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The
Birth, Near-Demise, and Comeback of "Bright College Years"
An
instant hit in the 19th century, Yale's unofficial alma mater was
nearly a casualty of the first World War.
December
1999
by Judith Ann Schiff
Judith
Ann Schiff is Chief Research Archivist at the Yale University Library.
Cole
Porter may be Yale's best known songwriter, but one work by Henry
Durand can lay claim to being the University's most-sung tune.
For Durand, a member of the Class of 1881, is the author of "Bright
College Years," the unofficial alma mater that, with handkerchief
accompaniment, is a standard element of Commencement, football games,
and almost every alumni get-together.
But though
the song—an instant hit when Durand penned it during his senior
year—has become a permanent part of Yale tradition, there was
a time when the future of "Bright College Years" was very dim. The
problem was the music.
"Harry"
Durand was born in 1861 in Cincinnati and prepared for Yale at the
Hopkins School in New Haven. Well known for his versification, he
was named Class Poet in his senior year. In the spring of 1881,
John F. Merrill, Harry's classmate, told him it was his duty to
write a poem that would add to the literary quality of the College
and their class. A few days later when he came into the room shared
by Merrill and William L. Harkness, later the donor of Harkness
Hall, Merrill, who was president of the Glee Club, had another request:
a song for his organization.
At Merrill's
50th reunion, he recalled his friend's reply. "If you will give
me a tune, Jack, I will see what I can do," said Durand.
After
a moment's thought, Merrill sang a verse of Die Wacht am Rhein—"The
Watch on the Rhine"—a German patriotic song. He noticed Harry's
foot tapping to the swing of the music, and when he had finished
singing, Durand, who pronounced the tune "splendid," went back to
his room in Farnam Hall. A half-hour later, he returned with a manuscript.
Merrill raced through the poem, and as he came to the final couplet,
he "realized that a great masterpiece has been completed." He told
his friend, "Harry, this is magnificent. I will take it right over
to Tom Shepard, and we will have the voice parts arranged and get
it up for our senior concert."
As soon
as "Shep," the Glee Club's director, saw the poem, he was equally
enthusiastic, made the arrangements, and started rehearsals. The
singing of "Bright College Years" at the senior concert evoked wild
enthusiasm, and it has continued to be received in much the same
spirit during most, but not all, of the intervening years.
The
song fell from grace in the aftermath of World War I when anti-German
sentiment nearly caused "Bright College Years" to be banned from
campus. The original words to Die Wacht am Rhein were
written in 1840 when France threatened the left bank of the Rhine.
In 1854, Carl Wilhelm set the poem to his music and played it for
the silver anniversary of the Crown Prince of Prussia, later William
I. Its popularity grew during the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-71
and beyond.
During
World War I, the German national song became so hateful to the Allies
that the English wrote a rejoinder, "When We've Wound Up the Watch
on the Rhine." Yale men stationed in Paris began singing "Bright
College Years" to the tune of La Marseillaise, and after
the war, many students and alumni told the administration that they
could no longer sing the German air in public.
On December
1, 1919, the Yale Student Council passed a recommendation that would
have banished the song from undergraduate gatherings. The following
spring, questionnaires went out to alumni clubs asking their opinion.
As it
happened, 21 clubs voted for the retention of the tune, and five
voted against it. Many alumni said that the unofficial alma mater
would not be the same if sung to a different tune and that a wholly
new song should be written.
Passions,
however, would soon cool, and a new generation of students in the
fall of 1920 saved the Yale song. At the freshman dinner, the Alumni
Weekly was delighted to report, everyone sang "the song that was
wont to stir Yale blood and quicken Yale loyalty." In the Yale Bowl,
undergraduates bared their heads and joined in singing without hesitation.
"Bright College Years" was back to stay. 
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