Sunday, May 20, 2012
ha ha ha you and me little brown jug don't I love thee -- 1869
Speranza
1869
ha ha ha
you and me
little brown jug
don't I love thee
me and my wife live all alone
in a little log hut we call our own;
she loves gin and I love rum,
and don't we have a lot of fun!
when I go toiling on the farm
I take the little jug under my arm;
place it under a shady tree,
little brown jug, 'tis you and me.
’tis you that makes me friends and foes,
’tis you that makes me wear old clothes;
but, seeing you're so near my nose,
tip her up and down she goes.
if all the folks in Adam's race
were gathered together in one place,
I'd let them go without a tear
before I'd part from you, my dear.
if I'd a cow that gave such milk,
I'd dress her in the finest silk;
feed her up on oats and hay,
and milk her twenty times a day.
I bought a cow from Farmer Jones,
and she was nothing but skin and bones;
I fed her up as fine as silk,
she jumped the fence and strained her milk.
and when I die don't bury me at all,
just pickle my bones in alcohol;
put a bottle o' booze at my head and feet
and then I know that I will keep.
the rose is red, my nose is too,
the violet's blue and so are you;
and yet, I guess, before I stop,
we'd better take another drop.
--- Joseph Winner, 1869.
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