© in This Web Service Cambridge University Press

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

© in This Web Service Cambridge University Press Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-60577-0 - The Ballad in Literature T. F. Henderson Index More information INDEX Adultery, 43 79, 80, 96; on Edwa1'd, 25;' Adventure, 54 ou Lord Thomas and Fair Allan-a-Maut, 6 Annet, 38; on Queen Eleanor'.s Ange1fyr og Kelmer Kamp, 35 Confession, 51; on The' Battle Archie of Ca' Field, III of Harlaw, 101 Auld Maitland, 112 Child Waters, 40 Clerk Colvin, 33 Babylon, 47 Clerk Saunders, 40, 52 BaUada, the, etc., 3 Cnut's Song, 85 Bannockburn, song on, 2 Coronachs, 8 Barbara Allan, 27 Crime, 50 Bartoli, Signor A., quoted, 58 Crow and Pie, 80 Becket, Gilbert, the legend of,48 Bonnie James Campbell, 99 Dalrymple, Sir David, Lord Bonny Babie Livingston, 122 Hailes, 25, 119 Border Ba.llads, 106 sq_ Danish ballads, 15, 31, 55, 70, 92 Bothwell Bridge, 122 Dante, quoted, 3, 83 Bride Stealing, 31 David, song in praise of, 85 Brown, Mrs, of Falkland, 23 David II., 2 Brume, Brume on hill, 49 Dead, return of the, 51 Buchan, Peter, 23 Deloney, Thomas, quoted, 102 Buchanan, George, quoted, 109 Dick 0' the Cowe, HI B'llrd Ellen, 39 Dunbar, William, quoted, 83 BUrger's Leonora, 52 Dwarf King, the, 32 Burn, Nicol, 45 Burns, Robert, 19, 33, 104 Earl Bothwell, 103 ,Earl Brand, 31, 93 Captain Car. 119 Earl Richard, 35 Captain Wedderb'llrn, 34 Ebbe Skammelson, 35 Carole, the, 2, 84, 92, 95 Edomo' Gordon, 27, 119, 120 Chansons de geste, 2, 7, 95 Edward, 25, 50, 69, 120 Child Maurice, 43 Elliot, Hon. Fitzwilliam, on Child, Professor, on the char­ the Border ballads, 112 sq. acteristics of the ballad, 59, Elopements, 31, 122 125 © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-60577-0 - The Ballad in Literature T. F. Henderson Index More information 126 THE BALLAD IN LITERATURE Enchantments, 41 Humorous tales, 122 Hynde Etin, 32 Fabyan, quoted, 2 Fair Annie, 39 Incest, 46 Fair Janet, 39 Italian ballads, 7, 17 Fair Margaret and Sweet William, 37 Jack 0' Hazelgreen, 122 Fair Margaret's Misfortune, 37 James Harri8, 32 Fairy Queen, the, 33 Jameson, Robert, 22 ]'aroe ballads, etc., 4, 88 Jamie Telfer, Ill, 115, 116 Flodden Field, 101 Jeanroy, M. Alfred, quoted, 58, French ballads, 17, 93 91 Frith, Professor C. H., 106 Jellon Grame, 44 John Barleycorn, 6 Geordie, 122 Johnie Oock, 27 German ballads, 17 Johnnie Armstrong, 100, 109 Get up and bar the Door, 122 Johnson's Scots Musical Gil Morice, 43 Museum, 21 Glasgerion, 39 Johny Faa, 99 Gude Wallace, 54 Judas, 9 Gummere,Prof., 12; on Edward, 25; on the greatest ballads, Kemp Owyne , 42 73; on ballad authorship, 79 ; King Arthur and King Oorn­ on the minstrel, 81; on wall, 81 Cnnt's song, 85, on ballad King Henry, 42 structure, 86; on the develop­ King Henry Fifth's Oonquest ment of the ballad, 89; on oj France, 101 the Oarole, 95; on the Border King Orfeo, 41 ballads, 108 Kinmont Willie, lII, 115 Kittredge, Professor, on the Habor og Signotd, 40 ballad, 72 sq.; on the min­ Hart, Mr W. M., his summary strel, 81 of Professor Child's opinions, Knipp, Mrs, 27 9, 61, 71 Knox, John, quoted, 103 Herd, David, 21, 24 Kynd Kittok, 6 Hind Horn, 49 Historical ballads, 54, 99 sq. L'accouchment au Bois, 40 Hobbie Noble, III La Blanche Biche, 42 Hogg, James, 112 sq. Lammikin, 50 Hugh Spencer's Feats in France, Lang, Andrew, Mr, on Mary 54 Hamilton, 103; on the Border Hughie Graham, 106 ballads, 108, 112 sq. © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-60577-0 - The Ballad in Literature T. F. Henderson Index More information INDEX 127 Leader-Hwug!ts and Yarrow, 45 Queen Eleanor's Con:/e8Bion, 51 Leslie, Bishop, quoted, 108 Little Musgrave, 43 Ramsay, Allan, 18, 110 Lizie Wan, 48 Redselille og Medelvold, 40 Lord Bateman, 48 Refrains, 15 Lord Lovel, 38 Ribald og Guldborg, 32 Lord Maxwell's Goodnight, 112 Riddle Songs, 8 Lord Randal, 36 Riddles WiselyllJ,-r;pounded, 10 Lord Thomas and Fair Annet, Ritson, Joseph, his Ancient 37 Songs, 21 Lord Thomas and Fair Eleanor, Robene and Makeyne, 6 37 Robin and Gandeteyn, 11, 12,91 Louden Hill, 122 Robin and Guy of Gisborne, 11 Love tragedies, 31 Robin Hood and the Monk, 11, Ly ke-Wake dirges, 8 69,97 Lyndsay of Pitscot tie, his Chron- Robin Hood and the Potter, 11,97 icle, 100, no Robin Hood ballads, 7, 28, 54, 97 Robin Hood, the Gest of, 11 Mary Hamilton, 103 Rob'8 Jock cam to woo our Merman, the, 32 Jenny, 122 Minstrel, the, 80, 82 Rondeau, the, 3 Miriam, 84 Rondel, the, 3 Motherwell, William, 22 Rondet, the, 3 Musselburgh Field, 102 Rose of England, 101 Northern Lass, 49 Scandinavian ballads, 15, 55, 92 Northumnerland betrayed by Scott of Buccleugh, 117 Douglas, 105 Scott of Satchells, 115 Scott, Sir Walter, 18, 19, his Old Robin ofPortingale, 43 Border Minstrelsy, 20; his Our Good Man, 122 Border ballad versions, 112 sq. Sheath and Knife, 47 Paris, Gaston, on the ballad, 30 ; Sir Aldingar, 44 on L'accouchment au Bois, 40 Sir Andrew Barton, 12, 101 Pepys, 27 Sir Gawain, 42 Percy, Bishop, his Reliques of Sir James the Rose, 46, 123 Ancient Poetr,y, 18 sq. Sir John Butler, 101 Percy folio MS., 13 Sir Patrick Spens, 27, 69, 120 Philiphaugh, 122 Skiren Anna, 39 Pinkerton, John, his Scottish Spanish ballads, 7 Ballads, 21 St Stephen and Herod, 10 Proud Lady Margaret, 53 Standard, Battle of the, 2 © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-60577-0 - The Ballad in Literature T. F. Henderson Index More information 128 THE BALLAD IN LITERATURE Sweet William, 38 The Lads of Wamphray, 110 Sweet William's Ghost, 52 1'he Laird of Wariston, 105, 121 The Lass of Lochroyall, 41 Tamlane, 33 1'he Lochmaben Ifarper, 70, 80, The Bailiff s Da~tghter of Isling- 112 ton, 50 . The Maid freed from the The Baron oj Brackley, 121 Gallows, 76 The Battle of Harlaw, 101 The Marriage of Sir Gawain, 81 The Battle of Otterbourne, 54, The .lYlourning Maiden, 6 114 The Raid of Reidswire, 111 The Bonnie Bank8 oj Fordie, 47 The Rising in the North, 80, 105 The Bonnie Earl of Murray, 27, The Rookhope Ryde, 105 99 The Song 0/ the Outlaw Murray, The Bonnie House 0' Airlie, 99 112 The Bonnie Hynd, 47 The Suffolk Miracle, 51 The Boy and the Mantle, 81 The Twa Sisters, 34 The Broom blooms bonnie, 47 The Wee, Wee Man, 23, 33 The Broom of Cowdenknows, 49 The Wife of A uchtermychty, 122 The Clerks Twa Sons of Owsen- The Wife of Usher's Well, 53 ford, 45 Thomas Cromwell, 101 'l'he Cruel Mother, 40 Thomas Rhymer, 10,33 The Death of Parcy Reed, 105 The Death of Q~teen Jane, 101 Valravnen, 42 The Duke of A thole's Nurse, 46 Virelai, the, 3 The Duke's Daughter'8 Cruelty, 41 The Earl of Westmorelamd, 105 Willie's Rare and Willie's Fair, The Fray of Suport, 107, III 45 The Gaberlunzie Man, 122 The Hangman's Tree, 76 Yarrow ballads, 45 The Hunting of the Cheviot, 12, Young Allan, 120 54 Young Beichan, 48, 49 The Jolly Beggar, 122 Young Benjie, 36 The Jolly Pinder of Wakefield, 98 Young Hunting, 35 The King's Dochter, Lady Jean, Young Johnstone, 50 47 Young Waters, 26 TURNBULL A.ND BPEA.»S, PRINTERS, EDINBURGH. © in this web service Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org.
Recommended publications
  • Social Issues in Ballads and Songs, Edited by Matilda Burden
    SOCIAL ISSUES IN BALLADS AND SONGS Edited by MATILDA BURDEN Kommission für Volksdichtung Special Publications SOCIAL ISSUES IN BALLADS AND SONGS Social Issues in Ballads and Songs Edited by MATILDA BURDEN STELLENBOSCH KOMMISSION FÜR VOLKSDICHTUNG 2020 Kommission für Volksdichtung Special Publications Copyright © Matilda Burden and contributors, 2020 All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owners. Peer-review statement All papers have been subject to double-blind review by two referees. Editorial Board for this volume Ingrid Åkesson (Sweden) David Atkinson (England) Cozette Griffin-Kremer (France) Éva Guillorel (France) Sabina Ispas (Romania) Christine James (Wales) Thomas A. McKean (Scotland) Gerald Porter (Finland) Andy Rouse (Hungary) Evelyn Birge Vitz (USA) Online citations accessed and verified 25 September 2020. Contents xxx Introduction 1 Matilda Burden Beaten or Burned at the Stake: Structural, Gendered, and 4 Honour-Related Violence in Ballads Ingrid Åkesson The Social Dilemmas of ‘Daantjie Okso’: Texture, Text, and 21 Context Matilda Burden ‘Tlačanova voliča’ (‘The Peasant’s Oxen’): A Social and 34 Speciesist Ballad Marjetka Golež Kaučič From Textual to Cultural Meaning: ‘Tjanne’/‘Barbel’ in 51 Contextual Perspective Isabelle Peere Sin, Slaughter, and Sexuality: Clamour against Women Child- 87 Murderers by Irish Singers of ‘The Cruel Mother’ Gerald Porter Separation and Loss: An Attachment Theory Approach to 100 Emotions in Three Traditional French Chansons Evelyn Birge Vitz ‘Nobody loves me but my mother, and she could be jivin’ too’: 116 The Blues-Like Sentiment of Hip Hop Ballads Salim Washington Introduction Matilda Burden As the 43rd International Ballad Conference of the Kommission für Volksdichtung was the very first one ever to be held in the Southern Hemisphere, an opportunity arose to play with the letter ‘S’ in the conference theme.
    [Show full text]
  • Folk Song in Cumbria: a Distinctive Regional
    FOLK SONG IN CUMBRIA: A DISTINCTIVE REGIONAL REPERTOIRE? A dissertation submitted in partial fulfilment of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy by Susan Margaret Allan, MA (Lancaster), BEd (London) University of Lancaster, November 2016 ABSTRACT One of the lacunae of traditional music scholarship in England has been the lack of systematic study of folk song and its performance in discrete geographical areas. This thesis endeavours to address this gap in knowledge for one region through a study of Cumbrian folk song and its performance over the past two hundred years. Although primarily a social history of popular culture, with some elements of ethnography and a little musicology, it is also a participant-observer study from the personal perspective of one who has performed and collected Cumbrian folk songs for some forty years. The principal task has been to research and present the folk songs known to have been published or performed in Cumbria since circa 1900, designated as the Cumbrian Folk Song Corpus: a body of 515 songs from 1010 different sources, including manuscripts, print, recordings and broadcasts. The thesis begins with the history of the best-known Cumbrian folk song, ‘D’Ye Ken John Peel’ from its date of composition around 1830 through to the late twentieth century. From this narrative the main themes of the thesis are drawn out: the problem of defining ‘folk song’, given its eclectic nature; the role of the various collectors, mediators and performers of folk songs over the years, including myself; the range of different contexts in which the songs have been performed, and by whom; the vexed questions of ‘authenticity’ and ‘invented tradition’, and the extent to which this repertoire is a distinctive regional one.
    [Show full text]
  • The Sinclair Macphersons
    Clan Macpherson, 1215 - 1550 How the Macphersons acquired their Clan Lands and Independence Reynold Macpherson, 20 January 2011 Not for sale, free download available from www.reynoldmacpherson.ac.nz Clan Macpherson, 1215 to 1550 How the Macphersons acquired their traditional Clan Lands and Independence Reynold Macpherson Introduction The Clan Macpherson Museum (see right) is in the village of Newtonmore, near Kingussie, capital of the old Highland district of Badenoch in Scotland. It presents the history of the Clan and houses many precious artifacts. The rebuilt Cluny Castle is nearby (see below), once the home of the chief. The front cover of this chapter is the view up the Spey Valley from the memorial near Newtonmore to the Macpherson‟s greatest chief; Col. Ewan Macpherson of Cluny of the ‟45. Clearly, the district of Badenoch has long been the home of the Macphersons. It was not always so. This chapter will make clear how Clan Macpherson acquired their traditional lands in Badenoch. It means explaining why Clan Macpherson emerged from the Old Clan Chattan, was both a founding member of the Chattan Confederation and yet regularly disputed Clan Macintosh‟s leadership, why the Chattan Confederation expanded and gradually disintegrated and how Clan Macpherson gained its property and governance rights. The next chapter will explain why the two groups played different roles leading up to the Battle of Culloden in 1746. The following chapter will identify the earliest confirmed ancestor in our family who moved to Portsoy on the Banff coast soon after the battle and, over the decades, either prospered or left in search of new opportunities.
    [Show full text]
  • The Ballads of the Southern Mountains and the Escape from Old Europe
    B AR B ARA C HING Happily Ever After in the Marketplace: The Ballads of the Southern Mountains and the Escape from Old Europe Between 1882 and 1898, Harvard English Professor Francis J. Child published The English and Scottish Popular Ballads, a five volume col- lection of ballad lyrics that he believed to pre-date the printing press. While ballad collections had been published before, the scope and pur- ported antiquity of Child’s project captured the public imagination; within a decade, folklorists and amateur folk song collectors excitedly reported finding versions of the ballads in the Appalachians. Many enthused about the ‘purity’ of their discoveries – due to the supposed isolation of the British immigrants from the corrupting influences of modernization. When Englishman Cecil Sharp visited the mountains in search of English ballads, he described the people he encountered as “just English peasant folk [who] do not seem to me to have taken on any distinctive American traits” (cited in Whisnant 116). Even during the mid-century folk revival, Kentuckian Jean Thomas, founder of the American Folk Song Festival, wrote in the liner notes to a 1960 Folk- ways album featuring highlights from the festival that at the close of the Elizabethan era, English, Scotch, and Scotch Irish wearied of the tyranny of their kings and spurred by undaunted courage and love of inde- pendence they braved the perils of uncharted seas to seek freedom in a new world. Some tarried in the colonies but the braver, bolder, more venturesome of spirit pressed deep into the Appalachians bringing with them – hope in their hearts, song on their lips – the song their Anglo-Saxon forbears had gathered from the wander- ing minstrels of Shakespeare’s time.
    [Show full text]
  • University Microfilms International 300 North Zeeb Road Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106 USA St
    INFORMATION TO USERS This material was produced from a microfilm copy of the original document. While the most advanced technological means to photograph and reproduce this document have been used, the quality is heavily dependent upon the quality of the original submitted. The following explanation of techniques is provided to help you understand marking: or patterns which may appear on this reproduction. 1.The sign or "target" for pages apparently lacking from the document photographed is "Missing Page(s)". If it was possible to obtain the missing page(s) or section, they are spliced into the film along with adjacent pages. This may have necessitated cutting thru an image and duplicating adjacent pages to insure you complete continuity. 2. When an image on the film is obliterated with a large round black mark, it is an indication that the photographer suspected that the copy may have moved during exposure and thus cause a blurred image. You will find a good image of the page in the adjacent frame. 3. When a map, drawing or chart, etc., was part of the material being photographed the photographer followed a definite method in "sectioning" the material. It is customary to begin photoing at the upper left hand corner of a large sheet and to continue photoing from left to right in equal sections with a small overlap. If necessary, sectioning is continued again — beginning below the first row and continuing on until complete. 4. The majority of users indicate that the textual content is of greatest value, however, a somewhat higher quality reproduction could be made from "photographs" if essential to the understanding of the dissertation.
    [Show full text]
  • 01 Prelude | | |--02 City of Refuge | | |--03 Bring Me My Queen
    |--Abigail Washburn | |--City of Refuge | | |--01 Prelude | | |--02 City of Refuge | | |--03 Bring Me My Queen | | |--04 Chains | | |--05 Ballad of Treason | | |--06 Last Train | | |--07 Burn Thru | | |--08 Corner Girl | | |--09 Dreams Of Nectar | | |--10 Divine Bell | | |--11 Bright Morning Stars | | |--cover | | `--folder | |--Daytrotter Studio | | |--01 City of Refuge | | |--02 Taiyang Chulai | | |--03 Bring Me My Queen | | |--04 Chains | | |--06 What Are They Doing | | `--07 Keys to the Kingdom | |--Live at Ancramdale | | |--01 Main Stageam Set | | |--02 Intro | | |--03 Fall On My Knees | | |--04 Coffee’s Cold | | |--05 Eve Stole The Apple | | |--06 Red & Blazey | | |--07 Journey Home | | |--08 Key To The Kingdom | | |--09 Sometime | | |--10 Abigail talks about the trip to Tibet | | |--11 Song Of The Traveling Daughter | | |--12 Crowd _ Band Intros | | |--13 The Sparrow Watches Over Me | | |--14 Outro | | |--15 Master's Workshop Stage pm Set | | |--16 Tuning, Intro | | |--17 Track 17 of 24 | | |--18 Story about Learning Chinese | | |--19 The Lost Lamb | | |--20 Story About Chinese Reality TV Show | | |--21 Deep In The Night | | |--22 Q & A | | |--23 We’re Happy Working Under The Sun | | |--24 Story About Trip To China | | |--index | | `--washburn2006-07-15 | |--Live at Ballard | | |--01 Introduction | | |--02 Red And Blazing | | |--03 Eve Stole The Apple | | |--04 Free Internet | | |--05 Backstep Cindy_Purple Bamboo | | |--06 Intro. To The Lost Lamb | | |--07 The Lost Lamb | | |--08 Fall On My Knees | | |--Aw2005-10-09 | | `--Index
    [Show full text]
  • The Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border
    *> THE MINSTRELSY OF THE SCOTTISH BORDER — A' for the sake of their true loves : I ot them they'll see nae mair. See />. 4. The ^Minstrelsy of the Scottish "Border COLLECTED BY SIR WALTER SCOTT EDITED AND ARRANGED WITH INTRODUCTION AND NOTES BY ALFRED NOYES AND SIX ILLUSTRATIONS BY JOHN MACFARLANE NEW YORK FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY PUBLISHERS • • * « * TO MARGARET AND KATHARINE BRUCE THIS EDITION OF A FAMOUS BOOK OF THEIR COUNTRY IS DEDICATED WITH THE BEST WISHES OF ITS EDITOR :593:3£>3 CONTENTS l'AGE Sir Patrick Spens I 6 The Wife of Usher's Well Clerk Saunders . 9 The Tvva Corbies 15 Barthram's Dirge 16 The Broom of Cowdenknows iS The Flowers of the Forest 23 25 The Laird of Muirhead . Hobbie Noble 26 Graeme and Bewick 32 The Douglas Tragedy . 39 The Lament of the Border Widow 43 Fair Helen 45 Fause Foodrage . 47 The Gay Goss-Hawk 53 60 The Silly Blind Harper . 64 Kinmont Willie . Lord Maxwell's Good-night 72 The Battle of Otterbourne 75 O Tell Me how to Woo Thee 81 The Queen's Marie 83 A Lyke-Wake Dirge 88 90 The Lass of Lochroyan . The Young Tamlane 97 vii CONTENTS PACE 1 The Cruel Sister . 08 Thomas the Rhymer "3 Armstrong's Good-night 128 APPENDIX Jellon Grame 129 Rose the Red and White Lilly 133 O Gin My Love were Yon Red Rose 142 Annan Water 143 The Dowie Dens of Yarrow .46 Archie of Ca'field 149 Jock o' the Side . 154 The Battle of Bothwell Bridge 160 The Daemon-Lover 163 Johnie of Breadislee 166 Vlll LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS "A' for the sake of their true loves ;") ^ „, .,,/".
    [Show full text]
  • Barbara Allen
    120 Charles Seeger Versions and Variants of the Tunes of "Barbara Allen" As sung in traditional singing styles in the United States and recorded by field collectors who have deposited their discs and tapes in the Archive of American Folk Song in the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. AFS L 54 Edited by Charles Seeger PROBABLY IT IS safe to say that most English-speaking people in the United States know at least one ballad-tune or a derivative of one. If it is not "The Two Sisters, " it will surely be "When Johnny Comes Marching Home"; or if not "The Derby Ram, " then the old Broadway hit "Oh Didn't He Ramble." If. the title is given or the song sung to them, they will say "Oh yes, I know tllat tune." And probably that tune, more or less as they know it, is to them, the tune of the song. If they hear it sung differently, as may be the case, they are as likely to protest as to ignore or even not notice the difference. Afterward, in their recognition or singing of it, they are as likely to incor­ porate some of the differences as not to do so. If they do, they are as likely to be aware as to be entirely unconscious of having done ·so. But if they ad­ mit the difference yet grant that both singings are of "that" tune, they have taken the first step toward the study of the ballad-tune. They have acknow­ ledged that there are enough resemblances between the two to allow both to be called by the same name.
    [Show full text]
  • Popular British Ballads : Ancient and Modern
    11 3 A! LA ' ! I I VICTORIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARY SHELF NUMBER V STUDIA IN / SOURCE: The bequest of the late Sir Joseph Flavelle, 1939. Popular British Ballads BRioky Johnson rcuvsrKAceo BY CVBICt COOKe LONDON w J- M. DENT 5" CO. Aldine House 69 Great Eastern Street E.G. PHILADELPHIA w J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY MDCCCXCIV Dedication Life is all sunshine, dear, If you are here : Loss cannot daunt me, sweet, If we may meet. As you have smiled on all my hours of play, Now take the tribute of my working-day. Aug. 3, 1894. eooccoc PAGE LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS xxvii THE PREFACE /. Melismata : Musical/ Phansies, Fitting the Court, Cittie, and Countrey Humours. London, 1 6 1 i . THE THREE RAVENS [MelisMtata, No. 20.] This ballad has retained its hold on the country people for many centuries, and is still known in some parts. I have received a version from a gentleman in Lincolnshire, which his father (born Dec. 1793) had heard as a boy from an old labouring man, " who could not read and had learnt it from his " fore-elders." Here the " fallow doe has become " a lady full of woe." See also The Tiua Corbies. II. Wit Restored. 1658. LITTLE MUSGRAVE AND LADY BARNARD . \Wit Restored, reprint Facetix, I. 293.] Percy notices that this ballad was quoted in many old plays viz., Beaumont and Fletcher's Knight of the xi xii -^ Popular British Ballads v. The a Act IV. Burning Pestle, 3 ; Varietie, Comedy, (1649); anc^ Sir William Davenant's The Wits, Act in. Prof. Child also suggests that some stanzas in Beaumont and Fletcher's Bonduca (v.
    [Show full text]
  • The History of Scotland from the Accession of Alexander III. to The
    UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT LOS ANGELES THE GIFT OF MAY TREAT MORRISON IN MEMORY OF ALEXANDER F MORRISON THE A 1C MEMORIAL LIBRARY HISTORY OF THE HISTORY OF SCOTLAND, ACCESSION OF ALEXANDEB III. TO THE UNION. BY PATRICK FRASER TYTLER, ** F.RS.E. AND F.A.S. NEW EDITION. IN TEN VOLUMES. VOL. X. EDINBURGH: WILLIAM P. NIMMO. 1866. MUEKAY AND OIBB, PUINTERS. EDI.VBUKOII V.IC INDE X. ABBOT of Unreason, vi. 64 ABELARD, ii. 291 ABERBROTHOC, i. 318, 321 ; ii. 205, 207, 230 Henry, Abbot of, i. 99, Abbots of, ii. 206 Abbey of, ii. 205. See ARBROATH ABERCORN. Edward I. of England proceeds to, i. 147 Castle of, taken by James II. iv. 102, 104. Mentioned, 105 ABERCROMBY, author of the Martial Achievements, noticed, i. 125 n.; iv. 278 David, Dean of Aberdeen, iv. 264 ABERDEEN. Edward I. of England passes through, i. 105. Noticed, 174. Part of Wallace's body sent to, 186. Mentioned, 208; ii. Ill, n. iii. 148 iv. 206, 233 234, 237, 238, 248, 295, 364 ; 64, ; 159, v. vi. vii. 267 ; 9, 25, 30, 174, 219, 241 ; 175, 263, 265, 266 ; 278, viii. 339 ; 12 n.; ix. 14, 25, 26, 39, 75, 146, 152, 153, 154, 167, 233-234 iii. Bishop of, noticed, 76 ; iv. 137, 178, 206, 261, 290 ; v. 115, n. n. vi. 145, 149, 153, 155, 156, 167, 204, 205 242 ; 207 Thomas, bishop of, iv. 130 Provost of, vii. 164 n. Burgesses of, hanged by order of Wallace, i. 127 Breviary of, v. 36 n. Castle of, taken by Bruce, i.
    [Show full text]
  • English 577.02 Folklore 2: the Traditional Ballad (Tu/Th 9:35AM - 10:55AM; Hopkins Hall 246)
    English 577.02 Folklore 2: The Traditional Ballad (Tu/Th 9:35AM - 10:55AM; Hopkins Hall 246) Instructor: Richard F. Green ([email protected]; phone: 292-6065) Office Hours: Wednesday 11:30 - 2:30 (Denney 529) Text: English and Scottish Popular Ballads, ed. F.J. Child, 5 vols (Cambridge, Mass.: 1882- 1898); available online at http://www.bluegrassmessengers.com/the-305-child-ballads.aspx.\ August Thurs 22 Introduction: “What is a Ballad?” Sources Tues 27 Introduction: Ballad Terminology: “The Gypsy Laddie” (Child 200) Thurs 29 “From Sir Eglamour of Artois to Old Bangum” (Child 18) September Tues 3 Movie: The Songcatcher Pt 1 Thurs 5 Movie: The Songcatcher Pt 2 Tues 10 Tragic Ballads Thurs 12 Twa Sisters (Child 10) Tues 17 Lord Thomas and Fair Annet (Child 73) Thurs 19 Romantic Ballads Tues 24 Young Bateman (Child 53) October Tues 1 Fair Annie (Child 62) Thurs 3 Supernatural Ballads Tues 8 Lady Isabel and the Elf Knight (Child 4) Thurs 10 Wife of Usher’s Well (Child 79) Tues 15 Religious Ballads Thurs 17 Cherry Tree Carol (Child 54) Tues 22 Bitter Withy Thurs 24 Historical & Border Ballads Tues 29 Sir Patrick Spens (Child 58) Thurs 31 Mary Hamilton (Child 173) November Tues 5 Outlaw & Pirate Ballads Thurs 7 Geordie (Child 209) Tues 12 Henry Martin (Child 250) Thurs 14 Humorous Ballads Tues 19 Our Goodman (Child 274) Thurs 21 The Farmer’s Curst Wife (Child 278) S6, S7, S8, S9, S23, S24) Tues 24 American Ballads Thurs 26 Stagolee, Jesse James, John Hardy Tues 28 Thanksgiving (PAPERS DUE) Jones, Omie Wise, Pretty Polly, &c.
    [Show full text]
  • Ancient Ballads and Songs of the North of Scotland, Hitherto
    1 ifl ANCIENT OF THE NOETH OF SCOTLAND, HITHERTO UNPUBLISHED. explanatory notes, By peter BUCHAN, COKRESFONDING ME3IBER OF THE SOCIETY OF ANTIQUARIES OF SCOTLAND. " The ancient spirit is not dead,— " Old times, wc trust, are living here.' VOL. ir. EDINBURGH: PRINTED 1011 W. & D. LAING, ANI> J, STEVENSON ; A. BllOWN & CO. ABERDEEN ; J. WYLIE, AND ROBERTSON AND ATKINSON, GLASGOW; D. MORISON & CO. PERTH ; AND J. DARLING, LONDON. MDCCCXXVIII. j^^nterct! in -Stationers i^all*] TK CONTENTS V.'Z OF THK SECOND VOLUME. Ballads. N'olcs. The Birth of Robin Hood Page 1 305 /King Malcolm and Sir Colvin 6 30G Young Allan - - - - 11 ib. Sir Niel and Mac Van 16 307 Lord John's Murder 20 ib. The Duke of Athole's Nurse 23 ib. The Laird of Southland's Courtship 27 308 Burd Helen ... 30 ib. Lord Livingston ... 39 ib. Fause Sir John and IMay Colvin 45 309 Willie's Lyke Wake 61 310 JSTathaniel Gordon - - 54 ib. Lord Lundy ... 57 312 Jock and Tarn Gordon 61 ib. The Bonny Lass o' Englessie's Dance 63 313 Geordie Downie . - 65 314 Lord Aboyne . 66 ib. Young Hastings ... 67 315 Reedisdale and Wise William 70 ib. Young Bearwell ... 75 316 Kemp Owyne . 78 ib. Earl Richard, the Queen's Brother 81 318 Earl Lithgow .... 91 ib. Bonny Lizie Lindsay ... 102 ib. The Baron turned Ploughman 109 319 Donald M'Queen's Flight wi' Lizie Menzie 117 ib. The Millar's Son - - - - 120 320 The Last Guid-night ... 127 ib. The Bonny Bows o' London 128 ib. The Abashed Knight 131 321 Lord Salton and Auchanachie 133 ib.
    [Show full text]