Poor but a gentleman still

AKAA gentleman still
Gypsy Girl
First Publishedc1876

Writer/composerJohn J StamfordRoudRN7337

Music Hall PerformersFred Coyne
Folk performancesCollected from the singing of:
Short, Mrs. Lillian USA : Missouri : 1940
Van de Bogart, Aaron; USA : New York : 1948
Young, Freeman; Canada : Nova Scotia : 1953
Vass, John Daniel; USA : Virginia : Hillsville 1958
Cooper, Lena; England : Kent : 1966
Wehman's Universal Songster Vol 28
available at TraditionalMusic.co.uk


Don't think by my dress that I've come here to beg,
Though the sharp pangs of hunger I feel;
The cup of misfortune I've drained to the dregs.
But I'm proud, though I'm shabby-genteel.
A time was when nobs who met me would say,
"Ha, Harry, dear boy, come and dine;"
But now when they meet they look t'other way-
My company now they decline.

Though poverty daily looks in at my door,
I am hungry, I am footsore And ill,
I can look the whole world in the face and say,
"If I'm poor, I'm a gentleman still."

Reverses in business brought me to a stand-
I found very Boon I should smash;
My friends advised me to fly from the land,
And seize upon all my loose cash;
But my reputation was dearer to me
Than all the bright gold in my till,
So I paid what I owed, and proudly I said,
"If I'm poor, I'm a gentleman still." 

One evening last week, the other end of the town,
Whilst wandering sadly along,
I picked up a purse a lady had dropped-
The temptation to keep it was strong-
My pockets were empty, but firmly I said,
"She shall have her own, come what will;"
She looked at my dress as I gave it and said,
"If you're poor, you're a gentleman still." 

Last evening I rescued a poor, homeless girl
Whom a swell was insulting; I found
My strength for the moment was something immense,
As I hurled the great brute to the ground.
He cried out, "You beggar, don't meddle with me,
Or very soon you'll  get a pill;"
But I said, "Lay a hand on that girl and you'll find
If I'm poor, I'm a gentleman still." 

A song written and composed by John J Stamford, which first featuring in the repertoire of Fred Coyne (1845-86), a British performer often billed as The Sterling Comic. The earliest record we have of the song being sung professionally is in 1876:

The Era – Sunday 30 January 1876

It was a popular song amongst amateur performers in Britain and there are numerous reports of it featuring in amateur concerts from 1877 on. According to the authors of Folk Songs of the Catskills it was popularised in the USA by William J Scanlon, who first performed it at the New York’s Olympic Theatre in 1879. No sheet music seems to have survived, but several sources suggest it was published in the US copyright EH Harding in 1876. At around that time it appeared in America in Scanlan & Cronin’s Poor but a gentleman still songster (publication date unknown) and widely in other 19th century street literature on both sides of the Atlantic.

It was recorded in the late 1920s by Oscar L Coffey, an early old time/country music recording artist.

Not to be confused with Harry Clifton’s Shabby Genteel a song with a similar theme.

Sources:

  • VWML entry
  • Kilgarrif Sing Us
  • Lyrics: Wehman’s Universal Songster Vol28, available at TraditionalMusic.co.uk
  • Sheet Music: not found
  • Gale Primary Sources
  •  Norman Cazden, Herbert Haufrecht, Norman Studer, Folk Songs of the Catskills (1982) p387
  • Russell, Tony, Pinson, Bob (2004) Country Music Records : a discography, 1921-1942, p216
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