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Bill's Choice


"All that sort o' guff," said Bill, "they may keep
About 'ow nice it is bein' buried at sea,
For I don't want no rest in the rollin' deep,
Nor yet no blinkin' fishes a-nibblin' me."

"I never could see no sense in slingin' a rhyme
Over a bolt o' sail an' a dollop o' lead,
An' sailormen get salt water enough in their time
Not to be wantin' the taste of it after they're dead."

"An' if I was goin' to be buried, the place for me
'Ud be some snug port or other, I don't mind where,
Somewhere within the sound an' smell o' the sea,
East or West or South — well, I won't much care."

"So long's I can lay quiet an' hear the ships
Goin' an' comin' . . . an' sailormen 'avin' their fun . . .
A song an' a laugh an' a drink an' a girl's red lips . . .
An' a bit of a shellback's yarn when the long day's done."

Notes

From ROVINGS: Sea Songs and Ballads, edited by Cicely Fox Smith, published by Elkin Mathews, London, UK, © 1921, p. 44.

There have been many debates on the somber subject of burial at sea or ashore. Especially so since sailors didn't like sailing with a corpse on board.

The second verse refers to composing a poem about a corpse that has been wrapped in an old piece of sail with scrap metal included to ensure it would sink to the bottom.

The header graphic by nautical artist Anton Otto Fischer shows a typical sea burial.

Jim Saville

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Comments

  • Aries
    March 3
    Edit | Reply

    Bill's choice

    I love it, my son (who died in an accident) loved the
    sea. He would have loved this poem.Wonderful