Bells And Motley Poem by David Lewis Paget

Bells And Motley



The Jester put on his cap and bells
For the final time, we're told,
The Queen was set to replace him for
She said he was far too old,
‘He doesn't amuse me like he did
Before, when we all were young,
Should I dispense with his services,
Or command the Jester hung? '

Her courtiers were gathered around,
They wanted to please the Queen,
Lord Chalmers said, ‘Suspend by his feet! '
Then Darnley: ‘No! By his spleen! '
‘Tar and Feather him, ' said Bottolph,
‘And run him around the town,
Then tether him to a stake, and light
Him up, in the palace grounds.'

The Queen thought that was hilarious,
And clapped and cried in her mirth,
‘By Jove, we'll have us some jesting yet,
We'll bring him on down to earth! '
‘He's sure to appreciate the jest
For he won't deny your fun, '
The Chancellor of the Exchequer said,
‘We'll gather in everyone.'

While the Jester sat in his lonely room
In a dark and evil tower,
He knew that he would be summoned soon
But he didn't know the hour.
He wondered if she might knight him then
For his services to the crown,
Or grant him a fabulous pension for
The years that he'd played the clown?

For Jesters, they are but mortal men
Aside from their clownish role,
Down under bells and motley lives
A far from perfect soul,
The jesting covers a beating heart
That is rarely ever seen,
And his was filled with a lifetime love
For Her Majesty, the Queen.

He'd loved her since, as a little girl
She'd laughed and played in the grounds,
While he'd leapt out of the bushes there
To her squeals, and laughs and frowns,
He'd always jingled his bells for her,
And carried her in to tea,
When she was sleepy and all laughed out
After playing so happily.

He knew that he'd made more enemies
Than friends, as the years went by,
For jealousy breeds in a court with needs
And the courtiers were sly,
They took it in turns to trip him up
And to hurt, as part of the jest,
But he took new heart at the cruel laughs
By the ones who were not impressed.

He finally stood in front of the Queen
And bowed right down to the floor,
He looked for a smile on her much loved face
But a scowl was all he saw.
‘You've come to the end of your usefulness,
A Fool on a bended knee,
Take him outside and string him up,
Upside down from a tree! '

He hung for an hour in misery,
And then they had cut him down,
Tarred and feathered his motley'd form
And beat him around the town.
They wanted to stake and light him up
But the Queen said, ‘Let him go.
Give him a crown in a silver cup
For the years he amused me so! '

They cast him out in a farmer's field
And barred him then from the court,
He wept and wailed in his anguish there
For a day and a night, and thought;
The slings and arrows he'd suffered from
Were now brought up with his bile,
And sweet revenge was his ruling theme,
He planned and schemed for a while.

One night he went to the palace yard
And crept down the cellar stair,
He doctored all the barrels of hock
And the fine French flagons there,
Then some time after the palace hunt
He hid in the servants' hall,
And waited til they drank and were drunk
At the Queen's Most Favoured Ball.

Then Bottolph woke in a barrel of tar,
And Chalmers hung by his heels,
While Darnley woke in a quivering fear
In a barrel of snakes and eels,
The Queen awoke in her stately bed
Pinned down by a giant sow,
And wearing the Jester's bells. He said,
‘Who is the Jester now? '

12 December 2014

Friday, December 12, 2014
Topic(s) of this poem: horror
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
READ THIS POEM IN OTHER LANGUAGES
David Lewis Paget

David Lewis Paget

Nottingham, England/live in Australia
Close
Error Success