Bingen on the Rhine
Norton, Caroline E.S.
Porter & Coates (1883)
In Collection
#2919
0*
Poet
Woman
Hardcover B000KV5YX2
eng
This ballad begins: 'A soldier of the Legion lay dying in Algiers, / There was lack of woman's nursing, there was dearth of woman's tears; / But a comrade stood beside him, while his life-blood ebbed away, / And bent, with pitying glances, to hear what he might say'. The publisher was the Poet's Box, (probably Glasgow) but the town of publication has been obscured. The broadside was published on Saturday, 27th July 1867, priced at one penny.

'Bingen on the Rhine' is narrated by a German soldier who has been mortally wounded on the battlefield at Algiers. Although the ballad is written almost entirely in standard English, the use of the word 'aye' for 'always' in the second line of the third verse suggests that the song probably originated in Scotland rather than England or Germany. Deathbed ballads, last words and elegies were all very popular among the broadside-buying public.

Credits
Illustrator Fred B. Schell, Alfred Fredericks, Granville Perkins, J.D. Woodward, and Edmund H. Garrett W.T. Smedley
Product Details
LoC Classification PR5112.N5A62
Nationality British
Pub Place Philadelphia:
Cover Price $43.65
Height x Width 7.9  inch
Personal Details
Read It Yes
Links Amazon US
Amazon UK
User Defined
Conflict Napleonic Wars
Notes
Caroline Elizabeth Sarah Norton (22 March 1808 – 15 June 1877) was a famous British society beauty and author of the early and mid nineteenth century.


Beautifully illustrated and attractively bound antique book about a young German Soldier in the Foreign Legion as he lay dying in Algiers, Africa. He reminisces on his beloved homeland and loved ones--with a fellow soldier his only companion. Detailed litographs included are by W. T. Smedley, Fred B. Schell, Alfred Fredericks, Granville Perkins, J. D. Woodward and Edmund H. Garrett. Heavy stock contents are clean with all gold gilt edges