The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #34906   Message #4204887
Posted By: Thompson
03-Jul-24 - 04:29 AM
Thread Name: Help: 'Lily of the West' known during Civil War?
Subject: RE: Help: 'Lily of the West' known during Civil War?
IanC writes:

==
This is what The Contemplator has to say.
Lily, the unfaithful lover has appeared in English street ballads (broadside ballads) for more than 100 years. The tune is similar to Lakes of Pontchartrain.

Although this version of the ballad is identified with the American West, Rev. S. Baring-Gould collected versions of Lily of the West in Devonshire, Yorkshire and elsewhere. Baring-Gould felt the ballad was of definite Irish origin (though it may not have been sung to a similar air) and traced it back to at least 1839. The lyrics in Sam Henry's Songs of the People are an Irish version which begins; "When first I came to Ireland..."

Another theory of it's origin traces it back to the West of Ireland during the time of Cromwell.

Cheers!
Ian
==

This reminds me of the main character in Joe O'Connor's superb novel Star of the Sea, who starts off as a balladeer writing songs about Ireland, and emigrating to England finds they don't go down well, so he seamlessly reworks them as songs about England…