University of Virginia Library

Search this document 
The English and Scottish Popular Ballads

Edited by Francis James Child.

expand sectionI. 
expand sectionII. 
expand sectionIII. 
expand sectionIV. 
expand sectionV. 
collapse sectionVI. 
expand section156. 
expand section157. 
expand section158. 
expand section159. 
expand section160. 
expand section161. 
expand section162. 
expand section163. 
expand section164. 
expand section165. 
expand section166. 
expand section167. 
expand section168. 
expand section169. 
expand section170. 
expand section171. 
expand section172. 
collapse section173. 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
expand section174. 
expand section175. 
expand section176. 
expand section177. 
expand section178. 
expand section179. 
expand section180. 
expand section181. 
expand section182. 
expand section183. 
expand section184. 
expand section185. 
expand section186. 
expand section187. 
expand section188. 
expand sectionVII. 
expand sectionVIII. 
expand sectionIX. 


250

Willie, Willie

WILLIE'S LYKE-WAKE—A

[_]

Kinloch's MSS, i, 53, from the recitation of Mary Barr, Lesmahagow, aged upwards of seventy. May, 1827.

1

Willie, Willie, I'll learn you a wile,’
And the sun shines over the valleys and a'
‘How this pretty fair maid ye may beguile.’
Amang the blue flowrs and the yellow and a'

2

‘Ye maun lie doun just as ye were dead,
And tak your winding-sheet around your head.

251

3

‘Ye maun gie the bellman his bell-groat,
To ring your dead-bell at your lover's yett.’

4

He lay doun just as he war dead,
And took his winding-sheet round his head.

5

He gied the bellman his bell-groat,
To ring his dead-bell at his lover's yett.

6

‘O wha is this that is dead, I hear?’
‘O wha but Willie that loed ye sae dear.’

7

She is to her father's chamber gone,
And on her knees she's fallen down.

8

‘O father, O father, ye maun grant me this;
I hope that ye will na tak it amiss.

9

‘That I to Willie's burial should go;
For he is dead, full well I do know.’

10

‘Ye'll tak your seven bauld brethren wi thee,
And to Willie's burial straucht go ye.’

11

It's whan she cam to the outmost yett,
She made the silver fly round for his sake.

12

It's whan she cam to the inmost yett,
She made the red gowd fly round for his sake.

13

As she walked frae the court to the parlour there,
The pretty corpse syne began for to steer.

14

He took her by the waist sae neat and sae sma,
And threw her atween him and the wa.

15

‘O Willie, O Willie, let me alane this nicht,
O let me alane till we're wedded richt.’

16

‘Ye cam unto me baith sae meek and mild,
But I'll mak ye gae hame a wedded wife wi child.’