Annotation:Around the World for Sport (4): Difference between revisions
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Versions of the melody were entered into the large mid-19th century music manuscript collection of County Cork cleric and uilleann piper Canon [[biography:James Goodman]] as "[[Coughing Old Man (The)]]" and "[[Diversion Everywhere (2)]]." | Versions of the melody were entered into the large mid-19th century music manuscript collection of County Cork cleric and uilleann piper Canon [[biography:James Goodman]] as "[[Coughing Old Man (The)]]" and "[[Diversion Everywhere (2)]]." See also "[[Jackie Layton]]/Jack Lattin/Lattan" for another story of a tune named for a wager. | ||
|f_source_for_notated_version= | |f_source_for_notated_version= | ||
|f_printed_sources=O’Farrell ('''National Irish Music for the Union Pipes'''), 1804; p. 28. | |f_printed_sources=O’Farrell ('''National Irish Music for the Union Pipes'''), 1804; p. 28. |
Latest revision as of 19:34, 27 September 2021
X:1 T:Round the World for Sport [4] M:6/8 L:1/8 R:Jig S:O’Farrell – National Irish Music for the Union Pipes (1804) Z:AK/Fiddler’s Companion K:G D | GBB BAB | GBd def | gfe edB | dBA A2B | GBB BAB | GBd def | gfe edB | dBG G2 || def gfg | abg fed | gfe edB | dBA A2B | GBB BAB | GBd def | gfe edB | AGG G2 ||
(A)ROUND THE WORLD FOR SPORT [4]. AKA and see "Coughing Old Man (The)," "Diversion Everywhere (2)." Irish, Jig (6/8 time). G Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. The title takes its name from the adventures of Irish rake and politician Thomas "Buck" Whaley (1765-1800), whose penchant for gambling not only lost him his inheritance and large sums of money, but made for a number of hurried relocations when he was unable to pay his gambling debts. He was born to an Irish Protestant landowner and sometime Member of Parliament, who died when Thomas was a teenager. As he could not inherit until he was eighteen, he was sent on the Grand Tour to the Continent, but the sums given him eventually proved to meager for the undertaking leading to his first hasty escape when his cheque to cover a huge gambling debt (accrued in one night) was not accepted. Back in Ireland, Whaley, still a teenager, was elected to the Irish House of Commons for a locale in County Dublin.
Whaley did not tarry long, and was homeward bound within a few days. He arrived back in Dublin in the summer of 1790, easily satisfying the conditions of his wager. He collected his winnings, and, after clearing expenses for the trip, still made a hefty profit.
A restless, man, Whaley had further travels, although not so far afield, but was present in Paris during the Revolutionary period. He was obliged to flee from gambling debts several more times, and finally expired on a journey to London either from rheumatic fever, or, as some said, from a fatal stabbing at the hands of one of two jealous sisters. At his funeral it was said that a Mr. Robinson, an Irishman, danced a hornpipe over the coffin.
The exploit was celebrated in song and music. "Buck Whaley's Departure" was a song set to the melody "Rutland Jig (The)" (AKA "Humors of Dublin (2) (The)"), and a song with the chorus "Round the world for sport," which became attached to a popular dance tune[1]
Versions of the melody were entered into the large mid-19th century music manuscript collection of County Cork cleric and uilleann piper Canon biography:James Goodman as "Coughing Old Man (The)" and "Diversion Everywhere (2)." See also "Jackie Layton/Jack Lattin/Lattan" for another story of a tune named for a wager.
- ↑ Seán Donnelly, "A German Dulcimer Player in Eighteenth-Century Dublin", Dublin Historical Record Vol. 53, No. 1 (Spring, 2000), p. 81.