J

‘Lady Margery,’ “Scotch Ballads, Materials for Border Minstrelsy,” No 71, MS. of Thomas Wilkie, p. 71, Abbotsford. “From the recitation of Janet Scott, Bowden, who sung a dysmal air, as she called it, to the words.”

This version resembles D. 12, 13, may be caught from ‘Lord Derwentwater:’ see No 208, E 8, 9, F 9, 10. Omens are not in place after the positive information given in 11.

1

Lady Margery was the king’s ae daughter,

But an the prince’s heir; O

She’s away to Strawberry Castle,

To learn some English lair. O

2

She had not been in Strawberry Castle

A twelvemonth and a day

Till she’s even as big wi child

As ever a lady could gae.

3

Her father’s to the cutting o the birks,

Her mother to the broom,

And a’ for to get a bundle o sticks

To burn that fair lady in.

4

‘O hold your hand now, father dear,

O hold a little while,

For if my true-love be yet alive

I’ll hear his bridle ring.

5

‘Where will I get a bonny boy,

That will win hoes and shoon,

That will run to Strawberry Castle

And tell my love to come?’

6

She’s called on her waiting-maid

To bring out bread and wine:

‘Now eat and drink, my bonny boy,

Ye’ll neer eat mair o mine.’

7

Away that bonny boy he’s gaen,

As fast as he could rin;

When he cam where grass grew green

Set down his feet and ran.

8

And when he cam where brigs were broken

He bent his bow and swam;

. . . . . . .

. . . . . . .

9

When he came to Strawberry Castle,

He lighted on the green;

Who was so ready as the noble lord

To rise and let the boy in!

10

‘What news? what news, my pretty page?

What tydings do ye bring?

Is my lady lighter yet

Of a daughter or a son?’

11

‘Bad news, bad news, my noble lord,

Bad tydings have I brung;

The fairest lady in a’ Scotland

This day for you does burn.’

12

He has mounted a stately steed

And he was bound to ride;

The silver buttons flew off his coat

And his nose began to bleed.

13

The second steed that lord mounted

Stumbled at a stone;

‘Alass! alass!’ he cried with grief,

‘My lady will be gone.’

14

When he came from Strawberry Castle

He lighted boots and a’;

He thought to have goten a kiss from her,

But her body fell in twa.

15

For the sake o Lady Margery

He’s cursed her father and mother,

For the sake o Lady Margery

He’s cursed her sister and brother.

16

And for the sake o Lady Margery

He’s cursed all her kin;

He cried, Scotland is the ae warst place

That ever my fit was in!

O, added in singing to the second and fourth lines of each stanza, is sometimes not written in the MS.

9 is written as the third and fourth lines of 8.

15 and 16 are written as one stanza of four long lines.