No such brave heart as she.
The touch of sea-gulls' wings, the sea that rears
But do God's work the still and splendid way.
Though Danger be her neighbour and her guest.
And home is far below; and in that nest
But treads with naked feet the stair of rock
She sees made manifest
The sun that burns and sears.
Upon so wild and dangerous a quest.
At grips with the great sea. She has no fears,
The gulls are crying in her heedless ears
She has no fears because her daily bread
Their father tosses on the open sea,
So the brave mother clambers day by day,
Night brings her little children to her knee
But danger shakes with fitful murmurings
She has but youth and courage for her wings,
That has but known for years on weary years
Are little hungry mouths that must be fed,
Halfway 'twixt sky and sea:
Is of that school of saints that wear no bay,
And fain would loosen steady hand or knee,
Where flashing shoals of silver dolphins play.
And always Death about her labour sings,
Here in the pendulous weed that tempts her tread
Her waves against it with recurrent shock,
And pulls the samphire trails, and knows not she
For daily bread to pray;
The samphire sways and dangles overhead
And cast her down among life's broken things,
The samphire gatherer to the cliff-face clings
But hungry mouths must feed while he's away,
That strength is made a mock