The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #171646   Message #4154477
Posted By: Monologue John
09-Oct-22 - 12:02 PM
Thread Name: Lyr Add: Songs and Recitations of Weston & Lee
Subject: RE: Lyr Add: Songs and Recitations of Weston & Lee
All the girls are busy knitting jumpers or he Jumper Song 1919
Writer/composer
Weston and Lee

Music Hall Performers
Will Evans
Folk performances
Source Singers
Pritchard, Howard 1962 England : Gloucestershire
Chappell, Bill 1970 England : Lincolnshire
As transcribed on GlosTrad site

Now Baa Baa black sheep have you any wool?
Yes sir, yes sir, I’ve three bags full.
Then give me your ’ot un let your mutton go bare,
For all the girls are busy knit ting jumpers ev’ry where.
And there ain’t one that’s worth three and six as a rule,
It takes ten pairs of needles and two tons of wool.
 
But all the girls they’re busy knitting jumpers,
Busy knitting jumpers all day long.
Can’t you hear the jumper girls saying
"First two plain and then two purl,
Knit one slip one, make a stitch and drop one."
Leave the needles in the chair,
So that Pa with the hump’s got to do the jumpers’ jump.
Shouting "Jumpers, jumpers, jumpers ev’ry where!"
 
Miss Jane Jones had jumpers on the brain
Her young man said "Wed me, Jane"
Said Jane "You must wait ’till my jumper’s done, Jack."
He went away for seven years but when he came back
She was still saying "Two plain" and Jack said "Ta ta."
You keep saying two plain and by gosh you are."
 
Now in the trams and buses they’ll sit,
And they knit, knit, knit, knit knit, knit, knit.
They purchase the wool at a guinea a pound,
And they gets a lot of little holes and puts the wool around.
At ninepence a stitch, jumpers cost quite a lot,
And the little holes between ’em cost God knows what!
 
A song from the 1920s , remembered by traditional singers 40 or 50 years later.
After the Great War there was a craze in the UK for knitting, apparently people stopped knitting for the troops, and started knitting for themselves. This song was written by the prolific Weston and Lee, and was sung in the pantomime Cinderella by Will Evans. The performance apparently involved a chorus line of men in drag knitting in time to the song. (See also Lloyd George of Criccieth )