Lord Lovel- Farnham (VT) 1930 Flanders M

Lord Lovel- Farnham (VT) 1930 Flanders M

[Fragment from Flanders; Ancient Ballads; 1966, version M.

R. Matteson 2014]


Lord Lovel
(Child 75)

Phillips Barry in British Ballads from Maine, 145-47, gives a good history of this song, telling of its popularity among the nineteenth-century printers and the many uses it served for political parody and music hall gaiety. The American versions which are known wherever ballads are sung almost all stem from the same tradition as Child H, an 1846 London broadside. American printers reproduced texts from this tradition throughout the period between the Mexican and Civil Wars. The Flanders versions are in no way exceptional and are much what one would expect to find. As with texts from other areas, the original name of the church, St. Pancras (see E), has undergone radical modification, but all in all proximity to print has held variation to a minimum. The tune to "Lord Lovel" is also consistent. In South Carolina Ballads (Cambridge, Mass., 1928), 121, Reed Smith comments that "the difference between reading [Lord Lovel] as a poem and singing it is the difference between tragedy and comedy." The use of a tune that is too light for the story no doubt accounts for the tact that parodies have turned up in Maine, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, and Missouri, among other places, in this country (see Coffin, 79, for a bibliography) and in Scotland (see Greig and Keith, 57) abroad. Bibliographical references can be had in Coffin, 78-79 (American); Dean-Smith, 85 (English); and Greig and Keith, 57-58 (Scottish).

The five tunes given here are related, four of them very closely. Only the Fish tune diverges. In order to save repetition of references, the related tunes for the group consisting of the Grindell, Moore, Britton, and Pierce. Tunes are given here: SAA,20; SSC, 122; Sharp , 149 (C), 149 (D and E), 116 (distant), and 147 (distant); AA, 124; DV,524, No. 20 (E, L, and O); EO, 39, 40; BES, 139 (not too close); BI, 92. obviously this tune group is very widespread and its correlation with the Child 75 text is great.


M. Lord Lovell. Recorded in Wardsboro, Vermont, as remembered by George Farnham, 77 years old, from the singing of his mother, Lydia French Farnham, born in Windsor, Vermont. George Brown, Collector; August 28, 1930.

Lord Lovell, he stood at his castle gate
A-combing his milk-white steed
When along came his lady, Nancy Bell,
A-wishing her lover God-speed, -speed, -speed
A-wishing her lover God-speed.

"Oh, where are you going, Lord Lovell?" she said.
"Oh, where are you going?" said she.
"I'm going, my Lady Nancy Bell,
Strange countries for to see, see, see
Strange countries for to see."