Bell, Book & Candle Poem by David Lewis Paget

Bell, Book & Candle



The Church in its awesome majesty
Looked down, from over the hill,
From faith, to hope, to travesty
It stood, and is standing still,
So proud in its fine regalia
Its ritual, and never the least,
Its potent God who would wield his rod
Deter the jaws of the beast.

The Bishop of Saint Ignatius Church
Was a proud and holy man,
Who wouldn't suffer the jibes of fools
From Rome to Afghanistan,
And certainly not those down the hill
In the new Masonic Lodge,
That beastly, secret doctrine that
He advised his flock to dodge.

He'd stand at the steps of his church and stare
Down at the barbarians,
He hated Lodges, he hated Mosques
And Rastafarians,
‘There shouldn't be anyone else but me,
I hold the eternal God,
What gods they worship could never be,
For they're all distinctly odd.'

While down at the Lodge of the Masons
They were cool with their golden rule,
They had to believe in a god as such,
But how, it was up to you.
For some would practice the Baptist faith,
And some Presbyterian,
While some enrolled in the Primitive state
Were a type of Wesleyan.

There was only a single Catholic
And he wore a glued on rug,
He wanted to still be young at heart,
Was known as the Grand HumBug,
The Antidiluvian Mason's Guild
Was the name he'd chosen himself,
The others differed, but he was keen,
And he was the one with wealth.

Their God was known as the Architect,
They carried the masons tools,
The set square set them apart from all
The disbelievers and fools.
They worked on their secret rituals
And kept a goat at the back,
For leading a blindfold novice in
And guarding the Lodge from attack.

The Bishop heard that a Catholic
Was leading the Masons there,
He fumed, choked on his rhetoric, but
Was heard to firmly declare,
‘I will not shelter a wayward sheep
Who has taken to ways I hate,
The only fate for a traitor here
Is to excommunicate! '

He gathered a dozen priests to march
With candles, down to the Hall,
Surrounded the base heretic's Lodge
And named HumBug in his call,
Sprinkled his holy water ‘til
It fizzed, and gave off a smell,
Doused his candle and closed his book,
Consigning the man to Hell!

But Humbug patted his glued on rug
Went out, untethered the goat,
He let it loose on the dozen Priests,
It butted the Bishop's coat,
They ran in confusion up the street,
To the church, set up on the hill,
While the goat was hard at the Bishop's heels
Like a demon released from Hell.

It butted the Bishop's altar and
It charged, knocked over the font,
Scattered the pews for the devil's dues
In a hellfire sacrament,
While HumBug muttered he might end up
In Hell, with his Mason's sect,
But the Bishop's God, had failed with his rod
In a clash with his Architect!

22 December 2014

Sunday, December 21, 2014
Topic(s) of this poem: humour
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David Lewis Paget

David Lewis Paget

Nottingham, England/live in Australia
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