XI.
"Fire!" 'twas an awful sound to hear on solitary
seas,
With double danger in the breath of every fresh'ning
breeze;
An awful sight it was to see the vessel all alight,
As if a blazing meteor dropped into the darksome
night.
XII.
Foremost and calm amid his crew the Captain gave
command,
Nor backward in a moment's need to help with skilful
hand,
Awhile the courage in his voice and firmness on his
brow
Imparted strength and hope to hearts which ne'er
had drooped till now.
XIII.
Three days, three nights, the vessel burned; oh,
Heavens! 'twas strange to be
Mid fire unquenchable with all the waters of the
sea!
But neither skill nor strength availed: the fatal
breezes blew,
Death and destruction, fiery-winged, threatened the
gallant crew.
XIV.
And all was lost. Those gorgeous silks would sweep
no palace now,
Those ivory fans would never feign a breeze to
beauty's brow;
The aromatic leaf could soothe no weary student's
brain,
Or freshen lips in fever heats upon the bed of pain.
XV.
" Get out the boat!" with firm quick voice the short
command was said,
And no man spoke, but straight and swift the order
was obeyed;
Then one by one the crew stepped forth— but all
looked back with tears,
Upon the bonnie Golden Bee, their home of many
years.
XVI.
But first the Captain snatched from flame, and pressed
within his breast,
A relic of departed days, of all his heart loved best:
A little Prayer-book, well-worn now, a gift in early
life,
Sweet token from his early love ere yet he called her
wife.
XVII.
And quick as falls a lightning shaft, when thunder
is behind,
A thousand recollected joys flashed o'er his troubled
mind;
Of happy, happy courtship days, and later, still more
sweet,
The tranquil joys of married life, the sound of baby
feet.
XVIII.
Amid a death-like silentness of breeze and sky and
sea,
Beneath a burning noonday sun they left the Golden
Bee;
And when they saw the blackened wreck totter amid
the foam,
Each sailor breathed a prayer to God, and thought
of wife and home.
XIX.
Then out upon a lonely sea, six hundred miles from
land,
The solitary boat sailed forth with that courageous
band;
Sailed forth as drifts a withered leaf upon the surging
tide,
With only hope to be their strength, and only God as
guide.
XX.
No white sail specked the arid sky, no cloud or
shadow came,
To cool that blue abyss of air which seemed to be a
flame;
No breeze sprang up to aid their oars, no friendly
ray of light,
Of moon or star shone out to guide their dreary path
at night.
XXI.
Oh! God, it was a fearful thing to float and drift
away,
Upon so wide a wilderness, day after weary day,
With meagre store of food and drink which, ere two
days had rolled,
They measured out as never yet a miser did his
gold.
XXII.
"Oh, Captain!" cried a sailor boy, "I ran away
to sea,
And well I know my mother's heart has sorely
grieved for me;
Will some one take my parting love?— I shall not
reach the shore."
And then he smiled a saintly smile, nor smiled nor
spoke no more.
XXIII.
Then tenderly, with bare brown hands, his comrades
did prepare
An humble shroud, and wrapp'd him in with more
than woman's care.
And all stood up and bared their heads, awhile the
Captain read
The Church of England's requiem over its ransomed
dead.
XXIV.
The red sun dipp'd into the sea, and lit the west afar,
The crimson clouds paled one by one, beneath the
evening star;
A calm of even-tide enwrapp'd both breeze and sky
and wave,
When in God's great cathedral vault the sailor found
a grave.
XXV.
They wept no more— but, silent, stood and watched
the placid deep;
Thinking with wistful hearts of him who slept such
blessed sleep.
And one— a gaunt and giant man— sent forth a
bitter cry,
And clenched his hand, and shrieked aloud, " Oh,
master, let us die!"
XXVI.
Oh, let us die! The words rang forth through the
sweet summer air,
As if a mad and tortured soul breathed out its last
wild prayer.
They sounded far athwart the sea, and up into the
sky,
Till even silence seemed to make the echo, " Let us
die!"
Dickens Journals Online