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Home  »  The Oxford Book of Ballads  »  114. Adam Bell, Clym of the Clough, and William of Cloudesley

Arthur Quiller-Couch, ed. (1863–1944). The Oxford Book of Ballads. 1910.

114

114. Adam Bell, Clym of the Clough, and William of Cloudesley

Fytte the Second

LII

And when they came to mery Carleile,

In a fayre mornyng tyde,

They founde the gates shut them untyll

About on every syde.

LIII

‘Alas!’ then sayd good Adam Bell,

‘That ever we were made men!

These gates be shut so wonderly well,

We may not come therein.’

LIV

Then bespake him Clym of the Clough,

‘With a wyle we wyl us in bryng;

Let us say we be messengers,

Streyght comen from our King.’

LV

Adam said, ‘I have a letter written,

Now let us wysely werke,

We wyl saye we have the Kyngè’s seale;

I holde the porter no clerke.’

LVI

Then Adam Bell bete on the gates

With strokès great and stronge:

The porter herde such a noyse therat.

And to the gates he thronge.

LVII

‘Who is there now,’ sayd the porter,

‘That maketh all thys knockinge?’—

‘We be two messengers,’ quoth Clym of the Clough,

‘Be come ryght from our Kynge.’—

LVIII

‘We have a letter,’ sayd Adam Bell,

‘To the Justice we must it brynge;

Let us in our message to do,

That we were agayne to the Kynge.’—

LIX

‘Here commeth none in,’ sayd the porter,

‘By hym that dyed on a tre,

Tyll a false thefe be hangèd,

Called Wyllyam of Cloudesley.’

LX

Then spake the good yeman, Clym of the Clough,

And swore by Mary fre,

‘And if that we stande long wythout,

Lyke a thefe hangèd shalt thou be.

LXI

‘Lo! here we have got the Kynge’s seale:

What, lordane, art thou wode?’

The porter wende it had ben so,

And lyghtly dyd off hys hode.

LXII

‘Welcome is my lordes seale,’ he saide;

‘For that ye shall come in.’

He opened the gate right shortlye:

An evyl openyng for him!

LXIII

‘Now are we in,’ sayde Adam Bell,

‘Wherof we are full faine;

But Christ he knowes, that harowed hell,

How we shall come out agayne.’

LXIV

‘Had we the keys,’ said Clym of the Clough,

‘Ryght wel then shoulde we spede,

Then might we come out wel ynough

When we se tyme and nede.’

LXV

They callèd the porter to counsell,

And wrang his necke in two,

And caste hym in a depe dungeon,

And toke hys keys hym fro.

LXVI

‘Now am I porter,’ sayd Adam Bell,

Se, brother, the keys are here!

The worst porter to merry Carleile

That ye had thys hundred yere.

LXVII

‘And now wyll we our bowès bend,

Into the towne wyll we go,

For to delyver our dere brothèr,

That lyeth in care and wo.’

LXVIII

Then they bent theyr good yew bowes,

And lokèd theyr stringes were round,

The market-place of mery Carleile

They beset in that stound.

LXIX

And, as they lokèd them besyde,

A paire of new galowes they see,

And the Justice with a quest of swerers,

That judged Cloudesley hangèd to be.

LXX

And Cloudesley lay redy in a cart,

Fast bound both fote and hand;

And a stronge rope about hys necke,

All readye for to be hang’d.

LXXI

The Justice called to him a ladde,

Cloudesley’s clothes shold hee have,

To take the measure of that yeman,

Thereafter to make hys grave.

LXXII

‘I have sene as great mervaile,’ said Cloudesley,

‘As betweyne thys and pryme,

He that maketh a grave for mee,

Hymselfe may lye therin.’

LXXIII

‘Thou speakest proudlye,’ said the Justice,

‘I will thee hange with my hande.’

Full wel herd this his brethren two,

There styll as they dyd stande.

LXXIV

Then Cloudesley cast his eyen asyde

And saw hys brethren stande

At a corner of the market place,

With theyr good bowes bent in theyr hand.

LXXV

‘I se comfort,’ sayd Cloudesley;

‘Yet hope I well to fare;

If I might have my handes at wyll,

Ryght lytell wolde I care.’

LXXVI

Then bespake good Adam Bell

To Clym of the Clough so fre,

‘Brother, se you marke the Justyce wel;

Lo! yonder you may him se:

LXXVII

‘And at the Sheryfe shote I wyll

Strongly wyth an arrowe kene.’—

A better shote in mery Carleile

Thys seven yere was not sene.

LXXVIII

They loosed their arrowes both at once,

Of no man had they drede;

The one hyt the Justice, the other the Sheryfe,

That both theyr sides gan blede.

LXXIX

All men voyded, that them stode nye,

When the Justice fell to the grounde,

And the Sheryfe fell nye hym by;

Eyther had his deathes wounde.

LXXX

All the citezeyns fast gan flye,

They durst no longer abyde:

There lyghtly they losèd Cloudesley,

Where he with ropes lay tyde.

LXXXI

Wyllyam start to an officer of the towne,

Hys axe out hys hand he wronge,

On echè syde he smote them downe,

Hym thought he taryed to long.

LXXXII

Wyllyam sayde to hys brethren two,

‘Thys daye let us lyve and die,

If e’er you have nede, as I have now,

The same you shall finde by me.’

LXXXIII

They shot so well in that tyde

(Theyr stringes were of silke ful sure)

That they kept the stretes on every side;

That batayle did long endure.

LXXXIV

They fought together as brethren true,

Lyke hardy men and bolde,

Many a man to the ground they threw,

And many a herte made colde.

LXXXV

But when their arrowes were all gon,

Men presyd to them full fast,

They drew theyr swordès then anone,

And theyr bowès from them cast.

LXXXVI

They went lyghtlye on theyr way,

Wyth swordes and bucklers round;

By that it was mydd of the day,

They had made many a wound.

LXXXVII

There was many an out-horne in Carleile blowen,

And the belles backwarde dyd ryng;

Many a woman sayde, Alas!

And many theyr handes dyd wryng.

LXXXVIII

The Mayre of Carleile forth com was,

Wyth hym a ful great route:

These thre yemen dred hym full sore,

For theyr lyvès stode in doute.

LXXXIX

The Mayre came armèd a full great pace,

With a polaxe in hys hande;

Many a strong man wyth him was,

There in that stowre to stande.

XC

The Mayre smot at Cloudesley with his byll,

Hys buckler he brast in two,

Full many a yeman with great yll,

‘Alas! Treason! ’they cryed for wo.

‘Kepe well the gatès fast we wyll,

That these traytours therout not go.’

XCI

But al for nought was that they wrought,

For so fast they downe were layde,

Tyll they all thre, that so manfully fought

Were gotten without, at a braide.

XCII

‘Have here your keys,’ sayd Adam Bell,

‘Myne office I here forsake;

And yf you do by my counsell

A new porter do ye make.’

XCIII

He threw theyr keys there at theyr hedes,

And bad them well to thryve,

And all that letteth any good yeman

To come and comfort his wyfe.

XCIV

Thus be these good yeman gon to the wode

As lyghtly as lefe on lynde;

They laughe and be mery in theyr mode,

Theyr enemyes were farre behynd.

XCV

When they came to Inglyswode,

Under theyr trysty tre,

There they found bowès full good,

And arrowès great plentye.

XCVI

‘So God me help,’ sayd Adam Bell,

And Clym of the Clough so fre,

‘I would we were in mery Carleile,

Before that fayre meynye.’

XCVII

They set them downe, and made good chere,

And eate and dranke full well.—

A second Fyt of the wightye yeomen:

Another I wyll you tell.


thronge] hastened.lordane] dolt.wode] mad.wende] weened, thought.round] i.e. not frayed.stound] time.swerers] swearers, jurymen.voyded] gave room, ran off.out-horne] a horn blown to call citizens to help the law.stowre] press of fight.braide] sudden spring.letteth] hindereth.lynde] linden.meynye] company.