Gentleman ranker


A gentleman ranker is an enlisted soldier who may have been a former officer or a gentleman qualified through education and background to be a commissioned officer.
It suggests that the signer was born to wealth and privilege but he disgraced himself and has enlisted as a common soldier serving far from the society that now scorns him. Compare to remittance man, often the black sheep of a "good" family, paid a regular allowance to stay abroad, far from home, where he cannot embarrass the family.
The term also describes those soldiers who signed on specifically as 'gentleman volunteers' in the British army to serve as private soldiers with the understanding being that they would be given a commission at a later date. These men trained and fought as private soldiers but "messed" with the officers and were thus afforded a social standing of somewhere in between the two.

Kipling's poem

The term appears in several of Rudyard Kipling's stories and as the title of a poem he wrote which appeared in Barrack-Room Ballads, and Other Verses, first series, published in 1892. T. S. Eliot included it in his 1941 collection A Choice of Kipling's Verse.
In Kipling's poem "Gentlemen-Rankers", the speaker "sings":

Commentary on the poem

"machinely crammed" may indicate the use of a Latin 'crammer' and the general method of learning by rote; a somewhat 'mechanical' process.
The Empress is Queen Victoria, specifically in her role as Empress of India.
Ready tin means easy access to money.
Branded with the blasted worsted spur refers to the emblem of a spur, embroidered with worsted wool, that was sewn onto the uniforms of highly skilled riding masters of the British Army.
And the Curse of Reuben holds us, this refers to the Biblical story of Reuben, who, for sexual misconduct, was told by his dying father, "Reuben, thou art my first-born.... Unstable as water, thou shall never excel....".

Adaptations of and references to the poem

Kipling's poem, in translation, was set to music by Edvard Grieg in 1900 However, after he had completed it, he received a copy of the English original and was so dismayed by the omission of important passages that he did not publish it; it was published posthumously in 1991.
The poem was set to music and sung at Harvard and Yale Universities in the early 1900s. It became associated with one collegiate a cappella group in particular, The Whiffenpoofs of Yale. Their historian states that the song was known "as far back as 1902" and was popular by 1907–1909. The words were famously adapted by Meade Minnigerode and George Pomeroy to become "The Whiffenpoof Song". In turn, it has been covered by many singers, including Bing Crosby and Rudy Vallee.
James Jones's award-winning 1951 bestseller From Here to Eternity, about American soldiers in Hawaii on the eve of the U.S. entry into World War II, takes its title from Kipling's poem. In Robert Heinlein's novel Starship Troopers, the poem is sung at marching cadence by Mobile Infantry officer cadets.
Billy Bragg borrows part of this poem in his song "Island Of No Return" on his 1984 album Brewing Up with Billy Bragg: "Me and the corporal out on the spree, Damned from here to Eternity". Peter Bellamy recorded it in 1990 for his privately issued cassette Soldiers Three. This recording was also included in 2012 on the CD reissue of Peter Bellamy Sings the Barrack-Room Ballads of Rudyard Kipling.
The song is spoken of in The Road to Kalamata, a memoir by soldier of fortune Mike Hoare, who led several mercenary companies during the bush wars in the Katanga and former Belgian Congo during the 1960s.
Eliza Carthy recorded the poem in full on her 2019 album “Restitute”. Her version is sung acapella and repeats the ‘chorus’ of Kipling’s poem several times which do not appear in the original text.