Witch Of The Westmoreland lyrics by Stan Rogers, 2 meanings, official 2024 song lyrics | LyricsMode.com
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Stan Rogers – Witch Of The Westmoreland lyrics
Pale was the wounded knight, that bore the rowan shield
Loud and cruel were the raven's cries that feasted on the field
Saying "Beck water cold and clear will never clean your wound
There's none but the witch of the Westmoreland can make thee hale and soond"

So turn, turn your stallion's head 'til his red mane flies in the wind
And the rider of the moon goes by and the bright star falls behind
And clear was the paley moon when his shadow passed him by
Below the hills were the brightest stars when he heard the owlet cry

Saying "Why do you ride this way, and wherefore came you here?"
"I seek the Witch of the Westmorland that dwells by the winding mere"
And it's weary by the Ullswater and the misty brake fern way
Til throught the cleft in the Kirkstane Pass the winding water lay

He said "Lie down, by brindled hound and rest ye, my good grey hawk
And thee, my steed may graze thy fill for I must dismount and walk,
But come when you hear my horn and answer swift the call
For I fear ere the sun will rise this morn ye will serve me best of all"

And it's down to the water's brim he's born the rowan shield
And the goldenrod he has cast in to see what the lake might yield
And wet she rose from the lake, and fast and fleet went she
One half the form of a maiden fair with a jet black mare's body

And loud, long and shrill he blew til his steed was by his side
High overhead the grey hawk flew and swiftly did he ride
Saying "Course well, my brindled hound, and fetch me the jet black mare
Stoop and strike, my good grey hawk, and bring me the maiden fair"

She said "Pray, sheathe thy silvery sword. Lay down thy rown shield
For I see by the briny blood that flows you've been wounded in the field"
And she stood in a gown of the velvet blue, bound round withh a silver chain
And she's kissed his pale lips once and twice and three times round again

And she's bound his wounds with the goldenrod, full fast in her arms he lay
And he has risen hale and sound with the sun high in the day
She said "Ride with your brindled hound at heel, and your good grey hawk in hand
There's none can harm the knight who's lain with the Witch of the Westmorland. "
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Witch Of The Westmoreland meanings

  • b
    + 4
    BJD1
    I was sure this was an old Medieval ballad, and was stunned to see that Stan Rogers wrote it. To me, the message is about seeking truth. The wouned knight carries the shield, or honor, of his family name. The hawk is his intellect, the hound his tenacity, the steed his physical strength. But, he must leave these behind and enter the lake with only his heart. In the pre-Christian era, the witch would represent the power of nature. In the Christian era, she represents the Holy Spirit. The wounds represent the inability of the things of this world to satisfy us, so we continue to bleed until we enter the lake and seek the truth. Many of the tales and legends of the Middle Ages were adapted from old pre-Christian myths, hence the double meaning on the witch. Suggested reading would be Joseph Campbell's "Hero with a Thousand Faces", or any book about the mythology of the High Middle Ages, circa 1200AD. There is a reason that artists like Loreena McKennitt and authors like Tolkein are fixated on this period: It was a time when our cosmology made sense. Kudos to Stan for re-creatig a perfect story from that time.
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  • m
    + 3
    Mockurn
    A wounded knight tries to wash his wounds and heal himself, but the birds all around him urge him to seek out the witch of the Westmoreland. He rides all night until, at last, at the very earliest of dawn, he comes to the lake. He commands his hound and hawk to hide until he calls them to his aid, then he readies his shield and throws in a handful of goldenrod flowers. The witch rises from the lake in the form of a centaur, with a pale woman's torso and a black horse's body. She wears a velvet blue dress wrapped with a silver chain. She bolts, but he calls his animals who capture her. She tells him to sheathe his sword, for she will heal him with the goldenrod. He lays with her. By the time the sun has fully risen, the knight is healed and is promised that "none can harm the knight who's lain with the witch of the Westmoreland."
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    • b
      + 4
      BJD1
      I was sure this was an old Medieval ballad, and was stunned to see that Stan Rogers wrote it. To... Read more →
    • m
      + 3
      Mockurn
      A wounded knight tries to wash his wounds and heal himself, but the birds all around him urge him... Read more →

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