| Manuscript Number | Ballad Title | Alternative Title | First Two Lines | Comes With (Other songs on same sheet) | Printer | Address | Roud Number | Is The Broadside Illustrated | Link To Other Texts? | Link To Audio? | Archival Data |
| Mu23-y1:002 | Elegy (Theatre Royal, Dunlop Street, Fire). | N/A |
"Give ear all ye of feeling heart / Unto this tale of woe-" | None |
D. Scott | Unknown. | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:003 | The Queens Welcome To The Clyde. | N/A |
"Hail, happy morn! Auspicious day, / When Clydes romantic shores are gay" | None |
William Love | Glasgow, 5 Nelson St. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:004 | Royal Visit. | N/A |
"Victorias come so the West at last, / Midst cannons roar and trumpets blast," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:005 | Economise. | N/A |
"While onward move the fleeting hours of life, / Flee dissipations paths, make no delay:" | Let Joy Abound. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:005 | Let Joy Abound. | N/A |
"Let Joy abound, a glorious time is now! / Improvement marches on in peaceful ways;" | Economise. |
Unknown | Unknown. | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:006 | One Glass More. | N/A |
"Stay, mortal stay! Nor heedless thus / Thy sure destruction seal:" | None |
Robert Harriston | Glasgow, 29 Jamaica St. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:007 | Lament Of Andrew Hamilton. | N/A |
"As down by the banks of the clear winding Avon, / I happend to wander one morning in spring;" | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:007 | Lamentation Of Archibald Hare. | N/A |
"In Glasgow dreary dungeons, heart broken I murmer / When I think on the pleasure in youth I have spent;" | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:008 | Lament Of Archibald Hare. | N/A |
"Draw near y good people, and hear my sad story, / In the dark cell of horror in chains I now lie-" | None |
Bristow | Glasgow, 203 Gallowgate. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:008 | The Rambler From Clair. | N/A |
"The first of my courtships that ever was known, / I straight took my way to the county Tyrone," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | 1531 |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:009 | Lucys Flittin. | N/A |
"Twas when the wan leaf frae the birk-tree was falling, / Martimas dowie had wound up the year," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:009 | Burns And Highland Mary. |
N/A |
In green Caledonia there neer were twa lovers, / Sae enraptured and happy in each ithers arms," | None |
J. Bristow | Glasgow, 203 Gallowgate. |
N/A |
No |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:010 | Rosy Anderson. | N/A |
"High Marshall was a gentleman as ever lived on earth, / He courted Rosy Anderson a lady into Perth," | None |
Unknown | Glasgow, 271 Gallowgate. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:010 | The Glasgow Factory Lass. | N/A |
"As I walked out one morning fair along the banks of Clyde, / A maiden fair without compare, by chance its there I spied:" | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:011 | Woman The Joy And Pride Of The Land. | N/A |
"Come married and single, together pray mingle, / And listen a-while to these lines I relate," | None |
J. Bristow | Glasgow, 203 Gallowgate. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:011 | Uncle Neds Ghost. | N/A |
"Youve heard of a nigger whom they call Uncle Ned / Hes left this place long ago," | None |
Bristow | Glasgow, 203 Gallowgate. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:012 | The Drunkards Child. | N/A |
"In taking a walk on a cold winter day, / By hill side and valley I careless did stray," | None |
Bristow | Glasgow, 203 Gallowgate. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:012 | Meet Me On The Gowan Lea. | N/A |
"When the sun sinks in the west, / An nature a has gane to rest," | None |
J. Bristow | Glasgow, 203 Gallowgate. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:013 | The Oul Bog Hole. | N/A |
"The pig is in the mire, and the cow is on the grass, / And a man without a woman is no better than an ass;" | None |
J. Bristow | Glasgow, 203 Gallowgate. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:013 | Donald And His Mither. | N/A |
"Come my lass, and be nae blate, / And I will be your guard forever," | None |
J. Bristow | Glasgow, 203 Gallowgate. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:014 | Highland Jane. | N/A |
"As I walkd out one morning fair, / Being in the pleasant month of June," | None |
J. Bristow | Glasgow, 203 Gallowgate. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:014 | Of A The Airts The Win Can Blaw. | N/A |
"Of a the airts the win can blaw, I dearly like the west / For there the bonnie lassie lives, the lass that I loe best," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:015 | The Pitmans Union. | N/A |
"Its on the 5th of April, the days were long and clear, / So bright did shine the sun, and how cool did blow the air;" | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:015 | The Blooming Rose Of Banbridge Town. | N/A |
"One evening late as I took my way down by a shady grove, / I little thought I would be caught all in the chains of love;" | None |
R. MIntosh | Calton, 96 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:016 | Lass O Aberdour. | N/A |
"How pleasant is the rising morn, / Which every scene does bright adorn," | None |
R. McIntosh | Calton, 96 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:016 | The Dark-Eyed Sailor. | N/A |
"There was a charming young lady fair, / Was walking about to take the air;" | None |
R. MIntosh | Calton, 96 King Street. |
265 |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:022 | Glasgow Fair On The Banks O The Clyde. | N/A |
"Glasgow fair on the banks of Clyde, / That pure winding stream of the city," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:022 | The Week After The Fair. | N/A |
"Oh John whats this yeve done John, / Yer head this mornings sair," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:023 | The Falkirk Ploughmen. | N/A |
"You bonny lasses brisk and gay, / That comes to Falkirk on the feeing day," | Humours Of This Town. |
Jas. Lindsay Jnr. | Glasgow, King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:023 | Humours Of This Town. | N/A |
"Let us be merry, its no use to cry, / This is town for humour and joy. | The Falkirk Ploughmen. |
Jas. Lindsay Jnr. | Glasgow, King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:024 | The Drunkard Reclaimed. | N/A |
"In taking of my walks, upon a bonny summer morn, / I met a handsome woman whose clothes were rather torn." | General Monro. |
James Lindsay Junr. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:024 | General Monro. | N/A |
"Come all you good people and listen to me, / Till I sing a few verses concerning Monro." | The Drunkard Reclaimed. |
James Lindsay Junr. |
Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:025 | The Irish Girl. | N/A |
"As I was a walking down by you river side, / And looking all around me an Irish girl I spied." | Duncan Campbell. |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
308 |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:025 | Duncan Campbell. | N/A |
"My name is Duncan Campbell, from the shire of Argyll, / I have travelld this country for many a long mile," | The Irish Girl. |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
1627 |
Yes |
|||
| Mu23-y1:026 | Burns And Highland Mary. | N/A |
"In green Caledonia there neer were twa lovers, / Sae enrapturd and happy in each others arms," | My Native Highland Home. |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:026 | My Native Highland Home. | N/A |
"My Highland home, where tempests blow, / And cold thy wintry looks," | Burns And Highland Mary. |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:027 | Poor Black Bess. | N/A |
"When fortune, blind goddess, she fled my abode, / And friends proved ungrateful, I took to the road," | The Bonnie House O Airlie. |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:027 | The Bonnie House OAirlie. | N/A |
"It fell on a day, and a bonnie summer day, / When the corn grew green and yellow," | Poor Black Bess. |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
794 |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:028 | Dialogue Between Death And A Sinner. | N/A |
"O sinner! Come by heavens decree, / My warrant is to summon thee," | None. |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:029 | Scotch Bloomers. | N/A |
"Listen females all no matter what your trade is, / Old nick is in the garls, the D___ls in the ladies;" | Colleen Dhas Crutha na Mho. |
James Lindsay Junr. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:029 | Colleen Dhas Crutha na Mho. | N/A |
"It was on a summers morning, / When birds sweetly tuned on each bough," | Scotch Bloomers. |
James Lindsay Junr. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:030 | Lord Beigham. | N/A |
"Lord Beigham he was a noble lord, / A noble lord of high degree," | None |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
40 |
No |
|||
| Mu23-y1:031 | Blue Eyd Mary. | N/A |
"As I roved out on a summer day, / To view the flowers springing," | Answer To Young Jane And Her Gallant Hussar. |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:031 | Answer To Young Jane And Her Gallant Hussar. | N/A |
"One morning as I went a walking, / In order to take the fresh air." | Blue Eyd Mary. |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:032 | Bonnie Bessie Lee. | N/A |
"Bonnie Bessie Lee she had a face fu o smiles, / And mirth round her ripe lip was aye dancing slee;" | Lovely Anne. |
James Lindsay Junr. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:032 | Lovely Anne. | N/A |
"When I was young and in my prime, / The seas I had to rove," | Bonnie Bessie Lee. |
James Lindsay Junr. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:033 | The Feeing Day. | N/A |
"Was you at ______ or did you see, / Hey down, O down, O diddle dee;" | The Battle Of Waterloo. |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:033 | The Battle Of Waterloo. | N/A |
"On the 16th day of June, my boys, in Flanders where we lay, / The bugle did alarm sound before the break of day;" | The Feeing Day |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
1132 |
No |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:034 | The Lovers Discussion. | N/A |
"As I walked out one evening in the month of May, / The flowers they were springing, the lambs dis sport and play," | Lurgan Braes |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:034 | Lurgan Braes. | N/A |
"The summer time being in its prime, / The weather calm and clear," | The Lovers Discussion. |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
6273 |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:035 | The Queen Of Love. | N/A |
"As I rovd out one morning fair, down by a shady grove; / With a hasty foot I did draw nigh, and sat down by my love." | The Female Cabin Boy |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:035 | The Female Cabin Boy. | N/A |
"It is of a pretty fair maid as you may understand, / She had a maid for roving unto some foreign land;" | The Queen Of Love. |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
239 |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:036 | The Oul Bog Hole. | N/A |
"The pig is in the mire, and the cow is on the grass, / And a man without a woman is no better than an ass;" | The Feeing Time. |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:036 | The Feeing Time. | N/A |
"My friend and I struck frae Millgye, / For Glasgow town we took our way;" | The Oul Bog Hole |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:037 | The Oul Bog Hole. | N/A |
"The pig is in the mire, and the cow is on the grass, / And a man without a woman is no better than an ass;" | The Feeing Time. |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:037 | The Feeing Time. | N/A |
"My friend and I struck frae Millgye, / For Glasgow town we took our way;" | The Oul Bog Hole |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:039 | The Crook And Plaid. | N/A |
"If lasses loe the laddies, the surely should confess, / For every lassie has a lad she loes aboon the rest;" | William And Margaret. |
James Lindsay Junr. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:039 | William And Margaret. | N/A |
"Twas on a Monday morning, all in the month of May, / Our ship she shippd her anchor away from Greenock quay;" | The Crook And The Plaid. |
James Lindsay Junr. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:040 | The Butcher And The Chamber Maid | N/A |
"It's of a brisk young butcher, as I have heard them say / He started from Newcastle town upon a certain day," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:041 | The Golden Glove. | N/A |
"A wealth young squire of Tamworth we hear, / He courted a noblemans daughter so fair;" | Ewe Buchts. |
James Lindsay Junr. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:041 | Ewe Buchts. | N/A |
Bonnie Mary in the Ewe buches is gane / To milk her fathers ewes," | The Golden Glove. |
James Lindsay Junr. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:042 | Hardie And Baird. | N/A |
"On the 8th of September the bell had tolld one, / A solemn procession in Stirling began;" | Queens Visit. |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street, |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:042 | Queens Visit. | N/A |
"Victorias come to the west at last, / Midst cannons roar and trumpets blast," | Hardie And Baird. |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:043 | Song Of The Haymakers. | N/A |
"The noontide is hot, and our foreheads are brown, / Our palms are all shining and hard-" | Napoleon Bonaparte. |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:043 | Napoleon Bonaparte. | N/A |
"I visited that splendid city Paris, the Metropolis of France, / Saluted every morning by Sols refulgent beams;" | Song Of The Haymakers. |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:044 | The Braes Of Strathalbane. | N/A |
As I was walking one morning in May, / Down by yon green meadows I careless did stray;" | Mary Neal. |
James Lindsay Junr. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:044 | Mary Neal. | N/A |
I am a bold undaunted youth, and my name is John MCan, / I am a native of Donegal, convenient to Straban. | The Braes Of Strathalbane. |
James Lindsay Junr. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
142 |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:045 | The Farmers Boy. | N/A |
"The sun had set behind yon hill, / Across yon dreary moor," | Woman The Pride Of The Land. |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:045 | Woman The Pride Of The Land. | N/A |
"Come married and single, together pray mingle, / And listen awhile to these lines I relate," | The Farmers Boy. |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:046 | The Little Gipsy Girl. | N/A |
"My father is king if the gipsies, tis true, / And my mother she learnd me the camping to do," | The Unfortunate Shepherdess. |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:046 | The Unfortunate Shepherdess. | N/A |
"In the county of Essex there lived a squire, / And he had a daughter most beautiful and fair," | The Little Gipsy Girl. |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:047 | The Week After The Fair. | The Discontented Pair. |
Im grieved to think, my wife Meg, this day we are so poor, / The Fair has forced us out clean to beggarys very door;" | The Chimney Sweepers Wedding. |
James Lindsay Junr. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:047 | The Chimney Sweepers Wedding. | N/A |
"Come all you pretty fair maids , some young and some older, / From eighteen to twenty thats now going to marry," | The Week After The Fair. |
James Lindsay Junr. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:049 | Humours Of This Town. | N/A |
"Let us be merry, its no use to cry, / This is the town for humour and joy;" | Ballandine Braes. |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:049 | Ballandine Braes. | N/A |
"Over yon moorlands and down by yon glen, / Where the waters run clear and the doe makes her den;" | Humours Of This Town. |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:050 | White Cliffs Of Albion. | N/A |
"On the white cliffs of Albion, as musing I stood, / Surveying the waves of the rough swelling flood," | The Girl I Left Behind Me. |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:050 | The Girl I Left Behind Me. | N/A |
"Now for America Im bound, / Against my inclination -" | White Cliffs Of Albion. |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:052 | The Factory Girl (Parody On Rosa May). | N/A |
Come all around both old and young, and listen to my song, / While I relate a circumstance, that does to love belong;" | The Undaunted Female. |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:052 | The Undaunted Female. | N/A |
"Tis of a fair damsel who in london did dwell, / For wit and for beauty none could her excell." | The Factory Girl. |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
289 |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:053 | Digging For Gold. | The Australia Mania. |
"Oh, have you heard the news so grand, / The last and best thats come to hand," | None |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:054 | Scotch Bloomers. | N/A |
"Listen females all no matter what your trade is, / Old Nick is in the garls, the D___ls in the ladies;" | A Word Of Advice. |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:054 | A Word Of Advice. | N/A |
"Come all you sporting husbands wherever you be, / In high life or low life of every degree," | Scotch Bloomers. |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:056 | Marys Dream. | N/A |
"The moon had climd the highest hill, / That rises oer the source of Dee;" | Bundle An Go. |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:056 | Bundle An Go. | N/A |
"Clydes bonnie hills whar the heather was blooming, / An laddies an lassies lang lo-e a the day," | Marys Dream. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:057 | Railroad To Hell. | N/A |
"If you are determined and wishful to go, / With blind debauchees to the religions woe," | None |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:058 | Lovely Mourin Shore. | N/A |
"Ye muses nine with me combine, / And grant me some relief," | A Song On The New Year. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:058 | A Song On The New Year. | N/A |
"Come all you lads and lassies gay, attend unto my song, / While I sing you a few verses that will not keep you long," | Lovely Mourin Shore. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:60 | Pop Goes The Weasel. | N/A |
"Now all the girls are going mad, / For Pop goes the Weasel," | The Mariners Grave. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:60 | The Mariners Grave. | N/A |
"I remember the night was stormy and wet, / And dismally dashed the dark wave." | Pop Goes The Weasel. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:061 | The Tipperary Boys. | N/A |
"Arrah heid-na-hust. thats hould your whisht, / Whilst I my voice am raising," | Paul Jones. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:061 | Paul Jones. | N/A |
"An American frigate, called the Richard by name, / Mounted guns fourty-four, from New York she came," | The Tipperary Boys. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:062 | Nell Flahertys Drake. | N/A |
"My name is Nell, I candid will tell / I live near Coothill I never will deny;" | Dream Of Napoleon. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:062 | Dream Of Napoleon. | N/A |
"One night, sad and languid, I went to my bed, / And scarce had reclined on my pillow," | Nell Flahertys Drake. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:063 | The Adventures Of Sandy And Donald On The Plains Of Waterloo. | N/A |
"When crafty wee Buona broke out o his prison, / The word was after his tail wandering;" | The Harp Of Erin. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:063 | The Harp Of Erin. | N/A |
"O Erin my country although thy harp slumbers, / And lies in oblivion in Taras old hall;" | The Adventures of Sandy And Donald. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:064 | Phoebe Morel. | The Slaves Dream. |
"I had a dream, a happy dream, / I thought that I was free;" | Johnie My Man. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:064 | Johnie My Man. | N/A |
"O, Johnie, my man, are you thinking on rising, / The day is far spent, and the nights drawing near" | Phoebe Morel. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
845 |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:065 | Phoebe Morel. | The Slaves Dream. |
"I had a dream, a happy dream, / I thought that I was free;" | Johnie My Man. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:065 | Johnie My Man. | N/A |
"O, Johnie, my man, are you thinking on rising, / The day is far spent, and the nights gaying near" | Phoebe Morel. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
845 |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:066 | Paddy On The Canal. | N/A |
"When I came to sweet Philadelphia, / It happened to be in the fall," | Doings On A Sunday Night. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:066 | Doings On A Sunday Night. | N/A |
"I am going to sing a funny song, / And y_t the subject is not long," | Paddy On The Canal. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:067 | Lather Em, Shave Em. | N/A |
"It was in this town not far from this spot, / A barber once opened a snug little shop," | Katty Darling. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:067 | Katty Darling. | N/A |
"The flowers are blooming, Katty Darling, / And the birds are singing on each tree;" | Lather Em ShaveEm. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:068 | Duncan Campbell. | N/A |
"My name is Duncan Campbell, from the shire of Argyll, / I have travelled this country for many a long mile," | Parody On The Irish Emigrant. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
1627 |
Yes |
|||
| Mu23-y1:068 | Parody On The Irish Emigrant. | N/A |
"Im sitting on a rail Judy, / Where oft across yed stride," | Duncan Campbell. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:069 | Kathleen Mavoureen. | N/A |
"Kathleen Mavoureen, the grey dawn is breaking, / The horn of the hunter is heard on then hill;" | The Young Emigrants Farewell. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:069 | The Young Emigrants Farewell. | N/A |
"Will you gang awa wi me, bonnie lassie, O, / Across the Atlantic sea, bonnie lassie, O;" | Kathleen Mavoureen. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:070 | Haughs Of Crumdel. | N/A |
"As I came in by Auchendown, / A little bit frae the town," | The Young Mans Dream. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
5147 |
No |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:070 | The Young Mans Dream. | N/A |
On the sixteenth of March, one evening so fair, / Down by a clear river my course I did steer;" | Haughs Of Crumdel. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:071 | The Drunken Father Reclaimed. | N/A |
"They had but two children a girl and a boy, / Who could at home no quietness enjoy!" | None |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:072 | The Bank Of Grace. | N/A |
"I have a never failing Bank, / A more than golden store," | None |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:073 | My Nannies Awa. | N/A |
"Now in her green mantle blythe nature arrays, / And listens the lambkins that bleat oer the braes;" | Scotlands Stagnation! |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:073 | Scotlands Stagnation! | Where Is All The Money Gone? |
"The oldest person in the world, on land or on the water, / Never saw such times before, since Sampson killed his daughter." | My Nannies Awa. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:074 | The Russian In Glasgow. | N/A |
"The Russian is coming Oh dear! oh dear! / The hearts of the British are all put in fear," | Inniskillen Dragoon. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:074 | Inniskillen Dragoon. | N/A |
"A beautiful damsel of fame and renown, / A gentlemans daughter near Monaghan town," | The Russian In Glasgow. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
2185 |
No |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:075 | The Russians Are Coming. | N/A |
"You sons of Brittania attend to my song, / While I sing a few verses that will not be long," | The Star Of Glengarry. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:075 | The Star Of Glengarry. | N/A |
The red moon is up on the mosscovered mountain, / The hour is at hand when I promised to roam;" | The Russians Are Coming. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:076 | A Parody On The Iron Child. | N/A |
"You ladies all on you I call, / Wherever you may be," | The Wandering Boy. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:076 | The Wandering Boy. | N/A |
"When the winter wind whistles along the wild moor, / And the cottager shuts on the beggar his door;" | Parody On The Iron Child. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:078 | The Banks Of The Nile. | N/A |
"Hark, hark, the drums do beat my love, and I must haste away / The bugles sweetly sound, and no longer can I stay," | New Years Day. |
Jas. Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:078 | New Years Day. | N/A |
"All you that are to mirth inclind, / Consider well, and bear in mind," | The Banks Of The Nile. |
Jas. Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:079 | Remember The Poor. | N/A |
"Cold winter is come with its cold frosty breath, / And the leaves fall fast from the trees," | James MDonnell. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:079 | James MDonnell. | N/A |
"Both young and old, I now make bold pray lend to me an ear,-" / This is a cruel murder as ever you did hear," | Remember The Poor. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:080 | James MNabs Opinion Of The March Of Intellect. | N/A |
"Nainsel pe Maister Shon MNab, / Pe aulds ta forty-five, man," | None |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:081 | The Pedlar. | N/A |
"The pedlar cad in by the house o Glenuck, / When the famly were by wi the breakfast and beuk;" | The Ivy Green. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:081 | The Ivy Green. | N/A |
"O a dainty plant is the ivy green, / That creepeth oer ruins old;" | The Pedlar. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:082 | Flora & Donald. | Massacre Of Glencoe. |
"O dark lourd the night on the wild distant heath, / And the wild raven croakd out the bodies of death," | The Farmers Daughter. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:082 | The Farmers Daughter. | N/A |
"My love is of fine low station, and I a gentleman of all renown; / Give ear to those lines that I mention, the truth I would wish to lay down," | Flora And Donald. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:083 | My Bonnie, Blooming, Highland Jean. | N/A |
"As I walked out one morning fair, / Being in the pleasant month of June," | A Song Of The Times. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:083 | A Song Of The Times. | N/A |
"As striking has become the order of the day, / Ill strike you up a song if youll listen to my lay;" | My Bonnie, Blooming, Highland Jean. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:084 | My Bonnie, Blooming, Highland Jean. | N/A |
"As I walked out one morning fair, / Being in the pleasant month of June," | Widow MacFarlanes Lamentation. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:084 | Widow MacFarlanes Lamentation. | N/A |
"On the banks of the Clyde I happened to wander / In the month of August, when the flowers were in bloom;" | My Bonnie, Blooming, Highland Jean. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:086 | My Brughel Roe. | N/A |
"Come all ye tender lovers till I relate my grief, / My darlings gone and left me with small hopes of relief;" | Bridgeton Tragedy. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:086 | Bridgeton Tragedy. | N/A |
"Good people all of Glasgow, pray listen unto me, / Whilst I relate this woeful tale and mournful tragedy;" | My Boughel Roe. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:087 | The Bold Lieutenant In The Lions Den. | N/A |
"In London city there lived a lady, / She had ten thousand pounds a-year." | Meet Me On The Gowan Lea / The Bonnie Breast-Knots. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:087 | Meet Me On The Gowan Lea. | N/A |
"Meet me on the gowan lea, / Bonnie Mary, sweetest Mary;" | The Bold Lieutenant / The Bonnie Breast-Knots. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:087 | The Bonnie Breast-Knots. | N/A |
"Hey the bonnie, ho the bonnie, / Hey the bonnie breast-knots;" | The Bold Lieutenant / Meet Me On The Gowan Lea |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:088 | The Weeks Matrimony. | N/A |
"On Sunday morning I went out for a spree, / And met a maid as fair as could be;" | None |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:089 | Farewell Address To Their Countrymen And Friends. | N/A |
"The Circuit it is over now, the Judges are one away, / But many aching hearts are left within the town today." | None |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:090 | The Glasgow Maid And The Tinker. | N/A |
"In Glasgow town a maid did dwell, / A buxom lass, and I knew her well;" | Paddys Visit To London. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:090 | Paddys Visit To London. | N/A |
"Oh! have you not heard Pat of many a joke, / Thats made by the wits gainst your own country folk;" | The Glasgow Maid And The Tinker. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:091 | Betsy Of Drumore. | N/A |
"It was on a summers morning I rovd for recreation, / Quite happy in my station, no care nor trouble knew," | The Murder Of Betsy Smith. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:091 | The Murder Of Betsy Smith. | N/A |
"Come all false-hearted young men and listed to my song, / Its of a dreadful murder that lately has been done," | Betsy Of Drumore. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:092 | Lamentation Of Margaret Bell. | N/A |
"From my dungeon in Paisley I send you this warning, / To shun paths of vice which leads on to crime." | The Long Lost Child. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:092 | The Long Lost Child. | N/A |
"Far in a lonely highland vale, beside a mountain wild, / There lived a happy wedded pair who had a darling child;" | Lamentation Of Margaret Bell. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:093 | Uncle Toms Cabin. | N/A |
"Im thinking of poor Uncle Tom, / So generous, kind, and brave;" | One Pound Two. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:093 | One Pound Two. | N/A |
"Now Maggy dear, I do hear you have been on the spree, / Where is my whole weeks wages gone, I pray come tell to me" | Uncle Toms Cabin. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:094 | Undaunted Mary On The Banks Of Sweet Dundee. | N/A |
"Its of a farmers daughter, so beautiful, Im told, / Her parents died and left her five hundred pounds in gold," | Lament For James MMulkin. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
148 |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:094 | Lament For James MMulkin. | N/A |
"My old companions give attention, / James MMulkin bids you adieu," | Undaunted Mary. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:095 | Margaret Bells Lament. | N/A |
"Adieu unto Barrhead, and to Neilston also, / Where the river Levern it sweetly does flow," | Bob The Groom. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:095 | Bob The Groom. | N/A |
"My young swells come pity, pray, / The life of poor old Bob." | Margaret Bells Lamentation. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:096 | Dandy Dick. | N/A |
"Dick Dash! all is my name, / Im up to everything thats game;" | Death Of The Duke Of Wellington. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:096 | Lines On The Death Of The Duke Of Wellington. | N/A |
"Britannia now lament for our hero that is dead, / That son of mars, brave Wellington, alas his spirits fled;" | Dandy Dick. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:097 | John And His Wife On Using Tea. | N/A |
"Neighbours draw near and Ill tell you a tale, / To lend your attention Im sure you wont fail," | The Hungry Army. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:097 | The Hungry Army. | N/A |
"The wind in thundering gales did roar, / As I left my home in black October," | John And His Wife On Using Tea. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
1746 |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:098 | The Discussion. | N/A |
"As I walkd out one morning early, / Being in the charming sweet month of May." | Good News. |
James Lindsay Jun | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:098 | Good News. | N/A |
"If good news you choose, attention pay and dont refuse, / To what Ill say my list Ill lay before you if you choose." | The Discussion. |
James Lindsay Jun. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:099 | Perished The Pack. | N/A |
"In the days o my youth when I travelled the kintra, / Carrying bare on my rumple the weariefu pack," | The Last Breathings Of Napoleon. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:099 | The Last Breathings Of Napoleon. | N/A |
"Sequestered here, afar from fame, / And hopes enchanting smile," | Perished The Pack. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:100 | The Battle Of The Boyne. | N/A |
""July the first in Oldbridge town, / There was a grievous battle," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:101 | A Story Of Heaven. | The Childs Dream. |
"Before a lonely cottage once, / With climbing roses gay," | None |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:102 | Fair Phoebe And Her Dark-Eyed Sailor. | N/A |
"There was a comely young lady fair, / Was walking out to take the air," | The Dandy Servants. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:102 | The Dandy Servants. | N/A |
"Ye braw decent women Ill sing you a song, / Of the wit of the auld and the pride of the young," | Phoebe And Her Dark-Eyed Sailor. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:103 | The Wifes Dream. | N/A |
"Now tell me, Mary, how is it that you can look so gay, / When evening after evening your husband is away?" | The Laird O Loannheads Description Of The Farmers. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:103 | The Laird O Loanheads Description Of The Farmers. | N/A |
"Our farmers now they are a growing braw, / And getting quite fat on the Corn Law." | The Wifes Dream. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:104 | The Wheel Of Fortune. | N/A |
"When I was young I was well beloved, / By all young men in this country;" | The Convicts Return. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:104 | The Convicts Return. | N/A |
"Ye true sons of freedom, I pray you attend, / Unto these few verses that I have here penned," | The Wheel Of Fortune. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:105 | The Convicts Return. | N/A |
"Ye true sons of freedom, I pray you attend, / Unto these few verses that I have here penned," | The Wheel Of Fortune. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:105 | The Wheel Of Fortune. | N/A |
"When I was young I was well beloved, / By all young men in this country;" | The Convicts Return. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:106 | James Raeburn. | N/A |
"My name is James Raeburn, / In Glasgow I was born," | Sandy And The Days Of Langsyne. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:106 | Sandy And The Days Of Langsyne. | N/A |
"What makes ye sae wae, man, wi tear in your ee, / For blythe you was ance, man, wi pleasure an glee," | James Raeburn. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:107 | Napoleon Bonaparte. | N/A |
"I visited that splendid city Paris, the Metropolis of France, / Saluted every morning by Sols refulgent beams;" | Song Of The Haymakers. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:107 | Song Of The Haymakers. | N/A |
"The noontide is hot, and out foreheads are brown, / Our palms are all shining and hard -" | Napoleon Bonaparte. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:108 | Kate Kearney With The Silver Eye. | N/A |
"A maiden fair lived in Kildare, / A matchless lass, I must allow," | The Battle Of Corunna. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:108 | The Battle Of Corunna. | N/A |
"On the nineteenth day of December eighteen hundred and eighty-eight, / That day I well remember we had a bloody fight;" | Kate Kearney With The Silvery Eye. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:109 | The Emigrants Farewell To Ireland. | N/A |
"Farewell to dear Erin, I now must leave you, / And cross the sea to a foreign clime," | Come And Be A Soldier Lad. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:109 | Come And Be A Soldier Lad. | N/A |
"Come and be a soldier, lads, come lads, come, / Hark, dont you hear the fife and drum." | The Emigrants Farewell To Ireland. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:110 | Salts And Senna. | N/A |
"I now will sing to you a song, / If you listen unto me," | Will You Go To Australia Oh? |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:110 | Will You Go To Australia Oh? | N/A |
"To high and low of all degrees, a tale I will unfold, / And tell you where across the seas, you may get lots of gold;" | Salts And Senna. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:111 | Erins Lovely Home. | N/A |
"When I was young and in my prime, just aged twenty-one, / When I became a servant to a noble gentleman;" | I Wish I Was Lying Alone. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
1427 |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:111 | I Wish I Was Lying Alone. | N/A |
"You ladies have pity on me, / Let me and your company mingle," | Erins Lovely Home. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:113 | Erin The Green. | N/A |
"Adieu, lovely Erin, Im going to leave you, / Peace be with you daisy-clad hills;" | The County Down. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:113 | The County Down. | N/A |
"Och, the spuds, avick, were in the ridge, / The weather in troth was mighty fine;" | Erin The Green. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:114 | A Woman Is The Torment Of Man. | N/A |
"You married men, I pray, come listen to my lay, / I will tell you the truth if I can;" | The Stir-A-Bout Pot. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:114 | The Stir-A-Bout Pot. | N/A |
"At the outlets of our city there lived / A widow woman, Mrs Keogh," | A Woman Is The Torment Of Man. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:115 | Bonny Bunch Of Roses. | N/A |
"By the danger of the ocean, / One morning in the month of June," | The Annie Jane. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
664 |
No |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:115 | The Annie Jane. | N/A |
"You landsmen all pray lend an ear, to this my dismal tale, / Concerning the wreck of the Annie Jane, which from Liverpool did sail;" | Bonny Bunch Of Roses. |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:116 | The Battle Of Alma. | N/A |
"You loyal Britons pray draw near, / Unto the news Ive brought you here" | None |
James Lindsay. | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:117 | Smile Again Bonny Lassie. | N/A |
"Smile again, my bonnie lassie,- / Lassie, smile again;" | Evening Bells / Gipsy Girl / Rule The Main. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:117 | Those Evening Bells. | N/A |
"Those evening bells, those evening bells, / How many a tale their music tells," | Smile Again / Gipsy Girl / Rule The Main. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:117 | The Little Gipsy Girl. | N/A |
"My father is king of the gipsies, tis true, / And my mother is learning the camping to do;" | Smile Again / Evening Bells / Rule The Main. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:117 | May Britain Ever Rule The Main. | N/A |
"When Seated round the festive board, / When Bacchus pleasures does afford," | Smile Again / Evening Bells / Gipsy Girl. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:118 | Hurrah For The Bonnets Of Blue. | N/A |
"Heres a health to them thats awa, / Heres a health to them thats awa,-" | Allandale / Pretty Susan / Silver Moon. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:118 | The Rose Of Allandale. | N/A |
"The morn was fair, the skies were clear, / no breath came oer the sea," | Bonnets Blue / Pretty Susan / Silver Moon |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:118 | Pretty Susan The Pride Of Kildare. | N/A |
"When first from sea I landed, I had a roving mind; / Undaunted I rambled my true love to find,-" | Bonnets Blue / Allandale / Silver Moon. |
Unknown | Unknown | 962 |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:118 | Lady The Silver Moon. | N/A |
"Lady, the silver moon shines bright; / Her beams disperse the dews of night;" | Bonnets Blue / Allandale / Pretty Susan. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:119 | Johnny Cope. | N/A |
"Cope sent a letter frae Dunbar, / Saying, Charlie, meet me gin you dare," | Thomas And Nancy. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:119 | Thomas And Nancy. | N/A |
"The boatswains shrill whistle had sounded, / And Thomas and Nancy must part;" | Johnny Cope. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:121 | The Village-Born Beauty. | N/A |
"See! The star-breasted villain to yonder cot bounds, / Where the sweet honeysuckle entwines it around," | Annie Laurie. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:121 | Annie Laurie. | N/A |
"Maxweltons banks are bonnie, / Where early falls the dew," | The Village-Born Beauty. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:127 | Contrarie Paddy. | N/A |
"Come all you good people, pray listen, / I would have you draw near, but stand off;" | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 130 Gallogate St |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:129 | Daniel OConnell In Purgatory. | N/A |
"Have you not heard the Scripture saith, / How some departing from their faith," | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:130 | The Laughable Adventures Of Larry MFlynn. | N/A |
"In eighteen hundred and forty-nine, / I thought a soldiers life Id like fine;" | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:131 | The Sporting Hero. | N/A |
"Im a bold sporting hero, who never yet was daunted, / For courting of a pretty maid I never yet was faunked;" | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:132 | The Irish Teacher. | N/A |
"Some talk of education, and moral reformation / For schools throughout the nation, they raise a philaloo;" | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:133 | Paddys Market. | N/A |
"Good people all pray lend an ear / And listen with attention," | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:134 | Bob O The Bent. | N/A |
"Come a ye steeve tipplers, and listen unto me, / An Ill show you the upshot o John Barleybrie," | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:135 | Dorrans Ass. | N/A |
"One Paddy Doyle lived near Killarney, / He courted a maid called Biddy Toole;" | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
1010 |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:137 | Whiskey In The Jar. | N/A |
"Im a bold Irish hero, who never yet was daunted, / In the courting of a pretty girl I very seldom wanted," | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
533 |
No |
No |
||
| Mu23-y1:138 | Barbara Allan. | N/A |
"It was in about the Martinmas time, / When the green leaves were a-fallin," | Barbara Allan The Cruel. |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
54 |
No |
|||
| Mu23-y1:138 | Barbara Allan The Cruel. | N/A |
In Reading town a lad was born, / And a fair maid there was dwelling;" | Barbara Allan. |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:139 | Wont You Leave Us A Lock Of Your Hair. | N/A |
"The night is fresh and calm, love, / The birds are in their bowers," | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:139 | The Strawberry Beds. | N/A |
"Last Sunday the weather was charming, / And all things looked gay in the sun," | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:140 | Jemmy The Gom. | N/A |
"Peg MIlwaine lived below in Belfast, / She was fifty years old so her young days were past," | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:141 | Happy-Go-Lucky. | N/A |
"Im happy, and turns up my nose / At whatever may happen, and therefore" | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y1:145 | Index Of Twenty-Four Page Penny History Books. | N/A |
N/A |
None |
Francis Orr & Sons. | Glasgow. | N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
N/A |
|
| Manuscript Number | Ballad Title | Alternative Title | First Two Lines | Comes With (Other songs on same sheet) | Printer | Address | Roud Number | Is The Broadside Illustrated | Link To Other Texts? | Link To Audio? | Archival Data |
| Mu23-y2:001 | The Cowcaddens Barber. | N/A |
"In the Cowcaddens a barber these some years lived there / Hes the boast of the world for cropping folks hair." | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:002 | The Camlachie Militia. | N/A |
"The Russians are coming, oh, dear! oh, dear! / Well, let them come on, we have nothing to fear;" | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:003 | The Kirkintilloch Critic. | N/A |
"Some men are overly ambitious, / And some to worldly avaricious;" | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:005 | The First Worlds Fair. | The National Exhibition. |
"How wonderful it doth appear, / To people of each station;" | None |
D. Scott | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:005 | Lady Franklins Lament For Her Husband. | N/A |
"You seamen bold, that have oft withstood, / Wild storms of Neptunes briny flood;" | None |
Unknown. | Unknown | 487 |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y2:010 | Watty. | Glasgow Teatotal Party. |
"Ye teatotal neighbours take advice from a friend, / When he tells ye of one, that a fause course does vend;" | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:010 | Duncan MCallochan. | N/A |
"It was for a peck o meal or mair, / Ae day, as coming frae the fair," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:011 | William And Jane. | N/A |
"One fair summers morning as I went a walking, / Down by the banks of a clear winding tide," | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:011 | Kirsty Forsyth. | N/A |
Kirsty Forsyth was a maiden in Fife, / Waes me for Kirsty Forsyth," | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:012 | Well Nae Nane But Highland Bonnets Here. | N/A |
"Almas field of heroes hail, / Alma! glorious to the Gael;" | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:012 | The Paddy Trick. | N/A |
"First when I set out to tramp, it was in the year 1809, / My course I steered for Scotland in hopes a sweetheart for to find;" | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:013 | The Sporting Youth. | N/A |
"Im a stranger in this country, from America I came, / Theres very few that know me or that can tell you my name" | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:013 | Sprightly Painter. | N/A |
"There was a sprightly painter gay, / That lived a single life," | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:014 | When Johns Ale Was New. | N/A |
"The was two jolly tradesmen / Went out to spend an evening," | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
139 |
No |
|||
| Mu23-y2:014 | Glasgow Doctor. | N/A |
"In Glasgow once there livd a man as I have heard folks say, / And if he doesnt live there still he must have gone away;" | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:015 | Betsy Bluster. | N/A |
"Im an unhappy man, as you can plainly see, / Sure, its all through my lot getting married;" | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:015 | Im Ninety-Five. | N/A |
"Im ninety-five, Im ninety-five, / And to keep single I contrive;" | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:016 | Great Sea Snake. | N/A |
"Perhaps you all have heard of a yarn, / Of a famous large sea-snake," | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:016 | Aladdins Lamp. | N/A |
"Oh, had I but Aladdins lamp, / If only for a day," | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:017 | Paddy And The Butter. | N/A |
"We sailed from the Downs in a ship calld the Lion, / With fifty brass guns, our crew could rely on;" | None |
Poets Box | Glasgow, 6 St Andrews Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:048 | The Exile Of Erin. | N/A |
"There came to the beach a poor exile of Erin, / The dew on his thin robes was heavy and chill;" | None |
Unknown | Glasgow, 271 Gallowgate. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:048 | James And Flora United. | N/A |
"Come all you true lovers attend for a while, / To a tale I am going to unfold. | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:060 | Lanty Fegans Breeches. | N/A |
"Last Donnybrook Fair day, / I started from Stillorgan," | The Cameron Men. |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:060 | The Cameron Men. | N/A |
"There is many a man of the Cameron Clan / That has followed his chief to the field," | Lanty Fegan's Breeches. |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:061 | Ye Cowe A | N/A |
"I wiled my lass wi loving words to Kelvins leafy shade, / And a that fondest heart can feel, or tongue can tell, I said;" | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:065 | New Years Address Of The Deliverers Of The North British Advertiser. | N/A |
"A guid New Year tae ane an a, / An mony may ye see!" | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y2:066 | Inauguration Of The Burns Statue. (Poem) | N/A |
"Why are the bells ringing? / Why are the people out? | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Manuscript Number | Ballad Title | Alternative Title | First Two Lines | Comes With (Other songs on same sheet) | Printer | Address | Roud Number | Is The Broadside Illustrated | Link To Other Texts? | Link To Audio? | Archival Data |
| Mu23-y3:001 | An Elegy For Dougal Graham. | N/A |
"Attend, ye mighty sons of fame, / While I th unwelcome news proclaim;" | The Dying Song Of A Repenting Sinner. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:001 | The Dying Song Of A Repenting Sinner When Near The Point Of Death. | N/A |
"O every where! and good of all! / Creator out of nought," | An Elegy For Dougal Graham. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:003 | Murrays Roguery. | N/A |
"On the twenty-seventh of January, / The year Seventeen Hundred and Eighty-three," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:004 | Second Address To The Reformed Town Council. | N/A |
"Ye idiots of the rabble hail, / Wha now in power so smoothly sail" | None |
Caldwell & Son | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:006 | Archys Weather Glass. | N/A |
"O for Archys weather glass, / Hey for Archys weather glass;" | None |
Caldwell & Son | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:007 | Archys Return. | N/A |
"O, Archy, hes come back again, / Archy is come back again;" | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:008 | Who Diddled The Paupers? | N/A |
"You ratepayers of Glasgow all, I hope you will be easy, / For unto you Ive brought a song, I think that it will please you," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:008 | The Pauper And The Minister. | N/A |
"Im living on the parish now as happy as a king, / From morn to night Ive nought to do but whistle dance and sing," | None |
Robert MIntosh | Calton, 96 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:009 | The Comforts Of Man. | N/A |
"When I was young many troubles I got, / I wanted a somewhat, I couldnt tell what," | None |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:009 | Johnies Lamentation. | N/A |
"Ye gentle muses thats nine in number, / I pray assist me to I explain," | None |
Robert MIntosh | Calton, 96 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:010 | The Lady Of The Lake. | N/A |
"One evening as I chanced to stray along the banks of the Clyde, / Near to the town of sweet Renfrew, a bonny lass I spied;" | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:010 | William And Herriet. | N/A |
"There was a rich gentleman in Glasgow did dwell, / He had a lovely daughter a sailor loved well;" | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:013 | Floras Lament For Her Charlie. | N/A |
"Its yon bonny banks and yon bonny braes, / Where the sun shines bright and bonny," | None |
Robert MIntosh | Calton, 96 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:013 | Dumbartons Bonny Dell. | N/A |
"Theres ner a nook in a the land, / Victoria rules sae weel," | None |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:014 | Donald Blue. | N/A |
"My names Donald Blue, you ken me fu well / And if you be civil Im a civel chiel," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y3:014 | Hamilton Big Doctor. | N/A |
Now ladies here of Hamilton, / Theres a Doctor in the town," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:015 | Donnelly And Oliver. | N/A |
"You muses I beg you will lend me your aid, / Ill sing of brave Donnelly a true Irish blade;" | None |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:015 | The Laird O Loanheads Description Of The Farmers. | N/A |
"Our farmers now are a growing braw, / And getting quite fat on the Corn Law," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:016 | The Gossiping Wife. | N/A |
"Of all the wives that plague mens lives, / And keeps them from their rest," | None |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:016 | A Bachelors Wants. | N/A |
"Come all you single women if you wish to change your life, / I long to be married and I want to get a wife" | None |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:017 | The Great Meat Pie. | N/A |
"Youve heard of the wondrous Crocodile, / And the thundring great sea-snake-" | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:017 | Its All Serene. | N/A |
"I am a country yokel, just come down, / To view the rigs of Glasgow town, -all serene;" | None |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:019 | The Golden Glove. | N/A |
"A wealthy young squire in Tamworth we hear, / He courted a noblemans daughter so fair," | None |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:019 | The Stir-About Pot. | N/A |
"At the outlets of our city there lived / A widow woman, Mrs Keogh," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:021 | The Flying Dutchman. | N/A |
"You sportsmen all both great and small, one moment now attend, / And listen with attention to these verses I have pennd," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:021 | A New Song Of The Times. | N/A |
"Ye people now both high and low, pray listen to those rhymes, / Concerning what we may expect in these our stirring times," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:022 | Teetotallers' Defeat. | N/A |
"Come fill up your Glasses, / And drink your toast round," | None |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:022 | The Truck Masters. | N/A |
"You truck masters all pay attention to me, / Especially Gartsherrie and summerlea;" | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:023 | The Feeing Time. | N/A |
"My friend and I struck frae Millgye, / For Glasgow town we took our way;" | None |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
||
| Mu23-y3:023 | The Clowns Courtship. | N/A |
"There once lived a clown in a stead, / An he thought he would hae a bit wifie," | None |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:024 | Dark Bonnymuir. | N/A |
"As evening dashed on the western ocean, / Caledonia stood perchd on the waves of the Clyde," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:024 | The Banks Of The Nile. | N/A |
"Hark, hark, the drums do beat my love, and I must haste away, / The bugles sweetly sound, and no longer can I stay," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:025 | Young Jamie O The Forty-Twa! | N/A |
"One evening as I walkd by the Clydes banks so gay, / It was for recreation that way I did stray;" | None |
Robert MIntosh | Calton, 96 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:026 | The Drunken Wife. | N/A |
"See what a drunken wife will do, / Shell drink wi ony blackguard crew;" | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:028 | The Burning Of The Montreal And The Loss Of 300 Scotch Emigrants | N/A |
"You people of Scotland I pray give attention, / A sad dismal story I soon shall let you hear," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:028 | The British Lion And The Russian Bear. | N/A |
"You loyal Britons pray draw near, / And to my song pray lend an ear," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:030 | James And Margaret. | The Glasgow Constant Lovers. |
"As I was a-walking to tak the fresh air, / By the Clydes bonnie banks I did carelessly steer:" | None |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:030 | The Gipsy Laddie. | N/A |
"There were three gipsies in a gang, / They were both brisk and bonnie O," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y3:031 | The Young Emigrants Farewell. | N/A |
"Will you gang awa wi me bonnie lassie, O, / Across the Atlantic sea, bonnie lassie, O," | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:033 | The Opening Of The Glasgow And Ayr Railway. | N/A |
"The Eleventh of August in this present year, / The Railway was opend twixt Glasgow and Ayr;" | None |
Carmichael | Glasgow. | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:033 | Hardie And Baird. | N/A |
"On the eighth of September, the bell had tolld one, / A solemn procession in Stirling began," | None |
Robert MIntosh | Calton, 96 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:034 | The Drouthie Chiel. | N/A |
"The drouthie, drouthie cheil, wi the red plooky face, / Daised and half doited stoytes frae place tae place," | None |
D. S. Wardrop | Paisley. | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:034 | The Unco Change. | N/A |
"See yon braw bit laddie comin rinnin down the street, / Weel happit frae the caul blast, an a sae clean an neat:" | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:037 | The Broth Of A Boy. | N/A |
"I am one that bears an illegant name, / And who dares say, tis not;" | None |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:037 | Donnelly And Oliver. | N/A |
"You muses I beg you will lend me your aid, / Ill sing of brave Donnelly a true Irish blade;" | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:038 | Erin The Green. | N/A |
"Adieu! lovely Erin I am going to leave you, / Peace be with your daisy-clad hills;" | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:038 | OConnors Farewell. | N/A |
The orders have arrived, boys, & we are bound for Dublin, / The orders that we cannot help but obey;" | None |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:039 | Pat MGuire. | N/A |
"Ye muses nine with me combine, assist my slender quill, / And my weary notions at every line I fill," | None |
James Lindsay | Glasgow, 9 King Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y3:039 | Mick The Watchman | N/A |
"All you thats here, attend I pray, / And you shall hear without delay" | None |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Manuscript Number | Ballad Title | Alternative Title | First Two Lines | Comes With (Other songs on same sheet) | Printer | Address | Roud Number | Is The Broadside Illustrated | Link To Other Texts? | Link To Audio? | Archival Data |
| Mu23-y4:001 | Albion The Pride Of The Sea. | N/A |
"My boys would you know how our ship got her name, / You speedily shall learn that from me," | Troubadour / Slomon Lob. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:001 | Gaily The Troubadour Touchd His Guitar. | N/A |
"Gaily the Troubadour touchd his guitar, / As he was hastening home from the war:" | Albion The Pride / Solomon Lob. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:001 | Solomon Lob. | N/A |
"Solomon Lob was a ploughman stout, / And a ranting cavalier:" | Albion The Pride / Troubadour. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:002 | The Maid Of Erins Isle. | N/A |
"The sun has sunk down in the west / His daily journeys oer," | How, When, / Maggie Lauder. |
Pitts | Glasgow, 6 Great Street, St Andrews St. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:002 | How, When, And Where. | N/A |
"Wha wadna be in love / Wi bonny Maggie Lauder," | Of Erins Isle/ Maggie Lauder. |
Pitts | Glasgow, 6 Great Street, St Andrews St. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:002 | Maggie Lauder. | N/A |
"Oh, tell me when and tell me where, / Am I to meet with thee, my fair?" | Of Erins Isle / How, When. |
Pitts | Glasgow, 6 Great Street, St Andrews St. |
N/A |
No |
No |
||
| Mu23-y4:003 | The Wandering Young Gentlewoman. | Cat-Skin. |
"You fathers and mothers, and children also, / Draw near unto me, and soon you shall now," | None |
J. Evans | London, Long Lane. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:007 | The Bold Pedlar And Robin Hood. | N/A |
"There chanced to be a Pedlar bold, / A Pedlar bold he chanced to be," | Colin Stole My Heart Away. |
J, Catnach | Dials, 2 Monmouth Ct |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:007 | Colin Stole My Heart Away. | N/A |
"The fields were green, the hills were gay, / And the birds were singing on each spray," | The Bold Pedlar And Robin Hood. |
J. Catnach | Dials, 2 Monmouth Ct |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:009 | Green Hills Of Tyrol. | N/A |
"Green hills of Tyrol! Again I fee / The home of childhood so dear to me;" | The Wake Of Teddy Tiler. |
W. & T. Fordyce | Newcastle & Hull. | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:009 | The Wake Of Teddy The Tiler. | N/A |
"From Dublin town the other night, / A courier came with all his might" | Green Hills Of Tyrol. |
W. & T. Fordyce | Newcastle & Hull. | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:010 | The Blue Bells Of Scotland. | N/A |
"Ah, where and ah, where is your highland laddie gone, / Hes gone to fight the Frenchman, for George upon the throne," | Happy Moments. |
Sharp | Boro. 30 Kent Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:010 | Happy Moments. | N/A |
"In happy moments, day by day, / Tho sands of life may pass," | The Blue Bells Of Scotland. |
Sharp | Boro. 30 Kent Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:016 | Irish Emigrant. | N/A |
"Im resting on the stile, Mary, / Where we sat side by side," | Effects Of Love / The Blackbird. |
John Ross | Newcastle, Royal Arcade. |
2661 |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:016 | Effects Of Love. | N/A |
"Young lovers all I pray draw near, / Most shocking news you soon shall hear," | Irish Emigrant / The Blackbird. |
John Ross | Newcastle, Royal Arcade. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:016 | The Blackbird. | N/A |
"Early one morning for soft recreation, / I heard a fair lady was making her moan," | Irish Emigrant / Effects Of Love. |
John Ross | Newcastle, Royal Arcade. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:018 | Uncle Ned. | N/A |
"I once knew a nigger and his name was Uncle Ned, / But hes gone dead long ago;" | My Plaidie / Poor Mary. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:018 | Come Under My Plaidie. | N/A |
"Come under my plaidie, the nights gaun to fa; / Come in frae the cauld blast, the drift, and the snaw;" | Uncle Ned / Poor Mary. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:018 | Poor Mary Of The Wild Moor. | N/A |
"Twas on a cold winters night, when the wind, / Blew bitterly cross the wild moor," | Uncle Ned / My Plaidie. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:019 | Fanny Gray. | N/A |
"Now really, Jane your temper is, / So very odd to-day," | Princess Royal / Long Long Ago |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:019 | Bold Princess Royal. | N/A |
"On the fourteenth day of February, we sailed from the land, In the bold Princess Royal bound for Newfoundland," | Fanny Gray / Long Long Ago. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
|||
| Mu23-y4:019 | Long, Long Ago. | N/A |
"Tell me the tales that to me were so dear, / Long, long ago, long, long ago;" | Fanny Gray / Princess Royal. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:020 | Gallant Poachers. | N/A |
"Come all ye lads of high renown, / That love to drink good ale thats brown," | Ewe Buchts. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:020 | Ewe Buchts. | N/A |
"Bonnie Mary in the Ewe-buchts is gane / To milk her fathers ewes," | Gallant Poachers. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:024 | Burns And Highland Mary. | N/A |
"In green Caledonia there neer were twa lovers, / Sae enraptured and happy in each ithers arms," | Lucy Neal / Handkerchief / Happy Yet. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y4:024 | Lucy Neal. | N/A |
Come all you niggers, old and young, / And listen to my song," | Highland Mary / Handkerchief / Happy Yet. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:024 | Blue Handkerchief. | N/A |
"As early one morning I chanced for to stray, / A bonny young lassie came tripping that way," | Highland Mary / Lucy Neal / Happy Yet. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:024 | We May Be Happy Yet. | N/A |
"Oh! smile as thou wert wont to smile, / Before the weight of care," | Highland Mary / Lucy Neal / Handkerchief. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:026 | Rambler From Clare. | N/A |
"The first of my travels that ever was known, / I straight took my way to the town of Athlone," | Struggle For / Pirate Of Isles / Bill Jones. |
Unknown | Unknown | 1531 |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:026 | Struggle For The Breeches. | N/A |
"H- About my wife I mean to sing a very comic song, / W- I hope that you the truth will tell, be it right or wrong." | Rambler Clare / Pirate Of Isles / Bill Jones. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:026 | Pirate Of The Isles. | N/A |
"I command a sturdy band, / Of pirates bold and free." | Rambler Clare / Struggle For / Bill Jones. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:026 | Bill Jones. | N/A |
"Twas off the coast of Guinea land, / Full sixteen leagues from shore we lay." | Rambler Clare / Struggle For / Pirate Of Isles. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:028 | Shannon Side. | N/A |
"It was in the month of April one morning in the dawn, / When violets and cowslips bestrewd every lawn," | Bank Of Clyde / Kye Home / Gipsie Girl. |
Unknown | Unknown | 1423 |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y4:028 | Banks Of The Clyde. | N/A |
"When I was young and youth did bloom, / Where fancy led me, I did roam," | Shanon Side / Kye Home / Gipsie Girl. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:028 | When The Kye Come Home. | N/A |
"Come all you jolly shepherds, / That whistle through the glen," | Shanon Side / Banks Of Clyde / Gipsie Girl. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:028 | The Little Gipsie Girl. | N/A |
"My father is king of the gipsies, tis true, / And my mother she learned me the camping to do," | Shanon Side / Banks Of Clyde / Kye Home. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:029 | Flora And Donald. | N/A |
"O dark lowrd the night on the wide distant heather, / And wild the raven croakd out the bodings of death," | Plaidie Awa / Bluebells / Nightingale / Robin Gray. |
John Ross | Newcastle, Royal Arcade. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:029 | The Wind Blew The Plaidie Awa. | N/A |
"The plaidie was lost and could na be found, / The diels in the plaid its awa wi the wind," | Flora & Donald / Bluebells / Nightingale / Robin Gray. |
John Ross | Newcastle, Royal Arcade. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:029 | Bluebells Of Scotland. | N/A |
"Oh! where, and oh where is my highland laddie gone? / Hes gone to fight the French for King George upon the throne," | Flora & Donald / Plaidie Awa / Nightingale / Robin Gray. |
John Ross | Newcastle, Royal Arcade. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:029 | The Nightingale. | N/A |
"My love he was a rich farmers son, / When first my tender heart he won;" | Flora & Donald / Plaidie Awa / Bluebells / Robin Gray. |
John Ross | Newcastle, Royal Arcade. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:029 | Auld Robin Gray. | N/A |
"Young Jemmy loed me weel, and askd me for his bride, / But saving a crown, he had nothing else beside;" | Flora & Donald / Plaidie Awa / Bluebells / Nightingale. |
John Ross | Newcastle, Royal Arcade. |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:030 | English Bloomers. | N/A |
"Listen females all no matter what your trade is, / Old Nick is in the garls, the D___ls in the ladies;" | Deeply Drinks / Johnie My Man / The Valley. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:030 | Who Deeply Drinks Of Wine. | N/A |
"Gaily still my moments roll, / While I quaff the flowing bowl," | Bloomers / Johnie My Man / The Valley. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:030 | Johnnie My Man. | N/A |
"O Johnnie, my man, do you not think on rising, / For the day is far spent and the nights coming on," | Bloomers / Deeply Drinks / The Valley. |
Unknown | Unknown | 845 |
Yes |
No |
||
| Mu23-y4:030 | Can I Forget The Valley. | N/A |
"Can I forget the valley, / Or the gentle rippling rill," | Bloomers / Deeply Drinks / Johnie My Man. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:034 | The Female Sailor. | N/A |
"Come listen awhile and you soon shall hear, / By the rolling sea lived a maiden fair," | Van Dieman / Paddy Canal / Banners Blue. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:034 | Van Diemans Land. | N/A |
"Come all you gallant poachers that ramble void of care, / That walk out on a moonlight night with your dog, and gun, and snare," | Female Sailor / Paddy Canal / Banners Blue. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:034 | Paddy On The Canal. | N/A |
"When I came to sweet Philadelphia, / It happened to be in the fall," | Female Sailor / Van Dieman / Banners Blue. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:034 | Banners Of Blue. | N/A |
"Strike up, strike up, strike up, / Scottish minstrels so gay," | Female Sailor / Van Dieman / Paddy Canal |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:036 | Donalds Return To Glencoe. | N/A |
"As I was walking one morning of late, / When Floras gay mantle the fields decorate," | John Reily / The Rose Of Allandale |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:036 | John Reily. | N/A |
"As I went out one evening clear down by yon river side, / I over heard a fair maid the tears rolling down did glide," | Return To Glencoe / The Rose Of Allandale. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:036 | The Rose Of Allandale. | N/A |
"The morn was fair, the skies were clear, / No breath came oer the sea," | Return To Glencoe / John Reily |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:039 | The Cork Leg. | N/A |
"A tale I now tell without any flam, / In Holland dwelt Mynheer Von Clam," | Unfortunate Lad / Aileen Mavourneen. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:039 | The Unfortunate Lad. | N/A |
"As I was a walking down by the Lock Hospital, / As I was a walking one morning of late," | The Cork Leg / Aileen Mavourneen. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:039 | Aileen Mavourneen. | N/A |
"He tells me he loves me and can I believe, / The heart he has won he can wish to deceive?" | The Cork Leg / Unfortunate Lad. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:042 | Female Rambling Sailor. | N/A |
"Come all you people far and near, / And listen to my ditty." | Dandy Husband / Mill Stream / Gleniffer. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:042 | Dandy Husband. | N/A |
"Come all you married women whoever that you be, / Likewise all you thats single and listen unto me," | Female Sailor / Mill Stream / Gleniffer. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:042 | Old Mill Stream. | N/A |
"Is this the old mill stream, that ten years ago, / Was so fast in its current, so sure in its flow?" | Female Sailor / Dandy Husband / Gleniffer. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:042 | Braes O Gleniffer. | N/A |
"Keen blaws the wind oer the braes o Gleniffer, / The auld castles turrerts are covered wi snaw;" | Female Sailor / Dandy Husband /Mill Stream. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:043 | I Dreamt I Dwelt In Marble Halls. | N/A |
"I dreamt I dwelt in marble halls, / With vassals and serfs at my side," | Loved Together / Old Sextan / Gloomy Winter. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:043 | We Have Lived And Loved Together. | N/A |
"We have livd and lovd together, / Thro many changing years," | Marble Halls / Old Sextan / Gloomy Winter. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:043 | The Old Sextan. | N/A |
"Nigh to a grave that was newly made, / Leand a Sextan old, on his earth-worn spade;" | Marble Halls / Loved Together / Glomy Winter |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:043 | Gloomy Winters Now Awa. | N/A |
"Gloomy winters now awa, / Saft the western breezes blaw;" | Marble Halls / Loved Together / Old Sextan. |
Unknown | Unknown | N/A |
No |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:054 | Nell Flahertys Drake. | N/A |
"My name it is Nell, quite candid I tell, / And I live near Clonmell, I will never deny," | None |
Unknown | Cork, 5 Paul Street. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:054 | Mauriade In Kallagh. | N/A |
"At the dance in the village, / The white foot was fleetest," | None |
Haly. | Cork. | N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:059 | Bound Prentice To A Coasting Ship. | N/A |
"Bound prentice to a coasting ship, I weatherd many a gale, / but, bless your heart, I never knowd no fear:" | Blue Violets / The Voice Of Her I Love. |
J. Catnach | Dials, Monmouth Ct. |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:059 | Blue Violets. | N/A |
"Violets, violets, beautiful blue violets, / Laden with perfume & dripping with dew," | Bound Prentice / The Voice Of Her I Love. |
J. Catnach | Dials, 2 Monmouth Ct |
N/A |
Yes |
No |
No |
|
| Mu23-y4:059 | The Voice Of Her I Love. | N/A |
"How sweet at close of silent eve, / The harps responsive sound:" | Bound Prentice / Blue Violets. |
J. Catnach | Dials, 2 Monmouth Ct |
N/A |
No |
No |
No |