| The leading lights of the age all wondered among themselves what I would do
|
| next,
|
| After all that I’d found, in my circles around the world, was there anything
|
| left?
|
| «Gentlemen,» I said, «I've studied the maps, and if what I am thinking is right,
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| There’s another new world, at the top of the world, for whoever can break
|
| through the ice,»
|
| I looked 'round the room, in that way I once had, and I saw that they wanted
|
| belief,
|
| So I said, «All I’ve got are my guts and my God,» then I paused, «and the Annabel Lee.»
|
| Oh, the Annabel Lee, I saw their eyes shine, the most beautiful ship in the sea,
|
| My Nina, my Pinta, my Santa Maria, my beautiful Annabel Lee
|
| That spring we set sail, and the crowd waved from shore, and on board the
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| sailors waved caps,
|
| But I’d never had family, just the Annabel Lee, so I never had cause to look
|
| back.
|
| I just studied the charts, set the course north, and towards dark I drifted
|
| toward sleep,
|
| And I dreamed of the fine, deep harbor I’d find past the ice, for my Annabel
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| Lee.
|
| After that it got colder, and the world got quiet. |
| It was never quite day or
|
| quite night.
|
| And the sea turned the color of sky turned the color of sea turned the color of
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| ice.
|
| After that all around us was vastness, one glassy desert of arsenic white,
|
| And the waves that once lifted us, shifted instead into drifts against
|
| Annabel’s sides.
|
| And the crew gathered closer, at first for the comfort, but each morning would
|
| bring a new set
|
| Of tracks in the snow, leading over the edge of the world, til I was the only
|
| one left.
|
| And as the going got slower, colder and colder, my crew drifted closer to me,
|
| At first for the comfort, but then it was more like the icebergs rammed Annabel
|
| Lee
|
| As the floes shrieked her hull, the shouting began, and a mast snapped off in
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| the wind,
|
| And I woke up much later, my crew disappeared, and they never were heard from
|
| again
|
| After that it gets cloudy,
|
| But it feels like I laid there for days, or maybe for months
|
| But Annabel held me, the two of us happy,
|
| Just to think back on all we had done
|
| I told her {We talked) of the other new worlds
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| We’d discover as she gave up her body to me,
|
| As I chopped up her mainsail for timber,
|
| I told her of all that we still had to see.
|
| As the ice turned her moorings
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| To nine-tails and the wind lashed her sides in the cold,
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| I burned her to keep me alive every night in the loving embrace of her hold.
|
| I can’t call it rescue,
|
| What brought me back here to this old world to drink and decline,
|
| Pretend that the search for another new world was well worth the burning of
|
| mine.
|
| But sometimes at night, in my dreams,
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| Comes the singing of some unheard tropical bird,
|
| And I smile in my sleep,
|
| Thinking Annabel Lee’s finally made it to the top of the world.
|
| Yeah, sometimes at night in my dreams comes the singing of some unheard
|
| tropical bird,
|
| And I smile in my sleep, thinking Annabel Lee’s finally found another new world. |