| Call of the
Sea Contemporary Maritime Ballad Words and Music © 2007 Dean Calin |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
When I was a boy, a drayman’s son (Chorus) (Chorus)
A purse of gold coins and a single red rose |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
I felt compelled to write this song after much research into the life of a sailor from Elizabethan times forward. Going to sea was as good as a death sentence, and only the most desperate of men would voluntarily take the task if not schooled in maritime life from birth. The stories of sailors and their ridiculous wealth after capturing prizes is also compelling, and indeed must have been the lure to man England's sailing ships before crimps and press gangs moved the male citizenry from the port towns to Nelson's navy. To wrap the irony of this story is the incomprehensible length of sea voyages, in particular Drake's inadvertent global circumnavigation after one of his voyages against Spanish treasure ships - one could not simply call home to say you were on a trip! News of Drake's voyage only came from rumors from court spies and military engagements and could only be trusted so far. Those were amazing times. And of course, it is a melancholy tale of deep and sincere love of a man who literally risked his life for his love, but in doing so, lost her to time, an opportunity forever gone. All that was his mission in life was simply gone; only fate at fault. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||