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A Salty Dog Lyrics
All hands on deck, we've run a float,
I heard the Captain cry.
Explore the ship, replace the cook,
Let no one leave alive.
Across the straits, around the horn,
How far can sailors fly?
A twisted path, our tortured course,
And no one left alive.
We sailed for parts unknown to man,
Where ships come home to die.
No lofty peak, nor fortress bold,
Could match our captain's eye.
Upon the seventh seasick day,
We made our port of call.
A sand so white, and sea so blue,
No mortal place at all.
We fired the guns, and burned the mast,
And rowed from ship to shore.
The captain cried, we sailors wept,
Our tears were tears of joy!
Now many moons and many Junes,
Have passed since we made land.
A Salty Dog, this seaman's log,
Your witness, my own hand.
I heard the Captain cry.
Explore the ship, replace the cook,
Let no one leave alive.
Across the straits, around the horn,
How far can sailors fly?
A twisted path, our tortured course,
And no one left alive.
Where ships come home to die.
No lofty peak, nor fortress bold,
Could match our captain's eye.
Upon the seventh seasick day,
We made our port of call.
A sand so white, and sea so blue,
No mortal place at all.
And rowed from ship to shore.
The captain cried, we sailors wept,
Our tears were tears of joy!
Now many moons and many Junes,
Have passed since we made land.
A Salty Dog, this seaman's log,
Your witness, my own hand.
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Okay, since I cannot find a decent interpretation of this song anywhere I’m going to post what I think is closest to what the metaphors are about in this song and the basic meaning:
The song is about the sinking of a ship. It could have sank rounding Cape of Good Hope (southern tip of the African continent) which is very treacherous. There are no survivors as noted in the lyrics “and no one left alive.” The rest of the song is about their journey into an afterlife as indicated by “Upon the seventh seasick day we made our port of call”. Port of call being “heaven” as in “seventh heaven”. Another key line indicating this is “no mortal place at all”. In the final verse the line “and burnt the mast” indicates that there is no going back to the mortal world, they have accepted this and their entrance into the afterlife is met with “tears of joy”. The line “many moons and many Junes” is a poetic way to epitomize the sense of eternity. Finally, the sinking is noted in the seaman’s log and seen by “your witness”. “Your” in this sense is god as in “god as my witness”. Since the ship sunk at sea with no survivors and would have been destroyed by the ocean over time there are no human witnesses to their “tortured course”.
Note that “heaven” can be interpreted any way one likes. It could be thought of as “nirvana” or “the great beyond” or even some kind of “reincarnation”. In any case the song represents sailors risking their lives for passion for the sea. It is a story of those who never made it to their destination - lost at sea forever - but live instead in the glory of god.
I think this is such a beautiful song because it honors all those sailors who have been lost at sea over the centuries. The nameless and faceless many who braved the sea with as much hope and passion as those who made it through their journeys alive. May they all rest in peace.
well said. I agree wholeheartedly.
well said. I agree wholeheartedly.
@fullmoon2000
@fullmoon2000
Sounds like a relatively accurate interpretation to me.
Sounds like a relatively accurate interpretation to me.
However, I think the term "witness" refers to the hand itself (there should be no comma in the line).
However, I think the term "witness" refers to the hand itself (there should be no comma in the line).
@fullmoon2000 This is perfect...
@fullmoon2000 This is perfect...
@fullmoon2000 Thanks incredibly much for this interpretation of what may be one of the finest songs in the English canon. Long has it been a favorite of mine and my elder brothers, particularly the second eldest of our family who holds a PhD in drama and was a young hippie when this tune was originally conceived and recorded.
@fullmoon2000 Thanks incredibly much for this interpretation of what may be one of the finest songs in the English canon. Long has it been a favorite of mine and my elder brothers, particularly the second eldest of our family who holds a PhD in drama and was a young hippie when this tune was originally conceived and recorded.
Just recently I performed this composition along with my nephew on cello on the sad occasion of our father's passing. He was a navigator for the RCAF during the cold war, flying Avro Lancasters over the Northern Atlantic in search of...
Just recently I performed this composition along with my nephew on cello on the sad occasion of our father's passing. He was a navigator for the RCAF during the cold war, flying Avro Lancasters over the Northern Atlantic in search of Russian submarines. It's a long way to Australia and Japan from there, but he, as well as many fine mariners in centuries past who made that journey by sea, eventually found himself on that side of the great Pacific. I can only imagine that an ocean of tears have been cried by those who know the full import of this melody, these words and those celestial harmonies, having lost someone dear who navigated the vast unknown in quest of some great purpose, but never made it back home to tell the tale.
I hope you don't mind that I paraphrased your words to introduce this song. I had my good brother David recite this short introduction (I could not do so, given that a swell of emotion had run me afloat).
"A shipwreck in the treacherous waters off Cape Horn, the southern tip of South America, is not the end of the voyage for it's crew.
Led on by their fearless captain their journey continues on into the afterlife and finally finds them on some heavenly shore: 'A sand so white, and sea so blue, no mortal place at all'. Burning what remains of their mortal coil they here embrace the infinite, with only God as their witness."
I'm amazed by the variety of interpretations here. Since first hearing this some 40+ years ago, I've always felt this was a straightforward story, representing a first-hand account (your witness-my own hand) of a group of sailors (pirates?) who commandeer a ship, kill the existing crew, and sail to a far-off destination where they go ashore, destroy the ship, and happily live out their lives. Lines like "explore the ship" and "let no one leave alive" seem completely consistent with taking violently taking over an unfamiliar ship. And in a hostile take over of a ship, the first order of business is to secure the food supply to someone you trust, lest you risk poisoning ("replace the cook"). And once arriving at their safe haven, to them it is the most beautiful place ever, being the fulfillment of their dreams (sand so white, and sea so blue, no mortal place at all).
@JimbobAlbobjim I concur. I have always seen it as the deathbed confession (in a log book) of some old retired pirate, telling how he came to be in Tahiti or Mali or wherever. He tells about how he and his pirate pals, led by their charismatic captain, decided to retire from pirating and just "disappear," no doubt taking lots of booty with them. So they commandeered a ship, murdered everybody on board, and sailed off to "parts unknown" where the authorities will never find them. But then they got lost. Cuz they were in parts unknown. They were getting pretty...
@JimbobAlbobjim I concur. I have always seen it as the deathbed confession (in a log book) of some old retired pirate, telling how he came to be in Tahiti or Mali or wherever. He tells about how he and his pirate pals, led by their charismatic captain, decided to retire from pirating and just "disappear," no doubt taking lots of booty with them. So they commandeered a ship, murdered everybody on board, and sailed off to "parts unknown" where the authorities will never find them. But then they got lost. Cuz they were in parts unknown. They were getting pretty desperate and so were very happy when they sighted land. They destroyed the ship to make sure nobody could ever leave (and thus could not rat on the others), and that no evidence of their crime exists. And they lived happily ever after.
@JimbobAlbobjim This is exactly how I hear the song. It's not about death but life after a long voyage. It's a song about reality, not Valhalla. All other interpretations wish it to be about the afterlife, but it is about this life, finding someplace amazing and existing there. That said, I think I'll use it at my funeral.
@JimbobAlbobjim This is exactly how I hear the song. It's not about death but life after a long voyage. It's a song about reality, not Valhalla. All other interpretations wish it to be about the afterlife, but it is about this life, finding someplace amazing and existing there. That said, I think I'll use it at my funeral.
A most haunting account - ‘fulllmoon2000’ (above) nailed it very well with some help from ‘ASaltyDog’. Please indulge this interpretation:
'All hands on deck, we've run afloat!' I heard the captain cry.
'Explore the ship, replace the cook. Let no one leave alive!'
Across the straits, around the horn: How far can sailors fly? A twisted path, our tortured course, And no one left alive.
We sailed for parts unknown to man, Where ships come home to die No lofty peak, nor fortress bold, Could match our captain's eye.
Upon the seventh seasick day We made our port of call. A sand so white, and sea so blue, No mortal place at all.
We fired the gun, and burnt the mast, And rowed from ship to shore The captain cried, we sailors wept: Our tears were tears of joy.
Now many moons and many Junes have passed since we made land.
A salty dog, this seaman's log: Your witness my own hand.
@dmtilley Great additions to the convo. Harem lyrics are so cool and fuzzy so one never knows what's up or down. But there are so may clues that this crew was--and continues to be--very dead. So it's almost a reverse time warp and a redo of what really occurred. No doubt, this is an ode to sailors past, reverent in tone but asking larger questions about us. And this is not the only song that references the sea in Procul Harem's body of work.
@dmtilley Great additions to the convo. Harem lyrics are so cool and fuzzy so one never knows what's up or down. But there are so may clues that this crew was--and continues to be--very dead. So it's almost a reverse time warp and a redo of what really occurred. No doubt, this is an ode to sailors past, reverent in tone but asking larger questions about us. And this is not the only song that references the sea in Procul Harem's body of work.
I saw Procul Harem in 1967, in Cleveland, OH, at La Cave, a cozy and iconic...
I saw Procul Harem in 1967, in Cleveland, OH, at La Cave, a cozy and iconic venue at 105th and Euclid Avenue I think I have that right; Though I wish I knew then what I knew now about the band's extraordinary music. I was too young then
Still working on this. Just heard it today.
They're sailing the river Styx. Their captain is Charon. But they do find themselves in Heaven at the end. "The seventh sea-sick day" -- 7 being the number of the infinite. As with most Procol Harum songs that I've heard, Christian imagery and numerology play their part, here. They fired the gun to announce their arrival, and burned the mast because they intended never to return to their port of departure. "A salty dog, this seaman's log: your witness, my own hand" is the end of the letter. In his blindness and old age, Paul had Timothy write his last epistles. Paul came in at the end to say, "I write this in my own hand," to prove to the recipients that the letter was authentic, and that Paul was still alive. It should be written like this:
Now many moons and many Junes have passed since we made land. A salty dog, this seaman's log.
Your Witness
(my own hand)
He felt his name was unimportant, just that he had witnessed this all, and wrote it to us as a promise.
Addendum: Cape Horn is the southernmost tip of Chile. Here's the wikipedia excerpt:
Cape Horn is the most southerly point of South America, and marks the northern boundary of the Drake Passage; for many years it was a major milestone on the clipper route, by which sailing ships carried trade around the world. However, the waters around the Cape are particularly hazardous, owing to strong winds, large waves, strong currents and icebergs; these dangers have made it notorious as a sailors' graveyard.
It was on the way to Australia from England.
To me it is a very simple straightforward song about a ghost ship. The lyrics are hauntingly clear. It may have been inspired by a book or history. It reminds me of some of the stories my father (a merchant marine) used to tell me. Sailors have lots of stories that border on the paranormal. I guess it's the mystery of the sea.
The strings and chord progressions in this song are brilliant. They convey the feeling of floating on the sea extremely well (along with the rhythm and seagul/wave noises). The string section sounds like it was lifted straight out of an older piece of work - like they did with Whiter Shade of Pale.
As for the lyrics, I'm not sure. I think death obvioulsy has something to do with it. The lyrics about "a sand so white...no mortal place at all" sort of sounds like they all died or discovered a paradise.
In regards to 'lapofthegods' - yes, Disney are apparently set to release a film in 2010.
Yeah I going with the death thing to. Just the line about burning mask and stuff. Sounds to me like they destroying the ship, you know no return once ya dead.
But then on the other hand it talks about death in ways that seem to conflict this such as "and no one leaves alive", seems kinda obvious if they are already dead.
Who knows? Amazing song though.
I think, this song is an illustration to a British movie Mutiny on the Bounty 1962 (remake of the Oscar Winning original made in 1935). The crew of the British Navy ship Bounty went on riot against the crude captain. They let the captain go back to England on the small boat, and fled from the chase to the unknown island, being lead by senior officer, played by Marlon Brando. They have found the beautiful refuge, paradise like island with plenty of food and water, but their new captain died, trying to save a navigation instrument from the ship, burnt by the crew members. This a sad story of separation from the Mother Land. Salty Dog could have been a slang name for a typical sailor.
Alright. Getting deeper and more shallow at the same time.
This is a song about a man dreaming of his perfect love. "All hands on deck," is the last thing any sailor wants to hear. It means there is terrible trouble about. "We've run afloat," is the opposite of what any sailor would worry about. They were bound to sea, but actually being at sea was a fearful thing. This is a man who has left his home and his mother. "Explore the ship, replace the cook," terrible freedom from Mother. "Across the straits," -Keith Reid "straight is the gate and narrow the path that leads to salvation."-- Jesus Christ. "Around the horn," horn being a symbol of fertility, referring to a penis. "How far can sailors fly?" sperm being the ultimate sailors. "A twisted path, our tortured course, and no one left alive," the horrible emptiness of the life of a single man. "We sailed for parts unknown to man, where ships come home to die," every voyage ends in the port. The port being the right vagina, in this case. "No lofty peak, nor fortress bold could match our Captain's eye," no woman can fulfill him so far. "Upon the seventh seasick day we made our port of call," after an eternity of searching adrift, (no seasoned sailor should ever get seasick), he found his girl. "A sand so white, and sea so blue, no mortal place at all," she had white skin and blue eyes, and was so beautiful that the sailor could not believe she was human. "We fired the gun, and burnt the mast, and rowed from ship to shore The captain cried, we sailors wept: our tears were tears of joy," -- ejaculation, and more, an emotional connection. "Now many moons and many Junes have passed since we made land," they're growing old together. "A salty dog," he's unworthy of this experience. "This seaman's log," semen, penis, the account of the whole story. "Your witness. My own hand." the fact that he can dream it (and masturbate over the idea) means the reality must be out there, somewhere.
Hi there, I just signed in on the purpose of exploring this beatiful song's lyrics. I'm more with the thing of "travel through life and death", at least a more poetical option. I would hate to think of it as a wanker's testament! :-)
Hi there, I just signed in on the purpose of exploring this beatiful song's lyrics. I'm more with the thing of "travel through life and death", at least a more poetical option. I would hate to think of it as a wanker's testament! :-)
I have loved this song since my early boyhood, it used to be the opening of one of the very first tv programs I can recall - it was called "adventures" or something - and kept listening to it like a mantra forever. Then I grew up and sailed around the world for many years,...
I have loved this song since my early boyhood, it used to be the opening of one of the very first tv programs I can recall - it was called "adventures" or something - and kept listening to it like a mantra forever. Then I grew up and sailed around the world for many years, yes I passed the Horn quite a few times, too, and never really felt like having to dig into meanings - weird as it may be. The song was some sort of a "call" to me, if you like, as I was born far from the sea. Now I'm over fifty and bolted to the mainland, but the song certainly still evokes the freedom and fear of sailing into the blue, totally unaware of whatever comes next, wind in your hair and eyes pointed into the infinite. And all the confused mixed feelings and unanswerable questions that go with it. Just like life when you face it day-to-day, and death.
"we run afloat", though, means "we have a big hole in the hull" and is perfectly consequent to "all hands on deck" as a serious alert. What I don't understand is: Why "A Salty Dog" ? What has a dog to do with it all ? I am not mothertongue, so possibly a hidden meaning of this expression eludes me ? A dog (maybe a humble person) that has spent too much time at sea ? Thanks buddies, catch you soon.
Thanks for your notes, particularly about what "we've run afloat" means, Chicco. Salty dog is an old English term for a sailor. Something to do with the typical sailor of the time being low-bred and reeking of sea salts. I came across Libertatia and James Misson in my readings, recently. Libertatia was a libertarian, communist pirate haven set up in Madagascar in the 1600s. I wonder if Reid might have been thinking about it when he wrote this song. Would a ship from England in the 1600s have traveled all the way around Cape Horn just...
Thanks for your notes, particularly about what "we've run afloat" means, Chicco. Salty dog is an old English term for a sailor. Something to do with the typical sailor of the time being low-bred and reeking of sea salts. I came across Libertatia and James Misson in my readings, recently. Libertatia was a libertarian, communist pirate haven set up in Madagascar in the 1600s. I wonder if Reid might have been thinking about it when he wrote this song. Would a ship from England in the 1600s have traveled all the way around Cape Horn just to avoid the Cape of Good Hope? In other words, would they have sailed west to get to Madagascar?
@ASaltyDog I agree that it has to do with finding love and salvation. The boat is a symbol of the soul. The sailors are physically alive, but dead in their souls. So when they find salvation it is a huge surprise. The "How many moons how many Junes" is what marks it as being about finding the "loving homeland." Because these are empty words used as cheap rhymes in doggerel poems about love. So they represent the "torturous journey" to find earthly love, which leaves us stranded and dead. But at the end of the poem they find the true...
@ASaltyDog I agree that it has to do with finding love and salvation. The boat is a symbol of the soul. The sailors are physically alive, but dead in their souls. So when they find salvation it is a huge surprise. The "How many moons how many Junes" is what marks it as being about finding the "loving homeland." Because these are empty words used as cheap rhymes in doggerel poems about love. So they represent the "torturous journey" to find earthly love, which leaves us stranded and dead. But at the end of the poem they find the true love. A lot of the details aren't easy to figure out, but this is Procol Harum, after all.
@ASaltyDog I agree that it has to do with finding love and salvation. The boat is a symbol of the soul. The sailors are physically alive, but dead in their souls. So when they find salvation it is a huge surprise. The "How many moons how many Junes" is what marks it as being about finding the "loving homeland." Because these are empty words used as cheap rhymes in doggerel poems about love. So they represent the "torturous journey" to find earthly love, which leaves us stranded and dead. But at the end of the poem they find the true...
@ASaltyDog I agree that it has to do with finding love and salvation. The boat is a symbol of the soul. The sailors are physically alive, but dead in their souls. So when they find salvation it is a huge surprise. The "How many moons how many Junes" is what marks it as being about finding the "loving homeland." Because these are empty words used as cheap rhymes in doggerel poems about love. So they represent the "torturous journey" to find earthly love, which leaves us stranded and dead. But at the end of the poem they find the true love. A lot of the details aren't easy to figure out, but this is Procol Harum, after all.