Captain Wedderburn's Courtship
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Captain Wedderburn's Courtship is an old Scotish ballad dating from 1785 or earlier. It is Child Ballad #46. It is known by a number of titles, including Lord Roslin's Daughter and The Laird of Roslin's Daughter.
The Great Big Sea song "Captain Wedderburn" on their Turn album is based on this ballad.
[edit] Lyrics
- The Laird of Rosslyn's daughter
- Walked through the wood her lane.
- And by came Captain Wedderburn,
- A soldier of the king.
- He said unto his serving man,
- Were't not against the law,
- I would take her to my own bed
- And lay her next the wall.
- I'm walking here my lane, says she,
- Among my father's trees,
- And you may let me walk my lane,
- Kind sir, now, if you please.
- The supper bell it will be rung
- And I'll be missed awa',
- So I'll not lie in your bed
- At neither stock nor wall.
- Then said the pretty lady,
- I pray tell me your name.
- My name is Captain Wedderburn,
- A soldier of the king.
- Though your father and all his men were here,
- I would take you from them all,
- I would take you to my own bed
- And lay you next the wall.
- O hold away from me,
- Kind sir, I pray you let me be,
- For I'll not lie in your bed
- Till I get dishes three.
- Three dishes for my supper,
- Though I eat none at all,
- Before I lie in your bed
- At either stock or wall.
- I must have to my supper
- A chicken without a bone,
- And I must have to my supper
- A cherry without stone,
- And I must have to my supper
- A bird without a gall,
- Before I lie in your bed
- At either stock or wall.
- The chicken when it's in the shell
- I'm sure it has no bone,
- And when the cherry's in the bloom
- I wat it has no stone.
- The dove she is a gentle bird,
- She flies without a gall,
- And we'll both lie in one bed
- And you'll lie next the wall.
- O hold away from me, kind sir,
- And do not me perplex,
- For I'll not lie in your bed
- Till you answer questions six.
- Six questions you must answer me,
- And that is four and twa,
- Before I lie in your bed
- At either stock or wall.
- O what is greener than the grass,
- What's higher than the trees,
- O what is worse than a woman's wish,
- What's deeper than the seas,
- What bird crows first, what tree buds first,
- What first on them does fall,
- Before I lie in your bed
- At either stock or wall.
- Death is greener than the grass,
- Heaven's higher than the trees,
- The devil's worse than woman's wish,
- Hell's deeper than the seas,
- The cock crows first, the cedar buds first,
- Dew first on them does fall,
- And we'll both lie in one bed,
- And you'll lie next the wall.
- Little did this lady think,
- That morning when she raise,
- It was to be the very last
- Of all her maiden days,
- For now she's Captain Wedderburn's wife,
- A man she never saw,
- And now they lie in one bed,
- And she lies next the wall.
[edit] External links
- Quoted Text: Captain Wedderburns's Courtship
- Alternate Versions: Captain Wedderburns's Courtship