One night upon the stormy waters, John the sailor lost his hearing But the sea and the sky, Indifferent as ever, Continued humming and screaming.
Before his eyes waves came and went Just like the days of his youth, Seen only through the lightning And faded glow of the lanterns, Never destined to sooth.
Unable to hear the shouts of his captain He felt lost; in his nose only salt and sea With their notion of deaf eternity. A piece of mankindβs suffering shone from his eye While his hands, stretched onwards, perplexed, Were desperately trying to grab the invisible sky.
At that moment a memory came to John, From the depths of human unconscious, Of a drowned Phoenician sailor who resides In every man who hath passeth the seas, Of the end of the lengthy voyage, Of the leaves of grass and of the breeze.
Burried by the ocean or burried by the soil, Matters not to those who seek eternal life But more often they end in the stony places Where only dark and ghastly things form - Considering this, he regained control of his spirit Prepared once again to conquer the storm.