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THK KDUCAT^IOKAIv MUSIC COURSK 
 
 Fifth Reader 
 
 BY . 
 
 Luther Whiting Mason 
 
 LATH SUPERVISOR OF MUSIC, BOSTON PUBLIC SCHOOLS 
 
 JAMES M. Mclaughlin george a. veazie 
 
 SUPERVISOR OF MUSIC, BOSTON PUBLIC SCHOOLS SUPERVISOR OF MUSIC, CHELSEA PUBLIC SCHOOLS 
 
 AND 
 
 W. W. GILCHRIST 
 
 AUTHOR OF "exercises FOR SIGHT-SINGING CLASSES," ETC. 
 
 
 Boston, U.S.A., and London 
 GINN & COMPANY, PUBLISHERS 
 
 1900 
 
EDUCATION DEPT 
 
 
 }kX)^ 
 
 Copyright, 1897 
 By GINN & COMPANY 
 
 ALL RIGHTS RKSHRVHD 
 
INDEX OF SONGS. 
 
 PAGE 
 
 America Henry Carey. 117 
 
 At Sunrise 90 
 
 Autumn Days C.H. Dretsel. iii 
 
 Blessed Home K. Z'dllner. 107 
 
 Choral Martin Ltitker. 71 
 
 Columbia, the Gem of the Ocenu... David T. Shaw. 122 
 
 Come Home 34 
 
 Cradle Song Curschmann. 15 
 
 Cradle Song A. Voelckerling. 22 
 
 Evening C. Reinecke. 51 
 
 Evening Star 17 
 
 Forest, The.... H. Sattler. 85 
 
 Gentle Murmurs, Sweet Complaining Monro. 30 
 
 Hail Columbia Fyles. 120 
 
 Home Greeting F. M'dhring. 40 
 
 In the Moonlight F. W. Sering. 78 
 
 In the Swing B. Lutgen. 112 
 
 Joy-Bells G. A. Veazie. 24 
 
 Jubilate loi 
 
 Lord's Own Day Mendelssohn. 106 
 
 May Queen A. Miller. 95 
 
 May Song Thomas Mor ley. 42 
 
 My Country 9 
 
 PAGE 
 
 74 
 
 My Mountain Home F. Silcher. 
 
 O Forest Fair and Stately F. Zimmer. 
 
 Only Wait F. D. Sturm. 
 
 Peacefully Sleep H. A. Donald. 
 
 Praise the Lord F.Abt. 
 
 Prayer for our Country C. S. Reissiger. 44 
 
 Seasons 4 
 
 Song of Joy H . Sattler. 102 
 
 Song of Life CarlGlaser. 12 
 
 Song of Praise /. F. Reichardt. loi 
 
 Song to Wisdom Mozart. 36 
 
 Spring H. Mailer. 72 
 
 Spring Madrigal F.Adlam. 78 
 
 Spring Magic 38 
 
 Star Spangled Banner Samuel Arnold. 118 
 
 Summer Joy H. Miiller. 26 
 
 Twilight K. Kloss. 84 
 
 Up the Mountain F. Schubert. 49 
 
 Vacation Song R. Franz. 114 
 
 Water-Lily 116 
 
 Winter Song G. Federich. 96 
 
 Woodland Rose E. Hermes. 46 
 
 ivill8275 
 
TABLE OF CONTENTS. 
 
 PAGR 
 
 Part First, Three-Part Song i 
 
 Chapter I. — Review and Conclusion of Keys i 
 
 Chapter II. — Modulation 35 
 
 Part Second , 55 
 
 Chapter I. — Two-Part Studies. Bass and Treble Staffs 55 
 
 THE GREAT STAFF 55 
 
 Key of C Major 55 
 
 Key of G Major 58 
 
 Key of D Major 60 
 
 Key of A Major 61 
 
 Key of F Major 62 
 
 Key of B-flat Major 64 
 
 Key of E-flat Major 65 
 
 Chapter II. — Three-Part Song with Bass Staff 67 
 
 Part Third, Patriotic Songs 117 
 
PREFACE TO THE FIFTH READER. 
 
 The Fifth Reader of the Educational Music Course is a continuation 
 and elaboration of the study of ''Three-part Song" begun in the 
 preceding volume. 
 
 Chapter I, Part First, is primarily intended for unchanged voices, 
 but the lowest part may also be sung by the Bass voices which are 
 frequently found in this grade. 
 
 Chapter II, which presents the subject of Modulation, offers further 
 insight into practical harmonic and contrapuntal progressions, and 
 should spur teachers and pupils alike to keen study of this deeply 
 interesting element. While we have here a few more or less advanced 
 examples in modulation, it should be borne in mind that simple modu- 
 lations have been frequently met with in the preceding Readers, — even 
 in the First Reader, where modulations to the nearest related keys were 
 plainly suggested by the melodic tendency of the single-voice Songs and 
 Studies. 
 
 In Chapter I, Part Second, which introduces the Bass Staff, the 
 simplicity of the Bass in the progressive Two-part Exercises cannot but 
 be appreciated by teachers who are familiar with the difficulties inherent 
 in this (to the pupil) innovation. 
 
 5 
 
PREFACE TO THE FIFTH READER. 
 
 In Chapter II, Three-part Song is resumed, the Studies and Songs 
 with a few exceptions being now presented upon three staffs — the 
 lower staff in the Bass or F Clef. As in the preceding chapter, the 
 initial exercises are quite easy, yet progressive, and the pupil is almost 
 imperceptibly led into the more difficult studies which follow in the 
 different keys. 
 
 The authors desire to express their acknowledgments to Mr. F. W. 
 Bancroft of Boston for translations and original lyrics. 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 PART FIRST. -THREE-PART SONG, 
 
 CHAPTER I. 
 
 Review, and Conclusion of Keys 
 
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 joy - ous Spring, O 
 Sum - mer time, O 
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 joy - ous Spring, I own I love thee 
 
 Sum - mer time, I own I love thee 
 
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 Win - ter time, I own I love thee 
 
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 dear - ly ! The gol - den grain waves to and fro. And scar-let pop -pies 
 
 dear - ly! The trees in robes of flame are clad, The hun-ter's horn rings 
 
 dear - ly! With ice and snow thou com'st a - gain. And Christmas fol - lows 
 
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 through it glow, O Sum - mer time ! O Sum - mer 
 
 gay and glad, O Au - tumn days! O Au 
 
 in thy train, O Win - ter time! O Win 
 
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 1. Calm-ly the day now sinks to rest, Twi- light now spreads its dusk - y pall: 
 
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 Each bird has found its qui - et nest, And bless - ed si - lence reigns o'er all. 
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 MY COUNTRY. 
 
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 A SONG OF LIFE. 
 
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 CRADLE SONG. 
 
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 THE EVENING STAR. 
 
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 shine; It tells of worlds of splen - dor, And heav'n-ly love di-vine. 
 rays, And earth-ly thoughts are ban - ished As on its light I gaze, 
 far, — The home that I am seek - ing. Thou ra-diant evening star! 
 
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 ri-;r 
 
 i 
 
 6# 
 
 s 
 
 ^E^E^^i^^ 
 
 9—jt 
 
 
 f 
 
22 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 CRADLE SONG. 
 
 Dolce. 
 
 ^ 
 
 B==^ 
 
 A. VOELCKERLING. 
 
 ^ 
 
 mw 
 
 ?^=?^ 
 
 t; ' ' ' 
 
 1. In sweet - est dreams 
 
 2. A hush like death 
 
 3. No ill shall come 
 
 my dar - ling lies, Fast closed in sleep thy 
 fills all the house, Not e - ven stirs the 
 or foes af - fright, Thou 'rt safe throughout the 
 
 :rf 
 
 ^^= 
 
 4; 
 
 ^ 
 
 ■•--■ # 
 
 ^^ 
 
 ^^ 
 
 J^^. 
 
 
 clear blue eyes; An an - gel hov-ers o'er thy bed. Her snow- y wings in 
 bus - y mouse; The clock a - lone in sol - emn tone Says : ''Time goes on, yes, 
 live-long night, For thou art in God's ho -ly care, His love surrounds thee 
 
 fe?=^=?^ 
 
 ^^ 
 
 W 
 
 
 =-? 
 
 
 ^ 
 
 T^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 s 
 
 l^ll^ 
 
 ^^IgE^ 
 
 S: 
 
 
 a-^ 
 
 love out -spread. 
 
 time goes on !" 
 
 ev - 'ry - where. 
 
 ^ 
 
 Safe watch she keeps 
 The play - things all 
 Sleep well, sleep well. 
 
 all through the night, To 
 are put a - way. They 
 
 my dar - ling child. An 
 
 guard thy rest 
 too can rest 
 an - gel guards 
 
 r-r 
 
 till morn - ing light, till morn - ing light, 
 
 till dawn of day, till dawn of day. 
 
 thy slum - ber mild, thy slum - ber mild. 
 
 'r^^^^ 
 
 V" 
 
 -" — --it- 
 
 --i--^^;^— :^ 
 
 1 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 23 
 
 54 
 
 5: 
 
 ^'=F 
 
 ^=d=J=r^ 
 
 -•«>• 
 
 
 i 
 
 i^ 
 
 ^^ 
 
 ^^^^ 
 
 ^^=^^^ 
 
 -S—^<5f 
 
 55 
 
 fci 
 
 ^^? 
 
 Fji 
 
 ^=f=^ 
 
 i^ 
 
 ^T^^ 
 
 r 
 
 :itz«: 
 
 §i; 
 
 r^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 I 
 
 4 X 
 
 S: 
 
 ±^|ij 
 
 r.=L-' 
 
 fe^T 
 
 ^^^^^^ 
 
 • ^ 
 
 56 
 
 EE 
 
 J*?^tS 
 
 f"t?^ 
 
 f^ 
 
 jgSg ^ 
 
 ;is^?^ 
 
 1=::|: 
 
 ^ ^ 
 
 
 i 
 
 3 
 
24 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 i 
 
 
 r=a 
 
 p 
 
 J=r-«zi: 
 
 fei^^^^#^^^^ 
 
 m 
 
 EE 
 
 t==l: 
 
 z_^ 
 
 :|t^: 
 
 t- 
 
 -4 — It 
 
 i^ 
 
 JOY-BELLS. 
 
 Andante con moto. 
 
 PP IS '^ i '^ PP IS "^ i "^ i^ [s 
 
 G. A. Veazie. 
 
 Gt— 
 
 w^ 
 
 -=^^- 
 
 -.5*-^ 
 
 ^^N^^±^ 
 
 1. Ring bells! Ring bells! Ring bells! 
 
 2. Ring bells ! Ring bells ! Ring bells ! 
 
 Loud tri - umphant gladness ; 
 Light the way be -fore us; 
 
 EB^E^ 
 
 :*: 
 
 \-=-X 
 
 ^ 
 
 1. Ring out a- gain in loud tri - umph - ant glad - ness, 
 
 2. Bright are the hopes that light the way be - fore us, 
 
 r. 
 
 l^-i 
 
 :t^tiE 
 
 N ^ ^ ^ 
 
 gi 
 
 f^^ 
 
 Ring 
 Ring 
 
 bells ! 
 bells ! 
 
 Ring bells ! Ring bells ! 
 Ring bells ! Ring bells ! 
 
 Banish thoughts of sad-ness, 
 Ring a mer-ry cho - rus, 
 
 i 
 
 r=:* 
 
 ll^l 
 
 s 
 
 'Tis 
 Friend 
 
 a time of pur 
 s re - joice to meet 
 
 est joy; Swing bells and ban - ish gloom-y thoughts of sad - ness, 
 a-gam ; Join with the bells in mer - ry, mer - ry cho - rus, 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 25 
 
 Here 
 Wake 
 
 :i2zat 
 
 -=i — (2- 
 
 bliss with - out 
 new the sweet 
 
 J 4- 
 
 al - loy. 
 re - frain. 
 
 • &- 
 
 -0 — ^ — (5>-r 
 
 Ring bells 
 
 -^-(^ 
 
 Ring bells 
 
 Ring bells ! 
 
 ;^J^e3=^: 
 
 ^ 
 
 1^: 
 
 ^ 
 
 -11—25^ 
 
 re '- fraln. } ^■^' ^^^^ ^^^ ^^^ ^^^^^ ^^at 
 
 Here 
 Wake 
 
 is bliss with - out 
 
 a - new the sweet 
 
 Days of sor - row now are o'er. 
 
 ± 
 
 
 Wait on hap-py greeting, Ring bells ! 
 
 Ring bells 
 
 m 
 
 ^=T^ 
 
 M 
 
 it^t 
 
 -^ 
 
 Ring bells ! 
 / 
 
 -^^^ 
 
 wait on hap • py greet-ing, Days of sor - row now are o'er. Ring out a glad ex 
 
 ^l2: 
 
 Ring bells ! 
 
 
 We shall part no moi 
 
 ./ I Admt I \rall. pp\ 
 
 ?^^ 
 
 Gt— 
 
 B 
 
 f 
 
 Ring bells! 
 
 Ring 
 P 
 
 bells ! 
 dim. 
 
 rail. 
 
 Ring! 
 PP 
 
 1 
 
 iY. 
 
 ^ 
 
 -4 — ^ 
 
 t- 
 
 ult - ant chime 
 
 We 
 
 shall part 
 
 ^^ f Marcato, moderato. 
 
 oderato. ^ 1 ^ 
 
 Wi 
 
 M^m^FFmm 
 
 :f=3^ 
 
 1 
 
 1^ 
 
 t- 
 
 -4 — ^ 
 
 ^^f 
 
 ^ 
 
26 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 60 , 
 
 :i2=^=:d: 
 
 '-Bri 
 
 t 
 
 \ ! 
 
 gH- r-g'- 
 
 y 
 
 P 
 
 ?^ 
 
 BEfl^ZZ^J 
 
 r 
 
 r r"rT^^~r 
 
 i^ 
 
 i 
 
 i^£2: 
 
 ^ 
 
 St^ 
 
 (S* 25) 
 
 &- -gjr 
 
 -<5» — L-<S^ 
 
 s 
 
 :*=£ 
 
 SSi* 
 
 ^ 
 
 ^^^r^^^^rs 
 
 m 
 
 ^^^^ 
 
 -m-^ 
 
 m 
 
 ± 
 
 ;^ 
 
 -i==^ — h- 
 
 -N ^- 
 
 3^J=.^^-=^ "~^~^" ^3=^ 
 
 -i^ V 
 
 -^ -^ 
 
 r^~-?~j- 
 
 SUMMER JOY. 
 
 Allegro non troppo.^ ^ 
 
 H. MULLER. 
 
 -^ 
 
 Come out! The world in - vites us To greet her beau- ty rare; And 
 Now ev - 'ry - thing re - joic - es In mer - ry sum - mer time, — Shall 
 
 i 
 
 / 
 
 OE=j3EE^E5=g=i 
 
 ^ 
 
 t=t 
 
 7--7^r-r ^^'^ 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 27 
 
 -H^ 
 
 L^ 
 
 H—f- 
 
 -iF- 
 
 f==f. 
 
 i^i^y- I y ]/ y ' '^ y 
 
 ev - 'ry thing de - lights us, For all is won-drous fair. 
 
 we not join our voi - ces To hail her glo - rious prime ! Our 
 
 The 
 
 •zl?: 
 
 ^ 
 
 m 
 
 ^^_ 
 
 m^ 
 
 'i=iri=r7 
 
 ■p— T" 
 
 p 
 
 sweet - est flow'rs are bloom- ing, The sum-mer air per- fum - ing. O 
 praise and thanks we ren - der For all thy gold - en splen - dor. O 
 
 ^ 
 
 w^^^'^^^^^ 
 
 if^ 
 
 "J y V \^ \j \j \j \j I 
 
 t=^ 
 
 -^A 
 
 ^^ 
 
 T=^=^- 
 
 world, so gay and bright,We greet thee with de - light! O world, so gay and 
 
 / 
 
 '^S 
 
 Tf 
 
 t=t 
 
 r=i=n^ 
 
 . h ^ ^ N I 
 
 A-^^— ^—jl— jtzp^ 
 
 &: 
 
 
 :=r 
 
 ^ /A 
 
 mm 
 
 • r 
 
 ^^ 
 
 m^m 
 
 bright, We greet thee with de - light ! light ! O world ! O world ! we greet thee with delight ! 
 
28 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 62 
 
 iii^^pip^^ 
 
 j~r rf 
 
 :^b# 
 
 :^= 
 
 * ^ 
 
 -z^ 
 
 ^ It 
 
 h PS J X- fc-f^f— 1 ^sm—i 1- 
 
 n-^ 
 
 f 
 
 r r 
 
 X s 
 
 r=r- 
 
 EE 
 
 •« — «- 
 
 5=J^^^ 
 
 63 
 
 I I I i -l I I l -rn— J 1 U— U«L-M-^ il-l I J — I ^ri 
 
 ffeg 
 
 ^^^^ 
 
 v—1— j 
 
 :::J: 
 
 ^-- * 
 
 S-rfEfee^ 
 
 a 
 
 rg^ngf gpp 
 
 :^=3t 
 
 --ti!iCZ± 
 
 tatqcqE 
 
 ^1^ 
 
 rr? 
 
 :^ 
 
 tea 
 
 e 
 
 ^ 
 
 4 f~t? l^ -^^fzrbif:^ 
 
 ^^?f33^^3^ 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 29 
 
 65 
 
 66 
 
 psi^^m^im#^^ 
 
 S 
 
 blf 
 
 0-^ 
 
 i^ 
 
 ^-^- 
 
 -^ Z 
 
 i^iPsSi^-pE^^^ 
 
 I I I S X 
 
 rtF=F=tF=p 
 
 r-f— I — ^ 
 
 'i^ 
 
 
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 67 
 
 S^^^^^JEL^ 
 
 -T^ 
 
 ^P#i 
 
 -=^— ^- 
 
 r 
 
 p — r 
 
 fes 
 
 
 ^1^ 
 
 ^=^,^±=^; 
 
 ^.E£ 
 
 H 
 
 -^T-^"- 
 
 j^^-J^::^- 
 
 -^1- — « 
 
 vi *■ 
 
 ^i^==^ 
 
 ■^-^- 
 
 ^^ 
 
 1 » i - 
 
 w — ^^ — s- 
 
 -■^^ 
 
 ^ ^.n—^. 
 
 -N-=l S- 
 
 -=1 »■ 
 
 ::itr 
 
30 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 68 
 
 i 
 
 1^ 
 
 4-4- 
 
 4 — n f * 
 
 B 
 
 ^\ 
 
 1^3 
 
 GENTLE MURMURS, SWEET COMPLAINING. 
 
 Monro. — 1690. 
 
 Andante. 
 
 -A i 
 
 S^ 
 
 P 
 
 plain 
 
 S 
 
 t? 
 
 1. Gen - tie mur - murs, sweet com 
 
 2. In the woods the birds are 
 
 3. Yes, sweet sum - mer days are 
 
 piam - ing, 
 sing - ing 
 o - ver. 
 
 From the 
 Sweet a 
 Win - ter 
 
 deep la - ment-ing 
 bab - bling gen - tly 
 cold and sul - len 
 
 That sweet sum - mer days 
 
 To the wa - ter flow 
 
 Bring -ing snow and lead 
 
 p poco ritard. 
 
 de - part, 
 rets coy. 
 en skies. 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 31 
 
 69 
 
 3;!F& 
 
 ^£*^Ei^ 
 
 ^^ 
 
 An-J^^^S"i 1- 
 
 T^r^^^TZTLLl 
 
 f=^ 
 
 SI 
 
 fiy 
 
 ^^3^^^^^^ 
 
 fc&M^EE^^fcE| 
 
 70 
 
 i 
 
 la 
 
 t=:^* 
 
 -^-f=i 
 
 ES 
 
 atfejzi 
 
 -S S- 
 
 f==f=F^ 
 
 --§ 
 
 s «- 
 
 r T 
 
 fel3 
 
 S^ 
 
 m 
 
 f 
 
 1 — ^ — s- 
 
 Wi 
 
 71 
 
 
 
 l-B=^^ 
 
 m 
 
 
 72 
 
 i: 
 
 
 i-m 
 
 -sir 
 
 r 
 
 ;=t 
 
32 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 p^^^M:^^^^ 
 
 iters 
 
 mffiEi 
 
 :3EB 
 
 •-*-# 
 
 ^^^^^^^^^^ 
 
 fe-^fe^^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 ^tSH 
 
 ^"^^"^^^^'E^ra 
 
 ?#l^^ 
 
 :*=^s3E3 
 
 i^— ^ 
 
 • # i 
 
 ^ — ^i^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 B5 
 
 *^^ 
 
 Si^^^^^^l^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 B=S^ 
 
 i 
 
 ;fc|: 
 
 6!fetfe 
 
 i^^ 
 
 i^ a< 
 
 •^ -^ 
 
 - I I 1 h 
 
 
 1 T-( 
 
 
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FIFTH READER. 
 
 33 
 
 76 I 
 
 ^ 
 
 ? 
 
 t 
 
 :^ 
 
 -J— ^4 
 
 a!i=e 
 
 : y— tri 
 
 r-^?^r 
 
 ^*fi" 
 
 p 
 
 Itei; 
 
 ^i^ 
 
 ;3 
 
 ^ 
 
 77 
 
 ;?± 
 
 fc2: 
 
 ±4zi: 
 
 U4 
 
 i=:-A 
 
 i= Bj^=h bd:d 
 
 ^rrPpPF'&^M 
 
 ^ — n 
 
 :F=tp 
 
 SS 
 
 pPP^£^=^ES^^^ 
 
 MAz 
 
 t 
 
 * — • 
 
 
 l±:4 -^ — •J^ 
 
 ff* 
 
 ?J;ESES 
 
 ■s — s- 
 
 PFS^ 
 
 i£3 
 
 -« — s- 
 
 
 fer 
 
 a 
 
 IE 
 
 
 Er 
 
 § 
 
 
 j ^j 
 
 t^^ 
 
 ^=^ — ^- 
 
 p 
 
 -^ — ^ — 
 
 ^^fsg 
 
34 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 79 
 
 1. The world is 
 
 2. Here sped the 
 
 3. The world is 
 -P 
 
 fair, the world 
 hap - py gold 
 full of strife 
 
 is wide, That lured thee 
 
 en hours Be - side thy 
 
 and care : Then where - fore 
 
 forth to roam ; Yet dear - er far than all . . be 
 
 moth - er's knee ; Here bloomed the sweet - est, fair - est 
 
 long - er roam? Here waits for thee a wel - come 
 
 mf —= ^ 1 / 
 
 m 
 
 -& •' 
 
 
 1^^ 
 
 EU3 
 
 ■PP 
 
 -J- 
 
 S 
 
 -:^ 
 
 M=± 
 
 'f^=ru=f=r^f 
 
 rr—urr 
 
 ii 
 
 side Is home, thy child - hood's home. 1.2.3. Come home ! Come home ! 
 flowers. And all things smiled on thee, 
 
 rare, Thou wan - d'ring child, come home ! 
 
 P =* PP 
 
 B 
 
 
 :i 
 
 -^ 
 
 ^- 
 
 • Si/ 
 
 Tri 
 
 9 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 35 
 
 CHAPTER IL-MODULATION. 
 
 :2: 
 
 To Dominant and return. 
 
 _l , 1 mi- 
 
 -^r 
 
 
 i 
 
 r*=^: 
 
 tzz* 
 
 ^^^^^^^^^^^ 
 
 ;b 
 
 T=M 
 
 =r^ 
 
 •?=^=;^ 
 
 • — ^-^ 
 
 :E^ 
 
 P^^^m 
 
 ^ I 
 
 i 
 
 ^E^^Ep 
 
 5S 
 
 :^;^^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 
 ^: 
 
 ^^^.^Efe^E^^^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 ;^ 
 
 To Major Dominant and return. 
 
 m^^m 
 
 tl---^ 
 
 r — r 
 
 fmm- 
 
 r^==^ 
 
 ■f^=^ 
 
 ^m 
 
 1 
 
 A. 
 
 t 
 
 ^ 1^- 
 
 ^¥ 
 
 :^- 
 
 (^-J 
 
 f 
 
36 
 
 Moderate. 
 P 
 
 m 
 
 i 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 A SONG TO WISDOM. 
 
 Mozart. 
 
 T=^ 
 
 m 
 
 3t3t 
 
 ;r— f- 
 
 1. Be-hold the glo-rious sun 
 
 2. Thy light in ev - 'ry eye 
 
 3. Soar forth on thine im-mor 
 
 ap-pear - ing With ev - er spreading ray: The 
 is shin - ing, Thine im - age in each heart; O 
 tal pin - ions To loft-iest heights a - bove, — And 
 
 i 
 
 clouds of dark-ness now are clear- ing To 
 
 wis -dom, all the world re - fin - ing, Dwell 
 leave be-hind thee earth's do-min - ions. Thou 
 
 wel-come wis-dom's day. 
 here and ne'er de - part, 
 soul of truth and love! 
 
 We 
 Gone 
 
 ^ 
 
 ^^ 
 
 i 
 
 i 
 
 1 
 
 t 
 
 p 
 
 dolce. 
 
 ^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 
 :#Th 
 
 F=^=^"T=r=?=? 
 
 heav'n - ly Peace, look down up 
 
 thank thee for thy springs of 
 
 is the night of doubt and 
 
 on us. And shed thy sa . 
 
 learn-ing. For zeal that in 
 
 ter - ror, And fled for aye 
 P dolce. 
 
 cred bless - ing 
 
 each breast is 
 
 the reign of 
 
 ^^^$EE i=f=-t^^^^= ^^^^=^^^^ 
 
 I 
 
 mf 
 
 
 e^^- 
 
 ?iit=«; 
 
 on us! 
 burning- 
 er - ror, 
 
 -•-^- 
 
 I 
 
 i 
 
 Then 
 
 -Each 
 
 O 
 mf 
 
 % 
 
 will the earth be filled with love, 
 gift, each grace un- to us giv'n, 
 come and dwell in ev - 'ry soul 
 
 f 
 
 --4-- 
 
 ^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 And mortals raised to heav'n a- 
 For joy of life, and hope of 
 
 That fain would seek a heav'nly 
 
 mf 
 
FIFTH RF:ADER. 
 
 37 
 
 II 
 
 =f^F 
 
 / 
 
 T 
 
 bove, 
 
 heav'n, 
 
 goal! 
 
 ?ES 
 
 -•— 
 
 And mor - tals raised 
 
 For joy of life 
 
 That fain would seek 
 
 to heav'n 
 and hope 
 a heav'n 
 
 ^ 
 
 ^-^ 
 
 ^ r 
 
 a - bove. 
 
 of heav'n. 
 
 ly goal ! 
 
 I 
 
 11 
 
 To Dominant and return. 
 
 -X 
 
 fefi 
 
 lE^Elp^^^iP^^i^ 
 
 :?--i 
 
 ^^ 
 
 ■S=:^ 
 
 ^M^\ 
 
 r-T"^n 
 
 M 
 
 4-*- 
 
 :»=?=1: 
 
 it»t 
 
 ss 
 
 SI 
 
 ^«^^=^:r^3zzp=S^:a 
 
 ^|^g^||g^*gp^ 
 
 :d=^=r 
 
 -jP — » •— ^r 
 
 I I ^ X 
 
 -{S*- 
 
 ^^ 
 
 3^^g^ 
 
 -^— ^ 
 
 ::1=:^= 
 
 :SE?E? 
 
 -• — #- 
 
 -t^'M* r^ r~-f 
 
 
 d=it 
 
 r^n-^rtrr 
 
 E^ 
 
 -K 
 
 jtrt 
 
 V -•- -5^ 
 
38 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 SPRING MAGIC. 
 
 Moderato. German Melody. 
 
 I 
 
 The mer - ry brook its song is singing,Freed from tiie yoke of winter's chain, Their 
 
 2. The deer flits thro' the for- est shadows, On the blue lake the swan doth float,The 
 
 3. How dear the mag- ic legends old-en Borne onward by the breath of spring; She 
 
 4. And since all things to life a-wak-en. Awake thou, too, my wea-ry breast ! New 
 
 
 
 rt 
 
 ^%A 
 
 mM: 
 
 s — fv 
 
 p^mmm- 
 
 •w^- 
 
 c r 
 
 
 r 
 
 drow-sy slum-bers from them flinging, Sweet flow-ers bud and bloom a -gain, 
 peace-ful flock now seeks the meadows, Swift -ly the fish - er speeds his boat, 
 comes a - gain with prom-ise gold-en With hope and bless-ing on her wing, 
 life is thine; thou'rt not for-sak-en; Press on and seek the land of rest! 
 
 w 
 
 fcz^v±:i! 
 
 ^ 
 
 H- -K-^iiT^ "i— :f-*-^ 
 
 To Dominant and return. 
 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 39 
 
 10 
 
 To Mediant, Super-tonic and return. 
 
 i^^ffpp#^#p^ 
 
 ** 
 
 i 
 
 w^¥^ 
 
 -4 
 
 ±=Mi 
 
 P- 
 
 1=* 
 
 •— r 
 
 1 1 
 
 To Major Dominant and return. 
 
 N 
 
 
 'S# 
 
 w^^ 
 
 m 
 
 p 
 
 ^ 
 
 3^-^ 
 
 ONLY WAIT! 
 
 Allegro moderato. 
 mf 
 
 F. D. Sturm. 
 
 63 
 
 =E? 
 
 
 n 
 
 mw- 
 
 I I ' I 
 
 1. Snow doth cov - er hill and plain, Yet the spring will come a - gain, 
 
 2. Black the sky that was so fair, — Yet the stars are shin - ing there, 
 
 3. Though thy heart is sad to- day, Troub-Ie soon will pass a - way, 
 
 4. Cares may come and ills be- fall, Yet God watch -es o - ver all. 
 
 ite£^ 
 
 ^=i 
 
 ^s=3 
 
 ^ir^-*—^ 
 
 ^J=J^ 
 
 P 
 
 :B 
 
 w 
 
 On 
 
 / 
 
 ly wait ! On 
 P 
 
 ^^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 ly wait ! All 
 
 will be 
 
 well ! 
 
 ^? 
 
 ^ 
 
 --i 
 
 m 
 
40 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 A HOME GREETING. 
 
 Vivace. 
 
 F. MoHRING. 
 
 te 
 
 
 -/5^- 
 
 ii 
 
 W^^ 
 
 mm 
 
 \ .3^U' 
 
 1. With what rap - ture I be -hold thee, Na-tive land, all lands a- 
 
 2. I have wan - dered to each na - tion Gazed on coun - tries won-drous 
 
 3. Let proud free - dom shout thy sto - ry To the na - tions far and 
 
 ite 
 
 N-— ifc- 
 
 -^. 
 
 ^ 
 
 -z?- 
 
 t 
 
 '-^-H. 
 
 ^^^m^m^ 
 
 r — ' -v^— — \f—v-^ — ^ — r 
 
 bove ! All my pur - est thoughts en - fold thee With a chain of faith and 
 fair, — But no spot in God's ere - a - tion Can with thee, my home, corn- 
 near. Spread a - broad thy pow'r and glo - ry, Na-tive land for- ev - er 
 
 i 
 
 g)— ^— #- 
 
 ^ 
 
 ^^. 
 
 1^ 
 
 n-- 
 
 
 ^. 
 
 g^±^ 
 
 -^-^5::' 
 
 p 
 
 s 
 
 ^^ 
 
 r?=it 
 
 -^--r^ 
 
 rp- 
 
 love. I. -3. Heart and soul and life are thine. Bless - ed land for - ev - er 
 
 pare. 
 
 dear. 
 
 g-^-.^-J^ = ^ — 1=^—4 — i— g=^=#==^ -g — J— j— J — i= 
 
 i 
 
 / 
 
 -(&- 
 
 ^^ 
 
 -<5^ 
 
 --■=^- 
 
 ^ f2- 
 
 1 — r 
 
 f=r 
 
 f- 
 
 mine, Glo-rious na - tion, bless-ed land for - ev - er mine, 
 / 
 
 ^ 
 
 f— f^ 
 
 m. 
 
 -f- -• mine, yes, ev - er mine, O 
 
 -t&- 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 41 
 
 J^-J 
 
 -^ ^• 
 
 -jv— --^ 
 
 m 
 
 ^^ 
 
 j=j. 
 
 -f2- 
 
 -r f— 
 
 glo - rious na 
 
 r — r 
 
 tion, bless -ed land for - ev - er mine. 
 
 1 — r'i^~'^~ 't~~ =i ^ 
 
 s 
 
 r^ 
 
 12 
 
 #- 
 
 To Relative Minor, Dominant and return. 
 
 i 
 
 ^lE^ 
 
 SE^ 
 
 1 — r — r 
 
 tt 
 
 '^^^^:i=^= ^^ff^=^i^^ 
 
 13 
 
 To Mediant and return. 
 
 iL 
 
 i^s^^S^s 
 
 See 
 
 a^ 
 
 1^^-^ F 
 
 1? — r r I" 
 
 #- 
 
 l=e; 
 
 ^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 3^^ 
 
 -ir~* 
 
 *— ^ 
 
 14 
 
 To Sub-dominant and return. 
 
 lAw-^B 
 
 m 
 
 -Tir 
 
 hrX 
 
 a 
 
 '" ^^^^^f^^m 
 
 tt^=^ 
 
 ^^-^T^ 
 
 u 
 
 m 
 
 gg^.^i^^^^^^^^ 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 15 
 
 To Relative Major and return. 
 
 tf 
 
 ^#^#i^p 
 
 iigij 
 
 =*f^?=(pp(' 
 
 Pi 
 
 i^ 
 
 ^S 
 
 MAY SONG. 
 
 7j/ time/; 2nd time p. 
 
 Thomas Morley, 1595. 
 
 ffiE 
 
 W^^^^W^ 
 
 t 
 
 P 
 
 ^±E^^ 
 
 1 
 
 i=J 
 
 
 Nowwel-come in the May-time! It is a joy - ous play - time : Fa la 
 Why should we mope in sad - ness When all things smile in glad - ness? 
 Now let us dance a meas - ure ! Give rein to mirth and plea - sure. 
 
 i 
 
 lEE 
 
 ^* 
 
 r? 
 
 t=^ 
 
 Itit 
 
 feti 
 
 li^^ixJ 
 
 :=f: 
 
 f=rt 
 
 H 
 
 d; 
 
 #-: 
 
 la la 
 
 la 
 
 la la la (la) la, fa la la 
 
 -^— # 
 
 la 
 
 la la 
 
 la. 
 
 -#-v- 
 
 ^ifiS^ 
 
 sl^fe 
 
 I I 
 
 F=r 
 
 ^ 
 
 &:* 
 
 ■-^k^E^^ 
 
 Pf 
 
 :F=F 
 
 -«^ 
 
 Fa la 
 
 V- 
 
 f 
 
 Come lads and lass - es gay And wel- come in the May! Fa 
 
 There's life in ev - 'ry-thing Atdawn-ing of the spring. 
 And on the dew - y green We'll crown our May-day queen. 
 
 j-/^_ , . -.—u 
 
 n- 
 
 la la 
 
 =1=:]= 
 1^ -^ 
 
 i 
 
 ^^ 
 
 Fa la la 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 43 
 
 I ^feti 
 
 la, 
 
 ff^^^ 
 
 fa la la la la la la, 
 
 ■^-t-^^=f=j=titpj^_tf: — s — ^=pr-r— r— r^ — 
 
 fet 
 
 fa la la la, fa la la la la la, 
 
 fa la la la la la la. 
 
 ■^4 
 
 :::4: 
 
 N— N--^ 
 
 iJ^i 
 
 P^^ 
 
 ^i^--^: 
 
 ^=t 
 
 ==i: 
 
 --4r 
 
 la, 
 
 fa la la la la, 
 
 fa la la la la. 
 
 16 
 
 To Dominant and return through Super-tonic. 
 
 tes^^isg 
 
 r—t-r^-t-j 
 
 s 
 
 
 iiEEi 
 
 --f- 
 
 ■^- 
 
 r-t— r 
 
 ■J 
 
 H 
 
 
 L^: 
 
 :^=n: 
 
 •^ ^ 6^ 
 
 ;i^ 
 
 ^■x 
 
 A=:1: 
 
 r^J:-^ 
 
 i^:i= 
 
 -25*- 
 
 -si-. 
 
 ip 
 
 To Relative Minor and return. 
 
 :-fe^: 
 
 ii^;^#i^t=pf#P^ 
 
 ifcjsS 
 
 ^g^ 
 
 Itzzt 
 
 :rf=h4 
 
 -^ -^ -^ 
 
 18 
 
 To Sub-dominant and return 
 
 J — ^y 
 
44 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 19 
 
 To Dominant of Relative Major 
 
 M-e 
 
 mM 
 
 pE^.^=^^-l^E^E^^ 
 
 Sg^ 
 
 a 
 
 tt^ 
 
 :^^3^ 
 
 :=|: 
 
 psp^ 
 
 PRAYER FOR OUR COUNTRY. 
 
 ;S 
 
 «=^ 
 
 Moderato. 
 
 C. S. Reissiger. 
 
 r=B^c?T 
 
 iS^ 
 
 1. God of all the 
 
 2. Thou hast heard our 
 
 3. Guard our homes from 
 
 4. And should foes as 
 
 I . 
 
 na 
 
 fa 
 
 e 
 
 sail 
 
 r f- 
 
 tions, Lord of woe and weal,- 
 
 thers In the old - en days; 
 
 vil, Give us last - ing peace ; 
 
 us, Guard, O Lord, our land. 
 
 ips^P^P 
 
 W^^^^ 
 
 In Thy sa • cred pres • ence 
 
 Hear us, God of na - tions. 
 
 Let Thy gra - cious mer - cies 
 
 Mav we live as free - men, 
 
 We 
 As 
 
 Nev 
 Free 
 
 Thy chil - dren kneel, 
 
 our pray'r we raise, 
 
 er, nev - er cease, 
 
 for - ev er stand ! 
 
 
 Pi 
 
 
 1=T 
 
 G>— 
 
 r 
 
 In Thy sa - cred pres - ence We Thy chil - dren kneel. 
 
 Hear us, God of na - tions As our prayV we raise. 
 
 Let Thy gra- cious mer - cies Nev - er, nev - er cease. 
 
 May we live as free - men, Free for - ev - er stand ! 
 
 P 
 
 -^- 
 
 • — 4- 
 
 if^-^^ %~3~-J~^ - 
 
 9 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 45 
 
 4^ 
 
 E4: 
 
 20 
 
 '^^=^ 
 
 '^- 
 
 -:X 
 
 =l^:=t 
 
 :=1: 
 
 tK 
 
 :t3=: 
 
 -&- 
 
 
 f--i.^tf 
 
 .^ ^- 
 
 ;^= 
 
 =-i= 
 
 -=1: 
 
 21 
 
 F=? 
 
 IB3 
 
 ^ 
 
 ii^ii^i^^ 
 
 r— 1"— r 
 
 w- 
 
 i 
 
 ie3E^ 
 
 *-=i 
 
 -1— i- 
 
 * — »^ 
 
 i^sfe.^^ 
 
 i 
 
 ^ 
 
 ^^^=^=P= 
 
 ^-* — *^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 I I 
 
 .(5'- 
 
 i 
 
 -^ — \- 
 
 s 
 
 V -<^- 
 
46 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 
 i 
 
 liii^^^SJ^^ 
 
 23 ^^ I 
 
 fe 
 
 :s 
 
 P^^^^^ 
 
 ¥■ 
 
 S 
 
 fi* — •-^- 
 
 ^ 
 
 ::t 
 
 P 
 
 ^ 
 
 ;S 
 
 g^— r 
 
 THE WOODLAND ROSE. 
 
 Andante sostenuto. 
 
 i 
 
 i^ 
 
 E. Hermes. 
 
 
 e- 
 
 ^ 
 
 ^EE^ 
 
 t f V ^ V >' V \ I 
 
 I. Be - side my path a rose - bud grew, Its blos-soms wet with morn-ing 
 
 2."Dear rose - bud, wilt thou go with me?" I said with long - ing ec - sta - 
 
 3. The mod - est rose -bud made re - ply,"Pray choose some fair -er flow'r than 
 
 4. And so I left the qui - et spot; But place and rose are ne'er for- 
 
 is 
 
 rt—nf-^ 
 
 -i<- 
 
 ::^ 
 
 i 
 
 
 WE^ 
 
 t I- 
 
 F^ 
 
 i 
 
 dew. One bud more love - ly than the rest, Peeped forth in fra-grant beau - ty 
 
 sy; "I'll wear thee ev - er near my heart, And nev - er, nev - er from thee 
 
 I. My home is dear - er far to me Than all earth's splendor e'er could 
 
 got. When oth - er flow'rs up -on me smile With fragrance that would fain be - 
 
 ^5^-=? 
 
 :i 
 
 I^-H^f 
 
 SE5^ 
 
 t 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 47 
 
 l§4sS^#fei^^ 
 
 i^; 
 
 i r ^ r r r ^ 
 
 dressed; I saw and stayed my hurrying feet: No rose was ev - er half so 
 part. How few be - hold thy beau - ty here : Be mine, be mine thou rose - bud 
 be. Go leave me in my shad - y dell, 'Tis here a - lone I love to 
 guile, I think of thee, sweet woodland rose; Why did'st thou wake my heart's re - 
 
 S 
 
 -J^ 
 
 ^^=^^ t^ffrr.r^^ ^ 
 
 a tempo. 
 
 
 sweet, 
 dear! 
 dwell.' 
 
 pose 
 
 1-4. O rose-bud red! 
 
 a tempo. 
 
 O rose - bud fair ! 
 
 Oh 
 
 / 
 
 r=? 
 
 ^f 
 
 \ 
 
 ■m- 
 
 ^^^ 
 
 =^E^^^. 
 
 --t 
 
 nev - er 
 
 i 
 
 seen thee there! 
 
 O 
 
 rose - bud red ! 
 
 O 
 
 ^- 
 
 
 
 1^ 
 
 rose - bud red! 
 
 rose - bud 
 
 ^^ 
 
 rose 
 
 bud fair ! 
 
 is 
 
 I / 
 
 O had I 
 cres. 
 
 IT: 
 
 mm 
 
 f' 
 
 ■d-= 
 
 tP, 
 
 n 
 
 I 
 
 er seen thee there ! 
 
 :=1^ 
 
 3t: 
 
 fair! 
 
 O had 
 
 nev - er 
 
 \* 
 
 ^ 
 
 \!*^^^ 
 
 atz: 
 
 :EI 
 
48 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 24 
 
 1 
 
 ■BE: 
 
 4 S- 
 
 -r-r 
 
 ^ 
 
 t^^=^i=^ 
 
 *=s 
 
 ^^^^^^ 
 
 rT~^^=r=^^f 
 
 I 
 
 ee^Es 
 
 ^-=^- 
 
 t 
 
 ^ 
 
 ^^=^ 
 
 -^ — : 
 
 • — ^ 
 
 25 
 
 & 
 
 9^E^ 
 
 g^-fi=j3?fii- 
 
 '^ 
 
 mw^ 
 
 ^^*^Si 
 
 r-H-T 
 
 g?5E33^=d=zi: 
 
 Si 
 
 B^^P:3g^^^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 W=&=^=M=z±z^=^ 
 
 26 
 
 To Major Dominant and return. 
 
 'itz-^. 
 
 P^FPt 
 
 a^ 
 
 i-4. 
 
 I 
 
 • S 
 
 t^^=f^irr*^"r^ 
 
 Ee; 
 
 -^- 
 
 s=^^««^=tt=^^?f^^=M=«* 
 
 il! 
 
 
 te 
 
 ^ 
 
 .^_L_^_ 
 
 ^=i 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 49 
 
 UP THE MOUNTAIN. 
 
 F. Schubert. 
 
 Moderato 
 
 
 ^ ^ ^ ^ y ^ ^ ^ K - ^ I 
 
 pur- pose high and cour -age strong, We press the rug-ged path a -long As 
 
 on we take our toil-some way, We must not now for rest de - lay As 
 
 all our toil we're well re - paid, A wondrous world we see dis- played As 
 
 we climb up 
 we climb up 
 we stand on 
 
 the height, 
 the height, 
 height, 
 
 As we climb up 
 As we climb up 
 As we stand on 
 
 the height, 
 the height, 
 the height. 
 
 
 '^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 ? 
 
 -=^^- 
 
50 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 27 
 
 To Relative Minor, Dominant and return through Mediant and Super-tonic. 
 
 m 
 
 ^^^^^m^ 
 
 i 
 
 zt 
 
 t^ 
 
 ^=X 
 
 3^f^ 
 
 -ihr- 
 
 :|==l: 
 
 li — ^ 
 
 gP*=^ 
 
 28 
 
 To Mediant, Dominant and return through Relative Minor and Sub-dominant. 
 
 Ji, J— J- 
 
 
 i^i=^i|g^i^^ 
 
 s 
 
 :'g 1^ 
 
 i* 
 
 29 
 
 To Super-tonic and return. 
 
 i^^#^#^ii^^W^ 
 
 fcteEi 
 
 ■^ 
 
 ^^i 
 
 ^^^ 
 
 ::j: 
 
 ^^ 
 
 m 
 
 T=f=^ 
 
 -?5^ 
 
 i 
 
 t]2zzd: 
 
 ^^fe^^^i 
 
 ^^ 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 30 
 
 51 
 
 To Major Dominant, Sub-dominant and return. 
 
 '&^m^^^^ 
 
 -/5>- 
 
 :t^ 
 
 f—:t 
 
 :fv — -m e^ 
 
 S 
 
 t^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 ■w 
 
 a 
 
 ^ 
 
 EVENING. 
 
 
 Moderato 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 C 
 
 Reinecke, arr. 
 
 ^ 
 
 9 b ^ 
 
 \f 
 
 
 
 ^ 
 
 
 
 
 
 Jv _«. 
 
 
 
 
 
 N» •] 
 
 '^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 J i ' i^ 1 
 
 ^ ^H?-^ — • = 
 
 
 \- T^ 
 
 _ _j i — J J \ 
 
 f^> "^-4 t 
 
 — F— 
 
 — F 
 
 
 — = — 
 
 — # — 
 
 —li — ' 
 
 — d~; 
 
 — 
 
 =5 — ' — r=^ 
 
 V ^ y 
 
 NJ^ U' 
 
 ^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 
 X 
 
 
 J 
 
 1 
 
 
 I. The 
 
 sun 
 
 has 
 
 the 
 
 sun 
 
 has 
 
 set. 
 
 
 and night is 
 
 2. The 
 
 field 
 
 and 
 
 wood, 
 
 the 
 
 field 
 
 and 
 
 wood 
 
 
 and whisp'ring 
 
 3. Now 
 
 fresh 
 
 and 
 
 cool» . 
 
 now 
 
 fresh 
 
 and 
 
 cool 
 
 
 the dew comes 
 
 
 4. The 
 
 h» 
 
 sil - 
 
 ver 
 
 moon, 
 
 the 
 
 sil - 
 
 ver 
 
 moon 
 
 
 is beam - ing 
 
 
 < 1 1^ Q 
 
 
 
 
 -i 
 
 
 T^-i?-^ — =^ — 
 
 — *— 
 
 
 --^ ^ . 
 
 
 —N 
 
 ^— HV -N 
 
 A_1Z^ .z 
 
 
 fV- 
 
 — ^~ 
 
 — N— 
 
 — ^ ^~ 
 
 -d- 
 
 _H ^ 4^_ 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 -•- 
 
 -#- 
 
 
 V*. 
 
 
 * s s 
 
 1^ 
 
 tX- 
 
 m 
 
 I 
 
 nigh, 
 
 breeze, 
 
 down, 
 
 now 
 
 It 
 
 A sin - 
 The lit - 
 Each blade 
 Up - on 
 
 gle star is 
 
 tie birds up 
 
 of grass, each 
 
 the si - lent 
 
 U=^3=l 
 
 ±mL 
 
 -f— 1?, 
 
 in the 
 on the 
 flow'r up 
 world be 
 
 ^ y ^ y 
 
 sky. Now gen - tie 
 
 trees, The ver - y 
 
 on. While float - ing 
 
 low; As if to 
 
 peace and rest re 
 rose up - on the 
 
 round us ev - 'ry 
 bid each trou-bled 
 
 pay The trou-bles of the toil - ing day. 
 
 thorn Are slumb'ring sweet un - til the morn, 
 
 where, A sub - tie fragrance fills the air. 
 
 breast: Lie still, lie still and be at rest. 
 
 --t 
 
 i -*. 
 
 ':X 
 
 
 ]B 
 
52 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 31 
 
 To Sub-mediant ( Relative Minor,) Dominant and return. 
 
 ii^^^^^^i^ 
 
 ?JS 
 
 e?B3 
 
 ^ 
 
 ttt 
 
 ^i=^^ 
 
 :Szd: 
 
 -<& # 
 
 ^^ 
 
 -1^ -il- 
 
 32 I I 
 
 rrT~r n T> — rt-r rnTf-rT~li Tr i 
 
 ' m^^m 
 
 -•=i=t 
 
 t 
 
 atjt 
 
 --i 
 
 •^ 
 
 -(S*- 
 
 33 
 
 I ^ 
 
 t-^ 
 
 lz6?BE3^ 
 
 ^=3^g^-=^^= ^g^6^3 
 
 t=1= 
 
 •=±±4. 
 
 PRAISE THE LORD! 
 
 J =96. 
 
 F. Abt. 
 
 
 rto 
 
 1. Praise the Lord! His love is end- less, He His own will ne'er for - 
 
 2. Praise the Lord! His gra-cious bless -ing Decks the Spring with rar - est 
 /' p cres. 
 
 #: 
 
 ^E^ 
 
 S 
 
 ^^^ 
 
 -^f 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 53 
 
 :it=it 
 
 --A — ^ . 
 
 ^i=r 
 
 But the wea-ry, sad, and friendless, Will He to His bos - om 
 And His Fa-ther-hand ca-ress-ing, Fills the flow -'ret cup with 
 
 :H=^^ 
 
 -=r 
 
 -It -•/-• 
 
 But the wea 
 And His Fa 
 
 ry, sad, and friend - less, 
 ther-hand ca - ress - ing, 
 
 f-s 
 
 *=r 
 
 ^EE^SEHEEi. 
 
 mm. 
 
 M 
 
 take ; Praise the Lord ! His love is ten-der; Af - ter tempest's storm-y 
 dew; Praise the Lord ! His aid re - new - eth All who from His guid-ance 
 / P 
 
 t, b I - 1^, ^ '^ i ^ I ^ \ / ^ ^ 
 
 might; Green -er glows the summer's splen-dor. Brighter shines the rainbow's 
 stray; And with peace His might en - du -eth Those who walk the nar-row 
 
 ^-^--r. 
 
 tsm- 
 
 mmmmm. 
 
 >^.A 
 
 33^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 
 Mz:^ 
 
 light; Greener glows the summer's splendor, Brighter shines the rainbow's light, 
 way. And with peace His might en-du - eth. Those who walk the nar-row way. 
 
 w=^ 
 
 -*- 
 
 -^m^ 
 
 t^- 
 
 % 
 
 s 
 
54 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 34 
 
 
 '^m 
 
 a 
 
 i=\=-- 
 
 ^la 
 
 ± 
 
 --^^-1' 
 
 i=lz=z-yii^_ 
 
 ^zzitzt:^: 
 
 3g E. Prout, arr. 
 
 To Flat Sub-mediant, Dominant, Minor Super-tonic, Major Super-tonic and return. 
 
 
 a 
 
 :*=4 
 
 1==* 
 
 :j— ^-|*- 
 
 i=^-=t:^ 
 
 * 1?*- 
 
 i 
 
 1^ 
 
 ,,-^^f. 
 
 J— ^j 
 
 .2(2 ^- 
 
 i^i^^^i^^^ 
 
 fe^s 
 
 M 
 
 :^: 
 
 -J—J- 
 
 -« •- 
 
 '-^F^ 
 
 :?=— :^ 
 
 :iK 
 
 ifeEt^^Sfe^fiEEp^E^ 
 
 :3=t 
 
 R=^f^-M=^r= 
 
 $^^^m 
 
 '^=^^ 
 
 :t 
 
 a^=.* 
 
 i 
 
 I 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 55 
 
 PART SECOND, 
 
 CHAPTER I. 
 
 Two-Part Studies. — Bass and Treble Staffs. 
 
 The Great Staff. 
 
 
 ^ 
 
 cdefgaBcdefg 
 
 
 Treble Staff. 
 
 / r-j ^ "^ ' \ 
 
 1 
 
 Jf ,, c^ - 1 
 
 1 
 
 G Clef. 
 
 E 
 
 \ ^ r> "^ \ 
 
 1 
 
 Srr ^ c> ^ 1 
 
 1 
 
 
 ^ 
 
 ^^ -^ ^--- 
 
 Bass Staff. 
 
 
 ^ <^i (3. '^ 
 
 1 
 
 ^ r^ ^ '^ 
 
 1 
 
 F Clef. 
 
 ■J - _. ^ ^ "^ 
 
 1 
 
 ^ o ^ 
 
 1 
 
 
 
 ^ ^ . ^ , . , - 
 
 
 FGABcdefgab c 
 
 Key of C Major. 
 
 Be 
 
 1=^ 
 
 ^rt 
 
 ■!=2- 
 
 ^ •= 
 
 :F^:t==U=t 
 
 m^ 
 
 ii^ii 
 
 * '.J - * 
 
 pa^^ 
 
 iiS^ 
 
 :p=i: 
 
 ^ — J ^ 
 
 ^=t 
 
 
56 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 i 
 
 
 :t=«; 
 
 i5z4: 
 
 ^i!-^ 
 
 EE^-i 
 
 ^^i 
 
 ^= 
 
 ifc|=* 
 
 1=t 
 
 I 
 
 4: 
 
 (5*- 
 
 i 
 
 P^4^^E^ 
 
 t=^ 
 
 1 — h 
 -* — •- 
 
 ^ 
 
 a3=^ 
 
 ^- 
 
 f 
 
 I 
 
 S^^ 
 
 :e=z*: 
 
 * — *■ 
 
 i ^— # 1^" 
 
 i 
 
 s 
 
 
 4=::d: 
 
 ^^^^^^^ 
 
 i±E; 
 
 zszzzpc 
 
 :^: 
 
 Hi=f=zqc 
 
 =t=F 
 
 -^ — ^- 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 57 
 
 ig: 
 
 Ig^i^ 
 
 -n 
 
 g 
 
 
 ^ 
 
 ffiB 
 
 i^E^^ 
 
 ;^ ^'— j l"j~j^ 
 
 *+^^^-hj: 
 
 ^^ ^^^ ^s^^^T^ m^ 
 
 :M: 
 
 s^ 
 
 :4:d 
 
 
 ^ta: 
 
 i^ 
 
 ?3^^ 
 
 S^EES-^JgE^ 
 
 -4 — ^ 
 
 t- 
 
 ^m 
 
 ^^ 
 
 i^i 
 
 is 
 
 p 
 
 :^ 
 
 # 
 
 p^ 
 
 sp^ 
 
 ^K 
 
 -« 1=- 
 
 ^i 
 
 li ijE^^ 
 
 t^ 
 
58 
 
 lO 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 1 1 
 
 il"^ 
 
 2^i 
 
 is: 
 
 :^E^S 
 
 ;s 
 
 
 ■^ 
 
 S^^p-^S^^^isi 
 
 -5^- 
 
 
 BiS^p^ligp g 
 
 i?f2 #- 
 
 :t=F: 
 
 :iE=F=1: 
 
 •gi-^- 
 
 i 
 
 A>j/ ^ G Major. 
 
 z^i=ss-. 
 
 12 
 
 13 
 
 i^gig^^^i^pr^pg^ei 
 
 i^i^^^mi^^i^S^i 
 
 pii#^^ 
 
 :^:^ 
 
 I^^^_S^1SI 
 
 14 
 
 15 
 
 l-siggSi 
 
 •=?^p^i^ 
 
 t===f 
 
 fat 
 
 a 
 
 ?s 
 
 *-«=^i 
 
 ^^- 
 
 P^B 
 
 3*EEf 
 
 :j=; 
 
 ■*^±T*- 
 
 fe 
 
 — ^- 
 
 ^ 0- 
 
 ^^ 
 
 \±i=t 
 
 SiHiil 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 16 
 
 - 1F^ 
 
 ^— r 
 
 W: 
 
 ^m 
 
 59 
 
 :S=?: 
 
 :fcz± 
 
 l^ii^ 
 
 PI? 
 
 r I 
 
 17 
 
 i^^^^ 
 
 s:^^ 
 
 
 s 
 
 f^ 
 
 t 
 
 -^^-^ 
 
 -^ 
 
 ^ii^EEEEEd^SES^S:^^ 
 
 & 
 
 fc=f: 
 
 :^-= * 
 
 t=t: 
 
 Ie^^^^S 
 
 ^^^ 
 
 feg 
 
 
 
 :l=5 
 
 ;S^z1v 
 
 ^^^^^^^^m^mm 
 
6o 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 Key of D Major, 
 
 ■m. 
 
 B=^ 
 
 |:2^-Sz=f=t 
 
 nt=t: 
 
 Es: 
 
 m^^^m 
 
 '-n- 
 
 ^^ 
 
 
 ^i 
 
 ^i|: 
 
 :^ 
 
 .<5, — 
 
 20 
 
 -^i 
 
 =4: 
 
 ^— • 
 
 pip: 
 
 :p^^^^BlgBi^^^^^ 
 
 P«iF§=i^^: 
 
 ■-¥- 
 
 ^gii 
 
 llE^^EE 
 
 ^: 
 
 ^: 
 
 J 
 
 21 
 
 *t^ 
 
 ■-• ^- 
 
 :=1===1: 
 
 :it.-=Jt 
 
 i^^^iSis=i 
 
 =:4=?=E|!L— |t 
 
 1 ^— J~ri ^ T Zzjz::gEEi:|= ^_,U- tt:j=:± 
 
 i 
 
 i^gj li^ 
 
 i^ • 
 
 ;=|: 
 
 
 P3^ 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 Key of A Major. 
 
 6i 
 
 S§«£ 
 
 22 
 
 iia 'g- 
 
 
 '«^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 t=^^^^ 
 
 •zzi^t 
 
 • — 4 
 
 ^ 
 
 =i: 
 
 ^i=P= 
 
 ^ 
 
 ^=^ 
 
 ^mA^ 
 
 f=F^E^ 
 
 4=z^ 
 
 fczt^ 
 
 23 
 
 M^ 
 
 ;?»=§ 
 
 ^^^^^^ 
 
 ^m 
 
 u 
 
 '»=#: 
 
 ;S 
 
 I^ 
 
 r-=i= 
 
 9#f 
 
 ^ 
 
 Pl^ 
 
 PS^ 
 
 24 
 
 i.t 
 
 i=§EEi 
 
 ft 
 
 I I ■^- 
 
 g 
 
 — => 
 
 i^J 
 
 ■^=x 
 
 t 
 
 J) # 4- 
 
 tr ' ' ' ! L r-^ — i 
 
 i 
 
62 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 25 
 
 mm^^^^^^&^^^^m^^ 
 
 u 
 
 rag 
 
 ^-^a^li^3^S 
 
 i^: 
 
 « — #■ 
 
 --t 
 
 5s: 
 
 i^tii^fi?3iiisi 
 
 -f2 ^ 
 
 J^ey of F Major. 
 
 'm 
 
 26 
 
 Igg Eg^ 
 
 3 -3^*=^-^ — # 
 
 ^3=*=; 
 
 
 ;^ 
 
 :^e 
 
 -i— •- 
 
 :=l: 
 
 i 
 
 
 t=t: 
 
 :t^t: 
 
 -<5>-v- 
 
 -^- 
 
 
 
 T: 
 
 ^^ 
 
 P- 
 
 ;i=^- 
 
 s=@il 
 
 :d: 
 
 ._^. 
 
 ©-a: 
 
 fe3=i 
 
 •=p: 
 
 •— ^ 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 63 
 
 27 
 
 1 
 
 £b; 
 
 ~^=i: 
 
 -t,— H 
 
 ji 
 
 Ee^i; 
 
 ^^=^=E Ei^E^: 
 
 :»=F 
 
 ;g^j^ p^g-^^^i i i^]gi^ppi^i l 
 
 ;g=^ 
 
 fe 
 
 :1=4: 
 
 ^ ^ 
 
 t- 
 
 ^=i\=^=:zt 
 
 ^=r^ 
 
 ^s — s- 
 
 m 
 
 ^^'^ 
 
 p — • 
 
 p=rt=S: 
 
 -^ # 
 
 i^^ 
 
 28 
 
 =B=i 
 
 !~4=::^ 
 
 5=a:zrs: 
 
 -U- 
 
 ^^ =^=^=f^ 
 
 f- 
 
64 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 §g= 
 
 Key of B-Jiat Major, 
 
 _ _ <s> <=- 
 
 29 
 
 ^^ 
 
 EB 
 
 1:^ 
 
 I 
 
 i 
 
 ^^JEEJI 
 
 EE 
 
 -*- -^ 
 
 ^^S^ 
 
 ;^E 
 
 • — F 
 
 30 
 
 ga^'i^^^g^^p 
 
 •— 
 
 ^ — ^ 
 
 =1: 
 
 ^^^ 
 
 S^z^ 
 
 -25^- 
 
 i^ 
 
 P 
 
 ^s=i=i 
 
 9iifc*=t 
 
 g 
 
 te 
 
 5^3i 
 
 #-4- 
 
 :p 
 
 •zzt 
 
 31 
 
 :l2: 
 
 
 ^^ 
 
 tP=^ 
 
 :i=pc 
 
 gi^ 
 
 b" 
 
 :E-f: 
 
 :1: 
 
 :^: 
 
 1=*: 
 
 ^ 
 
 aa^ia 
 
 ::1^: 
 
 1^: 
 
 -s-s- 
 
 ^iifcf 
 
 agfg^^^ 
 
 t=^ 
 
 EiiE^ 
 
 -^— ^- 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 Key of E-Jiat Major, 
 
 65 
 
 t^ -g " 
 
 32 
 
 ^S^ 
 
 ^^ 
 
 ^=hk 
 
 *-^*-# 
 
 atzfzat 
 
 :3=J=t 
 
 -g-^^_^ 
 
 :fe=5 
 
 :^:|=i 
 
 ^^^^t 
 
 t 
 
 -& ^ 
 
 ^^^^. 
 
 
 =F^ 
 
 m J « *. 
 
 ^ • 
 
 -:X=-X 
 
 itzzt 
 
 • — ^ 
 
 i^ 
 
 EE 
 
 trrt 
 
 :^ 
 
 iiB^i^ 
 
 :&•: 
 
 -f=- 
 
 33 
 
 ^M^ 
 
 m^£4: 
 
 S.=f 
 
 ^^i ^^^ ^^gg^^ 
 
 :^ 
 
 Bzrl2z:3=^ 
 
 
 ^ 
 
 -r 
 
 ^ 
 
66 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 34 
 
 i^S 
 
 ^l±|EEgEi^=P= 
 
 
 b=u- 
 
 r-ii^ 
 
 * -•- v ij -•- 5 -*- 
 
 PP 
 
 ±=jt 
 
 ^^ 
 
 ^^H 2:fizi^i=^-* ^t| *-*-| ^^JL L- E ^= '^-F ^^ziE: •- [:z=B 
 
 35 
 
 :]2 
 
 zB_ii ft: 
 
 ^l^il^ 
 
 r^ 
 
 m^ 
 
 M=, 
 
 ■4=:!^ 
 
 
 ^: 
 
 i±=t=it: 
 
 :4-- 
 
 pii&u=3=F 
 
 iil2:4: 
 
 :|=: 
 
 f—0 
 
 ^=^^^ 
 
 
 -I '^_L_ 
 
 
 P=p 
 
 tr±=t=*: 
 
 ;i^E± 
 
 
 
 •— ^ 
 
 ?^L=^^!^gi^ 
 
 -(22 ^ 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 67 
 
 CHAPTER 11. 
 
 Three-Part Song with Bass Staff. 
 
 
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 CHORAL. 
 
 Martin Luther. 
 
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 1. May I re - solve with all my heart, With all my powers, to serve the 
 
 2. Be this the pur -pose of my soul, My sol - emn, my de - termined 
 
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72 
 
 FIFTH REAPER. 
 SPRING. 
 
 Vivace. 
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 H. MULLER. 
 
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 1. Come, youths and maid - ens, and dance in a 
 
 2. Who would be sad when the Spring-time is 
 
 rmg, (a nng;) 
 here, (is here!) 
 
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 - est 
 
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 - ing are 
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FIFTH READER. 
 
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 bright, sun - ny hours. 
 
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 of the whole joy - ful year! 
 
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74 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 MY MOUNTAIN HOME. 
 
 -A 
 
 F. SiLCHER. 
 
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 none is half so fair, . . For none is half so fair, 
 all their tops of snow, . Gilds all their tops of snow. 
 
 
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 dis - tant mountain ho me ! . My dis - tant moun - tain home! 
 
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FIFTH READER. 
 
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FIFTH READER. 
 THE MOONLIGHT. 
 
 F. W. Sering. 
 
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 On the broad lake's peaceful breast, And the 
 Let us smooth-ly on - ward glide In the 
 
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 In the calm and si -lent night There is pure and sweet de - light. What has 
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 snow - y swan doth 
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 scene so 
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 won-drous fair! 
 in a dream! 
 
 ^#t=t 
 
 Allegro. J -140, 
 
 ,ist time mf^ 2d tiine p. 
 
 SPRING MADRIGRAL. 
 
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 and fro : 
 
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 3. Banish thoughts of gloom and care ! Joy now reign - eth 
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 ev - 'ry-where. 
 
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FIFTH READER. 
 
 79 
 
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 1st time ?nf, 2d time p. 
 
 1. With a ca - rol 
 
 2. At the dawn - ing 
 
 3. Speed the hap - py 
 
 
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 Let us greet the ver-dant May With a ca - rol glad and gay! 
 And the hap - py bird-lings sing At the dawn- ing of the Spring. 
 Come, ye lads and lass-es gay, Speed the hap-py hours a - way. 
 
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 Come, ye lads and lass - es gay, 
 
 Come, ye lads and lass - es gay, 
 
 Come, ye lads and lass - es gay, 
 
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 With a ca - rol gay ! Fa la 
 
 At the dawn - ing Spring. 
 Speed the hours a - way. 
 
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84 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 TWILIGHT. 
 
 K. Kloss. 
 
 1. O come peace-ful twi - light,thou wel - come guest! Thou bring- est re 
 
 2. The flow - ers are dream-ing in sweet re - pose, The once noi - sy 
 
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 fresh - ment, and calm and rest, 
 brook - let more gtx\ - tly flows. 
 
 The cares that op -pressed me 
 Each bird now is si - lent 
 ^/ / 
 
 all 
 with - 
 
 ler. His care. His love. To souls that must sor - row He 
 
 Fa - ther, His care, His love. 
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 through the day, Have fad - ed with sun - set and passed a - 
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 way. 
 rest. 
 
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 grants His peace. His love for His chil -drendoth nev - er 
 
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 cease. 
 
 
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FIFTH READER. 
 
 85 
 
 Vivace, 
 mf Soli. 
 
 THE FOREST 
 
 1. With -in the dark,green for-est, the for - 
 
 2. Beneath its dusk-y shadows, its shad 
 
 3. The birds so blithely sing-ing, yes, sing • 
 4."0 welcome,and thrice welcome! thrice welcome! O welcome, and thrice welcome!thrice 
 
 P =- P 
 
 est. With -in the dark,green forest, the 
 ows, Beneath its dusk-y shadows, its 
 ing, The birds so blithely sing-ing, yes, 
 
 
 1. When noon's 
 
 2. And ev 
 
 3. The mer 
 4. " Who dwells 
 
 
 hot sun is burn - ing, 
 'ry mod - est flow - er 
 ry brook - let prat - ties, 
 with - in my king-dom, 
 
 for - est, I dear-ly love to stray, When noon's hot sun is burn - ing, And 
 shad - ows, A sweet re -treat I find; And ev - 'ry mod-est flow - er Gives 
 sing-ing. Up -raise their greeting gay ; The mer- ry brooklet prat - ties. And 
 wel - come!" The for- est says to me:"Who dwells within my king - dom.From 
 
 95 
 
 
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 ^ 
 
 And at close of day. 
 
 Gives a wel -come kind. 
 
 Laughs as if in play. 
 
 From all care is free. 
 
 at the close of day. When noon's hot sun is 
 
 me a welcome kind. And ev - 'ry mod-est 
 
 laughs as if in play. The mer- ry brooklet 
 
 earth -ly care is free ! Who dwells within my 
 
 ■J- '^ f ■- r 
 
 burn-ing, And at the close of day. 
 flow - er Gives me a welcome kind, 
 prat-tles. And laughs as if in play, 
 kingdom. From earthly care is free ! " 
 
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 la 
 
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 When noon's 
 And ev 
 The mer 
 Who dwells 
 
 hot sun is burn - ing, At the close of day. 
 
 'ry mod-est flow - er Gives a welcome kind, 
 
 ry brook-let prat-tles, Laughs as if in play, 
 
 with - in my king-dom From all care is free ! 
 
86 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 26 
 
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 O FOREST FAIR AND STATELY. 
 
 89 
 
 Comodo. 
 
 F. ZiMMER. 
 
 
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 thank-ful - ness I greet thee, O for - est green and fair! 
 
 
 
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 AT SUNRISE. 
 
 Allesretto. 
 
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 dolce. 
 
 THE MAY QUEEN. 
 
 A. Miller. 
 
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 1. Gath-er sweetest flow - ers, Fair- est that e'er grew, 
 
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 To our gen - tie queen. 
 
 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 
 
96 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 WINTER SONG. 
 
 In march time. 
 
 G, Federich. 
 
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FIFTH READER. 
 
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 A SONG OF PRAISE. 
 
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 1. Let all that be - ing hath, wor-ship the Lord! Let truth and vir - tue and 
 
 2. Taste and dis - cov - er how gracious He is! Love and com-pas -sion, and 
 
 3. O all with lov- ing hearts, love ye the Lord! Ser - a-phim,Cher - u - bim, 
 
 4. Let all that be - ing hath, wor-.ship the Lord! He is our Fa - ther, on 
 
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 'rent soul ! 
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 tal bliss. 
 His throne ! 
 
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 Comodo. 
 
 ■ P ^ 
 
 JUBILATE. 
 
 English Melody. 
 
 
 V-ei-4=v 
 
 1. See the sun in splen-dor glow - ing On the hap-py earth a - gain! 
 
 2. All the birds lift up their voi - ces In a song of joy and love; 
 
 3. For His gifts so free - ly giv -en Shall we not His pow'r de -clare, 
 
 4. He it was who formed the dais - ies, He up-re ared the m ountain's height: — 
 
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 us join in na - ture's prais-es 
 
 far - flow . 
 
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 the mountain, wood and plain ! 
 she wor-ships God a - bove. 
 things no - ble, good and fair.? 
 the Lord of love and might ! 
 
 H 
 
 ^^i^i^^Sil^S^^ 
 
^ ■ Allegro non troppo 
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 FIFTH READER. 
 
 A SONG OF JOY. --^ 
 
 i-'^r^f 
 
 When the lit - tie lambs are springing, And the blos-soms come with May; 
 2. Cast off clouds of care and sor - row In a world of pure de - light; 
 
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 3. E'en the wan-d'rer, worn and wea - ry, Though he on his way must roam 
 
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 Who would think of dark to - mor-row When 
 
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 our hearts with them be gay; 
 to - day is fair and bright, 
 
 Feels his heart re - freshed and cheer-y. And 
 
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 1. with them be gay. . 
 
 2. is fair and bright. 
 
 3. a song of home. 
 
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 Let our hearts with them be gay. . 
 When to - day is fair and bright. 
 
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 And he sings a song of home. 
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FIFTH READER. 
 
 103 
 
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 FIFTH READER. 
 
 THE LORD'S OWN DAY. 
 
 Comodo. 
 P 
 
 Mendelssohn. 
 
 ■^^^^^m^^m 
 
 t^ b r p ^' t- y i' 
 
 1. The earth is hushed in si-lence,Its cares now flee a - way ; Let all things bow in 
 
 2. The bells are sweet-ly ringing,Their clear-toned voices say : Ye peo-ple come and 
 
 3. O call of love and du-ty! Who would not praise and pray, And thank the Lord of 
 
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 4. Hecheersthewea-ry-heart-ed, He shows the heavenly way To those who kneel be- 
 
 5. Come all ye thank-ful peo-ple ! Why should one soul de-lay To greet the Lord of 
 
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 rev - 'rence On this,the Lord's ownday,On 
 wor - ship On this,the Lord's own day,On 
 Heav-en On this,His chos-en day,On 
 
 this, 
 this, 
 this, 
 
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 on this, the Lord's own day ! 
 on this,the Lord's own day ! 
 on this,His chos - en day ! 
 
 fore Him 
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 Onthis,His ho 
 Onthis,His ho 
 
 7nf 
 
 ly day,On 
 ly day, On 
 
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 on this, His ho - ly day! 
 onthis,His ho - ly day! 
 
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FIFTH READER. 
 BLESSED HOME. 
 
 107 
 
 Afoderato. 
 
 K. ZOLLNER. 
 
 r— .-5— «^~-E— S-E«-i;-«— iFV — l^ 
 
 »me, how fair thou art ! Thou a-lone shalthave mv heart, Dear thv 
 
 ed home, how fair thou art ! Thou a-lone shalthave my heart, Dear tny 
 ed home, how fair thou art! Here are joys that ne'er de-part. Here the 
 
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 1. Bless - ed home, how fair thou art! Thou a-lone shalthave my heart, Dear thy 
 
 2. Bless - ed home, how fair thou art ! Here are joys that ne'er de - part. Here the 
 
 
 crags and snow-clad mountains, Dear thy crys-tal springs and fountains: Who from 
 perfumed breeze is blowing. Here the sil - ver streams are flow -ing, Here all 
 
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 crags and snow-clad mountains, Dear thy crys-tal springs and fountains: Who from 
 perfumed breeze is blowing, Here the sil - ver streams are flow -ing, Here all 
 
 P 
 
 
 thee would ever part ! Blessed home, how fair thou art ! Blessed home,how fair thou art ! 
 things delight the heart: — Blessed home,how fair thou art! Blessed home.how fair thou art! 
 
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 thee would ever part! Blessed home,how fair thou art ! Blessed home, how fair thou art ! 
 things delight the heart:— Blessed home,how fair thou art ! Blessed home,how fair thou art! 
 
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 FIFTH READER. 
 AUTUMN DAYS. 
 
 II 
 
 ::J=:i 
 
 SEt 
 
 nt^ 
 
 C. H. Dretsel 
 
 -^m 
 
 r 
 
 1. Autumn days are now be - fore us, Field and wood are brown and sere; 
 
 2. Now the bird for-sakes its cov - er, Oft is heard the hun - ter's gun; 
 
 m&: ^ — "^' 
 
 i=t 
 
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 3. Grain is gold-en, corn is yel - low. Blest hast been the fruit - ful ground ; 
 
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 Au-tumn skies are arch-ing o'er us, And the har-vest moonshines clear, 
 Quail and par-tridge fly - ing o - ver. Show that sum-mer days are done. 
 
 d: 
 
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 Boughs bend down with ap- pies mel-low, Plen - ty smiles on all a 
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 round. 
 
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 All things tell of Win-ter sad -ness. Yet we welcome you with glad-ness. 
 Rustling leaves aie 'round us fall - ing, And the crick -et shrill is call - ing. 
 
 ■-^ 
 
 nf 
 
 H 
 
 Nuts are fall -ing in a show-er; O, how rich is Autumn's dow - er! 
 
 
112 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 IN THE SWING. 
 
 -Wit 
 
 Andante grazioso 
 dolce. 
 
 B. LUTGEN. 
 
 dolce. ^ — - ~ ^ pp . 
 
 1. Swinging,gai -ly swing-ing, This bright Summer day, 
 
 2. All the flowers are bow- ing, Fresh and fair to see; 
 
 Birds are blithe- ly 
 . And the brook-let 
 
 Mg giz^-p^^^gj^a igpf^ 
 
 3. Borne as if on pin - ions Toward the a - zure sky, 
 
 High o'er earth's do- 
 
 iita 
 
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 -4 
 
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 a tempo, 
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 rit. mf w^^ 
 
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 sing - ing. Dull care has flown a- way. 
 flow - ing, Laughs out as if in glee. 
 
 See the branches bend -ing low, 
 Earth and sky are wondrous fair, 
 3. O what joy it is to swing. 
 
 ^^ 
 
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 :=^ 
 
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 min-ions We al-most seem to fly. 1.2.3. Swing, swing, swing, swing, 
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 Swaying,swaying to and fro ! Who would not be gay On this glad Summer day ! 
 
 Nev-er was a time so rare, — Who would not be gay On this glad Summer day ! 
 
 While the happy birdlings sing ! Who would not be gay On this glad Summer day ! 
 
 % 
 
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 swing, swing, swing, swing, All 
 
 gay On this glad Summer day ! 
 
 §i|ife 
 
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FIFTH READER. 
 
 113 
 
 62 
 
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114 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 64 
 
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 Andantino. 
 
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 VACATION SONG. 
 
 g 
 
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 R. Franz. 
 
 ^^EiElE^^El 
 
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 1. With joy be-yond all meas-iire, We- hail this day of pleas-ure, And 
 
 2. We've worked with firm en- deav- or, Withearn-est pur- pose ev - er, All 
 
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 3. We'll roam the wood-land bow - ers, And speed the hap - py hours By 
 
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 FIFTH READER. 
 
 -4--,-; 
 
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 raise a mer - ry strain, 
 through the long, long year, 
 
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 And raise a mer 
 
 r'^r 
 
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 ry strain : Let 
 All through the long, long year; With 
 
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 riv - er, mount, and shore, 
 
 By riv - er, mount and shore. Till 
 
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 all join in the cho - rus. Bright days are now be - fore 
 joy and sor - row blend - ed Our dai - ly tasks are end 
 
 us, Va - 
 ed, And 
 
 Au-tumn's gold - en weath - er Shall bring us all to - geth - er In 
 
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 ca - tion's come a - gain, Va - ca - ti'on's come a - 
 
 glad va - ca - tion's here. And glad va - ca - tion's 
 
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 gain 
 here. 
 
 '^^^^^^ 
 
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 this, our school, once more, 
 
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 In this, our school, once 
 
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 FIFTH READER. 
 
 THE WATER-LILY. 
 
 Moderate. 
 -P 
 
 German Melody. 
 
 
 the lake's broad breast, the lake's broad breast,The li 
 
 r 
 
 ly lies at 
 All through the sun - ny 
 So in - no - cent and 
 
 Up - on 
 
 9i±|^=s 
 
 2. She dreams the hours a -way, 
 
 3. O type of calm and rest. 
 
 the hours a -way, 
 of calm and rest, 
 
 ^: 
 
 s— s- 
 
 -^ 
 
 ?Ef3 
 
 -^ 
 
 1. Up 
 
 2. She 
 
 3. o 
 
 on the 
 
 lake's 
 
 breast 
 
 dreams hours 
 
 a 
 
 way, 
 
 type 
 
 of 
 
 rest, 
 
 The li - ly lies at 
 All through the sun - ny 
 So in - no - cent and 
 
 ^^0. 
 
 n 
 
 ^ M^^^ m^ 
 
 r 
 
 rest, Her pet - als un - clos-ing, 
 day; But when night's dark shad-ow 
 blest! Like thee I'd be liv-ing, 
 
 In beau - ty 
 
 Rests on wood 
 
 My no - blest 
 
 re 
 
 and 
 
 work 
 
 pos-ing, She 
 mead-ow, She 
 giv-ing, When 
 
 BSi 
 
 I 
 
 -=^^- 
 
 -^=P= 
 
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 rest, 
 day: 
 blest ! 
 
 r=i^ 
 
 Her pet - als un-clos - ing, 
 But when night's dark shadow 
 Like thee I'd be liv - ing, 
 
 In beau - ty re - pos - ing, She 
 Dost rest on wood and mead - ow, She 
 My no -blest work giv - ing, When 
 
 ^^ 
 
 ^1 tj 
 
 m 
 
 r^-^tr 
 
 tr^T 
 
 r-rr- 
 
 makes the world more fair, the world more fair, With fragrance pure and rare. 
 
 lifts to heaven her face, to heaven her face. In pu - ri - ty and grace, 
 clouds of care and strife, of care and strife. En-shroud my troub-led life! 
 
 ^^ 
 
 =1: 
 
 -^m 
 
 ggSj i 
 
 Isl 
 
 makes 
 
 the 
 
 world 
 
 more 
 
 lifts 
 
 to 
 
 heaven 
 
 her 
 
 clouds 
 
 of 
 
 care 
 
 an(^ 
 
 fair. With fra-grance pure and rare, 
 face, In pu - ri - ty and grace. 
 strife, En - shroud my trou -bled life! 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 117 
 
 PART THIRD.-PATRIOTIC SONGS. 
 
 AMERICA. 
 
 S. F. Smith. 
 
 Henry Carey. 
 
 ^^ 
 
 f 
 
 ^ 
 
 My 
 My 
 Let 
 Our 
 
 coun - try 
 na - tive 
 mu - sic 
 fa - thers' 
 
 't is of thee, Sweet land of lib 
 
 coun-try, thee — Land of the no 
 
 swell the breeze, And ring from all 
 
 God ! to Thee, Au - thor of lib 
 
 er - ty, 
 ble free— 
 the trees, 
 er - ty, 
 
 ii 
 
 :t 
 
 — S-- 
 
 f 
 
 I 
 
 ^ 
 
 t=\ 
 
 Of thee i snig ; 
 
 Thy name I love ; 
 
 Sweet freedom's song ; 
 
 To Thee we sing ; 
 
 -F 
 
 4=iF=t 
 
 — v- 
 
 Land where my fa - thers died ! Land of the 
 I love thy rocks and rills, Thy woods and 
 Let mor-tal tongues a - wake ; Let all that 
 Long may our land be bright, With freedom's 
 
 I 
 
 Pil-grims' pride ! From ev - 'ry moun-tain side, Let free-dom 
 
 tern - pled hills : My heart with rap - ture thrills. Like that a - 
 
 breathe par - take ; Let rocks their si - lence break. The sound pro- 
 
 ho - ly light ! Pro - tect us by Thy might. Great God, our 
 
 rmgl 
 bove. 
 long. 
 King! 
 
 pu 
 
 w 
 
 i=P« 
 
 fli^flfSlI 
 
ii8 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 ^fe 
 
 THE STAR-SPANGLED BANNER. 
 
 Samuel Arnold. 
 
 0: 
 
 4=^ 
 
 :^ 
 
 1 . Oh ! say, can you see, by the dawn's ear - ly light, What so 
 
 2. On the shore, dim - ly seen thro' the mist of the deep. Where the 
 
 3. And where is that band, who so vaunt-ing - ly swore, Mid the 
 
 Oh ! thus be 
 
 it 
 
 ev - er,when free-men shall stand. Be 
 
 i 
 
 =l=j: 
 
 W^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 proud - ly we hailed at the twi - light's last gleaming .''Whose broad 
 foe's haught-y host in dread si - lence re - pos - es, What is 
 hav - oc of war and the bat - tie's con - fu - sion, A 
 
 tween our lov'd home and the war's des - o - la - tion ! Blest with 
 
 g 
 
 1^=3 
 
 S 
 
 thro' the per - il - ous fight. O'er the 
 
 o'er the tow - er - ing steep, As it 
 
 they'd leave us no more.? Their 
 
 may the Heav'n-res - cued land, Praise the 
 
 stripes and bright stars, 
 that which the breeze, 
 home and a coun - try 
 vie - fry and peace, 
 
 t^- 
 
 W=^ 
 
 ram-parts we watch'd,were so gal - lant 
 fit - ful - ly blows,, half con - ceals, half 
 blood has wash'd out their foul foot - steps' pol 
 Power that hath made and pre-serv'd us a 
 
 ly stream-ing ! And the 
 dis - clos - es.? Now it 
 lu - tion ; No 
 na - tion ! Then 
 
FIFTH READER. 
 
 IK 
 
 ^^ 
 
 ^=^=^ z: 
 
 !^^ 
 
 rock - ets' red glare, the bombs burst -ing in air, Gave 
 
 catch - es the gleam of the morn-ing's first beam ; In full 
 
 ref - uge could save the hire - ling and slave From the 
 
 con - quer w^e must, when our cause it is just ; And 
 
 I 
 
 'p- 
 
 -z^- 
 
 proof thro' the night that our flag was still there : 
 
 glo - ry re - fleet - ed, now shines on the stream ; 
 
 ter - ror of flight, or the gloom of the grave; 
 
 this be our mot - to, "In God is our trust;" 
 
 j=^=HN 
 
 — 1-^ ^^- 
 
 Oh! 
 
 v^ix. say does that star - span 
 
 'T is the star - span - gled ban - ner, 
 
 And the star - span - gled ban - ner 
 
 And the star - span - gled ban - ner 
 
 gled 
 
 ban - 
 
 ner 
 
 yet 
 
 oh! 
 
 long 
 
 may 
 
 it 
 
 in 
 
 tri - 
 
 umph 
 
 shall 
 
 in 
 
 tri - 
 
 umph 
 
 shall 
 
 m 
 
 4^1^ 
 
 the 
 the 
 
 wave, O'er the land of 
 
 wave, O'er the land of 
 
 wave, O'er the land of the 
 
 wave. While the land of the 
 
 ^^g^ 
 
 t 
 
 free, and the home of the brave ! 
 free, and the home of the brave ! 
 free, and the home of the brave I 
 free, is the home of the brave! 
 Francis Scott Key. 
 
I20 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 g 
 
 Maestoso. 
 
 HAIL COLUMBIA! 
 
 Fyles. 
 
 ifciz^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 i 
 
 i'ti^ 
 
 1. Hail, Co - lum - bia! hap - py land! 
 
 2. Im - mor - tal pa - triots, rise once more! De 
 
 3. Sound, sound the trump of fame! 
 
 4. Be - hold the chief, who now com - mands, Once 
 
 i 
 
 -^ 
 
 Hail! 
 
 ye he 
 
 roes heav'n 
 
 - born 
 
 fend 
 
 your rights. 
 
 de - fend 
 
 your 
 
 Let . 
 
 . . Wash - 
 
 ing - ton*s 
 
 great 
 
 more 
 
 to serve 
 
 his coun 
 
 - try 
 
 Who 
 Let 
 
 band! 
 
 shore ; 
 
 name 
 
 stands, — The 
 
 i 
 
 m^ 
 
 -■m, 
 
 fought and bled in Free 
 
 no rude foe, with im 
 
 Ring thro' the world with loud 
 
 rock on which the storm 
 
 dom's 
 pious 
 ap - 
 will 
 
 cause, Who 
 hand, Let 
 
 plause ! 
 beat! The 
 
 i^ 
 
 *3 
 
 ^^ 
 
 fe 
 
 fought and bled in 
 
 no rude foe, with 
 
 Ring thro' the world with 
 
 rock on which the 
 
 Free - dom's cause. And 
 
 im - pious hand. In 
 
 loud ap - plause ! Let 
 
 storm will beat ! But 
 
 e; 
 
 ■^ 
 
 when 
 
 the 
 
 storm 
 
 of 
 
 war 
 
 was 
 
 gone 
 
 En 
 
 vade 
 
 the 
 
 shrine 
 
 where 
 
 sa 
 
 cred 
 
 lies. 
 
 Of 
 
 ev - 
 
 'ry 
 
 clime 
 
 to 
 
 Free ■ 
 
 ■ dom 
 
 dear, 
 
 . , 
 
 arm'd 
 
 in 
 
 vir. - 
 
 ■ tue, 
 
 firm 
 
 and 
 
 true. 
 
 His 
 
FIFTH READER 
 
 121 
 
 
 joyed 
 toil 
 Lis 
 hopes 
 
 the 
 and 
 ten 
 are 
 
 peace your 
 
 val 
 
 or 
 
 won, 
 
 Let 
 
 blood the well - earned prize, While 
 with a joy - ful . ear; With 
 
 fixed on heaven and you ! When 
 
 i 
 
 ^=F^ 
 
 W 
 
 -^1— f-- 
 
 in - de - pend-ence be our boast, Ev - er mind - ful 
 
 of - f'ring peace, sin - cere and just, In heav'n we place a 
 
 e - qual skill, with stead - y power, He gov - erns in the 
 
 hope was sink - ing in dis - may. When gloom ob - scured Co 
 
 r-et=j: 
 
 i 
 
 :± 
 
 ^S^.^ 
 
 what it cost, Ev - er grate - ful for the prize, 
 
 man - ly trust, That truth and jus - tice shall pre - vail, 
 
 fear - ful hour Of hor - rid war, or guides with ease 
 
 lum - bia's day, His stead - y mind, from chang - es free. 
 
 Chorus. 
 
 And 
 The 
 Re- 
 
 i 
 
 i=i 
 
 M 
 
 ^^ 
 
 -jtzgiit 
 
 Let its al - tar reach the skies, i . ^ 
 
 ev-'ry scheme of bond-age fail. 2. Uirm, u-nit - ed, let 
 lap-pier times of hon- est peace. 3. ( 
 
 hap 
 
 solved on death, or lib - er - ty. 4. 
 
 us be, 
 
 m 
 
 ^^^^ 
 
 :* 
 
 F^^g 
 
 Ral - lying round our 
 
 lib 
 
 ty! As a band of 
 
 mm 
 
 *^¥^ 
 
 £^ 
 
 S^ 
 
 ^P 
 
 broth-ers joined, Peace and safe - ty we shall find. 
 
 Joseph Hopkinson. 
 
122 
 
 FIFTH READER. 
 
 m 
 
 COLUMBIA, THE GEM OF THE OCEAN. 
 
 Maestoso. Words and melody by David T. Shaw. 
 
 -^ 
 
 1 . O Co - lum - bia ! the gem of the o - cean, 
 
 2. When war winged its wide des - o ° la - tion, 
 
 The 
 And 
 
 i 
 
 ^ 
 
 *=4: 
 
 -• — a P P 
 
 i=X 
 
 ^j^tef 
 
 3t=#: 
 
 ^' ^ ^ kid '^==' ' V- 
 
 home of the brave and the free, The shrine of each patriot's de-votion, A 
 threatened the land to de - form,The ark then of freedom'sfoundation, Co - 
 
 i 
 
 w- 
 
 ^ 
 
 trat 
 
 ^ 
 
 W^ 
 
 ±-^ 
 
 1=^ 
 
 ? 
 
 -y X -'i 
 
 ^ 
 
 1*- 
 
 world of-fers hom-age to thee. Thy man-dates make he - roes as 
 
 lum-bia,rode safe thro' the storm ; With her gar - lands of vic-t'ry a 
 
 ^^^^^^M 
 
 sem ■ 
 round 
 
 ble, When lib - er 
 
 her, When so proud-ly 
 
 =t3 
 
 fczMzii: 
 
 ty's form stands in view. Thy 
 
 she bore her brave crew, With her 
 
 m 
 
 S^5^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 ■f»-s- 
 
 ^3^ 
 
 s=£3 
 
 ^^ 
 
 ban-ners make tyr-an-ny tremble. When borne by the Red, White and Blue, 
 flag proudly floating before her, The boast of the Red, White and Blue. 
 Chorus. 
 
 ^ 
 
 -t 
 
 ^^^S 
 
 1^ 
 
 S 
 
 Whenboine by the Red, White andBlue, When borne by the Red, White and 
 The boast of the Red, White andBlue, The boast of the Red, White and 
 
 ■^ 
 
 Blue, 
 Blue, 
 
 Thy ban - ners make tyr - an - ny 
 
 With her flag proud - ly float - ing be 
 
 15= 
 
 S 
 
 ^ 
 
 w 
 
 f^—^ — 5^- 
 
 trem - ble, 
 fore her, 
 
 When borne by 
 The boast of 
 
 the Red, White and Blue ! 
 the Red, White and Blue ! 
 
M118275 
 
 M3 
 
 THE UNIVERSITY OF CAUFORNIA LIBRARY 
 
14 DAY USE 
 
 RETURN TO DESK FROM WHICH BORROWED j 
 
 EDUCATION-PSYCHOLOGY ! 
 LIBRARY 
 
 TEL. NO. 642-4209 
 
 This book is due on the last date stamped below, or 
 
 on the date to which renewed. 
 
 Renewed books are subjea to immediate recall. 
 
 DEC 14 197a 
 
 
 
 
 DEClZRtCD-^ ^^ 
 
 
 
 
 
 1 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 LD 21A-15m-ll,'72 General Library 
 (Q5761S10)476— A-32 University of California 
 
 Berkeley 
 
OLD FLAG 
 
 Words by 
 Frank L, Stanton. 
 
 Maestoso — not too fast. 
 
 YC 49388 
 
 FOREVER. 
 
 Musio by 
 Ijeila Frtmco 
 
 m 
 
 m 
 
 ^ 
 
 s 
 
 -#*- 
 
 t 
 
 *J-0 — - 
 
 -4 1 \—^—J 
 
 She's up there — Old Glo - ry — where light-nings are sped: She . 
 She's up there — Old glo - ry — how bright the stars stream I And the 
 
 r:\ 
 
 i 
 
 ^Si^ 
 
 ^ 
 
 iFii 
 
 '>- 
 
 *.- - n , - *: * 
 
 daz-zles the na- tions with rip-pies of red ; And she'll wave o'er us 
 
 stripes like red sig-nals of lib- er - ty gleam I And we dare for her 
 
 rii. , ^ 
 
 a tempo, i a^^^ 
 
 
 <9 
 
 
 liv- ing, or droop o'er us dead — The . flag of our coun-try for- ev - er. 
 liv- ing, or dream the last dream 'Neath the flag of our coun-try for- ev - er. 
 
 CHORUS a little faster. 
 
 « — m- 
 
 3t=Ji 
 
 Ei 
 
 iiri 
 
 ^m 
 
 K t 
 
 -a^--»- 
 
 ■?-« 
 
 i=^ 
 
 #— « 
 
 -0 #- 
 
 .^—0- 
 
 She's up there — Old Glo - ry- 
 
 :^ 
 
 rit. 
 
 No ty - rantrdealt scars — No blur on hei 
 ,^« tempo, mf ____-- f^^ 
 
 ^I'i^—^Z 
 
 3=^: 
 
 =«=:^ 
 
 :^ 
 
 t 
 
 bright - ness — no stain on her stars 1 The . brave blood of he-roes hath 
 
 slow and with expression, 
 
 L^ ^//. a tempo. 
 
 I 
 
 m 
 
 crim 
 
 aer of our coun - trv for - ev - er I 
 
 im-soned her bars — She's me flag of our coun - try for - ev | 
 Copyright, mdccoxcviii, by L«ila Frane«.