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Back
to song
Whisky
on a Sunday,
AKA Come Day, Go Day,
AKA Seth Davy was
written in the 1960s
by Glyn Hughes. Hughes
was born in Liverpool
in 1932 and died there
in 1972. During his
brief life he had
many occupations:
journalist, short-story
writer, bookseller's
assistant, musician
in a circus, film
extra, hotel liftman
and song writer, to
mention only a few.
The song is about
a well-known Jamaican
street entertainer
in Liverpool in the
1890s/1900s and has
been recorded by among
others The Dubliners,
The Irish Rovers and
Rolf Harris.
Gerry Jones, Liverpool
singer, says:
"Seth
Davy was a real person,
he really existed,
and he died a couple
of years into the
20th century. There
was a street and a
pub, both called Bevington
Bush just north of
Liverpool City Centre,
and Seth Davy did
do a busking act outside.
"In his
book Liverpool: Our
City - Our Heritage,
Freddie O'Connor tells
us that in 1760, half
a mile from Marybone
(St Patrick's Cross)
along Bevington Bush
Road was a hamlet
named Bevington Bush
which had an inn called
simply the Bush, which
became a favourite
haunt for folk to
travel out into the
country, to the Bevy
Inn, as it became
fondly known. With
the opening of Scotland
Road, the ancient
Bevington Bush Road
became a minor road
amidst the massive
slum district that
would soon engulf
it. As the district
was built up it also
lost its original
name.
"Please
do not be taken in
by any Irish versions
of this song, or any
reference to "Bebbington".
Bebington is "over
the water" -
not in Liverpool at
all. I know the truth
for a fact because,
when I was a brand-new
teacher in the Dingle
in 1963, our old lollypop
man told me that he
had actually seen
Seth Davy doing his
stuff. So I have spoken
to a first-hand witness.
"I have
heard that Seth Davy's
own singing was a
non-too-wonderful
monotone, and not
the pleasant melody
that was written about
him in the 60s folk
boom."
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The version in the
FSC book is the Dubliners'
although with one
or two differences:
Oh, he sits at the
corner of Beggar's
Bush
Astride of an old
packing case
And the dolls at the
end of the plank were
dancing
And he crooned with
a smile on his face
Come day, go day
Wish in me heart it
was Sunday
Drinkin' buttermilk
all the week
And it's whisky on
a Sunday
His tired old hands
tug a wooden beam
And the puppets they
danced up and down
A far better show
than you ever will
see
In the fanciest theatre
in town
Come day, go
day...
In 1902 old Seth
Davy died
His song it was heard
no more
The three dancing
dolls in the dustbin
were thrown
When the plank went
to mend a backdoor
Come day, go
day...
But some stormy night,
if you're passing
that way
When the wind's blowing
up from the sea
You may still hear
the song of old Seth
Davy
As he croons to his
dancing dolls three
Come day, go day
Wish in me heart it
was Sunday
Drinkin' buttermilk
all the week
And it's whisky on
a Sunday
There are about 75
versions of the lyrics
on the web, but only
two use the phrase
"wishing me heart"
in the chorus as opposed
to "wish in me
heart" and one
of those is from a
Dutch language website,
so it seems likely
that it's a mistake.
However, that's how
oral traditions continue...
SB Feb 06 |