The Secret Whisky Cure
Henry Lawson
The Secret Whisky Cure
âTis no tale of heroism, âtis no tale of storm and strife,
But of ordinary boozing, and of dull domestic lifeâ
Of the everlasting friction that most husbands must endureâ
Tale of nagging and of drinkingâand a secret whisky cure.
Name of Jonesâperhaps you know himâsmall house-agent here in townâ
(Friend of Smith, you know him alsoâlikewise Robinson and Brown),
Just a hopeless little husband, whose deep sorrows were obscure,
And a bitter nagging Missisâand death seemed the only cure.
âTwas a common sordid marriage, and thereâs little new to tellâ
Save the pub to him was Heaven and his own home was a hell:
With the office in between themâpurgatory to be sureâ
And, as far as Jones could make outâwell, there wasnât any cure.
âTwas drink and nagâor nag and drinkâwhichever you preferâ
Till at last she couldnât stand him any more than he could her.
Friends and relatives assisted, telling her (with motives pure)
That a legal separation was the only earthly cure.
So she went and saw a lawyer, who, in accents soft and low,
Asked her firstly if her husband had a bank account or no;
But he hadnât and she hadnât, they in fact were very poor,
So he bowed her out suggesting she should try some liquor cure.
She saw a drink cure advertised in the Sydney Bulletinâ
Cure for brandy, cure for whisky, cure for rum and beer and gin,
And it could be given secret, it was tasteless, swift and sureâ
So she purchased half a gallon of that Secret Whisky Cure.
And she put some in his coffee, smiling sweetly all the while,
And he started for the office rather puzzled by the smileâ
Smile or frown heâd have a whisky, and youâll say he was a boorâ
But perhaps his wife had given him an overdose of Cure.
And he met a friend he hadnât seen for seven years or moreâ
It was just upon the threshold of a private bar-room doorâ
And they coalised and entered straight away, you may be sureâ
But of course they hadnât reckoned with a Secret Whisky Cure.
Jones, he drank, turned pale, and, gasping, hurried out the back way quick,
Where, to his old chumâs amazement, he was violently sick;
Then they interviewed the landlord, but he swore the drink was pureâ
It was only the beginning of the Secret Whisky Cure.
For Jones couldnât stand the smell of even special whisky blends,
And shunned bar-rooms to the sorrow of his trusty drinking friends:
And they wondered, too, what evil genius had chanced to lure
Him from paths of booze and friendshipânever dreaming of a Cure.
He had noticed, too, with terror that a something turned his feet,
When a pub was near, and swung him to the other side the street,
Till he thought the devils had him, and his person theyâd immure
In a lunatic asylum where there wasnât any Cure.
He consulted several doctors who were puzzled by the caseâ
As they mostly are, but never tell the patient to his faceâ
Some advised him âTry the Mountains for this malady obscure:â
But there wasnât one could diagnose a Secret Whisky Cure.
And his wife, when he was sober?âWell, she nagged him all the more!
And he couldnât drown his sorrow in the pewter as of yore:
So he shot himself at Manly and was sat upon by Woore,
And found rest amongst the spirits from the Secret Whisky Cure.
And the moral?âwell, âtis funnyâor âtis womanâs way with menâ
Sheâs remarried to a publican who whacks her now and then,
And they get on fairly happy, heâs a brute and heâs a boor,
But sheâs never tried her second with a Secret Whisky Cure.
âTis no tale of heroism, âtis no tale of storm and strife,
But of ordinary boozing, and of dull domestic lifeâ
Of the everlasting friction that most husbands must endureâ
Tale of nagging and of drinkingâand a secret whisky cure.
Name of Jonesâperhaps you know himâsmall house-agent here in townâ
(Friend of Smith, you know him alsoâlikewise Robinson and Brown),
Just a hopeless little husband, whose deep sorrows were obscure,
And a bitter nagging Missisâand death seemed the only cure.
âTwas a common sordid marriage, and thereâs little new to tellâ
Save the pub to him was Heaven and his own home was a hell:
With the office in between themâpurgatory to be sureâ
And, as far as Jones could make outâwell, there wasnât any cure.
âTwas drink and nagâor nag and drinkâwhichever you preferâ
Till at last she couldnât stand him any more than he could her.
Friends and relatives assisted, telling her (with motives pure)
That a legal separation was the only earthly cure.
So she went and saw a lawyer, who, in accents soft and low,
Asked her firstly if her husband had a bank account or no;
But he hadnât and she hadnât, they in fact were very poor,
So he bowed her out suggesting she should try some liquor cure.
She saw a drink cure advertised in the Sydney Bulletinâ
Cure for brandy, cure for whisky, cure for rum and beer and gin,
And it could be given secret, it was tasteless, swift and sureâ
So she purchased half a gallon of that Secret Whisky Cure.
And she put some in his coffee, smiling sweetly all the while,
And he started for the office rather puzzled by the smileâ
Smile or frown heâd have a whisky, and youâll say he was a boorâ
But perhaps his wife had given him an overdose of Cure.
And he met a friend he hadnât seen for seven years or moreâ
It was just upon the threshold of a private bar-room doorâ
And they coalised and entered straight away, you may be sureâ
But of course they hadnât reckoned with a Secret Whisky Cure.
Jones, he drank, turned pale, and, gasping, hurried out the back way quick,
Where, to his old chumâs amazement, he was violently sick;
Then they interviewed the landlord, but he swore the drink was pureâ
It was only the beginning of the Secret Whisky Cure.
For Jones couldnât stand the smell of even special whisky blends,
And shunned bar-rooms to the sorrow of his trusty drinking friends:
And they wondered, too, what evil genius had chanced to lure
Him from paths of booze and friendshipânever dreaming of a Cure.
He had noticed, too, with terror that a something turned his feet,
When a pub was near, and swung him to the other side the street,
Till he thought the devils had him, and his person theyâd immure
In a lunatic asylum where there wasnât any Cure.
He consulted several doctors who were puzzled by the caseâ
As they mostly are, but never tell the patient to his faceâ
Some advised him âTry the Mountains for this malady obscure:â
But there wasnât one could diagnose a Secret Whisky Cure.
And his wife, when he was sober?âWell, she nagged him all the more!
And he couldnât drown his sorrow in the pewter as of yore:
So he shot himself at Manly and was sat upon by Woore,
And found rest amongst the spirits from the Secret Whisky Cure.
And the moral?âwell, âtis funnyâor âtis womanâs way with menâ
Sheâs remarried to a publican who whacks her now and then,
And they get on fairly happy, heâs a brute and heâs a boor,
But sheâs never tried her second with a Secret Whisky Cure.
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