lover fair?Not for the mother that me bare.
'I will not change my true lover?For friends, or for my father dear.'
'Now where are all my pages keen,?And where are all my serving men?
'My daughter must lie in the tower alway,?Where she shall never see the day.'
Seven long years are past and gone?And there has seen her never one.
At ending of the seventh year?Her father goes to visit her.
'My child, my child, how may you be?'?'O father, it fares ill with me.
'My feet are wasted in the mould,?The worms they gnaw my side so cold.'
'My child, change your love speedily?Or you must still in prison lie.'
''Tis better far the cold to dree?Than give my true love up for thee.'
THE MILK WHITE DOE.
It was a mother and a maid?That walked the woods among,?And still the maid went slow and sad,?And still the mother sung.
'What ails you, daughter Margaret??Why go you pale and wan??Is it for a cast of bitter love,?Or for a false leman?'
'It is not for a false lover?That I go sad to see;?But it is for a weary life?Beneath the greenwood tree.
'For ever in the good daylight?A maiden may I go,?But always on the ninth midnight?I change to a milk white doe.
'They hunt me through the green forest?With hounds and hunting men;?And ever it is my fair brother?That is so fierce and keen.'
'Good-morrow, mother.' 'Good-morrow, son;?Where are your hounds so good?'?Oh, they are hunting a white doe?Within the glad greenwood.
'And three times have they hunted her,?And thrice she's won away;?The fourth time that they follow her?That white doe they shall slay.'
Then out and spoke the forester,?As he came from the wood,?'Now never saw I maid's gold hair?Among the wild deer's blood.
'And I have hunted the wild deer?In east lands and in west;?And never saw I white doe yet?That had a maiden's breast.'
Then up and spake her fair brother,?Between the wine and bread,?'Behold, I had but one sister,?And I have been her dead.'
'But ye must bury my sweet sister?With a stone at her foot and her head,?And ye must cover her fair body?With the white roses and red.'
And I must out to the greenwood,?The roof shall never shelter me;?And I shall lie for seven long years?On the grass below the hawthorn tree.
A LADY OF HIGH DEGREE.
[I be pareld most of prise,?I ride after the wild fee.]
Will ye that I should sing?Of the love of a goodly thing,?Was no vilein's may??'Tis sung of a knight so free,?Under the olive tree,?Singing this lay.
Her weed was of samite fine,?Her mantle of white ermine,?Green silk her hose;?Her shoon with silver gay,?Her sandals flowers of May,?Laced small and close.
Her belt was of fresh spring buds,?Set with gold clasps and studs,?Fine linen her shift;?Her purse it was of love,?Her chain was the flower thereof,?And Love's gift.
Upon a mule she rode,?The selle was of brent gold,?The bits of silver made;?Three red rose trees there were?That overshadowed her,?For a sun shade.
She riding on a day,?Knights met her by the way,?They did her grace;?'Fair lady, whence be ye?'?'France it is my countrie,?I come of a high race.
'My sire is the nightingale,?That sings, making his wail,?In the wild wood, clear;?The mermaid is mother to me,?That sings in the salt sea,?In the ocean mere.'
'Ye come of a right good race,?And are born of a high place,?And of high degree;?Would to God that ye were?Given unto me, being fair,?My lady and love to be.'
LOST FOR A ROSE'S SAKE.
I laved my hands,?BY the water side;?With the willow leaves?My hands I dried.
The nightingale sung?On the bough of the tree;?Sing, sweet nightingale,?It is well with thee.
Thou hast heart's delight,?I have sad heart's sorrow?For a false false maid?That will wed to-morrow.
'Tis all for a rose,?That I gave her not,?And I would that it grew?In the garden plot.
And I would the rose-tree?Were still to set,?That my love Marie?Might love me yet.
BALLADS OF MODERN GREECE.
THE BRIGAND'S GRAVE.
The moon came up above the hill,?The sun went down the sea;?Go, maids, and fetch the well-water,?But, lad, come here to me.
Gird on my jack and my old sword,?For I have never a son;?And you must be the chief of all?When I am dead and gone.
But you must take my old broad sword,?And cut the green bough of the tree,?And strew the green boughs on the ground?To make a soft death bed for me.
And you must bring the holy priest?That I may sained be;?For I have lived a roving life?Fifty years under the greenwood tree.
And you shall make a grave for me,?And make it deep and wide;?That I may turn about and dream?With my old gun by my side.
And leave a window to the east,?And the swallows will bring the spring;?And all the merry month of May?The nightingales will sing.
THE SUDDEN BRIDAL.
It was a maid lay sick of love,?All for a leman fair;?And it was three of her bower-maidens?That came to comfort her.
The first
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