BEADILE’S || FIRST SERIES, } 1 to 10, ine ( The Bowld Soger Boy, Kinigan’s Wake, Beautiful Land of my Dreams, Captain Jinks, ‘Lhe Merry Old Maid. oe} o- NEWT WORE: BEADLE AND COMPANY, 98 WILLIAM STREET. FIRST SHRINS BEADLE’S ONE CENT SONG BOOKS, Numbers One to Ten, No. 1. Battle-cry of Freedom, Not for Joseph, Love me Little, Love me Long, Ridin’ in a Railroad Keer, I Love the Merry Sunshine, No. 2. The Bowld Soger Boy, Finigan’s Wake, Beautiful Land of my Dreams, Captain Jinks, The Merry Old Maid. j Mo. 3. Toddy O’Neale, What are Wild Waves Saying? On the Beach at Long Brauch, I'd be a Gipsey, Nancy’s Waterfall. No. & Yohn Schmidt, Dandy Barber Joe, I’m o’er Young to Marry yet, Dear Father, Come Down, Row, Brothers, Row. No. 5. Nigger, put down dat Jug, Tenting on the Camp-ground, Pretty Little Sarah, Little Fanchon, Katy Avourneen. No. 6. When this Cruel War is Over, My Emma Lonise, Cousin Jedediah, My Father Sould Charcoal, Colleen Bawn. No. 7. *Way Down in Maine, Come Home, Father, Rollicking Old Man, Old Bachelor’s Song, Johnny Bell’s Wooing. No. 8. Who'll Have Me? The Italian Guinea-pig Boy, Solon Shingle, Champagne Charlie, An hour at Central Park, No. 9. Lanigan’s Ball, Canadian Boat Song, Bread and Cheese and Kisses, Star of Twilight, I Really Shall Expire. No, 10. John Bull and his Bitter Beer, Tramp! Tramp! Tramp! Jersey Blue, Old John Jones Uncle Ben, the Yankee, This series of ONE Cent Sone Books are for sale, singly or in packages of tens or hundreds, by newsdealers ; everywhere or will be sent prepaid by mail, in packages of no? less than ten, at the rate of one cent each, by BEADLE AND COMPANY, Publishers, 98 William Street, N. Y. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1868, by BEADLE AND COMPANY, in the Clerk’s Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York. 44 The Bowld Sojer Boy. “opie. by permission of OutvER Dirson & Co,, Music Publishers, Qh! there’s, not a thrade that’s going, Worth showing, or knowing; Like that from. glory growing, For a, bewld sajer boy | Where right or left we go, Sure you know, friend, or foe Will have,the hand,or toe From, the bowld; sojer: boy ! There’s not a town we march through, But ladies, looking arch throtgh The window panes, will sarch through The ranks to find their joy ; While tp the street, cach girl you meet, With look.so sly,,will, ery, ““My eye! Oh, isn’t he a darling, The bowld. sojer boy!” But when weget the’ route, How they pout, and they shout, While to the right about Goes the bowld sojer boy ; *Tis then that ladies fair, In despair, tear their hair, But the divyil a one I care, Says the bowld sojer boy ; For the world is all before us, Where the Jandladies adore us, Ant ne’er refuse to score us, But chalk us up with joy; We taste her tap, we tear her cap, “ Oh, that’s the chap for me,” says she, “ Oh, isn’t he a darling, The bowld sojer boy ?” 4 Captain Jinks, AS SUNG BY LINGARD. I am Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines, I often live beyond my means, I sport young ladies in their ’teens, To cut a swell in the army. I teach the ladies how to dance, How to dance, how to darice, I teach the ladies how to danée, For I’m their pet in the army. Spoken ; Hatha! ah! Cuorus—l’m Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines, "I give my horse good corn and beans ; Of course it’s quite beyond my means, Though a captain in the army. I joined my corps when twenty-one, Of course I thought it capital fun, When the enemy came then off I run, I wasn’t cut out for the army. When I left home’ mamma she cried, Mamma she cried, mamma she cried, When I deft home mamma she cried, “ He ain’t cut out for the army.” Spoken : No, she thought I was too young, but then, I said, ah! mamma, (CHoRUvs.) The first day I went out to drill, The bugle-sound made me quite ill, At the balance step my hat it fell, And that wouldn’t do for the army, The officers they all did shout, They all cried out, they all did shout, The officers they all did shout, “Oh, that’s the curse of the army.” Spoken ; Of course my hat did fall off, but, ah! neverthe- less, (Cuorus.) 5 Mv tailor’s bills came in so fast, Forced me one day to leave at last, And ladies, too, no more did cast, Sheep’s eyes at me in the army. My creditors at me did shout, At me did shout, at me did shout, My creditors at me did shout, “Why, kick bim out of the army.” Spoken : T said, ah! gentlemen, ah! kick me out of the army? Perhaps you are not aware that CHORUS.) The Merry Old Maid. There was an old maiden of seventy-six, With scarcely a tooth in her head, Who, swerving a little from prudish tricks, Conceived a strong passion to wed. And cheering her fancy with splendid views, With mighty conceit of herself, She thought that no man in the world could refuse A maiden with plenty of pelf. Sing fal de ral, old and tough, etc. Oh yes! oh yes! said the crier aloud, Come, bachelors, be not afraid, Her treasures will render him wealthy and proud, Who marries a merry old maid. And money, you know, makes the matter a joke, Though gained with a frisky old trapes, Who'd rather be bound in a conjugal yoke, Than afterward leading of apes. Sing fal de ral, old and tough, ete, CHorus Finigan’s Wake, Copied by permission of Wm. A, Ponp & Co,, Music Publishers, 547 Broadway, New York, Owners of the copyright. Tim Finigan lived in Walker Street, A gentleman Irishman—mighty odd— He'd a beautiful brogue, so rich, and sweet, And to rise in the world he; carried, a hod ; But, you. see he’d a, sort of a tippling way.: : With a love for the liquor poor Tim was born, And to help him through his work each day, He'd a drop of the Greatur’ every morn. Whack, hurrah, dance to you partiners, Welt the-flure,ye’re trotters shake, Isn’t it the truth I’ve tould ye, Lots of fun, at, Finigan’s. wake, One morning Tim was rather full, His head felt heayy, which made him shake, He fell from the ladder and broke his skull ; So.they carried him home his corpse to. wake : They rolled him up in, a nice clean sheet, And laid him out upon the, bed, With fourteen candles round his feet, And a barrel of paratees around his head. His friends assembled. at his wake Missus Finigan. called out for the lunch ; First they laid in tay and cake, Then pipes and tobacky, and whisky punch, Miss Biddy,O’Brien began to ery ; Such a purty corpse did) ever,you, see ? Arrah! Tim avourneen, an’ why did, ye die? Och, none of your gab, sez Judy Magee. q Then Peggy O’Connor took up the job, Arrah, Biddy, says she, ye’re wrong I’m shure ; But Judy then gave her a belt on the gob, I left her sprawling on the flure. Each side in war did soon engage : ’Twas woman to woman and man to man; Shillelah: law was all the rage, And a rousing ruction soon began. In this Beautiful Land of My Dreams, A REPLY TO “HAPPY BE THY DREAMS.” Copied by permission of Wm. Hatt & Son, Music Publishers, 543 Broadway, New York, owners of the copyright, I’ve passed from sorrow and strife To a sunlit isle of love, And my dreams are happy and light In this beautiful land above. My mother’s long watch is o’er, And my days glide by like the streams ; And the song birds, I hear them no more, In this beautiful land of my dreams. Cuorus—lI’ve passed from sorrow and strife, etc. T’ve waited not long or in vain, In this land of celestial delight, To greet my dear mother with love, And bless her with heavenly light. The angels her coming welcomed, And o’er her flung soft, silver beams ; And bade’ her be joyous and free, In this beautiful land of my dreams. Crorus—l've waited not long or in vain, etc. BEADLE’S STANDARD DIME PUBLICATIONS, Novels Series. 1. Malaeska. 9. The Privateer’s Cruise. 8. Myra, the Child of Adoption, 4. Alice Wilde. 5. The Golden Belt, 6. Chip, the Cave Child. 1. The Reefer of °76. Seth Jones. . The Slave Sculptor. The Backwoods Bride. The Prisoner of La Vintresse. . Bill Biddon, the Trapper, Cedar Swamp. The Emerald Necklace. The Frontier Angel. Uncle Ezekiel. Mae Wylde. 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