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The Three Bohemian Ones
A worthy man in every way Three sons he had, and only three, On Sundays they would laugh and joke, At length the eldest son, called Dan, |
The second (Donald) would insist
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And as they trod these fearful ways
(These three misguided Porklebays)
They drew not on their father’s hoard —
For Jasper threw them overboard.
Yes — Jasper, grieving at their fall,
Renounced them one, renounced them all.
And lived alone, so good and wise,
At Zion Villa, Clapham Rise.
By dint of work and skilful plan
Old Jasper grew a wealthy man;
And people said, in slangy form,
That Jasper P. would “cut up warm.”
He had no relative at all So he determined he would fain When his intent was known abroad, |
St. George’s, Charing Cross, and Guy’s,
And little Westminster likewise,
Bartholomew’s and Middlesex,
Combined old Jasper to perplex.
House surgeons, spite of patients’ hints,
Bound headaches up in fracture splints;
In measles, strapped the spots that come,
With strips of plain diachylum.
Rare leeches, skilled at fever beds,
For toothache shaved their patients’ heads;
And always cut their fingers off
If they complained of whooping cough.
Their zeal grew greater day by day,
And each did all that in him lay
To prove his own pet hospital
The most deserving of them all.
Though Jasper P. could not but feel
Delighted at this show of zeal,
When each in zeal exceeds the rest,
One can’t determine which is best.
Interea, his reckless boys
Indulged in low Bohemian joys:
They sometimes smoked till all was blue,
And danced at evening parties too.
The hospitals, conflicting sore,
Perplexed poor Jasper more and more.
But, ah! ere Jasper could decide,
Poor charitable man, he died.
And Donald, Singleton, and Dan By strange exceptions Virtue deigns |
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Page Created 30 July, 2011