The Recruiting Serjeant

Not to be confused with The Recruiting Officer, by George Farquhar.
Oh, What a Charming Thing's a Battle!
"Oh, What a Charming Thing's a Battle!", from Charles Dibdin and Isaac Bickerstaff's The Recruiting Serjeant (1770). Sung by Leon Lishner.

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The Recruiting Serjeant is a burletta[1] by composer Charles Dibdin and playwright Isaac Bickerstaff. It premièred on 20 July 1770 at Ranelagh Gardens, London.[2]

Roles

Role Premiere cast, 20 July 1770[3]
Serjeant Charles Bannister
Countryman Charles Dibdin
His wife Mrs. Wrighten
His mother Mrs. Dorman

Synopsis

Composer Charles Dibdin in 1799

A recruiting sergeant comes to a village seeking out new recruits. A countryman, Joe, living with his wife and mother, hears his stirring cry, and decides to enlist. The two women in his life seek to dissuade him, and follow him in when he meets with the sergeant. The sergeant is pleased to find a recruit, but Joe's mother begins cursing the sergeant out for trying to take her son away.[4]

This too fails to dissuade either of them. The mother fetches his children from the house, and appeals to Joe not to leave them, and thus risk all of them ending up in the workhouse. The sergeant starts to sign the man on, but Joe hesitates, asking for information about army life. They talk about women's love of the uniform, and when he asks about battles, sergeant explains "what a charming thing's a battle", cheerily describing everyone's gory death.[4] ("Heads, and limbs, and bullets flying / Then the groans of soldiers dying...")[5]

This terrifies the women, but Joe simply asks whether it's likely he himself will lose his head or limbs. "Not if you've good luck", says the sergeant.[6] Joe begins to have second thoughts at this – he had wished to see a battle, but he has decided the sergeant's description of it is quite sufficient. His wife and mother are delighted – and then Joe explains the whole thing was revenge upon his wife for nagging him the night before when he wanted to go to the alehouse. She promises not to do so again, and they reconcile. The play ends with the sergeant buying Joe a drink, and all toasting King George.[4]

References

  1. Bickerstaffe, Isaac in The Thespian Dictionary: Or, Dramatic Biography of the Eighteenth Century, etc. (1802), printed by J. Cundee for T. Hurst. Digitised by Google and Harvard University. Accessed 29 August 2008. Pages unnumbered.
  2. OperaGlass, Opera Composers D. Hosted by Stanford University, accessed on 29 August 2008. See also OperaGlass Notes for an explanation of the abbreviations.
  3. The Recruiting Sergeant (1778) p. 333
  4. 1 2 3 The Recruiting Serjeant, pp. 333–342
  5. Recruiting Serjeant, p. 337
  6. Recruiting Serjeant, p. 338

Bibliography

External links

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