THE MATE OF THE “BUNCH O’ KEYS”

IN fifteen hundred and eighty-eight—

Name a braver year if you can—

’Twas a caravel, as the legends tell,

That passed from the sight of man.

Southward away, like an ocean bird,

On the breath of a northern blast,

Sailed the Bunch o’ Keys; and following seas

Laughed loud as they thundered past.

She struggled from moon to moon again,

While a hurricane round her leapt;

Till her master and crew aweary grew,

And murmured their Maker slept.

Then many an angry and fearful eye

Bent aglow on the vessel’s mate,

Where he moved in dread, with a hanging head

And a mien disconsolate.

This pitiful, haunted, haggard wretch

Was as friendless as man may be;

And upon his face lay the ugly trace

Of a secret agony.

When day departed they heard his cry

To the God of all power and might,

And his hollow groan, as he moved alone,

At the darkest hour of night.

He told his crime to the Evening Star

And a wandering wild sea-bird,

“They will bear my tale on the angry gale,”

He whispered when no man heard.

“They will cry my deed to the icy wind,

And the wind to the white-capped wave;

They will tell the sun the thing I have done

Far under his western grave.

“I slew a friend in his hour secure,

While a woman pointed the way;

And I saw the flood of his good heart’s blood

Leap red as the Judgment Day!”

That terrible deed they knew alone—

God and the Devil and the Dead—

Then a morning came, upon wings of flame,

And deluged the world with red.

“O, who shall tell?” cried the sailor-men,

“What this vision of woe can mean,

Filling sea and air with a gory glare

And the lurid clouds between?

“Red, as at rising or going down,

Reels the sun at the hour of noon,

And the stars by night are like sparks of light

From the bale-fire of the moon.

“Red are the hungry and steel-eyed sharks,

Where they swim in these crimson seas,

And horribly red, to her top-mast head,

Is the luckless Bunch o’ Keys.

“Now mad we grow, as a beast grows mad

When his eyes the red shambles see,

And it is not well that we suffer hell

For another’s villainy.”

Thus did they threaten, those sailor-men;

But the master cried, “God of grace!”

And pointed away to the dying day,

Where the sun sank down apace.

And there, from out circles of liquid flame,

Spread abroad on the ocean’s breast,

Ascended a Hand, like the sight of land,

From under the shining west.

“ASCENDED A HAND, LIKE THE SIGHT OF LAND”

Crooked, gigantic, and lean and gaunt,

And ebon, and naked and vast,

It hid the skies from the terrified eyes

Of those who beheld aghast.

Sombre and grim as a blind man’s night,

It arose like a mountain peak;

Each finger-bone was a pillar of stone,

Each claw was a dragon’s beak.

All the black malice of deepest hell

Did the palm of the monster show,

With passions sore, full many more

Than human natures know.

Its pulsing wrist made the waters leap,

Where it moved through that blood-red sea;

While the caravel, like a rocking shell,

Awaited her destiny.

As a herd of frightened flying sheep

Ran the sailors, with cry and groan;

But their cursed mate met the fall of Fate

Where he stood, on the poop alone.

From the inky mass of that awful Hand

Did the thumb and finger bend,

And, as crawling ant from the leaf of plant,

They plucked him unto his end.

They plucked him aloft and they held him high,

Then, under the sea of gore,

To his torment dire of eternal fire

He vanished for evermore.


A northern wind, like the breath of God,

Leapt forth from the sky to the sea;

And the hideous stain off the rolling main

Was lifted right speedily.

A clear sweet night of diamond stars,

And a crew on their bended knees,

For the precious boon of a silver moon

That shone upon silver seas.