In this slot we have previously invited
John Henry Newman,
King David,
Charles Wesley, and
Christina
Rossetti to attend masterclasses on how to write a good "modern" hymn.
Today, we are pleased to welcome William Williams, author of
Guide me, O thou great Jehovah (or possibly
...Redeemer). In fact, Bill, you wrote this
song originally in Welsh?
WW: Arglwydd, arwain trwy'r anialwch!
Fi, bererin gwael ei wedd...
E: Er, yes, thank you. Of course I speak Welsh fluently, but
for the benefit of my readers we'll continue in English, if you don't mind.
WW: Not at all, old fruit.
E: Now, here is the first verse you wrote, in a popular translation:
Guide me, O Thou great Redeemer,
Pilgrim through this barren land;
I am weak, but Thou art mighty;
Hold me with Thy powerful hand:
Bread of Heaven, bread of Heaven
Feed me till I want no more.
Feed me till I want no more.
WW: Yes, and it's usually sung to the stirring tune of Cwm Rhondda.
E: No good, I'm afraid. Too many ideas crammed into one verse, and the
tune is not one that you can clap your hands to. Liturgical dancers
also find it a bit tricky to participate.
Strictly Cwm Dancing.
WW: Well, I didn't have the benefit of modern musical scholarship, Eccles. Can
you help?
E: Yes. Let's change the tune first. How about a song that people can jump to,
like Colonel Bogey?
The best tune for today's hymn.
WW: Is that the one about Hitler's deficiencies?
E: Well, in some traditions, but we can adapt your hymn to this too. Note how we
just use the first line, and repeat it several times. Thus we don't overload
the hymn with ideas!
Guide me, thou great Re-de-e-mer!
Guide me, thou great Re-de-e-mer!
Guide me, oh guide me, guide me,
Oh guide me, guide me, oh guide me, ha-ha!
WW: I don't remember writing "Ha-ha!"
E: Well I would have said "Ch-ch" but Paul Inwood might have complained
that I'd pinched one of his deeper theological ideas. We need something clunky
to end on.
WW: What happens in Verse 2? "Pilgrim through this barren land" doesn't scan.
E: We can get round that.
I am a jolly pilgrim, Lord!
I am a jolly pilgrim, Lord!
I am a jolly pilgrim,
A jolly pilgrim, a pilgrim, ho-ho!
Like the surprise ending?
I am a jolly pilgrim, Lord!
WW: Well, I didn't see that coming.
E: Note that the verse is now mostly about YOU, and not about God.
WW: So would Verse 3 ("I am weak, but thou art mighty") now be
better if it were something like I am - a pretty useless chap?
E: No, that's not inclusive language, Bill. Maybe, I don't - feel very well some days.
Still about you, of course. But you know what the real problem with your hymn is?
WW: I'd be very grateful if you could tell me, Eccles.
E: It doesn't mention light, sunrise, shining, etc. These are very popular
with modern hymnwriters.
WW: Well...
Sunrise - I like the shining light!
Sunrise - I like the shining light!
Sunrise, I like the sunrise,
I like the sunrise, the sunrise, hee-hee!
Bring me sunshine...
E: Well, we've come a long way from your original hymn, but I'm sure that
our new version is a great improvement.
WW: Eccles, thank you very much.
E: My pleasure, Bill.