by Humphlock » Fri Feb 08, 2008 11:03 pm
As promised last night, here's another poem from Wal.
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Bachelor's Lament
Walter Paterson
The gloomy night is gathering fast
Chill blows the bleak December blast
Comes through the gloom the Bay's dull roar
Of waves, wild dashing, on the pebbly shore
My feathered workers to their perch retire
And I sit, lonely, by the cottage fire
Brooding on one mistake, now clearly seen
Brooding on what I am, and might have been.
Pity that man whom cruel fate
Dooms to the status celibate
For him, no blazing hearth does burn
In welcome, at his home return.
No children meet him at the gate
To glad his heart with childish prate
Or gather, joyeous, round his chair
To climb his knees, the kiss to share.
He hears no children's joyful noise
At play, amongst their favoured toys
Nor ever called, is he, to right
Some small dispute, some petty fight
Or wipe away the trickling tear
Engendered by some childish fear.
No bedtime prayer, for him alone
Is wafted to the heavenly throne
No wife stands, smiling, at the door
To greet him, when his work is o'er
Or bend a sympathetic ear
To share his joy, his hope, his fear.
With busy shears, his clothes to mend
Or to the household chores attend -
No wife, supreme in cooking art
With tempting dishes, charm his heart
Or smiling, share the evening fire
With busy, clicking knitting wire
Or, with the wiles, that women use
Recount the local spicy news.
No wife, in social hour to go
To trip the light fantastic toe
Or share with him, the social call
Or function, in the Village Hall
No wife, to keep him, snug and warm
When loudly blows the winter storm
When he, in sickness, lies supine
No wife, to scan the Doctor's line
Precluded from these scenes of life
Who took not to himself a wife.
Such is my fate, recounted here
Friend! spare a sympathetic tear.
But stay; not every man is blessed
Who finds himself with wife possessed
Fate worse than mine, his role in life
The trembling vassal, to the tyrant wife
Better an Anchorite to dwell
On some far mountain, in a lonely cell
In peace and happiness, his life persue
Than suffer torture, from a wifely Shrew.
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Kinna poignant, that yin, eh? Is the trickling tear blinnin' any o yiz?
Maybe no efter the last verse.