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                         The moon is at her full,
                          and, riding high,  
                          Floods the calm fields with light;  
                          The airs that hover in the summer-sky  
                          Are all asleep to-night.  
                        There comes no voice
                          from the great woodlands round  
                          That murmured all the day;  
                          Beneath the shadow of their boughs the ground  
                          Is not more still than they. -  
                        But ever heaves and
                          moans the restless Deep;  
                          His rising tides I hear,  
                          Afar I see the glimmering billows leap;  
                          I see them breaking near.  
                        Each wave springs upward,
                          climbing toward the fair  
                          Pure light that sits on high-  
                          Springs eagerly, and faintly sinks, to where  
                          The mother-waters lie.  
                        Upward again it swells;
                          the moonbeams show  
                          Again its glimmering crest;  
                          Again it feels the fatal weight below,  
                          And sinks, but not to rest.  
                        Again and yet again;
                          until the Deep  
                          Recalls his brood of waves;  
                          And, with a sullen moan, abashed, they creep  
                          Back to his inner caves. 
                        Brief respite! they
                          shall rush from that recess  
                          With noise and tumult soon,  
                          And fling themselves, with unavailing stress,  
                          Up toward the placid moon.  
                        O restless Sea, that,
                          in thy prison here,  
                          Dost struggle and complain;  
                          Through the slow centuries yearning to be near  
                          To that fair orb in vain; -  
                        The glorious source
                          of light and heat must warm  
                          Thy billows from on high,  
                          And change them to the cloudy trains that form  
                          The curtain of the sky.  
                        Then only may they leave
                          the waste of brine  
                          In which they welter here,  
                          And rise above the hills of earth, and shine  
                          In a serener sphere.  
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