In this week’s episode of Beyond the Verse, the official podcast of PoemAnalysis.com and Poetry+, Maiya and Joe turn their attention to the ballad form, tracing its long history and asking why it continues to matter.
They begin by looking at the origins of the ballad in oral tradition, where anonymous narrative poems were passed from voice to voice and often shaped by music. Joe explains how the form developed from medieval storytelling into printed broadside ballads, before later being taken up by major literary figures. The hosts also discuss the formal qualities often associated with ballads, especially their musical rhythm, narrative structure, and memorable rhyme patterns. This opening gives listeners a strong sense of how the ballad moved from popular tradition into a lasting literary form.
The discussion then turns to W. H. Auden’s ‘As I Walked Out One Evening’, which Maiya and Joe use to show how the ballad can carry both lyrical beauty and deeper tension. They reflect on the poem’s musical flow, its observer speaker, and its treatment of love, time, and movement. The hosts also explore the tension between old forms and modern life, showing how Auden draws on traditional ballad features while writing within a much later poetic moment. Their reading shows how the ballad can remain familiar while still feeling intellectually sharp and emotionally unsettled.
They then move to Walt Whitman’s ‘O Captain! My Captain!’, where the ballad becomes a way of handling public grief and national loss. Maiya and Joe discuss how Whitman balances celebration and mourning, using the figure of the captain to honor Abraham Lincoln while still keeping the poem broad enough to speak beyond one historical moment. They also reflect on the sea voyage at the center of the poem, showing how water becomes a way of thinking about danger, leadership, and return. In doing so, they show how the ballad can hold both personal sorrow and collective meaning at once.
The episode closes with Oscar Wilde’s ‘The Ballad of Reading Gaol’, bringing the conversation toward injustice, punishment, and the moral force of the form. Maiya and Joe place the poem in the context of Wilde’s imprisonment and explore how it turns the ballad toward questions of guilt, suffering, and human judgment. They reflect on how the poem keeps the ballad’s interest in outcasts and crime, while also making it more reflective and socially critical. By the end, the hosts show that the ballad is far more than an old poetic structure. It is a form that keeps changing while still carrying the power of story, song, and shared feeling.
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