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Henry Lawson - And What Have You To Say?Henry Lawson - And What Have You To Say?
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I MIND the days when ladies fair     Helped on my overcoat, And tucked the silken handkerchief     About my precious throat; They used to see the poet’s soul     In every song I wrote.         They pleaded hard, but I had work             To do, and could not stay         I used to work the whole night through,             And what have you to say? ’Twas clever, handsome woman then,     And I their rising star; I could not see they worshipped me,     Because I saw too far. (’Tis well for one or two, I think,     That things are as they are.)         (I used to write for writing’s sake,             I used to write till day,         I loved my prose and poetry,             And what have you to say?) I guess if one should meet me now     That she would gasp to think, She ever knew a thing like me,     As down the street I slink, And trembling cadge from some old pal     The tray-bit for a drink.         I used to drink with gentlemen             To pass an hour away:         I drink long beers in common bars,             And what have you to say? But often, in the darkest night     (And ’tis a wondrous thing)— When others see the devils dance,     I hear the angels sing, And round the drunkard’s lonely bed     Heaven’s nurses whispering.         I wrote for Truth and Right alone,             I wrote from night till day;         I’ll find a drunken pauper grave,             And what have you to say?             Good night!             Good day!             My noble friends,         And what have you to say?
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