Page:National Ballad and Song (1897), vol. 1.djvu/13
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INDEX
ix
| Gaberlunzie Man, The (James V. Scotland, b. 1542) | 1 |
| Gallant Schemers Petition, The (Musical Miscellany, 1731) | 238 |
| Gather your rosebuds (Tune) | 118 |
| Green Grow the Rashes, O (b. 1796) | 261 |
| Gramachree (Tune) | 274 |
| “Gudewife when your gude man’s frae hame” (b. 1796) | 256 |
| Haddington, Earl of | 242 |
| Harleian MS | 103 |
| Harlot, The high priz’d (or The Penurious Quaker) | 216 |
| “Hee that hath no mistresse” (1610) | 34 |
| Help House of Commons, House of Peers (Refrain) | 118 |
| “Her dainty palm I gently prest” (Marrow of Complements, 1685) | 159 |
| Horrible relation of a dog (or Four legg'd elder) | 118 |
| “I a tender young maid have been courted by many” (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1707) | 194 |
| “I am a young Lass of Lynn” (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1707) | 199 |
| I am fallen away (Tune) | 125 |
| I cannot tell what to do (Refrain) | 199 |
| I cannot, winnot, monnot buckle too (Refrain) | 169 |
| “I dreamed my Loue lay in her bed” (Percy Folio MS., c. 1620–50) | 80 |
| I ha’e laid a herrin’ in sa’t (Tune) | 259 |
| “I have a tenement to let” (Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1719) | 218 |