Why does beauteous Lina weep? (John Wall Callcott): Difference between revisions
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==General Information== | ==General Information== | ||
{{Title|''Why does beauteous Lina weep?''}} | |||
{{Composer|John Wall Callcott}} | {{Composer|John Wall Callcott}} | ||
{{Lyricist|Thomas James Mathias| (1754-1835)}}<br> | {{Lyricist|Thomas James Mathias| (1754-1835)}}<br> |
Revision as of 21:57, 4 July 2020
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- Editor: Jonathan Goodliffe (submitted 2009-03-06). Score information: A4, 9 pages, 89 kB Copyright: CPDL
- Edition notes:
General Information
Title: Why does beauteous Lina weep?
Composer: John Wall Callcott
Lyricist: Thomas James Mathiascreate page (1754-1835)
Number of voices: 5vv Voicing: ATTBB
Genre: Secular, Glee
Language: English
Instruments: A cappella (originally). Piano accompaniment added by William Horsley (1774-1858).
First published:
Description: A 5 part glee
External websites:
Original text and translations
English text
From "Twilight of the gods" by Thomas James Mathias (1754-1835), lines 61-72
Why does beauteous Lina weep?
Whence those lorn notes in accent deep?
A day of war!—prepare, prepare:
Aloft in distant realms of air,
Mark the murd'rous monster stalk,
In printless majesty of walk.
Odin fearless meets the shock,
The towers of heaven around him rock;
Though arm'd in panoply divine,
He yields, and owns the fated sign;
To the mansions drear he turns:
In vain the beauteous Lina mourns.
Note: "Murd'rous monster" refers to the wolf monster Fenris, who killed Odin and was in turn killed by Odin's son.