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  1. The first known publication of “Rise Up, Shepherd, and Follow” was a text-only printing in the body of a short story titled “Christmas-Giftsby Ruth McEnery Stuart (1849–1917), found in Lippincott’s Monthly Magazine (January-June 1891, 107; Daw, 2016, p. 140).

  2. Rise up, shepherd, and follow I. Origins The text of this spiritual was first published in Lippincott’s Monthly Magazine , vol. 47, January 1891, in the middle of a fictional story called “Christmas Gifts” (pp. 104–115 | Fig. 1) by Ruth McEnery Stuart (1852–1917).

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  3. "Rise Up, Shepherd, and Follow" is a song telling the story of Christmas morning, describing a "star in the East" that will lead to the birthplace of Christ. The title derives from a lyric repeated throughout the song.

  4. The central message of this spiritual is contained in the repeated line “Rise up, shepherd, and follow.” The first stanza tells us that it is Christ whom we are to rise and follow. The second stanza reminds us that our commitment to this following must be as complete as it was for the disciple Levi.

    • There's a star in the East on Christmas morn
    • Traditional Spiritual
    • English
    • Rise Up, Shepherd, and Follow
  5. Rise Up, Shepherd, and Follow. This African-American spiritual was collected on the islands offshore from South Carolina and Georgia and first published in Slave Songs of the United States, compiled by William F. Allen, et al (1867).

  6. Aug 21, 2020 · The original text of “Rise Up, Shepherd, and Follow”—that is, the first printed version of it—saw the light of day in the January 1891 issue of Lippincott’s Monthly Magazine, in the story “Christmas-Gifts,” by Ruth McEnery Stuart (1849–1917).

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  8. As a result, the two collections totaling 120 spirituals published by Johnson and his brother J. Rosamond Johnson in the first quarter of the twentieth century records only two Christmas-related entries, a spiritual collected in Virginia, “Dar’s A Star In De East” (“Rise Up Shepherd An’ Foller”), and one from St. Helena Island ...

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