Entertainment Music Lyrics and History of the Irish Folk Song "The Spinning Wheel" Share PINTEREST Email Print Design Pics Inc/Getty Images Music World Music Genres & Styles Top Picks Top Artists Rock Music Pop Music Alternative Music Classical Music Country Music Folk Music Rap & Hip Hop Rhythm & Blues Punk Music Heavy Metal Jazz Latin Music Oldies Learn More By Megan Romer Updated on 01/31/19 "The Spinning Wheel" was written in the mid-1800s by an Irish lawyer and poet named John Francis Waller. It's a beautiful ballad written in waltz time (3/4 time). To understand the song better, you'll want to know that "a chara" means "dear" and "The Coolin" refers to a traditional Irish air called "An Chúilfhionn," which translates to "The Fair-Haired One." Noteworthy Versions Cathy HarropSharon MurphyThe Shamrock Singers Lyrics Mellow the moonlight to shine is beginningClose by the window young Eileen is spinningBent o'er the fire her blind grandmother sittingIs crooning and moaning and drowsily knitting. Merrily, cheerily, noiselessly whirringSwings the wheel, spins the wheel while the foot's stirringSpritely and lightly and merrily ringingTrills the sweet voice of the young maiden singing. "Eileen, a chara, I hear someone tapping""'Tis the ivy dear mother against the glass flapping""Eily, I surely hear somebody sighing""'Tis the sound mother dear of the autumn winds dying." Merrily, cheerily, noiselessly whirringSwings the wheel, spins the wheel while the foot's stirringSpritely and lightly and merrily ringingTrills the sweet voice of the young maiden singing. "What's the noise that I hear at the window I wonder""'Tis the little birds chirping, the holly-bush under""What makes you be shoving and moving your stool onAnd singing all wrong the old song of 'The Coolin'?" Merrily, cheerily, noiselessly whirringSwings the wheel, spins the wheel while the foot's stirringSpritely and lightly and merrily ringingTrills the sweet voice of the young maiden singing. There's a form at the casement, the form of her true loveAnd he whispers with face bent, "I'm waiting for you, love"Get up on the stool, through the lattice step lightlyAnd we'll rove in the grove while the moon's shining brightly." Merrily, cheerily, noiselessly whirringSwings the wheel, spins the wheel while the foot's stirringSpritely and lightly and merrily ringingTrills the sweet voice of the young maiden singing. The maid shakes her head, on her lips lays her fingersSteps up from the stool, longs to go and yet lingersA frightened glance turns to her drowsy grandmotherPuts one foot on the stool, spins the wheel with the other. Merrily, cheerily, noiselessly whirringSwings the wheel, spins the wheel while the foot's stirringSpritely and lightly and merrily ringingTrills the sweet voice of the young maiden singing. Lazily, easily, swings now the wheel roundSlowly and lowly is heard now the reel's soundNoiseless and light to the lattice above herThe maid steps then leaps to the arms of her lover. Merrily, cheerily, noiselessly whirringSwings the wheel, spins the wheel while the foot's stirringSpritely and lightly and merrily ringingTrills the sweet voice of the young maiden singing. Slower and slower and slower the wheel ringsLower and lower and lower the reel ringsE're the reel and the wheel stopped their ringing and movingThrough the grove the young lovers by moonlight are roving.