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OLD GRIMES
"Old Grimes" was originally a poem by Albert Gorton Greene (1802-1866). Born in Providence, Rhode Island, as an adult Greene was a lawyer, poet, and judge in Rhode Island. While he was a student at Brown University, Greene borrowed a verse from Mother Goose and added almost a dozen more of his own. His poem was first published in the Providence Gazette on January 16, 1822. Originally sung to the tune "John Gilpin was a Citizen," it lends itself equally well to "Auld Lang Syne." We know that Pa sang it to the tune of "Auld Lang Syne" because in both manuscript and published Little House in the Big Woods, Wilder wrote that "Pa began to play the song about Old Grimes. But he did not sing the words he had sung when Ma was making cheese..." (see Little House in the Big Woods, Chapter 13, "The Deer in the Wood"). Pa's lyrics aren't in Greene's poem; their origin is unknown.
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For more information: For a complete list of songs from the "Little House"® books, go to the SONG INDEX. "Old Grimes" is included in The Laura Ingalls Wilder Songbook, compiled and edited by Eugenia Garson, 1968. Published by HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. Sheet music for "Auld Lang Syne" and the poem "Old Grimes" were included in Songs of the Prairie, compiled by Margaret Irwin, 1968. Published in De Smet, this book is now out of print. "Auld Lang Syne" is included on Laura Ingalls Wilder's Songs From Home, produced by the Laura Ingalls Wilder Home Association, Mansfield, Missouri, 1992. The tape includes music played on Pa's fiddle!
Old Grimes (BW 10), see also Auld Lang Syne
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Copyright © 2009 by Nancy Cleaveland - All Rights Reserved. |
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