Skip to content
Linespedia

Treasure Trove

Topics: classic

We were a crew of what you please,     Men with the lust of gold gone mad;     Dutch and Yankee and Portuguese,     With a nigger or two from Trinidad,     The scum of the Caribbees:     Outbound, outbound for a treasure ground,     A pirate isle no man had found,     A long-lost isle in the Southern Seas,     An isle of the Southern Seas.     We sailed our ship by a chart we bore,     The parchment script of a buccaneer,     Whose skeleton, found on a Carib shore,     Had kept its secret for many a year,     Locked in a buckle of belt it wore.     And the dim chart told of buried gold,     A hidden harbor and pirate hold,     On an isle that seamen touched no more,     That sailors knew no more.     We were a crew of Devil-may-care,     Who staked our lives on a bit of a scrawl;     Who diced each other for lot and share     Or ever we hoisted sail at all,     Or the brine blew through our hair.     At last with a hail for calm or gale,     The wind of adventure in our sail,     We piped up anchor and did our dare,     Steered for the Island there.     From Porto Bello to Isle of France,     And thence South East our chart read plain:     We followed the route of old Romance,     The plate-ship route of the Spanish Main,     The old wild route of Chance.     Black Beard sailed it and Jean Lafitte;     And Drake and Morgan, and many a fleet     Of pillage once that led the dance,     Spain's golden-galleon dance.     Moidores, guineas, and pieces-of-eight;     Doubloons round as the gibbous moon;     All the wealth that they sacked as freight     In the good old days' of the piccaroon,     We dreamed of soon and late:     And gems of the East, of which the least     Would grace a Khan's or a Caliph's feast,     And chest on chest of Spanish plate,     Great chests of Spanish plate.     The wind blew fair from Panama;     For a month the wind blew fair and free;     We steered our ship by the gold we saw     In the far-off script of a century,     Wherein men knew no law.     We held our course, for better or worse,     Now with a song and now with a curse,     According to the lots we'd draw,     Rum or the lots we'd draw.     We had not reckoned on destiny,     And him all seamen dread, they say,     That captain, old in infamy,     Who holds to Hell till the Judgment Day,     And takes of Earth his fee.     Oh, black and black is the South Sea track     Of the skeleton Captain, Yellow Jack,     Who sweeps with his boneyard crew the sea,     The hurricane-haunted sea.          .    .    .    .    .    .          Six weeks we lay in the doldrums; dead;     Six weeks that rotted us with delay,     Till a gale sprang up and drove us ahead,     Out of our course, for a week and a day,     Till we deemed we were Dutchman-led.     When the gale was done, why, one by one,     The scurvy took us, every son,     And mutiny down in the hold was bred,     Mutiny then was bred.     At last on our bow we sighted shore,     A wild crag circled of cloud and sea;     Our pirate isle, where ceaselessly     The rock-fanged surf kept up its roar     Round a towering bluff and tree,     Where the chart was marked that the gold should be:     Cliffs that the seafowl clamored o'er,     With the dragging seaweed hoar.     A smudge of mist and a gleam that died,     And a muttering down below     And night was on us at a stride,     And, God! how it came to blow!     And a man went over the side:     Then fore and aft of our crazy craft     Corposants glimmered and Madness laughed,     And a voice from the Island wild replied,     A dmon voice replied.     Three nights and days of the hurncane's rage.     What curse now held us off!     We never would win to an anchorage,     We thought, when, ho! with a scoff     The Island thundered, "Come take your wage!"     And, lo, that night by the thin moonlight     We found our ship in a bay or bight,     That seemed a part of another age,     A far-off pirate age.     Our ship a-leak and her pumps all jammed     We won to the Harbor of Yellow Jack;     And so it was that he took command     And hoisted his skeleton flag of black,     And our decks with dead men crammed.     But we we found the treasure ground     Where some went mad and some were drowned     For the gold, you see, was damned, was damned,     The gold you see was damned.

AI analysis available. Enable JavaScript to interact.

About this line

"We were a crew of what you please,..."

Exploring the themes of classic, Madison Julius Cawein delivers a powerful performance in "Treasure Trove"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

Classified Tags

Related lines

"I saw the daughters of the ocean dance     With wind and tide, and heard them on the rocks:     White hands they waved me, tossing sunlit locks,"

"Listen, dearest! you must love me more,     More than you did before!     Hark, what a beating here of wings!     Never at rest,     Dear, in"

"I.     O Dark-Eyed goddess of the marble brow,     Whose look is silence and whose touch is night,     Who walkest lonely through the world, O tho"

"God made that night of pearl and ivory,     Perfect and holy as a holy thought     Born of perfection, dreams, and ecstasy,     In love and sil"

"Here morning in the ploughman's songs is met     Ere yet one footstep shows in all the sky,     And twilight in the east, a doubt as yet,     S"

"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

Continue Reading

"I saw the daughters of the ocean dance     With wi..."

Weekly Poetic Insight

Join our literary Sanctuary

Get the most inspiring lines, poetic analysis, and secret shayaris delivered to your inbox every Sunday.