Green Grow the Lilacs

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Green Grow the Lilacs is a folk song of Irish origin that was popular in the United States during the mid 1800s.

The song title is familiar as the source of an extremely dubious popular etymology for the word gringo, supposedly being a Hispanicization of "green grow," which Mexicans certainly could have heard U.S. troops singing during the Mexican-American War. (See gringo for a derivation from griego, which dictionaries suggest is more likely).

Green Grow the Lilacs is also the title of the 1931 play by Lynn Riggs which became the libretto for the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical Oklahoma!

One version of the lyrics (there are innumerable variations) opens:

Green grow the lilacs, all sparkling with dew
I'm lonely, my darling, since parting with you;
But by our next meeting I'll hope to prove true
And change the green lilacs to the Red, White and Blue.
I once had a sweetheart, but now I have none
She's gone and she's left me, I care not for one
Since she's gone and left me, contented I'll be,
For she loves another one better than me.
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