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at the gallant Rainbow shot, And shot and shot in vain, And left the rover's company, And return'd home again. 11. 'Our royal King of England, Your ship's returned again, For Ward's ship is so strong It never will be ta'en.' 'O everlasting!' says our King, 'I have lost jewels three, Which would have gone unto the seas And brought proud Ward to me. 12. 'The first was Lord Clifford, Earl of Cumberland; The second was the Lord Mountjoy As you shall understand; The third was brave Essex From field would never flee, Which would have gone unto the seas, And brought proud Ward to me.' THE SWEET TRINITY +The Text+ is taken from a broadside in the Pepys collection (iv. 196), which can be dated between 1682 and 1685, and is entitled _Sir Walter Raleigh sailing in the Low-lands_. Three other copies of the same edition of the broadside are known. +The Story+ of the _Sweet Trinity_ has become confused with that of the _Golden Vanity_ (_Golden Victorie_, _Golden Trinitie_, _Gold Pinnatree_ are variants), which is probably a corrupted form of it; indeed the weak ending of the broadside challenges any singer to improve upon it. But again there are two distinct variations of the _Golden Vanity_ ballad. In the first class, the boy, having sunk the French galley, calls to the _Golden Vanity_ to throw him a rope, and when it is refused, threatens to sink her too; whereupon they take him aboard and carry out all their promises of reward (which vary considerably in the different versions). In the second class, the boy dies after he is taken up from the water; in one version he sinks from exhaustion before he can be saved. The _Sweet Trinity_, however, has been taken by a ship of unspecified nationality ('false' might easily become corrupted into 'French'); and thus this ballad deals with three ships, while the _Golden Vanity_ versions mention but two. The latter are still current in folk-song. THE SWEET TRINITY 1. Sir Walter Raleigh has built a ship, _In the Netherlands_; Sir Walter Raleigh has built a ship, _In the Netherlands_; And it is called the Sweet Trinity, And was taken by the false gallaly. _Sailing in the Lowlands_. 2. 'Is there never a Seaman bold _In the Netherlands_; Is there never a Seaman bold _In the Netherlands_; That will go take this false gallaly, And to redeem
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