The Lady Gay- Wright (VA) 1915 Fauntleroy/ Davis C

The Lady Gay- Wright (VA) 1915 Fauntleroy/ Davis C

[From Traditional Ballads of Virginia; Kyle Davis Jr., 1929. Davis' notes follow.

R. Matteson 2015]

TRADITIONAL BALLADS OF VIRGINIA
THE WIFE OF USHER'S WELL
(Child, No. 79)

The Child title is unknown in Virginia, where the ballad is called "The Lady Gay," "The Three Little Babes," "The Beautiful Bride," or (once) "Lady Gains." The Virginia variants all belong to the same version, which is neither Child A, B, nor C. The religious cast of the Virginia version seems to relate it to Child C, but in other respects it is nearer to Child A. It is practically identical with the American text printed in Child, V, 294, except that the mother's prayer for the return of the children is not usual in the Virginia texts; indeed, appears only once. The motive for the children's return - to forbid the mother's obstinate grief - is found in most of the Virginia variants, as in other American texts, but not in Child A. In practically all Virginia texts the ghosts disappear for two reasons: the crowing of the cock and the summons of the Saviour. In this respect they are like West Virginia B. The Virginia texts do not add much except minor variations to the texts already published from America.

The story of the composite Virginia text runs as follows: - A lady gay sends her three children to school in the north country, where, after a time, they die. (The mother grieves for her children and prays for their return.) About Christmas time they appear to her. She prepares a feast for them, but they refuse to eat, because the Saviour forbids. She spreads a bed with rich covering for them, but they bid her take it off, as it represents mere worldly pride. With the approach of dawn and by appointment with their Saviour, they depart, warning the mother that her tears but wet their winding sheet. The Virginia and other American texts are more sternly puritanical and have less human warmth than Child A. Another interesting feature of the Virginia texts concerns the sex of the babies. In old-country texts the children are always sons. In Virginia the sex is normally unspecified; they are simply "children" or " babes." But occasionally they actually become girls. See F 6, line 2, and G 5, line 4. Perhaps the same change of sex is indicated by the " normal school " variant of C 1, line 3.

For American texts, see Belden, No. 77; Brown, p. 9 (North Carolina); Bulletin, Nos. 3-5, 9; Campbell and Sharp, No. 19 (North Carolina, Tennessee); Child, X, 194 (North Carolina); Cox, No. 14; Hudson, No. 12 (and Journal, XXXIX, 96; Mississippi); Journal, XIII, 119 (Newell, North Carolina); XXIII, 429 (Belden, Missouri); XXX, 305 (Kittredge; California, Nebraska, Kentucky, Tennessee); XXXII, 503 (Richardson, West Virginia); McGill, p. 5; Pound, Syllabus, p. 10 (fragment); Pound, Ballads, No. 7; Shearin and Combs, p. 9. For additional references, see Journal, xxx, 305.

C. "The Lady Gay." Collected by Miss Juliet Fauntleroy. Sung by Miss Maggie Wright, of Altavista, Va. Campbell County. September 18, 1915.

I There lived a lady, lady gay,
And children she had three.
She sent them off to a northern (normal) school [1],
To learn their grammaree.

2 They hadn't been gone but a very short time,
Scarcely three months and a day,
Until cold death came over the land
And stole those babes away.

3 "There lives a King in Heaven," she cried,
"Who used to wear a crown.
Pray send me back my babes tonight
Or in the morning soon."

4. . . . .
. . . .
She saw three babes come hastening along
To greet their mother home.

5. She spread her table wide and long,
Put on it bread and wine.
" Come eat, come drink, my sweet little babes,
Come eat, come drink of mine."

6. "No, mother, we don't want your bread,
Nor either want your wine,
For yonder stands our Saviour dear,
To him we are resigned."

7. She fixed her bed in a narrow back room,
Put on it white, white sheets,
And on the top a golden spread,
That they might better sleep.

8. "Take it off, take it off," the oldest cried,
"For the chickens now do crow,
And yonder stands our Saviour dear,
To him we now must go."

1. Apparently she also sang "normal" in place of "northern."