AKA | Half a pint of ale (!) |
First published | 1905 |
Lyrics | Charles Tempest | Music | Charles Tempest | Roud | RN32454 |
Music Hall performers | Gus Elen |
Folk performances | Cosmotheka Jim Mageean |
I hate those blokes wot talks about The things wot they like to drink Such as tea and coffee, cocoa and milk Why, such fings I never fink I'm plain in me 'abits and plain in me food And wot I say is this If a man wot drinks such rubbish at his meals Well, I always gives 'im a miss. Now at breakfast I never fink of 'aving tea I likes arf a pint of ale And me dinner I likes a little bit o' meat An arf a pint of ale For me tea I likes a little bit o' fish An arf a pint of ale And for supper I likes a crust o' bread and cheese And a pint and an arf of ale. Now this is how I looks at it And I think you'll agree with me I've never seen a man get drunk in me life On cocoa, coffee or tea To think I pay one and eight a pound for tea Why, the thought makes me feel queer When I think of what you'd get for another one and six Such a pretty little barrel of beer. Now folks wot drinks such stuff as that Are always looking pale They've pains in their tummies And they've pains in their backs But I never had a pain with ale I always feel happy, and I always feel right When I've had a glass or two So why should I drink coffee or tea When theres' plenty of ale would do?
Gus Elen (1862-1940): ex-egg packer, one-time shop assistant, was one of the great Coster comedians. At the height of his fame on both sides of the Atlantic in the 1890s and 1900s, he retired in the first world war. According to his contemporaries, he was much more like a real Cockney Coster character than some of his fellow artistes. According to MacQueen Pope there was “a grim seriousness which overlaid the humour” in some of his songs, which included It’s a Great Big Shame and If it Wasn’t for the Houses In between. Unlike so many of his contemporaries from working-class backgrounds , he amassed a small fortune during his time as a performer, which allowed him to retire to the countryside, refusing all offers of a comeback except a single Royal Variety performance.
The words and music of this song, published in 1905, were written by Charles Tempest, who is not credited with writing any other songs in the sources that I have available, it may be a pseudonym.
Quite often heard in UK folk singarounds – in my experience usually introduced as a music Hall song. It features in the repertoire of both Cosmotheka and Jim Mageean (thanks to Graeme Knights for this last point!)
Sources:
- lyrics: monologues.co.uk
- Kilgarriff Sing us
- Macqueen Pope: The Melody Lingers
Gus Elen:
Last Updated on November 2, 2020 by John Baxter | Published: April 22, 2020