She’d a black and rolling eye (sailor version)

AKAThe fireship
Black and rolling eye
Covent Garden ramble
Dark and roving eye
First Publishedunknown

Writer/composerunknownRoudRN4841

Music Hall Performersna
Folk performancesCollected from the singing of:
Fender, William; Wales ; Glamorganshire 1929-35
McBride, Owen; Canada : Ontario 1994
Hingston, Bill `Pop’; England : Devon 1979
Baxter, Ben; England : Norfolk 1955
Stickle, John; Scotland : Shetland Isles; 1948
H., F.; USA : Arkansas 1951

Modern performances
Cyril Tawney, Stan Hugill, Louis Killen, many more ..
From Bodleian Ballads 

As I walked out one morning. 
All in the month of May,
I met a pretty fair maid,
Most beautiful and gay.
Her shoes they were of Velvet,
Her stockings they were silk,
Her shift it was of Hollands fine
And her breast as white as milk.

She had a black and rolling eye,
To my fal de lal ral laddy, O, 
She is a nice little girl,
And one of the rakish crew.

I took her to a tavern,
And I called for cakes and wine,
But little did I drink,
She was of a rakish crew,
I took her to a tavern,
As you shall understand,
She said kind sir I am a maid,
Be easy as you can

She said kind sir excuse me,
For staying out so late,
My parents would be angry,
And sad would be my fate,
My father is a preacher,
A good and pious man,
My mother is a Methodist,
And I'm a true Briton.

Come all you able Seaman,
That plough the raging main,
That get a little money,
I called wind and rain.
I'd have you shunned those fiery ships,
All you will surely rue,
Or else you'll get your cobbles sprung
And set on fire too

This song, as far as I know, was not sung in the Halls – I’ve included my notes on the site because I needed to distinguish it from a music hall song also given the title She’d a black and rolling eye.

This older song is more commonly known in traditional singing as The Fireship, and it warns of the danger of catching venereal disease. The version given above is not very explicit about it, others are more so – see for example the versions given at MainlyNorfolk . Stan Hugill describes it as “an old English ballad …. [which] at sea was often sung at the pumps.”

Sources:

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