And leave a man undone to his fate. Ye Jacobites By Name – part one.
The Battle of Culloden 1746. |
The necessary backstory
Prince Charles Edward Stuart |
Musically this glorious failure motif has been fairly dominant. In order to explore this further I offer the song above from The Corries. Written by Ronnie Brown in the early 1970’s, it’s called The Roses of Prince Charlie. It is, to be fair, an enjoyable, good paced romp performed in the usual excellent manner by Roy Williamson and Ronnie Brown. The lyrics are as follows:
Chorus
Come now gather now, here where the flowers grow
White is the blossom as the snow on the ben
Hear now, freedom’s call, we’ll make a solemn vow
Now by the roses o’ Prince Charlie
Fight again at Bannockburn yer battleaxe tae wield
Fight wi’ yer grandsires on Flodden’s bloody field
Fight at Culloden, yer Bonnie Prince tae shield
Fight by the roses o’ Prince Charlie
Chorus
Spirit o’ the banished, in far an’ distant land
Carved out the new world wi’ sweat, blood an’ hand
Return now in glory an’ on the silver sand
Fight by the roses o’ Prince Charlie
Chorus
Tak’ yer strength frae the green fields that blanket peat and coal
Ships frae the Clyde have a nation in their hold
The water o’ life, some men need tae make them bold
Black gold and fishes frae the sea, man
Chorus
In particular interest to our current theme is the words of the first verse. Two of the biggest battles in Scottish history are name checked. One, Bannockburn, being the biggest success, and Flodden being the biggest failure. If you were looking for a contemporary culture analysis of how successful Prince Charles was during the 1745 rebellion you would struggle to find it here. Only in the second verse is there a sense of what went wrong after the rebellion with a passing reference to the “spirit of the banished, in far an’ distant land.”
I am not criticising Ronnie Brown who along with Roy Williamson provided a huge part of the soundtrack of my childhood. I am, however, trying to raise critical questions about whether this portrayal of Scottish history offers a fair and accurate understanding of what actually happened.
Ronnie Brown’s song was part of a Nationalist revival that swept through Scotland in the early 1970’s and led to a referendum in 1979 that offered the Scots a degree of self-government. Considering what the song sought to link, Bannockburn, the victory of King Robert Bruce over King Edward II of England, a victory that ensured that Scotland in any form existed up until 1707, through the defeat of Flodden, the exile of Charlie’s failed army to the contemporary Scotland of coal, of shipbuilding, and of the newly found North Sea Oil, the use of ‘Bonnie Prince Charlie’ is a very curious icon.
Somewhere between the myth and the reality of the 1745 rebellion do we edge towards our song. And in edging towards this song we also edge towards the reality of this rebellion and the cost of it.
The second part of this search will look in greater detail at the actual song we seek to explore. Central to this second part is a hauntingly beautiful reinterpretation of this song by the singer Eddi Reader. I will end this first part with the ‘normal’ musical presentation of this song, as the jaunty, plucky, get it up you version sung by The Corries.