Annotation:New Whitehall: Difference between revisions
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The title may be explained in this passage from Thornbury's ''' | Whitehall Palace, London, was destroyed in a fire in 1698, and almost the only building in Inigo Jonses's large complex to survive the conflagration (luckily, if was the finest) was the Banqueting House, the first completed Renaissance building in England. The two-story façade of seven bays divided by columns and pilasters encloses one large, double-cube room, which was used for a variety of court festivities and entertainments. The title may be explained in this passage from Thornbury's ''' | ||
[[File:whitehall.jpg|200px|thumb|left|Whitehall and the Privy Garden from Richmond House, by Venetian painter Giovanni Antonio Canal (1697–1768), better known as Canaletto]] | |||
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''With respect to this highly historical neighbourhood,'' [Alexander] ''Pope'' [(1688–1744)], ''as usual, minutely accurate in details, thus writes in a spirit of'' ''prophecy, which, it is needless to say, has never yet been quite fulfilled to the letter:—'' | ''With respect to this highly historical neighbourhood,'' [Alexander] ''Pope'' [(1688–1744)], ''as usual, minutely accurate in details, thus writes in a spirit of'' ''prophecy, which, it is needless to say, has never yet been quite fulfilled to the letter:—'' |
Revision as of 02:19, 27 May 2014
Back to New Whitehall
NEW WHITEHALL. English, Dance Tune (6/4 time). B Flat Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). "New Whitehall" was first published in Henry Playford's Dancing Master, eleventh edition (1701) and was retained in the long-running series through the eighteenth and last edition of 1728 (then published in London by John Young, heir to the Playford music publishing concerns). It also appears in Walsh & Hare's Compleat Country Dancing Master (1718) and John Walsh's The Third Book of the Compleat Country Dancing-Master (1735 and 1749).
Whitehall Palace, London, was destroyed in a fire in 1698, and almost the only building in Inigo Jonses's large complex to survive the conflagration (luckily, if was the finest) was the Banqueting House, the first completed Renaissance building in England. The two-story façade of seven bays divided by columns and pilasters encloses one large, double-cube room, which was used for a variety of court festivities and entertainments. The title may be explained in this passage from Thornbury's
With respect to this highly historical neighbourhood, [Alexander] Pope [(1688–1744)], as usual, minutely accurate in details, thus writes in a spirit of prophecy, which, it is needless to say, has never yet been quite fulfilled to the letter:—
"Behold! Augusta's glittering spires increase,
And temples rise, the beauteous works of peace.
I see, I see, where two fair cities bend
Their ample bow, a new Whitehall ascend;
There mighty nations shall enquire their doom,
The world's great oracle in times to come:
There kings shall sue, and suppliant states be seen
Once more to bend before a British Queen."
And yet, after all, the seer may be regarded as not so very wide of the mark, if we interpret a "new Whitehall" to mean the new Houses of Parliament, and the new Foreign, Indian, and Colonial Offices, which have lately risen on the Park side of Whitehall, and have well nigh effaced the narrow and close cul de sac of Downing Street.
Source for notated version:
Printed sources: Barlow (The Complete Country Dances from Playford's Dancing Master), 1985; No. 460, p. 105.
Recorded sources: Topic Records TSCD550, Brass Monkey - "Flame of Fire" (2004).