THE WORDS
Day is done,
gone the sun,
From the hills,
from the lake,
From the skies.
All is well,
safely rest,
God is nigh.
Go to sleep,
peaceful sleep,
May the soldier
or sailor,
God keep.
On the land
or the deep,
Safe in sleep.
Love, good night,
Must thou go,
When the day,
And the night
Need thee so?
All is well.
Speedeth all
To their rest.
Fades the light;
And afar
Goeth day,
And the stars
Shineth bright,
Fare thee well;
Day has gone,
Night is on.
Thanks and praise,
For our days,
'Neath the sun,
Neath the stars,
'Neath the sky,
As we go,
This we know,
God is nigh.
|
During the Civil War, in July 1862 when the Army of the Potomac was
in camp, Brig. Gen. Daniel Butterfield summoned Pvt. Oliver Wilcox Norton,
his brigade bugler, to his tent. Butterfield, who disliked the colorless
"extinguish lights" call then in use, whistled a new tune
and asked the bugler to sound it for him. After repeated trials and
changing the time of some notes which were scribbled on the back of
an envelope, the call was finally arranged to suit Gen. Butterfield
and used for the first time that night. Pvt. Norton, who on several
occasions, had sounded numerous new calls composed by his commander,
recalled his experience of the origin of "Taps" years later:
"One day in July 1862 when the Army of the Potomac was in camp
at Harrison's Landing on the James River, Virginia, resting and recruiting
from its losses in the seven days of battle before Richmond, Gen. Butterfield
summoned the writer to his tent, and whistling some new tune, asked
the bugler to sound it for him. This was done, not quite to his satisfaction
at first, but after repeated trials, changing the time of some of the
notes, which were scribbled on the back of an envelope, the call was
finally arranged to suit the general. "He then ordered that it
should be substituted in his brigade for the regulation "Taps"
(extinguish lights) which was printed in the Tactics and used by the
whole army. This was done for the first time that night. The next day
buglers from nearby brigades came over to the camp of Butterfield's
brigade to ask the meaning of this new call. They liked it, and copying
the music, returned to their camps, but it was not until some time later,
when generals of other commands had heard its melodious notes, that
orders were issued, or permission given, to substitute it throughout
the Army of the Potomac for the time-honored call which came down from
West Point.
In the western armies the regulation call was in use until the autumn
of 1863. At that time the XI and XII Corps were detached from the Army
of the Potomac and sent under command of Gen. Hooker to reinforce the
Union Army at Chattanooga, Tenn. Through its use in these corps it became
known in the western armies and was adopted by them. From that time,
it became and remains to this day the official call for "Taps."
It is printed in the present Tactics and is used throughout the U.S.
Army, the National Guard, and all organizations of veteran soldiers.
Gen. Butterfield, in composing this call and directing that it be used
for "Taps" in his brigade, could not have foreseen its popularity
and the use for another purpose into which it would grow. Today, whenever
a man is buried with military honors anywhere in the United States,
the ceremony is concluded by firing three volleys of musketry over the
grave, and sounding with the trumpet or bugle "Put out the lights.
Go to sleep"...There is something singularly beautiful and appropriate
in the music of this wonderful call. Its strains are melancholy, yet
full of rest and peace. Its echoes linger in the heart long after its
tones have ceased to vibrate in the air."
|