Author | Topic: Add: Avenging and Bright | |
dmcg | Posted - 07 Dec 04 - 08:50 am | |
Avenging and bright fall the swift sword of Erin On him who the brave sons of Usna betrayed; For ev'ry fond eye he hath wakened a tear in, A drop from his heart wounds shall weep o'er her blade. By the red cloud that hung over Conor's dark dwelling, When Ulad's three champions lay sleeping in gore- By the billows of war, which so often, high swelling, Have wafted these heroes to victory's shore. We swear to avenge them! No joy shall be tasted, The harp shall be silent, the maiden unwed; Our halls shall be mute, and our fields shall lie wasted Till vengeance is wreak'd on the murderer's head. Source: Singing Together, Spring 1972, BBC Publications Notes: Described as "Irish Traditional tune. Words by Thomas More." | ||
dmcg | Posted - 07 Dec 04 - 09:04 am | |
Copied from a web site giving commentary on this poem:
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Malcolm Douglas |
Posted - 07 Dec 04 - 01:53 pm | |
"Moore's song, which was suggested by the well-known Irish story of 'Deirdre,' was written for the fourth number of the Melodies published Nov 1811. He obtained the air from Holden's Irish Airs, vol ii, 1806, where it is printed as 'Crookaun a Venéé' (Cruachan na Feinne, or 'Mount of the Fenians'). In Panorma's National Airs it is called 'Bryan Borue.' Alfred Moffat, The Minstrelsy of Ireland, 4th (enlarged) edition, n.d. p 20. | ||
masato sakurai | Posted - 07 Dec 04 - 06:20 pm | |
Originally there is one more verse (verse four): Yes, monarch! tho' sweet are our home recollections,The note above was, I think, written by Moore himself. Every edition I have (Moore's Irish Melodies, Longmans, 1873; Poetical Works, William P. Nimmo, 1875; Moore's Irish Melodies, ed. by J.W. Glover, J. Duffy & Co., 1859; Selection of Irish Melodies, vol. II, n.d.; the last two are songbooks) contains it. | ||
masato sakurai | Posted - 11 Dec 04 - 03:18 am | |
The 1869 edition of Irish Melodies and Sacred Songs also has that note. Go to page 49. | ||
masato sakurai | Posted - 12 Dec 04 - 02:16 am | |
The tune is also set by Beethoven to "O Who, my dear Dermot" (in 12 Irish Songs, WoO 154 No. 5; text by William Smyth). | ||
masato sakurai | Posted - 12 Dec 04 - 06:15 am | |
X:1 T:CROOKAUN A VENÉÉ T:[? Cruachán na Féinne -- Mount of the Fenians; Avenging and bright] S:Holden's Collection of the Most Esteem'd Old Irish Melodies, Bks. II, c1807 B:Fleischmann, Sources of Irish Traditional Music c. 1600-1855, vol. 2, 1998, p. 829 [no. 4561] M:3/4 L:1/8 K:Dm A2 | d2 defd | e2 a2 ag|f2 d2 d2|c2 A2 A2| d2 defd|e2 a2 ag|e2 d2 d2| d4:||: e2| f2 f3/2g/af|e2 c2 A2 |BABdcB|A2 F2 F2| f2 fgaf|e2 c2 A2|B3/2A/G3/2F/E3/2D/|{D}d4:|] |