Online Book Reader

Home Category

The Bab Ballads [2]

By Root 244 0
I sing

This tawdry, tinselled thing?



No airy fairy she,

As she hangs in arsenic green

From a highly impossible tree

In a highly impossible scene

(Herself not over-clean).

For fays don't suffer, I'm told,

From bunions, coughs, or cold.



And stately dames that bring

Their daughters there to see,

Pronounce the "dancing thing"

No better than she should be,

With her skirt at her shameful knee,

And her painted, tainted phiz:

Ah, matron, which of us is?



(And, in sooth, it oft occurs

That while these matrons sigh,

Their dresses are lower than hers,

And sometimes half as high;

And their hair is hair they buy,

And they use their glasses, too,

In a way she'd blush to do.)



But change her gold and green

For a coarse merino gown,

And see her upon the scene

Of her home, when coaxing down

Her drunken father's frown,

In his squalid cheerless den:

She's a fairy truly, then!







Ballad: General John







The bravest names for fire and flames

And all that mortal durst,

Were GENERAL JOHN and PRIVATE JAMES,

Of the Sixty-seventy-first.



GENERAL JOHN was a soldier tried,

A chief of warlike dons;

A haughty stride and a withering pride

Were MAJOR-GENERAL JOHN'S.



A sneer would play on his martial phiz,

Superior birth to show;

"Pish!" was a favourite word of his,

And he often said "Ho! ho!"



FULL-PRIVATE JAMES described might be,

As a man of a mournful mind;

No characteristic trait had he

Of any distinctive kind.



From the ranks, one day, cried PRIVATE JAMES,

"Oh! MAJOR-GENERAL JOHN,

I've doubts of our respective names,

My mournful mind upon.



"A glimmering thought occurs to me

(Its source I can't unearth),

But I've a kind of a notion we

Were cruelly changed at birth.



"I've a strange idea that each other's names

We've each of us here got on.

Such things have been," said PRIVATE JAMES.

"They have!" sneered GENERAL JOHN.



"My GENERAL JOHN, I swear upon

My oath I think 'tis so - "

"Pish!" proudly sneered his GENERAL JOHN,

And he also said "Ho! ho!"



"My GENERAL JOHN! my GENERAL JOHN!

My GENERAL JOHN!" quoth he,

"This aristocratical sneer upon

Your face I blush to see!



"No truly great or generous cove

Deserving of them names,

Would sneer at a fixed idea that's drove

In the mind of a PRIVATE JAMES!"



Said GENERAL JOHN, "Upon your claims

No need your breath to waste;

If this is a joke, FULL-PRIVATE JAMES,

It's a joke of doubtful taste.



"But, being a man of doubtless worth,

If you feel certain quite

That we were probably changed at birth,

I'll venture to say you're right."



So GENERAL JOHN as PRIVATE JAMES

Fell in, parade upon;

And PRIVATE JAMES, by change of names,

Was MAJOR-GENERAL JOHN.







Ballad: To A Little Maid - By A Policeman







Come with me, little maid,

Nay, shrink not, thus afraid -

I'll harm thee not!

Fly not, my love, from me -

I have a home for thee -

A fairy grot,

Where mortal eye

Can rarely pry,

There shall thy dwelling be!



List to me, while I tell

The pleasures of that cell,

Oh, little maid!

What though its couch be rude,

Homely the only food

Within its shade?

No thought of care

Can enter there,

No vulgar swain intrude!



Come with me, little maid,

Come to the rocky shade

I love to sing;

Live with us, maiden rare -

Come, for we "want" thee there,

Thou elfin thing,

To work thy spell,

In some cool cell

In stately Pentonville!







Ballad: John And Freddy







JOHN courted lovely MARY ANN,

So likewise did his brother, FREDDY.

FRED was a very soft young man,

While JOHN, though quick, was most unsteady.



FRED was a graceful kind of youth,

But JOHN was very much the strongest.

"Oh, dance away," said she, "in truth,

I'll marry him who dances longest."



JOHN tries the maiden's taste
Return Main Page Previous Page Next Page

®Online Book Reader