The Robert W. Gordon
"Inferno" Collection in the Archive of Folk Song, Library of
Congress
The 'Inferno' collection consists of original correspondence and typescript
copies of letters (~200 pages) that either Gordon or someone else separated
out -- because of their bawdy and scatological subject matter -- from the
materials he received and compiled as first head of the folklife
department at the Library of Congress. Prefaced to the 'Inferno' collection is a 14 page index
which lists informant, date, location and title of the texts.
If you use any of the Gordon material in
publication, please credit Gordon's source, supply the Gordon pagination, and
note that the collection is in the "Archive of Folk Culture, American Folklife
Center, Library of Congress." The Archive of Folk Culture would also like to
receive a copy of the publication, so that they can retain a record of
research concerning the collections.
The text below was Optical Character Recognized (OCRed) from a photocopy
of a photocopy of a typescript copy of the MS letters. This photocopy
was very generously provided by Abby Sale. Also note that the typescript from which this is
derived is itself incomplete, (e.g., #2561
which omits six verses).
Since this is OCR of a
photocopy of a photocopy, there are errors in the text below. If you
wish to verify the text, please
download the PDF of the
scanned pages. ~ Last revised 29 June
2006.

The Gordon 'Inferno' Collection
Index
[[Index compiled by Debora
Kodish 1/74. HTML version of index revised and edited by Jack Horntip 8/04.]]
KEY: MS number; number of pages in MS;
contributor's name, place, date; Title (number of pages in song-text
typescript); additional commentary.
NOTE: Brackets appear around information
that is not set forth exactly as in the MSS. They also appear around
titles that I [[Debora Kodish]] gave to items. When the title was a first
line or a chorus, that information appears in the commentary also surrounded
by brackets.
[[Double brackets setout additional
information or commentary that I, Jack Horntip, have provided to the index
or typescript. It is my supposition that the
"request" items are fragments of longer songs of which the full
version is being requested of
Gordon.]]
R.W.
Gordon Adventure MSS [[Subsection of the Gordon MSS. Letters
containing songs contributed to Robert Winslow Gordon while editor of the "Old
Songs That Men Have Sung" column of Adventure Magazine (1923-29).]]
246; 5; E.S. Fowlds, Hidalgo, Mex., 9/17/23;
- Bollocky
Bill the Sailor (1);
- Inky
Dinky Paries Vous (1).
- [Mama,
malade, Papa Zigzag] (1);
fragment.
- Francie
and Josie (1).
- She
was Poor but She was Honest (1).
- La
Sombra de un Palmar (1).
- A
las Poches de California (1);
fragment.
- Lady
Lil (1);
fragment-first line only.
- La
Cucuracha (1).
265; 3; John L. Bracken, written at sea,
10/20/23;
- [Never
Let a sailor boy get an inch above your knee] (1);
two-line
request. [first line]
271; 1; D. C. Stearns, Cleveland, Ohio,
11/15/23;
- [Sister
you'll be called upon] (1);
two-line request; [first line].
333; 2; E.S. Lawson, Evanston, Illinois,
5/8/24;
-
The'
Little Dutch Soldier From Over The Rhine (1);
two-line fragment,
learned as child.
365; 7; J.N. West, Bayonne, New Jersey,
11/10/24;
- Sally
Brown (1);
last verse only.
- A
Long Time Ago (1).
- Roll
The Cotton Down (1);
learned from an old Irishman.
- [Every
ship has a capstan] (1);
request, [first line]
385; 5; H.W. McCormick, Ypsilanti,
Michigan, 5/1/25;
- Dirty
Old Brown (1).
two.
448; 12; Theodore Lancaster,--,
12/—/27;
- Lulu
(1).
- There
once was a gay. Don d'Ilio (1).
474; 7; L.P. Richmond, Schenectady, New
York, 1/2/23;
- The
Jolly Fisherman (1);
learned from a man who claimed it came from a
New England fisherman.
480; 4; Cousin Jack, --,
undated;
- Bolakee
Bill The Sailor (2);
somewhat expurgated by contributor.
481; 6; Ray Keller, Lewiston, Idaho,
5/26/25;
- Frankie
and Johnnie (1);
"mild" version of the song learned by contributor
in California.
- [Cocaine];
chorus:
"O,baby, honey, cook a pill for me." Learned around Frisco and Barbary
coast and expurgated by contributor.
482; 4; William F. Burroughs, DuBois,
Maryland, 12/12/26;
- [When
I was young and foolish] (1);
first line, learned on the U.S.S.
Intrepid, includes the line "Never let a sailor get an inch above your
kneel."
- Ring
Dang Doo (1);
"circulated throughout the navy, and on a few
merchant ships."
-
The
Little Red Pants That Maggie Wore (1);
popular up and down the C
and O canal around 1914.
738; 3; Lee Gotcher, Los
Angeles [Amos], California, 5/10/24;
- [Little
Ball of Yarn] (1);
first line:"I placed my arms around her waist,"
fragment.
779; 9; Allen P. Wescott, (Field
Artillery School) Port Sill, Oklahoma, 10/6/24;
- [I'd
rather be a pimp to a Mexican whore] (1);
[first line] Sung by the
regulars of 1917-18 and previously, according to contributor.]
999; (4); Francis Boyer, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, 4/8/25;
- Frankie
(2);
a conglomerate of the versions the contributor learned at Harvard
('l6) and in the army.
three.
1008; 2; H.L. Davis, The Dalles, Oregon,
4/15/25;
- Frankie
and Johnny (1);
one stanza.
1020; 5; Donald C. Foster, Binghampton,
New York, 4/14/25;
- Frankie
and Johnny (3);
learned as student in Ithaca, New York, (Cornell
Univ.) 1912-1913.
1069; 4; John R. Spears, Utica, New York,
3/20/25;
- Away
Rio (1).
1109; 5; William F. Burroughs, Mount
Ranier, Maryland, 4/30/25;
- The
Fair Young Maiden (Modern Swab Wringer's Version) (1);
[Abram
Brown the Sailor]
- Lulu
(1)
- Parlez
Vous (1);
[Mademoiselle from Armnentieres]
1156; 5; C. Becker, Chicago, Illinois,
5/14/25;
- Frankie
and Albert (3);
first heard in Camp Mills, Long Island in 1917,
and various other times in the army.
1261; 2; Charles Bell Emerson, Los Gatos,
California, 8/10/25;
- The
Whores Lament (1);
Laws Q 26, two-line fragment.
1590; 10; J.F. Peverley, Dixon, Missouri,
5/28/24;
- [The
devil and the dutch/and the dun cow fit] (1);
[first 2 lines]
fragment of four lines. learned as a boy, "evidently referring to a
Spanish Italliand war"
1744; 5; Robert Hale, New York City, New
York, before June 3, 1926;
- [The
bear went over the mountain] (1);
[first line] learned in a hobo
meeting in the North-west c.1926. Contributor notes that the song is sung
to the tune of Pop Goes The Weasel.
- [Say,
boys, thats where my money goes] (1);
[chorus] Contributor notes
that this is "another tired Tommy song".
1752; 3; Wheaton H. (Skin) Brewer,
Berkeley, California, 5/6/26;
- The
Weaver (1);
Laws 03, Contributor heard this from the rangers in
the Sierras.
four.
1763; 5; R.W. Yearley, Quincy, Illinois,
5/28/26;
- The
Ring Dang Do (1);
sung by a sailor to the tune of "How Dry I
Am".
- [Schnapoo]
(1);
[chorus] First line is "A young Dutch soldier came over the
Rhine,".
2010; 11; C.W. Loutzenhiser, Chicago,
Illinois, 10/21/26;
- [The
Beautiful lakes of Australur] (1);
[first line and chorus] Music
included from letter 2179 (11/9/26) of the same contributor.
2036; 8; Hubert L. Canfield, Pittsford,
New York, 10/27/26;
- Christopho
(1);
fragment of one line: "The white of an egg ran down her leg."
Typescript has summary of the letter., Contributor's postulates the songs
existence during the Civil War.
2061; 6; Joseph F. McGinnis, Brooklyn,
New York, 11/01/26;
- Slim
Jones' House (1);
Continued in letter 2100 (11/11/26). Both
letters included in the six MSS pages.
2087; 6; Hubert Canfield, Pittsford, New
York, 11/5/26;
- Frankie
and Johnnie (3);
"The version that Carl Sanberg says is the best
he's seen."
- Frankie
and Johnnie (2);
"Miscellaneous stanzas"
2148; 3; J.J. Burke, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, 2/15/26;
- Hinky
Dinky Parlez Voo (or Mademoiselle from Armentiers) (1);
heard it
sung overseas.
2168; 4; J.F. McGinnis, Brooklyn, New
York, 11/20/26;
- [The
Sea Crab] (i);
[first line: 'Oh there was a little man, An' he had
a little wife'] Contributor remembers only two stanzas but gives a
prose summary of the rest, which is also contained in the
typescript.
- Bollicky
Bill the Sailor (1).
2186; 5; William F. Burroughs, DuBois,
Maryland, 12/3/26;
- [Mah
fathah's in tha workhouse] (1);
[first line] fragment ---one verse
that Contributor says "seems to be complete", from Washington, D.C.
five.
- [Eyes
right, assholes tight] (1);
[first line] "from the Lanca'shire
Lassies at Manchester, England." Three verses to three different
tunes.
- [The
Dying Hobo] (1);
[First two lines: 'Were every tree is a ----- /
And houses have no locks']. one verse.
2188; 2; D.E. Little; Long Island City,
New York, before 12/13/26;
- The
Fisherman's Friend (1);
[The Sea Crab] Contributor uncertain of
last verse, has known it for 45 years.
2377; 6; William F. Burroughs, DuBois,
Maryland, 12/25/26;
- [Oh
John saw a tulip] (1);
[first line] Parody of "When You Wore a
Tulip" learned by contributor nine years earlier.
- I
Love My Wife (1);
Contributor thinks that was probably the title.
He gives only a line of the song which he describes in the letter.
- [Down
in Rio de Janeiro] (1);
[first line]. three lines of one verse
from a song he heard a sailor sing in Rio.
2383; 8; Frank Earnest, Sugar Loaf,
Colorado, 1/20/27;
- [Gaucho
Song] (1);
one verse in Spanish and English translation. First
line is : Mi tiene en la esquina barbaro loco. ( I have in the corner
crazy barbarian.)
2432; 3; Leonard Nason, Paris, France,
before 1/22/27;
- [Oh
Feel o' my slimy belly] (1);
[first line of chorus] [first line
'Four lassies came from Canada / Got drunk on cherry wine] learned in the
army, 1914.*
- [Our
first sergeant he's the worst of all] (1);
- [Oh,
she don't act like she oughter] (1);
[first line]
2434; 3; R.S. Spears, Inglewood,
California, 11/19/26;
- [Parson
chased her round a stump] (1);
four line fragment.
2463; 5; Charles E. Roe, Hudson,
Massachusetts, 1/27/27;
- The
Sparrer (1);
Contributor attributes the song to a drunken Cockney
in his town, a "long time ago".
2471; 5; Mellinger E. Henry, Ridgefield,
New Jersey, 1/25/27;
- The
Ballade of the Skunk (1);
from Canada or tipper New York State
according to Contributor.
six.
- The
Gold Nugget (1);
Prose-humorous story told entirely in
dialogue.
2500; 4; Paul L. Jones, Waltham,
Massachusetts, 1/28/27;
- [Our
Goodman] (1);
two line fragment.
- [Little
Ball of Yarn {{Doubtful Attribution}}] (1);
four line
fragment.
2537; 13; Earl J. Teets, Buffalo, New
York, 2/2/27;
- Hesitation
Blues (1);
Typescript includes description of the singing of the
song. The Contributor says it is usually sung while swinging a
pick.
- All
Night Blues (1);
Contributor learned it about 15 years ago when he
was on a chain gang in Tennessee.
2561; 6; Charles E. Roe, Hudson,
Massachusetts, 2/11/27;
- [The
old maid sat by the fah-yer] (1);
[first line] "From a half crazy
hostler in a livery stable in Newtonville, spring of 1897.
- Johnson's
Boarders (1);
"Sung by 'Greeley' a lumberjack, in 1895. "Said he
learned in Maine, about ten years before." Somewhat expurgated by
the contributor C.E.Roe.
2578; 4; Frank A. Partridge, Lemoncove,
California, before 2/17/27;
- [I
ast her for a little piece/of what she's setting on] (1);
[first
two lines].
2582; 4; M.D. Little, Long Island City,
New York, 2/10/27;
- The
Sailor Boy (1); Contributor said he had
forgotten parts of the
verses.
2641; 4; M.D. Little, Long Island City,
New York, 3/3/27;
- [Oh
Mother, dearest Mother] (1);
[first line], Contributor notes:
"Scotch, before 1880, Canada.".
2711; 6; Prank A. Partridge, Auburn,
California, before 4/27/27;
- [Oh,
the she cat sat on the barb-wire fence] (1);
[first line of chorus]
Fragment--chorus only.
2734; 7; Bill Nice,Crestwood Station, New
York, 3/16/27;
- Lulu
(1); chorus only.
seven.
2739; 6; Earl Teets, Buffalo, New York,
4/2/27;
- [Farewell
to winter, farewell to frost] (1);
First line. Also includes a
verse deriving from "The. Riddle Song". Contributor heard it as a boy in
New Jersey.
2752; 6; C.W. Loutzenhiser, Chicago,
Illinois, before 4/29/27;
- [The
very first night that I lay down beside her] (1);
Eight line
fragment. Includes line about the woman's "set of false teeth and
pair of glass eyes".
- Billy
Green (1);
In the song text in the MSS the gentleman's name
is Billy Grey.
2789; 8; Earl Teets, Buffalo, New York,
5/5/27;
- Three
Whores From Canada (1);
typescript summarizes variations mentioned
by Contributor.
3007; 3; Bill Nice, Crestwood Station,
New Jersey, 5/31/27;
- Lulu
(1).
3009; 3; Frank A. Partridge, [no
identification on this letter. Gordon has Partridges name on the typescript,
and the paper and typing are like his other letters to Gordon.]
- [Good
by gun, good by step] (1);
[first line] fifth line of the one verse
given is "Join the army, some shit!"
- [You're
in the army now, you're not behind the plow] (1);
one
verse—Contributor's note says "words to the bugle call--march flourish"
according to the typescript. (Hand written in the margin of the is "march
flourish") [first line]
- [All
you soldiers in the grass] (1);
[first line] Note in MSS and
typescript is "Assembly".
3102; 5; Earl Teets, Buffalo, New
York,after 4/10/27;
- [Farewell
to winter, farewell to frost] (1);
[first line] The same as
2739.
3144; 9; Frank A. Partridge, Auburn,
California, undated;
- Mademoiselle
(2);
[Mademoiselle from Armentieres]
- Lulu
(3);
Partridge notes that there are two choruses.
- The
Tennessee Servant Girl (1);
includes the line "And never let a
sailor boy an inch above your knee".
- In
the Back Room (1).
eight.
3359; 5; Ben A. Ranger, Santa Rosa,
California, 6/5/27;
- Miss
Kitty O'Horey (1).
3711; 14; S.C. Wheeler, Seattle,
Washington, 3/23/28;
- Gypsy
Davie (1);
Not Child 200. The summary included in both MSS and
typescript describes Laws Q 8. Only one verse is given, the first two
lines of which are: "Oh I'll ship you off to China/ And I'll trade you off
for tea."
3729; 6; E. Anderson, London, England,
11/23/28;
- [Every
ship has a cabin] (1);
[first line] Contributor remembers only one
verse and chorus, but gives description of the rest of song. (included in
typescript).
3756; 11; C.E. Roe, [Identification
penciled in, possibly by Gordon] 6/-/29;
- Johnson's
Boarders (1).
3773; 1; [Anonymous, according to
typescript. No other identification
- [I
walked down the street like a nice girl should] (1);
[first
line]
- [Oh
the ladies wear no teddies in Manila] (1);
[first line] one verse
fragment. MSS has "A verse I hadn' heard before to the old familiar
song."
3779; 5; Charles E.Roe, Hudson,
Massachusetts, 6/29/30;
- Frankie
and Johnny (2);
"This version has a Chicago atmosphere and
setting."
3801; 1; Anonymous,----, 1931;
- [Oh
the caribous have no hair in Merivales] (1);
[first line]
3802; 2; [No identification. Cornell
paper, and a notation on the the typescript by Gordon "from Cornell" and
"--1931". Possibly from the Godfrey. Irving MSS 3803]
- Frankie
and Johnny (2);
heard from Wobbly ranch laborers near Boise,
Idaho, 1910-12.
3803; 2; Godfrey Irving, New York, New
York, 12/14/31;
- The
One-Eyed Reilly (1);
heard from an Irish stoker off Belize, l920.
This version from the "Slime Sheet", Paris, 1930. Letter has "The One'Eyed
Riley".
nine.
3781; 6; Charles E. Roe, Hudson,
Massachusetts, 8/25/30;
- The
Old Chisolm Trail (3);
"Additional verses from Slim Guyer,
Montana".
3851; 9; Jean Bordeaux, Los Angeles,
California, 2/6/32;
- The
Old Fool (2);
[Child 274] Learned from a Nova Scotian farmhand
1898-99. Typescript includes detailed history and description of the song
as the contributor knows it.
3866; No MSS copy ; Anonymous [according
to typescript];
- [There
was a rich merchant who sat on a rock] (1);
[first line].
3900; 1; No MSS copy; Anonymous
[according to typescript];
- [Two
little nuts are in her guts, And they'll be out to-morrow] (1);
[last two lines]
3901; 1; Anonymous [according to
typescript];
-
On
a tombstone (1);
Epitaph of two lines.
3902; 6; Grantley W. Taylor, Cambridge,
Massachusetts, 10/7/17;
- [The
Bastard King of England] (1);
Contributor encloses letter of a
friend who had sent him the song as he had learned it at Princeton.
3903; 2; Emmet Dunn, Northampton,
Massachusetts, 4/13/18;
- [Oh
it's home, boys home; it's home we ought to be] (1);
[first line
of chorus] "Evolved during the Mexican campaign."
- Evelina
(I); Sung by a Washington D.C. at Port Meyer.
3904; 2; Anonymous [according to
typescript], June 1925 penciled on MS; [possibly by Gordon];
- The
Ballad of Chambers Street (Harvard Medical School) (4);
3904; 2; Anonymous [according to
typescript];
- [My
name is Tannhauser] (1);
[first line] MSS and typescript have
note: "Variant of above with name, Jim Bowser."
ten.
- [The
Foggy Dew] (1).
3906; 2; No Identification;
- [The
Bastard King of England] (1).
3907; 3 (part of MSS missing); Stu Van
Hook, No location or date available,
- Christopher
Columbo (2).
3908; 1; No Identification;
- [Christopho
Columbo] (2).
3909; 1; Arch., Monastery, 4/2/18
[Identification crossed out, this is what is visible. 1918 written in
pencil, possibly by Gordon.]
- [Christopho
Columbo] (2).
3910; 1; Anonymous [according to
typescript]
- Lady
Lill (1);
arranged in verse form on typescript.
3911; 2; Anonymous, Cambridge, 1916
[Place and date penciled on MSS, possibly by Gordon. Typescript says
"Anonymous"]
- The
Arse-hole of Zeus (2)
3912; 2; Anonymous, Cambridge, 1917,
[Place and date penciled on MSS, possibly by Gordon. Typescript says
"Anonymous"]
- My
Lulu (1)
- [In
the cottage next to mine] (1);
[first line] Contributor includes
note "Tune: 'In the Good Old Summer Time'" which appears in the typescript
as well as the MSS
3913; 8; Ollie, 1044 Cornell Rd., ??,
3/3/18 [This is all the decipherable identification that the letter,
addressed to Lee, signed Ollie, provided. 1918 is added in pencil, possibly
by Gordon. Possibly from Cleveland, Ohio according to comments in the
letter.]
- [The
mountaineers have curly ears] (1);
[first line] four line
fragment.
- [Ring
Dang Doo] (1).
- The
Old King Arose (1);
[The Sea Crab].
- [No
balls at all] (1);
[chorus]
- [Don't
look at me that way, mister] (1);
[first line] MSS says this is a
recitation.
- Oh
Noah (1).
eleven.
3914; 1; Anonymous [According to
typescript];
- The
Key Hole In The Door (1).
3915; 1; M.D. Little [According to
typescript];
- Flash
Nell (1);
Contributor postulates origin of the song in London,
adding information about words in the song. The tune is given as "The
Flash Frigate".
3916; 1; Broadside, Manila, P.I., July
4th, 1899;
- An
Incident of the Late War (2);
First line is: "Don Camara, Don
Camara, you are a funny creature." A parody of the first verse is included
on the same Broadside, the first line of it being: "Don Camara, Don
Camara, we've read in song and story."
3917; No MSS copy; Anonymous [according
to typescript];
- Sally
(1);
four lines toungue-twister.
3918; 1; -------, Lark Hill, Salisbury
Plains, 11/--/14;
- As
I Was Going To Salisbury (1).
3919; 1; F. Gregory Hartswick,
---,---;
- [The
old red bull came down from the mountain] (1);
This and the
following item appear in an unknown, undated newspaper clipping, under the
title "Lumberjack Chanteys".
- [One-Eyed
Reilly] (1);
refrain only. Appears in newspaper clipping, as
above.
3920; 3; Unidentified Contributor.
Newspaper clipping possibly from Denver, Colorado, 1/27/24;
- The
Whores Lament (1).
- The
Cowboy's Lament (1);
From newspaper clipping (The Sunday Gazette
and Telegraph) which recounts the claim of F.H. Maynard to authorship of
the song.
twelve.
R.W.
Gordon California MSS
239; 1; No Identification;
- Blow the Man Down (1);
includes false parts motif.
240; 1; A.M. Turner,--,
8/24/23;
- Fire
Down Below (1);
"Pumping or Capstan chanty".
241; 1; A.M. Turner, --,
8/24/23;
- Handy,
Me Boys, Be Handy (1);
"To'gallan's'l halyards chanty."
242; 1 (on same page of MSS as above);
A.M. Turner, --, 8/24/23;
- [Three
times they give you peasoup] (1);
[first line] "Fragment--Capstan
Chanty".
248; 1; A.M. Turner, --,
8/24/23;
- Rikki
Dikki Doo Da Day (1).
377; 4; Wheaton H. (Skin) Brewer; ---,
3/23/27;
- The
Appleknocker's Lament (1);
similar to "The Big Rock Candy
Mountain".
378; Included in above MSS; Wheaton H.
(Skin) Brewer,--, 3/23/27;
- The
Song of Amy (1);
One fragmentary verse of "Amy MacPherson"
379; 2; No Identification;
- Hinky
Dink (2);
[Mademoiselle from Armentieres] MSS includes note: "Das
ist viel genug". Secondary title is; "the official song of the
A.E.F."
380;t;No Identification;
- [My
father was hung as a horse thief] (1);
[first line] Pour line
fragment with note "1911 Sullivan County, Missouri".
38l; No Identification;
- [Frankie
and Johnnie] (1);
three verse fragment.
thirteen.
382; No Identification;
- [Frankie
and Johnnie] (1);
Three verses and first line of fourth.
383; No Identification;
- Johnnie
and Frankie (2).
384; 1; No Identification;
- [My
name is Bob Baker] (1); [first line] one verse.
385; 1; Anonymous [according to
typescript];
- Mobile
(1).
386; 1; Anonymous [according to
typescript];
- Hesitation
Blues (1).
387; 1; Anonymous [according to
typescript];
- Samuel
Hall (1).
388; 1; Anonymous [according to
typescript];
- Lydia
Pinkham (1).
389; 1; Anonymous [according to
typescript];
- Bocardy
Bill The Sailor (1).
390; 1; Anonymous [according to the
typescript];
- The
King of England (1);
[The Bastard King of England].
391; 1; Anonymous [according to
typescript];
- Lydia's
Compound (1);
[Lydia Pinkham].
392; 1; Anonymous [according to
typescript];
- [Five
little heifers grazing in the valley] (1);
[first line] Four line
fragments of "The Little Black Bull" learned c. 1894, Nova Scotia.
393; 4; Andrew M. Turner, Berkeley,
California, 12/12/25;
- [Three
Men Went A'Hunting] (1);
learned in Australia.
fourteen.
394; 3; L.C. Lockley, Berkeley,
California, 5/--/23;
- [A
sailor man came home one night as drunk as drunk could be] (1);
[first line] Child 274.
395-408; 17; Anonymous;
Berkeley, California, 1923;
MSS Entitled "Songs
and Fragments Common Among Young Men"
395; I'm
A Weaver (1); learned on the Monterey Peninsula among laborers c.
1920.
399; [The
steward went below Whoo-oo-oo]; [first line]
400; [Oh
mother, oh mother, have you a daughter, Snap-oo, snap-oo] (1);
[first line].
401; [Those
hardy sons of bitches] (1); [last line chorus] includes many verses
made up by a soldier while in quarantine with nothing else to do.
402;
The
Spanish Countilio (1).
403; Frankie
and Johnie (2).
404;
The
Bastard King of England (1).
406; [Toodle
um toodle urn too] (1); 8 line fragment, By an art student in New
York City, 1917.
407; [Floating
down the river, sitting on the stern] (1); fragment of four lines
learned by an art student in New York City, 1917.
Davids
MSS Written down by R.M. Davids, Cross X Ranch, Woodmere
Florida, c. 1924. Sent in to
R.W. Gordon by J.C. Colcord 12/21/29.
pp. 5-6: Boring
for Oil (1);
p. 8:[I
swear to God I'll go whaling no more] (1); [last line] three line
fragment.
pp. 9-10:
I'll
Go No More A Roving (1).
pp. 11-12: John
and Sue (1).
p. 13:
The
Handsome Cabin Boy (1).
p. 14: Pretty
Peggy (1).
pp. 19-20:
The
Little Dutch Soldier From Over The Rhine (1).
p. 20:
Little
Ball of Yarn (1).
p. 22: Anything
(1).
p. 24: Down
Derry Down (1).
pp. 31-32:
Abram
Brown the Sailor (1).
PP.35-36:
The
Keyhole in the Door (1).
pp. 37-38:
Jackie
and His Master (1).
R.W.
Gordon Georgia Collection MSS
560; 2; No Identification;
- Uncle
Bud (1);
Note on typescript says : "Sung in 1908 in Georgia near
Atlanta-- work song, cotton picking."
LCFAFA No. 9 July
1991
The Gordon
Collections
Manuscript and Recorded
Collections Acquired and/or Indexed by Robert Winslow Gordon in the Archive
of Folk Culture
Robert Winslow Gordon was
the first head of the Archive of American Folk-Song, Library of Congress,
1928-1932.
Compiled by Joseph C.
Hickerson and Gregory Jenkins
Arthur Mss. See Odum-Arthur
Mss.
Boyd Mss. Ca. 125 songs contributed
by T. B. Boyd, Alliance, North Carolina, 1926-27. Indexed. Original
typescript in Archive.
Davids Mss.
Thirty-three songs contributed by Joanna Colcord, New York, New
York, December 1929, obtained from R. M. Davids, Woodmere,
Florida, ca. 1924. Indexed. Original manuscript and two
typescript copies in Archive.
Frothingham Mss. One hundred
thirty-seven letters containing queries and songs contributed to Robert
Frothingham, editor of the "Old Songs That Men Have Sung" column of
Adventure Magazine, 1922-23. Indexed. Original letters and two typescript
copies of texts in Archive.
Galt Mss. Ca. 115 songs, presumably
obtained from Nellie Galt, Louisville, Kentucky, ca. 1928, and corresponding
recordings numbered D3 through D9 and E4. Indexed. Some of these recordings
presumably in Archive, but no transcriptions.
Gordon Collection: California. Ca.
four hundred songs and groups of texts acquired by Robert Winslow Gordon
while he lived in California, ca. 1920-23. The first part corresponds with
cylinder recordings numbered 1-131. Indexed. Recordings and original
manuscripts numbered ca. 240-400 in Archive.
Gordon
Collection: Georgia. Five hundred fifty-five songs acquired by Robert
Winslow Gordon while he resided at a "field station" in Darien, Georgia,
primarily during the years 1926-28. The first half corresponds with cylinder
recordings numbered A203 through ca. A562. Indexed. Recordings only in
Archive.
Gordon
Collection: N.C. Three hundred seventy-four songs acquired by Robert
Winslow Gordon during a. field trip in North Carolina, October-December
1925. Texts 1-298 correspond with cylinder recordings A1-A202. Indexed.
Recordings, one typescript of the whole, and two typescripts of 1-298 in
Archive.
Gordon Mss.
Three thousand eight hundred fifty-eight letters containing songs and
queries contributed to Robert Winslow Gordon, editor of the "Old Songs That
Men Have Sung" column of Adventure Magazine/ 1923-29, plus additional
letters and texts dating from 1911-32. Indexed. Original letters and two
typescript copies of texts (one bound: M1629.G65) in Archive.
Hanford Mss. Eight songs contributed
by J. H. Hanford, Cleveland, Ohio, obtained from Esther Stover, Cleveland,
January 12, 1930, who learned them from her father in Iowa City, Iowa.
Indexed. Original typescript and two typescript copies in
Archive.
Henry Mss. Sixty-one southern
Appalachian songs contributed by Mellinger Edward Henry, Ridgewood, New
Jersey, 1928-29. Most texts and headnotes were subsequently published by
Henry in the Journal of American Folklore and in Folk-Songs from the
Southern Highlands (New York: J. J. Augustin, 1938). Indexed. Original
typescript and two typescript copies in Archive.
"Inferno" Collection. Bawdy and
related songs taken from the following collections: 128 from the Gordon Mss
collection; 32 from the Gordon Collection: California; 13 from the Davids
Mss.; and 1 from the Gordon Collection: Georgia. Not indexed. Original
manuscripts and two typescript copies in Archive.
Johnson Mss. Fifteen songs
contributed by Guy B. Johnson, University of North Carolina, ca. 1929,
written down by Walter Jordon of New York City, as he learned them in the
South twenty years before. Not indexed. Original manuscript and two
typescript copies in Archive.
McAdams thesis. "The Folk-Songs of
the American Negro -- A Collection of Unprinted Texts Preceded by a General
Survey of the Traits of Negro Song," collected and annotated by Nettie F.
McAdams (Master's thesis, University of California, Berkeley, 1923). Ca. 140
songs. Indexed. Bound typescript in Archive (ML3556.M112).
McGinnis Mss. Ca. 130 sea chanties
and songs with music contributed by Joseph F. McGinnis, Brooklyn, New York,
1928-29. Indexed. Original manuscript returned in 1929.
McIlhenny Mss. Three hundred
twenty-five page manuscript entitled "Louisiana Negro Spirituals,"
containing 125 texts and tunes compiled by E. A. McIlhenny, Avery Island,
Louisiana. Indexed. Microfilm copy in Music Division {Music 0025). See
McIlhenny's Befo' de War Spirituals (Boston: Christopher Publishing House,
1933 [M1670.M15B4]).
Neal-Brown Co. Songs. "Brown County
Songs and Ballads," collected and annotated by Mabel Evangaline Neal
(Master's thesis, Indiana University, 1926). One hundred eighty-three pages
containing one hundred songs. Indexed. Bound photostat copy in Archive
(M1629.N48B8).
Newcomb Mss. Four hundred three-page
photostat manuscript entitled "Songs My Mother Sang," containing 210 texts
and 101 tunes from New Hope, Kentucky, contributed by Mary Newcomb,
Louisville, Kentucky, 1929-30. Indexed. Not in Archive.
Newcomb Mss. (Additional). One hundred
two songs from Kentucky contributed by Mary Newcomb, Louisville, Kentucky,
1930-31. Indexed. One typescript copy in Archive.
Odum-Arhur Mss. Eighty-three songs
contributed by Howard W. Odum, University of North Carolina, July 10, 1929,
obtained from J. D. Arthur of Tennessee. Indexed. Original typescript and
two typescript copies in Archive.
Phillips Mss. Twenty-two songs
contributed by R. W. Phillips, Akeley, Minnesota, March 22, 1924. Indexed.
Original manuscript and two typescript copies in Archive.
Purcell Mss. One hundred eight songs
with music contributed by Margaret Purcell, Greenwood, Virginia, ca. 1929.
Indexed. Not in Archive.
Winger Mss. Two collections of ca.
125 songs obtained from Betty Bush Winger, Point Pleasant, West Virginia,
including black songs from Miss Winger's home in the Ozark region of
Missouri. Manuscript II corresponds with ca. twenty-five recordings made by
Gordon at Point Pleasant, 1931-32. Indexed, Typescripts in Archive;
recordings presumably in Archive.
Additional R. W. Gordon manuscript
collections may be located at the Randal V. Mills Memorial Archive of
Northwest Folklore, University of Oregon.
For detailed biographical information on
R. W. Gordon, see Debora Kodish's unbound Master's thesis entitled "Good
Friends and Bad Enemies: Robert Winslow Gordon and American Folksong
Scholarship," located in the Archive, and her book entitled Good Friends,
Bad Enemies: Robert Winslow Gordon and the Study of American Folksong
(Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1966 [ML423.G69K6 1986]}.
To obtain copies of the manuscripts and
recordings in the Gordon collection and other collections in the Archive of
Folk Culture, please request a copy of the "Photoduplication Service Price
List" and the Guide to the Collections of Recorded Folk Music and Folklore
in the Library of Congress.
END
This ascii version prepared for Internet.
For a published version please write to The American Folklife Center,
Library of Congress, Washington, DC 20540.
[The Gordon 'Inferno' Typescript]
[5]
c 1924
BORING FOR OIL
As I walked out one morning in May I
met a fair damsel and to her did say It's all for a fortune I am willing
to toil If you'll show me some place to go boring for oil.
She stammered, she stammered, kind sir, I
declare, I know of a place and I've nursed it with care, And no one
has seen it since I was a child And I'll show you there's no trouble in
boring for oil.
Oh, I had not bored down more than six
inches or so, When the oil from my well it so freely did flow, She
screamed and she hollered Oh my character's spoiled You've busted my
hamgut while boring for oil. [?]
R. M. Davids
8
c 1924
No more, no more, no more, no
more, While I sit on my chest with my feet on the floor I swear to God
I'll go whaling no more.
(Or as the rough has it--) With my
arse on my chest, &c.
R. M. Davids
9
c 1924
I'LL GO NO MORE A ROVING
In Amsterdam there lived a maid, Now
mark well what I say. In Amsterdam there lived a maid, And she was
mistress of a trade.
I'll go no more a roving, for you fair
maid, I'll go no more a roving, for rovings been my ruin, I'll go no
more a roving, for you fair maid.
In Amsterdam there lived a maid, Now
mark well what I say. In Amsterdam there lived a maid And she did have
a maidenhead.
I laid this maid down on the bed, Now
mark well what I say. I laid this maid down on the bed And slote away
her maidenhead.
I laid this maid over in such
style Now mark well what I say. I laid this maid over in such
style That in nine months she had a child.
R. M. Davids.
11
c 1924
JOHN AND SUE
One bright summer's morning the sun was
brightly shining, When Dame Margaret told her daughter Sue for market to
get ready, And John would bear her company, a lad sedate and
steady.
John went along to drive the horse so
away they went together With nothing much to talk about but the neighbors
and the weather.
And when going along the road close to a
barley field, sir, Sue saw a bull, in vigor full, leap upon a cow,
sir.
Say, John, says she, how can he tell when
the cow's a mind for it, Or is the cow by nature turned continually
inclined for it?
Oh, no, said John, the cow does stink
when in that situation And the bull full well the stink does smell and
knows her inclination.
And then the weather being warm Sue
unloosed her gown bethought her And John saw her bubbles sticking out and
his mouth began to water.
Then something in John's breeches rose
that made his concience stagger So stiff it grew the buttons flew, out
popped his tallywagger.
Then Susan's dark and rolling eye began
to flash and brighten For now she saw the pretty thing that girls all "so
delight in.
Say John, said she, 'tis firey red and
now if you will tell me I really think that I do stink, pray see if you
can smell me.
So John got out and tied the horse, and
amorously embraced her, And in the wagon on some hay with gentle hands he
placed her.
At first they took it on their sides, but
Sue she overturned him And John soon made the butter come with his
tallowagger churning.
Than Sue got up and shook herself and sat
her down right clever, But they had not gone a mile or so, till she stunk
as bad as ever.
John rasped her off the second time with
his good stout repeater, And as he rasped her off again, she swore it
tasted sweeter.
And then when coming close to town, poor
Sue she sat a thinking, That she would like another go, so she yelled
out, I'm a stinking.
John said, you have a fiery arse to hot
by half I tell you And if you think that you do stink, by God I cannot
smell you.
R. M. Davids
13 c 1924
THE HANDSOME CABIN BOY
'Tis of a handsome female, as you must
understand Who had a mind for roving unto some foreign land
Dressed out in sailor's clothing, this
fair maid did appear And she agreed with a Captain to serve him for a
year.
She agreed with this Captain a cabin boy
to be, And the wind it being favorable, they soon put out to
sea
The Captain's lady being on board, she
seemed much to enjoy The favorable appearance of this handsome cabin
boy.
His cheeks were like the roses, his
sidelooks they did curl, And the sailors often smiled and said he looked
just like a girl
But eating cabin biscuits his color did
destroy And the waist began to swell, on lovely Nell, the handsome cabin
boy.
Oh doctor dearest doctor the cabin boy
did cry, The sailors swore by all that's good the cabin boy would
die,
The doctor ran with all his might, a
laughing at the fun, To think the cabin boy should have a daughter or a
son.
The sailors learning of the joke, they
all began to stare That the child belonged to none of them they solemnly
did swear
The Captain speaking to the Mate said I
must wish you joy, For I see it's you that has betrayed, this handsome
cabin boy.
And now let's fill a bumper and drink
success to trade Likewise to the handsome cabin boys, be they boys or
maids
And if the waves should rise again, us
sailors to destroy Why then we'll ship some more sailors, like the hands
one cabin boy.
Davids
14 c 1924
PRETTY PEGGY
There was a rich merchant all riding one
day When he spied Pretty Peggy all by the highway. He called to his
coachman and loudly did say There's a pretty fair damsel, go bring her
this way.
There's fifty gold dollars if you will
comply All in my bedchamber this this night for to lie At the sight of
the gold, she gave her consent So into his bed chamber pretty Peggy she
went.
She played with his old boy with her
lilly white hand Which caused every hair on his old boy to
stand, Which caused every hair on his old boy to play Over hills and
green valleys and so far away.
With hugging and kissing he soon fell
asleep When out of his arms pretty Peggy did creep, She sifted his
pockets of a large sum of gold Gold rings, a gold watch, and diamonds I'm
told.
'Twas early next morning this merchant
arose 'Tis raving distracted they thought he would go He called for
his horses to take a long ride, Thinking to spy pretty Peggy down by the
seaside.
Ha rode the beach up and he rode the
beach down But nothing of Peggy could there be found Three times he
did pass her but didn't her know She laughed in her sleeve saying there
goes my rich beau.
How Peggy is rich and lives by the
seashore She swears by her Maker she'll whore it no more Unless some
poor sailor is sadly in want For the tars of Columbia shall never
lack.
Davids
c
1924
THE LITTLE DUTCH SOLDIER FROM OVER THE
RHINE
Oh, a little Dutch soldier from over the
Rhine, Snapoo, Snapoo, A little Dutch soldier from over the
Rhine, Snapoo, A little Dutch soldier from over the
Rhine He stopped at the house of a lady so fine Snap peter, snap pooter, philander
cochita phidam snapoo.
Oh, then says he have you a daughter so
fine For the little Butch soldier from over the Rhine
I have a daughter but she is too
young, Snapoo, Snapoo, Oh yes said she, I have a daughter
fine, Snapoo, For the little Dutch soldier
from over the Rhine.
Snapeeter, snapooter, philander cocheeter
phidam snapoo.
Oh no mamma I am not too
young, For I will open my legs and let him hop
on.
He hopped on but he came off damned
quick For he thought he was luckey in saving
his p-k.
Her Grandmammy she ran for the frying
pan. For fear that baby would s-—t (or mess)
in her hand.
Davids
20
c 1924
LITTLE BALL OF YARN
It was in the month of May, when the
lambs did skip and play That I met a pretty fair maid, and thus to her
did say, Let me wind up your little ball of yarn.
Ball of yarn, ball of yarn, Let me wind up your little ball of
yarn. Oh no kind sir said she you are a
stranger unto me And perhaps you have some other
charm.
And I'd rather go with those, who have
money and fine clothes To wind up my little ball of
yarn.
Ball of yarn, ball of yarn, And I'd rather go with those,
&c.
I took her by the waist and gently laid
her down Hot intending to do her any
harm And the mocking bird and thrush was
singing in the bush While I would up her little ball of
yarn.
Ball of yarn, ball of yarn, While I
wound up, &c.
She jumped up from the green and pulled
her clothing down And home unto her mother she did run. And I skinned off from the green, for
fear of being seen For I had wound up her little ball of yarn.
Davids
22 c 1924
ANYTHING
Oh short and sweet shall be my
song As through this world I jog along, I
jog along through thick and thin And sound the praise of "Anything".
I
jog along through thick and thin And sound the praise of
"Anything".
As through a wood my way it led Into a
house I was conveyed, A lady met me, so neat and trim She made me
think of "Anything".
As in this house I was
conveyed And in my arris this fair maid
laid Said she kind sir it is no sin, For you to do most
"Anything".
As in that bed we lay so snug, And she began to kiss and hug, I pulled her shift up to her
chin And played that game called
"Anything".
Oh if ever I did have delight, 'Twas
on that happy, happy night And I only wish I was back again To play
that game called "Anything".
And now kind friends don't take me
wrong You asked me for to sing a song, I asked you what you would have
me sing And you said I might sing "Anything".
And now kind friends my song's
complete And I do think it is your treat, My choice, it is a brandy
sling But I can drink most "Anything".
R. M. Davids
24
c 1924
DOWN DERRY DOWN
As Jackie was walking the streets upon
Down He spied pretty Peggy of fair London
town, He spoke her in English, the signal she
knew, And she backed her main yard and she let
him come to. Singing down, down, derry
down,
And she rattled his rigging right down to
the rail. She burnt poor Jack's rigging right down
to the hull So off to the doctors, poor Jack he did skull, His yards were well braced and his blocks
were well hung Saying doctor, dear doctor, my main yard in
sprung.
R. M. Davids
31
c 1924
ABRAM BROWN THE SAILOR
Who Is that knocking at my door? Cries
the fair young maiden. Who is that knocking at my door? Cries the fair
young maiden
Won't you come down and let me
in? Cried Abram Brown the sailor --Bass
voice; repeat.
Oh, I'll cone down and let you
in, Cries the fair young maiden.
Have you got a place for me. to
sleep? Cries Abram. Brown the sailor.
You can sleep by the side of me, Cries
the fair young maiden.
Oh, what have you got between your
legs? Cried Abram Brown the sailor.
I've got a hairy pin-cushion, Cried
the fair young maiden.
I've got a pin and I'll stick it
in, Cried Abram Brown the sailor.
If you stick it 'in you'll break my
heart, Cried the fair young maiden.
I'll break your heart or I'll make you
fart, Cried Abram Brown the sailor.
When can I have this treat
again? Cried the fair young maiden.
When you can get my cock to
star4 Cried Abram Brown the sailor.
How can I get your cock to
stand? Cried the fair young maiden.
Scratch my arse and tickle my
balls, Cried Abram Brown the sailor.
R. M. Davids
35 c 1924
THE KEYHOLE IN THE DOOR
We left the parlor early, I think it
scarcely nine And by a lucky fortune, her room was next to
mine Resolved like old Columbus new regions to explore I took a snug
position, by the keyhole in the door.
The keyhole in the door, the keyhole in
the door, I took a snug position, by the keyhole in the door.
And while kneeling there in silence upon
my bended knee Most patiently I waited to see what I could see. She
first took off her collar, and it fell upon the floor And I seen her
stoop to get it, through the keyhole in the door.
This maiden next proceeded to take off
her pretty dress And than her underclothing some hundred more or
less, To speak the truth sincerely I think there was a score But I
could not count correctly through the keyhole in the door.
She sat down on the carpet, in pretty
graceful ease, And lifted her snowly linen above her lilly white
knees A dainty sky blue garter on either leg she wore And they looked
like Parian marble, through the keyhole in the door.
As she arose from her position, looking
so nice and warm And nothing but a chemise concealed her pretty
form Thinks I take off your chemise, and I'll ask for nothing more And
by Jots I seen her do it, through the keyhole in the door.
Then up before the mirror this pretty
creature stood Revealing her rich beauty and feverishing my blood My
hair apraised like briatles upon an angry boar By Jove I felt like
jumping through the keyhole in the door.
And as she stood reviewing her voluptuous
charms I wished like a polypus (or octopus) I had an hundred arms, But
as I did not have then the fact I did deplore For you can't embrace a
maiden through a keyhole in the door.
She next unloosed her tresses of flowing
golden hair, They fell in a golden torment, about her shoulders
fair. And as she quickly rebound them, more firmly than before I
viewed the pretty process, through the keyhole in the door.
She next approached the bed and laid the
covers down And on the bed Miss Jennie prepared to lay her body
down The light it was extinguished and I knew the show was o'er So I
abandoned my position by the keyhole in the door.
R. M. Davids
37 c 1924
JACKIE AND HIS MASTER
Jackie and his master a wager they did
lay That the one that had the shortest dink the wager had to
pay.
Singing ta de di di ump de ay, Tudie
de ump di ay.
So they measured them around and they
measured then about And Jackie's was the longest by four inches and a
snout.
The maid was in the barn and I think she
was to blame When she oversaw the measurement she went and told the
dame.
The dame went to the barn, some eggs for
to hunt, And she stooped down to buckle her shoe, a mouse run up her
c-—t.
She went to the door and hollered loud
and shrill And the old man heard her while working in the
mill.
The old man came running just as fast as
ha could walk Saying, What's the matter, Dame, I thought I heard you
talk.
There's a mouse up my old belly gut, oh
God how he doth gnaw And if you do not get him out, he'll eat away my
maw.
The old nan went to the door and hollered
loud and shrill And Jackie overheard him while plowing on the
hill,
Jackie he came running just as fast as he
could walk Saying, What's the matter, master, I thought I heard you
squawk.
There's a mouse up my wife's belly gut,
oh God how he doth gnaw, And if we do not get him out, he'll eat away her
maw.
I'll. give you twenty dollars if you'll
only get him out, For your dink it is the longest, by four inches and a
snout.
Twenty dollars is not my wages, neither
is it my price For not less than fifty dollars shall my dink go hunting
mice.
So Jackie took her by the middle small,
and gently laid her down And every jig and half a jig he whirled the
mouse around.
The old woman being cunning had the mouse
up in her sleeve And when Jackie had tickled her tail enough, she gave
the mouse a heave.
The old man stood by with a club, and as
the mouse ran up the wall He hit a hell of a lick, and missed it after
all.
Tu di di um de ay, Tu di di um di
ay.
R. M. Davids
[560]
UNCLE BUD
Me and my gal a goin' cross de
field Kicking up dust like a automobile.
Uncle Bud, Uncle Bud, Who in hell is Uncle Bud?
Me an' my gal went a huckleberry huntin' She fell down and I saw somethin'.
Big cat, little cat, teeny insey
kitten And de little cat farted like a nachul man.
Uncle Bud had forty-nine
children
Corn pone and taters, chicken and
ham Cornfed nigger and nachul man.
"Sung in 1908 in Georgia near
Atlanta--work song,
cotton picking."
239
BLOW THE MAN DOWN.---
Oh blow the man down,
bullies blow him away To my Way-Hay-ay Blow the man down Oh blow the man down, bullies blow him away Give me some time to blow the man down.
As I was a walking down
Paradise Street A pretty young damsel, I happened to meet.
I said where are you ging,
my pretty maid I'm going a-milking, kind sir she said.
Then I smiled at this
damsel, so beautous to see And said-pretty maiden will you milk me.
Oh no Sir she answered, oh
no sir not I If I was to milk you I'd milk you too dry.
I gave her 5 shillings,
she took me in tow And away to her stateroom we quickly did go.
As I stripped off my
dunnage and jumped into bed This fair maid she scared me till I was nearly dead.
Her catheads came off when
she took off her dress Also with her bonnet came off her bright tress.
Then she unscrewed her
left leg-unhooked her right ear By that time believe me, I was feelin' dam queer.
When she spat out her
teeth, and gouged out her right eye, I grabbed up my dunnage, and left her to die.
Take warnin' my hearties,
when you go ashore Steer clear of false riggins & moor to a whore.
***********************************
240
[CALIFORNIA]
August 24, 1923
FIRE DOWN BELOW
Oh there's fire in the fo'c'sle, all
hands on deck Fire down below There's fire in the
fore-peak, comin' thru the deck There's fire down below.
There's fire in the fore-top, fire in the
main We thought we had it drownded, there it
comes again.
There's fire in the cabin, fire in the
poop, There's a fire in the galley, burnin' up the soup.
The old man he's a terror, allays cussin'
at the crew, If this old wagon burns, me boys, he'll only get his
due.
The old woman she's a pissin', she's
spoutin' like a whale The ocean is a risin' way 'bove the t'
gallant rail.
Pass along the buckets boys, and let the
old girl spout Double bank the pump my sons, we'll drownd the -----
out.
"Pumping or Capstan chanty"
A. M. Turner
241
August 24, 1923
HANDY, ME BOYS, BE HANDY.
As I was a strollin' one fine summer
day So handy, my boys, so handy, A rosy cheeked damsel, I met on the
way By handy, me boys, be handy.
She passed out her hawser and took me in
tow I shortened all sail and away we did go. She led me to her
father's halls To a beautiful garden inside the walls.
And there I embraced this pretty
maid And love me, Oh love me, kind sir, she said. Then she led me to
her snowhite bed And I hugged her there till she was dead.
"To' gallan's'l halyards chanty ." A.
M. Turner
242 August 24,
1923
Three times they give you
peasoup Three tines they give you duff On Saturdays they give you
rice To make you blow and puff .
So blow ye winds in the mornin' Blow
ye winds Aye Oh We're outward boun' in the ship Renown To the port of
Callao.
"Fragment—Capstan Chanty" A. M.
Turner
248
August 24, 1923
RIKKI DIKKI DOO DA DAY
One night I slept with an English
maid Dooda dooda A virgin pure as the snow--she said Rikki dikki
doo da day.
She swore that I was her very first
love And gave me her maidenhead by the Gods above.
I spent all my payday in buying her
clothes But all that she gave me was a dam dirty dose.
So every night when I go out to piss I
curse the whore who gave me this.
Now all you young sailors take my
advice Don't play with virgin women, for you'll have to pay the
price.
A. M. Turner
377 March 23, 1927
THE APPLEKNOCKER'S LAMENT
On a very fine day in the month of
May A great big bum (big burly) came hiking And he seated his pratt
(himself) neath a big green tree Which was very much to his
liking.
On the very same day in the month of
May A farmer's lad caste hiking. Said the bum to the son, "If you will
come, I'll show you some sights to your liking.
I'll show you the bees in the cigarette
trees, The big rook candy mountains The chocolate heights where they
give away kites And the sody-water fountains.
The lemonade springs where the blue bird
sings, The marbles made of crystal. We'll join the band of Dangerous
Dan Who carries a sword and a pistol."
So the bum set out with the lad at his
back. For six long months they travelled. Than the boy came back on
the very same track And this (sad) tale (he) unravelled,
"There are no bees in the cigarette
trees; No big rock candy mountains, No chocolate heights where they
give away kites, Or sody-water fountains.
No lemonade springs where the blue bird
sing, No marble made of crystal. There is no such man as Dangerous
Dan Who carries a sword and a pistol.
He made me beg and steal his eggs (sit on
his peg) And he called me his jocker When I didn't get pies he blacked
my eyes And called me his apple-knocker.
No more I'll roam from my very fine
home. I'll save my junkerino You can bet your lid that this old
kid Won't be no one else's punkerino."
Wheaton H. (Skin) Brewer
378 March 23, 1927
THE SONG OF AMY
Now the slats were all busted And the
springs were all loose And the sag in the matress Fitted Amy's
caboose. And if your girl thinks This party is swell There's lots
more cottages Down at Carmel.
"Last verse" Wheaton H. (Skin)
Brewer
379
HINKY DINK
Oh, Madam, have you a daughter
fair, Parley-voo? Oh, Madam, have you a daughter
fair, Parley-voo? Oh, yes, I have a daughter fair, With two little
tits and golden hair! Hinky Dinky Parley-voo.
Oh, up the stairs and into
bed, Parley-voo, Up the stairs and into bed, Parley-voo, Oh, up
the stair and into bed, And there I captured her maidenhead) Hinky
Dinky Parleyvoo.
The first three months and all was
well, Parley-voo, The second three months she began to
swell, Parley-voo, The third three months, she gave a grunt, And a
little doughboy jumped out of her cunt, Hinky dinky
parley-voo.
The little red bastard, he grew and he
grew, Parley-voo, The little red bastard, he grew and he
grew, Parley-voo, The little red bastard he grew and ha grew, And
now he's screwing the women, too, Hinky dinky parley-voo.
The little red bastard, he died like a
mack, Parley-voo, The little red bastard, he died like a
mack, Parley-voo, The little red bastard, he died like a mack, From
putting his cock in a dirty crack, Hinky dinky parley-voo.
The First Division went over the
top, To make the Kaiser suck his cock, The damned M.P.'s behind the
line, Screwing the women and drinking the wine.
379
HINKY DINK (2)
The YMCA had a hell of a
time, Screwing the soldiers out of their dimes.
The Medical Corps, they did their
bit, Jazzing the nurses and shovelling shit.
Oh, mademoiselle from Gay Paree, She
had the clap and gave it to me.
0h, madamoiselle from St.
Nazaire, She'd do "jig-jig' for a pomme de terre.
Oh, madamoiselle from Andernach, For
fifty pfennigs, she'd suck your cook.
0h, madamoiselle,from
Niederzissin, She'd give you a jazz like cats a-pissin'.
Oh, Madamoiselle from
Niedermendig, She'd give you a screw for fifty
pfennigs.
"the official song of the
A.E.F."
380
My father was hung as a horse thief My
mother was burned as a witch I have seventeen sisters in the
whore-house And I'm a cock-sucking son of a bitch.
"1911, Sullivan County, Missouri, by a
small town braggest type. More or less common property tho this an unusually
tough version."
381
Frankie and Johnnie were lovers Oh ray
God how they could lore They swore they would ever be faithful As true
as the stars above. Oh, he was her man But he done her
wrong.
Johnnie went down to the corner She
went down after some beer Said Johnnie to the bartender "Have you seen
my Frankie here!" Oh he was my man And now he's done me
wrong.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - tell you no lie But I saw your Frankie go yonder With a girl
named Nellie Bly Oh he was your man But he's done you
wrong.
382
Frankie and Johnnie were lovers Swore
to be true to their love, Swore to be true to each other, As true as
the stars above. God dam his soul. He was doing her wrong, wrong,
wrong.
Johnnie went down to the corner
saloon To get him a glass of beer Says Frankie, "Oh Mr.
bartender, Has my lovin' Johnnie been here?" Goddam his soul, He'
been doin' me wrong, wrong, wrong.
Johnnie went down to the whorehouse To
buy him a piece of tail, When Frankie came in and shot him, And the
sherrif took Frankie to jail God dam his soul, He'd been doin' her
wrong.
They put Johnnie away in the
boneyard.
383
JOHNNIE AND FRANKIE
O Johnnie and Frankie were lovers! O
my! How they did love! They swore to be true to each other, Just as
true as the stars above. But Johnnie was the man That was doin' her
wrong.
O Frankie went to the crib-house, She
looked in the window high; And there she saw her Johnnie A-lovalovin'
Alice Fly. He sure is the man That is doin' me wrong.
O Frankie went to the crib-house, But
this time not for fun, For underneath her kimona She had a great big
forty-four gun. She was gonna git the man That was doin' her
wrong.
She said to the jolly
bar-tender, "Have ya seen my Johnnie round here?" "I saw your Johnnie
not a half-hour ago-- He was tanked to the muzzle with beer. He sure
is the man That was doin' you wrong."
O Johnnie said to Frankie, "How
darling, don't you shoot?" But Frankie pulled out that forty-four
gun, And seven times went "Toot-toot!" She sure got the man That
was doin' her wrong.
O I ain' t-a-goima tell ya no
stories, An I ain't-a-gonna tell ya no lies. Is a thing I do
despise. He sure is the man That was doin' me wrong.
O bring on your rubber-tired
hearses, And bring on your rubber-tired hacks. I'm gonna take my
Johnnie to the graveyard; Ain't a-gonna bring his ---- back. Best part
of the man That was doin' me wrong.
383
JOHNNIE AND FRANKIE (2)
O bury me down in a dungeon; O bury me
down in a cell; O bury me down in a dungeon In the south-east corner
of hell. For she sure got the man That was doin' her wrong.
O Frankie's down at the
depot A-waitin' fo' 'at train-- A-waitin' fo' 'at train to
Sing-Sing Where they keep 'at ball an' chain. She killed her
man, But he was doin' her wrong.
384
My name is Bob Baker My prick is my
maker My bollux weigh 99 pounds Bring me Johanna I'll fuck her, God
damn her And nail her damn ass in the ground.
385
MOBILE
Oh the eagles they fly high in Mobile, in
Mobile, Oh the eagles they fly high in Mobile, Oh the eagles they fly
high And they shit down in your eye
Ain't you glad the cows don't fly in
Mobile. Oh the old grey cow is dead But the children must be fed So
they milk the bull instead.
Oh they never wash their dishes But
they wipe them on their britches Oh the dirty sons of bitches.
Anonymous
386
HESITATION BLUES
Oh ashes to ashes and dust to dust If
the whisky don't get you why the cocain must. Must I hesitate? Must I
wait so long?
Oh ashes to ashes and dust to
dust Ain't a man in old Virginia that a woman can trust Must I wait so
long? Or can I get you now? Must I hesitate?
Well I'm not the iceman nor the iceman's
son But I can fill your box until the iceman comes.
I'm not the undertaker nor the
undertaker's son, But I'll screw you in your coffin till the undertaker
comes.
I'm not the plumber nor the plumber's
son But I can stop your leak until the plumber comes.
Anonymous
387
SAMUEL HALL
Oh my name's Samuel Ball, Samuel Hall,
Samuel Hall, Oh my name's Samuel Hall, And I hates you one and
all You're a gang of mushers all Damn your eyes.
Oh they put me in the Quod For I
killed a man by God And I left him on the sod.
Oh the sheriff he came too With the
gang of men in blue They're a gang of mushers too.
Oh the parson he did come And he
looked so goddam glum With his talk of kingdom come.
So I you my story tell Hopes you all
may go to hell Hopes by God you sissle well.
Anonymous.
388
LYDIA PINKHAM
Rufus Jones he was a
And he had no balls at all But ha
drank three bottles down Of Lydia's vegetable compound Now they hang
below his knees.
Sally Brown she had no breastworks And
she had no breasts at all But she drank three bottles down Of Lydia's
vegetable compound Now they milk her with the cows.
Mary Black had female trouble And she
had no kids at all But she drank three bottles down Of Lydia's
vegetable compound How she throws them twice a year,
Anonymous
389
BOCARDY BILL THE SAILOR
What have you got between your
legs? Said Bocardy Bill the Sailor. What have you got between your
legs? Said Bocardy Bill the Sailor.
I have got a cushion there, Said the
fair young maiden, I have got a cushion there, Said the fair young
maiden.
What if there should be a child, Said
the fair young maiden.
Strangle the bugger as soon as he
comes Said Bocardy Bill the Sailor.
What about the police force, Said the
fair young maiden.
Bugger the police and fuck the
force, Said Bocardy Bill the Sailor.
Anonymous
390
THE KING OF ENGLAND
Oh minstrels sing of an ancient king who
lived long years ago He rulled his land with an iron hand but his mind
was weak and low He loved to hunt to royal stag within the royal
wood But his favorite occupation was pulling the royal pud, Christ,
how he loved to pull his pud, pull his pud.
His only nether garment was a woolen
undershirt With which he tried to hide the hide, but couldn't hide the
dirt His hair was wooly and full of fleas And his terrible dong hung
down to his knees. God save the bastard king of England.
The Queen of Spain was a sprightly dame,
a sprightly dame was she She loved to fool with his majesty's tool so far
across the sea So she sent a royal message by a royal messenger Asked
him to come and spend a month with her.
When the King of France heard this
report, he said unto his court She must prefer me rival because me horn
in short So he sent the Duke of Simmesap to give the queen a dose of
clap God save the bastard King of England.
Oh when the news of this foul deed did
reach Old England's walls The king he swore by the shirt he wore he'd
have the Frenchman's balls He offered half his kingdom and a piece of
Queen Hortense To any loyal Briton who would nut the king of
France.
The loyal Duke of Suffolk betook himself
to France He swore he was a fruiter and the king took down his
pants He slipped a thong on the royal dong And mounted his horse and
galloped along And dragged him before the king of England.
The king threw up his breakfast and
fainted on the floor For in the ride the Frenchman's pride had stretched
a yard or more The ladies of old England heard about King Philip's
bone They rallied to the Frenchman, to hell with the English
throne.
So Philip of France usurped the
throne His sceptre was his royal bone With which he browned the
bastard kind of England.
Anonymous
391
LYDIA'S COMPOUND
Then we'll sing, sing, sing, of Lydia
Pink-ham, Pink-ham, Ping And her love for the human race She had
builded a vegetable compound, And the papers publish her face.
Elsie Janis was hollow chested She
could scarcely fill her blouse She drank six bottles of Lydia's
Compound Now they milk her with the cows.
Johnnie Jones had urinitis, He could
scarcely pee at all He drank four bottles of Lydia's Compound How he's
a human waterfall.
Mrs. Jones was quite unhappy She could
have no babies dear She drank six bottles of Lydia's Compound Now she
has them twice a year.
Anonymous
392
Five little heifers grazing in the
valley Five little bull calves had next season. They cut those calves
and they made them oxen The little black bull went back to the
mountains...
"Billy Day of Middle Musquodoboit,
Halifax Co., N.S. c 1894 W. Gladwin of Jeddore, Halifax Co., N. S. c
1894."
Anonymous
393 December 12,
1925
Three jolly men went ahunting And nothing could they find They came unto a cowdung And that they left behind.
The Scotchman says-that's a
cowdung The Englishman says Kay And Paddy says-that's a custard
pie With the custard blown away.
Three jolly men went ahunting And nothing could they find They came unto a pumpkin And that they left behind.
The Scotchman says-that's a
pumpkin The Englishman-he says Hay And Paddy says-That's a tater But it's in the family way.
Three jolly men went ahunting And nothin' could they find They came unto a knothole And that they left behind.
The Scotchman says-that's a
knothole The Englishman-he says Hay And Paddy says-that's a horse's
arse But the horse has ran away.
"an old song I heard in
Australia"
Andrew M. Turner
394 May,
1923
A sailor man came home one night as drunk
as drunk could be, He saw a hat upon the rack where his hat ought to
be. "My dear wife, my sweet wife, my darling wife," says he, "What
means this hat upon the rack, where my hat ought to be?" "O, you poor
fool, you damn fool, you son of a bitch," says she, "It's nothing but a
piss pot that my granny sent to see." "O I've travelled over land and
sea, and pissed on every shore, But a piss pot on a hat rack, I've never
seen before."
A sailor man came home one night as drunk
as drunk could be, He saw a head upon the bed, where his head ought to
be. "My dear wife, my sweet wife, my pretty wife," says he, "What
means this head upon the bed, where my head ought to be?" "O you poor
fool, you damn fool, you son of a bitch," says she, "It's nothing but a
cabbage head my granny sent to me." "O I've travelled over land and sea,
and pissed on every shore But a cabbage head with whiskers on, I've never
seen before.
A sailor man came home one night, as
drunk as drunk could be, He saw an ass upon the bed, where his ass ought
to be. "My dear wife, my sweet wife, my pretty wife," says he, What
means this ass upon the bed, where my ass ought to be?" "O you poor fool,
you damn fool, you son of a bitch," says she, "It's nothing but two loves
of bread, my granny sent to me." "O I've travelled over land and sea, and
pissed on every shore, But loaves of bread with shit between, I've never
seen before."
A sailor man came home one night, as
drunk as drunk could be, He found a thing, within the thing, where his
thing ought to be. "My dear wife, my sweet wife, my pretty wife," says
he, "What means this thing, within the thing, where my thing ought to
be?" "You poor fool, you damn fool, you son of a bitch," says
she, It's nothing but a rolling pin, my granny sent to me." "O I've
travelled over land and sea, and pissed on every shore, But a rolling
pin, with balls upon, I've never seen before.
L. C. Lockley
395
I'M A WEAVER
I am a bachelor, and I live all
alone, And I work at the weaver's trade. And the only, only thing that
I ever did wrong Was to woo a fair young maid.
One night she came to my bed
side, "When I was fast asleep. She cried, she sighed, she damn near
died, So what was I to do, But take her into bed, and cover up her
head, Just to keep her from the foggy, foggy dew.
I am a bachelor, and I live with my
son, And we work at the weaver's trade. And every, every night I look
into his eyes, He reminds me of the maid That I once took into bed, to
cover up her head, And to keep from the foggy, foggy dew.
"This song was gotten from a young man of
about twenty who picked it up while with a gang of laborers working
for the Pacific Improvement Company on the Monterey Peninsula. He was
indefinite as to which laborer or laborers he got it from--said they all
knew it and sang it. There were both Americans and foreigners among them.
He got it from them about three years ago."
Songs and Fragments Common Among Young
Men, Berkeley, California, 1923.
399
The steward want below Whoo-oo-oo To light the cabin
lamp Whoo-oo-oo The lamp it would not burn Whoo-oo-oo Because the wick was
damp Whoo-oo-oo, whoo-oo-oo.
The captain went below To kick the
steward's ass Fire up, you son of a bitch, The
Golden Gate is past.
"This song I picked up at a Fraternity
House, where I heard the whole group of men around the table sing. The
melody is only two notes, sung very slowly, with a measured beat, much as
a dirge, the 'Whoo-oo-oo' after each line like a hoarse fog-horn in the
night. I have no idea where they got it, and none of them seem to
know,"
Songs and Fragments Common Among Young
Men, Berkeley, California, 1923
400
Oh mother, oh mother, have you a
daughter Snap-oo, snap-oo, Oh mother, oh mother, have you a
daughter, To sleep with a sailor from over the water, Snap-oo,
snap--ee--tah, fie-nanny-go-eat-ah, Snap-oo,
Oh no, oh no, my daughter's too
young To sleep with that dirty old son of a gun.
Oh mother, oh mother, I'm not too
young, I've dona it before with finger and thumb.
So that son of a bitch ha took her to
bed, And crammed it in from its roots to its head.
Oh, six months came, and six months
past, The rim of her belly hung down to her ass.
Oh nine months came, and nine months
past, And a jolly young sailor rolled out of her ass.
"I got this song from a group of college
boys of normal age who had not the slightest idea where they had gotten
it, or how long they had known it. Two of them said that they thot
there were two or three more stanzas, but they did not know them, The
fourth stanza was offered by only one of them; the others said they had
never heard it before. It is probably original with him."
Songs and Fragments Common Among Young
Men, Berkeley, California, 1923
401
The Canoneers they have no fears They
piss thru leather britches And knock their cocks 'gainst jagged
rocks Those hardy sons of bitches.
They masterbate from morn till
late Till their bloody foreskin twitches Next morn at ten they begin
again Those hardy sons of bitches.
When tail is rare, they rape the
bear In dusky nooks and nitches Nor give a care for sand or
hair Those hardy sons of bitches.
They crawl and creep upon a sheep And
fuck her while she pitches Nor give a damn if it be a ram Those hardy
sons of bitches.
They scrouge a cow and care not
how The shit sticks to their breeches And fergle a bull and fill him
full Those hardy sons of bitches.
The Canoneers have hairy ears For care
now much it itches To wipe their ass on broken glass Those hardy sons
of bitches.
"These stanzas came from a man who was a
private in an artillery battery, and hence the adoption of
'canoneers'. He was about twenty-two or three, and said that he had
picked them up while in quarantine for spinal menemgitis, and
that many many more were made up at that time that had slipped
his memory, for all that was to be done all day long was to lie in bed
and think up rhymes. Several of these were new to me but I had already
heard more than half of them from others."
Songs and Fragments Common Among Young
Men, Berkeley, California, 1923
402
THE SPANISH COUNTILIO
There once was a Spanish Countilio Who
lived in a Spanish Castilio He was proud of his tra-la-la—lilio And
the works of his tweedle-dum-dee.
He once met a young sanorita And asked
her to be his senora He showed her his tra-la-la-lilio And the works
of his tweedle-dum-dee.
He took her into his Castilio And laid
her down on the sofilio He rammed in his tra-la-la-lilio To the works
of his tweedle-dum-dee.
Next morn he felt rather sickilio The
doc said he had syphilio All over his tra-la-la-lilio And the works of
his tweedle-dum-dee.
How he sits in his Spanish
Castilio With a handfull of cotton wadilio Swabbing his
tra-la-la-lilio And the works of his tweedle-dim-dee.
"This was taken from a college boy who
had gotten it from another from some other college (I couldn't
determine where)."
Songs and Fragments Common Among Young
Men, Berkeley, California, 1923
403
FRANKIE AND JOHNIE
Frankie and Johnie were lovers Lawdy,
oh God, how they loved, Swore to be true to each other As true as the
blue sky above. Ha was her man, But ha was doin' her wrong.
Frankie she worked in a hump-house A
hump-house with only two doors, Gave all her money to Johnie Who spent
it on the parlor-house whores Damn his soul, For he was doin' her
wrong.
One night when Frankie was
lonely Nobody came out to call Frankie put on her kimonie And went
out to the nickel crawl Lookin' for the man That was doin' her
wrong.
Frankie blew down to the
corner Ordered herself up some beer Said to the gentle
bar-tender "Have you seen my lovin' Johnie here? For he's my
man, But he's doin' me wrong.11
"I don't want to tell you no story I
don't want to tell you no lie But Johnie was here about an hour
ago With that fat bitch Nellie B1y. He's your man, But he's doin'
you wrong."
Frankie blew back to the
hump-house This time 'twasn't for fun Under her dirty kimona She
packed a big 44 gun Lookin' for the man That was doin' her
wrong.
Frankie blew into the
hump-house Didn't even ring the bell Said, "Look out, all you pimps
and whores, Or I'll blow you all straight to hell. I'm lookin' for the
man That's doin' me wrong."
403
FRANKIE AND JOHNIE (2)
She want on back thru the
hall-way Looked over a transom so high There she saw her lovin'
boy Finger-fucking Nellie Bly God damn her soul, But he was doin'
her wrong.
Johnie saw Frankie a-comin' Said, "My
God, Frankie, don't shoot." But Frankie pulled out her big 44 gun And
the gun went root-i-toot-toot. She shot the man That was doin' her
wrong.
"Bring on your rubber-tired
hearses Fill 'em up plumb full of maques For they're taking my Johnie
to the cemetery And they'll never bring his penis back. Beat part of
the man That was doin' me wrong."
"This song is pure negro. I got it from a
man that has played in cafes, and he said that is universal among the
negroes."
Songs and Fragments Common Among Young
Men, Berkeley, California, 1923
404
THE BASTARD KING OP ENGLAND
The minstrels sing of an English king of
many years ago How he ruled the land with an iron hand tho his mind was
"weak and low He was wild and wooley and full of fleas And his
terrible tool hung down to his knees. So God bless the bastard king of
England.
His only nether garment was a woolen
undershirt With which he tried to hide his hide but he couldn't hide the
dirt He loved to chase the bounding stag thruout the royal wood And he
dearly loved to pull the royal pud.
Now the Queen of Spain was a sprightly
dame, an amorous dame was she, She longed to fool with his Majesty's tool
so far across the sea So she sent a note to England by a special
messenger For the king to come and spend a month with her.
When Philip of Prance was told of this he
cried unto his court "She much prefers my rival because my horn is
short." And he sent the Duc de Siphensac To give the queen a dose of
clapp "Which wouldn't do a thing to Merrie England.
Sow whan the news of this foul deed
arrived at Windsor's halls The king he swore by the shirt he wore he'd
eat the Frenchman's balls And he promised half his kingdom and the hand
of Queen Hortense To anyone who would nut the king of France.
So the noble Duke of Suffolk betook
himself to France He said he was a fruiter and the king took down his
pants Then over his prong he slipped a thong And mounted his horse and
galloped along. And dragged him before the bastard king of
England.
The King threw up his breakfast and
fainted on the floor For during the ride the Frenchman's pride had
stretched a rod or more And all the ladies of London Town had gathered
around the castel grounds And shouted, "To hell with the British
Crown And down with the bastard king of England."
So Philip of France usurped the
throne His sceptre was his royal bone With which he browned the
bastard king of England.
"I got this from a man who is turn had
gotten it from some members of the Harvard Law School in 1914. He said
that that was the only place that he had heard it, except once, in a
slightly different version, while in the army. If he recollected
correctly, there it was sung by an old veteran sergiant who sung it when
tight."
Songs and Fragments Common Among Young
Men, Berkeley, California, 1923
406
Toodle um toodle um too That's what he
played on his horn Toodle urn toodle um too He played it from midnight
till morn Toodle-um toodle um too And now I will tell it to you He
won the hand of his Mary Ann With his hand on her toodle um
too.
"These fragments came from an art student
that had picked them up in the Art Students' League in New York City
in 1917."
Songs and Fragments Common Among Young
Men, Berkeley, California, 1923
407
Floating down the river Sitting on the
stern She had a-hold of hisen He had a-hold of hern.
"These fragments came from an art student
that had picked them up in the Art Students' League in New York City
in 1917."
Songs and Fragments Common Among Young
Men, Berkeley, California, 1923
246
September 17,
1923
SHE WAS POOR BUT SHE WAS
HONEST
She was poor but she was honest Victim
of a village crime Of the Squire's guilty passion And she lost her own
good nyme.
Then she went right up to Lunnon For
to hide her ghastly shyme And she met another squire And she lost her
nyme agyne.
She was poor but she was
foolish, Victim of a rich man's whim, He seduced her, then he left
her, She'd a little child by him.
You'll find her in the theayter See
her sitting in the stalls And at home an hour lyter Plying with some
strynger's balls.
You'll see her in her limoosin In the
park and people say All the squires and nobby people Stop to pass the
time of day.
In a quiet country cottage There her
aged parents live Drink the champagne that she sends them But they
never can forgive.
You will find her in the
gutter Selling matches by the box For a tanner you can up her Ten
to one you get the pox.
See him passing in his carriage With
his fyce all wreathed in smiles See her sitting on the pyvement Which
is bloody bad for pyles.
See him passing to the Commons Making
laws for rich and pore See her walking of the
pyvements Nothing but a bloody hore.
It's the syme the whole world
over It's the poor they always blyme And the rich they takes their
pleasures Isn't it a bloody shyme.
E. S. Fowlds
246 September 17, 1923
INKY DINKY PARLEZ VOUS
Madamoiselle from Armenteers, parlez
vous, Mademoiselle from Armenteers, parlez vous, Madamoiselle from
Armenteers, She hadn't been tamped for umpteen
years Inky-dinky-parlez-vous .
The general won the Croix de
Guerre And the son of a bitch was never there.
Madamoiselle from Say Paree She had
the crabs and she gave 'em to me.
The French they are a funny race They
fight with their feet and they f--- with their face.
"and then of course the stock one sung by
any army in reference to any other."
The ------- are hairing a hell of a
time Winning the war behind the line.
(or) F------ the Waacs, behind the
line.
E. S. Fowlds
246 September 17, 1923
BOLLOCKY BILL THE SAILOR
Who's that knocking at the door? Said
the fair young maiden Who's that knocking at the door? Said the fair
young maiden.
O it's your lover come home from
sea Said Bollocky Bill the sailor. O it's your lover come home from
sea Said Bollocky Bill the sailor.
When will you be back once more. O
never again, you poxy old whore.
E. S. Fowlds
246
September 17,
1923
Mama, malade, Papa ZigZag, Moi,
refugie Bully-Grenay.
E. S. Fowlds
[246]
September 17, 1923
FRANCIE AND JOSIE
Josie went down to the corner To get
her a glass of beer She said, "Mr. Bartender, Have you seen my Francie
here? For he's my man, Though he's doing me wrong."
"Now I ain't a goin' to tell you no
stories And I ain't a goin' to tell you no lias But I seen your man
going out of here With a yallsr girl names Lise And if he's you
man Why, he's doin' you wrong."
Josie went down to the pawn shop She
didn't go there for fun But she laid down fourteen iron men For a
great big forty-five gun For he was her man
Josie went down to the hore house And
rang that hore house bell And said, "Stand aside, you hores and
pimps, Or I'll blow you all to hall," For she wanted her man Who'd
been doing her wrong.
Roll out your rubber tired
carriages Roll out your rubber tired hack For there's fourteen pimps
to the cemetery going And there's one not coming back.
E. S. Fowlds
246
September 17,
1923
LA SOMBRA DE UN PALMAR
Soy huerfanita Ay. No tengo padre ni
madre Hi una amiga Ah. Qua me venga a consolar.
Mia ojitos van y vienen Como las olas
del mar Mis ojitos van y vienen Como las olas del mar.
E. S. Fowlds
246
September 17,
1923
A las Poches de California No les
gusta la tortilla Que les gusta en la mesa Es el pan con
mantequilla.
E. S. Fowlds
246
September 17,
1923
LADY LIL She was the best the camp
produced.
E. S. Fowlds
246
September 17, 1923
LA CUCURACHA
Todas las mujeres tienen En el pecho
una esperanza Y mas abajito tienen Un retrato de Carranza.
La Cucuracha, La Cucuracha, Ya no
puede caminar Por tiene falta, por que la falta Marihuana que
fumar.
E. S. Fowlds
265 October
20, 1923
Never let a sailor boy get an inch above
your knee. I'd dress him up in a sailor suit and sent him off to
sea.
(request)
John L. Bracken
271 November 15,
1923
Sister you'll be called upon For some
of that your sittin' on.
(request)
D. C. Stearns
333 May 8,
1924
THE LITTLE DUTCH SOLDIER FROM OVER THE
RHINE
Saint Paul, Saint Peter, Saint
Margarite, Saint Paul, Saint Peter, John Jones.
"We used to have in circulation, when I
was a kid, a bawdy song, with a refrain that varied in
different localities, one being the above."
E. S. Lawson [on envelope]
365 November 10, 1924
SALLY BROWN
Oh Sally Brown my love grows
bigger But for Heavens sake don't f-ck that nigger.
J. N. West
365 November 10, 1924
ROLL THE COTTON DOWN
Oh, when last I was in Frisco
Town Roll the cotton down, I never ever
will forget Oh, roll the cotton down.
I was drinking steam beer all day
long Until I could drink no more, no more. And I felt in my mind full
inclined That I would go to sea no more.
Oh, last night I slept with
"Angelina" An' she was afeared and wouldn't turn in. But when I woke up next
morning All my clothes and money then had
fled.
Oh, when I was walking down the
street All the whores and pimps were roaring. See there goes poor Jack to sea once
more So I went down to a boarding house.
Which was kept by Mister "Shang Haj"
Brown Says he, I'll give you a chance and take
your advance. And send you to sea once more So he shipped me on a whaler.
Who was bound for the cold antartic
seas An' I had no money to buy clothes. And Lord almighty how I froze.
"I cannot remember some lines that are
missing and anyway this whole thing seems garbled to me but that's how
I heard it from an old Irishman.
J. N. West
365 November 10, 1924
Every ship has a capstan, has a capstan,
has a capstan, Every good ship has a capstan and a capstan has
pawls And every young girl likes a young man With a big pair of
balls.
Sheet out your main t'gan't'sail, your
main t'gan't' sail,
your main t'gan't' sail, Sheet out
your main topgallant sail and let the good ship go free,
(request) J. N. West
365 November 10, 1924
A LONG TIME AGO
I wish to God that I'd never been
born To me way-hey-heyan. To go rambling
round and round Cape Horn, A long time ago.
Around Cape Horn where the wild winds
blow, Around Cape Horn through sleet and snow.
It's a long, long time since I've had a
glass rum Oh, if I was the skipper I'd give the crew some.
Oh, it's a long, long time since I've had
a "short time".
[This and some more lines of like
character were repeated twice.]
Oh, it's a long, long time since I've had
a good "f-ck", Oh, it's a long, long time since I've had a good
"f-ck". And it's a long, long time since I've had
a sore cock. And it's a long, long time since my last
"chancre" went. Oh, it's a long, long time since I've had
a "whole night".
J. N. West
385 May 1, 1925
DIRTY OLD BROWN
There was an old lady I'd have you
know Who went up to London A short time ago. She liked it quite
well And she thot she would stay The neighbors were tickled When
she went away.
Singing Brown, Brown, Dirty Old
Brown.
Now when this old lady Retired for the
night She said Oh gor blime I believe I must shit There's no use in
talking About things that have past So up went the window And out
went her ass.
There was an old watchman Who chanced
to pass by Looked up got a chunk of shit Right square in the eye He
put up his hand To see where he was hit He says Oh gor blime I'm
blinded with shit.
Now this poor old watchman Was blinded
for life He had five healthy children And a fine fucking wife On a
London street corner You may now see him sit With a sign on his
chest Reading blinded with shit.
H. W. McCormick
448 December,,
1927
There once was a gay Don d'Ilio, Who
lived in a high white castilio And he played with his Trototoilio And
the works of his Raggle de bam Bam! Bam!
One day to that high white
castilio There came a gay young senorio And she played with his
Trototoilio And the works of his Haggle de bam Bam! Bam!
Next day that gay Don d'Ilio Laid her
down on a soft sofailio And he eased in his Trototoilio And the works
of his Haggle de bam Bam! Bam!
Nine days later that gay Don
d'Ilio Gnashed his teeth with rage at the senoric And gazed with
sorrow on his Trototoilio And the works of his Haggle de bam Bam!
Bam!
He went to see Dr. Gonzalio Who told
him he had the clapilio And he gave him a bottle of Castorio For the
works of his Raggle de bam Bam! Bam!
Theodore Lancaster
448 December, 1927
LULU
The first time I saw Lulu She was tall
and thin A settin' on a box-car Playing with a couplin-pin.
Bang away my Lulu Bang away good and
strong O, what're you gonna do for banging When your Lulu's dead and
gone.
The next time I saw Lulu She was short
and fat Some son of a bitch had knocked her up Now what do you think
of that?
My Lulu got arrested Ten dollars was
her fine She said to the judge, "You son of a bitch, Take it out of
this ass on mine."
My Lulu had a baby She called him
Sunny Jim She put him in the shit-pot To see if he could
swim.
I wish I was a diamond ring Upon my
Lulu's hand Then every time she wiped her ass I'd see her promised
land.
O, you ought to see my Lulu She is the
Tillage queen Her ass is full of buttermilk Her cunt is full of
cream.
Theodore Lancaster
474
THE JOLLY FISHERMAN
Oh, I say jolly fisherman, I love you
very well Holy Moses, ain't it cold? Oh, I say jolly fisherman, I lore
you very well Have you any deep sea crabs for to sell? Singin' one
eye, two eye, die.
Oh, I got that deep sea crab by the very
backbone And I russled and I tussled till I got the bugger
home.
When I got in the house, the old lady was
asleep So I put that deep sea crab in the piss pot for to
keep.
In the middle of the night, she got up to
do her due And that deep sea crab grabbed her by the ding dang
doo.
"Oh, I say, John Henry, can't you help a
little bit? There's a devil in the piss pot, and his eyes are full of
shit."
John Henry got up,—put on his
overalls And that deep sea crab a-grabbed him by the balls.
How my story is done, and I don't know
anymore There's an apple up my ass-hole, and you can have the
core.
"This one I got from a fellow who said it
came from Hew England fisherman."
L. P. Richmond
480
BOLAKEE BILL THE SAILOR
Oh who's that knocking at my door Says
the fair young maiden. Oh who's that knocking at my door Says the fair
young maiden.
Oh this is me and no one else Says
Bolakee Bill the sailor.
I'll open the door and let you in Says
the fair young maiden.
Now I am here I'll stay till dawn Says
Bolakee Bill the sailor.
But a babe now I shall have Says the
fair young maiden.
But it will never see its daddy Says
Bolakee Bill the sailor.
And if it be a lass Says the fair
young maiden.
Strangle it as soon as its born Says
Bolakee Bill the sailor.
But if it be a laddie Says the fair
young maiden.
Send him out to sea Says Bolakee Bill
the sailor.
I'll make him bell bottom
trousers Says the fair young maiden.
Get him a suit of navy blue Says
Bolakee Bill the sailor.
And he will climb the riggings Says
the fair young maiden.
Like his daddy used to do Says Bolakee
Bill the sailor.
480
BOLAKEE BILL THE SAILOR (2)
How all you woman folks Listen now to
me Do not trust a sailor An inch above your knee.
Take my advice And keep them from your
homes For they always cause trouble And soon they will
roam.
"Some of the words are pretty raw so I
have altered them, also a line or two."
Cousin Jack
481 May 26, 1925
FRANKIE AND JOHNNIE
Bring on your thousand policemen Throw
me in a thousand jails Throw the keys in the deep, deep sea So the
(pimps) gang can't go my bail. You've killed your man Who done you
wrong.
Bring on your rubber tired
hearses, Bring on your rubber tired hacks, Hearse to take Johnie to
the grave yard A hack to bring his poor mother back Who killed her
man Cause he done her wrong.
Frankie went down to the hop joint She
rang the hop joint bell, She says: stand back all you (hors and pimps)
boys and girls, Or I'll blow you clean to hell. I'se lookin for my
man Who done me wrong.
Turn me over, Frankie Turn me over
slow Turn me on my right side Those bullets hurt me so You've
killed your man Cause he done you wrong.
"Frankie and Johnnie were colored people,
a real black man and a fine looking Creole girl and were both
'opium smokers' and sporting people from Frisco and California
in general and the old Stingaree at San Diego and Tia Jauana, Mex.,
was their favorite hold outs in the early days or what would be around 20
years ago. The song is supposed to be true and what happened to them
through jealousy. I my- self have heard this song sang in hop joints up
and down the coast and in Calif., mostly sang by colored people
and much loved by them as their idea of romance."
Ray Keller
481 May 26,
1925
Down on front street, back on
main, Trying to bum a dime to buy cocane. Oh, baby, honey, cook a pill
for me.
Hop is one thing, coke is another, Run
down my dope and I'll scandleize your mother. O, baby, cook a pill for
me.
Look here old gal you better look
around Before you get to prancing put your curtain down. O, baby,
honey, cook a pill for me.
There's only one thing that bothers my
mind A house full of girls and none of em mine. O, baby, honey, cook a
pill for me.
Went down to the store, well a store full
of smoke, A sign on the door, there's no more coke. O, baby, honey,
cook a pill for me.
Dreamed I saw a ship loaded with
hop O, baby, honey, cook a pill for me.
A hop head went for a merry
stroll Looked for a drunk whom he may roll. O, baby, honey, cook a
pill for me.
"another sporting song that used to be
sang by the old gang that used to be around Frisco and Barbery
Coast years ago."
Ray Keller
482 December 12, 1926
RING DANG DOO
And I'll do as I please With my ring
dang doo.
Come all you sailors And civvys
too And play a tune On my ring dang doo.
He gave her clap, And syphilis
too And she went to Hell With her ring dang doo.
"one in active circulation throughout the
navy, and on a few merchant ships."
William F. Burroughs
482 December 12,
1926
When I was young and foolish It was to
my delight, To go to balls and dances, And stay out late at
night.
'Twas at the ball I met him, He asked
me for a dance. I knew he was a sailor By the buttons on his
pants.
His shoes were nicely polished, His
hair was neatly combed. And when the dance was over He asked to see me
home.
'Twas in my mother's hallway Where I
was led astray. 'Twas in my mother's bedroom Where I was forced to
lay.
He laid me down so gently And pulled
my dress up high, And said my darling Nellie I'll have it now or
die.
Come all you foolish girlies And take
a tip from me Never let a sailor, Get an inch above your
knee.
He'll love you and he'll kiss
you He'll say there's none like you But when he's copped your
cherry He'll say to hell with you.
"I heard it first on the U.S.S. Intrepid,
the Mare Island station ship and later of the U.S.S. Celtic at the
Isle of Guam."
William F. Burroughs
482 December 12,
1926
THOSE LITTLE RED DRAWERS THAT MAGGIE
WORE
When Maggie died She called me to her
side And willed to me Those little red drawers
That Maggie wore They were
tattered They were torn You could tell they had been worn
They were baggy at the knees And the
cracks were filled with cheese Those little red drawers That Maggie
willed to me.
"We used to sing it up and down the C.
& O. canal about twelve years ago."
William F. Burroughs
738
I placed my arms around her waist, And
gantly laid her down; Not meaning to do her any harm; But the
blackbird and the thrush Hid their heads behind the brush, As I wound
up her little ball of yarn.
"song sung by a man on the scaffold as he
was about to be hanged for a certain unmentionable crime."
Lee Gotcher
779
I'd rather be a pimp to a Mexican
whore Than a first class sergeant in the Hospital Corpse.
I'd rather be a bull dog in a nigger's
back yard Than the ranking duty general in the National Guard.
[I'd rather be a monkey in the top of a
tree Than the Lieutenant-Colonel in the Q.M.C.]
"which, though little known to the
citizen-soldiers of 1917-18, was much sung by regulars of that period
and previous."
Allen P. Wescott
999
FRANKIE
Frankie and Johnnie were lovers, And
Gawd but they knew how to love, And they swore they'd be true to each
other, True as the stars above. But the son of a b---- He done her
wrong.
Frankie lived down by the railroad In
a house that had only one door She gave all her money to Johnny, Who
spent it on aparlor house w----. And the, etc.
Frankie went down to the corner To buy
her a souttle of beer And she says to the kind old bar-tender "Have
you seen my loving Johnny round here?" "Why the s-- o- b---- He's a
doing you wrong!"
"Now I ain't goin' to tell you a
story I ain't goin' to tell you a lie, If you're looking for your
lovin' Johnny He's with that parlor house wh---, Nellie Bly." The,
etc.
Frankie went down to the w----
house And she didn't go there for fun For under her dirty
kimona She's packing a forty four gun To get the man That was doin'
her wrong.
Frankie she spy-ed her Johnny, Johnny
he hollers, "Don't shoot." But the fourty-four calibre spoke five
times With a rooty toot tooty toot toot . And she got the man,
etc.
"Bring on your rubber tired
buggies Bring on your rubber tired hack And take my man to the
cemetery And don't you ever bring him back." For the s-- o-
b---- He done me wrong.
999
FRANKIE (2)
Lock me up in a dungeon Throw me down
in a cell Where the north east wind blows forty miles an hour From the
south west corner of hell For I've shot the man, etc.
"The above represents the thing as I know
it now. It's a kind of conglomerate of the version I learned in the
army and the one current when I went to college ('16) right in your own
town of Cambridge."
Francis Boyer
1008 April 15, 1925
FRANKIE AND JOHNNY
Frankie went to a hop-joint, Frankie
rang the bell, "Get out of the way, you pimps and shores, Or I'll blow
you plumb to hell For he's my man And he done me wrong."
H. L. Davis
1020
FRANKIE AND JOHNNY
Frankie and Johnny were lovers. Oh my
good God, how they loved. Swore to be true to each other Jast as true
as the stars above, He was her man, But he done her wrong.
Frankie and Johnny got married, They
were happy as everyone knows, Till Frankie gave Johnny some money To
buy him some new clothes, He was her man, But he done her
wrong.
Johnny went down to the
cat-house House with only two doors, Spent all Frankie's money On
the ---- and the parlor ------ He was her man, But he done her
wrong.
Frankie went down to the corner To get
her a cool glass of beer. She says, "Mister Bartender, Has my lovin'
man been here?" "Been here and gone, Bout an hour ago."
"Ain't gonna tell you no story, Ain't
gonna tell you no lie, Johnny went down to the cat-house To call on
Nellie Bly, If he's your man, He's a doin' you wrong."
Frankie went down to the
cat-house, She didn't go there for fun. Under her blue gingham
apron Was a colt steel forty-four gun, Lookin' for her man, What
done her wrong.
Frankie she went to the
cat-house, Looked in the window so high, There she saw her
Johnny In bed with Nellie Bly, He was her man, But he done her
wrong.
1020
FRANKIE AND JOHHHY (2)
Frankie bust into the cat-house Pistol
in her hand. "Stand back, ye -----, on her -------, I'm a-lookin' for
my man, And I'll get him, too, The son of a -----.
Johnny he ran down the back
stairs Hollerin, "Honey, don't shoot!" But Frankie cut loose with her
forty-four And the gun went "Root-ta-toot-toot!"
"Turn me over easy, Turn me over
slow, Turn me over easy, That bullet hurts me so, I was her
man, But I done her wrong."
Then came the funeral
procession, Moving easy and slow, Frankie she sat by the window And
watched the mourners go To bury her man What done her
wrong.
"Rubber-tired buggy, Double seated
hack, Take my Johnny to the cemetery But bring his ------
back, Best part of the man What done me wrong."
Frankie she sits in her parlor Tellin'
her sister Fan "Whatever you do don't never Marry no gamblin'
man, --- ---- their souls They'll do you wrong.
So if you should ever get
married Don't hink it's all fun, Remember the tale of Frankie, How
she used her forty-four gun To shoot her man What done her
wrong.
1020
FRANKIE AND JOHNNY (3)
But if you marry a sportin' woman Be
sure you treat her right, Kick her --- out every morning, Take her
money every night, The --- ---- ---- She's a doin' you
wrong.
"I have heard portions of this song sung
many times, hut I never heard a complete version but once, and that
was the first time I ever heard it. This was in Ithaca, N.Y. in 1912
or 1913 at an informal gathering of Cornell students in the back room of
a saloon. The singer was a student whose name I can't remember, but he
was a Southerner and if I am not mistaken a Texan. . .Since then, as I
say, I have heard portions of the song many times, different verses in
almost every case. . .In particular I have heard, somewhere, three or
four verses which tell of the arrest, trial and execution of Frankie via
the electric chair - evidently late additions. There follows the song as
I first heard it. . I have tried to set it down word for word—with a few
exceptions ."
Donald C. Foster
1069 March 20, 1925
AWAY RIO
Oh where are you going to my pretty
maid? Away Riot Oh where are you going to my pretty maid? And we're
bound to Rio Grande.
"I'm going out milking, sor," she
said.
May I go with you my pretty
maid?
"Oh, yes, if you please, kind sor," she
said.
Well then will you diddle me, my pretty
maid?
"Oh, yes, if you please, kind sir," she
said.
"Then they began at the top and sang it
over again until the cable was up and down. They were supported— at
least once I remember--by the captain--a Norwegian.- I remember that when
I went to Greenland on the bark Ar- genta for a load of cryolite the
sailors usually sang Sunday School songs, learned at the bethels, instead
of chanteys, and those were sung at the windlass only. They never sang
when making sail. On smother bark in the port (Ivighet [?]) the men sang
'Away Rio' over and over again--no other song of any kind."
John R. Spears
1109
THE FAIR YOUNG MAIDEN
"Who's that knocking at my door?" Said
the fair young maiden. "Who's that knocking at my door?" Said the fair
young maiden.
"It's me an' I wanna get in;" Said
Abram Brown the sailor. "It's me an' I wanna get in;" Said Abram Brown
the sailor.
"Open the door and walk in;" Said the
fair young maiden. "Open the door and walk in;" Said the fair young
maiden.
"There's only room in the bed for
one," Said Abram Brown the sailor, "There's only room in the bed for
one," Said Abram Brown the sailor.
"You can sleep between my
thighs," Said the fair young maiden. "You can sleep between my
thighs," Said the fair young maiden.
"What is that hairy thing I see?" Said
Abram Brown the sailor. "What is that hairy thing I see?" Said Abram
Brown the sailor.
"That is my pin cushion," Said the
fair young maiden. "That is my pin cushion," Said the fair young
maiden.
"I have the pin and it must go
in," Said Abram Brown the sailor. "I have the pin and it must go
in," Said Abram Brown the sailor.
"What if we should have a child?" Said
the fair young maiden. "What if we should have a child," Said the fair
young maiden.
"I'd kill the dirty son of a
bitch," Said Abram Brown the sailor. "I'd kill the dirty son of a
bitch," Said Abram Brown the sailor.
William F. Burroughs
[1109]
LULU
Oh, Lulu was arrested Ten dollars was
the fine, She said to the judge you son of a bitch Take it out of this
ass of mine.
Oh bang away on Lulu Oh bang her good
and strong, For what are you gonna do for your banging When Lulu's
dead and gone?
Oh Lulu went to the football game The
football made a punt. The half back made a miss And it went up Lulu's
cunt.
Oh Lulu went to the circus To see what
she could see Oh she got stuck on Jumbo's nuts And wouldn't come home
with me.
Oh Lulu had a baby She called him
Sunny Dick She couldn't call it Lulu 'Cause it didn't have no
------.
William F. Burroughs
1109
PARLEZ VOUS
Oh the farmer had a daughter
fair, Parlez vous, Oh the farmer had a daughter fair, Paries
vous, Oh the farmer had a daughter fair With milk white tits and
golden hair Hinkey Dinkey Parlez Vous.
Oh up the stairs and on the bed Was
where she lost her maiden head.
In two months time she began to
swell Until she got as big as Hell.
After nine months she gave a grunt And
a little marine hopped out of her cunt.
The little marine he grew and he
grew And now he's screwin' the ladies too.
Oh the little marine went over the
top To make the Kaiser suck his cock.
Oh Madamoiselle from gay Paree She had
the clap and she gave it to me.
William F. Burroughs
1156
FRANKIE AND ALBERT
Frankie was a good woman As everybody
knows She hooked her rings and all her things To buy her man some
clothes. He urns her man, But he done her wrong.
Frankie and Albert were
sweethearts They had a quarrell one day Said Albert to Frankie I'm
done with you And I'm goin' away. He was her man But he done her
wrong.
Frankie broke down crying She bowed
her head with woe When she looked up she was all alone, And said,
"Where did my Albert go?" He was my man But he's doin' me
wrong.
Frankie went down to the barroom She
ordered a bottle of beer Said Frankie to the bartender "Has my lovin'
Albert been here?" He was my man But he's done me wrong.
Said the bartender to Frankie "I'll
tell you no stories or lies Your lovin' man left an hour ago With a
woman that you despise. He was your man, But he's doing you
wrong."
Then Frankie went into the
hockshop She didn't go there for fun. She hooked her rings and all her
clothes To buy a great big "41" She's going to find her man Because
he done her wrong.
Frankie started for home then. She had
blood in her eye. If I find that dark skinned man of mine He sure is
goin' to die. He was my man But he's done me wrong.
1156
FRANKIE AND ALBERT (2)
Frankie climbed the back door
stairs She looked in the transom high There she saw her lovin'
man Bangin' old Nancy Bly. He was her man But he's doing her
wrong.
Albert rolled over and saw her Said
"Frankie don't you shoot." But Frankie pulled that old "41" It went
Root-a-toot-a-toot-toot! She shot her man 'Cause he done her
wrong.
Frankie shot him the first time Then
Frankie shot him twice Frankie shot him the third time And he hollared
"Oh, Jesus Christ!" He was her man But he done her wrong.
Frankie missed him the first time Then
she shot him in the side Frankie shot him the third time And he rolled
right over and died. Be was her man But he done her wrong.
Turn me over gently Raise my head up
high I want to see that gal of mine Once more before I die. I was
her man But I done her wrong.
Then Frankie went down to Mrs.
Jones's She fell down on her knees She said, "Mrs. Jones, I done shot
your son But won't you forgive me please?" He was my man But he
done me wrong."
"Bow go call a policeman And have him
take me away Lock me down in a dungeon dark And throw the old keys
away My heart's like lead 'Cause my Albert's dead.
1156
FRANKIE AND ALBERT (3)
Bring on your rubber tired
carriages Bring on your rubber tired hack They're goin' to take Albert
to the graveyard And they ain't agoin' to bring him back. He was my
man But he done me wrong.
The jailer gave her coffee The jailor
gave her tea He gave her everything she wanted Except that good old
jail house key She shot her man Because he done her wrong.
Frankie stole out one morning She
didn't make a sound he left a note on the jailers desk Sayin' she was
Alabama bound. She shot her man Because he done her wrong.
The angels up in heaven Said, "Here's
something we don't get. Frankie shot Albert a month ago And the fool
ain't got here yet!" He was her man But he done her wrong.
"I first heard this song in Camp Mills,
Long Island, in 1917. It was sung by a boy who was in a machine
gun company from Georgia. Who he was I do not know. I heard verses of
it going to France the same years but never the complete song until one
night in Bocarrat, France. 1 heard a boy sing it. He was from Alabama (a
regular cracker, if you know what I mean.) We were in a cafe (French
equivalent for bar) and he was fairly well organized but man ha could
sing! He used to sing it along with another song entitled 'Uncle Bud'.
This man said he learned the song from his Dad and that it was an actual
happening."
C. Becker
1261
WHORE'S LAMENT
Then ta-ake me ter ther churchyard and
throw der clorth over me, I'm a poor who-ore and mi mission is
done!
"'Once upon a time', while upon a
prospecting trip for coal, I happened to land in a logging camp at
nightfall, in the Western country. One of the near by 'town girls'
had died that day of T.B., and other complications, and some of her
admirers had 'chipped in' and gave her a 'hell-er-ver' good funeral. The
group of 30 men was then, more or less, full of 'Oregon whiskey' which in
1877 was a compound 'rectified' in Front St., San Francisco, and had in
it somewhat of oil of mustard, that added to the 'cut' as it went
down. These 'mourners1 had just returned from the grave. Among them were
some very good voices, and altho uncultivated, yet rich in tone, and
altho the song had quite a number of words that I will not here repeat,
yet the chorus ran [see above] I was asked to contribute $1.oo to the
occasion, and promptly did so, and as 'booze' is'nt one of my weak
points, I got full benefit of what I saw and heard; and this song and
chorus was sung all through the night, so that it could not be forgotten
no matter how- hard one might try to forget; in fact I found myself
humming it months after in a country far from that camp."
Charles Bell Emerson
1590
The da-ell and the dutch And the dun
cow fit. The devil whipped the dutch And the dun cow ----.
(a request) "four lines I heard when a
boy sung by another boy and all he knew."
J. F.. Peverley
1744
That's where my money goes To buy my
baby clothes To keep her in style.
She's got a ten room flat That's where
I jazz her at, Say, boys, that's where my money
goes.
She's got some pretty knees, I buy her
pink chamoise, Say, boys, that's where my money
goes.
She's got a limousine, I buy the
gasoline. Say, boys, that's where my money
goes.
She gets her own silk hose, I buy her
other clothes (or, underclothes). Say, boys, that's where my money
goes.
"another tired Tommy song." Robert
Bale
1744
Oh, the bear went over the
mountain, The bear went over the mountain, The beat went over the
mountain, To see what he could find.
Oh, he found a stick o' charcoal, He
stuck it up his arshole, The sparks few of his tadpole, (sic) And that
is all he found.
"Tune; 'Pop Goes The Weasel'" Robert
Hale
1752
THE WEAVER
I am a bachelor, and I live by myself
; And I work at the weaver's trade. And the only, only thing I ever
did wrong, Was to woo a fair young maid.
I wooed her in the summertime, And
part of the winter too, And the only, only thing I ever did wrong Was
to keep her from the foggy, foggy dew.
One night she came to my bed
side, When I was fast asleep. She laid her head upon my bed, And
then began to weep.
She sighed, she cried, she dam near
died. She said, "What shall I do-o?" So I took her in my bed and I
covered up her head Just to keep her from the foggy, foggy
dew.
Oh I am a bachelor, and I live with my
son And we work at the weaver's trade. And every, every time I look
into his eyes I'm reminded of that maid.
Reminded in the summertime, And part
of the winter too, Of the many, many times I took her in my arms, Just
to keep her from the foggy, foggy dew.
"It's a favorite ranger song in the
Sierras, and I ran across it a year ago."
Wheaton H. Brewer
1763
THE RING DANG DO
She took me down into the cellar And
said I was a damn' good feller.
She gave me wine and whisky too, And
let me play with her ring dang do.
I laid her down upon the coals And
gave her a taste of my jelly roll.
Her mother came before we were
through, "O shame, O shame, O shame on you."
O daughter dear, go right ahead, For
you have broke your maiden head."
"Sung by a young sailor to the tune of
'How Dry I Am'"
R. W. Yearley
1763
A young Dutch soldier came over the
Rhine, Schnapoo, schnapoo, A young Dutch soldier came over the
Rhine, Schnapoo, schnapoo, A young Dutch soldier came over the
Rhine, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -, Schnapoo,
schnapoo,
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Schnapoo.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- -
No, my daughter is too
young, Schnapoo, schnapoo, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-
O no, mother, I'm not too
young, Schnapoo, schnapoo, O no, mother, I'm not too
young, Schnapoo, schnapoo, Oh no mother, I'm not too young, It's
often been tried by Richard and John, Schnapoo, schnapoo,
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Schnapoo.
(request)
R. W. Yearley
2010
Oh the beautifull lakes of
Australur Wher the ladys are hansum and fair, Oh! She jumped in the
watter with fear or alarme And her lilly white thyes they spred out as
she swarm, And her hair flowing free and every stran black Saying
watch me kind Sur as I swim on my back In the beautifull lakes of
Australur Where the ladys are hansum and fair.
[For MUSIC see letter 2179] C. W.
Loutzenhiser
2036
CHRISTOPHO
"Here is what made me suspect that it's
of more or less ancient origin--I showed a version to a Mr. F.
L. LaBousty, formerly a professor of English and then ad- vertising
manager of the Jello Company. Mr. LaBounty said that one stanza,
containing the line
'The white of an egg ran down her
leg'
had stuck in his memory since he was a
boy. He had heard his father reel it off probably thirty years ago but
had never heard it since. Now his father fought in the Civil War in
Farragut's fleet, and from the end of the Civil War until his death was a
combination invalid and misanthrope who almost never left his own home
and had no intimate friends. Mr. LaBounty was convinced that Ms
father's only contact with the rough, tough world came during the Civil
War and that he could only have learned the lines at that time. This
seems to me pretty fair evidence. The only question is--were
these lines dragged into 'Christopho' from some older song?"
Hubert L. Canfield
2061
SLIM JONES' HOUSE.
O ah went down t' Slim Jones house An'
Sally she wus scrubbin' Little Johnny's shirt tail it was short An'
ah seed his little nubbin.
Ki-yi-yi an' a too-ral-loo, Hooray foh
ma wife Mandy, She says when ah's drunk ah's ornery But when sober
ah's a dandy.
Ah went down t' Slim Jones house An'
Slim he wus a-drinkin'
. . .
. . .
J. F. McGinnis.
(See also 2100)
2087
FRANKIE AND JOHNNIE
Frankie and Johnnie were lovers Oh my
God, how they could love They swore to be true to each other As true
as the stars above. He was her man And he dons her wrong.
Frankie she lived in a crip house A
crip house with only one door She gave ail her money to Johnnie Who
spent it on a parlor house whore. And he was her man. What done her
wrong.
Frankie she was a good girl As all the
neighborhood knows She gave her Johnnie a hundred dollar bill Just to
buy himself some clothes. And he was her man What done her
wrong.
One night when Frankie was lonely And
nobody came to call She put on her dirty kimona And went down to the
nickel crawl. She was looking for her man What was doin't her
wrong.
Oh, frankie went down to the
corner Just to buy herslef a beer She said to the big
bartender "Has my lovin' man been here? I'm looking for the
man What's a doing me wrong?"
"Well, I ain't gonna tell you no
stories, And I ain't gonna tell you no lies But Johnnie was here 'bout
an hour ago With that high yaller Nelly Bly." "God-damn his
soul He's a cheating the game."
Oh, Frankie went down to the
hop-joint This time it wasn't for fun, Underneath her dirty
kimona She had a big forty-four gun To shoot the man What was doing
her wrong.
2087
FRANKIE AND JOHNNIE (2)
And when she reached the hop-joint And
she looked in the window so high There she saw Johnnie a sittin' Finger-fuckin' Nellie Bly. The son of a bitch He was dealin' it
cold.
Frankie she knocked at the hop
joint And she rang the hop joint bell She yelled, "Clear out, all you
whores and pimps I'm going to blow my lover to hell. God burn his
balls He's a doing me wrong."
Johnnie heard Frankie a-comin' And
yelled, "My God, don't shoot But Frankie pulled her forty-four gatling
gun Five times,-Root, tooty-toot-toot Right into the man What had
done her wrong.
"Oh, roll me over gently Roll me over
slow Roll me over on my right side So the bullets won't hurt me
so For I was your man Though I done you wrong."
"Oh, roll up your rubber tired
hearses Hearses all lined with black Take me out to the
cemetery And I'll never, never, never come back Oh, I was you
man And I done you wrong."
"Oh, lock me up in the dungeon And
throw the fuckin' key away I've gone and killed my lover Johnnie And I
never want to live another day Oh, I've killed my man What done me
wrong."
But the sheriff said, "Frankie, don't
worry I guess it was all for the best He was always pimping and
whoring around My God! he was an awful pest And he was your man And
he done you wrong."
2087
FRANKIE AND JOHNNIE (3)
And the judge he said, "Looka here,
Frankie, This case is as plain as can be You went and shot your lover
Johnnie And it's murder in the first degree. You killed your
man What's been doing you wrong.
Frankie said, "Judge, I'm sorry For
all that's come to pass But I never shot him in the first degree I
shot his. in his big fat ass. For he was my man And he done me
wrong."
Frankie now sits in the
parlor Underneath the 'lectric fan Warning her little grand
daughters "Beware the God-damn man Yes, he'll do you wrong Just as
sure as you're born.
(Unhappy variant--)
Frankie climbed up the scaffold As
calm as a girl can be And turning her eyes to heaven, she said, "Good
Lord, I'm a coming to thee."
Hubert Canfield
2087
FRANKIE AND JOHNNIE
Frankie and Johnnie were
lovers. Lordy, how they could love! Swore they'd be true to each
other, True as the bright stars above, He was her man But he done
her wrong.
Frankie walked down to the
corner, Down to the grocery stores There she saw Johnny, her
lover, Talking to a parlor-house whore. He was her man,
etc.
Frankie went into the hardware, Bought
a big butcher knife, Said "As sure as I'm standing here, I'll have
that hooker's life." He was her man, etc.
After the shooting was over, Frankie
felt so big and stout, She stuck her forty-four beneath her apron And
she done that slow-drag out. He was her man, etc.
Frankie's mother said to
Frankie, "Frankie, you've killed your man." The only answer that
Frankie made Was "I don't give a damn, He was my man But he done me
wrong."
"Bring up a thousand policemen, Take
me to prison so gray, Lock me up in a dungeon deep And throw the
f--kin' key away, Cause I killed my man, But he done me
wrong."
"Bring up your rubber-tired
carriage, Bring up your rubber-tired hack; They' re taking poor
Johnnie to the graveyard And he ain't never going to come back. He was
her man But he done her wrong.
2087
FRANKIE AND JOHNNIE (2)
Frankie stood on the corner To watch
the funeral go by- Brine back my poor dead Johnnie to me To the
undertaker she did cry.
Call in ten thousand policemen Call in
a million more You'll need all those policemen To arrest that old fat
whore .
The sheriff took poor Frankie He took
her at the break of day- He locked her up in a dungeon dark And took
the keys away.
"Miscellaneous stanzas" Hubert
Canfield
2148
HINKY DINKY PARLEY VOO
A big Marine went over to
France, Parleyvoo, A big Marine went over to
France, Parleyvoo, A big Marine went over to France, With seventeen
inches in his pants, Hinky Dinky Parleyvoo.
And there he met a damsel
fair, Parleyvoo, And there he met a damsel fair, Parleyvoo, And
there he met a damsel fair, With big blue eyes and curly hair, Hinky
Dinky Parleyvoo.
The first three months and all went
well, Parleyvoo, The second three months she began to
swell, Parleyvoo, The third three months she gave a grunt, And a
little Marine jumped out of her cunt, Hinky Dinky Parleyvoo.
The little Marine he grew and
grew, Parleyvoo, The little Marine he grew and
grew, Parleyvoo, The little Marine he grew and grew, And learned to
fuck the girlies too, Hinky Dinky Parleyvoo.
Oh the French they are a dirty
race, Parleyvoo, The French they are a dirty
race, Parleyvoo, The French they are a dirty race, They fight with
their feet, fuck with their face, Hinky Dinky Parleyvoo.
If you don't believe the story I
tell, Parleyvoo, If you don't believe the story I
tell, Parleyvoo, If you don't believe the story I tell, You can
kiss my ass and go to hell, Hinky Dinky Parleyvoo.
"I have actually heard them sung by men
overseas" J. J. Burke
2168
Oh there was a little man, An' he had
a little wife, And he loved this little woman, As dear as his
life.
Singin' tow row raddy
too-ra-loo-al-ay,
- - - - - - - "Forgotten, but he was out
with the boys and
he brought home a couple of lobsters to
make use of some time in the coming day and being a pitch black night and
he having a good souse on he didn't light the candle to go to bed by,
and not wanting the lobsters to navigate 'round the house while he was
asleep, he bethought of the thundermug which lay 'neath the bed where his
darling lay asleep, then after getting his duds off he went to sleep in a
hurry. Act.II. His dearly beloved awoke some time during the night for
to pump ship and reached for the aforesaid thundermug and proceeded to
ease herself, when Lo! the lobsters feeling themselves once more in their
native element (although 'twas a bit warm) got gay and reached out a
couple of hooks with the result that wifey began to scream—
Oh!! Husband! Dear Husband! I pray you
come hither! The Divil's in the Piss Pot An' got me by the
bladder.
Singin'
tow-row-raddy-too-ra-loo-al-ay.
- - - - - - -"Sad to relate but I can't
remember any more
at the present time."
J. F. McGinnis
2168
BOLLICKY BILL THE SAILOR
Oh! where will I sleep to-night, fair
maid, Said Bollicky Bill, the Sailor, You'll sleep in my bed, the
maiden said, To Bollicky Bill, the Sailor.
He went up stairs to her lily white
bed, Did Bollicky Bill the Sailor, He took the pillow from under her
head, And put it under her ass, instead, Did Bollicky Bill the
Sailor.
J. F. McGinnis
2186
Mah fathah's in tha workhouse, Mah
muthah's in jail Mah sistah's in ho' house Wid pussy fo'
sale.
"From Washington, D. C." William F.
Burroughs
2186
Eyes right, assholes tight, Foreskins
to th' front. We're the boys that make no noise We're always after
cunt.
We're th' heroes of the night We would
rather fuck than fight. We're the heroes of the foreskin
fusileers.
Oh rolling home, blind drunk. Oh
rolling home, blind drunk. (Repeat twice again)
"From the Lanca'shire Lassies at
Manchester, Eng. First verse to tune of : 'Where do we go from
here.' Other two verses to different tunes yet."
William F. Burroughs
2186
Were every tree is a ----- And houses
have no locks And little streams of alcohol Come tumbling through the
rocks.
William F. Burroughs
2188
THE FISHERMAN'S FRIEND
Good morning, Mr. Fisherman, I wish you
mighty well (whistle last 2 bars)
Good morning, Mr. Fisherman, I wish you
mighty well, Hare you got any sea crabs this morning
for to sell
Oh! yes sir, I have got one, two or
three, And the best of them all I will give unto
thee.
(usually a jig step)
The old man took a sea crab by the back
bone The old man took a sea crab by the back bone And like a D- fool
he lugged it off for home But when he got there for the want of a
dish He put it in the pot where the old Lady paweawe awe awe
awe
(jig step begins after old
lady)
The old lady got up as she was
wont The old lady got up as she was wont
And the sea crab reached up and caught
her by the C * Rump
Oh! Lord! Oh husband what is it has me
got For as shure as God's above the devil's in the pot.
The old man got up to see what the row
was all about The old man got up to see what the row was all about And
the sea crab reached up and caught him by the snout Oh Son! Oh Daughter!
get the horse and the cart To pull your father's nose and your mother's
ass apart.
Go and get the Priest with all his Holy
Water Go and get the Priest with all his Holy Water To exercise the
devil that's holding us together
But the son got a fork and the daughter
got a ladle And they pounded that sea crab dedder than the
devil.
"Cannot swear to the last verse. I may
have run two verses into one. Over 45 years is a long time to
remember."
M. D. Little
2377
Down in Rio de Janeiro - - - - - - - -
- - - - That dirty Senorita She gave me a dose of clapita,
"On the S.S. Robin Hood laying at
Nictorai or Victorio or whatever it is across from Bio in Brazil, a New
York kike ordinary seaman with an A.B.ticket (some combination) sang a
short something."
William F. Burroughs
2377
I'd eat a mile Of her shitty shitty
shit Just to kiss her big brown asshole.
"a song that was popular on the S.S. West
Celina (Blake Line). The song was probably called 'I love my
wife.'"
William F. Burroughs
2377
Oh John saw a tulip A big yellow
tulip When Mary took off her clothes. She dared him to take it As
she lay atrip naked And he did as every one knows.
Oh she laid a dreaming While he laid a
creaming 'Twas down where the black hairs grow. His cook was stiffer
than julep When he saw her tulip For it looked like a big red
rose.
"parody of "When You Wore a Tulip", a
pre-war item. I learned this parody about nine years ago."
William F. Burroughs
2383
Mi tiene en la esquina barbaro loco Mi
madre no te cara ni yo tampoco Creo mi madre para hacer casada La puta
que lo pario mi falta nada.
I hare in the corner crazy
barbarian My mother don't love him nor I either I think for my mother
to make a marriage You son of a wh-re that raised you I lack
nothing.
Frank Earnest
2432
Our first sergeant, he's the worst of
all He gets us up in the morning before first call Squads right,
squads left, left front into line And then the dirty son of a bitch he
gives us double time.
Home, boys, home, it's home we ought to
be, Home, boys, home, in the land of liberty. We'll nail Old Glory to
the top of the pole And we'll all re-enlist in a pigs asshole.
Give us a barrel o whiskey, sugar
ahundred pound, A six inch gun to mix it in a spade to stir it
round. We'll sit on the steps o the guard house, and sing as we used to
do To hell with Aguinaldo and the W.C.T.U.
"The last lines of the chorus were
changed during the late war to read,
"To hell with the W.C.T.U. and the army
Y.M.C.A."
Leonard Nason
2432
Oh aha don't act like she
oughter, She's the sergeant major's daughter. She goes stolling
through the garden, Where the roses grow the thickest When she can't
find grass to wipe her ass, She wipes it on the picket.
Rinky dinky doodle dum, Stick your
finger up your bum, Pull it out an smella your thumb, Rinky dinky
doodle dum.
"fragment of Second Cavalry
origin" Leonard Bason
2432
Four lassies came from Canada, Got
drunk on cherry wine, And all the conversation was, Oh your cunt is
smaller than mine!
"You're a liar," said the first
one, "For mine is the biggest by far, A fall rigged ship could sail
right in And never touch a spar."
"You're a liar!" said the second
one, "For mine is as big as the moon. A man went in in January And
never come out until June."
"Oh feel o' my slimy belly, Fondle my
fat old can, Rattle your nuts against my guts, I belong to a
cavalryman!"
"You're a liar!" said the third
one, "For mine is as big as the air, The sun could set in the crack of
my ass, And never singe a hair."
"You're a liar! said the fourth
one, "For mine is the biggest of all, I have the flowers twice a
month As big as Niagara Falls!"
"Oh fell o' my slimy belly, Fondle my
fat old can, Battle your nuts against my guts, I belong to an
infantryman!"
"I heard the above with C. company of the
Fifth infantry in 1914, in camp near New Bedford. They had coma from
Platts- burg Barracks. I have since heard it among members of
the Thirtieth Infantry from the same garrison, and at Fort
Ethan Allen, the branch of the service changing in the chorus
accord- ing to the one the singer belonged to. Heard some drunks
sing- ing it at Connigis, France, near Chateau Thierry. They
were probably from the Thirtieth, although that regiments sector
was some distance to the left."
Leonard Nason
2434
Parson chased her round a stump, Till
he los' his tucker Rearin' tearing mis'able chump-- A worryin' for to
---- her.
R. S. Spears
2463
THE SPARRER
The bloody bloomin' sparrer Flaw up
the bleedin' bloody spout, In' the bloomin' bleedin' ra in come
down An' washed the bloody bloomin' beggar out.
The bloomin' bleedin' sun come out An'
dried up the bloody bloonin' rain, An' the bloomin' bleedin'
sparrer Flew up the bloody spout agayne.
The bloody bloomin' sparrer Sat on the
bleedin' bloody grass, An' told the f------- thunderstorm To ---- his
bloody ---.
"A long time ago, in the consulship of
Grover, there cane to this town of Hudson, (where I was born, and
to which I have recently returned after nearly forty years of
wandering) a squad of the then novel Salvation Army. You know probably
what the early Army suffered; it was a lot, for it was the target of
everybody high and low, es- pecially the latter. There was a little
Cockney among 'em. who had come directly from Lunnon and one night he
fell from grace: hard. He weaved down this same Main Street and ever
and anon broadcasted the Sparrer."
Charles E. Roe
2471
THE BALLADE OF THE SKUNK
I hont de bear, I hont de moose An'
sometimes hont de rat. Last night I take my axe and go To hont de
pole-cat.
My fren, Bill, says, "Very fine
fur An' sometimes good to eat." I tell my wife I get fur
coat-- Sometime I get some meat.
I walk about two, three, five, six,
miles An' then I feel strong smell, Tink maybe dat dam skonk he
die An' fur coat go to hell.
By'mby I see dat skonk Close up by one
big tree. I sneak up ver' close behind An' tink he no see
me.
Sacre blue! I tink I blind Jess Crise!
I cannot see. I run roun' an' roun' an' roun' Till bump in a goddam
tree.
By'mby I drop my axe An light out for
de shack. I tink 'bout ten million skonk He climb up my
back.
My wife, she meet me at de door; She
sick on me de dog. She say, "You no sleep here tonight; Go out and
sleep with hog."
I try to get in dat hog-pen, Jess
Crise! How wat you tink? Dat goddam hog no stand for dat On account of
awful stink.
I no more will hont de skonk To get
his fur and meat. For if his pees he smell so bad, Jess Cruse! What if
he sheet?
Mellinger E. Henry
2471
THE GOLD NUGGET
Mrs. Smith had presented her husband with
a bouncing baby twelve pounds. A friend of Smith's went to a newspaper
office and as a joke told them that Smith had found a Gold Nugget.
The newspaper sent out a reporter to investigate the case and write a
story about it. When he arrived at the house the following conversation
took place.
R. "Does Mr. Smith live here?"
Mrs. S. "He does."
R. "Is he in."
Mrs. S. "No, I am sorry to say he is
not."
R. "I understand he has found a twelve
pound nugget."
Mrs. S. (seeing joke) "Yes, he
has."
R. "Can you show me the exact spot where
he found it?"
Mrs. S. "I am afraid Mr. Smith would
object."
R. "Is the hole very far from
here?"
Mrs. S. "Oh no, it is very
close."
R. "Has Mr. Smith been working it very
long?"
Mrs. S. "About sixteen
months."
R. "Was he the first to work
it?"
Mrs. S. "He thinks he was but I know
better."
R. "Was the work very
difficult."
Mrs. S. "It was at first but he found it
easier after a while."
R. "Is the waterfall
plentiful?"
Mrs. S. "Sufficient to keep the hole
clean."
R. "Has he reached the bottom of the hole
yet?"
Mrs. S. "No, but he nearly did the last
time he worked it."
R. "Do you think there is any more
nuggets there?"
Mrs. S. "Oh yes, if the claim is properly
worked."
R. "Has he worked the claim since the
nugget was found?"
Mrs. S. "lot yet but I told him last
night that it was about timeto get busy on it."
R. "Does anyone help him?"
Mrs. S. "Only myself but I do my
best."
R. "Do you think he would sell the
claim?"
Mrs. S. "Oh no, he has too much pleasure
working it."
R. "May I see the nugget?"
Mrs. S. "Certainly".
And when she brought out the baby they
carried out the reporter in the ambulance.
Mellinger E. Henry
2500
How miles I have traveled, a thousand
miles or more But ballics on a rolling pin I never saw before.
"This is a fair sample of boomer
favorites alway followed by a hymn such as When the Roll is Called up
yonder."
Paul L. Jones
2500
Oh it wasn't in the parlor, It wasn't
in the hall, It was in the kitchen The darndest place of all That I
rolled it underneath her apron.
"sung by corn shuckers in the White river
bottoms." Paul L. Jones
2537
HESITATION BLUES
Oh, I ain't no butcher nor nor butcher's
son Cut your meat till the butcher comes.
Oh, tell me how must I wait Can I get it now or most I
hesitate.
Ain't no doctor nor no doctor's
son Doctor you up till doctor comes.
Ain't no plumber nor no plumber
son Stop your leak till the plumber comes.
Here I lay face to the wall, Blone headed women was the cause of it
all.
"And a 101 more verses....The chorus is
sung on a even pitch except the word wait, the first part of the word
sung on the same pitch as the rest of the song, the latter part broke of
in a high pitch thus wait, as if the singer was sing in a high pitch and
hit a false note. These two songs were usually sung while swing
a pick, the pick being swung in a very slow swing when the pick hit
there would be a loud Wa, as if the singer was striking hard blows which
he was not."
Earl J. Teets
2537
ALL NIGHT BLUES
The white gal wears her watch of
gold The yellow gal wears' the plain, Poor old black got no watch at
all, But got a movement just the same.
The white gal uses powder and
paint The yellow gal do the same, Poor old black gal got no paint at
all But she's smellin' just the same.
The white gal sleeps upon a folding
bed, The yellow gal on the plain. The poor old black no bed at
all, But she gets hers just the same.
I went down to a whore house Couldn't
have any fun Went down to the railroad yards And mounted old
51. And rode—
All night long, honey baby, All night
long.
I got a gal/she live in
Baltimore She's high yellow
And there's c—-t marked on her
door And works—
All night long, honey baby, All night
long.
"I heard it about 15 years ago while
doing time on a chain gang in Tenn. for train riding...There were
more verses to it than I can remember and seemed popular with the
black boys . . ."
Earl J. Teets
2561
The old maid sat by the fah-yer She
pulled her skirts up hah-yer, And left her ---- all bah-yer. The old
tom cat was thah-yer, He saw that --- all bah-yer, He gave a jump, and he grabbed that
----, And he pulled like Hell at the
hah-yer! And now, old maid, take cah-yer, Let not your ---- go bah-yer, Or the old tom cat will grab that
---- And pull like Hell at the hah-yer!
"From a half crazy hostler in a livery
stable in Newtonville, spring of 1897. He had more, maybe I can recall
some later."
Charles E. Roe
2561
JOHNSON'S BOARDERS
There was a man, he had a farm A
little house, woodshed and barn, And so he thought 'twould do no
harm To take in Johnson's boarders.
He showed them out into the hay, Where
night and morning they might lay, And since that time he's cursed the
day, He took in Johnson's boarders.
The boarders they were full of
fun, And almost always full of rum, He wished one day he had a
gun To murder Johnson's boarders.
They ------ the dog, they out the
oat, The fed the cow his old straw hat, They turpentined his ----- so
fat, Those funny Johnson boarders.
The hired girl had hair so red, The
old man looked at her and said, He'd put some cow-itch in her bed, If
she slept with Johnson's boarders.
- - - - [Six verses omitted here. Too
tough for me.] - - - -
At last one day the woods were
down, They all got paid and went to town, And the old man got as drunk
as a clown Along with Johnson's boarders .
"Sung by 'Greeley' a lumberjack. In 1895.
Said he learned in Maine, about ten years before."
Charles E. Roe
2578
I ast her for a little piece Of what she's setting on That's what made my Mandy mad She says "I don't understand And it makes me feel so sad
I thought you was a gennaman But I think you better be gone Cause they ain't no gennaman Gonna ast no lady For a piece o' what she's settin'
on.
Frank A. Partridge
2583
THE SAILOR BOY
A sailor lad to shore was sent A bottle of wine to bring And when he arrove at the landlords
door Hot a soul could he find
therin
He rapped he tapped he called
aloud But no a voice replied Until he heard something go rap tap
tap At the window over his head.
So Jack he raised his eyes
aloft To see what he could see And he caught the smile on a fair youn[g]
face And a wink from a bright blue eye
(eee)
She rapped she tapped she beconed to
Jack And he could not refuse For when he though of her rap tap
tap He could not well refuse.
So Jack he gayly tripped aloft With
pants and waistcoat blue Tarpaulih hat and hair in curls And a buckle
all on his shoe.
(If I ever knew I have entirely forgotten
the last half of this verse and the first of the next.)
When Jack he rose up of her He swore
that she was no whore For he knew by the blood on his rat tat tat That
she never had done so before.
M. D. Little
2641
Oh Mother, dearest Mother, I think you
are to blame For at the age of sixteen You used to do the same You
left your relations, Your friends and your all, To follow off my
Father With his long Fol de Roll.
"Scotch, before 1880, Canada" M. B.
Little
2711
Oh, the she cat sat on the barb-wire
fence And the tom cat sat on the ground Old tom made a pass at the she
cat's ass And they went round and round.
Frank A» Partridge
2734
LULU
Bang away, my Lulu, Oh! bang away good
and strong, What are you goin' to do for you ban[g]ing away When your Lulu's dead and
gone?
"a song that the older boys of the 2nd
Division sang when on the march or in the dugouts in Belleu Wood
during the spare moments that brought us all back to thoughts of home.
The chorus I can give you as is. The verses were very vulgar and no doubt
are only made up on the moment."
Bill Nice
2739
Farewell to winter, farewell to
frost, Maybe you think I am sighing for the girl I have lost.
But I have another far better than
she Just wait till I get married and sail across the sea.
You can't get a cherry without any
stone You oan't get a chicken without any bone You can't get a ring
without any rim You can't get a baby unless you stick it in.
"It was sung by boys (maybe girls) when I
was a kid in Jersey, have never heard it elsewhere."
Earl Teets
2752
The very first night that I lay down
beside her, Her bones were as sharp as the edge of a saw. Her flesh
was as cold as the snows on the mountain, And not a whole tooth in her
old under jaw.
Now I have me old damsel dressed out in
the fas[h]ion With a set of fals[e] teeth and a pair of glass
eyes. I'll dress her in silks, and I'll dress her in satin, At the
fair of Tralee it's she'll take the prize.
C. W. Loutzenhiser
2752
BILLY GREEN
'Twas a fair young man, his name was
Billy Grey, Was the first one enticed me to roam, He took me by the
hand, and he led me far astray, But he's left me in the wide world to
mourn.
He took me by the lily white hand, Led
me to the garden green, And what we did there, I never will
declare Bit on the green grass, it plainly could be seen.
Nine months went, and nine months
came And this young man came riding by Said I, Young man here is a
child for you, And the very same you cannot well deny.
But he's gone, gone away, the Lord knows
where; Perhaps he will never more return, Perhaps his fair body lies
buried in the sea, But he's left me in the wide world to
mourn.
G. W. Loutzenhiser
2789
THREE WHORES FROM CANADA
Three whores came down from Canada And
they were drinking wine All their conversation was Your cunts no
bigger than mine.
Up stood the first one Said mines as
big as the sea. The ships sail in and the ships sail out The rigging
it hangs free.
Then up stood the second one Said
mines as big as air The suns goes sailing round and round And never
scrachin a hair.
Up stood the third one Said mines as
big as the moon A man when up last Agust And he never came back until
June.
So jiggle my tits and boobies Play
with my hole below Go to hell you son of bitch For I am whore from
Buffalo.
"Heard in a number of palaces, mostley
sailors, the only variations being the wine in the second line. Have
heard it sung cherry wine. Also the place in the last line. Have heard
any number of palaces, Buffalo, Cairo, anything that rhymes with
below."
"The first I heard it was in Cape Town,
So. Africa, again in Port Said sang by a woman." [Note from letter
2739.]
Earl Teets
3007
LULU
My Lulu had a baby His name was Sunny
Jim She put him in a bath tub (?) To sea if he could swim.
I wish I was a diamond ring Upon my
Lula's hand 'Cause every time she ------- I'd see the promised
land.
O bang away my Lulu Bang away good and
strong. What you going to do for your banging away When your Lulu's
dead and gone?
"The one prevailing in the Second
Division at 'Chateau Thierry' was Lulu."
Bill Nice
3009
Good by gun, good by step Good by army
with your --- ---- pep All I want is a clean discharge And you can all
go straight to hell, by gearge Join the army, some shit!
Frank A. Partridge
3009
You're in the army now, you're not
behind, the plow You son of a --- you'll never get rich, You're in the
army now.
"the words to the bugle calls--march
flourish" Frank A. Partridge
3009
All you soldiers in the grass, With
your fingers in your ass, Take 'em out, take 'em out, take 'em out, take
'em out.
"Assembly" Frank A.
Partridge
3102
Farewell to Winter, Farewell to frost, Maybe you think I am sighing For the girl I have lost.
But I have another Far better than she Just wait till I get married And sail across the sea.
Oh you can get a chicken (sic) Without any bone You can't get a cherry Without any stone
Can't get a ring Without any rim Can't get a baby Unless you stick it in.
"a song that I sang when a boy in Jersey,
have never heard it elsewhere."
Earl J. Teets
3144
MADAMOISELLE
Madamoiselle from
Armentiers Parley-vous. Hadn't been jazzed for fifty
years Parley-vous. Then she met the engineers And made up for all
arrears Hinkey-dinkey-parley-vous.
Up the stairs and into
bed Parley-vous She swore I broke her maiden head Parley-vous Up
the stairs and into bed She swore I broke her maiden
head Hinkey-dinkey-parley-vous.
Madamoiselle had a taking
way Parley-vous Madamoiselle had a talcing
way Parley-vous Mademoiselle had a taking way She stole ay shirt
and stole my pay Hinkey-dinkey-parley-vous.
The general slept with
Madamoiselle Parley-vous The general slept with
Madamoiselle Parley-vous The general slept with Madamoiselle And
now he's giving the doctor hell Hinkey-dinkey-parley-vous.
Madamoiselle she met an M
P Parley-vous Madamoiselle she met an M
P Parley-vous Madamoiselle she met an M P And she caught the clap
and give it to me Hinkey-dinkey-parley-vous .
0h, she got knocked up by the son of a
gun Parley-vous She got knocked up by the son of a
gun Parley-vous She got knocked up by the son of a bitch And her
dose of clap would run and itch Hinkey-dinkey-parley-vous .
3144
MADAMOISELLE (2)
The first three months you could not
tell Parley-vous The second three months she started to
swell Parley-vous The third three months with a couple o' squawks A
little M P popped out of her box Hinkey-dinkey-parley-vous.
Now she's got a little M
P Parley-vous How she's got a little M P Parley-vous How she's
got a little M P Keeping the clap in the
family Hinkey-dinkey-parley-vous.
The little M P he grew and
grew Parley-vous The little M P he grew and grew Parley-vous The
little M P he grew and grew And now he's stooling on me and
you Hinkey-dinkey-parley-vous.
The Y M C A went over to
France Parley—vous The Y M C A went over to
France Parley-vous The Y M C A behind the lines Was gypping the
soldiers nickles and dimes Hinkey-dinkey-parley-vous.
The Y M C A on its ass did
set Parley-vous While I was out in the cold and
wet Parley-vous When I came in from the cold and wet They soaked me
a franc for a cigarette Hinkey-dinkey-parley-vous.
The Y M C A they saved my
soul Parley-vous The IMC A they saved my soul Parley-vous The Y
M C A they saved my soul Yes they did, in a pigs ass
hole Hinkey-dinkey-parley-vous.
Frank A. Partridge
3144
LULU
My Lulu was a lady She came from a
country town She tried to keep her reputation up But she couldn't keep
her shirttail down.
My Lulu kept a boarding house Across
the railroad track And all the meals the boarders: got Was Lulu on her
back.
I went to call on Lulu But Lulu wasn't
in I found her down in the railroad yards Jacking off with a coupling
pin.
My Lulu she went fishing She caught a
string of bass She hung them over her shoulder And they still stink in
her ass.
I wish I was a piss pot Beneath my
Lulu's bed And every time she took a crap I'd see her maiden
head.
I wish I was a diamond ring Upon my
Lulu's hand And every time she scratched her ass I'd see the promised
land.
I wish I was a diamond pin Upon my
Lulu's breast I'd get between my Lulu's teats And sink right down to
rest.
The rich girl's pants are made of
lace The poor girl's are chambray My Lulu wears no pants at all She
claims they're in the way.
The rich girl's watch is made of
gold The poor girl's is of brass My Lulu needs no watch at
all There's movement in her ass.
The rich girl uses vaseline The poor
girl uses lard My Lulu uses neither but She gets there Just as
hard.
3144
LULU (2)
I took her to the circus The circus
for to see But she got stuck on the elephant's cock And had no use for
me.
My Lulu joined the army One sunny
summer's day And when the doctor looked at us There sure was hell to
pay.
They put her In the guardhouse And
fined her a month's pay But Lulu didn't give a damn She made more
every day.
They marched her up and down the
road Till both her feet were sore It was no way to treat a
girl Altho she was a whore.
My Lulu was arrested Ten dollars was
her fine And turning to the judge she said Take It outta this ass of
mine.
They put my Lulu into jail And a sad
thing came to hap The sheriff and the warden both Came down with a
dose of clap
My Lulu she went teaching She taught
in a Sunday school She showed the scholars lots of things Beside the
golden rule.
My Lulu was a farmhand She went out
pitching hay She shoved the pitchfork up her ass And it went in all
the way
She took the farmer's horse and
team To drive to the country store But she eloped with the old stud
horse And wont come back no more.
3144
LULU (3)
"There are two choruses to
this."
Bang away at Lulu Bang her good and strong What ya gonna do For a midnight screw When Lulu's dead and gone.
My God, she was a Lulu Every inch a Lulu Lulu, that little old girl of
mine.
Frank A. Partridge
3144
THE TENNESSEE SERVANT GIRL
When I was a servant girl, down in
Tennessee Along cane a sailor, a sailor from the sea I, like a foolish
girl, thinking it no harm Jumped into bed that night to keep the sailor
warm.
Early the next morning, the sailor he
awoke And reaching in his pocketbook, he handed me a note Take this,
my gentle maiden for the damage I have done In nine months time, just
drop a line, a girlie or a son.
And if it be a little girl, just bounce
her on your knee And if it be a little boy, just send him
out to sea With belly button jacket, and trowsers navy blue So he can
charm the ladies as his daddy used to do.
Now all you gentle maidens, just take a
tip from me And never let a sailor boy an inch above your knee They'll hug you, they'll kiss you,
they'll swear there's none like you Until they're copped your cherry,
then they'll say to hell with you.
Frank A. Partridge
3144
IN THE BACK ROOM
When you're tired of pitch and
casino There's one little game we can play You will find it the bliss
of all blisses If you'll step in I'll show you the way.
There's hugging and loving and
kissing The best things of life, you'll agree. I will show you the
gateway of heaven If you'll step in the backroom with me.
Nine days have passed over, my
darling, And oh, how I wish I were dead For my peter is full of the essence of
hell And there's shankers all ringed round his head.
Good bye, all you women,
forever Farewell every chippy and whore When I think of the pains that
I suffer Then I wish I had said that before,
When I next feel desire's
temptation And my balls with a custard are full With industrious hand
and quick motion I will step in the back room and pull.
Frank A. Partridge
3359
MISS KITTY O'HOREY
Come boys and girls and sit around and
listen to my story It's all about a plan I took to beat Miss Kittie
O'Horey. Tiddie oddie ing I O, tiddie oddie ing I 0.
I went unto her sister's house just like
some clever fellow. I told her that the plums and grapes were getting
ripe and mellow.
I told her that my sister Nat was down in
younder bower She wanted her to come along and spend a half an
hour.
As we walked along the road, we walked
along together I told her that my sister Nat knew nothing of this
matter.
[I fear, sir,
She seemed quite pleased, my hand she
squeezed, saying one thing that My Pa's below a cutting hay I'm afraid
he'll catch us here, sir,
If you will but climb up younder tree
till he should come this way, sir, We will pick our plums and hare our
fun, O, how we will sport and play,sir.
I climbed the tree, she pousted me, not
being the least offended. Kittle she stood and looked at me to see how
high I ascended.
Your ugly looks I do dispise you look
like one big owl, sir, You fuck your plums and snap the stones you may
have your own fun, sir.
And if ever you treat another poor girl
as you treated me, sir, I hope you'll give her a chance to run by
climbing up another tree, sir.
Then Kittie she treated [headed ?] her
oer the plain a[s] tho she was
I cussed, I swore my close I tore to see
how Kittie had acted. [distracted]
My thoughts I kept within myself her
deads I recomended, I took and mad[e] a wife of her so now my troubles
are ended.
And now I've climed the prettiest tree
that ever bore peach or pear, sir, I have split the lima and I've grafted
in to see what fruit it would bear, sir.
Now I have sung enough of this poor stuf
so now I will cease my syning But every time Kittie winks at me, good
Lord I feel like climing.
Ben A. Ranger
3711 March 23, 1928
GYPSY DAVIE
Oh., I'll ship you off to China And
I'll trade you off for tea, For I will not leave you here A making
babies for me.
Oh, a ring dang ding dang Doodle oddle
ay, Oh, a ring dang ding dang
Davie.
"Many years ago I knew a man who sang
'Gypsy Davie'. He was much older than I and has long since crossed
the divide, I have forgotten the song, but it was a different plot
from you 'Black Jack Davie'. They Gypsie Davie was engaged in the Chinese
tea trade and was obliged to be away from home a great deal. One night he
came home unexpectedly, quietly let himself into the house and proceeded
to his wife's bedroom. As he opened the door he saw the lid to a large
cedar chest quietly closing down. He immediately sized up the situation,
sat down on the chest and proceeded to look it. While he was doing so he
was also singing-----."
S. C. Wheeler
3729
Every ship has a cabin Every cabin has
doors Every sailor likes a nice girl With nice pretty
drawers.
Lower away your main t'gallant
sail Lower away your main t'gallant sail You son of a
whore.
"Every verse takes another part of the
ship and a catholic taste in adjectives.--A fragment collected by a
friend of mine in the dockyard end of London. The tune of the shanty was
a variant of the German student song, 'Gradaus den
Wirtzhaus'."
E. Anderson
3756
June, 1929
JOHNSON'S BOARDERS
One Holiday night I got my chance, I
rum my hand up in her pants, "You're welcome to do that," says
Blanche, "For you're one of Johnson's boarders."
I laid her down upon the floor, And
fucked her fifteen times or more, And Blanche would sure have been a
whore If she'd stayed with Johnson's boarders.
When Martin seen what I had done He
grabbed the old man, just for fun, And corn-holed that old
son-of-a-gun; Ha was one of Johnson's boarders.
And then along come Harry Hunt, He
grabbed poor Blanche right by the cunt, And fucked her both in back and
front, Like one of Johnson's boarders.
C. E. Roe
3773
Oh the ladies wear no teddies in
Manila, Oh the ladies wear no teddies in Manila, Oh the ladies wear no
teddies, And they call them everreadies, Oh the ladies wear no teddies
in Manila.
Anonymous
[See MacClintuck]
[3773]
I walked down the street like a nice girl
should, A keen man followed like I thought he would, This keen man
whoever he may be, Listen while I tell you what he did to me.
I went in the house like a nice girl
should, The keen man followed like I thought he would, This keen man,
etc.
I turned on the lights like a nice girl
should, He turned them off like I thought he would, This keen man,
etc.
I got into bed like a nice girl
should, The keen man followed like I thought he would, This keen man,
etc.
I waited nine months like a nice girl
should, He left town like I thought he would, This keen man whoever he
may be, It's none of your damn business what he did to me.
Anonymous
3779 June 20, 1930
FRANKIE AND JOHNNY
Frankie and Johnny were lovers, O
Lardy haw they could lore, They swore to be true to each other Just as
true as the stars above. He was her man, But he done her
wrong.
Frankie and Johnny went
walking, Johnny had a brand new suite (!) Frankie paid a hundred
dollars, Just to make her man look cute.
Johnny said I've got to leave you, But
I won't be very long, Don't you wait up for me honey, Nor worry while
I'm gone.
Frankie went down to the
corner, Stopped in to buy her some beer, Says to the fat
bartender, Has my Johnny man been here?
Well I ain't going to tell you no
story, Ain't going to tell you no lie, Johnny went by 'bout an hour
ago With a girl named Nelly Blye. He's your man, But he's doing you
wrong.
Frankie went home in a hurry, She
didn't go there for fun, She hurried home to get a hold Of Johnny's
shootin' gun.
Frankie took a cab at the
corner, Says, Driver, step on this can. She was a desperate
woman Gettin' two-timed by her man.
Frankie got out at South Clark
Street Looked up in a window so high, Saw her Johnny man a lovin'
up That high brown Nelly Blye.
Johnny saw Frankie comin' Out the back
door he did scoot, Frankie took aim with her great big gat, And the
gat went Root-a-toot-toot.
3779 June 20,
1930
FRANKIE AND JOHNNY (2)
Oh roll me over so easy, Roll me over
so slow, Roll me over easy boys, Cause my wounds they hurt me so, I
was her man, But I done her wrong.
Bring out your long black
coffin, Bring out your long black clothes, Johnny's gone and cashed
his checks, To the graveyard Johnny goes.
Drive out your rubber tired
carriage, Drive out your rubber tired hack, Twelve men goin' to the
graveyard, But only eleven comin' back.
The sheriff arrested poor
Frankie, Took her to jail that same day. He locked her up in a dungeon
cell And threw the keys away. She shot her man, For he done her
wrong.
"Evidently this version has a Chicago
atmosphere and setting."
Charles E. Roe
[3781] August 25, 1930
THE OLD CHISHOLM TRAIL
Looking for a job, and I went broke
flat. Got a job riding on the Double O flat.
Signs pinned up on the bunk-house
door, "Punchers allowed at a quarter after four."
"Round up and saddle up some old pitching
hoss, If you can't ride him, you're fired by the boss,"
As I come a-riding 'cross the 00
range, I was thinking of my sweetheart that I left on the
ranch.
I rode on with the old man's
daughter, Guess I said a few words what I hadn't oughter,
I told her that I'd love her like I loved
my life, I asked her how she'd like to a cowpuncher's wife.
Said she'd like it fine, but I better see
her dad, For he got the dough, and it might make him mad,
I went to the old man, as all lovers
oughter, I says, "Old Man, I'm in love with your daughter,"
He grins and he points to the Double O
roan, That's piled every puncher that ever rode alone.
Says, "If you can ride that hoss, and not
pull leather, You and my daughter can throw you things
together."
Went to the hoss, and slammed on my
saddle, Best damn rider that ever punched cattle.
All the punchers yelled, as all punchers
oughter, For they knew I was riding for the Old Man's
daughter.
Jumped in the saddle and gave a little
yell, What's going to happen is damned hard to tell.
Spurred him on the shoulder, and hit him
with my quirt, Gave four jumps, and rolled me in the dirt.
Went to the Old Man to have a little
chat, Hit Mm in the face with my old felt hat,
Went to the girl, and offered her a
quarter, Says she, "Go to Belli I'm a cow-puncher's daughter!"
378l August 25,
1930
THE OLD CHISHOLM TRAIL (2}
Offered her a dollar, and she took it in
her hand, Punched me in the belly, says, "Well, I'll be
damned!"
Threw my arms around her and laid her on
the grass, To show her the wiggle of a cow-puncher's ----.
The hair on her belly was a strawberry
brown, The crabs on her m----- were jumping up and down.
Took my old jockey to the watering
trough, Washed him and I scrubbed him till his head fell off.
In about nine days, when I looked for to
see, Chancres on my p----- were big as a pea.
She found it out, and called me a
kid, Told me to remember her, and by God, I did!
Wrote her a letter, don't think I
lied, Said, I'm leaving Texas, fast as I can ride.
Know a little Injun, damn' pretty
squaw, Guess I'll go and see her, for I leave for Arkansas.
Going to leave Texas, going to head for
home, All on account of the Double-O roan,
Sheep man a-stealing of the Double-O
grass, Boss says, "Shoot him, but not in the ----."
So we pulled out our guns and we got him
on the fly, Crawled in the weeds, and I guess he's going to
die.
Chased a bunch of bosses thru the G--
d----- sheep, The scatterment they made, made the sheep men
weep.
Camped over night at the A bar
B's, Got so damn' cold, I thought I would freeze.
Raining hard and muddy as
Hell, Trailing thru the gumbo sure is Hell!
Hit Belle Fourche, and went on a
spree, Sheriff coma a running, and he picked on me.
Locked me up in his lousy old
jail. Boss said he'd be damned if he went my bail.
[3781]
August 25, 1930
THE OLD CHISHOLM TRAIL (3)
Just because I worked for him wa'n't no
sign That a cow-poke's boss had got to pay his fine.
Met a girl and thought I'd seen her
before, Tried her, and I found she was a G-- d----- whore.
Went to make a date as a cowpuncher
oughter, Found out the girl was that damn' sheriff's daughter.
Sheriff on my trail, left town on the
run, If he catches up, have to use my gun.
Left Belle Fourche, and left her on the
lope, To keep my neck from wearing out a scratchy old rope.
Going to leave Montana, and marry my
squaw, Going to settle down in Arkansas.
"Additional verses from Slim Guyer,
Montana." Charles E. Roe
[3801]
—1931
Oh the caribous have no hair in
Merivales Oh the caribous have no hair in Merivales Oh the caribous
have no hair That's the reason they are bare, Oh the caribous have no
hair in Merivales.
Oh the kiddies wear no pants in
Mindenao Oh the kiddies wear no pants in Mindenao Oh the kiddies wear
no pants They were eaten off by ants, Oh the kiddies wear no pants in
Mindanao.
Oh the ladies wear no teddies,in
Manila Oh the ladies wear no teddies in Manila Oh the ladies wear no
teddies, To they call them Ever-readies Oh the ladies wear no teddies
in Manila.
Oh the monkies have no tails in old
Luzon Oh the monkies have no tails in old Luzon Oh the monkies have no
tails They were bitten off by whales Oh the monkies have no tails in
old Luzon.
Oh the women get no tail in
Zamboanga Oh the woman get no tail in Zamboanga Oh the women get no
tail For their husbands are in jail Oh the women get no tail in
Zamboanga.
There's a virgin in Cebu-so they
say There's a virgin in Cebu-so they say There's a virgin in
Cubu And today she is just two, There's a virgin in Cebu-so they
say.
Anonymous
3802 —1931
FRANKIE AND JOHNNY
Frankie and Johnny were lovers, So
everybody knew; She was his lovin' sweetheart — My God, how that gal
could screw. He was her man, And she treated him square,
Johnny chased the other women, Took to
chasin' Alice Fry, While Frankie sat and waited, Hot think-in' her
Johnny'd lie, For he was her man, And she thot he was
square.
One day in Doc Sheehan's Alley A
friend to Frankie said, "Your Johnny-boy's a gash-hound Sportin' on a
whore-house bed — He is your man, But he's doin' you wrong
.
Frankie went down to the
whore-house, She rang that whore-house Bell; "Stand aside, you pimps
and whores, Or I'll blow you all to hell. He is my man, And he's
doin' me wrong."
Frankie looked over the transom, What
a sight met her eye-- There sat her lovin' Johnny-boy Finger-fuckin'
Alice Fry, He ms her man, But he was doin' her wrong.
Frankie yelled loud through the
transom, "Goddam your soul, I'll shoot," And she pulled her forty-five
-- She Colt went rooty-toot-toot. For he was her man, And he was
doin' her wrong.
She shot him once, she shot him
twice, Hit the middle of his big black ass; The whores and pimps
huddled there, "Waitin' for his soul to pass, For he was her
man, And he was doin' her wrong.
3802 —1931
FRANKIE AND JOHNNY (2)
Johnny got shot in the ass-hole, He
saw his life-blood flow; "Lord-a'mighty, sweetheart gal, An ass full
of lead harts so, But I was your man, And I done you
wrong."
"Turn me over easy, Oh Lord! Turn me
over slow, Oh! Lord God-a'mighty, boys, It hurts to turn me, Oh! I
was her man, And I done her wrong."
And Johnny said to the pimps and
whores Who gathered round his side, "I double-crossed my lovin'
gal," Then wiggled his ass and died, Ha was her man, But he done
her wrong.
Silver-handled, plush-lined casket, A
rubber-tired hack, Takin' Johnny to the graveyard And bringin' nothin'
back, For he was her man, And he done her wrong.
(second stanza)
Frankie took care of her Johnny, She
gave him a gold watch and chain; She staked his crap games in
Frisco And fed him till luck came again, For he was her man, And
she loved him true.
"heard by the writer on a ranch near
Boise, Idaho, between 1910-12, sung by floating wobbly ranch laborers.
"Doc Sheehan's Alley" is the local rendezvous for the daughters of
joy."
[From Cornell]
[3803] December 14, 1931
THE ONE-EYED REILLY
Sittin' by the fireside, drinkin' rum and
water Suddenly a thought come to my mind; I'll go and shag O'Reilly's
daughter, The nearest girl that I can find.
Tiddle-aye, aye. Tiddle-aye,
aye. Tiddle-aye, aye, for the one-eyed Reilly, Boom, boom,
boom, Balls and all, Jig-a-jig-a-jig. Tres boom!
Went upstairs an' got in bed, First I
threw my left lag over; What d'ye think the lady said?
She laughed like hell 'til the fun was
over. Comes a knockin' at the door, Who should it be but the girl's
ol' man,
Pair of pistols at his side, An' a big
stick in his han'.
Took the big stick from his
hand, Shoved his head in a pail of water;
Stuck the pistols up his ass A dam'
sight further than I shagged his daughter.
"Originally heard sung by an Irish stoker
on a Squarehead freighter off Belize, about 1920. Since then in various
places about the States. This verion from the "Slime Sheet",
Paris,1930."
Godfrey Irwin
[3851] January 26, 1932
THE OLD FOOL
Last night when I came home, Love, and
hung my hat on the tree, I found another man's hat, Love, where my hat
ought to be.
Why, you old fool, you blind fool, say,
can't you see, It's nothing but a flower pot my mother sent to
me.
Oh, it's many a mile I've traveled, a
thousand miles or more, But never saw a flower pot look like a hat
before.
- - - -coat- - - - - - - -blanket- - -
-
But I never saw a blanket with buttons on
before.
- - - -gun- - - - - - - -beanpole- - -
-
But I never saw a beanpole have a trigger
before.
- — - -boots- — - - - - -
-bootjack- - - -
But I never saw a bootjack with spurs on
before.
Last night when I came home, Love, to the
barn the horse and me, And there in the stable, a strange horse I did
see.
Why,- - - -
It's nothing but a milking cow, my gramma
sent to me.
Oh it's - - - -
But I never saw a cow with a saddle on
before.
Last night- - - -
I looked into the bedroom and a strange
face I did see.
- - - -baby- - - -
I never saw a baby with whiskers on
before.
Last night--- - -
I saw a pair of feet, love, in bed where
mine should be.
- - - -warming pan- - - -
I never saw a warming pan with toes on
before.
Last night- - - -
I saw another ass, love, in bed where
mine should be.
- - - -pumpkin shell- - - -
I never saw a pumpkin shell with an
asshole before.
Last night- - — -
I saw a pair of bollocks, Jove, where my
bollocks ought to be.
- - - -some lemons- - - -
I never saw two lemons with hair on them
before.
January 26, 1932
THE OLD FOOL (2)
Last night- - - -
I saw another man's cook, my love, in the
hole where mine should be.
Why- - - -
It's nothing but a candle which in play I
stuck in me.
Oh it's- - - -
But I never saw a candle with a red head
on before.
The song continues almost interminably
telling the story of how the poor blind husband, supposedly unaware, but
with malice aforethought, proceeded to 'shag' the alleged pumpkin shell,
much to the distress and pain of the adultreous wretch who was
cuckolding the husband. Having thoroughly cowed the intruder by
judicious sodomies, the husband threw wife and her Don Juan out. Song
ends with this Terse,
Oh, it's many a mile we've traveled, a
thousand miles or more, But never heard such goings on, in all our lives
before.
My history of the above is interesting.
It is undoubtedly an old ballad or English folksong which has been
burlesqued and per- verted. 'Bollocks' is at least 600 years old, for
Skelton used it (cerca 1360-75}.
I learned the song from a Nova Scotian
farmhand about 1898-99. He was a man of about 40 or 45, and told me he
learned the song from an English sailor who was sort of village oracle,
being very old and who delighted in singing ribald songs when drunk. The
sailor told my mentor he learned the song as a youngster in England,
where he had been born and raised in or near London. This would put the
song back to the middle 17 hundreds...."
Jean Bordeaux
[3866] May 26,
1932
There was a rich merchant who sat on a
rock Amusing some women by shaking his ---
Stick at some ladies in front of a
store. Along came a lady who looked like a ---
Perfect young lady. She sat on the
grass And when she sat down I could see all her ---
Ruffles and flounces and each little
tuck. She said she was learning a new way to ---
Bring up her daughters to sew and to knit
. The boys in the stable were shoveling ---
The stuff in the stable all over the
sod And if you don't think so, just smell it,
by God!
Anonymous
3900
A shady nook, a babbling brook, A girl
dressed all in yellow-- O, what a lucky fellow!
Five days had passed. He gave a
sigh, A sigh of pain and sorrow---
Two pimples pink are on his dink, And
there'll be more to-morrow.
Nine months has passed. She gave a
sigh, A sigh of pain and sorrow--
Two little muts are in her guts, And
they'll be out to-morrow.
Anonymous
3901
Wherever you be, let the wind go
free For holding in was the killing of me.
"On a tombstone" Anonymous
3902 October
7, 1917
Oh the bards they sing of an English king
so many years ago, Who ruled the land with an iron hand but his mind was
weak and low. And well he loved to hunt the stag within the royal
wood But better still he loved the pleasure of pulling his royal
pud. Chi-rist, how he loved to pull his pud, pull his pud!
Oh his only nether garment was a woolen
undershirt With which he tried to hide the hide, but he couldn't hide the
dirt. He was wild and wooly and full of fleas. And his terrible tool
hung down to his knees. All hail to this bastard king of
En--gland.
Oh the queen of Spain was a sprightly
dame, a sprightly dame was she, And she loved to fool with his majesty's
tool, so far across the sea, So she sent him a message by a special
messenger, To come and spend a month or so with her!
X-rist, what a scandal it would sitr, it
would stir!
How the king of France when he heard of
this, he swore onto his court, She must prefer me rival, because me horn
is short! So he sent the Duke of Sippensap to give the queen a dose of
clap Which wouldn't do a thing to dear old En--gland
Which wouldn't help old England any at
all, at all, at all!
How when the news of this fell deed had
reached old England's walls, The king he swore by the shirt he wore, he'd
have the Frenchman's balls. He offered half his kingdom and the hand of
Queen Hortense To any loyal Briton who would nut the king of
France.
To him who would the king of France, the
king of France.
The royal duke of Suffolk betook himself
to France, Oh, he swore he was a fruiter and the king took down his
pants, He tied a thong to the royal dong, And mounted his horse and
galloped along, And dragged him before the bastard king of
England.
The king threw up his breakfast and he
fainted on the floor, For in the ride the Frenchman's tool has stretched
a rod or more And all the ladies of England came down to London
town, And they gather round the castle walls, "To hell with the English
crown!"
The king of Prance usurped the
throne, His sceptre was his royal bone, With which he downed the
bastard king of England.
"I received it at the beginning of the
summer from a friend who want to France. It was collected at
Princeton."
Grantley W. Taylor .
3903 April
13, 1918
Oh here is to the Sergeant and the
Corporal of the Guard And here is to the Officers who make us work so
hard They make us do squads right and left front into line And the God
dam sons of bitches they make us double time.
Oh it's home, boys, home; it's home we
ought to be It's home, boys, home, in the land of liberty. We'll nail
old glory to the top of the pole And we'll all reenlist in a pig's
asshole.
"It was evolved during what we used to
call the 'Mexican campaign'."
Emmett Dunn
3903 April 13, 1918
EVELIHA
Down in Cat's Alley, where sailor-men
go The rats and the mice they are thick as
the snow There lived Evelina, a dear friend of
mine Whose asshole was hairy and covered with
slime When she got started, she puked and she
farted She squirted green maggots all over the
carpet Now Evelina lies dead in her
tomb And the rats and the mice they played
hell with her womb. Oh Evelina keep your asshole
cleaner And my love for you will never, never
die.
"the peculiar property of a Washington,
D.C., boy at Fort Myer."
Emmett Dunn
3904 June, 1925
THE BALLAD OF CHAMBERS STREET
Sow in the East the gleaming
wheel Oh Phoebus' car is turning Up in a suite on Chambers
street The gas is dimly burning And from that floor there comes a
roar That startles every neighbor. "Oi, oi," it says, "Gewalt,
gewalt," Big Rosy is in labor."
For twenty years this flame of
love Had kept herself quite busy Dispensing screws to luctful
Jews- To Abe and Ike and Izzy. The Male West End called her their
friend- With scalped and eager penis They climbed aboard and oft
explored This much frequented Venus.
But as the pitcher at the well Was fractured in the fable After the horse was pinched, of
course, They fastened up the stable. For Tansy Teas and soft
bougies And local applications Had ne'er returned what she most
yearned-- That absent menstruation.
For high above the pelvic brim Placed in a soft depression, Beyond the wound of probe or
sound Reposed her indiscretion. The rascal grew and wiggled
till The word was passed around, Some sprightly knight had caught by
night Rose with her britches down.
Oh, bards may sing of Dido's
plight Deserted on the shore - Aenaes gay, off down the bay Bad stolen her Angora. Our heroine did not repose, Although she often wondered She could not think what festive
dink Had scored an even hundred.
3904 June,
1925
THE BALLAD OP CHAMBERS STREET
(2)
Now full ten times the pallid
moon Had risen in the heavens, And did disclose to pregnant
Rose Herself at sixes and sevens. A rough uproar starts in her
breast And centers in her belly. She sweats and quakes and water
makes, And shakes like quava Jelly..
To rescue damsels was the wont Of valiant knights of old, So Jo-Jo Pratt put on his hat And came when he was told. On 0.P.D. in nineteen three With potions soporific He'd make her nap, he'd cure her
clap Or treat her for "specific".
But e'er he left his residence He
scoured the leaves of Cooper To make him sure nought but manure Came
down a lady's pooper. For Hunter (John) has nothing on This suave,
urbane physician, The type and print of Austin Flint, (A damned poor
obstetritian).
"Great William Osier!" Through his
brain There came a beam of light! "She must be seen by Charlie
Green." He jumped up in delight. "By Charlie Green she must be
seen," To banish her dispair. With his little round hat and his walking
stick, And his beard of pubic hair.
High in a room on Chambers
Street E'er yet the waters broke From pregnant Rose they took the
clothes And ne'er a word they spoke. They laid her head across the
bed- Her legs they had to bend 'em. With sterile hands they made
demands To open her pudendum.
3904 June,
1925
THE BALLAD OF CHAMBERS STREET
(3)
"Instroitus admitts my fist, Without
the slightest urgin'-- There, I ween," said Doctor Green, "That Hose
is not a virgin. And I would dare almost declare That she has had
coition, Which in the main would best explain Her present 3ad
condition."
Now all through that summer's
day, They grappled for a foetus. With hooks and bands and tugs and
hands, Said Joe, "This sure does beat
us. How would the Gods, with traction
rods, Though risking many stitches, Call into view this God-damned
Jew, This prince of sons of
bitches."
Then as the shades of evening
fell, And night came on at last, They did conspire to prune and
fire, To countermire and blast. High in the sluice they laid their
fuse, With no one to detect them. They bought a pound of
dynamite And stuffed it up her rectum.
Proud Aetna in her gala days, Upon the foreign shores, Did not erupt much more abrupt Than did this Jewish whore. She then defiled with mangled
child The waters of the bay. The balls they struck in
Cambridgeport And landed there to stay.
His balls they struckin
Cambridgeport, 'Twas there they came to
earth. At Boston Light, all right, all
right, They got the after-birth. The State House dome of dirty
chrome Was stained with foetal faces. They said "God damn" in
Framingham As they picked up the pieces.
3904 June,
1925
THE BALLAD OF CHAMBERS STREET
From many a little village
spire, As waned the peaceful day The curfews toll the passing
knell Remarked upon by Gray. The lowly kine, in tardy line Pass slowly o'er the lea. The jumping horse is cropping
gorse, (Whatever that may be.)
'Tis silent now in Chambers
Street, The crowds have homeward
turned. With reverened heads they bore the
dead Out of the house that burned. And Doctor Green has not been
seen, And as for Doctor Pratt-- I do not know, nor give a
damn, Where he is really at.
"Harvard Medical
School" Anonymous
3905
My name is Tannhauser, My cock is a
rouser, My balls each weigh ninety-five pound; My wife is
Johanna, I screw her, God damn her, And nail her old arse to the
ground.
"Variant of above with name, Jim
Bowser." Anonymous
3905
Oh, I am a bachelor and I live with my
son, And we work at the weaver's trade, And every time that I look
into his eyes, I think me of a pretty, pretty maid, I wooed her in the
summer-time, And in the winter too, And the only, only thing that I
ever did wrong Was to shield her from the foggy,foggy dew.
'Twas on a dark and stormy night and the
grass was wet, And nothing could be dry, A pretty, pretty maid came to
my bedside And started in to cry. She wept, she wailed, she tore her
hair, My God! What could I do? So I wrapped her in my arms the whole
night long, Just to shield her from the foggy, foggy dew!
anonymous
3906
Oh the bards they sing of an English king
so many years ago, Who ruled the land with an iron hand but his mind was
weak and low. And well he loved to hunt the stag within the royal
wood, But better still he loved the pleasure of pulling his royal
pud. Chr-ist, how he loved to pull his pud, pull his pud.
Oh his only nether garment was a woolen
undershirt With which he tried to hide the hide, but he couldn't hide the
shirt He was wild and wooly and full of fleas, And his terrible tool
hung down to his knees. All hail to this bastard king of
England.
Oh the Queen of Spain was a sprightly
dame, a sprightly dame was she, And she loved to fool with his majesty's
tool so far across the sea So she sent him a message by a special
messenger To come and spend a month or so with her.
X-ist, what a scandal it would stir, it
would stir,
How the King of France when he heard of
this, he swore unto his court, She must prefer me rival because me tool
is short, So he sent to the Duke of Sippesap To give the queen a dose
of clap, Which wouldn't do a thing to dear old En-gland.
Which wouldn't help old England any at
all, at all, at all.
Now when the news of this fell deed had
reached old England's walls, The king he swore by the shirt he wore he'd
have that Frenchman's balls, He offered half his kingdom and the hand of
Queen Hortense To any loyal Briton who would cut the King of
France.
To him who would castrate the king of
France, King of France.
The royal Duke of Suffolk betook himself
to France, Oh, he swore he was a fruiter and the King took down his
pants. He tied a thong to the royal dong, And mounted his horse, and
galloped along, And dragged him before the bastard king of
England.
The King threw up his breakfast and he
fainted on the floor, For in the ride the Frenchman's tool and stretched
a rod or more, And all the ladies of England came down to London
town And they gather round the castle walls, "To Hell with the English
crown."
The King of France userped the
throne, His sceptre was his royal bone, With which he downed the bastard king of
England.
3907
CHRISTOPHER COLUMBO
In fourteen hundred ninety-two A dago
from Italia Roamed and roamed the streets of Rome Selling his hot
tamales.
Christopher Columbo, He knew the world
was round-o That urinating, masturbating, son of a bitch
Columbo.
He said to the king, to the king said
he, Just give me ships and cargo In fourteen days you son of a
bitch I'll bring you back Chicago.
The Queen she hocked her family
jewels To get Columbus started And on the decks she wept with
tears But Columbus only farted.
Columbus piped, "All hands on
deck." And tied them to the mast pole Then he took down all their
pants And fucked them in the ass hole.
The cabin maid ran down the deck The
villain he pursued her The white of an egg ran down her leg Columbo he
had screwed her.
In fourteen days they sighted land It
was the isle of Cuba A big fat whore ran down to shore With legs just
like a tuba.
Columbus he jumped overboard The crew
they stripped and followed In forty-five minutes by the clock She'd
made ten thousand dollars.
Columbus he came back on deck His tool
was sore and fiery He wiped it off on the tablecloth And logged it in
his diary.
3907
CHRISTOPHER COLUMBO (2)
In Spain the doctors they were few The
syph doctors not many The only one Columbus knew Was a God damn Jew
named Benny.
Columbus went up and that Jew His face
was calm and placid The God damn fool filled up his tool, With
muriatic acid.
Van Hook
3908
In fourteen hundred ninety two There
lived Queen Isabella ('Twas then) She had to do with a god damned
fool Said here's your dago feller.
She wanted him to leave the land And
for a damned good reason For he had screwed her husband's wife And
that you know was treason.
Columbus stood upon the deck And gazed
out o'er the ocean The god damned crew ran down below Because they
lacked emotion.
Columbus stood upon the deck And gazed
out through his glass hole The second mate crept up behind And goosed
him in the arsehole.
Columbus stood upon the deck And there
he took his station The god damned crew went down below And practised
masturbation,
Columbus stood upon the deck And gazed
out o'er the ocean When on the shore he saw a whore (And) Which filled
him with emotion.
The god damned crew jumped in the
boat Their cocks were red and - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
The sailors jumped into the boat And
doffed their coats and collars (Undid) In fifteen minutes by the clock
(Fifty) She made six hundred dollars.
Columbus too would have his piece His
cook was red and fiery He rammed it down into the ship And wrote it in
his diary.
3908
(2)
Of doctors in those good old
days There were not very many Except one god damned little Jew Who
went by the name of Benny,
Columbo went to Benny His cock was red
and flaccid The god damned fool filled up his tool With hot sulphuric
acid.
His balls they went around oh Until
they touched the ground oh, That geographical son of a bitch That
Christopho Columbo.
3909 April 2,
1918
In fourteen hundred ninety two A dago
from I-tal-y Was walking down the streets of Rome, A-selling hot
tamales.
Christopher Colombo, He knew the world
was round O! That masturbating, fornicating, Song of a bitch
Colombo!
He went up to the Queen of Spain, And
asked for ships and cargo, And "I'll be a son of a son of a bitch, If
I don't bring back Chicargo!"
The Queen of Spain, she hocked her
clock, To get Colombo started, She wept and cried all over the
dock, Colombo merely farted.
Colombo piped all hands on deck, And
tied them to the mast O! And then he took their panties down And
screwed them in the ass, O!
The cabin girl ran down the deck, The
villain still pursued her, The white of an egg ran down her
leg, Colombo he had screwed her!
Colombo had a one-eyed mate, He loved
him like a brother, And every night at seven bells, They hopped upon
each other!
And when at last they spied the
shore, It was the coast of Cuby, Upon the shore there stood a
whore, By God, she was a beauty!
Colombo, he jumped overboard The crew
shed coats and collars, In fifteen minutes by the clock, She made nine
hundred dollars.
3909 April 2,
1918
(2)
Back to the ship Colombo went. His
prick was red and fiery, He wiped it on the table-cloth, And logged it
in his diary!
Of all the doctors in Cadis, There
weren't so very many, The only one Colombo knew, Was a goddamn Jew
named Benny.
So to this doc Colombo went, His face
was calm and placid, But the goddamn fool filled up his tool With
muriatic acid!
3910
LADY LILL
She were the best the camp produced,
boys, And them what she aint goosed aint had no
goose, and never will For the Lords raked in poor Lady
Lill.
There were a standing bet in our
town There warnt a Geezer fer miles
around
Could screw her to a finish, and ther
warnt, Till one day Sly Pete, an ole
galoot, Came wandering in from Scraggins
Chute
And won it, boys, when he took his prick
out thar, An laid it down acrost the
bar, We fellers knewed we seen Lills
fate. But thar warnt no backin out that
late.
So we arranged to have the
mill Behind the school house on the
hill, Where all the boys could see
it.
Lill's start was like the summer
breeze That softly sways the cypress
trees.
But when Lill screwed boys, she screwed
for keeps, And piled her victims up in
heeps.
Lill screwed around and screwed
until She screwed the grass clean off the
hill.
She tried her bunts and double
bunts And all the tricks whats knowed to
cunts.
But Pete was with her every
lick, Still lettin out more prick.
Lill had her boots on when she
fell; So what the Hell boys, what the
Hell?
Anonymous
3911 —1916
THE ARSE-HOLE OF ZEUS
Old Jupiter once called a council of
Gods To settle a question which kept them at
odds
And there came to Olympus both great gods
and small Deified mortals and goddesses
all
The question was hour to make mortals
abstain From delights of the flesh, and unlustful
remain
And each of the gods had a plan of his
own Which he came to expound before Jupiter's
throne.
Old Neptune had none and the god of the
fish Furthermore remarked "boo" and was heard to say "pish" For time
out of mind it's been everywhere known That the meat that is sweetest is
nearest the bone And he claimed that it's utterly useless to try To
keep them from scragging away on the sly.
First Vulcan arose and had out his
say "I am sure that my plan is the easiest
way
Fit long iron spikes round the parts of
the male So that all his attempts at coition shall
fail
It's crude" he allowed "but I think it'll
do." "You're right" bellowed Neptune, "You
kiss my arse too."
Minerva to battle would send all the
men Engage then in conflict and so she said
then
Arrange by her magic and mystical
arts To have them all hacked in the genital
parts
Till there wasn't a ball that a sword
blade could hit Old Neptune laughed hoarsely and shouted
out "Shit".
Then Jupiter rose to divulge his great
way "Of all the wise council we've heard here
today
My own is the safest and wisest and
best And you'll deem it I'm sure in advance of
the rest.
But here all the gods got a hell of a
shock For nasty old Neptune had hauled out his cock Got Venus half
naked and flat on her back And was soaking his Roger like hell up her
crack They all yelled together and Castor and Pollux Grabbed hold of
old Hep by the beard or the bollux The prick or the arsehole they didn't
care which And threw out the rotten old son of a bitch.
—1916
THE ARSE-HOLE OP ZEUS (2)
When the noise had subsided Old Jupiter
tried To take up his plan where he'd laid it
aside
But try as he might to explain or
appound To the wondering deities gathered
around
He could only see Venus stretched out on
the floor With her pink prat atwitching away for
some more. So he got out his cock with a rush and a
run Held her down by the bubbies and scragged
her like fun The other gods all followed suit at the
sight And the goddesses got such a whaling that
night The the spattering fluid spread over the
sky And the milky way shows it quite plain to
the eye.
But nasty old Neptune who'd started the
rumpus Was down by the sea raising hell with a grumpus And calling the
mermaids to come turn about And he screwed in their turn while his pecker
was out For his John was as hard as the heart of a flint And good for
twelve hours he was without stint And he cried as on each of their
bunches he'd fall By the arse-hole of Zeus I was right after
all.
Anonymous
"Cambridge"
3912
—1917
MY LULU
I took my Lulu to a circus To a circus good to see She got a hammer-lock on an elephant's
cock And wouldn't come home with
me.
O bang away at Lulu Bang away good and strong For what are you going to do for your
banging When your Lulu's dead and
gone.
I wish I were a picture Up in Lulu's
room And everytime she let a fart I'd smell the sweet
perfume.
I wish I were a shithouse Upon my
Lulu's place And every time she took a shit She'd shit right in my
face,
I wish I were a diamond Upon my Lulu's
hand And everytime she wiped her ass I'd see the promised
land.
Some girls wear lace on their
pants Some girls wear them plain. My Lulu she wears none at all But
we get there just the same.
I wish I were a pisspot Under Lulu's
bed And everytime she took a piss I'd see her maiden head
Some girls they use vaseline Some
girls they use lard. My Lul simply spits on it But she gets it just as
hard.
Anonymous
["Cambridge"]
3912
—1917
In the cottage next to mine, In the
cottage next to mine, There lives a married couple And they do it all
the time. They go to bed at seven o'clock And they don't get up till
nine There must be something doing In the cottage next to
mine.
In the good old summer time, In the
good old summer time, Mary went to bed one night And forgot to pull
the blind. Johnnie climbed an apple tree And got there just in
time To see her pussy wussy In the good old summer time.
"Tune: 'In the Good Old Summer
Time'"
Anonymous--
"Cambridge"
3913
March 3 - 1918.
The mountaineers have curly ears They
shit in their leathern breeches They pound their cocks against the
rocks And yell like sons-of-bitches.
[3913]
March 3 - 1918.
Oh ring dang doo--Oh what is that So
soft and round—like a pussy cat So soft and round, and split in
two She said it was her ring dang doo.
She took me down into the cellar She
told me I was a damn good feller She fed me wine and whiskey too And
let me diddle her ring dang doo.
She took me up into her bed She put a
pillow beneath my head She took a hold of my cock a doodle doo And
shoved it in her ring dang doo.
You God damn fool, her mother
said, You've gone and lost your maiden-head Go pack your trunk and
satchel too And go to Hell, with your ring dang doo.
She went away and became a whore And
hung a sign above her door Come in young men, and old ones too And
have a crack at my ring dang doo.
[3913]
March 3 —1918
THE OLD KING AROSE
Oh the old King arose and he put on his
clothes Sing a rooty tooty toot, sing a rooty tooty toot.
And he followed his nose to the sea shore
goes. Sing a one eye, two eye, die.
Oh fisheraan, oh fisherman, I wish you
very well But hare you any crab to sell.
Yes sir, yes sir, one, two, three, And
the best of these I'll sell to thee.
Oh he picked up the sea crab by the back
bone-- And he tugged and he tugged till he got him clear home.
When he got home his wife was
asleep-- So he put him in a piss pot six feet deep.
Oh the old Queen arose and sat on the
pot And the damned old (sea) crab grabbed her by the twot.
Old man, old man, sure as you're
born, The devil's in the piss pot, got me on his horn.
The old king arose and he lifted up her
clothes, And the damned old sea crab grabbed him by the nose.
Old lady, old lady, can't you let a
fart And blow this damn old crab apart.
Oh she heaved and she squeezed and she
pooped a little bit And she filled John Henry's face full of
shit.
The old Queen rose and picked up a
broom And chased the sea crab 'round the room.
But the sea crab he did laugh up his
sleeve For he knew that he had taken French leave.
3913 March 3 -
1918
Listen my people and to you I'll
tell The tale of a couple I once knew real well The maid she was
skinny and not very tall The man he was large but had no balls at
all.
No balls at all, no balls at all, For
she married a man who had no balls at all.
The very first night when they crawled
into bed Her cheeks they were rosy, her lips they were red She reached
for his penis and found it quite small For she married a man who had no
balls at all.
Oh mother, Oh mother, I wish I were
dead And buried along with my poor maiden head My sorrows are many, my
pleasures are small For I've married a man who has no balls at
all.
Oh daughter, Oh caughter, why are you so
sad Just do to your man like I did to your dad There's many a man who
will answer the call Of a wife whose husband has no balls at
all.
Some women are pure and free from
sin But nine out of ten have their bung holes pushed in. Bungholes
pushed in, bungholes pushed in, But nine out of ten have their bungholes
pushed in.
[3913]
March 5--1918
Don't look at me that way, mister I
didn't shit on the seat I just came down from the mountains And me
balls are itchin with gleet.
We hail from Lehigh Valley Me and me
brother Lou We were pimps in a whore-house And God damn good ones
too.
Now I had a girl named Ivy And she was
just the stuff There weren't nothin' wrong with her liver By God, you
couldn't give her enough.
But along came a guy named Duncan And
he was a city chap He took her off in the mountains And gave her a
dose of clap.
Then along came a Mexican greaser He
was handsome and rich He took her off and raped her The pink whiskered
son of a bitch.
So that's why I'm here tonight
sir, And it's here I'm going to stay For I'll catch the runt that
stole my cunt If it takes me till judgement day.
[3913]
THE WHORES LAMENT
As I walked down by King James'es
Hospital King James'es hospital one morning in May- There I espied a
handsome young Hooker All wraped in white linen as cold as the
clay
Come sit down beside me my own dear Sister Gams sit down and dont
mind if I cry For the bubo's are aching and my poor
heart is breaking And with sad meditations I am going to die.
Then beat the drums lowly and play the
fife slowly Play the dead march as I'm carried along Take me to the
church-yard and lay the sod oer me For I am a young whore and know I've
done rong.
Go send for the Minister for to pray ore
me Go send for the Doctor to heal up my
wound And send for the young man that first did
seduce me So I may see him before I go
home
So cruel was the man that first did
seduce me That he did not tell me in
time That I might aplyed to the pills of white
mercury Now I am a young whore cut down in my
prime.
Once on the street I drest in the
fasion Once on the street I dreast so
gay But it was first to the dance house and
then to the ale house And then to the Whore House and now to
the clay
Let six jollie gamblers go cary my
coffin Let six flameing Whores go sing a
song And in their hands cary a bunch of wild
roses So that they cant smell me as they cary
me along.
3913 March 3 --1918
OH NOAH
"Oh Noah, Oh! Noah, may I come into the
ark of the Lord For it's growing very dark and it's raining very
hard?" Tra la lu, tra la lu, tra la lu la.
"Young fellow, young fellow, you can't
come into the ark of the Lord, Though it's growing very dark, and it's
raining very hard." Tra la lu, tra la lu, tra la lu la.
"Go to Hell then, go to Hell then, go to
Hell with your damned old For it ain't going to rain very hard anyhow."
[dinky scow, Tra la lu, tra la lu, tra la lu la.
"It's a lie, sir, it's a lie, sir, it's a
lie for your life for you That it's sprinkling now, going to rain like
Hell." [know damn well Tra la lu, tra la lu, tra la lu la.
"Oh Noah, Oh Noah, you damned old son of
a tightwad you. I do not care to ride with you." Tra la lu, tra la lu,
tra la lu la.
"Young fellow, young fellow, your plea
for life ain't worth a shit So get the Hell off my good ship," Tra la
lu, tra la lu, tra la lu la.
3914
THE KEY HOLE IN THE DOOR
We left the parlor early, I think it was
scarcely nine When by some happy fortune her room was next to
mine Resolved like bold Columbus new regions to explore I took a snug
position by the key hole in the door.
Then stooping down in silence aresting on
one knee Most patiently I waited to see what I could see She first
took off her collar it fell upon the floor I saw her stoop to get it
through the key hole in the door.
This fair maid then proceeded took off
her pretty dress And then her under garments some fifty more or
less But to tell the truth sincerely I think there were a score But I
could not count correctly through the key hole in the door.
Then up before the mirror this lovely
maiden stood Reviewing the rich beauty that favored in her blood My
hair uprose like brussels upon an angry bore Great God I felt like
jumping through the key hole in the door.
Then down upon the carpet she sat with
graceful ease Lifting up her chemise above her sparkling knees Two sky
blue garters on either leg she wore I watch this pretty process through
the key hole in the door.
Then up before the fire her little feet
to warm With nothing but a chemise to conceal her lovely form I cries
take off that chemise and I'll ask for nothing more You bet I saw her do
it through the key hole in the door.
You dreaming men of science constrain
your eager eyes And gaze upon the planets and decorated skies This
world is more implanted than you or I implore. But a telescope is nothing
to a key hole in a door.
Anonymous
3915
FLASH NELL
There is a young damsel, a damsel of
fame, A Moll of the Highway, Plash Hell is her name. She cruised in
"the Bay" and loudly did bawl, "Rig out your long jib booms, you bellox
and all."
Her dress she unbent; she brailed up her
chemise, And hauled down her silk stockings my actions to please. She
slipped my jib boom 'tween her lily white thighs, Saying "Bli' me young
sailor, oh ain't it a size."
I rode her a watch and an hour or so
more, 'Till my jib boom fell limber and my bobstay grew sore, I
emptied my bellox and felt I was done, No charge in the locker to fire
off my gun.
For quarter, "Oh quarter," to her I did
cry, "No quarter bold sailor," Flash Nell did reply; "You hare the
best quarters that I can afford; So, 'turn to' with your fucking or jump
overboard."
Singing fal the ral dadee dal de dal dal
day.
"The above dates probably from the middle
of the last century, when Ratcliffe Highway, London, was at it's
'best' teeming with whores and 'Homeward Bounders' from the
Indias China and Australia. 'The Bay' was a sailor designation for
Tiger Bay or Pennington Street. It lies off and paralell with the
Ratcliffe Highway."
M. D. Little
3916 July 4, 1899
AN INCIDENT OF THE LATE WAR
Don Camara, Don Camara, you are a funny
creature; You've given to this cruel war a new and curious
feature. You'd hare us think, while every man is bound to be a
fighter, The women (bless the pretty dears) should save their P for
nitre.
Don Camara, Don Camara, where did you get
the notion To send your barrels round the town to gather up the
lotion? We thought the woman's duty done in keeping house and
diddling, But now you'd put the pretty dears to patriotic
piddling.
Don Camara, Don Camara, do pray invent a
neater And somewhat less immodest way of making your Saltpetre. The
thing's so very queer you know, gunpowder-like and cranky, That when a
lady "jerks her brine1" she shoots a bloody yankae.
--O--
[One copy of the above was sent home to
New York where a wag saw it and sent the following reply:--]
Don Camara, Don Camara, we've read in
song and story, How women's tears in all these years have sprinkled
fields of glory; But ne'er before did women help their braves in deeds of
slaughter Till Spanish beauties dried their tears and went to making
water.
No wonder, Don, your boys are brave,--who
would not be a fighter, If every time he shot a gun ha used his
sweetheart's nitre? And vice versa, what would make a Yankee soldier
sadder Than dodging bullets fired from a pretty woman's
bladder?
We've heard it said a subtle smell still
lingered in this powder And as the smoke grew thicker and the din of
battle louder, That there was found in this compound a serious
objection,— The soldiers could not sniff it without getting an
erection.
'Tis clear now why desertion is common in
our ranks; An Artic nature's needed to withstand Dame Nature's
pranks. A Yankee boy can't stand the press when once he's had a
smell; He's got to have a "bit" or bust,—-the cause can go to
Hell.
[At the top of the broadside is the
following:—]
The latest accounts to hand state that
the value of the ammunition used by Admiral Dewey at the bombardment of
Manila was only L9,400 and by the Atlantic fleet at
Santiago about
L20,000. At Manila 5,681 projectiles are
now said to have been fired and at Santiago 7,581 shells.
3916 July 4, 1899
AN INCIDENT OF THE LATE WAR
(2)
During the latter period of the
Spanish-American War, the supply of Ammunition in the Spanish Camp was so
short that a member of their Ordnance Department devised a scheme for
providing the necessary ingredient, Saltpetre; and as an experiment
inserted the following advertisement in a Manila Newspaper :--
'The ladies of Manila are respectfully
requested to preserve their Chamber Lye as it is very needful to the
cause of Spain in the manufacture of nitre, a necessary ingredient of
gunpowder. Wagons with barrels will be sent to residences daily to
collect and remove the same.'
(Sgd.) 'Don Camara'
Manila, P. I., July 4th, 1899.
3917
SALLY
Sally, Sally, sitting in a shoe shining
shop. When she sits she shines all day, When she shines she sits all
day, Sally, Sally, sitting in a shoe shining shop.
Anonymous
3918
AS I WAS GOING TO SALISBURY
As I was going to Salisbury Upon a market day, Why, there I met a pretty fair
maid And she was going my way And she was going my way, Sir, With butter and eggs to sell, And we jogged along together, With a titti-for-aw-for-el.
And as we jogged along, Sir, Side by side, By some strange chance it happened,
Sir, That her garter came untied, Her garter came untied, Sir, A hands breadth o'er the knee, And we jogged along together, With a titti-for-aw-for-el.
And would you be so very good, And would you be so free, And would you be so very good As to do it up for me, Why yes, fair maid, and that I
will When we get to yonder hill And we jogged along together With a titti-for-aw-for-el.
When yonder hill was reached,
Sir, The grass it was so green That the tying up of that garter,
Sir, Was the prettiest sight e'er
seen For she spread wide her lilly white
thighs, And I slipped in between, And we jogged along together With a titti-for-aw-for-een.
And now I must be going, Sir, My
butter and eggs are sold, And I have lost my maiden head Which makes
my heart run cold, For I have lost my maiden head To a man that I
abhore, And he's a dirty son of a bitch And I'm a bloody
whore.
3919
As I was strollin' round and
round, Huntin' fun in ivery quarther, I stopped meself in a little
Dutch inn An' ordhered up me gin an' wather, One-eyed
Reilly, Two-eyed Reilly, Ho for the land of the one-eyed
Reillys!"
[Correspondence, Unknown, undated
newspaper clipping, signed 7. Gregory Hartswick.]
3919
The old red bull came down from the
mountain, You, St. John, You, St. John, The old red bull came down
from the mountain, A long--time--ago.
[Correspondence. Unknown, undated
newspaper clipping signed F. Gregory Bartswick.]
[3920]
THE COWBOY'S LAMENT
[Article entitled "Spring Man Claims
Authorship of Famous Old Cowboy Ballad" clipped from [Denver, Colorado ?]
Sunday Gazette and Telegraph, January 27, 1924, claiming it was written by
F. H. Maynard in 1876.]
[See correspondence.]
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