Currently as: Lomax, John A., Alan Lomax, and Ruth Crawford Seeger. Our Singing Country: A Second Volume of American Folk Songs and Ballads. Dover, 2000.
Presumably the title given is Roark's own. Refrain is "I love you, really love?¨ / More than all the world can know / You have proved [sic] to me false-hearted / you can now forever go."
Lomax: ""Where does that song come from, Molly?"" Jackson: ""It comes from where all the rest of the songs comes from I know - it comes out of the hills."" Lomax: ""Where'd you learn it, though?"" Jackson: ""I learned it in the mountains. I never learned none of these songs no other place for I never was nowhere else to learn nothing.""
Lomax announces that this song was composed by Brewer "about 1930 about the circuit judge, Judge Roberts," but very likely it was learned from B.F. Shelton's 1927 Victor record of the same name.
The discrepancies between speeds and places - Goose Rock and Horse Creek (despite only a four-mile distance between them) - across these discs is flummoxing, especially given the back-and-forth between the contents.