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Friday 21 November 2014

The Bottom-Pincher of Old Corsham Town

The Bottom-Pincher of Old Corsham Town (the latest in a line starting with Milligan/ Goons’ Dreaded Batter Pudding-Hurler of Bexhill-on-Sea, and Milligan/ Two Ronnies’ The Raspberry-Blower of Old London Town)

There’s a town in West Wiltshire,
That stands out proud on the A4.
Let me tell you a tale of old Corsham,
That you’ve not heard of before.

For in this quiet, peaceful corner,
With its old High Street & its shopping,
Things most nefarious were afoot,
Which would have your jaw dropping.

This old weaving town had its characters,
Its girls on the corner and punks,
The bag-ladies, and kebab-sellers,
And the usual winos & drunks.

The car parks and the toilets,
The back-streets and the alleys,
But surrounded by great country,
With rolling hills & some valleys.

T’was a peaceful town it’s reported:
In the Gazette there was an article,
About the town’s small Hadron collider
And the search for the Chippenham particle.

But then this peace was suddenly broken:
The ladies there broke into a sweat,
For out on the streets one day,
Emerged a terrible new threat.

An elusive figure, a pimpernel,
His crime was a clincher:
Creeping up behind ladies:
The phantom bottom-pincher.

At first they were all in an outrage,
For he didn’t seem really to choose
The attractive younger ladies:
It was the older ones he tended to goose.

But soon they felt themselves flattered:
I just have this to mention,
It may have been a bad thing to do,
But really they liked the attention.

For shopping in Corsham was boring,
Thrills could be quite hard to find,
Even if the criminal was unknown
At least someone’d touched their behinds.

So no-one ever reported the crime,
The police were powerless to act,
But the ladies’ husbands became annoyed
And vowed vengeance - that’s a fact.

The provisional wing of the Salvation Army
Were brought in to scout,
But they never spotted the crime,
They never caught the chap out.

The bum-pincher became a popular figure,
Of his habit he took fully his fill,
There was no-one to get cross with,
For the victims shared in the thrill

So you’ll find if you go into Corsham,
It’s a town of wonderful places,
But now you know the deep secret
Of so many smiling faces.


Copyright Andy Fawthrop 2014

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