Edwin Arlington Robinson (1869–1935). Collected Poems. 1921.
III. Captain Craig, Etc.3. The Return of Morgan and Fingal
A
Together again, we three:
Morgan, Fingal, fiddle, and all,
They had come for the night with me.
There were songs in Fingal’s throat;
And secure outside, for the spray to drench,
Was a tossed and empty boat.
And somewhere were twelve years;
So it came, in the manner of things unsought,
That a quick knock vexed our ears.
And I heard Fingal swear;
Then I opened the door—but I found no more
Than a chalk-skinned woman there.
“What is it that we can do?”
But never a word could I get from her
But “You—you three—it is you!”
Was more than a man could make;
So I said, “But we—we are what, we three?”
And I saw the creature shake.
And I was afraid to come;
But you, you three—God made it be—
Will ferry the dead girl home.
Who is that makes it?—hark!”
But I heard no more than a knocking splash
And a wind that shook the dark.
“And the boat that rocks outside.”
And I watched her there, and I pitied her there—
“Be quick! be quick!” she cried.
To find where my two friends were;
So Morgan came, and Fingal came,
And out we went with her.
And a fearsome way for three;
And over the water, and all day long,
They had come for the night with me.
And the best we could see to do
Was to lay her aboard. The north wind roared,
And into the night we flew.
Furrowing crest and swell,
Through the surge and the dark, for that faint far spark,
We ploughed with Azrael.
Crashing to south we went;
And three of us there were too spattered to care
What this late sailing meant.
Through the flash of the midnight foam:
Silent enough to be ghosts on guard.
We ferried the dead girl home.
And we carried her up to the light;
And we left the two to the father there,
Who counted the coals that night.
But our thoughts were fast and few;
And all we did was to crowd the surge
And to measure the life we knew;—
Skipped out to us, we three,—
And the dark wet mooring pointed home
Like a finger from the sea.
And in we drew to the stairs;
And up we went, each man content
With a life that fed no cares.
And the tide was cold and rough;
But the light was warm, and the room was warm,
And the world was good enough.
More shrewd than Satan’s tears:
Fingal had fashioned it, all by himself,
With a craft that comes of years.
Together again, we three:
Morgan, Fingal, fiddle, and all,
They were there for the night with me.