Babes in the Wood

All you want to know about Babes in the Wood

Colour plates from
Randolph Caldecott's book of the rhyme
The parents: sore sicke they were and like to dye
The parents: sore sicke they were and like to dye
"Now, brother", said the dying man, "look to my children deare"
"Now, brother", said the dying man, "look to my children deare"
With lippes as cold as any stone, they kist the children small
With lippes as cold as any stone, they kist the children small
The parents being dead and gone, the children home he takes
The parents being dead and gone, the children home he takes
Away then went those pretty babes, rejoycing at that tide
Away then went those pretty babes, rejoycing at that tide
And he that was of mildest mood, did slaye the other there
And he that was of mildest mood, did slaye the other there
These prettye babes, with hand in hand, went wandering up and downe
These prettye babes, with hand in hand, went wandering up and downe
In one another’s armes they dyed
In one another’s armes they dyed

Babes in the Wood, also known as Kids of the Wood, is a traditional children's tale, as well as a popular pantomime subject. It has also been the name of some other unrelated works. The expression has passed into common language, referring to inexperienced innocents entering unawares into any potentially dangerous or hostile situation. A number of child murder cases have been referred to in the media as the Babes in the Wood murders.

Contents

Traditional tale

The traditional children's tale is of two children abandoned in a wood, who die and are covered with leaves by robins.

First published as a ballad by Thomas Millington in Norwich in 1595, the tale has been reworked in many forms. It frequently appears attributed as a Mother Goose rhyme.

In Randolph Caldecott's telling of the story, the children are orphans left in the care of an uncle and aunt after their parents' death. The uncle gives the children to ruffians to be killed, in order to acquire their inheritance, telling his wife they are being sent to London for their upbringing. The murderers fall out and the "milder" of the two kills the other. He tells the children he will return with provisions, but they do not see him again. The children, wandering alone in the woods, die, and are covered by leaves by the birds. Unlike many morality tales, the story ends there; no retribution is described as happening to the uncle.[1]

The Walt Disney Company re-worked this tale, incorporating some material from Hansel and Gretel by the Brothers Grimm and adding a village of friendly elves (a feature not traditionally present in either tale) and a happy ending, and on the 19 November 1932 released an animated short film entitled Babes in the Wood.

The story is also used as a basis for pantomimes. However, for various reasons including both the brevity of the original and the target pantomime audience of young children, modern pantomimes by this name usually combine this story with parts of the modern Robin Hood story (employing the supporting characters from it, such as Maid Marian, rather than Robin himself) to lengthen it.

Folklore

Tradition and folklore has it that the events told in Babes in the Wood originally happened in Wayland Wood in Norfolk, England. It is said that the Uncle lived at the nearby Griston Hall. The ghosts of the murdered children are said to haunt Wayland Wood. The village signs at both Griston and nearby Watton depict the story.

The essence of the lore concerns two children. After the death of their parents, they are left in the care of an Uncle. However, the Uncle resents the task and pays two men to take the children into the woods and kill them. Finding themselves unable to go through with the act, the criminals abandon the children in the wood, where they eventually die being unable to fend for themselves.

See also

References

  1. ^ The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Babes in the Wood, by R. Caldecott
  • "The Babes in the Wood". The Phrase Finder. Retrieved on March 14, 2005. This includes the text of the Thomas Millington ballad.
  • "Babes in the Wood". Nursery Rhymes. Retrieved on March 14, 2005. This is the Mother Goose rhyme.
  • "Babes in the Wood". KIDiddles: Song lyrics. Retrieved on March 17, 2005. Song lyrics, a variant on the Mother Goose rhyme.
  • "Babes in the Wood". Tom Wilkins, The Encyclopaedia of Disney Animated Shorts. Retrieved on March 14, 2005.

External links


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