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The English and Scottish Popular Ballads

Edited by Francis James Child.

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Barbara Allan

BONNY BARBARA ALLAN—C

[_]

Motherwell's MS., p. 288; from Mrs Duff, Kilbirnie, February 9, 1825.

1

It fell about the Lammas time,
When the woods grow green and yellow,
There came a wooer out of the West
A wooing to Barbara Allan.

2

‘It is not for your bonny face,
Nor for your beauty bonny,
But it is all for your tocher good
I come so far about ye.’

3

‘If it be not for my comely face,
Nor for my beauty bonnie,
My tocher good ye'll never get paid
Down on the board before ye.’

4

‘O will ye go to the Highland hills,
To see my white corn growing?
Or will ye go to the river-side,
To see my boats a rowing?’

5

O he's awa, and awa he's gone,
And death's within him dealing,
And it is all for the sake of her,
His bonnie Barbara Allan.

6

O he sent his man unto the house,
Where that she was a dwelling:
‘O you must come my master to see,
If you be Barbara Allan.’

7

So slowly aye as she put on,
And so stoutly as she gaed till him,
And so slowly as she could say,
‘I think, young man, you're lying.’

8

‘O I am lying in my bed,
And death within me dwelling;
And it is all for the love of thee,
My bonny Barbara Allan.’

9

She was not ae mile frae the town,
Till she heard the dead-bell ringing:
‘Och hone, oh hone, he's dead and gone,
For the love of Barbara Allan!’