BARRACK-ROOM BALLADS: THE LADIES
I’ve taken my fun where
I’ve found it;
I’ve rogued
an’ I’ve ranged in my time;
I’ve ‘ad my pickin’
o’ sweet’earts,
An’ four
o’ the lot was prime.
One was an ’arf-caste
widow,
One was a woman
at Prome,
One was the wife of a jemadar-saïs,
An’ one
is a girl at ’ome.
Now I aren’t no ’and
with the ladies,
For, takin’
’em all along,
You never can say till you’ve
tried ’em,
An’ then
you are like to be wrong.
There’s times when you’ll
think that you mightn’t,
There’s
times when you’ll know that you might;
But the things you will learn
from the Yellow an’ Brown,
They’ll
’elp you an ’eap with the White!
I was a young un at ’Oogli,
Shy as a girl
to begin;
Aggie de Castrer
she made me,
An’ Aggie
was clever as sin;
Older than me, but my first
un
More like a mother
she were
Showed me the way to promotion
an’ pay,
An’ I learned
about women from ’er.
Then I was ordered to Burma,
Actin’ in
charge o’ Bazar,
An’ I got me a tiddy
live ’eathen
Through buyin’
supplies off ’er pa.
Funny an’ yellow an’
faithful
Doll in a teacup
she were,
But we lived on the square,
like a true-married pair,
An’ I learned
about women from ’er.
Then we was shifted to Neemuch
(Or I might ha’
been keepin’ ’er now),
An’ I took with a shiny
she-devil,
The wife of a
nigger at Mhow;
Taught me the gipsy-folks’
bolee;
Kind o’
volcano she were,
For she knifed me one night
’cause I wished she was white,
And I learned
about women from ’er.
Then I come ’ome in
the trooper,
‘Long of
a kid o’ sixteen
Girl from a convent at Meerut,
The straightest
I ever ’ave seen.
Love at first sight was ’er
trouble,
She didn’t
know what it were;
An’ I wouldn’t
do such, ’cause I liked ’er too much,
But I
learned about women from ’er!
I’ve taken my fun where
I’ve found it,
An’ now
I must pay for my fun,
For the more you ‘ave
known o’ the others
The less will
you settle to one;
An’ the end of it’s
sittin’ and thinkin’,
An’ dreamin’
Hell-fires to see;
So be warned by my lot (which
I know you will not),
An’ learn
about women from me!
What did the colonel’s
lady think?
Nobody never knew.
Somebody asked the sergeant’s
wife,
An’ she
told ’em true.
When you get to a man in the
case,
They’re
like as a row of pins
For the colonel’s lady
an’ Judy O’Grady
Are sisters under
their skins!