Proud Lady Margaret

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Proud Lady Margaret is Child ballad 47, existing in several variants.

[edit] Synopsis

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

A man arrives at the heroine's castle to woo her. She is frequently critical of him, on the grounds that his clothing shows him to be no gentleman. In most variants, he taxes her with riddles such as "What's the first thing in flower?" (primrose), and in the end, she accepts his suit. He reveals that he is her brother and a ghost, sometimes after she has said she will go with him and he must forbid, as it will kill her. He tells her he has come to curb her haughtiness.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Commentary

Many of the elements of this are found in other ballads: the riddles from Riddles Wisely Expounded, the suitor who proves to be a brother in The Bonnie Banks o Fordie, the lover who returns as a ghost and must forbid the beloved from following him, as in The Unquiet Grave.

[edit] External links