Jack O'Rion
    (专辑: Tipplers Tales - 1978)
    
    Jack O'Rion was the 
finest fiddler ever fiddled on the 
string  He could drive young ladies wild with a 
tune his wires would sing  He could fiddle the 
fish out of salt water, water from a 
marble stone  Or milk from out a 
maiden's breast though baby she had none   There he played in the 
castle hall and there he played them fast asleep  Except it was for the 
young countess who, for love, she stayed awake  So first he played her a 
slow air and then he played it brisk and gay  And oh, dear love, behind her glove, this lady she did say   "Ere the 
day has dawned and the 
cocks have crowed and flapped their wings so wide  It's you must come to my chamber there and lie down by my side"  So he wrapped his fiddle in a 
cloth of green and he stole out on his a-tip-a-toe  And he's off back to his young boy Tom as fast as he could go   "Ere the 
day has dawned and the 
cocks have crowed and flapped their wings so wide  I'm bid to go to the 
lady's door and stretch out by her side"  "Lie down, lie down, my good master, here's a 
blanket to your hand  And I'll waken you in as good a 
time as any cock in this land"   Now Tom took the 
fiddle into his hand, he fiddled and he played for a 
full hour  Until he played him fast asleep; he's off to the 
lady's bower  And when he came to her chamber door, he twirled softly at the 
pin  The 
lady, true to her promise, rose up and let him in   He did not take that lady gay to bolster nor to bed  But down upon the 
hard cold floor right soon he had her laid  And he did not kiss her when he came nor yet but from her he did go  But in out the 
lady's bedroom window, the 
moon like a 
coal did glow   "Ragged are your stockings, love, and stubbly is your cheek and chin  And tousled is that yellow hair that I 
saw yestereve"  "These stockings belong to my boy Tom, they were the 
first came to my hand  The 
wind must have tousled my yellow hair and I 
rode over the 
land"  Now Tom took the 
fiddle into his hand, he fiddled and he played so saucily  He's off back to his master's house as fast as go could he   "Wake up, wake up, oh my good master, why snore you there so loud?  There's not a 
cock in all this land but has clapped his wings and crowed"  Jack O'Rion took the 
fiddle into his hand and he fiddled and he played so merrily  He's off away to the 
lady's house as fast as go could he   And when he came to the 
lady's door, he twirled so softly at the 
pin  Saying "Oh, my dear, it's your true love, rise up and let me in"  She said "Surely you didn't leave behind a 
golden brooch nor a 
velvet glove  Or are you returning back again to taste more of my love?"   Jack O'Rion, he swore a 
bloody oath, by oak, by ash, by bitter thorn  "Lady, I 
never was in your house since the 
day that I 
was born"  "Oh, then it was your young boy Tom that cruelly has beguiled me"  "Oh woe, that the 
blood of that ruffian boy did spring in my body"   Jack O'Rion sped off to his own house, saying "Tom, my boy, come here to me"  He hung him from his own gatepost, high as a 
willow tree