The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #172604   Message #4189572
Posted By: Gibb Sahib
03-Sep-23 - 03:58 AM
Thread Name: Origins: Valparaiso / Paddy Lay Back
Subject: RE: Origins: Valparaiso / Paddy Lay Back
I'm going to put up the Dick Maitland (1857-1942) versions.

Significantly for this discussion, in the endnotes of Doerflinger's book (I'm reading the 1990 revised edition), it says that Maitland stated "that he sang the shanty on board an American vessel in 1877 and also heard it sung about that time by Mobile Bay cotton-stowers."

Maitland first went to sea at age 12 (circa 1869), and is reported to have absorbed much about chantey singing in the first two years at sea.
Does anyone have good info on his later sea-going career? I ask to get a sense of the likelihood that he may have picked up some of his shanties later than the 1870s.

Here's the text of Maitland from _Songs of the Sailor and Lumbermen_. I think Doerflinger met Maitland for this in 1941?

PADDY, GET BACK [w/ score]

I was broke and out of a job in the city of London.
I went down the Shadwell Docks to get a ship.
Paddy get back, take in the slack!
Heave away your capstan, heave a pawl, heave a pawl!
‘Bout ship and stations, there, be handy,
Rise tacks ‘n’ sheets, ‘n’ mains’l haul!

There was a Yankee ship a-laying in the basin.
Shipping master told me she was going to New York!

If I ever get my hands on that shipping master,
I will murder him if it’s the last thing that I do!

When the pilot left the ship, the captain told us
We were bound around Cape Horn to Callao!

And he said that she was hot and still a-heating,
And the best thing we could do was watch our step.

Now the mate and second mate belonged to Boston,
And the captain b’longed in Bangor down in Maine.
The three of them were rough-n’-tumble fighters.
When not fighting amongst themselves, they fought with us.

Oh, they called us out one night to reef the tops’ls.
There was belayin’ pins a-flyin’ around the deck.

We came on deck and went to set the tops’ls.
Not a man among the bunch could sing a song.

Oh, the mate he grabbed ahold of me by the collar.
“If you don’t sing a song, I’ll break your blasted neck!”

I got up and gave them a verse of “Reuben Ranzo.”
Oh, the answer that I got would make you sick!

It was three long months before we got to Callao,
And the ship she was called a floating hell.

We filled up there at Callao with saltpetre,
And then back again around Cape Horn!

or

We filled up with saltpetre to the hatches
And then bound around Cape Horn to Liverpool.