![]() "the sweet yoke" could just as easily refer to her commitment as a nun and a lover of God alone ( Matthew 11:30).įunny. I contend that this isn't necessarily the case. That she chose marriage is said to be clear from the last line where she apparently refers to it as "the sweet yoke". She says she's trapped between love and chastity that is, between marriage and sisterhood. ![]() ![]() Some say it's a poem about a young girl's decision to fall in love rather than to become a nun. Here's the Latin version followed by an English transliteration. It was from this collection that Orff selected 24 poems that would eventually come to constitute his Carmina Burana.Īmong these poems is the one I mentioned hearing two days ago, In Trutina. The collection of poems, almost all of which were written in Medieval Latin, was discovered in a Benedictine monastery in 1803 and was dated back to as early as the 11th century. ![]() The name itself means "Songs from Benediktbeuern". Turns out that 'Carmina Burana' is a name that Orff borrowed from an early medieval manuscript that consisted of roughly 254 poems and satirical stories. Now I've heard this piece plenty of times, but it wasn't until then that I first learned of the song's poetic value. On my way home from work Wednesday I was listening to classical music on Colorado Public Radio (they were having a fundraiser) and to my delight they played a song from among Carl Orff's collection, Carmina Burana. ![]()
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