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Hastings Mill


As I went down by Hastings Mill I lingered in my going
To smell the smell of piled-up deals and feel the salt wind blowing,
To hear the cables fret and creak and the ropes stir and sigh
(Shipmate, my shipmate!) as in days gone by.

As I went down by Hastings Mill I saw a ship there lying,
About her tawny yards the little clouds of sunset flying;
And half I took her for the ghost of one I used to know
(Shipmate, my shipmate!) many years ago.

As I went down by Hastings Mill I saw while I stood dreaming
The flicker of her riding light along the ripples streaming,
The bollards where we made her fast and the berth where she did lie
(Shipmate, my shipmate!) in the days gone by.

As I went down by Hastings Mill I heard a fellow singing,
Chipping off the deep sea rust above the tide a-swinging,
And well I knew the queer old tune and well the song he sung
(Shipmate, my shipmate!) when the world was young.

And past the rowdy Union Wharf, and by the still tide sleeping,
To a randy dandy deep sea tune my heart in time was keeping,
To the thin far sound of a shadowy watch a-hauling,
And the voice of one I knew across the high tide calling
(Shipmate, my shipmate!) and the late dusk falling!

Notes

From SAILOR TOWN: Sea Songs and Ballads, edited by Cicely Fox Smith, published by George H. Doran Co., New York, US, © 1919, pp. 56-57. An earlier edition of SAILOR TOWN was published in 1914.

Hasting Mill was the primary lumber mill and lumber shipping wharf for Vancouver, BC. The “rowdy Union Wharf” was adjacent. After her work as a typist in a law office, the poet used to walk along the Victoria waterfront to a nearby lumber yard and muse over the ships being loaded there for faraway ports.

"Deals" are cheap planking.

This poem has been adapted for singing by Charles Ipcar, as recorded on MORE UNCOMMON SAILOR SONGS, © 2005.

The header graphic is a photograph of a ship tied up at the Hasting Mill lumber wharf at Vancouver, British Columbia, in the early 1900's.

Charley Noble

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Comments

1 - 7 of 7

  • Charley Noble Moderators member
    October 25, 2005
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    If you'd like to hear a version of this poem adapted for singing: home.gwi.net/~ipbar/lyr_list.htm

    Cheerily,
    Charley Noble


  • Charley Noble Moderators member
    October 18, 2005
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    "Hastings Mill" is most likely the major lumber mill located in Vancouver, BC. All the information in the poem seems to correlate, including the reference to the adjacent "rowdy Union Wharf." However, CFS was resident in Victoria for much of her 10 year stay in BC in the early 1900's. She probably visited Vancouver during this time but there is no record, so far, of her actually residing there.

    The photo is actually of sailing ships moored at the docks at Hastings Mill around 1900.

    Charley Noble
    Edited on Dec 01, 8:49 p.m. because 'adding more info'.


  • August 6, 2005
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    Hastings Mill is the original name of Vancouver, British Columbia, very near Steveston and Victoria where it is believed Cicely Fox Smith lived in the 10 year period prior to the first world war. The reference to the Union Wharf in the poem also indicates Vancouver as the wharf of the old Union Steamship Company was located not far from the intersection of Main and Hastings Streets, Vancouver. I would think the evidence for Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada would be more compelling than for the Hastings Mill in Nova Scotia.


  • July 28, 2005
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    I am interested in the origion of this poem & to any possibility of it referring to the Davison Lumber Mill in Hastings Nova Scotia as it was often referred to as the "Hasting's Mill" ???

    Were there any ties to Nova Scotia in approximately 1902-1928 ??


  • I-Like-Rhymes Moderators member
    July 17, 2005
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    This poem may also be found in Cicely Fox Smith's book Songs and Chanties 1914 - 1916 (published 1919)
    It is widely believed that she gained some of her insight into the sailor's life whilst working for a lumber firm and watching the ships full of wood coming into port and then talking to the sailors.
    Jim S
    Edited on Jul 17, 2:57 p.m. because ''.


  • April 13, 2005
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    Cicely also published this poem herself in her poetry book SAILOR TOWN, © 1919, pp. 56-57.

    Charley Noble


  • April 12, 2005
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    This poem was composed when Cicely Fox Smith was resident in Victoria, BC, in the early 1900's and refers to one of the local lumber mills. It's apparently not included in any of her own published works, at least the ones I have access to. It was found among the inventory of poems donated to the Library of the University of British Columbia by a local businessman and patron of the arts Alfred Myrick Pound (1869-1932) and apparently first published in an anthology called THE HOME BOOK OF VERSE, Vol. 3, 2001, edited by Burton Stevenson.

    Does anyone have any further information or corrections?

    Charley Noble
    Richmond, Maine

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