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the bab ballads-第1部分
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The Bab Ballads
by W。 S。 Gilbert
Contents:
Captain Reece
The Rival Curates
Only A Dancing Girl
General John
To A Little Maid … By A Policeman
John And Freddy
Sir Guy The Crusader
Haunted
The Bishop And The ‘Busman
The Troubadour
Ferdinando And Elvira; Or; The Gentle Pieman
Lorenzo De Lardy
Disillusioned … By An Ex…Enthusiast
Babette's Love
To My Bride … (Whoever She May Be)
The Folly Of Brown … By A General Agent
Sir Macklin
The Yarn Of The 〃Nancy Bell〃
The Bishop Of Rum…Ti…Foo
The Precocious Baby。 A Very True Tale
To Phoebe
Baines Carew; Gentleman
Thomas Winterbottom Hance
The Reverend Micah Sowls
A Discontented Sugar Broker
The Pantomime 〃Super〃 To His Mask
The Force Of Argument
The Ghost; The Gallant; The Gael; And The Goblin
The Phantom Curate。 A Fable
The Sensation Captain
Tempora Mutantur
At A Pantomime。 By A Bilious One
King Borria Bungalee Boo
The Periwinkle Girl
Thomson Green And Harriet Hale
Bob Polter
The Story Of Prince Agib
Ellen McJones Aberdeen
Peter The Wag
Ben Allah Achmet; … Or; The Fatal Tum
The Three Kings Of Chickeraboo
Joe Golightly … Or; The First Lord's Daughter
To The Terrestrial Globe。 By A Miserable Wretch
Gentle Alice Brown
Ballad: Captain Reece
Of all the ships upon the blue;
No ship contained a better crew
Than that of worthy CAPTAIN REECE;
Commanding of THE MANTELPIECE。
He was adored by all his men;
For worthy CAPTAIN REECE; R。N。;
Did all that lay within him to
Promote the comfort of his crew。
If ever they were dull or sad;
Their captain danced to them like mad;
Or told; to make the time pass by;
Droll legends of his infancy。
A feather bed had every man;
Warm slippers and hot…water can;
Brown windsor from the captain's store;
A valet; too; to every four。
Did they with thirst in summer burn;
Lo; seltzogenes at every turn;
And on all very sultry days
Cream ices handed round on trays。
Then currant wine and ginger pops
Stood handily on all the 〃tops;〃
And also; with amusement rife;
A 〃Zoetrope; or Wheel of Life。〃
New volumes came across the sea
From MISTER MUDIE'S libraree;
THE TIMES and SATURDAY REVIEW
Beguiled the leisure of the crew。
Kind…hearted CAPTAIN REECE; R。N。;
Was quite devoted to his men;
In point of fact; good CAPTAIN REECE
Beatified THE MANTELPIECE。
One summer eve; at half…past ten;
He said (addressing all his men):
〃Come; tell me; please; what I can do
To please and gratify my crew。
〃By any reasonable plan
I'll make you happy if I can;
My own convenience count as NIL:
It is my duty; and I will。〃
Then up and answered WILLIAM LEE
(The kindly captain's coxswain he;
A nervous; shy; low…spoken man);
He cleared his throat and thus began:
〃You have a daughter; CAPTAIN REECE;
Ten female cousins and a niece;
A Ma; if what I'm told is true;
Six sisters; and an aunt or two。
〃Now; somehow; sir; it seems to me;
More friendly…like we all should be;
If you united of 'em to
Unmarried members of the crew。
〃If you'd ameliorate our life;
Let each select from them a wife;
And as for nervous me; old pal;
Give me your own enchanting gal!〃
Good CAPTAIN REECE; that worthy man;
Debated on his coxswain's plan:
〃I quite agree;〃 he said; 〃O BILL;
It is my duty; and I will。
〃My daughter; that enchanting gurl;
Has just been promised to an Earl;
And all my other familee
To peers of various degree。
〃But what are dukes and viscounts to
The happiness of all my crew?
The word I gave you I'll fulfil;
It is my duty; and I will。
〃As you desire it shall befall;
I'll settle thousands on you all;
And I shall be; despite my hoard;
The only bachelor on board。〃
The boatswain of THE MANTELPIECE;
He blushed and spoke to CAPTAIN REECE:
〃I beg your honour's leave;〃 he said;
〃If you would wish to go and wed;
〃I have a widowed mother who
Would be the very thing for you …
She long has loved you from afar:
She washes for you; CAPTAIN R。〃
The Captain saw the dame that day …
Addressed her in his playful way …
〃And did it want a wedding ring?
It was a tempting ickle sing!
〃Well; well; the chaplain I will seek;
We'll all be married this day week
At yonder church upon the hill;
It is my duty; and I will!〃
The sisters; cousins; aunts; and niece;
And widowed Ma of CAPTAIN REECE;
Attended there as they were bid;
It was their duty; and they did。
Ballad: The Rival Curates
List while the poet trolls
Of MR。 CLAYTON HOOPER;
Who had a cure of souls
At Spiffton…extra…Sooper。
He lived on curds and whey;
And daily sang their praises;
And then he'd go and play
With buttercups and daisies。
Wild croquet HOOPER banned;
And all the sports of Mammon;
He warred with cribbage; and
He exorcised backgammon。
His helmet was a glance
That spoke of holy gladness;
A saintly smile his lance;
His shield a tear of sadness。
His Vicar smiled to see
This armour on him buckled:
With pardonable glee
He blessed himself and chuckled。
〃In mildness to abound
My curate's sole design is;
In all the country round
There's none so mild as mine is!〃
And HOOPER; disinclined
His trumpet to be blowing;
Yet didn't think you'd find
A milder curate going。
A friend arrived one day
At Spiffton…extra…Sooper;
And in this shameful way
He spoke to Mr。 HOOPER:
〃You think your famous name
For mildness can't be shaken;
That none can blot your fame …
But; HOOPER; you're mistaken!
〃Your mind is not as blank
As that of HOPLEY PORTER;
Who holds a curate's rank
At Assesmilk…cum…Worter。
〃HE plays the airy flute;
And looks depressed and blighted;
Doves round about him 'toot;'
And lambkins dance delighted。
〃HE labours more than you
At worsted work; and frames it;
In old maids' albums; too;
Sticks seaweed … yes; and names it!〃
The tempter said his say;
Which pierced him like a needle …
He summoned straight away
His sexton and his beadle。
(These men were men who could
Hold liberal opinions:
On Sundays they were good …
On week…days they were minions。)
〃To HOPLEY PORTER go;
Your fare I will afford you …
Deal him a deadly blow;
And blessings shall reward you。
〃But stay … I do not like
Undue assassination;
And so before you strike;
Make this communication:
〃I'll give him this one chance …
If he'll more gaily bear him;
Play croquet; smoke; and dance;
I willingly will spare him。〃
They went; those minions true;
To Assesmilk…cum…Worter;
And told their errand to
The REVEREND HOPLEY PORTER。
〃What?〃 said that reverend gent;
〃Dance through my hours of leisure?
Smoke? … bathe myself with scent? …
Play croquet? Oh; with pleasure!
〃Wear all my hair in curl?
Stand at my door and wink … so …
At every passing girl?
My brothers; I should think so!
〃For years I've longed for some
Excuse for this revulsion:
Now that excuse has come …
I do it on compulsion!!!〃
He smoked and winked away …
This REVEREND HOPLEY PORTER …
The deuce there was to pay
At Assesmilk…cum…Worter。
And HOOPER holds his ground;
In mildness daily growing …
They think him; all around;
The mildest curate going。
Ballad: Only A Dancing Girl
Only a dancing girl;
With an unromantic style;
With borrowed colour and curl;
With fixed mechanical smile;
With many a hackneyed wile;
With ungrammatical lips;
And corns that mar her trips。
Hung from the 〃flies〃 in air;
She acts a palpable lie;
She's as little a fairy there
As unpoetical I!
I hear you asking; Why …
Why in the world I sing
This tawdry; tinselled thing?
No airy fairy she;
As she hangs in arsenic green
From a highly impossible tree
In a highly impossible scene
(Herself not over…clean)。
For fays don't suffer; I'm told;
From bunions; coughs; or cold。
And stately dames that bring
Their daughters there to see;
Pronounce the 〃dancing thing〃
No better than she should be;
With her skirt at her shameful knee;
And her painted; tainted phiz:
Ah; matron; which of us is?
(And; in sooth; it oft occurs
That while these matrons sigh;
Their dresses are lower than hers;
And sometimes half as high;
And their hair is hair they buy;
And they use their glasses; too;
In a way she'd blush to do。)
But change her gold and green
For a coarse merino gown;
And see her upon the scene
Of her home; when coaxing down
Her drunken father's frown;
In his squalid cheerless den:
She's a fairy truly; then!
Ballad: General John
The bravest names for fire and flames
And all that mortal durst;
Were GENERAL JOHN and PRIVATE JAMES;
Of the Sixty…seventy…first。
GENERAL JOHN was a soldier tried;
A chief of warlike dons;
A haughty stride and a withering pride
Were MAJOR…GENERAL JOHN'S。
A sneer would play on his martial phiz;
Superior birth to show;
〃Pish!〃 was a favourite word of his;
And he often said 〃Ho! ho!〃
FULL…PRIVATE JAMES described might be;
As a man of a mournful mind;
No characteristic trait had he
Of any distinctive kind。
From the ranks; one day; cried PRIVATE JAMES;
〃Oh! MAJOR…GENERAL JOHN;
I've doubts of our respective names;
My mournful mind upon。
〃A glimmering thought occurs to me
(Its source I can't unearth);
But I've a kind of a notion we
Were cruelly changed at birth。
〃I've a strange idea that each other's names
We've each of us here got on。
Such things have been;〃 said PRIVATE JAMES。
〃They have!〃 sneered GENERAL JOHN。
〃My GENERAL JOHN; I swear upon
My oath I think 'tis so … 〃
〃Pish!〃 proudly sneered
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