The Sea-sick Billionaire

San Cassimally
2 min readMay 5, 2024

Dedicated to Bassim Haidar

Photo by Claudio Poggio (Unsplash)

A mild child

on the continent dark and wild

Mum hired for him a Mammy

to avoid the piccaninny

make sure he didn’t roam

too far from home.

He had a swimming pool

and didn’t go to school

Twas mum who taught him

and dad who bought him

books and toys

no need to play with other boys.

.

He didn’t really like swimming

but dad forced him

one day he nearly drowned

and only came round

after resuscitation

which was the justification

for his life-long fear of water

something one feels he didn’t oughta.

He liked cous cous and pili pili

And dad called him a silly billy

for not liking smoked salmon

or the best British gammon.

.

Dad taught him that only donors

to provincial governors

ever prospered in trade

and quick learner he was soon made.

He came to the Youkay

ready to make his learning pay

forking out the required subs

to join useful clubs

to the right parties donating

the right people frequenting

smart and debonair

at thirty he was a millionaire.

.

His ingrained wisdom

taught him to opt for non-dom

reliant on the laws lax

to avoid paying tax

One becoming two and two four

thirty-two soon became sixty-four

the man was floating on air

sure that a billionaire

he’d be in the near future

Oh frabjous rapture!

He bought himself a yacht

Tho’ past history suggest perhaps he ought not.

.

The thought of sailing the Atlantic

made him fearsome and frantic

but if you buy a yacht you face the music

five minutes on board he was violently sea-sick

and horrified the PM his guest most eminent

by vomiting on his accoutrement.

Confined to his cabin

he moaned I’m a has-been

For what good will it profit a man if he has a yacht

And is then let down by his gut

Good-bye knighthood, farewell O.B.E.

My kingdom to be a real he!

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San Cassimally

Prizewinning playwright. Mathematician. Teacher. Professional Siesta addict.