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<h2> Flodden Field </h2>
<p>King Jamie hath made a vow,<br/>
Keepe it well if he may:<br/>
That he will be at lovely London<br/>
Upon Saint James his day.<br/>
<br/>
Upon Saint James his day at noone,<br/>
At faire London will I be,<br/>
And all the lords in merrie Scotland,<br/>
They shall dine there with me.<br/>
<br/>
"March out, march out, my merry men,<br/>
Of hie or low degree;<br/>
I'le weare the crowne in London towne,<br/>
And that you soon shall be."<br/>
<br/>
Then bespake good Queene Margaret,<br/>
The teares fell from her eye:<br/>
"Leave off these warres, most noble King,<br/>
Keepe your fidelitie.<br/>
<br/>
"The water runnes swift, and wondrous deepe,<br/>
From bottome unto the brimme;<br/>
My brother Henry hath men good enough;<br/>
England is hard to winne."<br/>
<br/>
"Away" quoth he "with this silly foole!<br/>
In prison fast let her lie:<br/>
For she is come of the English bloud,<br/>
And for these words she shall dye."<br/>
<br/>
With that bespake Lord Thomas Howard,<br/>
The Queenes chamberlaine that day:<br/>
"If that you put Queene Margaret to death,<br/>
Scotland shall rue it alway."<br/>
<br/>
Then in a rage King Jamie did say,<br/>
"Away with this foolish mome;<br/>
He shall be hanged, and the other be burned,<br/>
So soone as I come home."<br/>
<br/>
At Flodden Field the Scots came in,<br/>
Which made our English men faine;<br/>
At Bramstone Greene this battaile was seene,<br/>
There was King Jamie slaine.<br/>
<br/>
His bodie never could be found,<br/>
When he was over throwne,<br/>
And he that wore faire Scotland's crowne<br/>
That day could not be knowne.<br/>
<br/>
Then presently the Scot did flie,<br/>
Their cannons they left behind;<br/>
Their ensignes gay were won all away,<br/>
Our souldiers did beate them blinde.<br/>
<br/>
To tell you plaine, twelve thousand were slaine,<br/>
That to the fight did stand,<br/>
And many prisoners tooke that day,<br/>
The best in all Scotland.<br/>
<br/>
That day made many [a] fatherlesse child,<br/>
And many a widow poore,<br/>
And many a Scottish gay lady<br/>
Sate weeping in her bower.<br/>
<br/>
Jack with a feather was lapt all in leather,<br/>
His boastings were all in vaine;<br/>
He had such a chance, with a new morrice-dance<br/>
He never went home againe.<br/>
<br/>
————<br/>
<br/>
This was written to adapt the ballad to the seventeenth century.<br/></p>
<p>Now heaven we laude that never more<br/>
Such biding shall come to hand;<br/>
Our King, by othe, is King of both<br/>
England and faire Scotland.<br/></p>
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