The Broomfield Hill

"The Broomfield Hill" (Child 43, Roud 34) is a traditional English folk ballad.[1]

Synopsis

A man and a woman make a wager, that she can not visit him in the greenwood without losing her virginity, or she makes a tryst and realizes she can either stay and be foresworn, or go and lose her virginity. She goes, sometimes after advice from a witch-wife, and puts him in an enchanted sleep; then, leaving tokens that she had come and gone.

He wakes and taxes those with him—his goshawk, his servingmen, his horse, or his hound—that they did not wake him, but they answer it was impossible. He is angry that he did not manage to take her virginity and, in many variants, murder her afterward.

In some variants, she hears this and leaves glad.

Motifs

The woman who enchants a man to sleep and so preserves her virginity is a common folktale and ballad motif throughout Europe.[2]

References

Wikisource has original text related to this article:
  1. Francis James Child, English and Scottish Popular Ballads, "The Broomfield Hill"
  2. Francis James Child, The English and Scottish Popular Ballads, v 1, p 391-4, Dover Publications, New York 1965


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