The Goose and the Common


"The Goose and the Common" is an anonymous English poem which comments on the social injustice caused by the privatization of common land during the enclosures in England.
As an orally transmitted folk poem, it is found in various forms and variations. It is estimated to have been composed in the mid to late 18th century. It is found recorded in magazines as early as 1810, with its first recorded attestation in a 4 stanza form in 1821.
The poem has had an enduring presence in English oral tradition, being often quoted or referenced in discussions and debates around inclosure, including on more than one occasion in the houses of parliament. Today, the poem is often referenced in connection to the privatization of common resources, not just land, such as seed genetics, the human genome and publicly funded research.
The poem generally consists of pairs of rhyming couplets, sometimes one stanza only, and sometimes in a longer variant.

Text

the 4 stanza version is most often quoted as follows:

Variations

The poem is also often found in a shorter forms, often one stanza only, as above, and with a few variations, such as:
Another, which similarly focuses on the comparatively morality of the act, rather than degree of earthly punishment:
One of the earliest recorded attestations in any form, found in The Monthly Magazine, 1810:

Derivative works

The posthumously released 2014 compilation album Rarities Volumes 1 & 2 by experimental musician Lindsay Cooper features "The Song of the Goose and the Common" which features lyrics adapted from the poem.
In the 2019 album Enclosure by The Askew Sisters, the poem is sung accompanied by cello and triangle in the track "Goose and Common".
The 2020 music video, "The Goose and the Common", a collaboration between Shadab Shayegan and Heaven Sent Cat, has the poem fully included within the lyrics.
In 2023, Helen Bell set the poem to a newly composed melody and added her own new chorus lyric, releasing a video in which it is sung by two voices, accompanied by two violas.
The 2025 novel Sunrise on the Reaping by Suzanne Collins, part of The Hunger Games series, sees the character Lenore Dove put the poem to music as she sings about her corrupt and greedy government.