[Page 132]

The Farmers Daughter, a SONG, set to a Pleasant Scotch Tune.

I.
1 COld and raw the North did blow,
2 Bleak in the Morning early,
3 All the Trees were hid in Snow,
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4 Dagl'd by Winter yearly;
5 When come riding over a Knough,
6 I met with a Farmer's Daughter,
7 Rosie Cheeks and bonny Brow,
8 Good faith made my Mouth to water.
II.
9 Down I vail'd my Bonnet low,
10 Meaning to shew my breeding,
11 She return'd a graceful bow,
12 A Village far exceeding:
13 I ask'd her where she went so soon,
14 And long'd to begin a Parly,
15 She told me to the next Market Town
16 A purpose to sell her Barley.
III.
17 In this purse, sweet Soul, said I,
18 Twenty pounds lie fairly,
19 Seek no farther one to buy,
20 For I'se take all thy Barley;
21 Twenty more shall buy Delight
22 Thy Person I love so dearly
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23 If thou wouldst stay with me all Night,
24 And go home in the Morning early.
IV.
25 If twenty pound could buy the Globe,
26 Quoth she, this I'd not do, Sir,
27 Or were my Kin as poor as Iob,
28 I wo'd not raise 'em so, Sir,
29 For should I be to Night your friend,
30 We'st get a young Kid together,
31 And you'd be gone ere the nine Months end,
32 And where should I find a Father?
V.
33 I told her I had wedded been
34 Fourteen years and longer,
35 Or else I choose her for my Queen,
36 And tie the Knot much stronger;
37 She bid me then no farther rome,
38 But manage my Wedlock fairly,
39 And keep Purse for poor Spouse at home,
40 For some other shall have her Barley.

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Title (in Source Edition): The Farmers Daughter, a SONG, set to a Pleasant Scotch Tune.
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Genres: song

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D'Urfey, Thomas, 1653-1723. New poems, consisting of satyrs, elegies, and odes together with a choice collection of the newest court songs set to musick by the best masters of the age / all written by Mr. D'Urfey. London: Printed for J. Bullord ... and A. Roper ..., 1690, pp. 132-134. [16],207,[1]p. (ESTC R17889) (Page images digitized from a copy in the Bodleian Library [Harding C 1197 (1)].)

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Typography, spelling, capitalization, and punctuation have been cautiously modernized. The source of the text is given and all significant editorial interventions have been recorded in textual notes. This ECPA text has been edited to conform to the recommendations found in Level 5 of the Best Practices for TEI in Libraries version 4.0.0.

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