When The Archbishop Came To Call
Our village is a quiet sort of place;
You can hear the autumn leaves as they fall,
But strange things started to happen,
Last Sunday, when the archbishop came to call.
St Nicholas is the name of our church,
Where suddenly everything came to a stop,
Expecting the top man from the C of E,
You know – Rowan – for he’s the Archbishop!
It was all meant to be very informal,
To give thanks for our Bishop’s loyalty,
But that’s not how it all turned out on the day -
You’d think they were expecting some royalty!
Now normally there’s not many goes there,
The congregation’s usually measured in tens,
But soon as word started to go round,
The vicar was cleaning his Mercedes-Benz.
The parishioners went into overdrive,
So that His Reverence would be very well-met.
They polished up the Church’s silverware,
And got set to roll out the red carpet.
The Erics, and Dereks, and all of the clerics,
Got themselves into a great fluster,
They pulled out all their best vestments,
And flicked round the vestry with a new duster.
The pulpit was given a make-over,
They made it into such a big deal -
Up in the bell-tower things were afoot,
They arranged to ring a grand quarter-peal.
They practised the bells for two days and nights,
The place was full of crumbly old ringers,
You couldn’t move for them pulling the ropes,
And they made a real set of swingers.
Come the day itself, things started to happen:
The last thing you’d feel would be lonely.
It was like “Songs Of Praise” had come to town:
In the church it was standing-room only.
There was a danger of over-crowding:
It was close to a riot – that’s a fact.
Inside people sat on one another’s knees,
Into the pews they were forcibly packed.
There was no outbreak of religious fervour,
Such was the opinion of the Dean,
But more of a social occasion,
As they all struggled to see, and be seen.
Now I’m not of a Christian persuasion,
I’m an atheist I have to confess,
So I don’t get what the fuss was about,
Just to see a bloke turn up in a dress.
Instead I decided I’d go down to the pub,
I just fancied to drink a few jars,
But I couldn’t get into the village,
For the two-mile tailback of cars.
Thousands wanted to get to communion,
There was a queue for road-side conversions,
There was chaos for miles all around,
The police set up road-blocks and diversions.
A helicopter droned low overhead,
Crack teams of snipers were up on the roofs,
And a ring of steel surrounded the pub,
Leaving me wondering just what this proves.
I hope that the moral of this story is clear,
Though some of my tale might be quite tall:
Don’t try to do anything near normal,
When an archbishop comes by to call.
Copyright Andy Fawthrop 2016
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