The English and Scottish Popular Ballads Edited by Francis James Child. |
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![]() | The English and Scottish Popular Ballads | ![]() |
Lord Garrick
THE GYPSY LADDIE—K
[_]
a. From Mrs Helena Titus Brown of New York. b. From Miss Emma A. Clinch of New York. Derived, 1820, or a little later, a directly, b indirectly, from the singing of Miss Phœbe Wood, Huntington, Long Island, and perhaps learned from English soldiers there stationed during the Revolutionary war.
1
‘Go bring me down my high-heeled shoes,Made of the Spanish leather,
And I'll take off my low-heeled shoes,
And away we'll go together.’
Lumpy dumpy linky dinky day
Lumpy dumpy linky dinky daddy
73
2
They brought her down her high-heeled shoes,Made of the Spanish leather,
And she took off her low-heeled shoes,
And away they went together.
3
And when Lord Garrick he got there,Inquiring for his lady,
Then up steps his best friend:
‘She's gone with a gipsy laddie.’
4
‘Go saddle me my bonny brown,For the grey is not so speedy,
And away we'll go to the Misty Mount,
And overtake my lady.’
5
They saddled him his bonny brown,For the grey was not so speedy,
And away they went to the Misty Mount,
And overtook his lady.
6
And when Lord Garrick he got there,'T was in the morning early,
And there he found his lady fair,
And she was wet and weary.
7
‘And it's fare you well, my dearest dear,And it's fare you well for ever,
And if you don't go with me now,
Don't let me see you never.’
![]() | The English and Scottish Popular Ballads | ![]() |