The English and Scottish Popular Ballads Edited by Francis James Child. |
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The English and Scottish Popular Ballads | ||
Lord Lovel
LORD LOVEL—F
1
As Lord Lovel was at the stable-door,Mounting his milk-white steed,
Who came by but poor Nancy Bell,
And she wished Lovel good speed.
2
‘O where are ye going, Lord Lovel?’ she said,‘How long to tarry from me?’
‘Before six months are past and gone,
Again I'll return to thee.’
3
He had not been a twelvemonth away,A twelvemonth and a day,
Till Nancy Bell grew sick and sad,
She pined and witherd away.
4
The very first town that he came to,He heard the death-bell knell;
The very next town that he came to,
They said it was Nancy Bell.
5
He orderd the coffin to be broke open,The sheet to be turned down,
And then he kissd her cold pale lips,
Till the tears ran tricklin down.
6
The one was buried in St. John's church,The other in the choir;
From Nancy Bell sprang a bonny red rose,
From Lord Lovel a bonny briar.
7
They grew, and they grew, to the height o the church,To they met from either side,
And at the top a true lover's knot
Shows that one for the other had died.
The English and Scottish Popular Ballads | ||