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[[File:CarrieJacobsBond.jpg|thumb|left|Carrie Jacobs-Bond]] | [[File:CarrieJacobsBond.jpg|thumb|left|Carrie Jacobs-Bond]] | ||
'''Carrie Jacobs-Bond''' was born | '''Carrie Jacobs-Bond''' (1862-1946) was born 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. | ||
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. | 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. | ||
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=== “Just A-wearyin’ for You” === | === “Just A-wearyin’ for You” === | ||
“Just A-wearyin’ for You” captured the longing for the Father | “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. | ||
<blockquote> | <blockquote> | ||