Et Cætera [excerpt]
Among hymns President McKinley’s
greatest favourite came from—the London Oratory. It is one of Father
Faber’s, that has found a wide acceptance among even those outside
the limits of the Church. Very well known in Anglican rectories
such as that which he himself sacrificed, in Presbyterian manses
and Salvation Army quarters even, are the verses:
There’s a wideness in God’s mercy
Like the wideness of the sea;
There’s a kindness in His justice
Which is more than Liberty.
For the love of God is broader
Than the measure of man’s mind,
And the heart of the Eternal
Is most wonderfully kind.
The President, according to the testimony of one of his friends,
“knew the hymn by heart, and was often heard humming it through
when alone in his library.” A little link is thus furnished between
the Oratory and Faber and Newman by the death of the President,
over whose body the hymn, “Lead, kindly Light!” was sung.
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When the band of a French man-of-war
played the “Marseillaise,” out of respect to the passing of President
McKinley’s coffin, few people, perhaps, knew or remembered that
they were hearing Church music. Yet such was the case. Not so very
long ago the manuscript of l’Esther, an oratorio composed
by a choir-master of the Cathedral of St. Omer in the seventeenth
century, was found to contain, note for note, the music of the national
air.
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