God save the King

Posted by fitheach on Sun 03 June 2012
Lord, grant that Marshal Wade,
May by thy mighty aid,
Victory bring.
May he sedition hush
And like a torrent rush,
Rebellious Scots to crush,
God save the King

King Charles III

Charles Edward Stuart or 'Bonnie Prince Charlie'

The man pictured was the cause of the stanza, quoted above, [1] being written in 1745. The King needing saving was King George II. God save the King became a popular song in the musical theatres of London as King George figuratively, and possibly literally, was packing his bags ready to leave for continental Europe.

However, the origins of the song are much older with a version dedicated to the birth of Prince Henry Stuart in 1725 and to King James VII and II before that [2]. Even in 1745 there were competing versions of the same song supporting either the Jacobites or the Hanoverians, an early form of propaganda. The winners of this dynastic tussle decided the version of the song used now.

Of course, had the Bonnie Prince and his generals continued on from Derby [3], rather than turning back, the song, and the outcome for the Highlands may have been profoundly different.


 Notes

[1]Rebellious Scots to Crush, 2008, Arran Paul Johnson.
[2]Sweet Freedom's Song: My Country 'tis of Thee and Democracy in America, 2002, Robert James Branham.
[3]Many of the Jacobite generals persuaded the Prince to turn back at Derby as they hadn't received the expected support from English sympathisers. Had the Jacobite army continued they could have taken a largely undefended London. The Lion in the North, 1981, John Prebble.


Related posts: