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A Book of Old Ballads — Complete. VariousЧитать онлайн книгу.

A Book of Old Ballads — Complete - Various


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you would say

       the very wood will burst into flame … and yet, the total effect is one

       of happy simplicity?

       Table of Contents

      How were the early ballads born? Who made them? One man or many? Were

       they written down, when they were still young, or was it only after the

       lapse of many generations, when their rhymes had been sharpened and

       their metres polished by constant repetition, that they were finally

       copied out?

      To answer these questions would be one of the most fascinating tasks

       which the detective in letters could set himself. Grimm, listening

       in his fairyland, heard some of the earliest ballads, loved them,

       pondered on them, and suddenly startled the world by announcing that

       most ballads were not the work of a single author, but of the people at

       large. Das Volk dichtet, he said. And that phrase got him into a lot of trouble. People told him to get back to his fairyland and not make such ridiculous suggestions. For how, they asked, could a whole people make a poem? You might as well tell a thousand men to make a tune, limiting each of them to one note!

      To invest Grimm's words with such an intention is quite unfair.

       [Footnote: For a discussion of Grimm's theories, together with much

       interesting speculation on the origin of the ballads, the reader should

       study the admirable introduction to English and Scottish Popular Ballads, published by George Harrap & Co., Ltd.] Obviously a multitude of people could not, deliberately, make a single poem any more than a multitude of people could, deliberately, make a single picture, one man doing the nose, one man an eye and so on. Such a suggestion is grotesque, and Grimm never meant it. If I might guess at what he meant, I would suggest that he was thinking that the origin of ballads must have been similar to the origin of the dance, (which was probably the earliest form of aesthetic expression known to man).

      The dance was invented because it provided a means of prolonging ecstasy

       by art. It may have been an ecstasy of sex or an ecstasy of victory …

       that doesn't matter. The point is that it gave to a group of people an

       ordered means of expressing their delight instead of just leaping about

       and making loud cries, like the animals. And you may be sure that as the

       primitive dance began, there was always some member of the tribe a

       little more agile than the rest--some man who kicked a little higher or

       wriggled his body in an amusing way. And the rest of them copied him,

       and incorporated his step into their own.

      Apply this analogy to the origin of ballads. It fits perfectly.

      There has been a successful raid, or a wedding, or some great deed of

       daring, or some other phenomenal thing, natural or supernatural. And now

       that this day, which will ever linger in their memories, is drawing to

       its close, the members of the tribe draw round the fire and begin to

       make merry. The wine passes … and tongues are loosened. And someone

       says a phrase which has rhythm and a sparkle to it, and the phrase is

       caught up and goes round the fire, and is repeated from mouth to mouth.

       And then the local wit caps it with another phrase and a rhyme is born.

       For there is always a local wit in every community, however primitive.

       There is even a local wit in the monkey house at the zoo.

      And once you have that single rhyme and that little piece of rhythm, you

       have the genesis of the whole thing. It may not be worked out that

       night, nor even by the men who first made it. The fire may long have

       died before the ballad is completed, and tall trees may stand over the

       men and women who were the first to tell the tale. But rhyme and rhythm

       are indestructible, if they are based on reality. "Not marble nor the

       gilded monuments of princes shall outlive this powerful rhyme."

      And so it is that some of the loveliest poems in the language will ever

       remain anonymous. Needless to say, all the poems are not anonymous. As society became more civilized it was inevitable that the peculiar circumstances from which the earlier ballads sprang should become less frequent. Nevertheless, about nearly all of the ballads there is "a common touch", as though even the most self-conscious author had drunk deep of the well of tradition, that sparkling well in which so much beauty is distilled.

       Table of Contents

      But though the author or authors of most of the ballads may be lost in

       the lists of time, we know a good deal about the minstrels who sang

       them. And it is a happy thought that those minstrels were such

       considerable persons, so honourably treated, so generously esteemed.

       The modern mind, accustomed to think of the singer of popular songs

       either as a highly paid music-hall artist, at the top of the ladder, or

       a shivering street-singer, at the bottom of it, may find it difficult to

       conceive of a minstrel as a sort of ambassador of song, moving from

       court to court with dignity and ceremony.

      Yet this was actually the case. In the ballad of King Estmere, for

       example, we see the minstrel finely mounted, and accompanied by a

       harpist, who sings his songs for him. This minstrel, too, moves among

       kings without any ceremony. As Percy has pointed out, "The further we

       carry our enquiries back, the greater respect we find paid to the

       professors of poetry and music among all the Celtic and Gothic nations.

       Their character was deemed so sacred that under its sanction our famous

       King Alfred made no scruple to enter the Danish camp, and was at once

       admitted to the king's headquarters."

      And even so late as the time of Froissart, we have minstrels and

       heralds mentioned together, as those who might securely go into an

       enemy's country.

      The reader will perhaps forgive me if I harp back, once more, to our

       present day and age, in view of the quite astonishing change in national

       psychology which that revelation implies. Minstrels and heralds were

       once allowed safe conduct into the enemy's country, in time of war. Yet,

       in the last war, it was considered right and proper to hiss the work of

       Beethoven off the stage, and responsible newspapers seriously suggested

       that never again should a note of German music, of however great

      


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