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EBBA 21107

Magdalene College - Pepys
Ballad XSLT Template
The Forlorn Lover,
DECLARING HOW
A Lass gave her Lover three slips for a Tester,
And Married another a Week before Easter.
To a Pleasant new Tune.

A Week before Easter,
the days long and clear,
So bright is the Sun
and so cold is the ayr;
I went into the Forrest,
[s]ome flowers to find there,
[An]d the Forrest would yield me no Posies.

[T]he Wheat and the Rye
that groweth so green,
The Hedges and Trees
in their several Coats,
Small Birds do sing
in their changeable notes,
But there grows no Strawberries or Roses.

I went in the Meadow
some time for to spend,
And to come back again,
did fully intend:
But as I came back
I met with a friend,
And love was the cause of my mourning.

I lov'd a fair Lady
this many a long day,
And now to requite me,
she married away;
Here she hath left me
in sorrow to stay,
But now I begin to consider.

I Loved her dear,
and I loved her well,
I hated those people
that spoke of her ill;
Many a one told me
what she did say,
But yet I would hardly believe them.

But when I did hear
my love askt in the Church,
I went out of my seat,
and sat in the porch:
I found I should falsly
be left in the lurch,
And thought that my heart would have broken.

But when I did see
my Love to the Church go,
With all her Bride-Maidens
they made such a show;
I laught in conceit,
but my heart was full low,
To see how highly she was regarded.

But when I saw my love
in the Church stand,
Gold Ring on her Finger,
well seal'd with a hand:
He had so seduc'd her
with house and with Land,
That nothing but Death can them sever.

But when the Bride-Maidens
were having her to Bed,
I stept in amongst them
and kissed the Bride:
I wisht I might have been
laid by her side,
And by that means I got me a favor.

When she was laid in bed,
(drest up in white)
My eyes gusht with water,
that drowned my sight:
I put off my Hat,
and bid them good-night,
And adieu my fair sweeting for ever.

Oh dig me a Grave
that is wide, large, and deep,
With a root at my head,
and another at my feet:
There will I lye
and take a long sleep,
I'le bid her farewel for ever.

She plighted her faith,
to be my fair Bride,
And now at last hath
me falsly depriv'd;
I'le leave off my wrath,
and with God be my guide,
To save me from such another.

I pitty her case,
much more then my own,
That she should imbrace
and joyn hands in one:
Whilst I am her true love,
and daily do groan,
My sorrow I cannot smother.

Though Marriage hath bound her,
she is much to blame,
And though he hath found her,
her Husband I am;
Hereafter 'twill wound her,
that she put them to shame,
When Conscience shall be her accuser.

Two Husbands she hath
by this wild miscarriage,
The one by a Contract,
the other by Marriage:
She doth her whole Family
grossly disparage,
But I will not plot to misuse her.

Beware you young-men,
of Arts or of Trades,
Chuse warily when
you meet with such Maids:
You'd better live single
alone in the Shades,
Then to love such an abuser.


Printed for J. Clark. W. Thackeray, and T. Passenger.

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