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Page title without namespace (page_title ) | 'The Mermaid (ballad)' |
Full page title (page_prefixedtitle ) | 'The Mermaid (ballad)' |
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Old page wikitext, before the edit (old_wikitext ) | ''''''The Mermaid''''' is a ballad, catalogued as [[Child Ballads|Child Ballad]] #289, [[Roud Folk Song Index|Roud]] 124. Dating to around the mid-18th century, this song is known by a number of names, including ''Waves on the Sea'',<ref name="NelsonBurns">{{harvnb|Nelson-Burns}}</ref> ''The Stormy Winds''<ref>{{harvnb|Atkinson|1998|p=446}}</ref> and ''The Wrecked Ship.''<ref name="NelsonBurns" /><ref name="RFSI">Roud Folk Song Indexes, Vaughan Williams Memorial Library; https://www.vwml.org/search?ts=1490310343340&collectionfilter=HHA;SBG;LEB;JHB;GB;COL;CC;DCD;GG;AGG;PG;HAM;MK;FK;EML;MN;TFO;CJS1;CJS2;FSBW;RVW1;RVW2;AW;RoudFS;RoudBS&advqtext=0|rn|124# Retrieved 2017/03/23</ref>
The song belongs in the category of sea ballads, being a song sailors sung during their time off and not while they worked, but is more commonly thought of as a [[sea shanty]].<ref>{{harvnb|Atkinson|1998|p=440}}</ref> It is well known in American folk tradition, and the text has appeared in many forms in both print and oral mediums.<ref name=Niles325>{{harvnb|Niles|2000|p=325}}</ref><ref name=CH&N286>{{harvnb|Cazden|Haufrecht|Studer|1983|p=262}}</ref> The ballad remains part of American culture as a song sung at camps operated by the [[Boy Scouts of America]] as well as in public school music education classes.<ref>{{harvnb|Hillcourt|1961|p=20}}</ref>
==Synopsis==
The ballad describes a ship that left port, its misadventure and eventual sinking. The moral of the song is that [[mermaid]]s are a sign of an impending shipwreck.<ref name="NelsonBurns" /> It is sung from the point of view of a member of the ship's crew, although the ship sinks without any survivors. Often the ship is said to be departing on a Friday morning, but there are other versions of the lyrics including one that has it leaving on a Saturday night.<ref name=CH&N286 /><ref name=Niles326>{{harvnb|Niles|2000|p=326}}</ref> On the way out to sea, the captain sees a mermaid with a "comb and a [[Mirror|glass]] in her hand".<ref name=Niles326 />
Three parallel stanzas most often follow describing how three of the crew members, contemplating impending disaster, would rather be somewhere else than on the ocean floor; for example, the cook would rather be with his pots and pans.<ref name=CH&N286 /> In English versions crew members often identify their home port and the people (parents, wives, children) who will mourn for them.<ref>Roud, S, and Bishop, J; The New Penguin Book of English Folk Songs; London, 2012 p 33</ref>
The home of the crew members varies from version to version, but it has been assigned to almost every port town in Britain and the East Coast of the United States. At the end of the ballad the ship turns around three times and sinks with all hands; there are no survivors.<ref name=CH&N263>{{harvnb|Cazden|Haufrecht|Studer|1983|p=263}}</ref>
Many versions have a chorus describing the conditions sailors face in a storm:
<blockquote>
When the stormy winds they did blow rough rough<br />
And the raging seas did roar<br />
While we poor sailors are up & to the top<br />
And the land lubbers lying down below<br />
</blockquote>
From the singing of Alfred Chard, Chew Magna, Somerset, Jan 11 1907, collected by [[Cecil Sharp]].<ref>Full English Collections; Vaughan Williams Memorial Library, Permanent URL: https://www.vwml.org/record/CJS2/9/1159 Retrieved 2017/03/24</ref>
In most versions the ship is unnamed but in a version sung by [[Almeida Riddle]] of Greers Ferry, Arkansas, and collected by Max Hunter the mermaid disappears and the ship is identified as the Merrymac, perhaps influenced by the name of one of several US Navy ships named Merrimack.
<blockquote>
I will sing you a song of the Merrymac at sea<br />
O, a fine large vessel was she<br />
An' she set sail for New Orleans<br />
Then, sank to th bottom of the sea<ref name="Merrymac" /><br />
</blockquote>
==History==
A blackletter [[Broadside (music)|broadside]] entitled ''The Praise of Saylors here set forth'' dating from between 1654 and 1658 contains verses relating the encounter with the mermaid and the storm as well as others about the roles of various crew men, and the many virtues of sailors.<ref>English Broadside Ballad Archive; EBBA ID: 31876
University of Glasgow Library - Euing 267 http://ebba.english.ucsb.edu/ballad/31876/image Retrieved 2017/03/23</ref> Child's A version, titled ''The Seamen's Distress'', was taken from "The Glasgow Lasses Garland", a [[chapbook]]<ref>Child, F J; The English and Scottish Popular Ballads Vol 5 part 1; 1894; No 289.</ref> published between about 1765 and 1785.<ref>Roud, S, and Bishop, J; The New Penguin Book of English Folk Songs; London, 2012 pp385-7</ref>
''The Mermaid'' was frequently printed in broadsides and in song-books in the late 18th century and throughout the 19th century.<ref name="RFSI" /> The earliest of 17 broadside copies in the [[Bodleian Library]] broadside collection was printed by G Thompon of Liverpool between 1789 and 1820.<ref>Bodleian Ballads Online; Shelfmark: 2806.17(274) http://ballads.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/view/edition/8729 Retrieved 2017/03/23</ref>
===Collection history===
The Roud Folk Song Index contains about 93 different versions collected from traditional singers: 27 from England, 1 from Wales, 12 from Scotland, 1 from Ireland, 5 from Canada and 49 from the USA.<ref name="RFSI"/>
==Recording history==
===Field recordings===
Some field recordings are available to listen online.
*[[Percy Grainger]] had a wax cylinder recording made in 1908 of Joseph Taylor singing ''Three Times Round Went Our Gallant Ship''.<ref name="RFSI" />
* ''The Mermaid'' sung by Norfolk singer [[Walter Pardon]], recorded by Bill Leader in 1974, is in the Reg Hall Collection, British Museum Sound Archive<ref>{{cite web|url=https://sounds.bl.uk/World-and-traditional-music/Reg-Hall-Archive/025M-C0903X0057XX-0500V0|work=[[British Library Sounds]]|title=Reg Hall English, Irish & Scottish Folk Music & Customs Collection - The mermaid|accessdate=10 March 2018}}</ref>
* ''The Merrymac at Sea'' sung by Arkansas singer Almeda Riddle, recorded by Max Hunter in 1970, is in the Max Hunter collection, Missouri State University.<ref name="Merrymac">{{cite web|url=https://maxhunter.missouristate.edu/songinformation.aspx?ID=0964|work=[[Missouri State University]]|title=Max Hunter Folk Song Collection - The Merrymac at Sea|accessdate=10 March 2018}}</ref>
===Commercial recordings===
*[[Ernest Stoneman]] and the Blue Ridge Corn Shuckers recorded ''The Raging Sea How It Roars'' in 1928.
*[[The Carter Family]] recorded ''The Waves on the Sea'' in 1941.<ref name="RFSI" />
==See also==
* [[List of the Child Ballads]]
==Notes==
{{Reflist|30em}}
==References and bibliography==
*{{cite journal|last=Atkinson|first=David|title=The Child Ballads from England and Wales in the James Madison Carpenter Collection|journal=Folk Music Journal|year=1998|volume=7|issue=4|ref=harv}}
*{{cite book|last=Cazden|first=Norman|title=Folk Songs of the Catskills|year=1983|publisher=State University of New York Press|isbn=0-87395-580-3|first2=Herbert|last2=Haufrecht|first3=Norman|last3=Studer|ref=harv}}
*{{cite magazine|last=Hilcourt|first=Bill|title=Green Bar Bill Says: Keep Your Feet Dry|magazine=[[Boys' Life]]|date=August 1961|publisher=Boy Scouts of America|ref=harv}}
*{{cite web|last=Nelson-Burns|first=Lesley|title=The Mermaid|url=http://www.contemplator.com/sea/mermaid.html|accessdate=8 August 2012|ref=harv}}
*{{cite book|last=Niles|first=John Jacob|title=The Ballad Book of [[John Jacob Niles]]|year=2000|publisher=University Press of Kentucky|isbn=0813109876|ref=harv}}
==External links==
*Lyrics: [http://www.contemplator.com/sea/mermaid.html The Mermaid]
*Alternate Version of the Lyrics: [http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/child/ch289.htm The Mermaid]
{{Francis James Child}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mermaid}}
[[Category:Child Ballads]]
[[Category:Fictional mermen and mermaids]]
[[Category:Year of song unknown]]' |
New page wikitext, after the edit (new_wikitext ) | ''''''The Mermaid''''' is a ballad, catalogued as [[Child Ballads|Child Ballad]] #289, [[Roud Folk Song Index|Roud]] 124. Dating to around the mid-18th century, this song is known by a number of names, including ''Waves on the Sea'',<ref name="NelsonBurns">{{harvnb|Nelson-Burns}}</ref> ''The Stormy Winds''<ref>{{harvnb|Atkinson|1998|p=446}}</ref> and ''The Wrecked Ship.''<ref name="NelsonBurns" /><ref name="RFSI">Roud Folk Song Indexes, Vaughan Williams Memorial Library; https://www.vwml.org/search?ts=1490310343340&collectionfilter=HHA;SBG;LEB;JHB;GB;COL;CC;DCD;GG;AGG;PG;HAM;MK;FK;EML;MN;TFO;CJS1;CJS2;FSBW;RVW1;RVW2;AW;RoudFS;RoudBS&advqtext=0|rn|124# Retrieved 2017/03/23</ref>
The song belongs in the category of sea ballads, being a song sailors sung during their time off and not while they worked, but is more commonly thought of as a [[sea shanty]].<ref>{{harvnb|Atkinson|1998|p=440}}</ref> It is well known in American folk tradition, and the text has appeared in many forms in both print and oral mediums.<ref name=Niles325>{{harvnb|Niles|2000|p=325}}</ref><ref name=CH&N286>{{harvnb|Cazden|Haufrecht|Studer|1983|p=262}}</ref> The ballad remains part of American culture as a song sung at camps operated by the [[Boy Scouts of America]] as well as in public school music education classes.<ref>{{harvnb|Hillcourt|1961|p=20}}</ref>
==Synopsis==
The ballad describes a ship that left port, its misadventure and eventual sinking. The moral of the song is that [[mermaid]]s are a sign of an impending shipwreck.<ref name="NelsonBurns" /> It is sung from the point of view of a member of the ship's crew, although the ship sinks without any survivors. Often the ship is said to be departing on a Friday morning, but there are other versions of the lyrics including one that has it leaving on a Saturday night.<ref name=CH&N286 /><ref name=Niles326>{{harvnb|Niles|2000|p=326}}</ref> On the way out to sea, the captain sees a mermaid with a "comb and a [[Mirror|glass]] in her hand".<ref name=Niles326 />
Three parallel stanzas most often follow describing how three of the crew members, contemplating impending disaster, would rather be somewhere else than on the ocean floor; for example, the cook would rather be with his pots and pans.<ref name=CH&N286 /> In English versions crew members often identify their home port and the people (parents, wives, children) who will mourn for them.<ref>Roud, S, and Bishop, J; The New Penguin Book of English Folk Songs; London, 2012 p 33</ref>
The home of the crew members varies from version to version, but it has been assigned to almost every port town in Britain and the East Coast of the United States. At the end of the ballad the ship turns around three times and sinks with all hands; there are no survivors.<ref name=CH&N263>{{harvnb|Cazden|Haufrecht|Studer|1983|p=263}}</ref>
Many versions have a chorus describing the conditions sailors face in a storm:
<blockquote>
When the stormy winds they did blow rough rough<br />
And the raging seas did roar<br />
While we poor sailors are up & to the top<br />
And the land lubbers lying down below<br />
</blockquote>
From the singing of Alfred Chard, Chew Magna, Somerset, Jan 11 1907, collected by [[Cecil Sharp]].<ref>Full English Collections; Vaughan Williams Memorial Library, Permanent URL: https://www.vwml.org/record/CJS2/9/1159 Retrieved 2017/03/24</ref>
In most versions the ship is unnamed but in a version sung by [[Almeida Riddle]] of Greers Ferry, Arkansas, and collected by Max Hunter the mermaid disappears and the ship is identified as the Merrymac, perhaps influenced by the name of one of several [[US Navy]] ships named Merrimack.
<blockquote>
I will sing you a song of the Merrymac at sea<br />
O, a fine large vessel was she<br />
An' she set sail for [[New Orleans]]<br />
Then, sank to th bottom of the sea<ref name="Merrymac" /><br />
</blockquote>
==History==
A blackletter [[Broadside (music)|broadside]] entitled ''The Praise of Saylors here set forth'' dating from between 1654 and 1658 contains verses relating the encounter with the mermaid and the storm as well as others about the roles of various crew men, and the many virtues of sailors.<ref>English Broadside Ballad Archive; EBBA ID: 31876
University of Glasgow Library - Euing 267 http://ebba.english.ucsb.edu/ballad/31876/image Retrieved 2017/03/23</ref> Child's A version, titled ''The Seamen's Distress'', was taken from "The Glasgow Lasses Garland", a [[chapbook]]<ref>Child, F J; The English and Scottish Popular Ballads Vol 5 part 1; 1894; No 289.</ref> published between about 1765 and 1785.<ref>Roud, S, and Bishop, J; The New Penguin Book of English Folk Songs; London, 2012 pp385-7</ref>
''The Mermaid'' was frequently printed in broadsides and in song-books in the late 18th century and throughout the 19th century.<ref name="RFSI" /> The earliest of 17 broadside copies in the [[Bodleian Library]] broadside collection was printed by G Thompon of Liverpool between 1789 and 1820.<ref>Bodleian Ballads Online; Shelfmark: 2806.17(274) http://ballads.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/view/edition/8729 Retrieved 2017/03/23</ref>
===Collection history===
The Roud Folk Song Index contains about 93 different versions collected from traditional singers: 27 from England, 1 from Wales, 12 from Scotland, 1 from Ireland, 5 from Canada and 49 from the USA.<ref name="RFSI"/>
==Recording history==
===Field recordings===
Some field recordings are available to listen online.
*[[Percy Grainger]] had a wax cylinder recording made in 1908 of Joseph Taylor singing ''Three Times Round Went Our Gallant Ship''.<ref name="RFSI" />
* ''The Mermaid'' sung by Norfolk singer [[Walter Pardon]], recorded by Bill Leader in 1974, is in the Reg Hall Collection, British Museum Sound Archive<ref>{{cite web|url=https://sounds.bl.uk/World-and-traditional-music/Reg-Hall-Archive/025M-C0903X0057XX-0500V0|work=[[British Library Sounds]]|title=Reg Hall English, Irish & Scottish Folk Music & Customs Collection - The mermaid|accessdate=10 March 2018}}</ref>
* ''The Merrymac at Sea'' sung by Arkansas singer Almeda Riddle, recorded by Max Hunter in 1970, is in the Max Hunter collection, Missouri State University.<ref name="Merrymac">{{cite web|url=https://maxhunter.missouristate.edu/songinformation.aspx?ID=0964|work=[[Missouri State University]]|title=Max Hunter Folk Song Collection - The Merrymac at Sea|accessdate=10 March 2018}}</ref>
===Commercial recordings===
*[[Ernest Stoneman]] and the Blue Ridge Corn Shuckers recorded ''The Raging Sea How It Roars'' in 1928.
*[[The Carter Family]] recorded ''The Waves on the Sea'' in 1941.<ref name="RFSI" />
==See also==
* [[List of the Child Ballads]]
==Notes==
{{Reflist|30em}}
==References and bibliography==
*{{cite journal|last=Atkinson|first=David|title=The Child Ballads from England and Wales in the James Madison Carpenter Collection|journal=Folk Music Journal|year=1998|volume=7|issue=4|ref=harv}}
*{{cite book|last=Cazden|first=Norman|title=Folk Songs of the Catskills|year=1983|publisher=State University of New York Press|isbn=0-87395-580-3|first2=Herbert|last2=Haufrecht|first3=Norman|last3=Studer|ref=harv}}
*{{cite magazine|last=Hilcourt|first=Bill|title=Green Bar Bill Says: Keep Your Feet Dry|magazine=[[Boys' Life]]|date=August 1961|publisher=Boy Scouts of America|ref=harv}}
*{{cite web|last=Nelson-Burns|first=Lesley|title=The Mermaid|url=http://www.contemplator.com/sea/mermaid.html|accessdate=8 August 2012|ref=harv}}
*{{cite book|last=Niles|first=John Jacob|title=The Ballad Book of [[John Jacob Niles]]|year=2000|publisher=University Press of Kentucky|isbn=0813109876|ref=harv}}
==External links==
*Lyrics: [http://www.contemplator.com/sea/mermaid.html The Mermaid]
*Alternate Version of the Lyrics: [http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/child/ch289.htm The Mermaid]
{{Francis James Child}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mermaid}}
[[Category:Child Ballads]]
[[Category:Fictional mermen and mermaids]]
[[Category:Year of song unknown]]' |
Unified diff of changes made by edit (edit_diff ) | '@@ -19,9 +19,9 @@
From the singing of Alfred Chard, Chew Magna, Somerset, Jan 11 1907, collected by [[Cecil Sharp]].<ref>Full English Collections; Vaughan Williams Memorial Library, Permanent URL: https://www.vwml.org/record/CJS2/9/1159 Retrieved 2017/03/24</ref>
-In most versions the ship is unnamed but in a version sung by [[Almeida Riddle]] of Greers Ferry, Arkansas, and collected by Max Hunter the mermaid disappears and the ship is identified as the Merrymac, perhaps influenced by the name of one of several US Navy ships named Merrimack.
+In most versions the ship is unnamed but in a version sung by [[Almeida Riddle]] of Greers Ferry, Arkansas, and collected by Max Hunter the mermaid disappears and the ship is identified as the Merrymac, perhaps influenced by the name of one of several [[US Navy]] ships named Merrimack.
<blockquote>
I will sing you a song of the Merrymac at sea<br />
O, a fine large vessel was she<br />
-An' she set sail for New Orleans<br />
+An' she set sail for [[New Orleans]]<br />
Then, sank to th bottom of the sea<ref name="Merrymac" /><br />
</blockquote>
' |
New page size (new_size ) | 7981 |
Old page size (old_size ) | 7973 |
Size change in edit (edit_delta ) | 8 |
Lines added in edit (added_lines ) | [
0 => 'In most versions the ship is unnamed but in a version sung by [[Almeida Riddle]] of Greers Ferry, Arkansas, and collected by Max Hunter the mermaid disappears and the ship is identified as the Merrymac, perhaps influenced by the name of one of several [[US Navy]] ships named Merrimack.',
1 => 'An' she set sail for [[New Orleans]]<br />'
] |
Lines removed in edit (removed_lines ) | [
0 => 'In most versions the ship is unnamed but in a version sung by [[Almeida Riddle]] of Greers Ferry, Arkansas, and collected by Max Hunter the mermaid disappears and the ship is identified as the Merrymac, perhaps influenced by the name of one of several US Navy ships named Merrimack.',
1 => 'An' she set sail for New Orleans<br />'
] |
Whether or not the change was made through a Tor exit node (tor_exit_node ) | false |
Unix timestamp of change (timestamp ) | 1544245946 |