I think he stays in his excellent maritime picture here. "The morning brings out a fresh young breeze, fills our sails and ends the doldrums, our lucky ship speeds across the sea..."
(Ahhhh, i love this song.) The moment of stagnation, or grief, passes and now life will go on. I think that's the meaning of the picture. The sea funeral has this strong image, too. You have to go out there, say farewell, leave the beloved one "in the deep dark sea", and than you return... because you yourself are (still) a living man. And life goes on.
This is a song I can really relate to. I think he really gets to the point here with every line. Much better than in some of the Get Lucky lyrics for example.
Although I really love the GL album and I really think it is his best solo album, some of the lyrics seem not to have the same relevance than some of his classic ones used to have. Or I am just not able to find the relevance. Border Reiver is a good example. He obviously wrote it because he used to hitchhike down the road from Glasgow to London and was happy when an Albion truck took him up. Also he remembered the Albion Factories and the driver in their long coats because he was a kid when he lived just opposite these factories. So these drivers were real heroes to him and the truck itself was a symbol for liberty and youth and energy. BUT these facts are all well known to us only because he told us in the press kit. When listening to the lyrics, I just find no link to these themes. It is just a song about how nice it is to drive an Albion truck in the Glasgow morning sun and maybe about how tough it is to be a driver in this vehicle. It is still great of course, and Mark maybe wants it exactly this way, but I would like to have some more levels if you know what I mean. Just one example. Same with So Far From The Clyde. If it is just a song about wrecking a ship, well then it is not so relevant. If it is a song that works on several other levels, I can't find any hints for that (apart from one that Dusty once pointed out about some religious pictures). I could go on and on about this because I really think very much about Mark's lyrics at the moment. And I very much like the Haul Away lyrics because they have a clear picture and also deliver a clear key that leads me to the other lyrical dimensions. The quality of Haul Away and also from Privateering (lyrics) gives me hope that he maybe reaches a new level of song writing on his new album.
Sorry, too long again..
LE