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Lady Franklin's Lament

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Lady Franklin's Lament is a traditional ballad commemorating the loss of Sir John Franklin's British Arctic Expedition of 1845. It is attested as early as 1855, and has since been recorded in numerous different versions.

Lady Franklin's Lament, a.k.a. "Lord Franklin"

(Traditional)

(To the tune of "The Croppy Boy")

We were homeward bound one night on the deep 

Swinging in my hammock I fell asleep

I dreamed a dream and I thought it true

Concerning Franklin and his gallant crew

With a hundred seamen he sailed away

To the frozen ocean in the month of May

To seek a passage around the pole 

Where we poor sailors do sometimes go.

Through cruel hardships they vainly strove

Their ships on mountains of ice were drove

Only the Eskimo with his skin canoe 

Was the only one that ever came through

In Baffin's Bay where the whale fish blow

The fate of Franklin no man may know 

The fate of Franklin no tongue can tell

Lord Franklin with his sailors do dwell

And now my burden it gives me pain

For my long-lost Franklin I would cross the main

Ten thousand pounds I would freely give

To know on earth, that my Franklin do live.

 


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