![]() ![]() ![]() Joshua from La Crosse, WiJethro Tull has also been known to perform this song in concert, such as on their live album A Little Light Music.It's a pagan representation of the Mabon ritual. It's an English folksong detailing the life of John Barleycorn. Nathan from Jackson, TnThis song is NOT from the Old West.Profile of the author > Scottish bard Robert Burns They took a plough and plough'd him down,Īnd they hae taen his very heart's blood,īack to the index > Poems by Robert Burns Randy from Las Vegas, NvThe song came from a poem by Robert Burns written in 1782.Noriko from Phoenix, AzI see, the lyrics really had a deep meaning and and you can really feel the essence of the song.A review of the data on causal beliefs about alcohol and social behavior indicates that such beliefs are common and that the general public shares a number of beliefs about. It has been suggested that these effects are, in part, a function of beliefs about the power of alcohol to change the drinker. And it was called historically 'The Passion of the Corn.'" Argues that in popular thought, alcohol has been invested with a great number of varied effects. The winter, the land being dormant, and then the corn growing, rising, being cut off, being ground between stones, and being mistreated, eventually rising again in the form of alcohol or bread. Jeff from Pittsburgh, PaAccording to Steve Winwood: "Of course, the title track of 'John Barleycorn' was an English folk song which was sometimes called 'The Passion of the Corn.' And it's a parallel with the passion of Christ and the rural cycle. ![]()
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