Annotation:Room for Cuckolds
X: 1 % T:Od's Zounds Make Room For Cuckolds. ASH.16 M:6/4 L:1/4 Q:3/4=90 S:Harrison & Wall MS,Ashover,Derbyshire,1762-75 R:.Jig O:England A:Derbyshire Z:vmp.Chris Partington., 2003. B:Village Music project, Harrison, Joshua & Wall, David %%Mirrorred-From:http://www.village-music-project.org.uk/abc/ashover.abc F:http://www.village-music-project.org.uk/abc/ashover.abc K:D d2DF>GA | fedecA | d2DFGA | fefd3:|! |:fedecA | fedecA | d2DFGA | fefd3:|
ROOM FOR CUCKOLDS. English, Air. "Room for Cuckolds" was a balled issued in 1660, designed to be sung to the air of "Cuckolds all a-row." It is cognate with "Hunting the Hare (1)," "Green Gown (The), and Thomas D'Urfey used it for "Room for Company" and "Room for Gentlemen; or, Here comes my Lord Mayor" (Pills to Purge Melancholy, vol. 6). Simpson notes that "Room for Cuckolds, here comes a Company" seems to have been a proverbial catchphrase when used as subtitle of "Hey for Horn-Fair" (c. 1685). It is the indicated tune for a song in the ballad opera The Footman (1732).