It Came Upon the Midnight Clear (Richard S. Willis)
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Music files
= BROKEN LINK
= EXTERNAL SITE (DISCLAIMER)
= SCORE ERROR
= HELP- Editor: Andrew Hawryluk (added 2006-11-12). Score information: Letter, 5 pages, 255 kbytes Copyright: Personal
- Edition notes: arr. Andrew Hawryluk with piano accompaniment.
- Editor: Edward L. Stauff (added 2004-05-20). Score information: Letter, 1 page Copyright: Personal
- Edition notes: a cappella
- Editor: Christopher R. Baker (added 2000-11-27). Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 1.0
- Edition notes: a cappella
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General Information
Title: It Came Upon the Midnight Clear
Composer: Richard S. Willis
Tune: Carol
Lyricist: Edmund H. Sears
Number of voices: 4vv Voicings: SATB, SSAA
Genre: Sacred, Carol
Language: English
Instruments: a cappella or optional keyboard
Published: 1850
Description:
External websites:
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Original text and translations
- 1
- It came upon the midnight clear,
- That glorious song of old,
- From angels bending near the earth,
- To touch their harps of gold;
- “Peace on the earth, good will to men,
- From Heaven’s all gracious King.”
- The world in solemn stillness lay,
- To hear the angels sing.
- 2
- Still through the cloven skies they come
- With peaceful wings unfurled,
- And still their heavenly music floats
- O’er all the weary world;
- Above its sad and lowly plains,
- They bend on hovering wing,
- And ever over its Babel sounds
- The blessèd angels sing.
- 3
- Yet with the woes of sin and strife
- The world has suffered long;
- Beneath the angel strain have rolled
- Two thousand years of wrong;
- And man, at war with man, hears not
- The love-song which they bring;
- O hush the noise, ye men of strife
- And hear the angels sing.
- 4
- And ye, beneath life’s crushing load,
- Whose forms are bending low,
- Who toil along the climbing way
- With painful steps and slow,
- Look now! for glad and golden hours
- Come swiftly on the wing.
- O rest beside the weary road,
- And hear the angels sing!
- 5
- For lo! the days are hastening on,
- By prophet-bards foretold,
- When with the ever circling years
- Comes round the age of gold;
- When peace shall over all the earth
- Its ancient splendors fling,
- And the whole world send back the song
- Which now the angels sing.
CPDL #13067: 