The English and Scottish Popular Ballads Edited by Francis James Child. |
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The English and Scottish Popular Ballads | ||
Johnie of Cockerslee
JOHNIE COCK—D
1
Up Johnie raise in a May morning,Calld for water to wash his hands,
And he has calld for his gude gray hunds,
That lay bund in iron bands. bands
That lay bund in iron bands
2
‘Ye'll busk, ye'll busk my noble dogs,Ye'll busk and mak them boun,
For I'm going to the Braidscaur hill,
To ding the dun deer doun.’
3
Whan Johnie's mither gat word o that,On the very bed she lay,
Says, Johnie, for my malison,
I pray ye at hame to stay.
4
Your meat sall be of the very, very best,Your drink sall be the same,
And ye will win your mither's benison,
Gin ye wad stay at hame.
5
But Johnie has cast aff the black velvet,And put on the Lincoln twine,
And he is on to gude greenwud,
As fast as he could gang.
6
His mither's counsel he wad na tak,He's aff, and left the toun,
He's aff unto the Braidscaur hill,
To ding the dun deer doun.
7
Johnie lookit east, and Johnie lookit west,And he lookit aneath the sun,
And there he spied the dun deer sleeping,
Aneath a buss o whun.
8
Johnie shot, and the dun deer lap,And he's scaithed him in the side,
And atween the water and the wud
He laid the dun deer's pride.
9
They ate sae meikle o the venison,And drank sae meikle o the blude,
That Johnie and his twa gray hunds
Fell asleep in yonder wud.
10
By ther cam a silly auld man,And a silly auld man was he,
And he's aff to the proud foresters,
As fast as he could dree.
6
11
‘What news, what news, my silly auld man?What news? come tell to me:’
‘I heard na news, I speird na news
But what my een did see.
12
‘As I cam in by Braidisbanks,And doun amang the whuns,
The bonniest youngster eer I saw
Lay sleepin amang his hunds.
13
‘His cheeks war like the roses red,His neck was like the snaw;
His sark was o the holland fine,
And his jerkin lac'd fu braw.’
14
Up bespak the first forester,The first forester of a':
O this is Johnie o Cockerslee;
Come draw, lads, we maun draw.
15
Up bespak the niest forester,The niest forester of a':
An this be Johnie o Cockerslee,
To him we winna draw.
16
The first shot that they did shoot,They woundit him on the bree;
Up bespak the uncle's son,
‘The niest will gar him die.’
17
The second shot that eer they shot,It scaithd him near the heart;
‘I only wauken,’ Johnie cried,
‘Whan first I find the smart.
18
‘Stand stout, stand stout, my noble dogs,Stand stout, and dinna flee;
Stand fast, stand fast, my gude gray hunds,
And we will gar them die.’
19
He has killed six o the proud foresters,And wounded the seventh sair:
He laid his leg out owre his steed,
Says, I will kill na mair.
20
‘Oh wae befa thee, silly auld man,An ill death may thee dee!
Upon thy head be a' this blude,
For mine, I ween, is free.’
The English and Scottish Popular Ballads | ||