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・ Robin Kern
・ Robin Hood (comic opera)
・ Robin Hood (DC Comics)
・ Robin Hood (disambiguation)
・ Robin Hood (golfer)
・ Robin Hood (Once Upon a Time)
・ Robin Hood (opera)
・ Robin Hood (train)
・ Robin Hood (Walibi Holland)
・ Robin Hood Academy
・ Robin Hood Airport Doncaster Sheffield
・ Robin Hood and Allan-a-Dale
・ Robin Hood and Guy of Gisborne
・ Robin Hood and Little John
・ Robin Hood and Queen Katherine
Robin Hood and the Beggar
・ Robin Hood and the Bishop
・ Robin Hood and the Bishop of Hereford
・ Robin Hood and the Butcher
・ Robin Hood and the Curtal Friar
・ Robin Hood and the Golden Arrow
・ Robin Hood and the Monk
・ Robin Hood and the Pedlars
・ Robin Hood and the Pirates
・ Robin Hood and the Potter
・ Robin Hood and the Prince of Aragon
・ Robin Hood and the Ranger
・ Robin Hood and the Scotchman
・ Robin Hood and the Shepherd
・ Robin Hood and the Tanner


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Robin Hood and the Beggar : ウィキペディア英語版
Robin Hood and the Beggar
"Robin Hood and the Beggar" is a story in the Robin Hood canon which has survived as, among other forms, a late seventeenth-century English broadside ballad, and is a pair out of several ballads about the medieval folk hero that form part of the Child ballad collection, which is one of the most comprehensive collections of traditional English ballads. These two ballads share the same basic plot device in which the English folk hero Robin Hood meets a beggar.
==Ballad I==
"''Robin Hood and the Beggar, I''" is Child Ballad 133.〔Francis James Child, ''English and Scottish Popular Ballads'', ("Robin Hood and the Beggar, I" )〕
One day, Robin Hood sets off on his horse wearing his green mantle, intent on adventure. On his way to Nottingham, he meets a "jolly" beggar wearing a patched coat and with many bags on his person, which especially attract Robin's attention (5.4). The beggar begs, but Robin refuses to offer him charity because, he explains, he is Robin Hood the outlaw and has no money himself. Robin offers to fight him, and the beggar agrees to the fight and lays into him, hoping to injure him and steal his purse. They fight until the blood trickles down Robin's head. Eventually, Robin calls for a truce in which Robin agrees to give over his mantle and horse, and the beggar his coat and bags. They exchange clothing, and Robin, now in the guise of a beggar "brave and stout" (II.7.5), approvingly examines the bags and their contents: "For now I have a bag for my bread, / () / So have I another for Corn, / I have one for Mault, and another for salt, / And one for my little Horn" (II.8.1-5). Robin goes to Nottingham as a beggar, where he hears three yeomen are sentenced to hang for poaching the king's deer. He begs their lives from the sheriff, but the Sheriff refuses to release the men, disregarding Robin's plea because he appears as a beggar. Just as the men are about to be hanged at the gallows, Robin blows his horn, summoning his hundred archers. They rescue the three through violence and return to the green wood, celebrating the yeomen's entrance into Robin Hood's band.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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