Bound to the Mast (Favenc)

"So they with voices sweet their music pour'd On my delighted ear, winning with ease My heart's desire to listen, and by signs I bade my people instant let me free, But they more strenuous row'd, and from their seats Eurylochus and Perimedes sprang With added cords to bind me still the more." "The Odyssey" (Cowper's translation).

Ulysses (loq.) :

"'Twas but the wave, and yet methought there came, Just for a moment, sounding o'er the sea, A shout of welcome, and I heard my name As if my long-left queen were calling me. Hark! there it swells again, now loud and clear. 'Tis not the waves as they plash idly past. Quick will I hasten. Gods! what keeps me here!  Ah, I forgot: they bound me to the mast."

"In vain the long long wars, the cruel strife, Last boon of all, I seem denied a grave. Doomed thus alone to linger out my life, And weary wander o'er the restless wave. But I have toiled for years, and surely now May claim a little ease for all my pains. Release me, comrades, turn our vessel's prow — Can you not feel the magic of those strains?

"Loud in their tones there seems at once to swell The voice of wife, of son, of faithful friend, And in glad accents joyfully they tell How they have longed for this — the wished-for end. See, in yon cove our boat will safely ride. Deaf slaves, why will ye thus row idly past! Turn e'er too late, and court the favouring tide — Curse on these bonds that bind me to the mast."

*  *   *   *   * Bound to the mast  the mast of daily toil. Doomed by stern poverty to longing gaze At the fair land, the teeming fruitful soil That looks the fairer for our darker days. The sirens' voices ever in our ear, Vainly we struggle; Fate our lot has cast. We drift along, powerless our course to steer, Bound by a threefold cord unto the mast.

Bound round with sickness, poverty, and sin — Tightening the bonds at every effort made To free ourselves. What can we hope to win But chafing wounds until the game's outplayed? Far happier they who never heed the song, But, with deaf ears, hear nothing 'till the last, And cannot know the yearnings that belong To those who pass through life bound to the mast.