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National Anthem
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I have to admit to getting mildly irritated On Saturday when they played 'God Save the Queen' at the England v Wales international.
The Welsh played their traditional national song (forget which one!!) whilst the English played the national anthem.
Surely it is either one thing or the other. Either the national anthem is played for both teams or, the English play a traditional song, 'Land of Hope and Glory', 'Greensleeves', 'On Ilkely Moor' or something similar.
We keep banging on about Englishness (whatever that means) and then blithley ignore a golden opportunity to express it.
However, the 'land' in the original version referred to the UK and not just to England. It was, after all, a line in the 'Coronation Ode' written by AC Benson to accompany Elgar's 'Pomp and Circumstance March No 1' music. It was for Edward VII's coronation and he - just like the present queen - was monarch of Great Britain and not just England. So, it is a �national anthem' only in the sense that 'Flower of Scotland' is a �national anthem'...ie merely an occasional one.
Wales had 2 national anthems on Saturday, theirs and the British one. England only had the British one. I've written to RFU to ask why they insist on playing it. It has to be Jerusalem doesn't it?
(Mind you, compared to the tedious festival of music and fireworks that the other home nations subject us to before a match, GSTQ is very no nonsense and punchy which I like.)
there's no law, though if the monarch is actually present there may be some courtesy involved in playing God Save the Queen. Otherwise, perhaps they could play those two lines of Swing Low Sweet Chariot which are all anyone seems to know and which seem so very English.
Nice idea, though waimarie: the All Blacks do a haka, then the England team respond by singing Greensleeves. Hmmm.
can't stand Jerusalem - that sounds really dirgy to me (GSTQ is a waltz and could be played much faster if anyone wanted) - as Wikipedia says, 'the first verse is a series of questions to which the 'truthful' answer is no, while the second frames a series of demands to which the reply might well be 'get them yourself'.'
The real problem with GSTQ is that it's a hymn to a single person, whereas other national anthems are hymns to the whole country. Perhaps it's time someone came up with a proper one, for England, not rabbiting on about dark satanic mills or my lady Greensleeves. You could start like the opening line of the Ukrainian anthem: 'Ukraine isn't dead yet...'