| Artist/Band: 
Lloyd Lyrics for Song: The Mermaid
 Lyrics for Album: Other Songs - Lloyd
 
 
 
 3634>The Mermaid
 
 One night as I lay on my bed,
 
 I lay so fast asleep,
 
 When the thought of my true love came running to my head
 
 And poor sailors that sail on the deep.
 
 As I sailed out one day, one day,
 
 And being not far from land,
 
 And there I spied a mermaid a-sitting on a rock
 
 With a comb and a glass in her hand.
 
 The song she sang, she sang so sweet,
 
 But no answer at all could us make,
 
 Till at last our gallant ship she tooked round about
 
 Which made all our poor hearts to ache.
 
 Then up stepped the helmsman of our ship
 
 In his hand a lead and line;
 
 All for to sound the seas, my boys, that is so wide and deep
 
 But to hard rock or sand could he find.
 
 Then up stepped the captain of our ship
 
 And a well-speaking man is he,
 
 He says," I have a wife, my boys, in fair Plymouth town
 
 But this night a widow she will be."
 
 Then up stepped the bosun of our ship
 
 And a well-spoken man was he,
 
 He says, "I have two sons, my boys, in fair Bristol town
 
 
 
 And orphans I fear they will be.
 
 And then up stepped the little cabin boy
 
 And a pretty boy was he,
 
 He says, "Oh I grieve for my own mother dear
 
 Whom I shall nevermore see."
 
 "Last night, when the moon shined bright
 
 My mother had sons five,
 
 But now she may look in the salt, salt sea
 
 And find but one alive."
 
 Call a boat, call a boat, my fair Plymouth boys
 
 Don't you hear how the trumpets sound?
 
 For the want of a long-boat in the ocean we were lost
 
 And most of our merry men drowned.
 
 From Penguin Book of English Folk Songs (Williams and Lloyd)
 
 From singing of James Herridge, 1906
 
 See also MERMDFRI
 
 Child #289
 
 filename[ MERMAID3
 
 play.exe MERMAID3
 
 RG
 
 3634>
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