RECITATIONS FOR MUSIC.

RECITATIONS FOR MUSIC.

Frances L. Mace.

[For pianissimo musical accompaniment.]

Ring soft across the dying day,Angelus!Across the amber-tinted bay,The meadow flushed with sunset ray,—Ring out, and float, and melt away,Angelus.The day of toil seems long ago,Angelus;While through the deepening vesper glow,Far up where holy lilies blow,Thy beckoning bell-notes rise and flow,Angelus.Through dazzling curtains of the west,Angelus!We see a shrine in roses dressed,And lifted high in vision blest,Our very heart-throb is confessed,Angelus.Oh, has an angel touched the bell,Angelus?For now upon its parting swellAll sorrow seems to sing farewell,There falls a peace no words can tell,Angelus!

Ring soft across the dying day,Angelus!Across the amber-tinted bay,The meadow flushed with sunset ray,—Ring out, and float, and melt away,Angelus.The day of toil seems long ago,Angelus;While through the deepening vesper glow,Far up where holy lilies blow,Thy beckoning bell-notes rise and flow,Angelus.Through dazzling curtains of the west,Angelus!We see a shrine in roses dressed,And lifted high in vision blest,Our very heart-throb is confessed,Angelus.Oh, has an angel touched the bell,Angelus?For now upon its parting swellAll sorrow seems to sing farewell,There falls a peace no words can tell,Angelus!

Ring soft across the dying day,Angelus!Across the amber-tinted bay,The meadow flushed with sunset ray,—Ring out, and float, and melt away,Angelus.

Ring soft across the dying day,

Angelus!

Across the amber-tinted bay,

The meadow flushed with sunset ray,—

Ring out, and float, and melt away,

Angelus.

The day of toil seems long ago,Angelus;While through the deepening vesper glow,Far up where holy lilies blow,Thy beckoning bell-notes rise and flow,Angelus.

The day of toil seems long ago,

Angelus;

While through the deepening vesper glow,

Far up where holy lilies blow,

Thy beckoning bell-notes rise and flow,

Angelus.

Through dazzling curtains of the west,Angelus!We see a shrine in roses dressed,And lifted high in vision blest,Our very heart-throb is confessed,Angelus.

Through dazzling curtains of the west,

Angelus!

We see a shrine in roses dressed,

And lifted high in vision blest,

Our very heart-throb is confessed,

Angelus.

Oh, has an angel touched the bell,Angelus?For now upon its parting swellAll sorrow seems to sing farewell,There falls a peace no words can tell,Angelus!

Oh, has an angel touched the bell,

Angelus?

For now upon its parting swell

All sorrow seems to sing farewell,

There falls a peace no words can tell,

Angelus!

Helen M. Winslow.

The golden dreams of youthAssume a guise of truthWhich age keeps never,For Hope’s voice singeth ever,“Oh, youth and strong endeavor,Can win the highest good forever.”Love’s subtle intuitionDivines life’s glad fruition,Distrusting never;And sweetly Hope sings ever,“True love and sweet endeavorShall hold the highest good forever.”Love’s sacred tryst is broken,Heart-breaking words are spokenHer bonds to sever;But still Hope singeth ever,“Brave heart and strong endeavorMust find the highest good forever.”Pale hands are crossed in death;Gone is the quivering breath;And still a low voice neverStops echoing, echoing ever,“Brave heart and strong endeavorHave won the highest good forever.”

The golden dreams of youthAssume a guise of truthWhich age keeps never,For Hope’s voice singeth ever,“Oh, youth and strong endeavor,Can win the highest good forever.”Love’s subtle intuitionDivines life’s glad fruition,Distrusting never;And sweetly Hope sings ever,“True love and sweet endeavorShall hold the highest good forever.”Love’s sacred tryst is broken,Heart-breaking words are spokenHer bonds to sever;But still Hope singeth ever,“Brave heart and strong endeavorMust find the highest good forever.”Pale hands are crossed in death;Gone is the quivering breath;And still a low voice neverStops echoing, echoing ever,“Brave heart and strong endeavorHave won the highest good forever.”

The golden dreams of youthAssume a guise of truthWhich age keeps never,For Hope’s voice singeth ever,“Oh, youth and strong endeavor,Can win the highest good forever.”

The golden dreams of youth

Assume a guise of truth

Which age keeps never,

For Hope’s voice singeth ever,

“Oh, youth and strong endeavor,

Can win the highest good forever.”

Love’s subtle intuitionDivines life’s glad fruition,Distrusting never;And sweetly Hope sings ever,“True love and sweet endeavorShall hold the highest good forever.”

Love’s subtle intuition

Divines life’s glad fruition,

Distrusting never;

And sweetly Hope sings ever,

“True love and sweet endeavor

Shall hold the highest good forever.”

Love’s sacred tryst is broken,Heart-breaking words are spokenHer bonds to sever;But still Hope singeth ever,“Brave heart and strong endeavorMust find the highest good forever.”

Love’s sacred tryst is broken,

Heart-breaking words are spoken

Her bonds to sever;

But still Hope singeth ever,

“Brave heart and strong endeavor

Must find the highest good forever.”

Pale hands are crossed in death;Gone is the quivering breath;And still a low voice neverStops echoing, echoing ever,“Brave heart and strong endeavorHave won the highest good forever.”

Pale hands are crossed in death;

Gone is the quivering breath;

And still a low voice never

Stops echoing, echoing ever,

“Brave heart and strong endeavor

Have won the highest good forever.”

Mrs. Celia Thaxter.

Upon the sadness of the seaThe sunset broods regretfully;From the far, lonely spaces, slowWithdraws the wistful after-glow.So out of life the splendor dies;So darken all the happy skies;So gathers twilight, cold and stern—But overhead the planets burn.And up the east another dayShall chase the bitter dark away;What though our eyes with tears be wet?The sunrise never failed us yet!The blush of dawn may yet restoreOur light, and hope, and joy, once more.Sad soul, take comfort, nor forgetThat sunrise never failed us yet!

Upon the sadness of the seaThe sunset broods regretfully;From the far, lonely spaces, slowWithdraws the wistful after-glow.So out of life the splendor dies;So darken all the happy skies;So gathers twilight, cold and stern—But overhead the planets burn.And up the east another dayShall chase the bitter dark away;What though our eyes with tears be wet?The sunrise never failed us yet!The blush of dawn may yet restoreOur light, and hope, and joy, once more.Sad soul, take comfort, nor forgetThat sunrise never failed us yet!

Upon the sadness of the seaThe sunset broods regretfully;From the far, lonely spaces, slowWithdraws the wistful after-glow.

Upon the sadness of the sea

The sunset broods regretfully;

From the far, lonely spaces, slow

Withdraws the wistful after-glow.

So out of life the splendor dies;So darken all the happy skies;So gathers twilight, cold and stern—But overhead the planets burn.

So out of life the splendor dies;

So darken all the happy skies;

So gathers twilight, cold and stern—

But overhead the planets burn.

And up the east another dayShall chase the bitter dark away;What though our eyes with tears be wet?The sunrise never failed us yet!

And up the east another day

Shall chase the bitter dark away;

What though our eyes with tears be wet?

The sunrise never failed us yet!

The blush of dawn may yet restoreOur light, and hope, and joy, once more.Sad soul, take comfort, nor forgetThat sunrise never failed us yet!

The blush of dawn may yet restore

Our light, and hope, and joy, once more.

Sad soul, take comfort, nor forget

That sunrise never failed us yet!

[With light, runningstaccatoandlegatoaccompaniments.]

Oh, summer has the rosesAnd the laughing, light south wind,And the merry meadows linedWith dewy, dancing posies;But winter has the spritesAnd the witching frosty nights.Oh, summer has the splendorOf the corn-fields wide and deep,Where the scarlet poppies sleepAnd wary shadows wander;But winter fields are rareWith diamonds everywhere.Oh, summer has the wild bees,And the ringing, singing noteIn the robin’s tuneful throat,And the leaf-talk in the trees;But winter has the chimeOf the merry Christmas time.Oh, summer has the lusterOf the sunbeams warm and bright,And rains that fall at nightWhere reeds and lilies cluster;But deep in winter’s snowThe fires of Christmas glow.St. Nicholas.

Oh, summer has the rosesAnd the laughing, light south wind,And the merry meadows linedWith dewy, dancing posies;But winter has the spritesAnd the witching frosty nights.Oh, summer has the splendorOf the corn-fields wide and deep,Where the scarlet poppies sleepAnd wary shadows wander;But winter fields are rareWith diamonds everywhere.Oh, summer has the wild bees,And the ringing, singing noteIn the robin’s tuneful throat,And the leaf-talk in the trees;But winter has the chimeOf the merry Christmas time.Oh, summer has the lusterOf the sunbeams warm and bright,And rains that fall at nightWhere reeds and lilies cluster;But deep in winter’s snowThe fires of Christmas glow.St. Nicholas.

Oh, summer has the rosesAnd the laughing, light south wind,And the merry meadows linedWith dewy, dancing posies;But winter has the spritesAnd the witching frosty nights.

Oh, summer has the roses

And the laughing, light south wind,

And the merry meadows lined

With dewy, dancing posies;

But winter has the sprites

And the witching frosty nights.

Oh, summer has the splendorOf the corn-fields wide and deep,Where the scarlet poppies sleepAnd wary shadows wander;But winter fields are rareWith diamonds everywhere.

Oh, summer has the splendor

Of the corn-fields wide and deep,

Where the scarlet poppies sleep

And wary shadows wander;

But winter fields are rare

With diamonds everywhere.

Oh, summer has the wild bees,And the ringing, singing noteIn the robin’s tuneful throat,And the leaf-talk in the trees;But winter has the chimeOf the merry Christmas time.

Oh, summer has the wild bees,

And the ringing, singing note

In the robin’s tuneful throat,

And the leaf-talk in the trees;

But winter has the chime

Of the merry Christmas time.

Oh, summer has the lusterOf the sunbeams warm and bright,And rains that fall at nightWhere reeds and lilies cluster;But deep in winter’s snowThe fires of Christmas glow.

Oh, summer has the luster

Of the sunbeams warm and bright,

And rains that fall at night

Where reeds and lilies cluster;

But deep in winter’s snow

The fires of Christmas glow.

St. Nicholas.

St. Nicholas.

Wolstan Dixey.

Oh, it was a musical old Beetle!And oh, it was a honey-throated Bee!But the dandified young Hopper,He couldn’t sing it proper,And the Cricket—out of tune was he.They sung and they sung,And the harebells swungA tinklingobligatoin the breeze;While the Beetle, singing-master,Tried to make them sing it faster,By patting off thetempoon his knees.And oh! it was a Robin overheard them,Who happened out a-walking in the glade,And he laughed in every featherWhen they tried to sing togetherAt the funny little noises that they made.He listened and he listened,And his eyes they fairly glistenedAs the Bee so sweetly bumbled out the air;But the Cricket struck another,And the Robin thought he’d smotherTrying not to let them know that he was there.Then oh, the Bee declared that “It was shameful!”And angrily sipped honey from a comb;“She was ruining her throatAnd wouldn’t sing another noteUntil the others studied it at home!”The Cricket said that heNevercouldkeep in the keyWhen the wind was blowing that way from the south,And young Hopper made excusesIn reply to these abuses,That he had too much molasses in his mouth.Then oh! the beetle-headed old conductorArose and made a few remarks in turn;“The soprano is so viciousAnd affairs so unpropitious,The best thing we can do is to adjourn.“Taking everything together,The molasses and the weather,And the fact that we can’t any of us sing,There is quite sufficient reasonThat we wait another seasonAnd postpone our little concert till the spring!”

Oh, it was a musical old Beetle!And oh, it was a honey-throated Bee!But the dandified young Hopper,He couldn’t sing it proper,And the Cricket—out of tune was he.They sung and they sung,And the harebells swungA tinklingobligatoin the breeze;While the Beetle, singing-master,Tried to make them sing it faster,By patting off thetempoon his knees.And oh! it was a Robin overheard them,Who happened out a-walking in the glade,And he laughed in every featherWhen they tried to sing togetherAt the funny little noises that they made.He listened and he listened,And his eyes they fairly glistenedAs the Bee so sweetly bumbled out the air;But the Cricket struck another,And the Robin thought he’d smotherTrying not to let them know that he was there.Then oh, the Bee declared that “It was shameful!”And angrily sipped honey from a comb;“She was ruining her throatAnd wouldn’t sing another noteUntil the others studied it at home!”The Cricket said that heNevercouldkeep in the keyWhen the wind was blowing that way from the south,And young Hopper made excusesIn reply to these abuses,That he had too much molasses in his mouth.Then oh! the beetle-headed old conductorArose and made a few remarks in turn;“The soprano is so viciousAnd affairs so unpropitious,The best thing we can do is to adjourn.“Taking everything together,The molasses and the weather,And the fact that we can’t any of us sing,There is quite sufficient reasonThat we wait another seasonAnd postpone our little concert till the spring!”

Oh, it was a musical old Beetle!And oh, it was a honey-throated Bee!But the dandified young Hopper,He couldn’t sing it proper,And the Cricket—out of tune was he.

Oh, it was a musical old Beetle!

And oh, it was a honey-throated Bee!

But the dandified young Hopper,

He couldn’t sing it proper,

And the Cricket—out of tune was he.

They sung and they sung,And the harebells swungA tinklingobligatoin the breeze;While the Beetle, singing-master,Tried to make them sing it faster,By patting off thetempoon his knees.

They sung and they sung,

And the harebells swung

A tinklingobligatoin the breeze;

While the Beetle, singing-master,

Tried to make them sing it faster,

By patting off thetempoon his knees.

And oh! it was a Robin overheard them,Who happened out a-walking in the glade,And he laughed in every featherWhen they tried to sing togetherAt the funny little noises that they made.

And oh! it was a Robin overheard them,

Who happened out a-walking in the glade,

And he laughed in every feather

When they tried to sing together

At the funny little noises that they made.

He listened and he listened,And his eyes they fairly glistenedAs the Bee so sweetly bumbled out the air;But the Cricket struck another,And the Robin thought he’d smotherTrying not to let them know that he was there.

He listened and he listened,

And his eyes they fairly glistened

As the Bee so sweetly bumbled out the air;

But the Cricket struck another,

And the Robin thought he’d smother

Trying not to let them know that he was there.

Then oh, the Bee declared that “It was shameful!”And angrily sipped honey from a comb;“She was ruining her throatAnd wouldn’t sing another noteUntil the others studied it at home!”

Then oh, the Bee declared that “It was shameful!”

And angrily sipped honey from a comb;

“She was ruining her throat

And wouldn’t sing another note

Until the others studied it at home!”

The Cricket said that heNevercouldkeep in the keyWhen the wind was blowing that way from the south,And young Hopper made excusesIn reply to these abuses,That he had too much molasses in his mouth.

The Cricket said that he

Nevercouldkeep in the key

When the wind was blowing that way from the south,

And young Hopper made excuses

In reply to these abuses,

That he had too much molasses in his mouth.

Then oh! the beetle-headed old conductorArose and made a few remarks in turn;“The soprano is so viciousAnd affairs so unpropitious,The best thing we can do is to adjourn.

Then oh! the beetle-headed old conductor

Arose and made a few remarks in turn;

“The soprano is so vicious

And affairs so unpropitious,

The best thing we can do is to adjourn.

“Taking everything together,The molasses and the weather,And the fact that we can’t any of us sing,There is quite sufficient reasonThat we wait another seasonAnd postpone our little concert till the spring!”

“Taking everything together,

The molasses and the weather,

And the fact that we can’t any of us sing,

There is quite sufficient reason

That we wait another season

And postpone our little concert till the spring!”

[The quoted words can be either sung or recited. The melody should be played through once before the beginning of the recitation. The accompaniment,pianissimo, should run through the entire poem, being definite, andpianoonly on the quoted lines.]

“Rock of ages, cleft for me,”Thoughtlessly the maiden sung,Fell the words unconsciouslyFrom her girlish, gleeful tongue;Sang as little children sing;Sang as sing the birds in June;Fell the words like light leaves downOn the current of the tune—“Rock of ages, cleft for me,Let me hide myself in Thee.”“Let me hide myself in Thee,”—Felt her soul no need to hide;Sweet the song as song could be,And she had no thought beside.All the words unheedinglyFell from lips untouched by care,Dreaming not that they might beOn some other lips a prayer—“Rock of ages, cleft for me,Let me hide myself in Thee.”“Rock of ages, cleft for me,”’Twas a woman sung them now,Pleadingly and prayerfully;Every word her heart did know.Rose the song, as a storm-tossed birdBeats with weary wings the air;Every note with sorrow stirred—Every syllable a prayer—“Rock of ages, cleft for me,Let me hide myself in Thee.”“Rock of ages, cleft for me,”Lips grown aged sung the hymnTrustingly and tenderly—Voice grown weak and eyes grown dim.“Let me hide myself in Thee,”Trembling though the voice and low,Rose the sweet strain peacefullyLike a river in its flow.Sang as only they can singWho life’s thorny paths have passed;Sang as only they can singWho behold the promised rest—“Rock of ages, cleft for me,Let me hide myself in Thee.”“Rock of ages, cleft for me,”Sung above a coffin-lid;Underneath all restfullyAll life’s joys and sorrows hid.Nevermore, O storm-tossed soul,Nevermore, from wind or tide,Nevermore from billows’ rollWilt thou need thyself to hide.Could the sightless, sunken eyes,Closed beneath the soft gray hair,Could the mute and stiffened lipsMove again in pleading prayer—Still, aye still, the words would be,“Let me hide myself in Thee.”

“Rock of ages, cleft for me,”Thoughtlessly the maiden sung,Fell the words unconsciouslyFrom her girlish, gleeful tongue;Sang as little children sing;Sang as sing the birds in June;Fell the words like light leaves downOn the current of the tune—“Rock of ages, cleft for me,Let me hide myself in Thee.”“Let me hide myself in Thee,”—Felt her soul no need to hide;Sweet the song as song could be,And she had no thought beside.All the words unheedinglyFell from lips untouched by care,Dreaming not that they might beOn some other lips a prayer—“Rock of ages, cleft for me,Let me hide myself in Thee.”“Rock of ages, cleft for me,”’Twas a woman sung them now,Pleadingly and prayerfully;Every word her heart did know.Rose the song, as a storm-tossed birdBeats with weary wings the air;Every note with sorrow stirred—Every syllable a prayer—“Rock of ages, cleft for me,Let me hide myself in Thee.”“Rock of ages, cleft for me,”Lips grown aged sung the hymnTrustingly and tenderly—Voice grown weak and eyes grown dim.“Let me hide myself in Thee,”Trembling though the voice and low,Rose the sweet strain peacefullyLike a river in its flow.Sang as only they can singWho life’s thorny paths have passed;Sang as only they can singWho behold the promised rest—“Rock of ages, cleft for me,Let me hide myself in Thee.”“Rock of ages, cleft for me,”Sung above a coffin-lid;Underneath all restfullyAll life’s joys and sorrows hid.Nevermore, O storm-tossed soul,Nevermore, from wind or tide,Nevermore from billows’ rollWilt thou need thyself to hide.Could the sightless, sunken eyes,Closed beneath the soft gray hair,Could the mute and stiffened lipsMove again in pleading prayer—Still, aye still, the words would be,“Let me hide myself in Thee.”

“Rock of ages, cleft for me,”Thoughtlessly the maiden sung,Fell the words unconsciouslyFrom her girlish, gleeful tongue;Sang as little children sing;Sang as sing the birds in June;Fell the words like light leaves downOn the current of the tune—“Rock of ages, cleft for me,Let me hide myself in Thee.”

“Rock of ages, cleft for me,”

Thoughtlessly the maiden sung,

Fell the words unconsciously

From her girlish, gleeful tongue;

Sang as little children sing;

Sang as sing the birds in June;

Fell the words like light leaves down

On the current of the tune—

“Rock of ages, cleft for me,

Let me hide myself in Thee.”

“Let me hide myself in Thee,”—Felt her soul no need to hide;Sweet the song as song could be,And she had no thought beside.All the words unheedinglyFell from lips untouched by care,Dreaming not that they might beOn some other lips a prayer—“Rock of ages, cleft for me,Let me hide myself in Thee.”

“Let me hide myself in Thee,”—

Felt her soul no need to hide;

Sweet the song as song could be,

And she had no thought beside.

All the words unheedingly

Fell from lips untouched by care,

Dreaming not that they might be

On some other lips a prayer—

“Rock of ages, cleft for me,

Let me hide myself in Thee.”

“Rock of ages, cleft for me,”’Twas a woman sung them now,Pleadingly and prayerfully;Every word her heart did know.Rose the song, as a storm-tossed birdBeats with weary wings the air;Every note with sorrow stirred—Every syllable a prayer—“Rock of ages, cleft for me,Let me hide myself in Thee.”

“Rock of ages, cleft for me,”

’Twas a woman sung them now,

Pleadingly and prayerfully;

Every word her heart did know.

Rose the song, as a storm-tossed bird

Beats with weary wings the air;

Every note with sorrow stirred—

Every syllable a prayer—

“Rock of ages, cleft for me,

Let me hide myself in Thee.”

“Rock of ages, cleft for me,”Lips grown aged sung the hymnTrustingly and tenderly—Voice grown weak and eyes grown dim.“Let me hide myself in Thee,”Trembling though the voice and low,Rose the sweet strain peacefullyLike a river in its flow.Sang as only they can singWho life’s thorny paths have passed;Sang as only they can singWho behold the promised rest—“Rock of ages, cleft for me,Let me hide myself in Thee.”

“Rock of ages, cleft for me,”

Lips grown aged sung the hymn

Trustingly and tenderly—

Voice grown weak and eyes grown dim.

“Let me hide myself in Thee,”

Trembling though the voice and low,

Rose the sweet strain peacefully

Like a river in its flow.

Sang as only they can sing

Who life’s thorny paths have passed;

Sang as only they can sing

Who behold the promised rest—

“Rock of ages, cleft for me,

Let me hide myself in Thee.”

“Rock of ages, cleft for me,”Sung above a coffin-lid;Underneath all restfullyAll life’s joys and sorrows hid.Nevermore, O storm-tossed soul,Nevermore, from wind or tide,Nevermore from billows’ rollWilt thou need thyself to hide.Could the sightless, sunken eyes,Closed beneath the soft gray hair,Could the mute and stiffened lipsMove again in pleading prayer—Still, aye still, the words would be,“Let me hide myself in Thee.”

“Rock of ages, cleft for me,”

Sung above a coffin-lid;

Underneath all restfully

All life’s joys and sorrows hid.

Nevermore, O storm-tossed soul,

Nevermore, from wind or tide,

Nevermore from billows’ roll

Wilt thou need thyself to hide.

Could the sightless, sunken eyes,

Closed beneath the soft gray hair,

Could the mute and stiffened lips

Move again in pleading prayer—

Still, aye still, the words would be,

“Let me hide myself in Thee.”


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