Sergeant-Major Money
It wasn't our battalion, but we lay alongside it,
   So the story is as true as the telling is frank.
 They hadn't one Line-officer left, after Arras,
   Except a batty major and the Colonel, who drank.
 'B' Company Commander was fresh from the Depot,
   An expert on gas drill, otherwise a dud;
 So Sergeant-Major Money carried on, as instructed,
   And that's where the swaddies began to sweat blood.
 His Old Army humour was so well-spiced and hearty
   That one poor sod shot himself, and one lost his wits;
 But discipline's maintained, and back in rest-billets
   The Colonel congratulates 'B' Company on their kits.
 The subalterns went easy, as was only natural
   With a terror like Money driving the machine,
 Till finally two Welshmen, butties from the Rhondda,
   Bayoneted their bugbear in a field-canteen.
 Well, we couldn't blame the officers, they relied on Money;
   We couldn't blame the pitboys, their courage was grand;
 Or, least of all, blame Money, an old stiff surviving
   In a New (bloody) Army he couldn't understand.


