The Wind at Dawn
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" The Wind at Dawn" is a poem set to music by the English composer Edward Elgar in 1888. The poem was written in 1880 by (Caroline) Alice Roberts, before she had met Elgar, though they were married in the year after the song was written.
Alice offered the poem to Edward when they were engaged, and such was the quality of the work that Edward put into it – the independent brilliant piano part, the voice in turn subtle and heroic - that it won a prize in a publisher’s competition. The song consequently appeared in the Magazine of Music.
The work was published by Boosey & Co. in 1907, when the dedication to the German tenor Ludwig Wüllner was added.
[edit] Lyrics
- And the wind, the wind went out to meet with the sun
- At the dawn when the night was done,
- And he racked the clouds in lofty disdain.
- As they flocked in his airy train.
- And the earth was grey, and grey was the sky,
- In the hour when the stars must die;
- And the moon had fled with her sad, wan light,
- For her kingdom was gone with night.
- Then the sun upleapt in might and on power,
- And the worlds woke to hail the hour,
- And the sea stream’d red from the kiss of his brow,
- There was glory and light enow.
- To his tawny mane and tangle of flush
- Leapt the wind with a blast and a rush;
- In his strength unseen, in triumph upborne,
- Rode he out to meet with the morn!
[edit] References
- Kennedy, Michael, Portrait of Elgar (Oxford University Press, 1968) ISBN 0193154145
- Moore, Jerrold N. Edward Elgar: a creative life (Oxford University Press, 1984) ISBN 0193154471