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The English and Scottish Popular Ballads

Edited by Francis James Child.

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The Loch o the Loanie

THE CRUEL MOTHER—N

[_]

Campbell MSS, II, 264.

1

As I lookit oer my father's castle wa,
All alone and alone O
I saw two pretty babes playing at the ba.
Down by yon green-wood sidie

2

‘O pretty babes, gin ye were mine,’
Hey the loch o the Loanie
‘I would clead ye o the silk sae fine.’
Down by that green-wood sidie

3

‘O sweet darlings, gin ye were mine,’
Hey the loch o the Loanie
‘I would feed ye on the morning's milk.’
Down by that green-wood sidie

4

‘O mither dear, when we were thine,’
By the loch o the Loanie
‘Ye neither dressd us wi silk nor twine.’
Down by this green-wood sidie

5

‘But ye tuke out your little pen-knife,’
By, etc.
‘And there ye tuke yer little babes' life.’
Down by the, etc.

6

‘O mither dear, when this ye had done,’
Alone by, etc.
‘Ye unkirtled yersel, and ye wrapt us in 't.’
Down by the, etc.

7

‘Neist ye houkit a hole fornent the seen.’
All alone and alone O
‘And tearless ye stappit your little babes in’
Down by the, etc.

8

‘But we are in the heavens high,’
And far frae the loch o the Loanie
‘But ye hae the pains o hell to d[r]ie.’
Before ye leave the green-wood sidie