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(From The Seven Seas, 1896) IVE taken my fun where Ive found it; | |
| Ive rogued an Ive ranged in my time; | |
| Ive ad my pickin o sweetearts, | |
| An four o the lot was prime. | |
| One was an arf-caste widow, | 5 |
| One was a woman at Prome, | |
| One was the wife of a jemadar-sais, | |
| An one is a girl at ome. | |
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| Now I arent no and with the ladies, | |
| For, takin em all along, | 10 |
| You never can say till youve tried em, | |
| An then you are like to be wrong. | |
| Theres times when youll think that you mightnt, | |
| Theres times when youll know that you might; | |
| But the things you will learn from the Yellow an Brown, | 15 |
| Theyll elp you an eap with the White! | |
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| 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; | 20 |
| 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! | |
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| Then I was ordered to Burma, | 25 |
| 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, | 30 |
| But we lived on the square, like a true-married pair, | |
| An I learned about women from er! | |
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| Then we was shifted to Neemuch | |
| (Or I might ha been keepin er now), | |
| An I took with a shiny she-devil, | 35 |
| 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! | 40 |
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| Then I come ome in a 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, | 45 |
| She didnt know what it were; | |
| An I wouldnt do such, cause I liked er too much, | |
| ButI learned about women from er! | |
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| Ive taken my fun where Ive found it, | |
| An now I must pay for my fun, | 50 |
| For the more you ave known o the others | |
| The less will you settle to one; | |
| An the end of its sittin and thinkin, | |
| An dreamin Hell-fires to see; | |
| So be warned by my lot (which I know you will not), | 55 |
| An learn about women from me! | |
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| What did the Colonels Lady think? | |
| Nobody never knew. | |
| Somebody asked the Sergeants Wife, | |
| An she told em true! | 60 |
| When you get to a man in the case, | |
| Theyre like as a row of pins | |
| For the Colonels Lady an Judy OGrady | |
| Are sisters under their skins! | |
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