PESCADERO PEBBLESWhere slopes the beach to the setting sun, On the Pescadero shore, For ever and ever the restless surf Rolls up with its sullen roar. And grasping the pebbles in white hands, And chafing them together, And grinding them against the cliffs In stormy and sunny weather, It gives them never any rest; All night, all day, the pain Of their long agony sobs on, Sinks, and then swells again. And tourists come from every clime To search with eager care For those whose rest has been the least; For such have grown most fair. But yonder, 'round a point of rock, In a quiet, sheltered cove, Where storms ne'er break, and sea ne'er comes, The tourists never rove. The pebbles lie 'neath the sunny sky, Quiet forevermore; In dreams of everlasting peace They sleep upon the shore. But ugly, and rough, and jagged still, Are they left by the passing years; For they miss the beat of angry storms, And the surf that drips in tears. The hard turmoil of the pitiless sea Turns the pebble to beauteous gem, They who escape the agony Miss also the diadem.--Minot Judson Savage From Minot J. Savage's America to England. Reprinted in the California State Series Eighth Year Literature Reader, 1917. |
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