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In A Bye-Canal
By Herman Melville

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	A swoon of noon, a trance of tide,
	The hushed siesta brooding wide
	    Like calms far off Peru;
	No floating wayfarer in sight,
	Dumb noon, and haunted like the night
	    When Jael the wiled one slew.
	A languid impulse from the oar
	Plied by my indolent gondolier
	Tinkles against a palace hoar,
	    And, hark, response I hear!
	A lattice clicks; and lo, I see
	Between the slats, mute summoning me,
	What loveliest eyes of scintillation,
	What basilisk glance of conjuration!

	    Fronted I have, part taken the span;
	Of portents in nature and peril in man.
	I have swum-I have been
	'Twixt the whale's black flukes and the white
	        shark's fin;
	The enemy's desert have wandered in,
	And there have turned, have turned and scanned,
	Following me how noiselessly,
	Envy and Slander, lepers hand in hand.
	All this. But at the latticed eye-
	'Hey! Gondolier, you sleep, my man;
	Wake up!' And, shooting by, we ran;
	The while I mused, This, surely now,
	Confutes the Naturalists, allow!
	Sirens, true sirens verily be,
	Sirens, waylayers in the sea.
	Well, wooed by these same deadly misses,
	Is it shame to run?
	No! flee them did divine Ulysses,
	    Brave, wise, and Venus' son.
 
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