How stands the glass around? (Anonymous): Difference between revisions
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{{Editor|Christopher Shaw|2007-12-02}}'''Score information:''' A4, 2 pages {{Copy|Personal}} | {{Editor|Christopher Shaw|2007-12-02}}'''Score information:''' A4, 2 pages {{Copy|Personal}} | ||
:'''Edition notes:''' | :'''Edition notes:''' Please click on the link for preview/playback. Free registration at external website required for PDF download | ||
==General Information== | ==General Information== |
Revision as of 08:51, 20 March 2011
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- Editor: Christopher Shaw (submitted 2007-12-02). Score information: A4, 2 pages Copyright: Personal
- Edition notes: Please click on the link for preview/playback. Free registration at external website required for PDF download
General Information
Title: How stands the glass around?
Composer: Anonymous
Number of voices: 3vv Voicing: ATB
Genre: Secular, Partsong
Language: English
Instruments: a cappella
Published: 1729
Description: A favourite song of General Wolfe, allegedly sung by him at Québec the night before his death. But the legend relies on an inexact reading of the description in Krifft's "Siege of Québec, a sonata" (c. 1797): "A favorite song of General Wolfe's & sung the evening before the engagement wherein he was killed". The present harmonization is that of Krifft, who completed "The siege of Quebec" after the majority had been composed by Kotzwara, before his untimely death from erotic asphyxiation (Kotwara's "Battle of Prague" was a favourite of Jane Austen). The song appears first in a ballad opera of 1729 called "The Patron" (I have not seen this source) and bears more than a passing resemblance to an Act Tune by Jeremiah Clarke associated with the play "A wife for any man", 1696.
External websites:
Original text and translations
English text
- 1.
- How stands the glass around?
- For shame ye take no care, my boys!
- How stands the glass around?
- Let mirth and wine abound.
- The trumpets sound,
- the colours they are flying boys
- To fight, kill or wound.
- May we still be found,
- Content with our hard fare, my boys,
- On the cold, cold ground.
- 2.
- Why, soldiers, why,
- Should we be melancholy, boys?
- Why, soldiers, why?
- Whose business is to die!
- What sighing? Fie!
- Damn fear, drink on, be jolly, boys.
- 'Tis he, you or I.
- Cold, hot, wet or dry,
- We're always bound to follow, boys,
- And scorn to fly.
- 3.
- 'Tis but in vain,
- (I mean not to upbraid you, boys),
- 'Tis but in vain
- For soldiers to complain.
- Should next campaign
- Send us to Him who made us, boys,
- We're free from pain.
- But should we remain,
- A bottle and kind landlady
- Cures all again.