The English and Scottish Popular Ballads Edited by Francis James Child. |
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Laird o Leys
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The English and Scottish Popular Ballads | ||
Laird o Leys
THE BARON O LEYS—B
1
The Laird o Leys is to London gane;He was baith full and gawdie;
For he shod his steed wi siller guid,
And he's playd the ranting laddie.
2
He hadna been in fair LondonA twalmonth and a quarter,
Till he met wi a weel-faurd may,
Wha wishd to know how they ca'd him.
3
‘They ca me this, and they ca me that,And they're easy how they've ca'd me;
357
They ca me The Ranting Laddie.’
4
‘Awa wi your jesting, sir,’ she said,‘I trow you're a ranting laddie;
But something swells atween my sides,
And I maun ken how they ca thee.’
5
‘They ca me this, and they ca me that,And they're easy how they ca me;
The Baron o Leys my title is,
And Sandy Burnet they ca me.’
6
‘Tell down, tell down ten thousand crowns,Or ye maun marry me the morn;
Or headit or hangit ye sall be,
For ye sanna gie me the scorn.’
7
‘My head's the thing I canna weel want;My lady she loves me dearlie;
Nor yet hae I means ye to maintain;
Alas for the lying sae near thee!’
8
But word's gane doun to the Lady o LeysThat the Baron had got a babie:
‘The waurst o news!’ my lady she said,
‘I wish I had hame my laddie.
9
‘But I'll sell aff my jointure-house,Tho na mair I sud be a ladie;
I'll sell a' to my silken goun,
And bring hame my rantin laddie.’
10
So she is on to London gane,And she paid the money on the morn;
She paid it doun and brought him hame,
And gien them a' the scorn.
The English and Scottish Popular Ballads | ||