FOOTNOTES:
[1308] biggit = built.
[1309] theekit = thatched.
[1310] haugh = water-mead.
[1311] biek = bask.
[1312] sin = sun.
[INDEX OF FIRST LINES]
The numbers are ballad numbers, not page numbers.
- A fair maid sat in her bower door [72]
- A ship I have got in the North Country [132]
- A wonder stranger ne’er was known [175]
- About Yule when the wind blew cule [82]
- Adieu, madame, my mother dear [151]
- A’ the boys of merry Lincoln [79]
- All the trees they are so high [156]
- All under the leaves and the leaves of life [111]
- An ancient story I’ll tell you anon [173]
- An earthly nourrice sits and sings [31]
- Annan water’s wading deep [92]
- As I pass’d by a river side [102]
- As I sat under a sycamore tree [104]
- As I was a-walking mine alane [140]
- As I was cast in my first sleepe [59]
- As I was walking all alane [67]
- As I was walking mine alane [11]
- As it befel in midsummer-time [130]
- As it fell on a holy-day [133]
- As it fell on one holy-day [50]
- As it fell out on a long summer’s day [62]
- As it fell out one May morning [110]
- As it fell out upon a day [109]
- Be it right or wrong these men among [69]
- But how many months be in the year? [118]
- By Arthur’s Dale as late I went [74]
- Can I not sing but ‘Hoy’ [103]
- Childe Maurice hunted the Silver Wood [47]
- Childe Waters in his stable stood [46]
- Clerk Colven and his gay ladie [29]
- Clerk Saunders and may Margaret [27]
- Come, all you brave gallants, and listen a while [119]
- Come, gentlemen all, and listen a while [120]
- Come listen to me, yon gallants so free [121]
- Cospatrick has sent o’er the faem [5]
- Der lived a king inta da aste [15]
- Erlinton had a fair daughter [37]
- Ettrick Forest is a fair forest 84
- Fair Margret was a proud ladye [26]
- False Sir John a-wooing came [10]
- Foul fa’ the breast first treason bred in! [139]
- Four-and-twenty nobles rade to the King’s ha’ [85]
- Glasgerion was a King’s own son [40]
- God! let never soe old a man [53]
- God send the land deliverance [146]
- Gude Lord Scroope’s to the hunting gane [143]
- Hearken to me, gentlemen [41]
- Her mother died when she was young [13]
- Hie upon Hielands [96]
- Hit wes upon a Scere-thorsday [97]
- Hynd Horn’s bound, love, and Hynd Horn’s free [35]
- ‘I am as brown as brown can be [157]
- I have heard talk of bold Robin Hood [123]
- ‘I heard a cow low, a bonnie cow low [7]
- I herde a carpyng of a clerk [112]
- I was a lady of high renown [87]
- ‘I was but seven year auld [14]
- I wish I were where Helen lies [152]
- In Cawsand Bay lying, with the Blue Peter flying [168]
- In London was Young Beichan born [45]
- In Scarlet town, where I was born [158]
- In seventeen hundred and ninety-four [169]
- In somer, when the shawes be sheyne [117]
- In summer time, when leaves grow green [118]
- In summer time, when leaves grow green [124]
- In the third day of May [17]
- Inverey cam’ doun Deeside, whistlin’ and playin’ [149]
- It fell about the Lammas tide [127]
- It fell about the Martinmas [77]
- It fell about the Martinmas time [172]
- It fell about the Martinmas tyde [141]
- It fell on a day, and a bonnie simmer day [135]
- It fell upon a Wadensday [21]
- It’s Lamkin was a mason good [78]
- It’s narrow, narrow, mak your bed [42]
- It was a blind beggar, had long lost his sight [163]
- It was a knight in Scotland born [71]
- It was intill a pleasant time [25]
- It was the worthy Lord of Lorn 76
- Jesus, Lord mickle of might [3]
- Johnnie rose up in a May morning [136]
- Joseph was an old man [101]
- King Easter has courted her for her lands [70]
- Kinge Arthur lives in merry Carlisle [19]
- Lady Alice was sitting in her bower-window [154]
- Late at e’en, drinkin’ the wine [150]
- Let never a man a wooing wend [16]
- Lithe and listen, Gentlemen [115]
- Lord Bateman was a noble lord [164]
- Lord Ingram and Childe Vyet [51]
- Lord Lovel he stood at his castle-gate [155]
- Lord Thomas and Fair Annet [54]
- Lordings, listen, and hold you still [126]
- Lully, lulley! lully, lulley! [100]
- Marie Hamilton’s to the kirk gane [83]
- Mark this song, for it is true [108]
- May Margaret sits in her bower door [36]
- Mery it was in the grene foreste [114]
- ‘My love has built a bonny ship, and set her on the sea [160]
- My love he built me a bonny bower [153]
- My plaid awa’, my plaid awa’ [8]
- Now is Christëmas y-come [107]
- Now Liddesdale has lain lang in [142]
- Now Liddesdale has ridden a raid [138]
- Now list and lithe, you gentlemen [129]
- Now ponder well, you parents dear [174]
- O Alison Gross, that lives in yon tow’r [12]
- O Bessie Bell and Mary Gray [176]
- O bonny Baby Livingston [147]
- ‘O brent’s your brow, my Lady Elspat [86]
- O did ye ever hear o’ brave Earl Brand? [38]
- O have ye na heard o’ the fause Sakelde? [137]
- O heard ye na o’ the silly blind Harper [144]
- ‘O I forbid you, maidens a’ [2]
- O Jellon Grame sit in Silverwood [49]
- ‘O lady, rock never your young son young [30]
- O Rose the Red and White Lilly 55
- O the Ploughboy was a ploughing [167]
- ‘O well’s me o’ my gay goss-hawk [60]
- ‘O wha will shoe my bonny foot? [43]
- O wha would wish the wind to blau [48]
- ‘O where hae ye been, Lord Randal, my son? [66]
- ‘O where hae ye been, my long, long love [28]
- O Willie’s large o’ limb and lith [113]
- O wow for day! [50]
- Of a’ the maids o’ fair Scotland [91]
- Our King he kept a false steward [4]
- Prince Robert has wedded a gay ladye [58]
- ‘Rise up, rise up, now Lord Douglas,’ she says [39]
- Saies, ‘Come here, cuzen Gawaine so gay [18]
- Saint Stephen was a clerk [98]
- She lean’d her back unto a thorn [22]
- Sum speiks of lords, sum speiks of lairds [89]
- Sweet Willy’s taen him o’er the faem [6]
- The Angel Gabriel from God [106]
- The bonny heir, and the well faur’d heir [80]
- The Duke of Gordon had three daughters [94]
- The eighteenth of October [145]
- The first good joy our Mary had [105]
- The gardener stands in his bower door [159]
- The George-Aloe, and the Sweepstake, too [131]
- The king sits in Dunfermline town [75]
- The maid she went to the well to washe [99]
- The Percy out of Northumberland [128]
- The shepard upon a hill he sat [103]
- ‘The wind doth blow to-day, my love [34]
- The young lords o’ the north country [73]
- There are twelve months in all the year [122]
- There cam’ seven Egyptians on a day [148]
- ‘There is a feast in your father’s house [56]
- There lived a wife at Usher’s well [32]
- There was a knight and a lady bright [24]
- There was a may, and a weel-far’d may [88]
- There was a rich lord, and he lived in Forfar [20]
- There was a youth, and a well-belovèd youth [162]
- There were three ladies play’d at the ba’ [64]
- There were three ravens sat on a tree [68]
- There were three sisters fair and bright 9
- There were twa brethren in the North [63]
- There were twa sisters sat in a bour [23]
- There where three ladies live in a bower [57]
- This ae nighte, this ae nighte [33]
- This winter’s weather it waxeth cold [170]
- ‘Tom Pearse, Tom Pearse, lend me your grey mare [171]
- True Thomas lay on Huntlie bank [1]
- ‘Turn, Willie Macintosh [134]
- When captains couragious whom death could not daunte [165]
- When Robin Hood and Little John [125]
- When shaws beene sheene, and shradds full fayre [116]
- When we were silly sisters seven [81]
- ‘Why does your brand sae drop wi’ blude [65]
- Will you hear a Spanish lady [161]
- Willie stands in his stable door [90]
- ‘Willie, Willie, what makes you sae sad?’ [61]
- ‘Willy’s rare, and Willy’s fair [93]
- Ye Highlands and ye Lawlands [95]
- ‘Ye maun gang to your father, Janet [52]
- You beauteous ladies great and small [166]
- Young Bekie was as brave a knight [44]