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I'll tell of Canute, King of England,
By trade he were what's called a Viking,
These trips always showed him a profit,
After duly considering the matter,
He got other Vikings to join him,
They landed one morning at Weymouth,
When the battle were done, Crown of England,
The Vikings was cheered as the winners,
She started to teach him his manners,
She said his companions was vulgar,
At the time this 'ere promise meant nothing,
He moved his court down to the seaside,
Said one, "Come on King, have a paddle,
"No need to do that," said the Tempter,
And that's how it happened... that later,
For not letting on that he'd seen her,
He replied, These 'ere flatterers told me,
"You're doing quite right," shouted Emma,
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A native of Denmark was he,
His hobbies was roving and raiding
And paddling his feet in the sea.
Every summer he'd visit our shore,
Help himself to whatever he wanted,
And come back in the autumn for more.
But what stumped him to know was this 'ere...
Where the English folk got all the money,
He came and took off them each year.
He concluded as how his best course,
Were to have an invasion of England,
And tap the supply at its source.
With a promise of plunder and spoil,
And raked up atrocity stories,
To bring all their blood to the boil.
And waited for fight to begin,
While their foe, Ethelred the Unready,
Found his army and got it fell in.
Changed heads, so the history book states,
From Ethelred's seven-and-a-quarter,
To King Canutes six-and-five-eights.
Ethelred, he went somewhere and died,
And Canute, to his lasting atonement...
Made the widow, Queen Emma, his bride.
To drink without wetting his nose,
Put his hand to his mouth and say "Pardon!",
Every time the occasion arose.
His habits more easy than free,
Made him promise no more to disgrace her,
By paddling his feet in the sea.
It were made in the cool of the spring,
But when summer came in with a heat wave,
T' were a totally different thing.
Where they took off their shoes and their socks,
And rushed to the water and left him,
Alone on his throne on the rocks.
I'll look after your sceptre and crown."
He replied, "Nay, I promised the missus,
And I can't let the old... lady down."
"The tide's coming in, as you see;
You promised you wouldn't go to it,
But you can't stop it coming to thee!"
When Emma came over the sands,
She found Canute knee deep in water,
Trying to shush the sea back with his hands.
He was chiding each wave as it came,
Saying, "Thus far, my lad, and no further!"
'Til Emma said, "What is this game?"
That the sea would obey me, and so,
I'm giving them this demonstration,
To show what a fat lot they know."
"It's time someone made them look small!"
Then she took off her shoes and her stockings,
And started to paddle an' all. 