The Poetry Corner

Out Of Sorts

By William Schwenck Gilbert

When you find you're a broken-down critter, Who is all of a trimmle and twitter, With your palate unpleasantly bitter, As if you'd just bitten a pill - When your legs are as thin as dividers, And you're plagued with unruly insiders, And your spine is all creepy with spiders, And you're highly gamboge in the gill - When you've got a beehive in your head, And a sewing machine in each ear, And you feel that you've eaten your bed, And you've got a bad headache DOWN HERE - When such facts are about, And these symptoms you find In your body or crown - Well, it's time to look out, You may make up your mind You had better lie down! When your lips are all smeary - like tallow, And your tongue is decidedly yallow, With a pint of warm oil in your swAllow, And a pound of tin-tacks in your chest - When you're down in the mouth with the vapours, And all over your new Morris papers Black-beetles are cutting their capers, And crawly things never at rest - When you doubt if your head is your own, And you jump when an open door slams - Then you've got to a state which is known To the medical world as "jim-jams." If such symptoms you find In your body or head, They're not easy to quell - You may make up your mind You are better in bed, For you're not at all well!