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The boy

wishes that whenever

his stepmother

stares

spitefully at

him she may "a rap let

go."

The old man agrees,

and departs.

At nightfall Jack pipes his cattle home,

"when meate my father giues to mee, 116 shee wishes poyson it might bee,

120

and stares me in the1 face:
Now when shee gazeth on me soe,
I wold shee might a rapp2 let goe
that might ring through the place."

The old man answered then anon,
"when-ere3 shee lookes thy face vpon,

her tayle shall wind1 the horne 5
124 Soe Lowdlye, that who shold it heare
shall not be able to forbeare,

128

132

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but laugh her vnto scorne.

Soe, farwell sonne! "the old man cryed;
god keepe you, Sir!" the boy replyed,
"I take my leaue of thee!

God, that blest of all things, may
keepe thee save9 both night & day!"
"gramercy, sonne!" sayd hee.

When it grew neere vpon 10 the night,
Iacke, well prepared,11 hied home full right;-
itt was his ordinance ;-

136 And as he went his pipe did blow,

the whilest his cattell on a row

about him gan to 12 dance;

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"Meateless I haue lyen all the day,

152 & kept your beasts, they did not stray;

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This greeued his stepdames hart full sore,

who lothed 12 the Ladd still more & more;

shee stared 13 him in the face:

160 with that shee let goe such a blast
that made 14 the people all agast,

itt sounded 15 through the place;

Each one laught & made 16 good game, 164 but the curst wife grew red for shame & wisht shee had beene gone.

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finds his

father

supping, and asks for a

help.

His father throws him a capon's wing.

The stepdame stares at him, fulfils the old man's promise,

and is laughed at

15 And sounded.-P.

16 did laugh & make.-P.

She stares again, with the same result.

The boy triumphs.

She tells her wrongs to a friar,

168

'Perdy," the boy sayd, "well I wott that gun was both well charged1 & shott, & might haue broke a stone."

ffull curstlye2 shee lookt on him tho:
that looke another cracke 3 lett goe
which did a thunder4 rise.

172 Quoth the boy, "did you euer see
a woman let her pelletts flee

More thicke & more at ease?

"ffye!" said the boy vnto his dame,

6

176"temper your teltale bumm, for shame!"
which made her full of sorrow.

180

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"Dame," said the goodman, "goe thy way,
for why, I sweare, by night nor day 8
thy geere is not to borrow.”

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"for gods loue meet this boy1 to-morrow,

beat him well, & giue him sorrow,

& make him blind or lame."

196 The fryar swore he wold him beat, the wiffe prayd him 3 not to forgett,

the boy did her much shame :

4

"Some wiche he is," quoth shee, "I smell." 200 "but," quoth the fryar, "Ile beat him well! of that take you noe care;

204

Ile teach him witchcraft, if I may."

"O," quoth the wiffe, "doe soe, I pray,

lay on & doe not spare."

Early next morne the boy arose,

& to the field full soone he goes,
his cattell for to driue.

208 The fryer then5 vp as early gatt,
he was afrayd to come to 6 late,
he ran 7 full fast & blythe.

But when he came vnto the land, 8

212 he found where litle Iacke did stand,

keeping his beasts alone.

[page 100.]

"Now, boy," he sayd, "god giue thee shame!
what hast thou done to thy stepdame ?

and asks him

to beat the boy soundly.

The friar agrees.

Next day

the boy

goes afield as before, followed by the friar;

who asks him to explain his conduct.

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Jack

changes the subject; offers to

shoot a bird,

and give it to the friar.

Shoots it.

The friar

gone among the bushes

to pick it up, Jack pipes and makes

him dance.

The briars scratch and tear him.

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There sate a small birde in a5 bryar:

"Shoot, shoot, you wagg," then sayd the fryer,

"for that I long to see."6

232 Iacke hitt the bird vpon the head

236

240

soe right that shee fell downe for dead,

noe further cold shee flee.

ffast to the bush the fryar went,

&

vp the bird in hand hee hent,8

much wondering at the chance.

Meane while Iacke tooke his pipe & playd
soe lowd, the fryar grew mad apaide,10
& fell to skip & dance;

Now sooner was 12 the pipes sound heard,
but Bedlam like 13 he bou[n]cet & fared,

& leapt the bush about;

244 The sharpe bryars cacth 14 him by the face,
& by the breech & other place,

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