The Smuggler Poem by David Lewis Paget

The Smuggler

Rating: 5.0


We went to live in Smuggler's Cove
Near a cave, right on the beach,
Where once they'd hidden ill-gotten gains
In the cave, and out of reach.
The locals said two hundred years
Since the smugglers came ashore,
Carrying casks of Spanish wine
And a chest of gold moidores.

Led by a man called One-Eye Red
For the only one he'd got,
He'd lost the other, the locals said,
To a random pistol shot,
He wore a patch on the missing eye
For the wind blew in at the hole,
And froze his brain till he went insane
When the winter winds were cold.

He hung with Sally, a thatcher's wife
Who would meet him in the cove,
And he would sample her plain delights
Till the time came round to rove.
She kept lookout on the cliff top there
For a glimpse of Revenue Men,
And would fire her flintlock pistol where
She had thought she'd sighted them.

My wife, her name was Sally too
And I'd rib her there in jest,
‘You'd better not hug a smuggler, Sally,
Dressed only in your vest.'
We'd laugh back then in those early days
As we worked to settle in,
But sensed some dread foreboding there,
In the air from old past sin.

It came on strong in the winter time
When the cove was filled with mist,
The mouth of the cave was grim and dark
It would almost seem possessed,
Then Sally started to walk at night
As the waves crashed into the shore,
She said she needed to beat the fright
That she'd suffered from times before.

I'd watch her walk to the darkened cave
Then halt to stare in the mouth,
It opened onto the northern shore
Then she'd turn, and wander south,
She'd come back shivering, pale and wan
And would warm up by the fire,
Then come out with the strangest thing
That it filled her with desire.

She'd strip right off by the glowing hearth
And I'm not one to complain,
She'd not been so very down to earth
Since the Lord invented rain,
Then one night when the mist was thick
I could barely see the cave,
When a ghostly figure stepped from the sea
And walked all over my grave.

Then Sally turned and she spoke to him
As my stomach churned inside,
They walked together into the cave
Like a bridegroom and a bride,
I left the cottage, the door ajar
And I ran down to the beach,
But when I got to the mouth of the cave,
Sally was out of reach.

Sally was out of reach that day
And has been each day since,
The phantom that walked her into the cave
Was One-Eye Red at a pinch.
I called and called for her to come back,
I even tried to insist,
But all that I've seen on a winter's night
Are their shadows, abroad in the mist.

13 April 2017

Thursday, April 13, 2017
Topic(s) of this poem: fantasy fiction
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
John Ahern 13 April 2017

Love it, there is a short story hidden here among this gem of a poem. Keep on with the twists David.

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David Lewis Paget

David Lewis Paget

Nottingham, England/live in Australia
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