AND
WALY, WALY, GIN LOVE BE BONNY
The Text of the ballad is here given from Kinloch’s MSS., where it is in the handwriting of John Hill Burton when a youth. The text of the song Waly, waly, I take from Ramsay’s Tea-Table Miscellany. The song and the ballad have become inextricably confused, and the many variants of the former contain a greater or a smaller proportion of verses apparently taken from the latter.
The Story of the ballad as here told is nevertheless quite simple and straightforward. It is spoken in the first person by the daughter of the Earl of Mar. (She also says she is sister to the Duke of York, 7.4, a person often introduced into ballads.) Blacklaywood, the lady complains, has spoken calumniously of her to her lord, and she leaves him, saying farewell to her children, and taking her youngest son with her.
The ballad is historical in so far as that Lady Barbara Erskine, daughter of the Earl of Mar, was married in 1670 to James, second Marquis of Douglas, and was formally separated from him in 1681. Further, tradition puts the blame of the separation on William Lawrie, factor to the Marquis, often styled the laird of Blackwood (‘Blacklaywood,’ 2.3), from his wife’s family estate.
The non-historical points in the ballad are minor ones. The couple had only one child; and the lady’s father could not have come to fetch her away (9.2), as the Earl of Mar died in 1668, before his daughter’s wedding.
I have printed the song Waly, waly not because it can be considered a ballad, but simply because it is so closely interwoven with Jamie Douglas. Stanza 6 is reminiscent of the beautiful English quatrain beginning:
‘Westron wind, when will thou blow.’
See Chappell’s Popular Music of the Olden Time, i. 57.