If an outsider may make a small contribution... there's Jarvis Lorry from 'A Tale of Two Cities'and someone Jarvis wrote [I think] 'The Battle Hymn of the Republic'. I'll get my coat too, sure it's not right.
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Anna
salympap, please feel free to contribute! Everyone is welcome
And then of course there is The Hogwart's Hymn by Jarvis Cocker! But we must not forget the Robert ,,,, it's the word 'incidentally' that confuses me.
Edit: Will await rubbra's return and his comments before posting any more thoughts on this rather baffling one.Last edited by Guest; 22-03-11, 16:08.
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Originally posted by salymap View PostIf an outsider may make a small contribution...
You may be on to something...
And there are no outsiders here! Or, if you like, we are all outsiders, a smallish band of misfit regulars and irregulars alike, languishing on the fringes of Platform 3...
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Originally posted by salymap View PostIf an outsider may make a small contribution... there's Jarvis Lorry from 'A Tale of Two Cities'and someone Jarvis wrote [I think] 'The Battle Hymn of the Republic'. I'll get my coat too, sure it's not right.
We await the question-setter's observations with keen anticipation..."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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rubbernecker
Some industrial-strength thinking going on here - that's what I like to see! (That's not a clue, btw)
Not Jarvis, I'm afraid, nor anything Dickensian. We're in the 20th century as far as our businessman goes.
The hymn is American, however, although it is the tune rather than the words that are important, and Caliban is on the right lines with the father and son...
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Anna
Originally posted by rubbernecker View PostCaliban is on the right lines with the father and son...
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Anna
Originally posted by rubbernecker View Postand Caliban has, as it happens, identified the involvement
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rubbernecker
Originally posted by hercule View PostMariss Jansons's father was a conductor
Yes, Hercule (nice to see you again, btw) I'm afraid it's not Jansons, but you're getting very warm now.
Let's think about our businessman: fictitious doesn't necessarily mean from a novel, and the 'incidental' element should give you both a musical and literary clue.
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rubbernecker
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