The songs of this group find their
common bond in their reference to Ireland, where some
of them undoubtedly had their origin.
Irish Molly O, 6aabb and
6aabb(?), 7: A Scotch laddie, MacDonald, falls
in love with “Irish Molly.” Scorned
by her parents, he wanders about, signifying his intention
to die for her, and suggests an appropriate inscription
for his tombstone. (See an Old World variant in Brooke
and Rolleston’s Treasury of Irish Poetry, , Macmillan, 1905.)
William Riley, 6aabb, 7:
Eloping with Polly Ann, he is brought back to trial
by her irate father, is defended by an aged lawyer,
is transported, and departs wearing the maiden’s
ring. (See an Old World variant in the volume just
named, .)
Roving Irish boy, 4a3b4c3b,
12: He lands in Philadelphia and “makes
a hit” with the ladies. Then he visits
“other parts” among the Dutch
of Bucks County, he meets an inn-keeper’s daughter,
and leaves off rambling.
The Waxford girl, 4a3b4c3b,
6: A youth murders his sweetheart and throws
her into a stream. He tells his mother, who sees
the blood on his clothes, that his nose has been bleeding.
He is haunted by the ghost of the dead girl. (Cf.
Lizzie Wan, Child, N, and Miller-boy, page 28.)
Patty on the canal,
3abcb and 3abcb, 9: Pat lands in “Sweet
Philadelphy” and soon “makes himself handy”
on the canal, likewise among the girls, whose mothers
become anxious. He is a “Jackson man up
to the handle.”
Molly, 6aabb, 4: An Irish
lad comes to America, courts Molly, but against her
parents’ will. He goes to serve a foreign
king for seven years, returns, and finds that Molly
has died of grief.
Johnnie came from sea,
6aa, 10: Irish Johnnie escapes a shipwreck and
lands in America. Thinking him penniless, a landlord
refuses him his daughter’s hand. Johnnie
“draws out handfuls of gold” and departs,
to drink “good brandy.”
Irish girl, a fragment, as follows:
So costly were the robes
of silk
The Irish girl did wear
Her hair was as black
as a raven,
Her eyes were black
as a crow,
Her cheeks were red
as roses
That in the garden grow.