National Ballad and Song/Volume 1

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
National Ballad and Song (1897)
edited by John S. Farmer
3964349National Ballad and Song1897

NATIONAL BALLAD AND SONG




Merry Songs and Ballads


PRIOR, TO THE YEAR A.D. 1800

EDITED BY

JOHN S. FARMER

VOLUME I

PRIVATELY PRINTED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY

MDCCCXCVII

INDEX


TO VOL. I


AUTHORS, TITLES, FIRST LINES, REFRAINS, AND SOURCES



Akeroyde (S.) 188
All Christians and Lay-Elders too” (Sir John Birkenhead, Bagford Ballads, iii. 57) 118
All in a greene meadowe” (Percy Folio MS., c. 1620–50) 82
All you that are disposed now to hear a merry jest” (Roxburgh Ballads, iii. 166) 89
Aminta one Night had occasion to Piss” (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1707) 202
And we’ll gang nae mair a roving, boys (Refrain) 5
Ane Pleasant Garland of Sweet Scented Flowers, (1835) 37, 275, 277, 279
As Damon late with Chloe sat” (S. Bolton, 1720) 228
As honest Jacob on a night” (b. 1796)>0) 257
As I lay musing all alone” (c. 1707) 189
As I lay on my lovely bead” (Laurence Price, c. 1654, Roxburgh Ballads, iii. 226) 105
As I sat at my Spinning Wheel” (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1707) 180
As I was riding by the way” (Percy Folio MS., c. 1620–50) 71
As I was walking I cannot tell where” (Rawlinson MS., c. 1610–50) 37
As I went o’er yon misty moor” (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1707) 188
As I went to Tottnam” (Choyce Drollery, 1666) 109
As Lady Jane devoutly wise” (1766, Durfey the Younger) 251
As Oyster Nan stood by her tub (c. 1705) 177
As she lay sleeping in her bed (Tune) 105
As the fryer he went along (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1707) 197
Auld cripple Dow, The (Tune) 257
Ayres by Alfonso Ferrabosco (1609) 29
Ayres by W. Corkine (1610) 34
Bagford Ballads 85, 118
Bathing Girles, The (Westminster Drollery, 1672) 148
Bathing Girles, The (Westminster Drollery, 1672) (Tune) 163
Beehive, The (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1707) 206
Beggar-wench turn’d into a devil (Debauchery Scared, Roxburgh Ballads, 1685–8, ii. 101) 160
Behn (Mrs.) 168
Behold the man (Tune) 41
Beneath a cool shade” (Mrs. Behn, 1697) 168
Birkenhead (Sir John) 118
Bob-Tail’d Lass, The (b. 1800) 275
Bolton (Sol.) 228
Bonnie Dundee (Tune) 263
Bonny Lass o’ Liviston, The” (b. 1796) 254
Boye, Friar and, The 51
Broze and Batter (b. 1796) 264
Burns (R.) 253, 254, 256, 257, 259, 261, 263, 264, 265, 267, 269, 272, 274
By the mole on your bubbies” (Musical Miscellany, 1731) 238
Canst thou loue and lie alone” (Melismata, c. 1611) 40
Carey, H. 228
Certain Presbyterian Pair, A,” (Musical Miscellany, 1729) 230
Chappell, William 89, 113, 159, 189
Choyce Ayres (Playford J.) 157
Choyce Drollery 109, 113
Clout the Couldron (Tune) 267
Come hither, good people” (Musical Miscellany, 1729) 230
Come off of my mother, Sirrah’ (Refrain) 35
Complements, Marrow of 159
Corkine (W.) 31
Country Gentleman came up to town, A” (1685–8, Roxburgh Ballads, ii. 101) 31
Courteous Knight, The (1609, Roxburgh Ballads, ii. 281) 31
Courtiers Good morrow to his Mistris, The (c. 1611) 40
Crimsall, Richard 89
Cuddie the Cooper (b. 1796) 263
Cumberland Lass, The (1674–80) 152
Cupid’s Visions (or Dainty Damsels Dream, Laurence Price, c. 1654, Roxburgh Ballads, iii. 226) 105
Dainty Damsels Dream, The (Laurence Price, c. 1654, Roxburgh Ballads, iii. 226) 105
Dainty ducke I chanced to meet, A (Percy Folio MS., c. 1620–50) 84
Debauchery Scared (1685–8, Roxburgh Ballads, ii. 101) 160
Devonshire Damsels Frollick, The (1685–8, Roxburgh Ballads, ii. 136–7) 163
Deuteromelia (1609) 31
Dildo, Nashes 14
Disaster, The sad 251
Dorset, The Earl of 157
Dub’d Knight of the Forked Order, The (1660–77, Roxburgh Ballads, ii. 114) 125
Duncan Macleerie and Janet his wife” (b. 1796) 267
Dunstable, Riding to 135
Durfey (T.) 169, 208, 210
Durfey the Younger 251
Fair Kitty, beautiful and young (Tune) 251
Ferrabosco (Alfonso) 29
Forked Order, The Dub’d Knight of the 125
Four and twentieth day of May, The” (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1707) 183
Four-Legg’d Elder, The (Sir John Birkenhead, Bagford Ballads, iii. 57) 118
Fryar and Boye, The (Percy Folio MS., c. 1620–50 51
Fryer and the Maid, The 187
Fumbler, The Old 167
Gaberlunzie Man, The (James V. Scotland, b. 1542) 1
Gallant Schemers Petition, The (Musical Miscellany, 1731) 238
Gather your rosebuds (Tune) 118
Green Grow the Rashes, O (b. 1796) 261
Gramachree (Tune) 274
Gudewife when your gude man’s frae hame” (b. 1796) 256
Haddington, Earl of 242
Harleian MS 103
Harlot, The high priz’d (or The Penurious Quaker) 216
Hee that hath no mistresse” (1610) 34
Help House of Commons, House of Peers (Refrain) 118
Her dainty palm I gently prest” (Marrow of Complements, 1685) 159
Horrible relation of a dog (or Four legg'd elder) 118
I a tender young maid have been courted by many” (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1707) 194
I am a young Lass of Lynn” (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1707) 199
I am fallen away (Tune) 125
I cannot tell what to do (Refrain) 199
I cannot, winnot, monnot buckle too (Refrain) 169
I dreamed my Loue lay in her bed” (Percy Folio MS., c. 1620–50) 80
I ha’e laid a herrin’ in sa’t (Tune) 259
I have a tenement to let” (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1719) 218
I’ll tell you . . . how this knave serv’d me (Refrain) 179
I owed my hostess thirty pounds” (c. 1720) 224
I pr'ythee now hear me, dear Molly (Refrain) 238
I Rede you beware o' the Ripples young man” (R. Burns, b. 1796) 253
I went to the Alehouse as an honest woman should” (1707) 179
I will fly into your arms” (c. 1720) 225
In a May morninge I mett sweet nursse” (Percy Folio MS., c. 1620–50) 77
It was a Lady of the North she lov'd a Gentleman” (1616, Roxburgh Ballads, iii. 230) 41
It was a puritanicall ladd” (Percy Folio MS., c. 1620–50) 73
It was in June” (Westminster Drollery, 1672) 148
James V. of Scotland 1, 5
Jenny beguil'd the Webster (Tune) 240
Jenny sits up i' the laft” (b. 1796) 265
Jocky Mac Gill (Tune) 267
John Anderson my Jo (Tune) 256
Jolly Beggar, The (James V. of Scotland, b. 1542) 5
Jovial Companions, The (Bagford Ballads, i. 88) 85
Joviall Pedler, The (1637–9, Roxburgh Ballads, iii. 184) 96
Kind-hearted Creature, The (1630, Roxburgh Ballads, iii. 166–7) 89
Ladies of London (Tune) 160
Lass o' Liviston (b. 1796) 254
Lass of Lynn’s Sorrowful Lamentation, The (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1707) 199
Lass with the velvet a—se, The (c. 1710) 214
Late Dialogue between Captain Low and his friend Dick (Robertson of Struan, b. 1749). 244
Let the world run its course of capricious delight” (Earl of Haddington, b. 1735) 242
Leveridge (R.) 175
Little o’ th’one with t’other (Refrain) 137
Lusty Young Smith at his vice stood a filing, A” (1705, Pills to Purge Melancholy [1707], ii. 198) 175
Lynn, The Lass of 199
Maid and a younge man, A (Percy Folio MS., c. 1620–50) 75
Maid, I dare not tell her name, A” (b. 1800) 279
Maid of Tottenham, The (Choyce Drollery, 1666) 109
Maids have you any Cony, Cony skins (Refrain) 96
Maid’s Lesson, The (c. 1710) 212
Maiden’s Delight (1661, Merry Drollery) 137
Man and a younge maid that loued, A” (Percy Folio MS., c. 1620–50) 75
Man he lay whopping, The (Refrain) 75
Man’s Yard, A (Rawlinson MS., 1600–20) 10
Marrow of Complements 159
May morninge, In a 77
Melismata (1611) 40
Merry Drollery (1661) 41, 80, 116, 133, 135, 137, 140, 142
Merry Muses of Caledonia 253, 254, 256, 257, 259, 261, 263, 264, 266, 267, 269, 272, 274
Methinks the poor town has been troubled too long” (Earl of Dorset, c. 1676) 157
Miles (A.) 125
Modern Prophets, The 208
Modiewark has done me ill, The (b. 1796) 272
Mother beguil'd the daughter, The (Tune) 89
Musical Miscellany 228, 230, 236, 238
My friend thy beauty seemeth good” (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1719) 216
My Mistress is a hive of bees in yonder flow'ry garden” (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1707) 206
My pretty maid fain would I know” (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1707) 204
My thing is my own (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1707) 194
Nameless Maiden, The (b. 1800) 279
Narcissus, come kiss us (Rawlinson MS., c. 1610–50) 37
Nash his Dildo (Thomas Nash, Rawlinson and Petyt MSS., b. 1601) 13
Nash (Thomas) 13
O for ane and twenty, Tam (Tune) 272
O gie my love brose, lasses (Refrain) 264
O jolly Robin hold thy hande” (Percy Folio MS., 1620–50) 47
O Mither dear I gin to fear” (Orpheus Caledonius, 1753) 240
O never went Wimble in Timber more nimble (Refrain) 140
O wat ye ought of Fisher Meg” (b. 1796) 261
Off a Puritane (Percy Folio MS., c. 1620–50) 73
Oh mother, Roger with his kisses” (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1707) 186
Oh! to Bed to me, to Bed to me (Refrain) 152
Old Fumbler, The (b. 1695) 167
Old Wanton Lady, The (Dub'd Knight of the forked order, 1660–77, Roxburgh Ballads, ii. 114) 125
On Wednesday in the afternoon” (b. 1800) 276
Orpheus Caledonius, see Thomson (W.) 240
Our John’s Brak Yestreen (b. 1796) 274
Oyster Nan, As 177
Pack, Mr. 208
Pardon, sweete flower of machles poesye” (Nash, b. 1601) 15
Patriarch, The (b. 1796) 257
Pauky auld carle cam ovir the lee, The” (Gaberlunzie Man, James V. of Scotland, b. 1542) 1
Pedler, Joviall, The 96
Pedlar Proud, The (c. 1750, Roxburgh Ballad, ii. 656) 247
Peggy in devotion, bred from tender years” (T. Durfey, c. 1710) 210
Penurious Quaker, The (c. 1719, Pills to Purge Melancholy) 216
Percy Folio MS. (c. 1620–50) 26, 47, 49, 51, 71, 73, 75, 77, 80, 82, 84
Petyt MS. (b. 1601) 13
Pills to Purge Melancholy (1707) 175, 179, 183, 186, 188, 192, 194, 197, 199, 202, 204, 206
Pills to Purge Melancholy (1719) 85, 109, 118, 152, 157, 169, 171, 177, 180, 208, 210, 216, 218, 220
Playford (J.) (Choyce Ayres) 157
Pleasant Garland, Ane (b. 1800) 275, 277, 279
Ploughman he's a bonnie lad, The” (b. 1796) 269
Popular Music of the Olden Time (Chappell) 26, 89, 113, 189
Presbyterian Wedding, The (Musical Miscellany, 1729) 236
Price (Laurence) 105
Purcell (Henry) 167, 169
Puritan, A (Merry Drollery, 1661) 133
Puritane, Off a (Percy Folio MS., 1620–50) 73
Quaker, The Penurious 216
Rattle, The (1766) 251
Ravenscroft, Thomas 40
Rawlinson MS. (1600–50) 10, 13, 35, 37
Reed me a ridle: what is this (Rawlinson MS., c. 1600-20) 10
Riding by the way, As I was 71
Riding to London on Dunstable way (Merry Drollery, 1661) 135
Robertson of Struan 244
Room for a Jovial Tinker: Old Brass to Mend (c. 1616, Roxburgh Ballads, iii. 230) 41
Rosebery to his lady says” (b. 1796) 266
Roxburgh Ballads 31, 41, 89, 96, 105, 125, 160, 163, 247
Sad Disaster, The, (Durfey the Younger, 1766) 251
Sally in our Alley (Tune) 228
School Master's Lesson, The (c. 1720) 225
Scotch Parson's Daughter, The (T. Durfey, c. 1710) 210
Sharpe (C. Kirkpatrick) 275
She lay up to the navel bare” (Tune 116) 131
She lay all naked in her bed” (Wit & Drollery, 1656) 116
Sheeles (J.) 238
Silent Flute, The (S. Bolton, 1720) 228
Sing Boyes, Drink Boyes (Refrain) 89
Sing trolly lolly (Refrain) 192
Sing, Stow the Fryer (Refrain) 197
Smug rich and fantastic old Fumbler was known” (b. 1695) 167
So merrily singeth the nightengale” (c. 1750, Roxburgh Ballads, iii. 656) 247
So old, so old, so wondrous old 125
Spinning Wheel, As I sat at my 180
Story, strange I will you tell, A” (Choyce Drollery, 1656) 113
Supper is na Ready” (b. 1796) 267
Surprised Nymph, The (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1707) 183
Taylor’s faun thro’ the bed (Tune) 253
Tell me mother, pray, now do (Refrain) 186
Tell me, thou source of scandal, Dick” (b. 1740 Robertson of Struan) 244
Tenement to let, A (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1719) 218
That God that dyed for vs all and drank both vinegar etc.” (Percy Folio MS., 1620–50) 51
Then she sang down a down (Refrain) 31
There dwelt a man in Lanrickshire” (b. 1800) 277
There liv’d a Wife in Whistle-cock-pen” (b. 1796) 259
There was a buxom lass” (c. 1710) 214
There was a cooper they ca’d him Cuddy” (b. 1796) 263
There wasa jolly beggar, and a begging he was born” (James V. of Scotland, b. 1542) 5
There was a joviall pedler” (1637–9, Roxburgh Ballads, iii. 184) 96
There was a Lady in this land” (Merry Drollery, 1661) 142
There was a lass in Cumberland” (c. 1674–80) 152
There was an old woman liv’d under a hill” (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1707) 192
There was three Birds that built very low” (Merry Drollery, 1661) 140
There was three Travellers, Travellers three” (c. 1630, Bagford Ballads, i. 88) 85
This way, that way, which way you will (Refrain) 171
Thomas vntyed his points apace” (Percy Folio MS., c. 1620–50) 26
Thomas you cannott” (Percy Folio MS., c. 1620–50) 26
Thomson (W.) [Orpheus Caledonius] 240
Three Merry Travellers (c. 1630, Bagford Ballads, i. 88) 85
Tinker, The (Merry Drollery, 1661) 142
To fall down, down, derry down (Refrain) 109
Tom and William with Ned and Ben” (Roxburgh Ballads, ii. 136–7) 163
Tom Tinker’s my true love, and I am his dear” (c. 1698) 171
To play upon a viol if a virgin will begin” (c. 1710) 212
Trooper Watering his Nagg, The (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1707) 192
Turnep Ground, The (c. 1720) 224
Twa neebour wives sat in the sun” (b. 1796, Burns) 274
’Twas a Lady born of high degree” (1660–77, Roxburgh Ballads, ii. 114–5) 125
’Twas within a Furlong of Edinborough town” (Durfey, 1697, Pills to Purge Melancholy) 169
Upon a certain day when Mars and Venus met together” (Rawlinson MS., 1610–20) 35
Venus, Mars, and Cupid” (Rawlinson MS., 1610–20) 35
Wanton Virgins Frighted, The (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1719) 220
Westminster Drollery 148
When first Amyntas su'd for a kiss (Tune) 202
When Phœbus address't himselfe to the West (Percy Folio MS., c. 1620–50) 49
White Thighs (b. 1735) 242
Who is to marry me (b. 1609) 29
Willie Steenson (b. 1800) 277
Will ye na, can ye na let me be?” (b. 1796) 259
Willing Lover, The (Wit & Drollery, 1661) 131
Wit and Drollery 96, 103, 116, 131
With a dildo (Refrain) 113
With a down … up and down (Refrain) 230
With a hey ho, hey, derry derry down (Refrain) 41
With a Humbledum, Grumbledum (Refrain) 204
With a rub … in and out, in and out ho (Refrain) 175
Without ever a stiver of money (Refrain) 85
Would you have a young Virgin of fifteen years” (T. Durfey, I709) 208
Yonder comes a courteous Knight” (Roxburgh Ballads, ii. 281) 31
Yorkshire Tale, A (Musical Miscellany, 1729) 230
You that delight in a jocular song” (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1719) 220
Young Man of late, A (Merry Drollery, 1661) 137
Younge and simple though I am” (b. 1609) 29