http://news.ca.msn.com/ontario/hamilton/audrey’s-case-gets-colder
Hamilton Spec. Jon Wells
"On the morning of Dec. 27, not long before the end of Audrey Gleave's life, the snow-covered ground shimmered in the winter sun.
Audrey was fed up with feeling under the weather. But that morning, instead of a Maxine joke or some techie article, she emailed a music video to a friend.
And that evening she sent it again to another. It was, for her, an unusual selection.
The video she sent was a live performance by the André Rieu Orchestra. Rieu is an acclaimed Dutch violinist, conductor and composer. The performance was described as a Celtic version of the timeless spiritual hymn, Amazing Grace.
VIDEO: André Rieu Amazing Grace
Source: YouTube video posted by testadure
The rendition begins with a single musician playing a pennywhistle. It grows larger, Rieu on his violin, then other sections, including a bagpiper, joining in wave upon wave, until the stirring climax — the soul-shaking lament of 300 pipers and a choir singing. It brings audience members to tears.
Amazing grace/How sweet the sound
That saved a wretch like me.
I once was lost/But now I'm found
Was blind but now I see.
In the last couple of years, Audrey had talked more about the end of her life. And she had that premonition, long ago, that it would end suddenly and violently.
Being moved by that video, sending it to friends, was it a sign? Did the beautiful mind sense something — mortality, perhaps — approaching that bright morning two days after Christmas?
How many times did she replay the song, which is about redemption, about having the soul delivered from despair through the mercy of God?
Audrey Gleave wasn't religious, at least not by appearances. But she asked questions about faith, and was curious about all things. But then no one knew what flowed under the still waters.
The rest of her life numbered mere hours after absorbing the vibrations of that song"