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Down the River

I’ve done with joys an’ misery,
      An’ why should I repine?
There’s no one knows the past but me
      An’ that ol’ dog o’ mine.
We camp an’ walk an’ camp an’ walk,
      An’ find it fairly good;
He can do anything but talk,
      An’ he wouldn’t if he could.
 
We sits an’ thinks beside the fire,
      With all the stars a-shine,
An’ no one knows our thoughts but me
      An’ that there dog o’ mine.
We has our Johnny-cake an’ “scrag,”
      An’ finds 'em fairly good;
He can do anything but talk,
      An’ he wouldn’t if he could.
 
He gets a 'possum now an’ then,
      I cooks it on the fire;
He has his water, me my tea—
      What more could we desire?
He gets a rabbit when he likes,
      We finds it pretty good;
He can do anything but talk,
      An’ he wouldn’t if he could.
 
I has me smoke, he has his rest,
      When sunset’s gettin’ dim;
An’ if I do get drunk at times,
      It’s all the same to him.
So long’s he’s got me swag to mind,
      He thinks that times is good;
He can do anything but talk,
      An’ he wouldn’t if he could.
 
He gets his tucker from the cook,
      For cook is good to him,
An’ when I sobers up a bit,
      He goes an’ has a swim.
He likes the rivers where I fish,
      An’ all the world is good;
He can do anything but talk,
      An’ he wouldn’t if he could.
Other works by Henry Lawson...



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