Comedy Poem set in Glasgow |
The tale of Edith McCall Here is the tale of Edith McCall A tale I am sure to enthral ye all Set in 1950’s Perth In Scotland, for what it’s worth Now Edith was a well known lass, Slow in the heed and thick in the ass Roamin Glasga pubs at night Causing havoc, wrong or right It was in the Swan that I caught sight of her, On that fatal night of yore Drinking heavily from the bottle Looking fer a customer or two to throttle She espied me and my wife from the public bar But we hot footed it to our car We sped away, up the street damn quick To avoid Edith’s flailing stick For I had been there afore Premonitions of a third World War But Edith, she was smarter still Next day, sober, she was up the hill To the polis, to ma boss Complaining of a bitter loss How me, Sergeant McTavish, meant her ill And harassed her upon Glasga Hill Now ma boss some would say a fool Freshly up from Liverpool Took her part against a colleague Some say from foolhardiness, others, fatigue He had a full enquiry launched No stone unturned or gossip staunched Unfortunately, when nought was found By professional courtesy he was bound To go and see young Edith quick To explain that her little trick Had not been the perpetration of a crime And that she was just ‘wasting police time’ Well Edith, not to be outdone Decided it would be good fun To set about my boss damn quick With that feared accursed stick In fact she just could not wait To lay it across his bald pate So up to casualty my boss did blunder With blood on the heed and a face like thunder To have his poor heed stitched back together With cat gut and a needle, whether it needed it or not, who can tell But he was discharged fine and well Or so he thought but you see He had gone too far in doubting me And so to his colleagues without exception He was overdue correction And so you know it came to pass He was kicked out on his bottom To return to Liverpool once more From whence he came, both gone and forgotten So the moral of this short tale As you can see, fine and well Is to keep your colleagues in good esteem Not doubt them or make them seem Less than they are or should be And I know, ‘cause it happened to me. |