I was listening to Bob Dylan’s latest release, ‘Tempest’,
and in that album is a character called Sweet Willie. I’ve heard it said that
this character is a revisit of one of his earlier characters, Gamblin Ramblin
Willie, but I wonder if that is true. I dug around and it seems
that there are quite a few folk songs about ‘Sweet Willie’.
Apparently in old murder ballads the character of Willie is simply a
reference to the antagonist, or protagonist in early American and Scottish folk
songs.
What is a Murder Ballad?
Simply put, a murder ballad is a song reciting the sad news of
violence and death at the hands of another. Remember that back in the old days,
before newspapers, before radio or movies, we had songs. Songs were the primary
way in which storytellers spun their tales and these songs often contained bits
of news and current events that would otherwise go unknown. If you think bias
is bad in news now, well, just imaging how each story changed in the telling by
each bard, each with his own take, his own morality.
These situations could often change and make the protagonist the
antagonist, and events were never set in stone the way we think of it now (
truth be told, it hast changed that much) Usually the source of the murder was
a jealous man, who dies because of the affections of a woman, or because said
woman cheated on her man. Surely it’s the oldest story in the book.
I find it interesting that Sweet Willie wound up as the central
character in many of these murder ballads. I presume that because the names in
the stories often got lost, or perhaps because the songwriter was singing a
sort of biography and didn’t want his name revealed, the name Willie was used
as sort of an everyman; something like a John Doe is in society today.
Through the passage of time, Willie becomes his own character due
to his prominence in these types of ballads and his story is retold over
and over again, circumstances and details changing with each telling. Who is
this man? Well, that all depends on who’s telling the story.
Sweet Willie
As Mrs. Bragg, of North Carolina sung it in 1933, Willy rode off
with a farmer’s daughter, and as they rode away, her father and brothers came
after. Willie and the father shot it out on horseback, and they both died of
their gunshot wounds. Willie made it to his parents’ house with his bride to be
but died the next day. The Farmers daughter died soon after of heartbreak in
the song indicating that Willie and she were lovers, but that Willie was not
though very kindly of by the farmer, leaving us to wonder what the cause of the
bad blood was. It seems as I’m Mrs. Bragg saw him as a hero and a martyr.
Knoxville Girl
In Knoxville Girl, a traditional ballad,
we hear the tale of a cruel Willy who beats his girl to death with a stick for
apparently no reason, but it’s possible that she was pregnant out of wedlock. In
the old America, especially in the pre-industrial days it was quite frowned
upon to be pregnant out of wedlock. Typically they would have just gotten
married, but as he killed her more likely scenario is that the child to be was
not his and that might help explain why he killed her.
There is another traditional song called Pretty
Polly in which
Willie asks Polly to marry him, then he takes his girl down to the
river and he kills her. Why? The reason is unclear but I suspect he is hurt by
her rejection and cannot contain his grief sand so he lashes out, only to be
arrested later in the tale. There is another version in which, like in
Knoxville girl, Polly is again pregnant, possibly with another’s child and this
may be the reason why Willie digs her grave in the night to toss her dead body
inside. Some tales even go as far as to have Polly's ghost murder him in
revenge after the deed for killing both herself and the baby however there are
too many versions of the tale to be sure.
Willie Moore
Yet another ballad called simply ‘Willie Moore’, we hear of a man
who again, was not allowed to marry but this time it is the girl’s parents who
refuse the marriage. Now, this story is interesting because the first line of
the song says, “Willie Moore was a King, his age 21”. Some say that he is an
actual king, but to me that to me seems a bit shortsighted; why would her
parents object to her marrying a king and why would a king settle for the
approval or disapproval of the girl’s parents?
I suspect that the first line refers to an honorary
title and that Willie was not really a bona fide king, At the end of the
song, Willie moves to Montreal to mend his broken heart so we know Willie is in
Canada, the King being the King of England so the king reference may mean that
Willie was the performer, as in the king of song, much like we consider Elvis
to be the King of Rock. Now Willie being a simple bard may be a very reasonable
explanation as to why Ana’s parents would refuse such a marriage. The girl is
found at the bottom of the river in a way no one knows but it seems to me that
she killed herself, being not able to marry the man she loves. Here Willie is
definitely the protagonist, the unfortunate hero, if you will.
Ramblin` Gamblin` Willie
And our great modern poet and folklorist, Bob Dylan writes about a
few 'Willies' in his songs. In ‘Ramblin
Gamblin Willie’, our hero is a gambler who takes the house every time, wins
steamboats, houses and land, fathers many children by many women, and became
quite successful until one fateful day, he plays the ‘dead man’s hand’ in which
he wins but the loser is so outraged, he takes his pistol and shoots poor
Willie in the head. There is some mystery in whether or not Willie is a cheat
or just a damn good card player but he is a good man at heart, as characterized
by the fact that he is generous with his money, and takes care of his many
illegitimate children and their mothers. Clearly, Willie is a man of
contradicting morality. But it is plain that he is the protagonist and hero of
the tale, a man of great legend and great tragedy.
In his latest number, Sweet Willie is mentioned in one line where
he laid down to die in 'Scarlett Town', which is apparently a reference to a
graveyard. Well that song may or may not refer to the same man, and it’s
impossible to tell, but I suspect that he is not, being that Willie had
previously died in a poker game by gunshot in the afore mentioned song.
Who is the Real Sweet Willie?
This character of Willie appears again and again, and is a
mysterious figure indeed. Whether he is a murderer or victim, hero or villain
largely depends on who is telling the tale. I’m of the opinion that he is the
classic unsung hero, often misunderstood, and widely the subject of great
controversy.
For me, Willie is the epitome of the forlorn character and is
usually depicted as down on his luck in some way. The Willie that resonates
with me the most is the songwriter with unrequited love either by the girl or
the parents who think him unworthy of their daughters hands in marriage. I can
relate to this, as I have also been defamed by scorned women and thought of as
a ‘dirty musician’ but thankfully no one has ever died by my hand!
When I think of this character I see a dark winding road in the
country, willows weeping all around, maybe the rain is pouring down, little
cabins and houses with closed doors and faint lights in the windows as the
cautious widows and would be lovers watch him walk by, carrying a guitar and
many lonely songs with him on the road to either heaven or hell, depending on
your point of view.
I believe Sweet Willie is a man who for all his good
intentions finds himself on the run. He seems to be courting death at every
turn and usually at the hands of a spiteful father. Sometimes, he is in fact, a
man who lets his emotions get the better of him and loses control, resulting in
a horrendous deed and once in a while, he is the victim of jealousy or betrayal.
He is the epitome of the
downtrodden traveler, as he moves through story to story finding death and
tragedy at every turn. He is as often the villain as the martyr but I believe
it’s up to you to decide who the real Willie is. Whatever your opinion, he is a
haunting everyman character that is easily relatable to those who have suffered
heartbreak and feel the blues.
Who hasn’t felt a murderous rage when our lover has been
caught cheating? Who hasn’t angered a lover’s parents at some point? It seems
to me that the best of us have been the victim of cruel rumor or been denied
love at some point and Sweet Willie is ever the reflection of all the pain that
comes with an unrequited love.

I love me some old folk stuff, I know Pretty Polly and the oen one i have has her commin back from the grave to kill ol willie!
ReplyDelete