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Verses from the past
Passage Through Bab el Mandeb
(A memory of the Brocklebank steamer SS Marwarri in 1960) The steam turbine throbs down the Red Sea road, through the oiled steel deck, the rust-streaked hull, in the dreaded dripping sweat of the Red Sea road. You have never seen such colour, it’s a molten sea of brass, splashed across with mazarine, and Mocha burns in orange low away to port. The sky, blinding at the zenith, fades into asses milk along the horizon, across the ovens of Punt, Eritrea and the Sudan. Javelins in volleys - flying fish pursued by nightmares - break surface, trailing necklaces of silver. Then, like salamanders dancing in a furnace, tortured islands rise up twisted dead ahead - shimmering anvils of the sun. Vapours exude out of long-dead mahogany. Decades of varnish soften and creep down bulkheads. The banded funnel exhales black smoke in rippled pulses that hover, then drift away astern. The phosphor-bronze screw thuds out the passage of time. But the crew are ghosts in history now, scraps of memory, as the old ship glides through the Gates of Weeping. Begun 2003, revised Oct 2010 for the Brocklebank Reunion. Harry Nicholson, one-time radio officer, SS Marwarri. (Bab el Mandeb translates: “Gates of Weeping” - these are the straits at the southern end of the Red Sea across which slaves were carried out of Africa to the markets of Arabia) |
Harry, were the gates of weeping not also known as the gates of hell?
I can feel the heat and blinding light, especially the blue sky turning to asses milk on the horizon! Rgds. Dave |
It was on the Good Ship Venus by God you shuld have seen us. soory forgot the rest. Perhaps some Old Salt can remember.
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The Red Sea always appeared the deepest blue of any of the seas I sailed. |
Charles Causley
A favourite of mine, which reminds me of some of the grizzled old CPOs I have met, written by the late Charles Causley who was a Cornish writer and poet and who served in the Royal Navy in WW2:
CHIEF PETTY OFFICER He is older than the naval side of British history, And sits More permanent than the spider in the enormous wall. His barefoot, coal-burning soul, Expands, puffs like a toad, in the convict air Of the Royal Naval Barracks at Devonport. Here, in depot, is his stone Nirvana: More real than the opium-pipes, The uninteresting relics of Edwardian foreign-commission. And, from his thick stone box, He surveys with a prehistoric eye the hostilities-only ratings. He has the face of the dinosaur That sometimes stares from old Victorian naval photographs: That of some elderly lieutenant With boots and celluloid Crippen-collar, Brass buttons and cruel ambitious eyes of almond. He was probably made a Freemason in Hong Kong. He has a son (on War Work) in the Dockyard, And an appalling daughter In the WRNS. He writes on your draft-chit, Tobacco-permit or request-form In a huge antique Borstal hand, And pins notices on the board in the Chiefs’ Mess Requesting his messmates not to Lay on the billiard table. He is an anti-Semite and has somewhat reactionary views, And reads the pictures in the daily news. And when you return from the nervous Pacific Where the seas Shift like sheets of plate-glass in the dazzling morning; Or when you return Browner than Alexander, from Malta, Where you have leaned over the side, in harbour, And seen in the clear water The salmon tins, wrecks and tiny explosions of crystal fish, A whole war later He will still be sitting under a pusser’s clock Waiting for tot-time, His narrow forehead ruffled by the Jutland wind. Petty Officer Charles Causley |
That is a great poem, Alick - and one I'd not met before. I particularly enjoyed:
Or when you return Browner than Alexander, from Malta, Where you have leaned over the side, in harbour, And seen in the clear water The salmon tins, wrecks and tiny explosions of crystal fish, I've just heard Causley read this at:https://www.discogs.com/release/1222...oems-1951-1975 It's the third poem in. |
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I also love Timothy Winters and the Ballad of the Breadman, which I have stored on my PC with CC reading them. Wonderful good old Cornish voice. Have you read Hands to Dance and Skylark, which is his short story (less than 200 pages) of his service in the RN? We have visited his father's tiny village of Trusham in the Teign valley, which CC knew well, not far from where we live. I must admit that I have only stumbled upon this thread after being a member of Shipping History for years (and SN before that). I have just finished writing my life from a small boy to my service in the RN in a book, which I am currently proof reading, hopefully for the last time. Book Printing UK will be printing a short run for me. I wanted to sell it but am finding it a bit of a hurdle and haven't even got the ISBN, etc sorted yet. It's a labour of love which I should have done years ago when I was younger. I hope I don't get penalised for breaking copyright laws by printing Chief Petty Officer ... (Seems to me that everything is a sin these days) |
Hello, Alick. Thanks for Causley recommendation. It's out of print, but I've just ordered a used copy via Amazon.
Writing memoir is an absorbing pursuit - I'm on with my third. Memoir raises all sorts of memory, and at this distance I wonder how accurate. But, no matter, I've concluded that the stories we tell about the past are valid enough so long as we catch the spirit of the times. Best wishes for yours. I'll look up Timothy Winters. |
Hi Harry the best memoir i ever red was a book called Angela's ashes by Frank Mccourt all about growing up in Ireland (nothing to do with the sea) it was also a film but the book is better, a great but sad book full of laughs and desperation. Regards rustytrawler
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Hello Rusty. It's many years since I read that one. There are so many treasures to read, and all the while time flashes by. I'm reading Thubron's 'The Amur River' currently -- taking it slow because he is such a fine travel writer.
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Hi Harry the best memoir i ever red is Angela's ashes by Frank MCcourt,is about his upbringing in Ireland (nothing to do with the sea) It was also a film but the book is better, a sad but uplifting, and funny memoir about his life as a child in 40s Ireland. MCcourt was a brilliant writer and story teller. Regards rustytrawler.
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Kia ora! Fully agree with you Rustytrawler, Frank McCourt was a great author and I recommend Angela's Ashes as an excellent read. It deservedly was awarded a Pullitzer Prize, the subject alone is worthy of a read. He also wrote another good book Teacher Man.
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Teacher man was his last book. His second book starts when he leaves Ireland, on the Irish oak and starts his new life on his own in America, the second book is called Ti's he only did three books, Ti's is also a great read.
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Irish writers - dunno if anyone else has read JP Donleavy's books? I read The Onion Man once and couldn't put it down. Completely outrageous and very funny.
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Watching the news of late brings to mind a verse from a T. S. Elliot poem. :mad:
This is the way the world ends This is the way the world ends This is the way the world ends Not with a bang but a whimper. |
After reading the book, watching the film and seeing him on numerous Talk Shows I'm convinced Mr mcCourt has a vivid imagination. Fiction rather than Autobiography.
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Under the wide and starry sky,
Dig the grave and let me lie. Glad did I live and gladly die, And I laid me down with a will This be the verse you grave for me: Here he lies where he longed to be; Home is the sailor, home from sea, And the hunter home from the hill. Robert Louis Stevenson. |
I must go down to the sea again, to the lonely sea and sky;
I left my nicks and socks there - I wonder if they're dry? With apologies to Spike Milligan, who should apologise to John Masefield... |
Any Soldier To His Son
I first came across this poem when I was a teenager serving in the Royal Navy. It was handwritten on sheets of paper and I was so impressed by it that I laboriously copied it out by hand and learned it by heart. I have carried it around with me for many years, although I can no longer recite it all from memory. My grandfather served in France in WW1 and I have always felt it is the sort of story he could have told. I have recently learned that George Willis was the author. Alick Lavers
Any Soldier To His Son What did I do, sonny, in the Great World War? Well, I learned to peel potatoes and to scrub the barrack floor. I learned to push a barrow and I learned to swing a pick, I learned to turn my toes out, and to make my eyeballs click. I learned the road to Folkestone, and I watched the English shore, Go down behind the skyline, as I thought, for evermore. And the Blighty boats went went by us and the harbour hove in sight, And they landed us and sorted us and marched us "by the right". "Quick march!" across the cobbles, by the kids who rang along Singing "Appoo?" "Spearmant" "Shokolah?" through dingy old Boulogne; By the widows and the nurses and the niggers and Chinese, And the gangs of smiling Fritzes, as saucy as you please. I learned to ride as soldiers ride from Etaps to the Line, For days and nights in cattle trucks, packed in like droves of swine. I learned to curl and kip it on a foot of muddy floor, And to envy cows and horses that have beds of beaucoup straw. I learned to wash in shell holes and to shave myself in tea, While the fragments of a mirror did a balance on my knee. I learned to dodge the whizz-bangs and the flying lumps of lead, And to keep a foot of earth between the sniper and my head. I learned to keep my haversack well filled with buckshee food, To take the Army issue and to pinch what else I could. I learned to cook Maconochie with candle-ends and string, With "four-by-two" and sardine-oil and any God-dam thing. I learned to use my bayonet according as you please For a breadknife or a chopper or a prong for toasting cheese. I learned "a first field dressing" to serve my mate and me As a dish-rag and a face-rag and a strainer for our tea. I learned to gather souvenirs that home I hoped to send, And hump them round for months and months and dump them in the end. I learned to hunt for vermin in the lining of my shirt, To crack them with my finger-nail and feel the beggars spirt; I learned to catch and crack them by the dozen and the score And to hunt my shirt tomorrow and to find as many more. I learned to sleep by snatches on the firestep of a trench, And to eat my breakfast mixed with mud and Fritz's heavy stench. I learned to pray for Blighty ones and lie and squirm with fear, When Jerry started strafing and the Blighty ones were near. I learned to write home cheerful with my heart a lump of lead With the thought of you and mother, when she heard that I was dead. And the only thing like pleasure over there I ever knew, Was to hear my pal come shouting, "There's a parcel, mate, for you." So much for what I did do - now for what I have not done: Well, I never kissed a French girl and I never killed a Hun, I never missed an issue of tobacco, pay, or rum, I never made a friend and yet I never lacked a chum. I never borrowed money, and I never lent - but once (I can learn some sorts of lessons though I may be borne a dunce). I never used to grumble after breakfast in the Line That the eggs were cooked too lightly or the bacon cut too fine. I never told a sergeant just exactly what I thought, I never did a pack-drill, for I never quite got caught. I never punched a Red-Cap's nose (be prudent like your Dad), But I'd like as many sovereigns as the times I've wished I had. I never stopped a whizz-bang, though I've stopped a lot of mud, But the one that Fritz sent over with my name on was a dud. I never played the hero or walked about on top, I kept inside my funk hole when the shells began to drop. Well, Tommy Jones's father must be made of different stuff: I never asked for trouble - the issue was enough. So I learned to live and lump it in the lovely land of war, Where the face of nature seems a monstrous septic sore, Where the bowels of earth of earth hang open, like the guts of something slain, And the rot and wreck of everything are churned and churned again; Where all is done in darkness and where all is still in day, Where living men are buried and the dead unburied lay; Where men inhabit holes like rats, and only rats live there; Where cottage stood and castle once in days before La Guerre; Where endless files of soldiers thread the everlasting way, By endless miles of duckboards, through endless walls of clay; Where life is one hard labour, and a soldier gets his rest When they leave him in the daisies with a puncture in his chest; Where still the lark in summer pours her warble from the skies, And underneath, unheeding, lie the blank upstaring eyes. And I read the Blighty papers, where the warriors of the pen Tell of "Christmas in the trenches" and "The Spirit of our men"; And I saved the choicest morsels and I read them to my chum, And he muttered, as he cracked a louse and wiped it off his thumb: "May a thousand chats from Belgium crawl under their fingers as they write; May they dream they're not exempted till they faint with mortal fright; May the fattest rats in Dickebusch race over them in bed; May the lies they've written choke them like a gas cloud till they're dead; May the horror and the torture and the things they never tell (For they only write to order) be reserved for them in Hell!" You'd like to be a soldier and go to France some day? By all the dead in Delville Wood, by all the nights I lay Between our lines and Fritz's before they brought me in; By this old wood-and-leather stump, that once was flesh and skin; By all the lads who crossed with me but never crossed again, By all the prayers their mothers and their sweethearts prayed in vain, Before the things that were that day should ever more befall May God in common pity destroy us one and all! George Willis Poet who survived the war 1919 http://www.firstworldwar.com/poetsan...ertohisson.htm http://www.forcespoetry.com/poemdetails.asp?ID=221 |
Thank you ALICK and well done regards rustytrawler
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When I was young I could recite it word for word - those were the days! |
Thanks, Alick. It makes for a reflective read. Brings to mind my old dad who was wounded on the Somme. He got home - which is why I'm here, I suppose.
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Any soldier to his son
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Ballad of the Breadman
Ballad of the Breadman Mary stood in the kitchen Baking a loaf of bread. An angel flew in the window ‘We’ve a job for you,’ he said. ‘God in his big gold heaven Sitting in his big blue chair, Wanted a mother for his little son. Suddenly saw you there.’ Mary shook and trembled, ‘It isn’t true what you say.’ ‘Don’t say that,’ said the angel. ‘The baby’s on its way.’ Joseph was in the workshop Planing a piece of wood. ‘The old man’s past it,’ the neighbours said. ‘That girls been up to no good.’ ‘And who was that elegant fellow,’ They said. ‘in the shiny gear?’ The things they said about Gabriel Were hardly fit to hear. Mary never answered, Mary never replied. She kept the information, Like the baby, safe inside. It was the election winter. They went to vote in the town. When Mary found her time had come The hotels let her down. The baby was born in an annexe Next to the local pub. At midnight, a delegation Turned up from the Farmers’ club. They talked about an explosion That made a hole on the sky, Said they’d been sent to the Lamb and Flag To see God come down from on high. A few days later a bishop And a five-star general were seen With the head of an African country In a bullet-proof limousine. ‘We’ve come,’ they said ‘with tokens For the little boy to choose.’ Told the tale about war and peace In the television news. After them came the soldiers With rifle and bombs and gun, Looking for enemies of the state. The family had packed up and gone. When they got back to the village The neighbours said, to a man, ‘That boy will never be one of us, Though he does what he blessed well can.’ He went round to all the people A paper crown on his head. Here is some bread from my father. Take, eat, he said. Nobody seemed very hungry. Nobody seemed to care. Nobody saw the god in himself Quietly standing there. He finished up in the papers. He came to a very bad end. He was charged with bringing the living to life. No man was that prisoner’s friend. There’s only one kind of punishment To fit that kind of crime. They rigged a trial and shot him dead. They were only just in time. They lifted the young man by the leg, Thy lifted him by the arm, They locked him in a cathedral In case he came to harm. They stored him safe as water Under seven rocks. One Sunday morning he burst out Like a jack-in-the-box. Through the town he went walking. He showed them the holes in his head. Now do you want any loaves? He cried. ‘Not today’ they said. Charles Causley |
[B] WRITTEN IN THE ER LOG BOOK BY "BUZ", ENGINEER CADET, CITY OF HEREFORD, c 1964 /B]
Have one on me said a drunken old tree, To a man going home to his spouse, No thank you said he 'cos, as you can see, I've just had one on the house. |
More spoken poetry by the late Charles Causley at https://poetryarchive.org/poet/charles-causley/
Strongly recommend you listen to his second reading of Timothy Winters. 'Tis proper Cornish. |
CHRISTMAS AT SEA
Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894) The sheets were frozen hard, and they cut the naked hand; The decks were like a slide, where a seaman could hardly stand; The wind was a nor'wester, blowing squally from the sea; And cliffs and spouting breakers were the only things a-lee. They heard the surf a-roaring before the break of day; But 'twas only with the peep of light we saw how ill we lay. We tumbled every hand on deck instanter, with a shout, And we gave her the maintops'l, and stood by to go about. All day we tacked and tacked between the South Head and the North; All day we hauled the frozen sheets, and got no further forth; All day as cold as charity, in bitter pain and dread, For very life and nature we tacked from head to head. We gave the south a wider berth, for there the tide-race roared; But every tack we made we brought the North Head close aboard: So's we saw the cliffs and houses, and the breakers running high, And the coastguard in his garden, with his glass against his eye. The frost was on the village roofs as white as ocean foam; The good red fires were burning bright in every 'long-shore home; The windows sparkled clear, and the chimneys volleyed out; And I vow we sniffed the victuals as the vessel went about. The bells upon the church were rung with a mighty jovial cheer; For its just that I should tell you how (of all days in the year) This day of our adversity was blessed Christmas morn, And the house above the coastguard's was the house were I was born. O well I saw the pleasant room, the pleasant faces there, My mother's silver spectacles, my father's silver hair; And well I saw the firelight, like a flight of homely elves, Go dancing round the china-plates that stand upon the shelves And well I knew the talk they had, the talk that was of me, Of the shadow on the household and the son that went to sea; And O the wicked fool I seemed, in every kind of way, To be here hauling frozen ropes on blessed Christmas day. They lit the high sea-light, and the dark began to fall. "All hands to loose topgallant sails," I heard the captain call. "By the Lord she'll never stand it," our first mate Jackson, cried. ..."It's one way or the other, Mr Jackson," he replied. She staggered to her bearings, but the sails were new and good, And the ship smelt up to windward just as though she understood. As the winter's day was ending, in the entry to the night, We cleared the weary headland, and passed below the light. And they heaved a mighty breath, every soul on board but me, As they saw her nose again pointing handsome out to sea; But all that I could think of, in the darkness and the cold, Was just that I was leaving home and my folks were growing old. |
There are good ships and wood ships
and ships that sail the sea But the best ships are freindships and may they always be . ============== I came across that one years ago , but cant remember who wrote it . Happy New Year to all Shipmates on here . Tony |
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Passage Through Bab el Mandeb
(A memory of the Brocklebank steamer SS Marwarri in 1960) The steam turbine throbs down the Red Sea road, through the oiled steel deck, the rust-streaked hull, in the dreaded dripping sweat of the Red Sea road. You have never seen such colour, it’s a molten sea of brass, splashed across with mazarine, and Mocha burns in orange low away to port. The sky, blinding at the zenith, fades into asses milk along the horizon, across the ovens of Punt, Eritrea and the Sudan. Javelins in volleys - flying fish pursued by nightmares - break surface, trailing necklaces of silver. Then, like salamanders dancing in a furnace, tortured islands rise up twisted dead ahead - shimmering anvils of the sun. Vapours exude out of long-dead mahogany. Decades of varnish soften and creep down bulkheads. The banded funnel exhales black smoke in rippled pulses that hover, then drift away astern. The phosphor-bronze screw thuds out the passage of time. But the crew are ghosts in history now, scraps of memory, as the old ship glides through the Gates of Weeping. Begun 2003, revised Oct 2010 for the Brocklebank Reunion. Harry Nicholson, one-time radio officer, SS Marwarri. (Bab el Mandeb translates: “Gates of Weeping” - these are the straits at the southern end of the Red Sea across which slaves were carried out of Africa to the markets of Arabia) |
Thank you Harry.
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