Traditional Songs - Rockabye Baby Lyrics
Traditional - Rockabye Baby |
Traditional - Rockabye Baby Lyrics and Youtube Music Videos
Album: Rockabye Baby
Released: 1872
Rockabye Baby Lyrics
Rockabye Baby
It was written by a pilgrim who sailed to America on the Mayflower. During this trip, the young passenger observed the way Native American women rocked their babies in birch-bark cradles suspended from the high branches of a tree, allowing the wind to rock the baby to sleep.
Effie Crockett, a relative of Davy Crockett, wrote the lyrics in 1872 while babysitting a restless child. (Indeed, Crockett - known as Effie I. Canning - has an IMDB filmography containing over 175 credits for the extensive use of "Rock-a-bye Baby" in film and television.)
It was inspired by an English family, the Kenyons, who lived in a vast tree house fashioned out of an ancient yew tree.
Author Gerald Massey ties the rhyme into Egyptian mythology in his book Ancient Egypt, claiming the baby is the god Horus.
When that wind blows, there's nothing to fear
'Cause mommy and daddy will always be here
In our interview with Night , she said, "If you are a parent or caregiver you have absolutely every right - more than that, it should be your duty really - to do whatever you can do to comfort your child and let them know everything is all right. Even if it isn't... We all shoulder burdens and hide truths from our children so that they can retain their innocence. And the most vulnerable time for a child is right before bedtime. Why would anyone want to scare them at that moment?"