Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE ENGLISHMAN, by WALTER JOHN DE LA MARE Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: I met a sailor in the woods Last Line: With painted eyes to sea. Alternate Author Name(s): Ramal, Walter; De La Mare, Walter Subject(s): England; Sailing & Sailors; English; Seamen; Sails | ||||||||
I met a sailor in the woods, A silver ring wore he, His hair hung black, his eyes shone blue, And thus he said to me: -- 'What country, say, of this round earth, What shore of what salt sea, Be this, my son, I wander in, And looks so strange to me?' Says I, 'O foreign sailorman, In England now you be, This is her wood, and there her sky, And that her roaring sea.' He lifts his voice yet louder, 'What smell be this,' says he, 'My nose on the sharp morning air Snuffs up so greedily?' Says I, 'It is wild roses Do smell so winsomely, And winy briar too,' says I, 'That in these thickets be.' 'And oh!' says he, 'what leetle bird Is singing in you high tree, So every shrill and long-drawn note Like bubbles breaks in me?' Says I, 'It is the mavis That perches in the tree And sings so shrill, and sings so sweet, When dawn comes up the sea.' At which he fell a-musing, And fixed his eye on me, As one alone 'twixt light and dark A spirit thinks to see. 'England!' he whispers soft and harsh, 'England!' repeated he, 'And briar, and rose, and mavis, A-singing in yon high tree. 'Ye speak me true, my leetle son, So -- so, it came to me, A-drifting landwards on a spar, And grey dawn on the sea. 'Ay, ay, I could not be mistook; I knew them leafy trees, I knew that land so witchery sweet, And that old noise of seas. 'Though here I've sailed a score of years, And heard 'em, dream or wake, Lap small and hollow 'gainst my cheek, On sand and coral break; '"Yet now," my leetle son, says I, A-drifting on the wave, "That land I see so safe and green Is England, I believe. '"And that there wood is English wood, And this here cruel sea, The selfsame old blue ocean Years gone remembers me, '"A-sitting with my bread and butter Down behind yon chitterin' mill; And this same Marinere" -- (that's me), "Is that same leetle Will! -- '"That very same wee leetle Will Eating his bread and butter there, A-looking on the broad blue sea Betwixt his yaller hair!" 'And here be I, my son, throwed up Like corpses from the sea, Ships, stars, winds, tempests, pirates past, Yet leetle Will I be!' He said no more, that sailorman, But in a reverie Stared like the figure of a ship With painted eyes to sea. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SAILS OF MURMUR by ANSELM HOLLO THE RIME OF THE ANCIENT MARINER by SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE TOM BOWLING ['S EPITAPH] by CHARLES DIBDIN HOW'S MY BOY? by SYDNEY THOMPSON DOBELL LOVE AT SEA by THEOPHILE GAUTIER ALL THAT'S PAST by WALTER JOHN DE LA MARE |
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