Down in Yon Forest
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Transcription: by Darryl D. Bush
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Lyrics:
Down in yon forest there stands a hall:
The bells of Paradise I heard them ring:
It's covered all over with purple and pall
And I love my Lord Jesus above anything.
In that hall there stands a bed:
The bells of Paradise I heard them ring:
It's covered all over with scarlet so red:
And I love my Lord Jesus above anything.
At the bed-side there lies a stone:
The bells of Paradise I heard them ring:
Which the sweet Virgin Mary knelt upon:
And I love my Lord Jesus above anything.
Under that bed there runs a flood:
The bells of Paradise I heard them ring:
The one half runs water, the other runs blood:
And I love my Lord Jesus above anything.
At the bed's foot there grows a thorn:
The bells of Paradise I heard them ring:
Which ever blows blossom since he was born:
And I love my Lord Jesus above anything.
Over that bed the moon shines bright:
The bells of Paradise I heard them ring:
Denoting our Saviour was born this night:
And I love my Lord Jesus above anything.
Collected by Ralph Vaughan Williams from Mr. Hall of
Castleton, Derbyshire.
The earliest version is more directly related to the
medieval stories of the Grail Quest including the
wounded knight who must be cured for the waste land
to become fertile again. An extensive study of the
transition from pagan rituals to Christian romance
is covered in Jesse's Weston's From Ritual to Romance.
Weston's book is an academic examination of the roots of the
King Arthur legends and seeks to make connections
between the early pagan elements and the later Christian
influences. The book's main focus is on the Holy Grail
tradition and its influence, particularly the Wasteland motif.
The origin of Weston's book is in James George Frazer's
seminal work on folklore, magic and religion, The Golden Bough (1890).
This is included in The Oxford Book of Carols (#61).
It was recorded by Joan Baez. I learned it from her recording.
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