Close ×

Search EBBA

Advanced Search

EBBA 35940

Beinecke Library - Michell-Jolliffe
Ballad XSLT Template
A Ballad, Intituled,, The Old Mans Complaint against his
Wretched Son, who to Advance his Marriage, did undo himself.
To the same Tune.

ALL you that Fathers be,
look on my misery,
Let not affection fond,
work your extremity,
For to advance my Son,
in Marriage wealthily,
I have myself undone,
without all remedy,

I that was wont to live
uncontroul'd any way,
With many checks and faunts,
am grieved every day:
Alack and woe is me,
I that might late command,
Cannot have a bit of Bread,
but at my Childrens hand.

While I was want to sit,
chief at the Tables end,
Now like a Servant slave,
must I on them attend,
I must not come in place
where their friends merry be,
Lest I should my Son disgrace,
with my unreverency,

My coughing in the night,
offends my Daughter-in-Law,
My deafness and ill sight,
doth much disliking draw,
Fie on this doting fool,
this crooked Churl (quoth she)
The Chimney-corner still,
must with him troubled be,

I must rise from my Chair,
to give my Children place,
I must speak Servants fair,
this is my woful case.
Unto their friends they tell,
(I must not say they lye)
That they do keep me here,
even of meer Charity.

When I am sick in bed,
they will not come me nigh,
Each day they wish me dead,
yet say i'le never dye:
O Lord an't be thy will,
look on my woful case,
No honest man before,
ever took such disgrace.

This was the Old man's plaint
every night and day,
With woe he waxed faint,
but mark what I shall say.
This rich and dainty pair,
the young-man and his Wife,
Though clog'd with Golden Coin,
yet led a grievous life.

Seven years they married were,
and yet in all that space,
God sent them ne'r an Heir,
their Riches to imbrace:
Thus did their sorrow breed,
joy was from them exil'd,
Quoth she, a hundred pound,
would I give for a Child:

To have a joyful Child,
of my own body born,
Full oft I am revil'd,
of this my barren Womb:
Much Physick did she take,
to make a fruitful soil,
And with access thereof,
her body she had spoyl.

Full of grief full of pain,
full of each grew she then,
That she criws out amain,
seek for some cunning men.
That I my health my have,
I will no money spare,
But that which she did crave,
never fell to her share.

Alack, alack, she said,
what torments I live in,
How well are they apaid,
that truly ease can win:
So that I had my health,
and from this pain was free,
I would give all my wealth,
that Blessed day to see.

O that I my health had,
though I were ne'r so poor,
I car'd not though I went,
begging from door to door:
Fie on this muck, quoth she,
it cannot pleasure me,
In this my woful case,
and great extremity.

Thus liv'd she long in pain,
all comfort from her fled,
She strangled at the last
herself within the bed
Her Husband full of grief,
consumed wofully,
His body pin'd away,
suddenly he did dye:

Ere thirteen years were past,
dy'd he without a will,
And by this means at last,
the old man living still;
Injoy'd his Land at last,
after much misery,
Many years after that,
liv'd he most happily.

Far richer then before,
by this means was he known:
He helpt the sick and sore,
the poor man overthrown.
But this was all his Song,
let all men understand,
Those Parents are accurst,
live on their Childrens hand.


Printed for and Sold by W. Thackeray, at the Angel in Duck Lane, J.M. and A.M.

View Raw XML