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The English and Scottish Popular Ballads/Part 9

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4410967The English and Scottish Popular Ballads — Part 91894Francis James Child

The
English and Scottish
Popular Ballads


Edited by
Francis James Child


Part IX


Houghton Mifflin Company Logo


Boston
Houghton, Mifflin and Company
New York: 11 East Seventeenth Street

The Riverside Press, Cambridge
London: Henry Stevens & Son, 39 Great Russell Street, W. C.

One Thousand Copies Printed.

No. 233


Copyright, 1894, by F. J. Child.


The Riverside Press, Cambridge, Mass., U. S. A.
Electrotyped and printed by H. O. Houghton and Company.

Contents
266. John Thomson and the Turk 1
267. The Heir of Linne 11
268. The Twa Knights 21
269. Lady Diamond 29
270. The Earl of Mar's Daughter 38
271. The Lord of Lorn and the False Steward 42
272. The Suffolk Miracle 58
273. King Edward the Fourth and a Tanner of Tamworth 67
274. Our Goodman 88
275. Get up and bar the Door 96
276. The Friar in the Well 100
277. The Wife Wrapt in Wether's Skin 104
278. The Farmer's Curst Wife 107
279. The Jolly Beggar 109
280. The Beggar-Laddie 116
281. The Keach i the Creel 121
282. Jock the Leg and the Merry Merchant 126
283. The Crafty Farmer 128
284. John Dory 131
285. The George Aloe and the Sweepstake 133
286. The Sweet Trinity (The Golden Vanity) 135
287. Captain Ward and the Rainbow 143
288. The Young Earl of Essex's Victory over the Emperor of Germany 145
289. The Mermaid 148
290. The Wylie Wife of the Hie Toun Hie 153
291. Child Owlet 156
292. The West-Country Damosel's Complaint 157
293. John of Hazelgreen 159
294. Dugall Quin 165
295. The Brown Girl 166
296. Walter Lesly 168
297. Earl Rothes 170
298. Young Peggy 171
299. Trooper and Maid 172
300. Blancheflour and Jellyflorice 175
301. The Queen of Scotland 176
302. Young Bearwell 178
303. The Holy Nunnery 179
304. Young Ronald 181
305. The Outlaw Murray 185
Fragments 201
Additions and Corrections 205



The delay of the publication of this Ninth Part of the English and Scottish Ballads has been occasioned partly by disturbances of health, but principally by the necessity of waiting for texts. It was notorious that there was a considerable number of ballads among the papers of Charles Kirkpatrick Sharpe, and it was an important object to get possession of these, the only one of the older collections (with a slight exception) which I had not had in my hands. An unexpected opportunity occurred upon the sale of Sharpe's manuscripts last year. All the ballads, including, besides loose sheets, several sets of pieces, were secured by Mr Macmath, and turned over to me (mostly in transcripts made by his own hand) with that entire devotion to the interests of this undertaking which I have had so frequent occasion to signalize. A particularly valuable acquisition was the "old lady's complete set of ballads," mentioned by Scott in his correspondence with Sharpe, which was the original of most of the pieces in the Skene MS.

This Ninth Part completes the collection of English and Scottish ballads to the extent of my knowledge of sources, saving that William Tytler's Brown-MS. has not been recovered. Copies, from Mrs Brown's recitation, of all the pieces in this MS. are, however, elsewhere to be found, excepting in a single instance, and that of a ballad which is probably a variety of one or another here given in several forms (No 99 or No 158).

I have to thank Mr Macmath once more for his energetic and untiring co-operation; the Rev. William Findlay, of Sabine, for permission to make use of his ballad-gatherings; the Rev. S. Baring-Gould, Mr P. Z. Round, Mr William Walker, and Mr R. Brinley Johnson, for texts; Professor Wollner, of Leipzig, for the most liberal assistance in Slavic matters; Mr Kaarle Krohn, of the University of Helsingfors, for a minute and comprehensive study of the Esthonian and Finnish forms of No 95; Dr Axel Olrik for Scandinavian texts and information relating thereto; Professor Kittredge for notes; and Mr R. B. Armstrong, of Edinburgh, Dr Åke W:son Munthe, of Upsala, Miss M. H. Mason, of London, Mr Alfred Rogers, of the Library of the University of Cambridge, Mr H. L. Koopman, late of Harvard College, and Mrs Maria Ellery MacKaye, for kind help of various descriptions.

It is intended that Part X (completing the work) shall contain a list of sources, a full and careful glossary, an index of titles and matters and other indexes, and a general preface.

F. J. Child.

April, 1894.