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accident. 10. Then the friar cried out with a piteous moan, 'O help! O help me! or else I am gone.' 11. 'Ye said ye wad whistle me out o' hell; Now whistle your ain sel' out o' the well.' 12. She helped him out and bade him be gone; The friar he asked his money again. 13. 'As for your money, there is no much matter To make you pay more for jumbling our water.' 14. Then all who hear it commend this fair maid For the nimble trick to the friar she played. 15. The friar he walked on the street, And shaking his lugs like a well-washen sheep. [Annotations: 1.2,4: The burden is of course repeated in each stanza. 15.2: 'lugs,' ears.] THE KNIGHT AND THE SHEPHERD'S DAUGHTER +The Text+ is given here from Kinloch's MSS. He gives also three other versions and various fragments. The tale is also found amongst the Roxburghe Ballads, as _The Beautifull Shepherdesse of Arcadia_, in two broadsides printed about 1655 and 1680. This is the only English version extant. But earlier than any text of the ballad is a quotation from it in John Fletcher's _The Pilgrim_, iv. 2 (1621). The Scots versions, about a dozen in number, are far more lively than the broadside. Buchan printed two, of sixty and sixty-three stanzas respectively. Another text is delightfully inconsequent:-- '"Some ca' me Jack, some ca' me John, Some ca' me Jing-ga-lee, But when I am in the queen's court Earl Hitchcock they ca' me." "Hitchcock, Hitchcock," Jo Janet she said, An' spelled it ower agane, "Hitchcock it's a Latin word; Earl Richard is your name." But when he saw she was book-learned, Fast to his horse hied he....' Both this version (from the Gibb MS.) and one of Buchan's introduce the domestic genius known as the 'Billy-Blin,' for whom see _Young Bekie_, First Series, p. 6, ff.; _Willie's Lady_, p. 19 of this volume; and _Cospatrick_, p. 26. +The Story.+--The King of France's auld dochter, disguised as a shepherdess, is accosted by Sweet William, brother to the Queen of Scotland, who gives his name as Wilfu' Will, varied by Jack and John. He attempts to escape, but she follows him to court, and claims him in marriage from the king. He tries to avoid discovery by pretending to be a cripple, but she knows him, refuses to be bribed, marries him, and finally reveals herself to him. The _denouement_ of the story is reminiscent of _The M
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