Songs of the Sea and Lays of the Land. Charles Godfrey Leland

Songs of the Sea and Lays of the Land - Charles Godfrey Leland


Скачать книгу
rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_68e7e769-b58f-5355-aec7-ed9deafb344b">PENN on a text by robert burdette

       BALLAD OF THE FOXES

       EST MODUS IN REBUS a narrative of new york

       THE MASHER

       ARIZONA JOHN

       THE BALLAD OF CHARITY

       MULTUM IN PARVO

       THE ORGANIST OF BERGAMO

       THE GOTH AND THE PIGEON

       REFLECTIONS IN A PRINTING-OFFICE

       APPENDIX

       ORBUS IN TACTU MAINET.—P. 2

       TIME FOR US TO GO.—P. 64

       SAMUEL JACKSON.—P. 99

      SONGS OF THE SEA

      I saw three sailors synging, hey howe!

      Upon yon lea-land hey!

      I hearde three mariners rynging, rumbelowe:

      Upon yon sea strand gaye.

      Synge hey howe, rumbelowe,

      Row the boat, Norman, rowe!

      Percy’s Relics.

       Table of Contents

      In the North End of Boston, long ago;

      Although ’tis yet within my memory;

      There were of gabled houses many a row,

      With overhanging storeys two or three,

      And many with half-doors over whose end

      Leaning upon her elbows, the good-wife

      At eventide conversed with many a friend

      Of all the little chances of their life;

      Small ripples in a stream which ran full slow

      In the North End of Boston, long ago.

      And ’mid these houses was a Hostelrie

      Frequented by the people of the sea,

      Known as the Boy and Barrel, from its sign:

      A jolly urchin on a cask of wine

      Bearing the words which puzzled every eye—

      Even there a bit of Latin made a show,

      In the North End of Boston—long ago.

      And many a sailor, when his cruise was o’er,

      Bore straight for it soon as he touched the shore:

      In many a stormy night upon the sea

      He’d thought upon the Boy—and of the spree

      He’d have when there, and let all trouble go,

      In the North End of Boston, long ago.

      There, like their vessels in a friendly port,

      Met many mariners of every kind,

      Spinning strange yarns of many a varied sort,

      Well sheltered from the ocean and the wind;

      In a long low dark room they lounged at ease;

      Strange men there were from many a distant land,

      And there above the high old chimney-piece

      Were curiosities from many a strand,

      Which often made strange tales and memories flow

      In the North End of Boston, long ago.

      And there I often sat to hear those tales,

      From men who’d passed through storm and fight and fire,

      Of mighty icebergs and stupendous whales,

      Of shipwrecked crews and of adventures dire,

      Until the thought came to me on a time,

      While I was listening to that merry throng,

      That I would write their stories out in rhyme,

      And weave into it many a sailor’s song,

      That men might something of the legends know

      Of the North End of Boston, long ago.

      First it was said that Captain Kidd in truth

      Had revelled in that tavern with his crew,

      And there it was he lost the Golden Tooth

      Which brought him treasure, and the gossips knew

      Moll Pitcher dwelt there in the days of yore,

      And Peter Rugg had stopped before the door:

      Tom Walker there did with the Devil go

      In the North End of Boston, long ago.

      Nor had I long to wait, for at the word

      Some one observed that he had seen in Spain

      A captain hung—which Abner Chapin heard

      And said, “I too upon the Spanish Main

      Met with a man well known unto us all,

      Who nearly hung a Captain General.”

      He told the tale and I did rhyme it so;

      In the North End of Boston, long ago.

[1]See Appendix.

       Table of Contents

      There was a Captain General who ruled in Vera Cruz,

      And what we used to hear of him was always evil news;

      He was a pirate on the sea—a robber on the shore:

      The Señor Don Alonzo Estabán San Salvador.

      There was a Yankee skipper who round about did roam,

      His name was Stephen Folger and


Скачать книгу