Post on 15-Dec-2015
Introducing the Poem
Literary Focus: Ballad
Reading Focus: Understanding Purpose
Writing Focus: Think as a Reader/Writer
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Lord Randall
Lord Randall Introducing the Poem
Love is whatever you can still betray. . . . Betrayal can only happen if you love.
John le Carré
Sensationalism in the Middle Ages
These aren’t the latest tabloid headlines. They’re the plots of medieval ballads. In the Middle Ages, just as today, some forms of popular entertainment tended toward the sensational.
Lord Randall Introducing the Poem
Slighted Woman Spurns Lover’s
Deathbed Request--- -- ----- ------ ---- --- ---- ----- ------
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Three Dead Sons Visit Mother for Dinner
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Poetry of the People
Ballads were the poetry of the people, just as popular music is today. Ballads had subjects such as
Lord Randall Introducing the Poem
• domestic tragedy• false love• the supernatural
What modern popular songs can you think of that have these same subjects?
Song and Dance
Lord Randall Introducing the Poem
The word ballad is derived from an Old French word meaning “dancing song.”
The structure and meter of the English ballads make it clear that they were intended to be sung to music.
Listen to part of the ballad.
Poetry of the People
The ballads of the Middle Ages
Lord Randall Introducing the Poem
• were passed down orally from singer to singer
• had strong beats and repetition
• were a gift of story passed from generation to generation
Lord Randall Introducing the Poem
In this ballad, Lord Randall has just returned from the forest. He tells his mother that all he wants to do is lie down.
• Is Lord Randall simply tired from hunting?
• What happened in the forest? Was there some kind of foul play, as his mother suspects?
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Ballads are songs or songlike poems that tell stories in simple, rhythmic language.
Lord Randall Literary Focus: Ballad
Ballads usually include• sensational or tragic
subject matter• omitted details
• supernatural events
• a refrain—a repeated word, line, or group of lines
Ballad singers often used certain conventions:
Lord Randall Literary Focus: Ballad
• incremental repetition—repeating a phrase or sentence, adding a new element each time, to build suspense
“O where hae ye been, Lord Randall, my son?. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .“Where gat ye your dinner, Lord Randall, my son?. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .“What gat ye to your dinner, Lord Randall, my son?”
Ballad singers often used certain conventions:
Lord Randall Literary Focus: Ballad
• question-and-answer format—a series of questions whose answers reveal facts of the story little by little; used to build suspense
“O where hae ye been, Lord Randall, my son? O where hae ye been, my handsome young man?”“I hae been to the wild wood; mother, make my bed
soon, For I’m weary wi’ hunting and fain wald lie down.”
Ballad singers often used certain conventions:
Lord Randall Literary Focus: Ballad
• conventional phrases—word groups understood by listeners to have a meaning beyond the literal one
• a strong, simple beat
• relatively uncomplicated verse forms
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Lord RandallReading Focus: Understanding Purpose
Although the author of “Lord Randall” is unknown, we can determine the author’s purpose from details in the text, such as
• dialogue• images• repetition
In “Lord Randall,” the mother repeats several phrases in each stanza. That repetition indicates that she loves her boy and is upset by his behavior.
We can guess that the ballad’s purpose is to share a tragic event with listeners.
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Lord RandallReading Focus: Understanding Purpose
Into Action: As you read, note details that help you determine the purposes of the ballads. Use a chart like the one below to record your findings.
Lord Randall Get Up and Bar Edward, Edward
the DoorDetails:
Purpose:
mother’s pleading tone
to move to sadness
Lord Randall Writing Focus: Think as a Reader/Writer
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Find It in Your Reading
Repetition is an essential feature of ballads.
Incremental repetition—a phrase or sentence that is
repeated with a new element each time—helps advance
the story until the climax is reached.
As you read, pay special attention to the use of
repetition.
Lord Randall Writing Focus: Think as a Reader/Writer
As you read, think about what a music video version of a ballad might look like.
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