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I really enjoyed studying this painting. My brother has a similar ship model with historical significance attached to it and my home town in Massachusetts. The history goes back to colonial times when the locals rebelled against the British imposing taxes and scuttled the ship. This happened before The Boston Tea Party, but never got the same publicity. Anyway, when I look at this picture I canât help but think of Bruce Springsteen singing âGlory Daysâ. When that old man was young and sailing on shipsâŚâŚ those were his glory days.
(syntax supported by the Google, Bing, Yahoo, DuckDuckGo, Ecosia, and Yandex search engines) in the browser address bar (or search for it using one of those search engines) and choose the first Category: found, and once there find the text string Story, and click its link for info and links that point to more info about this roughly jumbo envelope size painting. Other versions has the strip coloration image.Â
Again, a larger strip image is shown by merely clicking the image in Mr. Melcherâs THROWBACK THURSDAY: MASTERPIECE #2311 (10/20/19) (January 17, 2024) blog entry, accessible by the Check out the blog! box after the last comment. I have added a comment there pointing to the blog entry with my comment pointing to info about this artist I used to point to here. So far, 9 works by him have been used here (11 times total, including this and a prior Throwback Thursday repeat), the October 21, 2019, strip being its first use. The October 24, 2023, strip has the prior by him.
Papared25: âWhen we were in port weâd all see who could get the fattest woman up the gangplank. Thatâs why they were called whalers.â
âŚ
Kind&Kinder: We called him Ishmael, and he saw me battle the white whale. I remember it well. Used to write rhymes, I think. He was a watcher. Thatâs when I died, dear little cherub. He was scribbling something about some young lady from Dallas when the whale took me under. Good times!
Call me Ishmael: I were there when âe took ye under/ anâ it tore me olâ âeart asunder/ I were just rhyminâ âDallasâ/ wiâ âmast like a phallusâ/ but might I âave saved ye ? I wonderâŚ
âŚ
Call me Ishmael: A wise sailor once to me said / as sternwards he hastily fled / âyou may pee oâer the rail/but donât soak the sail / and be certain to poop in the head.â
âWe wuz laden wiâ tea from Kowloon/ when we ran into that typhoon/ by the end oâthat squall/ it were clear to us all/ that our schooner would no longer âschoonâ "
âŚ
Bookworm: Donât you just hate it when the grownups wonât let you play with your birthday presents?
âŚ
Linguist: The ole Capt. explaining how the sailors would dive off of the crowâs nest ⌠and occasionally even hit the water.
âŚ
Masterskrain: In case you have ever wondered⌠In naval architecture, a poop deck is a deck that forms the roof of a cabin built in the rear, or âaftâ, part of the superstructure of a ship.
The name originates from the French word for stern, la poupe, from Latin puppis. Thus the poop deck is technically a stern deck, which in sailing ships was usually elevated as the roof of the stern or âafterâ cabin, also known as the âpoop cabinâ. On sailing ships, the helmsman would steer the craft from the quarter deck, immediately in front of the poop deck. At the stern, the poop deck provides an elevated position ideal for observation.
Solstice*1947 about 1 year ago
/// With âThe Captainâ young Jim liked to loiter,
to hear tales of a pirate exploiter.
The boy itched when he neared
the drunkâs full white neck beard,
(which was grown out to cover a goiter).
BE THIS GUY about 1 year ago
My original post in 2019:
The moment little Charlie realized he didnât want to be a sailor.
Say What Nowâ˝ Premium Member about 1 year ago
My original comment: âGrandpa, I think you were suppose to build the ship in the bottle.â
rmremail about 1 year ago
See, Timmy? My boat is bigger than yours is.
Bilan about 1 year ago
âAnother one of Grandpaâs boring stories. And he still smells.â
Jayalexander about 1 year ago
And THAT! is why Peter Pan is a fairy tale.
Pickled Pete about 1 year ago
Lady loves a joke about 1 year ago
âThis is an incomplete model. Itâs missing one thing you MUST remember to take on the sailboat, dear lad â the sails!â
cdward about 1 year ago
Based on what Iâm smelling, Grandpa, should we call this the poop room?
[Traveler] Premium Member about 1 year ago
And I said âfetch me my brown pantsâ
Egrayjames about 1 year ago
I really enjoyed studying this painting. My brother has a similar ship model with historical significance attached to it and my home town in Massachusetts. The history goes back to colonial times when the locals rebelled against the British imposing taxes and scuttled the ship. This happened before The Boston Tea Party, but never got the same publicity. Anyway, when I look at this picture I canât help but think of Bruce Springsteen singing âGlory Daysâ. When that old man was young and sailing on shipsâŚâŚ those were his glory days.
thebashfulone about 1 year ago
âYeah, yeah. And then the big white whale appeared. Can I go now, Grampa?â
Call me Ishmael about 1 year ago
There be those who bemoan and bewail/
The end of the age of the sail../
Who lightly esteem/
The arrival of steam/
Preferring the gust of the galeâŚ
Linguist about 1 year ago
I must go down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky,
And all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by,
And the wheelâs kick and the windâs song and the white sailâs shaking,
And a grey mist on the seaâs face, and a grey dawn breaking,
.
I must down to the seas again, for the call of the running tide
Is a wild call and a clear call that may not be denied;
And all I ask is a windy day with the white clouds flying,
And the flung spray and the blown spume, and the sea-gulls crying.
.
I must down to the seas again, to the vagrant gypsy life,
To the gullâs way and the whaleâs way where the windâs like a whetted knife;
And all I ask is a merry yarn from a laughing fellow-rover,
And quiet sleep and a sweet dream when the long trickâs over.
__________John Masefield
wincoach Premium Member about 1 year ago
And then, one day, we landed at a port in Thailand, and there was this girl who would do anything! And thatâs how I met your grandmother.
The Wolf In Your Midst about 1 year ago
The boy is absolutely riveted.
.
Rivets were the only thing that could stop him from leaving. He broke the leather straps.
Rev Phnk Ey about 1 year ago
Bill Murrayâs latest gig since heâs not allowed at Pebble Beach anymore.
prrdh about 1 year ago
Kid realizing the only thing worse than a dad joke is a granddad joke.
MuddyUSA Premium Member about 1 year ago
Boy: Sheesh, he tells me the same story everyday how he saw a whale swallow someguy named JonahâŚâŚâŚ
Csaw Backnforth about 1 year ago
Santa, thatâs what I wanted for Christmas. What do you mean youâre keeping it?
Calvins Brother about 1 year ago
âYes Sir, this ship and I sailed many a time, in the bath tub.â
PoodleGroomer about 1 year ago
Their fleet is sailing towards us over the horizon.
Bring me my brown pants.
Call me Ishmael about 1 year ago
âOk, Bobby â here goes:
Aboard the good ship Venus/
Migod- you should have seen us../
The figurehead/
Was a wh*** in bed/
And the mast was a petrified p****âŚ..â
Ken Holman Premium Member about 1 year ago
âSoon I will have spun enough of my whiskers into threads I can use to make the sails!â
mabrndt Premium Member about 1 year ago
A Story of the Sea:Â
Paste (including the quote marks)Â
"Category:Models of ships in art" WikimediaÂ
(syntax supported by the Google, Bing, Yahoo, DuckDuckGo, Ecosia, and Yandex search engines) in the browser address bar (or search for it using one of those search engines) and choose the first Category: found, and once there find the text string Story, and click its link for info and links that point to more info about this roughly jumbo envelope size painting. Other versions has the strip coloration image.Â
Again, a larger strip image is shown by merely clicking the image in Mr. Melcherâs THROWBACK THURSDAY: MASTERPIECE #2311 (10/20/19) (January 17, 2024) blog entry, accessible by the Check out the blog! box after the last comment. I have added a comment there pointing to the blog entry with my comment pointing to info about this artist I used to point to here. So far, 9 works by him have been used here (11 times total, including this and a prior Throwback Thursday repeat), the October 21, 2019, strip being its first use. The October 24, 2023, strip has the prior by him.
6turtle9 about 1 year ago
I admit, itâs a bit cold during the winter, but still it was worth it to use all my facial hair for the rigging ropes.
d1234dick Premium Member about 1 year ago
in just a few years joe, we can sail away to Tahiti and get married.
hubbard3188 about 1 year ago
Looks like a model of the âConstitutionâ (Old Ironsides)
Running Buffalo Premium Member about 1 year ago
In the tone of âthatâs not a knife âŚâ
Thatâs not a ship Billy ⌠THIS is a ship!
Running Buffalo Premium Member about 1 year ago
Some comments from the 10/21/19 posts:
âŚ
Papared25: âWhen we were in port weâd all see who could get the fattest woman up the gangplank. Thatâs why they were called whalers.â
âŚ
Kind&Kinder: We called him Ishmael, and he saw me battle the white whale. I remember it well. Used to write rhymes, I think. He was a watcher. Thatâs when I died, dear little cherub. He was scribbling something about some young lady from Dallas when the whale took me under. Good times!
Call me Ishmael: I were there when âe took ye under/ anâ it tore me olâ âeart asunder/ I were just rhyminâ âDallasâ/ wiâ âmast like a phallusâ/ but might I âave saved ye ? I wonderâŚ
âŚ
Call me Ishmael: A wise sailor once to me said / as sternwards he hastily fled / âyou may pee oâer the rail/but donât soak the sail / and be certain to poop in the head.â
âWe wuz laden wiâ tea from Kowloon/ when we ran into that typhoon/ by the end oâthat squall/ it were clear to us all/ that our schooner would no longer âschoonâ "
âŚ
Bookworm: Donât you just hate it when the grownups wonât let you play with your birthday presents?
âŚ
Linguist: The ole Capt. explaining how the sailors would dive off of the crowâs nest ⌠and occasionally even hit the water.
âŚ
Masterskrain: In case you have ever wondered⌠In naval architecture, a poop deck is a deck that forms the roof of a cabin built in the rear, or âaftâ, part of the superstructure of a ship.
The name originates from the French word for stern, la poupe, from Latin puppis. Thus the poop deck is technically a stern deck, which in sailing ships was usually elevated as the roof of the stern or âafterâ cabin, also known as the âpoop cabinâ. On sailing ships, the helmsman would steer the craft from the quarter deck, immediately in front of the poop deck. At the stern, the poop deck provides an elevated position ideal for observation.
Call me Ishmael about 1 year ago
@Running Buffalo: thanks for the post! It was a Golden Age !