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Portrait Of A Lady-2

Pilot boat, lighthouse,
Stiff green sea —
House-flag and number
Plain as can be —

Sails like the cheek
Of the cherubim —
Blackwall fashion,
Shipshape and trim —

Cottonwool clouds
In a crude blue sky —
Who owned it, I wonder
In days gone by?

What old skipper
Or mate, maybe,
Snug by his fireside,
Done with the sea,

Lovingly scanned it
With age-dimmed eyes,
Saw in his pipe-smoke
Pictures rise —

Let, by the lamplight,
Memory range
A hundred harbours
And landfalls stange:

Mast-fringed Hooghly
And junk-thronged Praya,
And mat-thatched hamlets
Of far Malaya:

The Trade exultant,
The Doldrum calm,
The long surf creaming
On shores of palm:

Channels Formosan
Typhoon-torn,
Towering, tremendous
Seas of the Horn:

Long-lost shipmates
In long-drowned ships —
Smiling, yet sadly,
With bearded lips.

To think of the laughter
And larks that he had
In the old windjammers
When he was a lad,

And the storms he weathered
And songs he sung,
In days long over,
When earth was young!

Notes

From SAILOR'S DELIGHT, edited by Cicely Fox Smith, published by Methuen & Co., London, UK, © 1931, pp. 67-69.

Here the poet is musing on some crude portrait of a ship, as an old sailor might in his retirement from the sea.

Charley Noble

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