Subject: RE: Origin: Barges (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,Katryna Date: 14 May 06 - 04:10 PM We sang this song at Camp Sealth in Washington. I'm not sure the exact year I heard it but must have been long before 1970 maybe even around 1965 or earlier. I remember the girl was stuck by her window and wrote the song, after a few years of singing just the first two verses, one of the counselors said she had learned the 3rd verse and taught it to use. |
Subject: RE: Origin: Barges (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,Joanne Smith Date: 13 Jul 06 - 05:51 PM Hey, We sung this song with my Brownies today - we heard it was written by a little girl who was about 12 and lived in Holland, she was confined to a wheelchair and couldnt get outside. It seems plausible to me as I know Holland pretty much relied on barge trade. We heard she's still alive and an adult now (but then, telling the Brownies she was dead wouldnt have been a good idea!) But the last verse we sung had a different ending, it went: Out of my window looking through the night I can see the barges' flickering light Silently flows the river to the sea I hope one day they'll take me Still a poignant song whatever way it's sung, I do love it |
Subject: RE: Origin: Barges (Girl Scout song) From: Joe Offer Date: 13 Jul 06 - 07:36 PM I like that ending, Joanne. I wonder if we'll ever find the true origin of this song. Maybe it doesn't matter - the legends that have built up and the various versions of the song, are a wonderful (and recent) demonstration of the Folk Process. -Joe- |
Subject: RE: Origin: Barges (Girl Scout song) From: AllisonA(Animaterra) Date: 14 Jul 06 - 07:45 AM Here's a lasat verse I learned from Steve Schuch : One of these days and it will not be long You will look for me and I'll be gone Face to the wind far out upon the sea Where the whales and dolphins sing to me |
Subject: RE: Origin: Barges (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,Toni Trujillo (New Mexico) Date: 10 Aug 06 - 05:23 PM Hi Everyone, In New Mexico (Just Northwest of Texas and below Colorado) we were told that a little girl wrote this song while she was in the hospital overlooking the Missippi River. She suffered from luekemia and spend many hours looking out to the river watching the barges pass by. The last verse was emphasized as we were told she knew she would soon be gone. This song has always brought tears to my eyes. As I have read all the comments it's been great to see how the song has evolved over the years -- as a girl scout in the late 50's/early 60's then a GS Leader in the 80's and 90's with my own daughters-- This is the version we sang in and out of camp-- Verse One: Out of my window lookin in the night I can see the barges' flickering light. Silently flows the river to sea, and the barges too go silently. Chorus: Barges, I would like to go with you, I would like to sail the ocean blue. Barges, have you treasures in your hold? Do you fight with priates brave and bold? Verse Two: Out of my window lookin in the night, I can see the barges' flickering light. Starboard shines green and port is glowing red, in the night they signal far ahead. Chorus: Barges, I would like to go with you, I would like to sail the ocean blue. Barges, have you treasures in your hold? Do you fight with priates brave and bold? Verse Three: Out of my window looking in the night I can see the barges' flickering light. Now is the time when I will soon be gone, And I'll sail with barges on and on. Chorus: Barges, I would like to go with you, I would like to sail the ocean blue. Barges, have you treasures in your hold? Do you fight with priates brave and bold? |
Subject: RE: Origin: Barges (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,"Nana" (my camp name) Washington State Date: 30 Aug 06 - 01:02 AM I'm currently a Girl Scout Leader of 2 troops, Brownines & Juniors in one, and Cadettes & Seniors in the other. All my "girls" know and love this song. It brings tears to many of our eyes too. We had also heard the story of the sick girl, in a wheelchair that watched the barges sailing up and down the river thru her window. We were not told where she was or which river. It was sad enough to know she was ill and wheelchair bound. I remember singing it in Scouts in the early '60s & taught it to my adult daughters when they were in Scouts as I have now taught their 2 little sisters 14 & 11. We didn't sing a 3rd verse either, but I sure am enjoying picking up more verses for the more somber version. (We have several verses of the "camp" type ones that the girls like too. Funny how I also have the girls do the "original" version first like someone else mentioned. It's a "respect thing" for me.) I'll keep checking you guys out to see if someone, somewhere comes up with the real thing. (But, I must admit, I'd be sad if it wasn't something like the sick child story.) Either way, it's a beautiful, melancholy song. Sondra aka Nana |
Subject: RE: Origin of: BARGES (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,....... Date: 10 Nov 06 - 11:02 PM i humm the 3rd verse |
Subject: RE: Origin of: BARGES (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,child of the 60's Date: 11 Jan 07 - 03:35 AM I ran across this thread TOTALLY by accident. I won't bore you with details, but it started a few minutes ago when I saw the word "linger," which made me think of the song "Linger." We sang both Linger and Barges at Camp Washashe (Girl Scout camp) in Bartlesville, Oklahoma in the mid-60's to early 70's. I loved both of those songs (what is it about the melancholy ones that gets to me, I wonder?) Anyway, the reason I felt moved to comment is that the version that we sang was a slight variation that I haven't seen here. Instead of "Do you fight with pirates brave and bold," we sang, "Have you fought with pirates brave and bold?" I'm sure it's just because it's the version I learned, but I like that better. |
Subject: RE: Origin of: BARGES (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,Haley Date: 29 Jan 07 - 11:01 PM im a girl guide in canada and um why did someone ask if we still sing this song? of course we do! ha but my favorite song is linger. i just had a camp this weekend and my enrollments on wednsday and were singing this song. all i know is a girl was writing it and she died and never finished that verse so we hum it. |
Subject: RE: Origin of: BARGES (Girl Scout song) From: Joe Offer Date: 30 Jan 07 - 01:15 AM Is this (click) the "Linger" they're referring to? -Joe- |
Subject: RE: Origin of: BARGES (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,Seiri Omaar Date: 30 Jan 07 - 11:27 PM The parody I learned: CH: Leaders, I would like to go with you I would like to sleep in a trailer too. Leaders, are there cookies in your home To give to Girl Guides brave and bold. Out of my tent flap looking in the night I can see the leaders having a fight. Softly flies a pillow through the air And oops there goes some underwear. Out of my tent flap looking in the night I can see the leaders walking by... Gah, I can't remember the rest but there was a reference to makeup in that last verse... |
Subject: RE: Origin of: BARGES (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST Date: 02 Feb 07 - 09:53 AM I'm glad to find this resource, which confirms my memory of at least the first two verses of the song. Since we're gathering the folklore around the song, I'll just add my own memories of singing it at local campouts, as well as at Camp Miter Peak, in West Texas, in the late 1960s: "Barges" was often the last song we'd sing at night, beginning it as we made our way from the campfire to our tents. (Picture all the flashlights moving from the fire through the darkness to the tents -- about as close to "flowing down the river to the sea" that desert-dwelling Scouts would get!) I think the counselors and maybe oldest girls would put out the fire while the younger ones made our way to the tents. I vaguely remember humming the third verse as we stood outside the tents, then we'd sing the first two lines of the verse as a sort of "tag." Then everyone moved inside to get ready to bed down. It wasn't a melancholy song to us, but a peaceful one. After the counselors called for "lights out" and everyone was (supposedly) all quiet, the tentful of oldest girls would begin this parody, joined by the other campers after the second line: COUNSELORS (a parody) Out of my tent flap, looking in the night, I can see the couns'lors having a fight. Silently go the campers to their beds, But the couns'lors do go noisily. Couns'lors, I would like to go with you! I would like to stay up very late too! Couns'lors, have you candy in your tent? Do you fight with couns'lors old and bent? (Repeat verse and chorus) Out of my tent flap, looking in the night, I can see the couns'lors having a fight. After a good laugh, the counselors would bid us good night and do whatever it is that counselors do while campers sleep peacefully -- preparing for the next day's activities, most likely. I really don't remember hearing a story attached to the song, but we certainly used our imaginations, picturing ourselves living by a river and seeing the barges flowing past with green and red lights. (I'll try to remember the "true" origins from Joe Offer and pass them along!) |
Subject: RE: Origin of: BARGES (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,occasionalpiece Date: 11 Apr 07 - 01:20 AM I'm trying to teach this to my newest group of campers, but would love to have the melody written down. Anyone have sheet music, or know where to find it on the web? |
Subject: RE: Origin of: BARGES (Girl Scout song) From: Joe Offer Date: 11 Apr 07 - 02:32 AM Hello, Occasionalpiece - we have the tune at Mudcat MIDIs, http://www.mudcat.org/midi/midifiles/barges.mid. If you have the right software, you can make sheet music from a MIDI file. If not, you can find it in most any Girl Scout songbook. If you still have trouble, e-mail me. -Joe Offer- joe@mudcat.org |
Subject: RE: Origin of: BARGES (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,Teh Pippin Date: 09 Jun 07 - 05:11 PM I've sung this song for Years at Scout Camp in Illinois. The version I heard was that this song was written by a very ill little girl as she lay in the hospital. When she died, the lyrics were discovered. The hospital staff, however, was baffled, as the only window in the girls room faced nothing but a brick wall... Beautiful. |
Subject: RE: Origin of: BARGES (Girl Scout song) From: Joe Offer Date: 09 Jun 07 - 05:55 PM OK, so what we have so far is this:
The bottom line is this: We still haven't found where this song came from, and it has been almost nine years since this thread began. Bah! Humbug! Foiled again!!!! -Joe Offer- |
Subject: RE: Origin of: BARGES (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,Alexandra Date: 27 Jun 07 - 06:23 PM I go to a camp with children with all forms of Juvinile Arthritis (I have Dermatomyositis) and we sang it on the last night. We could all relate to it. What they told us was that it was written by an extremely sick little girl that could not go out or be a child. She wrote that song one night as she was looking out her window at all the barges. When she died her family passed it on through different charities and eventually the Girl Scouts. I have heared many other "histories" of it but I believe this one to be true, because the camp director, had a name for the little girl who wrote it, if I remember corectly. Next year I will be sure to write it down! Here is a link: http://www.nightheron.com/trees_activityguidebarges.html (By the way, I am refering to the version with the barges, not the counselor/scout/leaders etc) |
Subject: RE: Origin of: BARGES (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,Sarah Date: 10 Jul 07 - 06:32 PM I used to loooooooove the "Counselors" song as a scout :) It's been a while, so here is all I can remember: Out my tent flap looking out into the night I can see my counselors having a fight Curlers in their hair and make-up everywhere I can see my counselors' underwear Counselors, I would like to fight with you I would like to throw a pillow or two Counselors have you tresures in your purse? Have you fought brave battles with the nurse? |
Subject: RE: Origin of: BARGES (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,Hannah Date: 12 Jul 07 - 03:14 PM The camp I often attend has the counselors singing the song, two verses, (I can't remember if they hum)... I am looking for a good recording with words in, has anyone seen one? |
Subject: RE: Origin of: BARGES (Girl Scout song) From: Linda Mattson Date: 16 Jul 07 - 03:22 AM Nostalgia! I sang this song at Girl Scout Camp around the early to mid-60's in Wyoming, learned from my favorite counsellor "Piney." We had only the two verses mentioned above, in two part harmony. As to the origin, I most enjoyed the axe murderer story from Kamp Kwagmire, but I imagine the story about a camp counselor writng the song is probably correct. I don't recall hearing the little dying girl story, so the song didn't seem so sad to me, only a wistful campfire song. Out in the wilds of Wyoming, I had never seen barges, and didn't understand the line about starboard and port! Another song I remember - the round "Dip Dip and Swing" about canoe paddles. We didn't have a river to canoe in, only a stream to splash in, and rocks and sagebrush. -Linda |
Subject: RE: Origin of: BARGES (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,Glen Arden Girl Date: 21 Jul 07 - 02:03 AM My comments won't help you find the origin of the song, but they are a wonderful story of how this song has touched my family's life. My sister and I learned this song our first year at Camp Glen Arden in North Carolina in the late 70's. As soon as our parents picked us up at the airport we sang this song for them both. It was so beautiful! (Incidently, reading the posted verses above makes me giggle to think how off we were on our own version). Through the years, my sister and I sang the song at family events and special occasions, or whenever my parents just wanted us to stop fighting and harmonize. This past March, my father was hospitalized in the end stages of a valliant battle with lung and brain cancer. My sister and I were at his bedside in his final moments, and as we waited for my mom to arrive, we sang "Barges" for him one last time. It was the most beautiful moment in my life. We didn't even have to think about it..we just started singing together as if on cue. My own child will attend Glen Arden this summer, and my mother found this site for me tonight - to remind me to continue the tradition of the song. "Barges"..no matter where it originated, no matter who the composer or writer - is indelible to our family. |
Subject: RE: Origin of: BARGES (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,Guest: Timbertall Girl Date: 08 Aug 07 - 11:56 PM I looked and looked for Barges. I can't recall where I finally found it, but it wasn't in any girl scout songbook. It is in the 1968 Chansons etc, but no note as to where it is from. when I found it, it was in Russian and it's origin was noted as Russian. The translation was just like I had learned it which is pretty much what everyone else has. One difference is in the chorus of the 2nd verse: Bargemen, I should like to be with you I should like to see the ocean, too Bargemen, though the river you may roam On the river, always, you're at home. & to the person who remembers My Paddles Keen and Bright-It is called the Canoe Round. It can be found in the recreation books-the little pocket sized books made especially for camp song leaders to carry. It is in more than one of these. 4 parts. My Paddles keen and bright, flashing like silver swift as the wild goose flies dip, dip and swing Dip, dip and swing her back, flashing like silver follow the wild goose flight dip, dip and swing. |
Subject: RE: Origin of: BARGES (Girl Scout song) From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 09 Aug 07 - 12:43 AM Interesting. Please reference the source with the information on the Russian song. |
Subject: RE: Origin of: BARGES (Girl Scout song) From: Joe Offer Date: 09 Aug 07 - 02:29 AM Timbertall Girl, this is the first hint that this song may have come from a source other than a bedridden Girl Scout (a story I never believed). Please try to give us any other information about where the song may have been published. Thank you very much. -Joe Offer- |
Subject: RE: Origin of: BARGES (Girl Scout song) From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 09 Aug 07 - 03:54 PM "Canciones de Nuestra Cabaña," published by World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts, pub. Girl Scouts of the U. S. A., 1980, says "Source Unknown." Spanish lyrics are given for the chorus: Desde mi ventana puedo ver las luces de la barcas en el rio. ?Llevarán tésoros? ?Serán piratas preparados para luchar? !Como me gustaría navegar en ellas! (From my window I see the lights of the boats (barges) in the river. Are they carrying treasures? Are pirates preparing to board? How I would love to sail in them!) An English translation given with the Spanish, adding a first verse- Out of my window looking in the night I can see the barges' flickering light; Starboard shines green and port is glowing red, You can see them flickering far ahead. Chorus: Barges, I would like to go with you, I would like to sail the ocean blue. Barges, have you treasures in your hold? Do you fight with pirates brave and bold? With score. P. 8. |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,the princess jack Date: 17 Aug 07 - 08:28 PM well here are my thoughts the rules of ryhming should be the same in all laguages and seen as the english vesion ryhms (the ends of the last words in the phrases make the same sound)and i can't immagine that those words beeing translated into anyother language could still ryhm. so basically my conclution is that this song must have been originally written in english (unless the words were changed to make them rhym..) here's my other conclution, it seems to have been all over north america since around the 1960's so it had to have been written long enough before that for it to have spread across the country. my other thoughts are that it must have been shared at a camp with alotof people from veriouse places around the country alright now i heard the version about the sick girl looking out her wiindow ect. but reading everyone elses has really hit me a bit harder cause my little sister (11) has been batteling leukemia for the past 2 years so ya keep looking i will too |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,miribelle Date: 30 Aug 07 - 09:49 PM hi, i am a cadette in girlscouts and, yes we still sing barges. i cannot imagine camp arnold w/o it |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST Date: 06 Sep 07 - 06:44 PM does any one no sail away the girl scout song some one
-Joe Offer, Forum Moderator- |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,celeste ellerby Date: 13 Oct 07 - 10:11 AM The meaning of this song. a girl is trapped in a bed because she is to sick to move. her bed is beside the sea, so she is used to seeing barges roaming by. she starts wishing she could get onto one of those barges and sail away from the sickness that was killing her. her mother wrote this song for her, as she died 6 months after she was pronounced very, very ill. her mother was so overcome with grief, she couldnt stop thinking about her, so she wrote this song as a sort of RIP. |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 13 Oct 07 - 03:09 PM All the speculative interpretations posted here add up to quite an interesting pile. Oh, well, I'll add one about source (perhaps already stated somewhere up the thread). The barges come from 'barco,' Spanish for boat or ship; the song is a bad translation from a Spanish original. |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: Melissa Date: 14 Oct 07 - 12:45 AM Our third verse is: Out of my window, looking in the night I can see those barges' flickering light. Now is the time when I will soon be gone and I'll sail with barges on and on. Barges, I am going now with you I am going to sail the ocean blue. Barges, we have treasure in our hold and we fight with pirates brave and bold. I learned it in the mid-70s..NW Missouri. Judging by the apparent age of the handwritten songbook we used in the early 80s, the song was in use here for a long time before I learned it. My guess is that it might have been introduced at one of those Conference gathering things to have been able to get nearly everywhere with very few differences in wording. I chanced upon mudcat a few years ago by running across a thread about Barges. I was absolutely enchanted to find that there are still Old School scouts on the loose talking about songs I know. Neat find. Has anybody heard of a field collection of the songs we think of as Traditional GS? Melissa |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,Kerry Date: 20 Oct 07 - 05:44 PM Yes, we still do sing Barges today in Scouting. I learned it when I was just a wee little Brownie scout back in the 1960's and still teach it too all my little scouts today. The old version of Barges is the one that I learned and still teach.
I can see the barges flickering lights. Silently flows the water to the sea And the barges do go silently. Barges, I would like to go with you I would like to sail the ocean blue. Barges, is there treasure in your hold? Do you fight with pirates brave and bold? Out of my window, looking in the night, I can see the barges flickering lights. Starboard is glowing green and port is glowing red. I can see the barges far ahead. Chorus again and then hum the third verse. |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: Joe Offer Date: 21 Oct 07 - 12:10 AM Q, you caught my attention. I've been looking for the orgin of this song for years, and I never believed it came from a bedridden Girl Scout. What's the Spanish song you think it comes from? -Joe- |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 21 Oct 07 - 12:48 AM Joe, it is sometimes sung in Spanish by Girl Scouts in Latin America or Spain. I once found it in Spanish on a Latin American or Spanish children's site on which I didn't make a note. It may just have been a translation from English. I don't know of any Spanish song that is close enough to be related. Barge struck me as odd; seems to me the girls would be much more likely to sing about ships or boats, more romantic than barges. And barco is boat in Spanish. Sorry I can't help. The song bothers me too. |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: Melissa Date: 21 Oct 07 - 04:31 AM Has anybody 'collected' the hoards of songs sung at gs camps? I'm noticing that in this area, they're being replaced by a different type of song..and hate to think that the traditional ones might get lost. My niece has gone to camp twice (same camp I worked at) and the only song she learned well enough to remember is the one about floating down the Delaware chewing on her underwear. That song would have gotten me invited to not come back on camp after session break.. I never did completely buy the bedridden girl story. Mostly because we had that final verse--wondered how she supposedly finished it. It'll be interesting to see if this thread results in an older answer. Of course, I'll probably perpetuate the 'sick child' story to my girls by telling them that's what I learned but later learned that it had Spanish origins (or whatever the story turns out to be..if any comes to be at all) M |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: Melissa Date: 21 Oct 07 - 09:38 PM I asked a friend who was in Campfire. She learned the song at camp in the early 60s, said it was camp tradition for a long time before then..said she learned that it was about the Erie Canal. |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: Q (Frank Staplin) Date: 21 Oct 07 - 09:57 PM A last verse not seen before by me, but I could have missed the posting. I'll post the four verses and chorus. BARGES Out of the window looking into the night, I can see the barges' flickering light. Silently flows the river to the sea, As the barges do go silently.* CHORUS Barges, I would like to go with you, I would like to sail the ocean blue. Barges, have you treasure in your hold, Do you fight with pirates brave and bold. Out of my window looking in* the night, I can see the barges flickering light. Starboard shines green and port is glowing red, I can see the barges far ahead. Now my heart longs to sail away with you, As you sail across the ocean blue. But I must stay beside my ocean clear,(1) As I watch you sail away from here. Away from my window on into the night, I will watch til they are out of sight. Taking their cargo far across the sea, I wish that someday they'd take me. * Minor mistakes here- perhaps suggesting a translation? (1) ...my ocean pier, ? Barges |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: Joe Offer Date: 22 Oct 07 - 01:41 AM Melissa, you asked if anyone has ever "collected" camp songs. Your mention of "floating down the Delaware chewing on her underwear" led me to Google up this (click). I didn't know the Delaware/underwear song, but I knew most of the other songs on the page. There are tens of thousands of camp song pages available. One of the most impressive is the Prairie Home Companion Camp Song Songbook. You'll find many more of that ilk in our Naughty Kids' Greatest Hits threads. Now, to my mind, the Delaware/underwear songs are the real camp songs, and published songs like "Barges" are of secondary interest. Still, "Barges" intrigues me because we haven't been able to figure out where it came form originally. In general, though, there's a lack of spontaneity and creativity in the songs in "official" songbooks of camps and camping organizations. As for "collecting" camp songs, that question goes unanswered. -Joe- |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: Melissa Date: 22 Oct 07 - 02:08 AM Too bad..I was hoping to get access to a wad of songs I'm starting to forget. I've got plenty of words, but the tunes are beginning to vaporize. thanks, M |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: Joe Offer Date: 22 Oct 07 - 02:48 AM Oh, you'll find hundreds of them here at Mudcat, Melissa. Look at the threads crosslinked at the top of this thread, the "Naughty Kids" threads I spoke of above, and the threads crosslinked with this camp song thread (click). These songs weren't collected by the well-known collectors like Lomax and Sharp and Warner and the like. Camp songs are a newer phenomenon, a product of the post-Depression Twentieth Century. Many of us here grew up with these songs. And if you can't find a song, start a new thread and ask for it. -Joe- |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: Melissa Date: 22 Oct 07 - 04:17 AM yeah..I've found hundreds by snooping around in threads and clicking stuff. Mudcat is a pretty easy place to navigate--a treasure. I would have thought camp songs started building steam in the early 20s? There's a pretty strong emphasis on singing while you Work, Hike or Wait in the earliest GS handbooks. I don't know much about other organizations, but I think the first official GS songbook was printed in 1928. One of these days, I will probably open a thread to try getting a solid handful of songs to sing as part of a 1920s re-enactment GS troop, but for now, I'm content sitting around following existing threads and picking up information vicariously. This place certainly attracts people who are generous with their knowledge! Thanks, M |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,AMY Date: 03 Mar 08 - 08:03 PM I'm sure someone else has told the same story but I'm not gonna read them all. There was a lady in a hospital and she wrote this song while she was stuck there watching the barges. She died before she could finish it which is why the 3rd verse is traditionally hummed rather than sang because it doesn't actually have any words. There really isn't a fancy story to it other than that she didn't live to write the third verse. |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,A Girl Guide Date: 25 May 08 - 09:02 PM Many Canadian Guides still sing it. We have been told it was writen by a girl guide with cancer, and she had a hospital room overlooking a river. She was said to have passed away before she finished the third verse, so we hum the final verse. Although there are many stories, most of them agree on a sick girl that had a room overlooking a river. |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,Trisha - Daisy Ldr Troop 407 Date: 29 May 08 - 12:36 AM I remember singing the song as a child (in the 80's) & I seem to remember the story being about a girl who watched the barges from her window, The stories I've read on here about the sick little girl seem kinda familiar but all I remember is I liked the song. I was looking for songs 2 teach the girls & came across this version of Barges (6 Verses!!!) I only knew of 2! LOL BARGES Out of my window, looking in the night I can see the barges' flickering light Silently flows the river to the sea And the barges too go silently CHORUS: Barges, I would like to go with you I would like to sail the ocean blue Barges have you treasures in your hold Do you fight with pirates brave and bold Out of my window, looking in the night I can see the barges' flickering light Starboard shines green and port is glowing red I can see them flickering far ahead CHORUS How my heart longs to sail away with you As you sail across the ocean blue But I must sit beside my window dear And watch you sail away from here CHORUS Out of my window looking in the night I can see the barges' flickering light Harbor ahead and anchorage in view I will find my resting place with you CHORUS Away from my window on into the night I will watch 'til they are out of sight Taking their cargo far across the sea How I'd wish that someday they would take me CHORUS Out of my window looking through the night I can see the barges' flickering light People are sailing far and far away And I hope to go with them one day CHORUS from this website: http://su663.grgsc.org/girl_scout_songs.htm |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,Sherry Date: 30 Jun 08 - 04:28 PM Ilearned thisat Girl Scout Camp in Ohio in the mid 60's. I remember it above except the last line of the first verse \ "as the barges do go merrily. Also, We were told it was a sick child looking out their window overthe Mississippi River. I have always loved this song. |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,Hannah Date: 09 Jul 08 - 07:49 PM my mom used to sing "barges" to me when she put me to sleep: "out of my window looking through the night, i can see the barges' flickering light. starburt shines green and port is falling red i can see the barges far ahead barges, i would like to go with you, i would like to sail the ocean blue. barges, have you treasure in your hold, do you fight with pirates, brave and bold? out of my window looking through the night i can see the barges flickering light." |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,Linz Date: 10 Aug 08 - 05:58 PM Came across this site while searching for the origins of the song but looks like no one is any the wiser really! I 1st heard Barges as a Rainbow/Brownie in the late 80's/early 90's in the UK. I was always taught that it was written by someone in Holland (and even sang it at a Thinking Day celebration when our Brownie's were representing Holland). Always knew it as an unfinished song with the 3rd verse being hummed. |
Subject: RE: Origin of: 'Barges' (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST,KTG Date: 31 Aug 08 - 11:23 PM We- at GS camp in Iowa- were told it was written by a girl in Holland who was in a wheel chair and confined to the top floor of her house. I'm pretty sure the sick kid/wheel chair story is a bunch of bunk made up to inspire solemnity in hyperactive kids still crazy from the day's adventures, and then warped slighty each time it made it's way to a new camp. For me, personally, the fact that it is such a strong Girl Scout/Guide tradition and that so many camp people are tied together by it is sentimental enough. We only sang the first two verses, sometimes with harmony, sometimes without. We never hummed a third verse. I'm afraid the message Jen M quoted (four years ago!!) is all the origin we're going to get with this one. |
Subject: RE: Origin: Barges (Girl Scout song) From: GUEST Date: 11 Oct 08 - 01:43 AM I started my path in girl guides when i was 5 or six and was in it until my late teens. Barges was written by a girl scout who could see the barges from the window. She passed away before the song was finshed and that is whythe last "verse" is hummed. So the information you were told is true. |
Subject: RE: Origin: Barges (Girl Scout song) From: Joe Offer Date: 11 Oct 08 - 01:48 PM The story about the sick girl watching barges out the window, is the one we hear most often. However, we've never been able to find any written documentation of the origins of this song - so I'm not convinced the "sick girl" theory is true. Same with a lot of Girl Scout songs - it's very hard to trace their origins. -Joe- |
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