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Poems on Several Occasions

Written by Charles Cotton

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The Storm.
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
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199

The Storm.

To the Earl of ---
How with ill Nature does this World abound!
When I, who ever thought my self most sound,
And free from that infection, now must chuse
Out you, (my Lord,) whom least I should abuse
To trouble with a Tempest, who have none
In your firm Breast t'afflict you of your own;
But since of Friendship it the nature is,
In any accident that falls amiss,
Whether of sorrow, terrour, loss, or pain,
Caus'd or by Men or Fortune, to complain
To those who of our ills have deepest sense,
And in whose savour we've most confidence.

200

Pardon, if in a Storm I here engage
Your calmer thoughts, and on a Sea, whose rage,
When but a little mov'd, as far outbraves
The tamer Mutinies of Adria's Waves,
As they, when worst for Neptune to appease
The softest curls of most pacifick Seas;
And though I'm vain enough half to believe
My danger will some little trouble give,
I yet more vainly fansie 'twill advance
Your pleasure too, for my deliverance.
'Twas now the time of year, of all the rest,
For slow, but certain Navigation best;
The Earth had dress'd her self so fine and gay,
That all the World, our little World, was May;
The Sea too, had put on his smoothest face,
Clear, slick, and even as a Looking-glass;

201

The rugged Winds were lock'd up in their Gaoles,
And were but Zephyrs whisper'd in the Sails;
All Nature seem'd to court us to our woe;
Good God! can Elements dissemble too?
Whilst we, secure, consider'd not the whiles
That greatest Treasons lie conceal'd in smiles.
Aboard we went, and soon were under Sail,
But with so small an over-modest Gale,
And to our Virgin Canvass so unkind,
As not to swell their laps with so much wind,
As common courtship would in breeding pay
To Maids less buxom and less trim than they.
But of this Calm we could not long complain,
For scarcely were we got out to the Main
From the still Harbour but a League, no more,
When the false Wind (that seem'd so chaste before)

202

The Ship's lac'd Smock began to stretch and tear,
Not like a Suitor, but a Ravisher;
As if delight were lessen'd by consent,
And tasted worse for being innocent.
A Sable Curtain, in a little space,
Of thick wove Clouds was drawn o'er Phœbus face,
He might not see the horrour of the fight,
Nor we the comfort of his heav'nly light:
Then, as this darkness had the Signal been,
At which the furious Storm was to begin,
Heaven's loud Artillery began to play,
And with pale flashes made a dreadfull day:
The Centre shook by these, the Ocean
In hills of Brine to swell and heave began;
Which growing Mountains, as they rolling hit,
To surge and foam, each other broke and split,
Like men, who, in intestine storms of state,
Strike any they nor know, nor yet for what;

203

But with the stream of fury headlong run
To war, they know not how nor why begun.
In this disorder streight the winds forlorn,
Which had lain ambush'd all the flatt'ring Morn,
With unexpected fury rushes in,
The ruffling Skirmish rudely to begin;
The Sea with Thunder-claps allarm'd before,
Assaulted thus anew, began to roar.
In Waves, that striving which should fastest run,
Crouded themselves into confusion.
At which advantage Æolus brought on
His large spread Wings, and main Battallion,
When by opposing shoars the flying Foe
Forc'd back against the Enemy to flow,
So great a conflict follow'd, as if here
Th' enraged Enemies embattel'd were;

204

Not only one another to subdue,
But to destroy themselves and Nature too.
To paint this Horrour to the life; weak Art
Must want a hand, Humanity a heart,
And I, the bare Relation whilst I make,
Methinks am brave, my hand still does not shake;
For surely since men first in Planks of wood
Themselves committed to the faithless Floud,
Men born and bred at Sea, did ne'er behold
Neptune in such prodigious furrows roll'd;
Those winds, which with the loudest terrour roar,
Never so stretch'd their lungs and cheeks before;
Nor on this floating stage has ever been
So black a Scene of dreadfull ruine seen.
Poor Yacht! in such a Sea how canst thou live?
What ransome would not thy pale Tenants give

205

To be set down on the most desp'rate shoar,
Where Serpents hiss, Tygers and Lyons roar,
And where the men, inhumane Savages,
Are yet worse Vermin, greater Brutes than these?
Who would not for a danger that may be
Exchange a certain ruine that they see?
For such, unto our Reason, or our fear,
Ours did in truth most manifest appear;
And how could we expect a better end,
When Winds and Seas seem'd only to contend,
Not which should conquer other in this War,
But in our wreck which should have greatest share?
The Winds were all let loose upon the Main,
And every wind that blew a Hurricane,
Nereus's whole pow'r too muster'd seem'd to be,
Wave rode on wave, and every wave a Sea.
Of our small Bark gusts rush'd the trembling sides
Against vast billows that contain'd whole Tides,

206

Which in disdainfull fury beat her back
With such a force, as made her stout sides crack,
'Gainst others that in crowds came rolling in,
As if they meant their liquid walls between
T'engage the wretched hulk, and crush her flat,
And make her squeeze to death her dying fraight.
Sometimes she on a Mountain's ridge would ride,
And from that height her gliding Keel then slide
Into a Gulf yawning, and deep as Hell,
Whilst we were swooning all the while we fell;
Then by another billow rais'd so high,
As if the Sea would dart her into th' Sky,
To be a Pinnace to the Argosie;
Then down a precipice so low and steep,
As it had been the bottom of the Deep:
Thus whilst we up and down, and to and fro,
We're miserably toss'd and bandi'd so,

207

'Twas strange our little Pink, though ne'er so tight,
Could weather't so, and keep her self upright;
Or was not sunk with weight of our despair,
For Hope, alas! could find no ank'ring there:
Her Prow, and Poop, Star-board, and Lar-board side
B'ing with these Elements so hotly pli'd,
'Twas no less than a Miracle her seams
Not ripp'd and open'd, and her very Beams
Continu'd faithfull in these loud extremes;
That her tall Masts, so often bow'd and bent
With gust on gust, were not already spent;
That all, or any thing indeed withstood
A Sea so hollow, such a high wrought Floud.
Here, where no Sea-man's Art nor strength avails,
Where use of Compass, Rudder, or of Sails,
There now was none; the Mariners all stood
Bloudless and cold as we; or though they cou'd

208

Something, perhaps, have help'd in such a stress,
Were ev'ry one astonish'd ne'ertheless
To that degree, they either had no heart
Their Art to use, or had forgot their Art.
Meanwhile the miserable Passengers,
With sighs the hardest, the more soft with tears,
Mercy of Heav'n in various accents crav'd,
But after drowning hoping to be sav'd.
How oft, by fear of dying, did we die?
And every death, a death of cruelty,
Worse than worst Cruelties provok'd impose
On the most hated, most offending Foes.
We fansi'd death riding on every Wave,
And every hollow seem'd a gaping Grave:
All things we saw such horrour did present,
And all of dying too were so intent,
Ev'ry one thought himself already dead,
And that for him the tears he saw were shed.

209

Such as had not the courage to behold
Their danger above deck, within the Hold
Utter'd such groans in that their floating Grave,
As even unto terrour terrour gave;
Whilst those above pale, dead, and cold appear,
Like Ghosts in Charon's Boat that sailing were.
The last day's dread, which none can comprehend,
But to weak fancy only recommend,
To form the dreadfull Image from sick fear,
That fear and fancy both were height'ned here
With such a face of horrour, as alone
Was fit to prompt Imagination,
Or to create it where there had been none.
Such as from under Hatches thrust a head
T'enquire what news, seem'd rising from the dead,
Whilst those who stai'd above, bloudless with fear,
And gastly look, as they new risen were.

210

The bold and timorous, with like horrour struck,
Were not to be distinguish'd by their look;
And he who could the greatest courage boast
Howe'er within, look'd still as like a Ghost.
Ten hours in this rude Tempest we were toss'd,
And ev'ry moment gave our selves for lost;
Heav'n knows how ill prepar'd for sudden death,
When the rough winds, as they'd been out of breath,
Now seem'd to pant, and panting to retreat,
The Waves with gentler force against us beat;
The Sky clear'd up, the Sun again shone bright,
And gave us once again new life and light;
We could again bear sail in those rough Seas,
The Sea-men now resume their offices;
Hope warm'd us now anew, anew the heart
Did to our cheeks some streaks of bloud impart;

211

And in two hours, or very little more,
We came to Anchor Faulcon-shot from shoar,
The very same we left the Morn before;
Where now in a yet working Sea, and high,
Untill the wind shall veere, we rolling lie,
Resting secure from present fear; but then
The dangers we escap'd must tempt agen;
Which if again I safely shall get through,
And sure I know the worst the Sea can doe)
So soon as I shall touch my native Land,
I'll thence ride Post to kiss your Lordship's hand.