[CB 14] In taberna quando sumus [English translation]
[CB 14] In taberna quando sumus [English translation]
When we're in the tavern,
we don't care how the land's doing,
on the contrary we're rushing to gamble
over which we're always sweating.
What happens in the tavern
where coin is the waiter,
this is what needs to be asked
if anyone wants to hear.
Some gamble, some drink,
some live conspicuously
Furthermore from those who're gambling
some are stripped down
some are clothed here
some are dressed in sacks,
no one fears death here
but they're throwing dice for Bacchus (for revelry).
Firstly the coins for the wine
then the libertines drink;
they drink once for the prisoners,
after that, thrice for the living,
fourfold for the Christians' body (all christians),
fivefold for the faithful departed,
sixfold for the unworthy sisters (sluts),
sevenfold for the Nymph soldiers(of nature, probably people living in the wild)
eightfold for the errant brothers,
ninefold for the dispersed monks,
tenfold for the sailors,
elevenfold for the disputants,
twelvefold for the repenters,
thirteenfold for the travellers.
For both the pope and king
everybody's drinking without restraint.
Drinks the mistress, drinks the master
drinks the soldier, drinks the cleric,
he drinks, she drinks,
drink the servant with the maid
drinks the fast one, drinks the slow one
drinks the white one, drinks the black one
drinks the householder, drinks the drifter
drinks the ignorant, drinks the scholar
drink the poor and the sick,
drink the exile and the stranger,
drinks the boy, drinks the greybeard
drink the bishop and the deacon
drinks the sister, drinks the brother
drinks the granny, drinks the mother
there she's drinking, here's he drinking
they drink a hundred, they drink a thousand.
A ton of coins lasts
too little when everyone's
drinking excessively without limit
even though they drink with a joyous heart;
as you see everybody's sucking us away
and so we'll become poor
Everyone who's sucking us away let them scatter
and let them not be recorded among the righteous.
- Artist:Carl Orff
- Album:Carmina Burana