What is it about?

This article analyzes the earliest ballad (dating back to 1921) to have been gathered into Lorca's Romancero gitano. It shows how Lorca was able to take a common ballad feature --its fragmentation and gaps in narrative-- to create a modern version of the dismal hunt theme. (The latter is a traditional ballad theme about the unhappy quest for love on the part of a knight.)

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Why is it important?

This article shows how Lorca shaped a traditional theme and peculiarity of the Spanish ballad form-which he evidently knew very well-- to his own interests. The lacunae (literally, lagoons or gaps) become part of the story and hint at unspoken words.

Perspectives

This ballad was composed at a time when Lorca was absorbed in the writing of his Suites. Possibly, the theme of sexual manhood was not far from his mind.

Dr Roberta Ann Quance

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This page is a summary of: “Burla de don Pedro a caballo”: The Modern Ballad's Dismal Hunt, Romance Quarterly, February 1986, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/08831157.1986.9925762.
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