The Wife of Usher's Well
The Wife of Usher's Well
Original Text
The English and Scottish Popular Ballads, ed.
Francis James Child, 5 vols. (1884-1898; New York: Dover, 1965), II: 238-39 (79A). From Sir Walter Scott's Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, II (1802): 111, "from the recitation of an old woman residing near
Kirkhill, in West Lothian" (238).
2 And a wealthy wife was she;
3She had three stout and stalwart sons,
4 And sent them oer the sea.
##.
5They hadna been a week from her,8 That her three sons were gane.
##.
9They hadna been a week from her,10 A week but barely three,
11Whan word came to the carlin wife
12 That her sons she ’d never see.
##.
13“I wish the wind may never cease,15Till my three sons come hame to me,
16 In earthly flesh and blood.”
23But at the gates o Paradise,
24 That birk grew fair eneugh.
##.
25“Blow up the fire, my maidens,26 Bring water from the well;
27For a’ my house shall feast this night,
28 Since my three sons are well.”
##.
29And she has made to them a bed,30 She ’s made it large and wide,
31And she ’s taen her mantle her about,
32 Sat down at the bed-side.
##.
33Up then crew the red, red cock,34 And up and crew the gray;
35The eldest to the youngest said,
36 ’Tis time we were away.
##.
37The cock he hadna crawd but once,38 And clappd his wings at a’,
39When the youngest to the eldest said,
40 Brother, we must awa.
43Gin we be mist out o our place,
##.
45“Fare ye weel, my mother dear!47And fare ye weel, the bonny lass
48 That kindles my mother’s fire!”
Notes
1] Usher's Well: evidently a fictitious place-name. Back to Line
6] ane: one. Back to Line
7] carline: old. Back to Line
14] fashes: tumults. Back to Line
17] Martinmass: November 11, the feast of St. Martin. Back to Line
18] lang: long. mirk: dark. Back to Line
19] hame: home. Back to Line
20] birk: birch. Back to Line
21] syke: trench. Back to Line
22] sheigh: furrow. Back to Line
41] daw: dawn. Back to Line
42] channerin': grumbling, fretting. Back to Line
44] sair: sore. maun: must. bide: endure. Back to Line
46] byre: cattle shed. Back to Line
Publication Start Year
1802
RPO poem Editors
Ian Lancashire
RPO Edition
2002
Rhyme
Form