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Crazy Jane and the Bishop
| Bring me to the blasted oak | | That I, midnight upon the stroke, | | (All find safety in the tomb.) | | May call down
curses on his head | | Because of my dear Jack thats dead. | | Coxcomb was the least he said: | | The solid
man and the coxcomb. | | | | | | Nor was he Bishop when his ban | | Banished Jack the Journeyman, | | (All find safety
in the tomb.) | | Nor so much as parish priest, | | Yet he, an old book in his fist, | | Cried that we lived like beast
and beast: | | The solid man and the coxcomb. | | | | | | The Bishop has a skin, God knows, | | Wrinkled like the foot
of a goose, | | (All find safety in the tomb.) | | Nor can he hide in holy black | | The herons hunch upon his back, | | But a birch-tree stood my Jack: | | The solid man and the coxcomb. | | | | | | Jack had my virginity, | | And bids me to
the oak, for he | | (All find safety in the tomb.) | | Wanders out into the night | | And there is shelter under it, | | But
should that other come, I spit: | | The solid man and the coxcomb. |
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By PanEris
using Melati.
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