Lyrics & Knowledge Personal Pages Record Shop Auction Links Radio & Media Kids Membership Help
The Mudcat Cafesj

Post to this Thread - Sort Descending - Printer Friendly - Home


Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer

DigiTrad:
MAID AND THE PALMER
THE WELL BELOW THE VALLEY


Related threads:
Lyr Add: The Well below the Valley (Christy Moore (18)
(origins) Origins: Well Below the Valley/Maid & Palmer (107) (closed)


Uncle Frank the Singing Insurance Guy 16 Feb 99 - 11:42 PM
Bruce O. 17 Feb 99 - 12:04 AM
rich r 17 Feb 99 - 12:21 AM
The_one_and_only_Dai 17 Feb 99 - 04:29 AM
Ferrara 17 Feb 99 - 08:46 AM
dick greenhaus 17 Feb 99 - 08:50 AM
J. Woodland 17 Feb 99 - 02:19 PM
Bobby Bob, Ellan Vannin 17 Feb 99 - 03:26 PM
Bruce O. 17 Feb 99 - 04:55 PM
rich r 17 Feb 99 - 11:54 PM
Joe Offer 19 Feb 99 - 02:50 PM
Uncle Frank the Singing Insurance Guy 20 Feb 99 - 05:42 PM
Q (Frank Staplin) 03 Jan 09 - 05:48 PM
SINSULL 03 Jan 09 - 06:04 PM
Q (Frank Staplin) 03 Jan 09 - 08:06 PM
Q (Frank Staplin) 03 Jan 09 - 08:15 PM
Nerd 03 Jan 09 - 08:29 PM
Art Thieme 03 Jan 09 - 08:44 PM
dick greenhaus 03 Jan 09 - 09:33 PM
Amos 03 Jan 09 - 10:15 PM
Q (Frank Staplin) 03 Jan 09 - 11:40 PM
Malcolm Douglas 03 Jan 09 - 11:56 PM
Q (Frank Staplin) 04 Jan 09 - 12:04 AM
Anglo 04 Jan 09 - 02:59 AM
SINSULL 04 Jan 09 - 09:55 AM
SINSULL 04 Jan 09 - 10:09 AM
Amos 04 Jan 09 - 12:26 PM
Q (Frank Staplin) 04 Jan 09 - 02:06 PM
Steve Gardham 04 Jan 09 - 07:25 PM
Q (Frank Staplin) 04 Jan 09 - 08:04 PM
Q (Frank Staplin) 04 Jan 09 - 08:44 PM
Nerd 05 Jan 09 - 02:23 AM
Nerd 05 Jan 09 - 02:25 AM
Ruth Archer 05 Jan 09 - 04:55 AM
GUEST,TJ in San Diego 05 Jan 09 - 11:15 AM
SINSULL 05 Jan 09 - 11:36 AM
SINSULL 05 Jan 09 - 11:37 AM
Ruth Archer 05 Jan 09 - 11:42 AM
Roger in Baltimore 05 Jan 09 - 01:15 PM
Steve Gardham 05 Jan 09 - 03:34 PM
SINSULL 05 Jan 09 - 03:44 PM
Q (Frank Staplin) 05 Jan 09 - 04:10 PM
GUEST,harlowpoet 05 Jan 09 - 04:11 PM
SINSULL 05 Jan 09 - 04:15 PM
GUEST,Joseph de Culver City 05 Jan 09 - 04:16 PM
Q (Frank Staplin) 05 Jan 09 - 06:06 PM
PoppaGator 06 Jan 09 - 12:13 PM
Joe Offer 24 Feb 11 - 06:02 AM
GUEST,SteveG 20 Sep 11 - 01:20 PM
IvanB 20 Sep 11 - 02:25 PM
GUEST,SteveG 20 Sep 11 - 05:37 PM
Joe Offer 19 May 17 - 03:25 AM
Joe Offer 19 May 17 - 03:27 AM
keberoxu 26 Dec 19 - 07:50 PM
Richard Mellish 27 Dec 19 - 06:52 AM
keberoxu 06 Apr 20 - 07:40 PM
Tony Rees 21 Feb 22 - 04:46 PM
GUEST,.gargoyle 21 Feb 22 - 07:34 PM
clueless don 23 Feb 22 - 10:27 AM
Tony Rees 23 Feb 22 - 10:52 PM
Tony Rees 12 Apr 22 - 02:12 AM
Tony Rees 12 Apr 22 - 03:33 AM
Tony Rees 15 Apr 22 - 11:01 PM
Tony Rees 15 Apr 22 - 11:26 PM
Tony Rees 15 Apr 22 - 11:28 PM
Tony Rees 16 Apr 22 - 03:04 AM
Steve Gardham 16 Apr 22 - 10:42 AM
Tony Rees 16 Apr 22 - 03:07 PM
Steve Gardham 16 Apr 22 - 05:42 PM
GUEST,Tony Rees 01 May 22 - 02:18 AM
GUEST,Tony Rees 01 May 22 - 02:19 AM
GUEST,Tony Rees 01 May 22 - 02:20 AM
GUEST,Steve Gardham 01 May 22 - 02:21 AM
GUEST,Tony Rees 01 May 22 - 02:21 AM
GUEST,Steve Gardham 01 May 22 - 02:22 AM
GUEST,Tony Rees 01 May 22 - 02:23 AM
GUEST,Steve Gardham 01 May 22 - 02:26 AM
GUEST,Tony Rees 01 May 22 - 02:27 AM
GUEST,Steve Gardham 01 May 22 - 02:27 AM
GUEST,Tony Rees 01 May 22 - 02:28 AM
GUEST,Steve Gardham 01 May 22 - 02:29 AM
Joe Offer 01 May 22 - 02:31 AM
Steve Gardham 01 May 22 - 01:43 PM
Tony Rees 01 May 22 - 02:24 PM
Share Thread
more
Lyrics & Knowledge Search [Advanced]
DT  Forum Child
Sort (Forum) by:relevance date
DT Lyrics:













Subject: Lyrics request Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Uncle Frank the Singing Insurance Guy
Date: 16 Feb 99 - 11:42 PM

Two questions really - (1) does anyone know lyrics to this blues/gospel song and (2) is there a gospel counterpart to Digital Traditions Database? Not many Jesus titles in this database, must be policy. No complaints,I love the database, explains rookie user hastily.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyrics request Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Bruce O.
Date: 17 Feb 99 - 12:04 AM

See Child #21 in DT. The original of it is in the Percy Folio MS.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: Lyr Add: THE WOMAN AT THE WELL
From: rich r
Date: 17 Feb 99 - 12:21 AM

The Woman At The Well (from Rise Up Singing)

Jesus met the woman at the well (3x)
And he told her everything she'd ever done.

He said, "Woman, woman, where is your husband? (3x)
I know everything you've ever done."

She said, "Jesus, Jesus, I ain't got no husband (3x) And you don't know everything I've ever done."

He said, " Woman, woman, you've got 5 husbands (3x)
And the one you have now is not your own.

She said, "This man, this man, he must be a prophet (3x)
He done told me everything I've ever done.

Recordings:

Ian & Sylvia "Four Strong Winds"

Peter Paul & Mary "In concert"

Dave Van Ronk "Sunday Strut"

rich r


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyrics request Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: The_one_and_only_Dai
Date: 17 Feb 99 - 04:29 AM

Is this a bluesed-up (yes, bluesed) version of "Jacob's Well"? Evidence of cross-pollination, methinks. Fascinating...


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyrics request Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Ferrara
Date: 17 Feb 99 - 08:46 AM

There is a site called "The Cyber Hymnal,"

http://tch.simplenet.com/Default.htm,

don't know it you'd consider it gospel. Great music though. Lyrics only, I think.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyrics request Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: dick greenhaus
Date: 17 Feb 99 - 08:50 AM

Uncle FRank- We have no such policy. We include what's submitted.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyrics request Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: J. Woodland
Date: 17 Feb 99 - 02:19 PM

There is a great version of this song on Dave Van Ronk's album: Sunday Street. It on the Philo record label i think.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyrics request Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Bobby Bob, Ellan Vannin
Date: 17 Feb 99 - 03:26 PM

A version of the song was collected in the north of Ireland. There's a version which gave its name to the second Planxty album, The Well Below the Valley

Shoh slaynt,

Bobby Bob


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: Lyr Add: THE MAID AND THE PALMER
From: Bruce O.
Date: 17 Feb 99 - 04:55 PM

Here's the Percy Folio MS text of Child #21. Child called it "The maid and the Palmer".

^^ [Lillumwham]

The: maid, shee went to the well to washe,
Lillumwham, Lillumwham!
the mayd shee went to the well to washe,
whatt then? what then?
the maid she went to the well to washe,
dew ffell of[f] her lilly white fleshe;
Grandam boy, Grandam boy, heye!
Leg a derry, Leg a merry, mett, mer, whoope, whir!
driuance, larumben, Grandam boy, heye!

White shee washee, & white shee ronge,
Lillumwham, &c.
white shee hangd o the hazle wand,
Grandam boy, heye, &c.

There came an old Palmer by the way,
Lillumwham, &c.
sais, "god speed thee well thou faire maid!"
Grandam boy, heye, &c.

"Hast either Cupp or can-
Lillumwham, &c.-
to giue an old Palmer drinke therin."
Grandam boy, heye, &c.

sayes, "I haue neither cupp npr Cann-
Lillumwham, &c.-
to giue and old Palmer drinke therin."
Grandam boy, heye, &c.

"But an thy Lemman came from Rome,
Lillumwham, &c.
Cupps & canne thou wold ffind soone,
Grandam boy, heye, &c.

She sware by god & good St. John,
Lillumwham, &c.
Lemman had shee neuer none;
Grandam boy, heye, &c.

Saies, "peace, ffair mayd! you are fforsworne!
Lillumwham, &c.
Nine children you have borne;
Grandam boy, heye, &c.-

"They~ were buryed vnder thy beds head;- [~ three
Lillumwham, &c.-
other three vnder thy brewing leade;
Grandam boy, heye, &c.

Other three on won play greene,
Lillumwham, &c.
Count, maids, & there be 9."
Grandam boy, heye, &c.

"But I hope yu are the good old man-
Lillumwham, &c.-
That all the world beleeues vpon;
Grandam boy, heye, &c.

"Old Palmer, I pray thee, -
Lillumwham, &c.-
Pennaunce that thou wilt giue to me."
Grandam boy, heye, &c.

"Pennance I can giue the none,-
Lillumwham, &c.-
but 7 yeere to be a stepping stone;
Grandam boy, heye, &c.

"Other seauen a clapper in a bell,-
Lillumwham, &c.-
but 7 yeeres to lead an ape in hell. [*
Grandam boy, heye, &c.

When thou hast thy penance done,
Lillumwham, Lillumwham,
when thou hast thy penance done,
whatt then? what then?
when thou hast thy penance done,
then thoust come a mayden home."
Grandam boy, Grandam boy, heye!
Leg a derry, Leg a merry, met, mer, whoope, whirr!
driuance, Larumben, Grandam boy, heye!

....................

* It was a rather common 17th century saying (I hesitate to say that it was a real belief) that unmarried maids were doomed to lead apes in hell.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyrics request Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: rich r
Date: 17 Feb 99 - 11:54 PM

Child # 21 is certainly an interesting mix of story and nonsense lines although I don't see what the connection is to "Jesus met the Woman at the Well" other than the setting.

rich r


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyrics request Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Joe Offer
Date: 19 Feb 99 - 02:50 PM

Hey, Uncle Frank, take a look at Southern Harmony. Also The Gospel Music Archive. Here's The Cyber Hymnal, mentioned above. I think we may have more listed on our links page.
-Joe Offer-


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyrics request Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Uncle Frank the Singing Insurance Guy
Date: 20 Feb 99 - 05:42 PM

Thanks to all from Uncle Frank! The links are really something. If I recall, my search engine only hit one of them. Funny thing, I shifted gears and went to get lyrics to "Precious Lord, Take My Hand" and couldn't find the hymn. Baptist hymn, black gospel background, written by Thomas Dorsey from Chicago, I know that much, and our Episcopal church choir has sheet music for a goopy 3-4 version of it with just one verse, repeated several times. But I heard it played in 4-4 time on Preservation Jazz Band tape once (is that their name? New Orleans outfit) and it was terrific.

Guess I'll see what the search engine can do with Baptists. Thanks again everybody.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: Lyr. Add: Well Below the Valley (C. Moore)
From: Q (Frank Staplin)
Date: 03 Jan 09 - 05:48 PM

Lyr. Add: WELL BELOW THE VALLEY
(Christy Moore; new words; trad.)
Green grows the lily-o
Right among the bushes-o.

A gentleman was passing by
And he asked for a drink as he was dry
At the well below the valley-o
Green grows the lily-o
Right among the bushes-o.

My cup is full up to the brim
And if I were to stoop I might fall in
At the well below the valley-o
Green grows etc.

If your true love was passing by
You'd fill him a drink if he was dry
At the well below the valley-o
Green grows etc.

She swore by grass, she swore by corn
Her true love had never been born
At the well below the valley-o
Green grows etc.

He said to her you're swearing wrong
Six fine children you've been born
At the well below the valley-o
Green grows, etc.

If you be a man of noble fame
You'll tell to me the father of them
At the well below the valley-o
Green grows etc.

There's one of them by your brother John
At the well below the valley-o
One of them by your Uncle Don
At the well below the valley-o
Two of them by your father dear
At the well below the valley-o
Green grows, etc.

If you be a man of noble fame
You'll tell to me what did happen to them
At the well below the valley-o
Green grows, etc.

There's one of them buried beneath the tree
At the well below the valley-o
Another two buried beneath the stone
At the well below the valley-o
Two of them outside the graveyard wall
At the well below the valley-o
Green grows, etc.

If you be a man of noble fame
You'll tell to me what will happen myself
At the well below the valley-o
Green grows, etc.

You'll be seven years a-ringing a bell
At the well below the valley-o
And seven years burning in hell
At the well below the valley-o

I'll be seven years a-ringing a bell
But the Lord above may save my soul
From burning in hell at the well below the valley-o
Green grows the lily-o
Right among the bushes-o
Green grows the lily-o
Right among the bushes-o.

Right Among

(Christy Moore - The Official Website -)


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: SINSULL
Date: 03 Jan 09 - 06:04 PM

Wade In The Water

Jesus met the woman
Met her at the well
Wade in the water
He said "Look out lady
You're headed for hell"
Wade in the water

Wade in the water
Wade in the water children
Wade in the water.
God's gonna trouble the water.

Maybe?


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Q (Frank Staplin)
Date: 03 Jan 09 - 08:06 PM

We do have two songs here, as richr pointed out. SINSULL has added a third (interesting, though; the "Look out, lady ..." lines are new to me).

There may be a conection way back when, if 'gentleman' or 'palmer' is changed to Jesus.
There is a Coptic song (on youtube) about the Samaritan woman (El-Samaria)at the well; use of the myth (John 4) in song seems to be old. No translation of the Amharic(?) of the Coptic song. There is a full choral mass setting by Gouzes.

Did Dave van Ronk compose the modern 'Jesus met...' song? The lyrics in "Rise Up Singing" (Sing Out book) seem to have a Af-Am gospel slant, but I haven't found the song in any of the gospel sites.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Q (Frank Staplin)
Date: 03 Jan 09 - 08:15 PM

The Cristy Moore lyrics posted above are close to those sung by John Reilly, Roscommon, Ireland, 1969, and printed with musical score in B. H. Bronson, 1976, "The Singing Tradition of Child's Popular Ballads," Child No. 21, 2. "The Well Below the Valley," pp. 83-85.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Nerd
Date: 03 Jan 09 - 08:29 PM

Thanks Q,

John Reilly's recording of the song was also released by Topic Records on The Voice of the People, volume 3.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Art Thieme
Date: 03 Jan 09 - 08:44 PM

My absolute favorite version of this song was the one recorded by TRACY NELSON on what I think was her first solo LP appearance. This album was on Prestige Bluesville Records I'm fairly certain---and it was produced by Sam Charters. Ms Nelson was very young and very thin back then---circa 1960s. An old friend, the late Bob Pearlman of Chicago, had a huge crush on her in those days. And so did Mr. Sam Charters.

I'd love to get that LP on a CD now. Thinking of it provokes good memories of fun times.

Yes, that is the same Tracy Nelson who was lead singer of an early San Francisco rock band but the name of that group eludes me. And she still is singing, but out of Nashville here in 2009.

Art Thieme


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: dick greenhaus
Date: 03 Jan 09 - 09:33 PM

WEll, Mahalia was doing a knockout job of "Jesus Met the Woman at the Well quite a few years before D van R popped onto the scene. I believe he learned from a record I lent him back in the 50s.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Amos
Date: 03 Jan 09 - 10:15 PM

The lyrics first given are almost identical to those sung by Mahalia Jackson in one of her first LPs. One verse omitted upthread describes the woman running through the town telling people that she met a man who told her everything she had done.

A


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Q (Frank Staplin)
Date: 03 Jan 09 - 11:40 PM

The post by Dick Greenhaus sent me to my collection. Mahalia Jackson sang it at Newport in 1958. The composer credit is to James W. Alexander.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Malcolm Douglas
Date: 03 Jan 09 - 11:56 PM

It should be noted that the comment 'Christy Moore; new words' is more than a little misleading. Only minor alterations have been made to John Reilly's text; the 'official website' fails even to mention him or Tom Munnelly, which really is inexcusable.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Q (Frank Staplin)
Date: 04 Jan 09 - 12:04 AM

Alexander was a member of the "Pilgrim Travelers." Mahalia Jackson recorded it first in 1954.

The first recording of the song collected in Ireland, "Well Below the Valley," seems to be the one by John Reilly.
The Topic album vol. 3, with folk material by several singers including Reilly, is readily available (cduniverse in N. Am., etc.). Thanks for the post, Nerd.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Anglo
Date: 04 Jan 09 - 02:59 AM

As has been said, two separate songs (not counting Sinsull's fragment).

John Reilly's version of the older ballad was picked up by Planxty, among others. It's sad it doesn't get properly attributed. As far as I know it's the only collected version of 'The Maid and the Palmer' - Martin Carthy, et al, first with Steeleye Span and later with Brass Monkey concocted a really nice version though.

I forget where I learned the gospel song - it might have been DVR - ah, these many years ago.

Malcolm, really great to see you back, I hope you're feeling and doing well. Happy new year!

John


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: SINSULL
Date: 04 Jan 09 - 09:55 AM

Mine is "Wade In The Water" as sung by Odetta on an LP called Hootenanny, late 50s early 60s.I can provide most of the lyrics. Sung as a spiritual.

Wade In The Water

Chorus:
Wade in the water
Wade in the water children
Wade in the water
God's gonna trouble the water.

Jesus met the woman met her at the well
refrain: God's gonna trouble the water.
He said Look out lady you're headed for hell
refrain

CHORUS

Look at those babies dressed in red
refrain
Must be the children Moses led
refrain

Chorus


Look at those ladies dressed in white
refrain
Must be the children of the Israelites.
refrain

CHORUS

When I get to heaven- sing and shout
refrain
Nobody there can turn me out
refrain

CHORUS


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: SINSULL
Date: 04 Jan 09 - 10:09 AM

No, it was Miriam Makeba. Somewhere I still have the LP. Will have to dig it out.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Amos
Date: 04 Jan 09 - 12:26 PM

"Wade in the Water" has numerous verses in various versions, including all the widely used "dressed in ___" couplets, in the form:

"Who's that yonder, dressed in _____"
"Must be ___________________________".

As in:

Red__________________The children Moses left for dead
White--------------The children of the Israelites
Blue---------------The Hypocrites a-coming through
Black---------------The Hypocrites a-comin' back

A.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Q (Frank Staplin)
Date: 04 Jan 09 - 02:06 PM

Sinsull's "Wade in the Water" (Makeba(?) is a combination of two songs, "Wade in the Water" and "Jesus Met a Woman at the Well;" a very common occurrence in spiritual songs in which recombination was common, and a practice continued in later gospel songs.
As Amos posts, "numerous verses in various versions."

"Wade in the Water" seems to have its origin as a baptizing hymn. A version is in the DT, and a number of versions are included in thread 6108, "Wade in the Water." Unfortunately, several posts there are on other subjects, forcing the reader to wade in dilutant streams.
Wade in the Water


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 04 Jan 09 - 07:25 PM

Regarding the palmer=Jesus, Child's interpretation was that the Palmer was 'God' himself. In the Scandinavian analogues to Child 21 the woman is Mary Magdalene and the palmer is Jesus. My guess is that the 2 songs are related and that the blues versions derive from Scandinavian immigrants.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: Lyr. Add: The Well Below the Valley (Reilly)
From: Q (Frank Staplin)
Date: 04 Jan 09 - 08:04 PM

Lyr. Add: THE WELL BELOW THE VALLEY
Sung by John Reilly, 1969

1
A gentleman he was passing by.
He axed a drink as he got dry
At the well below the valley O.
Green grows the lily O
Right among the bushes O.
2
My cup it is an (in? on?) overflow
And if I do stoop I may fall in
At the well below the valley O.
Green grows the lily O
Right among the bushes O.
3
Well if your true love was passing by
You'd fill him a drink if he got dry
At the well below the valley O.
Green grows, etc.
4
She swore by grass and swore by corn
That her true love was never born.
I say, fair maiden, you've swore in wrong
At the well below the valley O.
Green grows, etc.
5
Well if you're a man of that noble fame
You'll tell to me the father o' them
At the well below the valley O.
Green grows, etc.
6
Two o' them by your father dear
At the well below the valley O.
Green grows, etc.
7
Two more o' them came by your uncle Dan
At the well below the valley O.
Green grows, etc.
8
Another one by your brother John
At the well below the valley O.
Green grows, etc.
9
Well if you're a man of the noble fame
You'll tell to me what happened then
At the well below the valley O.
Green grows, etc.
10
There was two o' them buried by the kitchen fire
At the well below the valley O.
Green grows, etc.
11
Two more o' them buried by the stable door
At the well below the valley O.
Green grows, etc.
12
The other was buried by the well
At the well below the valley O.
Green grows, etc.
13
Well if you're a man of the noble fame
You'll tell to me what will happen mysel'
At the well below the valley O.
Green grows, etc.
14
You'll be seven long years a-ringin' a bell
At the well below the valley O.
Green grows, etc.
15
You'll be seven more a-portin' in Hell
At the well below the valley O.
Green grows, etc.
16
I'll be seven long years a-ringin' the bell
But the Lord above might save my soul
From portin' in Hell
At the well below the valley O.
Green grows the lily O
Right among the bushes O.

"Recorded by Tom Munnelly, D. K and E. Wilgus and sent by Mr. Munnelly to the Editor. Printed with musical score.
Child No. 21, "The Maid and the Palmer"
"It was not to be expected that a traditional version of this ballad which had barely survived in a fragmentary form in Scotland a century and a half ago, should have turned up in Ireland after the Second World War. But such is the case, and we have word of yet another variant in the same vicinity in the year 1970. The musical tradition is very unstable, and perhaps the tunes have been borrowed for the nonce, from material well worn in other connections. In the British Isles, the persons of the ballad are equally blurred and indistinct in identity. On the Continent, the Christ is more perceptible, but the Magdalen and the woman of Samaria are still confused. In the penances forecast, the ballad seems very probably to have crossed the sturdier tradition of "The Cruel Mother" (No. 20)."
Quoted from p. 83, Bertrand Harris Bronson, 1976, "The Singing Tradition of Child's Popular Ballads," Princeton Univ. Press.

Child, "The English and Scottish Popular Ballads," mentions the Percy Ms as the only English copy, and two fragments communicated to Sir Walter Scott.
Other versions of the story of the woman of Samara are widespread; Danish, Norwegian, Finnish, Swedish; some Slavic ballads, Moravian, Russian, French, etc., and there is an extended Coptic version on youtube.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Q (Frank Staplin)
Date: 04 Jan 09 - 08:44 PM

The blues versions could be independent. In one version, "Look out, lady, you're headed for Hell," the line is an interjection in form, and the story is absent, most of the version being "Wade in the Water. It could have no relation to the 'woman at the well.'

The verse quoted by SINSULL refers to the woman at the well, but the subject is one that has been used for a long time by the man in the pulpit. It could be independent of the complex brought up by Child.
On the other hand, all of the countries mentioned by Child have sent many immigrants to North America. Is there any reason to select Scandinavians as the culprits?
So far, the 'blues' versions known are modern, but this could change.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Nerd
Date: 05 Jan 09 - 02:23 AM

Malcolm,

Not to quibble on this, but Christy Moore's official website does in fact mention both John Reilly and Tom Munnelly in connection with this song, albeit not in the lyrics section. In particular, this review, which Christy has taken the trouble to put up at the site, not only acknowledges Reilly for singing the song and Munnelly for collecting it, but makes it clear that Christy does so when playing the song in concert.

The people in charge of putting up the lyrics on Christy's site put some songs up with only lyrics, others with lyrics and chords, and a few with an essay by Christy. Only those few with an essay have their traditional sources revealed; otherwise most traditional songs are credited only to "traditional." The songs that don't have an essay state "Sorry no essay at present," so we can hope that eventually all songs will carry Christy's notes. However, in Christy's songbook, in album sleeve notes, and in concert, he routinely sings the praises of John Reilly and Tom Munnelly and credits them with preserving this song.

Finally, the credit on the site is not "Christy Moore; new words," but "Traditional With New Words By Christy Moore." Christy has stated elsewhere that he sometimes had trouble understanding what Reilly was singing, and so filled in words and verses for himself in some of the songs he learned from Reilly. I'm guessing that's all this credit is meant to convey.

Generally, Christy is very conscientious about mentioning his sources, which is why I feel it's important to point this out. I don't think the circumstances merit the word "inexcusable."


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Nerd
Date: 05 Jan 09 - 02:25 AM

By the way, to echo Anglo...it's marvelous to have you back, Malcolm!


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Ruth Archer
Date: 05 Jan 09 - 04:55 AM

"Other versions of the story of the woman of Samara are widespread;"

Completely OT, but out of interest, one of the Sheffield carols is called At Jacob's Well, and is based on the story: "Samaria's daughter little thought that Jacob's God was near..."


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: GUEST,TJ in San Diego
Date: 05 Jan 09 - 11:15 AM

"Jesus Met a Woman at the Well" was done by the great Josh White on an album I had back in 1959 or so (long lost). Also, didn't Hugh Masakela do an instrumental version (a hit, as I recall) of "Wade in the Water back in the 1960's or '70's?


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: SINSULL
Date: 05 Jan 09 - 11:36 AM

I thought Wade In The Water reeferred to the pool (Gethsemane?) where the angel of God would trouble the waters and the first one in was cured of whatever affliction they had.

Certainly that's what "God's gonna trouble the water" refers to.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: SINSULL
Date: 05 Jan 09 - 11:37 AM

Pool at Jerusalem.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Ruth Archer
Date: 05 Jan 09 - 11:42 AM

One of the verses I learned to Wade in the Water was

The River Jordan is chilly and cold
Chills the body but not the soul


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Roger in Baltimore
Date: 05 Jan 09 - 01:15 PM

Art,

I think Tracy Nelson's band was Mother Earth.

Roger in Baltimore


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 05 Jan 09 - 03:34 PM

Q,
The reason I specifically postulated the Scandinavian link is that these versions refer specifically to Jesus meeting MM at the well whereas the French and Moravian don't. Most areas have Mary Magdalen but the story starts to deviate somewhat in the southern European versions and they seem to concentrate on the penances.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: SINSULL
Date: 05 Jan 09 - 03:44 PM

The woman at the well was not Mary Magdalene.

http://www.lifeintheholyland.com/woman_at_the_well.htm


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Q (Frank Staplin)
Date: 05 Jan 09 - 04:10 PM

SINSULL, that is correct, but the folk versions confuse the two.
Child said, "The story of the woman of Samaria, John iv, is in all these blended with mediaeval traditions concerning Mary Magdalen, who is assumed to be the same with the woman "which was a sinner" in Luke, vii 37, and also with Mary, sister of Lazarus."

True that Scandinavian tales identify Jesus at the well, but so do versions from France, Gascony and Provence, as do some from the Iberian area, according to Child. It is God himself in Moravian versions mentioned by Child.
The variance in European stories seems to be considerable.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: GUEST,harlowpoet
Date: 05 Jan 09 - 04:11 PM

This song on you tube is on the same theme.

Everlasting Water


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: SINSULL
Date: 05 Jan 09 - 04:15 PM

Sorry - didn't mean my comment to sound so bitchy. At work and have limited time to post.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: GUEST,Joseph de Culver City
Date: 05 Jan 09 - 04:16 PM

Tj in SD---                                                                     A piano donminated instrumental version of "Wade In the Water" in the '60s was a hit for The Ramsey Lewis Trio, though Mr. Masakela may have recorded a version as well.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: Q (Frank Staplin)
Date: 05 Jan 09 - 06:06 PM

Didn't sound that way to me. I write in 'shorthand' at times and it reads like abrupt comment.

A nice version Nerd posted in the other thread! I may order the Glenbuchat Ballads.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Lyr Req: Jesus Met a Woman at the Well
From: PoppaGator
Date: 06 Jan 09 - 12:13 PM

As far as I'm concerned, "Wade in the Water" is a completely different song than the "Jesus Met the Woman at the Well" that I know, which is the song referenced in the third message of this thread, the one which appears in Rise Up Singing and on albums by Ian and Sylvia, Peter Paul & Mary, and Dave Van Ronk.

Both excellent traditional-gospel songs, but definitely different ones ~ despite the fact that some versions of "Wade" may include lyrics about a woman at a well.

*********************

I can verify what Roger in Baltimore posted earlier today ~ Tracy Nelson's band was called "Mother Earth," and they often performed an old blues song of that same title. ("No matter how rich you are / No matter how much you worth . . . When it all comes down / You got to go back to Mother Earth.")

About ten years ago, Tracy collaborated with Marcia Ball and Irma Thomas on a really great album, and they toured together for a while. Tracy was a great admirer of Irma (the longtime "Soul Queen of New Orleans"),and over the years had recorded several of Irma's greatest hits, with and without Mother Earth.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: Origins: Maid and the Palmer
From: Joe Offer
Date: 24 Feb 11 - 06:02 AM

The Maid and the Palmer (Child 21) is the song for February 24 in Jon Boden's A Folk Song a Day project.

Here's the Traditional Ballad Index entry for "Maid and the Palmer":

    Maid and the Palmer, The [Child 21]

    DESCRIPTION: A woman comes to a well, where she meets a man who asks of her a drink. She says she can offer him none because her leman/husband is away. The man tells her that she has no leman, and goes on to tell of her sins and assigns a punishment
    AUTHOR: unknown
    EARLIEST DATE: c. 1818 (GlenbuchatBallads)
    KEYWORDS: Jesus religious adultery
    FOUND IN: Britain(Scotland(Aber)) Ireland
    REFERENCES (10 citations):
    Child 21, "The Maid and the Palmer" (2 texts)
    Bronson's (21 in addenda), "The Maid and the Palmer" (2 versions in addenda)
    BronsonSinging 21, "The Maid and the Palmer" (2 versions: #1, #2)
    GlenbuchatBallads, pp. 89-90, "The Maid of Coldingham" (1 text)
    Leach, pp. 106-107, "The Maid and the Palmer" (1 text)
    OBB 99, "The Maid and the Palmer" (1 text)
    PBB 3, "The Maid and the Palmer" (1 text)
    TBB 37, "The Maid and the Palmer" (1 text)
    Niles 15, "The Maid and the Palmer" (1 text, which Niles identifies with Child 21, but the fragment is so short that it could equally be part of Child 20)
    DT 21, MAIDPALM MAIDPAL2*

    ST C021 (Full)
    Roud #2335
    RECORDINGS:
    John Reilly, "The Well Below the Valley" (on Voice03)
    CROSS-REFERENCES:
    cf. "Jesus Met the Woman at the Well" (subject)
    cf. "See the Woman at the Well" (subject)
    ALTERNATE TITLES:
    The Samaritan Woman
    The Well Below the Valley
    Jesus Met the Woman at the Well (?)
    Seven Years
    NOTES [69 words]: For the story of Jesus and the Woman of Samaria, see John 4:5-26.
    The second part of the song, in which the woman is given a penance in the form of a series of transformations, has no parallel in the Biblical story, although such transformations are attested elsewhere -- notably in "The Cruel Mother" [Child 20]. In fact, I wonder if the ending of this song in the Percy text might not be taken from Child 20. - RBW
    Last updated in version 4.1
    File: C021

    Go to the Ballad Search form
    Go to the Ballad Index Song List

    Go to the Ballad Index Instructions
    Go to the Ballad Index Bibliography or Discography

    The Ballad Index Copyright 2019 by Robert B. Waltz and David G. Engle.


Reinhard Zierke's page on Maid/Palmer is quite interesting.
-Joe-


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: GUEST,SteveG
Date: 20 Sep 11 - 01:20 PM

Joe
'I wonder if the ending of this song in the Percy text might not be taken from Child 20'

I think the RBW who made this statement is Bob? It's actually much more likely the other way round. The earliest version of Child 20 has none of the pennances, and in fact they only occur in a small number of Scottish versions. My own take on this is that some enterprising Scots antiquarian added the verses to a version of The Cruel Mother having taken them from Percy's version of Child 21. Once this has happened it takes but a few years for the new version to enter oral tradition.

Apologies if this is repeating what I've said earlier in the thread somewhere.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: IvanB
Date: 20 Sep 11 - 02:25 PM

A palmer was a person who wore crossed palm leaves to signify the person had made a pilgrimage to the holy land. Such persons were held in especial reverence during the middle ages, given almost the status of holy orders.

Obviously the two songs have been intermingled over the years. I suspect The Maid and the Palmer has its origins in the biblical story of Jesus and the woman at the well, but I never interpreted the palmer as being anyone but a citizen given a mantle of holiness by his circumstances.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: GUEST,SteveG
Date: 20 Sep 11 - 05:37 PM

An interesting possibility. Everyone has assumed because of the palmer's supernatural powers he is either God or Jesus in disguise, but the beliefs of the period might well have endowed supernatural powers of second sight and issuing penances to a palmer.

However if Child was right the ballad is a translation of a continental ballad and therefore we should look to the continental versions to tell us who he was.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: ADD: When Jesus Met the Woman at the Well
From: Joe Offer
Date: 19 May 17 - 03:25 AM

WHEN JESUS MET THE WOMAN AT THE WELL

When Jesus met the woman at the well,
Oh she went running to tell,
She said come to see a man at the well,
He told me everything that I done.

She cried oh, oh, he must be a prophet,
She cried oh, oh, he must be a prophet,
She cried oh, oh, he must be a prophet,
He told me everything that I done.

He said woman where is your husband?
She said that I don't have one.
He said woman you done had five,
And the one you got now ain't yours.

She cried oh, oh, you must be a prophet,
She cried oh, oh, you must be a prophet,
Oh, oh, you must be a prophet,
You told me everything that I done.

Oh he told that Messiah was coming,
Oh he told me everything that I done.
Oh he told that Messiah was coming,
Oh he told me everything that I done.
She cried oh, oh, etc.

Notes: The Gospel According to St. John, Chapter 4, tells that Jesus came to a well in Samaria, and engaged in conversation with a woman drawing water there. He spoke to her about the water of everlasting life which he had to offer, and she asked whether she might have some. "Jesus saith unto her, Go call thy husband and come hither. The woman answered and said, I have no husband. Jesus said unto her, Thou has well said, I have no husband; for thou hast had five husbands; and he whom thou now hast is not thy husband: in that saidst thou truly. The woman saith unto him, Sir, I perceive that thou art a prophet." This human, intimate exchange, and the woman's report to the village on the event, is recorded in the... song.

Another version of this song stresses a slightly different point in its choral stanza, and mentions that the people of the village, in response to the woman's report, came to see the man at the well
:

Oh listen, don't you hear what he say?
Oh listen, don't you hear what he say?
Oh listen, don't you hear what he say?

He say the truth is the light, and I am the way.
When the people of that city
Came and saw Jesus settin' at the well,
He say I can give water free
That'll save you from a burnin' hell.

Source: Negro Folk Music U.S.A., by Harold Courlander (1963, Columbia University Press), pp 59-60


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: Joe Offer
Date: 19 May 17 - 03:27 AM

Here's the Traditional Ballad Index entry on this song. Apparently, we don't have lyrics for this song in the Digital Tradition.

Jesus Met the Woman at the Well

DESCRIPTION: Jesus meets a (Samaritan) woman as she comes to draw water, and tells her "everything [she] has ever done." She proclaims him a prophet, and announces the news in the town
AUTHOR: unknown
EARLIEST DATE: 1947 (recorded by the Selah Jubilee Quartet)
KEYWORDS: Bible religious Jesus
FOUND IN: US
REFERENCES (2 citations):
Courlander-NFM, pp. 59-60, "(Jesus Met the Woman at the Well)" (1 text plus a fragment); p. 252, "Jesus Met the Woman at the Well" (1 tune, partial text)
ADDITIONAL: Harold Courlander, _A Treasury of Afro-American Folklore_, Crown Publishers, 1976, p. 325, "(no title)" (1 text); pp. 348-349, "(When Jesus Met the Woman at the Well" (1 text, 1 tune)

Roud #21781
RECORDINGS:
Pilgrim Travelers, "Jesus Met the Woman at the Well" (Specialty 329, n.d.)
CROSS-REFERENCES:
cf. "The Maid and the Palmer" [Child 21] (subject)
cf. "See the Woman at the Well" (subject)
cf. "Lift Him Up That's All" (subject)
NOTES [11 words]: For the story of Jesus and the Woman of Samaria, see John 4:5-26 - RBW
Last updated in version 5.0
File: CNFM059

Go to the Ballad Search form
Go to the Ballad Index Song List

Go to the Ballad Index Instructions
Go to the Ballad Index Bibliography or Discography

The Ballad Index Copyright 2019 by Robert B. Waltz and David G. Engle.

Fairfield Four recording: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n1RcR-x-Ewo

Dave Van Ronk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1UeFu7QdZPI

Sister Rosetta Tharpe: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1hsG3gs6C_k

Mahalia Jackson: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5SYxW8uCVkU

Ian & Sylvia: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=je6MFG_H5HY


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: keberoxu
Date: 26 Dec 19 - 07:50 PM

While Comcast was wrestling with the Mudcat Forum,
I was looking up the "woman at the well" song.

This thread, I have to say, is as confusing as it is informative.
There are a bunch of songs on this thread
and some are clearly related, others are not so much.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: Richard Mellish
Date: 27 Dec 19 - 06:52 AM

> some are clearly related, others are not so much.

Insofar as each of them involves a conversation at a well, where the man (whoever he is) tells the woman (whoever she is) about her personal life, they all clearly derive from the same original story, so I would count them as cousins. However they are so different that any attempt to identify their exact relationships would involve a lot of missing links.

BTW apropos Ruth Archer 05 Jan 09 - 04:55 AM saying "Completely OT": not at all. Jacob's Well (which is one of my favourites of the "Sheffield" carols) concerns the very same encounter, albeit with neither the personal revelations not the penances, so an entirely independent telling of the same biblical story.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: keberoxu
Date: 06 Apr 20 - 07:40 PM

The recorded version of the song that I first heard
came from Peter Paul and Mary on their live-in-concert album.

And here is a film clip of an actual live performance by same.

Jesus Met the Woman at the Well


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: Tony Rees
Date: 21 Feb 22 - 04:46 PM

This thread interests me as it sheds light on the origins/affinities of "The Well Below The Valley" as recorded by Christy Moore and Planxty, originating from the singing of John Reilly as recorded by Tom Munnelly in the 1960s. Revisiting this topic a few days back, I came across the recording by Thomas Moran previously referenced in a parallel (now closed) thread "Origins: Well below the valley - discuss!" which has now been posted to youtube at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DuhdiVbqhc4, and seems (as pointed out previously) to clearly be verses from "The Maid and the Palmer" interspersed with refrain lines from "The Cruel Mother".

Anyway, I visited the Wikipedia page for the Maid and the Palmer and found that quite a lot could be added there, in respect of the Moran recording and also the reappearance of the c.1818 version entitled "The Maid of Coldingham" in two different publications within the past 30 years or so. Hopefully I have represented the info previously expressed here by relevant persons more well informed than I - see current version at Wikipedia: The Maid and the Palmer. Regards - Tony


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: GUEST,.gargoyle
Date: 21 Feb 22 - 07:34 PM

We were singing this in 1968.

Arlin Megliaso played guitar.
It was an evangelical outreach.

We were in the front lawn space, of the Griffith Park observatory, on a bitter cold December night


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: clueless don
Date: 23 Feb 22 - 10:27 AM

I apologize if this has already been mentioned, but I have a recording of this song (the maid and the palmer) on an album by a British group called "Brass Monkey" - or maybe that was the name of the album.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: Tony Rees
Date: 23 Feb 22 - 10:52 PM

Yes, Brass Monkey's version is based on the words given by Child with a few modifications of their own ... Martin Carthy and John Kirkpatrick (of Brass Monkey) had previously performed the same song/version with a late incarnation of Steeleye Span... More info at https://mainlynorfolk.info/steeleye.span/songs/themaidandthepalmer.html.

BTW I have added a bit more info over the past couple of days regarding the history and content of the ballad to the Wikipedia page at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Maid_and_the_Palmer if anyone is interested...

Regards - Tony


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: Tony Rees
Date: 12 Apr 22 - 02:12 AM

Well I added a bit more to this thread but I think it has been lost, so a quick precis below...

It seems that John ("Jacko") Reilly's 2 performance(s) of "The Well Below The Valley" as recorded and notated by Tom Munnelly, D.K. Wilgus and reproduced in Bronson's "Traditional Tunes of the Child Ballads" were not without precedent after all. In 1954, the song collector Seamus Ennis recorded singer Thomas Moran of Mohill, Co. Leitrim singing a partial version (6 verses only), which actually made it to a 1961 Caedmon LP under a different title, "The Cruel Mother" - Thomas sang what appears to be portions of the verses of "The Well Below..." interspersed with refrain lines from "The Cruel Mother", hence the confusion. Thomas sings:

O your first little child with the golden locks
All along and a-lonely-O
And you've buried him under your own bed stock
Down by the greenwood sidey-O

You've buried three more on your way going home
And you've buried three more on that butting stone

Well you'll be seven long years a wolf in the woods
And you'll be seven long years a fish in the floods

You'll be seven long years a-ringing the bell
And you'll be seven long years a-burning in hell

Well I'd like very well to be a wolf in the woods
And I'd like very well to be a fish in the floods

I'd like very well to be a-ringing the bell
But the Lord may save my soul from hell.


Also, in 1955 a "full text" of the Well Below the Valley variant, with the opening verse:

There was a rider passin' by / There was a rider passing by / He askhed a drink, as he was dry / At the well below the valley, oh! / My washing tub it is afloat / Green grows the valley, oh!

by Pádraig Ó Móráin from Anna Ní Mháille, an old lady from Achill Island in County Mayo (text reproduced in Anne O'Connor, "Child Murderess and Dead Child Traditions", Helsinki, 1991) - I have not seen the full version, but several other verses are accessible via Google Books "snippet view".

Again, in 1972 and 1973, Tom Munnelly recorded additional versions of the song from 2 other travellers, a Willie A. Reilly aged 35, and a Martin Reilly aged 73, from different localities; and the late contemporary Irish singer Liam Weldon also had a partial version, as learned from the singing of Mary Duke ("a traveller?") which he recorded on a 1976 Mulligan LP (you can hear this at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gZZbbxhZVlM).

Finally, another probable fragment was recorded recently, from Julia Power, a traveller, in 2015-2016, see The Well Down in the Valley (Child 21) (Fragment) - Julia Power.

So quite a lot more extensive in Ireland than originally thought, apparently...

Cheers - Tony


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: Tony Rees
Date: 12 Apr 22 - 03:33 AM

Apparently the version from Willie Reilly also discloses the palmer's true identity in this variant:

(Stanza 5) 'Oh, for I am the Lord that rules on high; '
Green grows the lily-O ;
'Oh, I am the Lord that rules on high; '
In the well below the valley-O .

(Stanza 6) 'Oh for if you're the Lord that rules on high ...
Oh the Lord may save my soul from Hell.'

This and some of the other information from McCabe, Mary Diane (1980). "A critical study of some traditional religious ballads." M.A. Thesis, University of Durham, 471 pp. Available at http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/7804/1/7804_4801.PDF


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Well Below the Valley/Maid & Palmer
From: Tony Rees
Date: 15 Apr 22 - 11:01 PM

Joe has kindly reactivated this thread, so I will copy here some information posted to another, less exactly relevant one (copied from "Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer"):

It seems that John ("Jacko") Reilly's 2 performance(s) of "The Well Below The Valley" as recorded and notated by Tom Munnelly, D.K. Wilgus and reproduced in Bronson's "Traditional Tunes of the Child Ballads" were not without precedent after all. In 1954, the song collector Seamus Ennis recorded singer Thomas Moran of Mohill, Co. Leitrim singing a partial version (6 verses only), which actually made it to a 1961 Caedmon LP under a different title, "The Cruel Mother" - Thomas sang what appears to be portions of the verses of "The Well Below..." interspersed with refrain lines from "The Cruel Mother", hence the confusion. Thomas sings:

O your first little child with the golden locks
All along and a-lonely-O
And you've buried him under your own bed stock
Down by the greenwood sidey-O

You've buried three more on your way going home
And you've buried three more on that butting stone

Well you'll be seven long years a wolf in the woods
And you'll be seven long years a fish in the floods

You'll be seven long years a-ringing the bell
And you'll be seven long years a-burning in hell

Well I'd like very well to be a wolf in the woods
And I'd like very well to be a fish in the floods

I'd like very well to be a-ringing the bell
But the Lord may save my soul from hell.


Also, in 1955 a "full text" of the Well Below the Valley variant, with the opening verse:

There was a rider passin' by / There was a rider passing by / He askhed a drink, as he was dry / At the well below the valley, oh! / My washing tub it is afloat / Green grows the valley, oh!

by Pádraig Ó Móráin from Anna Ní Mháille, an old lady from Achill Island in County Mayo (text reproduced in Anne O'Connor, "Child Murderess and Dead Child Traditions", Helsinki, 1991) - I have not seen the full version, but several other verses are accessible via Google Books "snippet view".

Again, in 1972 and 1973, Tom Munnelly recorded additional versions of the song from 2 other travellers, a Willie A. Reilly aged 35, and a Martin Reilly aged 73, from different localities; and the late contemporary Irish singer Liam Weldon also had a partial version, as learned from the singing of Mary Duke ("a traveller?") which he recorded on a 1976 Mulligan LP (you can hear this at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gZZbbxhZVlM).

Finally, another probable fragment was recorded recently, from Julia Power, a traveller, in 2015-2016, see The Well Down in the Valley (Child 21) (Fragment) - Julia Power.

So quite a lot more extensive in Ireland than originally thought, apparently...

[follow on from the above]

Apparently the version from Willie Reilly also discloses the palmer's true identity in this variant:

(Stanza 5) 'Oh, for I am the Lord that rules on high; '
Green grows the lily-O ;
'Oh, I am the Lord that rules on high; '
In the well below the valley-O .

(Stanza 6) 'Oh for if you're the Lord that rules on high ...
Oh the Lord may save my soul from Hell.'

This and some of the other information from McCabe, Mary Diane (1980). "A critical study of some traditional religious ballads." M.A. Thesis, University of Durham, 471 pp. Available at http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/7804/1/7804_4801.PDF


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Well Below the Valley/Maid & Palmer
From: Tony Rees
Date: 15 Apr 22 - 11:26 PM

Here are the snippets I have been able to extract via Google Books from the 1955 Anna Ní Mháille version mentioned above, in Anne O'Connor, "Child Murderess and Dead Child Traditions" - not the whole text (it would be nice to see this!):

There was a rider passin' by
There was a rider passing by
He askhed a drink, as he was dry
At the well below the valley, oh!
My washing tub it is afloat
Green grows the valley, oh!

If I give you a drink, I might fall in
In the well below the valley, oh!
(Says she)"My true love never was born"
She swore by grass an' swore by corn
That her true love never was born
"How dar' you tell me such a lie
An' you havin' six childer, by the by,
At the well below the valley, oh!
... ...

An' three more behind the hall door
At the well below the valley, oh!
"So's you're a man o' such a skill
What's goin' to happen me?
"You're going to be
Seven years a nut in a wood
Seven years a tongue in a bell
... ...


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: Tony Rees
Date: 15 Apr 22 - 11:28 PM

This discussion now continued at Origins: Well Below the Valley/Maid & Palmer - thread kindly reactivated (and title modified) by Joe Offer.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Well Below the Valley/Maid & Palmer
From: Tony Rees
Date: 16 Apr 22 - 03:04 AM

Of course the Thomas Moran version per my post 2 messages up was reproduced and discussed earlier in this thread, although I was alerted to it separately, via some comments on a copy now posted to youtube... apologies for the duplication!

- Tony


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Well Below the Valley/Maid & Palmer
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 16 Apr 22 - 10:42 AM

Hi Tony
Forgive me if I'm repeating myself but in my opinion there are at least 2 ways in which the text of 21 could be linked in with the chorus of 20.

We know pretty conclusively that someone in Scotland in the late 18th century was deliberately mixing the 2 songs up. However this was not in the form shown above so I think this way unlikely.

The second way is much more obvious and simple. The 2 songs cover the unusual subject of new-born baby murder. I can't off-hand think of any other old ballads that deal with this subject in English. Couple this with the well-known hybridising of songs by the traveller community, among others, and you have your reason.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Well Below the Valley/Maid & Palmer
From: Tony Rees
Date: 16 Apr 22 - 03:07 PM

I don't disagree with you Steve, regarding the potential mechanisms of confusion.

However it does seem to have happened in at least 2 different forms - one with just the "penances" being attached to what is to happen to the protagonist in a song that is otherwise clearly Child 20, as noted by Child and expanded upon by Mary Diane McCabe, who pointed out over 30 such examples from Scotland, Ireland (? - via expatriates) and Canada; the other being a mixture of the refrain of Child 20 along with (some of) the text of Child 21, as per the (presently unique) Thomas Moran version, a different kettle of fish it seems to me...

A separate question is from where the Irish "song" - I think we can call it now that as opposed to just a "version" of Child 21 - known as the Well Below The Valley derives. To my eyes it seems to have more in common with the continental variants or precursors of the "Magdalen Ballad" than with any Scottish versions that have come down to us, or the Percy Text which was the main source for Child - Tom Munnelly states (whether or not one can take this at face value) that John Reilly was aware that the song was a Magdalen legend, and in another version the stranger is revealed to be Christ as mentioned above.

Just some rumination on my part, but interesting that John Reilly's documented performances turn out not to be the outliers originally thought!

- Tony


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Well Below the Valley/Maid & Palmer
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 16 Apr 22 - 05:42 PM

This should become clearer with a full detailed study of all the Irish versions. One also can't dismiss the well documented sexual connotations of 'well below the valley' though one could hardly think this was deliberate. If it derives from anything I would say it comes closest to the Percy version and I repeat what I have suggested before, the idea of such a ballad surviving for 3 centuries with no intervening appearance is highly unlikely but not impossible.

The Scottish 20 additions could easily have come direct from Percy as plenty of Scottish antiquarians were corresponding with him.

I do agree the evidence is beginning to show that it is unlikely the Irish version came from Scotland.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: GUEST,Tony Rees
Date: 01 May 22 - 02:18 AM

Date: 21 Mar 22 - 12:56 AM

Just revisiting this topic after a few weeks, and re-reading chapter 10 of Mary Diane McCabe's 1980 M.A. thesis entitled "A critical study of some traditional religious ballads", available at http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/7804/1/7804_4801.PDF , which deals with this ballad...

She notes receiving 2 additional tape copies supplied to her as recorded by Tom Munnelly in 1972 and 1973, again from travellers (also named Reilly...), this time in Co. Monaghan and Co. Sligo (McCabe's text versions E and F), the first from Willie A. Reilly (age 35 in 1972) and the second from Martin Reilly, age 73 in 1973, and includes a brief description of their content.

She also points to a 1976 recording by the Irish singer and songwriter Liam Weldon who had a fragmentary but different version, stated as being learned from the singing of Mary Duke, also a traveller; this version can be heard on youtube at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gZZbbxhZVlM. All new information, to me at least!


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: GUEST,Tony Rees
Date: 01 May 22 - 02:19 AM

Date: 21 Mar 22 - 01:03 AM

RE the above: "2 additional tape copies" - i.e. 2 new/different different versions of the song, collected from informants other than John Reilly. Presumably as now held in the Munnelly archive, although I do not know relevant access details...


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: GUEST,Tony Rees
Date: 01 May 22 - 02:20 AM

Date: 21 Mar 22 - 02:53 AM

OK, a bit more detail from the McCabe work - to avoid having to trawl through it (the information is a bit scattered therein)...

McCabe calls The Percy version A (=Child 21A), the Walter Scott fragment B (=Child 21B), the Glenbuchat version a.k.a. the Maid of Coldingham C, the John Reilly version(s) D, then Willie Reilly is E, Martin Reilly is F, and Liam Weldon (ex Mary Duke) is G.

G is available on youtube via a link given above, as are 2 variants of D. Unfortunately no transcriptions are given for E and F, although their content is briefly described as follows, using a "shorthand notation" to indicated which verses are present (for the full explanation you will need to read the thesis:

[D: The John Reilly (now well known) version/s]

E: Reilly (Willie), 3 May 1972, Near Clones, Co. Monaghan, Eire. Recorded by Tom Munnelly from the singing of Willie A. Reilly, a traveller, aged 35, camped on the Rosslea Road, outside Clones. Mr. Munnelly sent me a copy of the tape (50/a/5) on 12 April 1978.
7 stanzas, probably bowdlerised since the version was sung reluctantly; b, c-D-E-F-M l - R - p2, p3 (with internal refrain).

F: Reilly (Martin), 11 December 1973, Sligo, Co. Sligo, Eire. Recorded by Tom Munnelly from the singing of Martin Reilly, a traveller, aged 73, of Rathbroughan, Sligo; the informant had not sung the song for some years and needed some prompting; Mr. Munnelly sent me a copy of the tape (275/2) on 12 April 1978; in a letter dated 4/5/1978, Mr. Munnelly writes that the singers of M.P. [Maid and Palmer] texts D, E, and F may be related, but only distantly.
12 stanzas, b, c - D - E - G - H - j3 , j 4 - K L4 - nl , p3 - Q3 - Q3* - T (with internal refrain).

G: Liam Weldon / Mary Duke, collection date / place not given. Sung by Liam Weldon, as learned from the singing of Mary Duke (a traveller?).
7 stanzas, confused , A - B - C - D* - N l - P8 - r * (with internal refrain) .

There are a few stanzas quoted in passing from E and F, the "missing" ones in this context, as per the following snippets:

{quotes}
Recently another version of the Magdalen ballad, known as The Well below the Valley, has been recovered from the singing of Irish itinerants. These variants (D - G), whilst related to the Glenbuchat version, C, are more closely related in words and refrain to those versions of The Cruel Mother (Child 20) which end with seven-year penances. Textual study makes it plain that the Irish songs are variants of the same ballad version; moreover, the tunes of variants E - G are very similar ... It is probable, therefore, that the Irish version, recovered from the counties of Roscommon, Monaghan and Sligo, crossed from Scotland by way of Ulster. John Reilley's family travelled extensively in Ulster during his childhood ...

The Irish variants E - G have an interlaced refrain at the second and fourth lines of each stanza:
Green grows the lily-0 ...
In the well below the valley-0 .

Some additional lines are given as follows:
'My cup it is an overflow
And if I do stoop I may fall in. ' D.b. stanza 2 and cf . F stanza 2.
'For if my cup was flow an' flow ,
I would give him a drink if he was dry. ' E stanza 2

The conditional form of the last quoted stanza has been misunderstood in G, where the woman replies (sta . 4.1) ,
"Come in, Sir , and drink your fill. "

Although version D alone contain s Christ' s revelation of the Magdalen's incestuous unions , the older versions , like Irish variants E - G, may have suppressed the incest stanzas.

The burial places in Martin Reilly's version (F sta . 8) are by the kitchen door and the stable door: this has led to the confusion in F, stanza 6; whereby the fathers of the children are the kitchen boy and the stable boy.

In Irish version E, which is , however, a confused version reluctantly given, Christ Himself discloses His true identity :
'Oh, for I am the Lord that rules on high; '
Green grows the lily-0 ;
'Oh, I am the Lord that rules on high; '
In the well below the valley-0 .
E sta . 5

also:
'Oh for if you're the Lord that rules on high ...
Oh the Lord may save my soul from Hell.'
E sta . 6.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: GUEST,Steve Gardham
Date: 01 May 22 - 02:21 AM

Date: 21 Mar 22 - 09:35 AM

Hi Tony
This is all very interesting.
I must admit to having some skepticism initially regarding John Reilly's well-known version of such a rare ballad.
I'm very pleased someone is studying this currently and summarising what is available.
That the ballad must have been extant in Scotland during the 18th century, whether in literary circles or oral tradition, must have been, as some literary hand decided to tag on the penance verses to the Cruel Mother, not found in purely English versions or the presumed original. It does seem possible that some of the ballad writers in Scotland (Scott for instance or Jamieson or Lord Hailes) would have had access to the Percy Manuscripts. They were certainly in touch with Percy.

I would be interested in your opinions once you have completed your study. Please pm me if you don't want to air your thoughts here.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: GUEST,Tony Rees
Date: 01 May 22 - 02:21 AM

Date: 21 Mar 22 - 02:17 PM

Hi Steve, thanks for the comments. "Completed my study"... Well each time I write something, I think it is complete, until I get an idea to go back and look into some aspect a little further, often roads I may have travelled already but not appreciated everything that I was reading!

You asked for my opinion - RE "some literary hand decided to tag on the penance verses to the Cruel Mother, not found in purely English versions or the presumed original" - my feeling from reading around (and that is all it is) is that the "creep" of penances from Child 21 (Maid & Palmer) into Child 20 (Cruel Mother) is more likely to have happened in oral rather than written tradition - a singer who knew all or portions of both ballads getting them a bit mixed up on one or more occasions, and so the new combination begins to circulate - in Scotland, Ireland, Canada and the USA, with 32 instances as documented by McCabe in her 1980 thesis, labelled therein C.M. [Cruel Mother] 1 through 32.

"the ballad must have been extant in Scotland during the 18th century"... well, the Glenbuchat version - as well as Child 21B, the Walter Scott fragment, clearly the same song - clearly attests to that; and my thought would be that this is sufficiently different from the Percy text not to be a direct derivative, but that they both come from something older. As I point out in the [current version of] the Wikipedia article for "The Maid and the Palmer", "the [original] song has been thought to originate in Catalonia, from where it spread to France, Italy and among Slavic peoples".

McCabe is of the opinion that "transmission from Britain to Scandinavia, or vice versa, had clearly taken place by the late Middle Ages, though fresh contact at a later date must not be ruled out". She dates the initial English-language version to the late medieval period, and points out a few elements in the Percy text that are probably later additions, so it makes sense to me that the other versions recovered later might well have survived as an alternative stream to the Percy text. So to summarise, I see the Percy version as more of a "fork" (albeit written down the earliest), the Glenbuchat/Scott version as closer to the original and representing a song then still current in oral tradition in Scotland (from where it then disappeared), and being carried from there to Ireland (possibly Ulster) from which the Irish versions (now at least 5 if you count that by Thomas Moran) subsequently derived. Interestingly, the "creep" of penances into the "Cruel Mother" variants seems to have happened more in Scotland and North America than Ireland, and possibly originate with a Scottish version or versions, in which the "Cruel Mother" persisted but the "Maid and Palmer" was generally forgotten.

Just my take on things as above, not really an academic one but trying to make the best sense of available material. Happy to discuss further of course!

Regards - Tony


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: GUEST,Steve Gardham
Date: 01 May 22 - 02:22 AM

Date: 21 Mar 22 - 03:59 PM

I am assuming from this that you are not part of the school that thinks many of the Scottish ballads were redacted by (if not written by) sophisticated hands in the 18th century and early 19th. What evidence we have shows that some of them definitely were. We have here a spectrum of thought that ranges from only a few were (Scott/Buchan/Jamieson) to many more were and all of the antiquarians and friends were dabbling. I tend to be of the latter school, but the fact is we will never know the whole truth.

Last time I did a study of the Scottish versions of Cruel Mother I came to the conclusion that those with the appended penance stanzas all stem from one single redaction, and that all of the versions spread abroad from this to Ireland/N America etc. But this study was some years ago and I'm not familiar with McCabe's study, not being an academic also. Is the McCabe study online?

As for 'late Middle Ages' in English ballad form...highly unlikely in my opinion. The Percy text need not be any older than c1600. The story, yes, but not in this form.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: GUEST,Tony Rees
Date: 01 May 22 - 02:23 AM

Date: 21 Mar 22 - 05:57 PM

Hi Steve,

I must confess that my present opinions are at least partly influenced by the suggestions in McCabe - read for yourself and form your own opinions, perhaps! Available online here: http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/7804/1/7804_4801.PDF

Relevant pages are chapter 10 (p.244 onwards) and a portion of Appendix F (pp. 389 onwards).

Pp. 611 onwards in the Finnish Folklore Atlas (available online at https://moam.info/finnish-folklore-atlas_5a1c3ba41723dd7c327408e3.html) also deal in more detail with the non-English versions of this ballad...

Regards - Tony


Date: 22 Mar 22 - 02:59 AM

I may as well throw this in: another version of "Well Below The Valley" was apparently collected in Ireland in 1955! Unfortunately I do not have access to the text, just to the notes introducing it, thus:

From p. 1335 of "The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing, Volume 4":

"For a discussion of this ballad [i.e., The Well Below the Valley] in Ireland and another full text collected in Achill Island, County Mayo, from Anna Ní Mháille, aged 86, see Anne O'Connor, "Child Murderess and Dead Child Traditions" (Helsinki: Academia Scientiarium Fennica, 1991), pp. 85, 119-20."

From Anne O'Connor, "Child Murderess and Dead Child Traditions" (Helsinki: Academia Scientiarium Fennica, 1991), in snippet view: (https://books.google.com.au/books?redir_esc=y&id=ThjXAAAAMAAJ&focus=searchwithinvolume&q=well+below+the+valley):

p. 120: "The following full version of Child 21 from Co. Mayo collected on 9.5.1955 by Pádraig Ó Móráin from Anna Ní Mháille (pensioner, 86 years), of Achill is in fact the earliest recorded version since Child, antedating the Roscommon version collected by Tom Munnelly in 1969 (cf. Bronson, 1972, 457-459)." [text not visible in this snippet view]

If anyone can access that full text, might be very interesting...

Regards - Tony


Date: 22 Mar 22 - 04:23 AM

I managed to retrieve a few lines of Anna Ní Mháille's 1955 text via snippet view:

There was a rider passin' by
There was a rider passing by
He askhed a drink, as he was dry
At the well below the valley, oh!
My washing tub it is afloat
Green grows the valley, oh!
... ...

If I give you a drink, I might fall in
In the well below the valley, oh!
(Says she)"My true love never was born"
She swore by grass an' swore by corn
That her true love never was born
"How dar' you tell me such a lie
An' you havin' six childer, by the by,
At the well below the valley, oh!
... ...

(the original can be purchased on Amazon, see https://www.amazon.com/Child-Murderess-Dead-Traditions-communications/dp/9514106520, however it would be neat if someone already has a copy they can consult :)

Just a quick calculation - if Anna was 83 in 1955, she would be (say) 10 in 1872 ... so it is at least conceivable that (say) her grandmother might have been alive then, born maybe 1802, so potentially a direct link to the early years of the 1800s when the song was known to be alive in oral tradition in Scotland... just speculative of course, but it shows that what appears at first sight to be a big chronological gap can potentially be traversed without too many generations!

Regards - Tony


Date: 22 Mar 22 - 04:26 AM

I think I mean 1882 not 1872 in the post above, but the concept still stands :)


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: GUEST,Steve Gardham
Date: 01 May 22 - 02:26 AM

Date: 22 Mar 22 - 06:33 PM

Thanks for that link, Tony. I have read it through and my own studies throw up a lot in common with her conclusions. Some wonderful detail, and all this only got a Masters? I've seen Doctorates with less substance.

There is still a lot of missing information as with most studies like this. It should hopefully provoke further study. It would be useful for instance to have all of the Irish versions together and analyse what they collectively contain. They are almost a pastiche of earlier versions and smack to me as having been made by some hedge poet with a rough memory of an earlier version.

She dates A to c1600 as do I and as part of the scribal tradition may have been copied and recopied for some time but that doesn't take it back in that ballad form to the medieval period, which she suggests.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: GUEST,Tony Rees
Date: 01 May 22 - 02:27 AM

Date: 23 Mar 22 - 06:40 PM

Steve Gardham wrote:

>It would be useful for instance to have all of the Irish versions together and analyse what they collectively contain.

Agreed! Now all we need is a young and enthusiastic volunteer (hint, hint?)

- Tony


Date: 24 Mar 22 - 01:42 AM

RE putative precursors to the Percy MS version of "The Maid and the Palmer" (therein: "Lillumwham"): these are discussed further in Joseph C. Harris, "'Maiden in the Mor Lay' and the medieval Magdalene tradition", Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 1 (1971): 59-87, available at https://www.academia.edu/11379372/Maiden_in_the_mor_lay_and_the_medieval_Magdalene_tradition

Harris (p. 63-4) gives a speculative account of the evolution formation of the Magdalene ballad over time:

"Form I ... tells how Mary Magdalene in her sin and vainglory was touched by the preaching of Jesus; she confessed to him and was given a penance of seven years in the wilderness. ...

Form II (a hypothetical reconstruction) was born in Catalonia from a crossing of Form I with the Catalan ballad of the Samaritan woman ... the result being that Mary Magdalene met Jesus at a well but did not at first recognize him for what he was; he asked for water and surprised the woman with the knowledge of her sins; Mary Magdalene confessed, and the remainder of the ballad resembled Form I with penance, questioning, and salvation.

Having spread to Scandinavia, Form II was combined with motifs from "The Cruel Mother" (Child no. 20) to produce Form III: he asks for a drink and accuses her of sin; he then lists her adulteries and child murders (the new trait), and the ballad continues as in II and I."

Then later (p. 69): "A comparison of the eccentric and poorly preserved English versions of the ballad of the penance of Mary Magdalene, "The Maid and the Palmer" (Child no. 21) with the Continental versions indicates that the ballad came to Great Britain from Scandinavia rather than directly from France." ... "there is every reason to believe that full versions like those on the Continent also existed in medieval England [my interpretation: pre-1500]".

Now you may or may not accept Harris' logic and/or conclusions, but here at least is his opinion regarding the age and evolution of the ballad. Just sayin'...

Regards - Tony


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: GUEST,Steve Gardham
Date: 01 May 22 - 02:27 AM

Date: 24 Mar 22 - 03:24 PM

>>>>>Having spread to Scandinavia, Form II was combined with motifs from "The Cruel Mother" (Child no. 20) to produce Form III: he asks for a drink and accuses her of sin; he then lists her adulteries and child murders (the new trait), and the ballad continues as in II and I."<<<<<

Oh dear!!!
My own conclusion was that Lillumwham had come from Scandinavia, but where does Harris get Scandinavian versions of CM? CM is solely an English ballad in origin with no known equivalents elsewhere. A few versions deriving from Grundtvig's 1842 translation in Engelske og Skotske Folkeviser were found in northern Denmark, but that's it. The fact is that Child, when he wrote his CM headnotes, wasn't aware of the English broadside so all of the headnotes to 20 actually pertain to 21.
It's a pity he didn't revise this once he got hold of the broadside.

See my Dungbeetle articles on Musical Traditions.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: GUEST,Tony Rees
Date: 01 May 22 - 02:28 AM

Date: 25 Mar 22 - 02:20 PM

Thanks Steve, so maybe I will not add Joseph Harris' conclusions/speculations on the ballad's evolution to the "Maid and the Palmer" Wikipedia page!


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: GUEST,Steve Gardham
Date: 01 May 22 - 02:29 AM

Date: 28 Mar 22 - 04:54 PM

McCabe also doesn't appear to have spotted Child's error in ascribing his notes for 21 to 20. Apart from that I go along with all she says.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: Joe Offer
Date: 01 May 22 - 02:31 AM

I restored this thread as best I could. Hope it's OK. I moved all the April messages into this thread, and that may be confusing. Work with me on this to straighten it out. The other thread is a Spam magnet, so we can't use it.
-Joe-


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: Steve Gardham
Date: 01 May 22 - 01:43 PM

Well done, Joe!


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: Origins: Jesus Met Woman at the Well/Maid & Palmer
From: Tony Rees
Date: 01 May 22 - 02:24 PM

+1 from me... thanks as well.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate
  Share Thread:
More...

Reply to Thread
Subject:  Help
From:
Preview   Automatic Linebreaks   Make a link ("blue clicky")


Mudcat time: 26 April 7:51 AM EDT

[ Home ]

All original material is copyright © 2022 by the Mudcat Café Music Foundation. All photos, music, images, etc. are copyright © by their rightful owners. Every effort is taken to attribute appropriate copyright to images, content, music, etc. We are not a copyright resource.