Doing my duty

First Published1898

Writer/composerAJ Mills and FW CarterRoudRN21227

Music Hall PerformersFrank Coyne
Folk performancesCollected from the singing of:
Cobbin, Ted; England : Suffolk; 1975
Lyrics and associated notes from the sleevenotes for  A Story to Tell: Keith Summers in Suffolk 1972-79 (MTCD339-0),

Ted Cobbin: The Crown, Great Glemham 1975

[Spoken] The old song I'm going to sing is one I learnt from my cousin, Ross Egan. He learned it from an old pal of his right back in the Boer War, when he was a youngster with the RAMC. And I learned it from him a'singing that in the Crown here - Great Glemham.


Now can England be in danger,
Is there any chance of war?
You talk about your fighting men
And your Quifer (?) gunner corps.
You talk about your Wellingtons
That fought at Waterloo,
But how about your humble
On the field of Pinky-Poo?

Yes. I was doing my duty. A doing my duty.
When the bullets were flying as thick as the mud.
I was shedding my drops of blood,
Fighting with the corporal in the ammunition van.
Yes, I was doing my duty like a soldier and a man.

Now you think when under canvas
What a pleasant time was spent,
Especially when there's fifty of you
Bunged into a tent.
There's a dozen pairs of Bluchers,
Laying all around.
But what a rush for Keatings 
When the enemy he is found.

Yes. I'll be doing my duty. A doing my duty.
Soon as ever a flea pop out his head.
I'd give him a bash with a loaf of bread.
And then the blooming tent was like the battle of Sudan
For I was doing my duty like a soldier and a man.

Now every Sunday night when I go out,
With my best tunic dress,
A tuppeny cigar is in my mouth
And a loaf stuck up my chest.
I'm chasing bits of calico as soon as it get dark
But I've always got my eye upon the benches in the park.

Yes. I'll be doing my duty. A doing my duty.
A swinging my regimental stick,
Making myself look a bit thick,
And when the moon is out of sight,
With Flo and Mary-Ann
Oh I'll be doing my duty like a soldier and a man.


[Bluchers - A leather laced up half-boot; so called after Field-Marshal von Blucher (1742-1819) and notoriously uncomfortable.]
[Keating's - Keating's Flea Powder.]

A song from the repertoire of Frank Coyne. It was written by the alarmingly prolific AJ Mills with FW Carter and was a hit in 1898/99 in the Halls and pantomimes.

London and Provincial Entr’acte – Saturday 06 August 1898
The Era – Saturday 23 September 1899

The song was remembered by at least one traditional singer in the 1970s, when it was collected from the singing of Ted Cobbin by Keith Summers, who transcribed the lyrics and wrote the associated sleeve notes given above. The recording can be heard at the Vaughn Williams Memorial Library

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