AKA | |
First Published | 1891 |
Writer/composer | Leslie Reed / Warwick Williams | Roud | RN4782 |
Music Hall Performers | JC Heffron |
Folk performances | Traditional singers seem to have taken up the version of the song rewritten by Jean Havez see Everybody works but father |
From monologues.co.uk/Davison Oh, we are a happy family and I mention it with pride There's father, mother, me and sister Fan It would be quite a model group that meets around the fireside But father he is such a lazy man He has not done a day's work since the morning he was wed And that is five and twenty years ago No thought of work, in fact, has ever got into his head He's the laziest man I ever yet did know SPOKEN: Lazy! Why, he's bone idle! Never does anything at all. I wouldn't care if we set him a bad example, but we don't. In fact— We all go to work but father And he stays at home all day He sits by the fire with a quart of beer And he smokes a ten-inch clay Mother works at the washtub So does my sister Fan I've met lazy men in my time, now and then, But a champion is our old man. He's in three sick societies, and that's the reason why He vows to work he never will turn out He groans about his liver, then he'll hug his big toe and cry 'Good gracious! Here's my old complaint, the gout!' It seems to work he wasn't worth above a pound a week Though his was always 'a very trying job' And so each club in turn, he patronises, so to speak By receiving just its merry thirty bob SPOKEN: Yes, he belongs to the "Anti-work-yourself-to-death Association." He's the secretary of it. Ah! and he abides by the rules to the very letter, and that's one reason why— When the brokers vowed one day they'd come, because we owed the rent Dear mother said, 'We'd better shoot the moon' We packed the goods upon a truck, at twelve at night we went But father was an obstinate old coon He wouldn't move an inch; he wouldn't let us take his chair So that we left him there you may reply He said our heartless conduct should be punished, I declare But we banged the door and shouted out, 'Good-bye' SPOKEN: There's cheek for you! "Our heartless conduct," "miss him when he's gone," and so on! But HE didn't stop long. When we'd got the new place cosy—all the pictures hung, carpets down and bedsteads fixed, a knocking came at the street door, and there were two boys, with father stuck on his chair, and two long poles shoved underneath, like Guy Fawkes. He'd just waited till he thought all the work was done, and then he gave the boys two pence to bring him home. I wouldn't care if he did something sometimes, but he doesn't. He was standing outside our door one day with his hands in his pockets, when a gentleman asked him the way to the post office. Just to show how lazy he is, he pointed with his foot and said, "Up there." The gentleman said, "If you can show me a lazier trick than that, I'll give you half-a-crown." Our old man replied, "Alright, come and put it in my waistcoat pocket." I expect when he's pegging out he'll want somebody else to draw his last breath for him. So now you can believe me when I say—
A big hit in the 1890s, later re-written in 1905 as Everybody works but father and in that form was taken up by traditional singers.
JC Heffron (1857-1934) was a successful comic in the 1880s and 90s who is not well-remembered today. His two most famous songs were this one and Where did you get that hat? Notices in The Era suggest he may have had some early success as part of double act – Heffron and Melaney – described as “good Irish Knockabout comedians” (The Era, 5 Sept 1880). The double act was short-lived and Heffron only appeared solo from 1881 on. He seems to have found most work outside London.
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%3A4782
- Kilgarrif Sing Us
- Image from British Library sheet music
- Mudcat thread
- Lyrics and Sheet Music: monologues.co.uk
- Lyrics and Sheet Music: Davison British Music Hall
Last Updated on July 25, 2021 by John Baxter | Published: July 22, 2021