At Numero 69 Poem by David Lewis Paget

At Numero 69



They say it's been empty for quite some time,
But I've seen a flickering torch,
Late at night when the moon is bright
The light is red on the porch.
And shadows move by the hedgerows there
Like spectres that flit in the night,
The door will creak as the seekers seek,
While the blinds are pulled down tight.

And something creaks where the attic peaks
It could be a number of things,
A flutter of leaves, the wind in the eaves
Or the sound of some old bed springs.
The neighbours hide and they stay inside
When the Moon comes up on the rise,
They say no way can the children play,
It would be a blot on their eyes.

For Elspeth comes as the sun goes down
In a skirt as short as can be,
With fishnet tights in both blacks and whites,
They say she's brewing the tea.
Perhaps they're playing Canasta there
Or playing for poker chips,
They may be dancing the night away,
She sure has a dancer's hips.

Whatever it is they do in there
I'll have to go in to find,
The state of play that they do each day
At Numero sixty-nine.
I'll stay nonplussed till I get it sussed,
I wonder what it could be?
It's just my luck, if I go to look,
I'll catch her brewing the tea.

19 June 2017

Sunday, June 18, 2017
Topic(s) of this poem: humour
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
READ THIS POEM IN OTHER LANGUAGES
David Lewis Paget

David Lewis Paget

Nottingham, England/live in Australia
Close
Error Success