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Oh hark! the drums do beat, my love, no longer can we stay. |
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The bugle-horns are sounding clear, and we must march away. |
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We're ordered down to Portsmouth, and it's many is the weary mile. |
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To join the British Army on the banks of the Nile. |
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Oh Willie, dearest Willie, don't leave me here to mourn, |
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Don't make me curse and rue the day that ever I was born. |
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For the parting of our love would be like parting with my life. |
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So stay at home, my dearest love, and I will be your wife. |
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Oh my Nancy, dearest Nancy, sure that will never do. |
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The government has ordered, and we are bound to go. |
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The government has ordered, and the Queen she gives command. |
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And I am bound on oath, my love, to serve in a foreign land. |
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Oh, but I'll cut off my yellow hair, and I'll go along with you. |
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I'll dress myself in uniform, and I'll see Egypt too. |
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I'll march beneath your banner while fortune it do smile, |
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And we'll comfort one another on the banks of the Nile. |
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But your waist it is too slender, and your fingers they are too small. |
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In the sultry suns of Egypt your rosy cheeks would spoil. |
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Where the cannons they do rattle, when the bullets they do fly, |
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And the silver trumpets sound so loud to hide the dismal cries. |
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Oh, cursed be those cruel wars, that ever they began, |
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For they have robbed our country of manys the handsome men. |
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They've robbed us of our sweethearts while their bodies they feed the lions, |
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On the dry and sandy deserts which are the banks of the Nile. |