Close to the Edge

Close to the Edge

A Poem by David Lewis Paget

My father was a sailor

He was always off the shore,

And I’d watch his sailboat ‘Ransom’

As it gaff-rigged past our door,

And he told me - ‘When you’re old enough

I’ll show you where they dwell,

The mermaids, with their necklaces,

Made out of cockleshells!

 

Then out on the verandah

He would stare straight out to sea,

Where the sun meets the horizon

Then he’d sit me on his knee,

And he’d tell me tales of Morgan,

Tales of Captain Kidd and Co.,

When they roamed the Caribbean

In the days of long ago.

 

He would sail out in the summer,

He would sail out in the fall,

He would sail to the horizon

In the mist, and through a squall,

And he always took his bo’sun

‘Shifty’ Dick, who trimmed the sail,

Drank the ‘Ransom’ dry of whiskey,

Lashed his wrist, hard to the rail.

 

Then one winter, storm capped waters

Beat unceasing on our shore,

And my mother lit the lantern

Kept a vigil by the door.

But the ‘Ransom’ kept its secrets

Never came to shore again,

And my father joined the history

Of all seafaring men!

 

I grew and took my lessons

In a little trailer-sail,

When my mother wasn’t watching;

She would cry, and she would wail:

‘Don’t you ever let me catch you,

Staring, looking out to sea,

It’s enough I lost your father…’

‘Never fret! You won’t lose me!’

 

For years I watched them leaving,

All the magic sailing boats,

Some were worth a clear million,

While some could barely float!

I watched as they sailed out, and then

I watched on their return,

But some were lost forever,

Sunk - Exploded - Overturned!

 

I bought a gaff-rigged schooner,

It had seen far better days,

But I patched it and I painted it,

I called it the ‘Sea Haze’;

I took it out with friends -

We didn’t venture out too far -

But learnt to jib, and trim the sail,

To run along the shore!

 

Then finally I headed out

To where it all began,

Beyond the far horizon

Where the ‘Ransom’ cut and ran,

The clouds began to gather

And the shades began to steal,

The waves broke on the forward deck

And I clung to the wheel.

 

The storm clouds that had gathered

Opened up and thundered rain,

It beat upon the masthead, and it

Lashed the sagging main,

It soaked my tiny cabin and it

Churned the heaving sea,

The waves on the horizon

Lay in wait out there, for me!

 

I sailed right through some warp of space

Or time, or so it seemed,

For then it was I caught a sight

Out there - a Quinquereme!

The rows of oars were stilled, I saw,

But some unholy moan,

Broke through the madness of the storm

And chilled me to the bone!

 

And then I saw a Galleass,

And then I saw a tramp,

To port there was a Brigantine

To starboard there, a lamp!

A single lamp to light the way

I took my bearings then,

No sign of a horizon there,

I sailed toward the end!

 

The sea, it fell away just there

And all I saw was space,

The ancients said the earth was flat,

My heart began to race.

A thousand ships lay still out there

A Cruiser, Barque, a Dredge!

They’d sailed in space there since the day

They sailed right off the edge!

 

The ‘Sea Haze’ raced along a line

Just inches from dismay,

I turned the wheel to head back home,

To live another day,

And then I saw the ‘Ransom’ turning

Slowly in the sky,

While ‘Shifty’ Dick, still tethered,

Floated wide and still and dry!

 

The ‘Sea Haze’ sits at anchor still

Just out from my back door,

She sank a dozen years ago,

Sat down, hard on the shore.

I never stare out at the sea,

The sea I thought I knew,

For who’d believe the earth was flat?

That’s right! - Not even you!

 

David Lewis Paget

© 2012 David Lewis Paget


My Review

Would you like to review this Poem?
Login | Register




Featured Review

The call of the sea is a powerful siren and no woman can compete to one who hears the song. Not wife, not mother not girl can hold their own to the beauty and lure of the calling. But the sea is a fickle mistress and her temper harsh to those who fail to respect and fear her. He was lucky to have lived to tell the tale. Excellent feel with the drama only you can add.

Posted 12 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.




Reviews

This is a real story. Adventures, the sea and a mother with concern. I like the father's story. Tempting a young mind and heart with tales of the sea. No weakness in this poem. Held me to the excellent ending. Thank you for the outstanding story.
Coyote

Posted 12 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

I'm enjoying your writes by way of Tate Morgan, your writes are story driven with rhythm and good rhyming, tight and well crafted, hats off Mr. Paget

Posted 12 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

The call of the sea is a powerful siren and no woman can compete to one who hears the song. Not wife, not mother not girl can hold their own to the beauty and lure of the calling. But the sea is a fickle mistress and her temper harsh to those who fail to respect and fear her. He was lucky to have lived to tell the tale. Excellent feel with the drama only you can add.

Posted 12 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

[send message][befriend] Subscribe
Kes
Oh it sounds so effortless! How do you do it?
I can never hold a story and a rhyming pattern together at the same time. Fantastic work. :)

Posted 12 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Awesome write. You are a great writer and your thoughts are set to roam and capture vast tales in a few artistic words. I like the darkness in this piece. Beyond perception as usual ;-)

Posted 12 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

I am in love with your unique style of telling stories in poetic form, rhymes to match each emotion is unique in itself, lines " The sea, it fell away just there
And all I saw was space, The ancients said the earth was flat, My heart began to race. A thousand ships lay still out there, A Cruiser, Barque, a Dredge! They’d sailed in space there since the day They sailed right off the edge!" takes the entire story to a new level where you become part of what must have happened when it happened. Great peice

Posted 12 Years Ago


Excellent! this was a GREAT piece of art here. I loved this story I was so enticed by every stanza and every line. This was so well written I must say I'm a fan. Great job! Excellent work

Posted 12 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

What an awesome turn of events here. Would've never guessed where it was going. Delightful, thanks.

Posted 12 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

A delightful write, very nicely crafted

Posted 12 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

A great tale in the inimitable Paget style. That the lad set out in search of his father, who had sworn to show him where the Mermaids lay. and who KEPT that promise, only to return with boat, but without mermaid or Father...or further seafaring desire...seems the simile here is that dad was warning the lad that all that flippers is not gold!

Posted 12 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.


Share This
Email
Facebook
Twitter
Request Read Request
Add to Library My Library
Subscribe Subscribe


Stats

1317 Views
36 Reviews
Rating
Shelved in 3 Libraries
Added on January 8, 2012
Last Updated on June 6, 2012
Tags: sailor, yachts, horizon, quinquereme

Author

David Lewis Paget
David Lewis Paget

Moonta, South Australia, Australia



About
more..

Writing

Related Writing

People who liked this story also liked..