Ordo Draconis

Ordo Draconis - A Crimson Dawn Or An Overture To The Raven-feathered Queen lyrics

The introduction (as included in the booklet):

The scenery of "A Crimson Dawn" is a bloody battle area at early morning. The omnipresent colour of red

indicates both aurora, and blood and fire. The Morrigan is the Celtic goddess of war, death and rebirth, who

appears as an appalling raven when like mad she rages over the battlefield. Her cries can be heard at a

warrior's death.

I: (The harbinger Morrigan)

Blear with dew came the morrow

And winds rustled aloud.

Down by the rill where purled the flow

The Washer1 washed the shrouds

And Nemain2 sang of woe and sorrow.

"O black-feathered Morrigan"

II: (O'er bleak winds of death)

A raven, Morrigan yclept, loomed awaiting burial.

On wings o'er rueful winds, she stalked along.

A storm-blast of blazonry chased the sands

And left the drift seen afar.

A breeze brought the scattered grains,

That flung 'gainst the dewy scars.

Her frenzied squawks exhorted the ravage

And the hewing of sheen blades,

And blood suffused the barren earth,

'Pon which the crimson dawn glowered.

A Crimson Dawn Awakened!

III: (Hoarse cries and clanging steel)

The brash and bray heartened the noble souls

To defy the singeing fervour of battle.

The carmine sky was brimming with sore shrieks,

As they rose high above the flourish of brazen trumpets.

IV: (The beacon glare)

When, dark by smoke and red by fire,

Aurora had won the day,

The sun, in beacon glare, rose higher

And sweltered drouthy fey.

V: (The ascent of warlike fever)

The fervour seared the sanguine plain,

And the sour scent of cold damp

Did linger no more. Undaunted or felled,

Shrieks resounded to where their lot was cast.

"O black-feathered Morrigan"

"Thrilled by rankling fury, as I hearkened direful voices,

The red blaze of death aroused my vengeful moods."

"The glorious grandeur of battle, at this blood-tinged dawn,

Made boil my ebon ichor, glinstering as steel whirled."

The carmine sky in ashen stains flecked

Brimmed with husky moans.

Thus the sabre-rattling swoll

Into drear timbres of ire

(The empty words sceptred).

VI: (On the brink of ruin)

"Wounds of savage thrusts

Shifted me to the brink of ruin

And the grave burden borne

Struggled tho' I strained life."

VII: (A draught of immortality)

A raven, Morrigan yclept, loomed watching the battlefield.

On wings o'er rueful winds, she stalked along.

"Thrilled by rankling fury, as I hearkened direful voices,

The roan blaze of death aroused my vengeful moods."

"In awe of ancestral victories won

I unsheathed and brandished my sword

Once more. Dreadful countenances fell

Until the baleful knell rang triste."

After the dismal rise of the sullen sun,

Ravens reap the rich morning harvest,

As the drenched earth is sated by thousands

And splendid glory has been gained.

The ardent ashes that flare

Smoulder with more afterglow

Than a midsummer fever would leave

And now the embers are fanned.

1. In full the Washer at the Ford, has been told to wash the clothes of those warriors already destined to

fall in battle. A warrior, who saw her washing his very own blood-stained clothes, had seen the

prediction of his own death.

2. Nemain is one of the three forms attained by Morrigan. She is known a scaremongerer for she sowed

panic among the warrior's wives.

I who have stood dumb

when your betraying sisters,

cauled in tar,

wept by the railings,

who would connive

in civilized outrage

yet understand the exact

and tribal, intimate revenge.

(Seamus Heaney Punishment)

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