[1] The song was set to the music of Edward Elgar's Pomp and Circumstance March No.
It followed the success of Land of Hope and Glory, another patriotic song with lyrics by A. C. Benson set to Elgar's Pomp and Circumstance March No.
In 1940, six years after the death of the composer, A. P. Herbert (with permission) wrote lyrics to the tune.
Herbert wrote two verses for the song, each followed by a refrain: "All men must be free March for liberty with me.
The song appears in Stanley Kubrick's 1972 film A Clockwork Orange in an ironic way while the main character is on his way to a Pavlov training session; said session involves the use of torture that makes Alex unable of doing the violent acts he used to do because they reminded him of the pain he saw in the sex-and-violence-heavy films he watched during the program.