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Arnold Guy Vivian


The Arnold Book of Old Songs is a collection of English, Scottish, Irish, Welsh and French folk songs and traditional songs, with new piano accompaniments by Roger Quilter. Quilter dedicated it to and named it after his nephew Arnold Guy Vivian, who perished at the hands of German forces in Italy in 1943.

The collection consists of sixteen songs: five songs were written in 1921, and another eleven were written in 1942. Only the latter eleven were written with Vivian in mind at the outset.

Five of the songs were written in 1921, with each being dedicated to a friend, relative or popular singer of the day. These were:

Arnold Guy Vivian was Quilter's nephew, the son of his sister Norah by her second husband Guy Noel Vivian. He was born on 21 May 1915, and named after Quilter's and Norah's brother Arnold Quilter, who had been killed at Gallipoli only 15 days earlier, on 6 May. Roger Quilter had been closer to Arnold than to any of his other siblings and he became deeply attached to his namesake nephew. They found they were in tune with each other's overall gentle sensitivity. Arnold Vivian had a high, light tenor voice and often sang his uncle's songs. Quilter dedicated his song "Sigh No More, Ladies", from the 3rd Shakespeare Set, Op. 30, to his nephew.

Arnold Vivian joined the Grenadier Guards (6th Battalion) at the start of World War II and in 1942 left England for active service. Quilter wrote a deeply personal song called "What Will You Do, Love?" for him at that time. It was never intended for publication, and was recorded for the first time in 2005. At around the same time Quilter started working on eleven new arrangements of old songs, to have something to welcome his nephew home from the war.

It was not to be. In 1943, Arnold Vivian was listed as missing in action. He never returned and his family did not learn his fate until after the war had ended. He had been taken prisoner-of-war by German forces in Tunis in North Africa. Some months later he and his friend Lord Brabourne, also from the 6th Battalion, were being transported by train from an Italian POW camp to Germany, and they escaped near Bronzolo in the South Tyrol. They were recaptured on 15 September 1943 and summarily executed the same day. They were shot in the back of the neck while being made to kneel on railway tracks. Their bodies were left on the side of the tracks by the Germans as a warning to others, but the local people gave them a burial. They were later reinterred in the war cemetery in Padua. The atrocity was later investigated as a war crime, and a former German officer was found guilty and executed.


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