THE SONGS PLAYED TO BABIES IN FRANCE
French baby songs, or comptines, are far more than simple lullabies. They’re a child’s first encounter with the sound, rhythm and quiet melancholy of the French language, favouring poetry and beauty over moral lessons. À la claire fontaine teaches nasal vowels through a story of lost love, whilst Une souris verte drills é sounds with the absurd image of a mouse in boiling oil. The songs rarely sanitise life: Au clair de la lune is about a rejected plea for light. Most are paired with gestures, from Ainsi font, font, font to Savez-vous planter les choux, so children perform them as much as sing them. With simple, often minor-key melodies, they lodge in the ear at age two and remain there for life, which is why any French adult can still recite all twelve verses of Alouette, gentille alouette. If British nursery rhymes teach rules and caution, French comptines teach sound, longing, and a shrug at life’s absurdity.
À la claire fontaine is one of France’s oldest and most poignant folk songs, dating back to the 1600s. It was carried to Canada by the French settlers, where it became an unofficial anthem of French-speaking communities. Gentle and melancholic, it opens with a deceptively simple scene:
“À la claire fontaine
M’en allant promener
J’ai trouvé l’eau si belle
Que je m’y suis baignée
Il y a longtemps que je t’aime
Jamais je ne t’oublierai”
It translates as:
“At the clear fountain
Going for a walk
I found the water so beautiful
That I bathed in it
I have loved you for a long time
I will never forget you.”
The song turns a little sad in later verses, as the singer dries herself beneath an oak tree, hears a nightingale sing, and laments a lost love: she refused a bouquet of roses and, in doing so, lost her sweetheart without deserving it, now wishing only that the rose were still on the bush and her beloved still loved her. The tune is slow and instantly recognisable to any Francophone, and while children learn it for its lilting é, ée sounds and simple melody, the lyrics carry the weight of memory, regret and innocence lost. À la claire fontaine offers the other side of the French childhood canon: a longing for an order that was broken by one small refusal.
French culture values beauty and sound over moral lessons. Anglo nursery rhymes come from a didactic tradition where stories must teach right from wrong, so the absurd gets edited out or punished. French songs keep it, because art isn’t required to justify itself. The lyrics tolerate randomness and injustice without closure: Au clair de la lune ends with a refused favour. Paired with minor-key melodies and poetic language, they teach early that sadness and beauty can coexist, and that life doesn’t always give tidy reasons. Children aren’t shielded from the idea that order can break over something small, like refusing a rose in À la claire fontaine. The absurdity isn’t added. It’s just never taken out, set to music, and handed to them at age two.
French comptines give children something rare: honesty set to music. While other cultures scrub childhood clean of loss and contradiction, French rhymes trust a two-year-old to hold beauty and sadness in the same breath. They teach the ear before they teach the conscience. There is no condescension here, no simplified fable where good is rewarded and evil punished. Instead, there is À la claire fontaine, where one small refusal breaks an order that never returns. There is 'Une souris verte, absurd and vivid, refusing to explain itself. This is training in resilience without preaching it. It says: life will be strange, unjust, and heartbreaking, and still worth singing. A child raised on these songs learns early that melancholy is not a disease but depth, that the world does not owe you closure, and that you can meet its absurdity with grace and a shrug. That is not a lesser childhood. It is a braver one.
(Avtar Mota)
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