Author Topic: Add: A New Song on the Taxes


dmcg

Posted - 04 Sep 05 - 02:19 pm

All you young men and maidens come and listen to my song,
It is something short and comical it won't detain you long.
Go where you will by day or night, the town or country through,
The people cry and wonder what with us they mean to do.

(Chorus)
No wonder people grumble at the taxes more and more,
There never was such taxes in Ireland before.

They're going to tax the farmers, and their horses, carts and ploughs,
They're going to tax the billygoats, the donkeys and the cows;
They're going to tax the mutton, and they're going to tax the beef,
And they're going to tax the women if they do not learn to read.

They will tax the ladies' chignons and their boas, veils and mats,
They're going to tax the mouse traps and the mousies, cats and rats;
They'll tax the ladies' fluncey gowns, their high-heeled boots and stays,
And before the sun begins to shine they'll tax the bugs and fleas.


Source: Singing Together, Autumn 1985, BBC Publications







Malcolm Douglas
Posted - 04 Sep 05 - 06:27 pm

Roud 3033, one example only at present. It appears in Colm O Lochlainn, Irish Street Ballads 8-9 (no. 4), with a further five verses not quoted here. So far as I can see, O Lochlainn's tune has been used, though with the note values roughly doubled, the key lowered half a tone, and the time signature altered from 2/4 to 6/8.

O Lochlainn indicates that he had the tune from a "ballad singer in Galway, 1930" and the text from a printed ballad sheet. He notes tune comparisons with his no. 90, Pat of Mullingar and with Whiskey You're my Darling (Journal of the Folk Song Society vol. VIII p 96). Evidently it was used for a wide range of songs




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