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Sailor's Farewell


Lovely is the white town, and smiling it lies
With little green gardens underneath the blue skies,
Days so full of sunshine, nights so full of glee, —
Oh, a fair place, a rare place, for sailors in from sea.

A pleasant place to come to for ships long from land,
A bright place, a light place, with mirth on every hand,
Is the white smiling city by the blue Pacific shore . . . 
And I wish in my heart I may never see it more.

There's a wide white plaza where folks pass to and fro,
And a drowsy tune sounding on all the winds that blow,
Church-bells all the morning, fiddles all the night . . . 
Oh, a neat place, a sweet place, for sailormen's delight!

But it's heave and break her out . . . and the best tune of all
Is the rattle of the windlass, the clicking of the pawl,
And the steady wind a-blowing, yes, blowing off the shore,
From the white smiling city that I would see no more.

For cruel is the white town for all it looks so fair,
There's a cloud upon the sunshine and there's sorrow everywhere,
And blue as Mary Mother's robe the sea is and the sky . . . 
But a bitter hate I'll bear it until the day I die!

Notes

From SHIPS AND FOLKS, edited by Cicely Fox Smith, published by Elkin Mathews, London, UK, © 1920, p. 68.

This haunting poem appears to be a sister to "Port o' Dreams" and "Mariquita" but something bad has gone down in this Pacific paradise. Also compare this one with a prior poem by John Masefield's "The Golden City of St. Mary."

The full story behind this poem may be a short story that CFS wrote called "Oranges" published in TALES OF THE CLIPPER SHIPS, Cicely Fox Smith, pub. by Houghton Mifflin Co., NY, © 1926, pp. 91-106; the story describes how a young sailor ashore in a Spanish port is invited by a lovely young women to join a picnic in the hills, and how later than evening she is brutally murdered by her jealous lover.

The header graphic is by nautical illustrator Charles Pears, from SALT-WATER POEMS AND BALLADS, John Masefield, The MacMillan Co., NY, © 1921, p. 58.

Charley Noble

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