"The Ship that Never Returned" is a ballad written and composed by Henry Clay Work (1832–1884) in 1865. It was first published in September that year by Root & Cady, whom Work had collaborated with throughout the American Civil War.
It narrates the departure of a ship from a harbor that never come back, with a mother and the captain's wife lamenting the loss of their loved ones who were on board.
The song is best known nowadays for melodically inspiring later country tunes—most notably, the 1903 ballad "Wreck of the Old 97", which would become first million-selling country music hit. The melody was also adapted in Walter A. O'Brien's 1948 campaign song "Charlie on the MTA".
Henry Clay Work had gained much popularity during the Civil War, writing tunes for Root & Cady.
The song concerns a ship that left a harbor and never came back. A reason for the ship not returning is not given in the lyrics. However, the line "and their fate is yet unlearned" implies that the reason is unknown.
Traditional folk ballads, as is "The Ship that Never Returned", incorporate a distinct melodic structure, composed of "ballad stanzas". These comprise verses in multiples of four—so, quatrains or octets—linked by an ABCB or ABAB rhyme scheme. Metrically, the lines singularly alternate between iambic pentameter and iambic tetrameter—hence, common meter. Sometimes, spondees and pyrrhics feature, typically in the first metrical foot.
Work's composition abides by these conventions, reflected by the octet-based structure (and a quatrain for the chorus), the ABCB rhyme scheme, and the common meter. His songs are distinguished for a euphonic melody generated by the choice of words. Consider the structural analysis of the first four lines:
Stress | ˘ | ˘ | / | ˘ | / | / | ˘ | / | ˘ | / | ˘ |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Syllable | On | a | sum- | mer's | day, | when | the | wave | was | rip- | pled, |
Stress | ˘ | ˘ | / | ˘ | / | ˘ | / | ||||
Syllable | By | the | soft- | est | gent- | lest | breeze, | ||||
Stress | ˘ | ˘ | / | ˘ | / | / | ˘ | / | ˘ | / | ˘ |
Syllable | Did | a | ship | not | sail | with | a | car- | go | lad- | en |
Stress | ˘ | ˘ | / | ˘ | / | ˘ | / | ||||
Syllable | For | a | port | bey- | ond | the | seas. |
Parodies of the song started appearing by 1888 owing to its popularity.
"The Train that Never Returned" is one of the early parodies of Work's song:
Carl Sandburg's collection American Songbag recorded an adaptation from the Kentucky mountains. The tune formed the basis of "Wreck of the Old 97", about a 1903 train wreck; recorded by Vernon Dalhart in 1924, and many others afterward, the song became the first million-selling country music hit.
Later, the melody was adapted in "Charlie on the MTA", created in 1948, as a campaign song for Walter A. O'Brien about a man unable to alight from a Boston subway train because, rather than change all the turnstiles, the M.T.A. added an exit fare - Charlie did not have the extra nickel to get off the train. The Kingston Trio recorded the song in 1959 (as "M.T.A.") and had a hit with the recording in the same year.