English County Songs: Difference between revisions
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== Index of songs == | |||
[[A Cheshire Man went to Spain]] | [[A Cheshire Man went to Spain]] | ||
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[[A North-Country Maid]] | [[A North-Country Maid]] | ||
[[An | [[An Outlandish Knight]] | ||
[[Around the green gravel]] | [[Around the green gravel]] | ||
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== Structure of the book == | |||
The book is divided up into "chapters" each of which gives songs attributed to a grouping of counties, as follows: | The book is divided up into "chapters" each of which gives songs attributed to a grouping of counties, as follows: |
Revision as of 21:19, 26 October 2009
English County Songs was published by Leadenhall Press in 1893.
The full title of the work, as illustrated on the frontispiece is
English County Songs: Words and Music Collected and Edited by Lucy E. Broadwood and J.A.Fuller Maitland M.A.,F.S.A
Published by The Leadenhall Press Ltd, 50 Leadenhall Street, London E.C. J.B.Cramer and Co, 201 Regent Street, w. Simpkin,Marshall, Hamilton, Kent and Co., Ltd New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 743 and 745, Broadway.
Index of songs
A dashing young lad from Buckingham
As I rode over yonder forest green
As I walked through Bristol City
As I was a-walking one morning in May
A varmer he lived in the West Countree
Banks of the Sweet Dundee, The
Come, Deavie, I'll tell thee a secret
Come listen awhile unto my song
Down by the side of Bedlam City
Here's a health to the jolly blacksmith
Here's a health unto our master
Here's a health unto the mistress
Here's two or three jolly lads
Hold up thy hand, most righteous judge
Ho! yonder stands a charming creature
I been a-rambling all this night
I'll spread the greeen branches
I'm a man that's done wrong to my parents
In Thorney woods in Nottinghamshire
Is any of you going to Scarborough fair?
Ive lived in a wood for a number of years
I will give you the Keys of Heaven
Lord Thomas he was a bold forester
Me mither mend't me auld breek
Now listen, you landsmen, unto me
Of all the horses in the merry greenwood
O father, father, come build me a boat
"Oh hangman, hold thy hand" he cried
Oliver Cromwell lay buried and dead
Our Mistress's health we now begin
Painful (or Faithful) Plough, The
Robin he married a wife in the west
Servingman and the Husbandman, The
The lambs they skip with pleasure
There was a Pig went out to dig
There was a ship from the north country
There was a tree, and a very fine tree
There were three sisters fair and bright
There were two loving brothers
The sun went down beyond yon hill
'Tis young men and maidens all
'Twas on a jolly summer's morn
We Shepherds are the Best of Men
Will you buy my sweet lavender?
It should be noted that the index of songs also incorporates an index of first lines;and some songs are given more than one title. Thus one song may appear more than once in the index (eg Dives and Lazarus, and Lazarus, and As it fell out upon one day are all entries for the same song - titled "Lazarus" on the relevant page of the book)
Structure of the book
The book is divided up into "chapters" each of which gives songs attributed to a grouping of counties, as follows:
Songs of the Northern Counties
Songs of the North-Western Counties
Songs of the Midland Counties
Songs of the Eastern Counties
Songs of the Home Counties
Songs of the South Coast
Songs of the Sea
As can be seen from these groupings, particularly the last one, there was a somewhat arbitrary nature to the allocation to a particular grouping, and the appropriateness of its title (for instance, Wiltshire has been included in the grouping for the South Coast, and large tranches of various of the other counties are nowhere near a coastline!)
Three counties were also missing from the overall collection – Monmouthshire, Bedfordshire and Huntingdonshire.
The actual allocation of songs to particular counties was also somewhat less than accurate. In one or two instances a song collected in one particular county has been allocated to another because it was known that the version in question was sung there, or because the singer had actual associations with the county in question, although no longer living there.
--Irene Shettle 01:02, 8 October 2007 (BST)