"I'll Make a Man of You"
Song
Written1914
Composer(s)Arthur Wimperis
Lyricist(s)Herman Finck

"I'll Make a Man of You" is a World War I recruiting song that was sung across Britain in hopes of rallying young men to enlist in the military. It is sung from a flirtatious young woman's perspective of how she dates military men in order to turn them into better soldiers.[1] It was written and composed by Arthur Wimperis and Herman Finck in 1914. The song was also showcased in Frank Lloyd's Cavalcade, and in the musical and film Oh, What a Lovely War!.[2]

This song is well known for spawning numerous obscene parody versions which were performed in music halls during World War I and World War II, and are often still sung by serving soldiers today.[3] One of the most notable of these parodies was "I Don't Want to Join the Army",[4][5][6] a sanitized version of which also featured in Oh, What a Lovely War!.[7]

Lyrics

The Army and the Navy need attention
The outlook isn't healthy you'll admit
But I've a perfect dream of a new recruiting scheme
Which I really think is absolutely it
If only other girls would do as I do
I believe that we could manage it alone
For I turn all suitors from me, but the Sailor and the Tommy
I've an Army and a Navy of my own.

On Sunday I walk out with a Soldier
Monday I'm taken by a Tar
Tuesday I'm out with a baby Boy Scout
On Wednesday a Hussar
On Thursday I gang out wi' a Scottie
On Friday the Captain of the crew
But on Saturday I'm willing if you'll only take the shilling
To make a man of any one of you.

I teach the tenderfoot to face the powder
That gives an added lustre to my skin
And I show the raw recruit how to give a chaste salute
So when I'm presenting arms, he's falling in
It makes you almost proud to be a woman
When you make a strapping soldier of a kid
And he says, "You put me through it and I didn't want to do it
But you went and made me love you, so I did!"

On Sunday I walk out with a Bosun
On Monday a Rifleman in green
On Tuesday I choose a Sub in the Blues
On Wednesday a Marine
On Thursday a Terrier from Tooting
On Friday a Midshipman or two
But on Saturday I'm willing if you'll only take the shilling
To make a man of any one of you![2]

References

  1. Pegler, Martin (2014). Soldier's Songs and Slang of the Great War. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. pp. 252–253.
  2. 1 2 Priddle, Mel. "I'll Make a Man of You". International Lyrics Playground. Retrieved July 21, 2015.
  3. Joseph, Boskin (2011). Corporal Boskin's cold Cold War : a comical journey (1st ed.). Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press. p. 128. ISBN 978-0815650508. OCLC 956998368.
  4. Cook, Tim (1971). The Secret History of Soldiers: How Canadians survived the Great War. Toronto, Ontario. ISBN 9780735235274. OCLC 1053623628.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. Ferguson, John, ed. (1972). War and the Creative Arts. Macmillan International Higher Education. p. 258. ISBN 9781349154906.
  6. Jones, Tristan (2014). Ice!. Open Road Media. ISBN 9781497603578. OCLC 966108123.
  7. Wolf, Matt (1998-09-07). "Oh What a Lovely War". Variety. Retrieved 2018-12-02.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.