Gwahoddiad


Old Trevor’s funeral was held at Prestatyn Church. I know the Church well, mostly negative memories of family funerals for my grandparents , parents  and brother all had their final services there.
The church was cold and I was thankful for my new woollen coat.

I spied Animal Helper Pat and walked in with her, there was a good turn out given Trevor’s age
The young vicar Gregor performed the service after testing the microphones in the pulpits with a brusque 
testing ! Testing ! 
My mother would have frowned at that.
And in the half silence before service I remembered my grandmother being supported up the aisle by my mother and Uncle Jim at my grandad’s funeral
She was wailing “ My boy, ,my poor boy!” 
That was a bad funeral

Trevor’s was an uplifting one. 
A long eulogy read by Canon John Evans centred upon a life well enjoyed and lived but it was kind of sad to see the tiny coffin, just a little bigger than a child’s being wheeled past covered in lilies. 

The congregation sang Abide with me well and the Welsh hymn Gwahoddiad passably but it is really a hymn that needs a totally Welsh speaking congregation to do it proud, having said that I could hear Animal Helper Pat’s sweet soprano mingling in with my sudden bass . And a few Welsh voices at the back lifted the harmony enough for it to be moving.


I didn’t stay around the Church door after the service as so many do.
I find all that really embarrassing.
I walked around the Church and looked briefly at my parent’s Gravestone which lay unattended and cold looking, before heading off for home. 
My new coat keeping me warm was a comfort on a bittersweet day.

45 comments:

  1. Anonymous3:59 pm

    I just love the male voice choir, beautiful.

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  2. Anonymous4:09 pm

    The first paragraph "my new Wooden Coat"
    Surely it was the deceased wearing a wooden coat and nt you!

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  3. Sounds like Trevor's friends and family gave him a good sendoff. May he rest in peace, his long journey done.

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  4. I was fond of Trevor and if I lived nearby I should like to have chatted with him - His spirit light may remain where he was happy x 🌄

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    1. He was a big chatter….well into his 90s he’d walk 2 miles around tge village and would stop yo talk to chic Eleanor

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  5. Barbara Anne5:05 pm

    I'm glad that Trevor had an uplifting send off and that there were enough Welsh singers to harmonize. Abide with Me is one of my favorite hymns.
    I'd have walked you home.

    Hugs!

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  6. A long life, well lived. He would have appreciated your presence, and perhaps been surprised at how well you scrub up! xx

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  7. The video is not showing for me but I have no doubt the service would have been very moving.

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  8. Oh John, I'm glad your new coat was a comfort to you.To me(and it seems to you, too) all funerals have a sadness about them.
    May lovely and light hearted thoughts fill the rest of your time for a while - Mary

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    1. Yes…I need a little frivolity , we all do

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  9. There are beautiful harmonies in that hymn.

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    1. Yes and I’ve been to many a Welsh funeral where they are naturally met by the congregation

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  10. It sounds like a beautiful farewell, but it’s never easy no matter what the circumstances. And given your history there, I can imagine how challenging it must have been. Such a moving hymn. I think I’d rather not know the translation (although it comes from an originally American hymn).

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    1. Jo in Auckland6:43 pm

      It's interesting you say it comes from an originally American hymn, as it was written by a Scottish/Anglican cleric Henry Francis Lyte in 1847 but sometimes sung to another tune written by William Monk. The name of which escapes me right now.

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    2. Wiki isn’t gospel but……
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gwahoddiad

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    3. Gwahoddiad" is a Welsh hymn of American origin.

      "Gwahoddiad" (Welsh for 'invitation'), also known as Arglwydd Dyma Fi and by its first line Mi glywaf dyner lais, was originally the English-language gospel song "I Am Coming, Lord", the first line of which is I hear thy welcome voice. The English words and the tune were written in 1872 by the American Methodist minister and gospel songwriter Lewis Hartsough (1828–1919) during a revival meeting at Epworth, Iowa, where Hartsough was minister.[1] Hartsough was musical editor of The Revivalist, a collection of hymns which had begun in 1868 and continued through 11 editions.

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    4. Jo in Auckand7:56 am

      Well I never...you learn something new every day!

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    5. Nerdy musical fact: many, many hymn lyrics fit against many, many hymn tunes, as the metre is really similar. So all of it could well be true!

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  11. Anonymous6:28 pm

    You seem surrounded by sadness and death at the moment
    Do you need a belly laugh?

    Lee

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    1. Oh yes……a real good belly laugh
      I’ve got tickets to IM SORRY I HAVENT A CLUE soon !!!

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  12. I like those simple words on Trevor's "Order of Service":-
    "With love we remember".

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    1. Yes…economical , which is very Welsh

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  13. My only experience of a funeral in Wales was at a crem near Swansea. The poor elderly vicar constantly mixed up the name of the deceased, Gwen, with her very much alive and present brother Ken! Luckily uncle Ken saw the funny side and the whole service descended into a giggle fest. x

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  14. A good village send-off. Respect

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  15. Another beautiful Welsh hymn! Lovely for a well loved and well remembered man such as Trefor.
    Peace be with you, John dear.

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  16. The last of a great generation, sent off properly by the love of those who knew him.

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  17. Your Trevor was the same age as my mum. It's always sad when someone dies, no matter their age.

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  18. RIP Trevor. 99 years is a good age. Trevor must have been a well known icon in the community. He will be missed.

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  19. What a shame he didn't make it to 100.

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  20. It does sound like an uplifting funeral with a long life well lived. The music was beautiful too. RIP Trevor, your friend.

    I too went to a friend's funeral yesterday and when I returned home felt so cold and sad.

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  21. Anonymous8:10 am

    Not being Welsh, there'll be no singing when I go (the English have forgotten how to sing hymns and just mumble in a sort of embarrassed way). There will, however, be music by Beethoven, Purcell and Borodin - Bel Ami

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    1. And I shall fling myself on your coffin

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    2. Anonymous1:07 pm

      And don't forget, black will be obligatory....BA

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  22. Sleep well Trevor.

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  23. A nice send off for Trevor.

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  24. He did indeed Go Gently <3

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