\begin{song}{ title = {What shall we do (Drunken Sailor)}, alias = {Drunken Sailor}, note = {Eines der ältesten bekannten Shanties. Häufig wurden solche Shanties von Matrosen auf großen Schiffen gesungen, um rhythmische Arbeitsabläufe zu koordinieren - etwa beim Segelsetzen, wenn viele Männer gemeinsame „HooRay“ das Seil ziehen mussten. Es gibt noch unzählige weitere Strophen, die im Laufe der Zeit hinzugedichtet wurden. [Quelle: Codex]}, } \begin{verse} \chord{e}What shall we do with the drunken sailor? \\ \chord{D}What shall we do with the drunken sailor? \\ \chord{e}What shall we do with the drunken sailor, \\ \chord{D}early in the \chord{e}morning? \end{verse} \begin{verse} Ref.: \chord{e}Hooray, and up she rises. \chord{D}Hooray, and up she \\ rises. \chord{e}Hooray, and up she rises, \chord{D}early in the \chord{e}morning. \end{verse} \begin{verse} Put him in the long-boat till he´s sober (3x) - Hooray… \\ Pull out the plug and wet him all over (3x) - Hooray… \\ Keep him there and make him bale there (3x) - Hoo.. \\ Trice him up in a runnin´ bowline (3x) - Hoo… \\ Give him a dose of salt and water (3x) - Hoo… \\ Stick him in the scupper with a hosepipe on him (3x)- Hoo… \\ Stick on his back a mustard plaster (3x) - Hoo… \\ Shave his belly with a rusty razor (3x) - Hoo… \\ Put him in bed with the Captain´s daughter (3x) - Hoo… \\ That´s what we do with a drunken sailor (3x) - Hoo… \end{verse} \end{song}