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Updated: June 17, 2025


Neither spoke; they did not care for words and the only expression which framed itself audibly was that oft repeated jubilate of health and youth, "How beautiful it is to live!"

This contribution came, piecemeal, from several feasting mouths together. "Oh! the Housatonic blue Hous-a-tonic!" Pemrose bent demurely over her flapjack and cocoa, curling her toes under her as she recalled her view of it from the Devil's Chair. "And what about the second Get Together when is that to be?" she asked. "A week from Saturday: Jubilate!

In 1892, when she brought out her mass in E flat at the Handel and Haydn concerts, she was on the programme for the piano part of Beethoven's Choral Fantasie, and the ovation she received on her appearance will not soon be forgotten by those present. Her "Jubilate" cantata was written for the dedication of the women's building at the Chicago Exposition, and scored a great success there.

She fell on her knees in an exalted, jubilate spirit. She was more like a Praise-the-Lord psalm of David than like a young girl of the nineteenth century. And yet close behind her, a little to the left, was Bero on his knees too, at his pater nosters. By and by the music began.

As man grows more intellectual, the power of managing him by his intellect and his moral nature, in utter contempt of all appeals to his mere animal instincts of pain, must go on pari passu. And, if a "Te Deum," or an "O, Jubilate!" were to be celebrated by all nations and languages for any one advance and absolute conquest over wrong and error won by human nature in our times, yes, not excepting

High mass is, even to the eye of a heretic, a very splendid ceremony; and the music in this outlandish corner was unexpectedly good, every thing considered; in the church of La Merced, especially, they had a very fine organ, and the congregation joined in the Jubilate with very good taste.

There was no repression now; the Ark fairly rang with the sonorous strains of that wild Jubilate. They sang: "Light in the darkness, sailor, Day is at hand; See, o'er the foaming billows, Fair haven stands." Their voices rolling in at the chorus with the resistless sweep of the ocean-waves: "Pull for the shore, sailor, Pull for the shore; Heed not the rolling waves, But bend to the oar:"

Shout amain, exalt your voices, stamp your feet, jubilate, Organ Mountains! and roll your Te Deums round the world! What though, for more than five thousand five hundred years, this grand harbour of Rio lay hid in the hills, unknown by the Catholic Portuguese?

In another respect, also, is it Memnonian, that, whenever should rest upon its features the morning sunlight, we should surely await its responsive requiem or its trembling jubilate. These, too, are Memnonian, as is also that infinite distance which seems to interpose between its subtile meanings and the very possibility of interpretation.

No presents were accepted. Bishop McLaren and Eleen crossed the ocean for the occasion, and a warm welcome was given them by the great circle of friends. Tom was Edward's best man, and Eleen was Alice's bridesmaid. The great choir sang the grand old "Marriage Jubilate," and the two bishops made them one.

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