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2. And ay she sat in her mother's bower door, And ay she made her mane: 'O whether should I gang to the Broomfield Hill, Or should I stay at hame? 3. 'For if I gang to the Broomfield Hill, My maidenhead is gone; And if I chance to stay at hame, My love will ca' me mansworn.' 4. Up then spake a witch-woman, Ay from the room aboon: 'O ye may gang to the Broomfield Hill, And yet come maiden hame. 5. 'For when ye gang to the Broomfield Hill, Ye'll find your love asleep, With a silver belt about his head, And a broom-cow at his feet. 6. 'Take ye the blossom of the broom, The blossom it smells sweet, And strew it at your true-love's head, And likewise at his feet. 7. 'Take ye the rings off your fingers, Put them on his right hand, To let him know, when he doth awake, His love was at his command.' 8. She pu'd the broom flower on Hive Hill, And strew'd on's white hals-bane, And that was to be wittering true That maiden she had gane. 9. 'O where were ye, my milk-white steed, That I hae coft sae dear, That wadna watch and waken me When there was maiden here?' 10. 'I stamped wi' my foot, master, And gard my bridle ring, But na kin thing wald waken ye, Till she was past and gane.' 11. 'And wae betide ye, my gay goss-hawk, That I did love sae dear, That wadna watch and waken me When there was maiden here.' 12. 'I clapped wi' my wings, master, And aye my bells I rang, And aye cry'd, Waken, waken, master, Before the lady gang.' 13. 'But haste and haste, my gude white steed. To come the maiden till, Or a' the birds of gude green wood Of your flesh shall have their fill.' 14. 'Ye need na burst your gude white steed Wi' racing o'er the howm; Nae bird flies faster through the wood, Than she fled through the broom.' [Annotations: 3.4: 'mansworn,' perjured. 5.4: 'broom-cow,' twig of broom. 8.2: 'hals-bane,' neck-bone. See _The Twa Corbies_ (p. 82), 4.1. 8.3: 'wittering,' witness. 9.2: 'coft,' bought. 10.3: 'kin,' kind of. Cp. _Lady Maisry_, 2.2 (First Series, p. 70). 14.2: 'howm' = holme, the level low ground on the banks of a river or stream. --Jamieson.] WILLIE'S FATAL VISIT +The Text+ is taken from Buchan's _Ballads of the North of Scotlan
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