Misplaced Pages

The Jolly Waggoner

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Traditional song

The Jolly Waggoner (Roud # 1088) is an English folk-song.

Synopsis

A waggoner looks back on his life. His parents had disapproved of his choice of profession, but has no regrets. He can be cold and wet, but he simply stops at the next inn and sits with the landlord, drinking. In the summer he hears the birds sing. In the autumn he has lots of work and the money rolls in. What a jolly life!

Lyrics

These lyrics are those used by The Yetties in their adaptation of this song from their 1997 album Folk Music of England.

When first I went a-waggoning, a-waggoning did go
It filled me poor old parents' hearts with sorrow, grief and woe
And many were the hardships that I did undergo

Chorus:
Sing woah, me lads, sing woah
Drive on, my lads, drive on
Who wouldn't be for all the world a jolly waggoner?

It is a cold and stormy night, I'm wet near to me skin
But I'll bear it with contentment until I get to the inn
And there I'll sit a-drinking with the landlord and his kin

Chorus

Now summer is a-coming on, what pleasures we shall see!
The small birds they'll be singing high up on every tree
The blackbirds and the thrushes, a-whistling merrily

Chorus

Now Michaelmas is coming on, what pleasures we shall see!
I'll make the gold to fly, me boys, like chaff before the breeze!
And every lad shall take his lass and sit her on his knee

Chorus

Well things is greatly altered now since wagons here was seen
The world's turned topsy-turvy, lads, and things is run by steam!
And the whole world passes before me just like a morning dream

Chorus (x2)

Commentary

Several websites say "This country song could date back to the time when waggons replaced packhorses". Most versions refer to the arrival of steam

"The world's turned topsy-turvy lads and things, is run by steam" but this is an added stanza to the 4 original stanzas printed on late eighteenth century broadsides. The song is very likely from the pleasure garden repertoire and several stage singers popularised it from then right up to the 1860s.

In the early nineteenth century only the rich could afford to travel long distances. Most people would rarely travel more than a few miles from their house. This goes some way to explaining why the waggoner takes so much pleasure in travelling the countryside. The roadbuilding that took place in the late 18th century made travelling in a wheeled vehicle much more pleasurable. Those who were first to transport goods by road would make a quick profit. The waggoner can laugh at his parents for failing to spot this business opportunity.

Historical background

Ralph Vaughan Williams collected it from Edward Rose, landlord of the Bridge public house at Acle, Norfolk on Tuesday 14 April 1908. Alfred Williams collected it from David Sawyer of Ogborne, Upper Thames. Sabine Baring-Gould and Cecil Sharp also collected it. The distribution of the song appears to be confined to England, though an early broadsheet version comes from Dublin. Some sources say it is particularly popular in the west of England, though Kidson found it in Yorkshire, and Robert Bell found in Tyne and Wear.

Cultural relationships

As with most occupational folk songs, it is full of praise for his chosen way of life, and totally upbeat. This would be an ideal song for a traveller using a horse-drawn caravan, but there is no history of any traveller including it in his repertoire.

Standard references

  • Roud 1088

Broadsides

J. F. Nugent and Co (Dublin) (1860–1899)

Other printed versions

  • "Ancient Poems, Ballads and Songs of the Peasantry of England" ed by Robert Bell (1857)
  • Frank Kidson found it in Yorkshire
  • "A Garland of Country Songs" by S Baring Gould and H Fleetwood Shepherd (probably collected between 1888 and 1917)
(Sabing Baring-Gould noted it from James Oliver of Launceton)
  • Alfred Williams "Folk songs of the Upper Thames" song dated c 1914-16
  • "Twice 44 Sociable Songs" by Geoffrey Shaw (1928)
  • "The Oxford Song Book" vol 2 (1963)
  • "Everyman's Book of English Country Songs" ed by Roy Palmer. (1979)

Recordings

Album/Single Performer Year Variant Notes
"Travelling For a Living" The Watersons 1965 "The Jolly Waggoners" Live version. Broadcast on TV in 1966. Issued as a DVD ("Mighty River of Song") in 2004.
"The Watersons" The Watersons 1966 . .
"A Shropshire Lad" Fred Jordan 1952 "Jolly Waggoner" .
"Lark in the Morning" The Freemen 1971 . .
"Dorset Style" The Yetties 1978 . .
"A World Without Horses" Walter Pardon 1970s . .
"Johnny's Private Army" Johnny Collins 1975 . .
"By Numbers" Woodbine Lizzie 1979 . .
"Pint Pot and Plough" Mike Ballantyne 1992 . Canadian singer
"Brian Kelly In Memoriam" Brian Kelly c 2001 . .
"Fields to the Stones" The Spain Brothers c 2003 . .
"By Chance It Was" Mike Bosworth with John Kirkpatrick 2004 . .
"The Makem and Spain Brothers" The Makem and Spain Brothers 2005 . .

There are many pubs called "Jolly Waggoner", for example

  • - Ardley, Hertfordshire
  • - Hounslow, Middlesex

References

External references

Categories: