Textuality » 3A Interacting
The Wife of Usher’s Well presents the typical features of the ballad, there are some alliterations, repetitions and other figure of the speech. The ballad is arranged into twelve quatrains. The rhyme scheme is abcb, typical of the medieval English ballad. Right from the title the reader has the first piece of information about the wife.It is about her social status. She was rich and she was married.
The function of the first stanza is to introduce the story: there is a wife who lives at Usher's Well and she is a wealthy wife. She has three sons and she had sent them over the sea.
So the first information we have from the first 4 lines are the protagonist of the ballad, the wife’s social status, her hometown and her economic position.
In the first quatrain you can find some typical features of a ballad. First of all the repetition of the word "wife". In the 2nd line you can notice a syntactic deviation: the subject is placed at the end of the line (in a key position) so the word "wife" gains a lot of importance. There is an alliteration of the sound w in "wealthy", "wife", "was" which speeds up the rhythm of the line. In the 3rd line there is an other alliteration of the sound "st" in the words "stout" and "stalwart".
The function of the 2nd stanza is to inform the reader that the three sons had died: the composer tells that someone has said to the mother that her sons had died.
In this stanza there is the repetition of the word "week" and this is an incremental repetition.
There is also the alliteration of the sound w which recreats the sense of suffering of the mother.
The third stanza is similar to the second one: only the last line is different. The composer makes this choice because he wants to underline the tragic event of the death of the three sons and the mother's pain.
In the 4th stanza the composer introduces dialogue or direct speech and the readers can listen the real words of the mother. The function of this quatrain is to tell the mother's wish: she would like her sons to go back and she would like to see them again. The last line is very important and it is full of meaning: "In earthly flesh and blood". It means that the mother wishes to see her sons alive. From the last line the reader can understand all the mother's grief.
The function of the 5th stanza is to intoduce the theme of the supernatural: the resurrection of the three sons. The composer tells that in the time of S. Martino the three sons come back home.
But you have to consider a relevant line: "and their hats were of birk". The birk is a kind of tree which produces a strong wood that is used to produce graves. The intelligent reader immediately understands that this is a metaphor: as the matter of fact this is an indirect way of saying that they are dead. The composer says that the wife's sons come back home in a grave of birk (synedoch).
The 6th stanza starts witht the personal pronoun "it" which refers to "birk" (the word in the previous stanza). It grew at the gates of Paradise. The composer always underlines the death of the three sons. The poet speaks about the birk to refers to the three sons.
The reader understand that a theme is the supernatural.
In the 7th stanza the mother speaks and orders to blow up the fire and to bring water from the well. She believes that her sons will come back home that night. So she is preparing the house. But this is only a spell.
In the 8th stanza the mother prepares a bed for her sons, she brings her mantel on the bed and waits for them. The wife seems to see her sons. From this quatrain the reader can understand the space: the mother is inside the house. The mother is under a supernatural spell.
The function of the 9th stanza is to make the reader understand the time: cocks are crewing so it means that it is morning. There is the repetition of the word "red" in the first line of the quatrain. In the last line of the stanza the oldest son speaks: he says that it is time to go away.
In the 10th stanza the composer underlines the time: "the cock he hadna crawed but once and clapp'd his wings at a'". In the last two lines of the quatrain the youngest son speaks: he repeats that they have to go away.
In the 11th stanza just from the first line the reader can understand that it is morning. In the 2nd line there is a relevant word "worm". It creates a ghastly scene, the three sons had resurrected from the world of the dead. But they have to come back to the world of the dead. It is a typical medieval conception, the resurrection and the salvation.
The function of the 12th stanza is to conclude the ballad. It is in the dialogue form. A son is speaking before coming back to the world of the dead. From “Fare ye weel, my mother dear” and from “And fare ye well, the bonny lass That kindles my mother’s fire” the reader understand that the son loves the mother and he is gracious.