The Plank

The Plank

(A Double Rondeau)

Whose turn next to take his standWhere the plank reels black above the blue,—To wrench in vain at the fettered hand?—Ere the sea shall smother the last adieu?’Mid the gibes and jeers of the conquering crewAt the devil’s drift of the dread commandThat ends the hopeless interview,—Whose turn next to take his standOn the oaken road to a farther land,(Narrow and oaken, seen of few,For the eye were steady indeed that scannedWhere the plank reels black above the blue)To know the fear of the souls that slew,The thrust in the back of the goading brand,To feel on the forehead the fatal dew,To wrench in vain at the fettered hand,With head held high, but heart unmanned,With cheek turned pale to the breeze that blew,—For his bones shall lie on the dipsey sandEre the sea shall smother the last adieu?Gods of the false, and gods of the true!Grant that these fiends may understandThe things that on their plank we knew!—That one may say to that cursed band:Whose turn next?

Whose turn next to take his standWhere the plank reels black above the blue,—To wrench in vain at the fettered hand?—Ere the sea shall smother the last adieu?’Mid the gibes and jeers of the conquering crewAt the devil’s drift of the dread commandThat ends the hopeless interview,—Whose turn next to take his standOn the oaken road to a farther land,(Narrow and oaken, seen of few,For the eye were steady indeed that scannedWhere the plank reels black above the blue)To know the fear of the souls that slew,The thrust in the back of the goading brand,To feel on the forehead the fatal dew,To wrench in vain at the fettered hand,With head held high, but heart unmanned,With cheek turned pale to the breeze that blew,—For his bones shall lie on the dipsey sandEre the sea shall smother the last adieu?Gods of the false, and gods of the true!Grant that these fiends may understandThe things that on their plank we knew!—That one may say to that cursed band:Whose turn next?

Whose turn next to take his standWhere the plank reels black above the blue,—To wrench in vain at the fettered hand?—Ere the sea shall smother the last adieu?

Whose turn next to take his stand

Where the plank reels black above the blue,—

To wrench in vain at the fettered hand?—

Ere the sea shall smother the last adieu?

’Mid the gibes and jeers of the conquering crewAt the devil’s drift of the dread commandThat ends the hopeless interview,—Whose turn next to take his stand

’Mid the gibes and jeers of the conquering crew

At the devil’s drift of the dread command

That ends the hopeless interview,—

Whose turn next to take his stand

On the oaken road to a farther land,(Narrow and oaken, seen of few,For the eye were steady indeed that scannedWhere the plank reels black above the blue)

On the oaken road to a farther land,

(Narrow and oaken, seen of few,

For the eye were steady indeed that scanned

Where the plank reels black above the blue)

To know the fear of the souls that slew,The thrust in the back of the goading brand,To feel on the forehead the fatal dew,To wrench in vain at the fettered hand,

To know the fear of the souls that slew,

The thrust in the back of the goading brand,

To feel on the forehead the fatal dew,

To wrench in vain at the fettered hand,

With head held high, but heart unmanned,With cheek turned pale to the breeze that blew,—For his bones shall lie on the dipsey sandEre the sea shall smother the last adieu?

With head held high, but heart unmanned,

With cheek turned pale to the breeze that blew,—

For his bones shall lie on the dipsey sand

Ere the sea shall smother the last adieu?

Gods of the false, and gods of the true!Grant that these fiends may understandThe things that on their plank we knew!—That one may say to that cursed band:Whose turn next?

Gods of the false, and gods of the true!

Grant that these fiends may understand

The things that on their plank we knew!—

That one may say to that cursed band:

Whose turn next?


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