The text of "Come down, O Love divine" originated as an Italian poem, "Discendi amor santo" by the medieval mystic poet
Bianco da Siena (1350-1399). The poem appeared in the 1851 collection
Laudi Spirituali del Bianco da Siena of
Telesforo Bini, and in 1861, the
Anglo-Irish clergyman and writer
Richard Frederick Littledale translated it into English. The first publication of the English version was in Littledale's 1867
hymn-book, ''The People's Hymnal''. For the hymn's publication in
The English Hymnal of 1906, the hymnal's editor
Ralph Vaughan Williams composed a
tune, "Down Ampney", which he named after the
Gloucestershire village of his birth. This publication established the hymn's widespread popularity. When Vaughan Williams died in 1958, "Come Down, O Love Divine" was sung at his funeral in
Westminster Abbey as the composer's ashes were ceremonially interred in the Musicians' Corner. ==Text==