Friday, December 22, 2023

Christmas Carols From Germany We Enjoy

 While researching this year’s Christmas novella, Rose, in the Christmas Quilt multi-author series, I wanted one of the characters to teach the other about the holiday.

Rose is Scottish. Because of a proclamation made in the Reformation by Oliver Cromwell, celebrating Christ’s Mass was banned in England and Scotland starting in 1647. (The ban was lifted in the UK 15 years later, but remained in Scotland for another 300 years.) The day was spent like any other and most people worked the regular jobs. So all that Berrin shows her is new and exciting.

In this Beauty-and-the-Beast-themed story, I wanted the hero, Berrin, to expose Rose to new traditions as their friendship advanced. He is of German heritage and found a robust community of his folk when he bought the blacksmith shop in Butte City, Montana. He’s part of the Liederkrantz Society (a wreath of songs), formed in 1876, and the group performed at community events and visited the historical equivalent of rest homes in the city to bring holiday cheer. The tree, laden with miners’ candles and other decorations, was first decorated in 1876 in a hall where the German community met.

an illusion of what real candles look like on a tree

 Here’s a little background on two famous carols of German origin.

Stille Nacht (Silent Night), was first a poem written in 1816 by Father Joseph Mohr. His friend, Franz Gruber, set the poem to music and the pair performed it with a simple guitar accompaniment at a midnight Christmas Mass two years later in Austria. The song became instantly popular and was translated into many languages (300 at last count) but the name of the author was lost to history. Then, in 1995, Mohr’s original manuscript of the poem resurfaced, and the proper credit was given to the carol.

 

O Tannenbaum (O Christmas Tree), was written in 1824 by Ernst Anschütz, a schoolteacher in Liepzig, who based it on a 16th century folk song by Melchior Franck. By the middle of the 19th century, the song was tied to the Christmas tree and much loved in many other countries.

Spinster Rose MacEwen is the shy daughter in the large family of a prominent banker. All her life, her stutter has kept her from experiencing a normal social life like her sisters have. Although she’s the oldest daughter, Rose rarely talks with anyone outside her large family. Her mother believes no man will ever want her because a woman who can’t act serve as hostess won’t aid a husband’s career. Rather than argue, she keeps her thoughts bottled up inside. For years, she has sat at her grandmother’s side and learned the art of quilting. Rose pours her emotions into making quilts that she donates for charitable causes. But what she yearns for is the chance to converse with others in the community about what’s in her heart.

Blacksmith Berrin Harimann is most at ease in his world of heat and toil. No one bothers him while he’s wresting useful objects from blocks of metal. Those who come to his dark shop don’t linger after transacting their business. A disfiguring injury five years earlier robbed him of his fiancée. Rather than make excuses for a family who couldn’t look him in the eye, he moved west and set up shop in the Silver Bow Creek Valley. The pain from his burn scar now resides in his lonely heart and festers because of what’s missing from his life.

When the pulley on her quilt frame breaks, Rose ventures outside the family mansion in search of a blacksmith. Berrin looks up from his forge and sees an elegant lady in his shop doorway. Their gazes meet, and she steps into his world, bringing light. They connect instantly, and their fate seems set. But what chance does this pair have when everyone tells them they are not suited? Can their budding love withstand the expectations of her family and society’s standards?

 

Amazon  

and in KU

Best wishes to all for a happy holiday season

subscribe here to my newsletter 

OR

follow where you’re most active

https://www.twitter.com/lcarrollbradd

https://www.facebook.com/linda.carrollbradd

http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/1806413.Linda_Carroll_Bradd

https://www.bookbub.com/authors/linda-carroll-bradd

https://www.amazon.com/author/lindacarroll-bradd

Looking forward to a fantastic 2024



No comments:

Post a Comment