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Thread: A Vindi Boy’s First Trip

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    Default A Vindi Boy’s First Trip

    A Vindi Boy’s First Trip
    (A further excerpt from
    Boy on a Dolphin)
    By John C Ryan


    In Victoria Dock
    They rested
    Line after line
    Rust-streaked and beautiful
    Made glorious by size and bulk.
    Salt weariness
    Of plunging empires
    Smelling of tropics
    Limes
    Spices
    Black pan
    Of greaser fare
    Salted and sauced
    With baccy and rum.

    Stretched hawsers strain
    Reeking restlessness
    Aching to snort
    Where nothing can find them.

    Plucked heart of darkness
    In star biting blackness
    Shiver of loneliness
    Rusting the sides.

    Sighing for tattoo pricks
    Loving in Dirty Dick’s
    When Kate, Jane, or Margery
    Crosses the bar.

    Wind of the winches
    Swing of the spar
    Lashings of Mersey
    To sweet Malabar.

    The gangway leaned
    Against the eager boy
    Took him into the black bulk
    That was his berth.

    The pots in the galley
    Were stacked to the deckhead
    Plenty of soda
    To sluice the deck down.

    The Chief overseeing
    The stacking and loading
    Was Frying-Pan Smith
    From the Orient Line.

    His wild reputation
    Preceded his signing
    A ship can be fed
    From an old frying pan.

    If it can’t be cooked on a frying pan
    It can’t be cooked!

    Torpedoed and scuttled
    From convoy to convoy
    Adrift in the Arctic
    Through war after war.

    I’ve wrung more salt water
    Out of my socks
    Than you’ve ever sailed on!

    The cooks they were mighty
    Two massive Jamaicans
    Who kept the pots piling
    And nursed the stockpot.

    They sent the young boy
    On an errand of mercy
    To fetch the glass nails
    From Frying-Pan Smith

    The boy was sent back
    For the great rubber hammer
    And told in the shower
    His hangings were crook’d.

    That if the condition
    Of one hanging lower
    Was not put to rights
    It might stunt his growth.

    He must go to the Captain
    To have them both checked
    For a handicapped sailor
    Might bring them bad luck.

    So up on the bridge
    With his flags at half mast
    The captain and mate
    Checked his tackle for balance.

    They asked him to cough
    Pronounced with a flurry
    A few days at sea
    Would restore him to health.

    The great engine started
    The ship gave a shudder
    The rhythm went straight
    To the little boy’s heart.

    Down Greenwich Reach
    Past the Isle of Dogs
    The moment was fixed
    Like a star in the sky.

    The wind rose to whisper
    A metamorphosis
    From Sheerness to Margate
    Unchrisemed by salt.

    Poseidon came snorting
    The mad butting channel
    To see a new child
    On a brave dolphin’s back.

    Bow biting restlessness of Biscay
    Mast stuttering shake
    In a plunge of breaking
    Ship shuddering shiver
    Corkscrew of straining
    Pot, pan and kettle
    In bedlam of galley.

    Cooks groaning, boy greening
    In a crutch-retch of pitching
    Black-pan careering
    To stuff the late watch.

    Slip slop of sliding
    From gash-bin to dumping
    Plate rack and ruin
    In rattle of days.

    Vastness of ocean
    When land spit is misted
    Earth smell demolished
    In buckets of storm.

    World in a calming
    Of silk lipping morning
    The lap of her loving
    Beyond the Azores.

    The thrust of her throbbing
    The warmth of her sunning
    The lilt of her drift
    In the sky of her sea.

    The point of her balance
    Held firm to the offing
    Breeze kiss of shoulders
    Now stripped to the waist.

    The green boy was browning
    On deck for the peeling
    Of spuds by the barrel
    For sea pie and stew.

    A dag to the bridge
    In the early sea misting
    With tea for the helmsman
    At pinking of dawn

    Showed the whole panorama
    From offing to nowhere
    A chalice of sunshine
    Where flying fish flopped.

    From strap-up to bunktime
    They peopled the hatches
    The tiger, the peggy,
    The cooks and the boy.

    Woodbines would answer
    A sparkle of stardust
    Pinpoint the voyage
    Of Venus and Mars.

    They swung the wild lamp
    Of their hardtack and longing
    The lives of their shipwreck
    The triumph of love.

    Bar brawls in shanties
    Ports for the homeless
    Tenders of tenderness
    Love with no price.

    Sometimes the laughter
    Would bubble the ocean
    With dolphin and porpoise
    In great streaks of light.

    The swell in the wash
    Of the wake of their discourse
    Deepened the shelf
    Of the little boy’s mind.

    And they didn’t spare him
    Though no sailor harmed him
    A boy on a ship
    Was the child of them all.

    Dhobi days drifted
    In buckets of calming
    On knife-edge of wonder
    The tropics were born.

    Bermuda was herbage smell
    Off the port bow.
    Tang of lemon scratching salt
    Wafted on wild blue of morning
    Probing the startled heart
    Plucking the sea boy
    To meadows and tar
    Claiming him for
    A barefoot stamp
    Over frizz of frost
    In stiffness of grass.

    World wanderers wooed
    To wantonness
    Led by the nose
    In a sap-surge of sense
    Raising the Adam
    For Edens of Eves
    When sun licks the salt
    Off a land-scented breeze.

    Shelter of palms on the furthest flung ridge
    Greened in a whisper of tropical shore
    Kingston Jamaica now firm in the glass
    With cooks at the railings straining for more.

    The boy now fixed in the far fo’c’stle head
    Heard Port Royal bells ring under the waves
    He thought of the Pit, brass cannon and spit
    Cutlass of Blackbeard unfetter the slaves
    Heard Captain Morgan belay Captain Blood
    To throw the chest down with pieces of eight.

    The winch gave a grunt, the hawsers were taut
    The cooks jumped over to rush the dock gate
    The ship nestled up and breasted the quay
    Home was the sailor boy home from the sea.
    Last edited by James E Probetts; 20th October 2008 at 04:00 PM.

  2. #2
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    Absolutely Fantastic,James!
    Ive never heard that-I'm going to save,print and frame it.
    It says so very much quite economically-and so evocative,too.
    I'm quite moved Wow!-I've got goose-pimples.

    Davey

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    Ah, 'salt weariness' and 'plunging empires'. only a seaman would know the ghost of these sentiments, truly a mariner's poem.

    Reg Kear.

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    Hi James.
    Well done mate. Flashes of ships, smells, and coal dust rising, saltwater from tears brought it all back.
    All in one nostalgic poem
    Cheers Des
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