The Jolly Beggar (1840)/The Jolly Beggar

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
For other versions of this work, see The Jolly Beggar (Song).
The Jolly Beggar (1840)
The Jolly Beggar
3216130The Jolly Beggar — The Jolly Beggar1840

THE JOLLY BEGGAR.


There was a jolly beggar,
And a-begging he had been,
With his fal de dal lal la,
And he took up his quarters
In a house in Aberdeen,
With his toran oran an de odi.

The beggar wadna lie in barn,
Nor yet wad he in byre,
With his, &c.
But he would lie into the ha',
Or beyond the kitchen fire,
With his, &c.

The beggar's bed was well made
With clean hay and straw.
With his, &c.
And beyond the kitchen fire
There the jolly beggar lay,
With his, &c.

The lassie then she did get up
To bar the kitchen door,
With her, &c.
And there she met the jolly beggar
Standing naked on the floor,
With his, &c.

He gript the lassie by the middle jimp,
Laid her against the wa'.
With his, &c.
O kind sir, she said, be civil,
For you will waken my dada.
With your, &c.

He never minded what she said,
But carried on his stroke,
With his, &c.
Till he got his job done,
Then he began to joke,
With his, &c.

Have you got ony dogs about the house,
Or ony cats ava,
With his, &c.
For I’m fear'd they'll cut my meal pocks,
Throw them against the wa',
With a, &c.

O deil tak your meal pocks,
My maidenhead's awa,
With your, &c.

The lassie she got up again,
Three hours before 'twas day,
With a, &c.
For to gie the beggar hansel
Before he went awa,
With his, &c.

She went into the cellar
To draw a pot of ale,
With a, &c.
And the beggar follow'd after,
And did the joke again,
With his, &c.

He laid her on the ringle tree,
And gave her kisses three,
With his, &c.
And gave her twenty guineas
To pay the nurse's fee,
With his, &c.

Had you been an honest lass,
As I took you to be,
With a, &c.
You might have rode in your carriage,
And gone along with me,
With my, &c.

This beggar he took a horn,
And blew it wondrous shrill,
With his, &c.
And four-and-twenty belted knights
Came riding o'er the hill,
With his, &c.

Now if you are afraid
That you should miscall your child,
With his, &c.
You may call him for the daddy o't,
The great Duke of Argyle,
With his, &c.