The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #99170   Message #2060856
Posted By: Charley Noble
25-May-07 - 02:10 PM
Thread Name: Old Sailor-Poets (early 1900's)
Subject: RE: Old Sailor-Poets (early 1900's)
Here's another one by Harry Kemp, musing about the death of an old shipmate:

JIM

We couldn't make him out; he seldom spoke;
We never caught him smiling at a joke —
And yet he was a decent lad at work:
On watch or off, he was the last to shirk —
So that, among ourselves, we came to say,
"Jim, he's alright, he's only got his way."
Yet, somehow, in each storm he didn't care.
His life or death seemed only God's affair —
So when the cry came, in Nor'west Blow,
"Man overboard!" we each one seemed to know;
From the main topsail yardarm he had gone
Into the boiling seas . . . the ship held on;
There was no saving him in such a gale.
Then, when the dawn came, wide, and grey, and pale,
We brought his sea-chest aft with all it stored
(The custom when a man goes overboard).
It held the usual things that sailors own;
But at the bottom, in a box, alone,
We found a woman's picture — and we knew,
Now, why he'd been so offish with the crew —
He'd written it as plain as plain could be —
"She went and married HIM instead of me!"

Notes:

From CHANTEYS AND BALLADS, by Harry Kemp, published by Brentano's, New York, US, © 1920, p. 48.

Charley Noble