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The Dublin Fusilier

Here's to you,

Uncle Kruger! slainté!      an' slainté galore.

You 're a dacint ould man, begorra; never     mind if you are a Boer.

So with heart an' a half ma boucahl, we 'll     drink to your health

For yourself an' your farmer sojers gave us a     damn good fight.

I was dramin' of Kitty Farrell, away in the     Gap o' Dunloe,

When the song of the bugle woke me, ringin'     across Glencoe;

An' once in a while a bullet came pattherin'     from above,

That tould us the big brown fellows were send-     in' us down their love.'Twas a kind of an invitation, an' written in     such a han'That a Chinaman could n't refuse it- not to     spake of an Irishman.

So the pickets sent back an answer. "We're     comin' with right good will,"Along what they call the kopje, tho' to me it     looked more like a hill."Fall in on the left," sez the captain, "my     men of the Fusiliers;

You 'll see a great fight this morning -like     you have n't beheld for years.""Faith, captain dear," sez the sergeant, "you     can bet your Majuba

If the Dutch is as willin' as we are, you never     spoke truer word."So we scrambled among the bushes, the bowl-     ders an' rocks an' all,

Like the gauger's men still-huntin' on the     mountains of Donegal;

We doubled an' turned an' twisted the same     as a hunted hare,

While the big guns peppered each other over     us in the air.

Like steam from the divil's kettle the kopje     was bilin' hot,

For the breeze of the Dutchman's bullets was     the only breeze we got;

An' many a fine boy stumbled, many a brave     lad died,

When the Dutchman's message caught him     there on the mountainside.

Little Nelly O'Brien,

God help her!  over     there at ould Ballybay,

Will wait for a transvaal letter till her face an'     her hair is grey,

For I seen young Crohoore on a stretcher, an'     I knew the poor boy was

When I spoke to the ambulance doctor,an' he     nodded an' then passed on."Steady there!" cried the captain, "we must     halt for a moment here,"An' he spoke like a man in trainin' , full winded     an' strong an' clear.

So we threw ourselves down on the kopje,     weary an' tired as death,

Waitin' the captain 's orders, waitin' to get a     breath.

It 's strange all the humours an' fancies that     comes to a man like me;

But the smoke of the battle risin' took me     across the sea-It 's the mist of Benbo I 'm seein'; an' the     rock that we 'll capture

Is the rock where I shot the eagle, when I was     a small gosson.

I close my eyes for a minute, an' hear my poor     mother say,"Patrick, avick, my darlin', you 're surely not     goin'

To join the red-coated sojers?"- but the     blood in me was strong-If your sire was a Connaught Ranger, sure     where would his son belong?

Hark! whisht! do you hear the music comin'     up from the camp below?

An odd note or two when the Maxims take     breath for a second or so,

Liftin' itself on somehow, stealin' its way up     here,

Knowin' there 's waitin' to hear it, many an     Irish ear.

Augh!

Garryowen! you 're the jewel! an' we     charged on the Dutchman's guns,

An' covered the bloody kopje, like a Galway     greyhound runs,

At the top of the hill they met us, with faces     all set and grim;

But they could n't take the bayonet - that 's     the trouble with most of thim.

So of course, they 'll be praisin' the Royals     an' men of the Fusiliers,

An' the newspapers help to dry up the widows     an' orphans' tears,

An' they 'll write a new name on the colors-     that is, if there 's room for

An' we 'll follow them thro' the battle, the same     as we 've done before.

But here 's to you,

Uncle Kruger! slainté! an'     slainté galore.

After all, you 're a dacint Christian, never     mind if you are a Boer.

So with heart an' a half, ma boucahl, we 'll     drink to your health to-night,

For yourself an' your brown-faced Dutchmen     gave us a damn good fight.

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William Henry Drummond

William Henry Drummond (April 13, 1854 – April 6, 1907) was an Irish-born Canadian poet whose humorous dialect poems made him "one of the most p…

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