The Cruel Mother- W. Snow (NL) 1929 Karpeles G

The Cruel Mother- W. Snow (NL) 1929 Karpeles G

[Not a local title, assigned by Karpeles. From Folk Songs from Newfoundland, 1934, reprinted 1971, version G.

Following is an excerpt from Song Collecting in Newfoundland: Maud Karpeles, 1929 by David Gregory.

R. Matteson 2014]


Song Collecting in Newfoundland: Maud Karpeles, 1929
David Gregory, Athabasca University

Maud Karpeles (1885-1976) is best known for her song collecting with Cecil Sharp in the Southern Appalachians, her biography of Sharp[1] her commitment to preserving and teaching English folk dancing, and her work for the International Folk Music Council.
During 1929 and 1930 she made two collecting trips to Newfoundland, and they may be seen as the last important activities of the Late Victorian and Edwardian folk music revival and a coda to the work of Cecil Sharp.[2]

Why did Karpeles decide to go to Newfoundland? The reason is simple: Cecil Sharp had recommended it as a most promising place for further field-work. Newfoundland, incidentally, was not part of Canada when she visited it, since it would join the Canadian federation only after the Second World War.

Clarke’s Beach and North River
By now Maud had used up more than half the time she had available, and she had to make a difficult decision: whether to explore the islands of Twillingate and Fogo to the north-east, go further west to the Baie Verte peninsula, or return to eastern Newfoundland. She opted for the latter, taking a boat and train back to the relative civilization of Harbour Grace, where she did some more collecting before moving to Clarke’s Beach on the south-western shore of
Conception Bay.
The dozen or so outports Karpeles visited during the remainder of October included Clarke’s Beach, North River, Halls Town, Kit Hughes, Colliers, Conception Harbour, Harbour Main and Avondale.
The community that she found the most productive was North River, where lived a mix of families descended from both Irish and West of England settlers: the McCabes, Flinns, Boones, Snows, Halls, Fillers, and Sinclairs.

Another member of the Snow family, Rose, offered variants of “Young Floro” and “The Cruel Mother". . .

G. THE CRUEL MOTHER- sung by Mr. William Snow (73) at Harbour Grace, 12th October 1929

As I was walking my father's hall,
All alone and aloney,
I saw two pretty babes a-playing of a ball,
Down by the greenwood sidey.

O babes, O babes, if you were mine,
I would dress you up in silk so fine.

Mother, O mother, when we were yours,
You neither dressed us coarse nor fine.

Pretty babes, pretty babes, can you tell
That my poor soul is to be born in hell?

Mother, O mother, it's we can tell
That your poor soul is to be born in hell,

There's seven years to be born in hell,
And seven more to be ringing of a bell.

And seven more to be a stone in the street
Under men and horses' feet.

And after that you will take a flight
And away to heaven with the angels bright.