Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

King Estmere

Traditional song From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

King Estmere is an English and Scottish Child ballad and number 60 of 305 ballads collected by Francis James Child.[1]

Synopsis

King Estmere's brother Alder the Younger urges him to marry King Adland's daughter, and suggests that he look at the lady himself, rather than be deceived by any description. Once there, King Adland warns them that she put off the King of Spain, but he has her come down and she agrees to marry him, despite the threats of the King of Spain. King Estmere leaves, the King of Spain attacks, and the daughter sent a page after King Estmere to warn him of her danger. Adler is the son of a magician-woman and enchants King Estmere into the shape of a harper and himself into his boy. They infiltrate the castle, Alder kills the King of Spain, and the two fight off all his men. King Estmere and the daughter marry.

Remove ads

Variants

Various motifs similar to this ballad have appeared in Scandinavian ballads, but there are no actual foreign variants.[2]

Literature

Josepha Sherman retold this in King's Son, Magic's Son (1994).

In Bevis: the Story of a Boy by Richard Jefferies King Estmere is the favourite ballad of Bevis.

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads