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. 
expand sectionVI. 
expand sectionVII. 
expand sectionVIII. 
collapse sectionIX. 
expand section266. 
expand section267. 
expand section268. 
expand section269. 
expand section270. 
expand section271. 
expand section272. 
expand section273. 
expand section274. 
expand section275. 
expand section276. 
expand section277. 
expand section278. 
expand section279. 
expand section280. 
expand section281. 
expand section282. 
expand section283. 
expand section284. 
expand section285. 
expand section286. 
expand section287. 
expand section288. 
expand section289. 
expand section290. 
expand section291. 
expand section292. 
expand section293. 
expand section294. 
expand section295. 
expand section296. 
collapse section297. 
  
expand section298. 
expand section299. 
expand section300. 
expand section301. 
expand section302. 
expand section303. 
expand section304. 
expand section305. 

Moss Groves

LITTLE MUSGRAVE AND LADY BARNARD—O

[_]

Taken down in 1891 by Mr John Sampson, Liverpool, from Philip Murray, an old tinker, who learned the ballad in his boyhood from an old gypsy named Amos Rice.

1

There was four-and-twenty ladies
Assembled at a ball,
And who being there but the king's wife,
The fairest of them all.

2

She put her eye on the Moss Groves,
Moss Groves put his eye upon she:
‘How would you like, my little Moss Groves,
One night to tarry with me?’

3

‘To sleep one night with you, fair lady,
It would cause a wonderful sight;
For I know by the ring upon your hand
You are the king's wife.’

4

‘If I am the king's wife,
I mean him to beguile;
For he has gone on a long distance,
And won't be back for a while.’

5

Up spoke his brother,
An angry man was he;
‘Another night I'll not stop in the castle
Till my brother I'll go see.’

6

When he come to his brother,
He was in a hell of a fright:
‘Get up, get up, brother dear!
There's a man in bed with your wife.’

7

‘If it's true you tell unto me,
A man I'll make of thee;
If it's a lie you tell unto me,
It's slain thou shalt be.’

8

When he came to his hall,
The bells begun to ring,
And all the birds upon the bush
They begun to sing.

9

‘How do you like my covering-cloths?
And how do you like my sheets?
How do you like my lady fair,
All night in her arms to sleep?’

10

‘Your covering-cloths I like right well,
Far better than your sheets;
Far better than all your lady fair,
All night in her arms to sleep.’

11

‘Get up, get up now, little Moss Groves,
Your clothing do put on;
It shall never be said in all England
That I drew on a naked man.

12

‘There is two swords all in the castle
That cost me very dear;
You take the best, and I the worst,
And let's decide it here.’

13

The very first blow Moss Groves he gave,
He wounded the king most sore;
The very first blow the king gave him,
Moss Groves he struck no more.

14

She lifted up his dying head
And kissed his cheek and chin:
‘I'd sooner have you now, little Moss Groves,
Than all their castles or kings.’