> Tim Hart & Maddy Prior > Songs > The Dalesman's Litany
The Dalesman's Litany
[words F.W. Moorman, music Dave Keddie arr. Tim Hart]
Frederic William Moorman, professor of English Language and Literature at Leeds University, wrote his poem The Dalesman's Litany in about 1900. It was published in his book Songs of the Ridings (Elkin Mathews, London, 1918).
Tim Hart sang The Dalesman's Litany in 1968 on his and Maddy Prior's first duo album, Folk Songs of Old England Vol. 1. The record's sleeve notes comment:
The words of this song were collected by F.W. Moorman who was president of the Yorkshire Dialect Society during the latter part of the 19th century. The beautiful haunting melody was written only a few years ago by Dave Keddie of Bradford to whom we are indebted for allowing its inclusion on this record. Although the lyrics were originally in broad dialect Tim translated them where necessary to enable more people to understand them.
Dave Burland sang The Dalesman's Litany in 1971 as the title track of his Trailer album A Dalesman's Litany. Roy Bailey sang it in the same year, accompanied by Leon Rosselson on guitar and John Kirkpatrick on accordion, on his eponymous Trailer album Roy Bailey.
Cliff Haslam sang Dalesman's Litany in 1976 on the Living Folk album Here's A Health to the Man and the Maid.
Jon Boden sang The Dalesman's Litany as the March 14, 2011 entry of his project A Folk Song a Day. He noted in his blog:
Fay [Hield] is from Keighley so I fear will never forgive Tim Hart for his mispronunciation (‘Keeley’). I’ve at least got that right although, as ever, the southern accent lets me down with this song.
Moore Moss Rutter learned The Dalesman's Litany from the singing of Dave Burland and recorded it in 2011 for their first CD, Moore Moss Rutter.
Lyrics
| F.W. Moorman's poem | Tim Hart sings The Dalesman's Litany |
|---|---|
|
It's hard when fowks can't finnd their wark |
It's hard when folks can't find their work |
|
When I were courtin' Mary Ann, |
When I was courting Mary Jane |
|
I've wrowt i' Leeds an' Huthersfel', |
I've worked in Leeds and Huddersfield |
|
I've walked at neet through Sheffield loans3, |
I've walked at night through Sheffield lanes |
|
I've seen grey fog creep ower Leeds Brig |
I've seen fog creep across Leeds bridge |
|
But now, when all wer childer's fligged,5 |
But now that all our children have gone |
1 shelter; 2 earned; 3 lanes; 4 workhouse; 5 fledged
All places mentioned are in the West or South Riding of Yorkshire except for Hull which is part of Humberside.
Acknowledgements and Links
Transcriped by Reinhard Zierke. The names of the places were really hard to get, so many thanks to Stuart Preston, Terry Rigby, and Simon Talbot for invaluable help. I only found F.W. Moorman's original poem later.
See also the Mudcat Café thread Origins: Who Wrote Dalesman's Litany?
