sandracoley
master brummie
men of harlec . the windmill....morning has broken.
''And did those feet in ancient time
Walk upon England's mountains green...
...and was Jerusalem builded here
Among these dark satanic mills?''
At junior school we sang the Ash grove quite a lot but I can't remember all the words. Jean.
Yes badger lad, I was there with my little recorder from Albert Rd Stechford Primary in 1952! First heard a bloke in a white suit sing 'The Floral Dance', could have been Peter Dawson?. Still brings tears to my eyes when I play it sixty years on...incredible nostalgic hit.
My First school : Lass of Richmond Hill, Barbara Allen, The Ashgrove, Bobby Shafto, The British Grenadiers, Men of Harlech, Nymphs and Shepherds, plus silly dancing music...
Later School Song:
Where the iron heart of England throbs
Beneath her sombre robe.
Stands a school whose sons have made her
Great and famous round the globe;
These have plucked the bays of battle,
Those have won the scholars crown;
Old Edwardians, Young Edwardians
Forward for the School's renown.
Chorus
Forward where the knocks are hardest,
Some to failure, some to fame,
Never mind the cheers or hooting,
Keep your head and play the game.
Here no classic grove secludes us,
Here abides no sheltered calm;
Not the titled, not the stranger,
Wrestles here to gain the palm;
Round our smoke-encrusted precincts
Labour's turbid river runs,
Builders of a burly city
Temper here their strenuous sons.
Here's no place for fop or idler;
They who made our City great
Feared no hardship, shirked no labour,
Smiled at death and conquered fate;
They who gave our school it's laurels
Laid on us a sacred trust;
Forward, therefore, live your hardest,
Die of service, not of rust.
Forward where the scrimmage thickens
Never stop to rub your shin;
Cowards count the kicks and ha'pence,
Only care to save their skin.
Oftentimes defeat is splendid,
Victory may still be shame,
Luck is good, the prize is pleasant,
But the glory's in the game.
Always sung at beginning and end of a Term, and always followed by the prefects leaping on to the stage with rolled up school cap exhorting “School, three cheers for the Masters” Hip Rah, Hip, Rah, Hip Rah. “School, three cheers for the Headmaster” Hip Rah, Hip Rah, Hip, Rah, and finally the Head Boy with “SCHOOL, THREE CHEERS FOR THE SCHOOL!” The last one obviously getting the loudest cheers. Except the occasion when some besotted fool got carried away and called for “SCHOOL, THREE CHEERS FOR THE GIRLS SCHOOL” last up. Got the best result ever…but was never seen again.
My dad can still receite a monologue he was taught at school 90 years ago...
The Green Eye of the Little Yellow God...by J.Milton Hayes....
It begins...
There's a one eyed yellow idol to the north of Kathmandu.
There's a little marble cross below the town.
Where a broken hearted woman tends the grave of mad Carew.
And the yellow god, forever, gazes down....