Annotation:Mousetrap (1) (The)
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MOUSETRAP [1], THE. AKA - "Mouse Trap (The)." AKA and see "Old Hob." English, Air (6/8 time). C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. The air appears in the third and fouth editions of The Second Volume of the Dancing Master (London, 1718), published by John Young, heir to the Playford publishing concerns. It is the alternate title for "Old Hob." The same tune and titles were also published by Walsh and Har in The Second Book of the Compleat Country Dancing-Master (1719) and in later editions of that volume in 1735, and by son John Walsh in the 1749 edition.
The song "Mouse Trap" (to the same air as the country dance) can be found in the first part of Tom D'Urfey's Wit and Mirth: or Pills to Purge Melancholy (1719), Watts' Musical Miscellany (1731), Gay's The Beggar's Opera (1728) and other ballad operas, and was issued on numerous song sheets. William Chappell (1859) records that the words are by Thomas D'Urfey set to a tune that appeared first in a 1696 play written by Doggett called The Country Wake.
Of all the simple things we do,
To rub over a whimsical life;
There's no one folly is so true,
As that very bad bargain, a wife.
We're just like a mouse in a trap,
Or rat that is caught in a gin;
We start and fret, and try to escape,
And rue the sad hour we came in.
Source for notated version:
Printed sources: Chappell (Popular Music of the Olden Time), vol. 2, 1859; p. 111.
Recorded sources: