The Project Gutenberg EBook of English and Scottish Ballads, Volume II (of
8), by Various
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Title: English and Scottish Ballads, Volume II (of 8)
Author: Various
Editor: Francis James Child
Release Date: October 12, 2011 [EBook #37738]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENGLISH, SCOTTISH BALLADS, VOL 2 OF 8 ***
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Fraser-Cunliffe and the Online Distributed Proofreading
Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
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[Pg i]
Transcriber's Notes
Linenotes have been grouped at the end of each ballad. Linenote
anchors have been added to the text which provide a link to the appropriate note.
Irregular and inconsistent spellings have been retained as in the
original. Typographical errors such as wrongly placed line numbers,
punctuation or inconsistent formatting have been corrected without
comment. Where changes have been made to the wording these are
listed at the end of the book.
ENGLISH AND SCOTTISH
BALLADS.
EDITED BY
FRANCIS JAMES CHILD.
VOLUME II.
BOSTON:
LITTLE, BROWN AND COMPANY.
M.DCCC.LX.
[Pg ii]
Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1857,
by Little, Brown and Company, in the Clerk's Office of
the District Court of Massachusetts.
RIVERSIDE, CAMBRIDGE:
STEREOTYPED AND PRINTED BY
H. O. HOUGHTON AND COMPANY.
[Pg iii]
CONTENTS OF VOLUME SECOND.
[Pg 1]
BOOK II.
[Pg 3]
GLASGERION.
The two following ballads have the same subject,
and perhaps had a common original. The "Briton
Glaskyrion" is honourably mentioned as a harper
by Chaucer, in company with Chiron, Orion, and Orpheus,
(House of Fame, B. iii. v. 118,) and with the
last he is also associated, as Mr. Finlay has pointed out,
by Bishop Douglas, in the Palice of Honour. "The
Scottish writers," says Jamieson, "adapting the name
to their own meridian, call him Glenkindy, Glenskeenie,
&c."
Glasgerion is reprinted from Percy's Reliques, iii. 83.
Glasgerion was a kings owne sonne,
And a harper he was goode;
He harped in the kings chambere,
Where cuppe and caudle stoode,[Pg 4]
And soe did hee in the queens chambere,5
Till ladies waxed wood,
And then bespake the kinges daughter,
And these wordes thus shee sayd:—
"Strike on, strike on, Glasgerion,
Of thy striking doe not blinne;10
Theres never a stroke comes oer thy harpe,
But it glads my hart withinne."
"Faire might him fall, ladye," quoth hee,
"Who taught you nowe to speake!
I have loved you, ladye, seven longe yeere,15
My harte I neere durst breake."
"But come to my bower, my Glasgerion,
When all men are att rest:
As I am a ladie true of my promise,
Thou shalt bee a welcome guest."20
Home then came Glasgerion,
A glad man, lord! was hee:
"And, come thou hither, Jacke my boy,
Come hither unto mee.
"For the kinges daughter of Normandye25
Hath granted mee my boone;
And att her chambere must I bee
Beffore the cocke have crowen."[Pg 5]
"O master, master," then quoth hee,
"Lay your head downe on this stone;30
For I will waken you, master deere,
Afore it be time to gone."
But up then rose that lither ladd,
And hose and shoone did on;
A coller he cast upon his necke,35
Hee seemed a gentleman.
And when he came to the ladyes chamber,
He thrild upon a pinn:
The lady was true of her promise,
And rose and lett him inn.40
He did not take the lady gaye
To boulster nor to bed:
[Nor thoughe hee had his wicked wille,
A single word he sed.]
He did not kisse that ladyes mouthe,45
Nor when he came, nor yode:
And sore that ladye did mistrust,
He was of some churls bloud.
But home then came that lither ladd,
And did off his hose and shoone;50
And cast the coller from off his necke:
He was but a churlès sonne.[Pg 6]
"Awake, awake, my deere master,
The cock hath well-nigh crowen;
Awake, awake, my master deere,55
I hold it time to be gone.
"For I have saddled your horsse, master,
Well bridled I have your steede,
And I have served you a good breakfast,
For thereof ye have need."60
Up then rose good Glasgerion,
And did on hose and shoone,
And cast a coller about his necke:
For he was a kinge his sonne.
And when he came to the ladyes chambere,65
He thrilled upon the pinne;
The ladye was more than true of promise,
And rose and let him inn.
"O whether have you left with me
Your bracelet or your glove?70
Or are you returned back againe
To know more of my love?"
Glasgerion swore a full great othe,
By oake, and ashe, and thorne;
"Ladye, I was never in your chambere,75
Sith the time that I was borne."[Pg 7]
"O then it was your lither foot-page,
He hath beguiled mee:"
Then shee pulled forth a little pen-knìffe,
That hanged by her knee.80
Sayes, "there shall never noe churlès blood
Within my bodye spring:
No churlès blood shall e'er defile
The daughter of a kinge."
Home then went Glasgerion,85
And woe, good lord! was hee:
Sayes, "come thou hither, Jacke my boy,
Come hither unto mee.
"If I had killed a man to-night,
Jack, I would tell it thee:90
But if I have not killed a man to-night,
Jacke, thou hast killed three."
And he puld out his bright browne sword,
And dryed it on his sleeve,
And he smote off that lither ladds head,95
Who did his ladye grieve.
He sett the swords poynt till his brest,
The pummil untill a stone:
Throw the falsenesse of that lither ladd,
These three lives werne all gone.100
13, him fall.
77, MS. litle.
[Pg 8]
GLENKINDIE.
From Jamieson's Popular Ballads and Songs, i. 91. The copy
in the Thistle of Scotland, p. 31, is the same.
Glenkindie was ance a harper gude,
He harped to the king;
And Glenkindie was ance the best harper
That ever harp'd on a string.
He's taen his harp intil his hand,
He harpit and he sang;10
And ay as he harpit to the king,
To haud him unthought lang.[Pg 9]
"I'll gie you a robe, Glenkindie,
A robe o' the royal pa',
Gin ye will harp i' the winter's night15
Afore my nobles a'."
He's taen his harp intill his hand,
He's harpit them a' asleep,
Except it was the young countess,
That love did waukin keep.
Says, "Whan day is dawen, and cocks hae crawen,
And wappit their wings sae wide,30
It's ye may come to my bower door,
And streek you by my side.
"But look that ye tell na Gib your man,
For naething that ye dee;
For, an ye tell him, Gib your man,35
He'll beguile baith you and me."
He's taen his harp intill his hand;
He harpit and he sang;
And he is hame to Gib his man,
As fast as he could gang.40
"O mith I tell you, Gib, my man,
Gin I a man had slain?"
"O that ye micht, my gude master,
Altho' ye had slain ten."[Pg 11]
"Then tak ye tent now, Gib, my man,45
My bidden for to dee;
And, but an ye wauken me in time,
Ye sall be hangit hie.
"Whan day has dawen, and cocks hae crawen,
And wappit their wings sae wide,50
I'm bidden gang till yon lady's bower,
And streek me by her side."
"Gae hame to your bed, my good master;
Ye've waukit, I fear, o'er lang;
For I'll wauken you in as good time,55
As ony cock i' the land."
He's taen his harp intill his hand,
He harpit and he sang,
Until he harpit his master asleep,
Syne fast awa did gang.60
And he is till that lady's bower,
As fast as he could rin;
When he cam till that lady's bower,
He chappit at the chin.
"O wha is this," says that lady,65
"That opens nae and comes in?"
"It's I, Glenkindie, your ain true love,
O open and lat me in!"[Pg 12]
She kent he was nae gentle knicht
That she had latten in;70
For neither whan he gaed nor cam,
Kist he her cheek or chin.
He neither kist her whan he cam,
Nor clappit her when he gaed;
And in and at her bower window,75
The moon shone like the gleed.
"O, ragged is your hose, Glenkindie,
And riven is your sheen,
And reavel'd is your yellow hair
That I saw late yestreen."80
"The stockings they are Gib my man's,
They came first to my hand;
And this is Gib my man's shoon;
At my bed feet they stand.
I've reavell'd a' my yellow hair85
Coming against the wind."
He's taen the harp intill his hand,
He harpit and he sang,
Until he cam to his master,
As fast as he could gang.90
"Won up, won up, my good master;
I fear ye sleep o'er lang;[Pg 13]
There's nae a cock in a' the land
But has wappit his wings and crawn."
Glenkindie's tane his harp in hand,95
He harpit and he sang,
And he has reach'd the lady's bower,
Afore that e'er he blan.
When he cam to the lady's bower,
He chappit at the chin;100
"O, wha is that at my bower door,
That opens na and comes in?"
"It's I, Glenkindie, your ain true love,
And in I canna win."
* * * * * * *
"Forbid it, forbid it," says that lady,105
"That ever sic shame betide;
That I should first be a wild loon's lass,
And than a young knight's bride."
There was nae pity for that lady,
For she lay cald and dead;110
But a' was for him, Glenkindie,
In bower he must go mad.
He'd harpit a fish out o' saut water;
The water out o' a stane;[Pg 14]
The milk out o' a maiden's breast,115
That bairn had never nane.
But cald and dead was that lady,
Nor heeds for a' his maen;
An he wad harpit till domisday,
She'll never speak again.
He's taen his harp intill his hand;125
He harpit and he sang;
And he is hame to Gib his man
As fast as he could gang.
"Come forth, come forth, now, Gib, my man,
Till I pay you your fee;130
Come forth, come forth, now, Gib, my man;
Weel payit sall ye be!"
And he has taen him, Gib, his man,
And he has hang'd him hie;
And he's hangit him o'er his ain yate,135
As high as high could be.
5-8. These feats are all but equalled by the musician in
the Swedish and Danish Harpans Kraft.
"He harped the bark from every tree,
And he harped the young from folk and from fee.
"He harped the hind from the wild-wood home,
He harped the bairn from its mother's womb."
Arwidsson, No. 149.
"Villemand takes his harp in his hand,
He goes down by the water to stand.
"He struck the harp with his hand,
And the fish leapt out upon the strand."
Grundtvig, No. 40.
17-20. This stanza is found in the opening of Brown Robin,
which commences thus:—
"The king but and his nobles a'
Sat birling at the wine, [bis]
He would hae nane but his ae daughter
To wait on them at dine.
"She served them but, she served them ben,
Intill a gown o' green;
But her e'e was ay on Brown Robin,
That stood low under the rain," &c.
J.
25-28. The following stanza occurs in one of the editor's
copies of The Gay Gosshawk:—
"O first he sang a merry song,
And then he sang a grave;
And then he pecked his feathers gray,
To her the letter gave."
J.
64, at the chin. Sic.
120. This stanza has been altered, to introduce a little variety,
and prevent the monotonous tiresomeness of repetition.
J.
[Pg 15]
THE OLD BALLAD OF LITTLE MUSGRAVE
AND THE LADY BARNARD.
The popularity of this ancient ballad is evinced by
its being frequently quoted in old plays. In Beaumont
and Fletcher's Knight of the Burning Pestle,
(produced in 1611,) the fourteenth stanza is cited, thus:
"And some they whistled and some they sung,
Hey, down, down!
And some did loudly say,
Ever as the lord Barnet's horn blew,
Away, Musgrave, away."
Act V. Scene 3.
The oldest known copy of this piece is found in Wit
Restor'd, (1658,) p. 174, and from the reprint of that
publication we have taken it, (p. 293.) Dryden seems
to have adopted it from the same source into his Miscellanies,
and Ritson has inserted Dryden's version in Ancient
Songs and Ballads, ii. 116. Percy's copy (Reliques,
iii. 106,) was inferior to the one here used, and was
besides somewhat altered by the editor.
A Scottish version, furnished by Jamieson, is given
in the Appendix to this volume, and another, extend[Pg 16]ing
to forty-eight stanzas, in Scottish Traditional Versions
of Ancient Ballads, Percy Society, vol. xvii. p. 21.
Similar incidents, with a verbal coincidence in one
stanza, occur in the ballad immediately succeeding the
present.
As it fell one holy-day, hay downe,
As manybe in the yeare,
When young men and maids together did goe,
Their mattins and masse to heare,
Little Musgrave came to the church dore,5
The preist was at private masse;
But he had more minde of the faire women,
Then he had of our ladys grace.
The one of them was clad in green,
Another was clad in pall;10
And then came in my lord Barnards wife,
The fairest amonst them all.
She cast an eye on little Musgrave,
As bright as the summer sun,
And then bethought this little Musgrave,15
"This ladys heart have I woonn."[Pg 17]
Quoth she, "I have loved thee, little Musgrave,
Full long and many a day:"
"So have I loved you, fair lady,
Yet never word durst I say."20
"I have a bower at Buckelsfordbery,
Full daintyly it is deight;
If thou wilt wend thither, thou little Musgrave,
Thou's lig in mine armes all night."
Quoth he, "I thank yee, faire lady,25
This kindnes thou showest to me;
But whether it be to my weal or woe,
This night I will lig with thee."
All that heard a little tinny page,
By his ladyes coach as he ran:30
[Quoth he,] "allthough I am my ladyes foot-page,
Yet I am lord Barnards man.
"My lord Barnard shall knowe of this,
Whether I sink or swimm:"
And ever where the bridges were broake,35
He laid him downe to swimme.
"Asleepe, awake! thou lord Barnard,
As thou art a man of life;[Pg 18]
For little Musgrave is at Bucklesfordbery,
Abed with thy own wedded wife."40
"If this be true, thou little tinny page,
This thing thou tellest to mee,
Then all the land in Bucklesfordbery
I freely will give to thee.
"But if it be a ly, thou little tinny page,45
This thing thou tellest to me,
On the hyest tree in Bucklesfordbery
There hanged shalt thou be."
He called up his merry men all:—
"Come saddle me my steed;50
This night must I to Buckellsfordbery,
For I never had greater need."
And some of them whistl'd, and some of them sung,
And some these words did say,
Ever when my lord Barnards horn blew,55
"Away, Musgrave, away!"
"Methinks I hear the thresel-cock,
Methinks I hear the jaye;
Methinks I hear my Lord Barnard,—
And I would I were away."60
[Pg 19]
"Lye still, lye still, thou little Musgrave,
And huggell me from the cold;
Tis nothing but a shephards boy,
A driving his sheep to the fold.
"Is not thy hawke upon a perch?65
Thy steed eats oats and hay,
And thou [a] fair lady in thine armes,—
And wouldst thou bee away?"
With that my lord Barnard came to the dore,
And lit a stone upon;70
He plucked out three silver keys,
And he open'd the dores each one.
He lifted up the coverlett,
He lifted up the sheet;
"How now, how now, thou little Musgrave,75
Doest thou find my lady sweet?"
"I find her sweet," quoth little Musgrave,
"The more 'tis to my paine;
I would gladly give three hundred pounds
That I were on yonder plaine."80
"Arise, arise, thou littell Musgrave,
And put thy clothés on;
It shal ne'er be said in my country,
I have killed a naked man.[Pg 20]
"I have two swords in one scabberd,85
Full deere they cost my purse;
And thou shalt have the best of them,
And I will have the worse."
The first stroke that little Musgrave stroke,
He hurt Lord Barnard sore;90
The next stroke that Lord Barnard stroke,
Little Musgrave ne're struck more.
With that bespake this faire lady,
In bed whereas she lay;
"Although thou'rt dead, thou little Musgrave,95
Yet I for thee will pray;
"And wish well to thy soule will I,
So long as I have life;
So will I not for thee, Barnard,
Although I am thy wedded wife."100
He cut her paps from off her brest,
(Great pity it was to see,)
That some drops of this ladies heart's blood
Ran trickling downe her knee.
"Woe worth you, woe worth [you], my mery men all,105
You were ne're borne for my good;
Why did you not offer to stay my hand,
When ye saw me wax so wood![Pg 21]
"For I have slaine the bravest sir knight
That ever rode on steed;110
So have I done the fairest lady
That ever did womans deed.
"A grave, a grave," Lord Barnard cryd,
"To put these lovers in;
But lay my lady on [the] upper hand,115
For she came of the better kin."
8, lady.
10, pale.
11, Bernards.
22, geight.
23, wed.
29, With that he heard: tyne.
34, sinn.
37, or wake.
55, And ever.
108, see.
[Pg 22]
LORD RANDAL (A).
From Jamieson's Popular Ballads and Songs, i. 162.
"The story of this ballad very much resembles that
of Little Musgrave and Lord Barnard. The common
title is, The Bonny Birdy. The first stanza is sung
thus:—
'There was a knight, on a summer's night,
Was riding o'er the lee, diddle;
And there he saw a bonny birdy
Was singing on a tree, diddle:
O wow for day, diddle!
And dear gin it were day!
Gin it were day, and I were away,
For I ha'ena lang time to stay.'
In the text, the burden of diddle has been omitted;
and the name of Lord Randal introduced, for the sake
of distinction, and to prevent the ambiguity arising
from 'the knight,' which is equally applicable to both."
The lines supplied by Jamieson have been omitted.
Allan Cunningham's "improved" version of the
Bonny Birdy may be seen in his Songs of Scotland, ii.
130.[Pg 23]
Lord Randal wight, on a summer's night,
Was riding o'er the lee,
And there he saw a bonny birdie
Was singin' on a tree:
"O wow for day!5
And dear gin it were day!
Gin it were day, and I were away,
For I ha'ena lang time to stay!
"Mak haste, mak haste, ye wicht baron;
What keeps ye here sae late?10
Gin ye kent what was doing at hame,
I trow ye wad look blate.
"And O wow for day!
And dear gin it were day.
Gin it were day, and ye were away;15
For ye ha'ena lang time to stay!"
"O what needs I toil day and night,
My fair body to spill,
When I ha'e knichts at my command,
And ladies at my will?"20
"O weel is he, ye wight baron,
Has the blear drawn o'er his e'e;
But your lady has a knight in her arms twa,
That she lo'es far better nor thee.[Pg 24]
"And O wow for day!25
And dear gin it were day!
Gin it were day, and ye were away;
For ye ha'ena lang time to stay!"
"Ye lie, ye lie, ye bonny birdie;
How you lie upon my sweet;30
I will tak out my bonny bow,
And in troth I will you sheet."
"But afore ye ha'e your bow weel bent,
And a' your arrows yare,
I will flee till anither tree,35
Whare I can better fare.
"And O wow for day
And dear gin it were day!
Gin it were day, and I were away;
For I ha'ena lang time to stay!"40
"O whare was ye gotten, and where was ye clecked,
My bonny birdie, tell me?"
"O, I was clecked in good green wood,
Intill a holly tree;
A baron sae bald my nest herried,45
And ga'e me to his ladie.
"Wi' good white bread, and farrow-cow milk,
He bade her feed me aft;[Pg 25]
And ga'e her a little wee summer-dale wandie,
To ding me sindle and saft.50
"Wi' good white bread, and farrow-cow milk,
I wat she fed me nought;
But wi' a little wee summer-dale wandie,
She dang me sair and oft:—
Gin she had done as ye her bade,55
I wadna tell how she has wrought.
"And O wow for day!
And dear gin it were day!
Gin it were day, and ye were away;
For ye ha'ena lang time to stay."60
Lord Randal rade, and the birdie flew,
The live-lang summer's night,
Till he cam till his lady's bower-door,
Then even down he did light.
The birdie sat on the crap o' a tree,65
And I wat it sang fu' dight:
"O wow for day!
And dear gin it were day!
Gin it were day, and I were away;
For I ha'ena lang time to stay!"70
* * * * * * *
[Pg 26]
"O wow for day!
And dear gin it were day!
Gin it were day, and ye were away;
For ye ha'ena lang time to stay!"
"And O wow for day!
And dear gin it were day!80
Gin it were day, and I were away;
For I ha'ena lang time to stay!"
"What needs ye lang for day,
And wish that ye were away?
Is na your hounds in my cellar85
Eating white meal and gray?"
"Yet, O wow for day!
And dear gin it were day!
Gin it were day, and I were away,
For I ha'ena lang time to stay!"90
"Is na your horse in my stable,
Eating good corn and hay?[Pg 27]
Is na your hawk on my perch tree,
Just perching for his prey?
And isna yoursel in my arms twa;95
Then how can ye lang for day?"
"Yet, O wow for day!
And dear gin it were day!
Gin it were day, and I were away,
For I ha'ena lang time to stay.100
"Yet, O wow for day!
And dear gin it were day!
For he that's in bed wi' anither man's wife,
Has never lang time to stay."
* * * * * * *
Then out Lord Randal drew his brand,105
And straiked it o'er a strae;
And through and through the fause knight's waste
He gar'd cald iron gae;
And I hope ilk ane sall sae be serv'd,
That treats an honest man sae!110
77, This is a proverbial saying in Scotland. J.
[Pg 28]
GIL MORRICE.
"Of the many ancient ballads which have been
preserved by tradition among the peasantry of Scotland,
none has excited more interest in the world of
letters than the beautiful and pathetic tale of Gil Morice;
and this, no less on account of its own intrinsic
merits as a piece of exquisite poetry, than of its having
furnished the plot of the justly celebrated tragedy
of Douglas. It has likewise supplied Mr. Langhorne
with the principal materials from which he has woven
the fabric of his sweet, though prolix poem of Owen of
Carron. Perhaps the list could be easily increased of
those who have drawn their inspiration from this affecting
strain of Olden Minstrelsy.
"If any reliance is to be placed on the traditions of
that part of the country where the scene of the ballad
is laid, we will be enforced to believe that it is founded
on facts which occurred at some remote period of Scottish
History. The 'grene wode' of the ballad was the
ancient forest of Dundaff, in Stirlingshire, and Lord
Barnard's Castle is said to have occupied a precipitous
cliff, overhanging the water of Carron, on the lands of
Halbertshire. A small burn, which joins the Carron[Pg 29]
about five miles above these lands, is named the Earlsburn,
and the hill near the source of that stream is
called the Earlshill, both deriving their appellations,
according to the unvarying traditions of the country,
from the unfortunate Erle's son who is the hero of the
ballad. He, also, according to the same respectable
authority, was 'beautiful exceedingly,' and especially
remarkable for the extreme length and loveliness of
his yellow hair, which shrouded him as it were a golden
mist. To these floating traditions we are, probably,
indebted for the attempts which have been made to
improve and embellish the ballad, by the introduction
of various new stanzas since its first appearance in a
printed form.
"In Percy's Reliques, it is mentioned that it had run
through two editions in Scotland, the second of which
appeared at Glasgow in 1755, 8vo.; and that to both
there was prefixed an advertisement, setting forth that
the preservation of the poem was owing 'to a lady, who
favoured the printers with a copy, as it was carefully collected
from the mouths of old women and nurses,' and
requesting that 'any reader, who could render it more
correct or complete, would oblige the public with such
improvements.' This was holding out too tempting a
bait not to be greedily snapped at by some of those 'Ingenious
Hands' who have corrupted the purity of legendary
song in Scotland by manifest forgeries and gross impositions.
Accordingly, sixteen additional verses soon
appeared in manuscript, which the Editor of the Reliques
has inserted in their proper places, though he
rightly views them in no better light than that of an
ingenious interpolation. Indeed, the whole ballad of
Gil Morice, as the writer of the present notice has been
politely informed by the learned and elegant Editor of[Pg 30]
the Border Minstrelsy, underwent a total revisal about
the period when the tragedy of Douglas was in the zenith
of its popularity, and this improved copy, it seems,
embraced the ingenious interpolation above referred
to. Independent altogether of this positive information,
any one, familiar with the state in which traditionary
poetry has been transmitted to the present
times, can be at no loss to detect many more 'ingenious
interpolations,' as well as paraphrastic additions,
in the ballad as now printed. But, though it has been
grievously corrupted in this way, the most scrupulous
inquirer into the authenticity of ancient song can have
no hesitation in admitting that many of its verses, even
as they now stand, are purely traditionary, and fair,
and genuine parcels of antiquity, unalloyed with any
base admixture of modern invention, and in nowise
altered, save in those changes of language to which all
oral poetry is unavoidably subjected, in its progress
from one age to another." Motherwell.
We have given Gil Morrice as it stands in the Reliques,
(iii. 132,) degrading to the margin those stanzas
which are undoubtedly spurious, and we have
added an ancient traditionary version, obtained by
Motherwell, which, if it appear short and crude, is at
least comparatively incorrupt. Chield Morice, taken
down from recitation, and printed in Motherwell's
Minstrelsy, (p. 269,) nearly resembles Gil Morrice, as
here exhibited. We have also inserted in the Appendix
Childe Maurice, "the very old imperfect copy,"
mentioned in the Reliques, and first published from
the Percy MS. by Jamieson.
The sets of Gil Morrice in the collections of Herd,
Pinkerton, Ritson, &c., are all taken from Percy.[Pg 31]
Gil Morrice was an erles son,
His name it waxed wide:
It was nae for his great riches,
Nor zet his mickle pride;
Bot it was for a lady gay5
That liv'd on Carron side.
"Quhair sall I get a bonny boy,
That will win hose and shoen;
That will gae to Lord Barnard's ha',
And bid his lady cum?10
"And ze maun rin my errand, Willie,
And ze may rin wi' pride;
Quhen other boys gae on their foot,
On horseback ze sall ride."
"O no! O no! my master dear!15
I dare nae for my life;
I'll no gae to the bauld barons,
For to triest furth his wife."[Pg 32]
"My bird Willie, my boy Willie,
My dear Willie," he sayd:20
"How can ze strive against the stream?
For I sall be obeyd."
"Bot, O my master dear!" he cry'd,
"In grene wod ze're zour lain;
Gi owre sic thochts, I walde ze rede,25
For fear ze should be tain."
"Haste, haste, I say, gae to the ha',
Bid hir cum here wi' speid:
If ze refuse my heigh command,
I'll gar zour body bleid.30
"Gae bid hir take this gay mantel,
'T is a' gowd bot the hem;
Bid hir cum to the gude grene wode,
And bring nane hot hir lain:
"And there it is, a silken sarke,35
Hir ain hand sewd the sleive;
And bid hir cum to Gill Morice,
Speir nae bauld barons leave."
"Yes, I will gae zour black errand,
Though it be to zour cost;40
Sen ze by me will nae be warn'd,
In it ze sall find frost.[Pg 33]
"The baron he is a man of might,
He neir could bide to taunt;
As ze will see, before it's nicht,45
How sma' ze hae to vaunt.
"And sen I maun zour errand rin
Sae sair against my will,
I'se mak a vow and keip it trow,
It sall be done for ill."50
And quhen he came to Barnard's ha',55
Would neither chap nor ca';
Bot set his bent bow to his breist,
And lichtly lap the wa'.
He wauld nae tell the man his errand,
Though he stude at the gait;60
Bot straiht into the ha' he cam,
Quhair they were set at meit.
"Hail! hail! my gentle sire and dame!
My message winna waite;[Pg 34]
Dame, ze maun to the gude grene wod,65
Before that it be late.
"Ze're bidden tak this gay mantel,
'Tis a' gowd bot the hem:
Zou maun gae to the gude grene wode,
Ev'n by your sel alane.70
"And there it is, a silken sarke,
Your ain hand sewd the sleive:
Ze maun gae speik to Gill Morice;
Speir nae bauld barons leave."
The lady stamped wi' hir foot,75
And winked wi' hir ee;
But a' that she could say or do,
Forbidden he wad nae bee.
"It's surely to my bow'r-woman;
It neir could be to me."80
"I brocht it to Lord Barnard's lady;
I trow that ze be she."
Then up and spack the wylie nurse,
(The bairn upon hir knee):
"If it be cum frae Gill Morice,85
It's deir welcum to mee."
"Ze leid, ze leid, ze filthy nurse,
Sae loud I heird ze lee;
I brocht it to Lord Barnard's lady;
[Pg 35]I trow ze be nae shee."90
Then up and spack the bauld baron,
An angry man was hee;
He's tain the table wi' his foot,
Sae has he wi' his knee,
Till siller cup and ezer dish95
In flinders he gard flee.
"Gae bring a robe of zour cliding,
That hings upon the pin;
And I'll gae to the gude grene wode,
And speik wi' zour lemman."100
"O bide at hame, now, Lord Barnard,
I warde ze bide at hame;
Neir wyte a man for violence,
That neir wate ze wi' nane."
Gil Morice sate in gude grene wode,105
He whistled and he sang:
"O what mean a' the folk coming?
My mother tarries lang."
"Nae wonder, nae wonder, Gill Morice,
My lady loed thee weel;
The fairest part of my bodie115
Is blacker than thy heel.
"Zet neir the less now, Gill Morice,
For a' thy great beautie,
Ze's rew the day ze eir was born;
That head sall gae wi' me."120
Now he has drawn his trusty brand,
And slait it on the strae;
And thro' Gill Morice' fair body
He's gar cauld iron gae.
And he has tain Gill Morice up,
Laid him across his steid,130
And brocht him to his painted bowr,
And laid him on a bed.
The lady sat on castil wa',
Beheld baith dale and doun;
And there she saw Gill Morice' head135
Cum trailing to the toun.
"Far better I loe that bluidy head,
Bot and that zellow hair,
Than Lord Barnard, and a' his lands,
As they lig here and thair."140
And she has tain her Gill Morice,
And kissd baith mouth and chin:
"I was once as fow of Gill Morice,
As the hip is o' the stean.
"I got ze in my father's house,145
Wi' mickle sin and shame;
I brocht thee up in gude green wode,
Under the heavy rain.
"Oft have I by thy cradle sitten,
And fondly seen thee sleip;150
Bot now I gae about thy grave,
The saut tears for to weip."[Pg 38]
And syne she kissd his bluidy cheik,
And syne his bluidy chin:
"O better I loe my Gill Morice155
Than a' my kith and kin!"
5. The stall copies of the ballad complete the stanza thus:
His face was fair, lang was his hair,
In the wild woods he staid;
But his fame was for a fair lady
That lived on Carronside.
Which is no injudicious interpolation, inasmuch as it is founded
upon the traditions current among the vulgar, regarding
Gil Morice's comely face and long yellow hair. Motherwell.
51-58. A familiar commonplace in ballad poetry. See
Childe Vyet, Lady Maisry, Lord Barnaby, &c.
95, mazer.
109
His hair was like the threeds of gold
Drawne frae Minerva's loome;
His lipps like roses drapping dew;
His breath was a' perfume.
His brow was like the mountain snae
Gilt by the morning beam;
His cheeks like living roses glow;
His een like azure stream.
The boy was clad in robes of grene,
Sweete as the infant spring;
And like the mavis on the bush,
He gart the vallies ring.
122, slaited.
125
That sweetly wavd around his face,
That face beyond compare;
He sang sae sweet, it might dispel
A' rage but fell dispair.
153. Stall copy, And first she kissed.
157
"Obraid me not, my Lord Barnard!
Obraid me not for shame!
Wi' that saim speir, O pierce my heart!
And put me out o' pain.
"Since nothing bot Gill Morice' head
Thy jelous rage could quell,
Let that saim hand now tak hir life
That neir to thee did ill.
"To me nae after days nor nichts
Will eir be saft or kind;
I'll fill the air with heavy sighs,
And greet till I am blind."
"Enouch of blood by me's bin spilt,
Seek not zour death frae me;
I rather lourd it had been my sel
Than eather him or thee.
"With waefo wae I hear zour plaint;
Sair, sair I rew the deid,
That eir this cursed hand of mine
Had gard his body bleid.[Pg 39]
"Dry up zour tears, my winsome dame,
Ze neir can heal the wound;
Ze see his head upon the speir,
His heart's blude on the ground.
"I curse the hand that did the deid,
The heart that thocht the ill;
The feet that bore me wi' sik speid,
The comely zouth to kill.
"I'll ay lament for Gill Morice,
As gin he were mine ain;
I'll neir forget the dreiry day
On which the zouth was slain."
[Pg 40]
CHILD NORYCE.
From Motherwell's Minstrelsy, p. 282.
"By testimony of a most unexceptionable description,—but
which it would be tedious here to detail,—the
Editor can distinctly trace this ballad as existing in
its present shape at least a century ago, which carries
it decidedly beyond the date of the first printed copy
of Gil Morice; and this with a poem which has been
preserved but by oral tradition, is no mean positive
antiquity."
In the Introduction to his collection, Motherwell
mentions his having found a more complete copy of this
ballad under the title of Babe Nourice.
Child Noryce is a clever young man,
He wavers wi' the wind;
His horse was silver shod before,
With the beaten gold behind.[Pg 41]
He called to his little man John,5
Saying, "You don't see what I see;
For O yonder I see the very first woman
That ever loved me.
"Here is a glove, a glove," he said,
"Lined with the silver gris;10
You may tell her to come to the merry green wood,
To speak to Child Nory.
"Here is a ring, a ring," he says,
"It's all gold but the stane;
You may tell her to come to the merry green wood,15
And ask the leave o' nane."
"So well do I love your errand, my master,
But far better do I love my life;
O would ye have me go to Lord Barnard's castel,
To betray away his wife?"20
"O don't I give you meat," he says,
"And don't I pay you fee?
How dare you stop my errand?" he says;
"My orders you must obey."
O when he came to Lord Barnard's castel,25
He tinkled at the ring;[Pg 42]
Who was as ready as Lord Barnard himself
To let this little boy in?
"Here is a glove, a glove," he says,
"Lined with the silver gris;30
You are bidden to come to the merry green wood,
To speak to Child Nory.
"Here is a ring, a ring," he says,
"It's all gold but the stane:
You are bidden to come to the merry green wood,35
And ask the leave o' nane."
Lord Barnard he was standing by,
And an angry man was he:
"O little did I think there was a lord in this world
My lady loved but me!"40
O he dressed himself in the Holland smocks,
And garments that was gay;
And he is away to the merry green wood,
To speak to Child Nory.[Pg 43]
Child Noryce sits on yonder tree,45
He whistles and he sings:
"O wae be to me," says Child Noryce,
"Yonder my mother comes!"
Child Noryce he came off the tree,
His mother to take off the horse:50
"Och alace, alace," says Child Noryce,
"My mother was ne'er so gross."
Lord Barnard he had a little small sword,
That hung low down by his knee;
He cut the head off Child Noryce,55
And put the body on a tree.
And when he came to his castel,
And to his lady's hall,
He threw the head into her lap,
Saying, "Lady, there is a ball!"60
She turned up the bloody head,
She kissed it frae cheek to chin:
"Far better do I love this bloody head
Than all my royal kin.
"When I was in my father's castell,65
In my virginitie,
There came a lord into the North,
Gat Child Noryce with me."[Pg 44]
"O wae be to thee, Lady Margaret," he said,
"And an ill death may you die;70
For if you had told me he was your son,
He had ne'er been slain by me."
27. This unquestionably should be Lady Barnard, instead of her lord. See third stanza under. M.
[Pg 45]
CLERK SAUNDERS.
From the Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, (iii. 175,)
where it was first published. It was "taken from Mr.
Herd's MSS., with several corrections from a shorter
and more imperfect copy in the same volume, and one
or two conjectural emendations in the arrangement of
the stanzas."
That that part of the ballad which follows the
death of the lovers is an independent story, is obvious
both from internal evidence, and from the separate
existence of those concluding stanzas in a variety of
forms: as, Sweet William's Ghost, (Tea-Table Miscellany,
ii. 142,) Sweet William and May Margaret,
(Kinloch, p. 241,) William and Marjorie, (Motherwell,
p. 186.) Of this second part, Motherwell observes,
that it is often made the tail-piece to other ballads
where a deceased lover appears to his mistress.
The two were, however, combined by Sir Walter Scott,
and the present Editor has contented himself with indicating
distinctly the close of the proper story.
An inferior copy of Clerk Saunders, published by
Jamieson, is inserted in the Appendix, for the sake of[Pg 46]
a few valuable stanzas. It resembles the Swedish
ballad of The Cruel Brother, (Svenska Folk-Visor,
iii. 107,) which, however, is much shorter. The edition
of Buchan, (i. 160,) is entirely worthless. A North-Country
version of the First Part is given by Kinloch,
Ancient Scottish Ballads, 233.
PART FIRST.
Clerk Saunders and may Margaret,
Walked ower yon garden green;
And sad and heavy was the love
That fell thir twa between.
"A bed, a bed," Clerk Saunders said,5
"A bed for you and me!"—
"Fye na, fye na," said may Margaret,
"Till anes we married be;
"For in may come my seven bauld brothers,
Wi' torches burning bright;10
They'll say—'We hae but ae sister,
And behold she's wi' a knight!'"—
"Then take the sword from my scabbard,
And slowly lift the pin;
And you may swear, and safe your aith,15
Ye never let Clerk Saunders in.
It was about the midnight hour,
When they asleep were laid,
When in and came her seven brothers,
Wi' torches burning red.
When in and came her seven brothers,25
Wi' torches burning bright;
They said, "We hae but ae sister,
And behold her lying with a knight!"
Then out and spake the first o' them,
"I bear the sword shall gar him die!"30
And out and spake the second o' them,
"His father has nae mair than he!"
And out and spake the third o' them,
"I wot that they are lovers dear!"
And out and spake the fourth o' them,35
"They hae been in love this mony a year!"[Pg 48]
Then out and spake the fifth o' them,
"It were great sin true love to twain!"
And out and spake the sixth of them,
"It were shame to slay a sleeping man!"40
Then up and gat the seventh o' them,
And never a word spake he;
But he has striped his bright brown brand
Out through Clerk Saunders' fair bodye.
Clerk Saunders he started, and Margaret she turn'd45
Into his arms as asleep she lay;
And sad and silent was the night
That was atween thir twae.
And they lay still and sleeped sound,
Until the day began to daw;50
And kindly to him she did say,
"It is time, true love, you were awa."
But he lay still, and sleeped sound,
Albeit the sun began to sheen;
She looked atween her and the wa',55
And dull and drowsie were his een.
Then in and came her father dear,
Said—"Let a' your mourning be:
I'll carry the dead corpse to the clay,
[Pg 49]And I'll come back and comfort thee."—60
"Comfort weel your seven sons,
For comforted will I never be:
I ween 'twas neither knave nor loon
Was in the bower last night wi' me."—
20. In Kinloch's version of this ballad we have an additional
stanza here:—
——"Ye'll take me in your arms twa,
Ye'll carry me into your bed,
And ye may swear, and save your aith,
That in your bour floor I ne'er gae'd."
PART SECOND.
"Are ye sleeping, Margaret?" he says,5
"Or are ye waking presentlie?
Give me my faith and troth again,
I wot, true love, I gied to thee."—
"Your faith and troth ye sall never get,
Nor our true love sall never twin,10
Until ye come within my bower,
And kiss me cheik and chin."—
"My mouth it is full cold, Margaret,
It has the smell, now, of the ground;[Pg 50]
And if I kiss thy comely mouth,15
Thy days of life will not be lang.
"O cocks are crowing a merry midnight,
I wot the wild fowls are boding day;
Give me my faith and troth again,
And let me fare me on my way."—20
"Thy faith and troth thou sall na get,
And our true love shall never twin,
Until ye tell what comes of women,
I wot, who die in strong traiveling."
"Their beds are made in the heavens high,25
Down at the foot of our good Lord's knee,
Weel set about wi' gillyflowers;
I wot sweet company for to see.
"O cocks are crowing a merry midnight,
I wot the wild fowl are boding day;30
The psalms of heaven will soon be sung,
And I, ere now, will be miss'd away."—
Then she has ta'en a crystal wand,
And she has stroken her troth thereon;
She has given it him out at the shot-window,35
Wi' mony a sad sigh, and heavy groan.
"I thank ye, Marg'ret; I thank ye, Marg'ret;
And aye I thank ye heartilie;[Pg 51]
Gin ever the dead come for the quick,
Be sure, Marg'ret, I'll come for thee."—40
It's hosen and shoon and gown alone,
She climb'd the wall, and follow'd him,
Until she came to the green forest,
And there she lost the sight o' him.
"Is there ony room at your head, Saunders?45
Is there ony room at your feet?
Or ony room at your side, Saunders,
Where fain, fain, I wad sleep?"—
"There's nae room at my head, Marg'ret,
There's nae room at my feet;50
My bed it is full lowly now:
Amang the hungry worms I sleep.
"Cauld mould is my covering now,
But and my winding-sheet;
The dew it falls nae sooner down,55
Than my resting place is weet.
"And fair Marg'ret, and rare Marg'ret,
And Marg'ret o' veritie,
Gin e'er ye love another man,
Ne'er love him as ye did me."—
Then up and crew the milk-white cock,65
And up and crew the grey;
Her lover vanish'd in the air,
And she gaed weeping away.
1. The custom of the passing bell is still kept up in many
villages in Scotland. The sexton goes through the town,
ringing a small bell, and announcing the death of the departed,
and the time of the funeral. Scott.
33. Chrisom.
57. The custom of binding the new-laid sod of the churchyard
with osiers, or other saplings, prevailed both in England
and Scotland, and served to protect the turf from injury
by cattle, or otherwise. Scott.
[Pg 53]
SWEET WILLIE AND LADY MARGERIE.
From Motherwell's Minstrelsy, p. 370.
"This Ballad, which possesses considerable beauty
and pathos, is given from the recitation of a lady,
now far advanced in years, with whose grandmother
it was a deserved favourite. It is now for the first
time printed. It bears some resemblance to Clerk
Saunders."
Subjoined is a different copy from Buchan's Ballads
of the North of Scotland.
Sweet Willie was a widow's son,
And he wore a milk-white weed O;
And weel could Willie read and write,
Far better ride on steed O.
Lady Margerie was the first ladye5
That drank to him the wine O;
And aye as the healths gaed round and round,
"Laddy, your love is mine O."[Pg 54]
Lady Margerie was the first ladye
That drank to him the beer O;10
And aye as the healths gaed round and round,
Laddy, ye're welcome here O.
"You must come intill my bower,
When the evening bells do ring O;
And you must come intill my bower,15
When the evening mass doth sing O."
He's taen four-and-twenty braid arrows,
And laced them in a whang O;
And he's awa to Lady Margerie's bower,
As fast as he can gang O.20
He set his ae foot on the wa',
And the other on a stane O;
And he's kill'd a' the king's life guards,
He's kill'd them every man O.
"O open, open, Lady Margerie,25
Open and let me in O;
The weet weets a' my yellow hair,
And the dew draps on my chin O."
With her feet as white as sleet,
She strode her bower within O;30
And with her fingers lang and sma',
She's looten sweet Willie in O.[Pg 55]
She's louted down unto his foot,
To lowze sweet Willie's shoon O;
The buckles were sae stiff they wadna lowze,35
The blood had frozen in O.
"O Willie, O Willie, I fear that thou
Hast bred me dule and sorrow;
The deed that thou hast done this nicht
Will kythe upon the morrow."40
In then came her father dear,
And a braid sword by his gare O;
And he's gien Willie, the widow's son,
A deep wound and a sair O.
"Lye yont, lye yont, Willie," she says,45
"Your sweat weets a' my side O;
Lye yont, lye yont, Willie," she says,
"For your sweat I downa bide O."
She turned her back unto the wa',
Her face unto the room O;50
And there she saw her auld father,
Fast walking up and doun O.
"Woe be to you, father," she said,
"And an ill deid may you die O;
For ye've killed Willie, the widow's son,55
And he would have married me O."[Pg 56]
She turned her back unto the room,
Her face unto the wa' O;
And with a deep and heavy sich,
Her heart it brak in twa O.60
[Pg 57]
WILLIE AND LADY MAISRY.
From Buchan's Ballads of the North of Scotland, i. 155.
The Bent sae Brown, in the same volume, p. 30,
resembles both Clerk Saunders and the present ballad,
but has a different catastrophe.
Sweet Willie was a widow's son,
And milk-white was his weed;
It sets him weel to bridle a horse,
And better to saddle a steed, my dear,
And better to saddle a steed.5
But he is on to Maisry's bower door,
And tirled at the pin;
"Ye sleep ye, wake ye, Lady Maisry,
Ye'll open, let me come in, my dear,
Ye'll open, let me come in."10
"O who is this at my bower door,
Sae well that knows my name?"
"It is your ain true love, Willie,
If ye love me, lat me in, my dear,
[Pg 58]If ye love me, lat me in."15
Then huly, huly raise she up,
For fear o' making din;
Then in her arms lang and bent,
She caught sweet Willie in, my dear,
She caught sweet Willie in.20
She lean'd her low down to her toe,
To loose her true love's sheen;
But cauld, cauld were the draps o' bleed,
Fell fae his trusty brand, my dear,
Fell fae his trusty brand.25
"What frightfu' sight is that, my love?
A frightfu' sight to see;
What bluid is this on your sharp brand,
O may ye not tell me, my dear?
O may ye not tell me?"30
"As I came thro' the woods this night,
The wolf maist worried me;
O shou'd I slain the wolf, Maisry?
Or shou'd the wolf slain me, my dear?
Or shou'd the wolf slain me?"35
They hadna kiss'd nor love clapped,
As lovers when they meet,
Till up it starts her auld father,
Out o' his drowsy sleep, my dear,
[Pg 59]Out o' his drowsy sleep.40
"O what's become o' my house cock
Sae crouse at ane did craw?
I wonder as much at my bold watch,
That's nae shootin ower the wa', my dear,
That's nae shooting ower the wa'.45
"My gude house cock, my only son,
Heir ower my land sae free;
If ony ruffian hae him slain,
High hanged shall he be, my dear,
High hanged shall he be."50
Then he's on to Maisry's bower door,
And tirled at the pin;
"Ye sleep ye, wake ye, daughter Maisry,
Ye'll open, lat me come in, my dear,
Ye'll open, lat me come in."55
Between the curtains and the wa',
She row'd her true love then;
And huly went she to the door,
And let her father in, my dear,
And let her father in.60
"What's become o' your maries, Maisry,
Your bower it looks sae teem?
What's become o' your green claithing?
Your beds they are sae thin, my dear,
[Pg 60]Your beds they are sae thin."65
"Gude forgie you, father," she said,
"I wish ye be't for sin;
Sae aft as ye hae dreaded me,
But never found me wrang, my dear,
But never found me wrang."70
He turn'd him right and round about,
As he'd been gaun awa';
But sae nimbly as he slippet in,
Behind a screen sae sma', my dear,
Behind a screen sae sma'.75
Maisry thinking a' dangers past,
She to her love did say;
"Come, love, and take your silent rest,
My auld father's away, my dear,
My auld father's away!"80
Then baith lock'd in each other's arms,
They fell full fast asleep;
When up it starts her auld father,
And stood at their bed feet, my dear,
And stood at their bed feet.85
"I think I hae the villain now,
That my dear son did slay;
But I shall be reveng'd on him,
Before I see the day, my dear,
[Pg 61]Before I see the day."90
Then he's drawn out a trusty brand,
And stroak'd it o'er a stray;
And thro' and thro' sweet Willie's middle
He's gart cauld iron gae, my dear,
He's gart cauld iron gae.95
Then up it waken'd Lady Maisry,
Out o' her drowsy sleep;
And when she saw her true love slain,
She straight began to weep, my dear,
She straight began to weep.100
"O gude forgie you now, father," she said,
"I wish ye be't for sin;
For I never lov'd a love but ane,
In my arms ye've him slain, my dear,
In my arms ye've him slain."105
"This night he's slain my gude bold watch,
Thirty stout men and twa;
Likewise he's slain your ae brother,
To me was worth them a', my dear,
To me was worth them a'."110
"If he has slain my ae brither,
Himsell had a' the blame;
For mony a day he plots contriv'd,
To hae sweet Willie slain, my dear,
[Pg 62]To hae sweet Willie slain.115
"And tho' he's slain your gude bold watch,
He might hae been forgien;
They came on him in armour bright,
When he was but alane, my dear,
When he was but alane."120
Nae meen was made for this young knight,
In bower where he lay slain;
But a' was for sweet Maisry bright,
In fields where she ran brain, my dear,
In fields where she ran brain.125
[Pg 63]
THE CLERK'S TWA SONS O' OWSENFORD.
"This singularly wild and beautiful old ballad," says
Chambers, (Scottish Ballads, p. 345,) "is chiefly taken
from the recitation of the editor's grandmother, who
learned it, when a girl, nearly seventy years ago, from a
Miss Anne Gray, resident at Neidpath Castle, Peeblesshire;
some additional stanzas, and a few various
readings, being adopted from a less perfect, and far
less poetical copy, published in Mr. Buchan's [Ancient
Ballads and Songs of the North of Scotland, i. 281,]
and from a fragment in the Border Minstrelsy, entitled
The Wife of Usher's Well, [vol. i. p. 214, of this collection,]
but which is evidently the same narrative."[A]
"The editor has been induced to divide this ballad
into two parts, on account of the great superiority of
what follows over what goes before, and because the latter
portion is in a great measure independent of the
other, so far as sense is concerned. The first part is
composed of the Peeblesshire version, mingled with
that of the northern editor: the second is formed of
the Peeblesshire version, mingled with the fragment
called The Wife of Usher's Well."[Pg 64]
The natural desire of men to hear more of characters
in whom they have become strongly interested,
has frequently stimulated the attempt to continue
successful fictions, and such supplements are proverbially
unfortunate. A ballad-singer would have powerful
inducements to gratify this passion of his audience,
and he could most economically effect the object
by stringing two ballads together. When a tale ended
tragically, the sequel must of necessity be a ghost-story,
and we have already had, in Clerk Saunders, an
instance of this combination. Mr. Chambers has furnished
the best possible reasons for believing that the
same process has taken place in the case of the present
ballad, and that the two parts, (which occur separately,)
having originally had no connection, were arbitrarily
united, to suit the purposes of some unscrupulous rhapsodist.
PART FIRST.
O I will sing to you a sang,
Will grieve your heart full sair;
How the Clerk's twa sons o' Owsenford
Have to learn some unco lear.
They hadna been in fair Parish5
A twelvemonth and a day,
Till the Clerk's twa sons fell deep in love
Wi' the Mayor's dauchters twae.
And aye as the twa clerks sat and wrote,
[Pg 65]The ladies sewed and sang;10
There was mair mirth in that chamber,
Than in a' fair Ferrol's land.
But word's gane to the michty Mayor,
As he sailed on the sea,
That the Clerk's twa sons made licht lemans15
O' his fair dauchters twae.
"If they hae wranged my twa dauchters,
Janet and Marjorie,
The morn, ere I taste meat or drink,
Hie hangit they shall be."20
And word's gane to the clerk himsell,
As he was drinking wine,
That his twa sons at fair Parish
Were bound in prison strang.
Then up and spak the Clerk's ladye,25
And she spak tenderlie:
"O tak wi' ye a purse o' gowd,
Or even tak ye three;
And if ye canna get William,
Bring Henry hame to me."30
O sweetly sang the nightingale,
As she sat on the wand;
But sair, sair mourned Owsenford,
As he gaed in the strand.[Pg 66]
When he came to their prison strang,35
He rade it round about,
And at a little shot-window,
His sons were looking out.
"O lie ye there, my sons," he said,
"For owsen or for kye?40
Or what is it that ye lie for,
Sae sair bound as ye lie?"
"We lie not here for owsen, father;
Nor yet do we for kye;
But it's for a little o' dear-boucht love,45
Sae sair bound as we lie.
"O borrow us, borrow us, father," they said,
"For the luve we bear to thee!"
"O never fear, my pretty sons,
Weel borrowed ye sall be."50
Then he's gane to the michty Mayor,
And he spak courteouslie:
"Will ye grant my twa sons' lives,
Either for gold or fee?
Or will ye be sae gude a man,55
As grant them baith to me?"
"I'll no grant ye your twa sons' lives,
Neither for gold nor fee;[Pg 67]
Nor will I be sae gude a man,
As gie them baith to thee;60
But before the morn at twal o'clock,
Ye'll see them hangit hie!"
Ben it came the Mayor's dauchters,
Wi' kirtle coat alone;
Their eyes did sparkle like the gold,65
As they tripped on the stone.
"Will ye gie us our loves, father,
For gold, or yet for fee?
Or will ye take our own sweet lives,
And let our true loves be?"70
He's taen a whip into his hand,
And lashed them wondrous sair;
"Gae to your bowers, ye vile limmers;
Ye'se never see them mair."
Then out it speaks auld Owsenford;75
A sorry man was he:
"Gang to your bouirs, ye lilye flouirs;
For a' this maunna be."
Then out it speaks him Hynde Henry:
"Come here, Janet, to me;80
Will ye gie me my faith and troth,
And love, as I gae thee?"[Pg 68]
"Ye sall hae your faith and troth,
Wi' God's blessing and mine:"
And twenty times she kissed his mouth,85
Her father looking on.
Then out it speaks him gay William:
"Come here, sweet Marjorie;
Will ye gie me my faith and troth,
And love, as I gae thee?"90
"Yes, ye sall hae your faith and troth,
Wi' God's blessing and mine:"
And twenty times she kissed his mouth,
Her father looking on.
* * * * * * *
"O ye'll tak aff your twa black hats,95
Lay them down on a stone,
That nane may ken that ye are clerks,
Till ye are putten doun."
The bonnie clerks they died that morn;
Their loves died lang ere noon;100
And the waefu' Clerk o' Owsenford
To his lady has gane hame.
[Pg 69]
PART SECOND.
His lady sat on her castle wa',
Beholding dale and doun;
And there she saw her ain gude lord
Come walking to the toun.
"Ye're welcome, ye're welcome, my ain gude lord,5
Ye're welcome hame to me;
But where-away are my twa sons?
Ye suld hae brought them wi' ye."
"O they are putten to a deeper lear,
And to a higher scule:10
Your ain twa sons will no be hame
Till the hallow days o' Yule."
"O sorrow, sorrow, come mak my bed;
And, dule, come lay me doun;
For I will neither eat nor drink,15
Nor set a fit on groun'!"
The hallow days o' Yule were come,
And the nights were lang and mirk,
When in and cam her ain twa sons,
[Pg 70]And their hats made o' the birk.20
It neither grew in syke nor ditch,
Nor yet in ony sheuch;
But at the gates o' Paradise
That birk grew fair eneuch.
"Blow up the fire, now, maidens mine,25
Bring water from the well;
For a' my house shall feast this night,
Since my twa sons are well.
"O eat and drink, my merry-men a',
The better shall ye fare;30
For my two sons they are come hame
To me for evermair."
And she has gane and made their bed,
She's made it saft and fine;
And she's happit them wi' her gay mantil,35
Because they were her ain.
But the young cock crew in the merry Linkum,
And the wild fowl chirped for day;
And the aulder to the younger said,
"Brother, we maun away.40
"The cock doth craw, the day doth daw,
The channerin worm doth chide;
Gin we be missed out o' our place,
A sair pain we maun bide."[Pg 71]
"Lie still, lie still a little wee while,45
Lie still but if we may;
Gin my mother should miss us when she wakes,
She'll gae mad ere it be day."
* * * * * * *
O it's they've taen up their mother's mantil,
And they've hung it on a pin:50
"O lang may ye hing, my mother's mantil,
Ere ye hap us again."
[Pg 72]
CHILDE VYET.
First printed in a complete form in Maidment's
North Countrie Garland, p. 24. The same editor contributed
a slightly different copy to Motherwell's Minstrelsy,
(p. 173.) An inferior version is furnished by
Buchan, i. 234, and Jamieson has published a fragment
on the same story, here given in the Appendix.
Childe Vyet and Lord Ingram,5
Were both born in one hall,
Had both their loves on one Lady
The worse did them befall.[Pg 73]
Lord Ingram woo'd the Lady Maiserey,
From father and from mother;10
Lord Ingram woo'd the Lady Maiserey,
From sister and from brother.
Lord Ingram wooed the Lady Maiserey,
With leave of all her kin;
And every one gave full consent,15
But she said no, to him.
Lord Ingram wooed the Lady Maiserey,
Into her father's ha';
Childe Vyet wooed the Lady Maiserey,
Among the sheets so sma'.20
Now it fell out upon a day,
She was dressing her head,
That ben did come her father dear,
Wearing the gold so red.
"Get up now, Lady Maiserey,25
Put on your wedding gown,
For Lord Ingram will be here,
Your wedding must be done!"
"I'd rather be Childe Vyet's wife,
The white fish for to sell,30
Before I were Lord Ingram's wife,
To wear the silk so well![Pg 74]
"I'd rather be Childe Vyet's wife,
With him to beg my bread,
Before I'd be Lord Ingram's wife,35
To wear the gold so red.
"Where will I get a bonny boy,
Will win gold to his fee,
Will run unto Childe Vyet's ha',
With this letter from me?"40
"O here, I am the boy," says one,
"Will win gold to my fee,
And carry away any letter,
To Childe Vyet from thee."
And when he found the bridges broke,45
He bent his bow and swam;
And when he found the grass growing,
He hasten'd and he ran.
And when he came to Vyet's castle,
He did not knock nor call,50
But set his bent bow to his breast,
And lightly leaped the wall;
And ere the porter open'd the gate,
The boy was in the hall.
The first line that Childe Vyet read,55
A grieved man was he;[Pg 75]
The next line that he looked on,
A tear blinded his e'e.
"What ails my own brother," he says,
"He'll not let my love be;60
But I'll send to my brother's bridal;
The woman shall be free.
"Take four and twenty bucks and ewes,
And ten tun of the wine,
And bid my love be blythe and glad,65
And I will follow syne."
There was not a groom about that castle,
But got a gown of green;
And a' was blythe, and a' was glad,
But Lady Maiserey was wi' wean.70
There was no cook about the kitchen,
But got a gown of gray;
And a' was blythe, and a' was glad,
But Lady Maiserey was wae.
'Tween Mary Kirk and that castle,75
Was all spread o'er with garl,
To keep the lady and her maidens,
From tramping on the marl.[Pg 76]
From Mary Kirk to that castle,
Was spread a cloth of gold,80
To keep the lady and her maidens,
From treading on the mould.
When mass was sung, and bells were rung,
And all men bound for bed,
Then Lord Ingram and Lady Maiserey,85
In one bed they were laid.
When they were laid upon their bed,
It was baith soft and warm,
He laid his hand over her side,
Says he, "you are with bairn."90
"I told you once, so did I twice,
When ye came as my wooer,
That Childe Vyet, your one brother,
One night lay in my bower.
"I told you twice, so did I thrice,95
Ere ye came me to wed,
That Childe Vyet, your one brother,
One night lay in my bed!"
"O will you father your bairn on me,
And on no other man?100
And I'll gie him to his dowry,
Full fifty ploughs of land."[Pg 77]
"I will not father my bairn on you,
Nor on no wrongous man,
Tho' you'd gie him to his dowry,105
Five thousand ploughs of land."
Then up did start him Childe Vyet,
Shed by his yellow hair,
And gave Lord Ingram to the heart,
A deep wound and a sair.110
Then up did start him Lord Ingram,
Shed by his yellow hair,
And gave Childe Vyet to the heart,
A deep wound and a sair.
There was no pity for the two lords,115
Where they were lying slain,
All was for Lady Maiserey:
In that bower she gaed brain!
There was no pity for the two lords,
When they were lying dead,120
All was for Lady Maiserey:
In that bower she went mad!
"O get to me a cloak of cloth,
A staff of good hard tree;
If I have been an evil woman,125
I shall beg till I die.[Pg 78]
"For ae bit I'll beg for Childe Vyet,
For Lord Ingram I'll beg three,
All for the honourable marriage, that
At Mary Kirk he gave me!"130
4. The less was their bonheur. Motherwell.
70, she was neen. Motherwell.
76, gold.
78, mould. N. C. G.
LADY MAISRY.
This ballad, said to be very popular in Scotland,
was taken down from recitation by Jamieson, and is
extracted from his collection, vol. i. p. 73. A different
copy, from Motherwell's Minstrelsy, p. 234, is given in
the Appendix. Another, styled Young Prince James,
may be seen in Buchan's Ballads, vol. i. 103. Bonnie
Susie Cleland, Motherwell, p. 221, is still another version.
In Lady Maisry we seem to have the English form
of a tragic story which, starting from Denmark, has
spread over almost all the north of Europe, that of
King Waldemar and his Sister. Grundtvig's collection
gives seven copies of the Danish ballad upon this subject
(Kong Valdemar og hans Söster, No. 126), the
oldest from a manuscript of the beginning of the 17th
century. Five Icelandic versions are known, one
Norse, one Faroish, five Swedish (four of them in Arwidsson,
No. 53, Liten Kerstin och Fru Sofia), and
several in German, as Graf Hans von Holstein und
seine Schwester Annchristine, Erk, Liederhort, p. 155;[Pg 79]
Der Grausame Bruder, Erk, p. 153, and Hoffmann,
Schlesische Volkslieder, No. 27; Der Grobe Bruder,
Wunderhorn, ii. 272; Der Pfalzgraf am Rhein, id. i.
259, etc.; also a fragment in Wendish. The relationship
of the English ballad to the rest of the cycle can
perhaps be easiest shown by comparison with the simplified
and corrupted German versions.
The story appears to be founded on facts which occurred
during the reign and in the family of the Danish
king, Waldemar the First, sometime between 1157
and 1167. Waldemar is described as being, with all
his greatness, of a relentless and cruel disposition (in
ira pertinax; in suos tantum plus justo crudelior).
Tradition, however, has imputed to him a brutal ferocity
beyond belief. In the ballad before us, Lady Maisry
suffers for her weakness by being burned at the
stake, but in the Danish, Swedish, and German ballads,
the king's sister is beaten to death with leathern
whips, by her brother's own hand.
"Er schlug sie so sehre, er schlug sie so lang,
Bis Lung und Leber aus dem Leib ihr sprang!"
The Icelandic and Faroe ballads have nothing of
this horrible ferocity, but contain a story which is
much nearer to probability, if not to historical truth.
While King Waldemar is absent on an expedition
against the Wends, his sister Kristín is drawn into a
liaison with her second-cousin, the result of which is
the birth of two children. Sofía, the Queen, maliciously
makes the state of things known to the king
the moment he returns (which is on the very day of
Kristín's lying in, according to the Danish ballad), but
he will not believe the story,—all the more because
the accused parties are within prohibited degrees of[Pg 80]
consanguinity. Kristín is summoned to come instantly
to her brother, and obeys the message, though she is
weak with childbirth, and knows that the journey will
cost her her life. She goes to the court on horseback
(in the Danish ballads falling from the saddle once or
twice on the way), and on her arrival is put to various
tests to ascertain her condition, concluding with a long
dance with the king, to which, having held out for a
considerable time, she at last succumbs, and falls dead
in her brother's arms.
The incidents of the journey on horseback, and the
cruel probation by the dance, are found in the ballad
which follows the present (Fair Janet), and these coincidences
Grundtvig considers sufficient to establish its
derivation from the Danish. The general similarity of
Lady Maisry to King Waldemar and his Sister is,
however, much more striking. For our part, we are
inclined to believe that both the English ballads had
this origin, but the difference in their actual form is so
great, that, notwithstanding this conviction, we have
not felt warranted in putting them together.
The young lords o' the north country
Have all a-wooing gane,
To win the love of lady Maisry,
But o' them she wou'd hae nane.
O thae hae sought her, lady Maisry,5
Wi' broaches, and wi' rings;
And they hae courted her, lady Maisry,
Wi' a' kin kind of things.[Pg 81]
And they hae sought her, lady Maisry,
Frae father and frae mither;10
And they hae sought her, lady Maisry,
Frae sister and frae brither.
And they hae follow'd her, lady Maisry,
Thro' chamber, and through ha';
But a' that they could say to her,15
Her answer still was "Na."
"O haud your tongues, young men," she said,
"And think nae mair on me;
For I've gi'en my love to an English lord,
Sae think nae mair on me."20
Her father's kitchey-boy heard that,
(An ill death mot he die!)
And he is in to her brother,
As fast as gang cou'd he.
"O is my father and my mother weel,25
But and my brothers three?
Gin my sister lady Maisry be weel,
There's naething can ail me."
"Your father and your mother is weel,
But and your brothers three;30
Your sister, lady Maisry's, weel,
Sae big wi' bairn is she."[Pg 82]
"A malison light on the tongue,
Sic tidings tells to me!—
But gin it be a lie you tell,35
You shall be hanged hie."
He's doen him to his sister's bower,
Wi' mickle dool and care;
And there he saw her, lady Maisry,
Kembing her yellow hair.40
She's turned her richt and round about,45
And the kembe fell frae her han';
A trembling seized her fair bodie,
And her rosy cheek grew wan.
"O pardon me, my brother dear,
And the truth I'll tell to thee;50
My bairn it is to Lord William,
And he is betrothed to me."
"O cou'dna ye gotten dukes, or lords,
Intill your ain countrie,
That ye drew up wi' an English dog,55
To bring this shame on me?[Pg 83]
"But ye maun gi'e up your English lord,
Whan your young babe is born;
For, gin ye keep by him an hour langer,
Your life shall be forlorn."60
"I will gi'e up this English lord,
Till my young babe be born;
But the never a day nor hour langer,
Though my life should be forlorn."
"O whare is a' my merry young men,65
Wham I gi'e meat and fee,
To pu' the bracken and the thorn,
To burn this vile whore wi'?"
"O whare will I get a bonny boy,
To help me in my need,70
To rin wi' haste to Lord William,
And bid him come wi' speed?"
O out it spak a bonny boy,
Stood by her brother's side;
"It's I wad rin your errand, lady,75
O'er a' the warld wide.
"Aft ha'e I run your errands, lady,
When blawin baith wind and weet;
But now I'll rin your errand, lady,
[Pg 84]With saut tears on my cheek."80
O whan he came to broken briggs,
He bent his bow and swam;
And whan he came to the green grass growin',
He slack'd his shoon and ran.
And when he came to Lord William's yeats,85
He badena to chap or ca';
But set his bent bow to his breast,
And lightly lap the wa';
And, or the porter was at the yeat,
The boy was in the ha'.90
"O is my biggins broken, boy?
Or is my towers won?
Or is my lady lighter yet,
O' a dear daughter or son?"
"Your biggin isna broken, sir,95
Nor is your towers won;
But the fairest lady in a' the land
This day for you maun burn."
"O saddle to me the black, the black,
Or saddle to me the brown;100
Or saddle to me the swiftest steed
That ever rade frae a town."
Or he was near a mile awa',
She heard his weir-horse sneeze;[Pg 85]
"Mend up the fire, my fause brother,105
It's nae come to my knees."
O whan he lighted at the yeat,
She heard his bridle ring:
"Mend up the fire, my fause brother;
It's far yet frae my chin.110
"Mend up the fire to me, brother,
Mend up the fire to me;
For I see him comin' hard and fast,
Will soon men't up for thee.
"O gin my hands had been loose, Willy,115
Sae hard as they are boun',
I wadd hae turn'd me frae the gleed,
And casten out your young son."
"O I'll gar burn for you, Maisry,
Your father and your mother;120
And I'll gar burn for you, Maisry,
Your sister and your brother;
"And I'll gar burn for you, Maisry,
The chief o' a' your kin;
And the last bonfire that I come to,125
Mysell I will cast in."
v. 41. See preface to Clerk Saunders, p. 319.
[Pg 86]
FAIR JANET.
From Sharpe's Ballad Book, p. 1.
"This ballad, the subject of which appears to have
been very popular, is printed as it was sung by an old
woman in Perthshire. The air is extremely beautiful."
Herd gave an imperfect version of this ballad under
the title of Willie and Annet, in his Scottish Songs, i.
219; repeated after him in Ritson's Scottish Songs, and
in Johnson's Museum. Finlay's copy, improved, but
made up of fragments, follows the present, and in the
Appendix is Sweet Willie and Fair Maisry, from Buchan's
collection. We have followed Motherwell by
inserting (in brackets) three stanzas from Willie and
Annet and Sweet Willie, which contribute slightly to
complete Sharpe's copy. None of these ballads is satisfactory,
though Sharpe's is the best. Touching the
relation of Fair Janet to the Danish ballad of King
Waldemar and his Sister, the reader will please look
at the preface to the preceding ballad.[Pg 87]
"Ye maun gang to your father, Janet,
Ye maun gang to him soon;
Ye maun gang to your father, Janet,
In case that his days are dune!"
Janet's awa' to her father,5
As fast as she could hie;
"O what's your will wi' me, father?
O what's your will wi' me?"
"My will wi' you, Fair Janet," he said,
"It is both bed and board;10
Some say that ye lo'e Sweet Willie,
But ye maun wed a French lord."
"A French lord maun I wed, father?
A French lord maun I wed?
Then, by my sooth," quo' Fair Janet,15
"He's ne'er enter my bed."
Janet's awa' to her chamber,
As fast as she could go;
Wha's the first ane that tapped there,
But Sweet Willie her jo!20
"O we maun part this love, Willie,
That has been lang between;
There's a French lord coming o'er the sea
To wed me wi' a ring;[Pg 88]
There 's a French lord coming o'er the sea,25
To wed and tak me hame."
"If we maun part this love, Janet,
It causeth mickle woe;
If we maun part this love, Janet,
It makes me into mourning go."30
"But ye maun gang to your three sisters,
Meg, Marion, and Jean;
Tell them to come to Fair Janet,
In case that her days are dune."
Willie's awa' to his three sisters,35
Meg, Marion, and Jean;
"O haste, and gang to Fair Janet,
I fear that her days are dune."
Some drew to them their silken hose,
Some drew to them their shoon,40
Some drew to them their silk manteils,
Their coverings to put on;
And they're awa' to Fair Janet,
By the hie light o' the moon.
* * * * * * *
"O I have born this babe, Willie,45
Wi' mickle toil and pain;
Take hame, take hame, your babe, Willie,
For nurse I dare be nane."[Pg 89]
He's tane his young son in his arms,
And kist him cheek and chin,—50
And he's awa' to his mother's bower,
By the hie light o' the moon.
"O open, open, mother," he says,
"O open, and let me in;
The rain rains on my yellow hair,55
And the dew drops o'er my chin,—
And I hae my young son in my arms,
I fear that his days are dune."
With her fingers lang and sma'
She lifted up the pin;60
And with her arms lang and sma'
Received the baby in.
"Gae back, gae back now, Sweet Willie,
And comfort your fair lady;
For where ye had but ae nourice,65
Your young son shall hae three."
Willie he was scarce awa',
And the lady put to bed,
When in and came her father dear:
"Make haste, and busk the bride."70
"There's a sair pain in my head, father,
There's a sair pain in my side;[Pg 90]
And ill, O ill, am I, father,
This day for to be a bride."
"O ye maun busk this bonny bride,75
And put a gay mantle on;
For she shall wed this auld French lord,
Gin she should die the morn."
Some put on the gay green robes,
And some put on the brown;80
But Janet put on the scarlet robes,
To shine foremost through the town.
And some they mounted the black steed,
And some mounted the brown;
But Janet mounted the milk-white steed,85
To ride foremost through the town.
"O wha will guide your horse, Janet?
O wha will guide him best?"
"O wha but Willie, my true love,
He kens I lo'e him best!"90
And when they cam to Marie's kirk,
To tye the haly ban,
Fair Janet's cheek looked pale and wan,
And her colour gaed and cam.
When dinner it was past and done,95
And dancing to begin,[Pg 91]
"O we'll go take the bride's maidens,
And we'll go fill the ring."
O ben than cam the auld French lord,
Saying, "Bride, will ye dance with me?"
"Awa', awa', ye auld French Lord,100
Your face I downa see."
O ben than cam now Sweet Willie,
He cam with ane advance:
"O I'll go tak the bride's maidens,105
And we'll go tak a dance."
"I've seen ither days wi' you, Willie,
And so has mony mae;
Ye would hae danced wi' me mysel',
Let a' my maidens gae."110
O ben than cam now Sweet Willie,
Saying, "Bride, will ye dance wi' me?"
"Aye, by my sooth, and that I will,
Gin my back should break in three."
[And she's ta'en Willie by the hand,115
The tear blinded her e'e;
"O I wad dance wi' my true love,
Tho' bursts my heart in three!"]
She hadna turned her throw the dance,
[Pg 92]Throw the dance but thrice,120
Whan she fell doun at Willie's feet,
And up did never rise!
[She's ta'en her bracelet frae her arm,
Her garter frae her knee:
"Gie that, gie that, to my young son;125
He'll ne'er his mother see."]
Willie's ta'en the key of his coffer,
And gi'en it to his man;
"Gae hame, and tell my mother dear,
My horse he has me slain;130
Bid her be kind to my young son,
For father he has nane."
["Gar deal, gar deal the bread," he cried,
"Gar deal, gar deal the wine;
This day has seen my true love's death,135
This night shall witness mine."]
The tane was buried in Marie's kirk,
And the tither in Marie's quire:
Out of the tane there grew a birk,
And the tither a bonny brier.140
[Pg 93]
SWEET WILLIE.
"This ballad has had the misfortune, in common
with many others, of being much mutilated by reciters.
I have endeavoured, by the assistance of some fragments,
to make it as complete as possible; and have
even taken the liberty of altering the arrangement of
some of the stanzas of a lately-procured copy, that they
might the better cohere with those already printed."
Finlay's Scottish Ballads, ii. 61.
"Will you marry the southland lord,
A queen o' fair England to be?
Or will you mourn for sweet Willie,
The morn upon yon lea?"
"I will marry the southland lord,5
Father, sen it is your will;
But I'd rather it were my burial day,
For my grave I'm going till.
"O go, O go now my bower wife,
O go now hastilie,10
O go now to sweet Willie's bower,
And bid him cum speak to me.—
"Now, Willie, gif ye love me weel,
As sae it seems to me,
Gar build, gar build a bonny ship,15
Gar build it speedilie![Pg 94]
"And we will sail the sea sae green
Unto some far countrie;
Or we'll sail to some bonny isle,
Stands lanely midst the sea."20
But lang or e'er the ship was built,
Or deck'd or rigged out,
Cam sic a pain in Annet's back,
That down she cou'dna lout.
"Now, Willie, gin ye love me weel,25
As sae it seems to me,
O haste, haste, bring me to my bower,
And my bower maidens three."
He's ta'en her in his arms twa,
And kiss'd her cheek and chin,30
He's brocht her to her ain sweet bower,
But nae bower maid was in.
"Now leave my bower, Willie," she said,
"Now leave me to my lane;
Was never man in a lady's bower35
When she was travailing."
He's stepped three steps down the stair,
Upon the marble stane,
Sae loud's he heard his young son greet,
[Pg 95]But and his lady mane.40
"Now come, now come, Willie," she said,
"Tak your young son frae me,
And hie him to your mother's bower,
With speed and privacie."
And he is to his mother's bower,45
As fast as he could rin;
"Open, open, my mother dear,
Open, and let me in;
"For the rain rains on my yellow hair,
The dew stands on my chin,50
And I have something in my lap,
And I wad fain be in."
"O go, O go now, sweet Willie,
And make your lady blithe,
For wherever you had ae nourice,55
Your young son shall hae five."—
Out spak Annet's mother dear,
An' she spak a word o' pride;
Says, "Whare is a' our bride's maidens,
They're no busking the bride?"60
"O haud your tongue, my mother dear,
Your speaking let it be,
For I'm sae fair and full o' flesh,
Little busking will serve me."[Pg 96]
Out an' spak the bride's maidens,65
They spak a word o' pride;
Says, "Whare is a' the fine cleiding?
Its we maun busk the bride."
"Deal hooly wi' my head, maidens,
Deal hooly wi' my hair,70
For it was washen late yestreen,
And it is wonder sair.
"My maidens, easy wi' my back,
And easy wi' my side;
O set my saddle saft, Willie,75
I am a tender bride."
O up then spak the southland lord,
And blinkit wi' his ee;
"I trow this lady's born a bairn,"
Then laucht loud lauchters three.80
"Ye hae gi'en me the gowk, Annet,
But I'll gie you the scorn;
For there's no a bell in a' the town
Shall ring for you the morn."
Out and spak then sweet Willie,85
"Sae loud's I hear you lie,
There's no a bell in a' the town
But shall ring for Annet and me."[Pg 97]
And Willie swore a great great oath,
And he swore by the thorn,90
That she was as free o' a child that night,
As the night that she was born.
O up an' spak the brisk bridegroom,
And he spak up wi' pride,
"Gin I should lay my gloves in pawn,95
I will dance wi' the bride."
"Now haud your tongue, my lord," she said,
"Wi' dancing let me be,
I am sae thin in flesh and blude,
Sma' dancing will serve me."100
But she's ta'en Willie by the hand,
The tear blinded her ee;
"But I wad dance wi' my true love,
But bursts my heart in three."
She's ta'en her bracelet frae her arm,105
Her garter frae her knee,
"Gie that, gie that, to my young son;
He'll ne'er his mother see."
93. Sic Herd. Finlay, then sweet Willie.
97. Sic Herd. Finlay, Willie, she said.
[Pg 98]
FAIR ANNIE OF LOCHROYAN.
Of this beautiful piece a complete copy was first
published by Scott, another afterwards by Jamieson.
Both are here given, the latter, as in some respects
preferable, having the precedence. The ballad is found
almost entire in Herd's Scottish Songs, i. 206, a short
fragment in Johnson's Museum, p. 5, and a more considerable
one, called Love Gregory, in Buchan's collection,
ii. 199. This last has been unnecessarily repeated
in a very indifferent publication of the Percy
Society, vol. xvii. Dr. Wolcot, Burns, and Jamieson
have written songs on the story of Fair Annie, and
Cunningham has modernized Sir Walter Scott's
version, after his fashion, in the Songs of Scotland,
i. 298.
Of his text, Jamieson remarks, "it is given verbatim
from the large MS. collection, transmitted from Aberdeen,
by my zealous and industrious friend, Professor
Robert Scott of that university. I have every reason
to believe, that no liberty whatever has been taken
with the text, which is certainly more uniform than[Pg 99]
any copy heretofore published. It was first written
down many years ago, with no view towards being
committed to the press; and is now given from the
copy then taken, with the addition only of stanzas
twenty-two and twenty-three, which the editor has inserted
from memory." Popular Ballads, i. 36.
"Lochryan is a beautiful, though somewhat wild and
secluded bay, which projects from the Irish Channel
into Wigtonshire, having the little seaport of Stranraer
situated at its bottom. Along its coast, which is
in some places high and rocky, there are many ruins
of such castles as that described in the ballad." Chambers.
"O wha will shoe my fair foot,
And wha will glove my han'?
And wha will lace my middle jimp
Wi' a new-made London ban'?
"Or wha will kemb my yellow hair5
Wi' a new-made silver kemb?
Or wha'll be father to my young bairn,
Till love Gregor come hame?"
"Your father'll shoe your fair foot,
Your mother glove your han';10
Your sister lace your middle jimp
Wi' a new-made London ban';[Pg 100]
"Your brethren will kemb your yellow hair
Wi' a new-made silver kemb;
And the king o' Heaven will father your bairn,15
Till love Gregor come hame."
"O gin I had a bonny ship,
And men to sail wi' me,
It's I wad gang to my true love,
Sin he winna come to me!"20
Her father's gien her a bonny ship,
And sent her to the stran';
She's taen her young son in her arms,
And turn'd her back to the lan'.
She hadna been o' the sea sailin'25
About a month or more,
Till landed has she her bonny ship
Near her true-love's door.
The nicht was dark, and the wind blew cald,
And her love was fast asleep,30
And the bairn that was in her twa arms
Fu' sair began to greet.
Lang stood she at her true love's door,
And lang tirl'd at the pin;
At length up gat his fause mother,35
Says, "Wha's that wad be in?"[Pg 101]
"O it is Annie of Lochroyan,
Your love, come o'er the sea,
But and your young son in her arms;
So open the door to me."40
"Awa, awa, ye ill woman,
You're nae come here for gude;
You're but a witch, or a vile warlock,
Or mermaid o' the flude."
"I'm nae a witch or vile warlock,45
Or mermaiden," said she;—
"I'm but your Annie of Lochroyan;—
O open the door to me!"
"O gin ye be Annie of Lochroyan,
As I trust not ye be,50
What taiken can ye gie that e'er
I kept your companie?"
"O dinna ye mind, love Gregor," she says,
"Whan we sat at the wine,
How we changed the napkins frae our necks?55
It's nae sae lang sinsyne.
"And yours was gude, and gude enough,
But nae sae gude as mine;
For yours was o' the cambrick clear,
[Pg 102]But mine o' the silk sae fine.60
"And dinna ye mind, love Gregor," she says,
"As we twa sat at dine,
How we chang'd the rings frae our fingers,
And I can shew thee thine:
"And yours was gude, and gude enough,65
Yet nae sae gude as mine;
For yours was o' the gude red gold,
But mine o' the diamonds fine.
"Sae open the door, now, love Gregor,
And open it wi' speed;70
Or your young son, that is in my arms,
For cald will soon be dead."
"Awa, awa, ye ill woman,
Gae frae my door for shame;
For I hae gotten anither fair love,75
Sae ye may hie you hame."
"O hae ye gotten anither fair love,
For a' the oaths ye sware?
Then fare ye weel, now, fause Gregor;
For me ye's never see mair!"80
O hooly, hooly gaed she back,
As the day began to peep;
She set her foot on good ship board,
And sair, sair did she weep.[Pg 103]
"Tak down, tak down the mast o' goud;85
Set up the mast o' tree;
Ill sets it a forsaken lady
To sail sae gallantlie.
"Tak down, tak down the sails o' silk;
Set up the sails o' skin;90
Ill sets the outside to be gay,
Whan there's sic grief within!"
Love Gregor started frae his sleep,
And to his mother did say,
"I dreamt a dream this night, mither,95
That maks my heart richt wae;
"I dreamt that Annie of Lochroyan,
The flower o' a' her kin,
Was standin' mournin' at my door,
But nane wad lat her in."100
"O there was a woman stood at the door,
Wi' a bairn intill her arms;
But I wadna let her within the bower,
For fear she had done you harm."
O quickly, quickly raise he up,105
And fast ran to the strand;
And there he saw her, fair Annie,
Was sailing frae the land.[Pg 104]
And "heigh, Annie!" and "how, Annie!
O, Annie, winna ye bide?"110
But ay the louder that he cried "Annie,"
The higher rair'd the tide.
And "heigh, Annie!" and "how, Annie!
O, Annie, speak to me!"
But ay the louder that he cried "Annie,"115
The louder rair'd the sea.
The wind grew loud, and the sea grew rough,
And the ship was rent in twain;
And soon he saw her, fair Annie,
Come floating o'er the main.120
He saw his young son in her arms,
Baith toss'd aboon the tide;
He wrang his hands, and fast he ran,
And plunged in the sea sae wide.
He catch'd her by the yellow hair,125
And drew her to the strand;
But cald and stiff was every limb,
Before he reach'd the land.
O first he kist her cherry cheek,
And syne he kist her chin;130
And sair he kist her ruby lips,
But there was nae breath within.[Pg 105]
O he has mourn'd o'er fair Annie,
Till the sun was ganging down;
Syne wi' a sich his heart it brast,135
And his saul to heaven has flown.
[Pg 106]
THE LASS OF LOCHROYAN.
Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, iii. 199.
"This edition of the ballad is composed of verses
selected from three MS. copies, and two obtained from
recitation. Two of the copies are in Herd's MS.; the
third in that of Mrs. Brown of Falkland."
Lord Gregory is represented in Scott's version, "as
confined by fairy charms in an enchanted castle situated
in the sea." But Jamieson assures us that when
a boy he had frequently heard this ballad chanted
in Morayshire, and no mention was ever made of enchantment,
or "fairy charms." "Indeed," he very
justly adds, "the two stanzas on that subject [v. 41-52,]
are in a style of composition very peculiar, and
different from the rest of the piece, and strongly remind
us of the interpolations in the ballad of Gil Morris."
[Pg 107]
"O wha will shoe my bonny foot?
And wha will glove my hand?
And wha will lace my middle jimp
Wi' a lang, lang linen band?
"O wha will kame my yellow hair,5
With a new-made silver kame?
And wha will father my young son,
Till Lord Gregory come hame?"—
"Thy father will shoe thy bonny foot,
Thy mother will glove thy hand,10
Thy sister will lace thy middle jimp,
Till Lord Gregory come to land.
"Thy brother will kame thy yellow hair
With a new-made silver kame,
And God will be thy bairn's father15
Till Lord Gregory come hame."—
"But I will get a bonny boat,
And I will sail the sea;
And I will gang to Lord Gregory,
Since he canna come hame to me."20
Syne she's gar'd build a bonny boat,
To sail the salt, salt sea;
The sails were o' the light green silk,
The tows o' taffety.[Pg 108]
She hadna sailed but twenty leagues,25
But twenty leagues and three,
When she met wi' a rank robber,
And a' his company.
"Now whether are ye the queen hersell,
(For so ye weel might be,)30
Or are ye the Lass of Lochroyan,
Seekin' Lord Gregory?"—
"O I am neither the queen," she said,
"Nor sic I seem to be;
But I am the Lass of Lochroyan,35
Seekin' Lord Gregory."—
"O see na thou yon bonny bower,
It's a' cover'd o'er wi' tin?
When thou hast sail'd it round about,
Lord Gregory is within."40
And when she saw the stately tower
Shining sae clear and bright,
Whilk stood aboon the jawing wave,
Built on a rock of height;
Says—"Row the boat, my mariners,45
And bring me to the land!
For yonder I see my love's castle
Close by the salt-sea strand."[Pg 109]
She sail'd it round, and sail'd it round,
And loud, loud cried she—50
"Now break, now break, ye fairy charms,
And set my true love free!"
She's ta'en her young son in her arms,
And to the door she's gane;
And long she knock'd, and sair she ca'd,55
But answer got she nane.
"O open the door, Lord Gregory!
O open and let me in!
For the wind blaws through my yellow hair,
And the rain draps o'er my chin."—60
"Awa, awa, ye ill woman!
Ye're no come here for good!
Ye're but some witch or wil warlock,
Or mermaid o' the flood."—
"I am neither witch, nor wil warlock,65
Nor mermaid o' the sea;
But I am Annie of Lochroyan;
O open the door to me!"—
"Gin thou be Annie of Lochroyan,
(As I trow thou binna she,)70
Now tell me some o' the love tokens
That past between thee and me."[Pg 110]—
"O dinna ye mind, Lord Gregory,
As we sat at the wine,
We changed the rings frae our fingers?75
And I can show thee thine.
"O yours was gude, and gude enough,
But aye the best was mine;
For yours was o' the gude red gowd,
But mine o' the diamond fine.80
"And has na thou mind, Lord Gregory,
As we sat on the hill,
Thou twin'd me o' my maidenheid
Right sair against my will?
"Now open the door, Lord Gregory!85
Open the door, I pray!
For thy young son is in my arms,
And will be dead ere day."—
"If thou be the lass of Lochroyan,
(As I kenna thou be,)90
Tell me some mair o' the love tokens
Past between me and thee."
Fair Annie turn'd her round about—
"Weel! since that it be sae,
May never a woman that has borne a son,95
Hae a heart sae fou o' wae![Pg 111]
"Take down, take down, that mast o' gowd!
Set up a mast o' tree!
It disna become a forsaken lady
To sail sae royallie."100
When the cock had crawn, and the day did dawn,
And the sun began to peep,
Then up and raise him Lord Gregory,
And sair, sair did he weep.
"Oh I hae dream'd a dream, mother,105
I wish it may prove true!
That the bonny Lass of Lochroyan
Was at the yate e'en now.
"O I hae dream'd a dream, mother,
The thought o't gars me greet!110
That fair Annie o' Lochroyan
Lay cauld dead at my feet."—
"Gin it be for Annie of Lochroyan
That ye make a' this din,
She stood a' last night at your door,115
But I true she wan na in."—
"O wae betide ye, ill woman!
An ill deid may ye die!
That wadna open the door to her,
[Pg 112]Nor yet wad waken me."120
O he's gane down to yon shore side
As fast as he could fare;
He saw fair Annie in the boat,
But the wind it toss'd her sair.
"And hey, Annie, and how, Annie!125
O Annie, winna ye bide!"
But aye the mair he cried Annie,
The braider grew the tide.
"And hey, Annie, and how, Annie!
Dear Annie, speak to me!"130
But aye the louder he cried Annie,
The louder roar'd the sea.
The wind blew loud, the sea grew rough,
And dash'd the boat on shore;
Fair Annie floated through the faem,135
But the babie rose no more.
Lord Gregory tore his yellow hair,
And made a heavy moan;
Fair Annie's corpse lay at his feet,
Her bonny young son was gone.140
O cherry, cherry was her cheek,
And gowden was her hair;
But clay-cold were her rosy lips—
Nae spark o' life was there.[Pg 113]
And first he kiss'd her cherry cheek,145
And syne he kiss'd her chin,
And syne he kiss'd her rosy lips—
There was nae breath within.
"O wae betide my cruel mother!
An ill death may she die!150
She turn'd my true love frae my door,
Wha came sae far to me.
"O wae betide my cruel mother!
An ill death may she die!
She turn'd fair Annie frae my door,155
Wha died for love o' me."
[Pg 114]
THE DOUGLAS TRAGEDY.
Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, iii. 3.
This ballad, of which more than thirty versions have
been published in the Northern languages, is preserved
in English in several forms, all of them more or less
unsatisfactory. Of these the present copy comes nearest
to the pure original, as it is found in Danish. The next
best is The Brave Earl Brand and The King of England's
Daughter, recently printed for the first time in
Bell's Ballads of the Peasantry, and given at the end
of this volume. Erlinton (vol. iii. 220) is much mutilated,
and has a perverted conclusion, but retains a
faint trace of one characteristic trait of the ancient
ballad, which really constitutes the turning point of
the story, but which all the others lack. (See Erlinton.)
A fragment exists in the Percy MS., of which
we can only say that if it much resembled Percy's
Child of Elle (which it cannot), it might without
loss be left undisturbed forever. In the only remaining
copy Robin Hood appears as the hero. (See vol.
v. p. 334.) It is of slight value, but considerably less
insipid than the Child of Elle. Motherwell (Minstrelsy,
p. 180) has given a few variations to Scott's ballad,
but they are of no importance.—Of the corresponding
Danish ballad, Ribolt og Guldborg, Grundtvig has collected
more than twenty versions, some of them ancient,
many obtained from recitation, and eight of the[Pg 115]
kindred Hildebrand og Hilde. There have also been
printed of the latter, three versions in Swedish, and
of the former, three in Icelandic, two in Norse, and
seven in Swedish. (Danmarks Gamle Folkeviser, ii.
308-403, 674-81.) Jamieson has translated an inferior
copy of the Danish ballad in Illustrations of
North. Antiq., p. 317.
"The ballad of The Douglas Tragedy," says Scott,
"is one of the few (?) to which popular tradition has
ascribed complete locality.
"The farm of Blackhouse, in Selkirkshire, is said to
have been the scene of this melancholy event. There
are the remains of a very ancient tower, adjacent to
the farm-house, in a wild and solitary glen, upon a
torrent named Douglas burn, which joins the Yarrow,
after passing a craggy rock, called the Douglas craig....
From this ancient tower Lady Margaret is said to
have been carried by her lover. Seven large stones,
erected upon the neighboring heights of Blackhouse,
are shown, as marking the spot where the seven brethren
were slain; and the Douglas burn is averred to
have been the stream at which the lovers stopped to
drink: so minute is tradition in ascertaining the scene
of a tragical tale, which, considering the rude state of
former times, had probably foundation in some real
event."
Were it not for Scott's concluding remark, and the
obstinate credulity of most of the English and Scotch
editors, we should hardly think it necessary to say that
the locality of some of the incidents in Ribolt and
Guldborg, is equally well ascertained (Grundtvig, 342,
343). "Popular tales and anecdotes of every kind," as
Jamieson well remarks, "soon obtain locality wherever
they are told; and the intelligent and attentive[Pg 116]
traveller will not be surprised to find the same story
which he had learnt when a child, with every appropriate
circumstance of names, time, and place, in a
Glen of Morven, Lochaber, or Rannoch, equally domesticated
among the mountains of Norway, Caucasus,
or Thibet." Ill. North. Ant. p. 317.
"Rise up, rise up, now, Lord Douglas," she says,
"And put on your armour so bright;
Let it never be said that a daughter of thine
Was married to a lord under night.
"Rise up, rise up, my seven bold sons,5
And put on your armour so bright,
And take better care of your youngest sister,
For your eldest's awa' the last night."—
He's mounted her on a milk-white steed,
And himself on a dapple grey,10
With a bugelet horn hung down by his side,
And lightly they rode away.
Lord William lookit o'er his left shoulder,
To see what he could see,
And there he spy'd her seven brethren bold,15
Come riding o'er the lee.
"Light down, light down, Lady Marg'ret," he said,
"And hold my steed in your hand,[Pg 117]
Until that against your seven brethren bold,
And your father, I make a stand."—20
She held his steed in her milk-white hand,
And never shed one tear,
Until that she saw her seven brethren fa',
And her father hard fighting, who loved her so dear.
"O hold your hand, Lord William!" she said,25
"For your strokes they are wondrous sair;
True lovers I can get many a ane,
But a father I can never get mair."—
O she's ta'en out her handkerchief,
It was o' the holland sae fine,30
And aye she dighted her father's bloody wounds,
That were redder than the wine.
"O chuse, O chuse, Lady Marg'ret," he said,
"O whether will ye gang or bide?"—
"I'll gang, I'll gang, Lord William," she said,35
"For you have left me no other guide."—
He's lifted her on a milk-white steed,
And himself on a dapple grey,
With a bugelet horn hung down by his side,
[Pg 118]And slowly they baith rade away.40
O they rade on, and on they rade,
And a' by the light of the moon,
Until they came to yon wan water,
And there they lighted down.
They lighted down to tak a drink45
Of the spring that ran sae clear;
And down the stream ran his gude heart's blood,
And sair she 'gan to fear.
"Hold up, hold up, Lord William," she says,
"For I fear that you are slain!"—50
"'Tis naething but the shadow of my scarlet cloak,
That shines in the water sae plain."—
O they rade on, and on they rade,
And a' by the light of the moon,
Until they cam to his mother's ha' door,55
And there they lighted down.
"Get up, get up, lady mother," he says,
"Get up, and let me in!—
Get up, get up, lady mother," he says,
"For this night my fair lady I've win.60
"O mak my bed, lady mother," he says,
"O mak it braid and deep!
And lay Lady Marg'ret close at my back,
And the sounder I will sleep."[Pg 119]—
Lord William was dead lang ere midnight,65
Lady Marg'ret lang ere day—
And all true lovers that go thegither,
May they have mair luck than they!
And they twa met, and they twa plat,
And fain they wad be near;
And a' the warld might ken right weel,75
They were twa lovers dear.
But bye and rade the Black Douglas,
And wow but he was rough!
For he pull'd up the bonny brier,
And flang't in St. Marie's Loch.80
69-80.
This miracle is frequently witnessed over the
graves of faithful lovers.—King Mark, according to the German
romance, planted a rose on Tristan's grave, and a vine
on that of Isold. The roots struck down into the very
hearts of the dead lovers, and the stems twined lovingly together.
The French account is somewhat different. An
eglantine sprung from the tomb of Tristan, and twisted itself
round the monument of Isold. It was cut down three times,
but grew up every morning fresher than before, so that it
was allowed to stand. Other examples are, in this volume,[Pg 120]
Fair Janet, Lord Thomas and Fair Annet; in the third volume,
Prince Robert, &c. The same phenomenon is exhibited
in the Swedish ballads of Hertig Fröjdenborg och Fröken
Adelin, Lilla Rosa, Hilla Lilla, Hertig Nils, (Svenska Folk-Visor,
i. 95, 116, Arwidsson, ii. 8, 21, 24,) in the Danish ballad of
Herr Sallemand, (Danske Viser, iii. 348,) in the Breton ballad
of Lord Nann and the Korrigan, translated in Keightley's
Fairy Mythology, p. 433, in a Servian tale cited by Talvi, Versuch,
&c., p. 139, and in the Afghan poem of Audam and Doorkhaunee,
described by Elphinstone, Account of the Kingdom of
Caubul, i. 295,—which last reference we owe to Talvi.—In
the case of the Danish ballad it is certain, and in some of the
other cases probable, that the idea was derived from the romance
of Tristan.
[Pg 121]
LORD THOMAS AND FAIR ELLINOR.
The four pieces which follow have all the same subject.
Lord Thomas and Fair Ellinor, is given from
the Collection of Old Ballads, 1723, vol. i. p. 249,
where it is entitled, A Tragical Ballad on the unfortunate
Love of Lord Thomas and Fair Ellinor, together
with the Downfal of the Brown Girl. The text differs
but slightly from that of Percy, (iii. 121,) and Ritson,
Ancient Songs, ii. 89.
Lord Thomas he was a bold forrester,
And a chaser of the king's deer;
Fair Ellinor was a fine woman,
And Lord Thomas he loved her dear.
"Come riddle my riddle, dear mother," he said,5
"And riddle us both as one;
Whether I shall marry with fair Ellinor,
And let the brown girl alone?"[Pg 122]
"The brown girl she has got houses and land,
And fair Ellinor she has got none;10
Therefore I charge you on my blessing,
Bring me the brown girl home."
As it befell on a high holiday,
As many more did beside,
Lord Thomas he went to fair Ellinor,15
That should have been his bride.
But when he came to fair Ellinors bower,
He knocked there at the ring;
But who was so ready as fair Ellinor,
For to let Lord Thomas in.20
"What news, what news, Lord Thomas?" she said,
"What news hast thou brought unto me?"
"I am come to bid thee to my wedding,
And that is bad news for thee."
"O God forbid, Lord Thomas," she said,25
"That such a thing should be done;
I thought to have been thy bride my own self,
And you to have been the bridegrom."
"Come riddle my riddle, dear mother," she said,
[Pg 123]"And riddle it all in one;30
Whether I shall go to Lord Thomas's wedding,
Or whether I shall tarry at home?"
"There are many that are your friends, daughter,
And many that are your foe;
Therefore I charge you on my blessing,35
To Lord Thomas's wedding don't go."
"There's many that are my friends, mother;
And if a thousand more were my foe,
Betide my life, betide my death,
To Lord Thomas's wedding I'll go."40
She cloathed herself in gallant attire,
And her merry men all in green;
And as they rid through every town,
They took her to be some queen.
But when she came to Lord Thomas's gate,
She knocked there at the ring;45
But who was so ready as Lord Thomas,
To let fair Ellinor in.
"Is this your bride?" fair Ellinor said;
"Methinks she looks wonderful brown;50
Thou might'st have had as fair a woman,
As ever trod on the ground."[Pg 124]
"Despise her not, fair Ellin," he said,
"Despise her not unto me;
For better I love thy little finger,55
Than all her whole body."
This brown bride had a little penknife,
That was both long and sharp,
And betwixt the short ribs and the long,
Prick'd fair Ellinor to the heart.60
"O Christ now save thee," Lord Thomas he said,
"Methinks thou look'st wondrous wan;
Thou us'd to look with as fresh a colour,
As ever the sun shin'd on."
"O art thou blind, Lord Thomas?" she said,
"Or canst thou not very well see?65
O dost thou not see my own heart's blood
Run trickling down my knee?"
Lord Thomas he had a sword by his side;
As he walk'd about the hall,70
He cut off his bride's head from her shoulders,
And threw it against the wall.
He set the hilt against the ground,
And the point against his heart;
There never were three lovers met,75
That sooner did depart.
[Pg 125]
LORD THOMAS AND FAIR ANNET.
From Percy's Reliques, iii. 290, where it was "given,
with some corrections, from a MS. copy transmitted
from Scotland." There is a corresponding Swedish
Ballad, Herr Peder och Liten Kerstin, in the Svenska
Folk-Visor, i. 49. It is translated in Literature and
Romance of Northern Europe, by William and Mary
Howitt, i. 258.
Lord Thomas and fair Annet
Sate a' day on a hill;
Whan night was cum, and sun was sett,
They had not talkt their fill.
Lord Thomas said a word in jest,5
Fair Annet took it ill:
"A' I will nevir wed a wife
Against my ain friends will."[Pg 126]
"Gif ye wull nevir wed a wife,
A wife wull neir wed yee:"10
Sae he is hame to tell his mither,
And knelt upon his knee.
"O rede, O rede, mither," he says,
"A gude rede gie to mee:
O sall I tak the nut-browne bride,15
And let faire Annet bee?"
"The nut-browne bride haes gowd and gear,
Fair Annet she has gat nane;
And the little beauty fair Annet has,
O it wull soon be gane."20
And he has till his brother gane:
"Now, brother, rede ye mee;
A', sall I marrie the nut-browne bride,
And let fair Annet bee?"
"The nut-browne bride has oxen, brother,25
The nut-browne bride has kye:
I wad hae ye marrie the nut-browne bride,
And cast fair Annet bye."
"Her oxen may dye i' the house, billie,
And her kye into the byre,30
And I sall hae nothing to mysell,
Bot a fat fadge by the fyre."[Pg 127]
And he has till his sister gane:
"Now sister, rede ye mee;
O sall I marrie the nut-browne bride,35
And set fair Annet free?"
"Ise rede ye tak fair Annet, Thomas,
And let the browne bride alane;
Lest ye sould sigh, and say, Alace,
What is this we brought hame!"40
"No, I will tak my mithers counsel,
And marrie me owt o' hand;
And I will tak the nut-browne bride;
Fair Annet may leive the land."
Up then rose fair Annets father,45
Twa hours or it wer day,
And he is gane into the bower
Wherein fair Annet lay.
"Rise up, rise up, fair Annet," he says,
"Put on your silken sheene;50
Let us gae to St. Maries kirke,
And see that rich weddeen."
"My maides, gae to my dressing-roome,
And dress to me my hair;
Whair-eir yee laid a plait before,55
See yee lay ten times mair.[Pg 128]
"My maids, gae to my dressing-room,
And dress to me my smock;
The one half is o' the holland fine,
The other o' needle-work."60
The horse fair Annet rade upon,
He amblit like the wind;
Wi' siller he was shod before,
Wi' burning gowd behind.
Four and twanty siller bells65
Wer a' tyed till his mane,
And yae tift o' the norland wind,
They tinkled ane by ane.
Four and twanty gay gude knichts
Rade by fair Annets side,70
And four and twanty fair ladies,
As gin she had bin a bride.
And whan she cam to Maries kirk,
She sat on Maries stean:
The cleading that fair Annet had on75
It skinkled in their een.
And whan she cam into the kirk,
She shimmer'd like the sun;
The belt that was about her waist,
[Pg 129]Was a' wi' pearles bedone.80
She sat her by the nut-browne bride,
And her een they wer sae clear,
Lord Thomas he clean forgat the bride,
Whan fair Annet she drew near.
He had a rose into his hand,85
And he gave it kisses three,
And reaching by the nut-browne bride,
Laid it on fair Annets knee.
Up than spak the nut-browne bride,
She spak wi' meikle spite;90
"And whair gat ye that rose-water,
That does mak yee sae white?"
"O I did get the rose-water
Whair ye wull neir get nane,
For I did get that very rose-water95
Into my mithers wame."
The bride she drew a long bodkin
Frae out her gay head-gear,
And strake fair Annet unto the heart,
That word she nevir spak mair.100
Lord Thomas he saw fair Annet wex pale,
And marvelit what mote bee:
But whan he saw her dear hearts blude,
A' wood-wroth wexed hee.[Pg 130]
He drew his dagger, that was sae sharp,105
That was sae sharp and meet,
And drave into the nut-browne bride,
That fell deid at his feit.
"Now stay for me, dear Annet," he sed,
"Now stay, my dear," he cry'd;110
Then strake the dagger untill his heart,
And fell deid by her side.
Lord Thomas was buried without kirk-wa',
Fair Annet within the quiere;
And o' the tane thair grew a birk,115
The other a bonny briere.
And ay they grew, and ay they threw,
As they wad faine be neare;
And by this ye may ken right weil,
They were twa luvers deare.120
[Pg 131]
SWEET WILLIE AND FAIR ANNIE
Is another version of the foregoing piece, furnished
by Jamieson, Popular Ballads, i. 22.
"The text of Lord Thomas and Fair Annet," remarks
Jamieson, "seems to have been adjusted, previous
to its leaving Scotland, by some one who was
more of a scholar than the reciters of ballads generally
are; and, in attempting to give it an antique cast, it
has been deprived of somewhat of that easy facility
which is the distinguished characteristic of the traditionary
ballad narrative. With the text of the following
ditty, no such experiment has been made. It is
here given pure and entire, as it was taken down by
the editor, from the recitation of a lady in Aberbrothick,
(Mrs. W. Arrot.) As she had, when a child,
learnt the ballad from an elderly maid-servant, and
probably had not repeated it for a dozen years before
I had the good fortune to be introduced to her, it may
be depended upon, that every line was recited to me
as nearly as possible in the exact form in which she
learnt it."[Pg 132]
Mr. Chambers, in conformity with the plan of his
work, presents us with an edition composed out of Percy's
and Jamieson's, with some amended readings and
additional verses from a manuscript copy, (Scottish
Ballads, p. 269.)
Sweet Willie and fair Annie
Sat a' day on a hill;
And though they had sitten seven year,
They ne'er wad had their fill.
Sweet Willie said a word in haste,5
And Annie took it ill:
"I winna wed a tocherless maid,
Against my parent's will."
"Ye're come o' the rich, Willie,
And I'm come o' the poor;10
I'm o'er laigh to be your bride,
And I winna be your whore."
O Annie she's gane till her bower,
And Willie down the den;
And he's come till his mither's bower,15
By the lei light o' the moon.
"Whare hae ye been a' night, Willie?
O wow! ye've tarried lang!"
"I have been courtin' fair Annie,
And she is frae me gane.
"There is twa maidens in a bower;25
Which o' them sall I bring hame?
The nut-brown maid has sheep and cows,
And fair Annie has nane."
"It's an ye wed the nut-brown maid,
I'll heap gold wi' my hand;30
But an ye wed her, fair Annie,
I'll straik it wi' a wand.
"The nut-brown maid has sheep and cows,
And fair Annie has nane;
And Willie, for my benison,35
The nut-brown maid bring hame."
"O I sall wed the nut-brown maid,
And I sall bring her hame;
But peace nor rest between us twa,
[Pg 134]Till death sinder's again.40
"But, alas, alas!" says sweet Willie,
"O fair is Annie's face!"
"But what's the matter, my son Willie,
She has nae ither grace."
"Alas, alas!" says sweet Willie,45
"But white is Annie's hand!"
"But what's the matter, my son Willie,
She hasna a fur o' land."
"Sheep will die in cots, mither,
And owsen die in byre;50
And what's this warld's wealth to me,
An I get na my heart's desire?
"Whare will I get a bonny boy,
That wad fain win hose and shoon,
That will rin to fair Annie's bower,55
Wi' the lei light o' the moon?
"Ye'll tell her to come to Willie's weddin',
The morn at twal at noon;
Ye'll tell her to come to Willie's weddin',
[Pg 135]The heir o' Duplin town.60
"She manna put on the black, the black,
Nor yet the dowie brown;
But the scarlet sae red, and the kerches sae white,
And her bonny locks hangin' down."
He is on to Annie's bower,65
And tirled at the pin;
And wha was sae ready as Annie hersel,
To open and let him in.
"Ye are bidden come to Willie's weddin',
The morn at twal at noon;70
Ye are bidden come to Willie's weddin',
The heir of Duplin town.
"Ye manna put on the black, the black,
Nor yet the dowie brown;
But the scarlet sae red, and the kerches sae white,75
And your bonny locks hangin' down."
"Its I will come to Willie's weddin',
The morn at twal at noon;
Its I will come to Willie's weddin',
But I rather the mass had been mine.80
"Maidens, to my bower come,
And lay gold on my hair;[Pg 136]
And whare ye laid ae plait before,
Ye'll now lay ten times mair.
"Taylors, to my bower come,85
And mak to me a weed;
And smiths unto my stable come,
And shoe to me a steed."
At every tate o' Annie's horse' mane
There hang a silver bell;90
And there came a wind out frae the south,
Which made them a' to knell.
And whan she came to Mary-kirk,
And sat down in the deas,
The light, that came frae fair Annie,95
Enlighten'd a' the place.
But up and stands the nut-brown bride,
Just at her father's knee;
"O wha is this, my father dear,
That blinks in Willie's e'e?"100
"O this is Willie's first true love,
Before he loved thee."
"If that be Willie's first true love,
He might ha'e latten me be;
She has as much gold on ae finger,105
As I'll wear till I die.[Pg 137]
"O whare got ye that water, Annie,
That washes you sae white?"
"I got it in my mither's wambe,
Whare ye'll ne'er get the like.110
"For ye've been wash'd in Dunny's well,
And dried on Dunny's dyke;
And a' the water in the sea
Will never wash ye white."
Willie's ta'en a rose out o' his hat,115
Laid it in Annie's lap;
"[The bonniest to the bonniest fa's,]
Hae, wear it for my sake."
"Tak up and wear your rose, Willie,
And wear't wi' mickle care,120
For the woman sall never bear a son,
That will mak my heart sae sair."
Whan night was come, and day was gane,
And a' man boun to bed,
Sweet Willie and the nut-brown bride125
In their chamber were laid.
They werena weel lyen down,
And scarcely fa'n asleep,
Whan up and stands she, fair Annie,
[Pg 138]Just up at Willie's feet.130
"Weel brook ye o' your brown brown bride,
Between ye and the wa';
And sae will I o' my winding sheet,
That suits me best ava.
"Weel brook ye o' your brown brown bride,135
Between ye and the stock;
And sae will I o' my black black kist,
That has neither key nor lock."
Sad Willie raise, put on his claise,
Drew till him his hose and shoon,140
And he is on to Annie's bower,
By the lei light o' the moon.
The firsten bower that he came till,
There was right dowie wark;
Her mither and her three sisters145
Were makin' to Annie a sark.
The nexten bower that he came till,
There was right dowie cheir;
Her father and her seven brethren
Were makin' to Annie a bier.150
The lasten bower, that he came till,
[O heavy was his care!
The waxen lights were burning bright,]
And fair Annie streekit there.[Pg 139]
He's lifted up the coverlet,155
[Where she, fair Annie, lay;
Sweet was her smile, but wan her cheek;
O wan, and cald as clay!]
"It's I will kiss your bonny cheek,
And I will kiss your chin;160
And I will kiss your clay-cald lip;
But I'll never kiss woman again.
"The day ye deal at Annie's burial
The bread but and the wine;
Before the morn at twall o'clock,165
They'll deal the same at mine."
The tane was buried in Mary's kirk,
The tither in Mary's quire;
And out o' the tane there grew a birk,
And out o' the tither a brier.170
And ay they grew, and ay they drew,
Untill they twa did meet;
And every ane that past them by,
Said, "Thae's been lovers sweet!"
19. That is, my slumbers are short, broken, and interrupted. J.
60. Duplin town. Duplin is the seat of the earl of Kinnoul,
from which he derives his title of viscount. It is in the
neighborhood of Perth. It is observable, that ballads are
very frequently adapted to the meridian of the place where
they are found. J.
[Pg 140]
FAIR MARGARET AND SWEET WILLIAM.
From Percy's Reliques, iii. 164.
"This seems to be the old song quoted in Fletcher's
Knight of the Burning Pestle, acts ii. and iii.;
although the six lines there preserved are somewhat
different from those in the ballad, as it stands at present.
The reader will not wonder at this, when he is
informed that this is only given from a modern printed
copy picked up on a stall. Its full title is Fair Margaret's
misfortunes; or Sweet William's frightful dreams
on his wedding night, with the sudden death and burial
of those noble lovers.
"The lines preserved in the play are this distich:
"You are no love for me, Margaret,
I am no love for you."
Act iii. 5.
And the following stanza:
"When it was grown to dark midnight,
And all were fast asleep,
In came Margarets grimly ghost,
And stood at Williams feet.
Act ii. 8.
"These lines have acquired an importance by giving
birth to one of the most beautiful ballads in our
own or any other language: [Mallet's Margaret's
Ghost.]
"Since the first edition, some improvements have
been inserted, which were communicated by a lady of[Pg 141]
the first distinction, as she had heard this song repeated
in her infancy."
The variations in Herd's copy, (i. 145,) and in Ritson's
(Ancient Songs, ii. 92,) are unimportant.
In the main the same is the widely known ballad,
Der Ritter und das Mägdlein, Erk, p. 81, Hoffmann's
Schlesische Volkslieder, p. 9; Herr Malmstens Dröm,
Svenska Folkvisor, iii. 104, Arwidsson, ii. 21; Volkslieder
der Wenden, by Haupt and Schmaler, i. 159-162
(Hoffmann); in Dutch, with a different close,
Hoffmann's Niederländische Volkslieder, p. 61: also
Lord Lovel, post, p. 162.
As it fell out on a long summer's day,
Two lovers they sat on a hill;
They sat together that long summer's day,
And could not talk their fill.
"I see no harm by you, Margaret,5
And you see none by mee;
Before to-morrow at eight o' the clock
A rich wedding you shall see."
Fair Margaret sat in her bower-window,
Combing her yellow hair;10
There she spyed sweet William and his bride,
As they were a riding near.
Then down she layd her ivory combe,
And braided her hair in twain:
She went alive out of her bower,15
But ne'er came alive in't again.[Pg 142]
When day was gone, and night was come,
And all men fast asleep,
Then came the spirit of fair Marg'ret,
And stood at Williams feet.20
When day was come, and night 'twas gone,25
And all men wak'd from sleep,
Sweet William to his lady sayd,
"My dear, I have cause to weep.
"I dreamt a dream, my dear ladye,
Such dreames are never good:30
I dreamt my bower was full of red swine,
And my bride-bed full of blood."
"Such dreams, such dreams, my honoured sir,
They never do prove good;
To dream thy bower was full of red swine,35
And thy bride-bed full of blood."[Pg 143]
He called up his merry men all,
By one, by two, and by three;
Saying, "I'll away to fair Marg'ret's bower,
By the leave of my ladie."40
And when he came to fair Marg'ret's bower,
He knocked at the ring;
And who so ready as her seven brethren,
To let sweet William in.
Then he turned up the covering-sheet;45
"Pray let me see the dead;
Methinks she looks all pale and wan,
She hath lost her cherry red.
"I'll do more for thee, Margaret,
Than any of thy kin:50
For I will kiss thy pale wan lips,
Though a smile I cannot win."
With that bespake the seven brethren,
Making most piteous mone,
"You may go kiss your jolly brown bride,55
And let our sister alone."
"If I do kiss my jolly brown bride,
I do but what is right;
I neer made a vow to yonder poor corpse,
[Pg 144]By day, nor yet by night.60
Fair Margaret dyed to-day, to-day,65
Sweet William dyed the morrow:
Fair Margaret dyed for pure true love,
Sweet William dyed for sorrow.
Margaret was buryed in the lower chancel,
And William in the higher:70
Out of her brest there sprang a rose,
And out of his a briar.
They grew till they grew unto the church top,
And then they could grow no higher;
And there they tyed in a true lovers knot,75
Which made all the people admire.
Then came the clerk of the parish,
As you the truth shall hear,
And by misfortune cut them down,
Or they had now been there.80
21-24.
God give you joy, you lovers true,
In bride-bed fast asleep;
Lo! I am going to my green-grass grave,
And I'm in my winding sheet.
Herd's copy.
62. Alluding to the dole anciently given at funerals. P.
[Pg 145]
SWEET WILLIAM'S GHOST
As already remarked, is often made the sequel to
other ballads. (See Clerk Saunders, p. 45.) It was
first printed in the fourth volume of Ramsay's Tea
Table Miscellany, with some imperfections, and with
two spurious stanzas for a conclusion. We subjoin
to Ramsay's copy the admirable version obtained by
Motherwell from recitation, and still another variation
furnished by Kinloch.
Closely similar in many respects are the Danish
Fæstemanden i Graven (Aage og Else), Grundtvig,
No. 90, and the Swedish Sorgens Magt, Svenska F. V.,
i. 29, ii. 204, or Arwidsson, ii. 103. Also Der Todte
Freier, Erk's Liederhort, 24, 24 a. In the Danish and
Swedish ballads it is the uncontrolled grief of his mistress
that calls the lover from his grave: in the English,
the desire to be freed from his troth-plight.—See
vol. i. p. 213, 217.
There came a ghost to Margaret's door,
With many a grievous groan,
And ay he tirled at the pin,
But answer made she none.
"Is that my father Philip,
Or is't my brother John?
Or is't my true love Willy,
From Scotland new come home?"[Pg 146]
"Tis not thy father Philip,
Nor yet thy brother John;10
But 'tis thy true love Willy,
From Scotland new come home.
"O sweet Margaret! O dear Margaret!
I pray thee speak to mee:
Give me my faith and troth, Margaret,15
As I gave it to thee."
"Thy faith and troth thou's never get,
Nor yet will I thee lend,
Till that thou come within my bower,
And kiss my cheek and chin."20
"If I should come within thy bower,
I am no earthly man:
And should I kiss thy rosy lips,
Thy days will not be lang.
"O sweet Margaret, O dear Margaret,25
I pray thee speak to mee:
Give me my faith and troth, Margaret,
As I gave it to thee."
"Thy faith and troth thou's never get,
Nor yet will I thee lend,30
Till you take me to yon kirk-yard,
And wed me with a ring."[Pg 147]
"My bones are buried in yon kirk-yard,
Afar beyond the sea,
And it is but my spirit, Margaret,35
That's now speaking to thee."
She stretched out her lily-white hand,
And for to do her best;
"Hae there your faith and troth, Willy,
God send your soul good rest."40
Now she has kilted her robes of green
A piece below her knee,
And a' the live-lang winter night
The dead corps followed she.
"Is there any room at your head, Willy,45
Or any room at your feet?
Or any room at your side, Willy,
Wherein that I may creep?"
"There's no room at my head, Margaret,
There's no room at my feet;50
There's no room at my side, Margaret,
My coffin's made so meet."
Then up and crew the red red cock,
And up then crew the gray:
"Tis time, tis time, my dear Margaret,55
That you were going away."[Pg 148]
No more the ghost to Margaret said,
But, with a grievous groan,
Evanish'd in a cloud of mist,
And left her all alone.60
"O stay, my only true love, stay,"
The constant Margaret cried:
Wan grew her cheeks, she closed her een,
Stretch'd her soft limbs, and died.
[Pg 149]
WILLIAM AND MARJORIE.
Motherwell's Minstrelsy, p. 186.
Lady Marjorie, Lady Marjorie,
Sat sewing her silken seam,
And by her came a pale, pale ghost,
Wi' mony a sigh and mane.
"Are ye my father the king?" she says,5
"Or are ye my brither John?
Or are ye my true love, sweet William,
From England newly come?"
"I'm not your father the king," he says,
"No, no, nor your brither John;10
But I'm your true love, sweet William,
From England that's newly come."[Pg 150]
"Have ye brought me any scarlets sae red,
Or any of the silks sae fine;
Or have ye brought me any precious things,15
That merchants have for sale?"
"I have not brought you any scarlets sae red,
No, no, nor the silks sae fine;
But I have brought you my winding-sheet
Ower many a rock and hill.20
"Lady Marjorie, Lady Marjorie,
For faith and charitie,
Will ye gie to me my faith and troth,
That I gave once to thee?"
"O your faith and troth I'll not gie to thee,25
No, no, that will not I,
Until I get ae kiss of your ruby lips,
And in my arms you lye."
"My lips they are sae bitter," he says,
"My breath it is sae strang,30
If you get ae kiss of my ruby lips,
Your days will not be lang.
"The cocks are crawing, Marjorie," he says,—
"The cocks are crawing again;
It's time the dead should part the quick,—35
Marjorie, I must be gane."[Pg 151]
She followed him high, she followed him low,
Till she came to yon churchyard green;
And there the deep grave opened up,
And young William he lay down.40
"What three things are these, sweet William," she says,
"That stand here at your head?"
"O it's three maidens, Marjorie," he says,
"That I promised once to wed."
"What three things are these, sweet William," she says,45
"That stand close at your side?"
"O it's three babes, Marjorie," he says,
"That these three maidens had."
"What three things are these, sweet William," she says,
"That lye close at your feet?"50
"O it's three hell-hounds, Marjorie," he says,
"That's waiting my soul to keep."
O she took up her white, white hand,
And she struck him on the breast,
Saying,—"Have there again your faith and troth,55
And I wish your saul gude rest."
[Pg 152]
SWEET WILLIAM AND MAY MARGARET.
Kinloch's Ancient Scottish Ballads, p. 241.
As May Marg'ret sat in her bouerie,
In her bouer all alone,
At the very parting o' midnicht,
She heard a mournfu' moan.
"O is it my father, O is it my mother,5
Or is it my brother John?
Or is it sweet William, my ain true love,
To Scotland new come home?"
"It is na your father, it is na your mother,
It is na your brother John;10
But it is sweet William, your ain true love,
To Scotland new come home."[Pg 153]—
"Hae ye brought me onie fine things,
Onie new thing for to wear?
Or hae ye brought me a braid o' lace,15
To snood up my gowden hair?"
"I've brought ye na fine things at all,
Nor onie new thing to wear,
Nor hae I brought ye a braid of lace,
To snood up your gowden hair.20
"But Margaret, dear Margaret,
I pray ye speak to me;
O gie me back my faith and troth,
As dear as I gied it thee!"
"Your faith and troth ye sanna get,25
Nor will I wi' ye twin,
Till ye come within my bower,
And kiss me, cheek and chin."
"O Margaret, dear Margaret,
I pray ye speak to me;30
O gie me back my faith and troth,
As dear as I gied it thee."
"Your faith and troth ye sanna get,
Nor will I wi' ye twin,
Till ye tak me to yonder kirk,35
And wed me wi' a ring."[Pg 154]
"O should I come within your bouer,
I am na earthly man:
If I should kiss your red, red lips,
Your days wad na be lang.40
"My banes are buried in yon kirk-yard,
It's far ayont the sea;
And it is my spirit, Margaret,
That's speaking unto thee."
"Your faith and troth ye sanna get,45
Nor will I twin wi' thee,
Tell ye tell me the pleasures o' Heaven,
And pains of hell how they be."
"The pleasures of heaven I wat not of,
But the pains of hell I dree;50
There some are hie hang'd for huring,
And some for adulterie."
Then Marg'ret took her milk-white hand,
And smooth'd it on his breast;—
"Tak your faith and troth, William,55
God send your soul good rest!"
[Pg 155]
BONNY BARBARA ALLAN
Was first published in Ramsay's Tea-Table Miscellany,
(ii. 171,) from which it is transferred verbatim into
Herd's Scottish Songs, Johnson's Museum, Ritson's
Scottish Songs, &c. Percy printed it, "with a few
conjectural emendations, from a written copy," Reliques,
iii. 175, together with another version, which
follows the present. Mr. G. F. Graham, Songs of
Scotland, ii. 157, has pointed out an allusion to the
"little Scotch Song of Barbary Allen," in Pepys's Diary,
2 Jan. 1665-6.
It was in and about the Martinmas time,
When the green leaves were a falling,
That Sir John Graeme in the west country
Fell in love with Barbara Allan.
He sent his man down through the town,5
To the place where she was dwelling;
"O haste and come to my master dear,
Gin ye be Barbara Allan."[Pg 156]
O hooly, hooly rose she up,
To the place where he was lying,10
And when she drew the curtain by,
"Young man, I think you're dying."
"O it's I'm sick, and very, very sick,
And 'tis a' for Barbara Allan:"
"O the better for me ye's never be,15
Tho' your heart's blood were a spilling.
"O dinna ye mind, young man," said she,
"When ye was in the tavern a drinking,
That ye made the healths gae round and round,
And slighted Barbara Allan."20
He turn'd his face unto the wall,
And death was with him dealing;
"Adieu, adieu, my dear friends all,
And be kind to Barbara Allan."
And slowly, slowly raise she up,25
And slowly, slowly left him;
And sighing said, she cou'd not stay,
Since death of life had reft him.
She had not gane a mile but twa,
When she heard the dead-bell ringing,30
And every jow that the dead-bell geid,
It cry'd "Woe to Barbara Allan!"[Pg 157]
"O mother, mother, make my bed,
O make it saft and narrow;
Since my love died for me today,35
I'll die for him tomorrow."
[Pg 158]
BARBARA ALLEN'S CRUELTY.
From Percy's Reliques, iii. 169.
"Given, with some corrections, from an old blackletter
copy, entitled, Barbara Allen's Cruelty, or the
Young Man's Tragedy."
In Scarlet towne, where I was borne,
There was a faire maid dwellin,
Made every youth crye, Wel-awaye!
Her name was Barbara Allen.
All in the merrye month of May,5
When greene buds they were swellin,
Yong Jemmye Grove on his death-bed lay,
For love of Barbara Allen.
He sent his man unto her then,
To the towne where shee was dwellin;10
"You must come to my master deare,
Giff your name be Barbara Allen.[Pg 159]
"For death is printed on his face,
And ore his hart is stealin:
Then haste away to comfort him,15
O lovelye Barbara Allen."
"Though death be printed on his face,
And ore his harte is stealin,
Yet little better shall he bee
For bonny Barbara Allen."20
So slowly, slowly, she came up,
And slowly she came nye him;
And all she sayd, when there she came,
"Yong man, I think y'are dying."
He turned his face unto her strait,25
With deadlye sorrow sighing;
"O lovely maid, come pity mee,
I'me on my death-bed lying."
"If on your death-bed you doe lye,
What needs the tale you are tellin?30
I cannot keep you from your death;
Farewell," sayd Barbara Allen.
He turnd his face unto the wall,
As deadlye pangs he fell in:
"Adieu! adieu! adieu to you all,35
Adieu to Barbara Allen!"[Pg 160]
As she was walking ore the fields,
She heard the bell a knellin;
And every stroke did seem to saye,
"Unworthy Barbara Allen!"40
She turnd her bodye round about,
And spied the corps a coming:
"Laye down, laye down the corps," she sayd,
"That I may look upon him."
With scornful eye she looked downe,45
Her cheeke with laughter swellin,
Whilst all her friends cryd out amaine,
"Unworthye Barbara Allen!"
When he was dead, and laid in grave,
Her harte was struck with sorrowe;50
"O mother, mother, make my bed,
For I shall dye to-morrowe.
"Hard-harted creature him to slight,
Who loved me so dearlye:
O that I had beene more kind to him,55
When he was alive and neare me!"
She, on her death-bed as she laye,
Beg'd to be buried by him,
And sore repented of the daye,
[Pg 161]That she did ere denye him.60
"Farewell," she sayd, "ye virgins all,
And shun the fault I fell in:
Henceforth take warning by the fall
Of cruel Barbara Allen."
[Pg 162]
LORD LOVEL.
"This ballad, taken down from the recitation of a
lady in Roxburghshire, appears to claim affinity to
Border Song; and the title of the 'discourteous squire,'
would incline one to suppose that it has derived its origin
from some circumstance connected with the county
of Northumberland, where Lovel was anciently a well-known
name." Kinloch's Ancient Scottish Ballads,
p. 31.
A version from a recent broadside is printed in
Ancient Poems, Ballads, and Songs of the Peasantry
of England, Percy Society, vol. xvii. p. 78.
A fragment of a similar story, the relations of the
parties being reversed, is Lady Alice, given in Bell's
Ballads of the Peasantry, p. 127, and Notes and Queries,
2d S, i. 418.—Compare also Fair Margaret, &c. p.
140.
Lord Lovel stands at his stable door,
Mounted upon a grey steed;
And bye came Ladie Nanciebel,
And wish'd Lord Lovel much speed.
"O whare are ye going, Lord Lovel,5
My dearest tell to me?"
"O I am going a far journey,
Some strange countrie to see;[Pg 163]
"But I'll return in seven long years,
Lady Nanciebel to see."10
"O seven, seven, seven long years,
They are much too long for me."
* * * * * * *
He was gane a year away,
A year but barely ane,
When a strange fancy cam into his head,15
That fair Nanciebel was gane.
It's then he rade, and better rade,
Until he cam to the toun,
And then he heard a dismal noise,
For the church bells a' did soun'.20
He asked what the bells rang for;
They said, "It's for Nanciebel;
She died for a discourteous squire,
And his name is Lord Lovel."
The lid o' the coffin he opened up,25
The linens he faulded doun;
And ae he kiss'd her pale, pale lips,
And the tears cam trinkling doun.
"Weill may I kiss those pale, pale lips,
[Pg 164]For they will never kiss me;—30
I'll mak a vow, and keep it true,
That they'll ne'er kiss ane but thee."
Lady Nancie died on Tuesday's nicht,
Lord Lovel upon the niest day;
Lady Nancie died for pure, pure love,35
Lord Lovel, for deep sorray.
[Pg 165]
LORD SALTON AND AUCHANACHIE.
The following fragment was first published in Maidment's
North Countrie Garland, p. 10; shortly after,
in Buchan's Gleanings, p. 161. A more complete
copy, from Buchan's larger collection, is annexed.
* * * * * * *
Ben came her father,
Skipping on the floor,
Said, "Jeanie, you're trying
The tricks of a whore.
"You're caring for him5
That cares not for thee,
And I pray you take Salton,
Let Auchanachie be."
"I will not have Salton,
[Pg 166]It lies low by the sea;10
He is bowed in the back,
He's thrawen in the knee;
And I'll die if I get not
My brave Auchanachie."
"I am bowed in the back,15
Lassie as ye see,
But the bonny lands of Salton
Are no crooked tee."
And when she was married
She would not lie down,20
But they took out a knife,
And cuttit her gown;
Likewise of her stays
The lacing in three,
And now she lies dead25
For her Auchanachie.
Out comes her bower-woman,
Wringing her hands,
Says, "Alas for the staying
So long on the sands!30
"Alas for the staying
So long on the flood!
For Jeanie was married,
And now she is dead."
[Pg 167]
LORD SALTON AND AUCHANACHIE.
From Buchan's Ballads of the North of Scotland, ii. 133.
"Auchanachie Gordon is bonny and braw,
He would tempt any woman that ever he saw;
He would tempt any woman, so has he tempted me,
And I'll die if I getna my love Auchanachie."
In came her father, tripping on the floor,5
Says, "Jeanie, ye're trying the tricks o' a whore;
Ye're caring for them that cares little for thee,
Ye must marry Salton, leave Auchanachie.
"Auchanachie Gordon, he is but a man,
Altho' he be pretty, where lies his free land?10
Salton's lands they lie broad, his towers they stand hie,
Ye must marry Salton, leave Auchanachie.[Pg 168]
"Salton will gar you wear silk gowns fring'd to thy knee,
But ye'll never wear that wi' your love Auchanachie."
"Wi' Auchanachie Gordon I would beg my bread,15
Before that wi' Salton I'd wear gowd on my head;
"Wear gowd on my head, or gowns fring'd to the knee,
And I'll die if I getna my love Auchanachie;
O Salton's valley lies low by the sea,
He's bowed on the back, and thrawin on the knee."20
"O Salton's a valley lies low by the sea;
Though he's bowed on the back, and thrawin on the knee,
Though he's bowed on the back, and thrawin on the knee,
The bonny rigs of Salton they're nae thrawin tee."
"O you that are my parents to church may me bring,25
But unto young Salton I'll never bear a son;
For son, or for daughter, I'll ne'er bow my knee,
And I'll die if I getna my love Auchanachie."
When Jeanie was married, from church was brought hame,
[Pg 169]When she wi' her maidens sae merry shou'd hae been,30
When she wi' her maidens sae merry shou'd hae been,
She's called for a chamber to weep there her lane.
"Come to your bed, Jeanie, my honey and my sweet,
For to stile you mistress I do not think it meet."
"Mistress, or Jeanie, it is a' ane to me,35
It's in your bed, Salton, I never will be."
Then out spake her father, he spake wi' renown,
"Some of you that are maidens, ye'll loose aff her gown;
Some of you that are maidens, ye'll loose aff her gown,
And I'll mend the marriage wi' ten thousand crowns."40
Then ane of her maidens they loosed aff her gown,
But bonny Jeanie Gordon, she fell in a swoon;
She fell in a swoon low down by their knee;
Says, "Look on, I die for my love Auchanachie!"
That very same day Miss Jeanie did die,45
And hame came Auchanachie, hame frae the sea;
Her father and mither welcom'd him at the gate;
He said, "Where's Miss Jeanie, that she's nae here yet?"
Then forth came her maidens, all wringing their hands,[Pg 170]
Saying, "Alas! for your staying sae lang frae the land:50
Sae lang frae the land, and sae lang fra the fleed,
They've wedded your Jeanie, and now she is dead!"
"Some of you, her maidens, take me by the hand,
And show me the chamber Miss Jeanie died in;"
He kiss'd her cold lips, which were colder than stane,55
And he died in the chamber that Jeanie died in.
[Pg 171]
WILLIE AND MAY MARGARET.
A fragment obtained by Jamieson from the recitation
of Mrs. Brown, of Falkland. Popular Ballads,
i. 135. In connection with this we give the complete
story from Buchan. Aytoun has changed the title to
The Mother's Malison. An Italian ballad, containing
a story similar to that of this ballad and the two following
(but of independent origin), is La Maledizione
Materna, in Marcoaldi's Canti Popolari, p. 170.
"Gie corn to my horse, mither;
Gie meat unto my man;
For I maun gang to Margaret's bower,
Before the nicht comes on."
"O stay at hame now, my son Willie!5
The wind blaws cald and sour;
The nicht will be baith mirk and late,
Before ye reach her bower."
"O tho' the nicht were ever sae dark,
Or the wind blew never sae cald,10
I will be in my Margaret's bower
Before twa hours be tald."[Pg 172]
"O gin ye gang to May Margaret,
Without the leave of me,
Clyde's water's wide and deep enough;—15
My malison drown thee!"
He mounted on his coal-black steed,
And fast he rade awa';
But, ere he came to Clyde's water,
Fu' loud the wind did blaw.20
As he rode o'er yon hich, hich hill,
And down yon dowie den,
There was a roar in Clyde's water
Wad fear'd a hunder men.
His heart was warm, his pride was up;25
Sweet Willie kentna fear;
But yet his mither's malison
Ay sounded in his ear.
O he has swam through Clyde's water,
Tho' it was wide and deep;30
And he came to May Margaret's door,
When a' were fast asleep.
O he's gane round and round about,
And tirled at the pin;
But doors were steek'd, and window's bar'd,35
[Pg 173]And nane wad let him in.
"O open the door to me, Margaret,—
O open and lat me in!
For my boots are full o' Clyde's water,
And frozen to the brim."40
"I darena open the door to you,
Nor darena lat you in;
For my mither she is fast asleep,
And I darena mak nae din."
"O gin ye winna open the door,45
Nor yet be kind to me,
Now tell me o' some out-chamber,
Where I this nicht may be."
"Ye canna win in this nicht, Willie,
Nor here ye canna be;50
For I've nae chambers out nor in,
Nae ane but barely three:
"The tane o' them is fu' o' corn,
The tither is fu' o' hay;
The tither is fu' o' merry young men;—55
They winna remove till day."
"O fare ye weel, then, May Margaret,
Sin better manna be;
I've win my mither's malison,
[Pg 174]Coming this nicht to thee."60
He's mounted on his coal-black steed,—
O but his heart was wae!
But, ere he came to Clyde's water,
'Twas half up o'er the brae.
* * * * * * *
—— he plunged in,
But never raise again.
[Pg 175]
THE DROWNED LOVERS.
From Buchan's Ballads of the North of Scotland,
i. 140. The copy in the Appendix to Motherwell's
Minstrelsy, p. iii., is nearly the same.
Willie stands in his stable door,
And clapping at his steed;
And looking o'er his white fingers,
His nose began to bleed.
"Gie corn to my horse, mother;5
And meat to my young man;
And I'll awa' to Meggie's bower,
I'll win ere she lie down."
"O bide this night wi' me, Willie,
O bide this night wi' me;10
The best an' cock o' a' the reest,
At your supper shall be.[Pg 176]
"A' your cocks, and a' your reests,
I value not a prin;
For I'll awa' to Meggie's bower,15
I'll win ere she lie down."
"Stay this night wi' me, Willie,
O stay this night wi' me;
The best an' sheep in a' the flock
At your supper shall be."20
"A' your sheep, and a' your flocks,
I value not a prin;
For I'll awa' to Meggie's bower,
I'll win ere she lie down."
"O an' ye gang to Meggie's bower,25
Sae sair against my will,
The deepest pot in Clyde's water,
My malison ye's feel."
"The guid steed that I ride upon
Cost me thrice thretty pound;30
And I'll put trust in his swift feet,
To hae me safe to land."
As he rade ower yon high, high hill,
And down yon dowie den,
The noise that was in Clyde's water35
Wou'd fear'd five huner men.[Pg 177]
Then he is on to Meggie's bower,
And tirled at the pin;
"O sleep ye, wake ye, Meggie," he said,
"Ye'll open, lat me come in."
"O wha is this at my bower door,45
That calls me by my name?"
"It is your first love, sweet Willie,
This night newly come hame."
"I hae few lovers thereout, thereout,
As few hae I therein;50
The best an' love that ever I had,
Was here just late yestreen."
"The warstan stable in a' your stables,
For my puir steed to stand;
The warstan bower in a' your bowers,55
For me to lie therein:
My boots are fu' o' Clyde's water,
I'm shivering at the chin."[Pg 178]
"My barns are fu' o' corn, Willie,
My stables are fu' o' hay;60
My bowers are fu' o' gentlemen;—
They'll nae remove till day."
"O fare-ye-well, my fause Meggie,
O farewell, and adieu;
I've gotten my mither's malison,65
This night coming to you."
As he rode ower yon high, high hill,
And down yon dowie den;
The rushing that was in Clyde's water
Took Willie's cane frae him.70
He lean'd him ower his saddle bow,
To catch his cane again;
The rushing that was in Clyde's water
Took Willie's hat frae him.
He lean'd him ower his saddle bow,75
To catch his hat thro' force;
The rushing that was in Clyde's water
Took Willie frae his horse.
His brither stood upo' the bank,
Says, "Fye, man, will ye drown?80
Ye'll turn ye to your high horse head,
And learn how to sowm."[Pg 179]
"How can I turn to my horse head,
And learn how to sowm?
I've gotten my mither's malison,85
Its here that I maun drown!"
The very hour this young man sank
Into the pot sae deep,
Up it waken'd his love, Meggie,
Out o' her drowsy sleep.90
"Come here, come here, my mither dear,
And read this dreary dream;
I dream'd my love was at our gates,
And nane wad let him in."
"Lye still, lye still now, my Meggie.95
Lye still and tak your rest;
Sin' your true love was at your yates,
It's but twa quarters past."
Nimbly, nimbly raise she up,
And nimbly pat she on;100
And the higher that the lady cried,
The louder blew the win.'
The first an' step that she stepp'd in,
She stepped to the queet;
"Ohon, alas!" said that lady,105
"This water's wond'rous deep."[Pg 180]
The next an' step that she wade in,
She wadit to the knee;
Says she, "I cou'd wide farther in,
If I my love cou'd see."110
The next an' step that she wade in,
She wadit to the chin;
The deepest pot in Clyde's water
She got sweet Willie in.
"You've had a cruel mither, Willie,115
And I have had anither;
But we shall sleep in Clyde's water,
Like sister an' like brither."
39, 40. Found also in Leander on the Bay, and taken from
the epigram of Martial:
"Clamabat tumidis audax Leander in undis,
Mergite me fluctus, cum rediturus ero."
[Pg 181]
WILLIE'S DROWNED IN GAMERY.
From Buchan's Ballads of the North of Scotland,
i. 245. A fragment, exhibiting some differences, is
among those ballads of Buchan which are published in
the Percy Society's volumes, xvii. 66. Four stanzas,
of a superior cast, upon the same story, are printed in
the Tea-Table Miscellany, (ii. 141.)
Rare Willy drown'd in Yarrow.
"Willy's rare, and Willy's fair,
And Willy's wond'rous bonny;
And Willy heght to marry me,
Gin e'er he married ony.
"Yestreen I made my bed fu' braid,
This night I'll make it narrow;
For a' the livelang winter night
I ly twin'd of my marrow.
"O came you by yon water-side?
Pou'd you the rose or lilly?
Or came you by yon meadow green?
Or saw you my sweet Willy?"[Pg 182]
She sought him east, she sought him west,
She sought him braid and narrow;
Syne in the cleaving of a craig,
She found him drown'd in Yarrow.
These stanzas furnished the theme to Logan's Braes
of Yarrow.
"O Willie is fair, and Willie is rare,
And Willie is wond'rous bonny;
And Willie says he'll marry me,
Gin ever he marry ony."
"O ye'se get James, or ye'se get George,5
Or ye's get bonny Johnnie;
Ye'se get the flower o' a' my sons,
Gin ye'll forsake my Willie."
"O what care I for James or George,
Or yet for bonny Peter?10
I dinna value their love a leek,
An' I getna Willie the writer."
"O Willie has a bonny hand,
And dear but it is bonny;"
"He has nae mair for a' his land;15
What wou'd ye do wi' Willie?"[Pg 183]
"O Willie has a bonny face,
And dear but it is bonny;"
"But Willie has nae other grace;
What wou'd ye do wi' Willie?"20
"Willie's fair, and Willie's rare,
And Willie's wond'rous bonny;
There's nane wi' him that can compare,
I love him best of ony."
On Wednesday, that fatal day,25
The people were convening;
Besides all this, threescore and ten,
To gang to the bridesteel wi' him.
"Ride on, ride on, my merry men a',
I've forgot something behind me;30
I've forgot to get my mother's blessing,
To gae to the bridesteel wi' me."
"Your Peggy she's but bare fifteen,
And ye are scarcely twenty;
The water o' Gamery is wide and braid,35
My heavy curse gang wi' thee!"
Then they rode on, and further on,
Till they came on to Gamery;
The wind was loud, the stream was proud,
[Pg 184]And wi' the stream gaed Willie.40
Then they rode on, and further on,
Till they came to the kirk o' Gamery;
And every one on high horse sat,
But Willie's horse rade toomly.
When they were settled at that place,45
The people fell a mourning;
And a council held amo' them a',
But sair, sair wept Kinmundy.
Then out it speaks the bride hersell,
Says, "What means a' this mourning?50
Where is the man amo' them a',
That shou'd gie me fair wedding?"
Then out it speaks his brother John,
Says, "Meg, I'll tell you plainly;
The stream was strong, the clerk rade wrong,55
And Willie's drown'd in Gamery."
She put her hand up to her head,
Where were the ribbons many;
She rave them a', let them down fa',
And straightway ran to Gamery.60
She sought it up, she sought it down,
Till she was wet and weary;
And in the middle part o' it,
There she got her deary.[Pg 185]
Then she stroak'd back his yellow hair,65
And kiss'd his mou' sae comely;
"My mother's heart's be as wae as thine;
We'se baith asleep in the water o' Gamery."
[Pg 186]
ANNAN WATER.
Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, iii. 282.
"The following verses are the original words of the
tune of Allan Water, by which name the song is
mentioned in Ramsay's Tea-Table Miscellany. The
ballad is given from tradition; and it is said that a
bridge over the Annan, was built in consequence of
the melancholy catastrophe which it narrates. Two
verses are added in this edition, from another copy of
the ballad, in which the conclusion proves fortunate.
By the Gatehope-Slack, is perhaps meant the Gate-Slack,
a pass in Annandale. The Annan, and the
Frith of Solway, into which it falls, are the frequent
scenes of tragical accidents. The Editor trusts he will
be pardoned for inserting the following awfully impressive
account of such an event, contained in a letter
from Dr. Currie, of Liverpool, by whose correspondence,
while in the course of preparing these volumes
for the press, he has been alike honoured and instruct[Pg 187]ed.
After stating that he had some recollection of the
ballad which follows, the biographer of Burns proceeds
thus:—'I once in my early days heard (for it was
night, and I could not see) a traveller drowning; not
in the Annan itself, but in the Frith of Solway, close
by the mouth of that river. The influx of the tide had
unhorsed him, in the night, as he was passing the sands
from Cumberland. The west wind blew a tempest,
and, according to the common expression, brought in
the water three foot a-breast. The traveller got upon
a standing net, a little way from the shore. There he
lashed himself to the post, shouting for half an hour
for assistance—till the tide rose over his head! In the
darkness of the night, and amid the pauses of the hurricane,
his voice, heard at intervals, was exquisitely
mournful. No one could go to his assistance—no one
knew where he was—the sound seemed to proceed from
the spirit of the waters. But morning rose—the tide
had ebbed—and the poor traveller was found lashed to
the pole of the net, and bleaching in the wind.'"
Scott.
"Annan water's wading deep,
And my love Annie's wondrous bonny;
And I am laith she suld weet her feet,
Because I love her best of ony.
"Gar saddle me the bonny black,5
Gar saddle sune, and make him ready;
For I will down the Gatehope-Slack,
And all to see my bonny ladye."[Pg 188]—
He has loupen on the bonny black,
He stirr'd him wi' the spur right sairly;10
But, or he wan the Gatehope-Slack,
I think the steed was wae and weary.
He has loupen on the bonny grey,
He rade the right gate and the ready;
I trow he would neither stint nor stay,15
For he was seeking his bonny ladye.
O he has ridden o'er field and fell,
Through muir and moss, and mony a mire:
His spurs o' steel were sair to bide,
And fra her fore-feet flew the fire.20
"Now, bonny grey, now play your part!
Gin ye be the steed that wins my deary,
Wi' corn and hay ye'se be fed for aye,
And never spur sall make you wearie."—
The grey was a mare, and a right good mare;25
But when she wan the Annan water,
She couldna hae ridden a furlong mair,
Had a thousand merks been wadded at her.
"O boatman, boatman, put off your boat!
Put off your boat for gowden money!30
I cross the drumly stream the night,
Or never mair I see my honey."[Pg 189]—
"O I was sworn sae late yestreen,
And not by ae aith, but by many;
And for a' the gowd in fair Scotland,35
I dare na take ye through to Annie."
The side was stey, and the bottom deep,
Frae bank to brae the water pouring;
And the bonny grey mare did sweat for fear,
For she heard the water-kelpy roaring.40
O he has pou'd aff his dapperby coat,
The silver buttons glanced bonny;
The waistcoat bursted aff his breast,
He was sae full of melancholy.
He has ta'en the ford at that stream tail;45
I wot he swam both strong and steady;
But the stream was broad, and his strength did fail,
And he never saw his bonny ladye!
"O wae betide the frush saugh wand!
And wae betide the bush of brier!50
It brake into my true love's hand,
When his strength did fail, and his limbs did tire.
"And wae betide ye, Annan Water,
This night that ye are a drumlie river!
For over thee I'll build a bridge,55
That ye never more true love may sever."—
[Pg 190]
ANDREW LAMMIE.
"From a stall copy published at Glasgow several
years ago, collated with a recited copy, which has furnished
one or two verbal improvements." Motherwell's
Minstrelsy, p. 239.
Mr. Jamieson has published two other sets of this
simple, but touching ditty, (i. 126, ii. 382,) one of
which is placed after the present. Motherwell's text
is almost verbatim that of Buchan's Gleanings, p. 98.
The Thistle of Scotland copies Buchan and Jamieson
without acknowledgment.
The story has been made the foundation of a rude
drama in the North of Scotland. For a description of
similar entertainments, see Cunningham's Introduction
to his Songs of Scotland, i. 148.
The unfortunate maiden's name, according to Buchan,
(Gleanings, p. 197,) "was Annie, or Agnes,
(which are synonymous in some parts of Scotland,)
Smith, who died of a broken heart on the 9th of January,
1631, as is to be found on a roughly cut stone,
broken in many pieces, in the green churchyard of[Pg 191]
Fyvie." "What afterwards became of Bonny Andrew
Lammie," says Jamieson, "we have not been able to
learn; but the current tradition of the 'Lawland leas
of Fyvie,' says, that some years subsequent to the melancholy
fate of poor Tifty's Nanny, her sad story being
mentioned, and the ballad sung in a company in Edinburgh
when he was present, he remained silent and
motionless, till he was discovered by a groan suddenly
bursting from him, and several of the buttons flying
from his waistcoat."
At Mill o' Tifty liv'd a man,
In the neighbourhood of Fyvie;
He had a lovely daughter fair,
Was called bonny Annie.
Her bloom was like the springing flower5
That salutes the rosy morning;
With innocence and graceful mien
Her beauteous form adorning.
Lord Fyvie had a trumpeter
Whose name was Andrew Lammie;10
He had the art to gain the heart
Of Mill o' Tiftie's Annie.
Proper he was, both young and gay,
His like was not in Fyvie;
No one was there that could compare15
With this same Andrew Lammie.[Pg 192]
Lord Fyvie he rode by the door,
Where lived Tiftie's Annie;
His trumpeter rode him before,
Even this same Andrew Lammie.20
Her mother call'd her to the door:
"Come here to me, my Annie;
Did you ever see a prettier man
Than this Trumpeter of Fyvie?"
She sighed sore, but said no more,25
Alas, for bonny Annie!
She durst not own her heart was won
By the Trumpeter of Fyvie.
At night when they went to their beds,
All slept full sound but Annie;30
Love so opprest her tender breast,
Thinking on Andrew Lammie.
"Love comes in at my bed side,
And love lies down beyond me;
Love has possess'd my tender breast,35
And love will waste my body.
"The first time I and my love met
Was in the woods of Fyvie;
His lovely form and speech so sweet
[Pg 193]Soon gain'd the heart of Annie.40
"He called me mistress; I said, No,
I'm Tiftie's bonny Annie;
With apples sweet he did me treat,
And kisses soft and many.
"It's up and down in Tiftie's den,45
Where the burn runs clear and bonny,
I've often gone to meet my love,
My bonny Andrew Lammie."
But now, alas! her father heard
That the Trumpeter of Fyvie50
Had had the art to gain the heart
Of Tiftie's bonny Annie.
Her father soon a letter wrote,
And sent it on to Fyvie,
To tell his daughter was bewitch'd55
By his servant Andrew Lammie.
When Lord Fyvie had this letter read,
O dear! but he was sorry;
The bonniest lass in Fyvie's land
Is bewitched by Andrew Lammie.60
Then up the stair his trumpeter
He called soon and shortly:
"Pray tell me soon, what's this you've done
To Tiftie's bonny Annie?"[Pg 194]
"In wicked art I had no part,65
Nor therein am I canny;
True love alone the heart has won
Of Tiftie's bonny Annie.
"Woe betide Mill o' Tiftie's pride,
For it has ruin'd many;70
He'll no ha'e 't said that she should wed
The Trumpeter of Fyvie.
"Where will I find a boy so kind,
That'll carry a letter canny,
Who will run on to Tiftie's town,75
Give it to my love Annie?"
"Here you shall find a boy so kind,
Who'll carry a letter canny,
Who will run on to Tiftie's town,
And gi'e 't to thy love Annie."80
"It's Tiftie he has daughters three,
Who all are wondrous bonny;
But ye'll ken her o'er a' the lave,
Gi'e that to bonny Annie."
"It's up and down in Tiftie's den,85
Where the burn runs clear and bonny;
There wilt thou come and meet thy love,
Thy bonny Andrew Lammie.[Pg 195]
"When wilt thou come, and I'll attend?
My love, I long to see thee."90
"Thou may'st come to the bridge of Sleugh,
And there I'll come and meet thee."
"My love, I go to Edinbro',
And for a while must leave thee;"
She sighed sore, and said no more95
But "I wish that I were wi' thee."
"I'll buy to thee a bridal gown,
My love, I'll buy it bonny;"
"But I'll be dead, ere ye come back
To see your bonnie Annie."100
"If you'll be true and constant too,
As my name's Andrew Lammie,
I shall thee wed, when I come back
To see the lands of Fyvie."
"I will be true, and constant too,105
To thee, my Andrew Lammie;
But my bridal bed will ere then be made,
In the green churchyard of Fyvie."
"Our time is gone, and now comes on,
My dear, that I must leave thee;110
If longer here I should appear,
Mill o' Tiftie he would see me."[Pg 196]
"I now for ever bid adieu
To thee, my Andrew Lammie;
Ere ye come back, I will be laid115
In the green churchyard of Fyvie."
He hied him to the head of the house,
To the house top of Fyvie;
He blew his trumpet loud and schill;
'Twas heard at Mill o' Tiftie.120
Her father lock'd the door at night,
Laid by the keys fu' canny;
And when he heard the trumpet sound,
Said, "Your cow is lowing, Annie."
"My father dear, I pray forbear,125
And reproach no more your Annie;
For I'd rather hear that cow to low,
Than ha'e a' the kine in Fyvie.
"I would not, for my braw new gown,
And a' your gifts sae many,130
That it were told in Fyvie's land
How cruel you are to Annie.
"But if ye strike me, I will cry,
And gentlemen will hear me;
Lord Fyvie will be riding by,135
And he'll come in and see me."[Pg 197]
At the same time, the Lord came in;
He said, "What ails thee, Annie?"
"'Tis all for love now I must die,
For bonny Andrew Lammie."140
"Pray, Mill o' Tifty, gi'e consent,
And let your daughter marry."
"It will be with some higher match
Than the Trumpeter of Fyvie."
"If she were come of as high a kind145
As she's adorned with beauty,
I would take her unto myself,
And make her mine own lady."
"It's Fyvie's lands are fair and wide,
And they are rich and bonny;150
I would not leave my own true love,
For all the lands of Fyvie."
Her father struck her wondrous sore,
And also did her mother;
Her sisters always did her scorn;155
But woe be to her brother!
Her brother struck her wondrous sore,
With cruel strokes and many;
He brake her back in the hall door,
[Pg 198]For liking Andrew Lammie.160
"Alas! my father and mother dear,
Why so cruel to your Annie?
My heart was broken first by love,
My brother has broken my body.
"O mother dear, make ye my bed,165
And lay my face to Fyvie;
Thus will I ly, and thus will die,
For my love, Andrew Lammie!
"Ye neighbours, hear, both far and near;
Ye pity Tiftie's Annie,170
Who dies for love of one poor lad,
For bonny Andrew Lammie.
"No kind of vice e'er stain'd my life,
Nor hurt my virgin honour;
My youthful heart was won by love,175
But death will me exoner."
Her mother then she made her bed,
And laid her face to Fyvie;
Her tender heart it soon did break,
And ne'er saw Andrew Lammie.180
But the word soon went up and down,
Through all the lands of Fyvie,
That she was dead and buried,
Even Tiftie's bonny Annie.[Pg 199]
Lord Fyvie he did wring his hands,185
Said, "Alas, for Tiftie's Annie!
The fairest flower's cut down by love,
That e'er sprung up in Fyvie.
"O woe betide Mill o' Tiftie's pride!
He might have let them marry;190
I should have giv'n them both to live
Into the lands of Fyvie."
Her father sorely now laments
The loss of his dear Annie,
And wishes he had gi'en consent195
To wed with Andrew Lammie.
Her mother grieves both air and late;
Her sisters, 'cause they scorn'd her;
Surely her brother doth mourn and grieve,
For the cruel usage he'd giv'n her.200
But now, alas! it was too late,
For they could not recal her;
Through life, unhappy is their fate,
Because they did controul her.
When Andrew hame from Edinburgh came,205
With meikle grief and sorrow,
"My love has died for me to-day,
I'll die for her to-morrow.[Pg 200]
"Now I will on to Tiftie's den,
Where the burn runs clear and bonny;210
With tears I'll view the bridge of Sleugh,
Where I parted last with Annie.
"Then will I speed to the churchyard,
To the green churchyard of Fyvie;
With tears I'll water my love's grave,215
Till I follow Tiftie's Annie."
Ye parents grave, who children have,
In crushing them be canny,
Lest when too late you do repent;
Remember Tiftie's Annie.220
211. "In one printed copy this is 'Sheugh,' and in a recited
copy it was called 'Skew'; which is the right reading,
the editor, from his ignorance of the topography of the
lands of Fyvie, is unable to say. It is a received superstition
in Scotland, that, when friends or lovers part at a bridge,
they shall never again meet." Motherwell.
[Pg 201]
THE TRUMPETER OF FYVIE.
"The ballad was taken down by Dr. Leyden from
the recitation of a young lady (Miss Robson) of Edinburgh,
who learned it in Teviotdale. It was current
in the Border counties within these few years, as it
still is in the northeast of Scotland, where the scene is
laid." Jamieson's Popular Ballads, i. 129.
At Fyvie's yetts there grows a flower,
It grows baith braid and bonny;
There's a daisie in the midst o' it,
And it's ca'd by Andrew Lammie.
"O gin that flower war in my breast,5
For the love I bear the laddie;
I wad kiss it, and I wad clap it,
And daut it for Andrew Lammie.
"The first time me and my love met,
[Pg 202]Was in the woods of Fyvie;10
He kissed my lips five thousand times,
And ay he ca'd me bonny;
And a' the answer he gat frae me,
Was, My bonny Andrew Lammie!"
"'Love, I maun gang to Edinburgh;15
Love, I maun gang and leave thee;'
I sighed right sair, and said nae mair,
But, O gin I were wi' ye!"
"But true and trusty will I be,
As I am Andrew Lammie;20
I'll never kiss a woman's mouth,
Till I come back and see thee."
"And true and trusty will I be,
As I am Tiftie's Annie;
I'll never kiss a man again,25
Till ye come back and see me."
Syne he's come back frae Edinburgh,
To the bonny hows o' Fyvie;
And ay his face to the nor-east,
To look for Tiftie's Annie.30
"I ha'e a love in Edinburgh,
Sae ha'e I intill Leith, man;
I hae a love intill Montrose,
Sae ha'e I in Dalkeith, man.[Pg 203]
"And east and west, where'er I go,35
My love she's always wi' me;
For east and west, where'er I go,
My love she dwells in Fyvie.
"My love possesses a' my heart,
Nae pen can e'er indite her;40
She's ay sae stately as she goes,
That I see nae mae like her.
"But Tiftie winna gi'e consent
His dochter me to marry,
Because she has five thousand marks,45
And I have not a penny.
"Love pines away, love dwines away,
Love, love, decays the body;
For love o' thee, oh I must die;
Adieu, my bonny Annie!"50
Her mither raise out o' her bed,
And ca'd on baith her women:
"What ails ye, Annie, my dochter dear?
O Annie, was ye dreamin'?
"What dule disturb'd my dochter's sleep?55
O tell to me, my Annie!"
She sighed right sair, and said nae mair,
But, "O for Andrew Lammie!"[Pg 204]
Her father beat her cruellie,
Sae also did her mother;60
Her sisters sair did scoff at her;
But wae betide her brother!
Her brother beat her cruellie,
Till his straiks they werena canny;
He brak her back, and he beat her sides,65
For the sake o' Andrew Lammie.
"O fie, O fie, my brother dear,
The gentlemen 'll shame ye;
The laird o' Fyvie he's gaun by,
And he'll come in and see me.70
And he'll kiss me, and he'll clap me,
And he will speer what ails me;
And I will answer him again,
It's a' for Andrew Lammie."
Her sisters they stood in the door,75
Sair griev'd her wi' their folly;
"O sister dear, come to the door,
Your cow is lowin on you."
"O fie, O fie, my sister dear,
Grieve me not wi' your folly;80
I'd rather hear the trumpet sound,
Than a' the kye o' Fyvie.[Pg 205]
"Love pines away, love dwines away,
Love, love decays the body;
For love o' thee now I maun die—85
Adieu to Andrew Lammie!"
But Tiftie's wrote a braid letter,
And sent it into Fyvie,
Saying, his daughter was bewitch'd
By bonny Andrew Lammie.90
"Now, Tiftie, ye maun gi'e consent,
And lat the lassie marry."
"I'll never, never gi'e consent
To the Trumpeter of Fyvie."
When Fyvie looked the letter on,95
He was baith sad and sorry:
Says—"The bonniest lass o' the country-side
Has died for Andrew Lammie."
O Andrew's gane to the house-top
O' the bonny house o' Fyvie;100
He's blawn his horn baith loud and shill
O'er the lawland leas o' Fyvie.
"Mony a time ha'e I walk'd a' night,
And never yet was weary;
But now I may walk wae my lane,105
For I'll never see my deary.[Pg 206]
"Love pines away, love dwines away,
Love, love, decays the body:
For the love o' thee, now I maun die—
I come, my bonny Annie!"110
[Pg 207]
FAIR HELEN OF KIRCONNELL.
"The following very popular ballad has been handed
down by tradition in its present imperfect state.
The affecting incident on which it is founded is well
known. A lady, of the name of Helen Irving, or Bell,
(for this is disputed by the two clans,) daughter of the
Laird of Kirconnell, in Dumfries-shire, and celebrated
for her beauty, was beloved by two gentlemen in the
neighbourhood. The name of the favoured suitor was
Adam Fleming of Kirkpatrick; that of the other has
escaped tradition: though it has been alleged that he
was a Bell, of Blacket House. The addresses of the
latter were, however, favoured by the friends of the
lady, and the lovers were therefore obliged to meet in
secret, and by night, in the churchyard of Kirconnell,
a romantic spot, almost surrounded by the river Kirtle.
During one of these private interviews, the jealous and
despised lover suddenly appeared on the opposite bank
of the stream, and levelled his carabine at the breast of
his rival. Helen threw herself before her lover, received
in her bosom the bullet, and died in his arms.[Pg 208]
A desperate and mortal combat ensued between Fleming
and the murderer, in which the latter was cut to
pieces. Other accounts say, that Fleming pursued
his enemy to Spain, and slew him in the streets of
Madrid.
"The ballad, as now published, consists of two parts.
The first seems to be an address, either by Fleming or
his rival, to the lady; if, indeed, it constituted any
portion of the original poem. For the Editor cannot
help suspecting, that these verses have been the production
of a different and inferior bard, and only
adapted to the original measure and tune. But this
suspicion being unwarranted by any copy he has been
able to procure, he does not venture to do more than
intimate his own opinion. The second part, by far the
most beautiful, and which is unquestionably original,
forms the lament of Fleming over the grave of fair
Helen.
"The ballad is here given, without alteration or improvement,
from the most accurate copy which could
be recovered. The fate of Helen has not, however,
remained unsung by modern bards. A lament, of
great poetical merit, by the learned historian, Mr.
Pinkerton, with several other poems on this subject,
have been printed in various forms.[B]
"The grave of the lovers is yet shown in the churchyard
of Kirconnell, near Springkell. Upon the tombstone
can still be read—Hic jacet Adamus Fleming;[Pg 209]
a cross and sword are sculptured on the stone. The
former is called by the country people, the gun with
which Helen was murdered; and the latter the avenging
sword of her lover. Sit illis terra levis! A heap
of stones is raised on the spot where the murder was
committed; a token of abhorrence common to most
nations." Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, iii. 98.
Versions of the Second Part, (which alone deserves
notice,) nearly agreeing with Scott's, are given in the
Illustrations to the new edition of Johnson's Museum,
p. 143, by Mr. Stenhouse, p. 210, by Mr. Sharpe. Inferior
and fragmentary ones in Herd's Scottish Songs,
i. 257; Johnson's Museum, 163; Ritson's Scottish Song,
i. 145; Jamieson's Popular Ballads, i. 203.
FAIR HELEN.
PART FIRST.
O! sweetest sweet, and fairest fair,
Of birth and worth beyond compare,
Thou art the causer of my care,
Since first I loved thee.
Yet God hath given to me a mind,5
The which to thee shall prove as kind
As any one that thou shalt find,
Of high or low degree.
The shallowest water makes maist din,
The deadest pool the deepest linn;10
The richest man least truth within,
Though he preferred be.[Pg 210]
Yet, nevertheless, I am content,
And never a whit my love repent,
But think the time was a' weel spent,15
Though I disdained be.
O! Helen sweet, and maist complete,
My captive spirit's at thy feet!
Thinks thou still fit thus for to treat
Thy captive cruelly?20
O! Helen brave! but this I crave,
Of thy poor slave some pity have,
And do him save that's near his grave,
And dies for love of thee.
[Pg 211]
FAIR HELEN.
PART SECOND.
I wish I were where Helen lies,
Night and day on me she cries;
O that I were where Helen lies,
On fair Kirconnell Lee!
Curst be the heart that thought the thought,5
And curst the hand that fired the shot,
When in my arms burd Helen dropt,
And died to succour me!
O think na ye my heart was sair,
When my love dropt down and spak nae mair!10
There did she swoon wi' meikle care,
On fair Kirconnell Lee.
As I went down the water side,
None but my foe to be my guide,
None but my foe to be my guide,15
On fair Kirconnell Lee;[Pg 212]
I lighted down my sword to draw,
I hacked him in pieces sma',
I hacked him in pieces sma',
For her sake that died for me.20
O Helen fair, beyond compare!
I'll make a garland of thy hair,
Shall bind my heart for evermair,
Until the day I die.
O that I were where Helen lies!25
Night and day on me she cries;
Out of my bed she bids me rise,
Says, "Haste and come to me!"—
O Helen fair! O Helen chaste!
If I were with thee, I were blest,30
Where thou lies low, and takes thy rest,
On fair Kirconnell Lee.
I wish my grave were growing green,
A winding-sheet drawn ower my een,
And I in Helen's arms lying,35
On fair Kirconnell Lee.
I wish I were where Helen lies!
Night and day on me she cries;
And I am weary of the skies,
For her sake that died for me.40
[Pg 213]
THE LOWLANDS OF HOLLAND.
Mr. Stenhouse was informed that this ballad was
composed, about the beginning of the last century, by
a young widow in Galloway, whose husband was
drowned on a voyage to Holland. (Musical Museum,
ed. 1853, iv. 115.) But some of the verses appear to
be old, and one stanza will be remarked to be of common
occurrence in ballad poetry.
A fragment of this piece was published in Herd's
collection, (ii. 49.) Our copy is from Johnson's Museum,
p. 118, with the omission, however, of one spurious
and absurd stanza, while another, not printed by
Johnson, is supplied from the note above cited to the
new edition. Cunningham makes sense of the interpolated
verses and retains them; otherwise his version
is nearly the same as the present. (Songs of Scotland,
ii. 181.)
"The love that I have chosen,
I'll therewith be content,
The saut sea shall be frozen
Before that I repent;[Pg 214]
Repent it shall I never,5
Until the day I die,
But the lowlands of Holland
Hae twinn'd my love and me.
"My love lies in the saut sea,
And I am on the side,10
Enough to break a young thing's heart,
Wha lately was a bride;
Wha lately was a bonnie bride,
And pleasure in her e'e,
But the lowlands of Holland15
Hae twinn'd my love and me.
"My love he built a bonnie ship,
And set her to the sea,
Wi' seven score brave mariners
To bear her companie;20
Threescore gaed to the bottom,
And threescore died at sea,
And the lowlands of Holland
Hae twinn'd my love and me.
"My love has built another ship25
And set her to the main;
He had but twenty mariners,
And all to bring her hame;
The stormy winds did roar again,
[Pg 215]The raging waves did rout,30
And my love and his bonnie ship
Turn'd widdershins about.
"There shall nae mantle cross my back,
Nor kame gae in my hair,
Neither shall coal nor candle light35
Shine in my bower mair;
Nor shall I chuse anither love,
Until the day I die,
Since the lowlands of Holland
Hae twinn'd my love and me."40
"O haud your tongue, my daughter dear,
Be still, and be content;
There are mair lads in Galloway,
Ye need nae sair lament."
"O there is nane in Galloway,45
There's nane at a' for me;
For I never loved a lad but ane,
And he's drowned in the sea."
33-36,
45-48. With the conclusion of this piece may be
compared a passage from Bonny Bee-Ho'm, vol. iii. p. 57.
"Ohon, alas! what shall I do,
Tormented night and day!
I never loved a love but ane,
And now he's gone away.
"But I will do for my true love
What ladies would think sair;[Pg 216]
For seven years shall come and gae,
Ere a kaime gae in my hair.
"There shall neither a shoe gae on my foot,
Nor a kaime gae in my hair,
Nor ever a coal or candle light
Shine in my bower nae mair."
See also The Weary Coble o' Cargill.
[Pg 217]
BOOK III.
[Pg 219]
THE TWA BROTHERS.
From Jamieson's Popular Ballads, i. 59.
The ballad of the Twa Brothers, like many of the
domestic tragedies with which it is grouped in this volume,
is by no means the peculiar property of the island
of Great Britain. It finds an exact counterpart in
the Swedish ballad Sven i Rosengård, Svenska F. V.,
No. 67, Arwidsson, No. 87, A, B, which, together with
a Finnish version of the same story, thought to be derived
from the Swedish, will be found translated in our
Appendix. Edward, in Percy's Reliques, has the same
general theme, with the difference that a father is murdered
instead of a brother. Motherwell[C] has printed a
ballad (Son Davie) closely agreeing with Edward, except[Pg 220]
that the crime is again fratricide. He has also furnished
another version of The Twa Brothers, in which
the catastrophe is the consequence of an accident, and
this circumstance has led the excellent editor to tax
Jamieson with altering one of the most essential
features of the ballad, by filling out a defective
stanza with four lines that make one brother to
have slain the other in a quarrel. Jamieson is, however,
justified in giving this more melancholy character
to the story, by the tenor of all the kindred pieces,
and by the language of his own. It will be observed
that both in Edward and Son Davie, the wicked act
was not only deliberate, but was even instigated
by the mother. The departure from the original is
undoubtedly on the part of Motherwell's copy, which
has softened down a shocking incident to accommodate
a modern and refined sentiment. But Jamieson is artistically,
as well as critically right, since the effect of
the contrast of the remorse of one party and the generosity
of the other is heightened by representing the
terrible event as the result of ungoverned passion.
The three Scottish ballads mentioned above, here
follow, and Motherwell's Twa Brothers will be found
in the Appendix. Mr. Sharpe has inserted a third
copy of this in his Ballad Book, p. 56. Another is said to
be in The Scot's Magazine, for June, 1822. Placing no
confidence in any of Allan Cunningham's souvenirs of
Scottish Song, we simply state that one of them, composed
upon the theme of the Twa Brothers, is included
in the Songs of Scotland, ii. 16.
"The common title of this ballad is, The Twa Brothers,
or, The Wood o' Warslin, but the words o' Warslin[Pg 221]
appearing to the editor, as will be seen in the text,
to be a mistake for a-wrestling, he took the liberty of
altering it accordingly. After all, perhaps, the title
may be right; and the wood may afterwards have obtained
its denomination from the tragical event here
celebrated. A very few lines inserted by the editor
to fill up chasms, [some of which have been omitted,]
are inclosed in brackets; the text, in other respects, is
given genuine, as it was taken down from the recitation
of Mrs. Arrott." Jamieson.
"O will ye gae to the school, brother?
Or will ye gae to the ba'?
Or will ye gae to the wood a-warslin,
To see whilk o's maun fa'?"
"It's I winna gae to the school, brother;5
Nor will I gae to the ba'?
But I will gae to the wood a-warslin;
And it is you maun fa'."
They warstled up, they warstled down,
The lee-lang simmer's day;10
[And nane was near to part the strife,
That raise atween them tway,
Till out and Willie's drawn his sword,
And did his brother slay.]
"O lift me up upon your back;15
Tak me to yon wall fair;[Pg 222]
You'll wash my bluidy wounds o'er and o'er,
And syne they'll bleed nae mair.
"And ye'll tak aff my Hollin sark,
And riv't frae gair to gair;20
Ye'll stap it in my bluidy wounds,
And syne they'll bleed nae mair."
He's liftit his brother upon his back;
Ta'en him to yon wall fair;
He's washed his bluidy wounds o'er and o'er,25
But ay they bled mair and mair.
And he's ta'en aff his Hollin sark,
And riven't frae gair to gair;
He's stappit it in his bluidy wounds;
But ay they bled mair and mair.30
"Ye'll lift me up upon your back,
Tak me to Kirkland fair;
Ye'll mak my greaf baith braid and lang,
And lay my body there.
"Ye'll lay my arrows at my head,35
My bent bow at my feet;[Pg 223]
My sword and buckler at my side,
As I was wont to sleep.
"Whan ye gae hame to your father,
He'll speer for his son John:—40
Say, ye left him into Kirkland fair,
Learning the school alone.
"When ye gae hame to my sister,
She'll speer for her brother John:—
Ye'll say, ye left him in Kirkland fair,45
The green grass growin aboon.
"Whan ye gae hame to my true love,
She'll speer for her lord John:—
Ye'll say, ye left him in Kirkland fair,
But hame ye fear he'll never come."—50
He's gane hame to his father;
He speered for his son John:
"It's I left him into Kirkland fair,
Learning the school alone."
And whan he gaed hame to his sister,55
She speered for her brother John:—
"It's I left him into Kirkland fair,
The green grass growin aboon."
And whan he gaed hame to his true love,
[Pg 224]She speer'd for her lord John:60
"It's I left him into Kirkland fair,
And hame I fear he'll never come."
"But whaten bluid's that on your sword, Willie?
Sweet Willie, tell to me."
"O it is the bluid o' my grey hounds;65
They wadna rin for me."
"It's nae the bluid o' your hounds, Willie;
Their bluid was never so red;
But it is the bluid o' my true love,
That ye hae slain indeed."70
That fair may wept, that fair may mourn'd,
That fair may mourn'd and pin'd;
"When every lady looks for her love,
I ne'er need look for mine."
"O whaten a death will ye die, Willie?75
Now, Willie, tell to me."
"Ye'll put me in a bottomless boat,
And I'll gae sail the sea."
"Whan will ye come hame again, Willie?
Now, Willie, tell to me."80
"Whan the sun and moon dances on the green,
And that will never be."
32. "The house of Inchmurry, formerly called Kirkland,
was built of old by the abbot of Holyrood-house, for his
accommodation when he came to that country, and was
formerly the minister's manse." Stat. Ac. of Scotland, vol.
xiii. p. 506. J.
[Pg 225]
EDWARD, EDWARD.
"This curious Song was transmitted to the Editor
by Sir David Dalrymple, Bart., late Lord Hailes."
Percy, Reliques, i. 61.
"Quhy dois zour brand sae drop w' bluid,
Edward, Edward?
Quhy dois zour brand sae drop wi' bluid,
And quhy sae sad gang zee O?"
"O I hae killed my hauke sae guid,5
Mither, mither:
O I hae killed my hauke sae guid,
And I had nae mair bot hee O."
"Zour haukis bluid was nevir sae reid,
Edward, Edward:10
Zour haukis bluid was nevir sae reid,
My deir son I tell thee O."[Pg 226]
"O I hae killed my reid-roan steid,
Mither, mither:
O I hae killed my reid-roan steid,15
That erst was sae fair and free O."
"Zour steid was auld, and ze hae gat mair,
Edward, Edward:
Zour steid was auld, and ze hae gat mair,
Sum other dule ze drie O."20
"O I hae killed my fadir deir,
Mither, mither:
O I hae killed my fadir deir,
Alas! and wae is mee O!"
"And quhatten penance wul ze drie, for that,25
Edward, Edward?
And quhatten penance will ze drie for that?
My deir son, now tell me O."
"Ile set my feit in zonder boat,
Mither, mither:30
Ile set my feit in zonder boat,
And Ile fare ovir the sea O."
"And quhat wul ze doe wi' zour towirs and zour ha',
Edward, Edward?
And quhat wul ze doe wi' zour towirs and zour ha',35
That were sae fair to see O?"
"Ile let thame stand til they doun fa',
Mither, mither:[Pg 227]
Ile let thame stand til they doun fa',
For here nevir mair maun I bee O."40
"And quhat wul ze leive to zour bairns and zour wife,
Edward, Edward?
And quhat wul ze leive to zour bairns and zour wife,
Quhan ze gang ovir the sea O?"
"The warldis room, late them beg throw life,45
Mither, mither:
The warldis room, late them beg throw life,
For thame nevir mair wul I see O."
"And quhat wul ze leive to zour ain mither deir,
Edward, Edward?50
And quhat wul ze leive to zour ain mither deir?
My deir son, now tell me O."
"The curse of hell frae me sall ze beir,
Mither, mither:
The curse of hell frae me sall ze beir,55
Sic counseils ze gave to me O."
[Pg 228]
SON DAVIE, SON DAVIE.
From the recitation of an old woman. Motherwell's Minstrelsy,
339.
"What bluid's that on thy coat lap?
Son Davie! son Davie!
What bluid's that on thy coat lap?
And the truth come tell to me O."
"It is the bluid of my great hawk,5
Mother lady! mother lady!
It is the bluid of my great hawk,
And the truth I hae tald to thee O."
"Hawk's bluid was ne'er sae red,
Son Davie! son Davie!10
Hawk's bluid was ne'er sae red,
And the truth come tell to me O."[Pg 229]
"It is the bluid o' my grey hound,
Mother lady! mother lady!
It is the bluid of my grey hound,15
And it wudna rin for me O."
"Hound's bluid was ne'er sae red,
Son Davie! son Davie!
Hound's bluid was ne'er sae red,
And the truth come tell to me O."20
"It is the bluid o' my brother John,
Mother lady! mother lady!
It is the bluid o' my brother John,
And the truth I hae tald to thee O."
"What about did the plea begin?25
Son Davie! son Davie!"
"It began about the cutting o' a willow wand,
That would never hae been a tree O."
"What death dost thou desire to die?
Son Davie! son Davie!30
What death dost thou desire to die?
And the truth come tell to me O."
"I'll set my foot in a bottomless ship,
Mother lady! mother lady!
I'll set my foot in a bottomless ship,35
And ye'll never see mair o' me O."[Pg 230]
"What wilt thou leave to thy poor wife?
Son Davie! son Davie!"
"Grief and sorrow all her life,
And she'll never get mair frae me O."40
"What wilt thou leave to thy auld son?
Son Davie! son Davie!"
"The weary warld to wander up and down,
And he'll never get mair o' me O."
"What wilt thou leave to thy mother dear?45
Son Davie! son Davie!"
"A fire o' coals to burn her wi' hearty cheer,
And she'll never get mair o' me O."
[Pg 231]
THE CRUEL SISTER.
The earliest printed copy of this ballad is the curious
piece in Wit Restor'd, (1658,) called The Miller
and the King's Daughter, improperly said to be a parody,
by Jamieson and others. (See Appendix.) Pinkerton
inserted in his Tragic Ballads, (p. 72,) a ballad
on the subject, which preserves many genuine lines,
but is half his own composition. Complete versions
were published by Scott and Jamieson, and more recently
a third has been furnished in Sharpe's Ballad
Book, p. 30, and a fourth in Buchan's Ballads of the
North of Scotland (given at the end of this volume).
The burden of Mr. Sharpe's copy is nearly the same
as that of the Cruel Mother, post, p. 372. Jamieson's
copy had also this burden, but he exchanged it for the
more popular, and certainly more tasteful, Binnorie.
No ballad furnishes a closer link than this between the
popular poetry of England and that of the other
nations of Northern Europe. The same story is found
in Icelandic, Norse, Faroish, and Estnish ballads, as
well as in the Swedish and Danish, and a nearly related
one in many other ballads or tales, German, Polish,
Lithuanian, etc., etc.—See Svenska Folk-Visor, iii.
16, i. 81, 86, Arwidsson, ii. 139, and especially Den
Talende Strengeleg, Grundtvig, No. 95, and the notes
to Der Singende Knochen, K. u. H. Märchen, iii. 55,
ed. 1856.[Pg 232]
Of the edition in the Border Minstrelsy, Scott gives
the following account, (iii. 287.)
"It is compiled from a copy in Mrs. Brown's MSS.,
intermixed with a beautiful fragment, of fourteen
verses, transmitted to the Editor by J. C. Walker, Esq.
the ingenious historian of the Irish bards. Mr. Walker,
at the same time, favored the Editor with the following
note: 'I am indebted to my departed friend,
Miss Brook, for the foregoing pathetic fragment. Her
account of it was as follows: This song was trans-scribed,
several years ago, from the memory of an old
woman, who had no recollection of the concluding
verses; probably the beginning may also be lost, as it
seems to commence abruptly.' The first verse and
burden of the fragment ran thus:—
'O sister, sister, reach thy hand!
Hey ho, my Nanny, O;
And you shall be heir of all my land,
While the swan swims bonney, O.'"
There were two sisters sat in a bour;
Bínnorie, O Bínnorie;
There came a knight to be their wooer;
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.
He courted the eldest with glove and ring,5
Binnorie, O Binnorie;
But he lo'ed the youngest abune a' thing;
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.[Pg 233]
He courted the eldest with broach and knife,
Binnorie, O Binnorie;10
But he lo'ed the youngest abune his life;
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.
The eldest she was vexed sair,
Binnorie, O Binnorie;
And sore envied her sister fair;15
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.
The eldest said to the youngest ane,
Binnorie, O Binnorie;
"Will ye go and see our father's ships come in?"
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.20
She's ta'en her by the lily hand,
Binnorie, O Binnorie;
And led her down to the river strand;
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.
The youngest stude upon a stane,25
Binnorie, O Binnorie;
The eldest came and pushed her in;
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.
She took her by the middle sma',
Binnorie, O Binnorie;30
And dash'd her bonny back to the jaw;
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.[Pg 234]
"O sister, sister, reach your hand,
Binnorie, O Binnorie;
And ye shall be heir of half my land."—35
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.
"O sister, I'll not reach my hand,
Binnorie, O Binnorie;
And I'll be heir of all your land;
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.40
"Shame fa' the hand that I should take,
Binnorie, O Binnorie;
It's twin'd me and my world's make."—
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.
"O sister, reach me but your glove,45
Binnorie, O Binnorie;
And sweet William shall be your love."—
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.
"Sink on, nor hope for hand or glove!
Binnorie, O Binnorie;50
And sweet William shall better be my love,
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.
"Your cherry cheeks and your yellow hair,
Binnorie, O Binnorie,
Garr'd me gang maiden evermair."—55
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.[Pg 235]
Sometimes she sunk, and sometimes she swam,
Binnorie, O Binnorie;
Until she cam to the miller's dam;
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.60
"O father, father, draw your dam!
Binnorie, O Binnorie;
There's either a mermaid, or a milk-white swan."
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.
The miller hasted and drew his dam,65
Binnorie, O Binnorie;
And there he found a drown'd woman;
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.
You could not see her yellow hair,
Binnorie, O Binnorie;70
For gowd and pearls that were so rare;
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.
You could not see her middle sma',
Binnorie, O Binnorie;
Her gowden girdle was sae bra';75
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.
A famous harper passing by,
Binnorie, O Binnorie;
The sweet pale face he chanced to spy;
[Pg 236]By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.80
And when he looked that lady on,
Binnorie, O Binnorie;
He sigh'd and made a heavy moan;
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.
He made a harp of her breast-bone,85
Binnorie, O Binnorie;
Whose sounds would melt a heart of stone;
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.
The strings he framed of her yellow hair,
Binnorie, O Binnorie;90
Whose notes made sad the listening ear;
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.
He brought it to her father's hall,
Binnorie, O Binnorie;
And there was the court assembled all;95
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.
He laid his harp upon a stone,
Binnorie, O Binnorie;
And straight it began to play alone;
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.100
"O yonder sits my father, the king,
Binnorie, O Binnorie;
And yonder sits my mother, the queen;"
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie[Pg 237].
"And yonder stands my brother Hugh,105
Binnorie, O Binnorie;
And by him my William, sweet and true."
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.
But the last tune that the harp play'd then,
Binnorie, O Binnorie;110
Was—"Woe to my sister, false Helen!"
By the bonny milldams of Binnorie.
[Pg 238]
THE TWA SISTERS.
Verbatim (with one interpolated stanza) from the
recitation of Mrs. Brown. Jamieson's Popular Ballads,
i. 50.
There was twa sisters liv'd in a bower,
Bínnorie, O Bínnorie!
There came a knight to be their wooer,
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.
He courted the eldest wi' glove and ring,5
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
But he loved the youngest aboon a' thing,
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.
He courted the eldest wi' broach and knife,
Binnorie, O Binnorie!10
But he loved the youngest as his life,
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.[Pg 239]
The eldest she was vexed sair,
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
And sair envied her sister fair,15
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.
Intill her bower she coudna rest,
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
Wi' grief and spite she maistly brast,
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.20
Upon a morning fair and clear,
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
She cried upon her sister dear,
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.
"O sister, come to yon sea strand,25
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
And see our father's ships come to land,"
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.
She's ta'en her by the milk-white hand,
Binnorie, O Binnorie!30
And led her down to yon sea strand,
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.
The youngest stood upon a stane,
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
The eldest came and threw her in,35
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.[Pg 240]
She took her by the middle sma'
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
And dashed her bonny back to the jaw,
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.40
"O sister, sister, tak my hand,
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
And I'se mak ye heir to a' my land,
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.
"O sister, sister, tak my middle,45
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
And ye's get my goud and my gouden girdle,
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.
"O sister, sister, save my life,
Binnorie, O Binnorie!50
And I swear I'se never be nae man's wife,"
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.
"Foul fa' the hand that I should tak,
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
It twin'd me o' my warldes mak,55
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.
"Your cherry cheeks and yellow hair
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
Gars me gang maiden for evermair,"
[Pg 241]By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.60
Sometimes she sank, sometimes she swam,
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
Till she came to the mouth o' yon mill-dam,
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.
O out it came the miller's son,65
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
And saw the fair maid soummin in,
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.
"O father, father, draw your dam,
Binnorie, O Binnorie!70
There's either a mermaid or a swan,"
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.
[The miller quickly drew the dam,
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
And there he found a drown'd woman,75
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.]
"And sair and lang mat their teen last,
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
That wrought thee sic a dowie cast,"
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie!80
You coudna see her yellow hair
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
For goud and pearl that was sae rare,
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.[Pg 242]
You coudna see her middle sma85
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
For gouden girdle that was sae braw,
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.
You coudna see her fingers white,
Binnorie, O Binnorie!90
For gouden rings that were sae gryte,
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.
And by there came a harper fine,
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
That harped to the king at dine,95
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.
Whan he did look that lady upon,
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
He sigh'd and made a heavy moan,
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.100
He's ta'en three locks o' her yellow hair,
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
And wi' them strung his harp sae fair,
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.
The first tune it did play and sing,105
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
Was, "Fareweel to my father the king,"
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.[Pg 243]
The nexten tune that it play'd seen,
Binnorie, O Binnorie!110
Was, "Fareweel to my mither the queen,"
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie.
The thirden tune that it play'd then,
Binnorie, O Binnorie!
Was, "Wae to my sister, fair Ellen,"115
By the bonny mill-dams o' Binnorie!
[Pg 244]
LORD DONALD.
Kinloch's Ancient Scottish Ballads, p. 110.
Like the two which preceded it, this ballad is
common to the Gothic nations. It exists in a great
variety of forms. Two stanzas, recovered by Burns,
were printed in Johnson's Museum, i. 337; two others
were inserted by Jamieson, in his Illustrations,
p. 319. The Border Minstrelsy furnished five stanzas,
giving the story, without the bequests. Allan Cunningham's
alteration of Scott's version, (Scottish Songs,
i. 285,) has one stanza more. Kinloch procured from
the North of Scotland the following complete copy.
In the Appendix, we have placed a nursery song on
the same subject, still familiar in Scotland, and translations
of the corresponding German and Swedish ballads—both
most remarkable cases of parallelism in
popular romance.
Lord Donald, as Kinloch remarks, would seem to
have been poisoned by eating toads prepared as fishes.
Scott, in his introduction to Lord Randal, has quoted
from an old chronicle, a fabulous account of the poisoning
of King John by means of a cup of ale, in which
the venom of this reptile had been infused.[Pg 245]
"O whare hae ye been a' day, Lord Donald, my son?
O whare hae ye been a' day, my jollie young man?"
"I've been awa courtin':—mither, mak my bed sune,
For I'm sick at the heart, and I fain wad lie doun."
"What wad ye hae for your supper, Lord Donald, my son?5
What wad ye hae for your supper, my jollie young man?"
"I've gotten my supper:—mither, mak my bed sune,
For I'm sick at the heart, and I fain wad lie doun."
"What did ye get for your supper, Lord Donald, my son?
What did ye get for your supper, my jollie young man?"10
"A dish of sma' fishes:—mither, mak my bed sune,
For I'm sick at the heart, and I fain wad lie doun."
"Whare gat ye the fishes, Lord Donald, my son?
Whare gat ye the fishes, my jollie young man?"[Pg 246]
"In my father's black ditches:—mither, mak my bed sune,15
For I'm sick at the heart, and I fain wad lie doun."
"What like were your fishes, Lord Donald, my son?
What like were your fishes, my jollie young man?"
"Black backs and spreckl'd bellies:—mither, mak my bed sune,
For I'm sick at the heart, and I fain wad lie doun."20
"O I fear ye are poison'd, Lord Donald, my son!
O I fear ye are poison'd, my jollie young man!"
"O yes! I am poison'd:—mither mak my bed sune,
For I'm sick at the heart, and I fain wad lie doun."
"What will ye leave to your father, Lord Donald my son?25
What will ye leave to your father, my jollie young man?"
"Baith my houses and land:—mither, mak my bed sune,
For I'm sick at the heart, and I fain wad lie doun."[Pg 247]
"What will ye leave to your brither, Lord Donald, my son?
What will ye leave to your brither, my jollie young man?"30
"My horse and the saddle:—mither, mak my bed sune,
For I'm sick at the heart, and I fain wad lie doun."
"What will ye leave to your sister, Lord Donald, my son?
What will ye leave to your sister, my jollie young man?"
"Baith my gold box and rings:—mither, mak my bed sune,35
For I'm sick at the heart, and I fain wad lie doun."
"What will ye leave to your true-love, Lord Donald, my son?
What will ye leave to your true-love, my jollie young man?"
"The tow and the halter, for to hang on yon tree,
And lat her hang there for the poysoning o' me."40
[Pg 248]
LORD RANDAL (B).
From Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, (iii. 49.)
Scott changed the name of the hero of this piece
from Lord Ronald to Lord Randal, on the authority of
a single copy. The change is unimportant, but the
reason will appear curious, if we remember that the
Swedes and Germans have the ballad as well as the
Scotch;—"because, though the circumstances are so
very different, I think it not impossible, that the ballad
may have originally regarded the death of Thomas
Randolph, or Randal, Earl of Murray, nephew to
Robert Bruce, and governor of Scotland."
"O where hae ye been Lord Randal, my son?
O where hae ye been, my handsome young man?"—
"I hae been to the wild wood; mother make my bed soon,
For I'm weary wi' hunting, and fain wald lie down."[Pg 249]—
"Where gat ye your dinner, Lord Randal, my son?5
Where gat ye your dinner, my handsome young man?"
"I dined wi' my true-love; mother, make my bed soon,
For I'm weary wi' hunting, and fain wald lie down."—
"What gat ye to your dinner, Lord Randal, my son?
What gat ye to your dinner, my handsome young man?"—10
"I gat eels boil'd in broo; mother, make my bed soon,
For I'm weary wi' hunting, and fain wald lie down."—
"What became of your bloodhounds, Lord Randal, my son?
What became of your bloodhounds, my handsome young man?"—
"O they swell'd and they died; mother, make my bed soon,15
For I'm weary wi' hunting, and fain wald lie down."—
"O I fear ye are poison'd, Lord Randal, my son![Pg 250]
O I fear ye are poisoned, my handsome young man!"—
"O yes! I am poison'd; mother, make my bed soon,
For I'm sick at the heart, and I fain wad lie down."20
[Pg 251]
THE CRUEL BROTHER:
OR,
THE BRIDE'S TESTAMENT.
Of this ballad, which is still commonly recited and
sung in Scotland, four copies have been published.
The following is from Jamieson's collection, i. 66,
where it was printed verbatim after the recitation of
Mrs. Arrott. A copy from Aytoun's collection is subjoined,
which is nearly the same as a less perfect one
in Herd, i. 149, and the fourth, from Gilbert's Ancient
Christmas Carols, &c., is in the Appendix to this volume.
The conclusion, or testamentary part, occurs very
frequently in ballads, e. g. Den lillas Testamente, Svenska
Folk-Visor, No. 68, translated in the Appendix to
this volume, the end of Den onde Svigermoder, Danske
Viser, i. 261, translated in Illustrations of Northern
Antiquities, p. 344, Möen paa Baalet, Grundtvig, No.
109, A, st. 18-21, and Kong Valdemar og hans Söster,
Grundtvig, No. 126, A, st. 101-105. See also Edward,
and Lord Donald, p. 225, p. 244.
There was three ladies play'd at the ba',
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;
There came a knight, and play'd o'er them a',
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.[Pg 252]
The eldest was baith tall and fair,5
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;
But the youngest was beyond compare,
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.
The midmost had a gracefu' mien,
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;10
But the youngest look'd like beauty's queen,
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.
The knight bow'd low to a' the three,
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;
But to the youngest he bent his knee,15
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.
The lady turned her head aside,
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;
The knight he woo'd her to be his bride,
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.20
The lady blush'd a rosy red,
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;
And said, "Sir knight, I'm o'er young to wed,"
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.
"O lady fair, give me your hand,25
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;
And I'll mak you ladie of a' my land,"
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.[Pg 253]
"Sir knight, ere you my favor win,
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;30
Ye maun get consent frae a' my kin,"
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.
He has got consent fra her parents dear,
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;
And likewise frae her sisters fair,35
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.
He has got consent frae her kin each one,
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;
But forgot to speer at her brother John,
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.40
Now, when the wedding day was come,
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;
The knight would take his bonny bride home,
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.
And many a lord and many a knight,45
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;
Came to behold that lady bright,
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.
And there was nae man that did her see,
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay,50
But wished himself bridegroom to be,
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.[Pg 254]
Her father dear led her down the stair,
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;
And her sisters twain they kiss'd her there,55
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.
Her mother dear led her through the close,
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;
And her brother John set her on her horse,
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.60
She lean'd her o'er the saddle-bow,
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay,
To give him a kiss ere she did go,
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.
He has ta'en a knife, baith lang and sharp,65
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay,
And stabb'd the bonny bride to the heart,
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.
She hadna ridden half thro' the town,
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay,70
Until her heart's blood stained her gown,
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.
"Ride saftly on," said the best young man,
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;
"For I think our bonny bride looks pale and wan,"75
[Pg 255]As the primrose spreads so sweetly.
"O lead me gently up yon hill,
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay,
And I'll there sit down, and make my will,"
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.80
"O what will you leave to your father dear?"
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;
"The silver-shod steed that brought me here,"
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.
"What will you leave to your mother dear?"85
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;
"My velvet pall and silken gear,"
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.
"And what will ye leave to your sister Ann?"
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;90
"My silken scarf, and my golden fan,"
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.
"What will ye leave to your sister Grace?"
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;
"My bloody cloaths to wash and dress,"95
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.
"What will ye leave to your brother John?"
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;
"The gallows-tree to hang him on,"
[Pg 256]As the primrose spreads so sweetly.100
"What will ye leave to your brother John's wife?"
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;
"The wilderness to end her life,"
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.
This fair lady in her grave was laid,105
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;
And a mass was o'er her said,
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.
But it would have made your heart right sair,
With a heigh-ho! and a lily gay;110
To see the bridegroom rive his hair,
As the primrose spreads so sweetly.
[Pg 257]
THE CRUEL BROTHER.
From Aytoun's Ballads of Scotland (2d ed.), i. 232,
"taken down from recitation." Found also, but with
several stanzas wanting, in Herd's Scottish Songs, i.
149. The title in both collections is Fine Flowers i'
the Valley. This part of the refrain is found in one
of the versions of the Cruel Mother, p. 269. To
Herd's copy are annexed two fragmentary stanzas
with nearly the same burden as that of the foregoing
ballad.
She louted down to gie a kiss,
With a hey and a lily gay;
He stuck his penknife in her hass,
And the rose it smells so sweetly.
"Ride up, ride up," cry'd the foremost man,
With a hey and a lily gay;
"I think our bride looks pale and wan,"
And the rose it smells so sweetly.
There were three sisters in a ha',
Fine flowers i' the valley,
There came three lords amang them a',
The red, green, and the yellow.[Pg 258]
The first o' them was clad in red,5
Fine flowers i' the valley;
"O lady, will ye be my bride?"
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.
The second o' them was clad in green,
Fine flowers i' the valley;10
"O lady, will ye be my queen?"
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.
The third o' them was clad in yellow,
Fine flowers i' the valley;
"O lady, will ye be my marrow?"15
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.
"O ye maun ask my father dear,"
Fine flowers i' the valley,
"Likewise the mother that did me bear,"
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.20
"And ye maun ask my sister Ann,"
Fine flowers i' the valley;
"And not forget my brother John,"
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.
"O I have asked thy father dear,"25
Fine flowers i' the valley,
"Likewise the mother that did thee bear,"
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.[Pg 259]
"And I have asked your sister Ann,"
Fine flowers i' the valley;30
"But I forgot your brother John;"
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.
Now when the wedding-day was come,
Fine flowers i' the valley,
The knight would take his bonny bride home,35
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.
And mony a lord, and mony a knight,
Fine flowers i' the valley,
Cam to behold that lady bright,
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.40
There was nae man that did her see,
Fine flowers i' the valley,
But wished himsell bridegroom to be,
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.
Her father led her down the stair,45
Fine flowers i' the valley,
And her sisters twain they kissed her there,
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.
Her mother led her through the close,
Fine flowers i' the valley;50
Her brother John set her on her horse,
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.[Pg 260]
"You are high and I am low,"
Fine flowers i' the valley;
"Give me a kiss before you go,"55
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.
She was louting down to kiss him sweet,
Fine flowers i' the valley;
When wi' his knife he wounded her deep,
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.60
She hadna ridden through half the town,
Fine flowers i' the valley,
Until her heart's blood stained her gown,
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.
"Ride saftly on," said the best young man,65
Fine flowers i' the valley;
"I think our bride looks pale and wan!"
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.
"O lead me over into yon stile,"
Fine flowers i' the valley,70
"That I may stop and breathe awhile,"
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.
"O lead me over into yon stair,"
Fine flowers i' the valley,
"For there I'll lie and bleed nae mair,"75
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.[Pg 261]
"O what will you leave to your father dear?"
Fine flowers i' the valley;
"The siller-shod steed that brought me here,"
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.80
"What will you leave to your mother dear?"
Fine flowers i' the valley;
"My velvet pall, and my pearlin' gear,"
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.
"What will you leave to your sister Ann?"85
Fine flowers i' the valley;
"My silken gown that stands its lane,"
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.
"What will you leave to your sister Grace?"
Fine flowers i' the valley;90
"My bluidy shirt to wash and dress,"
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.
"What will you leave to your brother John?"
Fine flowers i' the valley;
"The gates o' hell to let him in,"95
Wi' the red, green, and the yellow.
[Pg 262]
LADY ANNE.
From Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, iii. 18.
"This ballad was communicated to me by Mr. Kirkpatrick
Sharpe of Hoddom, who mentions having copied
it from an old magazine. Although it has probably
received some modern corrections, the general turn
seems to be ancient, and corresponds with that of a
fragment which I have often heard sung in my childhood."
The version to which Sir Walter Scott refers, and
part of which he proceeds to quote, had been printed
in Johnson's Museum. It is placed immediately after
the present, with other copies of the ballad from Motherwell
and Kinloch.
In Buchan's Ballads of the North of Scotland there
are two more, which are repeated with slight variations
in the XVII. Vol. of the Percy Society, p. 46,
p. 50. Both will be found in the Appendix. The
copy in Buchan's Gleanings, p. 90, seems to be taken
from Scott. Smith's Scottish Minstrel, iv. 33, affords
still another variety.
In German, Die Kindesmörderin, Erk's Liederhort,
No. 41, five copies; Erlach, iv. 148; Hoffmann, Schlesische
V. L., No. 31, 32; Wunderhorn, ii. 202; Zuccalmaglio,
No. 97; Meinert, No. 81; Simrock, p. 87.
(But some of these are repetitions.) Wendish, Haupt
and Schmaler, I. No. 292, and with considerable differences,
I. No. 290, II. 197. This last reference is
taken from Grundtvig, ii. 531.[Pg 263]
Fair Lady Anne sate in her bower,
Down by the greenwood side,
And the flowers did spring, and the birds did sing,
'Twas the pleasant May-day tide.
But fair Lady Anne on Sir William call'd,5
With the tear grit in her ee,
"O though thou be fause, may Heaven thee guard,
In the wars ayont the sea!"—
Out of the wood came three bonnie boys,
Upon the simmer's morn,10
And they did sing and play at the ba',
As naked as they were born.
"O seven lang years wad I sit here,
Amang the frost and snaw,
A' to hae but ane o' these bonnie boys,15
A playing at the ba'."—
Then up and spake the eldest boy,
"Now listen, thou fair ladie,
And ponder well the rede that I tell,
Then make ye a choice of the three.20
"'Tis I am Peter, and this is Paul,
And that ane, sae fair to see,[Pg 264]
But a twelve-month sinsyne to paradise came,
To join with our companie."—
"O I will hae the snaw-white boy,25
The bonniest of the three."—
"And if I were thine, and in thy propine,
O what wad ye do to me?"—
"'Tis I wad clead thee in silk and gowd,
And nourice thee on my knee."—30
"O mither! mither! when I was thine,
Sic kindness I couldna see.
"Beneath the turf, where now I stand,
The fause nurse buried me;
The cruel penknife sticks still in my heart,35
And I come not back to thee."—
* * * * * * *
[Pg 265]
FINE FLOWERS IN THE VALLEY.
From Johnson's Musical Museum, p. 331.
The first line of the burden is found also in The Cruel
Brother, p. 258.
She sat down below a thorn,
Fine flowers in the valley;
And there she has her sweet babe born,
And the green leaves they grow rarely.
"Smile na sae sweet, my bonnie babe,5
Fine flowers in the valley,
And ye smile sae sweet, ye'll smile me dead,"
And the green leaves they grow rarely.
She's taen out her little penknife,
Fine flowers in the valley,10
And twinn'd the sweet babe o' its life,
And the green leaves they grow rarely.[Pg 266]
She's howket a grave by the light o' the moon,
Fine flowers in the valley,
And there she's buried her sweet babe in,15
And the green leaves they grow rarely.
As she was going to the church,
Fine flowers in the valley,
She saw a sweet babe in the porch,
And the green leaves they grow rarely.20
"O sweet babe, and thou were mine,
Fine flowers in the valley,
I wad cleed thee in the silk so fine,"
And the green leaves they grow rarely.
"O mother dear, when I was thine,25
Fine flowers in the valley,
Ye did na prove to me sae kind,"
And the green leaves they grow rarely.
[Pg 267]
THE CRUEL MOTHER.
From Motherwell's Minstrelsy, p. 161.
She leaned her back unto a thorn,
Three, three, and three by three;
And there she has her two babes born,
Three, three, and thirty-three.
She took frae 'bout her ribbon-belt,5
And there she bound them hand and foot.
She has ta'en out her wee penknife,
And there she ended baith their life.
She has howked a hole baith deep and wide,
She has put them in baith side by side.10
She has covered them o'er wi' a marble stane,
Thinking she would gang maiden hame.
As she was walking by her father's castle wa',
She saw twa pretty babes playing at the ba'.[Pg 268]
"O bonnie babes! gin ye were mine,15
I would dress you up in satin fine!
"O I would dress you in the silk,
And wash you ay in morning milk!"
"O cruel mother! we were thine,
And thou made us to wear the twine.20
"O cursed mother! heaven's high,
And that's where thou will ne'er win nigh.
"O cursed mother! hell is deep,
And there thou'll enter step by step."
[Pg 269]
THE CRUEL MOTHER.
From Kinloch's Ancient Scottish Ballads, p. 46.
Three stanzas of a Warwickshire version closely
resembling Kinloch's are given in Notes and Queries,
vol. viii. p. 358.
There lives a lady in London—
All alone, and alonie;
She's gane wi' bairn to the clerk's son—
Doun by the greenwud sae bonnie.
She has tane her mantel her about—5
All alone, and alonie;
She's gane aff to the gude greenwud—
Doun by the greenwud sae bonnie.
She has set her back until an aik—
All alone, and alonie;10
First it bowed, and syne it brake—
Doun by the greenwud sae bonnie.
She has set her back until a brier—
All alone, and alonie;[Pg 270]
Bonnie were the twa boys she did bear—15
Doun by the greenwud sae bonnie.
But out she's tane a little penknife—
All alone, and alonie;
And she's parted them and their sweet life—
Doun by the greenwud sae bonnie.20
She's aff unto her father's ha'—
All alone, and alonie;
She seem'd the lealest maiden amang them a'—
Doun by the greenwud sae bonnie.
As she lookit our the castle wa'—25
All alone, and alonie;
She spied twa bonnie boys playing at the ba'—
Doun by the greenwud sae bonnie.
"O an thae twa babes were mine"—
All alone, and alonie;30
"They should wear the silk and the sabelline"—
Doun by the greenwud sae bonnie.
"O mother dear, when we were thine,"
All alone, and alonie;
"We neither wore the silks nor the sabelline"—35
Doun by the greenwud sae bonnie.
"But out ye took a little penknife"—
All alone, and alonie;[Pg 271]
"An ye parted us and our sweet life"—
Doun by the greenwud sae bonnie.40
"But now we're in the heavens hie"—
All alone, and alonie;
"And ye have the pains o' hell to dree"—
Doun by the greenwud sae bonnie.
MAY COLVIN, OR FALSE SIR JOHN.
In the very ancient though corrupted ballads of
Lady Isabel and the Elf-Knight, and The Water o'
Wearie's Well (vol. i. p. 195, 198), an Elf or a Merman
occupies the place here assigned to False Sir
John. Perhaps May Colvin is the result of the same
modernizing process by which Hynde Etin has been
converted into Young Hastings the Groom (vol. i. p.
294, 189). The coincidence of the name with Clerk
Colvill, in vol. i. p. 192, may have some significance.
This, however, would not be the opinion of Grundtvig,
who regards the Norse and German ballads resembling
Lady Isabel, &c., as compounded of two independent
stories. If this be so, then we should rather say that
a ballad similar to May Colvin has been made to furnish
the conclusion to the pieces referred to.[Pg 272]
The story of this ballad has apparently some connection
with Bluebeard, but it is hard to say what the
connection is. (See Fitchers Vogel in the Grimms' K.
u. H.-Märchen, No. 46, and notes.) The versions of
the ballad in other languages are all but innumerable:
e. g. Röfvaren Rymer, Röfvaren Brun, Svenska F.-V.,
No. 82, 83; Den Falske Riddaren, Arwidsson, No. 44;
Ulrich und Aennchen, Schön Ulrich u. Roth-Aennchen,
Schön Ulrich und Rautendelein, Ulinger, Herr
Halewyn, etc., in Wunderhorn, i. 274; Uhland, 141-157
(four copies); Erk, Liederhort, 91, 93; Erlach,
iii. 450; Zuccalmaglio, Deutsche Volkslieder, No. 15;
Hoffmann, Schlesische Volkslieder, No. 12, 13, and
Niederländische Volkslieder, No. 9, 10; etc. etc. A
very brief Italian ballad will be found in the Appendix,
p. 391, which seems to have the same theme. In
some of the ballads the treacherous seducer is an enchanter,
who prevails upon the maid to go with him
by the power of a spell.
May Colvin was first published in Herd's Collection,
vol. i. 153. The copy here given is one obtained from
recitation by Motherwell, (Minstrelsy, p. 67,) collated
by him with that of Herd. It is defective at the end.
The other versions in Sharpe's Ballad Book, p. 45,
and Buchan's Ballads of the North of Scotland, ii. 45,
though they are provided with some sort of conclusion,
are not worth reprinting. A modernized version,
styled The Outlandish Knight, is inserted in the Notes
to Scottish Traditional Versions of Ancient Ballads,
Percy Society, vol. xvii. 101.
Carlton Castle, on the coast of Carrick, is affirmed
by the country people, according to Mr. Chambers, to
have been the residence of the perfidious knight, and[Pg 273]
a precipice overhanging the sea, called "Fause Sir
John's Loup," is pointed out as the place where he was
wont to drown his wives. May Colvin is equally well
ascertained to have been "a daughter of the family of
Kennedy of Colzean, now represented by the Earl of
Cassilis." Buchan's version assigns a different locality
to the transaction—that of "Binyan's Bay," which,
says the editor, is the old name of the mouth of the
river Ugie.
False Sir John a wooing came
To a maid of beauty fair;
May Colvin was the lady's name,
Her father's only heir.
He's courted her butt, and he's courted her ben,5
And he's courted her into the ha',
Till once he got this lady's consent
To mount and ride awa'.
She's gane to her father's coffers,
Where all his money lay;10
And she's taken the red, and she's left the white,
And so lightly as she tripped away.
She's gane down to her father's stable,
Where all his steeds did stand;
And she's taken the best, and she's left the warst,15
That was in her father's land.[Pg 274]
He rode on, and she rode on,
They rode a lang simmer's day,
Until they came to a broad river,
An arm of a lonesome sea.20
"Loup off the steed," says false Sir John;
"Your bridal bed you see;
For it's seven king's daughters I have drowned here,
And the eighth I'll out make with thee.
"Cast off, cast off your silks so fine,25
And lay them on a stone,
For they are o'er good and o'er costly
To rot in the salt sea foam.
"Cast off, cast off your Holland smock,
And lay it on this stone,30
For it is too fine and o'er costly
To rot in the salt sea foam."
"O turn you about, thou false Sir John,
And look to the leaf o' the tree;
For it never became a gentleman35
A naked woman to see."
He's turn'd himself straight round about,
To look to the leaf o' the tree;
She's twined her arms about his waist,
[Pg 275]And thrown him into the sea.40
"O hold a grip of me, May Colvin,
For fear that I should drown;
I'll take you hame to your father's gates,
And safely I'll set you down."
"O lie you there, thou false Sir John,45
O lie you there," said she;
"For you lie not in a caulder bed
Than the ane you intended for me."
So she went on her father's steed,
As swift as she could flee,50
And she came hame to her father's gates
At the breaking of the day.
Up then spake the pretty parrot:
"May Colvin, where have you been?
What has become of false Sir John,55
That wooed you so late yestreen?"
Up then spake the pretty parrot,
In the bonnie cage where it lay:
"O what hae ye done with the false Sir John,
That he behind you does stay?60
"He wooed you butt, he wooed you ben,
He wooed you into the ha',
Until he got your own consent
For to mount and gang awa'."[Pg 276]
"O hold your tongue, my pretty parrot,65
Lay not the blame upon me;
Your cage will be made of the beaten gold,
And the spakes of ivorie."
Up then spake the king himself,
In the chamber where he lay:70
"O what ails the pretty parrot,
That prattles so long ere day?"
"It was a cat cam to my cage door;
I thought 't would have worried me;
And I was calling on fair May Colvin75
To take the cat from me."
[Pg 277]
BABYLON,
OR,
THE BONNIE BANKS O' FORDIE.
"This ballad is given from two copies obtained from
recitation, which differ but little from each other. Indeed,
the only variation is in the verse where the
outlawed brother unweetingly slays his sister. One
reading is,—
'He's taken out his wee penknife,
Hey how bonnie;
And he's twined her o' her ain sweet life,
On the bonnie banks o' Fordie.'
The other reading is that adopted in the text. This
ballad is popular in the southern parishes of Perthshire:
but where the scene is laid the editor has been
unable to ascertain. Nor has any research of his enabled
him to throw farther light on the history of its
hero with the fantastic name, than what the ballad
itself supplies." Motherwell's Minstrelsy, p. 88.
Another version is subjoined, from Kinloch's collection.
This ballad is found in Danish; Herr Truels's Doettre,
Danske Viser, No. 164. In a note the editor endeavors
to show that the story is based on fact![Pg 278]
There were three ladies lived in a bower,
Eh vow bonnie,
And they went out to pull a flower,
On the bonnie banks o' Fordie.
They hadna pu'ed a flower but ane,5
Eh vow bonnie,
When up started to them a banisht man,
On the bonnie banks o' Fordie.
He's ta'en the first sister by her hand,
Eh vow bonnie,10
And he's turned her round and made her stand,
On the bonnie banks o' Fordie.
"It's whether will ye be a rank robber's wife,
Eh vow bonnie,
Or will ye die by my wee penknife,"15
On the bonnie banks o' Fordie?
"It's I'll not be a rank robber's wife,
Eh vow bonnie,
But I'll rather die by your wee penknife,"
On the bonnie banks o' Fordie.20
He's killed this may and he's laid her by,
Eh vow bonnie,
For to bear the red rose company,
On the bonnie banks o' Fordie.[Pg 279]
He's taken the second ane by the hand,25
Eh vow bonnie,
And he's turned her round and made her stand,
On the bonnie banks o' Fordie.
"It's whether will ye be a rank robber's wife,
Eh vow bonnie,30
Or will ye die by my wee penknife,"
On the bonnie banks o' Fordie?
"I'll not be a rank robber's wife,
Eh vow bonnie,
But I'll rather die by your wee penknife,"35
On the bonnie banks o' Fordie.
He's killed this may and he's laid her by,
Eh vow bonnie,
For to bear the red rose company,
On the bonnie banks o' Fordie.40
He's taken the youngest ane by the hand,
Eh vow bonnie,
And he's turned her round and made her stand,
On the bonnie banks o' Fordie.
Says, "Will ye be a rank robber's wife,45
Eh vow bonnie,
Or will ye die by my wee penknife,"
On the bonnie banks o' Fordie?[Pg 280]
"I'll not be a rank robber's wife,
Eh vow bonnie,50
Nor will I die by your wee penknife,
On the bonnie banks o' Fordie.
"For I hae a brother in this wood,
Eh vow bonnie,
And gin ye kill me, it's he'll kill thee,"55
On the bonnie banks o' Fordie.
"What's thy brother's name? come tell to me,"
Eh vow bonnie;
"My brother's name is Babylon,"
On the bonnie banks o' Fordie.60
"O sister, sister, what have I done,
Eh vow bonnie?
O have I done this ill to thee,
On the bonnie banks o' Fordie?
"O since I've done this evil deed,65
Eh vow bonnie,
Good sall never be seen o' me,"
On the bonnie banks o' Fordie.
He's taken out his wee penknife,
Eh vow bonnie,70
And he's twyned himsel o' his ain sweet life,
On the bonnie banks o' Fordie.
[Pg 281]
DUKE OF PERTH'S THREE DAUGHTERS.
From Kinloch's Ancient Scottish Ballads, p. 212.
The Duke o' Perth had three daughters,
Elizabeth, Margaret, and fair Marie;
And Elizabeth's to the greenwud gane,
To pu' the rose and the fair lilie.
But she hadna pu'd a rose, a rose,5
A double rose, but barely three,
Whan up and started a Loudon lord,
Wi' Loudon hose, and Loudon sheen.
"Will ye be called a robber's wife?
Or will ye be stickit wi' my bloody knife?10
For pu'in the rose and the fair lilie,
For pu'in them sae fair and free."
"Before I'll be called a robber's wife,
I'll rather be stickit wi' your bloody knife,
For pu'in the rose and the fair lilie,15
For pu'in them sae fair and free."[Pg 282]
Then out he's tane his little penknife,
And he's parted her and her sweet life,
And thrown her o'er a bank o' brume,
There never more for to be found.20
The Duke o' Perth had three daughters,
Elizabeth, Margaret, and fair Marie;
And Margaret's to the greenwud gane,
To pu' the rose and the fair lilie.
She hadna pu'd a rose, a rose,25
A double rose, but barely three,
When up and started a Loudon lord,
Wi' Loudon hose, and Loudon sheen.
"Will ye be called a robber's wife?
Or will ye be stickit wi' my bloody knife?30
For pu'in the rose and the fair lilie,
For pu'in them sae fair and free."
"Before I'll be called a robber's wife,
I'll rather be sticket wi' your bloody knife,
For pu'in the rose and the fair lilie,35
For pu'in them sae fair and free."
Then out he's tane his little penknife,
And he's parted her and her sweet life,
For pu'in the rose and the fair lilie,
[Pg 283]For pu'in them sae fair and free.40
The Duke o' Perth had three daughters,
Elizabeth, Margaret, and fair Marie;
And Mary's to the greenwud gane,
To pu' the rose and the fair lilie.
She hadna pu'd a rose, a rose,45
A double rose, but barely three,
When up and started a Loudon lord,
Wi' Loudon hose, and Loudon sheen.
"O will ye be called a robber's wife?
Or will ye be stickit wi' my bloody knife?50
For pu'in the rose and the fair lilie,
For pu'in them sae fair and free."
"Before I'll be called a robber's wife,
I'll rather be stickit wi' your bloody knife,
For pu'in the rose and the fair lilie,55
For pu'in them sae fair and free."
But just as he took out his knife,
To tak frae her her ain sweet life,
Her brother John cam ryding bye,
And this bloody robber he did espy.60
But when he saw his sister fair,
He kenn'd her by her yellow hair;
He call'd upon his pages three,
To find this robber speedilie.[Pg 284]
"My sisters twa that are dead and gane,65
For whom we made a heavy maene,
It's you that's twinn'd them o' their life,
And wi' your cruel bloody knife.
Then for their life ye sair shall dree:
Ye sall be hangit on a tree,70
Or thrown into the poison'd lake,
To feed the toads and rattle-snake."
[Pg 285]
JELLON GRAME.
From Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, iii. 162.
"This ballad is published from tradition, with some
conjectural emendations. It is corrected by a copy in
Mrs. Brown's MS., from which it differs in the concluding
stanzas. Some verses are apparently modernized.
"Jellon seems to be the same name with Jyllian, or
Julian. 'Jyl of Brentford's Testament' is mentioned
in Warton's History of Poetry, vol. ii. p. 40. The
name repeatedly occurs in old ballads, sometimes as
that of a man, at other times as that of a woman. Of
the former is an instance in the ballad of The Knight
and the Shepherd's Daughter. [See this collection,
vol. iii. p. 253.]
'Some do call me Jack, sweetheart,
And some do call me Jille.'
"Witton Gilbert, a village four miles west of Durham,
is, throughout the bishopric, pronounced Witton
Jilbert. We have also the common name of Giles,
always in Scotland pronounced Jill. For Gille, or[Pg 286]
Juliana, as a female name, we have Fair Gillian of
Croyden, and a thousand authorities. Such being the
case, the Editor must enter his protest against the conversion
of Gil Morrice into Child Maurice, an epithet
of chivalry. All the circumstances in that ballad argue,
that the unfortunate hero was an obscure and very
young man, who had never received the honour of
knighthood. At any rate there can be no reason,
even were internal evidence totally wanting, for altering
a well-known proper name, which, till of late years,
has been the uniform title of the ballad." Scott.
May-a-Row, in Buchan's larger collection, ii. 231, is
another, but an inferior, version of this ballad.
O Jellon Grame sat in Silverwood,
He sharp'd his broadsword lang;
And he has call'd his little foot-page
An errand for to gang.
"Win up, my bonny boy," he says,5
"As quickly as ye may;
For ye maun gang for Lillie Flower
Before the break of day."[Pg 287]—
The boy has buckled his belt about,
And through the green-wood ran;10
And he came to the ladye's bower
Before the day did dawn.
"O sleep ye, wake ye, Lillie Flower?
The red sun's on the rain:
Ye're bidden come to Silverwood,15
But I doubt ye'll never win hame."—
She hadna ridden a mile, a mile,
A mile but barely three,
Ere she came to a new-made grave,
Beneath a green aik tree.20
O then up started Jellon Grame,
Out of a bush thereby;
"Light down, light down, now, Lillie Flower,
For it's here that ye maun lye."—
She lighted aff her milk-white steed,25
And kneel'd upon her knee;
"O mercy, mercy, Jellon Grame,
For I'm no prepared to die!
"Your bairn, that stirs between my sides,
Maun shortly see the light:30
But to see it weltering in my blood,
Would be a piteous sight."[Pg 288]—
"O should I spare your life," he says,
"Until that bairn were born,
Full weel I ken your auld father35
Would hang me on the morn."—
"O spare my life, now, Jellon Grame!
My father ye needna dread:
I'll keep my babe in gude green-wood,
Or wi' it I'll beg my bread."—40
He took no pity on Lillie Flower,
Though she for life did pray;
But pierced her through the fair body
As at his feet she lay.
He felt nae pity for Lillie Flower,45
Where she was lying dead;
But he felt some for the bonny bairn,
That lay weltering in her bluid.
Up has he ta'en that bonny boy,
Given him to nurses nine;50
Three to sleep, and three to wake,
And three to go between.
And he bred up that bonny boy,
Call'd him his sister's son;
And he thought no eye could ever see55
The deed that he had done.[Pg 289]
O so it fell upon a day,
When hunting they might be,
They rested them in Silverwood,
Beneath that green aik tree.60
And many were the green-wood flowers
Upon the grave that grew,
And marvell'd much that bonny boy
To see their lovely hue.
"What's paler than the prymrose wan?65
What's redder than the rose?
What's fairer than the lilye flower
On this wee know that grows?"—
O out and answer'd Jellon Grame,
And he spak hastilie—70
"Your mother was a fairer flower,
And lies beneath this tree.
"More pale she was, when she sought my grace,
Than prymrose pale and wan;
And redder than rose her ruddy heart's blood,75
That down my broadsword ran."—
Wi' that the boy has bent his bow,
It was baith stout and lang;
An thro' and thro' him, Jellon Grame,
[Pg 290]He gar'd an arrow gang.80
Says,—"Lie ye there, now, Jellon Grame!
My malisoun gang you wi'!
The place that my mother lies buried in
Is far too good for thee."
1. Silverwood, mentioned in this ballad, occurs in a medley
MS. song, which seems to have been copied from the first
edition of the Aberdeen Cantus, penes John G. Dalyell, Esq.
advocate. One line only is cited, apparently the beginning
of some song:—
"Silverwood, gin ye were mine." Scott.
[Pg 291]
YOUNG JOHNSTONE.
A fragment of this fine ballad (which is commonly
called The Cruel Knight) was published by Herd,
(i. 222,) and also by Pinkerton, (Select Scottish Ballads,
i. 69,) with variations. Finlay constructed a
nearly complete edition from two recited copies, but
suppressed some lines. (Scottish Ballads, ii. 72.) The
present copy is one which Motherwell obtained from
recitation, with a few verbal emendations by that
editor from Finlay's.
With respect to the sudden and strange catastrophe,
Motherwell remarks:—
"The reciters of old ballads frequently supply the
best commentaries upon them, when any obscurity or
want of connection appears in the poetical narrative.
This ballad, as it stands, throws no light on young
Johnstone's motive for stabbing his lady; but the person
from whose lips it was taken down alleged that the
barbarous act was committed unwittingly, through
young Johnstone's suddenly waking from sleep, and, in
that moment of confusion and alarm, unhappily mistaking
his mistress for one of his pursuers. It is not
improbable but the ballad may have had, at one time,[Pg 292]
a stanza to the above effect, the substance of which is
still remembered, though the words in which it was
couched have been forgotten." Minstrelsy, p. 193.
Buchan's version, (Lord John's Murder, ii. 20,) it
will be seen, supplies this deficiency.
Young Johnstone and the young Col'nel
Sat drinking at the wine:
"O gin ye wad marry my sister,
It's I wad marry thine."
"I wadna marry your sister,5
For a' your houses and land;
But I'll keep her for my leman,
When I come o'er the strand.
"I wadna marry your sister,
For a' your gowd so gay;10
But I'll keep her for my leman,
When I come by the way."
Young Johnstone had a nut-brown sword,
Hung low down by his gair,
And he ritted it through the young Col'nel,15
That word he ne'er spak mair.[Pg 293]
But he's awa' to his sister's bower,
He's tirled at the pin:
"Whare hae ye been, my dear brither,
Sae late a coming in?"20
"I hae been at the school, sister,
Learning young clerks to sing."
"I've dreamed a dreary dream this night,
I wish it may be for good;
They were seeking you with hawks and hounds,25
And the young Col'nel was dead."
"Hawks and hounds they may seek me,
As I trow well they be;
For I have killed the young Col'nel,
And thy own true love was he."30
"If ye hae killed the young Col'nel,
O dule and wae is me;
But I wish ye may be hanged on a hie gallows,
And hae nae power to flee."
And he's awa' to his true love's bower,35
He's tirled at the pin:
"Whar hae ye been, my dear Johnstone,
Sae late a coming in?"
"It's I hae been at the school," he says,
[Pg 294]"Learning young clerks to sing."40
"I have dreamed a dreary dream," she says,
"I wish it may be for good;
They were seeking you with hawks and hounds,
And the young Col'nel was dead."
"Hawks and hounds they may seek me,45
As I trow well they be;
For I hae killed the young Col'nel,
And thy ae brother was he."
"If ye hae killed the young Col'nel,
O dule and wae is me;50
But I care the less for the young Col'nel,
If thy ain body be free.
"Come in, come in, my dear Johnstone,
Come in and take a sleep;
And I will go to my casement,55
And carefully I will thee keep."
He had not weel been in her bower door,
No not for half an hour,
When four-and-twenty belted knights
Came riding to the bower.60
"Well may you sit and see, Lady,
Well may you sit and say;
Did you not see a bloody squire
Come riding by this way?"[Pg 295]
"What colour were his hawks?" she says,65
"What colour were his hounds?
What colour was the gallant steed
That bore him from the bounds?"
"Bloody, bloody were his hawks,
And bloody were his hounds;70
But milk-white was the gallant steed
That bore him from the bounds."
"Yes, bloody, bloody were his hawks,
And bloody were his hounds;
And milk-white was the gallant steed75
That bore him from the bounds.
"Light down, light down now, gentlemen,
And take some bread and wine;
And the steed be swift that he rides on,
He's past the brig o' Lyne."80
"We thank you for your bread, fair Lady,
We thank you for your wine;
But I wad gie thrice three thousand pound,
That bloody knight was ta'en."
"Lie still, lie still, my dear Johnstone,85
Lie still and take a sleep;
For thy enemies are past and gone,
And carefully I will thee keep."[Pg 296]
But young Johnstone had a little wee sword,
Hung low down by his gair,90
And he stabbed it in fair Annet's breast,
A deep wound and a sair.
"What aileth thee now, dear Johnstone?
What aileth thee at me?
Hast thou not got my father's gold,95
Bot and my mither's fee?"
"Now live, now live, my dear Ladye,
Now live but half an hour,
And there's no a leech in a' Scotland
But shall be in thy bower."100
"How can I live, how shall I live?
Young Johnstone, do not you see
The red, red drops o' my bonny heart's blood
Rin trinkling down my knee?
"But take thy harp into thy hand,105
And harp out owre yon plain,[Pg 297]
And ne'er think mair on thy true love
Than if she had never been."
He hadna weel been out o' the stable,
And on his saddle set,110
Till four-and-twenty broad arrows
Were thrilling in his heart.
15. In the copy obtained by the Editor, the word "ritted"
did not occur, instead of which the word "stabbed" was
used. The "nut-brown sword" was also changed into "a
little small sword." Motherwell.
96. Buchan's version furnishes the necessary explanation
of Young Johnstone's apparent cruelty:—
"Ohon, alas, my lady gay,
To come sae hastilié!
I thought it was my deadly foe,
Ye had trysted in to me."
[Pg 298]
YOUNG BENJIE.
From the Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, iii. 10.
Bondsey and Maisry, another version of the same
story, from Buchan's collection, is given in the
Appendix.
"In this ballad the reader will find traces of a singular
superstition, not yet altogether discredited in the
wilder parts of Scotland. The lykewake, or watching
a dead body, in itself a melancholy office, is rendered,
in the idea of the assistants, more dismally awful, by
the mysterious horrors of superstition. In the interval
betwixt death and interment, the disembodied spirit is
supposed to hover round its mortal habitation, and, if
invoked by certain rites, retains the power of communicating,
through its organs, the cause of its dissolution.
Such inquiries, however, are always dangerous, and
never to be resorted to, unless the deceased is suspected
to have suffered foul play, as it is called. It is the
more unsafe to tamper with this charm in an unauthorized
manner, because the inhabitants of the infernal
regions are, at such periods, peculiarly active.
One of the most potent ceremonies in the charm, for[Pg 299]
causing the dead body to speak, is, setting the door ajar,
or half open. On this account, the peasants of Scotland
sedulously avoid leaving the door ajar, while a
corpse lies in the house. The door must either be left
wide open, or quite shut; but the first is always preferred,
on account of the exercise of hospitality usual
on such occasions. The attendants must be likewise
careful never to leave the corpse for a moment alone,
or, if it is left alone, to avoid, with a degree of superstitious
horror, the first sight of it.
"The following story, which is frequently related by
the peasants of Scotland, will illustrate the imaginary
danger of leaving the door ajar. In former times, a
man and his wife lived in a solitary cottage, on one of
the extensive Border fells. One day the husband
died suddenly; and his wife, who was equally afraid of
staying alone by the corpse, or leaving the dead body
by itself, repeatedly went to the door, and looked anxiously
over the lonely moor for the sight of some person
approaching. In her confusion and alarm she accidentally
left the door ajar, when the corpse suddenly
started up, and sat in the bed, frowning and grinning
at her frightfully. She sat alone, crying bitterly, unable
to avoid the fascination of the dead man's eye, and
too much terrified to break the sullen silence, till a
Catholic priest, passing over the wild, entered the cottage.
He first set the door quite open, then put his
little finger in his mouth, and said the paternoster backwards;
when the horrid look of the corpse relaxed, it
fell back on the bed, and behaved itself as a dead man
ought to do.
"The ballad is given from tradition. I have been
informed by a lady, [Miss Joanna Baillie,] of the highest
literary eminence, that she has heard a ballad on[Pg 300]
the same subject, in which the scene was laid upon the
banks of the Clyde. The chorus was,
"O Bothwell banks bloom bonny,"
and the watching of the dead corpse was said to have
taken place in Bothwell church." Scott.
Of a' the maids o' fair Scotland,
The fairest was Marjorie;
And young Benjie was her ae true love,
And a dear true love was he.
And wow but they were lovers dear,5
And loved fu' constantlie;
But aye the mair when they fell out,
The sairer was their plea.
And they hae quarrell'd on a day,
Till Marjorie's heart grew wae;10
And she said she'd chuse another luve,
And let young Benjie gae.
And he was stout, and proud-hearted,
And thought o't bitterlie;
And he's gane by the wan moonlight,15
To meet his Marjorie.
"O open, open, my true love,
O open, and let me in!"[Pg 301]—
"I darena open, young Benjie,
My three brothers are within."—20
"Ye lied, ye lied, ye bonny burd,
Sae loud's I hear ye lie;
As I came by the Lowden banks,
They bade gude e'en to me.
"But fare ye weel, my ae fause love,25
That I have loved sae lang!
It sets ye chuse another love,
And let young Benjie gang."—
Then Marjorie turn'd her round about,
The tear blinding her ee,—30
"I darena, darena let thee in,
But I'll come down to thee."—
Then saft she smiled, and said to him,
"O what ill hae I done?"—
He took her in his armis twa,35
And threw her o'er the linn.
The stream was strang, the maid was stout,
And laith, laith to be dang,
But, ere she wan the Lowden banks,
Her fair colour was wan.40
Then up bespak her eldest brother,
"O see na ye what I see?"[Pg 302]—
And out then spak her second brother,
"It's our sister Marjorie!"—
Out then spak her eldest brother,45
"O how shall we her ken?"—
And out then spak her youngest brother,
"There's a honey mark on her chin."—
Then they've ta'en up the comely corpse,
And laid it on the ground:50
"O wha has killed our ae sister,
And how can he be found?
"The night it is her low lykewake,
The morn her burial day,
And we maun watch at mirk midnight,55
And hear what she will say."—
Wi' doors ajar, and candle light,
And torches burning clear,
The streikit corpse, till still midnight,
They waked, but naething hear.60
About the middle o' the night,
The cocks began to craw;
And at the dead hour o' the night,
The corpse began to thraw.
"O whae has done the wrang, sister,65
Or dared the deadly sin?[Pg 303]
Whae was sae stout, and fear'd nae dout,
As thraw ye o'er the linn?"
"Young Benjie was the first ae man
I laid my love upon;70
He was sae stout and proud-hearted,
He threw me o'er the linn."—
"Sall we young Benjie head, sister,
Sall we young Benjie hang,
Or sall we pike out his twa gray een,75
And punish him ere he gang?"
"Ye maunna Benjie head, brothers,
Ye maunna Benjie hang,
But ye maun pike out his twa gray een,
And punish him ere he gang.80
"Tie a green gravat round his neck,
And lead him out and in,
And the best ae servant about your house
To wait young Benjie on.
"And aye, at every seven years' end,85
Ye'l tak him to the linn;
For that's the penance he maun dree,
To scug his deadly sin."
[Pg 305]
APPENDIX.
[Pg 307]
LORD BARNABY.
Scottish version of Little Musgrave and Lady Barnard.
See p. 15.
From Jamieson's Popular Ballads and Songs, i. 170.
"I have a tower in Dalisberry,
Which now is dearly dight,
And I will gie it to young Musgrave
To lodge wi' me a' night."
"To lodge wi' thee a' night, fair lady,5
Wad breed baith sorrow and strife;
For I see by the rings on your fingers,
You're good lord Barnaby's wife."
"Lord Barnaby's wife although I be,
Yet what is that to thee?10
For we'll beguile him for this ae night—
He's on to fair Dundee.[Pg 308]
"Come here, come here, my little foot-page,
This gold I will give thee,
If ye will keep thir secrets close15
'Tween young Musgrave and me.
"But here I hae a little pen-knife,
Hings low down by my gare;
Gin ye winna keep thir secrets close,
Ye'll find it wonder sair."20
Then she's ta'en him to her chamber,
And down in her arms lay he:
The boy coost aff his hose and shoon,
And ran to fair Dundee.
When he cam to the wan water,25
He slack'd his bow and swam;
And when he cam to growin grass,
Set down his feet and ran.
And when he cam to fair Dundee,
Wad neither chap nor ca';30
But set his brent bow to his breast,
And merrily jump'd the wa'.
"O waken ye, waken ye, my good lord,
Waken, and come away!"—
"What ails, what ails my wee foot-page,35
He cries sae lang ere day.
"O is my bowers brent, my boy?
Or is my castle won?[Pg 309]
Or has the lady that I lo'e best
Brought me a daughter or son?"40
"Your ha's are safe, your bowers are safe,
And free frae all alarms;
But, oh! the lady that ye lo'e best
Lies sound in Musgrave's arms."
"Gae saddle to me the black," he cried,45
"Gae saddle to me the gray;
Gae saddle to me the swiftest steed,
To hie me on my way."
"O lady, I heard a wee horn toot,
And it blew wonder clear;50
And ay the turning o' the note,
Was, 'Barnaby will be here!'
"I thought I heard a wee horn blaw,
And it blew loud and high;
And ay at ilka turn it said,55
'Away, Musgrave, away!'"
"Lie still, my dear; lie still, my dear;
Ye keep me frae the cold;
For it is but my father's shepherds
Driving their flocks to the fold."60
Up they lookit, and down they lay,
And they're fa'en sound asleep;
Till up stood good lord Barnaby,
Just close at their bed feet.
"How do you like my bed, Musgrave?65
And how like ye my sheets?[Pg 310]
And how like ye my fair lady,
Lies in your arms and sleeps?
"Weel like I your bed, my lord,
And weel like I your sheets;70
But ill like I your fair lady,
Lies in my arms and sleeps.
"You got your wale o' se'en sisters,
And I got mine o' five;
Sae tak ye mine, and I's tak thine,75
And we nae mair sall strive."
"O my woman's the best woman
That ever brak world's bread;
And your woman's the worst woman
That ever drew coat o'er head.80
"I hae twa swords in ae scabbert,
They are baith sharp and clear;
Take ye the best, and I the warst,
And we'll end the matter here.
"But up, and arm thee, young Musgrave,85
We'll try it han' to han';
It's ne'er be said o' lord Barnaby,
He strack at a naked man."
The first straik that young Musgrave got,
It was baith deep and sair;90
And down he fell at Barnaby's feet,
And word spak never mair.
* * * * * * *
[Pg 311]
"A grave, a grave!" lord Barnaby cried,
"A grave to lay them in;
My lady shall lie on the sunny side,95
Because of her noble kin."
But oh, how sorry was that good lord,
For a' his angry mood,
Whan he beheld his ain young son
All welt'ring in his blood!100
26. For slack'd read bent. J.
Note. [In v. 31] the term "braid bow" has been altered
by the editor into "brent bow," i. e. straight, or unbent bow.
In most of the old ballads, where a page is employed as the
bearer of a message, we are told, that,
"When he came to wan water,
He bent his bow and swam;"
And
"He set his bent bow to his breast,
And lightly lap the wa'," &c.
The application of the term bent, in the latter instance, does
not seem correct, and is probably substituted for brent.
In the establishment of a feudal baron, every thing wore a
military aspect; he was a warrior by profession; every man
attached to him, particularly those employed about his person,
was a soldier; and his little foot-page was very appropriately
equipped in the light accoutrements of an archer. His
bow, in the old ballad, seems as inseparable from his character
as the bow of Cupid or of Apollo, or the caduceus of his celestial
prototype Mercury. This bow, which he carried unbent,
he seems to have bent when he had occasion to swim, in order
that he might the more easily carry it in his teeth, to prevent
the string from being injured by getting wet. At other times
he availed himself of its length and elasticity in the brent, or
straight state, and used it (as hunters do a leaping pole) in[Pg 312]
vaulting over the wall of the outer court of a castle, when
his business would not admit of the tedious formality of
blowing a horn, or ringing a bell, and holding a long parley
with the porter at the gate, before he could gain admission.
This, at least, appears to the editor to be the meaning of these
passages in the old ballads. Jamieson.
[Pg 313]
CHILDE MAURICE. See p. 30.
From Jamieson's Popular Ballads and Songs, i. 8.
Childe Maurice hunted i' the silver wood,
He hunted it round about,
And noebody yt he found theren,
Nor noebody without.
* * * * * * *
* * * * * * *
And tooke his silver combe in his hand5
To kembe his yellow lockes.
He sayes, "come hither, thou litle footpage,
That runneth lowly by my knee;
Ffor thou shalt goe to John Steward's wiffe,
[Pg 314]And pray her speake with mee.10
"And as it ffalls out, many times
As knotts been knitt on a kell,
Or merchant men gone to leeve London,
Either to buy ware or sell,
* * * * * * *
* * * * * * *
And grete thou doe that ladye well,15
Ever soe well ffroe mee.
"And as it ffalls out, many times
As any harte can thinke,
As schoole masters are in any schoole house,
Writting with pen and inke,20
* * * * * * *
* * * * * * *
Ffor if I might as well as shee may,
This night I wold with her speake.
"And there I send her a ring of gold,
A ring of precyous stone;
And bid her come to the silver wood,
Let for no kind of man."30
One while this litle boy he yode,
Another while he ran;[Pg 315]
Until he came to John Steward's hall,
Iwis he never blan.
And of nurture the child had good;35
He ran up hall and bower ffree,
And when he came to this lady ffaire,
Sayes, "God you save and see.
"I am come ffrom Childe Maurice,
A message unto thee,40
And Childe Maurice he greetes you well,
And ever soe well ffrom me.
"And as it ffalls out, oftentimes
As knotts been knitt on a kell,
Or merchant men gone to leeve London45
Either to buy or sell;
"And as oftentimes he greetes you well,
As any hart can thinke,
Or schoolemaster in any schoole,
Wryting with pen and inke.50
"And heere he sends a mantle of greene,
As greene as any grasse,
And he bidds you come to the silver wood,
To hunt with child Maurice.
"And heere he sends you a ring of gold,55
A ring of precyous stone;
He prayes you to come to the silver wood,
Let for no kind of man."
"Now peace, now peace, thou litle fotpage,
[Pg 316]Ffor Christes sake I pray thee;60
Ffor if my lord heare one of those words,
Thou must be hanged hye."
John Steward stood under the castle wall,
And he wrote the words every one;
* * * * * * *
* * * * * * *
And he called unto his horssekeeper,65
"Make ready you my steede;"
And soe he did to his chamberlaine,
"Make readye then my weed."
And he cast a lease upon his backe,
And he rode to the silver wood,70
And there he sought all about,
About the silver wood.
And there he found him Childe Maurice,
Sitting upon a blocke,
With a silver combe in his hand,75
Kembing his yellow locke.
He sayes, "how now, how now, Childe Maurice,
Alacke how may this bee?"
But then stood by him Childe Maurice,
And sayd these words trulye:80
"I do not know your ladye," he said,
"If that I doe her see."
"Ffor thou hast sent her love tokens,
More now than two or three.
"For thou hast sent her a mantle of greene,85
As greene as any grasse,[Pg 317]
And bade her come to the silver wood,
To hunt with Childe Maurice.
"And by my faith now, Childe Maurice,
The tane of us shall dye;"90
"Now by my troth," sayd Childe Maurice,
"And that shall not be I."
But he pulled out a bright browne sword,
And dryed it on the grasse,
And soe fast he smote at John Steward,95
Iwis he never rest.
Then hee pulled forth his bright browne sword,
And dryed itt on his sleeve,
And the ffirst good stroke John Steward stroke,
Child Maurice head he did cleeve.100
And he pricked it on his swords poynt,
Went singing there beside,
And he rode till he came to the ladye ffaire,
Whereas his ladye lyed.
And sayes, "dost thou know Child Maurice head,105
Iff that thou dost it see?
And llap it soft, and kisse itt offt,
Ffor thou lovedst him better than mee."
But when shee looked on Child Maurice head,
Shee never spake words but three:110
"I never beare noe child but one,
And you have slain him trulye."
Sayes, "wicked be my merry men all,
I gave meate, drinke, and clothe;[Pg 318]
But cold they not have holden me,115
When I was in all that wrath!
"Ffor I have slaine one of the courteousest knights
That ever bestrode a steede;
Soe have I done one of the fairest ladyes
That ever ware womans weede."120
1. MS. silven. See vv. 25, 53, 70, 72.
11. out out.
25. Sic in MS.
CLERK SAUNDERS. See p. 45.
From Jamieson's Popular Ballads and Songs, i. 83.
"The following copy was transmitted by Mrs. Arrott
of Aberbrothick. The stanzas, where the seven
brothers are introduced, have been enlarged from two
fragments, which, although very defective in themselves,
furnished lines which, when incorporated with
the text, seemed to improve it. Stanzas 21 and 22,
were written by the editor; the idea of the rose being
suggested by the gentleman who recited, but who
could not recollect the language in which it was expressed."
This copy of Clerk Saunders bears traces of having
been made up from several sources. A portion of the[Pg 319]
concluding stanzas (v. 107-130) have a strong resemblance
to the beginning and end of Proud Lady Margaret
(vol. viii. 83, 278), which ballad is itself in a
corrupt condition. It may also be doubted whether
the fragments Jamieson speaks of did not belong to a
ballad resembling Lady Maisry, p. 78 of this volume.
Accepting the ballad as it stands here, there is certainly
likeness enough in the first part to suggest a
community of origin with the Swedish ballad Den
Grymma Brodern, Svenska Folk-Visor, No. 86 (translated
in Lit. and Rom. of Northern Europe, p. 261).
W. Grimm mentions (Altdän. Heldenl., p. 519) a
Spanish ballad, De la Blanca Niña, in the Romancero
de Amberes, in which the similarity to Den Grymma
Brodern is very striking. The series of questions (v.
30-62) sometimes appears apart from the story, and
with a comic turn, as in Det Hurtige Svar, Danske V.,
No. 204, or Thore och hans Syster, Arwidsson, i. 358.
In this shape they closely resemble the familiar old
song, Our gudeman came hame at e'en, Herd, Scottish
Songs, ii. 74.
Clerk Saunders was an earl's son,
He liv'd upon sea-sand;
May Margaret was a king's daughter,
She liv'd in upper land.
Clerk Saunders was an earl's son,5
Weel learned at the scheel;
May Margaret was a king's daughter;
They baith lo'ed ither weel.[Pg 320]
He's throw the dark, and throw the mark,
And throw the leaves o' green;10
Till he came to May Margaret's door,
And tirled at the pin.
"O sleep ye, wake ye, May Margaret,
Or are ye the bower within?"
"O wha is that at my bower door,15
Sae weel my name does ken?"
"It's I, Clerk Saunders, your true love,
You'll open and lat me in.
"O will ye to the cards, Margaret,
Or to the table to dine?20
Or to the bed, that's weel down spread,
And sleep when we get time."
"I'll no go to the cards," she says,
"Nor to the table to dine;
But I'll go to a bed, that's weel down spread,25
And sleep when we get time."
They were not weel lyen down,
And no weel fa'en asleep,
When up and stood May Margaret's brethren,
Just up at their bed feet.30
"O tell us, tell us, May Margaret,
And dinna to us len,
O wha is aught yon noble steed,
That stands your stable in?
"The steed is mine, and it may be thine,35
To ride whan ye ride in hie—[Pg 321]—
* * * * * * *
"But awa', awa', my bald brethren,
Awa', and mak nae din;
For I am as sick a lady the nicht
As e'er lay a bower within."40
"O tell us, tell us, May Margaret,
And dinna to us len,
O wha is aught yon noble hawk,
That stands your kitchen in?"
"The hawk is mine, and it may be thine,45
To hawk whan ye hawk in hie——
* * * * * * *
"But awa', awa', my bald brethren!
Awa', and mak nae din;
For I'm ane o' the sickest ladies this nicht
That e'er lay a bower within."50
"O tell us, tell us, May Margaret,
And dinna to us len,
O wha is that, May Margaret,
You and the wa' between?"
"O it is my bower-maiden," she says,55
"As sick as sick can be;
O it is my bower maiden," she says,
And she's thrice as sick as me."
"We hae been east, and we've been west,
[Pg 322]And low beneath the moon;60
But a' the bower-women e'er we saw
Hadna goud buckles in their shoon."
Then up and spak her eldest brither,
Ay in ill time spak he:
"It is Clerk Saunders, your true love,65
And never mat I the,
But for this scorn that he has done,
This moment he sall die."
But up and spak her youngest brother,
Ay in good time spak he:70
"O but they are a gudelie pair!—
True lovers an ye be,
The sword that hangs at my sword belt
Sall never sinder ye!"
Syne up and spak her nexten brother,75
And the tear stood in his ee:
"You've lo'ed her lang, and lo'ed her weel,
And pity it wad be,
The sword that hangs at my sword-belt
Shoud ever sinder ye!"80
But up and spak her fifthen brother,
"Sleep on your sleep for me;
But we baith sall never sleep again,
For the tane o' us sall die!"
[But up and spak her midmaist brother;85
And an angry laugh leugh he:
"The thorn that dabs, I'll cut it down,
Though fair the rose may be.[Pg 323]
"The flower that smell'd sae sweet yestreen
Has lost its bloom wi' thee;90
And though I'm wae it should be sae,
Clerk Saunders, ye maun die."]
And up and spak her thirden brother,
Ay in ill time spak he:
"Curse on his love and comeliness!—95
Dishonour'd as ye be,
The sword that hangs at my sword-belt
Sall quickly sinder ye!"
Her eldest brother has drawn his sword;
Her second has drawn anither;100
Between Clerk Saunders' hause and collar bane
The cald iron met thegither.
"O wae be to you, my fause brethren,
And an ill death mat ye die!
Ye mith slain Clerk Saunders in open field,105
And no in the bed wi' me."
When seven years were come and gane,
Lady Margaret she thought lang;
And she is up to the hichest tower,
By the lee licht o' the moon.110
She was lookin o'er her castle high,
To see what she might fa';
And there she saw a grieved ghost
Comin waukin o'er the wa'.[Pg 324]
"O are ye a man of mean," she says,115
"Seekin ony o' my meat?
Or are you a rank robber,
Come in my bower to break?"
"O I'm Clerk Saunders, your true love;
Behold, Margaret, and see,120
And mind, for a' your meikle pride,
Sae will become of thee."
"Gin ye be Clerk Saunders, my true love,
This meikle marvels me:
O wherein is your bonny arms125
That wont to embrace me?"
"By worms they're eaten, in mools they're rotten,
Behold, Margaret, and see;
And mind, for a' your mickle pride,
Sae will become o' thee!"130
* * * * * * *
O, bonny, bonny sang the bird,
Sat on the coil o' hay;
But dowie, dowie was the maid,
That follow'd the corpse o' clay.
"Is there ony room at your head, Saunders,135
Is there ony room at your feet?
Is there ony room at your twa sides,
For a lady to lie and sleep?"
"There is nae room at my head, Margaret,
[Pg 325]As little at my feet;140
There is nae room at my twa sides,
For a lady to lie and sleep.
"But gae hame, gae hame, now, May Margaret,
Gae hame and sew your seam;
For if ye were laid in your weel-made bed,145
Your days will nae be lang."
114. The wa' here is supposed to mean the wall, which, in
some old castles, surrounded the court. J.
[Pg 326]
LORD WA'YATES AND AULD INGRAM.
A FRAGMENT. See p. 72.
Jamieson's Popular Ballads, ii. 265.
"From Mr. Herd's MS., transmitted by Mr. Scott."
Lady Maisery was a lady fair,
She made her mother's bed;
Auld Ingram was an aged knight,
And her he sought to wed.
"Its I forbid ye, auld Ingram,5
For to seek me to spouse;
For Lord Wa'yates, your sister's son,
Has been into my bowers.
"Its I forbid ye, auld Ingram,
For to seek me to wed;10
For Lord Wa'yates, your sister's son,
Has been into my bed."[Pg 327]
He has brocht to this ladie
The robis of the brown;
And ever, "Alas!" says this ladie,15
"Thae robes will put me down."
And he has brocht to that ladie
The robis of the red;
And ever, "Alas!" says that ladie,
"Thae robes will be my dead."20
And he has brocht to that ladie
The chrystal and the laumer;
Sae has he brocht to her mither
The curches o' the cannel.
Every ane o' her seven brethren25
They had a hawk in hand,
And every lady in the place
They got a goud garland.
Every cuik in that kitchen
They got a noble claith;30
A' was blyth at auld Ingram's coming,
But Lady Maisery was wraith.
"Whare will I get a bonny boy,
Wad fain win hose and shoon,
That wad rin on to my Wa'yates,35
And quickly come again?"
"Here am I, a bonny boy,
Wad fain win hose and shoon;
Wha will rin on to your Wa'yates,
[Pg 328]And quickly come again."40
"Ye'll bid him, and ye'll pray him baith,
Gin ony prayer may dee,
To Marykirk to come the morn,
My weary wadding to see."
Lord Wa'yates lay o'er his castle wa',45
Beheld baith dale and down;
And he beheld a bonny boy
Come running to the town.
"What news, what news, ye bonny boy?
What news hae ye to me?50
* * * * * * *
* * * * * * *
"O are my ladie's fauldis brunt,
Or are her towers won?
Or is my Maisery lichter yet
O' a dear dochter or son?"
"Your ladie's faulds are neither brunt,55
Nor are her towers won;
Nor is your Maisery lichter yet
O' a dear dochter or son:
"But she bids you, and she prays you baith,
Gin ony prayer can dee,60
To Mary Kirk to come the morn,
Her weary wadding to see."
He dang the buird up wi' his fit,
Sae did he wi' his knee;
The silver cup, that was upon't,65
I' the fire he gar'd it flee:[Pg 329]
"O whatten a lord in a' Scotland
Dare marry my Maisery?
"O it is but a feeble thocht,
To tell the tane and nae the tither;70
O it is but a feeble thocht
To tell it's your ain mither's brither."
"Its I will send to that wadding,
And I will follow syne,
The fitches o' the fallow deer,75
And the gammons o' the swine;
And the nine hides o' the noble cow—
'Twas slain in season time.
"Its I will send to that wadding
Ten tun o' the red wine;80
And mair I'll send to that waddin',
And I will follow syne."
Whan he came in into the ha',
Lady Maisery she did ween;
And twenty times he kist her mou',85
Afore auld Ingram's een.
And till the kirk she wadna gae,
Nor tillt she wadna ride,
Till four-and-twenty men she gat her before,
And twenty on ilka side,90
And four-and-twenty milk white dows,
To flee aboon her head.
A loud lauchter gae Lord Wa'yates,
'Mang the mids o' his men;[Pg 330]
"Marry that lady wha that will,95
A maiden she is nane."
"O leuch ye at my men, Wa'yates,
Or did ye lauch at me?
Or leuch ye at the bierdly bride,
That's gaun to marry me?"100
"I leuchna at your men, uncle,
Nor yet leuch I at thee;
But I leuch at my lands so braid,
Sae weel's I do them see."
When e'en was come, and e'en-bells rung,105
And a' man gane to bed,
The bride but and the silly bridegroom
In ae chamber were laid.
Wasna't a fell thing for to see
Twa heads upon a cod;110
Lady Maisery's like the mo'ten goud,
Auld Ingram's like a toad.
He turn'd his face unto the stock,
And sound he fell asleep;
She turn'd her face unto the wa',115
And saut tears she did weep.
It fell about the mirk midnicht,
Auld Ingram began to turn him;
He put his hand on's ladie's side,
And waly, sair was she mournin'.120
"What aileth thee, my lady dear?
Ever alas, and wae is me![Pg 331]
There is a babe betwixt thy sides,—
Oh! sae sair's it grieves me!"
"O didna I tell ye, auld Ingram,125
Ere ye socht me to wed,
That Lord Wa'yates, your sister's son,
Had been into my bed?"
"Then father that bairn on me, Maisery,
O father that bairn on me;130
And ye sall hae a rigland shire
Your mornin' gift to be."
"O sarbit!" says the Ladie Maisery,
"That ever the like me befa',
To father my bairn on auld Ingram,135
Lord Wa'yates in my father's ha'.
"O sarbit!" says the Ladie Maisery,
"That ever the like betide,
To father my bairn on auld Ingram,
And Lord Wa'yates beside."140
* * * * * * *
[Pg 332]
SWEET WILLIE AND FAIR MAISRY. See p. 79.
From Buchan's Ballads of the North of Scotland, i. 97.
"Hey love Willie, and how love Willie,
And Willie my love shall be;
They're thinking to sinder our lang love, Willie;
It's mair than man can dee.
"Ye'll mount me quickly on a steed,5
A milk-white steed or gray;
And carry me on to gude greenwood
Before that it be day."
He mounted her upon a steed,
He chose a steed o' gray;10
He had her on to gude greenwood
Before that it was day.
"O will ye gang to the cards, Meggie?
Or will ye gang wi' me?
Or will ye ha'e a bower woman,15
To stay ere it be day?"[Pg 333]
"I winna gang to the cards," she said,
"Nor will I gae wi' thee,
Nor will I hae a bower woman,
To spoil my modestie.20
"Ye'll gie me a lady at my back,
An' a lady me beforn;
An' a midwife at my twa sides
Till your young son be born.
"Ye'll do me up, and further up,25
To the top o' yon greenwood tree;
For every pain myself shall ha'e,
The same pain ye maun drie."
The first pain that did strike sweet Willie,
It was into the side;30
Then sighing sair said sweet Willie,
"These pains are ill to bide."
The nextan pain that strake sweet Willie,
It was into the back;
Then sighing sair said sweet Willie,35
"These pains are women's wreck."
The nextan pain that strake sweet Willie,
It was into the head;
Then sighing sair said sweet Willie,
"I fear my lady's dead."40
Then he's gane on, and further on,
At the foot o' yon greenwood tree;
There he got his lady lighter,
Wi' his young son on her knee.[Pg 334]
Then he's ta'en up his little young son,45
And kiss'd him cheek and chin;
And he is on to his mother,
As fast as he could gang.
"Ye will take in my son, mother,
Gi'e him to nurses nine;50
Three to wauk, and three to sleep,
And three to gang between."
Then he has left his mother's house,
And frae her he has gane;
And he is back to his lady,55
And safely brought her hame.
Then in it came her father dear,
Was belted in a brand;
"It's nae time for brides to lye in bed,
When the bridegroom's send's in town.60
"There are four-and-twenty noble lords
A' lighted on the green;
The fairest knight amang them a',
He must be your bridegroom."
"O wha will shoe my foot, my foot?65
And wha will glove my hand?
And wha will prin my sma' middle,
Wi' the short prin and the lang?"
Now out it speaks him, sweet Willie,
Who knew her troubles best;70
"It is my duty for to serve,
As I'm come here as guest.[Pg 335]
"Now I will shoe your foot, Maisry,
And I will glove your hand,
And I will prin your sma' middle,75
Wi' the sma' prin and the lang."
"Wha will saddle my steed," she says,
"And gar my bridle ring?
And wha will ha'e me to gude church-door,
This day I'm ill abound?"80
"I will saddle your steed, Maisry,
And gar your bridle ring;
And I'll hae you to gude church-door,
And safely set you down."
"O healy, healy take me up,85
And healy set me down;
And set my back until a wa',
My foot to yird-fast stane."
He healy took her frae her horse,
And healy set her down;90
And set her back until a wa',
Her foot to yird-fast stane.
When they had eaten and well drunken,
And a' had thorn'd fine;
The bride's father he took the cup,95
For to serve out the wine.
Out it speaks the bridegroom's brother,
An ill death mat he die!
"I fear our bride she's born a bairn,
[Pg 336]Or else has it a dee."100
She's ta'en out a Bible braid,
And deeply has she sworn;
"If I ha'e born a bairn," she says,
"Sin' yesterday at morn;
"Or if I've born a bairn," she says,105
"Sin' yesterday at noon;
There's nae a lady amang you a'
That wou'd been here sae soon."
Then out it spake the bridegroom's man,
Mischance come ower his heel!110
"Win up, win up, now bride," he says,
"And dance a shamefu' reel."
Then out it speaks the bride hersell,
And a sorry heart had she;
"Is there nae ane amang you a'115
Will dance this dance for me?"
Then out it speaks him, sweet Willie,
And he spake aye thro' pride;
"O draw my boots for me, bridegroom,
Or I dance for your bride."120
Then out it spake the bride hersell,
"O na, this maunna be;
For I will dance this dance mysell,
Tho' my back shou'd gang in three."[Pg 337]
She hadna well gane thro' the reel,125
Nor yet well on the green,
Till she fell down at Willie's feet
As cauld as ony stane.
He's ta'en her in his arms twa,
And ha'ed her up the stair;130
Then up it came her jolly bridegroom,
Says, "What's your business there?"
Then Willie lifted up his foot,
And dang him down the stair;
And brake three ribs o' the bridegroom's side,135
And a word he spake nae mair.
Nae meen was made for that lady,
When she was lying dead;
But a' was for him, sweet Willie,
On the fields for he ran mad.140
112.
The first reel, danced with the bride, her maiden, and
two young men, and called the Shame Spring, or Reel, as
the bride chooses the tune that is to be played. B.
[Pg 338]
LADY MARJORIE. See p. 92.
"Given from the recitation of an old woman in
Kilbarchan, Renfrewshire, from whom the Editor has
obtained several valuable pieces of a like nature. In
singing, O is added at the end of the second and fourth
line of each stanza." Motherwell's Minstrelsy, p. 234.
Lady Marjorie was her mother's only daughter,
Her father's only heir;
And she is awa to Strawberry Castle,
To get some unco lair.
She had na been in Strawberry Castle5
A twelvemonth and a day,
Till Lady Marjorie she gangs big wi' child,
As big as she can gae.
Word is to her father gane,
Before he got on his shoon,10
That Lady Marjorie she gaes wi' child,
And it is to an Irish groom.[Pg 339]
But word is to her mother gone,
Before she got on her goun,
That Lady Marjorie she gaes wi' child15
To a lord of high renown.
"O wha will put on the pat," they said,
"Or wha will put on the pan,
Or wha will put on a bauld, bauld fire,
To burn Lady Marjorie in?"20
Her father he put on the pat,
Her sister put on the pan,
And her brother he put on a bauld, bauld fire,
To burn Lady Marjorie in;
And her mother she sat in a golden chair,25
To see her daughter burn.
"But where will I get a pretty little boy,
That will win hose and shoon;
That will go quickly to Strawberry Castle,
And bid my lord come doun?"30
"O here am I, a pretty little boy,
That will win hose and shoon;
That will rin quickly to Strawberry Castle,
And bid thy lord come doun."
O when he cam to broken brigs,35
He bent his bow and swam;
And when he cam to gude dry land,
He set doun his foot and ran.
When he cam to Strawberry Castle,
[Pg 340]He tirled at the pin;40
Nane was sae ready as the gay lord himsell
To open and let him in.
"O is there any of my towers burnt,
Or any of my castles won?
Or is Lady Marjorie brought to bed,45
Of a daughter or a son?"
"O there is nane of thy towers burnt,
Nor nane of thy castles broken;
But Lady Marjorie is condemned to die,
To be burnt in a fire of oaken."50
"O gar saddle to me the black," he says,
"Gar saddle to me the broun;
Gar saddle to me the swiftest steed
That e'er carried a man frae toun!"
He left the black into the slap,55
The broun into the brae;
But fair fa' that bonnie apple-gray
That carried this gay lord away!
"Beet on, beet on, my brother dear,
I value you not one straw;60
For yonder comes my ain true luve,
I hear his horn blaw.
"Beet on, beet on, my father dear,
I value you not a pin;
For yonder comes my ain true luve,65
I hear his bridle ring."
He took a little horn out of his pocket,
And he blew't baith loud and schill;[Pg 341]
And wi' the little life that was in her,
She hearken'd to it full weel.70
But when he came into the place,
He lap unto the wa';
He thought to get a kiss o' her bonnie lips,
But her body fell in twa!
"O vow! O vow! O vow!" he said,75
"O vow! but ye've been cruel:
Ye've taken the timber out of my ain wood,
And burnt my ain dear jewel!
"Now for thy sake, Lady Marjorie,
I'll burn baith father and mother;80
And for thy sake, Lady Marjorie,
I'll burn baith sister and brother.
"And for thy sake, Lady Marjorie,
I'll burn baith kith and kin;
But I'll aye remember the pretty little boy85
That did thy errand rin."
[Pg 342]
LEESOME BRAND.
Buchan's Ballads of the North of Scotland, i. 38.
This is properly a tragic story, as may be perceived by
comparing the present corrupted version (evidently
made up from several different sources) with the Danish
and Swedish ballads. See Herr Medelvold, Danske
Viser, iii. 361, Die wahrsagenden Nachtigallen, in
Grimm's Altdänische Heldenlieder, p. 88, Fair Midel
and Kirsten Lyle, translated by Jamieson, Illustrations,
p. 377; and Herr Redevall, Svenska Folkvisor, ii. 189,
Krist' Lilla och Herr Tideman, Arwidsson, i. 352, Sir
Wal and Lisa Lyle, translated by Jamieson, p. 373.
My boy was scarcely ten years auld,
Whan he went to an unco land,
Where wind never blew, nor cocks ever crew,
Ohon! for my son, Leesome Brand.
Awa' to that king's court he went,5
It was to serve for meat an' fee;
Gude red gowd it was his hire,
And lang in that king's court stay'd he.
He hadna been in that unco land,
But only twallmonths twa or three;10
Till by the glancing o' his ee,
He gain'd the love o' a gay ladye.[Pg 343]
This ladye was scarce eleven years auld,
When on her love she was right bauld;
She was scarce up to my right knee,15
When oft in bed wi' men I'm tauld.
But when nine months were come and gane,
This ladye's face turn'd pale and wane;
To Leesome Brand she then did say,
"In this place I can nae mair stay.20
"Ye do you to my father's stable,
Where steeds do stand baith wight and able;
Strike ane o' them upo' the back,
The swiftest will gie his head a wap.
"Ye take him out upo' the green,25
And get him saddled and bridled seen;
Get ane for you, anither for me,
And lat us ride out ower the lee.
"Ye do you to my mother's coffer,
And out of it ye'll take my tocher;30
Therein are sixty thousand pounds,
Which all to me by right belongs."
He's done him to her father's stable,
Where steeds stood baith wicht and able;
Then he strake ane upon the back,35
The swiftest gae his head a wap.
He's ta'en him out upo' the green,
And got him saddled and bridled seen;
Ane for him, and another for her,
[Pg 344]To carry them baith wi' might and virr.40
He's done him to her mother's coffer,
And there he's taen his lover's tocher;
Wherein were sixty thousand pounds,
Which all to her by right belong'd.
When they had ridden about six mile,45
His true love then began to fail;
"O wae's me," said that gay ladye,
"I fear my back will gang in three!
"My love, we're far frae ony town;
There is nae midwife to be foun';
But if ye'll be content wi' me,55
I'll do for you what man can dee."
"For no, for no, this maunna be,"
Wi' a sigh, replied this gay ladye;
"When I endure my grief and pain,
My companie ye maun refrain.60
"Ye'll take your arrow and your bow,
And ye will hunt the deer and roe;
Be sure ye touch not the white hynde,
For she is o' the woman kind."
He took sic pleasure in deer and roe,65
Till he forgot his gay ladye;
Till by it came that milk-white hynde,
And then he mind on his ladye syne.[Pg 345]
He hasted him to yon greenwood tree,
For to relieve his gay ladye;70
But found his ladye lying dead,
Likeways her young son at her head.
His mother lay ower her castle wa',
And she beheld baith dale and down;
And she beheld young Leesome Brand,75
As he came riding to the town.
"Get minstrels for to play," she said,
"And dancers to dance in my room;
For here comes my son, Leesome Brand,
And he comes merrilie to the town."80
"Seek nae minstrels to play, mother,
Nor dancers to dance in your room;
But tho' your son comes, Leesome Brand,
Yet he comes sorry to the town.
"O I hae lost my gowden knife,85
I rather had lost my ain sweet life;
And I hae lost a better thing,
The gilded sheath that it was in."
"Are there nae gowdsmiths here in Fife,
Can make to you anither knife?90
Are there nae sheath-makers in the land,
Can make a sheath to Leesome Brand?"
"There are nae gowdsmiths here in Fife,
Can make me sic a gowden knife;
Nor nae sheath-makers in the land,95
Can make to me a sheath again.[Pg 346]
"There ne'er was man in Scotland born,
Ordain'd to be so much forlorn;
I've lost my ladye I lov'd sae dear,
Likeways the son she did me bear."100
"Put in your hand at my bed head,
There ye'll find a gude grey horn;
In it three draps o' Saint Paul's ain blude,
That hae been there sin' he was born.
"Drap twa o' them o' your ladye,105
And ane upo' your little young son;
Then as lively they will be
As the first night ye brought them hame."
He put his hand at her bed head,
And there he found a gude grey horn;110
Wi' three draps o' Saint Paul's ain blude,
That had been there sin' he was born.
Then he drapp'd twa on his ladye,
And ane o' them on his young son;
And now they do as lively be,115
As the first day he brought them hame.
Note to v. 49-72.—A
similar passage is found at p. 94
of this volume, v. 33-36, also vol. v. p. 178, v. 97-108, and
p. 402, v. 169-176, and in the Scandinavian ballads cited in
the preface to this ballad. In these last the lady frees herself
from the presence of the knight by sending him to get
her some water, and she is found dead on his return. This
incident, remarks Grimm, (Altdänische Heldenlieder, p. 508),
is also found in Wolfdietrich, Str. 1680-96.
[Pg 347]
THE YOUTH OF ROSENGORD. See p. 219.
Sven i Rosengård, Svenska Folk-Visor, iii. 3, and
Arwidsson's Fornsånger, ii. 83: translated in Literature
and Romance of Northern Europe, i. 263.
"So long where hast thou tarried,
Young man of Rosengord?"
"I have been into my stable,
Our mother dear."
Long may you look for me, or look for me never.5
"What hast thou done in the stable,
Young man of Rosengord?"
"I have watered the horses,
Our mother dear."
Long may ye look for me, or look for me never.10
"Why is thy foot so bloody,
Young man of Rosengord?"
"The black horse has trampled me,
Our mother dear."
[Pg 348]Long may you look for me, or look for me never.15
"Why is thy sword so bloody,
Young man of Rosengord?"
"I have murdered my brother,
Our mother dear."
Long may you look for me, or look for me never.20
"Whither wilt thou betake thee,
Young man of Rosengord?"
"I shall flee my country,
Our mother dear."
Long may you look for me, or look for me never.25
"What will become of thy wedded wife,
Young man of Rosengord?"
"She must spin for her living,
Our mother dear."
Long may you look for me, or look for me never.30
"What will become of thy children small,
Young man of Rosengord?"
"They must beg from door to door,
Our mother dear."
Long may you look for me, or look for me never.35
"When comest thou back again,
Young man of Rosengord?"
"When the swan is black as night,
Our mother dear."
Long may you look for me, or look for me never.40
"And when will the swan be black as night,
Young man of Rosengord?"
"When the raven shall be white as snow,
Our mother dear."
[Pg 349]Long may you look for me, or look for me never.45
"And when will the raven be white as snow,
Young man of Rosengord?"
"When the grey rocks take to flight,
Our mother dear."
Long may you look for me, or look for me never.50
"And when will fly the grey rocks,
Young man of Rosengord?"
"The rocks they will fly never,
Our mother dear."
Long may you look for me, or look for me never.55
[Pg 350]
THE BLOOD-STAINED SON.—See p. 219.
A translation, nearly word for word, of Der Blutige
Sohn, printed from oral tradition in Schröter's Finnische
Runen, (Finnisch und Deutsch,) ed. 1834, p.
151.
"Say whence com'st thou, say whence com'st thou,
Merry son of mine?"
"From the lake-side, from the lake-side,
O dear mother mine."
"What hast done there, what hast done there,5
Merry son of mine?"
"Steeds I watered, steeds I watered,
O dear mother mine."
"Why thus clay-bedaubed thy jacket,
Merry son of mine?"10
"Steeds kept stamping, steeds kept stamping,
O dear mother mine."[Pg 351]
"But how came thy sword so bloody,
Merry son of mine?"
"I have stabbed my only brother,15
O dear mother mine."
"Whither wilt thou now betake thee,
Merry son of mine?"
"Far away to foreign countries,
O dear mother mine."20
"Where leav'st thou thy gray-haired father,
Merry son of mine?"
"Let him chop wood in the forest,
Never wish to see me more,
O dear mother mine."25
"Where leav'st thou thy gray-haired mother,
Merry son of mine?"
"Let her sit, her flax a-picking,
Never wish to see me more,
O dear mother mine."30
"Where leav'st thou thy wife so youthful,
Merry son of mine?"
"Let her deck her, take another,
Never wish to see me more,
O dear mother mine."35
"Where leav'st thou thy son so youthful,
Merry son of mine?"
"He to school, and bear the rod there,
[Never wish to see me more,]
[Pg 352]O dear mother mine."40
"Where leav'st thou thy youthful daughter,
Merry son of mine?"
"She to the wood and eat wild berries,
Never wish to see me more,
O dear mother mine."45
"Home when com'st thou back from roaming,
Merry son of mine?"
"In the north when breaks the morning,
O dear mother mine."
"In the north when breaks the morning,50
Merry son of mine?"
"When stones dance upon the water,
O dear mother mine."
"When shall stones dance on the water,
Merry son of mine?"55
"When a feather sinks to the bottom,
O dear mother mine."
"When shall feathers sink to the bottom,
Merry son of mine?"
"When we all shall come to judgment,60
O dear mother mine."
[Pg 353]
THE TWA BROTHERS. See p. 220.
From Motherwell's Minstrelsy, p. 61.
There were twa brothers at the scule,
And when they got awa',—
"It's will ye play at the stane-chucking,
Or will ye play at the ba',
Or will ye gae up to yon hill head,5
And there we'll warsel a fa'?"
"I winna play at the stane-chucking,
Nor will I play at the ba';
But I'll gae up to yon bonnie green hill,
And there we'll warsel a fa'."10
They warsled up, they warsled down,
Till John fell to the ground;
A dirk fell out of William's pouch,
And gave John a deadly wound.
"O lift me upon your back,15
Take me to yon well fair,[Pg 354]
And wash my bluidy wounds o'er and o'er,
And they'll ne'er bleed nae mair."
He's lifted his brother upon his back,
Ta'en him to yon well fair;20
He's wash'd his bluidy wounds o'er and o'er,
But they bleed ay mair and mair.
"Tak ye aff my Holland sark,
And rive it gair by gair,
And row it in my bluidy wounds,25
And they'll ne'er bleed nae mair."
He's taken aff his Holland sark,
And torn it gair by gair;
He's rowit it in his bluidy wounds,
But they bleed ay mair and mair.30
"Tak now aff my green cleiding,
And row me saftly in;
And tak me up to yon kirk style,
Whare the grass grows fair and green."
He's taken aff the green cleiding,35
And rowed him saftly in;
He's laid him down by yon kirk style,
Whare the grass grows fair and green.
"What will ye say to your father dear,
When ye gae hame at e'en?"40
"I'll say ye're lying at yon kirk style,
Whare the grass grows fair and green."
"O no, O no, my brother dear,
O you must not say so;[Pg 355]
But say that I'm gane to a foreign land,45
Whare nae man does me know."
When he sat in his father's chair,
He grew baith pale and wan:
"O what blude 's that upon your brow?
O dear son, tell to me."50
"It is the blude o' my gude gray steed,
He wadna ride wi' me."
"O thy steed's blude was ne'er sae red,
Nor e'er sae dear to me:
O what blude 's this upon your cheek?55
O dear son, tell to me."
"It is the blude of my greyhound,
He wadna hunt for me."
"O thy hound's blude was ne'er sae red,
Nor e'er sae dear to me:60
O what blude 's this upon your hand?
O dear son, tell to me."
"It is the blude of my gay goss hawk,
He wadna flee for me."
"O thy hawk's blude was ne'er sae red,65
Nor e'er sae dear to me:
O what blude 's this upon your dirk?
Dear Willie, tell to me."
"It is the blude of my ae brother,
O dule and wae is me!"70
"O what will ye say to your father?
Dear Willie, tell to me."
"I'll saddle my steed, and awa I'll ride
To dwell in some far countrie."[Pg 356]
"O when will ye come hame again?75
Dear Willie, tell to me."
"When sun and mune leap on yon hill,
And that will never be."
She turn'd hersel' right round about,
And her heart burst into three:80
"My ae best son is deid and gane,
And my tother ane I'll ne'er see."
[Pg 357]
THE MILLER AND THE KING'S DAUGHTER. See p. 231.
From Wit Restor'd, (1658,) reprinted, London,
1817, i. 153. It is there ascribed to "Mr. Smith," (Dr.
James Smith, the author of many of the pieces in that
collection,) who may have written it down from tradition,
and perhaps added a verse or two. Mr. Rimbault
has printed the same piece from a broadside dated 1656,
in Notes and Queries, v. 591. A fragment of it is given
from recitation at p. 316 of that volume, and a copy
quite different from any before published, at p. 102 of
vol. vi. Although two or three stanzas are ludicrous,
and were probably intended for burlesque, this ballad
is by no means to be regarded as a parody.
There were two sisters, they went a-playing,
With a hie downe, downe, a downe a;
To see their fathers ships sayling in.
With a hy downe, downe, a downe o.
And when they came into the sea brym,
With, &c.
The elder did push the younger in.
With, &c.
"O sister, O sister, take me by the gowne,5
With, &c.
And drawe me up upon the dry ground."
With, [Pg 358]&c.
"O sister, O sister, that may not bee,
With, &c.
Till salt and oatmeale grow both of a tree."
With, &c.
Somtymes she sanke, somtymes she swam,
With, &c.
Untill she came unto the mildam.10
With, &c.
The miller runne hastily downe the cliffe,
With, &c.
And up he betook her withouten her life.
With, &c.
What did he doe with her brest bone?
With, &c.
He made him a viall to play thereupon.
With, &c.
What did he doe with her fingers so small?15
With, &c.
He made him peggs to his violl withall.
With, &c.
What did he doe with her nose-ridge?
With, &c.
Unto his violl he made him a bridge.
With, &c.
What did he do with her veynes so blewe?
With, &c.
He made him strings to his viole thereto.20
With, [Pg 359]&c.
What did he doe with her eyes so bright?
With, &c.
Upon his violl he played at first sight.
With, &c.
What did he doe with her tongue soe rough?
With, &c.
Unto the violl it spake enough.
With, &c.
What did he doe with her two shinnes?25
With, &c.
Unto the violl they danct Moll Syms.
With, &c.
Then bespake the treble string,
With, &c.
"O yonder is my father the king."
With, &c.
Then bespake the second string,
With, &c.
"O yonder sitts my mother the queen."30
With, &c.
And then bespake the stringes all three,
With, &c.
"O yonder is my sister that drowned mee."
With, &c.
Now pay the miller for his payne,
With, &c.
And let him bee gone in the divels name.
With, &c.
[Pg 360]
THE BONNY BOWS O' LONDON. See p. 231.
From Buchan's Ballads of the North of Scotland, ii. 128.
There were twa sisters in a bower,
Hey wi' the gay and the grinding;
And ae king's son hae courted them baith,
At the bonny, bonny bows o' London.
He courted the youngest wi' broach and ring,5
Hey wi' the gay and the grinding;
He courted the eldest wi' some other thing,
At the bonny, bonny bows o' London.
It fell ance upon a day,
Hey wi' the gay and the grinding,10
The eldest to the youngest did say,
At the bonny, bonny bows o' London:
"Will ye gae to yon Tweed mill dam,"
Hey wi' the gay and the grinding,
"And see our father's ships come to land?"15
At the bonny, bonny bows o' London.[Pg 361]
They baith stood up upon a stane,
Hey wi' the gay and the grinding;
The eldest dang the youngest in,
At the bonny, bonny bows o' London.20
She swimmed up, sae did she down,
Hey wi' the gay and the grinding;
Till she came to the Tweed mill-dam,
At the bonny, bonny bows o' London.
The miller's servant he came out,25
Hey wi' the gay and the grinding;
And saw the lady floating about,
At the bonny, bonny bows o' London.
"O master, master, set your mill,"
Hey wi' the gay and the grinding;30
"There is a fish, or a milk-white swan,"
At the bonny, bonny bows o' London.
They could not ken her yellow hair,
Hey wi' the gay and the grinding;
[For] the scales o' gowd that were laid there,35
At the bonny, bonny bows o' London.
They could not ken her fingers sae white,
Hey wi' the gay and the grinding;
The rings o' gowd they were sae bright,
At the bonny, bonny bows o' London.40
They could not ken her middle sae jimp,
Hey wi' the gay and the grinding;
The stays o' gowd were so well laced,
At the bonny, bonny bows o' London.[Pg 362]
They could not ken her foot sae fair,45
Hey wi' the gay and the grinding;
The shoes o' gowd they were so rare,
At the bonny, bonny bows o' London.
Her father's fiddler he came by,
Hey wi' the gay and the grinding;50
Upstarted her ghaist before his eye,
At the bonny, bonny bows o' London.
"Ye'll take a lock o' my yellow hair,"
Hey wi' the gay and the grinding;
"Ye'll make a string to your fiddle there,"55
At the bonny, bonny bows o' London.
"Ye'll take a lith o' my little finger bane,"
Hey wi' the gay and the grinding;
"And ye'll make a pin to your fiddle then,"
At the bonny, bonny bows o' London.60
He's ta'en a lock o' her yellow hair,
Hey wi' the gay and the grinding;
And made a string to his fiddle there,
At the bonny, bonny bows o' London.
He's taen a lith o' her little finger bane,65
Hey wi' the gay and the grinding;
And he's made a pin to his fiddle then,
At the bonny, bonny bows o' London.
The firstand spring the fiddle did play,
Hey wi' the gay and the grinding;70
Said, "Ye'll drown my sister, as she's dune me."
At the bonny, bonny bows o' London.
[Pg 363]
I.
THE CROODLIN DOO.
See Lord Donald, p. 244.
From Chambers's Scottish Ballads, p. 324. Other
copies in The Scot's Musical Museum, (1853,) vol. iv.
364*, and Buchan's Ballads of the North of Scotland,
ii. 179.
"O whaur hae ye been a' the day,
My little wee croodlin doo?"
"O I've been at my grandmother's;
Mak my bed, mammie, noo."
"O what gat ye at your grandmother's,5
My little wee croodlin doo?"
"I got a bonnie wee fishie;
Mak my bed, mammie, noo."
"O whaur did she catch the fishie,
My bonnie wee croodlin doo?"10
"She catch'd it in the gutter-hole;
Mak my bed, mammie, noo."
"And what did she do wi' the fish,
My little wee croodlin doo?"[Pg 364]
"She boiled it in a brass pan;15
O mak my bed, mammie, noo."
"And what did ye do wi' the banes o't,
My bonnie wee croodlin doo?"
"I gied them to my little dog;
Mak my bed, mammie, noo,"20
"And what did your little doggie do,
My bonnie wee croodlin doo?"
"He stretch'd out his head, his feet, and dee'd,
And so will I, mammie, noo!"
II.
THE SNAKE-COOK.
From oral tradition, in Erk's Deutscher Leiderhort,
p. 6. Our homely translation is, as far as possible, word
for word. Other German versions are The Stepmother,
at p. 5 of the same collection, (or Uhland, i. 272,) and
Grandmother Adder-cook, at p. 7. The last is translated
by Jamieson, Illustrations of Northern Antiquities, p. 320.
"Where hast thou been away so long,
Henry, my dearest son?"
"O I have been at my true-love's,
Lady mother, ah me!
My young life,5
She has poisoned for me."
"What gave she thee to eat,
Henry, my dearest son?"[Pg 365]
"She cooked me a speckled fish,
Lady mother, ah me!" &c.10
"And how many pieces cut she thee,
Henry my dearest son?"
"She cut three little pieces from it,
Lady mother, ah me!" &c.
"Where left she then the third piece,15
Henry, my dearest son?"
"She gave it to her dark-brown dog,
Lady mother, ah me!" &c.
"And what befell the dark-brown dog,
Henry, my dearest son?"20
"His belly burst in the midst in two,
Lady mother, ah me!" &c.
"What wishest thou for thy father,
Henry, my dearest son?"
"I wish him a thousandfold boon and blessing,25
Lady mother, ah me!" &c.
"What wishest thou for thy mother,
Henry, my dearest son?"
"I wish for her eternal bliss,
Lady mother, ah me!" &c.30
"What wishest thou for thy true-love,
Henry, my dearest son?"
"I wish her eternal hell and torment,
Lady mother, ah me!" &c.
[Pg 366]
III.
THE CHILD'S LAST WILL.
Den lillas Testamente: Svenska Folk-Visor, iii. 13.
Translated in Literature and Romance of Northern
Europe, i. 265. See also Arwidsson's Fornsånger, ii. 90.
"So long where hast thou tarried,
Little daughter dear?"
"I have tarried with my old nurse,
Sweet step-mother mine."
For ah, ah!—I am so ill—ah!5
"What gave she thee for dinner,
Little daughter dear?"
"A few small speckled fishes,
Sweet step-mother mine."
For ah, ah!—I am so ill—ah!10
"What didst thou do with the fish-bones,
Little daughter dear?"
"Gave them to the beagle,
Sweet step-mother mine."
For ah, ah!—I am so ill—ah!15
"What wish leav'st thou thy father,
Little daughter dear?"
"The blessedness of heaven,
Sweet step-mother mine."
[Pg 367]For ah, ah!—I am so ill—ah!20
"What wish leav'st thou thy mother,
Little daughter dear?"
"All the joys of heaven,
Sweet step-mother mine."
For ah, ah!—I am so ill—ah!25
"What wish leav'st thou thy brother,
Little daughter dear?"
"A fleet ship on the waters,
Sweet step-mother mine."
For ah, ah!—I am so ill—ah!30
"What wish leav'st thou thy sister,
Little daughter dear?"
"Golden chests and caskets,
Sweet step-mother mine."
For ah, ah!—I am so ill—ah!35
"What wish leav'st thou thy step-mother,
Little daughter dear?"
"Of hell the bitter sorrow
Sweet step-mother mine."
For ah, ah!—I am so ill—ah!40
"What wish leav'st thou thy old nurse,
Little daughter dear?"
"For her I wish the same pangs,
Sweet step-mother mine.
For ah, ah!—I am so ill—ah!45
"But now the time is over
When I with you can stay;
The little bells of heaven
Are ringing me away."
For ah, ah!—I am so ill—ah!50
[Pg 368]
THE THREE KNIGHTS. See p. 251.
From the second edition of Gilbert's Ancient Christmas
Carols, &c. p. 68.
There did three Knights come from the West,
With the high and the lily oh!
And these three Knights courted one Lady,
As the rose was so sweetly blown.
The first Knight came was all in white,5
With the high and the lily oh!
And asked of her, if she'd be his delight,
As the rose was so sweetly blown.
The next Knight came was all in green,
With the high and the lily oh!10
And asked of her, if she'd be his Queen,
As the rose was so sweetly blown.
The third Knight came was all in red,
With the high and the lily oh!
And asked of her, if she would wed,15
As the rose was so sweetly blown.[Pg 369]
"Then have you asked of my Father dear,
With the high and the lily oh!
Likewise of her who did me bear?
As the rose was so sweetly blown.20
"And have you asked of my brother John?
With the high and the lily oh!
And also of my sister Anne?"
As the rose was so sweetly blown.
"Yes, I have asked of your Father dear,25
With the high and the lily oh!
Likewise of her who did you bear,
As the rose was so sweetly blown.
"And I have asked of your sister Anne,
With the high and the lily oh!30
But I've not asked of your brother John,"
As the rose was so sweetly blown.
[Here some verses seem to be wanting.]
For on the road as they rode along,
With the high and the lily oh!
There did they meet with her brother John,35
As the rose was so sweetly blown.
She stooped low to kiss him sweet,
With the high and the lily oh!
He to her heart did a dagger meet,
As the rose was so sweetly blown.40
"Ride on, ride on," cried the serving man,
With the high and the lily oh![Pg 370]
"Methinks your bride she looks wond'rous wan,"
As the rose was so sweetly blown.
"I wish I were on yonder stile,45
With the high and the lily oh!
For there I would sit and bleed awhile,
As the rose was so sweetly blown.
"I wish I were on yonder hill,
With the high and the lily oh!50
There I'd alight and make my will,"
As the rose was so sweetly blown.
"What would you give to your Father dear?"
With the high and the lily oh!
"The gallant steed which doth me bear,"55
As the rose was so sweetly blown.
"What would you give to your Mother dear?"
With the high and the lily oh!
"My wedding shift which I do wear,
As the rose was so sweetly blown.60
"But she must wash it very clean,
With the high and the lily oh!
For my heart's blood sticks in every seam,"
As the rose was so sweetly blown.
"What would you give to your sister Anne?"65
With the high and the lily oh!
"My gay gold ring, and my feathered fan,"
As the rose was so sweetly blown.
"What would you give to your brother John?"
[Pg 371]With the high and the lily oh!70
"A rope and gallows to hang him on,"
As the rose was so sweetly blown.
"What would you give to your brother John's wife?"
With the high and the lily oh!
"A widow's weeds, and a quiet life,"75
As the rose was so sweetly blown.
[Pg 372]
THE CRUEL MOTHER. See p. 262.
From Buchan's Ballads of the North of Scotland, ii. 222.
It fell ance upon a day, Edinbro', Edinbro',
It fell ance upon a day, Stirling for aye;
It fell ance upon a day,
The clerk and lady went to play,
So proper Saint Johnston stands fair upon Tay.5
"If my baby be a son, Edinbro', Edinbro',
If my baby be a son, Stirling for aye;
If my baby be a son,
I'll make him a lord o' high renown,"
So proper Saint Johnston stands fair upon Tay.10
She's lean'd her back to the wa', Edinbro', Edinbro',
She's lean'd her back to the wa', Stirling for aye;
She's lean'd her back to the wa',
Pray'd that her pains might fa',
[Pg 373]So proper Saint Johnston stands fair upon Tay.15
She's lean'd her back to the thorn, Edinbro', Edinbro',
She's lean'd her back to the thorn, Stirling for aye;
She's lean'd her back to the thorn,
There has her baby born,
So proper Saint Johnston stands fair upon Tay.20
"O bonny baby, if ye suck sair, Edinbro', Edinbro',
O bonny baby, if ye suck sair, Stirling for aye;
O bonny baby, if ye suck sair,
You'll never suck by my side mair,"
So proper Saint Johnston stands fair upon Tay.25
She's riven the muslin frae her head, Edinbro', Edinbro',
She's riven the muslin frae her head, Stirling for aye;
She's riven the muslin frae her head,
Tied the baby hand and feet,
So proper Saint Johnston stands fair upon Tay.30
Out she took her little penknife, Edinbro', Edinbro',
Out she took her little penknife, Stirling for aye;
Out she took her little penknife,
Twin'd the young thing o' its life,
So proper Saint Johnston stands fair upon Tay.35
She's howk'd a hole anent the meen, Edinbro', Edinbro',
She's howk'd a hole anent the meen, Stirling for aye;
She's howk'd a hole anent the meen,
There laid her sweet baby in,
[Pg 374]So proper Saint Johnston stands fair upon Tay.40
She had her to her father's ha', Edinbro', Edinbro',
She had her to her father's ha', Stirling for aye;
She had her to her father's ha',
She was the meekest maid amang them a',
So proper Saint Johnston stands fair upon Tay.45
It fell ance upon a day, Edinbro', Edinbro',
It fell ance upon a day, Stirling for aye;
It fell ance upon a day,
She saw twa babies at their play,
So proper Saint Johnston stands fair upon Tay.50
"O bonny babies, gin ye were mine, Edinbro', Edinbro',
O bonny babies, gin ye were mine, Stirling for aye;
O bonny babies, gin ye were mine,
I'd cleathe you in the silks sae fine,"
So proper Saint Johnston stands fair upon Tay.55
"O wild mother, when we were thine, Edinbro', Edinbro',
O wild mother, when we were thine, Stirling for aye;
O wild mother, when we were thine,
You cleath'd us not in silks sae fine,
So proper Saint Johnston stands fair upon Tay.60
"But now we're in the heavens high, Edinbro', Edinbro',
But now we're in the heavens high, Stirling for aye;
But now we're in the heavens high,
And you've the pains o' hell to try,"
[Pg 375]So proper Saint Johnston stands fair upon Tay.65
She threw hersell ower the castle-wa', Edinbro', Edinbro',
She threw hersell ower the castle-wa', Stirling for aye;
She threw hersell ower the castle-wa',
There I wat she got a fa',
So proper Saint Johnston stands fair upon Tay.70
[Pg 376]
THE MINISTER'S DOCHTER O' NEWARKE.
See p. 262.
From Scottish Traditional Versions of Ancient Ballads,
Percy Society, vol. xvii. p. 51. This is the same
ballad, with trifling variations, as The Minister's
Daughter of New York, Buchan, ii. 217.
The Minister's dochter o' Newarke,
Hey wi' the rose and the lindie O,
Has fa'en in luve wi' her father's clerk,
Alane by the green burn sidie O.
She courted him sax years and a day,5
Hey wi' the rose and the lindie O,
At length her fause-luve did her betray,
Alane by the green burn sidie O.
She did her doun to the green woods gang,
Hey wi' the rose and the lindie O,10
To spend awa' a while o' her time,
Alane by the green burn sidie O.[Pg 377]
She lent her back unto a thorn,
Hey wi' the rose and the lindie O;
And she's got her twa bonnie boys born,15
Alane by the green burn sidie O.
She's ta'en the ribbons frae her hair,
Hey wi' the rose and the lindie O,
Boun' their bodies fast and sair,
Alane by the green burn sidie O.20
She's put them aneath a marble stane,
Hey wi' the rose and the lindie O,
Thinkin' a may to gae her hame,
Alane by the green burn sidie O.
Leukin' o'er her castel wa',25
Hey wi' the rose and the lindie O,
She spied twa bonny boys at the ba',
Alane by the green burn sidie O.
"O bonny babies, if ye were mine,
Hey wi' the rose and the lindie O,30
I woud feed ye wi' the white bread and wine,
Alane by the green burn sidie O.
"I wou'd feed ye with the ferra cow's milk,
Hey wi' the rose and the lindie O,
An' dress ye i' the finest silk,"35
Alane by the green burn sidie O.
"O cruel mother, when we were thine,
Hey wi' the rose and the lindie O,
We saw nane o' your bread and wine,
[Pg 378]Alane by the green burn sidie O.40
"We saw nane o' your ferra cow's milk,
Hey wi' the rose and the lindie O,
Nor wore we o' your finest silk,"
Alane by the green burn sidie O.
"O bonny babies, can ye tell me,45
Hey wi' the rose and the lindie O,
What sort o' death for ye I maun dee,"
Alane by the green burn sidie O.
"Yes, cruel mother, we'll tell to thee,
Hey wi' the rose and the lindie O,50
What sort o' death for us ye maun dee,
Alane by the green burn sidie O.
"Seven years a fool i' the woods,
Hey wi' the rose and the lindie O,
"Seven years a fish i' the floods,55
Alane by the green burn sidie O.
"Seven years to be a church bell,
Hey wi' the rose and the lindie O,
Seven years a porter i' hell,"
Alane by the green burn sidie O.60
"Welcome, welcome, fool i' the wood,
Hey wi' the rose and the lindie O,
Welcome, welcome, fish i' the flood,
Alane by the green burn sidie O.
"Welcome, welcome, to be a church bell,65
Hey wi' the rose and the lindie O,
But heavens keep me out o' hell,"
Alane by the green burn sidie O.
[Pg 379]
BONDSEY AND MAISRY. See p. 298.
From Buchan's Ballads of the North of Scotland, ii. 265.
"O come along wi' me, brother,
Now come along wi' me;
And we'll gae seek our sister Maisry,
Into the water o' Dee."
The eldest brother he stepped in,5
He stepped to the knee;
Then out he jump'd upo' the bank,
Says, "This water's nae for me."
The second brother he stepped in,
He stepped to the quit;10
Then out he jump'd upo' the bank,
Says, "This water's wond'rous deep."
When the third brother stepped in,
He stepped to the chin;
Out he got, and forward wade,15
For fear o' drowning him.[Pg 380]
The youngest brother he stepped in,
Took 's sister by the hand;
Said, "Here she is, my sister Maisry,
Wi' the hinny draps on her chin.20
"O if I were in some bonny ship,
And in some strange countrie,
For to find out some conjurer,
To gar Maisry speak to me!"
Then out it speaks an auld woman,25
As she was passing by;
"Ask of your sister what you want,
And she will speak to thee."
"O sister, tell me who is the man,
That did your body win?30
And who is the wretch, tell me, likewise,
That threw you in the lin?"
"O Bondsey was the only man
That did my body win;
And likewise Bondsey was the man35
That threw me in the lin."
"O will we Bondsey head, sister?
Or will we Bondsey hang?
Or will we set him at our bow end,
Lat arrows at him gang?"40
"Ye winna Bondsey head, brothers,
Nor will ye Bondsey hang;
But ye'll take out his twa grey e'en,
Make Bondsey blind to gang.[Pg 381]
"Ye'll put to the gate a chain o' gold,45
A rose garland gar make;
And ye'll put that in Bondsey's head,
A' for your sister's sake."
[Pg 382]
LADY DIAMOND.
From the Percy Society Publications, xvii. 71. The
same in Buchan, ii. 206. The ballad is given in
Sharpe's Ballad Book, under the title of Dysmal, and
by Aytoun, Ballads of Scotland, 2d ed., ii. 173, under
that of Lady Daisy. All these names are corruptions
of Ghismonda, on whose well-known story (Decamerone,
iv. 1, 9) the present is founded.—This piece and
the next might better have been inserted at p. 347, as
a part of the Appendix to Book III.
There was a king, an' a curious king,
An' a king o' royal fame;
He had ae dochter, he had never mair,
Ladye Diamond was her name.
She's fa'en into shame, an' lost her gude name,5
An' wrought her parents 'noy;
An' a' for her layen her luve so low,
On her father's kitchen boy.
Ae nicht as she lay on her bed,
Just thinkin' to get rest,10
Up it came her old father,
Just like a wanderin' ghaist.
"Rise up, rise up, ladye Diamond," he says,
"Rise up, put on your goun;
Rise up, rise up, ladye Diamond," he says,15
"For I fear ye gae too roun'."[Pg 383]
"Too roun I gae, yet blame me nae;
Ye'll cause me na to shame;
For better luve I that bonnie boy
Than a' your weel-bred men."20
The king's ca'd up his wa'-wight men,
That he paid meat an' fee:
"Bring here to me that bonnie boy,
An' we'll smore him right quietlie."
Up hae they ta'en that bonnie boy,25
Put him 'tween twa feather beds;
Naethin' was dane, nor naethin' said,
Till that bonnie bonnie boy was dead.
The king's ta'en out a braid braid sword,
An' streak'd it on a strae;30
An' thro' an' thro' that bonnie boy's heart
He's gart cauld iron gae.
Out has he ta'en his poor bluidie heart,
Set it in a tasse o' gowd,
And set it before ladye Diamonds face,35
Said "Fair ladye, behold!"
Up has she ta'en this poor bludie heart,
An' holden it in her han';
"Better luved I that bonnie bonnie boy
Than a' my father's lan'."40
Up has she ta'en his poor bludie heart,
An' laid it at her head;
The tears awa' frae her eyne did flee,
An' ere midnicht she was dead.
[Pg 384]
THE WEST COUNTRY DAMOSELS COMPLAINT.
From Collier's Book of Roxburghe Ballads, p. 202.
After a broadside "printed by P. Brooksby, at the
Golden Bull in Westsmith-field, neer the Hospitall
Gate." The first ten or twelve stanzas seem to be
ancient.
"When will you marry me, William,
And make me your wedded wife?
Or take you your keen bright sword,
And rid me out of my life."
"Say no more then so, lady,5
Say you no more then so,
For you shall unto the wild forrest,
And amongst the buck and doe.
"Where thou shalt eat of the hips and haws,
And the roots that are so sweet,10
And thou shalt drink of the cold water
That runs underneath your feet."[Pg 385]
Now had she not been in the wild forrest
Passing three months and a day,
But with hunger and cold she had her fill,15
Till she was quite worn away.
At last she saw a fair tyl'd house,
And there she swore by the rood,
That she would to that fair tyl'd house,
There for to get her some food.20
But when she came unto the gates,
Aloud, aloud she cry'd,
"An alms, an alms, my own sister!
I ask you for no pride."
Her sister call'd up her merry men all,25
By one, by two, and by three,
And bid them hunt away that wild doe,
As far as e'er they could see.
They hunted her o're hill and dale,
And they hunted her so sore,30
That they hunted her into the forrest,
Where her sorrows grew more and more.
She laid a stone all at her head,
And another all at her feet,
And down she lay between these two,35
Till death had lull'd her asleep.
When sweet Will came and stood at her head,
And likewise stood at her feet,
A thousand times he kiss'd her cold lips,
[Pg 386]Her body being fast asleep.40
Yea, seaven times he stood at her feet,
And seaven times at her head;
A thousand times he shook her hand,
Although her body was dead.
"Ah wretched me!" he loudly cry'd,45
"What is it that I have done?
O wou'd to the powers above I'de dy'd,
When thus I left her alone!
"Come, come, you gentle red-breast now,
And prepare for us a tomb,50
Whilst unto cruel Death I bow,
And sing like a swan my doom.
"Why could I ever cruel be
Unto so fair a creature;
Alas! she dy'd for love of me,55
The loveliest she in nature!
"For me she left her home so fair
To wander in this wild grove,
And there with sighs and pensive care
She ended her life for love.60
"O constancy, in her thou'rt lost!
Now let women boast no more;
She's fled unto the Elizian coast,
And with her carry'd the store.
"O break, my heart, with sorrow fill'd,65
Come, swell, you strong tides of grief!
You that my dear love have kill'd,
Come, yield in death to me relief.[Pg 387]
"Cruel her sister, was't for me
That to her she was unkind?70
Her husband I will never be,
But with this my love be joyn'd.
"Grim Death shall tye the marriage bands,
Which jealousie shan't divide;
Together shall tye our cold hands,75
Whilst here we lye side by side.
"Witness, ye groves, and chrystal streams,
How faithless I late have been;
But do repent with dying leaves
Of that my ungrateful sin;80
"And wish a thousand times that I
Had been but to her more kind,
And not have let a virgin dye,
Whose equal there's none can find.
"Now heaps of sorrow press my soul;85
Now, now 'tis she takes her way;
I come, my love, without controule,
Nor from thee will longer stay."
With that he fetch'd a heavy groan,
Which rent his tender breast,90
And then by her he laid him down,
When as Death did give him rest.
Whilst mournful birds, with leavy bows,
To them a kind burial gave,
And warbled out their love-sick vows,95
Whilst they both slept in their grave.
[Pg 388]
THE BRAVE EARL BRAND AND THE KING
OF ENGLAND'S DAUGHTER.
See p. 114.
From Bell's Ballads of the Peasantry of England, p. 122.
This ballad, which was printed by Bell from the recitation
of an old Northumberland fiddler, is defective
in the tenth and the last stanzas, and has suffered much
from corruption in the course of transmission. The
name of the hero, however, is uncommonly well preserved,
and affords a link, rarely occurring in English,
with the corresponding Danish and Swedish ballads, a
good number of which have Hildebrand, though more
have Ribold. It may be observed that in Hildebrand
og Hilde (Grundtvig, No. 83), the knight has the rank
here ascribed to the lady.
"Hand heede hertug Hyldebraand,
Kongens sönn aff Engeland."
The "old Carl Hood" who gives the alarm in this
ballad, is called in most of the Danish ballads "a rich
earl"; in one a treacherous man, in another a young
Carl, and in a third an old man; which together furnish
the elements of his character here of a treacherous
old Carl.
O did you ever hear of the brave Earl Brand?
Hey lillie, ho lillie lallie!
He's courted the king's daughter o' fair England,
I' the brave nights so early.[Pg 389]
She was scarcely fifteen years that tide,
When sae boldly she came to his bed-side.
"O Earl Brand, how fain wad I see5
A pack of hounds let loose on the lea."
"O lady fair, I have no steed but one,
But thou shalt ride and I will run."
"O Earl Brand, but my father has two,
And thou shalt have the best of tho."10
Now they have ridden o'er moss and moor,
And they have met neither rich nor poor.
Till at last they met with old Carl Hood,
He's aye for ill, and never for good.
"Now, Earl Brand, an ye love me,15
Slay this old carl, and gar him dee."
"O lady fair, but that would be sair,
To slay an auld carl that wears grey hair.
"My own lady fair, I'll not do that,
I'll pay him his fee......."20
"O where have ye ridden this lee lang day,
And where have ye stown this fair lady away?"
"I have not ridden this lee lang day,
Nor yet have I stown this lady away.
"For she is, I trow, my sick sister,25
Whom I have been bringing fra Winchester."[Pg 390]
"If she's been sick, and nigh to dead,
What makes her wear the ribbon so red?
"If she's been sick, and like to die,
What makes her wear the gold sae high?"30
When came the carl to the lady's yett,
He rudely, rudely rapped thereat.
"Now where is the lady of this hall?"
"She's out with her maids a-playing at the ball."
"Ha, ha, ha! ye are all mista'en;35
Ye may count your maidens owre again.
"I met her far beyond the lea,
With the young Earl Brand, his leman to be."
Her father of his best men armed fifteen,
And they're ridden after them bidene.40
The lady looked owre her left shoulder then;
Says, "O Earl Brand, we are both of us ta'en."
"If they come on me one by one,
You may stand by till the fights be done.
"But if they come on me one and all,45
You may stand by and see me fall."
They came upon him one by one,
Till fourteen battles he has won.
And fourteen men he has them slain,
[Pg 391]Each after each upon the plain.50
But the fifteenth man behind stole round,
And dealt him a deep and deadly wound.
Though he was wounded to the deid,
He set his lady on her steed.
They rode till they came to the river Doune,55
And there they lighted to wash his wound.
They rode till they came to his mother's yett,
So faint and feebly he rapped thereat.60
"O my son's slain, he is falling to swoon,
And it's all for the sake of an English loon!"
"O say not so, my dearest mother,
But marry her to my youngest brother.
"To a maiden true he'll give his hand,65
To the king's daughter o' fair England.
"[To the king's daughter o' fair England,]
Hey lillie, ho lillie lallie!
To a prize that was won by a slain brother's brand,"
I' the brave nights so early.
58. Qy.? of my scarlet hood.
[Pg 392]
LA VENDICATRICE. See p. 273.
From Canti Popolari Inediti Umbri, Piceni, Piemontesi,
Latini, raccolti e illustrati da Oreste Marcoaldi.
Genova, 1855. p. 167.—From Alessandria.
"Va là, va là, Sior Conte,15
Va là 'nte quei boscon;16
Le spenni e li serpenti17
Saran toi compagnon."18
1 guarda ben, Monferina.
2 quel castello.
3 fanciulle.
4 menate io.
5 negato.
6 tagliato.
7 dica lei, signor.
8 sua spada.
10 vuoi fare.
11 tagliare.
12 cavallo.
13 spadina.
16 (boscon) cespugli.
17 spine.
18 tuoi.
[Pg 395]
GLOSSARY.
☞ Figures placed after words denote the pages in which
they occur.
- aboon, above, upon.
- abound, 335, bound.
- abune a' thing, above all things.
- a dee, 335, to do.
- ae, one.
- aft, oft.
- aith, oath.
- an, if.
- ance, once.
- anent, opposite to.
- are, early.
- assoile, absolve.
- aucht, owns;
- wha is aucht that bairn? who is it owns that child?
- ava, of all.
- a-warslin, a wrestling.
- ayont, beyond.
- ba', ball.
- badena, abode not.
- bairn, child.
- baith, both.
- ban, 89, bond.
- beet, 340, add fuel.
- bierdly, large and well-made, stately.
- biggins, buildings.
- ben, in, within.
- bestan, best.
- best young man, bridesman.
- bidden, bidding.
- bidene, in a company, forthwith (?)
- billie, comrade, brother.
- binna, beest not.
- birk, birch.
- birling, pouring out [drink], drinking.
- blan, ceased, stopped.
- blate, sheepish, ashamed.
- blear, [noun,] dimness.
- blinkit, blinked, winked.
- blinne, cease.
- borrow, ransom.
- bouerie, chamber.
- boun, ready.
- bour, bower, chamber.
- bra', braw, handsome.
- bracken, female fern.[Pg 396]
- brae, hill-side.
- braid, broad.
- brain, mad.
- brent, burnt;
- 308, v. 31, straight?
- bridesteel, (Buchan,) 183, bridal?
- brigg, brigue, bridge.
- broo, broth.
- brook, enjoy.
- brunt, burnt.
- buird, board.
- burd, lady.
- burn, brook.
- busking, dressing, making ready.
- but, butt, without.
- but and, and also.
- byre, cow-house.
- ca', call.
- cannel, 327. Qy. a corruption?
- canny, knowing, expert, gentle, adroitly, carefully.
- cast, trick, turn.
- channerin, fretting.
- chap, tap, rap;
- chappit, 11, tapped, rapped;
- at the chin, should probably be at the pin, or tongue of the latch.
- cheir, cheer.
- claise, clothes.
- clap, fondle;
- clappit, patted, fondled.
- cleading, clothing.
- clecked, hatched.
- cleed, clothe.
- cleiding, clothing.
- clerks, scholars.
- cliding, clothing.
- close, lane.
- cod, pillow.
- coil, 324, cock of hay.
- coost, cast.
- could, used with the infinitive as an auxiliary, to form a past tense.
- crap, crop, top.
- croodlin doo, cooing dove.
- crowse, brisk.
- cuik, cook.
- curches, kerchiefs. R. Jamieson, "linen caps tying under the chin."
- cuttit, cut.
- dabs, pricks.
- dang, 301, overcome;
- 361, pushed.
- dapperby, 189, dapper?
- daut, fondle, caress.
- daw, dawn.
- dead, death.
- dear-boucht, dear-bought.
- deas, sometimes a pew in a church.
- dee, die.
- dee, do, avail.
- deid, death.
- deight, dight, decked.
- den, valley.
- depart, 124, part.
- dight, 253, skilfully, readily?
- dighted, dressed, wiped.
- dine, dinner.
- ding, strike.
- dinna, do not.[Pg 397]
- disna, does not.
- dool, sorrow.
- dout, fear.
- dowie, mournful, sad, gloomy.
- downa, cannot.
- dows, doves.
- dreaded, doubted.
- dree, suffer.
- drew up with, 94, formed relations of love with.
- drie, suffer.
- drumly, troubled.
- dule, grief, sorrow.
- dune, done.
- dwines, dwindles.
- e'e, eye.
- een, eye, eyes.
- eneuch, enough.
- ezer, azure.
- fadge, clumsy woman.
- faem, foam.
- fare, go.
- farrow-cow, a barren cow.
- fee, property, wages.
- fell, hill.
- fell, strange.
- ferra cow, farrow cow, a cow not with calf.
- ffree, noble.
- firstan, firstand, first.
- fit, foot.
- fitches, 329, flitches?
- flang'd, flung.
- fleed, flood.
- foremost man, bridesman.
- forlorn, lost.
- fou, fow, full.
- frush, brittle.
- fur, furrow, a furrows length, furlong.
- gaed, went.
- gair, 354, gore, strip. See gare.
- gang, go;
- gangs, goes.
- gar, make.
- gare, 55, gore;
- apparently, here, skirt. So, hung low down by his gair, 296, by the edge of his frock. The word seems also to be used vaguely in romances for clothing.
- garl, gravel.
- gate, way.
- gear, goods, clothes.
- gin, trick, wile.
- gleed, a burning coal;
- 97, blaze.
- glent, gleam, glimmer.
- gone, go.
- gowd, gold;
- gowden, golden.
- gowk, fool.
- gravat, cravat?
- greaf, grave.
- greet, cry, weep.
- gris, a costly fur.
- grit, big.
- groom, man.
- gross, heavy.
- gryte, great, big.
- Gude, God.
- ha', hall.
- had her, betook her.
- hallow-days, holidays.[Pg 398]
- haly, holy.
- happit, covered.
- hass, neck.
- haud, hold;
- haud unthought lang, keep from ennui.
- hause, neck.
- head, behead.
- healy, slowly, softly.
- heght, promised.
- her lane, herself alone.
- herried, robbed.
- hich, high.
- hinny, honey.
- hip, the berry which contains the stones or seeds of the dog-rose.
- hooly, slowly, gently.
- how, ho!
- hows, hollows, dells.
- howket, dug.
- huggell, huddle, cuddle.
- huly, slowly.
- intill, into, in.
- into, on.
- iwis, certainly.
- jaw, 233, wave.
- jawing, dashing.
- jimp, slender.
- jo, sweetheart.
- jollie, handsome.
- jow, stroke in tolling.
- kell, caul, a species of cap, or net-work, worn by women as a head-dress.
- kembe, comb;
- kembing, combing.
- kenna, know not;
- kentna, knew not.
- kens, knows.
- kerches, kerchiefs.
- kilted, tucked up.
- kin, kind;
- a' kin, all kind.
- kist, chest.
- kitchey, kitchen.
- know, knoll.
- kye, cows.
- kythe, become, manifest.
- laigh, low.
- lain, alone;
- ye're your lain, you are alone;
- hir lain, her alone.
- lair, learning.
- lane, alone;
- the same in combination with the pronouns my, his, her, its, &c.
- lap, leapt.
- latten, let.
- lauch, laugh.
- laumer, 327, amber.
- lave, rest.
- lealest, truest, chastest.
- lear, lore, lesson.
- lease, leash.
- lee, lonesome.
- lee-lang, livelong.
- lei, 132, lonesome.
- len, lie.
- lent, leaned.
- let, stop, delay.
- leuch, leugh, laughed.
- lichtly, lightly.
- lig, lie.
- lighter, delivered.
- limmers, strumpets.[Pg 399]
- linn, the pool under a cataract, cataract.
- lith, joint.
- lither, naughty, wicked.
- looten, let.
- loup, leap.
- lourd, liefer, rather.
- louted, bent.
- louze, loosen.
- lykewake, watching of a dead body.
- mae, more.
- maene, moan, lamentation.
- maist, 58, maistly, almost.
- make, mate.
- mane, moan.
- maries, maids.
- marrow, mate.
- mat, may.
- maun, must.
- maunna, may not.
- may, maid.
- meen, moan, lament.
- message, messenger.
- micht, might.
- mind, remember.
- mirk, murky.
- mith, might.
- Moll Syms, 359, a celebrated dance tune of the 16th century.
- mools, the earth of the grave, the dust of the dead.
- mot, may.
- my lane, alone by myself.
- niest, next.
- nourice, nurse.
- oer, ower, over, too.
- ohon, alas.
- owsen, oxen.
- Owsenford, Oxford.
- pa', pall, rich cloth.
- Parish, Paris.
- part, 151, separate from.
- pat, pot.
- pearlin' gear, pearl ornaments.
- pin, door-latch.
- plat, plaited.
- plea, quarrel.
- pot, a pool, or deep place, in a river.
- prin, pin.
- propine, gift.
- putten down, hung.
- queet, quit, ancle.
- quhair, quhat, quhy, &c., where, what, why, &c.
- rair'd, roared.
- rave, tore off.
- reavel'd, tangled.
- rede, advice, advise;
- 263, story.
- reest, roost.
- renown, [Buchan,] 169, haughtiness?
- rigland shire, 331?
- rin, run.
- ritted, routed, struck.
- riv't, tear it.
- row, roll.
- row'd, rolled.
- sabelline, sable.[Pg 400]
- sanna, shall not.
- sarbit, an exclamation of sorrow.
- sark, shirt.
- saugh, willow.
- scheet, school.
- schill, shrill.
- scug, expiate.
- see, (save and,) protect.
- seen, sen, then, since.
- send, 334, the messengers sent for the bride at a wedding.
- sets, suits.
- shed by, 77, parted, put back.
- sheen, shine.
- sheen, shoes.
- sheet, shoot.
- sheuch, furrow, ditch.
- shimmerd, shone.
- shot-window, a projected window.
- sic, such.
- sich, sigh.
- sindle, seldom.
- sinsyne, since.
- skinkled, sparkled.
- slack, a gap or pass between two hills.
- slait, passed across, whetted.
- slap, a narrow pass between two hills.
- smore, smother.
- snood, a fillet or ribbon for the hair.
- socht, sought.
- sorray, sorrow.
- soum, sowm, swim.
- spakes, spokes, bars.
- speer, speir, ask.
- spreckl'd, speckled.
- stap, stuff.
- stean, stone.
- steek'd, fastened.
- stey, steep.
- stint, stop.
- stock, the forepart of a bed.
- stout, 300, haughty.
- strae, stray, straw.
- straiked, streaked, stroked, drew.
- streek, stretch;
- streekit, stretched;
- streikit, laid out.
- striped, thrust.
- suld, should.
- syke, marshy bottom.
- syne, then, afterwards.
- tane, one, [after the.]
- tasse, cup.
- tate, lock (of hair).
- tee, too.
- teem, empty.
- teen, sorrow, suffering.
- tent, heed.
- thae, these.
- the, thrive.
- thegither, together.
- thir, tho, these, those.
- thorn'd, 335, eaten?
- thought lang, felt ennui.
- thouth, thought, seemed.
- thraw, 302, writhe, twist;
- thrawen, crooked.
- thresel-cock, throstle, thrush.
- threw, 130, throve.
- thrild upon a pinn. See tirled below.[Pg 401]
- tift, puff (of wind).
- till, to, on.
- tirled at the pin, trilled or rattled, at the door-latch, to obtain entrance.
- tither, other.
- tocher, dowry.
- toomly, empty.
- tow, rope.
- triest, tryst, make an assignation.
- true, trow.
- twain, part.
- twal, twelve.
- twin, part;
- twinn'd, deprived, parted.
- virr, strength.
- vow, interjection of surprise.
- wad, would.
- wadded, wagered, staked.
- wadding, wedding.
- wae, waeful', sad, sorrowful.
- waked, watched.
- walde, would.
- wale, choice.
- wambe, wame, womb.
- wan, reached.
- wand, wandie, bough, wand, stick.
- wan na in, got not in.
- wap, throw.
- wappit, beat, fluttered.
- warde, 35, advise, forewarn.
- wark, work.
- warlock, wizzard.
- warstan, worst.
- warstled, wrestled.
- wat, know.
- water-kelpy, a malicious spirit thought to haunt fords and ferries, especially in storms, and to swell the waters beyond their ordinary limit, for the destruction of luckless travellers.
- wavers, 40, wanders.
- wa'-wight, 383, waled, picked, strong-men or warriors. See vol. vi. 220, v. 15.
- wean, child.
- wee, little.
- weed, dress.
- weir-horse, war-horse.
- werne, were.
- wha is aught, who is it owns.
- whang, thong.
- whaten, what.
- wicht, strong, agile.
- widdershins, the contrary way, round about.
- wide, wade.
- wight, strong, agile.
- win, arrive, reach, come, get.
- winna, will not.
- winsome, charming, attractive.
- woe, sad.
- won up, got up.
- wood, mad;
- wood-wroth, mad with anger.
- worth, be;
- wae worth you sorrow come upon you.
- wow, alas.[Pg 402]
- wraith, wroth.
- wrongous, wrong.
- wull, will.
- wyte, punish, blame.
- yae, every.
- yare, ready.
- yeats, yetts, gates.
- yestreen, yesterday.
- yird-fast, fixed in the earth.
- yode, went.
- yont, beyond, further off.
- Yule, Christmas.
- ze, zet, zour, &c., ye, yet, your.
Transcriber's Notes
Irregular and inconsistent spellings have been retained as in the
original. Typographical errors such as wrongly placed line numbers
and punctuation have been corrected without comment. Where changes
have been made to the wording these are listed as follows:
Page 10, line 33: added missing opening quotation mark ("But look that
ye tell na Gib your man,...)
Page 38, line note 157: reference originally read "177".
Page 55, line 47, 48: added missing quotation marks (Lye yont, lye yont,
Willie," she says, / "For your sweat I downa bide O.")
Page 97, line 97: added final comma ("Now haud your tongue, my lord," she
said, ...)
Page 118, line 58, 59: removed unnecessary quotation mark ("Get up, and
let me in!— / Get up, get up, lady mother," he says, ...)
Page 119, line 71: deleted duplicate "the" (Out o' the lady's grave
grew a bonny red rose).
Page 184, line 50: deleted erroneous closing quotation mark (Says,
"What means a' this mourning?)
Page 189, line 41 and page 396: "dapperpy" appears in text but is "dapperby" in the Glossary (O he has pou'd
aff his dapperpy coat, ...)
Page 227, line 41: added open quotation mark ("And quhat wul ze leive to
zour bairns and zour wife,)
Page 263 line 16: added missing period (A playing at the ba'."—)
Page 270, line 24: changed "Doan" to "Doun" (Doun by the greenwud
sae bonnie)
Page 300: added missing closing quotation mark (... taken place in
Bothwell church." SCOTT.)
Page 338, line 11: changed "Majorie" to "Marjorie" (That Lady
Marjorie she gaes wi' child, ...)
Page 347: heading "Book IV" removed. Note that it does not appear in the
Table of Contents and there are several references to ballads and page
numbers after this point as part of the Appendix. Note also that Volume
3 starts with "Book III (continued)".
Page 352, line 42: added closing quotation mark ("Where leav'st thou thy
youthful daughter, / Merry son of mine?")
Page 401, changed "widdershius" to "widdershins" (widdershins, the
contrary way, round about.)
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