Lyrics Lakes of Champlain - Martin Simpson
Airly
one
morning
young
William
arose.
It's
off
to
his
comrade's
bedchamber
he
goes,
Saying,
"Comrade,
royal
comrade,
rise
and
let
no
one
Know
For
this
is
a
fine
morning
and
bathing
we'll
go."
They
both
walked
along
till
they
came
to
a
long
lane.
The
first
one
they
met
was
the
keeper
of
game,
And
he
wished
them
in
his
heart
to
return
back
again,
But
the
fate
of
Young
William
was
to
die
in
a
watery
Main.
Young
William
stripped
ofF
and
he
swum
the
lake
round,
He
swum
to
an
island
but
not
in
dry
ground,
Saying,
"Comrade,
royal
comrade,
do
not
venture
in
For
there's
deep
and
false
waters
in
the
lakes
of
Champlain."
Airly
next
morning
his
sister
arose
And
off
to
her
mother's
bedchamber
she
goes,
Saying,
"Mother,
dearest
Mother,
I
dream'd
a
true
dream
That
Young
William
was
floating
in
a
watery
stream."
It
was
airly
next
morning
his
mother
came
there
Wringing
her
fingers
and
tearing
her
hair
Saying,
"Was
there
nobody
by
That
would
venture
their
life
for
my
fine
darling
boy?"
Airly
next
morning
his
uncle
came
there.
He
rowed
round
the
strand
like
a
man
in
despair.
His
uncle
stripped
himself
and
swum
the
lake
round
And
he
swum
to
the
island
where
William
was
found.
Saying,
"Comrade,
royal
comrade,
do
not
venture
in
For
there's
deep
and
false
waters
in
the
lakes
of
Champlain."*
The
day
of
his
funeral,
it
was
a
great
sight.
Four
and
twenty
young
men
all
dressed
in
white.
They
took
him
up
to
Mary's
church
and
laid
him
in
the
Clay
Saying,
"Farewell,
lovely
William,
forever
and
a
day."
God
help
his
poor
mother,
she's
got
reason
to
mourn
And
likewise
his
sweetheart
for
I'm
sure
she
has
more,
For
every
other
morning
he
did
her
salute
With
pinks
and
red
roses
and
fine
garden
fruit.
*For
these
two
lines,
repeat
tune
for
lines
3 and
4
From
The
New
Green
Mountain
Songster,
Flanders
et
al.
Collected
from
Mrs.
E.M.
Sullivan,
VT
Note:
Flanders
thinks
this
is
a
degenerate
form
of
Ballad
In
which
young
man
is
taken
by
a
water
witch
who
Desires
him.
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