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The Mouth-Organ


Oh, there ain't no band to cheer us up, there ain't no 'Ighland pipers
To keep our warlike ardure warm round New Chapelle an' Wipers;
So — since there's nothin' like a tune to glad the 'eart o' man —
Why, Billy with 'is mouth-organ 'e does the best 'e can.

There ain't no birds in Plug Street Wood, the guns 'ave sent 'em flyin',
An' there ain't no song to 'ear except the squealin' shells a-cryin';
The thrushes all 'ave 'ooked it, an' the blackbirds 'ad to flit . . .
So Billy with 'is mouth-organ 'e ups an' does 'is bit.

'Is notes is somewhat limited, they are not 'igh an' soary;
'E 'asn't got that many things in 'is bloomin' repertory;
But when 'e's played the lot, why, then 'is course is straight an' plain,
'E starts at the beginnin' an' 'e plays 'em all again!

'E plays 'em oft upon the march, an' likewise in the trenches;
'E plays 'em to the Gurkhas, an' 'e's played 'em to the Frenchies;
'E may be ankle-deep in dust or middle-deep in slime,
But Billy with 'is mouth-organ 'e's at it all the time.

Wet, 'ungry, thirsty, 'ot or cold, whatever may betide 'im,
'E'll play upon the 'ob of 'ell while the breath is left inside 'im;
And when we march up Potsdam Street an' goosestep through Berlin,
Why, Billy with 'is mouth-organ 'e'll play the Army in!

Notes

From SAILOR TOWN: Sea Songs and Ballads, edited by Cicely Fox Smith, published by George H. Doran Co., New York, US, © 1919, pp. 132-133. Earlier published in THE NAVAL CROWN by Elkin Mathews in 1915. First published in PUNCH magazine, Volume 149, July 21, 1915, p. 70.

Composed during the first year of World War 1.

The header graphic titled "Harmonica Player" is a painting of British soldier by Percy E Syer during World War 1.

Charley Noble

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1 - 5 of 5

  • 1 day ago
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    PERCY E SYER

    From guest LYLA HESKETH (contact)
    I'M GLAD TO SEE HIS PICTURE WAS USED FOR SUCH A NICE POEM. THIS PICTURE WAS ALSO USED FOR A CHRISTMAS CARD AND ANY PROFITS FROM ITS SALE WERE DISTRIBUTED BY THE ARMY BENEVOLENT FUND TO ARMY CHARITIES.PERCY SENT MY MOTHER A SIGNED COPY OF THIS CARD FOR CHRISTMAS AS HE WAS HER UNCLE.


  • Charley Noble Moderators member
    November 7
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    "Harmonica Player"

    It took me over a year to finally find via Google an appropriate header graphic for this poem.

    Miss C. Fox Smith had a good ear for sailor and soldier talk and most likely spent a lot of time as a volunteer in London at the local facilities where soldiers were recovering from their wounds.

    Charley Noble

    • adios muchachos
      November 7
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      Charley N.

      If you liked the dialect in this, you might like as well this one by
      Vera Rich of London...

      http://allpoetry.com/poem/2331199

      She is maybe one of the few pros we've got on the site. Sorry if this is an intrusion.

      John-Nevada

      • Charley Noble Moderators member
        November 7
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        John-Nevada-

        You're certainly correct about Vera Rich's poetry. I find it refreshing that people are still composing such poems.

        Charley Noble

  • rbruce
    November 7
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    This is an excellent piece of writing in the 'vernacular'. An apparently uneducated soldier writing as he spoke. I have not seen a lot of this writing outside of 'Punch' and the ' Sea songs and Ballads' both of which are referred to above. I did have another book of poetry written during WW1 but have lost it somewhere and cannot remember its name.
    Poetry written during WW1 in the 'vernacular' always came directly from the heart of the writer. Wonderful stuff, sometimes heartbreaking, sometimes hilarious, but always with the ring of reality written into it.

  • adios muchachos
    November 7
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    XLNT

    If I could write a tenth as good as this...!

1 - 5 of 5