The Earl of Mar’s Daughter
No: 270; variant: 270A
- IT was intill a pleasant time,
Upon a simmer's day,
The noble Earl of Mar's daughter
Went forth to sport and play.
- As thus she did amuse hersell,
Below a green aik tree,
There she was a sprightly doo
Set on a tower sae hie.
- 'O Cow-me-doo, my love sae true,
If ye'll come down to me,
Ye'se hae a cage o guid red gowd
Instead o simple tree:
- 'I'll put gowd hingers roun your cage,
And siller roun your wa;
I'll gar ye shine as fair a bird
As ony o them a'.'
- But she hadnae these words well spoke,
Nor yet these words well said,
Till Cow-me-doo flew frae the tower
And lighted on her head.
- Then she has brought this pretty bird
Hame to her bowers and ha,
And made him shine as fair a bird
As ony o them a'.
- When day was gane, and night was come,
About the evening tide,
This lady spied a sprightly youth
Stand straight up by her side.
- 'From whence came ye, young man?' she said;
'That does surprise me sair;
My door was bolted right secure,
What way hae ye come here?'
- 'O had your tongue, ye lady fair,
Lat a' your folly be;
Mind ye not on your turtle-doo
Last day ye brought wi thee?'
- 'O tell me mair, young man,' she said,
'This does surprise me now;
What country hae ye come frae?
What pedigree are you?'
- 'My mither lives on foreign isles,
She has nae mair but me;
She is a queen o wealth and state,
And birth and high degree.
- 'Likewise well skilld in magic spells,
As ye may plainly see,
And she transformd me to yon shape,
To charm such maids as thee.
- 'I am a doo the live-lang day,
A sprightly youth at night;
This aye gars me appear mair fair
In a fair maiden's sight.
- 'And it was but this verra day
That I came ower the sea;
Your lovely face did me enchant;
I'll live and dee wi thee.'
- 'O Cow-me-doo, my luve sae true,
Nae mair frae me ye'se gae;'
'That's never my intent, my luve,
As ye said, it shall be sae.'
- 'O Cow-me-doo, my luve sae true,
It's time to gae to bed;'
'Wi a' my heart, my dear marrow,
It's be as ye hae said.'
- Then he has staid in bower wi her
For sax lang years and ane,
Till sax young sons to him she bare,
And the seventh she's brought hame.
- But aye as ever a child was born
He carried them away,
And brought them to his mither's care,
As fast as he coud fly.
- Thus he has staid in bower wi her
For twenty years and three;
There came a lord o high renown
To court this fari ladie.
- But still his proffer she refused,
And a' his presents too;
Says, I'm content to live alane
Wi my bird, Cow-me-doo.
- Her father sware a solemn oath
Amang the nobles all,
'The morn, or ere I eat or drink,
This bird I will gar kill.'
- The bird was sitting in his cage,
And heard what they did say;
And when he found they were dismist,
Says, Wae's me for this day!
- 'Before that I do langer stay,
And thus to be forlorn,
I'll gang unto my mither's bower,
Where I was bred and born.'
- Then Cow-me-doo took flight and flew
Beyond the raging sea,
And lighted near his mither's castle,
On a tower a gowd sae hie.
- As his mither was wauking out,
To see what she coud see,
And there she saw her little son,
Set on the tower sae hie.
- 'Get dancers here to dance,' she said,
'And minstrells for to play;
For here's my young son, Florentine,
Come here wi me to stay.'
- 'get nae dancers to dance, mither,
Nor minstrells for to play,
For the mither o my seven sons,
The morn's her wedding-day.'
- 'O tell me, tell me, Florentine,
Tell me, and tell me true,
Tell me this day without a flaw,
What I will do for you.'
- 'Instead of dancers to dance, mither,
Or minstrells for to play,
Turn four-and-twenty wall-wight men
Like storks in feathers gray;
- 'My seven sons in seven swans,
Aboon their heads to flee;
And I mysell a gay gos-hawk,
A bird o high degree.'
- Then sichin said the queen hersell,
'That thing's too high for me;'
But she applied to an auld woman,
Who had mair skill than she.
- Instead o dancers to dance a dance,
Or minstrells for to play,
Four-and-twenty wall-wight men
Turnd birds o feathers gray;
- Her seven sons in seven swans,
Aboon their heads to flee;
And he himsell a gay gos-hawk,
A bird o high degree.
- This flock o birds took flight and flew
Beyond the raging sea,
And landed near the Earl Mar's castle,
Took shelter in every tree.
- They were a flock o pretty birds,
Right comely to be seen;
The people viewd them wi surprise,
As they dancd on the green.
- These birds ascended frae the tree
And lighted on the ha,
And at the last wi force did flee
Amang the nobles a'.
- The storks there seized some o the men,
They coud neither fight nor flee;
The swans they bound the bride's best man
Below a green aik tree.
- They lighted next on maidens fair,
Then on the bride's own head,
And wi the twinkling o an ee
The bride and them were fled.
- There's ancient men at weddings been
For sixty years or more,
But sic a curious wedding-day
They never saw before.
- For naething coud the companie do,
Nor naething coud they say
But they saw a flock o pretty birds
That took their bride away.
- When the Earl Mar he came to know
Where his dochter did stay,
He signd a bond o unity,
And visits now they pay.