History & Human Geography

The Ballad of Mary Hamilton

Jimie 2020. 8. 16. 05:20

 

Illustration by Eleanor Fortescue-Brickdale:

She had Mary Seaton, and Mary Beaton, And Mary Carmichael, and me

 

The History Behind the Ballad of Mary Hamilton

byJone Johnson Lewis

Updated July 20, 2019

A folk ballad, possibly no older than the 18th century, tells a story about a servant or lady-in-waiting, Mary Hamilton, at the court of a Queen Mary, who had an affair with the king and was sent to the gallows for drowning her illegitimate child. The song refers to "four Maries" or "four Marys": Mary Seaton, Mary Beaton, and Mary Carmichael, plus Mary Hamilton.

The Usual Interpretation

The usual interpretation is that Mary Hamilton was a lady-in-waiting at the Scottish court of Mary, Queen of Scots (1542-1587) and that the affair was with the Queen's second husband, Lord Darnley. Accusations of infidelity are consistent with stories of their troubled marriage. There were "four Maries" sent to France with the young Mary, Queen of Scots, by her mother, Mary of Guisefour Maries

 

There was the 18th-century story of a Mary Hamilton, from Scotland, who had an affair with Peter the Great, and who killed her child by Peter and her two other illegitimate children. She was executed by decapitation on March 14, 1719. In a variation of that story, Peter's mistress had two abortions before she drowned her third child. It is possible that an older folk song about the Stewart court was conflated with this story.

Other Possibilities

There are other possibilities that have been offered as roots of the story in the ballad:

 

  • John Knox, in his History of the Reformation, mentions an incident of infanticide by a lady-in-waiting from France, after an affair with the apothecary of Mary, Queen of Scots. The couple was reported to have been hanged in 1563.
  • Some have speculated that the "old Queen" referred to in the song was the Queen of Scots Mary of Guelders, who lived from about 1434 to 1463, and who was married to Scotland's King James II. She was regent for her son, James III, from her husband's death when a cannon exploded in 1460 to her own death in 1463. A daughter of James II and Mary of Guelders, Mary Stewart (1453 to 1488), married James Hamilton. Among her descendants was Lord Darnley, husband of Mary, Queen of Scots.

More recently, England's George IV, while still the Prince of Wales, is rumored to have had an affair with a governess of one of his sisters. The governess' name? Mary Hamilton. But no story of a child, much less infanticide.

Other Connections

The story in the song is about unwanted pregnancy; could it be that the British birth control activist, Marie Stopes, took her pseudonym, Marie Carmichael, from this song? In Virginia Woolf's feminist text, A Room of One's Own, she includes characters named Mary Beton, Mary Seton and Mary Carmichael.

The History of the Song

The Child Ballads were first published between 1882 and 1898 as The English and Scottish Popular Ballads. Francis James Child collected 28 versions of the song, which he classified as Child Ballad #173. Many refer to a Queen Marie and four other Maries, often with the names Mary Beaton, Mary Seaton, Mary Carmichael (or Michel) and the narrator, Mary Hamilton or Mary Mild, though there are some variations in the names. In various versions, she is the daughter of a knight or of the Duke of York or Argyll, or of a lord in the North or in the South or in the West. In some, only her "proud" mother is mentioned.

MARY HAMILTON JOAN BAEZ

 

Select Stanzas

The first five and the last four stanzas from version 1 of Child Ballad #173:

173A.1 WORDRR’rrS gane to the kitchen, And word’s gane to the ha, That Marie Hamilton gangs wi bairn To the hichest Stewart of a’.

173A.2 He’s courted her in the kitchen, He’s courted her in the ha, He’s courted her in the laigh cellar, And that was warst of a’.

173A.3 She’s tyed it in her apron And she’s thrown it in the sea; Says, Sink ye, swim ye, bonny wee babe! You’l neer get mair o me.

173A.4 Down them cam the auld queen, Goud tassels tying her hair: ‘O marie, where’s the bonny wee babe That I heard greet sae sair?’

173A.5 ‘There never was a babe intill my room, As little designs to be; It was but a touch o my sair side, Come oer my fair bodie.’

173A.6 ‘O Marie, put on your robes o black, Or else your robes o brown, For ye maun gang wi me the night, To see fair Edinbro town.’

173A.7 ‘I winna put on my robes o black, Nor yet my robes o brown; But I’ll put on my robes o white, To shine through Edinbro town.’

173A.8 When she gaed up the Cannogate, She laughd loud laughters three; But whan she cam down the Cannogate The tear blinded her ee.

173A.9 When she gaed up the Parliament stair, The heel cam aff her shee; And lang or she cam down again She was condemnd to dee.

173A.10 When she cam down the Cannogate, The Cannogate sae free, Many a ladie lookd oer her window, Weeping for this ladie.

173A.11 ‘Ye need nae weep for me,’ she says, ‘Ye need nae weep for me; For had I not slain mine own sweet babe, This death I wadna dee.

173A.12 ‘Bring me a bottle of wine,’ she says, ‘The best that eer ye hae, That I may drink to my weil-wishers, And they may drink to me.

173A.13 ‘Here’s a health to the jolly sailors, That sail upon the main; Let them never let on to my father and mother But what I’m coming hame.

173A.14 ‘Here’s a health to the jolly sailors, That sail upon the sea; Let them never let on to my father and mother That I cam here to dee.

173A.15 ‘Oh little did my mother think, The day she cradled me, What lands I was to travel through, What death I was to dee.

173A.16 ‘Oh little did my father think, The day he held up me, What lands I was to travel through, What death I was to dee.

173A.17 ‘Last night I washd the queen’s feet, And gently laid her down; And a’ the thanks I’ve gotten the nicht To be hangd in Edinbro town!

173A.18 ‘Last nicht there was four Maries, The nicht there’l be but three; There was Marie Seton, and Marie Beton, And Marie Carmichael, and me.’

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Mary, Queen of Scots

Mary’s life was a life of power, politics, intrigue and murder, resulting in Mary’s imprisonment and eventual execution by Elizabeth I of England.

 

  1. Born 8 December 1542 in Linlithgow Palace.
  2. Crowned Queen of Scots in the Chapel Royal, Stirling Castle, aged just nine months.
  3. Smuggled to France aged five, where she lived until she was 18.
  4. Gave birth to her only child in Edinburgh Castle. He would rise to become James VI of Scotland and I of England.
  5. Some believe she arranged to have her second husband, Lord Darnley, assassinated.
  6. Married for a third time to Lord Bothwell - some believe he abducted her against her will.
  7. Imprisoned for almost a year in Lochleven Castle in Kinross before managing to escape.
  8. Last hours in Scotland were spent in Dundrennan Abbey in Dumfries & Galloway before journeying to England to seek protection from her cousin, Queen Elizabeth I.
  9. Confined in England for 18 years before Elizabeth sanctioned her death warrant and she was beheaded. She died 8 February 1587 in Fotheringhay Castle.