The Yorkshire Bite- Moore (VT-QC) 1930 Flanders K

The Yorkshire Bite- Moore (VT-QC) 1930 Flanders K
 

[Text only partially remembered. Flanders has 15 versions in her Ancient Ballads, many reprinted elsewhere. Coffin's notes are excellent.

R. Matteson 2014]

The Yorkshire Bite (Laws L 1, similar to Child 283)

"The Crafty Farmer," Child 283, is rare indeed in America, though J. Harrington Cox, Folk Songs of the South (Cambridge, Mass., 1925), 166, prints a text close to Child A. In this country, unusual songs of the thief outwitted belong to "The Yorkshire Bite" group. However, there are a number of ballads on the resourcefulness of simple folk in the face of robbery that circurated in the chapbooks and on the broadsheets of the last 250 years, and one called "The Maid of Rygate" (Laws L 2) has also been collected in the New World. Why Child chose one and excluded the others from his select circle is not really clear. In "The Crafty Farmer" the farmer throws an old saddle bag over a hedge and when the thief goes after it rides off on the highwayman's horse. In "The Yorkshire Bite" a boy spreads money on the grass and when the thief dismounts to get it rides off on the highwayman's horse. And in "The Maid of Rygate" a girl, stripped naked by a thief, outwits him and rides off on his horse. All three are much alike in age and quality, as well as in plot. For that matter, "The Yorkshire Bite" and "The Maid of Rygate" go back at least to 1769 when they appeared in Logan's Pedlar's pack, 131 and 133 respectively. "The Crafty Farmer" has not been traced before 1796.

A bite is a shrewd trick played on a dull-witted person like those tricks for which the Yorkshiremen were famous. Vermonters, see Flanders J, evidently felt New Hampshiremen were capable of similar shrewdness.

The Flanders versions are much of a kind and quite like other American texts. For a bibliography to "The Crafty Farmer," "The Yorkshire Bite," and "The Maid of Rygate" in America, see Coffin, 151-2. "The Crafty Farmer" is listed in Dean-Smith, 102 (English) and in Greig and Keith, 236-7 (Scottish). "The Yorkshire Bite" is in Dean-Smith, 55 (English), while that song, and "The Maid of Rygate" are in Laws ABBB, 165-6, under L 1 and L 2 (British and American). See also Child, V, 128-31, for a discussion.

On March 2, 1948, the following story, copied from The Farmer's Almanac for 1860, was sent to Mrs. Flanders by George E. Smith of Takoma Park, Maryland. It bears a striking resemblance to all three ballads and was evidently reprinted from a daily newspaper, The Pennsylvanian, once published in Philadelphia.

The Farmer's Daughter and the Robber

A farmer living a few miles from Easton, sent his daughter on horse back to that town, to procure from the bank smaller notes in exchange for one hundred dollars. When she arrived there, the bank was shut, and she endeavored to effect her object by offering at several stores, but could not get her note changed. She had not gone far on her return, when a stranger rode to the side of her horse and accosted her with so much politeness, that she had not the slightest suspicion of any evil intent on his part. After riding a mile or two, employed in very social conversation, they came to a very retired part of the road, and the gentleman commanded her to give him the bank note. It was with some difficulty that she could be made to believe him in earnest, as his demeanor had been very friendly; but the presentation of a pistol placed the matter beyond a doubt, and she yielded to necessity. Just as she held the note to him, a sudden puff of wind blew it into the road, and carried it gently several yards from them. The discourteous knight alighted to overtake it, and the lady whipped her horse to ger out of his power, and the orher horse which had been left standing by her side, started off with her. His owner fired a pistol, which only tended to increase the speed of all parties-and the lady arrived safely at home with the horse of the robber, on which was a pair of saddle bags. When these were opened, they were found to contain, besides a quantity of counterfeit bank notes, fifteen hundred dollars in good money! The horse was a good one, and when saddled and bridled was thought to be worth as much at least as the bank note that was stolen.

All of the tunes for Child 283 are related, and can be sub-divided into three groups: (1) Britton, Brooks, Flarvey, Davis, Moore, and Williams; (2) Edwards, Merrill; and (3) Moses. Related tunes, and, indeed, tunes for this ballad in any relationship, were extremely hard to find. For the Britton group, see FCB4 p. I19, No. 46, for general relationship.

K.  Recorded in Plymouth, Verrnont, from the singing of Mrs. Herbert Moore, learned from her mother, Mrs. Eleanor (Goff) Benham, born in Brome, Quebec. Mrs. Benham's father also sang this song. He was Mr. Bamet Goff. The latter's father came from England, from what part Mrs. Moore does not know. Published in Vermont Folk-songs & Ballads, p. 234.

George Brown, Collector; October 10, 1930 Structure: A1 A2 B C D E (4,4,4,4,4,4); Rhythm D; Contour: arc; Scale: major, with modulations; t.c. C at beginning and end, F and B flat medially.

The Yorkshire Bite

The boy took the cow by the horn with his hand
To lead her to the fair, as you may understand.
And on his way he met three men,
And he sold his cow for six pound ten.
Lul-die-lul, lul-die-lul,
Lul-die-lul da liddle O,
Fall de lal, de liddle O,
Lie low day.

(Song of a boy went to market with cow, sold the cow. Land-lady sews proceeds in lining of his coat. On the way home,
robbers [who had watched] took him and he scatters the money. They collect it and, he, meanwhile, jumps on their horse.)

"When they were gathering up the money that was strown,
I jumped on the horse and away now I rode."

(Goes home. His father says,)

"I think for a boy you've done quite right,
And played on them a Yorkshire Bite."