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The English and Scottish Popular Ballads

Edited by Francis James Child.

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Brown Robin

BROWN ROBIN—A

[_]

a. Jamieson-Brown MS., fol. 37. b. Abbotsford MS., “Scottish Songs.”

1

The king but an his nobles a'
[_]

bis


Sat birling at the wine;
[_]

bis


He would ha nane but his ae daughter
To wait on them at dine.

2

She's servd them butt, she's servd them ben,
Intill a gown of green,
But her ee was ay on Brown Robin,
That stood low under the rain.

3

She's doen her to her bigly bowr,
As fast as she coud gang,
An there she's drawn her shot-window,
An she's harped an she sang.

4

‘There sits a bird i my father's garden,
An O but she sings sweet!
I hope to live an see the day
Whan wi my love I'll meet.’

5

‘O gin that ye like me as well
As your tongue tells to me,
What hour o the night, my lady bright,
At your bowr sal I be?’

6

‘Whan my father an gay Gilbert
Are baith set at the wine,
O ready, ready I will be
To lat my true-love in.’

7

O she has birld her father's porter
Wi strong beer an wi wine,
Untill he was as beastly drunk
As ony wild-wood swine:
She's stown the keys o her father's yates
An latten her true-love in.

369

8

Whan night was gane, an day was come,
An the sun shone on their feet,
Then out it spake him Brown Robin,
I'll be discoverd yet.

9

Then out it spake that gay lady:
My love, ye need na doubt;
For wi ae wile I've got you in,
Wi anither I'll bring you out.

10

She's taen her to her father's cellar,
As fast as she can fare;
She's drawn a cup o the gude red wine,
Hung't low down by her gare;
An she met wi her father dear
Just coming down the stair.

11

‘I woud na gi that cup, daughter,
That ye hold i your han
For a' the wines in my cellar,
An gantrees whare the stan.’

12

‘O wae be to your wine, father,
That ever't came oer the sea;
'T'is pitten my head in sick a steer
I my bowr I canna be.’

13

‘Gang out, gang out, my daughter dear,
Gang out an tack the air;
Gang out an walk i the good green wood,
An a' your marys fair.’

14

Then out it spake the proud porter —
Our lady wishd him shame —
‘We'll send the marys to the wood,
But we'll keep our lady at hame.’

15

‘There's thirty marys i my bowr,
There's thirty o them an three;
But there's nae ane amo them a'
Kens what flowr gains for me.’

16

She's doen her to her bigly bowr,
As fast as she could gang,
An she has dresst him Brown Robin
Like ony bowr-woman.

17

The gown she pat upon her love
Was o the dainty green,
His hose was o the saft, saft silk,
His shoon o the cordwain fine.

18

She's pitten his bow in her bosom,
His arrow in her sleeve,
His sturdy bran her body next,
Because he was her love.

19

Then she is unto her bowr-door,
As fast as she coud gang;
But out it spake the proud porter —
Our lady wishd him shame —
‘We'll count our marys to the wood,
An we'll count them back again.’

20

The firsten mary she sent out
Was Brown Robin by name;
Then out it spake the king himsel,
‘This is a sturdy dame.’

21

O she went out in a May morning,
In a May morning so gay,
But she came never back again,
Her auld father to see.