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The English and Scottish Popular Ballads

Edited by Francis James Child.

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JAMIE DOUGLAS—M

[_]

Herd's MSS, I, 54.

1

Earl Douglas, than wham never knight
Had valour moe ne courtesie,
Yet he's now blamet be a' the land
For lightlying o his gay lady.

2

‘Go, little page, and tell your lord,
Gin he will cum and dine wi me,
I'll set him on a seat of gold,
I'll serve him on my bended knee.’

3

The little page gaed up the stair:
‘Lord Douglas, dyne wi your lady;
She'll set ye on a seat of gold,
And serve ye on her bended knee.’

4

‘When cockle-shells turn siller bells,
When mussels grow on ilka tree,
When frost and snow sall warm us a',
Then I sall dyne wi my ladie.’

5

‘Now wae betide ye, black Fastness,
Ay and an ill dead met ye die!
Ye was the first and the foremost man
Wha parted my true lord and me.’