Bateese The Lucky Man

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He's alway ketchin' doré, an'he 's alway
  ketchin' trout
On de place w'ere no wan else can ketch at all
He 's alway ketchin' barbotte, dat 's w'at you
  call bull-pout,
An' he never miss de wil' duck on de fall.

O! de pa'tridge do some  skippin' w'en  she see
  heem on de swamp
For she know Bateese don't go for not'ing
  dere,
An' de rabbit if he 's comin' , wall! you ought
  to see heem jomp.
W'y he want to climb de tree he feel so
  scare.

Affer two hour by de reever I hear hees leetle
  song
Den I meet heem all hees pocket full of snipe,
An' me, I go de sam' place, an' I tramp de
  w'ole day long
An' I'm only shootin' two or t'ree, Ba Cripe!

I start about de sun-rise, an' I put out ma
  decoy,
An' before it 's comin' breakfas' , he 's holler
  on hees boy
For carry home two dozen duck or more.

An' I'm freezin' on de blin'-me- from four
  o'clock to nine
An' ev'ry duck she 's passin' up so high.
Dere 's blue-bill an' butter-ball, an' red-head,
  de fines' kin
An' I might as well go shootin' on de sky.

Don't see de noder feller lak Bateese was lucky
  man,
He can ketch de smartes' feesh is never
  sweem,
An' de bird he seldom miss dem, let dem try
  de hard dey can
W'y de eagle on de mountain can't fly
  away from heem.

But all de bird, an' fish too,  is geev'up feelin'
  scare,
An' de rabbit he can stay at home in bed,
For he feesh an' shoot no longer, ole Jean
  Bateese Belair,
  'Cos he 's dead.

© William Henry Drummond