I done my level best to whomever's concerned For children of wailer's, we all take a turn Now we lie in our oars boat, us six men at sea And travel for home with rations for three Two ounces fresh water and hardtack a day But we'll see Nantucket again Forty days and forty nights, we followed the wind In the southern Pacific, many miles from land The first mate of Essex and few crew with me Our captain, George Pollard, is lost at the sea And I look to the East and see nothing but blue So what can us starving men do? But sing, sing, we're on our way home Across the Pacific and through the unknown With God as our shepherd, then no harm shall pass We'll be in Nantucket at last But, oh, how this skin of blistered leather pulls tight on our skulls As rations all dwindle away And, oh, how our dreams every night of our stomachs so full But awake to find water to last two more days Our spirits all broken, our minds are all crazed And, oh, how I'd kill for just one more good meal But home's a little farther away So sing, sing, we're on our way home Across the Pacific and through the unknown With God as our shepherd, then no harm shall pass We'll be in Nantucket at last But, oh, when I look at my crewmen, I see them looking back at me Humanity gone from their eyes Once we were men of our god and brothers at sea Those times weren't so long ago, but how quick they pass Was once death a stranger, now approaching us fast But we are Nantucket, the proud and the strong For Nantucket, we must travel on But, oh, how these hunger pangs drive all the thoughts in my brain And body dries up in the sun Oh, 'cause it's meat and fresh water that the six of us crave So six bits of paper are tossed in the cap And six men reach in, and each pull out a scrap And one man of six with the unlucky draw Is one man to help feed us all