’TWAS to a small, up-country town, When we were boys at school, There came a circus with a clown, Likewise a bucking mule. The clown announced a scheme they had Spectators for to bring— They’d give a crown to any lad Who’d ride him round the ring.
And, gentle reader, do not scoff
Nor think a man a fool— To buck a porous-plaster off Was pastime to that mule.
The boys got on he bucked like sin;
The elephant went off his trunk,
The monkey played the fool, And all the band got blazing drunk When Dacey rode the mule.
But soon there rose a galling shout
The band struck up with “Killaloe”,
Then Dacey, in a furious rage,
For big baboons with canine snout
Are spiteful, as a rule— The people didn’t sit it out, When Dacey rode the mule.
And from the beasts he let escape,
And when those legislators fight,
And drink, and act the fool, Just blame it on that torrid night When Dacey rode the mule. |