TITLES: Caroline and Her Young Sailor Bold, Groline and Her Young Sailor Bold, The Young Sailor Bold, The Nobleman ‘s Daughter, Caroline and Her Young Sailor Boy, A Rich Nobleman’s Daughter’, Young Caroline and The Sailor
[ Roud 553 ; Master title: Caroline and Her Young Sailor Bold ; Laws N17 ; G/D 1:176 ; Ballad Index LN17
; Bodleian Roud 553 ; Wiltshire 272 , 747 ; trad.]
A love story between a young girl who denies her noble and wealthy family and her wealthy life for the love of a young and handsome sailor. For fear he forgets her, she embarks on the ship disguised as a sailor. When their ship returns to the port of London, the girl goes to her parents to request consent to their marriage.
The theme was very popular among the nineteenth-century broadside and the ballad was popularized by the popular tradition of England, Ireland, Scotland and North America. The melody combined with the text is not unique, here are reported only two: fromJoe Heaney (Rosin The Beau) and from Sara Makem (recorded by Bill Leader at the home of Sara, Keady, County of Armagh in 1967).
The cross-dressing ballads decline the theme of the disguise often combined with the sailor’s (sometimes soldier) farewell with the woman who begs him to take her with him, willing to dress up as a man to stand beside him; the image of a woman-warrior and strong, supported by the power of love and therefore willing to go against her family and social conventions is more a story from a novel than an actual chronicle, the women in those times were subdued to the father first and to the husband later, and very few could win the economic independence (there were then the poor ones who did not care about anyone and who ended up badly in the middle of a street, making all kind of work to barely manage to feed the children). These were the times of marriages combined by families and were based on appropriate alliances and young women were not allowed to fall in love with a handsome black-eyed sailor!
Sarah Makem from Sea Song and Shanties 1994
Andrea Corr from Rogue’s Gallery: Pirate Ballads, Sea Songs, and Chanteys, ANTI- 2006.
Joe Heaney 1964 (here)
I There lived a rich Nobleman’s daughter/ Caroline is her name we are told/ One day from her drawing room window She admired a young sailor bold II She cried – “I’m a Nobleman’s daughter My income’s five thousand in gold I forsake both my father and mother And I’ll marry young sailor bold” III Says William- “Fair lady remember Your parents you are bound to mind In sailors there is no dependence For they leave their true lovers behind” IV And she says – “There’s no one could prevent me/ One moment to alter my mind/ In the ships I’ll be off with my true love/ He never will leave me behind” | V Three years and a half on the ocean And she always proved loyal and true Her duty she did like a sailor Dressed up in her jacket of blue VI When at last they arrived back in England Straightway to her father she went “Oh father dear father forgive me Deprive me forever of gold Just grant me one favor I ask you To marry a young sailor bold” VII Her father looked upon young William And love and in sweet unity “If I be spared till Tomorrow It’s married this couple shall be”. |
LINK
https://mainlynorfolk.info/folk/songs/carolineandheryoungsailorbold.html
http://www.thecopperfamily.com/songs/collected/caroline.html
http://www.joeheaney.org/default.asp?contentID=742
http://www.clarelibrary.ie/eolas/coclare/songs/cmc/caroline_young_sailor_bold_pegmcmahon.htm
http://www.wtv-zone.com/phyrst/audio/nfld/15/caroline.htm
https://www.fresnostate.edu/folklore/ballads/LN17.html
http://www.johnmorrish.com/folkhandbook/sailors.html