University of Virginia Library

Search this document 
The English and Scottish Popular Ballads

Edited by Francis James Child.

expand sectionI. 
expand sectionII. 
expand sectionIII. 
collapse sectionIV. 
expand section83. 
expand section84. 
expand section85. 
expand section86. 
expand section87. 
expand section88. 
expand section89. 
expand section90. 
expand section91. 
expand section92. 
expand section93. 
expand section94. 
expand section95. 
expand section96. 
expand section97. 
expand section98. 
expand section99. 
expand section100. 
expand section101. 
expand section102. 
expand section103. 
expand section104. 
expand section105. 
expand section106. 
expand section107. 
expand section108. 
expand section109. 
collapse section110. 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
The Knight and the Shepherd's Daughter
  
  
  
  
  
expand section111. 
expand section112. 
expand section113. 
expand sectionV. 
expand sectionVI. 
expand sectionVII. 
expand sectionVIII. 
expand sectionIX. 

The Knight and the Shepherd's Daughter

THE KNIGHT AND SHEPHERD'S DAUGHTER—K

[_]

Motherwell's MS., p. 226. From the recitation of Widow McCormick, Westbrae, Paisley, 1825; learned of an old woman in Dumbarton, thirty or forty years before.

1

There was a shepherd's daughter,
Kept sheep on yonder hill;
O by comes a courtier,
And fain wud hae his will.
We'll go no more a roving,
A roving in the night,
We'll go no more a roving,
Let the moon shine neer so bright.
O we'll go [no] more a roving.

2

He took her by the middle so small,
And by the grass-green sleeve;
He bended her body unto the ground,
And of her parents he askd no leave.

3

‘Now since you've got your will o me,
And brought my fair bodie to shame,
All the request I ask of you is,
Pray tell me what's your name.’

4

‘O some do call me Jack,’ he says,
‘And some do call me John,
But when I am in the king's court,
My name is Sweet William.’

5

She took her petticoats by the band,
Her mantle oer her arm,
And she's awa to the king's court,
As fast as she could run.

6

When she came to the king's court,
She tinkled at the ring;
Who was so ready as the king himsel
To let this fair maid in!

476

7

And when she came before the king,
She kneeled low by his knee;
‘What's this? what's this, fair maid,’ he says,
‘What's this you ask of me?’

8

[OMITTED]
[OMITTED]
‘There is a knight into your court
This day has robbed me.’

9

‘If he robbed you of your gold,’ he said,
‘It's hanged he must be;
If he's robbed you of your maidenhead,
His body I grant to thee.’

10

‘He's not robbed me of my gold,’ she said,
‘Nor of my white money,
But he's robbed me of my maidenhead,
The flower of my bodie.’

11

He's called down his merry men all,
By one, by two, by three;
John used to be the foremost man,
But the hindmost man was he.

12

He took a long purse of gold
And wrapped it in a glove:
‘Here's to thee, my dearest dear,
Go seek some other love.’

13

‘I'll have none of your gold,’ she says,
‘Nor any of your white money,
But I'll just have your own bodie
The king has granted to me.’

14

‘I wish I was drinking the well-water
When I drank of the ale,
Before a shepherd's daughter
Would tell me such a tale.’

15

He got her on a milk-white steed,
Himself upon a grey, Then on a day [OMITTED]
This couple rode away.

16

It's when they were coming by the nettlebush,
She said, So well may you grow!
For many a day my mammy and me
Hae pickled at your pow.

17

When they cam by the mill-door, she said,
So well may you clatter!
For many a day my mammy and me
Pickled at your happer.

18

When they came to the king's court,
They reckoned up their kin;
She was a king's one dochter,
And he but a blacksmith's son.