12 S. 1. MAY 13, 1916.]
NOTES AND QUERIES.
391
Henry Grossman 7
Thee come so far a way to fight such man as I,
I will cut thy dublats ful of Hylent hols and make thy
buttens fly
Penty Landin 8
I am a man of vallour I will fight untill I die sun
George thou never will face me but away from me will fly
Henry Grossman 9
ha proud Turk what wilt will thou tell me so with threting words and threting oath's drow thy sord
and fight drow thy pees and pay for satisfaction I will
have be fore I go a way
Penty Landin 10
no satisfaction shell you have but hi a moment's
time I will bring thee to thy grave
Henry Grossman 11
thee bring me to my grave I will fight with thee no pardon shell you have so drow thy sord and
fight for I will concour you this night
P. 4. Solomon 12
o docter docter wat is thy fee this champion for
to rise the site of him doth trouble me to see how dead he
lies
W. Williams 13 full fifty ginues is my fee and money to have doun but sunes tis for is
majesty i will do it for ten pound i have alitle botle in the wrest-
bond of my britches that goes by the name of halycompane
shall make this goodly champin rice and fight again are jack
take a little of my drip drop pour it up in the tiptop arize
jack slash and fight again behould this mortal now reving
be tis by my sceel and strength the ficik see which make
this goodly night revive and bring is aged father now alive
awacke thou lustros knight also and i will take thee by the
hand an try if thou canst go
P. Langdon 1$
What places is are what seens appare whare ever
itorn mine eye tis all around in chantin ground and
soft delusions rise floury mounting mosy fountins what will
veriety surprize tis on the alow walks we walks an
hundred ecos round us stock from hils to hils the voices tost
rocks rebounding ecos resounding not one single words was lost
Henry Grossman 15
behould on yander risen ground the bour that
woander ever ending ever bending glades an glades shades an
shades runing on etarnall round
P. Langdon 16
pardon pardon st george one thing of thee icrav
spair me my life and i will be thy constant slave
H. Grossman 17 yes proude torke but arise and go in to thy on
land and tell What a bould champin there doth in England
stand had it ben a thousand or ten thousand such men as thee i
would fight for to mentain grait britans right great britians right
iwill mentain and fight free for England wance again.
P. 5.*
Wm. Solomon as i gist stiping out of my bed in hearing this my
honly son was dead o cruel christan what ast thou don
thou ast ruin'd me and killed my only son
Henry Grossman he was the first that chalins'd me and how cani
deny to see the turkish dog stand up and i folldon and die
William Solomon
1 will seek the bouldest champin in my relam
this cruel christans blood to overwealam o help me sampo
help me was
thare ever a man in greater need to fight like a
sowlyar make thy hart to bleed
John Rowe are am i sampo i will slafter the man that spilt
my master
blood and with my body i will make the oashen flood
Wm. Solomon o docter docter is there nary docter to be found
or to be had this
night can cuer this bloody wound and make him stand up right
Wm. Williams
is thare a docter to be found or to be had this
night can heal
this mans bloody wound and make him stand up right
Wm. Solomon
pray ware ast thou travled Williams
1 have travled to London garmenay Scotland an
spain by all my rich fortun safe returned to england again
Solomon what canst thou cure
- This page is the third on a sheet. The other
sheets are written on one side only, so that each sheet has only 2 pp. It was probably omitted, and afterwards inserted.