Analysis of The Katamarine



An easy breeze beset the sea as early morning sunlight began glowing over the horizon.
“Ahoy there, maties!” bellowed Captain Krieg to the crew, beginning his daily routine speech.
“Retrieve the whiskey, rum, and cheese; for tonight’s festivities will surely please any lady who boards the Katamarine.”
The ship was on schedule to pull into port that evening after having been adrift for several seasons.
Fantastic travels through many regions left the swashbucklers feeling depleted, although much gold and silver had been retrieved.
These weren’t evil men, but their deeds could hold a priest in confession for weeks and fill him with enough contempt to condemn them to hell for eternity.
These weren’t holy believers either, so fear of death could never be detected in their presence.
These men held a simple code of never-ending cheating, stealing, and equanimity when sharp steel took the breath of a friend or foe.
Their only rule was that mutiny be unanimous; otherwise, a fool’s head was to be removed for discussing such disrespectful schemes.
Fortunately, no such thought crossed the mind of any deckhand during times of prosperity—or so Krieg believed.
At six o’clock, the ship docked in the only spot open for entering the mainland.
The lot belonged to King Freelaw, but he was thought lost at sea by Queen Esmerelda and the townspeople.
The crew quickly tethered lines to bollards and secured a gangplank.
Afterward, the Captain sent First Mate Jenkins straight to the butcher for steak, bacon, and chicken legs.
“No party is complete without mutton, strong drinks, and women worth smitten,” asserted Krieg.
His invitation quickly spread around the city:
The Katamarine’s plank will be available to the prettiest dames, as we offer plenty of drinks, entertainment, and company for a one-night celebration.
Capetown housed plenty of lowbrow citizens wishing to make an appearance on the magnificent ship, but quarters were tight below the poop deck.
So a few crew members made reservations to stay in the local brothel & saloon to get their beaks wet, harpoon a prostitute, and rest a full night’s moon.
As preparations were made, a heavy storm poured in while everyone except the Captain was scattered about Capetown.
Alone on the bow, Krieg scowled as dark clouds drowned out the promising crowd.
The festivities were undoubtedly ruined by twenty-two-foot swells crashing at sails.
Nails on the peer began snapping as rails collapsed, unraveling lines bound to various ships.
The Katamarine began drifting away from the bay amidst the shifting current and waves.
As outrageous-sized hail pelted the deck, Krieg felt as though Zeus had let loose the Kraken.
The Captain stood confidently at the helm until a giant blue whale’s tail impacted the vessel hard on its port side.
It rocked the boat left and right, causing Krieg to roll overboard, but he managed to grab ahold of a knife before casting his life to the tide.
He struggled to swim towards a rope dragging from the ship, but it drifted away too quickly, forcing him to forfeit before his energy stores were expended.
After the unmanned Katamarine vanished out of sight, Captain Krieg cried to the sky, “I am not ready to enter Davy Jones’ Locker yet, so by God I’m placing one last bet! Let my breath carry the message that I will repent for my sins if You cast me an angelic safety net to save me from death!”


Scheme ABACDEFGHDIJKLMEANOPQRSTAUUVW
Poetic Form
Metre 110101011101010110100010 011110101101010110011 01010101110100110110101101 01111011011110101010111010 0101011010101100101110101101 1110111111010010110111010110111110100 111001010111111010100110 11101011101010100010011110110111 110111100101001001111101101010101 100011110111011011010011101 1110110010110110001 010111111111111100100010 01101011100101 100010111101101011100101 1101010110110101100101 101010101010 0111101001010011110101101001001011010 1110111001011101010010011100101011 101110101011001010011111101010010111 10100101011011001010110011 01101111111101001 0010000100101101111011 11010110110101001111001 01011001101010101001 10101110011111111101 01011000101010101111001011111 1101101101111011101101101011011101 1101101011010111100111010111001110010010 100011101111011101111101101011011111101111111001011101111111111010111111
Characters 3,444
Words 599
Sentences 31
Stanzas 1
Stanza Lengths 29
Lines Amount 29
Letters per line (avg) 94
Words per line (avg) 20
Letters per stanza (avg) 2,721
Words per stanza (avg) 568

About this poem

Part one to an epic prefacing each chapter to a self-published book titled “One Poetic Dreamer”.

Font size:
 

Written on October 20, 2019

Submitted by Kgbs123 on January 22, 2023

Modified on April 03, 2023

2:59 min read
42

Ken Dass

Dreamer, Writer, Nomad more…

All Ken Dass poems | Ken Dass Books

1 fan

Discuss this Ken Dass poem analysis with the community:

0 Comments

    Citation

    Use the citation below to add this poem analysis to your bibliography:

    Style:MLAChicagoAPA

    "The Katamarine" Poetry.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 29 Apr. 2024. <https://www.poetry.com/poem-analysis/150921/the-katamarine>.

    Become a member!

    Join our community of poets and poetry lovers to share your work and offer feedback and encouragement to writers all over the world!

    More poems by

    Ken Dass

    »

    April 2024

    Poetry Contest

    Join our monthly contest for an opportunity to win cash prizes and attain global acclaim for your talent.
    1
    day
    14
    hours
    3
    minutes

    Special Program

    Earn Rewards!

    Unlock exciting rewards such as a free mug and free contest pass by commenting on fellow members' poems today!

    Browse Poetry.com

    Quiz

    Are you a poetry master?

    »
    What year was "Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral" originally published?
    A 1701
    B 1789
    C 1773
    D 1761