A CROON ON HENNACLIFF - Rabindranath Tagore Poems

 
 

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A CROON ON HENNACLIFF

Thus said the rushing raven,
    Unto his hungry mate, --
"Ho! gossip! for Bude Haven:
    There be corpses six or eight.
Cawk! cawk! the crew and skipper,
    Are wallowing in the sea:
So there's a savoury supper
    For my old dame and me."

"Cawk! gaffer! thou art dreaming,
    The shore hath wreckers bold;
Would rend the yelling seamen,
    From the clutching billows hold.
Cawk! cawk! they'd bound for booty
    Into the dragon's den:
And shout, for `death or duty,'
    If the prey were drowning men."

Loud laughed the listening surges,
    At the guess our grandame gave:
You might call them Boanerges,
    From the thunder of their wave.
And mockery followed after
    The sea-bird's jeering brood:
That filled the skies with laughter,
    From Lundy Light to Bude.

"Cawk! cawk!" then said the raven,
    "I am fourscore years and ten:
Yet never in Bude Haven,
    Did I croak for rescued men. --
They will save the Captain's girdle,
    And shirt, if shirt there be:
But leave their blood to curdle,
    For my old dame and me."

So said the rushing raven,
    Unto his hungry mate, --
"Ho! gossip! for Bude Haven:
    There be corpses six or eight.
Cawk! cawk! the crew and skipper,
    Are wallowing in the sea:
O what a savoury supper,
    For my old dame and me."