Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of Herman Melville > Text of Tom Deadlight
A poem by Herman Melville |
||
Tom Deadlight |
||
________________________________________________
Title: Tom Deadlight Author: Herman Melville [More Titles by Melville] During a tempest encountered homeward-bound from the Mediterranean, a grizzled petty-officer, one of the two captains of the forecastle, dying at night in his hammock, swung in the sick-bay under the tiered gun-decks of the British _Dreadnaught, 98,_ wandering in his mind, though with glimpses of sanity, and starting up at whiles, sings by snatches his good-bye and last injunctions to two messmates, his watchers, one of whom fans the fevered tar with the flap of his old sou'wester. Some names and phrases, with here and there a line, or part of one; these, in his aberration, wrested into incoherency from their original connection and import, he voluntarily derives, as he does the measure, from a famous old sea-ditty, whose cadences, long rife, and now humming in the collapsing brain, attune the last flutterings of distempered thought. Farewell and adieu to you noble hearties,-- I have hove my ship to, with main-top-sail aback, boys; I have worried through the waters that are called the Doldrums, But what's this I feel that is fanning my cheek, Matt? Dead reckoning, says _Joe_, it won't do to go by; The signal!--it streams for the grand fleet to anchor. But give me my _tot_, Matt, before I roll over; [The end] GO TO TOP OF SCREEN |