From the Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, (iii. 175,) where it was first published. It was "taken from Mr. Herd's MSS., with several corrections from a shorter and more imperfect copy in the same volume, and one or two conjectural emendations in the arrangement of the stanzas."
That that part of the ballad which follows the death of the lovers is an independent story, is obvious both from internal evidence, and from the separate existence of those concluding stanzas in a variety of forms: as, Sweet William's Ghost, (Tea-Table Miscellany, ii. 142,) Sweet William and May Margaret, (Kinloch, p. 241,) William and Marjorie, (Motherwell, p. 186.) Of this second part, Motherwell observes, that it is often made the tail-piece to other ballads where a deceased lover appears to his mistress. The two were, however, combined by Sir Walter Scott, and the present Editor has contented himself with indicating distinctly the close of the proper story.
An inferior copy of Clerk Saunders, published by Jamieson, is inserted in the Appendix, for the sake of
a few valuable stanzas. It resembles the Swedish ballad of The Cruel Brother, (Svenska Folk-Visor, iii. 107,) which, however, is much shorter. The edition of Buchan, (i. 160,) is entirely worthless. A North-Country version of the First Part is given by Kinloch, Ancient Scottish Ballads, 233.
PART FIRST.
Clerk Saunders and may Margaret,
Walked ower yon garden green;
And sad and heavy was the love
That fell thir twa between.
"A bed, a bed," Clerk Saunders said,5
"A bed for you and me!"—
"Fye na, fye na," said may Margaret,
"Till anes we married be;
"For in may come my seven bauld brothers,
Wi' torches burning bright;10
They'll say—'We hae but ae sister,
And behold she's wi' a knight!'"—
"Then take the sword from my scabbard,
And slowly lift the pin;
And you may swear, and safe your aith,15
Ye never let Clerk Saunders in.
"And take a napkin in your hand,
And tie up baith your bonny een;