Tam Lin: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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| image = Page 161 illustration in More English Fairy Tales.png
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| elevator pitch = The title character is taken by the Queen of the Fairies, and his true love must rescue him.
| genre = [[Child Ballad]]
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{{quote|''If my love were an earthly knight,
{{quote|''If my love were an earthly knight,
''As he's an elfin grey,
''As he's an elfin grey,

Revision as of 20:54, 2 April 2021

Tam Lin
Central Theme:
Synopsis: The title character is taken by the Queen of the Fairies, and his true love must rescue him.
Genre(s): Child Ballad
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If my love were an earthly knight,
As he's an elfin grey,
I wad na gie my ain true-love
For nae lord that ye hae.

Tam Lin is Child Ballad #39, stemming from the Oral Tradition, and one of the most popular ballads, both as a song and as a source for literature. It is from the south of Scotland, and was first recorded in the mid-sixteenth century.

In a nutshell: Headstrong young Janet hears that the mysterious Tam Lin has forbidden all maidens to go to the wood called Carterhaugh (a real place; it's near Selkirk), on pain of... how shall we put this... no longer being maidens. She declares that she will go to Carterhaugh, but she has no sooner picked a rose[1] than Tam Lin himself shows up...

Some time later, a knight at Janet's father's court remarks that Janet looks knocked up. Janet agrees, but says the baby's father is not any of the men at her father's court. She returns to Carterhaugh and speaks to Tam Lin.

Tam Lin tells Janet that he was once mortal, but was captured by the Queen of the Fairies and is now in danger of being offered as a tithe to Hell[2]. Janet can save him, he explains, if she waits by Miles Cross until midnight on Halloween, pulls him down off his horse, and holds on to him throughout his transformations. Janet does this, and the Queen of the Fairies is obliged to let Tam Lin go.

The numerous variants collected by Francis Child can be found here.

Works derived from this ballad:
Tropes used in Tam Lin include:
  1. In ballads and stories, picking a rose summons the ruler of the place. See also Beauty and The Beast.
  2. There's an oblique reference to this in Sandman.