The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #127507   Message #2845537
Posted By: Joe Offer
20-Feb-10 - 10:31 PM
Thread Name: Origins: Sussex Drinking Song (Hilaire Belloc)
Subject: DT Correction: Sussex Drinking Song
Here is the Digital Tradition text, with the corrections Steve gave in the message above, plus a few other corrections I added from the Finest Kind recording. I couldn't find a printed text - anybody have one? (note that the original Hilaire Belloc text is below)
-Joe-

Sung Version:

SUSSEX DRINKING SONG
(Words: Hilaire Belloc, early 20th century;
set by Martyn Wyndham-Read to the fine Irish rebel tune "The West's
Awake")

On Sussex Downs, where I was bred,
In rains where autumn lanes are red,
Where Arun tumbles in his bed
And dusty gales go by.

Where branches, bare on Burton Glen
And Bury Hills are whitening then;
I drink strong ale with gentle-men,
Which no one can deny, deny,
Which no one can deny, deny.

In cold November off I go,
And turn my face against the snow;
And watch the wind where e'er it blow,
Because my heart is high.

'Till I settle me down in Steyning to sing
Of the girls I've met in my wandering;
And all I mean to do in Spring
Which no one can deny, deny,
Which no one can deny, deny.

'Tho times be hard and fortunes tough,
The ways be foul and the weather rough;
We are of stout South Country stuff
Who cannot have strong ale enough

From Crowborough Top to Ditchling Down,
From Hurstpierpoint to Arundel town,
The girls are fine, the ale is brown;
Which no one can deny, deny,
Which no one can deny, deny.


On Wyndham-Read's "Rose from the Bush" and also by Ian Robb on the Finest Kind CD, "Lost in a Song".
AJS
@drink
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AJS
oct97