Poems for the Sea/The Whaler's Song

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1201132Poems for the Sea — The Whaler's SongLydia Sigourney

THE WHALER'S SONG.



There she lies! There she lies!
   A mountain on old Ocean's breast.
   "Where away?" Just three points west,
Toward yon waves that boldly rise.
   Head the vessel! Trim the sail!
   We must chase that mighty whale.



There she blows! There she blows!
   Man the boats! for nothing stay!
Such a prize we cannot lose,
   Stretch to your oars! away! away!

Grapple closer, careful steer,
Launch the harpoon, laugh at fear,
Plunge it deep, the barbed spear,
Strike the lance, in swift career,
Give her line! Give her line!
Down she goes through the foaming brine,
Sponge the side, where the flying coil
Mark's the monster's speed and toil;
But though she dive to the deepest ground,
Where the plummet fails to sound,
'Tis all in vain! All in vain!
   She hath that within her side,
Will surely bring her up again.



Spout! Spout! Spout!
The waves are maddening all about,
Every billow on its head
Strangely wears a crest of red;
How she lashes the seething main,
In her flurry and her pain;

Take good heed, my hearts of oak,
   Lest her terrible flukes, as she tortured lies,
   Wildly hurl us to the skies:
But see! the pride of her strength is broke,
   Heavy she lies, as a mass of lead,
   The mighty monarch-whale is dead!



   Row! Row! Row!
   In our ship she must go,
Changed by fire to a liquid stream,
Over the broad Pacific's swell,
Round Cape Horn, where the tempests dwell,
Many a night and many a day,
Home with us, she must sail away,
   Till we joyful hail once more,
   Old Nantucket's treeless shore.



There, when the fair with brilliant eyes
   In evening circles sit,
While the shining needle plies
Or the merry laugh replies
   To pleasant wit,

Let them think, if they will,
      Of the hardy tar
      On seas afar,
Who risks his life, their lamps to fill.