Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Uncle Harry by Henry Lawson
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Uncle Harry

    By Henry Lawson



    Oh, never let on to your own true love
    That ever you drank a drop;
    That ever you played in a two-up school
    Or slept in a sly-grog shop;
    That ever a bad girl nursed you round,
    That ever you sank so low.
    But she pulled you through, and it's only you
    And your old mate Harry know.

    "Billy the Link" they called you then,
    And it makes me sad to think
    Of the strenuous days when it took three cops
    And a pimp to couple the Link.
    "Mister Linkhurst" they call you now,
    And your kitchen garden grows;
    And no one knows in your family,
    But your Uncle Harry knows.

    Oh, never let on to your fair young bride
    How a "straight" girl stabbed your heart
    With a devilish wire to the Western side
    Where we were a world apart.
    With pick and shovel you fought it out
    Where the red sirocco blows;
    And no one knew in the gang save you,
    But your old mate Harry knows.

    Oh, never let on to your own good wife,
    For a tender heart has she,
    Of the girl that loved and the girl that lies
    In the graveyard there by the sea!
    'Twas not for his "manners" she loved the cad,
    'Twas not for his verse or prose,
    But the pity she felt for the country lad,
    And your Uncle Harry knows.

    The bad girl went where the bad girls go
    And I see her dark eyes yet;
    The good girl left me her broken heart,
    But I trow that their souls have met.
    The cry of the heart we send not forth
    On every wind that blows;
    You are hiding a sorrow from someone now,
    But your Uncle Harry knows.



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