The English and Scottish Popular Ballads Edited by Francis James Child. |
I. |
1. |
2. |
3. |
4. |
5. |
6. |
7. |
8. |
9. |
10. |
11. |
12. |
13. |
14. |
15. |
16. |
17. |
18. |
19. |
20. |
21. |
22. |
23. |
24. |
25. |
26. |
27. |
28. |
II. |
29. |
30. |
31. |
32. |
33. |
34. |
35. |
36. |
37. |
38. |
39. |
40. |
41. |
42. |
43. |
44. |
45. |
46. |
47. |
48. |
49. |
50. |
51. |
52. |
53. |
III. |
54. |
55. |
56. |
57. |
58. |
59. |
60. |
61. |
62. |
63. |
64. |
65. |
66. |
67. |
68. |
69. |
70. |
71. |
72. |
73. |
74. |
75. |
76. |
77. |
78. |
79. |
80. |
81. |
82. |
IV. |
83. |
84. |
85. |
86. |
87. |
88. |
89. |
90. |
91. |
92. |
93. |
94. |
95. |
96. |
97. |
98. |
99. |
100. |
101. |
102. |
103. |
104. |
105. |
106. |
107. |
108. |
109. |
110. |
111. |
112. |
113. |
V. |
114. |
115. |
116. |
117. |
118. |
119. |
120. |
121. |
122. |
123. |
124. |
125. |
126. |
127. |
128. |
129. |
130. |
131. |
132. |
133. |
134. |
135. |
136. |
137. |
138. |
139. |
140. |
141. |
142. |
143. |
144. |
145. |
146. |
147. |
148. |
149. |
150. |
151. |
152. |
153. |
154. |
155. |
SIR HUGH, OR, THE JEW'S DAUGHTER—G |
VI. |
156. |
157. |
158. |
159. |
160. |
161. |
162. |
163. |
164. |
165. |
166. |
167. |
168. |
169. |
170. |
171. |
172. |
173. |
174. |
175. |
176. |
177. |
178. |
179. |
180. |
181. |
182. |
183. |
184. |
185. |
186. |
187. |
188. |
VII. |
189. |
190. |
191. |
192. |
193. |
194. |
195. |
196. |
197. |
198. |
199. |
200. |
201. |
202. |
203. |
204. |
205. |
206. |
207. |
208. |
209. |
210. |
211. |
212. |
213. |
214. |
215. |
216. |
217. |
218. |
219. |
220. |
221. |
222. |
223. |
224. |
225. |
VIII. |
226. |
227. |
228. |
229. |
230. |
231. |
232. |
233. |
234. |
235. |
236. |
237. |
238. |
239. |
240. |
241. |
242. |
243. |
244. |
245. |
246. |
247. |
248. |
249. |
250. |
251. |
252. |
253. |
254. |
255. |
256. |
257. |
258. |
259. |
260. |
261. |
262. |
263. |
264. |
265. |
IX. |
266. |
267. |
268. |
269. |
270. |
271. |
272. |
273. |
274. |
275. |
276. |
277. |
278. |
279. |
280. |
281. |
282. |
283. |
284. |
285. |
286. |
287. |
288. |
289. |
290. |
291. |
292. |
293. |
294. |
295. |
296. |
297. |
298. |
299. |
300. |
301. |
302. |
303. |
304. |
305. |
The English and Scottish Popular Ballads | ||
SIR HUGH, OR, THE JEW'S DAUGHTER—G
[_]
a. Written down by Mrs Dulany, January 14, 1885, from the recitation of her mother, Mrs Nourse, aged above ninety, as learned when a child, in Philadelphia. b. From the same source, furnished several years earlier by Miss Perine, of Baltimore.
1
It rains, it rains in old Scotland,And down the rain does fa,
And all the boys in our town
Are out a playing at ba.
2
‘You toss your balls too high, my boys,You toss your balls too low;
You'll toss them into the Jew's garden,
Wherein you darst not go.’
3
Then out came one of the Jew's daughters,All dressed in red and green:
‘Come in, come in, my pretty little boy,
And get your ball again.’
4
‘I winna come in, and I canna come in,Without my playmates all,
And without the will of my mother dear,
Which would cause my heart's blood to fall.’
5
She shewed him an apple as green as grass,She shewed him a gay gold ring,
She shewed him a cherry as red as blood,
Which enticed the little boy in.
6
She took him by the lily-white hand,And led him into the hall,
And laid him on a dresser-board,
And that was the worst of all.
7
She laid the Bible at his head,The Prayer-Book at his feet,
And with a penknife small
She stuck him like a sheep.
8
Six pretty maids took him by the head,And six took him by the feet,
And threw him into a deep draw-well,
That was eighteen fathoms deep.
9
‘The lead is wondrous heavy, mother,The well is wondrous deep,
A keen pen-knife sticks in my heart,
And nae word more can I speak.’
The English and Scottish Popular Ballads | ||