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A Bundle of Ballads - Henry Morley
The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Bundle of Ballads, by Various
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
Title: A Bundle of Ballads
Author: Various
Editor: Henry Morley
Release Date: December 8, 2008 [EBook #2831]
Last Updated: January 8, 2013
Language: English
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A BUNDLE OF BALLADS ***
Produced by Les Bowler, and David Widger
A BUNDLE OF BALLADS
EDITED BY HENRY MORLEY.
by Various
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION BY THE EDITOR.
CHEVY CHASE
CHEVY CHASE (the later version.)
THE NUT-BROWN MAID
ADAM BELL, CLYM OF THE CLOUGH, AND WILLIAM OF CLOUDESLIE.
THE SECOND FYTTE.
THE THIRD FYTTE.
BINNORIE.
KING COPHETUA AND THE BEGGAR-MAID.
TAKE THY OLD CLOAK ABOUT THEE.
WILLOW, WILLOW, WILLOW.
PART THE SECOND.
THE LITTLE WEE MAN.
THE SPANISH LADY'S LOVE. AFTER THE TAKING OF CADIZ.
EDWARD, EDWARD.
ROBIN HOOD.
THE SECONDE FYTTE.
THE THYRDE FYTTE.
THE FOURTH FYTTE.
THE FIFTH FYTTE.
THE SIXTH FYTTE.
THE SEVENTH FYTTE.
THE EIGHTH FYTTE.
KING EDWARD IV. AND THE TANNER OF TAMWORTH.
SIR PATRICK SPENS.
EDOM O' GORDON.
THE CHILDREN IN THE WOOD.
THE BEGGAR'S DAUGHTER OF BETHNAL GREEN.
THE SECOND FYTTE.
THE BAILIFF'S DAUGHTER OF ISLINGTON.
BARBARA ALLEN'S CRUELTY.
SWEET WILLIAM'S GHOST.
THE BRAES O' YARROW.
KEMP OWYNE.
O'ER THE WATER TO CHARLIE.
ADMIRAL HOSIER'S GHOST.
JEMMY DAWSON.
WILLIAM AND MARGARET.
ELFINLAND WOOD.
CASABIANCA.
AULD ROBIN GRAY.
SECOND PART.
GLOSSARY.
INTRODUCTION BY THE EDITOR.
Recitation with dramatic energy by men whose business it was to travel from one great house to another and delight the people by the way, was usual among us from the first. The scop invented and the glee-man recited heroic legends and other tales to our Anglo-Saxon forefathers. These were followed by the minstrels and other tellers of tales written for the people. They frequented fairs and merrymakings, spreading the knowledge not only of tales in prose or ballad form, but of appeals also to public sympathy from social reformers.
As late as the year 1822, Allan Cunningham, in publishing a collection of Traditional Tales of the English and Scottish Peasantry,
spoke from his own recollection of itinerant story-tellers who were welcomed in the houses of the peasantry and earned a living by their craft.
The earliest story-telling was in recitative. When the old alliteration passed on into rhyme, and the crowd or rustic fiddle took the place of the old gleebeam
for accentuation of the measure and the meaning of the song, we come to the ballad-singer as Philip Sidney knew him. Sidney said, in his Defence of Poesy,
that he never heard the old song of Percy and Douglas, that he found not his heart moved more than with a trumpet; and yet, he said, it is sung but by some blind crowder, with no rougher voice than rude style; which being so evil apparelled in the dust and cobweb of that uncivil age, what would it work trimmed in the gorgeous eloquence of Pindar?
Many an old ballad, instinct with natural feeling, has been more or less corrupted, by bad ear or memory, among the people upon whose lips it has lived. It is to be considered, however, that the old broader pronunciation of some letters developed some syllables and the swiftness of speech slurred over others, which will account for many an apparent halt in the music of what was actually, on the lips of the ballad-singer, a good metrical line.
Chevy Chase
is, most likely, a corruption of the French word chevauchee, which meant a dash over the border for destruction and plunder within the English pale. Chevauchee was the French equivalent to the Scottish border raid. Close relations between France and Scotland arose out of their common interest in checking movements towards their conquest by the kings of England, and many French words were used with a homely turn in Scottish common speech. Even that national source of joy, great chieftain of the pudding-race,
the haggis, has its name from the French hachis. At the end of the old ballad of Chevy Chase,
which reads the corrupted word into a new sense, as the Hunting on the Cheviot Hills, there is an identifying of the Hunting of the Cheviot with the Battle of Otterburn:—
"Old men that knowen the ground well enough call it the Battle of
Otterburn.
At Otterburn began this spurn upon a Monenday;
There was the doughty Douglas slain, the Percy never went away."
The Battle of Otterburn was fought on the 19th of August 1388. The Scots were to muster at Jedburgh for a raid into England. The Earl of Northumberland and his sons, learning the strength of the Scottish gathering, resolved not to oppose it, but to make a counter raid into Scotland. The Scots heard of this and divided their force. The main body, under Archibald Douglas and others, rode for Carlisle. A detachment of three or four hundred men-at-arms and two thousand combatants, partly archers, rode for Newcastle and Durham, with James Earl of Douglas for one of their leaders. These were already pillaging and burning in Durham when the Earl of Northumberland first heard of them, and sent against them his sons Henry and Ralph Percy. In a hand-to-hand fight between Douglas and Henry Percy, Douglas took Percy's pennon. At Otterburn the Scots overcame the English but Douglas fell, struck by three spears at once, and Henry was captured in fight by Lord Montgomery. There was a Scots ballad on the Battle of Otterburn quoted in 1549 in a book—The Complaynt of Scotland
—that also referred to the Hunttis of Chevet. The older version of Chevy Chase
is in an Ashmole MS. in the Bodleian, from which it was first printed in 1719 by Thomas Hearne in his edition of William of Newbury's History. Its author turns the tables on the Scots with the suggestion of the comparative wealth of England and Scotland in men of the stamp of Douglas and Percy. The later version, which was once known more widely, is probably not older than the time of James I., and is the version praised by Addison in Nos. 70 and 74 of The Spectator.
The Nut-Brown Maid,
in which we can hardly doubt that a woman pleads for women, was first printed in 1502 in Richard Arnold's Chronicle. Nut-brown was the old word for brunette. There was an old saying that a nut-brown girl is neat and blithe by nature.
Adam Bell, Clym of the Clough, and William of Cloudeslie
was first printed by Copland about 1550. A fragment has been found of an earlier impression. Laneham, in 1575, in his Kenilworth Letter, included Adam Bell, Clym of the Clough, and William of Cloudeslie
among the light reading of Captain Cox. In the books of the Stationers' Company (for the printing and editing of which we are deeply indebted to Professor Arber), there is an entry between July 1557 and July 1558, To John kynge to prynte this boke Called Adam Bell etc. and for his lycense he giveth to the howse.
On the 15th of January 1581-2 Adam Bell
is included in a list of forty or more copyrights transferred from Sampson Awdeley to John Charlewood; A Hundred Merry Tales
and Gower's Confessio Amantis
being among the other transfers. On the 16th of August 1586 the Company of Stationers Alowed vnto Edward white for his copies these fyve ballades so that they be tollerable:
four only are named, one being A ballad of William Clowdisley, never printed before.
Drayton wrote in the Shepheard's Garland
in 1593:—
"Come sit we down under this hawthorn tree,
The morrow's light shall lend us day enough—
And tell a tale of Gawain or Sir Guy,
Of Robin Hood, or of good Clem of the Clough."
Ben Jonson, in his Alchemist,
acted in 1610, also indicates the current popularity of this tale, when Face, the housekeeper, brings Dapper, the lawyer's clerk, to Subtle, and recommends him with—
"'slight, I bring you
No cheating Clim o' the Clough or Claribel."
Binnorie,
or The Two Sisters,
is a ballad on an old theme popular in Scandinavia as well as in this country. There have been many versions of it. Dr. Rimbault published it from a broadside dated 1656. The version here given is Sir Walter Scott's, from his Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border,
with a few touches from other versions given in Professor Francis James Child's noble edition of The English and Scottish Popular Ballads,
which, when complete, will be the chief storehouse of our ballad lore.
King Cophetua and the Beggar Maid
is referred to by Shakespeare in Love's Labour's Lost,
Act iv. sc I; in Romeo and Juliet,
Act ii. sc. I; and in II. Henry IV.,
Act iii. sc. 4. It was first printed in 1612 in Richard Johnson's Crown Garland of Goulden Roses gathered out of England's Royall Garden. Being the Lives and Strange Fortunes of many Great Personages of this Land, set forth in many pleasant new Songs and Sonnets never before imprinted.
Take thy Old Cloak about thee,
was published in 1719 by Allan Ramsay in his Tea-Table Miscellany,
and was probably a sixteenth century piece retouched by him. Iago sings the last stanza but one—King Stephen was a worthy peer,
etc.—in Othello,
Act ii. sc. 3.
In Othello,
Act iv. sc. 3, there is also reference to the old ballad of Willow, willow, willow.
The Little Wee Man
is a wee ballad that is found in many forms with a little variation. It improves what was best in the opening of a longer piece which introduced popular prophecies, and is to be found in Cotton MS. Julius A. v. It was printed by Thomas Wright in his edition of Langtoft's Chronicle (ii. 452).
The Spanish Lady's Love
was printed by Thomas Deloney in The Garland of Goodwill,
published in the latter half of the sixteenth century. The hero of this ballad was probably one of Essex's companions in the Cadiz expedition, and various attempts have been made to identify him, especially with a Sir John Bolle of Thorpe Hall, Lincolnshire.
Edward, Edward,
is from Percy's Reliques.
Percy had it from Lord Hailes.
Robin Hood
is the Lytell Geste of Robyn Hood,
printed in London by Wynken de Worde, and again in Edinburgh by Chepman and Myllar in 1508, in the first year of the establishment of a printing-press in Scotland.
King Edward IV. and the Tanner of Tamworth
is a ballad of a kind once popular; there were King Alfred and the Neatherd,
King Henry and the Miller,
King James I. and the Tinker,
King Henry VII. and the Cobbler,
with a dozen more. The Tanner of Tamworth
in another, perhaps older, form, as The King and the Barker,
was printed by Joseph Ritson in his Ancient Popular Poetry.
Sir Patrick Spens
was first published by Percy in his Reliques of Ancient English Poetry
(1757). It was given by Sir Walter Scott in his Minstrelsy of the Border,
and with more detail by Peter Buchan in his Ancient Ballads of the North.
Buchan took it from an old blind ballad-singer who had recited it for fifty years, and learnt it in youth from another very old man. The ballad is upon an event in Scottish history of the thirteenth century, touching marriage of a Margaret, daughter of the King of Scotland, to Haningo, son of the King of Norway. The perils of a winter sea-passage in ships of the olden time were recognised by an Act of the reign of James III. of Scotland, prohibiting all navigation frae the feast of St. Simon's Day and Jude unto the feast of the Purification of our Lady, called Candlemas.
Edom o' Gordon
was first printed at Glasgow by Robert and Andrew Foulis in 1755. Percy ascribed its preservation to Sir David Dalrymple, who gave it from the memory of a lady. The incident was transferred to the border from the North of Scotland. Edom o' Gordon was Sir Adam Gordon of Auchindown, Lieutenant-Depute for Queen Mary in the North in 1571. He sent Captain Ker with soldiers against the Castle of Towie, which was set on fire, and the Lady of Towie, with twenty-six other persons, was cruelly brint to the death.
Other forms of the ballad ascribe the deed, with incidents of greater cruelty, to Captain Carr, the Lord of Estertowne.
The Children in the Wood
was entered in the books of the Stationers' Company on the 15th of October 1595 to Thomas Millington as, for his Copie vnder th[e h]andes of bothe the wardens a ballad intituled, The Norfolk gent his will and Testament and how he Commytted the keepinge of his Children to his owne brother whoe delte moste wickedly with them and howe God plagued him for it.
It was printed as a black-letter ballad in 1670. Addison wrote a paper on it in The Spectator
(No. 85), praising it as one of the darling songs of the common people.
The Blind Beggar of Bednall Green
is in many collections, and was known in Elizabeth's time, another Elizabethan ballad having been set to the tune of it. This very house,
wrote Samuel Pepys in June 1663 of Sir William Rider's house at Bethnal Green, was built by the blind beggar of Bednall Green, so much talked of and sung in ballads; but they say it was only some outhouses of it.
The Angels that abounded in the Beggar's stores were gold coins, so named from the figure on one side of the Archangel Michael overcoming the Dragon. This coin was first struck in 1466, and it was used until the time of Charles the First.
The Bailiff's Daughter of Islington,
or True Love Requited,
is a ballad in Pepys's collection, now in the Bodleian. The Islington of the Ballad is supposed to be an Islington in Norfolk.
Barbara Allen's Cruelty
was referred to by Pepys in his Diary, January 2, 1665-6 as the little Scotch song of Barbary Allen.
It was first printed by Allan Ramsay (in 1724) in his Tea-Table Miscellany.
In the same work Allan Ramsay was also the first printer of Sweet William's Ghost.
Fragments of The Braes o' Yarrow
are in old collections. The ballad has been given by Scott in his Minstrelsy of the Border,
and another version is in Peter Buchan's Ancient Ballads of the North.
Kemp Owyne
is here given from Buchan's Ballads of the North of Scotland.
Here also