He bore him into an orchard brown.
(Chorus)
Lully, lullay, lully, lullay!
The falcon has borne my make away.
And in that hall there standeth a bed:
It was hanged with gold so red;
(Chorus)
And on that bed there lieth a knight,
His woundis bledyng day and night;
(Chorus)
And by that side there kneleth a may,
And she wepeth both night and day;
(Chorus)
And by that bed there standeth a stone,
“Corpus Christi” written thereon.
(Chorus)
Key: "make" = "mate"; "may" = "maid"; "Corpus Christi" = "body of Christ"
There are many variants of title and lyrics, and even more of the melody.
But this is the tune I regard as definitive (although the performance is only adequate IMO - I can't find any better online).
It is composed in the Doric/ Dorian Mode, which runs from D to D on the white notes of a piano; and is characterized by a minor third and a flattened seventh (no "leading note"). This lends a suitably "medieval" quality to the ancient song.
This "carol" (it isn't really a carol) is very mysterious in its subject matter; seeming like an imaginary journey of initiation as we are led from scene to scene to a climatic revelation - none of which scenes are explained, and all of which seem "symbolic" in some way.
Some ideas about the poem are that it is to do with a slain knight and his betrothed, the Holy Grail and the Fisher King; or Mary and Jesus (maybe the Blessed Virgin Mary, or perhaps Mary Magdalene) - or perhaps all of these at the same time.
4 comments:
It has a shimmering, ethereal, weird sort of beauty. I've loved it for a long time. It's like a cinematic montage before cinemas.
@M - Did you know it with the modal tune, or another version?
I never listened to the tune...to be honest, I hate listening to musical versions of song lyrics I first encountered on the page!
@M Ha! I think I first came across the lyrics, together with written melody and chords, in The Yetties Songbook - The Yetties being a nationally popular 70s folk group from Dorset, that I enjoyed. So I first discovered the tune by playing it to myself (on the accordion).
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