"That a
butcher doth deny;
I will go with you, my brethren true,
As fast as I can hie."
But when to the
sheriffs house they came,
To dinner they hied apace,
And Robin Hood he the man must be
Before them all to say grace.
"Pray God bless us all," said jolly Robin,
"And our meat within this place;
A cup of sack so good will
nourish our blood,
And so do I end my grace."
"Come fill us more wine," said jolly Robin,
"Let us be merry while we do stay;
For wine and good cheer, be it never so dear,
I vow I the reck'ning will pay.
"Come, 'brothers,' be merry," said jolly Robin,
"Let us drink, and never give ore;
For the shot I will pay, ere I go my way,
If it cost me five pounds and more."
"This is a mad blade," the
butchers then said;
Saies the
sheriff, "He is some prodigel,
That some land has sold for silver and gold,
And now he doth mean to spend all.
"Hast thou any horn beasts," the
sheriff repli'd,
"Good fellow, to sell unto me?"
"Yes, that I have, good master
sheriff,
I have hundreds two or three;
"And a hundred aker of good free land,
If you please it to see:
And Ile make you as good
assurance of it,
As ever my father made me."
The
sheriff he saddled his good palfrey,
And, with three hundred pound in gold,
Away he went with bold Robin Hood,
His horned beasts to behold.
Away then the
sheriff and Robin did ride,
To the forrest of merry Sherwood;
Then the
sheriff did say, "God bless us this day
From a man they call Robin Hood!"
But when a little farther they came,
Bold Robin he chanced to spy
A hundred head of good red deer,
Come tripping the
sheriff full nigh.
"How like you my horn'd beasts, good master
sheriff?
They be fat and fair for to see;"
"I tell thee, good fellow, I would I were gone,
For I like not thy company."
Then Robin set his horn to his mouth,
And blew but blasts three;
Then quickly anon there came Little John,
And all his company.
"What is your will, master?" then said Little John,
"Good master come tell unto me;"
"I have brought
hither the
sheriff of Nottingham
This day to dine with thee."
"He is
welcome to me," then said Little John,
"I hope he will
honestly pay;
I know he has gold, if it be but well told,
Will serve us to drink a whole day."
Then Robin took his
mantle from his back,
And laid it upon the ground:
And out of the
sheriffs port
mantleHe told three hundred pound.
Then Robin he brought him thorow the wood,
And set him on his dapple gray;
"O have me commanded to your wife at home;"
So Robin went laughing away.
NOTES
SIR PATRICK SPENS
Mr. Child finds the first published
version of "the grand old
ballad of Sir Patrick Spens," as Coleridge calls it, in Bishop
Percy's RELIQUES. Here the name is "Spence," and the middle rhyme
-
"Haf owre, haf owre to Aberdour,"
is not of early date. The "Cork-heeled Shoon," too, cannot be
early, but
ballads are subject, in oral
tradition, to such modern
interpolations. The verse about the ladies
waitingvainly is
anticipated in a popular song of the fourteenth century, on a
defeat of the NOBLESSE in Flanders -
"Their ladies them may abide in bower and hall well long!"
If there be
historicalfoundation for the
ballad, it is probably a
blending of the
voyage of Margaret, daughter of Alexander III., to
wed Eric, King of Norway, in 1281 (some of her
escort were drowned
on their way home), with the rather
mysterious death, or
disappearance, of Margaret's daughter, "The Maid of Norway," on her
voyage to marry the son of Edward I., in 1290. A woman, who
alleged that she was the Maid of Norway, was later burned at the
stake. The great number and
variety of
versions sufficiently
indicate the
antiquity of this
ballad,
wherein exact history is not
to be expected.
THE BATTLE OF OTTERBURN
From THE BORDER MINSTRELSY, Sir Walter Scott's latest
edition of
1833: the copy in the
edition of 1802 is less complete. The
gentle and
joyous passage of arms here recorded, took place in
August 1388. We have an
admirableaccount of Otterburn fight from
Froissart, who revels in a
gallantencounter, fairly fought out
hand to hand, with no
intervention of archery or
artillery, and for
no
wretched practical purpose. In such a
combat the Scots, never
renowned for success at long bowls, and led by a Douglas, were
likely to prove
victorious, even against long odds, and when taken
by surprise.
Choosing an
advantage in the discordant days of Richard II., the
Scots mustered a very large force near Jedburgh, merely to break
lances on English ground, and take loot. Learning that, as they
advanced by the Carlisle route, the English intended to invade
Scotland by Berwick and the east coast, the Scots sent three or
four hundred men-at-arms, with a few thousand mounted archers and
pikemen, who should harry Northumberland to the walls of Newcastle.
These were led by James, Earl of Douglas, March, and Murray. In a
fight at Newcastle, Douglas took Harry Percy's pennon, which
Hotspur vowed to recover. The
retreat began, but the Scots waited
at Otterburn,
partly to
besiege the castle,
partly to abide
Hotspur's
challenge. He made his attack at
moonlight, with
overwhelming odds, but was hampered by a marsh, and incommoded by a
flank
attach of the Scots. Then it came to who would pound
longest, with axe and sword. Douglas cut his way through the
English, axe in hand, and was
overthrown, but his men protected his
body. The Sinclairs and Lindsay raised his
banner, with his cry;
March and Dunbar came up; Hotspur was taken by Montgomery, and the
English were routed with heavy loss. Douglas was buried in Melrose
Abbey; very many years later the English defiled his grave, but
were punished at Ancram Moor. There is an English poem on the
fight of "about 1550"; it has many analogies with our Scottish
version, and,
doubtless, ours descends from a
ballad almost
contemporary. The
ballad was a great favourite of Scott's. In a
severe
illness, thinking of Lockhart, not yet his son-in-law, he