undyingking: (Default)
undyingking ([personal profile] undyingking) wrote2010-10-05 03:22 pm
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Land of dope and snoring

If you're respectably at work or somewhere today rather than able to watch the TV at lunch like me, you may not be aware that a minor hoo-hah is afoot about England's anthem at the Commonwealth Games.

At previous such events, when an English competitor / team won gold, the medal ceremony was soundtracked by 'Land of Hope and Glory'. This time round though there was a public poll which prompted a change to use 'Jerusalem' instead.

Now it's actually happening though, people are complaining that they don't know the words and that it goes on too long.

I don't know about you, but I missed the poll at the time, so here I will in part recreate it and also add some extras.

[Poll #1627902]

I personally favour Jerusalem, because I think William Blake's poetry rather more inspiring than the bombastic hackwork that AC Benson churned out for Land of Hope and Glory. For one thing, the line about "Wider and still wider / Shall thy bounds be set" seems singularly inappropriate for a Commonwealth event involving countries who owe their existence to the belated retrenchment of those bounds. Also, it seems to me that piously hoping that God will make the nation mightier runs a poor second to strapping on one's bow of burning gold and setting out to achieve a better England directly by human effort.

(And LoHaG is the anthem of the Conservative Party, while Jerusalem was the anthem of the women's suffrage movement. There you go.)

I wonder though why 'I Vow to Thee, My Country' wasn't offered as an option? Maybe too slow…

[identity profile] mr-malk.livejournal.com 2010-10-06 11:03 am (UTC)(link)
I knew about the Swiss one - I used to have a lot of Swiss friends when I was doing TEFL. One of them insisted that we stole it from them. IIRC, it was written by Benjamin Britten, which makes it a remarkably simple one to defend!

[identity profile] undyingking.livejournal.com 2010-10-06 03:15 pm (UTC)(link)
GStQ? I think it's a lot older than Britten -- it dates back to the Hanoverian takeover iirc.

I think the reason it got taken up such a lot elsewhere was that it was pretty much the first purpose-written national anthem; and lesser other nations who liked the idea at first thought they should just apply their own words to this tune, rather than also getting their own tune.

[identity profile] mr-malk.livejournal.com 2010-10-06 03:37 pm (UTC)(link)
You are right of course.

Where on Earth did I get that from? I know there was some connection that I'd heard with Britten, whether it was an arrangement he did or what, I can't remember, but yes, I was talking nonsense. Sorry about that.