Behind the shattered corners In the dawning of our years We played among our memories Of happiness and tears. We walked along the seafront Two children hand-in-hand And if you believed in magic Then you lived in a magic land. From lemonade and seaweed And driftwood floating by We built sand castle empires That reached up to the sky And left our bankrupt foot prints To be taken by the tide And laughed inside our innocence As the world passed by our side. We gazed along the coastline From the top of Bluebell Hill. The buttercups and dandelions Were pulled against their will The trembling woods behind us Held their dark secrets too Where nettles sting And the butterflies wing And banks of wild flower bloom. And the bells on Sunday morning Rang far across the sea And salty sea birds sang their songs About eternity And the ocean muttered something No man could understand For he who solves a paraphrase Of powers at his command. In the corner of the garden Where the rhododendrons grew There lived a Captain Shannon Whom everybody knew His life he spent on sailing ships From the Azores down to the Horn He danced the rhythm of the waves Since the day that he was born. He used to take us on his knee And smoke his pipe of clay And speak of storms and hurricanes And San Francisco Bay He spoke of wars and earthquakes That have torn the world apart How little children laughed and died With each beat of your heart. One day, a wounded sea bird Came to rest upon the sand His wings had ceased to function And were dry with oil and sand A gentle dog had sensed him As the wind blew from the South And fetched the lump of lifelessness Hold safely in his mouth. In the stroke of every hour The oily bird was bathed For Captain Shannon saw the bird And knew he could be saved In a few days, he became quite well And quickly learned to fly Flew off towards the sunset And left us wondering why. And we prayed there every morning My tiny friend and I Looking out across the ocean Beneath the clear blue sky Where the telescopic irons Are half hidden in the mist They broke the dim horizon Where the sea and heaven kissed. There was an old man from the irons Who hobbled with a stoop He ate small boys for breakfast Who did not eat their soup. I'll carry you in a row boat To an island called Gigha And if you weren't too polite You ne'er be seen again. The old hunchback lived all alone In a cave down by the sea And stocked his fish-box kitchen With fools like you and me He wore one golden earring And grew seaweed in his hair Though no man had ever seen him We all knew he lived there. He had a dog called Seafus Who would bite you if he could Though you would never come to harm If the life you led was good. Now, he might have been a walrus Or he might have been a seal Though most times he looked just like a dog Though not a dog for real. One, night while Captain Shannon Was alone beside beer He heard the hunchback calling him And knew not any fear For he was proud to be alive Of his three score years and ten With twice the guile and twice the strength Of ordinary men "I do not fear ye hunchback!" Was the captain's brave reply "I am a bold seafaring man And not afraid to die!" But the dog had sniffed the ocean From the sea man's salty skin And lead him to the water's edge As the tide came pounding in. And we hid beneath the blankets As the storm raged all night long And once or twice we thought we heard The hunchback's mournful song But we were children freshly launched Upon the seas of life And news of Captain Shannon's death Cut deeply like a knife What happened on the beach that night Is never been quite clear For no one heard his helpless cries Or saw him disappear But we all knew who had been there Was as plain as it could be By his usual trail of seaweed Down the beach and out to sea And the bells on Sunday morning Rang far across the sea And salty sea birds sang their songs About eternity And the ocean muttered something No man could understand For he who solves a paraphrase Of powers at his command. Behind the shattered corners In the dawning of our years We played among our memories Of happiness and tears. We walked along the seafront Two children hand-in-hand And if you believed in magic Then you lived in a magic land. From lemonade and seaweed And driftwood floating by We built sand castle empires That reached up to the sky And left our bankrupt foot prints To be taken by the tide And laughed inside our innocence As the world passed by our side. We gazed along the coastline From the top of Bluebell Hill. The buttercups and dandelions Were pulled against their will The trembling woods behind us Held their dark secrets too Where nettles sting And the butterflies wing And banks of wild flower bloom. And the bells on Sunday morning Rang far across the sea And salty sea birds sang their songs About eternity And the ocean muttered something No man could understand For he who solves a paraphrase Of powers at his command. In the corner of the garden Where the rhododendrons grew There lived a Captain Shannon Whom everybody knew His life he spent on sailing ships From the Azores down to the Horn He danced the rhythm of the waves Since the day that he was born. He used to take us on his knee And smoke his pipe of clay And speak of storms and hurricanes And San Francisco Bay He spoke of wars and earthquakes That have torn the world apart How little children laughed and died With each beat of your heart. One day, a wounded sea bird Came to rest upon the sand His wings had ceased to function And were dry with oil and sand A gentle dog had sensed him As the wind blew from the South And fetched the lump of lifelessness Hold safely in his mouth. In the stroke of every hour The oily bird was bathed For Captain Shannon saw the bird And knew he could be saved In a few days, he became quite well And quickly learned to fly Flew off towards the sunset And left us wondering why. And we prayed there every morning My tiny friend and I Looking out across the ocean Beneath the clear blue sky Where the telescopic irons Are half hidden in the mist They broke the dim horizon Where the sea and heaven kissed. There was an old man from the irons Who hobbled with a stoop He ate small boys for breakfast Who did not eat their soup. I'll carry you in a row boat To an island called Gigha And if you weren't too polite You ne'er be seen again. The old hunchback lived all alone In a cave down by the sea And stocked his fish-box kitchen With fools like you and me He wore one golden earring And grew seaweed in his hair Though no man had ever seen him We all knew he lived there. He had a dog called Seafus Who would bite you if he could Though you would never come to harm If the life you led was good. Now, he might have been a walrus Or he might have been a seal Though most times he looked just like a dog Though not a dog for real. One, night while Captain Shannon Was alone beside beer He heard the hunchback calling him And knew not any fear For he was proud to be alive Of his three score years and ten With twice the guile and twice the strength Of ordinary men. "I do not fear ye hunchback!" Was the captain's brave reply "I am a bold seafaring man And not afraid to die!" But the dog had sniffed the ocean From the sea man's salty skin And lead him to the water's edge As the tide came pounding in. And we hid beneath the blankets As the storm raged all night long And once or twice we thought we heard The hunchback's mournful song But we were children freshly launched Upon the seas of life And news of Captain Shannon's death Cut deeply like a knife What happened on the beach that night Is never been quite clear For no one heard his helpless cries Or saw him disappear But we all knew who had been there Was as plain as it could be By his usual trail of seaweed Down the beach and out to sea And the bells on Sunday morning Rang far across the sea And salty sea birds sang their songs About eternity And the ocean muttered something No man could understand For he who solves a paraphrase Of powers at his command.