The English and Scottish Popular Ballads Edited by Francis James Child. |
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The English and Scottish Popular Ballads | ||
SIR HUGH, OR, THE JEW'S DAUGHTER—K
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Notes and Queries, First Series, IX, 320; taken down by S. P. Q. from the recitation of a nurse-maid in Shropshire about 1810. Salopian Shreds and Patches, July 21, 1875, in Miss Burne's Shropshire Folk-Lore, p. 539.
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It hails, it rains, in Merry-Cock land,It hails, it rains, both great and small,
And all the little children in Merry-Cock land
They have need to play at ball.
2
They tossd the ball so high,They tossd the ball so low,
mongst all the Jews' cattle,
And amongst the Jews below.
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Out came one of the Jew's daughters,Dressed all in green:
‘Come, my sweet Saluter,
And fetch the ball again.’
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‘I durst not come, I must not come,Unless all my little playfellows come along;
For if my mother sees me at the gate,
She'll cause my blood to fall.
5
‘She showd me an apple as green as grass,She showd me a gay gold ring;
She showd me a cherry as red as blood,
And so she entic'd me in.
6
‘She took me in the parlor,She took me in the kitchen,
And there I saw my own dear nurse,
A picking of a chicken.
7
‘She laid me down to sleep,With a Bible at my head and a Testament at my feet;
And if my playfellows come to quere for me,
Tell them I am asleep.’
The English and Scottish Popular Ballads | ||