Songs of the West. S. (Sabine) Baring-Gould

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Songs of the West - S. (Sabine) Baring-Gould

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my chamber,

       High out of danger,

       From eye of ranger,

       In misery.

       In tower I languish, &c.

      4

      Enclosed in mortar,

       By wall and water,

       A luckless daughter

       All white and wan;

       Till day is breaking

       My bed forsaking,

       I all night waking

       Sing like the swan.

       In tower I languish,

       In cold and sadness,

       Heart full of anguish,

       Eye full of tear,

       Whilst glades are ringing

       With maidens singing

       Sweet roses bringing,

       To crown the year.

      No 18 THE SILLY OLD MAN

       Table of Contents

      H.F.S.

music

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      1

      Aw! Come now, I'll sing you a song,

       'Tis a song of right merry intent,

       Concerning a silly old man,

       Who went for to pay his rent,

       Singing, Too-ra-la-loo-ra-loo.

      2

      And as this here silly old man,

       Was riding along the lane,

       A Gentleman thief overtook him,

       Saying "Well over-taken old man."

      3

      "What! well over-taken, do'y say?"

       "Yes, well over-taken," quoth he.

       "No, no," said the silly old man.

       "I don't want thy company.

      4

      "I am only a silly old man,

       I farm but a parcel of ground.

       And I am going to the landlord to pay,

       My rent which is just forty pound."

      5

      "But supposing a highway-man stopped you?

       For the rascals are many, men say,

       And take all the money from off you

       As you ride on the king's highway?"

      6

      "What! supposing some fellow should stop me?

       Why badly the thief would be sped.

       For the money I carry about me

       In the quilt o' my saddle is hid."

      7

      And as they were riding along,

       Along and along the green lane,

       The Gentleman thief rode afore him

       And summoned the old man to stand.

      8

      But the old man was crafty and cunning,

       As, I wot, in the world there be many,

       Pitched his saddle clean over the hedge,

       Saying, "Fetch'n if thou would'st have any,"

       Singing, Too-ra-la-loo-ra-loo.

      9

      Then the thief being thirsty for gold,

       And eager to get at his bags,

       He dra'ed out his rusty old sword,

       And chopped up the saddle to rags.

      10

      The old man slipped off his old mare,

       And mounted the thief's horse astride,

       Clapp'd spur, and put him in a gallop,

       Saying "I, without teaching, can ride."

      11

      When he to his landlord's had come,

       That old man was almost a-spent,

       Says he, "Landlord, provide me a room.

       I be come for to pay up my rent."

      12

      He opened the thief, his portmantle

       And there was a sight to behold,

       There were five hundred pounds in silver,

       And five hundred pounds in gold.

      13

      And as he was on his way home,

       And riding along the same lane,

       He seed—his silly old mare,

       Tied up to the hedge by the mane.

      14

      He loosed his old mare from the hedge,

       As she of the grass there did crib,

       He gi'ed her a whack o' the broad o' the back,

       Saying "Follow me home, old Tib."

      15

      Aw! When to his home he were come

       His daughter he dress'd like a duchess,

       And his ol' woman kicked and she capered for joy,

      

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