Lyrics & Knowledge Personal Pages Record Shop Auction Links Radio & Media Kids Membership Help
The Mudcat Cafesj

Post to this Thread - Sort Descending - Printer Friendly - Home


Lyr Req: Young Hunting

DigiTrad:
FALSE LADY
FALSE TRUE LOVE
THE LORD OF SCOTLAND
YOUNG HUNTING
YOUNG HUNTING 2
YOUNG REDIN


Related threads:
Lyr Add: Scotland Man (Child #68, from G Landers) (6)
Line from 'Henry Lee' (Young Hunting) (62)
Lyr Req: jimmie tarlton's lowe bonnie (child #68) (14)
Child 68 Field Recording with bugle horn (25)
Young Hunting by Tony Rose (5)
Review: Did Young Hunting have it coming? (26)
Lyr Req: Love Henry (#68, Hedy West) (11)
Lyr Req: Proud Girl #68 (Frankie Armstrong) (8)
Lyr Req: Young Hunting #68 (Sheila Kay Adams) (4)
(origins) Origins: Looking for some Love Henry answers (4)
Lyr Add: Young Hunting (13)
Tune Req: Young Redin (12)


In Mudcat MIDIs:
Young Redin (per Malcolm: Child #68 (Young Hunting). The DT text is Child's example B, from Kinloch's Ancient Scottish Ballads (1827), and was noted from a Miss E. Beattie (from Mearns-shire), in Edinburgh.Her tune was printed by Kinloch, and I have used Bronson's emended version,)


GUEST,Fay 29 Oct 01 - 01:32 PM
MMario 29 Oct 01 - 01:44 PM
Phil Cooper 31 Oct 01 - 03:52 PM
GUEST 01 Nov 01 - 01:24 PM
GUEST,MCP 01 Nov 01 - 01:25 PM
MMario 01 Nov 01 - 04:08 PM
Phil Cooper 02 Nov 01 - 12:56 AM
GUEST,pavane 02 Nov 01 - 02:33 AM
GUEST,MCP 02 Nov 01 - 04:31 AM
GUEST,MCP 02 Nov 01 - 04:38 AM
Phil Cooper 02 Nov 01 - 03:45 PM
Stewie 07 Nov 01 - 06:40 PM
GUEST,MCP 08 Nov 01 - 06:28 AM
Phil Cooper 09 Nov 01 - 12:49 AM
GUEST,JennyFitz 12 Nov 03 - 02:59 AM
Phil Cooper 12 Nov 03 - 04:37 PM
Share Thread
more
Lyrics & Knowledge Search [Advanced]
DT  Forum Child
Sort (Forum) by:relevance date
DT Lyrics:





Subject: Young Hunting
From: GUEST,Fay
Date: 29 Oct 01 - 01:32 PM

I have a version of Young Hunting sung by Athur Knevett, and it's longer than most of the others I have found, but it still feels like it has verses missing. Does anyone know where I can find more versions of the ballad. I particually want verses relating to him being called up by the king and where the divers come from? make any sense? Ah well, please help me!!!
Thread #40885   Message #587609
Posted By: GUEST,Fay
07-Nov-01 - 02:18 PM
Thread Name: Young Hunting
Subject: Young Hunting

I want some extra verses for Young Hunting - I seem to have lost the last request I put up, so appologies if you've already responded.

My version is from Arthur Knevett, but there are some verses on a version by Brian Peters re the king sumoning the dead man, and not finding him so sending divers out to look for him, and the maid being nearly burned first, I would like other versions of these verses if they exist.

Go hunting...!


I deleted Thread #40885 because it's a duplicate.
-Joe Offer


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: Lyr Add: YOUNG HUNTING (Child #68)
From: MMario
Date: 29 Oct 01 - 01:44 PM

"Young Hunting" is, if I am reading other threads correctly, Child 68 -

Try a search of the DT using #68 - it should give you several versions.

Also - this is what I have on # 68:

Child 68A

O LADY, rock never your young son young
One hour longer for me,
For I have a sweetheart in Garlick's Wells
I love thrice better than thee.

`The very sols of my love's feet
Is whiter then thy face:'
`But nevertheless na, Young Hunting,
Ye'l stay wi me all night.'

She has birld in him Young Hunting
The good ale and the beer,
Till he was as fou drunken
As any wild-wood steer.

She has birld in him Young Hunting
The good ale and the wine,
Till he was as fou drunken
As any wild-wood swine.

Up she has tain him Young Hunting,
And she has had him to her bed,
. . . . .
. . . . .

And she has minded her on a little penknife,
That hangs low down by her gare,
And she has gin him Young Hunting
A deep wound and a sare.

Out an spake the bonny bird,
That flew abon her head:
`Lady, keep well thy green clothing
Fra that good lord's blood.'

`O better I'll keep my green clothing
Fra that good lord's blood
Nor thou can keep thy flattering toung,
That flatters in thy head.

`Light down, light down, my bonny bird,
Light down upon my hand,
. . . . . .
. . . . .

`O siller, O siller shall be thy hire,
An goud shall be thy fee,
An every month into the year,
Thy cage shall changed be.'

`I winna light down, I shanna light down,
I winna light on thy hand;
For soon, soon wad ye do to me
As ye done to Young Hunting.'

She has booted an spird him Young Hunting
As he had been gan to ride,
A hunting-horn about his neck,
An the sharp sourd by his side.

And she has had him to yon wan water,
For a' man calls it Clyde,
. . . . .
. . . . .

The deepest pot intill it all
She has puten Young Hunting in;
A green truff upon his breast,
To hold that good lord down.

It fell once upon a day
The king was going to ride,
And he sent for him Young Hunting,
To ride on his right side.

She has turnd her right and round about,
She sware now by the corn,
`I saw na thy son, Young Hunting,
Sen yesterday at morn.'

She has turnd her right and round about,
She swear now by the moon,
`I saw na thy son, Young Hunting,
Sen yesterday at noon.

`It fears me sair in Clyde Water
That he is drownd therein:'
O thay ha sent for the king's duckers,
To duck for Young Hunting.

They ducked in at the tae water-bank,
Thay ducked out at the tither:
`We'll duck no more for Young Hunting,
All tho he wear our brother.'

Out an spake the bonny bird,
That flew abon their heads,
. . . . .
. . . . .

`O he's na drownd in Clyde Water,
He is slain and put therein;
The lady that lives in yon castil
Slew him and put him in.

`Leave aff your ducking on the day,
And duck upon the night;
Whear ever that sakeless knight lys slain,
The candels will shine bright.'

Thay left off their ducking o the day,
And ducked upon the night,
And where that sakeless knight lay slain,
The candles shone full bright.

The deepest pot intill it a'
Thay got Young Hunting in;
A green turff upon his brest,
To hold that good lord down.

O thay ha sent aff men to the wood
To hew down baith thorn an fern,
That they might get a great bonefire
To burn that lady in.
`Put na the wyte on me,' she says,
`It was her May Catheren.'

Whan thay had tane her May Catheren,
In the bonefire set her in;
It wad na take upon her cheeks,
Nor take upon her chin,
Nor yet upon her yallow hair,
To healle the deadly sin.

Out they hae tain her May Catheren,
And they hay put that lady in;
O it took upon her cheek, her cheek,
An it took upon her chin,
An it took on her fair body,
She burnt like hoky-gren.


Child 68B

YOUNG REDINR'rS til the huntin gane,
Wi therty lords and three;
And he has til his true-love gane,
As fast as he could hie.

`Ye're welcome here, my Young Redin,
For coal and candle-licht;
And sae are ye, my Young Redin,
To bide wi me the nicht.'

`I thank ye for your licht, ladie,
Sae do I for your coal;
But there's thrice as fair a ladie as thee
Meets me at Brandie's Well.'

Whan they war at their supper set,
And merrily drinking wine,
This ladie has tane a sair sickness,
And til her bed has gane.

Young Redin he has followed her,
And a dowie man was he;
He fund his true-love in her bouer,
And the tear was in her ee.

Whan he was in her arms laid,
And gieing her kisses sweet,
Then out she's tane a little penknife,
And woundid him sae deep.

`O lang, lang is the winter nicht,
And slawly daws the day;
There is a slain knicht in my bouer,
And I wish he war away.'

Then up bespak her bouer-woman,
And she spak ae wi spite:
`An there be a slain knicht in your bouer,
It's yoursell that has the wyte.'

`O heal this deed on me, Meggy,
O heal this deed on me;
The silks that war shapen for me gen Pasche,
They sall be sewed for thee.'

`O I hae heald on my mistress
A twalmonth and a day,
And I hae heald on my mistress
Mair than I can say.'


They've booted him, and they've spurred him,
As he was wont to ride,
A huntin-horn round his neck,
And a sharp sword by his side;
In the deepest place o Clyde's Water,
It's there they've made his bed.

Sine up bespak the wylie parrot,
As he sat on the tree:
`And hae ye killd him Young Redin,
Wha neer had love but thee'

`Come doun, come doun, ye wylie parrot,
Come doun into my hand;
Your cage sall be o the beaten gowd,
Whan now it's but the wand.'

`I winna come doun, I canna come doun,
I winna come doun to thee;
For as ye've dune to Young Redin,
Ye'll do the like to me;
Ye'll thraw my head aff my hause-bane,
And throw me in the sea.'

O there cam seekin Young Redin
Mony a lord and knicht,
And there cam seekin Young Redin
Mony a ladie bricht.

And they've til his true-love gane,
Thinking he was wi her;
. . . . . .
. . . . .

`I hae na seen him Young Redin
Sin yesterday at noon;
He turnd his stately steed about,
And hied him throw the toun.

`But ye'll seek Clyde's Water up and doun,
Ye'll seek it out and in;
I hae na seen him Young Redin
Sin yesterday at noon.'

Then up bespak Young Redin's mither,
And a dowie woman was scho:
`There's na a place in Clyde's Water
But my son wad gae throw.'

They've sought Clyde's Water up and doun,
They've sought it out and in,
And the deepest place in Clyde's Water
They've fund Young Redin in.

O white, white war his wounds washen,
As white as a linen clout;
But as the traitor she cam near,
His wounds they gushit out.

`It's surely been my bouer-woman,
O ill may her betide!
I neer wad slain him Young Redin,
And thrown him in the Clyde.'

Then they've made a big bane-fire,
The bouer-woman to brin;
It tuke not on her cheek, her cheek,
It tuke not on her chin,
But it tuke on the cruel hands
That pat Young Redin in.

Then They've tane out the bouer-woman,
And pat the ladie in;
It tuke na on her cheek, her cheek,
It tuke na on her chin,
But it tuke on the fause, fause arms
That Young Redin lay in.


Child 68C

The ladie stude in her bour-door,
In her bour-door as she stude,
She thocht she heard a bridle ring,
That did her bodie gude.

She thocht it had been her father dear,
Come ridin owre the sand;
But it was her true-love Riedan,
Come hiean to her hand.

`You're welcome, you're welcome, Young Riedan,' she said,
`To coal an cannel-licht;
You're welcome, you're welcome, Young Riedan,
To sleep in my bour this nicht.'

`I thank you for your coal, madame,
An for your cannel tae;
There's a fairer maid at Clyde's Water,
I love better than you.'

`A fairer maid than me, Riedan
A fairer maid than me
A fairer maid than ten o me
You shurely neer did see.'

He leant him owre his saddle-bow,
To gie her a kiss sae sweet;
She keppit him on a little penknife,
An gae him a wound sae deep.

`O hide! oh hide! my bourswoman,
Oh hide this deed on me!
An the silks that waur shappit for me at Yule
At Pasch sall be sewed for thee.'

They saidled Young Riedan, they bridled Young Riedan,
The way he was wont to ride;
Wi a huntin-horn aboot his neck,
An a sharp sword by his side.

An they are on to Clyde's Water,
An they rade it up an doon,
An the deepest linn in a' Clyde's Water
They flang him Young Riedan in.

`Lie you there, you Young Riedan,
Your bed it is fu wan;
The maid you hae at Clyde's Water,
For you she will think lang.'

Up it spak the wily bird,
As it sat on the tree:
`Oh wae betide you, ill woman,
An an ill death may you dee!
For he had neer anither love,
Anither love but thee.'

`Come doon, come doon, my pretty parrot,
An pickle wheat aff my glue;
An your cage sall be o the beaten goud,
Whan it's of the willow tree.'

`I winna come doon, I sanna come doon,
To siccan a traitor as thee:
For as you did to Young Riedan,
Sae wald you do to mee.'

Come doon, come doon, my pretty parrot,
An pickle wheat aff my hand;
An your cage sall be o the beaten goud,
Whan it's o the willow wand.'

`I winna come doon, I sanna come doon,
To siccan a traitor as thee;
You wald thraw my head aff my hase-bane,
An fling it in the sea.'

It fell upon a Lammas-tide
The king's court cam ridin bye:
`Oh whare is it him Young Riedan
It's fain I wald him see.'

`Oh I hae no seen Young Riedan
Sin three lang weeks the morn;
It bodes me sair, and drieds me mair,
Clyde's Water's him forlorn.'

Up it spak the wily bird,
As it sat on the tree;
. . . . .
. . . . .

`Leave aff, leave aff your day-seekin,
An ye maun seek by nicht;
Aboon the place Young Riedan lies,
The cannels burn bricht.'

They gae up their day-seekin,
An they did seek by nicht;
An ower the place Young Riedan lay,
The cannels burnt bricht.

The firsten grip his mother got
Was o his yellow hair;
An was na that a dowie grip,
To get her ae son there!

The nexten grip his mother got
Was o his milk-white hand;
An wasna that a dowie grip,
To bring sae far to land!

White, white waur his wounds washen,
As white as ony lawn;
But sune's the traitor stude afore,
Then oot the red blude sprang.


Fire wadna tak on her bourswoman,
Niether on cheek nor chin;
But it took fast on thae twa hands
That flang young Riedan in.

`Come oot, come oot, my bourswoman,
Come oot, lat me win in;
For as I did the deed mysell,
Sae man I drie the pine.'


Child 68D

EARL RICHARD has a hunting gone,
As fast as he can ride;
He's a hunting-horn about his neck,
And a broadsword by his side.

`Licht down, licht down, Earl Richard,' she says,
`O licht down and come in,
And thou'll get cheer and charcoal clear,
And torches for to burn.'

`I winna licht, I canna licht,
I winna licht at all;
A fairer lady then ten of thee
Meets me at Richard's Wall.'

He louted owre his saddle-bow,
And for to kiss her sweet,
But little thocht o that penknife
Wherewith she wound him deep.

`Why wounds thou me so deep, lady
Why stabs thou me so sore
There's not a lord like Earl Richard
Could love false woman more.'

She called upon her waiting-maid,
Long before it was day:
`I have a dead man in my bower,
I wish he were away.'

`Keep ye your bower, my lily-flower,
Keep it free of all men's blood;'
`Oh I will keep it een as weel
As you or any maid.

`But siller will be thy wage,' she says,
`And gold will be thy fee,
And I mysell will gang alang
And bear thee companye.'

They booted him, and spurred him,
As he was wont to ride,
And they're awa to Lorn's Water,
To Lorn's Water so wide.

They turned down his yellow hair,
Turnd up his milk-white feet:
`Lye thou there, Earl Richard,' she said,
`Till the blood seep from thy bane;
That fairer maid than ten of me
Will look lang or thou come hame.'

As they were coming hame again,
Upon the road so hie,
There they spy'd a small pyet,
Was sitting on a tree.

`Where has thou been, fair lady' it says,
`Whare has thou been so soon
Or what did thou wi Earl Richard,
Was late wi thee yestreen'

`Come down, come down, my wee pyet;
An thou'll come to my knee,
I have a cage of beaten gold,
And I'll bestow 't on thee.'

`Keep thou thy cage of beaten gold,
And I will keep my tree;
For as thou did wi Earl Richard,
So wad thou do wi me;
Thou wad thraw the wee head aff my bouk,
And drown me in the sea.'

`Come down, come down, my wee pyet;
An thou'll come to my hand,
I have a cage of beaten gold,
And thou's be put therein.'

`Keep thou thy cage o beaten gold,
And I will keep my tree;
For as thou did wi Earl Richard,
So would thou do wi me.'

`Oh an I had my bow bendit,
And set unto my knee,
I wad shoot this wee pyet
Sits gabbling on the tree.'

`Before thou get thy bow bendit,
And set unto thy knee,
I'll be at Earl Richard's father,
Telling ill tales on thee.'

As they were coming hame again,
Upon the road so bricht,
There they saw Earl Richard's father,
Coming marching in their sicht.

`Whare has thou been, fair lady' he says,
`Whare has thou been back sae sune
O what did thou wi my auld son,
Was late wi thee yestreen'

She did swear by stars o licht,
And grass-green growing corn,
That she had not seen Earl Richard's face
Since Saturday at morn;
`But in Lorn's Water, indeed,' she says,
`I fear his days are done.'

`There was not a ford in Lorn's Water
But he could ride it weel;
And what did thou wi my auld son,
That went with thee afield'


Child 68E

LORD WILLIAM was the bravest knight
That dwalt in fair Scotland,
And, though renowned in France and Spain,
Fell by a ladie's hand.

As she was walking maid alone,
Down by yon shady wood,
She heard a smit o bridle reins,
She wishd might be for good.

`Come to my arms, my dear Willie,
You're welcome hame to me;
To best o chear and charcoal red,
And candle burnin free.'

`I winna light, I darena light,
Nor come to your arms at a';
A fairer maid than ten o you
I'll meet at Castle-law.'

`A fairer maid than me, Willie
A fairer maid than me
A fairer maid than ten o me
Your eyes did never see.'

He louted owr his saddle-lap
To kiss here ere they part,
And wi a little keen bodkin,
She pierced him to the heart.

`Ride on, ride on, Lord William now,
As fast as ye can dree;
Your bonny lass at Castle-law
Will weary you to see.'

Out up then spake a bonny bird,
Sat high upon a tree:
`How could you kill that noble lord
He came to marry thee.'

`Come down, come down, my bonny bird,
And eat bread aff my hand;
Your cage shall be of wiry goud,
Whar now it's but the wand.'

`Keep ye your cage o goud, lady,
And I will keep my tree;
As ye hae done to Lord William,
Sae wad ye do to me.'

She set her foot on her door-step,
A bonny marble stane,
And carried him to her chamber,
Oer him to make her mane.

And she has kept that good lord's corpse
Three quarters of a year,
Until that word began to spread;
Then she began to fear.

Then she cryed on her waiting-maid,
Ay ready at her ca:
`There is a knight into my bower,
'Tis time he were awa.'

The ane has taen him by the head,
The ither by the feet,
And thrown him in the wan water,
That ran baith wide and deep.

`Look back, look back, now, lady fair,
On him that loed ye weel;
A better man than that blue corpse
Neer drew a sword of steel.'

Child 68F

EARL RICHARD is a hunting gone,
As fast as he can ride,
His hunting-horn hung about his neck,
And a small sword by his side.

When he came to my lady's gate
He tirled at the pin,
And wha was sae ready as the lady hersell
To open and let him in.

`O light, O light, Earl Richard,' she says,
`O light and stay a' night;
You shall have cheer wi charcoal clear,
And candles burning bright.'

`I will not light, I cannot light,
I cannot light at all;
A fairer lady than ten of thee
Is waiting at Richard's Wall.'

He stooped from his milk-white steed,
To kiss her rosy cheek;
She had a pen-knife in her hand,
And wounded him so deep.

`O lie ye there, Earl Richard,' she says,
`O lie ye there till morn;
A fairer lady than ten of me
Will think lang of your coming home.'

She called her servants ane by ane,
She called them twa by twa:
`I have got a dead man in my bower,
I wish he were awa.'

The one has taen him by the hand,
And the other by the feet,
And they've thrown him in a deep draw-well,
Full fifty fathom deep.

Then up bespake a little bird,
That sat upon a tree:
`Gae hame, gae hame, ye false lady,
And pay your maids their fee.'

`Come down, come down, my pretty bird,
That sits upon the tree;
I have a cage of beaten gold,
I'll gie it unto thee.'

`Gae hame, gae hame, ye fause lady,
And pay your maids their fee;
As ye have done to Earl Richard,
Sae wud ye do to me.'

`If I had an arrow in my hand,
And a bow bent on a string,
I'd shoot a dart at thy proud heart,
Amang the leaves sae green.'


Child 68G

SHE has calld to her her bower-maidens,
She has calld them one by one:
`There is a dead man in my bower,
I wish that he was gone.'

They have booted him, and spurred him,
As he was wont to ride,
A hunting-horn around his waist,
A sharp sword by his side.

Then up and spake a bonie bird,
That sat upon the tree:
`What hae ye done wi Earl Richard
Ye was his gay lady.'

`Cum down, cum down, my bonie bird,
Cum sit upon my hand;
And ye sall hae a cage o the gowd,
Where ye hae but the wand.'

`Awa, awa, ye ill woman,
Nae ill woman for me;
What ye hae done to Earl Richard,
Sae wad ye do to mee.'


`O there's a bird intill your bowir
That sings sae sad and sweet;
O there's a bird intill your bour
Kept me frae my nicht's sleep.'


And she sware by the grass sae greene,
Sae did she by the corn,
That she had not seen Earl Richard
Sen yesterday at morn.


Child 68H

`HAIL well, hail well, my little foot-page,
Hail well this deed on me,
And ever I live my life to brook,
I'se pay thee well thy fee.'

`It's we'l beet him, and we'l spur him,
As gin he had been gain to ride,
Put a huntin-horn about his neck,
And a small sword by his side.

`And we'll carry him to Clyde's Water,
And there we'll fling him in,
That we may have it to be said
In Clyde's Water he drownd.'

O they bet him, and they spurrd him,
As gin he had been gain to ride,
Pat a huntin-horn about his neck,
But the sword on his wrang side.

And they hae carried him to Clyde's Water,
And there they flang him in,
That they might have it to be said
In Clyde's Water he drowned.


`It's we'll sen for the king's doukers,
And douk it up and doun;
It's we'll sen for the king's doukers,
And douk it out and in.'

Out it spak a little wee birdie,
As it sat on yon burn-brae:
. . . . .
. . . . .

`Ye may lay by your day doukers,
And turn you to the night,
And where the innocent blood lies slain,
The candles will burn fou bricht.'

O they hae brunt that gay ladie,
And blawn her in the air,
And nothing o that bower-man would burn
But the hands that buskd him rare.


Child 68I

`Come down, come down, thou bonnie bird,
Sit low upon my hand,
And thy cage shall be o the beaten gowd,
And not of hazel wand.'

`O woe, O woe be to thee, lady,
And an ill death may thou die!
For the way thou guided good Lord John,
Soon, soon would thou guide me.'

`Go bend to me my bow,' she said,
`And set it to my ee,
And I will gar that bonnie bird
Come quickly down to me.'

`Before thou bend thy bow, lady,
And set it to thy ee,
O I will be at yon far forest,
Telling ill tales on thee.'


Child 68J

'O lady, rock never your young son young
One hour langer for me;
For I have a sweetheart in Garlioch Wells
I love far better than thee.

`The very sole o that ladye's foot
Than thy face is far mair white:'
`But, nevertheless, now, Erl Richard,
Ye will bide in my bower a' night'

She birled him wi the ale and wine,
As they sat down to sup:
A living man he laid him down,
But I wot he neer rose up.

Then up and spake the popinjay,
That flew aboun her head:
`Lady, keep weel your green cleiding
Frae gude Erl Richard's bleid.'

`O better I'll keep my green cleiding
Frae gude Erl Richard's bleid,
Than thou canst keep thy clattering toung,
That trattles in thy head.'

She has calld upon her bower-maidens,
She has calld them ane by ane:
`There lies a deid man in my bowr,
I wish that he were gane.'

They hae booted him, and spurred him,
As he was wont to ride,
A hunting-horn tied round his waist,
A sharp sword by his side;
And they hae had him to the wan water,
For a' men call it Clyde.

Then up and spake the popinjay,
That sat upon the tree:
`What hae ye down wi Erl Richard
Ye were his gaye ladye.'

`Come down, come down, my bonny bird,
And sit upon my hand;
And thou sall hae a cage o gowd,
Where thou hast but the wand.'

`Awa, awa, ye ill woman,
Nae cage o gowd for me;
As ye hae dune to Erl Richard,
Sae wad ye do to me.'

She hadna crossd a rigg o land,
A rigg but barely ane,
When she met wi his auld father,
Came riding all alane.

`Where hae ye been, now, ladye fair,
Where hae ye been sae late
We hae been seeking Erl Richard,
But him we canna get.'

`Erl Richard kens a' the fords in Clyde,
He'll ride them ane by ane;
And though the night was neer sae mirk,
Erl Richard will be hame.'

O it fell anes upon a day
The king was boun to ride,
And he has mist him Erl Richard,
Should hae ridden on his right side.

The ladye turnd her round about,
Wi mickle mournfu din:
`It fears me sair o Clyde water,
That he is drownd therein.'

`Gar douk, gar douk,' the king he cried,
`Gar douk for gold and fee;
O wha will douk for Erl Richard's sake,
Or wha will douk for me'

They douked in at ae weil-heid,
And out aye at the other:
`We can douk nae mair for Erl Richard,
Altho he were our brother.'

It fell that in that ladye's castle
The king was boun to bed,
And up and spake the popinjay,
That flew abune his head.

`Leave aff your douking on the day,
And douk upon the night;
And wherever that sackless knight lies slain,
The candles will burn bright.'

`O there's a bird within this bower,
That sings baith sad and sweet;
O there's a bird within your bower
Keeps me frae my night's sleep.'

They left the douking on the day,
And douked upon the night,
And where that sackless knight lay slain,
The candles burned bright.

The deepest pot in a' the linn
They fand Erl Richard in;
A green turf tyed across his breast,
To keep that gude lord down.

Then up and spake the king himsell,
When he saw the deadly wound,
`O wha has slain my right-hand man,
That held my hawk and hound'

Then up and spake the popinjay,
Says, What needs a' this din
It was his light lemman took his life,
And hided him in the linn.

She swore her by the grass sae grene,
Sae did she by the corn,
She had na seen him Erl Richard
Since Moninday at morn.

`Put na the wyte on me,' she said,
`It was my may, Catherine:'
Then they hae cut baith fern and thorn,
To burn that maiden in.

It wadna take upon her cheik,
Nor yet upon her chin,
Nor yet upon her yellow hair,
To cleanse the deadly sin.

The maiden touchd the clay-cauld corpse,
A drap it never bled;
The ladye laid her hand on him,
And soon the ground was red.

Out they hae ta'en her May Catherine,
And put her mistress in;
The flame tuik fast upon her cheik,
Tuik fast upon her chin,
Tuik fast upon her fair bodye,
She burnd like hollins grene.


Child 68K

LADY MAISRY forth from her bower came,
And stood on her tower-head;
She thought she heard a bridle ring,
The sound did her heart guid.

She thought it was her first true-love,
Whom she loved ance in time;
But it was her new love, Hunting,
Come frae the hunting o the hyn.
S

N1 `Gude morrow, gude morrow, Lady Maisry,
God make you safe and free;
I'm come to take my last farewell,
And pay my last visit to thee.'

`O stay, O stay then, Young Hunting,
O stay with me this night;
Ye shall hae cheer, an charcoal clear,
And candles burning bright.'

`Have no more cheer, you lady fair,
An hour langer for me;
I have a lady in Garmouth town
I love better than thee.'

`O if your love be changed, my love,
Since better canno be,
Nevertheless, for auld lang syne,
Ye'll stay this night wi me.

`Silver, silver shall be your wage,
And gowd shall be your fee,
And nine times nine into the year
Your weed shall changed be.

`Will ye gae to the cards or dice,
Or to a tavern fine
Or will ye gae to a table forebye,
And birl baith beer and wine'

`I winna gang to the cards nor dice,
Nor to a tavern fine;
But I will gang to a table forebye,
And birl baith beer and wine.'

Then she has drawn for Young Hunting
The beer but and the wine,
Till she got him as deadly drunk
As ony unhallowed swine.

Then she's taen out a trusty brand,
That hang below her gare,
Then she's wounded him Young Hunting,
A deep wound and a sair.

Then out it speaks her comrade,
Being in the companie:
`Alas! this deed that ye hae done
Will ruin baith you and me.'

`Heal well, heal well, you Lady Katharine,
Heal well this deed on me,
The robes that were shapen for my bodie,
They shall be sewed for thee.'

`Tho I woud heal it never sae well,
And never sae well,' said she,
`There is a God above us baith
That can baith hear and see.'

They booted him, and spurred him,
As he'd been gaun to ride,
A hunting-horn about his neck,
A sharp sword by his side.

And they rode on, and farther on,
All the lang summer's tide,
Until they came to wan water,
Where a' man ca's it Clyde.

And the deepest pot in Clyde's water,
And there they flang him in,
And put a turf on his breast-bane,
To had Young Hunting down.

O out it speaks a little wee bird,


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Young Hunting
From: Phil Cooper
Date: 31 Oct 01 - 03:52 PM

I remember hearing Tony Rose do a spellbinding version of Young Hunting when he appeared in Chicago in 1982. Does anyone know his tune of it?


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Young Hunting
From: GUEST
Date: 01 Nov 01 - 01:24 PM

Here is an approximate version of the tune (from memory - I haven't checked back with the version on Tony Roses' Young Hunting LP.

He got the version and the tune from Pete Nalder (who was on Teesside in the early 70s IIRC, but of whom I have heard nothing for many a long year)

Mick

As she was a-walking all alone
Down in a leafy wood
She has heard the sound of a bridle reins
And she hoped that it might be for good

  X: 1  T:Young Hunting  M:3/4  L:1/4  K:D  (Ac)|d2 B/ 


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Young Hunting
From: GUEST,MCP
Date: 01 Nov 01 - 01:25 PM

Sorry again - ident missing from Guest - last was me Mick


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: Tune Add: YOUNG HUNTING
From: MMario
Date: 01 Nov 01 - 04:08 PM

Mick - does this look right?

X: 1
T:Young Hunting
M:3/4
L:1/4
K:D
(Ac)|d2 B/ M:4/4 L:1/4 A D A B|
M:3/4 L:1/4 G2 E|
M:5/4 L:1/4 D F A B c|
M:3/4 L:1/4 d2 A/A/|
M:6/4 L:1/4 d B/ M:3/4 L:1/4 G2 E| D F A | G E =C| D3-|D ||


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Young Hunting
From: Phil Cooper
Date: 02 Nov 01 - 12:56 AM

Thanks for the tune information. Did Tony have an LP out called Young Hunting? I thought the two leader/trailer albums he had done and Poor Fellows were the only one's he'd done before Bare Bones had come out. Any info on where to find a copy would be appreciated. Thanks.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Young Hunting
From: GUEST,pavane
Date: 02 Nov 01 - 02:33 AM

Yes, Tony did do an LP called Young Hunting - I used to have it but I don't know where it has gone. Shame because it was good.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Young Hunting
From: GUEST,MCP
Date: 02 Nov 01 - 04:31 AM

MMario - thanks for trying to make sense of my post. There are a few errors above. Here it is again, hopefully with line breaks. (The first time I tried using pre-/pre tags to avoid lots of br tags in the ungainly abc. I obviously didn't get that right!)

Mick

As she was a-walking all alone
Down in a leafy wood
She has heard the sound of a bridle reins
And she hoped that it might be for good

X: 1
T:Young Hunting
M:3/4
L:1/4
K:D
(Ac)|d2 B/ M:4/4
L:1/4
A D A B|\
M:3/4
L:1/4
G2 E|\
M:5/4
L:1/4
D F A B c|\
M:3/4
L:1/4
d2 A/A/|
M:6/4
L:1/4
d B/ M:3/4
L:1/4
G2 E|
D F A |\
G E =C|\
D3-|D ||


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Young Hunting
From: GUEST,MCP
Date: 02 Nov 01 - 04:38 AM

Curse you HTML! My < signs were swallowed up along with a few following character to the > of br tag. Final try incorporating them properly.
Mick

X: 1
T:Young Hunting
M:3/4
L:1/4
K:D
(Ac)|d2 B/<B/|\
M:4/4
L:1/4
A D A B|\
M:3/4
L:1/4
G2 E|\
M:5/4
L:1/4
D F A B c|\
M:3/4
L:1/4
d2 A/A/|
M:6/4
L:1/4
d B/<B/ A D A B|\
M:3/4
L:1/4
G2 E|
D F A |\
G E =C|\
D3-|D ||


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Young Hunting
From: Phil Cooper
Date: 02 Nov 01 - 03:45 PM

thanks MCP and MMario for the tune information. I've always liked Young Hunting and appreciate the thread.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Young Hunting
From: Stewie
Date: 07 Nov 01 - 06:40 PM

Phil, the 'Young Hunting' album was on Trailer - LER 2013. As mentioned above, Rose's version and tune came from Pete Nalder - Rose noted on the album sleeve that it was a 'fine reworking of the ballad' by Nalder.

--Stewie.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: Lyr Add: YOUNG HUNTING (Tony Rose)
From: GUEST,MCP
Date: 08 Nov 01 - 06:28 AM

Phil, here are the words for Tony Rose's version of it. As noted by myself and Stewie above, the version originated with Pete Nalder.

Mick

YOUNG HUNTING

As she was a-walking all alone
Down in a leafy wood
She has heard the sound of a bridle reins
And she hoped that it might be for good.

"Come down, come down, you fine young man
You're welcome home to me.
To my cosy bed and the charcoal red
And the candles that burn so free."

"Oh I can't come down and I won't come down,
Nor come into your arms at all.
For a finer girl than ten of you
Is waiting beneath the town wall."

"Well a finer girl than ten of me,
I wonder now how that might be?
For a finer girl than ten of me
I'm sure that you never did see."

Then and he has leaned him across his saddle
For a kiss before they did part.
And she has taken a keen, long knife
And she's stabbed him to the heart.

Saying, "Lie there, lie there, you fine young man,
Until the flesh it rots from your bones.
And that finer girl than ten of me
Can weary waiting alone."

But as she walked up the high highway
She spied a little bird up in a tree
Saying "Oh how could you kill that fine young man
As he was a-kissing of thee?"

"Come down, come down, you pretty little bird
And sit upon my right knee
And your cage shall be made of the glittering gold
And the spokes of the best ivory."

"I can't come down and I won't come down
Nor sit upon your right knee.
For as you did serve that fine young man
I know that you would serve me."

"Oh, then I wish I had my bended bow
And my arrow close to my knee.
I would fire a dart that would pierce your heart
As you sit there a-piping on that tree."

"Ah, but you've not got your bended bow,
Nor your arrows close to your knee.
So I'll fly across the sea to that young man's home
And tell them what I did see."

So she's gone back to her own house
And she's crossed the threshold with a moan
And she has taken that fine young man
And she's walled him behind the stones.

And she has kept that fine young man
For full three-quarters of a year.
Til a heavy smell it began to spread
And it filled her heart with fear.

So she's called unto the servant girl
And this to her did say,
"There's a fine and a young man in my room
But it's time that he was away."

So the one of them's took him by the shoulders
And the other one's took him by the feet.
And they've thrown his body in the River Clyde,
That runs so clear and so sweet.

And they has not crossed a rig of land,
A rig and barely one,
Before they saw his old father
Come a-riding all along.

"Oh, where have you been, my gay lady,
And where have you been so late?
For we've come a-seeking for my only son
Who used to visit your gates"

And there came a-seeking for this fine young man
Many lords and many knights.
And there came a-weeping for this fine young man
Full many's the lady bright.

Now the ladies turned them around and about
And they made such a mournful sound
Saying, "We greatly fear that your son is dead
And he lies neath the water and drowned."

"So, who will dive from either bank
For gold and for fee."
And the young men dived from either bank
But his body they could not see.

Then up and speaks that pretty little bird
A-sitting up high in the tree.
Saying "Oh, cease your diving, you divers bold,
For I'd have you to listen to me.

And I'd have you to cease your day diving
And dive all into the night
For under the water where his body lies
The candles they burn so bright."

So the divers ceased their day diving
And they dived all into the night.
And under the water where his body lay
The candles they burned so bright.

And they have raised his body up
From out the deepest part.
And they've seen the wound deep in his chest
And the turf all across his heart.

And when his father did see this dreadful wound
He made such a mournful sound.
Saying "Oh, who has killed my only son
Who used to follow my hounds?"

Then up and speaks the pretty little bird
Saying "What needs all this din?
For it was his light leman took his life
And then threw his body in."

"Oh, blame not me", the lady says,
"For it was the servant girl".
So they built a fire of the oak and ash
And put that servant girl in.

But the fire wouldn't take upon her cheek,
And the fire wouldn't take upon her chin,
And nor would it take upon her hair,
For she was free from the sin.

And when the servant girl touched the clay cold corpse
A drop it never bled.
But when the lady laid a hand upon it
The ground was soon covered with red.

So they've taken out the servant girl
And they've put the lady in.
And the fire it reached a ruddy red,
And all because of her sin.

And the fire took fast upon her cheek,
And the fire took fast upon her chin,
And it sang in the points of her yellow hair,
And twas all because of her sin.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Young Hunting
From: Phil Cooper
Date: 09 Nov 01 - 12:49 AM

Stewie and MCP

Thank you so much for the text. I'll have to try and find a copy of the LP sometime. I still remember how spell binding Tony was singing the song way back (his only trip to Chicago back in 1982 or '83). Thanks again. --Phil


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: Lyr Add: YOUNG HUNTING
From: GUEST,JennyFitz
Date: 12 Nov 03 - 02:59 AM

Hi there
I know this thread is a long time ago now, but last year I took the five incomplete stories I found in Bronson and made this. The tune is adapted from one of the american ones in the book.

YOUNG HUNTING

Last night, last night, Lady Margaret awoke
to the sweet call of a horn
Indeed it was her Sir Henry
returned from his wild hunting

Come in, come in, loving Henry she said
Come and stay hours one, two, three,
For it has been most three long years
Since I spent one hour with thee.

I can't come in, and I won't come in
and stay hours one, two, three
For there's a little girl in the old east land
That I love much better than thee.

He bended over her pillow side
to take kisses one, two, three
She held in her hand a little white knife
and she pierced him oh so deep

She clasped one hand to his yellow hair
and pulled him to his feet
and she plunged him down in the well water
which was both cold and deep

Help me get out, my own true love
won't you help me out cried he
for there's not a girl in the whole east land
that I love any better than thee

Lie there, lie there, loving Henry she said
til the flesh rots from your bones
And there's a little girl in the old east lands
Will long for your return.

Fly down fly down, pretty parrot bird,
and take corn one, two, three
I'll make you a cage of yellow beaten gold
and doors of ivory

I can't fly down and I won't fly down
and take corn one, two, three
For you have murdered your own true love
and I fear you would murder me.

O parrot if I had a tight drawn bow
and ar-rows one, two, three
I'd let them slip at your cold red breast
as you sit on yonder tree.

O Lady if you had a tight drawn bow
and ar -rows one, two, three
I'd take to flight and fly away
and sing from another tree.

Child #68
In same series is; False Lady/Lord of Scotland
Also parrot theme happens in another ballad series Outlandish Knight/Lady Isobel and the elf knight/False Sir John (versions of Child #4)

Jenny Fitzgibbon


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Young Hunting
From: Phil Cooper
Date: 12 Nov 03 - 04:37 PM

Jenny, good job! I'm still looking for the Rose tune, but have made up a tune on my own in the mean time for the song. Our bandmate Kate compiled a version we're working up. Your words seem to scan all right, on reading them. Are you using the tune Earl Richard with them?


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate
  Share Thread:
More...

Reply to Thread
Subject:  Help
From:
Preview   Automatic Linebreaks   Make a link ("blue clicky")


Mudcat time: 19 April 8:42 AM EDT

[ Home ]

All original material is copyright © 2022 by the Mudcat Café Music Foundation. All photos, music, images, etc. are copyright © by their rightful owners. Every effort is taken to attribute appropriate copyright to images, content, music, etc. We are not a copyright resource.