Not long after graduating from the
Royal College of Music, Britten started composing his collection of mostly
unison songs (the last song, "Old Abram Brown", being in
canon) to texts he selected from
Walter de la Mare's anthology
Come Hither. Britten noted in his diary on 2 November 1933 (just over a month before his twentieth birthday) that he had composed that afternoon "a song, for R.H.M.B. & Clive House, very light & bad – 'I mun be married a Sunday'". "Ee-Oh!" followed on 19 December. There was no further mention in Britten’s diary of composing school songs until May 1934, when he spent time with Robert at Clive House and helped by coaching pupils in
cricket and taking singing classes. He then resumed work on his songs, including "A New Year Carol", a setting of the traditional "
Levy-Dew". The title of the collection was originally
Twelve Songs for Schools, but at the suggestion of Robert Britten was changed to
Friday Afternoons, since class singing was held at Clive House at that time in the week. == Songs ==