CONTENTS OF VOLUME FIRST.

Page
[PREFACE]vii
[List of Collections of Ballads and Songs]xiii
BOOK I.
1. [The Boy and the Mantle]3
2. [The Horn of King Arthur]17
3. [The Marriage of Sir Gawaine]28
4. [King Arthur's Death]40
5. [The Legend of King Arthur]50
6. [Sir Lancelot du Lake]55
7. [The Legend of Sir Guy]61
8. [St. George and the Dragon]69
9. [The Seven Champions of Christendom]83
10.a[Thomas of Ersseldoune]95
10.b[Thomas the Rhymer]109
11. [The Young Tamlane]114
12. [The Wee Wee Man]126
13. [The Elfin Knight]128
14.a[The Broomfield Hill]131
14.b[Lord John]134
15.a[Kempion]137
15.b[Kemp Owyne]143
16. [King Henry]147
17.a[Cospatrick]152
17.b[Bothwell]158
18. [Willie's Ladye]162
19. [Alison Gross]168
20. [The Earl of Mar's Daughter]171
21.a[Young Akin]179
21.b[Young Hastings the Groom]189
22. [Clerk Colvill, or, The Mermaid]192
23.a[Lady Isabel and the Elf-Knight]195
23.b[The Water O'Wearie's Well]198
24.a[The Dæmon Lover]201
24.b[James Herries]205
25. [The Knight's Ghost]210
26. [The Wife of Usher's Well]213
27. [The Suffolk Miracle]217
28. [Sir Roland]223
APPENDIX.
[ Fragment of the Ballad of King Arthur and the King of Cornwall]231
[Fragment of Child Rowland and Burd Ellen]245
[Rosmer Hafmand, or, The Merman Rosmer]253
[Tam-a-Line]258
[Tom Linn]267
[Burd Ellen and Young Tamlane]271
[Als Y yod on ay Mounday]273
[The Elphin Knight]277
[The Laidley Worm of Spindlestonheugh]281
[Lord Dingwall]288
[Fragment of Hynde Etin]294
[Sir Oluf and the Elf-King's Daughter]298
[Fragment of the Dæmon Lover]302
[Constantine and Arete]304
[Translation of the Same]307
[The Hawthorn Tree]311
[St. Stephen and Herod]315
[GLOSSARY]319

PREFACE.

These volumes have been compiled from the numerous collections of Ballads printed since the beginning of the last century. They contain all but two or three of the ancient ballads of England and Scotland, and nearly all those ballads which, in either country, have been gathered from oral tradition,—whether ancient or not. Widely different from the true popular ballads, the spontaneous products of nature, are the works of the professional ballad-maker, which make up the bulk of Garlands and Broadsides. These, though sometimes not without grace, more frequently not lacking in humor, belong to artificial literature,—of course to an humble department.[1] As many

ballads of this second class have been admitted as it was thought might be wished for, perhaps I should say tolerated, by the "benevolent reader." No words could express the dulness and inutility of a collection which should embrace all the Roxburghe and Pepys broadsides—a scope with which this publication was most undeservedly credited by an English journal. But while the broadside ballads have been and must have been gleaned, the popular ballads demand much more liberal treatment. Many of the older ones are mutilated, many more are miserably corrupted, but as long as any traces of their originals are left, they are worthy of attention and have received it. When a ballad is extant in a variety of forms, all the most important versions are given.—Less than this would have seemed insufficient for a collection intended as a complement to an extensive series of the British Poets. To meet the objections of readers for pleasure, all those pieces which are wanting in general interest are in each volume inserted in an appendix.

The ballads are grouped in eight Books, nearly corresponding to the division of volumes. The arrangement in the several Books may be called chronological, by which is meant, an arrangement