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Join us in this Spring 2013 course to learn about Medieval Ballads. Discover the elements, themes, and structure of ballads through analysis and creating your own. Explore examples like "Get Up And Bar The Door," "Barbara Allan," and "Lord Randall."
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Medieval Ballads Spring 2013
What is a ballad? • Then: • Poems sung • Popular with lower class people • Oral tradition like the Anglo-Saxon time • Now: • Slower pieces of music *Think music that you swayed to in middle school
What are the characteristics? • A theme of disappointed love, jealousy, revenge, sudden disaster, domestic dispute • Single incident • Little background information • Little characterization • Use of dialogue • A form of refrain and quatrains • May contain supernatural elements
How to hear it? • http://www.folkways.si.edu/explore_folkways/poetry.aspx
What examples will we read? • “Get Up And Bar The Door” • “Barbara Allan” • “Lord Randall”
How we analyze the ballads? • Use the worksheets provided to collect information regarding the ballads’ structure. • Create a ballad that follows the appropriate elements from the Medieval structured ballads. • Type the ballad to make a class set of ballads.
IT fell about the Martinmas* time, And a gay time it was then, When our good wife got puddings to make, And she’s boild them in the pan. The wind saecauld blew south and north, And blew into the floor; Quoth our goodman to our goodwife, “Gae 1 out and bar the door.” *November 15
“My hand is in my hussyfskap*, Goodman, as ye may see; An it shoud nae be barrd this hundred year, It’s no be barrd for me.” They made a paction tween them twa, They made it firm and sure, That the first word whaeer shoud speak, Shoud rise and bar the door. *Water in which the puddings were boiled
Then by there came two gentlemen, At twelve o’clock at night, And they could neither see house nor hall, Nor coal nor candle-light. “Now whether is this a rich man’s house, Or whether is it a poor?” But neer a word wad ane o them speak, For barring of the door.
And first they ate the white puddings, And then they ate the black; Tho muckle thought the goodwife to hersel, Yet neer a word she spake. Then said the one unto the other, “Here, man, tak ye my knife; Do ye tak aff the auld man’s beard, And I’ll kiss the goodwife.”
“But there’s nae water in the house, And what shall we do than?” “What ails thee at the pudding-broo, 3 That boils into the pan?” O up then started our goodman, An angry man was he: “Will ye kiss my wife before my een, And scad 4 me wi pudding-bree?”
Then up and started our goodwife, Gied three skips on the floor: “Goodman, you’ve spoken the foremost word, Get up and bar the door.”
How can we tell this is a ballad? • Author? • Theme? (Disappointed love, jealousy, revenge, sudden disaster, domestic dispute) • Single incident? • Little background information? • Little characterization? • Use of dialogue? • A form of refrain and quatrains? • Supernatural elements?