Fair Charlotte

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Template:Short description "Fair Charlotte" (or "Young Charlotte") (Laws G17)[1] is an American folk ballad.

Story

The story is a cautionary tale concerning a young girl called Charlotte who refused to wrap up warmly to go on a sleigh ride to a New Year's ball. Upon arriving at the ball, her fiancé discovers that she has frozen to death during the journey.

Origins

The earliest known form of the story is in a purported incident recounted in The New York Observer in 1840, entitled "A Corpse Going to a Ball";Template:Sfn[2] this was reprinted in The Ohio Democrat and Dover Advertiser for February 28, 1840.[3] The report claimed that the incident in question happened on January 1, 1840, and likened it to a story called "Death at the Toilet" from Passages from the Diary of a London Physician (1838),[4] which tells of a young woman who is determined to go a ball despite the fact that she suffers from heart problems; because of cold weather in her room she is found dead at her toilet while primping herself for the ball. The moral of the story is against vanity: "...I have seen many hundreds of corpses, as well in the calm composure of natural death, as mangled and distorted by violence; but never have I seen so startling a satire upon human vanity, so repulsive, unsightly, and loathsome a spectacle as a corpse dressed for a ball!."[5] Other Newspapers that reprinted "" were the "Vermont Telegraph" (February 19, 1840) and "Southern Argus" March 3, 1840 of Columbus Mississippi.[6] There was also a follow-up article April 1, 1840.

American poet and suffragist Elizabeth Oakes Smith turned this story into a poem, published in The Neapolitan, a newspaper of Naples, New York, on January 27, 1841, also under the title "A Corpse Going to a Ball".[7][8] A version of Smith's poem was subsequently set to music, leading to the creation of the ballad. During the 20th century, a version of the ballad was sung by Almeda Riddle under the title "Young Carlotta".[8]

See also

  • Springfield Mountain, another cautionary folk ballad situated in New England, about a boy who is bitten by a rattlesnake. The two ballads are often cited together as examples of narrative verse representative of obituary tradition.
  • Frozen Charlotte, a porcelain doll named after the ballad.

References

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External links

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