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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Alf the Freebooter, Edited by Thomas J. Wise,
+Translated by George Borrow
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Alf the Freebooter
+ Little Danneved and Swayne Trost and other Ballads
+
+
+Editor: Thomas J. Wise
+
+Release Date: October 6, 2008 [eBook #26787]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ALF THE FREEBOOTER***
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1913 Thomas J. Wise pamphlet by David Price, email
+ccx074@pglaf.org
+
+
+
+
+
+ ALF THE FREEBOOTER
+ LITTLE DANNEVED AND
+ SWAYNE TROST
+
+ AND OTHER BALLADS
+
+ BY
+ GEORGE BORROW
+
+ LONDON:
+ PRINTED FOR PRIVATE CIRCULATION
+
+ 1913
+
+ _Copyright in the United States of America_
+ _by Houghton_, _Mifflin & Co. for Clement Shorter_.
+
+
+
+
+SIR ALF THE FREEBOOTER
+_Song the First_
+
+
+Sir Alf he is an Atheling,
+Both at Stevn and at Ting. {5}
+ _Know ye little Alf_?
+
+Alf he builds a vessel stout,
+For he will rove and sail about.
+
+Alf he builds a vessel high,
+The trade of pirate he will try.
+
+He draws on the sand a circle mark,
+And with a bound he gained the bark.
+
+Upon the prow Alf foremost stood,
+And Copenhagen’s koggers view’d.
+
+O’er the wide sea he flung a look,
+He knew the course the vessels took.
+
+“There koggers nine salute mine eyes,
+All, all they bear shall be my prize.”
+
+Alone into a boat he goes,
+And briskly to the koggers rows.
+
+“Well met, ye Courtmen, clad in mail
+Unto what haven do ye sail?”
+
+“Unto that haven we are bound,
+Where Alf is likeliest to be found.”
+
+“What will ye on the man bestow
+Who unto ye Sir Alf can show?”
+
+“Silver and gold to him we’ll give,
+All he can wish for shall he receive.
+
+Presents of worth he shall not miss,
+The robber’s vessel shall be his.”
+
+“And what shall be the pirates’ lot,
+If Alf the pirate escape you not?”
+
+“His mariners we’ll hew and slay,
+Himself we will in irons lay.”
+
+“Ha! little Alf ye here may see,
+Slight victory ye shall win from me!”
+
+“Up, up and board, my gallant crew,
+Cable and rope asunder hew!”
+
+Till he was weary Alf he hew’d,
+In fifteen Courtmen’s gore he stood.
+
+He captured all the koggers nine,
+And sailed for Norway o’er the brine.
+
+To Rostock in the tiding goes,
+Then palened many a cheek of rose.
+
+Widow and child lamented sore,
+This hurtful hawk had made them poor.
+
+But they must thole this damage all,
+Their tears but bootless, bootless fall.
+ _Know ye little Alf_?
+
+
+
+
+SIR ALF THE FREEBOOTER
+_Song the Second_
+
+
+Sir Alf will not stay in Norroway land,
+ For he passes his time there wearily;
+Full fifteen lordships in fief he holds,
+ He can live thereout right merrily.
+
+Sir Alf he walks on the verdant wold,
+ Conning his breviary;
+There meets him Bendit Rimaardson,
+ For God of his sins was weary.
+
+“Good morrow, good day, thou little Sir Alf,
+ Thou art a valiant noble,
+But if thou become the King’s prisoner to-day,
+ The land will know less trouble.”
+
+“I am not the little Sir Alf,
+ I vow by the holy Mary;
+I am but a little mass-boy, Sir,
+ To the priest the wine I carry!”
+
+Bendit lifted his high, high hat,
+ And upon his visage staring,
+Said: “Thou art the little Norwegian Alf,
+ If mine eyes are the truth declaring.
+
+“Thou wast a school boy along with me,
+ Thou darest not deny it;
+And well at the school I remember thee,
+ Thou gavest us no quiet.”
+
+“If thou be Bendit Rimaardson,
+ Thou art my near relation;
+If to-day thou wilt swear thou knowest me not,
+ Thou wilt do me an obligation.”
+
+But straight they took the little Sir Alf,
+ And gyves to his legs they fastened;
+And away, away to Helsingborg,
+ With the captive Alf they hastened.
+
+“Now take little Alf to the chamber high,
+ To the hall of the regal tower,
+That the Queen at her ease, and her maids, if they please.
+ May behold this thief of power.”
+
+Then up and spake the Danish Queen,
+ On first little Alf espying:
+“The man that I see cannot surely be he,
+ Whose fame through the world is flying.”
+
+“Though I of stature be little and mean,
+ I’ve every manly talent,
+And ne’er wilt thou bear thy lord an heir,
+ Half, half so good and gallant.
+
+“I’d give my mantle with roses red,
+ And lilies flowered over,
+If I might sleep one night with thee,
+ And play the ardent lover.
+
+“If I one night with thee might sleep,
+ None knowing but thy maid servant,
+For then, I ween, thou would’st beg, fair Queen,
+ For my pardon in accents fervent.”
+
+Then answered him the Danish Queen,
+ As she struck the board with vigour:
+“To-morrow, ere folk to breakfast go,
+ On a gibbet thou shalt figure!”
+
+“Why hang’st thou not Ivor of Holsterbro,
+ And Canute of Sonderboro?
+They were thieves like me, but they slept with thee,
+ And their death would have caused thee sorrow.”
+
+Then they took away the little Sir Alf
+ From the hall of the regal tower;
+For the beauteous Queen and her ladies had seen
+ Enough of this thief of power.
+
+They led the little Count Sir Alf
+ Out East from Helsing city;
+With contrite breast he his sins confess’d,
+ And to God he cried for pity.
+
+“Now I counsel each noble woman’s son,
+ He in honour’s courses guide him,
+With his equals dwell in the land, for well
+ With all will that land provide him.
+
+“For many a day and many a year
+ I’ve plundered, as every one knoweth;
+But what we win with injustice and sin
+ With shame and sorrow goeth.
+
+“A Count was I, of Erling’s race,
+ O’er Timsberg’s rich fief I lorded;
+That filled me with pride, and my will I would have,
+ Though my will with no law accorded.
+
+“First, first on all who my hate had won
+ I murders foul committed;
+Then to wife and maid no respect I paid,
+ But shamefully them I treated.
+
+“From the needy citizen his goods
+ And his life besides I’ve riven;
+Widow and orphans my deeds bemoan,
+ And for vengeance cry to heaven.
+
+“Lord God to me kind and clement be,
+ And grant me this petition:
+Let me gain, when this death of shame I’ve thol’d,
+ Into endless life admission.”
+
+
+
+
+LITTLE DANNEVED AND SWAYNE TROST.
+
+
+“O what shall I in Denmark do?
+ To bear your armour I’m too weak;
+The Danish warriors jeer at me,
+ Because their tongue I cannot speak.”
+
+It was the young Danneved,
+ He bade them saddle his courser grey:
+“O I will ride to Borrebye,
+ And a visit to my mother pay.”
+
+O clinking were his spurs so keen,
+ And swiftly sped his horse along;
+At Lundy Kirk in Skaaney land
+ He stopped to hear the matin song.
+
+O first he heard the matin song,
+ To hear nine masses stopped he then;
+And now it lists young Danneved
+ To mount upon his steed again.
+
+Out spake Oluf, the aged and good,
+ He was I ween the parish priest:
+“I beg of thee, little Danneved,
+ To be this day my honoured guest.”
+
+“This day I’ll break with no man bread,
+ Nor drink a drop of rosy wine,
+Until I come to Borrebye,
+ And hold discourse with mother mine.”
+
+“Now hear me, dearest Danneved,
+ Give o’er, I beg, thy purpose straight;
+So many of thy enemies
+ Before the town in ambush wait.”
+
+“O first I trust in my faulchion good,
+ And then I trust in my courser tall,
+And next to them in my merry swains,
+ But in my own self most of all.”
+
+“’Tis well to trust in thy faulchion good,
+ ’Tis well to trust in thy courser tall,
+But do not trust in thy merry swains,
+ For they’ll deceive thee first of all.”
+
+It was little Danneved,
+ Abroad before the town he came;
+And there met him his enemies,
+ Thrice nine in number were the same.
+
+So numerous were these enemies,
+ For him that did in ambush lie,
+All Danneved’s swains they took their leave,
+ And from their lord did basely fly.
+
+All his merry men took their leave,
+ And from their master basely flew,
+Except the young Swayne Trost alone,
+ He with his lord took on anew.
+
+“O I, my Lord, your clothes have worn,
+ And ridden have I, my Lord, your steed,
+And I will stand by you to-day,
+ Nor leave you in your greatest need.
+
+“O I have taken your silver and gold,
+ And I have eaten of your bread,
+And I’ll not budge from you to-day,
+ Although my life-blood I should shed.”
+
+So they their backs together placed,
+ Master and man, in the forest green;
+And in the early morning tide
+ They of the foemen slew fifteen.
+
+Then they their backs together placed,
+ Where thick and high the bushes were;
+They twain alone full thirty slew,
+ Acquiring honour ever fair.
+
+It was the young Danneved,
+ To his side his trusty faulchion tied;
+And now they both so joyously
+ Home to his mother’s castle ride.
+
+It was the young Danneved,
+ Came riding to the Castellaye;
+It was then his mother dear
+ Came out to meet him, blythe and gay.
+
+“Be welcome, little Danneved,
+ Be welcome to this house of mine;
+What doth it please thee now to drink?
+ O, say, shall it be mead or wine?”
+
+“O, I will ne’er break bread with you,
+ Or drink a drop of mead or wine,
+’Till thou hast given the young Swayne Trost
+ Fair Ellen, only sister mine.”
+
+“And do thou hear, my dearest son,
+ Hear what I now declare to thee;
+As God shall help me in my need,
+ Brothers of Ellen both ye be.”
+
+“Now do thou hear, my mother dear,
+ Thou’st not to me the truth declar’d;
+Where didst thou bear the young Swayne Trost,
+ That of his birth I never heard?”
+
+“O he was but a little child,
+ When him from out the land I sent;
+And, hearing it said that he was dead,
+ To none I did my loss lament.”
+
+Then up spoke little Danneved,
+ He was the son of a knight so high:
+“Now I have such a brother found,
+ I never more will grieve or sigh.
+
+“God’s blessing upon thee, young Swayne Trost,
+ To thee my troth I now will give;
+I’ll ne’er deceive thee, young Swayne Trost,
+ As long as I on earth shall live.”
+
+Little Danneved and young Swayne Trost,
+ In sables and mard themselves array;
+And both of them took so joyously
+ To the imperial Court their way.
+
+
+
+
+SIR PALL, SIR BEAR, AND SIR LIDEN.
+
+
+Liden he rode to the Ting, and shewed
+ His bloody gashes there:
+“And these were done by no other one
+ But my dear brother Bear.”
+
+With humble air upstood Sir Bear,
+ And for leave to speak he cried:
+“I’ll give thee gold and silver to hold,
+ And my good broad lands beside.”
+
+“Keep thou thyself thy silver pelf,
+ And thy good broad lands for me;
+By God I swear this little hand fair
+ Thy death, brother Bear, shall be.”
+
+Home to their hall ride Bear and Pall.
+ With unsuspicious mind;
+In wrathful mood, with five swains good,
+ Followed Liden close behind.
+
+Sir Pall, and Sir Bear, and Sir Liden, three were,
+ And they met the boughs beneath:
+’Twas sad to view how quick out-flew
+ Their faulchions from the sheath.
+
+First Pall he slew his brother true,
+ Then Bear to death he smote;
+I tell to ye for verity
+ His own death wound he got.
+
+They took up with care Sir Pall and Sir Bear,
+ To the city them they bore;
+Beneath the skies in the greenwood lies
+ Sir Liden amid his gore.
+
+To the earn and the owl and the beasts that prowl
+ Sir Liden’s corpse they left;
+When that was said to his plighted maid
+ She died of sense bereft.
+
+Had he paid heed to his mother’s rede,
+ And himself to the law address’d,
+His brothers twain had remained unslain,
+ And their feud had been laid at rest.
+
+In piteous mode wept Mettelil proud,
+ The death of her three sons bold:
+“Woe’s me,” cried she, “That e’er my eyes
+ Should this sad hour behold.”
+
+For Pall she wept sore, and still, still more
+ For Bear the good and brave;
+But most of all for Sir Liden’s fall,
+ For he had no hallowed grave.
+
+
+
+
+BELARDO’S WEDDING
+
+
+From the banks, in morning’s beam,
+Of Xarama, famous stream;
+From the spot, or nigh it, where
+It joins the Tagus broad and fair,
+Sped Belardo, blithe and gay,
+To receive the righteous pay
+Of all the years of love he’d spent
+In doubts, and fears, and discontent—
+
+ _But happy the shepherd who finally gains_
+ _The beautiful prize of his manifold pains_.
+
+Unto her village now he goes
+The handsome Philis to espouse;
+For now her father, kind and bland,
+But late so stern, yields him her hand.
+Now in his eyes the shepherd shows
+The rapture in his breast that glows,
+That after storm and hurricane
+The heaven should look bright again.
+
+ _How happy the shepherd who finally gains_
+ _The beautiful prize of his manifold pains_.
+
+Not as of yore on foot, I trow,
+Or in albarcas goes he now;
+Albarcas made of slain wolf hide,
+In blood of cow or heifer dyed.
+O snow-white pointed shoes wore he,
+Green stockings gartered at the knee;
+Button composed of burning glass,
+Presented, mind ye, by his lass.
+
+ _How happy the shepherd who finally gains_
+ _The beautiful prize of his manifold pains_.
+
+What a knight of gallant air
+Rides he forth on sorrel mare;
+Saddle of Friezeland leather made,
+Fringe of the most dainty thread.
+Sombrero new, of neatest shape,
+Mantle long with lengthy cape,
+Sayo green, obscure to see,
+Graced with much embroidery.
+
+ _How happy the shepherd who finally gains_
+ _The beautiful prize of his labour and pains_.
+
+By the guise in which he’s drest,
+His hopes are visibly exprest;
+Hopes which so often damped and chilled
+Are on the point to be fulfilled.
+Within his bosom he doth bear
+All the billets of his dear;
+They are so many bills which he
+Is bent to settle speedily.
+
+ _Happy the shepherd who finally gains_
+ _The beautiful prize of his manifold pains_.
+
+Arriving at the house he saw,
+Waiting for him, his father-in-law,
+Who, good-bye to scoffs and slights,
+Holds his stirrup whilst he lights.
+Lovely Philis at the door
+Calls him “husband” and “senor;”
+He “senora” and “dear wife”
+Calleth her, they’re one for life.
+
+ _Happy the shepherd who finally gains_
+ _The beautiful prize of his manifold pains_.
+
+
+
+
+THE YEW TREE
+
+
+O tree of yew, which here I spy,
+By Forida’s famed monastery;
+Beneath thee lies, by cold death bound,
+The tongue for sweetness once renown’d.
+
+Thou noble tree who shelterest kind,
+The grave from winter’s snow and wind,
+May lightning never lay thee low,
+Nor archer cut from thee his bow;
+Nor Crispin peel thee, pegs to frame,
+But may thou ever bloom the same;
+A noble tree the grave to guard
+Of Cambria’s most illustrious bard!
+
+ LONDON:
+ Printed for THOMAS J. WISE, Hampstead, N.W.
+ _Edition limited to Thirty Copies_.
+
+
+
+
+Footnotes:
+
+
+{5} _Stevn_ and _Ting_. Both words signify a tribunal before which
+litigations were decided.
+
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ALF THE FREEBOOTER***
+
+
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