Wednesday, April 8, 2020
Medieval Ballads Essays - Child Ballads, Appalachian Culture
  Medieval Ballads    There are many medieval ballads that contain male-female relationships. However,  the ballads "Edward", "Bonny Barbara Allen", and "Mattie Groves"  stand out because they all contain atypical male-female relationships. The  similarities the three ballads share in their male-female relationships are: 1)  there is always a conflict between the male and the female and 2) none of these  relationships are representative of the ideal male-female relationship or  marriage. Although the male-female relationship in the ballad "Edward"  revolves around a mother and a son, their relationship is just as convoluted as  the ones found in the other ballads. Edward and his mother have a tense and  stormy relationship, which is highlighted through their conversations and  interactions with each other. Edward's tenseness towards his mother is shown  through his replies to his mother's question "why dois your brand sae drap  wi bluid?" Instead of telling her the truth, Edward is at first hesitant and  lies to his mother by saying the blood on his sword is from hawk, and then says  it is actually from his horse. Eventually Edward cracks due to his feelings of  guilt and admits to his mother that he actually killed his father (line 21).    Expecting to find at least some sympathy and advice from his mother, since it  was the mother who gave Edward the idea of killing his father, Edward, instead,  is bombarded by a series of questions from his mother. These questions make    Edward angry, especially since one of them is how is Edward going to show  penance for his actions (line 25)? Even though it is Edward's mother who gives    Edward the idea of murdering his father, by interrogating Edward after the  murder, it is shown that she is clearly the person in charge of their  relationship since she knows how to manipulate Edward. The relationship between    Edward and his mother is not an example of an ideal male-female relationship, or  a mother-son relationship, since both parties do not show respect towards the  other. This is especially highlighted when Edward's mother asks Edward what he  will leave for her since he has to flee his homeland in order to save himself.    To this question Edward replies "The curse of hell frae me shall ye beir, sic  counseils ye gave to me O." Additionally, because of the troubled relationship    Edward has with his mother, Edward appears to treat other females, such as his  wife, with the same lack of respect he shows toward his mother. When Edward's  mother asks him what he will leave behind for his children and wife, Edward  replies nothing since the world is large enough for them to beg through life  (line 46). The ballad "Bonny Barbara Allan" presents a male-female  relationship that does not work primarily because of the stubbornness and  demands of the parties involved. The relationship between Sir John Graeme and    Barbara Allan can be characterized as stubborn since both of them are  headstrong, although Sir Graeme a little less so since he is dying. Barbara    Allan is portrayed as being more headstrong because she refuses to acknowledge  the fact that Sir Graeme is dying for her love. This is because Barbara Allan is  still mad at Sir Graeme for a past incident, where Sir Graeme slighted her at a  tavern (lines 13-16 and lines 18-20). Although Sir Graeme and Barbara Allan do  not see eye to eye, their relationship is the closest among those of the three  ballads to be representative of at least a "normal" male-female  relationship, even if not of an ideal one. Although Barbara Allan does not  proclaim her love for Sir Graeme as Sir Graeme did for her, Sir Graeme still  tells his friends to "be kind to Barbara Allan" (line 24). Even though Sir    Graeme slighted Barbara Allan in the past, Barbara Allan tells her mother to fix  her coffin since "my love died for me to-day, I'll die for him to-morrow"  (lines 35-36). These actions show that both of them did respect, and probably  love each other, even if both of them, especially Barbara Allan, were reluctant  in showing each other how they felt about one another. Among the three  relationships, the relationship between Lord Arlen and his wife, from the ballad    "Mattie Groves", is the one least like an ideal male-female relationship  because of the high level of deception and patriarchy their relationship  involves. The relationship between Lord Arlen and his wife contains deception  since Lord Arlen's wife is sleeping with Mattie Groves, despite the fact she  is married. Furthermore, Lord Arlen's wife promises Mattie Groves that Lord    Arlen will not    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.