Ed de Moel

Child Ballads - Appendix

Robin Hood and the Curtal Friar

Appendix

The Play of Robin Hood

(1-110)

  1. Ritson's Robin Hood, 1795, II, 192, as printed by William Copland, at the end of his edition of the Gest.
  2. As printed by Edward White, at the end of his edition of the Gest: Bodleian Library, Z. 3. Art. Seld.

Robyn Hode





5  




10  




15  
Now stand ye forth, my mery men all,
And harke what I shall say;
Of an adventure I shal you tell,
The which befell this other day.
As I went by the hygh way,
With a stout frere I met,
And a quarter-staffe in his hande.
Lyghtely to me he lept,
And styll he bade me stande.
There were strypes two or three,
But I cannot tell who had the worse,
But well I wote the horeson lept within me,
And fro me he toke my purse.
Is there any of my mery men all
That to that frere wyll go,
And bryng hym to me forth withall,
Whether he wyll or no?

Lytell John



20  
Yes, mayster, I make God avowe,
To that frere wyll I go,
And bring him to you,
Whether he wyl or no.

Fryer Tucke




25  




30  




35  




40  




45  
Deus hic! deus hic! God be here!
Is not this a holy worde for a frere?
God save all this company!
But am not I a jolly fryer?
For I can shote both farre and nere,
And handle the sworde and buckler,
And this quarter-staffe also.
If I mete with a gentylman or yeman,
I am not afrayde to loke hym upon,
Nor boldly with him to carpe;
If he speake any wordes to me,
He shall have strypes two or thre,
That shal make his body smarte.
But, maisters, to shew you the matter
Wherfore and why I am come hither,
In fayth I wyll not spare.
I am come to seke a good yeman,
In Bernisdale men sai is his habitacion,
His name is Robyn Hode.
And if that he be better man than I,
His servaunt wyll I be, and serve him truely;
But if that I be better man than he,
By my truth my knave shall he be,
And leade dogges all three.

Robyn Hode

  Yelde the, fryer, in thy long cote.

Fryer Tucke

  I beshrew thy hart, knave, thou hurtest my throt[e].

Robyn Hode



50  
I trowe, fryer, thou beginnest to dote;
Who made the so malapert and so bolde
To come into this forest here,
Amonge my falowe dere?

Fryer




55  
Go louse the, ragged knave.
If thou make mani wordes, I will geve the on the eare,
Though I be but a poore fryer.
To seke Robyn Hode I am com here,
And to him my hart to breke.

Robyn Hode

  Thou lousy frer, what wouldest thou with hym?
He never loved fryer, nor none of freiers kyn.

Fryer


60  
Avaunt, ye ragged knave!
Or ye shall have on the skynne.

Robyn Hode





65  
Of all the men in the morning thou art the worst,
To mete with the I have no lust;
For he that meteth a frere or a fox in the morning,
To spede ill that day he standeth in jeoperdy.
Therfore I had lever mete with the devil of hell,
(Fryer, I tell the as I thinke,)
Then mete with a fryer or a fox
In a mornyng, or I drynk.

Fryer


70  
Avaunt, thou ragged knave! this is but a mock;
If thou make mani words thou shal have a knock.

Robyn Hode

  Harke, frere, what I say here:
Over this water thou shalt me here,
The brydge is borne away.

Fryer


75  
To say naye I wyll not;
To let the of thine oth it were great pitie and sin;
But up on a fryers backe, and have even in!

Robyn Hode

  Nay, have over.

Fryer



80  
Now am I, frere, within, and thou, Robin, without,
To lay the here I have no great doubt.
Now art thou, Robyn, without, and I, frere, within,
Lye ther, knave; chose whether thou wilte sinke or swym.

Fryer

  Mary, set a knave over the shone.

Robyn Hode

  Therfore thou shalt abye.

Fryer

85   Why, wylt thou fyght a plucke?

Robyn Hode

  And God send me good lucke.

Fryer

  Than have a stroke for fryer Tucke.

Robyn Hode

  Holde thy hande, frere, and here me speke.

Fryer


90  
Say on, ragged knave,
Me semeth ye begyn to swete.

Robyn Hode

  In this forest I have a hounde,
I wyl not give him for an hundreth pound.
Geve me leve my home to blowe,
That my hounde may knowe.

Fryer

95   Blowe on, ragged knave, without any doubte,
Untyll bothe thyne eyes starte out.
Here be a sorte of ragged knaves come in,
Clothed all in Kendale grene,
And to the they take their way nowe.

Robyn Hode

100   Peradventure they do so.

Fryer

  I gave the leve to blowe at thy wyll,
Now give me leve to whistell my fyll.

Robyn Hode

  Whystell, frere, evyl mote thou fare! Untyll bothe thyne eyes stare.

Fryer

105   Now Cut and Bause!
Breng forth the clubbes and staves,
And down with those ragged knaves!

Robyn Hode



110  
How sayest thou, frere, wylt thou be my man,
To do me the best servyse thou can?
Thou shalt have both golde and fee.

After ten lines of ribaldry, which have no pertinency to the traditional Robin Hood and Friar, the play abruptly passes to the adventure of Robin Hood and the Potter.

End-Notes
a.  Ritson has been followed, without collation with Copland.
35. maister.
64. spede ell.
70. you, you for thou, thou.
82. donee.
104. starte.
b.  13. he wanting.
15. to the.
23. word of.
31. Not.
35. maister.
41. if he.
43. be a.
59. ye wanting.
61. in a.
65. had rather: of hell wanting.
70. yu: yu shalt.
81. choose either sinke.
97. Here is.
103. might thou.
104. stare.

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