The Cuckoo's Nest Poem by David Lewis Paget

The Cuckoo's Nest



They lived in a farm on the lower slopes
Of a place called Gresty Hill,
Three sisters, Emily Jane and Hope
And the younger one called Jill,
My father said to avoid those girls
And my mother echoed him,
‘They're plain and nasty and not for you,
My son, my darling Jim.'

Like everything that's denied to you
My interest was aroused,
I'd watch them swilling the pigs below
And milking the Jersey cows,
They went barefoot and they slopped through mud,
When they laughed, I heard their cries,
And watched from up on the hill above
Till I caught their laughing eyes.

Then they'd point at me, and they'd strut and flounce
And would shake their tangled hair,
A blonde, brunette and an auburn girl
They would stand below, and stare,
And sometimes, when they were feeling bold
They would hitch their skirts up high,
Put one foot on a water cask
And show me a muddy thigh.

‘Don't never go down to that Gresty Farm, '
My parents made me swear,
‘For once they get you they'll use their charm
And will likely keep you there.'
But the girl called Jill had a butter churn
And she made it soft as silk,
And came with Hope to our rustic barn,
Selling the sisters' milk.

They smiled and giggled when I came out
And they thrust their wares at me,
‘I don't know whether the folks will want, '
I said, ‘I'll go and see.'
But my father came and shooed them off,
‘We don't want the likes of you!
You keep yourselves to your Gresty Farm
And do what you have to do.'

I asked my mother what they had done
And she shed a whispy tear,
‘Some things cannot be undone, my son,
I try not to interfere.'
My father turned to me, stony, grim
Said sleeping dogs should lie,
‘The likes of them are forbidden, Jim,
But you'll not know the reason why.'

The day came after my father fell
From the tractor, over the hill,
Was crushed, and after the funeral
All of his secrets spilled.
My mother took me aside to say
That my father wasn't a saint,
‘You know how a cuckoo drops its egg
In another's nest… Don't faint! '

‘Two of the three at Gresty Farm
Were his, but I don't know which,
Their widowed mother would put about
Before they were born, the bitch!
It well could be the first and the third,
The second, I couldn't tell,
All I know is your father made my
Life, like a living hell! '

Jim went down to the Gresty Farm
For the first time in his life,
He lined up three of the Gresty girls
And said, ‘I need me a wife.
I'm told that two of the three of you
Are my sisters, is it true?
I need to know what your mother knows
For I sure can't marry two.'

Their mother Gail gave a fearsome wail
When confronted by the four,
The daughters said, ‘Well we never knew,
Why didn't you tell us before? '
‘Emily Jane and Hope were his,
I never was going to tell,
But Jill was William Parson's girl,
Your father should burn in hell! '

He took Jill back to his hillside farm
And he called his mother out,
‘This is Jill, and her father's Bill,
I've been told that, without doubt.'
Then he said to Jill, ‘Will you marry me? '
She was coy, and answered slow,
‘You'll have to prove you can carry me,
If you can, you never know! '

29 January 2015

Wednesday, January 28, 2015
Topic(s) of this poem: romance
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
READ THIS POEM IN OTHER LANGUAGES
David Lewis Paget

David Lewis Paget

Nottingham, England/live in Australia
Close
Error Success