Subject: Eskimo Nell From: GUEST,Thomas Date: 12 Aug 01 - 08:09 PM I've encountered vague references to a song called "The Ballad of Eskimo Nell". Is this a real song and does anyone have the lyrics/tune/artist/recording? |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Sorcha Date: 12 Aug 01 - 08:13 PM Lyrics are in the DT here! If you put Eskimo Nell in the white search box you will also find discussions of it. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Bill D Date: 12 Aug 01 - 09:07 PM at a workshop at our folk music camp maybe 10-12 years ago, we heard a complete rendition of Eskimo Nell...(read..not from memory)...boggles the mind! |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: RangerSteve Date: 12 Aug 01 - 09:10 PM I just read the poem. I'm at a loss for words. Thank you, Sorcha. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Grab Date: 13 Aug 01 - 08:43 AM Has anyone ever heard this done from memory? I'm sure there must be _someone_ who can do it, but it'd certainly be a challenge! Graham. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Steve Parkes Date: 13 Aug 01 - 09:18 AM It's possible, but where are you going to get to perform it often enough for it to sink in properly? I set out years ago to memorise the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam (what's his name's 1st version), but only got about 1/3 of the way; but it gets tedious practicing, and the neighbours start complaining. I see it's described as "imitation Robert Service", bt I've heard it actually attributed to him, though without provenance. Does anybody know for sure? If it was his, he proaly wrote other "unsuitable" stuff (although after 60-odd verses maybe he'd had eought!) Steve |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: IanC Date: 13 Aug 01 - 09:44 AM Grab I think you just have to ask around Rugby clubs in the UK. As far as I'm aware, Eskimo Nell has always been on the menu.
Cheers! |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Grab Date: 13 Aug 01 - 10:21 AM Yeah, I know it's a traditional rugby song/recitation, but I can't imagine many ppl being able to remember all those verses in the middle of a good pissup! Graham. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: IanC Date: 13 Aug 01 - 10:38 AM But they do. The normal Rugby version isn't all that long and I've heard longer recitals.
Cheers! |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: pavane Date: 13 Aug 01 - 10:48 AM Back in 1968, a friend of mine spent his entire 3rd year at University (London) memorising it, when he wasn't playing Bridge. I never DID hear him recite it though, so I don't know if he succeeded. On another point, there have been many rumours about who wrote it, he was said to be a well known literary figure, but I never did uncover an actual name. Can we have some names of the supposed author? |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Steve Parkes Date: 13 Aug 01 - 11:42 AM Yes--Robert Service (see above!) Steve |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: IanC Date: 13 Aug 01 - 11:58 AM Grab Sorry, I only just looked at the DT version. It's been Amalgamated from 3 or 4 different sources which is why it's so long. Most versions are rather less than half the length!
Cheers! |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: pavane Date: 13 Aug 01 - 01:32 PM Any other suggested authors though? I am sure the one I was told about was someone better known. (or maybe its just my ignorance of poets) |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Abby Sale Date: 13 Aug 01 - 06:40 PM Martin Carthy recites a fine, dramatic recitation of a good, full version. My understanding is that while it cannot be proven that Service wrote it, there are no other likely candidates. It is not unusual to find extremely bawdy material from otherwise "acceptable" or children's material authors. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Gareth Date: 13 Aug 01 - 06:55 PM Well, I my Rugby playing youth we usually had one Herbert who could sing (if thats the right word) Eskimo Nell, my own party presentation was "the Harlot of Jerusalem", funny thing is as the beer kicks in you recall the verses. If sober you have difficulty recalling the name, let along the words. Gareth |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Gareth Date: 13 Aug 01 - 06:56 PM Well, I my Rugby playing youth we usually had one Herbert who could sing (if thats the right word) Eskimo Nell, my own party presentation was "the Harlot of Jerusalem", funny thing is as the beer kicks in you recall the verses. If sober you have difficulty recalling the name, let along the words. Gareth |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Joe_F Date: 13 Aug 01 - 07:01 PM The collation of the various versions, and most of the notes at the end, are mine. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Joe_F Date: 13 Aug 01 - 07:05 PM The collation of the various versions, and most of the notes at the end, are mine. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Snuffy Date: 13 Aug 01 - 07:24 PM Sure it's not Echo Nell? |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Lin in Kansas Date: 13 Aug 01 - 09:48 PM There are 13 verses and an actual tune on p. 56 in Jerry Silverman's The Dirty Song Book, ISBN 0-88029-292-X, copyrighted in 1982 (formerly ISBN 0-8128-6118-3). I've transcribed the tune and sent it to MMario for the DT, so it will eventually be attached to the lyrics. If anyone wants to hear it sooner, I could email them a midi maybe. Lin |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Grab Date: 14 Aug 01 - 08:49 AM I've got a rugby songs book at home with a "full" version which goes on for ever - I swear, it's longer than the Ancient Mariner! Have to post it for cross-reference purposes. Some of the other songs are worth knowing, but unfortunately it lacks the tune. Mind you, "tune" is arguable when 15 (plus subs) drunk rugby players are belting it out... Graham. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Joe Offer Date: 28 Jan 04 - 09:10 PM Copied from another thread:
Thread #41018 Message #1103851 Posted By: Gareth 28-Jan-04 - 07:10 PM Thread Name: song lyrics: the shooting of dan mcgrew Subject: RE: song lyrics: the shooting of dan mcgrew Now a question I will ask. Having sung/recited that seminal poem "The Ballad of Eskimo Nell", at many a Rugby Club or similar night, did Robert W. Service write "Eskimo Nell"? Serious replys please ! Gareth When a man growes old, And his b**ls grow cold, And the tip of his C**k turns blue, When it bends in the middle Like a one string fiddle. He can tell you a tale or two." |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: GUEST,banjoman Date: 29 Jan 04 - 07:35 AM Many many years ago at a club in Liverpool hosted by the Original Old Rope band (the name was pinchedfrom them) I met a guy who produced a computer print out of Eskimo Nell. We then spent a whole evening reading/singing it and counted 400 -Yes 400- verses. I don't know what happened to it and I suspect that lots of the verses were add ons to the original. The song also included a few verses about another "Lady" called Sarah Cox : This is the tale of Mary Cox Who gave a thousand men the p**x Now she's dead she's not forgotten They just dig her up & Stuff her rotten. Tho' she's known as Mary Tucker by the ones who used to f*** her Her real name is Tulula Johnson Black She's handled many a tool since the day she finished school And made a darn fine living on her back Thats all for now folks |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: greg stephens Date: 29 Jan 04 - 07:47 AM Seem to have lost a post so I'll try again. Robert Service attribution seems highly unlikely to me. The piece(or at least the versions I have heard) seems to me a knowing slightly ironic 2oth century parody of Robert Service. I've seen it attributed to Noel Coward, A.P. Herbert and possibly others as well, on what evidence I havent a clue. But that sort of genre of writer seems a lot more likely than an actual bit of Robert Service. Take a couple of quotes: He twitched his arsehole in and out And made his balls inflate Until they looked like granite knobs Atop a garden gate Now Dead-Eye Dick and Mexico Pete Had been panning up Shit Creek And they'd had no luck by way of a fuck In well nigh on a week Does that sound like Robert Service? I think it sounds like a devastating parody of the style. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Teribus Date: 29 Jan 04 - 08:34 AM I have heard that it was written by Noel Coward and that it's first "public" performance was at a "Sod's Opera" onboard HMS Gambia while she was out in the West Indies. banjoman, the one you have quoted is I think a different poem/song - it used to be my Rugby Club party piece. It goes something like: There's a dirty stinking piss-house to the North of Waterloo There's another one for Ladies further down They are kept by Sally Tucker, for a shilling you can f**k her You can sleep with her for only half a crown Tho' she's known as Sally Tucker, by those who've oft times f**ked her Her real name is Tahlula Johnstone-Black And she's handled many a tool, from the day she first left school and she's earned a damn fine living on her back She's the filthiest of bitches, by the colour of her britches You'd swear that dame had never had a wash Yet the smell from her vagina is infinitely finer Than any whisky, beer, rum, or lemon squash One night she had a rattle by a sailor from Seattle She wondered why he hugged her long and close But when he'd finished screwing, she knew what he'd been doing For he'd gone and left her proper with a dose She gave it to her father, who gave it to her mother Who gave it to the Reverend Percy Brown Who gave it to his cousin, who gave it to a dozen And now it's half way round the f**ckin' town At last it came to pass, it reached that sailors arse It travelled half way up his flamin' back It rotted and it festered, his very life it pestered Twas the vengeance of Tuhlula Johnstone-Black There's a dirty stinking sailor to the North of Waterloo With a dose of syph that's slowly turning green Tho' he's hacked it, and he's scratched it If he can ere detatch it. He's a better man than I am Gunga Din. The tune for the above is "The Tangle o' the Isles" |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Abby Sale Date: 29 Jan 04 - 08:48 AM Yeah, but Greg...verses evolve in oral tradition. The verses in DigTrad are more common and are better scansion. 5. Now Deadeye Dick and Mexico Pete had been working Dead Man's Creek, And they'd had no luck in the way of a fuck for nigh on half a week -- 36. He winked his arsehole in and out, and make his balls inflate Until they looked like granite knobs on top of a garden gate. Yes, sounds like Service to me. I think Joe, the poster of the text(s), clearly shows it's most likely of Canadian (and not Brit or USian) origin. And after all, how many Canadian poets are there? Perhaps one day a manuscript copy will turn up... |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Snuffy Date: 29 Jan 04 - 09:26 AM Teribus, That one's a parody of The Green Eye of the Little Yellow God or Mad Carew or whatever they call it. I've only ever heard it done as a recitation, in the same way as Eskimon Nell. The version I know starts: There's a little green urinal to the North of Waterloo. The usual song sung to "The Tangle o' the Isles" is in the DT Database as THE FINEST FUCKING FAMILY. That version shares a couple of lines with the Talulah song, but many versions don't. And there's a version which claims D'Ye Ken John Peel is the tune |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Teribus Date: 29 Jan 04 - 09:56 AM Hi Snuffy, Thanks for the info. Another that I used to hear, but don't know the title of goes In Market Street Manchester one summers night There was only one cab on the rank The driver was reading the News of the World And quietly having a wank He was dreaming that Venus was kissing his penis The shaking was making him tired When a waitress named Lena, with tits like Sabrina Came up and casually enquired How much would you charge me to Oldham The cab driver nearly dropped dead He got such a shock he let go of his cock And Barclayed his gear nob instead. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: GUEST,Jim Ward Date: 29 Jan 04 - 12:06 PM 4th verse to the one above- How much would you charge me to Oldham? You're a nice sort of girl I can tell So I won't charge you nothing to Oldham If you let me 'old yours as well, fuckin 'ell If you let me 'old yours as well |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Teribus Date: 29 Jan 04 - 12:18 PM Thanks Jim |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: GUEST,roylow Date: 13 Aug 08 - 04:18 AM I stumbled on this discussion today. Some years ago I attempted a compilation of several versions of the Ballad of Eskimo Nell and put it on my personal web-site. I tried to preserve only those lines with good scansion because, like several contributors, I was told (ca 1955) it was written by a "real" poet - Coward was named as a possible. The lines I removed are still preserved at the end of the file if you prefer another version. Anyone interested can get it on my web-site at http://www.low.net.au/eskimo.html with compliments. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: pavane Date: 13 Aug 08 - 06:11 AM As mentioned above, it is usually attributed to Robert Service, who spent some time in the area. I don't suppose he would have claimed authorship even if he DID write it! |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Bill D Date: 13 Aug 08 - 12:18 PM In the same way, there was a famous bawdy novel, "The Memoirs of Josephine_Mutzenbacher", which was attributed to Felix Salten, the author of "Bambi". see here I remember reading that someone once got up the nerve to ask Salten about it, and that his reply was a shrug and (paraphrased) "If I admit it, you will think I am teasing you, and if I deny it, you won't believe me anyhow." ...which was widely taken as a thinly disguised admission. Some things are better left in that literary limbo...it gives folks something to debate. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: pavane Date: 13 Aug 08 - 01:17 PM I'm sure he would have done well out of the royalties. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: The Walrus Date: 13 Aug 08 - 09:28 PM Is this the Robert Service who wrote "Rhymes of a Red Cross Man"? W |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: pavane Date: 14 Aug 08 - 03:08 AM Yes, according to Wikipedia Robert Service in Wikipedia |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: GUEST,RJ WARD Date: 07 Sep 08 - 05:23 PM BRILLIANT STUFF |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: GUEST,Mike Foster Date: 25 Sep 08 - 05:45 AM I remember this ballad from a book of Rugby Songs published by Pan in the UK around 1968. As a teenager I thought the obscenities were hilarious, but I was shocked when my father recited some of it from memory. He'd learned it while on patrol in submarines based on Alexandria in 1941/1942. In between landing secret agents on Crete and torpedoing Italian ships, the crews occupied their time with beard-growing competitions and memorising Eskimo Nell competitions. He had (and I think still has) a carbon copy from which he memorised the ballad, so it is possible to learn the whole thing. When you're stuck in a tin can underwater for 18 hours at a time hoping the depth charges don't come any closer, it's probably easy to concentrate on on a smutty masterpiece like this. He says it was widely believed the ballad was written by Noel Coward. The reason I visited this website today is that I came across a recitation of Robert Service's The Shooting of Dan McGrew on BBC Radio 4's Poetry Please last Sunday. For the first minute I was convinced it was a part of Eskimo Nell I'd never heard before. The rhythm of the two poems is identical, which is why Eskimo Nell is obviuosly an excellent parody of Dam McGrew. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Schantieman Date: 25 Sep 08 - 09:43 AM ...er.....how, exactly, does a beard growing competition occupy time? Mine is quite capable of growing all on its own without taking up any time at all. ;-) And if Noel Coward wrote Eskimo Nell, I'll eat my hat. Steve |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: GUEST,Skylark Date: 26 Sep 08 - 06:29 AM Yes, the Ballad of Eskimo Nell, I remember it well. 1968 seems to be a significant year in some of our memories of this rhyme. In my first term at the Univesrity of Leeds in 1968, the Leeds Engineers Weekly Dispatch (LEWD) serialised the ballad - ten verses each week for the term. It kept us all very amused I remember. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: GUEST,cooked Date: 10 May 10 - 05:00 AM hi! Primitive as they were, it would be interesting to see back numbers of 'LEWD' Any ideas? At Leeds 1966- 1970 |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: GUEST,chazer Date: 26 May 10 - 05:52 PM my nan recited every verse at a rugby club dinner. she stood on the pub table and said it word for word |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: GUEST,tedda ! Date: 07 Nov 10 - 06:30 PM I can recite it , easy peasy - I do 100 pu's , the drink a pint standing on me head and blast it out ! Shuld be compulsory ..| :) |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: MGM·Lion Date: 07 Nov 10 - 11:56 PM ---And if Noel Coward wrote Eskimo Nell, I'll eat my hat.--- Schantieman Sep 08 >>>>> Oh, I don't know. Think of the verse about poor old Deadwood Dick having to make do with 'a moose or two, or a caribou, A bison cow or a crow; But Deadwood Dick was king of the prick, & he found it fucking slow'; and think also of the bit in Coward's "Mad Dogs & Englishmen" - 'Even caribous lie around and snooze, For there's nothing else to do' ~~~ the similarity of the intro in each case of the unlikely 'caribou' to provide a rhyme, linked to the concept of immediate complete boredom, strike me as at least stylistically suggestive of a Noel Coward connection. Anyone agree? ~Michael~ |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: MGM·Lion Date: 08 Nov 10 - 12:01 AM & re Robert Service as a possible candidate: I agree that it is too much of a patent travesty of his own style & preoccupations to be his own work: I mean, no-one would think Will Shax himself actually wrote the "Get thee to Essex, Gloucester, and thee to Sussex, Kent" line in 'Beyond The Fringe', would they? ~M~ |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Lighter Date: 08 Nov 10 - 07:56 AM The caribous could easily be a coincidence, since "-oo" is a useful rhyme and suggested by the Canadian milieu. (See what I mean? It's even happening now!) Another very real possibility is that Coward was familiar with the poem, even if he didn't write it. The earliest printed reference I find, for what it's worth, came in 1941. No text, of course. The psychologist H. J. Eysenck wrote decades later that he'd "learned it at student parties at Exeter College, London, about 1932." It was widely recited during WWII, apparently in the RAF especially. Perhaps its direct inspiration was the bawdy parody of Service's "Shooting of Dan McGrew," but now I'm just guessing. The limited information available suggests that "Eskimo Nell" has not been very well known in the U.S. That too may imply a British rather than a Canadian origin. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: MGM·Lion Date: 08 Nov 10 - 09:21 AM But, Lighter, as Mad Dogs & Englishmen [1931{NY}/32{London}] is about exactly contemporary with your terminus a quo date for E Nell, your putative 'coincidence' would appear either unlikely or suggestive of same-authorship. Your dates make my point feel even stronger to me. Coward had bored/boring caribous much in mind & they would out! &, as you yourself point out, it is much more probably of CisAtlantic than TransAtlantic origin. ~M~ BTW,in what dialect does 'milieu' rhyme with 'caribou'? |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: Lighter Date: 08 Nov 10 - 12:42 PM If you'll ask any average American who happened not to have majored in English or literature in college, you'll discover that the final syllables of "caribou" and "milieu" do rhyme, though imperfectly. Ogden Nash might have gotten some mileage out of them had he thought to do so. So far as I know, the case for Coward's authorship rests on these facts only: Both Noel Coward and "Eskimo Nell" were extremely clever and perverse, both were in circulation in 1931-32, and both used "caribou." To me that's not a case; it's a suspicion. Other clever and perverse people were in circulation at that time, though most of them presumably kept lower profiles than Noel Coward. Short of a signed and notarized confession, I'd have to see more actual evidence before concluding that Coward was the poet in question. |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: MGM·Lion Date: 08 Nov 10 - 12:56 PM I didn't make it as a 'case', if you look, Lighter; but as a suggestion rather than as a 'suspicion'. I still think that it isn't only the mention of the caribous, in two works we have established were probably written about the same time, but mention of them both in a context of extreme boredom, which suggests a link ~~ & think of the words in 'Mad Dogs' ~ "Even caribous lie about & snooze, For there's nothing else to do" ~~ what the betting that if NC sang that on a stag-cabaret occasion, he would have sung "fuck-all else to do"? Irresistible, isn't it? ~Michael~ |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: GUEST,busterkeeton Date: 18 Aug 19 - 06:33 AM THE SAGA OF ESKIMO NELL 1. WHEN MEN GROW OLD THEIR BALLS GROW COLD AND THE END OF THEIR NOBS TURN BLUE THEY LOOK BACK ON A LIFE OF YUKON STRIFE AND CAN TELL YOU A THING OR TWO 2. SO BUY ME A DRINK AND I WILL THINK AND A WONDERFUL TALE I WILL TELL OF DEAD EYED DICK AND MEXICAN PETE AND A HARLOT NAMED ESKIMO NELL 3. I`LL TELL YOU A TALE OF THE YUKON WHERE IT`S FIFTY DEGREES BELOW WHERE IT`S SO DAMN COLD FRENCH LETTERS ARE SOLD WRAPPED UP IN BUNDLES OF SNOW 4. WHERE SKELETONS RATTLE IN SEXUAL BATTLE NEATH THE LIGHT OF THE ARCTIC NIGHT IT`S ONE LONG FUCK FROM DAWN TO DUSK AND THEIR PARSON AGREES THAT IT`S RIGHT 5. AYE A PLACE WHERE THERES PLENTY OF SEX LIFE AND FOLKS THAT ARE STERILE ARE FEW WHERE ALL THE WHORES WEAR FUR-LINED DRAWS AND THE BROTHELS ARE ICEBOUND IGLOOS 6. AWAY ON A FAR DISTANT ICE CAP DWELT A FLOZZIE OF NATIONWIDE FAME SHE WOULD TAKE FRONT OR BACK IN A LITTLE WOOD SHACK AND ESKIMO NELL WAS HER NAME 7. NOW IN THE SLUMP OF THIRTY ONE WHEN WAGES WERE RATHER POOR THE PRICE OF FUCK WAS HALF A BUCK WHICH DOESN`T MUCH DO A WHORE 8. YES THE SLUMP HIT POOR NELL GOOD AND PROPER SHE DECIDED TO LEAVE HER LAND SHE FOUND OUT WHERE THE PRICES WERE HIGHER AND SET OUT FOR THE RIO GRANDE 9. THE SCENE SHIFTS TO THE GREAT BEAR LAKE A PLACE WHERE ITS EQUALLY COLD WHERE IN A SHACK IN THE BACK OF BEYOND THERE LIVED TWO TRAPPERS BOLD 10. WHEN DEAD EYED DICK AND MEXICAN PETE WERE UNABLE TO FIND A WHORE IT WAS PETE THE CUNT WHO BORE THE BRUNT WHICH MEANT THAT HIS ARSE WAS SORE 11. NOW DEAD EYED DICK AND MEXICAN PETE HAD BEEN WORKING DEAD MANS CREEK AND THEY`D HAD NO LUCK BY WAY OF A FUCK FOR WELL NIGH OVER A WEEK 12. JUST A MOUSSE OR TWO OR A CARIBOU OR A BISON ASTRAY OR SO BUT DEAD EYED DICK WAS THE KING OF PRICKS AND HE THOUGHT SUCH FUCKING SLOW 13. SO DEAD EYED DICK WITH HIS MIGHTY PRICK AND PETE WITH HIS GUN IN HIS HAND LEFT DEAD HAND CREEK FOR THE REST OF THE WEEK AND MADE FOR A BETTER LAND 14. AND AS THEY BLAZED THEIR RANDY TRAIL NO MAN THEIR FIRE WITHSTOOD AND MANY A BRIDE WHO WAS HUBBIES PRIDE SAW PREGNANT WIDOWHOOD 15. THEY HIT THE SHORES OF THE RIO GRANDE AT THE TOP OF A BLAZING NOON AND TO SLAKE THEIR THIRST AND DO THEIR WORST THEY SOUGHT BAD MIKES SALOON 16. THEY STOPPED TO SURVEY THE PROSPECTUS OF PRICES PER PERSON PER WHORE A CENT A THRUST TILL THE MAIDENHEAD BUST AND THEREAFTER TWENTY CENTS MORE 16. THEN AS THEY CRASHED THROUGH THE SWINGING DOORS BOTH PRICK AND GUN FLASHED FREE ACCORDING TO SEX YOU DRUNKEN WRECKS YOU DRINKS OR FUCKS WITH ME 17. THEY KNEW THIS TRICK OF DEAD EYED DICK FROM THE HORN TO PANAMA SO WITH NOTHING WORSE THAN A MUTTERED CURSE THE DAGOS ALL SOUGHT THE BAR 18. THE WOMAN ALL KNEW HIS PLAYFULL WAY FROM CAPE CODE TO THE RIO GRANDE SO FORTY WHORES PULLED DOWN THEIR DRAWERS AT DEAD EYED DICKS COMMAND 19. THEY SAW THE FINGERS OF MEXICAN PETE TWITCH ON THE TRIGGER GUARD AS NONE DARED WAIT AT THEIR FASTEST RATE THEY ALL BEGAN TO DISCARD 20. MEANWHILE DICK WAS BREATHING QUICK WITH LECHEROUS SNORTS AND GRUNTS AS FORTY ARSES BROUGHT TO VIEW TO SAY NOTHING OF FORTY CUNTS 21. AND AS YOU`LL SEE IF YOU USE YOUR WITS AND YOU`RE GOOD AT ARITHMETIC FORTY ARSES AND FORTY CUNTS MEAN ALSO EIGHTY TITS 22. NOW FOUR SCORE TITS ARE A WONDERFULL SIGHT TO A MAN WITH A MIGHTY STAND IT MAY BE RARE IN BERKELEY SQUARE BUT IT AINT ON THE RIO GRANDE 23. DEAD EYED DICK HAD FUCKED A FEW THE LAST PRECEEDIN NIGHT BUT HE`D JUST DONE THIS BY WAY OF FUN KINDA WETTING HIS APPETITE 24. HIS PHALLIC LIMB WAS IN FIGHTING TRIM HE BACKED UP AND TOOK A RUN HE MADE A JUMP AT THE NEAREST CUNT AND SCORED A HOLE IN ONE 25. HE BORE THAT WHORE TO THE SANDY FLOOR AND FAIRLY FUCKED HER FINE AND THOUGH SHE GRINNED IT FAIR PUT THE WIND UP THE OTHER THIRTY NINE 26. NOW DEAD EYE DICK HE FUCKS EM QUICK SO HE CASTS THE FIRST ASIDE HE MAKES A DART AT THE NEAREST TART WHEN THE DOORS OPENED WIDE 27. AND THERE ENTERS INTO THAT HOUSE OF SIN INTO THE HARLOTS HELL A LUSTY MAID WHO WAS NOT AFRAID AND HER NAME WAS ESKIMO NELL 28. DEAD EYED DICK HAD JUST GOT HIS PRICK WELL INTO NUMBER TWO WHEN ESKIMO NELL LET OUT A YELL AND SHOUTED TO HIM HI YOU 29. HE GAVE A FLICK OF HIS MUSCULAR PRICK AND THE GIRL FLEW OVER HIS HEAD AS HE TURNED ABOUT WITH A SNARLING SHOUT HIS KNEES AND KNOB GLOWED RED 30. WITH A LUSTFUL LEER HE SAID LOOK HERE NOW TAKE YOUR PLACE IN THE QUEUE I`VE GOT TO MATE WITH THE THIRTY EIGHT BEFORE I COME TO YOU 31. BUT ESKIMO NELL SHE STOOD IT WELL AS SHE LOOKED HIM BETWEEN THE EYES AND SHE GAZED AT HIS HORN WITH FATHOMLESS SCORN AS IT ROSE FROM HIS HAIRY THIGHS 32. SAID ESKIMO NELL TO DEAD EYED DICK IN ACCENT CLEAR AND COOL YOU CUNT STRUCK SHRIMP OF A YANKEE PIMP YOU CALL THAT THING A TOOL 33. IF THIS LITTLE TOWN CAN`T TAKE THAT DOWN SHE SNEERED TO THE CROWD OF WHORES THERE`S ONE LITTLE CUNT THAT CAN DO THE STUNT THATS ESKIMO NELLS NOT YOURS 34. SHE BLEW A WHIFF FROM HER CIGARETTE ACROSS HIS STEAMING KNOB AND SO UTTERLY BEAT WAS MEXICAN PETE THAT HE CLEAR FORGOT HIS JOB 35. SHE STRIPPED HER GARMENTS ONE BY ONE WITH AN AIR OF CONSCIOUS PRIDE AND AS SHE STOOD IN HER WOMANHOOD THEY COULD ALL SEE THE GREAT DIVIDE 36. SHE LAID HERSELF ON A TABLE TOP WHERE SOMEONE HAD STOOD A GLASS WITH A FLICK OF HER TITS CRUSHED IT TO BITS TWEEN THE CHEEKS OF HER MIGHTY ARSE 37. SHE FLEXED HER KNEES WITH SUPPLE EASE AND SPREAD HER LEGS APART WITH A FRIENDLY NOD TO THE RANDY SOD SHE GAVE HIM HIS CUE TO START 38. HE WINKED HIS ARSEHOLE ONCE OR TWICE AND HIS BALLS INCREASED IN SIZE AND HIS MIGHTY PRICK GREW TWICE AS THICK AND NEARLY REACHED HIS EYES 39. HE POLISHED IT UP WITH ALCOHOL TO MAKE IT STEAMING HOT AND TO FINISH THE JOB HE SPRINKLED THE LOT WITH CAYENNE PEPPER POT 40. HE DIDN`T RUN NOR TAKE A FLYING LEAP HE DIDN`T SWOOP BUT SEEMED TO STOOP AND ADVANCED WITH A STEADY CREEP 41. WITH PIERCING EYES HE LAID A SIGHT ALONG HIS MAMMOTH TOOL AND THE DEAD SLOW WAY HE PUT IT IN WAS CALCULATING AND COOL 42. HAVE YOU EVER SEEN THE PISTONS WORK ON A GIANT C.P.R. WITH THE DRIVING FORCE OF A THOUSAND HORSE THEN YOU KNOW WHAT PISTONS ARE 43. YOU THINK YOU DO BUT I`M TELLING YOU YOU HAVEN`T GOT A CLUE OF THE WORK THATS DONE ON A NON-STOP RUN BY DEAD EYED DICK MCGREW 44. BUT ESKIMO NELL WAS A BROAD HIPPED BELLE WITH A REALLY THOUGH CONSTRUCTION SHE`D THE STRENGTH OF TEN IN HER ABDOMEN AND A PARALYSING SUCTION 45. AMIDSHIPS SHE COULD STAND THE STRAIN OF A FLUSH LIKE A WATER CLOSET AND SHE GRIPPED HIS COCK LIKE A CHATWOOD LOCK IN THE NATIONAL SAFE DEPOSIT 46. NOW DEAD EYED DICK DIDN`T MEAN TO COME AND HE MEANT TO SAVE HIS POWERS FOR IF HE`D A MIND HE COULD STAND A GRIND FOR NIGH ON A COUPLE OF HOURS 47. NELL LAY FOR A WHILE WITH A DREAMY SMILE TILL THE THROB OF HER CUNT GREW KEENER THEN WITH A RAPTUROUS SIGH SHE SUCKED HIM DRY WITH THE EASE OF A VACUM CLEANER 48. AND NOW MY FRIEND WE COME TO THE END OF THIS COPULATING EPIC THE EFFECT ON DICK WAS SHORT AND QUICK AND AKIN TO ANAESTHETIC 49. HE DROPPED TO THE FLOOR AND KNEW NO MORE HIS PASSION EXTINCT AND DEAD GIVING ONE LOUD SHOUT AS HIS TOOL CAME OUT AND THEY KNEW SHE HAD STRIPPED HIS THREAD 50. THEN MEXICAN PETE JUMPED TO HIS FEET TO AVENGE HIS PAL`S AFFRONT HIS LONG NOSE COLT WITH A TEARING JOLT HE RAMMED RIGHT INTO HER CUNT 51. HE SANK IT HARD TO THE TRIGGER GUARD AND FIRED IT 1 2 3 BUT TO HIS SUPRISE SHE JUST CLOSED HER EYES WITH A SMILE OF ECSTASY 52. HE STOOD FOR A WHILE IN AMAZEMENT FEELING JUST LIKE A BLOODY FOOL WHILE A HORRIFIED MAID TRIED TO RENDER FIRST AID TO DEAD EYED DICKS RUINED TOOL 53. AGAIN IT FELL TO ESKIMO NELL TO BREAK THE SEXUAL SPELL YOU GODDAM PUNK YOU CROSS EYED SKUNK YOUR PASSIONS YOU MUST QUELL 54. YOU`D BETTER GO BACK TO YOUR TRAPPING WHERE THERE AREN`T ANY GIRLS THAT ARE NICE BUT BEFORE WE END LETS PART AS FRIENDS LET ME GIVE YOU A LITTLE ADVICE 55. WHEN NEXT MY FRIEND YOU DO INTEND TO SALLY FORTH FOR SOME FUN PICK DEAD EYED DICK AND ARMOURED PRICK AND YOURSELF A 12-BORE GUN 56. OR EVEN THE TRUNK OF A DOUGLAS FIR IF YOU REALLY WANT TO RAPE THOUGH I MUST ADMIT THATS TOO TIGHT A FIT TO LET THE GAS ESCAPE 57. I THOUGHT YOU JERKS COULD GIVE ME THE WORKS SHE ENDED IN ACCENTS COOL BUT I GUESS I MUST GO TO THE LAND OF THE SNOW TO FIND ME A MAN WITH A TOOL 58. SO NELLIE WENT BACK TO THE YUKON TO THE LAND WHERE SPUNK IS SPUNK NOT A STREAM OF LUKE WARM CREAM BUT A SOLID FROZEN CHUNK 59. BACK TO THE LAND OF THE FROZEN NORTH WHERE THEY KNOW HOW TO COPULATE WHERE THE LUSTY DEAD LIE TWO IN A BED AND THE BABIES MASTURBATE 60. BACK TO THE FAR DISTANT ICE CAP WHERE FRENCH LETTERS ARE MADE OF TIN WHERE THE WOMEN WEAR BARBED WIRE JAM RAGS AND THE MENSTRUAL STREAM IS PURE GIN 61. POOR DEAD EYED DICK AND MEXICAN PETE HAVE NOW LEFT THE RIO GRANDE DEAD EYED DICK WITH HIS RUINED PRICK AND PETE A 12-BORE IN HIS HAND 62. YES THE`VE BOTH GONE BACK TO THAT LITTLE LOG SHACK WHERE THEY`RE PRACTISING NIGHT AND DAY WITH ICE PACKS COOL DICK HEALS HIS TOOL TO PREPARE FOR THE NEXT AFFRAY 63. WHILE MEXICAN PETE HAS HIS 12-BORE GUN WHICH HE FLOURISHES ROUND WITH VIM FIRING HIS BLANKS UP DEAD EYED`S PANTS AND DREAMING OF NELLIES QUIM THE END Hello This was sent out to Royal Navy ships during the 1980`s over Telex. I have the original printout. Remember this being done on ship as a Sods opera and many of the older matelots could recite the whole thing. Was also done when drinking and nominating the next person to carry it on, with forfeit if not correct. A few words used that saw use in the navy such as broad hipped (ship), vim and fathomless that are not seen in the other version. Some different ordering of stanza plus a few other additions. Other words are left spelt wrong as this is how they appear in the original and depending on how they are pronounced give different connotations most obvious being ANAESTHETIC - anus thectic and the use of FULL instead of ful. Hope you enjoy, busterkeeton |
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Eskimo Nell From: GUEST,Kenny B(Inactive) Date: 18 Aug 19 - 08:36 AM Eskimo Nell ... spoken at the Bad Penny Sand Drags around great performance in an Australian accent |
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