The Little Commodore.
by J. C. Squire.
(After Henry Newbolt.)
It was eight bells in the forenoon and hammocks running sleek
(It’s a fair sea flowing from the west,)
When the little Commodore came a-sailing up the creek
(Heave Ho! I think you’ll know the rest,)
Thunder in the halyards and horses leaping high,
Blake and Drake and Nelson are listenin’ where they lie,
Four and twenty blackbirds a-bakin’ in a pie,
And the Pegasus came waltzing from the west.
Now the little Commodore sat steady on his keel
(It’s a fair sea flowing from the west,)
A heard as stout as concrete reinforced with steel
(Heave Ho! I think you’ll know the rest,)
Swinging are the scuppers, hark, the rudder snores,
Plugging at the Frenchmen, downing ‘em by scores,
Porto Rico, Vera Cruz, and also the Azores,
And the Pegasus came waltzing from the west.
So three cheers more for the little Commodore
(It’s a fair sea flowing from the west,)
I tell you so again as I’ve told you so before
(Heave Ho! I think you’ll know the rest,)
Aged is the Motherland, old but she is young
(Easy with the tackle there—don’t release the bung),
And I sang a song lake all the songs that I have ever sung,
When the Pegasus came waltzing from the west.
Friday, December 15, 2006
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