| Now I can guess that some of you are wondering at my navy blues
|
| Or how I came to be — oh a sailor on the sea.
|
| You may think that I’m too daft to know what’s forward and which is aft,
|
| But when I’ve sung my song — Oh, you’ll all agree you’re wrong.
|
| A happy-go-lucky A.B. |
| on the land or the sea
|
| I know a few nautical games and my name’s Bell Bottom George
|
| A girl in each port may be true of the boys dressed in blue,
|
| A sailor I know has got three and it’s me, Bell Bottom George
|
| It’s the same to me as we sail to Tripoli or we go back home to Dover
|
| I can go ashore and have one or two more till I’m feeling half-seas-over.
|
| Adventures I’ve had by the score, what a life, what a war.
|
| If ever you get in a scrap I’m your chap, Bell Bottom George
|
| When others are up to their necks pulling ropes, scrubbing decks,
|
| Who slips on the soap and goes — whiz — down on his Bell Bottom George.
|
| The Admiral’s not a bad guy, we get on, he and I,
|
| He speaks when we meet on the stair, «Gangway there Bell Bottom George.»
|
| And the chief is grand so I always lend a hand
|
| With a grin and a smart «Aye, Aye Sir»,
|
| And it’s fun by 'gum' when I’ve had a tot of rum,
|
| I’m the champion main brace splicer.
|
| I’ve sailed the Dead Sea and the Med, and the Black and the Red,
|
| There’s only the suck it and see left for me Bell Bottom George. |