Edition: Paperback
ISBN: 9780571245710
Published:
No of pages: 320

The Everlasting Circle

£16.00

My one man, my two men shall mow me down my meadows,
My three men, my four men shall carry my grass away,
My four, my three, my two, my one, nay not mo,
For to mow my hay and carry it away
On a beautiful midsummer’s day.


In The Idiom of the People (1958), James Reeves revisited the manuscripts of the folklorist Cecil Sharp to produce a selection of traditional English verse undiluted by early twentieth-century propriety. The Everlasting Circle (1960), his successor volume, takes a similarly faithful approach to the folk-verse collections of Sabine Baring-Gould, H. E. D. Hammond and George B. Gardiner.

Restored to their original vitality, the lyrics assembled here sing out joyfully and strong. Songs familiar to us still - ‘The Cuckoo’, ‘The Carpenter’s Wife - sit alongside lesser-known verse in a vibrant collection of England’s folk heritage.

Tags  

Categorised as: Non-fiction
Sub-categories: Biography & Memoir
Genres & Themes: Faber Finds; Folk; Songs; Lyrics; Heritage
Characters: Cecil Sharp

The Idiom of the People
James Reeves

Where shall I meet you my pretty little dear
With your red rosy cheeks and your coal black hair
I’m going a milking kind ...

Folk Song in England
A. L. Lloyd

A seminal work by one of the most influential figures of the English folk revival of the 1950s, Folk Song in England (1967) is an ...

Cecil Sharp
Maud Karpeles

Others came before and after him but no person is more strongly associated with the revival of English folk song and dance at the turn ...

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