Himno Nacional De Honduras Partitura «2027»
With trembling fingers, he took the third page—the one where the horns rise like a mountain wind. He hummed the bar: "India virgen y hermosa dormías..." His voice cracked, but Lucero joined in, her young soprano lifting the notes into the cold air.
Matías closed his eyes. "Déjala. Some things must fly free."
Then, a gust from a broken window snatched the page. It spun once, twice, and lodged against a cobwebbed beam. himno nacional de honduras partitura
Inside, the paper was the color of dried corn husks. The ink had faded to sepia, but the notes were still there—intricate, furious, tender. Lucero gasped. "This is... the complete coro? The missing modulation before 'Por guardar ese emblema divino'?"
But he had one last task.
Matías had found it forty years ago but kept it secret. Now, the diocese wanted to digitize relics. He had promised to deliver the score by dawn.
Old Professor Matías Linares knew he was dying. Not from the cough that had rattled his chest for three months, but from the silence. For sixty years, he had directed the choir of San Miguel de Comayagua. Now, his hands trembled too much to hold a baton, and his lungs collapsed before the first verse of "Tu bandera es un lampo de cielo." With trembling fingers, he took the third page—the
Fin.
Matías nodded, smiling. "Hartling wrote it for a full philharmonic. But presidents wanted a shorter anthem. They cut the soul out." "Déjala
High in the dusty attic of the cathedral, beneath a fallen rafter, lay a box marked with the seal of the National Autonomous University of Honduras, 1904. Inside was a rumor—a manuscript copy of the original partitura for the "Himno Nacional de Honduras," arranged by the composer Carlos Hartling himself. Not the simplified, modern transcriptions that schoolchildren memorized, but the true orchestral score: seven sweeping stanzas of defiance, the storm of the cornet, the tenderness of the cello weeping for the pine forests and the lost Lenca kingdoms.
He pointed to the box. "Abre con cuidado."