Ancient Poems, Ballads and Songs of the Peasantry of England
HARRY THE TAILOR (TRADITIONAL.)

Robert Bel

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[The following song was taken down some years ago from the recitation of a country curate, who said he had learned it from a very old inhabitant of Methley, near Pontefract, Yorkshire. We have never seen it in print.]

When Harry the tailor was twenty years old,

He began for to look with courage so bold;

He told his old mother he was not in jest,

But he would have a wife as well as the rest.

Then Harry next morning, before it was day,

To the house of his fair maid took his way.

He found his dear Dolly a making of cheese,

Says he, 'You must give me a buss, if you please!'

She up with the bowl, the butter-milk flew,

And Harry the tailor looked wonderful blue.

'O, Dolly, my dear, what hast thou done?

From my back to my breeks has thy butter-milk run.'

She gave him a push, he stumbled and fell

Down from the dairy into the drawwell.

Then Harry, the ploughboy, ran amain,

And soon brought him up in the bucket again.

Then Harry went home like a drowned rat,

And told his old mother what he had been at.

With butter-milk, bowl, and a terrible fall,

O, if this be called love, may the devil take all!

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