Barbara Allen- Martin (NC) pre1943 Brown I

Barbara Allen- Martin (NC) pre1943 Brown I

[No date given, before 1943. From the Brown Collection; Volume 2, 1952; with music in Part 4 added to Part 2. There are also several additional texts in Part 4. The Brown editors' notes follow. Additional text from Abrams MS.

Only part of the ballad was supplied. The notes say the opening is like version C but that's not right-- it is close to version K second stanza.

R. Matteson 2015]


27. Bonny Barbara Allan (Child 84)

Of all the ballads in the Child collection this is easily the most widely known and sung, both in the old country and in America. Scarcely a single regional gathering of ballads but has it, and it has  been published in unnumbered popular songbooks. See BSM 60-1. Mrs. Eckstorm in a letter written in 1940 informed me that she  and Barry had satisfied themselves, before Barry's death, that as  sung by Mrs. Knipp to the delight of Samuel Pepys in 1666 it  was not a stage song at all but a libel on Barbara Villiers and her relations with Charles II; but so far as I know the details of their argument have never been published. The numerous texts in the North Carolina collection may conveniently be grouped according to  the setting in three divisions: (1) those that begin in the first  person of Barbara's lover (or at least of the narrator), (2) those  that begin with a springtime setting, and (3) those that begin  with an autumnal setting. Of course those in group 1 may also have either the springtime or the autumnal setting. The rose-and-brier ending is likely to be attached to any of the texts. The  lover's bequests to Barbara, a feature not infrequent in modern  British versions but unusual in America, appears once in the North Carolina texts, in F. The first person of the lover commonly is  dropped after the opening stanza, but in F it holds through four stanzas. Not all of the texts are given in full.

J. 'Barbara Allen.' From Miss A. M. Martin, time and place not given.  This text begins something like C:

Over, over was the town
Where three fair maids were dwelling.
There was but one I called my own
And that was Barbara Allen.

In the death-bed scene it has a stanza corresponding to the tenth stanza of G:

He reached forth his pale white hand,
Aiming for to touch her;
She slipped and danced all over the floor
And says, 'I will not have you.'

It has the rose-and-brier ending.