The English and Scottish Popular Ballads Edited by Francis James Child. |
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The English and Scottish Popular Ballads | ||
The Queen of England
QUEEN ELEANOR'S CONFESSION—D
[_]
Aytoun's Ballads of Scotland, 2d edition, I, 196, from the recitation of a lady residing in Kirkcaldy; learned of her mother.
1
The queen of England she has fallen sick,Sore sick, and like to die;
And she has sent for twa French priests,
To bear her companie.
2
The King he has got word o this,And an angry man was he;
And he is on to the Earl-a-Marshall,
As fast as he can gae.
3
‘Now you'll put on a priest's robe,And I'll put on anither,
And we will on unto the Queen,
Like twa French priests thegither.’
4
‘No indeed!’ said the Earl-a-Marshall,‘That winna I do for thee,
Except ye swear by your sceptre and crown
Ye'll do me nae injurie.’
5
The King has sworn by his sceptre and crownHe'll do him nae injurie,
And they are on unto the Queen,
As fast as they can gae.
6
‘O, if that ye be twa French priests,Ye're welcome unto me;
But if ye be twa Scottish lords,
High hanged ye shall be.
7
‘The first sin that I did sin,And that to you I'll tell,
I sleeped wi the Earl-a-Marshall,
Beneath a silken bell.
8
‘And wasna that a sin, and a very great sin?And I pray ye pardon me;’
‘Amen, and amen!’ said the Earl-a-Marshall,
And a wearied man was he.
9
‘The neist sin that I did sin,And that to you I'll tell,
I keeped the poison seven years in my bosom,
To poison the King himsel.
262
10
‘And wasna that a sin, and a very great sin?And I pray ye pardon me;’
‘Amen, and amen!’ said the Earl-a-Marshall,
And a wearied man was he.
11
‘O see ye there my seven sons,A’ playing at the ba?
There's but ane o them the King's himsel,
And I like him warst of a'.
12
‘He's high-backed, and low-breasted,And he is bald withal;’
‘And by my deed,’ and says the King,
‘I like him best mysel!
13
‘O wae betide ye, Earl-a-Marshall,And an ill death may ye die!
For if I hadna sworn by my sceptre and crown,
High hanged ye should be.’
The English and Scottish Popular Ballads | ||