"Early One Morning" (Roud V9617) is an Englishfolk song with lyrics first found in publications as far back as 1787.[1] A broadside ballad sheet in the Bodleian Library, Oxford, dated between 1828 and 1829 [2] has the title "The Lamenting Maid" and refers to the lover leaving to become a sailor.[1]
The now well-known melody was first printed by William Chappell in his publication National English Airs c.1855-1859.[1] The melody may be derived from an earlier song "The Forsaken Lover". Chappell wrote in his later Popular Music of the Olden Time:
If I were required to name three of the most popular songs among the servant-maids of the present generation, I should say, from my own experience, that they are Cupid's Garden, I sow'd the seeds of love, and Early one morning. I have heard Early one morning sung by servants who came from Leeds, from Hereford and from Devonshire, and by others from parts nearer to London. The tune... was, I believe first printed in my collection.... from one of the penny song-books collected by Ritson, and it is curious that scarcely any two copies agree beyond the second line, although the subject is always the same - a damsel's complaint for the loss of her lover.[3]
This tune was also used as the opening and closing theme to the beloved Canadian children's short programme, The Friendly Giant (1958-1985).
Early one morning just as the sun was rising, I heard a young maid sing in the valley below.
Oh, don't deceive me, Oh, never leave me, How could you use A poor maiden so?
Remember the vows that you made to me truly, Remember how tenderly you nestled close to me.
Gay is the garland fresh are the roses I've culled from the garden to bind over thee.
Here I now wander alone as I wonder Why did you leave me to sigh and complain.
I ask of the roses why should I be forsaken, Why must I here in sorrow remain?
Through yonder grove by the spring that is running, There you and I have so merrily played, Kissing and courting and gently sporting, Oh, my innocent heart you've betrayed.
Soon you will meet with another pretty maiden, Some pretty maiden, you'll court her for a while.
Thus ever ranging turning and changing, Always seeking for a girl that is new.
Thus sung the maiden, her sorrows bewailing Thus sung the maid in the valley below
Oh, don't deceive me, Oh, never leave me, How could you use A poor maiden so?
Arrangements
The folk song is used in a number of well known folk-song arrangements, for example by the English composers Benjamin Britten and Gordon Jacob along with the Australian composer Percy Aldridge Grainger. Its melody forms the opening bars of the "Radio 4 UK Theme" by Fritz Spiegl, which was played every morning at the switch-on of BBC Radio 4 from late 1978 until April 2006. The melody was also adapted by Sir Francis Vivian Dunn as a military slow march called "The Globe and Laurel", created for the Band of the Royal Marines in 1935. The melody is one of the main themes of the "Nell Gwyn Overture" by Edward German.
"Early One Morning" is used as a plot device in Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season 7, Episode 8, "Sleeper," where the First Evil uses the song as a trigger to turn re-ensouled Spike back into a killer.[8]
The tune "Early One Morning" was also used as the theme song for the CBC television show "The Friendly Giant".