You are here: > > The Fairy Curate
The Fairy Curate
Once a fairy Light and airy Married with a mortal; Men, however, Never, never Pass the fairy portal. Slyly stealing, She to Ealing Made a daily journey; There she found him, Clients round him (He was an attorney). |
Long they tarried,
Then they married.
When the ceremony
Once was ended,
Off they wended
On their moon of honey.
Twelvemonth, maybe,
Saw a baby
(Friends performed an orgie).
Much they prized him,
And baptized him
By the name of GEORGIE.
GEORGIE grew up;
Then he flew up
To his fairy mother.
Happy meeting
Pleasant greeting —
Kissing one another.
"Choose a calling
Most enthralling,
I sincerely urge ye."
"Mother," said he
(Rev'rence made he),
"I would join the clergy.
"Give permission
In addition —
Pa will let me do it:
There's a living
In his giving,
He'll appoint me to it.
Dreams of coff'ring
Easter off'ring,
Tithe and rent and pew-rate,
So inflame me
(Do not blame me),
That I'll be a curate."
She, with pleasure,
Said, "My treasure,
'Tis my wish precisely.
Do your duty,
There's a beauty;
You have chosen wisely.
Tell your father
I would rather
As a churchman rank you.
You, in clover,
I'll watch over."
GEORGIE said, "Oh, thank you!"
GEORGIE scudded, Time proceeded; |
So the fairy,
Wise and wary,
Felt no sorrow rising —
No occasion
For persuasion,
Warning, or advising.
He, resuming
Fairy pluming
(That's not English, is it?)
Oft would fly up,
To the sky up,
Pay mamma a visit.
* * * * *
Time progressing,
GEORGIE'S blessing
Grew more Ritualistic —
Popish scandals,
Tonsures — sandals —
Genuflections mystic;
Gushing meetings —
Bosom-beatings —
Heavenly ecstatics —
Broidered spencers —
Copes and censers —
Rochets and dalmatics.
This quandary
Vexed the fairy —
Flew she down to Ealing.
"GEORGIE, stop it!
Pray you, drop it;
Hark to my appealing:
To this foolish
Papal rule-ish
Twaddle put an ending;
This a swerve is
From our Service
Plain and unpretending."
He, replying,
Answered, sighing,
Hawing, hemming, humming,
"It's a pity —
They're so pritty;
Yet in mode becoming,
Mother tender,
I'll surrender —
I'll be unaffected —
"Then his Bishop
Into his shop
Entered unexpected:
"Who is this, sir, — (Fairies clever |
| |
Page Created 29 July, 2011