A Soldier's Sketches Under Fire by Harold Harvey
page 16 of 60 (26%)
page 16 of 60 (26%)
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here Monte Cristo was hurled from the Chateau d'If in the sack from
which he cut his escape. Francis the First besieged it in vain, and it prospered under King Rene. In the French Revolution it figured so conspicuously as to give the title to the national hymn of the French. THE STORY OF "THE MARSEILLAISE." Is it too late to tell again the story of the origin of "The Marseillaise"? [Illustration: ON THE QUAYHEAD AT MARSEILLES.] Its author and composer (or it might be more correct to say composer and author, for in this case music preceded words), Rouget de Lisle--a young aristocrat and an artillery officer--had as a friend a citizen of Strasbourg, to whose house, in the early days of the Revolution, he came on a visit one evening. The tired guest was cordially welcomed by the citizen and his wife and daughter. To celebrate the occasion his friend sent the daughter into the cellar to bring up wine. Exhausted as he was, de Lisle drank freely, and, sitting up late with his host, did not trouble to go to bed. He had been amusing the family by playing some of his original compositions on the spinnet. When the host retired for the night he left de Lisle asleep with his head resting on the instrument. In the early hours of the morning the young officer awoke, and running through his head was a melody which, in his semi-drunken state the evening before, he had been attempting to extemporise. It seemed to haunt him, and, piecing it together as it came back to his memory, he played it over. Then, feeling inspired, he immediately set words to it. When the family came down he played and sang it to them, and his host |
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