"O Oysters, come and walk with us" The walrus did beseech "A pleasant walk, a pleasant talk Along the briny beach We cannot do with more than four To give a hand to each
It typically carries a crew of 60 to 70 men , though this number fluctuates wildly due to the high mortality rate of pirate life. the walrus black sails
The song's lyrics are as follows:
First and foremost, The Walrus is the physical manifestation of Captain Flint’s singular, obsessive will. When we first meet the ship, it is a lean, powerful frigate, already a feared name in the Caribbean. But Flint’s relationship with the vessel is not one of simple ownership; it is a symbiotic union of purpose. The ship becomes the tool through which Flint executes his grand, vengeful war against civilization. Every scar on its hull, every patched sail, tells the story of a battle fought not for gold, but for a future. The ship’s legendary status—its ability to outrun, outgun, and outmaneuver larger men-of-war—is a direct reflection of Flint’s own tactical genius and unyielding rage. When Flint is at his most broken, the ship feels it; when he is possessed by his vision of a free Nassau, The Walrus cuts through the waves with a predator’s grace. The ship is not just his command; it is his body politic, a sovereign nation of two hundred souls afloat on a hostile sea. "O Oysters, come and walk with us" The