Sippin' Cider (The Prettiest Girl)
"Sippin Cider" is an echo song where the "leader" sings each line and then the "group" repeats each line. Then at the end of each verse the whole group sings the whole verse together.
This is the same tune and exactly the same type of song as The Littlest Worm. Given that they both involve sipping from a straw, I'd imagine one is based on the other.
Sippin' Cider (The Prettiest Girl)
Camp Song
The prettiest girl
I ever saw
Was sippin' cider
Through a straw.
(Repeat whole verse.)
I told that gal
I didn't see how
She sipped that cider
Through a straw.
(Repeat whole verse.)
Then cheek to cheek
And jaw to jaw
We sipped that cider
Through a straw.
(Repeat whole verse.)
And now and then
That straw would slip
And I'd sip some cider
From her lip.
(Repeat whole verse.)
And now I've got
A mother-in-law
From sippin' cider
Through a straw.*
(Repeat whole verse.)
The moral of
This little tale
Is to sip your cider
Through a pail.
(Repeat whole verse.)
Notes
*Alternate verse:
And now I've got
A mother-in-law
And nineteen kids
That call me "Paw" (or "Maw").
This song can be found as "Sucking cider" in "American Songbag" (1927) compiled by Carl Sandburg. In that version every instance of "sipping" is replaced by "sucking".
Comments
Composed by Carey Morgan and Lee David in 1919.
Nancy sent the following recording with the note:
"I have more verses for you for a different version. We sang this in junior high school while we were on field trips in the early 1960s in Northern New Jersey..."
The prettiest girl I ever saw
was sippin' cider through a straw.
(Repeat)
I said to her, "What you doin' that for
a sippin' cider through a straw?"
(Repeat)
She said to me, "Why don't you know
that sippin' cider's all I know?"
(Repeat)
Now 28 kids all call me paw
from sippin' cider through a straw.
(Repeat)
This is the end. There ain't no more
of sippin' cider through a straw.
(Repeat)
Many thanks to Nancy Membrez for singing "The Prettiest Girl" for us!