Good Dr. Brown, he fell in love with a girl with sleeves of such rosy silk But her dark eyes roved away, away like the soaring gulls on the wine-dark sea One night he begged she be his bride but she said, “No, it can not be. Just like the gulls, with their hungry cries I love you less than the wine-dark tide.” How he did brood on such cruel words and those rosy sleeves of shining silk Then he took a rock and threw it high And knocked a gull from the wine-dark sky In twilight dusk, in a black eel ditch, the doctor burned wormwood and pitch And with a fist of graveyard dirt he begged the night for that wine-dark heart There she came with those rosy sleeves to touch his lips with such a wine-dark kiss His black top hat to the breeze it went and his flapping arms grew feathered thick His face it stretched to a sharpened beak And how he screeched to feel the wine-dark wind But though he flapped and fought to fly those rosy sleeves held him, oh, so tight