Come, all ye jolly Tinner boys
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Come, all ye jolly Tinner boys" is a traditional folk song associated with Cornwall. It is a song against Napoleon Bonaparte, written circa 1807, the date of the invasion of Poland. [1]
According to Cornish historian Robert Morton Nance, it was possibly the inspiration to R. S. Hawker's "The Song of the Western Men" which was written in 1824.
[edit] Lyrics
Come, all ye jolly Tinner boys, and listen to me;
I'll tell ее of a storie shall make ye for to see,
Consarning Boney Peartie, the schaames which he had maade
To stop our tin and copper mines, and all our pilchard traade.
Chorus- Hurea for tin and copper, boys, and fisheries likewise!
Hurea for Cornish maadens-Oh, bless their pretty eyes!
Hurea for our ould gentrie, and may they never faale!
Hurea, hurea for Cornwall! Hurea, boys, "one and ale!"
He summonsed forty thousand men, to Polland they did goa,
And for to rob and plunder there you very well do knawa;
But ten-thou-sand were killed, and laade dead in blood and goare,
And thirty thousand ranned away, and I cante tell where, I'm sure.
And should that Boney Peartie have forty thousand still
To make into an army to work his wicked will,
And try for to invaade us, if he doesnt quickly fly—
Why forty thousand Cornish boys shall knawa the reason why.[2]
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- The Reason Why article from Old Cornwall by Robert Morton Nance.
|