In Scotland is a bonnie kinge, As proper a youth as neede to be, Well given to every happy thing, That can be in a kinge to fee: Yet that unluckie country ftill, Hath people given to craftie will. Alas for woe, &c. On Whitfun eve it fo befell, A poffet was made to give the king, Whereof his ladie nurse hard tell, And that it was a poyfoned thing: 10 15 She cryed, and called piteouslie ; 20 One Browne, that was an English man, Out with his fword, and bestir'd him than, 25 But all the doores were made so fast, Alas for woe, &c. With him were two that ranne away, For feare that Browne would make a fray. Bishop, quoth Browne, what haft thou there? Is it fo fayd Browne, that will I fee, Be it weale or woe, it fhall be fo, 35 40 The bishop fayde, Browne I doo know, Thou art a young man poore and bare; Livings on thee I will bestowe : 45 Let me go on, take thou no care. No, no, quoth Browne, Iwill not be 50 A traitour for all Chriftiantie: Happe well or woe, it shall be so, The bishop dranke, and by and by A juft rewarde for his traitery. 55 This was a poffet indeed, quoth Brown! He ferched the bishop, and found the keyes, To come to the kinge when he did please. Alas for woe, &c. 3 As As foon as the king got word of this, To taft of that extremity : For that he did perceive and know, Alas for woe, &c. Alas, he said, unhappie realme, Alas for woe, &c. The king did call his nurse to his grace, And For dooing fuch a manly feat, 60 65 70 75 As he did fhowe, to the bishop's woe, 80 When V. 67. His father was Henry Lord Darnley. His grandfather the old Earl of Lenox, regent of Scotland, and father of Lord Darnley was murdered at Stirling, Sept. 5. 1571. When all this treason done and past, Tooke not effect of traytery; Another treason at the last, They fought against his majestie : How they might make their kinge away, By a privie banket on a daye. Alas for woe, &c. • Another time' to fell the king The Earle Mourton told the Douglas then, Take heede you do not offend the king; But fhew yourselves like honest men Obediently in every thing: For his godmother* will not fee Her noble childe mifus'd to be With any woe; for if it be fo, God graunt all fubjects may be true, In England, Scotland, every where: 85 90 95 100 105 That That no fuch daunger may enfue, Το put the prince or state in feare: In wealth or woe, God graunt it be fo 110 XVII. THE BONNY EARL OF MURRAY. A SCOTTISH SONG. In December 1591, Francis Stewart Earl of Bothwell had made an attempt to feize on the perfon of his fovereign James VI. but being disappointed, had retired towards the north. The king unadvifedly gave a commiffion to George Gordon Earl of Huntley, to pursue Bothwell and his followers with fire and fword. Huntley, under cover of executing that commiffion, took occafion to revenge a private quarrel be bad against James Stewart Earl of Murray, a relation of Bothwell's. In the night of Feb. 7. 1592, he befet Murray's boufe, burnt it to the ground, and flew Murray himfelf; a young nobleman of the most promifing virtues, and the very darling of the people. See Robertfon's Hift. The prefent Lord Murray hath now in his poffeffion a picture of his ancestor naked and covered with wounds, which bad been carried about, according to the cuftem of that age, in order to inflame the populace to revenge his death. If this picture did not flatter, he well deferved the name of the BONNY EARL, for he is there reprefented as a tall and comely perfonage. It is a tradition in the family, that Gordon of Bucky gave him a wound in the face: Murray balf expiring, |