Girls and
boys come out to play
I first published this post on my blog on 5th December 2009.
The
brilliance of the moon has led my mind to the old Nursery rhyme 'Girls and boys
come out to play' and I began to wonder about its origins.
There are
regional variations of this rhyme, but the commonest one is as follows:
Girls and
boys come out to play,
The moon doth shine as bright as day;
Leave your supper and leave your sleep
And come with your playfellows into the street.
Come with a whoop and come with a call,
Come with a good will or not at all.
Up the ladder and down the wall,
A halfpenny loaf will serve us all.
Some versions add the following:
You find
milk and I'll find flour
And we'll have a pudding in half an hour.
Alternative
renderings place boys before girls.
The rhyme
has been in existence since at least 1708 when the first two lines were printed
in dance books. The earliest known collection of nursery rhymes was published
in London in 'Tommy Thumb's Pretty Song Book' in 1744 and
contained the first six lines.
Why,
though, would children be invited to play in the street by moonlight?
Prior to
the beginning of the Industrial Revolution (c.1760-c.1840) children often worked alongside
their parents when the workload was heavy, for example during harvest. Once the
Revolution was under way they became essential to the domestic economy when all
able-bodied members of poor working class families were expected to work to
bring in money. Under the Poor Laws, failure to provide for the family often
meant that its members were sent to the Workhouse, where husband and wife would
be separated from each other and their children. Workhouse conditions were grim,
and degrading and people did their very best to avoid the destitution that
would force them to seek support from the parish.
Thus were
children from a tender age put to work, often in appallingly dangerous
conditions. Many employers preferred to hire children as they were cheaper to
employ than adults, were nimbler and could be used in confined spaces. For example,
in the coal mines a child might start work at 2 o'clock in the morning opening
and shutting wooden doors to let air into the tunnels. He or she sat in the
cold damp dark, alone, with a single candle until 8 o'clock in the evening.
Other children pulled the heavy trucks of coal or worked on the surface sorting
coal.
Some boys
were employed as chimney sweeps, often climbing up inside the narrow branching
chimneys of grand houses, scraping off soot. When they emerged, cut and
bruised, their master would rub salt water on their elbows and knees before
sending them up other chimneys. Charles Kingsley wrote 'The Water Babies' which
gives an idea of the life of a young sweep before his escape.
In the
textile factories children might work for 16 hours cleaning machines while they
were still running. Workers lost fingers and some were crushed by the huge
machines. The smallest children were sent under the machines to tie broken
threads. It mattered little to the factory owners if their defenceless
labourers died – children were cheap in all senses for a dead child was easily
replaced from the many in orphanages.
So, the
poverty-stricken, hard-working children had little time for leisure. Generally
starting work at the age of five many of them were dead before they were
twenty-five, killed in accidents or through ill-health caused by lack of fresh
air, good food, exercise, poor working conditions.
However,
children will play when they have opportunity and this nursery rhyme gives an
indication of when they might have been able to forget the harshness of their
lives and enjoy themselves for a short while.


I remember that song well. It always seemed exciting to play out by moonlight.
ReplyDeleteChildren worked from babyhood in the mines and textile mills. Even the supposedly progressive child labor laws of the nineteenth century were only about conditions, not about banning child labor even for the smallest children.
I only remember the first two lines but I don't think we sang doth. It was girls first, for me.
ReplyDeleteAs marvellous as the industrial revolution was, what a terrible cost it was to so many, especially to children.