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So farewell then, "drunken sailor"...

I loved the bit at the end of this story.
However, a study in 2004 showed that nursery rhymes exposed children to far more violent incidents than an average evening watching television - including Humpty Dumpty's serious head injury.:guffaw:
 
I so do not approve!

"Drunken Sailor" is my favorite sea shanty of all time, and probably in my top 10 songs.

So, to the person who made this change, I say we pull out the plug and wet him all over!
 
"Drunken sailors" have been removed from the lyrics of a nursery rhyme in a government-funded books project.

But the Bookstart charity says the re-writing of What Shall We Do With the Drunken Sailor? has "absolutely nothing to do with political correctness".

The charity says that the shift from drunken sailor to "grumpy pirate" was to make the rhyme fit a pirate theme, rather than censorship.

Because of course it couldn't have been a "drunken pirate"...
 
So, to the person who made this change, I say we pull out the plug and wet him all over!
Depends on the meaning of the words "pull out", "plug", "wet" and "all over". And, to a certain extent, "him". :evil:


(aorry)
 
God help the folk movement if some people ever sit down and go through some of the folk songs - they can be rather ribald and filled with a lot of innuendo.

Though some of them would raise a few hackels to day. There's a song called Little Sir Hiugh where a young boy is murdered by his mother a verse has the local Jews being blamed.

Oh and I gather there's a 6th verse to the God Save the King/Queen that's rather derogatory about the Scots.
 
Oh and I gather there's a 6th verse to the God Save the King/Queen that's rather derogatory about the Scots.
Ah, the controversial 4th verse:

Lord, grant that Marshal Wade,
May by thy mighty aid,
Victory bring.
May he sedition hush
and like a torrent rush,
Rebellious Scots to crush,
God save the King.
I believe that was actually a made-up verse added during the 1745 Jacobite rebellion.

Some even made an anti-French verse too...
 
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