It was played by two pipers as
HM Queen Victoria's body was carried in procession from
Osborne House on its way to
Windsor for her funeral in 1901. The piece was played by Pipe Major Colour Sergeant Peter Grant of The Highlanders, Royal Regiment of Scotland at the
funeral of HRH Prince Philip, The Duke of Edinburgh on Saturday, April 17, 2021 and again in tribute on Friday, September 9, 2022 by a lone piper, Pipe Sergeant Parsons of the London Scottish, at the memorial service of
HM Queen Elizabeth II. It was again played by a lone piper as her body left
St Giles's Cathedral in preparation for its journey to London. As per royal tradition, the piece was played by the mass pipes and drums of the Irish and Scots Guards, at the last stage of the state funeral procession, when the Queen's coffin was brought down the hill from
Windsor Castle to the lower ward and
St. George's Chapel. Traditionally, the piece has always been played for this stage of a monarch's state funeral. In late 1942, according to the late
Duchess of Windsor's memoir
The Heart Has Its Reasons,
The Duke of Windsor asked that it be played at the funeral of his brother,
Prince George, Duke of Kent, who was killed in a plane crash in the Scottish Highlands. Apparently it was a personal favourite of the Duke of Kent. It is the official lament of the
Canadian Armed Forces, played to honour dead members of the service. It was standard practice in the
British and
Canadian military to use this tune to mark the death of a soldier serving
in Afghanistan during the official memorial service. An excerpt from J. Elliot's lyrics to this song was used in John McGrath's play
Border Warfare (1989). The English folk-rock band
Fairport Convention covered the song on their 1970 album
Full House. The tune was played by a lone piper at the funeral of singer/songwriter
Sandy Denny. The track 'Flowers of the Town' by the English folk band
The Unthanks is based on this song but it laments the loss of young men in the
First World War. The lyrics of this version are almost identical to the first of "Two Songs" by
Cecil Day-Lewis. In 2007, Scottish singer
Isla St Clair was invited to sing
Flowers of the Forest at
Tyne Cot Cemetery in
Flanders, Belgium to commemorate the 90th anniversary of the
Battle of Passchendaele, in the
First World War. The ceremony was attended by
Queen Elizabeth II and
Queen Paola, as well as other European Heads of State and Commonwealth Representatives. She also recorded the lament in 1998, for the album
When the Pipers Play and again in 2011, for the
Scots Guards album
From Helmand To Horse Guards. Both versions of the song are part of the traditional music at
Selkirk Common Riding which in part commemorates the loss at Flodden. Jean Elliot's version is known in the town as "The Liltin" and is played after the Casting of the Colours ceremony. Alison Cockburn's version is played as a march by the town band but is also the version more often sung; it is the version known in Selkirk as "The Flo'ers o' the Forest". Scots/Australian singer-songwriter
Eric Bogle refers to "Flowers of the Forest" in his song "
No Man's Land", in which he muses over the grave of a World War I soldier, and wonders whether "Flowers of the Forest" and "
Last Post" were played at the soldier's burial. English folk singer
June Tabor recorded Bogle's song, followed by an instrumental version of "Flowers of the Forest", on the album
Ashes and Diamonds (1977). Australian singer-songwriter
Graham Dodsworth recorded a version of the song with Irish/Australian singer Claire Peters on his 1998 folk music album ''In Good King Arthur's Day''. The song is heavily referenced in the novel
Sunset Song by
Lewis Grassic Gibbon and features in the 2015 film of the same name, including a rendition by
Agyness Deyn, who plays the lead character, Chris Guthrie. Scottish tenor
Kenneth McKellar recorded a version of the song.
Michael Nyman speeded up the song and re-edited it as part of the score for
The Piano. English musician
Mike Oldfield covered the song on his 1996 album,
Voyager. The song is quoted at the beginning and end of the historical novel
The Flowers of the Forest by
Elizabeth Byrd, which culminates in the
Battle of Flodden. The
Australian War Memorial uses the song during its Last Post ceremony. ==The Forest==