At Sainte-Marguerite
The gray tide flows and flounders in the rocks
Along the crannies up the swollen sand.
Far out the reefs lie naked—dunes and blocks
Low in the watery wind. A shaft of land
Going to sea thins out the western strand.
It rains, and all along and always gulls
Career sea-screaming in and weather-glossed.
It blows here, pushing round the cliff; in lulls
Within the humid stone a motion lost
Ekes out the flurried heart-beat of the coast.
It blows and rains a pale and whirling mist
This summer morning. I that hither came—
Was it to pluck this savage from the schist,
This crazy yellowish bloom without a name,
With leathern blade and tortured wiry frame?
Why here alone, away, the forehead pricked
With dripping salt and fingers damp with brine,
Before the offal and the derelict
And where the hungry sea-wolves howl and whine
Live human hours? now that the columbine
Stands somewhere shaded near the fields that fall
Great starry sheaves of the delighted year,
And globing rosy on the garden wall
The peach and apricot and soon the pear
Drip in the teasing hand their sugared tear.
Inland a little way the summer lies.
Inland a little and but yesterday
I saw the weary teams, I heard the cries
Of sicklemen across the fallen hay,
And buried in the sunburned stacks I lay
Tasting the straws and tossing, laughing soft
Into the sky’s great eyes of gold and blue
And nodding to the breezy leaves aloft
Over the harvest’s mellow residue.
But sudden then—then strangely dark it grew.
How good it is, before the dreary flow
Of cloud and water, here to lie alone
And in this desolation to let go
Down the ravine one with another, down
Across the surf to linger or to drown
The loves that none can give and none receive,
The fearful asking and the small retort,
The life to dream of and the dream to live!
Very much more is nothing than a part,
Nothing at all and darkness in the heart.
I would my manhood now were like the sea.—
Thou at high-tide, when compassing the land
Thou find’st the issue short, questioningly
A moment poised, thy floods then down the strand
Sink without rancour, sink without command,
Sink of themselves in peace without despair,
And turn as still the calm horizon turns,
Till they repose little by little nowhere
And the long light unfathomable burns
Clear from the zenith stars to the sea-ferns.
Thou art thy Priest, thy Victim and thy God.
Thy life is bulwarked with a thread of foam,
And of the sky, the mountains and the sod
Thou askest nothing, evermore at home.
In thy own self’s perennial masterdom.
This poem is in the public domain. Published in Poem-a-Day on August 7, 2022, by the Academy of American Poets.
“At Sainte-Marguerite” first appeared in The Poems of Trumbull Stickney (Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1905). Written in rhyming cinquains, the poem takes place on the Île Sainte-Marguerite, an island just off the coast of Cannes. Taking this poem as an illustration of his point, Stickney’s close friend and editor William Vaughn Moody writes, in “The Poems of Trumbull Stickney,” published in volume 183 of the North American Review, that “[t]here is in Stickney’s lyric utterance at its best something momentously unspoken, which betrays to deeper abysses of feeling than are advertised of, which causes the reader, if he be sensitive to such suggestion, to turn and wonder what it is so soul-shaking under the innocent words. The secret of this quality lies in the poet’s profound sincerity, masked, and for a careless or captious eye defeated, by the play of coloured fancy on the surface.”