Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: John MacKenzie Date: 22 Oct 08 - 10:43 AM Great, Charley? ¦¬] |
Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: Charley Noble Date: 22 Oct 08 - 10:31 AM Old Sea Dog, in my opinion, has done the best job of dredging up a song that sounds as if real sailors might have sung it. I was reviewing Cyril Tawney's GREAT FUNNEL LINE and thought that "Sod Them All" had some potential but, no, it's just a general protest song against all the higher ranked people that plague the common sailor. Cheerily, Charley Noble |
Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: JWB Date: 22 Oct 08 - 12:20 AM In Hugill's collection he mentions that The Shaver was a rare chantey dealing with homosexuality. (Being away from home I can't check page number and exact quote). But there is a version of The Shaver on Salty Dick's record. Jerry |
Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: Michael Date: 21 Oct 08 - 06:49 AM Whilst not a song but musical nevertheless, George Melly's autobiography was 'Rum, Bum and Concertina'. Just thought you might like to know. Mike |
Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: Jack Campin Date: 21 Oct 08 - 05:25 AM From the book review I started this thread with, it looks like there was *not* a world of difference. Men mostly chose to be pirates, and for a gay man that meant a life (albeit probably a short one) entirely outside any legal code that might interfere with expressing their sexuality. They could probably have it off at midday on the foredeck without anyone caring. |
Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: bubblyrat Date: 21 Oct 08 - 04:46 AM Of course,many a nautical phrase ,expression or word can be misinterpreted to humourous effect,leading perhaps to misunderstanding. In any case,there is a world of difference between homosexuality and nautical sodomy; in normal circumstances gay men are drawn together through mutual attraction and proclivity,whereas seafarers,particularly in the 17th & 18th centuries,had no alternative,being often confined to their ships (for fear of desertion) for years on end ;at the time of the Battle of Trafalgar,for example,many of the sailors on the British ships hadn't been allowed ashore for seven years or more! So,whilst it may well have been a serious offence (if you got caught"in flagrente dilecto" )officially, it would have had tacit acceptance as a fact of shipboard life and an everyday( if you had access to a handsome cabin-boy ! ) activity.So probably not considered to be worth composing a song about ,to be honest (other than a Pumping Shanty ?),although one can have lots of fun with one's imagination and phrases like "Haul away Joe" and "As we walloped around Cape Horn " etc. Even dear old Captain Pugwash has his place in the scheme of things---apparently, his name means "blowjob" in Australia,although I know nothing of antipodean sailors other than that they spent a lot of time "down under" !! |
Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: allanwill Date: 21 Oct 08 - 03:01 AM You MUST listen to Loudon Wainwright the Third's (or if you're Irish, the turd's) version of On The Good Ship Venus, off the Rogues Gallery double CD. Not only one of his best ever recordings, but also of that particular song. Allan |
Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: Bill D Date: 20 Oct 08 - 11:23 PM Snuffy's link above will let you hear common tunes to these songs...a couple differ a bit from the ones I remember, but that how it goes. |
Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: Joe_F Date: 20 Oct 08 - 11:15 PM quokka: I have heard "The Good Ship Venus" to a couple of tunes, but neither bears any resemblance to that of "Whiskey in the Jar". Charley Noble: As to the Royal Navy, the 20th-century song "Stripey and Blondie", a takeoff on "Frankie and Johnny" collected by Cyril Tawney in _Grey Funnel Lines_, gives the impression that having a boyfriend is no big deal, but you had better not let your girlfriend find out about it: "Never run an OD winger/And a blond barmaid as well". Tawney explains in his gloss on "winger": Originally this meant a young novice sailor taken "under the wing" of a veteran, usually a "Stripey" or Petty Officer. It might or might not imply a homosexual bond.... |
Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: John MacKenzie Date: 20 Oct 08 - 11:25 AM That Able Seaman should have been bloody well hung! He was ducky, he was! |
Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: quokka Date: 20 Oct 08 - 11:18 AM I seem to remember 'The Good Ship Venus' was to the tune of Whiskey in the Jar - is that correct? It was the first dirty song I ever learned LOL! |
Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: Bill D Date: 20 Oct 08 - 10:55 AM "Few were hanged for that offense but the law probably did act as a deterrent." Since the captain's cabin was often the only 'private' place on a ship, that may have helped.... |
Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: Charley Noble Date: 20 Oct 08 - 09:24 AM There's a number of shanties that mention "hoisting Blue Peter" and there is also the "Salt Peter Shanty." "Sodomy" aboard a Royal Navy ship was considered a capital offense. Few were hanged for that offense but the law probably did act as a deterrent. Cheerily, Charley Noble |
Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: Michael Date: 20 Oct 08 - 05:20 AM I'm buggered if I know any! But as nobody has mentioned the apocryphal 'Roger the cabin boy' from Capt'Pugwash, I will. Anyway, as the saying goes "Sodom, for Gommorah we die" Mike |
Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: Big Al Whittle Date: 19 Oct 08 - 01:39 PM Go down you blood red roses! who they were going down on, I'm not sure. |
Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: Marc Bernier Date: 19 Oct 08 - 12:27 PM There are tons of ssong on the subject(s). Few shanties though. |
Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: Snuffy Date: 19 Oct 08 - 06:27 AM Try Salty Dick's Uncensored Sailor Songs |
Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: John MacKenzie Date: 19 Oct 08 - 06:23 AM Yardarms? ¦¬] |
Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: SPB-Cooperator Date: 19 Oct 08 - 06:03 AM Without going into detail (unless I am pressed) the double-entendre in the use of maritime jargon is quite blantent (or at least pretty suggestive). Piracy tended to be more a subject of forebitters. |
Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: John MacKenzie Date: 19 Oct 08 - 04:57 AM I pity the matelot who was Captain Hook's bitch! JM |
Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: Jim Carroll Date: 19 Oct 08 - 04:03 AM When I worked on the Liverpool Docks they used to tell about the sailor who wouldn't go back to sea because he didn't want to leave his friend's behind - or maybe it was 'his friends behind' - never been sure. Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: Shanties about sodomy and piracy From: GUEST,Old Seadog Date: 19 Oct 08 - 03:08 AM There was this un that might apply Well raise a cheer for the pretty cabin lad Hi-come-diddle ol dannie with the face of an angel, and his legs ain't bad diddle ol dannie all day We thought at first he was a maid in disguise Hi-come-diddle-ol-dannie But the First Mate sez he's one of the guys diddle ol dannie all day He's a chipper lad, and his humor's sunny Hi come diddle ol dannie But after five month's sail he was walkin kind of funny diddle ol dannie all day |
Subject: RE: sodomy and piracy From: Peace Date: 18 Oct 08 - 10:32 PM Thank you, Joe. I have never heard those stanzas before. Much appreciated, both the lyrics and the history. Thanbk you. |
Subject: RE: sodomy and piracy From: Joe_F Date: 18 Oct 08 - 09:32 PM Peace: The song you quote is usually called The Good Ship Venus. It has some other homosexual stanzas: The captain had a first mate; He loved him like a brother, And every night by the pale moonlight They cornholed one another. The skipper came upon the deck; His prick was like a mast-pole -- He grabbed the first mate by the neck And fucked him in the ass-hole. At St Andrews University while I was there (just about 50 years ago), it had the chorus Frigging in the rigging, Wanking on the planking, Buggery in the snuggery -- There's fuck-all else to do. There is no evidence, however, that the Venus was a pirate ship. Furthermore, most of the stanzas describe heterosexual or autosexual activity. There is a good deal of overlap between that song and Christopher Colombo, and some otherwise independent limericks get mixed into both. |
Subject: RE: sodomy and piracy From: Amos Date: 18 Oct 08 - 08:39 PM I alway swondered about that long-tailed black man coming up behind, mate. Thanks for the context!!! A |
Subject: RE: sodomy and piracy From: Peace Date: 18 Oct 08 - 08:34 PM Jack, it's going to present difficulties in the extreme to keep this thread on course. Extreme difficulty. Makes a fellow wonder whether they might have worn the condoms made from intestine, both in situ and ex rigor mortis of the animal, pardon the thread drift. |
Subject: RE: sodomy and piracy From: Big Al Whittle Date: 18 Oct 08 - 07:53 PM Of course! I see it all now! that's why they called him Long John! No wonder George was merry and few prizes for guessing how Israel Hands spent his time in the hammock! In fact LJS refers to the Hispaniola as a 'blessed bumboat'. I bet it was like Blackpool Tower Ballroom on tango night. |
Subject: RE: sodomy and piracy From: Peace Date: 18 Oct 08 - 07:52 PM LOL, the lot of you. The song question is a good one. "The cabin boy, the cabin boy, The dirty little nipper Shoved broken glass up the first mate's ass And circumcized the skipper." Only one I'm aware of and I know nothing about its history. |
Subject: RE: sodomy and piracy From: Emma B Date: 18 Oct 08 - 07:36 PM Whip Jamboree - in the unexpurgated version I think! |
Subject: RE: sodomy and piracy From: John MacKenzie Date: 18 Oct 08 - 07:33 PM More |
Subject: RE: sodomy and piracy From: Peace Date: 18 Oct 08 - 07:29 PM While this subject is a pain in the ass, it deserves more mention than it receives in our history books. |
Subject: sodomy and piracy From: Jack Campin Date: 18 Oct 08 - 07:25 PM Any known shanties to go along with this maritime actvity? http://www.chiprowe.com/bookrev/sodomy.html People that far outside the law probably *did* make up songs about what they were doing. Fifteen men on a dead man's, er, um, ... Blow the man... well, not down exactly... |
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