The basic story is that King David is walking on the roof of his palace and sees Bathsheba bathing. Captivated by her beauty, he sends for her and sleeps with her, and she becomes pregnant. David sends for her husband Uriah, who is a soldier in David's army, hoping that he will sleep with his wife and it will be assumed that the child is his. But Uriah is too honourable a soldier to enjoy home comforts while his comrades are still fighting, and sleeps outside, refusing to go to his wife. David's only choice then is to marry Bathsheba, so he arranges to have Uriah 'accidentally' killed in battle, and marries Bathsheba (he already has several other wives too).
The whole affair eventually becomes known, and is a huge scandal, for which David seeks forgiveness from God. Originally chosen as king for his great piety and devotion to God, the whole episode is seen as his one spectacular downfall. It is frequently alluded to in contemporary religion as an illustration that no one is perfect.
The child dies a few days after its birth, which is seen as God's judgement on David's sin. However, Bathsheba has other children by David, including Solomon, whom, he promises Bathsheba, he will eventually select to succeed him as king. The fact that he chooses her son, though he has other, older sons vying for the throne, suggests that she holds a special place in his heart - and, perhaps, that he feels he needs to make amends to her.
I imagine the song being David's reflection on all this some years later. He recalls how he was so moved by Bathsheba's beauty on the evening when he first noticed her. She had an innocence about her, an artless beauty, pleasing without effort. Washing in Judaism is, of course, associated with purification, and justification before God ('shameless'). As a pious man, perhaps he's even drawn to her piety.
While bathing, she turns her mind to her absent husband Uriah, and prays for his safe return. The biblical account, including the parable told by the prophet Nathan in the next chapter, suggests that Uriah had probably been a loving husband. He is certainly depicted as a righteous man, undeserving of his fate.
The line "my lady never told me of her sadness, bones floating in the sound" could be about her mourning first for her husband and then for her son. But she also no doubt mourns for herself, and the incredibly complex pain of someone who has been raped, made the unwilling cause of her husband's death, and snatched into a new life against her will. We're told that David comforted Bathsheba after the death of their son, but maybe the song is suggesting that there are parts of her heart that she keeps hidden from him.
He recalls the moment when she realised she was being watched. There was an awakening in her, a terror, paralysis, and a period of waiting, as she wondered what would happen, and what she'd started. He remembers watching all this flash across her face, while he sent a messenger to fetch her.
Now, years later, she once again bathes alone, elusive and withdrawn from him. As king, and as a man, he can 'have' her whenever he wants, but he can never gain admission to her inner world, which is hers to guard. What he desired eludes him, and is cheapened by the fact that he has stolen her.
The refrain again, and this time it's David's thoughts. Years later, he can never forget what he did to Uriah, and the other innocent men who died because of what he did.
I hear the final two lines comparing her to a teacup as a suggestion that in her later life as one of David's queens, she's playing a role and being an ornament to the court, but her heart is silent, hidden.
She is described in the song as brave, which matches the biblical account. She later advocates for her son, reminding David of his promise to make him king, though this will put them both in danger from the other ambitious sons. She clearly hasn't just withered away in her sadness, but has applied herself to the cause of those she loves. David admires her strength, but, just as on that first evening, he can only ever admire from afar.
Re. possible biblical references: listening to it today it made me think of David and Bathsheba.
Go here for the biblical account: http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?book_id=10&chapter=11&version=47&context=chapter
The basic story is that King David is walking on the roof of his palace and sees Bathsheba bathing. Captivated by her beauty, he sends for her and sleeps with her, and she becomes pregnant. David sends for her husband Uriah, who is a soldier in David's army, hoping that he will sleep with his wife and it will be assumed that the child is his. But Uriah is too honourable a soldier to enjoy home comforts while his comrades are still fighting, and sleeps outside, refusing to go to his wife. David's only choice then is to marry Bathsheba, so he arranges to have Uriah 'accidentally' killed in battle, and marries Bathsheba (he already has several other wives too).
The whole affair eventually becomes known, and is a huge scandal, for which David seeks forgiveness from God. Originally chosen as king for his great piety and devotion to God, the whole episode is seen as his one spectacular downfall. It is frequently alluded to in contemporary religion as an illustration that no one is perfect.
The child dies a few days after its birth, which is seen as God's judgement on David's sin. However, Bathsheba has other children by David, including Solomon, whom, he promises Bathsheba, he will eventually select to succeed him as king. The fact that he chooses her son, though he has other, older sons vying for the throne, suggests that she holds a special place in his heart - and, perhaps, that he feels he needs to make amends to her.
I imagine the song being David's reflection on all this some years later. He recalls how he was so moved by Bathsheba's beauty on the evening when he first noticed her. She had an innocence about her, an artless beauty, pleasing without effort. Washing in Judaism is, of course, associated with purification, and justification before God ('shameless'). As a pious man, perhaps he's even drawn to her piety.
While bathing, she turns her mind to her absent husband Uriah, and prays for his safe return. The biblical account, including the parable told by the prophet Nathan in the next chapter, suggests that Uriah had probably been a loving husband. He is certainly depicted as a righteous man, undeserving of his fate.
The line "my lady never told me of her sadness, bones floating in the sound" could be about her mourning first for her husband and then for her son. But she also no doubt mourns for herself, and the incredibly complex pain of someone who has been raped, made the unwilling cause of her husband's death, and snatched into a new life against her will. We're told that David comforted Bathsheba after the death of their son, but maybe the song is suggesting that there are parts of her heart that she keeps hidden from him.
He recalls the moment when she realised she was being watched. There was an awakening in her, a terror, paralysis, and a period of waiting, as she wondered what would happen, and what she'd started. He remembers watching all this flash across her face, while he sent a messenger to fetch her.
Now, years later, she once again bathes alone, elusive and withdrawn from him. As king, and as a man, he can 'have' her whenever he wants, but he can never gain admission to her inner world, which is hers to guard. What he desired eludes him, and is cheapened by the fact that he has stolen her.
The refrain again, and this time it's David's thoughts. Years later, he can never forget what he did to Uriah, and the other innocent men who died because of what he did.
I hear the final two lines comparing her to a teacup as a suggestion that in her later life as one of David's queens, she's playing a role and being an ornament to the court, but her heart is silent, hidden.
She is described in the song as brave, which matches the biblical account. She later advocates for her son, reminding David of his promise to make him king, though this will put them both in danger from the other ambitious sons. She clearly hasn't just withered away in her sadness, but has applied herself to the cause of those she loves. David admires her strength, but, just as on that first evening, he can only ever admire from afar.