The Golden Vanity (Child 286)
There are dozens of versions of The Golden Vanity, with predictable variations in the names of the two ships (in the North American set I recorded with Gordon Tyrrall, for instance, the ‘Turkish Revelry’ is attacker and ‘Green Willow Tree’ the victim of unprovoked aggression). This one was collected in1928 by James Madison Carpenter, whose search for ballads, shanties, mummers plays and what-have-you took him the length of Britain in his jalopy. In Cardiff docks he met a seaman, Richard Warner, who sang him this version of the ballad – I’ve not tampered with it, and particularly liked the line “Oh no you foolish youngster”, which may be unique to this version. I’m not sure what “dazzled out her lights” means, come to that. In the same location Carpenter heard The Farmer’s Curst Wife sung to the tune and chorus of Blow the Man Down.

1. Now there was a bonny ship in the North country
The name that she went under was the Golden Vanity
I fear she will be taken by the Turkish privateer
As she sails along the lowlands low,
As she sails along the lowlands low
Chorus: In the lowlands, in the lowlands
As she sails along the lowlands low
2. Now the first that come on deck was the little cabin boy
Captain what’ll you give to me if I do them destroy?
I’ll give you gold and silver, my daughter for your bride
If you’ll sink them in the Lowlands low
If you’ll sink them in the Lowlands low
3. So the captain held the keel light, and overboard he goes
He swam ‘til he came to the Turkish privateer
He’s let the water in and he’s dazzled out her lights
And he sank her in the lowands low
And he sank her in the lowands low
4. So it’s back to the ship so quickly he swam
Captain, captain, pick me up my work I’ve bravely done
Captain, pick me up, for I’m sinking in the sea
I’m sinking in the lowlands low
And I’m sinking in the lowlands low
5. Pick you up, pick you up? The captain said he
Oh no, you foolish youngster, that will never be
For I’m going to send you after the Turkish Ivory
And I’ll sink you in the lowlands low
And I’ll sink you in the lowlands low
6. So he swam around the ship all to the starboard side
Shipmates, shipmate, pick me up, I’m sinking in the tide
Shipmates, pick me up, for I’m sinking in the sea
I’m sinking in the lowlands low
And I’m sinking in the lowlands low
7. So his shipmates picked him up, and on the deck he died
They sewed him in his hammock, which was both long and wide
They sewed him in his hammock and they threw him o’er the side
And they sank him in the lowlands low
And they sank him in the lowlands low

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