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Folk Play Distribution Map: If you don't believe what/the words I say

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Master Home >> Atlas >> If you don't believe what/the words I say >> Google Map

Click on the markers for information about the script(s).

Question Marks indicate uncertain or special locations.
Versions of this map: Interactive Google Map Static Google Map Outline Map
Key Earliest Example of Variant Approx.Date
lime and if you would not believe what i say 1785-1789
fuchsia if you don t believe the word i say 1815
  1. Figures indicate the number of lines that use these formulae at each location.
  2. Marker sizes represent the number of lines that use these formulae at each location.
  3. Known composite scripts prepared by known authors have been omitted.
  4. Chapbooks, broadsides, and other commercial texts have been omitted.
1. View the number of lines that use these formulae at each location
 
2. Resize the dots to reflect the number of lines that use these formulae
 
3. Omit known composite scripts prepared by literary authors
 
4. Omit chapbooks, broadsides & commercial texts

This map was generated from the Historical Database of Folk Play Scripts (Millington, 1994-2006) using the Master Mummers' Folk Play Scripts Explorer.

Commentary

The map shows the distribution of the first line of one of the more common formulaic couplets in British and Irish folk plays, in which one character calls on the next:

And if you don't believe what I say,
Enter in [someone] and clear the way

or

And if you don't believe the words I say,
Step in [someone] and clear the way

There are two variants of this line, differentiated by the words given in italics above. The 'what I say' version is the more widely distributed of the two, and is probably the older version, with early records in Truro (1785-1789) and Belfast (1803-1818). The oldest 'words I say' example comes from Bowden, Scotland. It may have originated in Scotland and then worked its way south.

It is not the distribution pattern per se that is interesting about this couplet, but the degree to which it is used in different parts of the islands. This becomes apparent when the dots are resized to reflect the number of times the line is used at each location. The significance of this variation is discussed with map for line two of the couplet - Step/Enter/Walk/Come in [someone] and clear the way.

Peter Millington

References

Peter Millington (1999-2018) Folk Play Research: Texts and Contexts
Internet URL: https://folkplay.info/resources/texts-and-contexts/introduction, 1999-2018, accessed 24th Jan.2021
Retitled in 2018 - formerly 'Historical Database of Folk Play Scripts'.

Peter Millington (2004-2021) Folk Play Scripts Explorer
Internet URL: http://www.mastermummers.org/scripts/, 2004-2021, accessed 24th Jan.2021

This map was generated from the Folk Play Scripts Explorer.
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© 2009, Peter Millington. (Webmaster: peter.millington@mastermummers.org). Last updated: 24-Jan-2021