Hypochondriac, The

AKAA travelling doctor’s shop
First Published1894

Writer/composerCharles Osborne RoudRN25062

Music Hall PerformersTE Dunville
Folk performancesCollected from the singing of:
Connell, John; Ireland : Co. Clare; 1975
Modern performances
The Wolfetones
THE HYPOCHONDRIAC, or, A TRAVELLING DOCTOR'S SHOP
Words and music by Charles Osborne; sung by T. E. Dunville

I want to tell you about a pal — a beauty minus paint
Who always thought he'd some sort of serious complaint.
No matter what the remedy, he always bought a dose.
To cure his ills he'd buy blue pills and bolt them by the gross.
He said he'd had the measles bad, the staggers and the ague,
Varicose veins and Chancery Lanes, likewise the cattle plague.
Shivers, and shakes and various aches, and also papshelals,
And I never saw such a man before for taking chemicals.

He wore a belt whenever he felt a pain in his tiddley push,
A chemical vest to save his chest from cannoning off the cush.
He tried quinine and chloride of lime to cure the pippity pop,
Till he became in the What's-a-name a travelling doctor's shop.

When the Asiatic cholera came, he swore he'd captured that,
So he bought some vaccination tools and practised on the cat.
To keep the influenza off that came down here and 'gripped' us,
He bathed his feet with turpentine and oil of eucalyptus.
He found a wart of a curious sort that hurt his sit-me-down,
So he bathed it, sir, with tincture of myrrh and wore a padded gown.
I hinted once that I could see his bumps as plain as the Crystal Palace.
He told a quack he'd got an attack of aurora borealis. 

He used to wear a nose machine whenever he went to bed.
He nailed his will to the window-sill in case they found him dead.
He lived on brimstone and treacle just to purify his blood,
And never risked a bath in case he perished in the mud.
One day with a stroke of flibberty-bobs this poor young man was taken,
So off they went and the doctor sent some medicine to be shaken.
The servant girl she could not spell (for she'd been on the boozalem).
She shook him up instead of the stuff, and now he's in Jeruzalem.

A music hall song of the 1890s seemingly only collected once from a traditional singer – from the singing of John Connell by Jim Caroll and Pat MacKenzie in 1975. You can hear John Connell’s version on the Clare County Library site.

The song was originally published in 1894, written and composed by Charles Osborne for the comedian TE Dunville.

Irish rebel band, The Wolfetones sang their own version – closely based on the original, but changing the gender of the song’s subject.

The Wolfetones sing their version, including some very strange darts…

Sources:

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