James Oswald
(1710 - 1769)

Lovely Nancy
(Song)
Full score (PDF), €0.00 for unlimited copies   Download this item
Printable cover page (PDF), €0.00 for unlimited copies   Download this item

If you have any problem obtaining a PDF, please see our help page. If that does not resolve the issue, please click here.
Page 1 of 2
Creative Commons Licence
This work, Oswald : Lovely Nancy : scoreid 148557, as published by notAmos Performing Editions, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. All relevant attributions should state its URL as https://www.notamos.co.uk/detail.php?scoreid=148557. Permissions beyond the scope of this licence may be available at https://www.notamos.co.uk/index.php?sheet=about.
Published in "The Musical Entertainer", London 1738 under the original title of "The inconstant fair one, or Strephon's complaint".
The tune achieved great popularity under the name of Lovely Nancy.
Lyrics: John Lockman

How can you, lovely Nancy, thus cruelly slight
A swain who is wretched when banished your sight;
Who for your sake alone thinks life worth his care,
But which soon if you frown on must end in despair.

If you mean thus to torture, Oh! why did your eyes
Once express so much softness and sweetly surprise?
By their lustre inflamed I could not believe
As they shed such wild influence they e'er would deceive.

But alas, like the pilgrim bewildered in night,
Who perceives a false splendour at distance invite.
Overjoyed he hastes on, pursues it and dies;
A like ruin attends me, if away Nancy flies.

O forget not the raptures you felt in my arms,
When you called me dear angel and unveiled all your charms;
When you vowed lasting love and swore with a kiss
That in my fond embraces was centred all bliss.

Fairest but most obdurate consider that woe
Will, like sickness neglected, more desperate grow.
That your heart may relent, I implore the kind pow'rs,
Since I'm constant as your sex, be not fickle as ours.