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Loreena Mckennitt
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The Lady Of Shalott
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Current song lyrics
[Words by Alfred Lord Tennyson]<br />[Music by Loreena McKennitt]<br /><br />On either side of the river lie<br />Long fields of barley and of rye,<br />That clothe the world and meet the sky;<br />And thro' the field the road run by<br />To many-towered Camelot;<br />And up and down the people go,<br />Gazing where the lilies blow<br />Round an island there below,<br />The island of Shalott.<br /><br />Willows whiten, aspens quiver,<br />Little breezes dusk and shiver<br />Thro' the wave that runs for ever<br />By the island in the river<br />Flowing down to Camelot.<br />Four grey walls, and four grey towers,<br />Overlook a space of flowers,<br />And the silent isle imbowers<br />The Lady of Shalott.<br /><br />Only reapers, reaping early,<br />In among the bearded barley<br />Hear a song that echoes cheerly<br />From the river winding clearly<br />Down to tower'd Camelot;<br />And by the moon the reaper weary,<br />Piling sheaves in uplands airy,<br />Listening, whispers "'tis the fairy<br />The Lady of Shalott."<br /><br />There she weaves by night and day<br />A magic web with colours gay,<br />She has heard a whisper say,<br />A curse is on her if she stay<br />To look down to Camelot.<br />She knows not what the curse may be,<br />And so she weaveth steadily,<br />And little other care hath she,<br />The Lady of Shalott.<br /><br />And moving through a mirror clear<br />That hangs before her all the year,<br />Shadows of the world appear.<br />There she sees the highway near<br />Winding down to Camelot;<br />And sometimes thro' the mirror blue<br />The Knights come riding two and two.<br />She hath no loyal Knight and true,<br />The Lady Of Shalott.<br /><br />But in her web she still delights<br />To weave the mirror's magic sights,<br />For often thro' the silent nights<br />A funeral, with plumes and lights<br />And music, went to Camelot;<br />Or when the Moon was overhead,<br />Came two young lovers lately wed.<br />"I am half sick of shadows," said<br />The Lady Of Shalott.<br /><br />A bow-shot from her bower-eaves,<br />He rode between the barley sheaves,<br />The sun came dazzling thro' the leaves,<br />And flamed upon the brazen greaves<br />Of bold Sir Lancelot.<br />A red-cross knight for ever kneel'd<br />To a lady in his shield,<br />That sparkled on the yellow field,<br />Beside remote Shalott.<br /><br />His broad clear brow in sunlight glow'd;<br />On burnish'd hooves his war-horse trode;<br />From underneath his helmet flow'd<br />His coal-black curls as on he rode,<br />As he rode back to Camelot.<br />From the bank and from the river<br />he flashed into the crystal mirror,<br />"Tirra Lirra," by the river<br />Sang Sir Lancelot.<br /><br />She left the web, she left the loom,<br />She made three paces taro' the room,<br />She saw the water-lily bloom,<br />She saw the helmet and the plume,<br />She looked down to Camelot.<br />Out flew the web and floated wide;<br />The mirror cracked from side to side;<br />"The curse is come upon me," cried<br />The Lady of Shalott.<br /><br />In the stormy east-wind straining,<br />The pale yellow woods were waning,<br />The broad stream in his banks complaining.<br />Heavily the low sky raining<br />Over towered Camelot;<br />Down she came and found a boat<br />Beneath a willow left afloat,<br />And round about the prow she wrote<br />The Lady of Shalott<br /><br />And down the river's dim expanse<br />Like some bold seer in a trance,<br />Seeing all his own mischance -<br />With a glassy countenance<br />Did she look to Camelot.<br />And at the closing of the day<br />She loosed the chain and down she lay;<br />The broad stream bore her far away,<br />The Lady of Shalott.<br /><br />Heard a carol, mournful, holy,<br />Chanted loudly, chanted lowly,<br />Till her blood was frozen slowly,<br />And her eyes were darkened wholly,<br />Turn'd to towered Camelot.<br />For ere she reach'd upon the tide<br />The first house by the water-side,<br />Singing in her song she died,<br />The Lady of Shalott.<br /><br />Under tower and balcony,<br />By garden-wall and gallery,<br />A gleaming shape she floated by,<br />Dead-pale between the houses high,<br />Silent into Camelot.<br />Out upon the wharfs they came,<br />Knight and Burgher, Lord and Dame,<br />And round the prow they read her name,<br />The Lady of Shalott.<br /><br />Who is this? And what is here?<br />And in the lighted palace near<br />Died the sound of royal cheer;<br />And they crossed themselves for fear,<br />All the Knights at Camelot;<br />But Lancelot mused a little space<br />He said, "She has a lovely face;<br />God in his mercy lend her grace,<br />The Lady of Shalott."
New song lyrics
[Words by Alfred Lord Tennyson]<br />[Music by Loreena McKennitt]<br /><br />On either side of the river lie<br />Long fields of barley and of rye,<br />That clothe the world and meet the sky;<br />And thro' the field the road run by<br />To many-towered Camelot;<br />And up and down the people go,<br />Gazing where the lilies blow<br />Round an island there below,<br />The island of Shalott.<br /><br />Willows whiten, aspens quiver,<br />Little breezes dusk and shiver<br />Thro' the wave that runs for ever<br />By the island in the river<br />Flowing down to Camelot.<br />Four grey walls, and four grey towers,<br />Overlook a space of flowers,<br />And the silent isle imbowers<br />The Lady of Shalott.<br /><br />Only reapers, reaping early,<br />In among the bearded barley<br />Hear a song that echoes cheerly<br />From the river winding clearly<br />Down to tower'd Camelot;<br />And by the moon the reaper weary,<br />Piling sheaves in uplands airy,<br />Listening, whispers "'tis the fairy<br />The Lady of Shalott."<br /><br />There she weaves by night and day<br />A magic web with colours gay,<br />She has heard a whisper say,<br />A curse is on her if she stay<br />To look down to Camelot.<br />She knows not what the curse may be,<br />And so she weaveth steadily,<br />And little other care hath she,<br />The Lady of Shalott.<br /><br />And moving through a mirror clear<br />That hangs before her all the year,<br />Shadows of the world appear.<br />There she sees the highway near<br />Winding down to Camelot;<br />And sometimes thro' the mirror blue<br />The Knights come riding two and two.<br />She hath no loyal Knight and true,<br />The Lady Of Shalott.<br /><br />But in her web she still delights<br />To weave the mirror's magic sights,<br />For often thro' the silent nights<br />A funeral, with plumes and lights<br />And music, went to Camelot;<br />Or when the Moon was overhead,<br />Came two young lovers lately wed.<br />"I am half sick of shadows," said<br />The Lady Of Shalott.<br /><br />A bow-shot from her bower-eaves,<br />He rode between the barley sheaves,<br />The sun came dazzling thro' the leaves,<br />And flamed upon the brazen greaves<br />Of bold Sir Lancelot.<br />A red-cross knight for ever kneel'd<br />To a lady in his shield,<br />That sparkled on the yellow field,<br />Beside remote Shalott.<br /><br />His broad clear brow in sunlight glow'd;<br />On burnish'd hooves his war-horse trode;<br />From underneath his helmet flow'd<br />His coal-black curls as on he rode,<br />As he rode back to Camelot.<br />From the bank and from the river<br />he flashed into the crystal mirror,<br />"Tirra Lirra," by the river<br />Sang Sir Lancelot.<br /><br />She left the web, she left the loom,<br />She made three paces taro' the room,<br />She saw the water-lily bloom,<br />She saw the helmet and the plume,<br />She looked down to Camelot.<br />Out flew the web and floated wide;<br />The mirror cracked from side to side;<br />"The curse is come upon me," cried<br />The Lady of Shalott.<br /><br />In the stormy east-wind straining,<br />The pale yellow woods were waning,<br />The broad stream in his banks complaining.<br />Heavily the low sky raining<br />Over towered Camelot;<br />Down she came and found a boat<br />Beneath a willow left afloat,<br />And round about the prow she wrote<br />The Lady of Shalott<br /><br />And down the river's dim expanse<br />Like some bold seer in a trance,<br />Seeing all his own mischance -<br />With a glassy countenance<br />Did she look to Camelot.<br />And at the closing of the day<br />She loosed the chain and down she lay;<br />The broad stream bore her far away,<br />The Lady of Shalott.<br /><br />Heard a carol, mournful, holy,<br />Chanted loudly, chanted lowly,<br />Till her blood was frozen slowly,<br />And her eyes were darkened wholly,<br />Turn'd to towered Camelot.<br />For ere she reach'd upon the tide<br />The first house by the water-side,<br />Singing in her song she died,<br />The Lady of Shalott.<br /><br />Under tower and balcony,<br />By garden-wall and gallery,<br />A gleaming shape she floated by,<br />Dead-pale between the houses high,<br />Silent into Camelot.<br />Out upon the wharfs they came,<br />Knight and Burgher, Lord and Dame,<br />And round the prow they read her name,<br />The Lady of Shalott.<br /><br />Who is this? And what is here?<br />And in the lighted palace near<br />Died the sound of royal cheer;<br />And they crossed themselves for fear,<br />All the Knights at Camelot;<br />But Lancelot mused a little space<br />He said, "She has a lovely face;<br />God in his mercy lend her grace,<br />The Lady of Shalott."
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