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The English and Scottish Popular Ballads

Edited by Francis James Child.

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Lord Derwentwater

LORD DERWENTWATER—B

[_]

Notes and Queries, First Series, XII, 492, 1855; learned some forty five years before from an old gentleman, who, about 1773, got it by heart from an old washerwoman singing at her tub.

1

The king he wrote a love-letter,
And he sealed it up with gold,
And he sent it to Lord Derwentwater,
For to read it if he could.

2

The first two lines that he did read,
They made him for to smile;
But the next two lines he looked upon
Made the tears from his eyes to fall.

3

‘Oh,’ then cried out his lady fair,
As she in child-bed lay,
‘Make your will, make your will, Lord Derwentwater,
Before that you go away.’

4

‘Then here's for thee, my lady fair,
[OMITTED]
A thousand pounds of beaten gold,
To lead you a lady's life.’

5

[OMITTED]
[OMITTED] his milk-white steed,
The ring dropt from his little finger,
And his nose it began to bleed.

6

He rode, and he rode, and he rode along,
Till he came to Westminster Hall,
Where all the lords of England's court
A traitor did him call.

7

‘Oh, why am I a traitor?’ said he;
‘Indeed, I am no such thing;
I have fought the battles valiantly
Of James, our noble king.’

8

O then stood up an old gray-headed man,
With a pole-axe in his hand:
‘'Tis your head, 'tis your head, Lord Derwentwater,
'Tis your head that I demand.’

9

[OMITTED]
His eyes with weeping sore,
He laid his head upon the block,
And words spake never more.