Ed de Moel

Child Ballads - Narrative

Burd Isabel and Earl Patrick

  1. 'Burd Bell,' Kinloch Manuscripts, I, 211. Version A
  2. 'Burd Isbel and Sir Patrick,' Buchan's Ballads of the North of Scotland, I, 76. Version B
  3. 'Earl Patrick and Burd Isabel,' Motherwell's Manuscript, p. 440. Version C

Christie, Traditional Ballad Airs, II, 34, I, 42, says that an old woman in Buckie, Enzie, Banff, who died in 1866 at the age of nearly eighty, and whose father was a noted ballad-singer, sang him words which, so far as he could remember, were like those of B.

A. Unmarried Burd Isabel bears a son to Earl Patrick. He has passed his word to make her his wife in case the expected bairn should be a boy, but his mother objects. He now promises to bring her home after the demise of his parents, and in the mean while builds her a gold and silver bower (which for a reason inscrutable is 'strawn round wi sand'). Father and mother die; Patrick takes no step to fulfil his engagement, and Isabel asks why. Patrick wishes that a hundred evils may enter him, and he 'fa oure the brim,' if ever he marries another; nevertheless he weds a duke's daughter. His bride has a fancy to see his son, and Patrick sends his aunt (or his grand-aunt, or his great-grand-aunt) to fetch the boy. Isabel dares any woman to take the bairn away. Patrick comes in person. Isabel repeats the words she had used to his aunt, and reminds him of the curse which he had conditionally wished himself at their last interview. The perjured man turns to go away, the hundred evils enter him, and he falls 'oure the brim.'

B has nearly the same story with additional circumstances. Patrick wishes that eleven devils may attend his last day should he wed another woman. When he goes to inquire how Isabel came to refuse the request he had made through his aunt, he takes the opportunity to make over to her child the third part of his land. She has two clerks, her cousins, at her call, who see to the legal formalities pertaining to this transfer; she commits the boy to one of these, and herself goes to an unco land to drive love out of her mind. We hear of nothing worse happening to Earl Patrick for selling his precious soul than his never getting further ben the church than the door.

C is a variety of B, but not half so long. Whether B has added or C omitted, no reader will much concern himself to know.

St. 7 (nearly) occurs in No 92, B 17, II, 313, and something similar in various ballads.

This page most recently updated on 26-Apr-2011, 16:19:38.
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