Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: GUEST,Dummy from Brummie Date: 13 Jan 05 - 12:04 PM I believe everything I am told. Unless it is on the thread to which I am posting. Then I don't bother to read it. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: The Unicorn Man Date: 14 Jan 05 - 11:56 AM MMario I must confess not, I was in a bit of a rush when I wrote that. What have I got wrong? I promise to read every single thread, but not until Saturday. I am interested in this cos I have written a song about it. And guess what it is called! That's right "Ring of Roses" I will read the threads and get back to you. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: GUEST,MMario Date: 14 Jan 05 - 12:00 PM Martin - the reason I asked was because the discussion in the thread pretty much shows that there is no evidence whatsoever that 'Ring around a rosie" is about the plague. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: Lighter Date: 14 Jan 05 - 12:07 PM We all know the little finger is called the "pinky." Well, the third finger was once called the "rosey." That's right! During medieval wedding ceremonies, the groom was always asked to put the "ring around the rosey!" Yes, he was ! "Posies" refer to the wedding bouquet, and the ashes are what was left of the fire after the huge dinner later. "We all fall down" because we're all tipsy from eating and drinking. Doesn't everybody know this? Must I "discover" these things myself? Yours, L. in a parallel universe |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: The Unicorn Man Date: 14 Jan 05 - 01:34 PM Yes. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: GUEST,Guest Date: 23 Jan 05 - 02:03 AM I think the concept of ring around the rosey being about the black death in the 16th century is appalling. How could such a terrible thing that called so many innocent people be turned into a sweet nursey rhyme for little kids to jump around and sing too. They are representing a song of death. Why and how could people allow this song of death be changed into a kids song? would you want your kids falling down on the ground when it means they drop dead? Maybe im wrong but this is my opinion the song should not be allowed to be written in childrens books, it should be in history books instead! |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: thespionage Date: 23 Jan 05 - 11:44 AM I had heard the black plague. If you'd like to know the origins of Arlo Guthrie's "Ring-Around-A-Rosy Rag," let me know. : ) Russ Practitioner of Thespionage and Folk Music |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: Lighter Date: 23 Jan 05 - 11:52 AM But Guest, Guest, I just proved it's a happy song. If kids don't sing it, the idea of marriage could come under threat. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: GUEST,teh balck death Date: 25 Jan 05 - 05:41 PM |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: GUEST,the black death Date: 25 Jan 05 - 05:51 PM Ring around the rosie- the red "mark" 1st sign that you had the plague. pocket full of posies- The flowers that People carried to the smell of the bodies down. Ashes ashes- They burned the bodies sence no one wanted to bury them. Or Achoo Achoo- the snezzing that came with the plague. We all fall down- The plague spared no one. Rich, poor, old or young it would kill you.. This is the real meaning of the childhood song that we sang. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: Lighter Date: 25 Jan 05 - 06:11 PM No, no, no, it's a happy wedding song. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 25 Jan 05 - 07:37 PM More of that plague nonsense. It really is a song about hay fever and ash ma (asma, azma, asthma). Atch-oo! (In Middle English, asma; but scholars Greekified it) |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: Lighter Date: 25 Jan 05 - 10:50 PM No, no, no. It's a happy wedding song. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 25 Jan 05 - 11:37 PM This happy little game could be related to "Merry-ma-tansie," the marriage game in Scotland- "a happy wedding song" as Lighter insists. One of the verses is- Twice about and then we fall, Then we fall, then we fall, Twice about and then we fall, Around the merry-ma-tansie. An old variant in America- A ring, a ring, a ransy, Buttermilk and tansy, Flower here and flower there, And all- squat! More verses, but I think they have appeared in Mudcat already. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: GUEST,Lighter at work Date: 26 Jan 05 - 10:21 AM Q, I feel GOOOD! SO GOOOOOOD! We're all dancing around the office right now! |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: GUEST,Christina Date: 30 Jan 05 - 03:08 PM ummm..... I heard It was about Black Death, but why would they have children singing a song about such a horrible thing? I think Lighter is right about it being a song about a wedding. : ) |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: Nerd Date: 31 Jan 05 - 01:49 PM Actually, it's about that favorite schoolyard pastime, the kick up the arse! The "Rosey" is not a facial cheek but the cheek of someone's arse. The "ring" is the mark made by the hobnail boot of a person administering a swift kick. The Pocket full of posies is the back pocket of the victim's trousers, at which the kick was traditionally aimed, and the rest of the rhyme is: "arses, arses, we all fall down!" |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: Lighter Date: 31 Jan 05 - 07:51 PM Nerd, if the kick had been administered during the actual wedding (say, to the bride holding the bouquet or "poseys") our analyses would jibe nicely. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: Malcolm Douglas Date: 31 Jan 05 - 07:59 PM It's a pity the kick can't be administered to the idiots who repeatedly post the same old, discredited myth to this over-long and played-out discussion without bothering to read any of it first. What do they think they are achieving, beyond wasting everybody's time? |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: Lighter Date: 31 Jan 05 - 08:12 PM Malcolm, if you'd been educated over here, you'd know exactly why this happens. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: masato sakurai Date: 31 Jan 05 - 08:15 PM With the "Black Death" myth often cropping up, this thread seems never ending. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: Nerd Date: 31 Jan 05 - 08:16 PM Yes, that was the subtext of my post, Malcolm :-) |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 31 Jan 05 - 08:34 PM This thread will outlive us all... |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 31 Jan 05 - 08:46 PM |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 31 Jan 05 - 08:48 PM ? Rosie |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: GUEST,Gordo Date: 01 Feb 05 - 12:13 PM I believe the children's version dates to medieval times. The origin will never be traced accurately, bucause it was passed down in oral tradition. You can still see some of this in jump rope songs and military cadence chants. The verses will change to fit the times. It is easy to see the corelation between the words of Ring Around The Rosey and symptoms of the plague, and some of the previous variations of the words achoo, ashes, arses are one way a true folk song evolves - when words become garbled or misunderstood, new words are substituted. You will never find a direct tie to this rhyme. It is not like LIZZIE BORDEN TOOK AN AXE. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: GUEST,Gordo Date: 01 Feb 05 - 03:25 PM To: Christina, Jan 30. It is nice, warm, and fuzzy to think that this was not a children's song. Politically correct in every way! BUT, a hundred or more years ago, death was more real to every living person, young or old. There were no antibiotics, hospitals were a mess and usually only a place to go to die. Most children did not live to the age of majority. Also, Do you remember the line from the child's prayer,Now I Lay Me Down To Sleep, - "IF I SHOULD DIE BEFORE I WAKE"? This line has been changed recently. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 01 Feb 05 - 03:51 PM All wrong! On Sherman's March to the Sea, Union troops drew a ring around Atlanta and burned much of the city. 'Pockets full of posies' referred to the looting. Thus 'Rosie' is the burning city, and the troops were the 'ring.' "Atlanta's Ashes" were the result (Apologies to Frank McCourt). |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: Lighter Date: 01 Feb 05 - 06:24 PM Q, that's sick! Kids wouldn't sing about that. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: masato sakurai Date: 01 Feb 05 - 07:37 PM This must be Q's version. Don't sing it in Georgia. X:1 T:Civil War Ring a Ring a Roses M:C L:1/8 S:Q the Mudcatter K:Bb d3/2 c/ B c (dF F) F | G3/2 A/ B c B2 B B| w:Ring a ring a ros - es A pock-et full of pos-ies A- (D3/2E/) F F (G F) G B|(c3/2B/) (cd) c4| w:ti - shoo a-ti - shoo We'll all_ fall_ down. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: GUEST,Turk Date: 23 Apr 05 - 04:54 PM Has anyone here ever heard of the 1918 Influenza Outbreak? An epidemic that lasted two full years, went around the world and killed between 20-40 million people. The worst pandemic in known history. The first markings of this "plague" came around the cheeks. Red and black, the ring of roses. The last symptoms were vile, horrible sneezes that threw blood and puss out of the lungs, quickly culminating in a wheezing death. Other rhymes were also invented about this pandemic, so maybe, was "Ring around the roses." |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: Brían Date: 23 Apr 05 - 07:53 PM The Great Dying: The 1918 Influenza Epidemic will give a more accurate picture of this diease. My father-in-law had some memories. I have seen a letter written by someone who was warned by a fortune teller that she would die if she did not leave town (no surprise there). She did. I have read an account of a four-year-old singing THE WEXFORD GIRL complete knocking down with a stick and dragging around by the hair and announcing, "That's the best I ever sung it." A child's ability to comprehend all sorts of painful topics is totally underestimated. Brían |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: GUEST,Joan Date: 15 Jul 06 - 12:20 AM I'm new to this forum and hope it's OK to jump in. Actually, I found this thread because I was looking for an interpretation of Arlo Guthrie's "Ring-Around-A-Rosy Rag," so my Google search brought up Russ' post, where he offers to explain the origins of Guthrie's lyrics to anyone who's interested. Well, I'm interested! I would have written to Russ privately, since Guthrie's song is not the topic of this thread, but I couldn't figure out how to do that, so I'm posting away. I suspect that Guthrie's song is a drug song, what with references to going to the park and getting busted, Officer Joe Strange and blowing your mind, but what the heck is the "Ring-Around-A-Rosy Rag"? Help? Lyrics here: http://www.arlo.net/ And, to go back on-topic, the Urban Legend site Snopes.com has a page about the nursery rhyme, "Ring Around the Rosie." They reject the "black plague" interpretation: http://www.snopes.com/language/literary/rosie.htm -- Joan |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: danensis Date: 15 Jul 06 - 05:18 AM I find it interesting the way The Black Death (an airborne infectious disease) and the Great Plague (a flea borne viral infection) have become conflated in this thread. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: GUEST,Nerd Date: 15 Jul 06 - 09:21 AM Not so, Danesis. The incidents generally known as "The Black Death" and "The Great Plague" were both flea-borne. They were, most likely, the same disease: Bubonic Plague. You can also catch the infection by coughed saliva and blood droplets of victims, however (pneumonic plague). It is bacterial, not viral. There are a few scientists who question that the Black Death was bubonic plague, but I don't know their research well. Do you have any further knowledge on this? BTW, interesting as your post is, it is, as we have been saying, irrelevant to "Ring around the Rosie." Just sayin'. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: danensis Date: 15 Jul 06 - 11:25 AM My apologies, I didn't realise that the Black Death was the septicemic form of the infection casued by Yersinia pestis. Many nursery rhymes were based on topical events of the time - Little Jack Horner, Goergie Porgie, HUmpty Dumpty, and I see no reason why "Ring a Ring a Roses" should be any different. John |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: DMcG Date: 15 Jul 06 - 12:13 PM Ok, I'm finally convinced. There ARE good reasons for closing threats apart from abuse, etc. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: DMcG Date: 15 Jul 06 - 12:14 PM "threads", not "threats". Freudian slip there, I think. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: BuckMulligan Date: 15 Jul 06 - 12:33 PM danensis, while there may be links between some "nursery rhymes" and events in history, that's insufficient evidence for linking a particular rhyme to a particular event. Linguists, etymologists, and folklorists generally refuse to accept the link between "plague" or "Black Death" or any other particular event, eipdemiological or otherwise, and the "rind around the rosy" rhyme. It is a "folk etymology" unattested by hard evidence. You can still believe in it if you like, of course, but you're engagin in an act of faith, not science. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 15 Jul 06 - 12:52 PM Ho hum. The rhyme itself appeared in the 19th c. The ring was pubic hair around the 'rosy'. The last two lines are meant to evoke phallic images. (Now isn't that a better explanation? |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: BuckMulligan Date: 15 Jul 06 - 01:52 PM Perhaps, but also unattested. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: Azizi Date: 15 Jul 06 - 02:00 PM Let me take this opportunity to say "Welcome" to all new guests who came here to find out more about Ring Around The Rosey and other subjects. I hope that you will consider joining our online community. Joining Mudcat is free and easy-Just click the word Membership at on the right hand top of any page. One of the benefits to membership is the ability to send private messages [pms] to other members. Best wishes, Azizi |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: BuckMulligan Date: 15 Jul 06 - 10:14 PM How nice to have you managing all this for us, Azizi. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring Around The Rosey's History?? From: Azizi Date: 15 Jul 06 - 10:27 PM If by 'managing' you mean greeting guests, then that buck stops with all of us. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring around the Rosy / Rosey From: Azizi Date: 06 Jul 08 - 10:56 AM I happened upon this thread last night. After reading some of the old American variants of "Ring Around The Rosie", I got to thinking about the possible connection between these rhymes and the version of "Green Sally Up" that is found on Disc 4 of Alan Lomax's Sounds of the South, A Musical Journey from the Georgia Sea Isles to the Mississippi Delta {Atlantic 787496-2; 1993}. There's another version of "Green Sally Up" that is included in the book but not the record of African American Georgia Sea Isles children's game songs, Step It Down by Bessie Jones and Bess Lomax Hawes. The "Step It Down" version of "Green Sally Up" is composed by combining floating lines and verses from "Miss Mary Mack", "I Love Coffee, I Love Tea" and other African American children's rhymes. As such, besides their first lines, the "Step It Down" version has very little in common with the "Sounds Of The South" version of "Green Sally Up". For that reason I think that the "Sounds Of The South" version of "Green Sally Up" is older than the "Step It Down" version. Here are the two versions of these rhymes that I've mentioned: Version #1- [from "Sounds Of The South" CD] Green Sally up. Green Sally down. last one squat got to tear the ground. Ole {Oh?} Miss Lucy dead and gone. Left me here to weep and moan. If you hate it fold your arms. If you love it clap your hands. -snip- Version #2- [from "Step It Down"] Green Sally up, Green Sally down Green Sally bake her possum brown. Asked my mama for fifteen cents to see the elephant jump the fence. He jumped so high, he touched the sky He never got back till the fourth of July. You see that house upon that hill, That's where me and my baby live. Oh the rabbit in the hash come a-stepping in the dash, With his long-tailed coat and his beaver on. ** Btw, the song "Flowers" by the pop singer Moby uses the repeated clip of the Sounds of The South recording of "Green Sally Up". Could it be that Moby named his song "Flowers" because he thinks there's a connection between "Green Sally Up" and "Ring Around The Rosie" [particularly those versions of that game song found in Newell's book and posted in Q's 30 Oct 04 - 11:21 PM comment on this thread]? Maybe... ** I'll share some additional thoughts about the possible connections between some "Ring Around The Rosie" rhymes and the "Sounds of South" version of "Green Sally Up" in my next post to this thread. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring around the Rosy / Rosey From: Azizi Date: 06 Jul 08 - 11:34 AM The first rhyme that I think has some similarities with "Green Sally Up" {what I call version #1, The Sounds of South" CD version} is the rhyme that Dicho posted on this thread in 2002 Ring around a rosey, pocket full o' posies, Light bread, Sweet bread, Squat! Guess who she told me, tralalalala, Mister Red was her lover, tralalalala, If you love him, hug him! If you hate him, stomp! -snip- Source: Lomax and Lomax, 1939 Southern States Collecting Trip, from Wiergate, Texas: (Sec. 13, Merryville, LA and vicinity) -snip- I call this version "Louisiana Ring Around The Rosie" because Lomax and Lomax collected it from Louisiana {LA]. The last two lines of that rhyme remind me of the lines "If you hate it fold your arms/ If you love it clap your hands" in version #1 of "Green Sally Up" as given above. Also, version #1 of "Green Sally Up" and that Louisiana version of "Ring Around The Rosie" both include the word "squat". Actually, as Q has shared with us in this thread, a number of Southern American versions of "Ring Around The Rosie" include the word "squat". Here are reposts of two of these examples from Q's post above: Ring around the rosie, Squat among the posies, Ring around the roses, Pockets full of posies, One, two, three- *squat! -snip- Should this be called "Ring Around The Rosie, Squat} to distinquish it from other Ring Around The Rosie" examples? A Ring, A Ring, A Raney A ring, a ring, a raney Buttermilk and tansy, Flower here and flower there, And all- squat! -snip- I call this version "A Ring, A Ring, A Raney". I know that ring means circle, but what does "raney" mean? Both of these examples are from the same source: W. W. Newell, Games and Songs of American Children, 1883, (1903), Dover reprint. If the African American game song "Green Sally Up" originally had as it's source the British game song "Ring Around The Rosie" ,then it eventually became an entirely different song-as seen by the "Step It Down" version. Of course, any "early" connection between these two game songs is speculation on my part. But I believe that it's worth a thought or two. My thanks to Dicho, Malcolm Douglas, and Q for jump starting my thoughts about a possible connections between "Green Sally Up" and "Ring Around The Rosie". I'm interested in any comments that folks here might have about these speculations. Btw, this page of my website devoted to "Green Sally Up" contains most of these comments and more, including my thanks and a hyperlink to this thread: http://cocojams.com/green_sally_up__song.htm |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring around the Rosy / Rosey From: Azizi Date: 06 Jul 08 - 11:40 AM Clarification: By "Southern American" I meant Southern USA. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring around the Rosy / Rosey From: GUEST,joeeeyyy Date: 19 Jan 09 - 08:19 PM its about the plauge |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring around the Rosy / Rosey From: GUEST,Stephen Tierney UK Date: 05 Oct 09 - 07:37 PM Ring a Ring a Roses is English in origin and has been modified like chinese whispers around the worlds and appears in many different forms. It's important to remember that in Victorian England and back to medieval times death and high mortality was a fact of life for children and so many phrases, poems and tales would have had an unsavoury origin. The rhyme would have travelled to the USA with early settlers and evolved. Many English phrases have unpleasant origins. 'No room to swing a cat'(of 9 tails), 'one for the road'(to Tyburn),'sweet fanny adams' are good examples. Many English rhymes also have less savoury origins too. |
Subject: RE: Origins: Ring around the Rosy / Rosey From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 05 Oct 09 - 08:30 PM This has been gone over several times in the posts above; nothing found before the 19th c. of this English game. |
Share Thread: |
Subject: | Help |
From: | |
Preview Automatic Linebreaks Make a link ("blue clicky") |