The English and Scottish Popular Ballads Edited by Francis James Child. |
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The English and Scottish Popular Ballads | ||
CAPTAIN CAR, OR, EDOM O GORDON—C
[_]
Communicated to Percy by Robert Lambe, Norham, October 4, 1766, being all that a servant of Lambe's could remember.
1
‘Luk ye to yon hie castel,Yon hie castel we see;
A woman's wit's sun oercum,
She'll gie up her house to me.’
2
She ca'd to her merry men a',‘Bring me my five pistols and my lang gun;’
The first shot the fair lady shot,
She shot seven of Gordon's men.
3
He turned round about his back,And sware he woud ha his desire,
And if that castel was built of gowd,
It should gang a' to fire.
4
Up then spak her doughter deere,She had nae mair than she:
433
The reek it skomfishes me.’
5
‘I d rather see you birnt,’ said she,‘And doun to ashes fa,
Ere I gie up my house to Adam of Gordon,
And to his merry men a'.
6
‘I've four and twenty kyeGaing upo the muir;
I'd gie em for a blast of wind,
The reek it blaws sae sour.’
7
Up then spak her little young son,Sits on the nourrice knee:
‘Gie up your house, now, mither deere,
The reek it skomfishes me.’
8
‘I've twenty four shipsA sailing on the sea;
I'll gie em for a blast of southern wind,
To blaw the reek frae thee.
9
‘I'd rather see you birnt,’ said she,‘And grund as sma as flour,
Eer I gie up my noble house,
To be Adam of Gordon's hure.’
The English and Scottish Popular Ballads | ||