Hubbry Logo
search
logo
2139868

The Ballad of Chevy Chase

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers
Read side by side
from Wikipedia

Copperplate illustration for 1790 edition

"The Ballad of Chevy Chase" is an English ballad, catalogued as Child Ballad 162 (Roud 223[1]). There are two extant ballads under this title, both of which narrate the same story. As ballads existed within oral tradition before being written down, other versions of this once-popular song also may have existed.

Its tune has been used by other, unconnected songs.

Synopsis

[edit]
Earl Percy hunting in Chevy Chase. Illustration by F. Tayler.
Earl Douglas advancing with his men. Illustration by F. Tayler.
The death of Earl Douglas. Illustration by F. Tayler.

The ballads tell the story of a large hunting party upon a parcel of hunting land (or chase) in the Cheviot Hills, a range of rolling hills straddling the Anglo-Scottish border between Northumberland and the Scottish Borders—hence, Chevy Chase. The hunt is led by Percy, the English Earl of Northumberland, against the wishes of the Scottish Earl Douglas, who had forbidden it. Douglas interprets the party's arrival as an invasion of Scotland and attacks. Only 110 people survive the bloody battle that follows.

Historical basis

[edit]

Thomas Percy and scholar Francis J. Child noted similarities with the older "The Battle of Otterburn", about the 1388 Battle of Otterburn. Neither set of lyrics is completely historically accurate.[2] Versions of either ballad often contain parallel biographical and historical information; nonetheless, the differences led Child to believe that they did not originally refer to the same occurrence.[3]

Simpson suggests that the music of "Chevy Chase" was identical to the tune of "Flying Flame", in which the former superseded the latter by the beginning of the seventeenth century.[4]

Both ballads were collected in Thomas Percy's Reliques. The first of the ballads is in Francis James Child's English and Scottish Popular Ballads. Different versions were collected in England, Scotland, and the United States.[1]

Versions of "The Ballad of Chevy Chase" exist in several ballad collections, including the Roxburghe Ballads, the Pepys Library, the Huntington Library Miscellaneous, the Glasgow University Library, and the Crawford Collection at the National Library of Scotland. The ballads in these collections were printed with variations between 1623 and 1760.[5] Online facsimiles of the ballad are also available for public consumption at the English Broadside Ballad Archive and other online repositories.

First ballad

[edit]

The first of the two ballads of Chevy Chase may have been written as early as the 1430s, but the earliest record we have of it is in The Complaynt of Scotland, printed around 1549. One of the first printed books in Middle Scots, the book calls the ballad The Hunting of Cheviot.

The first manuscript version of the ballad was written around 1550 (MS Ashmole 48, Bodleian Library).[6]

In the seventeenth century, the tune was licensed in 1624 and again in 1675.[7]

Second ballad

[edit]

In 1711, Joseph Addison wrote in The Spectator:

The old song of "Chevy-Chase" is the favourite ballad of the common people of England, and Ben Jonson used to say he had rather have been the author of it than of all his works. Sir Philip Sidney, in his discourse of Poetry [The Defence of Poesie], speaks of it in the following words: "I never heard the old song of Percy and Douglas that I found not my heart more moved than with a trumpet; and yet it is sung by some blind crowder with no rougher voice than rude style, which being so evil apparelled in the dust and cobweb of that uncivil age, what would it work trimmed in the gorgeous eloquence of Pindar?" For my own part, I am so professed an admirer of this antiquated song, that I shall give my reader a critique upon it without any further apology for so doing.[8]

Apparently, Addison was unaware that the ballad, which he proceeded to analyze in detail, was not the same work praised by Sidney and Jonson.[8] The second of the ballads appears to have been written in modernized English some years after Sidney's comments, perhaps around 1620, and to have become the better-known version.

Cultural references

[edit]

Legacy

[edit]

A tract of land in British America was named "Cheivy Chace" by 1725, and was in the 1890s and early 1900s developed into the affluent areas of Chevy Chase, Maryland, and Chevy Chase, Washington, D.C. A golf club in the Maryland Chevy Chase inspired the name of Chevy Chase, Lexington, Kentucky.

A shopping mall in the Eldon Square Shopping Centre in Newcastle upon Tyne is named "Chevy Chase" in allusion to the ballad.[14]

The ballad inspired the childhood nickname and adult stage name of the American comedian and actor Chevy Chase (born Cornelius Crane Chase, 1943).

The ballad has given the English language the verb to chivvy, meaning to pester or encourage someone to perform a task.[15][16]

Further reading

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
"The Ballad of Chevy Chase, also known as The Hunting of the Cheviot and catalogued as Child Ballad 162, is an anonymous traditional English border ballad that recounts a legendary conflict in the Cheviot Hills between English forces under Henry Percy, known as Hotspur, and Scottish forces led by the Earl of Douglas.[1] Composed in the early 15th century and transmitted orally for centuries, the poem blends heroic themes of chivalry, defiance, and mutual respect with a dramatized tale of a hunt escalating into a bloody battle that claims the lives of both leaders and decimates their armies.[2]" The ballad draws loose inspiration from the historical Battle of Otterburn in August 1388, during the reign of King Richard II, where Scottish raiders under James, 2nd Earl of Douglas, ambushed and defeated an English force led by Sir Henry Percy, capturing him but not killing him in combat.[1] However, the narrative introduces significant inaccuracies, such as portraying the clash as a hunt on disputed lands, exaggerating casualties by depicting nearly all of an English force of 1,500 archers and a Scottish force of 2,000 spearmen as slain, with only around 110 survivors in some variants, and including anachronistic references to later kings like Henry IV and James I of Scotland, suggesting composition around 1430 amid ongoing Anglo-Scottish tensions.[2] Percy's historical death occurred in 1403 at the Battle of Shrewsbury, not at Otterburn, further highlighting the ballad's legendary embellishments over factual precision.[1]" "Preserved in manuscripts dating to the mid-16th century, such as the Ashmole 48 folio from the reign of Mary I (1553–1558), the ballad was first mentioned in print in 1617 and entered in the Stationers' Register in 1624, though its full text appeared widely only in 1765 through Thomas Percy's Reliques of Ancient English Poetry, which included an archaic 15th-century version alongside a more modern 17th-century adaptation.[1] This collection revived interest in folk ballads, positioning "Chevy Chase" as a cornerstone of English literary heritage due to its rhythmic alliterative verse in 13-line stanzas and vivid depictions of medieval warfare.[3] Variants exist across oral and printed traditions, with differences in details like survivor counts—e.g., 73 English and 55 Scottish in one version, or 53 English and 55 Scottish in another, totaling around 110 in the latter—but all emphasize the chivalric bond between Percy and Douglas, who exchange compliments even in death.[1]" "In the ballad's plot, Percy vows to hunt in the Cheviot Hills despite Douglas's territorial claim, prompting Douglas to summon 2,000 spearmen while Percy rallies 1,500 archers; the ensuing three-hour battle sees arrows darken the sky, swords clash in heroic duels, and both earls mortally wound each other after Douglas slays Percy's banner-bearer.[2] The survivors, numbering few, bury their leaders side by side, and the tale concludes with prophecies of future wars and royal mourning, underscoring themes of futile border strife and noble valor.[1] This narrative structure, rooted in the auld alliance between Scots and French against England, reflects broader 15th-century cultural anxieties over national identity and warfare.[2]" "The ballad's literary significance was championed in the early 18th century by Joseph Addison, who in The Spectator (Nos. 70 and 74, 1711) lauded its simplicity, natural vigor, and appeal to the common people, quoting Ben Jonson as saying he would rather have written it than all his own works.[4] Addison's essays elevated folk poetry's status, influencing Romantic-era appreciation of ballads as authentic expressions of popular genius, and "Chevy Chase" inspired later adaptations in music, theater, and even American place names like Chevy Chase, Maryland.[5] Its enduring legacy lies in capturing the raw energy of medieval heroism while critiquing the costs of endless Anglo-Scottish rivalry.[1]"

Historical Context

The Battle of Otterburn

The Battle of Otterburn occurred on August 5, 1388 (or August 19 according to some English sources), in Northumberland, northern England, as part of the ongoing Anglo-Scottish border conflicts during the late 14th century. These skirmishes, often involving reiver raids by families on both sides of the border, were exacerbated by the Hundred Years' War, in which Scotland allied with France against England, leading to opportunistic invasions when English forces were distracted elsewhere. The Percy and Douglas families, prominent border lords, had a longstanding rivalry, with the Percys holding key marcher lordships and the Douglases leading Scottish incursions.[6][7] In the summer of 1388, James Douglas, 2nd Earl of Douglas, led a Scottish raiding party of estimates varying from 2,000-6,000 men into England, burning settlements near Durham and Newcastle before withdrawing to besiege Otterburn Tower. Henry Percy, known as Hotspur, the eldest son of the Earl of Northumberland, assembled an English force of approximately 8,000 men, including his brother Ralph Percy, to intercept them. Upon arriving at Otterburn under cover of darkness, the English prepared to assault the Scottish camp, but Douglas preemptively ordered a night raid on the English position.[6][8][7] The ensuing battle, fought by moonlight and lasting through the night, featured intense hand-to-hand combat, including a chivalric single combat between Douglas and Hotspur, in which Douglas captured Percy's pennon. Douglas was mortally wounded early in the fighting but instructed his followers to conceal his body to preserve morale, allowing the Scots to press their advantage. The English mounted a fierce counterattack, but the Scots ultimately prevailed, capturing both Henry and Ralph Percy along with many other English leaders. The primary historical account comes from Jean Froissart's Chronicles, based on interviews with battle veterans, which emphasizes the chivalric valor and describes it as one of the most fiercely contested engagements of the era.[6][8][9] Casualties were heavy on both sides, reflecting the battle's brutality. Scottish losses included Douglas and around 80-100 others, primarily nobles such as Sir Robert Heriot, Sir John Touris, and Sir William Lundie. English forces suffered approximately 1,800 killed and 1,000 captured, among them about 40 nobles and knights whose ransoms, including 200,000 francs for Hotspur, provided significant financial gain for the Scots. Froissart's estimates align closely with these figures, though contemporary chronicles like the Westminster Chronicle suggest slightly higher Scottish deaths at around 500. Despite the victory, the battle did not alter the broader strategic balance, as truces soon resumed amid ongoing border tensions.[6][8][7]

Origins and Early Transmission

The Ballad of Chevy Chase, also known as "The Hunting of the Cheviot," is thought to have originated in the fifteenth century, likely composed by an English minstrel familiar with border conflicts between the noble houses of Percy and Douglas, including events like the Battle of Otterburn in 1388. The ballad includes anachronistic references to later figures like Henry IV of England and James I of Scotland, suggesting composition around 1430 amid ongoing tensions.[10][1] This composition reflects the oral traditions of the Anglo-Scottish border region, where such narratives preserved memories of feudal rivalries and military encounters.[10] As a key example of Border balladry, the poem was performed by itinerant minstrels at fairs, courts, and communal gatherings, contributing to a cycle of Percy-Douglas tales that emphasized themes of chivalry and retribution.[10] It shares thematic and historical ties with related works, such as "The Battle of Otterburn" (Child Ballad 161), which recounts a similar clash but from a Scottish perspective.[1] These performances helped embed the ballad in the cultural fabric of the borderlands, where English and Scottish variants began to emerge through regional retellings.[1] The earliest surviving full text appears in a mid-sixteenth-century manuscript compiled by the Tamworth minstrel Richard Sheale, preserved as MS Ashmole 48 in the Bodleian Library and dated to the 1550s.[10][1] An additional early version is found in the Percy Folio (British Library, Additional MS 27879), a seventeenth-century collection of older ballads.[1] The ballad's antiquity is further evidenced by its mention as an established "old song" in The Complaynt of Scotland (1549), indicating prior oral circulation.[10] Transmission occurred primarily through oral recitation by minstrels and shepherds in the border areas, evolving into printed broadsides during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, which introduced variations influenced by English and Scottish performers.[10][1] Licensing records in the Stationers' Register from 1624 and 1675 mark its entry into commercial print culture, facilitating wider dissemination across Britain and later to America.[1] Scholars classify the ballad as number 162 in Francis James Child's English and Scottish Popular Ballads (1882–1898), where variant A represents the English text from the Ashmole manuscript and variant B a Scottish form, highlighting the dual traditions of its preservation. Child's compilation underscores its role as a foundational piece in the study of folk narrative evolution.

The Ballad Texts

Shared Synopsis

The Ballad of Chevy Chase recounts a legendary border conflict in the Cheviot Hills, where the English Earl Percy boasts of his right to hunt there with a force of fifteen hundred men, encroaching on Scottish territory claimed by the Earl Douglas. This provocation leads Douglas to assemble two thousand spearmen in response, issuing a challenge that Percy initially meets with a refusal of single combat, escalating the dispute into a full-scale battle from dawn until dusk.[11] Central motifs in the narrative include the deer hunt serving as the casus belli, chivalric oaths binding the nobles to honorable combat, and a climactic confrontation where Douglas is felled by an arrow and Percy slain by Sir Hugh Montgomery—amidst heavy casualties, with only fifty-three English and fifty-five Scottish survivors from over three thousand combatants. The emphasis falls on noble valor and personal prowess rather than tactical strategy, portraying the leaders' forces as evenly matched in their doomed valor.[11] Thematically, the ballad critiques the senseless feuding along the Anglo-Scottish border through its depiction of catastrophic losses, while simultaneously glorifying aristocratic honor and the tragic nobility of the fallen leaders, whose rivalry echoes the historical Percy-Douglas antagonism of the fourteenth century. Supernatural or exaggerated elements, such as vast herds of deer and improbable survivor counts, heighten the epic scale and underscore the futility of such conflicts.[11][12] The text typically employs four-line stanzas in common meter, with approximately sixty to eighty stanzas, often incorporating a refrain such as "The stout Earl of Northumberland" in certain variants to reinforce rhythmic recitation. Linguistically, it features an archaic Northern Middle English dialect, rich in alliterative phrases like "milk-white steed" and formulaic repetitions—such as enumerations of slain knights—that align with oral-formulaic composition traditions, facilitating memorization and performance.[11]

The First Ballad

The First Ballad, catalogued as Child Ballad 162A and commonly referred to as the Percy or English version, consists of approximately 64 stanzas and presents a narrative of mutual tragedy rather than clear triumph. In this longer iteration, the conflict arises from Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland (known as Hotspur), hunting in the forbidden Scottish grounds of the Cheviot Hills, transforming a border raid into an epic tale of martial valor despite the devastating toll on both sides. Douglas is killed by an arrow during the battle, while Percy falls to Sir Hugh Montgomery in single combat, emphasizing chivalric doom over national pride.[1] Key textual elements include the English army's initial advantage with archery, but the battle results in pyrrhic losses for both sides—approximately 1,500 English combatants with only 53 survivors, and similar devastation among the 2,000 Scots. Heraldic details abound, such as descriptions of Percy's "stoute stagge of ten" and the lords' emblazoned banners, while the narrative opens with Percy's explicit defiance of Douglas's hunting prohibition, portraying him as a daring provocateur. These features reflect an English perspective, though the outcome underscores shared tragedy rather than clear victory.[13][3] The ballad introduces several historical inaccuracies that serve its dramatic purposes. It fictionalizes the leaders' deaths as prominent battlefield events, whereas contemporary chronicles record that Douglas fell anonymously amid the Battle of Otterburn's chaos on August 19, 1388; his men stripped the body, severed the head to prevent identification, and concealed it in a thorn bush until retrieving it post-victory to maintain Scottish morale. Furthermore, the poem inflates Percy's centrality, depicting him as the commanding English champion, despite his age of 24 and role leading the pursuit under his father, the Earl of Northumberland; historically, Hotspur was captured by the Scots, and the English force suffered defeat. These alterations prioritize dramatic heroism over fidelity, aligning the tale with border traditions.[8] Stylistically, the First Ballad employs elaborate, vivid depictions of battlefield pandemonium, such as the clash of "spears full sadlye sore" and the "deadlie dint" of weapons, to immerse readers in the visceral intensity of combat. Alliteration enhances its rhythmic force, evident in lines like "With bowes and bills about their shoulders" and "The stoutest teene in Chevy-Chase," evoking the oral traditions of border minstrelsy. The poem culminates in a didactic tone, moralizing on hubris as the root of catastrophe: "The childe may rue, that is unborne, / The hunting of that day," warning that excessive pride invites ruinous consequences for all involved. This reflective close reinforces the ballad's ethical framework, blending epic action with proverbial wisdom.[3] The primary surviving manuscript of this version resides in the Percy Folio, an 18th-century collection of ballads acquired by Thomas Percy, who edited and published it in his influential Reliques of Ancient English Poetry in 1765, where it appeared as the volume's opening piece to exemplify ancient heroic verse. Earlier attestations include 17th-century broadside printings, with the oldest known dated to 1624, circulated as a popular chapbook among English audiences and often sung to the tune "In Peascod Time." These printings, typically abridged but faithful to the core narrative, indicate the ballad's widespread oral and textual dissemination by the early modern period.

The Second Ballad

The Second Ballad, a related Scottish account of the same events also known as the Douglas version and catalogued separately as Child Ballad 161 ("The Battle of Otterburn"), comprises approximately 32 stanzas in its 18th-century printed forms and emphasizes a nationalistic Scottish perspective on the Battle of Otterburn.[14] This version portrays Earl Douglas as the heroic leader who mortally wounds Henry Percy in single combat before his own death, leading to a decisive victory for the Scottish forces and Percy's capture, thereby reversing the English-oriented outcome of the first ballad.[15] Unlike the first ballad's extended account of Percy's hunt in the Cheviot Hills, this text omits such details and begins directly with Douglas's raid into England, the defiant challenge exchanged between the leaders, and the ensuing nighttime battle, heightening the focus on Scottish valor and unity.[14] It includes prophetic elements, such as Douglas's foreknowledge of his fate symbolized by the Bloody Heart banner he carries into battle, and exaggerates Scottish cohesion under his command while inaccurately depicting Douglas lingering longer in the fight to deliver the fatal blow to Percy despite his mortal wound.[8] The poetic style is more concise and rhythmic than the first version, employing a tight narrative structure with vivid, lamenting descriptions of fallen nobles to evoke emotional pathos, particularly in the closing stanzas mourning Douglas's death and celebrating the Scottish triumph.[14] Refrain variations, such as iterations of "Adieu, adieu, my friends all," appear in some oral transmissions to provide solemn emotional closure, underscoring themes of noble sacrifice.[16] Surviving copies include an 18th-century printing in David Herd's Ancient and Modern Scots Songs (1769), which preserves a traditional Scottish rendering, alongside 19th-century oral variants collected from Scottish singers that maintain the core pro-Douglas emphasis despite minor textual divergences.[17]

Cultural and Literary Impact

Early Modern References

In the late 16th century, the ballad gained literary recognition through Philip Sidney's An Apologie for Poetrie (1595), where he praised the "old song of Percy and Douglas" for stirring the heart more profoundly than a trumpet's sound, citing it as an example of poetry's power to move emotions and inspire virtue despite its rustic form.[18] Sidney's endorsement highlighted the ballad's heroic themes as emblematic of English poetic tradition, influencing perceptions of border folklore in Renaissance literature. By the 17th century, the ballad's popularity extended into everyday cultural life, as evidenced by Samuel Pepys's diary entry on February 12, 1667, where he noted hearing "Chevy Chase" performed as part of simple musical entertainment alongside "Hermitt poore," underscoring its role in informal gatherings and its enduring appeal among the middle classes.[19] Regular literary references to its tune during this period demonstrate its ubiquity, often adapted in broadside prints and oral performances that preserved its narrative of chivalric conflict.[20] These adaptations, including musical settings in tavern and domestic contexts, reflect the ballad's integration into the era's playhouse traditions, where such tunes accompanied dramatic interludes evoking border warfare and noble sacrifice.[21] In the 18th century, the ballad received critical acclaim that elevated its status in literary discourse. Joseph Addison, in The Spectator essays Nos. 70 (May 21, 1711) and 74 (May 25, 1711), lauded it as the "favourite ballad of the common people of England," arguing its simple grandeur surpassed sophisticated verse and attributing to Ben Jonson the wish to have authored it over his own plays; these pieces helped legitimize folk poetry amid Enlightenment tastes.[22] Thomas Percy's Reliques of Ancient English Poetry (1765) further popularized the work by including both the ancient and modern versions, editing them for authenticity while emphasizing their historical value in shaping views of medieval chivalry, thus sparking Romantic-era interest in oral traditions.[3] The ballad also appeared in collections like A Collection of Old Ballads (1723–1725), which reprinted it alongside other heroic narratives, reinforcing its influence on contemporary drama such as John Home's Douglas (1756), where motifs of tragic nobility and familial honor echo the Percy-Douglas rivalry.[20]

Modern Adaptations and Legacy

In the 19th century, the ballad underwent a significant revival as part of the Romantic movement's fascination with folk traditions and national heritage. It was prominently featured in Sir Walter Scott's Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border (1802–1803), a collection that preserved and popularized border ballads, drawing on oral and manuscript sources to evoke the turbulent Anglo-Scottish history.[23] Scholars like Andrew Lang further analyzed its poetic merits, praising passages such as the death of the Earl of Douglas for their emotional depth and heroic pathos in essays on English poetry and ballads.[24] This revival positioned the ballad as a cornerstone of literary antiquarianism, influencing subsequent anthologies and studies of medieval literature. Musical adaptations have sustained the ballad's presence in folk traditions throughout the 20th century and into the present. Traditional renditions were recorded by artists such as Bob Davenport in the mid-20th century and Gordeanna McCulloch in her 1978 album She Was a Lady, accompanied by the Craigellachie Folk Group, emphasizing its Northumbrian roots.[25] These recordings, often set to the ancient tune known as "Chevy Chase," highlight the ballad's rhythmic structure suited for oral performance, as documented in folk music archives. Modern Celtic and English folk ensembles continue to perform it at festivals, preserving variants that blend historical narrative with contemporary instrumentation. The ballad's legacy extends to 20th- and 21st-century popular culture, where it inspired the stage name of American comedian Chevy Chase (born Cornelius Crane Chase in 1943). His grandmother nicknamed him "Chevy" after the affluent Maryland community of the same name, which itself derives from the ballad, leading him to adopt "Chevy Chase" professionally in the 1970s during his time with the comedy group Channel One.[26] This connection underscores the ballad's permeation into American entertainment, evoking its themes of border rivalry and chivalric conflict. Scholarly interest has focused on the ballad's role in defining the "historical ballad" genre and its implications for nationalism, particularly in representations of Anglo-Scottish identity. Ruth Perry's analysis in Ballads and Broadsides in Britain, 1500–1800 (2010) examines how the narrative of the Percy-Douglas clash served as a media for border propaganda, reflecting enduring tensions in British cultural memory.[27] Studies in folklore journals have explored variants for their nationalist undertones, tracing how English and Scottish editions emphasize differing heroic ideals to foster regional pride. The ballad's texts are now accessible in digital archives, such as the Percy collection selections hosted by the Digital Archive Ontario, facilitating modern research in digital humanities.[28]

References

User Avatar
No comments yet.