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Venusian lullaby

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
Revision as of 02:33, 31 August 2011 by Boblipton (talk | contribs)
For the Paul Leonard novel, see Venusian Lullaby.

A Venusian lullaby was used by the Doctor to soothe Aggedor, along with the spinning mirror/torch, which apparently had a hypnotic effect on the beast. (DW: The Curse of Peladon, The Monster of Peladon).

For reasons unknown, the melody of the lullaby was identical to a centuries-old Earth Christmas carol entitled, "God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen". As the original composer of the carol -- and indeed the date of its creation -- have been lost to history, any connection that may exist between the two pieces of music can only be speculated.

The first line translates roughly to "Close your eyes, my darling. Well three of them, at least"! (DW: The Dæmons)

More obscurely, in the late 2000s, an illustrated book of Venusian lullabies was used by Rhys Williams to placate a giant Zansi baby when he and Gwen took care of him. (TWM: Rift War! Part Three: Funhouse!)

The Eleventh Doctor used the lullaby when he organised an orchestra to prevent the Drexxons escaping from their cell in a Perpetuity Chamber, which was locked by a musical key. (NSA: Death Riders)

Some archaeological sources suggested that the tune wasn't a lullaby, but instead a bawdy rhyme. (NA: Lucifer Rising)

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