GrannyBeek : www.scottishpoetrylibrary.org.uk/poem/fairies
eGJ thanks for the words. 
aprilrose Hope you saw all the words another poster supplied.
When I sang ‘Grandfather’s Clock’ to my son, he’d be about 4 at the time. He said, ‘Did it really stop when he died, that's incredible!’ To children, all songs are true.
Urmstongran Dear wee children. www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dw-oRXq_rUI
Although I have said I don’t like music, I DO like singing, or used to.
I've sung in folk clubs up and down the UK and NZ and nearly always it’s been the old songs:
Barbara Allen; Linden Lea; Ash Grove, Last Rose of Summer; Sweet Nightingale; AshGrove; Wild Mountain Thyme.
When I came back to New Zealand I started a folk music club and also attended Auckland Folk Festival for over 20 years as a singer and volunteer worker and these old song are still sung and kept alive.
www.mudcat.org (good site for folk lyrics and some tunes)
I attended a workshops in which it was explained that many of the innocent sounding lyrics were actually, if you knew the code, quite racy. Also, the meanings of oak, ash and ivy in folk songs are not what they first seem.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sweet_Nightingale
When a knight won his spurs was written by Jan Struther of Mrs Miniver fame.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jan_Struther (a sad little entry)
BuffyBee www.youtube.com/watch?v=fdxTrHDySOM
When we sang this at school, we alternated, boys and girls.
Girls: Jacky boy
Boys: Master?
Girls: Sing ‘ee well
Boys: Very well.
Grandma70 I chose 'My Song is Love Unknown' when I was baptised at 18. It always makes me cry.
Anxiousgran Many years ago I was told that sailors wore gold rings in their ears as that represented ‘ready money’ in any part of the world. How true this is I don’t know.
Recently, I was asked by my Maori group to sing a song from my home area and fond as I am of Yorkshire, just couldn’t bring myself to sing ‘On Ikley Moor Bah’t ‘at’ - a song about cannibalism. 
Farview: www.youtube.com/watch?v=izsFt76fNfw
Saggi
Did you go to a religious based school perhaps Bradford Lass
Not until I was 11 and transferred from primary but in those days, it was accepted that if you weren’t Jewish, you were automatically a Christian and all of life, including school, was permeated by this assumption. 
Grandma2213 www.youtube.com/watch?v=H4pVu1BnSv4
I also loved, ‘Little lamb who made thee?’ poets.org/poem/lamb
EllanVannin Daffyd y Garreg Wen: This is the most beautiful version – it’s a song I’ve sung many times...but certainly never as well as this. 
www.youtube.com/watch?v=RBm9uG51YmQ
Dogsmother And we’re bound for Botany Bay…..another favourite. I love shanties but traditionally women don't sing them. Some do of course nowadays but I was content to sing along rather than add them to the repertoire.