The Indian's Prayer

The Indian's Prayer

Infobox Standard
title=The Indian's Prayer
comment=


image_size=
caption=Cover of sheet music, 1846.
writer=
composer=I.B. Woodbury
lyricist=Anonymous
published=
written=1846
language=English
form=
original_artist=
recorded_by=
performed_by=

"The Indian's Prayer" is a popular song with music composed by I.B. Woodbury in 1846. The author is not known. Woodbury, a composer of religious music, dedicated the song to his friend and student I.O. Emerson, Esq.. The lyrics express an unnamed Indian's wish to be allowed to return to his home in the "far distant west."

Lyrics

The lyrics as they appear in Woodbury's original sheet music: [Woodbury, "The Indian's Prayer" (Sheet music).] :"Let me go to my home in the far distant west,":"To the scenes of my childhood in innocence blest;":"Where the tall cedars wave and the bright waters flow,":"Where my fathers repose. Let me go, let me go.":"Where my fathers repose. Let me go, let me go."

:"Let me go to the spot where the cataract plays,":"Where oft I have sported in boyhood’s bright days,":"And greet my poor mother, whose heart will o’erflow":"At the sight of the child. Let me go, let me go.":"At the sight of the child. Let me go, let me go."

:"Let me go to me sire, by whose battlescar’d side,":"I have sported so oft in the morn of my pride,":"And exulted to conquer the insolent foe,":"To my father, the chief, let me go, let me go.":"To my father, the chief, let me go, let me go."

:"And oh! let me go to my flashing eyed maid,":"Who taught me to love, ’neath the green willow’s shade,":"Whose heart, like the fawn’s, leaps as pure as the snow,":"To the bosom it loves. Let me go, let me go.":"To the bosom it loves. Let me go, let me go."

:"And oh! let me go to my wild forest home—":"No more from it life-cheering pleasures to roam.":"’Neath the groves of the glen, let my ashes lie low—":"To my home in the woods, let me go, let me go.":"To my home in the woods, let me go, let me go."

References

Bibliography

*Woodbury, I.B. (m.); Anonomous (w.). "The Indian's Prayer" (Sheet music). Boston: E.H. Wade (1846).


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Silk in the Indian subcontinent — Silk in India as elsewhere, is an item of luxury.For more than four thousand years, this cloth produced from the cocoons of caterpillers, has been associated with crowned heads and riches throughout the different ages. As a designer once said… …   Wikipedia

  • Prayer flag — Prayer flags are colorful panels or rectangular cloths often found strung along mountain ridges and peaks high in the Himalayas to bless the surrounding countryside or for other purposes. Unknown in other branches of Buddhism, prayer flags are… …   Wikipedia

  • Prayer circle — Prayer circles have several different interpretations across Christianity and other religions. The most common definition of a prayer circle is where participants simply join hands in a literal circle of prayer, often as part of a vigil. Although …   Wikipedia

  • Indian Wedding Blessing — The Indian Wedding Blessing, Apache Wedding Prayer, and other variants, is commonly recited at weddings in the United States. It is not associated with any particular religion and indeed does not mention a deity or include a petition, only a wish …   Wikipedia

  • Indian independence movement — The term Indian independence movement is diffuse, incorporating various national and regional campaigns, agitations and efforts of both Nonviolent and Militant philosophy and involved a wide spectrum of political organizations, philosophies, and… …   Wikipedia

  • Indian Shaker Church — The Indian Shaker Church is a Christian denomination founded in 1881 by Squaxin logger John Slocum in Washington. The Indian Shaker Church is a unique blend of American Indian, Catholic, and Protestant beliefs and practices.The Indian Shakers are …   Wikipedia

  • The Song of Hiawatha — is an 1855 epic poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow based on the legends of the Ojibway Indians. Longfellow credited as his source the work of pioneering ethnographer Henry Rowe Schoolcraft, specifically Schoolcraft s Algic Researches and History …   Wikipedia

  • The United States of America —     The United States of America     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► The United States of America     BOUNDARIES AND AREA     On the east the boundary is formed by the St. Croix River and an arbitrary line to the St. John, and on the north by the… …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • INDIAN ARCHITECTURE —    The structural, aesthetic, and symbolic characteristics of Indian architecture are traditionally seen within the shared cultural history of the peoples of the South Asian subcontinent, which includes modern day India and the surrounding… …   Historical Dictionary of Architecture

  • The Benedictine Order —     The Benedictine Order     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► The Benedictine Order     The Benedictine Order comprises monks living under the Rule of St. Benedict, and commonly known as black monks . The order will be considered in this article under… …   Catholic encyclopedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”