Child Ballad: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Secret Test of Character]]: Lovers are very fond of this, feigning poverty, or their own deaths, to discover whether the other really is in love with them.
* [[Sibling Triangle]]: the sister's motive in "The Twa Sisters"
* [[Standard Hero Reward]]: e.g. "The ''Golden Vanity''" (Child #286) {{spoiler|SUBVERTED TO THE MAX!!! The hero is told this is the reward, if he drills holes in the enemy man-o'-war, which he does (In a horribly poetic way: He let the water in, and it dazzled in their eyes, and he sunk them in the Low Lands Low.) He is then [[Did You Actually Believe?|betrayed by the captain]] and is abandoned to drown in the ocean.}} [[Standard Hero Reward]] be damned!
* [[Stock Puzzle]]: e.g. "Riddles Wisely Expounded" (Child #1), "Captain Wedderburn's Courtship" (Child #46)
* [[Star-Crossed Lovers]]

Revision as of 01:15, 27 January 2014

Burd Isabel and Billy Blind, from Young Bekie


Has nothing to do with children.

In the late 19th century, Harvard professor Francis James Child was concerned that the tradition of folk songs in the British Isles was endangered--songs were dying out, unrecorded. He made it his personal mission to collect as many traditional folk songs as he could from England and Scotland. (Including Ireland, he felt, was way too ambitious a goal. He was right. Ireland has its own folk tradition, which is still active, with new ballads for major political events and new stories up to the present day.)

He got about 300 of them, not including variants; many of the ballads have a dozen variants, or more, and most have several. Even today, ballads are often referred to by the numbers Child assigned them. See here for the full text of The English and Scottish Popular Ballads.

They range, as ballads often do, from Fairy Tales in verse form all the way through to accounts of historical events, with historical characters, perhaps a little refined for story form. Many are recognizably popular forms of medieval Chivalric Romances.

Many of them are heavy on dialect, especially the Border Ballads, those collected on the English-Scottish border. Metrical considerations means that using standard English often requires a total rewrite. This also helps keep the number of Evil Matriarchs high; unlike a Fairy Tale, you can not merely Bowdlerise her into a Wicked Stepmother, because the terms change and no longer fit the meter. A Wicked Stepmother appears in different ballads than the Evil Matriarch.

Many Murder Ballads are Child Ballads. Robin Hood has so many that Child lumps them all together in their own volume.

Child Ballads with their own page:


Tropes common in the Child Ballads:


Those interested in a more thorough and detailed discussion might wish to check out this post and comment thread.