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"Jack shall have Jill; Naught shall go ill; The man shall have his mare again, and all shall be well". Puck in Act 3, Scene 2 of A Midsummer Night's Dream. “The Farmer’s Boy” is one of the most enduring narrative ballads in the English folk tradition. I learned this 'happy-ending' song in primary school. Printed first as The Lucky Farmer’s Boy in a London street ballad catalogue of 1832, the song travelled quickly into the hearts and voices of rural communities across the country. By the middle of the nineteenth century it was already spoken of as an “ancient song,” its origins comfortably obscured by the very tradition that kept it alive. Farmers, labourers, and families embraced the tale of a weary youth — lame, cold, and desperate for work — whose determination and integrity lead him to a better life. The tune familiar today is widely believed to derive from “Ye Sons of Albion,” a patriotic air associated with the Napoleonic Wars. Broadside printers ensured that both melody and lyric spread far beyond their earliest printings. These inexpensive single-sheet publications were sold by street vendors throughout the towns and market fairs of England. Their songs often provided both entertainment and moral instruction. “The Farmer’s Boy” presented the virtues of perseverance, humility, family loyalty, and ultimately reward for honest labour — ideals deeply aligned with rural values of the period. Collecting efforts in the late nineteenth century, especially those of Frank Kidson, captured multiple versions of the song. Yet intriguingly, many collected melodies differ from the now-standard tune. This divergence speaks to the elasticity of folk tradition: songs survive because they change. The legend of the song’s being based on the life of Reverend Thomas Fownes Smith of Little Leigh, Cheshire — written by a brother-in-law — remains a charming but uncertain local tale, adding a further layer to the song’s cultural mythology. Musically, “The Farmer’s Boy” has also lived well beyond the folk clubs and country halls of England. The tune has been adopted as a regimental quick march, particularly associated with the Duke of Edinburgh’s Royal Regiment and its Berkshire and Wiltshire predecessors. It has even served as the traditional closing song of the National Folk Festival in England, where singers and listeners alike join in its heartfelt chorus — a moment of communal warmth, connection, and shared heritage. This performance adopts a reflective and gentle interpretation, highlighting the simplicity and honesty at the song’s heart. The story itself — from poverty and rejection to dignity, security, and love — reflects what some have called an English equivalent of the “American Dream.” It reassures its listeners that a life begun in hardship may yet find fulfilment through steadfastness and good character. As the boy becomes a man, inherits the farm, and marries the farmer’s daughter, the song concludes with a smile and a gentle look back at the lucky day he knocked upon that door. It is no wonder that “The Farmer’s Boy” continues to resonate: here is hope, set to a tune that carries the fields and hedgerows of England within it.