Robin Hood and the Curtal Friar
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Robin Hood and the Curtal Friar is Child ballad number 123, about Robin Hood.
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[edit] Synopsis
This ballad is one of those appearing in earlrier and later versions, the earlier one appearing in damaged form in the Percy manuscript but, as with Robin Hood and Guy of Gisborne the story also appears in May Day plays and there is good reason to think that it goes back at least to the fifteenth century.
The outlaws have a good hunt. Robin Hood says there is no match for Little John within a hundred miles; Will Scadlock tells him that a friar at Fountains Abbey can. Robin sets out to see this monk. He finds him by a riverside and forces the monk to carry him over, except that the friar throws him in half way across. They battle until Robin asks a favor: to let him blow on his horn. When the friar agrees, Robin's men appear, with bows in hand. The friar asks a favor: to let him whistle. When Robin agrees, many fierce dogs appear. In the later version Little John shoots twenty of them, and the Friar agrees to make peace with Robin. In the earlier version Robin Hood good-humouredly refuses further combat; in both earlier and later versions Robin invites him to join the band.
[edit] Adaptions
Howard Pyle used this tale in his Merry Adventures of Robin Hood as part of the tale of Allen A Dale: Robin needed a priest who would perform the wedding ceremony in defiance of authority, and Will Scarlet proposed the Friar.[1]
[edit] 13 months
The Percy Folio version of the ballad begins with the stanza:
- But how many merry monthes be in the yeere?
- There are thirteen, I say;
- The midsummer moone is the merryest of all,
- Next to the merry month of May.
Robert Graves in his English and Scottish Ballads used this stanza to support his argument for pagan survivals in the Robin Hood legend, and for the popular survival of a supposedly pagan 13 month calendar.
[edit] References
- ^ Michael Patrick Hearn, "Afterword", Howard Pyle The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood, p 384 ISBN 0-451-52007-6