BALLAD
A Ballad is a poem that tells a story similar to a folk tale or legend which often has a repeated refrain. A typical ballad is a plot-driven song, with one or more characters hurriedly unfurling events leading to a dramatic conclusion. It is often constructed in quatrain stanzas, each line containing as few as three or four stresses and rhyming either the second and fourth lines, or all alternating lines.
Ballad of Cynthia
Up on the hill over Riverton
Cynthia knotted her thread;
Stitching a quilt for her baby
to keep warm in his small wicker bed.
She was widowed that fall on a blustery day
when a large tree erroneous fell;
Through grieving and grit she came up with a way
in raising her child up well.
She sewed aprons and bloomers and lace petticoats
and took them to market each week;
While Benjamin played with stick and string boats
in nearby Low Cumberland Creek.
Benjamin grew tall and straight as a man
despite what his Ma could avail;
He kissed her goodbye, and his new life began
His desire in life was to sail.
As years took their toll on the poor woman's lot
her hands could no longer pull thread;
She mourned for her son as she lay on her cot
with his quilt used to pillow her head.
She dreamed of a sailing ship billowing proud
with her boy facing battering wave;
commanding his crew boldly and loud
A ship captain worldly and brave.
Though she missed him she knew he was happy
in doing what he wanted to do;
defending his ship strong and scrappy
with sea winds and gales he fought through.
He returned on a morn in December
When the smoke from her chimney rose high;
Much taller than she could remember
with a son's look of love in his eye.
He took her to live by the ocean
where sailing ships came in from sea;
She knew Benjamin's care and devotion
wishing all to be happy as she.