FAIR ANNIE

The Text is that of Scott’s Minstrelsy, ‘chiefly from the recitation of an old woman.’ Scott names the ballad ‘Lord Thomas and Fair Annie,’ adding to the confusion already existing with ‘Lord Thomas and Fair Annet.’

The Story.—Fair Annie, stolen from the home of her father, the Earl of Wemyss, by ‘a knight out o’er the sea,’ has borne seven sons to him. He now bids her prepare to welcome home his real bride, and she meekly obeys, suppressing her tears with difficulty. Lord Thomas and his new-come bride hear, through the wall of their bridal chamber, Annie bewailing her lot, and wishing her seven sons had never been born. The bride goes to comfort her, discovers in her a long-lost sister, and departs, thanking heaven she goes a maiden home.

Of this ballad, Herd printed a fragment in 1769, some stanzas being incorporated in the present version. Similar tales abound in the folklore of Scandinavia, Holland, and Germany. But, three hundred years older than any version of the ballad, is the lay of Marie de France, Le Lai de Freisne; which, nevertheless, is only another offshoot of some undiscovered common origin.

It is imperative (in 4.4) that Annie should braid her hair, as a sign of virginity: married women only bound up their hair, or wore it under a cap.

FAIR ANNIE

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