Robin Hood and Guy of Gisborne: Difference between revisions

From International Robin Hood Bibliography
mNo edit summary
mNo edit summary
Line 25: Line 25:
* {{:Child, Francis James 1882a}}, vol. III, pp. 89-94
* {{:Child, Francis James 1882a}}, vol. III, pp. 89-94
* {{:Gummere, Francis Barton 1894a}}, pp. 68-76; notes, pp. 320-21
* {{:Gummere, Francis Barton 1894a}}, pp. 68-76; notes, pp. 320-21
** {{:Gummere, Francis Barton 1914a}}, pp. 68-76; notes, pp. 320-21
* {{:Mabie, Hamilton Wright 1896a}}, pp. 106-118
* {{:Mabie, Hamilton Wright 1896a}}, pp. 106-118
** {{:Mabie, Hamilton Wright 1902a}}, pp. 106-118
** {{:Mabie, Hamilton Wright 1902a}}, pp. 106-118

Revision as of 17:33, 10 August 2020

Ballad
Child 118
Title Robin Hood and Guy of Gisborne
Versions 1
Variants 1
Stanzas 58
Date c. 1650

By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2013-07-11. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2020-08-10.

Editions

Separate editions

Scholarly collections

Translations

German

Criticism

Sources and analogues

For general discussion of, and sources relating to, other outlaw traditions and tales, see the Analogues section.

Stanzas Matter Title Analogue
3-4 Portentous dream Marsk Stig (DgF 145A, B, H-I, M) Marsk Stig has portentous dream, but his wife tells him not to worry, cf. Little John's words to Robin. Analogous scenes in several other Danish ballads; see page on Marsk Stig.


Also see