John Masefield
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- All day they loitered by the resting ships,
- Telling their beauties over, taking stock;
- At night the verdict left my messmate's lips,
- "The Wanderer is the finest ship in dock."
- I had not seen her, but a friend, since drowned,
- Drew her, with painted ports, low, lovely, lean,
- Saying, "The Wanderer, clipper, outward bound,
- The loveliest ship my eyes have ever seen--
- "Perhaps to-morrow you will see her sail.
- She sails at sunrise": but the morrow showed
- No Wanderer setting forth for me to hail;
- Far down the stream men pointed where she rode,
- Rode the great trackway to the sea, dim, dim,
- Already gone before the stars were gone.
- I saw her at the sea-line's smoky rim
- Grow swiftly vaguer as they towed her on.
- Soon even her masts were hidden in the haze
- Beyond the city; she was on her course
- To trample billows for a hundred days;
- That afternoon the northerner gathered force,
- Blowing a small snow from a point of east.
- "Oh, fair for her," we said, "to take her south."
- And in our spirits, as the wind increased,
- We saw her there, beyond the river mouth,
- Setting her side-lights in the wildering dark,
- To glint upon mad water, while the gale
- Roared like a battle, snapping like a shark,
- And drunken seamen struggled with the sail.
- While with sick hearts her mates put out of mind
- Their little children, left astern, ashore,
- And the gale's gathering made the darkness' blind,
- Water and air one intermingled roar.
- Then we forgot her, for the fiddlers played,
- Dancing and singing held our merry crew;
- The old ship moaned a little as she swayed.
- It blew all night, oh, bitter hard it blew!
- So that at midnight I was called on deck
- To keep an anchor-watch: I heard the sea
- Roar past in white procession filled with wreck;
- Intense bright stars burned frosty over me,
- And the Greek brig beside us dipped and dipped,
- White to the muzzle like a half-tide rock,
- Drowned to the mainmast with the seas she shipped;
- Her cable-swivels clanged at every shock.
- And like a never-dying force, the wind
- Roared till we shouted with it, roared until
- Its vast virality of wrath was thinned,
- Had beat its fury breathless and was still.
- By dawn the gale had dwindled into flaw,
- A glorious morning followed: with my friend
- I climbed the fo'c's'le-head to see; we saw
- The waters hurrying shoreward without end.
- Haze blotted out the river's lowest reach;
- Out of the gloom the steamers, passing by,
- Called with their sirens, hooting their sea-speech;
- Out of the dimness others made reply.
- And as we watched, there came a rush of feet
- Charging the fo'c's'le till the hatchway shook.
- Men all about us thrust their way, or beat,
- Crying, "Wanderer! Down the river! Look!"
- I looked with them towards the dimness; there
- Gleamed like a spirit striding out of night,
- A full-rigged ship unutterably fair,
- Her masts like trees in winter, frosty-bright.
- Foam trembled at her bows like wisps of wool;
- She trembled as she towed. I had not dreamed
- That work of man could be so beautiful,
- In its own presence and in what it seemed.
- "So, she is putting back again," I said.
- "How white with frost her yards are on the fore."
- One of the men about me answer made,
- "That is not frost, but all her sails are tore,
- "Torn into tatters, youngster, in the gale;
- Her best foul-weather suit gone." It was true,
- Her masts were white with rags of tattered sail
- Many as gannets when the fish are due.
- Beauty in desolation was her pride,
- Her crowned array a glory that had been;
- She faltered tow'rds us like a swan that died,
- But altogether ruined she was still a queen.
- "Put back with all her sails gone," went the word;
- Then, from her signals flying, rumor ran,
- "The sea that stove her boats in killed her third;
- She has been gutted and has lost a man."
- So, as though stepping to a funeral march,
- She passed defeated homewards whence she came,
- Ragged with tattered canvas white as starch,
- A wild bird that misfortune had made tame.
- She was refitted soon: another took
- The dead man's office; then the singers hove
- Her capstan till the snapping hawsers shook;
- Out, with a bubble at her bows, she drove.
- Again they towed her seawards, and again
- We, watching, praised her beauty, praised her trim,
- Saw her fair house-flag flutter at the main,
- And slowly saunter seawards, dwindling dim;
- And wished her well, and wondered, as she died,
- How, when her canvas had been sheeted home,
- Her quivering length would sweep into her stride,
- Making the greenness milky with her foam.
- But when we rose next morning, we discerned
- Her beauty once again a shattered thing;
- Towing to dock the Wanderer returned,
- A wounded sea-bird with a broken wing.
- A spar was gone, her rigging's disarray
- Told of a worse disaster than the last;
- Like draggled hair dishevelled hung the stay,
- Drooping and beating on the broken mast.
- Half-mast upon her flagstaff hung her flag;
- Word went among us how the broken spar
- Had gored her captain like an angry stag,
- And killed her mate a half-day from the bar.
- She passed to dock along the top of flood.
- An old man near me shook his head and swore:
- "Like a bad woman, she has tasted blood--
- There'll be no trusting in her any more."
- We thought it truth, and when we saw her there
- Lying in dock, beyond, across the stream,
- We would forget that we had called her fair,
- We thought her murderess and the past a dream.
- And when she sailed again, we watched in awe,
- Wondering what bloody act her beauty planned,
- What evil lurked behind the thing we saw,
- What strength there was that thus annulled man's hand,
- How next its triumph would compel man's will
- Into compliance with external fate,
- How next the powers would use her to work ill
- On suffering men; we had not long to wait.
- For soon the outcry of derision rose,
- "Here comes the Wanderer!" the expected cry.
- Guessing the cause, our mockings joined with those
- Yelled from the shipping as they towed her by.
- She passed us close, her seamen paid no heed
- To what was called: they stood, a sullen group,
- Smoking and spitting, careless of her need,
- Mocking the orders given from the poop.
- Her mates and boys were working her; we stared.
- What was the reason of this strange return,
- This third annulling of the thing prepared?
- No outward evil could our eyes discern.
- Only like one who having formed a plan
- Beyond the pitch of common minds, she sailed,
- Mocked and deserted by the common man,
- Made half divine to me for having failed.
- We learned the reason soon: below the town
- A stay had parted like a snapping reed,
- "Warning," the men thought, "not to take her down."
- They took the omen, they would not proceed.
- Days passed before another crew would sign.
- The Wanderer lay in dock alone, unmanned,
- Feared as a thing possessed by powers malign,
- Bound under curses not to leave the land.
- But under passing Time fear passes too;
- That terror passed, the sailors' hearts grew bold.
- We learned in time that she had found a crew
- And was bound out southwards as of old.
- And in contempt we thought, "A little while
- Will bring her back again, dismantled, spoiled.
- It is herself; she cannot change her style;
- She has the habit now of being foiled."
- So when a ship appeared among the haze,
- We thought, "The Wanderer back again"; but no,
- No Wanderer showed for many, many days,
- Her passing lights made other waters glow.
- But we would oft think and talk of her,
- Tell newer hands her story, wondering, then,
- Upon what ocean she was Wanderer,
- Bound to the cities built by foreign men.
- And one by one our little conclave thinned,
- Passed into ships and sailed and so away,
- To drown in some great roaring of the wind,
- Wanderers themselves, unhappy fortune's prey.
- And Time went by me making memory dim,
- Yet still I wondered if the Wanderer fared
- Still pointing to the unreached ocean's rim,
- Brightening the water where her breast was bared.
- And much in ports abroad I eyed the ships,
- Hoping to see her well-remembered form
- Come with a curl of bubbles at her lips
- Bright to her berth, the sovereign of the storm.
- I never did, and many years went by,
- Then, near a Southern port, one Christmas Eve,
- I watched a gale go roaring through the sky,
- Making the cauldrons of clouds upheave.
- Then the wrack tattered and the stars appeared,
- Millions of stars that seemed to speak in fire;
- A byre cock cried aloud that morning neared,
- The swinging wind-vane flashed upon the spire.
- And soon men looked upon a glittering earth,
- Intensely sparkling like a world new-born;
- Only to look was spiritual birth,
- So bright the raindrops ran along the thorn
- So bright they were, that one could almost pass
- Beyond their twinkling to the source, and know
- The glory pushing in the blade of grass,
- That hidden soul which makes the flowers grow.
- That soul was there apparent, not revealed,
- Unearthly meanings covered every tree,
- That wet grass grew in an immortal field,
- Those waters fed some never-wrinkled sea.
- The scarlet berries in the hedge stood out
- Like revelations but the tongue unknown;
- Even in the brooks a joy was quick: the trout
- Rushed in a dumbness dumb to me alone.
- All of the valley was loud with brooks;
- I walked the morning, breasting up the fells,
- Taking again lost childhood from the rooks,
- Whose cawing came above the Christmas bells.
- I had not walked that glittering world before,
- But up the hill a prompting came to me,
- "This line of upland runs along the shore:
- Beyond the hedgerow I shall see the sea."
- And on the instant from beyond away
- The long familiar sound, a ship's bell, broke
- The hush below me in the unseen bay.
- Old memories came, that inner prompting spoke.
- And bright above the hedge a seagull's wings
- Flashed and were steady upon empty air.
- "A Power unseen," I cried, "prepares these things;
- Those are her bells, the Wanderer is there."
- So, hurrying to the hedge and looking down,
- I saw a mighty bay's wind-crinkled blue
- Ruffling the image of a tranquill town,
- With lapsing waters glimmering as they grew.
- And near me in the road the shipping swung,
- So stately and so still in such a great peace
- That like to drooping crests their colors hung,
- Only their shadows trembled without cease.
- I did but glance upon these anchored ships.
- Even as my thought had told, I saw her plain;
- Tense, like a supple athlete with lean hips,
- Swiftness at pause, the Wanderer come again--
- Come as of old a queen, untouched by Time,
- Resting the beauty that no seas could tire,
- Sparkling, as though the midnight's rain were rime,
- Like a man's thought transfigured into fire,
- And as I looked, one of her men began
- To sing some simple tune of Christmas day;
- Among her crew the song spread, man to man,
- Until the singing rang across the bay;
- And soon in other anchored ships the men
- Joined in the singing with clear throats, until
- The farm-boy heard it up the windy glen,
- Above the noise of sheep-bells on the hill.
- Over the water came the lifted song--
- Blind pieces in a mighty game we sing;
- Life's battle is a conquest for the strong;
- The meaning shows in the defeated thing.
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