Christmas Day in the Cookhouse

AKA
First Published1930

Writer/composerRoudRN29690

Music Hall PerformersBilly Bennett
Folk performancesCollected from the singing of:
MacKay, Freddie ; England ; 1969
Smith, Bill; England ; Shropshire; no date
Dunn, Ernie ; England ; West Midlands ; 1971
'Twas Christmas Day in the cookhouse
And the place was clean and tidy
The soldiers were eating their pancakes...
I'm a liar... that was Good Friday.

In the oven a turkey was sizzling
And to make it look posh, I suppose,
They fetched the Battalion Barber,
To shingle it's parson's nose!

Potatoes were cooked in their jackets,
And carrots in pants - how unique!
A sheep's head was baked with the eyes in,
As it had to see them through the week.

At one o'clock 'Dinner Up' sounded,
The sight made an old soldier blush,
They were dishing out Guinness for nothing,
And fifteen got killed in the rush!

A jazz band played in the mess-room,
A fine lot of messers it's true,
We told them to go and play Ludo,
And they all answered 'Fishcakes' to you!

In came the old Sergeant Major,
He'd walked all the way from his billet,
His toes were turned in, his chest was turned out,
With his head back in case he'd spill it.

He wished all the troops 'Merry Xmas,'
Including the poor Orderly Man;
Some said 'Good Old Sergeant Major,'
But others said 'San Fairy Arm.'

Then up spoke one ancient warrior,
His whiskers a nest for the sparrows,
The old man had first joined the army
When the troops used to use bows and arrows.

His grey eyes were flashing with anger,
He threw down his pudden' and cursed,
'You dare to wish me a Happy New Year,
Well, just hear my story first.

Ten years ago, as the crow flies,
I came here with my darling bride,
It was Christmas Day in the Waxworks,
So it must be the same outside.

We asked for some food, we were starving
You gave us pease pudden' and pork.
My poor wife went to the Infirmary,
With a pain in her Belle of New York.

You're the man that stopped bacon from shrinking,
By making the cook fry with Lux,
And you wound up the cuckoo clock backwards,
And now it goes'oo' fore it'cucks'.

So thank you, and bless you, and blow you,
You just take these curses from me,
May your wife give you nothing for dinner,
And then warm it up for your tea.

Whatever you eat, may it always repeat
Be it soup, fish, entree, or horse doovers,
May blue bottles and flies descend from the skies
And use your bald head for manoeuvres.

May the patent expire on your evening dress shoes,
May your Marcel waves all come uncurled,
May your flannel shirt shrink up the back of your neck
And expose your deceit to the world.

And now that I've told you my story,
I'll walk to the clink by the gate,
And as for your old Xmas Pudden'
Stick that - on the next fellow's plate.

This well-known parody of Christmas Day in the Workhouse was written and performed by Billy Bennett. It appears to be at least in part a cleaned up version of the anonymous Christmas in the Work’us (below) that was first published in 1927, though other collections pulished later suggest it was recited or sung by troops in the First World War.

CHRISTMAS  IN  THE WORK’US 
Anonymous

It was Christmas day in the work’us,
The best day of the year;
And’ the paupers h’all was ’appy
For their guts was full o’ beer.

The master of the work’us
Strode through those dismal ’alls,
An’ wished ’em Merry Christmas,
An’ the paupers h’answered, “Balls!”

This made the master h’angry,
An’ ’e swore by h’all the Gods,
They’d arve no Christmas puddin’,
The lousy lot of sods.

Up sprang a war-scarred vet’ran
’Oo ’ad stormed the Khyber Pass,
“We don’t want yer Christmas puddin’,
Shove it up yer fuckin’ ass!”

Immortalia (1927)

Billy Bennet performs it:

Sources:

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