Annie Lisle
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"Annie Lisle" is an 1857 ballad by Boston, Massachusetts songwriter H. S. Thompson, first published by Moulton & Clark of Newburyport, Massachusetts, and later by Oliver Ditson & Co.[1] It is about the death of a young maiden, by what some have speculated to be tuberculosis. However, the lyric does not explicitly mention tuberculosis, or "consumption" as it was called then. The song might have slipped into obscurity had the tune not been adopted by countless colleges, universities, and high schools worldwide as their respective alma mater songs.
Lyrics
[edit]Down where the waving willows
'Neath the sunbeams smile,
Shadow'd o'er the murm'ring waters
Dwelt sweet Annie Lisle;
Pure as the forest lily,
Never tho't of guile
Had its home within the bosom
Of sweet Annie Lisle.
Chorus:
Wave willows, murmur waters,
Golden sunbeams, smile!
Earthly music cannot waken
Lovely Annie Lisle.
Sweet came the hallow'd chiming
Of the Sabbath bell,
Borne on the morning breezes
Down the woody dell.
On a bed of pain and anguish
Lay dear Annie Lisle,
Chang'd were the lovely features,
Gone the happy smile.
Chorus
"Raise me in your arms, O Mother;
Let me once more look
On the green and waving willows
And the flowing brook.
Hark! the sound of angel music
From the choirs above!
Dearest mother, I am going;
Truly God is love."
Chorus
In popular culture
[edit]- The tune is used for the alma mater songs at many high schools and universities. Cornell University is believed to be the first school to have used this melody for its alma mater. Other universities that use it, many with similar lyrics, include the College of William & Mary, University of Alabama, Indiana University, Indiana State University, University of Missouri, University of Kansas, Syracuse University, University of Georgia, The Barstow School, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Vanderbilt University, Swarthmore College, Howard Payne University, The University of Akron, Lehigh University, Southern Nazarene University, American University of Beirut, and Worcester State University.[2]
- The tune is used as the melody for the alma mater song of the Methodist Girls’ School Ipoh in Perak, Malaysia which was founded in 1895.
- The tune is adopted as the melody for the alma mater song of three affiliated schools, including Chung Ling High School, Chung Ling Private High School and Chung Ling Butterworth High School.
- The tune is adopted as the melody for alma mater song of Hwa Chong Institution in Singapore.
- The tune played as the alma mater of Springfield College on the TV show Father Knows Best, season 6, episode 8, "Margaret's Old Flame".
- The tune is used in the parting song for the Kellerman Resort in the 1987 film Dirty Dancing, as well as the tune sung by the Purdue University students in the 1953 film Titanic.
- The tune is played over the opening credits of the 1942 Merrie Melodies cartoon The Dover Boys at Pimento University.
- The tune was featured in Hey Arnold! as the school song of PS-118
- The tune was used for the Civil War battle song "Ellsworth's Avengers" [words by A. Lora Hudson, musical adaptation by S. L. Coe], paying tribute to Col. Elmer Ellsworth, the first U.S. Army officer killed in the conflict. An innkeeper shotgunned him after removing a confederate flag from the rooftop of an Alexandria, Virginia, hotel.
- A snippet of the melody is sung, with different words and alongside many others, by the Butterfly in the animated movie "The Last Unicorn."
- The tune is used at the end of the 1989 film Shag for the alma mater song of Spartanburg High School.
- The tune is used as the melody for the alma mater song of Anarene High School in the 1971 film The Last Picture Show.
- The tune is quoted in Charles Ives' song "Old Home Day" and in his "Intercollegiate March" no. 5
References
[edit]- ^ Fuld, James J., The Book of World-Famous Music: Classical, Popular, and Folk, 5th Ed. Courier Dove, 2000. ISBN 0-486-41475-2
- ^ Cornell Songs, Cornell University Chorus, 101 Lincoln Hall, Ithaca, NY