Come All of You- Madge Nichols (NC) 1922 Brown C

Come All of You- Madge Nichols (NC) 1922 Brown C

[My abbreviated title. Last stanza from Brown Collection of NC Folklore volume 2, 1952. Their notes follow.

R. Matteson 2016]

65. The Lexington Murder

Variously known as 'The Oxford Girl,' 'The Wexford Girl,' 'The Lexington Girl,' 'The Knoxville Girl,' 'The Bloody Miller,' and in England as 'The Wittam Miller' and 'The Berkshire Tragedy,' this ballad tells a story similar to that of 'The Gosport Tragedy' and also to that of the American 'Florella,' 'Poor Naomi' ('Omie Wise'), 'Pearl Bryan,' 'Nell Cropsey,' and others. See the headnote to 'The Gosport Tragedy,' and also FSS 311 and BSM 133-4, both of which give extensive references showing the diffusion of the ballad; add also Davis, FSV 271-2 for texts from Virginia, Morris, FSF 336-9, for texts from Florida, and Randolph, OFS II 92-104 for texts from Missouri and Arkansas. The texts selected for presentation here are reckoned to belong to the tradition of 'The Wittam Miller' because of the names under which they are known in North Carolina or because they are, most of them at least, marked by the killer's excuse for his appearance that it is due to "bleeding at the nose." Most of them also remember that the murderer is a miller or a miller's apprentice. The ballad about Nellie Cropsey, a North Carolina girl murdered early in the present century (see no. 307, below), is in most of its texts modeled very closely on 'The Lexington Murder.'

C. 'Come All of You Who's Been in Love and Sympathize with Me.' Contributed by Miss Madge Nichols of Durham about 1922. A somewhat reduced form, with no indication that the murderer is a miller; placed here rather than with the local American forms of the story because of the nosebleed in the final stanza:

They asked of me most seriously
How come blood on my clothes;
I answered them most modestly:
'By bleeding at the nose.'