The Voyage of Diego Mendez

by Mark Anthony Signorelli (October 2011)

Sat in extremest enervation

And cast their eyes on the volatile sea

Where they looked for death and not salvation.

Then Diego Mendez rose and he said:

To Hispaniola, and bring us help

And I trust for the goodness of the attempt

So he gathered Flisco, his old friend,

And a few of the sailors fortified

Against the perils of such a task,

Then they all set out in two canoes

That could barely float above the tide.

The sea swelled flat and tranquilly

The immoderate sun burned painfully,

And the tangible breeze that stirred at times

Smelled thick with mangrove and sassafras.

But the ocean current under their boats

Ran steady and strongly against their head,

So they pulled at the oars all the seering day

All day and all night, and when morning came

One man from the strain of it all lay dead.

For two more days and for two more nights,

Across the forty leagues of the sea,

Which their faint eyes searched out desperately,

And two more died, and the others looked

On their quiet cheeks with jealousy.

Still, on they toiled, these fugitive men,

To one another so little known,

With little more language fit to commune

Than a weary and labor-wrested groan,

Or the misery drawn on each taut cheek

Cast suddenly in the midst of a sphere

Uncertain of how to find their bearing

On a trek momentous and wonderful

Through a natural frame of things at once

In constant terror of ruinous storms

Fatigued to a soul-deep lassitude,

Surrounded by death, beset by despair.

Yet whatever they lacked in that arduous course

They were not deprived a mind assured

Of its righteous aims, nor a tested arm,

To every trial at sea inured,

Nor a spirit in every season inclined

And certain it is, whatever the cause,

Whatever the source of that tendency,

And whatever it meant in the final word,

Those little boats and their company

Were the only thing in that mystical realm

That moved against the prevailing sea.

At last the distorted shape of the moon

So revivified, they plied at the wave

At dawn they made land, and the natives came

To greet and to succor the exhausted corps.

They brought many fruits, and spirits to drink,

And garments woven white for this band

That had struggled so long and with such good cause,

Then they lay them down on the night-cooled sand,

Where there was no fear of the sudden gale,

Neither labor, nor heat of the sun to withstand.

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