Winds from far foreign climes beats upon the Lizard rocks Gulls driven towards the blackest of crags, yet pass over safely inland In the darkest skies they wheel and spin as if torn by some giant’s hand White horses gallop crests of waves as they rush towards tiny harbours There to crash savagely and rend cut stones from their secured places Men work to save their boats, fighting the storm which mothers sent Nature conspires to take their very lives as they struggle with her might Rocks gnash their teeth and boats not safe yet, pass near their faces Hoping for the safety of their port, men’s white faces line their gunwales Black, white, red, blue and yellow, boats colours lost within the spray These same boats that forge the men they carry out upon the sea’s wrath But now just seek to bring them safely home to their worried wives Their women stand upon the quay or stare worried from their windows Churchyards on the hills above seaside villages filled with headstones Men’s deaths caused by storms in past times of fishing for their living Leaving spouses, their children to carry on their traditions and religion Headstones cut from the very granite of the weather worn Lizard cliffs Menfolk deep beneath the Cornish loam, there to rest for all eternity Whilst below in the thrashing storm, the families fight once again Then as quickly as it came, the storm blows out, waters return to placid Men stretch their aching backs, those hidden from storm turn out The ******’s mission helps as it can the fractured families And church maybe rings for those lost out to sea, never to be seen again There will be time to mourn, and the village will then lament together And those who are left, they return to their sacred craft of netting fish Return to shining calm, to ply their trade, to bring food to this isles shore
Writing a Cornish Faery tale presently, and I felt parts of the book would benefit from some prose at the beginning of a chapter...