The Deceived Girl- Mullens (Hazard, KY) 1932 Collected John Jacob Niles
[From the 1961 book, The Ballad Book of John Jacob Niles. Niles gives a lengthy bit about the ne'er-do-well Mullins and his ginseng business but fails to point out the obvious- why haven't any versions of this ballad been collected in North America, yet Niles found three.
R. Matteson 2014]
The Deceived Girl- attributed to Taylor Mullens, Hazard, KY; 1932
1. As she walked past the jailhouse door,
She spied a man with head hung low,
And all because of bolts and bars,
His homeland he would never know.
2. "I am a prisoner far from home,
But if you only steal the key,
I'll take you where the grass grows green,
And make you a great lady."
3. "I cannot go, I will not go,
And be your great lady,
For you have got a Scotland wife,
And you've got babies three."
4, She's done to her father's stable,
She's done to her mother's till,
She's got the jailhouse key so large,
And she's galloped o'er the hill.
5. And as they galloped o'er the plain,
It was "my dearling dear,"
But as they came to Scotland,
Well changed was this cheer.
6, "Oh pity, pity, pity, please,
As I did pity thee,
Or fling me from your castle's walls
And break my slim body."
7. "But how can I have pity
When you are just a whore?
Now get you back to England
Where I'll see you no more!"
8. "Oh false and faithless knight," said
"I'll to my father's door,
And he will prove to Scotland
That I have never been whore."
9. Her mother, who was truly queen,
She gently then did smile,
"You're not the first, nor only one,
The Scotsmen did beguile."
10. Come all ye maidens, young and old,
Pray come, be warned of me--
Scots were never, never true,
And Scots will never be.