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Origins: Oh Where Is King George-Padstow May Song

DigiTrad:
CORNISH MAY CAROL
DRAWING NEARER TO THE MERRY MONTH OF MAY
MAY DAY CAROL
MAY DAY CAROL (2)
MAY MORNING CAROL
MAY MORNING DEW
NEW SWINTON MAY SONG
QUEEN OF THE MAY


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GUEST 25 Jul 04 - 07:20 AM
The Borchester Echo 25 Jul 04 - 08:01 AM
GUEST 25 Jul 04 - 08:21 AM
masato sakurai 25 Jul 04 - 10:11 AM
Little Robyn 25 Jul 04 - 03:49 PM
The Borchester Echo 25 Jul 04 - 03:59 PM
Little Robyn 26 Jul 04 - 04:13 AM
Joe Offer 26 Jul 04 - 01:51 PM
Little Robyn 26 Jul 04 - 04:09 PM
Barbara 26 Jul 04 - 04:47 PM
Little Robyn 27 Jul 04 - 02:35 AM
Kevin Sheils 27 Jul 04 - 04:49 AM
Little Robyn 27 Jul 04 - 08:57 AM
GUEST,red oss teaser 24 Mar 05 - 02:17 PM
BB 24 Mar 05 - 02:50 PM
Little Robyn 24 Mar 05 - 05:31 PM
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Subject: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: GUEST
Date: 25 Jul 04 - 07:20 AM

Years ago I was going through my mothers old tapes of songs and music she had recorded off the radio. I happened across a half recorded folk song. The only bit i can remember to this day was a small section of accapella harmony around the lines:

" Oh where is king George/John? Oh where is he now?
He's off on his Long boat, blah blah blah balh."

I can also remember there being something about a

"Merry morning in May"

It sounded English, and A bit Maddy Prioresque.

As I say would like to know what song it is so i can go and find it.

many many thanks.


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: The Borchester Echo
Date: 25 Jul 04 - 08:01 AM

It's the Padstow May Song, lyrics here. And yes, Steeleye Span have done a version.


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: GUEST
Date: 25 Jul 04 - 08:21 AM

oh mega fast answere as well, thank you mate.


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: masato sakurai
Date: 25 Jul 04 - 10:11 AM

See also CORNISH MAY CAROL in the DT.


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: Little Robyn
Date: 25 Jul 04 - 03:49 PM

That's only a small portion of it in the DT. If you can get a copy of either the Red Ribbon Oss or the Blue Ribbon Oss's set of words, you'll find a whole lot more. The words are normally available on Mayday but I can dig mine out if you like.
The bit about Saint George is the slow piece in the middle, when the Oss dies. At the end someone yells out "Oss Oss" and the crowd replies "Wee Oss", then the Oss comes back to life, jumps up and starts dancing again.
Robyn
Oss Oss!


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: The Borchester Echo
Date: 25 Jul 04 - 03:59 PM

OK,   here's a link for the full version of the Blue 'Oss day, night and farewell songs.


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: Little Robyn
Date: 26 Jul 04 - 04:13 AM

That's more like it!
Oss Oss!
Robyn (Blue Ribbon follower)


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Subject: Padstow Blue ribbon 'Oss May Song
From: Joe Offer
Date: 26 Jul 04 - 01:51 PM

I think I'll copy/paste the lyrics from the link Countess Richard posted, http://home.freeuk.net/bribbonobbyoss/maysong.html
I'd hate to come back three years from now and find that the link is dead. Are all three of these songs traditional?
Can somebody tell a Californian like me about the Padstow Blue Ribbon 'Oss?
-Joe Offer-

Padstow Blue Ribbon 'Oss

May Song


NIGHT SONG
(unaccompanied)

Unite and unite and let us all unite,
   For summer is acome unto day,
And whither we are going we will all unite,
   In the merry morning of May.

I warn you young men everyone
   For summer is acome unto day,
To go to the green-wood and fetch your May home
   In the merry morning of May.

Arise up Mr. ---- and joy you betide
   For summer is acome unto day,
And bright is your bride that lies by your side,
   In the merry morning of May.

Arise up Mrs. ---- and gold be your ring,
   For summer is acome unto day,
And give to us a cup of ale the merrier we shall sing,
   In the merry morning of May.

Arise up Miss ---- all in your gown of green
   For summer is acome unto day,
You are as fine a lady as wait upon the Queen,
   In the merry morning of May.

Now fare you well, and we bid you all good cheer,
   For summer is acome unto day,
We call once more unto your house before another year,
   In the merry morning of May.




DAY SONG

Unite and unite and let us all unite,
   For summer is acome unto day,
And whither we are going we will all unite,
   In the merry morning of May.

Arise up Mr. ---- I know you well afine,
   For summer is acome unto day,
You have a shilling in your purse and I wish it was in mine
   In the merry morning of May.

All out of your beds,
   For summer is acome unto day,
Your chamber shall be strewed with the white rose and the red,
   In the merry morning of May.

Where are the young men that here now should dance,
   For summer is acome unto day,
Some they are in England and some they are in France
   In the merry morning of May.

Where are the maidens that here now should sing
   For summer is acome unto day,
They are in the meadows the flowers gathering,
   In the merry morning of May.

Arise up Mr. ---- with your sword by your side,
   For summer is acome unto day,
Your steed is in the stable awaiting for to ride
   In the merry morning of May.

Arise up Miss ---- and strew all your flowers,
   For summer is acome unto day,
It is but a while ago since we have strewed ours
   In the merry morning of May.

O! where is St. George,
O, where is he O?
He is out in his long-boat all on the salt sea O.
Up flies the kite and down falls the lark O,
Aunt Ursula Birdhood she had an old ewe
And she died in her own Park O.

With the merry ring, adieu the merry spring,
   For summer is acome unto day,
How happy is the little bird that merrily doth sing
   In the merry morning of May.

The young men of Padstow might if they would,
   For summer is acome unto day,
They might have built a ship and gilded her with gold
   In the merry morning of May.

The young women of Padstow might if they would,
   For summer is acome unto day,
They might have made a garland with the white rose and the red,
   In the merry morning of May.

Arise up Mr. ---- and reach me your hand,
   For summer is acome unto day,
And you shall have a lively lass with a thousand pounds in hand
   In the merry morning of May.

Arise up Miss ---- all in your cloak of silk,
   For summer is acome unto day,
And all your body under as white as any milk,
   In the merry morning of May.

O! where is St. George,
O, where is he O?
He is out in his long-boat all on the salt sea O.
Up flies the kite and down falls the lark O,
Aunt Ursula Birdhood she had an old ewe
And she died in her own Park O.

With the merry ring, adieu the merry spring,
   For summer is acome unto day,
How happy is the little bird that merrily doth sing
   In the merry morning of May.

Now fare you well and bid you all good cheer,
   For summer is acome unto day,
We call no more unto your house before another year
   In the merry morning of May.




FAREWELL

Farewell farewell my own true love
Farewell farewell my own true love

How can I bear to leave you
One parting kiss I'll give you
I'll go what 'ere befalls me
I'll go where duty calls me

Farewell farewell my own true love
Farewell farewell my own true love

No more will I behold thee
Nor in my arms enfold thee
With spear and penant glancing
I see the foe advancing

Farewell farewell my own true love
Farewell farewell my own true love

I think of thee with longing
Think though while tears are thronging
That with my last faint sighing
I whispered soft whilst dying

Farewell farewell my own true love
Farewell farewell my own true love

By Anon. Traditional



Also see https://padstowobbyoss.wordpress.com/music/

Reinhard Zierke did a lot of work on the Padstow May Song here:

Here's the Traditional Ballad Index entry on this song:

Padstow May Day Song

DESCRIPTION: Ritual song, for a hobby-horse, in English or Cornish: "Unite and unite, and let us all unite"..."Rise up, Mrs. __ and gold be your ring/And give to us a cup of ale the merrier we shall sing"..."Where are these young men that now here should dance..."
AUTHOR: unknown
EARLIEST DATE: 1860 (Baring Gould MS)
LONG DESCRIPTION: Ritual song, accompanying antics of a hobby-horse; sung in English or Cornish: "Unite and unite, and let us all unite"..."Rise up, Mrs. __ and gold be your ring/And give to us a cup of ale the merrier we shall sing"..."Where are these young men that now here should dance?/Some they are in England and some they are in France"..."Now we fare you well and we bid you all good cheer/We'll call no more unto your house before another year"
KEYWORDS: ritual drink foreignlanguage moniker nonballad animal horse
FOUND IN: Britain(England(South,North))
REFERENCES (5 citations):
Kennedy 86, "Can Cala Me [May Day Song]" (1 text, 1 tune; the notes give a related text and a version of "The Old May Song")
Reeves-Circle 104, "Padstow May Song" (2 texts)
Gundry, pp. 15-17, "May Day Song" (2 texts, 2 tunes)
DT, CORMMAY
ADDITIONAL: Bob Stewart, _Where Is Saint George? Pagan Imagery in English Folksong_, revised edition, Blandford, 1988, pp. 129-131, "The Padstow May Song" (1 text, divided into "Night Song," "Day Song," and "Dirge")

Roud #305
RECORDINGS:
Blue Ribbon Hobby Horse Team, "May Day Song" (on FSB9)
People of Padstow, "Padstow May Day Song" (on Lomax41, LomaxCD1741)

CROSS-REFERENCES:
cf. "May Day Carol" (subject) and references there
ALTERNATE TITLES:
The Old May Song
Cornish May Carol
NOTES [1789 words]: Kennedy's Cornish words are a revivalist translation from the English. - PJS
Some versions of this ask, "O where is Saint George" or equivalent. (The answer being, "He's out in his longboat, all on the salt sea, O.") It's an interesting question: As Stewart notes (p. 62), George was not a natural English saint; Edward the Confessor was long considered England's natural saint -- and in Northumbria, Saint Cuthbert was long revered. Saint Dunstan was also popular. Stewart notes that various authors date George's adoption as England's Patron at diverse times from 1220 to 1415.
It should be noted, however, that the tale of "St. George for Merry England" (Briggs, pp. 474-476) makes George a son of the Earl of Coventry. (An odd claim, given that Coventry was not an ancient earldom.)
The best-known version of the legend of George in medieval England would be that in the so-called "Golden Legend." George is #58 in Ryan's edition (pp. 238-242). It calls him a military tribune from Cappadocia. His exploit with the dragon is said to have taken place by a lake near "Silena in the province of Lybia." The dragon demanded two animals -- sheep or humans -- per day, and George arrived when the king's daughter (a king? Inside the Roman Empire?) was to be sacrificed. George hits the dragon with his lance and orders the girl to bind it with her girdle as a leash. He then converts the whole town. (The legend admits that there are variants in the story.)
Next the "Legend" tells how, in the time of the Emperor DIocletian, a "prefect Dacian" started a persecution. (Diocletian's persecution of Christians was the most severe in Roman history.) George therefore quit the army and gave away his possessions. Dacian orders George tortured, and this makes no impression on him. So Dacian calls in a magician to poison him, but the poison fails. So does persuasion. Dacian's wife tells him it is pointless, whereupon the wife too is tortured -- and George tells her that her blood "will be both your baptism and your crown."
George is then sentenced to be dragged through the streets and beheaded. He is said to have prayed that all who asked for his help receive their requests, and a voice from heaven said it would be so. George is then executed -- and lightning strikes and kills Davian.
Stewart notes that the Catholic church in 1969 effectively de-sanctified George, demoting him to local status only. This is frankly logical, since the records of his works, and even of his existence, are slight. As early as 494 C.E., Pope Gelasius had declared that George was "one of those saints whose names are justly revered by men but whose works are known only to God" (Alexander, p. 253). Chadwick, p. 155, thinks "the" Saint George is George of Lydda, a soldier -- but also thinks that his history has been mixed up with that of the Arian Bishop George of Alexandria (martyred 360), and that much of the tale of Saint George comes from the martyrdom of this heretic! Benet, p.970, declares this to have been disproved, however, and the revised fourth edition of Benet, which shortens the entry on George (p. 393) does not even mention it. Similarly Hole, p. 104, declares that this story "carries within it the seeds of its own refutation." The story apparently was popularized by Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (Hole, p. 106).
OxfordCompanion, p. 412, says that George was martyred at Lydda in Palestine in the fourth century, with the first signs of reverence in the sixth century. It suggests that the story of George and the Dragon is "a reminiscence of Perseus and Theseus" -- a statement that seems very likely, since the story is that the dragon, which was terrorizing a kingdom, demanded the daughter of the king as a meal, and George killed the beast instead (Alexander, p. 253). Eventually this fight came to be associated with Dragon Hill in Berkshire (Alexander, p. 254). Hole, p. 110, confesses that we do not know when he came to be known as a dragon-fighter, but the two had certainly been linked by the twelfth century. It is only with the Golden Legend, however, that we see George actually fighting the dragon, as opposed to defeating it by prayer.
George was not the only victim of Diocletian's persecution -- in Britain, saints Alban, Aaron, and Julius of Caerlon were said to have suffered (Hole, p. 105). Alban's story was particularly interesting, in that he had to make a miraculous river crossing to reach his own place of execution, and his executioner went blind as he struck the fatal stroke (DictSaints, p. 6). But that wasn't enough to make him Britain's patron saint.
OxfordCompanion adds that George was the patron of the Order of the Garter, founded by Edward III in 1348. It has met on April 23, St. George's day, ever since, except for a brief interruption during the reign of Edward VI (Hole, p. 116, who thinks Edward disliked St. George. There were also orders devoted to George in Aragon and Prussia; Hole, p. 115.) Simpson, p. 105, says that Edward III added St. George's name to the English battle cry during the siege of Calais at about the same time. This doubtless helped make him popular in England.
Hole, p. 115, says that he was certainly England's patron saint by the time of the Battle of Agincourt (1415). It is possible that his cult is older; a legend eventually arose that Richard I had called upon St. George during the siege of Acre in the Third Crusade (Saul, p. 93; Hole, p. 114). Hole, p. 115, says that several of his alleged relics were brought to Europe following the First Crusade. And Hole, p. 103, says that George's legend was known in the time of the Venerable Bede. But Saul, p. 171, says that the evidence of Richard introducing George's cult into England is weak.
Simpson, p. 105, notes that George was celebrated by a guild in Norwich by 1389, and they had equipment for an elaborate pageant by 1408. George's feast day was made an official holiday in 1415 (reign of Henry V). Alexander, p. 253, suggests however that he gained his fame at the time of the Third Crusade, since a soldier-saint would appeal to the British crusaders. We know that RIchard III supported his cult in the 1480s (Saul, p. 195).
According to Simpson, p. 106, by 1532 the girl George rescued was reputed to be St. Margaret -- i.e. St. Margaret of Antioch, whose dates are unknown but who was a pagan converted to Christianity who was oppressed by her father and who was swallowed by a dragon which later threw her up (DictSaints, p. 152). This is the only St. Margaret associated with a dragon, although the ties with George are at best tenuous (and Simpson maintains Margaret was fictitious, which makes it interesting that Jean Darc once claimed to have heard her...). The two were both found in the famous Golden Legend (Simpson, p. 107), one of the earliest printed books in English, so that may have cemented the link.
Alternately, Simpson, p. 115 (and preceding pages) mentions a sort of a "hobby dragon" tradition parallel to the hobby horse. She hints that this would cause Saint George the Dragon Slayer to be attracted to hobby horse celebrations.
Stewart, p. 63, is of the opinion that George is based on a pagan deity. This is perhaps an elaboration of the link to Perseus. But on p. 68, Stewart rings in fertility deities such as the Green Man. This is somewhat more logical than the other -- the Greek name "George" means "farmer." So he is associated with agriculture -- but hardly as a fertility deity!
It is curious to note that Greene, p. 227, observes that only one early carol about George survives (it is Greene's #62, p. 124, beginning "Enfors we us with all our might To love Seynt Georg, Owr Lady knyght"). But he is hardly more popular in recent folk song. Could he have been less popular with the folk than the nobility?
Englebert, pp. 28-29, declares, "St. George suffered martyrdom at Lydda in Palestine shortly before the accession of the Emperor Constantine. These words contain all we certainly know of him whom the Greeks call 'the great martyr....'" He supposedly was celebrated in the east by the fifth century, and his cult reach France by the sixth. Oxford was celebrating him in 1222.
Benet, p. 970, calls George a soldier in Diocletian's army, killed in 304. The revised edition eliminates this statement. The explanation of George and the Dragon also changes; the first edition, pp. 970-971, links it to various tales of Christian heroes slaying dragons, including the account in the Revelation to John of the Dragon (Greek drakon) who contests with God in chapter 12 and after, and who is cast out of heaven by Michael in 12:7. The revised edition, while mentioning this, also brings in (Perseus and) Andromeda.
Finally, both editions of Benet mention that the Red Cross Knight in Spenser's Fairie Queene is Saint George.
Adding all this up, I wonder if the reference in this song is not to Saint George the (mostly fictional) saint but to Saint George's Banner, one of the naval flags. This would explain why Saint George was "out in his longboat." Although Stewart has an explanation for that, too -- or, rather, two of them. On p. 66, he thinks Saint George is to be identified with the brother in the bottomless boat of "Edward" [Child 13]. On p. 67, he suggests that the bottomless boat that we have no actual reason to believe Saint George is in is in fact a sacrifice to the mother deep. I leave it to you to decide how to apply Occam's Razor to that.... Somewhat more likely is Kennedy's suggestion that it is associated with St. George's Well near Padstow.
Greene, pp. 9-10, would have us believe that the song must go back at least to the time of the Battle of Agincourt in 1415, because of the lines, "Where are the French dogs that made so great a boast, O, They shall eat the grey goose feather, And we will eat the roast, O." The goose feathers do sound like clothyard arrows, of course -- but as far as beating the French goes, the Napoleonic Wars are much more recent.
Alexander, p. 134, has what strikes me as the most likely explanation of all. "There can be little doubt that the 'Obby 'Oss goes back to some long-forgotten pagan ritual but over the years the locals grew frustrated at not knowing the reason for their great day and several explanations evolved. The most popular is that a French warship attempted to raid Padstow in the fourteenth century when most of the men of the town were away at the siege of Calais [i.e. 1346-1347]. Some quick-thinking person rushed a hobby horse to the harbour, where the French thought it was the Devil come to protect the Cornish and turned about with all speed."
With that sort of hypothesis floating around, is it any wonder that the song got a bit strange too? - RBW
Bibliography
  • Alexander: Marc Alexander, A Companion to the Folklore, Myths & Customs of Britain, Sutton Publishing, 2002
  • Benet: William Rose Benet, editor, The Reader's Encyclopdedia, first edition, 1948 (I use the four-volume Crowell edition but usually check it against the single volume fourth edition edited by Bruce Murphy and published 1996 by Harper-Collins)
  • Briggs: Katherine Briggs, A Dictionary of British Folk-Tales in the English Language, Part A: Folk Narratives, 1970 (I use the 1971 Routledge paperback that combines volumes A.1 and A.2)
  • Chadwick: Henry Chadwick, The Early Church (being volume I of The Pelican History of the Church), Pelican, 1967
  • DictSaints: Revd. Philip D. Noble, editor, The Watkins Dictionary of Saints, Watkins Publishing, 2007
  • Englebert: Omar Englebert, The Lives of the Saints, translated by Christopher and Anne Fremantle, Penguin, 1995
  • Greene: Richard Greene, editor, A Selection of English Carols, Clarendon Medieval and Tudor Series, Oxford/Clarendon Press, 1962
  • Hole: Christina Hole, English Folk Heroes: From King Arthur to Thomas a Becket, 1948? (I use the 1992? Dorset Press reprint)
  • OxfordCompanion: John Cannon, editor, The Oxford Companion to British History, Oxford, 1997
  • Ryan: Jacobus de Voragine, The Golden Legend: Readings on the Saints, translated by William Granger Ryan, Volume I, Princeton University Press, 1993 (I use the 1995 Princeton paperback)
  • Saul: Nigel Saul, The Three Richards: Richard I, Richard II and Richard III, Hambledon & London, 2005
  • Simpson: Jacqueline Simpson, British Dragons, 1980; second edition with new introduction, Wordsworth/Folklore Society, 2000
  • Stewart: Bob Stewart, Where Is Saint George? Pagan Imagery in English Folksong, revised edition, Blandford, 1988
Last updated in version 4.5
File: K086

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The Ballad Index Copyright 2019 by Robert B. Waltz and David G. Engle.




And the Digital Tradition lyrics:

CORNISH MAY CAROL (DT Lyrics)

Oss, Oss, Wee Oss

Unite and unite and let us all unite
For summer is a-come unto day
And wither we are going, we will all unite
In the merry morning of May

With a merry ring and now the joyful spring
O give us a cup of ale and the merrier we will sing

The young men of Padstow, they might if they would
They might have built a ship and gilded it all in gold

The young women of Padstow, they might if they would
They might have built a garland of the white rose and the red

Where are those young men that now here should dance?
For some they are in England and some they are in France

O where is St. George?
O where is he o ?
He's out in his longboat
All on the salt sea-o
Up flies the kite
Down falls the lark-o
And Ursula Birdhood she had an old ewe
And she died in her own park-o

With a merry ring and now the joyful spring
So happy are those little birds and the merrier we will sing

from the May celebration at Padstow, Cornwall
@ritual @Cornish
filename[ CORNMAY
SOF


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: Little Robyn
Date: 26 Jul 04 - 04:09 PM

The Farewell song came back from WW1 with the young men and it sounds like a Victorian Parlour Ballad. The rest goes back into the mists of antiquity and is reputed to be a pre-christian death and resurrection/fertility rite.
These festivals used to be held all over Britain (and Europe) but gradually died out with the growth of "modern civilisation" and the help of two world wars.
Padstow's Mayday festivities have never had a break, even when the men were away at war, and today they're bigger than ever, with ex-pats and tourists coming from miles around - some even from overseas.
The Blue Oss was the Temperance Oss and there's also a Red Oss which used to be the boozy faction but they're much the same these days although there is a (mock) rivalry betwee the two. There are also children's osses and these are the first ones out on Mayday.
Like many of these festivals, Padstow's Mayday celebrations exist on several levels - first, it's a great excuse for a booze-up and it brings in the tourists, but it includes sympathetic magic folk-lore, with the oss (a stallion) chasing the girls and there's a rain charm there too. There's also a lot of obscure stuff that can be seen in the words of the songs, like who was Aunt Ursula Birdhood with the old ewe? Is this sexual imagery or just an old lady?
Both the Night song and the Day song have the same tune, except when you get to the Saint George bit - that is a small part of another song that seems to have been abandoned during the last century or so.
The tunes are not particularly inspiring until you find yourself in the middle of that crowd, when you spend the whole day following the oss around the streets and then late at night everyone starts singing 'Farewell, farewell, my own true love' and all the old men are in tears and everyone is exhausted!
You just have to be there!
Oss Oss!
Robyn


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: Barbara
Date: 26 Jul 04 - 04:47 PM

Robyn and all, I've got some questions about the singing of this. I find it great fun to sing this song, but in our informal group of pub singers here in Portland, Oregon there is some controversy about what, if anything is the chorus.
In this part of the world, the first stanza ("Unite and unite and let us all unite...") often gets sung as a chorus. Others sings the "Oh where is [King, not Saint] George, oh where is he oh...." as the chorus. Are either of them that?
Also, as far as I can tell from the pictures, the "oss" is a great shiny black cylinder worn over someone's body and head, and it has -- something -- a horse's head? a bunch of ribbons? some ornament? on top of it and toward the front. Is that right? Does it have a tail? Does it have more than one person inside? How on earth could someone fall down in that and manage to get up again?
Could you tell us a bit more about the rituals involved? Singing, drinking, following the 'oss' through town, I've got, but where does the whole thing come from? Did it ever actually look like a hobby horse?
Blessings,
Barbara


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: Little Robyn
Date: 27 Jul 04 - 02:35 AM

No chorus - the 2nd and 4th lines are a refrain and the whole thing is repeated over and over and over throughout the day and night.
The Oss used to be made out of sailcloth painted with pitch or tar sort of stuff - Padstow used to be a ship-building community - so it used to be very heavy, but these days the oss is made with much lighter, more modern stuff.
Imagine a large round table, about 6 foot across, throw a black table-cloth over it and that's the basic oss shape. Put a hole in the middle - slightly off centre, and put your head through the hole and lift it up with your shoulders. Then get a black witches hat thing that's so big it covers your whole face. That's the mask, painted black with red and white markings, big eyes, pointy ears, sharp teeth and, for the Blue Oss only, white whiskers. There are blue or red ribbons tied to the top - the pointy bit of the mask, depending on which oss you have. The main body of the oss has a long sort of broom handle thing poking out the front, with a stylised head attached at the end, with vicious 'snappers' in the mouth, and at the opposite side there is a whispy 'tail'. Only one person at a time can wear the oss but once in you can chase the girls and 'catch' them under your skirt. Very sexy! The oldest ones used to be very heavy but modern osses are much more manoeuvrable. The dancer doesn't quite fall down, usually just crouches in the most comfortable way he possibly can. He has to jump up again shortly after. And it's always a man - the girls can dance as 'teaser' but mustn't dance the oss - he is a stallion, after all!
The earliest picture of an oss isn't too different from today's ones but no-one knows for sure what the first one was like - perhaps a horse skin draped over the dancer, perhaps more like the Mari-lwyd. No, it's not like a morris horse and I don't think it ever was like that.
Oss Oss
Robyn


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: Kevin Sheils
Date: 27 Jul 04 - 04:49 AM

There is even a theory I've heard that the 'Oss's head is actually a stylised sheeps head, hence the reference to the old ewe in the slow bit of the song.

But take anything with a pinch of salt.


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: Little Robyn
Date: 27 Jul 04 - 08:57 AM

The pointed mask has OB painted on it, about halfway up and some people will tell you that stands for O B (Obby) oss.
However, there is a family of Brentons in Padstow, who had seafaring sons 150 - 200 years ago and it's possible that Octavious Brenton brought it back from his travels. It actually looks similar to masks used in places like Africa or some Pacific islands, but nobody knows for sure. For awhile there was a similar mask used by the 'teaser' but that didn't have a high pointy top.
The Minehead horse is similar but not as streamlined as the modern Padstow oss, more like the ones in the photos dated around 1900.
Oss Oss!
Robyn


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: GUEST,red oss teaser
Date: 24 Mar 05 - 02:17 PM

the O B stands for old bugger!!!This is what weve always known it as.The rim of the oss is wooden,then you have straps going across to keep the rim tight.We still use a form of sailcloth to cover the whole thing,which still weighs about 40-50lbs.And you know it after youve danced in it for about ten minutes.The teaser mask was only worn by the blue oss, the red oss never used one,but my grandad did dress as a women and also a mannequin once.


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: BB
Date: 24 Mar 05 - 02:50 PM

Not sure what you mean by 'the Minehead horse is similar but not as streamlined as the modern Padstow oss', Robyn.

The Minehead horse is only similar in that it is borne on the shoulders of the carrier, and the carrier wears a mask. Otherwise, it's boat-shaped, the top is covered in 'tatters', and the skirt is made of sackcloth with painted circles all over it.

I was always told that the OB on the Padstow mask stood for Octavius Bate.

Barbara


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: Little Robyn
Date: 24 Mar 05 - 05:31 PM

But compared with a Morris horse, which looks somewhat like a merry-go-round horse, carried at the waist of the 'rider', with little legs attached so that the rider seems to be sitting on the back of a more realistic horse, both the Padstow and Minehead horses (used to) have a flowing skirt that almost reaches the ground. The 'rider' isn't much like a real person - just a pointy head with grotesque features. And the horse head isn't realistic either - in fact, if you weren't told it was a horse, you would never guess.
I understand the Minehead horse is still the old shape but if you compare photos of the Oss in the early 1900s with today's Oss - well, which one would you rather go under?
Both the Bates and Brentons had sea-going sons for many years (as did the Trescowthicks and Henwoods - my link with Padstow) but you could always ask Barry Kinsmen - he might know! Or Donald Rawe.
'Oss Oss'
Keep 'er gain' Teaser and Barbara,
Robyn in New Zealand


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: GUEST,Grace
Date: 17 Apr 05 - 09:29 AM

I live just outside of padstow and was born and raised in Padstow. i attend May Day (obby oss Day) every year and i can comfirm that those lyrics are the May Day lyric's,although i must tell you that The red and blue oss both have the same lyrics.


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: GUEST,Atheling
Date: 29 Aug 08 - 10:40 AM

I'm not Cornish and perhaps am not qualified to comment but I have attended the festival several times and followed the night song too,although I have had to leave the night singing after an hour & a half or so to make my way back the 4 or 5 miles to my lodgings to get some sleep.

In all the times I have gone none of the verses beginning 'Arise Mr... (or Mrs or Miss) have been sung during the day despite some of the them being shown above as part of the day song. However most, if not all are sung in the night song with the other verses shown there, which makes sense if you think about it.

Whether they were once part of the day song but have been moved in recent years because they belong with the night song I don't know.

I can confirm just how moving the 'Farewell' is although its not easy to hear it clearly owing to the vast crowds of people congregating in the adjacent areas.

The Steeleye Span lyrics refer to King George. I would guess that the St.George version is more authentic and is certainly what is sung in Padstow, but when the Obby Oss festival was revived it would have been in Georgian times so perhaps it has changed with the years.

Ursula Birdhood is supposed to be an old lady who rallied the womenfolk of Padstow to drive off French Raiders whilst the menfolk were away, presumably with her old ewe at her side, but the authenticity of this is doubtful.

The festivals are not unbroken, there were certainly times in previous centuries when it was banned and therefore it cannot be certain that the current tradition reflects the ancient ceremonies but the Old Oss seems to be much the same as it was in the nineteenth century.

Many will tell you that the rivalry between the two Osses is akin the football rivalries in its vehemence, but don't believe it. I have seen Teasers in one colour teasing the Oss of the other and that certainly wouldn't be allowed if the two were such bitter rivals.

I would advise anyone interested in folklore or even just a good time to go to Padstow on Mayday, but be prepared to walk in from elsewhere because although the roads are not closed only a fool would drive into town on Mayday. A few years back a Mercedes drove into the town square 15 minutes before the two osses were due to meet at the maypole,only to be confronted with a mass of people in the streets and no way out due to the one way system. The police got him clear but no before a few cries of'F... off back to London' were directed at the poor man and his family.

Not all the locals welcome people from outside. There is a feeling amongst some that the vast crowds ruin things for the locals, but most are welcoming and certainly the shopkeepers, pub landlords and guest house owners never have it so good.

The celebrations and singing carry on in the pubs of the town way after the Old Oss has retired to its stable and round off the day perfectly, but I wouldn't wan't the job of cleaning up the next day.

I hope to have a chance to go again in the next few years.

Oss Oss... Wee Oss


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Subject: Lyr Add: SOLDIER'S FAREWELL
From: Jim Dixon
Date: 01 Apr 09 - 09:41 AM

Here's a slightly different version of the FAREWELL song that Joe posted above:

From The Boylston Club Collection of German and English Four Part Songs (Boston: Oliver Ditson & Co., 1875):

(That book also has musical notation.)


SOLDIER'S FAREWELL
Words, translated from the German by L. C. Elson. Music, Johanna Kinkel.

1. How can I bear to leave thee?
One parting kiss I give thee;
And then whate'er befalls me,
I go where honor calls me.

CHORUS: Farewell, farewell, my own true love.
Farewell, farewell, my own true love.

2. Ne'er more may I behold thee,
Or to this heart enfold thee;
With spear and pennon glancing,
I see the foe advancing. CHORUS

3. I think of thee with longing.
Think thou, when tears are thronging,
That with my last faint sighing,
I'll whisper soft, while dying, CHORUS


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: breezy
Date: 01 Apr 09 - 01:29 PM

Then there's the 2nd Day of May in Padstow too

And as this year it will be a Saturday ,and, if the weather is fine, well it could be a long one.

could last until Monday late!!

best get some training in


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: Little Robyn
Date: 30 Apr 09 - 06:12 AM

It's nearly time - the day before Mayday has dawned.
There'll be singing tonight and then in the merry morning of May it'll happen all over again.
OSS OSS
WEE OSS!
Robyn in NZ


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: Barbara
Date: 01 Feb 10 - 12:09 AM

Refresh for the 'obby 'oss builders.
Blessings,
Barbara


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: GUEST,leeneia
Date: 01 Feb 10 - 02:28 AM

The version upthread has:

I warn you young men everyone
   For summer is acome unto day,
To go to the green-wood and fetch your May home
   In the merry morning of May.

'Fetch your May home' should be 'Fetch your may." 'May' is an old form of 'maiden.'

That is, unless May was a wildly popular given name at the time, which seems unlikely.


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: Silas
Date: 01 Feb 10 - 03:03 AM

No one going to mention the Colts then....?


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: GUEST,S O'P (Astray)
Date: 01 Feb 10 - 04:02 AM

fetch your May home

Not May / Hawthorn Blossom? Which seems to be at the heart of much Maylore on account of a certain - er - Olfactory Simulacra, if Robert Graves is to be believed anyway, though it is rather potent in that respect...


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: GUEST,FillyW
Date: 10 Feb 12 - 01:34 PM

'Summer is acome unto Day' is clearly a corruption of 'Summer is y-comen today' (y-comen being an old form of 'has come').

I reckon 'Aunt Ursula Birdhood' is really something to do with Saint Ursula - a martyred Westcountry Romano-Celtic virgin. She was a princess & daughter of King Dionotus. (Could he be one & the same as King Doniert, I wonder?)

Reference to 'an old ewe' in a song about the return of Spring sounds, to me, like a garbled version of something about 'old anew'.

Any Cornish or Middle-English speakers have any ideas about meanings of the lyrics?


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: Paul Burke
Date: 10 Feb 12 - 05:35 PM

"'Fetch your May home"

may blossom. That's when summer is icomen in, and you can cast clouts.


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: GUEST,Ebor_Fiddler (Well-known pedant)
Date: 11 Feb 12 - 05:35 PM

Or "A-come in today"?


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: GUEST
Date: 14 Oct 14 - 10:34 PM

A song that says: The merry month of May       and "where is King George?"


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: GUEST
Date: 23 Mar 18 - 03:29 PM

The World Famous Poxy Boggards and The Merry Wives of Windsor have just joined forces to record a version that will be sung live this Spring (and for years to come, I hope) at the Original Renaissance Pleasure Faire in beautiful Southern California, in the good ol' U.S. of A. Our Faire turns 56-years old this year (2018). Most of the folks in those two groups came of age in the digital age and are indebted to this site for so much. Please, seek out our folk music both original and ancient and accept our unconditional thanks for being a member of the folk tradition both digital and ancient.


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: Richard Mellish
Date: 23 Mar 18 - 05:37 PM

I've only been the once, in 1970, but I half remember the day song, and it included two verses not shown above.

A quick Google found a version of one of them here but I remember it as (approximately)
Where are the young men that here today should dance
For summer is a-come unto day.
Some they are in England and some they are in France
In the merry morning of May.

And I remember the other (also approximately) as
Where are the young maids that here today should sing
For summer is a-come unto day.
They're out all in the meadow, the flowers a-gathering
In the merry morning of May.

Someone here should be able to provide accurate versions as currently sung.


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: GUEST,Malcolm Martyn
Date: 21 Apr 18 - 02:36 AM

Just noticed the reference to the letters on the hat, O B to me the hat represents the rider of the horse and the horse itself already has a head and tail in the form of snappers. This fellow on the horse is old Hob himself (the Devil) although along with many words at the time the H has been dropped.. he has been nicknamed old Bonaparte on occasion too although its origins are a mystery really. I suppose his place in this is the bringer of bad weather and bad winds, by the End of mayday he has been killed off for another year heralding the coming of summer good fortune and bountiful harvest with a hint of the Hob that will rise again in Autumn and winter ready to be killed off again the next year.


I am from Padstow and the Ursula mentioned in the St George part of the song was my Great great great great great great great great grandmother she was born in 1629 real name Ursula Butson.


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: GUEST
Date: 21 Apr 18 - 02:47 AM

summer is a come on to day


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh where is king george/john?
From: Tradsinger
Date: 23 Apr 18 - 01:00 PM

Interesting to see a US perspective on the song. We tend not to sing the song over here in the UK (although I have heard it occasionally in a folk club) as many consider it proper to leave it to the good folks of Padstow to sing it,

Incidentally, many years ago, talking to Charlie Bate, he told me 2 variations: one was that on the phrase 'and let us all unite', he would sing G G G F# G rather that the usual G G G F# E. I think everyone sings the latter these days. He also sang the short verse 'All out of your beds...' and said that this often caused a disruption of rhythm when the red and blue teams got together. Does anyone have any views on this?

Tradsinger


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh Where Is King George-Padstow May Song
From: Mrrzy
Date: 03 Oct 23 - 04:34 PM

Just discovered this song, thanks (duh) to the Poxy Boggards, who did a version of this with the Merry Wives of Windsor, here [with the rest of the album. Many crude songs. I recommend "safeword" highly... but be warned].

Back to Padsrow: Wondering about the lines after King George in his longboat... Is the part where someone died in her own park-O, Aunt Ursula or her old ewe, pronounced yow, named to fit the occasion, like Mrs. Johnson, all in your gown of green? Or a reference? To whom?

Thanks!


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh Where Is King George-Padstow May Song
From: Mrrzy
Date: 03 Oct 23 - 04:36 PM

P.S. There were several threads, with some below the line. This seemed the best to refresh with that question I didn't see answered in the ones I checked...


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh Where Is King George-Padstow May Song
From: Mrrzy
Date: 03 Oct 23 - 04:34 PM

Just discovered this song, thanks (duh) to the Poxy Boggards, who did a version of this with the Merry Wives of Windsor, here [with the rest of the album. Many crude songs. I recommend "safeword" highly... but be warned].

Back to Padsrow: Wondering about the lines after King George in his longboat... Is the part where someone died in her own park-O, Aunt Ursula or her old ewe, pronounced yow, named to fit the occasion, like Mrs. Johnson, all in your gown of green? Or a reference? To whom?

Thanks!


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Subject: RE: Origins: Oh Where Is King George-Padstow May Song
From: Mrrzy
Date: 03 Oct 23 - 04:36 PM

P.S. There were several threads, with some below the line. This seemed the best to refresh with that question I didn't see answered in the ones I checked...


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