|
"Have Some Madeira M'Dear", also titled "Madeira, M'Dear?", is a darkly comic song by Flanders and Swann. It is a song about seduction and alcohol, containing complex and witty wordplay. The lyric〔http://sniff.numachi.com/pages/tiMADERA.html〕 tells of an elderly rake who "slyly inveigles" an attractive young girl of seventeen to his flat where he offers her a glass of Madeira, a fortified Portuguese wine. The girl enthusiastically drains her glass, becoming slightly drunk in the process: "She lowered her standards by raising her glass/Her courage, her eyes—and his hopes"〔 Sensing victory, the rake offers the young girl another glass of wine which she accepts, but before raising it to her lips she recalls her dying mother's warning to avoid red wine. With a cry, the girl drops the glass and flees the apartment, the old roué's pleas for her to remain echoing in her ears. The following morning, however, the young lady awakens in bed with a hangover and a beard tickling her ear. The song contains three much-quoted instances of syllepsis, including "she made no reply, up her mind and a dash for the door."〔Flanders and Swann, pp. 143–145〕 ==Notes and references== ;Notes ;References 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Have Some Madeira M'Dear」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|