The song has a march beat and has often been associated with British and American military bands, especially in the context of soldiers heading out to (or returning from) battle. The tune is easy to play on the
fife, and is one of two songs often associated with the famous ''
The Spirit of '76 painting, along with "Yankee Doodle". One example in popular culture that illustrates this cliché is at the end of the 1940 Bugs Bunny cartoon, A Wild Hare, in which the bunny marches into the sunset playing the tune on a fife (in reality, a carrot) and affecting a stiff leg as with the fifer in the painting. Bugs later plays it at the end of the 1950 cartoon Bunker Hill Bunny'', accompanied by
Yosemite Sam. The title of Chapter 30 of William Thackeray's
Vanity Fair (published in serial form in 1847–1848) is “‘The Girl I Left Behind Me’”. Within the chapter is a further reference to the song: “Jack or Donald marches away to glory with his knapsack on his shoulder, stepping out briskly to the tune of ‘The Girl I left behind me’." , early 1870s The title of
Eastman Johnson's painting, made shortly after the
American Civil War, was drawn from this ballad. In the 1980 movie
The Long Riders, set several years after the American Civil War,
Keith Carradine sings a variant of the song which
Oscar Brand has recorded under the title "The Wayward Boy", beginning: "I walk the street with a tap to my feet. I heard a voice above me."
Ewan MacColl's song "Ivor" uses the tune to wryly mock the supposedly favourable treatment given to
Ivor Novello in prison during World War II. The tune appears in the
Popeye cartoon
Popeye the Sailor Meets Sindbad the Sailor. Popeye mumbles to it under his breath as he marches toward his final confrontation with Sindbad. An uptempo version of the tune recorded by
Pete Rugolo and His Orchestra served as the opening and closing theme of the 1961–1962
CBS situation comedy Ichabod and Me. "
The Frogs and the Lobsters", an episode of the
Hornblower television series, features the tune being played by a band of the
Royal Marines, along with the first few bars of "
Rule Britannia". Chapter 3 of
Hornblower in the West Indies opens with the first few lines of the lyrics. The song appears several times in the TV movie ''
Sharpe's Company. Emphasizing its popularity with British soldiers during the Napoleonic Wars it features prominently in the 1970 movie Waterloo. In particular, it is played during the advance of a British division under the command of Sir Thomas Picton and when the Duke of Wellington orders a general advance at the end of the battle. In a 1960s Beverly Hillbillies'' episode, the melody is used for the commercial jingle "the best durn soap is Foggy Mountain Soap". The tune has also been used as a theme for
Western films about the
Indian Wars, such as a 1915 silent film about
George Custer titled
The Girl I Left Behind Me and a theme in the soundtrack of
John Ford's "cavalry trilogy":
Fort Apache,
She Wore a Yellow Ribbon and
Rio Grande. In the 1968 film
The Charge of the Light Brigade a detachment of British soldiers whistle the tune just before the
Battle of the Alma; a fife and drum corps plays the song while leading a regiment marching through London in the 1939 film
The Four Feathers. == Popular recordings ==