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More Bab Ballads [22]

By Root 184 0
sneer when you your hat should doff:

Why, we begin where you leave off!



"Your wisest men are very far

Less learned than our babies are!"

I mused awhile - and then, oh me!

I framed this brilliant repartee:



"Although your babes are wiser far

Than our most valued sages are,

Your sages, with their toys and cots,

Are duller than our idiots!"



But this remark, I grieve to state,

Came just a little bit too late

For as I framed it in my head,

I woke and found myself in bed.



Still I could wish that, 'stead of here,

My lot were in that favoured sphere! -

Where greatest fools bear off the bell

I ought to do extremely well.







Ballad: The Bishop Of Rum-Ti-Foo Again







I often wonder whether you

Think sometimes of that Bishop, who

From black but balmy Rum-ti-Foo

Last summer twelvemonth came.

Unto your mind I p'r'aps may bring

Remembrance of the man I sing

To-day, by simply mentioning

That PETER was his name.



Remember how that holy man

Came with the great Colonial clan

To Synod, called Pan-Anglican;

And kindly recollect

How, having crossed the ocean wide,

To please his flock all means he tried

Consistent with a proper pride

And manly self-respect.



He only, of the reverend pack

Who minister to Christians black,

Brought any useful knowledge back

To his Colonial fold.

In consequence a place I claim

For "PETER" on the scroll of Fame

(For PETER was that Bishop's name,

As I've already told).



He carried Art, he often said,

To places where that timid maid

(Save by Colonial Bishops' aid)

Could never hope to roam.

The Payne-cum-Lauri feat he taught

As he had learnt it; for he thought

The choicest fruits of Progress ought

To bless the Negro's home.



And he had other work to do,

For, while he tossed upon the Blue,

The islanders of Rum-ti-Foo

Forgot their kindly friend.

Their decent clothes they learnt to tear -

They learnt to say, "I do not care,"

Though they, of course, were well aware

How folks, who say so, end.



Some sailors, whom he did not know,

Had landed there not long ago,

And taught them "Bother!" also, "Blow!"

(Of wickedness the germs).

No need to use a casuist's pen

To prove that they were merchantmen;

No sailor of the Royal N.

Would use such awful terms.



And so, when BISHOP PETER came

(That was the kindly Bishop's name),

He heard these dreadful oaths with shame,

And chid their want of dress.

(Except a shell - a bangle rare -

A feather here - a feather there

The South Pacific Negroes wear

Their native nothingness.)



He taught them that a Bishop loathes

To listen to disgraceful oaths,

He gave them all his left-off clothes -

They bent them to his will.

The Bishop's gift spreads quickly round;

In PETER'S left-off clothes they bound

(His three-and-twenty suits they found

In fair condition still).



The Bishop's eyes with water fill,

Quite overjoyed to find them still

Obedient to his sovereign will,

And said, "Good Rum-ti-Foo!

Half-way I'll meet you, I declare:

I'll dress myself in cowries rare,

And fasten feathers in my hair,

And dance the 'Cutch-chi-boo!'" (11)



And to conciliate his See

He married PICCADILLILLEE,

The youngest of his twenty-three,

Tall - neither fat nor thin.

(And though the dress he made her don

Looks awkwardly a girl upon,

It was a great improvement on

The one he found her in.)



The Bishop in his gay canoe

(His wife, of course, went with him too)

To some adjacent island flew,

To spend his honeymoon.

Some day in sunny Rum-ti-Foo

A little PETER'll be on view;

And that (if people tell me true)

Is like to happen soon.







Ballad: A Worm Will Turn







I love a man who'll smile and joke

When with misfortune crowned;

Who'll pun beneath a pauper's yoke,

And as he breaks his daily toke,

Conundrums gay propound.


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