I was born in Blackpool in 1958 and I there is nothing that inspires me more than a drive along the promenade - car indows open, wind blowing the waves. My darling Dad, (who was also a 'sandgrown'un'), told me that if you ever feel low, there is nothing better than the air at the end of North pier. He said, "It was worth a pound a bucketful".
For all its beauty, the sheer power of the sea ia awesome. I rememeber the devastation of the tsunami that hit Sri Lanka one Boxing Day. When the sea invades the land, there is only one winner. Man has no defence against it. We can build walls, creat sea defences but ultimately we are susceptible to its will.
On 28 – 29 October 1927, serious flooding happened in the Fleetwood area. More than 1,800 properties became inundated with sea water and sadly, six people lost their life. At the time it was the worst flood that the Fylde Coast had ever experienced.
It was what you might call a ‘perfect storm’. The winds were gale force 12, reaching 80mph. The 32′ tide was about seven feet higher than predicted. Most of the town was under seawater following this flooding in Fleetwood in 1927.
Drafted in to help was a fleet of small rowing boats, many of them borrowed from Stanley Park lake. The boats ferried supplies to the hundreds of people stranded at home, while they were unable to get out.
The deep water persisted for three days before it started to subside.
My poem was inspired by the 1927 flood. I wrote it during my spell as Wyre Poet in Residence in 2013.
And Oh The Sea
And oh the sea,
The sand filled sea
that crowds into the estuary,
raising levels as it flows,
flooding marshland cratered lows.
Where herring gulls send piercing cries,
cutting through the cloud swept skies.
Drifting, lifting, ebbing ‘caws’,
shrill between the breakers’ roars.
Jostling on the sandbank mound,
beaking mackerel
mashed in mud,
with violent currents swirling round.
And oh the sea
The wretched sea
that raises crests to break upon
the mother cradling little one,
who waves eternally from shore
to seamen lost forevermore.
An older child arm braced to chest,
skirts clinging to their cold bronze legs,
a wind-break to the red-legg’d terns,
wading surf
filled with foam
gripping sand-logged esplanade.
And oh the sea.
The destructive sea,
that overflowed through cobbled row
to flood the cottages below
and lifted logs from port to town
breaking doors
and pouring down,
filling all with filth and grime:
Retreating left a salty line
engraved on walls
etched on hearts
in memory for all of time.
And oh the sea
The abundant sea
That brought the trawlers’ catch to land
To feed the hungry factory hand
To women waeving trusty nets,
with fateful hearts and faint regrets,
to catch the hake for fish and chips
to open mouths and licking lips
Sustenance piled on a plate.
Or newsprint wrap
With mushy peas
It kept the war torn Nation great.
And Oh the sea,
The turbulents sea,
That ebbs and flows through history
Ships at sai, then pleasure steam,
Trips that built the childhood dream
Bringer of happiness
Taker of life
Widow-maker of Fleetwood wife.
And Oh the sea,
The relentless sea.
With power to shape our destiny
It takes the very breath from me.
Thanks for reading. Adele
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