Morn ing has (C)brok
(Dm)en
(G)like the first (F)morn
(C)ing,
black bird has (Em)spok
(Am)en
(Dsus2)like the (D)first (G)bird.
(C)Praise for the (F)sing
ing,
(C)praise for the (Am)morn
(D)ing,
(G)praise for them (C)spring
(F)ing
(G7)fresh from the (C)world.
Sweet the rain’s (C)new
(Dm)fall,
(G)sun lit from (F)heav
(C)en,
like the first (Em)dew
(Am)fall
(Dsus2)on the (D)first (G)grass.
(C)Praise for the (F)sweet
ness
(C)of the wet (Am)gar
(D)den,
(G)sprung in com (C)plete
(F)ness
(G7)where his feet (C)pass.
Mine is the (D)sun
(Em)light,
(A)mine is the (G)morn
(D)ing,
born of the (F#m)one
(Bm)light
(E7)E den saw (A)play.
(D)Praise with e (G)la
tion,
(D)praise ev ’ry (Bm)morn
(E)ing,
(A)God’s re cre (D)a
(G)tion
(A7)of the new (D)day.
This page shows “Morning Has Broken” by Cat Stevens in our color-coded kid songbook view — every note is colored by pitch (red C, orange D, yellow E, green F, blue G, purple A, pink B) and the lyrics sit directly under each note, so children can sing along while they play. The song is in the key of C at 135 BPM, a comfortable easy-level arrangement perfect for first-time learners.