The Story of the Hymns and Tunes Part 36
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When youthful spring around us breathes, Thy Spirit warms her fragrant sigh, And every flower the summer wreathes Is born beneath that kindling eye.
Where'er we turn Thy glories s.h.i.+ne, And all things fair and bright are Thine.
"MOURNFULLY, TENDERLY, BEAR ON THE DEAD."
A tender funeral ballad by Henry S. Washburn, composed in 1846 and ent.i.tled "The Burial of Mrs. Judson." It is rare now in sheet-music form but the _American Vocalist_, to be found in the stores of most great music publishers and dealers, preserves the full poem and score.
Its occasion was the death at sea, off St. Helena, of the Baptist missionary, Mrs. Sarah Hall Boardman Judson, and the solemn committal of her remains to the dust on that historic island, Sept. 1, 1845. She was on her way to America from Burmah at the time of her death, and the s.h.i.+p proceeded on its homeward voyage immediately after her burial. The touching circ.u.mstances of the gifted lady's death, and the strange romance of her entombment where Napoleon's grave was made twenty-four years before, inspired Mr. Washburn, who was a prominent layman of the Baptist denomination, and interested in all its ecclesiastical and missionary activities, and he wrote this poetic memorial of the event:
Mournfully, tenderly, bear on the dead; Where the warrior has lain, let the Christian be laid.
No place more befitting, O rock of the sea; Never such treasure was hidden in thee.
Mournfully, tenderly, solemn and slow; Tears are bedewing the path as ye go; Kindred and strangers are mourners today; Gently, so gently, O bear her away.
Mournfully, tenderly, gaze on that brow; Beautiful is it in quietude now.
One look, and then settle the loved to her rest The ocean beneath her, the turf on her breast.
Mrs. Sarah Judson was the second wife of the Rev. Adoniram Judson, D.D., the celebrated pioneer American Baptist missionary, and the mother by her first marriage, of the late Rev. George Dana Boardman, D.D., LL.D., of Philadelphia.
The Hon. Henry S. Washburn was born in Providence, R.I., 1813, and educated at Brown University. During most of his long life he resided in Ma.s.sachusetts, and occupied there many positions of honor and trust, serving in the State Legislature both as Representative and Senator. He was the author of many poems and lyrics of high merit, some of which--notably "The Vacant Chair"--became popular in sheet-music and in books of religious and educational use. He died in 1903.
_THE TUNE._
"The Burial of Mrs. Judson" became favorite parlor music when Lyman Heath composed the melody for it--of the same name. Its notes and movement were evidently inspired by the poem, for it reproduces the feeling of every line. The threnody was widely known and sung in the middle years of the last century, by people, too, who had scarcely heard of Mrs. Judson, and received in the music and words their first hint of her history. The poem prompted the tune, but the tune was the garland of the poem.
Lyman Heath of Bow, N.H., was born there Aug. 24, 1804. He studied music, and became a vocalist and vocal composer. Died July 30, 1870.
"TELL ME NOT IN MOURNFUL NUMBERS."
Longfellow's "Psalm of Life" was written when he was a young man, and for some years it carried the t.i.tle he gave it, "What the Young Man's Heart Said to the Psalmist"--a caption altogether too long to bear currency.
The history of the beloved poet who wrote this optimistic ballad of hope and courage is too well known to need recounting here. He was born in Portland, Me., in 1807, graduated at Bowdoin College, and was for more than forty years professor of Belles Lettres in Harvard University. Died in Cambridge, March 4, 1882. Of his longer poems the most read and admired are his beautiful romance of "Evangeline," and his epic of "Hiawatha," but it is hardly too much to say that for the last sixty years, his "Psalm of Life" has been the common property of all American, if not English school-children, and a part of their education. When he was in London, Queen Victoria sent for him to come and see her at the palace. He went, and just as he was seating himself in the waiting coach after the interview, a man in working clothes appeared, hat in hand, at the coach window.
"Please sir, yer honor," said he, "an' are you Mr. Longfellow?"
"I am Mr. Longfellow," said the poet.
"An' did you write the Psalm of Life?" he asked.
"I wrote the Psalm of Life," replied the poet.
"An', yer honor, would you be willing to take a workingman by the hand?"
Mr. Longfellow gave the honest Englishman a hearty handshake, "And"
(said he in telling the story) "I never in my life received a compliment that gave me more satisfaction."
The incident has a delightful democratic flavor--and it is perfectly characteristic of the amiable author of the most popular poem in the English language. The "Psalm of Life" is a wonderful example of the power of commonplaces put into tuneful and elegant verse.
The thought of setting the poem to music came to the compiler of one of the Unitarian church singing books. Some will question, however, whether the selection was the happiest that could have been made. The tune is "Rathbun," Ithamar Conkey's melody that always recalls Sir John Bowring's great hymn of praise.
"BUILD THEE MORE n.o.bLE MANSIONS."
This poem by Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, known among his works as "The Chambered Nautilus," was considered by himself as his worthiest achievement in verse, and his wish that it might live is likely to be fulfilled. It is stately, and in character and effect a rhythmic sermon from a text in "natural theology." The biography of one of the little molluscan sea-navigators that continually enlarges its sh.e.l.l to adapt it to its growth inspired the thoughtful lines. The third, fourth and fifth stanzas are as follows:
Year after year beheld the silent toil That spread the l.u.s.trous coil; Still, as the spiral grew, He left the last year's dwelling for the new, Stole with soft step the s.h.i.+ning archway through, Built up its idle door, Stretched in his last-found home, and knew the old no more.
Thanks for the heavenly message brought by thee, Child of the wand'ring sea, Cast from her lap forlorn!
From thy dead lips a clearer note is born Than ever Triton blew from wreathed horn!
While on my ear it rings Through the deep caves of thought I hear a voice that sings,
"Build thee more n.o.ble mansions, O my soul.
As the swift seasons roll: Leave thy low-vaulted past!
Let each new temple, n.o.bler than the last, Shut thee from heaven with a dome more vast, Till thou at length art free, Leaving thy outgrown sh.e.l.l by life's unresting sea."
Dr. Frederic Hedge included the poem in his hymn-book but without any singing-supplement to the words.
WHITTIER'S SERVICE SONG.
It may not be our lot to wield The sickle in the harvest field.
If this stanza and the four following do not reveal all the strength of John G. Whittier's spirit, they convey its serious sweetness. The verses were loved and prized by both President Garfield and President McKinley. On the Sunday before the latter went from his Canton, O., home to his inauguration in Was.h.i.+ngton the poem was sung as a hymn at his request in the services at the Methodist church where he had been a constant wors.h.i.+pper.
The second stanza is the one most generally recognized and oftenest quoted:
Yet where our duty's task is wrought In unison with G.o.d's great thought, The near and future blend in one, And whatsoe'er is willed, is done.
John Greenleaf Whittier, the poet of the oppressed, was born in Haverhill, Ma.s.s., 1807, worked on a farm and on a shoe-bench, and studied at the local academy, until, becoming of age, he went to Hartford, Conn., and began a brief experience in editorial life. Soon after his return to Ma.s.sachusetts he was elected to the Legislature, and after his duties ended there he left the state for Philadelphia to edit the _Pennsylvania Freeman_. A few years later he returned again, and established his home in Amesbury, the town with which his life and works are always a.s.sociated.
He died in 1892 at Hampton Falls, N.H., where he had gone for his health.
_THE TUNE._
"Abends," the smooth triple-time choral joined to Whittier's poem by the music editor of the new _Methodist Hymnal_, speaks its meaning so well that it is scarcely worth while to look for another. Sir Herbert Stanley Oakeley, the composer, was born at Ealing, Eng., July 22, 1830, and educated at Rugby and Oxford. He studied music in Germany, and became a superior organist, winning great applause by his recitals at Edinburgh University, where he was elected Musical Professor.
Archbishop Tait gave him the doctorate of music at Canterbury in 1871, and he was knighted by Queen Victoria in 1876.
Besides vocal duets, Scotch melodies and student songs, he composed many anthems and tunes for the church--notably "Edina" ("Saviour, blessed Saviour") and "Abends," originally written to Keble's "Sun of my Soul."
"THE BIRD WITH THE BROKEN PINION."
This lay of a lost gift, with its striking lesson, might have been copied from the wounded bird's own song, it is so natural and so clear-toned. The opportune thought and pen of Mr. Hezekiah b.u.t.terworth gave being to the little ballad the day he heard the late Dr. George Lorimer preach from a text in the story of Samson's fall (Judges 16:21) "The Philistines took him, and put out his eyes, and brought him down to Gaza ... and he did grind in the prison-house." A sentence in the course of the doctor's sermon, "The bird with a broken pinion never soars as high again," was caught up by the listening author, and became the refrain of his impressive song. Rev. Frank M. Lamb, the tuneful evangelist, found it in print, and wrote a tune to it, and in his voice and the voices of other singers the little monitor has since told its story in revival meetings, and mission and gospel services throughout the land.
The Story of the Hymns and Tunes Part 36
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The Story of the Hymns and Tunes Part 36 summary
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