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Ouse Washes Molly
A Long Long Trail
We performed a concert this year in Talbot
House in Poperinge and "A Long Long Trail" was performed for
the first time as part of that show: We were in fact the
first group to perform in the concert hall at Talbot house
since the end of the First World
War. "A Long Long Trail" is actually
"Morrigan's" but danced to the
music "The Long Long Trail a Winding".
Click here to here it sung by
June Tabor. Live recording 1992. (MP3 PRO file, 1,4 Mb)
Nights are growing very lonely Days are very long I'm a-growing weary only List'ning for your song Old remembrances are thronging Thro’ my memory Thronging till it seems The world is full of dreams Just to call you back to me
There's a long, long trail a-winding Into the land of my dreams Where the nightingales are singing And the white moon beams
There's a long, long trail a-winding Into the land of my dreams Where the nightingales are singing And a white moon beams There's a long, long night of waiting Until my dreams all come true; Till the day when I'll be going down
That long, long trail with you
All night long I hear you calling Calling sweet and low Seem to hear your footsteps falling Ev’rywhere I go Tho’ the road between us stretches Many a weary mile Somehow I forget That you’re not with me yet When I think I see you smile
There's a long, long night of waiting Until my dreams all come true 'Till the day that I'll be going down
That long, long trail with you.
Talbot House where we performed is one of
the most famous places in the world that commemorate
this terrible war. The house was run by an army
chaplain, Tubby Clayton, as a place for soldiers to
recuperate in the first safe
town behind the lines near Ypres. It is said that
perhaps half a million troops rested at some time in the
house. Poperinge, itself was described by the poet
Edmund Blunden as, “One of the 7 wonders of the world.”
This is how Rifleman Worrell described what he did in
the evenings;
The cafes were our only opportunity of
seeing anything of life. We used to go to the
Café des Allies in Poperinghe.
It was a popular place because there was a little man
with a squeeze box there and he
knew all the right tunes to play. He'd picked them up
from the troops and some of them were
pretty fruity. He'd start very politely with
Mademoiselle from Armentieres (and of course we had our
own words for that one) but the universal favourite was
“The Monk of Great Renown”, and sooner or later, he got
round to Après la guerre fini:
Après la Guerre fini
Soldat Anglais parti
Mademoiselle in the family way
Apres la guerre fini.
Of course all of the troops knew Talbot House
and so many of them would have
attended concert parties in this very place. We feel very
proud and humbled to be some of the first performers here
since 1918.
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