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Rhyming History of Britain

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Quickbelle | 17:08 Thu 22nd Nov 2007 | Arts & Literature
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Am trying to find out about a rhyming history of England/Britain which my husband remembers owning as a child - it would be in the 40s/50s. The only lines he can recall are "when up the Medway sailed the Dutch"! Not very helpful I'm afraid, but would love to obtain a copy as a present.
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There is this version by Rudyard Kipling, but it isn't your one.

If wars were won by feasting,
Or victory by song,
Or safety found, by sleeping sound
How England would be strong!
But honour and dominion
Are not maintained so,
They�re only got by sword and shot
And this the Dutchmen know!
The moneys that should feed us
You spend on your delight,
How can you then, have sailor-men
To aid you in your fight?
Our fish and cheese are rotten,
Which makes the scurvy grow �
We cannot serve you if we starve,:
And this the Dutchmen know!
Our ships in every harbour
Be neither whole nor sound,
And when we seek to mend a leak,
No oakum can be found,
Or, if it is, the caulkers,
And carpenters also,
For lack of pay have gone away,
And this the Dutchmen know!
Mere powder, guns and bullets,
we scarce can get at all;
Their price was spent in merriment
And revel at Whitehall,
While we in tattered doublets
From ship to ship must row,
Beseeching friends for odds and ends �
And this the Dutchmen know!
No King will heed our warnings,
No Court will pay our claims �
Our King and Court for their disport
Do sell the very Thames!
For, now De Ruyter�s topsails
Off naked Chatham show,
We dare not meet him with our fleet �
And this the Dutchmen know!


Here's the man wot duffed up Chatham (Michiel Adriaenze de Ruyter).
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Wow, the things you learn on this site! Nothing changes much does it - the poem could well stand as an analogy of the parlous present state of English football. But best to tiptoe quietly away from that one I think. Thanks both!

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