Here you will find the Long Poem The Quaker Graveyard in Nantucket of poet Robert Lowell
Let man have dominion over the fishes of the sea and the fowls of the air and the beasts and the whole earth, and every creeping creature that moveth upon the earth. I A brackish reach of shoal off Madaket,- The sea was still breaking violently and night Had steamed into our north Atlantic Fleet, when the drowned sailor clutched the drag-net. Light Flashed from his matted head and marble feet, He grappled at the net With the coiled, hurdling muscles of his thighs; The corpse was bloodless, a botch of red and whites, It's open, starring eyes Were lusterless dead-lights Or cabin-windows on a stranded hulk Heavy with sand. we weight the body, close Its eyes and heave it seaward whence it came, Where the heel-headed dogfish barks at its nose On Ahab's void and forehead; and the name Is blocked in yellow chalk. Sailors, who pitch this at the portent at the sea Where dreadnoughts shall confess It's hell-bent deity When you are powerless To sand-bag this Atlantic bulwark, faced By the earth-shaker, green, unwearied, chaste In his steel scales; ask for no Orphean lute To pluck life back. The guns of the steeled fleet Recoiled and then repeat The hoarse salute II. Whenever winds are moving and their breath Heaved at the roped-in bulwarks of this pier, Then terns and sea-gulls tremble at your death In these waters. Sailor, can you hear The Pequod's sea wings, beating landward, fall Headlong and break on our Atlantic wall Off 'Sconset, where the yawing S-boats-splash The bellbuoy, with ballooning spinnakers, As the entangled, screeching mainsheet clears The blocks: off Madaket, where lubbers lash The heavy surf and throw their long lead squids For blue-fish? Sea-gulls blink their heavy lids Seaward. The winds'wings beat upon the stones, Cousin, and scream for you and the claws rush At the sea's throat and wring it in the slush Of this old Quaker graveyard where the bones Cry out in the long night for the hurt beast Bobbing by Ahab's whaleboats in the East. III All you recovered from Poseidon died With you, my cousin, and the harrowed brine Is fruitless on the blue beard of the god, Stretching beyond us to the castles in Spain, Nantucket's westward haven. To Cape Cod Guns, cradled on the tide, Blast, the eelgrass about a waterclock Of bilge and backwash, roil the salt and the sand Lashing earth's scaffold, rock Our warships in the hand Of the great God, where time's contrition blues Whatever it was these Quaker sailor's lost In the mad scramble of their lives. They died When time was open-eyed, Wooden and childish; only bones abide There, in the nowhere, where their boats were tossed Sky-high, where mariners had fabled news Of IS, the whited monster. what it cost Them is their secret. In the sperm-whale's slick I see the Quakers drown and hear their cry: "If God himself had not been by our side, If God himself had not been on our side, When the Atlantic rose against us, why, Then it had swallowed us up quick." IV This is the end of the whaleroad and the whale Who spewed Nantucket bones on the thrashed swell And stirred the troubled waters to whirlpools To send the Pequod packing off to hell: This is the end of them, three quarters fools, Snatching at straws to sail Seaward and seaward on the turntail whale, Spouting out blood and water as it rolls Sick as a dog to these Atlantic shoals: Clamavimus, O depths. Let the sea-gulls wail For water, for the deep where the high tide Mutters to its hurt self, mutters and ebbs. Waves wallow in their wash, go out and out, Leave only the death-rattle of the crabs, The beach increasing, its enormous snout Sucking the ocean's side. This is the end of running on the waves; We are poured out like water. who will dance The mast-lashed master of Leviathans Up from this field of Quakers in their unstoned graves? V When the whales viscera go and the roll Of its corruption overruns this world Beyond tree-swept Nantucket and Wood's Hole whistle and fall and sink into the fat? In the great ash-pit of Jehoshapat The bones cry for the blood of the white whale, The fat flukes arch and whack about its ears, The death-lance churns into the sanctuary, tears The gun-blue swingle, heaving like a flail, And hacks the coiling life out: it works and drags And rips the sperm-whale's midriff into rags, Gobbets of blubber spill to wind and weather, Sailor and gulls go round the stoven timbers Where the morning stars sing out together And thunder shakes the white surf and dismembers The red flag hammered in the mast-head. Hide Our steel, Jonas Messias, in Thy side. VI Our Lady of Walsingham There once the penitents took off thei