Annotation:She lived beside the Anner: Difference between revisions
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|f_tune_annotation_title= https://tunearch.org/wiki/Annotation:She_lived_beside_the_Anner > | |||
|f_annotation='''SHE LIVED BESIDE THE ANNER.''' AKA – “Irish Peasant Girl (The).” Irish, Slow Air. The title and melody of a still-popular song by Charles J. Kickham (1828-1882), a Fenian novelist from County Tipperary. The song is about emigration, with political undertones. The first two stanzas go: | |||
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'''SHE LIVED BESIDE THE ANNER.''' AKA – “Irish Peasant Girl (The).” Irish, Slow Air. The title and melody of a still-popular song by Charles J. Kickham (1828-1882), a Fenian novelist from County Tipperary. The song is about emigration, with political undertones. The first two stanzas go: | |||
<blockquote> | <blockquote> | ||
''She lived beside the Anner at the foot of Slievenamon''<br> | ''She lived beside the Anner at the foot of Slievenamon''<br> | ||
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''The widow’s brown haired daughter was the loveliest of the throng''<br> | ''The widow’s brown haired daughter was the loveliest of the throng''<br> | ||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
|f_source_for_notated_version= | |||
|f_printed_sources=Herbert Hughes ('''Irish Country Songs, vol.4'''). | |||
|f_recorded_sources=Arran Records, Seán O’Sé – “Irish Heritage” (2009). Tara CD4011, Frankie Gavin – “Fierce Traditional” (2001. A great favorite of his father’s). | |||
|f_see_also_listing=Alan Ng's Irishtune.info [https://www.irishtune.info/tune/4483/]<br> | |||
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Revision as of 18:52, 5 March 2023
X:0 T: No Score C: The Traditional Tune Archive M: K: x
SHE LIVED BESIDE THE ANNER. AKA – “Irish Peasant Girl (The).” Irish, Slow Air. The title and melody of a still-popular song by Charles J. Kickham (1828-1882), a Fenian novelist from County Tipperary. The song is about emigration, with political undertones. The first two stanzas go:
She lived beside the Anner at the foot of Slievenamon
A gentle Irish peasant girl with wild eye’s like the dawn
Her lips were dewy rosebuds, her teeth were pearls rare
And a snow-drift ‘neath a beechen bough, her neck and nut brown hair
How pleasant ’twas to see her on a Sunday when the bell
Was filling with its mellow tones, lone wood and grassy dell
And when at eve, young maidens strayed, the river bank along
The widow’s brown haired daughter was the loveliest of the throng