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Data is sometimes entered poorly, processed incorrectly and may not be free from defect. This is a beautiful home located in Scofield Farms. Information contained herein is derived from records that may have errors and/or not always be accurate or complete. View detailed information about property 1947 Dapplegrey Lane Austin TX 78727 If you have additional questions regarding 1947 Dapplegrey Lane in Austin or would like to tour the property with us call 80 and reference MLS 9909300. He's ta'en three locks o' her yellow hair,Ģ6.Disclaimer: By using this site, you certify that you will use any information obtained for lawfully acceptable purposes.
Whase sounds would melt a heart o' stane,Ģ4. Sometimes she sank, sometimes she swam,ġ8.
"Your cherry cheeks, and yellow hair,"ġ3. "And sweet William shall better be my love,ġ2. "Shame fa' the hand that I should take,"ġ0. "Will ye see our father's ships come in?"ĩ. He courted the eldest wi' glove and ring,īut he lo'ed the youngest abune a' thing, There were twa sisters lived in a bower,Ģ. Thomas Lugton, Glasgow, who says it was noted by a friend of his own from the singing of a country person in the neighbourhood of Coldstream, Berwickshire, in or about the year 1830.ġ. Other refrains have been "Hey ho, my Nanny O," and "While the swan swims bonnie O." Whilst on the borderland it has been found with "Norham, O Norham," and "By the bonnie mill-dams o' Norham." For the very excellent melody here printed, perhaps the original air, and which has certainly the real old ballad cry in it, I am indebted to Mr. Sometimes it has been printed with a deal of repetition, and this curious refrain :. And if the text and titles have varied so also have the refrains. There is not change in the 2nd refrain which was common in the mid-1800s to mid-1900s in Scotland.įew collections of Scottish ballads have appeared within the last two hundred years which do not embrace a copy of the above, in one or other of its many forms, and under one or other of its various titles of, "The Cruel Sister," "The Drowned Lady," "The Bonnie Bows o' London," "Sister, Dear Sister," "The Miller and the King's Daughter," or the one here chosen.
The stanzas at the end are different than Scott's. Ford mentions no informant or gives no date for his text which seems to be based on or similar to Sir Walter Scott's (Child C) Cruel Sister text from 1802 with minor changes. The melody was collected around 1830 by Thomas Lugton (see also Child W).
[From Vagabond Songs and Ballads of Scotland: Second Series Volume 2 edited by Robert Ford 1901 (p.190-194). Binnorie, O Binnorie- Robert Ford 1901 (melody 1830)