The Gay Goshawk
Encyclopedia
Synopsis
A Scottish squire sends a letter to his love by a goshawk, who tells her that he has sent many letters and will die for love. She goes to ask her father a boon, and he says, anything but leave to marry the squire. She asks that, if she dies, she will be buried in Scotland. He agrees, and she takes a sleeping potion. When her body is carried to Scotland, the squire comes to lament her, opening the coffin or the winding sheet. She wakes—sometimes after he kisses her—tells him she has fasted nine days for him, and tells her brothers to go home without her.Variants
Heroines who feign death, to win their lovers or for other reasons of escape, are a common motif in ballads. The hero who feigns death to draw a timid maiden is less common, but still often appears as in Willie's Lyke-WakeWillie's Lyke-Wake
-Synopsis:Willie sets up his wake and lies in his winding cloth. His love discovers this and pleads with her father to let her go. When he does, and she enters the room, Willie rouses himself and declares that he will marry her at once.-Variants:...
, Child ballad 25.
The bird as a messenger is common in ballads. Later forms of this ballad use not a goshawk but a parrot, a bird that can talk.