"Roses Are Red" is the name of a love poem and children's rhyme with Roud Folk Song Index number 19798.[1] It has become a cliché for Valentine's Day, and has spawned multiple humorous and parodic variants.
"Roses Are Red" | |
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Nursery rhyme |
A modern standard version is:[2]
Roses are red
Violets are blue,
Sugar is sweet
And so are you.
Origins
editThe rhyme builds on poetic conventions that are traceable as far back as Edmund Spenser's epic The Faerie Queene of 1590:
A rhyme similar to the modern standard version can be found in Gammer Gurton's Garland, a 1784 collection of English nursery rhymes published in London by Joseph Johnson:[4]
Victor Hugo was probably familiar with Spenser, but may not have known the English nursery rhyme when he published his novel Les Misérables in 1862. A song by the character Fantine contains this refrain:[6]
Les bleuets sont bleus, les roses sont roses,
Les bleuets sont bleus, j'aime mes amours.
In his English translation published in the same year, Charles Edwin Wilbour rendered this as:[7]
Violets are blue, roses are red,
Violets are blue, I love my loves.
This translation replaces the original version's cornflowers ("bleuets") with violets, and makes the roses red rather than pink, effectively making the song closer to the English nursery rhyme.
Folklore
editThe short poem has since become a snowclone, and numerous satirical versions have long circulated in children's lore.[8] Among them:
Roses are red.
Violets are blue.
Onions stink.
And so do you.[9]
Country music singer Roger Miller parodied the poem in a verse of his 1964 hit "Dang Me":
They say roses are red and violets are purple
Sugar's sweet and so is maple syruple. [sic][10]
The Marx Brothers' film Horse Feathers has Chico Marx describing the symptoms of cirrhosis thus:
Cirrhosis are red,
so violets are blue,
so sugar is sweet,
so so are you.[11]
The Benny Hill version:
Roses are reddish
Violets are bluish
If it weren't for Christmas
We'd all be Jewish.[12]
Notes
edit- ^ "Roud Folksong Index S299266 Roses are red, violets are blue". Vaughan Williams Memorial Library. English Folk Dance and Song Society. Archived from the original on 11 June 2016. Retrieved 20 May 2016.
- ^ Roud, Stephen (2010). The Lore of the Playground : One hundred years of children's games, rhymes and traditions. London: Random House Books. p. 420. ISBN 978-1-905211-51-7. OCLC 610824586.
- ^ Spenser, The Faery Queene iii, Canto 6, Stanza 6: on-line text Archived March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Gammer G's Garland". British Library. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ I. Opie and P. Opie (1951). The Oxford Dictionary of Nursery Rhymes (1997, 2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 375.
- ^ "Les misérables, Tome I by Victor Hugo". Project Gutenberg. (Book Seven, Chapter Six)
- ^ Hugo, Victor (1862). Les Miserables. Translated by Wilbour, Charles E. New York: The Modern Library. p. 212.
- ^ S. J. Bronner, American Children’s Folklore (August House: 1988), p. 84.
- ^ Liz Gooch (18 May 2005). "Jill Still Playing Jacks And Hopscotch Endures". Archived from the original on 27 January 2014. Retrieved 17 September 2009.
- ^ Jimmie N. Rogers (1983). The Country Music Message, Revisited. University of Arkansas Press. p. 194. ISBN 9781610751148.
- ^ "Selected bits from Horse Feathers".
- ^ Lawrence Dorfman (2013). Snark! The Herald Angels Sing: Sarcasm, Bitterness and the Holiday Season. Skyhorse Publishing.