The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #99170   Message #2002214
Posted By: Charley Noble
20-Mar-07 - 12:34 PM
Thread Name: Old Sailor-Poets (early 1900's)
Subject: lYr Add: Beach Comber (Harry Kemp)
Here's another one from Harry Kemp, the story of a sailor who jumps ship in the Pacific Islands to become a beachcomber, only later to have some doubts. It's got a nice twist:

THE BEACH COMBER

(From CHANTEYS AND BALLADS, by Harry Kemp, published by Brentano's, New York, US, © 1920, p. 66.)

I'd like to return to the world again,
To the dutiful, work-a-day world of men, –
For I'm sick of the beach-comber's lot,
Of the one volcano flaming hot,
With the snow round its edge and the fire in its throat,
And the tropical island that seems a-float
Like a world set in space all alone in the sea . . .
How I wish that a ship, it would stop for me.
I'm sick of the brown girl that loves me, I'm sick
Of the cocoanut groves, – you can't take me too quick
From this place, though it's rich in all nature can give . . .
For I want to return where it's harder to live,
Where men struggle for life, where they work and find sweet
Their rest after toil, and the food that they eat . . .
What? A ship's in the offing? . . . dear God, let me hide, –
They're in need of a sailor, are waiting for the tide
To put off? . . . I will hide where the great cliff hangs sheer –
Give 'em mangoes and goats, and don't tell 'em I'm here!

Cheerily,
Charley Noble