Annotation:Sir Garnet's Hornpipe
SIR GARNET'S HORNPIPE. Scottish, Hornpipe (whole time). E Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AABB'. The hornpipe title perhaps refers to Sir Garnet Wolesley [1] (1833-1913), field-marshal and commander of the British Army (from 1895-1900) who conducted several successful military expeditions in the Sudan and elsewhere. In 1885 he was created Viscount Wolseley, of Wolseley in the County of Stafford, and made a Knight of the Order of St Patrick. Patience; or, Bunthorne's Bride (1881), an operetta with music by Arthur Sullivan (1842-1900) and libretto by W.S. Gilbert (1836-1911), mentions Wolseley when Colonel Calverley refers to:
The genius of Caesar or Hannibal
Skill of Sir Garnet in thrashing a cannibal.
The popular period phrase everything's all Sir Garnet meant things were 'highly satisfactory', 'all is in order,' or 'all right.'