WHEN DACEY RODE THE MULE
The Bulletin, 8 July 1893 p 191

‘Twas in a small, up-country town,
   
When we were boys at school,
There came a circus with a clown
   
And with a bucking mule.
The clown announced a scheme they had -
   
The mule was such a king -
They’d give a crown to any lad
   
Who’d ride him round the ring.
And, gentle reader, do not scoff
   
Nor think the man a fool,
To buck a porous plaster off
   
Was pastime to the mule.

The boys got on - he bucked like sin -
   
He threw them in the dirt,
And then the clown would raise a grin
   
By asking, "Were you hurt?"
But Johnny Dacey came one night,
   
The crack of all the school,
Said he, "I’ll win the crown all right,
   
Bring in your bucking mule."
The elephant went off his trunk,
   
The monkey played the fool
And all the band got blazing drunk
   
When Dacey rode the mule.

But soon there rose an awful shout
   
Of laughter, when the clown,
From somewhere in his pants drew out
   
A little paper crown.
He placed the crown on Daceys head,
   
While Dacey looked a fool,
"Now, there’s your crown, my lad," he said,
   
"For riding of the mule!"
The band struck up with "Killalow",
   
And "Rule Britannia, Rule",
And "Young Man from the Country", too,
   
When Dacey rode the mule.

Then Dacey, in a furious rage,
   
For vengeance on the show
Ascended to the monkeys’ cage
   
And let the monkeys go;
The blue-tailed ape and chimpanzee
   
He turned abroad to roam;
Good faith! it was a sight to see
   
The people step for home.
For big baboons with canine snout
   
Are spiteful as a rule,
The people didn’t sit it out
   
When Dacey rode the mule.

And from the beasts that did escape
   
The bushmen all declare
Were born some creatures partly ape
   
And partly native bear.
They’re rather few and far between;
   
The race is nearly spent;
But some of them may still be seen
   
In Sydney Parliament.
And when those legislators fight,
   
And drink, and act the fool -
It all commenced that wretched night
   
When Dacey rode the mule.