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The Tifo

Love it the club has found it’s identity again literally brings tears to my eyes, them up the road saw money and claim they got their club back for no other reason than that, money. We really do have our club back through clever planning a lot of hard a work, faith in youth and our academy (bit of luck of course) but most importantly the club had a vision stuck with that vision and rode out the mistakes and criticism it’s beautiful to see,

Ha’way the Lads!
When the maggots were wnaking the Saudis off for giving them money, I said I’d rather be at our place because I actually feel a part of something. All the years of league one were nothing more than character building. I’ve never been more proud of being a Sunderland fan.

The boy billionaire needs a stand named after him for what he’s done and given the people of the city.
 

Historically it was County Durham though.

I know , I was born there.

Historically Sunderland was county Durham too
The Lambton Worm

Words by C.M. Leumane (1867)



One Sunday morn young Lambton went
A-fishing’ in the Wear;
An’ catched a fish upon he’s heuk,
He thowt leuk’t varry queer.
But whatt’n a kind of fish it was
Young Lambton cuddent tell.
He waddn’t fash te carry’d hyem,
So he hoyed it doon a well.

chorus:

Whisht! Lads, haad yor gobs,
An Aa’ll tell ye’s aall an aaful story
Whisht! Lads, haad yor gobs,
An’ Aa’ll tell ye ‘boot the worm.

Noo Lambton felt inclined te gan
An’ fight i’ foreign wars.
He joined a troop o’ Knights that cared
For nowther woonds nor scars,
An’ off he went te Palestine
Where queer things him befel,
An’ varry seun forgat abootT
he queer worm i’ the well.

(chorus)

But the worm got fat an’ growed and’ growed
An’ growed an aaful size;
He’d greet big teeth, a greet big gob,
An’ greet big goggle eyes.
An’ when at neets he craaled abootT
e pick up bits o’ news,If he felt dry upon the road,
He milked a dozen coos.
(chorus)

This feorful worm wad often feed
On caalves an’ lambs an’ sheep,
An’ swally little barins alive
When they laid doon te sleep.
An’ when he’d eaten aall he cud
An’ he had had he’s fill,
He craaled away an’ lapped he’s tail
Three times roond Pensher Hill.

(chorus)

The news of this myest aaful worm
An’ his queer gannins on
Seun crossed the seas, gat te the ears
Ov brave and’ bowld Sor John.
So hyem he cam an’ catched the beast
An’ cut ‘im in twe haalves,
An’ that seun stopped he’s eatin’ bairns,
An’ sheep an’ lambs and caalves.
(chorus)

So noo ye knaa hoo aall the foaks
On byeth sides ov the Wear
Lost lots o’ sheep an’ lots o’ sleep
An’ leeved i’ mortal feor.
So let’s hev one te brave
Sor John That kept the bairns frae harm,
Saved coos an’ caalves by myekin’ haalves
O’ the famis Lambton Worm.

(Final chorus)

Noo lads, Aa’ll haad me gob,
That’s aall Aa knaa aboot the story
Ov Sor John’s clivvor job
Wi’ the aaful Lambton Worm.

Is this the full version? I remember something about a curse and witches and a dog and a suit of armour covered in spikes
 
Last edited:
The motto under the tifo is from this by Walter Wintle:

If you think you are beaten, you are
If you think you dare not, you don't,
If you like to win, but you think you can't
It is almost certain you won't.

If you think you'll lose, you're lost
For out of the world we find,
Success begins with a fellow's will
It's all in the state of mind.

If you think you are outclassed, you are
You've got to think high to rise,
You've got to be sure of yourself before
You can ever win a prize.

Life's battles don't always go
To the stronger or faster man,
But soon or late the man who wins
Is the man WHO THINKS HE CAN!
1755425687083.jpeg
 

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I’d also like to point out that “worm” doesn’t mean worm. It means dragon. There are plenty of uses of it in Middle English to mean “dragon” eg in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight where the hero goes on a quest to the wilderness that is the Wirral (really) and, we’re told, “warred with worms and wolves”.

There's other European legends where a 'worm' is depicted as a large serpent, such as the Lindworm in Sweden. I think in most tellings of the Lambton Worm it's closer to this.
 
The Lambton Worm

Words by C.M. Leumane (1867)



One Sunday morn young Lambton went
A-fishing’ in the Wear;
An’ catched a fish upon he’s heuk,
He thowt leuk’t varry queer.
But whatt’n a kind of fish it was
Young Lambton cuddent tell.
He waddn’t fash te carry’d hyem,
So he hoyed it doon a well.

chorus:

Whisht! Lads, haad yor gobs,
An Aa’ll tell ye’s aall an aaful story
Whisht! Lads, haad yor gobs,
An’ Aa’ll tell ye ‘boot the worm.

Noo Lambton felt inclined te gan
An’ fight i’ foreign wars.
He joined a troop o’ Knights that cared
For nowther woonds nor scars,
An’ off he went te Palestine
Where queer things him befel,
An’ varry seun forgat abootT
he queer worm i’ the well.

(chorus)

But the worm got fat an’ growed and’ growed
An’ growed an aaful size;
He’d greet big teeth, a greet big gob,
An’ greet big goggle eyes.
An’ when at neets he craaled abootT
e pick up bits o’ news,If he felt dry upon the road,
He milked a dozen coos.
(chorus)

This feorful worm wad often feed
On caalves an’ lambs an’ sheep,
An’ swally little barins alive
When they laid doon te sleep.
An’ when he’d eaten aall he cud
An’ he had had he’s fill,
He craaled away an’ lapped he’s tail
Three times roond Pensher Hill.

(chorus)

The news of this myest aaful worm
An’ his queer gannins on
Seun crossed the seas, gat te the ears
Ov brave and’ bowld Sor John.
So hyem he cam an’ catched the beast
An’ cut ‘im in twe haalves,
An’ that seun stopped he’s eatin’ bairns,
An’ sheep an’ lambs and caalves.
(chorus)

So noo ye knaa hoo aall the foaks
On byeth sides ov the Wear
Lost lots o’ sheep an’ lots o’ sleep
An’ leeved i’ mortal feor.
So let’s hev one te brave
Sor John That kept the bairns frae harm,
Saved coos an’ caalves by myekin’ haalves
O’ the famis Lambton Worm.

(Final chorus)

Noo lads, Aa’ll haad me gob,
That’s aall Aa knaa aboot the story
Ov Sor John’s clivvor job
Wi’ the aaful Lambton Worm.
Thanks for explaining this.
 
For me, being a native of Chester, I always class sunderland as starting when you cross the roundabout in Shiney heading towards the monument. Everything east of that was Sunderland to me as a kid.

Whilst I don't disagree. Being closer to coast myself and being a bit greedy. I reckon it's the A1. Anything on other side is Durham, Anything on this side is ours, including Lambton Castle and Finchale Priory, the monks in Durham got enough monasteries, we need some sanctuaries for ourselves.
 
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