Mike’s Poem about our Northwest Passage Expedition

A poem about our Northwest Passage Expedition by Michael Harding

 

Iron link

Chains clink

Anchor’s jaw

Bites Ocean floor

Half a fathom

Water chasm

High tide

Boat rise

Tide falls

Wind squall

Bone piercing

Ship Fiercing

North blowing

Sense slowing

Cold

 

Low shore

Earth’s core

 

Volcanic rock

Aftershock

Stone jumbled

Boulder tumbled

Ice gouged

Sun scoured

Shelter from

Approaching storm

 

Empty open

Shallow sloping

Sky reaching

Dry lichen

Snow flooded

Seaweed studded

Terns wheeling

Gulls keening

Haven from

The Polar sea

 

Haul the anchor

Chains a-clanker

 

Northwest Passage

Bound once more

Lonely ship

Cast adrift

Wind and tide

Wild ride

Rain or snow

Row the boat

Pull the oars

The only law

 

Arms aching

Back breaking

Hands blistered

Knees twisted

Shoulders knotted

Eyes bloodshot

Pull the oars boys

Pull the oars

Two by two

Four by four

Pull the oars

 

For distant shores

 

Baffin Bay to Bering sea

Two short months ice free

Sun high

Geese fly

Winter broken

Passage open

Row fast

Row hard

When summers past

Be on your guard

 

Night comes

Low Sun

Clouds, wind

Boat pinned

Sheltered bay

Must stay

Can’t fight

Arctic night

 

So Pull the oars boys

Pull the oars

Point the boat

To distant shores

Westwards steer

Sky is clear

Pull the oars

For distant shores.

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2 Comments

  1. Thank you Stefan and Mrs B for sharing Mike’s verses! Very atmospheric, No doubt more to be added for wailing/whaling/ bailing…..I’ve just read the blog by Stefan with the link for this. It is so incredible that you can calmly type up the account of finding the leak and the crack in the boat…wishing you a safe journey to Paulatuk for repais, and back…

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