ABSTRACT

Broadside or 'Street' ballads not only give the flavour of English life and history more vividly than much historical evidence of more conventional kinds, but their sheer poetic quality often makes them substantial poems, light or serious, in their own right. This second volume, taking examples mainly over the years 1800-40 from the immense Madden Collection in the University Library, Cambridge, continutes the same literary emphasis, especially with a large number of pieces exploiting all the bustle, humour and variety of life in London - the colourful, crowded, rapidly-expanding metropolis of the period. Other sections concentrate on more traditional themes like crime and transportation, religion (some moving 'freemason' songs), love-making, sex and the 'sex war': or on fashion, the Royal Family and its escapades, and life in the army or navy. There is also an extensive collection of 'Napoleon' ballads, ranging from the early years through to his final re-internment in Paris. This book, illustrated with some remarkable large-scale contemporary woodcuts, should interest not only social historians and students of literature, but also all who have an ear for the verse of the people.



This book was first published in 1979.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction to Volume 2

part |308 pages

The Ballads

chapter 1|8 pages

The Ballad and its Singers

chapter 2|15 pages

Love Songs and Narratives

chapter 3|22 pages

Sex Tricks and the Sex War

chapter 4|8 pages

Rambles and Rigs

chapter 5|20 pages

Marriage

chapter 6|17 pages

Comic Ballads

chapter 7|11 pages

Social Life

chapter 8|15 pages

Religion and Morals

chapter 9|16 pages

Rural Life

chapter 10|14 pages

Crime

chapter 11|21 pages

The Army and the Navy

chapter 12|26 pages

Napoleon

chapter 13|20 pages

The State of the Nation

chapter 14|10 pages

The Royal Family

chapter 15|31 pages

‘Ballads on a Subject’

chapter 16|20 pages

Fashion

chapter 17|26 pages

Trades Ballads