Annotation:MacCarthy's March

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MACCARTHY'S MARCH. Irish, March. Henry Hudson's note to the tune in The Dublin Magazine (January, 1843) goes:

A wild March. Simplicity in the arrangement, and power in the performance, are what will make this tell. We have it under the name of "Mac Carthy's March." There are people of this ancient tribe, who, brutishly,--(we tell them the plain fact BRUTISHLY,--they may say themselves, or think it to be only, Britishly)--write their names Mac Carthy--Mc Carthy--M' (apostrophe) Carthy --Mac Carty--Mc Carty--M' (apostrophe) Carty--Macarthy--Macarty--or simply, Carthy--Carty--and so on. But there is only one--genuine--princely--Munster--true-born cognomen in the whole of them-- to be written in Roman characters, Mac Cartha,--and, if you wish to imitate the sound in English spelling say boldly--"like a soldier and a man"--Mac Carha.

Source for notated version:

Printed sources: Hudson (The Dublin Magazine), January, 1843; No. 7.

Recorded sources:




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