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The Black Bordered Letter

An’€™ SO '€™e’€™s dead in London,
An’€™ answered to the call,
An’€™ trotted through the Long Street,
With '€™earse an’€™ plumes an’€™ all?
We was village boys an’€™ brothers’€”
We was warm as we could be,
In the milk-walk an’€™ the fried fish,
Up in London, '€™im an’€™ me.
We was warm,
We was warm,
As we '€™ad always been;
We never '€™ad a dry word
Till she come between.
 
I lived round Windsor Terrace,
An’€™ '€™im across the wye,
An’€™ when I sailed a emigrant
We never said good-bye!
He wos better than a brother’€”
Wot you Bushmen call a mate.
(Did he reach the rylwye stytion,
As they told me, just too late!)
 
We was warm,
We was warm,
As pals was ever seen;
We never '€™ad a dry word
Till she come between.
 
I meant to go back '€™ome again,
I meant to write to-night;
I meant to write by every mail,
But I thought '€™e oughter write.
An’€™ now '€™e’€™s left North London’€”
For a better place, perhaps’€”
She’€™s flauntin’€™ in '€™er widder weeds,
With eyes on other chaps.
 
We was warm,
We was warm,
As we '€™ad always been;
We never '€™ad a dry word
Till she come between.
 
Oh! tongues is bad in wimmin,
When wimmin’€™s tongues is bad!
For they’€™ll part men an’€™ brothers
World oceans wide, my lad!
There was seven years between us,
An’€™ fifteen thousand mile,
An’€™ now there’€™s death an’€™ sorrer
For ever an’€™ awhile.
 
We was warm,
We was warm,
As two was ever seen;
We never '€™ad a dry word
Till she come between.
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