The House Carpenter- Mulleins (VA) 1921 Davis R
[From Kyle Davis, Jr.'s Traditional Ballads of Virginia, 1929. Davis says in Traditional Ballads of Virginia that "The House Carpenter" is second only to "Barbara Allen" in popularity in Virginia with fifty-two texts and seven musical transcriptions of which twenty-nine texts and seven melodies are given A-AA. Additionally two variants are given as an appendix which have stanzas of the House Carpenter within a related ballad.
R. Matteson 2013]
Traditional Ballads of Virginia (Davis' commentary)
JAMES HARRIS (THE DAEMON LOVER) (Child, No. 243)
Next to "Barbara Allen" in Virginia popularity stands "The House Carpenter," with fifty-two texts and seven melodies, of which twenty-nine-texts and all seven melodies are here given. "The House Carpenter" is its almost invariable title, which yields only once to "The House Carpenter's Wife" (a slightly more appropriate title) and once to "On the Banks of the Sweet Laurie." "James Harris" which appears once, and "The Daemon Lover," which appears three times at the head of manuscripts (and therefore in the table of contents), may be regarded merely as identifications, not as local titles. The lover has lost not only his name, but also, with the possible exception of four variants, all trace of his demoniac character.
The Virginia texts are most closely related to Child B, but with occasional stanzas and details that suggest other Child versions. But as all the Child versions are based upon A, with traditional modifications, the story of Child A may be profitably scanned as a preliminary step: "Jane Reynolds and James Harris, a seaman, had exchanged vows of marriage. The young man was pressed as a sailor, and after three years was reported as dead; the young woman married a ship carpenter, and they lived together happily for four years, and had children. One night when this carpenter was absent from home, a spirit rapped at the window and announced himself as James Harris, come after an absence of seven years to claim the woman for his wife. She explained the state of things, but upon obtaining assurance that her long-lost lover had the means to support her- seven ships upon the sea - consented to go with him, for he was really much like unto a man. 'The woman-kind' was seen no more after that; the carpenter hanged himself."
The Virginia ballad cuts out all the antecedent action and the aftermath about the carpenter. It omits all names (except for the stolen "Fair Ellen" of Virginia F), and deprives the lover altogether of his ghostly character (with the possible exception of Virginia A, M, N, and Appendix A). The Virginia story, then, is a compressed and very human drama of illicit elopement and retribution. A seaman returns to find his old love married, it seems happily, to a house carpenter, by whom she has a child (or more). By his persuasiveness and by promises, the old lover induces the wife to desert husband and babe and sail away with him. But soon she pines for the old ties, weeps for her sweet little babe, and (sometimes after she has had a vision of the torment in store for her) the ship springs a leak and sinks to the bottom of the sea. There is often a final stanza voicing her contrition, her curse upon deceiving men, or her warning to other women. In Virginia texts the carpenter does not reappear, as he does in Child B, to grieving and swoon at the news of the disaster and to curse such deluding mariners. Virginia A, M, N, and appendix A are related to Child E and F; they contain the "hills of heaven and hell" stanzas, in which the so-called lover by interpreting the wife's vision assumes a more eerie and diabolical personality. But she never spies his cloven foot, as in Child E, F, and G, and, even the vision stanzas are exceedingly rare in Virginia.
"The House Carpenter" is very often corrupted with other songs and ballads that fit in with its general motif. But it generally preserves its own identity; it does not, like "The Lass of Roch Royal" in Virginia, merely contribute certain stanzas to other songs of the texts that follow, A-E are more or less pure and unalloyed variants, though the name "Fair Ellen," in F9 and Q4, and stanzas E 8, K 7, N 3, suggest "Lord Thomas and Fair Eleanor." But with R the combined texts begin. R-AA are marked by the intrusion of a stanza or more from some other source, but with the "House Carpenter" story still well preserved. Appendices A and B have been corrupted almost beyond recognition, but they still preserve two or three stanzas of the ballad. The "shoe my foot" stanzas of "The Lass of Roch Royal," appear in R 7, and 8, S 7 and 8, Appendix A 5 and 6, Appendix B 5 and 6; and the chorus of Appendix A is a stanza of "The Lass of Roch Royal" seldom found in Virginia. In variants T-AA stanzas are supplied from certain later songs- which have something in common with "The House Carpenter" such as a lovers' greeting, a lovers' parting, a false lover, a remorseful lover, a betrayed lover's lament or warning, -etc. Traces of "The False young Man," "The True Lover's Farewell," "The Rejected Lover," "The Wagoners Lad," "Cold Winter's Night," "Careless Love," and perhaps other English folk-songs are to be found in the Virginia variants T-AA, and in the appendices. "The False Young Man" is the most frequent intruder. These variants in combination are a most interesting feature of the ballad in Virginia.
R. "The House Carpenter." - Collected by Mr. John Stone. Sung by Mrs. Ellen Mulleins, of Saltville, Va., an old lady who learned it from her mother. Smyth county, November 8, 1921. The intruding stanzas here are 7 and 8 - they are from "The Lass of Roch Royal."
1 "Well met, well met, my old true love,"
"Well met, well met," says she.
"I've just returned from the foreign land,
And it's all for the sake of thee.
2 "I could have married a king's daughter great,
And she would have married me,
But I refused her crown of gold;
It was all for the sake of thee."
3 "If you could have married a king's daughter great,
I'm sure you are to blame;
For I am married to a house carpenter,
And I think he is a nice young man."
4 "If you will leave your house carpenter
And go along with me,
I'll take you to where the grass grows green,
On the banks of the deep blue sea."
5. "If I was to leave my house carpenter
And go along with thee,
What have you got to maintain me on
And keep me from slavery?"
6 "I have a hundred and ten young men
Stand ready at your command,
If you will come and go with me
And give me your lily-white hand."
7. "Who will shoe my pretty little foot?
And who will glove my hand?
Who will kiss my ruby lips,
When your off in the foreign land?"
8 "My father will shoe your pretty little feet,
MY mother will glove your hands,
And I will kiss your ruby lips,
When I return from the foreign land."
9 She picked up her pretty little babe
And kissed- she gave it three, [1]
"Stay here stay here my sweet little babe,
And keep your father company."
10 This lady had not been on the sea two weeks,
I'm sure it was not three,
Before this lady began to weep,
And she wept most bitterly."
11 "Is it for your land you weep?
Or is it for your store,
Or is it for that house carpenter,
That you never shall see any more?"
12 "It is not for my land I weep,
Nor is it for my store,
But it its for my sweet little babe,
That I never shall see any more."
13 This lady had not been on sea three weeks,
I'm sure it was not four,
Before the ship it sprang a leak,
And she sank to rise no more.
1. "And kisses she gave it three" is the normal line.