Richard Sheale
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Richard (or Rycharde) Teale, harper of Tamworth, was 16th century peddlar, and minstrel for the Stanley Family (and some say, like all pedlars, a mediocre poet).


Life

Richard (or Rycharde) Teale was a minstrel-retainer of the
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about the middle of the 16th century. He was technically an itinerant vagabond, and (probably a skilful) beggar. He obtained most of his income "on the road". He was honest in so far as he preferred to pay his debts. He was married and, with the help of his wife, managed to save sixty pounds. Unfortunately in that he was stopped by highwaymen while crossing Dunsmore Heath (in
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and about 7 miles from
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) and his money stolen. He thought that he was safe carrying the money because of his reputation of his calling for poverty. He wrote a song to tell of this tale, and possibly collected many times more by collection from the audience’s sympathy. Before his performance he pronounced that "his patron has given him letters, friends everywhere have contributed, and he hopes present company will do the same". Sheale was like many other beggars of the time, in so far that his begging was better than his poetry, and much of the poetry or songs called on generous giving by the listeners. By now, the days of the court jester were ending, yet there were still a few men, such as Richard Sheale, who managed, to some extent, to fill the shoes of the previous courtly minstrel of the Middle Ages. Such were several "known" beggars who were generally decent beings, singing songs to educate. Some would join the several guilds of minstrels which gave, or claimed to give, those licensed by them protection from the law against vagabonds. But in the words of the poem "A Minstrel in the Stocks" (From one of the Roxburghe Ballads):- Beggars they are with one consent, And Rogues by act of Parliament. Richard Searle, like many other itinerants, was able to perform tricks which amazed their hosts. One such trick was to hold a sheep’a bladder full of blood under his shirt, he would then stab himself, shortly after "arising from the dead"


Works

These include :- * The Hunting of the Cheviot (page 164) * O God, what a world (page 170) * An Elergy for Lady Margaret, Countess of Derby c1558 (page 175) * The Ballad of Chevy Chase – has been generally attributed to the Lancashire born minstrel Richard Sheale although it is a far better quality than anything else he is known to have written


See also

Geordie dialect words Geordie () is a nickname for a person from the Tyneside area of North East England, and the dialect used by its inhabitants, also known in linguistics as Tyneside English or Newcastle English. There are different definitions of what constitut ...

John Collingwood Bruce
John Stokoe
Northumbrian Minstrelry by Bruce and Stokoe, 1882 ''Northumbrian Minstrelsy'' is a book of 18th and 19th century North East of England folk songs and pipe music, intended to be a lasting historical record. The book was edited by John Stokoe and the Rev John Collingwood Bruce LL.D., F.S.A., and ...

Folk music of England The folk music of England is a tradition-based music which has existed since the later medieval period. It is often contrasted with courtly, classical and later commercial music. Folk music traditionally was preserved and passed on orally wit ...


References


External links


The Songs and Travels of a Tudor Minstrel – Richard Sheale of Tamworth – by Andrew Taylor

Elizabethan rogues and vagabonds- and their representation in contemporary literature – by Frank Aydelotte

Northumbrian Minstrelsy
{{DEFAULTSORT:Sheale, Richard (or Rycharde) English singers English songwriters People from Tamworth, Staffordshire 15th-century deaths 16th-century births Geordie songwriters