Edmund Clarence Stedman, ed. (1833–1908). A Victorian Anthology, 1837–1895. 1895.
Sir Joseph Noel Paton b. 1821The Last of the Eurydice
T
As tight a craft, I ween,
As ever bore brave men who lov’d
Their country and their queen—
Built when a ship, sir, was a ship,
And not a steam-machine.
Cruising the Indian sea;
And now, with all her canvas bent—
A fresh breeze blowing free—
Up Channel in her pride she came,
The brave Eurydice.
The English cliffs appear,
And fore and aft, from man and boy,
Uprang one mighty cheer;
While many a rough-and-ready hand
Dash’d off the gathering tear.
Fair in the Sabbath sun;
We mark’d each hamlet gleaming white,
The church spires, one by one;
We thought we heard the church bells ring
To hail our voyage done.
Only an hour from home!”
So sang the captain’s cheery voice
As we spurn’d the ebbing foam;
And each young sea-dog’s heart sang back
“Only an hour from home!”
To tell of danger nigh;
Nor looming rack, nor driving scud—
From out a smiling sky,
With sound as of the trump of doom,
The squall broke suddenly.
From off the Shanklin shore;
It caught us in its blinding whirl
One instant, and no more;
For, ere we dream’d of trouble near,
All earthly hope was o’er.
To change the vessel’s course;
The storm had caught her crowded masts
With swift, resistless force.
Only one shrill, despairing cry
Rose o’er the tumult hoarse.
Amid the swirling foam;
And with her nigh four hundred men
Went down, in sight of home,
(Fletcher and I alone were sav’d)
Only an hour from home!