Analysis of Bedfordshire Ballad. - I.

Edward Woodley Bowling 1837 (Nice,) – 1907 (Ealing, London, )




THE TWO MAIDENS.

[The following Verses were written for a country Penny Reading].

Two Bedfordshire maidens in one village dwelt;
Side by side in their Church every Sunday they knelt;
They were not very pretty and not very plain;
And their names were Eliza and Emily Jane.

Now Carpenter Smith was young, steady and still,
And wherever he went, worked and played with a will:
To bed he went early, and early did rise;
So, of course, he was healthy, and wealthy, and wise.

But John he grew tired of a bachelor's life,
So he looked all around him in search of a wife;
And his eyes, as they wandered, again and again
Returned to Eliza and Emily Jane.

And whenever those maidens encountered his eye,
Their pulses beat quickly (perhaps you know why);
They each of them thought him a wonderful Don,
And wished to be married to Carpenter John.

But John, as you've heard, was a prudent young man;
And determined their faults and their merits to scan;
Says he, "If I marry, I'm tied for my life;
"So it's well to be cautious in choosing a wife."

Now I'm sorry to say that young Emily Jane
Was disposed to be rather conceited and vain;
In fact, for the truth I'm obliged to confess,
Was decidedly fond of extravagant dress.

So she thought the best way to the Carpenter's heart
Was to purchase gay dresses and finery smart;
In the carrier's van off to Bedford she went,
And many weeks' wages in finery spent.

Her dress it was blue, and her ribbons were green,
And her chignon the highest that ever was seen,
And perched on the top, heavy-laden with flowers,
Was a bonnet, embosomed in beautiful bowers.

So red, as she walked to the Church, was her shawl
That the bull in the farm-yard did bellow and bawl;
And so high were her heels that on entering the door
She slipped, and she stumbled, and fell on the floor.

Says Carpenter Smith, "It's decidedly plain
"That I'd better keep clear of that Emily Jane:"
So from Emily Jane he averted his eye,
And just at that moment Eliza passed by.

Now Eliza had thought, "If his heart I subdue,
"It shall not be by dresses and finery new:
"For a lover who's taken by ornaments gay
"Will love some one else ere a week pass away."

So her ribbons were lilac; white straw was her bonnet;
Her dress was light grey, with dark braiding upon it;
Her jacket was black; and her boots of stout leather
Were fitted for walking in all sorts of weather.

She was not very pretty, and yet in her smile
There was something that charmed by its freedom from guile:
And tho' lowly her lot, yet her natural grace
Made her look like a lady in figure and face.

A rose from the garden she wore on her breast,
And John, as her fingers he tenderly press'd,
Seemed to feel a sharp arrow ('twas Cupid's first dart)
Come straight from the rosebud and enter his heart.

Now John and Eliza are husband and wife;
Their quarrels are few, and contented their life;
They eat and they drink and they dress in good taste,
For their money they spend on their wants, not in waste.

But I'm sorry to say that Miss Emily Jane
Has still an aversion to dress that is plain;
And the consequence is that she always has stayed,
And is likely to stay, a disconsolate maid.

Young ladies, I hope you'll attend to my moral,
When you hear it, I'm sure you and I shall not quarrel:
If you're pretty, fine dress is not needed to show it;
If you're ugly, fine dress will make all the world know it.

Young men, if you wish, as I trust you all do,
A partner for worse or for better to woo,
Don't marry a peacock dressed out in gay feathers,
But a wife guaranteed to wear well in all weathers.


Scheme X X AABB CCDD EEXB FFGG HHEE BBII JJKK LLMM NNOO BBFF PPQQ XRSS TTUU VVJJ EEWW BBXX YYRR PPMM
Poetic Form
Metre 0110 01001001010101010 111001101 111011100111 101101001101 011001001001 11001111001 001011101101 11111001011 111111001001 111110101001 111101101101 011111001001 01101001001 001011001011 11011001111 11111101001 01111011001 11111101011 001011011011 11111011111 111111001001 111011111001 101111001001 01101101101 11001101001 111011101001 111011001001 001001111011 01011001001 01111001001 00101011011 011011010110 10101010010 11111101101 101001111001 0110011110001 11011001101 1100111001 111011111001 111001101011 01111001011 101011111101 111111001001 101011011001 11111101101 101001111010 011111110011 010110011110 010110011110 111101001001 111011111011 011001101001 101101001001 01101011101 01101011001 11101101111 11101001011 11001011001 11011001011 11011011011 111011111101 111011111001 11101011111 00100111111 011011011 110111011110 1111111011110 1110111110111 1110111110111 11111111111 01011111011 11001110110 101011110110
Closest metre Iambic hexameter
Characters 3,564
Words 698
Sentences 22
Stanzas 20
Stanza Lengths 1, 1, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4
Lines Amount 74
Letters per line (avg) 37
Words per line (avg) 9
Letters per stanza (avg) 138
Words per stanza (avg) 34
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Submitted on August 03, 2020

Modified on March 05, 2023

3:34 min read
6

Edward Woodley Bowling

Edward Woodley Bowling was an English poet, rector of Houghton Conquest, and fellow of St John's College, Cambridge. more…

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