| | The ice was here, the ice was there, |
| The ice was all around. |
| |
O, WHITHER sail you, Sir John Franklin? | |
| Cried a whaler in Baffins Bay. | |
| To know if between the land and the pole | |
| I may find a broad sea-way. | |
| |
| I charge you back, Sir John Franklin, | 5 |
| As you would live and thrive; | |
| For between the land and the frozen pole | |
| No man may sail alive. | |
| |
| But lightly laughed the stout Sir John, | |
| And spoke unto his men: | 10 |
| Half England is wrong, if he be right; | |
| Bear off to westward then. | |
| |
| O, whither sail you, brave Englishman? | |
| Cried the little Esquimaux. | |
| Between your land and the polar star | 15 |
| My goodly vessels go. | |
| |
| Come down, if you would journey there, | |
| The little Indian said; | |
| And change your cloth for fur clothing, | |
| Your vessel for a sled. | 20 |
| |
| But lightly laughed the stout Sir John, | |
| And the crew laughed with him too: | |
| A sailor to change from ship to sled, | |
| I ween were something new! | |
| |
| All through the long, long polar day, | 25 |
| The vessels westward sped; | |
| And wherever the sail of Sir John was blown, | |
| The ice gave way and fled. | |
| |
| Gave way with many a hollow groan, | |
| And with many a surly roar, | 30 |
| But it murmured and threatened on every side, | |
| And closed where he sailed before. | |
| |
| Ho! see ye not, my merry men, | |
| The broad and open sea? | |
| Bethink ye what the whaler said | 35 |
| Think of the little Indians sled! | |
| The crew laughed out in glee. | |
| |
| Sir John, Sir John, tis bitter cold, | |
| The scud drives on the breeze, | |
| The ice comes looming from the north, | 40 |
| The very sunbeams freeze. | |
| |
| Bright summer goes, dark winter comes, | |
| We cannot rule the year; | |
| But long ere summers sun goes down, | |
| On yonder sea well steer. | 45 |
| |
| The dripping icebergs dipped and rose, | |
| And floundered down the gale; | |
| The ships were staid, the yards were manned, | |
| And furled the useless sail. | |
| |
| The summers gone, the winters come | 50 |
| We sail not on yonder sea: | |
| Why sail we not, Sir John Franklin? | |
| A silent man was he. | |
| |
| The summer goes, the winter comes | |
| We cannot rule the year: | 55 |
| I ween, we cannot rule the ways, | |
| Sir John, wherein wed steer. | |
| |
| The cruel ice came floating on, | |
| And closed beneath the lee, | |
| Till the thickening waters dashed no more; | 60 |
| Twas ice around, behind, before | |
| My God! there is no sea! | |
| |
| What think you of the whaler now? | |
| What of the Esquimaux? | |
| A sled were better than a ship | 65 |
| To cruise through ice and snow. | |
| |
| Down sank the baleful crimson sun, | |
| The northern light came out, | |
| And glared upon the ice-bound ships, | |
| And shook its spears about. | 70 |
| |
| The snow came down, storm breeding storm, | |
| And on the decks was laid, | |
| Till the weary sailor, sick at heart, | |
| Sank down beside his spade. | |
| |
| Sir John, the night is black and long, | 75 |
| The hissing wind is bleak, | |
| The hard green ice as strong as death: | |
| I prithee, Captain, speak! | |
| |
| The night is neither bright nor short, | |
| The singing breeze is cold, | 80 |
| The ice is not so strong as hope | |
| The heart of man is bold! | |
| |
| What hope can scale this icy wall, | |
| High over the main flag-staff? | |
| Above the ridges the wolf and bear | 85 |
| Look down, with a patient, settled stare, | |
| Look down on us and laugh. | |
| |
| The summer went, the winter came | |
| We could not rule the year; | |
| But summer will melt the ice again, | 90 |
| And open a path to the sunny main, | |
| Whereon our ships shall steer. | |
| |
| The winter went, the summer went, | |
| The winter came around; | |
| But the hard green ice was strong as death, | 95 |
| And the voice of hope sank to a breath, | |
| Yet caught at every sound. | |
| |
| Hark! heard you not the noise of guns? | |
| And there, and there, again? | |
| Tis some uneasy icebergs roar, | 100 |
| As he turns in the frozen main. | |
| |
| Hurra! hurra! the Esquimaux | |
| Across the ice-fields steal: | |
| God give them grace for their charity! | |
| Ye pray for the silly seal. | 105 |
| |
| Sir John, where are the English fields, | |
| And where are the English trees, | |
| And where are the little English flowers | |
| That open in the breeze? | |
| |
| Be still, be still, my brave sailors! | 110 |
| You shall see the fields again, | |
| And smell the scent of the opening flowers, | |
| The grass, and the waving grain. | |
| |
| O! when shall I see my orphan child? | |
| My Mary waits for me. | 115 |
| O! when shall I see my old mother, | |
| And pray at her trembling knee? | |
| |
| Be still, be still, my brave sailors! | |
| Think not such thoughts again. | |
| But a tear froze slowly on his cheek; | 120 |
| He thought of Lady Jane. | |
| |
| Ah! bitter, bitter grows the cold, | |
| The ice grows more and more; | |
| More settled stare the wolf and bear, | |
| More patient than before. | 125 |
| |
| O! think you, good Sir John Franklin, | |
| Well ever see the land? | |
| Twas cruel to send us here to starve, | |
| Without a helping hand. | |
| |
| Twas cruel, Sir John, to send us here, | 130 |
| So far from help or home, | |
| To starve and freeze on this lonely sea; | |
| I ween, the Lords of the Admiralty | |
| Would rather send than come. | |
| |
| O! whether we starve to death alone, | 135 |
| Or sail to our own country, | |
| We have done what man has never done | |
| The truth is found, the secret won | |
| We passed the Northern Sea! | |
| |