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Intelligence in the Ballad of Sir Patrick Spens


Article # : 20008 

Section : MODERN THOUGHT
Issue Date : 8 / 1992  5,174 Words
Author : John Bremer
John Bremer, a Cambridge philosopher and educator, writes mostly on Plato.

       The beauty and grandeur of European folk ballads often blind us to the intelligence that has gone into them. Collected and published by Bishop Percy, Francis James Child, and Cecil Sharp, with origins in oral, not literate cultures, the ballads often evince a dramatic sweep of action and call up powerful emotions that can obscure their intellectual content and structure, the artistry of the compose. It is so easy for us to think of intelligence as belonging only to a literate world, as showing itself only in written composition and in academic ways, that we can pass over the achievement of what we condescendingly call "untutored" intelligence.
       
        The ballad of "Sir Patrick Spens" (or, sometimes, Spence) is surely one of the greatest--if not the greatest--of all the ballads. Coleridge refers to it as "that grand old ballad," Gerould says that "of itself [it would] have been enough to give [Percy's Reliques] its great place in English poetry," and Entwhistle calls it (and "Tam Lin") "unsurpassed in power and beauty throughout all Europe." Chambers says of the ballads in Child's collection,
       
        They are of the first importance, not merely from their bulk, but from their literary quality, since they include most of those which, if the anthologists may be trusted, must be regarded as the best ballads. Here are, for example, such admirable things as "Sir Patrick Spens."
       
        There is surprising unity among the scholars.
       
        The testimony of those who have studied the ballads, the scholars, cannot be lightly disregarded, but, as Aquinas says, "the argument from ... (1995 of 27724 Characters)
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