The Famous Tay Whale
"The Famous Tay Whale" is a poem[1] by William Topaz McGonagall about the Tay Whale, also known as the Monster, a humpback whale hunted and killed in 1883 in the Firth of Tay near Dundee, Scotland, then the country's main whaling port. The doggerel verse is famous for lacking poetic quality.
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Context
The Tay Whale came to public prominence when it was subject to a public dissection by the anatomist Sir John Struthers and taken on a tour of Scotland and England by a showman, John Woods. Its skeleton is now held by the McManus Galleries in Dundee city centre.[2][1]
Worst poem
Paul Godfrey described McGonagall on the strength of the Tay Whale and other verse as "the worst poet in the English language".[3]
The poet and essayist Hugh MacDiarmid wrote of the Tay Whale that "what this [the verses about John Wood and the Tay Whale] amounts to, of course, is simply what quite uneducated and stupid people—the two adjectives by no means necessarily go together, for many uneducated people have great vitality and a raciness of utterance altogether lacking here—would produce if asked to recount something they had read in a newspaper."[4] MacDiarmid continued that "in their retailings of, or comments upon, such matters, hoi polloi would also reflect their personal feelings, as is done here, by the tritest of emotional exclamations."[4]
Musical settings
McGonagall's poem was set to music by the composer Mátyás Seiber in 1958. The premiere performance of this work – scored for orchestra, foghorn, espresso coffee machine and narrator – took place at the second of the humorous[5] composer Gerard Hoffnung's music festivals, with Edith Evans in the role of the narrator.[6] In 2013, the poem was scored for two SATB choirs by Finnish composer Jaakko Mäntyjärvi in a commission for the Yale Glee Club and Princeton Glee Club's centennial pre-football game concert.[7]
References
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Wikisource has original text related to this article: |
- McGonagall, William (1884). "The Famous Tay Whale". McGonagall Online. Retrieved 10 December 2014.
- M. J. Williams (June 1996). "Professor Struthers and the Tay whale". Scottish Medical Journal. 41 (3): 92–94. doi:10.1177/003693309604100308. PMID 8807706. Archived from the original on 3 March 2006.
- Godfrey, Paul Corfield. "Review: Robert Zuidam, McGonagall-Lieder". Retrieved 22 September 2014.
- MacDiarmid, Hugh (1936). Scottish Eccentrics. Edinburgh: G. Routledge, R. & R. Clark. p. 63. Retrieved 10 December 2014.
- Ingrams, Richard. "Hoffnung, Gerard [formerly Gerhardt]". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/37558. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- "William McGonagall (1830?–1902) The Famous Tay Whale", Representative Poetry Online, version 3.0, University of Toronto, retrieved 14 January 2012
- "Glee Clubs to Perform World Premiere". Princeton University Glee Club. 3 November 2013.