Sweet William- Dodd (VA) 1918 Sharp L

    Sweet William- Dodd (VA) 1918 Sharp L

[My title. Single stanza with music from: English Folk Songs from the Southern Appalachians I; Sharp/Campbell, 1932 edition, edited by Karpeles. All of Sharp's versions use the generic title, Fair Margaret and Sweet William. Fair Margaret is not the name that is sung, usually it's Lady (Liddy/Lydia) Margaret (Marget/Margret).

Notes from the 1932 edition follow.

R. Matteson 2014]


No. 20. Fair Margaret and Sweet William.

Texts without tunes: — Child's English and Scottish Popular Ballads, No. 74. Ashton's Century of Ballads, p. 345. W. R. Mackenzie's Ballads and Sea Songs from Nova Scotia, No. 7. Journal of American Folk-Lore, xix. 281; xxiii. 381; xxviii. 154; xxx. 303.
Texts with tunes : — Christie's Traditional Ballad Airs, i. 117. Journal of the Folk-Song Society, ii. 289; iii. 64. Folk-Songs of England, i, No. 14. Rimbault's Musical Illustrations of Percy's Reliques, pp. 117 and 118. Kidson's Garland of English Folk Songs, p. 30. ChappelPs Popular Music of the Olden Times, i. 382. C. Sharp's English Folk Songs (Selected Edition), ii. 13. Cox's Folk Songs of the South, pp. 65 and 522 (see also further references). Wyman and Brockway's Lonesome Tunes, p. 94. journal of American Folk-Lore, xxxi. 74; xxxv. 340. Musical Quarterly, January 1916. British Ballads from Maine, p. 134. Davis's Traditional Ballads of Virginia, pp. 221 and 570. McGill's Folk Songs of the Kentucky Mountains, p. 71.

L. Sweet William.
Sung by Mrs. MARGARET JACK DODD at Beechgrove, Va., May 24, 1918
Hexatonic (no 6th).

Sweet William's bride rose one merry morning,
He dressed him self in blue.
Pray tell to me that long, long love
Betwixt Lady Margret and you.