Damaged Duckling
.
Bob Munro, The Mother
Duck, was acting as a guide,
Teaching five new traffic
men, the proper way to ride.
Heading for the P.N.E.,
through Nanaimo and McGill,
When sadly for the ducklings,
Paul Ellis took a spill.
.
The road was wet and
greasy, when he went to make the turn,
Instead of going round
it, he was seen to crash and burn.
He hit the broadside
of a van, that was coming round the curve,
It all occurred so quickly,
he could not even swerve.
.
The Harley lying on
its side, Paul upon his back,
Debris was scattered
everywhere, the ducklings in a pack.
Bob had stopped his
own big bike, went running back to Paul,
To check on his condition,
after such a nasty fall.
.
The first words that
were uttered, as he lay there in the rain,
"I think I tore
my dink off!" God, I'm in such pain!
Words to make the blood
run cold, of every male in town,
The thought of such
an injury, sends shivers up and down.
.
But at the clinic, Paul
received, news both good and bad,
His male equipment had
survived, he still could be a Dad.
The pelvis had been
broken, there is even a bright side,
When all has healed
sufficiently, Paul will learn to ride.
.
But first Paul, change
your call sign, Nine Five Eight must go,
It seems to draw the
accidents, as Art Chin could let you know.
Someday over breakfast,
he will tell you, if you treat,
He had three, while
using it, and was "swept" right off his feet.
.
The big thing to remember,
as you climb back on that "horse",
Is despite the painful
injury, things could have been much worse.
Besides you get the
"Danger Pay", for the two days that you rode,
Don't spend it all in
just one place, two bucks is quite a load.
.
This poem is not to
ridicule, but to bring the duckling cheer,
As he lies there in
the hospital, so early this new year.
Remember too, some good
advice, learned from my traffic days,
The side that's shiny,
must stay up, its advice that really pays.
.
PC 664 T.J. Gowdyk 89-01-28
(59)
RETURN TO INDEX OF POEMS