Annotation:All 'Round My Hat (1): Difference between revisions

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''All round my hat I will wear the green willow:''<br>
''All round my hat I will wear the green willow:''<br>
''All round my hat for a twelvemonth and a day;''<br>
''All round my hat for a twelvemonth and a day;''<br>
''And if anyone should ask me the reason that I wear it,''<br.
''And if anyone should ask me the reason that I wear it,''<br>
''I'll tell him that my true-love is gone far away.''.....[P.W. Joyce].<br>
''I'll tell him that my true-love is gone far away.''.....[P.W. Joyce].<br>
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Revision as of 02:51, 20 June 2024




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ALL 'ROUND MY HAT [1]. AKA and see "Come Along with Me (1)," "Green Willow." English, Irish; Air (). The song, probably English in origin, was "a Cockney parody that proved very popular from the 1820's onward and spawned many versions; the one popular in Ireland, where the hat is adorned with a tri-coloured ribbon, is a later adaptation by Peadar Kearney, referring to the Easter Rising of 1916", notes Paul de Grae[1].

With the title "Green Willow," the tune is used for an English country dance, fashioned in 1932.

All round my hat I will wear the green willow:
All round my hat for a twelvemonth and a day;
And if anyone should ask me the reason that I wear it,
I'll tell him that my true-love is gone far away......[P.W. Joyce].


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  1. Paul de Grae, “Notes on Sources of Tunes in the O’Neill Collections”, 2017 [1].