Quizzes & Puzzles27 mins ago
Hovis...
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.And do you also recall that there was a hymn written which used the same tune? It is called 'Going Home', and is sometimes chosen for funeral services.
The words? I thought you'd never ask!
Going home, going home,
I'm just going home.
Quiet-like, slip away-
I'll be going home.
It's not far, just close by;
Jesus is the Door;
Work all done, laid aside,
Fear and grief no more.
Friends are there, waiting now.
He is waiting, too.
See His smile! See His hand!
He will lead me through.
Morning Star lights the way;
Restless dream all done;
Shadows gone, break of day,
Life has just begun.
Every tear wiped away,
Pain and sickness gone;
Wide awake there with Him!
Peace goes on and on!
Going home, going home,
I'll be going home.
See the Light! See the Sun!
I'm just going home.
I've always though of it as "Goin' Home", since we sang it in the school choir some years prior to that. None of us really wanted to be in the choir and we certainly wouldn't admit to taking any real interest in it, but I doubt there was a single lad that wasn't moved, almost to tears, by that song. And when we sang it at the Philharmonic Hall, with the wonderful acoustics there, it was stunning. I can still remember it clear as a bell, and some of the other stuff we sang too, and I bet each and every one that sang there that night can as well.
The choirmaster's name was Mr Flood and he managed to get the best out of a bad bunch - we started as no-hopers and by the time we sang that night we were damn near professionals. If you're out there, Mr Flood (John?), thankyou - you gave me a true appreciation of music and an experience of singing I couldn't have bought for any amount of money.
Robert G, I'm not really a Snook, it's just something that popped into my mind when I was trying to come up with a username. In fact I didn't realise it was such an esteemed name. I feel quite honoured now!
There's a couple of Snooks here: http://www.belchalwell.org.uk/1851-census.asp
If you scroll down to No.42, you'll see Charles and his wife Ann, and it's in the Census of 1851, for Belchalwell, Dorset. Don't know if they're ancestors of yours, but if you haven't already researched the name this might be a worthwhile place to start. ;o)