The clover was in blossom,
an’ the year was at the June,
When Flap-jack Billy
hit the town, likewise O’Flynn’s saloon.
The frost was on the
fodder an’ the wind was growin’ keen,
When Billy got to seein’
snakes in Sullivan’s shebeen.
Then in meandered Deep-hole
Dan, once comrade of the cup:
“Oh Billy, for
the love of Mike, why don’t ye sober up?
I’ve got the gorgus
recipay, ‘tis smooth an’ slick as silk
Jest quit yer strangle-holt
on hooch, an’ irrigate with milk.
Lackteeal flooid is
the lubrication you require;
Yer nervus frame-up’s
like a bunch of snarled piano wire.
You want to get it coated
up with addypose tishoo,
So’s it will work
elastic-like, an’ milk’s the dope for you.”
Well, Billy was complyable,
an’ in a month it’s strange,
That cow-juice seemed
to oppyrate a most amazin’ change.
“Call up the water-wagon,
Dan, an’ book my seat,” sez he.
“’Tis mighty
queer,” sez Deep-hole Dan, “’twas
just the same with me.”
They shanghaied little
Tim O’Shane, they cached him safe away,
An’ though he
objurgated some, they “cured” him night
an’ day;
An’ pretty soon
there came the change amazin’ to explain:
“I’ll never
take another drink,” sez Timothy O’Shane.
They tried it out on
Spike Muldoon, that toper of renown;
They put it over Grouch
McGraw, the terror of the town.
They roped in “tanks”
from far and near, an’ every test was sure,
An’ like a flame
there ran the fame of Deep-hole’s Cow-juice Cure.
“It’s mighty
queer,” sez Deep-hole Dan, “I’m puzzled
through and through;
It’s only milk
from Riley’s ranch, no other milk will do.”
An’ it jest happened
on that night with no predictive plan,
He left some milk from
Riley’s ranch a-settin’ in a pan;
An’ picture his
amazement when he poured that milk next day
There in the bottom
of the pan a dozen “colours” lay.
“Well, what d’ye
know ’bout that,” sez Dan; “Gosh
ding my dasted eyes,
We’ve been an’
had the Gold Cure, Bill, an’ none of us was wise.
The milk’s free-millin’
that’s a cinch; there’s colours everywhere.
Now, let us figger this
thing out how does the dust git there?
‘Gold from the
grass-roots down’, they say why,
Bill! we’ve got it cold
Them cows what nibbles
up the grass, jest nibbles up the gold.
We’re blasted,
bloomin’ millionaires; dissemble an’ lie
low:
We’ll follow them
gold-bearin’ cows, an’ prospect where they
go.”
An’ so it came
to pass, fer weeks them miners might be found
A-sneakin’ round
on Riley’s ranch, an’ snipin’ at
the ground;
Till even Riley stops
an’ stares, an’ presently allows:
“Them boys appear
to take a mighty interest in cows.”
An’ night an’
day they shadowed each auriferous bovine,
An’ panned the
grass-roots on their trail, yet nivver gold they seen.
An’ all that season,
secret-like, they worked an’ nothin’ found;
An’ there was
colours in the milk, but none was in the ground.
An’ mighty desperate
was they, an’ down upon their luck,
When sudden, inspirationlike,
the source of it they struck.
An’ where d’ye
think they traced it to? it grieves my heart to tell
In the black sand at
the bottom of that wicked milkman’s WELL.