The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #159270 Message #3773040
Posted By: Joe Offer
16-Feb-16 - 02:46 AM
Thread Name: DTStudy: King John and the Bishop (Child #45)
Subject: ADD Version: King John and the Bishop (Child #45)
The Library of Congress offers album notes from their LP 57, CHILD BALLADS TRADITIONAL IN THE UNITED STATES, edited by Bertrand H. Bronson. The lyrics in the album notes:
KING JOHN AND THE BISHOP (Child No. 45)
1. A story, a story, a story anon I'll tell unto thee concerning King John He had a great mind for to make himself merry So he called for the Bishop of Canterbury Lolli-doll-lay, Lolli-doll-luddy-tri-ol-de-dum-day.
2. Good morning, good morning, the old king did say I've called you to ask you questions three And if you don't answer them all right Your head shall be taken from your body quite. Lolli-doll-lay, Lolli-doll-luddy-tri-ol-de-dum-day.
3. My first question is, and that without doubt How long I'll be travelling this whole world about And the next question is when I sit in state With my gold crown upon my pate And all the nobility join in great mirth You must tell to one penny just what I am worth. Lolli-doll-lay, Lolli-doll-luddy-tri-ol-de-dum-day.
4. And the last question is and when I do wink You must tell to me presently, what I do think • • • Lolli-doll-lay, Lolli-doll-luddy-tri-ol-de-dum-day.
5. As the old bishop was returning home He met his young shepherd and him all alone Good morning, good morning, the young man did say, What news do you bring from the old King today? Lolli-doll-lay, Lolli-doll-luddy-tri-ol-de-dum-day.
6. O very bad news, the old bishop did say, The King has asked me questions three And if I don't answer them all right My head shall be taken from my body quite. Lolli-doll-lay, Lolli-doll-luddy-tri-ol-de-dum-day.
7. Well, I'm sorry a man of such learning as thee Can't go back and answer the king's questions three But if you will lend me a suit of apparel I'll go to King John and settle the quarrel. Lolli-doll-lay, Lolli-doll-luddy-tri-ol-de-dum-day.
8. A suit of apparel I freely will give And ten thousaad pounds as sure as you live And now the young shepherd has gone to King John To settle the quarrel that he had begun. Lolli-doll-lay, Lolli-doll-luddy-tri-ol-de-dum-day.
9. Good morning, good morning, the young shepherd did say, I've called to answer your questions three Your first question is and that without doubt How long you'll be travelling this whole world about If you start with the sun and you travel the same In twenty-four hours you'll come back again. Lolli-doll-lay, Lolli-doll-luddy-tri-ol-de-dum-day.
10. The next question is when you sit in state With your gold crown upon your pate And all the nobility join in great (mirth) I'm to tell to one penny just what you are worth. Lolli-doll-lay, Lolli-doll-luddy-tri-ol-de-dum-day.
11. For thirty gold pieces our dear Lord was sold By those old Jews so brazen and bold And for twenty-nine pieces I think you'll just do for I'm sure he was one piece better than you. Lolli-doll-lay, Lolli-doll-luddy-tri-ol-de-dum-day.
12. The last question is and when you do wink I'm to tell to you presently what you do think And that I will do if 't will make your heart merry You think I'm the Bishop of Canterbury. Lolli-doll-lay, Lolli-doll-luddy-tri-ol-de-dum-day.
13. And that I am not as is very well known I am his young shepherd and him all alone Go tell the old bishop, go tell him for me That his young shepherd has outwitted me. Lolli-doll-lay, Lolli-doll-luddy-tri-ol-de-dum-day.
[(a) "The Bishop of Canterbury." Sngg by Warde B. Ford at Central. Valley, California, 1938. recorded by Sidney Robertson Cowell.]
Half-a-dozen of the ballads in Child's collection turn on the setting riddles to be answered either on pain of heavy forfeit or in hope of high reward. The story suggested in the present one exists in many shapes, both oriental and occidental, and can be followed back to the early Middle Ages. The English ballad has been long a favorite and has been well preserved, thanks partly to its appearance in printed broadsides from the seventeenth century onward. But it is not common in the United States. The fine copy here recorded probably went West from the loggers of the Maine Woods to Wisconsin, whence it was brought to California by the present singer when he came to work on the great Shasta Dam. He learned it and other Child ballads from his mother, in Crandon, Wisconsin.