The Perils Of Laughing In Church Poem by Thomas Vaughan Jones

The Perils Of Laughing In Church

Rating: 5.0


The Parson read his sermon to the folk he thought had sinned;
Some listened - sadly others nodded off.
He stood prepared for snoring or the sound of breaking wind,
or the stifling of a surreptitious cough.

But he almost lost his diction when somebody made a gaffe
which caused his brow to bead with consternation.
He could scarce believe his ears, for he'd heard a hearty laugh
from a member of his solemn congregation.

The pulpit shook and trembled to the Heavens' thunderous roar.
Forked lightning flashed around the old church bell.
There came a fiendish hammering upon the old oak door,
and from the earth a most malodorous smell.

Beelzebub came bursting in and rolled himself a smoke
from pages of an ancient Holy Psalter.
Then to the consternation of the watching parish folk,
unzipped himself and peed upon the altar.

A hundred grinning gargoyles danced a dance of dark desire,
then set upon an unsuspecting hassock;
They ripped it into pieces, which they promptly set on fire
then shoved them up the poor old parson’s cassock.

The choirboys cried and whimpered in a state of mortal fright;
Parishioners were paralysed with fear,
The eagle on the altar spread its wings and took to flight,
Madonna graced a solitary tear.

That drop of holy water stopped the Devil’s dread intent;
The Daemon and his henchmen fled away,
But he laid his curse upon the holy house before he went,
and the roof fell into permanent decay.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Lorraine Colon 17 January 2014

This is unbelievably funny - one of the best - no THE best poem I have ever read. Let's hope the Lord doesn't read it, and bring about your peril, Ha.But you'd have a lot of people defending you. So well done!

0 0 Reply
READ THIS POEM IN OTHER LANGUAGES
Close
Error Success