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Sinéad O'Connor - I Am Stretched On Your Grave

I am streched on your grave
And will lie there forever
If your hands were in mine
I'd be sure we'd not sever
My apple tree my brightness
It's time we were together
For I smell of the earth
And am worn by the weather

When my family thinks
That I'm save in my bed
From night until morning
I'm streched on your head
Calling out to the air
With tears hot and wild
My grief for the girl
That I loved as a child

Do you remember
The night we were lost
In the shade of the blackthorn
And the chill of the frost
Thanks be to Jesus
We did what was right
And your maidenhead still
Is your pillar of light

The priests and the friars
Approach me in dread
Because I still love you
My love and your dead
I still would be your shelter
Through rain and through storm
And with you in your cold grave
I cannot sleep warm

So I'm streched on your grave
And I will lie there forever
If your hands were in mine
I'd be sure we'd not sever
My apple tree my brightness
It's time we were together
For I smell on earth
And am worn by the weather

"I Am Stretched on Your Grave" is an anonymous 17th century Irish poem titled "Táim shínte ar do h'uaigh", and further translated by Frank O'Connor. While the translation existed prior to its first recording, and in various versions of melody and lyric (and all or most likely possessing a strong similarity), the popular and current versions are influenced or rely heavily on the adapted version by musician Philip King, which was recorded on Scullion's first album from 1979 on the Mulligan Records label, and titled "I Am Stretched on Your Grave." The song's third line of each verse contains a level shift from minor to major. Since then it has been played on recordings and in performances by many professional, semi-professional, and amateur musicians, students, and hobbyists. Album recordings * In Gowan Ring * Dead Can Dance, on the album Toward the Within * Peta Webb (of the band "Oak") and Ken Hall, track 9 on the 2000 album 'As Close As Can Be' (Fellside Records), and crediting 'P.King/F.O'Connor/Trad'. * The Voice Squad, on the album 'Hollywood' (Hummingbird Records) * The Lennon Family. CEFCD 167 Dúchas Ceoil * The "gothic-gaelic" band Eden, on the album "Fire and Rain" * Kate Rusby on the album "Hourglass", whose version is altered melodically, but not lyrically. * Sinéad O'Connor on the album I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got * Charlotte Martin on her album Reproductions * Abney Park on the album Lost Horizons * Iarla O'Lionaird on his soundtrack to the film I Could Read the Sky

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