A Ballad of John Silver
We were schooner-rigged
and rakish,
with a long and lissome hull,
And we flew the pretty colours of the crossbones and
the skull;
We'd a big black Jolly Roger flapping grimly at the
fore,
And we sailed the Spanish Water in the happy days of
yore.
We'd a long
brass gun amidships, like a well-conducted ship,
We had each a brace of pistols and a cutlass at the
hip;
It's a point which tells against us, and a fact to
be deplored,
But we chased the goodly merchant-men and laid their
ships aboard.
Then the dead
men fouled the scuppers and the wounded filled the chains,
And the paint-work all was spatter dashed with other
peoples brains,
She was boarded, she was looted, she was scuttled till
she sank.
And the pale survivors left us by the medium of the
plank.
O! then it
was (while standing by the taffrail on the poop)
We could hear the drowning folk lament the absent chicken
coop;
Then, having washed the blood away, we'd little else to
do
Than to dance a quiet hornpipe as the old salts taught
us to.
O! the fiddle
on the fo'c'sle, and the slapping naked soles,
And the genial "Down the middle, Jake, and curtsey
when she rolls!"
With the silver seas around us and the pale moon overhead,
And the look-out not a-looking and his pipe-bowl glowing
red.
Ah! the pig-tailed,
quidding pirates and the pretty pranks we played,
All have since been put a stop to by the naughty Board
of Trade;
The schooners and the merry crews are laid away to rest,
A little south the sunset in the islands of the Blest.
John Masefield