"Hanged I Shall Be" mentions hanging in the title and the conclusion to the song, but it stands out for the totally gratuitous and unexplained level of violence that led to the conviction. Here's the version as sung by Martin Carthy with the Albion Country Band HANGED I SHALL BE Now as I was bound apprentice, I was ’prentice to the mill, And I served my master truly for more than seven year. Until I took up to courting with a lass with that rolling eye And I promised that I’d marry her in the month of sweet July. And as we went out a-walking through the fields and the meadows gay, Oh it’s there we told our tales of love and we fixed our wedding day. And as we were walking and talking of the things that grew around Oh I took a stick all out of the hedge and I knocked that pretty maid down Down on her bended knees she fell and loud for mercy cry, “Oh spare the life of an innocent girl for I’m not prepared to die.” But I took her by her curly locks and I dragged her on the ground And I throwed her into the riverhead that flows to Ekefield town, That flows so far to the distance, that flows so deep and wide, Oh it’s there I threw this pretty fair maid that should have been my bride. Now I went home to my parents’ house, it being late at night. Mother she got out of bed all for to light the light. Oh she asked me and she questioned me, “What stains your hands and clothes?” And the answer I gave back to her, “I’ve been bleeding at my nose.” No rest, no rest all that long night, no rest there could I find For there’s sparks of fire and brimstone around my head did shine. And it was about three days after that this pretty fair maid was found, Floating by the riverhead that flows to Ekefield town. That flows so far to the distance, that flows so deep and wide. Oh it’s there they found this pretty fair maid that should have been my bride. Oh the judges and the jurymen all on me they did agree For a-murdering of this pretty fair maid oh hanged I shall be.
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