The Beggar-Laddie

The Beggar-Laddie is a traditional English ballad existing in several variants. It was collected by Francis James Child as Child ballad 280 (Roud 119[1]).

Synopsis

A man tells a woman that he is a beggar, making his living from spindles or similar items. She loves him and follows him. After a time, she finds it very hard, but then he takes her on to his father's hall, or sometimes his brother's. His brothers express envy of his bride, and she gains a husband of high birth.

First editions

The first known record, probably, dates from 1805; it was included in the Old Lady's Collection. Other early versions were collected in the D. Kinloch's MS and C. Motherwell's MS (both written before 1850). The first publication of the song could be found in Christie's Traditional Ballad Airs (1876, I).[2][3][1]

gollark: "Greek keyboard aere" or something.
gollark: θις ις υσελεσς
gollark: I needed to type some stuff ages ago, so I just reconfigured my keyboard configuration so I can type all Greek letters with mildly annoying compose key sequences.
gollark: Amazing what sort of neat technology there is around now.
gollark: I kind of want a watch with an atomic clock so I can avoid having to manually recalibrate the time every month.

See also

References

  1. See here.
  2. Anglia. M. Niemeyer. 1899.
  3. Ewald Flügel (1898). Zur Chronologie der englischen Balladen.
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