Sonny, it seems like twenty year,
The while that you’ve been gone,
And left me lonesome for you here
Trying to do my bit — oh, dear! —
By keeping steady on.
I promised and I’ve meant to do,
But now and then at night
I’ve been to blame, the times it blew
Like guns that answered guns, with you —
My you — amongst the fight.
But in the morning “Dear old fool”
I’ve seemed to hear you say;
“Mother, no need to fuss, keep cool,”
Just like the cheeky brat from school
You was the other day.
You wasn’t always quite so grand;
Once you was mighty glad,
Chased by a puppy-dog, to stand
Behind your Mummy, slip your hand
In hers, the way you had.
Small son turned big, now that you’re grown
And in a real war,
And set to face it all alone,
I’m wild to run and guard my own
Same as I did before.
You’d laugh at that; but keep your fun
Till fighting’s through, and then
Hurry off back to where there’s one
All of a fuss to hear her son
Say “Dear old fool” again.
The while that you’ve been gone,
And left me lonesome for you here
Trying to do my bit — oh, dear! —
By keeping steady on.
I promised and I’ve meant to do,
But now and then at night
I’ve been to blame, the times it blew
Like guns that answered guns, with you —
My you — amongst the fight.
But in the morning “Dear old fool”
I’ve seemed to hear you say;
“Mother, no need to fuss, keep cool,”
Just like the cheeky brat from school
You was the other day.
You wasn’t always quite so grand;
Once you was mighty glad,
Chased by a puppy-dog, to stand
Behind your Mummy, slip your hand
In hers, the way you had.
Small son turned big, now that you’re grown
And in a real war,
And set to face it all alone,
I’m wild to run and guard my own
Same as I did before.
You’d laugh at that; but keep your fun
Till fighting’s through, and then
Hurry off back to where there’s one
All of a fuss to hear her son
Say “Dear old fool” again.
This poem appeared in Punch, 19th May 1915.
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