Lord Thomas- Blankenship (NC) 1918 Sharp Ee

 Lord Thomas- Blankenship (NC) 1918 Sharp Ee

[My title, two stanzas with music. From English Folk Songs from the Southern Appalachians collected by Cecil J. Sharp and Olive Dame Campbell- Volume I; 1932 edition edited by Maud Karpeles. The  1932 edition notes follow.

R. Matteson 2014]


No. 19. Lord Thomas and Fair Ellinor.

Texts without tunes:—Child's English and Scottish Popular Ballads, No. 73. Broadside by Catnach. C. S. Burners Shropshire Folk-Lore, p. 545. A. Williams's Folk Songs of the Upper Thames, p. 135. Journal of American Folk-Lore, xix. 235; xx. 254; xxviii. 152; xxxix. 94. Cox's Folk Songs of the South, p. 45 (see also further references).

Texts with tunes:—Kidson's Traditional Tunes, p. 40. English County Songs, p. 42. E. M. Leather's Folk-Lore of Herefordshire, p. 200. Sandys's Christmas Carols, tune 18. Journal of the Folk-Song Society, ii. 105; v. 130. Rimbault's Musical Illustrations of Percy's Reliques, p. 94. C. Sharp's English Folk Songs (Selected Edition), ii. 27 (also published in One Hundred English Folk Songs, No.28). Gavin Greig's Last Leaves, No. 28. Scots Musical Museum, vi, No. 535. Reed Smith's South Carolina Ballads, No. 6. Wyman and Brockway's Twenty Kentucky Songs, p. 14. Journal of American Folk-Lore, xviii. 128. British Ballads
from Maine, p. 128, Davis's Traditional Ballads of Virginia, pp. 191 and 568. McGill's Folk Songs of the Kentucky Mountains, p. 28. Sandburg's American Songbag, p. 156.

Ee. [Lord Thomas]  Sung by Mrs. MARY BLANKENSHIPP at Price's Creek, Burnsville, N. C , Oct. 5, 1918
Heptatonic. Mixolydian.

Lord Thomas, Lord Thomas, is this your wife?
I think she's very brown,
When you might have married as fair a young lady
As ever the sun shined on.

He took the brown girl by the hand,
And led  her through the hall.
He took his sword, cut off her head,
And kicked it against the wall.