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The English and Scottish Popular Ballads

Edited by Francis James Child.

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THE MAID FREED FROM THE GALLOWS—J

[_]

Communicated by Dr George Birkbeck Hill, May 10, 1890, as learned forty years before from a schoolfellow, who came from the north of Somersetshire and sang it in the dialect of that region. Given from memory.

1

‘Hold up, hold up your hands so high!
Hold up your hands so high!
For I think I see my own father
Coming over yonder stile to me.

2

‘Oh father, have you got any gold for me?
Any money for to pay me free?
To keep my body from the cold clay ground,
And my neck from the gallows-tree?’

3

‘Oh no, I've got no gold for thee,
No money for to pay thee free,
For I've come to see thee hangd this day,
And hangëd thou shalt be.’

4

‘Oh the briers, prickly briers,
Come prick my heart so sore;
If ever I get from the gallows-tree,
I'll never get there any more.’
[_]

[“The same verses are repeated, with mother, brother, and sister substituted for father. At last the sweet-heart comes. The two first verses are the same, and the third and fourth as follows.”]

5

‘Oh yes, I've got some gold for thee,
Some money for to pay thee free;
I'll save thy body from the cold clay ground,
And thy neck from the gallows-tree.’

6

‘Oh the briers, prickly briers,
Don't prick my heart any more;
For now I've got from the gallows-tree
I'll never get there any more.’