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Happy St. Patrick’s Day!

Galway Hooker Sloop

Happy St. Patrick’s Day!

Below is a ballad composed by one of our authors, Stephen A. Carter, for the Galway Sailing Club located in Galway, Ireland.

Stephen is also the author of the four‑book Matari Series, a fact‑driven historical fiction saga that explores the U.S. Civil War and highlights the pivotal contributions of Black Americans to the conflict.

THE GALWAY HOOKER

Sleek fishing boat, red sails full blown

In foaming wake she cruised alone.

Upon her deck a lad did sway,

Kept looking back across the bay.

 

From Claddagh town his tearful bride,

Upon a dock stood tall and cried.

White hanky danced upon the wind,

As em’rald eyes upon him pinned.

 

To starboard bow Clare Hills rose high,

Through spray the hooker scudded by.

All sails lay taut before the blast,

Aboard a groom clung to a mast.

 

The Galway hooker flew away,

Across North Sound that fateful day.

From Inishmore to Rossavail,

That night o’er surf heard widows wail.

 

At dawn a body washed ashore,

Found by a pregnant paramour.

Today her ghost still haunts the scene,

And in the wind one hears her keen.

 

Refrain:

A Galway hooker sailed away,

And took her love across the bay.

A widow waits upon the shore.

Will she be pining evermore?

Photo is courtesy of the Galway Museum

 

79 UXBRIDGE ROAD - A WWII Romance

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79 UXBRIDGE ROAD - A WWII Romance
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Tom, who was previously an Accountant in the shipping office of Cunard, has arrived home from the second world war to his wife Martha and their two children, Brian who is five and Janey eleven.

Because of the terrible conditions in the concentration camp in which he was imprisoned by the Germans, Tom contracts TB and is subsequently admitted to a sanitarium leaving Martha to care for the family.

Tom’s mother who lives in style in Belgravia does not endear herself to anyone and blames her son’s ill health on his enlistment in the war. However, Martha’s mother is the complete opposite to Grandma Johnson, and Brian and Janey adore visiting her in the school holidays.

In Martha’s struggle to care for her family, she is supported by her gossipy but kind neighbour, Ethel, who lives next door and likes to play Bingo at the local hall.

Tom dies of TB, but he did not die alone as Edward, the kind doctor at the sanitarium had been with him in his final moments.

Will Martha be able to support herself and her two children with no husband? Will she find love again when everything looks so hopeless?

 

 

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