Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
They have me chained in this noisome cell With its smells, its moans and shrieks, No wonder they call it Bedlam for I haven’t slept in weeks, They brought me here from the Bridewell, For they said I was raving mad, I swapped a cell for a place in hell And the food in here is bad. We’re chained and beaten by loutish guards And starved and purged as well, Unless we ***** and take the cure They bleed us in the cell, I see the others who beat their heads On posts, and the old stone wall, Hoping to join the peaceful dead When they have no blood at all. The rats will nibble at hands and feet If we sleep too deep, and soon You’ll hear the patter as hundreds scatter About the cell in the gloom, There are chains and shackles around my neck My waist and my ankles too, The only part is my beating heart Where they can’t chain me from you. I live with the shrieks and moans and groans Of the most demented souls, The prostitutes in their open cells Who squat on the sewer holes, A guard says he will take care of you And I know just what he means, Be true my love, he’ll take hold of you And I know the man’s unclean. I should have minded my temper when I was walking in the yard, Was cursed by the devil’s tempter, then I hit the Bridewell guard, I hang on tight to my sanity For I never scream or shout, And hope for the governor’s lenity That they come and let me out. The visitors come and they poke their fun At the lunatics in here, They hold their noses and spit at us And they make their feelings clear, We’re only **** in the world they’re from If the fools could only see, That our putrid state could be their fate In seventeen sixty-three! David Lewis Paget
0
Dec 5, 2014
Dec 5, 2014 at 8:46 PM UTC
A Letter from Bedlam
They have me chained in this noisome cell With its smells, its moans and shrieks, No wonder they call it Bedlam for I haven’t slept in weeks, They brought me here from the Bridewell, For they said I was raving mad, I swapped a cell for a place in hell And the food in here is bad. We’re chained and beaten by loutish guards And starved and purged as well, Unless we ***** and take the cure They bleed us in the cell, I see the others who beat their heads On posts, and the old stone wall, Hoping to join the peaceful dead When they have no blood at all. The rats will nibble at hands and feet If we sleep too deep, and soon You’ll hear the patter as hundreds scatter About the cell in the gloom, There are chains and shackles around my neck My waist and my ankles too, The only part is my beating heart Where they can’t chain me from you. I live with the shrieks and moans and groans Of the most demented souls, The prostitutes in their open cells Who squat on the sewer holes, A guard says he will take care of you And I know just what he means, Be true my love, he’ll take hold of you And I know the man’s unclean. I should have minded my temper when I was walking in the yard, Was cursed by the devil’s tempter, then I hit the Bridewell guard, I hang on tight to my sanity For I never scream or shout, And hope for the governor’s lenity That they come and let me out. The visitors come and they poke their fun At the lunatics in here, They hold their noses and spit at us And they make their feelings clear, We’re only **** in the world they’re from If the fools could only see, That our putrid state could be their fate In seventeen sixty-three! David Lewis Paget
david-lewis-paget
Written by
Dec 5, 2014
Dec 5, 2014 at 8:46 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem