University of Virginia Library


170

THE POLICE.

As I was going along the way,
I saw the tracks where a Gipsy lay—
Of a Gipsy fellow whom I did know,
And the name of the man was Petulengro.
And so I went on the road a bit,
Till I came to the fire where I saw him sit;
And he said to me, “Sarishan?”—“How do you do?”
For a real Rom was Petulengro.
“What luck for the day?” I asked, and he
Said, “Wery bad luck,” again to me;
“It's wery bad luck, that never will cease,
And all along o' these here police.
“If I pulls a bit of a stick from a hedge,
There's a bobby a bobbin' along its edge;
An' it's luck if I ain't in prison a piece,
An' all along o' that 'ere police.
“When I'm sound asleep in our little camp,
The Pigs come down an' they make us tramp;

171

They roots me out, and I gets no peace;
For it's allers ‘Move on!’ with them 'ere police.
“If my missus gets in a house, you know,
To tell a bit of a fortin' or so,
They scares her almost to her de-cease,
For they're nat'ral devils, is them police.
“I heard a fellow preachin' to me,
As this is the land o' liberty:
But I tells him my liberty is peace;
An' there's none o' that there, where you has police.
“Oh, I've had enough o' this land, I say,
With its lords and parsons an' sitch as they;
An' it's over the water I goes like geese,
To a land where there isn't no police.
“There you can tell a fortin' or so;
There you can clear out the things, you know;
There you are free as the blowin' breeze:—
Hespesherly from them vile police.
“The 'Merican land, I thinks, mayhap,
Is just the spot for a Rommany chap;
For from all I hears, there they lives at peace,
An' the people don't care for no police.
Charles G. Leland.

This ballad was partly written one day while associating with Gipsies, and was drawn from their own remarks.