Читать книгу The Oxford Book of Ballads - Various Authors - Страница 8
ОглавлениеI
‘O I forbid you, maidens a’,
That wear gowd on your hair,
To come or gae by Carterhaugh,
For young Tam Lin is there.
II
‘For even about that knight’s middle
O’ siller bells are nine;
And nae maid comes to Carterhaugh
And a maid returns again.’
III
Fair Janet sat in her bonny bower,
Sewing her silken seam,
And wish’d to be in Carterhaugh
Amang the leaves sae green.
IV
She’s lat her seam fa’ to her feet,
The needle to her tae12, And she’s awa’ to Carterhaugh As fast as she could gae.
V
And she has kilted her green kirtle
A little abune her knee;
And she has braided her yellow hair
A little abune her bree13; And she has gaen for Carterhaugh As fast as she can hie.
VI
She hadna pu’d a rose, a rose,
A rose but barely ane,
When up and started young Tam Lin;
Says, ‘Ladye, let alane.
VII
‘What gars ye pu’ the rose, Janet?
What gars ye break the tree?
What gars ye come to Carterhaugh
Without the leave o’ me?’
VIII
‘Weel may I pu’ the rose,’ she says,
‘And ask no leave at thee;
For Carterhaugh it is my ain,
My daddy gave it me.’
IX
He’s ta’en her by the milk-white hand,
And by the grass-green sleeve,
He’s led her to the fairy ground
At her he ask’d nae leave.
X
Janet has kilted her green kirtle
A little abune her knee,
And she has snooded her yellow hair
A little abune her bree,
And she is to her father’s ha’
As fast as she can hie.
XI
But when she came to her father’s ha’,
She look’d sae wan and pale,
They thought the lady had gotten a fright,
Or with sickness she did ail.
XII
Four and twenty ladies fair
Were playing at the ba’,
And out then came fair Janet
Ance the flower amang them a’.
XIII
Four and twenty ladies fair
Were playing at the chess,
And out then came fair Janet
As green as onie glass.
XIV
Out then spak’ an auld grey knight
’Lay owre the Castle wa’,
And says, ‘Alas, fair Janet!
For thee we’ll be blamèd a’.’
XV
‘Hauld your tongue, ye auld-faced knight,
Some ill death may ye die!
Father my bairn on whom I will,
I’ll father nane on thee.
XVI
‘O if my love were an earthly knight,
As he is an elfin gay,
I wadna gie my ain true-love
For nae laird that ye hae.
XVII
‘The steed that my true-love rides on
Is fleeter nor the wind;
Wi’ siller he is shod before,
Wi’ burning gold behind.’
XVIII
Out then spak’ her brither dear—
He meant to do her harm:
‘There grows an herb in Carterhaugh
Will twine14 you an’ the bairn.’
XIX
Janet has kilted her green kirtle
A little abune her knee,
And she has snooded her yellow hair
A little abune her bree,
And she’s awa’ to Carterhaugh
As fast as she can hie.
XX
She hadna pu’d a leaf, a leaf,
A leaf but only twae,
When up and started young Tam Lin,
Says, ‘Ladye, thou’s pu’ nae mae.
XXI
‘How dar’ ye pu’ a leaf?’ he says,
‘How dar’ ye break the tree?
How dar’ ye scathe15 my babe,’ he says, ‘That’s between you and me?’
XXII
‘O tell me, tell me, Tam,’ she says,
‘For His sake that died on tree,
If ye were ever in holy chapel
Or sain’d16 in Christentie?’
XXIII
‘The truth I’ll tell to thee, Janet,
Ae word I winna lee;
A knight me got, and a lady me bore,
As well as they did thee.
XXIV
‘Roxburgh he was my grandfather,
Took me with him to bide;
And ance it fell upon a day,
As hunting I did ride,
XXV
‘There came a wind out o’ the north,
A sharp wind an’ a snell17, A dead sleep it came over me And frae my horse I fell; And the Queen o’ Fairies she took me In yon green hill to dwell.
XXVI
‘And pleasant is the fairy land
For those that in it dwell,
But ay at end of seven years
They pay a teind18 to hell; I am sae fair and fu’ o’ flesh I’m fear’d ’twill be mysell.
XXVII
‘But the night is Hallowe’en, Janet,
The morn is Hallowday;
Then win me, win me, an ye will,
For weel I wat ye may.
XXVIII
‘The night it is gude Hallowe’en,
The fairy folk do ride,
And they that wad their true-love win,
At Miles Cross they maun bide.’—
XXIX
‘But how should I you ken, Tam Lin,
How should I borrow19 you, Amang a pack of uncouth20 knights The like I never saw?’—
XXX
‘You’ll do you down to Miles Cross
Between twel’ hours and ane,
And fill your hands o’ the holy water
And cast your compass roun’.
XXXI
‘The first company that passes by,
Say na, and let them gae;
The neist company that passes by,
Say na, and do right sae;
The third company that passes by,
Then I’ll be ane o’ thae.
XXXII
‘O first let pass the black, ladye,
And syne let pass the brown;
But quickly run to the milk-white steed,
Pu’ ye his rider down.
XXXIII
‘For some ride on the black, ladye,
And some ride on the brown;
But I ride on a milk-white steed,
A gowd star on my crown:
Because I was an earthly knight
They gie me that renown.
XXXIV
‘My right hand will be gloved, ladye,
My left hand will be bare,
And thae’s the tokens I gie thee:
Nae doubt I will be there.
XXXV
‘Ye’ll tak’ my horse then by the head
And let the bridle fa’;
The Queen o’ Elfin she’ll cry out
“True Tam Lin he’s awa’!”
XXXVI
‘They’ll turn me in your arms, ladye,
An aske21 but and a snake; But hauld me fast, let me na gae, To be your warldis make22.
XXXVII
‘They’ll turn me in your arms, ladye,
But and a deer so wild;
But hauld me fast, let me na gae,
The father o’ your child.
XXXVIII
‘They’ll shape me in your arms, ladye,
A hot iron at the fire;
But hauld me fast, let me na go,
To be your heart’s desire.
XXXIX
‘They’ll shape me last in your arms, Janet,
A mother-naked man;
Cast your green mantle over me,
And sae will I be won.’
XL
Janet has kilted her green kirtle
A little abune the knee;
And she has snooded her yellow hair
A little abune her bree,
And she is on to Miles Cross
As fast as she can hie.
XLI
About the dead hour o’ the night
She heard the bridles ring;
And Janet was as glad at that
As any earthly thing.
XLII
And first gaed by the black, black steed,
And syne gaed by the brown;
But fast she gript the milk-white steed
And pu’d the rider down.
XLIII
She’s pu’d him frae the milk-white steed,
An’ loot23 the bridle fa’, And up there rase an eldritch24 cry, ‘True Tam Lin he’s awa’!’
XLIV
They shaped him in her arms twa
An aske but and a snake;
But aye she grips and hau’ds him fast
To be her warldis make.
XLV
They shaped him in her arms twa
But and a deer sae wild;
But aye she grips and hau’ds him fast,
The father o’ her child.
XLVI
They shaped him in her arms twa
A hot iron at the fire;
But aye she grips and hau’ds him fast
To be her heart’s desire.
XLVII
They shaped him in her arms at last
A mother-naked man;
She cast her mantle over him,
And sae her love she wan.
XLVIII
Up then spak’ the Queen o’ Fairies,
Out o’ a bush o’ broom,
‘She that has borrow’d young Tam Lin
Has gotten a stately groom.’
XLIX
Out then spak’ the Queen o’ Fairies,
And an angry woman was she,
‘She’s ta’en awa’ the bonniest knight
In a’ my companie!
L
‘But what I ken this night, Tam Lin,
Gin I had kent yestreen,
I wad ta’en out thy heart o’ flesh,
And put in a heart o’ stane.
LI
‘And adieu, Tam Lin! But gin I had kent
A ladye wad borrow’d thee,
I wad ta’en out thy twa grey e’en
Put in twa e’en o’ tree25.
LII
‘And had I the wit yestreen, yestreen,
That I have coft26 this day, I’d paid my teind seven times to hell Ere you had been won away!’
FOOTNOTES:
12. tae = toe.
13. bree = eye-brow.
14. twine = part, sunder.
15. scathe = harm.
16. sain’d = blessed, baptised.
17. snell = keen, cold.
18. teind = tithe.
19. borrow = ransom.
20. uncouth = unknown.
21. aske = newt, lizard.
22. make = mate, husband.
23. loot = let.
24. eldritch = unearthly.
25. tree = wood.
26. coft = bought.