This Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894) poem describes the toil of a square-rigged sailing ship, caught between two headlands and unable to make windward to escape. The crew fights all day, coming so close to land that they feel they can see the burning fireplaces and smell the Christmas dinners. Finally, the captain gambles on adding extra sails, saving the ship, but the homesick sailor finds celebration difficult.

The poem has been set to music, for example by Beag Horn, and to an original melody by Charlie Ipcar.