Ancient Origin of a Famous Song
It is not generally known that the famous
tune sung all over the English speaking world to the works of "For He's a
Jolly Good Fellow" is of quite ancient origin, and has served a remarkable
number of functions in the course of its existence. A French writer asserts that
it was originally used by the Crusaders, and was led to this belief from having
heard it sung by Arabs in Palestine, but the learned Grove says this could not
possibly be. "The breadth of phrasing" say the dictionary, "the
major mode, and the close on the dominant, are as characteristic of the popular
tunes of the time of Louis XIV as they are unlike the un-rhythmical melodies of
the middle ages." A tune very similar to this was used by a French soldier
after the battle of Malplaquet to satirize the English general, Marlborough, or
"Malbrook" as the French called him. In this form it attained wide
popularity. It would, however, very likely have been forgotten by now had not
Madame Poitrine used it as a lullaby for the infant heir to the French throne in
1781. Marie Antoinette heard the tune, and "Malbrook s'en va-t-en
guerre" (Malbrook is off to the war) soon became very popular all over
France, and was a favorite melody for satirical couplets of all kinds used in
French vaudevilles of the period.
The tune had become so closely associated
with the French that Beethoven used it in a "Battle Symphony" he once
wrote to commemorate the defeat of the French at Vittoria by the allied armies
under Wellington. In this piece it was cleverly contrasted with "Rule
Britannia" and "God Save the King". Nevertheless the melody seems
to have been as popular with the British as it was with the French. It was,
probably, first used by them in 1872 at Gibraltar to the words "D'Artois
returns from Spain".
It soon became popular in England after this,
and was used chiefly as an instrumental piece for violin or flute, and finally
became a teaching piece on the harpsichord. About 1830, however, somebody used
the melody for the words, "We Won't Go Home Till Morning", second
verse "For He's A Jolly Good Fellow", and from that time on the melody
has found its way into very nearly every country under the sun - to say nothing
of the seven seas. For wherever Anglo-Saxons gather, from New York to San
Francisco, and from London to London by way of Montreal and Melbourne, the tune
is always used when they wish to do honor to one of their number.
The Etude Magazine
August 1910