The Fringes of the Fleet

First booklet publication (Macmillan & Co.)

The Fringes of the Fleet is a booklet written in 1915 by Rudyard Kipling (1865–1936). The booklet contains essays and poems about nautical subjects in World War I.

It is also the title of a song-cycle written in 1917 with music by the English composer Edward Elgar and lyrics from poems in Kipling's booklet.

Kipling's booklet

In 1915 Kipling was commissioned by The Daily Telegraph to write a series of six articles on his view of life in less well-known aspects of the defence of the nation on its seas. These were given the general title "The Fringes of the Fleet", and had three sub-titles "The Auxiliaries", "Submarines" and "Patrols", and published between 20 November and 2 December. Each was prefaced by a short poem which did not have a title itself.

Immediately afterwards the poems and essays were re-published in a booklet called "The Fringes of the Fleet".[1]

The text opens with a poem The Lowestoft Boat which starts with the words "In Lowestoft a boat was laid, / Mark well what I do say!", later given the title "The Lowestoft Boat" and a subtitle "(East Coast Patrols of the War)".
The text opens with a poem which starts "Dawn off the Foreland[2] – the young flood making / Jumbled and short and steep – ", later titled "Mine Sweepers".
The text opens with a poem which resembles the shanty "Farewell and adieu to you, Spanish Ladies". The original and final title, "Harwich Ladies", was for security reasons at the time changed to "Greenwich Ladies".
The text opens with a very short poem (two verses of four lines) titled "Tin Fish".[3] The poem starts "The ships destroy us above / And ensnare us beneath."
The text opens with a poem entitled "A Song in Storm", which starts with the words "Be well assured that on our side / Our challenged oceans fight."
The final article begins with a poem later called "The North Sea Patrol".

Elgar's songs

In January 1916 Lord Charles Beresford requested Elgar to make songs of some of the verses in Kipling's booklet: Elgar chose four of them, and appropriately set them for four men's voices.[4]

Elgar gave different titles to three of the four poems

The work was dedicated by the composer "...to my friend Admiral Lord Beresford". The first performance was, at Elgar's suggestion, part of a wartime variety show at the London Coliseum on 11 June 1917, and the singers were baritones Charles Mott (following his performance in "The Starlight Express"), Harry Barratt, Frederick Henry and Frederick Stewart. The show ran for four weeks with two performances a day and was a great success. In the production the curtain rose on a seaport scene, outside a public house, with the four singers in rough-and-ready merchant-seamen's clothes, seated around a table.[4][6]

The song Inside the Bar, with words by Sir Gilbert Parker, was subsequently added to the cycle and performed by the same singers at the same theatre exactly two weeks later. The songs were so popular that later that year Elgar conducted the songs around British provincial music-halls (Stoke, Manchester, Leicester, and Chiswick), with Charles Mott (who had been called up) replaced by George Parker.[4]

For reasons which Elgar did not understand at the time, when they returned to the Coliseum at the end of that year, Kipling appeared and objected to his songs being performed at music-halls.[4] Kipling was upset by the report that his son John was missing.[7]

Elgar's singer, Charles Mott, was later killed in France in May 1918.[8]

Recordings

Republication in Sea Warfare

In 1916 The Fringes of the Fleet was republished by Macmillan, titled Sea Warfare, with two other sections relating to the Navy and a final poem:

Opens with a poem The Lowestoft Boat; not titled
About the Submarine Service; opens with a poem titled "The Trade" which starts:
They bear, in place of classic names,
Letters and numbers on their skin.
They play their grisly blindfold games
In little boxes made of tin.
About the sea battle; opens with a poem which starts:
Have you news of my boy Jack?
Not this tide
When d’you think that he’ll come back?
Not with this wind blowing, and this tide.
Brethren, how shall it fare with me
When the war is laid aside,
If it be proved that I am he
For whom a world has died ?

See also

Notes

  1. Notes by Alastair Wilson on "The Fringes of the Fleet"
  2. The North Foreland and the South Foreland (in Kent) are features of the south-east English coast
  3. "Tin fish" were torpedoes, and submarines were "sardine cans"
  4. 1 2 3 4 Moore, pages 705–710
  5. "Mine Sweepers" is in another small booklet and called "Trawlers", published in "Twenty Poems from Rudyard Kipling"
  6. Porte, page 201
  7. Foreman, p.209
  8. Foreman, p.321
  9. Kennedy, p.365
  10. Lewis Foreman, Oh, My Horses! Elgar and the Great War
  11. Elgar: The Fringes of the Fleet, etc: Williams/Guildford PO/Higgins
  12. Nick Higham Elgar rediscovered BBC Saturday, 7 November 2009

References

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