To a Merchant Sailor

Be yours the prudent sailing

From harbor up to town,

Your timid women wailing

Whenever rain comes down;

A mild and easy creeping

From market-place to mart,

A sound and dreamless sleeping,—

Sign of a moral heart!

Be yours the dreary climbing

Of hemp and mesh and mast,

And after proper priming

Up to a Mate at last;

Then years of grog-and-waters,

Of starb’rd, luff, and lee,

And seven sons and daughters

In a shanty by the sea.

And endless out-and-inning,

And ceaseless back-and-forth,

And toil that lacks the sinning

To make the toiling worth;

And never blood of human

To paint your tarry hand,—

And sorrow come o’ woman

To meet you when you land.

Be yours the feeble fighting

That keeps the liver white,

Your turn-the-other smiting

That makes a mock of Fight;—

A truce to your cautious guarding

Of the bastions of the bay ...

I sail to a wild bombarding

Of the white walls of Cathay!