Packington's Pound
DESCRIPTION: Dance tune, with no real lyrics of its own, but used as a platform for a great variety of broadsides.
AUTHOR: unknown
EARLIEST DATE: 1596 (Barley's "New Book of Tablature")
KEYWORDS: nonballad dancetune
FOUND IN: Britain(England)
REFERENCES (2 citations):
Chappell-PopularMusicOfTheOldenTime, pp. 123-125, "Packington's, or Paggington's Pound" (1 text, 1 tune)
Chappell/Wooldridge-OldEnglishPopularMusic I, pp. 259-260, "Packington's Pound" (1 tune)
SAME TUNE:
The Praise of a Dairy (File: BeCo444)
Well worth[y] Predecessors, and Fathers by name/Pitties Lamentation (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN2781)
Come listen a while and a Story you'll hear/The Murtherer Justly Condemned.. May, 1697 (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN629)
When England half Ruin'd had cause to be sad/Romes Beargarden (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN2836)
Poor England thy sorrows this many a year/England's Mercies (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN2214)
Come, John, sit thee down, I have somewhat to say/An Amorous Dialogue between John and his Mistress (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN616)
Come young men and listen to what I'le you show/A good wife is a portion every day (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN710)
All Company-keepers come hear what I say/Two-penny-worth of Wit for a Penny (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN61)
Come listen a while though the weather be cold/Blanket Fair (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN636)
I am a young blade that had money good store/The World turn'd up-side down (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN1231)
All you that have stock, and are mad for a peace/The French Preliminaries (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN136)
Let England rejoyce with heart and with voice/A New Protestant Ballad.. Reign of King William (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN1641)
Hold up thy head England, and now shew thy face/Englands Joy in a Lawful Triumph [on proclaiming Charles II King] (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN1158)
You Sabbath-day Tiplers, pray do not repine/A Caveat for Tiplers (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN3103)
There was an old Knight liv'd in Sommersetshire/The Bountiful Knight of Sommersetshire (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN2555)
A chimney-man lately in London did dwell/Chimney-man's Lamentation (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN486)
This nation long time hath been plagued with old rats/Come Buy a Mouse Trap/ [by Humphrey Crouch] (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN2582)
A new calculation of late has been given/A New Copy of Verses, of Monsieurs Boating (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN1875)
By Brittains true Monarchs, Great William and Mary/The Proclamation For a General Fast in the Nation (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN457)
Ye Sages of London, of states high and low/City Justice (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN2986)
Your scandalous lies I with patience have read/An Answer to the Packet of Advice (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN3223)
Good people come hither come listen awhile/The Brickmaker's Lamentation from Newgate (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN1049)
You free-men, and masters, and 'prentices mourn/London's Lamentation (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN3245)
Ye Whigs and Dissenters I charge ye, attend/The Whigs Hard Heart for the Cause of the Hard Frost (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN2987)
This Winter was sharp, it did plainly appear/London's Wonder [frost ending Feb. 4 1685] (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN2585)
Bold Titus he walkt about Westminster-Hall/Perjury Punished (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN411)
Come listen ye Whigs, to my pitiful moan/The Salamanca Doctor's Farewell (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN658)
Let England Rejoyce and all sorrows expell/The Princely Triumph..Birth of the Young Prince of Wales (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN1639)
The world is orerun with enormous abuse/Fayre Warning (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN2966)
Though the town does abound so with plots and with shams/The Protestant Cuckold [Ben. Harris and wife Ruth] (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN2599)
Now let us all true Protestants ever Rejoyce/...Prince of Orange's March (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN1932)
London now smiles to see Oxford in tears/Oxford in Mourning for the Loss of the Parliament (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN1703)
The manifold changes that have hap'ned of late/The High Court of Justice [trial of Regicides] (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN1748)
You Millers, and Taylors, & Weavers each one/The Crafty Maid of the West..Miller.. trapan'd (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN3071)
As through the City I passed of late/The Sorrowful Complaint of Conscience and Plain-Dealing (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN314)
The weather is clear, which was late over cast/Holland turn'd to Tinder..Third Great Royal Victory [Naval battle, July 25-6, 1666] (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN2760)
Let England, and Jreland, and Scotland rejoyce/The Royal Victory [over Dutch fleet, June 2, 3, 1665] (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN1636) (With the title "The Royal Victory" in C. H. Firth, _Publications of the Navy Records Society_ , p. 58)
Lift up thy head England & lay by thy mourning/The Triumph of four Nations;.. [peace of Breda] (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN1690)
Of all the rich pleasures that ever was seen/Joyfull News to the Nation..[Crowning of] Charles the II. on the 23. of April (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN2094)
Adiew vain delights, and bewitch us no more/Robbery Rewarded.. Five Notorious High-way-men's Exploits (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN15)
Come hither good fellows and hear what I say/A Groatsworth of Good Counsel for a Penny, Or The Bad Husbands Repentance (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN595)
Of late I did walk in a pleasant fair day/The Constant Couple, Or, The Glory of True Love (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN2110)
The Jenny a small Picaroon in the Park/The City Caper; Or, The Whetstone-Park Privateer (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN1541)
Forbear your vile plotting/The Plotter Executed (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN906)
All young men and maidens, come listen a while/The merry Pastime of the Spring (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN161)
Good people attend now, and I will declare/Mans Amazement..Thomas Cox.. (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN1045)
When all hearts did yield unto Cupid as King/Pyramus and Thisbie (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN2815)
You Bartholomew tapsters I first do advise/A Description of Bartholomew-Fair (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN2991)
Come all you brave Sea-men of Courage so free/News from the coast of Spain (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN524)
Let all loyal subjects look well to their wits/Treason Rewarded at Tiburn.. executed [24th of January, 1679] (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN1619)
Fairest and dearest to thee I am bound/The Dying Lovers Reprieve (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN848)
For certain and sure, this Girl will go mad/The Young-Man's Answer to the Politick-Maids Device (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN903)
Farewel, worldly pleasures and fading delight/Sir Thomas Armstrong's Farewell [executed June 20, 1684] (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN888)
Come, all loyal lovers, so courteous and free/Love and Constancy (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN503)
You bonny boon blades that are company keepers/The bad husband's Information of ill Husbandry (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN2998)
Good fellows come hither, 'tis to you I speak/The Alewives Invitation to Married-Men, and Batchelors (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN1005)
My dearest come hither and listen tome [sic]/The merry Discourse between two Lovers (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN1799)
Come all loyal Subjects of every degree/Good News for the Nation..[new parliament] (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN506)
Company of Gossips that love strong bub/The Merry Gossips Vindication (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN712)
Alas my dear husband, what is your intent/A Looking glass for all Good-fellows; or, The Provident Wives Directions (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN45)
Come all loyal subjects I pray you draw near/ Great Britains Joy (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN505)
A curse on blind Cupid his name I do hate/A Westminster Wedding, Or, A Whore-master Buried Alive (Olson-BroadsideBalladIndex ZN738)
Captain Harman, or, News from the Coast of Spain ("Come, all you brave seamen of courage so free") (C. H. Firth, _Publications of the Navy Records Society_ , p. 83)
An Appeal to Loyalists ("The old English cause knocks at ev'ry man's door") (Rabson-SongbookOfTheAmericanRevolution, pp. 64-65)
Unto the Prophet Jonas I Read (H. E. Rollins, A Pepysian Garland, Black-Letter Broadside Ballads of the years 1595-1639, chiefly from the Collection of Samuel Pepys, p. 67)
ALTERNATE TITLES:
Digby's Farewell
NOTES [76 words]: Folklore has it that a fellow named Packington, in the reign of Elizabeth I, bet that he could swim the length of the Thames. But Elizabeth forbade the attempt, and Packington forfeited his pound. I have no way to verify this; I heard it on a classical music station.
This *tune* is almost certainly traditional, though the words have not endured. It is included in the Index because of the many broadsides set to its melody (see the Same Tune list). - RBW
Last updated in version 6.2
File: ChWI259
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