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Ballad of John Cable and Three Gentlemen

He that had come that morning,

One after the other,

Over seven hills,

Each of a new color,

 

Came now by the last tree,

By the red-colored valley,

To a gray river

Wide as the sea.

 

There at the shingle

A listing wherry

Awash with dark water;

What should it carry?

 

There on the shelving,

Three dark gentlemen.

Might they direct him?

Three gentlemen.

 

"Cable, friend John, John Cable,"

When they saw him they said,

"Come and be company

As far as the far side."

 

"Come follow the feet," they said,

"Of your family,

Of your old father

That came already this way."

 

But Cable said, "First I must go

Once to my sister again;

What will she do come spring

And no man on her garden?

 

She will say 'Weeds are alive

From here to the Stream of Friday;

I grieve for my brother's plowing,'

Then break and cry."

 

"Lose no sleep," they said, "for that fallow:

She will say before summer,

'I can get me a daylong man,

Do better than a brother.' "

 

Cable said, "I think of my wife:

Dearly she needs consoling;

I must go back for a little

For fear she die of grieving."

 

Ask no such wild favor;

Still, if you fear she die soon,

The boat might wait for her."

 

But Cable said, "I remember:

Out of charity let me

Go shore up my poorly mother,

Cries all afternoon."

 

They said, "She is old and far,

Far and rheumy with years,

And, if you like, we shall take

No note of her tears."

 

But Cable said, "I am neither

Your hired man nor maid,

Nor your ape to be led."

 

He said, "I must go back:

Once I heard someone say

That the hollow Stream of Friday

Is a rank place to lie;

 

And this word, now I remember,

Makes me sorry: have you

Thought of my own body

I was always good to?

 

The frame that was my devotion

And my blessing was,

The straight bole whose limbs

Were long as stories-

 

Now, poor thing, left in the dirt

By the Stream of Friday

Might not remember me

Half tenderly."

 

They let him nurse no worry;

They said, "We give you our word:

Poor thing is made of patience;

Will not say a word."

 

"Cable, friend John, John Cable,"

After this they said,

"Come with no company

To the far side.

 

To a populous place,

A dense city

That shall not be changed

Before much sorrow dry."

 

Over shaking water

Toward the feet of his father,

Leaving the hills' color

And his poorly mother

 

And his wife at grieving

And his sister's fallow

And his body lying

In the rank hollow,

 

Now Cable is carried

On the dark river;

Nor even a shadow

Followed him over.

 

On the wide river

Gray as the sea

Flags of white water

Are his company.

w
Written by
W. S. Merwin
1927 - Present / American
Lines·Words
98·480
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