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Hind Horn

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Traditional song
Illustration of a scene from "Hind Horn" byArthur Rackham
EnglishWikisource has original text related to this article:

"Hind Horn" (Child 17,Roud28) is a traditional English and Scottish folkballad.[1]

Synopsis

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Hind Horn and the king's daughter Jean fall in love. He gives her a silver wand, and she gives him a diamond ring and tells him when the stones grow pale, he has lost her love. One day, on his travels, he sees it growing pale and sets out for her father's castle. A beggar tells him that the king's daughter is going tomarry, and he persuades him to trade clothing. Hind Horn gets to the castle and begs a cup of wine; when the king's daughter gives it to him, he drops the ring in. She asks where he got it, and he told her she gave it to him. She declares she will throw off her fine clothing and beg with him from town to town, and he tells her that his clothing is only a disguise, she will be a great lady.

It was tradition at the time that any beggar who came to the back door of a house to beg from the bride on a wedding day would receive whatever reasonable thing he asked for.[citation needed]

Variants

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The popular ballad contains little more than the climax of a tale that is told at much great length in several manuscripts: the English "King Horn", the latest parts of which are thirteenth century; the Frenchromance,Horn et Rymenhild; and the fourteenth-century "Horn Childe and Maiden Rimnild", also English, but closer to the French version.[2]

It appears to contain a stanza from "The Whummil Bore".[3]

Several Swedish variants are known, including "Herr Lagman och Herr Thor", from the sixteenth century.[4]

The hero's absence, return, disguised arrival at the wedding feast, and recognition by dropping a ring into the bride's wine cup is a common motif found in both ballads and fairy tales,[4] such asSoria Moria Castle andThe Raven.

Themagic ring is also found, with the same properties, in the ballad "Bonny Bee Hom".[5]

The ballad was published byWilliam Motherwell in hisMinstrelsy: Ancient and Modern (Glasgow, 1827). It was collected in US, South England, Scotland, and Canada.[6]

Recording

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This can be found onBandoggs (now unobtainable) eponymous LP, andMaddy Prior's 1998 CDFlesh & Blood and 1999 liveBallads & Candles.

An adapted version can be found onLissa Schneckenburger's 2008 albumSong entitledThe Old Beggar Man.

See also

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References

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  1. ^Francis James Child,English and Scottish Popular Ballads,"Hind Horn"
  2. ^Francis James Child,The English and Scottish Popular Ballads, v 1, p 188-192, Dover Publications, New York 1965
  3. ^Francis James Child,The English and Scottish Popular Ballads, v 1, p 247, Dover Publications, New York 1965
  4. ^abFrancis James Child,The English and Scottish Popular Ballads, v 1, p 194, Dover Publications, New York 1965
  5. ^Francis James Child,The English and Scottish Popular Ballads, v 2, p 317, Dover Publications, New York 1965
  6. ^See here

External links

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TheChild Ballads
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