Northern Lights
June 29, 2017
A CHORAL rendering of the Northern Lights by Norwegian composer Ola Gjeilo, performed here by the University Singers at the University of Minnesota, captures the pulsing drama and beauty of these magnificent atmospheric events.
Pulchra es, amica mea,
suavis et decora filia Ierusalem.
Pulchra es, amica mea,
suavis et decora sicut Ierusalem,
terribilis ut castrorum acies ordinata.
Averte oculos tuos a me
quia ipsi me avolare fecerunt.
Thou art beautiful, O my love,
sweet and comely as Jerusalem,
terrible as an army set in array.
Turn away thy eyes from me,
for they have made me flee away.
The composer wrote:
Looking out from an attic window one Christmas close to Oslo, over a wintry lake under the stars, I was thinking about how this ‘terrible’ beauty is so profoundly reflected in the northern lights, or aurora borealis, which, having grown up in the southern part of the country, I have only seen once or twice in my life. It is one of the most beautiful natural phenomena I’ve ever witnessed, and has such a powerful, electric quality that must have been both mesmerizing and terrifying to people in the past, when no one knew what it was and when much superstition was attached to these experiences.