Ballads and Songs of Indiana - online book

A collection of 100 traditional folk songs with commentaries, historical info, lyrics & sheet music

Home Main Menu Singing & Playing Order & Order Info Support Search Voucher Codes



Share page  Visit Us On FB

Previous Contents Next
Brewster: Ballads and Songs of Indiana           149
22
OUR GOODMAN
(Child, No. 274)
The only specimen of "Our Goodman" in the files of the Indiana col­lection is a three-stanza fragment belonging to Child A, and is an importa­tion from Pennsylvania. The contributor writes: "All the old ballads I know were heard in western Pennsylvania, and as I am now sixty-eight years old, it was a long time ago. I remember particularly hearing The Lass of Roch RoyaP sung by a wedding procession going to the bride­groom's house for the infair—the bride and groom in the front buggy, top laid back, the bride wearing a large hat with immense white feather, groom with white tie, white flower in buttonhole, and white ribbon on the whip. . . . My mother's people were Scotch-Irish and were singers. One of the family was always precentor in the old Seceder church, and in their frivolous moments they sang some of these cheerful ballads. The first thing I can remember, almost, is my mother singing around her work— psalms, hymns, ballads—nothing written, just handed down by word of mouth."
For American texts, see Barry, No. 17; Brown, p. 9; Campbell and Sharp, No. 32; Cox, No. 28; Davis, p. 485; Finger, p. 161; Hudson, No, 20; Hudson, Folksongs, p. 122; Jones, p. 301 (fragment); Journal, XVIII, 295; XXX, 199; Mackenzie, Ballads, No. 14; C. A. Smith, p. 17; Smith, Ballads, No. 14; Scarborough, Song Catcher, p. 232; Randolph, Ozark Mountain Folks, p. 225; Henry, Songs Sung in the Southern Appalachians, p. 14; Henry, Folk-Songs from the Southern Highlands, p. 119.
British: Williams, Folk-Songs of the Upper Thames, p. 188; Ford, Vagabond Songs and Ballads of Scotland, II, 31.
JFSS, VII, 302, has a Manx version, "Haink fer-thie thie Amnagh." A Hungarian version appears in Buday and Ortutay, SzSkely Nipballaddk (No. 23 "A megcsalt f£rj"). A practically identical text is given in Bartok, Hungarian Folk Music (No, 260).
For additional references, see Journal, XXIX, 166; XXX, 328; XXXV, 348.
No title given. Contributed by Miss Florence Eva Dillan, of Indian­apolis, Indiana. Marion County. January 30, 1936.
1. "My dear wife, my loving wife, What is this that I see; Whose is this cap a-hanging Where my cap ought to be?9