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Ancient Scottish ballads, recovered from tradition, and never before ...

Ancient Scottish ballads, recovered from tradition, and never before ...

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HYNDE HORN.<br />

This ballad was <strong>recovered</strong> <strong>from</strong> recitation<br />

in the north; <strong>and</strong> though it cannot boast of<br />

much poetical merit, yet it has a claim to pre-<br />

servation, <strong>from</strong> its being undoubtedly a frag-<br />

ment, though a mutilated one, of the ancient<br />

English metrical romance of King Horn, or<br />

Home Childe <strong>and</strong> Maiden Rymenild; whose<br />

story is thus detailed by Warton :<br />

—<br />

" Mury, king of the Saracens, l<strong>and</strong>s in the<br />

kingdom of Suddene, where he kills the king<br />

named Allof. The queen, Godylt, escapes; but<br />

Mury seizes on her son Home, a beautiful youth<br />

aged fifteen years, <strong>and</strong> puts him into a galley,<br />

with two of his playfellows, Athulph <strong>and</strong> Fy-<br />

kenyld: the vessel being driven on the coast of

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