The song shares a title with an award-winning collection of poetry from 1964 by fellow Canadian
Margaret Atwood. But Mitchell has said that "The Circle Game" was written as a response to the song "
Sugar Mountain" by
Neil Young, whom she had befriended on the Canadian folk-music circuit in the mid-1960s. Young wrote "Sugar Mountain" in 1964 on his 19th birthday, lamenting the end of his teenage years: "You can't be 20 on Sugar Mountain". "The Circle Game" offers a more hopeful conclusion: "So the years spin by and now the boy is 20 / Though his dreams have lost some grandeur coming true / There'll be new dreams, maybe better dreams and plenty / Before the last revolving year is through." In a concert at the Paris Theatre in London on October 29, 1970, Mitchell opened her performance of "The Circle Game" with this speech: In 1965 I was up in Canada, and there was a friend of mine up there who had just left a rock'n'roll band (...) he had just newly turned 21, and that meant he was no longer allowed into his favourite haunt, which was kind of a teeny-bopper club and once you're over 21 you couldn't get back in there anymore; so he was really feeling terrible because his girlfriends and everybody that he wanted to hang out with, his band could still go there, you know, but it's one of the things that drove him to become a folk singer was that he couldn't play in this club anymore. 'Cause he was over the hill. (...) So he wrote this song that was called "Oh to Live on Sugar Mountain" which was a lament for his lost youth. (...) And I thought, God, you know, if we get to 21 and there's nothing after that, that's a pretty bleak future, so I wrote a song for him, and for myself just to give me some hope. It's called "The Circle Game." Mitchell composed the song in 1966. That year, Mitchell performed songs at a Detroit nightclub where
Tom Rush was headlining. Rush asked Mitchell to put some songs on tape for him, and she put "The Circle Game" at the end of the tape. Rush was quoted as saying, "As long as kids grow up, that tune will be relevant." Before Rush could release the song, it was recorded in 1967 by
Ian & Sylvia for their album
So Much for Dreaming and by
Buffy Sainte-Marie for her album
Fire & Fleet & Candlelight. Rush recorded the song as the title track of his 1968 album
The Circle Game, which also featured the Mitchell compositions "Tin Angel" and "Urge for Going". ==Buffy Sainte-Marie version==