THE ADMIRAL’S STORY

This the Admiral told,

The Admiral early-old,

Gentle, and tragic-eyed,

The year before he died;

Told to the lads of the street,

At the Settlement where they meet,

Jake and Patsy and Pete,

Sons of the lean East Side.

Eyes of the Irish blue,

Jewel-bright eyes of the Jew,

Stared at him, wonder-wide,

As he stood there blanched and frail,

Telling a world-known tale

With a look that was far away.

Some that were once as they,

Aliens, lads of the street,

Served with the great gray fleet

On Santiago Day.

They looked upon him then

With eyes that did not swerve,

Gravely; they too were men;

Haply they too might serve!

Sunday it was, he said;

The warm sky overhead

Bright blue, without a fleck;

And the flagship steaming east

To Shafter at Siboney,

With the Admiral on her deck.

Westward the Morro lay,

Seven long miles at least.

(Each in her station right,

The gray ships ranged in a ring;

Slender the Spaniard’s chance for flight!

So grim birds on a poising wing

Threaten a wounded beast.)

Suddenly burst from the Morro bluff

One round, cloud-white puff!

Nobody felt a doubt:

The Spaniard was coming out,

And the Admiral seven miles east—

Seven long miles at least!

(Ah, fate’s master-stroke,

Irony royal-rare!

After the long blockade

And the patient plans well laid,

The search-light’s sleepless glare

And the growl of the cannonade—

The whole fleet bid to the battle-feast,

And the Admiral seven miles east!)

Forth from the channel they came,—

Adventure of despair!—

Each stately and splendid name

Foredoomed to thunder and flame,

Foredoomed to ruin and fame,

But the Admiral was not there!

He saw from afar his ships close in,

The smoke-veils thicken, the chase begin,

(And O for wings! sighed the Admiral’s heart,

As the flagship followed, apart.)

“Then it was, as we speeded west,

Just as the flagship came abreast

Of the poor Theresa there, on the beach,

And the Almirante Oquendo, each

Wrecked and ablaze,” he said,

“We saw on the seaward side,

All alone in the waters wide,

Rising and falling, the round black head

Of a Spanish sailor as good as dead,

Fighting death in the sea.

“Strange it seemed when the strife

Shrank to a single man,

Fighting alone for his life!

One of the flagship’s crew

A second stood at a loss,

Then leaped and shouted and ran

And reached and lifted and threw

The desk with the wooden cross

Where the chaplain used to read.

He hurled it over the side.

‘Dago, cling to the Cross

And you shall be saved!’ he cried.

And the thing was so indeed.

“Strange, how the terrible battle-strain

Goes like wine to the brain!

Those were the words we heard him speak,

With a twitch of his leathern cheek.

Did he jest? would his own soul know?

Dago, cling to the Cross

And you shall be saved!’ he cried;

And indeed the thing was so.”

This the Admiral told

To the boys of alien race,

Each eager, sparkling face

Insistently outthrust

To hear and to behold;

He, robbed of his desire,

Gentle and blanched and frail,

War’s martyr, ashen-pale,

Burnt brittle in that fire,—

And now a long time dust.