My Father's Gold- Noel (VA) 1923 Davis S

My Father's Gold- Noel (VA) 1923 Davis S; Bronson 24

[My title. Single stanza with music from Davis, Traditional Ballads of Virginia; 1929. His notes follow.

R. Matteson 2011]


LADY ISABEL AND THE ELF-KNIGHT
(CHILD, NO.4)

THIS ballad is one of the few most frequently found in Virginia, where variously known as "Pretty Polly," "The Seven King's Daughters," "King's Daughter," "The Pretty Gold Leaf," "The Salt Water Sea," "Miss Mary's Parrot," and under several other titles. Its polyonymity is almost equal to its ubiquity - twenty-eight variants under sixteen different titles. In Virginia it does not, however, when compared with" Barbara Allen," "The House Carpenter" and several others quite live up to its reputation of having obtained the widest circulation of all ballads. Child's remarkable introduction to this ballad discusses at some length its extraordinary currency in the southern as well as the northern nations of Europe. Space is also given to a consideration of the hypothesis that the ballad is a wild shoot from the story of Judith and Holofernes, with Holofernes the original of the Elf-Knight. Child concludes; "It is a supposition attended with less difficulty that an independent European tradition existed of a half-human, half-demonic being, who possessed an irresistible power of decoying away young maids, and was wont to kill them after he got them into his hands, but who at last found one who was more than his match, and lost his own life through her craft and courage. A modification of this story is afforded by the large class of Bluebeard tales."

All the Virginia texts correspond much more closely with the Child series C-G (and Sargent and Kittredge H) than to A and B. Warning might perhaps be given of the confusion of Pollies in most of the Virginia texts. The girl and the parrot have the same name and are not always immediately distinguishable.

For American findings of this ballad see Barry, No. 4; Belden, No. 1 (fragment); Brown, p. 9 (North Carolina); Bulletin, Nos. 2-4, 6-12; Campbell and Sharp, No. 2 (Massachusetts, North Carolina, Kentucky, Georgia); Child, III, 496 (Virginia, from The Folk-Lore Journal, VII, p. 28); Cox, No. I and p. 521 (fragment and melody); Hudson, No. I (Mississippi); Jones, p. 301 (fragment); Journal, XVIII, 132 (Barry, Massachusetts, text and melody); XIX, 232 (Belden, Missouri); XXII, 65 (Beatty, Wisconsin), 76 (Barry, New Jersey, melody only), 374 (Barry, Massachusetts, text and melody, Missouri), 344 (Barry, Massachusetts); XXVII, 90 (Gardner, Michigan); XXVIII, 148 (Perrow, North Carolina); XXXV, 338 (Tolman and Eddy, Ohio); Mackenzie, Ballads, No. I, and p. 391 (melody); Sandburg, P: 60 (R. W. Gordon Collection); Scarborough, p. 43 (Texas, text and melody); Shearin, p. 3; Shearin and Combs, p. 7; Reed Smith, No. I; Reed Smith, Ballads, No. I; Wyman and Brockway, p. 82. For additional references, see Cox, p. 3; Journal, XXIX.

[My Father's Gold]- Sung by Lucile Noel, Vinton, Va., November 30, 1923. Noted by Evelyn Rex. Collected by Alfreda M. Peel.

"Go get me of my father's gold,
And some of my mother's feed;
Get two of the horses that stand in the stall,
That stand by forty and three."
-----------------

X:24
T:Lady Isabel and the Elf Knight
C:Trad
B:Bronson
O:Davis, I929, p. 55I(S); text, p. 85. Sung by Lucile Noel,
O:Vinton, Va., November 30, I923. Noted by Evelyn Rex.
O:Collected by Alfreda M. Peel.
M:6/8
L:1/8
K:Gmix % Hexatonic ( -7) Ionian/Mixolydian
d | d2 d d2 d | B2 A G2 d |
w:Go get me of my fath-er's gold, And
eee cde | d3-d2 d | gBB BAB |
w:some of my moth*er's feed;* Get two of the hors-es that
cBc d2 B | d2 d cBA | G3-G2 |]
w:stand in the stall, That stand by for-ty and three.
W:
W:"Go get me of my father's gold,
W:And some of my mother's feed;
W:Get two of the horses that stand in the stall,
W:That stand by forty and three."