WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
The buccaneer book: Songs of the black flag cover

The buccaneer book: Songs of the black flag

Chapter 15: 3. The Wooing
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

A sequence of poems that dramatizes life at sea through ballads, lyrics, and dramatic monologues focused on buccaneers, sailors, and the lawless world they inhabit. The pieces alternate between rollicking drinking songs and vivid battle and chase scenes, introspective meditations on exile, mortality, and lost love, and elegiac portraits of execution, marooning, and final rest. Several linked poems trace a seafaring romance and its breakup. Language shifts from brazen and celebratory to mournful and reflective, emphasizing comradeship, daring, greed, and the fatal costs of a life pursued on the open ocean.

3. The Wooing

Ah, Princess, hast thou laughed and left
Some faery isle that called thee queen?
And hath that island so bereft
Retained the flouted robe of green
That graced thy lovely ruling, when
It knows thou shalt not come again?
Princess, hearken: wilt thou trust
To my stern clay thy tenderer dust?
Turn to my wooing,—hush thee, sweet,
’Tis but my comrades in the street!
Ah, Princess, doth thine empire seem
Far from the anguish here that lies?...
Resume the sceptre of thy dream,
And make crown-jewels of thine eyes,
And rule a realm whose boundaries are
Limited by my boundless war!
Princess, hearken while I woo,
For love is brief, and death is due
To him who kills,—flinch not, my fair,
’Tis but my comrades on the stair!
Ah, Princess, of that faery isle
Resign thy reign, and rule with me
With sudden splendour of thy smile
O’er the long reaches of the sea;
And all the world shall vassal be,
Heart of my heart, for love of thee.
Princess, hark to me, and give
Thy love to make my love to live;
Here, to my heart!... Love, fear no more,
’Tis but my comrades at the door!