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He sat there, same table, most Sundays If he came alone, he did not stay that way long His corner table would fill, with nodders and smilers People with pint glass recognition of all he'd done His special tankard 'World's Strongest Man'; no year, for that would be cruel I watched him as I grew, from colouring book infant to The girl who stood a round for her father Each year he shrunk a little, those muscles softening to fat And still they came and asked him to bend their metal pipes And carry a man on each shoulder One handed him a rope for his teeth, and Asked if he would tow away his junker, they Laughed and bought him another round, mate, another pint For the World's Strongest Man He told me once, when I was 10 and curious, The stories of his ink marks, the places He had been and all the strange and wonderful things He had lifted and bent and pulled and Training with the Sumo, ice hole bathing with Inuit, wrestling hobbled Russian bears, the lion that left 'see, this mark here' A yawn when he'd placed his big, shaggy head In the beast's mouth because He too was a king I asked him once, when I had grew If he should have been More like bamboo Thin and reedy, bending in the wind No substance to speak off, yet With a strength belieing it's slender form He told me, as the acolytes trudged past In heavy boots and rough winter coats 'All I ever wanted was for someone else to take the weight, even for a moment, but now it's too late' I smiled sadly, because I understood Tested strength and how it withstood And yet I felt his heart-deep sorrow At looking back, not to tomorrow I did not buy him another pint, I walked with him instead Through the door he'd left a thousand times To his taxi, usual driver, 'home, mate?' Lean on me for now, I said. I'm stronger than I look.
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Dec 8, 2014
Dec 8, 2014 at 12:57 PM UTC
The Strongest Man in the World
He sat there, same table, most Sundays If he came alone, he did not stay that way long His corner table would fill, with nodders and smilers People with pint glass recognition of all he'd done His special tankard 'World's Strongest Man'; no year, for that would be cruel I watched him as I grew, from colouring book infant to The girl who stood a round for her father Each year he shrunk a little, those muscles softening to fat And still they came and asked him to bend their metal pipes And carry a man on each shoulder One handed him a rope for his teeth, and Asked if he would tow away his junker, they Laughed and bought him another round, mate, another pint For the World's Strongest Man He told me once, when I was 10 and curious, The stories of his ink marks, the places He had been and all the strange and wonderful things He had lifted and bent and pulled and Training with the Sumo, ice hole bathing with Inuit, wrestling hobbled Russian bears, the lion that left 'see, this mark here' A yawn when he'd placed his big, shaggy head In the beast's mouth because He too was a king I asked him once, when I had grew If he should have been More like bamboo Thin and reedy, bending in the wind No substance to speak off, yet With a strength belieing it's slender form He told me, as the acolytes trudged past In heavy boots and rough winter coats 'All I ever wanted was for someone else to take the weight, even for a moment, but now it's too late' I smiled sadly, because I understood Tested strength and how it withstood And yet I felt his heart-deep sorrow At looking back, not to tomorrow I did not buy him another pint, I walked with him instead Through the door he'd left a thousand times To his taxi, usual driver, 'home, mate?' Lean on me for now, I said. I'm stronger than I look.
tracey-katz
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Dec 8, 2014
Dec 8, 2014 at 12:57 PM UTC
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