True Sailor Boy- Beulah Wohlbeek (MO) 1934 Belden F

True Sailor Boy- Beulah Wohlbeek (MO) 1934 Belden F

[From Belden's "Songs and Ballads," p. 188. Belden's notes follow.

R. Matteson 2017]



The Sailor Boy

This song is a general favorite on both side of the water. The core of it is that the girl asks her father to build her a boat that she may go in search of her sailor lover; that, meeting ships, she inquires for him and is told that he was drowned (or simply 'lost') at an island (commonly 'Rocky Island'); and that she then runs her boat upon a rock or throws herself overboard. Very often the conclusion is borrowed. from The Butcher Boy: she calls for pen, ink, and paper and writes a letter directing that her grave be dug long and deep and a turtle dove be placed on her breast to show that she died for love. The Lincolnshire text shows a pretty complete contamination of the two: she hangs herself, and her father comes home, cuts her down, and finds the letter. Stall texts were printed by Catnach and Such, and one by Pitts is allied to it in story tho not in language. It is recorded from tradition in Scotland (Christie I 249), Ireland. (JFSS VIII 213), Lincolnshire (JFSS II 293-4), Sussex (JFSS 199), Worcestershire (ECS 71-5, Dorset (JFSS VIII 212), Somerset (NSS IV 2-3); in Newfoundland. (FSM9-62), Nova Scotia (SBNS 89-91), Quebec (JAFL xxxl 1?0-1), ottawa (JAFL XXXI 162); in Virginia (SharpK II 87-8, scsM 319-20), West Virginia (FSS 353-?), Kentucky (SharpK II 87), Tennessee (JAFL XXX 363-4, XIJV 79-80, FSSH 188-9, SharpK II 86-7), North Carolina (JAFL XIIV 80-1, SSSA 177-8, FSSH 189-90, SharpK II 84-6, 88-9), Georgia (JAFL XXIX 199), Ohio (JAFL XXXV 410-1), and Wisconsin
(BSSB 85-6, adapted to the life of raftsmen). 'Careless Love,'reported by Henry from North Carolina (BMFSB 24-5), and "A Soldier's Life," reported by Cox from West Virginia (FSWV 29-30), use parts of it. I have not found it reported from the North Atlantic states.

F. 'True Sailor Boy.' Contributed by Miss Beulah Wohlbeek in 1934 as known to her uncle in Morgan County.

'Captain, O Captain, come tell me true,
Does my Sweet William sail with you?
Tell me quick and give me joy,
For I'm inquiring for my true sailor boy.'

As she went sailing clown the main
She met three ships all out from Spain;
And every ship that she passed by
She'd inquire for her true sailor boy.

She rammed her boat against a rock.
I thought to my soul her heart had broke;
She wrung her hands and tore her hair
Just like a lady in despair.