The Mariner's Revenge Song

Album: Picaresque (2005)
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  • We are two mariners
    Our ships' sole survivors
    In this belly of a whale
    Its ribs are ceiling beams
    Its guts are carpeting
    I guess we have some time to kill

    You may not remember me
    I was a child of three
    And you, a lad of eighteen
    But I remember you
    And I will relay to you
    How our histories interweave

    At the time you were
    A rake and a roustabout
    Spending all your money
    On the whores and hounds
    Oh

    You had a charming air
    All cheap and debonair
    My widowed mother found so sweet
    And so she took you in
    Her sheets still warm with him
    Now filled with filth and foul disease

    As time wore on you proved
    A debt-ridden drunken mess
    Leaving my mother
    A poor consumptive wretch
    Oh, oh

    And then you disappeared
    Your gambling arrears
    The only thing you left behind
    And then the magistrate
    Reclaimed our small estate
    And my poor mother lost her mind

    Then, one day in spring
    My dear sweet mother died
    But before she did
    I took her hand as she, dying, cried
    Oh, oh

    "Find him, bind him
    Tie him to a pole and break
    His fingers to splinters
    Drag him to a hole
    Until he wakes up naked
    Clawing at the ceiling of his grave"

    It took me fifteen years
    To swallow all my tears
    Among the urchins in the street
    Until a priory
    Took pity and hired me
    To keep their vestry nice and neat

    But never once in the employ
    Of these holy men
    Did I ever once turn my mind
    From the thought of revenge
    Oh, oh

    One night I overheard
    The prior exchanging words
    With a penitent whaler from the sea
    The captain of his ship
    Who matched you toe to tip
    Was known for wanton cruelty

    The following day
    I shipped to sea with a privateer
    And in the whistle of the wind
    I could almost hear
    Oh, oh

    "Find him, bind him
    Tie him to a pole and break
    His fingers to splinters
    Drag him to a hole
    Until he wakes up, naked
    Clawing at the ceiling of his grave

    There is one thing I must say to you
    As you sail across the sea
    Always, your mother will watch over you
    As you avenge this wicked deed"

    And then, that fateful night
    We had you in our sight
    After twenty months at sea
    Your starboard flank abeam
    I was getting my muskets clean
    When came this rumbling from beneath

    The ocean shook
    The sky went black
    And the captain quailed
    And before us grew
    The angry jaws
    Of a giant whale
    Oh, oh, oh, oh

    Don't know how I survived
    The crew all was chewed alive
    I must have slipped between his teeth
    But, oh, what providence
    What divine intelligence
    That you should survive as well as me

    It gives my heart great joy
    To see your eyes fill with fear
    So lean in close and I will whisper
    The last words you'll hear
    Oh, oh Writer/s: Colin Meloy
    Publisher: BMG Rights Management
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Comments: 9

  • Alex from PortlandThis was one plot summary that I thought was slightly more accurate:
    The story begins as the narrator, one of two survivors stranded in the belly of a whale, explains to his companion how (unknown to the companion) their lives were interwoven.

    The narrator details how, when he was three, his widowed mother fell in love with the companion — then an eighteen-year-old roustabout — who was charming at first but was later revealed as a gambler and womanizer. The roustabout then disappeared, leaving only his gambling debts and the mother sick with consumption. The magistrate repossessed their estate to pay for the debts and the mother later died, leaving the boy an orphan. On her deathbed, the boy's mother instructs the boy to avenge her death, telling him:

    "Find him, bind him, tie him to a pole and break his fingers to splinters. Drag him to a hole until he wakes up, naked, clawing at the ceiling of his grave."

    Fifteen years later, having found work cleaning a priory, the boy hears of a whaler captain who matches the roustabout's description and is known for "wanton cruelty". The next day he joins a privateer ship to hunt him down. After 20 months at sea, the privateer crew spots the whaling ship, but a giant whale attacks both ships before they are able to board. Everyone is killed, except the narrator and the roustabout.

    The narrator then tells the man who ruined his mother's life that it must have been by "providence" that only they survived, and cautions the roustabout to listen closely, as what he will be told next "will be the last words (he) will hear". Though the lyrics end here, the musical theme representing the mother's instructions is repeated several times in escalating tempo, implying the culmination of the narrator's pyrrhic victory over the roustabout.
  • Reilly from Hurley, NyIt was a sailor from the roustabout's ship who was confessing, not the roustabout himself. He recognized the description of the roustabout ("the captain of his ship, who matched you toe to tip")
  • Evin from Cork, Ireland'Hamlet meets Moby Dick' is how i'd describe it...
  • Red from Nowhere, IaK. is correct, the whaler is confessing ("penitent whaler"). The roustabout is not the person confessing, it's a member of the roustabout's crew--the roustabout is the captain ("who matched you toe to tip". The narrator goes to sea with a privateer (pirate) and after 20 months at sea, when they have the other ship in sight and the narrator is "getting his muskets clean" (preparing to attack) the whale comes up and capsizes both ships. Everyone dies but the narrator and the roustabout. The narrator tels this tale to the captain/roustabout (and we listeners) and now he will have his revenge. Quinn is in the ballpark but he's sitting in the wrong bleachers when it comes to this review. I'm not sure where people get the idea that they were on the same ship--it says quite clearly that he went looking for the whaler on a privateer's ship.
  • Matthew from Calgaryi love the chorus of this song
  • K from Rock, HiI thought he overhears one of the man's sailors confessing then follows him and works the ship on which the man is captain....
  • Ben from Orillia, Ontario, CanadaMuch better, Dru. Still some "questionables" though... After leaving the priory he joins up with a privateer to chase down the roustabout. When they've finaly cought up with him, after 20 months at sea, and thier ships are almost within bording distance (starboard flank a-beam) the whale comes from beneath and eats both ships. I'm pretty sure about that anyway... I never cought that about the roustabout confessing his sins! I thought he was just having a conversation with the priest. Your'se makes much more sense. thanks for helping me to understand that part.

    Also, I'm just clearing up the first post a little further. The mother and the roustabout are definately lovers. The boy talks about the sheets still being warm from his father when his mother brings this new man into her bed... not a big change, but I'm pretty sure that's how it is.

    Also, it's just my personal perception of the end of the song, but I also imagined the boy killing the roustabout with his bare hands (prolly by choking) when the music that his mother's final words were sang to plays. I suppose it can be looked at fomr different angles, but I imagined him driven by bloodlust, ending the roustabouts life brutaly and with much blood. ...hehehe
  • Ashlee from HobartI thought that he hears a sailor talking about his captain who turns out the be the roustabout then he joins another crew to find him, then when he does both crews die except the narrator and the other captain (the roustabout). I could be wrong thought because i haven't listened to this song in awhile. lol
  • Dru from Melbourne, AustraliaOh for goodness sakes! Quinn - did you even listen to the lyrics?? The above synopsis is wrong both factually and fails to grasp the whole point of the song (ie the song's title is REVENGE).

    The song opens set in the belly of a whale with the narrator confronting a man who runied his mother's life.

    Oh for goodness sakes! Quinn - did you even listen to the lyrics?? The above synopsis is wrong factually and fails to grasp the whole point of the song (ie the song's title is REVENGE).

    The song opens set in the belly of a whale with the narrator confronting a man who ruined his mother's life.

    The tale is then told of an opportunististic drunkard and gambling roustabout. The widowed mother was charmed into taking the roustabout in. He runs down her health, spends all her money and leaves her with is debts. She loses her tiny estate to pay these off. On her death bed she asks her son to avenge (rather brutally) her death.

    The song then tells of the son?s avengeance. After living on the streets for 15 years he is given menial work in the church. One night he overhears a cruel sea captain confessing his sins and realises it is the roustabout. He leaves the priory and joins the roustabout?s whaling ship.

    After 20 months at sea, on the eve of his preparation to confront the roustabout, the ship is attacked by a whale (a neat little side-plot of avengeance in itself) and miraculously only the boy and the roustabout survive - albeit caught in the belly of the whale. The revenge is then effected - not by the hand of the boy - but rather through his delight in watching the fear in the roustabout?s eyes in the face of imminent death. His revenge is complete when he says to the roustabout that the story of revenge will be the last words he will hear?
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