NAME: Bigler's Crew, The [Laws D8] DESCRIPTION: The Bigler sets out for Buffalo from Milwaukee. A number of minor incidents are described, and the Bigler's lack of speed sarcastically remarked upon: "[We] MIGHT have passed the whole fleet there -- IF they'd hove to and wait" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1922 (Dean) KEYWORDS: ship travel humorous FOUND_IN: US(MA,MW) Canada(Mar,Ont) REFERENCES: (11 citations) Laws D8, "The Bigler's Crew" Rickaby 47, "The Bigler's Crew" (1 text) Dean, pp. 19-20, "The Bigler's Crew" (1 text) Warner 19, "Jump Her, Juberju" (this version rather heavily folk processed); 20, "The Bigler" (2 texts, 1 tune) Creighton-Maritime, p. 141, "The Cruise of the Bigler" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-FSUSA 46, "The Bigler" (1 text, 1 tune) Sandburg, pp. 174-175, "Bigerlow" (1 short text, 1 tune) Colcord, pp. 200-202, "The Cruise of the Bigler" (1 text, 1 tune) Shay-SeaSongs, pp. 105-108, "The Bigler" (1 text, 1 tune) Botkin-AmFolklr, pp. 843-845, "The Bigler's Crew" (1 text, 1 tune) DT 611, BIGLRCRW* Roud #645 RECORDINGS: Stanley Baby, "The Trip of the 'Bigler'" (on GreatLakes1) Sam Larner, "The Dogger Bank" (on SLarner02) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Light on Cape May" (tune, lyrics) cf. "The Crummy Cow" (tune) SAME_TUNE: The Crummy Cow (File: HHH501) The Light on Cape May (File: Doe130) NOTES: According to Julius F. Wolff, Jr., _Lake Superior Shipwrecks_, Lake Superior Port Cities Inc., Duluth, 1990, p. 42, a ship named _J. Bigler_ was lost near Marquette, Michigan in 1884, but he was unable to find many other details. I have no idea if it is the same ship, but it was on the right lakes at about the right time. - RBW File: LD08 === NAME: Bile dem Cabbage Down: see Bile Them Cabbage Down (File: LoF269) === NAME: Bile Them Cabbage Down DESCRIPTION: Chorus: "Boil them cabbage down, Bake that hoecake brown, Only tune that I can play is Boil them cabbage down." Fiddle tune, with floating verses from anywhere, e.g. "Raccoon has a bushy tail, Possum's tail is bare" or "Raccoon up a 'simmon tree" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1924 (recordings, Uncle Dave Macon, Fiddlin' John Carson) KEYWORDS: fiddle dancing nonballad animal food floatingverses FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (5 citations) Lomax-FSNA 269, "Bile Them Cabbage Down" (1 text, 1 tune) Botkin-SoFolklr, p. 710, "Bile dem Cabbage Down" (1 text, 1 tune) BrownIII 432, "Boil Them Cabbage Down" (1 fragment); also perhaps 155, "Jaybird Up a Simmon Tree" (1 text plus mention of 1 more; both are singles stanzas, "Jaybird up a 'simmon tree, sparrow(s) on the ground," which float; I list them here because this seems the most popular of the songs with the stanza, though they might instead be "Possum Up a Gum Stump" or something else) Scarborough-NegroFS, pp. 124-125, "Bile dem Cabbage Down" (1 text, with some unusual variants in the chorus); p. 168, "Boil Dem Cabbage Down" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 40, "Bile Them Cabbage Down" (1 text) Roud #4211 RECORDINGS: Fiddlin' John Carson, "Boil Dem Cabbage Down" (OKeh 40306, 1925; rec. 1924) Crockett's Kentucky Mountaineers, "Bile Dem Cabbage Down" (Crown 3101, 1931; on KMM) (Varsity 5046, n.d.) Dixie Crackers, "Bile Them Cabbage Down" (Paramount 3151, 1929) Earl Johnson & his Dixie Entertainers, "Boil Dem Cabbage Down" (OKeh 45112, 1927) Uncle Dave Macon, "Bile Dem Cabbage Down" (Vocalion 14849, 1924; Vocalion 5042, c. 1926) Clayton McMichen's Wildcats, "Bile Dem Cabbage Down" (Decca 5436, 1937) Riley Puckett, "Bile Dem Cabbage Down" (Columbia 254-D, 1924; Harmony 5127-H, n.d.) Ernest V. Stoneman, "Bile Them Cabbage Down" (on Stonemans01), "Bile 'em Cabbage Down" (on Autoharp01) Gid Tanner & his Skillet Lickers, "Bile Them Cabbage Down" (Columbia 15249-D, 1928; rec. 1927) Jack Youngblood, "Bile Dem Cabbage Down" (Columbia 21103, 1953) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Raccoon" (floating lyrics) cf. "Possum Up a Gum Stump" (floating lyrics) File: LoF269 === NAME: Bill Bailey, Won't You Please Come Home? DESCRIPTION: Bill (a B&O brakeman) and his woman have a fight; he storms out. She begs, "Won't you come home, Bill Bailey... I'll do the cooking, honey, I'll pay the rent; I know I've done you wrong." (At last Bill shows up in an automobile) AUTHOR: Hughie Cannon EARLIEST_DATE: 1902 (sheet music, recording by Arthur Collins) KEYWORDS: love separation reunion FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (4 citations) Silber-FSWB, p. 253, "Bill Bailey" (1 text) Geller-Famous, pp. 205-210, "Bill Bailey, Won't You Please Come Home" (1 text, 1 tune) Fuld-WFM, pp. 145-146, "Bill Bailey, Won't You Please Come Home?" DT, BLLBAILY* Roud #4325 RECORDINGS: Perry Bechtel's Colonels, "Bill Bailey" (Brunswick 498, c. 1930) Al Bernard, "Bill Bailey, Won't You Please Come Home" (Brunswick 312, 1929; Panachord [UK] 25148, 1931; rec.1928) Homer Brierhopper, "Bill Bailey" (Bluebird B-6903, 1937) Big Bill Broonzy, "Bill Bailey" (on Broonzy01) Arthur Collins, "Bill Bailey Won't You Please Come Home" (CYL: Edison 8112, 1902) Warde Ford, "Bill Bailey" [fragment] (AFS 4215 B3, 1939; in AMMEM/Cowell) Jess Young's Tennessee Band [or Young Brothers' Tennessee Band], "Bill Bailey Won't You Please Come Home" (Columbia 15219-D, 1927) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Hop-Joint" (some lyrics; character of Bill Bailey) cf. "Oh, Baby, 'Low Me One More Chance" (theme) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Won't You Come Home Bill Bailey? NOTES: Although obviously not a folk song in origin, this strikes me as a popular enough piece as to belong here. Fuld mentions several papers examining who "Bill Bailey" might have been. He seems to find none of them entirely convincing. The story in Geller is that William Bailey was a "lazy shiftless Negro whose angry spouse, weary of supporting him, had finally turned him out." Cannon, apparently too sexist to fathom this, was convinced she would take him back, and made the wife the lazy one. Spaeth's _A History of Popular Music in America_ mentions another 1902 song, "I Wonder Why Bill Bailey Don't Come Home" (by Frank Fogarty, Woodward, Mills), and still another, "Since Bill Bailey Came Back Home," by Billy Johnson and Seymour Furth. Unfortunately, he supplies no details. - RBW File: FSWB253B === NAME: Bill Dunbar DESCRIPTION: "Come all you sympathizers, I pray you lend an ear. It's of a drowning accident as you shall quicklie hear." Hotel manager Bill Dunbar, liked by all, attends a race. On his return, he and (Bob Cunningham) go through the ice and drown AUTHOR: (Billy Lyle and) Dave Curtin ? EARLIEST_DATE: 1964 (Fowke); c. 1957 (recording, Emerson Woodcock) LONG_DESCRIPTION: Bill Dunbar, a kind hotel-keeper, and Bob Cunningham lose their way while returning from the races; they drive their team onto the ice, break through and are drowned; Bill throws his mitts onto the ice to show where they went in. Bill leaves a wife and child, and is sorely mourned; once a foreman for Mossom Boyd, he was known for bravery. Singer hopes to meet on a brighter shore "there to live in happiness and old acquaintance to renew" KEYWORDS: racing death drowning grief travel mourning lament animal horse children family wife friend landlord HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1894 (other sources say c. 1885) - Drowning of Bill Dunbar and Bob Cottingham at Gannon's Narrows on Pigeon Lake in Ontario FOUND_IN: Canada(Ont) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Fowke-Lumbering #40, "Bill Dunbar" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #3677 RECORDINGS: Emerson Woodcock, "Bill Dunbar" (on Lumber01) NOTES: One of Fowke's informants told her the song, widely known in the Peterborough area, was written in about 1900. Mossom Boyd, for whom Dunbar worked, came to Canada in 1834, died 1883; he was the first European to settle in the Sturgeon Lake region, and was successful in the lumber trade. - PJS File: FowL40 === NAME: Bill Grogan's Goat DESCRIPTION: Bill Grogan has a goat; "He loved that goat just like a kid." One day the goat, "Ate three red shirts from off the line." Bill angrily ties the goat to the railroad track. The goat "coughed up those shirts (and) flagged down the train." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1904 (sheet music, The Tale of a Shirt) KEYWORDS: animal humorous train FOUND_IN: US(SE) Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (7 citations) Cohen-LSRail, pp. 288-295, "Papa's Billy Goat/Rosenthal's Goat" (3 texts plus some excerpts and a sheet music cover of "The Tale of a Shirt," 2 tunes) BrownIII 514, "The Billy Goat" (1 short text) Peacock, p. 65, "Joey Long's Goat" (1 text, 1 tune) Spaeth-ReadWeep, pp. 140-141, "(The Goat)" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 404, "Bill Groggin's Goat" (1 text) Pankake-PHCFSB, pp. 54-55, "Papa's Billy Goat" (1 text, 1 tune, with additional elements added) DT, GOATSHRT* Roud #4574 RECORDINGS: Fiddlin' John Carson, "Papa's Billy Goat" (OKeh 4994, 1924; rec. 1923) (Okeh, unissued, 1927) Uncle Dave Macon, "Papa's Billie Goat" (Vocalion 14848, 1924) Riley Puckett, "Papa's Billy Goat" (Columbia, unissued, 1924) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Reuben and Rachel" (tune of some versions, including Fiddlin' John Carson's) NOTES: Almost certainly based on a poem by Robert Service -- which may, however, have been based on a folk song or story. - PJS Norm Cohen, however, makes no mention of this; he notes that the 1904 "Tale of a Shirt" (the earliest precisely dateable version) is very distinct from the common text, requiring recensional activity. The earliest traditional version seems to be Brown's, from 1913. Cohen also notes a link to a Will Hays song, "O'Grady's Goat," published by 1890. It sounds to me as if the thing goes back into the mists of time, with periodic performers grabbing some traditional fragment and expanding it into a full-blown song. Carson's version, incidentally, has a final verse in which the singer marries a widow and the widow's daughter marries the singer's father. It's not "I'm My Own Grandpa" -- but it's very possibly an inspiration for that song. - RBW File: SRW141 === NAME: Bill Groggin's Goat: see Bill Grogan's Goat (File: SRW141) === NAME: Bill Hopkin's Colt DESCRIPTION: "'Twas over in Cambridge county In a barroom filled with smoke Where all the neighbors... Talk horse and crack a joke." Hopkins tells how his father planned to shoot an ugly colt, but Bill urged him to spare it -- and it has become a champion racer AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1930 (Flanders/Brown) KEYWORDS: horse racing father FOUND_IN: US(NE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Flanders/Brown, pp. 39-42, "Bill Hopkin's Colt" (1 text, 1 tune) ST FlBr039 (Partial) Roud #4156 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Creeping Jane" [Laws Q23] (theme) NOTES: As "Bill Hopkins's Colt," this is item dH36 in Laws's Appendix II. - RBW File: FlBr039 === NAME: Bill Martin and Ella Speed: see Ella Speed (Bill Martin and Ella Speed) [Laws I6] (File: LI06) === NAME: Bill Mason DESCRIPTION: The song opens with chat about Bill Mason, then notes that he was called to "bring (down) the night express." His new wife, seeing vandals destroying the tracks, she brings out a lantern and saves him and his train AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: probably 1873 (100 Choice Selections, Volume 6) KEYWORDS: train rescue sabotage FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (2 citations) Cohen-LSRail, pp. 282-287, "Bill Mason" (2 texts, 1 tune) Rorrer, p. 84, "Bill Mason" (1 text) Roud #12393 RECORDINGS: Roy Harvey and the North Carolina Ramblers, "Bill Mason" (Paramount 3079, 1927) Charlie Poole and the North Carolina Ramblers, "Bill Mason" (Columbia 15407-D, 1929) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Bill Mason's Bride NOTES: This poem somehow came to be associated with Bret Harte, but is not in any of the works written in his lifetime; this seems to be a case of an incorrect attribution that somehow "stuck." - RBW File: LSRai282 === NAME: Bill Miller's Trip to the West DESCRIPTION: "When I got there I looked around; No Christian man or church I found." Alleged to describe the adventures of Confederate captain Bill Miller of North Carolina, but the two lines quoted above are all the text known AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1952 (Brown) KEYWORDS: clergy FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) BrownII 268, "Bill Miller's Trip to the West" (1 fragment) Roud #6625 NOTES: Many editors print occasional fragments of songs they can't identify, but as of this moment, I think this is the most anonymous fragment I've yet seen in a book of traditional song. - RBW File: BrII268 === NAME: Bill Morgan and His Gal DESCRIPTION: Bill Morgan takes his girlfriend out to eat; she orders such a huge dinner that he remonstrates with her, saying, "My name is Morgan, but it ain't J. P." Other examples of her profligacy follow; at last Morgan gives up on her AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1906 (recording, Bob Roberts) KEYWORDS: food humorous lover money FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (1 citation) DT, AINTJP* RECORDINGS: Buster Carter & Preston Young, "Bill Morgan and his Gal" (Columbia 15758-D, 1932; rec. 1931) New Lost City Ramblers, "Bill Morgan and his Gal" (on NLCR05, NLCRCD1) Bob Roberts, "My Name Is Morgan, But It Ain't J.P." (CYL: Edison 9227, 1906) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "I Had But Fifty Cents" (theme) ALTERNATE_TITLES: My Name is Morgan (But It Ain't J. P.) NOTES: John Pierpont Morgan (1837-1913), mortgage banker, was probably the most powerful financier in American history; he controlled railroads, steel mills and the largest bank on Wall Street. The size of his enterprises is demonstrated by the fact that his bank actually financed the Federal Reserve Board in its early years. Morgan also (at the request of Theodore Roosevelt) managed the stock market problem which led to the Panic of 1907. Using his own money and money he pried out of other bankers, he managed to stabilize the financial system, though the resulting recession hurt ordinary people badly. - PJS, RBW This has the hallmarks of a vaudeville song. - PJS And the New Lost City Ramblers version heightens this impression with an additional chorus. - RBW We should note that this is NOT the same as the Mitchell Trio song "My Name Is Morgan," though that was doubtless suggested by this piece. - RBW File: RcBMAHG === NAME: Bill Peters, the Stage Driver DESCRIPTION: "Bill Peters was a hustler From Independence town...." "Bill driv the stage from Independence... Thar warn't no feller on the route that driv with half the skill." Bill drives faster, stops less, and kills more than anyone, but at last he stops a bullet AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1910 (Lomax) KEYWORDS: travel death talltale FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (1 citation) Saffel-CowboyP, pp. 194-195, "Bill Peters, the Stage Driver" (1 text) Roud #8012 File: Saffe194 === NAME: Bill Stafford: see The State of Arkansas (The Arkansas Traveler II) [Laws H1] (File: LH01) === NAME: Bill the Bullocky DESCRIPTION: "As I came down through Conroy's Gap I heard a maiden cry, 'There goes old Bill the Bullocky, He's bound for Gundagai!'" Bill is said to be very honest, but has a difficult time doing his work AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1964 KEYWORDS: Australia dog work travel hardtimes FOUND_IN: Australia REFERENCES: (1 citation) Manifold-PASB, p. 139, "Bill the Bullocky" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #10221 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Nine Miles from Gundagai (The Dog Sat in the Tuckerbox)" (lyrics) NOTES: The version in Manifold is only two verses long, and one of them is largely derived from "Nine Miles from Gundagai" (with which Roud lumps it). Even the lines not derived from that song generally have parallels elsewhere. I'm not sure this even counts as an independent song. But I'm giving it the benefit of the doubt. - RBW File: PASB139 === NAME: Bill the Weaver: see Will the Weaver [Laws Q9] (File: LQ09) === NAME: Bill Vanero (Paul Venerez) [Laws B6] DESCRIPTION: Bill/Paul hears that a band of Indians is coming, and rides to tell his love Bessie Lee and her fellow ranchers. Fatally wounded, he writes a warning in his own blood. The letter is carried by his horse, and the ranch is saved AUTHOR: Eben E. Rexford (as "The Ride of Paul Venerez") EARLIEST_DATE: 1881 ("Youth's Companion") KEYWORDS: death Indians(Am.) horse warning FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (8 citations) Laws B6, "Bill Vanero (Paul Venerez)" Larkin, pp. 40-45, "Billy Venero" (1 text, 1 tune) Logsdon 4, pp. 42-47, "Billie Vanero" (1 text, 1 tune) Randolph 199, "Bill Vanero" (3 texts, 1 tune) Randolph/Cohen, pp. 184-186, "Bill Vanero" (1 text, 1 tune -- Randolph's 199A) Fife-Cowboy/West 46, "Billy Veniro" (1 text, 1 tune) Ohrlin-HBT 99, "Billy Venero" (1 text, 1 tune) DT 374, BVANERO* BVANERO2* Roud #632 RECORDINGS: Billie Maxwell, "Billy Venero" (Parts 1&2) (Victor V-40148, 1929; on WhenIWas2) Harry "Mac" McClintock, "Billy Venero" (Victor 21487, 1928) Glenn Ohrlin, "Billy Venero" (on Ohrlin01) Luther Royce, "Billy Vanero" (AFS, 1941; on LC55) Art Thieme, "Billy Venero" (on Thieme01) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Billy Vanero NOTES: Logsdon notes a complicated story here. He states that Eben E. Rexford published "The Ride of Paul Venerez" in 1881. But it was in 1882 (July 17) that the White Mountain Apaches broke out of their reservation. Riders did bring warning of the outbreak, which allowed the settlers to protect the Burch Ranch near Payson, Arizona. There is no documentation of a rider named Billy Vanero, so while the Rexford poem was probably adopted to the Arizona situation, the details are anything but clear. - RBW File: LB06 === NAME: Bill Wiseman DESCRIPTION: "Oh Bill rode out one morning just at the break of day; He said he was sure of his bait-tub of squid up here in Hiscock Bay." The song ends "It's all about Bill Wiseman jiggin' his squid in Hiscock Bay." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1951 (Peacock) KEYWORDS: sailor sex bawdy humorous FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Doyle3, pp. 14-15, "Bill Wiseman" (1 text, 1 tune) Peacock, pp. 40-42, "Bill Wiseman" (1 text, 1 tune) Blondahl, pp. 12-13, "Kitchy-Coo" (1 text, 1 tune) RECORDINGS: Omar Blondahl, "Kitchey Coo" (on NFOBlondahl01) Ken Peacock, "Bill Wiseman" (on NFKPeacock) NOTES: What are Bill, George, Patience, Tom, Ethel, Lisa and Judge Pippy doing between the first and last verse? They may be jigging but I doubt it has anything to do with squid; guessing at keywords could be like taking Bessie Smith literally when she sings "He's a deep sea diver." Omar Blondahl recorded a version as "Kitchey Coo" -- from the nonsense chorus? -- on Rodeo LP RLP7 [per Neil Rosenberg, "Omar Blondahl's Contribution to the Newfoundland Folksong Canon" in Canadian Journal for Traditional Music, 1991] Peacock (NFKPeacock notes): "The man who sang it for me was somewhat embarassed by the presence of women, a valuable clue to the involved symbolism of both the verses and the chorus. To an outsider unfamiliar with local sexual symbols it appears obscure, though perhaps mildly suggestive. Similar songs occur in our own popular music too.... Millions know the words but only a few know what's going on. In Newfoundland, everyone knows what's going on." - BS File: Doyl3014 === NAME: Billie Johnson of LundyÕs Lane: see General Scott and the Veteran (File: Wa013) === NAME: Billie Magee Magaw: see The Three Ravens [Child 26] (File: C026) === NAME: Billie Vanero: see Bill Vanero (Paul Venerez) [Laws B6] (File: LB06) === NAME: Billy and Diana: see Vilikens and His Dinah [LawsM31A/B] (File: LM31) === NAME: Billy Barlow (I) DESCRIPTION: "Let's go a-huntin', said Risky Rob, Let's go a-huntin', said Robin to Bob, Let's go a-huntin', said Dan'l to Jo, Let's go a-huntin', said Billy Barlow." They hunt a (rat/possum), kill it, cook it, and divide it. All get sick except Billy, who feels fine. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1916 (Brown) KEYWORDS: hunting humorous animal disease poison FOUND_IN: US(MW,SE,So) REFERENCES: (5 citations) BrownII 57, "'Let's Go A-Hunting,' Says Richard to Robert" (1 text) Scott-BoA, pp. 165-166, "Let's Go a-Huntin'" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-FSNA 159, "Let's Go A-Huntin'" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 204, "Billy Barlow" (1 text) DT, BLLYBRLO Roud #236 RECORDINGS: Pete Seeger, "Billy Barlow" (on PeteSeeger03, PeteSeegerCD03) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Cutty Wren" (form) cf. "Cricketty Wee" (form) NOTES: Thought by many to be an Americanized version of "The Cutty Wren." The similarity, both in form and in subject matter, is there -- but the two have gone in such separate directions that it seems better to keep them distinct; it is barely possible they are independent (and quite possible that "Billy Barlow" is a deliberate parody). I can't help but add Paul Stamler's comment, though: "If this is independent from 'Cutty Wren,' I'll eat that possum." (Yes, but would you eat the rat?) - RBW File: SBoA165 === NAME: Billy Barlow (II) DESCRIPTION: William Barlow "come[s] before you with one boot and one shoe." He arouses the wonder of the girls, is given free entrance to the races, and is more unusual than any animal in the circus. He hopes some young lady will accept him as a beau AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1910 (Belden) KEYWORDS: talltale courting clothes FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Belden, pp. 253-255, "Billy Barlow" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #7758 NOTES: Belden notes this as a comic song performed as far back as 1842, and popular enough to parody during the administration of Franklin Pierce (1853-1857). Belden also notes that Edgar Allen Poe refers to his ex-publisher as "Billy Barlow," implying that, by 1840, the name was already used for a buffoon. Joy Hildebrand brings to my attention Sam Cowell (1820-1864), who performed as Billy Barlow. From the dates, it looks like Billy probably predates Cowell. But Hildebrand speculates that Cowell might have converted Billy into a character in the "Cutty Wren" type song "Billy Barlow (I)." So far, this is just speculation -- but it makes some sense. - RBW File: Beld253 === NAME: Billy Barlow in Australia DESCRIPTION: "When I was at home I was down on my luck And I earned a poor living by driving a truck." Billy inherits a thousand pounds, but a merchant sells him a station and he is cheated of the whole inheritance. He returns to Sydney to beg a job AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1843 (Maitland Mercury and Hunger River General Advertiser; see Patterson/Fahey/Seal) KEYWORDS: money trick home unemployment FOUND_IN: Australia REFERENCES: (2 citations) Manifold-PASB, pp. 34-35, "Billy Barlow in Australia" (1 text, 1 tune) Paterson/Fahey/Seal, pp. 149-155, "Billy Barlow in Australia" (1 text plus an excerpt) Roud #8397 NOTES: Obviously not to be confused with the American "Billy Barlow." I'm far from sure it's a folk song, either. Banjo Paterson published it in "Old Bush Songs," but Paterson is no reliable source -- how many folk songs are there about truck drivers? The tune is also of suspect origin. - RBW File: PASB034 === NAME: Billy Boy DESCRIPTION: Asked where he has been, Billy says he has been courting, and has found a girl, "but she's a young thing and cannot leave her mother." In response to other questions, he describes her many virtues, always returning to his refrain AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1776 (Herd, according to Opie-Oxford2) KEYWORDS: courting age youth FOUND_IN: US(Ap,MA,MW,NE,Ro,SE,So) Britain(England(North,South)) Canada(Mar,Ont) REFERENCES: (25 citations) Bronson (12), 29 versions (though Bronson omits a higher fraction than usual of the versions known to him) Belden, pp. 499-501, "Billy Boy" (2 texts) Randolph 104, "Billy Boy" (1 text plus a fragment and 5 excerpts, 1 tune) Randolph/Cohen, pp. 131-133, "Billy Boy" (1 text, 1 tune -- Randolph's 104A) BrownIII 121, "Billy Boy" (2 texts plus an excerpt; the headnotes mention 47 texts in the Brown collection) Hudson 133, pp. 278-280, "Billy Boy" (4 texts, condensed, plus mention of "at least" 8 more) Scarborough-SongCatcher, pp. 296-298, "Billy Boy" (4 texts, mostly short; 1 tune on p.435) {Bronson's #27} Eddy 38, "Billy Boy" (5 texts, 1 tune) Creighton/Senior, pp. 246-248, "Billy Boy" (2 texts plus 2 fragments, 1 tune) {Bronson's #20} Flanders/Brown, pp. 162-163, "Billy Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronon's #29} Linscott, pp. 166-167, "Billy Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #19} Wyman-Brockway I, p. 14, "Billie Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #26} Fuson, p. 105, "Billy Boy" (1 text) Cambiaire, pp. 45-46, "Billy Boy" (1 text) SharpAp 89, "My Boy Billy" (3 texts, 3 tunes) {B=Bronson's #22, C=#8} Sharp-100E 58, "My Boy Willie" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-ABFS, pp. 320-322, "Billy Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #28} Hugill, pp. 450-452, "Billy Boy" (3 texts, 2 tunes) [AbrEd, pp. 336-338] LPound-ABS, 113, pp. 231-232, "Billy Boy" (1 text) JHCox 168, "Billy Boy" (4 texts) Pankake-PHCFSB, p. 267, "Billy Boy" (1 text) Opie-Oxford2 45, "Where have you been all the day, My boy Billy?" (2 texts) cf. Gardner/Chickering, p. 477, "Billy Boy" (source notes only) DT (12), BILLYBOY BLLYBOY2* BLLYBOY3* ADDITIONAL: Walter de la Mare, _Come Hither_, revised edition, 1928; #40, "My Boy Tammy" (1 text) Roud #326 RECORDINGS: Ray Covert, "Billy Boy" (Herwin 75564, c. 1927) Frank Crumit, "Billy Boy" (Victor 19945, 1926) Donnie Stewart & Terry Perkins, "Billy Boy" (on JThomas01) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Lord Randal" [Child 12] NOTES: A number of scholars have linked this simple little song with the classic ballad "Lord Randall." Since they only have two things in common, however (the courting theme and certain metrical traits), in the Ballad Index at least we keep them separate. De la Mare attributes the "My Boy Tammy" text to Hector MacNeill (1746-1818), a prolific author now almost forgotten. (_Granger's Index to Poetry_, for instance, cites only one of his poems: This one.) Given the dates of other versions, it seems unlikely that MacNeill originated "Billy Boy," but he may well have created a popular recension. - RBW File: R104 === NAME: Billy Brink: see Bluey Brink (File: FaE148) === NAME: Billy Broke Locks (The Escape of Old John Webb) DESCRIPTION: John Webb was imprisoned and well guarded, but "Billy broke locks and Billy broke bolts, And Billy broke all that he came nigh." Billy and John Webb escape on horseback, then relax by organizing a dance AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1929 (Barry, Eckstorm, Smyth) KEYWORDS: prison escape dancing freedom FOUND_IN: US(NE) REFERENCES: (3 citations) BarryEckstormSmyth pp. 393-400, "John Webber" (1 text plus four versions from newspapers and such, 1 tune) Lomax-FSNA 4, "Billy Broke Locks" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, JOHNWEBB* Roud #83 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Archie o Cawfield" [Child 188] (tune & meter, theme) NOTES: An American rework of "Archie o' Cawfield," with which Roud lumps it; the revised version dates perhaps from the 1730s. It may have arisen out of an attempt at currency reform. In the early days of the English colonies, there was no universal system of coinage; Spanish money was common, but there was no fixed exchange rate. Parliament decided to settle the matter by issuing a paper money, the "tenor." However, after a time the "Old Tenor" (referred to in the song) was replaced by the "New Tenor" -- resulting in civil disturbance. One of the chief culprits was one John Webb (Webber), a mint-master, who ended in prison but was rescued by friends. - RBW File: LoF004 === NAME: Billy Byrne of Ballymanus DESCRIPTION: In (17)99, United commander Billy Byrne is caught in Dublin and brought to Wicklow jail. Informers Dixon, Doyle, Davis, and Doolin swear he fought at Mount Pleasant, Carrigrue and Arklow. He is hanged. The devil has a warm corner for the informers AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1798 (OLochlainn-More) KEYWORDS: rebellion betrayal execution trial Ireland patriotic HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: September 26, 1799 - Billy Byrne executed in Wicklow Town. (source: Moylan) FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (4 citations) OLochlainn-More 15, "Billy Byrne of Ballymanus" (1 text, 1 tune) Zimmermann 12, "Billy Byrne of Ballymanus" (3 texts, 1 tune) Moylan 124, "Billy Byrne of Ballymanus" (1 text, 1 tune) Healy-OISBv2, pp. 68-71, "Billy Byrne of Ballymanus (1) (2)" (2 texts; 1 tune on pp. 21-22) Roud #2376 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Wicklow Mountains High" (subject) NOTES: Knowing the subject of this song is a bit tricky; it appears that there were *two* Irish rebels from the 1798 rising named William Byrne, both of Wicklow, and both ending their lives on the scaffold. This Billy Bryrne is, in terms of the history of the rebellion, the lesser-known; if you read a history of the 1798 Rebellion, you're more likely to encounter the other: William Byrne was the son of Garrett Byrne, a Catholic squire. He was a United Irish delegate from Wicklow, and a colonel in the United army around the time of New Ross. He was taken to Dublin for trial in the summer of 1798. According to Thomas Pakenham's _The Year of Liberty_, p. 287, the chief witness against him was Thomas Reynolds, a paid informant. Byrne was one of the few delegates whose guilt was so obvious that the government felt sure it could convict him. Pakenham date his execution to the end of July 1798. It was one of a series of five, and it encouraged the 80 or so other United leaders in custody to agree to tell all in return for emigrating to the United States. (Their alternative, of course, was being tried and, probably, hanged.) Among those who took that deal was Thomas Addis Emmet, the brother of Robert. - RBW Apparently broadside Bodleian, Harding B 40(12), "Billy Byrne of Ballymanus" ("Come all you loyal heroes, pay attention to my song"), J.F. Nugent and Co.? (Dublin?), 1850-1899 is this song but I could not download and verify it. OLochlainn-More: "An authentic 1798 ballad still popular after more than 160 years." - BS File: OLcM015 === NAME: Billy Go Leary: see Yo Ho, Yo Ho (File: EM318) === NAME: Billy Goat, The: see Bill Grogan's Goat (File: SRW141) === NAME: Billy Grimes the Rover DESCRIPTION: The girl comes to her mother and asks if she can marry Billy Grimes. Mother refuses her blessing; Billy is poor and dirty. The girl points out that Billy has just come into a large inheritance; the mother suddenly praises Billy and gives her blessing AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: c. 1852 (published by an N.C. Morse, who claimed authorship) KEYWORDS: courting marriage mother poverty FOUND_IN: US(Ap,MA,MW,SE) Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (11 citations) Belden, pp. 251-252, "Billy Grimes" (1 text) McNeil-SFB2, pp. 33-34, "Billy Grimes" (1 text, 1 tune) BrownII 193, "Billy Grimes the Drover" (1 composite text derived from 8 unprinted versions) Chappell-FSRA 76, "Billy Grimes" (1 text) Cohen/Seeger/Wood, p. 58, "Billy Grimes, the Rover" (1 text, 1 tune) LPound-ABS, 96, pp. 205-206, "The Courtship of Billy Grimes" (1 text) Manny/Wilson 59, "Billy Grimes the Drover" (1 text plus an excerpt, 1 tune) SharpAp 176, "Billy Grimes" (1 text, 1 tune) DSB2, p. 46, "Billy Grimes the Rover" (1 text) cf. Gardner/Chickering, p. 477, "Billy Grimes" (source notes only) DT, BILGRIME* ST MN2033 (Full) Roud #468 RECORDINGS: I. G. Greer, "Billy Grimes" (AFS; on LC14, TimesAint02) Marie Hare, "Billy Grimes the Drover" (on MRMHare01) New Lost City Ramblers, "Billy Grimes the Rover" (on NLCR04, NLCR11) Shelor Family, "Billy Grimes the Rover" (Victor 20865, 1927; on GoingDown) BROADSIDES: LOCSheet, sm1852 510300, "Billy Grimes" or "The Country Lassie and her Mother," Firth, Pond and Co. (New York), 1852; same broadside as sm1852 691750; sm1852 520830, "Billy Grimes the Drover"; sm1853 540400, "Billy Grimes" same broadside as sm1853 700610 (tune) LOCSinging, as101050, "Billy Grimes the Rover," J. Andrews (New York), 1853-1859; also as101060, sb10018b, "Billy Grimes the Rover" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Will Ray" (plot) cf. "Peggy in the Morning" (plot) NOTES: Belden asserts that Billy Grimes was properly a "drover," not a "rover" (even though his informant used the word "rover"), and it's possible that this was original -- but, as the list of titles shows -- Billy quickly became transformed. The composite text in Brown ends with the drover rejecting the girl because she wants his money. Chappell also has this ending This is, however, the "minority version" even in Brown, and seems rare elsewhere; if it is original, it had generally been dropped. More likely it's a North Carolina variant. - RBW The following broadsides are duplicates, or so close to being duplicates that I don't find a difference: LOCSheet sm1852 510300 and sm1852 691750: these claim "words by Richard Coe, Esq Music by W.H. Oakley" LOCSheet sm1853 540400 and sm1853 700610: these claim the song was "composed by [usually meaning "music by" ] Wm H Oakes"; the story ends with the mother explaining that she is in favor of Billy. LOCSinging as101050, as101060 and sb10018b[same text, different printer]: no attribution; the story has Billy reject her at the end. The remaining American Memory broadside, LOCSheet sm1852 520830 is "by N C Morse"; it ends when the daughter announces Billy's ten thousand pound capitalization and 600 pound annual income." Broadside LOCSinging as101050: J. Andrews dating per _Studying Nineteenth-Century Popular Song_ by Paul Charosh in American Music, Winter 1997, Vol 15.4, Table 1, available at FindArticles site. - BS File: MN2033 === NAME: Billy Johnson's Ball DESCRIPTION: On his first wedding anniversary Johnson throws a party to celebrate it (and the arrival of a baby six months earlier). Johnson dances with all the girls; Mrs. Johnson gets jealous; the singer can't tell how it ended; he woke next morning under the table AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1952 (recorded fromPeter Reilly by Kennedy) LONG_DESCRIPTION: On his first wedding anniversary Billy Johnson throws a party to celebrate the occasion (and the arrival of a baby six months earlier). The baby is introduced, Mrs. Johnson faints, someone gives her a drop to drink, and the dancing begins. Families are introduced; the party moves to a pub; Johnson dances with all the girls, and Mrs. Johnson gets jealous; the singer can't tell you how it all ended, only that he woke the next morning underneath the table KEYWORDS: jealousy pride marriage dancing drink party baby family wife humorous FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) Kennedy 266, "Billy Johnson's Ball" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #2139 NOTES: Kennedy, in his usual inexplicable way, compares this to Percy French's "Phil the Flut(h)er's Ball." The only connection I can see is that they're both about Irish parties. - RBW File: K266 === NAME: Billy Ma Hone DESCRIPTION: "Love is sweet and love is pleasant, Long as you keep it in your view." A man asks Missis Mary why she can't favor him. Her love is on the ocean. He says her Billy Ma Hone is dead. She screams. He reveals himself and shows her the ring she gave him AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1937 (Scarborough) KEYWORDS: love courting separation marriage disguise ring brokentoken FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Scarborough-SongCatcher, pp. 267-270, "Fair Phoebe and her Dark-Eyed Sailor" (3 texts; this is the third; the first, "Young Willie's Return, or The Token," with tune on pp. 426-427, is "The Dark-Eyed Sailor (Fair Phoebe and her Dark-Eyed Sailor)" [Laws N35]; the second, "The Sailor," with tune on p. 427, is "John (George) Riley (II)" [Laws N37]) ST ScaSC270 (Partial) Roud #265 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "John (George) Riley (I)" [Laws N36] and references there NOTES: Roud files this with Laws N35 ("The Dark-Eyed Sailor (Fair Phoebe and her Dark-Eyed Sailor)"), mostly, I think, because that's where Scarborough files it. Laws, however, does not file it there -- nor anywhere else that I can see -- and the name and form are sufficiently unlike the other Riley ballads that I finally decided to treat it as a separate song. It is, no doubt, based on one of the myriad other songs of this type, probably rewritten (perhaps to apply to some local person), but I haven't a clue which such song. - RBW File: ScaSC270 === NAME: Billy My Darling DESCRIPTION: "Billy, my darling, Billy, my dear, When you think I don't love you it's a foolish idea -- Up in the tree-top high as the sky, I can see Billy, Billy pass by." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1922 (Brown) KEYWORDS: love FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) BrownIII 288, "Billy My Darling" (1 fragment plus mention of 1 more) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Down in the Valley" (lyrics) NOTES: Based just on the text in Brown, I would probably have classified this as a by-blow of "Down in the Valley." But a tune was recorded, apparently *not* "Down in the Valley." So it lists separately -- though I remain dubious. - RBW File: Br3288 === NAME: Billy O'Rourke DESCRIPTION: Billy sets out for Dublin and takes ship. Though a great storm blows up, Billy pays no attention. After he lands, a robber tries to hold him up, but Billy's shillelagh is quicker. Billy tells of his other adventures AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: c.1820 (OLochlainn-More); 1849 (Journal from the Euphrasia) KEYWORDS: emigration Ireland robbery FOUND_IN: US(MW) Ireland REFERENCES: (4 citations) Eddy 145, "Billy O'Rourke" (1 text) Huntington-Whalemen, pp. 318-320, "Billy O'Rourke" (1 text) OLochlainn-More 51, "Billy O'Rourke" (1 text, 1 tune) O'Conor, p. 99, "Billy O'Rourke" (1 text) ST E145 (Full) Roud #2101 BROADSIDES: LOCSinging, as101080, "Billy O'Rourke," J. Andrews (New York), 1853-1859 NOTES: Broadside LOCSinging as101080: J. Andrews dating per _Studying Nineteenth-Century Popular Song_ by Paul Charosh in American Music, Winter 1997, Vol 15.4, Table 1, available at FindArticles site. - BS File: E145 === NAME: Billy Pitt and the Union DESCRIPTION: Billy Pitt convinced the British that Union with Ireland would solve their problems. Ireland would gain no more from union than the Sabines gained through union with Rome. "They may take our all from us and leave us the rest." Hibernia must reject union. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1798 (Zimmermann) KEYWORDS: England Ireland nonballad political HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1759-1806 - Life of William Pitt the Younger, Prime Minister 1783-1801 and from 1804 until his death 1798 - United Irish rebellion causes England to decide on Union with Ireland 1800 - Act of Union passed by British and Irish parliaments, causing a parliamentary Union to take effect in 1801 FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (0 citations) CROSS_REFERENCES: Bodleian, Harding B 14(314), "A new song Billy Pitt and the Union ("Come neighbours attend, while I tell you a story"), unknown, 1798 NOTES: Broadside Bodleian Harding B 14(314) is dated "Dublin, December, 1798." Zimmermann p. 40 cites it as a broadside ballad circulated against William Pitt. What is the original of the "poisoned pill"? The broadside warns "Arrah Paddy beware, there's snake in these offers, For Billy can gild, whilst he poisons the pill." In 1909, in _Fallen Fairies; or The Wicked World_ W.S. Gilbert wrote "Oh, love's the source of every ill! Compounded with unholy skill, It proves, disguise it as you will, A gilded but a poisoned pill." - BS Both Ireland and Scotland had people who, in their time, opposed Union with England. I've seen it argued that the Scots were wrong, because they needed English trade. (I'm not sure it's that simple, but the case can be made.) Ireland, though, really did get a poisoned pill -- because they lost their own parliament (Grattan's, for which see "Ireland's Glory") but did not get Catholic Emancipation in return. Prime Minister Pitt wanted to grant voting rights to Catholics, but the English parliament simply would not go along. So while Ireland had seats in the British Commons, they weren't really popularly elected. Eventually, leaders like Parnell would learn how to use their position, and sometimes hold the balance of power between Conservatives and Liberals, but that was a long time coming. In the short run, Union simply cost Ireland self-government. - RBW File: BrdBPatU === NAME: Billy Richardson's Last Ride DESCRIPTION: "Through the West Virginia mountains came the early mornin' mail Old Number Three was westbound...." Engineer Bill Richardson is "old and gray," but still wants to make good time. He dies when his head strikes a mail train AUTHOR: Words: Cleburne C. Meeks / Music: Carson J. Robison EARLIEST_DATE: 1926 (letter from Meeks to Vernon Dalhart) KEYWORDS: train wreck death HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: Dec 14, 1910 - Death of William S. Richardson (1848-1910) after he looks out of the FFV train and is hit in the head FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Cohen-LSRail, pp. 232-233, "Billy Richardson's Last Ride" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #10440 RECORDINGS: Vernon Dalhart [as Al Craver], "Billy Richardson's Last Ride" (Columbia 15098-D, 1926) George Goebel, "Billy Richardson's Last Ride" (Conqueror 8156) NOTES: Although the accident described in the song happened, roughly as described, in 1910, Cohen reports that the song was written 16 years later. Poet Meeks heard Vernon Dalhart's recording of The Wreck of Old 97, decided to produce his own train wreck item, and sent it to Dalhart. Carson J. Robison added the tune, and Dalhart started on his usual cycle of recording for every label known to humanity. The Meeks/Robison combination also gave us "The Wreck of the C & O Number Five." - RBW File: LSRai232 === NAME: Billy Riley DESCRIPTION: Shanty. "Oh Billy Riley was a dancing master, O Billy Riley. Old Billy Riley, screw him up so cheer'ly, O Billy Riley O." Verses name members of RileyÕs family and/or their occupations. Refrain changes each time based on which Riley is named in the verse. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1914 (Sharp-EFC) KEYWORDS: shanty FOUND_IN: West Indies Britain REFERENCES: (3 citations) Colcord, p. 74, "O Billy Riley!" (1 text, 1 tune) Hugill, pp. 452-453, "Billy Riley" (1 text, 1 tune) [AbrEd, p. 338] Sharp-EFC, LVIII, p. 63, "O Billy Riley" (1 text, 1 tune) ST Hug452 (Full) Roud #4701 NOTES: The liner notes to the Lloyd/MacColl recording "Blow, Boys, Blow" state "The sail would need to be light, or the occasion desperate, for men to haul at the halyards to tbe beat of such a fast song as this." But other sources don't seem to have noticed this. - RBW File: Hug452 === NAME: Billy Taylor: see William Taylor [Laws N11] (File: LN11) === NAME: Billy the Kid (I) DESCRIPTION: "I'll sing you a true song of Billy the Kid, I'll sing of the desperate deeds that he did." Billy "went bad" in Silver City as "a very young lad." He soon has 21 notches on his pistol, but wants Sheriff Pat Garrett for 22. But Garrett shoots Billy first AUTHOR: Andrew Jenkins EARLIEST_DATE: 1927 (recordings, Vernon Dalhart) KEYWORDS: outlaw youth death police HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1859 - Birth of William H. Bonney, the man most often labelled "Billy the Kid" 1881 - Death of William Bonney at the hands of Pat Garrett, who traced him to the home of a Mexican girlfriend FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (6 citations) Lomax-FSNA 202, "Billy the Kid" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-ABFS, pp. 137-138, "Billy the Kid" (1 text, 1 tune) Fife-Cowboy/West 96, "Billy the Kid" (3 texts, 1 tune, but the "C" text is "Billy the Kid (II)") Burt, p. 193, "(Song of Billy the Kid)" (1 excerpt) Silber-FSWB, p. 208, "Billy the Kid" (1 text) DT, BILLYKID Roud #5097 RECORDINGS: Vernon Dalhart, "Billy the Kid" (Columbia 15135-D [as Al Craver], 1927) (Brunswick 100, 1927) (OKeh 45102, 1927) (one of these recordings is on RoughWays2, but we don't know which) SAME_TUNE: So Long, It's Been Good to Know Yuh (File: Arn165) NOTES: This song has been (falsely) credited to Woody Guthrie, who recorded it in the 1940s. - PJS Might this be because the tune has come to be better known as (the verse of) "So Long, It's Been Good to Know You"? This song, like so many "bad man" ballads, is a mix of the false and the true. Dale L. Walker, _Legends and Lies: Great Mysteries of the American West_, Forge, 1997, p. 112, writes, "Why Billy the Kid is among that handful of Old West names... that are instantly recognized around the world is not clear. The Kid had no significant history. He never served in a war, never blazed a trail, never traveled beyond a few hundred miles of his boyhood home, had no special talents, and knew no one of importance.... He rose to a brief regional prominence in an obscure regional power struggle [starting in 1878] and by the summer of 1881 he was dead." Yet Walker believes that at there are at least 900 books, major magazine articles, poems, and plays about him (based on a bibliography which listed over 400 as of around 1950, with the number only increasing since). According to Bill O'Neal, _Encyclopedia of Western Gunfighters_, p. 4, only four deaths can be unequivocally blamed on Billy the Kid, even though he boasted of killing 21 "not counting Mexicans." O'Neal on p. 5 does credit Billy with five "possible killings or assists," and lists him as participating in 21 gunfights. According to O'Neal's main entry on Billy (pp.198-203), the future Kid was born Henry McCarty, in Indiana or New York in 1859 (the _Concise Dictionary of American Biography_ lists New York only, with no hesitation, and lists Billy's birth name as William Bonney, the name he used throughout his later career. But Walker agrees with O'Neal in calling him Henry McCarty, of Irish ancestry, possibly born in New York City. How this is reconciled with the statement that he never traveled far I am not sure). The family moved to Kansas when Billy was very young, then to New Mexico after Billy's father died. His mother remarried in 1873, but died in 1874 (Walker, p. 113). Soon after, Billy (then still just Henry McCarty, or "Kid Antrim" after the name of his stepfather) started in on a life of petty crime. The song is right in accusing him of "going bad" in Silver City, in New Mexico; soon after his mother died, he was engaged in petty theft. Imprisoned, he soon escaped (Walker, p. 113). His career for the next two years was obscure, but he killed a man in Bonito, Arizona in 1877 (Walker, p. 114). Again imprisoned, he again escaped, and took the pseudonym "William Bonney." He was actively involved in a range war the next year. In the process, Billy's boss John Henry Tunstall was killed. Billy declared that Tunstall was the only man he ever worked for who treated him fairly, and so insisted on revenge (Walker, p. 116). Several people died in the next few months, though Billy was not responsible for most of the deaths. In 1878, newly-appointed territorial governor Lew Wallace offered an amnesty, but Billy was under an independent indictment, so though he offered testimony, he then took off and formed an outlaw gang (Walker, pp. 118-119). Captured and imprisoned in 1880 by a posse led by Pat Garrett (Walker, p. 120), he killed two guards and escaped in early 1881 (Walker, pp. 121-122). On the night of July 14, 1881, he paid a brief visit to a Mexican girlfriend (Walker, p. 122), then visited another house where Garrett was waiting in hiding, and Garrett shot him to death (Walker, p. 123). For some reason, most famous outlaws seem to have had second lives, with impostors claiming to be the dead outlaws who somehow escaped their fates. (See "Jesse James (III)" for examples of the phenomenon). Walker, pp. 125-136, examines some of the Billy impersonators. In one case, he actually seems somewhat sympathetic to the claim. - RBW File: LoF202 === NAME: Billy the Kid (II) DESCRIPTION: "Billy was a bad man And carried a big gun. He was always after greasers And kept them on the run." Billy shot a white man "every morning." But one day he met a worse man, "And now he's dead and we Ain't none the sadder." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1966 KEYWORDS: outlaw death police FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (2 citations) Fife-Cowboy/West 96, "Billy the Kid" (3 texts, 1 tune, but only the "C" text goes here) Lomax-ABFS, pp. 136-137, "Billy the Kid" (1 text) Roud #5098 NOTES: From the Fife text it is not clear whether this song actually refers to Billy the Kid; since Billy was white, it would appear not. But they may have other versions which imply otherwise. - RBW File: FCW096C === NAME: Billy Veniro: see Bill Vanero (Paul Venerez) [Laws B6] (File: LB06) === NAME: Billy Vite and Molly Green DESCRIPTION: "Come all you blades both high and low And you shall hear of a dismal go." Billy Vite/White falls in love with Molly Green, but she denies him. The devil comes to him with arsenic; he poisons her; a sheep's head accuses him of murder and takes him to hell AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1927 (Spaeth) (Digital Tradition claims a date of 1823) KEYWORDS: homicide poison death sheep ghost devil FOUND_IN: US(NE) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Flanders/Brown, pp. 109-110, "Billy White" (1 text, 1 tune) Spaeth-WeepMore, pp. 198-199, "Billy Vite and Molly Green" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #5441 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Henry Green (The Murdered Wife)" [Laws F14] (plot) File: FlBr109 === NAME: Billy White: see Billy Vite and Molly Green (File: FlBr109) === NAME: Billy's Downfall DESCRIPTION: The singer swears by all things and people -- O'Connell, King Saul, Zozymus Moran, Dido, the Shannon, Brian Boru, dirty dealers -- that "I ne'er had a hand in King Billy's downfall." Billy will be rebuilt but had better not "dress as before" on July 12. AUTHOR: probably by "Zozimus" (Michael Moran) (c.1794-1846) (Source: Zimmermann) EARLIEST_DATE: 1836 (Zimmermann) KEYWORDS: Ireland political HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: April 8, 1836 - "The equestrian statue of William III, which stood in the centre of College Green, Dublin [the site of the "unified" out of existance Irish Parliament ... [was] blown up early in the morning." (source: Zimmermann) FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Zimmermann 48, "Billy's Downfall" (1 text, 1 tune) NOTES: July 12 is the Gregorian Calendar (adopted in England in 1752) date for celebrating the victory of William III of Orange in the Battle of the Boyne, July 1, 1690. Zimmermann: The statue "was annually coloured white and decorated with Orange lilies, a scarlet cloak and an orange sash, to commemorate the Protestant victory at the battle of the Boyne." - BS File: Zimm048 === NAME: Bingo DESCRIPTION: "There was a farmer had a dog, And Bingo was his name, sir. B-I-N-G-O (x3), And Bingo was his name, sir." "That farmer's dog sat at our door, Begging for a bone, sir...." "The farmer's dog sat on the back fence...." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1910 (Brown) KEYWORDS: dog nonballad playparty FOUND_IN: US(NE,SE) REFERENCES: (6 citations) Pankake-PHCFSB, p. 212, "Bingo" (1 text, tune referenced) BrownIII 137, "Bingo" (1 text, which seems to be a device for learning the vowels) Linscott, pp. 168-169, "Bingo" (1 text, 1 tune, with an unusual chorus of "B with an I, I with an N, N with a G, G with an O, B-i-n-g-o, Called his name 'Old Bingo.'") Silber-FSWB, p. 390, "Bingo" (1 text) DT, BINGGO* ADDITIONAL: Walter de la Mare, _Come Hither_, revised edition, 1928; #88, "Bingo" (1 text, similar in form to Linscott's but spelling out various names and ending with Bingo's owner offering a girl a wedding ring: "Bingo," "Stingo," "Ring-o") Roud #589 RECORDINGS: Chubby Parker, "Bingo Was His Name" (Conqueror 7892, 1931) Pete Seeger, "Bingo Was His Name" (on PeteSeeger11) File: FSWB390D === NAME: Binnorie: see The Twa Sisters [Child 10] (File: C010) === NAME: Bird in a Cage (II): see Down in the Valley (File: R772) === NAME: Bird in a Gilded Cage, A DESCRIPTION: A couple sees a rich young woman. When the girl envies the fine lady's wealth, her companion replies that "she married for wealth, not for love." He pities her; "she's only a bird in a gilded cage... Her beauty was sold for an old man's gold." AUTHOR: Words: Arthur J. Lamb / Music: Harry von Tilzer EARLIEST_DATE: 1900 (copyright) KEYWORDS: money marriage age FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (4 citations) Spaeth-ReadWeep, pp. 205-206, "A Bird in a Gilded Cage" (1 text, 1 tune) Gilbert, pp. 317-318, "A Bird in a Gilded Cage" (1 text) Silber-FSWB, p. 266, "A Bird In A Gilded Cage" (1 text) DT, GILDCAGE Roud #4863 RECORDINGS: Leo Boswell & Elzie Floyd, "She's Only a Bird in a Guilded (sic.) Cage" (Columbia 15150-D, 1927) Brown and Bunch [pseud. for Leonard Rutherford & John Foster], "She's Only A Bird In A Guilded (sic.) Cage" (Supertone 9375, 1929) [Byron] Harlan & [?] Madeira, "Bird in a Gilded Cage" (CYL: Edison 7696, 1901) Roy Harvey & the North Carolina Ramblers, "She Is Only A Bird In A Guilded (sic.) Cage" (Paramount 3079, c. 1928; Broadway 8133, n.d.; rec. 1927) Marlow & Young, "She's Only a Bird in a Gilded Cage" (Champion 15691, 1929) Frank & James McCravy, "A Bird in a Gilded Cage" (Brunswick 4335, 1929; Supertone S-2022, 1930; rec. 1928) Joseph Natus, "A Bird in a Gilded Cage" (Zonophone J-9072, CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Maids When You're Young Never Wed an Old Man" and references there File: SRW205 === NAME: Bird in the Bush, The: see Three Maidens to Milking Did Go (File: K191) === NAME: Bird in the Cage: see Down in the Valley (File: R772) === NAME: Bird in the Lily-Bush, The: see Three Maidens to Milking Did Go (File: K191) === NAME: Bird Rocks, The DESCRIPTION: "Twas winter down the icy gulf, The Gulf St Lawrence wide." The Bird Rocks lighthouse keeper, his son, and helper are swept away. His wife keeps the light burning until spring. Like her we should "in sorrow's darkest night ... show the world our light" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1929 (Greenleaf/Mansfield) KEYWORDS: grief death drowning sea wife FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Greenleaf/Mansfield 144, "The Bird Rocks" (1 text, 1 tune) Peacock, pp. 903-904, "The Bird Rocks" (1 text, 1 tune) Blondahl, pp. 69-70, "The Bird Rocks" (1 text, 1 tune) Ryan/Small, pp. 110-111, "The Bird Rocks" (1 text, 1 tune) ST GrMa144 (Partial) Roud #6348 NOTES: Bird Rocks is an islet in the Gulf of St Lawrence, northeast of Magdalen Islands in East Quebec. - BS File: GrMa144 === NAME: Bird Song, The: see The Bird's Courting Song (The Hawk and the Crow; Leatherwing Bat) (File: K295) === NAME: Bird's Courting Song, The (The Hawk and the Crow; Leatherwing Bat) DESCRIPTION: Various birds talk about their attempts at courting, and the effects of their successes and failures. Example: "Said the hawk to the crow one day, Why do you in mourning stay, I was once in love and I didn't prove fact, And ever since I wear the black." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1733 (broadside, Bodleian Harding Douce Ballads 2(243b)); other broadsides appear to date back to the seventeenth century "Woody Querristers" in the Roxburge collection KEYWORDS: bird courting nonballad FOUND_IN: Ireland US(Ap,MW,NE,SE,So) REFERENCES: (14 citations) Randolph 275, "The Crow Song" (5 texts, 1 tune, but only the first three texts are this piece, with the "B" and "C" texts mixing with "The Crow Song (I)") BrownIII 152, "Birds Courting" (3 texts plus an excerpt; the "D" text may be mixed); also 156, "Said the Blackbird to the Crow" (the "D" text mixes this with "The Crow Song (I)") JHCoxIIB, #20, pp. 170-171, "Pourquoi" (1 text, tune, probably amplified as it carefully has birds of all colors including some rarely encountered in nature) Scarborough-NegroFS, p. 193, (no title) (1 fragment, probably this) SharpAp 215, "The Bird Song" (2 texts, 2 tunes) Kennedy 295, "The Hawk and the Crow" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-FSUSA 4, "Leatherwing Bat" (1 text, 1 tune) Sharp/Karpeles-80E 73, "The Bird Song" (1 text, 1 tune) Botkin-NEFolklr, pp. 573-574, "Bird's Courting Song" (1 text, 1 tune) Abrahams/Foss, pp. 90-91, "Bird Song" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 397, "Leatherwing Bat" (1 text) BBI, ZN968, "Give ear you lads and lasses all" (?); ZN2037, "Oh says the Cuckoo, loud and stout"; ZN2038, "Oh says the Cuckoo loud and stout" DT, LEATRBAT* LEATHBA2* ADDITIONAL: Bell/O Conchubhair, Traditional Songs of the North of Ireland, pp. 49-51, "The Hawk and the Crow" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #747 RECORDINGS: Virgil Sandage, "The Birds' Song" (on FineTimes) Pete Seeger, "Leatherwing Bat" (on PeteSeeger09, PeteSeegerCD02) (on PeteSeeger32) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Douce Ballads 2(243b), "The Woody Queresters" or "The Birds Harmony" ("Oh! says the cuckoo, loud and stout")[some words illegible], T. Norris (London), 1711-1732; also Douce Ballads 1(17b), "The Birds Lamentation"; Douce Ballads 3(110a), Douce Ballads 3(108a), "The Woody Choristers" or "The Birds Harmony" in two parts CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Hind Horn" [Child 17] (tune) cf. "The Crow Song" (floating lyrics) cf. "The Old Man at the Mill" (floating lyrics) cf. "The Bird-Catcher's Delight" (tune, per broadside Bodleian Douce Ballads 1(17b)) NOTES: Cox's "Pourquoi" title is, in effect, the French term for "Just So Story"; Cox applied it because the piece he collected (in Missouri, though from an informant born in Kentucky) had no title. - RBW File: K295 === NAME: Birdie Darling DESCRIPTION: "Fly across the ocean, birdie, Fly across the deep blue sea, There you'll find an untrue lover...." The singer bids the bird to remind him of his promises to her and how he betrayed her. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1913 (Belden) KEYWORDS: love separation betrayal bird FOUND_IN: US(MW,So) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Belden, p. 210, "Birdie Darling" (1 text) Roud #7948 File: Beld210 === NAME: Birds in the Spring, The DESCRIPTION: Singer sits down to listen to the birds sing, and praises the pleasure of their notes. Chorus: "And when you grow old, you will have it to say/You'll never hear so sweet... as the birds in the spring" or "...as the nightingale sing" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1956 (recorded from George Maynard) KEYWORDS: lyric nonballad animal bird FOUND_IN: Britain(England(South)) REFERENCES: (1 citation) DT, BIRDSPRG Roud #356 RECORDINGS: George Maynard, "The Sweet Nightingale (The Birds in the Spring)" (on Maynard1) NOTES: I've entitled this, "The Birds in the Spring" to avoid confusion with, "The Sweet Nightingale" or "One Morning In May (To Hear the Nightingale Sing)," both unrelated songs. - PJS File: RcTBiITS === NAME: Birken Tree, The DESCRIPTION: "Oh, lass, gin ye would think it right, To gang wi' me this very night, We'll cuddle till the mornin' licht...." The girl would like to meet him at the birken tree, but her parents watch closely. But she manages to sneak away; all ends happily AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1904 (Ford) KEYWORDS: love separation reunion mother nightvisit FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Ford-Vagabond, pp. 88-90, "The Birken Tree" (1 text, 1 tune) Ord, pp. 100-101, "Johnnie's Got His Jean, O" (1 text) DT, BIRKNTRE* Roud #5069 BROADSIDES: NLScotland, L.C.Fol.178.A.2(058), "The Birken Tree," unknown, c. 1860; also L.C.Fol.70(15a), c. 1875 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Bonnie Glasgow Green" (form) File: FVS088 === NAME: Birmingham Boys, The: see The Man of Burningham Town (File: VWL068) === NAME: Birmingham Jail (I): see Down in the Valley (File: R772) === NAME: Birmingham Jail (II): see Sweet Thing (I) (File: R443A) === NAME: Birmingham Man, The: see The Man of Burningham Town (File: VWL068) === NAME: Birth of Robin Hood, The: see Willie and Earl Richard's Daughter" [Child 102] (File: C102) === NAME: Biscuits Mis' Flanagan Made, The DESCRIPTION: The singer is invited to a party at Flanagan's. He is invited to try the biscuits. They looked good, and were attractively presented, but the singer had never had "such nuggets of lead." To cut them, he advises the use of an axe and wedge AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1941 (Randolph) KEYWORDS: food party humorous FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Randolph 480, "The Biscuits Mis' Flanagan Made" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #5000 File: R480 === NAME: Bitter Withy, The DESCRIPTION: Jesus is sent out by Mary to play. He is snubbed by a group of rich boys. He builds "a bridge with the beams of the sun," and the boys who follow him across fall into the river and drown. Mary beats her child with a withy branch AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1905 KEYWORDS: Jesus poverty punishment religious discrimination FOUND_IN: Britain(England(West)) REFERENCES: (7 citations) Leach, pp. 689-690, "The Bitter Withy" (1 text) Leather, pp. 181-184, "The Bitter Withy; or The Sally Twigs" (2 texts, the first perhaps mixed with "The Holy Well," 4 tunes) Friedman, p. 60, "The Bitter Withy" (1 text, 1 tune) PBB 5, "The Bitter Withy" (1 text) Hodgart, p. 152, "The Bitter Withy" (1 text) cf. Belden, p. 102, "Jesus and Joses" (a legend he connects with this piece) DT 310, BITWITHY* Roud #452 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Holy Well" (plot) NOTES: It should perhaps be noted that this event has no place in the Bible, nor even in the (known) apocryphal gospels (though it reminds one of various events in the "Infancy Gospel of Thomas," which also contains some rather nasty miracles; Leather also mentions this obscure and vicious piece). The bridge of sunbeams is a commonplace in religious art. Belden sees a connection between this song and the folk legend "Jesus and Joses," in which Joses (Jesus's brother; cf. Mark 6:3) tattles on Jesus and Jesus is beaten with willow twigs. There is a fundamental difference, however: In "The Bitter Withy," Jesus is genuinely guilty; in "Jesus and Joses," he is said to be innocent. According to Leather, the local title "The Sally Twigs" came about because, in Hereford, a willow wand is called a "sally twig." The phrase is not used in either text she prints.- RBW File: L689 === NAME: Black and Amber Glory DESCRIPTION: "Their sparkling style we've come to know, since far-off days of yore, When first they blazed the victory trail in Nineteen hundred and four." Names and attributes of past stars of Kilkenny hurling. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1964 (_The Kilkenny People,_ according to OLochlainn-More) KEYWORDS: pride sports Ireland moniker nonballad FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) OLochlainn-More, pp. 261-262, "Black and Amber Glory" (1 text, tune referenced) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Lily of the West" [OLochlainn 93] (tune) cf. "Bold Thady Quill" (subject of hurling) and references there NOTES: For information see the KilKennyCity site re _Black and Amber Glory_ by Jamesie Murphy: "From that historic day at Deerpark in Carrick-on-Suir in 1904 when Kilkenny represented by Tullaroan and captained by Jer Doheny won their first title right up to the current success in 2002, every final is covered not alone in poetry and song, but also with photographs of the winning teams." - BS For another hurling song, as well as some information on the sport, see "Bold Thady Quill." - RBW File: OLcM262 === NAME: Black Ball Line, The DESCRIPTION: "I served my time on the Black Ball line, To me way-ay-ay, Rio... Hurrah for the Black Ball line." "The Black Ball ships are good and true" and fast. They will lead you to a "gold mine." The listener is advised to travel to Liverpool and see the Yankees AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1914 (Sharp-EFC) KEYWORDS: shanty sailor work FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (7 citations) Hugill, pp. 131-133, "Hooraw for the Blackball Line" (1 text plus several fragments, 3 tunes) [AbEd, pp. 107-108] Colcord, p. 53, "Black Ball Line, The" (1 text, 1 tune) Harlow, pp. 105-106, "Black Ball Line, The" (2 texts, 1 tune) Sharp-EFC, XXIII, p. 26, "Black Ball Line, The" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-ABFS, pp. 489-490, "The Black Ball Line" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BLAKBALL* ADDITIONAL: Captain John Robinson, "Songs of the Chantey Man," a series published July-August 1917 in the periodical _The Bellman_ (Minneapolis, MN, 1906-1919). "Blackball Line" is in Part 2, 7/21/1917. Roud #2623 File: LxA489 === NAME: Black Betty DESCRIPTION: "Oh Lawd, Black Betty, bam-ba-lam (x2), Black Betty had a baby, bam-ba-lam (x2)." "Oh, Lawd, Black Betty... It de cap'n's baby." "Oh, Lawd, Black Betty... but she didn't feed the baby. "Oh Lawd, Black Betty... Black Betty, where'd you come from?" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1934 KEYWORDS: prison prisoner punishment chaingang FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Lomax-ABFS, pp. 60-61, "Black Betty" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BLKBETTY* Roud #11668 RECORDINGS: Mose "Clear Rock" Platt, "Black Betty" (AFS 2643 B2, 1939) NOTES: According to the Lomaxes, "[Black Betty] is the whip that was and is used in some Southern prisons." - RBW File: LxA060 === NAME: Black Bottom Blues: see Deep Elem Blues (File: DTdeepel) === NAME: Black Cat, The DESCRIPTION: "I brought a black cat home one night, And I brought some steak home too...." While the singer is out, the cat eats the steak. Cat and human fight, with the human generally coming off worse. Similar escapades follow AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1987 KEYWORDS: animal humorous fight FOUND_IN: Australia REFERENCES: (1 citation) Meredith/Covell/Brown, pp. 141-142, "The Black Cat" (1 text, 1 tune) File: MCB141 === NAME: Black Chimney Sweeper, The: see The Old Maid's Song (File: R364) === NAME: Black Cook, The DESCRIPTION: One of three sailors, a black cook, has an idea to "rise cash." They sell his body as a corpse to a doctor. When the doctor goes to dissect the corpse it stands. The doctor runs to his wife, who bars the door and asks him to "leave off dissecting" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1911 (broadside, Bodleian 2806 c.14(57)) KEYWORDS: trick corpse humorous cook doctor sailor Black(s) money FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Peacock, pp. 856-858, "The Black Devil" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BLCKCOOK* Roud #2310 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, 2806 c.14(57), "The Black Cook" or "The Doctor Outwitted," James Lindsay (Glasgow), 1851-1910; also Firth b.27(445), "The Doctor Outwitted"; Harding B 26(141), 2806 b.9(12)[many illegible words], "The Docter Outwited by the Black" (sic.) NLScotland, L.C.178.A.2(078), "The Black Cook, or The Doctor Outwitted," unknown, c. 1870 NOTES: The shortage of cadavers for dissection which gave rise to this song is by no means exaggerated. Anatomists need bodies; so do beginning medical students. Robert M. Sapolsky, _The Trouble with Testosterone and Other Essays on the Biology of the Human Predicament_, Touchstone Books, 1997, pp. 117-119, notes the various problems the shortage of dead human bodies has caused. For starters, it gave rise to the occupation of the body snatcher -- people who went out and unearthed (often literally) the bodies of recently-dead people for use by doctors. It appears that the sailors in this song are imitating the snatchers. There were two other sources of dead bodies: Executed criminals, and paupers. Henry VIII actually passed a law giving dead bodies of criminals to the doctors. These bodies at least were healthy, but they had suffered from execution -- and, before death, had suffered the brutal conditions of English prisons, and very likely from torture as well. The corpses of the poor were intact, but these people had died of starvation, illness, and the general brutality of life. Their deaths were theoretically "natural," but they were usually hastened by their workhouse conditions. The result was that doctors generally were not in position to examine the bodies of people who died of a healthy old age. Indeed, this remains a problem to this day, according to Sapolsky. It is a genuine problem both for doctors and for medical researchers -- he notes on p. 121 that two artificial diseases (one related to the adrenal glands and one related to the thymus) went into the diagnostic manuals as a result of always performing dissections on poor and sick people. The thymus problem was actually treated, with radiation, resulting in poorer health for those so treated plus a vast spike in cases of thyroid cancer (Sapolsky, p. 122). Under the circumstances, it is understandable that some doctors might be willing to work with the body snatchers. Ugly as their profession obviously was, it had the potential to bring good for many other people. - RBW File: Pea858 === NAME: Black Devil, The: see The Black Cook (File: Pea858) === NAME: Black Fly Song, The DESCRIPTION: "'Twas early in the spring when I decide to go For to work up in the woods in North Ontario." The unemployed singer joins a survey crew under Black Toby. He suffers from the flies, and is helped only by the cook. He vows never to work up north again AUTHOR: Wade Hemsworth EARLIEST_DATE: 1957 KEYWORDS: work Canada bug cook unemployment FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Fowke/Mills/Blume, pp. 212-214, "The Black Fly Song" (1 text, 1 tune) NOTES: Wade Hemsworth worked for Ontario Hydro in 1949, seeking a site for a dam on the Little Abitibi. This song was a direct result of his experiences. - RBW File: FMB212 === NAME: Black Friday: see The Mermaid [Child 289] (File: C289) === NAME: Black Gal: see Heavy-Hipped Woman (Black Gal) (File: LoF294) === NAME: Black Gal, De: see Missus in the Big House (File: CNFM117) === NAME: Black Girl: see In the Pines (File: LoF290) === NAME: Black Horse, The: see The Airy Bachelor (The Black Horse) (File: HHH586) === NAME: Black Is the Color DESCRIPTION: "(Black, black,) black is the color of my true love's hair...." The singer describes the beautiful girl he is in love with. (He regretfully concedes that they will never be married) AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1916 (Cecil Sharp collection) KEYWORDS: love courting hair beauty separation nonballad FOUND_IN: US(Ap,SE,So) REFERENCES: (8 citations) Lomax-FSUSA 16, "Black Is the Color" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax- FSNA 100, "Black Is the Color" (1 text, 1 tune) Ritchie-Southern, p. 88, "Black is the Color" (1 text, 1 tune, with several floating lines including some that appear to be from "Lady Mary Anne" or something related) SharpAp 85, "Black is the Colour" (1 text, 1 tune) Sharp/Karpeles-80E 41, "Black is the Color" (1 text, 1 tune) Darling-NAS, pp. 267-268, "Black is the Color" (1 text) Silber-FSWB, p. 145, "Black Is The Color" (1 text) DT, BLACKCOL* BLACKCO2* Roud #3103 RECORDINGS: Pete Seeger, "Black is the Color" (on PeteSeeger18) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Black Is the Color of My True Love's Hair NOTES: John Jacob Niles, who is largely responsible for popularizing this song, also claims to have written it. For a recently composed song, however, it exists in unusually diverse and widespread forms. Randolph notes connections with English pieces, and Lomax correctly observes that the tune resembles "Fair and Tender Ladies." - RBW File: LxU016 === NAME: Black Is the Color of My True Love's Hair: see Black Is the Color (File: LxU016) === NAME: Black Jack Daisy: see The Gypsy Laddie [Child 200] (File: C200) === NAME: Black Jack Davy: see The Gypsy Laddie [Child 200] (File: C200) === NAME: Black Mustache, The DESCRIPTION: "It's O once I had a charming beau..." The singer describes his wealth and wooing. "And then there came a sour old maid, She's worth her weight in gold," whom the suitor prefers. She warns against "those stylish chaps that wear the black mustache" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1925 KEYWORDS: courting hair money abandonment oldmaid FOUND_IN: US(Ap,MW,SE,So) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Randolph 402, "The Little Black Mustache" (3 texts) BrownII 202, "The Little Black Mustache" (1 text plus 1 excerpt and mention of 4 more) Combs/Wilgus 154, pp. 180-181, "The Black Mustache" (1 text) Roud #471 RECORDINGS: Vernon Dalhart, "The Little Black Mustache" (Edison 52118, 1927) Nations Brothers, "Little Black Mustache" (Vocalion 03152, 1936) [Ernest Stoneman &] The Dixie Mountaineers, "The Black Mustache" (Edison, unissued, 1927) Henry Whitter, "My Darling's Black Mustache" (OKeh 40395, 1925) File: CW180A === NAME: Black Phyllis DESCRIPTION: "And then came black Phyllis, his charger astride, And took away Annie, his unwilling bride..." The singer sits in the storm and wishes his love Annie would be returned to him. Someone eventually kills Phyllis, but Annie is dead by then AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1916 KEYWORDS: love death separation abduction disease FOUND_IN: US(Ap) REFERENCES: (1 citation) JHCox 43, "Black Phyllis" (1 text) ST JHCox043 (Full) Roud #3628 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Nottamun Town (Nottingham Fair)" (lyrics) NOTES: Cox's text is only a fragment, unfortunately, of what looks to have once been an excellent ballad, probably of British origin. Indeed, it almost looks like a narrative poem; the lyrical devices are complex. I wonders, though, if "Phyllis" is not in fact "Syphilis." This would fit in with the mysterious feeling of the song -- and would also explain the connections with "Nottamun Town," which also seems to be the result of plague and hallucination. Seeking for relatives has been an unrewarding process. The closest I've found is in Kinloch's _Ballad Book_ (item #XXII, no title, a fragment of two stanzas) has a piece in the same meter, with equally mysterious lines ("First there cam whipmen, and that not a few, And there cam bonnetmen following the pleugh"), but I don't have any reason except the metre and mystery to link them. - RBW File: JHCox043 === NAME: Black Pipe, The DESCRIPTION: The singer is a beggar, but "if I got the best of broth with helpings of cold tripe, I would rather have an extra reek of my black pipe." The singer describes how tobacco is better than fame or fortune or power, and hopes to be buried with his pipe AUTHOR: English words by Andy Doey and George Graham EARLIEST_DATE: 1939 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: begging drugs FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H832a, p. 49, "The Black Pipe" (1 text, 1 tune) File: HHH832a === NAME: Black Ram, The: see The Sheep-Shearing (File: ShH95) === NAME: Black Sarpent, The: see Springfield Mountain [Laws G16] (File: LG16) === NAME: Black Sheep: see All the Pretty Little Horses (File: LxU002) === NAME: Black Sheep Lullaby: see All the Pretty Little Horses (File: LxU002) === NAME: Black Sheep, The DESCRIPTION: A father has three sons, one honest, two vile. The bad sons convince the father to evict the youngest. Then -- urged on perhaps by their wives -- they evict their father from the house. The third son, the "Black Sheep," comes forth and rescues the father AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1897 KEYWORDS: father children rescue FOUND_IN: US(Ap,MA,MW,SE) REFERENCES: (5 citations) Fuson, pp. 79-80, "The Black Sheep" (1 text) MHenry-Appalachians, pp. 130-131, "The Black Sheep" (1 text) FSCatskills 105, "The Black Sheep" (2 texts, 2 tunes) Spaeth-WeepMore, pp. 173-174, "The Black Sheep" (1 text) DT, BLCKSHEP* Roud #4282 RECORDINGS: [Tom] Darby & [Jimmie] Tarlton, "The Black Sheep" (Columbia 15674, 1931; rec. 1930) [Blind James] Howard & [Charles] Peak, "Three Black Sheep" (Victor V-40189, 1930; rec. 1928; on KMM) NOTES: Yes, this song DOES sound like "King Lear." Given that it is patently a stage song, I can't help but think that the author was influenced by that play. - RBW File: FSC105 === NAME: Black Stripper, The DESCRIPTION: "I have but one cow and she has but one tit, But she's better to me than one that has six, One drop of her milk would make the house ring." All his barley goes to feed her. He'll take her to town "and if I meet the gauger, I will knock him down" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1904 (_Songs of Uladh,_ according to OLochlainn-More) KEYWORDS: drink nonballad wordplay FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) OLochlainn-More 29, "The Black Stripper" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #9755 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Ewie Wi' the Crookit Horn" (subject, theme) NOTES: OLochlainn-More: "The 'Black Stripper' is a Poitin Still." The gauger, in that case, would be a revenue collector. - BS File: OLcM029 === NAME: Black Tail Range, The DESCRIPTION: "I am a roving cowboy Off from the western plains." Vignettes about cowboy life: One cowboy is rejected by a girl because he is poor. Another recalls leaving his family. Others tell of the dangers of mining and suggests hunting instead AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1931 (Larkin) KEYWORDS: cowboy work hunting mining FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (1 citation) Larkin, pp. 141-143, "The Black Tail Range" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #5762 NOTES: Larkin's informant Bob Norfleet claims that he and a group of cowboys made this up in 1893, with each cowboy contributing a verse on pain of having to do the day's cooking. Given the miscellaneous nature of the verses, this seems possible -- but it was a surprisingly poetic bunch of cowboys. - RBW File: Lark141 === NAME: Black Them Boots (Goin' Down to Cairo) DESCRIPTION: "Black them boots an' make 'em shine, Goodbye, goodbye, Black them boots and make 'em shine, Goodbye lazy Jane." "Oh how I love her, ain't that a shame...." "See that snail a-pullin' that rail?" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1930 (Randolph) KEYWORDS: playparty FOUND_IN: US(MW,So) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Randolph 550, "Black Them Boots" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #7656 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Goodbye Liza Jane (I)" NOTES: From its form this would appear to be akin to "Goodbye Liza Jane" (or one of the other Liza Jane songs), but the fragment in Randolph is just too fragmentary for certainty. - RBW [This is a variant of] "Goin' Down to Cairo," a southern Illinois fiddle tune with these verses and the chorus "Goin' down to Cairo/Goodbye, goodbye/Goin' down to Cairo/Goodbye, Liza Jane." The reference is to Cairo, Illinois. - PJS File: R550 === NAME: Black Velvet Band (I), The DESCRIPTION: The singer meets and courts a girl with fine hair tied up in a (black/blue) velvet band. As they are out (walking) one night, she steals a gentleman's (watch). The crime is discovered; she plants the evidence on the singer; he is convicted and punished AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1907 KEYWORDS: crime courting robbery transportation punishment clothes FOUND_IN: Britain(England) US(MW,So) Australia Ireland Canada REFERENCES: (9 citations) Randolph 672, "The Blue Velvet Band" (1 text) Meredith/Anderson, pp. 49-50, 145-146, 192-193, "The Black Velvet Band" (2+ texts, 3 tunes) Fahey-Eureka, pp. 48-49, "The Black Velvet Band" (1 text, 1 tune) Paterson/Fahey/Seal, pp. 61-64, "The Black Velvet Band" (1 text plus an excerpt) Kennedy 313, "The Black Velvet Band" (1 text, 1 tune) Manifold-PASB, pp. 10-11, "The Girl with the Black Velvet Band" (1 text, 1 tune) Spaeth-WeepMore, pp. 148-150, "The Girl in the Blue Velvet Band" (1 text) JHJohnson, pp. 38-41, "The Girl with the Blue Velvet Band" (1 text) DT 313, BLACKVEL BLKVEL2 BLUEVEL (BLUEVELV2 -- definitely a parody, possibly traditional) Roud #2146 and 3764 RECORDINGS: Cliff Carlisle, "The Girl in the Blue Velvet Band" (Melotone 5-12-61, 1935) Tex Fletcher & Joe Rogers, "The Girl in the Blue Velvet Band" (Decca 5403, 1937) Bill Monroe & His Blue Grass Boys, "The Girl In The Blue Velvet Band" (Columbia 20648, 1949) Hank Snow, "The Blue Velvet Band" (Bluebird [Canada] B-4635, c. 1939) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Black Velvet Band (II -- New Zealand)" (tune, meter, lyrics) cf. "The Black Velvet Band (III)" cf. "The Charming Young Widow I Met on the Train" (woman pickpocket theme) SAME_TUNE: Hank Snow, "Answer to 'The Blue Velvet Band'" (Bluebird [Canada] B-4688, c. 1939) NOTES: Roud splits this into two songs, based perhaps on whether the band is black (#2146) or blue (#3764). It may well be that the "blue velvet band" versions are a rewrite. Certainly the version produced by Spaeth is the sort of thing you'd expect when someone "improves" a traditional piece: The stanza form is different, and it's full of cutesy forms. But it's the same story, and the "blue" form is less popular, so I'm content to lump them while considering the blue velvet band secondary and the result of redaction. It should be noted that the fullest versions of the "Blue" version, such as Spaeth's, are extremely full, with (in effect) two plots: First the wild meeting which results in the young man being convicted and punished, and then a final scene in which the young man misses the girl and goes to find her, only to find her dead. There is another "Blue" version (in the Index as "Blue Velvet Band (II)" ) in which the middle part, about the prison, has broken off. Genetically, it's still the same song, and perhaps should file here -- but the parts have separated so far that it seemed better to split them. In any case, there are so many black and blue velvet bands floating around the tradition that you probably should check all songs which use these titles. Inceidentally, it seems pretty certain that the song was well-known in the ninetheenth century; according to Spaeth's _A History of Popular Music in America_, p. 608, there was a popular piece of 1894 entitled "Her Eyes Don't Shine Like Diamonds" by Dave Marion. - RBW File: R672 === NAME: Black Velvet Band (II -- New Zealand) DESCRIPTION: In a form clearly based on the transportation song "The Black Velvet Band," the singer -- who has chosen to emigrate to New Zealand -- bids farewell to his girl and sails away. He tells how he is saving up to be reunited with his girl in the velvet band. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1961 (recording, Bruce Hall) KEYWORDS: love separation clothes emigration New Zealand FOUND_IN: New Zealand REFERENCES: (1 citation) DT, BLKVEL3* CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Black Velvet Band (I)" (tune, meter, lyrics) cf. "The Black Velvet Band (III)" NOTES: I suspect this is not really traditional, but rather is an adaption of the standard Black Velvet Band to New Zealand conditions (i.e. no transportation). But I gather it was found in some manuscript somewhere, so it *may* have been passed from hand to hand at some time. - RBW File: DTBlkve3 === NAME: Black Velvet Band (III), The DESCRIPTION: Singer loves a girl who wears a blue (black) velvet band. He leaves her to find work. She appears to him by firelight; he returns home, to discover or learn from his captain that she has died. She is buried wearing his ring and the velvet band AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1961 (recording, Stanley G. Triggs) KEYWORDS: loneliness love rambling separation beauty clothes burial death work supernatural lover worker ghost FOUND_IN: Can(West) REFERENCES: (1 citation) DT, BLUEVEL2, BLUVELV2 RECORDINGS: Stanley G. Triggs, "The Blue Velvet Band" (on Triggs1) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Black Velvet Band (I)" cf. "The Black Velvet Band (II - New Zealand)" NOTES: The relationship to the other "Black Velvet Band" songs is clear -- this one shares the chorus "Her cheeks were the full flush of nature/Her beauty it seemed to expand/Her hair hung down in long tresses/Tied back by the blue velvet band." But the theme of betrayal common in the other songs is wholly absent; in this case the lady is innocent, and dies. So I separate them. - PJS File: RcBlVel3 === NAME: Black Water Side, The [Laws O1] DESCRIPTION: A boy and girl have long been courting. He offers to marry her; she objects that she is too poor. He says that, though he loves only her, this is her only chance; he has another girl in reserve. She gains her mother's permission and they are married AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1933 (Flanders/Olney) KEYWORDS: courting poverty love marriage FOUND_IN: US(NE) Ireland Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Laws O1, "The Black Water Side" Flanders/Olney, pp. 39-41, "Black Water Side" (1 text, 1 tune) SHenry H811, pp. 461-462, "The Blackwaterside" (1 text, 1 tune) Peacock, pp. 503-504, "The Blackwater Side" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #312 NOTES: Not to be confused with Kennedy's song "Down by Blackwaterside" ("Abroad As I Was Walking"), which is a seduction ballad. The two appear to have cross-fertilized heavily, but the plots are distinct. - RBW File: LO01 === NAME: Black Woman DESCRIPTION: "Come here Black woman...ah-hmm, sit on Black daddy's knee." Singer asks if her house is lonesome with her biscuit-roller gone. He's going to Texas "to hear the wild ox moan. He asks where she stayed last night and threatens to tell her daddy on her AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1940 (recording, Vera Hall) KEYWORDS: separation loneliness courting love sex abandonment travel lyric nonballad animal lover FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Courlander-NFM, pp. 140-141, "(Black Woman)" (1 text); pp. 266-268, "Black Woman" (1 tune, partial text) Roud #10987 RECORDINGS: Rich Amerson, "Black Woman" (on NFMAla1, DownHome) Vera Hall, "Black Woman" (on AFS 4067 B1, 1940) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Wild Ox Moan NOTES: Vera Hall recorded this subsequently as "Wild Ox Moan," the name by which it became popular in the folk revival. - PJS File: CNFM140 === NAME: Black-Eyed Daisy, The DESCRIPTION: "Send for the fiddle and send for the bow, Send for the black-eyed Daisy, Don't reach here by the middle of the week, It's almost drive me crazy...." "Who'se been here since I been gone? Send for the... Pretty little girl with a red dress on...." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1921 (Brown) KEYWORDS: music nonballad floatingverses FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) BrownIII 310, "The Black-Eyed Daisy" (1 text) File: Br3310 === NAME: Black-Eyed Mary: see Farewell Ballymoney (Loving Hannah; Lovely Molly) (File: R749) === NAME: Black-Eyed Susan: see Black-Eyed Susie (Green Corn) (File: R568) === NAME: Black-Eyed Susan (Dark-Eyed Susan) [Laws O28] DESCRIPTION: Susan boards a ship to seek William. He hears her voice and greets her on the deck, promising to be true wherever he goes. Susan bids a sad farewell as the ship prepares to leave AUTHOR: words: John Gay / music: Richard Leveridge EARLIEST_DATE: 1730 KEYWORDS: ship separation love FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar,Newf) REFERENCES: (5 citations) Laws O28, "Black-Eyed Susan (Dark-Eyed Susan)" Creighton/Senior, pp. 131-132, "Black-Eyed Susan" (2 texts, 2 tunes) Creighton-Maritime, pp. 90-91, "Black-Eyed Susan" (1 text, 1 tune) Lehr/Best 28, "Dark-eyed Susan" (1 text, 1 tune) DT 672, BLKEYSUS Roud #560 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 1(7), "William and Susan," W. and C. Dicey (London), 1736-1763; also Harding B 1(12), Harding B 1(8), Firth c.12(3), Harding B 1(11), Harding B 1(6), Harding B 1(9), "William and Susan"; Harding B 11(304), Harding B 11(2498), Firth b.26(37), Harding B 11(307), "Black Eyed Susan"; 2806 c.16.(122), Harding B 11(306), "Black-Ey'd Susan"; Harding B 11(2206), Firth b.25(241), Harding B 11(527), Harding B 28(74), Harding B 28(74), 2806 b.10(120), Harding B 18(42), "Black-Eyed Susan" NLScotland, L.C.1270(002), "Black-Eyed Susan," unknown, c.1840-1850 SAME_TUNE: Black-eyed Susan (broadside Bodleian Harding B 1(7)) Black-ey'd Susan (broadside Bodleian Harding B 1(6)) NOTES: Written by John Gay, and fairly common in printed sources (Laws lists several broadsides, and it is item CLXVI in Palgrave's _Golden Treasury_). The only collections in oral tradition listed by Laws, however, are Nova Scotia versions found in Creighton; I am surprised to see that Laws regards it as a genuine traditional song. - RBW Lehr/Best has a note on the transmission of this ballad. Best collected the song from her mother who had also passed it to a friend who "wrote it down in her song scribbler." In the book's intoduction Best notes that "we encountered women who had compiled their own songbooks, usually two or three scribblers bound together 'so as not to be always forgetting the words.' These books are treasured and carefully kept clear of the children." [Of] "Dark-eyed Susan," Best goes on to note "Great was my surprise to find out, much later, that John Gay of Beggar's Opera fame had composed it in 1760, and that our version matched his almost word for word." Almost word for word, in fact. In comparing Lehr/Best 28 to Harding B 1(6) no line is dropped or added or substantially changed. "The" may be replaced by "with" and "black-ey'd Susan" becomes "dark-eyed Susan," for example, but the most substantial change is that "In every port a mistress finds" becomes "In every port a sweetheart find": likely intentional censorship. Transmission then seems likely to have been from broadside through two hundred years of "scribblers" - BS File: LO28 === NAME: Black-Eyed Susie (Green Corn) DESCRIPTION: Floating verses about courting and marriage: "All I want in this creation / Pretty little wife and a big plantation.... Two little boys to call me pappy, One named sup and the other named gravy. Hey, black-eyed Susie" (or "Green corn," or other chorus) AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1924 (recording, Gid Tanner & Riley Puckett) KEYWORDS: courting marriage children nonballad playparty FOUND_IN: US(SE,So) REFERENCES: (9 citations) Randolph 568, "Black-Eyed Susan" (1 short text plus a fragment, 1 tune); also perhaps 415, "Possum Sop and Polecat Jelly" (1 text, 1 tune -- a playparty that shares some lyrics and is too short to classify on its own) Randolph/Cohen, pp. 410-411, "Black-Eyed Susan" (1 text, 1 tune -- Randolph's 568A) BrownIII 311, "Black-Eyes Susie" (2 fragments, presumably of this piece) Cambiaire, p. 86, "Pretty Little Black-Eyed Susan" (1 text) MHenry-Appalachians, p. 184, "Pretty Little Black-Eyed Susan" (1 text) Lomax-FSUSA 29, "Black-eyed Susie" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-ABFS, pp. 286-288, "Black-eyed Susie" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 38, "Green Corn"; p. 39, "Black-Eyed Susie" (2 texts) DT, BLKEYESZ Roud #4954 and 3426 RECORDINGS: Roscoe Holcomb, "Blackeyed Susie" (on MMOK, MMOKCD) Al Hopkins & his Buckle Busters, "Black Eyed Susie" (Brunswick 175/Vocalion 5179 [as the Hill Billies], 1927) J. P Nestor, "Black-Eyed Susie" (Victor 21070, 1927; on TimesAint05) New Lost City Ramblers, "Blackeyed Susie" (on NLCR07) Land Norris, "Kitty Puss" (OKeh 40212, 1924) Fiddlin' Doc Roberts, "Black-Eyed Susie" (Gennett 6257, 1927) Pete Seeger, "Black-Eyed Suzie" (on LonesomeValley);"Green Corn" (on BroonzySeeger2) Jilson Setters [pseud. for James W. "Blind Bill" Day], "Black Eyed Susie" (Victor V-40127, 1929) Gid Tanner & Riley Puckett, "Black-Eyed Susie" (Columbia 119-D, 1924) Gid Tanner & his Skillet Lickers, "Black-Eyed Susie" (Columbia 15283-D, 1928) Henry Whitter [Whitter's Virginia Breakdowners], "Black-Eyed Susie" (OKeh 40320, 1925) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Shady Grove" (floating lyrics) cf. "Hot Corn, Cold Corn (I'll Meet You in the Evening)" (floating lyrics) cf. "Davy" (meter) NOTES: It is possible that this song and "Hot Corn, Cold Corn (I'll Meet You in the Evening)" spring from the same sources, since they share lyrics and themes. However, they have evolved far enough apart that I feel I have to split them. Roud seems to split the group even more, with "Black Eyed Susie" being his #3426 and "Green Corn" his #4954. The versions I've seen, though, are so mixed up that I decided to lump them because almost any split would be somewhat arbitrary. Nor are the titles any help; Cambiaire's "Pretty Little Black-Eyed Susie." for instance, never mentions Susie; the girl in the song is Sally. - RBW File: R568 === NAME: Black, Brown, and White DESCRIPTION: About the troubles suffered by American blacks, who must take poor jobs (if any are available) for poor pay. "If you're white, you're all right; If you're brown, stick around, But if you're black, O brother, git back, git back, git back." AUTHOR: Big Bill Broonzy EARLIEST_DATE: 1945 KEYWORDS: discrimination hardtimes work FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (4 citations) Scott-BoA, pp. 350-351, "Discrimination Blues" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-FSNA316 , "Black, Brown, and White" (1 text, 1 tune) Arnett, p. 176, "Git Back Blues (Black, Brown, and White Blues)" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, GITBACK* File: SBoA350 === NAME: Blackberries, The: see Na Smeara (The Blackberries) (File: TST009) === NAME: Blackberry Grove DESCRIPTION: The singer is eating blackberries when he spies a milkmaid. He asks to buy milk; she says the cow has kicked over the bucket. She hints that the loan of a shilling would be quickly repaid; he takes the hint, she takes the shillings, and he takes her AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1892 (Baring-Gould and Sheppard) KEYWORDS: courting sex commerce farming money food animal worker FOUND_IN: Britain(England(South)) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Kennedy 122, "Blackberry Grove" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BLKBERGR* Roud #9176 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Harmless Young Jim" (innuendoes) cf. "Buttercup Joe" (innuendoes) cf. "The Spotted Cow" (theme) cf. "Kitty of Coleraine" (theme) cf. "Three Maidens to Milking Did Go" (theme) ALTERNATE_TITLES: One Michaelmas Morn NOTES: Not to be confused with "Pretty Betsy the Milkmaid (Blackberry Fold)," despite their sharing a milkmaid and blackberries. Incidentally, one of the reasons milkmaids were held in such romantic esteem was for their smooth, fair, and un-pockmarked skin, which came from their contact with cowpox and resultant immunity to smallpox. - PJS Kennedy observes that the song dates itself to Michaelmas (September 29), a day on which hired workers finished their terms and were paid off. Thus the youth would have money to spend -- and the girl would have every reason to latch onto him *now* (even if it meant spilling the milk) before he left the vicinity. I know of no version in which the two explicitly sleep together (and can't imagine Baring-Gould printing such!), but the implication is strong. - RBW File: K122 === NAME: Blackbird (I), The (Jacobite) DESCRIPTION: A lady is mourning for her blackbird, who "once in fair England... did flourish." Now he has been driven far away "because he was the true son of the king." She resolves to seek him out, and wishes him well wherever he may be AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1651 (Broadside, reprinted by Ramsay, 1740) KEYWORDS: lament separation Jacobites HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1625 - Accession of Charles I 1649 - Execution of Charles I. Charles (II) forced into hiding. Britain becomes a commonwealth 1660 - Restoration of monarchy. Accession of Charles II. 1685 - Death of Charles II. Accession of James II and VII (a Catholic) 1688-1689 - Glorious Revolution deposes King James II 1720-1788 - Life of Bonnie Prince Charlie 1745-1746 - Jacobite rebellion of 1745, which ended in the defeat and final exile of Bonnie Prince Charlie FOUND_IN: US(So) Ireland REFERENCES: (12 citations) Randolph 116, "The Blackbird" (3 texts, 2 tunes) Randolph/Cohen, pp. 115-117, "The Blackbird" (1 text, 1 tune -- Randolph's 116B) OLochlainn-More 78, "The Blackbird" (1 text, 1 tune) PGalvin, pp. 16-17, "The Royal Blackbird" (1 text, 1 tune) O'Conor, p. 36, "The Blackbird" (1 text) Zimmermann 1, "The Blackbird" (2 texts, 1 tune) Hayward-Ulster, pp. 19-21, "The Royal Blackbird" (1 text) DT, RYLBLKBD* ADDITIONAL: Charles Gavan Duffy, editor, The Ballad Poetry of Ireland (1845), pp. 139, "The Blackbird" Kathleen Hoagland, editor, One Thousand Years of Irish Poetry (New York, 1947), pp. 246-248, "The Blackbird" (1 text) H. Halliday Sparling, Irish Minstrelsy (London, 1888), pp. 143-144, 510, "The Blackbird" ADDITIONAL: Thomas Kinsella, _The New Oxford Book of Irish Verse_ (Oxford, 1989), p. 255, "The Blackbird" (1 text) Roud #2375 RECORDINGS: Paddy Tunney, "The Royal Blackbird" (on IRTunneyFamily01) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 28(67), "The Blackbird" ("Upon a fair morning, for soft recreation"), W. Armstrong (Liverpool), 1820-1824; also Harding B 17(27a), Harding B 16(25a), Harding B 6(18), 2806 b.11(71), Harding B 11(297), Johnson Ballads 3041, Harding B 20(16), Firth c.26(219), "The Blackbird"; Harding B 19(107), Firth c.14(250), Harding B 11(1038), Harding B 11(3357), 2806 c.15(167) [almost entirely illegible], "The Royal Blackbird" LOCSinging, sb10013b, "The Blackbird," J. Andrews (New York), 1853-1859; also as112050, "Royal Blackbird" Murray, Mu23-y4:016, "The Blackbird," John Ross (Newcastle), 19C NLScotland, L.C.1270(003), "The Blackbird," unknown, c. 1845 SAME_TUNE: The Lark Is Up (broadside Bodleian 2806 b.11(71)) NOTES: Sparling claims his six verse text is "an unmutilated version" accessible "for the first time in a hundred years.... In every other collection [including Duffy] it has appeared as three stanzas, made up of fragments." Zimmermann's text agrees essentially with Sparling's. - BS The first broadside versions of this song date to 1650, obviously referring to Charles II, who was then in exile. It wasn't safe to refer to him by name, so the allegorical "blackbird" was used. It seems also to have been used of James II, and perhaps also to his son James III. However, the title came to be most strongly associated with Bonnie Prince Charlie. After the Jacobite Rebellion of 1745, the same situation arose as in 1650. It was generally not safe to speak of Charlie, so the Jacobites adopted various circumlocutions -- the "blackbird," the "moorhen," or simply "Somebody." The Jacobite Rebellions had their roots in the "Glorious Revolution" of 1688/9. The British King James II (James VII of Scotland) was Catholic, and had just had a Catholic son. This was unacceptable, and James was overthrown on behalf of his Protestant daughter Mary II (died 1694) and her husband William III (died 1702). When Mary and her sister Anne died without issue (1714), the throne was awarded to the utterly disgusting George I of Hannover (died 1727). The result was the first Jacobite Rebellion in 1715, intended to bring James II's son James (III) back to the throne. The rebellion sputtered, and another revolt in 1719 was stillborn. In 1745, Prince Charles Edward (the son of James III) took up his father's cause. 24 years old, handsome, and with an aura of nobility, Charles thoroughly scared the Hannoverian dynasty, but was at last defeated and driven into exile. But his face and bearing burned their way into the hearts of the Scots for many years to come. - RBW Also collected and sung by Kevin Mitchell, "The Royal Blackbird" (on Kevin and Ellen Mitchell, "Have a Drop Mair," Musical Tradition Records MTCD315-6 CD (2001)) - BS File: R116 === NAME: Blackbird (III), The : see Logan's Lament (File: E112) === NAME: Blackbird (IV), The: see Granua's Lament for the Loss of her Blackbird Mitchel the Irish Patriot (File: Zimm060) === NAME: Blackbird and Thrush, The DESCRIPTION: The singer hears two birds rejoicing because they are "single and free." The girl goes to meet Johnny, but "the dearer I loved him, the saucier he grew." At last he rejects her, and she says she can do better elsewhere AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1928 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: love courting rejection flowers gift FOUND_IN: Ireland Britain(England(South)) REFERENCES: (2 citations) SHenry H241, pp. 346-347, "The Blackbird and Thrush" (1 text, 1 tune) Copper-SoBreeze, pp. 290-291, "So Abroad as I was Walking" (1 text, 1 tune, with no particular plot but with verses reminiscent of "Old Smokey" or this piece) Roud #2380 RECORDINGS: Turp Brown, "Abroad As I Was Walking" (on Voice01) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "On Top of Old Smokey" (floating lyrics) cf. "Farewell He" (floating lyrics) cf. "Green Grows the Laurel (Green Grow the Lilacs)" (floating lyrics) cf. "The Ploughboy (I)" (theme) NOTES: The full version of this song, from the Sam Henry collection, is little more than a pastiche of floating lyrics (see the cross-references). I've thrown in the Copper text (which Roud actually splits off as its own song) because it, like the Henry text, contains lyrics we ordinarily associate with "Old Smokey." Presumably both songs derive from the same source as gave us the American text. The key lines are "A meeting's a pleasure, a parting's a grief, And an (unconstant young man) is worse than a thief." - RBW File: HHH241 === NAME: Blackbird in the Bush, The: see Three Maidens to Milking Did Go (File: K191) === NAME: Blackbird of Avondale, The (The Arrest of Parnell) DESCRIPTION: A fair maid mourns "Oh, where is my Blackbird of sweet Avondale." The fowler caught him in Dublin and he is behind "the walls of Kilmainham." She says "God grant that my country will soon be a nation And bring back my Blackbird to sweet Avondale" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1881 (Zimmermann) KEYWORDS: HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: Oct12, 1881 - Charles Stewart Parnell (1846-1891) is arrested in Dublin. He is released from Kilmainham Jail May 2, 1882 (source: Zimmermann) FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) Zimmermann 81, "The Blackbird of Avondale" or "The Arrest of Parnell" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #5174 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 26(59), "The Blackbird of Avondale" or "The Arrest of Parnell" ("By the sweet bay of Dublin whilst carelessly strolling"), unknown, n.d. CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Michael Davitt" (subject and references there) cf. "The Bold Tenant Farmer" (character of Parnell) and references there) NOTES: Parnell, who was born in Avondale, County Wicklow, is arrested under the Coercion Act of 1881, which was intended to inhibit Land League activities. Parnell was the head of the Land League at the time. (source: "Charles Stuart Parnell (1846-1891)" at the Alumni Website of Magdalene College, Cambridge) - BS [We should note that almost all sources spell Parnell's name "Charles Stewart Parnell."] For the Land League, see the notes to "The Bold Tenant Farmer." This, incidentally, was one of the Great Mistakes of Britain's dealings with Ireland. Prior to his arrest, Parnell was in the uncomfortable position of leading a divided organization: Many Land Leaguers were for fighting the British with all their might, others favored purely parliamentary means. Both were growing somewhat suspicious of Parnell (who seems to have favoured whatever was most effective at a particular time). But the radicals' activism caused Gladstone to pass a Coersion Act, and to round up Parnell and his associates. That united all Ireland behind him; by the time he was released, he was Ireland's dominant politician (see Robert Kee, _The Bold Fenian Men_, being volume II of _The Green Flag_, pp. 81-85). I should say, *almost* all Ireland. The exception was the Ulster presbyterians. According to Kee, p. 103, the Kilmainham "treaty" which led to the release of Parnell, and the accompanying British concessions, alarmed the workers of northeast Ulster. The result was the revival of the Orange Society, and the rise of the Ulster Unionists, and eventually partition; see, e.g. the notes to "A Loyal Song Against Home Rule." - RBW File: Zimm081 === NAME: Blackbird of Mullaghmore, The DESCRIPTION: For money the singer will "supply you with a good friend" and a glass. The "loyal blackbird" of Mullaghmore has been driven away to some fine still. "Her offspring are well proven in America, France and Spain" She will return "but not to the same place" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1952 (Tunney-StoneFiddle) KEYWORDS: drink nonballad emigration bird FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (2 citations) Tunney-StoneFiddle, pp. 123-124, "The Blackbird of Mullaghmore" (1 text, 1 tune) OBoyle 4, "Blackbird of Mullaghmore" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #3474 ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Loyal Blackbird NOTES: Tunney-StoneFiddle: "If poteen was so potent surely it inspired the poets. Isn't 'The Loyal Blackbird' or 'The Blackbird of Mullaghmore' one of the many songs in praise of stills and poteen-making?" OBoyle: .".. the Blackbird of the song is the hidden name for the hidden Still. Mullaghmore (The Big Height) is a townland on the slopes of the Mournes above Hilltown in County Down, where I first heard the song from Owen McAteer in July 1952." - BS File: TSF124 === NAME: Blackbirds and Thrushes (I) DESCRIPTION: Young man meets young woman; she laments her Jimmy, who is off to the wars. She fears he will be killed, but when he returns, he finds her dead instead. He regrets having left. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1916 KEYWORDS: love separation death soldier FOUND_IN: Britain(England) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Sharp-100E 36, "Blackbirds and Thrushes" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #12657 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Cowboy Jack" [Laws B24] (plot) cf. "The Lass of Roch Royal" [Child 76] (theme) cf. "John (George) Riley (I)" [Laws N36] and references there (theme) cf. "Ball of Yarn" File: ShH36 === NAME: Blackbirds and Thrushes (II): see Hares on the Mountain (File: ShH63) === NAME: Blackboy's Waltzing Matilda, The: see Waltzing Matilda (File: PBB119) === NAME: Blackeyed Susie: see Black-Eyed Susie (Green Corn) (File: R568) === NAME: Blackfoot Rangers DESCRIPTION: "Mount! mount! and away o'er the greenwood so wide, The sword is our sceptre, the fleet steed our pride...." The Blackfoot rangers will raid and bushwhack the Federals, who cannot hope to defeat them; God will support them AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1912 (Belden) KEYWORDS: outlaw horse Civilwar FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Belden, p. 354, "Blackfoot Rangers" (1 text) Roud #7770 NOTES: Although the reader may be tempted to refer this to the Blackfoot Indians (who lived primarily in Montana and Alberta east of the Rockies), Belden refers this to the Blackfoot region in Missouri, and to the Civil War, and he is likely right. Missouri was long a center of intense guerrilla activity, starting actually *before* the Civil War (as raiders crossed over into "Bleeding Kansas" to try to force that state to become slave or free). These particular raiders were probably Confederate (since they were anti-Federal), but it's barely possible that they were abolitionist and trying to overthrow the pro-slavery Lecompton government. In any case, given the way these guerillas behaved, the only god who could approve of their behavior is one which fed on human sacrifice. Belden does not mention an ancestor of this piece, but looking at it, I cannot help but feel that it is adapted from something else, though I'm not sure what. - RBW File: Beld354 === NAME: Blackman's Dream, The DESCRIPTION: Singer dreams of a mystical trip. At different points on the desert trip he is given colored garments to wear. He encounters the burning bush, a toad, armed strangers, mountains, a pyramid and a fountain and cup for toasting all that don't bow to Baal. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1987 (OrangeLark) KEYWORDS: dream ritual religious FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) OrangeLark 35, "The Blackman's Dream" (1 text, 1 tune) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Knight Templar's Dream" (subject) and references there cf. "The Grand Mystic Order" (subject) and references there NOTES: OrangeLark: "The title is a sufficient description of the song's contents." [?!] According to Zimmermann, p. 303, "Other [than Orange Lodge] Protestant organizations, such as the Grand Black Chapter or the Royal Arch Purple Chapter, developed parallel with Orangeism, and their rituals were also themes of allegorical songs which appeared, along with masonic texts, in Orange collections." His footnote to that statement lists among songs not inspired by Orange ritual, "The Black Man's Dream." The Royal Black Institution was formed in Ireland in 1797; the Orange Order had been formed in 1795. To this day it has an annual July 13 demonstration at Scarva in Co. Down. (source: "Our Background" at The Royal Black Institution site) - BS The Burning Bush is of course a reference to Exodus 3. Most of the other references are non-Biblical, except for the one to bowing to Baal. I suspect this is a reference to 1 Kings 19:18. Elijah had fled to Mount Horeb, saying that he is left alone as a worshipper of YHWH, but YHWH answers, "Yet I have left _me_ seven thousand in Israel, all the knees which have not bowed unto Ba'al." This must have seemed unusually suitable imagery to the Protestants of Ulster, who were so conscious of being a minority in a Catholic nation. - RBW File: OrLa035 === NAME: Blacksmith (II), The: see Whiskey Is My Name (Donald Blue) (File: HHH835) === NAME: Blacksmith Courted Me, A: see The Blacksmith (File: K146) === NAME: Blacksmith of Cloghroe, The DESCRIPTION: "The rebels' hall of meeting was the forge of sweet Cloghroe" where they learned the soldier's drill. Sean Magee, the blacksmith there, is now buried in Kilmurry. "Ireland lost a gallant son in the blacksmith of Cloghroe" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1978 (OCanainn) KEYWORDS: rebellion death Ireland nonballad patriotic FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) OCanainn, pp. 66,122, "The Blacksmith of Cloghroe" (1 text, 1 tune) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Skibbereen" (tune, per OCanainn) NOTES: OCanainn calls this "another patriotic song of West Cork." I assume that it is -- like many of the other songs in the collection -- a song of the Irish Civil Wars of 1920-1922. - BS The flip side is, blacksmiths had often been at the center of earlier rebellions, simply because they could make pikes. By 1920, even the Irish had realized that pikes were useless against modern weapons. But, of course, the flip side is that rebellions such as 1848 and 1867 had almost no casualties. So the Civil War does indeed seem the most likely occasion. - RBW File: OCan066 === NAME: Blacksmith, The DESCRIPTION: "A blacksmith courted me, Nine months or better. He fairly won my heart, Wrote me a letter.... And if I were with my love, I'd live forever." Sadly, her love has departed (for the wars? To be married?); she wishes she were with him wherever he goes AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1901 KEYWORDS: love separation courting lie betrayal lament lover FOUND_IN: Britain(England(South)) Canada REFERENCES: (4 citations) Kennedy 146, "A Blacksmith Courted Me" (1 text, 1 tune) Vaughan Williams/Lloyd, p. 22, "The Blacksmith" (1 text, 1 tune) MacSeegTrav 56, "The Blacksmith" (2 texts, 2 tunes) DT, BLAKSMIT* BLAKSMT2* BLAKSMI2* Roud #816 RECORDINGS: Harry Brazil, "A Blacksmith Courted Me" (on Voice11) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Firth c.18(130), "The Blacksmith," H. Such (London), 1863-1885 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Brave Wolfe" [Laws A1] (tune & meter) cf. "Our Captain Called" (tune & meter, lyrics) cf. "Pining Daily and Daily" (theme) SAME_TUNE: Brave Wolfe [Laws A1] (File: LA01) NOTES: Lines are similar to Opie-Oxford2 270, "Brave news is come to town" (earliest date in Opie-Oxford2 is 1842). Firth c.18(130): "Strange news has come to me, strange news is carried, And now it's all the talk, my love he is married." Opie-Oxford2 270: "Brave news is come to town, Brave news is carried; Brave news is come to town, Jemmy Dawson's married." - BS (For the items listed above, see also Baring-Gould-MotherGoose #280, p. 165, "(Brave news is come to town)"; also Montgomerie-ScottishNR 96, "(Braw News is come to town)," in which the girl is Jean Tamson. The similarity is only in the lyrics, though, not in the plot.) Kennedy lists in excess of a dozen collections of this song, almost all from the south of England. Normally I would interpret this to mean that it is recent but popular -- but of course it is old enough to have supplied the tune for "Brave Wolfe." - RBW File: K146 === NAME: Blacksmith's Song, The: see Twankydillo (The Blacksmith's Song) (File: K286) === NAME: Blackwater Side (I): see Down By Blackwaterside (File: K151) === NAME: Blackwater Side (II), The: see The Bann Water Side (File: HHH685) === NAME: Blackwater Side (III): see The Lovely Irish Maid (File: Pea551) === NAME: Blackwaterside, The: see The Black Water Side [Laws O1] (File: LO01) === NAME: Blaeberries, The: see The Blaeberry Courtship [Laws N19] (File: LN19) === NAME: Blaeberry Courtship, The [Laws N19] DESCRIPTION: A Lowland girl is induced to follow a Highland lad home "to pick blueberries" (and get married). The girl is worn out by the time they reach his home -- only to discover that his poverty is a sham and he is a great lord whom she knew in childhood AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1835 (broadside, Bodleian Johnson Ballads 1570) KEYWORDS: courting poverty money harvest FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar) Britain(England(North),Scotland) Ireland REFERENCES: (6 citations) Laws N19, "The Blaeberry Courtship" SHenry H193, pp. 487-488, "The Hielan's o' Scotland" (1 text, 1 tune) Ord, pp. 190-191, "The Blaeberry Courtship" (1 text) Stokoe/Reay, pp. 62-63, "The Blaeberries" (1 text, 1 tune) Mackenzie 18, "The Blaeberry Courtship" (2 texts) DT 450, BLAEBRRY BLAEBRR2 Roud #1888 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Johnson Ballads 1570, "The Blaeberries" or "Highland Laird's Courtship," G Walker (Durham), 1797-1834 NLScotland, RB.m.143(004), "The Blaeberry Courtship," Pos Box (sic.), i.e. Poet's Box (Glasgow), c. 1880 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Lizie Lindsay" [Child 226] (plot) cf. "Glasgow Peggy" [Child 228] (plot) NOTES: Laws calls this a "modernization of the story" told in "Lizie Lindsay" (Child #226). It is possible that this is technically true -- that is, that "The Blaeberry Courtship" was inspired by the Child Ballad. Certainly a number of scholars (far too many!) have lumped them together. But they are clearly and obviously separate songs, and should be treated as such. In terms of plot, "The Blaeberry Courtship" is nearly as close to "Glasgow Peggy" as to "Lizie Lindsay"; note that the suitor reveals his wealth only *after* the lady comes away with him. - RBW File: LN19 === NAME: Blanche Comme la Niege (White as Snow) DESCRIPTION: French. A lady is taken home by a captain. They eat before making love, but she falls dead during the meal. She is buried in her father's garden. When her father comes, she calls him to open her tomb: She has pretended to be dead to save her honor. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1959 (Peacock) KEYWORDS: foreignlanguage courting sex virginity escape beauty trick burial father FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Peacock, pp. 174-178, "Blanche Comme la Niege" (3 texts, 3 tunes) RECORDINGS: Anita Best, "Blanche Comme la Neige" (on NFABest01) ALTERNATE_TITLES: La Belle Qui Fait la Morte Pour Son Honneur Garder NOTES: In Peacock's version there is only one lady rather than three. In some versions one lady, white as snow and beautiful as day, falls asleep on a bed of roses and three captains come courting. - BS File: Pea174 === NAME: Blancheflour and Jellyflorice [Child 300] DESCRIPTION: Blancheflour, a pretty servant girl, finds a place sewing for a queen. The queen warns the girl away from her son Jellyflorice, but the two fall in love. The queen would kill the girl, but Jellyflorice rescues and marries her AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1828 (Buchan) KEYWORDS: royalty courting servant punishment rescue marriage FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Child 300, "Blancheflour and Jellyflorice" (1 text) Roud #3904 NOTES: Compare the "naive and quant" Middle English romance "Floris and Blancheflour," also known as "Floriz and Blauncheflur," etc. That romance is not really the source of the plot of this piece, but probably the ultimate inpsiration. Bruce Dickens and R. M. Wilson, in _Early Middle English Texts_ (p. 43), report that there are two European versions of the story, one for aristocratic and one for popular audiences; both exist, e.g., in French. The Middle English version seems to be derived from the aristocratic version. A band of pilgrims is attacked by Saracens. A young pregnant widow is taken prisoner when her father is killed. Taken to Spain, she bears a daughter Blancheflur. On that day, the Saracen queen has a son Floris. Brought up together, they fall in love. The parents oppose the match, and sell Blancheflur into slavery. Floris attempts suicide; his parents relent and equip him for a journey to find her. He discovers her in an eastern harem and manages to rescue her. (The popular version makes the ending simpler; Floris simply performs some of the tasks of a knight errant.) The plot is common; Boccaccio used it in _Il Filocopo_, and the idea at least is found in Chaucer's "Franklin's Tale" and is said to go all the way back to India. The Middle English "Floris and Blauncheflur" romance, according to Dickens and Wilson, has been "severely pruned... to such a degree that occasionally details vital to the plot have been omitted." This includes even the introductory material, about the capture of the Christian widow that motivates the plot -- though all the Middle English versions seem to have lost material at the beginning, so that may be accidental. The history of this romance is curious. Donald B. Sands, in _Middle English Verse Romances_, p. 280, dates it c. 1250. Dickens and Wilson report four manuscripts, B.M. Cotton Vitellius D III (late XIII century), Cambridge Gg.4.27.2 (early XIV century), Edinburgh Auchinleck MS (XIV century), B. M. Egerton 2862 (early XV century). They make the odd claim that "All MSS. go back to a single lost original, but the wide discrepancies between them suggest that the intervening links were more probably oral than written." Sands seems to offer a simpler explanation: The manuscripts have all been edited, with much material being omitted along the way. The result is erratic and the meter often defective, but Sands notes (p. 282) that it is a "well-structured story" and believes that this makes up for the "undistinguished verse." Several other ballads also derive loosely or from Middle English romance, or from the legends that underly it, examples being: * "Hind Horn" [Child 17], from "King Horn" (3 MSS., including Cambridge Gg.4.27.2, which also contains "Floris and Blancheflour") * "King Orfeo" [Child 19], from "Sir Orfeo" (3 MSS., including the Auchinlek MS, which also contains "Floris and Blancheflour") * "The Marriage of Sir Gawain" [Child 31], from "The Weddynge of Sir Gawe and Dame Ragnell" (1 defective MS, Bodleian MS Rawlinson C 86) - RBW File: C300 === NAME: Blandon Blarney Stone, The: see The Blarney Stone (File: DTblrnst) === NAME: Blantyre Explosion, The: see The High Blantyre Explosion [Laws Q35] (File: LQ35) === NAME: Blaris Moor DESCRIPTION: It would be "treason" to accuse Colonel Barber of "murder." Those shot "were lads of good behaviour" but "O'Brien and Lynch" betrayed them for gold. Offered a pardon and gold themselves, those condemned as "united" chose death, and were shot. AUTHOR: ascribed to James Garland (d. c.1842) (Source: Zimmermann) EARLIEST_DATE: 1797 ("as sung in Belfast in 1797," according to Zimmermann) KEYWORDS: army betrayal execution Ireland HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: May 16, 1797 - William and Owen McKenna, Peter McCarren and Daniel McGillain, soldiers in the Monaghan militia, executed after sentence by court martial. (source: United Irishmen handbill quoted by Zimmermann) FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) Zimmermann 6, "Blaris Moor" (2 texts, 1 tune) Roud #13386 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Battle of Blaris Moor" (subject) NOTES: Blaris is a civil parish in County Antrim and County Down. IRCroppysComplaint notes re "The Blarismoor Tragedy": "In 1797 the Monaghan Militia were quartered in Belfast. In May of that year it was discovered that large numbers of them had been secretly recruited as United Irishmen." Zimmermann quotes a 1798 United Irishmen handbill describing the execution and refusal by the men convicted as United Irishmen to inform in spite of offers of pardon and reward. Zimmermann's two versions have many differences but share a rhyme scheme and so many lines that I would not separate them. One seems a badly remembered version of the other. - BS File: Zimm006 === NAME: Blarismoor Tragedy, The DESCRIPTION: "Oh, Lord, grant me direction To sing this foul transaction... Late done at Blarismoor." Three Irishmen are accused, and offered pardon and promotion if they list their accomplices. They refuse and are executed AUTHOR: James Garland (d. c.1842) (source: Moylan) EARLIEST_DATE: 1897 (P.W. Joyce finds it in _The Weekly Nation_, according to Moylan) KEYWORDS: Ireland rebellion trial crime execution HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: May 17, 1797 - The Blarismoor Tragedy FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (3 citations) PGalvin, pp. 86-87, "The Blarismoor Tragedy" (1 text, 1 tune) Moylan 47, "The Blarismoor Tragedy" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BLARISMOOR Roud #13386 NOTES: Moylan has a long note, quoting Madden, describing the event. The ballad is recorded on one of the CD's issued around the time of the bicentenial of the 1798 Irish Rebellion. See: Jim McFarland, "The Blarismoor Tragedy" (on "The Croppy's Complaint," Craft Recordings CRCD03 (1998); Terry Moylan notes) - BS File: PGa086 === NAME: Blarney Stone, The DESCRIPTION: Singer meets a pretty girl on the road to Bandon, who tells him she's lonely and asks "where I'd find that little Blarney stone." He shows her, to their mutual delight. The chorus points out there's a Blarney Stone in every town in Ireland AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1926 (recorded by Shaun O'Nolan, according to Munnelly/Deasy-Lenihan) LONG_DESCRIPTION: Singer meets a pretty girl on the road to Bandon, who tells him she's lonely and asks "where I'd find that little Blarney stone." He shows her, to their mutual delight -- "He rolled me in his arms where I never had been before/Sure he's kissed the blooming roses on my Bandon Blarney Stone." The chorus lists various places with Blarney Stones, ad notes that one is found in every town in Ireland KEYWORDS: courting sex Ireland FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (2 citations) Munnelly/Deasy-Lenihan 41, "The Bandon Blarney Stone" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BLARNSTN, BLRNSTON Roud #4800 RECORDINGS: Margaret Barry w. Michael Gorman, "The Blarney Stone" (on Pubs1); Margaret Barry, "The Blarney Stone" (on IRMBarry-Fairs) (on Voice01) Tom Lenihan, "The Bandon Blarney Stone" (on IRTLenihan01) NOTES: The famous stone is located at Blarney, County Cork; according to legend, if one can stretch across a gap between two cliffs and kiss the stone, one will acquire the "gift of gab" -- that is, the "eloquence of flattery," to use Rinzler's term. The song points out that everyone in Ireland has acquired that gift, Blarney Stone or no, and the chorus tells why. - PJS File: DTblrnst === NAME: Blaser Kallt, Kallt Vader Ifran Sjon, Det (The Cold Weather's Blowin' in From the Sea) DESCRIPTION: Swedish shanty. Sailor goes to sea at the age of 14. Sometime later meets a girl in Kalmar Harbour, convinces her to come along and marry him. Chorus after each verse line: "Det blaser kallt vader ifran sjon (The cold weather's blowin' in from the sea)" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1935 (Sternvall, _Sang under Segel_) KEYWORDS: foreignlanguage shanty courting FOUND_IN: Sweden REFERENCES: (1 citation) Hugill, pp. 543-545, "Det Blaser Kallt, Kallt Vader Ifran Sjon" (1 Swedish plus 1 English text, 1 tune) NOTES: Sternvall has a note that this was already popular by the beginning of the 19th century. - SL File: Hugi543 === NAME: Blaw the Wind Southerly: see Blow the Wind Southerly (File: StoR018) === NAME: Blazing Star of Drum (Drim, Drung), The DESCRIPTION: The singer out late on a snowy night when he sees the girl. They meet again. He asks her dwelling. She says she is too young. He says he would treat her well if she would come away. He goes across the sea without her AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1903 (JIFSS) KEYWORDS: love courting beauty emigration rejection FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H197a, pp. 247-248, "The Blazing Star of Drim"; H197b, p. 248, "The Blazing Star of Drung" (2 texts, allegedly from the same source but with substantial differences, 1 tune) Roud #2945 NOTES: Reading this reminds me very strongly of "Farewell Ballymoney (Loving Hannah; Lovely Molly)," and to a lesser extent of other courting/lost love type songs. Yet they don't actually have lyrics in common. - RBW File: HHH197a === NAME: Bleacher Lassie o' Kelvinhaugh DESCRIPTION: "As I went out on a summer's evening," the singer meets a pretty girl in Kelvinhaugh. He asks what she is doing, then enquires if she will go with him. She refuses; she is waiting for her love, gone for seven years. He reveals himself as the missing lover AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1930 (Ord) KEYWORDS: love reunion disguise FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ord, p. 77, "The Bleacher Lassie o' Kelvinhaugh" (1 text) Roud #3325 BROADSIDES: NLScotland, L.C.Fol.70(24b), "Bleaching Lassie of Kelvinhaugh," Poet's Box (Dundee), c. 1890 [despite the title, the girl is called a "bleacher lassie"] CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. esp. "John (George) Riley (I)" [Laws N36] and references there File: Ord077 === NAME: Bleaches So Green, The: see Braes of Strathblane (File: McCST053) === NAME: Bless 'Em All DESCRIPTION: Verses can be on any subject, though usually military and often obscene. Many units had their own versions. The conclusion, either "Bless 'em all" or "Fuck 'em all," is diagnostic AUTHOR: F. Godfrey? EARLIEST_DATE: 1916 KEYWORDS: soldier war technology bawdy flying FOUND_IN: Britain(England) US(SW) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Cray, pp. 386-391, "Fuck 'Em All" (3 texts plus floating stanzas, 1 tune) DT, BLSSALL1* BLSSALL2* BLSSALL3* BLSSALL4* BLSSALL5* BLSSALL6* BLSSALL7* BLSSALL8* BLSSALL9* BLSSAL10* Roud #8402 NOTES: Ed Cray notes, "It was a poor unit during the Second World War that didn't have at least one version of this classic...." It probably originated in World War I, and has been credited to "F. Godbey." A copyright version appeared in 1940; this is probably the cleanest version that has ever existed. It is not immediately evident which of the two basic titles ("Bless" or "Fuck") is more common. - RBW File: EM386 === NAME: Blessed Zulu War, The DESCRIPTION: "I love to tell the story As I've often told before How we fought in glory At the blessed Zulu war." The singer tells how Jack Smith is wounded in a bloody battle, and sends messages to mother and sweetheart before dying AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1987 KEYWORDS: soldier death war farewell HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1879 - The Zulu War. British forces annex Zululand, but only after a great deal of bungled fighting FOUND_IN: Australia REFERENCES: (1 citation) Meredith/Covell/Brown, pp. 155-158, "The Blessed Zulu War" (2 texts, 1 tune) Roud #5362 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Dying Soldier (Erin Far Away I)" [Laws J6] (plot) and references there File: MCB155 === NAME: Blessing on Brandy and Beer, A DESCRIPTION: "When one's drunk, not a girl but looks pretty, The country's as gay as the city, And all that ones says is so witty. A blessing on brandy and beer!" The singer praises the effects of drink -- letting him defy his master, beat his wife, chase girls, etc. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: KEYWORDS: drink nonballad FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (1 citation) Arnett, p. 33, "A Blessing on Brandy and Beer" (1 text, 1 tune) File: Arn033 === NAME: Blessings of Mary, The: see The Seven Joys of Mary (File: FO211) === NAME: Blest Be the Tie that Binds DESCRIPTION: "Blest be the tie that binds Our hearts in Christian love, The fellowship of kindred souls Is like to that above." Believers pray to God and "share each other's woes." They grieve to part "and hope to meet again" AUTHOR: Words: John Fawcett (1740-1817) / Music: Hans Georg Naegeli (1773-1836), adapted by Lowell Mason EARLIEST_DATE: KEYWORDS: religious nonballad FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) ADDITIONAL: Charles Johnson, One Hundred and One Famous Hymns (Hallberg, 1982), pp, 70-71, "Blest Be the Tie that Binds" (1 text, 1 tune) SAME_TUNE: Blest Be the Tie that Binds (parody) (Pankake-PHCFSB, p. 107; Roud #12809) NOTES: According to Johnson, author John Fawcett was a Methodist-influenced Baptist. He came to be pastor of a congregation at Wainsgate, where he was successful enough that another congregation tried to steal him away with the offer of a better salary. When his own congregation could not match it, he prepared to move. Whereupon the Wainsgate church begged him to stay (and, presumably, anted up). Fawcett wrote this hymn because of the ties that bound him to his church. - RBW File: BdBBtttB === NAME: Blin' Auld Man, The: see Four Nights Drunk [Child 274] (File: C274) === NAME: Blin' Man Stood on de Way an' Cried: see Blind Man (File: LoF245) === NAME: Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green, The: see The Blind Beggar's Daughter of Bednall Green [Laws N27] (File: LN27) === NAME: Blind Beggar's Daughter of Bednall Green, The [Laws N27] DESCRIPTION: Pretty Betsy, the blind beggar's daughter, seeks a husband. Many court her for her looks, but when she reveals that her father is a beggar, all but one change their minds. This one is surprised when her father proves able to give a large dowry AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1624 KEYWORDS: begging courting marriage dowry FOUND_IN: US(MA,MW,NE,SE) Canada(Newf) Ireland REFERENCES: (14 citations) Laws N27, "The Blind Beggar's Daughter of Bednall Green" Percy/Wheatley II, pp. 171-185, "The Beggar's Daughter of Bednall-Green" (1 text plus variant stanzas from the folio manuscript) Eddy 26, "The Blind Beggar's Daughter of Bednall Green" (1 text) Flanders/Olney, pp. 107-109, "The Blind Beggar's Daughter" (1 text, 1 tune) Greenleaf/Mansfield 32, "The Blind Beggar" (1 text) Karpeles-Newfoundland 57, "The Blind Beggar's Daughter of Bethnal Green" (1 text, 4 tunes) SharpAp 46, "The Blind Beggar's Daughter" (1 text, 1 tune) Leach, pp. 694-695, "The Blind Beggar of Bednall (Bethnal) Green" (1 text) OBB 163, "The Blind Beggar's Daughter of Bednall-Green" (1 text) FSCatskills 32, "The Blind Beggar's Daughter of Bethnell Green" (2 texts, 1 tune) Chappell/Wooldridge II, pp. 16-17, "The Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green" (1 tune, partial text) McBride 11, "The Blind Beggar's Daughter" (1 text, 1 tune) BBI, ZN1515, "It was a blind begger that long lost his sight" DT, BLINDBEG* SIMONTFD Roud #132 RECORDINGS: Paddy Reilly, "The Blind Beggar" (on IRTravellers01) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 3(62), "The Blind Beggar's Daughter of Bethnal Green," W. and C. Dicey (London), 1736-1763; also Harding B 3(61), Harding B 3(63), Harding B 28(269), "The Blind Beggar's Daughter of Bethnal-Green"; Harding B 11(322), Firth c.21(11), Harding B 11(1438), Johnson Ballads 1393, Firth c.21(13), Harding B 11(323), Harding B 11(321), Harding B 25(214)[parts illegible], "[The] Blind Beggar's Daughter of Bethnal Green"; Harding B 25(212), "The Blind Beggar"; Douce Ballads 3(4b), "The Blind Beggar of Bednal Green"; Vet. A3 b.43(3)[parts faded to illegibility], Harding B 5(18), "The Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green"; Firth c.21(12), "Blind Beggar's Daughter of Bethnall Green" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Mary Ambree" (tune) SAME_TUNE: Mary Ambree (File: OBB165) Of a stout Cripple that kept the high way/..Stout Cripple of Cornwall (BBI ZN2079) The devil has left his puritanical dress/..Licentiousness of the Times (BBI ZN777) NOTES: This is "The Child Ballad that Wasn't." Printed in Child's preliminary edition, he later withdrew the piece on the grounds that it was not popular (even though it has been found regularly in tradition). Most traditional versions are short, but the earliest text, from Percy, is extremely long (67 four-line stanzas!). In the second part of this version it appears that the blind beggar is none other than Simon de Montfort, who nearly overthrew England's King Henry III (reigned 1216-1272). When King John died in 1216, his son Henry was only seven years old. Henry, naturally, never amounted to much. By 1254, Parliament was rebelling against him. In 1258 the nobles drafted the "Provisions of Oxford," which put the king under the control of a group of barons. Even stronger measures were passed in 1259, leaving Henry in a position he considered intolerable. Simon de Montfort, Earl of Leicester and Henry's brother-in-law, was a leader of the rebels. Forced into exile in 1261, he returned to England in 1263 to start an organized rebellion. In 1264 his armies met those of the king. De Montfort won a smashing victory, despite inferior numbers, at the battle of Lewes. (The latter, incidentally, commemorated in _The Song of Lewes_, one of the "Harley Lyrics" found in British Museum Harley 2253; it's a bit surprising that Child did not include this in his canon, since it looks as popular as several of his other political pieces.) Simon was now in control of England, and tried to strengthen his grip by a series of liberal reforms. But Henry's party had one great asset: the crown prince Edward (later Edward I). Edward gathered another army, and defeated and killed Simon at Evesham in 1265. The author of this ballad apparently believed that, instead of being killed, de Montfort went into hiding as a beggar (but also reports that Simon lost his eyes fighting in France). - RBW File: LN27 === NAME: Blind Beggar's Daughter of Bethnal Green, The: see The Blind Beggar's Daughter of Bednall Green [Laws N27] (File: LN27) === NAME: Blind Beggar's Daughter, The: see The Blind Beggar's Daughter of Bednall Green [Laws N27] (File: LN27) === NAME: Blind Child, The DESCRIPTION: "They tell me, father, that tonight You'll wed another bride, That you will clasp her in your arms Where my dear mother died." The child asks about the new wife, and hopes she will be kind. The child dies, and goes to heaven where no one is blind AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1906 (Belden) KEYWORDS: death mother father wife disease death FOUND_IN: US(Ap,MW,SE,So) REFERENCES: (9 citations) Belden, pp. 275-276, "The Blind Child" (1 text plus mention of 4 more) Randolph 724, "The Blind Child" (3 texts, 1 tune) Randolph/Cohen, pp. 472-473, "The Blind Child" (1 text, 1 tune -- Randolph's 724A) BrownII 149, "The Blind Girl" (1 text plus mention of 12 more) JHCoxIIB, #29, pp. 198-200, "The Blind Child's Prayer" (1 text, 1 tune) Fuson, p. 146, "The Blind Orphan" (1 text) MHenry-Appalachians, pp. 128-129, "The Blind Girl" (1 text) DT, BLNDCHLD* ADDITIONAL: Fred W. Allsopp, Folklore of Romantic Arkansas, Volume II (1931), pp. 203-204, "(The Blind Girl)" (1 text) Roud #425 RECORDINGS: Harvey Irwin, "The Blind Child" (OKeh 45014, 1925) Bradley Kincaid, "The Blind Girl" (Champion 15968 [as Dan Hughey], 1930; Conqueror 7983, 1932) Lester McFarland & Robert Gardner, "The Blind Child's Prayer" (Brunswick 167, 1927) McMichen's String Band, "Blind Child's Prayer, pts. 1 & 2" (Columbia 15333-D, 1928) Arnold Keith Storm, "The Blind Child" (on AKStorm01) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "I Cannot Call Her Mother (The Marriage Rite is Over; The Stepmother)" (theme) NOTES: Cohen remarks, "Frankly, I think the saccharine little miss is overdoing it." Amen. - RBW File: R724 === NAME: Blind Child's Prayer, The: see The Blind Child (File: R724) === NAME: Blind Fiddler, The DESCRIPTION: "I lost my sight in the blacksmith's shop in the year of 'Fifty-six." The singer, with no other trade available, has had to become a wandering fiddler. Not even Doctor Lane of San Francisco could help him. He hopes his family is safe and well AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1923 (Belden) KEYWORDS: homesickness poverty rambling separation fiddle injury family doctor hardtimes music FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Belden, p. 446, "The Blind Fiddler" (1 text) Darling-NAS, p. 364, "The Blind Fiddler" (1 text) Silber-FSWB, p. 55, "The Blind Fiddler" (1 text) DT, BLINDFID* Roud #7833 RECORDINGS: Pete Seeger, "The Blind Fiddler" (on PeteSeeger13, AmHist1) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Blind Man's Song" (theme) cf. "Jilson Setters's Blind Song" (theme) cf. "The Blind Man's Regret" (theme) NOTES: Until this century, there was nothing resembing a social safety net for the victims of industrial accidents -- in particular, no workers' compensation, and little chance of compensation by the employer. Pete Seeger dates this song from 1850, with no supporting documentation; as the first line reads "I lost my eyes in the blacksmith shop in the year of '56", this date is doubtful. It has the feel of the mid-19th century about it, but I've dated it only back to the field recording for safety's sake. - PJS Joe Hickerson, who probably would know, implies that this is the earliest recording known to him, though the fact that there is also a version in Belden implies that it is older. He speculates that it is derived from the earlier "The Rebel Soldier"(primarily on the basis of the final line; "I am a (blind fiddler/rebel soldier) and far from my home." - RBW File: FSWB055 === NAME: Blind Girl, The: see The Blind Child (File: R724) === NAME: Blind Man DESCRIPTION: "Blind man stood in the way and cried (x2), Wo, Lord, show me the way...." "Preacherman stood on the way and cried...." "My mother stood on the way and cried...." "My deacon stood on the way and cried...." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1960 KEYWORDS: religious nonballad FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (2 citations) Lomax-FSNA 245, "Blind Man" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-ABFS, p. 596, "Blin' Man Stood on de Way an' Cried" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #12357 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Blind Man Lay Beside the Way" (theme) NOTES: There are several accounts in the gospels of curing the blind (e.g. Matt. 9:27f., 20:29f.; Mark 7:22f.; John 9:1). The account here is most reminiscent of that in Mark 10:46f.=Luke18:35 (Bartimaeus; in the parallel in Matthew there are *two* blind men). - RBW File: LoF245 === NAME: Blind Man Lay Beside the Way DESCRIPTION: "Blind man lay beside the way, He could not see the light of day, The Lord passed by and heard him say: 'O Lord, won't you help-a me?'" "A man he died, was crucified, They hung a thief on either side, One lifted up his voice and cried, 'O Lord...'" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1927 (Sandburg) KEYWORDS: Bible religious death FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (1 citation) Sandburg, pp. 452-453, "Blind Man Lay Beside the Way" (1 text, 1 tune) ST San452 (Full) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Blind Man" (theme) NOTES: The miracle most associated with Jesus was healing -- especially "casting out demons" (curing epilepsy and/or insanity) and giving sight to the blind. There are several accounts in the gospels of curing the blind (e.g. Matt. 9:27f., 20:29f.; Mark 7:22f.; John 9:1). The account here is most reminiscent of that in Mark 10:46f.=Luke18:35 (Bartimaeus; in the parallel in Matthew there are *two* blind men). Although Matt. 27:38, Mark 15:28, Luke 23:32, John 19:18 all mention the criminals crucified along with Jesus, only Luke 23:39 mentions one of them repenting. - RBW File: San452 === NAME: Blind Man's Regret, The DESCRIPTION: "Young people attention give And hear what I do say...." "hen I was young and in my prime I used to go so gay, For I did not think right of time But idled time away." The singer laments wasting time and going blind AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1917 (Cox) KEYWORDS: injury hardtimes nonballad FOUND_IN: US(Ap) REFERENCES: (1 citation) JHCox 154, "The Blind Man's Regret" (1 text) ST JHCox154 (Full) Roud #6365 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Young People, Take Warning" (lyrics) NOTES: I know of no other version of this song (though see the notes on "Young People, Take Warning"), and I don't find it surprising. There really isn't much plot; with the exception of a single stanza claiming that the singer went blind in the "year of eighty-four," there is no story. It's just a series of warnings and complaints, quite repetitious, mostly warning against wasting time. Cox's informant claims that this is the story of a man who tried to avoid being involved in the Civil War, and so hid in a cave and damaged his sight. This is not impossible -- but the song does not give the theory any support (and note that the blindness did not strike until 1884). - RBW File: JHCox154 === NAME: Blind Man's Song DESCRIPTION: "My friends, I cannot labor, I will try and get along... I will try to sell my song... May heaven above preserve you From ever being blind." The singer lists the things he cannot see, and says he wants to work but can't; he wishes he had sight again AUTHOR: Matthew Stovall? EARLIEST_DATE: 1939 (Thomas) KEYWORDS: injury hardtimes music FOUND_IN: US(Ap) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Thomas-Makin', pp. 179-180, "Blind Man's Song" (1 text) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Blind Fiddler" (theme) and references there File: ThBa178 === NAME: Blind Orphan, The: see The Blind Child (File: R724) === NAME: Blind Sailor, The: see By the Lightning We Lost our Sight [Laws K6] (File: LK06) === NAME: Blinded by Shit DESCRIPTION: An old woman, who must relieve herself, empties her bowels out a window. A passing night watchman (or cowboy) looks up, and is blinded by shit. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: KEYWORDS: bawdy injury scatological FOUND_IN: Australia Britain(England) US REFERENCES: (1 citation) Cray, pp. 125-128, "Blinded by Shit" (2 texts, 1 tune); see also under "Ditties," pp. 264-268, which contain other verses that fit "Sweet Betsy" Roud #10306 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Vilikens and his Dinah (William and Dinah) [Laws M31A/B]" (tune & meter) and references there ALTERNATE_TITLES: Blinded by Turds NOTES: Probably of British music hall origins - EC File: EM125 === NAME: Blinded by Turds: see Blinded by Shit (File: EM125) === NAME: Blinkin' O't, The DESCRIPTION: "O it wasna her daddy's lairdly kin, It wasna her siller -- the clinkin' o't... 'Twas er ain blue e'e, the blinkin' o't... My heart an' a' she's stown awa' Wi' the lythesome, blythesome blinkin' o't." The singer praises the girl but is rejected AUTHOR: James Grieg ? EARLIEST_DATE: 1904 (Ford) KEYWORDS: love rejection beauty FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ford-Vagabond, pp. 169-170, "The Blinkin' O't" (1 text) Roud #6135 File: FVS169 === NAME: Blockader Mama DESCRIPTION: The little girl begs mother not to visit the still; the sheriff is watching. Mother says she must; they need money and father never works. Mother goes to the still and is shot; the child laments when the body is returned AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1948 (Brown) KEYWORDS: death children police drink FOUND_IN: US(NE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) BrownII 314, "Blockader Mama" (1 text) Roud #6633 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Dream of the Miner's Child" (theme) NOTES: This song has, I gather, had some small success in commercial country circles. Whether this success predates the North Carolina collection I do not know. - RBW File: BrII314 === NAME: Blockader's Trail DESCRIPTION: The singer is arrested for moonshining.The singer claims the charge is false. The still is disassembled. The law officers take their turns with the captured brew (?). The singer complains about the conditions in the prison AUTHOR: Henry D. Holsclaw EARLIEST_DATE: 1948 (Brown) KEYWORDS: drink prison FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) BrownII 313, "Blockader's Trail" (1 text) Roud #6647 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Moonshine Can" (subject) cf. "Ewie Wi' the Crookit Horn" (subject) NOTES: This is apparently based on a real incident, and the author thought enough of it to have it printed as a broadside -- but I'd have to declare it one of the most incoherent, invertebrate (47 verses!) things I've ever seen. On the other hand, the song seems to have worked as propaganda; Brown's informant thought Holsclaw was innocent. - RBW File: BrII313 === NAME: Blood Done Signed My Name, The DESCRIPTION: A very simple hymn; consisting of little more than the title words. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1949 KEYWORDS: nonballad religious FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Botkin-SoFolklr, p. 760, "The Blood Done Signed My Name" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #11678 RECORDINGS: Dock Reed & Vera Hall Ward, "The Blood Done Signed My Name" (on NFMAla5) File: BSoF760 === NAME: Blood on the Saddle DESCRIPTION: "There was blood on the saddle And blood all around, And a great big puddle Of blood on the ground. The cowboy lay in it All covered with gore, And he won't go riding no broncos no more.... For his bronco fell on him and mashed in his head." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1905 KEYWORDS: cowboy injury death horse FOUND_IN: Canada(West) US(MW) REFERENCES: (6 citations) Fowke/Johnston, p. 101, "Blood on the Saddle" (1 text, 1 tune) Gardner/Chickering 101, "Blood" (1 text, 1 tune) Fife-Cowboy/West 38, "Blood on the Saddle" (2 texts, 1 tune) Darling-NAS, pp. 331-332, "Blood on the Saddle" (1 text) Silber-FSWB, p. 106, "Blood On The Saddle" (1 text) DT, BLOODON Roud #3685 RECORDINGS: Harry Jackson, "Blood on the Saddle" (on HJackson1) NOTES: The Fifes trace this piece back to something called "Halbert the Grim" (published by Motherwell in 1827). The melody is said to be the same, and both involve vast quantities of blood. There has been a lot of evolution along the way, though; I would not consider the two related if it weren't for the melody. The version we usually hear focusses solely on the blood, but the Gardner/Chickering text gives a brief biography of the cowboy and talks of his sweetheart who has lost her love. - RBW File: FJ101 === NAME: Blood Red Roses DESCRIPTION: Shanty. Characteristic lines: "Come/go down, you blood red/bunch of roses, Come down... Oh you pinks and posies, come down...." The verses generally refer to life at sea, with perhaps floating verses on other themes AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1893 KEYWORDS: shanty ship flowers FOUND_IN: US(NE) REFERENCES: (6 citations) Doerflinger, pp. 22-23, "Come Down, You Bunch of Roses, Come Down" (1 text, 1 tune) Hugill, pp. 365-367, "Bunch O' Roses," "Ho Molly!" (3 texts, 3 tunes - includes a fragment of text titled "Ho Molly! which seems to follow the same meter and rhyme) [AbrEd, pp. 275-277] Scott-BoA, pp. 132-134, "Blood Red Roses" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-FSNA 27, "Blood Red Roses" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 90, "Blood Red Roses" (1 text) DT, BLOODRED* Roud #931 RECORDINGS: A. L. Lloyd, "Blood Red Roses" (on Lloyd3, Lloyd7) Henry Lundy & David Pryor, "Come Down, You Roses" (AAFS 511 A1, 1935; on LomaxCD1822-2) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "O Mary, Come Down!" (lyrics) NOTES: Doerflinger comments of this piece, "I doubt that the movie version, with a 'blood red roses' chorus, is authentic folklore." However, that's the version I've always heard (including even an alleged New Zealand version), so I've adopted that title. Doerflinger also thinks the "bunch of roses" refers to Napoleon. Obviously that is the case in other "roses" songs, but I can't see any connection here. - RBW File: Doe022 === NAME: Blood-Stained Diary, The DESCRIPTION: "It's just a little blood-stained book, Which a bullet has town in two; It tells the fate of Nick and Nate...." The singer recounts the words of Nathan D. Champion's diary as he and his companion are attacked in the Johnson County War AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1958 (Burt) KEYWORDS: death homicide cowboy FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (1 citation) Burt, pp. 175-177, "The Blood-Stained Diary" (1 text, 1 tune) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Invasion Song" (subject) NOTES: Burt links this with an event she calls the Johnson County War, a conflict in Wyoming between honest herders and cattle rustlers. There are, apparently, conflicting versions of what happened; see Burt for details. - RBW File: Burt175 === NAME: Blood-Stained Soil: see The Dying Soldier (III) (File: Doyl3065) === NAME: Bloody Breathitt Farmer DESCRIPTION: "Come all you folks and gather To hear the awful tale Of the bloody Breathitt farmer Taken from the county jail." Chet Fugate had murdered Clay Watkins (Christmas 1925?). Fugate is taken from prison by force and murdered, his body found by Jim Butler AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1939 (Thomas) KEYWORDS: homicide prison punishment revenge FOUND_IN: US(Ap) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Thomas-Makin', pp. 17-18, (no title) (1 text) File: ThBdM018 === NAME: Bloody Garden, The: see The Bloody Gardener (File: Pea668) === NAME: Bloody Gardener, The DESCRIPTION: A lord loves a shepherd's daughter. His mother pays the gardner to kill and bury the shepherdess. The mother confesses and reveals the body. The lord kills himself. The lovers are buried together and the gardener is hanged. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1764 (broadside, Bodleian Harding B 1(100)); ; c.1705 (broadside, NLScotland S.302.b.2(063)) KEYWORDS: courting love virginity burial suicide homicide bird father mother gardening money punishment execution FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Peacock, pp. 668-670, "The Bloody Garden" (1 text, 1 tune) Karpeles-Newfoundland 25, "The Bloody Gardener" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #1700 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 1(100), "The Bloody Gardener's Cruelty" or "The Shepherd's Daughter Betrayed," W. and C. Dicey (London), 1736-1763; also Harding B 1(101),"The Bloody Gardiner's Cruelty" or "The Shepherd's Daughter Betrayed"; Douce Ballads 3(2b), Harding B 1(103), "The Bloody Gardener's Cruelty" or "The Shepherd's Daughter Betray'd"; Harding B 1(102), Harding B 1(94), Firth c.18(7), "The Bloody Gardiner's Cruelty" or "The Shepherd's Daughter Betrayed"; 2806 c.17(39)[parts faded to illegibility], Harding B 5(113), Harding B 11(330), "[The] Bloody Gardener"; Harding B 1(104), "The Bloody Gardener's Cruelty" NLScotland, S.302.b.2(063), "The Bloody Gardener's Cruelty; Or, The Shepherd's Daughter Betray'd," unknown, c. 1705 [poorly printed and nearly illegible] File: Pea668 === NAME: Bloody War (I): see That Crazy War (File: CSW102) === NAME: Bloody War (II): see Battleship of Maine (File: CSW100) === NAME: Bloody Waterloo: see Lonely Waterloo [Laws N31] (File: LN31) === NAME: Blooming Bright Star of Belle Isle, The [Laws H29] DESCRIPTION: The singer comes upon a beautiful girl hard at work. Poor as she is, she vows to keep hard at work until her lover returns to her. The singer reveals himself as her lover; the two are married AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1929 (Greenleaf/Mansfield) KEYWORDS: courting love disguise FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (8 citations) Laws H29, "The Blooming Bright Star of Belle Isle" Greenleaf/Mansfield 133, "The Blooming Bright Star of Belle Isle" (1 text, 1 tune) Peacock, pp. 598-599, "The Star of Belle Isle" (1 text, 1 tune) Fowke/Johnston, pp. 144-145, "The Blooming Bright Star of Belle Isle" (1 text, 1 tune) Fowke/MacMillan 46, "Star of Belle Isle" (1 text, 1 tune) Doyle2, p. 73, "The Blooming Bright Star of Belle Isle" (1 text, 1 tune) Blondahl, p. 113, "The Blooming Bright Star of Belle Isle" (1 text, 1 tune) DT 653, BELLISLE* Roud #2191 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "John (George) Riley (I)" [Laws N36] and references there cf. "The Green Shores of Fogo" (tune) NOTES: Moulden makes the argument that this is an Irish ballad rather than "Native American" as Laws would have it. See archives of the site for the Canadian Journal for Traditional Music, _Canadian Journal for Traditional Music_, vol 14, 1986, "The Blooming Bright Star of Belle Isle: American Native or Irish Immigrant" by John Moulden. - BS File: LH29 === NAME: Blooming Caroline of Edinburgh Town: see Caroline of Edinborough Town [Laws P27] (File: LP27) === NAME: Blooming Mary Ann DESCRIPTION: The singier is a sailor. He courts blooming Mary Ann. Her father offers "a little money and a house and farm of land" if he'd stay on shore forever. They marry and are happy. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1959 (Peacock) KEYWORDS: courting marriage beauty farming dancing father sailor FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Peacock, pp. 505-507, "Blooming Mary Ann" (1 text, 2 tunes) Leach-Labrador 34, "Lovely Mary Ann" (1 text, 1 tune) ST Peac505 (Partial) Roud #6466 File: Peac505 === NAME: Blooming Star of Eglintown, The DESCRIPTION: The singer prepares "to take farewell of famed Salthill"; he is crossing the sea to seek his fortune. He meets his darling. He fears she will prove untrue. She promises to be faithful. He sets sail; they watch each other as long as his ship stays in sight AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1927 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: love courting separation emigration FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H170, p. 299, "The Blooming Star of Eglintown" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #6895 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Erin's Flowery Vale (The Irish Girl's Lament)" [Laws O29] (plot) and references there File: HHH170 === NAME: Blossom Time DESCRIPTION: About a heavenly wedding: "There's a wedding in an orchard, dear, I know it by the flowers, They're wreathed on ev'ry bough and branch, Or falling down in showers." "And though I saw... no groom nor gentle bride, I know that holy things were asked" AUTHOR: Words: Mary E. Dodge / Music: "The Wearing of the Green" EARLIEST_DATE: 1884 KEYWORDS: wedding nonballad supernatural FOUND_IN: US(MA) REFERENCES: (1 citation) FSCatskills 85, "Blossom Time" (1 text, 1 tune) File: FSC085 === NAME: Blow Away the Morning Dew: see The Baffled Knight [Child 112] (File: C112) === NAME: Blow Below the Belt, The DESCRIPTION: In 1966 "the Government Plan was sent around" for resettlement from the outports. "When fifty percent... did sign The other fifty had no choice." Many found no one to buy their home. Many could not find work. Eventually, Premier Smallwood is voted out AUTHOR: Words: Anthony Ward, Tune: Dave Panting EARLIEST_DATE: 1983 (Lehr/Best) KEYWORDS: homesickness home parting unemployment hardtimes political money HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1950s-1970s - Newfoundland Resettlement Program FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Lehr/Best 8, "The Blow Below the Belt" (1 text, 1 tune) NOTES: Lehr/Best: "The Resettlement Program was carried out in Newfoundland during Joseph Smallwood's government.... Its aim was to relocate... coastal communities to larger centers where they would find better job opportunities and public facilities such as hospitals and schools.... When the smoke had finally cleared over three hundred communities had been completely closed down and those that remained were tombstones marking the passing of a large and noble part of our history." The title is a reference to boxing as part of an analogy to [that sport]: "But when elections rolled around, we showed Joey [Smallwood] how we felt, We dropped him in his corner and gave Frank Moores the [championship] belt!" See "The Leaving of Merasheen" for another resettlement song - BS Joey Smallwood began his career as a radio broadcaster, and used his position to push Newfoundland into Confederation with Canada; according to Craig Brown, e.d, _The Illustrated History of Canada_, p. 374, "Mainland prosperity, urged by Joey Smallwood... won out against the proud penury of independence." But Smallwood, who went from broadcaster to Newfoundland premier and led the province for more than twenty years, by the late Fifties was turning to "increasingly illiberal one-man rule" (p. 491). The result of his policy was complaints like these. - RBW File: LeBe008 === NAME: Blow Bullies Blow: see Blow, Boys, Blow (I) (File: Doe025) === NAME: Blow High Blow Low DESCRIPTION: "Blow high blow low let tempests tear The mainmast by the board My heart with thoughts of thee my dear And love well stored Shall brave all danger scorn all fear...." As the sailor works and rests aboard ship, he remembers his love AUTHOR: Charles Dibdin EARLIEST_DATE: 1776 (date of composition) KEYWORDS: sailor separation lover FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Huntington-Whalemen, pp. 256-257, "Blow High Blow Low" (1 text) ST SWMS256 (Full) Roud #2069 File: SWMS256 === NAME: Blow the Candle Out [Laws P17] DESCRIPTION: The singer comes to visit his love on a moonlit night. She lets him in. He points out that her parents are in bed in the next room; he suggests rolling into his arms and blowing out the candles. (Nine months later, when he is gone, she has a child) AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1714 (Pills to Purge Melancholy) as "The London 'Prentice" KEYWORDS: courting nightvisit pregnancy bawdy apprentice FOUND_IN: US(Ap,MA,NE,So) Britain(England(Lond,South),Scotland) Ireland REFERENCES: (10 citations) Laws P17, "Blow the Candle Out" Randolph-Legman I, pp. 61-65, "Blow the Candle Out" (2 texts, 2 tunes) Combs/Wilgus 114, pp. 140-141, "The Jolly Boatsman" (1 text) Kennedy 170, "Blow the Candle Out" (1 text, 1 tune) OLochlainn-More 74, "Blow the Candle Out" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-FSNA 160, "Blow the Candle Out" (1 text, 1 tune) Hodgart, p.247, "Blow the Candle Out" (1 text) Ord, p. 95, "Blow the Candle Out" (1 text) Silber-FSWB, p. 156, "Blow The Candles Out" (1 text) DT 499, CANDLOUT* Roud #368 RECORDINGS: Jumbo Brightwell, "Blow the Candle Out" (on Voice10) Jimmy Gilhaney, "Blow the Candle Out" (on FSB2, FSB2CD) Martin Howley, "Blow the Candle Out" (on IRClare01) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Johnson Ballads 168, "Blow the Candle Out," J. Catnach (London), 1813-1838; also Harding B 11(335), Harding B 20(139), Firth c.18(294), Firth b.25(299), Harding B 11(336), Harding B 16(26c), Johnson Ballads 1279, Firth b.34(33), Harding B 17(30b), "Blow the Candle Out" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Dash Along" (tune, per broadside Bodleian Johnson Ballads 1279) cf. "Come Into My Arms" (tune, per broadside Bodleian Harding B 17(30b)) ALTERNATE_TITLES: The London 'Prentice File: LP17 === NAME: Blow the Man Down DESCRIPTION: A tale of a sailor's adventures. Perhaps he serves under a difficult captain; perhaps he meets a girl (and "[gives] her my flipper") who spends his money or sells him off to sea; perhaps his heroic exploits in port earn him a night (or more) in prison AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1917 KEYWORDS: bawdy shanty sailor travel shanghaiing FOUND_IN: US(MA,NE,So,SW) Canada(Mar) Bahamas REFERENCES: (23 citations) Doerflinger, pp. 17-22, "Blow the Man Down" (5 texts, 2 tunes. The first text is influenced by "Ratcliffe Highway"; the fourth is "The Three Ravens" (!); the last is largely "The Salt Horse Song") Colcord, pp. 53-59, "Blow the Man Down" (3 texts, 1 tune. First text is what Hugill would call the Blackballer version; second text is the Flying Fish Sailor; third is along the lines of Ratcliffe Highway) Harlow, pp. 92-95, "Blow the Man Down" (2 texts, 1 tune. Both texts are related to Ratcliffe Highway) Hugill, p. 122, "Goodbye, Fare-Ye-Well" (1 text, version C of "Homeward Bound") [AbrEd, p. 105]; p. 200, "Knock a Man Down" (1 text, 1 tune -- quoting Sharp-EFC) [AbrEd, p. 155]; pp. 203-214, "Blow the Man Down" (6 texts plus several fragments, 1 tune. The first text is a sanitized "Ratcliffe Highway" version; the fourth is the "Song of the Fishes," the fifth is a version of "Rolling in the Dew," and the seventh is "Quare Bungo Rye.") [AbrEd, pp. 158-167] Sharp-EFC, XXXIX p. 44-45, "Knock a Man Down" (1 text, 1 tune) Bone, pp. 77-82, "Blow th' Man Down" (2 texts, 1 tune; the second text may have a bit of "Cruising Round Yarmouth" in it) Linscott, pp. 128-131, "Blow the Man Down" (1 text, 1 tune) Shay-SeaSongs, pp. 38-39, "The Black Ball Line" (1 text, 1 tune); pp. 39-40, "Blow the Man Down, I" (1 text); p. 40, "Blow the Man Down, II" (1 text plus an alternate chorus) Smith/Hatt, p. 21, "Blow the Man Down" (1 text) Mackenzie 107, "Blow the Man Down" (2 texts, 2 tunes) Randolph-Legman I, pp. 459-460, "Blow the Man Down" (1 text, 1 tune) Thomas-Makin', p. 31, (no title) (1 text, short, perhaps not this song but with the key line in modified form and too short to link to anything else) Lomax-ABFS, pp. 491-493, "Blow the Man Down" (1 full +2 partial texts, the second seemingly being actually "Brian O'Lynn (Tom Boleyn)", 1 tune) Fahey-Eureka, pp. 52-53, "Radcliffe Highway" (1 text, 1 tune) Sandburg, pp. 404-405, "Blow the Man Down" (1 text, 1 tune) Darling-NAS, pp. 310-311, "Blow the Man Down" (1 text) Arnett, pp. 54-55, "Blow the Man Down!" (1 text, 1 tune) PSeeger-AFB, p. 39, "Blow The Man Down" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 90, "Blow the Man Down" (1 text) Fuld-WFM, pp. 146-147, "Blow the Man Down" DT, BLOWDOWN* BLOWDWN2* BLOWDWN3* BLOWDWN4* BLOWDWN5 BLOWDWN6* ADDITIONAL: Captain John Robinson, "Songs of the Chantey Man," a series published July-August 1917 in the periodical _The Bellman_ (Minneapolis, MN, 1906-1919). "Blow the Man Down" is in Part 3, 7/28/1917. Roud #2624 RECORDINGS: Almanac Singers, "Blow the Man Down" (General 5016A, 1941; on Almanac02, Almanac03, AlmanacCD1) Noble B. Brown, "Blow the Man Down (I)" (AFS, 1946; on LC27) Woody Guthrie, "Blow the Man Down" (Commodore 3006, n.d. -- but this may be the same recording as the General disc by the Almanac Singers) G. Lotson, "Blow the Man Down" (AFS A-397, 1926) Richard Maitland, "Blow the Man Down (II)" (AFS, 1939; on LC27) Minster Singers, "Blow the Man Down" [medley w. "Rio Grande"] (Victor 61148, n.d., prob. c. 1903) Pete Seeger, "Blow the Man Down" (on PeteSeeger07, PeteSeeger07a) (on PeteSeeger23) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Ratcliffe Highway" (lyrics) cf. "The Salt Horse Song" (lyrics) cf. "The Three Ravens" [Child 26] (lyrics) cf. "Ane Madam" (tune) cf. "Et Nous Irons a Valapariso" (partial tune) SAME_TUNE: Roll 'Im On Down (sung by David Pryor on AFS 507 B, 1935; on LC08) Ane Madam (File: Hugi215) NOTES: Hugill defines six versions of this: a) The Flash Packet (from Ratcliffe Highway); b) The Sailing of the Blackballer; c) The Flying Fish Sailor or Policeman - where a sailor is mistaken for a "Blackballer" or "packet rat" (whom the crews of clippers generally considered to be a lower form of marine life); d) The Fishes (i.e. "Song of the Fishes/Blow Ye Winds Westerly"); e) The Milkmaid (i.e. "Rolling in the Dew"); and f) Bungyereye (i.e. "Quare Bungo Rye"). - SL The David Pryor recording ["Roll 'Im On Down"; see the "Same Tune" field] is actually a boat-launching song with different lyrics but the same tune and structure. - PJS Some versions of this song mention that "Kicking Jack Williams commands the Black Ball." Williams was a historical figure, known for driving his crews hard; he commanded the American clipper _Andrew Jackson_ (launched 1855 as the _Belle Haxie_ and given a new name after changing owners). In 1859-1860, Williams caused the _Jackson_ to make the fastest clipper trip ever, "pilot to pilot," from New York to San Francisco -- 89 days 4 hours. (The record for fastest trip, anchor to anchor, is held by the _Flying Cloud_, but circumstances were somewhat different in that case.) The above information comes from Lincoln P. Paine's _Ships of the World_ (entry on the _Andrew Jackson_, which cites this song). Shay, however, quotes Robert Greenhalgh Albion's _Square Riggers on Schedule_, which states that the only Captain Williams who served on the Black Ball Line was a different John Williams, commanding the _Pacific_. If so, it appears the two have been conflated. - RBW File: Doe017 === NAME: Blow the Wind Southerly DESCRIPTION: "Blow the wind southerly, southerly, southerly, Blow the wind southerly, South or southwest." The girl hopes that her love will return to her quickly AUTHOR: unknown (some versions reworked by John Stubbs) EARLIEST_DATE: 190 (Stokoe/Reay) KEYWORDS: love separation return FOUND_IN: Britain(England(North)) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Stokoe/Reay, pp. 18-19, "Blaw the Wind Southerly" (1 fragment plus the Stubbs text, 1 tune) ST StoR018 (Full) Roud #2619 ALTERNATE_TITLES: cf. "Song of the Fishes (Blow Ye Winds Westerly)" (lyrics) File: StoR018 === NAME: Blow the Wind Westerly: see Song of the Fishes (Blow Ye Winds Westerly) (File: LxA496) === NAME: Blow the Winds I Oh: see Ten Thousand Miles Away (File: MA084) === NAME: Blow the Winds, I-Ho!: see The Baffled Knight [Child 112] (File: C112) === NAME: Blow Ye Winds High-O (Blow the Winds I-Ho, etc.): see The Baffled Knight [Child 112] (File: C112) === NAME: Blow Ye Winds in the Morning DESCRIPTION: The call is going out for whalermen in New England. The song warns of the conditions the potential recruit will face: Boarding masters, hard times at sea, the dangers of taking the whale. Chorus: "Blow ye winds in the morning, Blow ye winds high-o...." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1859 (Journal of the Elizabeth Swift) KEYWORDS: whaler ship sea work FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (10 citations) Lomax-FSUSA 44, "Blow, Ye Winds in the Morning" (1 text, 1 tune) Botkin-AmFolklr, pp. 829-831, "Blow, Ye Winds" (1 text, 1 tune) Huntington-Whalemen, pp. 42-46, "Blow Ye Winds" (1 text, 1 tune) Shay-SeaSongs, pp. 126-128, "Blow, Ye Winds" (1 text, 1 tune) Colcord, pp. 191-192, "Blow, Ye Winds" (2 texts, 1 tune) Harlow, pp. 130-131, 211-213 "Blow Ye Winds in the Morning" "It's Advertised in Boston" (2 texts, 2 tunes -- second version has a different chorus, "Cheer up lively lads, in spite of stormy weather. Cheer up...we'll all get drunk together") Hugill, pp. 219-224, "Blow, Ye Winds" (3 texts plus several fragments, 3 tunes) [AbrEd, pp. 168-171] Darling-NAS, pp. 318-319, "Blow Ye Winds" (1 text) Silber-FSWB, p. 85, "Blow Ye Winds In The Morning" (1 text) DT, BLOWYE* Roud #2012 RECORDINGS: Almanac Singers, "Blow Ye Winds, Heigh Ho" (General 5015A, 1941; on Almanac02, Almanac03, AlmanacCD1) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Coast of Peru" [Laws D26] (floating verses) cf. "Peter Gray" (chorus lyrics) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Blow, Boys, Blow NOTES: Whalers were considered the lowest sort of sailors; most seamen had to be desperate to ship on a whaler. This song perhaps helps explain why. - RBW File: LxU044 === NAME: Blow Yo' Whistle, Freight Train DESCRIPTION: "Blow yo' whistle, freight train, take me down the line...." "That old freight train movin' along to Nashville, Holds a charm that is a charm for me, Makes me think of good old boomer days gone by." The singer wants to ramble but cannot AUTHOR: probably the Delmore Brothers EARLIEST_DATE: 1935 (recording, Delmore Brothers) KEYWORDS: train nonballad FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Cohen-LSRail, pp. 519-520, "Blow Yo' Whistle, Freight Train" (1 text, 1 tune) RECORDINGS: The Delmore Brothers, "Blow Yo' Whistle, Freight Train" (Bluebird 5925, 1935) NOTES: This song feels like it "ought to" have another verse, probably in which the singer explains that he can't leave his family/home/something, which makes me wonder if there isn't something which predates the Delmore Brothers recording. But Cohen mentions no such thing, and I have never met such a song. - RBW File: LSRai519 === NAME: Blow, Boys, Blow (I) DESCRIPTION: Shanty. Characteristic line: "Blow, boys, blow... Blow, my bully bows, blow!" Often liberally sprinkled with floating verses, the basic version seems to be about a shining Yankee clipper on her way to China. It describes several members of the crew AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1874 KEYWORDS: shanty sailor ship slavery Black(s) moniker FOUND_IN: US(MA,NE) Australia Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (13 citations) Doerflinger, pp. 25-29, "Blow, Boys, Blow" (4 texts, 2 tunes) Bone, pp. 57-58, "Blow, Boys, Blow" (1 text, 1 tune) Linscott, pp. 126-127 "Blow, Boys, Blow" (1 text, 1 tune) Shay-SeaSongs, pp. 59-60, "Blow, Bullies, Blow" (1 text plus a verse of another, 1 tune) Botkin-NEFolklr, pp. 558-560, "Blow, Boys, Blow" (1 text, 1 tune) Meredith/Covell/Brown, pp. 91-92, "Blow Bullies Blow" (1 text, 1 tune) Mackenzie 100, "Blow, Boys, Blow" (1 text) Colcord, pp. 50-51, "Blow, Boys, Blow" (1 text plus 3 fragments, 1 tune) Harlow, pp. 66-67, "Blow Boys Blow" (1 text, 1 tune) Hugill, pp. 224-231, "Blow, Boys, Blow'" (4 texts, 2 tunes; the 4th text is a Norwegian version taken from Sternvall's _Sang under Segal_) [AbrEd, pp. 172-175] Sharp-EFC, L, p. 55, "Blow, Boys, Come Blow Together" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BLOWBOYS* BLOWBOY2* CONGORIV* ADDITIONAL: Captain John Robinson, "Songs of the Chantey Man," a series published July-August 1917 in the periodical _The Bellman_ (Minneapolis, MN, 1906-1919). "Blow, Boys, Blow" is in Part 1, 7/14/1917. Roud #703 RECORDINGS: Noble B. Brown, "Blow, Boys, Blow" (AFS, 1946; on LC26) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Shallow Brown (II)" (lyrics) NOTES: Doerflinger reports that "[The] captain was sometimes said to be 'Bully Hayes ["Haines," in Bone's text], the Down East bucko,' who was lost in 1848 with the clipper ship _Rainbow_ (not to be confused with the later South Seas blackbirder)." - RBW Other versions of the song are about a slave-ship taking contraband slaves past the embargo (after slaving was outlawed). - PJS An example of this is Shay's text, and Bone had heard such verses though they aren't part of his main version. The importation of slaves into the United States was forbidden as early as 1808, with stronger enforcement passed in 1819. This wasn't entirely a moral act, however; legislators from northern slave states supported it because it let them breed slaves for the deep South. (Which is one reason why the Confederacy, after breaking off from the Union, maintained its own ban.) The side effect of that was, of course, smuggling -- and a worsening of conditions aboard slavers. Native-born slaves had to be fed and housed as they grew up, making them expensive. Imported slaves were less useful, but the only expense was the importing. Even at prices far below American-born slaves, they brought high profits. And, because even a sick slave brought some money, and there was no one regulating them, there was no incentive at all for the slaver to treat them decently. "Wastage," they called it, and treated it as part of the job. Somehow the words "wilful murder" never entered their vocabulary. - RBW File: Doe025 === NAME: Blow, Boys, Blow (II): see Blow Ye Winds in the Morning (File: LxU044) === NAME: Blue: see Old Blue (File: R295) === NAME: Blue and the Gray, The DESCRIPTION: "A mother's gift to her country's cause is a story yet untold, She had three sons...." All three boys died at war. Two died for the Confederacy in the Civil War; a third died for the Union in Santiago. The singer hopes mother and sons will meet in heaven. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1922 KEYWORDS: war death Civilwar mother FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (2 citations) LPound-ABS, 56, p. 129, "The Blue and the Gray" (1 text) Spaeth-ReadWeep, p. 202, "The Blue and the Gray" (1 tune, partial text) ST LPnd129 (Full) Roud #4984 NOTES: There were soldiers who fought in both the Civil War and Spanish-American War; a leading example is Joseph Wheeler, a Confederate cavalry general who was also a Major General at San Juan Hill and the siege of Santiago. M. Calbraith Butler was another Confederate cavalry general who also served in the later war.And then there was Johnny Clem, who joined the Confederate forces at age nine, and retired from the U. S. army as a general in 1916. Still, the odds of one mother having a child die at Chickamauga (1863), Appomatox (i.e. probably Saylor's Creek in 1865, though very few men actually died there), and Santiago (1898) must be considered slight; the final son would surely have been a fairly senior officer, unlikely to be hurt -- and what are the odds that the mother would still be alive in 1898 anyway? The feeling, though, is probably appropriate for this era of horrid sentimentality. There were, of course, many poems of this name in the period shortly after the Civil War. Few had any more literary merit than this piece. - RBW File: LPnd129 === NAME: Blue Bell Bull DESCRIPTION: The cowboy boasts of his skill, only to draw "that Blue Bell bull." He admits "I'm lucky I ain't dead." He tries to ride the bull, but ends up spending "Eight long weeks in traction, I ain't never been the same." He warns other cowboys against bragging AUTHOR: Johnny Baker EARLIEST_DATE: 1973 KEYWORDS: bragging cowboy injury injury FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ohrlin-HBT 96, "Blue Bell Bull" (1 text, 1 tune) File: Ohr096 === NAME: Blue Bells of Scotland, The DESCRIPTION: "Oh where, please tell me where is your highland laddie gone? (x2) He's gone with the streaming banners where noble deeds are done...." He dwells in Scotland at the sign of the blue bell; he wears a plumed bonnet; if he dies, the pipes shall mourn him AUTHOR: Annie McVicar and Dorothy Jordan (?) EARLIEST_DATE: c. 1915 (recording, Inez Barbour) KEYWORDS: soldier clothes separation home FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) US REFERENCES: (2 citations) Silber-FSWB, p. 280, "The Blue Bells Of Scotland" (1 text) DT, BLUEBELL* Roud #13849 RECORDINGS: Inez Barbour, "Blue Bells of Scotland" (Phono-Cut 5198, c. 1915) Ella Logan, "The Blue Bells of Scotland" (Brunswick 8196, 1938) BROADSIDES: Murray, Mu23-y4:010, "The Blue Bells of Scotland," Sharp (London?), 19C; also Mu23-y4:029, "Blue Bells of Scotland," John Ross (Newcastle), 19C NLScotland, L.C.Fol.178.A.2(083), "The Blue Bells of Scotland," unknown, n.d. NOTES: The notes at the National Library of Scotland site attribute this to the Napoleonic Wars. There is no evidence for this in the versions I've seen (it mentions "King George," but there was a King George continually from 1714 to 1837). There is a song in the Scots Musical Museum which may be related, but that *predates* the Napoleonic Wars. - RBW File: FSWB280A === NAME: Blue Bleezin' Blind Drunk (Mickey's Warning) DESCRIPTION: "O friends, I have a sad story." The singer "married a man for his money, But he's worse than the devil himsel'. For when Mickey comes home I get battered." She vows to "get blue bleezin' blind drunk Just to give Mickey a warning" and hopes he reforms AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1985 (recording, Sheila Stewart) KEYWORDS: drink money hardtimes abuse injury FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (0 citations) Roud #6333 RECORDINGS: Sheila Stewart, "Mickey's Warning" (on SCStewartsBlair01) File: RcBlBlBl === NAME: Blue Eyes: see Broken Ties (I'm Thinking Tonight of My Blue Eyes) (File: BrII156) === NAME: Blue Jacket and White Trousers: see The Maid in Sorrow (Short Jacket) [Laws N12] (File: LN12) === NAME: Blue Juniata, The DESCRIPTION: "Wild roved an Indian girl, bright Alfarata, Where sweeps the water of the blue Juniata." She lives free in the forest, praising her gentle lover. But now "Fleeting years have borne away the voice of Alfarata; Still sweeps the river of blue Juniata." AUTHOR: Marion Sullivan Dix EARLIEST_DATE: 1844 (sheet music) KEYWORDS: Indians(Am.) love river FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Hudson 83, pp. 210-211, "The Blue Juniata" (1 text) Spaeth-WeepMore, pp. 98-99, "The Blue Juniata" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #4494 NOTES: Laws condemns this as a mere "ballad-like piece," but it strikes me as very effective, as well as unusually sympathetic to Native Americans (though the girl's name is assuredly fake). Quite surprising for a piece composed in 1844 (see Spaeth, _A History of Popular Music in America_, p. 101). - RBW Laura Ingalls Wilder quotes an unusually large excerpt of this in _Little House on the Prairie_ (chapter 18, "The Tall Indian"). This particular section of the "Little House" books is of very dubious historical value -- the Ingalls family actually moved to Kansas when Laura was only a year and a half old (see Donald Zochert, _Laura: The Life of Laura Ingalls Wilder_, Avon, 1976, p. 22. The sources I've consulted don't even explain why she wrote _Little House on the Prairie_; it would have been much more logical to proceed from _Little House in the Big Woods_, which could be based on her *second* stay in Wisconsin, to _On the Banks of Plum Creek_). We're told that Laura heard about the time in Kansas from Ma and Pa and Mary Ingalls -- but, by the time _Little House on the Prairie_ was written, all three of them were dead. For the later "Little House" books, Laura could consult her sister Carrie, and for the very late books, also her sister Grace and her husband Almanzo Wilder, but _LIttle House on the Prairie_ is nothing but a memory of others' memories. All that is to say that I really don't trust _Little House on the Prairie_ as an indication of the popularity of this song in 1868-1869. The flip side is, it is quite clear that Laura Ingalls Wilder knew the song in the 1930s at least. - RBW File: Hud083 === NAME: Blue Mountain DESCRIPTION: "My home it was in Texas, My past you must not know.... Blue Mountain, you're azure deep... Blue Mountain with a horsehead on your side, You've won my love to keep." Moments in the life of a cowboy: Drinking, wandering, wishing for mother AUTHOR: F. W. Keller EARLIEST_DATE: 1947 (Collected by Fife/Fife) KEYWORDS: cowboy work travel drink commerce moniker FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (2 citations) Fife-Cowboy/West 88, "Blue Mountain" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BLUMTNAZ* Roud #10861 RECORDINGS: Art Thieme, "Blue Mountain" (on Thieme01) File: FCW088 === NAME: Blue Mountain Lake (The Belle of Long Lake) [Laws C20] DESCRIPTION: The singer recalls the "racket" on Blue Mountain Lake when Jim Lou and "lazy Jimmie Mitchell" fought. The song concludes with a joke about Nellie the camp cook, "the belle of Long Lake" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1939 (Warner) KEYWORDS: cook fight moniker FOUND_IN: US(MA,NE) REFERENCES: (5 citations) Laws C20, "Blue Mountain Lake (The Belle of Long Lake)" Warner 59, "The Ballad of Blue Mountain Lake" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-FSUSA 49, "Blue Mountain Lake" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 44, "The Rackets Around Blue Mountain Lake" (1 text) DT 605, BLUEMTN* Roud #2226 RECORDINGS: Pete Seeger, "Blue Mountain Lake" (on PeteSeeger07, PeteSeeger07b) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Moosehead Lake" (floating verses) NOTES: This song shares at least three verses with "Moosehead Lake," as well as the "Derry Down" tune, but the remaining text (and the feeling) are just enough different that I -- very tentatively -- keep the songs separate. - RBW File: LC20 === NAME: Blue Ridge Mountain Blues DESCRIPTION: "When I was young and in my prime, I left my home in Caroline, Now all I do is sit and pine, For those folks I left behind. I've got the Blue Ridge Mountain blues." The singer longs for home, and dreams of the aged parents at home whom he will soon see AUTHOR: credited to Bill Cox EARLIEST_DATE: 1924 (recording, Riley Puckett) KEYWORDS: separation home travel father mother nonballad homesickness home return reunion travel family dog FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) BrownIII 401, "Blue Ridge Mountain Blues" (1 text) Roud #11758 RECORDINGS: Bill Cox, "Blue Ridge Mountain Blues" (Conqueror 8232, 1933; Banner 32941/Perfect 12969, 1934) Vernon Dalhart, "Blue Ridge Mountain Blues" (Banner 1611, 1925) (Challenge 164/Challenge 314, 1927; rec. 1925) (Broadway 8061, n.d.) Sid Harkreader, "Blue Ridge Mountain Blues" (Vocalion 15193, 1926) Al Hopkins & his Buckle-Busters, "Blue Ridge Mountain Blues" (Brunswick 180, 1927) Wade Mainer, "Blue Ridge Mountain Blues" (Blue Ridge 109) Charlie Newman, "Blue Ridge Mountain Blues" (OKeh 45184, 1928; rec. 1927) Riley Puckett, "Blue Ridge Mountain Blues" (Columbia 254-D, 1924; Harmony 5127-H, n.d.) (Bluebird B-6196, 1935) Ernest V. Stoneman, "Blue Ridge Mountain Blues" (Okeh 45009, 1925) Doc Watson, "Blue Ridge Mountain Blues" (on RitchieWatsonCD1) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Where Is My Wandering Boy Tonight?" (quoted) NOTES: The only authorship claim I've found for this lists it as copyright 1958 by Bill Clifton and Buddy Dee. Clifton, however, was born in 1931, and Riley Puckett recorded the song in 1924, so this claim is demonstrably false. Paul Stamler found the credit to Bill Cox, which is at least chronologically possible though he seems to have recorded it relatively late. - RBW File: Br3401 === NAME: Blue Tail Fly, The: see The Blue-Tail Fly [Laws I19] (File: LI19) === NAME: Blue Velvet Band (I), The: see The Black Velvet Band (I) (File: R672) === NAME: Blue Velvet Band (II) DESCRIPTION: Singer leaves home and his sweetheart, the girl in the blue velvet band. Five years later he still dreams of her every night. He returns home and "the old colored people" tell him she has died and been buried wearing his ring and the blue velvet band. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1960 (Leach-Labrador) KEYWORDS: love ring separation death FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Spaeth-WeepMore, pp. 148-150, "The Girl in the Blue Velvet Band" (1 text) Leach-Labrador 51, "Blue Velvet Band" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #3764 NOTES: Hank Snow recorded this as "The Blue Velvet Band" in Montreal in 1937 on RCA LMP/LSP 6014 (source: _Country Music Sources_ by Guthrie T Meade Jr, p. 40). You can see the lyrics on the Hank Snow site. In Snow's lyrics he hears the news when he reaches "the old country depot" rather than from "the old colored people." The cut is available on a number of CDs now including "Hank Snow -- I'm Movin On" on Prism Entertainment 928. It's not clear to me whether the singer dreams of Blue Velvet Band every night for five years or one night after five years. That is, it may be that her appearance in his dream is what makes him decide to go home. Hank Snow apparently thought it was her appearance in the dream that was critical. In the lyrics Snow wrote to "The New Blue Velvet Band" the singer accuses Blue Velvet Band of "loving some man" and leaves her on "a tanker for Holland"; he dreams of her and is called on deck by the captain who tells him "This message just flashed o'er the wireless And your darlin' is dying tonight"; he goes back and knows she has died when he hears "the bell in the old country steeple." Source: sing365.com site - BS The fullest forms of "The Girl in the Blue Velvet Band" (as in Spaeth) are a combination of the "Black Velvet Band" plot (girl causes guy to end up in prison) and the above "Blue Velvet Band" plot (he misses the dead girl). This great invertebrate mass was too long to be recorded on a 78, and Creighton declares that they are not to be confused. I (tentatively) disagree. I suspect that this version of the song is a "Blue Velvet Band" variant chopped down by someone to fit in three minutes. For more details, see "The Black Velvet Band (I)." - RBW File: LLab051 === NAME: Blue Wave, The DESCRIPTION: The Triton, fishing the Grand Banks, hears that the Cape Dolphin and Blue Wave are sinking in a storm. They join the search for Blue Wave but "no sign of their missing boat was anywhere to be found" AUTHOR: Jack Lushman EARLIEST_DATE: 1977 (Lehr/Best) KEYWORDS: death sea ship storm wreck HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: Feb 9, 1959 - Blue Wave and Cape Dauphin are lost but Cape Dauphin's crew are saved (per Lehr/Best, Northern Shipwrecks Database) FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Lehr/Best 9, "The Blue Wave" (1 text, 1 tune) File: LeBe09 === NAME: Blue Yodel #4: see California Blues (Blue Yodel #4) (File: Br3505) === NAME: Blue-Coat Man, The: see (tentatively) The Roving Gambler [Laws H4] (File: LH04) === NAME: Blue-Eyed Boy, The: see My Blue-Eyed Boy (File: R759) === NAME: Blue-Eyed Ella: see The Jealous Lover (II) (File: E104) === NAME: Blue-Eyed Ellen: see The Jealous Lover (II) (File: E104) === NAME: Blue-Eyed Girl: see Fly Around, My Pretty Little Miss (File: CSW066) === NAME: Blue-Eyed Lover: see Dear Companion (The Broken Heart; Go and Leave Me If You Wish To, Fond Affection) (File: R755) === NAME: Blue-Haired Boy (Little Willie II, Blue-Haired Jimmy) DESCRIPTION: (Willie/Jimmy) has gone ("He never died so suddenly before"). After undergoing horrendous medical treatments..."he sneezed and smiled and died/He blew his nose and smiled and died again". Singer vows to plant a bunch of whiskers on his grave AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1929 (unissued recording, Cumberland Mountain Fret Pickers) LONG_DESCRIPTION: Parody of sentimental death songs; (Willie/Jimmy) has gone ("He never died so suddenly before). After undergoing horrendous medical treatments, including bathing his head in boiling lead and filling his mouth with glue..."he sneezed and smiled and died/He blew his nose and smiled and died again". Singer vows to go to the barber shop, per the deceased last request and plant a bunch of whiskers on his grave KEYWORDS: disease grief request death dying mourning humorous nonsense paradox parody family FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Pankake-PHCFSB, pp. 134-135, "Little Willie II" (1 text, tune referenced) Cumberland Mountain Fret Pickers, "Little Blue-Haird (sic) Boy" (unissued Brunswick/Vocalion mx TK-145, 1929) Roud #1411 RECORDINGS: Horton Barker, "Blue-Haired Jimmy" (on Barker01) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Little Willie (I)" (lyrics) NOTES: It sounds like this should be a parody of a particular song, rather than a pastiche of a genre, but so far I haven't found an original on which it's based. - PJS Listed by the Pankakes as being sung to "Jesse James," although other versions appear to use different tunes. One suspects that their tune is a retrofit by their informant. The Pankakes also have a song (on the same page) called Little Willie I. It is by no means clear that this is the same song, but I haven't seen it elsewhere; I suspect it is a parody of all the various songs about murderers and other vile folks named Willie. - RBW File: RcBlHaJi === NAME: Blue-Haired Jimmy: see Blue-Haired Boy (Little Willie II, Blue-Haired Jimmy) (File: RcBlHaJi) === NAME: Blue-Tail Fly, The [Laws I19] DESCRIPTION: A young slave is made into a household servant, with the particular task of keeping away the (stinging) blue-tail flies. One day the master goes out riding; a fly stings his pony; the master is thrown and dies. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1844 KEYWORDS: bug servant death FOUND_IN: US(SE,SW) REFERENCES: (13 citations) Laws I19, "The Blue-Tail Fly" BrownIII 414, "Jim Crack Corn" (1 text plus 2 mixed fragments and 2 excerpts) Friedman, p. 453, "The Blue-Tail Fly" (1 text) Lomax-FSNA 267, "The Blue-Tail Fly" (1 text, 1 tune) RJackson-19CPop, pp. 91-92, "Jim Crack Corn or the Blue Tail Fly" (1 text, 1 tune) Scarborough-NegroFS, pp. 201-203, "De Blue-Tail Fly" (1 text plus some fragments, 1 tune); also p. 190, (no title) (1 fragment, with a verse of "The Jaybird" and the chorus of this piece); also p. 224, (no title) (1 short text, with the "Jim crack corn" chorus and the "My ole mistus promised me" verse) Arnett, p. 66, "Jim Crack Corn (Blue-Tail Fly)" (1 text, 1 tune) Botkin-SoFolklr, p. 709, "The Blue-Tail Fly" (1 text, 1 tune) PSeeger-AFB, p. 12, "The Blue-Tail Fly" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 30, "The Blue-Tail Fly" (1 text) Fuld-WFM, p. 312, "Jim Crack Corn" cf. Gardner/Chickering, p. 477, "The Blue-Tailed Fly" (source notes only) DT 669, BLUETAIL ST LI19 (Full) Roud #4185 RECORDINGS: Bob Atcher, "Blue Tail Fly" (Columbia 20538, 1949) Doc Hopkins, "The Blue Tailed Fly" (Radio 1410A, n.d., prob. late 1940s - early 1950s) Bradley Kincaid, "The Blue Tail Fly" (Majestic 6010, 1947) Pete Seeger, "Jim Crack Corn" (on PeteSeeger03, PeteSeegerCD03); "The Blue Tail Fly" (on PeteSeeger17) Riley Shepard, "The Blue Tail Fly" (King 523, 1946) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Shoo Fly" (chorus) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Jimmie Crack Corn NOTES: Sometimes credited to Dan Emmett (e.g. by Spaeth), and one of the earliest publications was in a series credited to him -- but the absence of his name on the earliest copies goes far toward discrediting his authorship. - RBW The subtext for this song is that the slave in fact killed the master himself, blaming it on the blue-tail fly. This is hinted at, to varying degrees, in some versions of the song. -PJS File: LI19 === NAME: Blueberry Ball, The DESCRIPTION: The Jubilee lands its freight at Daniel's Harbour and stays three days. The crew and sharemen dance all night, have a good "scuff" and leave to "prepare for a time in the bay" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1958 (Peacock) KEYWORDS: fight ship dancing drink humorous FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Peacock, pp. 43-44, "The Blueberry Ball" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #9945 NOTES: Daniel's Harbour is on the northwest coast of Newfoundland, north of St Paul's [perhaps, since 1973, I should place it north of Gros Morne National Park] - BS File: Pea043 === NAME: Bluebird, The DESCRIPTION: About Captain Moar's water-boat Bluebird. If you "come to Merrimashee, You will see the noble Bluebird, Through the waters she will fly, And the Captain says he'll run her Till the tank runs dry" AUTHOR: Martin Sullivan of Kouchibougac (Manny/Wilson) EARLIEST_DATE: 1947 (Manny/Wilson) KEYWORDS: sea ship work nonballad FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Manny/Wilson 6, "The Bluebird" (1 text, 1 tune) ST MaWi006 (Partial) Roud #9204 NOTES: Manny/Wilson: "The water-boats were schooners fitted with tanks. They supplied the ships in port with water." - BS File: MaWi006 === NAME: Blues Ain't Nothin', De DESCRIPTION: "I'm gonna build myself a raft An' float dat ribber down, I'll build myself a shack In some ol' Texas town... 'Cause de blues ain't nothin... But a good man feelin' bad." The singer will go to the levee and rock until her sweetheart comes -- if he does AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1927 (Sandburg) KEYWORDS: separation nonballad river FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (1 citation) Sandburg, pp.234-235 , "De Blues Ain' Nothin'" (1 text, 1 tune) File: San234 === NAME: Bluestone Quarries, The DESCRIPTION: "In eighteen hundred and forty one, They put their long red flannels on (x2), To work in the bluestone quarries." Stories of the Irish immigrants who became bluestone miners, and faced poverty, uncaring bosses, and cruel conditions AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1982 KEYWORDS: work mining boss poverty FOUND_IN: US(MA) REFERENCES: (1 citation) FSCatskills 174, "The Bluestone Quarries" (1 text + appendix, 1 tune) ST FSC174 (Partial) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Paddy Works on the Railway" (tune & meter) File: FSC174 === NAME: Bluey Brink DESCRIPTION: Bluey Brink, "a devil for work and a devil for drink," walks into Jimmy's bar and demands the closest available liquid -- the sulfuric acid used to clean the bar. Brink stomps out, and Jimmy fears for his life. But Brink returns next day asking for more AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1960 KEYWORDS: Australia talltale humorous drink poison FOUND_IN: Australia REFERENCES: (3 citations) Fahey-Eureka, pp. 148-149, "Bluey Brink" (1 text, 1 tune) Paterson/Fahey/Seal, pp. 258-260, "Billy Brink" (1 text) DT, BLUBRINK* Roud #8838 and 3317 RECORDINGS: John Greenway, "Bluey Brink" (on JGreenway01) A. L. Lloyd, "Bluey Brink" (on Lloyd4, Lloyd8) SAME_TUNE: The Wedding of Lochan McGraw (Meredith/Covell/Brown, pp. 181-182) NOTES: Fahey suspects this of having been the work of A.L. Lloyd, who originally collected it. Australians like to boast of their drinking, however (though their per capita consumption of alcoholic beverages, other than beer, is actually rather low), so they have gladly adopted the song. Note that the name in Paterson/Fahey/Seal is "Billy Brink," implying some folk processing. Though the Paterson/Fahey/Seal version (collected from Simon McDonald by O'Connor and Officer) isn't as clever as Lloyd's version. Perhaps the likeliest explanation is that Lloyd tightened up a traditional song. Meredith/Covell/Brown add that the tune for this is "The Wedding of Lochan McGraw." - RBW File: FaE148 === NAME: Blushing Bride DESCRIPTION: Bride Mary Bell blushes as she walks down the aisle: "Every boy in every pew/Knows how she can bill and coo/No wonder she's a blushing bride." Even the preacher remembers her in her younger days; so does the best man. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1926 (recording, Jim Miller & Charlie Farrell) LONG_DESCRIPTION: Mary Bell and Jackie Horner are to be married. The bride blushes as she walks down the aisle, and the singer says she has every reason to; "Every boy in every pew/Knows how she can bill and coo/No wonder she's a blushing bride." Even the preacher remembers her in her younger days; so does the best man. "Don't tell me she knows her stuff/She should; she's practiced long enough..." KEYWORDS: courting marriage sex wedding humorous lover clergy FOUND_IN: US(MW) REFERENCES: (0 citations) RECORDINGS: Edith Clifford, "No Wonder She's a Blushing Bride" (Columbia 901-D, 1927) Golden Melody Boys, "Blushing Bride" (c. 1928 [unissued]; on TimesAint04) Jim Miller & Charlie Farrell, "No Wonder She's a Blushing Bride" (Victor 20291, 1926) [Moe] Thompson & [Carson] Robison "No Wonder She's a Blushing Bride" (Gennett 6062, 1927) NOTES: Nothing overt is mentioned, but I put "sex" as a keyword, and defy all challenges. - PJS File: RcBluBri === NAME: Blythe and Bonny Scotland: see The Paisley Officer (India's Burning Sands) [Laws N2] (File: LN02) === NAME: Blythe Mormond Braes DESCRIPTION: "O, wat ye wha's in yon wee hoose Beneath blythe Mormond Braes?" It is where pretty Nellie sits bleaching her clothes. He praises her beauty, and urges her to "blink owre the burn" with him. They love each other, and will wed, dowry or no AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1930 (Ord) KEYWORDS: love courting dowry FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ord, pp. 60-61, "Blythe Mormond Braes" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #4598 NOTES: Apart from the title, this has nothing in common with the better-known "Mormond Braes." - RBW File: Ord060 === NAME: Blythesome Bridal, The DESCRIPTION: A call to a wedding: "Fy let us a' tae the bridal, For there will be lilting there, For Jock's tae be married tae Maggie, The lass wi' the gowden hair." The elaborate feast is described in extravagant and nauseating fullness, as are the guests AUTHOR: Francis Sempill ? EARLIEST_DATE: 1776 (Herd) KEYWORDS: marriage humorous wedding food party FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) PBB 82, "The Blythesome Bridal" (1 text) ST PBB082 (Full) Roud #5889 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Lanigan's Ball" (theme) cf. "A Glorious Wedding" (theme) cf. "The Wedding at Ballyporeen" (theme) cf. "Sheelicks" (theme) cf. "Pat's Wedding" cf. "The Skipper's Wedding" (theme) SAME_TUNE: The Sports o' Glasgow Green (File: Ord397) NOTES: By the seventeenth century, the "penny bridal" was common in Scotland: At a marriage, anyone could get into the feast by paying the penny fee. The results were often uproarious. - RBW File: PBB082 === NAME: Bo Lamkin: see Lamkin [Child 93] (File: C093) === NAME: Bo-wow and Bo-wee DESCRIPTION: A fragmentary ballad in which the old woman condemns the old man for "flashing," then has sex with him. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: KEYWORDS: bawdy sex FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Randolph-Legman I, p. 135, "Bo-wow and Bo-wee" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #11501 File: RL135 === NAME: Boar's Head Carol, The DESCRIPTION: The singer brings in the boar's head, "bedecked with bays and rosemary," to help celebrate Christmas. Chorus: Caput apri defero, Redens laudes domino." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1790 (Ritson); earliest versions c. 1500 (Hill MS., Balliol Coll. Oxf. 354; Wales National Library Porkington 10) KEYWORDS: carol Christmas food party nonballad foreignlanguage FOUND_IN: Britain(England) REFERENCES: (3 citations) OBC 19, "The Boar's Head Carol" (1 text, 1 tune) ADDITIONAL: Brown/Robbins, _Index of Middle English Verse_, #3313, 3314 Ian Bradley, _The Penguin Book of Carols_ (1999), #75, "The Boar's Head in Hand Bear I" (1 text) NOTES: The Latin chorus translates as "[The] head of [the] boar I bring, giving praises to God." This is said to be the "earliest English carol to appear in print"; Ian Bradley's _Penguin Book of Carols_ reports it to have appeared in van Wynken's _Christmase Carolls Newly Emprynted at London_ (1521). Since I have not seen the latter book, though, and no one else mentions that publication, I haven't listed that as an earliest date. Folklore also has a rather fantastic account of the origin of the song: An Oxford student named Copcot was on his way to mass when attacked by a boar. He allegedly killed it by stuffing a volume of Aristotle down his throat (an act, it seems to me, more likely to kill a lazy student than a boar), then took the head to the cooks. - RBW File: OBC172 === NAME: Boar's Head in Hand Bear I, The: see The Boar's Head Carol (File: OBC172) === NAME: Boarding-House, The: see Hungry Hash House (File: San207) === NAME: Boarding-School Maidens, The DESCRIPTION: Johnny disports one after the other with "two boarding-school maidens, charming and bright." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: KEYWORDS: bawdy sex FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Randolph-Legman II, pp. 658-659, "The Boarding-School Maidens" (1 text) File: RL658 === NAME: Boardman River Song DESCRIPTION: Singer tells of his work, skills and history on the Boardman River (and many others), saying he will never waste his money on drink, but will save it for his old age. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1941 (Beck) KEYWORDS: lumbering work logger drink FOUND_IN: US(MW) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Beck 27, "Boardman River Song" (1 text) Roud #8857 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Manistee River Song" cf. "The Kipawa Stream" ALTERNATE_TITLES: Jolly Pinewoods Boys NOTES: According to Beck, the "Manistee River Song" is alleged to have been composed by Ole Nelson in 1880. However, he notes that this very similar song was being sung along the Boardman River in the 1880s. - PJS And, similarly, note "The Kipawa Stream." Chances are that there is some ancestral pierce (we can hardly tell which) which various singers localized. File: Be027 === NAME: Boat, A Boat, Across the Ferry, A DESCRIPTION: Round: "A boat, a boat across the ferry, For we are going to be merry, To laugh and quaff and drink old sherry." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1952 (Brown) KEYWORDS: ship drink FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) BrownIII 225, "A Boat, A Boat, Across the Ferry" (1 text) File: Br3225 === NAME: Boat's Up the River: see Alabama Bound (Waterbound II) (File: BMRF598) === NAME: Boatman, The (Fhear a Bhata): see Fhear a Bhata (Fhir a Bhata: I Climb the Mountains) (File: HHH834) === NAME: Boatman's Dance: see De Boatman Dance (File: BMRF566) === NAME: Boatsman and the Chest, The [Laws Q8] DESCRIPTION: The boatsman's wife is being visited by the tailor when he comes home unexpectedly. The tailor hides in a chest. Knowing its contents, the husband deliberately takes the chest back to his ship. He tells the tailor he abducted him to keep him from his wife AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1916 (Cecil Sharp collection) KEYWORDS: infidelity punishment hiding abduction FOUND_IN: US(Ap,MA,MW,NE,SE) Canada(Newf) Britain(England) Ireland REFERENCES: (12 citations) Laws Q8, "The Boatsman and the Chest" Eddy 46, "Jolly Boatman" (1 text) JHCoxIIA, #23, pp. 91-93, "The Wealthy Merchant" (1 text, 1 tune) FSCatskills 138, "The Jolly Boatswain" (1 text, 1 tune) Greenleaf/Mansfield 53, "The Boatswain and the Tailor" (1 text) Peacock, pp. 306-311, "The Old Bo's'n" (3 texts, 3 tunes) SHenry H604, pp. 505-506, "The Tailor in the Tea [Sea] Chest" (1 text, 1 tune) Chappell-FSRA 52, "The Boatswain and the Chest" (1 text, 1 tune) SharpAp 52, "The Boatsman and the Chest" (2 texts, 2 tunes) Gilbert, pp. 26-27, "The Sailor and the Tailor" (1 text) JHJohnson, pp.71-73, "The Boatswain and the Tailor" (1 text) DT 346, BOATTAIL TRPRTAIL* Roud #570 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Will the Weaver" [Laws Q9] (plot) cf. "The Major and the Weaver" [Laws Q10] (plot) cf. "The Dog in the Closet (The Old Dyer)" [Laws Q11] (plot) cf. "The Trooper and the Tailor" (plot) cf. "The Little Cobbler" (plot) cf. "The Greasy Cook (Butter and Cheese and All, The Cook's Choice)" (plot) cf. "Murphy in the Cupboard" (plot) ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Randy Tailor NOTES: In one version, the husband ships the chest (and the tailor) off to China. - PJS This and similar songs are sometimes traced back to a story in Boccaccio (seventh day, second story: Gianella, Peronella, and her husband). But the story is really one of the basic themes of folktale, and doubtless predates Boccaccio as well as these songs. - RBW File: LQ08 === NAME: Boatswain and the Tailor, The: see The Boatsman and the Chest [Laws Q8] (File: LQ08) === NAME: Bob Cranky's 'Size Sunday DESCRIPTION: "Ho'way and aw'll sing thee a tune, mun, 'Bout huz seein' my lord at the toon, mun... Nyen them aw cut a dash like Bob Cranky." The singer sets out for a celebration in town, gets drunk and dirty, and tells of the exploits of Cranky AUTHOR: Words: John Selkirk? / Music: Thomas Train EARLIEST_DATE: 1812 (Bell) KEYWORDS: drink clothes humorous FOUND_IN: Britain(England(North)) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Stokoe/Reay, pp. 88-89, "Bob Cranky's Size Sunday" (1 text, 1 tune) ST StoR088 (Partial) Roud #3146 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Bob Cranky's Adieu" (character) File: StoR088 === NAME: Bob Cranky's Adieu DESCRIPTION: "Farewell, farewell, ma comely pet! Aw's forced three weeks to leave thee; Aw's doon for parm'nent duty set." The singer must obey the sergeant during the long parting -- but if the girl wishes to see him, they can always meet in the "yell-house" AUTHOR: Words: John Shield EARLIEST_DATE: 1900 (Stokoe/Reay); Shield died 1848 KEYWORDS: soldier separation drink reunion humorous parody FOUND_IN: Britain(England(North)) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Stokoe/Reay, pp. 91-93, "Bob Cranky's Adieu" (1 text, 1 tune) ST StoR091 (Partial) Roud #3148 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Bob Cranky's 'Size Sunday" (character) NOTES: According to Stokoe, "This song is a parody on the popular song of the Peninsular War period, entitled 'The Soldier's Adieu.'" - RBW File: StoR091 === NAME: Bob Ingersoll and the Devil DESCRIPTION: "Some dese days gwine hit 'im. Ingersoll sing anudder song When de debill git 'im. Debbil watch fo' sich as him." The singer describes with seeming relish how the Devil will gather Ingersoll and dance as the dead man suffers AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1952 (Brown) KEYWORDS: devil Hell humorous FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) BrownIII 348, "Bob Ingersoll and the Devil" (1 text) Roud #11736 File: Br3348 === NAME: Bob Sims: see Logan County Jail (Dallas County Jail) [Laws E17] (File: LE17) === NAME: Bob Vail Was a Butcher Boy DESCRIPTION: Bob Vail is a butcher who would "rather fight than eat." He is bald on top and uses marrow to grease his hair. He courts Codfish Lize. When he asks her to marry "Her teeth fell out and she lost her wig" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1960 (Creighton-SNewBrunswick) KEYWORDS: courting humorous hair FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Creighton-SNewBrunswick 67, "Bob Vail Was a Butcher Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) ST CrSNB067 (Partial) Roud #2760 File: CrSNB067 === NAME: Bob-a Needle DESCRIPTION: "Well oh bob-a needle bob-a needle, And oh bob-a needle." "Bob-a needle is a running, Bob-a needle ain't a-running." "And oh bob-a needle, bob-a needle... You got bob-a" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1950 (recording, children of Lilly's Chapel School) KEYWORDS: playparty nonballad FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Courlander-NFM, p. 159, "(Bob-a Needle)" (1 text) Roud #11001 RECORDINGS: Children of Lilly's Chapel School, "Bob a Needle (Bobbin Needle)" (on NFMAla6, RingGames1) Pete Seeger, "Bob-a-Needle" (on PeteSeeger21) NOTES: Courlander reports that a source suspects this title to be a mistake for "bobbing needle," but as he does not list either his own source or the source of the speculation, it is difficult to know what to make of this. - RBW File: CNFM159A === NAME: Bobbed Hair, The DESCRIPTION: Singer is horrified that "my Biddy darling ... had bobbed her hair." She says "'Tis all the fashion now.'" She says it was started by Black and Tans. He leaves her: "your neck is bare, like Paddy McGinty's drake." The asses, goats and swallows protest. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1974 (Munnelly/Deasy-Lenihan) KEYWORDS: hair humorous nonballad FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) Munnelly/Deasy-Lenihan 23, "The Bobbed Hair" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #3077 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Why Do You Bob Your Hair, Girls?" (theme) NOTES: The reference to the Black and Tans is curious. The Black and Tans were, of course, the soldiers the English imported to Ireland as an auxiliary police force after the First World War (see, e.g., "The Bold Black and Tan"). I recall reading, somewhere, of an Irish girl having her head shaved for being too close to the English. I can't recall hearing of one cutting her hair to imitate them. - RBW File: RcTBobHa === NAME: Bobby Campbell DESCRIPTION: Bobby Campbell, though he weeps for the dead, hears the pipes "calling the clans to war," and remembers how his father told him not to dishonor the clan. He goes to war and is killed; his Mary grieves for him AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1973 KEYWORDS: soldier death FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Silber-FSWB, p. 272, "Bobby Campbell" (1 text) File: FSWB272B === NAME: Bobby Shafto's Gone To Sea: see Bobby Shaftoe (File: FSWB170A) === NAME: Bobby Shaftoe DESCRIPTION: "Bobby Shaftoe's gone to sea, Silver buckles on his knee, He'll come back and marry me, Bonnie Bobby Shaftoe." The singer praises Bobby's appearance. (In some versions she ends by noting that he is "getting a bairn") AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1805 (Songs for the Nursery, according to Opie-Oxford2) KEYWORDS: sailor love beauty pregnancy FOUND_IN: Britain(England(North)) US(SE) REFERENCES: (8 citations) BrownIII 132, "Bobby Shaftoe" (1 text) Stokoe/Reay, pp. 12-13, "Bobby Shaftoe" (1 text, 1 tune); p. 198, "Bobby Shaftoe" (1 text) Opie-Oxford2 60, "Bobby Shafto's gone to sea" (2 texts) Baring-Gould-MotherGoose #153, pp. 116-117, "(Bobby Shafto's gone to sea)" Montgomerie-ScottishNR 75, "(Bobbie Shaftoe's gone to sea)" (1 short text) Silber-FSWB, p. 170, "Bobby Shaftoe" (1 text) DT, BOBSHAFT ADDITIONAL: Walter de la Mare, _Come Hither_, revised edition, 1928; notes to #352, ("Bobby Shaftoe's gone to sea") (1 text) Roud #1359 ALTERNATE_TITLES: Bonny Bobby Shaftoe Bobbie Shaftoe NOTES: According to Stokoe, "Tradition connects this song with one of the Shaftoes of Bavinngton, who ran away to sea to escape the attentions of an enamoured lady of beauty and fortune.... The original air was entitled 'Brave Wully Forster,' and appears so in a manuscript music book in the Antiquarian Society's possession, dated 1694." The Baring-Goulds, however, report that the "original Bobby Shafto is said to have lived at Hollybrook, County Wicklow, and died in 1737." But they add that a later verse, not found in "Songs for the Nursery," "was composed by the supporters of another Bobby Shafto -- Robert Shafto of Whitworth, a candidate for parliament in the election of 1761. He was said to be exceedingly handsome." I wouldn't bet on any of those identifications. - RBW File: FSWB170A === NAME: Bog Down in the Valley-O: see The Rattling Bog (File: ShH98) === NAME: Bogend Hairst, The: see Rhynie (File: RcRhynie) === NAME: Boggy Creek or The Hills of Mexico [Laws B10b] DESCRIPTION: A group of cowboys is hired for an expedition away from home. Mistreated by their boss, they eventually rebel (and kill him) AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: KEYWORDS: cowboy revenge boss FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (6 citations) Laws B10b, "Boggy Creek or The Hills of Mexico" Lomax-FSNA 196, "On the Trail to Mexico" (1 text, 1 tune) Thorp/Fife XV, pp. 195-218 (31-33), "Buffalo Range" (6 texts, 2 tunes, though the "B" text is "Boggy Creek," C and D appear unrelated, and E is "Canada-I-O") Fife-Cowboy/West 30, "The Hills of Mexico" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 109, "Trail To Mexico" (1 text) DT 377, (ARIZONIO* -- clearly a member of this family of songs, and closer to this than Laws B10a or C17, although it perhaps should be classified as a separate piece) Roud #634 RECORDINGS: Roscoe Holcomb, "The Hills of Mexico" (on Holcomb-Ward1) Harry "Haywire Mac" McClintock, "The Trail to Mexico" (Victor V-40016, 1929; on MakeMe) Carl T. Sprague, "Following the Cow Trail" (Victor 20067, 1926; Montgomery Ward M-4468, 1934; rec. 1925; on AuthCowboys) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Buffalo Skinners" [Laws B10a] cf. "Shanty Teamster's Marseillaise" (plot) cf. "Canaday-I-O, Michigan-I-O, Colley's Run I-O" [Laws C17] File: LB10B === NAME: Bogie's Bonnie Belle DESCRIPTION: Singer meets Bogie and goes to work for him; his daugher Isabel meets him by the river. She delivers a son, and Bogie sends for the singer, who promises to marry her. Bogie says the singer's not worthy of his daughter. Bogie's daughter marries a tinker AUTHOR: Unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1956 (Kennedy) LONG_DESCRIPTION: Singer, going to Huntley, meets Bogie and arranges to drive horses for him; his daugher Isabel chooses him for her guide, down by the river. Later, she delivers a son, and Bogie sends for the singer, who promises to marry her. Bogie says the singer's not worthy of his daughter, so (the singer takes his son away while) Bogie's daughter marries a tinker; the singer takes his leave (and boasts of having taken her maidenhead) (or he wishes her well) KEYWORDS: hardheartedness courting seduction sex bragging pregnancy baby father lover FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Kennedy 340, "Bogie's Bonnie Belle" (1 text, 1 tune) MacSeegTrav 81, "Bogie's Bonnie Belle" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BOGIEBEL* Roud #2155 RECORDINGS: Davie Stewart, "Bogie's Bonny Belle" (on FSB1) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Adieu to Bogie Side" (lyrics) NOTES: According to Kennedy, a "literary" version of the song by John Riddel was printed in Ford's _Vagabond Songs and Ballads of Scotland_, 1900. - PJS This is an instance of a difficult conundrum, which initially led me to lump the songs. There is good evidence that this "literary" version is a traditional song (Ford and Ord have very different versions, and Grieg found quite a few versions). And Ord's longish version has clear links to Kennedy's song. Links, but not really the same plot (e.g. the pregnancy vanishes). Still, I suspect there are versions which mix. Best to check the references to both songs. I find myself wondering if Riddell didn't know both songs, and create his version (with its references to the muses, etc.) from scraps of both. - RBW File: DTbogieb === NAME: Bogie's Braes DESCRIPTION: "By Bogie's streams that rin sae deep, Fu' aft wi' glee I've herded sheep... Wi' my dear lad on Bogie's braes.... But waes my heart the days are gane... While my dear lad maun face his faes." She laments all that she will do alone in his absence AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1930 (Ord) KEYWORDS: love separation parody FOUND_IN: Britain(England) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ord, p. 114, "Bogie's Braes" (1 text) Roud #5542 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Logan Water" cf. "Logan Braes" NOTES: Ord notes that this is "simply a parody on Logan Braes," and (given its rarity) it might almost be filed with that piece -- but "Logan Braes" isn't in the index yet. - RBW File: Ord114 === NAME: Bohunkus (Old Father Grimes, Old Grimes Is Dead) DESCRIPTION: Old Grimes, "the good old man," was always dressed in a long black coat and was widely respected. He had two sons, (Tobias) and Bohunkus. "They has a suit of clothes... Tobias wore them through the week, Bohunkus on a Sunday." AUTHOR: Words: Albert Gorton Greene? EARLIEST_DATE: 1822 (Providence Gazette) KEYWORDS: father children death clothes humorous FOUND_IN: US(Ap,MW,SE,So) REFERENCES: (9 citations) Belden, pp258-259, "Old Grimes is Dead" (1 text, 1 tune) Randolph 428, "Old Father Grimes" (1 short text, 1 tune) BrownIII 321, "Josephus and Bohunkus" (2 texts plus a fragment) Gardner/Chickering 194, "Old Grimes" (1 fragment) Botkin-NEFolklr, pp. 576-577, "Old Grimes" (1 text) Spaeth-ReadWeep, pp. 83-84, "Bohunkus" (1 text) Spaeth-WeepMore, pp. 150-151, "Old Grimes" (1 text) JHCox 170, "Old Grimes" (1 text, with an "Old Grimes" first verse and the rest unrelated) Pankake-PHCFSB, pp. 156-157, (No title listed) (1 text, tune referenced) ST R428 (Full) Roud #764 RECORDINGS: Ernest V. Stoneman, "Josephus and Bohunkus" (Victor, unissued, 1927) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Auld Lang Syne" (tune) NOTES: This piece seems to fall into two parts, one describing Old Grimes, his clothes, and the respect with which he was treated (so, e.g., in Spaeth's _Weep Some More_ and Botkin's _New England Folklore_). The other describes the humorous exploits of (Tobias/Josephus) and Bohunkus (so in Speath, _Read 'Em and Weep_; also the "B" text and perhaps the "C" fragment in Brown), who shared almost everything, usually with one brother having rather the better of the distribution. In Randolph's version, for instance, Tobias gets the clothes for six days out of seven. On the other hand, in Spaeth, when they went to the theatre, Bohunkus was in the gallery and Josephus in the pit; Bohunkus died of cholera but Josephus "by request"; Bohunkus went to heaven and Josephus to Hell (or, in one book, "Sing Sing"!) Laura Ingalls Wilder (_Little House in the Big Woods_, chapter 10) has a different sort of a plot, in which Grimes's wife is so stingy with cream that he blows away in the wind. Based on the notes in Brown, it appears that Green wrote only the "Old Grimes" text, with the rest coming from elsewhere. But this does not solve the matter, for it appears that Greene was not responsible for the first verse of "Old Grimes"; when he confessed authorship in 1833, he denied writing the opening stanza. Spaeth's "Old Grimes" text is so feeble that it's hard to believe such a thing could enter tradition. And, indeed, no traditional form similar to the printed versions from Spaeth and Botkin seems to have turned up; they all add some sort of comic ending (see Randolph, Cox, Wilder; Brown "A"). My feeble guess is that "Old Grimes" did not become traditional until it picked up some sort of humorous element, perhaps from "Bohunkus," and circulated only in that form. "Bohunkus" very possibly did not enter tradition at all on its own; although the Pankakes have a text which may have come from oral tradition, it is so short that it could be a fragment of a Grimes/Bohunkus conflation. But it's probably best if you examine the matter yourself. This should not be confused with the piece called "Old Roger is Dead (Old Bumpy, Old Grimes, Pompey)" in this collection, which also goes under the title "Old Grimes." - RBW Opie-Oxford2 6, "Old Abram Brown is dead and gone" is the usual first verse for this song: "Old Abram Brown is dead and gone, You'll never see him more; He used to wear a long brown coat That buttoned down before." - BS File: R428 === NAME: Boil dem Cabbage Down: see Bile Them Cabbage Down (File: LoF269) === NAME: Boil Them Cabbage Down: see Bile Them Cabbage Down (File: LoF269) === NAME: Boire un P'tit Coup C'Est Agreable (Sipping is Pleasant) DESCRIPTION: French. Let's go to the woods together, marionette. We will gather apples and hazelnuts. Marie has a marionette; Marie has us both, we will sleep in the same little bed. Chorus: "Sipping is pleasant. Sipping is gentle. Swigging makes the spirit sick" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1959 (Peacock) KEYWORDS: foreignlanguage courting sex drink bawdy nonballad FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Peacock, pp. 508-509, "Boire un P'tit Coup C'Est Agreable" (1 text, 1 tune) File: Pea508 === NAME: Bolakin: see Lamkin [Child 93] (File: C093) === NAME: Bolamkin: see Lamkin [Child 93] (File: C093) === NAME: Bold Belfast Shoemaker, The: see James Ervin [Laws J15] (File: LJ15) === NAME: Bold Ben Hall: see The Death of Ben Hall (File: MA098) === NAME: Bold Benjamin, The DESCRIPTION: Admiral Cole sails for Spain on the Benjamin with five hundred men, to gain silver and gold; he returns with sixty-one men. On their return to Blackwall, mothers and widows lament the lost sailors. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1907 (Firth) KEYWORDS: navy war death mourning ship shanty sailor FOUND_IN: Britain(England(South)) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Vaughan Williams/Lloyd, p. 23, "The Bold Benjamin" (1 text, 1 tune) BBI, ZN464, "Captain Chilver's gone to Sea" ADDITIONAL: C. H. Firth, _Publications of the Navy Records Society_ , 1907 (available on Google Books), p. 89, "The Benjamin's Lamentation for their Sad Loss at Sea by Storms and Tempests" (1 text) Roud #2632 NOTES: This song is a remake of the black-letter ballad (c. 1679) "The Benjamin's Lamentation for their Sad Loss at Sea, etc." - (PJS) File: VWL023 === NAME: Bold Black and Tan, The DESCRIPTION: "Says Lloyd George to MacPherson, I give you the sack To uphold law and order you haven't the knack." The English create the Black and Tan army, which commits atrocities, but the Irish vow they will defeat the English AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1962 (Galvin) KEYWORDS: Ireland rebellion violence Civilwar IRA HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1920-1921 - The Black and Tan War FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (2 citations) PGalvin, pp. 63-64, "The Bold Black and Tan" (1 text, 1 tune) DT,BLACKTAN* CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Boys from County Cork" (subject: Irish Civil War) and references there cf. "The Boys of Kilmichael" (subject: Irish Civil War) cf. "The Burning of Rosslea" (subject: Irish Civil War) cf. "Charlie Hurley" (subject: Irish Civil War) cf. "Down in the Town of Old Bantry" (subject: Irish Civil War) cf. "Mac and Shanahan" (subject: Irish Civil War) cf. "General Michael Collins" (subject: Irish Civil War) cf. "The Piper of Crossbarry" (subject: Irish Civil War) and references there cf. "The Rineen Ambush" (subject: Irish Civil War) cf. "The Quilty Burning" (subject: Irish Civil War) cf. "The Valley of Knockanure" (subject: Irish Civil War) cf. "The Valley of Knockanure (II)" (subject: Irish Civil War) cf. "The Boys of Kilmichae" (subject Irish Civil War) NOTES: By 1920, Irish terrorism had clearly reached the point where the normal authorities could not control it. This was especially true since the regular members of the Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC) were losing their enthusiasm. By this time, though only a few dozen had been killed, their morale was falling; by late 1920, roughly 10% had resigned (see Robert Kee, _Ourselves Alone_, being Volume III of _The Green Flag_, p. 96), and the rest had perhaps lost their edge. The British saw a need for more replacements than could possibly be raised in Ireland itself (Kee, p. 97, says that they eventually recruited some 7000 new police), and started importing potential police from Britain itself. British Prime Minister David Lloyd George therefore recruited a special auxiliary force (known as the Black and Tans) to try to restore order. The Black and Tans are often called the dregs of British society. This is at best an exaggeration. It is true that most were unemployed -- but this is hardly their fault; they were World War I veterans, often taken into the army as soon as they finished school, and then returned home to an England where all the jobs were filled. As Calton Younger puts it (_Ireland's Civil War_, p. 105), "They were not the dregs of English jails, as Irishmen have so often alleged, but bored, unsettled, often workless ex-soldiers, young men whose ordinary pity and honour had been dried up by their long and merciless ordeal in the trenches." One might add that, having been so long under discipline, it took only a few really bad apples to lead them to brutality. Their black and tan uniform was largely an accident; as there were not enough Royal Irish Constabulary uniforms available, the Black and Tans received a mixture of oddments. The Irish correctly accuse the Black and Tans of atrocities -- the British (exhausted by World War I) had little choice but to fight terror with terror. The Black and Tans were the worst mostly because they had no experience of the Irish except during the terrorism. With their comrades being attacked from hiding with terrorist weapons, they took revenge where they could -- even if it meant random revenge which hurt their cause more than it helped. The British did not entirely ignore the Black and Tan problem; Kee reports (p. 117) that 218 of them were dismissed as unsuitable, and a few dozen were subjected to prosecution for their behavior. This did little to control the problem. Technically, the Black and Tans were keeping Ireland in British hands; Richard Mulcahy, the Irish Chief of Staff, who was one of those chiefly responsible for fighting them, observed that, for all the deaths, the Irish rebels had never managed to drive the English out of anything more significant than "a fairly good-sized police barracksÓ (see Kee, p. 145). But military control is not peace. (Just ask any citizen of Iraq.) The results were intolerable. Both sides agreed to a truce in 1921, with elections to follow in Ulster and the rest of Ireland. As it proved, Sinn Fein won overwhelmingly in Ireland and Unionist (i.e. pro-British) parties almost as completely in Ulster. The path to Irish independence was at last clear -- as long as the country was willing to accept partition. The MacPherson of the song is Sir Ian MacPherson, Lloyd George's Irish Minister, who believed in Home Rule and, although he fought to keep order, was not strict enough for the Prime Minister. Macready is Major General Sir Nevil Macready, Commander in Chief of the British forces in Ireland. George Dangerfield describes him as impartial in the Irish struggles; "he disliked both sides" (nationalists and Ulstermen; see Dangerfield, _The Damnable Question_, p. 319; also p. 110, where it is said he had "no sympathy for either Nationalists or Orangemen"). - RBW File: PGa063 === NAME: Bold Brannan on the Moor: see Brennan on the Moor [Laws L7] (File: LL07) === NAME: Bold Daniels (The Roving Lizzie) [Laws K34] DESCRIPTION: Bold Daniels and the "Roving Lizzie" meet a pirate ship which calls for their surrender. Though outnumbered, Daniels and the "Lizzie" fight so effectively that they capture the pirate and take it to (Baltimore) as a prize AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1926 (Rickaby) KEYWORDS: pirate battle ship FOUND_IN: US(MW,NE) Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (6 citations) Laws K34, "Bold Daniels (The Roving Lizzie)" Rickaby 43, "Bold Daniel" (1 text, 1 tune) Dean, pp. 39-40, "Bold Daniel" (1 text) Leach-Labrador 57, "Bold Daniel" (1 text, 1 tune) Colcord, pp. 149-151, "Bold Daniels" (1 text) DT 567, BOLDDANL Roud #1899 File: LK34 === NAME: Bold Deserter, The DESCRIPTION: The singer loves a girl. "She first advised me for to list and afterwards desert" He is hiding, thinking of those he left behind, terrorized even by "the bird that flutters on each tree." He will return. If they "pardon me, I would desert no more" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1825 (broadside, Bodleian Harding B 28(64)) KEYWORDS: courting soldier desertion FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (2 citations) OLochlainn 68, "The Bold Deserter" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BOLDDSRT* Roud #1655 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 28(64), "Bold Deserter" ("My parents rear'd me tenderly, I being their only son)," W. Armstrong (Liverpool), 1820-1824; also Firth c.14(126), Harding B 26(66), 2806 c.15(183), Harding B 19(42), "[The] Bold Deserter"; Firth c.14(128), "The Bold Deserter" or "Why Did I Desert?" File: OLoc068 === NAME: Bold Dickie and Bold Archie: see Archie o Cawfield [Child 188] (File: C188) === NAME: Bold Dighton [Laws A21] DESCRIPTION: The French on Guadeloupe have imprisoned hundreds of seamen. Dighton offers 500 guineas to relieve their distress and is himself imprisoned. He manages to free all the prisoners and, fighting off a pursuing ship, escape to Antigua AUTHOR: P. Russell? EARLIEST_DATE: 1928 (Mackenzie); also in at least some versions of the Forget-Me-Not Songster KEYWORDS: prisoner escape FOUND_IN: US(MW) Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Laws A21, Bold Dighton" Gardner/Chickering 94, "Bold Dighton" (1 text plus mention of 1 more, 1 tune) Mackenzie 83, "Bold Dighton,Ó ÒThe Tiger and the Lion" (2 texts) DT 696, BLDIGHTN Roud #2209 BROADSIDES: LOCSinging, as101290, "Bold Dighton," L. Deming (Boston), 19C NOTES: Mackenzie attributes this to P. Russell (of whom I know nothing) -- but this is based on an advertising blurb on a broadside copy, and we know what those are worth. - RBW "Being the account of an action fought off Gaudaloupe (sic.), in 1805, where ninety-five Americans, and near three hundred Britons made their escape from the prison at that place." (Source: Note included in America Singing as101290 broadside) - BS File: LA21 === NAME: Bold Doherty DESCRIPTION: Doherty loves drink and women. He fools his mother into giving him money. He passes two tinkers fighting over the effect of Doherty on his wife. Doherty goes home. His mother has locked him out. He doesn't mind "for I can get lodging with Nora McGlinn" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1978 (recording, Mary Ann Carolan) KEYWORDS: sex drink mother rake home FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (0 citations) Roud #2992 RECORDINGS: Mary Ann Carolan, "Bold Doherty" (on Voice13) File: RcBolDoh === NAME: Bold Dragoon, The: see The Bold Soldier [Laws M27] (File: LM27) === NAME: Bold English Navvy, The: see The Courting Coat (File: RcWMPBO) === NAME: Bold Escallion and Phoebe: see Corydon and Phoebe (File: K125) === NAME: Bold Fenian Men (I), The DESCRIPTION: "See who comes over the red-blossomed heather, Their green banners kissing the pure mountain air...." Fenians come from all over Ireland, boasting of their victories (!) over the English. Refrain "Out and make way for the bold Fenian men!" AUTHOR: Michael Scanlon EARLIEST_DATE: 1864 ("first printed in Chicago", according to Zimmermann p. 48 fn. 65) KEYWORDS: Ireland rebellion FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (2 citations) PGalvin, pp. 51-52, "The Bold Fenian Men" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 323, "The Bold Fenian Men" (1 text) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 18(168), "The Fenian Men", H. De Marsan (New York), 1864-1878 LOCSinging, sb10126b, "The Fenian Men", H. De Marsan (New York), 1864-1878; also as201000, "The Fenian Men" NOTES: The Fenians were an Irish Independence organization -- but they were also among the most absurdly inept plotters in history. The depth of their feelings are illustrated by the fact that they kept on after an endless litany of failures. (For examples, see "A Fenian Song," "The British Man-of-War," and "The Smashing of the Van (I)." Robert Kee, in _The Bold Fenian Men_, being Volume II of _The Green Flag_, p. 37, perhaps sums up their record best: "This iron, selfless dedication to a cause which, though often viewed with sympathy by the Irish people, was made consistently ludicrous by events, became an important feature of the Fenian movement.) This song, however, appears to come from their heady early days, when they were still growing and had not started to mess up. For this early part of their history, see "James Stephens, the Gallant Fenian Boy." - RBW Broadsides LOCSinging sb10126b and Bodleian Harding B 18(168): H. De Marsan dating per _Studying Nineteenth-Century Popular Song_ by Paul Charosh in American Music, Winter 1997, Vol 15.4, Table 1, available at FindArticles site. Broadsides LOCSinging sb10126b and Bodleian Harding B 18(168) are duplicates. - BS File: PGa051 === NAME: Bold Fisherman, The [Laws O24] DESCRIPTION: The fisherman comes to court the lady. Having tied up his boat, he takes her hand and removes his coat. This reveals three golden chains. Seeing that he is rich, the lady asks forgiveness for calling him a fisherman. The two go home and are married AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1839 (broadside, Bodleian Harding B 11(3114)) KEYWORDS: fishing marriage courting money FOUND_IN: US(NE) Canada(Mar,Newf) Britain(England(Lond)) REFERENCES: (8 citations) Laws O24, "The Bold Fisherman" Flanders/Olney, pp. 218-219, "The Bold Fisherman" (1 text, 1 tune) Creighton/Senior, pp. 112-114, "The Bold Fisherman" (1 text plus 1 fragment, 1 tune) Peacock, pp. 603-604, "The Young Fisherman" (1 text, 1 tune) Leach, pp. 692-693, "The Bold Fisherman" (1 text) PBB, "The Royal Fisherman" (1 text) Sharp-100E 42, "The Bold Fisherman" (1 text, 1 tune) DT 483, FISHBOLD* Roud #291 RECORDINGS: Harry Cox, "The Bold Fisherman" (on Voice01) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 11(3114), "The Bold Fisherman," J. Catnach (London), 1813-1838; also Johnson Ballads 596; Harding B 11(840)=B 11(841), "The Bold Fisherman," H. Such (London), 1863-1885 File: LO24 === NAME: Bold Fusilier, The DESCRIPTION: "A bold fusilier came marching down through Rochester, Off to the wars in the north country, And he sang as he marched the dear old streets of Rochester, 'Wha'll be a sodger for Marlbro' and me?'" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1941 KEYWORDS: soldier recruiting HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1650-1727 - Life of John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough 1701-1714 - War of the Spanish Succession, pitting France and Spain against Britain, Austria, and many smaller nations. Marlborough made a reputation by winning the battles of Blenheim (1704), Ramillies (1706), and Oudenarde (1708) (he fought a draw at Malplaquet in 1709) FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) DT, (COMBSOLD* COMBSOL2) NOTES: The currency of this song in oral tradition is rather open to debate. This is not due to any defect in the song itself, but its precise parallels to "Waltzing Matilda," which has made the history of the song rather a fetish for Australians. The facts: 1. There are no early collections of the song, and some have judged the language inappropriate for the early seventeenth century. There do not appear to be broadside prints. (The verses quoted in the Digital Tradition are modern reconstructions by Peter Coe of the extant fragments remembered by recent informants) 2. The song clearly *refers to* events of the time of the War of the Spanish Succession, when Marlborough was the English general in chief and when the recruiting sergeant still roamed the streets sweeping up recruits. Does this date the song to the seventeenth century? The only other alternative I've seen is a suggestion that the song was written during the Boer War (1899-1902) as some sort of parody on the Churchills. I find this hard to believe. The question will probably never be settled to everyone's satisfaction, barring discovery of an early broadside print or the like. - RBW File: DTcombso === NAME: Bold Grenadier, The: see One Morning in May (To Hear the Nightingale Sing) [Laws P14] (File: LP14) === NAME: Bold Hawke DESCRIPTION: Sir Edward Hawke takes Royal George out of Torbay December 18 and December 28 fights a French fleet of five ships. They sink Lily and burn Rising Sun and Glory. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1977 (Lehr/Best) KEYWORDS: battle navy sea France HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: Nov 20, 1759 - "Sir Edward Hawke [defeats] the Brest fleet... at Quiberon Bay on the coast of France" (Lehr/Best) FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Lehr/Best 10, "Bold Hawke" (1 text, 1 tune) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Heart of Oak" (context of the Battle of Quiberon Bay) NOTES: A 1760 Bodleian broadside, "Admiral Hawke's welcome to old England, on his compleating the ruin of the French navy," says about the battle that "Five Ships did, reluctant, the Combat sustain While eight, trembling, sneaked up the River Vilaine And the rest flew, like Feathers, all over the Main" -- shelfmark 5 Delta 278(16). Lehr/Best: "This battle was recorded in British history as one of the greatest naval victories of all time." Hawke had been driven to Torbay by a November gale, giving the French a chance to sail from Brest (Source: Royal Navy site re Royal Naval History "The Battle of Quiberon Bay 1759"). Torbay is in Devon, on the English Channel, though it may have tickled Newfoundlanders to transfer the base in their mind's eye to Torbay, seven miles north of St John's. - BS Sir Edward Hawke (1710-1781) was, after Anson, the chief admiral of the late phase of the War of the Austrian Succession (1740-1748), and was to prove a brilliant innovator. Lacking political connections (he was the son of an unimportant barrister), he rose to the rank of captain on merit. Early in the war, he had disobeyed the orders of his commander, Admirl Mathews, at Toulon, capturing the only significant prize -- an affair resulting in a nasty set of charges and counter-charges (see Arthur Herman, _To Rule the Waves_, pp. 266-267). It nearly cost Hawke his job; he was slated to be "promoted" from active-duty Captain to half-pay (inactive) Rear Admiral. But George II himself objected, and Hawke was kept on (Herman, p. 271) -- and assigned to minor duties. He then got lucky. He had been assigned to what amounted to a desk job, but briefly assumed command of the Western Squadron when Vice Admiral Warren came down with scurvy. And, during what was supposed to be a minor tour of duty, the French tried to break a convoy out of Brest. Hawke caught up with them and won a brilliant victory at the second battle of Cape Finisterre in October 1747 (Herman, pp. 271-273). From then on, his career was secure. He took good advantage, revising naval tactics (modifying the line-ahead method of attack and also creating a system of blockade based on a few ships close in to watch for breakouts while the main fleet stood out to sea to guard against other fleets arriving) -- and solving the scurvy problem by having supply ships regularly bring fresh food to his ships on patrol. Never again would ships on patrol duty be forced to return to port every few weeks, though scurvy would still bother sailors on long-distance voyages (Herman, p. 280). The Seven Years' War had initially gone well for France, but by 1759, they were taking a beating in Canada, and decided to try for an assault on Britain (yes, this sounds very much like Napoleon and the Trafalgar campaign; see Walter R. Borneman, _The French and Indian War_, Harper-Collins, 2006, pp. 238-239). This required the French to concentrate their fleet. The key to this was getting the force in Brest down to Quiberon Bay. Admiral Hawke was blockading the port. Eventually, helped by weather that troubled the British fleet the French got out (see Alfred Thayer Mahan, _The Influence of Sea Power Upon History_, pp. 300-301) -- but Hawke caught up with them at Quiberon Bay, chased them when they sailed toward shore, and inflicted a signal defeat. As Mahan says (p. 304), "All possibility of an invasion of England passed away with the destruction of the Brest fleet. The battle of Novermber 20, 1759 was the Trafalgar of this warÓ (compare Borneman, pp. 242-243, which in fact quotes Mahan on the point). Quiberon Bay itself is the bay off Lorient in Brittany, which after the unification of France gradually became one of France's chief havens. This song appears rather confused; the dates match neither Quiberon Bay nor Cape Finisterre, and neither do the circumstances. (E.g. Quiberon Bay went as it did largely because it was fought in terrible storms.) The description in the song may be based on the fact that the French fleet lost five ships at Quiberon Bay, though the names are wrong. The song is correct in calling Hawke's flagship the _Royal George_. Hawke's exploits seem to have inspired several songs and poems; in addition to this and the broadside mentioned by Ben, C. H. Firth, _Publications of the Navy Records Society_ , 1907 (available on Google Books), p. 197, has an item called "Admiral Hawke," and on p. 217 prints "Hawke's Engagement," with "Lord Anson and Hawke" found on page 225. The Roud index lists a number of broadsides of "Admiral Hawke" and so forth. But this appears to be the only traditional song about Hawke, and even it barely survives. - RBW File: LeBe010 === NAME: Bold Irvine: see James Ervin [Laws J15] (File: LJ15) === NAME: Bold Jack Donahoe DESCRIPTION: The singer sadly recalls the death of Donahoe. He and his companions are overtaken by three policemen. Walmsley refuses to fight, and Donahoe is left alone. He is shot and killed AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1941 (Beck); c.1870 (Zimmermann) KEYWORDS: Australia death cowardice fight outlaw HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: Sept 1, 1830 (the ballad says Aug 24) - Jack Donahue, formerly of Dublin (transported 1823), is killed by police near Sydney FOUND_IN: Australia US(MW) Ireland REFERENCES: (5 citations) Meredith/Anderson, pp. 63-64, "Bold Jack Donahoe" (1 text, 1 tune) Beck 89, "Bold Jack Donohue" (1 text) Manifold-PASB, pp. 50-51, "Bold Jack Donahue" (1 text, 1 tune) O'Conor, pp. 22-23, "Bold Jack Donahoe" (1 text) Zimmermann 76, "Bold Jack O'Donoghue" (2 texts, 1 tune) Roud #611 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Jack Donahue" [Laws L22] cf. "Jim Jones at Botany Bay" (tune) cf. "The Wreck of the Eliza" (tune) cf. "The Aranmore Disaster" (tune) SAME_TUNE: Jim Jones at Botany Bay (File: PBB096) The Wreck of the Eliza (File: Ran056) The Aranmore Disaster (File: Ran125) NOTES: This ballad often mixes with "Jack Donahue" (for obvious reasons), and they are lumped by Roud, but the two can be distinguished by the mention of Donahue's companions at the time of Donahoe's capture. Some scholars think this the older of the two. For historical background on Donahue, see "Jack Donahue" [Laws L22]. - RBW Zimmermann 76 makes a Fenian connection: "I turned out as a Fenian boy as I'd often done before"; "...that Fenian bold called Jack O'Donoghue." Zimmermann: "The name of Captain Mackey ["There was MacNamara, Andrew Ward, and Captain Mackey too, They were the chiefs and associates of bold Jack Donoghue"] helps us to date this version. William Mackey commanded the Fenians at Ballyknockane, County Cork, in an attack upon the police barracks during the rising of 1867. He was sentenced to 12 years' penal servitude in March 1868." The connection with Jack O'Donoghue, killed in 1830, would -- if Zimmermann is right -- be fictitious. - BS Zimmermann's version is attributed to "John McCarthy." But the list of co-conspirators is unusual at best. The version of this song I know best lists Donohue's companions as "Jacky Underwood, and Webber and Walmsley too." According to Harry Nunn's _Bushrangers: A Pictorial History_, p. 16, the members of the Underwood Gang (active 1820-1832) were "William Underwood, John Donohue [not O'Donohue, note], George Kilroy, William Smith, John Walms[l]ey, John Webber and others." It notes that "Donohue and Webber shot by police 1830. Underwood shot 1832. Walmsley turned informer, Smith and Kilroy hanged 1832." Thus my guess would be that McCarthy took an existing song and converted it for Fenian purposes. - RBW File: MA063 === NAME: Bold Jack Donahoo: see Jack Donahue [Laws L22] (File: LL22) === NAME: Bold Jack Donahue (II): see Jack Donahue [Laws L22] (File: LL22) === NAME: Bold Kidd, the Pirate DESCRIPTION: The singer's ship is newly put to sea when she spots a pirate. The mate identifies the ship as Captain Kidd's. The captain turns about and flees. After a long chase, she escapes AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1945 (Flanders/Olney) KEYWORDS: escape pirate sea HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1699 - Arrest of Captain William Kidd in Boston May 23, 1701 - Execution of Captain Kidd FOUND_IN: US(NE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Flanders/Olney, pp. 16-18, "Bold Kidd, the Pirate" (1 text, 1 tune) ST FO016 (Partial) Roud #528 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Captain Kidd" [Laws K35] cf. "The Bold Princess Royal" [Laws K29] (plot) NOTES: For background on Captain Kidd, see the notes to "Captain Kidd" [Laws K35]. It seems highly unlikely, however, that this song is contemporary with Kidd; it doesn't appear to fit Kidd's actual behavior. - RBW File: FO016 === NAME: Bold Larkin (Bull Yorkens) DESCRIPTION: In 1855 the Elizabeth runs for land in a heavy sea. Andrew Shean/Sheehan, a sailor, falls into the sea. Captain Bull Yorkens reluctantly orders the rescue attempt abandoned. At St John's he consoles the parents and offers a prayer for Sheehan. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1923 (Murphy) KEYWORDS: death drowning mourning ship sea father mother sailor storm FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Peacock, pp. 907-908, "Bull Yorkens" (1 text, 1 tune) Lehr/Best 11, "Bold Larkin" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #4420 and 9807 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "New York to Queenstown" (theme) ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Loss of Andrew Sheehan NOTES: According to Lehr, "'Bold Larkin,' also known as 'The Loss of Andrew Sheehan,' was composed by John Grace. Sheehan was a native of St John's. In a version of the song printed in Murphy's _Songs Their Fathers Sung_, the date of the event is '55 and not '65 as in our version. Larkin is also written Harkin in Murphy's book." Cape Spear is less than four miles from St John's harbour. - BS File: Pea907 === NAME: Bold Lieutenant, The: see The Lady of Carlisle [Laws O25] (File: LO25) === NAME: Bold Lover Gay [Laws P23] DESCRIPTION: The young man wins shy May's heart with promises of an easy life and fine clothes. He takes her to his home across the sea. His promises prove false; a year later she is homesick and pregnant, with no fine clothes AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1909 (Belden) KEYWORDS: seduction marriage poverty pregnancy FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Laws P23, "Bold Lover Gay" Belden, pp. 208-209, "All on Account of a Bold Lover Gay" (1 text) DT 505, LOVERGAY Roud #996 File: LP23 === NAME: Bold M'Dermott: see Bold McDermott Roe (File: OLoc028) === NAME: Bold Manan the Pirate [Laws D15] DESCRIPTION: The pirate Bold (Manning/Manan) captures a merchant ship. To prevent the sailors from fighting over a young woman found on board, Manning kills her. But (the next day) Manning encounters a warship and the pirate ship is sunk AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1916 KEYWORDS: pirate homicide sea FOUND_IN: US(MW) Canada(Mar,Newf) Ireland REFERENCES: (5 citations) Laws D15, "Bold Manan the Pirate" Peacock, pp. 848-851, "William Craig and Bold Manone" (1 texts, 2 tunes) Ranson, pp. 59-61, "Manning, The Pirate" (1 text) Doerflinger, pp. 139-141, "Bold Manning" (1 text, 1 tune) DT 752, BLDMANAN Roud #673 File: LD15 === NAME: Bold Manning: see Bold Manan the Pirate [Laws D15] (File: LD15) === NAME: Bold McCarthy (The City of Baltimore) [Laws K26] DESCRIPTION: Bold McCarthy sails from Liverpool (as a stowaway) on the City of Baltimore. An argument with the mate turns into a fight, and the Irishman handily defeats the mate (and several others). The captain appoints McCarthy an officer AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1929 (Greenleaf/Mansfield) KEYWORDS: sea fight rambling FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar,Newf) Ireland REFERENCES: (10 citations) Laws K26, "Bold McCarthy (The City of Baltimore)" Doerflinger, pp. 128-129, "The City of Baltimore (Bold McCarthy)" (1+ texts, 1 tune) Greenleaf/Mansfield 174, "Bold McCarthy" (1 text) Peacock, pp. 860-861, "Bold McCarthy" (1 text, 1 tune) Smith/Hatt, p. 46, "The City of Baltimore" (1 fragment) Creighton-NovaScotia 58, "City of Baltimore" (1 text, 1 tune) Ranson, pp. 54-55, "The City of Baltimore" (1 text, 1 tune)\ Ives-DullCare, pp. 187-189,242, "Bold McCarthy" (1 text, 1 tune) Manny/Wilson 62, "The City of Baltimore (Bold McCarthy)" (1 text, 1 tune) DT 408, CITYBALT* CITYBAL2 Roud #1800 NOTES: The Inman line of steamers, active starting in 1850, had a history of naming ships "The City of X," e.g. the _City of Philadelphia_, the _City of Manchester_ (see John Malcolm Brinnin, _The Sway of the Grand Saloon: A Social History of the North Atlantic_ (1986, pp. 208-209). I have found no references to the _City of Baltimore_ in my sources, but that may be just as well; Inman line ships seem to have become famous mostly for spectacular wrecks. The line was at its peak from about 1855-1880. - RBW File: LK26 === NAME: Bold McDermott Roe DESCRIPTION: McDermott Roe heads the Roscommon Defenders but is taken, tried and convicted. He is taken to Dublin to hang in spite of his parents' wealth. "To back the poor against the rich with them did not agree, And so McDermott Roe must die in shame and misery" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1939 (OLochlainn); c.1867 (broadside, Bodleian 2806 b.10(12)); c.1800? (Zimmermann) KEYWORDS: battle rebellion trial execution Ireland patriotic FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (4 citations) OLochlainn 28, "Bold McDermott Roe" (1 text, 1 tune) Zimmermann 23, "Bold McDermott" (2 texts, 1 tune) Moylan 43, "Bold McDermott Roe" (1 text, 1 tune) Healy-OISBv2, pp. 50-51, "(A New Song Called) Bold M'Dermott" (1 text) ST OLoc028 (Partial) Roud #3021 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, 2806 b.10(12), "Bold M'Dermott," W. Birmingham (Dublin), c.1867; also Harding B 19(83), "Bold M'Dermott" NOTES: In the late eighteenth century, as more legitimate Irish nationalists combined to form the United Irishmen, a more extreme branch went on to form the Defenders, devoted to defending Catholicism against the Protestants, notably in Ulster. The Defenders, though they started mostly by demonstrating against the Protestant Peep o' Day Boys, eventually attacked a group of the latter -- who, though outnumbered, were victorious and eventually turned into the Orange Society. The precipitating event was the so-called Battle of the Diamond, a riot "won" by the Protestants in September 1795 (see Robert Kee, _The Most Distressful Country_, being Volume I of _The Green Flag_, p. 71). The Defenders, poor and Catholic, continued to grow after this, and the British, with their brilliant ability to always do the wrong thing in Ireland, cracked down ever harder. This song no doubt tells of one of the victims of that oppression -- though one suspects that McDermott Roe was probably guilty of more than just politics; the Defenders engaged in quite a bit of looting and burning. For another song on the battles between these two groups, see "The Noble Ribbon Boys." For the Battle of the Diamond itself, see "The Battle of the Diamond." - RBW File: OLoc028 === NAME: Bold McIntyres, The DESCRIPTION: "In County Kildare on Hibernia shore Lived a fam'ly of John McIntyres. There was Mike and Tim, the twins, as they stand upon their pins; We're the elegant bold McIntyres." The song continues through the rest of the family AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1940 (recording, Arthur Moseley) KEYWORDS: family nonballad moniker FOUND_IN: US(MW) REFERENCES: (0 citations) Roud #5413 RECORDINGS: Arthur "Happy" Moseley, "The Bold McIntyres" (AFS, 1940; on LC55) File: RecTboMc === NAME: Bold Nelson's Praise DESCRIPTION: A song in praise of Lord Nelson and other English heroes. Details are sketchy. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1916 KEYWORDS: war navy drink HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1758-1805 - Life of Horatio Nelson, Britain's greatest naval hero, killed at Trafalgar FOUND_IN: Britain(England) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Sharp-100E 88, "Bold Nelson's Praise" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #1574 File: ShH88 === NAME: Bold Northwestern Man, The [Laws D1] DESCRIPTION: A band of Indians, come to sell furs, find weapons aboard the "Lady of Washington"; they try to capture the ship. Eventually they are defeated, losing some seventy of their number. The Europeans raid the Indian village to reclaim their property AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: KEYWORDS: fight Indians(Am.) HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1791 - Attack on the Lady Washington FOUND_IN: US(NE) Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Laws D1, "The Bold Northwestern Man" DT 843, BOLDNW* Roud #2227 File: LD01 === NAME: Bold O'Donahue DESCRIPTION: "Well, here I am from Paddy's land... I've broke the hearts of all the girls for miles round Keady town." The singer boasts of his ability to court, wishes his love were a rose so he could rain on her, and speaks of courting Queen Victoria's daughter AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1975 (fragment in the Sam Henry collection from 1924) KEYWORDS: courting flowers FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (2 citations) SHenry H10i, p. 3, "(Old Choir Rhymes -- Additional Verses, text #1)" (1 text) DT, BOLDODON NOTES: The Sam Henry text (reportedly sung to the tune "Irish") is only a fragment, a dialect version of I wish my love was a red rose Beside yon garden wall, And I myself a drop of dew Upon that rose to fall. This (half)-stanza almost certainly floats, but the only song I've met it in is "Bold O'Donahue," so here it files. - RBW File: HHH010i === NAME: Bold Peddler, The: see The Bold Pedlar and Robin Hood [Child 132] (File: C132) === NAME: Bold Pedlar and Robin Hood, The [Child 132] DESCRIPTION: Robin Hood and Little John meet a pedlar. Neither Robin nor John can out-wrestle the pedlar. They exchange names, and the pedlar (Gamble Gold, a murderer) proves to be Robin's cousin. They celebrate the reunion in a tavern AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1775 KEYWORDS: Robinhood fight return robbery family outlaw FOUND_IN: Britain(England(South,North),Scotland(Aber)) US(NE) Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (12 citations) Child 132, "The Bold Pedlar and Robin Hood" (1 text) Bronson 132, "The Bold Pedlar and Robin Hood" (14 versions+ 2 in addenda) BarryEckstormSmyth pp. 457-461, "The Bold Pedlar and Robin Hood" (1 songster text plus extensive notes) Flanders/Brown, pp. 217-218, "Bold Robing Hood" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #14} Flanders/Olney, pp. 67-69, "Bold Robin Hood and the Pedlar" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #3} Flanders-Ancient3, pp. 101-106, "The Bold Pedlar and Robin Hood" (2 texts plus a fragment, 2 tunes) {Bronson's #3, #14} Creighton/Senior, pp. 67-69, "The Bold Pedlar and Robin Hood" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #7} Creighton-NovaScotia 6, "Bold Pedlar and Robin Hood" (1 text, called "Pedlar Bold" by the singer, 1 tune) {Bronson's #12} Leach, pp. 383-385, "The Bold Pedlar and Robin Hood" (1 text) Niles 46, "The Bold Pedlar and Robin Hood" (1 text, 1 tune) Vaughan Williams/Lloyd, p. 88, "Robin Hood and the Pedlar" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #5, emended} DT 132, RHPEDLAR* RHDPDLR2 Roud #333 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 11(381), "The Bold Pedlar and Robin Hood," J. Catnach (London), 1813-1838; also Harding B 11(380), Harding B 11(382), "The Bold Pedlar and Robin Hood" Murray, Mu23-y4:007, "The Bold Pedlar and Robin Hood," J. Catnach (London), 1813-1838 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Jock the Leg and the Merry Merchant" [Child 282] (plot) cf. "Robin Hood Newly Revived" [Child 128] (theme) ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Bold Peddler NOTES: For background on the Robin Hood legend, see the notes on "A Gest of Robyn Hode" [Child 117]. Fully half the Robin Hood ballads in the Child collection (numbers (121 -- the earliest and most basic example of the type), 123, 124, 125, 126, 127, 128, 130, 131, 132, (133), (134), (135), (136), (137), (150)) share all or part of the theme of a stranger meeting and defeating Robin, and being invited to join his band. Most of these are late, but it makes one wonder if Robin ever won a battle. Child considered this a variation of "Robin Hood Newly Revived," but Bronson argues that this is not so. - RBW File: C132 === NAME: Bold Peter Clarke: see Peter Clarke (File: MA100) === NAME: Bold Pirate, The [Laws K30] DESCRIPTION: A British ship is overhauled by pirates. Though outnumbered, the sailors beat off the pirates. A broadside prevents the pirate's escape. The pirate ship is hauled back to England, and the sailors are made rich by the spoils AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1950 (Creighton/Senior); 19C (broadside, Bodleian Firth c.12(64)) KEYWORDS: pirate ship money fight FOUND_IN: US(NE) Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (5 citations) Laws K30, "The Bold Pirate" Creighton/Senior, pp. 229-230, "Pirate Song" (1 text, 1 tune) Creighton-Maritime, pp. 150-151, "On the Twenty-First of May" (1 text, 1 tune) Ives-NewBrunswick, pp. 128-130, "The Bold Pirate" (1 text, 1 tune) DT 411, BOLDPRT Roud #984 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Firth c.12(64), "The Bold Pirate," J. Scott (Pittenweem), 19C File: LK30 === NAME: Bold Poachers, The DESCRIPTION: Three brothers go poaching one night in January. The sound of their guns brings the gamekeepers. One shoots a gamekeeper, then another. The brothers are taken prisoner; two are sentenced to be transported, the third is hanged AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1862 (broadside, Bodleian Firth c.19(47)) KEYWORDS: violence crime execution poaching punishment transportation death homicide FOUND_IN: Britain(England) REFERENCES: (2 citations) MacSeegTrav 98, "The First Day in October" (1text, 1 tune); this entry also contains 1 nearly-complete text for "The Bold Poachers" (collected by E. J. Moeran, not by them) DT, POACHRS Roud #1686 RECORDINGS: Wiggie Smith, "The Oakham Poachers" (on Voice18) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Firth c.19(47), "Oakham Pachers [sic] ("Young men in every station"), E.M.A. Hodges (London), 1855-1861; also 2806 c.15(253), Harding B 20(199), "Oakam Poachers" or "The Lamentation of Young Perkins"; Firth c.19(63), Johnson Ballads 2038, "The Oakham Poachers" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Keepers and Poachers" (plot) cf. "The Poacher's Fate" [Laws L14] (subject) NOTES: MacColl & Seeger call "The First Day in October" a composite, and so it is, but the similarities to "The Bold Poachers," particularly the use of the name Parkins for the guilty young man, have persuaded me to place it here. - PJS File: McCST098 === NAME: Bold Princess Royal, The [Laws K29] DESCRIPTION: The Princess Royal is overtaken by an unknown ship which tries to come alongside. The captain realizes that the other is a pirate, and safely outruns the other. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: c.1870 (broadside, NLScotland L.C.Fol.70(145)) KEYWORDS: ship pirate escape FOUND_IN: US(NE,SE) Canada(Mar,Newf) Britain(England) Ireland REFERENCES: (16 citations) Laws K29, "The Bold Princess Royal" Doerflinger, pp. 142-143, "The Bold Princess Royal" (2 texts, 2 tunes) Colcord, pp. 148-149, "The Fair Princess Royal" (1 text, 1 tune) Hugill, p. 421, "The Princess Royal" (1 text, 1 tune) Greenleaf/Mansfield 35, "The Bold Princess Royal" (1 text, 1 tune) Peacock, pp. 835-836, "The Bold Princess Royal" (1 texts, 2 tunes) Leach-Labrador 75, "Bold Princess Royal" (1 text) Creighton-NovaScotia 53, "Bold Princess Royal" (1 text, 1 tune) Creighton-Maritime, p. 153, "The Bold Princess Royal" (1 text, 1 tune) Ranson, p. 91, "Kelly, the Pirate" (1 text, 1 tune) Ives-NewBrunswick, pp. 126-128, "The Bold Prince of Royal" (1 text, 1 tune) Warner 150, "The Prince Boys" (1 text, 1 tune, incorrectly equated with Laws K39) BrownII 119, "The Lorena Bold Crew" (1 fragment) Chappell-FSRA 26, "Buxter's Bold Crew" (1 text, 1 tune) Copper-SoBreeze, pp. 206-207, "The Bold 'Princess Royal'" (1 text, 1 tune) DT 410, PRNCROYL* Roud #528 RECORDINGS: Harry Cox, "The Bold 'Princess Royal'" (on Voice12) Sam Larner, "The Bold Princess Royal" (on SLarner01, SLarner02, HiddenE) Bob Roberts, "The Bold Princess Royal" (on LastDays) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Firth c.12(63), "The Bold Princess Royal," H. Disley (London), 1860-1883; also Firth b.25(136), 2806 b.11(9), Harding B 11(384)[some illegibility], "The Bold Princess Royal"; Firth c.12(65), "The Old Princess Royal, and the Pirate Ship" Murray, Mu23-y4:019, "Bold Princess Royal," unknown, 19C NLScotland, L.C.Fol.70(145), "Bold Princess Royal," unknown, c.1870 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Bold Kidd, the Pirate" (plot) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Buxter's Bold Crew Prince of Royal NOTES: Greenleaf/Mansfield names the ship Prince of Royal and refers to a variant that calls the ship Royal Apprentice. In Ranson's version the usually anonymous pirate announces "This is Kelly, the Pirate"; that is the only mention of the name that gives the version its title. Yates, Musical Traditions site _Voice of the People suite_ "Notes - Volume 12" - 11.9.02: "Colcord dates this song to the beginning of the American War of Independence." - BS There were a number of British ships named _Princess Royal_; including a battlecruiser that fought at the Battle of Jutland in 1916 (unlike several of her sister ships, she survived). But the most famous was probably the flagship of the fleet of Admiral John Byron (1723-1786). Byron served in the Caribbean in the late 1770s, with limited results. At the Battle of Grenada, his fleet was mauled by a superior French force, and he ended up fleeing the fight. This, I would guess, is the basis of Colcord's date (though she also mentions the usage of "glass" for an hour, a usage which died out about that time). If Colcord's guess is accurate, is it possible that this was inspired as some sort of slur on Byron for fleeing the battle? - RBW File: LK29 === NAME: Bold Privateer, The [Laws O32] DESCRIPTION: (Johnny) tells (Polly) that he must go to sea. She begs him to stay safe at home. (He points out that her friends dislike him and her brothers threaten him. He offers to exchange rings with her), and promises to return and marry her if his life is spared AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1918 (Cecil Sharp collection); +1891 (Kidson, _Traditional Tunes_) KEYWORDS: sea farewell FOUND_IN: US(Ap,MW,SE) Britain(England(North)) Ireland Canada(Ont) REFERENCES: (6 citations) Laws O32, "The Bold Privateer" Randolph 233, "The Union Volunteer" (1 text, 1 tune, with a "Union Volunteer" substituted for the "Bold Privateer" but no other substantial changes) Eddy 79, "The Bold Privateer" (1 text) SharpAp 138, "The Bold Privateer" (1 text, 1 tune) SHenry H514, pp. 297-298, "The Bold Privateer" (1 text, 1 tune) DT 486, BOLDPRIV BLDPRIV2* Roud #1000 RECORDINGS: Tom Brandon, "The Bold Privateer" (on Ontario1) Robert Cinnamond, "The Wild Privateer" (on IRRCinnamond03) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Pleasant and Delightful" (meter) cf. "Adieu Sweet Lovely Nancy" (lyrics) NOTES: Some versions of this are so mixed with "Adieu Sweet Lovely Nancy" that they might almost be one song. But there are sufficient distinct versions that I think they must be considered separate songs. The Sam Henry text contains an interesting reference, "The French they are treacherous, right very well you know, Did they not kill their own poor king not so very long ago?" Presumably this refers to the execution of Louis XVI in 1793, though there are other possibilities, including Louis's son Louis XVII, who died in 1795, some say by poison. Huntington placed his version of "Our Captain Calls All Hands (Fighting for Strangers)" here, and early editions of the Index did the same, but while there is some similarity in theme, they are certainly separate songs. - RBW File: LO32 === NAME: Bold Rake, The DESCRIPTION: Johnny meets Sally at Culgreany chapel. He promises to marry her. They spend two nights and all her money together and he decides to leave. Johnny will confess to his clergy; if forgiven he will "go home to Longacre and live with my own lawful wife" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1939 (OLochlainn); c.1867 (broadside, Bodleian 2806 b.9(60)) KEYWORDS: seduction infidelity promise separation rake wife FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) OLochlainn 37, "The Bold Rake" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #3036 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, 2806 b.9(60), "The Bold Rake" ("I am a bold rake and this nation I travel'd all round)" , P. Brereton (Dublin), c.1867 LOCSinging, as101320, "The Bold Rake," P. Brereton (Dublin), 19C NOTES: Broadside LOCSinging as101320 appears to be the same as Bodleian 2806 b.9(60) printed by P. Brereton (Dublin). - BS File: OLoc037 === NAME: Bold Ranger, The DESCRIPTION: The huntsmen go out to seek the fox: "Come and hunt Bull (Ranger) (Reynard?) Among the hills and rocks." Along the way, they meet various people, who may tell them where the fox has gone AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1917 (Cox); Halliwell in 1849 published something that may be the source, or an edited text, or, well, your guess is as good as ours.... KEYWORDS: hunting animal FOUND_IN: US(Ap,MW,SE,So) REFERENCES: (7 citations) Randolph 76, "Bold Ranger" (2 texts, 1 tune) Eddy 84, "The Ranger" (2 texts, 1 tune) JHCox 164, "The Ranger" (1 text) BrownII 190, "Three Jolly Welshmen" (5 text, but only "A" and "B" are "Three Jolly Huntsmen"; "C," "D," and "E" appear to belong here) Chappell-FSRA 101, "The Foxes" (1 text, 1 tune, a bare fragment with no mention of Reynard; it includes only the conversations with the people the hunters meet, and might possibly belong to other members of this song group) Scarborough-SongCatcher, pp. 7+10, "Tom Redman" (1 text; tune on p. 385) SharpAp 214, "The Three Huntsmen" (1 text, 1 tune) ST R076 (Partial) Roud #796 RECORDINGS: J. L. Peters, "How Happy is the Sportsman" (AFS, 1946; on LC55) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Bold Reynard the Fox (Tallyho! Hark! Away!)" (form, theme, lyrics) cf. "Three Jolly Huntsmen" (theme, some lyrics) NOTES: This appears very much to be a worn-down version of "Bold Reynard the Fox (Tallyho! Hark! Away!)," possibly influenced by "Three Jolly Huntsmen." For further discussion, see the notes to "Bold Reynard." It's worth noting that Roud subdivides this song differently, with "The Hare's Dream" being one group and "Bold Reynard" plus the "Bold Ranger" being the other. - RBW File: R076 === NAME: Bold Reynard ("A Good Many Gentlemen") DESCRIPTION: "A good many gentlemen take great delight in hunting bold Reynard, the fox, for he... lives upon fat geese and ducks." The hunters give chase, and catch and kill the fox. They go home and rejoice at having taken the rogue AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1825 (broadside, Bodleian Harding B 28(261)) KEYWORDS: animal hunting FOUND_IN: Britain(England(South)) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Kennedy 243, "Bold Reynard" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, REYNFOX Roud #1868 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 28(261), "Sly Reynard the Fox" ("Some gentlemen take great delight"), W. Armstrong (Liverpool), 1820-1824 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Bold Reynard the Fox (Tallyho! Hark! Away!)" (theme) cf. "The Echoing Horn" (theme) cf. "Joe Bowman" (theme) NOTES: Although this song has points of similarity to "Bold Reynard the Fox (Tallyho! Hark! Away!)," Kennedy and others clearly state that they are different -- and indeed, they have few details in common except that they describe a foxhunt. - RBW File: K243 === NAME: Bold Reynard the Fox (Tallyho! Hark! Away!) DESCRIPTION: "The first morning of March in the year '33" the King's County fox hunt finally takes Reynard. He asks for pen, ink and paper to write his will. He leaves his estate and money to the hunters and backs it up by giving them a check on the National Bank. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1839 (Croker-PopularSongs); before 1839 (broadside, Bodleian Firth b.34(114)) KEYWORDS: animal hunting political lastwill Ireland humorous FOUND_IN: US(So) Britain(England(West)) Ireland REFERENCES: (6 citations) O'Conor, p. 124, "The Fox Hunt" (1 text) Croker-PopularSongs, p. 208, "Reynard the Fox" (1 fragment) OCanainn, pp. 84-85, "The Cork National Hunt" (2 texts, 1 tune) Leather, pp. 265-266, "The Fox-Hunting Chase" (1 text); also probably pp. 264-265, "The Herefordshire Fox-Chase" (1 text), though the latter appears reworked or mixed DT, REYNRDFX RENOLDS ADDITIONAL: Kathleen Hoagland, editor, One Thousand Years of Irish Poetry (New York, 1947), pp. 295-296, "Reynard the Fox" (1 text) Roud #2349 RECORDINGS: Eugene Jemison, "Come All You Merry Hunters" (on Jem01) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Firth b.34(114), "The Fox Chase"("The sun had just peep'd his head o'er the hills"), J. Catnach (London), 1813-1838; also Harding B 11(1255), Firth c.19(120)[some words not legible], "The Fox Chase"; Johnson Ballads 505, "Fox Chase" or "Tally Ho Hark Away" [all versions end with the fox being taken] CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Hare's Dream" (lyrics) cf. "Bold Reynard ('A Good Many Gentlemen')" (theme) cf. "The Bold Ranger" (form, theme, lyrics) cf. "The Echoing Horn" (theme) cf. "Joe Bowman" (theme) cf. "The Call of Quantrell (form) cf. "The Kielder Hunt" (subject, phrase) cf. "Donagh Hill" (form, hunting theme) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Balriginor Bull Raider NOTES: This is a real mess -- so much so that every new text I've turned up has forced me to reclassify the old ones. There seem to be four related families of texts here. This is lyrically very close to the Irish song "The Hare's Dream," but after much hesitation I've split that off because it's found mostly if not entirely in Ireland (perhaps only in Ulster), and it's about a hare, not a fox. That leaves three versions with English roots: 1. The political "Bold Reynard" versions. 2. The Fox Chase versions not ending in the death of the fox 3. The Fox Chase versions ending in the death of the fox The first of these seems to exist in fragments, so although the political content seems clear, it's not obvious just which politicians are involved. The second is the one I have heard recorded -- though it came from a bunch of folkies, so they may have preferred a non-hunting version. My original description of that form was: "The hunters set out in pursuit of Reynard the Fox. Crafty Reynard leads hunters and hounds on many a wild goose chase. At last the hunters give up, and Reynard returns to his snug den. (He sends the hunters a cheque to pay for their losses!)" The third, which is the basis for the description, is what appears in Leather and O'Conor. Possibly these types should be split, but it would be impossible to split fragments and one has to suspect that all the rewriting is deliberate. In the United States (or possibly in England, if a fragment from Baring-Gould constitutes evidence), the song changed even more dramatically -- so much so that, after some hesitation and discussion, we reclassified it as a separate song, "The Bold Ranger." The song is still about a hunt (sometimes for "Reynard," but now often for "Rainer" or "Ranger"), but the result is almost a moniker song, with verses perhaps influenced by "Three Jolly Huntsmen." No longer does the song start in the victim's lair; no longer is Reynard leading the huntsmen astray; rather, they meet various people who tell them how to find the fox. The choruses in this version are often extravagant, though the verse retains the "Tallyho" form. Leather reports that her version was written by a Richard Matthews "in the reign of George III." Matthews may well have been responsible for a particular version, but without more evidence, I hesitate to attribute the whole song to him. Although this song has points of similarity to "Bold Reynard ('A Good Many Gentlemen')," Kennedy and others clearly state that they are different -- and indeed, they have few details in common except that they describe a foxhunt. - RBW Hoagland begins "The first day of spring in the year ninety-three" and adds a subtitle of "A Song Celebrating the Great Hunt of 1793." - BS File: DTReynrd === NAME: Bold Richard, The DESCRIPTION: The "Phoebus[?] frigate Young Richard" cruises the French main with the Shannon. They encounter two merchants and "the finest frigate that did sail out of Brest." They sink all three, rescue their crews and land in Kingston where they enjoy drinks. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1915 (ENMacCollSeeger02) KEYWORDS: battle sea ship drink France FOUND_IN: Britain(England) REFERENCES: (0 citations) Roud #1351 RECORDINGS: Ewan MacColl and Peggy Seeger, "The Bold Richard" (on ENMacCollSeeger02) NOTES: From ENMacCollSeeger02 album cover notes: "E.J. Moeran recorded this song from James Sutton, 'Old Larpin', of Winerton, Norfolk, in 1915. In a note to the song printed in the Folksong Journal, Ann Gilchrist suggests that The Bold Richard is an English adaptation of an American sailor's song which describes the adventures of Paul Jones' ship, Old [sic] Richard." The song is nothing like either of Laws's Paul Jones ballads (Paul Jones, the Privateer [Laws A3] and Paul Jones's Victory [Laws A4]) - BS If we assume "Phoebus" is an error for "famous," then it is likely that Paul Jones's _Bonhomme Richard_ is indeed meant. But she never sailed with the _Shannon_; the consorts of the former _Duc de Durac_ were the _Alliance_, _Pallas_, and _Vengeance_ -- none of them in any way famous. And this still leaves us with the curiosity of the reference to Kingston. Is this Kingston in England? In that case, the singers can hardly be telling of John Paul Jones, who fought against England. Is the reference, then, to the Quasi-War with France fought in the years before 1800? But Jones died in 1792 -- and I can't find any battle involving other ships which fits. Alternately, is it Kingston, Jamaica? Jones sailed the Carribean several times early in his career -- but as a merchant saior, not a naval captain. In the end, I think we simply must conclude that we don't know what this is about. Probably it's mixing two or more battles. - RBW File: RcBolRic === NAME: Bold Robert Emmet DESCRIPTION: "The struggle is over, the boys are defeated, Old Ireland's surrounded with sadness and gloom... And I, Robert Emmet, awaiting my doom." Emmet, "the Darling of Ireland," recounts the failure of his rebellion and awaits execution AUTHOR: Sometimes ascribed to Tom Maguire (Source: Zimmermann, Hoagland) EARLIEST_DATE: c.1900 (Zimmermann) KEYWORDS: rebellion Ireland death HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1778 - Birth of Robert Emmet, younger brother of Thomas Addis Emmet (a leader of the United Irishmen) 1798 - Robert Emmet expelled from Trinity College; he eventually goes to France 1798 - the (failed) Irish Rebellion 1802 - Emmet returns to Ireland 1803 - Emmet attempts a new rebellion. The revolt is quickly crushed, and Emmet eventually hanged FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (6 citations) PGalvin, p. 32, "Bold Robert Emmet" (1 text, 1 tune) OLochlainn 87, "Bold Robert Emmet" (1 text, 1 tune) Moylan 155, "Bold Robert Emmet" (1 text, 1 tune) Zimmermann 91, "The Last Moments of Robert Emmet" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, ROBTEMMT* ADDITIONAL: Kathleen Hoagland, editor, One Thousand Years of Irish Poetry (New York, 1947), pp. 626-627, "Bold Robert Emmet" (1 text) Roud #3066 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Emmet's Death" (subject) cf. "Emmet's Farewell to His Sweetheart" (subject) cf. "My Emmet's No More" (subject) cf. "The Three Flowers" (briefly mentions Emmet) cf. "She is Far From the Land" (thought by some to refer to Emmet) cf. "Oh! Breathe Not His Name" (thought by some to refer to Emmet) cf. "When He Who Adores Thee" (thought by some to refer to Emmet) cf. "Nell Flaherty's Drake" (thought by some to refer to Emmet) cf. "The Man from God-Knows-Where, The" (thought by some to refer to Emmet) NOTES: Zimmermann: "The ballad is sometimes sung to the American tune 'The Streets of Laredo'." See that song for more information on the history of that tune. Zimmermann p. 40: ... Robert Emmet's rising, on 23rd July, 1802. After a skirmish in the streets of Dublin the revolt fizzled out. Emmet was executed on 23rd September. In spite of his failue, he became the favourite hero of the Irish patriots, "the darling of Erin" (song [Zimmermann] 91); but this glorification did not take place immediately. In 1803, nowhere in the country does there seem to have been much enthusiasm for the rising." - BS Robert Emmet's fruitless revolt is usually treated as a sequel to the 1798 Rising. This is oversimplified. The British government reacted to 1798 by proclaiming the Union of Ireland and Britain. Ironically, a series of Catholic Relief Acts in 1778 and 1782 had given Catholics more rights, and under the (informal but working) constitution of 1782, Britain no longer could compel Ireland into Union. But the English managed to pull it off anyway, by much the same means as they had earlier used to form the union with Scotland: Bribery, by-elections, and every other sort of political trick. Robert Kee, on p. 158 of _The Most Distressful Country_ (being Volume I of _The Green Flag_) note the "inadequacy of the word 'corruption'" to describe the level of under-the-counter payoffs. To make it worse, the statute that finally passed altered Pitt's original Union proposal, eliminating the provisions for Catholic Emancipation. (This even though Viceroy Cornwallis, who had finally suppressed the rebellion, argued that they should be kept. But the only way to get the proposal through the parliaments -- especially the all-Protestant Irish parliament -- was to use the Union as a stick to beat the Catholics.) Union was passed in 1800, and came into effect in 1801. The terms were actually quite favorable to Ireland in terms of seats in parliament; had there been an Irish party, it would almost always have held the parliamentary balance of power in Britain. But the Irish, with no program of their own, could neither fit into the British political system nor form a strong party. And the Catholic/Protestant problem continued to plague them. As a result, Ireland found itself politically neutralized. Emmet of course did not know this. He, like the vast majority of Irishmen, knew only that he didn't like the changes. But, once again, he had no answer to the problems of Union, and so was unable to produce either a working political party or a working rebellion -- only about thirty people were killed, mostly by ambush. These included the Lord Kilwarden, Chief Justice of Ireland (Terry Golway, _For the Cause of Liberty_, p. 92; Kee, p. 167, adds that Kilwarden was a "remarkably humane man," while Peter and Fiona Somerset Fry, _A History of Ireland_, p. 215 note that he was "not an unpopular man"). Another element of Emmet's personal tragedy was that he very nearly left the country, which would have saved everyone a lot of trouble. But with his brother Thomas Addis Emmet (1764-1827), a leader of the United Irish rebellion, in exile and unable to return, Robert decided that he could not leave their aging parents alone and grieving (Kee, p. 162). Obviously, as it turned out, he did leave them alone, and grieving even more. Emmet also started a sad tradition that persisted in Ireland for more than a century: The Rebellion By Gimmick. Emmet's forces had fold-up pikes (that could be hidden under a coat) and black powder rockets, and similar "secret weapons." What they didn't have was a real organization -- which, on the one hand, meant that the government didn't know of their existence, but on the other, meant that they had absolutely no way to accomplish anything. All he did was assemble a small mob and watch it be dispersed. Emmet is remembered less because of his defiant acts (after all, there were many others equally rebellious and entirely obscure) but because of a brilliant farewell speech which eventually was widely quoted by nationalists: "Let no man write my epitaph.... When my country takes her place among the nations of the earth, then and not till then, let my epitaph be written" (Golway, p. 92; Fry/Fry, p. 215; Kee, p. 168, with the note that Emmet's words probably were not taken down with perfect accuracy. Not that it mattered; what counts is what people *thought* he said). Charles Townshend (in _Easter 1916: The Irish Rebellion_, pp. 8-9) suggests that the simplicity of Emmet's message contributed to his fame: "Theobald Wolfe Tone, a serious political thinker, was less widely accepted than the simple heroism of his youthful successor Robert Emmet. Tone, a child of the Enlightenment... aimed to reconstitute Irish identity through eroding the separate traditions of 'Catholic, Protestant and Dissenter [.'] The secularization this envisaged was less attractive than his simple slogan 'break the connection....' EmmetÕs failed rebellion of 1803 became an icon of romantic activism, its incompetence ignored while the brutality of the British reaction was played up. (Emmet never got his tiny force out of its assembly point, Thomas Street, toward his target, Dublin Castle; his hoped-for 2,000 insurgents had dwindled to 20 by the time they reached the end of the street.)Ó It is perhaps not coincidental that Emmet became one of the chief inspirations for the future head of the 1916 RebellionPadraig Pearse (Townshend, p. 23); for Pearse's hazy notion of a mystic sacrifice redeeming Ireland, see the notes to "The Boys from County Cork." It is ironic that Robert's brother Thomas, whose association with rebellion was much older and deeper, lived. Emmet was one of the United Irish leaders taken when the British raided their Dublin leadership in early 1798. (That may not have been smart on the British part; Emmet was a cautious man who was trying to cool things down. By taking him, the British left the leaderless United Irish chapters to rise in desperation.) Thomas Emmet spent some time in prison, but was released in 1802, went briefly to France, then emigrated to the United States in 1804, where he found success in the legal profession. According to Hoagland, Tom Maguire was born c. 1870 and went on to join the Irish Revolutionary Brotherhood (the chief independence organization in the late nineteenth century -- a largely secret group), and later became part of the Irish parliament. But I've seen no absolute proof he wrote this song; much depends on when it actually first appeared. - RBW File: PGa032 === NAME: Bold Robin Hood (I): see Robin Hood Rescuing Three Squires [Child 140] (File: C140) === NAME: Bold Robin Hood and the Pedlar: see The Bold Pedlar and Robin Hood [Child 132] (File: C132) === NAME: Bold Robin Hood Rescuing the Three Squires: see Robin Hood Rescuing Three Squires [Child 140] (File: C140) === NAME: Bold Robing Hood: see The Bold Pedlar and Robin Hood [Child 132] (File: C132) === NAME: Bold Sodger Boy, The DESCRIPTION: "O! There's not a trade that's going, Worth showing or knowing, Like that from glory growing For the bold sodger boy." The singer describes how the girls watch the marching soldiers, and urges the listeners to follow the soldier's trade AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1904 (Ford) KEYWORDS: soldier recruiting FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ford-Vagabond, pp. 321-322, "The Bold Sodger Boy" (1 text) Roud #12829 File: FVS321 === NAME: Bold Soldier, The [Laws M27] DESCRIPTION: A father threatens to kill his daughter because she loves a soldier. He settles for sending (seven) men to kill her lover. The soldier fights the brigands off. The frightened father is then negotiated into making the soldier his heir AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1679 (Roxburghe) KEYWORDS: father children love soldier fight FOUND_IN: US(Ap,MA,MW,NE,SE,So) Canada(Mar,Newf) Britain(England(South)) REFERENCES: (26 citations) Laws M27, "The Bold Soldier" Bronson 7a, "The Lady and the Dragoon" (24 versions) BarryEckstormSmyth pp. 377-382, "The Soldier's Wooing" (3 texts, 1 tune) {Bronson's #6} Flanders/Brown, pp. 232-233, "The Poor Soldier" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #14} Flanders-Ancient1, pp. 131-149, "The Bold Soldier" (7 texts plus a fragment, 5 tunes) {C= Bronson's #18, F=#14} Belden, pp. 103-104, "The Soldier's Wooing" (1 text) Randolph 70, "The Valiant Soldier" (4 texts, 3 tunes) Randolph/Cohen, pp. 88-90, "The Valiant Soldier" (1 text, 1 tune -- Randolph's 70A) Eddy 3, "Earl Brand" (3 texts, 1 tune, but all clearly this piece) {Bronson's #3} FSCatskills 46, "The Bold Soldier" (1 text, 1 tune) BrownII 86, "The Soldier's Wooing" (4 texts) Chappell-FSRA 50, "The Lady and the Dragon" (sic.) (1 text plus a fragment, 1 tune) {Bronson's #4} Davis-Ballads [4], "[Earl Brand]" (1 text, filed as an appendix to that ballad) Scarborough-SongCatcher, pp. 201-202, "The Lady and the Dragoon" (1 text, with local title "A Brave Soldier"; 1 tune on pp. 409-410) {Bronson's #16} Brewster 5, "Erlinton" (1 text, called "The Soldier's Wooing" by the informant) SharpAp 51, "The Lady and the Dragoon" (4 texts plus 4 fragments, 8 tunes) {Bronson's #19, #8, #21, #23, #20, #24, #22, #17} Sharp/Karpeles-80E 30, "The Lady and the Dragoon" (1 text, 1 tune -- a composite version) {Bronson's #23} Warner 55, "Only a Soldier" (1 text, 1 tune) Copper-SoBreeze, pp. 248-249, "The Bold Dragoon" (1 text, 1 tune) Creighton-NovaScotia 12, "Song of a Soldier" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #15} Leach-Labrador 32, "The Soldier and the Lady" (1 text, 1 tune) LPound-ABS, 27, pp. 68-69, "The Soldier" (1 text) JHCox 117, "The Soldier's Wooing" (1 text) Darling-NAS, pp. 116-117, "The Valiant Soldier" (1 text) Silber-FSWB, p. 169, "The Bold Soldier" (1 text) DT, (DOUGTRD4*) Roud #321 RECORDINGS: Harry Brazil, "Bold Keeper" (on Voice18) Pete Seeger, "The Valiant Soldier" (on PeteSeeger29) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 11(2237), "The Bold Dragoon" ("My father is a lord, a lord of high renown"), H. Such (London), 1863-1885; also Firth c.14(210, "The Bold Dragoon"; Harding B 22(320), "The Valiant Dragoon" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Earl Brand" [Child 7] cf. "Erlinton" [Child 8] NOTES: It will be observed that Bronson lists this as an appendix to Child 7, "Earl Brand," though he notes the obvious signs of broadside publication. Laws mentions that others have connected it to Child 7 (and Child 8, "Erlinton," which is where Barry et al file it), but does not seem himself to consider the two related. Neither does he mention Bronson's title, "The Lady and the Dragoon." Cazden connects it with Child 214 and/or 215. - RBW File: LM27 === NAME: Bold Tenant Farmer, The DESCRIPTION: Singer, drinking in Ballinascorthy, overhears a landlord's son and a tenant farmer's wife. He threatens eviction. She says the National Land League protects the tenants and they are members. She praises Father O'Leary, John Dillon, and Davitt. He leaves. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1951 (recording, Mickey Cronin) KEYWORDS: drink farming political labor-movement HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1879 - formation of the Irish Land League FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (0 citations) Roud #5164 RECORDINGS: The Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem, "The Bold Tenant Farmer" (on IRClancyMakem02) Mickey Cronin, "The Bold Tenant Farmer" [fragment] (on Lomax42, LomaxCD1742) Joe Heaney, "The Wife of the Bold Tenant Farmer" (on Voice08) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Moneygran Pig Hunt" (subject) cf. "The Blackbird of Avondale (The Arrest of Parnell)" (subject of Charles Stewart Parnell) cf. "The Land League's Advice to the Tenant Farmers of Ireland" (character of Parnell, plus the Land League) cf. "We Won't Let Our Leader Run Down" (subject of Charles Stewart Parnell) cf. "The Phoenix Park Tragedy" (subject of Charles Stewart Parnell) cf. "Michael Davitt" (subject) and references there cf. "The Devil and Bailiff McGlynn" (subject of problems during the Land War) NOTES: Another eternal frustration from Lomax; he tells us that this is part of a "cocky and aggressive" Land League ballad, but gives not a clue of the subject matter. Formed in 1879, the Irish tenant farmers' Land League fought evictions and spearheaded land reforms through Parliament. - PJS IRClancyMakem02 has only four verses that mention the dispute and Land League but not the resolution. The Musica site has a thirteen verse version used as the basis for the description. - BS The tenants' rights movements began in the 1840s (in Ulster of all places!), but did not become a major force until 1879. In that year, Michael Davitt (whose family had been thrust off its land when he was a child; see the notes to "Michael Davitt") came back to Ireland from America. He formed the Land League in his ancestral home in County Mayo. The new Gladstone government tried to make concessions in 1880, but was blocked by the House of Lords. This was even though the landlords of Ireland were good for very little except brutality. They kept rents as high as possible, and discouraged land improvements. They were so widely despised that Belfast M.P. Joseph Biggar declared that he opposed shooting landlords on the grounds that the assailant often missed and might hit someone else (see Robert Kee, _The Bold Fenian Men_, being volume II of _The Green Flag_, p. 79). The Land League reacted with strikes and demonstrations (the word "boycott" is believed to date from this event; Charles Boycott was a British officer charged with evicting tenants). Kee writes (p. 79) that by "1880 there were parts of Ireland where the queen's writ no longer ran." It *did* run on Boycott's land -- but it reportedly took 7000 British soldiers to guard the workers he had brought in from Ulster! (Kee, p. 81.) Davitt (and Charles Stewart Parnell, another leader of the movement, who also was the de facto leader of the Irish representatives in the British parliament) opposed violence, but their followers were not so peaceful. The pressure was on the English parliament. Their first reaction was to tighten restrictions on the Irish, suppressing the Land League -- but the English people at last began to understand the plight of the Irish tenants. Gladstone eventually (1881) came up with laws to protect the tenants (it was these which, in effect, finalized the split between Ulster and the rest of Ireland; Ulster was satisfied, Catholic Ireland was not). But Parnell refused his whole-hearted support. He certainly favored the law, but he wanted Home Rule and he didn't want to offend the more radical Irish. The British, in an act of incredible stupidity, arrested him briefly (see "The Blackbird of Avondale (The Arrest of Parnell)." This further radicalized the Irish; even as Parnell was released, they took to assassinating British officials. In 1882, the outlawed Land League was replaced by the Irish National League -- a true political party rather than an activist group. This group won nearly every Irish seat in Parliament in the next election. This allowed Parnell to gain land concessions from the minority Conservative government, and also meant that Parnell was the controlling element in the next Parliament -- whichever party he supported would govern.The Land League had, in effect, triumphed. Unfortunately, Parnell simply couldn't work out a Home Rule compromise. Conditions in Ireland improved, but not enough. Ireland continued on its destructive road to eventual independence. - RBW File: RcTBTF === NAME: Bold Thady Quill DESCRIPTION: Girls "anxious for courting" should see Thady Quill. He is a champion in field events, a partisan for Ireland, and a star at hurling. At the Cork match a rich and sickly lady remarked that she would be cured by "one squeeze outa bold Thady Quill" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1959 (IRClancyMakem01) KEYWORDS: sports Ireland humorous FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) DT, THADQUIL* RECORDINGS: The Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem, "Bold Thady Quill" (on IRClancyMakem01) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Victorious Goalers of Carrigaline and Kilmoney" (subject of hurling) cf. "Black and Amber Glory" (subject of hurling) cf. "The Convict of Clonmel" (subject of hurling) cf. "The Carrigaline Goalers Defeated" (subject of hurling) NOTES: The description is from the Digital Tradition text for "Bold Thady Quil"; although its credit is "Recorded by Clancys" its version has more verses than that in IRClancyMakem01. IRClancyMakem01 cover notes refer to Thady Quill as "a champion hurler from county Cork, whom I understand is still alive" [1959]. - BS Hurling is an ancient Irish sport, somewhat similar to hockey (it involves sticks, two teams of 15, and a complicated set of rules for sticking or kicking or carrying the ball), seemingly mentioned in twelfth century records and possibly before that. According to the _Oxford Companion to Irish History_, the rules were formally codified in 1870 and the Irish Hurley Union formed in 1879. It was already mentioned in song before that, to be sure; see "The Victorious Goalers of Carrigaline and Kilmoney." There is an interesting political twist on this, because the sport is Irish: It is seen, in a small way, as a form of anti-Protestant demonstration. The Irish nationalist Charles Stewart Parnell (1846-1891) doesn't appear to have anything significant to do with hurling, but the Hurley Union dissolved around the time of his death, with other leagues having gradually taken its place.- RBW File: RcBoThQu === NAME: Bold Trellitee, The: see The Golden Vanity [Child 286] (File: C286) === NAME: Bold Trooper, The: see The Trooper and the Tailor (File: FSC139) === NAME: Bold William Taylor (I): see William Taylor [Laws N11] (File: LN11) === NAME: Bold William Taylor (II): see Keepers and Poachers (File: K254) === NAME: Bold Wolfe: see Brave Wolfe [Laws A1] (File: LA01) === NAME: Bold, Brave Bonair, A: see One Morning in May (To Hear the Nightingale Sing) [Laws P14] (File: LP14) === NAME: Boll Weevil Blues, The: see The Boll Weevil [Laws I17] (File: LI17) === NAME: Boll Weevil Song: see The Boll Weevil [Laws I17] (File: LI17) === NAME: Boll Weevil, The [Laws I17] DESCRIPTION: The boll weevil, which is just "a-lookin' for a home," inevitably comes in conflict with the cotton farmer. The farmer tries many techniques to drive the weevil out; the weevil, far from being inconvenienced, is often represented as thanking the farmer AUTHOR: possibly Postal McCurdy & Emabel Palmer EARLIEST_DATE: 1921 (recordings, Al Bernard & Ernest Hare) KEYWORDS: animal bug poverty farming HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: c. 1898 - Boll Weevil arrives in the southern U.S. from Mexico FOUND_IN: US(Ap,So,SE) REFERENCES: (17 citations) Laws I17, "The Boll Weevil" BrownIII 214, "Boll Weevil Blues" (2 texts) Hudson 72, pp. 199-200, "Mister Boll Weevil" (1 text) Scarborough-NegroFS, p. 66, (no title) (1 excerpt, probably of this song); pp. 77-79, "Mr. Boll Weevil" (plus other versions with no title) (2 texts plus 3 excerpts, 1 tune) Friedman, p. 319, "The Ballet of the Boll Weevil" (2 texts+1 fragment, 1 tune) Sandburg, pp. 8-10, "Boll Weevil Song"; 252-253, "De Ballet of de Boll Weevil" (2 texts, 2 tunes) Scott-BoA, pp. 316-318, "The Ballad of the Boll Weevil" (2 texts, 2 tunes) Lomax-FSUSA 69, "The Boll Weevil" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-ABFS, pp. 112-117, "De Ballit of de Boll Weevil" (1 text, 1 tune, composite) Lomax-FSNA 285, "The Boll Weevil Holler" (1 text, 1 tune) Botkin-AmFolklr, pp. 916-918, "Boll Weevil Song" (1 text, 1 tune) Arnett, pp. 140-141, "Boll Weevil" (1 text, 1 tune) Botkin-SoFolklr, p. 751, "Boll Weevil" (1 text, 1 tune) Darling-NAS, pp. 244-246, "Mississippi Bo Weavil Blues"; "The Boll Weevil" (2 texts) Silber-FSWB, p. 118, "Ballad Of The Boll Weevil" (1 text) DT, BOLLWEEV* BLLWEEV2* (BOLWEV2) ADDITIONAL: Fred W. Allsopp, Folklore of Romantic Arkansas, Volume II (1931), p. 163, (no title) (1 fragment) Roud #3124 RECORDINGS: Pink Anderson, "Bo Weevil" (on PinkAnd1) Arkansas Trio, "Boll Weevil Blues" (Edison 51373-R, 1924) Al Bernard, "Boll Weevil Blues" (Brunswick 2092, 1921) Fiddlin' John Carson, "Dixie Boll Weevil" (OKeh 40095-B, 1924) Jaybird Coleman, "Boll Weevil" (Black Patti 8055, 1927; on StuffDreams1) [Vernon] Dalhart, [Ed] Smalle & [Harry] Reser, "Boll Weevil Blues" (OKeh 40156, 1924) Fats Domino, "Bo Weevil" (Imperial 5375, 1956) Vera Hall, "Boll Weevil" (AFS 1323 A1, 1937) Ernest Hare, "Boll Weevil Blues" (Vocalion 14151, 1921) Lead Belly, "The Boll Weevil" (Musicraft 226, rec. 1939) W. A. Lindsay & Alvin Condor, "Boll Weevil" (OKeh 45346, 1929; rec. 1928) The Masked Marvel (pseud. for Charley Patton), "Mississippi Boweavil Blues" (Paramount 15805B. 1929; on AAFM1, BefBlues2) Charlie Oaks, "Boll Weevil" (Vocalion 5113, c. 1927) Ma Rainey w. Lovie Austin & her Blues Serenaders, "Bo-Weavil Blues" (Paramount 12080, 1924) Tex Ritter, "Boll Weevil" (Capitol 40084, 1948) Carl Sandburg, "The Boll Weevil" (Victor 20135, 1926) Pete Seeger, "Boll Weevil" (on PeteSeeger05) (on PeteSeeger43); "Ballad of the Boll Weevil" (on PeteSeeger31) Bessie Smith, "Boweavil Blues" (Columbia 14018-D, 1924) Gid Tanner & Riley Puckett, "Boll Weevil Blues" (Columbia 15016-D, c. 1924) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Poor Man Blues" (floating lyrics) cf. "Frankie and Albert" [Laws I3] (tune) NOTES: Sandburg reports collections of Boll Weevil verses dating back to 1897, but it is not clear in context whether these are actually part of this song. - RBW, PJS And indeed, the origins of the song are obscure, or at least messy. The Bernard, Hare & Arkansas Trio recordings credit the authorship to McCurdy & Palmer, as does a regional guide to the town of Fakes Chapel [state unknown] which claims that McCurdy wrote the "'well-known' folk song" there in 1923. The recordings, of course, make this date impossible, but he seems to have had a hand in the creation of some well-known verses. Fiddlin' John Carson copyrighted his version in 1924, and it certainly contains some of the classic lines. - PJS File: LI17 === NAME: Bollochy Bill the Sailor DESCRIPTION: A dialogue song in which Bill -- who "just got paid and wants to be laid" -- seeks to get the fair young maiden into bed. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1927 ("Immortalia") KEYWORDS: bawdy dialog sailor seduction FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (8 citations) Greenleaf/Mansfield 49, "Abram Brown the Sailor" (1 text, 1 tune) Cray, pp. 81-86, "Bollochy Bill the Sailor" (3 texts, 1 tune) Shay-SeaSongs, p. 204, "Rollicking Bill the Sailor" (1 text, 1 tune, probably truncated since it ends with Bill asking for a place to sleep and the girl declaring she has only one bed) Colcord, pp. 182-183, "Abram Brown" (1 text, 1 tune) Harlow, pp. 164-166, "Barnacle Bill the Sailor" (1 text, 1 tune) Hugill, pp. 440-442, "Abel Brown the Sailor" (1 text, 1 tune) [AbrEd, pp. 331-333] Fuld-WFM, pp. 128-129, "Barnacle Bill the Sailor" DT, BARNBILL BARNBIL2 Roud #4704 RECORDINGS: Anonymous singers, "Barnacle Bill the Sailor" (on Unexp1) Bix Beiderbecke w. Paul Whiteman's Orchestra, "Barnacle Bill the Sailor" (Victor 25371, 1936) Bud & Joe Billings (Frank Luther & Carson Robison), "Barnacle Bill The Sailor" (Victor V-40043, 1929; Victor V-40153, 1929 [as Bud Billings & Carson Robison]) Ned Cobbin [pseud. for Irving Kaufman], "Barnacle Bill the Sailor" (Harmony 861-H/Diva 2861-G, 1929) Billy Costello (Popeye), "Barnacle Bill, the Sailor" (Decca 1573, 1937) Frank Luther & His Pards, "Barnacle Bill the Sailor" (CYL: Edison 5678, c. 1929) (Edison 52532, 1929) Carson Robison, "Barnacle Bill, the Sailor" (Broadway 4054, c. 1932) Pete Wiggins, "Barnacle Bill, the Sailor" (OKeh 45295, 1929) SAME_TUNE: Frank Luther & his Pards "Barnacle Bill the Sailor, No. 2" (Edison 20008, 1929) Bud & Joe Billings (Frank Luther & Carson Robison), "Barnacle Bill The Sailor No. 2" (Victor V-40102, 1929) Bud & Joe Billings (Frank Luther & Carson Robison), "Barnacle Bill the Sailor No. 2" (Victor V-40102, 1929); "Barnacle Bill The Sailor No. 3" (Victor V-40153, 1929) Carson Robison, "Here I Go to Tokyo, Said Barnacle Bill, the Sailor" (Bluebird B-11460, 1942) Vernon Dalhart, "Barnacle Bill the Sailor - No. 2" (Harmony 1304, 1931) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Barnacle Bill the Sailor NOTES: For a history of this onetime sea song, see Cray, _Erotic Muse_ II, pp. 83-85. - EC Most of the printed versions of this song are fairly "clean." But Cray and Fuld are in agreement that it is properly a bawdy song. Fuld doubts the existence of its ancestor "Abram Brown the Sailor," but Cray quotes a text from the Gordon collection [and there is a version in Greenleaf/Mansfield- (BS)]. There is also a nursery rhyme about Abram Brown, found in Baring-Gould-MotherGoose #230, p. 150, ("Abram Brown is dead and gone"), but if that is associated with any song, it is probably "Old Grimes Is Dead." Carson Robison is sometimes credited with a popular version of this ("Barnacle Bill the Sailor"), but obviously his part was no more than a clean-up (and production of sequels). - RBW In the interest of history, it is worth recording that the scientists of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, during the Sojourner mission, named a particularly lumpy rock on the surface of Mars "Barnacle Bill the Sailor." - PJS File: EM081 === NAME: Bolsum Brown DESCRIPTION: "There's a red light on the track for Bolsum Brown, for Bolsum Brown, for Bolsum Brown... And it'll be there when he comes back." "Hop along, sister Mary, hop along.... There's a red light on the track And it'll be there when he comes back." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1927 (Sandburg) KEYWORDS: railroading FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (1 citation) Sandburg, p. 355, "Bolsum Brown" (1 short text, 1 tune) ST San355 (Full) File: San355 === NAME: Bon Vin, Le (The Good Wine) DESCRIPTION: French. We drink and a friend sings [the chorus] in my ear. Be careful of this beautiful woman. She had three captains, one in Bordeaux, one in La Rochelle and the other in Versailles. Chorus: "Good wine makes me dead, Love wakes me again." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1961 (Peacock) KEYWORDS: foreignlanguage sex wine bawdy nonballad rake mistress FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Peacock, pp. 249-250, "Le Bon Vin" (1 text, 1 tune) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Passant par Paris File: Pea249 === NAME: Bonaparte DESCRIPTION: "Come all you natives far and near Come listen to my story... Boni would not be content Until he was master of the whole world." He divorces his wife, fights the church, fights England, fails at Waterloo, and is exiled AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1834 (Journal from the L.C. Richmond) KEYWORDS: Napoleon war wife pride exile HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1769 - Birth of Napoleon Bonaparte 1796 - Napoleon marries Josephine de Beauharnais (1763-1814) 1796 - Napoleon given command of the Army of Italy. Over the next eight years he will have many conflicts with Austria and the Pope in the Italian peninsula 1809 - Napoleon divorces Josephine (partly on the grounds of her notorious infidelity, partly because she is barren); he marries Maria Louisa (Marie Louise) of Austria the next year June 18, 1815 - Battle of Waterloo July 15, 1815 - Napoleon is sent to Saint Helena on the Bellerophon 1821 - Death of Napoleon. He died with Josephine's name on his lips FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Huntington-Whalemen, pp. 209-212, "Bonaparte" (1 text, 1 tune) ST SWMS209 (Full) Roud #1992 NOTES: This seems to be the only text of this song known; it may never have gone into tradition. But I decided to include it to show the wealth of Napoleon songs. File: SWMS209 === NAME: Bonaparte on St. Helena: see Saint Helena (Boney on the Isle of St. Helena) (File: E096) === NAME: Bonaparte's Farewell DESCRIPTION: Bonaparte bids farewell to France which has abandoned him because of its weakness: "Decay'd in thy glory and sunk in thy worth!" "But when Liberty rallies Once more in thy regions, remember me then ... and call on the Chief of thy choice" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1865 (broadside, LOCSinging as200400 and Bodleian Harding B 18(52)) KEYWORDS: freedom Napoleon FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Moylan 208, "Bonaparte's Farewell" (1 text, 1 tune) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 18(52), "Bonaparte's Farewell," H. De Marsan (New York), 1861-1864 [same as LOCSinging, as200400]; also Harding B 18(593) [yet another copy of the same sheet] LOCSinging, as200400, "Bonaparte's Farewell," H. De Marsan (New York), 1861-1864 [same as Bodleian, Harding B 18(52)] CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Captain O'Kean" (tune, per broadsides LOCSinging as200400 and Bodleian Harding B 18(52)) NOTES: This song has absolutely no historical references; the only proper noun in the whole song is "France." Theoretically, the speaker might not even be Napoleon -- though the bombast fits him. The only specific reference is that a diadem crowned him -- more relevant to a parvenu emperor than to the legitimate Bourbons, but Bourbon *could* have said such a thing. Still, Napoleon seems to be the intended speaker. It sounds like something he would have said before his exile to Elba (1814), rather than the exile to St. Helena (1815). This because, in 1813-1814, Paris and the government actually voted him out of power. In 1815, there wasn't time for any of that. - RBW Broadsides LOCSinging as200400 and Bodleian Harding B 18(52): H. De Marsan dating per _Studying Nineteenth-Century Popular Song_ by Paul Charosh in American Music, Winter 1997, Vol 15.4, Table 1, available at FindArticles site. - BS File: Moyl208 === NAME: Bonavist Line, The DESCRIPTION: Hard times for "the red roarin' devils on the Bonavist [or Riverhead] Line." The railway construction workers are charged high rates for terrible food and simple services. Go to the store and the old woman there won't give you a thing without "a tip" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1952 (Peacock) KEYWORDS: sex food hardtimes railroading nonballad worker FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Peacock, pp. 768-771, "The Bonavist Line" (2 texts, 2 tunes) Leach-Labrador 92, "Riverhead Line" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #5206 ALTERNATE_TITLES: The North Shoreman's Line The Shoal Harbour Line NOTES: Peacock says the Bonavista Line serving the tip of the Bonavista peninsula and Riverhead Line serving Conception Bay are spurs of Newfoundland's now defunct narrow-gauge trans-insular railway. - BS File: Pea768 === NAME: Bonavista Harbour DESCRIPTION: "They started to make a harbour here quite early in the Spring; The people came from Canada with all kinds of machines ...." A list of people doing all the jobs but now that they've finished they'll surely have to come back and patch it every year. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1955 (Doyle) KEYWORDS: moniker warning technology work tasks worker nonballad FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Doyle3, pp. 16-17, "Bonavista Harbour" (1 text, 1 tune) Blondahl, p. 52, "Bonavista Harbour" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #7290 NOTES: [The breakwater described was built sometime between 1943 and 1945.] As the song predicts, by the end of 1945 there are already comments about improving the harbour by dredging [per Charles Granger, "Bonavista Cold Storage Co., Limited" in Fishermen's Advocate, December 21, 1945] - BS File: Doyl3016 === NAME: Boney DESCRIPTION: Napoleon's story in the space of a shanty: "Boney was a warrior, Way up! A warrior and a tarrier, John Francois!" He fights the Russians, comes to Waterloo, is defeated, goes to Saint Helena, and dies AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1909 KEYWORDS: shanty Napoleon exile battle HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1812- Napoleon's Russian campaign 1815- Battle of Waterloo 1821- Death of Napoleon on Saint Helena FOUND_IN: US(MA) REFERENCES: (11 citations) Doerflinger, pp. 6-7, "Boney" (2 texts, 1 tune) Bone, p. 42, "Boney" (1 partial text, 1 tune) Shay-SeaSongs, p. 29, "Boney" (1 text, 1 tune) Colcord, pp. 40-41, "Boney" (1 text, 1 tune plus 1 fragment of "Jean Francois") Harlow, pp. 27-28, "John Francois (Boney Was a Warrior)" (1 text, 1 tune) Hugill, pp. 445-446, 448 "Boney," "Hilonday" (2 English and 1 French text, 2 tune) [AbrEd, pp. 333-335] Sharp-EFC, XLIX, p. 54, "Bonny Was a Warrior" (1 text, 1 tune) Darling-NAS, p. 310, "Boney" (1 text) Silber-FSWB, p. 88, "Boney Was A Warrior" (1 text) DT, BONEYNAP* ADDITIONAL: Captain John Robinson, "Songs of the Chantey Man," a series published July-August 1917 in the periodical _The Bellman_ (Minneapolis, MN, 1906-1919)." Boney was a Warrior" is in Part 4, 8/4/1917. Roud #485 ALTERNATE_TITLES: John Francois Jean Francois de Nantes File: Doe006 === NAME: Boney on the Isle of St. Helena: see Saint Helena (Boney on the Isle of St. Helena) (File: E096) === NAME: Boney Was a Warrior: see Boney (File: Doe006) === NAME: Boney's Defeat: see Saint Helena (Boney on the Isle of St. Helena) (File: E096) === NAME: Bonhomme Tombe de L'Arbre, Le (The Fellow Falls from the Tree) DESCRIPTION: French. Willie goes hunting for partridges. He goes up in a tree to see his dogs running. The branch breaks; Willie falls and breaks his thigh. All the girls in the village hear his cries and run to bandage his leg. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1959 (Peacock) KEYWORDS: foreignlanguage help hunting injury FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Peacock, p. 45, "Le Bonhomme Tombe de L'Arbre" (1 text, 1 tune) File: Pea045 === NAME: Bonhomme! Bonhomme! DESCRIPTION: French: "Bonhomm', Bonhomm', sais-tu jouer?" "My friend, my friend, can you play this? Can you play the violin... flute... drum... horn... jug." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1954 KEYWORDS: cumulative nonballad music foreignlanguage FOUND_IN: Canada(Que) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Fowke/Johnston, pp. 120-121, "Bonhomme! Bonhomme!" (1 text, 1 tune) File: FJ120 === NAME: Bonnet o' Blue: see Jacket So Blue, The (The Bonnet o' Blue) (File: FSC43) === NAME: Bonnet of Blue, The: see Jacket So Blue, The (The Bonnet o' Blue) (File: FSC43) === NAME: Bonnet sae Blue, The: see Jacket So Blue, The (The Bonnet o' Blue) (File: FSC43) === NAME: Bonnie Annie [Child 24] DESCRIPTION: A ship's captain seduces (Annie) and takes her to sea with him. The ship they are sailing is caught in a storm which will not die down. (The crew) decides that Annie is the guilty party and throws her overboard. (The captain may order her rescue) AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1827 (reported by Lloyd) KEYWORDS: seduction sea death storm childbirth pregnancy bastard FOUND_IN: Britain(England,Scotland) US(NE) REFERENCES: (6 citations) Child 24, "Bonnie Annie" (3 texts) Bronson 24, "Bonnie Annie" (18 versions) OBB 20, "Bonnie Annie" (1 text) Vaughan Williams/Lloyd, p. 15, "The Banks of Green Willow" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #2} DBuchan 45, "Bonnie Annie" (1 text) DT 24, GREWILLO* BONNYANN* Roud #172 NOTES: In the Vaughan Williams/Lloyd version, the sailor Johnny has persuaded the girl to steal her mother's money and run away to sea with him. When she has his baby, he (not the crew) throws her overboard, along with her baby. - PJS File: C024 === NAME: Bonnie Banks o' Loch Lomond, The: see Loch Lomond (File: FSWB257B) === NAME: Bonnie Banks of the Virgie, O, The: see Babylon, or, The Bonnie Banks o Fordie [Child 14] (File: C014) === NAME: Bonnie Barbara, O: see Bonnie Lass of Fyvie, The (Pretty Peggy-O) (File: SBoA020) === NAME: Bonnie Black Bess: see My Bonnie Black Bess I [Laws L8] AND My Bonnie Black Bess II [Laws L9] (File: LL09) === NAME: Bonnie Blue Flag, The DESCRIPTION: "We are a band of brothers, and native to the soil, Fighting for the property we gained by honest toil... Hurrah for the bonny blue flag that bears the single star." The states which joined the Confederacy are chronicled and praised AUTHOR: Words: Harry McCarthy EARLIEST_DATE: 1861 KEYWORDS: Civilwar patriotic FOUND_IN: US(SE,So) REFERENCES: (10 citations) Belden, pp. 357-359, "The Bonnie Blue Flag" (1 text) Randolph 214, "The Bonnie Blue Flag" (1 text, 1 tune) BrownIII 379, "The Bonnie Blue Flag" (1 text plus mention of 1 more probably from the same informant) RJackson-19CPop, pp. 34-38, "The Bonnie Blue Flag" (1 text, 1 tune) Scott-BoA, p. 220, "The Bonny Blue Flag (Southern)" (1 partial text, tune referenced) Silber-CivWar, pp. 52-53, "The Bonnie Blue Flag" (1 text, 1 tune) Hill-CivWar, p. 210, "The Bonnie Blue Flag" (1 text) Krythe 8, pp. 133-141, "The Bonnie Blue Flag" (1 text, 1 tune) Darling-NAS, pp. 349-350, "The Bonnie Blue Flag" (1 text) DT, BONBLUE* ST R214 (Full) Roud #4769 RECORDINGS: Mary C. Mann, "Bonnie Blue Flag" (AFS A-488, 1926) Old South Quartette, "The Bonnie Blue Flag" (Cyl.: Edison Amberol 389, 2175, 1909) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Irish Jaunting Car" (tune& meter) cf. "The Homespun Dress" (tune & meter) cf. "The Northern Bonnie Blue Flag" (tune & meter) cf. "The Southern Girl's Reply (True to the Gray)" (tune & meter) cf. "Counties of Arkansas" (tune & meter) SAME_TUNE: The Southern Girl's Reply (True to the Gray) (File: Wa156) The Homespun Dress (File: R215) The Northern Bonnie Blue Flag (File: SBoA218) The Counties of Arkansas (File: R876) Gathering Song (by Annie Chambers Ketchum) (War Songs and Poems of the Southern Confederacy, pp. 329-330) NOTES: This song, written by an immigrant Irishman very early in the Civil War (Belden has a note that Fitz-Grald credits the words to Annie Chambers Ketchum, with Harry McCarthy supplying the tune, but almost all sources credit the song to McCarthy), refers to the first Confederate flag, later succeeded by the "Stars and Bars." The order the states are mentioned is roughly the order in which they left the Union. South Carolina was first, obviously, followed by the various states of the Deep South (Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, Florida; Louisiana and Texas took slightly longer because of their remote location). It was not until after the attack on Fort Sumter that the border states of Virginia, Arkansas, Tennessee, and (last of all) North Carolina seceded. Jefferson Davis was, of course, the first and only President of the Confederacy, and Alexander Stephens its Vice President. Krythe's notes on this song contain several errors. The captain of the _Alabama_ was not "Admiral Symmes" but Captain (later Admiral) Raphael Semmes, and General Wickham's first name was not William but Williams (with an s). Harry McCarthy was only 27 when he wrote this song, but managed to avoid Confederate service as a British citizen. What's more, he fled to the North once the outlook for the Confederacy turned bad enough. He never wrote anything else of note, either. - RBW File: R214 === NAME: Bonnie Bonnie Banks of the Virgie-O, The: see Babylon, or, The Bonnie Banks o Fordie [Child 14] (File: C014) === NAME: Bonnie Bower, The: see The Famous Flower of Serving-Men [Child 106] (File: C106) === NAME: Bonnie Breist-knots, The DESCRIPTION: "Hey, the bonnie, ho, the bonnie, Hey, the bonnie breist-knots, Blythe and merry were they a' When they got on their bonnie breist-knots." "There was a bridal in the toun" to which many came; the song tells of their happy and wild adventures AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1803 (_Scots Musical Museum_ #214) KEYWORDS: marriage music dancing clothes husband wife food FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ford-Vagabond, pp. 303-306, "The Bonnie Breist-knots" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #5888 BROADSIDES: Murray, Mu23-y1:087, "The Bonnie Breast-Knots," James Lindsay (Glasgow), 19C ALTERNATE_TITLES: Hey the Bonnie Breistknots The Breast Knots File: FVS303 === NAME: Bonnie Brier Bush, The DESCRIPTION: "There grows a bonnie brier bush in oor kailyaird, And sweet are the blossoms on't in oor kaildyaird. Beneath the... bush a lad and lass were scared... busy courtin'." The singer tells of the joys of courting in the kailyaird, as was first done by Adam AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1904 (Ford) KEYWORDS: love courting nonballad FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ford-Vagabond, pp. 157, "The Bonnie Brier Bush" (1 text) Roud #1506 BROADSIDES: NLScotland, L.C.Fol.70(39b) "Bonnie Brier Bush," Poet's Box (Dundee), c. 1890 NOTES: Kennedy lumps this with "The Cuckoo's Nest (II)" and this equation is accepted by Roud. But that song is definitely erotic, and this is merely a courting song. I can't see lumping them, though I'm sure other sources have been guilty of doing so. - RBW File: FVS157 === NAME: Bonnie Buchairn DESCRIPTION: The singer asks, "Quhilk o' ye lasses will go to Buchairn (x3) And be the gudewife o' bonnie Buchairn?" He turns down the pretty girls, wanting "the lass wi' the shaif o' bank notes." He describes his plans for the wedding AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1827 (Kinloch) KEYWORDS: courting wedding money FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Kinloch-BBook XX, pp. 69-70, "Bonnie Buchairn" (1 text) Ford-Vagabond, pp. 119-121, "Glowerowerum" (1 text, 1 tune) ST KinBB20 (Full) Roud #1101 NOTES: In dealing with old songbooks which do not list sources, it is a perpetual problem to determine what is traditional and what is just space-filling garbage. Kinloch's looks a little artsy and archaizing, as if touched up -- but the basic text seems very traditional. Either that, or it's the first-ever proposal for an urban renewal grant. - RBW File: KinBB20 === NAME: Bonnie Farday: see Babylon, or, The Bonnie Banks o Fordie [Child 14] (File: C014) === NAME: Bonnie George Campbell [Child 210] DESCRIPTION: Bonnie George Campbell sets out on his horse. The horse comes home, but he does not: "High upon Hielands and low upon Tay, Bonnie George Campbell rade oot on a day; Saddled and bridled and gallant rade he; Hame cam his guid horse but never cam he" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1807 KEYWORDS: death horse FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland(Bord)) US(Ap,NE,SE) REFERENCES: (18 citations) Child 210, "Bonnie James Campbell" (4 texts) Bronson 210, "Bonnie James Campbell" (5 versions) BarryEckstormSmyth pp. 279-284, "Bonnie George Campbell" (2 text plus a printed version and a composite reconstruction, 1 traditional plus one printed tune) {The "C" reprint is Bronson's #1, the traditional tune "D" is Bronson's #23} Flanders-Ancient3, pp. 237-238, "Bonnie James Campbell" (1 badly damaged fragment) Ford-Vagabond, pp. 31-311, "Bonnie George Campbell" (1 text, with a peculiar final verse probably not traditional and edited by Ford) Davis-More 35, pp. 267-269, "Bonnie James Campbell" (1 text) Thomas-Makin', pp. 25-26, "Bonnie George Campbell" (1 text, 1 tune) Leach, p. 560, "Bonnie James Campbell" (2 texts) OBB 96, "Bonnie George Campbell" (1 text) Warner 106, "James Campbell" (1 text, 1 tune) PBB 57, "Bonnie George Campbell" (1 text) Gummere, pp. 162+335, "Bonnie George Campbell" (1 text) Combs/Wilgus 34, pp. 126-127, "Bonnie James Campbell" (1 text) Hodgart, p. 145, "Bonnie George Campbell" (1 text) TBB 18, "Bonnie James (George) Campbell" (2 texts) HarvClass-EP1, p. 27, "Bonnie George Campbell" (1 text) DT 210, GEORCAMP* GEORCMP2* ADDITIONAL: Walter de la Mare, _Come Hither_, revised edition, 1928; #50, "Bonnie George Campbell" (1 text) Roud #338 RECORDINGS: Margaret Caudill Hurst & Carolyn Margaret Hurst, "Bonnie George Campbell" (on JThomas01) Bascom Lamar Lunsford, "Bonnie George Campbell" (on BLLunsford01) {Bronson's #2} Frank Proffitt, "James Campbell" [excerpt] (on USWarnerColl01) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Cumberland Gap" (tune) cf. "The Killin' in the Gap"(Stevie Allen) (theme) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Bonnie Johnnie Campbell NOTES: Although several names have been suggested as the original hero of this ballad, the details suggested in the song are so few that none can be viewed as more than a possibility. - RBW File: C210 === NAME: Bonnie Glasgow Green DESCRIPTION: "As I went out one morning fair On Glasgow green to tak the air, I spied a lass wi' yellow hair And twa bewitching e'en, O." The girl will not betray her mason. He asks if she can trust a mason. She decides to turn to the singer. He praises Glasgow Green AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1930 (Ord) KEYWORDS: love courting rejection betrayal FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ord, pp. 121-122, "Bonnie Glasgow Green" (1 text) Roud #6262 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Birken Tree" (form) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Bonny Glasgow Green NOTES: And the singer *wants* a girl who changes her mind that easily? Ouch. At least some versions of this appear to have been sung to "The Birken Tree," to which it is highly similar in detail. - RBW File: Ord121 === NAME: Bonnie Hind, The [Child 50] DESCRIPTION: A sailor, new come from the sea, sees a girl and sleeps with her. After the deed is done, they exchange names, only to find they are brother and sister. The sister stabs herself; the brother buries her and goes home grieving AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1771 (Herd) KEYWORDS: incest death seduction mourning suicide grief FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Child 50, "The Bonnie Hind" (1 text) Friedman, p. 172, "The Bonny Hind" (1 text) DT 50, BONNYHND Roud #205 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The King's Dochter Lady Jean" [Child 52] (plot) cf. "Sheath and Knife" [Child 16] (plot, lyrics) cf. "Babylon, or, The Bonnie Banks o Fordie" [Child 14] (plot) cf. "Lizie Wan" [Child 51] (theme) NOTES: Friedman states that the only recorded collection of this song was from a Scottish milkmaid in 1771. -PJS On the scientific evidence that brothers and sisters raised apart are particularly likely to fall in love, and some further speculation as to why, see the notes to "Babylon, or, The Bonnie Banks o Fordie [Child 14]." - RBW File: C050 === NAME: Bonnie House o Airlie, The [Child 199] DESCRIPTION: Argyle sets out to plunder the home of his enemy Airlie while the latter is away (with Bonnie Prince Charlie?). Argyle summons Lady Airlie, asking for a kiss and threatening ruin to the house if she will not. She refuses; they plunder the house AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: c. 1790 (broadside) KEYWORDS: feud courting HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1640 - Argyle commissioned to clean up certain "unnatural" lords FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland(Aber,Bord)) Canada(Mar) US(Ap,MA,MW,NE) REFERENCES: (13 citations) Child 199, "The Bonnie House o Airlie" (4 texts) Bronson 199, "The Bonnie House o Airlie" (15 versions) BarryEckstormSmyth pp. 266-269, "The Bonnie House of Airlie" (2 texts, 1 tune) {Bronson's #11} Flanders-Ancient3, pp. 191-192, "The Bonnie House of Airlie" (1 fragment, "The Sacking of Arlee") Gardner/Chickering 80, "Prince Charlie" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #8} Ford-Vagabond, pp. 296-299, "The Bonnie House o' Airlie" (1 text) JHCox 20, "The Bonnie House o' Airlie" (1 text) Ord, p. 470, "The Bonnie House o' Airlie" (1 text) MacSeegTrav 15, "The Bonnie House o' Airlie" (1 text, 1 tune) Creighton/Senior, pp. 70-71, "The Bonny House o' Arlie" (1 text plus 1 fragment, 1 tune) {Bronson's #16} Leach, pp. 537-538, "The Bonnie House of Airlie" (2 texts) OBB 135, "The Bonnie House o Airlie" (1 text) DT 199, BONAIRLI* Roud #794 RECORDINGS: John MacDonald, "The Bonnie Hoose O' Airlie" (on Voice17) Belle Stewart, "The Bonny Hoose o' Airlie" (on FSBBAL2) (on SCStewartsBlair01) Lucy Stewart, "The Bonnie Hoose o' Airlie" (on LStewart1) BROADSIDES: Murray, Mu23-y1:027, "The Bonnie House o' Airly," James Lindsay Jr. (Glasgow), 19C SAME_TUNE: Bonnie Den o' Airlie (broadside NLScotland L.C.Fol.70(130b), "Bonnie Den o' Airlie" ("It fell upon a day, on a bonnie simmer's day"), Poet's Box (Dundee), n.d, with no tune indicated but clearly this is meant) NOTES: This song seems to have originated in the period when Scotland was in open rebellion against Charles I over the issue of religion -- Charles had tried to impose an Episcopal prayer book on Scotland; that Presbyterian nation reacted with the Covenant, a defiant rejection of Charles's religious schemes. (For this see, e.g. Rosalind Mitchison, _A History of Scotland_, second edition, p. 206ffff.) Although almost all of Scotland accepted the Covenant, a religious agreement was not a government. The various factions proposed various ways to govern their nation. The two key factions were those headed by Montrose (who still stood by the monarchy, and who would by his military genius later become its chief prop) and Argyle (who was anti-royalist and out for his own profit). On June 12, 1640, as Charles I was trying to attack Scotland but being delayed by his finances and the increasing unrest of his English subjects, Argyle was empowered by the Scottish parliament (then meeting for the first time without a royal representative) to deal with certain lords as enemies of the Church. One of those under suspicion was the Earl of Airlie (then away in England, apparently to avoid signing the Covenant). Montrose had taken the lands of Airlie from the Earl's son Lord Ogilvie, but Argyle felt the urge to deal with the house more strenuously. The earliest copies of the ballad refer to Airlie being present with "King Charlie" (Charles I, reigned 1625-1649). In later versions, "King Charlie" became "(Bonnie) Prince Charlie," a confusion perhaps encouraged by the fact that the Earl of Airlie of 1745 was a follower of Charlie. The "B" text in Barry et al is even more confused, it dates itself to the days of "the wars of Roses white and red And in the days of Prince Charlie" -- which is, of course, impossible, since the Wars of the Roses took place two and a half centuries before the Jacobite rebellions, and a century and a half before Airlie's first commission. The context of the version suits the Forty-Five. - RBW File: C199 === NAME: Bonnie James Campbell: see Bonnie George Campbell [Child 210] (File: C210) === NAME: Bonnie Jean O' Aberdeen, She Lang'd for a Baby DESCRIPTION: "Oh, there was a farmer's daughter And she longed for a baby And she rolled up a big grey hen And she put it into the cradle ... she rocked the cradle, saying: If it wasn't for your big long neb I would gie ye a draw of the diddy, oh" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1803 (Mother Goose's Melody, according to Opie-Oxford2) KEYWORDS: bird baby humorous FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) Opie-Oxford2 183, "A girl in the army" (4 texts) Roud #2293 RECORDINGS: Eddie Butcher, "The Farmer's Daughter" (on IREButcher01) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Rose Tree in Full Bearing" (tune, notes to IREButcher01) NOTES: The opening lines of the four Opie-Oxford2 texts are "A girl in the army She longed for a baby,' "There was a miller's dochter, She couldna want a babie,' "The little lady lairdie She longt for a baby" and "There once was a lady Who longed for a babby oh." "Neb" can be either beak or nose. "Diddy" is teat. (source: _Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language Unabridged_, 1976) - BS File: OOx2183 === NAME: Bonnie Jean o' Bethelnie: see Glenlogie, or, Jean o Bethelnie [Child 238] (File: C238) === NAME: Bonnie Jeanie Cameron DESCRIPTION: "You'll a' hae heard tell o' bonnie Jeanie Cameron, how she fell sick... And a' that they could recommend her Was ae blythe blink o' the Young Pretender." She sends a letter to Prince Charlie, who arrives soon after and takes her in his arms. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1901 (Ford) KEYWORDS: love disease Jacobites FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ford-Vagabond, pp. 221-223, "Bonnie Jeanie Cameron" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #13082 NOTES: Ford has several stories allegedly about the later life of this young woman, who supposedly died in 1773. I checked both a biography of Bonnie Prince Charlie and assorted histories of the Forty-Five, however, and found no mention of a liaison, even brief, with a woman of this name. Abby Sale pointed me to the apparent solution to the question. According to a web commentary on Eyre-Todd's _Ancient Scots Ballads_, based on Ray's _Complete History of the Rebellion_, Cameron had been born as early as 1695, and had been in trouble with men by the time she was in her mid-teens. Not even putting her in a nunnery could apparently control her passions, and after the death of her father and brother, managed to take a spot as "tutor" to her nephew, who reportedly was of limited intellectual capacity. At the time of the 1745 rebellion, Ray reports, Cameron raised the Camerons of Glendessary, bringing some 250 men to Bonnie Prince Charlie, who under the circumstances naturally treated her to a large dose of his considerable charm. Considering that Jean Cameron was rather older than Charlie's mother, one doubts any romantic connection. But singers might easily ignore that. The Eyre-Todd report continues through much contradictory data, finally going so far as to speculate that perhaps there were *two* Jean Camerons. I must add that the histories no more mention Jean Cameron of Glendessary as a leader of soldiers than as a love interest of Prince Charles. - RBW File: FVS221 === NAME: Bonnie Jeanie Shaw DESCRIPTION: "I'm far awa frae Scotland, Nae lovin' voice is near, I'm far frae my ain folk... I'll wander hame to Scotland An' my bonnie Jeaanie Shaw." The singer misses the sights, sounds, people of home, and repeatedly promises to go back AUTHOR: Words: Alexander Melville EARLIEST_DATE: 1930 (Ord) KEYWORDS: home emigration return FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ord, p. 344, "Bonnie Jeanie Shaw" (1 text) Roud #3945 BROADSIDES: NLScotland, L.C.Fol.70(24a), "Bonnie Jeanie Shaw," Poet's Box (Dundee), c. 1890 File: Ord344 === NAME: Bonnie Jeannie o Bethelnie: see Glenlogie, or, Jean o Bethelnie [Child 238] (File: C238) === NAME: Bonnie John Seton [Child 198] DESCRIPTION: Forces from north and south prepare for battle at the Brig o' Dee. John Seton, with great foresight, makes his will. He is killed in the battle, and the highlanders routed by cannon. The leaders of the enemy forces despoil Seton's body AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1832 KEYWORDS: battle death nobility HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: Junw 18, 1639 - Montrose's attack on the Bridge of Dee FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Child 198, "Bonnie John Seton" (2 texts) Leach, pp. 535-536, "Bonnie John Seton" (1 text) DBuchan 36, "Bonny John Seton" (1 text) Roud #3908 NOTES: Were it not for the mention of Montrose in the final stanzas of Child's "B" version, it would be almost impossible to connect this with historical events. As it is, the ballad focuses entirely on Seton; the setting of the battle is entirely ignored. It relates to a minor incident of the English Civil Wars, but this is rather trivial in context. Child provides such additional background as is available. - RBW File: C198 === NAME: Bonnie Johnnie Campbell: see Bonnie George Campbell [Child 210] (File: C210) === NAME: Bonnie Johnnie Lowrie: see Johnny Lowre (File: FVS193) === NAME: Bonnie Kellswater: see The Lover's Curse (Kellswater) (File: HHH442) === NAME: Bonnie Lad That Handles the Plough, The: see The Laddie That Handles the Ploo (File: Ord081) === NAME: Bonnie Laddie, Hieland Laddie: see Hieland Laddie (File: Doe050) === NAME: Bonnie Lass Among the Heather DESCRIPTION: Singer meets a shepherdess and offers to buy her sheep if she would live with him: he has cattle and lives on "level ground," not in the cramped highlands among the heather. She tells him to keep his land and money; she is happy at home with her parents. AUTHOR: Paddy Tunney EARLIEST_DATE: 1991 (Tunney-SongsThunder) KEYWORDS: courting rejection dialog sheep FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) Tunney-SongsThunder, pp. 30-31, "Bonnie Lass Among the Heather" (1 text) Roud #2894 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Queen Among the Heather" (theme) and references there cf. "The Fair o' Balnaminna (The Lass Among the Heather)" (theme) NOTES: Although Tunney's title "Bonnie Lass Among the Heather" suggests "Queen Among the Heather," the two share only a few lines and the story outcome is different. In answer to a query, John Moulden clarified the relationship between McWilliams's "The Lass Among the Heather" [see John Moulden's book _Songs of Hugh McWilliams : schoolmaster, 1831_]/"The Fair O' Balnaminna"/"The Blooming Heather" versions and Tunney's song. In a note posted to IRTRAD-L on September 21, 1996 he wrote "almost certainly, all this except [four lines] have been written by Paddy Tunney." John Moulden is researcher at the "Centre for the Study of Human Settlement and Historical Change" at National University of Ireland, Galway whose subject is "the printed ballad in Ireland." To compare Tunney-SongsThunder with the "original" see John Moulden, Songs of Hugh McWilliams, Schoolmaster, 1831 (Portrush,1993), p. 15, "The Lass among the Heather" Gavin Greig, Folk-Song in Buchan and Folk-Song of the North-East (Hatboro,1963), XLIV, p.1, "The Fair o' Balnaminna" - BS File: TST030 === NAME: Bonnie Lass o' Fyvie, The: see Bonnie Lass of Fyvie, The (Pretty Peggy-O) (File: SBoA020) === NAME: Bonnie Lass of Fyvie, The (Pretty Peggy-O) DESCRIPTION: A troop of soldiers comes to town. The (captain) falls in love with (Peggy). He asks her to marry; she says she will never marry a soldier. When ordered to leave, he asks more time to persuade her. It is denied. He departs, and dies for love AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1839 (broadside, Bodleian 2806 c.16(125)) KEYWORDS: love courting soldier hardheartedness rejection death FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland(Aber)) US(Ap,SE,So) REFERENCES: (9 citations) Ford-Vagabond, pp. 121-123, "Bonnie Barbara, O" (1 text) Ord, pp. 304-305, "The Bonnie Lass o' Fyvie" (1 text) Belden, p. 169, "Pretty Peggy O" (1 text) BrownIII 381, "Pretty Peggy" (1 text) Hudson 49, pp. 165-166, "Pretty Peggy-O" (1 text) SharpAp 95, "Pretty Peggy O" (4 texts, 4 tunes) Scott-BoA, pp. 20-22, "The Bonnie Lass o' Fyvie" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 282, "Peggy-O" (1 text) DT, FYVIOLAS* FENARLAS* FYVIOLS2 (FYVINOTE -- background notes) Roud #545 RECORDINGS: The Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem, "The Maid of Fife-E-O" (on IRClancyMakem02) Jimmy McBeath, "Bonnie Lass O' Fyvie" (on Voice01) John Strachan, "The Bonnie Lass O' Fyvie" (on Lomax43, LomaxCD1743) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, 2806 c.16(125), "Pretty Peggy of Derby" ("There was a regiment of Irish dragoous [sic]"), J. Catnach (London), 1813-1838; also Harding B 15(244a), "Pretty Peggy of Derby"; Harding B 25(1565), "Pretty Peggy of Derry" ALTERNATE_TITLES: Pretty Peggy of Derby File: SBoA020 === NAME: Bonnie Lassie O: see The Shearin's Nae for You (File: RcShNaYo) === NAME: Bonnie Lassie, Come to the North Hielands: see The North Highlands (File: Ord087) === NAME: Bonnie Lassie's Answer, The DESCRIPTION: "Farewell to Glasgow city, likewise to Lanarkshire, Farewell, my dearest parents, I'll never see you more." Poverty forces the young man to sea. The girl wishes he would stay, or that she could come along, "the bonnie lassie's answer was aye no, no." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1904 (Ford) KEYWORDS: poverty separation love rejection sailor war navy cross-dressing FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Ford-Vagabond, pp. 68-70, "The Bonnie Lassie's Answer" (1 text, 1 tune) Ord, pp. 73-75, "The Bonnie Lassie's Answer Was Aye Oh No" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #3326 BROADSIDES: NLScotland, RB.m.168(063), "The Bonnie Lasses' (sic.) Answer," James Lindsay (Glasgow), c. 1880; also L.C.Fol.178.A.2(087), "The Bonnie Lassie's Answers," unknown, n.d. (part of a multi-song sheet also containing a "Kangaroo" song); also L.C.Fol.73(127b), "The Bonnie Lassie's Answer," unknown, n.d. File: FVS070 === NAME: Bonnie Light Horseman, The DESCRIPTION: The singer calls on listeners to hear of a "maid in distress" who wanders forlorn; "She relies upon George for the loss of her lover." She tells how he went to fight Napoleon and was slain. (She wishes she could join her lover at his grave, and die there) AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1820 (broadside, Bodleian Harding B 25(1107)) KEYWORDS: soldier death separation burial bird Napoleon HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1760-1820 - reign of George III (the George of the song) June 18, 1815 - Battle of Waterloo FOUND_IN: Ireland Britain Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (4 citations) SHenry H122a, pp. 88-89, "The Bonny Light Horseman" (1 text, 1 tune, with many variations in the source texts) Moylan 181, "The Bonny Light Horseman" (1 text, 1 tune) Creighton-NovaScotia 69, "Bonny Light Horseman" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BONLGHT* BONLGHT3 BONLGHT4* Roud #1185 RECORDINGS: Martin Howley, "The Young Horseman" (on Voice08) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 25(1107), "The Light Horseman Slain in the Wars ," J. Pitts (London), 1802-1819; also Harding B 25(260), Harding B 28(165), Firth c.14(182), Firth c.14(183), Firth c.26(266), "[The] Bonny Light-Horseman"; Harding B 18(55), Harding B 16(34a), 2806 c.16(249), Johnson Ballads 1914, Harding B 20(174), "[The] Bonny Light Horseman"; Firth b.25(230), Harding B 11(413), Harding B 15(29b), "Bonny Light Horseman Slain in the Wars"; Harding B 11(3413), "Bonny Light Horseman Slain in the Wars!"; Harding B 11(1106), "The Light Horseman Slain in the Wars" or "The Lamenting Maiden" NOTES: Napoleon was famous for his handling of artillery (he was the one who gave a crowd the "whiff of grapeshot"), so it is no surprise to find a reference to "Boney" "[fixing] his cannon the victory to gain." - RBW The ballad is recorded on one of the CD's issued around the time of the bicentenial of the 1798 Irish Rebellion. See: Franke Harte and Donal Lunny, "The Bonny Light Horseman" (on Franke Harte and Donal Lunny, "My Name is Napoleon Bonaparte," Hummingbird Records HBCD0027 (2001)) Hall, notes to Voice08: "'The Young Horseman' is the story of a British soldier who dies in the Egyptian campaign, 1798-1802"; "I once loved a soldier ... To the dark plains of Egypt he was forced for to go.... It was brave Napoleon ... slew brave MacDonald coming over from Spain." - BS Though, to be nitpicky, Napoleon didn't himself fight the British in any significant way in Egypt. After the British beat the French fleet in Aboukir Bay, Napoleon fooled around a little in Palestone, then left the area, leaving his army in Egypt to be defeated and captured. - RBW File: HHH122a === NAME: Bonnie Lyndale DESCRIPTION: The singer recalls "bonnie Lyndale, My dear and early home." He recalls the glens, peaceful homes, the robin's and milkmaid's songs. He thinks of the plowman: since leaving "I've plowed the sea. I've sailed with sailors ... Far from bonnie Lyndale" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1973 (Dibblee/Dibblee) KEYWORDS: home lyric nonballad emigration FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Dibblee/Dibblee, pp. 115-116, "Bonnie Lyndale" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #12460 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Scarborough Settler's Lament" and references there File: Dib115 === NAME: Bonnie Mally Stewart DESCRIPTION: "The cold winter is past and gone, And now comes on the spring, And I am one of the King's Life-Guards, And must go fight for my king, my dear, And must go fight...." She offers to go with him. When he leaves, she follows; (when they meet, he denies her) AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1904 (Ford) KEYWORDS: soldier separation reunion betrayal cross-dressing FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ford-Vagabond, pp. 174-175, "Bonnie Mally Stewart" (1 text) Roud #5789 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "It Was A' for Our Rightfu' King" (lyrics) NOTES: This song ends with a verse also associated with Burns's "It Was A' for Our Rightfu' King," and follows the same metrical pattern. Ford thinks it the source of the Burns song, and this is certainly possible -- except that this song, which also looks composed, is not attested until the nineteenth century, and in broadsides. - RBW File: FVS174 === NAME: Bonnie Mason Laddie, The DESCRIPTION: "Simmer's gaun awa'... And the bonnie mason laddies They'll be comin' home... And the bonnie mason laddie He will marry me." The singer describes all the men she will not have (sailor, ploughman, blacksmith, weaver), "But I will hae the mason." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1930 (Ord) KEYWORDS: love courting work FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ord, p. 108, "The Bonnie Mason Laddie" (1 text) Roud #5540 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Soldier Boy for Me (A Railroader for Me)" (theme, lyrics) NOTES: This is so like "Soldier Boy for Me" in lyrics and theme that at first I lumped them. I still suspect cross-fertilization, but this is sufficiently close-knit that I've split it off. - RBW File: Ord108 === NAME: Bonnie Mill-Dams o' Binnorie, The: see The Twa Sisters [Child 10] (File: C010) === NAME: Bonnie Moorhen, The DESCRIPTION: "(The/My) bonnie moorhen Has feathers enou'." "There's some of them black, And there's some of them blue." Additional verse may be about the bird, or perhaps about an exiled monarch AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1964 (Montgomerie) KEYWORDS: Jacobites bird exile colors FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Montgomerie-ScottishNR 17, "(The bonnie moor-hen)" (1 short text) Roud #2944 NOTES: This is one of those conundrums. The lyrics by the Montgomeries seem to be a simple rhyme about a bird. But sources going back to Hogg's _Jacobite Relics_ have a fuller text in which the singers give a toast to the bonnie moorhen, who is in exile, and who wears red, green, white, and grey but not blue feathers (colors associated with the Stuart tartan). It seems clear that these two forms are related, though which is earlier I cannot tell. Then there is the version that provides most of Roud's texts, often starting "You brave lads of Wardhill/Wardale I pray tend an ear." This exists in several Bodleian broadsides [Harding B 25(261), ""Bonny moor hen," Stephenson (Gateshead), 1821-1850; also Harding B 11(414), Firth c, 19(39)]. This is an even fuller text, mostly about hunting, though there might be some Jacobite elements in there somewhere. My feeling is that that should be split off, though Roud lumps them. Incidentally, it might be noted that Bonnie Prince Charlie, handsome though he was, would not have met the moorhen standard for attractiveness.According to Olivia Judson's tongue-in-cheek book on evolutionary biology, _Dr. Tatiana's Sex Advice to All Creation_ (Henry Holt, 2002), p. 126, the ideal male moorhen is fat (because the males sit on the eggs, and a fat bird can sit on them longer) and small (because a small bird can get fat more easily). - RBW File: RcMyBoMu === NAME: Bonnie Muirhen, The: see The Bonnie Moorhen (File: RcMyBoMu) === NAME: Bonnie Parks o' Kilty, The DESCRIPTION: "On the south side o Perth there lived a fair maid, She wandered late and ear' and never was afraid." A young man stops her and lays her down. Her father comes out and demands that the lad marry her. He agrees, and she becomes lady o' Kilty AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1930 (Ord) KEYWORDS: love courting seduction sex marriage nobility FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ord, pp. 113-114, "The Bonnie Parks o' Kilty" (1 text) Roud #3953 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Broom of Cowdenknows" [Child 217] (plot) cf. "The Wylie Wife of the Hie Toun Hie" [Child 290] (plot) cf. "The Dainty Doonby" (plot) File: Ord113 === NAME: Bonnie Redesdale Lassie, The DESCRIPTION: "The breath of spring is gratefu', As mild it sweeps alang... Yet the bonnie Redesdale lassie Is sweeter still to me." The singer praises each season, but loves the girl best; he would not trade her for kingdoms AUTHOR: Words: Robert White EARLIEST_DATE: 1900 (Stokoe/Reay) KEYWORDS: love nonballad FOUND_IN: Britain(England(North)) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Stokoe/Reay, pp. 37-38, "The Bonnie Redesdale Lassie" (1 text, 1 tune) ST StoR037 (Partial) Roud #3057 File: StoR037 === NAME: Bonnie Ship the Diamond, The DESCRIPTION: "The Diamond is a ship my lads, For the Davis Straight she's bound." The ship goes whaling near Greenland, "Where the sun it never sets." The singer toasts various ships, and promises to return home. When the ship returns, sailors and girls go on sprees AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1930 (Ord) KEYWORDS: ship sea whaler return sex FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Ord, pp. 312-313, "The Bonnie Ship the Diamond" (1 text) Darling-NAS, pp. 319-320, "The Diamond" (1 text) Silber-FSWB, p. 94, "The Bonny Ship the Diamond" (1 text) DT, BDIAMOND* Roud #2172 NOTES: According to Ord, _The Bonnie Ship the Diamond_ sailed from Aberdeen -- and, yes, he considers the ship's name to be _The Bonnie Ship the Diamond_, not just _The Diamond_. He does not, however, cite a source. The internal date for this song seems to be the first quarter of the nineteenth century, based on its mention of the _Resolution_. According to Lincoln P. Paine's _Ships of the World_, p. 430, the ship sailed from North Whitby. Her most famous captains were William Scoresby Senior, who commanded from her fitting out in 1803 until 1810, and his son William Junior, captain from 1810 to 1813. In 1806, Scoresby took _Resolution_ to 82 degrees 30 minutes north latitude (see Pierre Berton, _The Arctic Grail_, p. 97) -- the unofficial record for "farthest north" at the time, not to be broken for twenty years, and not to be broken by a ship for many years after that. The Scoresbys became famous, and some thought the younger one (whose discoveries set the Admiralty to thinking about the Northwest Passage, since they reported that the polar ice was retreating) should have led John Ross's northward expedition (for background on these, see the notes to "Lady Franklin's Lament (The Sailor's Dream)" [Laws K9]). The navy wouldn't trust a civilian whaler, however. The _Resolution_ was sold in 1813 (Scoresby the Younger would eventually turn to the priesthood), but Paine reports that she continued to work out of Whitby until 1829. She was sold to Peterhead interests in 1829; Paine does not record her final fate. - RBW File: FSWB094 === NAME: Bonnie Susie Cleland: see Lady Maisry [Child 65] (File: C065) === NAME: Bonnie Udny DESCRIPTION: "O Udny, bonnie Udny, you shine whaur you stand." The singer praises the land and its people; he recalls walking the land and going out to meet his beloved. "Wherever I wander, I'll still think on you"; he hopes to return to the place and its people AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1930 (Ord) KEYWORDS: home travel separation FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ord, pp. 341-342, "Bonnie Udny" (1 text) Roud #3450 File: Ord341 === NAME: Bonnie Wee Lass of the Glen, The DESCRIPTION: The singer goes "up to a neat little cottage" and is amazed at the beauty of the girl living here. When he courts her, she accuses him of flattery and deception, and says she is too young to marry. He wishes her happiness and hopes to change her mind AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1924 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: love courting rejection beauty FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H14a, pp. 356-357, "The Bonnie Wee Lass of the Glen" (1 text, 2 tunes) Roud #6879 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Maid with the Bonny Brown Hair" (tune) File: HHH014a === NAME: Bonnie Wee Lassie Fae Gouroch, The DESCRIPTION: Piper MacFarlane will wed the daughter of a grocer in Gouroch. He's "popped her the question and bought her the ring." Everywhere the couple go she causes a stir among men. In "a first-class hotel" they show they are not city folk. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1976 (recording, Belle Stewart) KEYWORDS: courting fight humorous FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland(Aber)) REFERENCES: (0 citations) Roud #5212 RECORDINGS: Belle Stewart, "The Bonnie Wee Lassie Fae Gouroch" (on Voice01) NOTES: Gourock is about 25 miles west of Glasgow at the mouth of the Clyde. - BS File: RcTBWLFG === NAME: Bonnie Wee Lassie That Never Said No, The: see The Bonnie Wee Lassie Who Never Said No (File: DTnevsay) === NAME: Bonnie Wee Lassie Who Never Said No, The DESCRIPTION: Singer invites a lass to drink with him; she accepts; she is the "bonnie wee lassie who never said no." She says to take the night's rent from her pocket, but he'll owe half a crown for laying her down. He reaches in, finds 5 pounds, and takes off with it AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1856 (broadside, Bodleian Harding B 11(985)) KEYWORDS: sex abandonment money drink landlord whore FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) Ireland REFERENCES: (2 citations) Morton-Maguire 30, pp. 72-74,117,168, "Bonnie Wee Lassie that Never Said No" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, NEVSAYNO Roud #2903 RECORDINGS: Jeannie Robertson, "The Bonnie Wee Lassie Who Never Said No" (on FSB2, FSB2CD, Voice13) BROADSIDES: John Maguire, "Bonny Wee Lassie That Never Said No" (on IRJMaguire01) Bodleian, Harding B 11(985), "The Bonny We [sic] Lassie That Never Said No" ("You lads of this nation, of high and low station"), W. Wright (Birmingham), 1842-1855 File: DTnevsay === NAME: Bonnie Wee Tramping Lass, The DESCRIPTION: The singer passed the carter's mill on a Saturday night and meets "a bonnie wee tramping lass", She explains her job "winding hanks of yarn." They discuss love and go home together. They marry happily and now have three children. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1967 (recording, Willie Scott) KEYWORDS: love marriage sex children FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland(Bord)) REFERENCES: (0 citations) Roud #5129 RECORDINGS: Willie Scott, "The Bonnie Wee Tramping Lass" (on Voice10) NOTES: Hall, notes to Voice10, describes this as an "innocent courtship" leading to a "fortunate and happy marriage." - BS File: RcBWTrLa === NAME: Bonnie Woodha' DESCRIPTION: The singer and his Annie must part; he is a soldier and has been called away. His regiment goes into battle and he is wounded. He says he would recover better if Annie were there. He regrets leaving the collier's trade. (He thinks of deserting) AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1911 (Grieg) KEYWORDS: mining soldier separation injury desertion FOUND_IN: Ireland Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (2 citations) SHenry H476, p. 84-85, "Bonnie Woodha'" (1 text, 1 tune) Ord, p. 310, "Sweet Calder Burn; or Bonnie Woodha'" (1 text) Roud #3778 File: HHH476 === NAME: Bonnie Woodhall: see Bonnie Woodha' (File: HHH476) === NAME: Bonnie Woods o' Hatton, The DESCRIPTION: "Ye comrades and companions... To my sad lamentation I pray ye give an ear." The singer courted a beautiful girl, but at last she bid him depart. Now he prepares to leave home, still remembering her in Hatton and hoping that she will regret her decision AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1930 (Ord) KEYWORDS: love courting separation FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ord, p. 185, "The Bonnie Woods o' Hatton" (1 text) Roud #5531 RECORDINGS: Cathie Stewart, "Hatton Woods" (on SCStewartsBlair01) [called "Hattan Woods" on the LP jacket but "Hatton Woods" on the lyrics sheet] BROADSIDES: NLScotland, L.C.Fol.70(32), "Hatton Woods or the Bonnie Woods o' Hatton," Poet's Box (Dundee), c. 1890 CROSS_REFERENCES: Hattan Woods File: Ord185 === NAME: Bonny Anne: see The Sea Apprentice (File: HHH739) === NAME: Bonny at Morn DESCRIPTION: "The sheep's in the meadows, The kye's in the corn, Thou's ower lang in thy bed, Bonny at morn." "Canny at night, Bonny at morn, Thou's ower lang in...." The parents complain of the children's laziness: "The lad winnot work And the lass winnot lairn." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1900 (Stokoe/Reay) KEYWORDS: work mother children FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (2 citations) Stokoe/Reay, pp. 66-67, "Bonny at Morn" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BONMORN BONYMORN Roud #3064 File: Stor066 === NAME: Bonny Baby Livingston [Child 222] DESCRIPTION: Clenlion carries Bonny Baby Livingston off to the Highlands. She refuses to show any favor unless she is returned. At Glenlion Castle, Glenlion's sister helps Baby get a letter away to her true love. He arrives with armed men, and carries Baby back home. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1800 LONG_DESCRIPTION: Bonny Baby Livingston is carried off to the Highlands by Glenlion. She refuses to smile or speak or show any favor unless she is returned. Glenlion's brother John wants to return her, but Glenlion hopes to win her love. At Glenlion Castle, Glenlion's youngest sister helps Baby get a letter away to her true love Johnny at Dundee. He arrives with armed men, and carries Baby back home. KEYWORDS: love abduction rescue family FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland(Aber)) REFERENCES: (6 citations) Child 222, "Bonnie Baby Livingston" (5 texts, 1 tune) {Bronson's [#1]} Bronson 222, "Bonnie Baby Livingston" (1 version+1 in addenda) Leach, pp. 579-583, "Bonny Baby Livingston" (1 text) OBB 147, "Baby Livingston" (1 text) DBuchan 24, "Bonny Baby Livingston" (1 text) DT, BABLIVST* Roud #100 File: C222 === NAME: Bonny Banks of Ardrie-O, The: see Babylon, or, The Bonnie Banks o Fordie [Child 14] (File: C014) === NAME: Bonny Barbara Allan [Child 84] DESCRIPTION: A knight lies dying for love of Barbara Allan. His servant summons her, but she scorns him. As she returns home, she hears the death-bell, repents, and in turn dies. Buried close together, a briar grows from her grave, a rose from his; they entwine AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1740 (Tea-Table Miscellany; mentioned by Pepys in 1666) KEYWORDS: love hardheartedness death flowers FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland(Aber,Bord,Hebr),England(All)) US(All) Canada(Mar,Newf,West) Ireland REFERENCES: (63 citations) Child 84, "Bonny Barbara Allan" (3 texts, 1 tune) {Bronson's #79} Bronson 84, "Bonny Barbara Allan" (198 versions+2 in addenda) BarryEckstormSmyth pp. 195-200, "Barbara Allen" (3 texts plus 1 fragment, 2 tunes) {Bronson's #15, #188} Percy/Wheatley III, pp. 128-130, "Barbara Allen's Cruelty"; pp. 133-135, "Sir John Grehme and Barbara Allen" (2 texts) Belden, pp. 60-65, "Barbara Allen" (1 full text+3 fragments, 4 tunes, plus references to 11 other versions) {G=Bronson's #55, K=#159, M=#158, N=#181} Randolph 21, "Barbara Allen" (11 texts plus 4 fragments, 6 tunes) {A=Bronson's #114, B=#135, E=#172, J=#163, M=#119, N=#162} Randolph/Cohen, pp. 41-44, "Barbara Allen" (1 text, 1 tune -- Randolph's 21M) {Bronson's #119} Eddy 16, "Bonny Barbara Allen" (4 texts plus 2 fragments (the fragments might be any rose-and-briar song); 4 tunes) {Bronson's #191, #53, #22, #160} Gardner/Chickering 8, "Barbara Allen" (1 text plus an excerpt and mention of 1 more; 1 tune) {Bronson's #187} Flanders/Olney, pp. 197-200, "Mary Alling" (1 text, 1 tune) Flanders-Ancient2, pp. 246-292, "Barbara Allen" (16 texts plus 9 fragments, 13 tunes -- some of the items rather oddly related, e.g. H1, H2, H3 are said to derive from the same informant but the melodies of H2 and H3 differ) Linscott, pp. 163-164, "Barb'ry Ellen or Barbara Allen" (1 short text, 1 tune) Davis-Ballads 24, "Bonny Barbara Allan" (28 texts plus 4 fragments, 12 tunes, all entitled "Barbara Allen"; 56? more versions mentioned in Appendix A) {Bronson's #89, #101, #102, #189, #169, #75, #182, [#s, unprinted], [#t, unprinted], #141, #171, #184} Davis-More 25, pp. 182-198, "Bonny Barbara Allen" (7 texts plus a fragment, 8 tunes) BrownII 27, "Bonny Barbara Allen" (9 texts plus 10 excerpts and citations of 12 more) Chappell-FSRA 13, "Bonny Barbara Allen" (1 short text) Hudson 15, pp. 95-107, "Bonny Barbara Allen" (6 texts plus 7 excerpts and mention of 3 more) Fuson, pp. 47-48, "Barbara Allen" (1 text) Cambiaire, pp. 66-68, "Barbara Allen" (1 text) MHenry-Appalachians, p. 248, "Barbara Ellen" (1 fragment) Scarborough-SongCatcher, pp. 83-96, collectively titled "Bonny Barbara Allen"; individual versions are "The Ballet of Barbara Allan," "Barbry Ellen," "Barbara Allen," (no title), "Barbare Allen," (no title), "Barbara Ellen," "Barbara Ellen," "Barbarie Allen" (9 texts; 5 tunes on pp. 386-388) {Bronson's #183, #107, #180, #168, #118} Scarborough-NegroFS, pp. 59-60, (no title; the song uses the name "Bob-ree Allin") (1 text) Brewster 15, "Barbara Allen" (12 texts plus a fragment and mention of 1 more, 1 tune) {Bronson's #150} Creighton/Senior, pp. 49-58, "Bonny Barbara Allen" (6 texts plus 1 fragment, 4 tunes) {Bronson's #85, #36, #37, #38} Creighton-Maritime, pp. 13-14, "Bonny Barbara Allan" (1 text, 1 tune) Greenleaf/Mansfield 12, "Barbree Ellen" (1 text) Peacock, pp. 649-661, "Barbara Allen" (4 texts, 6 tunes) Mackenzie 9, "Barbara Allan" (1 text); "Barbara Ellan" (2 texts, 1 tune) {Bronson's #18} Leach, pp. 277-280, "Bonny Barbara Allen" (3 texts) Wyman-Brockway I, p. 1, "Barbara Allen" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #151} Friedman, p. 88, "Barbara Allen" (3 texts, 1 tune) OBB 158, "Barbara Allen's Cruelty" (1 text) Warner 40, "Barbara Allen"; 187, "Barbara Allen" (2 texts, 2 tunes; the first tune is in 5/4 and seems to be the only American instance of this metre, commonly found in British tunes in Bronson's "A" group) PBB 59, "Bonny Barbara Allen" (1 text) McNeil-SFB1, pp. 102-105, "Barb'ry Allen" (1 text, 1 tune) SharpAp 24 "Barbara Allen" (7 texts plus 6 fragments, 16 tunes){Bronson's #88, #116, #136, #76, #176, #152, #178, #184, #106, #121, #110, #48, #49, #78, #111, #137} Sharp-100E 7, "Barbara Ellen" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #1} Niles 36, "Bonny Barbara Allan" (2 texts, 1 tune) Sharp/Karpeles-80E 19, "Barbara Ellen" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #49} Sandburg, p. 57, "Barbara Allen" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #35} Scott-BoA, pp. 7-8, "Bawbee Allen" (1 text, 1 tune) Copper-SoBreeze, pp. 278-279, "Barbara Allen" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-FSNA 89, "Barbara Allen" (1 text, 1 tune, probably composite as no source it listed) Ritchie-SingFam, pp. 169-171," [Barbry Ellen]" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #142} Ritchie-Southern, p. 73, "Barbry Ellen" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #142} Ord, pp. 476-477, "Barbara Allan" (1 text) Botkin-AmFolklr, pp. 820-822, "Bonny Barbara Allen" (1 text, 1 tune) TBB 12, "Bonny Barbara Allan" (1 text) SHenry H236, pp. 375-376, "Barbara Allen" (1 text, 1 tune) Munnelly/Deasy-Lenihan 9, "Barb'ry Ellen" (1 text, 1 tune) MacSeegTrav 11, "Bonny Barbara Allen" (2 texts, 2 tunes) Gilbert, pp. 25-26, "Barbara Allen" (1 text) HarvClass-EP1, pp. 68-69, "Bonny Barbara Allen" (1 text) Abrahams/Foss, p. 143, "(Barbara Allen)" (1 tune, partial text) LPound-ABS, 3, pp. 7-9, "Barbery Allen"; p. 10, "Barbara Allen" (2 texts) JHCox 16, "Bonny Barbara Allen" (9 texts plus mention of 3 more; 2 tunes) {Bronson's #138, #91} Darling-NAS, pp. 50-54, "Barbara Allen"; "Barbro Allen" (2 texts) PSeeger-AFB, p. 79, "Barbara Allen" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 179 "Barbara Allen" (1 text) BBI, ZN1459, "In Scarlet Town where I was bound" DT 84, BARBALEN* BARBALN2* BARBALN3* BARBALN4 BARBALN5 ADDITIONAL: Fred W. Allsopp, Folklore of Romantic Arkansas, Volume II (1931), pp. 212-213, "(Barbara Allen)" (1 text) Walter de la Mare, _Come Hither_, revised edition, 1928; #368, "Bonny Barbara Allan" (1 text) Roud #54 RECORDINGS: Bob Atcher, "Barbara Allen [pts. 1 & 2]" (Columbia 20481, c. 1948; rec. 1947) Alex Barr, "Barbara Allen" (AFS 4228 A/4228 B, 1939; in AMMEM/Cowell) Andy Cash, "Barbary Ellen" (on IRTravellers01) James B. Cornett, "Barbara Allen" (on MMOK, MMOKCD) Vernon Dalhart, "Barbara Allen" Brunswick 117/Vocalion 5140, 1927; Supertone S-2002, 1930 {Bronson's #131}) (Okeh 45090 [as Tobe Little], 1927) (Columbia 15126-D [as Al Craver], 1927) (Grey Gull 4239 [as Jeff Calhoun], 1928) (Champion 15246/Black Patti 8028, 1927; Supertone 9228, 1928) (Challenge 268, 1927) Rosie Day, "Barbara Ellen" (on JThomas01) Patsy Flynn, "Barbara Allen" (on IRHardySons) Newton Gaines, "Barbara Allen" (Victor V-40253 [as Jim New?], 1930) {cf. Bronson's #71} Molly Galbraith, "Barbara Allen" (on Saskatch01) G. Marston Haddock, "Barbara Allen" (Musicraft 262, c. 1944) Seena Helms, "Barbara Allen" (on HandMeDown2) (Queen) Hule Hines, "Barbara Allen" (AFS 2714 B2, 1939) Rebecca King Jones, "Barbara Allen" [excerpt] (on USWarnerColl01) Bradley Kincaid, "Barbara Allen" (Supertone 9211, 1928); (Melotone 12349/Conqueror 7982, 1932; Vocalion 02685, 1934; rec. 1930) Sam Larner, "Barbara Allen" (on SLarner01) Ewan MacColl and Peggy Seeger, "Barbara Allen" (on ENMacCollSeeger02) Sarah Makem, "Barbara Allen" (on Voice17) Jessie Murray, Fred Jordan, Charlie Wills, Ma[r]y Bennell, Thomas Moran, Phil Tanner [composite] "Barbara Allen" (on FSB4, FSBBAL1) New Lost City Ramblers, "Barbara Allen" (on NLCR10) Bill Nicholson w. Zane Shrader, "Barbara Allen" (AFS; on LC14) {Bronson's #70} Mose "Clear Rock" Platt, "Barbara Allen" (AFS 201 A, 1933; on LC54) Granny Porter w. Wade Ward, "Barbry Allen" (on Persis1) Mr. Rew, "Barbara Allen" (on FieldTrip1) Jean Ritchie, "Barbry Ellen" (on JRitchie01) {cf. Bronson's #142} Pete Seeger, "Barbara Allen" (on PeteSeeger16) (on PeteSeeger40) Lucy Stewart, "Barbary Allen" (on LStewart1) Art Thieme, "The Cowboys' Barbara Allen" (on Thieme01) (on Thieme06) The Vagabonds, "Barbara Allen" (Bluebird B-5300/Montgomery Ward M-4442, 1934; rec. 1933) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 3(49), "Barbara Allen's Cruelty" or "The Young Man's Tragedy," J. Davenport (London), 1800-1802; also Douce Ballads 3(3a), "Barbara Allen's Cruelty" or "The Young Man's Tragedy"; Harding B 25(115), Harding B 11(730), Johnson Ballads 266, Firth c.21(22), Firth c.21(23), Harding B 16(14a), 2806 c.17(19), Harding B 11(1011), Firth c.21(21), Harding B 11(729), "Barbara Allen"; Harding B 11(2121), "The Life, Death, and Love, of Barbara Allen" Murray, Mu23-y1:138, "Barbara Allen" and "Barbara Allen the Cruel," Poet's Box (St. Andrew's), 19C [two distinct texts, with critical introduction] CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Shantyman's Life (I)" (tune) cf. "Brother Green" (tune) cf. "Leslie Allen" (tune) cf. "Mother, Mother, Make My Bed" (floating verses) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Barbara Ellen Barbary Allen NOTES: Ed Cray makes the interesting note that, in a study he did with Charles Seeger, he found four basic versions of the text of this song (which can be initially sorted by their first lines), and Seeger found four basic tune families. But the text groupings and tune groupings do not overlap. Bronson, too, finds four tune families (Group A of 39 tunes, B of 11, C of 87, and D of 54, plus a handful of odds and ends). Not all of Bronson's texts can be proved to be Barbara Allen (e.g. #1 could come from several ballads), but spot checks of Bronson seem to support at least partly Cray's thesis. While many versions could not be identified based solely on first lines, I found the following: Of the 39 texts in Bronson's "A" group, 12 have the opening "In Scarlet Town (Reading Town, London Town, Scotland) where I was born," 7 start with "All in the merry month of May (June)," and 3 open with "So early, early in the Spring." Of the texts in the "B" group, 4 begin "It was about the Martinmas time," two are "Merry month of May," and one is "Scarlet Town." In the huge "C" group, 34 versions were "Merry month," 20 were "Scarlet Town," 2 were "Martinmas," and 4 were "So early." In the "D" group, 27 were "Merry Month," 9 were "Scarlet Town," and 2 were "So early." Based on this, we might speculate that: 1. The original text was "All in the merry month of May" (70 instances) and that the tune was, if anything, Bronson's "C" group. This group is described as pentatonic, though the timing varies. 2. "Scarlet Town" goes with the "A" group, and might be next in age, since the first line is second to "Merry month" in popularity (42 instances). Bronson considers this tune to be primarily English, and perhaps somewhat related to the "C" tune. 3. "Martinmas" is originally (and still primarily) associated with the "B" group. Bronson lists this group as primarily Scottish. 4. "So Early," might seem, by elimination, to go with the "D" group. But this group is entirely American, and the tune (according to Bronson) is related to "Boyne Water," so this seems unlikely. Perhaps "D" has no special text associated with it. But this is all very tentative (and based on only a few minutes' work on my part); if studies of classical texts teach us anything, it's that variants are to be weighed and not counted! Phillips Barry speculates that this is based on the lives of Barbara Villiers and King Charles II. This is characteristic of Barry: Clever but completely unconvincing. - RBW The name "Barbara," cognate with "barbarian," means "foreigner" [technically, someone who doesn't speak Greek - RBW]; Martin Carthy has conjectured that the original story involved a Gypsy or North African woman, and that racial prejudice explains why William slights her, and why she is so cold to him as a result. - PJS If we're going for the way-far-out, Peter Underwood's _Gazeteer of British, Scottish & Irish Ghosts_, pp. 343-344, has a tale which sounds amazingly like this one: Edmund Graeme (a name not far from that of one of the name for Barbara's swain) fell in love with an unnamed girl. They were engaged, but she betrayed his trust. He died for love. She repented within moments of his death. She asked to be buried (alive, in Underwood's version) with him. His story is that her ghost haunts the site. Of course, all this would be much better for documentation. And dates; it might well be more recent than Barbara's story. There is one element in the song which does have a strong foreign element: The rose-and-briar ending. This, of course, is not unique to this song, though it's most strongly associated with Barbara and her love. But the rose-and-briar-and-lover's-knot theme has been found as far away as Hungary (Romania?); Maud Karpeles, _Folk Songs of Europe_, Oak, 1956, 1964, p. 228, prints a Transylvanian version, "Kadar Kata," "Katie Kadar," with a loose English translation. In that version, the mother has drowned the girl, and the boy drowns himself where he finds her ghost. In that version, he is the rose, she the briar -- and the mother tears them out of the ground. The rose then curses his mother. (Could this be the origin of some sort of legend of the undead?) The story also has roots in Ireland. For a version of the story of Deirdre of the Sorrows, see Padraic Colum, editor, ÒA Treasury of Irish Folklore_, revised edition, 1954, 1967 (I use the 1992 Wings Books edition), pp. 73-83; also the much shorter summary in Peter Beresford Ellis's _A Dictionary of Irish Mythology_, Oxford, 1991, pp. 80-81. Deirdre, it was foretold at her birth, would grow up to be the most beautiful woman in Ireland, but also to cause great grief to the one who married her and to his nation. Although Conor cared for the child, promising to wed her himself (and hence prevent any sorrow for anyone who mattered), she was not interested in an old man (more to the point, perhaps, she may have felt the normal aversion children feel for those they grow up with; for background, see the notes to "Babylon, or, The Bonnie Banks o Fordie [Child 14]"). She instead fell in love with Naisi, and though strenuous efforts were made to keep them apart, he was killed and she killed herself. They slept side by side, and a tree grew from each, and the trees intertwined. The intertwining of branches is also found in the romance of Tristan and Iseult. Cambiaire claims there is a Spanish romance parallel to "Barbara Allen." Unfortunately he does not name it. Still, it seems clear that the rose-and-briar-intertwining theme is widespread at least across Europe. Cultural cross-fertilization, independent invention, or does this go back all the way to Indo-European? Perhaps there is a dissertation in there somewhere. - RBW Broadside Murray Mu23-y1:138, "Barbara Allan the Cruel," ends as a parody in which Barbara "gets another spark" after Johnny dies and, when she eventually dies," she is buried beside him "For she wished to be his bride in death, Though in life she couldn't abide 'un." - BS File: C084 === NAME: Bonny Bay of Biscay-O, The DESCRIPTION: The sailor fondly recalls his home, knowing that in a year he will be able to settle down with his love: "Of all the harbors east or west, There is one place that I love best, So whichever way the wind doth blow, I'll steer for the bonny Bay of Biscay-O" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1941 (Warner) KEYWORDS: sailor love FOUND_IN: US(NE) Britain REFERENCES: (2 citations) Warner 67, "The Bonny Bay of Biscay-O" DT, BISCAYO* Roud #6949 File: Wa067 === NAME: Bonny Bee Hom [Child 92] DESCRIPTION: The lady sits lamenting her absent love. She vows to wait seven years. Meanwhile, her love has received a talisman which will tell him if his love is dead or untrue. (After a year), the talisman turns dark. He sails for home, but his love is already dead AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: KEYWORDS: death separation magic FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Child 92, "Bonny Bee Hom" (2 texts) Leach, pp. 287-288, "Bonny Bee Hom" (1 text) OBB 74, "Bonny Bee Ho'm" (1 text) Roud #3885 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Lowlands of Holland" NOTES: "Bonny Bee Hom" is often linked with "The Lowlands of Holland" ("The Lily of Arkansas"), a link dating back to Child. The matter has been much studied, without clear conclusion. It might be noted, however, that "Bonny Bee Hom" involves a magic device (the stone that tells the lover whether his sweetheart is true), a theme not found in "The Lowlands of Holland." - RBW File: C092 === NAME: Bonny Birdy, The [Child 82] DESCRIPTION: A bird tells a knight that his wife is unfaithful. The two speed to his home, to find his wife in the arms of another man. He slays the intruder. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: KEYWORDS: infidelity death bird FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Child 82, "The Bonny Birdy" (1 text) Niles 35, "The Bonny Birdy" (1 text, 1 tune -- another instance where it is left to the reader to decide if Niles's version could possibly be legitimate) Roud #3972 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Little Musgrave and Lady Barnard" [Child 81] (plot) ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Tattletale Birdy File: C082 === NAME: Bonny Black Hare, The DESCRIPTION: A hunter goes out to shoot at the bonny black hare (hair), meets a willing maid, and beds her until his "ramrod is limber" and he cannot fire more. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: KEYWORDS: bawdy sex hunting FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar) Britain(England,Scotland) US(So) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Randolph-Legman I, pp. 42-43, "The Bonny Black Hare" (2 texts, 1 tune) DT, BLACKHAR* Roud #1656 RECORDINGS: A. L. Lloyd, "The Bonnie Black Hare" (on BirdBush1, BirdBush2) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Bonnie Moorhen" NOTES: Legman's notes link this broadside ballad to the older Scottish "The Bonnie Muir Hen." - EC File: RL042 === NAME: Bonny Blue Handkerchief, The DESCRIPTION: The singer meets a girl with a blue kerchief under her chin. She says that it is a local fashion. Entranced by her beauty, he offers her marriage and wealth. In some versions, she accepts; in others, she refuses; the handkerchief is a token from her love AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1892 (Baring-Gould/Sheppard) KEYWORDS: love courting clothes work factory FOUND_IN: Ireland Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H161a+b, p. 456-457, "The Pretty Blue Handkerchief (I and II)" (2 texts, 2 tunes) Roud #378 BROADSIDES: Murray, Mu23-y4:024, "Blue Handkerchief," unknown, 19C NOTES: In the first Sam Henry text, we are explicitly told that the two went to church. In the second, it's not made explicit, but the song ends after his proposal, so it sounds as if she agrees to marry. In the Murray broadside, she turns him down. Looking at the three, I thing the broadside text more likely to be original; the Henry texts are choppy, and the verse where she accepts appears an intrusion. - RBW File: HHH161 === NAME: Bonny Blue-eyed Jane DESCRIPTION: Leaving his native home, the singer will think of "my blooming girl, my bonny blue-eyed Jane." The girls from sunny Spain may win his friendship but not his love. If he gets rich he'll hurry back to marry Jane. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1979 (Lehr/Best) KEYWORDS: courting love separation Spain FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Lehr/Best 12, "Bonny Blue-eyed Jane" (1 text, 1 tune) File: LeBe012 === NAME: Bonny Bobby Shaftoe: see Bobby Shaftoe (File: FSWB170A) === NAME: Bonny Boy (I), The DESCRIPTION: The girl says, "I once had a boy, a bonny bonny boy, / A boy that I thought was my own." But the boy has taken another girl. She adds, "Let him go... I never will mourn." The ending varies; she may unsuccessfully seek another or refuse to do so AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1927 (Chappell dates it to "the reign of Charles II") KEYWORDS: courting separation loneliness abandonment betrayal love FOUND_IN: US(MA,MW) Ireland REFERENCES: (5 citations) Eddy 90, "Now, My Bonny, Bonny Boy" (1 fragment, 1 tune) FSCatskills 37, "The Bonny Boy' (1 text, 1 tune) Sharp-100E 52, "My Bonny, Bonny Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) SHenry H215, pp. 393-394, "The Bonny Bonny Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BONNBOY* Roud #293 RECORDINGS: Recordings: Anne Briggs, "My Bonny Boy" (on Briggs1, Briggs3) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Dear Companion (The Broken Heart; Go and Leave Me If You Wish To, Fond Affection)" (lyrics) cf. "The Grey Hawk" cf. "The Twitcher" (tune) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Cupid's Trappan The Bonny Bonny Bird I Once Loved a Girl File: FSC037 === NAME: Bonny Boy (II), The: see A-Growing (He's Young But He's Daily A-Growing) [Laws O35] (File: LO35) === NAME: Bonny Boy in Blue, The: see My Sailor Boy (A Sailor Boy in Blue) (File: HHH759) === NAME: Bonny Brown Hen, The DESCRIPTION: The singer's brown hen is missing. He tells how it laid six eggs a week and never strayed. He gives the bird's pedigree. He offers a reward for the return of the hen AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1925 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: chickens abduction FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H88, p. 18, "The Bonny Brown Hen" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #9053 File: HHH088 === NAME: Bonny Bunch of Roses, The [Laws J5] DESCRIPTION: Young Napoleon promises his mother that he will capture "The Bonny Bunch of Roses" (Great Britain). She warns him of his father's disaster in Russia and of the strength of the British. They sorrowfully prepare for the lad's death. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1847 (Journal of William Histed of the Cortes); c.1830 (Zimmermann) KEYWORDS: Napoleon dialog family political war Russia HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1805 - Battle of Trafalgar ends Napoleon's hopes of invading Britain 1811 - Birth of Napoleon Francis Joseph Charles Bonaparte (Napoleon II) 1812-1813 - Napoleon's Russian Campaign June 18, 1815 - Battle of Waterloo. Napoleon forced into exile 1821 - Death of Napoleon I July 22, 1832 - Death of Napoleon II FOUND_IN: US(MA,SE) Canada(Mar,Newf) Britain(England(Lond),Scotland) Ireland REFERENCES: (19 citations) Laws J5, "The Bonny Bunch of Roses" Greenleaf/Mansfield 84, "The Bonny Bunch of Roses" (1 text, 1 tune) Creighton-NovaScotia 68, "Bonny Bunch of Roses O" (1 text, 1 tune) Warner 3, "The Bonny Bunch of Roses-O" (1 text, 1 tune) Scott-BoA, pp. 105-107, "The Bonny Bunch of Roses O" (1 text, 1 tune) Copper-SoBreeze, pp. 202-203, "Bonny Bunch of Roses, O" (1 text, 1 tune) Hodgart, p. 200, "The Bonny Bunch of Roses" (1 text) Huntington-Whalemen, pp. 207-209, "The Bonny Bunch of Roses-O" (1 text, 1 tune) OLochlainn 16, "The Bonny Bunch of Roses" (1 text, 1 tune) Zimmermann 32B, "The Bonny Bunch of Roses, O" (1 text, 1 tune) Moylan 184, "The Bonny Bunch of Roses" (1 text, 1 tune) Hayward-Ulster, pp. 17-18, "The Bonny Bunch of Roses" (1 text) Ord, pp. 301-302, "The Bonny Bunch of Roses" (1 text) MacSeegTrav 85, "The Bonnie Bunch of Roses" (2 texts, 2 tunes) Peacock, pp. 988-989, "The Bonny Bunch of Roses" (1 text, 1 tune) Mackenzie 72, "The Bonnie Bunch of Roses" (2 texts, 2 tunes) O'Conor, p. 127, "The Bonny Bunch of Roses" (1 text) DT 392, BONBUNCH* BONBUNC2 ADDITIONAL: Richard Hayward, Ireland Calling (Glasgow,n.d.), pp. 18-19, "The Bonny Bunch of Roses" (text, music and reference to Regal Zonophone recording [probably Regal Zono MR-2830 recorded ca. May 1938]) Roud #664 RECORDINGS: Sam Larner, "Bonny Bunch of Roses" (on SLarner01) Cyril Poacher, "The Bonny Bunch O' Roses" (on Voice08) Brigid Tunney, "The Bonny Bunch of Roses" (on IRTunneyFamily01) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 11(403), "The Bonny Bunch of Roses, O!" ("By the dangers of the ocean"), J. Harkness (Preston) , 1840-1866; also 2806 c.16(296), Harding B 16(31d), Harding B 11(404), Harding B 11(406), Harding B 11(405), "Bonny Bunch of Roses, O"; Harding B 17(350a), Harding B 11(18), Firth b.25(245), Harding B 11(4381), "Young Napoleon" or "The Bonny Bunch of Roses"; Firth b.27(457/458) View 1 of 4, "Bonny Bunch of Roses"; Firth b.27(8), "Young Napoleon" LOCSinging, as109240, "Young Napoleon" or "The Bonny Bunch of Roses," Taylor's Song Mart (London), 19C Murray, Mu23-y1:115, "Bonny Bunch of Roses," James Lindsay (Glasgow), 19C CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The New Bunch of Loughero" (theme) SAME_TUNE: The Bunch of Rushes, O! (per broadsides Bodleian Harding B 17(350a), Bodleian Harding B 11(18), Bodleian Harding B 11(4381)) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Bold Blucher NOTES: Zimmermann: "The bunch of roses is usually said to symbolize England, Scotland, and Ireland, or the red coats of the English soldiers. In a ballad printed both in England and in Ireland, 'The Grand Conversation on Napoleon', we find the lines: 'The bunch of roses did advance And boldly entered into France,' alluding to Napoleon's enemies after Waterloo." The ballad is recorded on one of the CD's issued around the time of the bicentenial of the 1798 Irish Rebellion. See: Franke Harte and Donal Lunny, "The Bonny Bunch of Roses" (on Franke Harte and Donal Lunny, "My Name is Napoleon Bonaparte," Hummingbird Records HBCD0027 (2001)) The probable recording date and id for Hayward's record is provided by Bill Dean-Myatt, MPhil. compiler of the Scottish National Discography. - BS File: LJ05 === NAME: Bonny Bunch of Rushes Green: see An Binnsin Luchra (The Little Bench [or Bunch] of Rushes) (File: RcABLtlb) === NAME: Bonny Bushes Bright, The: see The Grey Cock, or, Saw You My Father [Child 248] (File: C248) === NAME: Bonny Busk of London, The: see The Twa Sisters [Child 10] (File: C010) === NAME: Bonny Ca' Laddie for Me, A DESCRIPTION: "On a mossy bank Jenny was sitting She had on a gay gown sae new And busily she was a knitting A yarn of bonny sky blue" "Last night ... He fed me with gingerbread sweet, He called me his dear and his honey And everything else that was neat" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1956 (Creighton-Maritime) KEYWORDS: courting clothes food FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Creighton-Maritime, p. 33, "A Bonny Ca' Laddie for Me" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #2276 File: CrMa033 === NAME: Bonny Earl of Murray, The [Child 181] DESCRIPTION: The Earl of Huntly slays the Earl of Murray (in his own bed?) as a result of the violent feud between them. The largest part of some versions is devoted to describing how noble Murray was AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1750 (Ramsay) KEYWORDS: feud homicide HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: Feb 7, 1592 - Murder of the Earl of Moray. James VI ordered the Earl of Huntley to apprehend Moray/Murray (said to be involved in rebellion), and Huntley apparently decided to do more than that FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) US(MA,MW,SE) REFERENCES: (16 citations) Child 181, "The Bonny Earl of Murray" (2 texts) Bronson 181, "The Bonny Earl of Murray" (6 versions) BarryEckstormSmyth pp. 468-469, "The Bonny Earl of Murray" (notes to a version called "The Treachery of Huntley" plus parts of 2 texts from Child) Percy/Wheatley II, pp. 226-228, "The Bonny Earl of Murray" (1 text) Flanders/Olney, pp. 133-134, "Earl of Murray" (1 text) Flanders-Ancient3, pp. 185-189, "The Bonnie Earl of Murray" (2 texts, 2 tunes) BrownII 36, "The Bonny Earl of Murray" (1 text) Leach, pp. 491-493, "The Bonny Earl of Murray" (2 texts) Friedman, p. 264, "The Bonny Earl of Murray" (1 text) OBB 95, "The Bonny Earl of Murray" (1 text) Gummere, pp. 155+334, "The Bonny Earl of Murray" (1 text) Hodgart, p. 144, "The Bonny Earl of Murray" (1 text) TBB 24, "The Bonny Earl of Murray" (1 text) HarvClass-EP1, pp. 107-108, "The Bonny Earl of Murray" (1 text) Silber-FSWB, p. 212, "The Bonny Earl Of Murray" (1 text) DT 181, EARLMURY* EARLMUR2* ST C181 (Full) Roud #334 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Willie Macintosh" [Child 183] (characters & situation) NOTES: James Stewart (c. 1567-1592) became Earl of Moray as a result of marrying a daughter of Lord James Stewart (1531-1570), the bastard of James V who had been Regent of Scotland for much of the early reign of James VI prior to being murdered (see Rosalind Mitchison, _A History of Scotland_, second edition, Methuen, 1982, p. 160). The younger James succeeded to the earldom in 1590. His murder by Huntley seems to have been the result of a feud between the two, though James VI (by then ruling in fact as well as name) didn't seem too bothered by it; Huntly (c. 1563-1636), despite several quarrels with James VI (some of which look suspiciously like rebellion) was made a marquis in 1599. It probably helped that Huntly had married a daughter of the Earl of Lennox, a favorite of James's (Mitchison, p. 151). The murdered Moray doesn't seem to have been a particularly noteworthy figure, except for his looks and the fact that he was murdered. In a place as messed-up as sixteenth century Scotland, getting killed by a rival was probably a positive. In a combination of police work and propaganda, Moray's mother had a painting made of his corpse, of which a copy can be seen in Magnus Magnusson's_Scotland: The Story of a Nation_ (Atlantic Monthly Press, 2000). The corpse has a caption (it almost looks like a speech balloon), "God revenge my cavs [cause]." The artist looks to have been completely incompetent -- but, if the drawing is accurate, it's hard to tell what actually killed Moray. There is a large wound on his leg, but that could not have been fatal unless he bled to death. The only wounds in the chest area are a couple of small scratches on his right side, the largest near the shoulder and not in a particularly gival area; in any case, it does not appear deep. There are the scratches on the face, but both look like flesh wounds (though one came close to Moray's right eye). According to Magnusson, pp. 396-397, the whole thing arose because James VI was having trouble with his barons (in other words, nothing unusual in Scotland). The Earl of Bothwell had been fighting against the King -- at one time almost capturing him -- and Moray was allied with Bothwell. James was even more afraid of Bothwell than he would have been of an ordinary rebel, because he was deeply superstitious, and Bothwell was reputedly involved with witches (Mitchison, p. 150). The king commissioned Huntley to put down Bothwell's faction, meanwhile negotiating with Moray. But Huntley had a grudge against Moray (whose father had enriched himself at the expense of an earlier Huntley -- plus Huntley had a chance to perhaps inherit the huntley earldom). Moray was at Donibristle, awaiting the chance to confer with the King, when Huntley showed up on February 7 and set fir to the castle. Moray reportedly escaped out a side gate, but was found and killed -- folklore claims that Huntley struck the first blow. James may have been prepared to negotiate with Moray, but he certainly didn't grieve for him; Huntley was merely placed under house arrest for a week. This is what caused Moray's mother to raise such a stink; she wanted justice for her son. James VI never did catch up with Bothwell, though the earl eventually fled into exile. But he did not die until 1624, only a year before James himself. - RBW File: C181 === NAME: Bonny Flora Clark, The DESCRIPTION: "Six sporting youths" borrow Donald's Bonny Flora Clark "in the chilly months of autumn" and sail up Grand River Harbour. They go through ice to a party and drink and fight. As Donald dreams, Bonny Flora Clark is wrecked in the ice on the way home. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1969 (Ives-DullCare) KEYWORDS: moniker fight ship dream drink party river wreck humorous FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ives-DullCare, pp. 210-212, 242, "The Bonny Flora Clark" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #13986 NOTES: Grand River is on the north coast of Prince County, Prince Edward Island. - BS File: IvDC210 === NAME: Bonny Garrydoo DESCRIPTION: On March 1, 1845, the singer leaves his comrades in Garrydoo. He crosses the seas (? or to Ballydoo?). He joins (departs?) a Masonic lodge, where McCracken is the master; there are 31. He praises the Orangemen and their girls, "Orange flowers." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1939 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: emigration home FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H800, p. 164, "Bonny Garrydoo" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #13473 NOTES: This is a confusing song. Does the singer leave Garrydoo, or come there? If he started and ended there, why did he go to sea? Is he a Mason or a patriot? Did he join before or after sailing? I can't tell. - RBW File: HHH800 === NAME: Bonny Green Tree, The: see Tripping Over the Lea [Laws P19] (File: LP19) === NAME: Bonny Grey, The: see The Cock-Fight (File: VWL027) === NAME: Bonny Hind Squire, The: see Proud Lady Margaret [Child 47] (File: C047) === NAME: Bonny Irish Boy DESCRIPTION: "His name I love to mention, in Ireland he was born." The girl recalls her Irish boy, now gone to America. She follows him, seeking him in New York and other cities. She dreams of him -- and finds him at her door. They marry and live free and happy AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1901 (O'Conor) KEYWORDS: love courting separation emigration dream reunion marriage FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Peacock, pp. 560-561, "My Bonnie Irish Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) O'Conor, p. 54, "Bonny Irish Boy" (1 text) File: Pea560 === NAME: Bonny Irish Boy, The: see The Bonny Young Irish Boy [Laws P26] (File: LP26) === NAME: Bonny Kilwarren DESCRIPTION: The singer overhears two lovers beside the canal in Kilwarren. He is leaving and he'll miss her sweet smile. He says birds must leave -- "gone to their nest" -- in their time. "Make few words excuse me for I must away" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1955 (IRRCinnamond01) KEYWORDS: love parting FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (0 citations) Roud #6991 RECORDINGS: Robert Cinnamond, "Bonny Kilwarren" (on IRRCinnamond01) NOTES: Cinnamond says this is about lovers parting as he goes to war. Kilwarren is a parish in County Galway. - BS File: RcBoKilw === NAME: Bonny Laboring Boy, The [Laws M14] DESCRIPTION: A rich girl loves a working boy. Her parents try to prevent the marriage by locking up the girl and exiling the boy. Both manage to escape; they flee to Belfast and prepare to take ship for America AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1860 (broadside, Bodleian Harding B 11(2525)) KEYWORDS: love prison exile escape emigration FOUND_IN: US(MA,MW) Canada(Mar,Newf,Ont) Britain(England(South)) Ireland REFERENCES: (12 citations) Laws M14, "The Bonny Labouring Boy" FSCatskills 52, "The Bonny Laboring Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) Gardner/Chickering 66, "The Bonny Laboring Boy" (1 text) Fowke/Mills/Blume, pp. 200-202, "The Railroad Boy" (1 text, 1 tune -- a Canadian adaption which has lost most of the plot, including the girl's imprisonment and the escape to America, but which retains so many of the lyrics that it can still be considered the same song) Fowke/MacMillan 69, "The Bonny Labouring Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) SHenry H576, pp. 435-436, "The Bonny Labouring Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) Peacock, pp. 564-565, "My Bonny Labouring Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) Karpeles-Newfoundland 69, "The Bonny Labouring Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) O'Conor, pp. 84-85, "My Bonny Laboring Boy" (1 text) OLochlainn 9, "The Bonny Labouring Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) Kennedy 147, "The Bonny Labouring Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) DT 433, LABORBOY* LABORBO2 Roud #1162 RECORDINGS: Paddy Beades, "The Bonnie Labouring Boy" (on Voice05) Harry Cox, "The Bonny Labouring Boy" (on HCox01) Martin Sullivan, "The Railroad Boy" (on Ontario1) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 11(2525), "My Bonny Labouring Boy," A. Ryle and Co. (London), 1845-1859; also Johnson Ballads 311, Firth b.27(109/110) View 1 of 2, Firth c.18(178), 2806 c.8(287), 2806 b.9(252), Harding B 19(17), Harding B 19(18), Harding B 19(43), "[The] Bonny Labouring Boy"; Harding B 11(838), "Bonny Laboring Boy"; Firth c.18(179), Johnson Ballads 1110, Harding B 25(256) (largely illegible), "My Bonny Labouring Boy" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Plains of Baltimore" (theme) cf. "My Jolly Shantyboy" (tune, theme) File: LM14 === NAME: Bonny Lass of Anglesey, The [Child 220] DESCRIPTION: A group of lords is come to "dance and win" the crown away from the king (?!). The king, knowing he cannot prevail, summons the Bonny Lass of Anglesey, who easily out-dances all comers AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1776 (Herd) KEYWORDS: dancing royalty contest FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Child 220, "The Bonny Lass of Anglesey" (2 texts) DT 220, ANGLELAS* Roud #3931 File: C220 === NAME: Bonny Light Horseman, The: see The Bonnie Light Horseman (File: HHH122a) === NAME: Bonny Lighter Boy (I), The: see Disguised Sailor (The Sailor's Misfortune and Happy Marriage; The Old Miser) [Laws N6] (File: LN06) === NAME: Bonny Lighter Boy (II), The: see The Bonny Sailor Boy [Laws M22] (File: LM22) === NAME: Bonny Lizie Baillie [Child 227] DESCRIPTION: Lizie goes to Gartartain to visit her sister, and there meets Duncan Grahame. She falls in love, and declares that she will have a Highlander rather than any lowland or English lord. Her family tries and fails to change her mind AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1776 (Herd) KEYWORDS: love courting family FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Child 227, "Bonny Lizie Baillie" (1 text) Bronson 227, "Bonny Lizie Baillie" (1 version) Leach, pp. 585-588, "Bonnie Lizie Baillie" (1 text) DT, LIZBAILI* Roud #341 BROADSIDES: NLScotland, Ry.III.a.10(045), "Bonny Lizie Balie," unknown, n.d. CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Glasgow Peggy" [Child 228] (theme) NOTES: Reportedly based on an actual story, but no real details are forthcoming. The NLScotland notes claim the broadside was printed in 1701, but offers no basis for this. - RBW File: C227 === NAME: Bonny Mary Hay DESCRIPTION: "Bonny Mary Hay, I will lo'e thee yet, For thine ee is the slae and thy hair is the jet." After praising Mary's looks, the singer asks her to come away with him. He says it is a holiday for him when she is with him. He begs her not to refuse him AUTHOR: Archibald Crawford? EARLIEST_DATE: 1829 (Chambers) KEYWORDS: love courting FOUND_IN: Ireland Britain REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H568, p. 226, "Bonny Mary Hay" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #7975 File: HHH568 === NAME: Bonny Peggy Irvine: see The Earl of Aboyne [Child 235] (File: C235) === NAME: Bonny Portmore DESCRIPTION: The singer mourns the loss of Portmore's trees which have been cut down and floated away by "the long boats from Antrim" The birds weep saying "Where will we shelter or where will we sleep?" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1976 (OBoyle) KEYWORDS: lament nonballad FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) OBoyle 5, "Bonny Portmore" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #3475 RECORDINGS: Robert Cinnamond, "Bonny Portmore" (on IRRCinnamond01) NOTES: OBoyle: In 1761 the castle built in 1664 by Lord Conway was removed. When the estate was broken up many of its trees were sold. The text comments on the "woeful destruction of your ornament tree"; O Boyle says this refers to "the Great Oak of Portmore which was blown down in 1760.... It was fourteen yards in circumference." See SHenry H775, p. 171, "Bonny Portrush" (1 text, 1 tune), apparently written by Henry "by request.... The first verse is parodied on the old ballad 'Bonny Portmore.'" I wouldn't call it a parody: the O Boyle lines are "If I had you [Portmore] as I had once before All the Lords in Old England would not purchase Portmore"; the Henry lines are "Were I near you now as I once was before, All the gold of old England would ne'er part us more." Greig #32 dicusses parallels between "Bonny Portmore" and "Bonny Udny" and similar songs. While his "Bonny Portmore" is not this song (Greig's has nothing to do with trees) it begins with practically the same lines: "O bonny Portmore, ye shine where ye charm, The more I think on you it makes my heart warm" but continues "But when I look on you it makes my heart sore To think of the valiant in bonny Portmore." Greig notes the same sort of pattern in "The Boys of Kilkenny" ("Kilkenny's a pretty town, and shines where it stands, And the more I think on it the more my heart warms; Oh! If I was in Kilkenny I'd think myself at home, For 'tis there I get sweethearts, but here I get none.") and "Bonnie Paisley." - BS File: OBoy005 === NAME: Bonny Sailor Boy, The [Laws M22] DESCRIPTION: A rich girl and a poor sailor are in love. The girl's father hears them courting in the garden, bursts in, and threatens the boy with transportation. The girl swears to remain faithful AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1914 (Sharp & Marson) KEYWORDS: poverty sailor love transportation FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar) Britain(Scotland,England(South)) Ireland REFERENCES: (7 citations) Laws M22, "The Bonny Sailor Boy" Kennedy 163, "My Darling Ploughman Boy" (1 text, 1 tune, much worn down) Ord, p. 328, "My Bonnie Sailor Boy" (1 text) Creighton/Senior, p. 179, "Jolly Young Sailor Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) OLochlainn-More 18, "The Newry Prentice Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) Morton-Maguire 39, pp. 127-128,171, "The Dandy Apprentice Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) DT 745, BONSAIL* Roud #843 RECORDINGS: Jimmy McBeath, "My Darling Ploughman Boy" (on FSB1) ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Bonny Lighter Boy NOTES: OLochlainn-More 18: the boy is "a weaver lad and him apprentice bound." Roud makes this version #2934. Morton-Maguire is like another Irish version (OLochlainn-More) in that the apprentice is a weaver; it ends "And so she sang and the valleys rang and she gained her apprentice boy." - BS File: LM22 === NAME: Bonny Saint John DESCRIPTION: "Where have you been, My bonny Saint John? You've bidden sae lang (x2)." "Up on yon hill... And I couldna win hame." "Now, what will you give me Unto my supper?" "A clean dish for you And a clean spoon, For biding sae long." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1964 (Montgomerie) KEYWORDS: food home travel FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Montgomerie-ScottishNR 191, "Bonny Saint John" (1 text) Roud #3899 NOTES: Sort of a cross between "Lord Randall" and a scold to a child for being late for dinner. If it didn't go back to Buchan, I'd have guessed a sixties parody. - RBW File: MSNR189 === NAME: Bonny Tavern Green DESCRIPTION: The singer falls in love with a girl in Tavern Green. Her killing glances wounded his heart. "If I was Queen of England as Queen Ann was long ago ... she never would want money while I would rule as queen" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1952 (IRPTunney01) KEYWORDS: love floatingverses nonballad royalty HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1702-1714 - Reign of Queen Anne of England, daughter of James II. She was succeeded by her cousin Geroge I FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) Tunney-StoneFiddle, p. 155, "Bonnie Tavern Green" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #3110 RECORDINGS: Paddy Tunney, "Tavrin Green" (on IRPTunney01); "Bonny Tavern Green" (on Voice15) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Irish Girl" (floating lyrics) cf. "Lover's Resolution" (floating lyrics) NOTES: Floating verses: from "The Irish Girl": "Oh, love it is a killing thing, I hear the people say." Musical Traditions site _Voice of the People suite_ "Reviews - Volume 15" by Fred McCormick - 27.2.99: "I am also curious over the fact that this song is told from a man's perspective, since the last verse fantasises about him being Queen of England 'as Queen Ann was long ago'. Are we witnessing a former woman's song which has undergone a less than perfect gender change?" Maybe this is a corrupted version, with roles reversed, of "Lover's Resolution." That would explain the "If I was Queen of England" line which both share; they also share "love it is a killing thing, I hear the people say." - BS The reference to Queen Anne is interesting. Anne was hardly the most famous Queen of England (obviously Elizabeth I earns that distinction), and she wasn't particularly noteworthy for brains or (especially) looks, but she was the *last* ruling queen until Victoria ascended in 1837. Indeed, prior to Victoria, Anne and Elizabeth I had been the only queens to really rule England. So maybe that explains the references to her. The other possibility is that Queen Anne was not ruling queen, but merely wife of a king. The last wife of a King named Anne was Anne Hyde, wife of James II, but she died before he succeeded and can be ignored. Prior to that, James VI and I was married to Anne of Denmark. And Henry VIII had had two wives named Anne. Given the careers of those consorts Anne, I have to think the ruling queen is meant. - RBW File: RcBoTaGr === NAME: Bonny Wee Lass (As I Went Out One Summer's Day) DESCRIPTION: The singer goes out and meets a shy girl on the road. He cajoles her into talking to him; they talk of her work and of love. They are married and live happily ever after; he looks fondly on the road where he met her. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1938 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: love courting marriage FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H763, p. 458, "The Bonny Wee Lass" (1 text, 1 tune) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Wee Trampin' File: HHH763 === NAME: Bonny Wee Window, The [Laws O18] DESCRIPTION: Johnny comes to visit Nellie, whose window lacks a pane. The two talk until Nellie must go to bed, when Johnny sticks his head through the window for a kiss -- and finds himself stuck! Nellie's grandmother beats him till he pulls out frame and all AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1899 KEYWORDS: courting humorous nightvisit FOUND_IN: US(So) Britain(Scotland,England(North)) Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (7 citations) Laws O18, "The Bonny Wee Window" Ford-Vagabond, pp. 20-23, "The Bonnie Wee Window" (1 text, 1 tune) Randolph 122, "The Bonny Wee Window" (1 text) Kennedy 123, "The Bonny Wee Window" (1 text, 1 tune) Ord, pp. 99-100, "The Bonnie Wee Window" (1 text) Creighton-SNewBrunswick 76, "The Neat Little Window" (1 text, 1 tune) DT 479, WEEWINDO* Roud #989 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 26(314), "Kissing at the Window," Haly (Cork), 19C; also Firth b.27(282), 2806 b.11(278), Harding B 19(41), "Kissing at the Window"; Harding B 26(312), "Kissing Through the Window" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Crockery Ware" (plot) SAME_TUNE: Imphm (by James Nicholson) File: LO18 === NAME: Bonny Willie Macintosh: see Willie Macintosh [Child 183] (File: C183) === NAME: Bonny Wood Green DESCRIPTION: Singer enlists at Kells Barracks "to fight for my Queen" and leaves Nellie behind in Wood Green. He leaves in a troop ship from Larne Harbour. He is shot in Flanders and asks his comrades to take a message to Nellie in Ireland near Portaballintree. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1979 (IRHardySons) KEYWORDS: love war parting death Ireland soldier FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (0 citations) Roud #9246 RECORDINGS: Packie McKeaney, "Bonny Wood Green" (on IRHardySons) NOTES: Notes to IRHardySons: "It would appear to be an Antrim song, given the mention of Portballintree, but there's no parish or townland called Wood Green anywhere nearby." - BS There is also the curiosity of fighting "for [the] Queen" in Flanders. Which Queen? Elizabeth I? Too early. Victoria? There were no major British interventions in Flanders in her time. Which leaves us only Queen Anne and the War of the Spanish Succession. But that's a lot of time for things to get confused. My guess is that this is a song from some earlier war, perhaps in Victoria's reign, imperfectly updated for World War I. - RBW File: RcBoWooG === NAME: Bonny Young Irish Boy, The [Laws P26] DESCRIPTION: The girl is sorely hurt when her Irish boy leaves her to cross the ocean. She follows him across the sea, only to learn that he has married another. She dies of a broken heart and asks to be buried in Ireland AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1867 (broadside, Bodleian Harding B 20(178)) KEYWORDS: separation rejection marriage death burial FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) Ireland Canada(Newf,Ont) REFERENCES: (8 citations) Laws P26, "The Bonny Young Irish Boy" Greenleaf/Mansfield 95, "The Bonny Young Irish Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) Peacock, pp. 562-563, "My Bonnie Irish Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) SHenry H168, pp. 399-400, "My Bonnie Irish Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) Morton-Maguire 40, pp. 128-129,171, "The Bonny Irish Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) Ord, pp. 162-163, "My Bonnie Irish Boy" (1 text) MacSeegTrav 64, "The Bonnie Irish Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) DT 506, YNGIRISH* Roud #565 RECORDINGS: O. J. Abbott, "The Bonny Irish Boy" (on Abbott1) John Maguire, "The Bonny Irish Boy" (on IRJMaguire01) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 20(178), "The Bonny Irish Boy" ("It's once I was courted by a bonny Irish boy"), J. Harkness (Preston), 1840-1866; also 2806 b.11(276), "Bonny Irish Boy" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Cupid's Trepan (Cupid's Trappan, The Bonny Bird)" (tune) NOTES: In the Bodleian broadsides the singer has not died yet: "In rattling of my chains and on a bed of straw I lie." - BS File: LP26 === NAME: Bonny, Bonny DESCRIPTION: The singer, or his love, recalls his beautiful home and situation. But now he has been taken by the press gang and serves aboard the Nightingale. He will depart soon, and expects once more to be pressed AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1909 (JIFSS) KEYWORDS: pressgang FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H75b, pp. 199-200, "Bonny, Bonny" (1 text, 1 tune, a fragment to which Henry added four stanzas) NOTES: The ballad is recorded on one of the CD's issued around the time of the bicentenial of the 1798 Irish Rebellion. See: Franke Harte and Donal Lunny, "The Nightingale" (on Franke Harte and Donal Lunny, "My Name is Napoleon Bonaparte," Hummingbird Records HBCD0027 (2001)) - BS File: HHH075b === NAME: Bony's Lament: see Napoleon's Farewell to Paris (File: GC089) === NAME: Boogaboo, The: see The Foggy Dew (The Bugaboo) [Laws O3] (File: LO03) === NAME: Bookerman, The DESCRIPTION: "Got to sleep, little baby, Before the bookerman catch you, Turkey in the next Can't get a rest, Can't get a rest for the baby." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1925 (Scarborough) KEYWORDS: lullaby nonballad FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Scarborough-NegroFS, p. 157, (no title) (1 short text) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Wind Is in the West" (theme) File: ScNF157B === NAME: Books of the Bible, The: see Old Testament in Verse (The Books of the Bible) (File: R875) === NAME: Booth Killed Lincoln DESCRIPTION: "Wiles Booth came to Washington, An actor great was he, He played at Ford's Theater And Lincoln went to see." Booth sneaks up on Lincoln and shoots him, then flees. The dying Lincoln says "'Of all the actors in this town, I loved Wilkes Booth the best'" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1958 (Burt) KEYWORDS: death Civilwar homicide HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: Apr 14, 1865 - John Wilkes Booth shoots Abraham Lincoln. Apr 15, 1865 - Lincoln dies FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Burt, pp. 224-225, "(Booth Killed Lincoln)" (1 text) Silber-CivWar, pp. 90-91, "Booth Killed Lincoln" (1 text, 1 tune) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Booth Shot Lincoln NOTES: Five days after Lee's surrender, John Wilkes Booth (1838-1865) entered Abraham Lincoln's box at Ford's Theatre and shot the President. Booth fled across the stage and, despite breaking his leg, escaped. Eventually he and his fellow conspirators were caught; Booth died when the barn in which he was hiding took fire. Most of the other conspirators were sentenced to death or long imprisonment. - RBW, (PJS) File: SCW90 === NAME: Boothbay Whale, The DESCRIPTION: Lauding the clever fisherfolk of Boothbay. One-legged Skipper Jake sets out to catch a whale, even though it is too big for his boat. He jumps on the whale's back, sticks his peg in its blowhole, and causes it to blow out its brains as it tries to exhale AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1973 KEYWORDS: whale humorous talltale fishing FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Silber-FSWB, p. 399, "The Boothbay Whale" (1 text) File: FSWB399A === NAME: Bootlegger, The (Trammell's Bootlegger) DESCRIPTION: "Hee-haw, hee-haw, Blind Jack is my name, I romp, I paw, I snort, I snooze, For I am in the business of selling booze." But the police are after him; he hopes to escape, but apparently is punished -- and hopes to win a prize for his poetry about it AUTHOR: "Trammell" EARLIEST_DATE: Dated to 1915; printed by Fuson 1931 KEYWORDS: drink punishment judge FOUND_IN: US(Ap) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Fuson, p. 154, "The Bootlegger" (1 text) ST Fus154 (Partial) Roud #16369 NOTES: Seemingly not traditional, and certainly not very good (or very easy to understand), but Fuson includes it as a "type of extreme modern ballad." - RBW File: Fus154 === NAME: Border Affair, A: see Spanish Is the Loving Tongue (A Border Affair) (File: FCW052) === NAME: Border Widow's Lament, The: see The Famous Flower of Serving-Men [Child 106] (File: C106) === NAME: Bordon's Grove DESCRIPTION: The singer wanders by Bordon's Grove and hears a girl lamenting. He courts her; she says she is waiting for Johnny. He asks about Johnny, and she says he was wounded in Flanders. She sees his love token, and declares they will never meet again AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1934 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: love courting separation reunion brokentoken FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H529, pp. 320-321, "Bordon's Grove" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #2322 ALTERNATE_TITLES: Borland's Groves NOTES: The Sam Henry version of this is very fragmentary; there is little real deceit. Presumably more happened in the original versions. - RBW File: HHH529 === NAME: Boring for Oil DESCRIPTION: The singer goes boring for oil with his "auger," and in some versions contracts a venereal disease. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1976 (collected from Riley Neal by Logsdon) KEYWORDS: bawdy sex disease warning FOUND_IN: Canada(West) US(MA,MW,NE,So,SW) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Randolph-Legman I, pp. 58-60, "Boring for Oil" (4 texts, 1 tune) Logsdon 26, pp. 160-162, "Boring for Oil" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BOREOIL* Roud #10094 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Fire Ship" (plot) and references there NOTES: Logsdon says this "may be the oldest bawdy oil occupation song in tradition." There isn't much competition for that title. But Logsdon's version refers to "Oil City," which he believes to be in the Pennsylvania oil fields, which might date the song as early as the 1860s. And one of Randolph's variants apparently did date back to c. 1910. So while proof is lacking, Logsdon's claim is possible. - RBW File: RL058 === NAME: Boss of the Section Gang, The DESCRIPTION: Mike Cahooley, an Irish immigrant, goes to work on the railroad; he advances to boss of the section gang. When the company president comes around, he shakes Mike's hand; his workers fear him. He is going home to his wife, but hearers are welcome to visit AUTHOR: Possibly "Cyclone" Harry Hart EARLIEST_DATE: 1893 (broadside by Harry Hart) KEYWORDS: pride bragging emigration railroading work family boss worker FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (0 citations) Roud #8585 RECORDINGS: Minta Morgan, "The Boss of the Section Gang" (AFS 922 B2, 1937; on LC61) File: RctBotSG === NAME: Boston: see Boston Harbor (File: BAF831) === NAME: Boston Burglar, The [Laws L16] DESCRIPTION: The youth is brought up by honest parents, but turns wild. At last he is taken and, despite his parents' entreaties, sentenced to transportation (in American texts, prison). He dreams of release, plans to give up bad ways, and warns others to do the same AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1886 (broadside, Bodleian Harding B 11(4372)); c.1840 (broadside, NLScotland APS.4.86.33) KEYWORDS: crime outlaw trial punishment warning father mother transportation prison FOUND_IN: US(All) Britain(Scotland) Australia Canada(Mar,Newf) Ireland REFERENCES: (30 citations) Laws L16, "Botany Bay A [Laws L16A]/The Boston Burglar (Botany Bay B) [Laws L16B]" Randolph 136, "The Louisville Burglar" (2 texts, 1 tune) Eddy 85, "The Boston Burglar" (1 text, 1 tune) Gardner/Chickering 131, "Botany Bay" (1 short text); 137, "The Boston Burglar" 1 text pllus an excerpt and mention of 1 more, 1 tune) Meredith/Anderson, pp. 64-65, "Bound for Charlers Town"; pp. 96-97, "Bound for Sydney Town"; pp. 139-140, "Moreton Bay"; pp. 257-258, "Boston City" (4 texts, 4 tunes) Paterson/Fahey/Seal, pp. 48-50, "The Botany Bay Transport" (1 text) Flanders/Brown, pp. 53-54, "Boston Burglar" (1 text) Friedman, p. 220, "Botany Bay; p. 222, "The Boston Burglar" (2 texts) FSCatskills 114, "The Boston Burglar" (1 text, 1 tune) BrownII 242, "The Boston Burglar" (1 text plus 2 excerpts and mention of 3 more) Chappell-FSRA 56, "The Boston Burglar" (1 text) Cambiaire, pp. 69-71, "Botany Bay (The Boston Burglar)" (1 text) Scarborough-SongCatcher, pp. 289-296, "The Boston Burglar" (5 texts plus a fragment of a playparty, with local titles "The Boston Burglar," "Covington," "I Was Borned and Raised in Covington," "Frank James, the Burglar" (which despite the title is clearly not about Jesse's brother), "The Boston Burglar"; 3 tunes on pp. 433-435) Scarborough-NegroFS, pp. 243-244, "To Huntsville" (1 text, which seems to have lost the beginning) Brewster 41, "The Boston Burglar" (2 texts plus mention of 3 more) Fahey-Eureka, pp. 10-11, "Bound for Botany Bay" (1 text, 1 tune) SHenry H691, p. 119, "Botany Bay"; H202, pp. 119-120, "The Boston Burglar" (2 texts, 2 tunes) OLochlainn 44, "Boston City" (1 text, 1 tune) Dibblee/Dibblee, p. 73, "The Boston Burglar" (1 text, 1 tune) Cohen/Seeger/Wood, pp. 132-133, "Louisville Burglar" (1 text, 1 tune) Spaeth-ReadWeep, pp. 158-160, "The Boston Burglar" (1 text, 1 tune) LPound-ABS, 23, pp. 57-58, "The Boston Burglar"; pp. 59-60, "Charlestown" (2 texts) JHCox 84, "The Boston Burglar" (3 texts) JHCoxIIA, #29, p. 105, "The Boston Burglar" (1 fragment, 1 tune) MacSeegTrav 92, "The Boston Burglar" (1 text, 1 tune) Leach-Labrador 101, "The Boston Burglar" (1 text, 1 tune) Creighton-NovaScotia 96, "Boston Burglar" (1 text, 1 tune) Darling-NAS, pp. 108-110, "Botany Bay"; "Louisville Burglar" (2 texts) Silber-FSWB, p. 67, "The Boston Burglar" (1 text) DT 425, BSTNCITY BOTNYBAY Roud #261 RECORDINGS: Fiddlin' John Carson, "The Boston Burglar" (OKeh 40419, 1925) Vernon Dalhart, "Boston Burglar" (Brunswick 2942, 1925) (Edison 51608 [as Vernon Dalhart & Co.], 1925) Hickory Nuts, "Louisville Burglar" (OKeh 45169, 1927; on RoughWays2, ConstSor1) Frank Hutchison, "The Boston Burglar" (OKeh 45425, 1930; rec. 1929) Claude Moye, "Boston Burgular" (Gennett 6748 [as Pie Plant Pete]/Champion 15752 [as Asparagus Joe]/Supertone 9351 [as Pie Plant Pete], 1929) (Conqueror 8435 [as Pie Plant Pete], 1934) New Lost City Ramblers, "Louisville Burglar" (on NLCR02) Riley Puckett, "The Boston Burglar" (Columbia 15050-D, 1926; rec. 1925) L. D. Smith, "Frank James, the Roving Gambler (The Boston Burglar)" (AFS; on LC14) Carl T. Sprague, "The Boston Burglar" (Victor 20534, 1927) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 11(4372), "Botany Bay" ("Come all young men of learning, take warning by me"), H. Such (London), 1863-1885; also Firth c.17(55), "The Transport" or "Botany Bay" NLScotland, APS.4.86.33, "The Edinburgh Convicts," Walker (Durham), after 1840 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Harrison Town" (theme) cf. "The Prisoner's Song (II)" (floating lyrics) cf. "The Coon-Can Game" [Laws I4] (floating lyrics) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Bound for Charlestown Bound for Sydney Town NOTES: For the history of the penal colony (that never was) at Botany Bay, see the song with that title. The original version of the piece was a transportation song to Botany Bay, but this seems to have been largely overshadowed by the ""X Burglar" type, so we have lumped them and filed them under the "Burglar" type. The subfamily of texts known as "The Boston Burglar" is now credited (Marks, Spaeth, Cazden et al; cf. Randolph) to Michael J. Fitzgerald. The amount of reworking done by Fitzgerald, however, was slight, and older and newer versions continue to mix. - RBW One of the Meredith/Anderson references goes under the name "Moreton Bay". This should not be confused with the song by the same name, indexed as "Moreton Bay (I), which includes the killing by an Aborigine of the oppressive Captain Logan. - PJS File: LL16 === NAME: Boston City: see The Boston Burglar [LawsL16] (File: LL16) === NAME: Boston Come-All-Ye, The: see Song of the Fishes (Blow Ye Winds Westerly) (File: LxA496) === NAME: Boston Harbor DESCRIPTION: "From Boston Harbor we set sail, The wind was blowing the devil of a gale." The captain gives cruel orders, curses the sailors, demands drink, and goes to his cabin to avoid the storm. They hope he dies; (when he does, they threaten his son) AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1938 (Colcord) KEYWORDS: ship sailor storm death hardtimes drink children FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (4 citations) Colcord, pp. 168-169, "Boston" (1 text, 1 tune) Harlow, pp. 155-157, "Boston" (1 text, 1 tune) Botkin-AmFolklr, pp. 831-832, "Boston" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BSTNMRBR* Roud #613 File: BAF831 === NAME: Boston Tea Tax, The DESCRIPTION: "I snum [declare] I am a Yankee lad, And I guess I'll sing a ditty." The singer describes all that his people would have done then had America been free (e.g. crossed a bridge that wasn't built yet). Failing that, they dumped the tea AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1933 KEYWORDS: rebellion ship patriotic HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: Dec. 16, 1773 - Boston Tea Party. Americans protest the British tax on tea by dumping a shipload into Boston Harbor FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (2 citations) Botkin-NEFolklr, pp. 539-541, "The Boston Tea Tax" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, TEATAX* NOTES: Although this song refers to events of 1773, the references to changes which took place after that time make it clear that it is more recent. Botkin dates it to the period 1830-1840. - RBW File: BNEF539 === NAME: Bosun's Alphabet, The: see The Sailor's Alphabet (File: RcTSAlp) === NAME: Bosun's Story, The DESCRIPTION: Walkaway (stamp and go) shanty. Exaggerated story about a whaling voyage. The crew nails the ship to a whale's tail and thus sails to the North Pole and back. Each stanza ends with "'And that's the truth', said he." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1935 (_Sea Breezes_) KEYWORDS: shanty whale bragging talltale FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (1 citation) Harlow, pp. 157-159, "The Bos'un's Story" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #9141 ALTERNATE_TITLES: Bos'un's Song NOTES: [Harlow's version is] taken from a 1935 issue of _Sea Breezes_ magazine, published in Liverpool, as given by Capt. A.G. Cole. - SL File: Harl157 === NAME: Botany Bay (I) DESCRIPTION: The singer is paying for his life of crime by being transported to Botany Bay. He describes the miserable fate of the convicts on board the prison vessel, warns others against such crimes, and wishes he could return to his love at home AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1885 KEYWORDS: transportation separation crime Australia HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1788 - First penal colony founded in Australia FOUND_IN: Britain(England) US(So) Australia REFERENCES: (7 citations) Randolph 96, "Botany Bay" (1 text, 1 tune) Meredith/Anderson, pp. 36-37, 113, "Botany Bay" (2 texts, 1 tune) Sharp-100E 86, "Botany Bay" (1 text, 1 tune) Fahey-Eureka, pp. 24-25, "Botany Bay" (1 text, 1 tune) Manifold-PASB, p. 22, "Botany Bay" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 67, "Botany Bay" (1 text) DT, BOTBAY2* Roud #3267 RECORDINGS: John Greenway, "Botany Bay" (on JGreenway01) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Here's Adieu to All Judges and Juries" (theme, lyrics) cf. "Too Rally" (tune) cf. "The Prisoner's Song (I)" NOTES: The American Revolutionary War meant that, after the 1780s, Britain could no longer transport convicts to America. In 1788, therefore, an expedition was mounted to carry prisoners to Australia. The fleet's original destination was Botany Bay (so-called because of all the wildlife found by the original explorers), but this proved so barren that the fleet's commander, Captain Arthur Phillip (1738-1814; governor 1788-1792), decided to move a short way up the coast to Sydney. Despite the fact that Botany Bay was never settled, its name came to be synonymous with Australian penal colonies. This song seems to have begun life in the music halls, perhaps as a rewrite of "Here's Adieu to All Judges and Juries." It is credited to Stephens and Yardley, and appeared in the 1885 comedy "Little Jack Shepherd." - RBW File: R096 === NAME: Botany Bay (II): see The Boston Burglar [LawsL16] (File: LL16) === NAME: Botany Bay Courtship (The Currency Lasses) DESCRIPTION: "The Currency Lads may fill their glasses And drink to the health of the Currency Lasses, But the lass I adore... Is a lass in the Female Factory." Having met Molly (who was "tried by the name of Polly"), the two plan marriage AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1832 KEYWORDS: courting Australia punishment robbery drink transportation FOUND_IN: Australia REFERENCES: (1 citation) Fahey-Eureka, pp. 68-69, "The Currency Lasses" (1 text, 1 tune) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Irish Washerwoman" (tune & meter) NOTES: The "Female Factory" was the compound at Parramatta where female immigrants were kept. Settlers were allowed to come in and seek wives. The Factory wasn't much of a solution to Australia's problems; fewer than one transportee in six was female, and not all of them were of "marriagable age" (though the authorities eventually started trying to send young women). The women at the Factory, in addition, were those who were not wanted by contractors. To top it off, the Factory was quite a dreadful place, a hall above a prison, not nearly large enough for all the women sent there. Many had to be lodged on the town, and the whole place presented a picture of squalor and, hence, of other vices as the women strove to survive. A "currency lad" or "currency lass" was a child born in Australia in the colony's early years, and usually illegitimate. The title arose because Australia had very little money, and so turned to odd, makeshift native products. Since the children, too, were native products, they were called "currency." (As opposed to the handful of British-born non-convict landowners, the "Sterling.") - RBW File: FaE068 === NAME: Botany Bay Transport, The: see The Boston Burglar [LawsL16] (File: LL16) === NAME: Bothwell Bridge [Child 206] DESCRIPTION: Earlston bids farewell to his family and sets out for Bothwell Bridge (to join the Covenanters). Monmouth, who commands the enemy, welcomes him but orders him to disarm. The two sides cannot agree, and a bloody battle ensues AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1803 (Scott) KEYWORDS: battle death nobility HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: June 22, 1679 - Battle of Bothwell Bridge (Bothwell Brig) FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Child 206, "Bothwell Bridge" (1 text) Bronson 206, "Bothwell Bridge" (4 versions) Leach, pp. 551-553, "Bothwell Bridge" (1 text) Roud #337 NOTES: The battle of Drumclog (1679; see "Loudon Hill, or Drumclog," Child 205), at which Dundee was defeated, brought many more men to the Covenanter cause. These new men, however, were anything but disciplined; they didn't even really agree on what they wanted (they were anti-Episcopal, but there were all sorts of ways to oppose bishops!). As a result of this disorganization (abetted by bad leadership), the Covenanters were routed at Bothwell Bridge by Charles II's illegitimate son Monmouth, the royalist commander. According to G. N. Clark's _The Later Sutarts, 1660-1714_, the presbyterian forces lost about 400 killed and over 1000 captured; many were sold into slavery in Barbados. Despite the failure of the rising, the mere fact that it happened caused the Duke of Lauderdale (John Maitland, 1616-1682), the Secretary of State for Scotland who had implemented the High Church policy, to lose most of his power. The ballad implies that Claverhouse was a senior officer at Bothwell Bridge -- but in fact he was only a captain of no great importance at this battle. It should be noted that various sources list July 2 as the date of the battle. This is, I believe, a case of Old Style (Julian) versus New Style (Gregorian) dates. There is at least one unrelated (but quite old) broadside about this battle, NLScotland, APS.4.99.4, "Bothwell-Bridge: Or, Hamilton's Hero," T.B. (London), 1679 - RBW File: C206 === NAME: Bottle O: see Sailor Likes His Bottle-O, The (File: Hugi055) === NAME: Bottle Up and Go DESCRIPTION: "She may be old, ninety years, But she ain't too old to shift them gears. You got to bottle up and go... All you high-power women." The singer encourages women to have fun, and appreciates their existence AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1932 (recording, Picaninny Jug Band) KEYWORDS: courting sex nonballad FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Silber-FSWB, p. 73, "Bottle Up and Go" (1 text) RECORDINGS: Tommy McClennan "Bottle It Up and Go" (Bluebird B-8373, 1940, rec. 1939) Memphis Jug Band, "Bottle Up and Go" (OKeh 8959/Vocalion 03080, 1935; rec. 1934) Picaninny Jug Band, "Bottle Up and Go" (Champion 16615, 1933; Varsity 6025, n.d.; rec. 1932) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Salty Dog" (floating lyrics) cf. "Step it Up and Go" NOTES: This song and "Step It Up and Go" look very alike at first glance, but the verses seem to be very different. They might both be "Salty Dog" spinoffs. Until I see an intermediate version, I am (tentatively) classifying them separately. - RBW File: FSWB073B === NAME: Boulavogue DESCRIPTION: "At Boulavogue, as the sun was setting... A rebel hand set the heather blazing And brought the neighbors from far and near." Father Murphy's rebels for a time defeat the English, but at last are defeated and Murphy executed AUTHOR: P.J. McCall (1861-1919) (Source: Zimmermann) EARLIEST_DATE: 1898 ("First printed in the _Irish Weekly Independent_, 18th June, 1898," according to Zimmermann) KEYWORDS: rebellion Ireland death clergy execution HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: May 26, 1798 - Beginning of the Wexford rebellion May 27, 1798 - The Wexford rebels under Father John Murphy defeat the North Cork militia June 5, 1798 - The Wexford rebels attack the small garrison (about 1400 men, many militia) at New Ross, but are repelled June 21, 1798 - The rebel stronghold a Vinegar Hill is taken, and the Wexford rebellion effectively ended FOUND_IN: Ireland Britain(Scotland(Aber)) REFERENCES: (4 citations) PGalvin, pp. 28-29, "Boulavogue" (1 text, 1 tune) Zimmermann 90, "Father Murphy of the County Wexford" (1 text, 2 tunes) Moylan 58, "Boolavogue" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BOULVOGE* Roud #2356 RECORDINGS: The Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem, "Boulavogue" (on IRClancyMakem03) Davie Stewart, "Boulavogue" (on Voice08) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Father Murphy (I)" (subject of Father Murphy) and references there NOTES: Zimmermann pp. 65: "The ceremonies marking the centenary of the 1798 rebellion brought out a new flow of ballads, (the best was song [Zimmermann] 90)" Zimmermann 90: "P.J. McCall most probably found the inspiration for this song in the old ballads "Come all you warriors" and "Some treat of David" (Songs [Zimmermann] 10 and 11), though he never borrowed more than half-a-line at a time." - BS Boulavogue is a small town in County Wexford. Although many parts of Ireland rose in rebellion in 1798, the revolts were uncoordinated and much too late; the leaders of the rebellion, for the most part, were already in British hands (the British authorities arrested most leaders of the United Irishmen in March 1798; the last major leader, Lord Edward Fitzgerald, was taken into custody, mortally wounded, on May 19. For more about him, see the notes to "Edward (III) (Edward Fitzgerald)"). The Irish had been waiting for foreign help, but it was not forthcoming (for the Bantry Bay fiasco and the Battle of Camperdown, see the notes on "The Shan Van Vogt"). What was left of the organization (which wasn't much, really; with the leaders gone, there was no way to coordinate a rebellion) decided to proceed with their planned attack Dublin on May 23. The idea was to pin down the British leaders. Unfortunately, the United Irishmen had nothing left in Dublin; all the forces there were dispersed. In Ulster, rebellion did break out, but it was so uncoordinated that it really amounted to little more than rioting (with absolutely no coordination between Irish Catholics and Protestants, whose distrust of each other was heightened by events in Wexford), and was quickly put down. As a result, only the Wexford uprising had any success. Led by the "Croppy Priest," Father John Murphy (for whom see especially "Father Murphy (I)"), the Catholics killed hundreds of Protestants at Vinegar Hill and other places and forced the English (who were already engaged in pacifying the county, as they feared a French invasion) to gather real forces to defeat them. But defeat them she did, with much violence -- and though the English government disclaimed the violence and offered more liberal terms, it was the violence that the Irish remembered. The British, now led by Cornwallis, proceeded to offer generous amnesties -- only to have the French finally invade! (See "The Men of the West") - RBW File: PGa028 === NAME: Bounce Upon Bess DESCRIPTION: The Irishman every night spends what he earns each day on Walker's "Bounce upon Bess." English porter and ale grow bad as they grow stale; this whisky improves with age. It's good in all weather. Give your sweetheart some and her heart will grow soft. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1839 (Croker-PopularSongs) KEYWORDS: drink nonballad FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Croker-PopularSongs, pp. 86-88, "Bounce Upon Bess" (1 text) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Priest and His Boots" (tune, according to Croker-PopularSongs) NOTES: Croker-PopularSongs: "'Bounce upon Bess' seems to have been a cant term for strong whisky." Croker [explins the term by telling] a long story about a woman who had such strong liquor that "it knocked her down so flat, she couldn't stand after it." As in the song, the liquor was "Walker's best whisky.... The song is given from a manuscript copy, which has been in the Editor's possession upwards of twenty years [that is: before 1819]. Mr Walker was an eminent distiller in Cork." - BS Despite Croker's improbable tale, my guess is that "Bounce upon Bess" is rhyming cant, perhaps inspired by hope of revenge upon Queen Elizabeth ("Bess"), during whose reign much of Ireland was conquered. The problem, with this theory, I admit, is that "Bess' does not rhyme with any term for strong drink that I can think of except for "Guinness." Which obviously doesn't fit very well here. - RBW File: CrPS086 === NAME: Bouncing Girl in Fogo, The DESCRIPTION: "There's a bouncing girl in Fogo that I am going to see... She is the sweetest colour of roses a soldier ever knew... You may talk about your Scotland girls, from Boston or the Strand, But you'll get no girl to suit you like the girls from Newfoundland" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1952 (Peacock) KEYWORDS: courting love separation derivative soldier FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Peacock, p. 354, "The Bouncing Girl in Fogo" (1 text, 1 tune) ST Pea354 (Partial) Roud #2800 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Yellow Rose of Texas" (theme, lyrics) NOTES: Peacock says "This is the only surviving fragment of a native love eulogy. Fogo is a strongly Irish community off the northeast coast of Newfoundland. The song probably dates from the World War I period." Considering how close an adaptation the words are of "The Yellow Rose of Texas" [Roud in fact lumps them - RBW], it is strange that the tune has not also been used. The "Bouncing Girl" tune is in 6/8 time and is not at all related to "Yellow Rose." - BS File: Pea354 === NAME: Bound Down to Newfoundland [Laws D22] DESCRIPTION: Young Captain Stafford Nelson of the Abilene falls sick. Unable to get up on deck, he cannot navigate the ship, and none of the other sailors know the coast. Unable to reach Halifax, they wind up in Arichat, where the captain dies AUTHOR: Captain Cale White EARLIEST_DATE: 1928 (Mackenzie) KEYWORDS: sea wreck disease death FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar,Newf) REFERENCES: (9 citations) Laws D22, "Bound Down to Newfoundland" Greenleaf/Mansfield 156, "The Schooner Mary Ann" (1 text, 1 tune) Peacock, pp. 905-906, "Bound Down for Newfoundland" (1 text, 1 tune) Doerflinger, pp. 201-203, "Bound Down to Newfoundland" (1 text, 1 tune) Lehr/Best 73, "The Schooner Mary Ann" (1 text, 1 tune) Creighton-NovaScotia 104, "Banks of Newfoundland" (1 text, 1 tune) Creighton-Maritime, pp. 195-196, "Bound Down to Newfoundland" (1 text, 1 tune) Mackenzie 87, "Newfoundland" (1 text) DT 615, BNDNEWF* BNDNEWF2* Roud #647 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 11(588), "The Loss of the Mary Ann" A. Ryle and Co. (London), 1845-1859; also Firth c.13(58)=Harding B 16(132b), "The Loss of the Albion," unknown, no date NOTES: In Greenleaf/Mansfield the schooner is Mary Ann and the illness, which kills all but two, is smallpox. - BS This story has interesting similarities to the story of the clipper _Neptune's Car_, though that ship sailed around Cape Horn rather than in Canada. The story has been widely retold; I found versions in the February 2005 issue of _American History_ magazine, in Lincoln P. Paine's _Ships of the World: An Historical Encylopedia_ (Houghton Mifflin, 1997), p. 356, andin A. A. Hoehling's _Ships that Changed History_ (1992; I used the 2007 Barnes & Noble edition), pp.11-12. Shortly before the _Car_ was to set sail from New York to San Francisco in 1857, her first mate broke her leg. Captain Joshua Adams Patten was forced to sail with a mate hired by the shipping company. It turned out to be a bad decision; the mate may have been a ringer (Patten was racing two other ships around the Horn). Whatever his reasons, he seems to have tried to slow the ship's passage. Patten had him arrested. But that left Patten as the only qualified navigator aboard -- and he was suffering from tuberculosis (so Paine and _American History_; Hoehling calls it a "mysterious" ailment). He tried to work two shifts, and eventually collapsed. In a sense, the story of _Neptune's Car_ was happier than this song. Salvation came in the form of Patten's wife, a teenager who was pregnant for the first time -- but whom Joshua Patten had taught navigation on a previous voyage. With the help of the crew and the second mate, she took over the ship, brought her through Cape Horn, and eventually got it to San Francisco. It was a slow passage, but they made it. Her name? Mary Ann. But if the Neptune's Car made it to port, the story then reverts to what is found in this song: The captain did not survive. Joshua Patten, who was barely 30, died in mid-1857, and Mary Ann Patten, not yet 25, had contracted his tuberculosis and died in 1861. (The ship itself outlived them; _Neptune's Car_ was still in service, under the British flag, in 1870.) The source of this song? Probably not. But one wonders if there might not have been a _Neptune's Car_ song which mixed with the Greenleaf/Mansfield version. - RBW File: LD22 === NAME: Bound for Botany Bay: see The Boston Burglar [LawsL16] (File: LL16) === NAME: Bound for Canada: see My Dear, I'm Bound for Canady (File: GrMa154) === NAME: Bound for Charlestown: see The Boston Burglar [Laws L16] (File: LL16) === NAME: Bound for South Australia: see South Australia (File: Doe071) === NAME: Bound for Sydney Town: see The Boston Burglar [LawsL16] (File: LL16) === NAME: Bound for the Promised Land DESCRIPTION: "On Jordan's stormy banks I stand And cast a wishful eye To Canaan's fair and happy land Where my possessions lie. I am bound for the promised land...." The rest of the song describes the wonders of the promised land. AUTHOR: Words: Samuel Stennett EARLIEST_DATE: 1787 (lyrics only) KEYWORDS: religious nonballad FOUND_IN: US(Ap,SE) REFERENCES: (4 citations) BrownIII 581, "I Am Bound for the Promised Land" (1 text) Randolph 624, "I'm Bound for the Promised Land" (1 short text, 1 tune) Lomax-FSUSA 99, "Bound for the Promised Land" (1 text, 1 tune) Arnett, p. 98, "I Am Bound for the Promised Land" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #11897 RECORDINGS: Charles Butts Sacred Harp Singers, "Promised Land" (OKeh 45252, 1928) Harmon E. Helmick, "Bound for the Promised Land" (Champion 16744, 1934) Alfred G. Karnes, "I Am Bound for the Promised Land" (Victor 20840, 1927) Frank & James McCravy, "The Promised Land" (OKeh 40371, 1925) Old Southern Sacred Singers, "I Am Bound for the Promised Land" (Brunswick 161, 1927; Supertone S-2096, 1930) Singers from Stewart's Chapel, Houston, MS, "New Jordan" (on Fasola1) Turkey Mountain Singers, "I Am Bound for the Promised Land" (Victor 20942, 1927) Walker Brothers, "I'm Bound for the Promised Land" (Broadway 4121, c. 1932?) Frank Welling & John McGhee, "I'm Bound for the Promised Land" (Perfect 12780, 1932) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Heavenly Port," "Jordan," "Jordan's Shore," "My Home," "New Jordan," "Sweet Prospect" (all share "On Jordan's Stormy Banks" verses) ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Promised Land NOTES: Randolph describes his fragmemt ("I'm bound for the promised land, I'm bound for the promised land, Oh who will come an' go with me? I'm bound for the promised land") as a "jump-up song" which could be used as the chorus to several hymns. It is apparently used most often with "On Jordan's Stormy Banks." The Sacred Harp lists no fewer than seven tunes ("Heavenly Port," "Jordan" [this not the same as the Missouri Harmony's "Jordan"], "Jordan's Shore," "My Home," "New Jordan," "Sweet Prospect," "The Promised Land") for Samuel Stennett's "On Jordan's Stormy Banks." The Missouri Harmony has it to the tune "Canaan." One of those shape note tunes (according to the editors of Brown, quoting Jackson) is described as "practically identical with the old Scottish 'The Boatie Rows."" The lyrics do fit "The Boatie Rows," but to declare any of the Sacred Harp tunes the same as "The Boatie Rows" appears an extreme stretch to me. - RBW The Karnes recording is a hybrid; the words are "Bound for the Promised Land," but the tune is a direct lift from "Don't Let Your Deal Go Down." - PJS File: LxU099 === NAME: Bound for the Stormy Main: see The Greenland Whale Fishery [Laws K21] (File: LK21) === NAME: Bound to Australia: see The First of the Emigrants (File: Doe149) === NAME: Bound to California DESCRIPTION: Shanty. "Good-bye my lads good-bye, no one can tell me why. I am bound to California, to reap the shinning gold. Good-bye, my lads, good-bye." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1927 (C. Fox Smith, _A Book of Shanties_) KEYWORDS: shanty mining farewell gold FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (1 citation) Hugill, p. 118, "Bound to California" (1 short text, 1 tune) [AbEd, o. 101] Roud #11253 NOTES: Hugill guesses this is of Negro origin. C. Fox Smith thinks it has some relationship to "Shallow Brown." - SL File: Hug118 === NAME: Bound to Go (I) DESCRIPTION: "I built my house upon the rock, O yes, Lord, No wind, no storm can blow it down, O yes, Lord. March on, member, bound to go; Been to the ferry, bound to go...." The singer builds a stout house, picks sweet berries, and gathers in brothers and sisters AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1966 KEYWORDS: religious nonballad FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Scott-BoA, pp. 202-203, "Bound to Go" (1 text, 1 tune) Darling-NAS, pp. 323-324, "Bound to Go" (1 text) Roud #11974 NOTES: For the story of the men who built their houses on rock and sand, see Matt. 7:24-27; Luke 6:47-49. - RBW File: SBoA202 === NAME: Bound to Go (II): see Yellow Meal (Heave Away; Yellow Gals; Tapscott; Bound to Go) (File: Doe062) === NAME: Bound to Rio: see Rio Grande (File: Doe064) === NAME: Boundless Mercy (Drooping Souls, No Longer Grieve) DESCRIPTION: "Drooping souls, no longer grieve; Heaven is propitious. If in Christ you can believe, you will find him precious." "From his hands, his feed, his side Flows the healing balsam." "Boundless mercy, how it flows; Now I hope I feel it." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1838 (Knoxville Harmony) KEYWORDS: religious nonballad FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (2 citations) BrownIII 528, "Drooping Souls, No Longer Grieve" (1 text) Chappell-FSRA 95, "The Mourner's Comfort" (1 short text, 1 tune) Roud #11820 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Zion's Sons and Daughters" ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Mourner's Comfort File: Br3528 === NAME: Bounty Jumper, The DESCRIPTION: "Friends and jolly citizens, I'll sing you a song... It's all about a jumper, Old Donald was his name." Captured at last, he prefers death to revealing where his money is hidden. The jumper is condemned, executed, and buried. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1883 (Smith/Hatt) KEYWORDS: death execution money Civilwar FOUND_IN: US(MA,MW) Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (3 citations) FSCatskills 17, "The Bounty Jumper" (1 text, 1 tune) Smith/Hatt, pp. 92-93, "The Bounty Jumper" (1 text) Dean, p. 101, "The Bounty Jumper" (1 text) ST FSC017 (Partial) Roud #1976 NOTES: During the Civil War, the Union grew so desperate for men that it began to use drastic recruitment measures. One of these was the bounty -- paying a man a large sum (sometimes as much as $300) to enlist, and then giving him leave to go off and spend it. Naturally, a large number of men -- the "Bounty Jumpers" -- took the money and ran. The harsh punishment a captured jumper received did little to discourage the practice. - RBW File: FSC017 === NAME: Bow Wow Wow DESCRIPTION: Primarily as tune used for various broadsides and late folk songs, recognized monotonal measures followed by arpeggios on a pentatonic scale. Chorus something like "Bow wow wow, all the dog did say to them was, Bow wow wow." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1859 (Chappell) KEYWORDS: dancetune nonballad animal FOUND_IN: Britain REFERENCES: (1 citation) Chappell/Wooldridge II, p. 183, "The Barking Barber" (1 tune) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Guy Fawkes" (tune) cf. "Jog Along Till Shearing" (tune) cf. "Row-Dow-Dow" (tune) cf. "The Carrier's Song" (tune) NOTES: I've yet to find a complete text of this piece, which makes it hard to write a proper description. I'm not sure Bow Wow Wow, as a song in its own right, exists in tradition. But it was used for so many traditional songs (see the cross-references) that it clearly belongs here. - RBW File: ChWII183 === NAME: Bow-Legged Rabbit DESCRIPTION: A dance song: "Bow-legged rabbit, A box ankle Joe, Flea bite me so bad I can't dance no mo'." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1949 KEYWORDS: dancing nonballad FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Botkin-SoFolklr, p. 709, "Bow-Legged Rabbit" (1 text, 1 tune) File: BSoF709 === NAME: Bowie, Bowerie: see The Twa Sisters [Child 10] (File: C010) === NAME: Bowl of Green Peas, The DESCRIPTION: "I'll sing you a ditty Of a fair maid so pretty Who lives from the city Some seventeen miles." The singer went to court "Mariar" in a briar. When he asked to wed, she smashed a bowl of green peas over his head. Now his friends are always offering him peas AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1934 (Randolph) KEYWORDS: love courting marriage humorous FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Randolph 378, "The Bowl of Green Peas" (1 text) Roud #7629 File: R378 === NAME: Bowling Green DESCRIPTION: "Wish I was in Bowling Green sittin' in a chair, One arm 'round my pretty little miss, the other 'round my dear." The singer offers to let her man go, wishes she were a bumblebee who could settle on her man, and sets out to ramble because she has no home AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1947 (recording, Cousin Emmy) KEYWORDS: home love betrayal abandonment rambling FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (3 citations) Silber-FSWB, p. 43, "Bowling Green" (1 text) Green-Miner, p. 230, "Bowling Green" or "Shady Grove" (1 fragmentary text) DT, BOWLGREN* RECORDINGS: Cousin Emmy [Cynthia May Carver], "I Wish I Was in Bowling Green" (Decca 24214, 1947) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Mary from Dungloe" (floating verse) File: FSWB043 === NAME: Bows of London, The: see The Twa Sisters [Child 10] (File: C010) === NAME: Box Upon Her Head, The: see The Undaunted Female (The Box Upon Her Head; The Staffordshire Maid; The Maid and the Robber) [Laws L3] (File: LL03) === NAME: Boy and the Mantle, The [Child 29] DESCRIPTION: A boy enters King Arthur's court wearing a rich mantle. He offers the mantle to whichever woman proves virtuous (the appearance of the mantle will show who is chaste and who is not). Only one woman in the court proves virtuous. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1765 (Percy) KEYWORDS: clothes infidelity magic FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (6 citations) Child 29, "The Boy and the Mantle" (1 text) Percy/Wheatley III, pp. 3-12, "The Boy and the Mantle" (1 text); cf. pp. 315-323, "The Boy and the Mantle" (a rewritten version) Flanders-Ancient1, pp. 257-264, "The Boy and the Mantle" (1 text, from "The Charms of Melody" rather than tradition) Leach, pp. 113-118, "The Boy and the Mantle" (1 text) OBB 17, "The Boy and the Mantle (A Ballad of King Arthur's Court)" (1 text) DT 29, BOYMANT1 Roud #3961 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Twa Knights" [Child 268] (theme) NOTES: The custom in Arthur's court of always having an entertainment before dinner (at least on a high day) occurs also in the (somewhat earlier) "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight," Stanza 4 (lines 85-106) -- a story in which, interestingly, it is the *man's* fidelity which comes under attack. The contest over women's fidelity is common in folklore; in the Child canon, cf. e.g. "The Twa Knights" [Child 268]. Flanders-Ancient mentions the French fablaiu _Le Mantel Mautaillie_ and von Zatzikhoven's _Lanzelet_. Incidentally, the Sir Craddoccke (Caradoc) of this song makes a brief appearance in Gilbert and Sullivan: In _The Pirates of Penzance_, the Modern Major General tells us that "I know our mythic history, King Arthur's and Sir Caradoc's"; one suspects Gilbert got it from Percy. - RBW File: C029 === NAME: Boy He Had an Auger, A DESCRIPTION: "A boy, he had an auger, It bored two holes at once; A boy, he had an auger, It bored two holes at once. And some were eating popcorn, And some were eating pickles (Spoken:) And the 'G' is silent as in 'fish.'" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1927 (Sandburg) KEYWORDS: nonsense nonballad technology wordplay FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (1 citation) Sandburg, p. 343, "A Boy He Had an Auger" (1 text, 1 tune) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Louisiana Lowlands" (another parody of "The Golden Vanity" verse beginning "Some were playing cards and some were playing dice") NOTES: The only part of this I'll try to explain is the line about "the 'G' is silent as in 'fish.'" This may go back to Shaw, who proposed to spell the word fish "ghoti." Other verses and other conclusions (e.g. "The Q is silent as in electricity") make even less sense. This may, I suppose, have been *very* loosely inspired by "The Golden Vanity." - RBW File: San343 === NAME: Boy in Blue, The: see The Express Office (He Is Coming to Us Dead) (File: R696) === NAME: Boy Killed by a Falling Tree in Hartford DESCRIPTION: Young Isaac Alcott, newly arrived in Hartford, goes riding. He goes to "cut some timber for a sled" and is hit by a falling branch. Found many hours later, it is too late to save his life. His funeral is described; the song ends with a moralizing stanza AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1953 (Flanders/Olney) KEYWORDS: death burial mourning injury warning FOUND_IN: US(NE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Flanders/Olney, pp. 167-169, "Boy Killed by a Falling Tree in Hartford" (1 text, 1 tune) ST FO167 (Partial) Roud #4680 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Harry Dunn (The Hanging Limb)" [Laws C14] cf. "Chance McGear" (plot) cf. "The Substitute (plot) File: FO167 === NAME: Boy of Love, The: see When a Man's in Love [Laws O20] (File: LO20) === NAME: Boy on the Land, The DESCRIPTION: Little boy, working on the land, is given an old coat, "old stiff collar button'd to the throat." Second, he's given an old gun; "Sometimes she gave fire, sometimes she gave smoke, She gave my shoulder the devil's own poke" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1917 (Cecil Sharp collection) KEYWORDS: farming work worker FOUND_IN: US(Ap) REFERENCES: (1 citation) SharpAp 164, "The Boy on the Land" (1 text, 1 tune) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Kerry Recruit" (hints of plot) NOTES: This is a conundreum; from the fragmentary text it's not clear whether the boy gets the coat and gun for his agricultural work or because he's been conscripted into the army. If the latter, just possibly "The Kerry Recruit" is related, but it's all very tenuous. - PJS Roud in fact lumps them, but until we find some sort of substantial version, it will be hard to prove either way. - RBW File: ShAp2164 === NAME: Boy That Found a Bride, The (Fair Gallowa') DESCRIPTION: The singer, born in Gallowa', has taken to rambling when he sees a beautiful girl. He courts her urgently until he must return home. He asks her to marry him before he takes to the road. After some hesitation, she agrees; they marry and live in Gallowa' AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1911 (Grieg) KEYWORDS: home rambling marriage FOUND_IN: Ireland Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H665, pp. 454-455, "The Boy that Found a Bride" (1 text, 1 tune) File: HHH665 === NAME: Boyndlie's Braes DESCRIPTION: "Boyndlie's banks and braes are steep And decked wi' flo'ers o mony a hue...." "There does dwell my bonnie Nell... And I cam' ower frae Aberdour To lat her taste my fruits sae rare." He is young and poor, but they expect to keep company in the future AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1930 (Ord) KEYWORDS: love courting FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ord, p. 88, "Boyndlie's Braes" (1 text) Roud #5585 File: Ord088 === NAME: Boyne Water (I), The DESCRIPTION: "July the First in Ouldbridge Town there was a grievous battle...." The song describes William's attack on the Irish positions at the Boyne. The listeners are reminded that the "Protestants of Drogheda have reason to be thankful" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1798 (_Constitutional Songs_, according to Zimmermann) LONG_DESCRIPTION: "July the First in Oldbridge town there was a grievous battle." William, shot in the arm, refused Schomberg's advice to avoid personal involvement. "William said, 'He don t deserve the name of Faith's Defender, Who would not venture life and limb to make a foe surrender'." When Schomberg was killed William "would be the foremost; 'Brave boys,' he said, 'be not dismayed, for the loss of one commander, For God will be our King this day, and I'll be general under.'" He rescued the Protestants of Drogheda who had been tried at the Millmount. The French left Duleek for Dublin, setting the fields on fire as they fled. William let his men rest rather than pursue the French: "sheathe your swords and rest a while, in time we'll follow after." KEYWORDS: battle Ireland royalty rebellion HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1685-1688 - Reign of James II (James VII of Scotland), the last Catholic king of Britain 1688 - Glorious Revolution overthrows James II in favour of his Protestant daughter Mary II and her husband and first cousin William III of Orange Mar 12, 1689 - James arrives in Ireland and begins, very hesitantly, to organize its defense. April-July, 1689 - Siege of Londonderry. James's forces fail to capture the Protestant stronghold, leaving Ireland still "in play" for William August, 1689 - Marshal Schomberg brings the first of William's troops to Ireland. James continues to be passive, allowing more troops to reinforce them March, 1690 - James receives reinforcements from France but still does nothing June 14, 1690 - William lands in Ireland July 1, 1690 - Battle of the Boyne. William III crushes the Irish army of James, at once securing his throne and the rule of Ireland. Irish resistance continues for about another year, but Ireland east of the Shannon is his, and the opposition is doomed. FOUND_IN: Ireland US(MW) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Hayward-Ulster, pp. 117-119, "The Battle of the Boyne" (1 text, mixing this and "The Boyne Water (I)") PGalvin, p. 15, "The Boyne Water" (1 partial text) Brewster 72, "The Battle of the Boyne" (2 texts, one short and from tradition, the other an excerpt from Peter Buchan's 1817 text; it is probably this version, since it mentions William's injury and title as Faith's Defender, but it's too fragmentary to be sure) DT, BOYNWATR* Roud #795 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 11(186), "Battle of the Boyne. Enniskillen, Aughrim, Boyne, Derry, 1690" ("July the first in Oldbridge town," The Poet's box (Glasgow), 1854 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Battle of the Boyne (I)" (subject: The Battle of the Boyne) and references there cf. "The Battle of the Boyne (II)" (lyrics) NOTES: The cross reference in broadside Bodleian Harding B 11(186) implies that there is a previous song as source of the tune. Three ballads seem confused: the most commonly recorded "The Boyne Water (I)," the "old version," "The Boyne Water (II)," and Colonel Blacker's "The Battle of the Boyne." The three are clearly distinct though Roud currently numbers both "Boyne Water" ballads as #795 and Colonel Blacker has been named by some as author of "The Boyne Water (I)" for more than 100 years. While this discussion may not settle the confusion, it may provide a fair starting point. One missing piece of evidence is Rev Abraham Hume's "The Two Ballads on the Battle of the Boyne," in _Ulster Journal of Archeology_ (1854). Zimmermann, pp. 300-301, says "An old ballad on this subject, known as 'The Boyne Water' [II], was later replaced by a shorter one entitled 'The Battle of the Boyne' [I]. Gavan Duffy gave a fragment of the old version in 1845, and Rev Abraham Hume published the whole ballad - nineteen stanzas - in 1854 [OrangeLark 9 has twenty]. The shorter version was then said to have first appeared in 1814, which is not true, as it is found in song books printed in the 1790's [Fn 28] For instance in _Constitutional Songs_, 1798 [when Colonel Blacker was 21 years old], pp. 9-12]" Duffy (Charles Gavan Duffy, editor, _The Ballad Poetry of Ireland_ (1845)) prints (I) as an anonymous "Old Ballad" though he knew Colonel Blacker's work and included Blacker's "Oliver's Advice" in his book. He comments that "This version of the 'Boyne Water' is in universal use among the Orangemen of Ireland, and is the only one ever sung by them. But that it is not the original song, written a century and a half ago, is perfectly certain" [p. 144] In Note A to the Appendix he prints the fragments. He comments that "They appear to us infinitely more racy and spirited than anything in the song which has strangely superseded them." H. Halliday Sparling, _Irish Minstrelsy_ (London, 1888), reprints Duffy's texts and some of Duffy's comments. On page 509 he writes of his "Battle of the Boyne" that it is the "accepted version of this famous song which is sung at Orange meetings; wrongly attributed to Colonel Blacker"; on p. 495 he notes "The 'Battle of the Boyne' is wrongly attributed to him; he wrote a poem of that name, but not the famous song." As Sparling noted, Colonel William Blacker (1777-1855) did write a poem on the subject which Hayes printed in 1855 (Edward Hayes, _The Ballads of Ireland_ (Boston, 1859 (reprint of 1855 London edition)), Vol I, pp. 210-211) and O'Conor reprinted in 1901. I don't know that it was ever sung; it is included in the Index to help clear up the confusion. The Index entry for each of the three ballads includes a LONG DESCRIPTION that should eliminate any thought that the three are related. The texts of Duffy's fragments (II) and Colonel Blacker's poem are included in the Supplemental Tradition Text File; the text of (I) is available at a Digital Tradition site. Versions of (I) and (II) share only the two lines of William's comment on the death of Schomberg ("He says, 'my boys, feel no dismay at the losing of one commander For God shall be our king this day, and I'll be general under.'") though OrangeLark 9 (II) replaces them ("I'll go before and lead you on-Boys use your hands full nimble; With the help of God, we'll beat them all, And make their hearts to tremble.") Colonel Blacker's poem shares no lines with the other two. Of the songs collected since Duffy I know of only one that is clearly the "old version." Art Rosenbaum, in _Folk Visions & Voices_ (1983) prints "King William, Duke Shambo, collected in Georgia in 1980 (p. 65). The last two verses of Hayward-Ulster are from "the old version": the Prince Eugene reference and "Now, praise God, all true Protestants ..." [see the Supplemental Tradition Text File]. The common fragment (for example, George Korson,_Pennsylvania Songs & Legends_) They fought with clubs and they fought with stones, King William on a charger, "He says now boys, don't be dismayed on losing a commander" On and on the battle raged, 'til caught by the fearful slaughter Ten thousand Micks got killed with sticks at the Battle of Boyne Water might be from either version (I) or (II). - BS The Battle of the Boyne was nearly the last gasp of fighting directly connected with the Glorious Revolution of 1688. James II, having been forced to abdicate, fled, but returned to Ireland to try to regain his throne. William of Orange gathered an army and followed. James showed some military sense in choosing his position along the Boyne; William's army was larger, better equipped, better trained, and better disciplined. The only Jacobite hope was to hold a strong defensive position. But this wasn't enough; the English and their allies quickly got across the Boyne, and from then on, the battle was little more than a rearguard action by Irish cavalry against the advancing English. In the aftermath, the power of the Old Ireland, and of the Old English who were the primary Irish leaders from the time of Henry II to that of Elizabeth -- already much diminished by Cromwell -- was completely and finally broken. For a fuller description and background, see the notes to "The Battle of the Boyne (I)." The Hoagland text includes several scriptural references. Nabal of Carmel lived during the time of King Saul of Israel, and David's rebel band asked him for protection money. (The Bible doesn't say so straight out, but that's what it was.) Nabal refused; his wife Abigail paid behind his back, then told him; it sounds as if he had a stroke and died a few days later. The story occupies most of 1 Samuel 25. The reference to Zerubbabel as deliverer is strange; Zerubbabel led one of the several Jewish returns to Jerusalem after the Babylonian Captivity, and was the secular leader who started the building of the Second Temple -- but, if we piece together the data in Ezra, Haggai, and Zechariah together, he wasn't around at the end. And he was too young for a natural death to have been likely. The best guess is that the Persian authorities thought him a rebel and removed him. - RBW File: PGa015 === NAME: Boyne Water (II), The DESCRIPTION: "July the First, of a morning clear, on thousand six hundred and ninety, King William did his men prepare...." The forces of James and William clash; Schomberg is killed; William's forces win the battle; Protestants are urged to plaise God AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1845 (Duffy) LONG_DESCRIPTION: July the First, of a morning clear," 1690, King William and 30000 men faced King James near the Boyne. They advanced to "Lillibalero." When Duke Schomberg was killed William said, "my boys, feel no dismay at the losing of one commander For God shall be our king this day, and I'll be general under." William's forces formed a body bridge to cross the Boyne. Dermot Roe fled. Lord Galmoy advanced but "never three from ten of them escaped." The French were battered. Prince Eugene advanced against James's forces who ran away because "the brandy ran so in their heads." The Enniskillen men were restrained from following the fleeing Jacobite forces; in contrast, though James would have tried to restrain them, "had the Papists gain'd the day, there would have been open murder." KEYWORDS: battle Ireland royalty rebellion drink HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1685-1688 - Reign of James II (James VII of Scotland), the last Catholic king of Britain 1688 - Glorious Revolution overthrows James II in favour of his Protestant daughter Mary II and her husband and first cousin William III of Orange Mar 12, 1689 - James arrives in Ireland and begins, very hesitantly, to organize its defense. April-July, 1689 - Siege of Londonderry. James's forces fail to capture the Protestant stronghold, leaving Ireland still "in play" for William August, 1689 - Marshal Schomberg brings the first of William's troops to Ireland. James continues to be passive, allowing more troops to reinforce them March, 1690 - James receives reinforcements from France but still does nothing June 14, 1690 - William lands in Ireland July 1, 1690 - Battle of the Boyne. William III crushes the Irish army of James, at once securing his throne and the rule of Ireland. Irish resistance continues for about another year, but Ireland east of the Shannon is his, and the opposition is doomed. FOUND_IN: Ireland US(SE) REFERENCES: (9 citations) OrangeLark 9, "The Boyne Water" (1 text, 1 tune) Hayward-Ulster, pp. 117-119, "The Battle of the Boyne" (1 text, mixing this and "The Boyne Water (I)") PGalvin, pp. 14-15, "The Battle of the Boyne" (1 text) Graham, p. 8, "The Boyne Water" (1 text, 1 tune) ADDITIONAL: Charles Gavan Duffy, editor, The Ballad Poetry of Ireland (1845), pp. 248-249, "The Boyne Water" Kathleen Hoagland, editor, One Thousand Years of Irish Poetry (New York, 1947), pp. 249-250, "The Boyne Water" H. Halliday Sparling, Irish Minstrelsy (London, 1888), pp. 13-14, 448-450, "The Boyne Water" Charles Sullivan, ed., Ireland in Poetry, pp. 105-106, "The Boyne Water" (1 text) Thomas Kinsella, _The New Oxford Book of Irish Verse_ (Oxford, 1989), pp. 179-180, "The Boyne Water" (1 text) ST PGa014 (Partial) Roud #795 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Battle of the Boyne (I)" (subject: The Battle of the Boyne) and references there NOTES: "[On the Duleek road during the retreat,] there was a small riot when some men broke ranks and smashed open barrels of spirits and proceeded in a number of cases to become very drunk" (source: Michael McNally, _Battle of the Boyne 1690: the Irish Campaign for the English Crown_ (Oxford, 2005), p.86). For another ballad with the theme of drink after a loss see "The Boys of Wexford." Viscount Galmoy's mounted regiment joined the French brigade, Maxwell's dragoons and Sarsfield's horse. When James left the field Sarsfield's and Maxwell's regiments were sent to protect him, leaving Galmoy's among the inadequate force left to counteract the Williamite cavalry. (source: McNally, p. 86) I found no reference in McNally to McDermott Roe or Prince Eugene of Savoy in this battle. [Since McDermott Roe lived in the era of the Defenders, a century after the Boyne, he obviously was not there. Eugene was at least alive at this time, but he was making his reputation in Italy at the time. I think this is an extended confusion -- Eugene worked with Marlborough, and Marlborough with William III and Anne. - RBW] Of the songs collected since Duffy I know of only one that is clearly the "old version." Art Rosenbaum, in _Folk Visions & Voices_ (1983) prints "King William, Duke Shambo, collected in Georgia in 1980 (p. 65). The last two verses of Hayward-Ulster, pp. 117-119, "The Battle of the Boyne" [version I] are from "the old version": the Prince Eugene reference and "Now, praise God, all true Protestants...." - BS For background on the Battle of the Boyne, see "The Battle of the Boyne (I)." For the relationship between this song and "The Boyne Water (I)" (which are much confused because both begin "July the First" and refer to many of the same events), see the notes to "The Boyne Water (I)." - RBW File: PGa014 === NAME: Boys and Girls Come Out to Play DESCRIPTION: "Girls and boys come out to play. You must have a holiday. Heigh-o, heigh-o, have a holiday." "If you want hay sweet and fine, Rake it when the sun doth shine. Heigh-o, heigh-o, when the sun doth shine." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1930 (Flanders/Brown) KEYWORDS: work nonballad playparty FOUND_IN: US(NE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Flanders/Brown, p. 187, "An English Round" (1 text, 1 tune) ST FlBr187 (Full) Roud #5452 NOTES: The first line of this occurs in _Tommy Thumb's Pretty Song Book, Volume II_ (1744?), and the Tommy Thumb text occurs in various texts of the period (see the _Oxford Dictionary of Nursery Rhymes_); this may explain why Flanders and Brown call this "An English Round," but I know of no English collections of the actual form in Flanders/Brown. - RBW File: FlBr187 === NAME: Boys Around Here, The: see A Comical Ditty (Arizona Boys and Girls) (File: JHCox057) === NAME: Boys at Ninety-Five, The DESCRIPTION: Mike takes the Bonavista Branch to Deer Lake and is sent to lumbercamp 95 "with not a decent tree." The skipper, foreman, and cook are named with comments on drink and dawn-to-dark hard work AUTHOR: Mike Brennan EARLIEST_DATE: 1952 (Peacock) KEYWORDS: lumbering drink moniker cook logger FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Peacock, pp. 746-747, "The Boys at Ninety-Five" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #9802 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Wabash Cannonball" (tune) cf. "The Lumber Camp Song" (theme) NOTES: The melody shown by Peacock is very close to "The Wabash Cannonball." He notes that the "writer was away during my visit, so I had no opportunity to get the 'correct' tune." He collected the song at Stock Cove, near Bonavista. The Bonavista Branch of the narrow gauge Newfoundland Railway started at Bonavista on the northeast coast. Deer Lake is about 350 miles west by Trans-Canada 1 and other roads that pretty much follow the route of the railway. The Bonavista Branch ran from 1913 to 1989 according to the Blanford site. - BS The failure to collect a tune is particularly sad given the likelihood that this is derived from some other logging song, e.g. "We Work for Hay and Company" (which also uses "The Wabash Cannonball"). - RBW File: Pea746 === NAME: Boys Can Whistle, Girls Can Sing DESCRIPTION: "Grandma Grunt said a curious thing, Boys can whistle but girls must sing." Various people confirm this observation: "[Papa] said to me, 'It's the usual thing For boys to whistles and girls to sing.'" Whistling girls will reportedly meet a bad end AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1940 (Brown) KEYWORDS: music nonballad FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (2 citations) BrownIII 145, "Whistling Girls and Crowing Hens" (1 text) Pankake-PHCFSB, p. 73, "Boys Can Whistle, Girls Can Sing" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #7012 NOTES: The first place I saw this was in the Prairie Home Companion book, and the Brown collection proves that it is a genuine folksong. Sadly, the Prairie Home Companion book does not document sources, so we do not know where this song survives. - RBW File: PHCFS073 === NAME: Boys from County Cork, The DESCRIPTION: "You've read in history's pages of heroes of great fame...." The singer notes that the heroes of Ireland's history are those who died in the 1916 rebellion. The singer lists heroes from old Ireland, noting that the Boys from Cork beat the Black and Tans AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1962 KEYWORDS: Ireland rebellion nonballad IRA HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: Apr 24, 1916 (Easter Monday) - beginning of the Easter Rebellion FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (2 citations) PGalvin, p. 70, "The Boys from County Cork" (1 text, 1 tune) OLochlainn-More 95, "The Boys from Rebel Cork" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #9774 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Foggy Dew (III)" (subject) NOTES: People and things mentioned in this song include: "The Black and Tans" (for which see "The Bold Black and Tan") -- A special English constabulary recruited to quell Irish violence. They failed, and in fact contributed to the brutality MacSweeney -- presumably Terence MacSwiney, Lord Mayor of Cork, who was arrested for seditious speech, then died in a hunger strike (1920). (See the notes to "Shall My Soul Pass Through Ireland"), though others in his family were also involved in the struggle against the British The other possibility is Terence's sister Mary, who was one of the die-hards who fought in parliament against the Free State Treaty with England. (Coogan, p. 307, quotes her speech against the Anglo-Irish treaty: "This is a betrayal, a gross betrayal... I tell you there can be no union between the representatives of the Irish Republic and the so-called Free State"[for bibliography, see the note at the end of this entry]. In Coogan's view, her statement ended any hope of peace between the radicals and the more rational majority. Certainly a pointless civil war followed.) Cathal Brugha - An officer in the resistance forces, famed for how hard he fought. He was also a political leader, arguing strenuously for a Republican government; he refused to join the delegation that negotiated with Lloyd George to negotiate the treaty of semi-independence. For his eventual fate, see "The Death of Brugh." Padraic Pearse (1879-1916) -- Irish poet and historian, acclaimed provisional president of the 1916 Irish Republic. He declared the Republic on Easter Monday of 1916, surrendered it the following Saturday, and was executed on May 3 of that year. According to Kee (II, pp. 206-207), "Patrick Pearse [his name before he Gaelicized it] [was a] Gaelic League poet and schoolmaster, son of a Birmingham stone-mason and an Irish mother, who since 1908 had been running a nationally minded school for boys called St Enda's at Rathfarnham on the outskirts of Dublin." Townshend, p. 13, notes that his first major activity was with the Gaelic League journal _An Claideamh Soluis_: "When he became editor in 1903 his position as chief ideologue of the language movement was cemented." But Irish nationalism at this stage was very fragmented (even Pierce apparently started out by trying for a Gaelic revival, not a revolt). What the vast majority opposed could still come about in the hands of a determined minority (the whole thing, frankly, reminds me of how Lenin first hijacked Russian Communism and then all of Russia). In May 1915, a small part of the leadership of the Irish Revolutionary Brotherhood appointed Pearse, Joseph Plunkett, and Eamonn Ceannt to look into a rebellion. Kee notes that it wasnÕt until September that even the full Supreme Council of the IRB knew of Pearce's committee. And the IRB was a minority in the Sinn Fein Volunteers, which was a minority of the National Volunteers, who did not represent all of Ireland (Kee II, p. 236). The Easter Rebellion was not a popular rebellion; had it somehow succeeded, it would have been called a coup d'etat, and its leaders a junta. But, of course, it did not succeed in anything except laying much of Dublin in ruins. In one sense, the rebelsÕ timing was bad; with millions of British troops fighting in France, Britain had to end the rebellion with all possible speed -- i.e. with great brutality. But that made them martyrs -- and *that* reawakened the nationalist cause. Many English leaders begged to have the rebels treated leniently (see Kee III, p. 1). Pearse, perhaps more than any other, foresaw the course of the Rising -- including its spectacular failure. The failure was fully expected, at least by Pearse and some of his associates. (Indeed, Pearse in 1915 wrote a play, "The Singer," about a hypothetical Irish rebellion, in which he described a handful of men going into battle against a multitude; told it was foolish course, one of the lost-hopers replied "And so it is a foolish thing. Do you want us to be wise?" -- see Kee II, p. 255. The hero went forth unarmed, but declaring "One man can free a people as one Man redeemed the world"; Townshend, p. 15).) Many nationalist leaders opposed the Rising for this very reason (Kee II, p. 235). In a way, Pearse didn't even want to succeed. He thought Irish independence could only be achieved by a sort of mystic sacrifice -- and set out to make it. In this sense, they were wise -- think how the fate of William Wallace roused Scotland, or in later years how the destruction of the Algerian liberation organizations caused the Algerian public to demand independence. It's the modern version of Tertullian's dictum "The blood of martyrs is the seed of the church." Kee summarize this attitude as follows (II, p. 235): "Pearse... consistently proclaimed to the effect that a blood sacrifice, however hopeless its chances of military succes, was necessary to redeem Ireland from her loss of true national pride, much as Jesus Christ by his blood had redeemed mankind from its sins." It's probably not coincidence that Pease much admired Robert Emmet despite the utter futility of the latter's rebellion (Townshend, p. 23. For background, see the notes to "Bold Robert Emmet.Ó) And, because the rebels were repressed, it changed public opinion. Until then, it seems certain that most Irish wanted home rule and peace. After the Rising, the IRA and resistance took over. Pearse sacrificed himself to win a free Ireland. One might say that the gods accepted the sacrifice. But they also exacted a price. J. C. Beckett (amplifying and paraphrasing a comment of Michael Collins) remarks that Pearse's sacrifice placed Ireland under the "tyranny of the dead." The dead cannot compromise. If the Rising had not taken place, Ireland might have found a peaceful solution. Because it did take place, Ireland was condemned to the Black-and-Tan War and the Civil War which followed. The whole story shows how tragic the fate of Ireland was. The rebels destroyed much of Dublin, and the ordinary Irish, who had no part in the rebellion, at first reviled them. But, as Golway notes (240-241), the speed and brutality of British justice caused public opinion "to turn against Britain's pursuit of vengeance. The spat-upon rebels were becoming martyrs." In the end, it was Pearse's mystic incompetents -- schoolteachers and poets who thought themselves soldiers, though it turned out that Pearse couldn't even stand the sight of blood -- who became the Irish heroes. Kee III, p. 15, mentions a case of a girl actually making reference to "Saint Pearse." de Valera -- Eamon de Valera (1882-1975) was born in America but became a leader of the 1916 rising, and barely avoided execution after its collapse. (He was among those about to be executed, but the British government realized he was an American citizen and halted the executions). Having survived, he was nominated in a parliamentary by-election in 1917 (the first chance to nominate a Nationalist since the Easter Rising) -- and was elected by a 2:1 margin (Kee III, pp. 27-28). He became the President of Sinn Fein in 1917, then of the rebel Irish parliament; he opposed the Treaty which led to the partition of Ireland, but formed the Fianna Fail party and won the 1932 election, then established the 1937 constitution. He remained Ireland's leading politician for fifty years, serving as President from 1959 to 1973. >>*BIBLIOGRAPHY*<<: In writing this summary, in addition to the standard references such as the _Oxford Companion to Irish History_, I have consulted the following works: Coogan: Tim Pat Coogan, _Michael Collins_ (Roberts Rinehart, 1996). A biography of Collins, but since Collins nearly *was* Ireland from 1918 until his death, there is much good history here Golway: Terry Golway, _For the Cause of Liberty_ (Simon & Schuster, 2000). A full history of relations between Britain and Ireland, though with curious gaps. Kee II: Robert Kee, _The Bold Fenian Men_, being volume II of _The Green Flag_ (Penguin, 1972), seems to me to be among the most balanced histories of Ireland I've seen. This second of three volumes covers the period from around 1848 until the Easter Rising. Kee III: Robert Kee, _Ourselves Alone_, being volume III of _The Green Flag_ (Penguin, 1972) is of course the sequel to Kee II; it covers the brief but intense period from 1916 to the establishment of constitutional government in the 1920s. Townshend: Charles Townshend, _Easter 1916: The Irish Rebellion_ (Ivan R. Dee, 2005, 1006). This is specific to the 1916 rebellion, but tries to offer a good historical context. - RBW File: PGa070 === NAME: Boys from Rebel Cork, The: see The Boys from County Cork (File: PGa070) === NAME: Boys of Bedlam: see Tom a Bedlam (Bedlam Boys) (File: Log172) === NAME: Boys of Coleraine, The DESCRIPTION: The singer invites listeners to drink to the boys of Coleraine. He recalls the exiles, and calls for another drink. He looks over the sea, and the thought saddens him. He once again toasts the boys of Coleraine AUTHOR: Robert Thompson ? EARLIEST_DATE: 1925 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: home emigration drink nonballad FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H87b, p. 182, "The Boys of Coleraine" (1 text, tune referenced) Roud #8005 File: HHH087b === NAME: Boys of Fair Hill, The DESCRIPTION: The boys of Fair Hill love the girls, hunting with the Harrier Club, drinking water at Fahy's well and porter at Quinlan's pub, and spending "a day with our Hurling Club." "Here's up 'em all say the boys of Fair Hill" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1978 (OCanainn) KEYWORDS: hunting sports drink nonballad FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) OCanainn, pp. 34-35, "The Boys of Fair Hill" (1 text, 1 tune) NOTES: Fair Hill is a suburb of Cork City. OCanainn: "This is one of Cork's most popular songs." The current [1978] pub version had inconsequential or disrespectful lines compared to the original. For example, "Shandon steeple stands up straight and the River Lee flows underneath," "The Blarney hens don't lay at all and when they lays they lays them small," "The Blackpool girls are very small up against the Sunbeam wall," "The Montenotte girls are very rude; they go swimming in the nude," and so on. - BS File: OCan034 === NAME: Boys of Kilkenny, The DESCRIPTION: "Oh the boys of Kilkenny are brave roaring blades." They kiss and coax every girl they meet. The singer remembers a "pretty dame" from Kilkenny. Now he's in exile; if he were in back there, he could get "sweethearts but here can get none" AUTHOR: Words: Arthur Matthison/Music: W. F. Wellman EARLIEST_DATE: 1807 (sung by Thomas Moore, according to Croker-PopularSongs) KEYWORDS: homesickness courting exile nonballad rake FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (3 citations) OLochlainn 73, "The Boys of Kilkenny" (1 text, 1 tune) O'Conor, p. 44, "The Boys of Kilkenny" (1 text) Croker-PopularSongs, pp. 196-199, "The Boys of Kilkenny" (1 text) Roud #1451 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 11(2403), "The Boys of Kilkenny," J. Pitts (London), 1819-1844; also Firth b.26(318), Firth b.25(595/596) View 2 of 2, 2806 b.11(171), "[The] Boys of Kilkenny" LOCSinging, as101550, "The Boys of Killkenny," J. Andrews (New York), 1853-1859 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. The Boys of Virginia (theme, some lyrics) cf. "The Old Head of Denis" (tune, according to Croker-PopularSongs) NOTES: Source: Re author--the Bodleian Library broadside. Croker-PopularSongs says Thomas Moore, whom he admits he incorrectly believed wrote the song, "sung 'The Boys of Kilkenny' in England, where he became a permanent resident about 1807." Broadside LOCSinging as101550: J. Andrews dating per _Studying Nineteenth-Century Popular Song_ by Paul Charosh in American Music, Winter 1997, Vol 15.4, Table 1, available at FindArticles site. - BS File: Ocon044 === NAME: Boys of Kilmichael, The DESCRIPTION: When honouring "the martyrs who have long since died," remember the boys of Kilmichael who "conquered the red white and blue." The Tans left Macroom November 28 with two Crossley tenders and were wiped out by the Column. The Column returned to Glenure. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1978 (OCanainn) KEYWORDS: rebellion battle Ireland patriotic IRA HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: Nov 28, 1920 - Tom Barry's IRA Flying Column ambushes Auxiliaries at Kilmichael (source: Donal Buckley, _The West Cork Trail: Scenes From the Anglo-Irish Civil Wars, 1920-1922_, "The Kilmichael Ambush" on The Wild Geese Today site). FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) OCanainn, pp. 50-51,121-122, "The Boys of Kilmichael" (1 text, 1 tune) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Bold Black and Tan" (subject: Irish Civil War) and references there cf. "Rosin the Beau" (tune) and references there cf. "The Men of the West" (tune and some phrases) cf. "The Piper of Crossbarry" (subject: the exploits of Tom Barry) NOTES: OCanainn: "At Kilmichael, West Cork's Flying Column under Commander Tom Barry, ambushed a group of Auxiliaries - a force introduced by the British some three months previously." Kilmichael and Macroom are in County Cork. - BS Robert Kee in _Ourselves Alone_, being Volume III of _The Green Flag_, pp. 120-121, describes this event (and quotes am accurate version of this song which uses language coarse enough that he expurgated it): "Two lorry-loads of the company of Auxiliaries stationed at Macroom Castle ran into a well-laid ambush position prepared by Tom Barry an the West Cork Flying Column on a lonely site of bogland and rocks near Kilmichael. It was the Auxiliaries' first major engagement and a terrible one. "After a savage fight at close quarters in which three IRA were killed and, according to Barry, the Auxiliaries made use of the notorious 'false surrender' tactics, the entire convoy as wiped out, and seventeen of the eighteen Auxiliaries were killed. The eighteenth was so severely wounded that he was in hospital for long afterwards. Some of the Auxiliaries' bodies were afterwards found to have wounds inflicted after death and the first officer on the scene after the fight said that although he had seen thousands of men lying dead in the course of the war, he had never before seen such an appalling sight as his eyes met there." Calton Younger has a stronger stomach for atrocity. In _Ireland's Civil War_, pp. 13-14, he writes: "Tom Barry set up his ambush, not in a place he would have chosen, but one dictated by circumstances, a little to the south of Kilmichael on the road to Gleann. It is treacherous, eerie country, where heather grows sparsely on the bogland and the only cover is provided by outcrops of gaunt rock. Barry's plan was brilliantly conceived an his column, only one or two of whom ha fired a shot in anger, matched with courage his inspiration. "Eighteen Auxiliaries in two lorries died that day. Some need not have died but their own treachery recoiled upon them. Crying surrender, they fired again when some of the column showed themselves. Barry was merciless then and his men did not let up until every one of the enemy was dead. An when the morale of his own men showed signs of cracking, he drilled them in the light of the burning lorries until discipline gripped again. Three men he had lost, two of them because of the surrender trick." Younger does not supply a citation for his information, I suspect Barry's _Guerilla Days in Ireland_. Kee also examined Barry's book, but took additional information from the _Irish Times_ (which documented the mutilations the Auxiliaries suffered after death) and other sources. It will be evident that all eyewitness testimony was from Barry's side. Given Barry's overall record, I don't think this can be trusted very far, particularly as regards the false surrender. - RBW File: OCan050 === NAME: Boys of Mullabawn, The DESCRIPTION: "A vile deceiving stranger ... has ordered transportation for the boys of Mullabawn." The women lament and "without hesitation, we are charged with combination And sent for transportation from the hills of Mullabawn" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1925 (Hayward-Ulster); c.1867 (broadside, Bodleian 2806 b.9(265)) KEYWORDS: farming transportation Ireland political FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (4 citations) OLochlainn-More 56, "The Boys of Mullabawn" (1 text, 1 tune) Moylan 42, "The Boys of Mullaghbawn" (1 text, 1 tune) Hayward-Ulster, pp. 26-27, "The Boys of Mullabawn" (1 text) OBoyle 6, "Boys of Mullaghbawn" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #2362 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, 2806 b.9(265), "The Boys of Mullaghbawn," W. Birmingham (Dublin), c.1867; also 2806 c.15(180), Harding B 19(40), "The Boys of Mullaghbawn" NOTES: OLochlainn-More: "This song records a real happening during the last quarter of the eighteenth century, the transportation of peasant farmers for some agrarian offence at Mullaghbawn near Newry, Co. Armagh. (See F. J. Bigger: _The Ulster Land War_.)" Moylan: "This song could be about Defenderism or United Irishmen or, according to one theory, the transportation of men who had attempted to abduct an heiress, an activity for which clubs existed in 18th-century Ireland. It is set in the heart of Defender country in south Armagh, but local tradition associates the song with the United Irishmen." At the end of the eighteenth century the Catholic "Defenders" were opposed to the Protestant "Peep o'Day Boys" or "Orangemen" (source: Zimmermann). - BS File: LcMullB === NAME: Boys of Mullaghbawn, The: see The Boys of Mullabawn (File: LcMullB) === NAME: Boys of Old Erin the Green, The DESCRIPTION: "Concerning that terrible battle, Where bloodshed and battery was seen, With the beef-eating bullies of England And the boys of old Erin the Green." The boys stop at an alehouse and head for the English in the market. The "cowardly English" are banished AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1925 (OLochlainn) KEYWORDS: battle drink Ireland humorous patriotic FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) OLochlainn 101, "The Boys of Old Erin the Green" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #3050 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Irish Harvestmen's Triumph" (subject) File: OLoc101 === NAME: Boys of Sandy Row, The DESCRIPTION: Orangemen, remember King William who "ended Popish sway." Presbyterians, defend your rights "from Fenians and Papists vile." At Sandy Row we made the Papists "fly like chaff before the wind." Toast Johnston. Remember the Boyne and Derry Walls AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1987 (OrangeLark) KEYWORDS: violence Ireland nonballad political religious HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: Jul 12-19, 1857 - Belfast riots between Catholics of the Pound and Protestants of Sandy Row (source: Janice Holmes, "The Role of Open-Air Preaching in the Belfast Riots of 1857," Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy_ v. 102c, pp. 47-66 (2002)).). FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) OrangeLark 25, "The Boys of Sandy Row" (1 text, 1 tune) NOTES: The chorus is "Then band together firmly, and Popery overflow, Like to your gallant brethren, the boys of Sandy Row." OrangeLark: "[The song] refers to the riots of 1857 over the open-air preaching of Rev. Hugh 'Roaring' Hanna and other Protestant Evangelicals... Despite the reference to William Johnston [see 'Bangor and No Surrender' and references there] the song may have been written 1868 by which time he was already well-known as a champion of Orangeism through his editorship of the _Downshire Protestant_" I wonder if the riots referred to are not the 1872 riots in Belfast opposing the parade in support of Home Rule on Lady's Day (the Feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin). Both Rev. Hanna, Catholics from the Pound and Protestants from Sandy Row were involved [again, as they were in 1857] (source: Neil Jarman and Dominic Bryan, _From Riots to Rights; Nationalist Parades in the North of Ireland_ (1997), pp. 13-14). That date would also make toasting William Johnston more reasonable. Johnston was, admittedly, a public figure in 1857, the date of "his first and unsuccessful bid to enter Parliament as the Member for Downpatrick"; in the 1860's he bacame "the leading campaigner against the unpopular Party Processions Act of 1850. It was his opposition to this legislation which was to make William Johnston of Ballykilbeg a folk-hero." (source: Ian McShane, "William Johnston of Ballykilbeg" on OrangeNet site). On the other hand, the reference to Johnston may be to one of the Presbyterian Ministers of that name involved in the 1857 conflict (see Holmes, cited in Historical References, above). [But William Johnston fits very well; see in this index the notes to "William Johnston of Ballykilbeg." - RBW] For background on "Derry Walls" see "Derry Walls Away" and its Notes.[Also "The Shutting of the Gates of Derry." - RBW For background on the Fenians see Notes to "A Fenian Song (I)." - BS File: OrLa025 === NAME: Boys of Sanpete County, The [Laws B26] DESCRIPTION: A wagon train from Sanpete County, headed by Captain (William Stewart) Seeley, must cross the Green River. The wagons are safely ferried, but as the crew attempts to bring the cattle over, six of them are drowned AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: KEYWORDS: travel river death HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1868 - Captain Seeley's expedition sets out for Laramie, Wyoming FOUND_IN: US(Ro) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Laws B26, "The Boys of Sanpete County" DT 830, SANPETE* Roud #3245 File: LB26 === NAME: Boys of the Island, The DESCRIPTION: The singer, from Prince Edward Island, warns against life in the logging camps. Many Islanders have headed for the Maine woods, to be instantly spotted by the old hands. In an place of bad drink and hard work, he must suffer without recourse to the law AUTHOR: Larry Gorman? EARLIEST_DATE: 1949 KEYWORDS: logger abuse hardtimes foreigner FOUND_IN: US(NE) Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Dibblee/Dibblee, p. 44, "The Boys of the Island" (1 text, 1 tune) Ives-DullCare, pp. 19-20,242, "The Boys of the Island" (1 text, 1 tune) Doerflinger, pp. 218-219, "The Boys of the Island" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #9427 RECORDINGS: Arthur Dalton, "The Boys of the Island" (on MREIves01) File: Doe218 === NAME: Boys of Virginia, The DESCRIPTION: "Oh the boys of Virginia are brave roaring blades, Deceiving young maidens is part of their trade...." "I'll build you a castle on Virginia's free ground... And if anyone asks you whatever's my name, My name is Joe Thorpe, from Virginia I came" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1942 (Randolph) KEYWORDS: rake courting home parody FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Randolph 670, "The Boys of Virginia" (1 text) Roud #1451 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Boys of Kilkenny" (tune, meter, floating lyrics) NOTES: This is so close to the "Boys of Kilkenny" that I thought of classifying it as a localized variant; Roud unsurprisingly lumps them. But it has some lyrics I have not seen in "Kilkenny" versions, and Randolph's text does not specify a tune, so I tentatively keep them separate. - RBW File: R670 === NAME: Boys of Wexford, The DESCRIPTION: "In comes the captain's daughter, the captain of the yeos Saying 'Brave United Irishmen, we'll ne'er again be foes.'" They win at Ross and Wexford, lose at Vinegar Hill. "For bravery won each battle But drink lost evermore" AUTHOR: Robert Dwyer Joyce (1830-1883) (source: Moylan) EARLIEST_DATE: 1873 (Joyce's _Ancient Irish Music_, according to Moylan) KEYWORDS: rebellion battle death drink Ireland patriotic HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: October 1791 - Society of United Irishmen founded in Belfast September 1795 - The Battle of the Diamond May 23, 1798 - United Irishmen seize the Dublin mail coaches as a signal to start the uprising May 26, 1798 - 34 suspected United Irishmen executed at Dunlavin May 26, 1798 - Father John Murphy launches the Wexford rebellion May 27, 1798 - Murphy's almost-unarmed force defeats a small militia force at Oulart (called "Oulast" in one version) May 29, 1798 - Father Murphy leads the insurgents against Enniscorthy May 29, 1798 - new leaders appointed to head the Ulster Provincial Council of the United Irishmen June 5, 1798 - The Wexford rebels attack the small garrison (about 1400 men, many militia) at New Ross, but are repelled June 7-8, 1798 - Rebel defeat at Antrim June 9, 1798 - Father Murphy, trying to lead his forces into Wicklow, defeated at Arklow June 12, 1798 - United Irishmen under Henry Monro defeated at Ballynahinch June 21, 1798 - Vinegar Hill is lost [some dates from _The 1798 Irish Rebellion_ by Professor Thomas Bartlett at the BBC History site)] FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (4 citations) OLochlainn 48, "The Boys of Wexford" (1 text, 1 tune) Moylan 68, "The Boys of Wexford" (1 text, 1 tune); 69, "The Boys of Wexford" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BOYSWEXF* BOYSWEX2*BOYSWEX3* ADDITIONAL: C. Day Lewis, editor, English Lyric Poems (1961), "The Boys of Wexford" Roud #3015 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Boulavogue" (historical setting) cf. "Father Murphy (I)" (subject of Father Murphy) and references there NOTES: Re "In comes the captain's daughter, the captain of the yeos": "Following an affray at Loughgall in Co. Armagh in 1795 the Orange Order was founded [the successor of the earlier Peep o' Day Boys - RBW], while the Yeomen were also established in June 1796. These were made up mainly of men from the Orange Lodges." (source: _The 1798 Rebellion_ on the Hogan Stand site). Zimmermann p.64 and fn.20: "'The Boys of Wexford' was ... one of the rallying songs of the Parnellites" [in the 1890's]. "Some of Parnell's well-known supporters were from County Wexford." Moylan attributes Moylan 68 to Robert Dwyer Joyce; Moylan 69 is a revision by Edmund Leamy (1848-1904) and published in 1922. They are similar enough that I have not split them. - BS The riot that turned the Peep o' Day Boys into the Orange Order was a Protestant/Catholic clash known as "The Battle of the Diamond" (for which see "The Battle of the Diamond"). A group of Defenders attacked a smaller party of Peep o' Day Boys, but were driven off "leaving twenty or thirty corpses on the field" (see Robert Kee, _The Most Distressful Country_, being Volume I of _The Green Flag_, p. 71). It would be hard to claim that alcohol ruined the 1798 rebellion; that was foredoomed by lack of planning and the fact that the United Irish leadership was informant-riddled. (As, indeed, some versions of this song note: "...for want of leaders We lost at Vingegar Hill"). But the Fenians of the nineteenth century did often fall prey to drink. A still later rebel, Vinnie Byrne, claims it nearly cost them even after the 1916 rebellion: "[Michael] Collins was a marvel. If he hadn't done the work he did, we'd still be under Britain. Informers and drink would have taken care of us." (See Tim Pat Coogan, _ Michael Collins_, p. 116.) - RBW P.W. Joyce, in _A Concise History of Ireland. 1916_, Chapter LXVI "The Rebellion of 1798 A.D. 1798 - George III" discusses the part played by drink in the defeats after Vinegar Hill. For example, "But there was no discipline; they fell to drink; and the soldiers returned twice and twice they were repulsed. But still the drinking went on; and late in the evening the military returned once more, and this time succeeded in expelling the rebels." (source: A Little Bit of Ireland site at Celtic Cousins). Drink in battle, after defeat, is a theme of "The Boyne Water (II)"; in 1798 that ballad was apparently still in wide use, at least among Orangemen. - BS File: OLoc048 === NAME: Boys Won't Do to Trust, The DESCRIPTION: "The boys are very pretty, And sweet as they can be... But now you'd better watch them For they won't do to trust." The girl describes the tricks boys use, and the fine letters they write, but experience shows that none (at most one) can be trusted AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1927 (Randolph) KEYWORDS: courting trick betrayal FOUND_IN: US(SE,So) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Randolph 461, "The Boys Won't Do to Trust" (1 text plus a fragment and an excerpt of 1 more) BrownII 207, "The Boys Won't Do to Trust" (1 text) Roud #6495 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Beware, Oh Take Care" (theme) cf. "Dark and Dreary Weather" (floating lyrics) ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Girls Won't Do to Trust File: R461 === NAME: Boys, Keep Away from the Girls: see The Bald-Headed End of the Broom (File: FaE190) === NAME: Bra' Rabbit (Oyscha') DESCRIPTION: Gullah dialect song: "Bra' Rabbit, wa' 'ere da do dere?" "I da pickin' oyscha' fa' young gal. Da oyscha' bite mah finger, Da young gal tek dat fa' laugh at." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1925 (Scarborough) KEYWORDS: animal courting FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Scarborough-NegroFS, p. 175, "Bra' Rabbit -- (Oyscha')" (1 short text, 1 tune) File: ScaNF175 === NAME: Braddock's Defeat DESCRIPTION: "It was our hard general's false treachery Which caused our destruction that great day." The singer tells how Braddock attacks his own men (?). Other generals take command, but it is too late; the forces across the river are slaughtered. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1934 (Lomax) KEYWORDS: battle death trick river HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1754-1763 - French and Indian War ("Great War for Empire"; fought in Europe 1756-1763 as the Seven Years' War) July 9, 1755 - Defeat and Death of Edward Braddock in the Battle of the Wilderness FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (1 citation) Lomax-ABFS, pp. 526-527, "Braddock's Defeat" (1 text) ST LxA526 (Full) Roud #4027 NOTES: According to Walter R. Borneman, _The French & Indian War: Deciding the Fate of North America_ (Harper Collins, 2006), p. 40, "not until the golden-haired Custerfiled to emerge from the Little Bighorn more than a century later would another leader's defeat be so personalized" as that of Major General Edward Braddock (1695-1755). Braddock was appointed in 1754 to command the American colonies in the French and Indian War. (Which technically hadn't been declared yet, but hey, if we can fight undeclared wars in this century, why couldn't they do it then?) According to Borneman, p. 41, this was based on the recommendation of the Duke of Cumberland, the infamous butcher of Culloden, who had little good on his military record except that one victory. (And who would be held responsible for England's loss of its one continentl possession in Hanover. After that, even George II had to get rid of his less than brilliant son. Borneman, pp. 96-97.) The English situation at this time was uncomfortable. They had many more colonists in the Americas than had the French, but the French controlled most of the land beyond the Appalachians. The English colonists wanted more land, but the French would not allow it. Braddock's objective was to do something about that. If possible, he was to do this quietly, so as to prevent the trouble from spreading to Europe (Borneman, p. 42) Braddock was assigned portions of two understrength regiments, in need of discipline, training, and recruits, all of which he was to supply in the colonies. Braddock, who had spent most of his career in non-combat posts (he had been an officer in the Coldstream Guards), seemed well enough suited for this task. But he had no combat experience (see Ted Pulliam, ÒA Huge, Red Bull's Eye,Ó article in _American History_ magazine, August 2005 issue, pp. 50-57; this particular reference is to p. 53), and soon was called upon to do something that couldn't be done "by the book." It didn't help that he quickly angered the colonials with his peremptory orders (Borneman, p. 46). In early 1755, Braddock set out to capture Fort Duquesne -- a work begun by Americans, at the confluence of the Allegheny and the Monongahela (the site of modern Pittsburg; see Pulliam, p. 53), but taken over by French Canadians. Unfortunately for Braddock, it was very well built and situated. Knowing it would he a hard nut to crack, he decided to bring as much heavy artillery as possible (Borneman, p. 48). Neither it nor he would ever come within range of the walls. He would have been better off striking as quickly as possible. Instead, he wasted a lot of time and effort building a road in the forest for his wagon train, which accomplished nothing much except to given the French a clear area in which to take pot shots at the British, and a whole month in which to do it (Braddock spent 32 days covering an estimated distance of 110 miles; see Samuel Eliot Morison, _The Oxford History of the American People_, p. 162. To manage even that, he had to leave a third of his force behind; Pulliam, p. 55). And he didn't even have a force of Native American scouts to watch for the enemy (Borneman, p. 52) The French and Indians ran into Braddock about twelve kilometers from Fort Duquesne -- not an ambush, technically, since the French were surprised too. But they responded quickly and effectiviely. Braddock apparently reacted by shoving more troops into the battle without making any attempt to build a defensive position (Borneman, p. 54). He wouldn't even let his men position themselves behind natural objects such as trees (Pulliam, p. 56). Naturally the situation quickly turned to chaos. Braddock was mortally wounded (he died four days later; Pulliam, p. 57), and two-thirds of his 1300 or o men men became casualties. The French had suffered less than a hundred, their Indian allies even fewer (Borneman, p. 55). It was a major French victory, as it left the western parts of the American colonies exposed (Braddock's successor, Colonel Dunbar, made it worse by abanding several defensible forts and going into "winter quarters" in July; Borneman, p. 67, Morison, p. 163); many settlers were forced back across the Allegheny Mountains. On top of it all, it helped turn a local war into a world war (Borneman, p. 60). Formally, the name of the fight was ÒThe Battle of the Monongahela" (Pulliam, p. 50), but everyone seems to call it "Braddock's Defeat." Despite this, there is absolutely no record in our sources hinting that Braddock was a traitor. In addition, though the French planned to attack the British at a river crossing, they could not actually mount the attack because their Indian allies were not ready. Thus the only really historical part of this song is the fact that Braddock was defeated. If the song is based on anything, it perhaps has to do with rumors that Braddock was killed by his own men; the story is that one Thomas Fausett killed Braddock after Braddock killed his brother Joseph for hiding behind a tree (a smart thing to do, but not something Braddock understood). But the only evidence for this was Fausett's own word, and most historians disbelieve the story. That isn't the only inaccuracy in the (Lomax) text of this song. The command structure is all wrong. Braddock's title was "major general," but that was the title then assigned to brigade commanders; his successor, as noted, was Colonel Thomas Dunbar. He did have an officer named Horatio Gates, but his rank was captain, not general! For the life of me I can't imagine what this is based on. One thing about Braddock's Defeat would prove very important: It allowed a young officer by the name of George Washington (a member of Braddock's staff) to gain combat experience. Two decades later, when the Continental Congress needed someone to run the army, "George Washington, a Virginia planter, was appointed to chair a committee on military supply. [He was t]he highest ranking former British officer with active military experience" (as a brevet brigadier); see Stanley Weintraub, _Iron Tears: America's Battle for Freedom, Britain's Quagmire: 1775-1783_, Free Press, 2005, pp. 11-12. This song is item dA28 in Laws's Appendix II. - RBW File: LxA526 === NAME: Brady: see Duncan and Brady [Laws I9] (File: LI09) === NAME: Braes o Yarrow, The: see The Dowie Dens o Yarrow [Child 214]; also Rare Willie Drowned in Yarrow, or, The Water o Gamrie [Child 215] (File: C214) === NAME: Braes o' Birniebouzle, The DESCRIPTION: "Will ye gang wi' me Lassie, To the braes of Birnibouzle?" The singer details all the things he will supply if the girl will we, and promises that she will be content AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1845 (broadside NLScotland, RB.m.168(070)) KEYWORDS: FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (0 citations) Roud #3343 BROADSIDES: NLScotland, RB.m.168(070), "Braes of Birniebouzle," J. Pitts (London), 1819-1844 File: BrBrBirn === NAME: Braes o' Broo, The DESCRIPTION: "Get up, get up, ye lazy loons, Get up, and waur them a', man, For the braes o' Broo are ill to ploo." "But the plooman laddie's my delight." The plowman must work very hard on the poor land, but the girl loves him enough to support him even so AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1930 (Ord) KEYWORDS: love farming hardtimes FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ord, pp. 254-255, "The Braes o' Broo" (1 text plus an excerpt from Greig consisting of "modern verses") Roud #5572 File: Ord254 === NAME: Braes o' Strathblane, The: see Braes of Strathblane (File: McCST053) === NAME: Braes of Balquhidder (I), The DESCRIPTION: The singer asks a lass to "leave your father and your mither" and join him "on the braes o' Balquither" She refuses. He wins her over and she agrees to "leave acquaintance a' for thee" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1843 (broadside, Bodleian Harding B 11(431)) KEYWORDS: courting rejection elopement FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Smith/Hatt, pp. 84-85, "The Braes of Balquhidder" (1 text) Creighton-SNewBrunswick 23, "The Braes of Belquether" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BALQUID Roud #541 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 25(267), "The Braes O Balquither" ("Frae far beyond the Grampian hills"), unknown, n.d.; also Harding B 25(269), "The Braes o' Gleniffer" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Saint Helena (Boney on the Isle of St. Helena)" (tune, per broadside Bodleian Firth c.16(84)) NOTES: This is not the poem/broadside of the same name by Robert Tannahill (1774-1810). That is a lyric: "Let us go, lassie, go To the braes o' Balquither." The singer will build her "a bower By the clear siller fountain" He describes their happy life in winter and summer among the moors "and the wild mountain thyme": NLScotland, L.C.178.A.2(202), "Braes o' Balquhither," unknown, c.1880 Bodleian, Harding B 11(431), "Braes o' Balquhither" ("Let us go, lassie, go"), W. & T. Fordyce (Newcastle), 1832-1842; also 2806 c.14(84), 2806 c.14(36), Firth b.25(231), Harding B 11(429), Harding B 25(266), Harding B 11(3873), 2806 c.14(109)[partly illegible], Harding B 11(2422), "Braes o' Balquhither." - BS File: SmHa084 === NAME: Braes of Belquether, The: see The Braes of Balquhidder (I) (File: SmHa084) === NAME: Braes of Carnanbane, The DESCRIPTION: The singer prepares to leave Carnabane for America, and will praise it as he leaves. He recalls the beauties of the land and the girls; it pains him to leave, but he has no choice. He blesses Carnabane AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1936 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: home emigration FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H651, p. 160, "The Braes of Carnanbane" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #13457 File: HHH651 === NAME: Braes of Strathblane DESCRIPTION: Singer meets a girl. He wants to marry her; she says her parents would be displeased if she married a rover. He'll go court another. She begs him to come back; she's changed her mind. She regrets slighting him, fearing she'll never find another AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1904 (Ford); c.1850 (broadside, NLScotland L.C.Fol.178.A.2(063)) LONG_DESCRIPTION: Singer meets a young girl, bleaching her clothes. He tells her he's been wanting to marry her for the past year; she tells him to hold his tongue, as her parents would be displeased if she married a rover. He tells her the clouds are heavy, and he fears it will rain, so he'll go court another. She tells him to come back, for she's changed her mind. But he leaves, and she regrets slighting him, fearing she'll never find another man KEYWORDS: courting rejection parting rambling lover FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland(Aber,High)) Canada(Mar,Newf) REFERENCES: (7 citations) Ford-Vagabond, pp. 77-78, "The Braes o' Strathblane" (1 text) Ord, p. 125, "The Braes o' Strathblane" (1 text) MacSeegTrav 53, "The Braes of Strathblane" (1 text, 1 tune) Peacock, pp. 499-500, "The Beach of Strablane" (1 text, 1 tune) Karpeles-Newfoundland 61, "The Bleaches So Green" (1 text, 1 tune) Creighton-SNewBrunswick 45, "Just As I Was Going Away" (1 fragment, 1 tune) Manny/Wilson 60, "The Braes of Strathblaine" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #1096 RECORDINGS: NLScotland, L.C.Fol.178.A.2(063), "The Braes of Strathblane," unknown, c.1850 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 26(73), "The Braes of Strathblane," unknown, n.d.; also Firth c.26(240), "The Braes of Strathblane" Murray, Mu23-y1:044, "The Braes of Strathalbene," James Lindsay Jr. (Glasgow), 19C NLScotland, L.C.Fol.178.A.2(063) "The Braes of Strathblane," unknown, n.d. CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Rejected Lover" [Laws P10] and references there cf. "The Chippewa Girl" [Laws H10] (words, theme) cf. "As I Stood At My Cottage Door" (tune, see notes for broadside NLScotland L.C.Fol.178.A.2(063)) ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Blades of Strawblane NOTES: Commentary to broadside NLScotland L.C.Fol.178.A.2(063): "This song, indeed, an identical match to the lyrics of 'The Braes of Strathdon', which lies in Aberdeenshire. On other broadsides the suggested to tune to these lyrics is often 'As I stood at my cottage door'." - BS File: McCST053 === NAME: Braes of Sweet Kilhoyle, The DESCRIPTION: The singer asks his listeners to hear him sing of Kilhoyle. He describes how all the boys and girls play there, admits that "Sometimes I work, more times I rest" there. He describes all the towns you can see, and says the locals are always friends in need AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1932 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: home nonballad FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H464, pp. 167-168, "The Braes of Sweet Kilhoyle" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #13480 File: HHH464 === NAME: Braes of Yarrow, The: see The Dowie Dens o Yarrow [Child 214]; also Rare Willie Drowned in Yarrow, or, The Water o Gamrie [Child 215] (File: C214) === NAME: Braiding Her Glossy Black Hair DESCRIPTION: The April sun is shining, the larks singing, when the singer seeds Mary as he heads off to work. His heart is ensnared as he watches her braid her hair. Others report that he is never the same cheerful worker again; he is distracted by dreams of Mary AUTHOR: Words: Andrew Doey EARLIEST_DATE: 1933 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: love beauty FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H493, pp. 237-238, "Braiding Her Glossy Black Hair" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #9472 File: HHH493 === NAME: Brake of Briars: see The Bramble Briar (The Merchant's Daughter; In Bruton Town) [Laws M32] (File: LM32) === NAME: Brakeman on the Train DESCRIPTION: (O')Shaughnessy takes a job as brakeman. He doesn't know the signal to stop the train. The train is derailed though no one is killed. They tell him to throw a switch; the train goes in the ditch. He gets the blame. And it's a hard, cold, dirty job. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1922 (Dean) KEYWORDS: railroading ordeal wreck train wreck FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) US(MW.So) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Leach-Labrador 99, "Brakeman on the Train" (1 text, 1 tune) Randolph 510, "Twisting on the Train" (1 text) Dean, pp. 16-17, "O'Shaughanesey" (1 text) ST LLab099 (Partial) Roud #8587 RECORDINGS: Nobel B. Brown, "Oh, I'm a Jolly Irishman Winding on the Train" (AFS 8473 A2, 1946; on LC61) ALTERNATE_TITLES: O'Shaughnessy NOTES: I assume this is the same person as the "Noble B. Brown" featured on other LC recordings. Again, I have no idea which spelling is correct. - PJS File: LLab099 === NAME: Bramble Briar, The (The Merchant's Daughter; In Bruton Town) [Laws M32] DESCRIPTION: A girl wishes to marry a man her family disapproves of. Her brothers take the lad hunting and kill him. They claim to have lost him, but he appears to his lover in a dream and reveals the truth. Accused by their sister, the two brothers are forced to flee AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1904 KEYWORDS: homicide brother love accusation dream FOUND_IN: US(Ap,MW,SE,So) Britain(England(South)) Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (17 citations) Laws M32, The Bramble Briar (The Merchant's Daughter; In Bruton Town)" Belden, pp. 109-111, "The Bramble Briar" (2 texts) Randolph 100, "The Jealous Brothers" (1 text, 1 tune) Eddy 27, "The Bramble Brier" (1 text, 1 tune) BrownII 62, "The Bramble Brier" (2 texts) Brewster 32, "The Bramble Briar" (1 text plus a mention of 1 more, 1 tune) Gardner/Chickering 11, "The Apprentice Boy" (1 text) Leach, pp. 705-707, "In Brunton Town" (1 text) SharpAp 48, "In Seaport Town" (9 texts, 9 tunes) Sharp-100E 2, "Bruton Town" (1 text, 1 tune) Vaughan Williams/Lloyd, pp. 24-25, "The Bramble Briar" (1 text, 1 tune) LPound-ABS, 22, pp. 53-54, "The Bamboo Briars"; pp. 54-58, "The Apprentice Boy" (2 texts) JHCox 88, "The Bramble Briar" (2 texts) JHCoxIIA, #16, pp. 70-72, "The Merchant's Daughter" (1 text, probably composite, 1 tune) MacSeegTrav 20, "Brake of Briars" (2 texts, 2 tunes) Darling-NAS, pp. 119-120, "In Zepo Town" (1 text) DT 309, JEALBROS JEALBRO2 JEALBRO3 JEALBRO4* SEAPRTWN* ST LM32 (Full) Roud #18 RECORDINGS: Logan English, "Bruton Town" (on LEnglish01) Louis Killen, "The Bramble Briar" (on ESFB2) Ewan MacColl and Peggy Seeger, "The Bramble Briar" (on ENMacCollSeeger02) Lisha Shelton, "In Zepo Town (In Seaport Town)" (on OldLove) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Constant Farmer's Son" [Laws M33] ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Bamboo Briers The Bomberry Briar NOTES: Boccaccio includes the story, hence my "14th century" date. It's also listed by Hans Sachs in the 16th century. Sachs' was in verse form, whereas Boccaccio's was prose. I'm tempted to list Sachs' version. -PJS H. M. Belden wrote an article on the relationships of these texts, "Boccaccio, Hans Sachs, and The Bramble Briar," published in _Publications of the Modern Language Association of America_ in 1918. - RBW Logan English learned this piece from a young Kentucky woman practicing it with a dulcimer on the sidelines of a folk festival... and concluded from textual evidence that she'd learned it from Cecil Sharp's book. Tradition, twentieth century style. - PJS File: LM32 === NAME: Bramble Brier, The: see The Bramble Briar (The Merchant's Daughter; In Bruton Town) [Laws M32] (File: LM32) === NAME: Bramble, The DESCRIPTION: "Thy fruit full well the schoolboy knows, Wild bramble of the brake, So put forth thy small white rose, I love thee for his sake." The singer tells how the tame flowers fade or are put aside; the wild bramble still blooms and lets the singer feel young AUTHOR: Words: Ebenezer Elliot EARLIEST_DATE: 1935 (Sam Henry collection); the author died 1849 KEYWORDS: flowers nonballad age FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H628, pp. 62-63, "The Bramble" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #13333 File: HHH628 === NAME: Branded Lambs [Laws O9] DESCRIPTION: A girl, seeking her branded lambs, sees Johnny asleep under a thorn and asks if he has seen the flock. He tells her to seek them in a distant meadow. She seeks them; Johnny follows. They are not there, but he takes the chance to woo her. They are married AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1950 (Creighton/Senior); before 1850 (broadside Bodleian, Harding B 22(266)) KEYWORDS: sheep courting marriage love shepherd FOUND_IN: Britain(England(South)) Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Laws O9, "Branded Lambs" Copper-SoBreeze, pp. 252-253, "Young Johnny" (1 text, 1 tune) Kennedy 134, "The Long and Wishing Eye" (1 text, 1 tune) Creighton/Senior, pp. 133-134, "Branded Lambs" (1 text, 1 tune) ST LO09 (Full) Roud #1437 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 22(266), "The sex, by Mr. Holt. Jockey and the Damsel's Courtship" ("As Jockey was walking one midsummer morn"), unknown, no date (but apparently pre-1825) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Searching for Lambs" (theme) NOTES: This song represents an instance where Laws perhaps produced a great deal of confusion with his classification. He cites only two texts, Creighton/Senior and Joyce, the latter of which he calls incomplete. But is the Joyce text incomplete, or is it a different song? Laws's "Branded Lambs" has a plot, summarized in the description. The Joyce text doesn't really. On its face, Joyce appears to be an instance of another song group, "Searching for Lambs" ("One Morning Clear"), which has no plot beyond the elementary one of "boy meets girl while watching flocks." The problem is, the two have common lyrics as well as a common theme. Either they've cross-fertilized or the lyric "Searching for Lambs" is a wearing down of "Branded Lambs." Scholars are divided; Kennedy (who admittedly lumps songs based on only the feeblest of connections) lumps them; the notes to Henry/Huntington/Herrmann explicitly deny the connection. Unfortunately, almost all the texts are in manuscript and not readily available. Roud distinguishes the two; "Searching for Lambs" seems to be his #576; "Branded Lambs" is #1437. The earlier editions of the Index lumped the song, in desperation. I still feel desperate about some versions -- e.g. the Copper text is difficult; it has the length of the lyric version but is more reminiscent of the ballad version in its wording. But we're splitters, and have now separated the songs. Still, readers should probably consult both entries for absolute certainty. - RBW File: LO09 === NAME: Brands: see Whose Old Cow (File: TF21) === NAME: Brandy Leave Me Alone DESCRIPTION: "Oh, brandy leave me alone (x3), Remember I must go home." "Oh, brandy, you broke my heart (x2); Oh, brandy, leave me alone; Remember I must go home." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1955 (recording, Pete Seeger) KEYWORDS: drink home nonballad Africa FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (2 citations) Silber-FSWB, p. 231, "Brandy Leave Me Alone" (1 text) DT, BRNDYLV* RECORDINGS: Pete Seeger, "Brandy Leave Me Alone" (on PeteSeeger06, PeteSeegerCD01); "Brandy Leave Me Alone" (on PeteSeeger12) NOTES: The history of this song is rather obscure; it probably does not qualify as a true ENGLISH-language folksong. Joseph Marais and Miranda seem to have found the chorus in South Africa, and added enough material to make it an actual song. - RBW File: FSWB231 === NAME: Brandywine: see Earl Brand [Child 7] (File: C007) === NAME: Brannigan's Pup DESCRIPTION: Brannigan's pup fought "seventeen hours of battle." The dog was ugly to begin with, and scarred, but it would attack anything -- clothes, other dogs, a young girl's leg -- until at last it attacked an organ grinder's monkey and choked on the tail AUTHOR: Gus Phillips EARLIEST_DATE: 1879 KEYWORDS: animal talltale dog FOUND_IN: US(MA) REFERENCES: (2 citations) FSCatskills 122, "Ol' Mickey Brannigan's Pup" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, MICKPUP* Roud #2971 File: FSC122 === NAME: Brass-Mounted Army, The DESCRIPTION: The soldier complains of the unfairness of Army life and the abuse he suffers at the hands of officers: "Oh, how do you like the army, The brass-mounted army, The high-falutin' army Where eagle buttons rule?" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1865 KEYWORDS: Civilwar abuse soldier army FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (5 citations) Randolph 221, "The Brass-Mounted Army" (1 text, 1 tune) Randolph/Cohen, pp. 211-213, "The Brass-Mounted Army" (1 text, 1 tune -- Randolph's 221) Silber-CivWar, pp. 20-21, "The Brass-Mounted Army" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-FSNA 180, "The Brass-Mounted Army" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BRSSARMY* Roud #6693 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Wait for the Wagon" (tune) NOTES: Attributed to "an anonymous soldier of Col. A Buchel's regiment." Some southern versions refer to a [General] Kirby, presumably General Edmund Kirby Smith, sent to command in Texas when Grant's Vicksburg campaign was cutting the Confederacy in two. - RBW File: R221 === NAME: Brats of Jeremiah, The: see Unhappy Jeremiah (The Brats of Jeremiah) (File: FSC134) === NAME: Brave Defender, The: see The Banished Defender (File: Zimm024) === NAME: Brave Fireman, The (Break the News to Mother Gently) DESCRIPTION: A fireman, mortally injured while rescuing a child, makes his last request: "Break the news to mother gently, Tell her how her son had died, Tell her that he done his duty...." His family and colleagues grieve but honor his memory AUTHOR: Charles K. Harris EARLIEST_DATE: 1891 (sheet music) KEYWORDS: death fire rescue farewell mother FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Randolph 687, "The Brave Fireman" (1 text) Roud #7371 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Break the News to Mother" (tune, theme) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Break the News Gently NOTES: Spaeth (Read _Em and Weep_, pp. 175-176) has another song built around the line "Break the news to mother." The plot, however, is completely different, and involves a soldier boy killed while rescuing a company's battle flag. That piece is by Charles K. Harris - RBW The Spaeth song is Harris's 1897 rewrite, "Break the News to Mother," of his own "The Brave Fireman." - BS Randolph's appears to be the only printed version of this piece taken from oral tradition, but it appears to have been found elsewhere. Tim Murphy contacted me about a fragment of the song he heard from his grandmother, Francis Mary Lawlor Skinner, born in 1880 in St. John's, Newfoundland; she later migrated to the United States. Based on Mr. Murphy's comments, it may be that the song was repeated in fire houses. In any case, it was known somewhere in eastern North America. - RBW File: R687 === NAME: Brave General Brock [Laws A22] DESCRIPTION: Brock leads his men on a forced march against the Americans. The surprised U.S. commander surrenders soon after the fighting begins. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1959 KEYWORDS: war Canada HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1812 - The Michigan campaign of Hull and Brock FOUND_IN: Canada(Ont) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Laws A22, "Brave General Brock" Doerflinger pp. 272-274, "Come All You Bold Canadians" (1 text, 1 tune) Fowke/Mills/Blume, pp. 62-65, "Come All You Bold Canadians" (1 text, 1 tune) DT 697, GENBROCK Roud #2210 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Battle of Queenston Heights" (for the death of Isaac Brock) NOTES: One of the major American aims in the War of 1812 was to conquer Canada. The primary responsibility for the defense of Canada fell on the shoulders of Brigadier General Isaac Brock, Governor of Upper Canada, who faced several threats. According to John K. Mahon, _The War of 1812_ (Da Capo, 1972, pp. 17-18, Brock had had a rather spectacular career, joining the army when very young and commanding a regiment by the time he was 28. He had combat experience in Europe, and had also spent years in Canada, so he was close to the ideal commander in Upper Canada (what we now call Ontario). The overall British commander in North America, Sir George Prevost, thought him a little too impetuous, but there were only three active-duty infantry general officers in Canada (Prevost, Brock, and Major General Francis Rottenberg; Mahon, p. 34), so Prevost had little choice but to employ Brock. Very short of soldiers, and wanting to enforce the strategic defensive, Prevost limited Brock to 1600 regular troops to keep him from getting too lively (Mahon, p. 19). It was to prove a fateful decision for Brock, who would perform brilliantly but eventually die at Queenstown in part because of lack of troops. There were supposed to be three American attack on Canada: One in the Detroit area (or, at least, in the region between Lakes Huron and Erie), one in the Niagara region between Lakes Erie and Ontario, and one up from Lake Champlain. The goal was to coordinate these attacks. The goal failed (which would allow Brock to personally deal with two of them). The first attack came from the west (Mahon, pp. 38-39). The governor of Michican Territory was William Hull (1753-1825), a veteran of the Revolutionary War -- but he was by training a lawyer, and the highest rank he had held in the Revolution was lieutenant colonel (Mahon, p. 43). He was still relatively young at 58, but looked older; he had lost much of his energy (see Pierre Berton, _The Invasion of Canada [Volume I], 1812-1813_, Atlantic-Little Brown, 1980, p. 92, who calls him "a flabby old soldier, tired of war, hesitant of command, suspicious of the militia who he knows are untrained and suspects are untrustworthy. He has asked for three thousand men; Washington finallyallows him two thousand. He does not really want to be a general, but he is determined to save his people from the Indians.... There is a soft streak in Hull, no asset in a frontier command. As a young man he studied for the ministry, only to give it up for the law, but something of the divinity student remains"). Gathering a motley and ill-equipped force of militia, with only a few regulars (and their commander outranked by the untrained militia officers; Mahon, p. 44), Hull crossed from Michigan into Ontario on Jyly 12 (see Donald R. Hickey, _The War of 1812_, p. 81; Mahon, p. 45), only to find that the local inhabitants didn't care and didn't want to be liberated (see Walter R. Borneman, _1812, The War that Forged a Nation_, p. 62). When a small British force forced its way across from Sault St. Marie to Mackinack, Hull fell back on Detroit (Borneman, p .67; Mahon, p. 48). Brock brought up a few British forces to Detroit, made them look like more, and threatened to turn the Indians loose on Hull (Hickey, pp. 82-83). The American commander seemed utterly unable to comprehend what was going on as Brock maneuvered forces all around him (Mahon, p. 50). Although he could in fact have defeated Brock in detail, and very possibly could have prevailed in an open battle because of superior numbers, Hull surrendered Detroit on August 16, 1812 (Borneman, pp. 68-69). Brock reportedly had 2500 prisoners; he listed his own forces as 750 whites and 600 Indians (Mahon, p. 50). Hull eventually would be court-martialed and sentenced to death, though his life would be spared (Borneman, p. 69; Hickey, p. 84; Mahon, p. 51). The only good thing that came out of the debacle, fir the American side, was that it forced them to start working on a fleet on Lake Erie, because they would need control of the lake to securely retake Detroit. For the later career of Brock, see "The Battle of Queenston Heights. Incidentally, as well as a good soldier, Brock seems to have had more liberal feelings than most people of his time. In an era when most people sneered at the Native Americans, Brock wrote of the "wrongs then continually suffer" (Berton, p. 66). Of course, he was trying to enlist them as allies in any possible war with the United States, so maybe he had an ulterior motive. Berton, pp. 81-82, says that Brock was utterly frustrated in Canada, and repeatedly requested transfer -- but, when finally granted the right to take a post in Britain, the War of 1812 was at hand, and he decided to stay at his post out of a sense of duty. Berton, pp. 82-83, describes him as follows: "He is a remarkably handsome man with a fair complexion, a broad forehead, clear eyes of grey blue (one with a slight cast), and sparkling white teeth. His portraits tend to make him look a little feminine -- the almond eyes, the sensitive nostrils, the girlish lips -- but his bearing belies it; he is a massive figure, big-boned and powerful, almost six feet three in height. He has now, at forty-two, a slight tendency to portliness... but he is, in his own words, 'hard as nails.' "He is popular with almost everybody, especially the soldiers who serve him -- a courteous, affable officer who makes friends easily and can charm with a smile. But there is also an aloofness about him. -RBW File: LA22 === NAME: Brave Irish Lady, A: see A Rich Irish Lady (The Fair Damsel from London; Sally and Billy; The Sailor from Dover; Pretty Sally; etc.) [Laws P9]; also "The Brown Girl" [Child 295] (File: LP09) === NAME: Brave Marin (Brave Sailor) DESCRIPTION: French. A brave sailor returns from war and stops at an inn. The hostess cries; she recognizes him as her husband. He asks why she has more children. She had reports that he had died and so remarried. He leaves silver and returns to his regiment. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1961 (Hugill), with a possible origin in the period 1562-1630 KEYWORDS: foreignlanguage marriage reunion children wife sailor husband wife money return foc's'le FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) France REFERENCES: (3 citations) Lehr/Best 13, "Brave Marin" (1 text, 1 tune) Colcord, p. 111-112, "Le Retour du Marin" (1 fragment (in French), 1 tune) ADDITIONAL: Grace Lee Nute, _The Voyageur_, Appleton, 1931 (reprinted 1987 Minnesota Historical Society), pp. 145-147, "Le Retour du Mari Soldat" (1 text plus English translation, 1 tune) RECORDINGS: Anita Best and Pamela Morgan, "Brave Marin" (on NFABestPMorgan01) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Le Jeune Militaire" (theme) cf. "Jack Robinson" (theme) cf. "Snapoo" (similar tune) NOTES: Lehr/Best: Best says "It dates from the wars of Louis XIV (the late 1600s) and was very popular in the southwest of France." Lehr/Best makes "Le Jeune Militaire" a version of "Brave Marin"; while the themes are very close the words are not. - BS Colcord theorizes that this is the ballad from which "Snapoo" and subsequently "Mademoiselle from Armentieres" were derived. The tune is similar (though slower) and the lines end with the words "tout doux" which could have been transliterated into "snapoo." Tennyson used the same theme in his classic poem "Enoch Arden" in 1864. Hugill (in _Songs of the Sea_, 1977) says that the song comes from the days of Louis XIII (1610-1643) and that the theme may have been derived from the story of Martin Guerre, which took place around 1560, though a significant difference in the two is that in "Retour du Marin" (and in "Enoch Arden") the returning sailor eventually goes on his way, rather than impersonating someone as Martin Guerre did. - SL Obviously none of these theories of origin can be proved, though in some ways, the earlier, the better, as long as the song is of French/Catholic origin. By the eighteenth century, a Catholic woman could not remarry unless she could not only show her husband was dead but could point out the body -- a cause of much distress at Trafalgar, e.g.; the English would bury their dead at sea, but the French and Spanish wanted to stack their ships full of bodies. Incidentally, in "Enoch Arden," the returned sailor dies for love. Whether that is a better ending is, I think, debatable. - RBW File: LeBe013 === NAME: Brave Nelson: see Nelson's Victory at Trafalgar (Brave Nelson) [Laws J17] (File: LJ17) === NAME: Brave Queen's Island Boys, The DESCRIPTION: "Belfast may boast ... of its far-famed ships." "May the name of Harland and Wolff still stand At the top of the ship-building trade" "The Island Boys are marvels .... With their 'White Star Liner'" If a "Greyhound" is needed Belfast gets the contract. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: c.1890-1918 (J Nicholson ballad sheet, according to Leyden) KEYWORDS: pride commerce ship nonballad FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Leyden 37, "The Brave Queen's Island Boys" (1 text) NOTES: Leyden: "The song dates from the 1880s." Dargan's Island, renamed Queen's Island "after Queen Victoria's visit to the town in 1849," in the River Lagan, was part of the world-famous Belfast ship-building industry. "This reputation was largely due to the efforts of the Harland and Wolff company which formed in 1861.... In 1870 Harland and Wolff signed a contract to build ships for the Oceanic Steam Navigation Company, better known as the White Star Line." [The _Titanic_ was built in Belfast for the White Star Line.] - BS According to David Allen Butler, _"Unsinkable": The Full Story of RMS_ Titanic, Stackpole, 1998, p. 4, "The origins of Harland and Wolff dated back to the 1840, when dredging of a deep-water passage in the of section of the River Lagan known as the Victoria Channel created Queen's Island in the middle of the channel. Robert Hickson built a shipyard on the new island and began construction of iron ships there in 1853. Edward J. Harland came to the yard, which was known as Hickson and Company, as a manager in 1854 and bought it outright from Hickson in 1859. Gustav Wolff was a silent partner when he first joined Harland in 1861, but by 1862 the yard was known as Harland and Wolff." It was a line which produced many innovations, mostly at the instigation of Edward Harland, eliminating most of the equipment of sailing ships from the steamers of the White Star and other lines (Butler, p. 5). It also managed to build what we would now call a "vertical monopoly": It designed the ships, built them, and even built the primary components such as boilers and propellers.At its peak, the shipyard employed 14,000 men. It was a Harland and Wolff ship, the _Oceanic_, which created the luxury liner concept and put White Star at the forefront of the transatlantic trade. The two ended up with an arrangement that was satisfactory to both: Harland and Wolff produced the ships for White Star, and billed the line for its actual costs plus a fixed percentage of profit. After Harland's death in 1894, William James Pirrie (who had started with the firm as an apprentice in 1862 at the age of 15) succeeded him; he became Lord Pirrie in 1895 (Butler, p. 6). He was still in charge at the time the _Titanic_ and her sisters were ordered, though Thomas Andrews handled most of the detail work. According to Wyn Craig Wade, _The_ Titanic: _End of a Dream_, revised edition, Penguin, 1986, p. 13, "Harland and Wolff were considered the highest-priced and most painstaking shipbuilders in Europe." Not even the _Titanic_ could change that. Irish partition and a series of economic downturns could. The Belfast shipping industry went into recession. Eventually Harland and Wolff was sold to a Norwegian company. Not even that could save the shipyards. And that company in 2003 sold the land of Harland and Wolff's old shipyard to a property developer. It may become a _Titanic_ memorial. It almost certainly won't be used to build ships (see Stephanie Barczewski, _The Titanic: A Night Remembered_, Hambledon Continuum, 2004, pp. 244-245. The reference to a "greyhound" is ironic. If the song really does come from the 1880s, it predates the time of the most extreme transatlantic competition, when German and British companies were constantly building bigger, faster ships. At last two ships were built that were called "greyhounds," and for nearly a quarter century, no one tried to build faster ships. The two ships were the _Lusitania_ and _Mauretania_ -- but they were built for Cunard, not White Star, and Harland and Wolff was not involved in the design. They were built in Britain, not Ireland. - RBW File: Leyd037 === NAME: Brave Volunteers, The DESCRIPTION: Henry leaves Margaret, his wife, and baby to volunteer "to fight 'neath a monarch of Portugal's banner." All 500 volunteers from Ireland and Scotland are lost with his ship on Galway's coast, outbound from Greenock, on Wednesday, November 28/29. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1886 (broadside, Bodleian Firth c.12(120)) KEYWORDS: grief marriage war drowning wreck Ireland Scotland lament baby wife HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: c. Dec 4, 1832 - The Rival, out of Greenock bound for Oporto in Portugal with 472 volunteer troops to support Dom Pedro in the Miguelista War, sinks off the Galway coast. FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Peacock, pp. 432-433, "The Brave Volunteers" (1 text, 1 tune) ST Pea432 (Partial) Roud #9784 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Firth c.12(120), "The Brave Volunteers" ("One cold stormy night in the month of November"), H. Such (London), 1863-1885; also Harding B 26(74), "The Brave Volunteers" NOTES: Greenock is on the west coast of Scotland across the North Channel from Ireland. Galway is on the west coast of Ireland. [The song refers to the Miguelist] War of Two Brothers [and] an expedition from Britain supporting Pedro II [November 28, 1832 was a Wednesday ] The real work on the historical basis of the ballad is in the following notes on other sources and historical references, posted between 3/8/2004 and 3/28/2004 to [the Ballad-L mailing list] by John Moulden. The references are used with his permission. In response to my [BS] query re the possible historical basis for the ballad John looked at his source texts to help narrow the date to the Miguelista War and then pinned down the likely actual disaster. Begin John Moulden's notes: Other Sources: This appears on Irish printed ballad sheets and eight page song-books The references I have are: 8 page song book: The bonny light horseman together with The brave volunteers. The burial of General Sir John Moore. Steady she goes all's well. Waterford. Printed at W Kelly's. Cut - oval -horse (nose at right) , left foreleg raised, unsaddled, tail up, under tree. [Walter Kelly printer evidently worked in the 1830s - the sole firm date I have for him is 1839 but he was probably working as early as 1835.] National Library of Ireland I6551 Song books Waterford (LO560) 4(3) British Library 11621aaa16 #9 Royal Irish Academy Irish song books Volume 1 12b'11 - 7 Queen's University Belfast Massey Gibson Collection Item 7:5 Ballad sheet: Brave Volunteers The One cold stormy night in the month of November Trinity College Dublin John Davis White Collection 189t1 273 7 verses [8 lines] [The White Collection was made around the 1860s to 70s - this ballad has no imprint] According to Steve Roud's Broadside index it was also printed by Such (Catalogue Entry only) and a copy is in the British Library's Crampton Collection Further to this: Kelly, Waterford printed this song in another 8 page book: The loss of the Brave Volunteers together with Auld Lang Syne, Shule Agra, Molly Brannigan Waterford printed at W Kelly's, National Library of Ireland I6551 Song books Waterford (LO560) 33, Dublin City Library 821.04 (Song-books 1820-1845) No 12 Dix Donation 2588 British Library 11622 b 30 #16 Trinity College Dublin Early Books 66 u 165 - 35 Royal Irish Academy Irish song books Volume 1 12b'11 - 5 I copied the copy of this in DCL. It bears a text identical in all respects but for one word to the other Kelly printing (dreams for thoughts in the Line "Dark were my thoughts that night on my pillow." ) Kelly in both versions, has the ship sailing from Greenock on December 1st and foundering on "That night of the dark 21st of December" and it is said to have been a Saturday! The Bodleian offerings are by Such (presumably the print referred to [above]) but the print by Haly of Hanover Street is another Irish printing, made in Cork. Such dates the event [November 28], Haly [November 29]. The range of (probable) dates I can offer for Haly in his occupancy of the Hanover Street Address are 1826-1852. He occupied those premises in 1821 but is listed as a Straw Hat Maker and by 1853, he (or his daughter) had moved to South Main Street. Historical References: I am fortunate to have a friend, Robert Anderson of Coleraine, who is an expert on matters maritime in Ireland and has good resources. On the basis that this happened, from the likely dates that the song was printed, in the range of years 1830-35 he searched the Shipwreck Index of Ireland and came up with a probability: The Rival, a brig, Captain John Wallace which had been hired to transport soldiers to Portugal, left the Clyde bound for Oporto and was reported lost on 4th December 1832. I then used my own resources to investigate further. Edward J Bourke Shipwrecks of the Coast of Ireland vol 3. cites Lloyd's List and gives a sailing date for the Rival of 24th November. Straw bedding and casks of rum were washed ashore. Citing the Dublin Newspaper the Freeman's Journal Bourke says it's not clear how many were aboard and says "This wreck may be the subject of a ballad." It seems fairly conclusive. More extensive newspaper search is indicated End of John Moulden's notes. Further confirmation is from two notes in the London Times archives "Yesterday the Lusitania sailed from the Broomielaw, having on board 172 men for Oporto, to join forces under Dom Pedro. n the course of the present week another vessel, the Rival, will sail from the Broomielaw, having on board 472 men, destined for the same port and service. Glasgow Chronicle of Monday" [The Times Nov 16, 1832; pg. 2; Issue 15011; Start column: D 2048 words. Elec. Coll.: CS34627440. (Copyright 2002 The Gale Group)] "Dublin, JULY 16. The Sarah, of Pwlheli, was lately fitted up with a diving-bell and suitable apparatus for the purpose of raising 11 vessels wrecked close to the Galway shore during the last severe winter, amongst which are understood to be the Thais, Falmouth packet; the Whitbread of London, the James of Tynemouth, the Rival of Glasgow, which had Don Pedro's troops on board ..." [The Times Jul 19, 1834; pg. 7; Issue 15534; Start column: C 854 words. Elec. Coll.: CS118514419.( Copyright 2002 The Gale Group)] The following information has been supplied by Charlie Napier, President of the Clan Napier Society, and is quoted with his permission. While looking for information about the Miguelist War that might shed some light on "The Brave Volunteers" disaster I found no helpful references. The only promising reference was a book not available to me: "An Account Of The War In Portugal Between Don Pedro And Don Miguel" by Admiral Sir Charles Napier. Since Admiral Napier was a major player in that war and apparently remained popular with volunteers from Ireland and Scotland through the early Crimean War I hoped that he would have considered a loss like the Rival to be worth a comment. Fortunately, I came across the Clan Napier Society website and asked if there might be a reference in the 1836 book to support what was, at the time, a speculation. Charlie Napier researched the matter at the National Library of Scotland. Here is his report: 1. The book is in two volumes, with approximately 300 pages in each and about 9 inches by 5 inches. 2. The book was published in 1836, only two years after the War finished. 3. There are no dates anywhere in the main text of the book, so it is very difficult to work out which year you are in if you just dip into the book. 4. Each volume has an Appendix which contains a number of transcripts of letters, proclamations and speeches. These are dated, which is a little help. 5. There is no index in either volume, although there are voluminous "Contents Lists" at the beginning of each volume. These were really no help in trying to find the relevant passage. 6. After skim-reading Volume I from the beginning, I eventually found what I think is the passage relevant to your question. 7. It starts about two thirds of the way down page 121 and finishes about one third down page 122. It reads as follows: "On the 5th of January nearly two hundred Scotch arrived and were put under the orders of Major Shaw, who was much pleased with having the command of his countrymen. Six hundred had been recruited in Glasgow, four hundred of whom were wrecked on the coast of Ireland, and every soul perished. This was a severe blow to the cause at a time when both men and money were so much wanted at Oporto. On the 15th a reinforcement of two hundred Portuguese arrived from the islands, and four hundred French; the whole were safely disembarked under the lighthouse, whose provisions continued to be landed, though frequently interrupted by surf." 8. There was no mention of the name of the ship that was lost and I think that the year in question must be 1833. - BS File: Pea432 === NAME: Brave Wolfe [Laws A1] DESCRIPTION: Disappointed in love, Wolfe gives his beloved a ring and leaves her. He lands at Quebec to battle the French. Wolfe is mortally wounded, but when he learns that a British victory is assured, he says, "I die with pleasure." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1759 (broadside) KEYWORDS: death war courting battle separation Canada HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1727-1759 - Life of General James Wolfe, British commander at the Battle of Quebec 1754-1763 - French and Indian War (in Europe, the Seven Years' War, fought 1756-1763) Sept 13, 1759 - Battle of Quebec. Wolfe and Montcalm killed. FOUND_IN: US(Ap,MA,NE,SE,So) Canada(Newf,Mar) Britain(England(South)) REFERENCES: (20 citations) Laws A1, "Brave Wolfe" Randolph 664, "Brave Wolfe" (1 text, 1 tune) Flanders/Olney, pp. 120-122, "Brave Wolfe" (1 text, 1 tune) Flanders/Brown, pp. 55-57, "Brave Wolfe/General Wolfe" (2 texts, 1 tune; the first text is in half-stanzas and does not use the "Blacksmith" tune; the second is the Green Mountain Songster version) Leach, pp. 716-719, "Brave Wolfe" (2 texts) Friedman, p. 288, "Brave Wolfe" (1 text) Greenleaf/Mansfield 44, "Bold Wolfe" (1 text, 1 tune) Peacock, pp. 986-987, "Bold Wolfe" (1 text, 1 tune) Fowke/Johnston, pp. 21-23, "Brave Wolfe" (1 text, 1 tune) Fowke/MacMillan 2, "Bold Wolfe" (1 text, 1 tune) Fowke/Mills/Blume, pp. 46-49, "Brave Wolfe" (1 text, 1 tune) Mackenzie 75, "Quebec" (1 text) Warner 21, "The Ballad of Montcalm and Wolfe" (1 text, 1 tune) Scott-BoA, pp. 36-38, "The Death of General Wolfe" (1 text, 1 tune) Combs/Wilgus 43, pp. 153-155, "Brave Wolfe" (1 text) Lomax-FSUSA 36, "Brave Wolfe" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-FSNA 16, "Brave Wolfe" (1 text, 1 tune) Darling-NAS, pp. 156-157, "Brave Wolfe" (1 text) cf. Gardner/Chickering, p. 478, "Brave Wolfe" (source notes only) DT 358, BRAVWOLF* BRVEWLF2* ST LA01 (Full) Roud #961 BROADSIDES: LOCSinging, as111310, "General Wolfe" ("Cheer up your hearts, young men, let nothing fright you"), Leonard Deming (Boston), 19C; also as102840, "The Death of General Wolf" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Blacksmith" (tune & meter) cf. "The Dark-Eyed Sailor (Fair Phoebe and her Dark-Eyed Sailor)" [Laws N35] (tune) cf. "General Wolfe" (subject) SAME_TUNE: The Blacksmith (File: K146) NOTES: When William Pitt the Elder came became Britain's Prime Minister in 1757 (the first man ever to hold that title, which was coined because there was no real cabinet role for him otherwise), he decided that the army -- newly involved in the Seven Years' War (known in the American colonies as the French and Indian War) -- needed a good dose of youthful energy. In 1755-1756, British results had been disastrous (see, e.g., the notes to "Braddock's Defeat"; also McNaught, pp. 40-41. For references, see the Bibliography at the end of this note). The American colonies were in danger of being boxed in by the French, and the British were suffering losses -- mostly pinpricks, but losses -- all over Europe. The Canadian expedition is an example of Pitt's determination to shake things up. Carroll, p. 61, notes that the French at this time were giving military commands to the nobility, competent or not, but "Pitt was constantly on the lookout for a sizzling young patriot willing to do the impossible -- to the devil with his ancestry." At the time of his appointment in 1758, North American army commander Jeffrey Amherst (1717-1797) was only forty years old, and newly jumped up from Lieutenant Colonel (Borneman, p. 100) and naval commander Edward Boscawen (1711-1761) was still on the young side of fifty (Bryant, p. 64). Even in this company, James Wolfe (1727-1759) was almost a baby; he was commanding the equivalent of a division at the age of 30. The most famous story about him has to do with his appointment to the command in Quebec. A courtier, shocked, asked George II how he could appoint such a man. The courtier allegedly said that Wolfe was mad. King George replied, "Mad, is he? Then I wish he'd bite some of my other generals." (The exact words of this legend vary. IÕm not sure where I met the above phrasing. Borneman, p. 207, has George II say "Then I hope he will bite some of my other generals!Ó) According to Borneman, p. 105, Wolfe was "tall and slight -- one might say gangly [Carroll, p. 23, lists his height as 6'3"] -- with reddish hair and a constitution given to a host of chromic ailments. He had been born in Westerham, Kent, on January 2, 1727... In 1741, at the age of fourteen, young Wolfe was given a commission as a second lieutenant in his father's marine regiment, though he soon transferred to the army because of his seasickness (Carroll, p. 22). Two years later, at Dettingen in Bavaria, Wolfe... received his first real test in battle.... Two years after that, at Culloden against the last gasp of the Stuarts, his regiment against suffered the most, losing one-third of its men." The assault on Canada began with an amphibious assault on the great fortress of Louisbourg in Cape Breton, a fortress and naval base which, if properly supplied, could prevent any expedition up the Saint Lawrence. Bryant, p. 64, says that 8000 sailors and 12,000 soldiers were involved in capturing the place; Wolfe, though not in charge, served bravely in the battle. (He also gained a reputation as a well-rounded man; Carroll, p. 27, notes that he was a flute player who kept up his practicing even in wartime. His cousin, the famous author Oliver Goldsmith, once sent him a dog -- Carroll, p. 39 -- though this was before Goldsmith achieved his real fame. And, as the ships headed for the landing above Quebec, he is reported to have said that he would rather have written Thomas Gray's "Elegy in a Country Churchyard" than capture Quebec -- Stacey, p. 122, though he doubts the detailed truth of the legend.) Although Wolfe's illnesses are not a major subject of this song, they do seem to have affected his behavior: Since he thought he was gravely ill anyway, he probably didn't worry much about his survival. But no one eems to have figured out his problem.Carroll, p. 20, notes that he has been called a hypochondriac, though she dismissed the charge. Page 215 of Borneman, describing Wolfe's final illness, sounds to me rather like a venereal disease (Borneman, p. 215), though Carroll, p. 6, offers the opinion that it was kidney stones (on p. 37, she lists his full catalog of complaints as "fevers, scurvy, rheumatism, kidney stones, and possibly tuberculosis"). Keegan/Wheatcroft, p. 334, suspect consumption. Carroll, p.31, says that Wolfe's brother Ned died of consumption, so there is a likelihood that Wolfe himself would have been subject to the disease (not all people are), but in that case, it would be surprising if he took so long to contract it. Although Amherst was in overall command of the attack on Louisbourg, it was Wolfe who led most of the tactical thrusts, including the initial landing west of the town (Borneman, pp. 108-114). Surrounded, and starving even before the siege started, the defenders surrendered on July 27, 1858 (Borneman, p. 116). Louisbourg was the main French base in Canada. With it gone, the British could safely advance up the Saint Lawrence. They also could attack on other fronts -- and they did. Much of the credit for the loss of Canada must go not to Wolfe himself but to the foolish enemy commanders. After the Battle of Fort Dequesne (for which see "Braddock's Defeat") and the victory at Ticonderoga, where the French had captured Fort William Henry and seem the Indians massacre defenders after they surrendered (Borneman, pp. 90-94), the French really had only to stand on the defensive and hold their ground (Brabant/Masters, p. 71, notes that the French success in the Champlain forced the British to give up on that area and turn to the St. Lawrence, which should have been much easier for the French to hold). But the French had several problems. One was divided command. The governor of New France was Pierre de Rigaud, Marquis de Vaudreuil (who, according to Carroll, p. 47, cared only about Quebec, not about France, and who even in Quebec did little to control corruption; Carroll, pp. 48-49). The general-in-chief was an officer sent from France, the Marquis de Montcalm, who would fight Wolfe at Quebec. And the two didn't see eye to eye on anything (Borneman, pp. 82-83. According to Carroll, p. 43, Montcalm at one point commented on the inept administration in Quebec, "What a country! Here all the knaves grow rich and the honest men are ruined!"; she adds on p. 44 that he did not wish to go, but took the Canadian command out of duty.) After the Battle of Fort Carrillon (or Ticonderoga -- the battle where Major Duncan Campbell was killed), Montcalm's prestige went sky-high (Keegan/Wheatcroft, p. 214, credit him with "virtually invent[ing] a new method of warfare"); he had, after all, defeated a much larger British force under Abercromby (Borneman, pp. 129-139). The fact that Abercromby had ordered a frontal attack on a strongly-defended position he had never seen was irrelevant. Montcalm was promoted over Vaudreuil, without really clarifying their relationship. And that didn't solve the other problem of New France: The French had never really built a self-supporting colony, and there were shortages of food and other things (Borneman, pp. 98-99). In late 1758, the one thing Montcalm and Vaudreuil agreed on was that thing were close to collapse (Borneman, p. 189). And Montcalm was not a local to know how to deal with this fact; he tried to run a colonial war as if it were a European war, and failed badly. By 1759, the English had taken other forts besides Louisbourg, and the Quebec economy was being strained to the breaking point. Though most of Canada was still in French hands, there was a feeling that this was a last stand. Particularly since the British were attacking on several fronts. Even though Amherst had been in charge at Louisbourg, he was relegated to the background in 1759, being handed command of the overall American theater. Wolfe was given command of the Quebec expedition -- a surprising appointment for a man who had only been made a colonel in 1757, and who had only had command of a brigade for one brief campaign (Stacey, p. 2). Wolfe almost blew it by returning to England in the absence of orders (Borneman, pp. 204-205). But there was a reason: He was courting a woman named Katherine Lowther, and they became engaged during his time at home (Borneman, pp. 205-206. Carroll, p. 8, says that he had fallen in love three times; presumably this was love #3. We know little about the romance, though, since not one letter between them survives, according to Stacey, p. 123. He does report that she later became Duchess of Bolton). Wolfe then set out for his date with destiny. The Battle of the Plains of Abraham is not really as much of a contest as is generally made out. Wolfe had 9000 men, of very high quality (Stacey, p. 5), though not all made it to the plateau; his opponent, Montcalm, only 4500 actually present in the field. Wolfe himself noted the quality difference: "Montcalm is at the head of a great number of bad soldiers and I am at the head of a small number of good ones," (Brown, p. 186). Wolfe's ability showed best in his ability to get his troops to the battlefield. Quebec is a very hard nut to crack -- the name itself is Algonquin for "river narrows" (Borneman, p. 208), and the city is atop a large triangular bluff with cliffs carved by rivers on two sides. The city is effectively impregnable from land attack except from the southwest (upstream), and completely immune to naval gunfire. Wolfe did manage to get some batteries erected on neighbouring heights, and they tossed in a few cannonballs, but they did trivial damage (Borneman, p. 211). So Wolfe's task was somehow to get his troops ashore in a position where they could get to the Plains of Abraham southwest of the city. His first attempt, on July 31, was a disaster (Bryant, p. 64); Montcalm had twice as many troops in the theater as Wolfe; they were numerous enough that the French could man the banks of the Saint Lawrence at every useful landing place, and even though they were inferior soldiers, they had the advantage of fighting from land. That July 31 landing cost the British 443 men and accomplished nothing (Borneman, pp. 212-213). There was no choice for it. Wolfe had to go above the town, even though it meant that the French might be able to cut his supply line (Borneman, pp. 213-214). Six weeks after the July fiasco, he had most of his troops upriver, and he proceeded to sneak his troops across the river and up an "impassable" cliff by night (Borneman, pp. 217-218). The admiral in charge of getting the troops to the foot of the cliff called the plan "the most hazardous and difficult task I ever engaged in" -- but he pulled it off (Borneman, pp. 218-219). It helped that the French were expecting to shift supplies by water that night, so they failed to note all the naval coming and goings (Stacey, p. 120). Apparently they were challenged by a small sentry post, but one of Wolfe's French-speaking officers bamboozled them (Stacey, p. 127). Some 4000 troops -- half of Wolfe's army -- managed to climb up to the Plains of Abraham. Finally they were in position to actually attack the city. Needless to say, the line in the song about Montcalm and Wolfe meeting before the battle is false -- Wolfe would have had to have been truly insane to allow Montcalm more time to bring up troops. Carroll, p. 6, says in fact that the two never met in their lives. I wonder if the notion might not have arisen because they spent so much time dressing their line before the battle (Carroll, p. 15, says that this took an hour -- which is quite a delay for a maneuver that troops would have much experience in performing. Maybe Wolfe really did want his troops arranged "in a line so pretty"). By this time, Wolfe was in dreadful health (see the description above), and it may have encouraged some of his earlier errors in the campaign. But it was Montcalm who made the big mistake. He still had that two to one edge in numbers in the theater, and he could have tried to stand on the defensive. But he didn't. With perhaps 4500 men -- a quarter of his total forces -- he attacked Wolfe head-on on September 13 (Borneman, p. 221). This even though reinforcements were on the way and would have arrived in short order (Stacey, p. 169). In Montcalm's defence, he probably hoped to take advantage of the British disorganization after they climbed the cliffs (Brown, pp. 187-188). It might have seemed like a good idea -- if it had worked. Instead, the British regulars calmly awaited the assault, and tore them apart. Wolfe had been hit in the wrist by then (Borneman, p. 221). But he wouldn't let it slow him down; he ordered a bayonet charge, and in leading it suffered fatal injuries, dying on the field of battle (Borneman, p. 222). There is some dispute about how many wounds he suffered; although many accounts say he was hit three times (wrist, then groin, then breast), Stacey, p. 149, observes that the groin wound ("an inch below the navel," according to the _Gentleman's Magazine_) would almost certainly have been crippling if real, and notes that Brigadier Townshend witnessed only two wounds, wrist and breast. In any case, he stayed with the colors after the wrist injury (which he bound up with a handkerchief), and was killed by the breast wound. Leckie, p. 364, tells a story of Wolfe's last words which almost parallels the song. One of his men declared, "The run! See how they run!" Wolfe asked which side ran. "The enemy, sir. Egad, they give way everywhere!" Wolfe made few final orders, concluded,"Now, God be praised, I will die in peace!" -- and breathed his last. Stacey, p. 150, reports that the words came from the careful research of Captain Knox, and may be accurate -- but notes that there are other versions. In terms of deaths of commanders, the battle was a draw; Montcalm too suffered a mortal wound (perhaps during the retreat; Stacey, p. 151) and died the day after the battle. But the ratio of casualties heavily favored the British (Borneman, p. 223, lists 60 British soldiers killed and 600 wounded; the French had 200 killed, 1200 wounded). Not everyone was impressed with Wolfe's leadership in the campaign. Brebner/Masters, p. 71, declares, "The men who won the British victory have received too much attention, for students of warfare have demonstrated that their talents were moderate." Stacey, p. 170, notes that Lord Wolseley, the best British general of the late nineteenth century, regarded him as "never anything more than 'a good regimental officer.'" Stacey himself says that "His performance as a strategist... was sadly ineffective," and notes that he seemed unable to make a plan and stick with it. Even the strategy which finally worked, of landing above Quebec, Stacey notes on p. 172, was largely the idea of Wolfe's subordinates; his only real contribution was to choose the landing point (closer to the town than the brigadiers would have chosen; Wolfe's plan was more likely to win big but also carried greater risks, and Stacey, p. 173, thinks the plan unsound. I'm frankly not convinced). Keegan/Wheatcroft, p. 334, "Wolfe was a safely dead hero, and many of the less attractive features of his personality were forgotten. Had he lived, he might have been the brilliant general which the British so desperately needed in the War of American Independence; but perhaps (more likely) he would have been yet another of those insubordinategeneralswhose wild schemes were to ruin the British cause." After Montcalm's defeat, Governor Vaudreuil told the new commander at Quebec City to surrender once his supplies were exhausted (Borneman, p. 223). That took place on September 18. The French around Quebec could perhaps have fought on -- Borneman, pp. 223-224, gives arguments why the could and perhaps should have. Indeed, the coming April, a force from Montreal came down to attack Quebec, and the British officer in charge after Wolfe's death emulated Montcalm, attacked from a poor position, and was whipped back into the town (Borneman, pp. 235-237). But the French government was too busy at home to support those remote efforts, and after its defeat at Quiberon Bay (for which see "Bold Hawke") had no way to support the colony anyway. The population stopped supporting the militia, and it became almost impossible to put a strong force in the field. The British forces under Amherst came at Montreal from several directions. Montreal surrendered in 1860 (Borneman, pp. 251-252), and Britain ruled Canada. It took a few more years to settle the Seven Years War -- peace was not made until 1863, and there were some Indian problems even after that -- but little that happened after than mattered much. The Treaty of Paris did some small shuffling around of European and Caribbean territories, but the main result was to put Canada in British hand (Borneman, p. 279). There was one other side effect. Pitt had beaten the rest of the world -- but he had spent a vast amount of money doing it, and the Treasury needed to make it up. Pitt himself certainly would not have placed that burden on the colonies (see Borneman, p. 298) -- but Pitt had been out of power for four years by then. George III's new ministry, headed by people like Bute and Grenville, passed laws such as the Stamp Act to get the money out of the Americans. The result would cost the British more than the taxes ever gained them. For further details, see "Taxation of America." >>BIBLIOGRAPHY<< Borneman: Walter R. Borneman, _The French and Indian War_, Harper-Collins, 2006 Brebner/Masters: J. Bartlett Brebner, _Canada_, revised and enlarge by Donald C. Masters, University of Michigan Press, 1970 Brown: Craig Brown, editor, _The Illustrated History of Canada_, Key Porter, 1987-2000 Bryant: Samuel W. Bryant, _The Sea and the States_, Crowell, 1947 Carroll: Joy Carroll, _Montcalm & Wolfe; their Lives, Their Times, and the Fate of a Continent_, Firefly, 2004 Keegan/Wheatcroft: John Keegan and Andrew Wheatcroft, _Who's Who in Military History from 1453_, 1976, 1987 (I use the 1991 LPR reprint) Leckie: Robert Leckie, _A Few Acres of Snow: The Saga of the French and Indian Wars_, 1999 (I use the 2006 Castle reprint). Note: I found several major errors in the very first pages of this book, and have tried to use it only for matters not found elsewhere. McNaught: Kenneth McNaught, _The Pelican History of Canada_, Pelican, 1969, 1982 Stacey: C. P. Stacey, _Quebec, 1859: The Siege and the Battle_, Macmillan Canada, 1959, 1966- RBW While the Bodleian collection has a number of broadsides for other ballads on the death of General Wolfe it has none for this one. It has: * Bodleian, Firth c.14(14), "Death of General Wolfe" ("In a mouldering cave where the wretched retreat"), J. Pitts (London), 1802 and 1819 ; also Harding B 11(832), Firth c.14(13) View 1 of 2, "The Death of General Wolfe"; Harding B 25(718), "Death of Wolfe" * Bodleian, Harding B 25(718), "Gen. Wolfe's Song" ("How stands the glass around"), W. Armstrong (Liverpool), 1820-1824; also Johnson Ballads 2584, "General Wolfe's Song"; Harding B 28(7), "How Stands the Glass Around"; Harding B 11(1588), Harding B 25(866), 2806 c.18(146), "How Stands the Glass Around?" [Digital Tradition "How Stands the Glass Around (Why, Soldiers, Why?)"] * Bodleian, Firth c.14(12), "Wolfe and Saunders" ("We'll gang abroad in a king's ship, and lead a soldier's life"), J. Pitts (London), 1802-1819 * Bodleian, Harding B 25(716), "General Wolfe" ("Now general Wolfe to his men did say"), J. Grundy (Worcester), 18C; also Harding B 25(717), "General Wolfe"; Harding B 28(208), "General Wolf" [Digital Tradition "Bold General Wolfe (3)"] * Bodleian, Firth c.14(16), "Britain in Tfars [sic] for the Loss of the Brave General Wolfe ("If ancient Romans did lament"), J. Jennings (London) , 1790-1840 * Bodleian, Firth c.14(11), "The Siege of Quebec"("Sound your silver trumpets, now, brave boys"), unknown, n.d. My other usual online net broadside sources have none at all for other ballads on the death of General Wolfe. This all seems to support Mackenzie: "In both England and America the death of young General Wolfe in 1759 stimulated the ballad-makers to the production of songs of admiration and sorrow. [Mackenzie 75] is evidently of American composition." Lines are similar to Opie-Oxford2 270, "Brave news is come to town" (earliest date in Opie-Oxford2 is 1842). Firth c.18(130): "Strange news has come to me, strange news is carried, And now it's all the talk, my love he is married." Opie-Oxford2 270: "Brave news is come to town, Brave news is carried; Brave news is come to town, Jemmy Dawson's married." - BS (For the items listed above, see also Baring-Gould-MotherGoose #280, p. 165, "(Brave news is come to town)"; also Montgomerie-ScottishNR 96, "(Braw News is come to town)," in which the girl is Jean Tamson. The similarity is only in the lyrics, though, not in the plot.) - RBW File: LA01 === NAME: Braw Servant Lasses, The DESCRIPTION: "Ye decent auld women, I'll sing you a song" to complain about the follies of the young. They dress up, go out "like a ship in full sail," visit the church but ignore what is said -- and end up pregnant. The singer admits being a 63-year-old bachelor AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1930 (Ord) KEYWORDS: clothes vanity pregnancy age bachelor FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ord, pp. 275-276, "The Braw Servant Lasses" (1 text) Roud #5597 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Meditations of an Old Bachelor (The Good Old-Fashioned Girl)" (subject) NOTES: I'm tempted to create a keyword "sour-grapes." - RBW File: Ord275 === NAME: Break the News to Mother DESCRIPTION: "While shot and shell were screaming Across the battlefield, The boys in blue were fighting, Their noble flag to shield." The flag falls. A boy volunteers and rescues the flag; he dies asking that someone "break the news to mother" AUTHOR: Charles K. Harris EARLIEST_DATE: 1897 (sheet music) KEYWORDS: army battle war dying mother youth FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Greenleaf/Mansfield 179, "While the Boys in Blue Were Fighting" (2 texts) Spaeth-ReadWeep, pp. 175-176, "Break the News to Mother" (1 text, 1 tune). Roud #4322 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Brave Fireman (Break the News to Mother Gently)" (tune, theme) NOTES: Charles K Harris wrote "The Brave Fireman" in 1891. He rewrote it as "Break the News to Mother" in 1897. Brett Page in "Writing for Vaudeville" quotes Harris: "When Gillette's war plays, 'Held by the Enemy' and 'Secret Service' caught the national eye, I caught the national ear with 'Just Break the News to Mother.'" Realist playwright Gillette's "Held by the Enemy" was a hit in 1886; "Secret Service" opened in New York October 5, 1896 and ran for a year. Both are set in the Civil War. Harris wrote "Just Break the News to Mother" in 1897 and it became a big hit the following year with the outbreak of the Spanish-American War. It became a hit again in 1917 when the World War I field uniform was no longer blue; in fact, blue uniforms were being phased out by 1898. Harris's text can be found on the Mudcat Cafe site - BS File: GrMa179 === NAME: Break the News to Mother Gently: see The Brave Fireman (Break the News to Mother Gently) (File: R687) === NAME: Breaking in a Tenderfoot: see The Horse Wrangler (The Tenderfoot) [Laws B27] (File: LB27) === NAME: Breaking of Omagh Jail, The DESCRIPTION: "I am a bold undaunted youth from the county of Tyrone," now in prison because "a girl against me swore." Soon to be sentenced, the singer makes a plan to escape, and manges to flee. He goes over the sea to escape his punishment AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1927 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: prison escape parting FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H181, pp. 131-132, "The Breaking of Omagh Jail" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #3581 File: HHH181 === NAME: Breast Knots, The: see The Bonnie Breist-knots (File: FVS303) === NAME: Brennan on the Moor [Laws L7] DESCRIPTION: Irishman Brennan, perhaps in revolt against the English, turns robber in the hills. After various escapades, he is captured, only to be freed by a blunderbuss smuggled in by his wife. At last, betrayed by a woman, he is taken and hanged AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1862 (broadside, Bodleian Harding B 11(3014)) KEYWORDS: outlaw rambling execution HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1804 - Hanging of William Brennan, a highwayman who worked in County Cork FOUND_IN: US(Ap,NE,NW,MA,SE,So) Canada(Mar) Ireland Britain(England) REFERENCES: (21 citations) Laws L7, "Brennan on the Moor" Ford-Vagabond, pp. 245-246, "Bold Brannan on the Moor" (1 text, 1 tune) Belden, pp. 284-286, "Brennan on the Moor" (1 text plus a reference to 1 more) Randolph 176, "Brennan on the Moor" (1 text) Creighton/Senior, pp. 236-237, "Brennan on the Moor" (1 text, 1 tune) Mackenzie 124, "Brennan on the Moor" (1 text) Flanders/Brown, pp. 98-99, "Brennan on the Moor" (1 text) Leach, pp. 745-747, "Brennan on the Moor" (1 text) Ives-DullCare, pp. 126-127,242-243, "Brennan on the Moor" (1 text, 1 tune) SharpAp 135, "Brennan on the Moor" (1 text, 1 tune) Friedman, p. 371, "Brennan on the Moor" (1 text, 1 tune) FSCatskills 110, "Brennan on the Moor" (1 text, 1 tune) Scott-BoA, pp. 264-266, "Brennan on the Moor" (1 text, 1 tune) Hodgart, p. 204, "Brennan on the Moor" (1 text) Kennedy 315, "Brennan's on the Moor" (1 text, 1 tune) OLochlainn-More 73, "Brennan on the Moor" (1 text, 1 tune) O'Conor, p. 59, "Brennen on the Moor" (1 text) Darling-NAS, pp. 103-106, "Brennan on the Moor" (1 text) Silber-FSWB, p. 325, "Brennan On The Moor" (1 text) DT 421, BRENMOOR ADDITIONAL: Kathleen Hoagland, editor, One Thousand Years of Irish Poetry (New York, 1947), pp. 250-252, "Brennan on the Moor" (1 text) Roud #476 RECORDINGS: The Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem, "Brennan on the Moor" (on IRClancyMakem02) William Jacob Morgan, "Brennan on the Moor" (AFS, 1946; on LC55) Neil Morris, "Willie Brennan" (on LomaxCD1705) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 11(3014), "Brennan On the Moor," J.O. Bebbington (Manchester), 1858-1861; also 2806 c.8(304), Firth b.26(276), Harding B 11(2135), 2806 b.9(178), Firth c.17(11)[some words illegible], 2806 b.9(242), Harding B 11(3014)[some words illegible], Harding B 11(443), Harding B 11(442), Harding B 19(26), "Brennan On the Moor"; 2806 b.10(112)[some words blurred], "Bold Brannan"; Harding B 11(365), 2806 c.15(240), Harding B 11(364), "Bold Brennan on the Moor"; Harding B 26 (341), "A Lament on the Execution of Captain Brennan" LOCSinging, as101620, "Brennen on the Moor," Horace Partridge (Boston), 19C NLScotland, L.C.1270(015), "Brennan On the Moor," unknown, c. 1880; also APS.4.95.15(4), "Bold Brannan on the Moor" ("The first of my misfortunes was to list & desert"), unknown, n.d. CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Charlie Quantrell" (tune & meter, theme, lyrics) File: LL07 === NAME: Brewer Laddie, The DESCRIPTION: "In Perth there lives a bonnie lad... And he courted Peggy Roy." "He courted her for seven long years... When there came a lad from Edinborough town." The girl goes off with the stranger, but ends up deserted; the brewer rejects her when she returns AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1904 (Ford) KEYWORDS: love abandonment return rejection FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Ford-Vagabond, pp. 95-97, "The Brewer Laddie" (1 text) Ord, pp. 178-179, "The Brewer Lad" (1 text) DT, BREWRLAD* Roud #867 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Rosie Anderson" (plot) cf. "Peggy and the Soldier (The Lame Soldier)" [Laws P13] (plot) File: FVS095 === NAME: Brian O Linn: see Brian O'Lynn (Tom Boleyn) (File: R471) === NAME: Brian O'Lynn (Tom Boleyn) DESCRIPTION: Vignettes about Brian/Tom. Each describes a situation he finds himself in and ends with his comment, e.g., "Tom Bolyn found a hollow tree / And very contented seemed to be / The wind did blow and the rain beat in / 'Better than no house,' said Tom Bolyn." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1849 (Halliwell, citing a book printed c. 1560; reputedly mentioned in The Complaynt of Scotland, 1548); Jonathan Lighter notes a mention of a bawdy song called Brian O'Lynn in Hugh Henry Brackenridge's 1793 _Modern Chivalry_, volume III, p. 214 KEYWORDS: poverty talltale humorous clothes FOUND_IN: Ireland Britain(England(All),Scotland) US(Ap,NE,So) Canada(Newf) Australia REFERENCES: (19 citations) Randolph 471, "Bryan O'Lynn" (1 text, 1 tune) Randolph-Legman I, pp. 155-157, "Brian O'Lynn" (2 fragmentary bawdy texts, 2 tunes) Belden, pp. 501-502, "Tom Bo-lin" (1 text) Flanders/Brown, pp. 178-179, "Old Tombolin" (1 text, 1 tune) SharpAp 151, "Tom Bolynn" (2 texts, 2 tunes) Kennedy 290, "Brian-O-Linn" (1 text, 1 tune) SHenry H480a+b, pp. 52-53, "Bryan O'Lynn" (1 text, 2 tunes) OLochlainn 15, "Brian O Linn" (1 text, 1 tune) Hodgart, p. 199, "Brian O Linn" (1 text) BrownII 189, "Bryan O'Lynn" (1 text) Leach-Labrador 109, "Brian O'Linn" (1 text, 1 tune) O'Conor, p. 64, "Bryan O'Lynn" (1 text) Opie-Oxford2 513, "Tommy o'Lin, and his wife, and wife's mother" (5 texts) Baring-Gould-MotherGoose, p. 149, note 34, "(Tommy O'Lin, and his wife, and his wife's mother)"; compare #228, p. 150, ("The two grey kits") (this mentions Tom Boleyn, and is the right form, but doesn't feel like it originated with the piece somehow) Montgomerie-ScottishNR 174, "(Tam o the linn came up to the gate)" (1 text) Pankake-PHCFSB, p. 35, "O'Brien O'Lin" (1 text) DSB2, p. 27, "Bryan O'Lynn" (1 text) DT, TOMBOLYN* TOMBOLY2* JONBOLYN ADDITIONAL: Kathleen Hoagland, editor, One Thousand Years of Irish Poetry (New York, 1947), pp. 252-254, "Brian O'Linn" (1 text) Roud #294 RECORDINGS: Thomas Moran, "Brian-O-Linn" (on FSB10) Tony Wales, "Bryan O'Lynn" (on TWales1) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 25(307), "Bryan O'Lynn," Stephenson (Gateshead), 1821-1850; also 2806 b.11(217), Harding B 15(36a), Harding B 11(480), Firth c.26(41), Firth c.20(135), 2806 b.11(106), Harding B 26(80), "Bryan O'Lynn"; Harding B 11(445), "Brian O'Lynn" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Old John Wallis" (style) NOTES: Sam Henry claims that Bryan O'Lynn (fl. 1770-1793) was an "apprizer" and grand juror in Cashel during the years specified. - RBW Randolph-Legman offers good notes on sources to this ballad. - EC A variant of the melody to this song is a popular fiddle tune in Ireland. I'm wary of the "Complaynt of Scotland" (1549) citation until I see it. The title given, "Thom of Lyn," and the title "Ballet of Thomalyn," licensed 1558, are both perilously close to "Tam Lin," which is not only the name of a ballad (Child 39) but also a fiddle tune. And in our indexing of "Tam Lin", we note a reference from 1549 -- is that "Complaynt of Scotland"? The plot's getting thicker, says Brian O'Lynn. - PJS Indeed, Dixon (notes to "Tam a Line," his version of "Tam Lin") cites the references from the _Complaynt of Scotland_; they are to the dance "thom of lyn" and the "tayl of the yong tamlene." This obviously sounds more like "Tam Lin," but the tunes I've heard for "Tam Lin" are not very danceable. (Bronson's #1, from Ireland, might work as a dance tune, but it is nothing like any of the others.) "Brian O'Lynn" seems much more suitable for dancing. To make the confusion worse, there are versions of this song beginning "Tom o' the Linn was a Scotsman born." Plus there is the report that Charles Dibdin wrote a piece, "[Poor] Tom Bowling." Could this have given rise to the "Tom Boleyn" version? - RBW File: R471 === NAME: Brian the Brave: see Remember the Glories of Brian the Brave (File: OCon048) === NAME: Briar-Rose: see Sleeping Beauty (Thorn Rose, Briar Rose) (File: HHH599) === NAME: Brid Og Ni Mhaille: see Bridget O'Malley (File: K027) === NAME: Bridge Was Burned at Chatsworth, The: see The Chatsworth Wreck [Laws G30] (File: LG30) === NAME: Bridget Donahue DESCRIPTION: The singer tells of the pretty town of Kelorgan, noting "what makes it interesting Is my Bridget Donahue." From America, he asks her in Ireland, "Just take the name of Patterson And I'll take Donahue." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1941 (Randolph) KEYWORDS: love courting emigration marriage separation FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Randolph 784, "Bridget Donahue" (1 text) Roud #7416 NOTES: Randolph had a songbook, which he could not identify, crediting this to Johnny Patterson. But we know how much attention to pay such claims. - RBW File: R784 === NAME: Bridget O'Malley DESCRIPTION: The singer laments that Bridget has left him heartbroken. He describes her beauty most fulsomely, and says his Sundays are now lonely and full of another. (She is now married, but) he bids her meet him on the road to Drumsleve AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1962 (recorded by Peter Kennedy) KEYWORDS: love betrayal abandonment marriage foreignlanguage FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (2 citations) Kennedy 27, "Brid Og Ni Mhaille (Bridget O'Malley) (1 text+translation, 1 tune) DT, BRIDOMAL* NOTES: Kennedy does not seem aware of any English-language versions of this Irish Gaelic song, but Silly Wizard found a text somewhere. It may well be a modern translation; it's awfully flowery. But I decided to include the song here because some might search for it. - RBW File: K027 === NAME: Bridgwater Fair DESCRIPTION: Singer tells of the delights of Bridgwater Fair and the colorful characters to be found there. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1916 KEYWORDS: dancing party nonballad FOUND_IN: Britain(England) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Sharp-100E 76, "Bridgwater Fair" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #1571 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Truro Agricultural Show" NOTES: [Sharp writes,] "St. Matthew's Fair at Bridgwater is a very ancient one, and is still a local event of some importance, although it has seen its best days." - PJS File: ShH76 === NAME: Bridle and Saddle, The DESCRIPTION: "The bridle and saddle hang on the shelf, Fol an day chine day cheer an Cheerily an cherry (x2); If you want any more you can sing it yourself." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1918 (Cecil Sharp collection) KEYWORDS: music nonballad floatingverses FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (2 citations) SharpAp 224, "The Bridle and Saddle" (1 text, 1 tune) Sharp/Karpeles-80E 80, "The Bridle and Saddle" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #3666 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Pork in the Cupboard" (lyrics) NOTES: This ending occurs in occasional texts of a vast variety of songs, including "Frog Went A-Courting," "The Swapping Boy," "Going to Banbury," and at least as many more that I've forgotten. I'm not even going to try to classify it. It does have a unique chorus line. - RBW File: SKE80 === NAME: Brien the Brave: see Remember the Glories of Brian the Brave (File: OCon048) === NAME: Briery Bush, The: see The Maid Freed from the Gallows [Child 95] (File: C095) === NAME: Brigade at Fontenoy, The DESCRIPTION: "The green flag is unfolded" before the battle. "There are stains to wash away." "Thrice blest the hour that witnesses The Briton turned to flee" from the French and Irish. God "grant us One day upon our own dear land Like that at Fontenoy!" AUTHOR: Bartholomew Dowling (1823-1863) (source: OLochlainn-More) EARLIEST_DATE: 1845 (Duffy; also Duffy's magazine _The Nation,_ according to OLochlainn-More) KEYWORDS: army battle England France Ireland patriotic HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: May 11, 1745: the French defeat the British and their allies at Fontenoy in South West Belgium (War of the Austrian Succession or King George's War) (source: _The Battle of Fontenoy 1745_ at BritishBattles.com site; "Irish" does not appear in the article) FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (4 citations) O'Conor, p. 129, "The Brigade at Fontenoy" (1 text) OLochlainn-More 13, "The Brigade at Fontenoy" (1 text, 1 tune) ADDITIONAL: Charles Gavan Duffy, editor, The Ballad Poetry of Ireland (1845), pp. 215-218, "'The Brigade' at Fontenoy" Edward Hayes, The Ballads of Ireland (Boston, 1859), Vol I, pp. 229-231, "The Brigade at Fontenoy" Roud #9758 NOTES: The first Irish Brigade, sent to France in 1688, became an integral part of the French army after the Jacobite defeat in Ireland. The Irish Brigade served the French army -- and did fight at Fontenoy -- until it was dissolved in 1791 as a result of the French Revolution. (source: _The Irish Brigade, A Brief History_ by David Kincaid at the Haunted Field Music site) - BS Of course, by the time of the War of the Austrian Succession (1740-1748), it was a completely new set of Irish exiles from those who departed Ireland c. 1690. The War of the Austrian Succession came about for complex reasons: When the Habsburg Emperor Joseph I died in 1711, just six years after his father, the Empire passed to his brother Charles VI even though Joseph had sons; the boys were too young to rule. But Charles VI wasn't willing to pass the crown back when he died; instead, as early as 1713, he devised the "Pragmatic Sanction" to pass the succession to his descendents. Which, since he had no sons, meant his daughter Maria Theresa. There was no particular reason for other countries to interfere, but the Habsburg Empire was a big place even prior to the reign of Charles VI, and Charles had gone so far as to try to reclaim Spain. So, at one time or another, Spain, France, Bavaria, Saxony, and Prussia went after Habsburg lands. (And, in Prussia's case, picked up a lot of them.) The Fontenoy campaign began in April 1745, with Maurice of Saxony (Hermann Maurice , comte de Saxe, 1696-1750) leading a mostly French army against an alliance of Austrian, Dutch, Hannoverian, and British forces under the Duke of Cumberland (yes, the future "Butcher" Cumberland of Culloden) in the low countries. Cumberland's goal was to stop Saxe from taking Tournai. Saxe, however, was much the better general; Cumberland, a typical Hannoverian, was brave and aggressive -- and stupid. Saxe picked the ground, and even though the English infantry proved better than the French, he used his artillery with enough effect to win the day. The histories of the battle that I've read make little or no mention of Irish contributions; they were there, but they don't seem to have done anything decisive. Tactically, Fontenoy was close to a draw: Both sides had about 50,000 troops in action, and both suffered about 15% casualties. But Saxe had won the campaign, relieving pressure on France; he had also lowered the reputation of British infantry. Maybe *that* is why the Irish celebrated it. It's just possible that the Irish would have been better off had they done worse at Fontenoy. Susan Maclean Kybett, in _Bonnie Prince Charlie_, Dodd Mead, 1988, p. 111, implies that the result of the battle put great pressure on Bonnie Prince Charlie and his colleagues in Paris at the time. They of course wanted to invade Britain, but the French were not being helpful. Had the French felt more pressure, they might have given Charlie enough support to do some good -- which might have led to a Stuart restoration, which would certainly have helped the Irish. As it was, the French gave Charlie just enough support to get in trouble: They sailed off to start the Forty-Five, but with no money, no French soldiers, no French generals to argue around the inept clan chiefs, and no equipment. The surprise is not that the Forty-Five failed; it's that such a hurried, under-funded botch came so close to success. Fontenoy resulted in a famous incident which says much about the fighting methods of the time, in which British and French soldiers invited the other to fire first (see Geoffrey Wawro, _The Austro-Prussian War: Austria's War with Prussia and Italy in 1866_, Cambridge University Press, 1996, p. 7). This wasn't politeness; in an era when muskets were extremely inaccurate, the side that fired first generally wasted its first volley, and it took a long time to relaod. O'Conor apparently lists the author as B. "Bowling" rather than "Dowling"; given that Bartholomew Dowling is a recognized if relatively minor poet (_Granger's Index to Poetry_ has citations to his works "Our Last Toast," "The Revel," "Revelry for the Dying," and "Stand to your Glasses), I'm assuming "Dowling" is correct. There is another Irish nationalist piece on Fontenoy; Thomas Davis wrote a poem "Fontenoy," published e.g. in Kathleen Hoagland, editor, _One Thousand Years of Irish Poetry_ (New York, 1947), pp. 476-478. I've seen no evidence that it is traditional. - RBW File: OLcM013 === NAME: Brigantine Sinorca: see Brigantine Sirocco (File: SmHa015) === NAME: Brigantine Sirocco DESCRIPTION: The Sirocco/Sorocco/Sinorca/Sirorca springs a leak and lays aground at Shelburne. The leak is found and fixed. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1932 (Creighton-Nova Scotia) KEYWORDS: sea ship FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Smith/Hatt, p. 15, "Brigantine Sorocco" (1 text) Creighton-NovaScotia 106, "Brigantine Sinorca" (1 text, 1 tune) ST SmHa015 (Full) Roud #1814 NOTES: No two versions of this song seem to give the ship the same name. I've called the song "Brigantine Sirocco" because that's the only title that means anything in a language I know. A sirocco is a desert wind, not exactly suitable for a ship -- but it's also a fast wind, so maybe it makes sense. The other possibility is that "Sinorca" is a corruption of "Saint (something-or-other)," and the rest corruptions of that. But only one of the four names known to me starts with the S[?]n phoneme combination; the others are S[?]r. So I think Sinorca a secondary corruption, probably of something like "Sirorca." - RBW File: SmHa015 === NAME: Brigantine Sorocco: see Brigantine Sirocco (File: SmHa015) === NAME: Brigg Fair DESCRIPTION: Singer goes to Brigg Fair expecting to meet his sweetheart; she arrives and he takes her hand, rejoicing, and hopes they will never part. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1908 (recording, Joseph Taylor) KEYWORDS: love courting reunion lover FOUND_IN: Britain(England(South)) REFERENCES: (0 citations) Roud #1083 RECORDINGS: Isla Cameron, "Brigg Fair" (on Lomax41, LomaxCD1741) Joseph Taylor, "Brigg Fair" (cylinder, on HiddenE) NOTES: About as basic a story as can be, but still complete. - PJS File: RcBF === NAME: Brigham Young DESCRIPTION: "Now Brigham Young (is/was) a Mormon bold" with "five and forty wives." He leads the Mormon citizens of "Great Salt Lake, Where they breed and swarm like hens on a farm." Most of the song describes how Young's wives have sapped his vigor AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1910 KEYWORDS: marriage humorous age HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1801-1877 - Life of Brigham Young 1832 - Young becomes a Mormon 1844 - Young becomes leader of the Mormons 1847 - Mormon migration to Utah 1850 - Young made Governor of Utah territory. From 1857, however, the U.S. Government enforced various restrictions on the Mormons and their governor, mostly in response to polygamy. FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (2 citations) Lomax-ABFS, pp. 432-433, "Brigham Young" (1 text) Silber-FSWB, p. 290, "Brigham Young" (1 text) Roud #8056 NOTES: In defense of Young (if not of Mormon doctrines of polygamy, which reportedly are still secretly practiced in some circles, resulting in severe inbreeding), it should be noted that he was a forceful and effective leader who successfully founded the Mormon colony in Utah, allowing the faith to survive despite severe persecution. Sally Denton, _American Massacre: The Tragedy at Mountain Meadows, September 11, 1857_ (Secker & Warburg, 2003) gives a brief account of Young's early life starting on page 32. Young was one of several children of John Young, a revolutionary war veteran. The family moved to Whitingham, Vermont, in 1801, and Brigham was born later that year. The family quickly fell into poverty; that, plus severe family discipline, seemed to forge a strong determination in Brigham. Very handsome in his early years, he first married in 1824, and watched in despair as his wife sickened and he failed to prosper. Then his brother Phinehas gave him a copy of the Book of Mormon, just recently published. In 1832, Brigham was baptised into the Mormon church. He met Mormon founder Joseph Smith later in that year, and once his wife died, Young became one of Smith's key assistants. By this time, the Mormons were starting on their wanderings. When Smith was killed in Nauvoo, Illinois, in 1844, the church was twice in crisis: It had no leader and it was finding it almost impossible to find a home. The contest to succeed Smith ended in what was reported as a miracle. Denton, pp. 30-31, reports that "When [Young] opened his mouth to speak, it was not his voice that emanated, according to many of those in the audience, but a voice uncannily like that of Joseph Smith. Many in the crow rushed the platform to see if their prophet had risen from the dead, only to be further mystified by the same 'supernatural radiance' that had enveloped Smith now illuminating Young." Stegner's version of this (p. 34) is that Young took on the appearance and voice of Smith. Bernard DeVoto, in _The Year of Decision: 1846_ (Little, Brown and Company, 1943), p. 77, concurs: "[T]he Saints beheld a transfiguration. [Young's] pudgy body suddenly became the tall, handsome, commanding body of the martyred prophet." Combine that with good organizing ability, and Young naturally became head of the Mormons. Not everyone accepted this, to be sure, including many of Smith's relatives. Many who did not accept Young would coalesce into the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-Day Saints; Denton, p. 37. This group is largely concentrated in southern Missouri. A member of the group tells me that while they still use the Book of Mormon and other Smith-related writings -- in editions slightly different from those used by the "regular" Mormons -- they generally fall closer to orthodox Christianity DeVoto, p. 77, mentions some other splinters that broke off the main body of the church: "all told these half dozen, dividing by mitosis, were to form over twenty minute churches, each one the true apostolic succession from the prophet." But the majority of the Mormons, though, accepted Young. "This was a much greater man than Joseph. Instead of a man drunk on deity... who could produce no effective leadership, no effective government, no effective social organization, there had come to lead the Church out of the land of Egypt one of the foremost intelligences of the time, the first American who learned how to colonize the desert" (DeVoto, p. 77). Young gradually consolidated his position, and in 1847 had a revelation which caused him to order his people to head for Utah (Denton, pp. 54-55). The land was so poor that Young was forced to change the Mormon economy, already rather socialist, into something approaching a Leninist centrally-directed communism (Denton, pp. 59-60). Unlike Russian Leninism, though, Young made his version work -- perhaps because he ran it himself, with fewer communist functionaries; perhaps because the people were all volunteers and actually gave it their best shot; perhaps something of both. It is little surprise, then, that Allan Nevins, in _The Emergence of Lincoln, Volume I: Douglas, Buchanan, and Party Chaos 1857-1859_ (Scribner's, 1950), p. 315, declares that "Brigham Young was the most commanding single figure of the West. This rugged Vermonter, who had been given only eleven days' formal schooling before he set to work as carpenter, glazier, and painter, possessed an inexhaustible energy, a domineering temper, and a rocklike will which made him seem truly the Lion of the Lord." Young's goal in moving to Utah seems to have been partly one of getting out of the United States (Utah was Mexican territory prior to the Mexican War) and partly to move to land no one else would want. He didn't really succeed in either; the Mexican War ended with all that land becoming part of the U.S., and land hunger in the east was so great that people settled even the basically uninhabitable parts of New Mexico territory. Young put small colonies in many areas of his "Deseret" territory. Most struggled even more than the settlement by the Great Salt Lake. And when Utah Territory was organized, it was much smaller than Young's projected fiefdom (Denton, p. 66). Still, President Fillmore appointed Young its governor after Thomas Leiper Kane turned down the job. Young also was given the titles of commander of the militia and superintendant of Indian affairs (Nevins, p. 315, who declares that, "In short, he confirmed Young's dictatorship"). Nevins, p. 316, adds that "Despite his coarse an brutal vein, his egotism, an his frequent pettiness, Brigham Young was popular. He treated his own people with affability, throwing his arm over any Mormon's shoulder and asking corially about his wives and children. His rough and ready manners, provincialisms of speech ('leetle,' 'beyend,' 'disremember,' and 'they was'), his kindness, an his justice in business dealings, were all assets in [Deseret]." Young, like Joseph Smith before him, had problems with authoritarianism, which would result in the Utah War (and probably, indirectly, in the Mountain Meadows Massacre; see that song for details). Folklore lists Young as having as many as sixty wives; it should be noted, however, that only 17 wives (along with 56 children) were alive at the time of his death. Of course, he had repeatedly denied that the Mormons engaged in plural marriage at all, until John Williams Gunnison exposed the truth (Denton, p. 69-70). - RBW File: LxA432 === NAME: Bright Morning Stars (For the Day Is A-Breakin' In My Soul) DESCRIPTION: "I hear the Savior calling (x3) (For the) day is a-breaking in my soul." "How I long to meet him...." "The golden bells are ringing...." "I want to see my father...." "I want to meet my Jesus...." "Bright morning stars are rising...." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1957 (collected by Shellans from Norman Lee Vass) KEYWORDS: religious nonballad FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Shellans, pp. 89-90, "For the Day Is A-Breakin' In My Soul" (1 text, 1 tune, which does not mention the Bright Morning Stars) DT, BRTMORNS* Roud #7335 and 18268 NOTES: I'm not sure that the title "Bright Morning Stars" is actually traditional for this song, but I chose it because that's the title I've heard sung in the revival. File: Shel089 === NAME: Bright Orange Stars of Coleraine, The DESCRIPTION: Marching song. The singer describes the celebrations on the twelfth of July. The marchers celebrate to the memory of William (of Orange). The singer praises Coleraine, and intends never to forget William's triumph AUTHOR: Robert Thompson ? EARLIEST_DATE: 1925 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: political Ireland nonballad HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: July 1, 1690 - Battle of the Boyne. William III crushes the Irish army of James II, at once securing his throne and the rule of Ireland. Irish resistance continues for about another year, but Ireland east of the Shannon is William's, and the opposition is doomed. July 12, 1691 - Battle of Aughrim. Decisive defeat of Irish Catholic forces FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H87a, pp. 181-182, "The Bright Orange Stars of Coleraine" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #8006 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Battle of the Boyne (I)" (subject: The Battle of the Boyne) and references there NOTES: This is probably the most political song in the Henry collection, and gives little evidence of being traditional. The _Northern Constitution_ was published in Ulster, of course, so such sentiments were permissible -- but I'm still surprised it was published. Other Irish songs may allude to William of Orange's triumph, but this is one of the few to gloat over it. - RBW File: HHH087a === NAME: Bright Phoebe DESCRIPTION: "Bright Phoebe was my true love's name, / Her beauty did my heart contain." The singer and his love agree to marry when he returns from sea. By the time he returns, she is dead. He promises to spend the rest of his life mourning AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1847 (Journal of William Histed of the Cortes) KEYWORDS: love courting separation sea death mourning FOUND_IN: US(MA,MW) Canada(Mar,Newf) REFERENCES: (6 citations) FSCatskills 70, "Bright Phoebe" (1 text, 1 tune) Dean, p. 104,"Sweet Mary Jane" (1 text) Huntington-Whalemen, pp. 119-120, "Bright Phoebe" (1 text, 1 tune) Peacock, pp. 434-435, "Bright Phoebe" (1 text, 2 tunes) Creighton-Maritime, pp. 96-97, "Phoebe" (2 texts, 2 tunes) DT, BRTPHOEB Roud #1989 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Lord Lovel" [Child 75] (plot) File: FSC070 === NAME: Bright Shades of Blue, The DESCRIPTION: The convict recalls leaving Britain in chains, saying, "I'd left all my joys in those bright shades of blue." Once in Australia, he prospers, and at last returns to Britain -- to find that he misses Australia. He is old and alone far from his new home AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1968 KEYWORDS: Australia transportation homesickness FOUND_IN: Australia REFERENCES: (1 citation) Meredith/Anderson, pp. 136-137, "The Bright Shades of Blue" (1 text, 1 tune) File: MA136 === NAME: Bright Sherman Valley: see The Red River Valley (File: R730) === NAME: Bright Star of Derry, The DESCRIPTION: The singer loves Mary, a widow's daughter, and praises her as the bright star of Derry. She is beautiful, sweet, and gentle. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1809 (OLochlainn-More) KEYWORDS: love beauty lyric nonballad FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) OLochlainn-More 33, "The Bright Star of Derry" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #9754 File: OLcM033 === NAME: Bright Sunny South, The: see The Sweet Sunny South (I) [Laws A23] (File: LA23) === NAME: Bright-Eyed Little Nell of Narragansett Bay: see Little Nell of Narragansett Bay (File: Brew88) === NAME: Brightest and Best DESCRIPTION: "Hail the blest morn when the great Mediator down from the regions of glory descends." The song describes the baby Jesus's humble birth and the feeble gifts they offer him. "Brightest and best of the sons of the morning, Dawn on our darkness...." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1854 (Southern Harmony) KEYWORDS: religious Jesus Christmas gift FOUND_IN: US(Ap) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Ritchie-SingFam, pp. 150-151, "[Brightest and Best]" (1 text, 1 tune) Ritchie-Southern, p. 55, "Brightest and Best" (1 text, 1 tune) ADDITIONAL: Ian Bradley, _The Penguin Book of Carols_ (1999), #13, "Brightest ans Best of the Sons of the Morning" (1 text) Roud #5743 RECORDINGS: Ritchie Family, "Brightest and Best" (on Ritchie03) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Star in the East NOTES: Earlier editions of this index credited this piece to Reginald Heber (1783-1826), on the basis of Irwin Silber's _The Season of the Year_. Ian Bradley's _The Penguin Book of Carols_ also attributes the song to Heber, and says it was the first hymn he wrote. The _New Oxford Book of Carols_ , however, credits the arrangement to William Walker, while submitting that the "refrain and vv. 2-4 [are] after Reginald Heber." But Spaeth, in _A History of Popular Music in America_, places the whole thing in the hands of Walker. George Pullen Jackson does not mention either Walker or Heber; he finds it first in William Caldwell's 1837 _Union Harmony_ (but it's not clear whether this is text or tune or both). The phrase "sons of the morning" is thought to have been inspired by Isaiah 14:12, which the King James Bible renders "How art though fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning!" This has sparked some controversy, because "Lucifer" is equated with Satan. But this is one of those over-reactions to the King James rendering. The translators used "Lucifer" in its Latin sense of "Light-bringer," which is a fair rendering of the Hebrew word which means something like "one who brightens." Modern versions render the Hebrew word something like "Day Star"; it's thought by some to be a reference to the pretensions of the Kings of Babylon. I'm a bit leery of this whole interpretation anyway. The idea of "Children of Light" or "Children of the Morning" is a common one in mythology, and might just have occurred to the author (whether Heber or someone else) because it sounds good. Bradley cites Routley to the effect that 19 different tunes have been used for this set of lyrics. - RBW File: JRSF150 === NAME: Brightest and Best of the Sons of the Morning: see Brightest and Best (File: JRSF150) === NAME: Brighton Camp: see The Girl I Left Behind Me (lyric) (File: R546) === NAME: Brilliant Light, The DESCRIPTION: Singer asks "a brother" to be "admitted." He passes a test and is taken to a door. He is admitted. He begins his ordeal. He meets Moses at the burning bush, casts his own rod as serpent, and is shown a great light. He swears not to reveal the secrets. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1865 (broadside, Bodleian Firth c.21(36)) KEYWORDS: ritual religious FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) Zimmermann, p. 302, "The Brilliant Light" (1 fragment) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Firth c.21(36), "The Brilliant Light" ("Come all you loyal marksmen that circle around"), The Poet's Box (Glasgow), 1865; also Harding B 1(35) View 2 of 2, "An admired Masonic song, called the Brilliant Lights" ("Come all you loyal Crafts-men that's circled round") CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Grand Mystic Order" (subject and some phrases) cf. "The Knight Templar's Dream" (subject) cf. "The Grand Templar's Song" (subject) NOTES: Zimmermann p. 302: "The songs inspired by the ritual of the Orange Institution are the most extraordinary. They are resolutely cryptic, with lines like: 'I'll tell you a secret your enemies do not know ...' ['Brilliant Light']." Zimmermann p. 302 is a fragment; broadside Bodleian Firth c.21(36) is the basis for the description. - BS Moses's rod (later Aaron's rod) that became a serpent is first mentioned in Exodus 4:3. I'm not sure if there is a direct significance to the great light. Perhaps it's a reference to the light that shone at the conversion of Paul/Saul (Acts 9:3, etc.), or a reference to Isaiah 9:2=Matthew 4:16, etc. - RBW File: Zimm302 === NAME: Brimbledon Fair: see Rambleaway (File: ShH31) === NAME: Brindisi Di Marinai DESCRIPTION: Fisherman's shanty for hauling the nets, refrain "Lampabbo! Lampa!" Verses revolve around drinking. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1948 (Favara, _Canti della Terra e del Mare di Sicilia_) KEYWORDS: shanty fishing drink foreignlanguage FOUND_IN: Italy Sicily REFERENCES: (1 citation) Hugill, pp. 245-246, "Brindisi Di Marinai" (1 text [Italian and English], 1 tune) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Reuben Ranzo" (tune) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Lampabbo Lampa NOTES: Hugill theorizes that this may have been the origin of "Reuben Ranzo." The hauling of nets and the hauling of halyards are similar jobs, and the two songs have identical melodies and the pulls are in the same places. The method of singing is also the same as deep-sea shanties, where the final note of the refrain is overlapped with the first note of the solos, and vice versa. - SL File: Hug245 === NAME: Bring Back My Barney to Me: see Bring Back My Johnny to Me (File: HHH007) === NAME: Bring Back My Bonnie to Me: see My Bonnie Lies over the Ocean (File: DTmybonn) === NAME: Bring Back My Johnny to Me DESCRIPTION: "He's gone, I am now sad and lonely, He has left me to cross the salt sea, And I know that he thinks of me only, And will soon be returning to me." The singer misses (Johnny), and asks, "Blow gently, sweet winds of the ocean, And bring my Johnny to me." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1923 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: love separation sailor poverty FOUND_IN: Ireland Britain REFERENCES: (2 citations) SHenry H7, p. 290-291, "Bring Back My Barney to Me" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BRINGJON* Roud #1422 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "My Bonnie Lies over the Ocean" NOTES: A. L. Lloyd, in his liner notes to the Watersons' "For Pence and Spicy Ale", says [this] was "A stage song favoured by Irish comedians from the 1860s on. During the 1880s, apparently on American university campuses, close-harmony groups remade it into the better-known -- and even more preposterous -- "My Bonny Lies Over the Ocean...." - PJS Steve Roud notes British songster versions starting from 1872 and possibly earlier. - (RBW) File: HHH007 === NAME: Bring Him Back Dead or Alive DESCRIPTION: "Gannon killed a man in Texas in the year of forty-five, Bring him back dead or alive!" The sheriff follows. Gannon kills the sheriff, then realizes it is his brother he has killed. He gives up: "If you will hang me quick I'll escape my brother's voice!" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1959 KEYWORDS: homicide brother police crime punishment FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Fife-Cowboy/West 91, "Bring Him Back Dead or Alive" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #11205 File: FCW091 === NAME: Bring in the Punch Ladle: see Fathom the Bowl (File: K268) === NAME: Bring Me Back the Boy I Love: see My Blue-Eyed Boy (File: R759) === NAME: Bring Me Little Water, Sylvie DESCRIPTION: "Bring me little water, Sylvie, Bring me little water now, Bring me little water, Sylvie, Ev'ry little once in a while." The field worker, toiling in the hot sun, calls on Sylvie to bring him something to drink. (She points out that she is coming.) AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1936 KEYWORDS: work worksong nonballad FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Lomax-FSNA 283, "Bring Me Little Water, Sylvie" (1 text, 1 tune) Courlander-NFM, p. 87, "(Bring Me a Little Water, Sylvie" (partial text) Silber-FSWB, p. 128, "Bring Me A Little Water, Sylvie" (1 text) DT, WATRSYLV Roud #11654 File: LoF283 === NAME: Bring the Gold Cup Back to Newtown DESCRIPTION: Three hundred supporters cheer for the Newtown football team at Enniskillen. The critical plays and players are named as Newtown defeats Irvinestown. "We've conquered two great teams: Lisnaskea and Roslea and "brought the gold cup for the second time" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1980 (IRHardySons) KEYWORDS: sports moniker FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (0 citations) Roud #17890 RECORDINGS: Big John Maguire, "Bring the Gold Cup Back to Newtown" (on IRHardySons) NOTES: Notes to IRHardySons: "All the place-names mentioned make it clear that Newtown is Newtownbutler." - BS File: RcBtGCBN === NAME: Bring Us Good Ale DESCRIPTION: The singer, "for our blessed Lady's sake," demands that the server "Bring us in good ale." Other foods are rejected (e.g. "Bring us in no brown bread, for that is made of bran, And bring us in no white bread, for therein is no gain.") AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: c. 1475 (MS. Bodl. 29734) KEYWORDS: food drink nonballad FOUND_IN: Britain REFERENCES: (5 citations) Stevick-100MEL 82, "(Bryng Us in Good Ale)" (1 text) Chappell/Wooldridge I, pp. 30-31, "Nowell, Nowell" (1 tune, with a fragment of this text appended) DT, BRINGALE* ADDITIONAL: Walter de la Mare, _Come Hither_, revised edition, 1928; #72, "Bring Us In Good Ale" (1 text) Brown/Robbins, _Index of Middle English Verse_, #549 NOTES: This is another song that cannot be demonstrated to have circulated in oral tradition. Its prevalence in the printed collections (starting with Ritson), however, argues for its inclusion here -- especially as there are two distinct Middle English texts. - RBW File: MEL82 === NAME: Bring Us in Good Ale: see Bring Us Good Ale (File: MEL82) === NAME: Bringing in the Sheaves DESCRIPTION: The farmers go out "sowing in the morning (evening, sunshine, shadows, etc.), sowing seeds of kindness." In the end, "We shall come rejoicing, bringing in the sheaves" AUTHOR: Words: Knowles Shaw (1834-1878) / Music: George A. Minor ((1845-1904) EARLIEST_DATE: 1927 (recordings, Eva Quartet, Stamps Quartet) KEYWORDS: religious nonballad FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (3 citations) Silber-FSWB, p. 351, "Bringing In The Sheaves" (1 text) DT, BRINGSHV* ADDITIONAL: Charles Johnson, One Hundred and One Famous Hymns (Hallberg, 1982), pp. 194-196, "Bringing in the Sheaves" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #14041 RECORDINGS: Eva Quartet, "Bringing In the Sheaves" (Gennett 6335, 1927) Earl Johnson's Dixie Entertainers, "Bringing In the Sheaves" (OKeh 45512, 1931; rec. 1930) Parker & Dodd, "Bringing In the Sheaves" (Conqueror 8131, 1933) Stamps Quartet, "Bringing In the Sheaves" (Victor 21035, 1927) SAME_TUNE: Bringing In the Cows (Pankake-PHCFSB, p. 105) NOTES: Based, rather loosely, on Psalm 126:6, translated in the King James version as "He that goeth forth and weepeth, bearing precious seed, shall doubtless come again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him." In the New Revised Standard Version, this becomes "Those who go out weeping, bearing the seed for sowing, shall come home with shouts of joy, Carrying their sheaves." - RBW File: FSWB351C === NAME: Brisbane Ladies DESCRIPTION: The singer bids farewell to the Brisbane Ladies, promising, "We'll rant and we'll roar like true Queensland natives...." He describes the trip he and the boys make from town "to the old cattle station. What joy and delight is the life in the bush!" AUTHOR: Saul Mendelsohn? EARLIEST_DATE: 1891 (_Boomerang_ magazine) KEYWORDS: travel work Australia FOUND_IN: Australia REFERENCES: (4 citations) Fahey-Eureka, pp. 162-163, "Brisbane Ladies" (1 text, 1 tune) Manifold-PASB, pp. 120-121, "Ladies of Brisbane (The Drover's Song)"; pp. 122-123, "Ladies of Brisbane (Augathella Station)" (2 texts, 2 tunes) Paterson/Fahey/Seal, pp. 214-216, "Brisbane Ladies" (1 text) DT, QUNSLAND* Roud #687 RECORDINGS: John Greenway, "Brisbane Ladies" (on JGreenway01) A. L. Lloyd, "Brisbane Ladies" (on Lloyd4, Lloyd8) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Spanish Ladies" (plot, tune, lyrics) and references there NOTES: An Australian rewrite of "Farewell and Adieu to you Spanish Ladies." The differences between the two, in this case, strike me as large enough to require separate classification. - RBW File: FaE162 === NAME: Brisk and Bonny Lass, The (The Brisk and Bonny Lad) DESCRIPTION: Cheerful description of the life of a farm girl. She wakes at dawn and milks the cows as the larks sing; at haying time they go dancing, At harvest they work, then celebrate; even in winter, all are happy; she declares herself content to be a country lass AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1891 (Barrett) KEYWORDS: courting farming harvest work dancing nonballad worker FOUND_IN: Britain(England(South)) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Kennedy 244, "The Brisk and Bonny Lass" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #606 RECORDINGS: James & Bob Copper, "The Contented Country Lad" (on Lomax41, LomaxCD41) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Country Life" (theme) cf. "The Contented Countryman" (theme) ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Country Lass Harvest Home Song NOTES: With mechanization and the change from female to male labor on farms, some versions have switched the sex of the narrator. - PJS Sometimes in midstream, in fact. I find myself wondering if this didn't start out as a fragment of a proper ballad about a brisk farm girl, with the actual plot (about a marriage, perhaps? -- the beginning of the song sounds very much like a ballad of that type) being broken off and replaced by these lyrics. - RBW File: K244 === NAME: Brisk and Lively Lad, The: see The London Heiress (The Brisk and Lively Lad) (File: MoMa033) === NAME: Brisk Young Bachelor (I), The DESCRIPTION: Young man, recently married, laments the hard work his wife forces him to do and counsels other bachelors, before marrying, to reflect on his fate. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1901 (O'Conor) KEYWORDS: marriage shrewishness work nonballad humorous bachelor FOUND_IN: Britain(England) US(SE) Ireland Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Mackenzie 142, "The Old Bachelor" (1 text) O'Conor, p. 31, "The Poor Man's Labor's Never Done" (1 text) Sharp-100E 69, "The Brisk Young Bachelor" (1 text, 1 tune) Cohen/Seeger/Wood, pp. 72-74, "The Man Who Wrote Home Sweet Home Never Was a Married Man" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #1572 RECORDINGS: Eddie Morton w. orchestra, "The Party That Wrote Home Sweet Home Never Was a Married Man" (Victor 5513, 1908; Victor 16758, 1911) New Lost City Ramblers, "The Man Who Wrote Home Sweet Home Never Was a Married Man" (on NLCR03) Charlie Parker & Mack Woolbright, "The Man Who Wrote Home Sweet Home Never Was A Married Man" (Columbia 15236-D, 1928; rec. 1927) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 14(152), "Poor Man's Labour Never Done," unknown, n.d.; also 2806 c.16(22), "Poor Man's Labour Never Done"; Harding B 25(1535) [partly illegible], "A Poor Man's Labour's Never Done" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Sporting Bachelors" (plot) ALTERNATE_TITLES: I Was a Young Man NOTES: Although the theme is identical with "The Sporting Bachelors", it's a separate song, in my opinion. Although the tune, chorus, etc. of ["The Man Who Wrote Home Sweet Home Never Was a Married Man" ] are completely different from the British song, I unhesitatingly lump them together; the verses are essentially identical, although not identically worded. - PJS A parody, perhaps? (I haven't seen the British song.) - RBW File: ShH69 === NAME: Brisk Young Bachelor (II), The: see The Holly Twig [Laws Q6] (File: LQ06) === NAME: Brisk Young Butcher, The DESCRIPTION: A (butcher) stays at an inn; he offers a serving girl money to lay with him. She does. Given his bill, he says he gave the girl the money and didn't get change. A year later, he comes back. She shows him her child and says it is his change AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1839 (broadside, Bodleian Johnson Ballads 216) KEYWORDS: money trick sex pregnancy travel FOUND_IN: Britain(England(North),Scotland) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Ord, pp. 158-159, "The Butcher and Chamber Maid" (1 text) DT, XMASGOOS XMASGOO2* Roud #167 RECORDINGS: Harvey Nicholson, "The Copshawholm Butcher" (on Voice10) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Johnson Ballads 216, "The Leicester Chambermaid" ("Its of a brisk young butcher as I have heard 'em say"), J. Catnach (London), 1813-1838; also Harding B 11(2105), Firth b.28(25a) View 2 of 2[some words illegible], Harding B 11(2103), Firth c.18(304), Harding B 11(2104), Harding B 11(2654), "The Leicester Chambermaid"; 2806 c.17(232), "London Butcher"; 2806 c.17(68), "The Chambermaid" Murray, Mu23-y1:040, "The Butcher and the Chamber Maid," unknown, 19C CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Basket of Eggs" (plot) and references there ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Christmas Goose The Ten Dollar Bill File: DTxmasgo === NAME: Brisk Young Farmer, The: see William Hall (The Brisk Young Farmer) [Laws N30] (File: LN30) === NAME: Brisk Young Lad, The DESCRIPTION: "There cam' a young man to my daddie's door... a-seeking me to woo." The singer feeds him while she bakes. He just sits there. At last she bids him depart. He trips over the "duck-dub"; they shout and laugh at him as he departs AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1790 (_Scots Musical Museum_ #219) KEYWORDS: courting rejection humorous FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Ford-Vagabond, pp. 294-296, "The Brisk Young Lad" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BRISKLAD Roud #6139 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "An Old Man Came Over the Moor (Old Gum Boots and Leggings)" ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Cauldrife Wooer File: FVS294 === NAME: Brisk Young Lover, The: see The Butcher Boy [Laws P24] (File: LP24) === NAME: Brisk Young Sailor, A: see Tavern in the Town (File: ShH94) === NAME: Brisk Young Sailor, The: see Pretty Fair Maid (The Maiden in the Garden; The Broken Token) [Laws N42] (File: LN42) === NAME: Bristol Channel Jamboree: see Whip Jamboree (Whup Jamboree) (File: Br3230) === NAME: Bristol Coachman, The DESCRIPTION: A coachman is enticed home by a girl. Her husband catches him. The coachman proposes "if I have slept with your good wife, I'll let you sleep with mine." The husband demands forty or fifty pounds. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1825 (broadside, Bodleian Harding B 28(109)) KEYWORDS: infidelity bargaining humorous husband rake FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (2 citations) Opie-Oxford2 409, "Up at Piccadilly oh!" (2 texts) Baring-Gould-MotherGoose #238, p. 153, "(Up at Piccadilly oh!)" BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 28(109), "Whip Away For Ever O" ("Come all you country lasses, come listen to my song"), W. Armstrong (Liverpool), 1820-1824; also Harding B 25(287), "The Bristol Coachman" ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Jolly Bristol Coachman File: OO2409 === NAME: Britannia on Our Lee DESCRIPTION: "A wet sheet and a flowing sea And a wind that follows fair... Away our good ship flies and leave (Columbia/Britannia) on our lee." The singer hopes for a good wind and rejoices in the life at sea AUTHOR: Words: Allan Cunningham EARLIEST_DATE: 1844 (Journal from the Citizen) KEYWORDS: ship sea sailor nonballad FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Huntington-Whalemen, pp. 49-50, "A Wet Sheet and a Flowing Sea" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #2014 ALTERNATE_TITLES: Columbia on Our Lee File: SWMS049 === NAME: Britannia Sat Weeping DESCRIPTION: Britannia weeps as pleasure is replaced by war and sailors fight for "country and king"; "John Bull has been ruin'd by pension and place." Rich and poor are brothers and we can never kindle war and still flourish with liberty in our happy home. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1867 (broadside, Bodleian 2806 c.15(294)) KEYWORDS: war England political FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (0 citations) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, 2806 c.15(294), "Britannia Sat Weeping" ("Britannia sat weeping as pleasure pass'd by"), J. Harkness (Preston), 1840-1866; also Harding B 11(3769), Harding B 16(37c), "Britannia Sat Weeping" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Daughter of Israel" (tune, per broadside Bodleian 2806 c.15(294)) NOTES: Zimmermann p. 54 uses "Britannia Sat Weeping" to illustrate the popularity in the 17th and 18th centuries of a country -- Italy, France, Ireland and Britain -- as "a poor woman asking for help." Does the reference to the king date the origin to a war before Victoria? - BS File: BrdBrSWe === NAME: Britannia, the Pride of the Ocean: see Columbia, the Gem of the Ocean (Britannia, the Pride of the Ocean) (File: FSWB044) === NAME: British Grenadiers, The DESCRIPTION: "Some talk of Alexander, and some of Hercules... And such great men as these..." but none can compare, "with a row- row-row, row-row-row To the British Grenadiers." The prowess of the Grenadiers is praised, and toasts are offered to them AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1838 (Chappell) KEYWORDS: soldier drink battle nonballad FOUND_IN: Britain(England) REFERENCES: (5 citations) Logan, pp. 109-112, "The British Grenadiers" (plus parody, "Aitcheson's Carabineers") Chappell/Wooldridge I, pp. 262-264, "Nancy; or, Sir Edward Noel's Delight; or All You That Love Good Fellows" (3 tunes, reputed to be ancestor of these tunes) Silber-FSWB, p. 279, "The British Grenadiers" (1 text) Fuld-WFM, pp. 153-154+, "The British Grenadiers" DT, BRITGREN* ST Log109 (Full) Roud #11231? CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Lord Cornwallis's Surrender" (tune) cf. "Free America" (tune) SAME_TUNE: Free America (File: Arn014) Lord Cornwallis's Surrender (File: SBoA088) NOTES: That this song is old is obvious. Logan argues that the words must date from between 1678 (when the Grenadier companies were formed) and the reign of Queen Anne (died 1714), when Grenadiers ceased to carry grenades and became simply elite troops. The earlier date is fairly solid; the latter, of course, has the problem that a songwriter might not know that grenadiers had become a general term. The same problems attend the tune. Fuld reports on various prints from around 1750, and the various parodies and adaptions categorically date it before 1780. It appears the tune is much older (and may not even be British), but no precise data can be offered. - RBW File: Log109 === NAME: British Man-of-War, The DESCRIPTION: The singer hears a sailor telling his love that he must leave her; he must go into battle. She begs him not to go. He says that he might win glory. He has fought before; he will fight again. He tears his handkerchief in two and gives her half as a token AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1847 (Journal of William Histed of the Cortes) KEYWORDS: war separation farewell brokentoken FOUND_IN: US(MA,So) Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (8 citations) Belden, pp. 379-380, "The Yankee Man of War" (1 text) FSCatskills 13, "The Yankee Man-of-War" (1 text, 1 tune) Peacock, pp. 181-182, "British Man-O'-War" (1 text, 1 tune) BrownII 96, "Lovely Susan" (1 stanza, which the editors cannot identify but which matches many texts of this song) Scott-BoA, pp. 226-227, "The Yankee Man o' War" (1 text, 1 tune) PGalvin, pp. 48-49, "The Fenian Man o' War" (1 text, 1 tune) Huntington-Whalemen, pp. 108-110, "The British Man-of-War" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BRITMANO Roud #372 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 15(397a), "[Young] William of the Man-of-War" ("One winter's day as I was walking"), W. Jackson and Son (Birmingham), 1842-1855; also Harding B 16(309b), Harding B 11(4232), Harding B 11(4233), Harding B 11(4234), 2806 c.16(59), "William of the Man-of-War"; Harding B 31(127), Harding B 31(141),"[A] Yankee Man-of-War"; Harding B 11(466), Firth c.12(135), Firth b.26(180), "British Man-of-War" LOCSinging, hc00037c, "A Yankee Man-of-War," Charles Magnus (New York), no date; also as115330, "Yankee Man of War" NLScotland, L.C.Fol.70(139), "British Man-of-War," unknown, no date CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Lowlands of Holland" (tune, theme) cf. "The Cork Men and the New York Men" (subject) cf. "On Board of a Man-of-War (Young Susan)" (theme, lyrics) ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Fenian Man-of-War NOTES: As the titles make clear, this general text and tune were applied to whatever war seemed most convenient at the time (e.g. the Mexican War, the Civil War; a British text refers to fighting "the proud Chinee," presumably during the Opium Wars). The Fenian version (named for the Fenians, a group of Irish-Americans who thought they could gain freedom for Ireland by invading Canada) is slightly changed; the opening is the same, but the broken token is missing, and in the end Bridget agrees that her Patrick should fight for Ireland. The Fenians actually did purchase a ship, which they named _Erin's Hope_, but it accomplished nothing except to make one voyage to Ireland -- where no one wanted them. (For more details, see the notes to "The Cork Men and New York Men.") Similarly, they invaded Canada -- and were easily repelled, with many taken captive. Later they built a submarine; its only use was as a fundraising device. Viewed from any standpoint except pure Irish patriotism, the Fenians were utterly ineffective and really quite silly. (For other examples, see "A Fenian Song (I)" and "The Smashing of the Van.") - RBW Broadsides Bodleian Harding B 11(466), Firth c.12(135) and Firth b.26(180) refer to the Opium War of 1840-1842; Harding B 31(141) and Harding B 31(141) refer to the American Civil War of 1861-1865; the "William" broadsides are not specific. There are also "answers" [such as Bodleian, 2806 c.16(90), "Susan's Adventures in a British Man-of-War"] and "No. 2's" [such as LOCSinging, cw106880, "Yankee Man-of-War. No. 2." - BS File: FSC013 === NAME: British Soldier (I), The DESCRIPTION: "The war was all ended, And the stars were shining bright" as a soldier lies dying. He sends messages home, telling mother he has kept her gift and promising to meet in heaven. He bids his sister not to weep. He recalls home and the old beech tree AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1929 (Henry, collected from Mae Hardin) KEYWORDS: soldier death farewell mother sister FOUND_IN: US(Ap) REFERENCES: (1 citation) MHenry-Appalachians, pp. 171-172, "The British Soldier" (1 text) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Dying British Sergeant" (subject) File: MHAp171 === NAME: British Soldier (II), The: see The Dying British Sergeant (File: Wa010) === NAME: Brockagh Brae DESCRIPTION: John leaves Mary "to take a trip strange lands to explore." He promises to be true and leaves for Belfast. He sails. When he lands at Greendock [sic] he is told to return home. He does, and returns to Mary. They marry and settle at Brockagh Brae. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1977 (recording, Geordie Hanna) KEYWORDS: courting marriage parting return reunion separation Ireland FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (0 citations) Roud #5171 RECORDINGS: Geordie Hanna, "Brockagh Brae" (on Voice04) NOTES: Hall, notes to Voice04: "'Brockagh Brae' at first sight seems to fall into the category of a footloose young man seeking adventure in emigration, but is actually about the seasonal migration of farm workers to the harvest in Scotland." Brockagh Mountain is in the Dublin/Wicklow area. Greenock is on the west coast of Scotland across the North Channel from Ireland. - BS File: RcBroBra === NAME: Broder Eton Got de Coon: see Uncle Eph (File: RcUncEph) === NAME: Broken Bridges: see London Bridge Is Falling Down (File: R578) === NAME: Broken Engagement (I -- She Was Standing By Her Window), The DESCRIPTION: The girl asks her fiancee if he truly loves another rather than her. He says he does. She releases him from his promise, and says they will be strangers henceforth. She dies; (he realizes as he stands by her coffin that she was his true love) AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1926 (recording, Kelly Harrell) KEYWORDS: love betrayal death FOUND_IN: US(Ap,SE,So) REFERENCES: (5 citations) Randolph 771, "The Broken Engagement" (1 text, 1 tune) Randolph/Cohen, pp. 496-498, "The Broken Engagement" (1 text, 1 tune -- Randolph's 771) MHenry-Appalachians, pp. 147-148, "The Broken Engagement"; pp. 149-150, "He Was Standing By the Window" (2 texts) BrownII 157, "They Were Standing by the Window" (4 texts) Shellans, p. 29, "Broken Engagement" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #3535 RECORDINGS: Emry Arthur, "The Broken Engagement" (Decca 5067, 1935) Betty Garland, "Broken Engagement" (on BGarland01) Kelly Harrell, "Broken Engagement" (Victor 20280, 1926; on KHarrell01) Charlie Oaks, "The Broken Engagement" (Vocalion 15144, 1925; Vocalion 5076, c. 1927) C. A. West, "The Broken Engagement" (Challenge 429, 1928) Henry Whitter, "The Broken Engagement" (OKeh 45081, 1927; rec. 1926); Henry Whitter & Fiddler Joe [Samuels], "The Broken Engagement" (OKeh, unissued, 1926) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Broken Engagement (II)" (lyrics) ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Broken Heart NOTES: Belden and Randolph both have songs from the Ozarks called "The Broken Engagement," and they share some lyrics. But the plots are so distinct that I have to list them as separate songs. Kelly Harrell's song "The Broken Engagement" is again quite different, but it clearly goes with Randolph's text (which it predates and might even have inspired) rather than Belden's. - RBW File: R771 === NAME: Broken Engagement (II -- We Have Met and We Have Parted), The DESCRIPTION: "You may go and win another, Go and win her for your bride." The singer says he has "broke the trust you've plighted." She says not to think of her, though she is true. They will meet as strangers. She will return his letters, and wish they never met AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1903 (Belden) KEYWORDS: love betrayal FOUND_IN: US(SE,So) REFERENCES: (6 citations) Belden, pp. 212-213, "The Broken Engagement" (1 text) BrownII 155, "We Have Met and We Have Parted" (4 texts plus 1 excerpt and mention of 2 more) BrownIII 248, "The Inconstant Lover" (5 texts plus a fragment, admitted by the editors to be distinct songs but with many floating items; "A," "B," and "C" are more "On Top of Old Smokey" than anything else, though without that phrase; "D" is primarily "The Broken Engagement (II -- We Have Met and We Have Parted)," "E" is a mix of "Old Smokey" and "The Cuckoo," and the "F" fragment may also be "Old Smokey") Randolph 755, "The Broken Heart" (9 texts, 2 tunes, several of which, notably "H," but also the "D" fragment, go here or at least mix with this song) MHenry-Appalachians, pp. 165-166, "Last Good-Bye" (1 text) Shellans, p. 42, "We Have Met and We Have Parted" (1 text, 1 tune, which does not mention a broken engagement) Roud #4250 RECORDINGS: Frank Blevins, "We Have Met and We Have Parted (Columbia, 1928; unissued but probably this) Otis High, "Young Ladies Take Warning" (on HandMeDown1) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Broken Engagament (I)" (lyrics) NOTES: Belden and Randolph both have songs from the Ozarks called "The Broken Engagement," and they share some lyrics. But the plots are so distinct that I have to list them as separate songs (note that Randolph also has a text of this song, which he filed with the "Dear Companion/Fond Affection" group). Kelly Harrell's song "The Broken Engagement" is again quite different, but it clearly goes with Randolph's text (which it predates and might even have inspired) rather than Belden's. - RBW File: Beld212 === NAME: Broken Engagement (III): see Broken Ties (I'm Thinking Tonight of My Blue Eyes) (File: BrII156) === NAME: Broken Heart (II -- Dearest One, Don't You Remember) DESCRIPTION: "Dearest one, don't you remember The last time we did part? My feelings of[t]times have been tender While piercing pains roll through my heart." The singer recalls how they loved each other; she says troubles caused them to part. She still dreams of him AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1952 (Brown) KEYWORDS: love separation nonballad FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) BrownII 158, "The Broken Heart" (1 text) Roud #6575 NOTES: Standard treacle, and not necessarily a song; it comes from manuscript. Neither the editors of Brown nor I recognize it. It looks rather composed to me -- it's quite stiff. - RBW File: BrII158 === NAME: Broken Heart, The: see Dear Companion (The Broken Heart; Go and Leave Me If You Wish To, Fond Affection) (File: R755) === NAME: Broken Home, The DESCRIPTION: "The church bells they were ringing... Just two short years ago... Two hearts had been united, Fair (Lillian) and Joe." All was well until a former lover showed up and stole Ann away. Now Joe is left lamenting with a broken home and a child in the cradle AUTHOR: Will H. Fox EARLIEST_DATE: 1927 (Spaeth) KEYWORDS: love marriage betrayal separation FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Randolph 768, "The Broken Home" (1 text, 1 tune) Spaeth-WeepMore, pp. 166-167, "The Broken Home" (1 text, 1 tune) Gilbert, pp. 270-271, "The Broken Home" (1 text) ST R768 (Full) Roud #7411 NOTES: The plot here is sort of a cleaned-up, de-mystified version of the "House Carpenter." It pretty well demonstrates the intellectual impoverishment that results from appealing to popular culture. - RBW File: R768 === NAME: Broken Ring (I), The: see Pretty Fair Maid (The Maiden in the Garden; The Broken Token) [Laws N42] (File: LN42) === NAME: Broken Ring (II), The: see The Dark-Eyed Sailor (Fair Phoebe and her Dark-Eyed Sailor) [Laws N35] (File: LN35) === NAME: Broken Ring Song: see Pretty Fair Maid (The Maiden in the Garden; The Broken Token) [Laws N42] (File: LN42) === NAME: Broken Ring Song fragment: see The Sailor Boy (I) [Laws K12] (File: LK12) === NAME: Broken Ties (I'm Thinking Tonight of My Blue Eyes) DESCRIPTION: "It would have been better for us both to have never In this wicked world never met." The singer recalls how the other once loved (her?); when she is dead, she asks if he will come and shed a tear on her grave AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1929 (recording, Carter Family) KEYWORDS: love betrayal death burial FOUND_IN: US(Ap,SE,So) REFERENCES: (6 citations) BrownII 156, "Broken Ties" (3 texts plus mention of 1 more) Randolph [811], "How Sadly My Heart Yearns Toward You" (omitted from the second edition) Fuson, p. 140, "Broken Vows" (1 text) Cambiaire, p. 60, "Blue Eyes" (1 text) MHenry-Appalachians, p. 167, "Blue Eyes" (1 text) DT, BLUEEYES Roud #460 RECORDINGS: The Carter Family, "I'm Thinking Tonight of My Blue Eyes" (Victor V-40089, 1929; Montgomery Ward M-4230, 1933) (Perfect 35-09-23/Conqueror 8539, 1935) Denver Darling & his Texas Cowhands, "I'm Thinking Tonight of My Blue Eyes" (Decca 46225, 1950) Montana Slim [pseud. for Wilf Carter] "I'm Thinking Tonight of my Blue Eyes" (Bluebird B-9032, 1942) Saddle Tramps, "I'm Thinking Tonight of My Blue Eyes" (Vocalion 04037, 1938) Shelton & Fox, "I'm Thinking Tonight of My Blue Eyes" (Decca 5184, 1936) ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Broken Engagement NOTES: Paul Stamler suggests that we should call this song "I'm Thinking Tonight of My Blue Eyes." Certainly that's the version most of us know today. It appears, however, that the majority of versions are called either "Broken Ties" or "Broken Vows." Of course, the whole family is rather amorphous; I could argue, for instance, for splitting off Fuson's "Broken Vows." As it is, I split it more than Roud, who also includes the "Forget You I Never May" family here. Pre-Carter Family texts of this seem to lack the "Blue Eyes" chorus, but some later versions (e.g. the "C" text in Brown, from 1930) add it; there may be some sort of cause and effect. - RBW File: BrII156 === NAME: Broken Vows: see Broken Ties (I'm Thinking Tonight of My Blue Eyes) (File: BrII156) === NAME: Broken-Down Sport: see The Tramp (II) (File: R843) === NAME: Broken-Down Squatter, The DESCRIPTION: "For the banks are all broken they say, And the merchants are all up a tree, When the bigwigs are brought to the bankruptcy court, what chance for a squatter like me?" Tales of a (bankrupt and now wandering) squatter's life in depression times AUTHOR: Charles Flower EARLIEST_DATE: 1905 (Paterson, _Old Bush Songs_) KEYWORDS: horse poverty Australia hardtimes FOUND_IN: Australia REFERENCES: (4 citations) Meredith/Anderson, pp. 42-43, 236-237, "The Broken-Down Squatter" (2 texts, 2 tunes) Manifold-PASB, pp. 154-155, "The Broken-Down Squatter" (1 text, 1 tune) Paterson/Fahey/Seal, pp. 115-118, "The Broken-Down Squatter" (1 text) DT, BRKSQUAT* Roud #8392 NOTES: Meredith and Anderson date this to a period of economic downturn between 1891 and 1893. The Penguin Book of Australian Folksongs dates it to the 1880s. Patterson/Fahey/Seal says that Flower was driven off his property by the economic troubles of the 1880s, so perhaps that is the most likely date. - RBW File: MA042 === NAME: Broken-hearted Boy, The: see The Girl I Left Behind [Laws P1A/B] (File: LP01) === NAME: Broken-Hearted Gardener, The DESCRIPTION: "I'm a broken-hearted gardener and don't know what to do, My love she is inconstant and a fickle jade too." The singer calls her his myrtle, geranium, and other flowers. He botanically describes his misery, but rejects suicide because she wants him dead AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1933 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: love abandonment flowers suicide FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H499, pp. 387-388, "The Broken-Hearted Gardener" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #7966 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Broken-Hearted Fish Fag" NOTES: This resembles "The Gardener" (Child #219) in its use of flowers to describe emotions, but doesn't use the same sort of emotional symbolism. To this singer, the girl is the flower; in "The Gardener," the flowers describe their relationship. The fullest description of flower symbolism I've found is from a piece in Norman Ault, _Elizabethan Lyrics From the Original Texts_, pp. 69-73, "A Nosegay Always Sweet, for Lovers to Send for Tokens of Loave at New Year's Tide, Or for Fairings," which was printed 1584. It offers this list: "Lavender is for lovers true.... "Rosemary is for remembrance.... "Sage is for sustenance.... "Fennel is for flatterers.... "Violet is for faithfulness.... "Thyme is to try me [the usual meaning is of course virginity].... "Roses is to rule me.... "Gillyflowers is for gentleness.... "Carnations is for graciousness.... "Marigolds is for marriage.... "Pennyroyal is to print your love So deep within my heart.... Cowslips is for counsel...." It will be noted that many of the gardener's flowers aren't in this list. File: HHH499 === NAME: Broncho Buster, The: see The Bucking Broncho (The Broncho Buster) [Laws B15] (File: LB15) === NAME: Bronco Buster, The DESCRIPTION: "I once knew a guy that thought he was swell... He tooted and spouted... He could ride any critter that ever wore hair." A group of cowboys bring a horse, Sue, to test him. He is thrown: "The evidence shows that he didn't make good." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1973 KEYWORDS: cowboy horse recitation FOUND_IN: US(MW) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ohrlin-HBT 82, "The Bronco Buster" (1 text) File: Ohr082 === NAME: Brookfield Murder, The [Laws F8] DESCRIPTION: Joseph Buzzell, who is being sued by Susan Hanson for breach of (marriage) contract, hires [Charles] Cook to kill her. The body is discovered by the family. Young ladies are warned against "reptiles" such as Buzzell AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1939 (Linscott) KEYWORDS: homicide corpse HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1847 - Joseph Buzzell arranges for the murder of Susan Hanson. The murder is carried out by Charles Cook, who is mentally handicapped. Buzzell was therefore executed and Cook condemned to life in prison FOUND_IN: US(NE) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Laws F8, "The Brookfield Murder" Linscott, pp.175-177, "The Brookfield Murder" (1 text, 1 tune) Botkin-NEFolklr, pp. 552-553, "The Brookfield Murder" (1 text, 1 tune) DT 667, BROOKFLD* Roud #2257 NOTES: Although Linscott's text, seemingly the only collected and printed version (Botkin's version is from Linscott) calls the girl "Hanson," Laws at one point calls her "Heston." Typo? - RBW File: LF08 === NAME: Brooklyn Fire, The: see The Brooklyn Theatre Fire [Laws G27] (File: LG27) === NAME: Brooklyn Theatre Fire, The [Laws G27] DESCRIPTION: A large audience is in the Brooklyn Theatre (to watch a performance of "The Two Orphans"). The scenery catches fire and the crowd panics. The next day the theatre is a charred ruin packed with bodies. A mass funeral is planned AUTHOR: P. J. Downey EARLIEST_DATE: 1926 (Randolph) KEYWORDS: fire death funeral disaster HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: Dec 5, 1876 - 295 people die in a fire at a Brooklyn theatre FOUND_IN: US(ME,So) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Laws G27, "The Brooklyn Theatre Fire" Randolph 688, "The Brooklyn Fire" (1 text) DT 640, BRKLYNFR* Roud #3258 File: LG27 === NAME: Broom o the Cowdenknowes (II - lyric), The DESCRIPTION: "How blythe each more was I to see My lass come ower the hill, She tripped the burn and ran to me, I met her wi' good will." The singer is exiled for loving the girl (who is above his station?). "To wander by her side again Is a' I crave or care." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1797 (_Scots Musical Museum_, #69); almost certainly in existence in some form by 1750 (see notes) KEYWORDS: love separation exile FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Bronson 217, "The Broom of Cowdenknows" (21 versions+1 in addenda; the #4 version belongs here, implying that at least some of #1-#6 also go with this piece) BarryEckstormSmyth pp. 293-295, "The Broom of Cowden-Knowes" (1 excerpt plus a text and tune from the Child ballad) DT, COWDENKN* Roud #8209 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Broom of Cowdenknows" [Child 217] (tune & meter) NOTES: Although this song is very popular in folk revival circles (probably because it has the excellent "Cowdenknowes" tune but is short), it is much less popular in tradition than its ballad cousin. It's interesting to note that the _Scots Musical Museum_ version, which is by far the earliest known to me, is longer than any I've ever heard sung: Eight stanzas plus the chorus. I rather suspect rewriting, because some of the verses are pretty poor. The tune is not quite the same as what we usually hear today. That the song is even older than that seems nearly certain from the existence of a broadside, NLScotland, Ry .III.a.10(007), "The New Way of the Broom of Cowden Knows," unknown, n.d. Said broadside clearly is based on this song -- the lyric begins "Hard Fate that I should banishet be, And Revell called with Scorn. For serving of a Lovely Prince, As e'er yet was Born. O the Broom, the Bonny Broom, The Broom of Cowding (sic.) knows, I wish his Frinds had Stayed at home, Milking there Dadys Ewes." There can be no question that this is a Jacobite song. The notes at the NLScotland site suspect it of coming from the 1715 rebellion, probably because it mentions Huntly and his treachery, plus Seaforth. I'd be more inclined to date it to 1746, because 1. It refers to a *prince* (James III was King, in the Jacobite view, in 1715 as well as 1745), and it wishes his friends had stayed at home -- a much more likely sentiment after 1746, when the Highlanders were ruined, than in 1715, when nothing much happened. Either way, though, the broadside is strong evidence for the existence of the lyric version of "Broom" long before the 1797 publication. - RBW File: DTcowden === NAME: Broom of Cowdenknows, The [Child 217] DESCRIPTION: A gentleman sees a pretty (shepherdess), and lies with her (without her leave). She becomes pregnant. Some weeks or months later, the gentleman returns and claims her for his own AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1768 (Percy collection; tune mentioned 1632) KEYWORDS: seduction pregnancy abandonment return marriage bastard FOUND_IN: Britain(England,Scotland(Aber)) US(NE) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Child 217, "The Broom of Cowdenknows" (15 texts) Bronson 217, "The Broom of Cowdenknows" (21 versions+1 in addenda) BarryEckstormSmyth pp. 293-295, "The Broom of Cowden-Knowes" (1 text plus an excerpt from "Broom (II)," 1 tune) {Bronson's #21} Roud #92 RECORDINGS: Stanley Robertson, "The Ballad of the Ewe Buchts" (on Voice06) BROADSIDES: Murray, Mu23-y1:041, "Ewe Buchts," James Lindsay Jr. (Glasgow), 19C NLScotland, L.C.1270(004), "Ewe Buchts," unknown, n.d. (the site says 1840-1850, but a second ballad on the sheet refers to [Charles Stewart] Parnell, which puts it least thirty years after that); also L.C.Fol.70(2b), "Ewe Buchts," unknown, n.d. CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Wylie Wife of the Hie Toun Hie" [Child 290] (plot) cf. "The Dainty Doonby" (plot) cf. "The Sleepy Merchant" (plot) cf. "The Bonnie Parks o' Kilty" (plot) cf. "A Nobleman" (plot) cf. "The Broom o the Cowdenknowes (II - lyric)" (tune & meter) SAME_TUNE: The New Way of the Broom of Cowden Knowes (Broadside NLScotland, Ry.III.a.10(007), "The New Way of the Broom of Cowden Knowes" ("Hard Fate that I should banisht be, And Rebell called with Scorn, for serving of a Lovely Prince, As e'er yet was born"), unknown, prob. 1716) The Glasgow Factory Lass (per broadside Murray, Mu23-y1:010, "The Glasgow Factory Lass," unknown (Glasgow), no date) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Laird o Ociltree Wa's Laird o Lochnie Ewe Buchts NOTES: Note that this melody is used for two pieces, both called "Broom o' the Cowdenknow(e)s," and both Scottish: The ballad listed here, and a more lyric piece about a man who must leave home because he fell in love with a girl above his station. Although the texts of this piece are generally quite late, the tune appears much older. BBI ZN2610, "Through Lidderdale as lately I went," registered in 1632, claims a "pleasant Scotch tune, called, The broom of Cowdenknowes" as its melody. It's ironic to add that the tune you've almost certainly heard for this song (Bronson's #1) is from Playford, without lyrics -- and neither the Playford tune nor any of its immediate relatives in Bronson has a text (Bronson's group Aa includes six tunes; #4 has a single stanza of lyrics, the rest none -- and that stanza in #4 is the lyric version of the song, not the ballad!). - RBW File: C217 === NAME: Broom, Green Broom: see Green Broom (File: ShH49) === NAME: Broomfield Hill, The [Child 43] DESCRIPTION: A girl wagers with a boy that "a maid I will go to the Broomfield Hill and a maid I shall return." At home she regrets her error, but a witch tells her how to make her love sleep on the hill. She arrives on the hill, leaves a token, and wins her wager AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1769 (Herd) KEYWORDS: magic wager sex trick witch FOUND_IN: Britain(England,Scotland) US(Ap,NE) Canada(Mar,Newf) Ireland REFERENCES: (14 citations) Child 43, "The Broomfield Hill" (6 texts) Bronson 43, "The Broomfield Hill" (30 versions -- but the last six are "The Maid on the Shore" -- plus 1 in addenda) BarryEckstormSmyth pp. 438-442, "The Broomfield Hill" (1 songster version plus extensive notes) Flanders-Ancient1, pp. 275-279, "The Broomfield Hill" (1 text, 1 tune) Leach, pp. 150-152, "The Broomfield Hill" (1 text) OBB 24, "The Broomfield Hill" (1 text) Friedman, p. 148, "The Broomfield Hill" (1 text) PBB 16, "The Broomfield Hill" (1 text) Vaughan Williams/Lloyd, p. 26, "The Broomfield Hill" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #23} Combs/Wilgus 11, pp. 113-114, "The Broomfield Hill" (1 text) SHenry H135, p. 414, "The Broomfield Hill" (1 text, 1 tune) MacSeegTrav 7, "The Broomfield Hill" (1 text, 1 tune) DT 43, BROOMFLD* BROMFLD2* BROMFLD3 ADDITIONAL: Walter de la Mare, _Come Hither_, revised edition, 1928; #325, "The Broomfield Hill" (1 text) Roud #34 RECORDINGS: George Maynard, "A Wager, A Wager" (on Maynard1) Walter Pardon, "Broomfield Hill" (on WPardon01, HiddenE) Cyril Poacher, "Broomfield Hill (The Broomfield Wager)" (on FSB4, FSBBAL1) (on Poacher1) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Maid on the Shore (The Maid on the Sea Shore; The Sea Captain)" [Laws K27] cf. "Martinmas Time" cf. "Lovely Joan" cf. "The Maid and the Horse" cf. "The Sleepy Merchant" (plot) cf. "Geaftai Bhaile Atha Bui (The Gates of Ballaghbuoy)" (plot) ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Broomfield Wager Green Broom The Merry Green Fields NOTES: For some inexplicable reason, the notes in Sam Henry claim that H133, "Bess of Ballymoney" (p. 461) is this song. I believe this is an accidental repetition of the notes on H135. - RBW File: C043 === NAME: Broomhill's Bonnie Daughter DESCRIPTION: "'Twas at the summer feeing time, When ploughmen lads they fee, That I engaged with Broomhill His foremost lad to be." The daughter of the place steals his heart; he tries to win her; she agrees, saying she loved him at first sight also AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1930 (Ord) KEYWORDS: farming courting marriage FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ord, p. 232-233, "Broomhill's Bonnie Dochter" (1 text) Roud #2175 File: Ord232 === NAME: Broomhill's Bonnie Dochter: see Broomhill's Bonnie Daughter (File: Ord232) === NAME: Broon Cloak On, The: see The Broon Cloak (File: FVS086) === NAME: Broon Cloak, The DESCRIPTION: "Some lads are ne'er at rest Till wi' crowds o' lassies press'd... But pleasure mair I find... Wi' ae lassie true and kind, And her broon cloak on." Relatives warn the lad of falling in love too young or wrongly, but he still loves the brown-cloaked girl AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1904 (Ford) KEYWORDS: love clothes family warning mother FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ford-Vagabond, pp. 86-88, "The Broon Cloak On" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #5648 File: FVS086 === NAME: Brother Ephrum Got de Coon and Gone On: see Uncle Eph (File: RcUncEph) === NAME: Brother Green DESCRIPTION: The dying singer asks Brother Green to write a letter to his wife, "For the southern foe has laid me low." He prays for his family, tells his wife not to grieve, and remembers his brothers who are fellow soldiers for the Union. He prays (and dies) AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1908 (Belden) KEYWORDS: Civilwar dying soldier FOUND_IN: US(Ap,MW,SE,So) REFERENCES: (11 citations) Belden, p. 377, "Brother Green" (1 fragment) Randolph 211, "Brother Green" (2 texts, 1 tune) Eddy 111, "The Song of Brother Green" (1 text, 1 tune) Wyman-Brockway I, p. 18 "Brother Green, or the Dying Soldier" (1 text, 1 tune) Fuson, pp. 193-194, "Brother Green" (1 text) Cambiaire, pp. 13-14, "The Dying Soldier" (1 text) MHenry-Appalachians, pp. 212-213, "Brother Green" (1 text) JHCox 72, "Brother Green" (2 texts) BrownIII 393, "Brother Green" (1 very full text plus mention of 2 more) Brewster 47, "Brother Green" (1 text) Silber-CivWar, p. 15, "Brother Green" (1 text, 1 tune) ST R211 (Partial) Roud #3395 RECORDINGS: Carter Family, "The Dying Soldier" (Montgomery Ward M-4735, 1935) Clarence Ganus, "The Dying Soldier" (Vocalion 5396, 1930; rec. 1929) Buell Kazee, "The Dying Soldier" (Brunswick 214, 1928; on TimesAint01, KMM) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Barbara Allen" (tune) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Go Tell Little Mary Not to Weep NOTES: Various legends swirl about the origin of this song; they are not compelling. Although every text known to me is from the Civil War (usually Union; Randolph mentions a Confederate text), the name, style, and reference to the Virgin Mary (in some versions; others manage to cover it up) lead one to suspect Irish ancestry. - RBW File: R211 === NAME: Brother Jim Got Shot DESCRIPTION: Singer and brother Jim start a fight in a restaurant; Jim is shot and killed. Jury says singer is innocent. Singer's wife gets scared one night, and a mouse runs down her throat. Later, she swallows a rat, cat, cheese. Jury still says singer is innocent. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1962 KEYWORDS: fight homicide trial death humorous nonsense animal wife FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (0 citations) Roud #16643 RECORDINGS: Dock Boggs, "Brother Jim Got Shot" (on Boggs2, BoggsCD1) NOTES: This song, almost certainly of minstrel-show origin, probably circulated as a "ballot" (song sheet). For sheer surrealism, it's up there with the works of Uncle Dave Macon. - PJS File: RcBJGS === NAME: Brother Jonah DESCRIPTION: Brother Jonah is called to duty, but is reluctant and goes to sea; the winds begin to blow, and the whale swallows him. The whale feels ill, and eventually throws Jonah up. Refrain: "Yessir, the whale he swallowed Brother Jon-oh. Oh! Brother! Jon-oh!" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1932 (recording, Famous Blue Jay Singers of Birmingham) KEYWORDS: travel storm Bible religious animal whale FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (0 citations) RECORDINGS: Famous Blue Jay Singers of Birmingham, "Brother Jonah" (Champion 50025, c. 1935; rec. 1932; on VocQ2) NOTES: The story of Jonah and his travels is, of course, the subject of the Biblical book of Jonah. The Bible, however, consistently calls the sea creature that swallowed him a "fish." - RBW File: RcBrotJo === NAME: Brother Noah DESCRIPTION: "Brother Noah, Brother Noah, May I come into the Ark of the Lord, For it's growing very dark and it's raining very hard." Noah says that the other cannot come aboard. The rejected man curses Noah and predicts light rain. Noah says it will rain like hell AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1948 (Shay) KEYWORDS: religious ship rejection FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Shay-SeaSongs, pp. 200-201, "Brother Noah" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #8821 File: ShaSS200 === NAME: Brother's Revenge: see The Cruel Brother [Child 11] (File: C011) === NAME: Brothers John and Henry Sheares, The DESCRIPTION: The singer recalls the sentencing and execution. The informer watches. The verdict is guilty. "One day between the sentence and the scaffold." No sword is raised to save them. They are beheaded. The bodies in their coffins are "life-like to this day" AUTHOR: "Speranza" (Jane Francesca Elgee, Lady Wilde) (source: Hayes) EARLIEST_DATE: 1855 (Edward Hayes, _The Ballads of Ireland_ (Boston, 1859), Vol I) KEYWORDS: rebellion betrayal execution trial patriotic brother HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: July 14, 1798 - John and Henry Sheares, members of the National Directory of the United Irishmen, hanged. (source: Moylan) FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (2 citations) Moylan 107, "The Brothers John and Henry Sheares" (1 text) ADDITIONAL: Edward Hayes, The Ballads of Ireland (Boston, 1859), Vol I, pp. 240-242, "The Brothers" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Tree of Liberty" (same subject from the other side) NOTES: Moylan: The brothers were hanged [not beheaded]. As described in the ballad, the informer, Captain John Warneford Armstrong, had "enjoyed the hospitality of their family home." Further, the "bodies lie in the vaults of St Michan's Church in Church Street, Dublin, where they remain in a state of preservation due to some remarkable property of their surroundings." - BS Robert Kee (in _The Most Distressful Country_, being volume I of _The Green Flag_, p. 46) writes of John Sheares, "His death was in fact to be particularly ignominius, for by some clumsiness on the part of the executioner he was hauled up on the rope for nearly a minute before being lowered again to the platform for his final drop." Kee also notes his lack of fame: "He has a small street named after him in Cork but otherwise his name... has little popular appear in modern republican Ireland." And, indeed, three of the first four histories I checked do not even mention the Sheares Brothers. Yet the two were among the most important figures of 1798. When the British captured most of the leaders of the United Ireland movement in March of that year, "leadership of the metropolitan organization... devolved on Lord Edward [Fitzgerald, for whom see "Edward (III) (Edward Fitzgerald)"], John and Henry Sheares and, recently released from prison, Samuel Neilson. All, including a fatally wounded Lord Edward, were in custody by the eve of the rebellion" (from Jim Smyth, _The Men of No Property_, p. 176). The informer Captain Armstrong did indeed betray them, but much of the fault belongs with the rebels. Thomas Pakenham, in _The Year of Liberty_, p. 78, tells of how Armstrong visited tbe bookstore of Patrick Byrne. He browsed "left-wing pamphlets," and apparently this was enough to cause Byrne to introduce him to the Sheares brothers, and enough to make them trust him! Pakenham, p. 81, reports that "Lawless and the Sheares brothers staked all on the loyalty of... Captain John Warneford Armstrong." To be sure, Pakenham notes that these leaders were now effectively cut off from the rest of the United Irish movement, including all the fighters they had so painfully raised. They needed help from the other side -- Armstrong. They didn't get it. Pakenham, p. 90, reports that the brothers were lawyers with no understanding of military issues anyway. What leadership they did apply was largely negated by another government spy, Francis Mangan, who had actually been appointed to the Directory (Pakenham, p. 91). The Sheares Brothers resigned from the Directory shortly before the rising began (Pakenham, p. 92). On May 21, the brothers were arrested, and a proclamation of independence, in the handwriting of John Sheares, was found among their papers (Pakenham, p. 96). Their trial came a month and a half later. Pakenham (pp. 285-287) describes it as all hanging on the testimony of Armstrong, a self-declared atheist and liberal. In a truly ironic twist, the lawyer for the Sheares Brothers, John Philpot Curran (for whom see "The Deserter's Lamentation" and "Emmet's Farewell to His Sweetheart") tried to use the fact that Armstrong was a follower of Thomas Paine (who of course inspired much of the Irish thinking) as reason not to trust his testimony. It didn't help. The jury (which apparently was carefully chosen) declared both brothers guilty in just 17 minutes. They were hanged the following day, and apparently their heads were severed after death. Moylan's statement about the preservation of the body perhaps requires some caution. Pakenham's account (p. 287) describes a shorter term of preservation: "In the peculiar atmosphere of [St. Michan's], the coffins soon crumbled away. Twenty years later Curran's son visited the place and was shown the severed heads, trunks, and 'the hand that once traced those lines' not yet mouldered into dust." Of course, that account was contemporary when "Speranza" was born. "Speranza," a frequent contributor to the nationalist publication _The Nation_ was in fact Jane Francesca Elgee (died 1896; birth date variously listed from "c. 1820" to 1826, but 1821 is the most common). She wrote much Irish nationalist poetry, most of it after the death of that paper's founder Thomas Davis in 1845, though only a few pieces can be found in present-day anthologies. (_Granger's Index to Poetry_, in fact, cites only one: "The Famine Year": "Weary men, what reap ye? -- 'Golden corn for the stranger.' What sow ye? -- 'Human corses that wait for the avenger.' Fainting forms, hunger-stricken, what see ye in the offing? 'Stately ships to bear our food away amid the stranger's scoffing....'" (For the full text, see Kathleen Hoagland, editor, _One Thousand Years of Irish Poetry_ (New York, 1947), pp. 494-496, or Charles Sullivan, editor, _Ireland in Poetry_, (Abrams, 1990), pp. 98-99.) Terry Golway (_For the Cause of Liberty_, p. 111) describes her as "tall, dark, and attractive" (which, if the portrait he prints on page 110 is to believed, strikes me as an understatement), and a heavy reader. Still, she married rather late; it was not until 1851 that she wed Sir William Wilde. They had two sons; the younger of them was Oscar Wilde. For a poem possibly by John Sheares himself, see "The Shamrock Cockade." - RBW File: Moyl107 === NAME: Broughty Wa's [Child 258] DESCRIPTION: Burd Helen, heir of Broughty Walls, is being visited by her beloved when she is abducted by armed Highlanders. Her kidnappers try to console her, but she refuses comfort. At her first chance, she swims to escape, while one who pursues her drowns AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: KEYWORDS: drowning abduction love separation escape FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland(South)) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Child 258, "Broughty Wa's' (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #1} Bronson 258, "Broughty Wa's' (1 version) Roud #108 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Glasgow Peggy" [Child 228] NOTES: It appears to me that Child has misinterpreted this ballad (which seems to be missing a key stanza or two). He believes that, when Helen is kidnapped, her love Glenhazlen follows, and it is he who drowns when she flees across the river. There is, however, no evidence in the text that her lover followed; all we know is that, after she threw herself into the water, "It was sae deep he [who "he" is is unidentified] couldna wide, Boats werna to be found, But he leapt in after himsell, And sunk down like a stone." Also, Helen rejoices at her freedom following her escape. So it sounds to me as if one of the Highlanders (presumably the prospective husband) is the one who drowned, not Helen's lover. - RBW File: C258 === NAME: Brow of Sweet Knocklayd DESCRIPTION: The singer recalls watching the lambs play by sunset on Knocklayd. Now she (?) must leave friends and parens behind "to cross the ocean to some far-off foreign shore." The song ends with the moon rising over Knocklayd AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1924 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: emigration FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H19b, p. 196, "Brow of Sweet Knocklayd" (1 text, tune referenced) File: HHH019b === NAME: Brown Adam [Child 98] DESCRIPTION: Brown Adam is a smith, banished from his kin. He builds a bower where he lives with his love. He goes hunting, returns to overhear a knight attempting to woo his love, finally threatening her life. He rescues his love, defeating the knight. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1494 (Ritson-Tytler-Brown ms.) KEYWORDS: knight love separation home hunting courting rejection FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland(Aber)) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Child 98, "Brown Adam" (3 texts, 1 tune) {Bronson's #2} Bronson 98, "Brown Adam" (2 versions) OBB 48, "Brown Adam" (1 text) DT, BRNADAM* Roud #482 File: C098 === NAME: Brown and Yellow Ale, The DESCRIPTION: The singer and his wife are walking when they meet the Brown and Yellow (Ale/Earl). He asks to take the wife aside. When she returns, he is so ashamed that he dies and is buried AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1983 (Harte), and said to have been sung by James Joyce; the Irish is older KEYWORDS: seduction drink nobility death adultery FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (2 citations) DT, BRWNYLLW BRWNYEL2 ADDITIONAL: Frank Harte _Songs of Dublin_, second edition, Ossian, 1993, pp. 80-81, "The Brown and Yellow Ale" (1 text, 1 tune) ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Brown and Yellow Earl NOTES: Reportedly a translation of the Irish "Chuaca Lan De Bui." Several translations are said to exist, including one by James Joyce. What's interesting is the two titles: "The Brown and Yellow Ale," apparently Dominic Behan's title and followed by Harte, and "The Brown and Yellow Earl," which I heard from Debby McClatchy. Obviously one could be an error of hearing for the other -- indeed, *must* be an error of hearing, since the mistake could not occur in print. And yet, how could such an error slip through? There seem to be no genuinely traditional collections to explain it. And which is original? Presumably the Irish Gaelic would make it clear, but I failed to turn up a reliable text, and Cliff Abrams did an earlier search which didn't net much either, at least in the way of genuine folk sources. "Ale" seems much the more strongly attested -- but it hardly makes sense. Harte offers Sean O'Boyle's explanation, which is that drink has rendered the husband impotent so that his wife prefers a younger man. This is possible, but a stretch. Whereas if the Brown and Yellow item is an Earl, then he is exercising droit de siegneur, and the husband is a cuckold and commits suicide as a result. This makes perfect sense. The flip side is, it makes such perfect sense that it's hard to imagine the change going the other way. So I think the weight of evidence favours "Brown and Yellow Ale." I wouldn't bet much on it, though. - RBW File: Hart080 === NAME: Brown and Yellow Earl, The: see The Brown and Yellow Ale (File: Hart080) === NAME: Brown Flour DESCRIPTION: Hard times on Fogo. All we get is brown flour from Russia that won't rise, makes you "merry" and smells like banana. Merchants say we owe them money. You trade work for government rations: "you must shovel snow, This will help 'em reduce the taxation." AUTHOR: Chris Cobb EARLIEST_DATE: 1952 (Peacock) KEYWORDS: poverty hardtimes starvation nonballad political food FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Peacock, pp. 46-47, "Brown Flour" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #9946 RECORDINGS: Ken Peacock, "Brown Flour, 1926" (on NFKPeacock) NOTES: Per Peacock: the song dates from the late twenties or thirties. Fogo is off the northeast coast of Newfoundland. - BS File: Pea046 === NAME: Brown Girl (I), The [Child 295] DESCRIPTION: The Brown Girl's former lover tells her he cannot marry her because she is so brown. She cares not. He writes again, saying he is sick and asking her to release him from his promise. She comes slowly and releases him, but promises to dance on his grave AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1788 KEYWORDS: courting promise betrayal revenge death FOUND_IN: Britain(England,Scotland(Aber,High)) Canada(Mar) Ireland US(MW,NE,NW,SE,So) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Child 295, "The Brown Girl" (2 texts) Bronson 295, "The Brown Girl" (49 versions+2 in addenda, but mostly these are Laws P9; of the 49, #1, #3, #8, #13, #16, #17, (#19), #24, #25, #35, #36, #41, #44, #8.1 are listed by Laws as "A Rich Irish Lady," as is #8 though it mixes with "The Death of Queen Jane"; #2, #5, #10, #15, #20, #21, #29, #32a/b, #34, #37, #38(a), #45, #47, #49, #41.1 are apparently LP9 as well; #4, #6, #7, #11, #31, #39, #42 are fragments which appear more likely to be LP9; #14, #22, #23, #27 are fragments identified by Laws with LP9 though this cannot be proved; #9 (Baring-Gould's) is definitely the Child version, and #33, #48 probably; #18 is a fragment that might be part of "Glenlogie"; #26, #28 have no text; #30, #40, #43 might be either) Leach, pp. 678-680, "The Brown Girl" (2 texts, but "B" is Laws P9) OBB 157, "The Brown Girl" (1 text) Roud #180 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. esp. "A Rich Irish Lady (The Fair Damsel from London; Sally and Billy; The Sailor from Dover; Pretty Sally; etc.)" [Laws P9] cf. "Lord Thomas and Fair Annet" [Child 73] NOTES: Identified by some (including Roud) with the ballad Laws calls "A Rich Irish Lady" and Randolph labels "Pretty Sally of London." The difference between the two is that, in "The Brown Girl," the girl is unforgiving; in "Pretty Sally" it is the man. Laws therefore declares that the two ballads are related but distinct. It should be observed that "A Rich Irish Lady" is much, much, much more popular; other than Baring-Gould's text (Child's B), I know of no traditional texts of the Child song. Any text listed as Child 295 should be carefully checked to see if it is not Laws P9 instead. No attempt has been made to list here all the songs claimed as Child #295 when in fact they are Laws P9. For further discussion on this point, including the opinions of various editors on the matter, see the entry on Laws P9. - RBW File: C295 === NAME: Brown Girl (II), The: see Lord Thomas and Fair Annet [Child 73] (File: C073) === NAME: Brown Girl (III), The: see The Banks of the Bann (I) [Laws O2] (File: LO02) === NAME: Brown Jug, The (Bounce Around) DESCRIPTION: "I (took/sent) my brown jug down to town (x3) So early in the morning (or "Tra de al de ay," etc.)." "It came back with a bounce around (or "all flounced around")...." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1928 (Randolph) KEYWORDS: playparty nonballad FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Randolph 534, The Brown Jug (2 texts, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 387, "I Sent My Brown Jug Downtown" (1 text, with some verses apparently from "Coffee Grows (Four in the Middle)") Roud #7644 RECORDINGS: Pete Seeger, "Play Party" (on PeteSeeger07, PeteSeeger07b) (on PeteSeeger22) File: R534 === NAME: Brown Robyn [Child 97] DESCRIPTION: The (king's) daughter loves lowly Brown Robyn, informs him so by song, sneaks him in to her bower, sneaks him out again by dressing him as one of her ladies. (His is shot by a suspicious porter who is hanged for it/They are allowed to marry.) AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: KEYWORDS: love disguise cross-dressing marriage death royalty FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland(Aber)) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Child 97, "Brown Robin" (3 texts, 1 tune) {Bronson's #1} Bronson 97, "Brown Robin" (2 versions) PBB 58, "Brown Robin" (1 text) DBuchan 18, "Brown Robin" (1 text, 1 tune in appendix) {Bronson's #1} Roud #62 File: C097 === NAME: Brown Robyn's Confession [Child 57] DESCRIPTION: Brown Robyn and his men go to sea and meet a fierce storm. They cast lots to learn who is to blame, and Brown Robyn himself is thrown overboard. He sees the Virgin Mary, who offers to let him come to heaven or return to his men. He chooses heaven AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: KEYWORDS: ship crime sea storm religious incest FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (6 citations) Child 57, "Brown Robyn's Confession" (1 text) Bronson (57) [Brown Robin's Confession], comments only with the tune belonging to "Captain Glen" OBB 21, "Brown Robyn's Confession" (1 text) PBB 8, "Brown Robyn's Confession" (1 text) Gummere, pp. 142-143+331, "Brown Robyne's Confession" (1 text) ADDITIONAL: Walter de la Mare, _Come Hither_, revised edition, 1928; #412, "Brown Robyn" (1 text) Roud #3882 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Captain Glen/The New York Trader (The Guilty Sea Captain A/B)" [Laws K22] (Jonah theme) cf. "Willie Was As Fine a Sailor" (Jonah theme) NOTES: This appears to be the only legitimate ballad that supports the doctrine of Justification by Faith. It is rather odd to find such a thing in Presbyterian Scotland. Especially given that Robyn had had incestuous relations with both his mother and his sister. - RBW The theme of the sailor thrown overboard to calm a storm sent by God is found in Jonah 1.1-16. - BS File: C057 === NAME: Brown-Eyed Boy: see Likes Likker Better Than Me (Brown-Eyed Boy) (File: CSW075) === NAME: Brown-Eyed Gypsies, The: see The Gypsy Laddie [Child 200] (File: C200) === NAME: Brown-Eyed Lee DESCRIPTION: "Kind friends, if you will listen, A story I will tell, About a final dust-up...." The singer courts Brown-Eyed Lee; her parents disapprove. He says he will win her anyway, but she proved untrue. He curses the day he met Lee but can't forget her AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1931 (Larkin); reportedly written 1889 KEYWORDS: cowboy love betrayal mother FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (1 citation) Larkin, pp. 72-74, "Brown-Eyed Lee" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #4042 NOTES: This song is item dB35 in Laws's Appendix II. It supposed was composed by the rejected lover himself. For once, this seems rather likely, because he clearly can't decide if he hates or loves her. - RBW File: Lark072 === NAME: Brown-Haired Lass, The DESCRIPTION: The singer bids farewell to country and to the brown-haired lass. He describes courting the girl, and their sad farewell. He says he will never be happy until he marries the girl. As the ship sets sail, he offers a toast to her AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1926 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: emigration parting separation love courting FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H116a+c, pp. 201-202, "The Brown-Haird Lass (a), (b)" (2 texts, 2 tunes) File: HHH116a === NAME: Brown-Skinned Woman, A DESCRIPTION: "A brown-skinned woman and she's choc'late to de bone, A brown-skinned woman and she smells like toilet soap...." The woman can make a train slide, or make a preacher "lay his Bible down"; "I married a woman, she was even tailor-made." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1925 (Scarborough) KEYWORDS: courting marriage Black(s) FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Scarborough-NegroFS, p. 278, "A Brown-Skinned Woman" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #11639 NOTES: Scarborough lists this as a blues; neither the form nor the apparent happiness of the singer supports this conclusion. - RBW File: ScNF278A === NAME: Brown's Ferry Blues DESCRIPTION: About a "hard-luck papa," etc.; "Hard-luck papa counting his toes... smell his feet wherever he goes"; "Hard-luck papa standing in the rain/If the world was corn, he couldn't buy grain"; "Refrain: "Lord, lord, got those Brown's Ferry blues." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1934 (recording, Delmore Brothers) KEYWORDS: humorous nonballad floatingverses FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (3 citations) Cohen/Seeger/Wood, pp. 224-225, "Brown's Ferry Blues" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 73, "Brown's Ferry Blues" (1 text) DT, BRWNFERY RECORDINGS: Frank Bode, "Brown's Ferry Blues" (on FBode1) Bill Cox, "Brown's Ferry Blues" (Melotone 13161/Oriole 8380, 1934) Delmore Bros., "Brown's Ferry Blues" (Bluebird B-5403, 1934) (King 592, 1947) McGee Brothers (Sam, Kirk), "Brown's Ferry Blues" (Decca 5348, 1937); (Champion 45033, 1935) New Lost City Ramblers, "Brown's Ferry Blues" (on NLCR01, NLCRCD1) (NLCR12) (NLCR16) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Jackhammer John" (tune) cf. "Dog House Blues" (tune) cf. "Rubberneck Blues" (tune) SAME_TUNE: Shirt Factory Blues (by Cleda Helton and James Pyle) (Greenway-AFP, p. 143) Philyaw Brothers, "Brown's Ferry Blues, No. 4" (Vocalion 04186, 1938) [that's not a misprint, I said Philyaw - PJS] Delmore Brothers, "Brown's Ferry Blues - Part 2" (Bluebird B-5893, 1935; Montgomery Ward M-4553, c. 1935) Callahan Brothers, "Brown's Ferry Blues - No. 2" (Melotone 6-04-59/Perfect 6-04-59/Conqueror 8627, 1936 [as Walter Callahan]) Log Cabin Boys, "New Brown's Ferry Blues" (Decca 5103, 1935) NOTES: Both the McGee Brothers and the Delmore Brothers claim authorship of this piece. The obvious conclusion is that neither actually wrote it. - RBW File: CSW224 === NAME: Bruce's Log Camp: see Burns's Log Camp (File: Doe217) === NAME: Brughaichean Ghlinn-Braon (Braes of Glen Broom) DESCRIPTION: Scottish Gaelic. "Lying in a French prison... No order from England To send me home free...." The singer thinks of his lost love, "the maid of thick tresses ... In the braes of Glen Broom" AUTHOR: William Ross (1762-1790) EARLIEST_DATE: 1959 (Peacock) KEYWORDS: foreignlanguage love separation war prison lyric nonballad FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Peacock, pp. 773-774, "Brughaichean Ghlinn-Braon" (1 text, 1 tune) NOTES: Peacock notes that this "is called a milling song... used to accompany the work of shrinking wool homespun. The wet cloth is alternately kneaded and pounded on a large table by several people either seated or standing. A leader sings the verses, and everyone comes in on the chorus." "Milling wool" and "waulking tweed" is the same process. For a note on the process and the songs see "Waulking" by Craig Cockburn at the Silicon Glen site. The description is based on a translation by George Calder in _Gaelic Songs_ by William Ross Collected by John MacKenzie Translated by George Calder (Oliver and Boyd, Edinburgh, 1937), specifically Ross 25, pp. 148-151. Calder's Note G to Ross 25: "The song may have been composed by a prisoner of war in France and improved by Ross, or it may have been composed by Ross himself and based on one or other of the many tales of the French wars which raged during his short life." p. 192 - BS File: Pea773 === NAME: Brule Boys, The DESCRIPTION: Two men from Brule go to St Peter's to bring back rum in winter. They become lost in a storm and drift until Captain Harvey and his crew save them. They are taken to Marystown and from there return home. Moral: wait till spring to go to St Peter's. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1977 (Lehr/Best) KEYWORDS: crime rescue sea ship storm drink FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Lehr/Best 14, "The Brule Boys" (1 text, 1 tune) NOTES: Lehr/Best: Brule, on Merasheen Island in Placentia Bay "was one of the prime smuggling areas for the St Pierre rum-running operation." Other Newfoundland songs about running rum from St Pierre include "Young Chambers" and "Captain Shepherd." - BS File: LeBe014 === NAME: Brunton Town: see The Bramble Briar (The Merchant's Daughter; In Bruton Town) [Laws M32] (File: LM32) === NAME: Brush Creek Wreck, The DESCRIPTION: The singer tells of a wreck near Bevier. As the train, moving at high speed, crosses a bridge, the switch "flew backward And sent them through the bridge." The engineer finds several fatally injured; the people of Brookfield mourn their dead AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1912 (Belden) KEYWORDS: train wreck death HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: March 1, 1881 - The Brush Creek Wreck (actually wrecks, as the rescue train also went off the tracks, causing worse casualties) FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Belden, pp. 421-422, "The Brush Creek Wreck" (1 text) Cohen-LSRail, p. 272, "Brush Creek Wreck" (notes only) Roud #4137 NOTES: This is item dG37 in Laws's Appendix II. Belden does not comment on the form of this piece, and has no tune, but it appears to me nearly certain that it was sung to "Casey Jones." Though it would take some squeezing to make it fit any tune; the text is highly irregular (and more than a little forced. Belden doesn't think it went far into tradition, and it's easy to see why). - RBW File: Beld421 === NAME: Brushy Mountain Freshet, The DESCRIPTION: "In the month of July, in the year 'sixteen, Came the awfullest storm that's ever been seen." The song describes the progress of the storm, and presumably details the various people killed or rendered homeless AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1952 (Brown) KEYWORDS: disaster storm flood FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) BrownII 284, "The Brushy Mountain Fresher" (1 text) Roud #6643 NOTES: The notes in Brown describe notes attached to this song about the storm of 1916. The song, however, is so fragmentary that little can be verified about its connection with actual events. - RBW File: BrII284 === NAME: Bruton Town: see The Bramble Briar (The Merchant's Daughter; In Bruton Town) [Laws M32] (File: LM32) === NAME: Bryan O'Lynn: see Brian O'Lynn (Tom Boleyn) (File: R471) === NAME: Bryng Us in Good Ale: see Bring Us Good Ale (File: MEL82) === NAME: Buachaill On Eirne (Boy from Ireland) DESCRIPTION: Gaelic. Singer claims great wealth and would marry a girl without a dowry. He doesn't work but drinks and plays with women for a short time each. He warns not to marry an old man; a young man who lives only one year can give her a son or a daughter. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1965 (IRLClancy01) KEYWORDS: foreignlanguage courting marriage warning drink nonballad rake FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (0 citations) RECORDINGS: Liam Clancy, "Buachaill On Eirne" (on IRLClancy01) NOTES: The description is based on the translation for "Buachaill on Eirne (Boy from Ireland)" for the Clannad site at jtwinc.com. - BS File: RcBuOnEi === NAME: Buachaill Roe, The DESCRIPTION: The singer's lover, at twenty three, fought "for the cause of Ireland ... He never once retreated though his wounds were deep and sore." He was killed and his remains are at Inniskillen. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1952 (IRPTunney01) KEYWORDS: love battle rebellion death Ireland FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (2 citations) Tunney-SongsThunder, pp. 147-148, "The Buachaill Roe" (1 text) McBride 16, "Charming Buachaill Roe" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #5730 RECORDINGS: Joe Tunney and Paddy Tunney, "My Charming Buachal Roe" (on IRPTunney01) Paddy Tunney, "The Buachaill Roe" (on IRPTunney02) NOTES: Paddy Tunney on IRPTunney02 translates the title as "The Red Haired Boy." - BS File: RcTMCBR === NAME: Buccaneers, The: see Dead Man's Chest (File: LxA512) === NAME: Buchan Miller, The: see Miller Tae My Trade (File: K218) === NAME: Buck Creek Gal: see Cripple Creek (II) (Buck Creek Girls) (File: SKE64) === NAME: Buck Creek Girls: see Cripple Creek (II) (Buck Creek Girls) (File: SKE64) === NAME: Buck Goat Song, The DESCRIPTION: The singer loses a fight to a billy goat while digging potatoes. "Now Wilcox he thinks he's a boxer, Joe Louis he thinks he's just swell, But they'd all lose their bout in a hurry, If they had to fight that old bill" AUTHOR: Edmund Chaffey EARLIEST_DATE: 1977 (Lehr/Best) KEYWORDS: fight humorous animal FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Lehr/Best 15, "The Buck Goat Song" (1 text, 1 tune) File: LeBe015 === NAME: Buck Sheep, The: see The Hesleys (File: FSC163) === NAME: Buck-Eye Rabbit DESCRIPTION: "I wanted sugar very much, I went to Sugar Town, I climbed up in that sugar tree And shook that sugar down. Buck-eye rabbit, Shoo! Shoo!" "I went down to my sweetheart's house... She fed me out of an old hog trough And I don't go there no more" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1950 KEYWORDS: talltale humorous courting FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Lomax-FSNA 266, "Buck-Eye Rabbit" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #6706 File: LoF266 === NAME: Buck-eyed Jim: see Buckeye Jim (File: LxU001) === NAME: Buckeye Jim DESCRIPTION: "Way up yonder above the sky, A bluebird lived in a jaybird's eye. Buckeye Jim, you can't go, Go weave and spin, you can't go, Buckeye Jim." Vignettes of the lives of odd creatures in odd places AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1947 KEYWORDS: lullaby animal nonballad FOUND_IN: US(Ap) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Lomax-FSUSA 1, "Buckeye Jim" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 388, "Buckeye Jim" (1 text) DT, BUCKEYJM* BUCKEYE2* Roud #10059 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Limber Jim" cf. "Jaybird Died With the Whooping Cough" (floating lyrics) File: LxU001 === NAME: Bucking Broncho, The (The Broncho Buster) [Laws B15] DESCRIPTION: A girl is in love with a bronco buster who has promised to give up his trade for her. She warns others not to rely on such promises; most breakers will leave their women to head up the trail on their horses AUTHOR: claimed by James Hatch and Billie Davis (1882) EARLIEST_DATE: 1904 ("The Rawhide" by Edward White, in McClure's Magazine) KEYWORDS: cowboy love promise FOUND_IN: US(Ro,So,SW) REFERENCES: (13 citations) Laws B15, "The Bucking Broncho (The Broncho Buster)" Larkin, pp. 58-60, "My Love Is a Rider" (1 text, 1 tune) Randolph 200, "The Bucking Bronco" (1 text plus 1 excerpt and 2 fragments, 1 tune, which Cohen implies might be wrongly transcribed) Randolph/Cohen, pp. 196-198, "The Bucking Bronco" (1 text, 1 tune -- Randolph's 200A) Thorp/Fife XI, pp. 121-134 (26-27), "Bucking Broncho" (9 texts, 3 tunes) Fife-Cowboy/West 60, "Bucking Broncho" (2 texts, 1 tune) Lomax-ABFS, pp. 417-418, "Bucking Bronco" (1 text) Lomax-FSNA 199, "My Love is a Rider" (1 text, 1 tune) Ohrlin-HBT 14, "My Love Is a Rider" (1 text, 1 tune) Logsdon, pp. xix-xx, "(The Bucking Broncho)" (1 text) Silber-FSWB, p. 163, "Bucking Bronco" (1 text) Saffel-CowboyP, p. 200, "Bucking Broncho" (1 text) DT 382, BUCKBRNC* Roud #934 RECORDINGS: Girls of the Golden West [Mildred & Dorothy Good], "Bucking Broncho (My Love is a Cowboy)" (Bluebird B-5752, 1935; on AuthCowboys) Powder River Jack & Kitty Lee, "My Love is a Cowboy" (Bluebird B-5298, 1934; on WhenIWas2) ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Cowboy's Hat NOTES: Has anyone else noticed the remarkable number of possible double-entendres in this song? - PJS This, I think, is the result of a dirty song being cleaned up -- probably by N. Howard Thorp. (At least, he confessed to cleaning it up. The question then becomes, what was the history of the song before the 1904 publication? Was it originally clean, then made dirty, then clean again? Or was it originally dirty, and twice expurgated? It's hard to tell, at this stage.) Thorp, if Logsdon is to be believed, started the story that Belle Starr was responsible for this piece -- a claim mentioned though not really endorsed by Randolph, and also found in Larkin. Randolph goes on to point out that there is no evidence that Starr ever wrote poetry of any kind. Logsdon is more pointed (p. xix), noting that Thorp claimed to have met Belle Starr but doubting he did so. The doubts seem reasonable -- Thorp did not make the claim until the 1920s, but Starr died in 1889. Thus, if Thorp *did* meet her, it was well before he first published the song. So why didn't he mention her authorship in his 1908 edition? Starr of course has become a legend -- so much so that I'm frankly amazed there are no songs about her (other than Woody Guthrie's, which is not traditional and which swallows the legend hook, line, and sinker). She did lead a wild and adventurous life -- but many of the stories about her seem to be things she invented - RBW File: LB15 === NAME: Bucking Bronko, The: see The Bucking Broncho (The Broncho Buster) [Laws B15] (File: LB15) === NAME: Bud Jones DESCRIPTION: A tramp stops at the home of "a snug little farmer that earns his bread ... and some dinner requested." The farmer agrees to trade dinner for work. After a hard luck story about why he can't work the tramp agrees to turn a ram. The ram does not agree. AUTHOR: Lawrence Doyle EARLIEST_DATE: 1973 (Dibblee/Dibblee) KEYWORDS: farming humorous animal migrant FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Dibblee/Dibblee, pp. 108-109, "Bud Jones" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #12457 File: Dib108 === NAME: Budd Lake Plains DESCRIPTION: Singer tells of working as camp cook at Frank Young's lumber camp on Budd Lake plains. He is stuck with bad provisions. Eventually he's jailed for twelve days; on his release, he vows not to return AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1941 (Beck) LONG_DESCRIPTION: Singer tells of coming to Frank Young's lumber camp on Budd Lake plains, working as camp cook. He is stuck with bad provisions -- "Many a poor mule's been killed up on Budd's Lake plains." Eventually he's jailed for twelve days; on his release, he vows not to return: "For since I have got out/I won't go again/For they wear striped pants/Up around Budd Lake plains." KEYWORDS: lumbering work prison food cook FOUND_IN: US(MW) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Beck 15, "Budd Lake Plains" (1 text) Roud #8866 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Lumber Camp Song" and references there cf. "Punchin' Dough" (theme) cf. "Boomer Johnson" (theme) NOTES: Clare County, Michigan, which includes Budd Lake, had a reputation as a rough and tough area. Beck notes that only one informant could remember the song. - PJS File: Be015 === NAME: Budded Roses: see Down Among the Budded Roses (File: RcDATBR) === NAME: Buddy Won't You Roll Down the Line DESCRIPTION: First verse describes leasing out of convicts to act as scabs in a miners' strike; rest of song describes bad conditions for the convicts. AUTHOR: Uncle Dave Macon? EARLIEST_DATE: 1925 (collected by Robert W. Gordon; text in Green-Miner) KEYWORDS: strike labor-movement mining work scab prisoner FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Green-Miner, p. 195-197,"Roll Down the Line"; p. 198, "Convict Song" (1 text); p. 210, "Chain Gang Special" (1 text); p. 203, "Roll Down the Line" (1 text, 1 tune); p. 208, "Lone Rock Song" (1 text); p. 216 ,"Buddy Won't You Roll Down the Line" (1 text, transcribed from Uncle Dave Macon's recording); p. 220, "Rollin' Down the Line" (1 text); p. 223, "Lone Rock Mine Song" (1 text); p. 225, "Humpy Hargis" (1 text) Asch/Dunson/Raim, p. 98 "Buddy Won't You Roll Down the Line" (1 text, 1 tune) Cohen/Seeger/Wood, pp. 204-205, "Buddy, Won't You Roll Down the Line" (1 text, 1 tune) Darling-NAS, pp. 366-367, "Buddy Won't You Roll Down the Line" (1 text) ST ADR98 (Full) RECORDINGS: The Allen Brothers, "Hey Buddy, Won't You Roll Down the Line" (Vocalion 02818, 1934); "Roll Down the Line" (Victor 23551, 1931; Bluebird B-5700, 1934; Bluebird B-6148, 1935; rec. 1930) Thaddeus Goodson & Belton Rice, "Roll Down the Line" (AFS 3792, 1939) Uncle Dave Macon, "Buddy Won't You Roll Down the Line" (Brunswick 292, 1929; rec. 1928; on AAFM3) Negro prisoners, Memphis, TN, "Rollin' Down the Line" (AFS 174) Pete Seeger & Sonny Terry, "Buddy Won't You Roll Down the Line" (on SeegerTerry) Pete Seeger, "Roll Down the Line" (on PeteSeeger13) William H. Stevens, "Convict Song" (AFS A-107, 1925) [Wilmer] Watts & [Frank] Wilson "Chain Gang Special" (Paramount 3019, 1927/Broadway 8114 [as Weaver & Wiggins], n.d.; on RoughWays1) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Coal Creek Troubles" (subject) cf. "The Irish Girl" (lyrics) NOTES: This strike apparently took place in Tennessee in the 1880s, according to notes in Asch/Dunson/Raim. Like most of Uncle Dave Macon's songs, this piece is basically free-association. - PJS Though it may in fact predate him. He gave it the authentic Uncle Dave spin, but how many other Uncle Dave songs have such strong historical roots? Many believe the song to go back to the actual event it describes. (For details, see the notes to "Coal Creek Troubles.") - RBW Macon's song seems to have been a rewrite of "Chain Gang Special," with the "leased the convicts out" verse tacked onto a song that's basically the lament of a black convict who's been sentenced to the chain gang. The racial overtones that Macon softens are clear in the Watts & Wilson recording: "Big nigger, won't you roll down the line." Interestingly, their song is clearly (and sympathetically) told from the black prisoner's point of view, rare for a white band. "Lone Rock Mine Song" and "Humpy Hargis" date from the early 1890s, but they are fragments; I've somewhat arbitrarily placed the Earliest Date for a non-fragmentary version of the song at 1925, when it was collected by Gordon from William H. Stevens. - PJS File: ADR98 === NAME: Budgeon It Is a Delicate Trade, The: see references under The Miller of Dee (File: K229A) === NAME: Buena Vista: see On Buena Vista's Battlefield (File: R225A) === NAME: Buffalo Boy DESCRIPTION: The girl asks the Buffalo Boy when they will wed. He suggests soon. (Assorted stanzas follow.) She asks who he will bring to the wedding. He suggests his children. She didn't know he had children. When assured he does, she calls off the wedding AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1927 (recording, Mr. & Mrs. Ernest V. Stoneman) KEYWORDS: courting wedding children rejection humorous FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (2 citations) Lomax-FSNA 162, "Buffalo Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 345, "Buffalo Boy" (1 text) Roud #313 RECORDINGS: Mr. & Mrs. Ernest V. Stoneman, "The Mountaineer's Courtship" (OKeh 45125, 1927; on AAFM3) (Victor 20880, 1927) The Hillbillies, "Mountaineer's Courtship" (Vocalion 5115, c. 1927) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Country Courtship" (theme) NOTES: Kennedy considers this to be a version of "The Country Courtship," and the forms, and even the verses, are similar. Roud lumps them. However, this version has a different punch line. - RBW File: LoF162 === NAME: Buffalo Gals DESCRIPTION: As requested, the Buffalo [Bowery, etc.] girls promise to come out tonight, to dance or otherwise disport themselves by the light of the moon. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: A Christy Minstrels' version was copyright in 1848 KEYWORDS: bawdy playparty dancing FOUND_IN: US(MW,SE,So) REFERENCES: (13 citations) Randolph 535, "Buffalo Gals" (2 texts plus an excerpt and a fragment, 1 tune) BrownIII 81, "Buffalo Gals" (2 short texts); also 491, "We'll Have a Little Dance Tonight, Boys" (1 fragment, too short to properly classify but it might go here) Scarborough-NegroFS, pp. 112-114, (no title) and "Buffalo Gals" (2 texts plus a fragment possibly from this, 1 tune) Randolph-Legman I, pp. 424-425, "Buffalo Gals" (2 texts, 1 tune) Lomax-FSUSA 33, "Buffalo Gals" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-ABFS, pp. 288-290, "Louisiana Girls" (1 text, 1 tune) Fife-Cowboy/West 101, "Buffalo Gals" (3 texts, 1 tune) Botkin-AmFolklr, p. 841, "(Buffalo Gals)" (1 text, 1 tune) MHenry-Appalachians, p. 233, (fourth of four "Fragments from Maryland") (1 fragment) Arnett, p. 58, "Buffalo Gals" (1 text, 1 tune) Spaeth-WeepMore, pp. 107-108, "Buffalo Gals" (1 text, 1 tune) PSeeger-AFB, p. 34, "Buffalo Gals" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 36, "Buffalo Gals" (1 text) ST R535 (Full) Roud #738 RECORDINGS: Fiddlin' John Carson, "Alabama Gal" (OKeh 40204, 1924) Collins & Harlan, "Ain't You Coming Out To-Night?" (CYL: Edison [4-min.] 480, n.d.) Crockett's Kentucky Mountaineers, "Buffalo Gal's Medley" (Crown 3075, c. 1930) Harlan Miner's Fiddlers [pseud. for Crockett's Kentucky Mountaineers], "Buffalo Gals" (Montgomery Ward M-3022, 1931) [I am assuming this is a different recording from Crown 3075, as the latter is a medley] Vernon Dalhart, "Ain't-Ya Comin' Out Tonight?" (Columbia 257-D, 1924) Vernon Dalhart & Co., "Ain't You Comin' Out Tonight?" (Edison 51430, 1924) Frank Hutchison, "Alabama Gal Ain't You Coming Out Tonight" (OKeh 45313, 1929; rec. 1928) Earl Johnson & his Dixie Entertainers [or Earl Johnson and his Clodhoppers], "Alabama Girl Ain't You Comin' Out Tonight" (OKeh 45300, 1929; rec. 1928) Guy Massey, "Ain't Ya Comin' Out Tonight" (Perfect 12170, 1924) Shorty McCoy, "Buffalo Gals" (Bluebird 33-0511, 1944) Pickard Family, "Buffalo Gals" (Brunswick 363/Banner 6371/Conqueror 7326, 1929) Riley Puckett, "Alabama Gal" (Columbia 15185-D, 1927) Bookmiller Shannon, "Buffalo Gals" [instrumental] (on LomaxCD1707) Pete Seeger, "Buffalo Gals" (on PeteSeeger17) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Hangtown Gals" (tune) cf. "Horsham Boys" (tune) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Alabama Gals NOTES: According to Spaeth (_A History of Popular Music in America_, p. 101), this originated as the Cool White (John Hodges) song "Lubly Fan" (1843). From the present perspective, it's hard to prove whether Hodges actually did write the thing or borrowed an existing piece -- but I rather suspect the latter. - RBW File: R535 === NAME: Buffalo Hunters DESCRIPTION: "Come all you pretty fair maidens, these lines to you I write, We're going on the range in which we take delight...." The singer describes hunting buffalo and other animals in the west, then heads off for a drink AUTHOR: "Whiskey" Parker ? EARLIEST_DATE: 1943 KEYWORDS: hunting drink FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (1 citation) Fife-Cowboy/West 2, "The Buffalo Hunters" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #4633 NOTES: Reportedly written by "Whisky" Parker in 1872, although the supporting evidence is slight. - RBW File: FCW002 === NAME: Buffalo Range (I): see The Buffalo Skinners [Laws B10a] (File: LB10A) === NAME: Buffalo Range (II), The DESCRIPTION: The singer declares "I wouldn't exchange the buffalo range For the world and all of its gold." It is where he makes his home, and where he'll "live and die." He describes the beautiful wildlife. He "thank[s] the Great Boss in the sky" for creating it AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1966 KEYWORDS: home religious cowboy nonballad FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (1 citation) Fife-Cowboy/West 127, "The Buffalo Range" (1 text, 1 tune) NOTES: Obviously not to be confused with "The Buffalo Skinners." - RBW File: FCW127 === NAME: Buffalo Skinners, The [Laws B10a] DESCRIPTION: A promoter named (Crego) hires a group of men to skin buffalo. He consistently cheats and mistreats them. Eventually they kill him AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1910 KEYWORDS: work homicide boss revenge FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (15 citations) Laws B10a, "The Buffalo Skinners" Leach, pp. 773-775, "Canaday I. O. (The Buffalo Skinners)" (2 texts, but only the first goes with this piece; the other belongs with "Canaday I-O" [Laws C17]) Friedman, p. 429, "The Buffalo Skinners" (1 text) PBB 110, "The Buffalo Skinners" (1 text) Sandburg, pp. 270-272, "The Buffalo Skinners" (1 text, 1 tune) Thorp/Fife XV, pp. 195-218 (31-33), "Buffalo Range" (6 texts, 2 tunes, though the "B" text is "Boggy Creek," C and D appear unrelated, and E is "Canada-I-O") Larkin, pp. 91-94, "The Buffalo Skinners" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-FSUSA 52, "The Buffalo Skinners" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-ABFS, pp. 390-392, "The Buffalo Skinners" (1 text, 1 tune) Botkin-AmFolklr, pp. 854-855, "The Buffalo Skinners" (1 text, 1 tune) LPound-ABS, 84, pp. 181-183, "The Buffalo Skinners" (1 text) Darling-NAS, pp. 169-170, "The Buffalo Skinners" (1 text) PSeeger-AFB, p. 63, "Buffalo Skinners" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 110, "Buffalo Skinners" (1 text) DT 377, BUFFSKIN* BUFFSKI2 Roud #634 RECORDINGS: Bill Bender, The Happy Cowboy, "Buffalo Skinners" (Varsity 5144, c. 1940) Woody Guthrie, "Buffalo Skinners" (on Struggle1, Struggle2, CowFolkCD1) John A. Lomax, "Buffalo Skinners" (AFS, 1940s; on LC28) Pete Seeger, "Buffalo Skinners" (on PeteSeeger13, AmHist1) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Boggy Creek" [Laws B10b] cf. "The Trail to Mexico [Laws B13]" (a few overlapping lyrics) cf. "Canaday-I-O, Michigan-I-O, Colley's Run I-O" [Laws C17] cf. "Shanty Teamster's Marseillaise" (plot) cf. "Way Out in Idaho (I)" (lyrics, plot) File: LB10A === NAME: Bugaboo, The: see The Foggy Dew (The Bugaboo) [Laws O3] (File: LO03) === NAME: Bugle Britches, The: see Trooper and Maid [Child 299] (File: C299) === NAME: Bugle, Oh! DESCRIPTION: Corn-husking song. "Goin' down the country, bugle, oh (x2), Red breast horses, bugle oh!, Red breast horses, Bugle, oh! Oh, bugle, oh!" "Comin' in a canter, meet my darlin'." The lovers court, marry, dance, have a baby AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1920 (Brown) KEYWORDS: courting work FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) BrownIII 197, "Bugle, Oh!" (1 text); 204, "Run, Sallie, My Gal" (1 text) NOTES: The notes in Brown admit uncertainty as to whether his two pieces are one; they have no lyrics in common except the chorus, and that is distorted in one or the other. But both are listed as corn-shucking songs, they have that same chorus, and "Run, Sallie, My Gal" is a fragment; if they aren't the same, they also aren't worth separate entries. - RBW File: Br3197 === NAME: Building a Slide DESCRIPTION: "Come all you young fellows from near, far, and wide, And I'll tell you a story of buliding a slide." The singer describes the loggers on the crew, thinks they are nearly done with work, and joins them in drinking AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1962 (Fowke) KEYWORDS: work logger lumbering moniker FOUND_IN: Canada(Ont) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Fowke-Lumbering #18, "Building a Slide" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #4386 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Logger's Alphabet" (tune, chorus) cf. "Chapeau Boys" (lyrics) File: FowL18 === NAME: Building of Solomon's Temple, The [Laws Q39] DESCRIPTION: A Masonic ballad referring to Solomon as a "freemason king"! The ballad details the building of the Jerusalem temple, including the vast crews which worked on it. The end of the ballad concerns modern Freemasonry AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1827 (Journal from the Galaxy) KEYWORDS: royalty Bible HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: c. 960-c. 921 B.C.E. - Reign of King Solomon in Israel. (Both dates have about a ten year margin for error.) Solomon began to build the Temple early in his "fourth year" (i.e. c. 957); he finished it seven years and six months later FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (5 citations) Laws Q39, "The Building of Solomon's Temple" Huntington-Whalemen, pp. 309-312, "Song of Solomon's Temple" (1 text, 1 tune) Mackenzie 159, "The Building of Solomon's Temple" (1 text, 1 tune) cf. Gardner/Chickering, p. 480, "King Solomon's Temple" (source notes only) DT 546, SOLTEMPL Roud #1018 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Firth c.21(41), "The Free Mason King," The Poet's Box (Glasgow), 1858; also Firth c.21(40), "The Free Mason King" NOTES: The building of the Temple occupies chapters 5-8 of 1 Kings (and 2 Chronicles chapters 2-6 with a foreshadowing in 1 Chron. 28-29). Chapter 5 describes the preparations (negotiations with Tyre, gathering of the materials, and -- in 5:13-18 -- the assembly of the laborers); Chapter 6 the building; Chapter 7 the furnishings (with an aside about Solomon's other projects), and Chapter 8 the dedication. - RBW File: LQ39 === NAME: Buinnean Bui: see An Buinnean Bui (File: HHH830) === NAME: Buinnean Bui, An DESCRIPTION: (Gaelic.) The singer laments to see the dead buinnean (bittern) upon the shore, and conjectures "Not want of food," but rather lack of liquor, killed the bird. He laments the bird. His wife wants him to drink less, but he cannot live without drink AUTHOR: Gaelic: Cathal Buidhe MacGiolla Gunna (or Cathal Buidhe MacElgun, or Cathal Bui Mac Giolla Gunna) (Tawny Charlie) (1680-?) (source for date: Tunney-StoneFiddle) EARLIEST_DATE: 1939 (Sam Henry collection); Hoagland gives the author's date as c. 1750 KEYWORDS: drink death bird foreignlanguage FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (6 citations) SHenry H830, pp. 64-65, "The Yellow Bittern/An Bunnan Buidhe" (1 text, 1 tune) Tunney-StoneFiddle, p. 170, "An Bunnan Bui" (1 text) ADDITIONAL: Bell/O Conchubhair, Traditional Songs of the North of Ireland, pp. 88-90, "An Buinnean Bui" ("The Yellow Bittern") [Gaelic and English] Kathleen Hoagland, editor, One Thousand Years of Irish Poetry (New York, 1947), pp. 235-236, "The Yellow Bittern" (1 text, translated by Thomas MacDonogh) Donagh MacDonagh and Lennox Robinson, _The Oxford Book of Irish Verse_ (Oxford, 1958, 1979), pp. 117-118, "The Yellow Bittern" (1 text, translated by Thomas MacDonogh) ADDITIONAL: Thomas Kinsella, _The New Oxford Book of Irish Verse_ (Oxford, 1989), pp. 200-201, "The Yellow Bittern" (1 text, seemingly translated by Kinsella) Roud #5332 ALTERNATE_TITLES: Buinnean Bui NOTES: This has to be the feeblest excuse for alcoholism I've ever seen. The poet allegedly saw a dead bittern by a frozen shore around 1700, and this song is the result. It seems to have been variously translated. It's worth noting that human interference extirpated bitterns from Ireland. - RBW Tunney-StoneFiddle includes Paddy Tunney's English translation (no Gaelic). TBell/O Conchubhair: "One hard winter's morning, perhaps 'hungover' after a night's or even many nights' carousing, he [Cathal Bui] came across a yellow bittern, lying stiff and cold; lost for a sip from the water of the frozen lake." - BS File: HHH830 === NAME: Buinnean Buidhe: see An Buinnean Bui (File: HHH830) === NAME: Bull Connor's Jail DESCRIPTION: "Down in Alabama, In the land of Jim Crow, There is a place where Lots of folks go. Birmingham jailhouse, Birmingham jail, Waiting for freedom in Bull Connor's jail." How three thousand peaceful protesters were harassed and imprisoned by Connor AUTHOR: Words: Guy & Candie Carawan, Ernie Marrs EARLIEST_DATE: 1963 KEYWORDS: discrimination prison political HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: May 1963 - The Birmingham demonstrations against segregation. Children and adults were attacked by police officers and police dogs commanded by Bull Connor, who was responsible for "public security." FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Scott-BoA, pp. 372-373, "Bull Connor's Jail" (1 text, 1 tune) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Down in the Valley" (tune) and references there File: SBoA372 === NAME: Bull Dog Down in Tennessee DESCRIPTION: Parody of "The Girl I Left in Sunny Tennessee." Singer goes to court his girl, but her father sics a bulldog on him. As the dog attacks him, he flees over the hills and hollers back to his home AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1925 (recording, Doc Walsh) KEYWORDS: courting derivative humorous parody dog father lover FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (0 citations) Roud #7879 RECORDINGS: Ashley & Foster, "Bull Dog Sal" (unissued, prob. Vocalion, 1933; on StuffDreans1) Lester P. Bivins, "Bull Dog Down in Tennessee" (Bluebird B-6950/Montgomery Ward M-7229. 1937) Carolina Tar Heels, "The Bulldog Down in Sunny Tennessee" (Victor 20941, 1927) Doc Walsh, "Bull Dog Down in Tennessee" (Columbia 15057-D, 1926; rec. 1925) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Girl I Left in Sunny Tennessee" (tune, object of parody) NOTES: It was a tossup whether these recordings should be entered as "Same Tune" items under "Girl I Left In Sunny Tennessee" or given their own entry. But the song has its own distinct plot, and it managed to get into the repertoires of several performers, so I decided to dignify it. - PJS File: RcBDDITe === NAME: Bull Frog, The: see Kemo Kimo (File: R282) === NAME: Bull Run (War Song) DESCRIPTION: "Away down in Belden Green... The whole earth shook in a quiver; Every devil had done his best To outrun the rest To get back to Washington to shelter." After the Union defeat, Abe Lincoln laments the cost of the battle AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1917 (Cox) KEYWORDS: Civilwar battle HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: July 21, 1861 - First battle of Bull Run/Manasses fought between the Union army of McDowell and the Confederates under J. E. Johnston and Beauregard FOUND_IN: US(Ap) REFERENCES: (1 citation) JHCox 68, "Bull Run"; 69, "War Song" (2 texts, the latter perhaps mixed with "The Happy Land of Canaan") Roud #5459 NOTES: The First Battle of Bull Run did indeed end in a Union rout. This was, however, an oddly minor result. The Union army was made up mostly of volunteers called up for only ninety days of service; they were greener than grass, and not really able to fight, but the politicians forced Irvin McDowell to lead his troops into battle before their enlistments expired. The Confederates, equally green, had the advantage of the defensive, and so were able to hold on. The Union army retreated, and the retreat became a rout, with soldiers streaming back to Washington. But the Confederates, as disorganized by victory as the Union troops were by defeat (and badly disposed; Beauregard's staff was so bad that more than half his troops were acting in response to orders Beauregard had thought meant something else), were unable to pursue. Cox does not recognize the second of these texts, which he calls "War Song," as the same as the first. It seems clear to me, however, that they are. The confusion comes in the first line. Cox's "Bull Run" begins Away down in Beldon Green, where the like was never seen The whole earth shook in a quiver. The "War Song" starts Down in Bowling Green, such a sight was never seen, The earth all stood in a quiver. The temptation, of course, is to associate the latter piece with a battle of Bowling Green (Kentucky). But there was no battle of Bowling Green. In 1861, the Confederate forces of Leonidas Polk moved into that part of Kentucky, and Albert Sidney Johnston had his headquarters there in late 1861 and early 1862, but Johnston's position was weak and he retreated without battle after Fort Donelson fell. Braxton Bragg's 1862 invasion of Kentucky never moved as far west as Bowling Green. After that, except for a few minor cavalry raids, the Confederates never came close to Kentucky. The only reasonable supposition is that "Bowling Green" is an error for the "Belden Green" of "Bull Run," or perhaps that "Bowling Green" refers not to a town but to an actual bowling green. - RBW File: JHCox068 === NAME: Bull Yorkens: see Bold Larkin (Bull Yorkens) (File: Pea907) === NAME: Bull-Whacker, The: see Root, Hog, or Die! (III -- The Bull-Whacker) (File: LoF171) === NAME: Bulldog and the Bullfrog, The: see The Bulldog On The Bank (File: FSWB399B) === NAME: Bulldog on the Bank, The DESCRIPTION: "Oh, the bulldog on the bank, and the bullfrog in the pool (x3), The bulldog called the bullfrog a green old water fool." Animals interact, with unusual results: A snapper catches the bullfrog's paw; a monkey gives an owl ink to drink; etc. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1973 KEYWORDS: nonballad humorous animal FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (2 citations) Silber-FSWB, p. 399, "The Bullfrog On The Bank" (1 text) Pankake-PHCFSB, p. 47, "The Bulldog and the Bullfrog" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #15368 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "John Brown's Body" (tune & meter) and references there File: FSWB399B === NAME: Bullfrog DESCRIPTION: "Bullfrog jumped in the middle of the spring, And I ain't a-gwine to weep no mo'. He tied his tail to a hick'ry limb...." "He kicked an' he rared an' he couldn't make a jump." Chorus expresses a wish to go to heaven AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1925 (Scarborough) KEYWORDS: animal humorous FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Scarborough-NegroFS, p. 198, "Bullfrog" (1 text, 1 tune, though the chorus may be imported from "I Hope I'll Join the Band"); also p. 199, (no title) (1 fragment) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "I Hope I'll Join the Band (Soon in the Morning)" (lyrics) File: ScaNF198 === NAME: Bullgine Run, The: see Margot Evans (Let the Bullgine Run) (File: LoF029) === NAME: Bullhead Boat, The DESCRIPTION: Singer, a mule-driver, gets work steering a canal boat. One pilot is killed by a low bridge. The singer spies a low bridge, but fails to warn the (drunken) captain, as he's busy tumbling end over end. He warns listeners never to drive a bullhead boat. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1986 (recording, Art Thieme) LONG_DESCRIPTION: Singer, a mule-driver, gets work steering a canal boat; it's miserable work, and the captain drinks. One pilot is killed by a low bridge. One day the singer spies a low bridge coming, but fails to warn the (drunken) captain, as he's busy tumbling end over end. He warns listeners never to drive a bullhead boat, but rather spend their time on a line barge; "The bridge you won't be hatin'/And you'll live till Judgement Day" KEYWORDS: warning death canal ship work worker FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (1 citation) DT, BULLHEAD RECORDINGS: Art Thieme, "The Bullhead Boat" (on Thieme04) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Erie Canal" (subject) NOTES: According to Art Thieme, a bullhead boat was an unusually tall canal boat. Since most canal boats on America's early waterways were built low (e.g. the Erie Canal carried mostly barges), bridges over the canal were often quite low. This meant that serving on a bullhead boat could be quite dangerous. - RBW File: RcTBulBo === NAME: Bullockies' Ball, The DESCRIPTION: The bullock drivers hear word that there is to be a ball. They descend in great numbers. The drink flows freely, and the girls are not shy. Soon a brawl breaks out, and many of the partygoers wind up covered with loose food and/or bruises AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1968 KEYWORDS: fight drink party FOUND_IN: Australia REFERENCES: (2 citations) Meredith/Anderson, pp. 110-111, "The Bullockies' Ball" (1 text+fragments, 1 tune) DT, BULLBALL* CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Finnegan's Wake" [Laws Q17] (theme) NOTES: Meredith and Anderson consider this a parody of "Finnegan's Wake" [Laws Q17] - RBW File: MA110 === NAME: Bullocky-O DESCRIPTION: "I draw for Speckle's Mill, bullocky-o, bullocky-o, And it's many a log I drew, bullocky-o... I'm the king of bullock drivers, don't you know, bullocky-o." The singer describes all the other (less competent) workers he competes against AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1959 (Queensland Pocket Songbook) KEYWORDS: work moniker animal FOUND_IN: Australia REFERENCES: (3 citations) Manifold-PASB, pp. 136-137, "Bullocky-O" (1 text, 1 tune) Paterson/Fahey/Seal, pp. 217-218, "Bullocky-O" (1 text) DT, BULLCKOH* File: PASB136 === NAME: Bullshit Bill DESCRIPTION: "Bill has took it in his noddle For to take a little toddle Up the river where some gold he might be earning. For he took his pick and shovel And he closed his little hovel, For B.S.B. is leaving in the morning." He'll hunt gold rather than bet on horses AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1987 KEYWORDS: gold home rambling gambling FOUND_IN: Australia REFERENCES: (1 citation) Meredith/Covell/Brown, pp. 228-229, "Bullshit Bill" (1 text, 1 tune) NOTES: I strongly suspect that there is something missing here -- e.g. a description of how Bill got his nickname. But the piece is clearly un-bowdlerized (consider the title!), so I can't guess what it is. - RBW File: MCB228 === NAME: Bully Boat, The: see Ranzo Ray (File: Hugi247) === NAME: Bully Brown DESCRIPTION: A failure as a coal-yard worker fails as a Liverpool policeman also and finally "shipped as a mate with Bully Brown." The captain kicks him out of the cabin and the sailors do not allow him in the bunk, so he "steals a pound of bread" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: KEYWORDS: work humorous sailor thief FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Peacock, pp. 862-863, "Bully Brown" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #9805 File: Pea862 === NAME: Bully in the Alley DESCRIPTION: Shanty. Refrain: "So help me bob, I'm bully in the alley, Way-ay bully in the alley. So help me bob, I'm bully in the alley, bully down in Shinbone Al." Verses involve courting, being rejected by, and/or leaving Sally. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1914 (Sharp-EFC) KEYWORDS: shanty courting rejection FOUND_IN: West Indies Britain REFERENCES: (3 citations) Hugill, pp. 522-523, "Bully in the Alley" (1 text, 1 tune) [AbEd, p. 382] Sharp-EFC, XXXV, pp. 40-41, "Bully in the Alley" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BULLYALL* Roud #8287 NOTES: Hugill says that "Shinbone Alley" is a place name often referred to in American Negro songs. - SL File: Hug522 === NAME: Bully of the Town, The [Laws I14] DESCRIPTION: The bully has terrorized the entire town, including even the police. At last a hunter catches up with him and kills him. The people rejoice; all the women "come to town all dressed in red." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1896 (published by Charles Trevathan) KEYWORDS: homicide punishment police clothes FOUND_IN: US(Ap,SE,So) REFERENCES: (7 citations) Laws I14, "The Bully of the Town" Leach, p. 767, "Lookin' for the Bully of the Town" (1 text) Darling-NAS, pp. 242-243, "The Bully of the Town" (1 text) MWheeler, p. 100, "Stacker Lee #1" (1 text, 1 tune -- a fragment, probably of this song though it does mention Stacker Lee) Geller-Famous, pp. 97-99, "'The Bully' Song (May Irwin's 'Bully' Song)" (1 text, 1 tune) Gilbert, pp. 209-210, "[Bully Song]" (1 partial text) DT 823, BULLYTWN Roud #4182 RECORDINGS: Roy Acuff, "Bully of the Town" (Columbia 20561, 1949) Fiddlin' John Carson & his Virginia Reelers, "Bully of the Town" (OKeh 40444, 1925) Cherokee Ramblers, "Bully of the Town" (Decca 5123, 1935) Sid Harkreader, "The Bully of the Town" (Paramount 3022, 1927; Broadway 8056, c. 1930) Frankie Marvin, "The Bully of the Town" (Radiex 4149, 1927) Lester McFarland & Robert Gardner, "Bully of the Town" (Brunswick 116, 1927) McMichen's Hometown Band, "Bully of the Town" (OKeh 45034, c. 1926; rec. 1925) Byrd Moore, "The Bully of the Town" (Gennett 6763, 1928/Supertone 9399 [as by Harry Carter]) North Carolina Hawaiians, "Bully of the Town" (OKeh 45297, 1929; rec. 1928) Prairie Ramblers, "Lookin' for the Bully of the Town" (Melotone 6-08-56, 1936) Ernest V. Stoneman, "Bully of the Town" (matrix #7225-1 recorded 1927 and issued as Banner 2157/Domino 3984/Regal 8347/Homestead 16500 [as by Sim Harris]/Oriole 947 [as by Harris]/Challenge 665/Conqueror 7755, 1931/Pathe 32279/Perfect 12358/Supertone 32279/Cameo 8217/Romeo 597/Lincoln 2822) (Broadway 8056-D, c. 1930); Ernest V. Stoneman and the Dixie Mountaineers, "The Bully of the Town" (Edison 51951, 1927) (CYL: Edison [BA] 5314, 1927) Gid Tanner & his Skillet Lickers, "Bully of the Town" (Columbia 15640-D, 1931; rec. 1930) Gordon Tanner, Smokey Joe Miller & Uncle John Patterson, "Bully of the Town" (on DownYonder) Tweedy Brothers, "The Bully of the Town" (Gennett 6447/Champion 15486, 1928) BROADSIDES: LOCSheet, rpbaasm 0994, "May Irwin's 'Bully' Song," White-Smith Music Publishing Co., (Boston), 1896 (tune) SAME_TUNE: Gid Tanner & his Skillet Lickers, "Bully of the Town - No. 2" (Columbia 15640-D, c. 1931) NOTES: Laws describes "The (New) Bully" (for which cf. Spaeth, _Read 'Em and Weep_, pp. 193-195, or Gilbert, _Lost Chords_, pp. 209-210) as an offshoot of this traditional piece. Personally, I'd call "The New Bully" an arrangement, but I follow Laws. Norm Cohen writes of this piece, I discussed the history of The Bully in the brochure notes to JEMF LP 103: Paramount Old Time Tunes.... "Basically, there are two received accounts of the genesis of this song. One was first published by James J. Geller in his "Famous Songs and their Stories (1931) [pp. 97-100, with the titles "'The Bully' Song" or "May Irwin's 'Bully' Song" - RBW]. This is the anecdote about sports writer and horse racing judge, Charles E. Trevathan, on the train back to Chicago from San Francisco in 1894, playing his guitar and humming popular airs to amuse the passengers around him among whom was May Irwin. He said he had learned the tune of "The Bully" from Tennessee blacks. Irwin suggested that he put [clean] words to the tune, which he did, and published it in 1896. She incorporated the song in her stage play, 'The Widow Jones.' The other account, first published, as far as I know, by E. B. Marks in 'They All Sang' (1934) is that the song was popularized before he got his hands on it by 'Mama Lou,' a short, fat, homely, belligerent powerhouse of a singer in Babe Connor's classy St. Louis brothel, a popular establishment in the 1890s that drew from all social classes for its clientele. Either Trevathan picked up the song from Mama Lou, or, equally likely, both learned it from black oral tradition in the South of the early 1890s. In support of this position is the fact that there were several sheet music versions of 'The Bully' published, some preceding Trevathan's 1896 version." Gilbert, p. 209, also mentions the connection to Mama Lou; he quotes Orrick Johns to the effect that she was "a gnarled, black African of the purest type [who] sang, with her powerful voice, a great variety of indigenous songs." Johns cites her as one of the earliest sources for "Frankie and Johnnie" and apparently for "Ta-ra-ra Boom-der-e." But Gilbert also notes a version in Delaney's songbook #12, from 1896, with words credited to Will Carleton and music by J. W. Cavanagh. It does seem likely that May Irwin is largely responsible for the song's popularity. Irwin was a notable popular singer who was at the height of her powers in the 1890s; In Sigmund Spaeth's _A History of Popular Music in _America__ she is credited with the song, "Mamie, Come Kiss Your Honey Boy" (pp. 265-266), and with popularizing George M. Cohan's "Hot Tamale Alley" (pp. 282, 339) as well as suh songs as "I Couldn't Stand to See My Baby Loose" (p. 347) and "Mister Johnson, Turn Me Loose" (p. 285). She presumably also had some part in the song we index as "May Irwin's Frog Song (The Foolish Frog, Way Down Yonder)." Her biggest success of all (based on how many popular music histories mention it) was apparently "May Irwin's Bully Song," the Trevathan version of this song. - RBW File: LI14 === NAME: Bully, The: see references under The Bully of the Town [Laws I14] (File: LI14) === NAME: Bumblebee Cotton, Peckerwood Corn DESCRIPTION: Liza grabs the singer, demanding sexual gratification. The singer responds appropriately. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: KEYWORDS: bawdy humorous seduction sex FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Randolph-Legman I, pp. 325-328, "Bumblebee Cotton, Peckerwood Corn" (7 texts, 1 tune) File: RL325 === NAME: Bumpers, Bumbers, Flowing Bumpers DESCRIPTION: The watchman calls "4" but we have to finish one more bottle. Anyone who wants to leave: "out of the window at once with him." Our whisky is from a still. Let's toast the sun rising as we did when it set. Then we'll go out and "leather" the watchman. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1821 (_Blackwood's Magazine_, according to Croker-PopularSongs) KEYWORDS: drink nonballad FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Croker-PopularSongs, pp. 94-95, "Bumpers, Bumbers, Flowing Bumpers" (1 text) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Lillibullero" (tune, according to Croker-PopularSongs) NOTES: Bumper: [noun] "a cup or glass filled to the brim or till the liquor runs over esp. in drinking a toast"; [verb] "to fill to the brim (as a wineglass) and empty by drinking,""to toast with a bumper,""to drink bumpers of wine or other alcoholic beverages" (source: _Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language Unabridged_, 1976). Croker-PopularSongs: One bottle of whisky is about thirteen tumblers. - BS File: CrPS094 === NAME: Bumpers, Squire Jones DESCRIPTION: If you like claret, or pine for female companionship, "don't pass the good House Moneyglass." Bumpers Squire Jones's claret will make you forget Cupid. Soldiers, clergy, lawyers, and foxhunters should forget their chores and dogs and stop for this claret. AUTHOR: Arthur Dawson, Baron of the Exchequer (ca.1695-1775), music Turlough O'Carolan (1670-1738) (source: Sparling; see also Andrew Kuntz, Fiddler's Companion site) EARLIEST_DATE: 1888 (Sparling) KEYWORDS: drink nonballad FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (2 citations) Hayward-Ulster, pp. 56-57, "Bumpers Squire Jones" (1 text) ADDITIONAL: H. Halliday Sparling, Irish Minstrelsy (London, 1888), pp. 470-473, 498, "Bumpers, Squire Jones" Roud #6532 NOTES: The description is from Sparling, a more complete version than Hayward-Ulster. Sparling: "For the origin of this song see _Dublin University Magazine_, January 1841." Hayward-Ulster: "Moneyglass House, which still [1925] stands neer Toomebridge in the County Antrim, was the residence of Bumpers Squire Jones, a character famous for his riotous hospitality. He is still talked about throughout the district, and this song is widely popular." Bumper: [noun] "a cup or glass filled to the brim or till the liquor runs over esp. in drinking a toast"; [verb] "to fill to the brim (as a wineglass) and empty by drinking,""to toast with a bumper,""to drink bumpers of wine or other alcoholic beverages" (source: _Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language Unabridged_, 1976). Croker-PopularSongs: One bottle of whisky is about thirteen tumblers. - BS The word "bumper" for a full tumbler is reportedly first found c. 1660, making its relation with the subject of this song somewhat interesting. - RBW File: HayU056 === NAME: Bunch O' Roses: see Blood Red Roses (File: Doe022) === NAME: Bundaberg, The: see The Glendy Burk (File: MA109) === NAME: Bundle and Go (I) DESCRIPTION: "Frae Clyde's bonnie hills, whaur the heather is blooming... I'm come, my dear lassie, to mak' the last offer.... " His father (and mother?) are dead, his house eerie; he loves none but her. She decides to leave her parents and "bundle and go" to his home AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1904 (Ford) KEYWORDS: love courting father abandonment dowry FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Ford-Vagabond, pp. 37-39, "Bundle and Go" (1 text) Ord, pp. 138-139, "Bundle and Go" (1 text) Roud #3329 BROADSIDES: Murray, Mu23-y1:056, "Bundle and Go," James Lindsay (Glasgow), 19C NLScotland, L.C.Fol.178.A.2(075), "Buudle and Go" (sic. -- the text says "bundle," not "buddle"), unknown, n. d. SAME_TUNE: Delays are Dangerous (per broadside Murray, Mu23-y1:056) NOTES: There are several broadsides in the NLScotland collection entitled "Rise Up Noble Britons, Bundle and Go," apparently written in response to the Indian Mutiny (1857; for which see, e.g., "Erin Far Away (I)" [Laws J6] and "The Dying Soldier (I) (Erin Far Away II)"). It is not evident from the sheets whether it is built around this piece, another "Bundle and Go" song, or is entirely independent. - RBW File: FVS037 === NAME: Bundle and Go (II) DESCRIPTION: "The winter is gane, love; the sweet spring again, love, Bedecks the blue mountain." "For far to the west, to the land of bright freedom... I would conduct you." They will leave home for a better place; "then hey, bonnie lassie, will you bundle and go?" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1904 (Ford) KEYWORDS: love home emigration travel FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Ford-Vagabond, pp. 35-37, "Bundle and Go" (1 text, 1 tune) Ord, pp. 139-140, "Bundle and Go" (1 text) Roud #3330 BROADSIDES: NLScotland, L.C.Fol.70(38a), "Bundle and Go," unknown, n.d. NOTES: There are several broadsides in the NLScotland collection entitled "Rise Up Noble Britons, Bundle and Go," apparently written in response to the Indian Mutiny (1857; for which see, e.g., "Erin Far Away (I)" [Laws J6] and "The Dying Soldier (I) (Erin Far Away II)"). It is not evident from the sheets whether it is built around this piece, another "Bundle and Go" song, or is entirely independent. - RBW File: FVS035 === NAME: Bundle of Truths, A DESCRIPTION: "Barney Bodkin broke his nose" is followed by truths, more or less: "without feet we can't have toes," "crazy folks are always mad," "a taylor's goose will never fly, ... And now, good folks, my song is done, Nobody knows what 'twas about" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1811 (broadside, Bodleian Harding B 10(11)) KEYWORDS: humorous nonballad nonsense FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (2 citations) Opie-Oxford2 34, "Barney Bodkin broke his nose" (1 fragment) Baring-Gould-MotherGoose #272, p. 163, "(Barney Bodkin broke his nose)" BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 10(11), "A Bundle of Truths" ("Barney Bodkin broke his nose"), Laurie and Whittle (London), 1811; also Harding B 16(39d), Douce Ballads 4(58), "A Bundle of Truths"; Harding B 25(1879), Harding B 11(3728), "A Tailor's Goose Can Never Fly"; Harding B 25(36), "All Truth and No Lies" or "A Tailor's Goose Will Never Fly" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "When I've Money I am Merry" (tune, per broadside Bodleian Harding B 25(1879)) NOTES: The first verse of the Bodleian broadsides is quoted in Opie-Oxford2 34, "Barney Bodkin broke his nose." The chorus and two truths of the Bodleian broadsides are quoted in Opie-Oxford2 235, "Hyder iddle diddle dell": "Right fol de riddle del, A yard of pudding's not an ell, Not forgetting didderum hi, A taylor's goose can never fly." A "tailor's goose" is a flat iron with a twisted wrought iron grip that, I guess, reminds someone of a goose's neck. - BS File: OO2034 === NAME: Bung Yer Eye DESCRIPTION: Singer praises his girlfriend, Kitty, and tells of a rowdy dance he takes her to where (Long Tom/Silver Jack) "bossed the whole shebang", Big Dan plays the fiddle, and Tom (Jack) eventually "cleans out" the joint. Chorus: "Bung yer eye! Bung yer eye!" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1926 (Rickaby) LONG_DESCRIPTION: Singer praises his girlfriend, Kitty, and tells of a rowdy dance he takes her to where (Long Tom/Silver Jack) "bossed the whole shebang," Big Dan plays the fiddle, and Tom (Jack) eventually "cleans out" the joint by kicking out sailors (farmers). Chorus: "Bung yer eye! Bung yer eye!" KEYWORDS: fight dancing drink lover FOUND_IN: US(MW) Canada(West) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Rickaby 33, "Bung Yer Eye" (1 text) Beck 41, "Bung Yer Eye" (2 texts) Fowke-Lumbering #4, "A-Lumbering We Go" (1 text, 1 tune, a mixed text starting with two stanzas of "Once More A-Lumbering Go" and continuing with a version of "Bung Yer Eye" minus the chorus) Lomax-ABFS, pp. 450-451, "Bung Yer Eye" (1 text) Roud #6513 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Silver Jack" (character) cf. Quare Bungo Rye" (chorus lyrics) NOTES: This should not be confused with the "Bung Your Eye" that is a version of "Quare Bungo Rye." No relation other than the chorus. The "Silver Jack" referred to in one version of this song is the same character that stars in the song of the same name. - PJS File: Be041 === NAME: Bung Your Eye (II): see Quare Bungo Rye (File: Log416) === NAME: Bunkhouse Ballad DESCRIPTION: Parody of "Fifteen Men on the Dead Man's Chest": "Sixteen men in a pine-slab bunk/Waken with grunt and growl...Coffee and flapjacks, pork and beans/Are waitin' to fill your snoots". In other words, yet another account of life in a lumber camp. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1941 (Beck) KEYWORDS: lumbering work logger nonballad parody FOUND_IN: US(MW) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Beck 18, "Bunkhouse Ballad" (1 text) Roud #8863 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Fifteen Men on the Dead Man's Chest" cf. "The Lumber Camp Song" (theme) and references there NOTES: Fifteen Men on the Dead Man's Chest" was included in Robert Louis Stevenson's _Treasure Island_. In 1891 Young E. Allison, of Louisville, KY, published a long and bloody version. Beck speculates that the composer of this parody may have seen Allison's, but without that text, it's impossible to tell. - PJS File: Be018 === NAME: Bunkhouse Orchestra DESCRIPTION: How the cowboys have a dance: "It' the best grand high that there is within the law When seven jolly punchers tackle 'Turkey in the Straw.'" The dance lets the cowboys forget their troubles, their aches, and the women they pretend not to miss AUTHOR: Words: Charles Badger Clark EARLIEST_DATE: 1920 KEYWORDS: dancing cowboy party FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (2 citations) Fife-Cowboy/West 103, "Bunkhouse Orchestra" (1 text, 1 tune) Saffel-CowboyP, pp. 163-164, "The Bunk-House Ochestra" (1 text) Roud #11093 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Turkey in the Straw" (tune & meter) and references there File: FCW103 === NAME: Bunnit of Straw, The DESCRIPTION: "A buxom young damsel a stage-horse was approaching, Cried 'Help' from afar for her bunnit of straw, For the horse he reached forward, without any addressing, And he seized her straw bunnit in her hungery jaw!" The girl laments the ruined hat. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1939 (Linscott) KEYWORDS: clothes horse humorous FOUND_IN: US(NE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Linscott, pp. 177-179, "The Bunnit of Straw" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #3728 NOTES: Linscott reports, "The first straw bonnet braided in the United States was made by Miss Betsey Metcalf in Providence, Rhode Island, in 1798. Straw bonnets were worn long before straw hats; and although the art of plaiting straw is very ancient, it was not known in England until introduced there by James I." This information she apparently derives from the _Encyclopedia Americana_. - RBW File: Lins177 === NAME: Burd Ellen and Young Tamlane [Child 28] DESCRIPTION: Burd Ellen is at her knitting, crying over her baby. Young Tamlane, apparently the father, bids her rock the child. Rock the child she will not, and he departs with her curse. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1824 (Maidment) KEYWORDS: bastard curse children mother abandonment curse FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Child 28, "Burd Ellen and Young Tamlane" (1 text) Roud #3962 File: C028 === NAME: Burd Isabel and Earl Patrick [Child 257] DESCRIPTION: Patrick promises to marry Isabel if the child she bears is a son. He delays until his parents died, then delays further and prepares to noblewoman. (His wife) wishes to see his son; Isabell will not give him up, and curses Patrick. The curse takes effect AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: KEYWORDS: nobility wedding pregnancy baby lie curse FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland(Aber)) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Child 257, "Burd Isabel and Earl Patrick" (3 texts) Bronson 257, "Burd Isabel and Earl Patrick" (1 version) Leach, pp. 626-629, "Burd Ellen and Earl Patrick" (1 text) Roud #107 File: C257 === NAME: Buren's Grove DESCRIPTION: "The day is hot, we will leave the spot, And together we will roam, We'll find a spot in some cooler cot Within fair Buren's grove. Each morning fair to take the air I walked to Buren's Grove" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1960 (Creighton-SNewBrunswick) KEYWORDS: courting FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Creighton-SNewBrunswick 10, "Buren's Grove" (1 fragment, 1 tune) Roud #2787 NOTES: The [above] description is all of the Creighton-SNewBrunswick fragment. It seems a shame to make a separate entry for so brief a fragment. It is tempting to include it under "Bordon's Grove" (Roud #2322) but there are no common lines. The note in Henry regarding the relationship of Creighton-SNewBrunswick 10 and Henry H529 describes Creighton's entry as "too short to say that it is the same with any certainty." Henry p.324 - BS File: CrSNB010 === NAME: Burges DESCRIPTION: "I'm glad that I am born to die, From grief and woe my soul shall fly, And we'll all shout together in that morning, In that morning, in that morning, And we'll all shout together in that morning." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1933 (Jackson) KEYWORDS: religious nonballad FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (1 citation) Lomax-ABFS, p. 565, "Burges" (1 text, 1 tune) ST LxA565 (Full) Roud #15560 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "In That Morning" (lyrics) File: LxA565 === NAME: Burglar Man, The: see The Old Maid and the Burglar [Laws H23] (File: LH23) === NAME: Burial of Sir John Moore, The DESCRIPTION: "We buried him darkly at dead of night" without a funeral, in a narrow grave, without a coffin. "The foe was sullenly firing" "We carved not a line, we raised not a stone, But left him alone with his glory!" AUTHOR: Rev. Charles Wolfe (1791-1823) (source: Moylan) EARLIEST_DATE: 1817 (_Newry Telegraph_, according to Moylan) KEYWORDS: war burial death soldier HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: Jan 16, 1809 - Moore is killed during the Battle of Corunna and is buried in the ramparts of the town (source: "John Moore (British soldier)" at the Wikipedia site) FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (3 citations) Moylan 183, "The Burial of Sir John Moore" (1 text, 1 tune) ADDITIONAL: Edward Hayes, The Ballads of Ireland (Boston, 1859), Vol II, p. 288, "The Burial of Sir John Moore" Donagh MacDonagh and Lennox Robinson, _The Oxford Book of Irish Verse_ (Oxford, 1958, 1979), pp. 37-38, "The Burial of Sir John Moore" (1 text) NOTES: Moylan: Sir John Moore re-captured Wexford town from the rebels in June 1798. He was killed as Commander in Chief of the British forces fighting the French in Portugal in 1808. - BS It is interesting to wonder how Moore's reputation would have stood had he lived. Although much praised, he had little experience as a commander-in-chief. Administratively, he was probably better than Wellington, but he had not the latter's incredible sense for the strengths and weaknesses of a position (few did, to be sure), and his one chance in sole command ended in partial failure and his own death. Of the senior officers in Ireland in 1798, Moore (1761-1809) was surely the best -- firm (he allowed his men, as they sought to disarm the rebels before the rising, to act harshly and commandeer provisions; see Thomas Pakenham, _The Year of Liberty_, p. 66) but opposed to straight-out looting (Pakenham, p. 258, tells how he personally imposed order on his men when they threatened to devastate the path along which they marched) and generally humane (Pakenham, p. 281); he was the one leading officer who did not hold any courts-martial or military tribunals (Pakenham, p. 284). Many of the very best generals are of this type. He also had a key role in the British invasion of Egypt. David Chandler, author of the magisterial (if not particularly readable) _The Campaigns of Napoleon_, writes of him (p. 627), "During the critical days when Britain was awaiting Napoleon's impending invasion, Moore had trained up a division of light infantry on new principles.... instilling a high degree of personal responsibility in officers and men alike, training the rank and file to think and fight as individuals rather than mere members of a military machine. To technical improvements... Sir John added a great gift for administration." But the Peninsular campaign was his first independent command, and very nearly his first action was the retreat which ended in his death at Corunna; Chandler (p. 627) admits that "it was to be some little time before he found his feet among the familiar and baffling surroundings of Portugal and Spain." Corunna was essentially a French attempt to cut off the British retreat. The British inflicted about 1500 casualties on the French, in exchange for about 800 losses of their own -- but in the course of the battle he was hit in the shoulder by a cannonball (Chandler, p. 656), dying (like Wolfe or Nelson) in the knowledge that the battle was won. Won, but the position lost; he was burid on January 17, and his men evacuated Corunna on January 17 and 18. Napoleon said of him, "His talents and firmness alone saved the British army," but of course by so saying, Napoleon covered over his own flawed Spanish strategy. - RBW File: Moyl183 === NAME: Burial of Wild Bill, The DESCRIPTION: Singer describes how he and his comrades buried their friend Wild Bill, reminiscing about his good character and talents. Characteristic last line of each verse: "As we covered him with the sod" AUTHOR: Captain Jack Crawford EARLIEST_DATE: 1929 (recordings, Jenkins' Pilot Mountaineers) KEYWORDS: burial death cowboy FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (1 citation) Burt, p. 194, "(The Burial of Wild Bill)" (1 excerpt) ST RcTBoWB (Partial) Roud #11542 RECORDINGS: Oscar Jenkins' Pilot Mountaineers [or Frank Jenkins & his Pilot Mountaineers: Oscar Jenkins, Frank Jenkins, Ernest V. Stoneman], "Burial of Wild Bill" (Broadway 8249/Paramount 3240, 1929); Alex Gordon [pseud. for Frank Jenkins & his Pilot Mountaineers], "The Burial of Wild Bill" (Conqueror 7270, 1929) [One of these recordings, probably the Conqueror, is on WhenIWas2.] Glenn Ohrlin, "Burial of Wild Bill" (on Ohrlin01) Ernest V. Stoneman, "The Burial of Wild Bill" (Conqueror 7270, 1929) NOTES: The uncertainty over the name of the bandleader on the Pilot Mountaineers records stems from its listing as "Frank Jenkins & his Pilot Mountaineers" on the Yazoo reissue and in Gennett logs (the Conqueror issue used a Gennett master), but "Oscar Jenkins' Pilot Mountaineers" on the Paramount/Broadway issues. On both records, the vocalist (uncredited, as he was under contract to Victor) was Ernest Stoneman. Notice that the succeeding record on Conqueror is the same song, listed as by Ernest Stoneman, while Frank Mares' catalog lists 7269 as a different song by Stoneman, with Jenkins' Mountaineers. Oy. Oh, and it's quite hard to tell from the text, but it doesn't sound like the subject of this song was Wild Bill Hickok. - PJS Burt claims it *is* Hickok (1837-1876), but she cites only one stanza -- though she says Crawford dedicated the song to Hickok's friend Charley Utter. - RBW File: RcTBoWB === NAME: Burke's Dream [Laws J16] DESCRIPTION: [Thomas] Burke, the singer, dreams he has rejoined his comrades to fight the British. They win a great victory, and he returns home. The scream his mother makes when he returns to her wakens him, and he finds he is still in his cell AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1901 (O'Conor); c.1867 (Zimmermann) KEYWORDS: rebellion battle dream prison mother HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: May 1, 1867 - "General" Thomas F. Burke is convicted of high treason for his leading part in the Fenian insurrection of 1867. He is condemned to die, but the sentence is commuted FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) Ireland REFERENCES: (6 citations) Laws J16, "Burke's Dream" Greenleaf/Mansfield 71, "Burke's Dream" (1 text, 1 tune) O'Conor, p. 70, "Burke's Dream" (1 text) Zimmermann 71, "Burke's Dream" (1 text) Healy-OISBv2, pp. 46-48, "A Dream of General T. F. Burke" (1 text) DT 813, BURKDREM Roud #1893 NOTES: Zimmermann p. 263 makes this song about Richard O'Sullivan Burke who "had become a colonel in the Federal Army during the American Civil War. He was sent back to Ireland by the Fenian Brotherhood, organized the 'Manchester Rescue', was sentenced to fifteen years' penal servitude in 1867, but returned to America in 1874." See what seems to be a broadside on the same subject, Bodleian, Harding B 26(663), "A New Song Call'd the Vision in Col Burke's Cell" ("Come all you Irish patriot's"), P. Brereton (Dublin), c.1867 - BS There is definite uncertainty about the person involved here. Robert Kee's history, _The Bold Fenian Men_ (being Volume II of _The Green Flag_) mentions two Burke/Bourkes of significance. Page 41, refers to "an Irish-American 'general' with a shrunken leg, T[homas] F. Bourke." He commanded at the Battle of Ballyhurst (March 7, 1867), in which the Fenian forces fled at the first government volley. Condemned to be hanged, beheaded, and quartered, he managed a fine speech which put him into Irish folklore (Kee, p. 42). The government finally spared him on the grounds that his execution would have no deterrent effect (Kee, p. 49). Richard O'Sullivan Burke was in 1867 a captain of engineers in the U. S. Army (Kee, p. 32), who travelled Europe to gather arms for the Fenians. Zimmermann is wrong; he was not a colonel (at least not at regular rank; he may have been breveted). According to the _State of New York Adjutant General's Report_, volume 2, p. 236, he was only made captain of the 15th New York Engineers on May 17, 1865, to date from April 29 of that year, and was mustered out as a captain on July 2. His closest thing to a big moment apparently came when he told the crew of the arms runner _Erin's Hope_ that there was no point in landing weapons in Sligo (Kee, p. 43; see the notes to "The Cork Men and New York Men"). In typical Fenian fashion, an attempt was made to rescue him after the British arrested him; in typical Fenian fashion, it was bungled -- and produced a heavy loss of civilian lives (Kee, pp. 49-50). Neither B(o)urke seems to have had much real effect on Irish events; Kee's is the only one of six histories I checked to mention either. I do not think it possible to tell from the song which one is meant. Both of course ended up in prison. The song makes one mention of the singer being in battle leading Irish forces, which sounds like T. F. Burke at Ballyhurst, but it also describes his hard work in prison, which sounds like R. O. Burke. - RBW File: LJ16 === NAME: Burly, Burly Banks of Barbry-O: see Babylon, or, The Bonnie Banks o Fordie [Child 14] (File: C014) === NAME: Burnfoot Town DESCRIPTION: "A paradise for racketeers and they call it Burnfoot Town." Shops, stores, petrol pumps, and sign posts "springing up like mushrooms overnight ... one day will all come down, And when Ireland's free prosperity will leave the Burnfoot Town" AUTHOR: Tom Molloy? (source: McBride) EARLIEST_DATE: 1988 (McBride) KEYWORDS: crime commerce nonballad FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) McBride 13, "Burnfoot Town" (1 text, 1 tune) NOTES: McBride: "[The song] tells, tongue in cheek, of how the racketeers set about to 'clean up' in the area during and after the second World War. Their shops stand silent and derelict today in Burnfoot Town." - BS The curiosity in this is that Ireland *was* free during World War II; Neville Chamberlain had given back the Irish naval bases shortly before Munich. And Ireland did not take part in the war; there was a certain amount of blockade-running, of course, but hardly enough to explain this. The one possibility that might explain this link is that the song perhaps comes from a Catholic in Northern Ireland, who would consider Ulster an "unfree" part of Ireland. The other possibility would be to associate the song with the First World War, which directly involved Ireland and came at a time when Ireland was still under British rule. Of course, there weren't many petrol pumps in Ireland then. - RBW File: McB1013 === NAME: Burning of Auchindown, The: see Willie Macintosh [Child 183] (File: C183) === NAME: Burning of Rosslea, The DESCRIPTION: The rebels march to Rosslea and start burning houses of RIC B's in the center of town. In return B's "pillaged and looted and carried away, The stuff of poor Catholics" A month later the B's "three houses they burned for each one in Rosslea." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1973 (Morton-Maguire) KEYWORDS: battle rebellion fire IRA police HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1920-1921 - The Black and Tan War March 21, 1921 - The Monaghan Brigade of the IRA attacks Rosslea (source: Morton-Maguire). FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) Morton-Maguire 55, pp. 152-153,176-177, "The Burning of Rosslea" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #2937 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Quilty Burning" (subject) and references there NOTES: RIC: Sir Robert Peel established the Royal Irish Constabulary in 1812. (source: _Sir Robert "Bobby" Peel (1788-1850)_ at Historic UK site.) For more information on the Black and Tan War see RBW note for "The Bold Black and Tan."- BS Morton-Maguire: "During the 'troubles' of 1921 the R.I.C. barracks in Rosslea was one of the many in 'risky' area, evacuated at an early stage. When the A-Specials (Mobilized B-Specials) were formed, they took it on themselves to police the area." Morton goes on to discuss the history behind the burning, including an earlier burning of Catholic homes by Specials. In the burning described by the song "fourteen houses were burned, and ... four officers were shot, two fatally." The plan had been to burn sixteen houses and shoot four Specials. - BS A little internet searching shows that there were killings in Rosslea in 1972 as part of the Troubles. I can't help but wonder if that didn't encourage someone to dust off this song as Morton prepared his book. - RBW File: MoMa055 === NAME: Burning of the Bayou Sara, The: see The Bayou Sara (File: DTBayous) === NAME: Burning of the Granite Mill, The [Laws G13] DESCRIPTION: Workers in a Fall River factory are routinely locked into their workplace. The mill catches fire and the workers -- who could have been saved if conditions had been better -- die in agony AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1932 (Creighton-NovaScotia) KEYWORDS: fire death disaster HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: Sept 19, 1874 - Burning of the Granite Mill in Fall River, Massachusetts. The tragedy, in which 20 died, three disappeared, and 36 were injured, was aggravated by the failure to sound a fire alarm for twenty minutes FOUND_IN: US(NE) Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Laws G13, "The Burning of the Granite Mill" Creighton-NovaScotia 118, "Granite Mill" (1 text, 1 tune) DT 675, GRANITML Roud #1823 File: LG13 === NAME: Burns and His Highland Mary [Laws O34] DESCRIPTION: (Robert) Burns meets Mary on the banks of the Ayr. Mary is returning to the Highlands to visit friends, but promises to return quickly. Both promise to be true. Mary departs, but soon falls sick and dies. Burns "ne'er did... love so fondly again." AUTHOR: Ord lists a "police constable named Thomson," c. 1865 EARLIEST_DATE: before 1835 (broadside, Bodleian Firth b.26(512)) KEYWORDS: courting love death separation HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1759-1796 - Life of Robert Burns 1786 - Death of Mary Campbell while on a visit to the Highlands FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar,Newf) US(NE) Ireland REFERENCES: (10 citations) Laws O34, "Burns and His Highland Mary" Ford-Vagabond, pp. 112-114, "Burns and His Highland Mary" (1 text, 1 tune) Doerflinger, pp. 312-313, "Burns and His Highland Mary" (1 text, 1 tune) Ord, pp. 354-355, "The Parting of Burns and Highland Mary" (1 text, 1 tune) Tunney-SongsThunder, pp. 108-111, "The Clear, Winding Ayr" (1 text) Creighton/Senior, p. 159-161, "Burns and His Highland Mary" (1 text) Creighton-Maritime, pp. 88-89, "Burns and His Highland Mary" (1 text, 2 tunes) Creighton-SNewBrunswick 56, "Burns and His Highland" (1 text, 1 tune) Peacock, pp. 427-429, "The Banks of the Ayr" (1 text, 2 tunes) DT 488, BURNMARY Roud #820 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Firth b.26(512), "Burns and Highland Mary," G. Walker (Durham), 1797-1834; also Harding B 15(37a), Harding B 11(3216), Harding B 11(496), Harding B 26(84)[some words illegible], Harding B 26(85), "Burns and Highland Mary"; 2806 c.14(5), 2806 c.14(4)[some words illegible], Johnson Ballads 3180[some words illegible], 2806 c.14(3)[some lines illegible], "Burns and His Highland Mary" Murray, Mu23-y1:009, "Burns and Highland Mary," J. Bristow (Glasgow), 19C; also Mu23-y1:026, Mu23-y4:024, "Burns and Highland Mary" NLScotland, RB.m.168(082), "Burns and His Highland Mary," unknown, c.1840; also APS.3.80.4, RB.m.143(030), L.C.Fol.70(10a), "Burns and His Highland Mary" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Laurel Hill" (tune) cf. "Highland Mary" (subject) File: LO34 === NAME: Burns's Log Camp DESCRIPTION: The singer arrives in the logging camp to find horrible conditions: "The floors were all dirty, all covered with mud; The bed quilts were lousy, and so was the grub." The very first night, a fight erupted, "And thus I was greeted at Burns's log camp." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1951 KEYWORDS: logger hardtimes fight FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Doerflinger, p. 217, "Burns's Log Camp" (1 text, 1 tune) Manny/Wilson 7, "Bruce's Log Camp (Hunter's Log Camp)" (3 fragments, 1 tune) ST Doe217 (Partial) Roud #9203 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Lumber Camp Song" (theme) and references there NOTES: Manny/Wilson: "Mr Doerflinger tactfully changed the name of the camp from Bruce's to Burns's, to avoid giving offense." - BS File: Doe217 === NAME: Burnt-Out Old Fellow, The [An Seanduine Doighte] DESCRIPTION: Irish Gaelic: Younger woman complains about her old husband; he sleeps too much, and sports with too many ladies. She sends him to town, then spots him with various women. If she could, she'd lock her old man up and keep company with young men. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1953 (collected by Peter Kennedy) LONG_DESCRIPTION: Irish Gaelic: Younger woman complains about her old husband; he sleeps too much, and sports with too many ladies. She sends him to town, then spots him with three women enticing him and four kissing him. She sends him to the west country, a place known for whores; "his genitals lessened and his jaws became bony/And he came back to me like a newly-born pony." She says that, if she had the chance, she'd lock her old man up and keep company with young men. Chorus: "O my old man O pity I fed you/O my old man O pity I wed you/O my old man O pity I bed you/Sleepin' your sleep for ever and ever" KEYWORDS: age infidelity jealousy marriage sex bawdy foreignlanguage humorous husband whore wife FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) Kennedy 45, "An Seanduine Doighte [The Burnt-Out Old Fellow]" (1 text in Irish Gaelic + translation, 1 tune) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Maids When You're Young Never Wed an Old Man" (theme) and references there NOTES: The parallel with "Maids When You're Young..." is obvious, although it should be noted that the wife in that song seems to have the opposite problem from the wife in this one. - PJS Kennedy claims there are "probably more versions of this song than any other in the Irish language," and it's certainly true that his reference list is longer than usual. The problem, as always with Kennedy, is determining if his references are actually to the same song. - RBW File: K045 === NAME: Bury Me Beneath the Willow DESCRIPTION: The singer has been abandoned by (her) lover. Tomorrow was to be their wedding day, but now he is off with another girl. The singer asks her friends to "bury me beneath the willow... And when he knows that I am sleeping, maybe then he'll think of me." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1909 (Belden) KEYWORDS: separation infidelity love death FOUND_IN: US(Ap,MW,SE,So) REFERENCES: (10 citations) Belden, pp. 482-483, "Under the Willow Tree" (2 texts) Randolph 747, "Bury Me Beneath the Willow" (3 short texts, 3 tunes) Randolph/Cohen, pp. 505-506, "Bury Me Beneath the Willow" (1 text, 1 tune -- Randolph's 747B) BrownIII 267, "The Weeping Willow" (3 texts plus 4 excerpts and mention of 4 more) Fuson, p. 126, "The Weeping Willow" (1 text) Cambiaire, p. 85, "O Bury Me Beneath the Weeping Willow" (1 text) Sandburg, pp. 314-315, "Bury Me Beneath the Willow" (1 text, 1 tune) Abrahams/Foss, p. 58, "(Bury Me Beneath the Willow)" (1 text) Silber-FSWB, p. 178, "Bury Me Beneath The Willow" (1 text) DT, BURYWLLW* Roud #410 RECORDINGS: Burnett & Rutherford, "Weeping Willow Tree" (Columbia 15113-D, 1927; rec. 1926; on BurnRuth01) Carter Family, "Bury Me Under the Weeping Willow" (Victor 21074, 1927; Bluebird B-6053, 1935) Jim Cole & his Tennessee Mountaineers, "Bury Me Beneath the Willow" (Crown 3122, 1931) Delmore Brothers, "Bury Me Under the Weeping Willow" (Bluebird B-7741, 1938) Red Foley & the Andrews Sisters (!), "Bury Me Beneath the Willow" (Decca 29222, 1947) Kelly Harrell, "Beneath the Weeping Willow Tree" (Victor 20535, 1925; on KHarrell01) Asa Martin, "Bury Me 'neath the Weeping Willow" (Banner 32426/Melotone M-12497 [both as Martin & Roberts]/Royal [Canada] 91402, 1932) Lester McFarland & Robert Gardner, "Weeping Willow Tree" (Brunswick 199, 1928; rec. 1927) Monroe Brothers, "Weeping Willow Tree" (Bluebird B-7093, 1937) Holland Puckett, "Weeping Willow Tree" (Champion 15334/Supertone 9243, 1928) Riley Puckett, "Bury Me 'Neath the Willow Tree" (Bluebird B-6348, 1936) Red Fox Chasers, "Weeping Willow Tree" (Supertone 9322, 1929) Lookout Mountain Revelers, "Bury Me Beneath the Willow" (Paramount 3143, 1928) Almeda Riddle, "Bury Me Beneath the Willow" (on LomaxCD1707) Shelton & Fox, "Bury Me Beneath the Willow" (Decca 5184, 1936) Ernest V. Stoneman, "Bury Me Beneath the Weeping Willow" (CYL: Edison [BA] 5187, 1927) (Edison 51909, 1927) Ernest Thompson, "Weeping Willow Tree" (Columbia 15001-D, 1924) Henry Whitter, "The Weeping Willow Tree" (OKeh 40187, 1924; rec. 1923); "Go Bury Me beneath the Willow" (OKeh 45046, 1926) SAME_TUNE: Carter Family, "Answer to Weeping Willow" (Decca 5234, 1936) Karl & Harty, "We Buried Her Beneath the Willow" (Melotone 6-04-61, 1936) [I am guessing here, not having heard the record - but I'll betcha - PJS] File: R747 === NAME: Bury Me in the Cornfield, Nigger: see Bury Me in the Garden (File: Br3266) === NAME: Bury Me in the Garden DESCRIPTION: "Bury me in the garden, mother, mother, Bury me in the garden, mother, mother, mother dear, Bury me in the garden." "O, the moonlight... shines so bright... way down in the garden 'neath the sycamore tree." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1928 (Brown) KEYWORDS: death burial mother FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) BrownIII 266, "Bury Me in the Garden" (1 text) Roud #15743 ALTERNATE_TITLES: Bury Me in the Cornfield, Nigger File: Br3266 === NAME: Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie [Laws B2] DESCRIPTION: A cowboy is dying. He asks to be taken home and buried in his family home. His request is ignored; he is buried in a small and isolated prairie grave AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: +1901 (JAFL14) KEYWORDS: cowboy death burial FOUND_IN: US(Ap,NW,Ro,So,SE) Canada(Newf,West) REFERENCES: (21 citations) Laws B2, "The Dying Cowboy (Oh Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie)" (sample text in NAB, pp. 81-82) Larkin, pp. 37-39, "The Lone Prairie" (1 text, 1 tune) Belden, pp. 387-392, "The Lone Prairie" (5 texts) Randolph 184, "Oh Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie" (2 texts, 2 tunes) BrownII 262, "The Lone Prairie" (2 texts) Hudson 93, pp. 222-223, "O Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie" (1 text) Friedman, p. 436, "The Lone Prairie" (1 text) Fowke/Johnston, pp. 92-93, "Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie" (1 text, 1 tune) Peacock, pp. 153-154, "Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie" (1 text, 1 tune) Sandburg, p. 20, "Oh, Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie" (1 short text, 1 tune) Fife-Cowboy/West 117, "The Dying Cowboy" (3 texts, 1 tune) SharpAp 169, "The Lonesome Prairie" (3 texts, 3 tunes) Lomax-FSUSA 60, "Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie" (1 text, 1 tune) LPound-ABS, 78, pp. 171-173, "O Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie" (1 text) JHCox 54, "The Lone Prairie" (2 texts) JHCoxIIB, #9, p. 143, "The Lone Prairie" (1 fragment, 1 tune) Darling-NAS, pp. 164-165, "Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie" (1 text) Silber-FSWB, p. 110, "Bury Me Not On The Lone Prairie" (1 text) Saffel-CowboyP, pp. 201-203, "The Dying Cowboy" (1 text) Fuld-WFM, pp. 396-398, "Oh, Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie" DT 370, LONEPRAR* Roud #631 RECORDINGS: Arkansas Woodchopper [pseud. for Luther Ossenbrink], "The Dying Cowboy" (Columbia 15463-D, 1929; rec. 1928) Jules [Verne] Allen, "The Dying Cowboy" (Victor 23834, 1933; on BackSaddle) Bentley Ball, "The Dying Cowboy" (Columbia A3085, 1920) Bill Childers, "Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie" (OKeh 45203, 1928) Vernon Dalhart, "Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie" (Columbia 969-D, 1927) (Romeo 431/Perfect 12361, 1927) (CYL: Edison [BA] 5315, n.d. but prob. 1927) Phil & Frank Luther, "Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie" (Melotone M-12143, 1931) Asa Martin, "The Dying Cowboy" (Banner 32426/Melotone M12497 [both as Martin & Roberts]/Royal [Canada] 91402, 1932) Sloan Matthews, "The Dying Cowboy" (AFS, 1940s; on LC28) Pickard Family, "Bury Me Not On The Lone Prairie" (Columbia 15141-D, 1927) Holland Puckett, "The Dying Cowboy" (Silvertone 25065, 1927; Supertone 9253, 1929) Herbert Sills, "O Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie" (on Saskatch01) Carl T. Sprague, "Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie" (Victor 20122, 1926; Montgomery Ward M-4099, 1933; on MakeMe) Vel Veteran [pseud. for either Arthur Fields, Vernon Dalhart, or Irving Kaufman] "O Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie" (Grey Gull 4239, 1928) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Ocean Burial" cf. "Going to Leave Old Texas (Old Texas, Texas Song, The Cowman's Lament)" (tune) cf. "I've Got No Use for the Women" (lyrics) NOTES: Probably adapted from "The Ocean Burial," attributed to Rev. Edwin H. Chapin (1839). For the complex question of the tune, see the notes on that piece. The 1922 edition of Thorp (quoted also by Belden) claims that the adaption to "The Lone Prairie" is by H. Clemons and written in 1872. I know of no supporting data. - RBW File: LB02 === NAME: Bush Christening, The DESCRIPTION: A man offers a doctor extra payment for services. He explains that it is on behalf of his baby who nearly died unbaptized. His wife had tried to take the child to a church, but no water was available. Had not a doctor chanced by, the baby would have died AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1987 LONG_DESCRIPTION: A man offers a doctor extra payment for services. He explains that it is on behalf of his baby who nearly died unbaptized, and his wife who nearly went mad as a result. The nearest church had only occasional services, as the preacher travelled widely in the bush. When the child took ill, they hoped to get the child baptized before death, but no water was to be had at the church, and a drunkard drank the water they had brought in a gin bottle. Had not a doctor happened by their hut, the baby would have died unchristened -- but the doctor saved the baby KEYWORDS: children clergy disease recitation FOUND_IN: Australia REFERENCES: (1 citation) Meredith/Covell/Brown, pp. 171-173, "The Bush Christening" (1 text) NOTES: Banjo Paterson published a poem, "A Bush Christening" ("On the outer Barcoo where the churches are few And men of religion are scanty") which shares many plot elements with this piece. The details are distinctly different, however (in the Paterson piece, the child is ten years old, and deliberately flees christening until whiskey is thrown over his head). Meredith's source claims to have learned this around the beginning of the twentieth century. One suspect this is another case where Paterson found a traditional piece and put his own stamp on it. - RBW File: MCB171 === NAME: Bushes and Briars DESCRIPTION: "Through bushes and through briars I lately took my way." "Long time have I been waiting for the coming of my dear." "Sometimes I am uneasy... Sometimes I think I'll go... And tell to him my mind." But she fears being too bold AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1908 (Vaughn Williams, _Folk Ongs from the Eastern Counties_) KEYWORDS: love separation animal FOUND_IN: Britain(England(Lond)) REFERENCES: (2 citations) DT, BUSHBRIR* ADDITIONAL: Maud Karpeles, _Folk Songs of Europe_, Oak, 1956, 1964, p. 42, "Bushes and Briars" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #1027 ALTERNATE_TITLES: Through Bushes and Briars File: FSOE026 === NAME: Bushman's Song, A: see The Castlereagh River (File: MA045) === NAME: Bushwhacker's Song DESCRIPTION: "I am a bushwhacker, The thicket's my home (x3)... And them that don't like me can leave me alone." "I'll tune up my fiddle And rosin my bow (x3)... And I shall find welcome Wherever I go." "My kinfolks don't like me, And that I well know." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1922 (Brown) KEYWORDS: home music floatingverses Civilwar FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) BrownIII 383, "Bushwhacker's Song" (1 text) Roud #11751 NOTES: Evidently a parody of something like "The Wagoner's Lad." Brown's informant gave detailed references connecting it do a gang of Civil War deserters, but there is no actual evidence for this in the text. - RBW File: Br3382 === NAME: Business of Makin' the Paper, The DESCRIPTION: Making paper is begun by cutting pine and spruce and sending it by truck, train, or river to the mill. There it is barked, chipped, digested, and cooked. It is ground to pulp, treated with sulphite and finally rolled into paper and shipped by A.N.D. AUTHOR: Omar Blondahl EARLIEST_DATE: 1964 (Blondahl) KEYWORDS: commerce technology nonballad work FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Blondahl, pp. 37-38, "The Business of Makin' the Paper" (1 text, 1 tune) NOTES: Blondahl: "The song was used in a Christmas greeting -- to all, from the Anglo-Newfoundland Development Company Limited. The A.N.D., as it is better known, is one of Newfoundland's great pulp and paper mills. This little song is not included as a ... folk song. It does, however, give us a small idea of the mechanics of paper-making and, as this is one of Newfoundland's prime industries, perhaps we do no harm, after all." - BS File: Blon037 === NAME: Busk, Busk, Bonnie Lassie DESCRIPTION: Singer asks girl to go with him. He points to shepherds and soldiers marching, and the snowy hills, which parted many lovers and will part them. Refrain: "Busk, busk, bonnie lassie, and come alang wi me/I will tak' ye tae Glenisla near bonnie Glenshee" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1963 (collected from Charlotte Higgins) KEYWORDS: courting love travel parting FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland(Aber)) REFERENCES: (1 citation) MacSeegTrav 33, "Busk, Busk, Bonnie Lassie" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #832 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Oh! No, No" (lyrics) NOTES: No relation to "Lass of Glenshee." - PJS To busk, in this context, is to prepare to travel. - PJS, RBW File: McCST033 === NAME: But I Forgot to Cry DESCRIPTION: "Johnie cam to our toun, to our toon, to our toun... The body wi' thet ye. And O as he kittled me... But I forgot to cry." "He gaed thro' the fields wi' me... And doun amang the rye. Then O as he kittled me... But I forgot to cry." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1827 (Kinloch) KEYWORDS: courting seduction FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Kinloch-BBook XXV, p. 79, (no title) (1 text) ST KinBB25 (Full) Roud #8155 File: KinBB25 === NAME: Butcher and Chamber Maid, The: see The Brisk Young Butcher (File: DTxmasgo) === NAME: Butcher Boy, The [Laws P24] DESCRIPTION: The butcher boy has "courted [the girl's] life away," but now has left her (for a richer girl?). She writes a letter expressing her grief, then hangs herself. Her father finds her body and the note asking that her grave show that she died for love AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1865 (broadside, Bodleian Harding B 18(72)) KEYWORDS: seduction suicide pregnancy betrayal abandonment FOUND_IN: Britain(England(South)) US(Ap,MA,MW,NE,Ro,SE,So) Canada(Mar,Newf) Australia REFERENCES: (36 citations) Laws P24, "The Butcher Boy" Belden, pp. 201-207, "The Butcher Boy" (3 texts plus excerpts from 2 more and references to 3 more, 3 tunes); see also pp. 478-480, "The Blue-Eyed Boy" (4 texts, though "D" is a fragment, probably of "Tavern in the Town" or "The Butcher Boy" or some such) Randolph 45, "The Butcher Boy" (4 texts plus 4 excerpts, 2 tunes) Eddy 41, "The Butcher Boy" (2 texts, 2 tunes) Gardner/Chickering 37, "The Butcher Boy" (1 text plus 2 excerpts and mention of 4 more, 2 tunes); also 25, "The Sailor Boy" (1 short text; the first 6 lines are "The Sailor Boy" [Laws K12]; the last twelve are perhaps "The Butcher Boy") Flanders/Brown, pp. 115-116, "The Butcher Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) Linscott, pp. 179-181, "The Butcher Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) Leach, pp. 737-738, "The Butcher Boy" (1 text) BrownII 81, "The Butcher Boy" (6 texts plus 5 excerpts and mention of 3 others) BrownIII 254, "Little Sparrow" (4 texts plus 1 excerpt and 1 fragment; the "F" text, however, is primarily "The Butcher Boy" or an "I Wish I Wish" piece of some sort) Scarborough-SongCatcher, pp. 282-288, "The Butcher Boy" (8 texts, with local titles "The Butcher Boy" (a single stanza), "Butcher Boy," "The Butcher Boy," "Jersey City," (E has no title and is a single-sentence fragment about Polly Perkins), "In Johnson City" (this short might be "Tavern in the Town" or similar), "Butcher's Boy," "The Girl Who Died For Love" (this version too might be a simple "Died for Love" piece); 3 tunes on pp. 431-433) MHenry-Appalachians, pp. 173-174, "I Am A Rambling Rowdy Boy" (1 text, which opens with a stanza from some sort of rambling man song but then becomes a standard, if short, "Butcher Boy" version) Brewster 34, "The Butcher's Boy" (3 texts plus mention of 6 more) SharpAp 101, "The Brisk Young Lover" (4 texts, 4 tunes) Friedman, p. 110, "The Butcher Boy" (1 text) Hudson 45, pp. 160-161, "The Butcher's Boy" (1 text plus mention of 11 more) Warner 86, "A Rude and Rambling Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) Shellans, p. 28, "The Farmer's Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) Meredith/Anderson, pp. 267-268, "The Maiden's Prayer" (1 text, 1 tune, with an unusual introduction in which the false lover is a soldier) Sandburg, p. 324, "Go Bring Me Back My Blue-Eyed Boy" and "London City" (2 texts, 1 tune) Copper-SoBreeze, pp. 230-231, "In Sheffield Park" (1 text, 1 tune) Asch/Dunson/Raim, p. 28 "The Butcher's Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) Kennedy 160, "In Sheffield Park" (1 text plus a second in the notes, 1 tune) Cohen/Seeger/Wood, pp. 60-62, "Snow Dove" (1 text, 1 tune) Spaeth-WeepMore, pp. 128-129, "In Jersey City" (1 text, 1 tune) JHJohnson, p. 77, "The Butcher Boy" (1 text) LPound-ABS, 24, pp.60-62, "The Butcher's Boy" (1 text; the "B" text is "Tavern in the Town") JHCox 145, "The Butcher Boy" (2 texts plus mention of 1 more, 1 tune) MacSeegTrav 73, "The Butcher Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) Peacock, pp. 707-708, "The Butcher Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) Creighton-NovaScotia 16, "Butcher Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) Mackenzie 59, "The Butcher Boy" (2 texts, 1 tune) Darling-NAS, pp. 139-140, "The Butcher Boy" (1 text); also pp. 141-142, "Morning Fair" (a complex text, with all sorts of floating elements, but with the final stanzas of this song) Silber-FSWB, p. 178, "The Butcher's Boy" (1 text) DT 320, BUTCHBOY* ADDITIONAL: Fred W. Allsopp, Folklore of Romantic Arkansas, Volume II (1931), p. 207, "(The Butcher's Boy)" (1 fragment) Roud #409 RECORDINGS: Blue Sky Boys, "The Butcher's Boy" (Montgomery Ward 8668, c. 1937) Vernon Dalhart, "The Butcher's Boy" (Perfect 12330, 1927) Kelly Harrell, "Butcher's Boy" (Victor 19563, 1925; on KHarrell01) (Victor 20242, 1926; on KHarrell01) Buell Kazee, "The Butcher's Boy" (Brunswick 213A, 1928; Brunswick 437, 1930; on AAFM1, KMM); "Butcher Boy" (on Kazee01) Jean Ritchie & Doc Watson, "Go Dig My Grave (Railroad Boy)" (on RitchieWatson1, RitchieWatsonCD1) Henry Whitter, "The Butcher Boy" (OKeh 40375, 1925) Ephraim Woodie & the Henpecked Husbands, "The Fatal Courtship" [uses tune of "Banks of the Ohio"] (Columbia 15564-D, 1930; rec. 1929; on LostProv1) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 18(72), "The Butcher Boy" ("In Jersey city where I did dwell"), H. De Marsan (New York), 1861-1864; also Harding B 18(71), "The Butcher Boy" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "My Blue-Eyed Boy" (lyrics, theme) cf. "Must I Go Bound" (lyrics, theme) cf. "The Sailor Boy (I)" [Laws K12] (lyrics) cf. "Died for Love (I)" cf. "Tavern in the Town" cf. "Love Has Brought Me to Despair" [Laws P25] (lyrics) cf. "Waly Waly (The Water is Wide)" cf. "Careless Love" (floating lyrics) cf. "Ye Mariners All" (tune) cf. "Dink's Song" (floating lyrics) cf. "Every Night When the Sun Goes In" (lyrics, plot) cf. "Farewell, Sweetheart (The Parting Lovers, The Slighted Sweetheart)" (lyrics) cf. "Beam of Oak" (theme) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Jersey City The Wild Goose Grasses NOTES: Most scholars hold that this song is a combination of two others (Randolph follows Cox in claiming *four*). The primary evidence is the shift in narrative style: The first part of the ballad is in first person, the rest (affiliated with "There is an Alehouse in Yonder Town/Tavern in the Town") is in the third person. Leach, on the other hand, considers it to be a single song of American origin. Given the extreme variations in the form of this ballad (e.g. a significant number of versions omit the fact that the butcher boy left to marry a richer girl; some of the most poignant imply that the butcher boy rather than the father found her body) and the amount of floating material it contains, any theories of dependence must be examined carefully. The two songs, "My Blue-Eyed Boy" and "Must I Go Bound," are clearly related (probably decayed offshoots of this song), now so damaged as to force separate listing. But there are, as so often, intermediate versions; one should check the references for those songs. "Died for Love (I)" is perhaps a worn-down fragment of this piece, consisting of the lament without the suicide. Similarly the Brown collection's piece "My Little Dear, So Fare You Well." MacColl and Seeger have classified related texts under fully seven heads: * "Deep in Love," corresponding roughly to "Must I Go Bound" in the Ballad Index. Generally lyric. * The Butcher Boy. Characterized by the story of betrayal and eventual suicide (informal translation: If the girl kills herself, file the song here no matter *what* the rest of it looks like. If she dies but doesn't kill herself, it's something else, perhaps "Died for Love (I)"). If there is a core to this family, this is it. * Love Has Brought Me To Despair. (Laws P25). This shares lyrics with this family, notably those concerning the girl's burial, but has a slighly distinct plot. * Waly Waly/The Water Is Wide. Related primarily by theme, it seems to me. * The Tavern in the Town. Shares lyrics, but a distinct song (or at least recension) by our standards. * Careless Love. Clearly distinct. * Died for Love (I). This shares the stanzas of lamentation with "The Butcher Boy," but is distinct in that the girl is certainly pregnant (the girl in "The Butcher Boy" may be, but not all versions show this), she laments her folly, but she does *not* kill herself. It's much more lyric than "The Butcher Boy." - RBW Broadside Bodleian Harding B 18(72): H. De Marsan dating per _Studying Nineteenth-Century Popular Song_ by Paul Charosh in American Music, Winter 1997, Vol 15.4, Table 1, available at FindArticles site. - BS File: LP24 === NAME: Butter and Cheese and All: see The Greasy Cook (Butter and Cheese and All, The Cook's Choice) (File: CoSB236) === NAME: Buttercup Joe DESCRIPTION: Singer prides himself on his plain tastes. In summer the girls like to romp and roll with rustic lads in the hay. His ladyfriend, Mary, a dairymaid, makes fine dumplings; he plans to "ask her if she won't supply/A rustic chap like I am." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1957 (recording, Tony Wales) LONG_DESCRIPTION: Singer prides himself on being rustic with plain tastes; the gentry laugh at him, but he laughs at them in turn. In summer the girls like to romp and roll with rustic lads in the hay. His young woman, Mary, a dairymaid, makes fine dumplings; he plans to "ask her if she won't supply/A rustic chap like I am." Cho: "Now I can guide a plow, milk a cow, and I can reap and sow/Fresh as the daisies in the fields/and they calls I Buttercup Joe" KEYWORDS: courting love sex food FOUND_IN: Britain(England(South)) REFERENCES: (0 citations) Roud #1635 RECORDINGS: Tony Wales, "Buttercup Joe" (on TWales1) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Husbandman and the Servingman" (subject, a few phrases) cf. "Harmless Young Jim" (innuendoes) cf. "Blackberry Grove" (innuendoes) NOTES: Wales's informant told him the words were being sung in Sussex in 1889, but offered no evidence, so I remain conservative in assigning an earliest date. I strongly suspect a music-hall origin. - PJS Nonetheless, the song is fairly well established in English tradition, though it hasn't been printed much. I suspect there may have been one or two rewrites along the way; some of the versions vary a great deal. - RBW File: RcButJoe === NAME: Buttermilk Boy, The DESCRIPTION: A poor boy tells his mother of his plan to get buttermilk, sell it to buy eggs, raise chickens, sell chickens, etc., and so get rich. Very early on, he spills the goods and his schemes come to naught. Listeners are warned against counting their chickens AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1924 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: money commerce poverty FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H57a, pp. 57-58, "The Buttermilk Boy" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #1227 File: HHH057a === NAME: Buttermilk Hill: see Shule Agra (Shool Aroo[n], Buttermilk Hill, Johnny's Gone for a Soldier) (File: R107) === NAME: Button Willow Tree: see Rosemary Lane [Laws K43] (File: LK43) === NAME: Buxter's Bold Crew: see The Bold Princess Royal [Laws K29] (File: LK29) === NAME: Buy a Charter Oak DESCRIPTION: "I'm going to tell my mother, I'm going to tell my pa, I'm going to tell my brother and all my brothers-in-law, I'm going to tell my uncle and all my cousins' folk To buy, to buy, to buy a Charter Oak." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1942 (Randolph) KEYWORDS: technology commerce FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Randolph 487, "Buy a Charter Oak" (1 short text, 1 tune) Roud #7588 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Wilson Patent Stove" (theme) NOTES: For all that this sounds like a (Nineteen-)Sixties TV commercial, Charter Oak stoves were advertised in the Ozark region in the Eighteen-Sixties. Spaeth mentions a "sacred song" called "The Charter Oak" (by Henry Russell) of around 1837. I don't know if the jingle is to the tune of Russell's song. - RBW File: R487 === NAME: Buy Broom Besoms (I Maun Hae a Wife) DESCRIPTION: The besom-seller calls his wares, then confesses, "I maun hae a wife, whaso'er she be." He will take anything, e.g., "If that she be bonnie, I shall think it right; If she should be ugly, what's the odds at night?" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1900 (Stokoe/Reay) KEYWORDS: husband wife marriage oldmaid humorous FOUND_IN: Britain(England(North) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Stokoe/Reay, pp. 20-21, "Buy Broom Buzzems" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BROOMBES* BROOMBES3* Roud #1623 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Fine Broom Besoms (When I Was wi' Barney)" (lyrics) NOTES: The besom-seller's cry, "Buy broom besoms, wha will buy them noo? (Fine heather ringers), better never grew" is obviously very old, and inspired Burns in 1796 to write "Wha will buy my troggin." It isn't really a song, though, and it evidently invited completion, as I am aware of at least three texts with this burden: * I Maun Hae a Wife, probably Scottish, in which the old besom-maker desperately seeks a companion. This humorous text seems to be the best-known of the variants * The Sam Henry text "Fine Broom Besoms," in which the singer misses Barney * The Besom Maker, a song of seduction, printed as a broadside. - RBW File: DTbroomb === NAME: Buy Broom Buzzems: see Buy Broom Besoms (I Maun Hae a Wife) (File: DTbroomb) === NAME: Buy Me a China Doll: see Milking Pails (China Doll) (File: R356) === NAME: By and By: see By'n By (File: San453) === NAME: By By, My Honey: see Who Will Shoe Your Pretty Little Foot (plus related references, e.g. The Lass of Roch Royal [Child 76]) (File: C076A) === NAME: By Kells Waters: see The Lover's Curse (Kellswater) (File: HHH442) === NAME: By Kells Waters (Kellswaterside) DESCRIPTION: The singer sets out and stops, seemingly at random, at a cottage by Kellswater. He introduces himself to the girl, and asks her to marry. She thanks him for the offer but refuses. He tells her of the birdsongs and other joys of his home. She gives in AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1856 (broadside, Bodleian 2806 b.11(201)) KEYWORDS: love courting home marriage beauty FOUND_IN: Ireland Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (5 citations) SHenry H802, p. 466, "Kellswaterside" (1 text, 1 tune) McBride 26, "Fair Randalstown" (1 text, 1 tune) Lehr/Best 104, "The Sweet Town of Anthony" (1 text, 1 tune) Creighton-Maritime, p. 51, "By Kells Waters" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, KELLWAT2* Roud #2730 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, 2806 b.11(201), "Bonny Kell's Waters," The Poet's Box (Glasgow), 1856 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Sweet County Antrim" SAME_TUNE: Camlachie March (per broadside Bodleian 2806 b.11(201)) File: HHH802 === NAME: By Memory Inspired DESCRIPTION: "By Memory inspired And love of country fired, The deeds of Men I love to dwell upon... Here's a memory to the friends that are gone. O'Connell, William Orr, John Mitchel, McCann, John and Henry Sheares, Maguire, Emmet, and others are recalled AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1962 KEYWORDS: Ireland rebellion memorial FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (2 citations) PGalvin. pp. 101-102, "By Memory Inspired" (1 text, 1 tune) Moylan 163, "By Memory Inspired" (1 text, 1 tune) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Grand Dissolving Views" (II) (subject and references there) cf. "Daniel O'Connell (I)" (subject: Daniel O'Connell) and references there cf. "The Wake of William Orr" (subject) cf. "The Brothers John and Henry Sheares" (subject) NOTES: Among those mentioned in versions of this song: O'Connell: Daniel O'Connell (1775-1847), who tried to convince the British to reform administration of Ireland and who was the leading figure on behalf of Catholic Emancipation. (For his history, see the many songs cited in the cross-references to )"Daniel O'Connell (I).") John Mitchel - One of the 1848 rebels. (For his history, see "John Mitchel"). Emmet - Robert Emmet (1778-1803), for whom see "Bold Robert Emmet." - RBW Moylan adds information for those mentioned in the song: "Edward" Lord Edward Fitzgerald's capture is cited here, but in less detail than in "Edward" (III) William Orr - Farmer, arrested in September 1796, charged with administering the United Irish oath, and executed October 14, 1797. His death inspired a well-known poem by William Drennan, "The Wake of William Orr," which also is found in this Index though I'm none too sure it's traditional. Thomas Reynolds - member of the Leinster Directory of the United Irishmen turned informer. John McCann, Bond and William Byrne - Among the members of the United Irish leadership taken in a raid based on Reynold's information. The Sheares brothers - members of the new National Directory set up to replace the one destroyed by the raid based on Reynold's information. Fr Thomas Maguire - parish priest who engaged in a public debate on theological matters in 1827. His poisoning, mentioned in the ballad, took place in 1847. The ballad is recorded on one of the CD's issued around the time of the bicentenial of the 1798 Irish Rebellion. See: Franke Harte and Donal Lunny, "By Memory Inspired" (on Franke Harte and Donal Lunny, "1798 the First Year of Liberty," Hummingbird Records HBCD0014 (1998)) - BS File: PGa101 === NAME: By the Hush DESCRIPTION: The singer calls on his listeners not to go to America; "there is nothing here but war." Unable to make a living in Ireland, he emigrates, is shoved straight into the army, joins the Irish Brigade, loses a leg, and is left without his promised pension AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1957 (recording, O. J. Abbott); there is a nineteenth century broadside KEYWORDS: poverty emigration soldier injury war Civilwar disability FOUND_IN: Canada(Ont,Que) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Fowke/MacMillan 6, "By the Hush, me Boys" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, BYHUSH* Roud #2314 RECORDINGS: O. J. Abbott, "By the Hush, Me Boys" (on Abbott1) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Farewell to Slieve Gallen" (plot) cf. "Pat Murphy of the Irish Brigade" (subject) NOTES: There is much historical truth in this song. The Irish Brigade, commanded by Thomas Francis Meagher (pronounced "Marr") had a horrendous loss rate even by Civil War standards. In the first two years of the war, the brigade (63 NY, 69 NY, 88 NY; 28 Mass and 116 PA added later) had the highest casualty rate of any comparable unit in the Army of the Potomac. By Gettysburg, the brigade had only 600 men (out of over 4000 originally enrolled), and the three New York regiments had fewer than a hundred men a piece -- a casualty rate in excess of 90%. It should be noted that some sources have written very inaccurately about Meagher and the Irish Brigade -- particularly about the 69 NY. Meagher himself (1823-1876) was quite a character; an Irish patriot, he was transported to Tasmania in 1849, and escaped to the U. S. in 1852. When the Civil War began, he reasoned that British sympathy would be with the Confederacy, and so joined the Union army. (In this he was not entirely correct; while many in the British aristocracy sympathized with the Confederate planters, the people were anti-slavery, and so anti-south, and the government wasn't going to commit to either side.) Meagher quickly raised a company for the three-month unit known as the 69th New York Militia. With this militia unit -- which he did *not* command -- he fought at First Bull Run. After Bull Run, the militia unit was disbanded. Meagher then set out to raise an Irish *brigade*. He succeeded in raising those three New York regiments, and was given the command of the unit. And the unit included the "real" 69 NY (which was not the same as the militia unit, despite Meagher's association with both). However, Meagher was never the colonel of the 69 NY (which had only one colonel, Robert Nugent, in its entire existence). Some sources say the Irish Brigade was shattered at Gettysburg. As the statistics above show, it was shattered well before Gettysburg. Meagher resigned his commission after Chancellorsville (fought two months earlier) on the grounds that the brigade was too much weakened to be effective; his resignation would be rescinded later, but he would not serve with the Irish Brigade at or after Gettysburg; the unit was led by Col. Patrick Kelly of the 88 NY (one of only two colonels left with the brigade, and commissioned only in October 1862, which again shows the high rate of casualties in the unit); the 69 NY was led by Captain Richard Maroney. For Meagher's career before and after the Civil War, see the notes to "The Escape of Meagher." The notes to Margaret Christl and Ian Robb's recording of this song make the curious observation that, although this song is about an Irishman in America, it seems to be known only in Canada! Several people on the Ballad-L mailing list recently attempted to trace the history of this song. Relatively little was found. There is a broadside, "Pat in America," beginning "Arragh, bidenhust my boys, Sure and that is hold your noise," with the tune listed as "Happy Land of Erin." But it cannot be dated precisely, and there is little evidence of the song in tradition in the century after that. I also find a broadside, "The Tipperary Boys" (broadside Murray, Mu23-y1:061, "The Tipperary Boys," James Lindsay (Glasgow), 19C), which seems built on the same pattern and formula. - RBW File: DTbyhush === NAME: By the Lightning We Lost our Sight [Laws K6] DESCRIPTION: The singer is on a journey from Gibraltar to England when a hurricane strikes. Sent aloft to reef the sails, he and four others are blinded when lightning strikes the mast. The storm washes several others overboard AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1883 (Smith/Hatt) KEYWORDS: sailor storm death disability FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Laws K6, "By the Lightning We Lost Our Sight" Mackenzie 86, "By the Lightning We Lost Our Sight" (1 text) Smith/Hatt, pp. 76-78, "The Blind Sailor" (1 text) DT 557, LIGHTNNG Roud #1894 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Captain Burke" [Laws K5] File: LK06 === NAME: By the Silvery Rio Grande: see My Heart's Tonight in Texas [Laws B23] (File: LB23) === NAME: By'm By: see By'n By (File: San453) === NAME: By'n By DESCRIPTION: "By'n by, by'n by, Stars shining, Number, number one, Number two, number three, Good Lord, by'n by, by'n by, Good Lord, by'n by." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1927 (Sandburg) KEYWORDS: religious nonballad FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Sandburg, p. 453, "By'm By" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 358, "By And By" (1 text) Roud #11600 RECORDINGS: Pete Seeger, "By'm By" (on GrowOn2) File: San453 === NAME: Bye and Bye: see Don't You Grieve After Me (I) (File: R257) === NAME: Bye and Bye You Will Forget Me (I) DESCRIPTION: "Bye and by you will forget me, When your face is far from me, And the day when I first met you Only lives in memory." She recalls that sad day, urges him to forget -- but if she dies, THEN she asks him to remember AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1962 (Brown), but clearly in existence by 1926 when Kelly Harrell made the recording cited KEYWORDS: love separation nonballad death burial FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) BrownII 161, "Bye and Bye You Will Forget Me" (1 text) Roud #6577 RECORDINGS: Kelly Harrell, "Bye and Bye You Will Forget Me" (Victor 20535, 1926; on KHarrell02 -- primarily a "Dear Companion/Fond Affection" variant, but with elements from this song) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Down Among the Budded Roses" (lyrics) File: BrII161 === NAME: Bye and Bye You Will Forget Me (II): see Dear Companion (The Broken Heart; Go and Leave Me If You Wish To, Fond Affection) (File: R755) === NAME: Bye Baby Bunting DESCRIPTION: "Bye, baby bunting, Daddy's gone a-hunting To get a little rabbit skin To wrap the baby bunting in." "Sister stayed at home To rock-a-bye-a-baby bunting. Mama stayed at home To bake a cake for baby bunting." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1784 (Gammar Gurton's Garland, according to Opie-Oxford2) KEYWORDS: nonballad baby hunting family FOUND_IN: US(Ap,SE) Britain(England) Jamaica REFERENCES: (4 citations) BrownIII 112, "Bye Baby Bunting" (assorted stanzas from sundry collections) Opie-Oxford2 25, "Bye, baby bunting" (2 texts) Baring-Gould-MotherGoose #551, p. 226, "(Bee baw bunting)" MHenry-Appalachians, p. 243, (no title) (1 short text) Roud #11018 File: Br3112 === NAME: Byker Hill DESCRIPTION: Dance tune with sketchy narrative; singer's wife sits up late drinking. Singer asks her to return home (bringing the beer). He also tells of working in Walker Pit and the poor wages for coal-cutters, singing ironically "Walker Pit's done well by me." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1812 (John Bell, "Rhymes of Northern Bards") LONG_DESCRIPTION: Usually a dance tune (in 2-2-2-3 time!), but with sketchy narrative; singer's wife sits up late drinking, neglecting home and family. Singer pleads with her to return home (but to bring the beer with her). He also tells of working in Walker Pit and the poor wages for coal-cutters, singing ironically "Walker Pit's done well by me," and a verse of "Geordie Charlton he had a pig/He hit it with a shovel and it danced a jig" KEYWORDS: mining work drink wife worker FOUND_IN: Britain(England(North)) REFERENCES: (1 citation) DT, BYKERHIL* Roud #3488 RECORDINGS: A. L. Lloyd, "Walker Shore and Byker Hill" (on Lloyd1); "Walker Hill and Byker Shore" (on Lloyd3) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "My Dearie Sits Ower Late Up" (tune) cf. "Elslie Marley" (tune) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Byker Hill and Walker Shore File: DTbykerh === NAME: Byrontown DESCRIPTION: The singer claims that he "belongs" in Byrontown, where "young ladies gay I will betray, And give them all their due." The rest of the song is devoted to complaining about women, e.g. how they lure men on and spend their money AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1949 KEYWORDS: courting oldmaid money FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Doerflinger, pp. 261-262, "Byrontown" (1 text, 1 tune) Manny/Wilson 8, "Byrontown" (1 text, 1 tune) ST Doe261 (Partial) Roud #9202 NOTES: In some versions, the city is "Barren Town," a nickname for Renous, New Brunswick, - RBW Manny/Wilson: "This song is always credited to Larry Gorman, but it does not seem quite like Gorman." - BS File: Doe261 === NAME: C & O Freight & Section Crew Wreck, The DESCRIPTION: A train with Jay Thompson and Doc Compton aboard is wrecked in the Big Sandy Valley. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1981 (Cohen) KEYWORDS: train wreck FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Cohen-LSRail, p. 274, "The C & O Freight & Section Crew Wreck" (notes only) File: LSRa274L === NAME: C-H-I-C-K-E-N DESCRIPTION: "C, that's the way to begin; H, the next letter in; I, is the third; C, seasoning the bird; K...C-H-I-C-K-E-N, that's the way to spell chicken" AUTHOR: Sidney Perrin & Bob Slater EARLIEST_DATE: 1902 (sheet music published) KEYWORDS: food humorous nonballad animal bird chickens FOUND_IN: US(SE,Ap) REFERENCES: (0 citations) RECORDINGS: Arthur Collins, "Dat's De Way to Spell Chicken" (CYL: Edison 8301, 1903) John & Emery McClung, "C-H-I-C-K-E-N Spells Chicken" (Brunswick 135, 1927) McGee Brothers "C-H-I-C-K-E-N Spells Chicken" (Vocalion 5150, 1927; Conqueror 7257, 1929; I also have a listing for the latter as being by Kirk McGee & Blythe Poteet, and another as by Rogers and Puckett, which is almost certainly wrong.) Fiddlin' Doc Roberts Trio, "Ragtime Chicken Joe" (Conqueror 8566, 1935; rec. 1933) Three Tobacco Tags, "De Way to Spell Chicken" (Bluebird B-7973, 1938) NOTES: The recent version by the Red Clay Ramblers fits this chorus with an outline in which Ragtime Joe is made to spell "chicken" in school. Not having heard some of the early recordings, I don't know if this is integral to the song and Paul Stamler omitted it in his description, or if someone added it later. - RBW The "Ragtime Chicken Joe" verse is indeed part of the original piece, published as a "coon song." - PJS File: RcCHICKE === NAME: C. & O. Wreck, The (1913) [Laws G4] DESCRIPTION: Men are at work on the C & O bridge at Guyandotte, but a train is given permission to cross it. The bridge fails, taking the train, the engineer, and seven bridge workers with it. The ballad ends with the usual wish for the widow and orphans AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1924 (recording, George Reneau) KEYWORDS: train death wreck HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: Jan 1, 1913 - Reported date of the C. & O. Wreck at Guyandott(e), West Virginia FOUND_IN: US(Ap,MW) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Laws G4, "The C. & O. Wreck" Gardner/Chickering 121, "The Seno Wreck" (1 text) Combs/Wilgus 73, pp. 172-174, "The C. & O. Wreck" (1 text) Cohen-LSRail, p. 274, "The C & O Wreck" (notes only) Roud #3248 RECORDINGS: George Reneau, "The C & O Wreck" (Vocalion 14897, 1924) NOTES: Laws has some notes about the actual facts of this case (NAB, pp. 65-66) - RBW File: LG04 === NAME: C.C. Rider: see Easy Rider (File: LxU022) === NAME: C'est a Paris Y-A-T'Une Noce (There's a Wedding in Paris) DESCRIPTION: French. The young girl the singer married was at least 80 years old: married Monday, buried Tuesday. But he didn't marry her; he married her money. If he marries again it will be with a girl 15 years old. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1961 (Peacock) KEYWORDS: foreignlanguage age greed marriage burial death oldmaid wife money FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Peacock, pp. 255-256, "C'est a Paris Y-A-T'Une Noce" (1 text, 1 tune) File: Pea255 === NAME: C'est L'Aviron (Pull on the Oars) DESCRIPTION: French: "C'est l'aviron, qui nous mene, qui nous mene, c'est l'aviron qui nous mene en haut." A young man goes riding, picks up a pretty girl, and takes her home to get a drink. Once home, "turning to me, she toasted her own lover" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1865 KEYWORDS: courting drink family foreignlanguage FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf,Que) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Fowke/Johnston, pp. 58-59, "C'est L'aviron (Pull on the Oars)" (1 text, 1 tune) Fowke/MacMillan 49, "C'est L'Aviron" (1 English and 1 French text, 1 tune) Peacock, p. 517, "En Revenant de la Jolie Rochelle" (1 text, 1 tune) ST FJ058 (Partial) ALTERNATE_TITLES: It's the Oars NOTES: "Over the years, more than ninety variants of this song have been written down or recorded on cylinders, discs, or tapes in French Canada. A few variants have also been found in the northeastern United States and France." [from] "'M'en, revenant de la Joli'Rochelle'::A song from c/ 1500 in the current French-Canadian repertoire" by Jay Rahn in _Canadian Journal for Traditional Music_, vol 16, 1988. See archives of the site for the Canadian Journal for Traditional Music. - BS File: FJ058 === NAME: C'etait Trois Jeunes Garcons Partis Pour un Voyage (Three Young Boys Go on a Voyage) DESCRIPTION: French. Three boys go on a voyage to distant islands, leaving loved ones. The youngest walks on the shore and cries. From far away he hears the voice of a swallow speaking to him about love. Beautiful swallow, fly to "la belle" and sit on her knee. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1960 (Peacock) KEYWORDS: foreignlanguage love separation bird lover FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Peacock, p. 512, "C'etait Trois Jeunes Garcons Partis Pour un Voyage" (1 text, 1 tune) File: Pea512 === NAME: Ca the Yowes to the Knowes: see Yowe Lamb, The (Ca' the Yowes; Lovely Molly) (File: K124) === NAME: Ca' Hawkie Through the Water DESCRIPTION: "Ca' Hawkie, ca' Hawkie, 'Ca Hawkie through the water, Hawkie is a sweir beast, And Hawkie winna wade the water." Hawkie is praised for her milk but blamed for her stubbornness; girls are advised to be brave and bold with men AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1900 (Stokoe/Reay) KEYWORDS: animal river courting FOUND_IN: Britain(England(North)) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Stokoe/Reay, pp. 132-133, "Ca' Hawkie Through the Water" (1 text, 1 tune) Montgomerie-ScottishNR 27, "(Caw Hawkie, drive Hawkie)" (1 text) DT, CAHAWKIE Roud #3159 File: StoR132 === NAME: Ca' the Ewes Unto the Knowes: see Yowe Lamb, The (Ca' the Yowes; Lovely Molly) (File: K124) === NAME: Ca' the Yowes (II): see Yowe Lamb, The (Ca' the Yowes; Lovely Molly) (File: K124) === NAME: Cabbage and Goose: see Sale of a Wife (File: HHH226) === NAME: Cabbage Head Song, The: see Four Nights Drunk [Child 274] (File: C274) === NAME: Cabin Boy: see The Maid in Sorrow (Short Jacket) [Laws N12] (File: LN12) === NAME: Cabin Boy, The: see Captain James (The Captain's Apprentice) (File: SWMS054) === NAME: Cabin Creek Flood, The DESCRIPTION: "A sad and mournful history Of which I now will speak Concerning that awful storm That flooded Cabin Creek." Five hours of rain washes away the miners' homes. The government and neighboring towns send relief AUTHOR: James W. Day ("Jilson Setters")? EARLIEST_DATE: 1939 (Thomas) KEYWORDS: flood disaster death FOUND_IN: US(Ap) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Thomas-Makin', pp. 106-107, (no title) (1 text) NOTES: Although certainly based on a historical incident, the few details in the song and in Thomas's account do not let me locate it in historical records. - RBW File: ThBa106 === NAME: Cadence Count: see Sound Off (Cadence Count, Jody Chant) (File: LoF317) === NAME: Cahan's Shaden Glen DESCRIPTION: The singer goes rambling and sees beautiful "Eliza of Cahan's shaden glen." Hecourts her, but "She will not condescend; I have no gold in store." He wishes her well and departs, wishing he could have gained her favor AUTHOR: Francey Heaney? EARLIEST_DATE: 1934 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: love courting rejection beauty FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H538, pp. 364-365, "Cahan's Shady Glen" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #6882 NOTES: Very possibly not traditional; Sam Henry did not list a source, and no other traditional versions are known. - RBW File: HHH538 === NAME: Cailin Deas Cruite Na MBo: see The Pretty Girl Milkin' Her Cow (File: San040) === NAME: Cailin Gaelach, An (The Irish Girl) DESCRIPTION: Gaelic. The singer thinks of how nice it would be to have an Irish girl by his side. One morning, herding his cows, he sees a vision of a woman. He will care for the herds well because young women marry when they see a well cared for herd. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1976 (OBoyle) KEYWORDS: foreignlanguage marriage farming nonballad animal FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) OBoyle 7, "Cailin Gaelach" (1 text, 1 tune) NOTES: O Boyle does not translate the text. There is a text on DruidStone site in Gaelic with English translation. The description follows that translation. O Boyle's conclusion that "men marry for the sake of cattle" disagrees with that translation. - BS File: Oboy007 === NAME: Cailin Rua, An (The Red-Headed Girl) DESCRIPTION: Gaelic. The singer praises his beautiful red-headed girl even though she drained his purse by drinking his ale and spending in the market on fancy shoes and ribbons instead of food and even though she ran off with the shop-boy. He prefers her to wealth. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1976 (OBoyle) KEYWORDS: foreignlanguage love infidelity nonballad FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (2 citations) OBoyle 8, "Cailin Rua, An" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, ANCAILIN NOTES: O Boyle summarizes the text in English but does not translate it. There is a Digital Tradition text in Gaelic with English translation that is compatible with O Boyle's summary. The description follows the Digital Tradition translation. - BS File: OBoy008 === NAME: Cain and Abel (When the Great Day Comes) DESCRIPTION: "Well, the Good Book says that Cain killed Abel, Yes, Abel, That he hit him in the head with the leg of a table." In the lion's den, Daniel tells the "cullud men" to get their white robes. "Oh, Lord, I'se ready, I'll be ready when the great day comes." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1952 (Brown) KEYWORDS: religious homicide nonballad clothes FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) BrownIII 557, "Can and Abel" (1 short text) Roud #11827 RECORDINGS: Cotton Belt Quartet, "We'll Be Ready When the Great Day Comes" (Vocalion 15263, 1926) [tentative identification; I have not heard the record - PJS] File: Br3557 === NAME: Cain Killed Abel DESCRIPTION: A shanty about cane-cutting (!). "I was a cane-cutter but now I'm at sea, Stoop it, and top it, and load it, my boys; Once Cain killed Abel, but it won't kill me." "I worked very hard until I went to sea/" ""This cutting of cane it isn't much fun." AUTHOR: Words: Merv Lilley / Music: Chris Kempster EARLIEST_DATE: 1964 KEYWORDS: work shanty nonballad FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (2 citations) Fahey-Eureka, pp. 200-201, "Cain Killed Abel" (1 text, 1 tune) Manifold-PASB, p. 171, "Cane Killed Abel" (1 text, 1 tune) File: FaE200 === NAME: Cairistiona DESCRIPTION: Scots Gaelic. The singer calls to Cairistiona, "Will you answer my cry?" After courting her, he went across the sea for years, and returns to find her dead. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1917 (Kennedy-Fraser) KEYWORDS: foreignlanguage love separation return death FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland(Hebr)) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Kennedy 5, "Cairistiona (Christina)" (1 text+English translation, 1 tune) Kennedy-Fraser II, pp. 182-184, "Caristiona" (1 text+English translation, 1 tune) NOTES: Kennedy somehow fails to note the connection between his piece and that in Kennedy-Fraser (the minor difference in names seems small excuse; the tunes are rather different, but both irregular, which probably hastened the process of change), but they share lyrics and plot; I do not doubt they are the same. - RBW File: K005 === NAME: Cairn-o'-Mount DESCRIPTION: The singer rides out and hears a girl singing, "The Cairn-o'-Mount is bleak and bare, An' cauld is Clochnabane." The man offers her wealth and land if she will marry him. She promises to be true to her Donald. He reveals himself as Donald, and rich AUTHOR: Alexander Balfour EARLIEST_DATE: 1904 (Ford) KEYWORDS: love courting disguise trick FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Ford-Vagabond, pp. 106-109, "Cairn-o'-Mount" (1 text) Ord, pp. 436-437, "Cairn-o'-Mount" (1 text) Roud #3794 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "John (George) Riley (I)" [Laws N36] (plot) and references there File: FVS106 === NAME: Caitilin Ni Uallachain (Cathaleen Ni Houlihan) DESCRIPTION: Gaelic. Irish nobles wander, banned, hoping for "the coming-to of Kathaleen Ny-Houlihan." She would be queen "were the king's son at home here." It is a disgrace that she is vassal to the Saxon. May he who led Israel through the waves save her AUTHOR: Sparling: "A Jacobite relic translated [by James Clarence Mangan, 1803-1849] from the Irish of William Hefferan, called William Dall, or Blind William" EARLIEST_DATE: 1845 (Duffy) KEYWORDS: Ireland rebellion patriotic foreignlanguage nonballad HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1798 - Irish rebellion against British rule FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (8 citations) Zimmermann, p. 31, "Caitilin Ni Uallachain" (1 fragment) Scott-BoA, pp. 94-96, "Caitilin Ni Uallachain (Cathaleen Ni Houlihan)" (1 text, 1 tune; no translator listed) ADDITIONAL: Charles Gavan Duffy, editor, The Ballad Poetry of Ireland (1845), pp. 89-90, "Kathaleen Ny-Houlahan" Edward Hayes, The Ballads of Ireland (Boston, 1859), Vol I, pp. 231-232, "Kathaleen Ny Houlahan" (1 text, translated by J.C. Mangan) H. Halliday Sparling, Irish Minstrelsy (London, 1888), pp. 141-142, 504, "Kathaleen Ny-Houlahan" Charles Sullivan, ed., Ireland in Poetry, p. 62, "Kathaleen Ny-Houlahan" (1 text, translated by James Clarence Mangan, 1803-1849) Thomas Kinsella, _The New Oxford Book of Irish Verse_ (Oxford, 1989), pp. 273-275, "Kathaleen Ny-Houlahan" (1 text) [translated by James Clarence Mangan] NOTES: Zimmermann p. 31 fn. 73 is a fragment in Irish and English; Duffy/Sparling's translation by Mangan is the basis for the description. Zimmermann p. 31 refering to "Caitilin Ni Uallachain": "In the eighteenth century poets were clinging to the hope that [help] would arrive from France or Spain, and they frequently alluded to a fleet bringing back to Ireland the Stuart king and his mighty allies" Zimmermann p. 55, Sparling p. 141: Caitlin Ni Uallachain as a secret or coded name. for Ireland. - BS Kinsella attributes the original Irish to William Hefferman. The image of Ireland as a lady wronged was very popular in Ireland (even though no one can seem to agree on the spelling). This lyric was one of the first examples. In 1902, William Butler Yeats and Lady Augusta Gregory staged the play "Cathleen ni Houlihan," about the 1798 rebellion. Sir John Lavery painted Lady Lavery, with harp, as Kathleen in 1923. This beautiful image came to be used on Irish money and can be seen in Sullivan, p. 63. My original description applies to Scott's English version: "Our hopes run high, the time is nigh To make the text of war. Our plans are laid, our weapons made, And soon our guns will roar." The [Irish] rebels prepare for war, calling upon Jesus to bless (and free) Cathaleen Ni Houlihan (=Ireland) - RBW File: SBoA094 === NAME: Calabar, The DESCRIPTION: The singer calls "dry-land sailors" to hear of the (Calabar), sailing the (Strabane canal). The food runs out. They hit mud, and throw off the captain's wife to lighten ship. They fight off a "pirate" scow. The captain says he'll take the train next time. AUTHOR: John Trainor (1910) (OLochlainn-More) EARLIEST_DATE: 1910 (OLochlainn-More) KEYWORDS: canal humorous food disaster wreck FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (5 citations) SHenry H502, pp. 98-99, "The Cruise of the Calabar" (1 text, 1 tune) OLochlainn-More 17, "The Cruise of the Calabar" (1 text, 1 tune) Hammond-Belfast, pp. 32-33, "The Cruise of the Calibar" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, CALABARR ADDITIONAL: Frank Harte _Songs of Dublin_, second edition, Ossian, 1993, pp. 16-17, "The Cruise of the Calabad" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #1079 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The E-ri-e" (theme) and references there cf. "The Wreck of the Mary Jane" (theme and first line) cf. "The Wreck of the Varty" (theme and first line) ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Manchester Canal The Wreck of the Calibar The Good Ship Calabah The Strabane Fleet NOTES: Sort of an Irish version of "The E-ri-e." It doesn't follow that it's older, though; there are references to steam. Harte makes the interesting comment that he never encountered a serious canal song, adding that a canalman told him that the worst danger on the canal boats was fleas! Harte's statement is a little strong -- there are a couple of minor canal disaster songs in the American tradition -- but he isn't far wrong. - RBW Also collected and sung by David Hammond, "Cruise of the Calabar" (on David Hammond, "I Am the Wee Falorie Man: Folk Songs of Ireland," Tradition TCD1052 CD (1997) reissue of Tradition LP TLP 1028 (1959)) - BS File: HHH502 === NAME: Caledonia (I): see Jamie Raeburn (Caledonia) (File: MA085) === NAME: Caledonia (II): see Canada-I-O (The Wearing of the Blue; Caledonia) (File: HHH162) === NAME: Caledonia (III -- Jean and Caledonia) DESCRIPTION: "Sair, sair was my heart, an' the tears stood in my een As I viewed my native hills an' I thought upon my Jean." Pressed by poverty (?), the two sadly part; he promises to be true, and wed no other, and someday to come back to marry her AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1904 (Ford) KEYWORDS: love separation emigration poverty FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Ford-Vagabond, pp. 237-239, "Jean and Caledonia" (1 text, 1 tune) Ord, p. 116, "Jean and Caledonia" (1 text) Roud #3801 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Erin's Flowery Vale (The Irish Girl's Lament)" [Laws O29] (plot) and references there File: FVS237 === NAME: Calendar Rhymes DESCRIPTION: Rhymes detailing the months of the year, e.g. "January brings the snow, Makes our feet and fingers glow"; "February brings the rain, Thaws the frozen lake again"; and so on to "Chill December brings the sleet, Blazing fire and Christmas treat" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: probably of various ages; nearly all published in nineteenth century nursery rhyme books KEYWORDS: FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Baring-Gould-MotherGoose #329, p. 180, "(January brings the snow)"; #336, p. 182, ("February brings the rain"); #341, p. 182, ("March brings breezes, loud and shrill"); #354, p. 185, ("April brings the primrose sweet"); #359, p. 186, ("May brings flocks of pretty lambs"); #371, p. 188, ("June brings tulips, lilies, roses"); #377, p. 189, ""Hot July brings cooling showers); #383, p. 190, ("August brings the sheaves of corn"); #389, p. 190, "Warm September brings the fruit"); #393, p. 191, "Fresh October brings the pheasant"); #402, p. 193 ("Dull November brings the blast"); #412, p. 194, ("Chill December brings the sleet") Roud #1599, 1954 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Months" (Flanders and Swann parody incorporating some of the traditional elements; DT JANMONTH) NOTES: Some of the verses of this are slightly similar to "The Months of the Year"; Roud to some extent combines them, and it is likely enough that "The Months" swallowed some of these rhymes. But that song is so different in form that I have split them. Even with that separated out, this is a very amorphous item, and may not have been sung or assembled in particular form. But tracking each fragment individually is hopeless. - RBW File: BGMG329 === NAME: Calibar, The: see The Calabar (File: HHH502) === NAME: California: see Ho for California (Banks of Sacramento) (File: E125) === NAME: California Bloomer DESCRIPTION: Singer describes Miss Ella, an educated female gold-miner who has "taken two degrees" and wears bloomers to show her knees. He'll leave for the States soon. Cho: "Take your time, Miss Ella, do And I will rock the cradle Give the ore all to you" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1854 (Put's Original California Songster) LONG_DESCRIPTION: Singer describes Miss Ella, an educated female gold-miner who has "taken two degrees" and wears bloomers so that she can show her knees. He describes her crossing the plains and washing her feet in a brook; she has also done some successful panning for gold dust. He says he'll leave for the States as soon as he can. Cho: ."..Take your time, Miss Ella, do/And I will rock the cradle/Give the ore all to you" KEYWORDS: return travel clothes mining work worker HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1849 - California gold rush begins FOUND_IN: US(SW) REFERENCES: (0 citations) RECORDINGS: Logan English, "California Bloomer" (on LEnglish02) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Lucy Long (I)" (rune) cf. "Lucy Long (II)" (tune) NOTES: In the late 1840s Amelia J. Bloomer designed the loose trousers, gathered at the knees, that immediately were called "bloomers." They were widely popular among young women, whom it freed up to be far more physically active than they could be in the long dresses of the time. Men viewed them with alarm and derision, calling the women who wore them "bloomer girls," not a complimentary term. - PJS File: RcCalBlo === NAME: California Blues (Blue Yodel #4) DESCRIPTION: "I'm going to California where they sleep out every night (x2), I'm leaving you, mama, You know you don't treat me right." The singer claims he has a home everywhere he goes. He refuses to worry, and will ride the blinds if he has no railroad fare. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1952 KEYWORDS: separation travel train FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) BrownIII 505, "The California Blues" (1 text) Roud #11804 NOTES: Although Brown's text is obviously a popular Blue Yodel, the version recorded apparently did not include a yodeling part. - RBW File: Br3505 === NAME: California Boys: see Come All You Virginia Girls (Arkansas Boys; Texian Boys; Cousin Emmy's Blues; etc.) (File: R342) === NAME: California Brothers, The: see The Dying Californian (I) (File: R183) === NAME: California Joe DESCRIPTION: "Well, mates, I don't like stories," so the singer tells his: of rescuing an orphan teenager when riding with Jim Bridger. She says she will love him, then her uncle takes her to his home. She is told Cowboy Jack is dead, but at last they are reunited AUTHOR: Captain Jack Crawford, "The Poet Scout" EARLIEST_DATE: 1886 (Crawford, in The Poet Scout) KEYWORDS: cowboy love rescue orphan reunion drowning FOUND_IN: US(Ap,So,SW) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Larkin, pp. 136-139, "California Joe" (1 text, 1 tune) Logsdon 30, pp. 173-181, "California Joe" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, CALIFJOE Roud #4645 NOTES: Crawford describes this as a true story written in the year California Joe died (1876), though he does not explicitly identify California Joe. The _Concise Dictionary of American Biography_ notes that John Wallace "Captain Jack" Crawford (1847-1917) served in the Union army from 1862, and "succeeded Buffalo Bill Cody as chief of scouts" [in the 1876 Sioux campaign]. It adds that he wrote "sincere but banal verse." This last description seems to be true: _Granger's Index to Poetry_ cites only three of his poems, none of which is cited more than once. The three are this poem, "The Death of Custer," and (get this) "Broncho versus Bicycle." It appears Crawford is remembered primarily for his scouting work; I couldn't find his name or descriptions of his writings in any literature or poetry references. Additional information about Crawford can be found ing Logsdon. Western scout Jim Bridger (1804-1881) was part of many exploratory expeditions from 1822 to 1868. - RBW File: Lark137 === NAME: California Stage Company, The DESCRIPTION: "They started as a thieving line." The shortcomings of the California Stage Company are described. Passengers are crowded into dirty, smoky cars; passengers must often help push or walk. The singer urges listeners to rise up against the Company. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1858 (Put's Golden Songster) LONG_DESCRIPTION: The shortcomings of the California Stage Company are described. Passengers are crowded into dirty, smoky cars; women must sit in tobacco spit while men talk politics and swear; it's dusty, and passengers must often help push or walk. The singer urges listeners to rise up against the Company. Cho: "They started as a thieving line In eighteen-hundred-and-forty-nine All opposition they defy So the people must root hog or die" KEYWORDS: travel technology ordeal nonballad HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1849 - Beginning of California gold rush FOUND_IN: US(SW) REFERENCES: (0 citations) Roud #8060 RECORDINGS: Logan English, "The California Stage Company" (on LEnglish02 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Dandy Jim of Caroline" (tune) NOTES: Again, we need the keyword "bitching," plus, perhaps, "squalor." - PJS File: RcCaStCo === NAME: California Trail DESCRIPTION: A complaint about the troubles of the trail to Mexico: Bad food (e.g. antelope steak), having to cook with buffalo chips rather than wood, fires that burn cooking women, Indians, people who shirk guard duty, etc. The singer advises giving up AUTHOR: unknown (Credited in Thorp to "Montana Kate" Childs, 1869) EARLIEST_DATE: 1900 KEYWORDS: warning travel hardtimes FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Thorp/Fife IV, pp. 58-60 (15-16), "California Trail" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #8051 File: TF04 === NAME: Calino Casturame: see Callino Casturame (Colleen Og a Store; Cailin O Chois tSiure; Happy 'Tis, Thou Blind, for Thee) (File: HHH491) === NAME: Call John the Boatman DESCRIPTION: The singer orders, "Call John the Boatman." A storm is rising, and he is needed -- but he sleeps too soundly for even the tempest to rouse him: "Well, the louder that you call him, the faster he'll sleep." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1951 KEYWORDS: sailor storm FOUND_IN: US(MA) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Doerflinger, p. 173, "Call John the Boatman" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #9433 File: Doe173 === NAME: Call My Little Dog DESCRIPTION: "Call my little dog. What shall I call him? Call him Ponto, Call him Carlo, Call him J-A-C-K." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1910 (Brown) KEYWORDS: nonballad dog FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) BrownIII 138, "Call My Little Dog" (1 text) Roud #15765 File: Br3138 === NAME: Call of Home, The DESCRIPTION: "Across the foaming ocean... In a corner of old Ireland there's a spot that's dear to me." The singer recalls the cottage where he was born. The ocean has called him away, and now he lives in a great dirty city. He cannot go home, but wishes it well AUTHOR: Jean Currie ? EARLIEST_DATE: 1936 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: homesickness emigration FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H674, p. 219, "The Call of Home" (1 text, 1 tune) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Scarborough Settler's Lament" (theme) and references there File: HHH674 === NAME: Call of Quantrell, The DESCRIPTION: The singer calls his hearers to rise; Penick's Union forces are coming, "But the Quantrell they seek shall be far, far away." The singer promises that, when Penick flags, they will turn on him and regain their territory AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1896 (Immortelles) KEYWORDS: outlaw Civilwar HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: Aug 21, 1863 - Quantrill's Raiders destroy Lawrence, Kansas, killing about 150 men. May 10, 1865 - Quantrill is mortally wounded on his way to Washington (where he hoped to stir up trouble by assassination). He dies 20 days later. FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Belden, pp.353-354, "The Call of Quantrell" (1 text) Roud #7771 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Quantrell" (subject) cf. "Charlie Quantrell" (subject) cf. "Bold Reynard the Fox (Tallyho! Hark! Away!)" (form" NOTES: As is so often the case with outlaw ballads, this paints much too pretty a picture. For a brief background on Quantrill (the name used in Confederate records), see the notes to "Charlie Quantrell." To tell this song from other Quantrell pieces, consider this first half-stanza and chorus: Up! Up! comrades, up! The moon's in the west, And we must be gone ere the dawning of the morn; The hounds of old Penick will find out our nest, But the Quantrell they seek shall be far, far away.... Cho: Rouse, my brave boys, up, up and away, Press hard on the foe ere the dawning of day; Look well to your steeds so gallant and [i.e. in?] chase, That they may never give o'er till they win in the race." Based on both form and content, I think this was inspired by "Bold Reynard the Fox (Tallyho! Hark! Away!)" or one of its relatives. Belden says that W. R. Penick, who pursued Quantrill, was eventually a Missouri brigadier. Based on Boatner's _Civil War Dictionary_, however, he did not attain that rank in Union service. Either he was a brigadier only by brevet (though even that is probably excluded by his absence from Phisterer's _Statistical Record of the Armies of the United States_), or he was only a state brigadier, with a lower national rank. Or he may have been a colonel who had command of a brigade without appropriate rank. - RBW File: Beld353 === NAME: Callino Casturame (Colleen Og a Store; Cailin O Chois tSiure; Happy 'Tis, Thou Blind, for Thee) DESCRIPTION: Gaelic, verses telling the blind to be happy because they cannot be dazzled by the beauty of the girl he loves, apparently in vain AUTHOR: English words by Douglas Hyde EARLIEST_DATE: 1933 (title known to and music arranged by William Byrd, died 1623) KEYWORDS: love beauty FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (3 citations) SHenry H491, p. 225, "Happy 'Tis, Thou Blind, for Thee" (1 text, 1 tune -- the Hyde translation set to music by Sam Henry, with very unhappy results. The various components may be traditional; the result is not) Chappell/Wooldridge I, pp. 84-85, "Calino Casturame, or Colleen Oge Astore" (1 text, 1 tune) ADDITIONAL: Kathleen Hoagland, editor, One Thousand Years of Irish Poetry (New York, 1947), pp. 267-259, "Colleen Oge Asthore" (1 text) NOTES: According to Hoagland, this is the tune used for "The Croppy Boy," though she doesn't say which "Croppy Boy" poem she means. Hoagland also claims that Shakespeare refers to this in Henry V, act IV, scene iv (line 4, I believe, though she doesn't say so). I don't buy it, though. The text of the First Folio is corrupt here, and the claim rests on a conjectural emendation. Editors don't even agree on the emendation. It's hard to accept a claim of dependence based on a text that isn't even secure! - RBW File: HHH491 === NAME: Calliope (This House is Haunted) DESCRIPTION: "This house is haunted, this house is haunted, It fairly makes my blood run cold." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1927 (Sandburg) KEYWORDS: ghost supernatural nonballad FOUND_IN: US(MW) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Sandburg, p. 349, "Calliope" (1 short text, 1 tune) File: San349 === NAME: Calomel DESCRIPTION: The singer describes how the doctor makes regular visits and with equal regularity prescribes Calomel. He comments, "I'm not so fond of Calomel," and asks, "How many patients have you lost? How many patients have you killed Or poisoned with your Calomel?" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1911 (Belden); Brewster's manuscript copy was dated 1832 KEYWORDS: doctor medicine humorous disease FOUND_IN: US(MW,SE) REFERENCES: (7 citations) Belden, pp. 441-442, "Calomel" (1 text, 1 tune) BrownIII 334, "Calomel" (1 text) Hudson 91, p. 217, "Calomel" (1 text) Brewster 69, "Calomel" (2 texts) Spaeth-WeepMore, pp. 203-204, "Calomel" (1 text, 1 tune) LPound-ABS, 54, pp. 126-127 "Calomel" (1 text) DT, CALOMEL(*) Roud #3770 NOTES: Calomel (Hg2Cl2) was one of the first tools in the physician's repertoire that actually did what it was supposed to do. Of course, given what it was used for (a purgative), it is questionable whether it was often needed. In addition, it contains mercury, which is poisonous. - RBW File: SWM203 === NAME: Calton Weaver, The: see Nancy Whisky (File: K279) === NAME: Calvary DESCRIPTION: Story of Jesus' crucifixion told from the point of view of one of his grieving followers. Jesus carries his cross to Calvary, where he is crucified, suffers, and dies without complaint. There is darkness over the earth, but Jesus is resurrected. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1968 (recording, Dock Boggs) KEYWORDS: grief execution punishment resurrection death dying Easter ordeal Bible religious supernatural clergy Jesus FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (0 citations) Roud #12169 RECORDINGS: Dock Boggs, "Calvary" (on Boggs3, BoggsCD1) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Saw You My Savior?" (plot) NOTES: This should not be confused with the Sacred Harp hymn of the same name. - PJS Based on Paul's description, it would appear that this song generally follows the passion account of John rather than the other three gospels -- e.g. Jesus carries his own cross (John 19:17; compare Mark 15:21, etc., where Simon of Cyrene carries the cross) and makes no complaint (compare John 19:25-30 to, e.g., Mark 15:34). - RBW File: RcCalva === NAME: Cambric Shirt, The: see The Elfin Knight [Child 2] (File: C002) === NAME: Camden Town DESCRIPTION: Singer meets a pretty girl, asks her to sit by him (and proposes marriage; they make love); she refuses to marry a man who has led her astray, whereupon he pushes her into the river to drown (or she drowns herself, whereupon he is seized with remorse) AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1962 (collected from William Hughes) KEYWORDS: courting sex rejection seduction river violence homicide death drowning suicide lover FOUND_IN: Britain(England) Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) MacSeegTrav 76, "Camden Town" (2 texts, 2 tunes) Roud #564 RECORDINGS: Mary Delaney, "In Charlestown There Lived a Lass" (on IRTravellers01) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Wexford Girl (The Oxford, Lexington, or Knoxville Girl; The Cruel Miller; etc.)" [Laws P35] (plot) cf. "Down by Blackwaterside" (plot) NOTES: This seems to be an amalgamation of "Down by Blackwaterside" and "The Wexford Girl," but as it shares few words with either song, and the denouement is quite different, I classify it separately. - PJS Roud lumps it with "Pretty Little Miss" [Laws P18], and that, given its textual state, is possible. But, when in doubt, we split. - RBW Mary Delaney's version on IRTravellers01 includes a verse from "The Silvery Tide"; specifically "Now as Willie, he went out walking, He went out to take fresh air, And he seen his own love Mary In the waves of the silvery tide." - BS File: McCST076 === NAME: Came Ye O'er Frae France DESCRIPTION: Geordie [George I] is ridiculed. "Jocky's gane to France, And Montgomery's lady" to learn to dance. He'll return with "Sandy Don," "Cockolorum," "Bobbing John, And his Highland quorum" "How they'll skip and dance O'er the bum o' Geordie!" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1819 (Hogg1) KEYWORDS: nonballad political Jacobites royalty FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) DT, CAMFRANC* Roud #5814 NOTES: Hogg1: "'Montgomery's lady' may have been the lady of Lord James Montgomery, who was engaged in a plot in 1695, and who, it is likely, would be connected with the Jacobites. Neither can I tell who 'Sandy Don' and 'Cockolorum' are; but it is evident that by 'Bobbing John' is meant John. Earl of Mar, who must, at the time this song was made, have been raising the Highlanders." GreigDuncan1: "From a manuscript book owned by William Walker. "Jacobite Song, from an old chapbook - about 1796-8." - BS The level of sarcasm in this song is obviously high. "Geordie Whelps" is George I -- a likely target for sarcasm even from his supporters, given that he was old, fat, ugly, and spoke no English. As for what the Jacobites thought, well, there are limits to what we can repeat.... "And his bonnie woman": There are wheels within wheels on this one. George I's wife, whom he married when he was still just the heir to the duchy of Hanover, was Sophia Dorothea of Luneburg (see Christopher Sinclair-Stevenson, _Blood Royal_, the Illustrious House of Hannover_, Doubleday, 1980, p. 31). But George I grew tired of her after she bore him two children, and after being ignored long enough, she had an affair with one Count Philip Konigsmarck. It was discovered, Konigsmark was made to vanish, and George I was officially divorced from Sophia Dorothea. He also had her imprisoned for the rest of her life (Sinclair-Stevenson, pp. 39-44). That left George I free to carry on with his mistresses, who were widely regarded as extremely ugly. Thackerey (quoted by Sinclair-Stevenson, p.26), describes them as follows: "The Duchess [Madame Schulenberg, made Duchess of Kendal by George] was tall, and lean of stature, and hence was irreverently nicknamed the Maypole. The Countess [Madame Kielmansegge, George's Countess of Darlington] wasa large-sized noblewoman, and this elevated personage was denominated the Elephant." Schulenberg also was nicknamed "the goose," and so George I came to England "riding on a goosie." The nickname "Bobbing John" for the Earl of Mar was well-earned. The first Jacobite rebellion, such as it was, came in the aftermath of the 1707 passage of the Act of Union between England and Scotland. It wasn't so much a rebellion as a scream of protest, and naturally went nowhere, even though Louis XIV of France supported it. The Earl of Mar enthusiastically supported Queen Anne at this time (Sinclair-Stevenson, p. 50). When George I showed up, though, Mar changed his tune and gathered many Highland chiefs to rebel (Sinclair-Stevenson, pp. 45-47). Hence the "Highland Quorum." - RBW File: DT === NAME: Cameloun DESCRIPTION: "It's Tarvis parish that I cam frae... To the Fyvie lands in the mornin'." The singer works at Cameloun, where they make him rise too early and feed him dreadful food. He lists the people he works with. If any ask about him, he says to say he is gone AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1930 (Ord) KEYWORDS: food hardtimes work farming FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ord, pp. 260-261, "Cameloun" (1 text) Roud #5592 File: Ord260 === NAME: Cameronian Cat, The: see The Presbyterian Cat (The Cameronian Cat) (File: FVS319) === NAME: Camp at Hoover Lake, The DESCRIPTION: "The first day of September we were all at hand For to go to the shanty at Sheehan's command." The crew leaves families to work at Hoover Lake. They live in a shanty built "like a nest of mudhens." The workers in the camp are described AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1962 (Fowke) KEYWORDS: work logger lumbering moniker FOUND_IN: Canada(Ont) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Fowke-Lumbering #19, "The Camp at Hoover Lake" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #4373 NOTES: For melodic reasons, Fowke suggests that this is composite. It's hard to tell from the lyrics, which are typical of logger songs, but she's probably right. - RBW File: FowL19 === NAME: Camp on de Cheval Gris, De DESCRIPTION: French-Canadian dialect song. Singer visits his abandoned lumber camp and reminisces. He recalls his friend Johnnie reading a letter over and over, and discovers it's a love-letter. He tells Johnnie he's never revealed the letter's secret. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1941 (Beck) LONG_DESCRIPTION: French-Canadian dialect song. Singer visits his old lumber camp, now abandoned, and addresses this song to his old friend, Johnnie, reminiscing about the crew and the times they had. He recalls Johnnie reading a letter over and over, and one day finding the letter himself, reading it, and realizing it's a love-letter. He dreams they are back together, but awakens to find himself back in the old camp with his grandson. He tells Johnnie he's never revealed the letter's secret. KEYWORDS: love return lumbering work logger moniker friend dream FOUND_IN: US(MW) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Beck 73, "De Camp on de Cheval Gris" (1 text) Roud #8847 File: Be073 === NAME: Camp on McNeal, The DESCRIPTION: Times and names of the crew that worked one winter for A and R Loggie. While times don't seem very hard "some of the boys ... brought with them the flu" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1961 (Ives-NewBrunswick) KEYWORDS: lumbering moniker logger disease FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ives-NewBrunswick, pp. 58-60, "The Camp on McNeal" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #1945 NOTES: Ives-NewBrunswick: "McNeal Brook flows through the wilderness between the Little Sevogle and the Little Southwest Miramichi Rivers....around 1920 Arthur and Stanley MacDonald put in a winter there in one of the camps of A & R Loggie Ltd of Loggieville." - BS File: IvNB158 === NAME: Campaign of 1856, The DESCRIPTION: "Old Benton had a daughter, Fair Jessie was her name, The Rocky Mountain ranger A-courting her he came." "Buck and Breck, neck and neck, A yoke of oxen true, Pulling to the Kansas log -- Gee, whoa, haw!" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1905 (Belden) KEYWORDS: courting political FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Belden, p. 341, "The Campaign of 1856" (1 text of two stanzas, perhaps not from the same song) Roud #7838 NOTES: Belden has no actual proof that this piece (pieces?) connects to the Campaign of 1856, let alone that it is a campaign song, but there is little doubt that it comes from that era. "Buck and Breck" are James Buchanan and his Vice President, John C. Breckinridge. The "Kansas Log" is the problem of "bleeding Kansas," a burning issue that neither president Pierce nor president Buchanan ever solved. The first verse quoted by Belden is another matter. It might be unrelated to the 1856 campaign, although it clearly describes John C. Fremont (1813-1890), the Republican candidate of 1856 (the first Republican presidential candidate, in fact). Fremont made his reputation as a western explorer; hence his common title "The Pathfinder" and the reference in the song to the "Rocky Mountain Ranger." Fremont married Jessie Benton (1824-1902), the daughter of Thomas Hart Benton (1782-1858). Benton and Fremont had an interesting relationship: Benton didn't like the younger man sniffing after his daughter, so he managed to have Fremont explore the Des Moines river. But John and Jessie Fremont married secretly after his return in 1841. Benton then became a strong supporter of Fremont and helped arrange for other expeditions. - RBW File: Beld341 === NAME: Campanero, The DESCRIPTION: The sailor complains about the conditions on the Campanero. "The skipper is a bulldozer... The mate he wants to fight." He finally concludes that getting married -- even getting married twice -- is better than serving on that ship AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1922 (Fragment in Frothingham, _Adventure_) KEYWORDS: shanty sailor abuse humorous FOUND_IN: US(MA) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Doerflinger, pp. 84-85, "The Campanero" (1 text, 1 tune) Hugill, pp. 471-472, "The Handy Bandy Barque" (1 text, 1 tune) [AbEd, pp. 349-350] ST Doe084 (Partial) Roud #3094 ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Campanayro File: Doe084 === NAME: Campbell the Drover: see Campbell the Rover (File: K269) === NAME: Campbell the Rover DESCRIPTION: "The first day of April I'll never forget; (Three) English (lasses) together they met." They offer Campbell a spree in a pub, then leave him to pay the bill. He escapes by tricking the landlord and leaving him with his thumbs plugging a cask AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1951 (Creighton-Maritime) KEYWORDS: drink trick party landlord FOUND_IN: Ireland Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Kennedy 269, "Campbell the Rover" (1 text, 1 tune) Creighton-Maritime, pp. 126-127, "Three English Rovers" (1 text, 1 tune) Creighton-SNewBrunswick 68, "Campbell the Drover" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, DROVCAMP Roud #881 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Irishtown Crew" (tune & meter) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Three English Blades Three English Rovers Campbell the Drover File: K269 === NAME: Campbell's Mill DESCRIPTION: The singer wanders out and sees a pretty girl. He goes up to her and courts her. She refuses to give her name, and asks why he is talking to her. He offers to marry her and take her away from the mill. She refuses; she has a love and is no match for him AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1938 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: love courting beauty rejection FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (2 citations) SHenry H762, p. 368, "Campbell's Mill" (1 text, 1 tune) Leyden 10, "Campbell's Mill" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #6884 NOTES: Leyden: In 1830, Campbell's Mill "was the last building on the town side of Belfast and beyond was open countryside ...; it finally ceased trading as the Irish Flax Spinning Co Ltd in about 1920." In Leyden's version, taken from SHenry H762, the maid "works in Campbell's Mill." Leyden comments that "It makes a welcome change in a traditional song that not only does the girl rebuff the advances of this 'fine well looking gentleman' for her lover's sake, but also because she has the security of a trade." - BS File: HHH762 === NAME: Campbells Are Coming, The DESCRIPTION: "The Campbells are coming, o-ho, o-ho! (x2), The Campbells are coming from bonnie Loch Lomond...." Argyle leads the van; the pipes sound. The singer expects them to win honor and success AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1748 ("A Choice Collection of 200 Favorite Country Dances") KEYWORDS: Scotland soldier nonballad FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Silber-FSWB, p. 281, "The Campbells Are Comin'" (1 text) Fuld, pp. 157-158, "The Campbells Are Coming" DT, (CAMPBLL* -- the Burns text) ST FSWB281B (Full) Roud #5784 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Yankees Are Coming" (tune) SAME_TUNE: The Yankees Are Coming (File: Hud124) The Camlachie Militia/The Russians are Coming (broadsides Murray, Mu23-y2:002, "The Camlachie Militia," ("The Russians are coming, oh dear, oh dear!"), Poet's Box (Glasgow), 1855; same broadside as NLScotland, L.C.Fol.70(49); [in broadside Murray, Mu23-y1:074, "The Russian in Glasgow," James Lindsay (Glasgow), 19C, this is given the tune "Joanne of Paris," but it's clearly this song; another Murray broadside, broadside Murray, Mu23-y1:075, "The Russians Are Coming," James Lindsay (Glasgow), probably c. 1855), does not appear to be the same piece] NOTES: Various theories have been offered about the historical significance of this song, which was certainly in existence by 1745. One has it that it concerns the suppression of the 1715 Jacobite rebellion; another, that it is concerned with the events around Mary Stewart's deposition. These theories and others like them are, at best, possible. Robert Burns rewrote the song for the Scots Musical Museum (#299), keeping chorus and one verse. - RBW File: FSWB281B === NAME: Camphor Song, The DESCRIPTION: "The old man went to the barn, To get some corn to fed some pigs." A pig is lying on the ground. The old man tries to revive it. The pig jumps on him. Sister Sal brings camphor to revive him. "He has never been to feed them hogs since." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1932 (Henry, collected from Mrs. Samuel Harmon) KEYWORDS: animal injury humorous farming FOUND_IN: US(Ap) REFERENCES: (1 citation) MHenry-Appalachians, pp. 7-8, "The Camphor Song" (1 text) NOTES: Camphor -- C(10)H(16)O -- is the characteristic component of mothballs. It thus can be used both to revive a person (in small quantities) and to hurt animals (usually in larger doses). - RBW File: MHAp007 === NAME: Camping in the Bend: see Four Little Johnny Cakes (File: PFS276) === NAME: Camptown Races DESCRIPTION: "De Camptown ladies sing dis song, Doo-da! Doo-da! De Camptown racetrack five miles long... Gwine to run all night! Gwine to run all day I'll bet my money on the bob-tail nag...." The singer describes the races and how he won a "pocket full of tin" AUTHOR: Stephen C. Foster EARLIEST_DATE: 1849 KEYWORDS: racing money nonballad horse FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (9 citations) RJackson-19CPop, pp. 39-42, "Gwine to Run All Night or De Camptown Races" (1 text, 1 tune) BrownIII 419, "Camptown Races" (1 fragment) Spaeth-ReadWeep, pp. 41-42, "Camptown Races" (1 text, 1 tune, plus the parody "'Lincoln Hoss' and Stephen A.") PSeeger-AFB, p. 40, "The Camptown Races" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 34, "Camptown Races" (1 text) Saunders/Root-Foster 2, pp. 477-478+496, "Camptown Races Arranged for the Guitar" (1 text, 1 tune, probably not arranged by Foster) Pankake-PHCFSB, p. 270, "Camptown Races" (1 text) Fuld-WFM, pp. 158-159, "(De) Camptown Races--(Sacramento)" DT, CAMPTWN* ST RJ19039 (Full) Roud #11768 RECORDINGS: Kanawha Singers, "De Camptown Races" (Brunswick 337, 1929) Pete Seeger, "Camptown Races" (on PeteSeeger24) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Lincoln Hoss and Stephen A." (tune) NOTES: Spaeth (_A History of Popular Music in America_, p. 107) notes that a "folk-song" called "Hoodah Day" is very similar to this song, and speculates that it or "Sacramento" could have been the original of the Foster song. Fuld, however, notes that no verifiable printing of either piece predates the Foster song. - RBW File: RJ19039 === NAME: Can Cala Me: see Padstow May Day Song (File: K086) === NAME: Can I Sleep in Your Barn Tonight? DESCRIPTION: The tramp asks to be allowed to spend the night in the barn, adding that he had no tobacco or matches. He explains how he used to live a settled life, but then a stranger came to town and made off with his wife and son. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1925 (recordings, Charlie Poole, George Reneau) KEYWORDS: abandonment rambling poverty hobo request FOUND_IN: US(Ap,SE,So) Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (6 citations) Randolph 841, "Can I Sleep in Your Barn Tonight?" (2 texts, 1 tune) Randolph/Cohen, pp. 502-504, "Can I Sleep in Your Barn Tonight?" (1 text, 1 tune -- Randolph's 841A) BrownIII 356, "May I Sleep In Your Barn Tonight, Mister?" (2 texts) Rorrer, p. 70, "Can I Sleep in Your Barn Tonight Mister" (1 text) Cambiaire, pp. 117-118, "May I Sleep In Your Barn To-Night, Mister" (1 text) Leach-Labrador 93, "The Tramp" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #768 RECORDINGS: Clarence Ashley & Tex Isley, "Can I Sleep In Your Barn Tonight, Mister?" (on Ashley01) Gene Autry, "May I Sleep In Your Barn Tonight Mister?" (Conqueror 7765, 1931) Boone County Entertainers, "May I Sleep In Your Barn Tonight, Mister" (Supertone 9182, 1928) Jeff Calhoun [pseud. for Vernon Dalhart], "May I Sleep In Your Barn Tonight, Mister?" (Grey Gull 4118, 1927) Kentucky Mountain Boys, "May I Sleep In Your Barn Tonight, Mister?" (Supertone S-2027, 1930) [Walter "Kid" Smith & the] Carolina Buddies, "May I Sleep In Your Barn Tonight Mister" (Perfect 160, 1930) Harry "Mac" McClintock, "Can I Sleep In Your Barn?" (Victor V-40264, 1930) Frank McFarland & Robert Gardner, "May I Sleep in Your Barn Tonight" (Brunswick 203, 1928; Supertone S-2027, 1930; rec. 1927) Charlie Poole and the North Carolina Ramblers, "Can I Sleep in Your Barn Tonight Mister" (Columbia 15038-D, 1925; on CPoole02) Red Fox Chasers, "May I Sleep In Your Barn Tonight Mister?" (Gennett 6547/Supertone 9182, 1928) George Reneau, "May I Sleep In Your Barn Tonight, Mister?" (Vocalion 15149, 1925) James Roberts, "May I Sleep In Your Barn Tonight Mister?" (Conqueror 7254 [as Joe Reeves], 1929; rec. 1928) (Banner 32205/Perfect 12726/Romeo 5074/Conqueror 7765 [as Joe Reeves], 1931) Ernest V. Stoneman and Fiddler Joe [Samuels], "May I Sleep In Your Barn Tonight Mister?" (Okeh 45059, 1926); Ernest V. Stoneman, "May I Sleep In Your Barn Tonight Mister?" (Challenge 153/Challenge 312/Gennett 3368/Herwin 75530, 1926) Tennessee Mountaineers [Charlie Poole?] "May I Sleep In Your Barn Tonight, Mister" (Broadway 8146, rec. 1929) Jim Whalen, "May I Sleep In Your Barn Tonight, Mister?" (Champion 15545, 1928) Kid Williams & Bill Morgan [pseuds. for Walter Smith & Lewis McDaniel], "May I Sleep In Your Barn Tonight Mister?" (Perfect 160, 1931) Marc Williams, "Can I Sleep In Your Barn Tonight, Mister" (OKeh 45467, 1930) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Tramp's Story" (plot) cf. "The Lehigh Valley" (plot) cf. "The Deserted Husband" (theme) cf. "Red River Valley" (tune) SAME_TUNE: Let Me Sleep in Your Tent Tonight, Beal (Greenway-AFP, pp.137-138; fragment, perhaps from Greenway, in Burt, p. 187; the song is said to have been written by Odel Corley when he was 11 years old. For Manville Jenckes, the villain of the song, see the notes on "Chief Aderholt") ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Honest Tramp Can I Sleep In Your Barn Tonight, Mister? NOTES: Carson J. Robison credits this to E. V. Body, but "Body" gets credit for too many things for the attribution to amount to much. - RBW File: R841 === NAME: Can of Grog, The DESCRIPTION: "When up the shrouds the sailor goes And ventures on the yard, The landsman who no better knows Believes his lot is hard." The sailor describes his hard life, but notes the comfort the sailors take in grog AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1776 (Journal from the Ann) KEYWORDS: sailor hardtimes drink FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Huntington-Whalemen, pp. 73-74, "The Can of Grog" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #2023 File: SWMS073 === NAME: Can of Spring Water, The DESCRIPTION: Singer meets a lass on her way to a well. He asks her parents' name. She rejects his advance but he seduces her. Subsequently she marries someone else but has a baby to go with her to the well. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1900 (broadside, Bodleian Harding B 19(64)) KEYWORDS: seduction sex marriage children FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (0 citations) Roud #5215 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 19(64), "The Can of Spring Water" ("One evening in May as I carelessly strayed"), J.F. Nugent & Co. (Dublin), 1850-1899; also 2806 c.15(35)[barely legible], "The Can of Spring Water" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Well of Spring Water" (form) NOTES: Broadside Bodleian Harding B 19(64) is the basis for the description. - BS File: BdCaSpWa === NAME: Can the Circle Be Unbroken?: see Will the Circle Be Unbroken (File: R635) === NAME: Can Ye Sew Cushions DESCRIPTION: "O can ye sew cushions, And can ye sew sheets, Can you sing ba-loo-loo When the bairn greets?" "And hee and baw, birdie, and he and baw, lamb... My bonnie wee lamb." (The singer talks of the child's future life.) AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1803 (Scots Musical Museum) KEYWORDS: nonballad baby FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Montgomerie-ScottishNR 135, "(O can you sew cushions)" (1 text) DT, SEWCUSHN* CUSHION2 Roud #5527 NOTES: Insignificant as this item sounds, it's had some pretty big names associated with it; both Burns and Lady Nairne are said to have worked on it. Murray Shoolbraid's Digital Tradition notes give information on a putative Gaelic source; I have not been able to check this. - RBW File: MSNR135 === NAME: Can You Rokker Romany? DESCRIPTION: "If you jump up on my barrow, I'll take you for a ride. And maybe in the springtime you can be my bride." Can you speak Romany, play the fiddle, eat prison food, cut the wood, break a horse, sleep with a girl and make someone not Romany? AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1991 (recording, Peter Ingram) KEYWORDS: sex fiddle food nonballad FOUND_IN: Britain(England(South)) REFERENCES: (0 citations) RECORDINGS: Peter Ingram, "Can You Rokker Romany?" (on Voice11) NOTES: The text in Voice11 translates the Romany words into English (for example, "rokker" is translated as "speak"). The description relies on that translation. - BS File: RcCYRRom === NAME: Can'cha Line 'Em DESCRIPTION: Work song/shout, with chorus, "Ho, boys, can'cha line em? (x3) See Eloise go linin' track." Many of verses are on religious themes ("If I could I surely would Stand on the rock where Moses stood"; "Mary, Marthy, Luke, and John, all... dead and gone") AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1933 (recording, Allen Prothero) KEYWORDS: railroading work religious worksong FOUND_IN: US(Ap,So) REFERENCES: (6 citations) Lomax-FSUSA 78, "Can'cha Line 'Em" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-ABFS, pp. 14-17, "Tie-Shuffling Chant" (1 text with extra verses, 1 tune) Cohen-LSRail, p. 646, "Track Linin'" (1 text) Botkin-RailFolklr, p. 446, "Track Lining Song" (1 text, 1 tune) Courlander-NFM, p. 97, (no title, but compare "The Captain Can't Read" on the previous page) (1 text) Darling-NAS, p. 328, "Jack the Rabbit" (1 text) Roud #10070 RECORDINGS: Henry Hankins, "Lining Track" (AFS 2946 A1, 1939; on LC61) Allen Prothero, "Track-Lining Song" (AFS 179 A1; on LC8) T. C. I. Section Crew, "Track Linin'" (Paramount 12478, 1927) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Oh, Mary, Don't You Weep" (floating verses) NOTES: Since this is one of those wonderful songs that is "adapted and arranged" (usual translation: "completely fouled up") by the Lomaxes, I can't tell if it comes from the same roots as "Can't You Line It?" There are almost no similarities beyond the titles, but that doesn't mean much. - RBW Looking at the lyrics of the Prothero field recording, they seem to have almost nothing in common with, "Can't You Line It?" as summarized in the latter's description. I'd guess the songs are, at best, distantly related. - PJS The Darling "Jack the Rabbit" text looks rather different (indeed, the feeling is almost closer to "Grizzely Bear") -- but it has a line similar to this one, so I'm sticking it here for now, more in desperation than anything else. Cohen's "Track Linin'" song also has the "Jack the rabbit" line, so it files here on hte same basis. According to Cohen, this is one of only two railroad worksongs released on a commercial 78 (the other being "Section Gang Song"). He thinks they may be the earliest worksong recordings of any sort. - RBW File: LxU078 === NAME: Can't Cross Jordan DESCRIPTION: Can't cross Jordan and you can't go around," with chorus "They've taken my Lord away, away... Oh, tell me where they've laid him." Also floating verses: "What kind of shoes does a Christian wear?" "As I went down in the valley to pray." Etc. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1922 (Brown) KEYWORDS: religious nonballad floatingverses Jesus FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) BrownIII 558, "Can't Cross Jordan" (1 text plus a fragment) Roud #11879 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Christ Was Born in Bethlehem" (floating verses) cf. "Down in the Valley to Pray" (floating verses) cf. "What Kind of Crowns Do the Angels Wear?" (floating verses) NOTES: From the looks of this, the Brown text has swallowed up lyrics from almost everywhere. The chorus, "They've taken my Lord away, Tell me where they've laid him" is an allusion to John 20:13, 15. The reference to Ezekiel walking into heaven defeats me; while Ezekiel probably holds the record for strange visions, there is no report of him going directly to heaven; that description fits only Enoch (Gen. 5:24), Elijah (2 Kings 2:11), and Jesus himself (Acts 1:9). The rest of the song -- about 75% of the whole, in the Brown text -- is floating material. Some of it is fairly characteristic of particular songs (see the cross-references), but much is too generic even to classify. - RBW File: Br3558 === NAME: Can't Help But Wonder: see I Can't Help But Wonder Where I'm Bound" (File: FSWB052) === NAME: Can't Help But Wonder Where I'm Bound: see I Can't Help But Wonder Where I'm Bound" (File: FSWB052) === NAME: Can't They Dance the Polka: see Can't You Dance the Polka (New York Girls) (File: Doe058) === NAME: Can't Ye Hilo? DESCRIPTION: Shanty. "Young gals, good gals, bad gals, O! Cho: Young girls can't ye Hilo? I will take 'em all in tow, Cho: Young girls can't ye Hilo?" Other verses have rhymes about dancing and women in general. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1917 (Robinson in _The Bellman_) KEYWORDS: shanty dancing FOUND_IN: West Indies REFERENCES: (2 citations) Hugill, p. 265, "Can't Ye Hilo?" (1 text, 1 tune) [AbEd, pp. 194-195] ADDITIONAL: Captain John Robinson, "Songs of the Chantey Man," a series published July-August 1917 in the periodical _The Bellman_ (Minneapolis, MN, 1906-1919). "Young Girls, Can't You Hilo? is in Part 3, 7/28/1917. ALTERNATE_TITLES: Jean Francois de Nantes NOTES: The word "hilo" in this case seems to refer to some sort of dance or jamboree. - SL File: Hug265 === NAME: Can't You Dance the Polka (New York Girls) DESCRIPTION: The sailor meets a girl, who offers to take him home to her "family." He sits down to dinner, is drugged, and goes to bed with the girl. In the morning he awakens to find himself naked and without his money. He is forced to go to a boarding master AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1882 KEYWORDS: sailor whore robbery drink drugs shanghaiing FOUND_IN: US(MA) REFERENCES: (7 citations) Doerflinger, pp. 58-60, "Can't They Dance the Polka!" (1 text, 1 tune) Colcord, pp. 108-109, "Can't You Dance the Polka?" (1 text, 1 tune) Harlow, pp. 37-38, "Can't You Dance the Polka?" "Santy" (2 texts, 1 tune) Hugill, pp. 369-376, "Away Susanna!" "Can't Ye Dance the Polka?" "The New York Girls" (4 texts, 4 tunes -- also includes a fragment from the Swedish shanty book _Sang under Segal_ titled "Seafarers", the words being the same as Hugill's first version of "Can't You Dance the Polka") Silber-FSWB, p. 87, "Can't You Dance the Polka" (1 text, which appears truncated, with an ending in which the girl puts off the man by saying she has a husband) DT, NYGIRLS* (NYGIRLS2? -- this looks like a modern parody; compare Silber's version) ADDITIONAL: Captain John Robinson, "Songs of the Chantey Man," a series published July-August 1917 in the periodical _The Bellman_ (Minneapolis, MN, 1906-1919). Robinson called his version (in Part 1, 7/14/1917) "Oh My Santi"; the verse has with words very similar to "My Irish Jaunting Car" though the meter, tune, and chorus are from this song. Roud #486 RECORDINGS: Bob Roberts w. Peter Kennedy, "Can't You Dance the Polka?" (on LastDays) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Gold Watch" [Laws K41] (plot) and references there NOTES: The Martin Churchill mentioned in the last verse of some versions was a boarding master of the mid-Nineteenth century. (For background on boarding masters, see the notes to "Dixie Brown" [Laws D7]). - RBW File: Doe058 === NAME: Can't You Line It? DESCRIPTION: "When I get to Illinois, I'm gonna spread the word about the Florida boys. Shove it over! Hey, hey, can't you line it?...." The singer complains about hard times and high prices, and describes the conditions in which he works AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1935 KEYWORDS: work hardtimes railroading FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Lomax-FSNA 293, "Can't You Line It?" (1 text, 1 tune) Botkin-SoFolklr, p. 746, "Can't You Line It?" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #10070 File: LoF293 === NAME: Canada I O: see Canaday-I-O/Michigan-I-O/Colley's Run I-O [Laws C17] (File: LC17) === NAME: Canada-I-O: see Canaday-I-O/Michigan-I-O/Colley's Run I-O [Laws C17] (File: LC17) === NAME: Canada-I-O (The Wearing of the Blue; Caledonia) DESCRIPTION: When her love goes to sea, a lady dresses as a sailor and joins (his or another's) ship's crew. When she is discovered, (the crew/her lover) determine to drown her. The captain saves her; they marry AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1839 (broadside, Bodleian Harding B 11(1982)) KEYWORDS: love separation betrayal disguise cross-dressing sailor rescue reprieve marriage FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) Ireland REFERENCES: (6 citations) SHenry H162, pp. 333-334, "Canada[,] Hi! Ho!" (1 text, 1 tune) Ord, pp. 117-118, "Caledonia" (1 text) Leach-Labrador 90, "Canadee-I-O" (1 text, 1 tune) Karpeles-Newfoundland 48, "Wearing of the Blue" (1 text, 1 tune) Creighton-SNewBrunswick 109, "She Bargained with a Captain" (1 fragment, 1 tune) DT, CANADIO3* CALEDONIA* Roud #309 and 5543 RECORDINGS: Robert Cinnamond, "Canadie-I-O" (on IRRCinnamond03) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 11(1982), "Kennady I-o," J. Catnach (London), 1813-1838; also Firth c.12(329), Harding B 11(2039), "Lady's Trip to Kennedy"; Harding B 25(1045), "The Lady's Trip to Kennady"; Firth c.12(330), "Canada Heigho"; Firth c.13(240), Firth c.12(331), Harding B 11(2920), 2806 c.16(72), "Canada I, O" ALTERNATE_TITLES: Canada Heigho!! Kennady I-o Lady's Trip to Kennady NOTES: Based on similarity of title, some connect this song with "Canaday-I-O, Michigan-I-O, Colley's Run I-O" [Laws C17]. There is no connection in plot, however, and any common lyrics are probably the result of cross-fertilization. (Leach-Labrador has a report that "Canaday-I-O" was written in 1854 by Ephraim Braley using this song as a pattern.) The Scottish song "Caledonia" is quite different in detail -- so much so that I'm tempted to separate it from the "Canada-I-O" texts (Roud, surprisingly, does split it; "Canaday-I-O" is his #309; "Caledonia" is #5543). But the plot is too close to allow us to distinguish. There is a curious anachronism in most of the "Canada-I-O" texts, in that the girl concludes by saying something like "You see the honor that I have gained By the wearing of the blue." However, the British navy did not adopt a uniform for ordinary sailors until 1857 -- this being, of course, the familiar blue serge and white duck (see Arthur Herman, _To Rule the Waves_, p. 455). This being after the date of the earliest broadsides, it presumably is an intrusive element. - RBW I don't believe anyone else has said that Creighton-SNewBrunswick fragment belongs here (it is Roud #2782). Here is all of Creighton-SNewBrunswick: "She bargained with a captain Her passage to go free, That she might be his comrade To cross the raging sea" The usual arrangement in Canada-I-O is "She bargained with a sailor [or the sailors], All for a purse of gold." However, broadside Bodleian Firth c.12(330) has the following wording: [...] She was courted by a sailor Twas true she loved him dear, And how to get to sea with him The way she did not know. [...] She bargained with a captain All for a purse of gold And soon they did convey the lady Down into the hold. [...] The plot continues as usual, with the captain coming to her rescue. - BS File: HHH162 === NAME: Canada, Hi! Ho!: see Canada-I-O (The Wearing of the Blue; Caledonia) (File: HHH162) === NAME: Canaday I-O: see Canaday-I-O/Michigan-I-O/Colley's Run I-O [Laws C17] (File: LC17) === NAME: Canaday-I-O, Michigan-I-O, Colley's Run I-O [Laws C17] DESCRIPTION: A group of lumbermen suffers a winter or cold and poor conditions. When winter ends, they joyfully return to their homes AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1924 KEYWORDS: logger work separation lumbering FOUND_IN: US(MA,MW,NE) Canada(Ont) REFERENCES: (15 citations) Laws C17a, "Canaday I-O"; C17b, "Michigan I-O"; C17c, "Colley's Run I-O (The Jolly Lumbermen)" Rickaby 8, "Michigan-I-O" (1 text, 1 tune) Gardner/Chickering 105, "Michigan--I-O" (1 text plus mention of 2 more, 1 tune) Fowke-Lumbering #2 , "Michigan-I-O" (1 text, 1 tune) Linscott, pp. 181-183, "Canaday-I-O" (1 text, 1 tune) Leach, pp. 773-775, "Canaday I. O. (The Buffalo Skinners)" (2 texts, but only the second goes with this piece; the other belongs with "The Buffalo Skinners" [Laws B10a]) Friedman, p. 415, "Canaday-I-O" (1 text, 1 tune) Fowke/Johnston, pp. 68-69, "Canaday-I-O" (1 text, 1 tune) Thorp/Fife XV, pp. 195-218 (31-33), "Buffalo Range" (6 texts, 2 tunes, though the "B" text is "Boggy Creek," C and D appear unrelated, and E is "Canada-I-O") Lomax-FSNA 57, "Canada-I-O" (1 text, 1 tune) Botkin-NEFolklr, pp. 569-570, "Canada I O" (1 text, 1 tune) Beck 1, "Michigan-I-O" (2 texts); 2, "Coolie's Run-I-O" (1 text) Darling-NAS, pp. 179-181, "Canaday I-O" (1 text) Silber-FSWB, p. 104, "Canada-I-O" (1 text) DT 377, CANADIO* CANADI2 CANADIO2 CANADIO Roud #640 RECORDINGS: L. Parker Temple, "Colley's Run I-O" (AFS, 1940s; on LC28) Lester Wells, "Michigan I-O" (AFS, 1938; on LC56) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Buffalo Skinners" (Laws B10a) cf. "Boggy Creek or The Hills of Mexico" [Laws B10b] cf. "Shanty Teamster's Marseillaise" ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Jolly Lumbermen NOTES: The text known as "Canaday-I-O" is credited by Fowke to one Ephraim Braley, who worked in the Canadian woods in 1853. Leach, in his notes to his #109, "Canadee-I-O," states that he based his song on the piece we have indexed as "Canada-I-O (The Wearing of the Blue; Caledonia)"-- though that song too appears to have been quite new at the time. Alan Lomax apparently accepts this interpretation, but also mentions the Scots song "Caledoni-o," which is also mentioned by Leach. Probably the whole complex deserves a more thorough examination than it has gotten. - RBW File: LC17 === NAME: Canadee-I-O: see Canada-I-O (The Wearing of the Blue; Caledonia) (File: HHH162) === NAME: Canadian Boat Song, A DESCRIPTION: "Faintly as tolls the evening chime, Our voices keep tune and our oars keep time.... Soon as the woods on shore look dim, We'll sing at St. Anne's our parting hymn." An encouragement to and prayer for good rowing when there is no wind AUTHOR: Thomas Moore EARLIEST_DATE: c. 1804 KEYWORDS: river nonballad FOUND_IN: Canada REFERENCES: (1 citation) Fowke/Johnston, pp. 60-61, "A Canadian Boat Song" (1 text, 1 tune) ST FJ060 (Partial) Roud #13847 NOTES: Moore's poem is sung to a French folk tune, "Dans mon chemin j'ai rencontre," but the result does not qualify as a voyageur piece and does not seem to have circulated extensively in oral tradition. (Granger's Index to Poetry cites three anthologies, but none of them folk-influenced.) Moore wrote it after a visit to Canada during which he sailed from Kingston to Montreal. The winds on this trip were so poor that the sailors were obliged to row the whole way; hence the poem. - RBW File: FJ060 === NAME: Candlelight Fisherman, The DESCRIPTION: Singer, a fisherman, tells how his father taught him to test the wind at night by sticking a candle lantern outside: "Open the pane and pop out the flame/To see how the wind do blow". He tells how he does it, and advises listeners to do the same AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1952 (recorded from Phil Hammond) KEYWORDS: fishing technology work humorous nonballad father wife worker FOUND_IN: Britain(England(South)) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Kennedy 219, "The Candlelight Fisherman" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, CANDLEBLO* Roud #1852 RECORDINGS: Phil Hammond, "The Candlelight Fisherman" (on FSB3) Bob Roberts, "The Candlelight Fisherman" (on BRoberts01, HiddenE) NOTES: The joke is that while one is testing the wind with the lantern, its light attracts fish. Doing this, of course, is against the law. - PJS Kennedy adds another joke along the lines of the "Arkansas Traveller": If the wind blows out the candle, it's blowing too hard to go out; if the wind doesn't blow out the candle, there isn't enough wind to sail. - RBW File: K219 === NAME: Candy Man DESCRIPTION: Blues, often bawdy, about the exploits of the Candy Man. The candy man's candy almost certainly gets its possessors in trouble, but many still seek it. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1928 (recording, Mississippi John Hurt) KEYWORDS: nonballad bawdy floatingverses FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Darling-NAS, p. 298, "Candy Man Blues" (1 text) DT, SALTYDOG RECORDINGS: Mississippi John Hurt "Candy Man Blues" (OKeh 8654, 1929 [rec. 1928]; on MJHurt01, MJHurt02) (on MJHurt03) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Salty Dog" (assorted references) NOTES: Neither text nor melody of this is fixed; it may not be one song (but with blues, who can really tell?). - RBW File: DarNS298 === NAME: Candy Man Blues: see Candy Man (File: DarNS298) === NAME: Cane Creek Massacre, The DESCRIPTION: "The boys have lived in peace upon the farm, A mother's care had shielded them from harm...." "So was their mother shot by cowardly hand.... Their youthful blood was on the hearthstone spilled." The (Mormon) singer blames the Christians AUTHOR: James H. Hart EARLIEST_DATE: 1958 (Burt) KEYWORDS: homicide mother children FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (1 citation) Burt, pp. 113-114, "The Cane Creek Massacre" (1 partial text) File: Burt113 === NAME: Cane-Cutter's Lament, The DESCRIPTION: "How we suffered grief and pain Up in Queensland, cutting cane." The singer describes the hard working conditions and the bad boss. He is particularly upset with the food and the Chinese cook. He vows never again to cut cane in Queensland AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1973 KEYWORDS: work cook Australia FOUND_IN: Australia REFERENCES: (1 citation) Fahey-Eureka, pp. 202-203, "The Cane-Cutter's Lament" (1 text, 1 tune) File: FaE202 === NAME: Cannily, Cannily DESCRIPTION: "Cannily, cannily, bonnie wee bairnikie, Don't you cry now, my little pet. Hush-a-bye, now, your daddy is sleeping; It's no time tae wauken him yet." Daddy needs his sleep, as soon he will go driving his engine. In time, the child will have its own engine AUTHOR: Ewan MacColl EARLIEST_DATE: 1954 (MacColl-Shuttle) KEYWORDS: lullaby work FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (3 citations) MacColl-Shuttle, p. 22, "Cannily, Cannily" (1 text, 1 tune) Silber-FSWB, p. 410, "Cannily, Cannily" (1 text) DT, CANNLY* File: FSWB410A === NAME: Cannon Ball, The: see The Cannonball (File: CSW116) === NAME: Cannonball Blues: see The Cannonball (File: CSW116) === NAME: Cannonball, The DESCRIPTION: Floating verses; singer says he will catch the train called the Cannonball (from Buffalo to Washington), his girl left him, and he's leaving her. More or less. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1930 (Lesley Riddle; recorded by the Carter Family) KEYWORDS: love farewell rambling train travel abandonment floatingverses lover FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Cohen-LSRail, pp. 413-425, "Cannonball Blues/Whitehouse Blues" (2 texts, 2 tunes, the first being "Mister McKinley (White House Blues)" and the second the "Cannonball Blues," plus a version of a song called "Mr. McKinley" from _The Week-End Book_, which is so different that I would regard it as a separate though perhaps related song, probably not traditional) Cohen/Seeger/Wood, pp. 116-117, "The Cannonball" (1 text, 1 tune) Botkin-RailFolklr, p. 463, "Cannonball Blues" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, (CANONBL3 adapted by Bruce Phillips?) Roud #4759 RECORDINGS: The Carter Family, "The Cannon Ball" (Victor V-40317/Bluebird 6020/Montgomery Ward 4742, 1930) Kilby Snow, "The Cannonball" (on KSnow1) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Mister McKinley (White House Blues)" (words, tune) cf. "Joking Henry" (tune) cf. "That Lonesome Train Took My Baby Away" (floating verses) File: CSW116 === NAME: Canny Newcassel: see Canny Newcastle (File: StoR043) === NAME: Canny Newcastle DESCRIPTION: "'Bout Lunnon aw'd heard sec wonderful spokes, That the streets were a' covered wi' guineas." The singer describes the sights in London, mentions seeing King George, recalls being robbed, and declares he likes his home better AUTHOR: Thomas Thompson EARLIEST_DATE: 1900 (Stokoe/Reay); Thompson died 1816 KEYWORDS: travel home humorous FOUND_IN: Britain(England(North)) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Stokoe/Reay, pp. 43-45, "Canny Newcassel" (1 text, 1 tune) ST StoR043 (Partial) Roud #3060 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Mountains of Mourne" (plot) NOTES: Stokoe/Reay calls this song by two different names: The first page labels it "Canny Newcastle" at the head; the name at the top of the complete text is "Canny Newcassel," in the chorus the town is spelled "Newcassel," and the end notes file it as "Canny Newcassel." - RBW File: StoR043 === NAME: Canso Strait DESCRIPTION: The crew is finishing a quiet voyage when a gale blows up. The drunken captain decides to take advantage of the storm by getting up the best speed possible. The alarmed sailors at last mutiny to get things back in control AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1932 (Creighton-NovaScotia) KEYWORDS: sailor ship drink storm rebellion FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar,Newf) REFERENCES: (8 citations) Doerflinger, pp. 183-184, "Canso Strait" (1 text, 1 tune) Peacock, pp. 871-872, "The Drunken Captain" (1 text, 1 tune) Leach-Labrador 40, "The Drunken Captain" (1 text, 1 tune) Lehr/Best 31, "The Drunken Captain" (1 text, 1 tune) Creighton-NovaScotia 107, "Canso Strait" (1 text, 1 tune) Creighton-Maritime, p. 194, "In Canso Strait" (1 text, 1 tune) Ives-DullCare, pp. 170-171,244-245, "The Drunken Captain" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, CNSOSTRT* Roud #1815 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Drunken Captain (I)" (subject) NOTES: This song, erroneously titled "Casno Strait," is item dD52 in Laws's Appendix II. Manny and Wilson, in their notes on "The Cedar Grove" [Laws D18] note that Canso Straight "was between Nova Scotia and the Island of Cape Breton. Now, by the magic of modern engineering, there is no straight, but a causeway has been built to connect the island and the mainland." - RBW File: Doe183 === NAME: Cant-Hook and Wedges: see Wrap Me Up in my Tarpaulin Jacket (File: FR439) === NAME: Canuck's Lament DESCRIPTION: "When you're sitting around in a dirty old shack, You can't keep your mind from wanderin' back To the happy old days... When we hunted all day and gambled all night." The poet describes the life he used to lead, and the quarrels he used to have AUTHOR: J. K Trout EARLIEST_DATE: 1973 KEYWORDS: cowboy recitation FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ohrlin-HBT 92, "Canuck's Lament" (1 text) File: Ohr092 === NAME: Cap Stone, The DESCRIPTION: "Have you heard the revelation Of this latter dispensation...." The poet tells how the Saints are persecuted in Illinois and Missouri, and describes how they will work "till we make Nauvoo as Eden" AUTHOR: W. W. Phelps EARLIEST_DATE: 1845 (Times and Seasons) KEYWORDS: religious nonballad abuse HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1830 - Joseph Smith founds the Latter-Day Saints 1831 - The Saints settle in Kirtland, Ohio. Later in the year, Smith chooses Independence, Missouri as the Holy City 1840 - The Saints found their town of Nauvoo, Illinois 1844 - Smith is killed by a mob at Nauvoo, to be succeeded by Brigham Young 1846 - Many Mormons leave Nauvoo for Council Bluffs, Iowa 1847 - Brigham Young leads the Mormon vanguard to Great Salt Lake FOUND_IN: US(So) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Belden, p. 457, "The Cap Stone" (1 text) Roud #7835 File: Beld457 === NAME: Cap'n Paul DESCRIPTION: Captain Paul and the seven men of the Big Mariner set out from Kennebunk(port) for the West Indies. The ship foundered in a gale; the six crewmen were drowned and only Captain Paul was saved AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1941 (Flanders/Olney) KEYWORDS: sea storm wreck drowning death FOUND_IN: US(NE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Flanders/Olney, pp. 241-242, "Cap'n Paul" (1 text) ST FO241 (Partial) Roud #4685 NOTES: Charles L. Cooke, who gave this song to Helen Flanders, said it was about his great-grandfather, Jeremiah Paul. - RBW File: FO241 === NAME: Cap'n, I Believe DESCRIPTION: "Cap'n, I believe, Cap'n, I believe, Cap'n, I believe, believe, believe I'll die. (Spoken): Oh, no, you ain't gonna die. Come on with that motah." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1927 (Sandburg) KEYWORDS: railroading death nonballad FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (1 citation) Sandburg, p. 363, "Cap'n, I Believe" (1 fragment, 1 tune) File: San363 === NAME: Cape Ann: see Three Jolly Huntsmen (File: R077) === NAME: Cape Breton Murder DESCRIPTION: In Cow Bay on December 8, 1874 "this young man was led like a sheep to slaughter ... He was wilfully murdered" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1951 (Creighton-Maritime) KEYWORDS: homicide FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Creighton-Maritime, p. 191, "Cape Breton Murder" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #2717 NOTES: Creighton-Maritime: The singer "said this happened during a riot." - BS File: CrMa191 === NAME: Cape Cod Girls DESCRIPTION: "Cape Cod Girls they have no combs, Heave away, heave away! They comb their hair with codfish bones...." "Heave away and don't you make a noise, For we're bound for Australia." Sundry lyrics on the oddities of Cape Cod girls AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1932 (Creighton-NovaScotia) KEYWORDS: shanty sailor separation nonballad talltale FOUND_IN: US(NE) Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (10 citations) Colcord, p. 91, "The Codfish Shanty" (1 text, 1 tune) Hugill, 196, "South Australia" (1 text, 1 tune) [AbEd, pp. 152-153] Creighton-NovaScotia 120, "Hanstead Boys" (1 fragment, 1 tune) Lomax-FSNA 23, "Cape Cod Girls" (1 text, 1 tune) Shay-SeaSongs, p. 84, "Cape Cod Girls" (1 text) Botkin-NEFolklr, pp. 561-562, "Cape Cod Shanty" (1 text, 1 tune) Pankake-PHCFSB, pp. 244-245, "Cape Cod Girls" (1 text, tune referenced) Darling-NAS, pp. 316-317, "Cape Cod Girls" (1 text) Silber-FSWB, p. 96, "Cape Cod Girls" (1 text) DT, CAPCODGL Roud #325 RECORDINGS: Charity Bailey, "Cape Cod Girls" (on GrowOn2) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "South Australia (I)" cf. "Round the Bay of Mexico" (lyrics) NOTES: There is no true dividing line between this song and "South Australia"; they merge into each other. However, the difference in local colour and focus is enough that they should be separated. Some versions of "South Australia" even have a rudimentary plot, and the tune can be somewhat different. The problem is classifying the intermediate versions.... - RBW File: LoF023 === NAME: Cape Cod Shanty: see Cape Cod Girls (File: LoF023) === NAME: Cape St Mary's: see Western Boat (Let Me Fish Off Cape St Mary's) (File: Doyl3039) === NAME: Capital Ship, A DESCRIPTION: Parody of fo'c'sle song; describes miserable conditions on the "Walloping Window Blind," including descriptions of the officers. They are stranded for a time on the "Gulliby Isles"; they commandeer a Chinese junk and escape, leaving its crew on the island AUTHOR: Charles Edward Carryl? EARLIEST_DATE: 1973 KEYWORDS: ship wreck humorous parody sailor moniker nonsense FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (2 citations) Silber-FSWB, p. 243, "A Capital Ship" (1 text) DT, CAPSHIP CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Ten Thousand Miles Away" (tune) cf. "Ho for California (Banks of Sacramento)" (tune) NOTES: This is basically a nonsense parody of "Ten Thousand Miles Away"; I suspect it was composed by some collegiate character in the 1890s or so. - PJS Except for the date (I believe it's somewhat earlier that that), that seems indeed to be the story. - RBW File: FSWB243 === NAME: Cappy, or The Pitman's Dog DESCRIPTION: A pitman lives near Newcastle with his family and their dog, "Weel bred Cappy, famous au'd Cappy, Cappy's the dog, Tallio, tallio." Cappy and owner set out for town. A robber attacks Cappy. The owner returns home, and is amazed to find the dog alive AUTHOR: Words: William Mitford EARLIEST_DATE: 1900 (Stokoe/Reay); Mitford died 1851 KEYWORDS: animal thief dog death FOUND_IN: Britain(England(North)) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Stokoe/Reay, pp. 84-85, "'Cappy'; or, The Pitman's Dog" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #3145 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Body in the Bag" (theme) File: StoR084 === NAME: Capt. Frederick Harris and the Grates Cove Seal Killers of 1915 DESCRIPTION: "Attention all, both great and small, A tale I have to tell Of Captain Frederick Harris And young Florizel." The singer lists various seal hunters, tells of the beginning of their voyage, and wishes them success AUTHOR: Joshua Stanford EARLIEST_DATE: 1952 (Stanford, Fifty Years of My Life in Newfoundland) KEYWORDS: ship hunting moniker FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ryan/Small, p. 101, "Capt. Frederick Harris and the Grates Cove Seal Killers of 1915" (1 text, 1 tune) NOTES: From internal indications, it appears that the _Florizel_ of this song is not the passenger ship described in "The Wreck of the Steamship Florizel." - RBW File: RySm101 === NAME: Captain Abram Kean DESCRIPTION: "We should not forget the Commodore, The old king of the sailing fleet." "With unerring aim and judgment rare He would strike each sealing patch." "For fifty years he butted the ice." "So we should not forget... The late Captain Abram Kean" AUTHOR: Otto Kelland ? EARLIEST_DATE: 1960 (Kelland, Anchor Watch) KEYWORDS: sailor hunting nonballad FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ryan/Small, p. 146, "Captain Abram Kean" (1 text) NOTES: The notes in Ryan/Small tell us that Kean died in 1945, at the age of 90, and that he captained sealing expeditions for over fifty years, bringing in more than a million animals. His fame can be told by the number of Newfoundland tales mentioning him -- among those indexed in this collection, "First Arrival -- 'Aurora' and 'Walrus' Full," "Arrival of 'Aurora,' 'Diana,' 'Virginia Lake,' and 'Vanguard,' Loaded," "The Sealer's Song (II)," "The Terra Nova," "The Swiler's Song," "Captains and Ships," and "A Noble Fleet of Sealers" -- though only the last two appear to be traditional, and "Captains and Ships" mentions Kean only briefly while "A Noble Fleet of Sealers" appears to get his first name wrong. Kean was not always as successful as this piece might imply, though; "The Terra Nova" is the story of how three men under his command died. - RBW File: RySm146 === NAME: Captain Bill Ryan Left Terry Behind DESCRIPTION: "Terry is a fine young man, But he has lots of 'chaw.'" As several ships, including Terry's Esquimaux, get stuck in the ice, Bill Ryan abandons Terry "To paddle his own canoe." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1927 (Doyle) KEYWORDS: hunting ship disaster FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ryan/Small, p. 32, "Captain Bill Ryan Left Terry Behind" (1 text) ST RySm032 (Partial) Roud #12532 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Paddle Your Own Canoe" (tune) File: RySm032 === NAME: Captain Bob Bartlett DESCRIPTION: "A rugged Newfoundlander as ever sailed the seas, He was born and raised in Brigus in the bay." Bartlett's career as a sealer, then as captain, is told, as is his work with Admiral Peary. "He's resting now at Brigus where his grave o'erlooks the bay." AUTHOR: Otto Kelland? EARLIEST_DATE: 1961 (Kelland, Anchor Watch) KEYWORDS: hunting ship exploration HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1875-1946 - Life of Robert Abram Bartlett FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ryan/Small, pp. 83-84, "Captain Bob Bartlett" (1 text) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Ballad of Captain Bob Bartlett, Arctic Explorer" (subject) cf. "The Roving Newfoundlanders (I)" (brief mention of Bob Bartlett) NOTES: Robert Bartlett (born 1875 in Brigus, Newfoundland; died 1946 in New York City, but his grave and monument are at his home in Brigus) is now remembered mostly as an arctic explorer -- Robert Peary, the alleged discoverer of the North Pole, took him on three expeditions; in 1913-1914 Bartlett, as commander of the _Karluk_, was wrecked, and saved his expedition by a sledge trip to Alaska; in 1926, he was on the ship that carried Robert Byrd's plane to Spitzbergen for Byrd's flight toward the pole, though Bartlett was not to be in the plane. But it appears that he was known in Newfoundland even before that; several of the poems in Ryan/Small, including those supposedly written before Peary's explorations, mention him. It is possible that some of this is by confusion with his uncle John Bartlett, who also worked with Peary for a time, or his cousin Sam Bartlett, who carried Josephine Peary north to meet her husband Robert in the arctic in 1900; he took the young Bob Bartlett as mate on that expedition (see Bryce, p. 212; for bibliography, see the notes at the end of the article). There was also a cousin, Moses Bartlett, who went on three arctic expeditions and whom Bryce, p. 294, says "had a fabulous reputation as an ice pilot, and like many of the Bartletts from Brigus, Newfoundland, including his second cousin, Bob, he had an equal reputation as a hard drinker." Ironically, Moses Bartlett would captain the ship that took Frederick A Cook, Peary's great rival, to the arctic on the trip where Cook claimed to reach the North Pole (Bryce, pp. 298, 849). Finally, there was Bob's uncle Isaac Bartlett, who in 1871 had captained the _Tigress_ and rescued the survivors of Hall's ill-fated _Polaris_ According to Loomis, p. 265, Isaac Bartlett told the story of the Hall rescue story so often to young Bob that the youth snuck away whenever Isaac showed up -- but Bob still went on to become a sealer and arctic explorer. (For more on these expeditions, see the notes to "Hurrah for Baffin's Bay.") The song's mention of Bartlett and Peary is significant. Bartlett figures very strongly in the question of Peary's 1909 trip to the pole. Bartlett served as commander of the _Roosevelt_, Peary's ship, and the explorer gave Bartlett much credit for keeping the ship afloat in his 1905 expedition, when the ship barely made it home with her hull badly damaged. But Bartlett wanted to be part of the group that made the Pole. Peary developed a system -- really, the only possible system at the time -- of working with a large support crew that wasn't intended to reach the Pole; they just shuttled supplies. In 1909, using this system, he made one more attempt for the Pole. (He had made several failed attempts in the past, but this was almost sure to be his last; Peary was too old and broken-down, and his financial backers too tired of the whole business, for him to have much hope of another chance if the 1909 expedition failed.) When Peary reached up his northermost supply stop, Bartlett was with him, and expected to be one of those on the crew that went to the Pole. But Peary left him behind -- disappointing the young captain so much that he actually started to set out for the Pole himself, on foot, before coming to his senses. The fact that Peary left him behind is highly indicative. There are few good witnesses to the last part of Peary's journey. As noted, Peary dropped off various men along the way, resupplying the remaining sledges from theirs. As the party reached the final stages, only three men were left who could read a sextant and hence measure the latitude: Peary, Bartlett, and Ross Marvin. Marvin was dropped at the next-to-last stop, leaving Peary with a signed statement of his position -- but he never made it home; apparently he was murdered by the Inuit (see Bryce, p. 698; Henderson, pp. 218-219). Then Peary got rid of Bartlett. Peary's final crew consisted of "Commander" Peary himself (whose correct Naval title was not "Commander" but merely "Civil Engineer"), his servant Matthew Henson, and a handful of Inuit. In other words, by leaving Bartlett behind, Peary had made sure that no one could verify his claimed position. Somewhere in Bryce (I lost my note on this, and the useless index is no help) is Henson's explanation for this: Bartlett was a slow sledger, and had damaged his legs, meaning that he should not continue. There are very strong arguments against this: Bartlett was in good enough shape that he actually started to walk to the pole, and he had broken trail for much of the trip north. On p. 878, Bryce notes that Bartlett made it back from where he parted from Peary in 24 days. Another of Peary's sledgers, Borup, needed 23 days to sledge back from a point more than two degrees further south. And Bartlett sledged just fine during the _Karluk_ voyage. So Henson's explanation simply doesn't hold up. Incidentally, those notes in Bryce are from Peary, and while Peary noted the positions where the others left, he listed his own return time without listing his own farthest north! It's as if he hadn't yet decided whether to pretend he had reached the Pole. And, once the National Geographic Society had accepted his alleged proofs, he kept them under lock and key; not even a congressional committee was allowed to keep them overnight. And Peary's records, it was noted, show none of the grease and grime one would expect of someone keeping a diary while on a polar trek, eating greasy pemmican and having no way to wash. (Though Bryce, p. 879, notes that Peary's diary is so full of egotistical statements that it's hard to imagine why he would have included them in a fake record. His only explanation is that Peary was unwilling to throw anything away -- unless it argued against his polar claim.) The map in Morris, p. 141, is strongly illustrative. Peary left land at a northern point on Ellesmere Island, roughly 500 miles south of the North Pole. Bartlett turned back 133 miles south of the Pole -- roughly a quarter of the remaining distance. It took Bartlett 18 days to cover the distance back to land, and six more to return to the _Roosevelt_. Peary, who would have had to cover at least 250 additional miles had he reached the pole, arrived back at the ship two days later (Morris, pp. 142-143). To manage that Peary, in that last leg he travelled with no other companion who could read a sextant, claimed to cover distances which no other sledging party ever managed; indeed, they were more than twice his own average. For part of the distance, he was claiming fifty miles a day (Morris, p. 148). Morris notes that the best average distance ever recorded on a verified trek was 36.6 miles per day. And Peary, who had damaged his feet and lost eight toes due to frostbite, made this claim even though he generally had to ride in a sledge rather than operating under his own power (see Bryce, p. 442, Henderson, p. 214); Bryce, p. 852, writes, Òas Henson attested, he was not much more than a load of freight." Any objective observer would say that it was Bartlett, not Peary, who should have made the final run to the Pole. He was fitter, younger, as determined as Peary, and at least as competent. But even if Peary wasn't planning to cheat, he wanted to be the only "white man" to reach the Pole. (Bryce, p. 296. And, yes, he does seem to have been that sort of a racist; in years of travelling with the Inuit, he never learned their language, and some of the things he said about his faithful Black assistant Matthew Henson are frightful -- even though Henson, as his memoirs show, was in many ways a wiser and better man than Peary.) It must have been truly wearing for Bartlett, who accompanied Peary on many speaking tours -- and was given a bunch of silver medals at the time when Peary was given gold (Bryce, p. 489). Talk about adding insult to injury! If Peary did in fact make it to the pole, then Bartlett certainly could have done so also -- and Peary could not have piloted the _Roosevelt_ far enough to make the run for the pole possible. So who deserves more credit? It appears Peary had pulled the same trick on Bartlett during his previous (1905-1906) expedition toward the Pole (see Fleming, pp. 340-343). Little is made of Peary's lack of documentation on that trip, since he did not reach the Pole, and apparently had no hopes of reaching it by the time he left the last of his support crew behind. The best he could hope for was a new "Farthest North," to encourage his financial backers -- and even his claim to that is dubious (Bryce, pp. 853-854, who notes also the inadequacy of his equipment). The classic book on this subject, according to Berton, is _Peary at the Pole: Fact or Fiction?_ by Dennis Rawlins. See also Berton, especially pp. 577-582. Rawlins convinced Berton -- and his extremely negative tone may have contributed to Berton's own harsh statements. That violent anti-Peary tone may have lessened the book's effect (Bryce, p. 757). Still, the evidence is strong: Peary never made the Pole. And, unlike other Arctic expeditions, he didn't gather any useful scientific data. Nor did he care. But that's Peary's story, not Bartlett's. Even in that, and in Peary's war with Frederick Cook over who reached the Pole first, Bartlett stands out (e.g. when Peary tried to destroy Cook's equipment to render his claim unprovable, Bartlett helped hide some of the equipment from Peary's wrath; Bryce, p. 415). The flip side is, Bartlett in 1910 took another ship, the _Beothic_, north to investigate some of Cook's records (Bryce, pp. 908-909). Bryce thinks Bartlett was doing Peary's dirty work at this point, destroying rather than investigating. Bryce, p. 920, goes so far as to state, "If Peary had a 'co-conspirator' in his fraudulent claim to the North Pole, it was Bob Bartlett, and his autobiography shows that he either was a clumsy liar or had an incredibly poor memory." Bryce, it will be clear, favors the former interpretation. I am inclined to disagree; the impression I get from Bartlett's writings is of a man who often acted before he thought, and suffered for it; this would help explain why Peary was able to lead him around by the nose. The real key to Bartlett's reputation, and the criticism of the same, is the _Karluk_ voyage. This time, there was no Peary; the expedition was chartered by Vilhjalmur Stefansson, but he abandoned the ship early on, leaving Bartlett in charge of the show. The _Karluk_ was intended to take Stefansson and his scientists to explore the western portions of the Canadian arctic. The ship was trapped in the ice, and Stefansson proceeded to take a few scientists and leave. Bartlett, his sailors, the remaining scientists, and the _Karluk_ and drifted west until they was close to Wrangel Island off Siberia, where the ice smashed the ship's hull. Bartlett managed to get the men on the ice, brought them (or most of them) to Wrangel Island, then set off for Alaska to find rescue. Not all the men he left behind lived, though. Three scientists and a sailor, who apparently did not trust Bartlett, set off on their own, and vanished. Four sailors, including the _Karluk's_ first and second mates, ended up on the uninhabitable Herald Island; their bodies would not be found for years. Two scientists died on Wrangel Island of dietary diseases, and one sailor died of a gunshot wound (probably murder); nearly everyone else, except for the expedition's handful of Inuit, ended up with severe frostbite and lost teeth or toes or other flesh. Of six scientists, 13 sailors including Bartlett, one trapper, and five Inuit (including a family of husband, wife, and two young daughters) on the _Karluk_ when she sank, only one scientist, seven sailors, the trapper, and the five Inuit lived to return home. How much of this is Bartlett's fault? It's hard to tell. Mirsky says on p. 289, "Had Bartlett not been there, it is doubtful if any would have come out of that nightmare alive." In his defence, he *did* lead the sledging voyage which eventually resulted in the rescue of the survivors, and this was certainly heroic. Not one man died in his presence, and only four were under his orders at the time of their deaths (and even they were on a sledging trip, and were lost due to an order given by one of the scientists, not Bartlett). The other side of the coin is, he left his men on Wrangel Island with no proper authority (the only officer left was an engineer, who seems to have had no skill in handling men and who separated himself from the majority of the survivors once they started slipping out of control). Under the pressures of arctic survival, the effect of leaving the men without a real commander was disastrous. And of course those three scientists had decided to set out on their own rather than continue in his presence. I can't help but note how much the whole story resembles that of the _Jeannette_, told in the notes to "Hurrah for Baffin's Bay" (and more fully in Guttridge). Bartlett and crew also noted the resemblances (see especially Bartlett-Karluk, pp. 93-94). But they did little to avoid it, except that Bartlett made the decision to leave most of his men at Wrangel Island (where their chances of survival were best) and seek rescue on his own; the _Jeannette_ crew, by contrast, had all sought to return to land together, and ended up with even heavier casualties than the _Karluk_. Bartlett would eventually publish two books of his experiences, _The Last Voyage of the Karluk_ (cited here as Bartlett-Karluk) and _The Log of "Bob" Bartlett_ (1928). Both are highly dramatic; Bartlett-Karluk begins "We did not all come back," while the _Log_ tells us that "I have been shipwrecked twelve times. Four times I have seen my own ship sink, or be crushed to kindling against the rocks. Yet I love the sea as a dog loves its master who clouts it for the discipline of the house." Several of the _Karluk_ survivors (and one of the dead scientists) left journals; the one surviving scientist, William Laird McKinlay, also produced a heavily-researched book praising Bartlett. On the whole, the impression I have of Bartlett is of a man of some skill but rather greater enthusiasm. He saved the _Roosevelt_, he rescued many of the men from the _Karluk_ -- but if he had not gotten into such fixes in the first place, he wouldn't have had to save anything. Stories from Bartlett-Karluk may illustrate this. In chapter III, Bartlett saw a polar bear and actually took the _Karluk_ off her course to shoot it. Shooting at bears was pretty natural at the time -- a seal hunter certainly had no worries about ecology! -- but it was a waste of time and fuel with no particular reward except that he had a hide to take home and a little extra food for the dogs. (And it's worth remembering that the _Karluk_ was wrecked because the ice trapped her before she had made enough distance east. Anything that delayed her added to the disaster.) Similarly, in chapter VII, he reports refusing treatment after a bad skiing accident lest everyone realize that he was "such a duffer." Perhaps my favorite, though, is from chapter IX, where he decided to clean out his clogged cabin stove by firing it with flashlight powder. He ended up blowing pieces of the stove all over the room. There is also a story of a reporter feeding Bartlett dinner to try to get his opinion on whether Peary had reached the Pole in 1909. Bartlett thought he probably had, or near enough -- but his language in describing being left behind was so salty that he was kicked out of the club where they were dining (see Fleming, p. 384). When it came to describing how the _Karluk_ was lost (Bartlett-Karluk, chapter 11), Bartlett is surprisingly reticent; he devotes a single paragraph (p. 88) to the subject, simply noting that the ice crushed the ship's side and the pump. No explanation of why the _Karluk_ was so damaged when few other ships suffered such damage in Arctic exploration (the Arctic was a graveyard of ships, but few were destroyed solely by ice; usually they were trapped and abandoned). Niven (pp. 117, 123) shows that the _Karluk_ stayed afloat for about 21 hours after her hull was breached, without help of pumps; was it not possible that the ship could have been saved? Why, after months on the ice, was the ship not better prepared to be evacuated? Much that was useful went down with the vessel. And why, why, why did he not make better command arrangements when he left the crew behind to seek rescue? The troubles on the island were almost solely due to bad leadership -- plus the fact that the people who knew something about survival in the arctic (the Inuit and the trapper John Hadley) had no authority. Some of this was initially the fault of Viljalmar Stefansson, the expedition commander who had purchased the _Karluk_ as part of his arctic expedition, but who then had bought many of the wrong supplies and caused them to be loaded in an extremely haphazard manner. He also assembled most of the inadequate crew. But Stefansson had abandoned the expedition shortly after the _Karluk_ was frozen in, giving Bartlett the opportunity to straighten things out. So why the mad rush at the last moment? And why did he have so much trouble with so many members of the ship's company? To be fair, Bartlett seems not to have liked speaking ill of anyone. He never publicly questioned Peary's claim to have reached the Pole, and in the _Last Voyage_ he does not say much about the problems he had with the scientists. Maybe the ship's problems were worse than he lets on. Niven, pp. 8-9, notes that Bartlett considered the _Karluk_ completely unsuitable for the voyage, demanded (and got) many repairs done on her, and had repeatedly told Stefansson that he would need additional equipment. I'm truly not sure what to think. Given those shipboard frictions, perhaps it's not a surprise that not everyone wanted to follow Bartlett back home. But his record is certainly more contradictory than these poems would indicate -- or than Bryce's blanket condemnation would allow. Fleming, p. 422, sums up the later part of his life as follows: "Robert Bartlett never got over his experience with Peary. He returned to the Arctic again and again. Some of his voyages were sucessful but others -- like the _Karluk_ expedition -- were harrowing failures. He wrote a few books, the last of which sold so badly that its earnings failed to cover his tobacco allowance.... He died on 26 April 1946." >>BIBLIOGRAPHY<<: In writing this summary, I have relied primarily on the following books: Bartlett-Karluk: Robert A. Bartlett (as set down by Ralph T. Hale), _The Karluk's Last Voyage_ (originally published 1916 as _The Last Voyage of the Karluk_; I used the 2001 Cooper Square expedition with a new introduction by Edward E. Leslie). This, I think, gives a pretty good feeling for Bob Bartlett the intense but slightly loopy officer. Instead of a new introduction, it could really have used an index! Berton: Pierre Berton, _The Arctic Grail:The Quest for the north West Passage and the NorthPole, 1818-1909_ (Viking, 1988). This is almost snarlingly negative, but it is a solid, widely-respected summary of exploration of the Canadian Arctic. Bryce: Robert M. Bryce, _Cook & Peary: The Polar Controversy, Resolved_ (Stackpole, 1997). Its thousand-plus pages spend more time on the political and legal jousting between Cook and Peary than anything else, and the index is pitiful in reference to its size, making it very hard to use, but the sheer bulk means that it contains a lot of information. Fleming: Fergus Fleming, _Ninety Degrees North: The Quest for the North Pole_ (Grove, 2001). A bit informal, but a thoroughly readable account of the various Polar expeditions. Guttridge: Leonard F. Guttridge, _Icebound: The Jeanette Expedition's Quest for the NorthPole_ (1986; I used the 2001 Berkley edition). This doesn't even mention Bartlett in the Index, but given that the _Karluk's_ story was so close to the _Jeanette's_, it's a useful control on any arctic exploration story. Henderson: Bruce Henderson, _True North: Peary, Cook, and the Race to the Pole_ (Norton, 2005) is an attempt to demonstrate that Frederick Cook beat Peary to the North Pole. It doesn't do much for Cook's case, it seems to me, but it has quite a bit about Peary and Bartlett. Loomis: Chauncey Loomis, _Weird and Tragic Shores: The Story of Charles Francis Hall, Explorer_ (I used the 2000 Modern Library edition, which has some new introductory work not by the author but which is essentially unchanged from Loomis's 1968 edition). This is the story of Hall, not Bob Bartlett, but it gives some information on Bartlett's family background. Mirsky: Jeannette Mirsky, _To the Arctic: The Story of Northern Exploration from the Earliest Times to the Present_, revised edition, Knopf, 1948. It's much too kind to the various wackos who headed for the North Pole, but it's also pretty comprehensive up to the 1920s. In an interesting note, Bryce, pp. 721-722, notes how the legal wrangles between the Peary and Cook factions actually caused portions of this book to be modified for publication; it still ended up in court. Jan Morris, _Great Exploration Hoaxes_ (Sierra Club, 1982; I use the 2001 Modern Library edition with an Introduction by Jan Morris) covers much more than arctic exploration, and is perhaps a little one-sided in situations where balance might be better, but it has much useful information on Peary and Cook. Niven: Jennifer Niven, _The Ice Master: The Doomed 1913 Voyage of the Karluk_ (Hyperion, 2000). Much more coherent than Bartlett's own accounts, though I often felt that Niven just didn't quite understand the Arctic. (She is a Californian, and clearly doesn't understand ice, snow, or cold -- she doesn't even know the difference between a "sled," a "sledge," and a "sleigh.") - RBW File: RySm083 === NAME: Captain Bover DESCRIPTION: "Where hae ye been, ma canny hinny, Where hae ye been, ma winsome man? I've been to the norrad, Cruising sair and lang; I've been to the norrad, cruising back and forrard, But daurna come ashore For Bover and his gang." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1900 (Stokoe/Reay) KEYWORDS: pressgang home FOUND_IN: Britain(England(North)) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Stokoe/Reay, p. 90, "Captain Bover" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #3147 NOTES: According to Stokoe/Reay, "Captain [John] Bover was the commander of the press-gang on the Tyne for many years, but appears to have carried out harsh laws as leniently as he could to be effective. He died 20th May 1792." Ray Fisher sang this fragment alongside "The Weary Cutters," but the connection seems to be a casual one. - RBW File: StoR090 === NAME: Captain Burke [Laws K5] DESCRIPTION: The singer ships on Captain Burke's Caroline, carrying a cargo of slaves. Sent aloft to reef sail in a storm, he and three others are hit by lightning and lose their sight. The singer wishes he could return to sea AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1932 (Creighton-NovaScotia) KEYWORDS: sailor storm disability FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar) Ireland REFERENCES: (4 citations) Laws K5, "Captain Burke" Creighton-NovaScotia 54, "Captain Burke" (1 text, 1 tune) Ranson, pp. 24-25, "The Blind Sailors" (1 text, 1 tune) DT 556, CAPBURKE Roud #834 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "By the Lightning We Lost Our Sight" [Laws K6] NOTES: Ranson's version makes the captain's name Gibson, the ship the _Gallant_, and [has] differences in wording that are strange but not strange enough to make me consider this not to be Laws K5. - BS File: LK05 === NAME: Captain Calls All Hands, The: see Our Captain Calls All Hands (Fighting for Strangers) (File: Pea416) === NAME: Captain Car, or, Edom o Gordon [Child 178] DESCRIPTION: (Captain Carr) decides to take a castle, calling upon the lady who holds it to surrender and lie by his side. She refuses (despite the appeals of her children). Carr burns the castle and slaughters the inhabitants AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1755 KEYWORDS: death homicide fire family FOUND_IN: Britain(England,Scotland(Aber)) US(NE) REFERENCES: (16 citations) Child 178, "Captain Car, or, Edom o Gordon" (9 texts) Bronson 178, "Captain Car, or, Edom o Gordon" (6 versions) Percy/Wheatley I, pp. 140-150, "Edom o' Gordon" (2 texts, one a fragment from the Percy folio and the other Percy's published text, drawn partly from other sources Flanders/Olney, pp. 134-139, "Adam Gorman" (1 text, 1 tune) Flanders-Ancient3, pp. 173-184, "Captain Car, or Edom O Gordon" (2 texts, 1 tune; the "B" text is from "The Charms of Melody" rather than tradition) Leach, pp. 488-491, "Captain Car, or, Edom o Gordon" (1 text) {Bronson's #6, which he places in an appendix} Friedman, p. 256, "Captain Car (Edom o' Gordon)" (2 texts) OBB 77, "Edom o Gordon" (1 text) PBB 46, "Edom o Gordon" (1 text) Gummere, pp. 146-150+332, "Captain Car, or Edom o Gordon" (1 text) Hodgart, p. 111, "Captain Car (Edom o' Gordon)" (1 text) DBuchan 53, "Edom o Gordon"; 54, "Edom o Gordon" (2 texts) HarvClass-EP1, pp. 103-107, "Captain Car" (1 text) Chappell/Wooldridge I, pp. 73-75, "Sick, Sick" (2 tunes, partial text) {Tune I is listed as Bronson's #2, but recast; Bronson does not print Chappell's tune II) BBI, ZN3329, "It befell at martynmas, When wether waxed colde" DT 178, ADAMGRMN* Roud #80 NOTES: Said to be the "sick tune" referred to, e.g., in "Much Ado about Nothing," III, iv, 42. This text, first found in the British Museum manuscript Cotton Vespasian A25 (late sixteenth century) is associated with a piece found in several lute books beginning no later than 1597. The events described are dated by Ritson to 1571; a piece labelled "Sick, sick" was licensed in 1578. - RBW, AS The actual event this is said to have been based on is the attack of Captain Ker (an agent of Sir Adam Gordon, brother of George Gordon, earl of Huntly) upon the Forbes stronghold at Towie on October 9, 1571 (during the minority of James VI, when the Regency had great difficulty controlling the country). The song, however, is by no means an accurate account of the assault -- which is curious given that the song seemingly came into existence so soon after the event. - RBW File: C178 === NAME: Captain Coldstein: see Captain Coulston (File: HHH562) === NAME: Captain Colson: see Captain Coulston (File: HHH562) === NAME: Captain Colstein: see Captain Coulston (File: HHH562) === NAME: Captain Colster: see Captain Coulston (File: HHH562) === NAME: Captain Conrod DESCRIPTION: The singer drunkenly signs aboard "a brig called the Mary belonging to Starr." He goes below and finds the mate has finished his brandy. The captain gives them "salt cod and religion" to eat. "To hell with Starr's Mary and Captain Conrod" AUTHOR: Harry Rissal ? EARLIEST_DATE: 1932 (Creighton/Nova Scotia) KEYWORDS: ship ordeal drink food sailor shore FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Smith/Hatt, p. 14, "The Mary" (1 text) Creighton-NovaScotia 108, "Captain Conrod" (1 text, 1 tune) ST SmHa014 (Partial) Roud #1816 RECORDINGS: Edmund Henneberry, "Captain Conrod" (on NovaScotia1) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "As Now We Are Sailing" (tune) NOTES: [This song is item] dD51 [in Laws's Appendix II]. Creighton-NovaScotia: "According to the singer, this was composed by Harry Rissal, a seaman with whom Mr Henneberry's brother sailed. Starr was the name of a well-known Halifax firm, in sailing ship days, and Captain Conrod a Halifax man." Creighton's Introduction puts an early date of 1929 on her collecting this song. Smith/Hatt Introduction claims Smith's songs were "sung aboard vessels out of Liverpool, Nova Scotia in the '70's, '80's and '90's." I suppose it's possible that the attribution is correct. - BS Looking at the text of this, I have to think it was intended to be sung to the Derry Down tune (in fact, it looks like a parody of "Red Iron Ore"). But Creighton's tune is not the Derry Down tune. - RBW Really two songs in one. The song refers to Halifax, N.S., but it was collected in Devil's Island, nearby. - PJS File: SmHa014 === NAME: Captain Coulson: see Captain Coulston (File: HHH562) === NAME: Captain Coulston DESCRIPTION: Captain Coulston's ship sails for America (carrying Irish emigrants?). She is overtaken by pirates. Following a desperate fight, Coulston and crew defeat the pirate; his wife shoots the pirate chief. They take the pirate ship to America as a prize AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1886 (broadside, Bodleian 2806 b.10(58)) KEYWORDS: pirate battle emigration FOUND_IN: Ireland Canada(Ont) REFERENCES: (4 citations) SHenry H562, pp. 113-114, "Captain Coulston" (1 text, 1 tune) Ranson, pp. 78-79, "Captain Coulston" (1 text, 1 tune) McBride 15, "Captain Colster" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, CAPTCOUL Roud #1695 RECORDINGS: O. J. Abbott, "Captain Coldstein" (on Abbott1) Brigid Tunney, "Captain Colston" (on IRTunneyFamily01) Paddy Tunney, "Captain Coulson" (on Voice12) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, 2806 b.10(58), "Captain Colston", H. Such (London), 1863-1885; also Firth b.26(492), Firth c.12(62), Harding B 11(534), Harding B 19(95), 2806 c.15(193), "Captain Colston"; Firth b.25(41/42), "Captain Colston" or "The Pirate Ship" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Terrible Privateer" (plot) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Captain Colstein Captain Colston Captain Coulson NOTES: Early versions of this song, such as Sam Henry's, make no mention of emigration; this may have been a later addition. All versions seem to reveal a not-very-smart pirate: He demands the passengers give up their valuables, and then he'll sink them. In such a context, what choice was there but to fight? - RBW File: HHH562 === NAME: Captain Devin: see Whisky in the Jar (The Irish Robber A) [Laws L13A]/The Irish Robber B (McCollister) [Laws L13B] (File: LL13) === NAME: Captain Doorley and the Boyne DESCRIPTION: John Doorley, 18, son of a wealthy farmer, joined the United men against the Orange at Naas, Timahoe, Prosperous, and Kilcullen. The target of a Yeoman manhunt, he was wounded at the Boyne: "Four hours I lay bleeding and my Nancy at my side" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1798 (Zimmermann) KEYWORDS: battle rebellion manhunt Ireland patriotic HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: May 26, 1798 - John Doorley of Lullymore leads about 5000 rebels to occupy Rathnagan, County Kildare (source: an article by Mario Corrigan, published by Kildare County Council, at Kildare Community Network site) FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (2 citations) Zimmermann 14, "Captain Doorley and the Boyne" (1 text, 1 tune) Moylan 57, "Captain Doorley and the Boyne" (1 text, 1 tune) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 19(90), "John Doorly -- a Song of 1798" ("I hope you'll pay attention and listen unto me"), J.F. Nugent & Co. (Dublin), 1850-1899; also 2806 c.15(177), "John Doorly -- a Song of 1798" NOTES: Zimmermann's has "no indication" of the tune used but lists a 1798 tune that fits the ballad. - BS Rathangan (as it is usually spelled) is on the boundary between Kildare and King's County (now County Offaly). It was little more than a village, and its occupation had little significance except to expand the rebel-occupied territory toward the west. Unfortunately, the rebels needed to move east, toward Dublin, if they wanted to help the cause. Even more unfortunately, the town had a garrison, which the rebels attacked. According to Thomas Pakenham, _The Year of Liberty_, pp. 133-134, the attackers (estimated as 5000, though most such estimates were high) killed two yeoman officers and 26 privates. After they surrendered. To be sure, when the place was retaken (Pakenham, pp. 167-168), there seems to have been a counter-massacre. But it's understandable why the British would pursue the rebel forces. The Boyne is a long day's march, or a somewhat shorter ride, north of the town, so Doorley may have been pursued the whole time. - RBW File: Zimm014 === NAME: Captain Dwyer DESCRIPTION: Ireland is ending the slavery binding it "Since Cromwell and his damned decree." Captain Dwyer's exploits against the cavalry and Captain Byrne are recounted: skirmishes at Hackettstown and Keadun bog avenging Stratford, Baltinglass and Dunlavin. AUTHOR: R. R. Madden (source: Moylan) EARLIEST_DATE: 1887 (Madden's _Literary Remains of the United Irishmen of 1798_, according to Moylan) KEYWORDS: army battle rebellion Ireland patriotic HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1798 - Irish rebellion against British rule FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Moylan 144, "Captain Dwyer" (1 text) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Michael Dwyer (I)" (subject of Michael Dwyer) and references there NOTES: The Oliver Cromwell reference is to the August 1652 Act of Settlement of Ireland and its consequent expropriation of Irish lands. [For background on Cromwell's subjection of Ireland, and the horrors it caused -- it was perhaps the worst atrocity committed by anyone from the time of the Roman Empire until the Twentieth Century, attempting to push all the native Irish into Connaught -- see the notes to "The Wexford Massacre." - RBW] Hackettstown, Stratford-on-Slaney, Baltinglass and Dunlavin are in County Wicklow. Moylan: "Michael Dwyer was a Wicklow man, a member of the United Irishmen, who fought during the 1798 rebellion, and who waged a guerilla war in the Wicklow mountains for several years afterwards." This song, unlike the others, deals with his activities in May and June of 1798. "The village of Stratford-on-Slaney was attacked on the 24th of May. Hackettstown was attacked the following day, and again one month later on the 25th of June." Dwyer's was appointed Captain commanding a company on June 24.- BS For more on Dwyer, see the notes to "Michael Dwyer (I)" or "Michael Dwyer (II)." - RBW File: Moyl144 === NAME: Captain Fowler DESCRIPTION: Orangeman Captain Dick Fowler arrives in hell. Fowler says that if a croppy brings him water he will "own to him I've done great wrong." Beelzebub explains that no croppy can help him: "it was for Freedom those boys fell And heaven is their station" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1970 (Healy's _Mercier Book of Old Irish Street Ballads_, according to Moylan) KEYWORDS: death humorous patriotic Devil FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Moylan 39, "Captain Fowler" (1 text) NOTES: Moylan: "Richard Fowler was a distiller living in Dunlavin, who in November 1797 had been condemned in the Union Star as 'a notorious informer and one of those principled murderers, orangemen'." Moylan lists other "activities" contributing to Fowler's reputation. - BS I can't help but think this is inspired by the story of the Rich Man and Lazarus (Luke 16:19-31), for which see, e.g., "Dives and Lazarus" [Child 56]. I can't prove it, though. - RBW File: Moyl039 === NAME: Captain Glen/The New York Trader (The Guilty Sea Captain A/B) [Laws K22] DESCRIPTION: A ship sets out to sea; many of the crew become ill. The captain has a dream which causes him to reveal his dreadful crimes to the boatswain. In the face of a severe storm, the boatswain reveals the captain's sins. He is tossed overboard; the storm abates AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1794 KEYWORDS: ship crime execution revenge storm FOUND_IN: Canada(Mar,Newf) Britain(England,Scotland) US(MA,SE) Ireland REFERENCES: (12 citations) Bronson (57 Ñ Appendix to "Brown Robyn's Confession"), 10 versions Laws K22, "Captain Glen/The New York Trader (The Guilty Sea Captain A/B)" Vaughan Williams/Lloyd, pp. 72-73, "The New York Trader" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's 10} Chappell-FSRA 35, "Captain Glen" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #3} Logan, pp. 47-50, "Captain Glen's Unhappy Voyage to New Barbary" (1 text) Peacock, pp. 396-397, "New York Trader" (1 text, 1 tune) Creighton-NovaScotia 55, "Captain Glen" (1 text, 1 tune) Mackenzie 90, "Captain Glen" (1 text); 91, "The New York Trader" (1 text) Leach, pp. 697-698, "William Glen" (1 text) Ranson, pp. 76-77, "The Cork Trader" (1 text) BBI, ZN2534, "There was a ship, and a ship of fame" DT 563, NYTRADR WILLGLEN ST LK22 (Full) Roud #478 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 11(2902), "The New York Trader," T. Birt (London), 1828-1829; Harding B 11(2700), Johnson Ballads 220, Johnson Ballads 569, Harding B 11(2163), 2806 b.11(232), Harding B 11(2699), Firth c.13(204), "The New York Trader" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Brown Robin's Confession" [Child 57] cf. "Cruel Ship's Carpenter, The (The Gosport Tragedy; Pretty Polly)" [Laws P36A/B] cf. "Sir William Gower" cf. "The Pirate" cf. "The Sailor and the Ghost" cf. "The Man and the Two Maidens" cf. "Willie Was As Fine a Sailor" (Jonah theme) ALTERNATE_TITLES: William Guiseman Sie William Gower NOTES: See also Creighton and MacLeod _Gaelic Songs in Nova Scotia_ 38, pp. 120-121, "Uilleam Glen (William Glen)" which alternates Gaelic and English verses. The English verses are close enough to Creighton-NovaScotia to be considered the same ballad. The theme of the sailor thrown overboard to calm a storm sent by God is found in Jonah 1.1-16. Ranson's version seems mangled with one four line stanza, three of five lines and three of six; no tune is supplied which, in Ranson's case, probably means the ballad was recited. Further, the contributor seems to be recalling the ballad as she remembers it from her late husband. The version has a few elements from the beginning of "Captain Glen": the number of the crew is mentioned (but only 34), and the captain is named (William Gore). From that point on couplets, rather than verses, and a few compressed single lines follow Catnach's "New York Trader" broadside at Bodliean Firth c.13(204). - BS This may not be the only song about Captain Glen's misdeeds. The National Library of Scotland has an item, broadside NLScotland, L.C.Fol.70(46a), "Captain Glen" ("As I was walking to take the air, To see the ships all sailing O"), unknown, c. 1890, describes Captain Glen seducing Betsy Gordon and abandoning her -- but he returns to her later. The idea of the sea raging against a criminal aboard a ship is, of course, a popular theme going back all the way to the Biblical book of Jonah. - RBW File: LK22 === NAME: Captain Grant DESCRIPTION: Singer, an apprentice in Northamptonshire, takes to highway robbery and is imprisoned in Edinburgh. Escaping, he hides in a wood, but is betrayed by a woman and reimprisoned. He prays for mercy on his soul and for his wife and children. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1969 (collected from Nelson Ridley) KEYWORDS: captivity betrayal crime execution prison punishment robbery escape gallows-confession family outlaw prisoner FOUND_IN: Britain(England) REFERENCES: (2 citations) MacSeegTrav 91, "Captain Grant" (1 text, 1 tune) DT, CAPTGRNT* Roud #1286 ALTERNATE_TITLES: Bold Captain Grant File: McCST091 === NAME: Captain Henry Thomey DESCRIPTION: "Upon the past I'm thinking, To it my heart is linking, When fifteen thousand hardy men Trod the frozen floe. Oh, those days were merry And everyone felt cheery When men sailed 'long with Terry and Thomey long ago." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1916 (Murphy, The Seal Fishery) KEYWORDS: hunting nonballad moniker FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Ryan/Small, p. 15, "Captain Henry Thomey" (1 single-stanza text) NOTES: Based on the very short form in Ryan/Small, this isn't really a moniker song -- but the whole thing is about Henry Thomey, who apparently headed sealing expeditions for nearly sixty years. Monikerish enough. Whether it's traditional I don't know; no author seems to be known, but there is no collection information either. - RBW File: RySm015 === NAME: Captain Holler Hurry DESCRIPTION: "The Captain holler hurry, Goin' to take my time... Say he makin' money, And I'm tryin' to make time. Say he can lose his job, But I can't lose mine. I ain't got time to tarry, Just stop by here. Boys if you got long You better move along." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1950 (recording, Willie Turner) KEYWORDS: prison work FOUND_IN: US(SE) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Courlander-NFM, pp. 106-107, (no title) (1 partial text); pp. 265-266, "Captain Holler Hurry" (1 tune, partial text) Roud #10989 RECORDINGS: Willie Turner, "Captain Holler Hurry" (on NFMAla6) File: CNFM106B === NAME: Captain James (The Captain's Apprentice) DESCRIPTION: (Captain James) has a servant who commits a "trifling offense." James ties him to the mast, abuses him, starves him, and leaves him to die of thirst, torture, and exposure. Brought to trial, James thinks money will save him, but he is hanged AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1768 (Journal from the _Two Brothers_) KEYWORDS: ship sailor death homicide crime punishment trial execution FOUND_IN: Britain(England(Lond)) US(MW) Canada(Mar) REFERENCES: (3 citations) Huntington-Whalemen, pp. 54-59, "Captain James" (3 texts, 1 tune) Gardner/Chickering 132, "The Cabin Boy" (1 text) Creighton-SNewBrunswick 88, "Captain James" (1 text, 1 tune) ST SWMS054 (Partial) Roud #835 RECORDINGS: Harry Cox, "Come All You Men Throughout This Nation" (on Voice12) NOTES: Although the versions of this I've seen don't clearly state that the vessel in this story was a navy ship, the picture here fits the British navy. The captains, in this era, were almost entirely isolated from their crews, and they weren't really examined for fitness for promotion. Many were incompetent, and many were barbaric. An extreme example of the latter was Hugh Pigot of H. M. S. _Hermione_, who killed at least two of his sailors with the cat, at least once ordered fourteen sailors flogged on the same day, and after giving an impossible order which resulted in injuries to two young sailors, had them thrown overboard. The result was a mutiny -- but while Pigot was killed, the admiralty officially stood by him. A summary of Pigot's career is given by Leonard F. Guttridge in _Mutiny: A History of Naval Insurrection_, United States Naval Institute, 1992 (I use the 2002 Berkley edition), pp. 75-82. On pp. 75-76, he reports, "Hugh Pigot came from a family whose wealth and political influence (his father had been on the board of the British Admiralty) were possibly factors in his attainment of naval command at the age of twenty-two. It woul be said in Pigot's defence that he was a skillful if ill-tempered officer who demanded proficiency from inferiors and too readily believed he could flog it out of them." Guttridge,p. 76, speculates that his assignment to the remoteness of the tropics may have affected his mind: "[H]is average of two floggings a week on HMS _Success_, a punishment rate not really excessive, was to worsen rapidly after he transferred his command to the 32-gun frigate _Hermione_ early in 1797." In the autumn of 1797, during a storm, Pigot ordered some canvas taken in, and decided the men were working too slowly. "He thretened to flog the last man down. In the scrambling descent three missentopmen missed their footing and plunged to their deaths. Pigot ordered the bodies thrown overboard and blamed a dozen men for clumsiness aloft and had them all flogged" (Guttridge, p.77). Since the ship had a crew of about 170, that means he in one day injured or killed almost 10% of his men -- a patently unsustainable rate. And, indeed, the crew mutinied that night and killed him; Guttridge says "the intruders practically fought each other to get at him." Repeatedly stabbed, he was then thrown overboard, perhaps still alive (since some men reportedly heard his cries; Guttridge, p. 78). I'd consider it a measure of his inhumanity that he actually thought he might be worth rescuing. Unfortunately, Pigot's insanity had infected the crew, and three more officers were killed before the bloody spree ended. When things calmed down a little, a series of mock-trials were held, and most of the remaining officers executed (Guttridge, p. 79). The crew, realizing they had no hope of mercy, headed for Venezuela, where they begged asylum (Claiming falsely to have set their officers adrift). One suspects they got it because their ship was valuable, not because anyone believed them. The British eventually managed to recover and hang some two dozen of the mutineers (Guttridge, p. 81), though most were not ringleaders. Over a hundred managed to avoid recapture by the British (Guttridge, p. 87); many probably ended up in the United States. The _Hermione_ itself, renamed _Santa Cecilia_ by the Spanish, was eventually retaken by the British, though her career was over; returned to Portsmouth in 1802, she was soon paid off, and broken up in 1805 (see Lincoln P. Paine, _Ships of the World: An Historical Encylopedia_ Houghton Mifflin, 1997, p. 243). Compare also the captain described in "The Flash Frigate (La Pique)." It was largely the behavior of officers that eventually led to the Spithead mutiny (which resulted, among other things, in many officers being transferred or put ashore; for details on Spithead, see "Poor Parker"). Captain James may not have been real (none of the sources seem able to trace him), but he was true-to-life. Incidentally, an incident almost parallel to this happened within a year of the recorded text from the _Two Brothers_ -- involving none other than John Paul Jones! According to Samuel Eliot Morison's biography (_John Paul Jones_, p. 17 of the Time-Life edition), Jones (then known simply as John Paul) was in 1769 the commander of the _John_; he had aboard a carpenter named Mungo Maxwell. (Truly. Mungo Maxwell. That's what it says.) Jones became so upset with him that he had him flogged. Maxwell filed charges against Jones, and while they were dismissed, Maxwell died on a voyage soon after. Jones faced a murder charge in consequence, though he was acquitted. - RBW File: SWMS054 === NAME: Captain Jim Rees and the Katie DESCRIPTION: "Captain Jim Rees said when the Katie was made, Arkansas City goin' to be her trade." The remaining verses describe the life and plans of a river worker, perhaps on the Kate Adams AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1944 (Wheeler) KEYWORDS: sailor work river FOUND_IN: US REFERENCES: (1 citation) MWheeler, pp. 10-12, "Captain Jim Rees and the Katie" (1 text, 1 tune); pp. 20-21, "She Leaves Memphis" (1 text, 1 tune); also perhaps p. 22, "Vicksburg Round the Bend" (1 text, 1 tune) ST MWhee010 (Full) Roud #9997 NOTES: According to Wheeler, James Rees ran a steamboat manufacturing company from 1854. In the aftermath of the Civil War, he built several boats for use on the southern Mississipi and offered them to southern firms on credit. Three boats on the Mississippi were named Kate Adams. The second was responsible for a run from Helena, Arkansas to Memphis (ninety miles) in less than five and a half hours. The third was said to be the subject of this song, and the Jim Rees was the son of the founder of the Jim Rees Duquesne Engine Works. Wheeler's second text, "She Leaves Memphis," has only the one verse in common with her first -- but since it's the key verse, and all the others are the sort of generic items one expects of bluesy songs, I concluded they were the same. Even more complicated is the case of "Vicksburg Round the Bend." The first stanza is generic, with different cities being used; the second is standard blues, the third is found also in "What Does the Deep Sea Say," the fourth is the "Katie" verse, and the fifth is from "The Katie and the Jim Lee Had a Race." More than anything else, these two versions (and even the first) show the difficulty of classifying songs of this type. These may be distinct in their origins, but they have cross-fertilized to the point where no clear line can be drawn. - RBW File: MWhee010 === NAME: Captain Jinks DESCRIPTION: "I'm Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines, I feed my horse on corn and beans And court young ladies in their teens Though a Captain in the army." Jinks describes his money troubles, his fancy clothes, army training, and perhaps his life with the girls AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1911 (JAFL 24) KEYWORDS: clothes courting money pride soldier army playparty marines FOUND_IN: US(Ap,SE,So) REFERENCES: (7 citations) Randolph 547, "Captain Jinks" (2 short texts, 1 tune) BrownIII 84, "Captain Jinks" (1 fragment) Cambiaire, p. 139, "Captain Jinks" (1 short text) Spaeth-WeepMore, pp. 47-48, "Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines" (1 text, 1 tune) Gilbert, p. 61, "Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines" (1 fragmentary text); pp. 86-87 contains a parody about Mrs. Jinks Silber-FSWB, p. 38, "Captain Jinks" (1 text) DT, CAPTJINK Roud #4858 RECORDINGS: Pete Seeger, "Captain Jinks" (on PeteSeeger21) NOTES: Randolph states that this song dates back to the Civil War era, and there are reports of public performances as early as 1901. Few substantial details seem to exist, though. The earliest dated account of the song in tradition seems to be that of Laura Ingalls Wilder, who reports her father singing in in 1872 (_Little House in the Big Woods_, chapter 7) and, more significantly, in 1879 (_By the Shores of Silver Lake_, chapter 15). Laura also sang a parody at the latter time -- the same one mentioned by Gilbert: I am Mrs. Jinks of Madison Square, I wear fine clothes and curl my hair, The Captain went on a regular tear, And they kicked him out of the army. This would seem to imply a song well-established in tradition -- but we should note that Wilder was writing sixty years later, and that her account is in any case not actual autobiography but fiction based loosely on her life. - RBW File: R547 === NAME: Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines: see Captain Jinks (File: R547) === NAME: Captain John: see Johnny the Sailor (Green Beds) [Laws K36] (File: LK36) === NAME: Captain Kidd (II): see Through All the World Below (File: LoF034) === NAME: Captain Kidd [Laws K35] DESCRIPTION: Captain Kidd tells the tale of his wicked life. His early sins include the murder of William Moore and one of his ship's gunners. He repents for a time, but slides back into piracy. Finally captured, he has been sentenced to death AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1701 (broadside) KEYWORDS: execution gallows-confession pirate HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1699 - Arrest of Captain William Kidd in Boston May 23, 1701 - Execution of Captain Kidd FOUND_IN: US(MW,NE,SE,So) Canada(Mar,Newf) REFERENCES: (23 citations) Laws K35, "Captain Kidd" BrownII 116, "Captain Kidd" (1 text) Chappell-FSRA 27, "The Pirate" (a single confused stanza, but clearly this song) Hudson 100, p. 238, "Kidd's Lament" (1 text) Gardner/Chickering 129, "Captain Kidd" (1 text, 1 tune) Linscott, pp. 131-134, "Captain Kidd" (1 text, 1 tune) Peacock, pp. 837-839, "Captain Kidd" (1 text, 1 tune) Colcord, pp. 141-144, "Captain Kidd" (1 text, 1 tune) Hugill, 449, "Captain Kidd" (1 text, 1 tune); "Samuel Hall" (1 text, 1 tune -- same tune and format as Kidd, but substituting other names and nonsense rhymes) Mackenzie 110, "Captain Robert Kidd" (1 text) Friedman, p. 366, "Captain Kidd" (1 text) PBB , "Captain Robert Kidd" (1 text) Lomax-ABFS, pp. 501-504, "Captain Robert Kidd" (1 text) Lomax-FSNA 5, "Captain Kidd-I" (1 text, 1 tune) LPound-ABS, 72, p. 160, "Captain Kidd" (1 text) Shay-SeaSongs, pp. 187-189, "The Ballad of Captain Kidd" (1 text) Gilbert, p. 43, "Captain Kidd" (1 partial text) JHJohnson, pp. 73-75, "The Ballad of Captain Kidd" (1 text) Silber-FSWB, p. 200, "Captain Kidd" (1 text) BBI, ZN1837, "My name is Captain Kid who has sail'd, &c." DT 413, CAPNKIDD* CAPNKID2 ADDITIONAL: C. H. Firth, _Publications of the Navy Records Society_ , 1907 (available on Google Books), p. 134, "Captain Kid's Farewel to the Seas; Or, The Famous Pirate's Lament" (1 very detailed text, with the tune listed as "Coming Down") Walter de la Mare, _Come Hither_, revised edition, 1928; notes to #87, "Told How a Crew Was Cursed" (1 short text) Roud #1900 BROADSIDES: LOCSinging, as101900, "Capt. Robert Kidd," unknown (Boston), 19C; also as101910, "The Dying Words of Capt. Robert Kidd: a Noted Pirate, Who Was Hanged at Execution Dock, in England" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Bold Kidd, the Pirate" (subject) SAME_TUNE: Admiral Byng and Brave West (C. H. Firth, _Publications of the Navy Records Society_ , 1907 (available on Google Books), p. 210) NOTES: One of the tunes for this song is also used for the American hymn "Wondrous Love"; another is used for the English hymn "Come Ye that Fear the Lord." -PJS, RBW The Missouri Harmony has a song, "Captain Kid" (sic.), which has still another set of lyrics (not "Wondrous Love"), but the sheet music is so cramped that it is literally impossible to match the text with the tune. It's the standard tune, though. - RBW Several of the ballad versions note that, after murdering William Moore, Kidd killed the gunner. According to Friedman, Moore *was* the gunner; Kidd killed him because he was allegedly planning a mutiny. - PJS There is, indeed, a lot more to this story than we find in this song. For the references cited in this note, see the Bibliography at the end. Although the British hung Captain Kidd as a pirate, the view of him here is probably too harsh. In his own mind he was a privateer, if perhaps an overly zealous one. Herman comments on p. 247, "Kidd had fallen victim of a new, less tolerant attitude toward the time-honored tradition of theft at sea. A few years earlier, Kidd's exploits would have been business as usual." Similarly, Cordingly, p. xiv, described the reign of Charles II (1660-1685) as the period when buccaneers were most active in the Caribbean. But by 1701, Britain was doing all it could to stop piracy; the gibbeted bodies of pirates were displayed all along the Thames to try to discourage potential pirates (Ritchie, p. 1) The truth is, there was a long history of piracy in the British navy. Francis Drake, the second man to circumnavigate the globe, made his profit by preying on the Spanish, e.g. (Cordingly, pp. 28fff.; Rodger, p. 244). As long as England was a self-sufficient nation, without colonies, and its enemies such as Spain had colonies, this made perfect sense. It was only in the seventeenth century that Britain began to find trade more profitably than raiding, and so started to suppress piracy (Ritchie, p. 128). William Kidd (or Kid; this is the spelling preferred by Firth) was born in the middle of this transition period. Few details of his early life survive, but he was said to come from Greenock, Scotland, and to have been born around 1645 (so Ritchie,p. 27; DictPirates; and all three biographical dictionaries I checked; Zacks, p. 9, makes him 42 in 1696, and on p. 60 says he was born in 1654. Clifford, p. 5, also gives the date 1654, and lists his birthplace as Dundee). His father is said to have been a Presbyterian minister (so Ritchie, p. 27; Clifford claims Kidd's father was "a sea captain who died when Kidd was very young"), which would accord with the statement in the song that Kidd's parents "taught me well to shun the gates of hell." But the extent to which that influenced his early career simply cannot be known; we don't have the information. Clifford, p. 5, believes Kidd spent time as a petty officer in the Royal Navy -- but it is worth noting that no petty officer would know how to navigate a ship. By 1689, Kidd was a buccaneer in the Caribbean (Ritchie, p. 29). In that confused region, with different islands ruled by different powers, semi-official piracy still flourished. In that year, seemingly with some official encouragement, he took command of the _Blessed William_, technically a privateer (Kidd in fact had helped capture her, and she was manned, in effect, by volunteers; Zacks, pp. 62-63) but part of a relatively regular navy flotilla (the lines between regular and irregulars were much less clearly drawn in remote stations); Ritchie, p. 30. But his crew didn't like how he ran his ship, and soon deposed him (Ritchie, p. 32; Zacks, p. 72). Kidd and his former vessel ended up chasing each other around the Atlantic. But Kidd did good work in New York during the confusion resulting from the ouster of James II in 1689 (Zacks, p. 79ff.); he used his new ship to help bluff the old governor out of his post. He went on to marry a well-to-do young New York widow in 1691 (Ritchie, p. 36; Zacks, pp. 82-83, describes the complications of their courtship and her inheritance, and Clifford, p. 23, notes that they married only four days after her previous husband died, but none of that affects Kidd's story much). They would have a daughter, Sarah, named for her mother (Zacks, p. 11). Kidd seems to have been a respectable citizen at the time, among other things, he served on a Grand Jury for a time (Zacks, pp. 90-91). Though it was hard to be entirely respectable in New York at this time; the place was a favorite pirate hang-out, where no one asked many questions about where goods came from (Clifford, pp. 32-33). Eventually life on land paled, though we have no clue as to why (Clifford, p. 23); in 1695 Kidd went to England to seek a privateer's licence (Ritchie, p. 40; Zacks, pp. 91-93, thinks he actually tried to gain a captain's commission in the Royal Navy, but this is almost too absurd an idea to contemplate). He did not get either warrant at this time; a shortage of trained sailors forced the British navy to grab every hand it could find. So no letters of marque were issued during this period (Ritchie, pp. 42-43). There were ways around this. According to Bryant, p. 34, "By 1698, the loss of revenue and trade brought about by the smugglers and pirates had reached such large proportions that the English government was moved to action. But since the Royal Navy was fully occupied in the war with Louis XIV, a private company was organized to hunt down and destroy some pirates.... [Among its stockholders] were King William [of Orange], Lord Bellomont.... Lord Chancellor Somers, [and] the Duke of Somerset...." What it really came down to was, Kidd and some acquaintances came up with a way around the restrictions on privateers: They would offer up their ship for purposes of hunting the pirates. In return, they wanted to have a much freer hand in dealing with the booty they captured (Zacks, pp. 102-104). We will meet Bellomont again; he was not born a member of the nobility, but was a soldier who had helped bring Charles II back to the throne; he had been rewarded with a title, but had little property to support it (Clifford, p. 34). His poverty, and his desire to do something about it, would play a large role in what followed. (In an interesting aside, the man who dreamed up this scheme, and who introduced Kidd to his other patrons, was one Robert Livingston. According to Zacks, p. 100, he was of the Livingston family that, a century and a half earlier, had produced Mary Livingston, one of the "four Maries" who went with Mary Stewart when Mary went to wed the king of France.) Initially, the goal seems to have been to have a relatively small number of shareholders, to keep the profits high. This proved unfeasible; too many people, including King William, had to approve the venture. So more partners were brought in and the charter rewritten (Ritchie, pp. 50-55). To get King William's assent to the whole deal, he was given a 10% stake. Raising the money was difficult enough that Kidd sold his old ship, the _Antigua_ (Zacks, p. 105). What's more, he signed what Zacks, p. 104, describes as a performance bond for twenty thousand pounds. Apart from his land in New York, much of which was really his wife's property, he was betting everything he had -- and if he failed, even the land might be forfeit, unless his wife could have the marriage dissolved. (Zacks thinks this is proof that Kidd either intended to cheat or to turn pirate. He ignores the possibility that Kidd was tricked -- which, given that Kidd was starry-eyed enough to hope for favors from the British government, seems to me quite possible.) And his backers were slow to come up with their parts of the funding, meaning that he lost a significant amount of his capital to interest on debts he piled up while he waited (Zacks, p. 106). Kidd's ship, the _Adventure Galley_, was still new; it was designed for it task and built in 1695. It was, by the standards of the time, quite an unusual vessel; in the century since the Spanish Armada had seen its oared vessels thoroughly out-maneuvered by the race-built English sailing ships, oared ships had almost disappeared from the seas. And the _Adventure Galley_ did have a full sailing rig -- but it also had oars, and was designed for rowing (Ritchie, p. 58; Zacks, p. 105). This would make it easier to maneuver in combat and close with a pirate, which was its purpose (Clifford, p. 6, calls it the "first ship ever built by the British to hunt pirates") -- but it also probably resulted in a cramped, slow ship in ordinary conditions. And she was ill-equipped for sailing in the tropics, where wooden hulls were constantly under attack; her planking was thin, and there was no metal coat (Zacks, p. 119). One suspects, given how leaky she was, that the wood was also of low quality. But she could certainly fight, being armed with over 30 cannon (32, according to Zacks, p. 9; 34, according to DictPirates, Paine, and Clifford, p. 45). On the other hand, Clifford seems to say that her guns were four-pounders -- very light artillery indeed; even field artillery was usually in the six-pound to twelve-pound range, and a ship of the line would carry 24-pounders or heavier. (On the other hand, Zacks, p. 119, believes at least some were sixteen-pounders.) Paine estimates her at 285 tons, DictPirates at 300; Zacks and Clifford give the improbably precise figure of 287 tons -- a fairly large ship for the time; even a ship of the line was generally under 1500 tons. The problem was the crew. Given the naval crisis, Kidd was only allowed to take 70 men from England, and only half of them were permitted to be experienced sailors (Ritchie, pp. 58, 63; Zacks, pp. 105-106). This was more than enough to sail the vessel, but not nearly enough to fight her efficiently; for that, Kidd needed about 150 men. So it was decided that she would sail to his old stomping grounds in New York to pick up more crew. (In the process, Kidd showed some of the arrogance that would eventually get him in trouble; as he was leaving England, he refused to accord proper recognition to naval vessels. He nearly lost his ship as a result; Ritchie, p. 61, and did lose some of his better crew members; Zacks, pp. 107-108; Clifford, p. 50. Plus the whole business was starting to look pretty under-the-table; Zacks, pp. 106-107, thinks Kidd's backers were trying to get him out of the country fast so he could be out making money rather than get stuck in something as tedious as fighting off a French invasion fleet intent on restoring James II.) My sources disagree about exactly what happened in New York. Ritchie says that the war with France had caused something of a depression in New York, making it easy to recruit crew. But he was signing crewmen to the standard privateer's "no prey, no pay" contract: They received a percentage of the booty, but no other pay except in the event of injury (Ritchie, pp. 58-59). And, of course, a fairly high percentage of the profit had already been promised away to the people who financed the expedition (including that 10% promised to King William). Ritchie implies that this wasn't a problem; Kidd found his crew. But DictPirates says that Kidd promised 60% of the booty to his men, and 60% to his backers -- obviously not a possibility. Clifford, p. 36, also says the backers were promised 60%. Zacks, p. 14, has an even more extreme equation: All the crew combined were to be granted only a quarter of the booty; Clifford, p. 47, also says the crew would get only 25% (with no data on the other 15%) -- and notes that privateering crews usually would get 50% of the take. Since there were 150 men, a 25% share for the crew meant 1 part in 600 for each man. So when Kidd, on the voyage over, captured a French vessel judged to be worth 350 pounds, each man would have gotten just over half a pound. Given the length of the voyage, that works out to pennies a day at best. Few sailors were interested. Zacks, p. 14, claims that Kidd then turned the arrangement on its head: The sailors would get 75%, the backers 25%. This, we note, was cheating the crown -- hardly a good idea. But, whatever Kidd did, he finally pulled together a crew -- though, according to Zacks, p. 16, quite a few of them were "known pirates." One of the key members of this crew was William Moore, who was appointed gunner. This meant that he was responsible for training the ship's crew in the proper handling and use of the ship's guns (Ritchie, p. 70). Zacks, p. 16, describes him as a known troublemaker, who had attacked his captain at age 18; he also spent time in prison in the Caribbean. Zacks speculates that Kidd wanted a "belligerent" gunner. On September 6, 1696, the _Adventure Galley_ left New York bound for Madeira, the first stop on the way around the Cape of Good Hope (Ritchie, pp. 69-70). In this period, he seems to have followed the rules against piracy scrupulously; he could have attacked several ships safely (Ritchie, page 70), but refrained when they proved to be from friendly countries. In fact, he gave one disabled British ship sails and a mast (Zacks, p. 24) that he would later sorely miss (Ritchie, p. 90). He first found himself in trouble a little later, when he ran into a naval squadron in the South Atlantic commanded by Commodore Thomas Warren. The squadron had gotten lost, and suffered heavily from scurvy, and had been under-manned even before that; they wanted to requisition some of Kidd's crew (Clifford, pp. 62-63). Kidd managed to slip away (apparently by rowing when the fleet was becalmed; Clifford, p. 64) -- but he didn't dare stop at the Cape of Good Hope, since that was where the fleet was headed. Needing supplies himself, and also facing an outbreak of scurvy, he set sail for Madagascar (Ritchie, pp. 77-79). The crew, who hated the idea of being impressed into the Navy, was probably thrilled. But Warren would remember being abandoned... (Zacks, p. 38). Madagascar, at this time, was a haunt mostly of pirates; European attempts at colonization had largely failed (Ritchie, p. 82). And there was enough trade with India to support a fair number of predators. Kidd stopped at the island of Mohilla to careen his ship -- and lost about thirty of his men to disease (Ritchie, p. 91; Zacks, p. 120, describes it as bloody dysentery, and says about 40 men died). The tropics at this time were still very deadly for Europeans. Kidd managed to find a few replacements, but Ritchie hints (p. 92) that the new men were even rougher than the old; Clifford, p. 66, believes they were veteran pirates, and that they changed the feelings of the crew: The majority were now in favor of actual piracy. This was most unfortunate. So far, the expedition had been a financial disaster: With no prizes taken since they left New York, Kidd would be in trouble with his bosses. And the absence of loot also made the crew restless. Clifford, p. 70, notes that at the end of her first year at sea, the men had made effectively nothing -- less than a piece of eight per man. Bryant, p. 35, writes, "As their search in the Indian ocean for pirates and booty proved futile, the crew became mutinous, demanding that the ship devote its time to a little pirating on its own account...." According to Ritchie, p. 94, "When Kidd rounded the horn [of Africa -- the region now known as Somalia] and turned due west into the Gulf of Aden, he was all but announcing he had turned pirate." He first tried stalking an East India convoy, but it was too strong to attack (Ritchie, pp. 97-98). By this time, the _Adventure Galley_ "was now 'leaky and rotten' and the men pumped water daily" (Ritchie, p. 99) -- this even though they had made several stops to careen and repair the ship. Between the loss of men, the hot weather, the lack of prizes, and the state of the ship, Ritchie is of the opinion that morale was terrible. Clifford, p. 69, says that a visitor to the ship saw a crew very disrespectful of their captain. Zacks, p. 127, notes that Kidd didn't have any authorization from anyone of importance in the Indian Ocean (e.g. the East India Company or one of the local Moslem rulers), so it was almost impossibly for him to visit a decent port; that can't have helped morale either. Under all these pressures, Kidd stopped an English ship in Indian waters. He took her captain hostage as a guide, and his men, by abusing the crew, managed to find a small amount of cash (Ritchie, pp. 99-100). It was a relatively minor act, but it was piracy. And men were starting to jump ship (Ritchie, pp. 101-102). "Confronted with a desperate situation, Kidd had to do something quickly, and it appears he set out to make a big strike as fast as possible" (Ritchie, p. 102). He blundered into a fight with a small Portuguese squadron (Zacks, pp. 139-141), fled, then managed to capture the smaller Portuguese ship (which had out-sailed its larger companion; Ritchie, p. 103). This too was piracy, since Portugal was not at war with England -- though fighting a ship from a Catholic nation wasn't likely to get Kidd in trouble, and he could at least argue that the Portuguese started it. By this time, reports of Kidd's piracy were common and very exaggerated (Zacks, pp. 142-143). Yet when Kidd met an actual English ship, the _Thankfull_, he once again let it pass (Ritchie, p. 104). And when he encountered an East India Company ship, the _Loyal Captain_, he again refused to attack her -- though the crew wanted to seize the ship (Ritchie, p. 105; Clifford, p. 71; Zacks, p. 147, gives a substantial but undocumented account of how he faced the crew down). It was in this context that the problem with William Moore arose. Moore had already caused a little trouble. When the _Adventure Galley_ overtook a small ship named _Mary_, Kidd had stopped her and spent much time talking to her captain in his cabin. While his back was turned, members of the crew, including Moore, had ransacked the _Mary_. It didn't yield much, and according to Zacks, p. 134, Kidd actually made them return much of what they had taken (evidence that Kidd was not yet committed to piracy). But refusing them even this small bit of booty can't have made the crew any happier. Later, the _Adventure Galley_ spotted a Dutch ship, and Kidd refused to attack it. Moore was discussing with some of the crew how it might be taken. Kidd overheard and flew into a rage. "Moore... when called a 'lousy dog,' had the temerity to reply, 'If I am a lousy dog, 'tis you who have made me so! [Kidd] ...hit Moore such a smart blow on the head with a wooden bucket that next day the gunner died" (Bryant, p. 35; there are circumstantial accounts in Zacks, p. 149, and Clifford, pp. 72-74, though they do not entirely agree with the accounts in other sources. Certainly there is no authentic and contemporary record of what was said that day; all is from later recollection.) If the description in Clifford, pp. 73-74, is correct, it sounds as if Kidd was formally in the right: Moore was openly mutinous. Properly, Kidd should have given orders for Moore's execution -- but this raises the possibility that his orders might not have been obeyed (according to Zacks, p. 148, the agreement Kidd had signed with his sailors gave him relatively limited; he had to get a vote of the men even to punish a mutineer!). It was a dreadful situation, thought Kidd's response was certainly unwise. With the crew more upset than ever, Kidd finally got lucky -- or so he thought. Kidd's mistake arose in part because of the tendency at the time to fly false flags. Soon after, while himself flying French colors, he encountered a ship called the _Rupparell_ (Ritchie, pp. 106-107). He stopped the ship and tricked the captain into showing a French pass. The ship in fact wasn't French, but since she had passed herself off as such, Kidd felt entitled to take her. Finally his men earned something worth having -- it even gave him a second ship, which eventually was renamed the _November_. But it was rather a sharp bit of business. It wasn't the last time false colors would get Kidd in trouble. It was on January 30, 1698 that they spotted the _Quedah Merchant_ (Ritchie, p. 108; the ship is sometimes called simply the _Quedagh_; so Herman, pp. 246-247, or the _Quedagh Merchant_, Clifford, p. 84, contra Ritchie, Bryant, Paine, p. 6). It was quite a prize -- Zacks, p. 155, calculates it at at least fifty thousand pounds, or twice the amount supplied by Kidd's investors. Of course, there was also the crew to pay.... Since Kidd was flying a French flag, the _Quedah Merchant_ did the same, and sent over a French pass when called upon to show her papers (Clifford, p. 84; Zacks, pp. 151-152). Kidd took her -- but in fact she was carrying Indian cloth. So he was arguably guilty of again attacking a British ship. Certainly a ship of a British ally. (According to Clifford, p. 86, he came to realize this, and later tried to return it, and Zacks, p. 156, says he tried to talk the crew into not holding the ship. But this sounds like an after-the-fact apology to me.) Worse, the ship had been under the control of Muklis Khan, a high official at the Indian court (Ritchie,p. 127; Clifford, pp. 134-135). Taking it didn't just cost the East India Company money; it got them in trouble with the locals they had to deal with. They were already in trouble with the locals, and struggling to maintain their monopoly (Ritchie, pp. 128-134); Kidd made their problems much worse. They would not forget -- and they wanted a scapegoat. Kidd apparently was the one chosen (Ritchie, p. 137; Clifford, p. 136). It was about the end of his voyage. Already the ship had been out longer than he planned, and between the state of his ship, and the fact that everyone was after him, it would be hard to take another major prize. Kidd managed to pick up a few more small ships after the _Quedah Merchant_ (Ritchie, p. 109), meaning he by now had a small fleet at his disposal -- but only the _Adventure Galley_ was really a fighting ship. And she was no longer in fighting shape; her pumps were always active (manned mostly by slaves; Clifford, p. 85), and Ritchie, p. 110, thinks she was now too slow to catch a merchantman. And she might not survive even a moderate storm (Ritchie, p. 111. It makes you wonder a bit about Kidd's ship-handling if he couldn't keep her in seaworthy shape for just two years. Though Zacks, p. 105, notes that she was built in five weeks and may not have been properly constructed and caulked.) Kidd took his motley fleet out of the Indian Ocean and headed for the pirate haunt of Madagascar. This is a noteworthy point, because if Kidd had really been trying to work with the authorities, he could have gone to a British port. (To be fair, every time he had tried that in India, he had gotten in trouble.) Instead, he arrived at the island of Saint Marie, off Madagascar, in April 1698, and assured the pirates who watched the entrance to the harbor that he was "as bad as they" (Ritchie, p. 116). It took some time for all his ships to arrive (Clifford, p. 120, says that the _Quedah Merchant_ arrived some five weeks after the _Adventure Galley_), but they all showed up eventually. At this point the crew insisted on a distribution of the spoils (Clifford, p. 121), and there was much grumbling at how much Kidd held back for his sponsors. The crew went to far as to loot one of their own smaller vessels, which ended up sinking (Ritchie, pp. 118-119). The crew did more than just take their money. They also quit. Maybe they were sick of Kidd, maybe they didn't think they were getting paid enough; maybe they just wanted more treasure. But a large majority (nearly 100 of the 117 remaining sailors, according to Ritchie, pp. 124-125) left Kidd to serve aboard the pirate ship _Resolution_, commanded by Robert Culliford. Ritchie describes it as if they just voted to quit, but Clifford, pp. 122-123, describes it in terms of mutiny: The men raided the property, threatened Kidd, and headed off to join Culliford. You have to give them a certain credit for foresight, because Culliford was to be very successful -- and even managed to cop a pardon when he arrived home. (This part of the story seems to have been pretty obscure; Firth, p. 348, thought Culliford followed Kidd to the gallows, as he probably should have.) Whatever Kidd had hoped to do at this point, the loss of his crew meant he didn't have much choice now but to head for home; although he could and did recruit local slaves to do most of the shipboard work, he didn't have enough sailors to do any more fighting. It also meant he had to give up on the leaky _Adventure Galley_, There wouldn't be enough men to man the pumps (Clifford, p. 124). The crew beached the ship, burned it to recover the relatively valuable iron fittings and cannon, and set out for New York in the former _Quedah Merchant_, now renamed the _Adventure Prize_ (Ritchie, p. 126). It was a curious decision: The loss of his specialized ship would surely not go over well with his backers, and the design of the _Adventure Prize_ was highly recognizable as an Indiaman (meaning that, unless Kidd had taken it from pirates, he must have captured it by his own piracy; Clifford, p. 124). It was a while before he was able to sail, though we don't know the exact date (Ritchie, p. 160). Ritchie thinks that Kidd fabricated a narrative during this time to explain his deeds (cf. Clifford, p. 125): He admitted to taking two legal prizes, and beyond that, every action forced upon him had been at the behest of his crew. And he destroyed his log so it could not be used against him (Ritchie, p. 125; Clifford, p. 161, says Kidd claimed the crew stole it). Clifford, however, notes a major problem with this line of argument: Kidd still had a significant amount of loot (Clifford, pp. 145, 148). If the crew had truly mutinied, would they have left him with so much? And could he, as he apparently claimed, have realized so much money for selling the fittings of the _Adventure Galley_ after she was abandoned (Clifford, p. 161)? Kidd, it seems to me, was on a cleft stick: If he came back with money, he was in trouble with the Crown; if he came back with none, he would answer to his investors. It is, perhaps, a measure of his devotion to his family that he came home at all. While Kidd was gone, the laws against piracy, which previously had been difficult to enforce, had been made much stiffer (Ritchie, pp. 151-155, etc.). And Kidd's was only the first of many ships sent to stop the pirates (Ritchie, p. 159). The government might have forgiven mere failure; it would not forgive a privateer turned pirate. And, in fact, Kidd was officially declared a pirate at this time. There are many rumors about Kidd's return voyage -- Clifford mentions stories of men murdered and a mutiny suppressed. There does not seem to be any hard evidence of this, and Kidd probably didn't have enough men for the costly mutiny described. Kidd did not sail back directly to either England or New York; his first stop in the New World was the island of Anguilla, where he picked up water and some fresh food (Ritchie, p. 165). He then headed to the Dutch port of Saint Thomas, apparently to avoid the Royal Navy. After some more flitting around the Antilles, he sold his ship an some of his goods (Ritchie, pp. 166-167) and transferred to a vessel he bought, the _Saint Antonio_. The _Quedah Merchant_ was finally fired in the islands (Ritchie, p. 168). Kidd then headed for New York, occasionally stopping along the coast to get rid of cargo, and apparently negotiating with Lord Bellomont, one of his original financial backers and now colonial governor. (Ritchie, pp. 177-180). His official post seemed to have done something to Bellomont's memory; he certainly did not welcome Kidd with open arms. He had an interesting problem: He could accept Kidd's account of what happened, take his share of Kidd's profits, and try to get Kidd a pardon for whatever crimes he was considered to have committed -- or he could turn Kidd in. Ritchie, p. 180, estimates that Bellomont could make on the order of a thousand pounds for cooperating with Kidd, and on the order of 13,000 if he himself turned Kidd in. Plus he would strengthen his political position by making himself look tough on piracy (Clifford, pp. 156-157). A scrupulous man might have hesitated -- but a scrupulous man probably wouldn't have gotten tied up in Kidd's adventure anyway. As Kidd arrived to present his case to the colony's council, Bellomont had him seized (Ritchie, p. 182) and imprisoned in Boston (Ritchie, p. 183; Clifford, p. 162). So strictly was he guarded that not even his wife was allowed to see him (Clifford, p. 178).. So great was government interest in making Kidd a symbol that a special ship was sent to transport him to England (Ritchie, p. 184), though it had to turn back before crossing the Atlantic (Ritchie, p. 185). He finally was sent to England in 1700 aboard the _Advice_ (Ritchie, p. 192). The trip being urgent, the ship sailed in winter, and a harsh winter at that (Clifford, p. 179), with the result that Kidd became very sick (Ritchie, p. 193). Clifford adds that he was kept in solitary confinement to make sure he didn't reveal any of his high-placed backers' embarrassing secrets. By this time, Kidd had even been discussed in Parliament (Ritchie, p. 188-192) -- he came to be a pawn in the contest between Whigs and Tories (Ritchie, pp. 202-203). In April, Kidd's testimony was taken by a Board of Examiners. He was asked to sign off on the transcript, then placed in solitary confinement in the notorious (and thoroughly unsanitary) Newgate Prison, unlike most other naval captives, who were sent to Marshalsea (Ritchie, pp. 196-199). His confinement nearly killed him; after a while, he had to be granted somewhat more liberty to keep him alive (Ritchie, pp. 200-201). After a time, he was called upon to testify before Parliament. What he said is unfortunately not recorded, since the MPs eventually washed their hands of him (Clifford, p. 181), but it ended with him being ordered to stand trial (Ritchie, pp. 203-205). It wasn't much of a trial; it lasted only two days: May 8-9, 1701 (Ritchie, p. 206). Under the rules of the time, Kidd was not given a lawyer (Ritchie, p. 206). Nor was he given full access to the documents used against him; the government did give him access to some, but others that might have helped his cause could not be found, and Kidd was given no help in searching for them (Ritchie, p. 208). Kidd was charged with piracy and murder, and was tried along with several others accused simply of piracy. (Ritchie, p. 211, who notes that the "judges were activists -- in Kidd's case, active on the side of the prosecution"). The trial did not, however, proceed according to the script, because the procedures of the time required a prisoner to plead innocent or guilty first, without benefit of a lawyer or anything else. Kidd didn't want to play this game; he wanted details of the case, and assistance, before entering a plea (hardly unfair, given that he had not been given particulars of the charges against him! -- Ritchie, p. 212). After much jousting, and being informed that not pleading was equivalent to a guilty plea, he gave in and said "not guilty" -- which meant that the trial could proceed and Kidd's needs basically ignored (Ritchie, p. 213). Kidd was tried initially for the murder of William Moore (Ritchie, pp. 213-216; Clifford, p. 198, notes that the indictment charged him with murder with "malice aforethought" -- i.e. first degree murder, which of course was absurd). Kidd could hardly contest that Moore was dead; his arguments were that he had the right to discipline his sailors (which was true, and the discipline could even include death, particularly in the case of mutiny) -- yet, at the same time, that he was sorry Moore had died. But witnesses were presented showing that Moore was not engaged in mutiny at the time Kidd killed him, and that Kidd killed him in passion. Kidd disputed this (Clifford, p. 210), but was told "You will not infer that if he was a mutineer it was lawful for you to kill Moore" (Clifford, p. 213). Since this was the basis of Kidd's defence, he hadn't much to say after that. He tried again to make is point during the summary made by one of the justices, and that was what we would call the instructing of the jury. But further statements by the defence were not allowed. The first jury then left to decide Kidd's fate. A second jury was empaneled, and proceeded to try Kidd and others for piracy, primarily with regard to the _Quedah Merchant_. The jury was still hearing the charges when, after only about an hour, the first jury returned and convicted Kidd (Ritchie, p. 217; Clifford, p. 214). There was no appeals process, except for the King's mercy. Nonetheless, Kidd continued his defence on the other charge. Kidd offered his privateering commission, information about the false passes offered by the _Quedah Merchant's_ crew, and other evidence; some of the others on trial tried to claim that they had been under the King's pardon (Ritchie, p. 218-219). Unfortunately for Kidd, much of his defence rested on the French passes offered by the _Quedah Merchant_ and other ships, and Kidd had given them to Lord Bellomont, and Bellomont wasn't about to given them back (Clifford, pp. 199-200). The second jury came back even faster than the first one; in half an hour, Kidd had received his second conviction of a capital crime, and all but three of the others their first. That still left two counts of piracy, meaning two more juries were empaneled and the trial went on. The result, of course, was more convictions, and finally the sentence (Ritchie, p. 220). When asked to give a reason why he should not die, all Kidd could reply was, "I have nothing to say, but that I have been sworn against by perjured and wicked people." All were sentenced to death (Ritchie, p. 220). By modern standards, it was an absurdly unfair trial -- though it was not atypical of the justice of the day. On May 10, King William III -- who earlier had held a share in Kidd's venture -- approved the death sentence (Ritchie, pp. 220-221). The execution was scheduled for May 23, 1701. Kidd did try one more trick: He claimed to have a large sum hidden in the West Indies, and appealed to Robert Harley, Speaker of the House, and others to set him free to recover it for them (Ritchie, p. 221). The appeal went nowhere. Its main effect was to start a legend of buried gold that people keep hunting for (Ritchie, p. 232); indeed, it eventually gave rise to the whole notion of treasure maps and such, as exemplified in books such as _Treasure Island_. But Kidd's voyage did not take enough prizes to produce such a vast treasure (Ritchie, p. 238, has a list of other captains who earned far greater sums), and much of what he did take was recovered by the authorities (Ritchie, pp. 230-231). Ironically, British justice was so inefficient that Coji Babba, the many whose complaints against Kidd made the East India Company so angry at him, was unable to get satisfaction for his claim (Ritchie, p. 232). It seems pretty clear that Kidd genuinely believed in his innocence; unlike most of the other pirates, he refused spiritual consolation and adamantly maintained his innocence (Ritchie, p. 225). The ordinary (chaplain) of Newgate was still after him for a confession as he started on his way to the gallows. He didn't give it. Herman, p. 247, reports that Kidd was thoroughly drunk when hanged (cf. Ritchie, p. 225, Clifford, p. 240) -- but still managed a thoroughly defiant proclamation of his innocence (Ritchie, p. 226; Clifford, p. 243). Luckily for him, this apparently didn't take long enough for him to sober up, since the first rope used to hang him broke (Paine, p. 7; according to Clifford, p. 244, the hangman was also drunk). Kidd fell dazed to the ground, supposedly finally repented, then was successfully re-stretched (Ritchie, p. 226; Clifford, pp. 244-245). From Wapping, his body was taken to the side of the Thames and tied into its gibbet (Ritchie, p. 227). Ironically, the man who had gotten Kidd into most of his trouble, Lord Bellomont, had died weeks earlier, on March 5 (Ritchie, p. 229), though apparently word of this did not reach London until after Kidd's death. Bellomont had for a time imprisoned Mrs. Kidd, but she managed to regain her freedom, and even remarried; she lived until 1744 (Ritchie, p. 229). Ritchie, p. 2, reports that a ballad about Kidd's death circulated immediately, but it is not clear which song is meant. Clifford, p. 245, quotes a broadside which is clearly this song, though not much like the common versions of the song. Not that it's much more accurate (e.g. it includes the error "Robert Kidd"). Versions of this song often print a line such as "Now to execution('s) dock I must go, I must go." This should read "Execution Dock"; Execution Dock was a place in Wapping where pirates were often hung (Zacks, p. 2). Clifford notes the irony that it was within sight of the spot where the _Adventure Galley_ started its ill-fated voyage (Clifford, p. 245). Rumors about wealth left hidden by Kidd have of course been many, and the source of a lot of the pirate legends we know today. Poe's "The Gold Bug," for instance, is about decoding a message leading to Kidd's hidden gold (though it strikes me as almost impossible -- Kidd does not strike me as literate enough to produce Poe's message). But, as Clifford notes on p. 260, despite many hunts, "no gold was ever found" from Kidd's alleged buried treasure. Clifford's book, which was published in 2003, is about the hunt for the wreck of the _Adventure Galley_ at Saint Marie. Roughly half the book is about Kidd's history (and seems to feature no original research, though he uses sources I haven't seen); the other half is about the search for the ship -- or, rather, mostly about the fights Clifford had with the Madagascar government to get permits to search. In the end, Clifford found what he thinks was the _Adventure Galley_ (though the evidence he offers seems to me to fall slightly short of proof). There doesn't seem to have been anything of great value left on the ship, either, though Clifford's search was brief due to all those problems with the government. You have to wonder, a little, if Britain knew what it was starting. Piracy in Kidd's day was still relatively gentlemanly, with pirates simply after wealth. But starting around the time of his death, nearly every country renounced it. Only in the eighteenth century did pirates start to fly the skull and crossbones, meaning that they truly had no allegiance to anyone, while England and other countries devoted significant naval forces to stopping pirates (Ritchie, pp. 234-238). Their success was, for a time, limited -- but the rise of steamers and the need for a coaling port meant the effective end of piracy by the mid-nineteenth century. (Though, ironically, it is reviving now, when oil is easy to divert to pirate ships.) Modern debate about Kidd has, it seems to me, been rather irrelevant to the issue of how we should view Kidd, because most of it is, well, modern. Was he guilty of piracy by the standards of the day? Pretty definitely yes. But did he regard himself as a pirate? Probably not -- even his most extreme actions were done under pressure from the crew. I would have to say that he deserved some punishment, but hardly death. On the other hand, there were few punishments except death at this time.... >>BIBLIOGRAPHY<< Bryant: Samuel W. Bryant, _The Sea and the States: A Maritime History of the American People_, Crowell, 1947 Clifford: Barry Clifford with Paul Perry, _Return to Treasure Island and the Search for Captain Kidd_, Morrow, 2003 Cordingly: David Cordingly, _Under the Black Flag: The Romance and the Reality of Life Among the Pirates_, 1995 (I use the 1997 Harcourt Brace edition) DictPirates:Jan Rogozinsky, _Pirates_, Facts on File, 1995 (reprinted 1997 by Wordsworth as _The Wordsworth Dictionary of Pirates_; this is the edition I used). References are to the article on [Captain William] Kidd. Firth: C. H. Firth, _Publications of the Navy Records Society_ , 1907 (available on Google Books). Herman: Arthur Herman, _To Rule the Waves_, 2004; (I use the 2005 Harper Perennial edition) Paine: Lincoln P. Paine, _Ships of the World_, Houghton Mifflin, 1997. References are to the article on the _Adventure Galley_. Ritchie: Robert C. Ritchie, _Captain Kidd and the War against the Pirates_, Harvard University Press, 1986 Rodger: N. A. M. Rodger, _The Safeguard of the Sea: A Naval History of Britain 660-1649_ (1997; I use the 1999 Norton edition) Zacks: Richard Zacks, _The Pirate Hunter: The True Story of Captain Kidd_, Theia, 2002 - RBW File: LK35 === NAME: Captain Old Blue DESCRIPTION: The singer warns the sheriff not to bother "Captain Old Blue." The song describes the various outlaws who work in the Snake River area AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1964 (apparently mentioned in an article by Harry Oster) KEYWORDS: outlaw moniker police FOUND_IN: US(Ro) REFERENCES: (0 citations) ST PrivCOBl (Partial) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Dreary Black Hills" (tune) NOTES: David Wahl sent me a copy of this text, along with discussion by those who knew it. It does not appear to have been published in any collection, but apparently made it into oral tradition in eastern Oregon and Idaho. Newell Stubblefield wrote to the _Idaho Farmer_ magazine about the piece, saying that it was written by the father of one John Bare. "Old Blue" was apparently an outlaw named Bruce Evans, who was active in Wallowa County, Oregon in the 1880s. He committed several murders, was apprehended, but escaped from prison and was not found again. - RBW File: PrivCOBl === NAME: Captain Osborn DESCRIPTION: "There was once a gay maiden, Her name was fair Kate. She traveled the Big Waters Both early and lave." Many court her; she loves only Captain Osborn. But he speaks in anger, and her love turns cold. He is married and has a daughter anyway AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1939 (Thomas) KEYWORDS: courting river children music FOUND_IN: US(Ap) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Thomas-Makin', pp. 33-34, (no title) (1 text, probably somewhat confused) File: ThMa033 === NAME: Captain Robert Kidd: see Captain Kidd [Laws K35] (File: LK35) === NAME: Captain Shepherd DESCRIPTION: Captain Shepherd sails to St Pierre. In a storm he stops at Bonne Bay where he is turned in for smuggling liquor. The police find no evidence. Shepherd gets another schooner. The singer hopes this fall "dis brave, undaunted man will have a drop to sell" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1960 (Leach-Labrador) KEYWORDS: crime sea ship drink police FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Leach-Labrador 83, "Captain Shepherd" (1 text, 1 tune) ST LLab083 (Partial) Roud #9977 NOTES: Leach-Labrador: "It is a local song of the Prohibition era ... St Pierre: an island off the southeast coast of Newfoundland belonging to France. During prohibition it became a wholesale warehouse supplying rum-runners all along the coast." - BS File: LLab083 === NAME: Captain Strachan DESCRIPTION: "Here's a health to Captain Strachan" and his men. Three leagues from Aladdin Strachan sees the 36-gun frigate Moselle with 500 men out of Marseille. In the battle they board the Moselle, hoist the English colors and take the prize to Gibraltar. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1958 (Peacock) KEYWORDS: battle navy war FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Peacock, pp. 990-991, "Captain Strachan" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #9814 NOTES: Speculation! This seems to be about the Napoleonic Wars. Admiral Sir Richard Strachan -- pronounced Strawn -- one of Nelson's sea captains, engaged in a number of important battles. On November 2, 1805, in _Caesar_ with eight other ships, [Strachan] captured four French warships that had escaped from Cadiz into the Bay of Biscay after the Battle of Trafalgar. The ships -- the _Duguay-Trouin,_ _Formidable,_ _Mont Blanc,_ and _Scipion_ -- were taken to Gibraltar (source: Houghton Mifflin Ships of the World site re HMS _Implacable_ [the British renamed _Duguay-Trouin_ "Implacable"]; 1911 Edition Encyclopedia site re Trafalgar; _Decision at Trafalgar_ by Dudley Pope,p. 92). That seems likely to be the battle intended here. But there are problems with this speculation: (1) There is only one French warship in the ballad and the warships named Moselle during the Napoleonic wars were British, not French, with 24 and 18 guns) (source: PlusNet webspace site re Index of 19th Century Naval Vessels) (2) The battle seems to take place outside Marseille -- that is, in the Mediterranean -- rather than at Cap/Cabo Ortegal at the northwest corner of the Iberian peninsula. This battle is the only reference to Strachan in _The Naval Achievements of Great Britain, From the Year 1793 to 1817_ by James Jenkins; there are no references there to Moselle. A quick scan of the London Times for the period of the Napoleonic Wars turned up no clues and no references to Crockett, Captain Strachan's second in command for the ballad. As for the site of the battle "three leagues from Alladin" that is most likely a corruption of a real or imagined place on the Mediterranean coast of Africa. Maybe this ballad is putting a positive spin on an attempted blockade of Rochefort by Strachan in 1808. In this case one French ship was crippled in a gale and returned to Rochefort but the other French ships made it safely to Toulon. This story ends near Marseille but Strachan's part takes place even farther north than his 1805 battle. Source: _Britannia Rules_ by C. Northcote Parkinson (Sutton, 1992) p. 135. It would be nice to have a broadside for this one that might resolve the conflicts. Incidentally, Admiral Strachan's adversary in the Bay of Biscay after Trafalgar was Admiral Villeneuve [the loser at Trafalgar - RBW]; Roud's broadside database cites "Captain Villineuve's Whimsical and Laughable Tale" starting "Long had Gallia been forc'd by Britannia to bow" which may refer to that battle or may not -- he was on the losing side of a number of other important battles -- or may have nothing to do with this Villeneuve at all. - BS In addition to the Strachan references cited above, he also figures in "Admiral Strachan's Victory," on p. 304 of C. H. Firth, _Publications of the Navy Records Society_ , 1907 (available on Google Books). It refers to another fight by Strachan, on November 4 of an unnamed year. - RBW File: Pea990 === NAME: Captain Thompson DESCRIPTION: The singer boards Captain Thompson's ship Fame to America. They escape stormy seas and "a mount of ice" off Newfoundland and land safely at Quebec. He thinks of Ireland and hopes to see his family again "and live together peacefully in love and liberty" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1965 (OLochlainn-More) KEYWORDS: emigration separation sea ship ordeal Canada Ireland family FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) OLochlainn-More 72A, "Captain Thompson" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #2373 File: OLcM072A === NAME: Captain Ward and the Rainbow [Child 287] DESCRIPTION: Captain Ward asks the king to grant him a place to rest. The king will not grant a place to any pirate (though Ward claims never to have attacked an English ship), and commissions the (Rainbow) to deal with Ward. Ward defeats the Rainbow AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: before 1733 (broadside, Bodleian Douce Ballads 1(80b)) KEYWORDS: ship pirate battle royalty HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: c. 1604-c. 1609 - Career of Captain John Ward. A fisherman from Kent, Ward's first notable act was his capture of a royal vessel in 1604. FOUND_IN: Britain(England(West),Scotland(Aber)) Canada(Mar,Newf) US(MW,NE,SE) Ireland REFERENCES: (16 citations) Child 287, "Captain Ward and the Rainbow" (1 text) Bronson 287, "Captain Ward and the Rainbow" (11 versions) Ranson, pp. 49-50, "Saucy Ward" (1 text) BarryEckstormSmyth pp. 347-363, "Captain Ward and the Rainbow" (2 texts plus a fragment and a version from the Forget-me-not Songster and a possibly-rewritten broadside, 2 tunes, plus extensive notes on British naval policy) {Bronson's #9, #10} Flanders/Olney, pp. 204-206, "Captain Ward and the Rainbow" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #11} Flanders/Brown, pp. 242-244, "Captain Ward and the Rain-Bow" (1 text from the Green Mountain Songster) Flanders-Ancient4, pp. 264-270 "Captain Ward and the Rainbow" (2 texts, 1 tune, the first text being the Green Mountain Songster version) Gardner/Chickering 83, "Captain Ward" (1 text) Peacock, pp. 840-841, "Captain Ward" (1 text, 1 tune) Chappell-FSRA 22, "Captain Ward and the Rainbow" (1 text) Leach, pp. 670-673, "Captain Ward and the Rainbow" (1 text) Friedman, p. 362, "Captain Ward and the Rainbow" (1 text) Logan, pp. 1-10, "Captain Ward" (1 text) BBI, ZN949, "Gallants you must understand"; ZN2410, "Strike up you lusty Gallants" DT 287, WRDRNBOW* WRDNBW2* ADDITIONAL: C. H. Firth, _Publications of the Navy Records Society_ , 1907 (available on Google Books), p. 30, "Captain Ward and the Rainbow" (1 text) ST C287 (Full) Roud #224 BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Douce Ballads 1(80b), "A Famous Sea-Fight Between Captain Ward and the Rainbow" ("Strike up ye lusty gallants)", T. Norris (London), 1711-1732; also Harding B 4(107), "A Famous Sea-Fight Between Captain Ward and the Rainbow"; Harding B 4(108), "A Famous Sea Fight Between Captain Ward and the Rainbow"; Firth c.12(8), "Famous Sea Fight Between Capt. Ward and the Gallant Rainbow"; Harding B 11(831), "Capt. Ward and the Rainbow" ("Come all you English seamen with courage beat your drums"); Firth c.12(6), "Captain Ward"; 2806 c.16(334), Harding B 11(4034), Firth c.12(7), "Ward the Pirate[!]" CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Outlaw Murray" [Child 305] (theme) cf. "Sir Andrew Barton" [Child 167] (theme) SAME_TUNE: Captain Ward (per broadside Bodleian Douce Ballads 1(80b)) The Wild Rover (per broadside Bodleian Firth c.12(6)) NOTES: Compare with this broadside for a different ballad on the same subject: Bodleian, Wood 402(39), "The Seamans Song of Captain Ward, the Famous Pyrate of the World, and an English[man] Born" ("Gallants you must understand"), F. Coles (London), 1655-1658; also Douce Ballads 2(199a), Wood 401(79), "The Seamans Song of Captain Ward, the Famous Pyrate of the world and an English Man Born" - BS Although the "historical" Captain Ward was active during the reign of Britain's King James I, the context sounds more like that in the time of Charles I. The religious and political situation, as well as financial interests, dictated that Charles should have been allied with the Protestants of the Netherlands and Germany against Spain -- but instead Charles implicitly supported Spain while quarreling with the Dutch about herring fishing. The result was an undeclared war between many of Charles's sailors and Spain. And many of the fighters, like Ward or the later Captain Kidd, thought right was on their side. Indeed, the Earl of Warwick was creating a group of pirates who were carefully trained according to Calvinist principles -- Puritan raiders (see Arthur Herman, _Tp Rule the Waves_, p. 157f.) This would also explain why the king was trying to crack down: Piracy had gotten completely out of hand in his father's reign. Robert C. Ritchie, _Captain Kidd and the War Against the Pirates_ (Harvard, 1986), p. 140, writes, "Only the most inept pirates ended their lives on the gallows during the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. The nadir of English concern and ability to control piracy came during the reign of James I. Taking no special price in the Royal Navy and abhorring the expenses generated by the fleet, James sold some of his ships and let most of the others rot at the docks. The resulting growth of piracy in and around English waters caused the Dutch to request permission to send their ships into English waters to attack the brigands. Bereft of means to do the jobs, James acquiesed." Barry et al, however, try to relate the whole thing to the politics of James I -- and to the opposition to that king. Of course, Charles I generated even more opposition, and talking about events in his father's reign might make the discussion slightly safer. The Wordsworth _Dictionary of Pirates_ (I'm not kidding, there is such a thing) gives Ward's dates as 1553-1623; he was imprisoned for piracy in England in 1602, impressed in 1603, turned pirate, and took to the Mediterranean. In 1606, he took service with the ruler of Tunis. In 1607, his fleet suffered a series of setbacks. He may have tried to buy a pardon from the King of England, but the idea failed. He turned to Islam and lived more or less happily ever after. If we accept that Ward was active at the very start of the reign of James I, that gives us still another scenario, which ties in with the death of Elizabeth I and the accession of James I. Elizabeth of course spent much of her reign at war with Spain; famous incidents in this war were the voyage of the Spanish Armada and Drake's circumnavigation of the globe. Semi-official piracy was one of Elizabeth's key weapons against the Spanish; her ships captured Spanish treasure ships and interfered with Spain's attempts to build a stronger navy. But all wars come to an end. Ritchie, p. 13, notes that peace was made with Spain in 1603, the year James I succeeded to the English throne. And suddenly English privateers who had been attacking the Spanish had to become either unlicensed pirates or join someone else's service. If Ward kept raiding the Spanish after peace was made, that might explain the King's attitude toward him. The comment about the captain being king upon the sea does date to the reign of James I -- but, according to N. A. M. Rodger's _The Safeguard of the Seas_, p. 349 (see also Herman, p. 144), it was not made by Ward but by one Peter Easton (or Eston). Easton, who took over the pirate fleet of Richard Bishop in 1611, did so much damage that he was offered a pardon in 1612, refused it, saying, "I am, in a way, a king myself." The next year, he was offered a lordship in Spain, which he took. - RBW File: C287 === NAME: Captain Webster DESCRIPTION: Webster wishes to marry a poor girl, but his parents tell him that he must marry a wealthy woman. The young man bids farewell to his sweetheart, then kills himself. Parents are warned against placing undue emphasis on money AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1968 (recording, Sara Cleveland) KEYWORDS: suicide love money poverty mother father FOUND_IN: US(MA) REFERENCES: (0 citations) Roud #5713 RECORDINGS: Sara Cleveland, "Captain Webster" (on SCleveland01) NOTES: The notes to the Sara Cleveland record suggest that this is a localization of a British original, though the editor (Kenneth S. Goldstein) cannot suggest an original. I have to agree; the feeling is old, but I cannot locate a true forerunner of the piece. - RBW File: RcCapWeb === NAME: Captain Wedderburn's Courtship [Child 46] DESCRIPTION: (Captain Wedderburn) sees a fair lady, and wishes to sleep with her. She takes an instant dislike to him, and will consent only if he can answer her riddles. He answers them, and the two are wed. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1783 (New British Songster) KEYWORDS: courting riddle marriage contest FOUND_IN: Britain(Scotland) US(Ap,MA,MW,NE,NW,SE) Canada(Mar,Newf) Ireland Australia REFERENCES: (23 citations) Child 46, "Captain Wedderburn's Courtship" (3 texts, 1 tune) {Bronson's #8} Bronson 46, "Captain Wedderburn's Courtship" (26 versions) BarryEckstormSmyth pp. 93-99, "Captain Wedderburn's Courtship" (2 texts plus 2 fragments, one of which might be "Riddles Wisely Expounded" or something else, 2 tunes; all the texts are rather damaged and even the full ones consist mostly of the riddles); p. 451 (1 tune) {B.II=Bronson's #12, C=#9; the tune on p. 451 is #17} Flanders/Olney, pp. 43-46, "A Strange Proposal" (1 text) Flanders-Ancient1, pp. 299-315, "Captain Wedderburn's Courtship" (3 texts plus two fragments, 5 tunes; the "A" text and the F fragment and tune are mixed with "Riddles Wisely Expounded" (Child 1) and the "I" and II" texts and tunes are "I Gave My Love a Cherry") Creighton/Senior, pp. 21-25, "Captain Wedderburn's Courtship" (3 texts, 3 tunes) {Bronson's #19, #20, #21} Creighton-Maritime, p. 6, "Captain Wedderburn's Courtship" (1 text, 1 tune) Gardner/Chickering 48, "Mr. Woodburn's Courtship" (2 texts, 2 tunes; the "B" text is short and in the first person; it shows signs of deliberate modification) {Bronson's #24, #15} Leach, pp. 158-162, "Captain Wedderburn's Courtship" (3 texts) Leach-Labrador 3, "Captain Wedderburn's Courtship" (1 text, 1 tune) Karpeles-Newfoundland 6, "Captain Wedderburn's Courtship" (2 texts, 2 tunes) Creighton-NovaScotia 3, "Captain Wedderburn's Courtship" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #22} Mackenzie 4, "Six Questions" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #13} Friedman, p. 137, "Captain Wedderburn's Courtship" (2 texts, but the second is "I Gave My Love a Cherry") FSCatskills 124, "The Rich Merchant's Daughter" (1 text, 1 tune) Ord, pp. 416-420, "The Laird o' Roslin's Daugher, or, Captain Wedderburn's Courtship" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #6} DBuchan 48, "Captain Wedderburn's Courtship" (1 text) TBB 1, "Captain Wedderburn's Courtship" (1 text) SHenry H681, p. 490, "The Keeper of the Game" (1 text, 1 tune) Munnelly/Deasy-Lenihan 44, "Mister Woodburren" (1 text, 1 tune) Meredith/Covell/Brown, pp. 152-153, "The Chicken and the Bone" (1 text, 1 tune) Abrahams/Foss, pp. 53-55, "Captain Wedderburn's Courtship" (1 text, 1 tune) {Bronson's #17} DT 46, CAPWEDER* THREESIX* Roud #36 RECORDINGS: Willy Clancy, "The Song of the the Riddles" (on Voice01) Logan English, "Bold Robington's Courtship" (on LEnglish01) Seamus Ennis, "Captain Wedderburn's Courtship" (on FSB4) Warde Ford, "Many Questions/Captain Wedderburn's Courtship" (AFS 4196B, 1938; in AMMEM/Cowell) {Bronson's #26} Pat MacNamara, "Mr Woodburren's Courtship" (on IRClare01) Thomas Moran, "Captain Woodburn (Wedderburn's Courtship)" (on FSBBAL1) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 25(1143), "Lord Roslin's Daughter's Courtship," Stephenson (Gateshead), 1821-1850 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "I Gave My Love a Cherry" ALTERNATE_TITLES: The Devil and the Blessed Virgin Mary NOTES: Many versions of this song tell a rather confused story, with the following plot outline: 1. Captain Wedderburn sees the Laird o' Roslin's daughter and says, more or less, "Gotta have her" 2. He asks her to marry him; she says, "No; it's time for supper." 3. Immediately upon turning him down, she gets on his horse, goes to his lodging-house, and prepares to go to bed with him. 4. Pause: The lady says, "Before I do this, you have to answer my questions." She proceeds with the riddle game. 5. Captain Wedderburn answers the riddles, and they are married. It will be evident that steps 4 and 5, as they are found in these texts, should precede step 3. It's also worth noting that the lady's riddles seem to be older than the song itself (the riddles are found in "I Gave My Love a Cherry," which as "I Have a Yong Suster" dates to 1430 or earlier). My suggestion was that steps 4 and 5 were a later addition to the song. Alternately, the song has become disordered. Don Duncan counter-proposes that the song is a rape ballad -- she is forced on the horse, and to the lodging-house, and the riddles are her last attempt at a defense. The happy ending is a later touch-up. None of this can be proved, and none of the suggestions is altogether convincing. But it is not unlikely that the song has changed its form somewhere along the line. Because scholars so often confound this with "I Gave My Love a Cherry," one should see that song also for the complete list of songs sometimes associated with this ballad. Another curiosity concerns the name "Wedderburn." This is an old Scottish name (consider the author of the _Complaynt of Scotland_) -- but the _Oxford Companion to British History_, in its thousand large pages of biographies, lists only one Wedderburn, that being Alexander Wedderburn 1733-1805). Don Cook, in _The Long Fuse: How England Lost the American Colonies, 1760-1785_, sketches him on pages 183-184: he "had a quick mind and was known as one of the most intelligent, formidable debaters in Parliament.... At the same time, he was one of the nastiest, most unscrupulous, most ambitious politicians of the time.... He grew up in Edinburgh and began his career in the Scottish law. Handling a case in court at age twenty-four, he became so abusive of the court president... that an apology was demanded by the entire bench. Instead, Wedderburn withdrew from the Scots bar and decamped for London.... Lord North decided politically that it would be better if Wedderburn... were inside the government rather than in opposition. For his part, Wedderburn was not inhibited by principles and could readily lend his debating talents to any side of any question. He was appointed solicitor general.Ó That was in 1771. In 1778, he became attorney-general. Eventually, tempted by Pitt, he joined the government as Lord Chancellor, finally retiring with an earldom in 1801. He wasn't very nicer, either -- Stanley Weintraub, _Iron Tears: America's Battle for Freedom, Britain's Quagmire: 1775-1783_, Free Press, 2005, p. 35, tells of him questioning Benjamin Franklin for an hour and a half -- and keeping the 68-year-old Franklin standing for an hour and a half. Weintraub, p. 126, also mentions that he nearly fought a duel over a simple remark about politics. Unscrupulous enough for this song, obviously, but he was never a captain, and since ÒCaptain Wedderburn" was circulating by 1783, he can't have been the original subject, right? Well, sure, but there is one other thing. To what earldom did George III appoint him in 1801? The earldom of -- Rosslyn. (So, at least, the _Oxford Companion_, which in general I have found to be reliable; Weintraub, p. 345, says he became "1st Earl Loughborough in 1801"). - RBW File: C046 === NAME: Captain Went Below, The DESCRIPTION: "O, the captain went below, For to light the cabin lamp, But he couldn't light the lamp Because the wick was too damn' damp, Heave-ho, you sons of glory, The Golden Gates are passed." AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1948 (Shay) KEYWORDS: sea travel FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Shay-SeaSongs, p. 125, (no title) (1fragment) Roud #9637 File: ShaS125A === NAME: Captain William Jackman, A Newfoundland Hero DESCRIPTION: "The fierce winds blow among the cliffs Of rugged Labrador." Jackman is on the beach in a snowstorm and hears cries from a wreck on a reef "some hundred fathoms from shore." He swims to the wreck 27 times and rescues all on board. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1904 (Murphy, Songs of Our Land, Old Home Week Souvenir) KEYWORDS: rescue storm wreck HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: Oct 9, 1867 - The Loon/Sea Clipper wreck FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (2 citations) Greenleaf/Mansfield 145, "Captain William Jackman, A Newfoundland Hero" (1 text) Ryan/Small, pp. 29-31, "A Newfoundland Hero" (1 text) ST GrMa145 (Partial) Roud #6349 NOTES: The site for the Captain William Jackman Memorial Hospital in Labrador City states "On October 9, 1867, during the worst storm of the decade, two ships collided. The Loon quickly sank and The Sea Clipper was able to save the passengers and crew of the smaller ship. Soon the strong gales drove the injured ship into a reef near Spotted Island, Labrador. Twenty-seven people on-board were in peril of their lives. Captain Jackman was visiting the island and as [he] and his host went for an evening walk, they noticed the troubled ship. Few people knew how to swim in that day; however, Jackman was an avid swimmer. He made 27 trips through the cold October waters and each time brought a survivor to shore. The storm had claimed 42 ships and 40 lives; however, all were saved from The Sea Clipper because of the exploits of Captain Jackman." Greenleaf/Mansfield has the date as October 29, 1866 and notes that Jackman's "health was broken. Queen Victoria sent him a medal." [The _Dictionary of Canadian Biography_ notes that Jackman, born in 1837, died at the age of 39. - RBW] The October 9, 1867 date is confirmed by Northern Shipwrecks Database 2002. - BS File: GrMa145 === NAME: Captain with His Whiskers, The: see O! They Marched Through the Town (The Captain with His Whiskers) (File: Wa069) === NAME: Captain's Apprentice, The: see Captain James (The Captain's Apprentice) (File: SWMS054) === NAME: Captain's Lady (I), The DESCRIPTION: Small boats land in Wild Bay among Blacks; the crews, including the captain's lady, are captured, stripped, and driven. Joseph, a Black slave crewman, saves them. He is freed, and the captain's lady returns safely to London. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1958 (Peacock) KEYWORDS: captivity return escape sea ship slavery Black(s) rescue FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Peacock, pp. 775-776, "The Captain's Lady" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #9799 NOTES: Not to be confused with the Burns fragment of the same name. - RBW File: Pea775 === NAME: Captains and Ships DESCRIPTION: "To Harvey's I'll start and to Bowring's I'll go, I'll name all the ships and the captains also." He names ships, captains, and companies, and wishes them all good luck. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1951 (Peacock) KEYWORDS: moniker commerce fishing sea ship work nonballad FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (4 citations) Doyle3, p. 19, "Captains and Ships" (1 text, 1 tune) Peacock, pp. 865-866, "Captains and Ships" (1 text, 1 tune) Blondahl, pp. 97-98, "Captains and Ships" (1 text, 1 tune) Ryan/Small, pp. 76-77, "Captains and Ships" (1 text, 1 tune) ST Doyl3019 (Partial) Roud #7291 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Some Ships in Port" (catalog of ships) File: Doyl3019 === NAME: Capture and Destruction of Sebastopol: see Sebastopol (Old England's Gained the Day; Capture and Destruction of Sebastopol; Cheer, Boys, Cheer) (File: SmHa041) === NAME: Carcasho DESCRIPTION: In winter 1916 a 73-year old Labrador trapper goes out to see to his traps. He gets lost and spends the night camping away from home and has a fight with a wolverine. The next day a search gang finds him and takes him home to Lelette. AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1960 (Leach-Labrador) KEYWORDS: rescue hunting ordeal animal FOUND_IN: Canada(Newf) REFERENCES: (1 citation) Leach-Labrador 69, "Carcasho" (1 text, 1 tune) ST LLab069 (Partial) Roud #9985 NOTES: Leach-Labrador: "This is a local song composed immediately after the event it celebrates." - BS Leach adds that Carcasho (=carcajou) is Canadian French for a wolverine. - RBW File: LLab069 === NAME: Cardinals Be Damned, The: see Son of a Gambolier (II) (File: EM327) === NAME: Careless Love DESCRIPTION: A young girl's lament for having loved unwisely, worrying what her mother will say when the girl returns home, wearing her apron high (i. e. pregnant). AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1911 (JAFL) KEYWORDS: sex seduction pregnancy lament FOUND_IN: US(SE,So) REFERENCES: (16 citations) Randolph 793, "Careless Love" (3 texts, 1 tune. The "B" text is, however, derived mostly from other materials -- it does not even have the "Careless Love" refrain -- of which "Little Pink" seems to be the most important) Randolph/Cohen, pp. 498-500, "Careless Love" (1 text, 1 tune -- Randolph's 793A) Randolph-Legman II, pp. 648-650, "Careless Love" (2 texts) Warner 167, "Careless Love" (1 text, 1 tune) Hudson 13, pp. 91-93, "The Lass of Roch Royal" (1 fragments, of which "A" is the "Pretty Little Foot" with a chorus from "Careless Love" and "B" is two "Pretty Little Foot" stanzas artificially and wrongly extracted from "Wild Bill Jones") Sandburg, p. 21, "Careless Love" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-FSUSA 20, "Careless Love" (1 text, 1 tune) Lomax-FSNA 309, "Careless Love" (1 text, 1 tune) Botkin-AmFolklr, pp. 901-902, "Careless Love" (1 text, 1 tune) MWheeler, pp. 89-90, "Careless Love" (1 text, 1 tune) Courlander-NFM, pp. 138-139, "(Careless Love)" (fragments of two texts); pp. 272-273, "Careless Love" (1 tune, partial text) PSeeger-AFB, p. 11, "Careless Love" (1 text, 1 tune) Handy/Silverman-Blues, p. 55-57, "Careless Love" (1 text, 1 tune, with a verse from "Free Little Bird" and others added by blues composers) Silber-FSWB, p. 163, "Careless Love" (1 text) Fuld-WFM, pp. 162-163, "Careless Love" DT, CARELOVE* Roud #422 RECORDINGS: Slim Barton & Eddie Mapp, "Careless Love" (QRS R-7088, 1929) Dock Boggs, "Careless Love" (on Boggs3, BoggsCD1) Anne, Judy & Zeke Canova, "Reckless Love" (Oriole 8044/Perfect 12685/Regal 10299, 1931) [Tom] Darby & [Jimmie] Tarlton, "Careless Love" (Columbia 15651-D, 1931; rec. 1930) Delmore Brothers, "Careless Love" (Bluebird B-7436, 1938) Johnny Dodds w. Tiny Parham, "Careless Love" (Paramount 12483, 1927) Fats Domino, "Careless Love" (Imperial 5145, 1951) Four Southern Singers, "Careless Love" (Bluebird B-8392, 1940; rec. 1933) Blind Boy Fuller, "Careless Love" (Vocalion 03457, 1937/Conqueror 9012, 1937/Melotone 8-02-66, 1938; rec. 1937) W. C. Handy, "Careless Love" (AFS 1620 B3, 1938) Ed Hudson, "Careless Love" (Champion 16464, 1932/Champion 40086, 1936; rec. 1931) Johnson Brothers, "Careless Love" (Victor 20940, 1927) Lonnie Johnson, "Careless Love" (OKeh 8635, 1928) Lulu Johnson, "Careless Love Blues" (Vocalion 1193, 1928; Supertone S-2227, 1931; [as Lulu Williams] Banner 32387/Oriole 8119/Perfect 195/Romeo 5119, all 1932; all of these rec. 1928) Ruth Johnson, "Careless Love" (Paramount 13060, 1931) Asa Martin, "Careless Love" (Melotone 5-11-63/Oriole 5-11-63 [as by "Martin & Roberts"], 1935) Lester McFarland & Robert Gardner, "Careless Love" (Vocalion 5125, 1927) Brownie McGhee, "Careless Love" (on McGhee01, DownHome) Byrd Moore & his Hot Shots, "Careless Love" (Columbia 15496-D, 1929) Eva Parker, "Careless Love" (Victor V-38020, 1929; rec. 1928) Riley Puckett, "Careless Love" (Columbia 15747-D, 1932; rec. 1931) (Bluebird B-5532/Montgomery Ward M-4507, 1934) Pete Seeger, "Careless Love" (on PeteSeeger18) Bessie Smith, "Careless Love Blues" (Columbia 14083-D, 1925) (Columbia 3172-D/Parlophone [UK] R-2479, 1938 -- I'm going to guess this is a different (electrical) recording from 14083-D) Ernest V. Stoneman, "Careless Love" (Edison 52388, 1928) (CYL: Edison [BA] 5530, 1928) Georgia White, "Careless Love" (Decca 7419, 1938) Lee Wiley, "Careless Love" (Decca 132, 1934) CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Butcher Boy" [Laws P24] (floating lyrics) cf. "Waly Waly (The Water is Wide)" cf. "Dink's Song" (floating lyrics) cf. "Every Night When the Sun Goes In" (floating lyrics) cf. "I Have No Loving Mother Now" (tune) SAME_TUNE: I Have No Loving Mother Now (Kelly Harrell & Henry Norton, Victor 20935, 1927; on KHarrell02) Loveless Love (Noble Sissle & his Sizzling Syncopators, Pathe 20493, 1921; Katherine Handy, Paramount 12011, 1922; Alberta Hunter w. Henderson's Dance Orch., Paramount 12018, 1922; Billie Holiday, OKeh 6064, 1941; Bob Wills & his Texas Playboys, Vocalion 04387, 1938) NOTES: The "Loveless Love" lyrics seem to have been written by W. C. Handy in 1921, using the tune and structure of "Careless Love". He also seems to have claimed "Careless Love" at times, but in other contexts he called it a folk song. So do I. One online biography of Handy called it an 18th-century English folk song ("Dear Companion"?) which by the early 1800s had become a Black rivermen's song. No references, unfortunately. But Wheeler associates the song with the Ohio packet Dick Fowler, running between Cairo and Paducah. - PJS File: R793 === NAME: Carey's Disguise DESCRIPTION: Carey's friends advise him that the best disguise would be to "dress as a lady and pass as Miss Grady." His wife shaves his every hair and glues on a wig. He dons a "chimese," etc. His wife wears his suit and moustache and smokes "a mild Havannah" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: KEYWORDS: cross-dressing disguise clothes FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (0 citations) BROADSIDES: Bodleian, Harding B 26(89), "A new song on Carey's disguise" ("Before he could go from his head to his toe"), unknown, no date CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "The Phoenix Park Tragedy" (possible subject: the Phoenix Park murders) and references there NOTES: The description follows broadside Bodleian Harding B 26(89). Speculation only: This may be a sarcastic reference to James Carey's "disguise" trying to escape into exile. If so, this is another reference to the Phoenix Park murders of May 1882 and the subsequent arrest, trial and executions in 1883. Carey was the Crown's key witness/informer and was assassinated by Patrick O'Donnell in July 1883 on board the "Melrose Castle." (There is more information, and references to other ballads on the subject, at "The Murder of the Double-Dyed Informer James Carey.") [Also, for the full list, "The Phoenix Park Tragedy" - RBW.] "The Assassination of Carey", _The Times_, Aug 2, 1883, p. 7, Issue 30888 column E, Copyright 1883, _The Times_, Article CS118408450, Copyright 2002 The Gale Group: the article mentions Carey's disguise before the "Melrose Castle' assassination but does not explain the nature of the disguise. On the Melrose Castle Carey boarded as J Power with 2 of his children, and his wife boarded as Mrs Power with 5 children. Tom Corfe, _The Phoenix Park Murders_ (London, 1968) says that Carey simply shaved off his beard as a "disguise" but that he spoke so freely that he was identified out of his own mouth by O'Donnell, who just happened to be on board (p. 258). There is no mention of a disguise for his wife and children, beyond the assumption of aliases. - BS File: BdCarDis === NAME: Caristiona: see Cairistiona (File: K005) === NAME: Carle He Cam' Ower the Craft, The: see Old Man Came Over the Moor, An (Old Gum Boots and Leggings) (File: R066) === NAME: Carle o' Killyburn Braes, The: see The Farmer's Curst Wife [Child 278] (File: C278) === NAME: Carmagnoles, The DESCRIPTION: In 1793 the French planted "a symbol of great Liberty." In 1794 "they gave to Flanders liberty." June 1 the French convoy was saved from British attack. The Batavian line extends freedom to the Netherlands. Kings and drones will "tumble unlamented" AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1796 (_Paddy's Resource_(Philadelphia), according to Moylan) KEYWORDS: battle navy rebellion England France freedom HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 1793 - French Revolution: France declares war on Great Britain and Holland (source: Moylan) June 1-3, 1794 - "[Admiral] Villaret-Joyeuse's squadron was attacked off Ouessant by Admiral Howe and lost seven ships in the three-day battle. Nevertheless he kept the way clear for the hundred grain transports to reach the port of Brest, which was on the verge of starvation. (source: Moylan) FOUND_IN: REFERENCES: (1 citation) Moylan 20, "The Carmagnoles" (1 text, 1 tune) NOTES: Moylan: "The 'Great Batavian Line' refers to the regime established by the French revolutionaries in the Netherlands." - BS Moylan's description of the battle pretty well sums up the result of the June 1 battle: It helped the current French government survive. But the British name for the battle reveals something about how the winners felt about the result: They called it "The Glorious First of June." And the French losses would weaken their fleet for years, and the psychological blow was also significant. - RBW File: Moyl020 === NAME: Carnabane DESCRIPTION: "When I was young and foolish still, Amerikay ran in my head, I from my native country strayed..." He recalls how friends took their parting from him. When he arrives in St. John's, he will drink and stop grieving, but still think of home and his girl AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1925 (Sam Henry collection) KEYWORDS: emigration separation farewell FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H100a, pp. 188-189, "Carnabane" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #13545 File: HHH100a === NAME: Carnal and the Crane, The [Child 55] DESCRIPTION: A carnal (crow) and a crane discuss various stories of Jesus, such as the roasted cock that crowed, the miraculous harvest of grain, and the adoration of the animals. (These accounts often became separated in tradition.) AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: KEYWORDS: bird Jesus religious carol HISTORICAL_REFERENCES: 4 B.C.E. -- Death of Herod the Great, whose actions motivated much of the plot of this song FOUND_IN: Britain(England(West,South)) REFERENCES: (6 citations) Child 55, "The Carnal and the Crane" (1 text) Bronson 55, "The Carnal and the Crane" (3 versions) Leather, pp. 188-189, "The Carnal and the Crane" (1 text, 1 tune) OBB 102, "The Carnal and the Crane" (1 text) OBC 53, "The Carnal and the Crane"; 54; "King Herod and the Cock"; 55, "The Miraculous Harvest" (3 texts, 3 tunes) {#53=Bronson's #1; compare #3; #55=Bronson's #3; this melody is said to be the English hymnal tune "Capel"} DT 55, PHARMKNG* PHARMKN2* Roud #306 CROSS_REFERENCES: cf. "Saint Stephen and Herod" (plot) ALTERNATE_TITLES: Herod and the Cock King Pharim File: C055 === NAME: Carnatogher's Braes DESCRIPTION: The singer says that no place on earth as dear as his old home by Carntogher's Braes. He recalls life and friendship there. "But cruel fate has ordered it that I must sail the seas"; he expects to return home once he has made his fortune AUTHOR: unknown EARLIEST_DATE: 1928 (Sam Henry collection; the Derry Journal may have printed the song a few years earlier) KEYWORDS: emigration poverty home FOUND_IN: Ireland REFERENCES: (1 citation) SHenry H237, p. 189, "Carnatogher's Braes" (1 text, 1 tune) Roud #13546 File: HHH237 ===