Folklore for the Apocalypse
By Ewan
- 2363 reads
Here is the church,
here is the steeple,
open the doors,
where are the people?
Hear the tocsin,
hear the bell,
know the toxin
by its smell.
Ring a ring o’ razors
with muggers wearing blazers:
a tissue, a tissue
of lies falls down.
See the bishop in his mitre,
such a lucky, lucky blighter;
none to see his secret sin,
or the safe he keeps it in.
Here is the mosque,
here is for prayer,
insult the muezzin,
if you dare.
See the mullah in his madhab
he will never mention jihad,
nor the dreadful, endless hells
awaiting all those infidels.
Mary had a little lamb,
and Little Bo Peep stole it:
Now we have a holy war
just as we foretold it.
“Fire! Fire!” Missus Dyer.
“Where, Where?” Mister Blair.
“In the East,” Reverend Feast,
“In the Kush,” Mistuh Bush.
(Fear in the church,
afraid of the people,
behind the doors
and under the steeple.)
It will not end with a bang,
nor even with a whisper,
just with the pop from the weasel’s gun
and the matter from a blister.
To the sound of the piper’s whistle,
his motley’s button-hole a thistle,
we will skip, and we will dance
and follow him in the Totentanz.
Here is the world,
here is its ending,
open the gates
beyond defending.
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Comments
I read this poem several
I read this poem several times and liked it more each time. I know it may not have been meant to be calypso style but I can imagine someone singing it in that way.
Loved it.
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some of these are really
some of these are really chilling
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