Into the twilight (Peter Bird): Difference between revisions
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<b>Exernal websites: </b>http://element.ess.ucla.edu/choral/ | <b>Exernal websites: </b>http://element.ess.ucla.edu/choral/ | ||
==Original text | ==Original text== | ||
[[Category:Sheet music]] | [[Category:Sheet music]] |
Revision as of 01:08, 26 November 2005
Music files
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- CPDL #10048: NOTEWORTHY COMPOSER
- Editor: Peter Bird (added 2005-11-05). Score information: Letter, 7 pages, 153 kbytes Copyright: Personal
- Edition notes: Copyright © 2005 by George Peter Bird. This edition may be freely distributed, duplicated, performed, and recorded.
General Information
Title: Into the Twilight
Composer: Peter Bird
Number of voices: 4vv Voicing: SATB, S solo
Genre: Secular, Madrigal
Language: English
Instruments: flute and violin (or equivalent organ stops)
Published: 2005
Description: The poem and the music go through mood swings as Yeats contrasts his conflicted modern life with the consolation he finds in the lore and landscape of ancient Ireland.
Exernal websites: http://element.ess.ucla.edu/choral/
Original text
Out-worn heart, in a time out-worn,
Come clear of the nets of wrong and right;
Laugh, heart, again in the gray twilight,
Sigh, heart, again in the dew of the morn.
Your mother Eire is always young,
Dew ever shining and twilight gray;
Though hope fall from you and love decay,
Burning in fires of a slanderous tongue.
Come, heart, where hill is heaped upon hill
For there the mystical brotherhood
Of sun and moon and hollow and wood
And river and stream work out their will;
And God stands winding His lonely horn,
And time and the world are ever in flight;
And love is less kind than the gray twilight,
And hope is less dear than the dew of the morn.
W. B. Yeats, 1893