Bonnie Banks o Fordie- Goldie 1825; Child C
Child C is from the recitation of J. Goldie in 1825 from a Motherwell Manuscript, p. 172. According to Child Motherwell's MS., 1825 and after:
"A folio, almost entirely in Motherwell's hand, containing, besides some pieces not indexed, 228 indexed ballads. Most of these are from the West of Scotland, but not a few were given Motherwell by Buchan and are duplicates of copies which occur in Buchan's MSS. In the possession of Mr Malcolm Colquhoun Thomson, Glasgow."
Bonnie Banks o Fordie- Goldie 1825 Version C
Motherwell's MS., p. 172. From J. Goldie, March, 1825.
1 THERE were three sisters on a road,
Gilly flower gentle rosemary
And there they met a banished lord!
And the dew it hings over the mulberry tree
2 The eldest sister was on the road,
And there she met with the banished lord.
3 'O will ye consent to lose your life,
Or will ye be a banished lord's wife?'
4 'I'll rather consent to lose my life
Before I'll be a banished lord's wife.'
5 'It's lean your head upon my staff,'
And with his pen-knife he has cutted it aff.
6 He flang her in amang the broom,
Saying, 'Lye ye there till another ane come.'
7 The second sister was on the road,
And there she met with the banished lord.
8 'O will ye consent to lose your life,
Or will ye be a banished lord's wife?'
9 'I'll rather consent to lose my life
Before I'll be a banished lord's wife.'
10 'It's lean yonr head upon my staff,'
And with his pen-knife he has cutted it aff.
11 He flang her in amang the broom,
Saying, 'Lie ye there till another ane come.'
12 The youngest sister was on the road,
And there she met with the banished lord.
13 'O will ye consent to lose your life,
Or will ye be a banished lord's wife?'
14 'O if my three brothers were here,
Ye durstna put me in such a fear.'
15 'What are your three brothers, altho they were here,
That I durstna put you in such a fear?'
16 'My eldest brother's a belted knight,
The second. he 's a . . . . .
17 'My youngest brother's a banished lord,
And oftentimes he walks on this road.'