GOOD roaring pistol-boys, brave lads of gold,
Good roistering easy maids, blown cock-a-hoop
On floods of tavern-steam, I greet you! Drunk
With wild Canary, drowned in wines of old,
I'll swear your round, red faces dive and swim
Like clouds of fire-fish in a waxen tide,
And these are seas of smoke we thieves behold.
Yet I've a mind I know what arms enchain
With flesh my shoulders . . . aye, and what warm legs
Wind quickly into mine . . . 'tis no pale mermaid,
No water-wench that floats in a smoky main
Betwixt the tankard and my knees . . . in faith,
I know thee, Joan, and by the beard of God,
I'll prove to-night thy mortal parts again!
Leap, leap, fair vagabonds, your lives are short . . .
Dance firelit in your cauldron-fumes, O thieves,
Ram full your bellies with spiced food, gulp deep
Those goblets of thick ale-yea, feast and sport,
Ye Cyprian maids-lie with great, drunken rogues,
Jump by the fire-soon, soon your flesh must crawl
And Tyburn flap with birds, long-necked and swart!
Thieves' Kitchen
Kenneth Slessor
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Poem topics: brave, dance, faith, fish, food, god, night, red, water, wind, wild, deep, long, great, mind, gold, easy, warm, jump, short, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
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