Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
America: Vols. XXV–XXIX. 1876–79.
The Phantom Boat
By E. Norman Gunnison (1836?1880)T
And the rollers break on the harbor bar,
And up from the distance comes a sail,
Gleaming white, ’neath the morning star.
Running rigging, belayed and trim;
Raking spars,—’t is no battered wreck
Sailing out in the distance dim.
The sheets are free, but it comes not nigh,
But hangs, a point on the morning air,
A pictured sail, ’twixt the sea and sky.
Sails, and no nearer comes to shore;
Nor in the distance grows remote,
Nor a ripple her bow breaks o’er.”
Many a year her pennant flew.
Old is the story; a worn-out song,
But her deck is trod by no mortal crew.
Gleaming white over mast and spar;
Here, take my glass; you can read the name
Under her starn; ’t is the Alice Marr.
Long ago in Glos’ter town;
Rippling tresses and sunny curl,
Rare red lips, and a check of brown.
Lovers sought her from near and far;
She was John Ackman’s promised bride:
He named his vessel the Alice Marr.
We ’re gone to-morrow, though here to-day:
Another v’yage she would be his wife,
At least so I ’ve hearn the gossips say.
Water in barrels, and water in tanks,
Nicely fixed for a three months’ cruise,
He sailed away for the fishing-banks.
“Months rolled on, and never a word;
Six months, twelve months: on the day
That finished the year was a rumor heard
Of the Alice Marr in the outer bay.
Slowly, silently, on she steered:
‘Skipper Ackman! ho! what cheer!’
She had vanished, had disappeared.
Bringing again her sailing day,
Rises her hull from the depths profound,
And slowly cruises the outer bay.
Only a glimmer of sail and spar;
Not a word of her crew or mate,—
This is the ghost of the Alice Marr.
Still her eye scanned each gathering cloud:
Years receded, and, worn and gray,
Her wedding dress was her funeral shroud.”