Surge la aurora

Representative text cannot be shown for this hymn due to copyright.

Translator: Gaylord E. Smith

(no biographical information available about Gaylord E. Smith.) Go to person page >

Author: Eleanor Farjeon

Eleanor Farjeon, (born Feb. 13, 1881, London--died June 5, 1965, Hampstead, London), English writer for children whose magical but unsentimental tales, which often mock the behaviour of adults, earned her a revered place in many British nurseries. The daughter of a British novelist and granddaughter of a U.S. actor, Eleanor Farjeon grew up in the bohemian literary and dramatic circles of London. Attending opera and theatre at 4 and writing on her father’s typewriter at 7, Farjeon came to public attention at 16 as the librettist of an opera, with music by her brother Harry, which was produced by the Royal Academy of Music. Her success with Nursery Rhymes of London Town (1916), simple tunes originally for adults but adapted and sung i… Go to person page >

Text Information

First Line: Surge la aurora
Author: Eleanor Farjeon
Translator: Gaylord E. Smith
Meter: 5.5.5.4 D
Language: Spanish
Copyright: Letra: © 1931 David Higham Associates, Ltd.; Traducción: © 1999 Gaylord E. Smith

Tune

BUNESSAN

BUNESSAN is a Gaelic tune that was first published (melody only) in Lachlan Macbean's Songs and Hymns of the Gael (1888) as a setting for Mary Macdonald's carol "Child in the Manger." The tune is named after Macdonald's birthplace on the Isle of Mull, Scotland. BUNESSAN is also well known as the set…

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Instances

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Las Voces del Camino #10

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