The Squatter, Three Cornstalks, and the Well
(A Dirge of Sin and Sorrow, Sung by Joe Swallow)
There was a Squatter in the land —
So runs the truthful tale I tell —
There also were three Cornstalks, and
There also was the Squatter's Well.
Singing ( slowly ): " Sin and sorrer, sin and sor-rer, sin and sor-r-r-rer. "
The Squatter he was full of pluck,
The Cornstalks they were full of sin,
The well it was half full of muck
That many rains had drifted in.
Singing ( with increased feeling ): " Sin, &c. "
The Squatter hired the Cornstalks Three
To cleanse the well of mud and clay;
And so they started willing-lee
At five-and-twenty bob a day.
Singing ( apprehensively ): " Sin, &c. "
At five-and-twenty bob the lot —
That's eight-and-four the day would bring
To each; and so they thought they'd got
A rather soft and easy thing.
Singing ( sadly ): " Sin, &c. "
The Cornstalks cleaned the well within
A day or two, or thereabout —
And then they worked an awful sin —
A scheme to make the job last out.
Singing ( reproachfully ): " Sin and sorrer, &c. "
For when the well was cleaned out quite
Of all its logs and muck and clay
They tipped a drayload down at night
And worked to haul it up next day.
Singing ( dismally ): " Sin, &c. "
But first the eldest, christened Hodge,
He greased the dray-wheel axles, so
The super wouldn't smell the dodge
And couldn't let the Squatter know.
Singing ( hopelessly ): " Sin and sorrer, &c. "
The stuff they surfaced out each day
With some surprise the Squatter saw.
He never dreamt the sand and clay
Was three miles off the night before.
Singing ( mournfully ): " Sin and sorrer, &c. "
But he got something in his eye;
It wasn't green, that's very plain.
He said the well was rather dry,
And they could fill it up again.
Singing ( mournfully and dismally ): " Sin and sorrer, &c. "
The Cornstalks went to work next day
In hope, of course, of extra tin —
The Squatter watched, and, sad to say,
The mullock wouldn't all go in.
Singing ( with great pathos ): " Sin and sorrer, &c. "
And though the Cornstalks twigged the ruse
Whereby the boss had done 'em brown,
They argued that the clay was loose,
And wanted time to settle down.
Singing ( hopelessly ): " Sin and sorrer, &c. "
The boss began to rave and tear,
And yelled with a most awful frown,
" I will not settle up, I swear,
Till that there clay is settled down! "
Singing ( hopefully ): " Sin, &c. "
" Before my cheques yer'll pocket, boys,
Yer'll put a mountain in a well " —
The Cornstalks didn't make a noise,
They only murmured sadly — !
Singing ( triumphantly ): " Sin and sorrer, &c. "
There is a moral to my rhyme —
A moral to the dirge I sing —
That when you do go in for crime
You mustn't overdoo the thing.
Singing ( more dismally than ever ): " Sin and sorrer, s-i-n and sor-r-r-r-rer! "
There was a Squatter in the land —
So runs the truthful tale I tell —
There also were three Cornstalks, and
There also was the Squatter's Well.
Singing ( slowly ): " Sin and sorrer, sin and sor-rer, sin and sor-r-r-rer. "
The Squatter he was full of pluck,
The Cornstalks they were full of sin,
The well it was half full of muck
That many rains had drifted in.
Singing ( with increased feeling ): " Sin, &c. "
The Squatter hired the Cornstalks Three
To cleanse the well of mud and clay;
And so they started willing-lee
At five-and-twenty bob a day.
Singing ( apprehensively ): " Sin, &c. "
At five-and-twenty bob the lot —
That's eight-and-four the day would bring
To each; and so they thought they'd got
A rather soft and easy thing.
Singing ( sadly ): " Sin, &c. "
The Cornstalks cleaned the well within
A day or two, or thereabout —
And then they worked an awful sin —
A scheme to make the job last out.
Singing ( reproachfully ): " Sin and sorrer, &c. "
For when the well was cleaned out quite
Of all its logs and muck and clay
They tipped a drayload down at night
And worked to haul it up next day.
Singing ( dismally ): " Sin, &c. "
But first the eldest, christened Hodge,
He greased the dray-wheel axles, so
The super wouldn't smell the dodge
And couldn't let the Squatter know.
Singing ( hopelessly ): " Sin and sorrer, &c. "
The stuff they surfaced out each day
With some surprise the Squatter saw.
He never dreamt the sand and clay
Was three miles off the night before.
Singing ( mournfully ): " Sin and sorrer, &c. "
But he got something in his eye;
It wasn't green, that's very plain.
He said the well was rather dry,
And they could fill it up again.
Singing ( mournfully and dismally ): " Sin and sorrer, &c. "
The Cornstalks went to work next day
In hope, of course, of extra tin —
The Squatter watched, and, sad to say,
The mullock wouldn't all go in.
Singing ( with great pathos ): " Sin and sorrer, &c. "
And though the Cornstalks twigged the ruse
Whereby the boss had done 'em brown,
They argued that the clay was loose,
And wanted time to settle down.
Singing ( hopelessly ): " Sin and sorrer, &c. "
The boss began to rave and tear,
And yelled with a most awful frown,
" I will not settle up, I swear,
Till that there clay is settled down! "
Singing ( hopefully ): " Sin, &c. "
" Before my cheques yer'll pocket, boys,
Yer'll put a mountain in a well " —
The Cornstalks didn't make a noise,
They only murmured sadly — !
Singing ( triumphantly ): " Sin and sorrer, &c. "
There is a moral to my rhyme —
A moral to the dirge I sing —
That when you do go in for crime
You mustn't overdoo the thing.
Singing ( more dismally than ever ): " Sin and sorrer, s-i-n and sor-r-r-r-rer! "
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