black sanctus
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English
Alternative forms
- black santis, blacke-saint, blacke santis, blacke santus, blacksaunt, black-sant, blacke saunts, blacke sanctus, black santos, black sanctis
Etymology
Noun
black sanctus (plural black sanctuses) (archaic)
- A profane or blasphemous parody of a hymn.
- 1578, Thomas Lupton, A moral and pitieful comedie, intituled, All for money […], folio 8r:
- I knewe I would make him soone change his note, / I will make him sing the blacke sanctus, I holde him a grote.
- 1861, Robert Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Earl of Lytton, “Adolfus, Duke of Guelders”, in All the Year Round: A Weekly Journal, volume 5, page 14:
- The surly sinners sing / A horrible black santis, so to cheer / The work in hand. And evermore you hear / A shout of awful joy, as down goes some / Three-hundred-years-old treasure.
- (figuratively) Harsh words, especially profanities, or other dissonant noises; a cacophony.
- 1533, Robert Saltwood, A comparyson bytwene. iiij. byrdes, the larke, the nyghtyngale, ye thrusshe & the cuko, for theyr syngynge who shuld be chauntoure of the quere[1], folio 14v:
- As plesaunt to the ere as the blacke sanctus / Of a sad sorte vpon a mery pyn.