Welcome to Assassin's Creed Wiki! Log in and join the community.

Sea shanties: Difference between revisions

From the Assassin's Creed Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
 
(7 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Era|Culture}}{{WP-REAL|Sea shanty}}
{{Era|Culture}}{{WP-REAL|Sea shanty}}
{{Update|[[Assassin's Creed: Odyssey]] and [[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]}}
{{Update|[[Assassin's Creed: Odyssey]], [[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]] and [[Assassin's Creed: Black Flag Resynced]]}}
<!--
A Long Time Ago [in Arroyos]
Blow The Man Down [in Princípe]
Burn Blackbeard's Beard
Light Upon The River
Reuben Ranzo [Local event in Great Inagua]
The Last Voyage of Stede Bonnet
The Wellerman [Very involved, check a guide]
-->
[[File:AC4 Shanty page.png|thumb|250px|A sea shanty page]]
[[File:AC4 Shanty page.png|thumb|250px|A sea shanty page]]
'''Sea shanties''' are working songs commonly sung aboard [[ship]]s by sailors. They were especially common among navy men and [[Piracy|pirates]]. The shanty consisted of two parts, the chant and the chorus. The chant would often be initiated by a single crewman who would sing the opening lines and establish the beat, and the chorus would then come as the rest of the crew would join in.<ref>{{WP|Sea shanty}}</ref>
'''Sea shanties''' are working songs commonly sung aboard [[ship]]s by sailors. They were especially common among navy men and [[Piracy|pirates]]. The shanty consisted of two parts, the chant and the chorus. The chant would often be initiated by a single crewman who would sing the opening lines and establish the beat, and the chorus would then come as the rest of the crew would join in.<ref>{{WP|Sea shanty}}</ref>


==History==
During the [[Golden Age of Piracy]], [[Edward Kenway]] could request his crew to sing various shanties, the lyrics of which he obtained from pages strewn across the [[Caribbean]].<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag]]''</ref> This tradition continued into the [[Seven Years' War]], when the [[American Rite of the Templar Order|Colonial Templar]] [[Shay Cormac]] also collected some shanties during his travels around the [[British Empire]]'s [[United States|colonies]].<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]''</ref>
During the [[Golden Age of Piracy]], [[Edward Kenway]] could request his crew to sing various shanties, the lyrics of which he obtained from pages strewn across the [[Caribbean]].<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag]]''</ref> This tradition continued into the [[Seven Years' War]], when the [[American Rite of the Templar Order|Colonial Templar]] [[Shay Cormac]] also collected some shanties during his travels around the [[British Empire]]'s [[United States|colonies]].<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]''</ref>
{{-}}
 
==Known shanties==
==Known shanties==
<!--
===5th century BCE===
===9th century CE===
-->
===Early 18th century===
<tabber>
<tabber>
|-|Billy Riley=
|-|Billy Riley=
Old Billy Riley was a dancing master.<br>
Old Billy Riley was a dancing master.<br>
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!
<br><br>
 
Old Billy Riley's master of a drogher.<br>
Old Billy Riley's master of a [[wikt:drogher|drogher]].<br>
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!
<br><br>
 
Master of a [[wikt:drogher|drogher]] bound for {{Wiki|Antigua}}.<br>
Master of a drogher bound for {{Wiki|Antigua}}.<br>
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!
<br><br>
 
Old Billy Riley has a nice young daughter.<br>
Old Billy Riley has a nice young daughter.<br>
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!
<br><br>
 
Oh Missy Riley, little Missy Riley.<br>
Oh Missy Riley, little Missy Riley.<br>
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!
<br><br>
 
Had a pretty daughter, but we can't get at her.<br>
Had a pretty daughter, but we can't get at her.<br>
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!
<br><br>
 
Screw her up and away we go, boys.<br>
Screw her up and away we go, boys.<br>
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!
<br><br>
 
One more pull and then belay, boys.<br>
One more pull and then belay, boys.<br>
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!
|-|Bloody Red Roses=
|-|Bully in the Alley=
Me bonnie bunch o'roses O!<br>
(Chorus)<br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
Help me, Bob, I'm bully in the alley,<br>
It's time for us to roll 'n' go! <br>
Way, hey, bully in the alley!<br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
Help me, Bob, I'm bully in the alley,<br>
Ooh! You pinks 'n' posies,<br>
Bully down in shinbone al!
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
 
<br><br>
Sally is the girl that I love dearly,<br>
We're bound away around {{Wiki|Cape Horn}}<br>
Way, hey, bully in the alley.<br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
Sally is the girl that I spliced dearly,<br>
We wisht ter hell you'd niver bin born<br>
Bully down in shinbone al.
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
 
Ooh! You pinks n' posies,<br>
(Chorus)
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
 
<br><br>
For seven long years I courted little Sally,<br>
Me boots an' clothes are all in a pawn,<br>
Way, hey, bully in the alley.<br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
But all she did was dilly and dally.<br>
An' it's bleedin' draughty around Cape Horn,<br>
Bully down in shinbone al.
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
 
Ooh! You pinks 'n' posies,<br>
(Chorus)
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
 
<br><br>
I ever get back, I'll marry little Sally,<br>
Ti's growl ye may but go ye must,<br>
Way, hey, bully in the alley.<br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
Have six kids and live in Shin-bone Alley.<br>
If ye growl too hard yer head they'll bust.<br>
Bully down in shinbone al.
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
 
Ooh! You pinks 'n' posies,<br>
(Chorus)
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
|-|Captain Kidd=
<br><br>
O, my name was [[Captain]] [[William Kidd|Kidd]],<br>
Them Spanish gals are pullin' strong,<br>
as I sailed, as I sailed,<br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
O, my name was Captain Kidd,<br>
Hang down, me boys, it won't take long.<br>
as I sailed.<br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
My name was Captain Kidd<br>
Ooh! You pinks 'n' posies,<br>
And [[Christianity|God]]'s laws I did forbid,<br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
And so wickedly I did<br>
<br><br>
as I sailed, as I sailed.<br>
Just one more pull an' that'll do<br>
So wickedly I did<br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
as I sailed.
We're the bullies for ter kick'er through.<br>
 
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
I murdered William Moore,<br>
Ooh! You pinks 'n' posies,<br>
as I sailed, as I sailed.<br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
O, I murdered William Moore<br>
Ooh! You pinks 'n' posies,<br>
as I sailed.<br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
I laid him in his gore,<br>
|-|Bold Riley Oh=
Not many leagues from the shore,<br>
Well, our anchor's on board and our rags are all set,<br>
O, I murdered William Moore,<br>
Bold Riley-oh, boom-a-lay!<br>
as I sailed, as I sailed.<br>
Them Liverpool Judies, we'll never forget,<br>
I murdered William Moore<br>
Bold Riley-oh, gone away!
as I sailed.
<br><br>
 
CHORUS:<br>
I spied three ships from [[Spain]]<br>
Goodbye, me darling, goodbye, me dear-oh,<br>
as I sailed, as I sailed,<br>
Bold Riley-oh, boom-a-lay!<br>
O, I spied three ships from Spain<br>
Goodbye, me darling, goodbye, me dear-oh,<br>
as I sailed.<br>
Bold Riley-oh, gone away!
I spied three ships from Spain,<br>
<br><br>
and I fired on them a-main,<br>
Well, the rain it is raining all the day long,<br>
And most of them I slain,<br>
Bold Riley-oh, boom-a-lay!<br>
as I sailed, as I sailed.<br>
And the northerly wind, it does so strong.<br>
And most of them I slain<br>
Bold Riley-oh, gone away!
as I sailed.
<br><br>
 
CHORUS<br>
Come all you young and old,<br>
<br><br>
see me die, see me die.<br>
We're outward and bound for the Bengal Bay,<br>
Come all you young and old,<br>
Bold Riley-oh, boom-a-lay!<br>
see me die.<br>
Get bending, me lads, it's a hell of a way.<br>
You are welcome to my goal,<br>
Bold Riley-oh, gone away!
And by it I lost my soul<br>
<br><br>
Come all you young and old,<br>
CHORUS<br>
I must die, I must die.<br>
|-|Bully in the Alley=
Come all you young and old,<br>
I must die.
|-|Cheerly Man=
Oh, Nancy Dawson, Hi-oh!<br>
Cheerly, man!<br>
She rubbed the {{Wiki|Boatswain|Bo'sun}}, Hi-oh!<br>
Cheerly, man!<br>
That was a caution, Hi-oh!
 
(Chorus)<br>
(Chorus)<br>
Help me, Bob, I'm bully in the alley,<br>
Cheerly, man,<br>
Way, hey, bully in the alley!<br>
O! Haulee, Hi-oh,<br>
Help me, Bob, I'm bully in the alley,<br>
Cheerly, man.
Bully down in shinbone al!
 
<br><br>
Oh, Sally Racket, Hi-oh!<br>
Sally is the girl that I love dearly,<br>
Cheerly, man!<br>
Way, hey, bully in the alley.<br>
Pawned my best jacket, Hi-oh!<br>
Sally is the girl that I spliced dearly,<br>
Cheerly, man!<br>
Bully down in shinbone al.
And sold pawn the ticket, Hi-oh!
<br><br>
 
(Chorus)
(Chorus)
<br><br>
 
For seven long years I courted little Sally,<br>
Oh, Kitty Carson, Hi-oh!<br>
Way, hey, bully in the alley.<br>
Cheerly, man!<br>
But all she did was dilly and dally.<br>
[[wikt:jilt|Jitted]] the parson, Hi-oh!
Bully down in shinbone al.
Cheerly, man!<br>
<br><br>
Married a mason, Hi-oh!
 
(Chorus)
(Chorus)
<br><br>
 
I ever get back, I'll marry little Sally,<br>
Oh, Betsy Baker, Hi-oh!<br>
Way, hey, bully in the alley.<br>
Cheerly, man!<br>
Have six kids and live in Shin-bone Alley.<br>
Lived in {{Wiki|Long Acre}}, Hi-oh!<br>
Bully down in shinbone al.
Cheerly, man!<br>
<br><br>
Married a {{Wiki|Quakers|Quaker}}, Hi-oh!
 
(Chorus)
 
Oh, Jenny Walker, Hi-oh!<br>
Cheerly, man!<br>
Married a {{Wiki|Hawker (trade)|hawker}}, Hi-oh!<br>
Cheerly, man!<br>
That was a [[wikt:corker|corker]], Hi-oh!
 
(Chorus)
 
Oh, Polly Riddle, Hi-oh!<br>
Cheerly, man!<br>
Broke her new fiddle, Hi-oh!<br>
Cheerly, man!<br>
Right through the middle, Hi-oh!
 
(Chorus)
(Chorus)
|-|Captain Kidd=
|-|Derby Ram=
O, my name was Captain [[William Kidd|Kidd]],<br>
As I was going to {{Wiki|Derby}}, 'twas on a market day,<br>
as I sailed, as I sailed,<br>
I met the finest [[Sheep|ram]], sirs, that ever was fed upon hay.
O, my name was Captain Kidd,<br>
 
as I sailed.<br>
(Chorus)<br>
My name was Captain Kidd<br>
That's a lie, that's a lie<br>
And God's laws I did forbid,<br>
That's a lie, a lie, a lie!
And so wickedly I did<br>
 
as I sailed, as I sailed.<br>
This ram and I got drunk, sir, as drunk as drunk could be,<br>
So wickedly I did<br>
And when we sobered up, sir, we were far away out on the sea.
as I sailed.
 
<br><br>
(Chorus)
I murdered William Moore,<br>
 
as I sailed, as I sailed.<br>
This wonderful old ram, sir, was playful as a kid;<br>
O, I murdered William Moore<br>
He swallowed the captain's spyglass along with the bo'sun's {{Wiki|fid}}.
as I sailed.<br>
 
I laid him in his gore,<br>
(Chorus)
Not many leagues from the shore,<br>
 
O, I murdered William Moore,<br>
One morning on the {{Wiki|Poop deck|poop}}, sir, afore eight bells was struck.<br>
as I sailed, as I sailed.<br>
He climbed up to the sky's I yard an' sat down on the truck.
I murdered William Moore<br>
 
as I sailed.
(Chorus)
<br><br>
 
I spied three ships from [[Spain]]<br>
This wonderful ol' ram, sir, he tried a silly trick,<br>
as I sailed, as I sailed,<br>
He tried to jump a five-barred fence and landed in a [[wikt:rick|rick]].
O, I spied three ships from Spain<br>
 
as I sailed.<br>
(Chorus)
I spied three ships from Spain,<br>
 
and I fired on them a-main,<br>
This wonderful ol' ram, sir, it grew two horns of [[brass]],<br>
And most of them I slain,<br>
One grew out o' his shoulder blade, t'other turned into a mast.
as I sailed, as I sailed.<br>
 
And most of them I slain<br>
(Chorus)
as I sailed.
 
<br><br>
An' when this ram was killed, sir, the butcher was covered in blood.<br>
Come all you young and old,<br>
Five and twenty butcher boys was carried away the flood.
see me die, see me die.<br>
 
Come all you young and old,<br>
(Chorus)
see me die.<br>
An' when this ram was dead, sir, they buried it in St. Joan's,<br>
You are welcome to my goal,<br>
It took ten men an' an [[elephant]] to carry one of its bones.
And by it I lost my soul<br>
 
Come all you young and old,<br>
(Chorus)
I must die, I must die.<br>
|-|Drunken Sailor=
Come all you young and old,<br>
I must die.
|-|Cheerly Man=
Oh, Nancy Dawson, Hi-oh!<br>
Cheerly, man!<br>
She rubbed the {{Wiki|Boatswain|Bo'sun}}, Hi-oh!<br>
Cheerly, man!<br>
That was a caution, Hi-oh!
<br><br>
(Chorus)<br>
(Chorus)<br>
Cheerly, man,<br>
Weigh-hay and up she rises<br>
O! Haulee, Hi-oh,<br>
Weigh-hay and up she rises<br>
Cheerly, man.
Weigh-hay and up she rises<br>
<br><br>
Early in the morning!
Oh, Sally Racket, Hi-oh!<br>
 
Cheerly, man!<br>
What will we do with a drunken sailor,<br>
Pawned my best jacket, Hi-oh!<br>
What will we do with a drunken sailor,<br>
Cheerly, man!<br>
What will we do with a drunken sailor,<br>
And sold pawn the ticket, Hi-oh!
Early in the morning?
<br><br>
 
(Chorus)
(Chorus)
<br><br>
 
Oh, Kitty Carson, Hi-oh!<br>
Put 'em in the {{Wiki|scupper}}s with a hose pipe on him,<br>
Cheerly, man!<br>
Put 'em in the scuppers with a hose pipe on him,<br>
Jitted the parson, Hi-oh!
Put 'em in the scuppers with a hose pipe on him,<br>
Cheerly, man!<br>
Early in the morning!
Married a mason, Hi-oh!
 
<br><br>
(Chorus)
(Chorus)
<br><br>
 
Oh, Betsy Baker, Hi-oh!<br>
Put him in the brig until he's sober,<br>
Cheerly, man!<br>
Put him in the brig until he's sober,<br>
Lived in {{Wiki|Long Acre}}, Hi-oh!<br>
Put him in the brig until he's sober,<br>
Cheerly, man!<br>
Early in the morning!
Married a {{Wiki|Quakers|Quaker}}, Hi-oh!
 
<br><br>
(Chorus)
(Chorus)
<br><br>
|-|Fish in the Sea=
Oh, Jenny Walker, Hi-oh!<br>
Come all you young sailor men, listen to me,<br>
Cheerly, man!<br>
I'll sing you a song of the [[fish]] in the sea;
Married a hawker, Hi-oh!<br>
 
Cheerly, man!<br>
(Chorus)<br>
That was a corker, Hi-oh!
And it's...<br>
<br><br>
Windy weather, boys, stormy weather, boys,<br>
(Chorus)
When the wind blows, we're all together, boys;<br>
<br><br>
Blow ye winds westerly, blow ye winds, blow,<br>
Oh, Polly Riddle, Hi-oh!<br>
Jolly sou'wester, boys, steady she goes.
Cheerly, man!<br>
 
Broke her new fiddle, Hi-oh!<br>
Up jumps the eel with his slippery tail,<br>
Cheerly, man!<br>
Climbs up aloft and reefs the topsail.
Right through the middle, Hi-oh!
 
<br><br>
(Chorus)
(Chorus)
|-|Derby Ram=
 
As I was going to Derby, 'twas on a market day,<br>
Then up jumps the [[shark]] with his nine rows of teeth,<br>
I met the finest ram, sirs, that ever was fed upon hay.
Saying, "You eat the dough boys, and I'll eat the beef!"
<br><br>
 
(Chorus)<br>
That's a lie, that's a lie<br>
That's a lie, a lie, a lie!
<br><br>
This ram and I got drunk, sir, as drunk as drunk could be,<br>
And when we sobered up, sir, we were far away out on the sea.
<br><br>
(Chorus)
(Chorus)
<br><br>
 
This wonderful old ram, sir, was playful as a kid;<br>
Up jumps the [[whale]]... the largest of all,<br>
He swallowed the captain's spyglass along with the bo'sun's fid.
"If you want any wind, well, I'll blow ye a squall!"
<br><br>
 
(Chorus)
(Chorus)
<br><br>
|-|Good Morning Ladies All=
One morning on the poop, sir, afore eight bells was struck.<br>
We are outward bound for {{Wiki|Mobile, Newfoundland and Labrador|Mobile town}}<br>
He climbed up to the sky's I yard an' sat down on the truck.
With a heave-o, haul!<br>
<br><br>
An' we'll heave the ol' wheel round an' round<br>
(Chorus)
Good mornin' ladies all!
<br><br>
 
This wonderful ol' ram, sir, he tried a silly trick,<br>
An' when we get to Mobile town<br>
He tried to jump a five-barred fence and landed in a [[wikt:rick|rick]].
With a heave-o, haul!<br>
<br><br>
Oh, 'tis there we'll drink an' sorrow drown<br>
(Chorus)
Good mornin' ladies all!
<br><br>
 
This wonderful ol' ram, sir, it grew two horns of [[brass]],<br>
Them gals down south are free an' gay<br>
One grew out o' his shoulder blade, t'other turned into a mast.
With a heave-o, haul!<br>
<br><br>
Wid them we'll spend our hard-earned pay<br>
(Chorus)
Good mornin' ladies all!
<br><br>
 
An' when this ram was killed, sir, the butcher was covered in blood.<br>
We'll swing around, we'll have good fun<br>
Five and twenty butcher boys was carried away the flood.
With a heave-o, haul!<br>
<br><br>
An' soon we'll be back on the homeward run<br>
(Chorus)
Good mornin' ladies all!
An' when this ram was dead, sir, they buried it in St. Joan's,<br>
 
It took ten men an' an [[elephant]] to carry one of its bones.
An' when we get to [[Bristol]] town<br>
<br><br>
With a heave-o, haul!<br>
(Chorus)
For the very last time we'll waltz around<br>
|-|Don't Forget Your Old Shipmates=
Good mornin' ladies all!
Safe and sound at home again, let the waters roar, Jack.<br>
 
Safe and sound at home again, let the waters roar, Jack.
With Poll and Meg an' Sally too<br>
<br><br>
With a heave-o, haul!<br>
Chorus:<br>
We'll drink an' dance wid a hullabaloo<br>
Long we've tossed on the rolling main, now we're safe ashore, Jack.<br>
Good mornin' ladies all!
Don't forget yer old shipmate, faldee raldee raldee raldee rye-eye-doe!
 
<br><br>
So a long goodbye to all you dears<br>
Since we sailed from Plymouth Sound, four years gone, or nigh, Jack.<br>
With a heave-o, haul!<br>
Was there ever chummies, now, such as you and I, Jack?
Don't cry for us, don't waste yer tears<br>
<br><br>
Good mornin' ladies all!
Chorus
|-|Handy Me Boys=
<br><br>
Why can't ye be so handy-o!<br>
We have worked the self-same gun, quarterdeck division.<br>
Handy, me boys, so handy!
Sponger I and loader you, through the whole commission.
 
<br><br>
Oh, aloft this {{Wiki|Yard (sailing)|yard}} must go.<br>
Chorus
Handy, me boys, so handy!
<br><br>
 
When the middle watch was on, and the time went slow, boy,<br>
Ooh! Up aloft from down below.<br>
Who could choose a rousing stave, who like Jack or Joe, boy?
Handy, me boys, so handy!
<br><br>
 
Chorus
Growl ye may, but go ye must.<br>
<br><br>
Handy, me boys, so handy!
There she swings, an empty hulk, not a soul below now.<br>
 
Number seven starboard mess misses Jack and Joe now.
Growl too much an yer head they'll bust.<br>
<br><br>
Handy, me boys, so handy!
Chorus
 
<br><br>
Oh, a bully ship an' a bully crew.<br>
But the best of friends must part, fair or foul the weather.<br>
Handy, me boys, so handy!
Hand yer flipper for a shake, now a drink together.
 
<br><br>
Oh, we're the gang for the kick 'er through.<br>
Chorus
Handy, me boys, so handy!
</tabber>
 
<tabber>
Yer advance has gone, yer at sea again.<br>
|-|Donkey Riding=
Handy, me boys, so handy!
Was you ever in [[Quebec]]<br>
 
Launchin' timber on the deck?<br>
Hey, bound round the horn through the hail an' rain.<br>
Where ya break yer bleedin' neck<br>
Handy, me boys, so handy!
Ridin' on a [[donkey]]!
 
<br><br>
Sing an' haul, an' haul an' sing.<br>
Way hey and away we go<br>
Handy, me boys, so handy!
Donkey riding, donkey riding<br>
 
Way hey and away we go<br>
Up aloft this yard we'll swing.<br>
Ridin' on a donkey.
Handy, me boys, so handy!
<br><br>
 
Was you ever in {{Wiki|Valparaíso|Vallipo}}<br>
Up aloft that yard must go.<br>
Where the gals put on a show?<br>
Handy, me boys, so handy!
Wriggle and dance with a roll and go<br>
 
Riding on a donkey.
For we are outward bound, ye know.<br>
<br><br>
Handy, me boys, so handy!
Wuz ye ever down {{Wiki|Mobile Bay}}<br>
 
Screwin' cotton all the day?<br>
A handy ship an' a handy crew.<br>
A dollar a day is a white man's pay.<br>
Handy, me boys, so handy!
Ridin' on a donkey.
 
<br><br>
A handy {{Wiki|Chief mate|Mate}} an Old Man too.<br>
Was you ever in [[London]]-town<br>
Handy, me boys, so handy!
Where the girls eat do come down<br>
|-|Hauley Hauley Ho=
See the King in his golden crown<br>
[[England]], ould [[Ireland]]<br>
Riding on a donkey
England, ould Ireland<br>
<br><br>
England, ould Ireland<br>
Was you ever 'round Cape Horn<br>
Hauley Hauley Ho!
Where the weather's never warm?<br>
 
Wished to [[Christianity|God]] you'd never been born<br>
Paddy M'Ginty<br>
Ridin' on a donkey.
Paddy, Jock and Jackie too,<br>
|-|Drunken Sailor=
Oh Paddy M'Ginty,<br>
(Chorus)<br>
Hauley Hauley Ho!
Weigh-hay and up she rises<br>
 
Weigh-hay and up she rises<br>
Shamrock an' Rose, boys,<br>
Weigh-hay and up she rises<br>
Shamrock, Rose, and prickly Thistle too,<br>
Early in the morning!
Shamrock an' Rose, boys,<br>
<br><br>
Hauley Hauley Ho!
What will we do with a drunken sailor,<br>
 
What will we do with a drunken sailor,<br>
England, ould Ireland<br>
What will we do with a drunken sailor,<br>
England, ould Ireland<br>
Early in the morning?
England, ould Ireland<br>
<br><br>
Hauley Hauley Ho!
(Chorus)
|-|Hi-Ho Come Roll Me Over=
<br><br>
Why don't you blow<br>
Put 'em in the scuppers with a hose pipe on him,<br>
High-O! Come roll me over<br>
Put 'em in the scuppers with a hose pipe on him,<br>
Why don't you blow<br>
Put 'em in the scuppers with a hose pipe on him,<br>
High-O! Come roll me over
Early in the morning!
 
<br><br>
One man to strike the bell<br>
(Chorus)
High-O! Come roll me over<br>
<br><br>
One man to strike the bell<br>
Put him in the brig until he's sober,<br>
High-O! Come roll me over
Put him in the brig until he's sober,<br>
 
Put him in the brig until he's sober,<br>
Two men to man the wheel<br>
Early in the morning!
High-O! Come roll me over<br>
<br><br>
Two men to man the wheel<br>
(Chorus)
High-O! Come roll me over
|-|Fish in the Sea=
 
Come all you young sailor men, listen to me,<br>
Three men, to gallant {{Wiki|Brace (sailing)|braces}}<br>
I'll sing you a song of the fish in the sea;
High-O! Come roll me over<br>
<br><br>
Three men, to gallant braces<br>
(Chorus)<br>
High-O! Come roll me over
And it's...<br>
 
Windy weather, boys, stormy weather, boys,<br>
Four men to furl {{Wiki|Topgallant sail|t'garns'ls}}<br>
When the wind blows, we're all together, boys;<br>
High-O! Come roll me over<br>
Blow ye winds westerly, blow ye winds, blow,<br>
Four men to furl t'garns'ls<br>
Jolly sou'wester, boys, steady she goes.
High-O! Come roll me over
<br><br>
 
Up jumps the eel with his slippery tail,<br>
Five men to {{Wiki|Clewlines and buntlines|bunt-a-bo}}<br>
Climbs up aloft and reefs the topsail.
High-O! Come roll me over<br>
<br><br>
Five men to bunt-a-bo<br>
(Chorus)
High-O! Come roll me over
<br><br>
</tabber>
Then up jumps the [[shark]] with his nine rows of teeth,<br>
<tabber>
Saying, "You eat the dough boys, and I'll eat the beef!"
|-|Homeward Bound=
<br><br>
Oh, don't yiz hear the old man say?<br>
(Chorus)
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!<br>
<br><br>
Oh, don't yiz hear the old man say?<br>
Up jumps the [[whale]]... the largest of all,<br>
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!
"If you want any wind, well, I'll blow ye a squall!"
 
<br><br>
We're Homeward bound to [[Liverpool]] Town,<br>
(Chorus)
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!<br>
|-|Good Morning Ladies All=
Where all them judies, they will come down<br>
We are outward bound for {{Wiki|Mobile, Newfoundland and Labrador|Mobile town}}<br>
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!
With a heave-o, haul!<br>
 
An' we'll heave the ol' wheel round an' round<br>
An' when we gits to the {{Wiki|Wallasey Pool|Wallasey}} {{Wiki|Great Float|Gates}}<br>
Good mornin' ladies all!
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!<br>
<br><br>
Sally an' Olly for their flash men do wait<br>
An' when we get to Mobile town<br>
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!
With a heave-o, haul!<br>
 
Oh, 'tis there we'll drink an' sorrow drown<br>
An' one to the other ye'll hear them say,<br>
Good mornin' ladies all!
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!<br>
<br><br>
Here comes Johnny with his fourteen mont's pay!<br>
Them gals down south are free an' gay<br>
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!
With a heave-o, haul!<br>
 
Wid them we'll spend our hard-earned pay<br>
We meet these fly gals an' we'll ring the ol' bell,<br>
Good mornin' ladies all!
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!<br>
<br><br>
With them judies, we'll raise merry hell<br>
We'll swing around, we'll have good fun<br>
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!
With a heave-o, haul!<br>
 
An' soon we'll be back on the homeward run<br>
We're homeward bound to the gals o' the town.<br>
Good mornin' ladies all!
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!<br>
<br><br>
And stamp up me bullies an' heave it around.<br>
An' when we get to [[Bristol]] town<br>
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!
With a heave-o, haul!<br>
 
For the very last time we'll waltz around<br>
An' when we gits home, boys, oh, won't we fly round.<br>
Good mornin' ladies all!
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!<br>
<br><br>
We'll heave up the anchor to this bully sound.<br>
With Poll and Meg an' Sally too<br>
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!
With a heave-o, haul!<br>
 
We'll drink an' dance wid a hullabaloo<br>
We're all homeward bound for the old backyard.<br>
Good mornin' ladies all!
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!<br>
<br><br>
Then heave, me bullies, we're all bound homeward.<br>
So a long goodbye to all you dears<br>
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!
With a heave-o, haul!<br>
 
Don't cry for us, don't waste yer tears<br>
Heave with a will, boys, oh, heave long an' strong.<br>
Good mornin' ladies all!
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!<br>
|-|Handy Me Boys=
Sing a good chorus for 'tis a good song.<br>
Why can't ye be so handy-o!<br>
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!
Handy, me boys, so handy!
 
<br><br>
We're homeward bound, we'll have yiz to know.<br>
Oh, aloft this yard must go.<br>
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!<br>
Handy, me boys, so handy!
An' over the water to England must go!<br>
<br><br>
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!
Ooh! Up aloft from down below.<br>
|-|Johnny Boker=
Handy, me boys, so handy!
Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,<br>
<br><br>
Come rock and roll me over.<br>
Growl ye may, but go ye must.<br>
Do! My Johnny Boker, do!
Handy, me boys, so handy!
 
<br><br>
Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,<br>
Growl too much an yer head they'll bust.<br>
The skipper is a rover.<br>
Handy, me boys, so handy!
Do! My Johnny Boker, do!
<br><br>
 
Oh, a bully ship an' a bully crew.<br>
Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,<br>
Handy, me boys, so handy!
The mate he's never sober.<br>
<br><br>
Do! My Johnny Boker, do!
Oh, we're the gang for the kick 'er through.<br>
 
Handy, me boys, so handy!
Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,<br>
<br><br>
The Bo'sun is a [[tailor]].<br>
Yer advance has gone, yer at sea again.<br>
Do! My Johnny Boker, do!
Handy, me boys, so handy!
 
<br><br>
Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,<br>
Hey, bound round the horn through the hail an' rain.<br>
We'll all go on a jamboree.<br>
Handy, me boys, so handy!
Do! My Johnny Boker, do!
<br><br>
 
Sing an' haul, an' haul an' sing.<br>
Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,<br>
Handy, me boys, so handy!
The {{Wiki|Packet boat|Packet}} is a Rollin'.<br>
<br><br>
Do! My Johnny Boker, do!
Up aloft this yard we'll swing.<br>
 
Handy, me boys, so handy!
Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,<br>
<br><br>
We'll pull and haul together.<br>
Up aloft that yard must go.<br>
Do! My Johnny Boker, do!
Handy, me boys, so handy!
 
<br><br>
Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,<br>
For we are outward bound, ye know.<br>
We'll haul for better weather.<br>
Handy, me boys, so handy!
Do! My Johnny Boker, do!
<br><br>
 
A handy ship an' a handy crew.<br>
Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,<br>
Handy, me boys, so handy!
And soon we'll be in [[London]] Town.<br>
<br><br>
Do! My Johnny Boker, do!
A handy Mate an Old Man too.<br>
 
Handy, me boys, so handy!
Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,<br>
|-|Haul Away Boys Haul Away=
Come rock and roll me over.<br>
Oh, Haul away for the windy weather, boys<br>
Do! My Johnny Boker, do!
Haul away, boys, haul away<br>
|-|Leave Her, Johnny=
Oh, Haul away and pull together boys<br>
I thought I heard the Old Man say:<br>
Haul away, boys, haul away
"Leave her, Johnny, leave her."<br>
<br><br>
Tomorrow you will get your pay,<br>
Haul away and let's get'er goin' boys<br>
and it's time for us to leave her.
Haul away, boys, haul away<br>
 
Haul away for the merchants' money boys<br>
(Chorus)
Haul away, boys, haul away
Leave her, Johnny, leave her!<br>
<br><br>
Oh, leave her, Johnny, leave her!<br>
Haul away like jolly young sailor boys<br>
For the voyage is long and the winds don't blow<br>
Haul away, boys, haul away<br>
And it's time for us to leave her.
Haul away and roll her over boys<br>
 
Haul away, boys, haul away
Oh, the wind was foul and the sea ran high.<br>
<br><br>
"Leave her, Johnny, leave her!"<br>
God made the bees and the bees made the honey, boys<br>
She shipped it green and none went by.<br>
Haul away, boys, haul away<br>
And it's time for us to leave her.
God made the food but the devil sent the cook, boys<br>
 
Haul away, boys, haul away
(Chorus)
<br><br>
 
We're rolling down to Cuba for to load up sugar, boys<br>
I hate to sail on this rotten tub.<br>
Haul away, boys, haul away<br>
"Leave her, Johnny, leave her!"<br>
And rolling down to Cuba just to meet a Creole lady, boys<br>
No grog allowed and rotten grub.<br>
Haul away, boys, haul away
And it's time for us to leave her.
<br><br>
 
And soon we'll be in red hot Cuba, boys<br>
(Chorus)
Haul away, boys, haul away<br>
 
Oh haul away and the wind'll move'er, boys<br>
We swear by rote for want of more.<br>
Haul away, boys, haul away
"Leave her, Johnny, leave her!"<br>
<br><br>
But now we're through so we'll go on shore.<br>
And soon we'll see a pretty woman, boys<br>
And it's time for us to leave her.
Haul away, boys, haul away<br>
 
Oh haul and shake her as she rolls, boys<br>
(Chorus)
Haul away, boys, haul away
|-|Lowlands Away=
<br><br>
I dreamed a dream the other night<br>
Haul away for finer weather, boys<br>
Lowlands, lowlands away me John<br>
Haul away, boys, haul away<br>
My love she came, dressed all in white<br>
Ooh, haul away for the better weather, boys<br>
Lowlands away
Haul away, boys, haul away<br>
 
Haul away, boys, haul away
I dreamed my love came in my sleep<br>
|-|Hauley Hauley Ho=
Lowlands, lowlands away me John<br>
[[England]], ould [[Ireland]]<br>
Her cheeks were wet, her eyes did weep<br>
England, ould Ireland<br>
Lowlands away
England, ould Ireland<br>
 
Hauley Hauley Ho!
She came to me at my bedside<br>
<br><br>
Lowlands, lowlands away me John<br>
Paddy M'Ginty<br>
All dressed in white, like some fair bride<br>
Paddy, Jock and Jackie too,<br>
Lowlands away
Oh Paddy M'Ginty,<br>
 
Hauley Hauley Ho!
And bravely in her bosom fair<br>
<br><br>
Lowlands, lowlands away me John<br>
Shamrock an' Rose, boys,<br>
Her red, red rose, my love did wear<br>
Shamrock, Rose, and prickly Thistle too,<br>
Lowlands away
Shamrock an' Rose, boys,<br>
 
Hauley Hauley Ho!
She made no sound, no word she said<br>
<br><br>
Lowlands, lowlands away me John<br>
England, ould Ireland<br>
And then I knew my love was dead<br>
England, ould Ireland<br>
Lowlands away
England, ould Ireland<br>
 
Hauley Hauley Ho!
Then I awoke to hear the cry<br>
|-|Hi-Ho Come Roll Me Over=
Lowlands, lowlands away me John<br>
Why don't you blow<br>
Oh watch on deck<br>
High-O! Come roll me over<br>
Oh watch, ahoy<br>
Why don't you blow<br>
Lowlands away
High-O! Come roll me over
|-|My Bonnie Highland Lassie=
<br><br>
Oh were you ever in {{Wiki|Roundstone}} Town?<br>
One man to strike the bell<br>
Bonnie Lassie, {{Wiki|Highland|Hieland}} Lassie<br>
High-O! Come roll me over<br>
Were you ever in Roundstone Town?<br>
One man to strike the bell<br>
My bonnie hieland lassie-o<br>
High-O! Come roll me over
I was often in Roundstone Town<br>
<br><br>
Drinking milk and eating flour<br>
Two men to man the wheel<br>
Although I am a young maid<br>
High-O! Come roll me over<br>
Come lately from my mammy-o
Two men to man the wheel<br>
 
High-O! Come roll me over
Were you ever in [[Mumbai|Bombay]],<br>
<br><br>
Bonnie Lassie, Hieland Lassie<br>
Three men, to gallant braces<br>
Were you ever in Bombay,<br>
High-O! Come roll me over<br>
My bonnie hieland lassie-o<br>
Three men, to gallant braces<br>
I was often in old Bombay,<br>
High-O! Come roll me over
Drinking coffee and bohay<br>
<br><br>
Although I am a young maid<br>
Four men to furl t'garns'ls<br>
Come lately from my mammy-o
High-O! Come roll me over<br>
 
Four men to furl t'garns'ls<br>
Oh were you ever in Quebec?<br>
High-O! Come roll me over
Bonnie Lassie, Hieland Lassie<br>
<br><br>
Were you ever in Quebec?<br>
Five men to bunt-a-bo<br>
My bonnie hieland lassie-o<br>
High-O! Come roll me over<br>
I was often in old Quebec<br>
Five men to bunt-a-bo<br>
Stowing timber up on deck<br>
High-O! Come roll me over
Although I am a young maid<br>
|-|Homeward Bound=
Come lately from my mammy-o
Oh, don't yiz hear the old man say?<br>
 
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!<br>
And are you fit to sweep the floor?<br>
Oh, don't yiz hear the old man say?<br>
Bonnie Lassie, Hieland Lassie<br>
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!
Are you fit to sweep the floor?<br>
<br><br>
My bonnie hieland lassie-o<br>
We're Homeward bound to [[Liverpool]] Town,<br>
I am fit to sweep the floor<br>
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!<br>
As the lock is for the door<br>
Where all them judies, they will come down<br>
Although I am a young maid<br>
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!
Come lately from my mammy-o
<br><br>
|-|New York Girls=
An' when we gits to the {{Wiki|Wallasey Pool|Wallasey}} {{Wiki|Great Float|Gates}}<br>
As I walked down the [[Broadway]]<br>
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!<br>
One evenin' in July<br>
Sally an' Olly for their flash men do wait<br>
I met a maid who asked me trade<br>
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!
And a sailor John says I.<br>
<br><br>
 
An' one to the other ye'll hear them say,<br>
To {{Wiki|Tiffany & Co.|Tiffany}}'s I took her<br>
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!<br>
I did not mind expense<br>
Here comes Johnny with his fourteen mont's pay!<br>
I bought her two [[gold]] earrings<br>
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!
And they cost me 50 cents<br>
<br><br>
 
We meet these fly gals an' we'll ring the ol' bell,<br>
(Chorus)<br>
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!<br>
And away, you Santee<br>
With them judies, we'll raise merry hell<br>
My dear Annie<br>
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!
O, you New York Girls<br>
<br><br>
Can't you dance the Polka?<br>
We're homeward bound to the gals o' the town.<br>
 
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!<br>
Says she, "You {{Wiki|Glossary of names for the British#Limey|limejuice}} sailor<br>
And stamp up me bullies an' heave it around.<br>
Now see me home you may"<br>
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!
But when we reached her cottage door<br>
<br><br>
She this to me did say.<br>
An' when we gits home, boys, oh, won't we fly round.<br>
 
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!<br>
"My flash man he's a Yankee<br>
We'll heave up the anchor to this bully sound.<br>
With his hair cut short behind<br>
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!
He wears a pair of long sea-boots<br>
<br><br>
And he sails in the {{Wiki|Black Ball Line (trans-Atlantic packet)|Blackball Line}}<br>
We're all homeward bound for the old backyard.<br>
 
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!<br>
(Chorus)
Then heave, me bullies, we're all bound homeward.<br>
 
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!
He's homeward bound this evenin'<br>
<br><br>
And with me he will stay<br>
Heave with a will, boys, oh, heave long an' strong.<br>
So get a move on, sailor-boy<br>
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!<br>
Get crackin' on your way"<br>
Sing a good chorus for 'tis a good song.<br>
 
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!
So I kissed her hard and proper<br>
<br><br>
Afore her flash man came<br>
We're homeward bound, we'll have yiz to know.<br>
And fare ye well, me {{Wiki|Bowery}} gal<br>
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!<br>
I know your little game<br>
An' over the water to England must go!<br>
 
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!
(Chorus)
|-|Johnny Boker=
 
Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,<br>
I wrapped me glad rags around me<br>
Come rock and roll me over.<br>
And to the docks did steer<br>
Do! My Johnny Boker, do!
I'll never court another maid<br>
<br><br>
I'll stick to [[rum]] and [[beer]]<br>
Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,<br>
 
The skipper is a rover.<br>
I joined a Yankee blood-boat<br>
Do! My Johnny Boker, do!
And sailed away next morn<br>
<br><br>
Don't ever fool around with gals<br>
Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,<br>
You're safer off {{Wiki|Cape Horn}}<br>
The mate he's never sober.<br>
 
Do! My Johnny Boker, do!
(Chorus)
<br><br>
|-|Paddy Doyle's Boots=
Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,<br>
To me, Way-ay-ay Yah!<br>
The Bo'sun is a [[tailor]].<br>
We'll pay Paddy Doyle for his boots!<br>
Do! My Johnny Boker, do!
To me, Way-ay-ay Yah!<br>
<br><br>
We'll all drink brandy and gin!<br>
Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,<br>
 
We'll all go on a jamboree.<br>
To me, Way-ay-ay Yah!<br>
Do! My Johnny Boker, do!
We'll all shave under the chin!<br>
<br><br>
To me, Way-ay-ay Yah!<br>
Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,<br>
We'll all throw muck at the cook!<br>
The Packet is a Rollin'.<br>
 
Do! My Johnny Boker, do!
To me, Way-ay-ay Yah!<br>
<br><br>
The dirty ol' man's on the poop!<br>
Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,<br>
To me, Way-ay-ay Yah!<br>
We'll pull and haul together.<br>
We'll [[wikt:bouse|bouse]] her up and be done!<br>
Do! My Johnny Boker, do!
 
<br><br>
To me, Way-ay-ay Yah!<br>
Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,<br>
We'll pay Paddy Doyle for his boots!<br>
We'll haul for better weather.<br>
|-|Padstow's Farewell=
Do! My Johnny Boker, do!
It's time to go now,<br>
<br><br>
Haul away your anchor,<br>
Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,<br>
Haul away your anchor,<br>
And soon we'll be in London Town.<br>
It's our sailing time.
Do! My Johnny Boker, do!
 
<br><br>
Get some sail upon her,<br>
Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,<br>
Haul away your {{Wiki|halyard}}s,<br>
Come rock and roll me over.<br>
Haul away your halyards.<br>
Do! My Johnny Boker, do!
It's our sailing time.
|-|Jolly Roving Tar=
 
Ships may come and ships may go<br>
Get her on her course now,<br>
As long as the sea does roll.<br>
Haul away your [[wikt:forsheet|foresheets]],<br>
But a sailor lad just like his dad,<br>
Haul away your foresheets,<br>
He loves the flowing bowl.
It's our sailing time.
<br><br>
 
Oh women on shore he does adore<br>
Waves are surging under,<br>
A girl who's plump and round.<br>
Haul away down Channel,<br>
And your money's gone<br>
Haul away down Channel,<br>
It's the same old song,<br>
On the evening tide.
"Get up Jack! John, sit down!"
 
<br><br>
When your sailing's over,<br>
Come along, come along, You jolly brave boys,<br>
Haul away for Heaven,<br>
There's lots of grog in the jar.<br>
Haul away for Heaven,<br>
We'll plough the briny ocean line<br>
God be by your side.
With the jolly roving tar.
 
<br><br>
It is time to go now,<br>
When Jack ashore, he'll make his way<br>
Haul away your anchor,<br>
To some old boarding house.<br>
Haul away your anchor,<br>
He's welcomed in with rum and {{Wiki|gin}},<br>
It's our sailing time.
Likewise with [[Pig|pork]] {{Wiki|Scouse (food)|scouse}}.
|-|Randy Dandy-O=
<br><br>
Now we are ready to sail for the Horn,<br>
He'll spend and spend and never offend<br>
Weigh hey, roll and go!<br>
Till he's lies drunk on the ground<br>
Our boots and our clothes, boys, are all in the pawn,<br>
When the money's gone<br>
To be rollicking randy dandy-O!
It's the same old song,<br>
 
"Get up Jack! John, sit down!"
(Chorus)<br>
<br><br>
Heave a pawl, O heave away!<br>
Then Jack then will slip aboard some ship bound for [[India]] or [[Japan]],<br>
Weigh hey, roll and go!<br>
Then in Asia there, the ladies fair,<br>
The anchor's on board and the cable's all stored,<br>
they all love a sailor man,<br>
To be rollicking randy dandy-O!<br>
He'll go ashore, and he'll not scorn to buy some girl a gown:<br>
 
When his money's gone<br>
Soon we'll be warping her out through the locks,<br>
It's the same old song,<br>
Weigh hey, roll and go!<br>
"Get up Jack! John, sit down!"
Where the pretty young girls all come down in their frocks,<br>
<br><br>
To be rollicking randy dandy-O!
When Jack is old and weather-beat, too old to cruise about,<br>
 
They'll let him stop in some rum shop till eight bells calls him out,<br>
(Chorus)
Then he'll raise his hands high, and loud he'll cry:<br>
 
Thank Christ! I'm homeward bound:<br>
Come breast the bars, bullies, heave her away,<br>
But his money's gone<br>
Weigh hey, roll and go!<br>
It's the same old song,<br>
Soon we'll be rolling her down through the Bay,<br>
"Get up Jack! John, sit down!"
To be rollicking randy dandy-O!
|-|Leave Her, Johnny=
 
I thought I heard the Old Man say:<br>
(Chorus)
"Leave her, Johnny, leave her."<br>
|-|Roll and Go=
Tomorrow you will get your pay,<br>
There was a ship, she sailed to Spain<br>
and it's time for us to leave her.
O ho, roll and go!<br>
<br><br>
There was a ship came home again.<br>
(Chorus)
Tommy's on the {{Wiki|topsail}} yard!
Leave her, Johnny, leave her!<br>
 
Oh, leave her, Johnny, leave her!<br>
And what do you think was in her hold?<br>
For the voyage is long and the winds don't blow<br>
O ho, roll and go!<br>
And it's time for us to leave her.
There was [[diamond]]s, there was gold.<br>
<br><br>
Tommy's on the topsail yard!
Oh, the wind was foul and the sea ran high.<br>
 
"Leave her, Johnny, leave her!"<br>
And what was in her {{Wiki|lazarette}}?<br>
She shipped it green and none went by.<br>
O ho, roll and go!<br>
And it's time for us to leave her.
Good split peas and bad [[Cattle|bull]] meat.<br>
<br><br>
Tommy's on the topsail yard!
(Chorus)
 
<br><br>
O, many a sailorman gets drowned,<br>
I hate to sail on this rotten tub.<br>
O ho, roll and go!<br>
"Leave her, Johnny, leave her!"<br>
Many a sailorman gets drowned.<br>
No grog allowed and rotten grub.<br>
Tommy's on the topsail yard!
And it's time for us to leave her.
</tabber>
<br><br>
<tabber>
(Chorus)
|-|Roll, Boys, Roll!=
<br><br>
Oh! Sally Brown, she's the gal for me boys<br>
We swear by rote for want of more.<br>
Roll, boys! Roll boys roll!<br>
"Leave her, Johnny, leave her!"<br>
Oh! Sally Brown she's the gal for me, boys<br>
But now we're through so we'll go on shore.<br>
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!
And it's time for us to leave her.
 
<br><br>
We're bound away, 'way down south, boys,<br>
(Chorus)
Roll, boys! Roll boys roll!<br>
</tabber>
We're bound away, 'way down south, boys,<br>
<tabber>
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!
|-|Liverpool Judies=
 
From Liverpool to 'Frisco a-rovin' I went,<br>
It's down to [[Trinidad]] to see Sally Brown boys,<br>
For to stay in that country was my good intent.<br>
Roll, boys! Roll boys roll!<br>
But drinkin' strong [[whiskey]] like other damn fools,<br>
Down to Trinidad to see Sally Brown boys,<br>
Oh, I soon got transported back to Liverpool, singin'.
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!
<br><br>
 
Chorus:<br>
She's lovely on the foreyard, an' she's lovely down below boys,<br>
Roll, roll, roll bullies, roll!<br>
Roll, boys! Roll boys roll!<br>
Them Liverpool judies have got us in tow.
She's lovely 'cause she loves me, that's all I want to know boys,<br>
<br><br>
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!
A smart Yankee packet lies out in the Bay,<br>
 
A-waitin' a fair wind to get under way.<br>
Ol' Captain Baker, how do you store yer cargo?<br>
With all of her sailors so sick and so sore,<br>
Roll Boys! Roll boys roll!<br>
They'd drunk all their whiskey and can't get no more.
Some I stow for'ard, boys, an' some I stow a'ter<br>
<br><br>
Way high, Miss Sally Brown
Chorus
 
<br><br>
Forty fathoms or more below boys,<br>
Oh, here comes the mate in a hell of a stew.<br>
Roll, boys! Roll boys roll!<br>
He's lookin' for work for us sailors to do.<br>
There's forty fathoms or more below boys,<br>
Oh, it's "Fore {{Wiki|topsail|tops'l}} {{Wiki|halyard}}s!" he loudly does roar,<br>
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!
And it's lay aloft Paddy, ye son-o'-a-whore!
 
<br><br>
Oh, way high ya, an' up she rises,<br>
Chorus
Roll Boys! Roll boys roll!<br>
<br><br>
Way high ya, and the {{Wiki|Block (sailing)|blocks}} is different sizes,<br>
One night of Cape Horn I shall never forget,<br>
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!
'Tis oft-times I sighs when I think of it yet.<br>
 
She was divin' bows under with her sailors all wet,<br>
Oh, one more pull, don't ya hear the mate a-bawlin?<br>
She was doin' twelve knots wid her {{Wiki|mainsail|mainskys'l}} set.
Roll, boys! Roll boys roll!<br>
<br><br>
Oh, one more pull, that's the end of all the hawlin'<br>
Chorus
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!
<br><br>
 
And now we've arrived in the {{Wiki|Bramley-Moore Dock|Bramleymoor Dock}},<br>
Sally Brown she's the gal for me boys,<br>
And all them flash judies on the pierhead do flock.<br>
Roll, boys! Roll boys roll!<br>
The barrel's run dry and our five quid advance,<br>
Sally Brown she's the gal for me, boys,<br>
And I guess it's high time for to git up and dance.
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!
<br><br>
|-|Roller Bowler=
Chorus
As I rolled out one mornin'<br>
<br><br>
Away, you roller bowler!<br>
Here's a health to the Captain wherever he may be,<br>
As I rolled out one mornin'<br>
A bucko on land and a bully at sea,<br>
I met a lady fair
But as for the {{Wiki|chief mate}}, the dirty ol' brute,<br>
 
We hope when he dies straight to hell he'll skyhoot.
(Chorus)<br>
<br><br>
Timme, hey-rig-a-jig an' a ha-ha<br>
Chorus
Good mornin', ladies all<br>
<br><br>
Away, you roller bowler!<br>
|-|Lowlands Away=
Timme, hey-rig-a-jig an' a ha-ha<br>
I dreamed a dream the other night<br>
Good mornin', ladies all
Lowlands, lowlands away me John<br>
 
My love she came, dressed all in white<br>
The first time that I saw her<br>
Lowlands away
Away, you roller bowler!<br>
<br><br>
The first time that I saw her,<br>
I dreamed my love came in my sleep<br>
that saucy gal of mine:
Lowlands, lowlands away me John<br>
 
Her cheeks were wet, her eyes did weep<br>
(Chorus)
Lowlands away
 
<br><br>
But when she found that I was skint<br>
She came to me at my bedside<br>
Away, you roller bowler!<br>
Lowlands, lowlands away me John<br>
But when she found that I was skint<br>
All dressed in white, like some fair bride<br>
She left me standing there
Lowlands away
 
<br><br>
(Chorus)
And bravely in her bosom fair<br>
 
Lowlands, lowlands away me John<br>
I squared me yards an' sailed away<br>
Her red, red rose, my love did wear<br>
Away, you roller bowler!<br>
Lowlands away
I squared me yards an' sailed away<br>
<br><br>
An' to the ship I went
She made no sound, no word she said<br>
 
Lowlands, lowlands away me John<br>
(Chorus)
And then I knew my love was dead<br>
 
Lowlands away
She winked & flipped a flipper<br>
<br><br>
Away, you roller bowler!<br>
Then I awoke to hear the cry<br>
She winked & flipped a flipper<br>
Lowlands, lowlands away me John<br>
She thought I was a mate
Oh watch on deck<br>
(Chorus)
Oh watch, ahoy<br>
|-|Running Down to Cuba=
Lowlands away
Running down to [[Cuba]] with a load of [[sugar]],<br>
</tabber>
Weigh, me boys, to Cuba!<br>
<tabber>
Make her run you, lime juice squeezes,<br>  
|-|My Bonnie Highland Lassie=
Running down to Cuba.
Oh were you ever in {{Wiki|Roundstone}} Town?<br>
 
Bonnie Lassie, {{Wiki|Highland|Hieland}} Lassie<br>
(Chorus)<br>
Were you ever in Roundstone Town?<br>
Weigh, me boys, to Cuba!<br>  
My bonnie hieland lassie-o<br>
Running down to Cuba.
I was often in Roundstone Town<br>
 
Drinking milk and eating flour<br>
O, I got a sister, she's nine feet tall,<br>  
Although I am a young maid<br>
Weigh, me boys, to Cuba!<br>  
Come lately from my mammy-o
Sleeps in the kitchen with her feet in the hall,<br>  
<br><br>
Running down to Cuba.
Were you ever in [[Mumbai|Bombay]],<br>
 
Bonnie Lassie, Hieland Lassie<br>
(Chorus)
Were you ever in Bombay,<br>
 
My bonnie hieland lassie-o<br>
The captain he will trim the sails,<br>  
I was often in old Bombay,<br>
Weigh, me boys, to Cuba!<br>  
Drinking coffee and bohay<br>
Winging the water over the rails,<br>  
Although I am a young maid<br>
Running down to Cuba.  
Come lately from my mammy-o
 
<br><br>
(Chorus)  
Oh were you ever in Quebec?<br>
 
Bonnie Lassie, Hieland Lassie<br>
Give me a gal can dance {{Wiki|Fandango}},<br>  
Were you ever in Quebec?<br>
Weigh, me boys, to Cuba!<br>  
My bonnie hieland lassie-o<br>
Round as a melon and sweet as a mango,<br>
I was often in old Quebec<br>
Running down to Cuba.
Stowing timber up on deck<br>
 
Although I am a young maid<br>
(Chorus)
Come lately from my mammy-o
 
<br><br>
Load this sugar and home-ward go,<br>  
And are you fit to sweep the floor?<br>
Weigh, me boys, to Cuba!<br>  
Bonnie Lassie, Hieland Lassie<br>
Mister mate, he told me so,<br>  
Are you fit to sweep the floor?<br>
Running down to Cuba.
My bonnie hieland lassie-o<br>
 
I am fit to sweep the floor<br>
(Chorus)
As the lock is for the door<br>
|-|Skull and Bones=
Although I am a young maid<br>
Yo ho, yo ho<br>
Come lately from my mammy-o
The seas forever roll<br>
|-|New York Girls=
Yo ho, yo ho<br>
As I walked down the [[Broadway]]<br>
'Til I'm not but skull and bones<br>
One evenin' in July<br>
Yo ho, yo ho
I met a maid who asked me trade<br>
 
And a sailor John says I.<br>
From outcast to kingpin<br>
<br><br>
Was born up on the sea<br>
To {{Wiki|Tiffany & Co.|Tiffany}}'s I took her<br>
Ne'er was meant to walk the land<br>
I did not mind expense<br>
A pirate's life for me<br>
I bought her two [[gold]] earrings<br>
Avast ye whining, up the sails<br>
And they cost me 50 cents<br>
Don't speak to mutiny<br>
<br><br>
Or find yourself a'wantin' quarter<br>
(Chorus)<br>
Bottom of the sea
And away, you Santee<br>
 
My dear Annie<br>
Among the shoals of Saint Anne<br>
O, you New York Girls<br>
To the eastern shores<br>
Can't you dance the Polka?<br>
I'll take my chances on the wind<br>
<br><br>
To loot and plunder scores<br>
Says she, "You limejuice sailor<br>
Our flag it stands for us alone<br>
Now see me home you may"<br>
And no one else around<br>
But when we reached her cottage door<br>
We owe our honour to the sea<br>
She this to me did say.<br>
And not to any crown
<br><br>
 
"My flash man he's a Yankee<br>
(Chorus)<br>
With his hair cut short behind<br>
Yo ho, yo ho<br>
He wears a pair of long sea-boots<br>
The seas forever roll<br>
And he sails in the {{Wiki|Black Ball Line (trans-Atlantic packet)|Blackball Line}}<br>
Yo ho, yo ho<br>
<br><br>
The winds forever blow<br>
Long after I've met Davy Jones<br>
'Til I'm naught but skull and bones<br>
Yo ho
 
So, me bullies, bottoms up<br>
Raise the sails and drink with me<br>
Here's to us!<br>
"Live long and long live piracy"<br>
Bring her round into the white<br>
If treasures to be found<br>
A pirate's life or nothing else<br>
'Til the ship she's goin' down
 
(Chorus)
 
Yo ho, yo ho<br>
The seas forever roll (skull and bones)<br>
Yo ho, yo ho<br>
The winds forever blow (skull and bones)<br>
Long after I've met Davy Jones<br>
'Til I'm naught but skull and bones (skull and bones)<br>
(x2)
|-|So Early in the Morning=
The mate was drunk and he went below to take a swig at his bottle o<br>
(Chorus)<br>
So early in the morning the sailor likes his bottle o<br>
The bottle o, the bottle o, the sailor loves his bottle o
 
A bottle of rum, a bottle of {{Wiki|gin}}, a bottle of Irish [[whiskey]] o<br>
(Chorus)
 
The [[Tobacco|baccy]] o, tabaccy o, the sailor loves his baccy o<br>
(Chorus)
 
A packet of shag, a packet of cut, a plug of hard terbaccy o<br>
(Chorus)
 
The lassies o, the maidens o, the sailor loves the judies o<br>
(Chorus)
 
A lass from the 'pool, a girl from the {{Wiki|River Tyne|Tyne}}, a chowlah so fine and dandy o<br>
(Chorus)
 
A bully rough house, a bully rough house, the sailor like his rough house o<br>
(Chorus)
 
Tread on me coat, and all hands in, a bully good rough and tumble o<br>
(Chorus)
 
A sing song o, a sing song o, the sailor likes a sing song o<br>
(Chorus)
 
A drinking song, a song of love, a ditty of seas and shipmates o<br>
(Chorus)
|-|Spanish Ladies=
Farewell and adieu to you, Spanish ladies,<br>
Farewell and adieu to you, ladies of Spain,<br>
For we've received orders for to sail for old England,<br>
And we may never see you fair ladies again.
 
(Chorus)<br>
We will rant and we'll roar like true British sailors,<br>
We'll rant and we'll roar all on the salt seas.<br>
Until we strike soundings in the channel of old England,<br>
From {{Wiki|Ushant}} to {{Wiki|Isles of Scilly|Scilly}} is thirty-five leagues.
 
We hove our ship to, with the wind at sou'west, boys<br>
We hove our ship to, deep soundings to take.<br>
'Twas forty-five fathoms with a white sandy bottom,<br>
So we squared our main yard and up channel did steer.
 
(Chorus)
 
Now let every man drink off his full bumper,<br>
And let every man drink off his full glass,<br>
We'll drink and be jolly and drown melancholy,<br>
And here's to the health of each true-hearted lass!
 
(Chorus)
(Chorus)
|-|Stormalong John=
Oh, poor old Stormy's dead and gone<br>
Storm along boys! Storm along John!<br>
Oh, poor old Stormy's dead and gone<br>
Ah-ha, come along get along<br>
Stormy along John!
I dug his grave with a [[silver]] spade<br>
Storm along boys! Storm along John!<br>
I dug his grave with a silver spade<br>
Ah-ha, come along get along<br>
Stormy along John!
I lower'd him down with a golden chain<br>
Storm along boys! Storm along John!<br>
I lower'd him down with a golden chain<br>
Ah-ha, come along get along<br>
Stormy along John!
I carried him away to {{Wiki|Montego Bay}}<br>
Storm along boys! Storm along John!<br>
I carried him away to Montego Bay<br>
Ah-ha, come along get along<br>
Stormy along John!
|-|The Coasts of High Barbary=
Look ahead, look-astern<br>
Look the weather in the lee!<br>
Blow high! Blow low! And so sailed we.<br>
I see a wreck to windward,<br>
And a lofty ship to lee!<br>
A-sailing down along<br>
The coast of {{Wiki|Barbary Coast|High Barbary}}
"O, are you a pirate<br>
Or a man o' war?" cried we.<br>
Blow high! Blow low! And so sailed we.<br>
"O no! I'm not a pirate<br>
But a man-o-war," cried he.<br>
A-sailing down along<br>
The coast of High Barbary.
We'll back up our topsails<br>
And heave vessel to.<br>
Blow high! Blow low! And so sailed we.<br>
For we have got some letters<br>
To be carried home by you.<br>
A-sailing down along<br>
The coast of High Barbary
For broadside, for broadside<br>
They fought all on the main;<br>
Blow high! Blow low! And so sailed we.<br>
Until at last the frigate<br>
Shot the pirate's mast away.<br>
A sailing down along<br>
The coast of High Barbary
With [[cutlass]] and [[Firearm|gun]],<br>
O we fought for hours three;<br>
Blow high! Blow low! And so sailed we.<br>
The ship it was their coffin<br>
And their grave it was the sea<br>
A-sailing down along<br>
The coast of High Barbary
|-|The Dead Horse=
A poor old man<br>
Came riding by.<br>
And we say so,<br>
And we know so.<br>
O, a poor old man<br>
Came riding by,<br>
O, poor old man.
Says I, "Old man,<br>
Your [[horse]] will die."<br>
And we say so,<br>
And we know so.<br>
And if he dies<br>
we'll tan his hide.<br>
O, poor old man.
And if he don't,<br>
I'll ride him again.<br>
And we say so,<br>
And we know so.<br>
And I'll ride him<br>
'Til the [[Jesus of Nazareth|Lord]] knows when,<br>
O, poor old man.
He's dead as a nail<br>
In the lamp room door,<br>
And we say so,<br>
And we know so.<br>
And he won't come<br>
Worrying us no more<br>
O, poor old man.
We'll use the hair of his tail<br>
To sew our sails<br>
And we say so,<br>
And we know so.<br>
And the iron of his shoes<br>
To make deck nails,<br>
O, poor old man.
Drop him down<br>
With a long long rope<br>
And we say so,<br>
And we hope so.<br>
Where the sharks have his body<br>
And the devil takes his soul!<br>
O, poor old man.
</tabber>
<tabber>
|-|The Rio Grande=
O say was you ever in {{Wiki|Rio Grande}}?<br>
A-weigh, you Rio!<br>
It's there that the river brings down golden sand,<br>
For we're bound for the Rio Grande
(Chorus)<br>
And away, boys, away.<br>
A-weigh, you Rio!<br>
It's fare-you-well my bonny young girls<br>
And we're bound for the Rio Grande
It's fare well to you all the girls of the town.<br>
A-weigh, you Rio!<br>
You got our half-pay for to keep you around,<br>
And we're bound for the Rio Grande!
(Chorus)
She's a deep water ship and a deep water crew.<br>
A-weigh, you Rio!<br>
You can keep to the coast but we're damned if we do,<br>
And we're bound for the Rio Grande!
(Chorus)
We was sick of the beach when our money was gone.<br>
A-weigh, you Rio!<br>
And sign in this packet to drive her along,<br>
And we're bound for the Rio Grande!
(Chorus)
|-|The Sailboat Malarkey=
Please tell me, what is this sailboat's name?<br>
The sailboat Malarkey.
Tell me now what is this good boat's name?<br>
It's the sailboat Malarkey.
Well now, me boys, we are bound out to sea!<br>
In the sailboat Malarkey.
O when will Caroline come down to me?<br>
In the sailboat Malarkey.
She's lovely aloft and she's lovely below.<br>
Is the sailboat Malarkey.
But she's best on her back as you very well know!<br>
That sailboat Malarkey.
Away, away in {{Wiki|St. George's, Grenada|St George's Town}},<br>
In the sailboat Malarkey.
The [[rat]]s come batting the houses down,<br>
Of the sailboat Malarkey.
I'd give the world boys and all that I know<br>
In the sailboat Malarkey.
To turn and to roll with my Lucy-oh!<br>
In the sailboat Malarkey.
You pick her up, boys, and lay her down,<br>
In the sailboat Malarkey.
And hang on tight as she bounces around!<br>
In the sailboat Malarkey.
|-|The Wild Goose=
Did you ever see a wild goose<br>
Sailing o'er the ocean?
Ranzo, Ranzo, weigh heigh!
They're just like them pretty girls,<br>
When they gets the notion.
Ranzo, Ranzo, weigh heigh!
The other morning<br>
I was walking by the river.
Ranzo, Ranzo, weigh heigh!
When I saw a young girl walking<br>
With her topsails all a-quiver.
Ranzo, Ranzo, weigh heigh!
I said, "Pretty fair maid<br>
And how are you this morning?"
Ranzo, Ranzo, weigh heigh!
She said none the better <br>
for the seeing of you
Ranzo, Ranzo, weigh heigh!
|-|The Worst Old Ship=
The worst old ship that ever did sail,<br>
Sailed out of {{Wiki|Harwich}} on a windy day.
(Chorus)<br>
And we're waiting for the day,<br>
Waiting for the day,<br>
Waiting for the day<br>
That we get our pay.
She was built in [[Romans|Roman]] time,<br>
Held together with bits of twine<br>
(Chorus)
Nothing in the galley—nothing in the hold,<br>
But the skipper's turned in with a bag of gold.
(Chorus)
Off {{Wiki|Orford Ness}} she sprang a leak,<br>
Hear her poor old timbers creak.
(Chorus)<br>
We pumped our way round {{Wiki|Newby and Scalby|Scalby Ness}},<br>
When the wind backed round to the west-nor'-west.
(Chorus)<br>
Into the {{Wiki|Humber}} and up the town,<br>
Pump you blighters—pump or drown.
(Chorus) x2
|-|Where am I to Go M'Johnnies=
Oh, where am I to go, M'Johnnies, oh where am I to go?<br>
Timme way hey hey, high roll and go.<br>
Oh, where am I to go, M'Johnnies, oh where am I to go,<br>
For I'm a young sailor boy, and where am I to go?
Way up on that t'gallant yard, that's where you're bound to go.<br>
Timme way hey hey, high roll and go.<br>
Oh, way up on that t'gallant yard, that's where you're bound to go.<br>
For I'm a young sailor boy, and where am I to go?
Way up on that t'gallant yard and take the gans'l in.<br>
Timme way hey hey, high roll and go.<br>
Oh, way up on that t'gallant yard and take the gans'l in.<br>
For I'm a young sailor boy, and where am I to go?
You're bound away to [[Kingston]] town, that's where you're bound to go.<br>
Timme way hey hey, high roll and go.<br>
You're bound away to Kingston town, that's where you're bound to go.<br>
For I'm a young sailor boy, and where am I to go?
|-|Whiskey Johnny=
Whiskey is the life of man,<br>
Whiskey, Johnny!<br>
O, whiskey is the life of man,<br>
Whiskey for my Johnny O!
O, I drink whiskey when I can<br>
Whiskey, Johnny!<br>
Whiskey from an old [[tin]] can,<br>
Whiskey for my Johnny O!
Whiskey gave me a broken nose!<br>
Whiskey, Johnny!<br>
Whiskey made me pawn my clothes,<br>
Whiskey for my Johnny O!
Whiskey drove me around Cape Horn,<br>
Whiskey, Johnny!<br>
It was many a month when I was gone,<br>
Whiskey for my Johnny O!
I thought I heard the old man say:<br>
Whiskey, Johnny!<br>
I'll treat my crew in a decent way,<br>
Whiskey for my Johnny O!
<br><br>
<br><br>
He's homeward bound this evenin'<br>
A glass of grog for every man!<br>
And with me he will stay<br>
Whiskey, Johnny!<br>
So get a move on, sailor-boy<br>
And a bottle for the Chantey Man.<br>
Get crackin' on your way"<br>
Whiskey for my Johnny O!
<br><br>
|-|Windy Old Weather=
So I kissed her hard and proper<br>
As we were a-fishing off {{Wiki|Happisburgh}} light<br>
Afore her flash man came<br>
Shooting and hauling and trawling all night
And fare ye well, me Bowery gal<br>
 
I know your little game<br>
<br><br>
(Chorus)
<br><br>
I wrapped me glad rags around me<br>
And to the docks did steer<br>
I'll never court another maid<br>
I'll stick to rum and beer<br>
<br><br>
I joined a Yankee blood-boat<br>
And sailed away next morn<br>
Don't ever fool around with gals<br>
You're safer off Cape Horn<br>
<br><br>
(Chorus)
|-|Off to Sea Once More=
When first I landed in Liverpool I went upon the spree<br>
Me hard earned cash, well I spent it fast<br>
Got drunk as drunk could be<br>
And when me money it was all gone 'twas then I wanted more<br>
But a man must be blind to make up his mind and to go to sea once more
<br><br>
Once more, boys, once more, go to sea once more<br>
But a man must be blind to make up his mind and to go to sea once more
<br><br>
I spent the night with Angeline too drunk to roll in bed<br>
Me cloths was new and me money too, in the morning with them she fled<br>
And as I rolled the streets about, the tarts they all did roar<br>
And there goes Jack Strapp, the poor sailorlad, he must go to sea once more
<br><br>
Once more, boys, once more, go to sea once more<br>
And there goes Jack Strapp, the poor sailorlad, he must go to sea once more
<br><br>
And as I walked the streets about, I met old Rapper Brown<br>
I asked him then to take me in they looked at me with a frown<br>
Says he last time you was paid off with me you chuck no score<br>
But I'll take your advance and I'll give you a chance and I'll go to see once more
<br><br>
Once more, boys, once more, go to sea once more<br>
'caused I'll take your advance and I'll give you a chance and I'll go to see once more
<br><br>
Come all you bold sailor lads, and listen to me song<br>
When you come off them damn long trips, I'll tell you what goes wrong<br>
Take my advice, drink no strong drink, don't go sleeping with whores<br>
Get married instead, spend all night in bed and go to sea no more
<br><br>
No more, boys, no more, go to sea no more<br>
Get married instead, spend all night in bed and go to sea no more
<br><br>
No more, boys, no more, go to sea no more<br>
Get married instead, spend all night in bed and go to sea no more
|-|One More Day=
Oh, have you heard the news, me Johnny<br>
One more day<br>
We're homeward bound tomorrow Johnny<br>
One more day<br>
Only one more day, me Johnny<br>
One more day<br>
Oh, rock and roll me over<br>
One more day
<br><br>
Don't you hear the old man growlin' Johnny<br>
One more day<br>
Don't you hear the mate a howlin' Johnny<br>
One more day<br>
Only one more day, me Johnny<br>
One more day<br>
Oh, rock and roll me over<br>
One more day
<br><br>
Don't you hear the caps'n pawlin' Johnny<br>
One more day<br>
Don't you hear the pilot bawlin' Johnny<br>
One more day<br>
Only one more day, me Johnny<br>
One more day<br>
Oh, rock and roll me over<br>
One more day
<br><br>
Only one more day a-howlin' Johnny<br>
One more day<br>
Can't you hear the gals a-callin'<br>
One more day<br>
Only one more day, me Johnny<br>
One more day<br>
Oh, rock and roll me over<br>
One more day
<br><br>
Only one more day a-rollin' Johnny<br>
One more day<br>
Only one more day a-cursin'<br>
Sing it!<br>
One more day<br>
Only one more day, me Johnny<br>
One more day<br>
Oh, rock and roll me over<br>
One more day
<br><br>
No more gales or heavy weather Johnny<br>
One more day<br>
Only one more day, me Johnny<br>
One more day<br>
Oh, rock and roll me over<br>
One more day
|-|Paddy Doyle's Boots=
To me, Way-ay-ay Yah!<br>
We'll pay Paddy Doyle for his boots!<br>
To me, Way-ay-ay Yah!<br>
We'll all drink brandy and gin!<br>
<br><br>
To me, Way-ay-ay Yah!<br>
We'll all shave under the chin!<br>
To me, Way-ay-ay Yah!<br>
We'll all throw muck at the cook!<br>
<br><br>
To me, Way-ay-ay Yah!<br>
The dirty ol' man's on the poop!<br>
To me, Way-ay-ay Yah!<br>
We'll bouse her up and be done!<br>
<br><br>
To me, Way-ay-ay Yah!<br>
We'll pay Paddy Doyle for his boots!<br>
|-|Paddy Lay Back=
It was cold and dreary morning in December (December)<br>
And all of me money it was spent (spent, spent)<br>
And where it went to, I can't remember (remember)<br>
So down to the shipping office I went (off I went)
<br><br>
CHORUS:<br>
Paddy lay back, (Paddy lay back)<br>
Take in your slack (take in your slack)<br>
Take a turn around your capstan heave a pawl.<br>
About ship's stations, boys, boys be handy (Handy!)<br>
We're bound for Valparaiso 'round the horn
<br><br>
Well it seems there was a great demand for sailors (for sailors)<br>
For the colonies, and for Frisco and for [[France]] (France, France)<br>
Well, I shipped aboard the limey {{Wiki|barque}} the {{Wiki|HMS Hotspur|Hotspur}} (the Hotspur)<br>
And got legless drunk on my advance (my ad-vance)
<br><br>
CHORUS
<br><br>
Well, I joined her on a cold December morning (morning)<br>
A-flapping of me flippers to keep me warm (keep me warm)<br>
With the south cone hoisted as a warning (a warning)<br>
To stand by the coming of a storm
<br><br>
CHORUS
<br><br>
Well, I woke up in the morning stiff and sore boys (sore boys)<br>
And I knew that I was outward bound again (bound again)<br>
And a voice come a-bawling at the door (door)<br>
Lay aft men, and answer to your name (to your name)
<br><br>
CHORUS
<br><br>
It was on the quarter deck when first I seen 'em (seen 'em)<br>
Such an ugly bunch I never seen before (seen before)<br>
There was a bum and stiff from every quarter (quarter)<br>
And it made my poor old heart feel sick and sore (sore, sore)
<br><br>
CHORUS
|-|Padstow's Farewell=
It's time to go now,<br>
Haul away your anchor,<br>
Haul away your anchor,<br>
It's our sailing time.
<br><br>
Get some sail upon her,<br>
Haul away your halyards,<br>
Haul away your halyards.<br>
It's our sailing time.
<br><br>
Get her on her course now,<br>
Haul away your foresheets,<br>
Haul away your foresheets,<br>
It's our sailing time.
<br><br>
Waves are surging under,<br>
Haul away down Channel,<br>
Haul away down Channel,<br>
On the evening tide.
<br><br>
When your sailing's over,<br>
Haul away for Heaven,<br>
Haul away for Heaven,<br>
God be by your side.
<br><br>
It is time to go now,<br>
Haul away your anchor,<br>
Haul away your anchor,<br>
It's our sailing time.
</tabber>
<tabber>
|-|Pay Me the Money Down=
"Your money, young man, is no object to me"<br>
Pay Me the Money Down<br>
Oh money down and money down<br>
Pay me the money down
<br><br>
I went for a cruise around the town<br>
Pay me the money down<br>
I there met a gal called Sally Brown<br>
Pay me the money down
<br><br>
Oh I put me arm around her waist,<br>
Pay me the money down<br>
She says, "Young man, you're in great haste."<br>
Pay me the money down
<br><br>
My price of love is half a crown<br>
Pay me the money down<br>
An' money down, 'tis real money down.<br>
Pay me the money down
<br><br>
Oh, the Yankee dollar some gits for their pay,<br>
Pay me the money down<br>
Will buy us rum for many a day,<br>
Pay me the money down
<br><br>
Oh, if I had silver dollars galore,<br>
Pay me the money down<br>
I'd pack me bags and stay on shore<br>
Pay me the money down
<br><br>
I wisht I had ten thousand [[Pound sterling|pound]],<br>
Pay me the money down<br>
I'd sail this old world, around an' around.<br>
Pay me the money down
<br><br>
I wisht I wuz Ol' Stormy's son,<br>
Pay me the money down<br>
I'd build a ship o' a thousan' ton.<br>
Pay me the money down
<br><br>
We'd stay at the ports where we wuz in,<br>
Pay me the money down<br>
Oh drinking' beer an' whiskey an' gin.<br>
Pay me the money down
<br><br>
When the ship it ties up an' the voyage is through,<br>
Pay me the money down<br>
Oh I wants me pay, sir, every sou.<br>
Pay me the money down
|-|Randy Dandy-O=
Now we are ready to sail for the Horn,<br>
Weigh hey, roll and go!<br>
Our boots and our clothes, boys, are all in the pawn,<br>
To be rollicking randy dandy-O!
<br><br>
(Chorus)<br>
(Chorus)<br>
Heave a pawl, O heave away!<br>
In the windy old weather, stormy old weather<br>
Weigh hey, roll and go!<br>
When the wind blows we all pull together
The anchor's on board and the cable's all stored,<br>
 
To be rollicking randy dandy-O!<br>
When up jumped a herring, the Queen of the sea<br>
<br><br>
Says "Now, old skipper, you cannot catch me"
Soon we'll be warping her out through the locks,<br>
 
Weigh hey, roll and go!<br>
Where the pretty young girls all come down in their frocks,<br>
To be rollicking randy dandy-O!
<br><br>
(Chorus)
(Chorus)
<br><br>
 
Come breast the bars, bullies, heave her away,<br>
We sighted a {{Wiki|Thresher shark|Thresher}}-a-slashin' his tail<br>
Weigh hey, roll and go!<br>
"Time now Old Skipper to hoist up your sail"
Soon we'll be rolling her down through the Bay,<br>
 
To be rollicking randy dandy-O!
<br><br>
(Chorus)
(Chorus)
|-|Roll and Go=
 
There was a ship, she sailed to Spain<br>
And up jumps a {{Wiki|Sole (fish)|Slipsole}} as strong as a horse<br>
O ho, roll and go!<br>
Says now, "Old Skipper, you're miles off course"
There was a ship came home again.<br>
 
Tommy's on the topsail yard!
(Chorus)
<br><br>
 
And what do you think was in her hold?<br>
Then along comes a {{Wiki|plaice}}, who's got spots on his side<br>
O ho, roll and go!<br>
Says "Not much longer, these seas you can ride"
There was diamonds, there was gold.<br>
 
Tommy's on the topsail yard!
(Chorus)
<br><br>
 
And what was in her {{Wiki|lazarette}}?<br>
Then up rears a {{Wiki|conger}}, as long as a mile<br>
O ho, roll and go!<br>
"Wind's coming east'ly" he says with a smile
Good split peas and bad [[Cattle|bull]] meat.<br>
 
Tommy's on the topsail yard!
(Chorus)
<br><br>
 
O, many a sailorman gets drowned,<br>
I think what that these fishes are sayin' is right<br>
O ho, roll and go!<br>
We'll haul up our gear now an' steer for the light
Many a sailorman gets drowned.<br>
 
Tommy's on the topsail yard!
(Chorus)
|-|Roll, Boys, Roll!=
|-|'Way Me Susiana=
Oh! Sally Brown, she's the gal for me boys<br>
We'll heave him up an away we'll go<br>
Roll, boys! Roll boys roll!<br>
'Way, me Susiana!<br>
Oh! Sally Brown she's the gal for me, boys<br>
We'll heave him up an away we'll go<br>
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!
We're all bound over the mounten!
<br><br>
 
We're bound away, 'way down south, boys,<br>
We'll heave him up from down below<br>
Roll, boys! Roll boys roll!<br>
'Way, me Susiana!<br>
We're bound away, 'way down south, boys,<br>
This is where the cocks do crow.<br>
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!
We're all bound over the mounten!
<br><br>
 
It's down to [[Trinidad]] to see Sally Brown boys,<br>
And if we drown while we are young,<br>
Roll, boys! Roll boys roll!<br>
'Way, me Susiana!<br>
Down to Trinidad to see Sally Brown boys,<br>
It's better to drown than to wait to be hung<br>
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!
We're all bound over the mounten!
<br><br>
 
She's lovely on the foreyard, an' she's lovely down below boys,<br>
Oh, growl ye may but go ye must,<br>
Roll, boys! Roll boys roll!<br>
'Way, me Susiana!<br>
She's lovely 'cause she loves me, that's all I want to know boys,<br>
If ye growl too hard yer head they'll bust<br>
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!
We're all bound over the mounten!
<br><br>
 
Ol' Captain Baker, how do you store yer cargo?<br>
Up sox, you cocks, hand her two blocks,<br>
Roll Boys! Roll boys roll!<br>
'Way, me Susiana!<br>
Some I stow for'ard, boys, an' some I stow a'ter<br>
An' go below to yer ol' ditty box<br>
Way high, Miss Sally Brown
We're all bound over the mounten!
<br><br>
 
Forty fathoms or more below boys,<br>
Oh, rock an shake 'er, one more drag<br>
Roll, boys! Roll boys roll!<br>
'Way, me Susiana!<br>
There's forty fathoms or more below boys,<br>
Oh, bend yer duds an' pack yer bag<br>
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!
We're all bound over the mounten!
<br><br>
</tabber>
Oh, way high ya, an' up she rises,<br>
 
Roll Boys! Roll boys roll!<br>
===Late 18th century===
Way high ya, and the blocks is different sizes,<br>
<tabber>
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!
|-|Bloody Red Roses=
<br><br>
Me bonnie bunch o'roses O!<br>
Oh, one more pull, don't ya hear the mate a-bawlin?<br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
Roll, boys! Roll boys roll!<br>
It's time for us to roll 'n' go! <br>
Oh, one more pull, that's the end of all the hawlin'<br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!
Ooh! You pinks 'n' posies,<br>
<br><br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
Sally Brown she's the gal for me boys,<br>
 
Roll, boys! Roll boys roll!<br>
We're bound away around Cape Horn<br>
Sally Brown she's the gal for me, boys,<br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!
We wisht ter hell you'd niver bin born<br>
|-|Roller Bowler=
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
As I rolled out one mornin'<br>
Ooh! You pinks n' posies,<br>
Away, you roller bowler!<br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
As I rolled out one mornin'<br>
 
I met a lady fair
Me boots an' clothes are all in a pawn,<br>
<br><br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
(Chorus)<br>
An' it's bleedin' draughty around Cape Horn,<br>
Timme, hey-rig-a-jig an' a ha-ha<br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
Good mornin', ladies all<br>
Ooh! You pinks 'n' posies,<br>
Away, you roller bowler!<br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
Timme, hey-rig-a-jig an' a ha-ha<br>
 
Good mornin', ladies all
Ti's growl ye may but go ye must,<br>
<br><br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
The first time that I saw her<br>
If ye growl too hard yer head they'll bust.<br>
Away, you roller bowler!<br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
The first time that I saw her,<br>
Ooh! You pinks 'n' posies,<br>
that saucy gal of mine:
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
<br><br>
 
(Chorus)
Them Spanish gals are pullin' strong,<br>
<br><br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
But when she found that I was skint<br>
Hang down, me boys, it won't take long.<br>
Away, you roller bowler!<br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
But when she found that I was skint<br>
Ooh! You pinks 'n' posies,<br>
She left me standing there
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
<br><br>
 
(Chorus)
Just one more pull an' that'll do<br>
<br><br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
I squared me yards an' sailed away<br>
We're the bullies for ter kick'er through.<br>
Away, you roller bowler!<br>
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
I squared me yards an' sailed away<br>
Ooh! You pinks 'n' posies,<br>
An' to the ship I went
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!<br>
<br><br>
Ooh! You pinks 'n' posies,<br>
(Chorus)
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
<br><br>
|-|Bold Riley Oh=
She winked & flipped a flipper<br>
Well, our anchor's on board and our rags are all set,<br>
Away, you roller bowler!<br>
Bold Riley-oh, boom-a-lay!<br>
She winked & flipped a flipper<br>
Them Liverpool Judies, we'll never forget,<br>
She thought I was a mate
Bold Riley-oh, gone away!
<br><br>
 
(Chorus)
CHORUS:<br>
|-|Rolling Down to Maui=
Goodbye, me darling, goodbye, me dear-oh,<br>
It's a damn tough life full of toil and strife<br>
Bold Riley-oh, boom-a-lay!<br>
We whalermen undergo.<br>
Goodbye, me darling, goodbye, me dear-oh,<br>
And we don't give a damn when the gale has stopped<br>
Bold Riley-oh, gone away!
How hard the winds did blow.<br>
 
Where homeward bound tiss a grand old sound<br>
Well, the rain it is raining all the day long,<br>
With a good ship, taut and free<br>
Bold Riley-oh, boom-a-lay!<br>
And we don't give a damn when we drink our rum<br>
And the northerly wind, it does so strong.<br>
With the girls of Old {{Wiki|Maui}}.
Bold Riley-oh, gone away!
<br><br>
 
CHORUS<br>
 
We're outward and bound for the Bengal Bay,<br>
Bold Riley-oh, boom-a-lay!<br>
Get bending, me lads, it's a hell of a way.<br>
Bold Riley-oh, gone away!
 
CHORUS<br>
|-|Don't Forget Your Old Shipmates=
Safe and sound at home again, let the waters roar, Jack.<br>
Safe and sound at home again, let the waters roar, Jack.
 
Chorus:<br>
Chorus:<br>
Rolling down to Old Maui, me boys<br>
Long we've tossed on the rolling main, now we're safe ashore, Jack.<br>
Rolling down to Old Maui<br>
Don't forget yer old shipmate, faldee raldee raldee raldee rye-eye-doe!
We're homeward bound from the {{Wiki|Arctic}} ground<br>
 
Rolling home to Old Maui.
Since we sailed from {{Wiki|Plymouth Sound}}, four years gone, or nigh, Jack.<br>
<br><br>
Was there ever chummies, now, such as you and I, Jack?
Once more we sail with a northerly gale<br>
 
Through the ice and wind and rain,<br>
Chorus
And coconut fronds, them tropical lands<br>
 
We soon shall see again.<br>
We have worked the self-same [[Cannon|gun]], {{Wiki|quarterdeck}} division.<br>
Six hellish months we've passed away<br>
{{Wiki|Cannon operation|Sponger}} I and loader you, through the whole commission.
On the cold {{Wiki|Kamchatka Peninsula|Kamchatka}} Sea,<br>
 
And now we're bound from the Arctic ground<br>
Rolling down to Old Maui.
<br><br>
Chorus
Chorus
<br><br>
 
And now we sail with a favouring gale<br>
When the middle watch was on, and the time went slow, boy,<br>
Towards our island home.<br>
Who could choose a rousing stave, who like Jack or Joe, boy?
Our mainmast sprung, our whaling done,<br>
 
And we ain't got far to roam.<br>
Chorus
Our {{Wiki|studding sail|stu'n's'l}} bones is carried away<br>
 
What care we for that sound?<br>
There she swings, an empty hulk, not a soul below now.<br>
A living gale is after us,<br>
Number seven starboard mess misses Jack and Joe now.
Thank God were homeward bound.
 
<br><br>
Chorus
 
But the best of friends must part, fair or foul the weather.<br>
Hand yer flipper for a shake, now a drink together.
 
Chorus
Chorus
|-|Round the Corner Sally=
|-|Donkey Riding=
Round the cor-ner an' away we'll go!<br>
Was you ever in [[Quebec]]<br>
Round the corner, Sally!<br>
Launchin' timber on the deck?<br>
Round th' corner where them gals do go,<br>
Where ya break yer bleedin' neck<br>
Round the corner, Sally!
Ridin' on a [[donkey]]!
<br><br>
 
Oh, Sally Brown she's the gal for me,<br>
Way hey and away we go<br>
Round the corner, Sally!<br>
Donkey riding, donkey riding<br>
She's waitin' there by the mango tree,<br>
Way hey and away we go<br>
Round the corner, Sally!
Ridin' on a donkey.
<br><br>
 
She loves me good, she loves me long,<br>
Was you ever in {{Wiki|Valparaíso|Vallipo}}<br>
Round the corner, Sally!<br>
Where the gals put on a show?<br>
She loves me hot, and she loves me strong<br>
Wriggle and dance with a roll and go<br>
Round the corner, Sally!
Riding on a donkey.
<br><br>
 
Was ye ever down in Kingston town?<br>
Wuz ye ever down {{Wiki|Mobile Bay}}<br>
Round the corner, Sally!<br>
Screwin' cotton all the day?<br>
Where the gals all spend our money around?<br>
A dollar a day is a white man's pay.<br>
Round the corner, Sally!
Ridin' on a donkey.
<br><br>
 
I wisht I had that gal in tow,<br>
Was you ever in London-town<br>
Round the corner, Sally!<br>
Where the girls eat do come down<br>
I'd take her in tow to Callyo.<br>
See the King in his golden crown<br>
Round the corner, Sally!
Riding on a donkey
<br><br>
 
To Callyo we're bound to go,<br>
Was you ever 'round Cape Horn<br>
Round the corner, Sally!<br>
Where the weather's never warm?<br>
Around that corner where there's ice an' snow<br>
Wished to God you'd never been born<br>
Round the corner, Sally!
Ridin' on a donkey.
<br><br>
|-|Haul Away Boys Haul Away=
So round 'er up an' stretch 'er luff,<br>
Oh, Haul away for the windy weather, boys<br>
Round the corner, Sally!<br>
Haul away, boys, haul away<br>
I think by Gawd we've hauled enough!<br>
Oh, Haul away and pull together boys<br>
Round the corner, Sally!
Haul away, boys, haul away
</tabber>
 
<tabber>
Haul away and let's get'er goin' boys<br>
|-|Running Down to Cuba=
Haul away, boys, haul away<br>
Running down to [[Cuba]] with a load of [[sugar]],<br>
Haul away for the merchants' money boys<br>
Weigh, me boys, to Cuba!<br>
Haul away, boys, haul away
Make her run you, lime juice squeezes,<br>
 
Running down to Cuba.
Haul away like jolly young sailor boys<br>
<br><br>
Haul away, boys, haul away<br>
(Chorus)<br>
Haul away and roll her over boys<br>
Weigh, me boys, to Cuba!<br>  
Haul away, boys, haul away
Running down to Cuba.
 
<br><br>
God made the bees and the bees made the honey, boys<br>
O, I got a sister, she's nine feet tall,<br>  
Haul away, boys, haul away<br>
Weigh, me boys, to Cuba!<br>  
God made the food but the devil sent the cook, boys<br>
Sleeps in the kitchen with her feet in the hall,<br>  
Haul away, boys, haul away
Running down to Cuba.
 
<br><br>
We're rolling down to Cuba for to load up sugar, boys<br>
(Chorus)
Haul away, boys, haul away<br>
<br><br>
And rolling down to Cuba just to meet a Creole lady, boys<br>
The captain he will trim the sails,<br>  
Haul away, boys, haul away
Weigh, me boys, to Cuba!<br>  
 
Winging the water over the rails,<br>  
And soon we'll be in red hot Cuba, boys<br>
Running down to Cuba.
Haul away, boys, haul away<br>
<br><br>
Oh haul away and the wind'll move'er, boys<br>
(Chorus)
Haul away, boys, haul away
<br><br>
 
Give me a gal can dance {{Wiki|Fandango}},<br>  
And soon we'll see a pretty woman, boys<br>
Weigh, me boys, to Cuba!<br>  
Haul away, boys, haul away<br>
Round as a melon and sweet as a mango,<br>  
Oh haul and shake her as she rolls, boys<br>
Running down to Cuba.
Haul away, boys, haul away
<br><br>
 
(Chorus)
Haul away for finer weather, boys<br>
<br><br>
Haul away, boys, haul away<br>
Load this sugar and home-ward go,<br>
Ooh, haul away for the better weather, boys<br>
Weigh, me boys, to Cuba!<br>  
Haul away, boys, haul away<br>
Mister mate, he told me so,<br>  
Haul away, boys, haul away
Running down to Cuba.
|-|Jolly Roving Tar=
<br><br>
Ships may come and ships may go<br>
(Chorus)
As long as the sea does roll.<br>
|-|Shallow Brown=
But a sailor lad just like his dad,<br>
Bound away to leave you
He loves the flowing bowl.
Shallow oh shallow brown<br>
 
Bound away to leave you<br>
Oh women on shore he does adore<br>
Shallow oh shallow brown
A girl who's plump and round.<br>
<br><br>
And your money's gone<br>
Shipped on board a whaler<br>
It's the same old song,<br>
Shallow oh shallow brown<br>
"Get up Jack! John, sit down!"
Shipped on board a whaler<br>
 
Shallow oh shallow brown
Come along, come along, You jolly brave boys,<br>
<br><br>
There's lots of grog in the jar.<br>
Love you Juliana<br>
We'll plough the briny ocean line<br>
Shallow oh shallow brown<br>
With the jolly roving tar.
Love you Juliana<br>
 
Shallow oh shallow brown
When Jack ashore, he'll make his way<br>
<br><br>
To some old boarding house.<br>
Packet lives tomorrow<br>
He's welcomed in with rum and gin,<br>
Shallow oh shallow brown<br>
Likewise with [[Pig|pork]] {{Wiki|Scouse (food)|scouse}}.
I leave you with great sorrow<br>
 
Shallow oh shallow brown
He'll spend and spend and never offend<br>
<br><br>
Till he's lies drunk on the ground<br>
Across the distant mountains<br>
When the money's gone<br>
Shallow oh shallow brown<br>
It's the same old song,<br>
find them crystal fountains<br>
"Get up Jack! John, sit down!"
Shallow oh shallow brown
 
<br><br>
Then Jack then will slip aboard some ship bound for [[India]] or [[Japan]],<br>
Shallow in the morning<br>
Then in Asia there, the ladies fair,<br>
Shallow oh shallow brown<br>
they all love a sailor man,<br>
Just as the day is dawning<br>
He'll go ashore, and he'll not scorn to buy some girl a gown:<br>
Shallow oh shallow brown
When his money's gone<br>
<br><br>
It's the same old song,<br>
Bound away to leave you<br>
"Get up Jack! John, sit down!"
Shallow oh shallow brown<br>
 
Bound away to leave you<br>
When Jack is old and weather-beat, too old to cruise about,<br>
Shallow oh shallow brown
They'll let him stop in some rum shop till eight bells calls him out,<br>
|-|So Early in the Morning=
Then he'll raise his hands high, and loud he'll cry:<br>
The mate was drunk and he went below to take a swig at his bottle o<br>
Thank Christ! I'm homeward bound:<br>
(Chorus)<br>
But his money's gone<br>
So early in the morning the sailor likes his bottle o<br>
It's the same old song,<br>
The bottle o, the bottle o, the sailor loves his bottle o
"Get up Jack! John, sit down!"
<br><br>
<tabber>
A bottle of [[rum]], a bottle of gin, a bottle of Irish whiskey o<br>
|-|Liverpool Judies=
(Chorus)
From Liverpool to '[[San Francisco|Frisco]] a-rovin' I went,<br>
<br><br>
For to stay in that country was my good intent.<br>
The [[Tobacco|baccy]] o, tabaccy o, the sailor loves his baccy o<br>
But drinkin' strong whiskey like other damn fools,<br>
(Chorus)
Oh, I soon got transported back to Liverpool, singin'.
<br><br>
 
A packet of shag, a packet of cut, a plug of hard terbaccy o<br>
Chorus:<br>
(Chorus)
Roll, roll, roll bullies, roll!<br>
<br><br>
Them Liverpool judies have got us in tow.
The lassies o, the maidens o, the sailor loves the judies o<br>
 
(Chorus)
A smart Yankee packet lies out in the {{Wiki|San Francisco Bay|Bay}},<br>
<br><br>
A-waitin' a fair wind to get under way.<br>
A lass from the 'pool, a girl from the {{Wiki|River Tyne|Tyne}}, a chowlah so fine and dandy o<br>
With all of her sailors so sick and so sore,<br>
(Chorus)
They'd drunk all their whiskey and can't get no more.
<br><br>
 
A bully rough house, a bully rough house, the sailor like his rough house o<br>
Chorus
(Chorus)
 
<br><br>
Oh, here comes the mate in a hell of a stew.<br>
Tread on me coat, and all hands in, a bully good rough and tumble o<br>
He's lookin' for work for us sailors to do.<br>
(Chorus)
Oh, it's "Fore {{Wiki|topsail|tops'l}} {{Wiki|halyard}}s!" he loudly does roar,<br>
<br><br>
And it's lay aloft Paddy, ye son-o'-a-whore!
A sing song o, a sing song o, the sailor likes a sing song o<br>
 
(Chorus)
Chorus
<br><br>
 
A drinking song, a song of love, a ditty of seas and shipmates o<br>
One night of Cape Horn I shall never forget,<br>
(Chorus)
'Tis oft-times I sighs when I think of it yet.<br>
|-|Spanish Ladies=
She was divin' bows under with her sailors all wet,<br>
Farewell and adieu to you, Spanish ladies,<br>
She was doin' twelve knots wid her {{Wiki|mainsail|mainskys'l}} set.
Farewell and adieu to you, ladies of Spain,<br>
 
For we've received orders for to sail for old England,<br>
Chorus
And we may never see you fair ladies again.
 
<br><br>
And now we've arrived in the {{Wiki|Bramley-Moore Dock|Bramleymoor Dock}},<br>
(Chorus)<br>
And all them flash judies on the pierhead do flock.<br>
We will rant and we'll roar like true British sailors,<br>
The barrel's run dry and our five [[Pound sterling|quid]] advance,<br>
We'll rant and we'll roar all on the salt seas.<br>
And I guess it's high time for to git up and dance.
Until we strike soundings in the channel of old England,<br>
 
From {{Wiki|Ushant}} to {{Wiki|Isles of Scilly|Scilly}} is thirty-five leagues.
Chorus
<br><br>
 
We hove our ship to, with the wind at sou'west, boys<br>
Here's a health to the Captain wherever he may be,<br>
We hove our ship to, deep soundings to take.<br>
A bucko on land and a bully at sea,<br>
'Twas forty-five fathoms with a white sandy bottom,<br>
But as for the chief mate, the dirty ol' brute,<br>
So we squared our main yard and up channel did steer.
We hope when he dies straight to hell he'll skyhoot.
<br><br>
 
(Chorus)
Chorus
<br><br>
|-|Off to Sea Once More=
Now let every man drink off his full bumper,<br>
When first I landed in Liverpool I went upon the spree<br>
And let every man drink off his full glass,<br>
Me hard earned cash, well I spent it fast<br>
We'll drink and be jolly and drown melancholy,<br>
Got drunk as drunk could be<br>
And here's to the health of each true-hearted lass!
And when me money it was all gone 'twas then I wanted more<br>
<br><br>
But a man must be blind to make up his mind and to go to sea once more
(Chorus)
 
|-|Stormalong John=
Once more, boys, once more, go to sea once more<br>
Oh, poor old Stormy's dead and gone<br>
But a man must be blind to make up his mind and to go to sea once more
Storm along boys! Storm along John!<br>
 
Oh, poor old Stormy's dead and gone<br>
I spent the night with Angeline too drunk to roll in bed<br>
Ah-ha, come along get along<br>
Me cloths was new and me money too, in the morning with them she fled<br>
Stormy along John!
And as I rolled the streets about, the tarts they all did roar<br>
<br><br>
And there goes Jack Strapp, the poor sailorlad, he must go to sea once more
I dug his grave with a silver spade<br>
 
Storm along boys! Storm along John!<br>
Once more, boys, once more, go to sea once more<br>
I dug his grave with a silver spade<br>
And there goes Jack Strapp, the poor sailorlad, he must go to sea once more
Ah-ha, come along get along<br>
 
Stormy along John!
And as I walked the streets about, I met old Rapper Brown<br>
<br><br>
I asked him then to take me in they looked at me with a frown<br>
I lower'd him down with a golden chain<br>
Says he last time you was paid off with me you chuck no score<br>
Storm along boys! Storm along John!<br>
But I'll take your advance and I'll give you a chance and I'll go to see once more
I lower'd him down with a golden chain<br>
 
Ah-ha, come along get along<br>
Once more, boys, once more, go to sea once more<br>
Stormy along John!
'caused I'll take your advance and I'll give you a chance and I'll go to see once more
<br><br>
 
I carried him away to {{Wiki|Montego Bay}}<br>
Come all you bold sailor lads, and listen to me song<br>
Storm along boys! Storm along John!<br>
When you come off them damn long trips, I'll tell you what goes wrong<br>
I carried him away to Montego Bay<br>
Take my advice, drink no strong drink, don't go sleeping with whores<br>
Ah-ha, come along get along<br>
Get married instead, spend all night in bed and go to sea no more
Stormy along John!
 
|-|The Coasts of High Barbary=
No more, boys, no more, go to sea no more<br>
Look ahead, look-astern<br>
Get married instead, spend all night in bed and go to sea no more
Look the weather in the lee!<br>
 
Blow high! Blow low! And so sailed we.<br>
No more, boys, no more, go to sea no more<br>
I see a wreck to windward,<br>
Get married instead, spend all night in bed and go to sea no more
And a lofty ship to lee!<br>
|-|One More Day=
A-sailing down along<br>
Oh, have you heard the news, me Johnny<br>
The coast of {{Wiki|Barbary Coast|High Barbary}}
One more day<br>
<br><br>
We're homeward bound tomorrow Johnny<br>
"O, are you a pirate<br>
One more day<br>
Or a man o' war?" cried we.<br>
Only one more day, me Johnny<br>
Blow high! Blow low! And so sailed we.<br>
One more day<br>
"O no! I'm not a pirate<br>
Oh, rock and roll me over<br>
But a man-o-war," cried he.<br>
One more day
A-sailing down along<br>
 
The coast of High Barbary.
Don't you hear the old man growlin' Johnny<br>
<br><br>
One more day<br>
We'll back up our topsails<br>
Don't you hear the mate a howlin' Johnny<br>
And heave vessel to.<br>
One more day<br>
Blow high! Blow low! And so sailed we.<br>
Only one more day, me Johnny<br>
For we have got some letters<br>
One more day<br>
To be carried home by you.<br>
Oh, rock and roll me over<br>
A-sailing down along<br>
One more day
The coast of High Barbary
 
<br><br>
Don't you hear the {{Wiki|Capstan (nautical)|caps'n}} pawlin' Johnny<br>
For broadside, for broadside<br>
One more day<br>
They fought all on the main;<br>
Don't you hear the pilot bawlin' Johnny<br>
Blow high! Blow low! And so sailed we.<br>
One more day<br>
Until at last the frigate<br>
Only one more day, me Johnny<br>
Shot the pirate's mast away.<br>
One more day<br>
A sailing down along<br>
Oh, rock and roll me over<br>
The coast of High Barbary
One more day
<br><br>
 
With [[cutlass]] and [[Firearm|gun]],<br>
Only one more day a-howlin' Johnny<br>
O we fought for hours three;<br>
One more day<br>
Blow high! Blow low! And so sailed we.<br>
Can't you hear the gals a-callin'<br>
The ship it was their coffin<br>
One more day<br>
And their grave it was the sea<br>
Only one more day, me Johnny<br>
A-sailing down along<br>
One more day<br>
The coast of High Barbary
Oh, rock and roll me over<br>
One more day
 
Only one more day a-rollin' Johnny<br>
One more day<br>
Only one more day a-cursin'<br>
Sing it!<br>
One more day<br>
Only one more day, me Johnny<br>
One more day<br>
Oh, rock and roll me over<br>
One more day
 
No more gales or heavy weather Johnny<br>
One more day<br>
Only one more day, me Johnny<br>
One more day<br>
Oh, rock and roll me over<br>
One more day
</tabber>
</tabber>
<tabber>
<tabber>
The Dead Horse=
|-|Paddy Lay Back=
A poor old man<br>
It was cold and dreary morning in December (December)<br>
Came riding by.<br>
And all of me money it was spent (spent, spent)<br>
And we say so,<br>
And where it went to, I can't remember (remember)<br>
And we know so.<br>
So down to the shipping office I went (off I went)
O, a poor old man<br>
 
Came riding by,<br>
CHORUS:<br>
O, poor old man.
Paddy lay back, (Paddy lay back)<br>
<br><br>
Take in your slack (take in your slack)<br>
Says I, "Old man,<br>
Take a turn around your capstan heave a pawl.<br>
Your [[horse]] will die."<br>
About ship's stations, boys, boys be handy (Handy!)<br>
And we say so,<br>
We're bound for Valparaiso 'round the horn
And we know so.<br>
 
And if he dies<br>
Well it seems there was a great demand for sailors (for sailors)<br>
we'll tan his hide.<br>
For the colonies, and for Frisco and for [[France]] (France, France)<br>
O, poor old man.
Well, I shipped aboard the limey {{Wiki|barque}} the {{Wiki|HMS Hotspur|Hotspur}} (the Hotspur)<br>
<br><br>
And got legless drunk on my advance (my ad-vance)
And if he don't,<br>
 
I'll ride him again.<br>
CHORUS
And we say so,<br>
 
And we know so.<br>
Well, I joined her on a cold December morning (morning)<br>
And I'll ride him<br>
A-flapping of me flippers to keep me warm (keep me warm)<br>
'Til the [[Jesus of Nazareth|Lord]] knows when,<br>
With the south cone hoisted as a warning (a warning)<br>
O, poor old man.
To stand by the coming of a storm
<br><br>
 
He's dead as a nail<br>
CHORUS
In the lamp room door,<br>
 
And we say so,<br>
Well, I woke up in the morning stiff and sore boys (sore boys)<br>
And we know so.<br>
And I knew that I was outward bound again (bound again)<br>
And he won't come<br>
And a voice come a-bawling at the door (door)<br>
Worrying us no more<br>
Lay aft men, and answer to your name (to your name)
O, poor old man.
 
<br><br>
CHORUS
We'll use the hair of his tail<br>
 
To sew our sails<br>
It was on the quarter deck when first I seen 'em (seen 'em)<br>
And we say so,<br>
Such an ugly bunch I never seen before (seen before)<br>
And we know so.<br>
There was a bum and stiff from every quarter (quarter)<br>
And the iron of his shoes<br>
And it made my poor old heart feel sick and sore (sore, sore)
To make deck nails,<br>
 
O, poor old man.
CHORUS
<br><br>
|-|Pay Me the Money Down=
Drop him down<br>
"Your money, young man, is no object to me"<br>
With a long long rope<br>
Pay Me the Money Down<br>
And we say so,<br>
Oh money down and money down<br>
And we hope so.<br>
Pay me the money down
Where the sharks have his body<br>
 
And the devil takes his soul!<br>
I went for a cruise around the town<br>
O, poor old man.
Pay me the money down<br>
<br><br>
I there met a gal called Sally Brown<br>
|-|The Maid of Amsterdam=
Pay me the money down
In [[Amsterdam]] there lived a maid,<br>
 
Mark well what I do say!<br>
Oh I put me arm around her waist,<br>
In Amsterdam there lived a maid,<br>
Pay me the money down<br>
And she was mistress of her trade.<br>
She says, "Young man, you're in great haste."<br>
I'll go no more a-roving with you fair maid!
Pay me the money down
<br><br>
 
(Chorus)<br>
My price of love is half a crown<br>
A roving, a roving,<br>
Pay me the money down<br>
Since roving's been my ru-i-in,<br>
An' money down, 'tis real money down.<br>
I'll go no more a roving,<br>
Pay me the money down
With you fair maid!
 
<br><br>
Oh, the Yankee dollar some gits for their pay,<br>
I asked this maid to take a walk,<br>
Pay me the money down<br>
Mark well what I do say!<br>
Will buy us rum for many a day,<br>
I asked this maid out for a walk,<br>
Pay me the money down
That we might have some private talk.<br>
 
I'll go no more a roving with you fair maid!
Oh, if I had silver dollars galore,<br>
<br><br>
Pay me the money down<br>
(Chorus)
I'd pack me bags and stay on shore<br>
<br><br>
Pay me the money down
Then a great big [[Netherlands|Dutch]]man rammed my bow,<br>
 
Mark well what I do say!<br>
I wisht I had ten thousand pound,<br>
For a great big Dutchman rammed my bow,<br>
Pay me the money down<br>
And said "Young man, dees ees meine frau!"<br>
I'd sail this old world, around an' around.<br>
I'll go no more a roving with you fair maid!
Pay me the money down
<br><br>
 
(Chorus)
I wisht I wuz {{Wiki|Alfred Bulltop Stormalong|Ol' Stormy}}'s son,<br>
<br><br>
Pay me the money down<br>
Then take fair warning boys from me,<br>
I'd build a ship o' a thousan' ton.<br>
Mark well what I do say!<br>
Pay me the money down
So take fair warning boys from me<br>
 
With other men's wives, don't make too free<br>
We'd stay at the ports where we wuz in,<br>
I'll go no more a roving with you fair maid!
Pay me the money down<br>
<br><br>
Oh drinking' beer an' whiskey an' gin.<br>
(Chorus)
Pay me the money down
|-|The Rio Grande=
 
O say was you ever in {{Wiki|Rio Grande}}?<br>
When the ship it ties up an' the voyage is through,<br>
A-weigh, you Rio!<br>
Pay me the money down<br>
It's there that the river brings down golden sand,<br>
Oh I wants me pay, sir, every sou.<br>
For we're bound for the Rio Grande
Pay me the money down
<br><br>
|-|Rolling Down to Maui=
(Chorus)<br>
It's a damn tough life full of toil and strife<br>
And away, boys, away.<br>
We whalermen undergo.<br>
A-weigh, you Rio!<br>
And we don't give a damn when the gale has stopped<br>
It's fare-you-well my bonny young girls<br>
How hard the winds did blow.<br>
And we're bound for the Rio Grande
Where homeward bound tiss a grand old sound<br>
<br><br>
With a good ship, taut and free<br>
It's fare well to you all the girls of the town.<br>
And we don't give a damn when we drink our rum<br>
A-weigh, you Rio!<br>
With the girls of Old {{Wiki|Maui}}.
You got our half-pay for to keep you around,<br>
 
And we're bound for the Rio Grande!
Chorus:<br>
<br><br>
Rolling down to Old Maui, me boys<br>
(Chorus)
Rolling down to Old Maui<br>
<br><br>
We're homeward bound from the {{Wiki|Arctic}} ground<br>
She's a deep water ship and a deep water crew.<br>
Rolling home to Old Maui.
A-weigh, you Rio!<br>
 
You can keep to the coast but we're damned if we do,<br>
Once more we sail with a northerly gale<br>
And we're bound for the Rio Grande!
Through the ice and wind and rain,<br>
<br><br>
And coconut fronds, them tropical lands<br>
(Chorus)
We soon shall see again.<br>
<br><br>
Six hellish months we've passed away<br>
We was sick of the beach when our money was gone.<br>
On the cold {{Wiki|Kamchatka Peninsula|Kamchatka}} Sea,<br>
A-weigh, you Rio!<br>
And now we're bound from the Arctic ground<br>
And sign in this packet to drive her along,<br>
Rolling down to Old Maui.
And we're bound for the Rio Grande!
 
<br><br>
Chorus
(Chorus)
 
|-|The Sailboat Malarkey=
And now we sail with a favouring gale<br>
Please tell me, what is this sailboat's name?<br>
Towards our island home.<br>
The sailboat Malarkey.
Our mainmast sprung, our whaling done,<br>
<br><br>
And we ain't got far to roam.<br>
Tell me now what is this good boat's name?<br>
Our {{Wiki|studding sail|stu'n's'l}} bones is carried away<br>
It's the sailboat Malarkey.
What care we for that sound?<br>
<br><br>
A living gale is after us,<br>
Well now, me boys, we are bound out to sea!<br>
Thank God were homeward bound.
In the sailboat Malarkey.
 
<br><br>
Chorus
O when will Caroline come down to me?<br>
|-|Round the Corner Sally=
In the sailboat Malarkey.
Round the cor-ner an' away we'll go!<br>
<br><br>
Round the corner, Sally!<br>
She's lovely aloft and she's lovely below.<br>
Round th' corner where them gals do go,<br>
Is the sailboat Malarkey.
Round the corner, Sally!
<br><br>
 
But she's best on her back as you very well know!<br>
Oh, Sally Brown she's the gal for me,<br>
That sailboat Malarkey.
Round the corner, Sally!<br>
<br><br>
She's waitin' there by the mango tree,<br>
Away, away in {{Wiki|St. George's, Grenada|St George's Town}},<br>
Round the corner, Sally!
In the sailboat Malarkey.
 
<br><br>
She loves me good, she loves me long,<br>
The rats come batting the houses down,<br>
Round the corner, Sally!<br>
Of the sailboat Malarkey.
She loves me hot, and she loves me strong<br>
<br><br>
Round the corner, Sally!
I'd give the world boys and all that I know<br>
 
In the sailboat Malarkey.
Was ye ever down in Kingston town?<br>
<br><br>
Round the corner, Sally!<br>
To turn and to roll with my Lucy-oh!<br>
Where the gals all spend our money around?<br>
In the sailboat Malarkey.
Round the corner, Sally!
<br><br>
 
You pick her up, boys, and lay her down,<br>
I wisht I had that gal in tow,<br>
In the sailboat Malarkey.
Round the corner, Sally!<br>
<br><br>
I'd take her in tow to Callyo.<br>
And hang on tight as she bounces around!<br>
Round the corner, Sally!
In the sailboat Malarkey.
 
|-|The Wild Goose=
To Callyo we're bound to go,<br>
Did you ever see a wild goose<br>
Round the corner, Sally!<br>
Sailing o'er the ocean?
Around that corner where there's ice an' snow<br>
<br><br>
Round the corner, Sally!
Ranzo, Ranzo, weigh heigh!
 
<br><br>
So round 'er up an' stretch 'er luff,<br>
They're just like them pretty girls,<br>
Round the corner, Sally!<br>
When they gets the notion.
I think by Gawd we've hauled enough!<br>
<br><br>
Round the corner, Sally!
Ranzo, Ranzo, weigh heigh!
|-|Shallow Brown=
<br><br>
Bound away to leave you
The other morning<br>
Shallow oh shallow brown<br>
I was walking by the river.
Bound away to leave you<br>
<br><br>
Shallow oh shallow brown
Ranzo, Ranzo, weigh heigh!
 
<br><br>
Shipped on board a whaler<br>
When I saw a young girl walking<br>
Shallow oh shallow brown<br>
With her topsails all a-quiver.
Shipped on board a whaler<br>
<br><br>
Shallow oh shallow brown
Ranzo, Ranzo, weigh heigh!
 
<br><br>
Love you Juliana<br>
I said, "Pretty fair maid<br>
Shallow oh shallow brown<br>
And how are you this morning?"
Love you Juliana<br>
<br><br>
Shallow oh shallow brown
Ranzo, Ranzo, weigh heigh!
 
<br><br>
Packet lives tomorrow<br>
She said none the better <br>
Shallow oh shallow brown<br>
for the seeing of you
I leave you with great sorrow<br>
<br><br>
Shallow oh shallow brown
Ranzo, Ranzo, weigh heigh!
 
|-|The Worst Old Ship=
Across the distant mountains<br>
The worst old ship that ever did sail,<br>
Shallow oh shallow brown<br>
Sailed out of Harwich on a windy day.
find them crystal fountains<br>
<br><br>
Shallow oh shallow brown
(Chorus)<br>
 
And we're waiting for the day,<br>
Shallow in the morning<br>
Waiting for the day,<br>
Shallow oh shallow brown<br>
Waiting for the day<br>
Just as the day is dawning<br>
That we get our pay.
Shallow oh shallow brown
<br><br>
 
She was built in [[Romans|Roman]] time,<br>
Bound away to leave you<br>
Held together with bits of twine<br>
Shallow oh shallow brown<br>
<br><br>
Bound away to leave you<br>
(Chorus)
Shallow oh shallow brown
<br><br>
|-|The Maid of Amsterdam=
Nothing in the galley—nothing in the hold,<br>
In [[Amsterdam]] there lived a maid,<br>
But the skipper's turned in with a bag of gold.
Mark well what I do say!<br>
<br><br>
In Amsterdam there lived a maid,<br>
(Chorus)
And she was mistress of her trade.<br>
<br><br>
I'll go no more a-roving with you fair maid!
Off {{Wiki|Orford Ness}} she sprang a leak,<br>
 
Hear her poor old timbers creak.
<br><br>
(Chorus)<br>
(Chorus)<br>
<br><br>
A roving, a roving,<br>
We pumped our way round {{Wiki|Newby and Scalby|Scalby Ness}},<br>
Since roving's been my ru-i-in,<br>
When the wind backed round to the west-nor'-west.
I'll go no more a roving,<br>
<br><br>
With you fair maid!
(Chorus)<br>
 
<br><br>
I asked this maid to take a walk,<br>
Into the Humber and up the town,<br>
Mark well what I do say!<br>
Pump you blighters—pump or drown.
I asked this maid out for a walk,<br>
<br><br>
That we might have some private talk.<br>
(Chorus) x2
I'll go no more a roving with you fair maid!
|-|Where am I to Go M'Johnnies=
 
Oh, where am I to go, M'Johnnies, oh where am I to go?<br>
(Chorus)
Timme way hey hey, high roll and go.<br>
 
Oh, where am I to go, M'Johnnies, oh where am I to go,<br>
Then a great big [[Netherlands|Dutchman]] rammed my bow,<br>
For I'm a young sailor boy, and where am I to go?
Mark well what I do say!<br>
<br><br>
For a great big Dutchman rammed my bow,<br>
Way up on that t'gallant yard, that's where you're bound to go.<br>
And said "Young man, dees ees meine frau!"<br>
Timme way hey hey, high roll and go.<br>
I'll go no more a roving with you fair maid!
Oh, way up on that {{Wiki|Topgallant sail|t'gallant}} yard, that's where you're bound to go.<br>
 
For I'm a young sailor boy, and where am I to go?
(Chorus)
<br><br>
 
Way up on that t'gallant yard and take the gans'l in.<br>
Then take fair warning boys from me,<br>
Timme way hey hey, high roll and go.<br>
Mark well what I do say!<br>
Oh, way up on that t'gallant yard and take the gans'l in.<br>
So take fair warning boys from me<br>
For I'm a young sailor boy, and where am I to go?
With other men's wives, don't make too free<br>
<br><br>
I'll go no more a roving with you fair maid!
You're bound away to [[Kingston]] town, that's where you're bound to go.<br>
 
Timme way hey hey, high roll and go.<br>
You're bound away to Kingston town, that's where you're bound to go.<br>
For I'm a young sailor boy, and where am I to go?
</tabber>
<tabber>
|-|Whiskey Johnny=
Whiskey is the life of man,<br>
Whiskey, Johnny!<br>
O, whiskey is the life of man,<br>
Whiskey for my Johnny O!
<br><br>
O, I drink whiskey when I can<br>
Whiskey, Johnny!<br>
Whiskey from an old [[tin]] can,<br>
Whiskey for my Johnny O!
<br><br>
Whiskey gave me a broken nose!<br>
Whiskey, Johnny!<br>
Whiskey made me pawn my clothes,<br>
Whiskey for my Johnny O!
<br><br>
Whiskey drove me around Cape Horn,<br>
Whiskey, Johnny!<br>
It was many a month when I was gone,<br>
Whiskey for my Johnny O!
<br><br>
I thought I heard the old man say:<br>
Whiskey, Johnny!<br>
I'll treat my crew in a decent way,<br>
Whiskey for my Johnny O!
<br><br>
A glass of grog for every man!<br>
Whiskey, Johnny!<br>
And a bottle for the Chantey Man.<br>
Whiskey for my Johnny O!
|-|Windy Old Weather=
As we were a-fishing off {{Wiki|Happisburgh}} light<br>
Shooting and hauling and trawling all night
<br><br>
(Chorus)<br>
In the windy old weather, stormy old weather<br>
When the wind blows we all pull together
<br><br>
When up jumped a herring, the Queen of the sea<br>
Says "Now, old skipper, you cannot catch me"
<br><br>
(Chorus)
<br><br>
We sighted a {{Wiki|Thresher shark|Thresher}}-a-slashin' his tail<br>
"Time now Old Skipper to hoist up your sail"
<br><br>
(Chorus)
(Chorus)
<br><br>
And up jumps a {{Wiki|Sole (fish)|Slipsole}} as strong as a horse<br>
Says now, "Old Skipper, you're miles off course"
<br><br>
(Chorus)
<br><br>
Then along comes a {{Wiki|plaice}}, who's got spots on his side<br>
Says "Not much longer, these seas you can ride"
<br><br>
(Chorus)
<br><br>
Then up rears a {{Wiki|conger}}, as long as a mile<br>
"Wind's coming east'ly" he says with a smile
<br><br>
(Chorus)
<br><br>
I think what that these fishes are sayin' is right<br>
We'll haul up our gear now an' steer for the light
<br><br>
(Chorus)
|-|'Way Me Susiana=
We'll heave him up an away we'll go<br>
'Way, me Susiana!<br>
We'll heave him up an away we'll go<br>
We're all bound over the mounten!
<br><br>
We'll heave him up from down below<br>
'Way, me Susiana!<br>
This is where the cocks do crow.<br>
We're all bound over the mounten!
<br><br>
And if we drown while we are young,<br>
'Way, me Susiana!<br>
It's better to drown than to wait to be hung<br>
We're all bound over the mounten!
<br><br>
Oh, growl ye may but go ye must,<br>
'Way, me Susiana!<br>
If ye growl too hard yer head they'll bust<br>
We're all bound over the mounten!
<br><br>
Up sox, you cocks, hand her two blocks,<br>
'Way, me Susiana!<br>
An' go below to yer ol' ditty box<br>
We're all bound over the mounten!
<br><br>
Oh, rock an shake 'er, one more drag<br>
'Way, me Susiana!<br>
Oh, bend yer duds an' pack yer bag<br>
We're all bound over the mounten!
</tabber>
</tabber>


==Behind the scenes==
==Behind the scenes==
Sea shanties are thought to have developed from naval work songs sung by the [[Royal Navy|British]] and [[French Navy|French navies]]. The first written reference to such songs emerged in the mid-16th century. However, the use of the term "sea shanties" in ''[[Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag]] ''and ''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]'' is anachronistic. The term "sea shanty" as a naval work song did not develop until the early 19th century, where they were used aboard American [[merchant]] vessels. The likely etymologies of the word is the French ''chanter'' (to sing) or its English cognate ''chant.''
Sea shanties are thought to have developed from naval work songs sung by the [[Royal Navy|British]] and [[French Navy|French navies]]. The first written reference to such songs emerged in the mid-16th century. However, the use of the term "sea shanties" in ''[[Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag]] ''and ''[[Assassin's Creed: Rogue]]'' is anachronistic. The term "sea shanty" as a naval work song did not develop until the early 19th century, where they were used aboard American [[merchant]] vessels. The likely etymologies of the word is the French ''chanter'' (to sing) or its English cognate ''chant.''


Remixed and shortened versions of some of the sea shanties can be heard in ''[[Assassin's Creed: Pirates]]''.
Remixed and shortened versions of some of the sea shanties can be heard in ''[[Assassin's Creed: Pirates]]''.
Line 1,864: Line 1,927:
==Appearances==
==Appearances==
*''[[Assassin's Creed III]]'' {{1st}}
*''[[Assassin's Creed III]]'' {{1st}}
*''[[Assassin's Creed III: Liberation]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Pirates]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Pirates]]''
Line 1,869: Line 1,933:
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Forgotten Temple]]''
*''[[Assassin's Creed: Forgotten Temple]]''
*''[[Animus Hub]]'' {{Mdat}}


==References==
==References==

Latest revision as of 02:56, 15 July 2026

Patience, brothers. Soon we will reveal the secrets of Assassin's Creed: Odyssey, Assassin's Creed: Valhalla and Assassin's Creed: Black Flag Resynced.

This article has been identified as being out of date. Please update the article to reflect recent releases and then remove this template once done.

A sea shanty page

Sea shanties are working songs commonly sung aboard ships by sailors. They were especially common among navy men and pirates. The shanty consisted of two parts, the chant and the chorus. The chant would often be initiated by a single crewman who would sing the opening lines and establish the beat, and the chorus would then come as the rest of the crew would join in.[1]

History[edit | edit source]

During the Golden Age of Piracy, Edward Kenway could request his crew to sing various shanties, the lyrics of which he obtained from pages strewn across the Caribbean.[2] This tradition continued into the Seven Years' War, when the Colonial Templar Shay Cormac also collected some shanties during his travels around the British Empire's colonies.[3]

Known shanties[edit | edit source]

Early 18th century[edit | edit source]

Old Billy Riley was a dancing master.

Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!

Old Billy Riley's master of a drogher.
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!

Master of a drogher bound for Antigua.
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!

Old Billy Riley has a nice young daughter.
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!

Oh Missy Riley, little Missy Riley.
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!

Had a pretty daughter, but we can't get at her.
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!

Screw her up and away we go, boys.
Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!

One more pull and then belay, boys.

Old Billy Riley, oh, Old Billy Riley!

(Chorus)
Help me, Bob, I'm bully in the alley,
Way, hey, bully in the alley!
Help me, Bob, I'm bully in the alley,
Bully down in shinbone al! Sally is the girl that I love dearly,
Way, hey, bully in the alley.
Sally is the girl that I spliced dearly,
Bully down in shinbone al. (Chorus) For seven long years I courted little Sally,
Way, hey, bully in the alley.
But all she did was dilly and dally.
Bully down in shinbone al. (Chorus) I ever get back, I'll marry little Sally,
Way, hey, bully in the alley.
Have six kids and live in Shin-bone Alley.
Bully down in shinbone al. (Chorus)

O, my name was Captain Kidd,
as I sailed, as I sailed,
O, my name was Captain Kidd,
as I sailed.
My name was Captain Kidd
And God's laws I did forbid,
And so wickedly I did
as I sailed, as I sailed.
So wickedly I did
as I sailed. I murdered William Moore,
as I sailed, as I sailed.
O, I murdered William Moore
as I sailed.
I laid him in his gore,
Not many leagues from the shore,
O, I murdered William Moore,
as I sailed, as I sailed.
I murdered William Moore
as I sailed. I spied three ships from Spain
as I sailed, as I sailed,
O, I spied three ships from Spain
as I sailed.
I spied three ships from Spain,
and I fired on them a-main,
And most of them I slain,
as I sailed, as I sailed.
And most of them I slain
as I sailed. Come all you young and old,
see me die, see me die.
Come all you young and old,
see me die.
You are welcome to my goal,
And by it I lost my soul
Come all you young and old,
I must die, I must die.
Come all you young and old,
I must die.

Oh, Nancy Dawson, Hi-oh!
Cheerly, man!
She rubbed the Bo'sun, Hi-oh!
Cheerly, man!
That was a caution, Hi-oh! (Chorus)
Cheerly, man,
O! Haulee, Hi-oh,
Cheerly, man. Oh, Sally Racket, Hi-oh!
Cheerly, man!
Pawned my best jacket, Hi-oh!
Cheerly, man!
And sold pawn the ticket, Hi-oh! (Chorus) Oh, Kitty Carson, Hi-oh!
Cheerly, man!
Jitted the parson, Hi-oh! Cheerly, man!
Married a mason, Hi-oh! (Chorus) Oh, Betsy Baker, Hi-oh!
Cheerly, man!
Lived in Long Acre, Hi-oh!
Cheerly, man!
Married a Quaker, Hi-oh! (Chorus) Oh, Jenny Walker, Hi-oh!
Cheerly, man!
Married a hawker, Hi-oh!
Cheerly, man!
That was a corker, Hi-oh! (Chorus) Oh, Polly Riddle, Hi-oh!
Cheerly, man!
Broke her new fiddle, Hi-oh!
Cheerly, man!
Right through the middle, Hi-oh! (Chorus)

As I was going to Derby, 'twas on a market day,
I met the finest ram, sirs, that ever was fed upon hay. (Chorus)
That's a lie, that's a lie
That's a lie, a lie, a lie! This ram and I got drunk, sir, as drunk as drunk could be,
And when we sobered up, sir, we were far away out on the sea. (Chorus) This wonderful old ram, sir, was playful as a kid;
He swallowed the captain's spyglass along with the bo'sun's fid. (Chorus) One morning on the poop, sir, afore eight bells was struck.
He climbed up to the sky's I yard an' sat down on the truck. (Chorus) This wonderful ol' ram, sir, he tried a silly trick,
He tried to jump a five-barred fence and landed in a rick. (Chorus) This wonderful ol' ram, sir, it grew two horns of brass,
One grew out o' his shoulder blade, t'other turned into a mast. (Chorus) An' when this ram was killed, sir, the butcher was covered in blood.
Five and twenty butcher boys was carried away the flood. (Chorus) An' when this ram was dead, sir, they buried it in St. Joan's,
It took ten men an' an elephant to carry one of its bones. (Chorus)

(Chorus)
Weigh-hay and up she rises
Weigh-hay and up she rises
Weigh-hay and up she rises
Early in the morning! What will we do with a drunken sailor,
What will we do with a drunken sailor,
What will we do with a drunken sailor,
Early in the morning? (Chorus) Put 'em in the scuppers with a hose pipe on him,
Put 'em in the scuppers with a hose pipe on him,
Put 'em in the scuppers with a hose pipe on him,
Early in the morning! (Chorus) Put him in the brig until he's sober,
Put him in the brig until he's sober,
Put him in the brig until he's sober,
Early in the morning! (Chorus)

Come all you young sailor men, listen to me,
I'll sing you a song of the fish in the sea; (Chorus)
And it's...
Windy weather, boys, stormy weather, boys,
When the wind blows, we're all together, boys;
Blow ye winds westerly, blow ye winds, blow,
Jolly sou'wester, boys, steady she goes. Up jumps the eel with his slippery tail,
Climbs up aloft and reefs the topsail. (Chorus) Then up jumps the shark with his nine rows of teeth,
Saying, "You eat the dough boys, and I'll eat the beef!" (Chorus) Up jumps the whale... the largest of all,
"If you want any wind, well, I'll blow ye a squall!" (Chorus)

We are outward bound for Mobile town
With a heave-o, haul!
An' we'll heave the ol' wheel round an' round
Good mornin' ladies all! An' when we get to Mobile town
With a heave-o, haul!
Oh, 'tis there we'll drink an' sorrow drown
Good mornin' ladies all! Them gals down south are free an' gay
With a heave-o, haul!
Wid them we'll spend our hard-earned pay
Good mornin' ladies all! We'll swing around, we'll have good fun
With a heave-o, haul!
An' soon we'll be back on the homeward run
Good mornin' ladies all! An' when we get to Bristol town
With a heave-o, haul!
For the very last time we'll waltz around
Good mornin' ladies all! With Poll and Meg an' Sally too
With a heave-o, haul!
We'll drink an' dance wid a hullabaloo
Good mornin' ladies all! So a long goodbye to all you dears
With a heave-o, haul!
Don't cry for us, don't waste yer tears
Good mornin' ladies all!

Why can't ye be so handy-o!
Handy, me boys, so handy! Oh, aloft this yard must go.
Handy, me boys, so handy! Ooh! Up aloft from down below.
Handy, me boys, so handy! Growl ye may, but go ye must.
Handy, me boys, so handy! Growl too much an yer head they'll bust.
Handy, me boys, so handy! Oh, a bully ship an' a bully crew.
Handy, me boys, so handy! Oh, we're the gang for the kick 'er through.
Handy, me boys, so handy! Yer advance has gone, yer at sea again.
Handy, me boys, so handy! Hey, bound round the horn through the hail an' rain.
Handy, me boys, so handy! Sing an' haul, an' haul an' sing.
Handy, me boys, so handy! Up aloft this yard we'll swing.
Handy, me boys, so handy! Up aloft that yard must go.
Handy, me boys, so handy! For we are outward bound, ye know.
Handy, me boys, so handy! A handy ship an' a handy crew.
Handy, me boys, so handy! A handy Mate an Old Man too.
Handy, me boys, so handy!

England, ould Ireland
England, ould Ireland
England, ould Ireland
Hauley Hauley Ho! Paddy M'Ginty
Paddy, Jock and Jackie too,
Oh Paddy M'Ginty,
Hauley Hauley Ho! Shamrock an' Rose, boys,
Shamrock, Rose, and prickly Thistle too,
Shamrock an' Rose, boys,
Hauley Hauley Ho! England, ould Ireland
England, ould Ireland
England, ould Ireland
Hauley Hauley Ho!

Why don't you blow
High-O! Come roll me over
Why don't you blow
High-O! Come roll me over One man to strike the bell
High-O! Come roll me over
One man to strike the bell
High-O! Come roll me over Two men to man the wheel
High-O! Come roll me over
Two men to man the wheel
High-O! Come roll me over Three men, to gallant braces
High-O! Come roll me over
Three men, to gallant braces
High-O! Come roll me over Four men to furl t'garns'ls
High-O! Come roll me over
Four men to furl t'garns'ls
High-O! Come roll me over Five men to bunt-a-bo
High-O! Come roll me over
Five men to bunt-a-bo
High-O! Come roll me over

Oh, don't yiz hear the old man say?

Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!
Oh, don't yiz hear the old man say?
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!

We're Homeward bound to Liverpool Town,
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!
Where all them judies, they will come down
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!

An' when we gits to the Wallasey Gates
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!
Sally an' Olly for their flash men do wait
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!

An' one to the other ye'll hear them say,
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!
Here comes Johnny with his fourteen mont's pay!
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!

We meet these fly gals an' we'll ring the ol' bell,
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!
With them judies, we'll raise merry hell
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!

We're homeward bound to the gals o' the town.
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!
And stamp up me bullies an' heave it around.
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!

An' when we gits home, boys, oh, won't we fly round.
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!
We'll heave up the anchor to this bully sound.
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!

We're all homeward bound for the old backyard.
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!
Then heave, me bullies, we're all bound homeward.
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!

Heave with a will, boys, oh, heave long an' strong.
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!
Sing a good chorus for 'tis a good song.
Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!

We're homeward bound, we'll have yiz to know.
Goodbye, fare-ye-well! Goodbye, fare-ye-well!
An' over the water to England must go!

Hoor-raw me boys! We're homeward bound!

Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,
Come rock and roll me over.
Do! My Johnny Boker, do! Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,
The skipper is a rover.
Do! My Johnny Boker, do! Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,
The mate he's never sober.
Do! My Johnny Boker, do! Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,
The Bo'sun is a tailor.
Do! My Johnny Boker, do! Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,
We'll all go on a jamboree.
Do! My Johnny Boker, do! Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,
The Packet is a Rollin'.
Do! My Johnny Boker, do! Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,
We'll pull and haul together.
Do! My Johnny Boker, do! Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,
We'll haul for better weather.
Do! My Johnny Boker, do! Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,
And soon we'll be in London Town.
Do! My Johnny Boker, do! Oh! Do, my Johnny Boker,
Come rock and roll me over.
Do! My Johnny Boker, do!

I thought I heard the Old Man say:
"Leave her, Johnny, leave her."
Tomorrow you will get your pay,
and it's time for us to leave her. (Chorus) Leave her, Johnny, leave her!
Oh, leave her, Johnny, leave her!
For the voyage is long and the winds don't blow
And it's time for us to leave her. Oh, the wind was foul and the sea ran high.
"Leave her, Johnny, leave her!"
She shipped it green and none went by.
And it's time for us to leave her. (Chorus) I hate to sail on this rotten tub.
"Leave her, Johnny, leave her!"
No grog allowed and rotten grub.
And it's time for us to leave her. (Chorus) We swear by rote for want of more.
"Leave her, Johnny, leave her!"
But now we're through so we'll go on shore.
And it's time for us to leave her. (Chorus)

I dreamed a dream the other night
Lowlands, lowlands away me John
My love she came, dressed all in white
Lowlands away I dreamed my love came in my sleep
Lowlands, lowlands away me John
Her cheeks were wet, her eyes did weep
Lowlands away She came to me at my bedside
Lowlands, lowlands away me John
All dressed in white, like some fair bride
Lowlands away And bravely in her bosom fair
Lowlands, lowlands away me John
Her red, red rose, my love did wear
Lowlands away She made no sound, no word she said
Lowlands, lowlands away me John
And then I knew my love was dead
Lowlands away Then I awoke to hear the cry
Lowlands, lowlands away me John
Oh watch on deck
Oh watch, ahoy
Lowlands away

Oh were you ever in Roundstone Town?
Bonnie Lassie, Hieland Lassie
Were you ever in Roundstone Town?
My bonnie hieland lassie-o
I was often in Roundstone Town
Drinking milk and eating flour
Although I am a young maid
Come lately from my mammy-o Were you ever in Bombay,
Bonnie Lassie, Hieland Lassie
Were you ever in Bombay,
My bonnie hieland lassie-o
I was often in old Bombay,
Drinking coffee and bohay
Although I am a young maid
Come lately from my mammy-o Oh were you ever in Quebec?
Bonnie Lassie, Hieland Lassie
Were you ever in Quebec?
My bonnie hieland lassie-o
I was often in old Quebec
Stowing timber up on deck
Although I am a young maid
Come lately from my mammy-o And are you fit to sweep the floor?
Bonnie Lassie, Hieland Lassie
Are you fit to sweep the floor?
My bonnie hieland lassie-o
I am fit to sweep the floor
As the lock is for the door
Although I am a young maid
Come lately from my mammy-o

As I walked down the Broadway
One evenin' in July
I met a maid who asked me trade
And a sailor John says I.
To Tiffany's I took her
I did not mind expense
I bought her two gold earrings
And they cost me 50 cents
(Chorus)
And away, you Santee
My dear Annie
O, you New York Girls
Can't you dance the Polka?
Says she, "You limejuice sailor
Now see me home you may"
But when we reached her cottage door
She this to me did say.
"My flash man he's a Yankee
With his hair cut short behind
He wears a pair of long sea-boots
And he sails in the Blackball Line
(Chorus) He's homeward bound this evenin'
And with me he will stay
So get a move on, sailor-boy
Get crackin' on your way"
So I kissed her hard and proper
Afore her flash man came
And fare ye well, me Bowery gal
I know your little game
(Chorus) I wrapped me glad rags around me
And to the docks did steer
I'll never court another maid
I'll stick to rum and beer
I joined a Yankee blood-boat
And sailed away next morn
Don't ever fool around with gals
You're safer off Cape Horn
(Chorus)

To me, Way-ay-ay Yah!
We'll pay Paddy Doyle for his boots!
To me, Way-ay-ay Yah!
We'll all drink brandy and gin!
To me, Way-ay-ay Yah!
We'll all shave under the chin!
To me, Way-ay-ay Yah!
We'll all throw muck at the cook!
To me, Way-ay-ay Yah!
The dirty ol' man's on the poop!
To me, Way-ay-ay Yah!
We'll bouse her up and be done!
To me, Way-ay-ay Yah!
We'll pay Paddy Doyle for his boots!

It's time to go now,
Haul away your anchor,
Haul away your anchor,
It's our sailing time. Get some sail upon her,
Haul away your halyards,
Haul away your halyards.
It's our sailing time. Get her on her course now,
Haul away your foresheets,
Haul away your foresheets,
It's our sailing time. Waves are surging under,
Haul away down Channel,
Haul away down Channel,
On the evening tide. When your sailing's over,
Haul away for Heaven,
Haul away for Heaven,
God be by your side. It is time to go now,
Haul away your anchor,
Haul away your anchor,
It's our sailing time.

Now we are ready to sail for the Horn,
Weigh hey, roll and go!
Our boots and our clothes, boys, are all in the pawn,
To be rollicking randy dandy-O! (Chorus)
Heave a pawl, O heave away!
Weigh hey, roll and go!
The anchor's on board and the cable's all stored,
To be rollicking randy dandy-O!
Soon we'll be warping her out through the locks,
Weigh hey, roll and go!
Where the pretty young girls all come down in their frocks,
To be rollicking randy dandy-O! (Chorus) Come breast the bars, bullies, heave her away,
Weigh hey, roll and go!
Soon we'll be rolling her down through the Bay,
To be rollicking randy dandy-O! (Chorus)

There was a ship, she sailed to Spain
O ho, roll and go!
There was a ship came home again.
Tommy's on the topsail yard! And what do you think was in her hold?
O ho, roll and go!
There was diamonds, there was gold.
Tommy's on the topsail yard! And what was in her lazarette?
O ho, roll and go!
Good split peas and bad bull meat.
Tommy's on the topsail yard! O, many a sailorman gets drowned,
O ho, roll and go!
Many a sailorman gets drowned.
Tommy's on the topsail yard!

Oh! Sally Brown, she's the gal for me boys

Roll, boys! Roll boys roll!
Oh! Sally Brown she's the gal for me, boys
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!

We're bound away, 'way down south, boys,
Roll, boys! Roll boys roll!
We're bound away, 'way down south, boys,
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!

It's down to Trinidad to see Sally Brown boys,
Roll, boys! Roll boys roll!
Down to Trinidad to see Sally Brown boys,
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!

She's lovely on the foreyard, an' she's lovely down below boys,
Roll, boys! Roll boys roll!
She's lovely 'cause she loves me, that's all I want to know boys,
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!

Ol' Captain Baker, how do you store yer cargo?
Roll Boys! Roll boys roll!
Some I stow for'ard, boys, an' some I stow a'ter
Way high, Miss Sally Brown

Forty fathoms or more below boys,
Roll, boys! Roll boys roll!
There's forty fathoms or more below boys,
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!

Oh, way high ya, an' up she rises,
Roll Boys! Roll boys roll!
Way high ya, and the blocks is different sizes,
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!

Oh, one more pull, don't ya hear the mate a-bawlin?
Roll, boys! Roll boys roll!
Oh, one more pull, that's the end of all the hawlin'
Way high, Miss Sally Brown!

Sally Brown she's the gal for me boys,
Roll, boys! Roll boys roll!
Sally Brown she's the gal for me, boys,

Way high, Miss Sally Brown!

As I rolled out one mornin'
Away, you roller bowler!
As I rolled out one mornin'
I met a lady fair (Chorus)
Timme, hey-rig-a-jig an' a ha-ha
Good mornin', ladies all
Away, you roller bowler!
Timme, hey-rig-a-jig an' a ha-ha
Good mornin', ladies all The first time that I saw her
Away, you roller bowler!
The first time that I saw her,
that saucy gal of mine: (Chorus) But when she found that I was skint
Away, you roller bowler!
But when she found that I was skint
She left me standing there (Chorus) I squared me yards an' sailed away
Away, you roller bowler!
I squared me yards an' sailed away
An' to the ship I went (Chorus) She winked & flipped a flipper
Away, you roller bowler!
She winked & flipped a flipper
She thought I was a mate (Chorus)

Running down to Cuba with a load of sugar,
Weigh, me boys, to Cuba!
Make her run you, lime juice squeezes,
Running down to Cuba. (Chorus)
Weigh, me boys, to Cuba!
Running down to Cuba. O, I got a sister, she's nine feet tall,
Weigh, me boys, to Cuba!
Sleeps in the kitchen with her feet in the hall,
Running down to Cuba. (Chorus) The captain he will trim the sails,
Weigh, me boys, to Cuba!
Winging the water over the rails,
Running down to Cuba. (Chorus) Give me a gal can dance Fandango,
Weigh, me boys, to Cuba!
Round as a melon and sweet as a mango,
Running down to Cuba. (Chorus) Load this sugar and home-ward go,
Weigh, me boys, to Cuba!
Mister mate, he told me so,
Running down to Cuba. (Chorus)

Yo ho, yo ho
The seas forever roll
Yo ho, yo ho
'Til I'm not but skull and bones
Yo ho, yo ho From outcast to kingpin
Was born up on the sea
Ne'er was meant to walk the land
A pirate's life for me
Avast ye whining, up the sails
Don't speak to mutiny
Or find yourself a'wantin' quarter
Bottom of the sea Among the shoals of Saint Anne
To the eastern shores
I'll take my chances on the wind
To loot and plunder scores
Our flag it stands for us alone
And no one else around
We owe our honour to the sea
And not to any crown (Chorus)
Yo ho, yo ho
The seas forever roll
Yo ho, yo ho
The winds forever blow
Long after I've met Davy Jones
'Til I'm naught but skull and bones
Yo ho So, me bullies, bottoms up
Raise the sails and drink with me
Here's to us!
"Live long and long live piracy"
Bring her round into the white
If treasures to be found
A pirate's life or nothing else
'Til the ship she's goin' down (Chorus) Yo ho, yo ho
The seas forever roll (skull and bones)
Yo ho, yo ho
The winds forever blow (skull and bones)
Long after I've met Davy Jones
'Til I'm naught but skull and bones (skull and bones)
(x2)

The mate was drunk and he went below to take a swig at his bottle o
(Chorus)
So early in the morning the sailor likes his bottle o
The bottle o, the bottle o, the sailor loves his bottle o A bottle of rum, a bottle of gin, a bottle of Irish whiskey o
(Chorus) The baccy o, tabaccy o, the sailor loves his baccy o
(Chorus) A packet of shag, a packet of cut, a plug of hard terbaccy o
(Chorus) The lassies o, the maidens o, the sailor loves the judies o
(Chorus) A lass from the 'pool, a girl from the Tyne, a chowlah so fine and dandy o
(Chorus) A bully rough house, a bully rough house, the sailor like his rough house o
(Chorus) Tread on me coat, and all hands in, a bully good rough and tumble o
(Chorus) A sing song o, a sing song o, the sailor likes a sing song o
(Chorus) A drinking song, a song of love, a ditty of seas and shipmates o
(Chorus)

Farewell and adieu to you, Spanish ladies,
Farewell and adieu to you, ladies of Spain,
For we've received orders for to sail for old England,
And we may never see you fair ladies again. (Chorus)
We will rant and we'll roar like true British sailors,
We'll rant and we'll roar all on the salt seas.
Until we strike soundings in the channel of old England,
From Ushant to Scilly is thirty-five leagues. We hove our ship to, with the wind at sou'west, boys
We hove our ship to, deep soundings to take.
'Twas forty-five fathoms with a white sandy bottom,
So we squared our main yard and up channel did steer. (Chorus) Now let every man drink off his full bumper,
And let every man drink off his full glass,
We'll drink and be jolly and drown melancholy,
And here's to the health of each true-hearted lass! (Chorus)

Oh, poor old Stormy's dead and gone
Storm along boys! Storm along John!
Oh, poor old Stormy's dead and gone
Ah-ha, come along get along
Stormy along John! I dug his grave with a silver spade
Storm along boys! Storm along John!
I dug his grave with a silver spade
Ah-ha, come along get along
Stormy along John! I lower'd him down with a golden chain
Storm along boys! Storm along John!
I lower'd him down with a golden chain
Ah-ha, come along get along
Stormy along John! I carried him away to Montego Bay
Storm along boys! Storm along John!
I carried him away to Montego Bay
Ah-ha, come along get along
Stormy along John!

Look ahead, look-astern
Look the weather in the lee!
Blow high! Blow low! And so sailed we.
I see a wreck to windward,
And a lofty ship to lee!
A-sailing down along
The coast of High Barbary "O, are you a pirate
Or a man o' war?" cried we.
Blow high! Blow low! And so sailed we.
"O no! I'm not a pirate
But a man-o-war," cried he.
A-sailing down along
The coast of High Barbary. We'll back up our topsails
And heave vessel to.
Blow high! Blow low! And so sailed we.
For we have got some letters
To be carried home by you.
A-sailing down along
The coast of High Barbary For broadside, for broadside
They fought all on the main;
Blow high! Blow low! And so sailed we.
Until at last the frigate
Shot the pirate's mast away.
A sailing down along
The coast of High Barbary With cutlass and gun,
O we fought for hours three;
Blow high! Blow low! And so sailed we.
The ship it was their coffin
And their grave it was the sea
A-sailing down along
The coast of High Barbary

A poor old man
Came riding by.
And we say so,
And we know so.
O, a poor old man
Came riding by,
O, poor old man. Says I, "Old man,
Your horse will die."
And we say so,
And we know so.
And if he dies
we'll tan his hide.
O, poor old man. And if he don't,
I'll ride him again.
And we say so,
And we know so.
And I'll ride him
'Til the Lord knows when,
O, poor old man. He's dead as a nail
In the lamp room door,
And we say so,
And we know so.
And he won't come
Worrying us no more
O, poor old man. We'll use the hair of his tail
To sew our sails
And we say so,
And we know so.
And the iron of his shoes
To make deck nails,
O, poor old man. Drop him down
With a long long rope
And we say so,
And we hope so.
Where the sharks have his body
And the devil takes his soul!
O, poor old man.

O say was you ever in Rio Grande?

A-weigh, you Rio!
It's there that the river brings down golden sand,
For we're bound for the Rio Grande

(Chorus)
And away, boys, away.
A-weigh, you Rio!
It's fare-you-well my bonny young girls
And we're bound for the Rio Grande

It's fare well to you all the girls of the town.
A-weigh, you Rio!
You got our half-pay for to keep you around,
And we're bound for the Rio Grande!

(Chorus)

She's a deep water ship and a deep water crew.
A-weigh, you Rio!
You can keep to the coast but we're damned if we do,
And we're bound for the Rio Grande!

(Chorus)

We was sick of the beach when our money was gone.
A-weigh, you Rio!
And sign in this packet to drive her along,
And we're bound for the Rio Grande!

(Chorus)

Please tell me, what is this sailboat's name?
The sailboat Malarkey. Tell me now what is this good boat's name?
It's the sailboat Malarkey. Well now, me boys, we are bound out to sea!
In the sailboat Malarkey. O when will Caroline come down to me?
In the sailboat Malarkey. She's lovely aloft and she's lovely below.
Is the sailboat Malarkey. But she's best on her back as you very well know!
That sailboat Malarkey. Away, away in St George's Town,
In the sailboat Malarkey. The rats come batting the houses down,
Of the sailboat Malarkey. I'd give the world boys and all that I know
In the sailboat Malarkey. To turn and to roll with my Lucy-oh!
In the sailboat Malarkey. You pick her up, boys, and lay her down,
In the sailboat Malarkey. And hang on tight as she bounces around!
In the sailboat Malarkey.

Did you ever see a wild goose
Sailing o'er the ocean? Ranzo, Ranzo, weigh heigh! They're just like them pretty girls,
When they gets the notion. Ranzo, Ranzo, weigh heigh! The other morning
I was walking by the river. Ranzo, Ranzo, weigh heigh! When I saw a young girl walking
With her topsails all a-quiver. Ranzo, Ranzo, weigh heigh! I said, "Pretty fair maid
And how are you this morning?" Ranzo, Ranzo, weigh heigh! She said none the better
for the seeing of you Ranzo, Ranzo, weigh heigh!

The worst old ship that ever did sail,
Sailed out of Harwich on a windy day. (Chorus)
And we're waiting for the day,
Waiting for the day,
Waiting for the day
That we get our pay. She was built in Roman time,
Held together with bits of twine
(Chorus) Nothing in the galley—nothing in the hold,
But the skipper's turned in with a bag of gold. (Chorus) Off Orford Ness she sprang a leak,
Hear her poor old timbers creak. (Chorus)
We pumped our way round Scalby Ness,
When the wind backed round to the west-nor'-west. (Chorus)
Into the Humber and up the town,
Pump you blighters—pump or drown. (Chorus) x2

Oh, where am I to go, M'Johnnies, oh where am I to go?
Timme way hey hey, high roll and go.
Oh, where am I to go, M'Johnnies, oh where am I to go,
For I'm a young sailor boy, and where am I to go? Way up on that t'gallant yard, that's where you're bound to go.
Timme way hey hey, high roll and go.
Oh, way up on that t'gallant yard, that's where you're bound to go.
For I'm a young sailor boy, and where am I to go? Way up on that t'gallant yard and take the gans'l in.
Timme way hey hey, high roll and go.
Oh, way up on that t'gallant yard and take the gans'l in.
For I'm a young sailor boy, and where am I to go? You're bound away to Kingston town, that's where you're bound to go.
Timme way hey hey, high roll and go.
You're bound away to Kingston town, that's where you're bound to go.
For I'm a young sailor boy, and where am I to go?

Whiskey is the life of man,
Whiskey, Johnny!
O, whiskey is the life of man,
Whiskey for my Johnny O! O, I drink whiskey when I can
Whiskey, Johnny!
Whiskey from an old tin can,
Whiskey for my Johnny O! Whiskey gave me a broken nose!
Whiskey, Johnny!
Whiskey made me pawn my clothes,
Whiskey for my Johnny O! Whiskey drove me around Cape Horn,
Whiskey, Johnny!
It was many a month when I was gone,
Whiskey for my Johnny O! I thought I heard the old man say:
Whiskey, Johnny!
I'll treat my crew in a decent way,
Whiskey for my Johnny O!

A glass of grog for every man!
Whiskey, Johnny!
And a bottle for the Chantey Man.
Whiskey for my Johnny O!

As we were a-fishing off Happisburgh light
Shooting and hauling and trawling all night (Chorus)
In the windy old weather, stormy old weather
When the wind blows we all pull together When up jumped a herring, the Queen of the sea
Says "Now, old skipper, you cannot catch me" (Chorus) We sighted a Thresher-a-slashin' his tail
"Time now Old Skipper to hoist up your sail" (Chorus) And up jumps a Slipsole as strong as a horse
Says now, "Old Skipper, you're miles off course" (Chorus) Then along comes a plaice, who's got spots on his side
Says "Not much longer, these seas you can ride" (Chorus) Then up rears a conger, as long as a mile
"Wind's coming east'ly" he says with a smile (Chorus) I think what that these fishes are sayin' is right
We'll haul up our gear now an' steer for the light (Chorus)

We'll heave him up an away we'll go
'Way, me Susiana!
We'll heave him up an away we'll go
We're all bound over the mounten! We'll heave him up from down below
'Way, me Susiana!
This is where the cocks do crow.
We're all bound over the mounten! And if we drown while we are young,
'Way, me Susiana!
It's better to drown than to wait to be hung
We're all bound over the mounten! Oh, growl ye may but go ye must,
'Way, me Susiana!
If ye growl too hard yer head they'll bust
We're all bound over the mounten! Up sox, you cocks, hand her two blocks,
'Way, me Susiana!
An' go below to yer ol' ditty box
We're all bound over the mounten! Oh, rock an shake 'er, one more drag
'Way, me Susiana!
Oh, bend yer duds an' pack yer bag
We're all bound over the mounten!

Late 18th century[edit | edit source]

Me bonnie bunch o'roses O!

Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
It's time for us to roll 'n' go!
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
Ooh! You pinks 'n' posies,
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!

We're bound away around Cape Horn
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
We wisht ter hell you'd niver bin born
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
Ooh! You pinks n' posies,
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!

Me boots an' clothes are all in a pawn,
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
An' it's bleedin' draughty around Cape Horn,
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
Ooh! You pinks 'n' posies,
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!

Ti's growl ye may but go ye must,
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
If ye growl too hard yer head they'll bust.
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
Ooh! You pinks 'n' posies,
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!

Them Spanish gals are pullin' strong,
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
Hang down, me boys, it won't take long.
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
Ooh! You pinks 'n' posies,
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!

Just one more pull an' that'll do
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
We're the bullies for ter kick'er through.
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
Ooh! You pinks 'n' posies,
Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!
Ooh! You pinks 'n' posies,

Come down, ye blood-red roses, come down!

Well, our anchor's on board and our rags are all set,
Bold Riley-oh, boom-a-lay!
Them Liverpool Judies, we'll never forget,
Bold Riley-oh, gone away! CHORUS:
Goodbye, me darling, goodbye, me dear-oh,
Bold Riley-oh, boom-a-lay!
Goodbye, me darling, goodbye, me dear-oh,
Bold Riley-oh, gone away! Well, the rain it is raining all the day long,
Bold Riley-oh, boom-a-lay!
And the northerly wind, it does so strong.
Bold Riley-oh, gone away! CHORUS
We're outward and bound for the Bengal Bay,
Bold Riley-oh, boom-a-lay!
Get bending, me lads, it's a hell of a way.
Bold Riley-oh, gone away! CHORUS

Safe and sound at home again, let the waters roar, Jack.
Safe and sound at home again, let the waters roar, Jack. Chorus:
Long we've tossed on the rolling main, now we're safe ashore, Jack.
Don't forget yer old shipmate, faldee raldee raldee raldee rye-eye-doe! Since we sailed from Plymouth Sound, four years gone, or nigh, Jack.
Was there ever chummies, now, such as you and I, Jack? Chorus We have worked the self-same gun, quarterdeck division.
Sponger I and loader you, through the whole commission. Chorus When the middle watch was on, and the time went slow, boy,
Who could choose a rousing stave, who like Jack or Joe, boy? Chorus There she swings, an empty hulk, not a soul below now.
Number seven starboard mess misses Jack and Joe now. Chorus But the best of friends must part, fair or foul the weather.
Hand yer flipper for a shake, now a drink together. Chorus

Was you ever in Quebec
Launchin' timber on the deck?
Where ya break yer bleedin' neck
Ridin' on a donkey! Way hey and away we go
Donkey riding, donkey riding
Way hey and away we go
Ridin' on a donkey. Was you ever in Vallipo
Where the gals put on a show?
Wriggle and dance with a roll and go
Riding on a donkey. Wuz ye ever down Mobile Bay
Screwin' cotton all the day?
A dollar a day is a white man's pay.
Ridin' on a donkey. Was you ever in London-town
Where the girls eat do come down
See the King in his golden crown
Riding on a donkey Was you ever 'round Cape Horn
Where the weather's never warm?
Wished to God you'd never been born
Ridin' on a donkey.

Oh, Haul away for the windy weather, boys
Haul away, boys, haul away
Oh, Haul away and pull together boys
Haul away, boys, haul away Haul away and let's get'er goin' boys
Haul away, boys, haul away
Haul away for the merchants' money boys
Haul away, boys, haul away Haul away like jolly young sailor boys
Haul away, boys, haul away
Haul away and roll her over boys
Haul away, boys, haul away God made the bees and the bees made the honey, boys
Haul away, boys, haul away
God made the food but the devil sent the cook, boys
Haul away, boys, haul away We're rolling down to Cuba for to load up sugar, boys
Haul away, boys, haul away
And rolling down to Cuba just to meet a Creole lady, boys
Haul away, boys, haul away And soon we'll be in red hot Cuba, boys
Haul away, boys, haul away
Oh haul away and the wind'll move'er, boys
Haul away, boys, haul away And soon we'll see a pretty woman, boys
Haul away, boys, haul away
Oh haul and shake her as she rolls, boys
Haul away, boys, haul away Haul away for finer weather, boys
Haul away, boys, haul away
Ooh, haul away for the better weather, boys
Haul away, boys, haul away
Haul away, boys, haul away

Ships may come and ships may go
As long as the sea does roll.
But a sailor lad just like his dad,
He loves the flowing bowl. Oh women on shore he does adore
A girl who's plump and round.
And your money's gone
It's the same old song,
"Get up Jack! John, sit down!" Come along, come along, You jolly brave boys,
There's lots of grog in the jar.
We'll plough the briny ocean line
With the jolly roving tar. When Jack ashore, he'll make his way
To some old boarding house.
He's welcomed in with rum and gin,
Likewise with pork scouse. He'll spend and spend and never offend
Till he's lies drunk on the ground
When the money's gone
It's the same old song,
"Get up Jack! John, sit down!" Then Jack then will slip aboard some ship bound for India or Japan,
Then in Asia there, the ladies fair,
they all love a sailor man,
He'll go ashore, and he'll not scorn to buy some girl a gown:
When his money's gone
It's the same old song,
"Get up Jack! John, sit down!" When Jack is old and weather-beat, too old to cruise about,
They'll let him stop in some rum shop till eight bells calls him out,
Then he'll raise his hands high, and loud he'll cry:
Thank Christ! I'm homeward bound:
But his money's gone
It's the same old song,
"Get up Jack! John, sit down!" <tabber>

From Liverpool to 'Frisco a-rovin' I went,
For to stay in that country was my good intent.
But drinkin' strong whiskey like other damn fools,
Oh, I soon got transported back to Liverpool, singin'. Chorus:
Roll, roll, roll bullies, roll!
Them Liverpool judies have got us in tow. A smart Yankee packet lies out in the Bay,
A-waitin' a fair wind to get under way.
With all of her sailors so sick and so sore,
They'd drunk all their whiskey and can't get no more. Chorus Oh, here comes the mate in a hell of a stew.
He's lookin' for work for us sailors to do.
Oh, it's "Fore tops'l halyards!" he loudly does roar,
And it's lay aloft Paddy, ye son-o'-a-whore! Chorus One night of Cape Horn I shall never forget,
'Tis oft-times I sighs when I think of it yet.
She was divin' bows under with her sailors all wet,
She was doin' twelve knots wid her mainskys'l set. Chorus And now we've arrived in the Bramleymoor Dock,
And all them flash judies on the pierhead do flock.
The barrel's run dry and our five quid advance,
And I guess it's high time for to git up and dance. Chorus Here's a health to the Captain wherever he may be,
A bucko on land and a bully at sea,
But as for the chief mate, the dirty ol' brute,
We hope when he dies straight to hell he'll skyhoot. Chorus

When first I landed in Liverpool I went upon the spree
Me hard earned cash, well I spent it fast
Got drunk as drunk could be
And when me money it was all gone 'twas then I wanted more
But a man must be blind to make up his mind and to go to sea once more Once more, boys, once more, go to sea once more
But a man must be blind to make up his mind and to go to sea once more I spent the night with Angeline too drunk to roll in bed
Me cloths was new and me money too, in the morning with them she fled
And as I rolled the streets about, the tarts they all did roar
And there goes Jack Strapp, the poor sailorlad, he must go to sea once more Once more, boys, once more, go to sea once more
And there goes Jack Strapp, the poor sailorlad, he must go to sea once more And as I walked the streets about, I met old Rapper Brown
I asked him then to take me in they looked at me with a frown
Says he last time you was paid off with me you chuck no score
But I'll take your advance and I'll give you a chance and I'll go to see once more Once more, boys, once more, go to sea once more
'caused I'll take your advance and I'll give you a chance and I'll go to see once more Come all you bold sailor lads, and listen to me song
When you come off them damn long trips, I'll tell you what goes wrong
Take my advice, drink no strong drink, don't go sleeping with whores
Get married instead, spend all night in bed and go to sea no more No more, boys, no more, go to sea no more
Get married instead, spend all night in bed and go to sea no more No more, boys, no more, go to sea no more
Get married instead, spend all night in bed and go to sea no more

Oh, have you heard the news, me Johnny
One more day
We're homeward bound tomorrow Johnny
One more day
Only one more day, me Johnny
One more day
Oh, rock and roll me over
One more day Don't you hear the old man growlin' Johnny
One more day
Don't you hear the mate a howlin' Johnny
One more day
Only one more day, me Johnny
One more day
Oh, rock and roll me over
One more day Don't you hear the caps'n pawlin' Johnny
One more day
Don't you hear the pilot bawlin' Johnny
One more day
Only one more day, me Johnny
One more day
Oh, rock and roll me over
One more day Only one more day a-howlin' Johnny
One more day
Can't you hear the gals a-callin'
One more day
Only one more day, me Johnny
One more day
Oh, rock and roll me over
One more day Only one more day a-rollin' Johnny
One more day
Only one more day a-cursin'
Sing it!
One more day
Only one more day, me Johnny
One more day
Oh, rock and roll me over
One more day No more gales or heavy weather Johnny
One more day
Only one more day, me Johnny
One more day
Oh, rock and roll me over
One more day

It was cold and dreary morning in December (December)

And all of me money it was spent (spent, spent)
And where it went to, I can't remember (remember)
So down to the shipping office I went (off I went)

CHORUS:
Paddy lay back, (Paddy lay back)
Take in your slack (take in your slack)
Take a turn around your capstan heave a pawl.
About ship's stations, boys, boys be handy (Handy!)
We're bound for Valparaiso 'round the horn

Well it seems there was a great demand for sailors (for sailors)
For the colonies, and for Frisco and for France (France, France)
Well, I shipped aboard the limey barque the Hotspur (the Hotspur)
And got legless drunk on my advance (my ad-vance)

CHORUS

Well, I joined her on a cold December morning (morning)
A-flapping of me flippers to keep me warm (keep me warm)
With the south cone hoisted as a warning (a warning)
To stand by the coming of a storm

CHORUS

Well, I woke up in the morning stiff and sore boys (sore boys)
And I knew that I was outward bound again (bound again)
And a voice come a-bawling at the door (door)
Lay aft men, and answer to your name (to your name)

CHORUS

It was on the quarter deck when first I seen 'em (seen 'em)
Such an ugly bunch I never seen before (seen before)
There was a bum and stiff from every quarter (quarter)
And it made my poor old heart feel sick and sore (sore, sore)

CHORUS

"Your money, young man, is no object to me"
Pay Me the Money Down
Oh money down and money down
Pay me the money down I went for a cruise around the town
Pay me the money down
I there met a gal called Sally Brown
Pay me the money down Oh I put me arm around her waist,
Pay me the money down
She says, "Young man, you're in great haste."
Pay me the money down My price of love is half a crown
Pay me the money down
An' money down, 'tis real money down.
Pay me the money down Oh, the Yankee dollar some gits for their pay,
Pay me the money down
Will buy us rum for many a day,
Pay me the money down Oh, if I had silver dollars galore,
Pay me the money down
I'd pack me bags and stay on shore
Pay me the money down I wisht I had ten thousand pound,
Pay me the money down
I'd sail this old world, around an' around.
Pay me the money down I wisht I wuz Ol' Stormy's son,
Pay me the money down
I'd build a ship o' a thousan' ton.
Pay me the money down We'd stay at the ports where we wuz in,
Pay me the money down
Oh drinking' beer an' whiskey an' gin.
Pay me the money down When the ship it ties up an' the voyage is through,
Pay me the money down
Oh I wants me pay, sir, every sou.
Pay me the money down

It's a damn tough life full of toil and strife
We whalermen undergo.
And we don't give a damn when the gale has stopped
How hard the winds did blow.
Where homeward bound tiss a grand old sound
With a good ship, taut and free
And we don't give a damn when we drink our rum
With the girls of Old Maui. Chorus:
Rolling down to Old Maui, me boys
Rolling down to Old Maui
We're homeward bound from the Arctic ground
Rolling home to Old Maui. Once more we sail with a northerly gale
Through the ice and wind and rain,
And coconut fronds, them tropical lands
We soon shall see again.
Six hellish months we've passed away
On the cold Kamchatka Sea,
And now we're bound from the Arctic ground
Rolling down to Old Maui. Chorus And now we sail with a favouring gale
Towards our island home.
Our mainmast sprung, our whaling done,
And we ain't got far to roam.
Our stu'n's'l bones is carried away
What care we for that sound?
A living gale is after us,
Thank God were homeward bound. Chorus

Round the cor-ner an' away we'll go!
Round the corner, Sally!
Round th' corner where them gals do go,
Round the corner, Sally! Oh, Sally Brown she's the gal for me,
Round the corner, Sally!
She's waitin' there by the mango tree,
Round the corner, Sally! She loves me good, she loves me long,
Round the corner, Sally!
She loves me hot, and she loves me strong
Round the corner, Sally! Was ye ever down in Kingston town?
Round the corner, Sally!
Where the gals all spend our money around?
Round the corner, Sally! I wisht I had that gal in tow,
Round the corner, Sally!
I'd take her in tow to Callyo.
Round the corner, Sally! To Callyo we're bound to go,
Round the corner, Sally!
Around that corner where there's ice an' snow
Round the corner, Sally! So round 'er up an' stretch 'er luff,
Round the corner, Sally!
I think by Gawd we've hauled enough!
Round the corner, Sally!

Bound away to leave you Shallow oh shallow brown
Bound away to leave you
Shallow oh shallow brown Shipped on board a whaler
Shallow oh shallow brown
Shipped on board a whaler
Shallow oh shallow brown Love you Juliana
Shallow oh shallow brown
Love you Juliana
Shallow oh shallow brown Packet lives tomorrow
Shallow oh shallow brown
I leave you with great sorrow
Shallow oh shallow brown Across the distant mountains
Shallow oh shallow brown
find them crystal fountains
Shallow oh shallow brown Shallow in the morning
Shallow oh shallow brown
Just as the day is dawning
Shallow oh shallow brown Bound away to leave you
Shallow oh shallow brown
Bound away to leave you
Shallow oh shallow brown

In Amsterdam there lived a maid,
Mark well what I do say!
In Amsterdam there lived a maid,
And she was mistress of her trade.
I'll go no more a-roving with you fair maid! (Chorus)
A roving, a roving,
Since roving's been my ru-i-in,
I'll go no more a roving,
With you fair maid! I asked this maid to take a walk,
Mark well what I do say!
I asked this maid out for a walk,
That we might have some private talk.
I'll go no more a roving with you fair maid! (Chorus) Then a great big Dutchman rammed my bow,
Mark well what I do say!
For a great big Dutchman rammed my bow,
And said "Young man, dees ees meine frau!"
I'll go no more a roving with you fair maid! (Chorus) Then take fair warning boys from me,
Mark well what I do say!
So take fair warning boys from me
With other men's wives, don't make too free
I'll go no more a roving with you fair maid! (Chorus)

Behind the scenes[edit | edit source]

Sea shanties are thought to have developed from naval work songs sung by the British and French navies. The first written reference to such songs emerged in the mid-16th century. However, the use of the term "sea shanties" in Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag and Assassin's Creed: Rogue is anachronistic. The term "sea shanty" as a naval work song did not develop until the early 19th century, where they were used aboard American merchant vessels. The likely etymologies of the word is the French chanter (to sing) or its English cognate chant.

Remixed and shortened versions of some of the sea shanties can be heard in Assassin's Creed: Pirates.

In Episode 47 of Assassin's Creed: Forgotten Temple, Edward Kenway sings part of a sea shanty which is actually an original song, "Skull and Bones", created for the 2024 video game of the same name, also developed by Ubisoft.

Gallery[edit | edit source]

Appearances[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]