The Elphin Knight Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis

Rhyme Scheme: A B C C DDDD EFED GG H II J K JJ JJ L JJ MM NN OO EE PP JJ Q P D E D

The Text is from a broadside in black letter in the Pepysian Library at Cambridge bound up at the end of a book published inA
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The Story of this ballad but poorly represents the complete form of the story as exhibited in many German and other ballads where alternate bargaining and riddling ensues between a man and a maid This long series of ballads is akin to the still longer series in which the person upon whom an impossible task is imposed is considered to have got the mastery by retaliating with another impossible taskB
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The opening stanzas of this ballad correspond closely with those of Lady Isabel and the Elf KnightC
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THE ELPHIN KNIGHTC
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My plaid awa my plaid awaD
And ore the hill and far awaD
And far awa to NorrowaD
My plaid shall not be blown awaD
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The elphin knight sits on yon hillE
Ba ba ba lilli baF
He blaws his horn both lowd and shrilE
The wind hath blown my plaid awaD
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He blowes it east he blowes it westG
He blowes it where he lyketh bestG
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'I wish that horn were in my kistH
Yea and the knight in my armes two '-
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She had no sooner these words saidI
When that the knight came to her bedI
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'Thou art over young a maid ' quoth heJ
'Married with me thou il wouldst be '-
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'I have a sister younger than IK
And she was married yesterday '-
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'Married with me if thou wouldst beJ
A courtesie thou must do to meJ
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'For thou must shape a sark to meJ
Without any cut or heme ' quoth heJ
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'Thou must shape it knife and sheerlesseL
And also sue it needle threedlesse '-
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'If that piece of courtesie I do to theeJ
Another thou must do to meJ
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'I have an aiker of good ley landM
Which lyeth low by yon sea strandM
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'For thou must eare it with thy hornN
So thou must sow it with thy cornN
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'And bigg a cart of stone and lymeO
Robin Redbreast he must trail it hameO
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'Thou must barn it in a mouse hollE
And thrash it into thy shoe's sollE
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'And thou must winnow it in thy looffP
And also seek it in thy gloveP
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'For thou must bring it over the seaJ
And thou must bring it dry home to meJ
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'When thou hast gotten thy turns well doneQ
Then come to me and get thy sark then '-
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'I'll not quite my plaid for my lifeP
It haps my seven bairns and my wife '-
The wind shall not blow my plaid awaD
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'My maidenhead I'l then keep stillE
Let the elphin knight do what he will '-
The wind's not blown my plaid awaD

Frank Sidgwick



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The Elphin Knight is a poem by Frank Sidgwick. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.



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