DRUM AND TRUMPET.
“The history of Northumberland
is essentially a drum and trumpet history, from the
time when the buccina of the Batavian cohort
first rang out over the moors of Procolitia down to
the proclamation of James III. at Warkworth Cross” Cadwallader
J Bates.
This sentence of the historian of
Northumberland sums up the story of our northern county
no less admirably than tersely, and it would be difficult
to find one which should more clearly bring before
us the whole atmosphere of north-country history and
north-country doings for many centuries.
Within the limits of this chapter
it is impossible to go into the details of every “foughten
field” within the county; the most that can
be done is to indicate the many and treat in detail
only the few. A goodly number have already been
alluded to in connection with the place where each
occurred.
After the Roman campaigns, from those
of Agricola to those of Theodosius the elder and Maximus,
and the legion sent by Stilicho, the earliest battle
story is that of the one in Glendale fought by King
Arthur. Then the forming of the kingdom of Bernicia
with the advent of Ida at Bamburgh was the beginning
of a long-protracted struggle between the various
little states, each fighting for its life, and surrounded
by others equally determined to take every advantage
that offered against it. The sons of Ida fought
against the celebrated Urien, a Keltic chief, who
almost succeeded in dispossessing them of their kingdom
of Bernicia. Hussa, one of Ida’s sons,
ultimately vanquished Urien’s son Owen, “chief
of the glittering West”; and after Hussa’s
death Ethelric of Bernicia, as we have seen, overcame
the neighbouring chieftain of Deira, thus forming
the kingdom of Northumbria. His successor, Ethelfrith,
in the year 603 gained a great victory over a large
force of northern Britons under a leader named Aedan
at a place called Daegsanstan, which is thought to
be Dissington, near Newcastle. His further victories
were gained outside the limits of our present survey.
After the long and glorious reign
of Edwin, his successor, Ethelfrith’s sons came
back to Bamburgh; the eldest, Eanfrid, was slain within
a year, and his brother Oswald carried on the struggle
against Penda of Mercia. We have seen how
he fought against Penda and Cadwallon on the
Heavenfield near Chollerford, and gained a victory
which obtained for him many years of peace. Penda
was finally slain by Oswald’s successor Oswy
in a great battle which is supposed to have taken place
on the banks of the Tweed.
Many years afterwards, Sitric, grandson
of that Prince Guthred who was once a slave at Whittingham,
married a sister of King Athelstan, grandson of Alfred
the Great. When Sitric died, Athelstan came northward
to claim Northumbria for himself. He captured
Bamburgh the first time that stronghold
of the Bernician kings had ever been taken and
arranged for two earls to govern Northumbria for him.
They attempted unsuccessfully to oppose a force of
Scots under Anlaf the Red, who was joined by two earls
of Bretland (Cumbria); and the whole force encamped
near a place called Weondune, supposed to be Wandon
near Chatton. Athelstan advanced against them
and challenged them to a pitched battle on this ground.
They agreed, and with much deliberation the course
was staked out with hazel wands between a wood and
a river (Chillingham woods and the Till). The
Scots greatly outnumbered Athelstan’s men, who
set up their tents at the narrowest part of the plain,
giving their king time to reach a little “burg”
(Old Bewick) in the neighbourhood. A running
fight followed, which was carried on the next day,
and with the help of two brothers, Egil and Thorold,
who were Norsemen, it ended in a complete victory
for Athelstan. While in the north, King Athelstan
gave the well-known rhyming charter to a certain Paulan
of Roddam;
“I kyng Adelstan giffs hier
to Paulan Oddam and Roddam als gud and als
fair als evyr thai myne war, and thar
to wytness Mald my Wiffe.”
Shortly after this, at the Battle
of Brunanburh, Athelstan vanquished Anlaf Sitricsson
and Constantine, king of the Scots. The site of
this battle would seem to have been in Northumbria,
as it was into the Humber that Anlaf and Constantine
sailed with their large fleet; but the precise spot
has never been determined.
In the reign of Knut the Dane, the
Scots obtained the whole of Lothian from the Saxon
earl of Northumberland, and the vast possessions of
St. Cuthbert beyond the Tweed seemed about to be lost
to the church of Durham. Accordingly, the clergy
called upon all the people of St. Cuthbert from the
Tees to the Tweed all those, that is, who
dwelt on lands granted by various donors to the church
of St. Cuthbert to rise and march northward
to fight for their lands. This great company set
out, in the autumn of 1018, and reached Carham on the
Tweed, where they were met by Malcolm king of the
Scots. A comet had been seen in the sky for some
weeks and the fears inspired by this dread visitant
seem to have had more effect upon the Northumbrians
than upon the Scots. From whatever cause it arose,
when the two forces joined in battle a panic spread
among the followers of St. Cuthbert. They were
utterly routed, and most of the leading Northumbrians
as well as eighteen priests were slain thus
curiously repeating the experience of the earlier battle
of Carham.
For the next three hundred years Northumberland
was swept by successive waves of raid and reprisal,
in the course of which occurred the two well-known
events, the attack of William the Lion of Scotland
on Alnwick Castle, and the more famous affair still,
the struggle between Percy and Douglas known as the
battle of Otterburn, which was fought in “Chevy
Chase” (Cheviot Forest). More important
poetically than politically, it stands out more vividly
in the records of the time than many other conflicts
of larger import. The personal element in the
fight, the deeds of gallantry recorded, the sounding
roll of the chief knights’ names, and the high
renown of the two leaders, throw a glamour around this
particular contest which is kept alive by the ballads
that chant the praises of Percy or Douglas according
as the singer was Scot or Saxon. Sir Philip Sidney,
that “verray parfit gentil knight”
and discriminating litterateur, said “I
never heard the old song of Percie and Douglas that
I found not my hart mooved more than with a trumpet:
and yet it is sung but by some blynd Crowder,
with no rougher voyce than rude stile! which beeing
so evill apparelled in the dust and cobweb of that
uncivill age, what wolde it work trimmed in the gorgeous
eloquence of Pindare!”
In the endless warfare of the Borders
the second of two short-lived periods of truce had
just expired, and an organised raid on a large scale
was arranged by the Scots. The main body was to
ravage Cumberland; and a smaller, but picked force
led by Earls Douglas, Moray, and March came southward
by way of Northumberland. But Northumbrian towers
and towns knew nothing of their passing; they marched
rapidly and by stealth into Durham, having crossed
the Tyne between Corbridge and Bywell, and began to
harry and lay waste the greener pastures and richer
villages of the southern county, the smoke of whose
burning homesteads was the first intimation to the
unlucky English of the fact that a Scottish host was
in their midst.
The Earl of Northumberland remained
at Alnwick in the hope that he might be able to attack
the Scots on their homeward journey; but he despatched
his sons Henry Hotspur and Ralph in all haste to defend
Newcastle. The Scots in due time appeared before
the walls.
And he marched up to Newcastel
And rode it round about;
“O wha’s the lord o’
this castel?
Or wha’s the lady o’t?”
But up spake proud Lord Percy then,
And O but he spake hie!
“I am the lord o’ this castel,
My wife’s the lady gay.”
Douglas challenged Percy to meet him
in single combat, and Percy promptly accepted.
In the duel Percy was unhorsed, and Douglas captured
his pennon and his gauntlet gloves, embroidered with
the Percy lion in pearls. This trophy Douglas
vowed he would carry off to Scotland with him, and
set it in the topmost tower of his castle of Dalkeith,
that it might be seen from afar. “By heaven!
that you never shall,” replied Percy; “you
shall not carry it out of Northumberland.”
“Come and take it, then,” was Douglas’
answer; and Hotspur would have attempted its recovery
there and then, but he was restrained by his knights.
Douglas, however, said he would give Percy a chance
to recover it, and agreed to await him at Otterburn.
“Yet I will stay at Otterbourne,
Where you shall welcome be;
And if ye come not at three dayis end,
A fause lord I’ll call thee”
Next day the Scots left Newcastle
and marched northward. They took Sir Aymer de
Athol’s castle of Ponte-land, and the good knight
Sir Aymer himself, and went on their way, harrying
and burning as they went. At Otterburn they halted,
and rested all night, making huts for themselves of
boughs and branches. The spot they had chosen
was a strong one, on the site of a former British
camp; and not only was it surrounded by trees, but
was near marshy ground as well. Next day they
attempted to take Otterburn tower, but without success.
Meanwhile word was brought to Hotspur
that the Scots would spend the night at Otterburn;
and he, without waiting for Walter de Skirlaw, Bishop
of Durham, who was expected that evening with a strong
force, at once set off with 600 spearmen, and a force
on foot which is variously given as anything from
800 to 8,000. They covered the thirty-odd miles
by the time evening fell: and as the Scots were
at supper in their little huts, they were startled
by a tumult amongst their grooms and camp-followers,
and cries of “a Percy! a Percy!” and the
Englishmen were among them. The Scottish leaders
had placed their camp-followers and servants at the
outermost; part of their encampment, facing the Newcastle
road; and Hotspur’s force, ignorant of this,
mistook it for the main camp. While they were
thus engaged, the Scottish knights were enabled to
make a detour around the scene of the first attack,
and take the English in the rear. With loud shouts
of “Douglas! Douglas!” they fell
upon them, and a fierce hand-to-hand struggle began.
The moon rose clear and bright, and the quiet evening
air was filled with the din of battle, the ring of
steel on steel, the crash of axe on armour, the groans
of the wounded, and the battle-cries of the combatants
on each side. Sir Ralph Percy, pressing too rashly
forward, was captured by a newly-made Scottish knight,
Sir John Maxwell. The battle was turning in favour
of Hotspur, when Douglas sent his silken banner to
the front and with renewed shouts of “Douglas!”
the Scots pressed forward and overbore their foes.
According to Froissart, there was not a man there,
knight, squire, or groom, who played the coward.
“This bataylle was one of the sorest and best
foughten without cowards or faynte hearts; for there
was neither knight nor I squire but that did his devoyre
and foughte hande to hande.” Great deeds
were done, and the fame of none amongst them is greater
than that of the gallant Widdrington;
“For Witherington my heart is woe,
That ever he slaine sholde be!
For when his legs were hewn in two
He knelt and fought on his knee”
Douglas rushed into the thickest of
the fray, and Hotspur tried to find him, but in the
dim light that was difficult, especially as Douglas
had, in his haste, come to the fight without helmet
or breastplate. Presently he was borne to the
ground by three English spears; and as he lay guarded
by his faithful chaplain, Sir John and Sir Walter Sinclair,
with Sir James Lindsay, came upon him. “How
fare you, cousin?” asked Sir John. “But
poorly, I thank God,” answered Douglas; “for
few of my ancestors died in bed or chamber. I
count myself dead, for my heart beats slow. Think
now to avenge me. Raise my banner and shout ‘Douglas!’
and let neither my friends nor my foes know of my state,
lest the one rejoice and the other be discomforted.”
His dying commands were obeyed; and while his battle-cry
was raised anew, his dead body was laid by a “bracken
bush,” and the fact of his death concealed from
friend and foe alike. The furious onslaught of
the Scots now carried all before them; and Hotspur
fell a captive to the sword of Sir Hugh Montgomery,
a nephew of Douglas, after a fierce hand-to-hand encounter.
The two chief English leaders being captured, the
day, or rather the night, was with the Scots, in fulfilment
of an old prophesy that “a dead Douglas should
win a field.”
“This deed was done at Otterbourne
At the breaking of the day;
Earl Douglas was buried at the braken
bush,
And the Percy led captive away.”
When the fray was over, the two sides
treated their captives with knightly courtesy, many
being allowed to go to their homes until they recovered
from their wounds, on giving their word of honour to
send the amount of their ransom, or themselves return
to their captors.
The Bishop of Durham, immediately
after having had some refreshment at Newcastle, had
set out to join the Percies; but as he and his men
neared Otterburn, they met so many fugitives who gave
them anything but reassuring accounts of the fortunes
of their friends, that half of his force melted away,
and the Bishop had perforce to return to Newcastle;
it was scarcely to be expected, indeed, that everyone
should have that thirst for hard blows which distinguished
the knights and their immediate followers. The
Bishop, however, made one capture Sir James
Lindsay, who had ridden so far in pursuit of Sir Matthew
Redman that he found himself amongst the force advancing
under the leadership of the warlike prelate.
When the Scots retired from their
camp, they took the body of Douglas from the “bracken
bush” where it lay, and carried it away for burial
in Melrose Abbey; and Hotspur, as the price of his
ransom, built a castle for Sir Hugh Montgomery.
After this there was peace on the
Borders for the next ten years or so, when the game
began again as merrily as ever. When Sir Thomas
Gray was absent from his castle of Wark-on-Tweed,
attending Parliament, the Scots came down upon it
and carried off his children and servants. Sir
Robert Umfraville met and checked another company
that were harrying Coquetdale. In the year 1400,
Henry Bolingbroke himself led an army to Edinburgh;
but a guerilla band of Scots, avoiding his line of
march, stole behind him and ravaged Bamburghshire.
Two years after this, a party of Scots
under the next Douglas rode into Northumberland, coming
nearly as far south as Newcastle. Hotspur set
off from Bamburgh, of which castle he was Constable
at the time, to intercept them. He awaited them
on the banks of the Glen, near Wooler; and the archers
of his force went out for forage meanwhile. When
the Scots arrived, they found themselves in the presence
of an enemy whom they had imagined to be behind them,
and they immediately occupied Homildon Hill.
The archers, returning, saw the Scottish force on the
hill, and began the attack forthwith, letting fly their
arrows upon the foe with deadly precision. Flight
after flight fell upon the Scots, who were completely
bewildered, and seemed incapable of action. A
Scottish knight, Sir John Swinton, implored the leaders
to charge, passionately exclaiming, “What madness
has seized you, my brave countrymen, that you stand
here like deer to be shot down? Follow me, those
who will! We will either gain the victory, or
die like men of courage.”
On hearing these brave words, Adam
de Gordon, Swinton’s deadly foe, felt his hatred
turn to admiration, and kneeling before Swinton, begged
that he might receive the honour of knighthood from
so valiant a hand. The two gallant knights then
charged the enemy, followed by a number of the Scots;
but the showers of arrows forced them to retreat towards
the river, and thither also moved the whole Scottish
force, followed still by that grim and deadly hail
from the English bows. Hotspur would now have
charged, but the Earl of March, his former antagonist,
now his friend, restrained his impetuous leader, and
persuaded him to let the archers continue their effective
work.
The event proved his wisdom; the Scots
were utterly routed by the archers alone. The
unfortunate Archibald Douglas added another to his
long list of reverses; he was taken prisoner, sorely
wounded, as was also Sir Hugh Montgomery, and over
four-score others of importance. It was in connection
with these prisoners, whom Hotspur refused to deliver
up to Bolingbroke, that the quarrel took place which
eventually led Northumberland and his son Hotspur
openly to throw off their allegiance to Henry Bolingbroke
and join in the rebellion of Owen Glendower. Not
only did Hotspur refuse to give up Douglas and the
others to King Henry, but he wished Henry to ransom
his brother-in-law Mortimer.
K. Henry. But sirrah,
henceforth Let me not hear you speak of Mortimer.
Send me your prisoners with the speediest means,
Or you shall hear in such a kind from me As will
displease you. My lord Northumberland,
We licence your departure with your son.
Send us your prisoners, or you’ll hear of it.
(Exeunt K. Henry, Blunt, and train)
Hotspur. And if the devil
come and roar for them
I will not send them: I will
after, straight,
And tell him so.
Worcester. These same noble
Scots
That are your prisoners
Hotspur. I’ll keep them
all; By heaven, he shall not have a Scot of them;
No, if a Scot would save his soul, he shall not;
I’ll keep them, by this hand.
Worcester. You start away,
And lend no ear unto my purposes.
Those prisoners you shall keep.
Hotspur. Nay, I will, that’s
flat: He said he would not ransom Mortimer;
Forbade my tongue to speak of Mortimer; But I
will find him when he lies asleep, And in his ear
I’ll holla “Mortimer!” Nay, I’ll
have a starling shall be taught to speak Nothing
but “Mortimer,” and give it him To keep
his anger still in motion.
The First Part of KING HENRY IV.,
Act I., Scene 3.
The fight at Homildon Hill took place
on a Monday in August, 1402, and the memory of it
is kept alive by the name of the “Monday Clough”
near Wooler, where the archers commenced the fight.
More than a hundred years after this,
the last, and in many respects the greatest, battle
ever fought on Northumbrian soil took place at Flodden.
King James IV. of Scotland had several grievances against
England, which had rankled in his mind for some time;
he had not yet received the full amount of the dowry
which had been promised with his wife, Margaret Tudor,
sister of Henry VIII., although they had been married
for many years; a Scottish noble, Sir Robert Ker,
had been killed in Northumberland, and the slayer
could not be found to be brought to justice he
was outlawed, but that seemed to King James very insufficient;
a Border raid on a large scale, led by Lord Hume, had
met with disastrous defeat on Milfield Plain at the
hands of Sir William Bulmer; and Andrew Barton, a
notable sea-captain, whom James was looking forward
to seeing as one of the best leaders of his new navy,
had been killed in a sea-fight by Thomas Howard, Lord
Admiral of England. Added to all this, France
had appealed to him to invade England in order to
force Henry VIII. to abandon his French war; the English
monarch was just then conducting the siege of Terouenne,
and the Queen of France sent a romantic appeal to
James (together with a large sum of money) begging
him to march “three feet on to English ground”
for her sake.
No time could have been more favourable
in James’ eyes for the enterprise; and in a
very short space of time he had an army of 100,000
men collected, and marched from Edinburgh to the Tweed,
which he crossed near Coldstream. He laid siege
to Norham, and captured it after a week’s investment;
and thereafter Wark, Ford, Etal, Duddo and Chillingham
fell before him. He took up his quarters at Ford
Castle, and on marching later to meet Surrey, left
it almost in ruins.
Surrey meantime had gathered a large
force from the northern counties, much to James’
surprise, for he had taken it for granted that nearly
every English fighting man would be with Henry in Flanders.
There were bowmen and billmen from Cheshire and Lancashire
under the Stanley banner; and James Stanley, Bishop
of Ely, brought the banner of St. Etheldreda, the
Northumbrian queen who founded the monastery of Ely.
Admiral Sir Thomas Howard brought a band of sailors
to join his father at Alnwick. Dacre came with
a strong contingent from the western Marches, men
from Alston Moor, Gilsland, and Eskdale, and also some
from Tynemouth and Bamburgh; and Sir Brian Tunstall
with Sir William Bulmer led the men of the Bishopric
under the banner of St. Cuthbert.
From Alnwick Surrey sent a letter
pledging himself to meet James by September 9th, and
challenging him to battle, a challenge which was promptly
accepted by the Scottish king. Marching from Alnwick
towards the Scottish army, Surrey encamped on September
6th on Wooler Haughs. James had formed his camp
on Flodden Hill, and all Surrey’s devices could
not induce him abandon this strong position. Many
of his own nobles advised him not to risk a battle,
but to withdraw while there was yet time; and some
were ready to leave the camp and return home, which
thousands of the more undisciplined in his army had
done already, being more anxious to carry off their
plunder safely than to stay and fight. But James
was eager for the contest, and felt himself bound in
honour to give battle to Surrey; he answered haughtily
those who counselled retreat, and scornfully told
Archibald Douglas, Earl of Angus, that he might go
home if he were afraid. The old man sorrowfully
left the field, but his two sons remained with their
rash but gallant king, and were both slain.
On the day before the battle took
place, Surrey, that “auld crooked carle,”
as James called him, marched his men northward across
the Till and encamped for the night near Barmoor Wood.
To the Scots this looked as though they had gone off
towards Berwick, to repeat James’ own manoeuvre,
and invade the country in the absence of its king;
and they must have thought that there would be little
chance of the battle for which James had punctiliously
waited taking place on the morrow. But Surrey’s
purpose proved to be quite otherwise. On the following
morning he sent the vanguard of his army, with the
artillery, to make a detour of several miles round
by Twizell bridge, where they re-crossed to the south
bank of the Till; and coming south-eastward towards
Flodden, they were joined by the rest of the army,
which had plunged through the stream, swollen by continuous
rains, at two points near Crookham. The two divisions
met at Branxton, after having waded through a marsh
which extended from Branxton nearly to the Till, and
which the Scots had thought impassable.
Seeing that the English were about
to occupy Branxton Hill, which would entirely cut
him off from communication with Scotland, James was
forced to abandon his advantageous position; he gave
orders for the camp-refuse to be fired, and under
cover of the dense clouds of smoke marched down to
forestall Surrey and occupy Branxton ridge. The
two armies suddenly found themselves within a few
spears’ length of each other, and the battle
was begun by the artillery on both sides.
Sudden, as he
spoke,
From the sharp ridges of the hill,
All downward to the banks of Till
Was wreathed in
sable smoke.
Volumed, and vast, and rolling far,
The cloud enveloped Scotland’s war
As down the hill
they broke;
Nor martial shout, nor minstrel tone
Announced their march; their tread alone,
At times one warning trumpet blown,
At times a stifled
hum.
Told England, from his mountain throne
King James did
rushing come.
Scarce could they hear or see their foes
Until at weapon-point they close.
Many of the raw levies on the English
side fled at the first sound of the Scottish cannon;
but the master of the ordnance, Lord Sinclair, was
killed, and his guns silenced. Then the battle
joined, and the first result was that the English
right wing under Sir Edmund Howard was scattered and
broken before the impetuous charge of the Gordons and
Highlanders under the Earl of Huntley and Lord Home.
Sir Edmund narrowly escaped with his life; but Lord
Dacre bringing up his reserve of horsemen at that
moment checked the further advance of the Scots.
The two central divisions of the armies engaged each
other fiercely, the Earl of Surrey, with his son Sir
Thomas Howard commanding the English centre, and King
James, with the Earls of Crawford and Montrose that
of the Scots. Sir Thomas, after having been so
hard pressed as to send the Agnus Dei he wore
to his father as a signal for help, afterwards with
Sir Marmaduke Constable defeated the Earl of Crawford,
whose division was opposed to him. Dacre and
Sir Thomas now charged Lord Home and drove him some
little way back, but could not dislodge his men entirely
from their position. The Earl of Bothwell, who
commanded the Scottish reserves, now came up to the
help of the king, and the day seemed about to be decided
in favour of the Scots, when Lord Stanley, on the English
left, exactly reversed the fortunes of the right wing,
and scattered and routed the Highlanders led by the
Earls of Lennox and Argyle. Then with his Lancashire
lads he attacked the rear of the Scottish position,
as did also Dacre and Sir Thomas Howard.
“They saw Lord Marmion’s falcon
fly,
And stainless Tunstall’s banner
white
And Edmund Howard’s lion bright
All bear them bravely in the fight,
Although against them come
Of gallant Gordons many a one,
And many a stubborn Highlandman,
And many a rugged Border clan
With Huntly and with Home.
Far on the left, unseen the while,
Stanley broke Lennox and Argyle.”
Nothing now remained for the Scottish
centre, hemmed in on all sides, but to make a stubborn
last stand; and gallantly did they do it. The
flower of Scotland’s chivalry surrounded their
brave monarch, and in the falling dusk fought desperately
to guard their king.
“No thought was there of dastard
flight;
Linked in that serried phalanx tight,
Groom fought like noble, squire like knight,
As fearlessly and well.
The stubborn spearmen still made good
Their dark impenetrable wood,
Each stepping where his comrade stood
The instant that he fell.”
As night fell, the fierce struggle
continued until the darkness made it impossible to
see friend or foe, but the fate of Scotland’s
bravest was sealed. The king lay dead, covered
with wounds, and around him a heap of slain; those
who were able made their way in haste from the field,
while the English host encamped where it stood.
The more lawless in each army plundered both sides
impartially, and when the king’s body was found
next day, it too was stripped like many others around
it.
“Then did their loss his foemen
know,
Their king, their lords, their mightiest
low,
They melted from the field as snow
Dissolves in silent dew.
Tweed’s echoes heard the ceaseless
plash
While many a broken band,
Disordered, through its currents dash
To gain the Scottish land;
To town and tower, to down and dale,
To tell red Flodden’s dismal tale,
And raise the universal wail.”
The tragic effects of that terrible
day were long felt in Scotland. Every family
of note in the land lost one or more of its members
on the fatal field, besides the thousands of humbler
beings who fell at the same time. Scotland did
not recover from the crushing blow for more than a
hundred years; and for many a day the people could
not believe that their gallant king was really slain,
but continued to hope that he had escaped in the darkness,
and would one day return.
There has recently been erected on
Flodden Field a simple cross of stone as a memorial
of that tragic day. It was unveiled on September
27th, 1910, by Sir George Douglas, Bart. The
inscription on the stone is “To the Brave of
both Nations.”
THE FLOWERS OF THE FOREST.
A LAMENT FOR FLODDEN.
I’ve heard the liltin’ at
our ewe-milking,
Lasses a’ liltin’ before dawn
o’ day;
But now they are moaning on ilka green
loaning
The Flowers of the Forest are a’
wede away.
At bughts, in the mornin’, nae
blythe lads are scornin’,
Lasses are lonely and dowie and wae;
Nae daffin’, nae jabbin’,
but sighin’ and sabbin’,
Ilk ane lifts her leglin and hies
her away.
In harst, at the shearing, nae youths
now are jeering,
Bandsters are lyart, and runkled,
and gray;
At fair or at preaching, nae wooing, nae
fleeching
The Flowers of the Forest are a’
wede away.
At e’en, in the gloaming, nae younkers
are roaming
’Bout stacks, with the lasses at
“bogle” to play;
But ilk ane sits drearie, lamenting her
dearie
The Flowers of the Forest are weded away.
Dool and wae for the order sent our lads
to the Border!
The English for ance by guile wan
the day;
The Flowers of the Forest, that fought
aye the foremost,
The prime of our land, are cauld in the
clay.
We’ll hear nae mair liltin’
at our ewe-milkin’;
Women and bairns are heartless and wae;
Sighing and moaning on ilka green loaning
The Flowers of the Forest are a’
wede away.