The English and Scottish Popular Ballads Edited by Francis James Child. |
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The English and Scottish Popular Ballads | ||
The Cruel Mother
THE CRUEL MOTHER—H
1
There was a lady brisk and smart,All in a lone and a lonie O
And she goes with child to her father's clark.
Down by the greenwood sidie O
2
Big, big oh she went away,And then she set her foot to a tree.
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Big she set her foot to a stone,Till her three bonnie babes were borne.
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She took the ribbons off her head,She tied the little babes hand and feet.
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She howkit a hole before the sun,She's laid these three bonnie babes in.
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She covered them over with marble stone,For dukes and lords to walk upon.
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She lookit over her father's castle wa,She saw three bonnie boys playing at the ba.
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The first o them was clad in red,To shew the innocence of their blood.
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The neist o them was clad in green,To shew that death they had been in.
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The next was naked to the skin,To shew they were murderd when they were born.
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‘O bonnie babes, an ye were mine,I wad dress you in the satins so fine.’
12
‘O mother dear, when we were thine,Thou did not use us half so kind.’
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‘O bonnie babes, an ye be mine,Whare hae ye been a' this time?’
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‘We were at our father's house,Preparing a place for thee and us.’
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‘Whaten a place hae ye prepar'd for me?’‘Heaven's for us, but hell's for thee.
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‘O mother dear, but heaven's high;That is the place thou'll ne'er come nigh.
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‘O mother dear, but hell is deep;'Twill cause thee bitterlie to weep.’
The English and Scottish Popular Ballads | ||