South Australia (song) - Work Function and Lyrical Variations

Work Function and Lyrical Variations

Smith said it was a capstan chanty, as evidenced by the refrain which indicates, "Heave away! Heave away!" Parrish found that stevedores hauling heavy timber used the song with the chorus, "Haul away, I’m a rollin’ king."

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Famous quotes containing the words work, function and/or variations:

    Christopher Cross: You shouldn’t be alone in the street so late at night.
    Kitty March: I was coming home from work.
    Christopher Cross: You work this late?
    Kitty March: Mmm, hmmm.
    Christopher Cross: What do you do?
    Kitty March: Guess.
    Christopher Cross: You’re an actress.
    Kitty March: Oh, you are clever!
    Dudley Nichols (1895–1960)

    As a medium of exchange,... worrying regulates intimacy, and it is often an appropriate response to ordinary demands that begin to feel excessive. But from a modernized Freudian view, worrying—as a reflex response to demand—never puts the self or the objects of its interest into question, and that is precisely its function in psychic life. It domesticates self-doubt.
    Adam Phillips, British child psychoanalyst. “Worrying and Its Discontents,” in On Kissing, Tickling, and Being Bored, p. 58, Harvard University Press (1993)

    I may be able to spot arrowheads on the desert but a refrigerator is a jungle in which I am easily lost. My wife, however, will unerringly point out that the cheese or the leftover roast is hiding right in front of my eyes. Hundreds of such experiences convince me that men and women often inhabit quite different visual worlds. These are differences which cannot be attributed to variations in visual acuity. Man and women simply have learned to use their eyes in very different ways.
    Edward T. Hall (b. 1914)