27 Apr 04 - 10:47 PM (#1172892) Subject: Lyr Add: EIGHTEENTH OF JUNE (from Harte & Lunny) From: Fergie Frank Harte & Donal Lunny released a CD entitled 'My Name is Napoleon Bonaparte' a year or so ago. One of the songs is entitled; Eighteenth of June. All you people who live at home easy And far from the trials of war Never knowing the dangers of battle But are safe with your families secure Know you the long scythe of destruction Has been sweeping the nations all round But it never yet cut with the keenness That it did on the eighteenth of June CHORUS: And what a sad heart had poor Boney To take up instead of the crown And to canter from Brussels to Paris Lamenting the eighteenth of June. It began about five in the morning And it lasted till seven at night All the people stood round in amazement They had never yet seen such a sight And the thunder of five hundred cannon Proclaimed that the battle was on And the moon in the sky overshone all Recording the eighteenth of June. chorus All you young girls with sweethearts out yonder That go daily to buy the black gown It's one thousand to one I will lay you Your love fell on the eighteenth of June Sixty thousand stout-hearted brave soldiers who died made an awful pall tune And there's many's the one will remember With sorrow the eighteenth of June. And what a sad heart had poor Boney For to take up instead of his crown And there's many's the girl will remember With sorrow the eighteenth of June. In his notes Frank comments that the song was collected in England from Henry Burstow and that Frank himself learned the song from Rod Stradling. I am interested in variations and alternative or additional verses for this song, The air/tune is similar to the Irish tune/song 'An Cailín Deas Cruite Na mBo' Regards Fergus |
27 Apr 04 - 11:20 PM (#1172901) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteen of June From: Malcolm Douglas The Roud Folk Song Index lists this at number 2539; at present Henry Burstow's set is the only example in the index. His text and tune were published in The Journal of the Folk Song Society, vol II (issue 8, 1906) p 193; numerous small changes and interpolations have been made to it -either by Rod Stradling or Frank Harte- if the transcription here is anything to go by. Henry said that he had learned the song "from a soldier in the Rifle Brigade who fought at Waterloo". The composer Ralph Vaughan Williams, who noted the tune in November 1905, mentioned that it bore some resemblance to The Green Mossy Banks of the Lea. Variants of that tune, and of the similar Pretty Maid Milking Her Cow, were very common at the time, so that doesn't really tell us anything useful about provenance. Such tunes were pressed into all manner of jobs that required a standard triple-time metre. |
28 Apr 04 - 12:33 AM (#1172912) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteen of June From: open mike in the U.S. June 19th is known as the day of freedom when slavery ended. there are many celebrations of Juneteenth. |
28 Apr 04 - 01:23 AM (#1172925) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteen of June From: Malcolm Douglas Is that in any way relevant to the question Fergus asked? Quite a lot of things happened in various Junes during the 19th century, but I'd hope that we don't wind up with a full list of them here. |
28 Apr 04 - 04:16 AM (#1172992) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteen of June From: IanC Malcolm Perhaps it would have been better to explain to Open Mike what 18th June signifies in this song. It is, of course, the date of the Battle of Waterloo (18th June 1815). :-) |
04 Jun 04 - 09:38 AM (#1200197) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteen of June From: Fergie I have since learned that Norma Waterson did a version of this song, does anybody have her version of the lyrics? |
04 Jun 04 - 01:24 PM (#1200384) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteen of June From: Malcolm Douglas There's a provisional transcription at Reinhard Zierke's Watersons site: Poor Boney. Watch out for the mondegreens, though. The difficulty over "awful pall tune", or whatever it originally was, goes back nearly a hundred years; Vaughan Williams wasn't entirely sure what Henry Burstow had sung, and printed it as "awful paltune", with a query. From the look of it, it's an arrangement of the same set, as mediated by Stradling and/or Harte. |
04 Jun 04 - 02:01 PM (#1200415) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteen of June From: Q (Frank Staplin) 'eighteenth of June' appears in the poem, "Napoleon's Farewell to Paris," no relation to the song, but mentioning the same event. One of the ten verses: My golden eagles were pulled down by Wellington's allied army My troops, all in disorder, could no longer stand the field; I was sold that afternoon, on the eighteenth of June, My reinforcements proved traitors, which caused me to yield. On a sheet with "The Nut Girl," printed by Taylor, Spitalfields, London, no date. American Memory. |
14 Jun 04 - 10:26 AM (#1206908) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteen of June From: Fergie I hope to sing this song at the Góilín singers club here in Dublin next friday (18th June). I have taken an extreme liberty and rewritten the last verse in a form that (in my opinion)scans easier than the version which Frank sings, I have done this in an attempt to make the song more accessible. I would really appreciate some brutally constructive critism on my efforts as usually I am loath to interfere with song lyrics. Franks version All you young girls with sweethearts out yonder That go daily to buy the black gown It's one thousand to one I will lay you Your love fell on the eighteenth of June Sixty thousand bravehearted stout soldiers who died made an awful pall tune And there's many's a one will remember With sorrow the eighteenth of June. My rewritten version All you widows whose loves died in battle And who daily must don the black gown It's one thousand to one I will lay you Your love died on the Eighteenth of June Sixty thousand stout hearted brave soldiers Were slain and their bodies lay strewn Amid the ruin and destruction of the battle That befell on the Eighteenth of June. |
14 Jun 04 - 10:43 AM (#1206925) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteen of June From: MartinRyan Fergie If it feels comfortable to you - go for it! Two minor suggestions you might consider: 1. Battle/gown seems to sit much less easily than yoNder/gowN 2. "Amid the ruin and the destruction of the battle" looks to be two syllables too many for comfort? To me, "'mid" and "of battle" would seem easier. IMHO what makes this song work is the combination of a lsow jig tune, soft delivery and a sense of loss. Good luck with it! Regards |
14 Jun 04 - 11:49 AM (#1206978) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteen of June From: M.Ted Doesn't scan as well--Fergie--and your choice of words--a bit more precise, but less direct-- "Were Slain and their bodies lay strewn" seems contrived more to rhyme than to convey meaning, and you've completely changed the meaning of the last lines--and what point to meddle with these verses, anyway? |
14 Jun 04 - 02:18 PM (#1207082) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteen of June From: Malcolm Douglas Perhaps I should post the song as Henry Burstow sang it. You'll see that Rod and Frank have made a fair few alterations between them. THE EIGHTEENTH OF JUNE (Sung by Henry Burstow, Horsham, November 1905. Noted by R Vaughan Williams) You people that live at home easy, And free from the riot of war * * Know that long has the scythe of destruction Been sweeping our nation around; It never yet cut with such keenness As on the great eighteenth of June. From half past five in the morning, To half past seven at night The people of the [ ? ] Never before saw such a sight, When the thunder of five hundred cannons Proclaiming the battle was won, The moon in the night overshone, As recorded the eighteenth of June. You lasses whose sweethearts were yonder, Go gaily and buy a black gown, A thousand I will lay to a hundred He fell on the eighteenth of June, Sixty thousand stout hearted mortals That fell, made an awful paltune [?] Many a sad heart will remember With sorrow the eighteenth of June. What a sad heart had poor Boney To take up instead of a crown A canter for Brussels and Paris Lamenting the eighteenth of June. X:1 T:The Eighteenth of June S:Henry Burstow, Horsham, Sussex. November 1905. Z:Noted by Ralph Vaughan Williams N:Learnt by Henry from J Shoebridge, Rifle Brigade, who had fought at Waterloo. B:The Journal of the Folk Song Society, vol II (issue 8, 1906) p 193. L:1/8 Q:1/4=100 M:6/8 K:G "Aeolian"(E/F/)|G B d B3/2 A/ G|E E z z z E| w:You_ peo-ple that live at home eas-y, And G B B (A/G/) E D|E3 z z (E/F/)| w:free from the ri_ot of war, G B d B3/2 A/ G|E E z z z E| w:* * * * * * * * * * * G B B (A/G/) E D|E3 z z E/ F/| w:* * ** * * * * Know that G3/2 A/ B d e f|d B z z z A| w:long has the scythe of de-struc-tion Been B e d B A G|D3 z z D| w:sweep-ing our na-tion a-round; It E F G A B D|D E z z z E| w:nev-er yet cut with such keen-ness As G/ A/ H(B3/2A/) G E D|E3 z z|] w:on the great_ eight-eenth of June. The Journal of the Folk Song Society, vol II (issue 8, 1906) p 193. Mr Burstow (who was 78 at the time) seems to have been a little unsure of some of the words, and to have omitted two lines in the first verse; he didn't list the song among the 420 that he considered to be his "active" repertoire. There is no clear indication that the final half-verse was used as a chorus. Vaughan Williams added the following note in his MS: "Sung to Burstow by J. Shoebridge, Rifle Brigade, who was in the Battle of Waterloo and, Burstow thought, learnt it there." Evidently this was Jim Shoubridge, who is mentioned briefly in Burstow's memoirs (Reminiscences of Horsham, 1912, p. 46) as a local veteran of Wellington's campaigns. Genealogical data (source unspecified) at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints website refers to a James Shoubridge, christened at Horsham on 2 February 1783: quite likely the same man. |
15 Jun 04 - 09:00 AM (#1207650) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteen of June From: Fergie Thanks for all your contributions M.Ted thanks for your interest and comments - I like the song and it's sentiment, I have only heard Frank Harte's version, and I find the last verse a little confusing, this maybe because as Malcolm Douglas points out it was collected only once and the source Henry Burstow was unsure of some of the words, therefore subsequently those who attempt to revive the song have had to improvise. Henry Burstow's version was transcribed by Ralph Vaughan Williams and he was unsure of what he was hearing and he placed question marks over some of the words. Paltune was one of these words and there has been much debate over this word and its possible meaning etc. I am trying to overcome (or maybe add to) some of this confusion by my own bit of improvisation/interpretation. and in the end isn't that what some of the magic, attraction and dynamism of the singing tradition is about. Thanks Martin Ryan for your comments - You are right concerning the number of syllables and I will take up your suggestions. Thanks to Malcolm also - I appreciate you going to such trouble to post such valuable and very interesting background to the history of this song, it has helped me a lot and given me a deeper insight into the lyrics. Fergus |
20 May 13 - 04:18 AM (#3517005) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteen of June From: GUEST,guest,John That line, as sung by Martin Carthy, sounds to me like "That fell paid an awful poor due", as in "to pay one's dues". |
20 May 13 - 04:18 PM (#3517299) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteen of June From: Richard Mellish Seeing as this thread has been revived, I'll throw in one comment. When I first heard this song (I forget who sung it) it was with a chorus of Burstow's last four lines: "What a sad heart had poor Boney To take up instead of a crown A canter for Brussels and Paris Lamenting the eighteenth of June." i.e. instead of taking up a crown he took up a canter to Paris. When I recently acquired and listened to the Frank Harte double-CD, it seemed to me that his version of the chorus: "And what a sad heart had poor Boney (For) to take up instead of a crown And to canter from Brussels to Paris Lamenting the eighteenth of June." doesn't make sense. But I must add that this is a minor whinge about what is on the whole an absolutely set of recordings. Richard |
30 Jun 17 - 07:07 AM (#3863563) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteenth of June From: GeoffLawes A link to Frank Harte singing the song https://www.itma.ie/goilin/song/eighteenth_of_june_frank_harte |
01 Jun 20 - 11:54 PM (#4056606) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteenth of June From: rich-joy Still a coupla weeks to go to the 205th anniversary, but as my other favourite Napoleon song (Isle of St Helena) has recently been revived in thread here on The Cat, I thought I'd get in early with my top favourite one!! [ROUD 2539] On "Mainly Norfolk", Rod Stradling is quoted : "..... I’m delighted to find, and proud to sing, a song about our ‘greatest military victory’ which is so concerned with the plight of the ordinary people involved on both sides. It doesn’t even mention who won!" This is Martin Carthy singing it in 2006 : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tPwt1BjFI8g and in 1983, excerpts only, in the Keith Dewhurst BBC-TV production "The Battle of Waterloo" : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A29dy9lBiLo Not sure why I am so drawn to this song. (..... but, perhaps I was there .....) R-J (Down Under) (and yes, I believe in multiple lives :) |
02 Jun 20 - 03:39 AM (#4056618) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteenth of June From: An Buachaill Caol Dubh Just a suggestion: There was a Ball, given by the Duchess of Richmond, a few days before the battle of Waterloo, attended by many of the higher-ranking officers in Wellington's army. In the final verse, might there be any ironic parallel intended between, on the one hand, a black mourning gown rather than a white wedding dress, and on the other the din of battle rather than the music of an orchestra? "Who fell, 'mid an awful Ball-tune" has little merit other than corresponding fairly closely to the line as noted by RVW, making some kind of awkward sense, and allowing that ironic contrast to be found. |
02 Jun 20 - 05:44 AM (#4056643) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteenth of June From: An Buachaill Caol Dubh Dissatisfied but still intrigued, I fell back on a long-standing practice; think and list every word which rhymes well with "June", and every word/combination of words which could be pressed into service. It's evident that "round" and "gown" were acceptable (and, incidentally, work perfectly in some Scots dialects). I stopped at "tomb". This seems so likely - in logical terms - that it seemed worthwhile to throw the idea out there and let others have a go at reconciling the sounds of the line into something cogent and not convoluted. Or maybe I should throw the idea out. Lord Byron's work was widely read, though perhaps not by all orders of society. In his "Childe Harold's Pilgrimage", he describes the fallen of both armies ( or all three, perhaps), buried in mass graves, as being "in one red burial blent". Something about a "fatal tomb" might be acceptable, and not out of harmony. |
04 Jun 20 - 02:21 PM (#4057244) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteenth of June From: Bearheart Richard Mellish, where did you find your copy of Frank's double CD? I bought it when it first came out, and realized recently I no longer have it. (Probably the result of a relationship split and moving to another state.) The liner notes were amazing. I tried getting on line today to find it and it turns out the company that produced it no longer exists. And there aren't really any copies out out there from what I can find. I am eager to replace it. Not really interested in downloading mp3s from Amazon. Bekki |
04 Jun 20 - 02:46 PM (#4057251) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteenth of June From: Reinhard Bekki, you should read what Geoff Wallis wrote about the quality of the liner notes in his album review on the Musical Traditions website. |
04 Jun 20 - 05:01 PM (#4057285) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteenth of June From: An Buachaill Caol Dubh I've just read through them too. Was there some personal animus between the writer and Frank Harte? The sneering tone so frequently adopted, coupled with numerous inaccuracies of fact, reminds me forcefully of contemporary British politicians drawling down, as it were, to a commoner. Sorry; that is, to one of the "working class", or - as Mr Harte put it - one of "the lower orders". The reviewer, in asking rhetorically about the term and by whom it was used, reveals a fundamental ignorance about the period which his recourse to a couple of familiar secondary texts does little to disguise. Mind you, FH would have been well advised not to try to summarise as much history as he seems to have done. Often, what caused Students to fail was not what they missed out, but some of the stuff they included. |
17 Jun 20 - 03:15 PM (#4059740) Subject: RE: Origins: Eighteenth of June From: Richard Mellish Hmm! I posted a response to Bekki's "where did you find your copy of Frank's double CD?" but it has vanished. I tracked down the email confirming my purchase, as it was from Amazon. And Amazon still shows the double CD as available, as well as the MP3s, though for some inscrutable reason it mentions only Donal Lunny, not Frank Harte. |