Song | Mary Hamilton |
Artist | Joan Baez |
Album | Joan Baez: First Album |
作曲 : Joan Baez | |
作词 : Joan Baez | |
Mary Hamilton | |
Word is to the kitchen gone, and word is to the Hall | |
And word is up to Madam the Queen, and that's the worst of all | |
That Mary Hamilton has borne a babe | |
To the highest Stuart of all | |
Oh rise, arise Mary Hamilton | |
Arise and tell to me | |
What thou hast done with thy wee babe | |
I saw and heard weep by thee | |
I put him in a tiny boat | |
And cast him out to sea | |
That he might sink or he might swim | |
But he'd never come back to me | |
Oh rise arise Mary Hamilton | |
Arise and come with me | |
There is a wedding in Glasgow town | |
This night we'll go and see | |
She put not on her robes of black | |
Nor her robes of brown | |
But she put on her robes of white | |
To ride into Glasgow town | |
And as she rode into Glasgow town | |
The city for to see | |
The bailiff's wife and the provost's wife | |
Cried Alack and alas for thee | |
You need not weep for me she cried | |
You need not week for me | |
For had I not slain my own wee babe | |
This death I would not dee | |
Oh little did my mother think | |
When first she cradled me | |
The lands I was to travel in | |
And the death I was to dee | |
Last night I washed the Queen's feet | |
And put the gold in her hair | |
And the only reward I find for this | |
The gallows to be my share | |
Cast off cast off my gown she cried | |
But let my petticoat be | |
And tie a napkin round my face | |
The gallows I would not see | |
Then by them come the king himself | |
Looked up with a pitiful eye | |
Come down come down Mary Hamillton | |
Tonight you will dine with me | |
Oh hold your tongue my sovereign liege | |
And let your folly be | |
For if you'd a mind to save my life | |
You'd never have shamed me here | |
Last night there were four marys | |
tonight there'll be but three | |
T'was Mary Beaton nd Mary Seton | |
And Mary Carmichael and me. |
zuò qǔ : Joan Baez | |
zuò cí : Joan Baez | |
Mary Hamilton | |
Word is to the kitchen gone, and word is to the Hall | |
And word is up to Madam the Queen, and that' s the worst of all | |
That Mary Hamilton has borne a babe | |
To the highest Stuart of all | |
Oh rise, arise Mary Hamilton | |
Arise and tell to me | |
What thou hast done with thy wee babe | |
I saw and heard weep by thee | |
I put him in a tiny boat | |
And cast him out to sea | |
That he might sink or he might swim | |
But he' d never come back to me | |
Oh rise arise Mary Hamilton | |
Arise and come with me | |
There is a wedding in Glasgow town | |
This night we' ll go and see | |
She put not on her robes of black | |
Nor her robes of brown | |
But she put on her robes of white | |
To ride into Glasgow town | |
And as she rode into Glasgow town | |
The city for to see | |
The bailiff' s wife and the provost' s wife | |
Cried Alack and alas for thee | |
You need not weep for me she cried | |
You need not week for me | |
For had I not slain my own wee babe | |
This death I would not dee | |
Oh little did my mother think | |
When first she cradled me | |
The lands I was to travel in | |
And the death I was to dee | |
Last night I washed the Queen' s feet | |
And put the gold in her hair | |
And the only reward I find for this | |
The gallows to be my share | |
Cast off cast off my gown she cried | |
But let my petticoat be | |
And tie a napkin round my face | |
The gallows I would not see | |
Then by them come the king himself | |
Looked up with a pitiful eye | |
Come down come down Mary Hamillton | |
Tonight you will dine with me | |
Oh hold your tongue my sovereign liege | |
And let your folly be | |
For if you' d a mind to save my life | |
You' d never have shamed me here | |
Last night there were four marys | |
tonight there' ll be but three | |
T' was Mary Beaton nd Mary Seton | |
And Mary Carmichael and me. |