Monday, December 1, 2014

MY 25 STORIES FOR CHRISTMAS

Last night one of my lovely neighbors came over to visit me. Sweet Ann Baird brought over a few stories about a couple of cherished Christmas Songs. As I read the stories last night, I was touched by the thoughtfulness of this dear friend – and touched by these songs and the stories behind them.
   Since I’ve had so much fun blogging lately, I decided to take on another Blogging Challenge – and I’m calling this one The 25 Stories of Christmas. Every day through Christmas Day, I will pick one of my favorite Christmas stories to share.
   Tonight’s comes from Ann Baird, and is about the song “Far, Far Away on Judea’s Plains” - which was written here in Utah:

A CHRISTMAS SONG by Reed Blake
When he was asked to sell his home and property and move to the Cotton Mission in St. George in the spring of 1868, John M. Macfarlane felt that it was more than just a call to direct one of the territory’s finest choirs. To his mind there was in this call a special mission to perform, a destiny of which he knew not the form.
   The mission choir had been organized two years earlier when President Brigham Young had called Professor Charles J. Thomas, conductor of the Salt Lake Theatre orchestra and Tabernacle Choir, to go to St. George to “teach the people the correct principles of singing and train local talent to lead out in this direction.” Now Professor Thomas was leaving, and Macfarlane, who had won acclaim as director of the Cedar City Choir, was taking his place as director of the St. George Choir.
   John Macfarlane, who was an attorney-at-law, a schoolteacher, and a surveyor in addition to being a musician, accomplished several things in his new position before many months had passed. He reorganized the choir, introduced the innovation of a choir soloist, organized the St. George Harmonic Society, and made a lasting friend of the city’s poet, Charles L. Walker.
   In time Walker and Macfarlane collaborated on many songs, among them one that was written for the Sunday School children, “Dearest Children, God Is Near You.” Macfarlane composed music, and Walker wrote words. When they collaborated, it was usually a composition to commemorate a special occasion—the dedication of a building, a visit from a general authority, a holiday celebration on the town square.
   And so it was that the “special mission” began for which John M. Macfarlane felt he had been called to St. George.
   In late autumn the two men had been approached and asked to write a song for the coming Christmas program. Walker completed the words for the song, and now Macfarlane was trying to set them to music. One night he went to bed discouraged; he had spent the day in a concerted effort to write the Christmas song, but the effort had proven futile. How often he had tried. How often he had failed. How often he had gone to his knees on the matter. And now as he stared up at the darkened ceiling he wondered why it was that he was unable to write the music, which he so much desired to do.
   Yet, perhaps Macfarlane had for weeks been forming in his mind the song that this night he would finally compose. From his intense conscious efforts he had probably been depositing in his subconscious the hymn’s framework, the elements that complemented the song he wanted to write.
   As he entered the heavy slumber of first sleep and began dreaming, he suddenly heard the song. Musical strains within his subconscious mind began forming and coming into a conscious state.
   Macfarlane arose quickly.
“Why are you getting up at this hour?” his wife Ann asked.
“I have the son,” he said. “I have the song and I must write it down.”
“You could do it just as well in the morning,” she replied.
“No, I must do it now.”
   Dutifully, Ann left the bed and followed her husband to the living room. The house was chilled, and while Ann procured his writing materials, he revived the banked fire, humming the song as he did so, the melody and the words playing across his mind. Then the work began.
   It was a strange sight. The composer’s portly frame was hunched over the organ, clothed in his nightshirt and stocking cap, his ankles exposed, his movement now jerky and hurried, now slow and pensive. And beside him his wife was huddled over his shoulder with an outstretched candle, clad in flannel nightclothes, shifting the light from hand to hand and supporting with her free hand the elbow of the other arm.

   Quickly Macfarlane recorded the melodic line and then added the lyrics that had brought him from his sleep. What was coming to life was a piece so new, so dramatic, that an emotion welled strongly within him, and he lost himself from the world about him.
   Outside, the sporadic squawks and distended chords that came from the house fell on a city embraced by a winter’s night. A cock crowed, disturbed prematurely, then went silent. A cold breeze went through the trees and spent itself. In the gray of the morning the room grew cold, the banked fire had died to a pile of ashes. But the composer did not stop to feed it.
   Now he was working on the parts, and the pace went slower. With one hand he fingered the keyboard, while with the other he wrote. From time to time he would lean back and look at his wife, and Ann would smile and nod. Often, as at the conclusion of a passage, she would pat his shoulder or squeeze his arm, conveying to her husband pride, approval, encouragement. The hours passed.
   Finally he stood, stretched, and went to the window. To the east the sun was edging the cliffs of pink and gold and bronze; in the valley the Virgin River picked up the shafts of light and glistened like a silver ribbon in its lazy drift toward the south.
   Macfarlane returned to the organ and adjusted himself on the stool. Hesitantly at first, the boldly, he struck the chords. Suddenly the room came to life. His wife picked up the melody, and the composer took the strong counter-melody of the bass; together they sang the composition once, twice, and then a third time. At its end, Ann was crying.
   Amid his joy, Macfarlane harbored a touch of misgiving: No longer did the song contain any evidence of Charles Walker’s words. Nevertheless, it was the poet’s writing that had launched the song, and for that contribution he ascribed Walker’s name to the manuscript.
   Charles Walker was elated with the new song. He recognized its appeal and hinted of the popularity it would one day enjoy. He would not, however, lay any claim to its origin. It was Macfarlane’s song, both words and music, and to him should go all the credit.
   When the St. George choir sang the song for the first time, it received an ardent reception. In the following weeks the people sang it in their homes, in their caroling, in their many gatherings. By the following Christmas Saintss all over the Church were singing the Macfarlane hymn.
   From the Utah territory the song spread across the nation, and in Albany and Atlanta, Lafayette and Lincoln, the people sang:
“Far, far away on Judea’s plains,
Shepherds of old heard the joyous strains.”
   And across the seas the world heard it. In Brussels and Bordeaux, Liverpool and Lausanne, the strains peeled forth:
“Glory to God, Glory to God,
Glory to God in the highest;
Peace on earth, good will to men,
Peace on earth, good will to men!”
   And so John M. Macfarlane’s message rings forth each year, telling the people the great message of Christmas, as in these words from the second verse:
“Sweet are the strains of redeeming love,
Message of mercy from heav’n above,”
   And from the third stanza:
“Lord with the angels we too would rejoice;
Help us to sing with the heart and voice.”
   Then the song concludes with a world call for brotherhood:
“Hasten the time when, from ev’ry clime,
Men shall unite in the strains sublime:
Glory to God, Glory to God,
Glory to God in the highest;
Peace on earth, good will to men,
Peace on earth, good will to men!”
   Not immediately, but gradually, as he realized that a Mormon had given to the world one of its universal Christmas hymns, John M. Macfarlane acknowledged that his special calling to a climate much like that of Judea had been fulfilled.
 (originally printed in The Improvement Era)

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