Charming Beauty Bright
"(Once I courted a) Charming Beauty Bright" is an American folk song. It is found in both Southern and Northern states during the 19th Century.[1][2] The song is about a man who finds a woman, leaves for seven years, and upon his return to his home he learns of her death.
Lyrics
According to the Max Hunter collection, the lyrics are as follows:
Once't I courted
 A charming beauty bright
 I courted her by day
 And I courted her by night
 I courted her for love
 An' love I did obtain
 An' I'm sure she must have loved me
 She had no reason to complain
 
 So, I struck out
 Californy for to go
 To see if I
 Could forget my love or no
 O, seven long years
 Been serving of my king
 An' it's seven long years
 Returning home again
 
 When their Mother
 Seen me coming
 She'd wrung her hands an' cried
 Saying, my daughter loves you dearly
 An' for your sake, she died
 
 O, then I was stroked
 Like a man that was slain
 Th tears, they poured down
 Like showers of rain
 Saying, o, ho, ho,ho
 My grief I cannot bear
 My true loves in 'er grave
 An' I want to be there[3] 
References
- ^ John Harrington Cox Folk-Songs of the South 1963 - Page 342 CHARMING BEAUTY BRIGHT American texts have been printed as follows: Journal, xxvi, 176 (Kittredge; taken down in 1877 or 1878 from an old lady born in Boston in 1799); xxvm, 147 (Perrow; Mississippi); xxix, 184 (Tolman; Indiana); ...
 - ^ James P. Leary Wisconsin Folklore 0299160335 -1999 - Page 219 and "Once I Courted a Charming Beauty Bright" on Folk Musk From Wisconsin (AAFS L55);
 - ^ "Song Information". maxhunter.missouristate.edu. Missouri State University. Retrieved 31 August 2022.