Old Albion sat on a crag of late.
 And sang out-'Ahoy! ahoy!
Long, life to the captain, good luck to the mate.
And this to my sailor boy!
   Come over, come home,
   Through the salt sea foam,
   My sailor, my sailor boy.
'Here's a crown to be given away, I ween,
 A crown for my sailor's head,
And all for the worth of a widowed queen,
 And the love of the noble dead;
   And the fear and fame
   Of the island's name
  Where my boy was born and bred.
'Content thee, content thee, let it alone,
 Thou marked for a choice so rare;
Though treaties be treaties, never a throne
 Was proffered for cause as fair.
   Yet come to me home,
   Through the salt sea foam,
   For the Greek must ask elsewhere.
''Tis a pity, my sailor, but who can tell?
 Many lands they look to me;
One of these might be wanting a Prince as well,
 But that's as hereafter may be.'
   She raised her white head
   And laughed; and she said
   'That's as hereafter may be.'                
This poem has not been translated into any other language yet.
I would like to translate this poem
 
                    