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d line; No gentle quiver owns the gentle gale, Nor gentlest swell distends the ready sail; Fix'd as in ice, the slumb'ring prows remain, And silence wide extends her solemn reign. Now to the waves the bursting clouds descend, And heaven and sea in meeting tempests blend; The black-wing'd whirlwinds o'er the ocean sweep, And from his bottom roars the stagg'ring deep. Driv'n by the yelling blast's impetuous sway Stagg'ring we bound, yet onward bound away: And now, escaped the fury of the storm, New danger threatens in a various form; Though fresh the breeze the swelling canvas swell'd, A current's headlong sweep our prows withheld: The rapid force impress'd on every keel, Backward, o'erpower'd, our rolling vessels reel: When from their southern caves the winds, enraged, In horrid conflict with the waves engaged; Beneath the tempest groans each loaded mast, And, o'er the rushing tide our bounding navy pass'd.[372] Now shin'd the sacred morn, when from the east Three kings[373] the holy cradled Babe address'd, And hail'd him Lord of heaven: that festive day[374] We drop our anchors in an opening bay; The river from the sacred day we name,[375] And stores, the wand'ring seaman's right, we claim: Stores we receiv'd; our dearest hope in vain, No word they utter'd could our ears retain; Nought to reward our search for India's sound, By word or sign our ardent wishes crown'd.[376] Behold, O king, how many a shore we tried! How many a fierce barbarian's rage defied! Yet still, in vain, for India's shore we try, The long-sought shores our anxious search defy. Beneath new heavens, where not a star we knew, Through changing climes, where poison'd air we drew; Wandering new seas, in gulfs unknown, forlorn, By labour weaken'd, and by famine worn; Our food corrupted, pregnant with disease, And pestilence on each expected breeze; Not even a gleam of hope's delusive ray To lead us onward through the devious way-- That kind delusion[377] which full oft has cheer'd The bravest minds, till glad success appear'd; Worn as we were, each night with dreary care, Each day, with danger that increas'd despair; Oh ! monarch, judge, what less than Lusian fire Could still the hopeless scorn of fate inspire! What less, O king, than Lusian fai
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