Away In A Manger Piano Notes With Letters

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Su Mcdowall

unread,
Aug 4, 2024, 7:38:16 PM8/4/24
to cirguaboothsand
Thisversion of Away in a Manger for easy piano is accessible for beginner piano players because it has a slow tempo, is in a simple key signature (F major) and the left hand is straightforward with no complicated rhythms. The melody does have some awkward moments where you will need to change hand position as the range of the melody is just over an octave (from middle C up a 9th to D).

The intermediate version involves more movement in the left hand and the addition of accompanying notes in the right hand. This is certainly more difficult than the easy version, but is a good stepping stone for any piano player who would like to develop the ability to play 4 part hymn tune or choral arrangements in the future.

I have also left the fingering blank so that you can work out what feels best for you as a player.


Verse 1

Away in a manger no crib for a bed

The little Lord Jesus lay down His sweet head

The stars in the bright sky looked down where He lay

The Little Lord Jesus asleep on the hay


When I offer this song to my students, I frequently say apologetically, "This is kind of a baby song..." and then am surprised, again, when they jump on it! It does have an irresistibly sweet melody.


I have put chord symbols above each measure where the chords change. This was at the request of one of my students who wished to play a duet at church with a friend, and only needed the chord symbols to figure out some kind of secondo part.




This kind of pattern seems so simple and obvious to advanced musicians that it is tempting to push it too soon onto students who are not ready for it. Play with chord inversions a lot first; then they will have a frame of reference for what is happening in this measure.


This beautiful song book for piano & voice "Esther, For Such a Time as This", available as a digital download, tells the riveting story of the time when Jews in ancient Persia faced a foe named Haman, and how a brave young queen risked her life to save her people.


And when they start reading white-key notes on the staff, this is a fun easy resource to say each week, "Choose a new black-key song at home this week and figure it out to show me next lesson!" They will be spending more time at the piano.






Web away in a manger: Easy piano tutorial with letters. Web learn how to play away in a manger with easy piano letter notes sheet music for beginners, suitable to play on. Learn how to play away in a manger in this easy piano tutorial for.


Web away in a manger: Web learn how to play away in a manger with easy piano letter notes sheet music for beginners, suitable to play on. Easy piano tutorial with letters. Web away in a manger: Learn how to play away in a manger in this easy piano tutorial for.


No Copyright - United StatesThe organization that has made the Item available believes that the Item is in the Public Domain under the laws of the United States, but a determination was not made as to its copyright status under the copyright laws of other countries. The Item may not be in the Public Domain under the laws of other countries. Please refer to the organization that has made the Item available for more information.


True, the fathers told it to the generation following, andthe generation has been faithful to the traditions committedto it. What I have to say in the aforesaid gossip over theconfidential fire is of what I saw and heard and did - andwas in that hoary Long Ago.


It was my lot to know the Old South in her prime, and to seeher downfall. Mine to witness the throes that racked herduring four black and bitter years. Mine to watch the dawnof a new and vigorous life and the full glory of a restoredUnion. I shall tell of nothing that my eyes did not see, anddepict neither tragedy nor comedy in which I was not castfor a part.


For three years after the elopement the name of hisdaughter's husband was never uttered in his hearing. Nordid she enter the house, until at twenty, her proud spiritbowed but not broken by sorrows she never retailed, shecame back to the old roof-tree on the eve of her confinementwith her first and only child. He was born there andreceived the grandfather's name in full. From that hour hewas adopted as a son of the house by the stern old Puritan,and brought up at his knees.


With the shrewd sense and sturdy independencecharacteristic of the true New-Englander, the mother wasnever forgetful of the fact that her boy was half-orphanedand dependent upon his grandfather's bounty, and beganearly to equip him for a single-handed fight with the world.


Within a decade I have studied an authentic and detailedgenealogy of the Hawes stock from which my grandfathersprang. It is a fine old English family, and the Americanbranch, in which appear the birth and death of JesseHawes, of Maine, numbers many men of distinction invarious professions. It is a comfort to a believer in heredityto be assured that the tree was sound at heart, in spite ofthe warped and severed bough.


At twenty-five he was an active member of the FirstPresbyterian Church in Richmond, established and built upby Rev. John Holt Rice, D. D., who was also the founder ofUnion Theological Seminary, now situated in Richmond.The young New-Englander was, likewise, a teacher in theSunday school - the first of its kind in Virginia, conductedunder the auspices of Doctor Rice's church - a partner in aflourishing mercantile house, and engaged to be married toMiss Judith Anna Smith, of Olney, a plantation on theChickahominy, five miles from the city.


I have a miniature of my father, painted upon ivory a fewyears after his marriage. It is that of a handsome man, withdeeply set gray eyes, very dark hair, and a well-cut, resolutemouth. The head is nobly shaped, the forehead full andbroad. His face was singularly mobile, and deeply lined, evenin youth.


Doctor Rice, whose wife was my mother's first cousin,appreciated young Hawes's character and ability; theparsonage was thrown open to him at all times, and withinthe hospitable precincts he first met his future wife.


Late in the seventeenth century, William Smith, ofDevonshire, a lineal descendant of the brother and heir ofCapt. John Smith of Pocahontas fame, married Ann Sterlingin England, and, emigrating to America, pitched his movingtent, first in Gloucester, then in Henrico County. His cousin,bearing the same name, took up land in Powhatan, naminghis homestead for the hapless Earl of Montrose. Thequestionable custom of the intermarriage of cousinsprevailed in the clan, as among other old Virginia families.


My maternal grandmother was petite, refined in feature,bearing, and speech, and remarkable in her day forintellectual vivacity and moral graces. Her chief associatesof the other sex were men of profound learning,distinguished for services done to Church and State. Amongthem were the founders of the Presbyterian Church inVirginia. The Smiths had seceded from the EstablishedChurch of England before Thomas Jefferson rent it fromthe State.


Her husband was the proprietor of broad acres, a man ofbirth and fair education, high-minded, honorable, anddevoted to his delicate wife. Nevertheless, the daintychtelaine must, sometimes, have missed her eruditeadmirers, and wished in her heart that the worthy planterwere, intellectually, more in tune with herself.


In the shade of the bower formed by these, Mrs. JudithSmith sat with her embroidery on summer days, her littlename-daughter upon a cricket beside her, reading aloudby the hour. It was rather startling to me to learn that atthirteen, the precocious child read thus Pamela, TheChildren of the Abbey, and Clarissa to the sweet-facedwhite-souled matron. Likewise The Rambler, Rasselas,Shakespeare, and The Spectator (unexpurgated). ButYoung's Night Thoughts, Thomson's Seasons, ParadiseLost, Pope's Essays, and the Book of Books qualifiedwhatever of evil might have crept into the tender imaginationfrom the strong meat, spiced. Cowper was a living presenceto mother and girl. My mother could repeat pages of TheTas from memory fifty years after she recited them to hergentle teacher, and his hymns were the daily food of thetwain.


The Olney family drove in the heavy coach over heavyroads five miles in all weathers to the First PresbyterianChurch of Richmond. My grandfather had helped raise themoney for the building, as his letters show, and was one ofthe elders ordained soon after the church was organized.


MY DEAR MR. SMITH, - I am sitting by my dear Josiah,who continues ill. His fever rises about dark. The chills areless severe, and the fever does not last as long as it did aweek ago. Still, he suffers much, and is very weak. He hastaken a great deal of medicine with very little benefit. Hisgums are sore. The doctor thinks they are touched by thecalomel. He was here this morning, and advised some oiland then the bark.


We have been looking for you ever since yesterday.Poor fellow! He longs to see you - and so do I! I was up lastnight, and I have been to-night very often - indeed, almostconstantly - at the door and the window, listening for thesound of your horse's feet. I have written by post, by JohnMorton, and by Mr. Mosby. I think if you had receivedeither of the notes I should see you to-night, unlesssomething serious is the matter. I am so much afraid thatyou are ill as to be quite unhappy.


My love to my dear girls and all the family. My dear!My heart is sore! Pray that God may support me. I amtoo easily depressed - particularly when you are not withme. I long to see you! I hope I shall before you receivethis. God bless you!


The few letters written by my grandfather that havebeen preserved until now show him to have been a manof sincere piety, sterling sense, and affectionatedisposition. One herewith given betrays what a wealthof tenderness was poured out upon his fairy-like wife. Itlikewise offers a fair sketch of the life of a well-to-doVirginia planter of that date.


I hope that you will not be uneasy about my lonelysituation. Every one must know that it cannot be agreeable,but when I consider that you may be benefited by it, andeven that your health may be restored (which we havereason to hope for), what would I not forego to secure sogreat a blessing!

3a8082e126
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages