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A ballad is a type of poem that was traditionally set to music. The word 鈥榖allad鈥 comes from the Latin 鈥ballare鈥 which means to dance 鈥 it鈥檚 also where the word 鈥榖allet鈥 comes from.

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Introduction to ballads

Ballads have a long tradition and are still written by poets to this day. Ballads can be based on real-life events (including terrible tragedies), or created purely from the imagination to tell tales of romance, mystery and even magic!

Key learning points

  • Find out about the conventions of a ballad.
  • Get to grips with and rhythm.
  • Try your hand at constructing your own ballad.

Video about ballads

A video about the conventions of ballads, their purpose, rhyme schemes and some examples of ballads

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History of the ballad

The ballad is one of the oldest forms of poetry in the English language. Across Europe, ballads were sung and performed to ordinary people and noble people alike. People remembered them and passed them on by reciting them to others. In the 15th century ballads began to be written down.

Ballads are associated with music and were passed on by travellers through song, in order to share news and stories . The catchy rhythm and rhyme scheme of ballads meant it was easy to remember them, and to pass them on to another village or community.

Ballads were written about many topics. These included sharing real life events and reporting news, the more shocking the better! Sometimes they were political, being rude about leaders and politicians, or campaigning for change. Later 鈥榣iterary鈥 ballads told romantic and supernatural stories with ghosts and visions, often looking back in time to the days of knights and ladies.

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Rhyme scheme and narrative form of ballads

The ballad鈥檚 has varied over the years but, generally, ballads tell a story, have a lively rhythm, often repeat key lines and use a rhyme scheme.

Rhyme scheme

  • In a ballad, the rhyme scheme is usually ABCB but there are many variations.
  • The rhythm comes from how certain words or parts of words are emphasised or stressed on each line.

Narrative form and refrain

The ballad form revolves around a story or narrative and tells the tale from beginning to end. This means that ballads are often quite long as they take the listeners through the entire journey of the story, from setting and character, through the dilemma and on to the conclusion.

Typically, ballads are written in four line called quatrains but are variations. The stanzas often include, or are followed by, a refrain. A refrain is a line that appears numerous times 鈥 like a chorus of a song. Using a refrain helps to emphasise the main moral, message or dramatic moment of the ballad.

A group of students showing various emotions including happiness, confusion, worry and concentration. Caption reads 'Test yourself'.

In a famous ballad called The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, an old sailor tells the story of a terrifying sea voyage where at one point he almost dies of thirst:

Water, water, every where,
And all the boards did shrink;
Water, water, every where,
Nor any drop to drink.

Which of these typical features of a ballad has the poet used:

A. Rhyme scheme and lively rhythm only
B. A quatrain, a refrain, rhyme scheme and lively rhythm
C. A refrain

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Rhythm and metre of ballads

Each line of poetry can be measured by looking at the number of syllables and the number of syllables. A pair of stressed/unstressed syllable is called a 鈥榝oot鈥. These feet are what gives the poem its rhythm.

In a word like 鈥榯o-day鈥, we emphasise the second syllable not the first syllable. This is called an iamb. It consists of an unstressed and stressed syllable, in that order 鈥 or da-DUM.

If the first syllable is stressed, as for example in 鈥榟a-ppy鈥, but not the second, it is called a trochee. A trochee is DUM-da.

How many iambs or trochees should there be in each line of a ballad?

A ballad is traditionally written using three, or four, iambs or trochees in a line.

  • Tetrameter 鈥 means four iambs or eight syllables in a line. A line containing four iambs or trochees, is called iambic or trochaic tetrameter.
  • Trimeter 鈥 means three iambs or six syllables in a line. A line containing three iambs or trochees, is called iambic or trochaic trimeter.
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Examples of famous ballads

The Lady of Shalott

Many famous poets have used the ballad form over the years from Romantic poets like Samuel Taylor Coleridge and John Keats, to Victorian poets like Christina Rossetti and Oscar Wilde.

La Belle Dame sans Merci by John Keats (which translates from French into 鈥楾he beautiful lady without pity鈥) was written in 1819. It uses the ballad form to suggest the story is taking place in an older time period with courtly knights and ladies. It begins:

O what can ail thee, knight-at-arms,
聽聽聽聽聽聽聽 Alone and palely loitering?
The sedge has withered from the lake,
聽聽聽聽聽聽聽 And no birds sing.

Oscar Wilde鈥檚 The Ballad of Reading Gaol, written in 1897, is not about noble lords or ladies. His ballad looks back to the traditions of murder ballads and political ballads which demanded change. It begins:

He did not wear his scarlet coat,
聽聽聽 For blood and wine are red,
And blood and wine were on his hands
聽聽聽 When they found him with the dead

Ballads are still written to this day. They continue to be written about real-life events and many are performed as songs in the music charts.

The Lady of Shalott
A group of students showing various emotions including happiness, confusion, worry and concentration. Caption reads 'Test yourself!'

These are lines from The Lady of Shalott by Alfred, Lord Tennyson.

Four gray walls, and four gray towers
Overlook a space of flowers,
And the silent isle imbowers
聽聽聽聽聽聽聽 The Lady of Shalott.

鈥︹赌

She knows not what the curse may be;
Therefore she weaveth steadily,
Therefore no other care hath she,
聽聽聽聽聽聽聽 The Lady of Shalott.

Which of the following statements isnottrue?

A: The first three lines rhyme
B: It has a repeated refrain
C: It is all written in tetrameter
D: The only trimeter used is in the last line

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