A hymn text I wrote for my Hymnody class project. Free to use without misattribution or alteration.
The Beatific Vision
1. Light of light, all light bestowing on Eve's daughters, Adam's sons: May I know but once Thy brightness, and be blinded, radiant One! Blind to all that would obscure Thee from my dim and sinful gaze: blind to all that still allures me from Thy love and from Thy ways.
2. Like the man born blind I knew Thee, saw Thee not, but heard Thy voice: like the sheep that knows its Shepherd, heard Thee calling, and rejoiced! Through the gloom, heard Thee invite me though the night was bitter cold, knew Thy gentle hand would guide me to the safety of Thy fold.
3. Some despised me for my blindness and reduced me to my sins, but my Maker, meek and humble, knelt beside me as a Friend: with the dirt that once defiled, with the spit that was my shame, forming clay, remade His child, made me whole and breathed my name.
4. Then I followed Him, but faltered, unaccustomed to my sight: And although not all was darkness, Neither still was all yet light. For I'd found a deeper blindness, hidden veins of pride within: But I found yet greater kindness when He called my name again.
5. Call at last then, Lord, and lift me to that height of heights wherein I'll behold Thy blazing glory and be blinded once again: Not with blindness meant to cover and disguise my sinful past, but the blindness of a lover who beholds his Love at last.
Text: SMC, June 17, 2020 87.87D Tune: BEACH SPRING
I'm no poet, but I think it's very fine, indeed. "Child" doesn't work for me, but perhaps that's got more to do with BEACH SPRING than it does with the word choice.
Really fine! I couldn't but make a comparison to several of John Donne's 'Holy Sonnets' as I read your poem. I agree with Irish Tenor about 'child' - that should be an 8 syllable line and doesn't work. And, I assume that you intend the '-ed' of 'defiled' (stanza3, line 5) to be voiced, for it is an 8 line. Your poem is surely inspired! I can't stop reading it.
I like Chuck's solution to the child problem. Another possibility that occurred to me, which you probably would not want to opt for, though it is somewhat J.M. Nealean, is 'childling'. Admittedly, it hath about it an archaic tone - but then, I love archaicisms. For most ears nowadays, Chuck's solution is the more likely choice, and a good one at that.
As for tunes. I don't feel either BEACH SPRING or BETHANY does the text justice. Two or three other tunes immediately struck me, though
One is an 87. 87. D adaptation of SALZBURG (which we know as a 77. 77. D tune), but which was also used as an 87. 87. 88. 77 tune, notably by Bach, in "Alle Menschen müssen sterben" (from whence we obtain the traditional harmonization).
Another is "Bin ich gleich von dir gewichen" from the St. Matthew Passion - one of my favourite but lesser known/used 87. 87. D chorales:
It is smooth and fluent, but I need a little more clarity in the sense.
The idea is that Christ, per quem omnia..., takes our shame and defilement, makes clay, and forms man anew after His own likeness, just as He formed Man in the Garden.
Back on 19th June I wrote, "Two or three other tunes immediately struck me, though" and then I proceeded to list an 87. 87. D adaptation of SALZBURG as well as the Bach chorale "Bin ich gleich von dir gewichen" - without mentioning the third tune. In fact, I had just been working on an 87. 87. D reworking of my original 87. 87. 87 tune BEAUDRY. Immediately, I was struck at just how perfectly matched Sean's text and my new tune might be. I spent some time tweaking it here and there, which tweaks will also ultimately make it to the original, now OLD BEAUDRY (87. 87. 87).
With Sean Connolly's approval, I am happy to share with all of you this new setting of his "The Beatific Vision" to my revamped tune BEAUDRY and hope that you will find it comforting and helpful.
In a few minutes (3:15 pm CDT), the scrolling score video will premiere on YouTube:
Thank you, marymezzo! Here is a PDF score and an MP3 sound file for The Beatific Vision (as it appears in the video).
In the last line of the third harmonization, note how the upward progression of the tenor-bass parts has intervals that widen over the five beats beginning in the second measure, a half-step wider at a time - from diminished fifth, through perfect fifth, minor sixth, diminished seventh (or major sixth), ending with a minor ninth at the beginning of the third measure - in which the push to the final cadence (and especially the descant flourish at the end) move us from "seeing through a glass darkly" to seeing our Maker "face-to-face".
N.B. (2020-09-07): The misplaced comma (which should have been before "thus") in the third stanza has been fixed in the score.
My plebian brain went for Hyfrydol. Let the poet figure out his own problems - Belloc said that there are some words poets will go to their graves unsatisfied with, but still at a loss for a preferable solution.
Oops, the comma slipped and fell after "thus" in the score. I intended it to be before "thus" as you suggest, Sean. I'll correct the score, but fixing the video might take some time (the comma is correctly placed in the text listed with the video). Thanks for the catch!
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