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Poem
September 29, 1819
The Rhode Island Republican
Newport, Newport County, Rhode Island
What is this article about?
The poem retells the biblical story of the dove leaving Noah's ark post-flood, searching amid devastation for signs of life, returning with an olive leaf symbolizing peace. It parallels the soul's journey seeking divine rest amid worldly trials.
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POETRY.
THE DOVE'S LEAVING THE ARK.
By J. Gently, of Connecticut.
Still, did an unseen Being guide
The lonely vessel o'er the tide,
And still, with steady prow, it braves
The fury of the foaming waves.
While scarce the deluge pours its stream,
The thunders roll—the lightning's gleam,
When ocean's mighty cisterns broke,
And earth, like a rent cottage shook,
And slowly as its axis turn'd,
The wat'ry planet mov'd and mourn'd;
Though trembling at the tempest's ire
Or scorching in the lightning's fire,
While holding in her firm embrace
The remnant of a wasted race,
Still o'er the waves the wandering ark
Roam'd like some lone, deserted bark.
But now the storm has hush'd its ire,
The warring elements retire;
And from its curtains, dusk and dim,
Look'd forth, once more, the astonish'd sun.
What saw he there! Young Nature's face
With smiles, and joy, and beauty fair?
No! not one feature could be traced
To tell him life was ever there:
Save when that little bark was seen
To shew him where her pride had been.
But now from that secure abode
The winged stranger went,
And from the casement, open'd wide
A joyful flight she bent;
High mounting seem'd to seek the sky
With forward breast, and sparkling eye,
Like captive set at liberty.
So went the dove on errand kind.
To seek a mansion for mankind,
Tho' scarce her meek eye dar'd to trace
The horrors of that dreadful place.
The waves with white and curling head
Swept above the silent dead,
The heaving billows' dashing surge
Hoarsely swell'd the hollow dirge;
The heavy weight of waters prest
The mighty monarch's mouldering breast,
The giant chief, the scepter'd hand,
The lip that pour'd the loud command;
The blooming cheek—the sparkling eye,
Now shrouded in the sea-weed lie.
But still the pensive stranger spread
Her white wing o'er that ocean dread,
And oft her anxious eye she cast
Across that dark and shoreless waste.
For evening clad the skies in gloom,
And warn'd her of her distant home
The stars that gemm'd the brow of night
Glanc'd coldly on her wavering flight,
In tears, the moon with trembling gleam
Withdrew her faint and faded beam.
And o'er that vast and silent grave
Was spread the dark and boundless wave.
With beating heart, and anxious ear,
She strove some earthly sound to hear,
In vain—no earthly sound was near.
It seem'd the world's eternal sleep
Had settled o'er that gloomy deep,
Nor slightest breath her bosom cheer'd.
Her own soft wings alone she heard.
But still that fearful dove preserv'd
With unabating care,
The olive leaf—the type of peace,
All fragrant, fresh and fair.
With pain her weary wing she stretch'd
Over the billows wide,
And oft her panting bosom dropp'd
Upon the briny tide.
The image of her absent mate,
That cheer'd her as she strove with fate.
Grew darker on her eye.
It seem'd as if she heard him mourn,
In broken minstrelsy.
Yet ere her pinions ceas'd their flight,
Or clos'd her eye in endless night,
A hand the weary wanderer prest
And drew her to the ark of rest,
Oh! welcome to thy peaceful home,
No more o'er that wild waste to roam.
When from this cell of pain and woe,
Like that weak dove my soul shall go.
And trembling still her flight shall urge,
Along this dark world's doubtful verge
O'er thy cold flood, and foaming surge,
When may the shrinking stranger spy
A pierc'd hand stretching from the sky,
Then hear a voice in accents blest,
"Return—return unto thy rest,"
Long prison'd in a wayward clime.
Long wounded with the thorns of time.s
Long chill'd by the wild storms that pour
Around that dark, deceitful shore.
No more—where thorns shall wound and tempests
rage no more.
THE DOVE'S LEAVING THE ARK.
By J. Gently, of Connecticut.
Still, did an unseen Being guide
The lonely vessel o'er the tide,
And still, with steady prow, it braves
The fury of the foaming waves.
While scarce the deluge pours its stream,
The thunders roll—the lightning's gleam,
When ocean's mighty cisterns broke,
And earth, like a rent cottage shook,
And slowly as its axis turn'd,
The wat'ry planet mov'd and mourn'd;
Though trembling at the tempest's ire
Or scorching in the lightning's fire,
While holding in her firm embrace
The remnant of a wasted race,
Still o'er the waves the wandering ark
Roam'd like some lone, deserted bark.
But now the storm has hush'd its ire,
The warring elements retire;
And from its curtains, dusk and dim,
Look'd forth, once more, the astonish'd sun.
What saw he there! Young Nature's face
With smiles, and joy, and beauty fair?
No! not one feature could be traced
To tell him life was ever there:
Save when that little bark was seen
To shew him where her pride had been.
But now from that secure abode
The winged stranger went,
And from the casement, open'd wide
A joyful flight she bent;
High mounting seem'd to seek the sky
With forward breast, and sparkling eye,
Like captive set at liberty.
So went the dove on errand kind.
To seek a mansion for mankind,
Tho' scarce her meek eye dar'd to trace
The horrors of that dreadful place.
The waves with white and curling head
Swept above the silent dead,
The heaving billows' dashing surge
Hoarsely swell'd the hollow dirge;
The heavy weight of waters prest
The mighty monarch's mouldering breast,
The giant chief, the scepter'd hand,
The lip that pour'd the loud command;
The blooming cheek—the sparkling eye,
Now shrouded in the sea-weed lie.
But still the pensive stranger spread
Her white wing o'er that ocean dread,
And oft her anxious eye she cast
Across that dark and shoreless waste.
For evening clad the skies in gloom,
And warn'd her of her distant home
The stars that gemm'd the brow of night
Glanc'd coldly on her wavering flight,
In tears, the moon with trembling gleam
Withdrew her faint and faded beam.
And o'er that vast and silent grave
Was spread the dark and boundless wave.
With beating heart, and anxious ear,
She strove some earthly sound to hear,
In vain—no earthly sound was near.
It seem'd the world's eternal sleep
Had settled o'er that gloomy deep,
Nor slightest breath her bosom cheer'd.
Her own soft wings alone she heard.
But still that fearful dove preserv'd
With unabating care,
The olive leaf—the type of peace,
All fragrant, fresh and fair.
With pain her weary wing she stretch'd
Over the billows wide,
And oft her panting bosom dropp'd
Upon the briny tide.
The image of her absent mate,
That cheer'd her as she strove with fate.
Grew darker on her eye.
It seem'd as if she heard him mourn,
In broken minstrelsy.
Yet ere her pinions ceas'd their flight,
Or clos'd her eye in endless night,
A hand the weary wanderer prest
And drew her to the ark of rest,
Oh! welcome to thy peaceful home,
No more o'er that wild waste to roam.
When from this cell of pain and woe,
Like that weak dove my soul shall go.
And trembling still her flight shall urge,
Along this dark world's doubtful verge
O'er thy cold flood, and foaming surge,
When may the shrinking stranger spy
A pierc'd hand stretching from the sky,
Then hear a voice in accents blest,
"Return—return unto thy rest,"
Long prison'd in a wayward clime.
Long wounded with the thorns of time.s
Long chill'd by the wild storms that pour
Around that dark, deceitful shore.
No more—where thorns shall wound and tempests
rage no more.
What sub-type of article is it?
Hymn
Ballad
What themes does it cover?
Religious Faith
Death Mourning
What keywords are associated?
Dove Ark
Noah Flood
Olive Leaf
Soul Rest
Biblical Deluge
What entities or persons were involved?
By J. Gently, Of Connecticut.
Poem Details
Title
The Dove's Leaving The Ark.
Author
By J. Gently, Of Connecticut.
Subject
The Dove Leaving Noah's Ark After The Flood
Form / Style
Rhymed Narrative Stanzas
Key Lines
But Still That Fearful Dove Preserv'd
With Unabating Care,
The Olive Leaf—The Type Of Peace,
All Fragrant, Fresh And Fair.
When From This Cell Of Pain And Woe,
Like That Weak Dove My Soul Shall Go.
And Trembling Still Her Flight Shall Urge,
Along This Dark World's Doubtful Verge
O'er Thy Cold Flood, And Foaming Surge,
When May The Shrinking Stranger Spy
A Pierc'd Hand Stretching From The Sky,
Then Hear A Voice In Accents Blest,
"Return—Return Unto Thy Rest,"