Pre-1600: Pastyme With Good Company
Pastyme With Good Company (The Kynges Ballade)
by Henry VIII
Notes: This song is preserved in a manuscript now residing at the British
Museum (B.M.
Addl. MSS. 31,922; Addl. MSS. 5,665; MSS. Reg. Appendix 58). Both words and
music are
almost certainly written by Henry VIII of England, the royal tyrant. In the
work The Complaynt
of Scotland, 1548, the author mentions "Pastance with gude companye" as
being among the popular songs of Scotland, in the early part of the
sixteenth century.
One verse and chorus:
.wav
(293K) |
.mp3 (67K)
or Entire Song: .wav
(919K)
| .mp3 (210K)
"Pastyme
With Good Company (The Kynges Ballade)"
is performed by Scarhart.
Passetyme with good companye
I love, and shall until I dye;
Grugge who wyll, but none deny,
So God be pleeyd, this lyfe wyll I:
For my pastaunce,
Hunt, syng, and daunce,
My hert ys sett;
All godely sport,
To my comfort,
Who shall me lett?
Youth wyll have nedes dalyaunce,
Of good or yll some pastaunce,
Companye me thynketh them best,
All thouts and fantasyes to dygest.
For ydleness,
Ys chef mastres
Of vices all:
Than who can say,
But passe the day
Ys best of all.
Company with honeste,
Ys vertu and vyce to flee;
Company ys gode or yll,
But ev'ry man hath hys frewylle;
The best I sew,
The worst eschew,
My mynd shall be:
Vertue to use,
Vyce to refuse,
I shall use me.