(A Virginia Legend.)
The Planting of the Hemp.
Captain Hawk scourged clean
the seas
(Black is the gap below the plank)
From the Great North Bank to the Caribbees
(Down by the marsh the hemp grows rank).
His fear was on the seaport towns,
The weight of his hand held hard the downs.
And the merchants cursed him, bitter and black,
For a red flame in the sea-fog’s wrack
Was all of their ships that might come back.
For all he had one word alone,
One clod of dirt in their faces thrown,
“The hemp that shall hang me is not
grown!”
His
name bestrode the seas like Death.
The
waters trembled at his breath.
This
is the tale of how he fell,
Of
the long sweep and the heavy swell,
And
the rope that dragged him down to hell.
The fight was done, and the gutted
ship,
Stripped like a shark the sea-gulls
strip,
Lurched blindly, eaten out with
flame,
Back to the land from where she
came,
A skimming horror, an eyeless shame.
And Hawk stood upon his quarter-deck,
And saw the sky and saw the wreck.
Below, a butt for sailors’
jeers,
White as the sky when a white squall
nears,
Huddled the crowd of the prisoners.
Over the bridge of the tottering
plank,
Where the sea shook and the gulf
yawned blank,
They shrieked and struggled and
dropped and sank,
Pinioned arms and hands bound fast.
One girl alone was left at last.
Sir Henry Gaunt was a mighty lord.
He sat in state at the Council board;
The governors were as nought to
him.
From one rim to the other rim
Of his great plantations, flung
out wide
Like a purple cloak, was a full
month’s ride.
Life and death in his white hands
lay,
And his only daughter stood at bay,
Trapped like a hare in the toils
that day.
He sat at wine in his gold and his
lace,
And far away, in a bloody place,
Hawk came near, and she covered
her face.
He rode in the fields, and the hunt
was brave,
And far away his daughter gave
A shriek that the seas cried out
to hear,
And he could not see and he could
not save.
Her white soul withered in the mire
As paper shrivels up in fire,
And Hawk laughed, and he kissed
her mouth,
And her body he took for his desire.
The Growing of the Hemp.
Sir Henry stood in the manor room,
And his eyes were hard gems in the
gloom.
And he said, “Go dig me furrows
five
Where the green marsh creeps like
a thing alive
There at its edge, where the rushes
thrive.”
And where the furrows rent the ground,
He sowed the seed of hemp around.
And the blacks shrink back and are
sore afraid
At the furrows five that rib the
glade,
And the voodoo work of the master’s
spade.
For a cold wind blows from the marshland
near,
And white things move, and the night
grows drear,
And they chatter and crouch and
are sick with fear.
But
down by the marsh, where the gray slaves glean,
The
hemp sprouts up, and the earth is seen
Veiled
with a tenuous mist of green.
And Hawk still scourges the Caribbees,
And many men kneel at his knees.
Sir Henry sits in his house alone,
And his eyes are hard and dull like
stone.
And the waves beat, and the winds
roar,
And all things are as they were
before.
And the days pass, and the weeks
pass,
And nothing changes but the grass.
But
down where the fireflies are like eyes,
And
the damps shudder, and the mists rise,
The
hemp-stalks stand up toward the skies.
And down from the poop of the pirate
ship
A body falls, and the great sharks
grip.
Innocent, lovely, go in grace!
At last there is peace upon your
face.
And Hawk laughs loud as the corpse
is thrown,
“The hemp that shall hang
me is not grown!”
Sir Henry’s face is iron to
mark,
And he gazes ever in the dark.
And the days pass, and the weeks
pass,
And the world is as it always was.
But
down by the marsh the sickles beam,
Glitter
on glitter, gleam on gleam,
And
the hemp falls down by the stagnant stream.
And Hawk beats up from the Caribbees,
Swooping to pounce in the Northern
seas.
Sir Henry sits sunk deep in his
chair,
And white as his hand is grown his
hair.
And the days pass, and the weeks
pass,
And the sands roll from the hour-glass.
But
down by the marsh in the blazing sun
The
hemp is smoothed and twisted and spun,
The
rope made, and the work done.
The Using of the Hemp.
Captain Hawk scourged clean the
seas
(Black is the gap below the
plank)
From the Great North Bank to the
Caribbees
(Down by the marsh the hemp
grows rank).
He sailed in the broad Atlantic
track,
And the ships that saw him came
not back.
And once again, where the wide tides
ran,
He stooped to harry a merchantman.
He bade her stop. Ten guns
spake true
From her hidden ports, and a hidden
crew,
Lacking his great ship through and
through.
Dazed and dumb with the sudden death,
He scarce had time to draw a breath
Before the grappling-irons bit deep,
And the boarders slew his crew like
sheep.
Hawk stood up straight, his breast
to the steel;
His cutlass made a bloody wheel.
His cutlass made a wheel of flame.
They shrank before him as he came.
And the bodies fell in a choking
crowd,
And still he thundered out aloud,
“The hemp that shall hang
me is not grown!”
They fled at last. He was
left alone.
Before his foe Sir Henry stood.
“The hemp is grown, and my
word made good!”
And the cutlass clanged with a hissing
whir
On the lashing blade of the rapier.
Hawk roared and charged like a maddened
buck.
As the cobra strikes, Sir Henry
struck,
Pouring his life in a single thrust,
And the cutlass shivered to sparks
and dust.
Sir Henry stood on the blood-stained
deck,
And set his foot on his foe’s
neck.
Then from the hatch, where the rent
decks slope,
Where the dead roll and the wounded
grope,
He dragged the serpent of the rope.
The sky was blue, and the sea was
still,
The waves lapped softly, hill on
hill,
And between one wave and another
wave
The doomed man’s cries were
little and shrill.
The sea was blue, and the sky was
calm;
The air dripped with a golden balm.
Like a wind-blown fruit between
sea and sun,
A black thing writhed at a yard-arm.
Slowly then, and awesomely,
The ship sank, and the gallows-tree,
And there was nought between sea
and sun
Nought but the sun and the sky and
the sea.
But
down by the marsh where the fever breeds,
Only
the water chuckles and pleads;
For
the hemp clings fast to a dead man’s throat,
And
blind Fate gathers back her seeds.