Fold to thy heart thy brother
Oct. 6th, 2010 10:19 amOver on someone else's LJ, I've just been reading a comment about someone's school hymn. Which has just reminded me to muse what a bloody odd choice my school made.
At the end of every term, and on various high days and holidays, we would churn out O Brother Man, which always struck me as a singularly odd choice for a girls school.
Worse, we didn't sing it to any kind of regular hymn tune; oh no. The middle verse went to a different tune from the first and third, both were full of weird runs and unsingable intervals, and the whole was rounded off with a vaguely apocalyptic piano accompaniment.
(Yikes. A brief quest on youtube to see if I could find a recording of it revealed this, which is bloody odd. Wrong tune, of course, but it's basically hymn-karaoke. Ah well, each to their own.)
A quick test has just revealed that I do actually still know all the words (and I bet
marjory does too). I have a vague idea it was dinned into us so we could sing it at school functions without the tiresome intervention of hymnbooks. My rendering of the tune was very poor, mind. Did I mention? Really quite a difficult tune.
(Anyone hugely curious can find the words here: http://www.cyberhymnal.org/htm/o/b/obrother.htm. We missed out the second verse they give altogether. That site will play (the wrong) audio at you, be warned. In fact, I mainly include the link so people can marvel at what a fabulous URL cyberhymnal.org is. Cyberhymnal! Isn't that a brilliant word?)
On the plus side, the sheer unwieldiness of the school tune means that no one else uses it. I'm extremely unlikely to bump into it anywhere else, and thus I avoid the pitfalls of being mentally displaced back to bottle-green-clad adolescence without warning.
The junior school (which I didn't attend) attached to my secondary school lucked out and got the jolly Lord of All Hopefulness instead. My junior school didn't go in for such exotica as a school hymn, as far as I can remember. In fact, I've no idea how common the concept of a school hymn is. Did you have one? Can you remember it?
At the end of every term, and on various high days and holidays, we would churn out O Brother Man, which always struck me as a singularly odd choice for a girls school.
Worse, we didn't sing it to any kind of regular hymn tune; oh no. The middle verse went to a different tune from the first and third, both were full of weird runs and unsingable intervals, and the whole was rounded off with a vaguely apocalyptic piano accompaniment.
(Yikes. A brief quest on youtube to see if I could find a recording of it revealed this, which is bloody odd. Wrong tune, of course, but it's basically hymn-karaoke. Ah well, each to their own.)
A quick test has just revealed that I do actually still know all the words (and I bet
(Anyone hugely curious can find the words here: http://www.cyberhymnal.org/htm/o/b/obrother.htm. We missed out the second verse they give altogether. That site will play (the wrong) audio at you, be warned. In fact, I mainly include the link so people can marvel at what a fabulous URL cyberhymnal.org is. Cyberhymnal! Isn't that a brilliant word?)
On the plus side, the sheer unwieldiness of the school tune means that no one else uses it. I'm extremely unlikely to bump into it anywhere else, and thus I avoid the pitfalls of being mentally displaced back to bottle-green-clad adolescence without warning.
The junior school (which I didn't attend) attached to my secondary school lucked out and got the jolly Lord of All Hopefulness instead. My junior school didn't go in for such exotica as a school hymn, as far as I can remember. In fact, I've no idea how common the concept of a school hymn is. Did you have one? Can you remember it?
no subject
Date: 2010-10-06 10:36 am (UTC)I can't remember much other than the opening lines:
Let our voices make the rafters ring,
As the motto of our school we sing,
Forward, forward, forward,
To something something something something...
I don't fear much chance of running into too many others who know it.
--
[1] The motto comes from James Douglas who realising he was about to be killed by Moors while on a Crusade, and carrying the embalmed heart of Robert the Bruce about his neck, flung it ahead of him into the midst of the Moors, crying: "Forward, brave heart, as ever thou were wont to do, and Douglas will follow thee or die". Which he then did.
no subject
Date: 2010-10-06 10:46 am (UTC)Both, presumably?
no subject
Date: 2010-10-06 10:51 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-10-06 01:25 pm (UTC)Not sure what the coalition's version would be yet.
no subject
Date: 2010-10-06 02:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-10-06 03:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-10-06 02:33 pm (UTC)After a mental pause, I now think this was: "To the knowledge learning can bring".
I'm sure there was more, but without a present life regression I'm not sure I could access it.
no subject
Date: 2010-10-06 02:35 pm (UTC)Or was it wisdom.
Obviously, whatever it was, it wasn't bringed to me.
no subject
Date: 2010-10-06 02:39 pm (UTC)As evidenced by your grammar... you mean "brung".