A Creditable Collision

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A Creditable Collision

There was once a brave collision

In Imaginary Bay,

When a steamer with precision

Clove its comfortable way

Through another, which had hospitably stood

To receive it, as a civil steamer should.

Then the people on the latter

Said they didn’t understand,

But they thought they’d better scatter

To the most adjacent land;

And the people on the former said: “That’s so⁠—

You will find it sixty fathoms down below.”

Then the skipper of the vessel

Which was sinking in the brine

Said to t’other one: “I guess I’ll

Trouble you to drop a line.”

“Well, just give me your address,” was the reply,

“I am busy but I’ll write you by-and-by.”

Then the carpenter whose function

Was to mend the leaky boat

Said: “So wide is our disjunction

That we cannot longer float.

See the rats already leave us!” And so he

Up and hove his kit among them in the sea.

Though these incidents are cheerful

For a landsman to relate,

Yet the passengers were fearful

Of a melancholy fate;

For their knowledge was imperfect of the way

That the fishes have of breathing in the bay.

Some of them, who were accounted

Quite unmannerly and rude,

On the floating steamer mounted,

Saying: “Hope we don’t intrude.”

But the others, with politeness rare and fine,

Said their tickets were not good upon that line.

But the skipper of the wetter

Ship, the pilot and the mate⁠—

Nothing ever yet was better

Than the way they met their fate;

For the perils that beset them in their climb

They encountered with alacrity sublime.

When the troubles all were ended

And the living safe in port

Invitation was extended

For them all to come to court.

Where the officers (they afterward explained)

Were with deferential kindness entertained.

Twenty Consuls, ten Inspectors,

Thirty Coroners were there,

Eighty-seven skilled objectors

And a Notary to swear;

And before that court the sailor-people sighed

And expounded how the passengers had lied.

The unanimous decision

Of that high and mighty court

Was “spontaneous collision”⁠—

(I am quoting the report)

And the skippers were commended who had fed

To the lobsters each a bellyful of dead.