- Source: I Dreamt I Dwelt in Marble Halls
"i" target="_blank">I Dreamt i" target="_blank">I Dwelt in Marble Halls", or "The Gipsy Girl's Dream", is a popular aria from The Bohemian Girl, an 1843 opera by Michael William Balfe, with lyrics by Alfred Bunn. It is sung in the opera by the character Arline, who is in love with Thaddeus, a Polish nobleman and political exile.
In popular culture
The song was popular in the 19th and 20th centuries, and has been recorded many times by musicians. It has also been parodied.
Lewis Carroll's parody of the lyrics was published in Lays of Mystery, Imagination and Humour in 1855: i" target="_blank">I dreamt i" target="_blank">I dwelt in marble halls,And each damp thing that creeps and crawlswent wobble-wobble on the walls...
The opera is featured in two short stories from James Joyce’s 1914 collection Dubliners: "Clay" and "Eveline".
The 1941 Glenn Miller song "i" target="_blank">I Dreamt i" target="_blank">I Dwelt in Harlem" is an allusion to the song.
The Irish singer Enya recorded an ambient, ethereal cover version for her third studio album, Shepherd Moons, released in 1994 as the fourth single for the album; this version was featured on the soundtrack of the 1993 Martin Scorsese film The Age of Innocence.
References
External links
1909 recording by Elizabeth Wheeler
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- I Dreamt I Dwelt in Marble Halls
- The Bohemian Girl
- I Dreamt I Dwelt in Harlem
- Yes! We Have No Bananas
- 1843 in music
- Alice, Where Art Thou?
- Sinéad O'Connor
- John Reynolds (musician)
- Steve Cooney
- 1899 in music