207. Lord Delamere

No. 207: Lord Delamere

[There are no known US or Canadian versions of this ballad.]

CONTENTS:

1. Child's Narrative
2. Footnotes  (Found at the end of Child's Narrative)
3. Brief (Kittredge)
4. Child's Ballad Texts A-D
5. End-Notes
6. Additions and Corrections

ATTACHED PAGES (see left hand column):

1. Recordings & Info: 207. Lord Delamere 
    A.  Roud No. 88: Lord Delamere (6 Listings)  
   
2. Sheet Music: 207. Lord Delamere (with Bronson's music examples)

3. English and Other Versions (Including Child versions A with additional notes)] 

Child's Narrative: 207. Lord Delamere

A. 'The Long-armed Duke,' first printed, about 1843, in a periodical called the Story Teller; afterwards in Notes and Queries, First Series, V, 243, 1852.

B. 'Devonshire's Noble Duel with Lord Danby, in the year 1687,' Llewellynn Jewitt's Ballads and Songs of Derbyshire, p. 55, 1867.

C. Llewellynn Jewitt's Ballads and Songs of Derbyshire, p. 57, two stanzas.

D. 'Lord Delaware,' Thomas Lyle's Ancient Ballads and Songs, chiefly from tradition, manuscripts, and scarce works, etc., London, 1827, p. 135. 'Lord Delamare,' Motherwell's Manuscript, p. 539. Dixon, Ancient Poems, Ballads and Songs of the Peasantry of England, p. 80, Percy Society, vol. xvii, 1846; the same, ed. Robert Bell, 1857, p. 66.

Of D the editor says: "An imperfect copy. . . was noted down by us from the singing of a gentleman in this city [Glasgow], which has necessarily been remodelled and smoothed down to the present measure, without any other liberties, however, having been taken with the original narrative, which is here carefully preserved as it was committed to us." The air, says Lyle, was "beautiful, and peculiar to the ballad."

E. Leigh, Ballads and Legends of Cheshire, p. 203, repeats A. Mr. E. Peacock had an imperfect manuscript copy with the title 'Lord Delamere,' beginning

    I wonder very much that our sovereign king
    So many large taxes upon this land should bring.

Notes and Queries, First Series, II, 104, 1851.

Dr. Rimbault remembered hearing a version sung at a village in Staffordshire, about 1842, in which Hereford was substituted for Devonshire: Notes and Queries, First Series, V, 348, 1852.

Lord Delamere, upon occasion of the imposition of some new taxes, begs a boon of the king, in the Parliament House; it is that he may have all the poor men in the land down to Cheshire and hang them, since it would be better for them to be hanged than to be starved. A French (Dutch) lord says that Delamere ought to be stabbed for publicly affronting the king. The Duke of Devonshire offers himself to fight for Delamere, and a stage is set up for a duel to the utterance. Devonshire's sword bends at the first thrust and then breaks. An English lord who is standing by (Willoughby, B) gives him another, and advises him to play low, for there is treachery. Devonshire drops on his knee and gives his antagonist his death-wound. The king orders the dead man to be taken away, but Devonshire insists on first examining the body. He finds that the French lord had been wear ing armor, and the king's armor, while he himself was fighting bare. He reproaches the king with the purpose of taking his life, and tells him that he shall not have his armor back until he wins it.

According to the title of B, the duel was between Devonshire and Lord Danby, and in 1687. The other party is, however, called a Dutch lord in the ballad. The king is James. Delamere is said to be under age (he was thirty-five in 1687).

In D, Delamere is changed to Delaware, of Lincolnshire; the Duke of Devonshire is called a Welsh lord, and fights a Dutch lord in defence of young Delaware. When Devonshire's sword breaks, he springs from the stage, borrows another from a soldier in the ring, and leaps back to the stage.

It is scarcely necessary to say that the duel is on a par for historical verity with that in 'Johnie Scot' (No 99). If there was to be a duel, Devonshire (Earl, he was not created Duke till 1694, the last year of Delamere's life) was well chosen for the nonce. He had fought with Lord Mohun, in 1676, and was credited with challenging Count Konigsmark, in 1682. What is true in the ballad is that Delamere was a strenuous and uncompromising advocate of constitutional government, and that he and Devonshire were political and personal friends. Both were particularly active in bringing in the Prince of Orange; and so was Lord Danby, with whom, according to the title of B, Devonshire was fighting the duel the year before the revolution.

It has been suggested,[1] and it is barely conceivable, that the ballad may have grown out of a perverted report of the affair of the Earl of Devonshire with Colonel Colepepper.

"On Sunday the 24th of April, 1687, the said earl, meeting on Colonel Culpepper in the drawing-room in Whitehall (who had formerly affronted the said earl in the king's palace, for which he had not received any satisfaction), he spake to the said colonel to go with him into the next room, who went with him accordingly; and when they were there, the said earl required of him to go down stairs, that he might have satisfaction for the affront done him, as aforesaid; which the colonel refusing to do, the said earl struck him with his stick, as is supposed."[2] For this, Devonshire was summoned to the King's Bench and required to give sureties to the amount of £30,000 that he would appear to stand trial. Delamere was surety for £5,000. Devonshire was in the end fined £30,000, and Delamere made a strong plea, apparently in the House of Lords, against the legality of the proceedings of the court.

There is the slightest possible similitude here to the facts of the ballad. It is merely that one party stands up for the other; but Delamere appears as the champion of Devonshire, not Devonshire of Delamere. If Devonshire had testified for Delamere when the latter was tried for high treason in 1686, there would be something to go upon. A more plausible explanation is desirable.

Footnotes:

1. In Notes and Queries, First Series, V, 249.

2. The Works of the late L. Delamer, 1694, The Case of William, Earl of Devonshire, p. 563; which is the plea referred to further on.

Brief Description by George Lyman Kittredge

The duel in this ballad is on a par for historical verity with that in 'Johnie Scot' (No, 99). If there was to be a duel. Devonshire (Earl, he was not created Duke till 1694, the last year of Delamere's life) was well chosen for the nonce. He had fought with Lord Mohun, in 1676, and was credited with challenging Count Königsmark, in 1682. What is true in the ballad is that Delamere was a strenuous and uncompromising advocate of constitutional government, and that he and Devonshire were political and personal friends. Both were particularly active in bringing in the Prince of Orange; and so was Lord Danby, with whom, according to the title of B (not here printed), Devonshire was fighting the duel the year before the revolution.

Child's Ballad Texts

'The Long-armed Duke'- Version A; Child 207 Lord Delamere
Taken down from recitation in Derbyshire, and first printed, about 1843, in a periodical called The Story Teller; afterwards in Notes and Queries, First Series, V, 243, by C.W.G.

1    Good people, give attention, a story you shall hear,
It is of the king and my lord Delamere;
The quarrel it arose in the Parliament House,
Concdrning some taxations going to be put in force.
Ri toora loora la.

2    Says my lord Delamere to his Majesty soon,
'If it please you, my liege, of you I'll soon beg a boon.'
'Then what is your boon? let me it understand:'
'It's to have all the poor men you have in your land.

3    'And I'll take them to Cheshire, and there I will sow
Both hempseed and flaxseed, and [hang] them all in a row.
Why, they'd better be hanged, and stopped soon their breath,
If it please you, my liege, than to starve them to death.'

4    Then up starts a French lord, as we do hear,
Saying, 'Thou art a proud Jack,' to my lord Delamere;
'Thou oughtest to be stabbed' — then he turnd him about —
'For affronting the king in the Parliament House.'

5    Then up starts his grace, the Duke of Devonshire,
Saying, I'll fight in defence of my lord Delamere.
Then a stage was erected, to battle they went,
To kill or to be killed was our noble duke's intent.

6    The very first push, as we do understand,
The duke's sword he bended it back into his hand.
He waited a while, but nothing he spoke,
Till on the king's armour his rapier he broke.

7    An English lord, who by that stage did stand,
Threw Devonshire another, and he got it in his hand:
'Play low for your life, brave Devonshire,' said he,
'Play low for your life, or a dead man you will be.'

8    Devonshire dropped on his knee, and gave him his death-wound;
O then that French lord fell dead upon the ground.
The king called his guards, and he unto them did say,
'Bring Devonshire down, and take the dead man away.'

9    'No, if it please you, my liege, no! I've slain him like a man;
I'm resolved to see what clothing he's got on.
Oh, fie upon your treachery, your treachery!' said he,
'Oh, king, 'twas your intention to have took my life away.

10    'For he fought in your armour, whilst I have fought in bare;
The same thou shalt win, king, before thou does it wear.'
Then they all turned back to the Parliament House,
And the nobles made obesiance with their hands to their mouths.

11    'God bless all the nobles we have in our land,
And send the Church of England may flourish still and stand;
For I've injured no king, no kingdom, nor no crown,
But I wish that every honest man might enjoy his own.'
-------------

'Devonshire's Noble Duel with Lord Danby, in the year 1687'- Version B; Child 207 Lord Delamere
Llewellynn Jewitt, Ballads and Songs of Derbyshire, 1867, p. 55, from a broad-sheet.

1    Good people give attention to a story you shall hear:
Between the king and my lord Delamere,
A quarrel arose in the Parliament House,
Concerning the taxes to be put in force.
With my fal de ral de ra.

2    I wonder, I wonder that James, our good king,
So many hard taxes upon the poor should bring;
So many hard taxes, as I have heard them say,
Makes many a good farmer to break and run away.

3    Such a rout has been in the parliament, as I hear,
Betwixt a Dutch lord and my lord Delamere.
He said to the king, as he sat on the throne,
'If it please you, my liege, to grant me a boon.'

4    'O what is thy boon? Come. let me understand.'
''Tis to give me all the poor you have in the land;
I'll take them down to Cheshire, and there I will sow
Both hemp-seed and flax-seed, and hang them in a row.

5    'It's better, my liege, they should die a shorter death
Than for your Majesty to starve them on earth.'
With that up starts a Dutch lord, as we hear,
And he says, 'Thou proud Jack,' to my lord Delamere,

6    'Thou ought to be stabbed,' and he turned him about,
'For affronting the king in the Parliament House.'
Then up got a brave duke, the Duke of Devonshire,
Who said, I will fight for my lord Delamere.

7    'He is under age, as I'll make it appear,
So I'll stand in defence of my lord Delamere.'
A stage then was built, and to battle they went,
To kill or be killed it was their intent.

8    The very first blow, as we understand,
Devonshire's rapier went back to his hand;
Then he mused awhile, but not a word spoke,
When against the king's armour his rapier he broke.

9    O then he stept backward, and backward stept he,
And then stept forward my lord Willoughby;
He gave him a rapier, and thus he did say;
Play low, Devonshire, there's treachery, I see.

10    He knelt on his knee, and he gave him the wound,
With that the Dutch lord fell dead on the ground:
The king calld his soldiers, and thus he did say:
Call Devonshire down, take the dead man away.

11    He answered, My liege, I've killed him like a man,
And it is my intent to see what clothing he's got on.
O treachery! O treachery! as I well may say,
It was your intent, O king, to take my life away.

12    'He fought in your armour, while I fought him bare,
And thou, king, shalt win it before thou dost it wear;
I neither do curse king, parliament, or throne,
But I wish every honest man may enjoy his own.

13    'The rich men do flourish with silver and gold,
While poor men are starving with hunger and cold;
And if they hold on as they have begun,
They'll make little England pay dear for a king.'
-------------

['O the Duchess of Devonshire']- Version C; Child 207 Lord Delamere
Llewellynn Jewitt'a Ballads and Songa of Derbyshire, p. 57. "Another version, which I have in Manuscript, has, besides many minor variations, these verses."

1    O the Duchess of Devonshire was standing hard by;
Upon her dear husband she cast her lovely eye:
'Oh, fie upon treachery! there's been treachery I say,
It was your full intent to have taen my duke's life away.'

2    Then away to the parliament these votes all went again,
And there they acted like just and honest men.
I neither curse my king, nor kingdom, crown or throne,
But I wish every honest man to enjoy but what is his own.
----------------

'Lord Delaware'- Version D; Child 207 Lord Delamere
T. Lyle's Ancient Ballads and Songs, p. 135, 1827, as "noted down from the singing of a gentleman," and then "remodelled and smoothed down" by the editor.

1    In the Parliament House a great rout has been there,
Betwixt our good king and the lord Delaware:
Says Lord Delaware to his Majesty full soon,
'Will it please you, my liege, to grant me a boon?'

2    'What's your boon?' says the king, 'Now let me understand.'
'It's, give me all the poor men we've starving in this land,
And without delay I'll hie me to Lincolnshire,
To sow hemp-seed and flax-seed, and hang them all there.

3    'For with hempen cord it's better to stop each poor man's breath
Than with famine you should see your subjects starve to death.'
Up starts a Dutch lord, who to Delaware did say,
Thou deservest to be stabbd! then he turnd himself away.

4    'Thou deservest to be stabbd, and the dogs have thine ears,
For insulting our king, in this parliament of peers.'
Up sprang a Welsh lord, the brave Duke of Devonshire:
'In young Delaware's defence, I'll fight this Dutch lord, my sire.

5    'For he is in the right, and I'll make it so appear;
Him I dare to single combat, for insulting Delaware.'
A stage was soon erected, and to combat they went;
For to kill or to be killd, it was either's full intent.

6    But the very first flourish, when the heralds gave command,
The sword of brave Devonshire bent backward on his hand.
In suspense he paused a while, scannd his foe before he strake,
Then against the king's armour his bent sword he brake.

7    Then he sprang from the stage to a soldier in the ring,
Saying, Lend your sword, that to an end this tragedy we bring.
Though he's fighting me in armour, while I am fighting bare,
Even more than this I'd venture for young Lord Delaware.

8    Leaping back on the stage, sword to buckler now resounds,
Till he left the Dutch lord a bleeding in his wounds.
This seeing, cries the king to his guards without delay,
Call Devonshire down! take the dead man away!

9    'No,' says brave Devonshire, 'I've fought him as a man;
Since he's dead, I will keep the trophies I have won.
For he fought me in your armour, while I fought him bare,
And the same you must win back, my liege, if ever you them wear.

10    'God bless the Church of England! may it prosper on each hand,
And also every poor man now starving in this land.
And while I pray success may crown our king upon his throne,
I'll wish every poor man may long enjoy his own.'

End-Notes

A.  41. Dutch for French, according to some reciters.
82. Oh.

B.  41, 91. Oh.

C.  11. Oh.

DPrinted by Lyle in stanzas of eight short lines.
The copy in Motherwell's Manuscript is not in Motherwell's handwriting. It may have been written down from recollection of Lyle, or may have been arbitrarily altered.
The variations are as follows:
12. Delamare, and always.
21. pray let.
22. now for we've.
24, with flax seed.
31. the poor men's.
42. or for our.
51. it wanting.
62. in his.
63. the stroke.
64. broke.
71. The sprang.
82. he laid.
83. to the.
94. must won: my liege wanting.
101. bliss.
103. the king


Additions and Corrections

To be Corrected in the Print.
110 b, No 207, D, third line. Read p. 135.