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The English and Scottish Popular Ballads

Edited by Francis James Child.
0 occurrences of England's black tribunal
[Clear Hits]

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0 occurrences of England's black tribunal
[Clear Hits]

The Clerk's Twa Sons o Owsenford

THE WIFE OF USHER'S WELL—B

[_]

Kinloch MSS, V, 403, stanzas 18-23. In the handwriting of James Chambers, as sung to his maternal grandmother, Janct Grieve, seventy years before, by an old woman, a Miss Ann Gray, of the Neidpath Castle, Peeblesshire: January 1, 1829.

1

The hallow days o Yule are come,
The nights are lang an dark,
An in an cam her ain twa sons,
Wi their hats made o the bark.

2

‘O eat an drink, my merry men a',
The better shall ye fare,
For my twa sons the are come hame
To me for evermair.’

3

She has gaen an made their bed,
An she's made it saft an fine,
An she's happit them wi her gay mantel,
Because they were her ain.

4

O the young cock crew i the merry Linkem,
An the wild fowl chirpd for day;
The aulder to the younger did say,
Dear brother, we maun away.

5

‘Lie still, lie still a little wee while,
Lie still but if we may;
For gin my mother miss us away
She'll gae mad or it be day.’

6

O it's they've taen up their mother's mantel,
An they've hangd it on the pin:
‘O lang may ye hing, my mother's mantel,
Or ye hap us again!’