The Poetry Corner

The Rice-boat

By Laurence Hope (Adela Florence Cory Nicolson)

I slept upon the Rice-boat That, reef protected, lay At anchor, where the palm-trees Infringe upon the bay. The windless air was heavy With cinnamon and rose, The midnight calm seemed waiting, Too fateful for repose. One joined me on the Rice-boat With wild and waving hair, Whose vivid words and laughter Awoke the silent air. Oh, beauty, bare and shining, Fresh washen in the bay, One well may love by moonlight What one would not love by day! Above among the cordage The night wind hardly stirred, The lapping of the ripples Was all the sound we heard. Love reigned upon the Rice-boat, And Peace controlled the sea, The spirit's consolation, The senses' ecstasy. Though many things and mighty Are furthered in the West, The ancient Peace has vanished Before To-day's unrest. For how among their striving, Their gold, their lust, their drink, Shall men find time for dreaming Or any space to think? Think not I scorn the Science That lightens human pain; Though man's reliance often Is placed on it in vain. Maybe the long endeavour, The patience and the strife, May some day solve the riddle, The Mystery of Life. Perchance I do not value Things Western as I ought, The trains, - that take us, whither? The ships, - that reach, what port? To me it seems but chaos Of greed and haste and rage, The endless, aimless, motion Of squirrels in a cage. Here, where some ruined temple In solitude decays, With carven walls still hallowed With prayers of bygone days, Here, where the coral outcrops Make "flowers of the sea," The olden Peace yet lingers, In hushed serenity. Ah, silent, silver moonlight, Whose charm impartial falls On tanks of sacred water And squalid city walls, Whose mystic whiteness hallows The lowest and the least, To thee men owe the glamour That draws them to the East. And as this azure water, Unflecked hy wave or foam, Conceals in its tranquillity The dreaded white shark's home, So if love be illusion I ask the dream to stay, Content to love by moonlight What I might not love by day.