"Jim King the Iron Stomach," read the sheet,
and what a show that eater gave the town!
Starting with week-warm milk and rancid meat,
he'd open up and hand the foul stuff down.
Next Jim chewed light bulbs, razorblades and tin;
he washed them down with some acidic stew.
And always smiled, the blood slick down his chin,
shards in his gums--and how, nobody knew.
Then one off-season, Jim took ill and died.
Food poisoning, of all things, don't you know!
Trichinosis--pork inexpertly fried
fermented in his guts and laid him low.
So take this lesson from poor old Jim King:
you can't inure yourself to everything.
2 comments:
I wonder what the inspiration was for this one?
"There was a Boy whose name was Jim" by Belloc, I'm sure. Have you read his sonnets?
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