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03 Aug 01 - 07:39 AM (#520261) Subject: Green grow the rushes - pagan version From: GUEST,(jo) reading one of the other threads reminded me Ive been meaning to track down this in a while
I only ever heard it once, all i remember is |
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03 Aug 01 - 08:33 AM (#520287) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Green grow the rushes - pagan versio From: Michael in Swansea Jo, Is this what you want?
I'll sing you 13 oh Mike
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03 Aug 01 - 08:36 AM (#520290) Subject: Lyr Add: GREEN GROW THE RUSHES-O (Pagan version) From: katlaughing Is this the one?
I'll sing you one, oh
I'll sing you two, oh
I'll sing you three, oh ...
I'll sing you thirteen, oh |
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03 Aug 01 - 08:37 AM (#520291) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Green grow the rushes - pagan versio From: Michael in Swansea And if you click here you'll find a Norse version Mike |
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03 Aug 01 - 02:24 PM (#520542) Subject: Lyr Add: RED FLY THE BANNERS OH ! From: Gareth A version of "Green Grow the Rushes Oh!, sung in leftist circles in London in the 70's. Older than that though, my mother can recall singing something similar in her student days in 1946 – 49. (UCW – Cardiff and Bath teacher Training College) RED FLY THE BANNERS OH !
I'll sing you one Oh!
Two, Two, the workers hands, Three, Three, the rights of man,
Four, for the four great leaders Five for the Years of the Five-year plan, Six for the Tolpuddle martyrs, Seven for the Stars on Connolly's Flag, Eight for the Eighth Red Army, Nine for the days of the General Strike, Ten for the days that shook the world, Eleven for the Moscow Dynamo's And that's the best that I can do ! Gareth |
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10 Aug 01 - 04:30 AM (#524936) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Green grow the rushes - pagan versio From: GUEST,(jo) thanks a lot you folks, I think that first one is the one I heard or something very close to it and I love both the others too. jo |
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12 Oct 02 - 11:59 AM (#801757) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Green grow the rushes - pagan versio From: belfast I have been known in times past to sit with my unreconstructed stalinist friends and sing Red Fly the Banners but I have never come across that pagan version of Green Grow the Rushes. It sounds very entertaining but what the hell does it mean? Mind you, being a old-fashioned atheist I assume it's a lot of twaddle. Hope I haven't offended any mystics out there. |
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18 Nov 03 - 07:07 PM (#1056556) Subject: RE: Req: Green grow the rushes - pagan version From: Gareth I missed your post last October - But Belfast "I have been known in times past to sit with my unreconstructed stalinist friends and sing Red Fly the Banners...." I'am Chuffed ! Gareth |
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19 Nov 03 - 06:30 AM (#1056830) Subject: RE: Req: Green grow the rushes - pagan version From: GUEST,Paul Burke Red Wave the Banners - the Four Great Teachers. The Trots used to sing "Marx, Engels, Lenin, Trotsky", the Maoists "Marx, Engels, Lenin, Mao",. and I used to upset EVERYBODY singing "Marx, Darwin, Einstein, Freud". For some reason Freud used to particularly upset Feminists. |
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11 Dec 07 - 12:51 AM (#2212869) Subject: RE: Req: Green grow the rushes - pagan version From: GUEST,abonaroo my father & i would sing it in the 50s but I can not remember 11 & 9, also with the mention of apostles & commandments I don't know how pagan it is.....he was quite the athiest; though as a child he was brought up Catholic: I will sing you 12-0 green grow the rushes 0 what is your 12-0 ? 12 are the 12 Apostles 11 are the 11 10 are the 10 Commandments, 9 are the 8 are the 8 Bold Rangers, 7 are the 7 that went to Heaven 6 are the 6 straight walkers, 5 is the symbol at your door & 4 for the cob stone makers, 3 three for the rivals 2 two for the lily white boys clothe your door in green-eee-0 and 1 is 1 and all alone and ever more shall be so. |
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11 Dec 07 - 04:48 AM (#2212919) Subject: RE: Req: Green grow the rushes - pagan version From: Jack Blandiver That's pretty much the Christian version, which is traditional, rather than any so-called 'Pagan' versions, which like modern Paganism itself is made up by the Pagans as they go along (see above). Did your father actually sing 'Four for the Cob Stone makers' ? Or is that a choice Mondegreen? |
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11 Dec 07 - 07:13 AM (#2212970) Subject: RE: Req: Green grow the rushes - pagan version From: Mo the caller 11 the 11 that went to heaven (12 - Judas, I suppose) 7 the 7 stars in the sky |
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11 Dec 07 - 08:07 AM (#2212991) Subject: RE: Req: Green grow the rushes - pagan version From: GUEST,James H I will sing you 12-o, Green grow the rushes o, What is your 12-o ? 12 are the 12 Apostles 11 are the 11 who went to heaven 10 are the 10 Commandments, 9 are the 9 bright shiners 8 are the April rainers, 7 are the 7 stars in the sky, 6 are the 6 proud walkers, 5 for the symbols at your door & 4 for the Gospel makers, 3 three, the rivals 2 two, the lily white boys clothed all in green-o and 1 is 1 and all alone and ever more shall be so is the version that I used to sing as a kid. |
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02 Jan 11 - 03:09 PM (#3065708) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Green Grow the Rushes - pagan version From: GUEST,Herb M There's a bit on the "Pagan" version at http://www.cyberwitch.com/Wychwood/Temple/songOfTheFaith.htm
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18 Jan 12 - 03:20 PM (#3292323) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Green Grow the Rushes - pagan version From: Lighter Evidently there were/are RAF/RN versions. Does anyone know any of these? |
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18 May 12 - 10:11 PM (#3352690) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Green Grow the Rushes - pagan version From: GUEST My dad was in the RAF. We used to sing this song but the only lines I remember are: Three - three the sergeant(s) Two - two apprentice's wings, dressed in black and green-oh One is on and all along (alone) and ever more shall be so. One of the lines has the phrase "for a packet of Player's" which, obviously refers to the cost of cigarettes in the day. Wish I could remember the whole thing. (Wish Dad was still here.) |
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07 Sep 12 - 11:58 PM (#3401580) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Green Grow the Rushes - pagan version From: GUEST,Rosie What does "Seven for the gates between the worlds" mean? |
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08 Sep 12 - 06:33 AM (#3401607) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Green Grow the Rushes - pagan version From: Les in Chorlton It doesn't really mean anything Guest,Rosie, but like most of this stuff anybody can believe it means anything at all - pick something of your own it will be just as valid as anyone elses Best wishes L in C# |
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15 Dec 13 - 12:33 AM (#3584215) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Green Grow the Rushes - pagan version From: GUEST,Priestess Pamela We sing "7 for the portals between the worlds" which refer to the seven chakras, energy centers in our body. Thanks for posting the lyrics to this! Blessed Be! |
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15 Dec 13 - 03:44 AM (#3584228) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Green Grow the Rushes - pagan version From: Tradsinger Here is a Gloucestershire version. I sang this the other night and someone asked me what the symbolism in it was. He seemed a little disappointed when I told him that apart from verses 4, 10 and 12, the song is garbled nonesense. Moral - don't look for symbolism when it's not there! Tradsinger |
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15 Dec 13 - 05:01 AM (#3584240) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Green Grow the Rushes - pagan version From: GUEST,Grishka Similar songs exist in many languages and cultures. The genre is called "numerology" (not symbolism) and must be considered "pagan" even if it contains items from the Bible. Not "garbled nonsense" though, mostly. Therefore, the Red Banner version quoted above, which I just saw for the first time, is pretty amusing. Darwin, Einstein, and Freud would not feel flattered at all. Marx and Engels neither, although they sometimes did believe in a sort of esoteric teleology analogous to Christian scholastic tradition, and thus must not be surprised to be seized by numerologists. The Soviet leaders appreciated any sort of ovation. |
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15 Dec 13 - 06:05 AM (#3584245) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Green Grow the Rushes - pagan version From: GUEST,Mike Yates I'm quite intrigued by the so-called "Pagan" version. Can anyone say if this is actually old, or, as I suspect, a recent composition by some "New Age" Pagans (or whatever they like to call themselves). Does anyone know any actual publication dates for these versions? I recall once being told that Ewan MacColl had said that the line "The playing of the merry organ" in "The Holly and the Ivy" was originally "The playing of the merry old Gods". Though I find it hard to believe that he would have said such a thing! |
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15 Dec 13 - 09:06 AM (#3584271) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Green Grow the Rushes - pagan version From: Lighter Any more RAF/RN verses? Seems like you could march to it just as well as to "Old King Cole." |
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15 Dec 13 - 12:23 PM (#3584313) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Green Grow the Rushes - pagan version From: dick greenhaus In "REd Fly the Banners", I've always liked the line "Two, two the opposites, interpenetrating-O" dialectically satisfying |
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15 Dec 13 - 02:18 PM (#3584340) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Green Grow the Rushes - pagan version From: Q (Frank Staplin) RAF version not found in "Airman's Song Book," 1967, C. H. Ward-Jackson and Leighton Lewis, nor in "Kiss Me Goodnight, Sergeant Major," 1973, edited by Martin Page. A version of the song appeared in print in 1868, in the form of "The Twelve Apostles," Notes and Queries, Dec. 26, '68, p. 600. Lyr. Add: THE TWELVE APOSTLES "H. H.;" Twelve, twelve apostles, Eleven arch-angels, Ten ten commandments, Nine bright shiners, Eight Gabriel angels, Seven were the stars of heaven, Six broad waters, Five tumblers on a barrel, And four gospel writers. Three three divers, Two two lily white boys One is one and all alone, And evermore shall be so. "H. H." adds, .... It was the repetition that, as a child,, pleased me-..." |
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15 Dec 13 - 02:34 PM (#3584343) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Green Grow the Rushes - pagan version From: Q (Frank Staplin) Note to version by "H. H.": I would like to see the preceding page, 599, which may have introductory notes to "The Twelve Apostles," p. 600. I am not a member and cannot bring up the articles in this Oxford journal. The "green-o" lines seem to have been added later; 20th C. |
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15 Dec 13 - 04:58 PM (#3584377) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Green Grow the Rushes - pagan version From: Lighter On p. 599 "H. H." attests to having heard the song "as a boy." Naturally, he doesn't bother to tell us when or where. He gives the pattern ("sung as a monotone")as, What shall we sing O? We will [sic] sing the ones O One is one, etc. Then: What shall we sing O? We will sing the twos O ...and so on to twelve, "always repeating the numbers all back to one." The list posted by Q represents the final "stanza." Also on p. 599, J. H. Payne of Kildare Gardens reports a quite similar song as having been sung by "the children at Beckington, Somerset, in 1867. Payne's finale: Twelve is the ring of bells, Eleven is the gate of heaven, Ten is Our Lady's hen, Nine is the water wine, Eight is the crooked straight, Seven is the bread of leaven, Six is the crucifix, Five is the man alive, Four is the open door, Three is the Trinity, Two is the Jewry, One they do call the Righteous Man, Save poor souls To rest, Amen. Payne cannot explain "Ten is Our Lady's hen." He wonders aloud if it could have anything to do with the saying, "As nice as a nun's hen." Which is a new one on me. Unlike in the better-known song, the numbers here are given rhymes. |
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27 Jul 17 - 12:54 PM (#3868657) Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Green Grow the Rushes - pagan version From: GUEST,ShinyAeon I heard on "Doctor in the House ", an old British sitcom about med students, a parody version called "Green Grow the Patients O" that I'd dearly love to see the lyrics for... |