Babylon or The Bonnie Banks o Fordie
No: 14; variant: 14D
- THERE were three sisters, they lived in a bower,
Sing Anna, sing Margaret, sing Marjorie
The youngest o them was the fairest flower.
And the dew goes thro the wood, gay ladie
- The oldest of them she's to the wood gane,
To seek a braw leaf and to bring it hame.
- There she met with an outlyer bold,
Lies many long nights in the woods so cold.
- 'Istow a maid, or istow a wife?
Wiltow twinn with thy maidenhead, or thy sweet life?'
- 'O kind sir, if I hae't at my will,
I'll twinn with my life, keep my maidenhead still.'
- He's taen out his we pen-knife,
He's twinned this young lady of her sweet life
- He wiped his knife along the dew;
But the more he wiped, the redder it grew.
- The second of them she's to the wood gane,
To seek her old sister, and to bring her hame.
- There she met with an outlyer bold,
Lies many long nights in the woods so cold.
- 'Istow a maid, or istow a wife?
Wiltow twinn with thy maidenhead, or thy sweet life?'
- 'O kind sir, if I hae't at my will,
I'll twinn with my life, keep my maidenhead still.'
- He's taen out his we pen-knife,
He's twinned this young lady of her sweet life.
- He wiped his knife along the dew;
But the more he wiped, the redder it grew.
- The youngest of them she's to the wood gane,
To seek her two sisters, and to bring them hame.
- There she met with an outlyer bold,
Lies many long nights in the woods so cold.
- 'Istow a maid, or istow a wife?
Wiltow twinn with thy maidenhead, or thy sweet life?'
- 'If my three brethren they were here,
Such questions as these thou durst nae speer.'
- 'Pray, what may thy three brethren be,
That I durst na mak so bold with thee?'
- 'The eldest o them is a minister bred,
He teaches the people from evil to good.
- 'The second o them is a ploughman good,
He ploughs the land for his livelihood.
- 'The youngest of them is an outlyer bold,
Lies many a long night in the woods so cold.'
- He stuck his knife then into the ground,
He took a long race, let himself fall on.