On Tuesday, 12 July 2016 at 01:55:30 UTC+3,
[email protected] wrote:
It means he set out from the River Clyde, with a cargo of coal.
Hope that clears that up. David.C and Rorbertdb are on the button lol.
J
On Friday, June 3, 2016 at 11:04:53 PM UTC+1, Joe Fineman wrote:
[email protected] writes:
On Friday, July 27, 2001 at 3:45:26 PM UTC-4, Bazinkum wrote:
From the song "Flowers Of Bermuda" by Stan Rogers, what does the
second line -Twenty-one days from Clyde in coal- refer to?
Clyde a place, I assume?
Why is it "in coal"?
Is the captain 21 years old, or did it take him 21 days to get to
Bermuda?
Thanks.
The ship is a collier (Nightingale)- that means she carries coal.
There's really no mystery here.
Beware! This reply to a 25-year-old inquiry is unlikely to reach its author. I presume this posting is another result of the fact that
Google has no notion of how newsgroups (used to) work.
The current venue for inquiries of this kind is www.mudcat.org, the
monster that swallowed rec.music.folk.
The Clyde mentioned is a river in Scotland, passing thru Glasgow.
--
--- Joe Fineman [email protected]
||: In pene paritas. :||
Replying 15 years later haha
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