Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
On a twisting, winding, rutted track That weaved from under the pines, A figure came in a burlap sack Where the crossroad intertwines, I could only see the bleeding feet As they peeped from under the sack, And the hood hid every feature that Would deem it a Jill or Jack. There was purpose in that stolid walk, And determination fixed, I thought to offer a helping hand But my feelings there were mixed, There were leaves and twigs on the figure’s back And a slime that looked like mud, I thought that it might have been attacked When I saw that the slime was blood. Nothing could stop its slow advance As it plodded into the street, I reached on out but it just walked by So I thought I’d be discreet, The day was settling into dusk As it reached the village square, And just as the ancient gas lamps lit It gave a cry of despair. The cry was that of a woman lost, Was more of a hell-fire screech, It echoed up to the steepletop And I thought of Caroline Beech, The girl who’d gone to the woods one day For a picnic of pies and mince, The basket lay for a week and a day, She hasn’t been heard of since. The figure stopped and its arm flew out To point at the Baker’s door, I saw his face at the window lace As pale as a painted ***** The sweat stood out on his beady brow As he hurried from room to room, Locking each door and window now, And shivering there in the gloom. A crowd was gathering in the square Surrounding the baker’s house, ‘You’d better come out and show yourself!’ But he was quiet as a mouse. The men of the village burst right in And they ****** him down on his knees, She put one ****** foot on his head And he squealed, ‘God help me… Please!’ ‘I only wanted some love,’ he said, ‘But you just pushed me away, I’d never have hurt a hair of your head If you’d loved me once that day.’ And that was enough for the surly crowd Who called on Oliver Beech, To bring a rope from the stableyard For a lesson they had to teach. Her father fastened the rope around The cringing baker’s neck, Just as the daughter’s burlap sack Collapsed to a heap on the deck. There was nothing inside the hood or sack As it lay there on the street, Only the footmark stains of blood From the murdered woman’s feet. They dragged him down to the wood of pines And he showed them where she lay, Under a pile of autumn leaves He’d covered her with that day, They left him hanging above the spot As they bore her gently home, Now there is no baker in Warley Copse So the villagers bake their own. David Lewis Paget
0
Nov 19, 2013
Nov 19, 2013 at 4:15 AM UTC
The Baker of Warley Copse
On a twisting, winding, rutted track That weaved from under the pines, A figure came in a burlap sack Where the crossroad intertwines, I could only see the bleeding feet As they peeped from under the sack, And the hood hid every feature that Would deem it a Jill or Jack. There was purpose in that stolid walk, And determination fixed, I thought to offer a helping hand But my feelings there were mixed, There were leaves and twigs on the figure’s back And a slime that looked like mud, I thought that it might have been attacked When I saw that the slime was blood. Nothing could stop its slow advance As it plodded into the street, I reached on out but it just walked by So I thought I’d be discreet, The day was settling into dusk As it reached the village square, And just as the ancient gas lamps lit It gave a cry of despair. The cry was that of a woman lost, Was more of a hell-fire screech, It echoed up to the steepletop And I thought of Caroline Beech, The girl who’d gone to the woods one day For a picnic of pies and mince, The basket lay for a week and a day, She hasn’t been heard of since. The figure stopped and its arm flew out To point at the Baker’s door, I saw his face at the window lace As pale as a painted ***** The sweat stood out on his beady brow As he hurried from room to room, Locking each door and window now, And shivering there in the gloom. A crowd was gathering in the square Surrounding the baker’s house, ‘You’d better come out and show yourself!’ But he was quiet as a mouse. The men of the village burst right in And they ****** him down on his knees, She put one ****** foot on his head And he squealed, ‘God help me… Please!’ ‘I only wanted some love,’ he said, ‘But you just pushed me away, I’d never have hurt a hair of your head If you’d loved me once that day.’ And that was enough for the surly crowd Who called on Oliver Beech, To bring a rope from the stableyard For a lesson they had to teach. Her father fastened the rope around The cringing baker’s neck, Just as the daughter’s burlap sack Collapsed to a heap on the deck. There was nothing inside the hood or sack As it lay there on the street, Only the footmark stains of blood From the murdered woman’s feet. They dragged him down to the wood of pines And he showed them where she lay, Under a pile of autumn leaves He’d covered her with that day, They left him hanging above the spot As they bore her gently home, Now there is no baker in Warley Copse So the villagers bake their own. David Lewis Paget
david-lewis-paget
Written by
Nov 19, 2013
Nov 19, 2013 at 4:15 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem