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<h2> THE DELECTABLE BALLAD OF THE WALLER LOT </h2>
<p>Up yonder in Buena Park<br/>
There is a famous spot,<br/>
In legend and in history<br/>
Yclept the Waller Lot.<br/>
There children play in daytime<br/>
And lovers stroll by dark,<br/>
For 't is the goodliest trysting-place<br/>
In all Buena Park.<br/>
Once on a time that beauteous maid,<br/>
Sweet little Sissy Knott,<br/>
Took out her pretty doll to walk<br/>
Within the Waller Lot.<br/>
While thus she fared, from Ravenswood<br/>
Came Injuns o'er the plain,<br/>
And seized upon that beauteous maid<br/>
And rent her doll in twain.<br/>
Oh, 't was a piteous thing to hear<br/>
Her lamentations wild;<br/>
She tore her golden curls and cried:<br/>
"My child! My child! My child!"<br/>
Alas, what cared those Injun chiefs<br/>
How bitterly wailed she?<br/>
They never had been mothers,<br/>
And they could not hope to be!<br/>
"Have done with tears," they rudely quoth,<br/>
And then they bound her hands;<br/>
For they proposed to take her off<br/>
To distant border lands.<br/>
But, joy! from Mr. Eddy's barn<br/>
Doth Willie Clow behold<br/>
The sight that makes his hair rise up<br/>
And all his blood run cold.<br/>
He put his fingers in his mouth<br/>
And whistled long and clear,<br/>
And presently a goodly horde<br/>
Of cow-boys did appear.<br/>
Cried Willie Clow: "My comrades bold,<br/>
Haste to the Waller Lot,<br/>
And rescue from that Injun band<br/>
Our charming Sissy Knott!"<br/>
"Spare neither Injun buck nor squaw,<br/>
But smite them hide and hair!<br/>
Spare neither sex nor age nor size,<br/>
And no condition spare!"<br/>
Then sped that cow-boy band away,<br/>
Full of revengeful wrath,<br/>
And Kendall Evans rode ahead<br/>
Upon a hickory lath.<br/>
And next came gallant Dady Field<br/>
And Willie's brother Kent,<br/>
The Eddy boys and Robbie James,<br/>
On murderous purpose bent.<br/>
For they were much beholden to<br/>
That maid—in sooth, the lot<br/>
Were very, very much in love<br/>
With charming Sissy Knott.<br/>
What wonder? She was beauty's queen,<br/>
And good beyond compare;<br/>
Moreover, it was known she was<br/>
Her wealthy father's heir!<br/>
Now when the Injuns saw that band<br/>
They trembled with affright,<br/>
And yet they thought the cheapest thing<br/>
To do was stay and fight.<br/>
So sturdily they stood their ground,<br/>
Nor would their prisoner yield,<br/>
Despite the wrath of Willie Clow<br/>
And gallant Dady Field.<br/>
Oh, never fiercer battle raged<br/>
Upon the Waller Lot,<br/>
And never blood more freely flowed<br/>
Than flowed for Sissy Knott!<br/>
An Injun chief of monstrous size<br/>
Got Kendall Evans down,<br/>
And Robbie James was soon o'erthrown<br/>
By one of great renown.<br/>
And Dady Field was sorely done,<br/>
And Willie Clow was hurt,<br/>
And all that gallant cow-boy band<br/>
Lay wallowing in the dirt.<br/>
But still they strove with might and main<br/>
Till all the Waller Lot<br/>
Was strewn with hair and gouts of gore—<br/>
All, all for Sissy Knott!<br/>
Then cried the maiden in despair:<br/>
"Alas, I sadly fear<br/>
The battle and my hopes are lost,<br/>
Unless some help appear!"<br/>
Lo, as she spoke, she saw afar<br/>
The rescuer looming up—<br/>
The pride of all Buena Park,<br/>
Clow's famous yellow pup!<br/>
"Now, sick'em, Don," the maiden cried,<br/>
"Now, sick'em, Don!" cried she;<br/>
Obedient Don at once complied—<br/>
As ordered, so did he.<br/>
He sicked'em all so passing well<br/>
That, overcome by fright,<br/>
The Indian horde gave up the fray<br/>
And safety sought in flight.<br/>
They ran and ran and ran and ran<br/>
O'er valley, plain, and hill;<br/>
And if they are not walking now,<br/>
Why, then, they're running still.<br/>
The cow-boys rose up from the dust<br/>
With faces black and blue;<br/>
"Remember, beauteous maid," said they,<br/>
"We've bled and died for you!"<br/>
"And though we suffer grievously,<br/>
We gladly hail the lot<br/>
That brings us toils and pains and wounds<br/>
For charming Sissy Knott!"<br/>
But Sissy Knott still wailed and wept,<br/>
And still her fate reviled;<br/>
For who could patch her dolly up—<br/>
Who, who could mend her child?<br/>
Then out her doting mother came,<br/>
And soothed her daughter then;<br/>
"Grieve not, my darling, I will sew<br/>
Your dolly up again!"<br/>
Joy soon succeeded unto grief,<br/>
And tears were soon dried up,<br/>
And dignities were heaped upon<br/>
Clow's noble yellow pup.<br/>
Him all that goodly company<br/>
Did as deliverer hail—<br/>
They tied a ribbon round his neck,<br/>
Another round his tail.<br/>
And every anniversary day<br/>
Upon the Waller Lot<br/>
They celebrate the victory won<br/>
For charming Sissy Knott.<br/>
And I, the poet of these folk,<br/>
Am ordered to compile<br/>
This truly famous history<br/>
In good old ballad style.<br/>
Which having done as to have earned<br/>
The sweet rewards of fame,<br/>
In what same style I did begin<br/>
I now shall end the same.<br/>
So let us sing: Long live the King,<br/>
Long live the Queen and Jack,<br/>
Long live the ten-spot and the ace,<br/>
And also all the pack.<br/></p>
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