English Poetry I: From Chaucer to Gray.
The Harvard Classics. 1909–14.
Traditional Ballads
3. The Douglas Tragedy
“R
“And put on your armour so bright,
Was married to a lord under night.
And put on your armour so bright,
And take better care of your youngest sister.
For your eldest’s awa the last night.”
And himself on a dapple grey,
With a bugelet horn hung down by his side,
And lightly they rode away.
To see what he could see,
And there he spy’d her seven brethren bold,
Come riding over the lee.
“And hold my steed in your hand,
Until that against your seven brethren bold,
And your father I mak a stand.”
And never shed one tear,
Until that she saw her seven brethren fa,
And her father hard fighting, who lovd her so dear.
“For your strokes they are wondrous sair;
True lovers I can get many a ane,
But a father I can never get mair.”
It was o the holland sae fine,
And aye she dighted her father’s bloody wounds,
That were redder than the wine.
“O whether will ye gang or bide?”
“For ye have left me no other guide.”
And himself on a dapple grey,
With a bugelet horn hung down by his side,
And slowly they baith rade away.
And a’ by the light of the moon,
Until they came to yon wan water,
And there they lighted down.
Of the spring that ran sae clear,
And down the stream ran his gude heart’s blood,
And sair she gan to fear.
“For I fear that you are slain;”
“’Tis naething but the shadow of my scarlet cloak,
That shines in the water sae plain.”
And a’ by the light of the moon,
Until they cam to his mother’s ha door,
And there they lighted down.
“Get up, and let me in!
Get up, get up, lady mother,” he says,
“For this night my fair lady I’ve win.
“O make it braid and deep,
And lay lady Margret close at my back,
And the sounder I will sleep.”
Lady Margret lang ere day,
And all true lovers that go thegither,
May they have mair luck than they!
Lady Margret in Mary’s quire;
Out o the lady’s grave grew a bonny red rose,
And out o the knight’s a brier.
And fain they wad be near;
And a’ the warld might ken right weel
They were twa lovers dear.
And wow but he was rough!
For he pulld up the bonny brier,
And Flang’t in St. Mary’s Loch.