您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
The Man from Snowy River and Other Verses
The All Right 'Un
Andrew Barton Paterson
下载:The Man from Snowy River and Other Verses.txt
本书全文检索:
       He came from `further out',
       That land of heat and drought
       And dust and gravel.
       He got a touch of sun,
       And rested at the run
       Until his cure was done,
       And he could travel.
       When spring had decked the plain,
       He flitted off again
       As flit the swallows.
       And from that western land,
       When many months were spanned,
       A letter came to hand,
       Which read as follows:
       `Dear sir, I take my pen
       In hopes that all your men
       And you are hearty.
       You think that I've forgot
       Your kindness, Mr. Scott,
       Oh, no, dear sir, I'm not
       That sort of party.
       `You sometimes bet, I know,
       Well, now you'll have a show
       The `books' to frighten.
       Up here at Wingadee
       Young Billy Fife and me
       We're training Strife, and he
       Is a all right 'un.
       `Just now we're running byes,
       But, sir, first time he tries
       I'll send you word of.
       And running `on the crook'
       Their measures we have took,
       It is the deadest hook
       You ever heard of.
       `So when we lets him go,
       Why, then, I'll let you know,
       And you can have a show
       To put a mite on.
       Now, sir, my leave I'll take,
       Yours truly, William Blake.
       P.S. -- Make no mistake,
       HE'S A ALL RIGHT 'UN.'
       . . . . .
       By next week's RIVERINE
       I saw my friend had been
       A bit too cunning.
       I read: `The racehorse Strife
       And jockey William Fife
       Disqualified for life --
       Suspicious running.'
       But though they spoilt his game,
       I reckon all the same
       I fairly ought to claim
       My friend a white 'un.
       For though he wasn't straight,
       His deeds would indicate
       His heart at any rate
       Was `a all right 'un'.