English folk-rhymes are very numerous and curious. Characteristics of persons and places have given rise to not a few which are frequently far from complimentary. Weather-lore is often expressed in rhyme; the rustic muse has besides rendered historic events popular, and enabled persons to remember them who are not readers of books. The lines often lack polish, but are seldom without point. Amongst the more ancient rhymes are those respecting grants of land. The following is a good example, and is from Derbyshire:— “Me and mine The old story of the grant is thus related. Years ago, a member of the ancient family of Lowe had the honour of hunting with the king and his nobles. Lowe rode a splendid horse, the only one in at the death. The king It is asserted that Athelstan granted the first charter to the ancient borough of Hedon, Yorkshire, in these words:— “As free make I thee It is said a similar charter was granted by the same king to the neighbouring town of Beverley. An old, old Norfolk rhyme says:— “Rising was a seaport town, It is said at Norwich:— “Caistor was a city ere Norwich was none, “About half-way between Curbar and Brompton, to the right of the turnpike leading from Barlow to Sheffield,” writes William Wood, “there is, far on the moor, a very level flat piece of ground, near a mile square, most remarkable for its boggy nature, so much so that it is dangerous to cross, or at times to approach. Here, before the Roman invasion, says the legend, stood a town or village, the inhabitants of which lived, according to Diodorus Siculus, in small cots or huts built of wood, the walls of stakes or wattles, like hurdles, and covered with rushes or reeds. These dwellings, with their inhabitants, were swallowed up by one of those convulsions of nature so destructive at times to the habitations of mankind.” Respecting Leechfield and Chesterfield are the following lines current in Derbyshire:— “When Leechfield was a market town, “Nertoun was a market-town A Scottish rhyme says:— “York was, London is, Says a popular English rhyme:— “Lincoln was, London is, In the days of old it was the practice to allow the wives of the Lord Mayors of York to retain by courtesy the title Lady for life, and this custom gave rise to the following couplet:— “The Lord Mayor’s a lord but a year and a day; Few English towns have made greater progress than the thriving port of Hull. Its prosperity was predicted long ago:— “When Myton is pulled down, As a matter of history, it may be stated that when the town was threatened by Charles I., a number of houses in Myton Lane, as well as the Charter-house, were laid in ruins by Sir John Hotham, Selling church-bells has given rise to satirical rhymes. Here are three Lincolnshire rhymes on this topic:— “The poor Hatton people The next says:— “Owersby’s parish, It is stated in the third:— “Poor Scartho people, About 1710, the spire of Arlesey Church, Bedfordshire, fell down, and it is believed the bells were broken. The metal was sold to a distant parish to raise money to rebuild the spire, and until the year 1877 only one small bell was suspended in the steeple to call the inhabitants to the house of prayer. The transaction gave rise to the saying:— “Arlesey, Arlesey, wicked people, About half a century later, a similar accident On the walls of Newington Church, London, in 1793, was written a rhyme anent the rebuilding of the church without a steeple and selling the bells:— “Pious parson, pious people Rhymes on steeples are very common; perhaps the best known is the one on Preston, Lancashire:— “Proud Preston, poor people, In a somewhat similar strain is the one on Bowness-on-Windermere:— “New church and old steeple, Lincolnshire rhymes are very numerous, and a complete collection would almost fill a book. Here are three:— “Gainsbro’ proud people “Luddington poor people A question is put and answered thus:— “Boston! Boston! The village of Ugley, Essex, supplies a satirical couplet:— “Ugley church, Ugley steeple, An old triplet describes the characteristics of three church spires thus:— “Bloxham for length, Almost every district furnishes examples of bell rhymes. We give one example, and it is from Derbyshire:— “Crich two roller-boulders, It is very generally believed in Derbyshire that “If I have not an ace, a deuce, and tray, There is a similar couplet respecting Carnfield Hall, near to Alfreton. It is related by Mr. E. Kirk, a Lancashire folk-lorist, that the owner of a large farm in Goosnargh, called Landscales, staked his land at a game of “put.” He received his three cards, which were a tray, a deuce, and an ace, and he put—that is, struck the table with his fist, in proof of his resolution to abide by the issue of his cards. His opponent had two trays and a deuce. The farm was consequently lost, and its owner exclaimed:— “Ace, deuce, and tray, A Derbyshire rhyme refers to the inhabitants of four places as follows:— “Ripley ruffians, Equally severe is the following on the people of the villages between Norwich and Yarmouth:—
Of Derbyshire folk it is said:— “Derbyshire born and Derbyshire bred, The next are two Kentish rhymes:— “Sutton for mutton This is complimentary:— “English lord, German count, and French marquies, It is said of Herefordshire:— “They who buy a house in Herefordshire Says a Gloucestershire rhyme:— “Blest is the eye In the same shire is the next couplet:— “Beggarly Birley, strutting Stroud, Many more rhymes similar to the foregoing might be given, if space permitted; but we have only room for a few more examples, and they relate to the weather. An old distich says:—
Another rhyme states:— “When the mist comes from the hill, In Worcestershire there is a saying:— “When Bredon Hill puts on his hat, Says a Yorkshire rhyme:— “When Oliver’s Mount puts on his hat, In the same broad shire is a similar couplet:— “When Ingleboro’ wears a hat, |