July 27, 2005

Wednesday Is Poetry Day: The Submarine

Well, i'm back from San Diego. i ate too much food and got too much sun, but it was beautiful. My dad served on a carrier years ago, and we took a tour of the new USS Midway museum, which was fascinating. Lots to see for fans of Naval aviation, especially Vietnam era stuff. i'll post some pictures later. During the tour, i found this painting on a bulkhead in the forecastle.

thresher.jpg

Here's a submarine poem by the 20th Century New Zealand poet Will Lawson.


The Submarine

The grey of OceanÂ’s denseness
     Surrounds her like a veil;
In silent deepsÂ’ immenseness
     No laughing seas give hail;
But round her, rudely riven,
     The sullen waters feel
Her stout hull, engine-driven,
     A thrilling thing of steel
That cleaves a pathway under
     The breakersÂ’ snarling lips—
That mocks the big gunsÂ’ thunder
     And scorns the battle-ships.

She goes by deeps and shallows
     Â’Neath blue Australian seas,
Where never sun enhaloes
     A wandering ocean breeze;
Yet, at her steersmanÂ’s willing,
     She lifts her stalk-like eye
To see the sunlight spilling
     Its gold on sea and sky;
And, mirrored in fair colour,
     The picture true is thrown
Where, in the sea-light duller,
     Her spinning engines drone.

When, with her bearings taken,
     She plunges deep again,
She is as one forsaken,
     Beyond the world of men.
Yet living men tend truly
     Her tanksÂ’ and air-valvesÂ’ flow,
And oil her engines duly,
     For it was ordered so—
Aye, thoÂ’ beyond the borders
     Of human worlds they be,
Their orders still are orders,
     And what avails the sea?

Â’Neath bright electrics glowing
     They reck not that outside,
In age-long course, is flowing
     The grey-green under-tide.
By periscope and needle
     And pressure gauge they steer;
For who with steel can wheedle
     As does the engineer,
In whose quick brain is hidden
     The secrets of the stars—
Who on the storms has ridden,
     And hurled the thunder-cars?

He hears the steady murmur
     Of engines in the gloom.
Could deck or floor be firmer
     Than his deep engine-room?
And he whose touch the rudders
     Respond to like a child,
Calm, when she turns and shudders,
     With silent mien and mild—
He makes new pathways under
     The breakersÂ’ snarling lips;
He mocks the big gunsÂ’ thunder
     And scorns the battle-ships.



Posted by: annika at 08:18 AM | Comments (3) | Add Comment
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1 wow, you always come up with cool and/or neat stuff. haven't visited your blog in a few, but evertime i do, you have something new and interesting. keep up the great work!! (somebody notices)

Posted by: walter at July 27, 2005 12:15 PM (5KnIk)

2 I THOUGHT that I'd caught your scent on the wind.

Posted by: Casca at July 27, 2005 03:34 PM (qBTBH)

3 I'm not too much into poetry, but I have a few favorites, There was an old hermit named Nick...

Posted by: Kyle at July 27, 2005 03:50 PM (7Re84)

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