Carrie Jacobs-Bond

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Carrie Jacobs-Bond was born in 1862 in Wisconsin. Her flame of the Divine Mother held the balance for the young men who went to war in the First Word War. And there are many stories of them playing her music as comfort and inspiration on the battlefield.

 
Part of a series of articles on
Composers
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   Capricorn   
Giacomo Puccini

   Aquarius   
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Franz Schubert
Felix Mendelssohn

   Pisces   
Frederick Chopin
George Frideric Handel

   Aries   
Johann Sebastian Bach
Joseph Haydn
Sergei Rachmaninoff

   Taurus   
Johannes Brahms
Franz Lehár
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

   Gemini   
Edward Elgar
Charles Gounod
Edvard Grieg
Robert Schumann
Richard Wagner

   Cancer   
Stephen Foster
Gustav Mahler

   Leo   
Sigmund Romberg
Claude Debussy
Carrie Jacobs Bond
Adolphe Adam

   Virgo   
Amilcare Ponchielli
Giacomo Meyerbeer
Johann Pachelbel

   Libra   
Ralph Vaughan Williams
Camille Saint-Saëns
Giuseppe Verdi

   Scorpio   
Johann Strauss, Jr.
Dominico Scarlatti
Franz Liszt
Georges Bizet

   Sagittarius   
Ludwig van Beethoven
Cesar Franck
Edward Alexander MacDowell
Mascagni
Jean Sibelius
Arthur Rubenstein

Carrie Jacobs-Bond

She expresses the longing of the Mother flame for the Father, for she, in her own life, lost her husband to a very untimely death. When she was 32, her husband, Dr. Bond was pushed over in the snow by some frolicking children. He suffered an injury and passed on within five days. She knew that nostalgia, and she lived to serve his Spirit as the Spirit of the Father. His going on enabled her to bring forth the heights of the feminine ray because she had to support their son. And in her son she found comfort in the Christ.

Her music

Hers were works of the heart. Among her songs were “Just A-wearyin’ for You,” “I Love You Truly,” and “A Perfect Day.”

“Just A-wearyin’ for You”

“Just A-wearyin’ for You” captured the longing for the Father, as well as the longing of the boys on the battlefield for their homeland.

Just a-wearyin’ for you
All the time a-feelin’ blue
Wishing for you, wonderin’ when
You’ll be coming home again,
Restless, don’t know what to do,
Just a-wearyin’ for you.

Mornin’ comes, the birds awake,
Used to sing so for your sake
But there’s sadness in the notes
That come trillin’ from their throats.
Seem to feel your absence, too,
Just a-wearyin’ for you.

Evening comes, I miss you more,
When the dark gloom’s round the door,
Seems just like you ought to be
There to open it for me.
Latch goes tinklin’, thrills me through,
Sets me wearyin’ for you.

 
Carrie Jacobs-Bond and her son, Frederick

“I Love You Truly”

We use the singing of “I Love You Truly” as a tribute to Gautama Buddha, to his fatherly love to us, and we remember that Gautama Buddha is the highest initiate of the World Mother upon the planet. He tells us that he sits in meditation upon the feminine ray, and by the magnet of his Father consciousness, the forcefield of Spirit within him, he magnetizes the energies of Omega. Hence, he is the Buddha, the Buddhic Light of the world.

I love you truly, truly dear,
Life with its sorrow, life with its tear
Fades into dreams when I feel you are near
For I love you truly, truly dear.
Ah! Love, ’tis something to feel your kind hand
Ah! Yes, ’tis something by your side to stand;
Gone is the sorrow, gone doubt and fear,
For you love me truly, truly dear.

“A Perfect Day”

When you come to the end of a perfect day,
And you sit alone with your thought,
While the chimes ring out with a carol gay
For the joy that the day has brought,
Do you think what the end of a perfect day
Can mean to a tired heart,
When the sun goes down with a flaming ray,
And the dear friends have to part?

Well, this is the end of a perfect day,
Near the end of a journey, too;
But it leaves a thought that is big and strong,
With a wish that is kind and true.
For mem’ry has painted this perfect day
With colors that never fade,
And we find at the end of a perfect day
The soul of a friend we’ve made.

Here is something she wrote about “A Perfect Day”:

During this time I had become very tired of “The End of a Perfect Day,” of too many cartoons and pictures that seemed to strike me as most unnecessary, such as “This is the End of a Perfect Day” with a picture of a road and five or six people staggering along so intoxicated they could not see where they were going; or a crowd of drunkards falling out of a taxi all singing “This is the End of a Perfect Day.” It was the war that made this a serious song to me. It was meant to be a happy song, but it has been used in some of the saddest episodes of my life, and its other side has been plainly marked to me. It was sung at the funeral of my dear friend Walter Gale. It had always been loved by him. There came letters from boys overseas, hundreds of them.

She goes on to quote from several of those letters. Here is one:

“Yesterday was a wonderful and terrible day to me. I went over the top for the first time. We were all inspired to do it, and we never realized anything about what it would be to meet the Germans. We simply marched on. When I had gone over and come back I remember running as fast as I could back to my bunk. And I heard a voice, that voice was singing, ‘This is the End of a Perfect Day’ and it was my voice. I have just time to write this little note to tell you that the song must have encouraged me to live.”

In another letter there was a clipping from Glasgow from a dear mother, who said:

My son has made the great sacrifice. Jamie has gone. He was buried yesterday. The last time we saw our boy he was waving his cap to us, and he was marching away never to come back. And as he was looking at me he was singing “The End of a Perfect Day.”

Then there was a letter from Ireland, from little Jean Craig, who gave up her stenographic work to sing for the boys in the hospitals. We corresponded for a long time during the war, and though I never saw or heard her I know she must have been a sweet, sweet singer. This is one of the stories she wrote me. She had gone into the hospital where the boys had been taken who had been wounded on the battleships by bombs, and one boy whom she remembered had asked her to sing. She sang “This is the End of a Perfect Day.” The boy asked her if she knew any more songs by Mrs. Bond, and she replied that she did not. “Well,” he said, “I’m going to die, and I want to give you something. This is the one little treasure that I have.” With that he took from under his pillow a little book of seven songs. He had carried it inside his jacket all during his service. He had been rescued from the water and the leaves of the book were water soaked. But as he gave it to Miss Craig, he said, “I have taken the best care of it I could. I am sure if you will write to Mrs. Bond she will send you another copy.” I did send her a copy, and many copies, and she sang my song for months.

“A Perfect Day” is for the soul’s reunion with the Presence. It is the perfect day for which we are all yearning; the day of our ascension.

Her life

One commentator on her life says that in age of war, disillusionment, when jazz was being born and life was very sophisticated, Carrie Jacobs-Bond dared to say the simple truths, the simple beauties, and by them she brought people back to the heart, to an appreciation of nature, and the value of friends, of friendships, and of just the clean living that we feel when we commune with nature. And so he says, “Sentimentality wears well when it is honest sentimentality. Mrs. Bond’s life has proven it.”

I don’t think it is sentimentality. I think it is the victory of the flow of fire in water.

The life of Carrie Jacobs Bond was a perfect day, a perfect life. So by the absence of the father, the mother is forced to bring forth the Law of the Father, His knowledge, His wisdom, His service to Life.

She is a beautiful soul. Her ascension was announced in Los Angeles through Sanat Kumara, and it took place during during the conference in Los Angeles in November 1966. You can feel her ascended Presence as her music plays.

Sources

Elizabeth Clare Prophet, “Music of Leo,” November 4, 1973.