Basket of onions, The
First Published | 1867 |
Writer/composer | George Leybourne / James Bayman | Roud | RNV56120 |
Music Hall Performers | George Leybourne |
Folk performances | Collected from the singing of: see below |
From Henry de Marsan's Singers Journal No 58 (c1870) The Basket of Onions. Music at Boosey & Co, 4 Bond Street, New-York. In me see an Actor — I play at the Play. But this life it goes hard with me now-a-day. Through one fairy creature. who sound onions sold- By my worn out features my story is told: In Covent Garden Market sometimes there she sat, Her hair unadorned by bonnet or hat— 0h ! with a basket of onions that hung on her arm Could I but wed Mary. I should get a charm! But she loves another ; so, it‘s no use to try To win her who cries out; “Sound onions, who'll buy! At the Theatre-Victoria. I play leading parts. In love-making scenes I could please all the hearts Of those in the Boxes, both Gall'ry. and Pit: But up in the Gall‘ry sweet Mary would sit. I played to her, nightly. both “Hamlet" and “Lear" — She'd cry from the Gall'ry, in the Pit she'd drop a tear. When I‘d done my part, I myself quickly took Round to the front door. and for Mary I‘d look; The way I told Mary in the dark nights so well, By the scent of the onions I Mary could tell. She said: "You are rich, I‘m too poor for thee, The wife of an Actor I never can be." I coaxed her and told her my wife she should be. In spite of her calling and hard poverty; I told her a mansion I had at command, She should live and digest all the fat in the land. She said: “Do not tempt me — for woman is weak— Go, go, you rich Hactor and your one pound a week." One night, I in "Hamlet" was playing the Ghost. I ne'er thought of "Hamlet" 'twas of her I thought most: I should have said: "Farewell, remember me!" But I shouted out: “Onions, sound onions, who’ll buy?" The people they hissed me, I turned blue and red. When Mary a bottle sent down at my head - And with her basket of onions she brought on her arm, They pelted poor me, but I took it calm. But she look it calmer — it seems like a dream She left me and married a Foot-horse marine.
George Leybourne wrote the words and sang this song from the late 1860s, with music composed by James Bayman, you can see the sheet music cover at the website related to Christopher Beeching’s excellent biography of Leybourne. The swell character portrayed by many early Music Hall performers seemed to have a habit of falling hopelessly for women that sold vegetables. Harry Clifton played one with a thing for watercress and peas (The watercress girl, Watercresses, and Shelling Green Peas), while Leybourne fell for the onion seller….
This song seems to have lived on in Australian traditional singing: The Fresno Ballad Index lists a song of this title in Volume 2 of Meredith, Covell and Brown’s Folk Songs Of Australia.
Sources:
- Entries in the Roud Indexes at the Vaughn Williams Memorial Library: https://archives.vwml.org/search/all:single[folksong-broadside-books]/0_50/all/score_desc/extended-roudNo_tr%3AV56120
- Kilgarrif Sing Us
- Lyrics: Henry de Marsan’s Singers Journal No 58 (c1870)
- Sheet Music Cover: The heaviest of swells
- Ballad Index