1957
DOI: 10.2307/938363
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Letters of Edward Elgar

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“…Conservative newspapers found the occasion imperially exhilarating: the Morning Post for example read 'the very spirit of that broad and tolerant Imperialism, to which the King had referred in his speech' into the Elgar march; 96 but Elgar himself, as it happens, hated it -'all mechanicil [sic] & horrible -no soul & no romance & no imagination...' He was also irritated by the philistine King's forever demanding Land of Hope and Glory when he wanted to play him other tunes. 97 The songs are very tame. The contemporary critic Cecil Barber noted that 'on examination neither the lyrics nor their settings are aggressive'.…”
Section: VImentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Conservative newspapers found the occasion imperially exhilarating: the Morning Post for example read 'the very spirit of that broad and tolerant Imperialism, to which the King had referred in his speech' into the Elgar march; 96 but Elgar himself, as it happens, hated it -'all mechanicil [sic] & horrible -no soul & no romance & no imagination...' He was also irritated by the philistine King's forever demanding Land of Hope and Glory when he wanted to play him other tunes. 97 The songs are very tame. The contemporary critic Cecil Barber noted that 'on examination neither the lyrics nor their settings are aggressive'.…”
Section: VImentioning
confidence: 98%