Here's one my music teacher taught me:
Oh Playmate, come out and play with me
and bring your dollies three
climb up my apple tree
look down my rain barrel
slide down my cellar door
and we'll be jolly friends
for evermore!"
But here's the thing - it's not really a kids song, as it was written by an adult back in 1940. But it became so popular among kids as a "singing game" that it showed up in most collections of childrens folklore, with a few edits made for kids who didn't know what a rain barrel was:
See See Playmate, come out and play with me
and bring your dollies three
climb up my apple tree
Slide down my rainbow
into my cellar door
and we'll be jolly friends
for evermore!"
Rather than changing the line, my music teacher gave us a long talk explaining the rain barrel line. He said rain barrels were better for washing your hair than shampoo....some who were in the class contend that he said he didn't BELIEVE in shampoo, but preferred to just stick his head in rain barrel (I can't exactly vouche for that, but it sounds about right....the folklore about THAT guy could fill a book on its own). He also noted, in a rare moment of humor, that sliding down a cellar door usually led to serious splinters. This all hearkens back to an earlier day when looking down at a barrel of water was first class entertainment, I guess.
Anyway, though, the song lent itself to parody very well - I THOUGHT we were making parodies up, but the ones we came up with were virtually identical that the ones folklorists collected years before. Did someone in class know them, do the parodies just naturally suggest themselves, or are we in some sort of "universal mind/collecting unconscious" thing here?
Here's one collected in Sherman's book (at right) from Jerri, who heard it in Doraville, GA in 1972:
Vampire, come out and bite me
and bring your bats three
climb up my graveyard tree
slide down my tombstone
climb in my coffin door
and we'll be vampires
for evermore!
Another, more violent version from Bronner's book, circa 73:
Playmate, come out at play with me
and bring your tommy gun three
climb up my poison tree
drown in my rain barrel
fall down my cellar door
and we'll be enemies
for evermore!
At the same time, Iona Opie was collecting similar parodies in England:
Baby, I cannot play with you
Because I've got the flu
chicken pox, measles too
Flush down the lavatory
into the drain pipe
and that's the way they go - go -go
She also notes that versions ending in "for evermore" had the term "droopy drawers!" appended onto the end with a shout, and further notes that even the 1940 song was essentially a rewrite of an 1894 song (by an adult) called "I Don't Want To Play In Your Yard:"
I don't want to play in your yard,
I don't like you anymore
you'll be sorry when you see me
sldiing down our cellar door
you can't holler down our rain barrel
you can't climb our apple tree
I don't want to play in your yard
if you won't be good to me.
The tune was very different, but we end up with sort of a mobeus strip of a folk process here: going from one song, to another, to a parody that's pretty much the same thing as the original!
I taught this to my preschoolers last year (as "Say Say My Playmate"), along with an additional verse I learned from my mother:
ReplyDeleteSo sorry playmate
I cannot play with you
My dollies have the flu
Boo-hoo boo-hoo boo-hoo
I have no rain barrel
I have no cellar door
But we'll be jolly friends
For ever more, more-- more more!
Of course, some of my kids learned the "rainbow" version and corrected me when I said "rain barrel" and then I had to explain what a rain barrel was and we discussed how painful and difficult it must've been to slide down one, and then stuck with "rainbow" after that. Actually, a lot of them preferred the alternate "sad version" more than the standard, but I think that's because I taught them to fake moany-weepy-crying until the last two lines, which were said with great big grins.
Man, I miss teaching little kids.
That is exactly how my Momaw used to sing it to me when I was a kid and I remember her explaining to me what a rain barrel was and she then did tell me how difficult it was back then. :-)
DeleteI too prefered the sadder 2nd verse, but it was due to the Boo-hoo-hoo-hoo-hoo-hoo line. Haha
I have taught my children the same verses and I expect when they have their own children this will be one that they pass on as well.
A variation from central Ohio in the 1990s that a friend and I made up while waiting for the rain to clear up so our softball game could start (we learned all the rhymes as "CiCi" my playmate)-
ReplyDeleteCiCi my teammate
Come out and play with me
And bring your baseball's three
Climb up my diamond gate
Slide into home plate
And through my dugout door
And we'll be champions
Forever more 1,2,3,4
Take your base!
I was a big snob as a kid (Vancouver 1980s) and always insisted on "rain barrel" while everyone else said "rainbow."
ReplyDeleteSecond verse similar but not the same as the comment above:
See see my playmate
I cannot play with you
My dolly has the flu
She might throw up on you
And if she does
(and I don't remember the rest)
This song takes me back to the early 60's to my childhood. My dad would sing us this song while driving.
ReplyDeleteUpper Michigan version, late 1960s. This was a sarcastic little clapping game and song.
ReplyDeleteOh jolly playmate, come out and play with me
and bring your dollies three
climb up my apple tree
Slide down my rainbarrel
into my cellar door
and we'll be jolly friends
for evermore!
Oh jolly enemy
I cannot play with you
My dollies have the flu
Boo-hoo hoo hoo hoo hoo
Ain't got no rain barrel
Ain't got no cellar door
But we'll be jolly enemies
For ever more, more-- more more!
I was taught the song by the old ladies in my grandmother's rest home when I was 9 (in 1951). It went:
ReplyDeleteOh playmate, come out and play with me
And bring your dollies three
Climb up your apple tree
Shout down your rain barrel
Slide down your cellar door
And we'll be jolly friends
Forever more.
Oh playmate, I cannot play with you
My dolly has the flu
Boo hoo hoo hoo hoo hoo
Ain't got no rain barrel
Ain't got no cellar door
But well be jolly friends
Forever more.
But I'm sure I would have preferred "She might throw up on you," instead of the "boo hoo hoo" line!
I learned this song when I Was in Kindargarten at the Laboratory School in Cheney, Washington. Miss Lang our teacher taught it to us. It had a catchy tune and all the kid liked it. That was in fall of 1939. Had to be 6 to go to Kindergarten in those days. Our learned version was the original as far as I know. Rain barrels, Cellar doors and all. Everyone had rain barrels, cellar doors and outhouses in those days.
ReplyDeleteIn addition to explaining what a rain barrel is, you also have to explain that the old-fashioned coal-cellar door was diagonal, so you can slide down it.
ReplyDeleteLots of the variations have them sliding down the rain barrel or rainbow INTO the cellar door. These are obviously people who don't know about the coal-cellar door that is perfect for sliding down.
I remember it from the 40's in Philadelphia, PA. It was sung while jumping rope as a cadence timer. I was looking for the lyrics to answer a request buy a reader of Farm and Ranch magazine.
ReplyDeleteI remember it from the 40's in Philadelphia, PA. It was sung while jumping rope as a cadence timer. I was looking for the lyrics to answer a request buy a reader of Farm and Ranch magazine.
ReplyDeleteWe used to sing this as a cadence to hand clapping with a friend. Crystal Lake Ill, 1960s.
ReplyDeleteOh Susie Playmate was the person in the 1st verse and Sally Playmate was in the 2nd.
Otherwise the song is the same as Anonymous comment from March 2011.
cece my baby i can not play with you for i have got the flue, chicken pox and measels too.
ReplyDeleteslide down that drain pipe into that sunny spot where we can play a lot forever more more more more shut that door
Our version had us sliding down a rainbow into the cellar door on Long Island in the mid 1970's
ReplyDeleteFlorida, mid-70s, we used to sing a second verse:
ReplyDeleteSee See my enemy
Come out and fight with me
And bring your bulldogs three
Climb up my thornbush tree
Slide down my razorblade
Into my dungeon door
And we'll be enemies
Forever more, more... ten four!
Yes! This is the second verse I remember. Late 70's in Newfoundland, Canada. Thanks for the memories!
DeletePlayground version Christchurch Dorset 1990's
ReplyDeletecee cee my bonnie
I can not play with you
my sisters got the flu
chicken pox and measles too
[it] slid down drain pipe
into a lump of poo
we're be friends for evermore
(tempo and melody changes at this point probably a different song)
more more shut that door
don't come back till half past 4
if you do(or don't)
you'll catch the flu
and that will be
the end of
you
[it] slid down drain pipe
Deletetypo
should be
[it] slid down the drain pipe
My mom sang this to me while i would play in the bathtub,
ReplyDeleteand it wasnt that long ago, since im only 16.
my mother was born in the early 60s though.
she would sing it differently;
Oh playmate,
come out and play with me,
and bring your dolly Dee.
climb up my apple tree.
play on my rain barrow,
slide down my cellar door,
and we'll be jolly friends,
forever more more more.
im sorry playmate,
i cannot play with you,
my dolly has the flu.
boo hoo hoo hoo hoo hoo.
aint got no rain barrow,
aint got no cellar door,
but we'll be jolly friends,
forever more more more.
I never learned this song as a child, but my mother-in-law taught it to our children.exactly as Anonymous quotes it, except she said, "rain barrel." She was raised in Iowa in the 1910's, and said it was a song of her childhood.
ReplyDeleteI learned this around grade 4 as a clapping game..
ReplyDeleteC.C My playmate, come out and play with me
And bring your dollies three
Climb up my apple tree
Slide down my rainbow
Into my cellar door
And we'll be jolly friends,
Forever more more, shut the door, dinosaur RAWR!
.. I suspect the end bit about the dinosaur was just put there to have a conclusion for the clapping. This would have been 1999 ish, in Newfoundland Canada :)
My grandmother taught this song to me in the 90's. We lived in Virginia but she had grown up in Wisconsin in the late forties\early fifties (I don't know where or when she learned it). I know it a little differently than any other comments have said, particularly the fifth line of the first verse, which actually makes the most sense this way, I think ;) She also had a diagonal cellar door on her house, so we had no problem with that line. :)
ReplyDeleteSay, say, my playmate
Come out and play with me
And bring your dollies three
Climb up my apple tree
Splash in my rain barrel
Slide down my cellar door
And we'll be jolly friends
Forevermore, 1, 2, 3, 4!
And the optional second verse went:
Say, say, my playmate
I cannot play with you
My dolly's got the flu
I think I've got it too
I have no rain barrel
I have no cellar door
But we'll be jolly friends
Forevermore, 1, 2, 3, 4!
Yorkshire, 1980s.
ReplyDeleteCC My playmate,
Come out and play with me,
My mother's got the flu,
Cicken pox and measles too.
Slide down the drain pipe,
On to the cellar floor,
And we'll be jolly friends
Forever more.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteMy friends sing this in class occasionally (btw we are a very childish bunch of 14 year olds) - I can only remember some of it
ReplyDeleteCee cee my play mate
why wont you play with me
my sisters got the flu
chicken pox and measles too
Cee cee my play mate
why wont you play with me
she don't play with baby toys
she plays with sexy boys...
I never heard the line, "slide down my rainbow, into my cellar door." I learned, "slide down my rainbow, into my fairy boat." Just didn't see that metioned here yet, and wondered if others had learned it that way.
ReplyDeleteMy version was
ReplyDeleteSay say little playmate,
Come out and play with me,
And bring your dollies 3,
Climb up my apple tree.
Slide down my rainbow,
Into my cellar door
And we'll be jolly friends,
forevermore 1234
I'm sorry playmate,
I cannot play with you
My dollie's got the flu
She'll puke all over you
Ain't got no rainbow,
Ain't got no cellar door,
But we'll be jolly friends,
Forevermore 1234!
I always thought it was supposed to be "dolly friends" but I guess it was "jolly friends"
It was a fun song when we were in elementary school, a lifetime ago!
I learned the song in Pennsylvania in the late 60's, Franklin County.
ReplyDeleteLynn New Zealand
ReplyDeleteDad sang to us in 1940's
Hey Hey Playmate come out and play with me
and bring your dollies three
Climb up my apple tree
Shout down my rain barrel
Slide down my cellar door
and we'll be jolly friends fore evermore
I'm sorry playmate I can not play with you
my dolly's got the flu
Boo hoo hoo hoo
Ain't got no rain barrel
Ain't got no cellar door
But we'll be jolly friends for evermore
Thanks every one for bringing that back!
This is the version my mother taught me in the 30s. She sang it as a little girl and she was born in 1909. I think the person who put their name to it as composer in 1940 plagiarized
DeleteShouting down the rain barrel would probably echo and might make the water shake causing a distorted reflection of any image? a fun thing to do even now if one had a rain barrel!
ReplyDeleteBy the time it reached my ears in 90s Australia we had an amalgamation of the two suggested verses, plus a little extra bit at the end. It was a clapping song.
ReplyDeleteSee see my play-a-mate
I cannot play with you
My dolly's got the flu
And German measles too
Slide down my rainbow
Into my pot of gold
And we'll be best of friends
Forever more, more, kick out the door (Upon which each clapper would try and be the first to punch the other in the stomach.)
The pot of gold seems to be the only relatively new bit, and that's a logical link with the end of a rainbow I guess.
Early 60's in Montreal, Canada. We'd sing it as a clapping song between two girls. The version we sang is slightly different from most of the other ones but all the kids in the neighbourhood sang it this way:
ReplyDeletePlaymate, come out and play with me
And bring your do-olly
Tee!Hee!Hee!Hee!Hee!Hee!
Slide down my rainbow
Into my cellar door
and we'll be jolly friends
forever more, more, more, more more.
We sang this song in the early 60s - Helen Baller Elementary School, Camas, Washington. I remember the tune and some of the words, and as I was collecting rain this winter for my garden the "rain barrels" made me recollect this song in bits. Today I Googled it, and here you are! Thanks for some fun memories!
ReplyDeleteRhonda Beatty-Gallo
My mom and her sisters were riding in the car on their way home from school one day back in the '60s. Her and my aunt were singing this song, and their daddy (My grandpa of course) asked them where they heard that song... and they said they learned it at school. He told them not to tell anyone but he wrote those words as a poem when he was a little boy and presented it to his class. My mom said as popular as that song has become now... if we ever told anyone Pawpaw wrote those words, nobody would ever believe us.
ReplyDeleteAnd he then joined in and sung it with them. He was a preacher for over 40 years and just passed away last month.
DeleteI seem to remember this song with rather disturrbing words and maybe I got it completely wrong, but it went something like....
ReplyDeleteCeCe my enemy
Come out and fight with me
and bring your Tommy Gun
And we'll have lots of fun (!!!!)
I'll scratch your eyes out
And they will bleed to death
And we'll be jolly good friends
For ever more, more more more more
Anyone else ever heard this (now that I think about it) disturbing version?
I used to sing this version in the playground at primary school in the early 70s (goodness didn't realise I was that old!!)
ReplyDeletemine always was
ReplyDeletecee cee come out and play with me
climb up my apple tree
slide down my golden key
i'm sorry playmate
my dollies have the flu
they'll puke all over you
The one i learned when i was younger was
ReplyDeleteSay, Hey my playmate
come out and play with me
bring out your dollie Dee
climb up my apple tree
slide down my rainbow
into your cellar door
and will be jolly friends
forever more
OPPOSITE:
So sorry playmate
i can not play today
my dollie has the flu
she might throw up on you
i have no rainbow
into your cellar door
but were still jolly friends
forever more
I also learned the hand movements that came with it
The one i learned when i was younger was
ReplyDeleteSay, Hey my playmate
come out and play with me
bring out your dollie Dee
climb up my apple tree
slide down my rainbow
into your cellar door
and will be jolly friends
forever more
OPPOSITE:
So sorry playmate
i can not play today
my dollie has the flu
she might throw up on you
i have no rainbow
into your cellar door
but were still jolly friends
forever more
I also learned the hand movements that came with it
I learned this song from listening to it on the radio in the early 1940s. Two key lines that almost all of you younger folks are getting wrong are:
ReplyDelete"Shout down my rain barrel,
Slide down my cellar door,"
A rain barrel was a barrel positioned so as to catch the runoff from a gutter or downspout for the purpose of watering the garden. Shouting down it (if it was about empty) with your head slightly into the barrel provided a mildly amusing experience in the form of an echo. In those days most cellars were no accessible from the interior of a house; instead there was a pair of doors covering the entrance. The two doors were set at a slant, and met in the center, and if the slant was steep enough and the doors slippery enough, a very young child could be amused for a mwhile by sliding on them. We didn't have computers, cell phones, or TV, and some folks didn't have radios, though most did.
In Maine you can still see homes with cellar doors as described, and rain barrels, too, still in use.
Sliding down a rain barrel or a rainbow would have been meaningless.
I agree with you 100% I hope your post clears things up for everyone!
DeleteYour music teacher had it wrong when he said that rain barrels were better for washing your hair than shampoo. You still used the shampoo — but with rain water instead of well water.
ReplyDeleteIn the old days (pre-1950), shampoos were soap-based instead of detergent-based. The thing about soap is that it doesn't work well with hard water. It doesn't lather properly, and it doesn't rinse out completely. In much of the country, water from wells and springs contained minerals that made it "hard". If you were rich, you could install a water softener, but most folks used "soft" rain water collected in a rain barrel.
You are exactly right.
DeleteIreland (1980s)
ReplyDeleteSee see my baby
Come back and play with me
For I am lonely
And I need your company
Slide down my rainbow
Into your paradise
For I am lonely
And I need your company
our "naughty" second verse went like this
ReplyDeleteOh See See Oh Enemy
Come out and fight with me!
And bring your soldiers three,
Climb up my poison tree.
Slide down my razor blade,
Into my dungeon door (variation: "Into my pool of alcohol")
And we'll be jolly enemies,
For ever more!
St. Louis 1980s
I googled this and discovered it was written in 1894 by someone named Philip Wingate.
ReplyDeleteI remember my Grandmother singing it to me when I was a kid in the early 40's and she always started it with:
Two little maids, both dressed alike,
Blue gingham pinafores, hair down in braids,
Stocking of red, sunbonnets on each head.
Then it would go on to the refrain of
See, See my playmate
Come out and play with me.
And bring your dollies three,
We'll climb my apple tree.
Holler down my rain barrel,
Slide down my cellar door
And we'll be jolly friends
Forever more.
I recall this as a hand clapping game my friends and I would play when I was little (which was not all that long ago, which is surprising considering this song was written in the late 1890s and I was born in the mid 1990s). The version we sang was a lot longer though and gets quite dark and violent towards the end. It goes...
ReplyDeleteSay Say oh playmate
Come out and play with me
And bring your dollies three
Climb up my Apple tree
Shout down my rain barrel
Slide down my cellar door
And we'll be jolly friends
Forevermore...more...more
Say Say oh playmate
I cannot play with you
My dollies have the flu
The mumps and measles too
Can't shout down rain barrels
Or slide down cellar doors
But we'll be jolly friends
Forevermore...more...more
Say Say oh playmate
Do not come play with me
Don't bring your dollies three
Chop down my Apple tree
Fall off my rainbow
And through my cellar door
And we'll be enemies
Forevermore...more...more
Say Say old enemy
Come out and fight with me
And bring your dragons three
Climb up my prickly tree
Slide down my lightening
Into my dungeon doors
And we'll be enemies
Forevermore...more...more
Say Say old enemy
Come out and fight with me
And bring your BB gun
And we'll have lots of fun
I'll scratch your eyes out
And make you bleed to death
And we'll be enemies
Forevermore...more...more
Say Say old enemy
I cannot fight with you
My mommy said not to
Boo hoo hoo hoo hoo hoo
Can't scratch your eyes out
Or make you bleed to death
But we'll be enemies
Forevermore...more...more
Say Say old enemy
Can't we be friends again
Forget what happened then
Replant your Apple tree
We'll fix your rain barrel
And then your cellar door
And we'll jolly friends
Forevermore...more...more
Say Say old enemy
Yes we'll be friends again
But I won't forget back then
We'll plant my apple tree
And fix my rain barrel
And then my cellar door
And we'll be friends again
Forevermore...more...more
More...more
There seem to be a lot of different versions of this song but this is the one I learned growing up in southern Mississippi in the early 2000s.
Not the original.
ReplyDeleteSay Say oh Enemy
ReplyDeleteCome out and fight with me
bring your pitbulls three
climb up my dying tree
slide down my razor wire
into my cellar door
and we will be jolly enemies
forever more more more more more