Lyrics George Collins - John Fleagle
George
Collins
walked
out
one
May
morning
When
May
was
all
in
bloom.
'Twas
there
he
beheld
a
pretty
fair
maid
She
was
washing
her
white
marble
stone.
She
whooped,
she
hollered,
she
highered
her
voice,
She
raised
up
her
lilywhite
hand.
'Come
hither
to
me,
George
Collins,'
quoth
she,
'For
thy
life
shall
not
last
you
long.'
He
took
her
by
the
milk-white
hand,
Likewise
by
the
grass-green
sleeve.
He's
laid
her
down
upon
the
bank
And
never
has
asked
her
leave.
George
Collins
cried
out
"O,
hold
and
alas!
So
sore
is
this
pain
in
my
head!"
Merrily
laughed
the
mermaiden,
"Oh
ever
'til
you
be
dead."
George
Collins
took
out
his
little
penknife,
So
sharp
for
to
draw
her
blood.
But
she's
become
a
fish
again
And
sprang
into
the
flood.
George
Collins
rode
home
to
his
father's
own
gate
And
loudly
he
did
ring.
George
Collins
rode
home
to
his
father's
own
gate
For
the
help
of
his
kith
and
kin.
"Arise,
dear
father,
and
let
me
in.
Rise,
dear
mother,
and
make
my
bed,
Arise
my
dear
sister
and
get
me
a
napkin,
A
napkin
to
bind
'round
my
head."
"For
if
I
chance
to
die
this
night,
As
I
fear
in
my
heart
I
will,
Go
bury
me
under
that
marble
stone
At
the
foot
of
fair
Helen's
hill."
Fair
Helen
doth
sit
in
her
room
so
fine,
A-sewing
her
silver
skein.
When
she
sees
the
fairest
corpse
a-coming
That
ever
the
sun
shined
on.
She
called
unto
her
Irish
maid:
"Whose
corpse
is
this
so
fine?"
"They
say
is
George
Collins'
corpse
a-coming,
That
once
was
a
true
lover
of
thine."
"Now
you
go
upstairs
and
fetch
me
the
sheet
What's
wove
with
the
silver
twine,
Go
hang
it
over
George
Collins'
head.
Tomorrow
it
shall
hang
over
mine."
The
news
went
round
through
fair
London
town,
Was
wrote
on
fair
London's
gate,
Six
pretty
maids
died
all
of
one
night,
And
all
for
George
Collins'
fate.
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