THE FISHERMEN HUNG THE MONKEY-O
 
In former times, 'mid war an' strife,
When French invashin threatened life,
An' all was arm'd te the knife,
The Fishermen hung the Monkey, O!
The fishermen, wi' courage high,
Siezed the Monkey for a spy.
Hang him says yen, says another he'll die;
They did, an' they hung the Monkey O!

(To sympathise with the unfortunate Monkey, altogether.)
cho: Dooram, dooram, dooram, da, etc.

They tried ivery means te myek him speak,
They tortor'd the Monkey tiv he loud did squeak;
Says yet that's French, asys anuther it's Greek,
For the Fishermen then gat drunkey, O!
He's all ower hair sum cheps did cry,
E'en up te summic cute an' sly;
Wiv a cod's heed then they closed an eye,
Afore they hung the Monkey, O!

Spoken- Ladies an' cheps, a chorus this time to mark our disapprobashin o' the
Pugnaeshis Fishermen
for closin' the ogle ov the unfortunate monkey.

Some the Monkey's fate they did bewail,
For all the speechles pug had his tail (tale),
He'd been better off i' Durham Jail,
For the Monkey wis tornin funkey, O!
They said he myed some curose mugs,
When they shaved his head an' cut off his lugs,
Sayin' that's the game for French humbugs,
Afore they hung the Monkey, O!

Spoken-- Chorus in considerashin of the removal and total annihilashin of the
Monkey's auricular organ
by all those who have an ear for gorilla sensashins.

Dooram, etc.

Hammere his ribs, the thunerin thief,
Pummel his pyet weel wi' yor neef,
He's landed here for nobbit grief,
He's aud Napoleon's Uncky, O!
Thustothe Monkey all hands behaved,
Cut off his whiskers one chep raved;
Another bawled oot he's never been shaved,
So they commenced to scrape the Monkey, O!

(After the style of "Lather and sheave' em.")
dooram, etc.

Now let us hope that ever at sea
We'll still maintain soverignty,
May Fance and England long agree,
An' nivor at each other get funkey, O!
As regards poor Pug aw've had my say,
His time they've past for mony a day,
But in Hartlepool, noo, thou'll hear lads say--

Spoken- Aw asy, Mistor, mother says it, she telled me te ax ye, te tell me te
tell her;
if ye tell me,- aw say, Mistor, can ye tell us--

(Sings)--Whe hung the Monkey, O?
Dooram, etc.

-Edward Corvan, 1862, In: Allan's Illustrated Edition of Tyneside Songs and
Readings....,
Thomas and George Allan, NewcastleUpon Tyne, 1891.
The Fishermen hung the Monkey, O!- These words are the greatest insult you can
offer to
the Hartlepool fishermen. It is supposed when Napoleon the Great threatened to
invade
England the Fishermen were loyal and patriotic, and ever on the look-out for
spies.
A vessel having been wrecked about this time, all on board perished with the
exception
of a monkey, which was seized by the fishermen for a French spy, and hung
because he
could not or would not speak English.
Tune- The Tinker's wedding.

@animal
filename[ HARTMON2
CB
Feb07
mudcat.org
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