Читать книгу A Book of Nursery Songs and Rhymes - Baring-Gould Sabine - Страница 4

I. THE TASK

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For other versions of this work, see The Elfin Knight.

Will you buy me, my lady, a cambric shirt?

Whilst every grove rings with a merry antine (antienne);

And stitch it without any needle-work?

O and then you shall be a true lover of mine.

O and you must wash it in yonder well,

Whilst every grove, etc.

Where never a drop of water in fell.

O and then, etc.

O and you must hang it upon a white thorn,

Whilst every grove, etc.

That never has blossomed since Adam was born.

O and then, etc.

O and when that these tasks are finished and done,

Whilst every grove, etc.

I will take thee and marry thee under the sun.

O and then, etc.

Or that ever I do these two and three,

Whilst every grove, etc.

I will set of tasks as many to three,

O and then, etc.

You must buy for me an acre of land,

Whilst every grove, etc.

Between the salt sea and the yellow sand,

O and then, etc.

You must plough it o'er with a horse's horn,

Whilst every grove, etc.

And sow it all over with one pepper-corn,

O and then, etc.

You must reap it, too, with a piece of leather,

Whilst every grove, etc.

And bind it all up with a peacock's feather,

O and then, etc.

You must take it up in a bottomless sack,

Whilst every grove, etc.

And bear it to the mill on a butterfly's back,

O and then, etc.

And when that these tasks are finished and done,

Whilst every grove, etc.

O then will I marry thee under the sun,

And then thou shalt be a true lover of mine.

A Book of Nursery Songs and Rhymes

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