第38章
Our labour is o'er, Our barns, in full store, Now swell with rich gifts of the land;Let each man then take, For the prong and the rake, His can and his lass in his hand.
For Ceres, &c.
No courtier can be So happy as we, In innocence, pastime, and mirth;While thus we carouse, With our sweetheart or spouse, And rejoice o'er the fruits of the earth.
For Ceres, &c.
Ballad: THE MOW. A HARVEST HOME SONG. Tune, WHERE THE BEE SUCKS.
[THIS favourite song, copied from a chap-book called THE WHISTLINGPLOUGHMAN, published at the commencement of the present century, is written in imitation of Ariel's song, in the TEMPEST. It is probably taken from some defunct ballad-opera.]
NOW our work's done, thus we feast, After labour comes our rest;Joy shall reign in every breast, And right welcome is each guest:
After harvest merrily, Merrily, merrily, will we sing now, After the harvest that heaps up the mow.
Now the plowman he shall plow, And shall whistle as he go, Whether it be fair or blow, For another barley mow, O'er the furrow merrily:
Merrily, merrily, will we sing now, After the harvest, the fruit of the plow.
Toil and plenty, toil and ease, Still the husbandman he sees;Whether when the winter freeze, Or in summer's gentle breeze;Still he labours merrily, Merrily, merrily, after the plow, He looks to the harvest, that gives us the mow.
Ballad: THE BARLEY-MOW SONG.
[THIS song is sung at country meetings in Devon and Cornwall, particularly on completing the carrying of the barley, when the rick, or mow of barley, is finished. On putting up the last sheaf, which is called the craw (or crow) sheaf, the man who has it cries out 'I have it, I have it, I have it;' another demands, 'What have'ee, what have'ee, what have'ee?' and the answer is, 'A craw! a craw! a craw!' upon which there is some cheering, &c., and a supper afterwards. The effect of the BARLEY-MOW SONG cannot be given in words; it should be heard, to be appreciated properly, -particularly with the West-country dialect.]
HERE'S a health to the barley-mow, my brave boys, Here's a health to the barley-mow!
We'll drink it out of the jolly brown bowl, Here's a health to the barley-mow!
CHO. Here's a health to the barley-mow, my brave boys, Here's a health to the barley-mow!
We'll drink it out of the nipperkin, boys, Here's a health to the barley-mow!
The nipperkin and the jolly brown bowl, CHO. Here's a health, &c.
We'll drink it out of the quarter-pint, boys, Here's a health to the barley-mow!
The quarter-pint, nipperkin, &c.
CHO. Here's a health, &c.
We'll drink it out of the half-a-pint, boys, Here's a health to the barley-mow!
The half-a-pint, quarter-pint, &c.
CHO. Here's a health, &c.
We'll drink it out of the pint, my brave boys, Here's a health to the barley-mow!
The pint, the half-a-pint, &c.
CHO. Here's a health, &c.
We'll drink it out of the quart, my brave boys, Here's a health to the barley-mow!
The quart, the pint, &c.
CHO. Here's a health, &c.
Well drink it out of the pottle, my boys, Here's a health to the barley-mow!
The pottle, the quart, &c.
CHO. Here's a health, &c.
We'll drink it out of the gallon, my boys, Here's a health to the barley-mow!
The gallon, the pottle, &c.
CHO. Here's a health, &c.
We'll drink it out of the half-anker, boys, Here's a health to the barley-mow!
The half-anker, gallon, &c.
CHO. Here's a health, &c.
We'll drink it out of the anker, my boys, Here's a health to the barley-mow!
The anker, the half-anker, &c.
CHO. Here's a health, &c.
We'll drink it out of the half-hogshead, boys, Here's a health to the barley-mow!
The half-hogshead, anker, &c.
CHO. Here's a health, &c.
We'll drink it out of the hogshead, my boys, Here's a health to the barley-mow!
The hogshead, the half-hogshead, &c.
CHO. Here's a health, &c.
We'll drink it out of the pipe, my brave boys, Here's a health to the barley-mow!
The pipe, the hogshead, &c.
CHO. Here's a health, &c.
We'll drink it out of the well, my brave boys, Here's a health to the barley-mow!
The well, the pipe, &c.
CHO. Here's a health, &c.
We'll drink it out of the river, my boys, Here's a health to the barley-mow!
The river, the well, &c.
CHO. Here's a health, &c.
We'll drink it out of the ocean, my boys, Here's a health to the barley-mow!
The ocean, the river, the well, the pipe, the hogshead, the half-hogshead, the anker, the half-anker, the gallon, the pottle, the quart, the pint, the half-a-pint, the quarter-pint, the nipperkin, and the jolly brown bowl!
CHO. Here's a health to the barley-mow, my brave boys!
Here's a health to the barley-mow!
[The above verses are very much AD LIBITUM, but always in the third line repeating the whole of the previously-named measures; as we have shown in the recapitulation at the close of the last verse.]
Ballad: THE BARLEY-MOW SONG. (SUFFOLK VERSION.)[THE peasantry of Suffolk sing the following version of the BARLEY-MOW SONG.]
HERE'S a health to the barley mow!
Here's a health to the man Who very well can Both harrow and plow and sow!
When it is well sown See it is well mown, Both raked and gavelled clean, And a barn to lay it in.
He's a health to the man Who very well can Both thrash and fan it clean!
Ballad: THE CRAVEN CHURN-SUPPER SONG.