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<h2> Hugh of Lincoln </h2>
<p>SHOWING THE CRUELTY OF A JEW'S DAUGHTER<br/></p>
<p>Four and twenty bonny boys<br/>
Were playing at the ba',<br/>
And up it stands him sweet Sir Hugh,<br/>
The flower among them a'.<br/>
<br/>
He kicked the ba' there wi' his foot,<br/>
And keppit it wi' his knee,<br/>
Till even in at the Jew's window<br/>
He gart the bonny ba' flee.<br/>
<br/>
"Cast out the ba' to me, fair maid,<br/>
Cast out the ba' to me."<br/>
"Never a bit," says the Jew's daughter,<br/>
Till ye come up to me."<br/>
<br/>
"Come up, sweet Hugh, come up, dear Hugh,<br/>
Come up and get the ba'."<br/>
"I winna come, I mayna come,<br/>
Without my bonny boys a'."<br/>
<br/>
She's ta'en her to the Jew's garden,<br/>
Where the grass grew lang and green,<br/>
She's pu'd an apple red and white,<br/>
To wyle the bonny boy in.<br/>
<br/>
She's wyled him in through ae chamber,<br/>
She's wyled him in through twa,<br/>
She's wyled him into the third chamber,<br/>
And that was the warst o' a'.<br/>
<br/>
She's tied the little boy, hands and feet,<br/>
She's pierced him wi' a knife,<br/>
She's caught his heart's blood in a golden cup,<br/>
And twinn'd him o' his life.<br/>
<br/>
She row'd him in a cake o' lead,<br/>
Bade him lie still and sleep,<br/>
She cast him in a deep draw-well<br/>
Was fifty fathom deep.<br/>
<br/>
When bells were rung, and mass was sung,<br/>
And every bairn went hame,<br/>
Then ilka lady had her young son,<br/>
But Lady Helen had nane.<br/>
<br/>
She row'd her mantle her about,<br/>
And sair, sair 'gan she weep;<br/>
And she ran unto the Jew's house,<br/>
When they were all asleep.<br/>
<br/>
"My bonny Sir Hugh, my pretty Sir Hugh,<br/>
I pray thee to me speak!"<br/>
"Lady Helen, come to the deep draw-well<br/>
'Gin ye your son wad seek."<br/>
<br/>
Lady Helen ran to the deep draw-well,<br/>
And knelt upon her knee:<br/>
"My bonny Sir Hugh, an ye be here,<br/>
I pray thee speak to me!"<br/>
<br/>
"The lead is wondrous heavy, mither,<br/>
The well is wondrous deep;<br/>
A keen penknife sticks in my heart,<br/>
It is hard for me to speak.<br/>
<br/>
"Gae hame, gae hame, my mither dear,<br/>
Fetch me my winding-sheet;<br/>
And at the back o' merry Lincoln,<br/>
It's there we twa sall meet."<br/>
<br/>
Now Lady Helen she's gane hame,<br/>
Made him a winding-sheet;<br/>
And at the back o' merry Lincoln,<br/>
The dead corpse did her meet.<br/>
<br/>
And a' the bells o' merry Lincoln<br/>
Without men's hands were rung;<br/>
And a' the books o' merry Lincoln<br/>
Were read without men's tongue:<br/>
Never was such a burial<br/>
Sin' Adam's days begun.<br/></p>
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