Ballads & Songs of Southern Michigan-songbook

A Collection of 200+ traditional songs & variations with commentaries including Lyrics & Sheet music

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Unhappy Love                        117
37 THE BUTCHER BOY
For a version of this Americanized British ballad almost identical with Michigan A and a note pointing out its composite character see Cox, pp. 430-432. See also Allsopp, II, 207; Eddy, No. 36; Flanders and Brown, pp. 115-116; Henry, JAFL, XLV, 72-74; Scarborough, pp. 282-288, Sharp, II, 76-78; and Stout, pp. 37-41.
Version A was obtained in 1930 from Miss Bessie Martin, Sebewaing, who had learned the song from having heard it sung at country gatherings in the "Thumb District" from the time that she began attending such gatherings fifteen years earlier.
In Jersey City where I did dwell A soldier boy I loved so well; He courted me my heart away, And now with me he will not stay.
He has a girl in that same town; That's where he goes and sits him down. He takes that strange girl on his knee And tells her things he once told me.
'Twas when I wore my aprons low, He'd follow me wherever I'd go. And now I wear them to my shins, He passes the door and never looks in.
I went upstairs to make my bed, And not a word to my mother said. My mother came upstairs to me And said, "What can the matter be?"
"Go get me a chair to sit upon, And pen and paper to write it on." In the letter she wrote to Willie dear On every line she dropped a tear.
But Willie dear he would not come;
He gave his love to another one.
And when at night her father came home,
He asked his wife where his daughter had gone.