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Ballads are most often folk poetry in a musical format, passed along orally from generation to generation, set and sung to music. Until written, the content evolves and changes over time, unlike a more traditional poem. Literary ballads are those composed and written formally.
Ballads are most often folk poetry in a musical format, passed along orally from generation to generation, set and sung to music. Until written, the content evolves and changes over time, unlike a more traditional poem. Literary ballads are those composed and written formally.


Famous Ballads<br>
Famous Ballads:
[[Ballad of the Alamo]]<br>
:[[Ballad of the Alamo]]
[[Ballad of the Green Berets]]<br>
:[[Ballad of the Green Berets]]







[[talk:Ballad|/Talk]]

Revision as of 11:43, 22 July 2002

"A narrative, rhythmic saga of a past affair, sometimes romantic and inevitably catastrophic, which is impersonally related, usually with foreshortened lines and simple repeating rhymes, and often with a refrain." Packard, The Art of Poetry Writing 93

Ballads are most often folk poetry in a musical format, passed along orally from generation to generation, set and sung to music. Until written, the content evolves and changes over time, unlike a more traditional poem. Literary ballads are those composed and written formally.

Famous Ballads:

Ballad of the Alamo
Ballad of the Green Berets