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1874–1936

BRITISH TRADE

Harry Graham

Oh, why was I born a English lad, In a island all shut in by sea? Wot a much better chance I might‘ ave‘ ad If I'd only been‘ made in Germanee’!

Oh, why was I thus unwilling‘ urled On the blooming‘ dust -‘ eap o’ the world.’ No doubt as the German artisan Do n't get very much in the matter o’ pay;

But‘ e works on the seven-days-weekly plan, With a haverage thirteen hours a day. An’‘ e‘ as n't no time for to sit an’ think, Nor money enough to take to drink!

Then give me a permanent German job, With nothink at all but work to do; With weekly wages o’ sixteen bob, For to keep myself an’ the missus too;

A-makin’ them gimcrack German toys For poor little English gals an’ boys. To my London‘ ome I'll say good-bye, For I‘ as n't no use for a open port,

Where the workin’ wage is a deal too‘ igh, An’ the workin’ hours is far too short; Where a workin’ - man‘ as time to sleep, An’ food's to be‘ ad so rotten cheap.

A German factory's more my taste, With none o’ them lazy English ways, Where there ai n't no money or time to waste On ridic'lous‘ beanos’ an’‘ olidays;

An’ the workin’ classes can just contrive To earn sufficient to keep alive. When I slaves all day at a German trade, A-makin’ them goods as they dumps down‘ ere,

When I'm overworked an’ I'm underpaid, Till I feels as weak as that German beer, I'll think o’ my English‘ ome maybe, Where everythink ( but the drinks ) is free!

When I gets back‘ ome of a Sunday night, With a supper o’ nice black bread to eat, I'll‘ ave such a‘ ealthy appetite, I never wo n't need no butcher's meat;

For‘ unger, o’ course, is the finest sauce, When you're swollerin’ sausages made of‘ orse! An’ I begs to state, when I comes‘ ome late, With a‘ ungry kind of a look in my eye,

If I‘ as to wait, with a hempty plate, Till the blooming cat's-meat-man comes by, I'll think wi’ scorn o’ the old‘ dust -‘ eap,’ Where mutton an’ beef's to be bought so cheap.

For we do n't know nothink o’‘ orse-flesh‘ ere, But Joe‘ e'll learn us to eat it, when ‘ Is tariff makes British meat too dear For the pockets o’ British workin’ men;

An’ they're‘ aving their Little Marys lined With a diet o’ maize an’ bacon rind! When the price goes up of our meat and bread, By a grand Imperial scheme o’ Joe's,

We'll get cheap sugar and tea instead, An’ we'll buy no food orf o’ Britain's foes; For we'll‘ ave no need o’ the furriner's crops When we're living on sweets washed down wi’ slops!

There's lessons to learn from German trade, In spite o’ this foolish fiscal fuss; Tho’ their peoples ai n't no better paid, Nor near as well orf for food as us;

For, wotever the German workman's lot, ‘ E knows‘ ow to use wot brains‘ e's got! An’ if our employers‘ d only learn A few o’ they furrin commercial ways,

To make the business their first concern, An’ not be so set upon‘ olidays, They would n't be always a -‘ urrying orf, For the sake of a afternoon at gorf!

With the wants o’ the trade they'd keep in touch, An’‘ d sometimes stay at the orfice late; If their business methods ai n't up to much, They, at any rate, could be up-to-date!

For there is n't no need of a fiscal fence, If you've henergy coupled wi’ common-sense! We English ai n't a-doing our best, An’ that's the reason we loses ground;

It's time as we took more interest, An’ the chance‘ as come to buck-up all round. No need for to put it in doggerel rhymes, To see as we're right be'ind the times.

For it's Heducation we wants, that's all, To make us the country we ought to be. If we rides for a fall at a tariff wall, We'll very soon find ourselves at sea.

( Which the simile's somewot mixed, you'll say, But the meanin's clear as the open day! ) Then‘ ere's a‘ ealth to the Motherland, For all as they says she's goin’ to pot;

Ole England's‘ wooden walls’‘ ll stand When the fiscal fences is all forgot! An’ she'll‘ old‘ er own, by land or sea, So long as‘ er sons an’‘ er trade is free!

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BRITISH TRADE · Harry Graham · Poetry Cove