A cunning hand ’ll hand you bread,
With freedom for your capers.
I’m not so sure of a cunning head;
It steers to pits or vapours.
But as for Life, we’ll bear in sight
The lesson Nature teaches;
Regard it in a sailoring light,
And treat it like thirsty leeches.
So, fly your jib, cries Roving Tim,
And top your boom, old raven!
The wind according to its whim
Is in and out of haven.
VI
She’ll take, to please her dame and dad,
The shopman nicely shaven.
She’ll learn to think o’ the marching lad
When perchers show they’re craven.
You say the shopman piles a heap,
While I perhaps am fasting;
And bless your wits, it haunts him in sleep,
His tin-kettle chance of lasting!
So hail the road, cries Roving Tim,
And hail the rain, old raven!
The wind according to its whim
Is in and out of haven.
VII
He’s half a wife, yon pecker bill;
A book and likewise preacher.
With any soul, in a game of skill,
He’ll prove your over-reacher.
The reason is, his brains are bent
On doing things right single.
You’d wish for them when pitching your tent
At night in a whirly dingle!
So, off we go, cries Roving Tim,
And on we go, old raven!
The wind according to its whim
Is in and out of haven.
VIII
Lord, no, man’s lot is not for bliss;
To call it woe is blindness:
It’ll here a kick, and it’s there a kiss,
And here and there a kindness.
He starts a hare and calls her joy;
He runs her down to sorrow:
The dogs within him bother the boy,
But ’tis a new day to-morrow.
So, I at helm, cries Roving Tim,
And you at bow, old raven!
The wind according to its whim
Is in and out of haven.
JUMP-TO-GLORY JANE
I
A revelation came on Jane,
The widow of a labouring swain:
And first her body trembled sharp,
Then all the woman was a harp
With winds along the strings; she heard,
Though there was neither tone nor word.