Whanganui Chronicle

Defend or amend national anthem?

- Max Cryer Max Cryer is the author of Hear Our Voices We Entreat.

Areader acknowledg­ing that the parliament­ary prayer has been modified suggested God Defend New Zealand demands the same scrutiny.

This is not impossible. Australia and Canada have both altered words within their official anthem, and in 1971 the Chancellor of the Exchequer reminded the British Parliament that Britain’s anthem,

God Save the Queen, actually has never had any official words.

Thomas Bracken, the author of

God Defend New Zealand, was an Irish-born Catholic. Orphaned at 10, Bracken went to relatives in Australia and worked in gold prospectin­g, stock riding, shearing — and writing poetry.

Emigrating to Dunedin, he became a proficient journalist, editor, eventually a member of Parliament and a friend to Sir George Grey.

Already in 1874, Frederick Leach had published All Hail Zealandia — New Zealand’s National Anthem — the first of many later unofficial offerings.

Bracken two years later published the poem God Defend New Zealand. It might have sunk without trace but for the tune added by John Joseph Woods in 1876.

God Defend had the support of former Governor Grey, who organised the Maori Land Court to provide the song’s words in the Maori language.

But over time, Bracken’s words have become a worry. The opening line brings the somewhat unexpected reference to God having feet, and also somehow suggests God has various portfolios to administer — one of which is “nations”.

The expressed wish to be protected from “the shafts of strife and war” is valid but strange, considerin­g that in 1876 any warlike nations with the availabili­ty to cause strife and war barely knew where New Zealand was.

But the killer is “Guard Pacific’s triple star”. Now 146 years since those words were written, nobody knows for sure what he meant despite 13 different speculatio­ns.

For more than 100 years, more than 50 different songs were published with covers incorrectl­y proclaimin­g the song to be New Zealand’s National Anthem.

In 1977 the Queen gave Royal Assent to God Defend to be instated as the national anthem on all occasions of national significan­ce, to be replaced by the Head of State’s anthem (God Save the Queen) if the Head of State or representa­tive thereof is present.

So now, New Zealand has two anthems. One extols the Head of State without mentioning our nation, the other extols our nation without mentioning the Head of State.

Is it time to revise the words? The reader is probably right. Go ahead, but be careful.

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