Lord Bateman- Ward (VA) c.1854 Davis A

Lord Bateman- Ward (VA) 1854; collected 1914 Davis 

[My date. From Traditional Ballad of Virginia; Kyle Davis Jr.; 1929. His notes follow.

R. Matteson 2014]


YOUNG BEICHAN
(Child, No. 53)

In Virginia the ballad is known as "Lord Bateman," "The Turkish Lady," or as "Lord Bateman and the Turkish Lady." This would indicate, what is indeecl the case, that the Virgina variants are closely related to Child L, "The Loving Ballad of Lord Bateman." The story is well known, Lord Bateman, an Englishman of high degree is discontented and must take a sea voyage. He is captured by the Turks and imprisoned. A lady, daughter of his Turkish captor, sees him in prison and is enamored of him. The attraction is mutual, and after they have vowed that for seven long years neither would wed another, she sets him free and he returnes home. At the  end of this period, having heard nothing of him, lover, she sets out to find him. Lord Bateman has just brough home his bride but when his Turkish love appears he bids the bride's mother take back her daughter, who is none the worse for him, and forthwith he marries the Turkish lady. The Virginia variants, in the main, follow Child L fairly closely, but often they show traces not found in the Child version, such as teh hole bored in the captive's shoulder (see other child versions), the lady's statement that she wants not his gold and silver but only his body, and the naming of India rather than England as the home of the noble lord. There are also certain fairly persistent exclusions, such as the stanza about the tree in the prison (Child L3) and that about the harbor and the ship of fame (Child L 9). But the likenesses are quite sufficient to prove
a common source.

Child says that, " 'Young Beichan,' is a favorite ballad, and most deservedly. There are beautiful repetitions of the story in the ballads of other nations, and it has secondary affinities wit hthe extensive cycle of 'Hind Horn,' the parts of the principal actors in the one being inverted in the other." The story of the ballad he points out, agrees in general outline, and also in some details, with a well-known legend about Gilbert Beket, father of St. Thomas, which legend he recounts at length.  but his conclusion is, "That our ballad has been affected by the legend of Gilbert Beket is altogether likely. . . But the ballad  is not derived from the legend."

For American texts, see Barry, No. 12; Brown, p. 9 (North Carolina); Bulletin,Nos. 2, 3, 5-9, 12; Campbell and Sharp, No. 12 (North Carolina, Kentucky); Cox No.8; Hudson, No. 8 (Mississippi); Journal, XVIII, 209 (Barry, Mass.); XX, 251 (Kittredge, Kentucky); XXVI, 64 (Beatty, Kentucky), 78 (Barry, Pennsylvania, melody only) XXIII, 451 (Barry, Pennsylvania, melody; the Forget-me-not Songster text); XXVI, 353 (Pound, Nebraska, fragment); XXVII, 149, (Perrow, North Carolina); XXX, 294 (Kittredge, Indiana, West Virginia, North Carolina, all fragments); Mackenzie, p. 115; Mackenzie, Ballads, No. 5, p. 392 (melody); Pound,  Syllabus, p. 9 (fragment); Pound Ballads no. 14; Shearin p. 4 (fragment); Shearin and Combs p. 7; Reed Smith No. 3 (text and melody) Reed Smith, No. 3; Wyman and Brockway, p. 54. For additional references, see Journal XXX, 294.

A. "Lord Bateman." Reported by Miss Edith M. Payne. Collected by Miss Grace Ward. Sung by her grandmother, Mrs. L. G. Davis, as sung by her mother about sixty year ago, Princess Anne County. January 20, 1914.

1 In England lived a noble lord,
His riches were beyond compare,
He was the darling of his parents,
To their estate the only heir.

2 He had gold and he had silver,
He had houses of high degree;
But still he never would be contented
Until a voyage he had been to sea.

3 He sailed east and he sailed west
Until he came to India's shore.
There he was taken and put in prison
Where he could see and hear no more.

4 The jailer had an only daughter,
A guy young lady of airs was she.
As she was walking by the door
She chanced Lord Bateman for to see.

5 She stole the keys of her father's prison,
She said Lord Bateman she would (set) free.
She went unto the prison door
And opened it without delay.

6 "What will you give to the fair lady
If she from bondage set you free?"

7 "I have gold and I have silver,
I have houses of high degree.
I'll give them all to the fair lady
If she from bondage set me free."

8 "It's not your gold nor yet your silver,
It's not your houses of high degree;
All that I crave to make me happy,
And all I want is your body."

9 "Let's make a bargain and make it strong,
For seven-long years this bargain shall stand.
That you will wed no other woman,
And I will wed no other man."