Ballads Of Romance And Chivalry - Ballads of Romance and Chivalry Part 40
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Ballads of Romance and Chivalry Part 40

Syne pierced him through the foul fa'se heart, And set his mother free.

35.

And he has rewarded Wise William Wi' the best half of his land; And sae has he the turtle dow Wi' the truth o' his right hand.

[Annotations: 3.1: 'kaivles,' lots.

13.4: 'gallows-pin,' the projecting beam of the gallows.

16.1: 'birled,' plied.

16.4: 'wallwood,' wild wood: a conventional ballad-phrase.

25.2: A stock ballad-phrase.

33.1: A ballad conventionality.]

FAIR ANNIE OF ROUGH ROYAL

'Ouvre ta port', Germin', c'est moi qu'est ton mari.'

'Donnez-moi des indic's de la premiere nuit, Et par la je croirai que vous et's mon mari.'

--_Germaine._

+The Text+ is Fraser Tytler's, taken down from the recitation of Mrs.

Brown in 1800, who had previously (1783) recited a similar version to Jamieson. The later recitation, which was used by Scott, with others, seems to contain certain improvisations of Mrs. Brown's which do not appear in the earlier form.

+The Story.+--A mother, who feigns to be her own son and demands tokens of the girl outside the gate, turns her son's love away, and is cursed by him. Similar ballads exist in France, Germany, and Greece.

There is an early eighteenth-century MS. (Elizabeth Cochrane's _Song-Book_) of this ballad, which gives a preliminary history. Isabel of Rochroyal dreams of her love Gregory; she rises up, calls for a swift steed, and rides forth till she meets a company. They ask her who she is, and are told that she is 'Fair Isabel of Rochroyal,' seeking her true-love Gregory. They direct her to 'yon castle'; and thenceforth the tale proceeds much as in the other versions.

'Lochryan,' says Scott, 'lies in Galloway; Roch--or Rough--royal, I have not found, but there is a Rough castle in Stirlingshire' (Child).

FAIR ANNIE OF ROUGH ROYAL

1.

'O wha will shoe my fu' fair foot?

And wha will glove my hand?

And wha will lace my middle jimp, Wi' the new-made London band?

2.

'And wha will kaim my yellow hair, Wi' the new-made silver kaim?

And wha will father my young son, Till Love Gregor come hame?'

3.

'Your father will shoe your fu' fair foot, Your mother will glove your hand; Your sister will lace your middle jimp Wi' the new-made London band.

4.

'Your brother will kaim your yellow hair, Wi' the new-made silver kaim; And the king of heaven will father your bairn, Till Love Gregor come haim.'

5.

'But I will get a bonny boat, And I will sail the sea, For I maun gang to Love Gregor, Since he canno come hame to me.'

6.

O she has gotten a bonny boat, And sail'd the sa't sea fame; She lang'd to see her ain true-love, Since he could no come hame.

7.

'O row your boat, my mariners, And bring me to the land, For yonder I see my love's castle, Closs by the sa't sea strand.'

8.

She has ta'en her young son in her arms, And to the door she's gone, And lang she's knock'd and sair she ca'd, But answer got she none.

9.

'O open the door, Love Gregor,' she says, 'O open, and let me in; For the wind blaws thro' my yellow hair, And the rain draps o'er my chin.'

10.

'Awa', awa', ye ill woman, You 'r nae come here for good; You 'r but some witch, or wile warlock, Or mer-maid of the flood.'

11.

'I am neither a witch nor a wile warlock, Nor mer-maid of the sea, I am Fair Annie of Rough Royal; O open the door to me.'

12.

'Gin ye be Annie of Rough Royal-- And I trust ye are not she-- Now tell me some of the love-tokens That past between you and me.'

13.

'O dinna you mind now, Love Gregor, When we sat at the wine, How we changed the rings frae our fingers?

And I can show thee thine.

14.

'O yours was good, and good enneugh, But ay the best was mine; For yours was o' the good red goud, But mine o' the dimonds fine.

15.

'But open the door now, Love Gregor, O open the door I pray, For your young son that is in my arms Will be dead ere it be day.'

16.

'Awa', awa', ye ill woman, For here ye shanno win in; Gae drown ye in the raging sea, Or hang on the gallows-pin.'

17.

When the cock had crawn, and day did dawn, And the sun began to peep, Then it raise him Love Gregor, And sair, sair did he weep.

18.

'O I dream'd a dream, my mother dear, The thoughts o' it gars me greet, That Fair Annie of Rough Royal Lay cauld dead at my feet.'

19.

'Gin it be for Annie of Rough Royal That ye make a' this din, She stood a' last night at this door, But I trow she wan no in.'

20.

'O wae betide ye, ill woman, An ill dead may ye die!

That ye woudno open the door to her, Nor yet woud waken me.'