The Torch (Elgar)

The Torch is a song written by the English composer Edward Elgar in 1909 as his Op.60, No.1.

Henry Wood's first wife, Olga

The manuscript is dated 23 December 1909.

On the title-page, the song is dedicated "To YVONNE,"[1] and it is described as a "Folk-Song (Eastern Europe),[2] paraphrased by Pietro d’Alba and Edward Elgar."[3]

It was one of a set of a cycle of four songs that he planned, to his own words. It was shortly after writing the song A Child Asleep for Muriel Foster, a few days before the Christmas of 1909 that Elgar received the news of the death of a friend, the soprano Olga Ouroussoff, the young wife of Henry Wood. The inspiration for the songs was the result of this news. Only the first song of the cycle, The Torch and the last, The River were written.

The song was orchestrated in July 1912 and, with its companion song The River, it was first performed by Muriel Foster at the Hereford Music Festival on 11 September 1912.

Lyrics

THE TORCH

Come, O my love !
Come, fly to me ;
All my soul
Cries out for thee :
Haste to thy home,-
I long for thee,
Faint for thee,
Worship thee
Only, - but Come !


Dark is the wood,-

The track's ever lonely and gray ;

But joyous the blaze

That welcomes and shows thee the way.
Come, O my love !
Come, fly to me :
All my soul
Cries out for thee !
Haste to thy rest,-
I long for thee,
Sigh for thee,
Faint for thee;
Come to my breast.


Cold is the stream,-

The ford is a danger to thee :

My heart is aflame,

As the beacon that lights thee to me.
Come, O my love !
Come, fly to me !
All my soul
Cries out for thee :
Haste to thy home,-
I long for thee,
Faint for thee,
Worship thee
Only,- but Come !
Pietro d’Alba.
From a Folk-Song (Eastern Europe)

Recordings

References

  • Banfield, Stephen, Sensibility and English Song: Critical studies of the early 20th century (Cambridge University Press, 1985) ISBN 0-521-37944-X
  • Kennedy, Michael, Portrait of Elgar (Oxford University Press, 1968) ISBN 0-19-315414-5
  • Young, Percy M. (1973). Elgar O.M.: a study of a musician. London: Collins. OCLC 869820.

Notes

  1. Percy Young (in his Elgar O. M.) says this is "Probably fictitious."
  2. "Folk-Song" probably also fictitious
  3. Pietro d’Alba (alias Peter Rabbit) was Elgar’s pseudonym for himself
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