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A poem by Anonymous (Poetry's author) |
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The Craven Churn-Supper Song |
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Title: The Craven Churn-Supper Song Author: Anonymous (Poetry's author) [More Titles by Anonymous (Poetry's author)] [In some of the more remote dales of Craven it is customary at the close of the hay-harvest for the farmers to give an entertainment to their men; this is called the churn supper; a name which Eugene Aram traces to 'the immemorial usage of producing at such suppers a great quantity of cream in a churn, and circulating it in cups to each of the rustic company, to be eaten with bread.' At these churn-suppers the masters and their families attend the entertainment, and share in the general mirth. The men mask themselves, and dress in a grotesque manner, and are allowed the privilege of playing harmless practical jokes on their employers, &c. The churn-supper song varies in different dales, but the following used to be the most popular version. In the third verse there seems to be an allusion to the clergyman's taking tythe in kind, on which occasions he is generally accompanied by two or three men, and the parish clerk. The song has never before been printed. There is a marked resemblance between it and a song of the date of 1650, called A Cup of Old Stingo. See Popular Music of the Olden Time, I., 308.] This ale it is a gallant thing, 'Twill make the parson forget his men, - So now to conclude, my merry boys, all, [The end] GO TO TOP OF SCREEN |