Pleading (Elgar)

"Pleading" is a poem written by Arthur L. Salmon,[1] and set to music by the English composer Edward Elgar in 1908, as his Op.48.

This is one of the most popular of Elgar's songs. Elgar had returned home at the end of September 1908, feeling depressed after taking the score of his first Symphony to the publishers. Arthur Salmon had sent him a book of poems, and the loneliness expressed in "Pleading" fitted his mood. He finished the song within a week, and added the orchestration the next month. He wrote the song for, and dedicated it to his great friend Lady Maud Warrender.

It was published by Novello & Co. It has been referred to as Elgar's Op. 48, No. 1,[2] as if a set of songs had been planned for Lady Maud Warrender, but no other Op. 48 songs are known.[3]

Lyrics

PLEADING


Will you come homeward from the hills of Dreamland,
Home in the dusk, and speak to me again?
Tell me the stories that I am forgetting,
Quicken my hopes, and recompense my pain?
Will you come homeward from the hills of Dreamland?
I have grown weary, though I wait for you yet;
Watching the fallen leaf, the faith grown fainter,
The memory smoulder’d to a dull regret.
Shall the remembrance die in dim forgetting–
All the fond light that glorified my way?
Will you come homeward from the hills of Dreamland,
Home in the dusk, and turn my night to day?

Recordings

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gollark: ```JS is the worst, worse than this verseIf you use JS, reverseI just rhymed a verb with a nounJS is too weak, it's worse than this verse```
gollark: Antihaskell rap from the esolangs people.
gollark: ```Y'allEver hear of a cool language?It goes a little likefibs = 0 : 1 : zipWith (+) fibs (tail fibs)Oh, you didn't understand that?ExactlyHaskell is the worstWorse than this verseIf you use Haskell, reverseI just rhymed reverse with verseHaskell is still worse than this verseThose who use Haskell, let me enlighten youHaskell is the only language that can't shine a light on youWhy? Because that's IO (oh)Haskell has a successor functionWhat a coincidence, because it sucksLet me introduce you to my friend FoopyFoopy's my own language, it's everything Haskell couldn't doHey, Foopy, my main man?Foopy: Yeah, dude?You suck too!Foopy is impossible to useFunctional programming's like boozeWith objects you can't loseHaskell's the worst, Foopy's the worst, OOP is the wayFP's the worstWorse than this verseIf you use FP, reverseI just rhymed reverse with verseFP is still worse than this verseLemme introduce some morePython, Rust, Ruby, these aren't choresRust's the ultimate high-level languageIt's taking the world by stormPython and Ruby are your Swiss army knivesAlways there when you need them mostThese languages are beautiful in their simplicityBeautiful in their complexityHaskell only has complexityUgly complexityHard to use, hard to learnHaskell is the worstWorse than this verseIf you use Haskell, reverseI just rhymed reverse with verseHaskell is still worse than this verse```
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References

  1. Arthur Leslie Salmon (born 1865), lover of literature, poet, music critic and author of British travel guides.
  2. Percy Young, Elgar O. M., p.424
  3. Many of Arthur Salmon's poems were set to music by other composers: "Homing", with music written by ballad composer Teresa del Riego (1876-1896) and published in 1917 expresses sentiments similarly and would have been a suitable companion song for "Pleading". Noteworthy among others are "Wait!" (1916) and "The curtain falls" (1923) with music by the aristocratic lady composer Guy d'Hardelot; and "My dear old town" (1932) with music by Australian May Brahe.
  • Kennedy, Michael Portrait of Elgar (Oxford University Press, 1968) ISBN 0-19-315414-5
  • Moore, Jerrold N. “Edward Elgar: a creative life” (Oxford University Press, 1984) ISBN 0-19-315447-1
  • Young, Percy M., Elgar O.M. (Collins, 1955)
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