MORE ROWDY SONGS NOT SUITABLE FOR CHILDREN 
            OR SMALL DOGS!
                          -transcribed by Ioseph of Locksley
                           All lyrics Public Domain / NO copyright!



Follows are extra verses, and XXX-rated verses to "Waltz Me Around Again, Hrothgar": There was a young girl named Alice Who used dynamite for a phallus They found her vagina In South Carolina And her arse was just this side of Dallas! (T) A rancid old hermit named Dave Kept a dead whore in a cave He said; "I admit," "I'm a bit of a shit;" "But think of the money I save!" (T) There was a young man from Nantucket Whose prick was so long he could suck it Said he, with a grin, As he wiped off his chin, "If my ear was a cunt, I could fuck it!" (T) Now, Jon and Diana one day Founded the whole SCA At a Berkeley party That was very arty Now it's covered the whole USA! (U) His Grace (or Her Grace…it depends) Remarks when the Dark Horde descends With chickens and goats, six Serbs and five Croats "My friends? I thought they were YOUR friends!" (E) There once was an old maid from Wooster Who thought that a man had seduced her When looking around, She finally found: 'Twas only the bedpost that goosed her! (T) There was an old lady from Munich Who was ravished one night by a Eunuch At the height of her passion He slipped her a ration From a squirt-gun concealed in his tunic! (T) There once was a mighty stick-jock Who had holes down the length of his cock When he got an erection He'd play a selection From Johann Sebastian Bach! (U) An attractive young lady named Myrtle Had quite an affair with a turtle What is more phenominal A swelling abdominal Showed Myrtle the Turtle was fertile! (T) * more * Extra verses and XXX-rated verses to "Waltz me around again, Hrothgar" (cont.) An unfortunate fellow named Chase Had an ass that was badly misplaced He showed indignation When investigation Proved that few persons shit thru their face! (T) A Roman, who hailed from Gazondom Used a dried hedgehog's hide for a condom His mistress did shout As he pulled the thing out "De gustibus non disputandum!" (U) There was a young maid from Madras Who had a magnificent ass Not pretty, and pink, As you probably think: It was grey, had long ears, and ate grass! (T) A bather, whose clothing was strewed By breezes, that left her quite nude Saw a man come along And, unless I am wrong, You expect the next line to be lewd! (U) A habit obscene and unsavoury Holds the Vicar of Wessex in slavery With maniacal howls He deflowers young owls Which he keeps in an underground aviary! (T) There was a young harlot from Crewe Who filled her vagina with glue She said, with a grin, "If they pay to get in, They'll pay to get out of it, too!" (U) There was a young lawyer named Rex Who was sadly deficient in sex Arraigned for exposure He said, with composure, "De minimus non curat lex!" (U) There was an old lady of Tring Who, when somebody asked her to sing Replied, "Isn't it odd? I can never tell 'God Save The Weasle' from 'Pop Goes The King!" (U) A young poet, whose name was McMahon Wrote verse that never would scan When they said, "But the thing Doesn't move with a swing," He said: "Yes, but I like to get as many words into the last line as I possibly can! (U) * more * Extra Verses and XXX-rated verses to "Waltz Me Around Again, Hrothgar" (cont.) There once was a Duke from the West Whose bride wore chain-mail with the best He said," She is sweet, And gentle, and neat, But it pulls out the hairs from my chest!" (I) There once was a man named Old Jossil Who found a most int'resting fossil He could tell by the bend And the knot in the end, T'was the pecker of Paul the Apostle! (T) There once was a man from Rangoon Who was born by the light of the moon He had not the luck To be born of a fuck But a wet-dream scraped up with a spoon! (T) There once was a man from Shambock Who played the bass viol with his cock With massive erections He rendered selections From Johann Sebastian Bach! (T) There once was a girl from Milpitas Who had a great yen for coitus Her athletic friend Had an itch on the end, So now she has ath-el-ete's foetus! (U) There once was a girl from Mobile Had a cunt made of crucible steel Her greatest sex-thrill Was a rotary drill And an off-center emery wheel! (U) A broken-down harlot named Truppe Was heard to confess, in her cups, "The height of my folly Was to diddle a Collie, But I got a nice prize for the pups!" (T) There once was a man named Grost Who had an affair with a ghost He said, with a spasm, At the height of orgasm, "I think I can feel it, almost!" (T) There once was a Corsair named Bates Who did the fandango, on skates; He fell on his cutlass Which rendered him nutless, And practically useless on dates! (T) * more * Extra Verses and XXX-rated verses to "Waltz Me Around Again, Hrothgar" (cont.) There was a young lady named Cager Who, as the result of a wager, Consented to fart The whole oboe part Of Mozart's Quartet in F Major! (U) There was a young lady from York Who was greatly adverse to the stork But no matter how firm, She feared no man's sperm, For she plugged it up first with a cork! (U) There was an old Count from Svoboda Who would not pay a whore what he owed her, So, with great savoir-faire, She stood on a chair, And pissed in his whiskey-and-soda! (T) There was a young lady from Arden Who was blowing a man in a garden, He said, in a huff: "Do you swallow the stuff?" She answered him:" (gulp!) Beg your pardon?" (T) The lovely young Countess of Bole Had a sense of humor most droll To a masquerade ball She wore nothing at all, And backed in as a Parker House Roll! (T) There was a young man from old Sparta Who was a magnificent farta He could fart anything From "God Save the Queen," To a solo from "La Traviata!" (T) On the chest of a Countess named Gail Was tatooed the price of her tail, And on her behind, For the sake of the blind, Was the same information, in Braille! (T) There was a young man from New Haven Who had an affair with a raven Said he, with a grin, As he wiped off his chin, "Nevermore!" (U) * note: there are HUNDREDS of verses to this song……. (T): Traditional (U): Unknown source (to protect the guilty!) (E): East Kingdom Songbook (I): Ioseph of Locksley (J): John Benson **