@@CatholicNicklas Yeah they are skippable, I watched it with someone else who is not Catholic so they could skip for me, but dont watch it, its not really worth it.
I listened this song previously from another you tube band and didn t mention it was a jacobite song, could you please give some historical clues that this is a jacobite song? Anyway wonderful video thank you very much Nicklas
"The lyrics are partially based on Bímse Buan ar Buairt Gach Ló ("My Heart is Sore with Sorrow Deep", c. 1746), a lament of the failure of the Jacobite rising of 1745.[1][2] The original poem is in the voice of the personification of Ireland, Éire, lamenting the exile of Bonnie Prince Charlie.[3] Mo ghile mear is a term applied to the Pretender in numerous Jacobite songs of the period. O'Daly (1866) reports that many of the Irish Jacobite songs were set to the tune The White Cockade. This is in origin a love song of the 17th century, the "White Cockade" (cnotadh bán) being an ornament of ribbons worn by young women, but the term was re-interpreted to mean a military cockade in the Jacobite context.[4] Another part of the lyrics is based in an earlier Jacobite poem by Mac Domhnaill, Seal do bhíos im mhaighdin shéimh.[5] This was published in Edward Walsh's Irish Popular Songs (Dublin, 1847) under the title of "Air Bharr na gCnoc 'san Ime gCéin - Over the Hills and Far Away". Walsh notes that this poem was "said to be the first Jacobite effort" by Mac Domhnaill, written during the Jacobite rising of 1715, so that here the exiled hero is the "Old Pretender", James Francis Edward Stuart." from wikipedia
Wow what a beautiful song
One of my favorite songs ever, so so heavenly beautiful. It was in my Spotify wrapped 2022. Makes me wanna learn Gaelic (I might as well do) 💚☘️
Beutifull charlie and his wee cobalt flag !!
Thank you
I had to skip every sex scene and feminist bullcrap in this show just to see the cool historic parts.
I probably will never watch it just because of the impure parts, I'll stick to youtube clips.
@@CatholicNicklas Yeah they are skippable, I watched it with someone else who is not Catholic so they could skip for me, but dont watch it, its not really worth it.
Sad that its the only show of its type because its so kino without the sex scenes
I listened this song previously from another you tube band and didn t mention it was a jacobite song, could you please give some historical clues that this is a jacobite song? Anyway wonderful video thank you very much Nicklas
"The lyrics are partially based on Bímse Buan ar Buairt Gach Ló ("My Heart is Sore with Sorrow Deep", c. 1746), a lament of the failure of the Jacobite rising of 1745.[1][2] The original poem is in the voice of the personification of Ireland, Éire, lamenting the exile of Bonnie Prince Charlie.[3] Mo ghile mear is a term applied to the Pretender in numerous Jacobite songs of the period. O'Daly (1866) reports that many of the Irish Jacobite songs were set to the tune The White Cockade. This is in origin a love song of the 17th century, the "White Cockade" (cnotadh bán) being an ornament of ribbons worn by young women, but the term was re-interpreted to mean a military cockade in the Jacobite context.[4]
Another part of the lyrics is based in an earlier Jacobite poem by Mac Domhnaill, Seal do bhíos im mhaighdin shéimh.[5] This was published in Edward Walsh's Irish Popular Songs (Dublin, 1847) under the title of "Air Bharr na gCnoc 'san Ime gCéin - Over the Hills and Far Away". Walsh notes that this poem was "said to be the first Jacobite effort" by Mac Domhnaill, written during the Jacobite rising of 1715, so that here the exiled hero is the "Old Pretender", James Francis Edward Stuart." from wikipedia
@@user-kg8ct6ng8g thank you very much
@@user-kg8ct6ng8ghas a side note based here means lyrics were taken word for word from those poems to make Mo Ghile Mear.