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4. Sir Aldingar

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I

Our King he kept a false steward,

Men call’d him Sir Aldingar;

He would have woo’d our comely Queene

To be his paramour].

II

He would have woo’d our comely Queene,

Her deere worship to betray:

Our Queene she was a good woman

And evermore said him nay.

III

Sir Aldingar was offended in ’s mind,

With her he was ne’er content,

But he sought what meanès he could find

In a fyer to have her brent55.

IV

There came a lame lazar to the King’s gate,

A lazar ’was blind and lame;

He took the lazar upon his backe,

Upon the Queene’s bed did him lay.

V

Said, ‘Lye still, lazar, whereas thou lyest,

Looke thou goe not away;

I’le make thee a whole man and a sound

In two howres of a day.’

VI

And then went forth Sir Aldingar

Our Queene for to betray,

And then he met with our comely King,

Says, ‘God you save and see!

VII

‘If I had space, as I have grace,

A message I’d say to thee.’—

‘Say on, say on, Sir Aldingar,

Say thou on and unto me.’

VIII

‘I can shew you one of the grievous’t sights

Ever Christian King did see;

Our Queene hath chosen a new, new love,

She will have none of thee.

IX

‘If she had chosen a right good knight,

The lesse had beene her shame;

But she hath chosen a lazar man

Which is both blind and lame.’—

X

‘If this be true, Sir Aldingar,

That thou dost tell to me,

Then will I make thee a rich knight

Both of gold and fee.

XI

‘But if it be false, Sir Aldingar,

That thou dost tell to me,

Then looke thou for no other death

But to be hang’d on tree.’

XII

When the King came into the Queene’s chamber,

Standing her bed before,

‘There’s a lodly56 lome57,’ says Harry the King For our dame Queene Elinor!

XIII

‘If thou were a man, as thou art none,

It is here thou shouldest dye;

But a paire of new gallowes shall be built,

Thou’st hang on them soe hye.

XIV

‘And a fayre fyer there shall be bett58, And brent our Queene shall been.’ Forth then walk’d our comely King, And met with our comely Queene.

XV

Saies, ‘God you save our Queene, Madam,

And Christ you save and see!

Here you have chosen a new, new love,

And you will have none of mee.

XVI

‘If you had chosen a right good knight,

The lesse had beene your shame;

But you have chosen a lazar man

That is both blind and lame.’

XVII

‘Ever alacke!’ said our comely Queene,

‘Sir Aldingar he is false;

But ever alacke!’ said our comely Queene,

‘And woe is me, and alas!

XVIII

‘I had thought swevens59 had never been true I have proved them true [today]: I dream’d in my swevens on Thursday at even In my bed wheras I lay,

XIX

‘I dreamèd a grype60 and a grimlie beast Had carried my crowne away, My gorget and my kirtle of golde, And all my heade-geare [gay].

XX

‘He wo’ld have worryed me with his tush61, And borne me into his nest, Saving there came a little hawke Flying out of the east.

XXI

‘—Saving there came a little hawke

Which men call a merlion62; He stroke him downe untill the ground, That deade he did fall downe.

XXII

‘Gif I were a man, as I am none,

A battell I wo’ld prove;

I wo’ld fight with that false traitor;

At him I cast my glove!

XXIII

‘Seeing I am able noe battell to make,

You must grant me, my liege, a knight,

To fight with that traitor, Sir Aldingar,

To maintaine me in my right.’

XXIV

‘I’le give thee forty dayes,’ said our King,

‘To seeke thee a man therein;

If thou find not a man in forty dayes,

In a hott fyer thou shalt brenn.’

XXV

Our Queene sent forth a messenger;

He rode fast into the south;

He rode the countryes through and through

Soe far unto Portsmouth.

XXVI

But for all his riding ne’er sped he

To fetch help to our Queene;]

He co’ld find noe man in the south countrỳ

‘Wo’ld fight with the knight soe keene.

XXVII

The second messenger shee sent forth,

Rode far into the east;

But—blessèd be God ’made sunn and moone!—

He sped then all of the best.

XXVIII

As he rode then by one river side,

There he mett with a little Child;

He seemèd noe more in a man’s likenesse

Than a child of four yeeres old.

XXIX

He ask’d the messenger how far he rode;

Loth he was him to tell;

The little one was offended att him,

Bade him adieu, farewell.

XXX

Said, ‘Turne thou againe, thou messenger,

Greete our Queen well from me;

When bale63 is at hyest, boote64 is at nyest— Helpe enough there may bee.

XXXI

‘Bid our Queene remember what she did dreame

In her bedd wheras shee lay;

She dreamèd the grype and the grimlie beast

Had carryed her crowne away;

XXXII

‘Her gorgett and her kirtle of gold,

Her head-geare [all soe drest]

He wo’ld have worryed her with his tush,

And borne her into his nest.

XXXIII

‘Saving there came a little hawke,

Men call him a merlion;

‘Did strike him downe untill the ground

That dead he did fall downe.

XXXIV

‘Bidd the Queene be merry att her heart,

Evermore light and glad;

When bale is at hyest, boote is at nyest,

Helpe enough [shall be had’].

XXXV

Then the Queen’s messenger rode backe,

A gladded man then was hee;

When that he came before our Queene,

A gladd woman then was shee.

XXXVI

She gave the messenger twenty pound,

O Lord, in gold and fee;

Saies, ‘Spend, nor spare while this doth last,

Then fetch thou more of me.’

XXXVII

Our Queene was put in a tunne65 to burn; She thought noe thing but death: When they were ware of the Little One ’Came ryding forth of the east.

XXXVIII

With a mu[le and a bridle all of bells]

A lovelye child was hee;

When that he came to that fyér

He lighted the Queene full nigh.

XXXIX

Sayd, ‘Draw away these brands of fyer

’Lie burning before our Queene,

And fetch me hither Sir Aldingar

That is a knight soe keene.’

XL

When Aldingar saw that Little One,

Full little of him hee thought;

If there had been halfe a hundred such

Of them he would not have wrought66.

XLI

He sayd, ‘Come hither, Sir Aldingar,

Thou seemest as big as a fooder67; I trust God ere I have done with thee God will send us an auger.’

XLII

Sayes, ‘The first stroke that’s given, Sir Aldingar,

I will give unto thee;

And if the second give thou may,

Looke then thou spare not mee.’

XLIII

This Little One pull’d forth a well good sword,

I wis it well all of gilte.

It cast a light there over that field,

It shone soe all of gilte.

XLIV

He stroke the first stroke at Aldingar;

Noe second needed hee;

At the first stroke] he stroke away

His leggs [all] by the knee.

XLV

Sayes, ‘Stand up, stand up, thou false traitor,

And fight upon thy feete;

For, an thou thrive as thou begins,

Of a height we shall be meete68.’

XLVI

‘A priest, a priest,’ sayes Aldingar,

‘Me for to housel and shrive!

A priest, a priest,’ sayes Aldingar,

‘While I am a man living alive!

XLVII

‘I would have courted our comely Queene;

To it shee wo’ld never consent;

I thought to betray her to our King

In a fyer to have her brent.

XLVIII

‘There came a lame lazar to the King’s gate,

A lazar both blind and lame;

I took the lazar upon my back,

Upon the Queene’s bedd had him layn.

XLIX

‘I bade him, Lye still, lazar, where he lay, Looke he went not away; I wo’ld make him a whole man and a sound In two houres of a day.

L

‘A priest, a priest,’ sayes Aldingar,

‘To shrive me cleane of hell!

Ever alacke!’ sayes Sir Aldingar,

‘Falsing never doth well.

LI

‘Forgive, forgive me, Queene, Madam!

For Christ’s love forgive me!’—

‘God forgave his death, Aldingar,

And freely I forgive thee.’—

LII

‘Now take thy wife, thou King Harry,

And love her as thou sho’ld;

Thy wife shee is as true to thee

As stone lies in castle wall.’

LIII

The lazar under the gallow tree

Grew] a pretty man and small:

The lazar under the gallow tree

Was made steward in King Harry’s hall.

FOOTNOTES:

55. brent = burnt.

56. lodly = loathly.

57. lome = thing.

58. bett = kindled.

59. swevens = dreams.

60. grype = gryphon.

61. tush = tusk, beak.

62. merlion = merlin, a small falcon.

63. bale = evil, trouble.

64. boote = help, remedy.

65. tunne = barrel.

66. wrought = recked.

67. fooder = tun.

68. meete = matched, equal.

The Oxford Book of Ballads

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