The Water of Tyne

The song is sung by a girl or woman lamenting the fact that her paramour is on the opposite bank of the River Tyne.

Sleeve notes to Michael Hunt's recording of Tyneside songs states that "the ferry is believed to be that at Haughton Castle on the North Tyne".

Alternatively the "rough river" in the last line may indicate a point further downstream, possibly Tynemouth.

The song was collected by John Bell in 1810 and published two years later in Rhymes of Northern Bards.

O bring me a boatman, I'll give any money, And you for your trouble rewarded shall be,— To ferry me over the Tyne to my honey, Or scull him across that rough river to me.

Haughton Castle , a possible setting for the ferry in the song