91, 101. There are.

[B].

"I have heard the 'Broom blooms bonnie' sung by our poor old nursery-maid as often as I have teeth in my head, but after cudgelling my memory I can make no more than the following stanzas." Scott, Sharpe's Ballad Book, 1880, p. 159.

Scott makes Effie Deans, in The Heart of Mid-Lothian, vol. I, ch. 10, sing this stanza, probably of his own making:

The elfin knight sat on the brae,
The broom grows bonny, the broom grows fair
And by there came lilting a lady so gay.
And we daurna gang down to the broom nae mair


[17]
HIND HORN

[A]. 'Hindhorn,' Motherwell's MS., p. 106.

[B]. 'Young Hyndhorn,' Motherwell's MS., p. 418.

[C]. a. 'Young Hyn Horn,' Motherwell's Note-Book, p. 42. b. Motherwell's MS., p. 413.