Gateway to the Classics: Poems Every Child Should Know by Mary E. Burt
 
Poems Every Child Should Know by  Mary E. Burt

The Inchcape Rock

The man is wrecked and his ship is sunken before he ever steps on board or sees the water if his heart is hard and his estimate of human beings low. "The Inchcape Rock" is a thrust at hard-heartedness. "What is the use of life?" To bear one another's burdens, to develop a genius for pulling people through hard places—that's the use of life. It is the last resort of a mean mind to crack jokes that wreck innocent voyagers on life's sea. (1774-1843.)

No stir in the air, no stir in the sea,

The ship was still as she could be;

Her sails from heaven received no motion;

Her keel was steady in the ocean.


Without either sign or sound of their shock,

The waves flowed over the Inchcape Rock;

So little they rose, so little they fell,

They did not move the Inchcape Bell.


The Abbot of Aberbrothok

Had placed that Bell on the Inchcape Rock;

On a buoy in the storm it floated and swung,

And over the waves its warning rung.


When the Rock was hid by the surge's swell,

The mariners heard the warning Bell;

And then they knew the perilous Rock,

And blest the Abbot of Aberbrothok.


The sun in heaven was shining gay;

All things were joyful on that day;

The sea-birds screamed as they wheeled round,

And there was joyance in their sound.


The buoy of the Inchcape Bell was seen,

A dark spot on the ocean green;

Sir Ralph the Rover walked his deck,

And he fixed his eye on the darker speck.


He felt the cheering power of spring;

It made him whistle, it made him sing:

His heart was mirthful to excess,

But the Rover's mirth was wickedness.


His eye was on the Inchcape float.

Quoth he, "My men, put out the boat

And row me to the Inchcape Rock,

And I'll plague the Abbot of Aberbrothok."


The boat is lowered, the boatmen row,

And to the Inchcape Rock they go;

Sir Ralph bent over from the boat,

And he cut the Bell from the Inchcape float.


Down sank the Bell with a gurgling sound;

The bubbles rose and burst around.

Quoth Sir Ralph, "The next who comes to the Rock

Won't bless the Abbot of Aberbrothok."


Sir Ralph the Rover sailed away;

He scoured the sea for many a day;

And now grown rich with plundered store,

He steers his course for Scotland's shore.


So thick a haze o'erspread the sky,

They cannot see the sun on high:

The wind hath blown a gale all day,

At evening it hath died away.


On the deck the Rover takes his stand;

So dark it is they see no land.

Quoth Sir Ralph, "It will be brighter soon,

For there is the dawn of the rising moon."


"Canst hear," said one, "the broken roar?

For methinks we should be near the shore."

"Now where we are I cannot tell,

But I wish I could hear the Inchcape Bell."


They hear no sound; the swell is strong;

Though the wind hath fallen, they drift along

Till the vessel strikes with a shivering shock:

"O Christ! it is the Inchcape Rock!"


Sir Ralph the Rover tore his hair,

He curst himself in his despair:

The waves rush in on every side,

The ship is sinking beneath the tide.


But, even in his dying fear,

One dreadful sound could the Rover hear,—

A sound as if with the Inchcape Bell

The Devil below was ringing his knell.


Robert Southey.


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