Flanders & Swann
Flanders & Swann
Flanders & Swann
Flanders & Swann
Flanders & Swann
Flanders & Swann
Flanders & Swann
Flanders & Swann
Flanders & Swann
Flanders & Swann
Flanders & Swann
Michael Flanders and Donald Swann
Oh nobody loves the Rhinoceros much
If you ask the reason why
They will tell you because of his scaly touch
Or his hard and glittering eye;
But should you ask a truthful man
You will get this quick response:
I do not trust that thing on his nose
The bodger on his bonce!
Oh the bodger on the bonce!
The bodger on the bonce!
Pity the poor old Rhino with
The bodger on the bonce!
Yet a sensitive heart the Rhinoceros owns
If you doubt it, here's the proof;
That thing on his nose is for taking stones
Out of a horse's hoof:
He seldom, if ever meets a horse
(It is this that makes him sad)
When he does then it hasn't a stone in its hoof
But he would if he did and it had!
Oh the bodger on the bonce!
The bodger on the bonce!
Pity the poor old Rhino with
The bodger on the bonce!
And just to bring pleasure to those
Who like to enjoy the natural scene
He picks up litter on his spike
To keep the forest clean:
And if one day to his habitat
For a picnic you should roam
He would open a tin should you
Have left your opener at home
With the bodger on the bonce!
The bodger on the bonce!
Pity the poor old Rhino with
The bodger on the bonce!
So treat the Rhinoceros as your friend
Though he looks a fearsome sight
He amply justifies his end
Because his means are right;
And ask yourself, would you do as well
Fulfilling long-felt wants
If nature had endowed you with
A Bodger on your bonce?
Yes, a Bodger on your bonce?
A Bodger on your bonce?
If nature had endowed you with
A Bodger on your bonce?
A Bodger on your bonce?
A Bodger on your bonce?