The English and Scottish Popular Ballads Edited by Francis James Child. |
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The English and Scottish Popular Ballads | ||
THE CRUEL MOTHER—Q
[_]
Shropshire Folk-Lore, edited by Charlotte Sophia Burne, 1883-86, p. 540; “sung by Eliza Wharton and brothers, children of gipsies, habitually travelling in North Shropshire and Staffordshire, 13th July, 1885.”
1
There was a lady, a lady of York,Ri fol i diddle i gee wo
She fell a-courting in her own father's park.
Down by the greenwood side, O
2
She leaned her back against the stile,There she had two pretty babes born.
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And she had nothing to lap 'em in,But she had a penknife sharp and keen.
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[OMITTED]There she stabbed them right through the heart.
5
She wiped the penknife in the sludge;The more she wiped it, the more the blood showed.
6
As she was walking in her own father's park,She saw two pretty babes playing with a ball.
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‘Pretty babes, pretty babes, if you were mine,I'd dress you up in silks so fine.’
8
‘Dear mother, dear mother, [when we were thine,]You dressed us not in silks so fine.
9
‘Here we go to the heavens so high,You'll go to bad when you do die.’
The English and Scottish Popular Ballads | ||