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EBBA 30163

British Library - Roxburghe
Ballad XSLT Template
The mad-merry prankes of Robbin Good-fellow.
To the tune of Dulcina.

FRom Oberon in Fairy Land
the King of Ghosts and shadowes there,
Mad Robbin I at his command,
am sent to view the night-sports here.
What revell rout
Is kept about
In every corner where I goe,
I will ore see,
And merry be,
And make good sport with ho ho ho.

More swift then lightning can I flye,
and round about this ayrie welkin soone,
And in a minutes space descry
each thing thats done beneath the Moone:
Theres not a Hag
Nor Ghost shall wag,
Nor cry Goblin where I do goe,
But Robin I
Their feats will spye
And feare them home with ho ho ho.

If any wanderers I meet
that from their night sports doe trudge home
With counterfeiting voyce I greet,
and cause them on with me to roame
Through woods, through lakes,
Through bdgs, through brakes
Ore bush and brier with them I goe,
I call upon
Them to come on,
And wend me laughing ho ho ho.

Sometimes I meet them like a man,
sometimes an oxe, sometimes a hound,
And to a horse I turne me can,
to trip and trot about them round.
But if to ride
My backe they stride,
More swift then winde away I goe,
Ore hedge and lands,
Through pooles and ponds,
I whirry laughing ho ho ho.

When Ladds and Lasses merry be,
With possets and with junkets fine,
Unseene of all the Company,
I eate their cates and sip their wine:
and to make sport,
I fart and snort,
And out the candles I doe blow,
The maids I kisse,
They shrieke whos this
I answer nought but ho ho ho.

Yet now and then the maids to please,
I card at midnight up their wooll:
And while they sleep, snort, fart, and fease,
with wheele to threds their flaxe I pull:
I grind at Mill
Their Malt up still,
I dresse their hemp, I spin their towe
If any wake,
And would me take,
I wend me laughing ho ho ho.

The second part, To the same tune.

WHen house or harth doth sluttish lie,
I pinch the Maids there blacke & blew,
And from the bed the bed-cloathes I
pull off, and lay them naked to view:
twixt sleepe, and wake
I doe them take
And on the key cold floore them throw,
If out they cry
Then forth flye I,
And loudly laugh I ho ho ho.

When any need to borrow ought,
we lend them what they doe require,
And for the use demaund we nought,
our owne is all we doe desire:
If to repay
They doe delay
Abroad amongst them then I goe,
And night by night
I them affright
With pinching, dreames, and ho ho ho.

When lazie queanes have naught to doe,
but study how to cogge and lie,
To make debate and mischiefe too
twixt one another secretly:
I marke their glose
And doe disclose
To them that they had wronged so,
When I have done
I get me gone
And leave them scolding ho ho ho.

When men doe traps and engins set
in loope-holes where the vermine creepe,

That from their foulds and houses set
their ducks and geese, their lambs and sheepe,
I spy the gin
And enter in,
And seemes a vermin taken so
But when they there
approach me neare
I leape out laughing ho ho ho.

By Wels and Gils in medowes greene
we nightly dance our heyday guise,
And to our fairy king and queene
wee chant our Moone-light harmonies
When larkes gin sing
Away we fling
And babes new borne steale as we goe,
An elfe in bed
We leave in stead,
And wend us laughing ho ho ho.

From Hag-bred Merlins time have I
thus nightly reveld to and fro:
And for my pranks men call me by
the name of Robin Good-fellow:
Fiends, ghosts, and sprites
That haunt the nights,
The Hags and Goblins doe me know,
And Beldams old
My feats have told,
So Vale, Vale, ho ho ho.


FINIS.
London, Printed for H.G.

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