Wednesday, June 29, 2011

The Mermaid (Windlass Song) by Robert Buchanan


Mermaid by Severino Baraldi (Available at Art.com)

This was one of my favorite finds while researching for Mermaid and Other Water Spirit Tales From Around the World. If you read it, you'll probably figure out why!

The Mermaid (Windlass Song)
by Robert Buchanan

I.

I’LL tell you, mates, how she came to sea!
(Heave at the windlass! heave ho! cheerily)
She loved me, and I loved she,
For she was the gel for a Sailor!
She hailed from Wapping, her name was Sue,
And she was the daughter of a tailor,
We parted at last, but without ado
She bought both jacket and breeches blue,
And aboard she came for to join our crew
And live the life of a Sailor!

CHORUS.

Heave at the windlass! yeo heave ho!
Up with the anchor! away we go!
The wind’s off the shore, boys,—let it blow,—
Hurrah for the life of a Sailor!
YEO—HO!

II.

Our Captain he eyed her from stem to starn
(Heave at the windlass! heave ho! cheerily)
But nought of her secret could he discarn,
For his savage jib couldn’t quail her.
But when she went for’ard among the res
Her heart began for to fail her,
So she took me aside and the truth confess’d,
With her face a-blushing on this ’ere breast,
And I stared and stared, and says I, “I’m blest!
My Sue turn’d into a Sailor!”

III.

Now we hadn’t got far away from land
(Heave at the windlass, heave ho! cheerily)
When a Mermaid rose with a glass in her hand,
And our ship hove to for to hail her.
Says she, “Each wessel that looks on me,
Man-o’-war, merchantman, or whaler,
Must sink right down to the bottom of the sea,
Where the dog-fish flies and the sea-snakes flee,
Unless a Wirgin on board there be
To plead for the life of a Sailor!”

IV.

Then up jumped Sue with the breeches on!
(Heave at the windlass, heave ho! cheerily)
“You nasty hussy!” says she, “begone!”
And the Mermaid’s cheeks grew paler!
“There’s a gel aboard and her name is Sue!
A Wirgin, the daughter of a tailor,
Who’s more than a match for the likes of you!”
At this the Mermaid looked werry blue,
And then, with a splash of her tail, withdrew,
While Sue she embraced her Sailor!

Source:
Buchanan, Robert. The Complete Poetical Works of Robert Buchanan, Volume II. London: Chatto & Windus, 1901.

Also appears in:
Mermaid and Other Water Spirit Tales From Around the World

Mermaid and Other Water Spirit Tales From Around the World

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