fina@fina·20 NisHe had trouble, this uncle, trouble breathing sometimes. And he never talked about the war at all. Never.Çevir English43150
fina@fina·20 NisIf someone slams a door, or if something falls in the kitchen his uncle jumps, and sometimes drops to the floor to hide behind the furnitureÇevir English0020
fina@fina·20 NisComes to visit and to be looked after for awhile by Johnny's mother, this uncle's oldest sisterÇevir English0010
fina@fina·20 Nisbut also because of another uncle who fought in the trenches. He comes to stay with them sometimes, this other uncle.Çevir English0020
fina@fina·20 NisOur little boy knows that the war in the trenches had been bad, and very scary. He knows this because of the uncle that never came backÇevir English0000
fina@fina·20 Nis, his flying goggles covered with the tiniest of rain drops tasting of the air, tasting of heaven.Çevir English0010
fina@fina·20 NisHe imagines the clouds feel soft and cold on his face as he flies through them,Çevir English0000
fina@fina·20 Nisthe uncle who never came home. Johnny thinks the war was exciting for the pilots, soaring high above the battlefields & into the clouds.Çevir English0000
fina@fina·20 Nisfostered by the stories his many uncles tell him & the silence that falls when someone mentions that other, unmet uncle,Çevir English0000
fina@fina·20 NisThe war was long over, his mother kept telling him, but it loomed large in his imagination,Çevir English0000
fina@fina·20 NisJohnny scampers along beside the motionless train his arms out, making the sputtering zooming noises he thinks that fighter planes must makeÇevir English1000
fina@fina·20 NisHe alone can guide the ship to safety; but the warmth & sweetness of the day are calling for his attention, & he runs off down the platformÇevir English0100
fina@fina·20 NisOur Johnny imagines struggling into a sou'wester, fighting against wind and massive waves crashing across the deck to reach the wheel.Çevir English0000
fina@fina·20 NisHe has heard his father tell stories about the many great ships that have been sunk by storms on the great lakes.Çevir English0000
fina@fina·20 Nisand that storms on those lakes can be as bad as anything on the ocean, with monstrous waves, and howling windsÇevir English0000
fina@fina·20 NisThose lakes are so big, Johnny knows, that sometimes you can't see the far shore. He knows that they are deep and cold,Çevir English0000
fina@fina·20 Nisbut he did work on the mammoth freighters that ply the waters of the great lakes a few hundred miles of where they now stand.Çevir English0000
fina@fina·20 NisLeave your sea legs behind, find your land legs! says his father. His father has never been to sea, never even seen the ocean,Çevir English0000
fina@fina·20 NisJohnny finds it difficult to walk on ground that stays exactly where his foot left it, so used is he to the rolling and shaking of the trainÇevir English0000