| Now Meg she was a gypsy maid, her house was out of doors
|
| She stood a tall as amazon, rare she was the queen of the moors
|
| Her apples were tart blackberries, her currants pods o’broom
|
| Her wine was the dew of the wild white rose, her book a churchyard tomb
|
| Her brothers were the craggy hills, her sisters larchen trees
|
| Alone with her great family, she did as she did please
|
| Brave Meg she was a gypsy fair, sh lived all out of doors
|
| She wore an old red blanket cloak, she came and she went did the queen of the
|
| moors
|
| No breakfast has she many a morn, no dinner many a noon
|
| Instead of supper she would stare, full hard against the moon
|
| But every morn with woodbine fresh, she made her garlanding
|
| And every night the dark glen yew she wove, and she would sing
|
| Now Meg she was a gypsy maid, her house was out of doors
|
| She stood a tall as amazon, rare she was the queen of the moors
|
| Brave Meg she was a gypsy fair, she lived all out of doors
|
| She wore an old red blanket cloak, she came and she went did the queen of the
|
| moors
|
| Meg she was a gypsy maid, her house was out of doors
|
| She stood a tall as amazon, rare she was the queen of the moors
|
| Meg she was a gypsy fair, she lived all out of doors
|
| She wore an old red blanket cloak, she came and she went did the queen of the
|
| moors
|
| Rare she was the queen of the moors |