I've climbed it twice, ive been to the Distillery, I've walked through the grounds of Balmoral, My Grandad was a piper for the Seaforth Highlanders, I was born in 1980 when they sung this, I'm a Cooper and make whisky casks, I was brought up listening to the Corries listening to the pipes and listening to older relatives taking about serving their country and being proud of Scotland and it brave amazing people. This brings a tear to my eye. Scotland I Love you 🥃
Reminds me of my grandfather who served most of his life in the military. He is still alive; I always wanted tae follow in his footsteps he was truly disappointed and said this and I will never forget it... "I served so you don't have tae! Yea won't be! But ill train yea tae be the fiercest our bloodline has ever seen..." I never enlisted and he wasn't lying. The words of a True Warrior and gentleman. I am truly lucky he is still kicking.
Listened to them when they sang in Broxburn West Lothian , in the Regal, I was in the alley outside, I was 10, to wee to go to a show, saw them in the Usher Hall in Edinburgh when I grew up, Roy you were taken to soon, No one new of your illness, I remember when they announced it you had passed away, that night on Scotland Today's 6o'clock news total shock. You are missed RIP
@@daisychainsssssssss Do you have any photographs of Nicky? I ask because a friend would like to see them. Please email me at murdoch1111@earthlink.net. By the way, I am a woman.
"and from the title of the abovementioned satire, he evidently saw himself as English" Actually Byron himself wrote that he was born a half Scot but raised a whole one. His family moved to England when he inherited the title when he was aged 10 and he was seemingly relentlessly teased because of his Scottish accent. He only spent about 12 years or so in England before starting his travels - only returning for a short spell. In a letter to his fellow poet and author Sir Walter Scott he wrote "I would be delighted to see you again - which is more than I can say for England or (with a few exceptions) anything that it contains - but my heart warms to the tartan or anything of Scotland which reminds me of Aberdeen and of other parts not so far from the Highlands as that town"
@flygweilo Byron who was seemingly teased in England as a boy because of his Scots accent actually stated that he was "born a half Scot and raised a full one". Also in a letter to Sir Walter Scott he actually wrote "I would be delighted to see you again which is far more than I shall ever feel for England or (with a few exceptions of kith and kin) anything that it contains - but my heart warms to the tartan or to anything of Scotland which reminds me of Aberdeen and other parts" etc etc
Joe A.: It's a majestic song only if it's sung correctly. The Corries do well with the first stanza and miserably on the others. Dark Lochnagar is NOT a ballad, but they sing it as if it is.
I am an East coaster born and bred,but no-where can compare with the magnificent landscapes of the North-West. From Argyll through West Inverness-shire,Wester Ross and Sutherland. It pulls me back to a land I love the best.
Indeed. Every day or two I have a new favorite. Together they were unbeatable at anything they sang. There are certain songs and types of songs in which either Roy or Ronnie's solo impresses me particularly!
Byron's mother was Scottish, from Aberdeen, and this was why he had the name 'Gordon'. He was also raised for several years in Scotland, attending school in Aberdeen.
Love the bit that says England thy beauties are tame and domestic compared to Dark Lochnagar. Was a coach driver and once had an English Tour director tell people we were approaching Loch Nagar. Lochnagar is a mountain.
I have ached, deep in my soul for Scotland. I always intended to go, but 2 rounds of severe cancer ate up my funds. Perhaps in my next life, I will be born there.
Ill-starred now the brave, did no vision foreboding, Tell you that fate had forsaken our cause? Yet were you destined to die at Culloden, Though victory crowned not your fall with applause, Yet were you happy in death's earthly slumber , To sleep wi' your clan in the caves of Braemar, The pibroch resounds to the piper's loud numbers, Your deeds to the echoes of wild Lochnagar. Brave Caledonia, dear are thy mountains I sigh for the valley o' dark Lochnagar Need i say any more?
I like this version of the song by the Corries the best because I can understand all the words. Some day I hope to visit the place they are singing of ......
Shades of the dead! Have I not heard your voices Rise on the night-rolling breath of the gale? Surely the soul of the hero rejoices, And rides on the wind o’er his own Highland vale. Round Lochnagar while the stormy mist gathers, Winter presides in his cold icy car. Clouds there encircle the forms of my fathers; They dwell in the tempests of dark Lochnagar.
Whatever his nationality he wrote this about the hauntingly beautiful Lochnagar and the dying of an ancient culture,such a place really belongs to no one people come and go but these places remain.A good artist may come from a certain country a great one is universal.
He may of been a despoiler of untouched women, a drunkard a wastrel in many ways a womaniser and countless other things, he had to leave the uk in exile be it self imposed, but you have to admit what a way with words Byron had, a revolutionary in writing at the time n correct me if i'm wrong a friend of Mary Shelley during his life in Europe before he died there. Amazing beautiful poem made into a song.
If you love this poem, you shouldn't accept all the ridiculous lies told about him in the past 200 years, just because his politics enraged his class and together with his absurd wife, forced him to leave his home. He was none of those things, but the tabloid version of him seems to have stuck. His life is worth studying but his poetry even more so.
this was sung at the parc de prince, landsdowne road, the arms park and even twickenham when the Scots won, if you were there you know what it means...
Scot by nationality and heritage, British if you want to use that name for the island, European because the islands are of the coast of Europe, northern hemisphian lol, Earthling, milky wayan, you can keep on going. Think I'll stick to being a Scot. The rest are superfluous.
Lord Byron was born in London to a Scottish mother. Brought up in Aberdeen in his early days. He inherited his title from an uncle. Sassa english nach person' Highlander's like to call lowlanders english people, as an insult IE Sassanach.
Lord Byron's entire poem: LACHIN Y GAIR 1. Away, ye gay landscapes, ye gardens of roses! In you let the minions of luxury rove; Restore me the rocks, where the snow-flake reposes, Though still they are sacred to freedom and love: Yet, Caledonia, belov'd are thy mountains, Round their white summits though elements war; Though cataracts foam 'stead of smooth-flowing fountains, I sigh for the valley of dark Loch na Garr. 2. Ah! there my young footsteps in infancy, wander'd: My cap was the bonnet, my cloak was the plaid; On chieftains, long perish'd, my memory ponder'd, As daily I strode through the pine-cover'd glade; I sought not my home, till the day's dying glory Gave place to the rays of the bright polar star; For fancy was cheer'd, by traditional story, Disclos'd by the natives of dark Loch na Garr. 3. "Shades of the dead! have I not heard your voices Rise on the night-rolling breath of the gale?" Surely, the soul of the hero rejoices, And rides on the wind, o'er his own Highland vale! Round Loch na Garr, while the stormy mist gathers, Winter presides in his cold icy car: Clouds, there, encircle the forms of my Fathers; They dwell in the tempests of dark Loch na Garr. 4. "Ill starr'd, though brave, did no visions foreboding Tell you that fate had forsaken your cause?" Ah! were you destined to die at Culloden, Victory crown'd not your fall with applause: Still were you happy, in death's earthy slumber, You rest with your clan, in the caves of Braemar; The Pibroch resounds, to the piper's loud number, Your deeds, on the echoes of dark Loch na Garr. 5. Years have roll'd on, Loch na Garr, since I left you, Years must elapse, ere I tread you again: Nature of verdure and flowers has bereft you, Yet still are you dearer than Albion's plain: England! thy beauties are tame and domestic, To one who has rov'd on the mountains afar: Oh! for the crags that are wild and majestic, The steep, frowning glories of dark Loch na Garr.
Joe Johnstone it’s funny how the yes vote attaches itself to everything that is good for scotland when any fiscal determination proves it to be false dream.... hey go takes all sorts....
the piper: I understand it perfectly. You have to stretch your imagination a little--be what my husband once called "imaginatory!" And that with a straight face, by golly!
Roy didn't write this one, I believe. On one of several videos of this on YT someone posted about who wrote it. Would take some searching to find it again.
@Grouter12 Everyone has a right to be proud of their heritage, but I'm not sure that it is directly related to a video of the song called Lochnagar, the words of wich were written as a poem by Lord Byron. Can't we all just enjoy the song without bringing politics into it?
try "Piper's loud numbers" or "Pipers' loud numbers" whatever is correct, but either way, if you punctuate that sentence, its correct. its one piper playing many tunes
Can anyone please tell me the title of one of the Corrie's songs? This may be too vague but,...it sounds similar to the slow start of this song, There is line which goes, "like a torrent down the mountain, swept the avalanche of steel" Please help.
"Just that it seems pretty well established that Roy didn't write the music." The Corries song book has the tune as traditional. So you are right Roy didn't write it
@gaconnochie Mind after saying that I like your comment about what is half Scottish or half English. My wife has one Scottish parent and one English parent but she regards herself as both English and Scottish. That is as much a Scot or English person as anyone else. Not half of anything :-)
MY GOSH!! Re: Piper84- First of all...For all you "adults" out there..Have you even bothered to go to her site? She's only 15 years old!! What does she know? For that matter...what do YOU know? Not enough to "take it from the source!" ROFLMAO!
Great song, written by an Englishman about Scotland. Sassenach = Englishman BTW, from the gaelic for Saxon. It's not about nationalism, it's about the beauty of Scotland and is a beautiful song itself.
And old comment but I will point out as others have that Lord Byron never considered himself English and even stated that he did not like England. As he put it, he was born a half Scot but raised a whole one.
@flygweilo You make a good point but it works the same for your original statement claiming he saw himself as English because of the title of one satire. Likewise we can pick one work of Burns to show he was this and another work to show he was that. We might also take his comment that he was raised a whole Scot with a pinch of salt too. Byron was half Scottish and half English. Those are the facts which can't really be disputed.
The fact is that he also spent his most impressionable years in Scotland and did not find a friendly welcome in England. His letter to Sir Walter Scott clearly showed his lack of fondness for England which he said he never wished to see again.
Hey, tell everyone this. I found a poem by Burn's that defend's the Jacobite cause! All Scot's must find the poem>>>"(On Seeing The Royal Palace At Stirling In Ruin's)"
Hi lowellirish , No need to be goshed. I would suggest that a fifteen year old who "does not know " needs to take more care . Anyone who comes on this site needs to realise that this is a resource used by all sorts . Having read some of the nonsense posted on this site , can a moderator remove her post , for her protection , if she is only 15 , please ?
The word is prejudice, and how were the Irish prejudice against Scottish gaelic music, Irish Gaelic and Scottish Gaelic are practically the same language. I'm from Fife, but i'd definitely say Glasgow is more Scottish than Edinburgh.
@tam19681 HI AGAIN i will sum it up it refers to the sad demise of our proud scottish national identity our diversity from GB and MOST IMPORTANTLY THE VAGUE HOPE OF FREEDOM and to para quote "does not give us the right to live freely" as indepent free scots-people free from that tag british that i aint and yes a lot of scots followed that disgusting crown esp the nobles THE RANK IS BUT THE GUINNES STAMP prayers for independance
Shades of the dead! Have I not heard your voices Rise on the night-rolling breath of the gale? Surely the soul of the hero rejoices, And rides on the wind o’er his own Highland vale. Round Lochnagar while the stormy mist gathers, Winter presides in his cold icy car. Clouds there encircle the forms of my fathers; They dwell in the tempests of dark Lochnagar
I've climbed it twice, ive been to the Distillery, I've walked through the grounds of Balmoral, My Grandad was a piper for the Seaforth Highlanders, I was born in 1980 when they sung this, I'm a Cooper and make whisky casks, I was brought up listening to the Corries listening to the pipes and listening to older relatives taking about serving their country and being proud of Scotland and it brave amazing people. This brings a tear to my eye. Scotland I Love you 🥃
Reminds me of my grandfather who served most of his life in the military. He is still alive; I always wanted tae follow in his footsteps he was truly disappointed and said this and I will never forget it...
"I served so you don't have tae! Yea won't be! But ill train yea tae be the fiercest our bloodline has ever seen..."
I never enlisted and he wasn't lying. The words of a True Warrior and gentleman. I am truly lucky he is still kicking.
The best folk duo in history. Their harmonizing has never been matched.
Harry & Meghan ?
Scottish royalty. God bless The Corries.
Love the corries . I was devastated when Roy died.
Listened to them when they sang in Broxburn West Lothian , in the Regal, I was in the alley outside, I was 10, to wee to go to a show, saw them in the Usher Hall in Edinburgh when I grew up, Roy you were taken to soon, No one new of your illness, I remember when they announced it you had passed away, that night on Scotland Today's 6o'clock news total shock. You are missed RIP
I am so sorry for your loss i didn't know Roy but new Nicky. i would like to talk to you Please xx
can you please get on touch Henry Condy xx
@@daisychainsssssssss Do you have any photographs of Nicky? I ask because a friend would like to see them. Please email me at murdoch1111@earthlink.net. By the way, I am a woman.
Beautiful, absolutely beautiful.
I wish I still felt the same way about Scotland now, as I did back then.
I miss it and I haven't evev ever seen it in my life
I’ve never heard this sang as well by anyone else the corries were a legend
my dads favourite song havent heard it for years.so proud that i am scottish great men
"and from the title of the abovementioned satire, he evidently saw himself as English" Actually Byron himself wrote that he was born a half Scot but raised a whole one. His family moved to England when he inherited the title when he was aged 10 and he was seemingly relentlessly teased because of his Scottish accent. He only spent about 12 years or so in England before starting his travels - only returning for a short spell. In a letter to his fellow poet and author Sir Walter Scott he wrote "I would be delighted to see you again - which is more than I can say for England or (with a few exceptions) anything that it contains - but my heart warms to the tartan or anything of Scotland which reminds me of Aberdeen and of other parts not so far from the Highlands as that town"
@flygweilo Byron who was seemingly teased in England as a boy because of his Scots accent actually stated that he was "born a half Scot and raised a full one". Also in a letter to Sir Walter Scott he actually wrote "I would be delighted to see you again which is far more than I shall ever feel for England or (with a few exceptions of kith and kin) anything that it contains - but my heart warms to the tartan or to anything of Scotland which reminds me of Aberdeen and other parts" etc etc
This song reminds me of my Da . The best of the best
One of the most evocative songs I know. Discovered this many years ago in my teens. Brings it all back.
Quite a majestic song. Makes sense that it was written by someone who knew both England and Scotland.
Joe A.: It's a majestic song only if it's sung correctly. The Corries do well with the first stanza and miserably on the others. Dark Lochnagar is NOT a ballad, but they sing it as if it is.
@@murdochmclennan3510 I wonder why you listen to the Corries. Is it to criticise only?
@@moraggrant9856 No. I enjoy their singing. I DO NOT LIKE what they do to Byron's poem.
How can three people dislike this? Baffling!!!
Sir they must English 🏴🏴🏴. God bless Scotland 🏴
@@johnjohnstone5133 Byron must be one of them then 😁
I am an East coaster born and bred,but no-where can compare with the magnificent landscapes of the North-West. From Argyll through West Inverness-shire,Wester Ross and Sutherland. It pulls me back to a land I love the best.
Know my home is near when I coming down the hill towards the Cromarty Bridge and dingwall, Ben wyvis on my left and fyrish looking on ross shire
What a wonderful couple, only wished I had discovered them years ago.
Indeed. Every day or two I have a new favorite. Together they were unbeatable at anything they sang. There are certain songs and types of songs in which either Roy or Ronnie's solo impresses me particularly!
Got that right
The lyrics are from a poem by Lord Byron. I didn't know he was raised in Scotland, and apparently always identified with Brave Caledonia.
It was more than 20 years since i saw this, just as good as ever, thanks for sharing.
I love Scotland and everything about her.
I really feel I belong there.....someday I'll live there.....
Scotland forever!!!!
Corries are great!!
Byron's mother was Scottish, from Aberdeen, and this was why he had the name 'Gordon'. He was also raised for several years in Scotland, attending school in Aberdeen.
Great video. I climbed "Dark Lochnagar" , nearly twenty years ago and this song brings back a lot of memories. Thanks for posting
lord byron .what would he think of scotland today.My ancestors are warriors to the present day.iam ex army .Scotland needs to stand alone.
cant fault any of their songs and both singers have their own qualities
Love the bit that says England thy beauties are tame and domestic compared to Dark Lochnagar. Was a coach driver and once had an English Tour director tell people we were approaching Loch Nagar. Lochnagar is a mountain.
There is just something so hauntingly beautiful about this song......
I dont even know them and I Miss them.
nice
thank you
I miss Scotland. And I've neer even been there.
I have ached, deep in my soul for Scotland. I always intended to go, but 2 rounds of severe cancer ate up my funds. Perhaps in my next life, I will be born there.
I miss it too, it is a deep longing….
Ill-starred now the brave, did no vision foreboding,
Tell you that fate had forsaken our cause?
Yet were you destined to die at Culloden,
Though victory crowned not your fall with applause,
Yet were you happy in death's earthly slumber ,
To sleep wi' your clan in the caves of Braemar,
The pibroch resounds to the piper's loud numbers,
Your deeds to the echoes of wild Lochnagar.
Brave Caledonia, dear are thy mountains
I sigh for the valley o' dark Lochnagar
Need i say any more?
pianoman1974: It's "death's earthy slumber"!
Byron's mother was from Aberdeenshire and he never forgot his heritage.
Home sick every time I hear this
What a beautiful voice
I like this version of the song by the Corries the best because I can understand all the words. Some day I hope to visit the place they are singing of ......
This gem is making me reconsider my absolutist opinion that Loch Lomond is Roy's best performance on RUclips. It's pretty close.
Anything by Roy(Poppa to me)is an absolute gem! But then again that's my opinion
Shades of the dead! Have I not heard your voices
Rise on the night-rolling breath of the gale?
Surely the soul of the hero rejoices,
And rides on the wind o’er his own Highland vale.
Round Lochnagar while the stormy mist gathers,
Winter presides in his cold icy car.
Clouds there encircle the forms of my fathers;
They dwell in the tempests of dark Lochnagar.
X hamster show women in Landrieu having oraplsex
Vote with your heart .
@Grouter12 beautifullly put mate. hopefully there are enough of us that still think we can rise. if we can, then lets do it.
words written by Lord Byron whose mother was from Aberdeenshire
Makes the hair on the back of my neck stand up every time I hear this.
Wow...lyrics and vocals.
Fantastic.
Absolutely godlike, God bless the corries, the true voices of scotland 🙏 🏴
Whatever his nationality he wrote this about the hauntingly beautiful Lochnagar and the dying of an ancient culture,such a place really belongs to no one people come and go but these places remain.A good artist may come from a certain country a great one is universal.
He may of been a despoiler of untouched women, a drunkard a wastrel in many ways a womaniser and countless other things, he had to leave the uk in exile be it self imposed, but you have to admit what a way with words Byron had, a revolutionary in writing at the time n correct me if i'm wrong a friend of Mary Shelley during his life in Europe before he died there. Amazing beautiful poem made into a song.
Kristine Lawrie well...nobody's perfect lol
If you love this poem, you shouldn't accept all the ridiculous lies told about him in the past 200 years, just because his politics enraged his class and together with his absurd wife, forced him to leave his home. He was none of those things, but the tabloid version of him seems to have stuck. His life is worth studying but his poetry even more so.
I love the weather.
I don't miss it 'cause I never leave!!
Very! Nice! The Corries!
probably their best, a classic.
EXACTLY!!! Couldn't agree more!
Awesome..Immortal lord Byron Lyrics...Corries do it better than anyone..
Written by Lord Byron.
From a poem by Lord Byron
the jewel in the corries crown
fantastic
this was sung at the parc de prince, landsdowne road, the arms park and even twickenham when the Scots won, if you were there you know what it means...
In honor of, in memory of Bill Conly.
I've seen that, too, but don't know what is correct, just that it seems pretty well established that Roy didn't write the music.
@Cradh actually that was written by "Lord" Wellington (Arthur Wellesley) of Ireland where he was born
Fantastic folk singers. Listened to them as a kid. New year just isn't the same nowadays. Scottish and British.
Fleet Foxes are goog for a newish folk band
Scot by nationality and heritage, British if you want to use that name for the island, European because the islands are of the coast of Europe, northern hemisphian lol, Earthling, milky wayan, you can keep on going.
Think I'll stick to being a Scot. The rest are superfluous.
You can only be one or the other, you cannot be both. SAOR ALBA GU BRATH
Lord Byron was born in London to a Scottish mother.
Brought up in Aberdeen in his early days.
He inherited his title from an uncle.
Sassa english nach person' Highlander's like to call
lowlanders english people, as an insult IE Sassanach.
Lord Byron's entire poem:
LACHIN Y GAIR
1.
Away, ye gay landscapes, ye gardens of roses!
In you let the minions of luxury rove;
Restore me the rocks, where the snow-flake reposes,
Though still they are sacred to freedom and love:
Yet, Caledonia, belov'd are thy mountains,
Round their white summits though elements war;
Though cataracts foam 'stead of smooth-flowing fountains,
I sigh for the valley of dark Loch na Garr.
2.
Ah! there my young footsteps in infancy, wander'd:
My cap was the bonnet, my cloak was the plaid;
On chieftains, long perish'd, my memory ponder'd,
As daily I strode through the pine-cover'd glade;
I sought not my home, till the day's dying glory
Gave place to the rays of the bright polar star;
For fancy was cheer'd, by traditional story,
Disclos'd by the natives of dark Loch na Garr.
3.
"Shades of the dead! have I not heard your voices
Rise on the night-rolling breath of the gale?"
Surely, the soul of the hero rejoices,
And rides on the wind, o'er his own Highland vale!
Round Loch na Garr, while the stormy mist gathers,
Winter presides in his cold icy car:
Clouds, there, encircle the forms of my Fathers;
They dwell in the tempests of dark Loch na Garr.
4.
"Ill starr'd, though brave, did no visions foreboding
Tell you that fate had forsaken your cause?"
Ah! were you destined to die at Culloden,
Victory crown'd not your fall with applause:
Still were you happy, in death's earthy slumber,
You rest with your clan, in the caves of Braemar;
The Pibroch resounds, to the piper's loud number,
Your deeds, on the echoes of dark Loch na Garr.
5.
Years have roll'd on, Loch na Garr, since I left you,
Years must elapse, ere I tread you again:
Nature of verdure and flowers has bereft you,
Yet still are you dearer than Albion's plain:
England! thy beauties are tame and domestic,
To one who has rov'd on the mountains afar:
Oh! for the crags that are wild and majestic,
The steep, frowning glories of dark Loch na Garr.
Thanks!
Yes, thankyou!😊✨
VOTE YES NOTHING LESS
Joe Johnstone it’s funny how the yes vote attaches itself to everything that is good for scotland when any fiscal determination proves it to be false dream.... hey go takes all sorts....
@@stanleyjohnstone2867 WE WILL SEE. AN AW YOU TRAITORS WHERE WILL YE GO. SAOR ALBA GU BRATH
The Ballad of James Connolly!!!
brill, where wd us north of perth teuchters be without folk posting the likes of the corries, fab
A Sasanach (as it is spelt) is an Enlishman. An Albanach is a Scotsman in Gaelic. Nothing racist about it, that is just what they are called.
Wow !
My favourite folk song from Alba :)
the piper: I understand it perfectly. You have to stretch your imagination a little--be what my husband once called "imaginatory!" And that with a straight face, by golly!
I LOVE this song! Is there a CD of theirs that has this song on it?
Linda música e lindos cantores...
FROM GOOGLE TRANSLATE: Beautiful music and beautiful singers
Roy didn't write this one, I believe. On one of several videos of this on YT someone posted about who wrote it. Would take some searching to find it again.
@Grouter12 Everyone has a right to be proud of their heritage, but I'm not sure that it is directly related to a video of the song called Lochnagar, the words of wich were written as a poem by Lord Byron. Can't we all just enjoy the song without bringing politics into it?
Fantastic Sond makes the hair on the back of my neck stand up
try "Piper's loud numbers" or "Pipers' loud numbers" whatever is correct, but either way, if you punctuate that sentence, its correct. its one piper playing many tunes
People are posting from years ago!
Can anyone please tell me the title of one of the Corrie's songs?
This may be too vague but,...it sounds similar to the slow start of this song,
There is line which goes, "like a torrent down the mountain, swept the avalanche of steel"
Please help.
rokinbillyboy It's "Weep Ye By Atholl"
I found reference to Sir H R Bishop???
"Just that it seems pretty well established that Roy didn't write the music." The Corries song book has the tune as traditional. So you are right Roy didn't write it
Google
@gaconnochie Mind after saying that I like your comment about what is half Scottish or half English. My wife has one Scottish parent and one English parent but she regards herself as both English and Scottish. That is as much a Scot or English person as anyone else. Not half of anything :-)
Lord Byron did not agree since he called himself born half Scot, whatever your wife may think herself.
MY GOSH!!
Re: Piper84- First of all...For all you "adults" out there..Have you even bothered to go to her site? She's only 15 years old!! What does she know? For that matter...what do YOU know? Not enough to "take it from the source!" ROFLMAO!
Great song, written by an Englishman about Scotland.
Sassenach = Englishman BTW, from the gaelic for Saxon.
It's not about nationalism, it's about the beauty of Scotland and is a beautiful song itself.
He saw himself as a Scot. End of story.
And old comment but I will point out as others have that Lord Byron never considered himself English and even stated that he did not like England. As he put it, he was born a half Scot but raised a whole one.
His mother was a Scot.
did Roy Williamson put the Byron words to music?
No he didnt
@@lidiaziolkowski3965
The words were written by Lord Byron
Sots Wha hey!! We are the people!!
@flygweilo You make a good point but it works the same for your original statement claiming he saw himself as English because of the title of one satire. Likewise we can pick one work of Burns to show he was this and another work to show he was that. We might also take his comment that he was raised a whole Scot with a pinch of salt too. Byron was half Scottish and half English. Those are the facts which can't really be disputed.
if he hadn't inherited the title, he would have continued to be raised in Aberdeen by his mother - but would still have written this poem!
The fact is that he also spent his most impressionable years in Scotland and did not find a friendly welcome in England. His letter to Sir Walter Scott clearly showed his lack of fondness for England which he said he never wished to see again.
jiiiiiiiiiiiha
Hey, tell everyone this. I found a poem by Burn's that defend's the Jacobite cause! All Scot's must find the poem>>>"(On Seeing The Royal Palace At Stirling In Ruin's)"
acerb PLEASE LEARN HOW TO USE APOSTROPHES CORRECTLY!
George Gordon Noel Byron was his full name.. and although descended of Scottish Nobility from long in his past he was definitely English!
His mother was a Scot.
12 years since there a comment disgrace
3 people must have taken nagar for a racial slur...
Hi lowellirish ,
No need to be goshed.
I would suggest that a fifteen year old who "does not know " needs to take more care .
Anyone who comes on this site needs to realise that this is a resource used by all sorts .
Having read some of the nonsense posted on this site , can a moderator remove her post , for her protection , if she is only 15 , please ?
The word is prejudice, and how were the Irish prejudice against Scottish gaelic music, Irish Gaelic and Scottish Gaelic are practically the same language. I'm from Fife, but i'd definitely say Glasgow is more Scottish than Edinburgh.
I really can't believe anyone would make such a comment about the west of Scotland. Does that include Ayrshire and Burns country?
Full name 'George Gordon Noel Byron' Descended from Scottish Nobility but definitely ENGLISH .
His mother was a Scot
@tam19681 HI AGAIN i will sum it up it refers to the sad demise of our proud scottish national identity our diversity from GB and MOST IMPORTANTLY THE VAGUE HOPE OF FREEDOM and to para quote "does not give us the right to live freely" as indepent free scots-people free from that tag british that i aint and yes a lot of scots followed that disgusting crown esp the nobles THE RANK IS BUT THE GUINNES STAMP prayers for independance
TheSpiritof45: THE RANK IS BUT THE GUINEA'S STAMP.
THEY RUIN BYRON'S WORDS.
Whatcha mean?
@@lidiaziolkowski3965 Dark Lochnagar is not a ballad; it is a beautiful song that should be sung in a serious manner.
Shades of the dead! Have I not heard your voices
Rise on the night-rolling breath of the gale?
Surely the soul of the hero rejoices,
And rides on the wind o’er his own Highland vale.
Round Lochnagar while the stormy mist gathers,
Winter presides in his cold icy car.
Clouds there encircle the forms of my fathers;
They dwell in the tempests of dark Lochnagar