A-begging I will go
Six for Gold track 6
Beggars  are often portrayed in the popular press as idle, workshy scroungers, who  choose this “trade” as an easy way of making a living. Such views are not new,  but date back at least to Tudor times. Meanwhile, songwriters and poets more  frequently give an idealised, romantic view of beggars, gypsies and all those  who live a travelling life.
The  earliest version of A-begging I will go  was printed on a black-letter broadside in 1684, and used in a ballad opera, The Jovial Crew, or the Merry Beggars.  Versions survived in oral tradition for almost three hundred years in England  and, especially, in Scotland. It is now, of course, a staple of the folk  revival.
Our arrangement pairs the song with the Playford dance tune Grimstock.
