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Features of Ballad Poetry

Ballad is originally meant to be sung and the story of a local heroic in a local battle, that a Ballad portrays, is revealed through the song. Generally: Ballad consists of 40-50 lines, but sometimes, it can be as short as 12 lines. Ballad poetry does not have long narration of the events as the length of Ballad is very short compared to Epic Ballad is fast-paced in terms of its narration. In Ballad, line or lines are repeated very often in the course of the poem and these repeating line or lines are called Refrain. Refrain mainly acts as an aid to the memory of the readers. Tell a story and have a straight and strict rhyming pattern.

The format of the classic Ballad stanza or verse is as follows:


The second and fourth lines of each stanza rhyme Line one has 8 beats Line two has 6 beats Line three has 8 beats...

The Ballad Ballads have strong associations with childhood: many children poetry comes in ballad form, and English poets traditionally associated ballads with their national childhood as well. Ballads emphasize strong rhythms, repetition of key phrases, and rhymes; if you hear a traditional ballad, you will know that you are hearing a poem. Ballads are meant to be song-like and to remind readers of oral poetry--of parents singing to children, for instance, or of ancient poets reciting their verse to a live audience. Ballads do not have the same formal consistency as some other poetic forms, but one can look for certain characteristics that identify a ballad, including these:

Simple language. Some ballads, especially older traditional ballads, were composed for audiences of non-specialist hearers or (later) readers. Therefore, they feature language that people can understand without specialist training or repeated readings.

When later poets choose to write ballads, regardless of their intended audience, the choice of the ballad form generally implies a similar emphasis on simple language. Sometimes poets write ballads specifically to react against poetry they see as overly intellectual or obscure.

Stories. Ballads tend to be narrative poems, poems that tell stories, as opposed to lyric poems, which emphasize the emotions of the speaker.

Ballad stanzas. The traditional ballad stanza consists of four lines, rhymed abcb (or sometimes abab--the key is that the second and fourth lines rhyme). The first and third lines have four stresses, while the second and fourth have three.

Repetition. A ballad often has a refrain, a repeated section that divides segments of the story. Many ballads also employ incremental repetition, in which a phrase recurs with minor differences as the story progresses. For a classic example of incremental repetition, see the first two lines of each stanza in "Lord Randal."

Dialogue. As you might expect in a narrative genre, ballads often incorporate multiple characters into their stories. Often, since changes of voice were communicated orally, written transcriptions of oral ballads give little or no indication that the speaker has changed. Writers of literary ballads, the later poems that imitate oral ballads, sometimes play with this convention.

Third-person objective narration. Ballad narrators usually do not speak in the first person (unless speaking as a character in the story), and they often do not comment on their reactions to the emotional content of the ballad.

Ballad form Most northern and west European ballads are written in ballad stanzas or quatrains (four-line stanzas) of alternating lines of iambic (an unstressed followed by a stressed syllable) tetrameter (eight syllables) and iambic trimeter (six syllables), known as ballad meter.

Usually, only the second and fourth line of a quatrain are rhymed (in the scheme a, b, c, b), which has been taken to suggest that, originally, ballads consisted of couplets (two lines) of rhymed verse, each of 14 syllables.[3] As can be seen in this stanza from Lord Thomas and Fair Annet:

The horse| fair Ann|et rode| upon| He amb|led like| the wind|, With sil|ver he| was shod| before, With burn|ing gold| behind|.[1]

In all traditions most ballads are narrative in nature, with a self-contained story, often concise and relying on imagery, rather than description, which can be tragic, historical, romantic or comic. Another common feature of ballads is repetition, sometimes of fourth lines in succeeding stanzas, as a refrain, sometimes of third and fourth lines of a stanza and sometimes of entire stanzas.

THE STRUCTURE OF BALLAD POEM


Structure: *4 Lines (quatrain) *One stanza *2nd and 4th line rhyme Characteristics: Short event or story put into song. Folk ballads are one stanza, literary ballads are more formal and can be composed of several stanzas. Origins: Also called popular ballads, ballads were passed orally from generation to generation as songs. The song would usually tell a story and include a shock refrain (impacting repetition) without going into detail of setting, characterization, etc. Example: Jsse had a wfe to murn for his lfe, Three chldren, thy were brve; But the drty little cward that sht Mister Hward Has lid Jesse Jmes in his grve. Ballad of Jesse James (Example from The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright 2004, Columbia University Press.)

Ballad rhyme
Ballad rhyme often uses four-line stanzas, with common rhyming patterns being AABB or ABAB.

Stanzas can have four, six, eight or even a dozen lines, depending on the intent of the writer, how he/she wishes to express him/herself, and where the expressive emphasis lies. The ballads of Australian bush balladeer A.B. 'Banjo' Paterson vary in length.

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