Enquiring minds want to know.
This is primarily for American citizens and residents of the United States, but if you’re not, you may still participate. Specify in a post where you’re from, please.
Enquiring minds want to know.
This is primarily for American citizens and residents of the United States, but if you’re not, you may still participate. Specify in a post where you’re from, please.
All of the first verse which is, realistically, the National Anthem version. I’m aware of the second verse and have sung it with lyrics in front of me but don’t know a single line from memory.
First and fourth. What can I say? I just remember stuff.
I might be able to pull off the entire first verse, but I chickened out and said most/more than half.
There’s more than one verse?
I only know the first. I’ve probably read the rest somewhere in grammar school, but I don’t remember a thing about it.
I couldn’t say the first verse, but I can* sing* it without a problem.
Don’t expect me to sing the Star Spangled Banner, but I know all the lyrics to the Spanish national anthem, does that count?
(Doesn’t have any)
Is this like a “Mel Tillis” thing?
Isaac Asimov devoted one of his monthly columns for The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction to an appreciation of the four verses of the anthem, called “All Four Stanzas.”
You can read an abridged version (which includes the text of the four verses) here. And you can find the original, unabridged article, along with a discussion of the fact of its abridgment, here.
Thanks to Schoolhouse Rock, I can sing the Preamble to the U.S. Constitution, but I’m not sure I could say it.
I know the first verse, but have only seen the others in print a few times and never have heard them sung, as I recall.
Doesn’t matter; almost the only times I even hear the first verse are at sporting events. I can’t think of a situation where I would ever really need to know the rest of it except for my own entertainment.
First verse, and recognize the others, especially the fourth.
The joke used to go that to detect a spy you would ask them to sing the second verse of the Star-spangled Banner. A spy would have memorized it, but no actual American would know it.
Except when Spain wins women’s singles in Badminton.
Cool!
I’ve known the words of first verse for most of my life, but never really sat down and tried to parse them until my wife was assigned it as a challenge assignment in her translation class (from English to Japanese), with a comment from her teacher that it is impossible to translate accurately.
Good lord, that is one unholy grammatical mess.
What, did someone play Riego’s anthem? (Republican anthem; it’s happened quite a few times).
I know the bass part of my choir director’s arrangement, first verse only. We perform it occasionally at special occasions.
I exaggerated. I know the first verse completely, and I can make a clumsy stab at some verses from the next three. They’re bloody awful, with the lyrics falling badly into the rhythm of the music. eg. “With the foes haughTEEEEE host…”
You didn’t have any options between “knowing verse one completely” and knowing all the verses completely.
no, but they used Pemán’s lyrics.
First verse. I’m South African.
I also know the first verses to America, The Beautiful & My Country, 'Tis of Thee.
But not The Stars and Stripes Forever, because it is tedium.