Mr Pettigrew
By Leander42
- 361 reads
Too late we come to realise,
There’s some folk take you by surprise,
Like my friend Mr Pettigrew,
A friend whom I once thought I knew.
Made his fortune in the city,
Had a wife so young and pretty,
Two children who were fair and bonny,
Oh what a life of milk and honey.
Flash cars and mansion on the hill,
There was no dream he’d not fulfil.
Yet though the world seemed at his feet,
Should you pass him in the street,
He'd smile and doff his hat and say,
‘Hello and how are you today?’
Hence everyone who knew him said,
That money’s not gone to his head,
A finer man you’ll never see,
A thing that we could all agree.
So what a shock it was to me,
To find him hanging from a tree,
As dead as any man can be,
A man who asked us how we fared,
A man who truly, truly cared
The notion came to me, quite grim,
We’d never asked the same of him,
And because we hadn’t thought to ask it,
Mr Pettigrew lies in his casket.
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Comments
Money doesn't always corrupt.
Money doesn't always corrupt. And who knows what lies behind what everyone sees?
Small typo in the first line: 'To' should be 'Too'.
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There's an obvious important
There's an obvious important message in your poem about giving aswell as taking. Such a tragic ending though.
Jenny.
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Yes, absolutely. That stigma
Yes, absolutely. That stigma is, thankfully, being broken down. But it's still there.
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What a shame! Sounds he was
What a shame! Sounds he was popular such a nice guy, always smiling and cracking jokes, helping old ladies over the street and that. Nobody really cared. The way the cookie crumbles.
Tom! Keep well
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