| I was taking compass bearings for the Ordinance Survey
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| On an army training camp on Salisbury plain,
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| I had packed up my theodolite, was calling it a day,
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| When I heard a voice that sang a sad refrain:
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| 'Oh, my darling Armadillo,
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| Let me tell you of my love,
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| Listen to my Armadillo roundelay;
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| Be my fellow on my pillow,
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| Underneath this weeping willow,
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| Be my darling Armadillo all the day.'
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| I was somewhat disconcerted by this curious affair,
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| For a single Armadillo, you will own,
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| On Salisbury plain, on summer, is comparatively rare,
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| And a pair of them is practically unknown.
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| Drawn by that mellow solo,
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| There I followed on my bike,
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| To discover what these Armadillo
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| Lovers would be like:
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| 'Oh, my darling Armadillo,
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| How delightful it would be,
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| If for us those silver wedding bells would chime,
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| Let the orange blossoms billow,
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| You need only say 'I will'-oh,
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| Be my darling Armadillo all the time.'
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| Then I saw them in a hollow, by a yellow muddy bank —
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| An Armadillo singing … to an armour-plated tank.
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| Should I tell him, gaunt and rusting, with the willow tree above,
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| This — abandoned on manoeuvres — is the object of your love?
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| I left him to his singing,
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| Cycled home without a pause,
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| Never tell a man the truth
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| About the one that he adores.
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| On the breeze that follows sunset,
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| I could hear that sad refrain,
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| Singing willow, willow, willow down the way;
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| And I seemed to hear it still, Oh,
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| Vive L’amore, vive l’Armadillo,
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| 'Be my darling Armadillo all the day.
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| Be my darling Armadillo all the day.' |