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ing, So loud there's not a sparrow in the spire But needs must hear. Sir, if I might make bold, I'd ask what song that was you sung. My mate, As we were shoving off the mackerel boats, Said he, 'I'll wager that's the sort o' song They kept their hearts up with in the Crimea,'" "There, fisherman," quoth I, "he showed his wit, Your mate; he marked the sound of savage war-- Gunpowder, groans, hot-shot, and bursting shells, And 'murderous messages,' delivered by Spent balls that break the heads of dreaming men." "Ay, ay, Sir!" quoth the fisherman. "Have done!" My brother. And I--"The gift belongs to few Of sending farther than the words can reach Their spirit and expression;" still--"Have done!" He cried; and then "I rolled the rubbish out More loudly than the meaning warranted, To air my lungs--I thought not on the words." Then said the fisherman, who missed the point, "So Mike rolls out the psalm; you'll hear him, Sir, Please God you live till Sunday." "Even so: And you, too, fisherman; for here, they say, You are all church-goers." "Surely, Sir," quoth he, Took off his hat, and stroked his old white head And wrinkled face; then sitting by us said, As one that utters with a quiet mind Unchallenged truth--"'Tis lucky for the boats." The boats! 'tis lucky for the boats! Our eyes Were drawn to him as either fain would say, What! do they send the psalm up in the spire, And pray because 'tis lucky for the boats? But he, the brown old man, the wrinkled man, That all his life had been a church-goer, Familiar with celestial cadences, Informed of all he could receive, and sure Of all he understood--he sat content, And we kept silence. In his reverend face There was a simpleness we could not sound; Much truth had passed him overhead; some error He had trod under foot;--God comfort him! He could not learn of us, for we were young And he was old, and so we gave it up; And the sun went into the west, and down Upon the water stooped an orange cloud, And the pale milky reaches flushed, as glad To wear its colors; and the sultry air Went out to sea, and puffed the sails of ships With thymy wafts, the breath of trodden grass: It took moreover music, for across The heather belt and over pasture land Came the sweet monotone of one slow bell, And parted time into divisions rare, Whereof each morsel brought its own delight. "They ring for service," quoth the fisherman; "Our parson preaches in the ch
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