The Dockyard Wife Poem by David Lewis Paget

The Dockyard Wife



He sat in the Bell & Lantern with
His pipe and with his beer,
The streets were wet on a misty night
With the pub, the only cheer,
He'd only married the month before
To a girl, not half his age,
And laid it out like a written law,
‘You must make a living wage.'

He said that he'd been disabled by
A burst of cannon shot,
Unleashed by one of the Frenchmen
On his sloop, ‘The Camelot'
He said that he'd done his duty by
His country and the King,
So she would have to support them both
By doing anything.

She wondered what he had meant at first
But soon was disabused,
When he ripped open her bodice, saying
‘What you've got, you'll use.
There's sailors down at the docks each night
Who've been at sea too long,
They'll pay for a bit of comfort, girl,
I want you to be strong.'

He chose the most of her wardrobe and
He threw away her drawers,
He said, ‘Whenever you greet one, you say,
‘What is mine, is yours.'
He chose a long cotton dress, he said
Was much more like a shift,
‘You have to be more than available,
It's easier to lift.'

He wouldn't be moved by the tears she shed,
How much she would implore,
His eyes were hard as her feelings bled,
His word would be the law,
He sent her out as the moon rose up
With its faint reflected light,
‘Make sure you bring all the money back
When you're finished for the night.'

She wandered along dark alleyways
And she saw their shadow shapes,
Standing by darkened buildings, some
With caps and some with capes,
Their eyes would follow her down the lanes
Until just one would shout,
‘Now there's the prettiest dolly bird,
What are you doing out? '

She'd soon get used to the smell of them,
Tobacco, gin and beer,
They'd come in close for a feel of her,
She'd try to hide her fear,
They'd ask how much for a little touch
She would say a shilling down,
If they were more of a gentleman
She would ask for half a crown.

Most of them took her standing up
With her dress up to her waist,
Or bent her over a barrel, it
Depended all on taste,
She'd work right through to the midnight hour
It depended on the trade,
He'd ask in the Bell & Lantern just
How often she'd been laid.

A good night, often she'd bring a pound
That he'd put down on the bar,
And pay for a round of drinks for mates
And for her, a pot or jar,
She'd blush and sit in the corner while
They'd leer and peer and joke,
The bolder ones would approach him, ask
‘How much for a friendly poke? '

He'd say, ‘She's my little money box,
It will cost you half a quid,
But you must be nice, she's sugar and spice
And she'll tell me what you did.'
Then one might lay his money down, say
I'm feeling like a ride,
While he would laugh at his other half,
‘You can take the girl outside.'

One night when out on the dockyard she
Looked bleakly up at the stars,
And saw the Moon through the mist and gloom
Sitting right next to Mars,
So back at the Bell & Lantern she
Picked up and shattered a glass,
Lunged up, and thrust it into his face,
With Mars in her eyes, at last.

26 March 2017

Sunday, March 26, 2017
Topic(s) of this poem: horror
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David Lewis Paget

David Lewis Paget

Nottingham, England/live in Australia
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