====== #1174 - My Wife's Gone to the Country ====== [[..:1173:|prev]] | [[..:1175:|next]] /*-20note-*/ *Composer: *Ted Snyder (1881-1965), 1909 *Also known as: *Hurrah! Hurrah! *[[/data/media/midi/1174.mid|MIDI]] | ++show|\\ {{http://www.rollerorgans.com/mid2roll.php?cob=1174&.gif?}}++ *[[:incipit]]: 517654321653311 /(intro)// *[[:incipit|Condensed Incipit]]: 5176543216531 /(intro)// *[[:incipit]]: 51712351615 *[[:incipit|Condensed Incipit]]: 51712351615 *[[/cob_label/index.php|Print a Label]] *++Lyrics:|\\ When Missus Brown told hubby, "I just can't stand the heat\\ Please send me to the country, dear, I know 'twould be a treat"\\ Next day his wife and fam'ly were seated on a train\\ And when the train had started, Brownie shouted this refrain:\\ My wife's gone to the country, hurrah, hurrah!\\ She thought it best, I need a rest, that's why she went away\\ She took the children with her, hurrah, hurrah!\\ I don't care what becomes of me, my wife's gone away\\ \\ He kept the 'phone a-going, told ev'ryone he knew\\ "It's Mister Brown, come on downtown, I have some news for you"\\ He told a friend reporter just why he felt so gay\\ Next day an advertisement in the papers read this way:\\ My wife's gone to the country, hurrah, hurrah!\\ She thought it best, I need a rest, that's why she went away\\ She took the children with her, hurrah, hurrah!\\ I don't care what becomes of me, my wife's gone away\\ \\ He sang his joyful story into a phonograph\\ He made a dozen records and I say it was to laugh\\ For when his friends had vanished and Brown was all alone\\ His neighbors heard the same old tune on Brownie's graphophone\\ My wife's gone to the country, hurrah, hurrah!\\ She thought it best, I need the rest, that's why she went away\\ She took the children with her, hurrah, hurrah!\\ Like Eva Tanguay, I don't care, my wife's gone away\\ \\ He went into the parlor and tore down from the wall\\ A sign that read "God Bless Our Home" and threw it in the hall\\ Another sign he painted and hung it up instead\\ Next day the servant nearly fainted when these words she read:\\ My wife's gone to the country, hurrah, hurrah!\\ She thought it best, I need the rest, that's why she went away\\ She took the children with her, hurrah, hurrah!\\ Now I'm with you if you're with me, my wife's gone away\\ \\ He called on pretty Molly, a girl he used to know\\ The servant said "She left the house about an hour ago\\ But if you leave your name, sir, or write a little note\\ I'll give it to her when she comes" and this is what he wrote:\\ My wife's gone to the country, hurrah, hurrah!\\ She thought it best, I need the rest, that's why she went away\\ She took the children with her, hurrah, hurrah!\\ I love my wife, but oh! you kid, my wife's gone away\\ \\ He went and bought a parrot, a very clever bird\\ The kind that always would repeat most anything she heard\\ So when his voice grew husky and Brownie couldn't talk\\ While he'd be taking cough-drops, he would have the parrot squawk:\\ My wife's gone to the country, hurrah, hurrah!\\ She thought it best, I need the rest, that's why she went away\\ She took the children with her, hurrah, hurrah!\\ I knew my book, she left the cook, my wife's gone away\\ \\ ++ *George Whiting and ++Irving Berlin|{{search>"Irving Berlin" @cobs}}++ (1888-1989), 1909