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Flannan Isle


THOUGH three men dwell on Flannan Isle
To keep the lamp alight,
As we steered under the lee, we caught
No glimmer through the night."

A passing ship at dawn had brought
The news; and quickly we set sail,
To find out what strange thing might ail
The keepers of the deep-sea light.

The Winter day broke blue and bright,
With glancing sun and glancing spray,
As o'er the swell our boat made way,
As gallant as a gull in flight.

But, as we neared the lonely Isle;
And looked up at the naked height;
And saw the lighthouse towering white,
With blinded lantern, that all night
Had never shot a spark
Of comfort through the dark,
So ghostly in the cold sunlight
It seemed, that we were struck the while
With wonder all too dread for words.
And, as into the tiny creek
We stole beneath the hanging crag,
We saw three queer, black, ugly birds—
Too big, by far, in my belief,
For guillemot or shag—
Like seamen sitting bolt-upright
Upon a half-tide reef:
But, as we neared, they plunged from sight,
Without a sound, or spurt of white.

And still to mazed to speak,
We landed; and made fast the boat;
And climbed the track in single file,
Each wishing he was safe afloat,
On any sea, however far,
So it be far from Flannan Isle:
And still we seemed to climb, and climb,
As though we'd lost all count of time,
And so must climb for evermore.
Yet, all too soon, we reached the door—
The black, sun-blistered lighthouse-door,
That gaped for us ajar.

As, on the threshold, for a spell,
We paused, we seemed to breathe the smell
Of limewash and of tar,
Familiar as our daily breath,
As though 't were some strange scent of death:
And so, yet wondering, side by side,
We stood a moment, still tongue-tied:
And each with black foreboding eyed
The door, ere we should fling it wide,
To leave the sunlight for the gloom:
Till, plucking courage up, at last,
Hard on each other's heels we passed,
Into the living-room.

Yet, as we crowded through the door,
We only saw a table, spread
For dinner, meat and cheese and bread;
But, all untouched; and no one there:
As though, when they sat down to eat,
Ere they could even taste,
Alarm had come; and they in haste
Had risen and left the bread and meat:
For at the table-head a chair
Lay tumbled on the floor.

We listened; but we only heard
The feeble cheeping of a bird
That starved upon its perch:
And, listening still, without a word,
We set about our hopeless search.

We hunted high, we hunted low;
And soon ransacked the empty house;
Then o'er the Island, to and fro,
We ranged, to listen and to look
In every cranny, cleft or nook
That might have hid a bird or mouse:
But, though we searched from shore to shore,
We found no sign in any place:
And soon again stood face to face
Before the gaping door:
And stole into the room once more
As frightened children steal.

Aye: though we hunted high and low,
And hunted everywhere,
Of the three men's fate we found no trace
Of any kind in any place,
But a door ajar, and an untouched meal,
And an overtoppled chair.

And, as we listened in the gloom
Of that forsaken living-room—
A chill clutch on our breath—
We thought how ill-chance came to all
Who kept the Flannan Light:
And how the rock had been the death
Of many a likely lad:
How six had come to a sudden end,
And three had gone stark mad:
And one whom we'd all known as friend
Had leapt from the lantern one still night,
And fallen dead by the lighthouse wall:
And long we thought
On the three we sought,
And of what might yet befall.

Like curs, a glance has brought to heel,
We listened, flinching there:
And looked, and looked, on the untouched meal,
And the overtoppled chair.

We seemed to stand for an endless while,
Though still no word was said,
Three men alive on Flannan Isle,
Who thought, on three men dead.

Notes

The History of Flannan Island: Eilean Mor, The Island of the Dead, is a major island of Flannan Isles which is a group of 7 main islands with about 45 rocks and islets.  Flannan Isles, also known as The Seven Hunters, is a uninhabited archipelago located 15-miles northwest of Lewis (Hebrides) island.  Before the Flannan Isle Lighthouse was built, The Seven Hunters were a hazardous group of isles so named for destroying ships en route to Scottish Ports.

The Flannan isle lighthouse was built in by 1899 by David Alan Stevenson and Charles Stevenson Eilean Mor (Big Isle). The disappearance happened one year later; in December 1900, three lighthouse keepers at the new lighthouse  mysteriously disappeared.

It was noticed on 15 December that the light had not been lit in the lighthouse, but bad weather prevented anyone getting to the island until 26 December. The lighthouse tender, the Hesperus, went to the island with a new set of keepers, but the three who were supposed to be there had gone - vanished. The lighthouse was deserted, with the lamps primed and ready for lighting. There was a diary entry made on the morning of 15 December that the lamp should have been lit, but no more.

Explanations put forward have included a freak wave, and a terrible row in which two were killed and the murderer committed suicide - but no bodies were ever found. Some accounts say there was a half-eaten meal on the table and that furniture had been overturned. A Board of Inquiry could not come up with an explanation, though the investigations are well documented.

Read more about the mystery at   www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A1061335

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Comments

1 - 20 of 20

  • July 17
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    Daily Mail

    From guest George Holmes (contact)
    I have rescently read the the Flannan Isle disaster in the Daily Mail which caused me to look this up & intersted in how could this happen!!


  • November 24, 2007
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    to revies

    From guest amy (contact)
    i really found this website useful because in english we are learning about the poem and we had to do 7 pages of facts about it and this website has really helped me


  • November 19, 2007
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    my grandad

    From guest hannah (contact)
    my greatgreatgrandad was one of the three people who went over to the isle to investigate


  • November 4, 2007
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    homework

    From guest rachel (contact)
    very good it was the best poem we have read in school all the others were well boring and this website helped me with my homework thx


  • October 4, 2007
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    what happnnnddd

    From guest jcb (contact)
    Any1 no Wat Appnd? sup mon ehh


    • I-Like-Rhymes Moderators member
      October 4, 2007
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      Job, If I understand your text speak message you are requesting information on the events described in the poem.
      Most of the information you require is posted in the comments under the actual poem.
      If you require further help please let us know (in clear text prefereably).


    • rufina caraid Moderators member
      October 4, 2007
      Edit | Reply
      jcb
      To help you with an answer I first need to know what the question is? Translation please?


  • June 5, 2007
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    its a real mystery

    From guest beth (contact)
    im beth and i was doing ballads in english i had to do a presentation o this subject and i didn't quite understand what it was about but this poem really helped me even though it is really long xoxoxoxoxo


  • May 9, 2007
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    From guest Sarah (contact)
    i have 2 do an essay on this for english! help needed!!!!!


  • May 3, 2007
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    ...

    From guest titch (contact)
    is this true


  • March 31, 2007
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    hi

    From guest Ally (contact)
    im doin this at the momment in english n ive gt to write an essay on it :( over easter! need help hehe


  • February 28, 2007
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    woow

    From guest stephanie (contact)
    The poem was reelii gurd i loved it..it was a great read...:D:D good poem guys;)


  • February 28, 2007
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    woooow

    From guest steff (contact)
    this poem is brilliaint i loved it sooooo much :D:D:D love from stephanie northwood .. x love youu x


  • February 28, 2007
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    looong poem lolz!!

    From guest sheridan (contact)
    tha poem is reelii loong bt it is dead gurd :D:D x


  • February 12, 2007
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    classroom

    From guest sophie (contact)
    wow i really like this poem i read it at school in my guided reading session and i loved it then


  • February 11, 2007
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    HOMEWORK

    From guest Clare (contact)
    Ty it helped with my homework and i liked the poem its self


  • November 27, 2006
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    rubbish

    From guest mimi blaker (contact)
    i dont like this poem


  • November 19, 2006
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    mystery??

    From guest jonny (contact)
    wheres da sense of mystery son?


  • November 15, 2006
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    homework

    From guest alastair paterson (contact)
    it was very helpful with my homework.

  • fearbolg
    March 1, 2006
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    Very much of its time

    A small point... Eilean Mor in Scots Gaelic (equivalent Oileann Mór in Gaelic) probably means "Great [big] Island" or "Large Island".  When something is "of" something in Gaelic, the conjuction "na" ("of the") is used. In Gaelic, the Isle of the dead would be "Oileann na Mairbhe" (pronounced Mariv-eh)
    - it is a true story, by the way - there is also an interesting modern opera written about this tale

  • ea
    February 25, 2006
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    Here's another example of a poem that once had an illustration with it.  

  • ea
    February 12, 2006
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    A Scottish friend told me that there are numerous accounts like this all over Scottland and that he can only agree with the article's assessment: "It was the Atlantic."


  • February 12, 2006
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    Its is a very good poem i think that it clearly points out the fact that their disapearence could have been super natural but it also gives the messgae that there was a lot of mystery involved.


  • February 12, 2006
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    its cool

  • ea
    February 1, 2006
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    I read the link at www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A1061335 and was glad to see someone mentioned the possibility of mermaids, for nixies and selkies come from this land for a good reason.


  • January 31, 2006
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    I've studied this pome in my school.And I still remember the gripping verses in this pome.Nothing spectacular abt the rhymes,but the suspense it does build in the pome - is fantastic.

    Then we were told by our English teacher, the story behind Flannel Isle - 3 missing members on the Island.Noone had a clue.
    Sends a chill down one's spine ....Glad I found this.Brings back memories of school days.


  • January 16, 2006
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    is it true because if it is then it is brilliant and i think you should put more pictures to brighten it up a bit more


  • January 15, 2006
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    WELL I THINK U GOT TO READ IT AGEIN CUZ IT'S JUS BRILANT IF IT'S TRUE OR FLASE AND NOT TRUE!!!!


  • January 15, 2006
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    GOD HOW DID THEY DIE I WOUNDER BUT WHO EVER KILLED THEM ARE REALLY DUMB?? AND HOW DID THEY GET THEIR


  • January 15, 2006
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    is it true???


  • May 27, 2005
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    I found this poem by searching on the word "overtoppled," because I was curious as to what the Doctor was quoting at the end of the Dr. Who episode "The Horror of Fang Rock." It's a good poem, and the story behind it is interesting; it appears to have served as the inspiration for the episode in question, which concerns an alien visitation to a remote island lighthouse that leaves all three of its keepers dead and their bodies lost in the sea. As the Doctor and Leela are about to depart the island at end of the episode (having disposed of the alien menace), the Doctor intones, in Tom Baker's sepulchrul basso profundo, "Of the three men's fate we found no trace/Of any kind in any place,/But a door ajar, and an untouched meal,/And an overtoppled chair."

  • Mistress Madness
    April 19, 2005
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    um, well, I'm just going to comment on the poem.....I think it's much too long and confusing, but thats just me. I think it could have been much better, but all well. The last part, about the three men alive and dead, was probably the best part of the poem. Also, those three birds...I think they represented those sailors. The chair was toppled over from one of the birds taking flight. Thats just my thoughts on that. Anyways, it gets a 6/10 in my opinion.


  • April 18, 2005
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    This poem is amazing,I enjoyed it so much. Shame I couldn't find the answer I needed for my worksheet, but enjoyed it all the same!


  • March 15, 2005
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    This poem was fantastic it built tension and mystery through the writing, which left you wondering and wanting an explanation.


  • March 12, 2005
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    The poem Flannan Ilse shows a clear repisintation of the supernatural (for example the number 3 offen used and 3 black birds, these often realated to witchcraft, e.t.c) and takes you beyond the natural world this is why it is a trill to read.


  • March 9, 2005
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    Spectacular. sent shivers down my spine. i simply loved this poem

  • Pari Ali
    March 5, 2005
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    I could not figure out the exact rhyme scheme of this poem... but what grips the reader is the scary atmosphere that is built right from the start. the feeling of dread seeps in through from the beginning, I think almost at the start one knows the tragic end yet one goes on reading more or less like the men went on searching, half fearfully not knowing what they would find.. there is also a feeling of some supernatural powers at work. The poem is gripping and at the end of it one is disatisfied one wants to know more know all about what happened that fateful day on Flannan Isle. I hope all who visit here will have soem of their curiousity satisfied by the notes that follow the poem.

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