The Isle Of Gods Poem by David Lewis Paget

The Isle Of Gods



The passengers from the ‘Bold Dundee'
Were sick as they crawled ashore,
Tossed about in an angry sea
By the God that they knew as Thor.
He'd beat his hammer along their hull,
He'd roared as the thunder clapped,
And ripped the sails from the forward stays
As the sheets and the masts collapsed.

The tide had hidden the rocks from view,
A mist had obscured the shore,
The captain thought he was sailing free
As he'd always done before.
But the ocean swell in its mystery
Hid atolls of murk and myth,
That never appeared on a sailor's chart
Where the Gods of old still lived.

The ship had shuddered and holed the bow,
Rode up, and sank at the stern,
The swell burst over the after deck
Drowning the crew in turn.
The passengers on the steerage deck
Were swept clean over the side,
Onto the rocks of a thousand wrecks,
But only a few survived.

By dawn that few had struggled ashore,
But the rest of them were dead,
Were floating out on the turn of tide
To rest on the deep seabed,
But Robert Young and his wife Jeanine
Were cast right up on the land,
And so was Emily Wintergreen
And the lad called Adam Shand.

They woke to an alien sunrise,
In a strange, pale purple mist,
And a sound came down from the mountainside
From a thousand years of myth.
A pale white horse bore a surly man
Who was ten feet tall to his head,
And roared, ‘Now bow before Woden, or
By Odin, you will be dead! '

Then striding noisily through the trees
That grew right down to the shore,
Came a giant man, a hammer in hand
Who roared, ‘You can call me Thor!
What brings you here to our hideaway,
To disturb our God's redoubt?
We left you, hundreds of years away,
Yet now, you seek us out.'

Each one of them bowed, and touched the sand,
‘We don't know why we're here.
We didn't plan it, ' said Adam Shand,
‘It wasn't our idea.'
‘You turned away from us, ' Woden roared,
‘Sought other gods to please,
Once you were praying to us for help,
Would beg of us, on your knees.'

‘I swear we've never forgotten you,
You're with us, all of our days,
For Woden, you are our Wednesday now,
And that is eternal praise.
While Thor is our every Thursday,
Every week that he comes around,
And Tiw, well he's become Tuesday
So you're lost, but you are found.'

The Gods stood back, and then conferred,
‘We're going to let you go,
But only because you honour us
With your calendar, if that's so.'
A longboat, free from the wreck came in
And the four of them climbed aboard,
Then waved goodbye to the Isle of Gods,
But at sea, they thanked the Lord!

16 October 2014

Thursday, October 16, 2014
Topic(s) of this poem: horror
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Douglas Scotney 17 October 2014

and the fast-thinking Adam Shand

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David Lewis Paget

David Lewis Paget

Nottingham, England/live in Australia
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