/ · John S. Farmer’s Canting Songs and Slang Rhymes
A Beggar I’ll Be
A Beggar I’ll Be
1660—1663
A black-letter broadside ballad.
I
A Beggar, a Beggar, a Beggar I’ll be,
There’s none leads a life more jocund than he;
A Beggar I was, and a Beggar I am,
A Beggar I’ll be, from a Beggar I came;
If, as it begins, our trading do fall,
We, in the Conclusion, shall Beggars be all.
Tradesmen are unfortunate in their Affairs,
And few Men are thriving but Courtiers and Play’rs.
II
A Craver my Father, a Maunder my Mother,
1 Notes
A Filer my Sister, a Filcher my Brother,
A Canter my Uncle, that car’d not for Pelf,
A Lifter my Aunt, and a Beggar myself;
In white wheaten Straw, when their Bellies were full,
Then was I got between a Tinker and a Trull.
And therefore a Beggar, a Beggar I’ll be,
For there’s none lives a Life more jocund than he
III
For such pretty Pledges, as Lullies from Hedges.
2 wet linen
We are not in fear to be drawn upon Sledges,
But sometimes the Whip doth make us to skip
And then we from Tything to Tything do trip;
But when in a poor Boozing-Can we do bib it,
3 ale-house
We stand more in dread of the Stocks than the Gibbet
And therefore a merry mad Beggar I’ll be
For when it is night in the Barn tumbles he.
IV
We throw down no Altar, nor never do falter,
So much as to change a Gold-chain for a Halter;
Though some Men do flout us, and others do doubt us,
We commonly bear forty Pieces about us;
But many good Fellows are fine and look fiercer,
And owe for their Cloaths to the Taylor and Mercer:
And if from the Harmans I keep out my Feet,
4 stocks
I fear not the Compter, King’s Bench, nor the Fleet.
5 Notes
V
Sometimes I do frame myself to be lame,
And when a Coach comes, I hop to my game;
We seldom miscarry, or never do marry,
By the Gown, Common-Prayer, or Cloak-Directory;
But Simon and Susan, like Birds of a Feather
They kiss, and they laugh, and so jumble together;
6 Notes
Like Pigs in the Pea-straw, intangled they lie,
Till there they beget such a bold rogue as I.
VI
When Boys do come to us, and their Intent is
To follow our Calling, we ne’er bind ’em ’Prentice;
Soon as they come to ’t, we teach them to do ’t,
And give them a Staff and a Wallet to boot;
We teach them their Lingua, to crave and to cant,
7 beggar’s patter
The Devil is in them if then they can want.
And he or she, that a Beggar will be,
Without any Indentures they shall be made free.
VII
We beg for our Bread, yet sometimes it happens
We fast it with Pig, Pullet, Coney, and Capons
The Church’s Affairs, we are no Men-slayers,
We have no Religion, yet live by our Prayers;
But if when we beg, Men will not draw their Purses,
We charge, and give Fire, with a Volley of Curses;
The Devil confound your good Worship, we cry,
And such a bold brazen-fac’d Beggar am I.
VIII
We do things in Season, and have so much Reason,
We raise no Rebellion, nor never talk Treason;
We Bill all our Mates at very low rates,
While some keep their Quarters as high as the fates;
With Shinkin-ap-Morgan, with Blue-cap, or Teague,
8 Notes
We into no Covenant enter, nor League.
And therefore a bonny bold Beggar I’ll be,
For none lives a life more merry than he.
Notes
This ballad is from the Bagford Collection which, formed by John
Bagford (1651-1716), passed successively through the hands of James
West (president of the Royal Society), Major Pearson, the Duke of
Roxburghe and Mr. B. H. Bright, until in 1845 it and the more
extensive Roxburghe Collection became the property of the nation.
Stanza II, line 1. Maunder = beggar. Line 2. filer =
pickpocket; filcher = thief. Line 3. canter = a tramping
beggar or rogue. Line 4. lifter = a shop-thief.
Stanza IV, line 8. Compter (or Counter), King’s
Bench, nor the Fleet, all prisons for debtors.
Stanza V, line 6, jumble = to copulate.
Stanza VIII, line 5. With Shinkin-ap-Morgan, with Blue-cap, or
Teague = With a Welshman, Scotchman, or Irishman—generic: as now
are Taffy, Sandy, and Pat.
Taken from
Musa Pedestris,
Three Centuries of Canting Songs and Slang Rhymes
[1536―1896], collected and annotated by John S. Farmer.
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