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Post by Admin on Jun 3, 2013 17:46:20 GMT -5
MY FATHER WORKED ON SHIPS: My father worked on ships. They spelked his hands, dusted his eyes, his face, his lungs. Those eyes that watered by the Tyne stared out to sea to see the world in a tear of water, at the drop of an old cloth cap. For thirty weary winters he grafted through the snow and the wild winds of loose change. He was proud of those ships he built, he was proud of the men he built with, his dreams sailed with them: the hull was his skull, the cargo his brains. His hopes rose and sunk in the shipwrecked streets of Wallsend and I look at him now this father of mine who worked on ships and I feel proud of his skeletal frame, this coastline that moulded me and my own sweet dreams. He sits in his retiring chair, dozing into the night. There are storms in his head and I wish him more love yet. Sail with me, breathe in me, breathe that rough sea air old man, and cough it up. Rage, rage against the dying of this broken-backed town, the spirit of its broken-backed ships. LINK: www.wallsendhistory.btck.co.uk/
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