Page:Songs from the Southern Seas and Other Poems (1873).djvu/84

80 Ay, that was a tale worth hearing, lad: if 'twas true we couldn't say. Or if 'twas a yarn old Mat had spun to while the time away.

"It's just fifteen years ago," said Mat, "since I shipped as harpooneer On board a bark in New Bedford, and came cruising somewhere near To this whaling-ground we're cruising now; but whales were plenty then. And not like now, when we scarce get oil to pay for the ship and men. There were none of these oil wells running then,—at least, what shore folk term An oil well in Pennsylvania,—but sulphur-bottom and sperm Were plenty as frogs in a mud-hole, and all of 'em big "whales, too; One hundred barrels for sperm-whales; and for sulphur-bottom, two. You couldn't pick out a small one: the littlest calf or cow