The songs in this group are apparently
of British origin. Material has not been at hand
to justify an attempt to establish their identity.
The rich Margent [merchant],
2abcb, 12: Dinah, daughter of a rich London merchant,
loves Felix contrary to her father’s wishes.
Going into the garden she drinks poison. Felix
arrives and drains the rest of the potion. Both
are buried in one grave.
Beneath the Arch of
London Bridge, 4a3b4c3b and 4aaaa, 5ca:
Here a man, whose son has recently died, finds a waif.
Struck by his resemblance to his own heir, he adopts
the orphan boy.
Jack Wilson, ii, 4a3b4c3b,
9: The confession of Jack Wilson, a Thames boatman,
awaiting execution in Newgate prison for robbery done
in Katherine Street, and his denunciation of the “false
deluding girl” for whose sake he had done the
wrong.
The old woman of
London, 3abcb, 6: She causes her husband
to suck two magic marrowbones, which blind him; then
leading him to the river, she essays to push him in
to drown. But he steps aside, and she dies in
his stead. The refrain is:
Sing tidri-i-odre-erdri-um,
Sing fol-de-ri-o-day!
The golden glove, ii,
4aabb, 9: A mariner’s daughter, about to
be married to a young squire of London, feigns illness,
goes a-hunting on the estate of her favored lover,
a farmer, intentionally drops her glove, and vows
she will marry only the man who can return it.
Of course, the farmer is the lucky finder.
Shearfield, 3abcb, 15: An
apprentice in Sheffield recites his running away to
London, where he enters the service of an Irish Lady,
who falls in love with him. He, however, cares
only for Polly Girl, her maid. His jealous mistress,
by a stratagem, causes him to be hanged for theft.
Fair Notamon [Nottingham]
town, 4aabb, 7: An absurd recital, full of
obvious contradictions, of a countryman’s visit
to the city, where he sees the royal progress:
I called for a quart
to drive gladness away
To stifle the dust it
had rained the whole day.
Lovely Caroline of
old Edinboro (Eddingsburg town),
ii, 3abcb, 9: She weds young Henry, “a
Highland man,” and goes with him to London.
Deserted by him, she wanders forlorn to a sea-cliff
and plunges in, to drown.
Who’ll be king
but Charlie?, metre as below, 3: A rally-song
upon the landing of Charles Stuart, The Young Pretender,
at Mordart, in Inverness-shire, July, 1745, beginning:
There’s news from
Mordart came yestreen,
Will soon
yastremony (sic) ferly,
For ships o’er
all have just come in
And landed
royal Charlie.
(Published by Shearin, Sewanee Review,
July, 1911, .)
Cubeck’s [CUPID’S]
garden, 3abcb, 16: The poet overhears a lady
and her father’s apprentice a-courting in “Cubeck’s
Garden.” The angry parent banishes the
lad, who goes to sea, is promoted, draws forty thousand
pounds in a lottery, returns and marries his fair love.
William hall, ii, 4abcb,
11ca: He is a young farmer of “Domesse-town”
and loves a “gay young lady” of “Pershelvy-town”
against her parents’ wishes. Banished by
them to sea, he returns, finds by a ruse that the
lady is yet faithful, and marries her.
Rosanna, 4aabb, 6ca (fragmentary):
Silimentary, the lover, bids Rosanna farewell, and
is later lost at sea; at the news she stabs herself
with a silver dagger.
Mary of the Wild
Moor, 3ab4c3b, 8: She, with her babe, returns
one winter night to her father’s door to seek
forgiveness and protection, is rebuffed by him, and
perishes in the snow.
Betsy Brown, 4aabb, 8:
John loves Betsy, the waiting-maid; his old mother
objects and packs her off across the sea. He dies
of grief.
The Romish lady, 6aabb
(or 3abcb), 12 (or 24): “Brought up in popery,”
she obtains a Bible and turns Protestant, is tried
before the Pope, is condemned, bids farewell to mother,
father, and tormentors, and is burned at the stake.