The Idiom of the People - English Traditional Verse from the Manuscripts of Cecil Sharp (Paperback, Main)


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 sir she answered me

But it's dabbling in the dew where you might find me

The cusp of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries saw a revived fascination with the native song of England, perhaps best known through the work of that crusading folklorist Cecil Sharp. But while the music was inoffensive enough to genteel ears, the violent, ribald and frequently erotic lyrical content was definitely not the respectable Victorian or Edwardian's cup of tea. Accordingly, the folk verse that did find its way into print was invariably neutered by what Alan Lomax describes as 'the dictates of the puritanical and namby-pamby editors of the Mauve Decade'.

In The Idiom of the People (1958), James Reeves has revisited Cecil Sharp's manuscripts, restoring a selection of 115 folk lyrics to their authentic, unexpurgated form. The result is a fascinating record of England's traditional verse, in all its robust, vigorous and beguiling glory.


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Product Description

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 sir she answered me

But it's dabbling in the dew where you might find me

The cusp of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries saw a revived fascination with the native song of England, perhaps best known through the work of that crusading folklorist Cecil Sharp. But while the music was inoffensive enough to genteel ears, the violent, ribald and frequently erotic lyrical content was definitely not the respectable Victorian or Edwardian's cup of tea. Accordingly, the folk verse that did find its way into print was invariably neutered by what Alan Lomax describes as 'the dictates of the puritanical and namby-pamby editors of the Mauve Decade'.

In The Idiom of the People (1958), James Reeves has revisited Cecil Sharp's manuscripts, restoring a selection of 115 folk lyrics to their authentic, unexpurgated form. The result is a fascinating record of England's traditional verse, in all its robust, vigorous and beguiling glory.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Faber and Faber

Country of origin

United Kingdom

Release date

September 2008

Availability

Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days

First published

September 2008

Authors

Dimensions

216 x 135 x 18mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

260

Edition

Main

ISBN-13

978-0-571-24570-3

Barcode

9780571245703

Categories

LSN

0-571-24570-6



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