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Henry Lawson - A New John BullHenry Lawson - A New John Bull
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A tall, slight, English gentleman,    With an eyeglass to his eye; He mostly says “Good-Bai” to you,    When he means to say “Good-bye”; He shakes hands like a ladies’ man,    For all the world to see— But they know, in Corners of the World.    No ladies’ man is he. A tall, slight English gentleman,    Who hates to soil his hands; He takes his mother’s drawing-room    To the most outlandish lands; And when, through Hells we dream not of,    His battery prevails, He cleans the grime of gunpowder    And blue blood from his nails. He’s what our blokes in Egypt call    “A decent kinder cove.” And if the Pyramids should fall?    He’d merely say “Bai Jove!” And if the stones should block his path    For a twelve-month, or a day, He’d call on Sergeant Whatsisname    To clear those things away! A quiet English gentleman,    Who dots the Empire’s rim, Where sweating sons of ebony    Would go to Hell for him. And if he chances to get “winged,”    Or smashed up rather worse, He’s quite apologetic to    The doctor and the nurse. A silent English gentleman—    Though sometimes he says “Haw.” But if a baboon in its cage    Appealed to British Law And Justice, to be understood,    He’d listen all polite, And do his very best to set    The monkey grievance right. A thoroughbred whose ancestry    Goes back to ages dim; Yet no one on his wide estates    Need fear to speak to him. Although he never showed a sign    Of aught save sympathy, He was the only gentleman    That shamed the cad in me.
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