I'll tell you a tale of our own Devil's Island and the demonic crash of the waves in a swell, the smell and the taste of the ball-breaking weather the ghosts that deliver poor sailors to Hell.
We were out in the water amongst our Magdalens the wind plucked the ropes of our rigging at sea we looked for a port and saw many lights flashing “that's old Devil's Island,” said the skipper to me.
Ghosts began hurling their fierce imprecations to “come to the Island safe landfall to thee” but the skipper turned round the ship with a vengeance “that old Devil's Island will never catch me.”
I thought he was mad to be scared of a legend it was my first time in a storm on the sea and two men washed over to Davey Jone's Locker “God bless 'em, they'll rest now” the skip said to me.
Protesting the treatment of two forlorn sailors I said to the skipper “It's not good to tell” “It's better,” he said, “that they're resting in Heaven than entering into the portals of Hell.”
Winds lasted the night then the voices did falter the lights blinkered out and I saw very well so many rocks jagged just waiting to smash us The Devil's Isle gateways await in the swell
If you're on a ship and the voices of demons come tell you it's safe in their harbor alee remember the shoreline at old Devil's Island then turn the ship seaward and gracelessly flee.