Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Sally Simpkin's Lament; Or, John Jones's Kit-Cat-Astrophe. by Thomas Hood
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Sally Simpkin's Lament; Or, John Jones's Kit-Cat-Astrophe.

    By Thomas Hood



    "He left his body to the sea,
    And made a shark his legatee."
    BRYAN AND PERENNE.


    "Oh! what is that comes gliding in,
    And quite in middling haste?
    It is the picture of my Jones,
    And painted to the waist.

    "It is not painted to the life,
    For where's the trowsers blue?
    Oh Jones, my dear! - Oh dear! my Jones,
    What is become of you?"

    "Oh! Sally dear, it is too true, -
    The half that you remark
    Is come to say my other half
    Is bit off by a shark!

    "Oh! Sally, sharks do things by halves,
    Yet most completely do!
    A bite in one place soems enough,
    But I've been bit in two.

    "You know I once was all your own,
    But now a shark must share!
    But let that pass - for now, to you
    I'm neither here nor there."

    "Alas! death has a strange divorce
    Effected in the sea,
    It has divided me from you,
    And even me from me!

    "Don't fear my ghost will walk o' nights
    To haunt, as people say;
    My ghost can't walk, for, oh! my legs
    Are many leagues away!

    "Lord! think when I am swimming round,
    And looking where the boat is,
    A shark just snaps away a half,
    Without a 'quarter's notice.'

    "One half is here, the other half
    Is near Columbia placed;
    Oh! Sally, I have got the whole
    Atlantic for my waist.

    "But now, adieu - a long adieu!
    I've solved death's awful riddle,
    And would say more, but I am doomed
    To break off in the middle!"



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