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The Five Poets

Soviet Ocean Liners of the 1960s, Their Poetic Names, Cold War Voyages, and the Last Days of Marco Polo

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The Five Poets

De : Cyril Marlen
Lu par : Michelle Peitz
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Some ships pass through history almost unnoticed. They are built, they serve, they age, and they disappear, leaving behind little more than a few photographs, an entry in a register, and the faint memory of a name painted once on steel. And then some ships carry something larger than themselves. Ships that become symbols without entirely meaning to. Ships that reflect the ambitions, anxieties, and identity of the age that produced them.

The Five Poets belonged to this second kind.They were not merely passenger liners designed to move travellers from one port to another.

They were vessels born in a very particular moment, shaped by Cold War realities, engineered for a practical purpose, and then named with surprising cultural tenderness. They carried the Soviet flag across international waters at a time when every outward gesture mattered. They sailed into foreign harbours as quiet statements of modernity, capability, and presence. And long after the world that built them began to dissolve, one of them endured, sailing on under a different name until the final years of the last survivor, the ship known to modern passengers as Marco Polo.

To tell their story is to tell something broader than maritime history alone. It is to tell the story of a world divided, of a system seeking legitimacy and reach, of engineering and culture meeting on the open sea, and of the strange way ships can outlive politics, outlast nations, and continue moving forward even after the era that launched them has passed.

The Five Poets were built in the early 1960s, at the height of a Cold War that was both tense and oddly static. The Second World War was not yet distant, its scars still visible across Europe, its memories still raw. The world had reorganised itself into opposing blocs. On one side stood the capitalist West, led by the United States and its NATO allies. On the other stood the communist East, led by the Soviet Union and its satellite states.

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