River Sáile- Fergus (Dublin) early-1900s

River Sáile- Fergus (Dublin) early-1900s

[This is a version (based loosely on The Cruel Mother) of the children's game-song usually found in Ireland that is titled Old Mother Lee or Weela Wallia.

R. Matteson 2012]

Submitted by Fergus on the Digital Traditional site March 2004. Note by Fergus:

Circa. 1956/7 I sang this song for my grandfather when he came to visit my father, I sang the version that I had learned from my siblings and from the street skipping, (I was reared in a small suburban housing-estate in northside Dublin) my grandfather said that he also learned it from the skipping.

It was mostly girls who would skip they would use a shortrope, two would swing the rope and a third would run in and skip, they had all sorts of songs and rhymes to keep time. If there was less than three girls then a young boy might be pressed into turning one end of the rope and to help sing out the rythyms.

My grandfather said that he had learned the proper words and he then proceed to teach me the variant of the song that he learned. This is how I remember it.

My grand father had me sing the first line, then he would reply in answer with the second line. He said that was how he learned it when he was a child, he was born in the heart of Dublin city in about 1890. He died in 1974 (Ar dheis Dé go raibh a ainm).
You seldom see street skipping in Dublin anymore, and you hear precious little of "the haunting childrens rhymes, that once were part of Dublin in the rare ould times"


River Sáile- Fergus (Dublin) early-1900s

There was an old woman who lived in the woods
We la, we la, wall la,
and that old woman she wasn't very good
Down by the river Sáile

She had a baby three months old
And that little babby was very bold

She had a penknife long and sharp
She stuck the dagger in the babby's heart

She stuck the penknife in the baby's head
The more she struck the more it bled

She buried the baby in the wood
The neighbours they all saw the blood.

Three hard knocks came knocking on the door
And the woman fell down in a faint on the floor

T'was two police men and a man
And another ouside waiting in the van

"Are you the woman that killed the child?"
She said "I am" and they went wild

They took her away and they put her in the jail
Loudly she did bawl and loudly she did wail

They put a rope around her neck
And dragger her up onto the deck

The rope was pulled and she got hung
Round and round her body swung

Now that was the end of the woman in the woods
And that was the end of the babby too

The moral of the story is:
Don't stick a penknive in a babby's head