The One-Eyed WitchA Poem by David Lewis PagetLavern lived down in the valley Away from the village folk, She didn’t want to be seen by them Playing with eggs and yolk, And skin of frog, an old dead dog A toad and the eye of newt, She only conjured them in the fog When dressed in her birthday suit. But I would see her abroad in the woods From up in the old oak tree, She flitted naked under a hood Albeit most carelessly, She liked to gather her toadstools there And take her favourite bat, Clinging onto her long, dark hair And follow her magical cat. The mushrooms grown in a Faery Ring Were an ever present danger, For goblins gathered them all themselves For a goblin baby’s manger, She’d lost an eye in a goblin pie When he reached on out and plucked it, She got it back, but the dwarf was sly In the sauce she’d used, he’d ducked it! I didn’t mind that she’d got one eye For her thighs were well developed, I thought I’d marry her, by and by, Then she went with Rodney Mellop, I wandered up to her window-sill When I heard his sighs and moans, I thought they must have been making love, She was hanging up his bones. I must admit that it calmed me down, That it put a damper on it, I’d watched him lie in her pot and drown As she danced in a pretty bonnet, His bones she pulled from the boiling stew And made wind chimes from his femurs, At night they sound like a xylophone In a madhouse full of dreamers. David Lewis Paget
© 2016 David Lewis PagetReviews
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