To Thread - Forum Home

The Mudcat Café TM
https://mudcat.org/thread.cfm?threadid=159449
6 messages

Lyr Req: Fish, stone, deer and the bonny oak tree

11 Mar 16 - 12:28 PM (#3778048)
Subject: Lyr Req: Fish, stone, deer and the bonny oak tree
From: GUEST,Mr Fox

Hi all, I'm trying to find the lyrics to a riddle song that has the common phrase 'bent to the bonny broom' in the chorus, but also has the the line 'The fish and the stone and the deer and the bonny oak tree' as part of the same chorus.. can anyone help?


12 Mar 16 - 06:58 AM (#3778251)
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Fish, stone, deer and the bonny oak tree
From: maeve

Here's a long tangle of Mudcat explanation with some very informative bits from some of our best song scholars... Lyr Req: Twa Sisters / Lay Bent to the Bonny Broom


12 Mar 16 - 06:11 PM (#3778369)
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Fish, stone, deer and the bonny oak tree
From: GUEST

Hi Maeve, thanks for the link. I've only had time for a quick scan but couldn't see anything in there with the line 'The fish and the stone and the deer and the bonny oak tree'. Has anyone ever heard this line as part of a chorus in a riddle song?


12 Mar 16 - 06:24 PM (#3778373)
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Lay the Bent...Fish/stone/deer/oak
From: maeve

I've just dug out that link (packed with other good links) out of several with 'bent to the bonny broom' part to give you a start. It might help if the subject could be focused a bit differently. You can post a request here for a moderator to help with changing the subject a wee bit if you wish to do so.

If I have any time later this weekend I'll do some more digging for fish, stone, deer, and oak used in conjunction with bent and broom. And it's a riddle song...you might try looking up riddle in the DT.

Could you perhaps give us some more information, please? Where you know it from, who might have sung it and where, etc.


13 Mar 16 - 07:54 AM (#3778485)
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Fish, stone, deer and the bonny oak tree
From: GUEST

Thanks again Maeve. Yes, perhaps a moderator can help phrase the subject better?

I heard someone singing the song recently in a session I run in south Devon, UK. He didn't know what the song was called or where it came from originally, but told me he had learnt it from a Perthshire singer who used to sing very long ballads. The singer he learnt the song from was apparently a collector of Child ballads and grew up in the Perth tradition. He was called Malcolm and was the head librarian at the University of Bangor, but is probably deceased. The song had quite a few Scots words in it, so I'm guessing it's a Scottish or Border ballad. This probably means that the line "The fish and the stone and the deer and the bonny oak tree" would have been 'stane' rather than 'stone'.


13 Mar 16 - 08:08 AM (#3778490)
Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Fish, stone, deer and the bonny oak tree
From: maeve

Thanks for the added information. You never know when one detail will lead to the song.