The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #6350   Message #36734
Posted By: Dale Rose
01-Sep-98 - 06:47 PM
Thread Name: lyr add: Daisy Dean
Subject: Lyr Add: DAISY DEANE
After entering the words to Nellie Dean from the Levy site for Joe, I got to thinking about similar songs back there in the corners of my mind and I came up with Daisy Deane, one of those really old fashioned tuneful tear-jerkers~~ actually not so much a tear-jerker as a sentimental love ballad for a lost loved one. So here it is, compliments of the Levy Sheet Music Site where you can go to find the tune, those of you who are fortunate to be able to read music, that is. I have heard only one version of this, by Grandpa Jones, a good number of years ago. He played it straight, without a trace of the mockery or condescension that you sometimes find when musicians of today attempt the old songs of sentiment. (And when is the last time that you saw the word outvieing in a song, or anywhere, for that matter?)

DAISY DEANE
Words and Music mostly by Lieut. T.F. Winthrop, 19th Regiment, and James R. Murray, 14th Regiment, Massachusetts Volunteers, 1863.

'Twas down in the meadows, the violets were blowing,
and the springtime grass was fresh and green;
And the birds by the brooklet their sweet songs were singing,
When I first met my darling Daisy Deane.

Chorus
None knew thee but to love thee, thou dear one of my heart,
O thy memory is ever fresh and green
Tho' the sweet buds may wither and fond hearts be broken,
Still I'll love thee my darling Daisy Deane.

Her eyes soft and tender, the violets outvieing,
And a fairer form was never seen--
With her brown silken tresses, her cheeks like the roses,
There was none like my darling Daisy Deane.

Chorus
The bright flowers are faded, the young grass has fallen,
And a dark cloud hovers o'er the scene:
For the death angel took her, and left me in sorrow
For my lost one, my darling Daisy Deane.

Chorus

O, down in the meadows I still love to wander,
Where the young grass grew so fresh and green;
But the bright golden visions of springtime have faded
With the flowers, and my darling Daisy Deane.

Chorus