summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:53:21 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:53:21 -0700
commitaa3d218e8d7477f7693920cc22979f35570e40b0 (patch)
treee376e18b3cc5f80a3526e5164ab8d27684814043
initial commit of ebook 18444HEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--18444-8.txt18953
-rw-r--r--18444-8.zipbin0 -> 316398 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h.zipbin0 -> 1405057 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/18444-h.htm33833
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/hymnal.pngbin0 -> 1273 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus01-thomasken-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 32575 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus02-oliverholden-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 46695 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus03-josephhaydn-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 45394 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus04-charleswesley-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 55488 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus05-martinluther-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 45787 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus06-ladyhuntingdon-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 28798 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus07-augustusmontaguetoplady-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 41173 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus08-thomashastings-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 47483 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus09-francesridleyhavergal-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 45711 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus10-reginaldheber-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 41872 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus11-georgejameswebb-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 47795 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus12-johnwesley-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 48633 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus13-johnbdykes-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 46501 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus14-ellengates-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 44948 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus15-jamesmontgomery-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 35649 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus16-fannycrosby-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 43827 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus17-samuelsmith-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 40554 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus18-williambradbury-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 37320 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus19-isaacwatts-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 42649 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus20-gfhandel-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 52199 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus21-philipdoddridge-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 39503 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus22-lowellmason-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 32996 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus23-carlvonweber-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 43293 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444-h/images/illus24-horatiusbonar-cameo.jpgbin0 -> 47304 bytes
-rw-r--r--18444.txt18953
-rw-r--r--18444.zipbin0 -> 316290 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
34 files changed, 71755 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/18444-8.txt b/18444-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f5d3a58
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,18953 @@
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Story of the Hymns and Tunes, by Theron
+Brown and Hezekiah Butterworth
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Story of the Hymns and Tunes
+
+
+Author: Theron Brown and Hezekiah Butterworth
+
+
+
+Release Date: May 24, 2006 [eBook #18444]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY OF THE HYMNS AND TUNES***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, David Wilson, and the Project
+Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net/)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 18444-h.htm or 18444-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/8/4/4/18444/18444-h/18444-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/8/4/4/18444/18444-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+THE STORY OF THE HYMNS AND TUNES
+
+by
+
+THERON BROWN and HEZEKIAH BUTTERWORTH
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ _Multae terricolis linguae, coelestibus una._
+
+ _Ten thousand, thousand are their tongues,
+ But all their joys are one._
+
+
+
+
+New York, 1906
+
+
+
+[Frontispiece: Thomas Ken]
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ PREFACE, v
+
+ INTRODUCTION, ix
+
+ 1. HYMNS OF PRAISE AND WORSHIP, 1
+
+ 2. SOME HYMNS OF GREAT WITNESSES, 53
+
+ 3. HYMNS OF CHRISTIAN DEVOTION AND EXPERIENCE, 100
+
+ 4. MISSIONARY HYMNS, 165
+
+ 5. HYMNS OF SUFFERING AND TRUST, 190
+
+ 6. CHRISTIAN BALLADS, 237
+
+ 7. OLD REVIVAL HYMNS, 262
+
+ 8. SUNDAY SCHOOL HYMNS, 293
+
+ 9. PATRIOTIC HYMNS, 321
+
+ 10. SAILOR'S HYMNS, 353
+
+ 11. HYMNS OF WALES, 378
+
+ 12. FIELD HYMNS, 409
+
+ 13. HYMNS, FESTIVAL AND OCCASIONAL, 458
+
+ 14. HYMNS OF HOPE AND CONSOLATION, 509
+
+ INDEXES OF NAMES, TUNES, AND HYMNS, 543
+
+
+LIST OF PORTRAITS.
+
+ THOMAS KEN, Frontispiece
+ OLIVER HOLDEN, Opp. page 14
+ JOSEPH HAYDN, " 30
+ CHARLES WESLEY, " 46
+ MARTIN LUTHER, " 62
+ LADY HUNTINGDON, " 94
+ AUGUSTUS MONTAGUE TOPLADY, " 126
+ THOMAS HASTINGS, " 142
+ FRANCES RIDLEY HAVERGAL, " 158
+ REGINALD HEBER, " 174
+ GEORGE JAMES WEBB, " 190
+ JOHN WESLEY, " 206
+ JOHN B. DYKES, " 222
+ ELLEN M.H. GATES, " 254
+ JAMES MONTGOMERY, " 286
+ FANNY J. CROSBY, " 302
+ SAMUEL F. SMITH, " 334
+ WILLIAM B. BRADBURY, " 366
+ ISAAC WATTS, " 398
+ GEORGE FREDERICK HANDEL, " 414
+ PHILIP DODDRIDGE, " 446
+ LOWELL MASON, " 478
+ CARL VON WEBER, " 494
+ HORATIUS BONAR, " 526
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+When the lapse of time and accumulation of fresh material suggested the
+need of a new and revised edition of Mr. Hezekiah Butterworth's _Story
+of the Hymns_, which had been a popular text book on that subject for
+nearly a generation, the publishers requested him to prepare such a
+work, reviewing the whole field of hymnology and its literature down to
+date. He undertook the task, but left it unfinished at his lamented
+death, committing the manuscript to me in his last hours to arrange and
+complete.
+
+To do this proved a labor of considerable magnitude, since what had been
+done showed evidence of the late author's failing strength, and when, in
+a conference with the publishers, it was proposed to combine the two
+books of Mr. Butterworth, the _Story of the Hymns_ and the _Story of the
+Tunes_, in one volume, the task was doubled.
+
+The charming popular style and story-telling gift of the well-known
+compiler of these books had kept them in demand, the one for thirty and
+the other for fifteen years, but later information had discounted some
+of their historic and biographical matter, and, while many of the
+monographs were too meagre, others were unduly long. Besides, the _Story
+of the Tunes_, so far from being the counterpart of the _Story of the
+Hymns_, bore no special relationship to it, only a small portion of its
+selections answering to any in the hymn-list of the latter book. For a
+personal friend and practically unknown writer, to follow Mr.
+Butterworth, and "improve" his earlier work to the more modern
+conditions, was a venture of no little difficulty and delicacy. The
+result is submitted as simply a conscientious effort to give the best of
+the old with the new.
+
+So far as was possible, matter from the two previous books, and from the
+crude manuscript, has been used, and passages here and there
+transcribed, but so much of independent plan and original research has
+been necessary in arranging and verifying the substance of the chapters
+that the _Story of the Hymns and Tunes_ is in fact a new volume rather
+than a continuation. The chapter containing the account of the _Gospel
+Hymns_ is recent work with scarcely an exception, and the one on the
+_Hymns of Wales_ is entirely new.
+
+Without increasing the size of this volume beyond easy purchase and
+convenient use, it was impossible to discuss the great oratorios and
+dramatic set-pieces, festival and occasional, and only passing
+references are made to them or their authors.
+
+Among those who have helped me in my work special acknowledgements are
+due to Mr. Hubert P. Main of Newark, N.J.; Messrs. Hughes & Son of
+Wrexham, Wales; the American Tract Society, New York; Mr. William T.
+Meek, Mrs. A.J. Gordon, Mr. Paul Foster, Mr. George Douglas, and Revs.
+John R. Hague and Edmund F. Merriam of Boston; Professor William L.
+Phelps of New Haven, Conn.; Mrs. Ellen M.H. Gates of New York; Rev.
+Franklin G. McKeever of New London, Conn.; and Rev. Arthur S. Phelps of
+Greeley, Colorado. Further obligations are gratefully remembered to
+Oliver Ditson & Co. for answers to queries and access to publications,
+to the Historic-and-Geneological Society and the custodians and
+attendants of the Boston Public Library (notably in the Music
+Department) for their uniform courtesy and pains in placing every
+resource within my reach.
+
+THERON BROWN.
+
+Boston, May 15th, 1906.
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+Augustine defines a hymn as "praise to God with song," and another
+writer calls hymn-singing "a devotional approach to God in our
+emotions,"--which of course applies to both the words and the music.
+This religious emotion, reverently acknowledging the Divine Being in
+song, is a constant element, and wherever felt it makes the song a
+worship, irrespective of sect or creed. An eminent Episcopal divine,
+(says the _Christian Register_,) one Trinity Sunday, at the close of his
+sermon, read three hymns by Unitarian authors: one to God the Father, by
+Samuel Longfellow, one to Jesus, by Theodore Parker, and one to the Holy
+Spirit, by N.L. Frothingham. "There," he said, "you have the
+Trinity--Father, Son, and Holy Ghost."
+
+It is natural to speak of hymns as "poems," indiscriminately, for they
+have the same structure. But a hymn is not necessarily a poem, while a
+poem that can be sung as a hymn is something more than a poem.
+Imagination makes poems; devotion makes hymns. There can be poetry
+without emotion, but a hymn never. A poem may argue; a hymn must not.
+In short to be a hymn, what is written must express spiritual feelings
+and desires. The music of faith, hope and charity will be somewhere in
+its strain.
+
+Philosophy composes poems, but not hymns. "It is no love-symphony we
+hear when the lion thinkers roar," some blunt writer has said. "The
+moles of Science have never found the heavenly dove's nest, and the Sea
+of Reason touches no shore where balm for sorrow grows."
+
+On the contrary there are thousands of true hymns that have no standing
+at the court of the muses. Even Cowper's Olney hymns, as Goldwin Smith
+has said, "have not any serious value as poetry. Hymns rarely have," he
+continues. "There is nothing in them on which the creative imagination
+can be exercised. Hymns can be little more than the incense of a
+worshipping soul."
+
+A fellow-student of Phillips Brooks tells us that "most of his verse he
+wrote rapidly without revising, not putting much thought into it but
+using it as the vehicle and outlet of his feelings. It was the sign of
+responding love or gratitude and joy."
+
+To produce a hymn one needs something more exalting than poetic fancy;
+an influence
+
+ "--subtler than the sun-light in the leaf-bud
+ That thrills thro' all the forest, making May."
+
+It is the Divine Spirit wakening the human heart to lyric language.
+
+Religion sings; that is true, though all "religions" do not sing. There
+is no voice of sacred song in Islamism. The muezzin call from the
+minarets is not music. One listens in vain for melody among the
+worshippers of the "Light of Asia." The hum of pagoda litanies, and the
+shouts and gongs of idol processions are not psalms. But many historic
+faiths have lost their melody, and we must go far back in the annals of
+ethnic life to find the songs they sung.
+
+Worship appears to have been a primitive human instinct; and even when
+many gods took the place of One in the blinder faith of men it was
+nature worship making deities of the elements and addressing them with
+supplication and praise. Ancient hymns have been found on the monumental
+tablets of the cities of Nimrod; fragments of the Orphic and Homeric
+hymns are preserved in Greek anthology; many of the Vedic hymns are
+extant in India; and the exhumed stones of Egypt have revealed segments
+of psalm-prayers and liturgies that antedate history. Dr. Wallis Budge,
+the English Orientalist, notes the discovery of a priestly hymn two
+thousand years older than the time of Moses, which invokes One Supreme
+Being who "cannot be figured in stone."
+
+So far as we have any real evidence, however, the Hebrew people
+surpassed all others in both the custom and the spirit of devout song.
+We get snatches of their inspired lyrics in the song of Moses and
+Miriam, the song of Deborah and Barak, and the song of Hannah (sometimes
+called "the Old Testament Magnificat"), in the hymns of David and
+Solomon and all the Temple Psalms, and later where the New Testament
+gives us the "Gloria" of the Christmas angels, the thanksgiving of
+Elizabeth (benedictus minor), Mary's Magnificat, the song of Zacharias
+(benedictus major), the "nunc dimittis" of Simeon, and the celestial
+ascriptions and hallelujahs heard by St. John in his Patmos dream. For
+what we know of the first _formulated_ human prayer and praise we are
+mostly indebted to the Hebrew race. They seem to have been at least the
+only ancient nation that had a complete psalter--and their collection is
+the mother hymn-book of the world.
+
+Probably the first form of hymn-worship was the plain-song--a
+declamatory unison of assembled singers, every voice on the same pitch,
+and within the compass of five notes--and so continued, from whatever
+may have stood for plain-song in Tabernacle and Temple days down to the
+earliest centuries of the Christian church. It was mere melodic
+progression and volume of tone, and there were no instruments--after the
+captivity. Possibly it was the memory of the harps hung silent by the
+rivers of Babylon that banished the timbrel from the sacred march and
+the ancient lyre from the post-exilic synagogues. Only the Feast trumpet
+was left. But the Jews sang. Jesus and his disciples sang. Paul and
+Silas sang; and so did the post-apostolic Christians; but until towards
+the close of the 16th century there were no instruments allowed in
+religious worship.
+
+St. Hilary, Bishop of Poitiers has been called "the father of Christian
+hymnology." About the middle of the 4th century he regulated the
+ecclesiastical song-service, wrote chant music (to Scripture words or
+his own) and prescribed its place and use in his choirs. He died A.D.
+368. In the Church calendars, Jan. 13th (following "Twelfth Night"), is
+still kept as "St. Hilary's Day" in the Church of England, and Jan. 14th
+in the Church of Rome.
+
+St. Ambrose, Bishop of Milan, a few years later, improved the work of
+his predecessor, adding words and music of his own. The "Ambrosian
+Chant" was the antiphonal plain-song arranged and systematized to
+statelier effect in choral symphony. Ambrose died A.D. 397.
+
+Toward the end of the 6th century Christian music showed a decline in
+consequence of impatient meddling with the slow canonical psalmody, and
+"reformers" had impaired its solemnity by introducing fanciful
+embellishments. Gregory the Great (Pope of Rome, 590-604) banished these
+from the song service, founded a school of sacred melody, composed new
+chants and established the distinctive character of ecclesiastical hymn
+worship. The Gregorian chant--on the diatonic eight sounds and seven
+syllables of equal length--continued, with its majestic choral step, to
+be the basis of cathedral music for a thousand years. In the meantime
+(930) Hucbald, the Flanders monk, invented _sight_ music, or written
+notes--happily called the art of "hearing with the eyes and seeing with
+the ears"; and Guido Arentino (1024) contrived the present scale, or the
+"hexachord" on which the present scale was perfected.
+
+In this long interval, however, the "established" system of hymn service
+did not escape the intrusion of inevitable novelties that crept in with
+the change of popular taste. Unrhythmical singing could not always hold
+its own; and when polyphonic music came into public favor, secular airs
+gradually found their way into the choirs. Legatos, with their pleasing
+turn and glide, caught the ear of the multitude. Tripping allegrettos
+sounded sweeter to the vulgar sense than the old largos of Pope Gregory
+the Great.
+
+The guardians of the ancient order took alarm. One can imagine the
+pained amazement of conservative souls today on hearing "Ring the Bells
+of Heaven" substituted in church for "Mear" or the long-metre Doxology,
+and can understand the extreme distaste of the ecclesiastical
+reactionaries for the worldly frivolities of an A.D. 1550 choir.
+Presumably that modern abomination, the _vibrato_, with its shake of
+artificial fright, had not been invented then, and sanctuary form was
+saved one indignity. But the innovations became an abuse so general that
+the Council of Trent commissioned a select board of cardinals and
+musicians to arrest the degeneration of church song-worship.
+
+One of the experts consulted in this movement was an eminent Italian
+composer born twenty miles from Rome. His full name was Giovanni Pietro
+Aloysio da Palestrina, and at that time he was in the prime of his
+powers. He was master of polyphonic music as well as plain-song, and he
+proposed applying it to grace the older mode, preserving the solemn
+beauty of the chant but adding the charming chords of counterpoint. He
+wrote three "masses," one of them being his famous "Requiem." These were
+sung under his direction before the Commission. Their magnificence and
+purity revealed to the censors the possibilities of contrapuntal music
+in sanctuary devotion and praise. The sanction of the cardinals was
+given--and part-song harmony became permanently one of the angel voices
+of the Christian church.
+
+Palestrina died in 1594, but hymn-tunes adapted from his motets and
+masses are sung today. He was the father of the choral tune. He lived to
+see musical instruments and congregational singing introduced[1] in
+public worship, and to know (possibly with secret pleasure, though he
+was a Romanist) how richly in popular assemblies, during the Protestant
+Reformation, the new freedom of his helpful art had multiplied the
+creation of spiritual hymns.
+
+[Footnote 1: But not fully established in use till about 1625.]
+
+Contemporary in England with Palestrina in Italy was Thomas Tallis who
+developed the Anglican school of church music, which differed less from
+the Italian (or Catholic) psalmody than that of the Continental
+churches, where the revolt of the Reformation extended to the
+tune-worship as notably as to the sacraments and sermons. This
+difference created a division of method and practice even in England,
+and extreme Protestants who repudiated everything artistic or ornate
+formed the Puritan or Genevan School. Their style is represented among
+our hymn-tunes by "Old Hundred," while the representative of the
+Anglican is "Tallis' Evening Hymn." The division was only temporary. The
+two schools were gradually reconciled, and together made the model after
+which the best sacred tunes are built. It is Tallis who is called "The
+father of English Cathedral music."
+
+In Germany, after the invention of harmony, church music was still felt
+to be too formal for a working force, and there was a reaction against
+the motets and masses of Palestrina as being too stately and difficult.
+Lighter airs of the popular sort, such as were sung between the acts of
+the "mystery plays," were subsidized by Luther, who wrote compositions
+and translations to their measure. Part-song was simplified, and Johan
+Walther compiled a hymnal of religious songs in the vernacular for from
+four to six voices. The reign of rhythmic hymn music soon extended
+through Europe.
+
+Necessarily--except in ultra-conservative localities like Scotland--the
+exclusive use of the Psalms (metrical or unmetrical) gave way to
+religious lyrics inspired by occasion. Clement Marot and Theodore Beza
+wrote hymns to the music of various composers, and Caesar Malan composed
+both hymns and their melodies. By the beginning of the 18th century the
+triumph of the hymn-tune and the hymnal for lay voices was established
+for all time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the following pages no pretence is made of selecting _all_ the best
+and most-used hymns, but the purpose has been to notice as many as
+possible of the standard pieces--and a few others which seem to add or
+re-shape a useful thought or introduce a new strain.
+
+To present each hymn _with its tune_ appeared the natural and most
+satisfactory way, as in most cases it is impossible to dissociate the
+two. The melody is the psychological coëfficient of the metrical text.
+Without it the verse of a seraph would be smothered praise. Like a
+flower and its fragrance, hymn and tune are one creature, and stand for
+a whole value and a full effect. With this normal combination a
+_complete_ descriptive list of the hymns and tunes would be a historic
+dictionary. Such a book may one day be made, but the present volume is
+an attempt to the same end within easier limits.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+HYMNS OF PRAISE AND WORSHIP.
+
+
+"TE DEUM LAUDAMUS."
+
+This famous church confession in song was composed A.D. 387 by Ambrose,
+Bishop of Milan, probably both words and music.
+
+ Te Deum laudamus, Te Dominum confitemur
+ Te aeternum Patrem omnis terra veneratur
+ Tibi omnes angeli, tibi coeli et universae potestates,
+ Tibi cherubim et seraphim inaccessibili voce proclamant
+ Sanctus, sanctus Dominus Deus Sabaoth.
+
+In the whole hymn there are thirty lines. The saying that the early
+Roman hymns were echoes of Christian Greece, as the Greek hymns were
+echoes of Jerusalem, is probably true, but they were only echoes. In
+A.D. 252, St. Cyprian, writing his consolatory epistle[2] during the
+plague in Carthage, when hundreds were dying every day, says, "Ah,
+perfect and perpetual bliss! [in heaven.] There is the glorious company
+of the apostles; there is the fellowship of the prophets rejoicing;
+there is the innumerable multitude of martyrs crowned." Which would
+suggest that lines or fragments of what afterwards crystalized into the
+formula of the "Te Deum" were already familiar in the Christian church.
+But it is generally believed that the tongue of Ambrose gave the anthem
+its final form.
+
+[Footnote 2: [Greek: Peri tou thnętou], "On the Mortality."]
+
+Ambrose was born in Gaul about the middle of the fourth century and
+raised to his bishopric in A.D. 374. Very early he saw and appreciated
+the popular effect of musical sounds, and what an evangelical instrument
+a chorus of chanting voices could be in preaching the Christian faith;
+and he introduced the responsive singing of psalms and sacred cantos in
+the worship of the church. "A grand thing is that singing, and nothing
+can stand before it," he said, when the critics of his time complained
+that his innovation was sensational. That such a charge could be made
+against the Ambrosian mode of music, with its slow movement and
+unmetrical lines, seems strange to us, but it was _new_--and
+conservatism is the same in all ages.
+
+The great bishop carried all before him. His school of song-worship
+prevailed in Christian Europe more than two hundred years. Most of his
+hymns are lost, (the Benedictine writers credit him with twelve), but,
+judging by their effect on the powerful mind of Augustine, their
+influence among the common people must have been profound, and far more
+lasting than the author's life. "Their voices sank into mine ears, and
+their truths distilled into my heart," wrote Augustine, long afterwards,
+of these hymns; "tears ran down, and I rejoiced in them."
+
+Poetic tradition has dramatized the story of the birth of the "Te Deum,"
+dating it on an Easter Sunday, and dividing the honor of its composition
+between Ambrose and his most eminent convert. It was the day when the
+bishop baptized Augustine, in the presence of a vast throng that crowded
+the Basilica of Milan. As if foreseeing with a prophet's eye that his
+brilliant candidate would become one of the ruling stars of Christendom,
+Ambrose lifted his hands to heaven and chanted in a holy rapture,--
+
+ We praise Thee, O God! We acknowledge Thee to be the Lord;
+ All the Earth doth worship Thee, the Father Everlasting.
+
+He paused, and from the lips of the baptized disciple came the
+response,--
+
+ To Thee all the angels cry aloud: the heavens and all the powers
+ therein.
+ To Thee cherubim and seraphim continually do cry,
+ "Holy, holy, holy Lord God of Sabaoth;
+ Heaven and Earth are full of the majesty of Thy glory!"
+
+and so, stave by stave, in alternating strains, sprang that day from the
+inspired lips of Ambrose and Augustine the "Te Deum Laudamus," which has
+ever since been the standard anthem of Christian praise.
+
+Whatever the foundation of the story, we may at least suppose the first
+public singing[3] of the great chant to have been associated with that
+eventful baptism.
+
+[Footnote 3: The "Te Deum" was first sung _in English_ by the martyr,
+Bishop Ridley, at Hearne Church, where he was at one time vicar.]
+
+The various anthems, sentences and motets in all Christian languages
+bearing the titles "Trisagion" or "Tersanctus," and "Te Deum" are taken
+from portions of this royal hymn. The sublime and beautiful "Holy, Holy,
+Holy" of Bishop Heber was suggested by it.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+No echo remains, so far as is known, of the responsive chant actually
+sung by Ambrose, but one of the best modern choral renderings of the "Te
+Deum" is the one by Henry Smart in his _Morning and Evening Service_. In
+an ordinary church hymnal it occupies seven pages. The staff-directions
+with the music indicate the part or cue of the antiphonal singers by the
+words Decani (Dec.) and Cantor (Can.), meaning first the division of the
+choir on the Dean's side, and second the division on the Cantor's or
+Precentor's side.
+
+Henry Smart was one of the five great English composers that followed
+our American Mason. He was born in London, Oct. 25, 1812, and chose
+music for a profession in preference to an offered commission in the
+East Indian army. His talent as a composer, especially of sacred music,
+was marvellous, and, though he became blind, his loss of sight was no
+more hindrance to his genius than loss of hearing to Beethoven.
+
+No composer of his time equalled Henry Smart as a writer of music for
+female voices. His cantatas have been greatly admired, and his hymn
+tunes are unsurpassed for their purity and sweetness, while his anthems,
+his oratorio of "Jacob," and indeed all that he wrote, show the hand and
+the inventive gift of a great musical artist.
+
+He died July 10, 1879, universally mourned for his inspired work, and
+his amiable character.
+
+
+"ALL GLORY, LAUD AND HONOR."
+_Gloria, Laus et Honor._
+
+This stately Latin hymn of the early part of the 9th century was
+composed in A.D. 820, by Theodulph, Bishop of Orleans, while a captive
+in the cloister of Anjou. King Louis (le Debonnaire) son of Charlemagne,
+had trouble with his royal relatives, and suspecting Theodulph to be in
+sympathy with them, shut him up in prison. A pretty story told by
+Clichtovius, an old church writer of A.D. 1518, relates how on Palm
+Sunday the king, celebrating the feast with his people, passed in
+procession before the cloister, where the face of the venerable prisoner
+at his cell window caused an involuntary halt, and, in the moment of
+silence, the bishop raised his voice and sang this hymn; and how the
+delighted king released the singer, and restored him to his bishopric.
+This tale, told after seven hundred years, is not the only legend that
+grew around the hymn and its author, but the fact that he composed it in
+the cloister of Anjou while confined there is not seriously disputed.
+
+ Gloria, laus et honor Tibi sit, Rex Christe Redemptor,
+ Cui puerile decus prompsit Hosanna pium.
+ Israel Tu Rex, Davidis et inclyta proles,
+ Nomine qui in Domini Rex benedicte venis
+ Gloria, laus et honor.
+
+Theodulph was born in Spain, but of Gothic pedigree, a child of the race
+of conquerors who, in the 5th century, overran Southern Europe. He died
+in 821, but whether a free man or still a prisoner at the time of his
+death is uncertain. Some accounts allege that he was poisoned in the
+cloister. The Roman church canonized him, and his hymn is still sung as
+a processional in Protestant as well as Catholic churches. The above
+Latin lines are the first four of the original seventy-eight. The
+following is J.M. Neale's translation of the portion now in use:
+
+ All glory, laud, and honor,
+ To Thee, Redeemer, King:
+ To whom the lips of children
+ Made sweet Hosannas ring.
+
+ Thou are the King of Israel,
+ Thou David's royal Son,
+ Who in the Lord's name comest,
+ The King and Blessed One. All glory, etc.
+
+ The company of angels
+ Are praising Thee on high;
+ And mortal men, and all things
+ Created, make reply. All glory, etc.
+
+ The people of the Hebrews
+ With palms before Thee went;
+ Our praise and prayer and anthems
+ Before Thee we present. All glory, etc.
+
+ To Thee before Thy Passion
+ They sang their hymns of praise;
+ To Thee, now high exalted
+ Our melody we raise. All glory, etc.
+
+ Thou didst accept their praises;
+ Accept the prayers we bring,
+ Who in all good delightest,
+ Thou good and gracious King. All glory, etc.
+
+The translator, Rev. John Mason Neale, D.D., was born in London, Jan.
+24, 1818, and graduated at Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1840. He was a
+prolific writer, and after taking holy orders he held the office of
+Warden of Sackville College, East Grimstead, Sussex. Best known among
+his published works are _Medićval Hymns and Sequences_, _Hymns for
+Children_, _Hymns of the Eastern Church_ and _The Rhythms of Morlaix_.
+He died Aug. 6, 1866.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+There is no certainty as to the original tune of Theodulph's Hymn, or
+how long it survived, but various modern composers have given it music
+in more or less keeping with its character, notably Melchior Teschner,
+whose harmony, "St. Theodulph," appears in the new _Methodist Hymnal_.
+It well represents the march of the bishop's Latin.
+
+Melchior Teschner, a Prussian musician, was Precentor at Frauenstadt,
+Silesia, about 1613.
+
+
+"ALL PRAISE TO THEE, ETERNAL LORD."
+_Gelobet Seist du Jesu Christ._
+
+This introductory hymn of worship, a favorite Christmas hymn in Germany,
+is ancient, and appears to be a versification of a Latin prose
+"Sequence" variously ascribed to a 9th century author, and to Gregory
+the Great in the 6th century. Its German form is still credited to
+Luther in most hymnals. Julian gives an earlier German form (1370) of
+the "Gelobet," but attributes all but the first stanza to Luther, as the
+hymn now stands. The following translation, printed first in the
+_Sabbath Hymn Book_, Andover, 1858, is the one adopted by Schaff in his
+_Christ in Song_:
+
+ All praise to Thee, eternal Lord,
+ Clothed in the garb of flesh and blood;
+ Choosing a manger for Thy throne,
+ While worlds on worlds are Thine alone!
+
+ Once did the skies before Thee bow;
+ A virgin's arms contain Thee now;
+ Angels, who did in Thee rejoice,
+ Now listen for Thine infant voice.
+
+ A little child, Thou art our guest,
+ That weary ones in Thee may rest;
+ Forlorn and lowly in Thy birth,
+ That we may rise to heaven from earth.
+
+ Thou comest in the darksome night,
+ To make us children of the light;
+ To make us, in the realms divine,
+ Like Thine own angels round Thee shine.
+
+ All this for us Thy love hath done:
+ By this to Thee our love is won;
+ For this we tune our cheerful lays,
+ And shout our thanks in endless praise.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The 18th century tune of "Weimar" (_Evangelical Hymnal_), by Emanuel
+Bach, suits the spiritual tone of the hymn, and suggests the Gregorian
+dignity of its origin.
+
+Karl Philip Emanuel Bach, called "the Berlin Bach" to distinguish him
+from his father, the great Sebastian Bach of Saxe Weimar, was born in
+Weimar, March 14, 1714. He early devoted himself to music, and coming to
+Berlin when twenty-four years old was appointed Chamber musician (Kammer
+Musicus) in the Royal Chapel, where he often accompanied Frederick the
+Great (who was an accomplished flutist) on the harpsichord. His most
+numerous compositions were piano music but he wrote a celebrated
+"Sanctus," and two oratorios, besides a number of chorals, of which
+"Weimar" is one. He died in Hamburg, Dec. 14, 1788.
+
+
+THE MAGNIFICAT.
+[Greek: Megalunei hę psuchę mou ton Kurion.]
+
+ Magnificat anima mea Dominum,
+ Et exultavit Spiritus meus in Deo salutari meo.
+ Luke 1:46-55.
+
+We can date with some certainty the hymn itself composed by the Virgin
+Mary, but when it first became a song of the Christian Church no one can
+tell. Its thanksgiving may have found tone among the earliest martyrs,
+who, as Pliny tells us, sang hymns in their secret worship. We can only
+trace it back to the oldest chant music, when it was doubtless sung by
+both the Eastern and Western Churches. In the rude liturgies of the 4th
+and 5th centuries it must have begun to assume ritual form; but it
+remained for the more modern school of composers hundreds of years later
+to illustrate the "Magnificat" with the melody of art and genius.
+Superseding the primitive unisonous plain-song, the old parallel
+concords, and the simple faburden (faux bourdon) counterpoint that
+succeeded Gregory, they taught how musical tones can better assist
+worship with the beauty of harmony and the precision of scientific
+taste. Musicians in Italy, France, Germany and England have contributed
+their scores to this inspired hymn. Some of them still have place in the
+hymnals, a noble one especially by the blind English tone-master, Henry
+Smart, author of the oratorio of "Jacob." None, however, have equaled
+the work of Handel. His "Magnificat" was one of his favorite
+productions, and he borrowed strains from it in several of his later and
+lesser productions.
+
+George Frederic Handel, author of the immortal "Messiah," was born at
+Halle, Saxony, in 1685, and died in London in 1759. The musical bent of
+his genius was apparent almost from his infancy. At the age of eighteen
+he was earning his living with his violin, and writing his first opera.
+After a sojourn in Italy, he settled in Hanover as Chapel Master to the
+Elector, who afterwards became the English king, George I. The
+friendship of the king and several of his noblemen drew him to England,
+where he spent forty-seven years and composed his greatest works.
+
+He wrote three hymn-tunes (it is said at the request of a converted
+actress), "Canons," "Fitzwilliam," and "Gopsall," the first an
+invitation, "Sinners, Obey the Gospel Word," the second a meditation, "O
+Love Divine, How Sweet Thou Art," and the third a resurrection song to
+Welsey's words "Rejoice, the Lord is King." This last still survives in
+some hymnals.
+
+
+THE DOXOLOGIES.
+
+ Be Thou, O God, exalted high,
+ And as Thy glory fills the sky
+ So let it be on earth displayed
+ Till Thou art here as there obeyed.
+
+This sublime quatrain, attributed to Nahum Tate, like the Lord's Prayer,
+is suited to all occasions, to all Christian denominations, and to all
+places and conditions of men. It has been translated into all civilized
+languages, and has been rising to heaven for many generations from
+congregations round the globe wherever the faith of Christendom has
+built its altars. This doxology is the first stanza of a sixteen line
+hymn (possibly longer originally), the rest of which is forgotten.
+
+Nahum Tate was born in Dublin, in 1652, and educated there at Trinity
+College. He was appointed poet-laureate by King William III. in 1690,
+and it was in conjunction with Dr. Nicholas Brady that he executed his
+"New" metrical version of the Psalms. The entire Psalter, with an
+appendix of Hymns, was licensed by William and Mary and published in
+1703. The _hymns_ in the volume are all by Tate. He died in London, Aug.
+12, 1717.
+
+Rev. Nicholas Brady, D.D., was an Irishman, son of an officer in the
+royal army, and was born at Bandon, County of Cork, Oct. 28, 1659. He
+studied in the Westminster School at Oxford, but afterwards entered
+Trinity College, Dublin, where he graduated in 1685. William made him
+Queen Mary's Chaplain. He died May 20, 1726.
+
+The other nearly contemporary form of doxology is in common use, but
+though elevated and devotional in spirit, it cannot be universal, owing
+to its credal line being objectionable to non-Trinitarian Protestants:
+
+ Praise God from whom all blessings flow,
+ Praise Him all creatures here below,
+ Praise Him above, ye heavenly host,
+ Praise Father, Son and Holy Ghost.
+
+The author, the Rev. Thomas Ken, was born in Berkhampstead,
+Hertfordshire, Eng., July, 1637, and was educated at Winchester School,
+Hertford College, and New College, Oxford. In 1662 he took holy orders,
+and seventeen years later the king (Charles II.) appointed him chaplain
+to his sister Mary, Princess of Orange. Later the king, just before his
+death, made him Bishop of Bath and Wells.
+
+Like John the Baptist, and Bourdaloue, and Knox, he was a faithful
+spiritual monitor and adviser during all his days at court. "I must go
+in and hear Ken tell me my faults," the king used to say at chapel time.
+The "good little man" (as he called the bishop) never lost the favor of
+the dissipated monarch. As Macaulay says, "Of all the prelates, he liked
+Ken the best."
+
+Under James, the Papist, Ken was a loyal subject, though once arrested
+as one of the "seven bishops" for his opposition to the king's religion,
+and he kept his oath of allegiance so firmly that it cost him his place.
+William III. deprived him of his bishopric, and he retired in poverty to
+a home kindly offered him by Lord Viscount Weymouth in Longleat, near
+Frome, in Somersetshire, where he spent a serene and beloved old age. He
+died ćt. seventy-four, March 17, 1711 (N.S.), and was carried to his
+grave, according to his request, by "six of the poorest men in the
+parish."
+
+His great doxology is the refrain or final stanza of each of his three
+long hymns, "Morning," "Evening" and "Midnight," printed in a _Prayer
+Manual_ for the use of the students of Winchester College. The "Evening
+Hymn" drew scenic inspiration, it is told, from the lovely view in
+Horningsham Park at "Heaven's Gate Hill," while walking to and from
+church.
+
+Another four-line doxology, adopted probably from Dr. Hatfield
+(1807-1883), is almost entirely superseded by Ken's stanza, being of
+even more pronounced credal character.
+
+ To God the Father, God the Son,
+ And God the Spirit, Three in One.
+ Be honor, praise and glory given
+ By all on earth and all in heaven.
+
+The _Methodist Hymnal_ prints a collection of ten doxologies, two by
+Watts, one by Charles Wesley, one by John Wesley, one by William Goode,
+one by Edwin F. Hatfield, one attributed to "Tate and Brady," one by
+Robert Hawkes, and the one by Ken above noted. These are all technically
+and intentionally doxologies. To give a history of doxologies in the
+general sense of the word would carry one through every Christian age
+and language and end with a concordance of the Book of Psalms.
+
+[Illustration: Oliver Holden]
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Few would think of any music more appropriate to a standard doxology
+than "Old Hundred." This grand Gregorian harmony has been claimed to be
+Luther's production, while some have believed that Louis Bourgeois,
+editor of the French _Genevan Psalter_, composed the tune, but the
+weight of evidence seems to indicate that it was the work of Guillaume
+le Franc, (William Franck or William the Frenchman,) of Rouen, in
+France, who founded a music school in Geneva, 1541. He was Chapel Master
+there, but removed to Lausanne, where he played in the Catholic choir
+and wrote the tunes for an Edition of Marot's and Beza's Psalms. Died in
+Lausanne, 1570.
+
+
+"THE LORD DESCENDED FROM ABOVE."
+
+A flash of genuine inspiration was vouchsafed to Thomas Sternhold when
+engaged with Rev. John Hopkins in versifying the Eighteenth Psalm. The
+ridicule heaped upon Sternhold and Hopkins's psalmbook has always
+stopped, and sobered into admiration and even reverence at the two
+stanzas beginning with this leading line--
+
+ The Lord descended from above
+ And bowed the heavens most high,
+ And underneath His feet He cast
+ The darkness of the sky.
+
+ On cherub and on cherubim
+ Full royally He rode,
+ And on the wings of mighty winds
+ Came flying all abroad.
+
+Thomas Sternhold was born in Gloucestershire, Eng. He was Groom of the
+Robes to Henry VIII, and Edward VI., but is only remembered for his
+_Psalter_ published in 1562, thirteen years after his death in 1549.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Nottingham" (now sometimes entitled "St. Magnus") is a fairly good echo
+of the grand verses, a dignified but spirited choral in A flat. Jeremiah
+Clark, the composer, was born in London, 1670. Educated at the Chapel
+Royal, he became organist of Winchester College and finally to St.
+Paul's Cathedral where he was appointed Gentleman of the Chapel. He died
+July, 1707.
+
+The tune of "Majesty" by William Billings will be noticed in a later
+chapter.
+
+
+TALLIS' EVENING HYMN.
+
+ Glory to Thee, my God, this night
+ For all the blessings of the light,
+ Keep me, O keep me, King of kings,
+ Under Thine own Almighty wings.
+
+This stanza begins the second of Bp. Ken's three beautiful hymn-prayers
+in his _Manual_ mentioned on a previous page.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+For more than three hundred and fifty years devout people have enjoyed
+that melody of mingled dignity and sweetness known as "Tallis' Evening
+Hymn."
+
+Thomas Tallis was an Englishman, born about 1520, and at an early age
+was a boy chorister at St. Paul's. After his voice changed, he played
+the organ at Waltham Abbey, and some time later was chosen organist
+royal to Queen Elizabeth. His pecuniary returns for his talent did not
+make him rich, though he bore the title after 1542 of Gentleman of the
+Chapel Royal, for his stipend was sevenpence a day. Some gain may
+possibly have come to him, however, from his publication, late in life,
+under the queen's special patent, of a collection of hymns and tunes.
+
+He wrote much and was the real founder of the English Church school of
+composers, but though St. Paul's was at one time well supplied with his
+motets and anthems, it is impossible now to give a list of Tallis'
+compositions for the Church. His music was written originally to Latin
+words, but when, after the Reformation, the use of vernacular hymns, was
+introduced he probably adapted his scores to either language.
+
+It is inferred that he was in attendance on Queen Elizabeth at her
+palace in Greenwich when he died, for he was buried in the old parish
+church there in November, 1585. The rustic rhymer who indited his
+epitaph evidently did the best he could to embalm the virtues of the
+great musician as a man, a citizen, and a husband:
+
+ Enterred here doth ly a worthy wyght,
+ Who for long time in musick bore the bell:
+ His name to shew was Thomas Tallis hyght;
+ In honest vertuous lyff he dyd excell.
+
+ He served long tyme in chappel with grete prayse,
+ Fower sovereygnes reignes, (a thing not often seene);
+ I mean King Henry and Prince Edward's dayes,
+ Quene Marie, and Elizabeth our quene.
+
+ He maryed was, though children he had none,
+ And lyv'd in love full three and thirty yeres
+ With loyal spowse, whose name yclept was Jone,
+ Who, here entombed, him company now bears.
+
+ As he dyd lyve, so also dyd he dy,
+ In myld and quyet sort, O happy man!
+ To God ful oft for mercy did he cry;
+ Wherefore he lyves, let Deth do what he can.
+
+
+"THE GOD OF ABRAHAM PRAISE."
+
+This is one of the thanksgivings of the ages.
+
+ The God of Abraham praise,
+ Who reigns enthroned above;
+ Ancient of everlasting days,
+ And God of love.
+ Jehovah, Great I AM!
+ By earth and heaven confessed,
+ I bow and bless the sacred Name,
+ Forever blest.
+
+The hymn, of twelve eight-line stanzas, is too long to quote entire,
+but is found in both the _Plymouth_ and _Methodist Hymnals_.
+
+Thomas Olivers, born in Tregynon, near Newtown, Montgomeryshire, Wales,
+1725, was, according to local testimony, "the worst boy known in all
+that country, for thirty years." It is more charitable to say that he
+was a poor fellow who had no friends. Left an orphan at five years of
+age, he was passed from one relative to another until all were tired of
+him, and he was "bound out" to a shoemaker. Almost inevitably the
+neglected lad grew up wicked, for no one appeared to care for his habits
+and morals, and as he sank lower in the various vices encouraged by bad
+company, there were more kicks for him than helping hands. At the age of
+eighteen his reputation in the town had become so unsavory that he was
+forced to shift for himself elsewhere.
+
+Providence led him, when shabby and penniless, to the old seaport town
+of Bristol, where Whitefield was at that time preaching,[4] and there
+the young sinner heard the divine message that lifted him to his feet.
+
+[Footnote 4: Whitefield's text was, "Is not this a brand plucked out of
+the fire?" Zach. 3:2.]
+
+"When that sermon began," he said, "I was one of the most abandoned and
+profligate young men living; before it ended I was a new creature. The
+world was all changed for Tom Olivers."
+
+His new life, thus begun, lasted on earth more than sixty useful years.
+He left a shining record as a preacher of righteousness, and died in the
+triumphs of faith, November, 1799. Before he passed away he saw at least
+thirty editions of his hymn published, but the soul-music it has
+awakened among the spiritual children of Abraham can only reach him in
+heaven. Some of its words have been the last earthly song of many, as
+they were of the eminent Methodist theologian, Richard Watson--
+
+ I shall behold His face,
+ I shall His power adore,
+ And sing the wonders of His grace
+ Forevermore.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The precise date of the tune "Leoni" is unknown, as also the precise
+date of the hymn. The story is that Olivers visited the great "Duke's
+Place" Synagogue, Aldgate, London, and heard Meyer Lyon (Leoni) sing the
+Yigdal or long doxology to an air so noble and impressive that it
+haunted him till he learned it and fitted to it the sublime stanzas of
+his song. Lyon, a noted Jewish musician and vocalist, was chorister of
+this London Synagogue during the latter part of the 18th century and the
+Yigdal was a portion of the Hebrew Liturgy composed in medieval times,
+it is said, by Daniel Ben Judah. The fact that the Methodist leaders
+took Olivers from his bench to be one of their preachers answers any
+suggestion that the converted shoemaker _copied_ the Jewish hymn and put
+Christian phrases in it. He knew nothing of Hebrew, and had he known
+it, a literal translation of the Yigdal will show hardly a similarity to
+his evangelical lines. Only the music as Leoni sang it prompted his own
+song, and he gratefully put the singer's name to it. Montgomery, who
+admired the majestic style of the hymn, and its glorious imagery, said
+of its author, "The man who wrote that hymn must have had the finest ear
+imaginable, for on account of the peculiar measure, none but a person of
+equal musical and poetic taste could have produced the harmony
+perceptible in the verse."
+
+Whether the hymnist or some one else fitted the hymn to the tune, the
+"fine ear" and "poetic taste" that Montgomery applauded are evident
+enough in the union.
+
+
+"O WORSHIP THE KING ALL GLORIOUS ABOVE."
+
+This hymn of Sir Robert Grant has become almost universally known, and
+is often used as a morning or opening service song by choirs and
+congregations of all creeds. The favorite stanzas are the first four--
+
+ O worship the King all-glorious above,
+ And gratefully sing His wonderful love--
+ Our Shield and Defender, the Ancient of Days,
+ Pavilioned in splendor, and girded with praise.
+
+ O tell of His might, and sing of His grace,
+ Whose robe is the light, whose canopy, space;
+ His chariots of wrath the deep thunder-clouds form,
+ And dark is His path on the wings of the storm.
+
+ Thy bountiful care what tongue can recite?
+ It breathes in the air, it shines in the light,
+ It streams from the hills, it descends to the plain,
+ And sweetly distils in the dew and the rain.
+
+ Frail children of dust, and feeble as frail,
+ In Thee do we trust, nor find Thee to fail.
+ Thy mercies how tender! how firm to the end!
+ Our Maker, Defender, Redeemer, and Friend!
+
+This is a model hymn of worship. Like the previous one by Thomas
+Olivers, it is strongly Hebrew in its tone and diction, and drew its
+inspiration from the Old Testament Psalter, the text-book of all true
+praise-song.
+
+Sir Robert Grant was born in the county of Inverness, Scotland, in 1785,
+and educated at Cambridge. He was many years member of Parliament for
+Inverness and a director in the East India Company, and 1834 was
+appointed Governor of Bombay. He died at Dapoorie, Western India, July
+9, 1838.
+
+Sir Robert was a man of deep Christian feeling and a poetic mind. His
+writings were not numerous, but their thoughtful beauty endeared him to
+a wide circle of readers. In 1839 his brother, Lord Glenelg, published
+twelve of his poetical pieces, and a new edition in 1868. The volume
+contains the more or less well-known hymns--
+
+ The starry firmament on high.
+
+ Saviour, when in dust to Thee,
+
+and--
+
+ When gathering clouds around I view.
+
+Sir Robert's death, when scarcely past his prime, would indicate a
+decline by reason of illness, and perhaps other serious affliction, that
+justified the poetic license in the submissive verses beginning--
+
+ Thy mercy heard my infant prayer.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ And now _in age_ and grief Thy name
+ Does still my languid heart inflame,
+ And bow my faltering knee.
+ Oh, yet this bosom feels the fire,
+ This trembling hand and drooping lyre
+ Have yet a strain for Thee.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Several musical pieces written to the hymn, "O, Worship the King," have
+appeared in church psalm-books, and others have been borrowed for it,
+but the one oftenest sung to its words is Haydn's "Lyons." Its vigor and
+spirit best fit it for Grant's noble lyric.
+
+
+"MAJESTIC SWEETNESS SITS ENTHRONED."
+
+Rev. Samuel Stennett D.D., the author of this hymn, was the son of Rev.
+Joseph Stennett, and grandson of Rev. Joseph Stennett D.D., who wrote--
+
+ Another six days' work is done,
+ Another Sabbath is begun.
+
+All were Baptist ministers. Samuel was born in 1727, at Exeter, Eng.,
+and at the age of twenty-one became his father's assistant, and
+subsequently his successor over the church in Little Wild Street,
+Lincoln's Inn Fields, London.
+
+ Majestic sweetness sits enthroned
+ Upon the Saviour's brow;
+ His head with radiant glories crowned,
+ His lips with grace o'erflow.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ To Him I owe my life and breath
+ And all the joys I have;
+ He makes me triumph over death,
+ He saves me from the grave.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Since from His bounty I receive
+ Such proofs of love divine,
+ Had I a thousand hearts to give,
+ Lord, they should all be Thine.
+
+Samuel Stennett was one of the most respected and influential ministers
+of the Dissenting persuasion, and a confidant of many of the most
+distinguished statesmen of his time. The celebrated John Howard was his
+parishoner and intimate friend. His degree of Doctor of Divinity was
+bestowed upon him by Aberdeen University. Besides his theological
+writings he composed and published thirty-eight hymns, among them--
+
+ On Jordan's stormy banks I stand,
+
+ When two or three with sweet accord,
+
+ Here at Thy table, Lord, we meet,
+
+and--
+
+ "'Tis finished," so the Saviour cried.
+
+"Majestic Sweetness" began the third stanza of his longer hymn--
+
+ To Christ the Lord let every tongue.
+
+Dr. Stennett died in London, Aug. 24, 1795.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+For fifty or sixty years "Ortonville" has been linked with this devout
+hymn, and still maintains its fitting fellowship. The tune, composed in
+1830, was the work of Thomas Hastings, and is almost as well-known and
+as often sung as his immortal "Toplady." (See chap. 3, "Rock of Ages.")
+
+
+"ALL HAIL THE POWER OF JESUS' NAME."
+
+This inspiring lyric of praise appears to have been written about the
+middle of the eighteenth century. Its author, the Rev. Edward Perronet,
+son of Rev. Vincent Perronet, Vicar of Shoreham, Eng., was a man of
+great faith and humility but zealous in his convictions, sometimes to
+his serious expense. He was born in 1721, and, though eighteen years
+younger than Charles Wesley, the two became bosom friends, and it was
+under the direction of the Wesleys that Perronet became a preacher in
+the evangelical movement. Lady Huntingdon later became his patroness,
+but some needless and imprudent expressions in a satirical poem, "The
+Mitre," revealing his hostility to the union of church and state, cost
+him her favor, and his contention against John Wesley's law that none
+but the regular parish ministers had the right to administer the
+sacraments, led to his complete separation from both the Wesleys. He
+subsequently became the pastor of a small church of Dissenters in
+Canterbury, where he died, in January, 1792. His piety uttered itself
+when near his happy death, and his last words were a Gloria.
+
+ All hail the power of Jesus' name!
+ Let angels prostrate fall;
+ Bring forth the royal diadem,
+ To crown Him Lord of all.
+
+ Ye seed of Israel's chosen race,
+ Ye ransomed of the fall,
+ Hail Him Who saves you by His grace,
+ And crown Him Lord of all.
+
+ Sinners, whose love can ne'er forget
+ The wormwood and the gall,
+ Go, spread your trophies at His feet,
+ And crown Him Lord of all.
+
+ Let every tribe and every tongue
+ That bound creation's call,
+ Now shout the universal song,
+ The crownéd Lord of all.
+
+With two disused stanzas omitted, the hymn as it stands differs from the
+original chiefly in the last stanza, though in the second the initial
+line is now transposed to read--
+
+ Ye chosen seed of Israel's race.
+
+The fourth stanza now reads--
+
+ Let every kindred, every tribe
+ On this terrestrial ball
+ To Him all majesty ascribe,
+ And crown Him Lord of all.
+
+And what is now the favorite last stanza is the one added by Dr.
+Rippon--
+
+ O that with yonder sacred throng
+ We at His feet may fall,
+ And join the everlasting song,
+ And crown Him Lord of all.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Everyone now calls it "Old Coronation," and it is entitled to the
+adjective by this time, being considerably more than a hundred years
+of age. It was composed in the very year of Perronet's death and one
+wonders just how long the hymn and tune waited before they came
+together; for Heaven evidently meant them to be wedded for all time.
+This is an American opinion, and no reflection on the earlier English
+melody of "Miles Lane," composed during Perronet's lifetime by William
+Shrubsole and published with the words in 1780 in the _Gospel Magazine_.
+There is also a fine processional tune sung in the English Church to
+Perronet's hymn.
+
+The author of "Coronation" was Oliver Holden, a self-taught musician,
+born in Shirley, Mass., 1765, and bred to the carpenter's trade. The
+little pipe organ on which tradition says he struck the first notes of
+the famous tune is now in the Historical rooms of the Old State House,
+Boston, placed there by its late owner, Mrs. Fanny Tyler, the old
+musician's granddaughter. Its tones are as mellow as ever, and the times
+that "Coronation" has been played upon it by admiring visitors would far
+outnumber the notes of its score.
+
+Holden wrote a number of other hymn-tunes, among which "Cowper,"
+"Confidence," and "Concord" are remembered, but none of them had the
+wings of "Coronation," his American "Te Deum." His first published
+collection was entitled _The American Harmony_, and this was followed by
+the _Union Harmony_, and the _Worcester Collection_. He also wrote and
+published "Mt. Vernon," and several other patriotic anthems, mainly for
+special occasions, to some of which he supplied the words. He was no
+hymnist, though he did now and then venture into sacred metre. The new
+_Methodist Hymnal_ preserves a simple four-stanza specimen of his
+experiments in verse:
+
+ They who seek the throne of grace
+ Find that throne in every place:
+ If we lead a life of prayer
+ God is present everywhere.
+
+Sacred music, however, was the good man's passion to the last. He died
+in 1844.
+
+"Such beautiful themes!" he whispered on his death bed, "Such beautiful
+themes! But I can write no more."
+
+The enthusiasm always and everywhere aroused by the singing of
+"Coronation," dates from the time it first went abroad in America in
+its new wedlock of music and words. "This tune," says an accompanying
+note over the score in the old _Carmina Sacra_, "was a great favorite
+with the late Dr. Dwight of Yale College (1798). It was often sung by
+the college choir, while he, catching, as it were, the music of the
+heavenly world, would join them, and lead with the most ardent
+devotion."
+
+
+"AWAKE AND SING THE SONG."
+
+This hymn of six stanzas is abridged from a longer one indited by the
+Rev. William Hammond, and published in _Lady Huntingdon's Hymn-book_. It
+was much in use in early Methodist revivals. It appears now as it was
+slightly altered by Rev. Martin Madan--
+
+ Awake and sing the song
+ Of Moses and the Lamb;
+ Join every heart and every tongue
+ To praise the Savior's name.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The sixth verse is a variation of one of Watts' hymns, and was added in
+the _Brethren's Hymn-book_, 1801--
+
+ There shall each heart and tongue
+ His endless praise proclaim,
+ And sweeter voices join the song
+ Of Moses and the Lamb.
+
+The Rev. William Hammond was born Jan. 6, 1719, at Battle, Sussex, Eng.,
+and educated at St. John's College, Cambridge. Early in his ministerial
+life he was a Calvinistic Methodist, but ultimately joined the
+Moravians. Died in London, Aug. 19, 1793. His collection of _Psalms and
+Hymns and Spiritual Songs_ was published in 1745.
+
+The Rev. Martin Madan, son of Col. Madan, was born 1726. He founded Lock
+Hospital, Hyde Park, and long officiated as its chaplain. As a preacher
+he was popular, and his reputation as a composer of music was
+considerable. There is no proof that he wrote any original hymns, but he
+amended, pieced and expanded the work of others. Died in 1770.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The hymn has had a variety of musical interpretations. The more modern
+piece is "St. Philip," by Edward John Hopkins, Doctor of Music, born at
+Westminster, London, June 30, 1818. From a member of the Chapel Royal
+boy choir he became organist of the Michtam Church, Surrey, and
+afterwards of the Temple Church, London. Received his Doctor's degree
+from the Archbishop of Canterbury in 1882.
+
+[Illustration: Joseph Haydn]
+
+
+"CROWN HIS HEAD WITH ENDLESS BLESSING."
+
+The writer of this hymn was William Goode, who helped to found the
+English Church Missionary Society, and was for twenty years the
+Secretary of the "Society for the Relief of Poor Pious Clergymen." For
+celebrating the praise of the Saviour, he seems to have been of like
+spirit and genius with Perronet. He was born in Buckingham, Eng., April
+2, 1762; studied for the ministry and became a curate, successor of
+William Romaine. His spiritual maturity was early, and his habits of
+thought were formed amid associations such as the young Wesleys and
+Whitefield sought. Like them, even in his student days he proved his
+aspiration for purer religious life by an evangelical zeal that cost him
+the ridicule of many of his school-fellows, but the meetings for
+conference and prayer which he organized among them were not unattended,
+and were lasting and salutary in their effect.
+
+Jesus was the theme of his life and song, and was his last word. He died
+in 1816.
+
+ Crown His head with endless blessing
+ Who in God the Father's name
+ With compassion never ceasing
+ Comes salvation to proclaim.
+ Hail, ye saints who know His favor,
+ Who within His gates are found.
+ Hail, ye saints, th' exalted Saviour,
+ Let His courts with praise resound.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Haydn," bearing the name of its great composer, is in several important
+hymnals the chosen music for William Goode's devout words. Its strain
+and spirit are lofty and melodious and in entire accord with the pious
+poet's praise.
+
+Joseph Haydn, son of a poor wheelwright, was born 1732, in Rohron, a
+village on the borders of Hungary and Austria. His precocity of musical
+talent was such that he began composing at the age of ten years. Prince
+Esterhazy discovered his genius when he was poor and friendless, and his
+fortune was made. While Music Master for the Prince's Private Chapel
+(twenty years) he wrote many of his beautiful symphonies which placed
+him among the foremost in that class of music. Invited to England, he
+received the Doctor's degree at Oxford, and composed his great oratorio
+of "The Creation," besides his "Twelve Grand Symphonies," and a long
+list of minor musical works secular and sacred. His invention was
+inexhaustible.
+
+Haydn seems to have been a sincerely pious man. When writing his great
+oratorio of "The Creation" at sixty-seven years of age, "I knelt down
+every day," he says, "and prayed God to strengthen me for my work." This
+daily spiritual preparation was similar to Handel's when he was creating
+his "Messiah." Change one word and it may be said of sacred music as
+truly as of astronomy, "The undevout composer is mad."
+
+Near Haydn's death, in Vienna, 1809, when he heard for the last time his
+magnificent chorus, "Let there be Light!" he exclaimed, "Not mine, not
+mine. It all came to me from above."
+
+
+"NOW TO THE LORD A NOBLE SONG."
+
+When Watts finished this hymn he had achieved a "noble song," whether he
+was conscious of it or not; and it deserves a foremost place, where it
+can help future worshippers in their praise as it has the past. It is
+not so common in the later hymnals, but it is imperishable, and still
+later collections will not forget it.
+
+ Now to the Lord a noble song,
+ Awake my soul, awake my tongue!
+ Hosanna to the Eternal Name,
+ And all His boundless love proclaim.
+
+ See where it shines in Jesus' face,
+ The brightest image of His grace!
+ God in the person of His Son
+ Has all His mightiest works outdone.
+
+A rather finical question has occurred to some minds as to the theology
+of the word "works" in the last line, making the second person in the
+Godhead apparently a creature; and in a few hymn-books the previous line
+has been made to read--
+
+ God in the _Gospel_ of His Son.
+
+But the question is a rhetorical one, and the poet's free
+expression--here as in hundreds of other cases--has never disturbed the
+general confidence in his orthodoxy.
+
+Montgomery called Watts "the inventor of hymns in our language," and the
+credit stands practically undisputed, for Watts made a hymn style that
+no human master taught him, and his model has been the ideal one for
+song worship ever since; and we can pardon the climax when Professor
+Charles M. Stuart speaks of him as "writer, scholar, thinker and saint,"
+for in addition to all the rest he was a very good man.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Old "Ames" was for many years the choir favorite, and the words of the
+hymn printed with it in the note-book made the association familiar. It
+was, and _is_, an appropriate selection, though in later manuals George
+Kingsley's "Ware" is evidently thought to be better suited to the
+high-toned verse. Good old tunes never "wear out," but they do go out of
+fashion.
+
+The composer of "Ames," Sigismund Neukomm, Chevalier, was born in
+Salzburg, Austria, July 10, 1778, and was a pupil of Haydn. Though not a
+great genius, his talents procured him access and even intimacy in the
+courts of Germany, France, Italy, Portugal and England, and for thirty
+years he composed church anthems and oratorios with prodigious industry.
+Neukomm's musical productions, numbering no less than one thousand, and
+popular in their day, are, however, mostly forgotten, excepting his
+oratorio of "David" and one or two hymn-tunes.
+
+George Kingsley, author of "Ware," was born in Northampton, Mass., July
+7, 1811. Died in the Hospital, in the same city, March 14, 1884. He
+compiled eight books of music for young people and several manuals of
+church psalmody, and was for some time a music teacher in Boston, where
+he played the organ at the Hollis St. church. Subsequently he became
+professor of music in Girard College, Philadelphia, and music instructor
+in the public schools, being employed successively as organist (on
+Lord's Day) at Dr. Albert Barnes' and Arch St. churches, and finally in
+Brooklyn at Dr. Storrs' Church of the Pilgrims. Returned to Northampton,
+1853.
+
+
+"EARLY, MY GOD, WITHOUT DELAY."
+
+This and the five following hymns, all by Watts, are placed in immediate
+succession, for unity's sake--with a fuller notice of the greatest of
+hymn-writers at the end of the series.
+
+ Early, my God, without delay
+ I haste to seek Thy face,
+ My thirsty spirit faints away
+ Without Thy cheering grace.
+
+In the memories of very old men and women, who sang the fugue music of
+Morgan's "Montgomery," still lingers the second stanza and some of the
+"spirit and understanding" with which it used to be rendered in meeting
+on Sunday mornings.
+
+ So pilgrims on the scorching sand,
+ Beneath a burning sky,
+ Long for a cooling stream at hand
+ And they must drink or die.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Many of the earlier pieces assigned to this hymn were either too noisy
+or too tame. The best and longest-serving is "Lanesboro," which, with
+its expressive duet in the middle and its soaring final strain of
+harmony, never fails to carry the meaning of the words. It was composed
+by William Dixon, and arranged and adapted by Lowell Mason.
+
+William Dixon, an English composer, was a music engraver and publisher,
+and author also of several glees and anthems. He was born 1750, and died
+about 1825.
+
+Lowell Mason, born in Medfield, Mass., 1792, has been called, not
+without reason, "the father of American choir singing." Returning from
+Savannah, Ga., where he spent sixteen years of his younger life as clerk
+in a bank, he located in Boston (1827), being already known there as the
+composer of "The Missionary Hymn." He had not neglected his musical
+studies while living in the South, and it was in Savannah that he made
+the glorious harmony of that tune.
+
+He became president of the Handel and Haydn Society, went abroad for
+special study, was made Doctor of Music, and collected a store of themes
+among the great models of song to bring home for his future work.
+
+The Boston Academy of Music was founded by him and what he did for the
+song-service of the Church in America by his singing schools, and
+musical conventions, and published manuals, to form and organize the
+choral branch of divine worship, has no parallel, unless it is Noah
+Webster's service to the English language.
+
+Dr. Mason died in Orange, N.J., in 1872.
+
+
+"SWEET IS THE WORK, MY GOD, MY KING."
+
+This is one of the hymns that helped to give its author the title of
+"The Seraphic Watts."
+
+ Sweet is the work, my God, my King
+ To praise Thy name, give thanks and sing
+ To show Thy love by morning light,
+ And talk of all Thy truth at night.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+No nobler one, and more akin in spirit to the hymn, can be found than
+"Duke Street," Hatton's imperishable choral.
+
+Little is known of the John Hatton who wrote "Duke St." He was earlier
+by nearly a century than John Liphot Hatton of Liverpool (born in 1809),
+who wrote the opera of "Pascal Bruno," the cantata of "Robin Hood" and
+the sacred drama of "Hezekiah." The biographical index of the
+_Evangelical Hymnal_ says of John Hatton, the author of "Duke St.":
+"John, of Warrington; afterwards of St. Helens, then resident in Duke
+St. in the township of Windle; composed several hymn-tunes; died in
+1793.[5] His funeral sermon was preached at the Presbyterian Chapel, St.
+Helens, Dec. 13."
+
+[Footnote 5: Tradition says he was killed by being thrown from a
+stage-coach.]
+
+
+"COME, WE THAT LOVE THE LORD."
+
+Watts entitled this hymn "Heavenly Joy on Earth." He could possibly,
+like Madame Guyon, have written such a hymn in a dungeon, but it is no
+less spiritual for its birth (as tradition will have it) amid the lovely
+scenery of Southampton where he could find in nature "glory begun
+below."
+
+ Come, we that love the Lord,
+ And let our joys be known;
+ Join in a song with sweet accord,
+ And thus surround the throne.
+
+ There shall we see His face,
+ And never, never sin;
+ There, from the rivers of His grace,
+ Drink endless pleasures in.
+
+ Children of grace have found
+ Glory begun below:
+ Celestial fruits on earthly ground
+ From faith and hope may grow.
+
+Mortality and immortality blend their charms in the next stanza. The
+unfailing beauty of the vision will be dwelt upon with delight so long
+as Christians sing on earth.
+
+ The hill of Sion yields
+ A thousand sacred sweets,
+ Before we reach the heavenly fields,
+ Or walk the golden streets.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"St. Thomas" has often been the interpreter of the hymn, and still
+clings to the words in the memory of thousands.
+
+The Italian tune of "Ain" has more music. It is a fugue piece
+(simplified in some tune-books), and the joyful traverse of its notes
+along the staff in four-four time, with the momentum of a good choir, is
+exhilarating in the extreme.
+
+Corelli, the composer, was a master violinist, the greatest of his day,
+and wrote a great deal of violin music; and the thought of his glad
+instrument may have influenced his work when harmonizing the four voices
+of "Ain."
+
+Arcangelo Corelli was born at Fusignano, in 1653. He was a sensitive
+artist, and although faultless in Italian music, he was not sure of
+himself in playing French scores, and once while performing with Handel
+(who resented the slightest error), and once again with Scarlatti,
+leading an orchestra in Naples when the king was present, he made a
+mortifying mistake. He took the humiliation so much to heart that he
+brooded over it till he died, in Rome, Jan. 18, 1717.
+
+For revival meetings the modern tune set to "Come we that love the
+Lord," by Robert Lowry, should be mentioned. A shouting chorus is
+appended to it, but it has melody and plenty of stimulating motion.
+
+The Rev. Robert Lowry was born in Philadelphia, March 12, 1826, and
+educated at Lewisburg, Pa. From his 28th year till his death, 1899, he
+was a faithful and successful minister of Christ, but is more widely
+known as a composer of sacred music.
+
+
+"BE THOU EXALTED, O MY GOD."
+
+In this hymn the thought of Watts touches the eternal summits. Taken
+from the 57th and 108th Psalms--
+
+ Be Thou exalted, O my God,
+ Above the heavens where angels dwell;
+ Thy power on earth be known abroad
+ And land to land Thy wonders tell.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ High o'er the earth His mercy reigns,
+ And reaches to the utmost sky;
+ His truth to endless years remains
+ When lower worlds dissolve and die.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Haydn furnished it out of his chorus of morning stars, and it was
+christened "Creation," after the name of his great oratorio. It is a
+march of trumpets.
+
+
+"BEFORE JEHOVAH'S AWFUL THRONE."
+
+No one could mistake the style of Watts in this sublime ode. He begins
+with his foot on Sinai, but flies to Calvary with the angel preacher
+whom St. John saw in his Patmos vision:
+
+ Before Jehovah's awful throne
+ Ye nations bow with sacred joy;
+ Know that the Lord is God alone;
+ He can create and He destroy.
+
+ His sovereign power without our aid
+ Made us of clay and formed us men,
+ And when like wandering sheep we stray,
+ He brought us to His fold again.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ We'll crowd Thy gates with thankful songs,
+ High as the heaven our voices raise,
+ And earth with her ten thousand tongues
+ Shall fill Thy courts with sounding praise.
+
+
+_TUNE--OLD HUNDRED._
+
+Martin Madan's four-page anthem, "Denmark," has some grand strains in
+it, but it is a tune of florid and difficult vocalization, and is now
+heard only in Old Folks' Concerts.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Rev. Isaac Watts, D.D., was born at Southampton, Eng., in 1674. His
+father was a deacon of the Independent Church there, and though not an
+uncultured man himself, he is said to have had little patience with the
+incurable penchant of his boy for making rhymes and verses. We hear
+nothing of the lad's mother, but we can fancy her hand and spirit in the
+indulgence of his poetic tastes as well as in his religious training.
+The tradition handed down from Dr. Price, a colleague of Watts, relates
+that at the age of eighteen Isaac became so irritated at the crabbed and
+untuneful hymns sung at the Nonconformist meetings that he complained
+bitterly of them to his father. The deacon may have felt something as
+Dr. Wayland did when a rather "fresh" student criticised the Proverbs,
+and hinted that making such things could not be "much of a job," and the
+Doctor remarked, "Suppose _you_ make a few." Possibly there was the same
+gentle sarcasm in the reply of Deacon Watts to his son, "Make some
+yourself, then."
+
+Isaac was in just the mood to take his father at his word, and he
+retired and wrote the hymn--
+
+ Behold the glories of the Lamb.
+
+There must have been a decent tune to carry it, for it pleased the
+worshippers greatly, when it was sung in meeting--and that was the
+beginning of Isaac Watts' career as a hymnist.
+
+So far as scholarship was an advantage, the young writer must have been
+well equipped already, for as early as the entering of his fifth year he
+was learning Latin, and at nine learning Greek; at eleven, French; and
+at thirteen, Hebrew. From the day of his first success he continued to
+indite hymns for the home church, until by the end of his twenty-second
+year he had written one hundred and ten, and in the two following years
+a hundred and forty-four more, besides preparing himself for the
+ministry. No. 7 in the edition of the first one hundred and ten, was
+that royal jewel of all his lyric work--
+
+ When I survey the wondrous cross.
+
+Isaac Watts was ordained pastor of an Independent Church in Mark Lane,
+London, 1702, but repeated illness finally broke up his ministry, and
+he retired, an invalid, to the beautiful home of Sir Thomas Abney at
+Theobaldo, invited, as he supposed, to spend a week, but it was really
+to spend the rest of his life--thirty-six years.
+
+Numbers of his hymns are cited as having biographical or reminiscent
+color. The stanza in--
+
+ When I can read my title clear,
+
+--which reads in the original copy,--
+
+ Should earth against my soul engage
+ And _hellish darts be hurled_,
+ Then I can smile at _Satan's rage_
+ And face a frowning world,
+
+--is said to have been an allusion to Voltaire and his attack upon the
+church, while the calm beauty of the harbor within view of his home is
+supposed to have been in his eye when he composed the last stanza,--
+
+ There shall I bathe my weary soul
+ In seas of heavenly rest,
+ And not a wave of trouble roll
+ Across my peaceful breast.
+
+According to the record,--
+
+ What shall the dying sinner do?
+
+--was one of his "pulpit hymns," and followed a sermon preached from
+Rom. 1:16. Another,--
+
+ And is this life prolonged to you?
+
+--after a sermon from 1 Cor. 3:22; and another,--
+
+ How vast a treasure we possess,
+
+--enforced his text, "All things are yours." The hymn,--
+
+ Not all the blood of beasts
+ On Jewish altars slain,
+
+--was, as some say, suggested to the writer by a visit to the abattoir
+in Smithfield Market. The same hymn years afterwards, discovered, we are
+told, in a printed paper wrapped around a shop bundle, converted a
+Jewess, and influenced her to a life of Christian faith and sacrifice.
+
+A young man, hardened by austere and minatory sermons, was melted, says
+Dr. Belcher, by simply reading,--
+
+ Show pity Lord, O Lord, forgive,
+ Let a repenting sinner live.
+
+--and became partaker of a rich religious experience.
+
+The summer scenery of Southampton, with its distant view of the Isle of
+Wight, was believed to have inspired the hymnist sitting at a parlor
+window and gazing across the river Itchen, to write the stanza--
+
+ Sweet fields beyond the swelling flood
+ Stand drest in living green;
+ So to the Jews old Canaan stood
+ While Jordan rolled between.
+
+The hymn, "Unveil thy bosom, faithful tomb," was personal, addressed by
+Watts "to Lucius on the death of Seneca."
+
+A severe heart-trial was the occasion of another hymn. When a young man
+he proposed marriage to Miss Elizabeth Singer, a much-admired young
+lady, talented, beautiful, and good. She rejected him--kindly but
+finally. The disappointment was bitter, and in the first shadow of it he
+wrote,--
+
+ How vain are all things here below,
+ How false and yet how fair.
+
+Miss Singer became the celebrated Mrs. Elizabeth Rowe, the spiritual and
+poetic beauty of whose _Meditations_ once made a devotional text-book
+for pious souls. Of Dr. Watts and his offer of his hand and heart, she
+always said, "I loved the jewel, but I did not admire the casket." The
+poet suitor was undersized, in habitually delicate health--and not
+handsome.
+
+But the good minister and scholar found noble employment to keep his
+mind from preying upon itself and shortening his days. During his long
+though afflicted leisure he versified the Psalms, wrote a treatise on
+_Logic_, an _Introduction to the Study of Astronomy and Geography_, and
+a work _On the Improvement of the Mind_; and died in 1748, at the age of
+seventy-four.
+
+
+"O FOR A THOUSAND TONGUES TO SING."
+
+Charles Wesley, the author of this hymn, took up the harp of Watts when
+the older poet laid it down. He was born at Epworth, Eng., in 1708, the
+third son of Rev. Samuel Wesley, and died in London, March 29, 1788. The
+hymn is believed to have been written May 17, 1739, for the anniversary
+of his own conversion:
+
+ O for a thousand tongues to sing
+ My great Redeemer's praise,
+ The glories of my God and King,
+ And triumphs of His grace.
+
+The remark of a fervent Christian friend, Peter Bohler, "Had I a
+thousand tongues I would praise Christ Jesus with them all," struck an
+answering chord in Wesley's heart, and he embalmed the wish in his
+fluent verse. The third stanza (printed as second in some hymnals), has
+made language for pardoned souls for at least four generations:
+
+ Jesus! the name that calms our fears
+ And bids our sorrows cease;
+ 'Tis music in the sinner's ears,
+ 'Tis life and health and peace.
+
+Charles Wesley was the poet of the soul, and knew every mood. In the
+words of Isaac Taylor, "There is no main article of belief ... no moral
+sentiment peculiarly characteristic of the gospel that does not find
+itself ... pointedly and clearly conveyed in some stanza of Charles
+Wesley's poetry." And it does not dim the lustre of Watts, considering
+the marvellous brightness, versatility and felicity of his greatest
+successor, to say of the latter, with the _London Quarterly_, that he
+"was, perhaps, the most gifted minstrel of the modern Church."
+
+[Illustration: Charles Wesley]
+
+Most of the hymns of this good man were hymns of experience--and this is
+why they are so dear to the Christian heart. The music of eternal life
+is in them. The happy glow of a single line in one of them--
+
+ Love Divine, all loves excelling,
+
+--thrills through them all. He led a spotless life from youth to old
+age, and grew unceasingly in spiritual knowledge and sweetness. His
+piety and purity were the weapons that alike humbled his scoffing fellow
+scholars at Oxford, and conquered the wild colliers of Kingwood. With
+his brother John, through persecution and ridicule, he preached and sang
+that Divine Love to his countrymen and in the wilds of America, and on
+their return to England his quenchless melodies multiplied till they
+made an Evangelical literature around his name. His hymns--he wrote no
+less than six thousand--are a liturgy not only for the Methodist Church
+but for English-speaking Christendom.
+
+The voices of Wesley and Watts cannot be hidden, whatever province of
+Christian life and service is traversed in themes of song, and in these
+chapters they will be heard again and again.
+
+A Watts-and-Wesley Scholarship would grace any Theological Seminary, to
+encourage the study and discussion of the best lyrics of the two great
+Gospel bards.
+
+
+_THE TUNES._
+
+The musical mouth-piece of "O for a thousand tongues," nearest to its
+own date, is old "Azmon" by Carl Glaser (1734-1829), appearing as No. 1
+in the _New Methodist Hymnal_. Arranged by Lowell Mason, 1830, it is
+still comparatively familiar, and the flavor of devotion is in its tone
+and style.
+
+Henry John Gauntlett, an English lawyer and composer, wrote a tune for
+it in 1872, noble in its uniform step and time, but scarcely uttering
+the hymnist's characteristic ardor.
+
+The tune of "Dedham," by William Gardiner, now venerable but surviving
+by true merit, is not unlike "Azmon" in movement and character. Though
+less closely associated with the hymn, as a companion melody it is not
+inappropriate. But whatever the range of vocalization or the dignity of
+swells and cadences, a slow pace of single semibreves or quarters is not
+suited to Wesley's hymns. They are flights.
+
+Professor William Gardiner wrote many works on musical subjects early in
+the last century, and composed vocal harmonies, secular and sacred. He
+was born in Leicester, Eng., March 5, 1770, and died there Nov. 16,
+1853.
+
+There is an old-fashioned unction and vigor in the style of
+"Peterborough" by Rev. Ralph Harrison (1748-1810) that after all best
+satisfies the singer who enters heart and soul into the spirit of the
+hymn. _Old Peterborough_ was composed in 1786.
+
+
+"LORD WITH GLOWING HEART I'D PRAISE THEE."
+
+This was written in 1817 by the author of the "Star Spangled Banner,"
+and is a noble American hymn of which the country may well be proud,
+both because of its merit and for its birth in the heart of a national
+poet who was no less a Christian than a patriot.
+
+Francis Scott Key, lawyer, was born on the estate of his father, John
+Ross Key, in Frederick, Md., Aug. 1st, 1779; and died in Baltimore, Jan.
+11, 1843. A bronze statue of him over his grave, and another in Golden
+Gate Park, San Francisco, represent the nationality of his fame and the
+gratitude of a whole land.
+
+Though a slaveholder by inheritance, Mr. Key deplored the existence of
+human slavery, and not only originated a scheme of African colonization,
+but did all that a model master could do for the chattels on his
+plantation, in compliance with the Scripture command,[6] to lighten
+their burdens. He helped them in their family troubles, defended them
+gratuitously in the courts, and held regular Sunday-school services for
+them.
+
+[Footnote 6: Eph. 6:9, Coloss. 4:1.]
+
+Educated at St. John's College, an active member of the Episcopal
+Church, he was not only a scholar but a devout and exemplary man.
+
+ Lord, with glowing heart I'd praise Thee
+ For the bliss Thy love bestows,
+ For the pardoning grace that saves me,
+ And the peace that from it flows.
+
+ Help, O Lord, my weak endeavor;
+ This dull soul to rapture raise;
+ Thou must light the flame or never
+ Can my love be warmed to praise.
+
+ Lord, this bosom's ardent feeling
+ Vainly would my life express;
+ Low before Thy footstool kneeling,
+ Deign Thy suppliant's prayer to bless.
+
+ Let Thy grace, my soul's chief treasure,
+ Love's pure flame within me raise,
+ And, since words can never measure,
+ Let my life show forth Thy praise.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"St. Chad," a choral in D, with a four-bar unison, in the _Evangelical
+Hymnal_, is worthy of the hymn. Richard Redhead, the composer, organist
+of the Church of St. Mary Magdalene, Paddington, Eng., was born at
+Harrow, Middlesex, March 1, 1820, and educated at Magdalene College,
+Oxford. Graduated Bachelor of Music at Oxford, 1871. He published
+_Laudes Dominć_, a Gregorian Psalter, 1843, a Book of Tunes for the
+_Christian Year_, and is the author of much ritual music.
+
+
+"HOLY, HOLY, HOLY, LORD GOD ALMIGHTY."
+
+There is nothing so majestic in Protestant hymnology as this Tersanctus
+of Bishop Heber.
+
+The Rt. Rev. Reginald Heber, son of a clergyman of the same name, was
+born in Malpas, Cheshire, Eng., April 21st, 1783, and educated at
+Oxford. He served the church in Hodnet, Shropshire, for about twenty
+years, and was then appointed Bishop of Calcutta, E.I. His labors there
+were cut short in the prime of his life, his death occurring in 1826, at
+Trichinopoly on the 3d of April, his natal month.
+
+His hymns, numbering fifty-seven, were collected by his widow, and
+published with his poetical works in 1842.
+
+ Holy! holy! holy! Lord God Almighty!
+ Early in the morning our song shall rise to Thee.
+ Holy! holy! holy! merciful and mighty,
+ God in Three Persons, blessed Trinity.
+
+ Holy! holy! holy! all the saints adore Thee,
+ Casting down their golden crowns around the glassy sea;
+ Cherubim and seraphim, falling down before Thee,
+ Which wert, and art, and evermore shall be.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Grand as the hymn is, it did not come to its full grandeur of sentiment
+and sound in song-worship till the remarkable music of Dr. John B. Dykes
+was joined to it. None was ever written that in performance illustrates
+more admirably the solemn beauty of congregational praise. The name
+"Nicća" attached to the tune means nothing to the popular ear and mind,
+and it is known everywhere by the initial words of the first line.
+
+Rev. John Bacchus Dykes, Doctor of Music, was born at
+Kingston-upon-Hull, in 1823; and graduated at Cambridge, in 1847. He
+became a master of tone and choral harmony, and did much to reform and
+elevate congregational psalmody in England. He was perhaps the first to
+demonstrate that hymn-tune making can be reduced to a science without
+impairing its spiritual purpose. Died Jan. 22, 1876.
+
+
+"LORD OF ALL BEING, THRONED AFAR."
+
+This noble hymn was composed by Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, born in
+Cambridge, Mass., 1809, and graduated at Harvard University. A physician
+by profession, he was known as a practitioner chiefly in literature,
+being a brilliant writer and long the leading poetical wit of America.
+He was, however, a man of deep religious feeling, and a devout attendant
+at King's Chapel, Unitarian, in Boston where he spent his life. He held
+the Harvard Professorship of Anatomy and Physiology more than fifty
+years, but his enduring work is in his poems, and his charming volume,
+_The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table_. Died Jan. 22, 1896.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Holmes' hymn is sung in some churches to "Louvan," V.C. Taylor's
+admirable praise tune. Other hymnals prefer with it the music of
+"Keble," one of Dr. Dykes' appropriate and finished melodies.
+
+Virgil Corydon Taylor, an American vocal composer, was born in
+Barkhamstead, Conn., April 2, 1817, died 1891.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+SOME HYMNS OF GREAT WITNESSES.
+
+
+JOHN OF DAMASCUS.
+
+[Greek: Erchesthe, ô pistoi,
+ Anastaseôs Hęmera.]
+
+John of Damascus, called also St. John of Jerusalem, a theologian and
+poet, was the last but one of the Christian Fathers of the Greek Church.
+This eminent man was named by the Arabs "Ibn Mansur," Son (Servant?) of
+a Conqueror, either in honor of his father Sergius or because it was a
+Semitic translation of his family title. He was born in Damascus early
+in the 8th century, and seems to have been in favor with the Caliph, and
+served under him many years in some important civil capacity, until,
+retiring to Palestine, he entered the monastic order, and late in life
+was ordained a priest of the Jerusalem Church. He died in the Convent of
+St. Sabas near that city about A.D. 780.
+
+His lifetime appears to have been passed in comparative peace. Mohammed
+having died before completing the conquest of Syria, the Moslem rule
+before whose advance Oriental Christianity was to lose its first field
+of triumph had not yet asserted its persecuting power in the north. This
+devout monk, in his meditations at St. Sabas, dwelt much upon the birth
+and the resurrection of Christ, and made hymns to celebrate them. It was
+probably four hundred years before Bonaventura (?) wrote the Christmas
+"Adeste Fideles" of the Latin West that John of Damascus composed his
+Greek "Adeste Fideles" for a Resurrection song in Jerusalem.
+
+ Come ye faithful, raise the strain
+ Of triumphant gladness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ 'Tis the spring of souls today
+ Christ hath burst His prison;
+ From the frost and gloom of death
+ Light and life have risen.
+
+The nobler of the two hymns preserved to us, (or six stanzas of it)
+through eleven centuries is entitled "The Day of Resurrection."
+
+ The day of resurrection,
+ Earth, tell its joys abroad:
+ The Passover of gladness,
+ The Passover of God.
+ From death to life eternal,
+ From earth unto the sky,
+ Our Christ hath brought us over,
+ With hymns of victory.
+
+ Our hearts be pure from evil,
+ That we may see aright
+ The Lord in rays eternal
+ Of resurrection light;
+ And, listening to His accents,
+ May hear, so calm and plain,
+ His own, "All hail!" and hearing,
+ May raise the victor-strain.
+
+ Now let the heavens be joyful,
+ Let earth her song begin,
+ Let all the world keep triumph,
+ All that dwell therein.
+ In grateful exultation,
+ Their notes let all things blend,
+ For Christ the Lord is risen,
+ O joy that hath no end!
+
+Both these hymns of John of Damascus were translated by John Mason
+Neale.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"The Day of Resurrection" is sung in the modern hymnals to the tune of
+"Rotterdam," composed by Berthold of Tours, born in that city of the
+Netherlands, Dec. 17, 1838. He was educated at the conservatory in
+Leipsic, and later made London his permanent residence, writing both
+vocal and instrumental music. Died 1897. "Rotterdam" is a stately,
+sonorous piece and conveys the flavor of the ancient hymn.
+
+"Come ye faithful" has for its modern interpreter Sir Arthur Sullivan,
+the celebrated composer of both secular and sacred works, but best
+known in hymnody as author of the great Christian march, "Onward
+Christian Soldiers."
+
+Hymns are known to have been written by the earlier Greek Fathers,
+Ephrem Syrus of Mesopotamia (A.D. 307-373), Basil the Great, Bishop of
+Cappadocia (A.D. 329-379) Gregory Nazianzen, Bishop of Constantinople
+(A.D. 335-390) and others, but their fragments of song which have come
+down to us scarcely rank them among the great witnesses--with the
+possible exception of the last name. An English scholar, Rev. Allen W.
+Chatfield, has translated the hymns extant of Gregory Nazianzen. The
+following stanzas give an idea of their quality. The lines are from an
+address to the Deity:
+
+ How, Unapproached! shall mind of man
+ Descry Thy dazzling throne,
+ And pierce and find Thee out, and scan
+ Where Thou dost dwell alone?
+
+ Unuttered Thou! all uttered things
+ Have had their birth from Thee;
+ The One Unknown, from Thee the spring
+ Of all we know and see.
+
+ And lo! all things abide in Thee
+ And through the complex whole,
+ Thou spreadst Thine own divinity,
+ Thyself of all the Goal.
+
+This is reverent, but rather philosophical than evangelical, and reminds
+us of the Hymn of Aratus, more than two centuries before Christ was
+born.
+
+
+ST. STEPHEN, THE SABAITE.
+
+This pious Greek monk, (734-794,) nephew of St. John of Damascus, spent
+his life, from the age of ten, in the monastery of St. Sabas. His sweet
+hymn, known in Neale's translation,--
+
+ Art thou weary, art thou languid,
+ Art thou sore distrest?
+ Come to Me, saith One, and coming
+ Be at rest,
+
+--is still in the hymnals, with the tunes of Dykes, and Sir Henry W.
+Baker (1821-1877), Vicar of Monkland, Herefordshire.
+
+
+KING ROBERT II.
+
+_Veni, Sancte Spiritus._
+
+Robert the Second, surnamed "Robert the Sage" and "Robert the Devout,"
+succeeded Hugh Capet, his father, upon the throne of France, about the
+year 997. He has been called the gentlest monarch that ever sat upon a
+throne, and his amiability of character poorly prepared him to cope with
+his dangerous and wily adversaries. His last years were embittered by
+the opposition of his own sons, and the political agitations of the
+times. He died at Melun in 1031, and was buried at St. Denis.
+
+Robert possessed a reflective mind, and was fond of learning and musical
+art. He was both a poet and a musician. He was deeply religious, and,
+from unselfish motives, was much devoted to the church.
+
+Robert's hymn, "Veni, Sancte Spiritus," is given below. He himself was a
+chorister; and there was no kingly service that he seemed to love so
+well. We are told that it was his custom to go to the church of St.
+Denis, and in his royal robes, with his crown upon his head, to direct
+the choir at matins and vespers, and join in the singing. Few kings have
+left a better legacy to the Christian church than his own hymn, which,
+after nearly a thousand years, is still an influence in the world:
+
+ Come, Thou Holy Spirit, come,
+ And from Thine eternal home
+ Shed the ray of light divine;
+ Come, Thou Father of the poor,
+ Come, Thou Source of all our store,
+ Come, within our bosoms shine.
+
+ Thou of Comforters the best,
+ Thou the soul's most welcome Guest,
+ Sweet Refreshment here below!
+ In our labor Rest most sweet,
+ Grateful Shadow from the heat,
+ Solace in the midst of woe!
+
+ Oh, most blessed Light Divine,
+ Shine within these hearts of Thine,
+ And our inmost being fill;
+ If Thou take Thy grace away,
+ Nothing pure in man will stay,
+ All our good is turned to ill.
+
+ Heal our wounds; our strength renew
+ On our dryness pour Thy dew;
+ Wash the stains of guilt away!
+ Bend the stubborn heart and will,
+ Melt the frozen, warm the chill,
+ Guide the steps that go astray.
+
+ _Neale's Translation_.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The metre and six-line stanza, being uniform with those of "Rock of
+Ages," have tempted some to borrow "Toplady" for this ancient hymn, but
+Hastings' tune would refuse to sing other words; and, besides, the
+alternate rhymes would mar the euphony. Not unsuitable in spirit are
+several existing tunes of the right measure--like "Nassau" or "St.
+Athanasius"--but in truth the "Veni, Sancte Spiritus" in English waits
+for its perfect setting. Dr. Ray Palmer's paraphrase of it in
+sixes-and-fours, to fit "Olivet,"--
+
+ Come, Holy Ghost in love, etc.
+
+--is objectionable both because the word Ghost is an archaism in
+Christian worship and more especially because Dr. Palmer's altered
+version usurps the place of his own hymn. "Olivet" with "My faith looks
+up to Thee" makes as inviolable a case of psalmodic monogamy as
+"Toplady" with "Rock of Ages."
+
+
+ST. FULBERT.
+
+"_Chori Cantores Hierusalem Novae._"
+
+St. Fulbert's hymn is a worthy companion of Perronet's "Coronation"--if,
+indeed, it was not its original prompter--as King Robert's great litany
+was the mother song of Watts' "Come, Holy Spirit, heavenly Dove;" and
+the countless other sacred lyrics beginning with similar words. As the
+translation stands in the Church of England, there are six stanzas now
+sung, though in America but four appear, and not in the same sequence.
+The first four of the six in their regular succession are as follows:
+
+ Ye choirs of New Jerusalem,
+ Your sweetest notes employ,
+ The Paschal victory to hymn
+ In strains of holy joy.
+
+ For Judah's Lion bursts His chains,
+ Crushing the serpent's head;
+ And cries aloud, through death's domains
+ To wake the imprisoned dead.
+
+ Devouring depths of hell their prey
+ At His command restore;
+ His ransomed hosts pursue their way
+ Where Jesus goes before.
+
+ Triumphant in His glory now,
+ To Him all power is given;
+ To Him in one communion bow
+ All saints in earth and heaven.
+
+Bishop Fulbert, known in the Roman and in the Protestant ritualistic
+churches as St. Fulbert of Chartres, was a man of brilliant and
+versatile mind, and one of the most eminent prelates of his time. He was
+a contemporary of Robert II, and his intimate friend, continuing so
+after the Pope (Gregory V.) excommunicated the king for marrying a
+cousin, which was forbidden by the canons of the church.
+
+Fulbert was for some time head of the Theological College at Chartres, a
+cathedral town of France, anciently the capital of Celtic Gaul, and
+afterwards he was consecrated as Bishop of that diocese. He died about
+1029.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The modern tone-interpreter of Fulbert's hymn bears the name "La Spezia"
+in some collections, and was composed by James Taylor about the time the
+hymn was translated into English by Robert Campbell. Research might
+discover the ancient tune--for the hymn is said to have been sung in the
+English church during Fulbert's lifetime--but the older was little
+likely to be the better music. "La Spezia" is a choral of enlivening but
+easy chords, and a tread of triumph in its musical motion that suits the
+march of "Judah's Lion":
+
+ His ransomed hosts pursue their way
+ Where Jesus goes before.
+
+James Taylor, born 1833, is a Doctor of Music, organist of the
+University of Oxford and Director of the Oxford Philharmonic Society.
+
+Robert Campbell, the translator, was a Scotch lawyer, born in Edinburgh,
+who besides his work as an advocate wrote original hymns, and in other
+ways exercised a natural literary gift. He compiled the excellent
+Hymnal of the diocese of St. Andrews, and this was his best work. The
+date of his death is given as Dec. 29, 1868.
+
+
+THOMAS OF CELANO.
+
+ Dies irae! dies illa,
+ Solvet saeclum in favilla,
+ Teste David cum Sybilla.
+
+ Day of wrath! that day of burning,
+ All the world to ashes turning,
+ Sung by prophets far discerning.
+
+Latin ecclesiastical poetry reached its high water mark in that awful
+hymn. The solitaire of its sphere and time in the novelty of its
+rhythmic triplets, it stood a wonder to the church and hierarchy
+accustomed to the slow spondees of the ancient chant. There could be
+such a thing as a trochaic hymn!--and majestic, too!
+
+It was a discovery that did not stale. The compelling grandeur of the
+poem placed it distinct and alone, and the very difficulty of staffing
+it for vocal and instrumental use gave it a zest, and helped to keep it
+unique through the ages.
+
+Latin hymnody and hymnography, appealing to the popular ear and heart,
+had gradually substituted accent for quantity in verse; for the common
+people could never be moved by a Christian song in the prosody of the
+classics. The religion of the cross, with the song-preaching of its
+propagandists, created medieval Latin and made it a secondary
+classic--mother of four anthem languages of Western and Southern Europe.
+Its golden age was the 12th and 13th centuries. The new and more
+flexible school of speech and music in hymn and tune had perfected
+rhythmic beauty and brought in the winsome assonance of rhyme.
+
+[Illustration: Dr. Martin Luther]
+
+The "Dies Irae" was born, it is believed, about the year 1255. Its
+authorship has been debated, but competent testimony assures us that the
+original draft of the great poem was found in a box among the effects of
+Thomas di Celano after his death. Thomas--surnamed Thomas of Celano from
+his birthplace, the town of Celano in the province of Aquila, Southern
+Italy--was the pupil, friend and co-laborer of St. Francis of Assisi,
+and wrote his memoirs. He is supposed to have died near the end of the
+13th century. That he wrote the sublime judgment song there is now
+practically no question.
+
+The label on the discovered manuscript would suggest that the writer did
+not consider it either a hymn or a poem. Like the inspired prophets he
+had meditated--and while he was musing the fire burned. The only title
+he wrote over it was "_Prosa de mortuis_," Prosa (or prosa oratio)--from
+_prorsus_, "straight forward"--appears here in the truly conventional
+sense it was beginning to bear, but not yet as the antipode of "poetry."
+The modest author, unconscious of the magnitude of his work, called it
+simply "Plain speech concerning the dead."[7]
+
+[Footnote 7: "Proses" were original passages introduced into
+ecclesiastical chants in the 10th century. During and after the 11th
+century they were called "Sequences" (i.e. _following_ the "Gospel" in
+the liturgy), and were in metrical form, having a prayerful tone.
+"Sequentia pro defunctis" was the later title of the "Dies Irae."]
+
+The hymn is much too long to quote entire, but can be found in _Daniel's
+Thesaurus_ in any large public library. As to the translations of it,
+they number hundreds--in English and German alone, and Italy, Spain and
+Portugal have their vernacular versions--not to mention the Greek and
+Russian and even the Hebrew. A few stanzas follow, with their renderings
+into English (always imperfect) selected almost at random:
+
+ Quantus tremor est futurus
+ Quando Judex est venturus,
+ Cuncta stricte discussurus!
+
+ Tuba mirum spargens sonum
+ Per sepulcra regionum,
+ Coget omnes ante thronum!
+
+ O the dread, the contrite kneeling
+ When the Lord, in Judgment dealing,
+ Comes each hidden thing revealing!
+
+ When the trumpet's awful tone
+ Through the realms sepulchral blown,
+ Summons all before the Throne!
+
+The solemn strength and vibration of these tremendous trilineals suffers
+no general injury by the variant readings--and there are a good many. As
+a sample, the first stanza was changed by some canonical redactor to get
+rid of the heathen word Sybilla, and the second line was made the
+third:
+
+ Dies Irae, dies illa
+ Crucis expandens vexilla,
+ Solvet saeclum in favilla.
+
+ Day of wrath! that day foretold,
+ With the cross-flag wide unrolled,
+ Shall the world in fire enfold!
+
+In some readings the original "in favilla" is changed to "_cum_
+favilla," "_with_ ashes" instead of "in ashes"; and "Teste Petro" is
+substituted for "Teste David."
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The varieties of music set to the "Hymn of Judgment" in the different
+sections and languages of Christendom during seven hundred years are
+probably as numerous as the pictures of the Holy Family in Christian
+art. It is enough to say that one of the best at hand, or, at least,
+accessible, is the solemn minor melody of Dr. Dykes in William Henry
+Monk's _Hymns Ancient and Modern_. It was composed about the middle of
+the last century. Both the _Evangelical_ and _Methodist Hymnals_ have
+Dean Stanley's translation of the hymn, the former with thirteen stanzas
+(six-line) to a D minor of John Stainer, and the latter to a C major of
+Timothy Matthews. The _Plymouth Hymnal_ has seventeen of the trilineal
+stanzas, by an unknown translator, to Ferdinand Hiller's tune in F
+minor, besides one verse to another F minor--hymn and tune both
+nameless.
+
+All the composers above named are musicians of fame. John Stainer,
+organist of St. Paul's Cathedral, was a Doctor of Music and Chevalier of
+the Legion of Honor, and celebrated for his works in sacred music, to
+which he mainly devoted his time. He was born June 6, 1840. He died
+March 31, 1901.
+
+Rev. Timothy Richard Matthews, born at Colmworth, Eng., Nov. 20, 1826,
+is a clergyman of the Church of England, incumbent of a Lancaster charge
+to which he was appointed by Queen Alexandra.
+
+Ferdinand Hiller, born 1811 at Frankfort-on-the-Main, of Hebrew
+parentage, was one of Germany's most eminent musicians. For many years
+he was Chapel Master at Cologne, and organized the Cologne Conservatory.
+His compositions are mostly for instrumental performance, but he wrote
+cantatas, motets, male choruses, and two oratorios, one on the
+"Destruction of Jerusalem." Died May 10, 1855.
+
+The Very Rev. Arthur Penrhyn Stanley, Dean of Westminster, was an author
+and scholar whom all sects of Christians delighted to honor. His
+writings on the New Testament and his published researches in Palestine,
+made him an authority in Biblical study, and his contributions to sacred
+literature were looked for and welcomed as eagerly as a new hymn by
+Bonar or a new poem by Tennyson. Dean Stanley was born in 1815, and died
+July 18th, 1881.
+
+
+THOMAS Ŕ KEMPIS.
+
+Thomas ŕ Kempis, sub-prior of the Convent of St. Agnes, was born at
+Hamerkin, Holland, about the year 1380, and died at Zwoll, 1471. This
+pious monk belonged to an order called the "Brethren of the Common Life"
+founded by Gerard de Groote, and his fame rests entirely upon his one
+book, the _Imitation of Christ_, which continues to be printed as a
+religious classic, and is unsurpassed as a manual of private devotion.
+His monastic life--as was true generally of the monastic life of the
+middle ages--was not one of useless idleness. The Brethren taught school
+and did mechanical work. Besides, before the invention of printing had
+been perfected and brought into common service, the multiplication of
+books was principally the work of monkish pens. Kempis spent his days
+copying the Bible and good books--as well as in exercises of devotion
+that promoted religious calm.
+
+His idea of heaven, and the idea of his order, was expressed in that
+clause of John's description of the City of God, Rev. 22:3, "_and His
+servants shall serve Him_." Above all other heavenly joys that was his
+favorite thought. We can well understand that the pious quietude wrought
+in his mind and manners by his habit of life made him a saint in the
+eyes of the people. The frontispiece of one edition of his _Imitatio
+Christi_ pictures him as being addressed before the door of a convent
+by a troubled pilgrim,--
+
+ "O where is peace?--for thou its paths hast trod,"
+
+--and his answer completes the couplet,--
+
+ "In poverty, retirement, and with God."
+
+Of all that is best in inward spiritual life, much can be learned from
+this inspired Dutchman. He wrote no hymns, but in his old age he
+composed a poem on "Heaven's Joys," which is sometimes called "Thomas ŕ
+Kempis' Hymn":
+
+ High the angel choirs are raising
+ Heart and voice in harmony;
+ The Creator King still praising
+ Whom in beauty there they see.
+
+ Sweetest strains from soft harps stealing,
+ Trumpets' notes of triumph pealing,
+ Radiant wings and white stoles gleaming
+ Up the steps of glory streaming;
+ Where the heavenly bells are ringing;
+ "Holy! holy! holy!" singing
+ To the mighty Trinity!
+ "Holy! holy! holy!" crying,
+ For all earthly care and sighing
+ In that city cease to be!
+
+These lines are not in the hymnals of today--and whether they ever found
+their way into choral use in ancient times we are not told. Worse poetry
+has been sung--and more un-hymnlike. Some future composer will make a
+tune to the words of a Christian who stood almost in sight of his
+hundredth year--and of the eternal home he writes about.
+
+
+MARTIN LUTHER.
+
+"_Ein Feste Burg Ist Unser Gott._"
+
+Of Martin Luther Coleridge said, "He did as much for the Reformation by
+his hymns as he did by his translation of the Bible." The remark is so
+true that it has become a commonplace.
+
+The above line--which may be seen inscribed on Luther's tomb at
+Wittenberg--is the opening sentence and key-note of the Reformer's
+grandest hymn. The forty-sixth Psalm inspired it, and it is in harmony
+with sublime historical periods from its very nature, boldness, and
+sublimity. It was written, according to Welles, in the memorable year
+when the evangelical princes delivered their protest at the Diet of
+Spires, from which the word and the meaning of the word "Protestant" is
+derived. "Luther used often to sing it in 1530, while the Diet of
+Augsburg was sitting. It soon became the favorite psalm with the people.
+It was one of the watchwords of the Reformation, cheering armies to
+conflict, and sustaining believers in the hours of fiery trial."
+
+"After Luther's death, Melancthon, his affectionate coadjutor, being one
+day at Weimar with his banished friends, Jonas and Creuziger, heard a
+little maid singing this psalm in the street, and said, 'Sing on, my
+little girl, you little know whom you comfort:'"
+
+ A mighty fortress is our God,
+ A bulwark never failing;
+ Our helper He, amid the flood
+ Of mortal ills prevailing.
+ For still our ancient foe
+ Doth seek to work us woe;
+ His craft and power are great,
+ And, armed with cruel hate,
+ On earth is not his equal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The Prince of Darkness grim--
+ We tremble not for him:
+ His rage we can endure,
+ For lo! his doom is sure,
+ One little word shall fell him.
+
+ That word above all earthly powers--
+ No thanks to them--abideth;
+ The Spirit and the gifts are ours,
+ Through Him who with us sideth.
+ Let goods and kindred go,
+ This mortal life also;
+ The body they may kill,
+ God's truth abideth still,
+ His kingdom is for ever.
+
+Martin Luther was born in Eisleben, in Saxony, Nov. 10, 1483. He was
+educated at the University of Erfurth, and became an Augustinian monk
+and Professor of Philosophy and Divinity in the University of
+Wittenberg. In 1517 he composed and placarded his ninety-five Theses
+condemning certain practices of the Romish Church and three years later
+the Pope published a bull excommunicating him, which he burnt openly
+before a sympathetic multitude in Wittenberg. His life was a stormy one,
+and he was more than once in mortal danger by reason of his antagonism
+to the papal authority, but he found powerful patrons, and lived to see
+the Reformation an organized fact. He died in his birthplace, Eisleben,
+Feb. 18th, 1546.
+
+The translation of the "Ein feste burg," given above, in part, is by
+Rev. Frederick Henry Hedge, D.D., born in Cambridge, March 1805, a
+graduate of Harvard, and formerly minister of the Unitarian Church in
+Bangor, Me. Died, 1890.
+
+Luther wrote thirty-six hymns, to some of which he fitted his own music,
+for he was a musician and singer as well as an eloquent preacher. The
+tune in which "Ein feste Burg" is sung in the hymnals, was composed by
+himself. The hymn has also a noble rendering in the music of Sebastian
+Bach, 8-4 time, found in _Hymns Ancient and Modern_.
+
+
+BARTHOLOMEW RINGWALDT.
+
+"Great God, What Do I See and Hear?"
+
+The history of this hymn is somewhat indefinite, though common consent
+now attributes to Ringwaldt the stanza beginning with the above line.
+The imitation of the "Dies Irae" in German which was first in use was
+printed in Jacob Klug's "_Gesangbuch_" in 1535. Ringwaldt's hymn of the
+Last Day, also inspired from the ancient Latin original, appears in his
+_Handbuchlin_ of 1586, but does not contain this stanza. The first line
+is, "The awful Day will surely come," (Es ist gewisslich an der Zeit).
+Nevertheless through the more than two hundred years that the hymn has
+been translated and re-translated, and gone through inevitable
+revisions, some vital identity in the spirit and tone of the one
+seven-line stanza has steadily connected it with Ringwaldt's name.
+Apparently it is the single survivor of a great lost hymn--edited and
+altered out of recognition. But its power evidently inspired the added
+verses, as we have them. Dr. Collyer found it, and, regretting that it
+was too short to sing in public service, composed stanzas 2d, 3d and
+4th. It is likely that Collyer first met with it in _Psalms and Hymns
+for Public and Private Devotion_, Sheffield 1802, where it appeared
+anonymously. So far as known this was its first publication in English.
+Ringwaldt's stanza and two of Collyer's are here given:
+
+ Great God, what do I see and hear!
+ The end of things created!
+ The Judge of mankind doth appear
+ On clouds of glory seated.
+ The trumpet sounds, the graves restore
+ The dead which they contained before;
+ Prepare, my soul, to meet Him.
+
+ The dead in Christ shall first arise
+ At the last trumpet sounding,
+ Caught up to meet Him in the skies,
+ With joy their Lord surrounding.
+ No gloomy fears their souls dismay
+ His presence sheds eternal day
+ On those prepared to meet Him.
+
+ Far over space to distant spheres
+ The lightnings are prevailing
+ Th' ungodly rise, and all their tears
+ And sighs are unavailing.
+ The day of grace is past and gone;
+ They shake before the Judge's Throne
+ All unprepared to meet Him.
+
+Bartholomew Ringwaldt, pastor of the Lutheran Church of Longfeld,
+Prussia, was born in 1531, and died in 1599. His hymns appear in a
+collection entitled _Hymns for the Sundays and Festivals of the Whole
+Year_.
+
+Rev. William Bengo Collyer D.D., was born at Blackheath near London,
+April 14, 1782, educated at Homerton College and settled over a
+Congregational Church in Peckham. In 1812 he published a book of hymns,
+and in 1837 a _Service Book_ to which he contributed eighty-nine hymns.
+He died Jan, 9, 1854.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Probably it was the customary singing of Ringwaldt's hymn (in Germany)
+to Luther's tune that gave it for some time the designation of "Luther's
+Hymn," the title by which the music is still known--an air either
+composed or adapted by Luther, and rendered perhaps unisonously or with
+extempore chords. It was not until early in the last century that
+Vincent Novello wrote to it the noble arrangement now in use. It is a
+strong, even-time harmony with lofty tenor range, and very impressive
+with full choir and organ or the vocal volume of a congregation. In
+_Cheetham's Psalmody_ is it written with a trumpet obligato.
+
+Vincent Novello, born in London, Sept. 6, 1781, the intimate friend of
+Lamb, Shelley, Keats, Hunt and Hazlitt, was a professor of music who
+attained great eminence as an organist and composer of hymn-tunes and
+sacred pieces. He was the founder of the publishing house of Novello and
+Ewer, and father of a famous musical family. Died at Nice, Aug. 9, 1861.
+
+
+ST. FRANCIS XAVIER.
+
+"_O Deus, Ego Amo Te._"
+
+Francis Xavier, the celebrated Jesuit missionary, called "The Apostle of
+the Indies," was a Spaniard, born in 1506. While a student in Paris he
+met Ignatius Loyola, and joined him in the formation of the new "Society
+for the Propagation of the Faith." He was sent out on a mission to the
+East Indies and Japan, and gave himself to the work with a martyr's
+devotion. The stations he established in Japan were maintained more than
+a hundred years. He died in China, Dec. 1552.
+
+His hymn, some time out of use, is being revived in later singing-books
+as expressive of the purest and highest Christian sentiment:
+
+ O Deus, ego amo Te.
+ Nec amo Te, ut salves me,
+ Aut quia non amantes Te
+ Ćterno punis igne.
+
+ My God, I love Thee--not because
+ I hope for heaven thereby;
+ Nor yet because who love Thee not
+ Must burn eternally.
+
+After recounting Christ's vicarious sufferings as the chief claim to His
+disciples' unselfish love, the hymn continues,--
+
+ Cur igitur non amem Te,
+ O Jesu amantissime!
+ Non, ut in coelo salves me,
+ Aut in ćternum damnes me.
+
+ Then why, O blessed Jesus Christ,
+ Should I not love Thee well?
+ Not for the sake of winning heaven,
+ Nor of escaping hell;
+
+ Not with the hope of gaining aught,
+ Nor seeking a reward,
+ But as Thyself hast lovéd me,
+ Oh, ever-loving Lord!
+
+ E'en so I love Thee, and will love,
+ And in Thy praise will sing;
+ Solely because Thou art my God
+ And my eternal King.
+
+The translation is by Rev. Edward Caswall, 1814-1878, a priest in the
+Church of Rome. Besides his translations, he published the _Lyra
+Catholica_, the _Masque of Mary_, and several other poetical works.
+(Page 101.)
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"St. Bernard"--apparently so named because originally composed to
+Caswall's translation of one of Bernard of Clairvaux's hymns--is by
+John Richardson, born in Preston, Eng., Dec. 4, 1817, and died there
+April 13, 1879. He was an organist in Liverpool, and noted as a composer
+of glees, but was the author of several sacred tunes.
+
+
+SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
+
+"Give Me My Scallop-Shell of Quiet."
+
+Few of the hymns of the Elizabethan era survive, though the Ambrosian
+Midnight Hymn, "Hark, 'tis the Midnight Cry," and the hymns of St.
+Bernard and Bernard of Cluny, are still tones in the church, and the
+religious poetry of Sir Walter Raleigh comes down to us associated with
+the history of his brilliant, though tragic career. The following poem
+has some fine lines in the quaint English style of the period, and was
+composed by Sir Walter during his first imprisonment:
+
+ Give me my scallop-shell of quiet,
+ My staff of faith to walk upon,
+ My scrip of joy--immortal diet--
+ My bottle of salvation,
+ My gown of glory, hope's true gage--
+ And thus I take my pilgrimage.
+
+ Blood must be my body's balmer,
+ While my soul, like faithful palmer,
+ Travelleth toward the land of heaven;
+ Other balm will not be given.
+
+ Over the silver mountains
+ Where spring the nectar fountains,
+ There will I kiss the bowl of bliss,
+ And drink my everlasting fill,
+ Upon every milken hill;
+ My soul will be a-dry before,
+ But after that will thirst no more.
+
+The musings of the unfortunate but high-souled nobleman in expectation
+of ignominious death are interesting and pathetic, but they have no
+claim to a tune, even if they were less rugged and unmetrical. But the
+poem stands notable among the pious witnesses.
+
+
+MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS.
+
+"_O Domine Deus, Speravi in Te._"
+
+This last passionate prayer of the unhappy Mary Stuart just before her
+execution--in a language which perhaps flowed from her pen more easily
+than even her English or French--is another witness of supplicating
+faith that struggles out of darkness with a song. In her extremity the
+devoted Catholic forgets her petitions to the Virgin, and comes to
+Christ:
+
+ O Domine Deus, Speravi in Te;
+ O care mi Jesu, nunc libera me!
+ In dura catena, in misera poena
+ Desidero Te!
+ Languendo, gemendo, et genuflectendo
+ Adoro, imploro ut liberes me!
+
+ My Lord and my God! I have trusted in Thee;
+ O Jesus, my Saviour belov'd, set me free:
+ In rigorous chains, in piteous pains,
+ I am longing for Thee!
+ In weakness appealing, in agony kneeling,
+ I pray, I beseech Thee, O Lord, set me free!
+
+One would, at first thought, judge this simple but eloquent cry worthy
+of an appropriate tone-expression--to be sung by prison evangelists like
+the Volunteers of America, to convicts in the jails and penitentiaries.
+But its special errand and burden are voiced so literally that hardened
+hearers would probably misapply it--however sincerely the petitioner
+herself meant to invoke spiritual rather than temporal deliverance. The
+hymn, if we may call it so, is _too_ literal. Possibly at some time or
+other it may have been set to music but not for ordinary choir service.
+
+
+SAMUEL RUTHERFORD.
+
+ The sands of time are sinking,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ But, glory, glory dwelleth
+ In Immanuel's Land.
+
+This hymn is biographical, but not autobiographical. Like the discourses
+in Herodotus and Plutarch, it is the voice of the dead speaking through
+the sympathetic genius of the living after long generations. The strong,
+stern Calvinist of 1636 in Aberdeen was not a poet, but he bequeathed
+his spirit and life to the verse of a poet of 1845 in Melrose. Anne Ross
+Cousin read his two hundred and twenty letters written during a two
+years' captivity for his fidelity to the purer faith, and studied his
+whole history and experience till her soul took his soul's place and
+felt what he felt. Her poem of nineteen stanzas (152 lines) is the voice
+of Rutherford the Covenanter, with the prolixity of his manner and age
+sweetened by his triumphant piety, and that is why it belongs with the
+_Hymns of Great Witnesses_. The three or four stanzas still occasionally
+printed and sung are only recalled to memory by the above three lines.
+
+Samuel Rutherford was born in Nisbet Parish, Scotland, in 1600. His
+settled ministry was at Anworth, in Galloway--1630-1651--with a break
+between 1636 and 1638, when Charles I. angered by his anti-prelatical
+writings, silenced and banished him. Shut up in Aberdeen, but allowed,
+like Paul in Rome, to live "in his own hired house" and write letters,
+he poured out his heart's love in Epistles to his Anworth flock and to
+the Non-conformists of Scotland. When his countrymen rose against the
+attempted imposition of a new holy Romish service-book on their
+churches, he escaped to his people, and soon after appeared in Edinburgh
+and signed the covenant with the assembled ministers. Thirteen years
+later, after Cromwell's death and the accession of Charles II. the wrath
+of the prelates fell on him at St. Andrews, where the Presbytery had
+made him rector of the college. The King's decree indicted him for
+treason, stripped him of all his offices, and would have forced him to
+the block had he not been stricken with his last sickness. When the
+officers came to take him he said, "I am summoned before a higher Judge
+and Judicatory, and I am behooved to attend them." He died soon after,
+in the year 1661.
+
+The first, and a few other of the choicest stanzas of the hymn inspired
+by his life and death are here given:
+
+ The sands of time are sinking,
+ The dawn of heaven breaks,
+ The summer morn I've sighed for--
+ The fair, sweet morn--awakes.
+ Dark, dark hath been the midnight,
+ But dayspring is at hand;
+ And glory, glory dwelleth
+ In Immanuel's land.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Oh! well it is for ever--
+ Oh! well for evermore:
+ My nest hung in no forest
+ Of all this death-doomed shore;
+ Yea, let this vain world vanish,
+ As from the ship the strand,
+ While glory, glory dwelleth
+ In Immanuel's land.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The little birds of Anworth--
+ I used to count them blest;
+ Now beside happier altars
+ I go to build my nest;
+ O'er these there broods no silence
+ No graves around them stand;
+ For glory deathless dwelleth
+ In Immanuel's land.
+
+ I have borne scorn and hatred,
+ I have borne wrong and shame,
+ Earth's proud ones have reproached me
+ For Christ's thrice blesséd name.
+ Where God's seals set the fairest,
+ They've stamped their foulest brand;
+ But judgment shines like noonday
+ In Immanuel's land.
+
+ They've summoned me before them,
+ But there I may not come;
+ My Lord says, "Come up hither;"
+ My Lord says, "Welcome home;"
+ My King at His white throne
+ My presence doth command,
+ Where glory, glory dwelleth,
+ In Immanuel's land.
+
+A reminiscence of St. Paul in his second Epistle to Timothy (chap. 4)
+comes with the last two stanzas.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The tender and appropriate choral in B flat, named "Rutherford" was
+composed by D'Urhan, a French musician, probably a hundred years ago. It
+was doubtless named by those who long afterwards fitted it to the words,
+and knew whose spiritual proxy the lady stood who indited the hymn. It
+is reprinted in Peloubet's _Select Songs_, and in the _Coronation
+Hymnal_. Naturally in the days of the hymn's more frequent use people
+became accustomed to calling "The sands of time are sinking,"
+"Rutherford's Hymn." Rutherford's own words certainly furnished the
+memorable refrain with its immortal glow and gladness. One of his joyful
+exclamations as he lay dying of his lingering disease was, "Glory
+shineth in Immanuel's Land!"
+
+Chretien (Christian) Urhan, or D'Urhan, was born at Montjoie, France,
+about 1788, and died, in Paris, 1845. He was a noted violin-player, and
+composer, also, of vocal and instrumental music.
+
+Mrs. Anne Ross (Cundell) Cousin, daughter of David Ross Cundell, M.D.,
+and widow of Rev. William Cousin of the Free church of Scotland, was
+born in Melrose (?), 1824. She wrote many poems, most of which are
+beautiful meditations rather than lyrics suitable for public song. Her
+"Rutherford Hymn" was first published in the _Christian Treasury_, 1857.
+
+
+GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS.
+
+"_Verzage Nicht Du Hauflein Klein._"
+
+The historian tells us that before the battle of Lutzen, during the
+Thirty Years' War (1618-1648), King Gustavus of Sweden, in the thick fog
+of an autumn morning, with the Bohemian and Austrian armies of Emperor
+Ferdinand in front of him, knelt before his troops, and his whole army
+knelt with him in prayer. Then ten thousand voices and the whole concert
+of regimental bands burst forth in this brave song:
+
+ Fear not, O little flock, the foe
+ Who madly seeks your overthrow,
+ Dread not his rage and power:
+ What though your courage sometimes faints,
+ His seeming triumph o'er God's saints
+ Lasts but a little hour.
+
+ Be of good cheer, your cause belongs
+ To Him who can avenge your wrongs;
+ Leave it to Him, our Lord:
+ Though hidden yet from all our eyes,
+ He sees the Gideon who shall rise
+ To save us and His word.
+
+ As true as God's own word is true,
+ Nor earth nor hell with all their crew,
+ Against us shall prevail:
+ A jest and by-word they are grown;
+ God is with us, we are His own,
+ Our victory cannot fail.
+
+ Amen, Lord Jesus, grant our prayer!
+ Great Captain, now Thine arm make bare,
+ Fight for us once again:
+ So shall Thy saints and martyrs raise
+ A mighty chorus to Thy praise,
+ World without end. Amen.
+
+The army of Gustavus moved forward to victory as the fog lifted; but at
+the moment of triumph a riderless horse came galloping back to the camp.
+It was the horse of the martyred King.
+
+The battle song just quoted--next to Luther's "Ein feste Burg" the most
+famous German hymn--has always since that day been called "Gustavus
+Adolphus' Hymn"; and the mingled sorrow and joy of the event at Lutzen
+named it also "King Gustavus' Swan Song." Gustavus Adolphus did not
+write hymns. He could sing them, and he could make them historic--and it
+was this connection that identified him with the famous battle song. Its
+author was the Rev. Johan Michael Altenburg, a Lutheran clergyman, who
+composed apparently both hymn and tune on receiving news of the king's
+victory at Leipsic a year before.
+
+Gustavus Adolphus was born in 1594. His death on the battlefield
+occurred Nov. 5, 1632--when he was in the prime of his manhood. He was
+one of the greatest military commanders in history, besides being a
+great ruler and administrator, and a devout Christian. He was, during
+the Thirty Years' War (until his untimely death), the leading champion
+of Protestantism in Europe.
+
+The English translator of the battle song was Miss Catherine Winkworth,
+born in London, Sept. 13, 1827. She was an industrious and successful
+translator of German hymns, contributing many results of her work to two
+English editions of the _Lyra Germania_, to the _Church Book of
+England_, and to _Christian Singers of Germany_. She died in 1878.
+
+The tune of "Ravendale" by Walter Stokes (born 1847) is the best modern
+rendering of the celebrated hymn.
+
+
+PAUL GERHARDT.
+
+"_Befiehl Du Deine Wege._"
+
+Paul Gerhardt was one of those minstrels of experience who are--
+
+ "Cradled into poetry by wrong,
+ And learn in suffering what they teach in song."
+
+He was a graduate of that school when he wrote his "Hymn of Trust:"
+
+ Commit thou all thy griefs
+ And ways into His hands;
+ To His sure trust and tender care
+ Who earth and heaven commands.
+
+ Thou on the Lord rely,
+ So, safe, shalt thou go on;
+ Fix on His work thy steadfast eye,
+ So shall thy work be done.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Give to the winds thy fears;
+ Hope, and be undismayed;
+ God hears thy sighs and counts thy tears,
+ He shall lift up thy head.
+
+ Through waves and clouds and storms
+ He gently clears thy way;
+ Wait thou His time, so shall this night
+ Soon end in joyous day.
+
+Gerhardt was born at Grafenheinchen, Saxony, 1606. Through the first and
+best years of manhood's strength (during the Thirty Years' War), a
+wandering preacher tossed from place to place, he was without a parish
+and without a home.
+
+After the peace of Westphalia he settled in the little village of
+Mittenwalde. He was then forty-four years old. Four years later he
+married and removed to a Berlin church. During his residence there he
+buried his wife, and four of his children, was deposed from the
+ministry because his Lutheran doctrines offended the Elector Frederick,
+and finally retired as a simple arch-deacon to a small parish in Lubben,
+where he preached, toiled, and suffered amid a rough and uncongenial
+people till he died, Jan. 16, 1676.
+
+Few men have ever lived whose case more needed a "Hymn of Trust"--and
+fewer still could have written it themselves. Through all those trial
+years he was pouring forth his soul in devout verses, making in all no
+less than a hundred and twenty-five hymns--every one of them a comfort
+to others as well as to himself.
+
+He became a favorite, and for a time _the_ favorite, hymn-writer of all
+the German-speaking people. Among these tones of calm faith and joy we
+recognize today (in the English tongue),--
+
+ Since Jesus is my Friend,
+
+ Thee, O Immanuel, we praise,
+
+ All my heart this night rejoices,
+
+ How shall I meet Thee,
+
+--and the English translation of his "O Haupt voll Blut und Wunden,"
+turned into German by himself from St. Bernard Clairvaux's "Salve caput
+cruentatum," and made dear to us in Rev. James Alexander's beautiful
+lines--
+
+ O sacred head now wounded,
+ With grief and shame weighed down,
+ Now scornfully surrounded
+ With thorns, Thine only crown.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+A plain-song by Alexander Reinagle is used by some congregations, but is
+not remarkably expressive. Reinagle, Alexander Robert, (1799-1877) of
+Kidlington, Eng., was organist to the church of St. Peter-in-the-East,
+Oxford.
+
+The great "Hymn of Trust" could have found no more sympathetic
+interpreter than the musician of Gerhardt's own land and language,
+Schumann, the gentle genius of Zwickau. It bears the name "Schumann,"
+appropriately enough, and its elocution makes a volume of each quatrain,
+notably the one--
+
+ Who points the clouds their course,
+ Whom wind and seas obey;
+ He shall direct thy wandering feet,
+ He shall prepare thy way.
+
+Robert Schumann, Ph.D., was born in Zwickau, Saxony, June 8, 1810. He
+was a music director and conservatory teacher, and the master-mind of
+the pre-Wagnerian period. His compositions became popular, having a
+character of their own, combining the intellectual and beautiful in art.
+He published in Leipsic a journal promotive of his school of music, and
+founded a choral society in Dresden. Happy in the coöperation of his
+wife, herself a skilled musician, he extended his work to Vienna and the
+Netherlands; but his zeal wore him out, and he died at the age of
+forty-six, universally lamented as "the eminent man who had done so much
+for the happiness of others."
+
+Gerhardt's Hymn (ten quatrains) is rarely printed entire, and where six
+are printed only four are usually sung. Different collections choose
+portions according to the compiler's taste, the stanza beginning--
+
+ Give to the winds thy fears,
+
+--being with some a favorite first verse.
+
+The translation of the hymn from the German is John Wesley's.
+
+Purely legendary is the beautiful story of the composition of the hymn,
+"Commit thou all thy griefs"; how, after his exile from Berlin,
+traveling on foot with his weeping wife, Gerhardt stopped at a wayside
+inn and wrote the lines while he rested; and how a messenger from Duke
+Christian found him there, and offered him a home in Meresburg. But the
+most ordinary imagination can fill in the possible incidents in a life
+of vicissitudes such as Gerhardt's was.
+
+
+LADY HUNTINGDON.
+
+"When Thou My Righteous Judge Shalt Come."
+
+Selina Shirley, Countess of Huntingdon, born 1707, died 1791, is
+familiarly known as the titled friend and patroness of Whitefield and
+his fellow-preachers. She early consecrated herself to God, and in the
+great spiritual awakening under Whitefield and the Wesleys she was a
+punctual and sympathetic helper. Uniting with the Calvinistic
+Methodists, she nevertheless stood aloof from none who preached a
+personal Christ, and whose watchwords were the salvation of souls and
+the purification of the Church. For more than fifty years she devoted
+her wealth to benevolence and spiritual ministries, and died at the age
+of eighty-four. "I have done my work," was her last testimony. "I have
+nothing to do but to go to my Father."
+
+At various times Lady Huntingdon expressed her religious experience in
+verse, and the manful vigor of her school of faith recalls the unbending
+confidence of Job, for she was not a stranger to affliction.
+
+ God's furnace doth in Zion stand,
+ But Zion's God sits by,
+ As the refiner views his gold,
+ With an observant eye.
+
+ His thoughts are high, His love is wise,
+ His wounds a cure intend;
+ And, though He does not always smile,
+ He loves unto the end.
+
+Her great hymn, that keeps her memory green, has the old-fashioned
+flavor. "Massa made God BIG!" was the comment on Dr. Bellany made by his
+old negro servant after that noted minister's death. In Puritan piety
+the sternest self-depreciation qualified every thought of the creature,
+while every allusion to the Creator was a magnificat. Lady Huntingdon's
+hymn has no flattering phrases for the human subject. "Worthless worm,"
+and "vilest of them all" indicate the true Pauline or Oriental
+prostration of self before a superior being; but there is grandeur in
+the metre, the awful reverence, and the scene of judgment in the
+stanzas--always remembering the mighty choral that has so long given the
+lyric its voice in the church, and is ancillary to its fame:
+
+ When Thou, my righteous Judge, shalt come
+ To take Thy ransomed people home,
+ Shall I among them stand?
+ Shall such a worthless worm as I,
+ Who sometimes am afraid to die,
+ Be found at Thy right hand?
+
+ I love to meet Thy people now,
+ Before Thy feet with them to bow,
+ Though vilest of them all;
+ But can I bear the piercing thought,
+ What if my name should be left out,
+ When Thou for them shalt call?
+
+ O Lord, prevent it by Thy grace:
+ Be Thou my only hiding place,
+ In this th' accepted day;
+ Thy pardoning voice, oh let me hear,
+ To still my unbelieving fear,
+ Nor let me fall, I pray.
+
+ Among Thy saints let me be found,
+ Whene'er the archangel's trump shall sound,
+ To see Thy smiling face;
+ Then loudest of the throng I'll sing,
+ While heaven's resounding arches ring
+ With shouts of sovereign grace.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The tune of "Meribah," in which this hymn has been sung for the last
+sixty or more years, is one of Dr. Lowell Mason's masterpieces. An
+earlier German harmony attributed to Heinrich Isaac and named
+"Innsbruck" has in some few cases claimed association with the words,
+though composed two hundred years before Lady Huntingdon was born. It is
+strong and solemn, but its cold psalm-tune movement does not utter the
+deep emotion of the author's lines. "Meribah" was inspired by the hymn
+itself, and there is nothing invidious in saying it illustrates the
+fact, memorable in all hymnology, of the natural obligation of a hymn to
+its tune.
+
+Apropos of both, it is related that Mason was once presiding at choir
+service in a certain church where the minister gave out "When thou my
+righteous Judge shalt come" and by mistake directed the singers to "omit
+the second stanza." Mason sat at the organ, and while playing the last
+strain, "Be found at thy right hand," glanced ahead in the hymnbook and
+turned with a start just in time to command, "Sing the _next_ verse!"
+The choir did so, and "O Lord, prevent it by Thy grace!" was saved from
+being a horrible prayer to be kept out of heaven.
+
+
+ZINZENDORF.
+
+"Jesus, Thy Blood and Righteousness."
+
+Nicolaus Ludwig, Count Von Zinzendorf, was born at Dresden, May 26,
+1700, and educated at Halle and Wittenberg. From his youth he evinced
+marked seriousness of mind, and deep religious sensibilities, and this
+character appeared in his sympathy with the persecuted Moravians, to
+whom he gave domicile and domain on his large estate. For eleven years
+he was Councillor to the Elector of Saxony, but subsequently, uniting
+with the Brethren's Church, he founded the settlement of Herrnhut, the
+first home and refuge of the reorganized sect, and became a Moravian
+minister and bishop.
+
+Zinzendorf was a man of high culture, as well as profound and sincere
+piety and in his hymns (of which he wrote more than two thousand) he
+preached Christ as eloquently as with his voice. The real birth-moment
+of his religious life is said to have been simultaneous with his study
+of the "Ecce Homo" in the Dusseldorf Gallery, a wonderful painting of
+Jesus crowned with thorns. Visiting the gallery one day when a young
+man, he gazed on the sacred face and read the legend superscribed, "All
+this I have done for thee; What doest thou for me?" Ever afterwards his
+motto was "I have but one passion, and that is He, and only He"--a
+version of Paul's "For me to live is Christ."
+
+ Jesus, Thy blood and righteousness
+ My beauty are, my glorious dress:
+ 'Midst flaming worlds, in these arrayed,
+ With joy shall I lift up my head.
+
+ Bold shall I stand in Thy great day,
+ For who aught to my charge shall lay?
+ Fully absolved through these I am--
+ From sin and fear, from guilt and shame.
+
+ Lord, I believe were sinners more
+ Than sands upon the ocean shore,
+ Thou hast for all a ransom paid,
+ For all a full atonement made.
+
+Nearly all the hymns of the great Moravian are now out of general use,
+having accomplished their mission, like the forgotten ones of Gerhardt,
+and been superseded by others. More sung in Europe, probably, now than
+any of the survivors is, "Jesus, geh voran," ("Jesus, lead on,") which
+has been translated into English by Jane Borthwick[8] (1854). Two
+others, both translated by John Wesley, are with us, the one above
+quoted, and "Glory to God, whose witness train." "Jesus, Thy blood,"
+which is the best known, frequently appears with the alteration--
+
+ Jesus, Thy _robe_ of righteousness
+ My beauty _is_, my glorious dress.
+
+[Footnote 8: Born in Edinburgh 1813.]
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Malvern," and "Uxbridge" a pure Gregorian, both by Lowell Mason, are
+common expressions of the hymn--the latter, perhaps, generally
+preferred, being less plaintive and speaking with a surer and more
+restful emphasis.
+
+
+ROBERT SEAGRAVE.
+
+"Rise, My Soul, and Stretch Thy Wings."
+
+This hymn was written early in the 18th century, by the Rev. Robert
+Seagrave, born at Twyford, Leicestershire, Eng., Nov. 22, 1693. Educated
+at Cambridge, he took holy orders in the Established Church, but
+espoused the cause of the great evangelistic movement, and became a
+hearty co-worker with the Wesleys. Judging by the lyric fire he could
+evidently put into his verses, one involuntarily asks if he would not
+have written more, and been in fact the song-leader of the spiritual
+reformation if there had been no Charles Wesley. There is not a hymn of
+Wesley's in use on the same subject equal to the one immortal hymn of
+Seagrave, and the only other near its time that approaches it in vigor
+and appealing power is Doddridge's "Awake my soul, stretch every nerve."
+
+But Providence gave Wesley the harp and appointed to the elder poet a
+branch of possibly equal usefulness, where he was kept too busy to enter
+the singers' ranks.
+
+For eleven years he was the Sunday-evening lecturer at Lorimer's Hall,
+London, and often preached in Whitefield's Tabernacle. His hymn is one
+of the most soul-stirring in the English language:
+
+[Illustration: S. Huntingdon]
+
+ Rise, my soul, and stretch thy wings;
+ Thy better portion trace;
+ Rise from transitory things
+ Toward Heaven, thy native place;
+ Sun and moon and stars decay,
+ Time shall soon this earth remove;
+ Rise, my soul and haste away
+ To seats prepared above.
+
+ Rivers to the ocean run,
+ Nor stay in all their course;
+ Fire ascending seeks the sun;
+ Both speed them to their source:
+ So a soul that's born of God
+ Pants to view His glorious face,
+ Upward tends to His abode
+ To rest in His embrace.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Cease, ye pilgrims, cease to mourn,
+ Press onward to the prize;
+ Soon your Saviour will return
+ Triumphant in the skies.
+ Yet a season, and you know
+ Happy entrance will be given;
+ All our sorrows left below,
+ And earth exchanged for heaven.
+
+This hymn must have found its predestinated organ when it found--
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Amsterdam," the work of James Nares, had its birth and baptism soon
+after the work of Seagrave; and they have been breath and bugle to the
+church of God ever since they became one song. In _The Great Musicians_,
+edited by Francis Huffer, is found this account of James Nares:
+
+"He was born at Hanwell, Middlesex, in 1715; was admitted chorister at
+the Chapel Royal, under Bernard Gates, and when he was able to play the
+organ was appointed deputy for Pigott, of St. George's Chapel, Windsor,
+and became organist at York Minster in 1734. He succeeded Greene as
+organist and composer to the Chapel Royal in 1756, and in the same year
+was made Doctor of Music at Cambridge. He was appointed master of the
+children of the Chapel Royal in 1757, on the death of Gates. This post
+he resigned in 1780, and he died in 1783, (February 10,) and was buried
+in St. Margaret's Church, Westminster.
+
+"He had the reputation of being an excellent trainer of boy's voices,
+many of his anthems having been written to exhibit the accomplishments
+of his young pupils. The degree of excellence the boys attained was not
+won in those days without the infliction of much corporal punishment."
+
+Judging from the high pulse and action in the music of "Amsterdam," one
+would guess the energy of the man who made boy choirs--and made good
+ones. In the old time the rule was, "Birds that can sing and won't sing,
+must be made to sing"; and the rule was sometimes enforced with the
+master's time-stick.
+
+A tune entitled "Excelsius," written a hundred years later by John Henry
+Cornell, so nearly resembles "Amsterdam" as to suggest an intention to
+amend it. It changes the modal note from G to A, but while it marches
+at the same pace it lacks the jubilant modulations and the choral glory
+of the 18th-century piece.
+
+
+SIR JOHN BOWRING.
+
+"In the Cross of Christ I Glory."
+
+In this hymn we see, sitting humbly at the feet of the great author of
+our religion, a man who impressed himself perhaps more than any other
+save Napoleon Bonaparte upon his own generation, and who was the wonder
+of Europe for his immense attainments and the versatility of his powers.
+Statesman, philanthropist, biographer, publicist, linguist, historian,
+financier, naturalist, poet, political economist--there is hardly a
+branch of knowledge or a field of research from which he did not enrich
+himself and others, or a human condition that he did not study and
+influence.
+
+Sir John Bowring was born in 1792. When a youth he was Jeremy Bentham's
+political pupil, but gained his first fame by his vast knowledge of
+European literature, becoming acquainted with no less than thirteen[9]
+continental languages and dialects. He served in consular appointments
+at seven different capitals, carried important reform measures in
+Parliament, was Minister Plenipotentiary to China and Governor of Hong
+Kong, and concluded a commercial treaty with Siam, where every previous
+commissioner had failed. But in all his crowded years the pen of this
+tireless and successful man was busy. Besides his political, economic
+and religious essays, which made him a member of nearly every learned
+society in Europe, his translations were countless, and poems and hymns
+of his own composing found their way to the public, among them the
+tender spiritual song,--
+
+ How sweetly flowed the Gospel sound
+ From lips of gentleness and grace
+ When listening thousands gathered round,
+ And joy and gladness filled the place,
+
+--and the more famous hymn indicated at the head of this sketch.
+Knowledge of all religions only qualified him to worship the Crucified
+with both faith and reason. Though nominally a Unitarian, to him, as to
+Channing and Martineau and Edmund Sears, Christ was "all we know of
+God."
+
+[Footnote 9: Exaggerated in some accounts to _forty_.]
+
+Bowring died Nov. 23, 1872. But his hymn to the Cross will never die:
+
+ In the cross of Christ I glory,
+ Towering o'er the wrecks of time;
+ All the light of sacred story
+ Gathers round its head sublime.
+
+ When the woes of life o'ertake me
+ Hopes deceive, and fears annoy,
+ Never shall the cross forsake me;
+ Lo! it glows with peace and joy.
+
+ When the sun of bliss is beaming
+ Light and love upon my way,
+ From the cross the radiance streaming
+ Adds new lustre to the day.
+
+ Bane and blessing, pain and pleasure
+ By the cross are sanctified,
+ Peace is there that knows no measure,
+ Joys that through all time abide.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Ithamar Conkey's "Rathbun" fits the adoring words as if they had waited
+for it. Its air, swelling through diatonic fourth and third to the
+supreme syllable, bears on its waves the homage of the lines from bar to
+bar till the four voices come home to rest full and satisfied in the
+final chord--
+
+ Gathers round its head sublime.
+
+Ithamar Conkey, was born of Scotch ancestry, in Shutesbury, Mass., May
+5th, 1815. He was a noted bass singer, and was for a long time connected
+with the choir of the Calvary church, New York City, and sang the
+oratorio solos. His tune of "Rathbun" was composed in 1847, and
+published in Greatorex's collection in 1851. He died in Elizabeth, N.J.,
+April 30, 1867.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+HYMNS OF CHRISTIAN DEVOTION AND EXPERIENCE.
+
+
+"JESU DULCIS MEMORIA."
+
+"Jesus the Very Thought of Thee."
+
+The original of this delightful hymn is one of the devout meditations of
+Bernard of Clairvaux, a Cistercian monk (1091-1153). He was born of a
+noble family in or near Dijon, Burgundy, and when only twenty-three
+years old established a monastery at Clairvaux, France, over which he
+presided as its first abbot. Educated in the University of Paris, and
+possessing great natural abilities, he soon made himself felt in both
+the religious and political affairs of Europe. For more than thirty
+years he was the personal power that directed belief, quieted
+turbulence, and arbitrated disputes, and kings and even popes sought his
+counsel. It was his eloquent preaching that inspired the second crusade.
+
+His fine poem of feeling, in fifty Latin stanzas, has been a source of
+pious song in several languages:
+
+ Jesu, dulcis memoria
+ Dans vera cordi gaudia,
+ Sed super mel et omnium
+ Ejus dulcis presentia.
+
+Literally--
+
+ Jesus! a sweet memory
+ Giving true joys to the heart,
+ But sweet above honey and all things
+ His _presence_ [is].
+
+The five stanzas (of Caswall's free translation) now in use are familiar
+and dear to all English-speaking believers:
+
+ Jesus, the very thought of Thee
+ With sweetness fills my breast,
+ But sweeter far Thy face to see,
+ And in Thy presence rest.
+
+ Nor voice can sing nor heart can frame
+ Nor can the memory find,
+ A sweeter sound than Thy blest name,
+ O Saviour of mankind.
+
+The Rev. Edward Caswall was born in Hampshire, Eng., July 15, 1814, the
+son of a clergyman. He graduated with honors at Brazenose College,
+Oxford, and after ten years of service in the ministry of the Church of
+England joined Henry Newman's Oratory at Birmingham, was confirmed in
+the Church of Rome, and devoted the rest of his life to works of piety
+and charity. He died Jan. 2, 1878.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+No single melody has attached itself to this hymn, the scope of
+selection being as large as the supply of appropriate common-metre
+tunes. Barnby's "Holy Trinity," Wade's "Holy Cross" and Griggs' tune (of
+his own name) are all good, but many, on the giving out of the hymn,
+would associate it at once with the more familiar "Heber" by George
+Kingsley and expect to hear it sung. It has the uplift and unction of
+John Newton's--
+
+ How sweet the name of Jesus sounds
+ In the believer's ear.
+
+
+"GOD CALLING YET! SHALL I NOT HEAR?"
+
+Gerhard Tersteegen, the original author of the hymn, and one of the most
+eminent religious poets of the Reformed German church in its early days,
+was born in 1697, in the town of Mors, in Westphalia. He was left an
+orphan in boyhood by the death of his father, and as his mother's means
+were limited, he was put to work as an apprentice when very young, at
+Muhlheim on the Ruhr, and became a ribbon weaver. Here, when about
+fifteen years of age, he became deeply concerned for his soul, and
+experienced a deep and abiding spiritual work. As a Christian, his
+religion partook of the ascetic type, but his mysticism did not make him
+useless to his fellow-men.
+
+At the age of twenty-seven, he dedicated all his resources and energies
+to the cause of Christ, writing the dedication in his own blood. "God
+graciously called me," he says, "out of the world, and granted me the
+desire to belong to Him, and to be willing to follow Him." He gave up
+secular employments altogether, and devoted his whole time to religious
+instruction and to the poor. His house became famous as the "Pilgrims'
+Cottage," and was visited by people high and humble from all parts of
+Germany. In his lifetime he is said to have written one hundred and
+eleven hymns. Died April 3, 1769.
+
+ God calling yet! shall I not hear?
+ Earth's pleasures shall I still hold dear?
+ Shall life's swift-passing years all fly,
+ And still my soul in slumber lie?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ God calling yet! I cannot stay;
+ My heart I yield without delay.
+ Vain world, farewell; from thee I part;
+ The voice of God hath reached my heart.
+
+The hymn was translated from the German by Miss Jane Borthwick, born in
+Edinburgh, 1813. She and her younger sister, Mrs. Findlater, jointly
+translated and published, in 1854, _Hymns From the Land of Luther_, and
+contributed many poetical pieces to the _Family Treasury_. She died in
+1897.
+
+Another translation, imitating the German metre, is more euphonious,
+though less literal and less easily fitted to music not specially
+composed for it, on account of its "feminine" rhymes:
+
+ God calling yet! and shall I never hearken?
+ But still earth's witcheries my spirit darken;
+ This passing life, these passing joys all flying,
+ And still my soul in dreamy slumbers lying?
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Dr. Dykes' "Rivaulx" is a sober choral that articulates the
+hymn-writer's sentiment with sincerity and with considerable
+earnestness, but breathes too faintly the interrogative and expostulary
+tone of the lines. To voice the devout solicitude and self-remonstrance
+of the hymn there is no tune superior to "Federal St."
+
+The Hon. Henry Kemble Oliver, author of "Federal St.," was born in
+Salem, Mass., March, 1800, and was addicted to music from his childhood.
+His father compelled him to relinquish it as a profession, but it
+remained his favorite avocation, and after his graduation from Harvard
+the cares of none of the various public positions he held, from
+schoolmaster to treasurer of the state of Massachusetts, could ever wean
+him from the study of music and its practice. At the age of thirty-one,
+while sitting one day in his study, the last verse of Anne Steele's
+hymn--
+
+ So fades the lovely blooming flower,
+
+--floated into his mind, and an unbidden melody came with it. As he
+hummed it to himself the words shaped the air, and the air shaped the
+words.
+
+ Then gentle patience smiles on pain,
+ Then dying hope revives again,
+
+--became--
+
+ See gentle patience smile on pain;
+ See dying hope revive again;
+
+--and with the change of a word and a tense the hymn created the melody,
+and soon afterward the complete tune was made. Two years later it was
+published by Lowell Mason, and Oliver gave it the name of the street in
+Salem on which his wife was born, wooed, won, and married. It adds a
+pathos to its history that "Federal St." was sung at her burial.
+
+This first of Oliver's tunes was followed by "Harmony Grove," "Morning,"
+"Walnut Grove," "Merton," "Hudson," "Bosworth," "Salisbury Plain,"
+several anthems and motets, and a "Te Deum."
+
+In his old age, at the great Peace Jubilee in Boston, 1872, the baton
+was put into his hands, and the gray-haired composer conducted the
+chorus of ten thousand voices as they sang the words and music of his
+noble harmony. The incident made "Federal St." more than ever a feature
+of New England history. Oliver died in 1885.
+
+
+"MY GOD, HOW ENDLESS IS THY LOVE."
+
+The spirited tune to this hymn of Watts, by Frederick Lampe, variously
+named "Kent" and "Devonshire," historically reaches back so near to the
+poet's time that it must have been one of the earliest expressions of
+his fervent words.
+
+Johan Friedrich Lampe, born 1693, in Saxony, was educated in music at
+Helmstadt, and came to England in 1725 as a band musician and composer
+to Covent Garden Theater. His best-known secular piece is the music
+written to Henry Carey's burlesque, "The Dragon of Wantley."
+
+Mrs. Rich, wife of the lessee of the theater, was converted under the
+preaching of the Methodists, and after her husband's death her house
+became the home of Lampe and his wife, where Charles Wesley often met
+him.
+
+The influence of Wesley won him to more serious work, and he became one
+of the evangelist's helpers, supplying tunes to his singing campaigns.
+Wesley became attached to him, and after his death--in Edinburgh,
+1752--commemorated the musician in a funeral hymn.
+
+In popular favor Bradbury's tune of "Rolland" has now superseded the old
+music sung to Watts' lines--
+
+ My God, how endless is Thy love,
+ Thy gifts are every evening new,
+ And morning mercies from above
+ Gently distil like early dew.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ I yield my powers to Thy command;
+ To Thee I consecrate my days;
+ Perpetual blessings from Thy hand
+ Demand perpetual songs of praise.
+
+William Batchelder Bradbury, a pupil of Dr. Lowell Mason, and the
+pioneer in publishing Sunday-school music, was born 1816, in York, Me.
+His father, a veteran of the Revolution, was a choir leader, and
+William's love of music was inherited. He left his father's farm, and
+came to Boston, where he first heard a church-organ. Encouraged by Mason
+and others to follow music as a profession, he went abroad, studied at
+Leipsic, and soon after his return became known as a composer of sacred
+tunes. He died in Montclair, N.J., 1868.
+
+
+"I'M NOT ASHAMED TO OWN MY LORD."
+
+The favorite tune for this spiritual hymn, also by Watts, is old
+"Arlington," one of the most useful church melodies in the whole realm
+of English psalmody. Its name clings to a Boston street, and the
+beautiful chimes of Arlington St. church (Unitarian) annually ring its
+music on special occasions, as it has since the bells were tuned:
+
+ I'm not ashamed to own my Lord
+ Or to defend His cause,
+ Maintain the honor of His Word,
+ The glory of His cross.
+
+ Jesus, my God!--I know His Name;
+ His Name is all my trust,
+ Nor will He put my soul to shame
+ Nor let my hope be lost.
+
+Dr. Thomas Augustine Arne, the creator of "Arlington," was born in
+London, 1710, the son of a King St. upholsterer. He studied at Eton, and
+though intended for the legal profession, gave his whole mind to music.
+At twenty-three he began writing operas for his sister, Susanna (a
+singer who afterwards became the famous tragic actress, Mrs. Cibber).
+
+Arne's music to Milton's "Comus," and to "Rule Brittannia" established
+his reputation. He was engaged as composer to Drury Lane Theater, and in
+1759 received from Oxford his degree of Music Doctor. Later in life he
+turned his attention to oratorios, and other forms of sacred music, and
+was the first to introduce female voices in choir singing. He died March
+5, 1778, chanting hallelujahs, it is said, with his last breath.
+
+
+"IS THIS THE KIND RETURN?"
+
+Dr. Watts in this hymn gave experimental piety its hour and language of
+reflection and penitence:
+
+ Is this the kind return?
+ Are these the thanks we owe,
+ Thus to abuse Eternal Love
+ Whence all our blessings flow?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Let past ingratitude
+ Provoke our weeping eyes.
+
+United in loving wedlock with these words in former years was "Golden
+Hill," a chime of sweet counterpoint too rare to bury its authorship
+under the vague phrase "A Western Melody." It was caught evidently from
+a forest bird[10] that flutes its clear solo in the sunsets of May and
+June. There can be no mistaking the imitation--the same compass, the
+same upward thrill, the same fall and warbled turn. Old-time folk used
+to call for it, "Sing, my Fairweather Bird." It lingers in a few of the
+twenty- or thirty-years-ago collections, but stronger voices have
+drowned it out of the new.
+
+[Footnote 10: The wood thrush.]
+
+"Thacher," (set to the same hymn,) faintly recalls its melody.
+Nevertheless "Thacher" is a good tune. Though commonly written in
+sharps, contrasting the B flat of its softer and more liquid rival of
+other days, it is one of Handel's strains, and lends the meaning and
+pathos of the lyric text to voice and instrument.
+
+
+"WHEN I SURVEY THE WONDROUS CROSS."
+
+This crown of all the sacred odes of Dr. Watts for the song-service of
+the church of God was called by Matthew Arnold the "greatest hymn in the
+English language." The day the eminent critic died he heard it sung in
+the Sefton Park Presbyterian Church, and repeated the opening lines
+softly to himself again and again after the services. The hymn is
+certainly _one_ of the greatest in the language. It appeared as No. 7 in
+Watts' third edition (about 1710) containing five stanzas. The second
+line--
+
+ On which the Prince of Glory died,
+
+--read originally--
+
+ Where the young Prince of Glory died.
+
+Only four stanzas are now generally used. The omitted one--
+
+ His dying crimson like a robe
+ Spreads o'er His body on the tree;
+ Then am I dead to all the globe,
+ And all the globe is dead to me.
+
+--is a flash of tragic imagination, showing the sanguine intensity of
+Christian vision in earlier time, when contemplating the Saviour's
+passion; but it is too realistic for the spirit and genius of
+song-worship. That the great hymn was designed by the writer for
+communion seasons, and was inspired by Gal. 6:14, explains the two last
+lines if not the whole of the highly colored verse.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+One has a wide field of choice in seeking the best musical
+interpretation of this royal song of faith and self-effacement:
+
+ When I survey the wondrous Cross
+ On which the Prince of Glory died,
+ My richest gain I count but loss,
+ And pour contempt on all my pride.
+
+ Forbid it, Lord, that I should boast
+ Save in the death of Christ my God;
+ All the vain things that charm me most,
+ I sacrifice them to His blood.
+
+ See from His head, His hands, His feet,
+ Sorrow and love flow mingled down;
+ Did e'er such love and sorrow meet;
+ Or thorns compose so rich a crown?
+
+ Were the whole realm of Nature mine,
+ That were a present far too small;
+ Love so amazing, so divine,
+ Demands my soul, my life, my all.
+
+To match the height and depth of these words with fitting glory of sound
+might well have been an ambition of devout composers. Rev. G.C. Wells'
+tune in the _Revivalist_, with its emotional chorus, I.B. Woodbury's
+"Eucharist" in the _Methodist Hymnal_, Henry Smart's effective choral in
+Barnby's _Hymnary_ (No. 170), and a score of others, have woven the
+feeling lines into melody with varying success. Worshippers in spiritual
+sympathy with the words may question if, after all, old "Hamburg," the
+best of Mason's loved Gregorians, does not, alone, in tone and
+elocution, rise to the level of the hymn.
+
+
+"LOVE DIVINE, ALL LOVES EXCELLING."
+
+This evergreen song-wreath to the Crucified, was contributed by Charles
+Wesley, in 1746. It is found in his collection of 1756, _Hymns for Those
+That Seek and Those That Have Redemption in the Blood of Jesus Christ_.
+
+ Love Divine all loves excelling,
+ Joy of Heaven to earth come down,
+ Fix in us Thy humble dwelling,
+ All Thy faithful mercies crown.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Come Almighty to deliver,
+ Let us all Thy life receive,
+ Suddenly return, and never,
+ Nevermore Thy temples leave.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Finish then Thy new creation;
+ Pure and spotless let us be;
+ Let us see our whole salvation
+ Perfectly secured by Thee.
+
+ Changed from glory into glory
+ Till in Heaven we take our place,
+ Till we cast our crowns before Thee
+ Lost in wonder, love and praise!
+
+The hymn has been set to H. Isaac's ancient tune (1490), to Wyeth's
+"Nettleton" (1810), to Thos. H. Bailey's (1777-1839) "Isle of Beauty,
+fare thee well" (named from Thomas Moore's song), to Edward Hopkins'
+"St. Joseph," and to a multitude of others more or less familiar.
+
+Most familiar of all perhaps, (as in the instance of "Far from mortal
+cares retreating,") is its association with "Greenville," the production
+of that brilliant but erratic genius and freethinker, Jean Jacques
+Rousseau. It was originally a love serenade, ("Days of absence, sad and
+dreary") from the opera of _Le Devin du Village_, written about 1752.
+The song was commonly known years afterwards as "Rousseau's Dream." But
+the unbelieving philosopher, musician, and misguided moralist builded
+better than he knew, and probably better than he meant when he wrote his
+immortal choral. Whatever he heard in his "dream" (and one legend says
+it was a "song of angels") he created a harmony dear to the church he
+despised, and softened the hearts of the Christian world towards an evil
+teacher who was inspired, like Balaam, to utter one sacred strain.
+
+Rousseau was born in Geneva, 1712, but he never knew his mother, and
+neither the affection or interest of his father or of his other
+relatives was of the quality to insure the best bringing up of a child.
+
+He died July, 1778. But his song survives, while the world gladly
+forgets everything else he wrote. It is almost a pardonable exaggeration
+to say that every child in Christendom knows "Greenville."
+
+
+"WHEN ALL THY MERCIES, O MY GOD."
+
+This charming hymn was written by Addison, the celebrated English poet
+and essayist, about 1701, in grateful commemoration of his delivery from
+shipwreck in a storm off the coast of Genoa, Italy. It originally
+contained thirteen stanzas, but no more than four or six are commonly
+sung. It has put the language of devotional gratitude into the mouths of
+thousands of humble disciples who could but feebly frame their own:
+
+ When all Thy mercies, O my God
+ My rising soul surveys,
+ Transported with the view I'm lost
+ In wonder, love and praise.
+
+ Unnumbered comforts on my soul
+ Thy tender care bestowed
+ Before my infant heart conceived
+ From whom those comforts flowed.
+
+ When in the slippery paths of youth
+ With heedless steps I ran,
+ Thine arm unseen conveyed me safe,
+ And led me up to man.
+
+Another hymn of Addison--
+
+ How are Thy servants bless'd, O Lord,
+
+--was probably composed after the same return from a foreign voyage. It
+has been called his "Traveller's Hymn."
+
+Joseph Addison, the best English writer of his time, was the son of
+Lancelot Addison, rector of Milston, Wiltshire, and afterwards Dean of
+Litchfield. The distinguished author was born in Milston Rectory, May 1,
+1672, and was educated at Oxford. His excellence in poetry, both English
+and Latin, gave him early reputation, and a patriotic ode obtained for
+him the patronage of Lord Somers. A pension from King William III.
+assured him a comfortable income, which was increased by further honors,
+for in 1704 he was appointed Commissioner of Appeals, then secretary of
+the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, and in 1717 Secretary of State. He died
+in Holland House, Kensington, near London, June 17, 1719.
+
+His hymns are not numerous, (said to be only five), but they are
+remarkable for the simple beauty of their style, as well as for their
+Christian spirit. Of his fine metrical version of the 23rd Psalm,--
+
+ The Lord my pasture shall prepare,
+ And feed me with a shepherd's care,
+
+--one of his earliest productions, the tradition is that he gathered its
+imagery when a boy living at Netheravon, near Salisbury Plain, during
+his lonely two-mile walks to school at Amesbury and back again. All his
+hymns appeared first in the _Spectator_, to which he was a prolific
+contributor.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The hymn "When all Thy mercies" still has "Geneva" for its vocal mate in
+some congregational manuals. The tune is one of the rare survivals of
+the old "canon" musical method, the parts coming in one after another
+with identical notes. It is always delightful as a performance with its
+glory of harmony and its sweet duet, and for generations it had no other
+words than Addison's hymn.
+
+John Cole, author of "Geneva," was born in Tewksbury, Eng., 1774, and
+came to the United States in his boyhood (1785). Baltimore, Md. became
+his American home, and he was educated there. Early in life he became a
+musician and music publisher. At least twelve of his principal song
+collections from 1800 to 1832 are mentioned by Mr. Hubert P. Main, most
+of them sacred and containing many of his own tunes.
+
+He continued to compose music till his death, Aug. 17, 1855. Mr. Cole
+was leader of the regimental band known as "The Independent Blues,"
+which played in the war of 1812, and was present at the "North Point"
+fight, and other battles.
+
+Besides "Geneva," for real feeling and harmonic beauty "Manoah," adapted
+from Haydn's Creation, deserves mention as admirably suited to
+"Addison's" hymn, and also "Belmont," by Samuel Webbe, which resembles
+it in style and sentiment.
+
+Samuel Webbe, composer of "Belmont," was of English parentage but was
+born in Minorca, Balearic Islands, in 1740, where his father at that
+time held a government appointment; but his father, dying suddenly, left
+his family poor, and Samuel was apprenticed to a cabinet-maker. He
+served his apprenticeship, and immediately repaired to a London teacher
+and began the study of music and languages. Surmounting great
+difficulties, he became a competent musician, and made himself popular
+as a composer of glees. He was also the author of several masses,
+anthems, and hymn-tunes, the best of which are still in occasional use.
+Died in London, 1816.
+
+
+"JESUS, I LOVE THY CHARMING NAME."
+
+When Dr. Doddridge, the author of this hymn, during his useful ministry,
+had finished the preparation of a pulpit discourse that strongly
+impressed him, he was accustomed, while his heart was yet glowing with
+the sentiment that had inspired him, to put the principal thoughts into
+metre, and use the hymn thus written at the conclusion of the preaching
+of the sermon. This hymn of Christian ardor was written to be sung after
+a sermon from Romans 8:35, "Who shall separate us from the love of
+Christ?"
+
+ Jesus, I love Thy charming name,
+ 'Tis music to mine ear:
+ Fain would I sound it out so loud
+ That earth and heaven should hear.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ I'll speak the honors of Thy name
+ With my last laboring breath,
+ Then speechless, clasp Thee in my arms,
+ The conqueror of death.
+
+Earlier copies have--
+
+ The _antidote_ of death.
+
+Philip Doddridge, D.D., was born in London, June 26, 1702. Educated at
+Kingston Grammar School and Kibworth Academy, he became a scholar of
+respectable attainments, and was ordained to the Non-conformist
+ministry. He was pastor of the Congregational church at Northampton,
+from 1729 until his death, acting meanwhile as principal of the
+Theological School in that place. In 1749 he ceased to preach and went
+to Lisbon for his health, but died there about two years later, of
+consumption, Oct. 26, 1752.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The hymn has been sometimes sung to "Pisgah," an old revival piece by
+J.C. Lowry (1820) once much heard in camp-meetings, but it is a
+pedestrian tune with too many quavers, and a headlong tempo.
+
+Bradbury's "Jazer," in three-four time, is a melody with modulations,
+though more sympathetic, but it is hard to divorce the hymn from its
+long-time consort, old "Arlington." It has the accent of its sincerity,
+and the breath of its devotion.
+
+
+"LO, ON A NARROW NECK OF LAND."
+
+This hymn of Charles Wesley is always designated now by the above line,
+the first of the _second_ stanza as originally written. It is said to
+have been composed at Land's End, in Cornwall, with the British Channel
+and the broad Atlantic in view and surging on both sides around a
+"narrow neck of land."
+
+ Lo! on a narrow neck of land,
+ Twixt two unbounded seas, I stand,
+ Secure, insensible:
+ A point of time, a moment's space,
+ Removes me to that heavenly place,
+ Or shuts me up in hell.
+
+ O God, mine inmost soul convert,
+ And deeply on my thoughtful heart
+ Eternal things impress:
+ Give me to feel their solemn weight,
+ And tremble on the brink of fate,
+ And wake to righteousness.
+
+The preachers and poets of the great spiritual movement of the
+eighteenth century in England abated nothing in the candor of their
+words. The terrible earnestness of conviction tipped their tongues and
+pens with fire.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Lady Huntingdon would have lent "Meribah" gladly to this hymn, but Mason
+was not yet born. Many times it has been borrowed for Wesley's words
+since it came to its own, and the spirit of the pious Countess has
+doubtless approved the loan. It is rich enough to furnish forth her own
+lyric and more than one other of like matter and metre.
+
+The muscular music of "Ganges" has sometimes carried the hymn, and there
+are those who think its thunder is not a whit more Hebraic than the
+words require.
+
+
+"COME YE SINNERS POOR AND NEEDY."
+
+Few hymns have been more frequently sung in prayer-meetings and
+religious assemblies during the last hundred and fifty years. Its
+author, Joseph Hart, spoke what he knew and testified what he felt. Born
+in London, 1712, and liberally educated, he was in his young manhood
+very religious, but he went so far astray as to indulge in evil
+practices, and even published writings, both original and translated,
+against Christianity and religion of any kind. But he could not drink at
+the Dead Sea and live. The apples of Sodom sickened him. Conscience
+asserted itself, and the pangs of remorse nearly drove him to despair
+till he turned back to the source he had forsaken. He alludes to this
+experience in the lines--
+
+ Let not conscience make you linger,
+ Nor of fitness fondly dream;
+ All the fitness He requireth
+ Is to feel your need of Him.
+
+During Passion Week, 1767, he had an amazing view of the sufferings of
+Christ, under the stress of which his heart was changed. In the joy of
+this experience he wrote--
+
+ Come ye sinners poor and needy,
+
+--and--
+
+ Come all ye chosen saints of God.
+
+Probably no two hymn-lines have been oftener repeated than--
+
+ If you tarry till you're better
+ You will never come at all.
+
+The complete form of the original stanzas is:
+
+ Come ye sinners poor and needy,
+ Weak and wounded, sick and sore;
+ Jesus ready stands to save you,
+ Full of pity, love and power.
+ He is able,
+ He is willing; doubt no more.
+
+The whole hymn--ten stanzas--is not sung now as one, but two, the second
+division beginning with the line--
+
+ Come ye weary, heavy laden.
+
+Rev. Joseph Hart became minister of Jewin St. Congregational Chapel,
+London, about 1760, where he labored till his death, May 24, 1768.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+A revival song by Jeremiah Ingalls (1764-1828), written about 1804, with
+an easy, popular swing and a _sforzando_ chorus--
+
+ Turn to the Lord and seek salvation,
+
+--monopolized this hymn for a good many years. The tunes commonly
+assigned to it have since been "Greenville" and Von Weber's "Wilmot," in
+which last it is now more generally sung--dropping the echo lines at the
+end of each stanza.
+
+Carl Maria Von Weber, son of a roving musician, was born in Eutin,
+Germany, 1786. He developed no remarkable genius till he was about
+twenty years old, though being a fine vocalist, his singing brought him
+popularity and gain; but in 1806 he nearly lost his voice by accidently
+drinking nitric acid. He was for several years private secretary to Duke
+Ludwig at Stuttgart, and in 1813 Chapel-Master at Prague, from which
+place he went to Dresden in 1817 as Musik-Director.
+
+Von Weber's Korner songs won the hearts of all Germany; and his immortal
+"Der Freischutz" (the Free Archer), and numerous tender melodies like
+the airs to "John Anderson, my Jo" and "O Poortith Cauld" have gone to
+all civilized nations. No other composer had such feeling for beauty of
+sound.
+
+This beloved musician was physically frail and delicate, and died of
+untimely decline, during a visit to London in 1826.
+
+
+"O HAPPY SAINTS WHO DWELL IN LIGHT."
+
+Sometimes printed "O happy _souls_." This poetical and flowing hymn
+seems to have been forgotten in the making up of most modern church
+hymnals. Hymns on heaven and heavenly joys abound in embarrassing
+numbers, but it is difficult to understand why this beautiful lyric
+should be _universally_ neglected. It was written probably about 1760,
+by Rev. John Berridge, from the text, "Blessed are the dead who die in
+the Lord,"
+
+The first line of the second stanza--
+
+ Released from sorrow, toil and strife,
+
+--has been tinkered in some of the older hymn-books, where it is found
+to read--,
+
+ Released from sorrows toil and _grief_,
+
+--not only committing a tautology, but destroying the perfect rhyme with
+"life" in the next line. The whole hymn, too, has been much altered by
+substituted words and shifted lines, though not generally to the serious
+detriment of its meaning and music.
+
+The Rev. John Berridge--friend of the Wesleys, Whitefield, and Lady
+Huntingdon--was an eccentric but very worthy and spiritual minister,
+born the son of a farmer, in Kingston, Nottinghamshire, Eng., Mar. 1,
+1716. He studied at Cambridge, and was ordained curate of Stapleford and
+subsequently located as vicar of Everton, 1775. He died Jan. 22, 1793.
+He loved to preach, and he was determined that his tombstone should
+preach after his voice was still. His epitaph, composed by himself, is
+both a testimony and a memoir:
+
+ "Here lie the earthly remains of John Berridge, late vicar of
+ Everton, and an itinerant servant of Jesus Christ, who loved his
+ Master and His work, and after running His errands many years, was
+ called up to wait on Him above.
+
+ "Reader, art thou born again?
+
+ "No salvation without the new birth.
+
+ "I was born in sin, February, 1716.
+
+ "Remained ignorant of my fallen state till 1730.
+
+ "Lived proudly on faith and works for salvation till 1751.
+
+ "Admitted to Everton vicarage, 1755.
+
+ "Fled to Jesus alone for refuge, 1756.
+
+ "Fell asleep in Jesus Christ,--" (1793.)
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The once popular score that easily made the hymn a favorite, was
+"Salem," in the old _Psalmodist_. It still appears in some note-books,
+though the name of its composer is uncertain. Its notes (in 6-8 time)
+succeed each other in syllabic modulations that give a soft dactylic
+accent to the measure and a wavy current to the lines:
+
+ O happy saints that dwell in light,
+ And walk with Jesus clothed in white,
+ Safe landed on that peaceful shore,
+ Where pilgrims meet to part no more:
+
+ Released from sorrow, toil and strife,
+ Death was the gate to endless life,
+ And now they range the heavenly plains
+ And sing His love in melting strains.
+
+Another version reads:
+
+ ----and welcome to an endless life,
+ Their souls have now begun to prove
+ The height and depth of Jesus' love.
+
+
+"THOU DEAR REDEEMER, DYING LAMB."
+
+The author, John Cennick, like Joseph Hart, was led to Christ after a
+reckless boyhood and youth, by the work of the Divine Spirit in his
+soul, independent of any direct outward influence. Sickened of his
+cards, novels, and playhouse pleasures, he had begun a sort of
+mechanical reform, when one day, walking in the streets of London, he
+suddenly seemed to hear the text spoken "I am thy salvation!" His
+consecration began at that moment.
+
+He studied for the ministry, and became a preacher, first under
+direction of the Wesleys, then under Whitefield, but afterwards joined
+the Moravians, or "Brethren." He was born at Reading, Derbyshire, Eng.,
+Dec. 12, 1718, and died in London, July 4, 1755.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The word "Rhine" (in some collections--in others "Emmons") names a
+revival tune once so linked with this hymn and so well known that few
+religious people now past middle life could enjoy singing it to any
+other. With a compass one note beyond an octave and a third, it utters
+every line with a clear, bold gladness sure to infect a meeting with its
+own spiritual fervor.
+
+ Thou dear Redeemer, dying Lamb,
+ I love to hear of Thee;
+ No music like Thy charming name,
+ Nor half so sweet can be.
+
+The composer of the bright legato melody just described was Frederick
+Burgmüller, a young German musician, born in 1804. He was a remarkable
+genius, both in composition and execution, but his health was frail, and
+he did not live to fulfil the rich possibilities that lay within him. He
+died in 1824--only twenty years old. The tune "Rhine" ("Emmons") is from
+one of his marches.
+
+
+"WHILE THEE I SEEK, PROTECTING POWER."
+
+Helen Maria Williams wrote this sweet hymn, probably about the year
+1800. She was a brilliant woman, better known in literary society for
+her political verses and essays than by her hymns; but the hymn here
+noted bears sufficient witness to her deep religious feeling:
+
+ While Thee I seek, Protecting Power,
+ Be my vain wishes stilled,
+ And may this consecrated hour
+ With better hopes be filled.
+ Thy love the power of thought bestowed;
+ To Thee my thoughts would soar,
+ Thy mercy o'er my life has flowed,
+ That mercy I adore.
+
+Miss Williams was born in the north of England, Nov. 30, 1762, but spent
+much of her life in London, and in Paris, where she died, Dec. 14, 1827.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Wedded so many years to the gentle, flowing music of Pleyel's "Brattle
+Street," few lovers of the hymn recall its words without the melody of
+that emotional choral.
+
+The plain psalm-tune, "Simpson," by Louis Spohr, divides the stanzas
+into quatrains.
+
+
+"JESUS MY ALL TO HEAVEN IS GONE."
+
+This hymn, by Cennick, was familiarized to the public more than two
+generations ago by its revival tune, sometimes called "Duane Street,"
+long-metre double. It is staffed in various keys, but its movement is
+full of life and emphasis, and its melody is contagious. The piece was
+composed by Rev. George Coles, in 1835.
+
+The fact that this hymn of Cennick with Coles's tune appears in the _New
+Methodist Hymnal_ indicates the survival of both in modern favor.
+
+[Illustration: Augustus Montague Toplady]
+
+ Jesus my all to heaven is gone,
+ He whom I fixed my hopes upon;
+ His track I see, and I'll pursue
+ The narrow way till Him I view.
+ The way the holy prophets went,
+ The road that leads from banishment,
+ The King's highway of holiness
+ I'll go for all Thy paths are peace.
+
+The memory has not passed away of the hearty unison with which
+prayer-meeting and camp-meeting assemblies used to "crescendo" the last
+stanza--
+
+ Then will I tell to sinners round
+ What a dear Saviour I have found;
+ I'll point to His redeeming blood,
+ And say "Behold the way to God."
+
+The Rev. George Coles was born in Stewkley, Eng., Jan. 2, 1792, and died
+in New York City, May 1, 1858. He was editor of the _N.Y. Christian
+Advocate_, and _Sunday School Advocate_, for several years, and was a
+musician of some ability, besides being a good singer.
+
+
+"SWEET THE MOMENTS, RICH IN BLESSING."
+
+The Hon. and Rev. Walter Shirley, Rector of Loughgree, county of Galway,
+Ireland, revised this hymn under the chastening discipline of a most
+trying experience. His brother, the Earl of Ferrars, a licentious man,
+murdered an old and faithful servant in a fit of rage, and was executed
+at Tyburn for the crime. Sir Walter, after the disgrace and long
+distress of the imprisonment, trial, and final tragedy, returned to his
+little parish in Ireland, humbled but driven nearer to the Cross.
+
+ Sweet the moments, rich in blessing
+ Which before the Cross I spend;
+ Life and health and peace possessing
+ From the sinner's dying Friend.
+
+All the emotion of one who buries a mortifying sorrow in the heart of
+Christ, and tries to forget, trembles in the lines of the above hymn as
+he changed and adapted it in his saddest but devoutest hours. Its
+original writer was the Rev. James Allen, nearly twenty years younger
+than himself, a man of culture and piety, but a Christian of shifting
+creeds. It is not impossible that he sent his hymn to Shirley to revise.
+At all events it owes its present form to Shirley's hand.
+
+ Truly blesséd is the station
+ Low before His cross to lie,
+ While I see Divine Compassion
+ Beaming in His gracious eye.[11]
+
+[Footnote 11: "Floating in His languid eye" seems to have been the
+earlier version.]
+
+The influence of Sir Walter's family misfortune is evident also in the
+mood out of which breathed his other trustful lines--
+
+ Peace, troubled soul, whose plaintive moan
+ Hath taught these rocks the notes of woe,
+
+(changed now to "hath taught _these scenes_" etc).
+
+Sir Walter Shirley, cousin of the Countess of Huntingdon, was born 1725,
+and died in 1786. Even in his last sickness he continued to preach to
+his people in his house, seated in his chair.
+
+Rev. James Oswald Allen was born at Gayle, Yorkshire, Eng., June 24,
+1743. He left the University of Cambridge after a year's study, and
+became an itinerant preacher, but seems to have been a man of unstable
+religious views. After roving from one Christian denomination to another
+several times, he built a Chapel, and for forty years ministered there
+to a small Independent congregation. He died in Gayle, Oct. 31, 1804.
+
+The tune long and happily associated with "Sweet the Moments" is
+"Sicily," or the "Sicilian Hymn"--from an old Latin hymn-tune, "O
+Sanctissima."
+
+
+"O FOR A CLOSER WALK WITH GOD."
+
+The author, William Cowper, son of a clergyman, was born at
+Berkhampstead, Hertfordshire, Eng., Nov. 15, 1731, and died at Dereham,
+Norfolk, April 25, 1800. Through much of his adult life he was afflicted
+with a mental ailment inducing melancholia and at times partial
+insanity, during which he once attempted suicide. He sought literary
+occupation as an antidote to his disorder of mind, and besides a great
+number of lighter pieces which diverted him and his friends, composed
+"The Task," an able and delightful moral and domestic poetic treatise in
+blank verse, and in the same style of verse translated Homer's _Odyssey_
+and _Iliad_.
+
+One of the most beloved of English poets, this suffering man was also a
+true Christian, and wrote some of our sweetest and most spiritual hymns.
+Most of these were composed at Olney, where he resided for a time with
+John Newton, his fellow hymnist, and jointly with him issued the volume
+known as the _Olney Hymns_.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Music more or less closely identified with this familiar hymn is
+Gardiner's "Dedham," and also "Mear," often attributed to Aaron
+Williams. Both, about equally with the hymn, are seasoned by time, but
+have not worn out their harmony--or their fitness to Cowper's prayer.
+
+William Gardiner was born in Leicester, Eng., March 15, 1770, and died
+there Nov. 11, 1853. He was a vocal composer and a "musicographer" or
+writer on musical subjects.
+
+One Aaron Williams, to whom "Mear" has by some been credited, was of
+Welsh descent, a composer of psalmody and clerk of the Scotch church in
+London. He was born in 1734, and died in 1776. Another account, and the
+more probable one, names a minister of Boston of still earlier date as
+the author of the noble old harmony. It is found in a small New England
+collection of 1726, but not in any English or Scotch collection. "Mear"
+is presumably an American tune.
+
+
+"WHAT VARIOUS HINDRANCES WE MEET."
+
+Another hymn of Cowper's; and no one ever suffered more deeply the
+plaintive regret in the opening lines, or better wrought into poetic
+expression an argument for prayer.
+
+ What various hindrances we meet
+ In coming to a mercy-seat!
+ Yet who that knows the worth of prayer
+ But wishes to be often there?
+
+ Prayer makes the darkest clouds withdraw,
+ Prayer climbs the ladder Jacob saw.
+
+The whole hymn is (or once was) so thoroughly learned by heart as to be
+fixed in the church among its household words. Preachers to the
+diffident do not forget to quote--
+
+ Have you no words? ah, think again;
+ Words flow apace when you _complain_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Were half the breath thus vainly spent
+ To Heaven in supplication sent,
+ Our cheerful song would oftener be,
+ "Hear what the Lord hath done for me!"
+
+And there is all the lifetime of a proverb in the couplet--
+
+ Satan trembles when he sees
+ The weakest saint upon his knees.
+
+Tune, Lowell Mason's "Rockingham."
+
+
+"MY GRACIOUS REDEEMER I LOVE."
+
+This is one of Benjamin Francis's lays of devotion. The Christian
+Welshman who bore that name was a Gospel minister full of Evangelical
+zeal, who preached in many places, though his pastoral home was with the
+Baptist church in Shortwood, Wales. Flattering calls to London could not
+tempt him away from his first and only parish, and he remained there
+till his triumphant death. He was born in 1734, and died in 1799.
+
+ My gracious Redeemer I love,
+ His praises aloud I'll proclaim,
+ And join with the armies above,
+ To shout His adorable name.
+ To gaze on His glories divine
+ Shall be my eternal employ;
+ To see them incessantly shine,
+ My boundless, ineffable joy.
+
+Tune, "Birmingham"--an English melody. Anonymous.
+
+
+"BLEST BE THE TIE THAT BINDS."
+
+Perhaps the best hymn-expression of sacred brotherhood, at least it has
+had, and still has the indorsement of constant use. The author, John
+Fawcett, D.D., is always quoted as the example of his own words, since
+he sacrificed ambition and personal interest to Christian affection.
+
+Born near Bradford, Yorkshire, Jan. 6, 1739, and converted under the
+preaching of Whitefield, he joined the Methodists, but afterwards
+became a member of the new Baptist church in Bradford. Seven years later
+he was ordained over the Baptist Society at Wainsgate. In 1772 he
+received a call to succeed the celebrated Dr. Gill, in London, and
+accepted. But at the last moment, when his goods were packed for
+removal, the clinging love of his people, weeping their farewells around
+him, melted his heart. Their passionate regrets were more than either he
+or his good wife could withstand.
+
+"I will _stay_," he said; "you may unpack my goods, and we will live for
+the Lord lovingly together."
+
+It was out of this heart experience that the tender hymn was born.
+
+ Our fears, our hopes, our aims are one,
+ Our comforts and our cares.
+
+Dr. Fawcett died July 25, 1817.
+
+Tune, "Boylston," L. Mason; or "Dennis," H.G. Nägeli.
+
+
+"I LOVE THY KINGDOM, LORD."
+
+"Dr. Dwight's Hymn," as this is known _par eminence_ among many others
+from his pen, is one of the imperishable lyrics of the Christian Church.
+The real spirit of the hundred and twenty-second Psalm is in it, and it
+is worthy of Watts in his best moments.
+
+Timothy Dwight was born at Northampton, Mass, May 14, 1752, and
+graduated at Yale College at the age of thirteen. He wrote several
+religious poems of considerable length. In 1795 he was elected President
+of Yale College, and in 1800 he revised Watts' Psalms, at the request of
+the General Association of Connecticut, adding a number of translations
+of his own.
+
+ I love Thy kingdom, Lord,
+ The house of Thine abode,
+ The Church our blest Redeemer saved
+ With His own precious blood.
+
+ I love Thy Church, O God;
+ Her walls before Thee stand,
+ Dear as the apple of Thine eye,
+ And graven on Thy hand.
+
+Dr. Dwight died Jan. 11, 1817.
+
+Tune, "St. Thomas," Aaron Williams, (1734-1776.)
+
+Mr. Hubert P. Main, however, believes the author to be Handel. It
+appeared as the second movement of a four-movement tune in Williams's
+1762 collection, which contained pieces by the great masters, with his
+own; but while not credited to Handel, Williams did not claim it
+himself.
+
+
+"MID SCENES OF CONFUSION."
+
+This hymn, common in chapel hymnbooks half a century and more ago, is
+said to have been written by the Rev. David Denham, about 1826.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Home, Sweet Home" was composed, according to the old account, by John
+Howard Payne as one of the airs in his opera of "Clari, the Maid of
+Milan," which was brought out in London at Drury Lane in 1823. But
+Charles Mackay, the English poet, in the London Telegraph, asserts that
+Sir Henry Bishop, an eminent musician, in his vain search for a Sicilian
+national air, _invented_ one, and that it was the melody of "Home, sweet
+Home," which he afterwards set to Howard Payne's words. Mr. Mackay had
+this story from Sir Henry himself.
+
+ Mid scenes of confusion and creature complaints
+ How sweet to my soul is communion with saints,
+ To find at the banquet of mercy there's room
+ And feel in the presence of Jesus at home.
+ Home, home, sweet, sweet home!
+ Prepare me, dear Savior for glory, my home.
+
+John Howard Payne, author at least, of the original _words_ of "Home,
+Sweet Home," was born in New York City June 9, 1791. He was a singer,
+and became an actor and theatrical writer. He composed the words of his
+immortal song in the year 1823, when he was himself homeless and hungry
+and sheltered temporarily in an attic in Paris.
+
+His fortunes improved at last, and he was appointed to represent his
+native country as consul in Tunis, where he died, Apr. 9, 1852.
+
+
+"O, COULD I SPEAK THE MATCHLESS WORTH."
+
+The writer of this hymn of worshiping ardor and exalted Christian love
+was an English Baptist minister, the Rev. Samuel Medley. He was born at
+Cheshunt, Hertfordshire, June 23, 1738, and at eighteen years of age
+entered the Royal Navy, where, though he had been piously educated, he
+became dissipated and morally reckless. Wounded in a sea fight off Cape
+Lagos, and in dread of amputation he prayed penitently through nearly a
+whole night, and in the morning the surprised surgeon told him his limb
+could be saved.
+
+The voice of his awakened conscience was not wholly disregarded, though
+it was not till some time after he left the navy that his vow to begin a
+religious life was sincerely kept. After teaching school for four years,
+he began to preach in 1766, Wartford in Hertfordshire being the first
+scene of his godly labors. He died in Liverpool July 17, 1799, at the
+end of a faithful ministry there of twenty-seven years. A small edition
+of his hymns was published during his lifetime, in 1789.
+
+ O could I speak the matchless worth,
+ O could I sound the glories forth
+ Which in my Saviour shine,
+ I'd soar and touch the heavenly strings
+ And vie with Gabriel while he sings,
+ In notes almost divine!
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Colebrook," a plain choral; but with a noble movement, by Henry Smart,
+is the English music to this fine lyric, but Dr. Mason's "Ariel" is the
+American favorite. It justifies its name, for it has wings--in both full
+harmony and duet--and its melody feels the glory of the hymn at every
+bar.
+
+
+"ROCK OF AGES CLEFT FOR ME."
+
+Augustus Montagu Toplady, author of this almost universal hymn, was born
+at Farnham, Surrey, Eng., Nov. 4, 1740. Educated at Westminster School,
+and Trinity College, Dublin, he took orders in the Established Church.
+In his doctrinal debates with the Wesleys he was a harsh
+controversialist; but his piety was sincere, and marked late in life by
+exalted moods. Physically he was frail, and his fiery zeal wore out his
+body. Transferred from his vicarage at Broad Hembury, Devonshire, to
+Knightsbridge, London, at twenty-eight years of age, his health began to
+fail before he was thirty-five, and in one of his periods of illness he
+wrote--
+
+ When languor and disease invade
+ This trembling house of clay,
+ 'Tis sweet to look beyond my pains
+ And long to fly away.
+
+And the same homesickness for heaven appears under a different figure in
+another hymn--
+
+ At anchor laid remote from home,
+ Toiling I cry, "Sweet Spirit, come!
+ Celestial breeze, no longer stay,
+ But swell my sails, and speed my way!"
+
+Possessed of an ardent religious nature, his spiritual frames
+exemplified in a notable degree the emotional side of Calvinistic piety.
+Edward Payson himself, was not more enraptured in immediate view of
+death than was this young London priest and poet. Unquestioning faith
+became perfect certainty. As in the bold metaphor of "Rock of Ages," the
+faith finds voice in--
+
+ A debtor to mercy alone,
+
+--and other hymns in his collection of 1776, two years before the end
+came. Most of this devout writing was done in his last days, and he
+continued it as long as strength was left, until, on the 11th of August,
+1778, he joyfully passed away.
+
+Somehow there was always something peculiarly heartsome and "filling" to
+pious minds in the lines of Toplady in days when his minor hymns were
+more in vogue than now, and they were often quoted, without any idea
+whose making they were. "At anchor laid" was crooned by good old ladies
+at their spinning-wheels, and godly invalids found "When languor and
+disease invade" a comfort next to their Bibles.
+
+"Rock of Ages" is said to have been written after the author, during a
+suburban walk, had been forced to shelter himself from a thunder
+shower, under a cliff. This is, however, but one of several stories
+about the birth-occasion of the hymn.
+
+It has been translated into many languages. One of the foreign
+dignitaries visiting Queen Victoria at her "Golden Jubilee" was a native
+of Madagascar, who surprised her by asking leave to sing, but delighted
+her, when leave was given, by singing "Rock of Ages." It was a favorite
+of hers--and of Prince Albert, who whispered it when he was dying.
+People who were school-children when Rev. Justus Vinton came home to
+Willington, Ct., with two Karen pupils, repeat to-day the "la-pa-ta,
+i-oo-i-oo" caught by sound from the brown-faced boys as they sang their
+native version of "Rock of Ages."
+
+Gen. J.E.B. Stuart, the famous Confederate Cavalry leader, mortally
+wounded at Yellow Tavern, Va., and borne to a Richmond hospital, called
+for his minister and requested that "Rock of Ages" be sung to him.
+
+The last sounds heard by the few saved from the wreck of the steamer
+"London" in the Bay of Biscay, 1866, were the voices of the helpless
+passengers singing "Rock of Ages" as the ship went down.
+
+A company of Armenian Christians sang "Rock of Ages" in their native
+tongue while they were being massacred in Constantinople.
+
+No history of this grand hymn of faith forgets the incident of Gladstone
+writing a Latin translation of it while sitting in the House of
+Commons. That remarkable man was as masterly in his scholarly
+recreations as in his statesmanship. The supreme Christian sentiment of
+the hymn had permeated his soul till it spoke to him in a dead language
+as eloquently as in the living one; and this is what he made of it:
+
+
+_TOPLADY._
+
+ Rock of ages, cleft for me,
+ Let me hide myself in Thee;
+ Let the water and the blood,
+ From Thy riven side which flowed,
+ Be of sin the double cure,
+ Cleanse me from its guilt and power.
+
+ Not the labor of my hands
+ Can fulfil Thy law's demands;
+ Could my zeal no respite know,
+ Could my tears for ever flow,
+ All for sin could not atone,
+ Thou must save, and Thou alone.
+
+ Nothing in my hand I bring,
+ Simply to Thy cross I cling;
+ Naked, come to Thee for dress,
+ Helpless, look to Thee for grace:
+ Foul, I to the fountain fly;
+ Wash, me, Saviour, or I die.
+
+ Whilst I draw this fleeting breath,
+ When my eyestrings break in death;
+ When I soar through tracts unknown,
+ See Thee on Thy judgment throne,
+ Rock of ages, cleft for me,
+ Let me hide myself in Thee.
+
+
+_GLADSTONE._
+
+ Jesus, pro me perforatus,
+ Condar intra tuum latus;
+ Tu per lympham profluentem,
+ Tu per sanguinem tepentem,
+ In peccata mi redunda,
+ Tolle culpam, sordes munda!
+
+ Coram Te nec justus forem
+ Quamvis tota vi laborem,
+ Nec si fide nunquam cesso,
+ Fletu stillans indefesso;
+ Tibi soli tantum munus--
+ Salva me, Salvator Unus!
+
+ Nil in manu mecum fero,
+ Sed me versus crucem gero:
+ Vestimenta nudus oro,
+ Opem debilis imploro,
+ Fontem Christi qućro immundus,
+ Nisi laves, moribundus.
+
+ Dum hos artus vita regit,
+ Quando nox sepulcro legit;
+ Mortuos quum stare jubes,
+ Sedens Judex inter nubes;--
+ Jesus, pro me perforatus,
+ Condar intra tuum latus!
+
+The wonderful hymn has suffered the mutations common to time and taste.
+
+ When I soar thro' tracts unknown
+
+--becomes--
+
+ When I soar to worlds unknown,
+
+--getting rid of the unpoetic word, and bettering the elocution, but
+missing the writer's thought (of the unknown _path_,--instead of going
+to many "worlds"). The Unitarians have their version, with substitutes
+for the "atonement lines."
+
+But the Christian lyric maintains its life and inspiration through the
+vicissitudes of age and use, as all intrinsically superior things can
+and will,--and as in the twentieth line,--
+
+ When my eyestrings break in death;
+
+--modernized to--
+
+ When my eyelids close in death,
+
+--the hymn will ever adapt itself to the new exigencies of common
+speech, without losing its vitality and power.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+A happy inspiration of Dr. Thomas Hastings made the hymn and music
+inevitably one. Almost anywhere to call for the tune of "Toplady"
+(namesake of the pious poet) is as unintelligible to the multitude as
+"Key" would be to designate the "Star-spangled Banner." The common
+people--thanks to Dr. Hastings--have learned "Rock of Ages" by _sound_.
+
+Thomas Hastings was born in Washington, Ct., 1784. For eight years he
+was editor of the _Western Recorder_, but he gave his life to church
+music, and besides being a talented tone-poet he wrote as many as six
+hundred hymns. In 1832, by invitation from twelve New York churches, he
+went to that city, and did the main work of his life there, dying, in
+1872, at the good old age of eighty-nine. His musical collections number
+fifty-three. He wrote his famous tune in 1830.
+
+[Illustration: Thomas Hastings]
+
+
+"MY SOUL BE ON THY GUARD"
+
+Strangely enough, this hymn, a trumpet note of Christian warning and
+resolution, was written by one who himself fell into unworthy ways.[12]
+But the one strong and spiritual watch-song by which he is remembered
+appeals for him, and lets us know possibly, something of his own
+conflicts. We can be thankful for the struggle he once made, and for the
+hymn it inspired. It is a voice of caution to others.
+
+[Footnote 12: I have been unable to verify this statement found in Mr.
+Butterworth's "Story of the Hymns."--T.B.]
+
+George Heath, the author, was an English minister, born in 1781; died
+1822. For a time he was pastor of a Presbyterian Church at Honiton,
+Devonshire, and was evidently a prolific writer, having composed a
+hundred and forty-four hymns, an edition of which was printed.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+No other has been so familiarly linked with the words as Lowell Mason's
+"Laban" (1830). It has dash and animation enough to reënforce the hymn,
+and give it popular life, even if the hymn had less earnestness and
+vigor of its own.
+
+ Ne'er think the vict'ry won
+ Nor lay thine armor down:
+ Thy arduous work will not be done
+ Till thou hast gained thy crown.
+
+ Fight on, my soul till death
+ Shall bring thee to thy God;
+ He'll take thee at thy parting breath
+ To His divine abode.
+
+
+"PEOPLE OF THE LIVING GOD."
+
+Montgomery _felt_ every line of this hymn as he committed it to paper.
+He wrote it when, after years in the "swim" of social excitements and
+ambitions, where his young independence swept him on, he came back to
+the little church of his boyhood. His father and mother had gone to the
+West Indies as missionaries, and died there. He was forty-three years
+old when, led by divine light, he sought readmission to the Moravian
+"meeting" at Fulneck, and anchored happily in a haven of peace.
+
+ People of the living God
+ I have sought the world around,
+ Paths of sin and sorrow trod,
+ Peace and comfort nowhere found:
+
+ Now to you my spirit turns--
+ Turns a fugitive unblest;
+ Brethren, where your altar burns,
+ Oh, receive me into rest.
+
+James Montgomery, son of Rev. John Montgomery, was born at Irvine,
+Ayrshire, Scotland, Nov. 4, 1771, and educated at the Moravian Seminary
+at Fulneck, Yorkshire, Eng. He became the editor of the _Sheffield
+Iris_, and his pen was busy in non-professional as well as professional
+work until old age. He died in Sheffield, April 30, 1854.
+
+His literary career was singularly successful; and a glance through any
+complete edition of his poems will tell us why. His hymns were all
+published during his lifetime, and all, as well as his longer pieces,
+have the purity and polished beauty, if not the strength, of Addison's
+work. Like Addison, too, he could say that he had written no line which,
+dying, he would wish to blot.
+
+The best of Montgomery was in his hymns. These were too many to
+enumerate here, and the more enduring ones too familiar to need
+enumeration. The church and the world will not soon forget "The Home in
+Heaven,"--
+
+ Forever with the Lord,
+ Amen, so let it be.
+ Life from the dead is in that word;
+ 'Tis immortality.
+
+Nor--
+
+ O where shall rest be found,
+
+--with its impressive couplet--
+
+ 'Tis not the whole of life to live
+ Nor all of death to die.
+
+Nor the haunting sweetness of--
+
+ There is a calm for those who weep.
+
+Nor, indeed, the hymn of Christian love just now before us.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The melody exactly suited to the gentle trochaic step of the home-song,
+"People of the living God," is "Whitman," composed for it by Lowell
+Mason. Few Christians, in America, we venture to say, could hear an
+instrument play "Whitman" without mentally repeating Montgomery's words.
+
+
+"TO LEAVE MY DEAR FRIENDS."
+
+This hymn, called "The Bower of Prayer," was dear to Christian hearts in
+many homes and especially in rural chapel worship half a century ago and
+earlier, and its sweet legato melody still lingers in the memories of
+aged men and women.
+
+Elder John Osborne, a New Hampshire preacher of the "Christian"
+(_Christ-ian_) denomination, is said to have composed the tune (and
+possibly the words) about 1815--though apparently the music was arranged
+from a flute interlude in one of Haydn's themes. The warbling notes of
+the air are full of heart-feeling, and usually the best available treble
+voice sang it as a solo.
+
+ To leave my dear friends and from neighbors to part,
+ And go from my home, it affects not my heart
+ Like the thought of absenting myself for a day
+ From that blest retreat I have chosen to pray,
+ I have chosen to pray.
+
+ The early shrill notes of the loved nightingale
+ That dwelt in the bower, I observed as my bell:
+ It called me to duty, while birds in the air
+ Sang anthems of praises as I went to prayer,
+ As I went to prayer.[13]
+
+ How sweet were the zephyrs perfumed by the pine,
+ The ivy, the balsam, the wild eglantine,
+ But sweeter, O, sweeter superlative were
+ The joys that I tasted in answer to prayer,
+ In answer to prayer.
+
+[Footnote 13: The _American Vocalist_ omits this stanza as too fanciful
+as well as too crude]
+
+
+"SAVIOUR, THY DYING LOVE."
+
+This hymn of grateful piety was written in 1862, by Rev. S. Dryden
+Phelps, D.D., of New Haven, and first published in _Pure Gold_, 1871;
+afterwards in the (earlier) _Baptist Hymn and Tune Book_.
+
+ Saviour, Thy dying love
+ Thou gavest me,
+ Nor should I aught withhold
+ Dear Lord, from Thee.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Give me a faithful heart,
+ Likeness to Thee,
+ That each departing day
+ Henceforth may see
+ Some work of love begun,
+ Some deed of kindness done,
+ Some wand'rer sought and won,
+ Something for Thee.
+
+The penultimate line, originally "Some sinful wanderer won," was altered
+by the author himself. The hymn is found in most Baptist hymnals, and
+was inserted by Mr. Sankey in _Gospel Hymns No. 1_. It has since won its
+way into several revival collections and undenominational manuals.
+
+Rev. Sylvester Dryden Phelps, D.D., was born in Suffield, Ct., May 15,
+1816, and studied at the Connecticut Literary Institution in that town.
+An early call to the ministry turned his talents to the service of the
+church, and his long settlement--comprising what might be called his
+principal life work--was in New Haven, where he was pastor of the First
+Baptist church twenty-nine years. He died there Nov. 23, 1895.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The Rev. Robert Lowry admired the hymn, and gave it a tune perfectly
+suited to its metre and spirit. It has never been sung in any other. The
+usual title of it is "Something for Jesus." The meaning and sentiment of
+both words and music are not unlike Miss Havergal's--
+
+ I gave my life for thee.
+
+
+"IN SOME WAY OR OTHER."
+
+This song of Christian confidence was written by Mrs. Martha A.W. Cook,
+wife of the Rev. Parsons Cook, editor of the _Puritan Recorder_, Boston.
+
+It was published in the _American Messenger_ in 1870, and is still in
+use here, as a German version of it is in Germany. The first stanza
+follows, in the two languages:
+
+ In some way or other the Lord will provide.
+ It may not be my way,
+ It may not be thy way,
+ And yet in His own way
+ The Lord will provide.
+
+ Sei's so oder anders, der Herr wird's versehn;
+ Mag's nicht sein, wie ich will,
+ Mag's nicht sein, wie du willst,
+ Doch wird's sein, wie Er will:
+ Der Herr wird's versehn.
+
+In the English version the easy flow of the two last lines into one
+sentence is an example of rhythmic advantage over the foreign syntax.
+
+Mrs. Cook was married to the well-known clergyman and editor, Parsons
+Cook, (1800-1865) in Bridgeport, Ct., and survived him at his death in
+Lynn, Mass. She was Miss Martha Ann Woodbridge, afterwards Mrs. Hawley,
+and a widow at the time of her re-marriage as Mr. Cook's second wife.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Professor Calvin S. Harrington, of Wesleyan University, Middletown, Ct.,
+set music to the words as printed in _Winnowed Hymns_ (1873) and
+arranged by Dr. Eben Tourjee, organizer of the great American Peace
+Jubilee in Boston. In the _Gospel Hymns_ it is, however, superseded by
+the more popular composition of Philip Phillips.
+
+Dr. Eben Tourjee, late Dean of the College of Music in Boston
+University, and founder and head of the New England Conservatory, was
+born in Warwick, R.I., June 1, 1834. With only an academy education he
+rose by native genius, from a hard-working boyhood to be a teacher of
+music and a master of its science. From a course of study in Europe he
+returned and soon made his reputation as an organizer of musical schools
+and sangerfests. The New England Conservatory of Music was first
+established by him in Providence, but removed in 1870 to Boston, its
+permanent home. His doctorate of music was conferred upon him by
+Wesleyan University. Died in Boston, April 12, 1891.
+
+Philip Phillips, known as "the singing Pilgrim," was born in Jamestown,
+Chautauqua, Co., N.Y., Aug. 13, 1834. He compiled twenty-nine
+collections of sacred music for Sunday schools, gospel meetings, etc.;
+also a _Methodist Hymn and Tune Book_, 1866. He composed a great number
+of tunes, but wrote no hymns. Some of his books were published in
+London, for he was a cosmopolitan singer, and traveled through Europe
+and Australia as well as America. Died in Delaware, O., June 25, 1875.
+
+
+"NEARER, MY GOD, TO THEE."
+
+Mr. William Stead, fond of noting what is often believed to be the
+"providential chain of causes" in everything that happens, recalls the
+fact that Benjamin Flower, editor of the _Cambridge Intelligencer_,
+while in jail (1798) at the instigation of Bp. Watson for an article
+defending the French Revolution, and criticising the Bishop's political
+course, was visited by several sympathizing ladies, one of whom was Miss
+Eliza Gould. The young lady's first acquaintance with him there in his
+cell led to an attachment which eventuated in marriage. Of that marriage
+Sarah Flower was born. By the theory of providential sequences Mr. Stead
+makes it appear that the forgotten vindictiveness of a British prelate
+"was the _causa causans_ of one of the most spiritual and aspiring hymns
+in the Christian Hymnary."
+
+"Nearer, My God, to Thee" was on the lips of President McKinley as he
+lay dying by a murderer's wicked shot. It is dear to President Roosevelt
+for its memories of the battle of Las Quasimas, where the Rough Riders
+sang it at the burial of their slain comrades. Bishop Marvin was saved
+by it from hopeless dejection, while practically an exile during the
+Civil War, by hearing it sung in the wilds of Arkansas, by an old woman
+in a log hut.
+
+A letter from Pittsburg, Pa., to a leading Boston paper relates the name
+and experience of a forger who had left the latter city and wandered
+eight years a fugitive from justice. On the 5th of November, (Sunday,)
+1905, he found himself in Pittsburg, and ventured into the Dixon
+Theatre, where a religious service was being held, to hear the music.
+The hymn "Nearer, My God, to Thee" so overcame him that he went out
+weeping bitterly. He walked the floor of his room all night, and in the
+morning telephoned for the police, confessed his name and crime, and
+surrendered himself to be taken back to the Boston authorities.
+
+Mrs. Sarah Flower Adams, author of the noble hymn (supposed to have been
+written in 1840), was born at Harlow, Eng., Feb. 22, 1805, and died
+there in 1848. At her funeral another of her hymns was sung, ending--
+
+ When falls the shadow, cold in death
+ I yet will sing with fearless breath,
+ As comes to me in shade or sun,
+ "Father, Thy will, not mine, be done."
+
+The attempts to _evangelize_ "Nearer, My God, to Thee" by those who
+cannot forget that Mrs. Adams was a Unitarian, are to be deplored. Such
+zeal is as needless as trying to sectarianize an Old Testament Psalm.
+The poem is a perfect religious piece--to be sung as it stands, with
+thanks that it was ever created.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+In English churches (since 1861) the hymn was and may still be sung to
+"Horbury," composed by Rev. John B. Dykes, and "St. Edmund," by Sir
+Arthur Sullivan. Both tunes are simple and appropriate, but such a hymn
+earns and inevitably acquires a single tune-voice, so that its music
+instantly names it by its words when played on instruments. Such a voice
+was given it by Lowell Mason's "Bethany," (1856). (Why not "Bethel,"
+instead, every one who notes the imagery of the words must wonder.)
+"Bethany" appealed to the popular heart, and long ago (in America) hymn
+and tune became each other's property. It is even simpler than the
+English tunes, and a single hearing fixes it in memory.
+
+
+"I NEED THEE EVERY HOUR."
+
+Mrs. Annie Sherwood Hawks, who wrote this hymn in 1872, was born in
+Hoosick, N.Y., in 1835.
+
+She sent the hymn (five stanzas) to Dr. Lowry, who composed its tune,
+adding a chorus, to make it more effective. It first appeared in a small
+collection of original songs prepared by Lowry and Doane for the
+National Baptist Sunday School Association, which met at Cincinnati, O.,
+November, 1872, and was sung there.
+
+ I need Thee every hour,
+ Most gracious Lord,
+ No tender voice like Thine
+ Can peace afford.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ I need Thee, Oh, I need Thee,
+ Every hour I need Thee;
+ Oh, bless me now, my Saviour,
+ I come to Thee!
+
+One instance, at least, of a hymn made doubly impressive by its chorus
+will be attested by all who have sung or heard the pleading words and
+music of Mrs. Hawks' and Dr. Lowry's "I need Thee, Oh, I need Thee."
+
+
+"I GAVE MY LIFE FOR THEE."
+
+This was written in her youth by Frances Ridley Havergal, and was
+suggested by the motto over the head of Christ in the great picture,
+"Ecce Homo," in the Art Gallery of Dusseldorf, Prussia, where she was at
+school. The sight--as was the case with young Count Zinzendorf--seems to
+have had much to do with the gifted girl's early religious experience,
+and indeed exerted its influence on her whole life. The motto read "I
+did this for thee; what doest thou for me?" and the generative effect of
+the solemn picture and its question soon appeared in the hymn that
+flowed from Miss Havergal's heart and pen.
+
+ I gave my life for thee,
+ My precious blood I shed,
+ That thou might'st ransomed be
+ And quickened from the dead.
+ I gave my life for thee:
+ What hast thou given for me?
+
+Miss Frances Ridley Havergal, sometimes called "The Theodosia of the
+19th century," was born at Astley, Worcestershire, Eng., Dec. 14, 1836.
+Her father, Rev. William Henry Havergal, a clergyman of the Church of
+England, was himself a poet and a skilled musician, and much of the
+daughter's ability came to her by natural bequest as well as by
+education. Born a poet, she became a fine instrumentalist, a composer
+and an accomplished linguist. Her health was frail, but her life was a
+devoted one, and full of good works. Her consecrated _words_ were
+destined to outlast her by many generations.
+
+"Writing is _praying_ with me," she said. Death met her in 1879, when
+still in the prime of womanhood.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The music that has made this hymn of Miss Havergal familiar in America
+is named from its first line, and was composed by the lamented Philip P.
+Bliss (christened Philipp Bliss[14]), a pupil of Dr. George F. Root.
+
+[Footnote 14: Mr. Bliss himself changed the spelling of his name,
+preferring to let the third P. do duty alone, as a middle initial.]
+
+He was born in Rome, Pa., Jan. 9, 1838, and less than thirty-nine years
+later suddenly ended his life, a victim of the awful railroad disaster
+at Ashtabula O., Dec. 29, 1876, while returning from a visit to his aged
+mother. His wife, Lucy Young Bliss, perished with him there, in the
+swift flames that enveloped the wreck of the train.
+
+The name of Mr. Bliss had become almost a household word through his
+numerous popular Christian melodies, which were the American beginning
+of the series of _Gospel Hymns_. Many of these are still favorite
+prayer-meeting tunes throughout the country and are heard in
+song-service at Sunday-school and city mission meetings.
+
+
+"JESUS KEEP ME NEAR THE CROSS."
+
+This hymn, one of the best and probably most enduring of Fanny J.
+Crosby's sacred lyrics, was inspired by Col. 1:29.
+
+Frances Jane Crosby (Mrs. Van Alstyne) the blind poet and hymnist, was
+born in Southeast, N.Y., March 24, 1820. She lost her eyesight at the
+age of six. Twelve years of her younger life were spent in the New York
+Institution for the Blind, where she became a teacher, and in 1858 was
+happily married to a fellow inmate, Mr. Alexander Van Alstyne, a
+musician.
+
+George F. Root was for a time musical instructor at the Institution, and
+she began early to write words to his popular song-tunes. "Rosalie, the
+Prairie Flower," and the long favorite melody, "There's Music in the
+Air" are among the many to which she supplied the text and the song
+name.
+
+She resides in Bridgeport, Ct., where she enjoys a serene and happy old
+age. She has written over six thousand hymns, and possibly will add
+other pearls to the cluster before she goes up to join the singing
+saints.
+
+ Jesus, keep me near the Cross,
+ There a precious Fountain
+ Free to all, a healing stream,
+ Flows from Calv'ry's mountain.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ In the Cross, in the Cross
+ Be my glory ever,
+ Till my raptured soul shall find
+ Rest beyond the river.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Near the Cross! O Lamb of God,
+ Bring its scenes before me;
+ Help me walk from day to day
+ With its shadows o'er me.
+
+ CHORUS.
+
+William Howard Doane, writer of the music to this hymn, was born in
+Preston, Ct., Feb. 3, 1831. He studied at Woodstock Academy, and
+subsequently acquired a musical education which earned him the degree of
+Doctor of Music conferred upon him by Denison University in 1875. Having
+a mechanical as well as musical gift, he patented more than seventy
+inventions, and was for some years engaged with manufacturing concerns,
+both as employee and manager, but his interest in song-worship and in
+Sunday-school and church work never abated, and he is well known as a
+trainer of choirs and composer of some of the best modern devotional
+tunes. His home is in Cincinnati, O.
+
+
+"I WOULD NOT LIVE ALWAY."
+
+This threnody (we may almost call it) of W.A. Muhlenberg, illustrating
+one phase of Christian experience, was the outpouring of a poetic
+melancholy not uncommon to young and finely strung souls. He composed it
+in his twenties,--long before he became "Doctor" Muhlenberg,--and for
+years afterwards tried repeatedly to alter it to a more cheerful tone.
+But the poem had its mission, and it had fastened itself in the public
+imagination, either by its contagious sentiment or the felicity of its
+tune, and the author was obliged to accept the fame of it as it
+originally stood.
+
+William Augustus Muhlenberg D.D. was born in Philadelphia, Sept. 16,
+1796, the great-grandson of Dr. Henry M. Muhlenberg, founder of the
+Lutheran church in America. In 1817 he left his ancestral communion, and
+became an Episcopal priest.
+
+As Rector of St. James church, Lancaster, Pa., he interested himself in
+the improvement of ecclesiastical hymnody, and did much good reforming
+work. After a noble and very active life as promoter of religious
+education and Christian union, and as a friend and benefactor of the
+poor, he died April, 8, 1877, in St. Luke's Hospital, N.Y.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+This was composed by Mr. George Kingsley in 1833, and entitled
+"Frederick" (dedicated to the Rev. Frederick T. Gray). Issued first as
+sheet music, it became popular, and soon found a place in the hymnals.
+Dr. Louis Benson says of the conditions and the fancy of the time, "The
+standard of church music did not differ materially from that of parlor
+music.... Several editors have attempted to put a newer tune in the
+place of Mr. Kingsley's. It was in vain, simply because words and melody
+both appeal to the same taste."
+
+[Illustration: Frances Ridley Havergal]
+
+
+"SUN OF MY SOUL, MY SAVIOUR DEAR."
+
+This gem from Keble's _Christian Year_ illustrates the life and
+character of its pious author, and, like all the hymns of that
+celebrated collection, is an incitive to spiritual thought for the
+thoughtless, as well as a language for those who stand in the Holy of
+Holies.
+
+The Rev. John Keble was born in Caln, St. Aldwyn, April 25, 1792. He
+took his degree of A.M. and was ordained and settled at Fairford, where
+he began the parochial work that ceased only with his life. He died at
+Bournmouth, March 29, 1866.
+
+His settlement at Fairford, in charge of three small curacies, satisfied
+his modest ambition, though altogether they brought him only about Ł100
+per year. Here he preached, wrote his hymns and translations, performed
+his pastoral work, and was happy. Temptation to wider fields and larger
+salary never moved him.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The music to this hymn of almost unparalleled poetic and spiritual
+beauty was arranged from a German Choral of Peter Ritter (1760-1846) by
+William Henry Monk, Mus. Doc., born London, 1823. Dr. Monk was a
+lecturer, composer, editor, and professor of vocal music at King's
+College. This noble tune appears sometimes under the name "Hursley" and
+supersedes an earlier one ("Halle") by Thomas Hastings.
+
+ Sun of my soul, my Saviour dear,
+ It is not night if Thou be near.
+ O may no earth-born cloud arise
+ To hide Thee from Thy servants' eyes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Abide with me from morn till eve,
+ For without Thee I cannot live
+ Abide with me when night is nigh,
+ For without Thee I cannot die.
+
+The tune "Hursley" is a choice example of polyphonal sweetness in
+uniform long notes of perfect chord.
+
+The tune of "Canonbury," by Robert Schumann, set to Keble's hymn, "New
+every morning is the love," is deservedly a favorite for flowing long
+metres, but it could never replace "Hursley" with "Sun of my soul."
+
+
+"DID CHRIST O'ER SINNERS WEEP?"
+
+The Rev. Benjamin Beddome wrote this tender hymn-poem while pastor of
+the Baptist Congregation at Bourton-on-the-water, Gloucestershire, Eng.
+He was born at Henley, Chatwickshire, Jan. 23, 1717. Settled in 1743,
+he remained with the same church till his death, Sept. 3, 1795. His
+hymns were not collected and published till 1818.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Dennis," a soft and smoothly modulated harmony, is oftenest sung to the
+words, and has no note out of sympathy with their deep feeling.
+
+ Did Christ o'er sinners weep,
+ And shall our cheeks be dry?
+ Let floods of penitential grief
+ Burst forth from every eye.
+
+ The Son of God in tears
+ Admiring angels see!
+ Be thou astonished, O my soul;
+ He shed those tears for thee.
+
+ He wept that we might weep;
+ Each sin demands a tear:
+ In heaven alone no sin is found,
+ And there's no weeping there.
+
+The tune of "Dennis" was adapted by Lowell Mason from Johann Georg
+Nägeli, a Swiss music publisher, composer and poet. He was born in
+Zurich, 1768. It is told of him that his irrepressible genius once
+tempted him to violate the ethics of authorship. While publishing
+Beethoven's three great solo sonatas (Opus 31) he interpolated two bars
+of his own, an act much commented upon in musical circles, but which
+does not seem to have cost him Beethoven's friendship. Possibly, like
+Murillo to the servant who meddled with his paintings, the great master
+forgave the liberty, because the work was so good.
+
+Nägeli's compositions are mostly vocal, for school and church use,
+though some are of a gay and playful nature. The best remembered of his
+secular and sacred styles are his blithe aria to the song of Moore,
+"Life let us cherish, while yet the taper glows" and the sweet choral
+that voices Beddome's hymn.
+
+
+"MY JESUS, I LOVE THEE."
+
+The real originator of the _Coronation Hymnal_, a book into whose making
+went five years of prayer, was Dr. A.J. Gordon, late Pastor of the
+Clarendon St. Baptist church, Boston. While the volume was slowly taking
+form and plan he was wont to hum to himself, or cause to be played by
+one of his family, snatches and suggestions of new airs that came to him
+in connection with his own hymns, and others which seemed to have no
+suitable music. The anonymous hymn, "My Jesus, I Love Thee," he found in
+a London hymn-book, and though the tune to which it had been sung in
+England was sent to him some time later, it did not sound sympathetic.
+Dissatisfied, and with the ideal in his mind of what the feeling should
+be in the melody to such a hymn, he meditated and prayed over the words
+till in a moment of inspiration the beautiful air sang itself to him[15]
+which with its simple concords has carried the hymn into the chapels of
+every denomination.
+
+[Footnote 15: The fact that this sweet melody recalls to some a similar
+tune sung sixty years ago reminds us again of the story of the tune
+"America." It is not impossible that an unconscious _memory_ helped to
+shape the air that came to Dr. Gordon's mind; though unborrowed
+similarities have been inevitable in the whole history of music.]
+
+ My Jesus, I love Thee, I know Thou art mine,
+ For Thee all the pleasures of sin I resign;
+ My gracious Redeemer, my Saviour art Thou,
+ If ever I loved Thee, my Jesus, 'tis now.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ I will love Thee in life, I will love Thee in death,
+ And praise Thee as long as Thou lendest me breath,
+ And say when the death-dew lies cold on my brow,
+ If ever I loved Thee, my Jesus, 'tis now.
+
+ In mansions of glory and endless delight
+ I'll ever adore Thee, unveiled to my sight,
+ And sing, with the glittering crown on my brow,
+ If ever I loved Thee, my Jesus, 'tis now.
+
+The memory of the writer returns to a day in a railway-car en route to
+the great Columbian Fair in Chicago when the tired passengers were
+suddenly surprised and charmed by the music of this melody. A young
+Christian man and woman, husband and wife, had begun to sing "My Jesus,
+I love Thee." Their voices (a tenor and soprano) were clear and sweet,
+and every one of the company sat up to listen with a look of mingled
+admiration and relief. Here was something, after all, to make a long
+journey less tedious. They sang all the four verses and paused. There
+was no clapping of hands, for a reverential hush had been cast over the
+audience by the sacred music. Instead of the inevitable applause that
+follows mere entertainment, a gentle but eager request for more secured
+the repetition of the delightful duet. This occurred again and again,
+till every one in the car--and some had never heard the tune or words
+before--must have learned them by heart. Fatigue was forgotten, miles
+had been reduced to furlongs in a weary trip, and a company of strangers
+had been lifted to a holier plane of thought.
+
+Besides this melody there are four tunes by Dr. Gordon in his
+collection, three of them with his own words. In all there are eleven of
+his hymns. Of these the "Good morning in Glory," set to his music, is an
+emotional lyric admirable in revival meetings, and the one beginning "O
+Holy Ghost, Arise" is still sung, and called for affectionately as
+"Gordon's Hymn."
+
+Rev. Adoniram Judson Gordon D.D. was born in New Hampton, N.H., April
+19, 1836, and died in Boston, Feb. 2d, 1895, after a life of unsurpassed
+usefulness to his fellowmen and devotion to his Divine Master. Like
+Phillips Brooks he went to his grave "in all his glorious prime," and
+his loss is equally lamented. He was a descendant of John Robinson of
+Leyden.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+MISSIONARY HYMNS.
+
+
+"JESUS SHALL REIGN WHERE'ER THE SUN."
+
+One of Watts' sublimest hymns, this Hebrew ode to the final King and His
+endless dominion expands the majestic prophesy in the seventy-second
+Psalm:
+
+ Jesus shall reign where'er the sun
+ Does his successive journeys run,
+ His kingdom stretch from shore to shore
+ Till moons shall wax and wane no more.
+
+The hymn itself could almost claim to be known "where'er the sun" etc.,
+for Christian missionaries have sung it in every land, if not in every
+language.
+
+One of the native kings in the South Sea Islands, who had been converted
+through the ministry of English missionaries, substituted a Christian
+for a pagan constitution in 1862. There were five thousand of his
+subjects gathered at the ceremonial, and they joined as with one voice
+in singing this hymn.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Old Hundred" has often lent the notes of its great plain-song to the
+sonorous lines, and "Duke Street," with superior melody and scarcely
+inferior grandeur, has given them wings; but the choice of many for
+music that articulates the life of the hymn would be the tune of
+"Samson," from Handel's Oratorio so named. It appears as No. 469 in the
+_Evangelical Hymnal_.
+
+Handel had no peer in the art or instinct of making a note speak a word.
+
+
+"JOY TO THE WORLD! THE LORD IS COME!"
+
+This hymn, also by Watts, is often sung as a Christmas song; but "The
+Saviour Reigns" and "He Rules the World" are bursts of prophetic triumph
+always apt and stimulating in missionary meetings.
+
+Here, again, the great Handel lends appropriate aid, for "Antioch," the
+popular tone-consort of the hymn, is an adaptation from his "Messiah."
+The arrangement has been credited to Lowell Mason, but he seems to have
+taken it from an English collection by Clark of Canterbury.
+
+
+"O'ER THE GLOOMY HILLS OF DARKNESS."
+
+_Dros y brinian tywyl niwliog._
+
+This notable hymn was written, probably about 1750, by the Rev. William
+Williams, a Welsh Calvinistic Methodist, born at Cefnycoed, Jan. 7,
+1717, near Llandovery. He began the study of medicine, but took deacon's
+orders, and was for a time an itinerant preacher, having left the
+established Church. Died at Pantycelyn, Jan. 1, 1781.
+
+His hymn, like the two preceding, antedates the great Missionary
+Movement by many years.
+
+ O'er the gloomy hills of darkness
+ Look my soul! be still, and gaze!
+ See the promises advancing
+ To a glorious Day of grace!
+ Blessed Jubilee,
+ Let thy glorious morning dawn!
+
+ Let the dark, benighted pagan,
+ Let the rude barbarian see
+ That divine and glorious conquest
+ Once obtained on Calvary.
+ Let the Gospel
+ Loud resound from pole to pole.
+
+This song of anticipation has dropped out of the modern hymnals, but the
+last stanza lingers in many memories.
+
+ Fly abroad, thou mighty Gospel!
+ Win and conquer, never cease;
+ May thy lasting wide dominion
+ Multiply and still increase.
+ Sway Thy scepter,
+ Saviour, all the world around!
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Oftener than any other the music of "Zion" has been the expression of
+William Williams' Missionary Hymn. It was composed by Thomas Hastings,
+in Washington, Ct., 1830.
+
+
+"HASTEN, LORD, THE GLORIOUS TIME."
+
+ Hasten, Lord, the glorious time
+ When beneath Messiah's sway
+ Every nation, every clime
+ Shall the Gospel call obey.
+ Mightiest kings its power shall own,
+ Heathen tribes His name adore,
+ Satan and his host o'erthrown
+ Bound in chains shall hurt no more.
+
+Miss Harriet Auber, the author of this melodious hymn, was a daughter of
+James Auber of London, and was born in that city, Oct. 4, 1773. After
+leaving London she led a secluded life at Broxbourne and Hoddesdon, in
+Hertfordshire, writing devotional poetry and sacred songs and
+paraphrases.
+
+Her _Spirit of the Psalms_, published in 1829, was a collection of
+lyrics founded on the Biblical Psalms. "Hasten Lord," etc., is from Ps.
+72, known for centuries to Christendom as one of the Messianic Psalms.
+Her best-known hymns have the same inspiration, as--
+
+ Wide, ye heavenly gates, unfold.
+
+ Sweet is the work, O Lord.
+
+ With joy we hail the sacred day.
+
+Miss Auber died in Hoddesdon, Jan. 20, 1862. She lived to witness and
+sympathise with the pioneer missionary enterprise of the 19th century,
+and, although she could not stand among the leaders of the battle-line
+in extending the conquest of the world for Christ, she was happy in
+having written a campaign hymn which they loved to sing. (It is curious
+that so pains-taking a work as Julian's _Dictionary of Hymns and
+Hymn-writers_ credits "With joy we hail the sacred day" to both Miss
+Auber and Henry Francis Lyte. Coincidences are known where different
+hymns by different authors begin with the same line; and in this case
+one writer was dead before the other's works were published. Possibly
+the collector may have seen a forgotten hymn of Lyte's, with that first
+line.)
+
+The tune that best interprets this hymn in spirit and in living _music_
+is Lowell Mason's "Eltham." Its harmony is like a chime of bells.
+
+
+"LET PARTY NAMES NO MORE."
+
+ Let party names no more
+ The Christian world o'erspread;
+ Gentile and Jew, and bond and free,
+ Are one in Christ the Head.
+
+This hymn of Rev. Benjamin Beddome sounds like a prelude to the grand
+rally of the Christian Churches a generation later for united advance
+into foreign fields. It was an after-sermon hymn--like so many of Watts
+and Doddridge--and spoke a good man's longing to see all sects stand
+shoulder to shoulder in a common crusade.
+
+Tune--Boylston.
+
+
+"WATCHMAN, TELL US OF THE NIGHT."
+
+The tune written to this pealing hymn of Sir John Bowring by Lowell
+Mason has never been superseded. In animation and vocal splendor it
+catches the author's own clear call, echoing the shout of Zion's
+sentinels from city to city, and happily reproducing in movement and
+phrase the great song-dialogue. Words and music together, the piece
+ranks with the foremost missionary lyrics. Like the greater Mason-Heber
+world-song, it has acquired no arbitrary name, appearing in Mason's own
+tune-books under its first hymn-line and likewise in many others. A few
+hymnals have named it "Bowring," (and why not?) and some later ones
+simply "Watchman."
+
+ 1.
+ Watchman, tell us of the night.
+ What its signs of promise are!
+ (Antistrophe)
+ Traveler, on yon mountain height.
+ See that glory-beaming star!
+
+ 2
+ Watchman, does its beauteous ray
+ Aught of hope or joy foretell?
+ (Antistrophe)
+ Trav'ler, yes; it brings the day,
+ Promised day of Israel.
+
+ 3
+ Watchman, tell us of the night;
+ Higher yet that star ascends.
+ (Antistrophe)
+ Trav'ler, blessedness and light
+ Peace and truth its course portends.
+
+ 4
+ Watchman, will its beams alone
+ Gild the spot that gave them birth?
+ (Antistrophe)
+ Trav'ler, ages are its own.
+ See! it bursts o'er all the earth.
+
+
+"YE CHRISTIAN HERALDS, GO PROCLAIM."
+
+In some versions "Ye Christian _heroes_," etc.
+
+Professor David R. Breed attributes this stirring hymn to Mrs. Vokes (or
+Voke) an English or Welsh lady, who is supposed to have written it
+somewhere near 1780, and supports the claim by its date of publication
+in _Missionary and Devotional Hymns_ at Portsea, Wales, in 1797. In this
+Dr. Breed follows (he says) "the accepted tradition." On the other hand
+the _Coronation Hymnal_ (1894) refers the authorship to a Baptist
+minister, the Rev. Bourne Hall Draper, of Southampton (Eng.), born 1775,
+and this choice has the approval of Dr. Charles Robinson. The question
+occurs whether, when the hymn was published in good faith as Mrs.
+Vokes', it was really the work of a then unknown youth of twenty-two.
+
+The probability is that the hymn owns a mother instead of a father--and
+a grand hymn it is; one of the most stimulating in Missionary
+song-literature.
+
+The stanza--
+
+ God shield you with a wall of fire!
+ With flaming zeal your breasts inspire;
+ Bid raging winds their fury cease,
+ And hush the tumult into peace,
+
+--has been tampered with by editors, altering the last line to "Calm the
+troubled seas," etc., (for the sake of the longer vowel;) but the
+substitution, "_He'll_ shield you," etc., in the first line, turns a
+prayer into a mere statement.
+
+The hymn was--and should remain--a God-speed to men like William
+Carey, who had already begun to think and preach his immortal motto,
+"Attempt great things for God; expect great things of God."
+
+
+_THE TUNE_
+
+Is the "Missionary Chant," and no other. Its composer, Heinrich
+Christopher Zeuner, was born in Eisleben, Saxony, Sept. 20, 1795. He
+came to the United States in 1827, and was for many years organist at
+Park Street Church, Boston, and for the Handel and Haydn Society. In
+1854 he removed to Philadelphia where he served three years as organist
+to St. Andrews Church, and Arch Street Presbyterian. He became insane in
+1857, and in November of that year died by his own hand.
+
+He published an oratorio "The Feast of Tabernacles," and two popular
+books, the _American Harp_, 1832, and _The Ancient Lyre_, 1833. His
+compositions are remarkably spirited and vigorous, and his work as a
+tune-maker was much in demand during his life, and is sure to continue,
+in its best examples, as long as good sacred music is appreciated.
+
+To another beautiful missionary hymn of Mrs. Vokes, of quieter tone, but
+songful and sweet, Dr. Mason wrote the tune of "Migdol." It is its
+musical twin.
+
+ Soon may the last glad song arise
+ Through all the millions of the skies.
+ That song of triumph which records
+ That "all the earth is now the Lord's."
+
+
+"ON THE MOUNTAIN TOP APPEARING."
+
+This admired and always popular church hymn was written near the
+beginning of the last century by the Rev. Thomas Kelly, born in Dublin,
+1760. He was the son of the Hon. Chief Baron Thomas Kelly of that city,
+a judge of the Irish Court of Common Pleas. His father designed him for
+the legal profession, but after his graduation at Trinity College he
+took holy orders in the Episcopal Church, and labored as a clergyman
+among the scenes of his youth for more than sixty years, becoming a
+Nonconformist in his later ministry. He was a sweet-souled man, who made
+troops of friends, and was honored as much for his piety as for his
+poetry, music, and oriental learning.
+
+"I expect never to die," he said, when Lord Plunkett once told him he
+would reach a great age. He finished his earthly work on the 14th of
+May, 1855, when he was eighty-five years old. But he still lives. His
+zeal for the coming of the Kingdom of Christ prompted his best hymn.
+
+ On the mountain-top appearing,
+ Lo! the sacred herald stands,
+ Joyful news to Zion bearing,
+ Zion long in hostile lands;
+ Mourning captive,
+ God himself will loose thy bands.
+
+ Has the night been long and mournful?
+ Have thy friends unfaithful proved?
+ Have thy foes been proud and scornful,
+ By thy sighs and tears unmoved?
+ Cease thy mourning;
+ Zion still is well beloved.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+To presume that Kelly made both words and music together is possible,
+for he was himself a composer, but no such original tune seems to
+survive. In modern use Dr. Hastings' "Zion" is most frequently attached
+to the hymn, and was probably written for it.
+
+
+"YE CHRISTIAN HEROES, WAKE TO GLORY."
+
+This rather crude parody on the "Marseillaise Hymn" (see Chap. 9) is
+printed in the _American Vocalist_, among numerous samples of early New
+England psalmody of untraced authorship. It might have been sung at
+primitive missionary meetings, to spur the zeal and faith of a Francis
+Mason or a Harriet Newell. It expresses, at least, the new-kindled
+evangelical spirit of the long-ago consecrations in American church life
+that first sent the Christian ambassadors to foreign lands, and followed
+them with benedictions.
+
+[Illustration: The Right Rev. Reginald Heber, D.D.]
+
+ Ye Christian heroes, wake to glory:
+ Hark, hark! what millions bid you rise!
+ See heathen nations bow before you,
+ Behold their tears, and hear their cries.
+ Shall pagan priest, their errors breeding,
+ With darkling hosts, and flags unfurled,
+ Spread their delusions o'er the world,
+ Though Jesus on the Cross hung bleeding?
+ To arms! To arms!
+ Christ's banner fling abroad!
+ March on! March on! all hearts resolved
+ To bring the world to God.
+
+ O, Truth of God! can man resign thee,
+ Once having felt thy glorious flame?
+ Can rolling oceans e'er prevent thee,
+ Or gold the Christian's spirit tame?
+ Too long we slight the world's undoing;
+ The word of God, salvation's plan,
+ Is yet almost unknown to man,
+ While millions throng the road to ruin.
+ To arms! to arms!
+ The Spirit's sword unsheath:
+ March on! March on! all hearts resolved,
+ To victory or death.
+
+
+"HAIL TO THE LORD'S ANOINTED."
+
+James Montgomery (says Dr. Breed) is "distinguished as the only layman
+besides Cowper among hymn-writers of the front rank in the English
+language." How many millions have recited and sung his fine and
+exhaustively descriptive poem,--
+
+ Prayer is the soul's sincere desire,
+
+--selections from almost any part of which are perfect definitions, and
+have been standard hymns on prayer for three generations. English
+Hymnology would as unwillingly part with his missionary hymns,--
+
+ The king of glory we proclaim.
+
+ Hark, the song of jubilee!
+
+--and, noblest of all, the lyric of prophecy and praise which heads
+this paragraph.
+
+ Hail to the Lord's anointed,
+ King David's greater Son!
+ Hail, in the time appointed
+ His reign on earth begun.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Arabia's desert ranger
+ To Him shall bow the knee,
+ The Ethiopian stranger
+ His glory come to see.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Kings shall fall down before Him
+ And gold and incense bring;
+ All nations shall adore Him,
+ His praise all people sing.
+
+The hymn is really the seventy-second Psalm in metre, and as a version
+it suffers nothing by comparison with that of Watts. Montgomery wrote
+it as a Christmas ode. It was sung Dec. 25, 1821, at a Moravian
+Convocation, but in 1822 he recited it at a great missionary meeting in
+Liverpool, and Dr. Adam Clarke was so charmed with it that he inserted
+it in his famous _Commentary_. In no long time afterwards it found its
+way into general use.
+
+The spirit of his missionary parents was Montgomery's Christian legacy,
+and in exalted poetical moments it stirred him as the divine afflatus
+kindled the old prophets.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The music editors in some hymnals have borrowed the favorite choral
+variously named "Webb" in honor of its author, and "The Morning Light is
+Breaking" from the first line of its hymn. Later hymnals have chosen
+Sebastian Wesley's "Aurelia" to fit the hymn, with a movement similar to
+that of "Webb"; also a German B flat melody "Ellacombe," undated, with
+livelier step and a ringing chime of parts. No one of these is
+inappropriate.
+
+Samuel Sebastian Wesley, grandson of Charles Wesley the great hymnist,
+was born in London, 1810. Like his father, Samuel, he became a
+distinguished musician, and was organist at Exeter, Winchester and
+Gloucester Cathedrals. Oxford gave him the degree of Doctor of Music.
+He composed instrumental melodies besides many anthems, services, and
+other sacred pieces for choir and congregational singing. Died in
+Gloucester, April 19, 1876.
+
+
+"FROM GREENLAND'S ICY MOUNTAINS."
+
+The familiar story of this hymn scarcely needs repeating; how one
+Saturday afternoon in the year 1819, young Reginald Heber, Rector of
+Hodnet, sitting with his father-in-law, Dean Shipley, and a few friends
+in the Wrexham Vicarage, was suddenly asked by the Dean to "write
+something to sing at the missionary meeting tomorrow," and retired to
+another part of the room while the rest went on talking; how, very soon
+after, he returned with three stanzas, which were hailed with delighted
+approval; how he then insisted upon adding another octrain to the hymn
+and came back with--
+
+ Waft, waft, ye winds, His story,
+ And you, ye waters, roll;
+
+--and how the great lyric was sung in Wrexham Church on Sunday morning
+for the first time in its life. The story is old but always fresh.
+Nothing could better have emphasized the good Dean's sermon that day in
+aid of "The Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts,"
+than that unexpected and glorious lyric of his poet son-in-law.
+
+By common consent Heber's "Missionary Hymn" is the silver trumpet among
+all the rallying bugles of the church.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The union of words and music in this instance is an example of spiritual
+affinity. "What God hath joined together let no man put asunder." The
+story of the tune is a record of providential birth quite as interesting
+as that of the hymn. In 1823, a lady in Savannah, Ga., having received
+and admired a copy of Heber's lyric from England, desired to sing it or
+hear it sung, but knew no music to fit the metre. She finally thought of
+a young clerk in a bank close by, Lowell Mason by name, who sometimes
+wrote music for recreation, and sent her son to ask him if he would make
+a tune that would sing the lines. The boy returned in half an hour with
+the composition that doubled Heber's fame and made his own.
+
+In the words of Dr. Charles Robinson, "Like the hymn it voices, it was
+done at a stroke, and it will last through the ages."
+
+
+"THE MORNING LIGHT IS BREAKING."
+
+Not far behind Dr. Heber's _chef-d'oeuvre_ in lyric merit is the still
+more famous missionary hymn of Dr. S.F. Smith, author of "My Country,
+'Tis of Thee." Another missionary hymn of his which is widely used is--
+
+ Yes, my native land, I love thee,
+ All thy scenes, I love them well.
+ Friends, connections, happy country,
+ Can I bid you all farewell?
+ Can I leave you
+ Far in heathen lands to dwell?
+
+Drs. Nutter and Breed speak of "The Morning Light is Breaking," and its
+charm as a hymn of peace and promise, and intimate that it has "gone
+farther and been more frequently sung than any other missionary hymn."
+Besides the English, there are versions of it in four Latin nations, the
+Italian, Spanish, Portuguese and French, and oriental translations in
+Chinese and several East Indian tongues and dialects, as well as one in
+Swedish. It author had the rare felicity, while on a visit to his son, a
+missionary in Burmah, of hearing it sung by native Christians in their
+language, and of being welcomed with an ovation when they knew who he
+was.
+
+ The morning light is breaking!
+ The darkness disappears;
+ The sons of earth are waking
+ To penitential tears;
+ Each breeze that sweeps the ocean
+ Brings tidings from afar,
+ Of nations in commotion,
+ Prepared for Zion's war.
+
+ Rich dews of grace come o'er us
+ In many a gentle shower,
+ And brighter scenes before us
+ Are opening every hour.
+ Each cry to heaven going
+ Abundant answer brings,
+ And heavenly gales are blowing
+ With peace upon their wings.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Blest river of Salvation,
+ Pursue thy onward way;
+ Flow thou to every nation,
+ Nor in thy richness stay.
+ Stay not till all the lowly
+ Triumphant reach their home;
+ Stay not till all the holy
+ Proclaim, "The Lord is come!"
+
+Samuel Francis Smith, D.D., was born in Boston in 1808, and educated in
+Harvard University (1825-1829). He prepared for the ministry, and was
+pastor of Baptist churches at Waterville, Me., and Newton, Mass., before
+entering the service of the American Baptist Missionary union as editor
+of its _Missionary Magazine_.
+
+He was a scholarly and graceful writer, both in verse and prose, and
+besides his editorial work, he was frequently an invited participant or
+guest of honor on public occasions, owing to his fame as author of the
+national hymn. His pure and gentle character made him everywhere beloved
+and reverenced, and to know him intimately in his happy old age was a
+benediction. He died suddenly and painlessly in his seat on a railway
+train, November 16, 1895 in his eighty-eighth year.
+
+Dr. Smith wrote twenty-six hymns now more or less in use in church
+worship, and eight for Sabbath school collections.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Millennial Dawn" is the title given it by a Boston compiler, about
+1844, but since the music and hymn became "one and indivisable" it has
+been named "Webb," and popularly _known_ as "Morning Light" or oftener
+still by its first hymn-line, "The morning light is breaking."
+
+George James Webb was born near Salisbury, Wiltshire, Eng., June 24,
+1803. He studied music in Salisbury and for several years played the
+organ at Falmouth Church. When still a young man (1830), he came to the
+United States, and settled in Boston where he was long the leading
+organist and music teacher of the city. He was associate director of the
+Boston Academy of Music with Lowell Mason, and joint author and editor
+with him of several church-music collections. Died in Orange, N.J., Nov.
+7, 1887.
+
+Dr. Webb's own account of the tune "Millennial Dawn" states that he
+wrote it at sea while on his way to America--and to secular words and
+that he had no idea who first adapted it to the hymn, nor when.
+
+
+"IF I WERE A VOICE, A PERSUASIVE VOICE."
+
+This animating lyric was written by Charles Mackay. Sung by a good
+vocalist, the fine solo air composed (with its organ chords) by I.B.
+Woodbury, is still a feature in some missionary meetings, especially the
+fourth stanza--
+
+ If I were a voice, an immortal voice,
+ I would fly the earth around:
+ And wherever man to his idols bowed,
+ I'd publish in notes both long and loud
+ The Gospel's joyful sound.
+ I would fly, I would fly, on the wings of day,
+ Proclaiming peace on my world-wide way,
+ Bidding the saddened earth rejoice--
+ If I were a voice, an immortal voice,
+ I would fly, I would fly,
+ I would fly on the wings of day.
+
+Charles Mackay, the poet, was born in Perth, Scotland, 1814, and
+educated in London and Brussels; was engaged in editorial work on the
+_London Morning Chronicle_ and _Glasgow Argus_, and during the Corn Law
+agitation wrote popular songs, notably "The Voice of the Crowd" and
+"There's a Good Time Coming," which (like the far inferior poetry of
+Ebenezer Elliot) won the lasting love of the masses for a superior man
+who could be "The People's Singer and Friend." He came to the United
+States in 1857 as a lecturer, and again in 1862, remaining three years
+as war correspondent of the _London Times_. Glasgow University made him
+LL.D. in 1847. His numerous songs and poems were collected in a London
+edition. Died Dec. 24, 1889.
+
+Isaac Baker Woodbury was born in Beverly, Mass., 1819, and rose from the
+station of a blacksmith's apprentice to be a tone-teacher in the church.
+He educated himself in Europe, returned and sang his life songs, and
+died in 1858 at the age of thirty-nine.
+
+A tune preferred by many as the finer music is the one written to the
+words by Mr. Sankey, _Sacred Songs_, No. 2.
+
+
+"SPEED AWAY! SPEED AWAY!"
+
+This inspiriting song of farewell to departing missionaries was written
+in 1890 to Woodbury's appropriate popular melody by Fanny J. Crosby, at
+the request of Ira D. Sankey. The key-word and refrain are adapted from
+the original song by Woodbury (1848), but in substance and language the
+three hymn-stanzas are the new and independent work of this later
+writer.
+
+ Speed away! speed away on your mission of light,
+ To the lands that are lying in darkness and night;
+ 'Tis the Master's command; go ye forth in His name,
+ The wonderful gospel of Jesus proclaim;
+ Take your lives in your hand, to the work while 'tis day,
+ Speed away! speed away! speed away!
+
+ Speed away, speed away with the life-giving Word,
+ To the nations that know not the voice of the Lord;
+ Take the wings of the morning and fly o'er the wave,
+ In the strength of your Master the lost ones to save;
+ He is calling once more, not a moment's delay,
+ Speed away! speed away! speed away!
+
+ Speed away, speed away with the message of rest,
+ To the souls by the tempter in bondage oppressed;
+ For the Saviour has purchased their ransom from sin,
+ And the banquet is ready. O gather them in;
+ To the rescue make haste, there's no time for delay,
+ Speed away! speed away! speed away!
+
+
+"ONWARD CHRISTIAN SOLDIERS!"
+
+Rev. Sabine Baring-Gould, the author of this rousing hymn of Christian
+warfare, a rector of the Established Church of England and a writer of
+note, was born at Exeter, Eng., Jan. 28, 1834. Educated at Clare
+College, Cambridge, he entered the service of the church, and was
+appointed Rector of East Mersea, Essex, in 1871. He was the author of
+several hymns, original and translated, and introduced into England from
+Flanders, numbers of carols with charming old Christmas music. The
+"Christian Soldiers" hymn is one of his (original) processionals, and
+the most inspiring.
+
+ Onward, Christian soldiers,
+ Marching as to war,
+ With the cross of Jesus
+ Going on before.
+ Christ the Royal Master
+ Leads against the foe;
+ Forward into battle,
+ See, His banners go!
+ Onward, Christian soldiers, etc.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Like a mighty army
+ Moves the Church of God;
+ Brothers, we are treading
+ Where the saints have trod;
+ We are not divided,
+ All one body we,
+ One in hope, in doctrine,
+ One in charity.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Sir Arthur Seymour Sullivan, Doctor of Music, who wrote the melody for
+this hymn, was born in London, May 13, 1842. He gained the Mendelssohn
+Scholarship at the Royal Academy of Music, and also at the Conservatory
+of Leipsic. He was a fertile genius, and his compositions included
+operettas, symphonies, overtures, anthems, hymn-tunes, an oratorio ("The
+Prodigal Son"), and almost every variety of tone production, vocal and
+instrumental. Queen Victoria knighted him in 1883.
+
+The grand rhythm of "Onward, Christian Soldiers"--hymn and tune--is
+irresistible whether in band march or congregational worship. Sir Arthur
+died in London, November 22, 1900.
+
+
+"O CHURCH ARISE AND SING"
+
+Designed originally for children's voices, the hymn of five stanzas
+beginning with this line was written by Hezekiah Butterworth, author of
+the _Story of the Hymns_ (1875), _Story of the Tunes_ (1890), and many
+popular books of historic interest for the young, the most widely read
+of which is _Zigzag Journeys in Many Lands_. He also composed and
+published many poems and hymns. He was born in Warren, R.I., Dec. 22,
+1839, and for twenty-five years was connected with the _Youth's
+Companion_ as regular contributor and member of its editorial staff. He
+died in Warren, R.I., Sept. 5, 1905.
+
+The hymn "O Church, arise" was sung in Mason's tune of "Dort" until
+Prof. Case wrote a melody for it, when it took the name of the
+"Convention Hymn."
+
+Professor Charles Clinton Case, music composer and teacher, was born in
+Linesville, Pa., June, 1843. Was a pupil of George F. Root and pursued
+musical study in Chicago, Ill., Ashland, O., and South Bend, Ind. He was
+associated with Root, McGranahan, and others in making secular and
+church music books, and later with D.L. Moody in evangelical work.
+
+As author and compiler he has published numerous works, among them
+_Church Anthems_, the _Harvest Song_ and _Case's Chorus Collection_.
+
+ O Church! arise and sing
+ The triumphs of your King,
+ Whose reign is love;
+ Sing your enlarged desires,
+ That conquering faith inspires,
+ Renew your signal fires,
+ And forward move!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Beneath the glowing arch
+ The ransomed armies march,
+ We follow on;
+ Lead on, O cross of Light,
+ From conquering height to height,
+ And add new victories bright
+ To triumphs won!
+
+
+"THE BANNER OF IMMANUEL!"
+
+This hymn, set to music and copyrighted in Buffalo as a floating waif of
+verse by an unknown author, and used in Sunday-school work, first
+appeared in Dr. F.N. Peloubet's _Select Songs_ (Biglow and Main, 1884)
+with a tune by Rev. George Phipps.
+
+The hymn was written by Rev. Theron Brown, a Baptist minister, who was
+pastor (1859-1870) of churches in South Framingham and Canton, Mass. He
+was born in Willimantic, Ct., April 29, 1832.
+
+Retired from pastoral work, owing to vocal disability, he has held
+contributory and editorial relations with the _Youth's Companion_ for
+more than forty years, for the last twenty years a member of the office
+staff.
+
+Between 1880 and 1890 he contributed hymns more or less regularly to the
+quartet and antiphonal chorus service at the Ruggles St. Church, Boston,
+the "Banner of Immanuel" being one of the number. _The Blount Family_,
+_Nameless Women of the Bible_, _Life Songs_ (a volume of poems), and
+several books for boys, are among his published works.
+
+ The banner of Immanuel! beneath its glorious folds
+ For life or death to serve and fight we pledge our loyal souls.
+ No other flag such honor boasts, or bears so proud a name,
+ And far its red-cross signal flies as flies the lightning's flame.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Salvation by the blood of Christ! the shouts of triumph ring;
+ No other watchword leads the host that serves so grand a King.
+ Then rally, soldiers of the Cross! Keep every fold unfurled,
+ And by Redemption's holy sign we'll conquer all the world.
+
+The Rev. George Phipps, composer of the tune, "Immanuel's Banner," was
+born in Franklin, Mass., Dec. 11, 1838, was graduated at Amherst
+College, 1862, and at Andover Theological Seminary, 1865. Settled as
+pastor of the Congregational Church in Wellesley, Mass., ten years, and
+at Newton Highlands fifteen years.
+
+He has written many Sunday-school melodies, notably the music to "My
+Saviour Keeps Me Company."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+HYMNS OF SUFFERING AND TRUST.
+
+
+One inspiring chapter in the compensations of life is the record of
+immortal verses that were sorrow-born. It tells us in the most affecting
+way how affliction refines the spirit and "the agonizing throes of
+thought bring forth glory." Often a broken life has produced a single
+hymn. It took the long living under trial to shape the supreme
+experience.
+
+ --The anguish of the singer
+ Made the sweetness of the song.
+
+Indeed, if there had been no sorrow there would have been no song.
+
+[Illustration: George James Webb]
+
+
+"MY LORD, HOW FULL OF SWEET CONTENT."
+
+Jeanne M.B. de la Mothe--known always as Madame Guyon--the lady who
+wrote these words in exile, probably sang more "songs in the night" than
+any hymn-writer outside of the Dark Ages. She was born at Montargis,
+France, in 1648, and died in her seventieth year, 1771, in the ancient
+city of Blois, on the Loire.
+
+A convent-educated girl of high family, a wife at the age of fifteen,
+and a widow at twenty-eight, her early piety, ridiculed in the dazzling
+but corrupt society of Louis XIV's time, blossomed through a long life
+in religious ministries and flowers of sacred poetry.
+
+She became a mystic, and her book _Spiritual Torrents_ indicates the
+impetuous ardors of her soul. It was the way Divine Love came to her.
+She was the incarnation of the spiritualized Book of Canticles. An
+induction to these intense subjective visions and raptures had been the
+remark of a pious old Franciscan father, "Seek God in your heart, and
+you will find Him."
+
+She began to teach as well as enjoy the new light so different from the
+glitter of the traditional worship. But her "aggressive holiness" was
+obnoxious to the established Church. "Quietism" was the brand set upon
+her written works and the offense that was punished in her person.
+Bossuet, the king of preachers, was her great adversary. The saintly
+Fenelon was her friend, but he could not shield her. She was shut up
+like a lunatic in prison after prison, till, after four years of dungeon
+life in the Bastile, expecting every hour to be executed for heresy, she
+was banished to a distant province to end her days.
+
+Question as we may the usefulness of her pietistic books, the visions of
+her excessively exalted moods, and the passionate, almost erotic
+phraseology of her _Contemplations_, Madame Guyon has held the world's
+admiration for her martyr spirit, and even her love-flights of devotion
+in poetry and prose do not conceal the angel that walked in the flame.
+
+Today, when religious persecution is unknown, we can but dimly
+understand the perfect triumph of her superior soul under suffering and
+the transports of her utter absorption in God that could make the stones
+of her dungeon "look like jewels." When we emulate a faith like
+hers--with all the weight of absolute certainty in it--we can sing her
+hymn:
+
+ My Lord, how full of sweet content
+ I pass my years of banishment.
+ Where'er I dwell, I dwell with Thee,
+ In heaven or earth, or on the sea.
+
+ To me remains nor place nor time:
+ My country is in every clime;
+ I can be calm and free from care
+ On any shore, since God is there.
+
+And could a dearer _vade mecum_ enrich a Christian's outfit than these
+lines treasured in memory?
+
+ While place we seek or place we shun,
+ The soul finds happiness in none;
+ But, with a God to guide our way,
+ 'Tis equal joy to go or stay.
+
+Cowper, and also Dr. Thomas Upham, translated (from the French) the
+religious poems of Madame Guyon. This hymn is Cowper's translation.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+A gentle and sympathetic melody entitled "Alsace" well represents the
+temper of the words--and in name links the nationalities of writer and
+composer. It is a choral arranged from a sonata of the great Ludwig von
+Beethoven, born in Bonn, Germany, 1770, and died in Vienna, Mar. 1827.
+Like the author of the hymn he felt the hand of affliction, becoming
+totally deaf soon after his fortieth year. But, in spite of the
+privation, he kept on writing sublime and exquisite strains that only
+his soul could hear. His fame rests upon his oratorio, "The Mount of
+Olives," the opera of "Fidelio" and his nine wonderful "Symphonies."
+
+
+"NO CHANGE IN TIME SHALL EVER SHOCK."
+
+Altered to common metre from the awkward long metre of Tate and Brady,
+the three or four stanzas found in earlier hymnals are part of their
+version (probably Tate's) of the 31st Psalm--and it is worth calling to
+mind here that there is no hymn treasury so rich in tuneful faith and
+reliance upon God in trouble as the Book of Psalms. This feeling of the
+Hebrew poet was never better expressed (we might say, translated) in
+English than by the writer of this single verse--
+
+ No change of time shall ever shock
+ My trust, O Lord, in Thee,
+ For Thou hast always been my Rock,
+ A sure defense to me.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The sweet, tranquil choral long ago wedded to this hymn is lost from the
+church collections, and its very name forgotten. In fact the hymn itself
+is now seldom seen. If it ever comes back, old "Dundee" (Guillaume Franc
+1500-1570) will sing for it, or some new composer may rise up to put the
+spirit of the psalm into inspired notes.
+
+
+"WHY DO WE MOURN DEPARTED FRIENDS?"
+
+This hymn of holy comfort, by Dr. Watts, was long associated with a
+remarkable tune in C minor, "a queer medley of melody" as Lowell Mason
+called it, still familiar to many old people as "China." It was composed
+by Timothy Swan when he was about twenty-six years of age (1784) and
+published in 1801 in the _New England Harmony_. It may have sounded
+consolatory to mature mourners, singers and hearers in the days when
+religious emotion habitually took a sad key, but its wild and thrilling
+chords made children weep. The tune is long out of use--though, strange
+to say, one of the most recent hymnals prints the hymn with a _new
+minor_ tune.
+
+ Why do we mourn departed friends,
+ Or shake at death's alarms?
+ 'Tis but the voice that Jesus sends
+ To call them to His arms.
+
+ Are we not tending upward too
+ As fast as time can move?
+ Nor should we wish the hours more slow
+ To keep us from our Love.
+
+ The graves of all His saints He blessed
+ And softened every bed:
+ Where should the dying members rest
+ But with their dying Head?
+
+Timothy Swan was born in Worcester, Mass., July 23, 1758, and died in
+Suffield, Ct., July 23, 1842. He was a self-taught musician, his only
+"course of study" lasting three weeks,--in a country singing school at
+Groton. When sixteen years old he went to Northfield, Mass., and learned
+the hatter's trade, and while at work began to practice making
+psalm-tunes. "Montague," in two parts, was his first achievement. From
+that time for thirty years, mostly spent in Suffield, Ct., he wrote and
+taught music while supporting himself by his trade. Many of his tunes
+were published by himself, and had a wide currency a century ago.
+
+Swan was a genius in his way, and it was a true comment on his work that
+"his tunes were remarkable for their originality as well as
+singularity--unlike any other melodies." "China," his masterpiece, will
+be long kept track of as a curio, and preserved in replicates of old
+psalmody to illustrate self-culture in the art of song. But the major
+mode will replace the minor when tender voices on burial days sing--
+
+ Why do we mourn departed friends?
+
+Another hymn of Watts,--
+
+ God is the refuge of His saints
+ When storms of sharp distress invade,
+
+--sung to Lowell Mason's liquid tune of "Ward," and the priceless
+stanza,--
+
+ Jesus can make a dying bed
+ Feel soft as downy pillows are,
+
+doubly prove the claim of the Southampton bard to a foremost place with
+the song-preachers of Christian trust.
+
+The psalm (Amsterdam version), "God is the refuge," etc., is said to
+have been sung by John Howland in the shallop of the Mayflower when an
+attempt was made to effect a landing in spite of tempestuous weather. A
+tradition of this had doubtless reached Mrs. Hemans when she wrote--
+
+ Amid the storm they sang, etc.
+
+
+"FATHER, WHATE'ER OF EARTHLY BLISS."
+
+This hymn had originally ten stanzas, of which the three usually sung
+are the three last. The above line is the first of the eighth stanza,
+altered from--
+
+ And O, whate'er of earthly bliss.
+
+Probably for more than a century the familiar surname "Steele" attached
+to this and many other hymns in the hymn-books conveyed to the general
+public no hint of a mind and hand more feminine than Cowper's or
+Montgomery's. Even intelligent people, who had chanced upon sundry
+copies of _The Spectator_, somehow fell into the habit of putting
+"Steele" and "Addison" in the same category of hymn names, and Sir
+Richard Steele got a credit he never sought. But since stories of the
+hymns began to be published--and made the subject of evening talks in
+church conference rooms--many have learned what "Steele" in the
+hymn-book means. It introduces us now to a very retiring English lady,
+Miss Anna Steele, a Baptist minister's daughter. She was born in 1706,
+at Broughton, Hampshire, in her father's parsonage, and in her father's
+parsonage she spent her life, dying there Nov. 1778.
+
+She was many years a severe sufferer from bodily illness, and a lasting
+grief of mind and heart was the loss of her intended husband, who was
+drowned the day before their appointed wedding. It is said that this
+hymn was written under the recent sorrow of that loss.
+
+In 1760 and 1780 volumes of her works in verse and prose were published
+with her name, "Theodosia," and reprinted in 1863 as "_Hymns, Psalms,
+and Poems_, by Anna Steele." The hymn "Father, whate'er," etc., is
+estimated as her best, though some rank it only next to her--
+
+ Dear Refuge of my weary soul.
+
+Other more or less well-known hymns of this devout and loving writer
+are,--
+
+ Lord, how mysterious are Thy ways,
+
+ O Thou whose tender mercy hears,
+
+ Thou lovely Source of true delight,
+
+ Alas, what hourly dangers rise,
+
+ So fades the lovely blooming flower.
+
+--to a stanza of which latter the world owes the tune of "Federal St."
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The true musical mate of the sweet hymn-prayer came to it probably about
+the time of its hundredth birthday; but it came to stay. Lowell Mason's
+"Naomi" blends with it like a symphony of nature.
+
+ Father, whate'er of earthly bliss
+ Thy sovereign will denies,
+ Accepted at Thy throne of grace
+ Let this petition rise.
+
+ Give me a calm and thankful heart
+ From every murmer free.
+ The blessings of Thy grace impart,
+ And make me live to Thee.
+
+
+"GUIDE ME, O THOU GREAT JEHOVAH."
+
+This great hymn has a double claim on the name of Williams. We do not
+have it exactly in its original form as written by Rev. William
+Williams, "The Watts of Wales," familiarly known as "Williams of
+Pantycelyn." His fellow countryman and contemporary, Rev. Peter
+Williams, or "Williams of Carmarthen," who translated it from Welsh into
+English (1771) made alterations and substitutions in the hymn with the
+result that only the first stanza belongs indisputably to Williams of
+Pantycelyn, the others being Peter's own or the joint production of the
+two. As the former, however, is said to have approved and revised the
+English translation, we may suppose the hymn retained the name of its
+original author by mutual consent.
+
+ Guide me, O Thou Great Jehovah,
+ Pilgrim through this barren land.
+ I am weak, but Thou art mighty,
+ Hold me by Thy powerful hand;
+ Bread of heaven,
+ Feed me till I want no more.
+
+ Open Thou the crystal Fountain
+ Whence the healing streams do flow,
+ Let the fiery cloudy pillar
+ Lead me all my journey through.
+ Strong Deliverer,
+ Be Thou still my Strength and Shield!
+
+ When I tread the verge of Jordan
+ Bid my anxious fears subside;
+ Death of death, and hell's destruction,
+ Land me safe on Canaan's side.
+ Songs of praises
+ I will ever give to Thee.
+
+ Musing on my habitation,
+ Musing on my heavenly home,
+ Fills my heart with holy longing;
+ Come, Lord Jesus, quickly come.
+ Vanity is all I see,
+ Lord, I long to be with Thee.
+
+The second and third stanzas have not escaped the touch of critical
+editors. The line,--
+
+ Whence the healing streams do flow
+
+--becomes,--
+
+ Whence the healing waters flow,
+
+--with which alteration there is no fault to find except that it is
+needless, and obliterates the ancient mark. But the third stanza,
+besides losing its second line for--
+
+ Bid the swelling stream divide,
+
+--is weakened by a more needless substitution. Its original third line--
+
+ Death of death, and hell's destruction,
+
+--is exchanged for the commonplace--
+
+ Bear me through the swelling current.
+
+That is modern taste; but when modern taste meddles with a stalwart old
+hymn it is sometimes more nice than wise.
+
+It is probable that the famous hymn was sung in America before it
+obtained a European reputation. Its history is as follows: Lady
+Huntingdon having read one of Williams' books with much spiritual
+satisfaction, persuaded him to prepare a collection of hymns, to be
+called the _Gloria in Excelsis_, for special use in Mr. Whitefield's
+Orphans' House in America. In this collection appeared the original
+stanzas of "Guide me, O Thou Great Jehovah." In 1774, two years after
+its publication in the _Gloria in Excelsis_, it was republished in
+England in Mr. Whitefield's collections of hymns.
+
+The Rev. Peter Williams was born in the parish of Llansadurnen,
+Carmarthenshire, Wales, Jan. 7, 1722, and was educated in Carmarthen
+College. He was ordained in the Established Church and appointed to a
+curacy, but in 1748 joined the Calvinistic Methodists. He was an
+Independent of the Independents however, and preached where ever he
+chose. Finally he built a chapel for himself on his paternal estate,
+where he ministered during the rest of his life. Died Aug. 8, 1796.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+If "Sardius," the splendid old choral (triple time) everywhere
+identified with the hymn, be not its original music, its age at least
+entitles it to its high partnership. _The Sacred Lyre_ (1858) ascribes
+it to Ludovic Nicholson, of Paisley, Scotland, violinist and amateur
+composer, born 1770; died 1852; but this is not beyond dispute. Of
+several names one more confidently referred to as its author is F.H.
+Barthelemon (1741-1808).
+
+
+"PEACE, TROUBLED SOUL"
+
+Is the brave faith-song of a Christian under deep but blameless
+humiliation--Sir Walter Shirley[16].
+
+[Footnote 16: See page 127]
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Apparently the favorite in several (not recent) hymnals for the subdued
+but confident spirit of this hymn of Sir Walter Shirley is Mazzinghi's
+"Palestine," appearing with various tone-signatures in different books.
+The treble and alto lead in a sweet duet with slur-flights, like an
+obligato to the bass and tenor. The melody needs rich and cultured
+voices, and is unsuited for congregational singing. So, perhaps, is the
+hymn itself.
+
+ Peace, troubled soul, whose plaintive moan
+ Hath taught these rocks the notes of woe;
+ Cease thy complaint--suppress thy groan,
+ And let thy tears forget to flow;
+ Behold the precious balm is found,
+ To lull thy pain, to heal thy wound.
+
+ Come, freely come, by sin oppressed,
+ Unburden here thy weighty load;
+ Here find thy refuge and thy rest,
+ And trust the mercy of thy God.
+ Thy God's thy Saviour--glorious word!
+ For ever love and praise the Lord.
+
+As now sung the word "scenes" is substituted for "rocks" in the second
+line, eliminating the poetry. Rocks give an _echo_; and the vivid
+thought in the author's mind is flattened to an unmeaning generality.
+
+Count Joseph Mazzinghi, son of Tommasso Mazzinghi, a Corsican musician,
+was born in London, 1765. He was a boy of precocious talent. When only
+ten years of age he was appointed organist of the Portuguese Chapel, and
+when nineteen years old was made musical director and composer at the
+King's Theatre. For many years he held the honor of Music Master to the
+Princess of Wales, afterwards Queen Caroline, and his compositions were
+almost numberless. Some of his songs and glees that caught the popular
+fancy are still remembered in England, as "The Turnpike Gate," "The
+Exile," and the rustic duet, "When a Little Farm We Keep."
+
+Of sacred music he composed only one mass and six hymn-tunes, of which
+latter "Palestine" is one. Mazzinghi died in 1844, in his eightieth
+year.
+
+
+"BEGONE UNBELIEF, MY SAVIOUR IS NEAR."
+
+The Rev. John Newton, author of this hymn, was born in London, July 24,
+1725. The son of a sea-captain, he became a sailor, and for several
+years led a reckless life. Converted, he took holy orders and was
+settled as curate of Olney, Buckinghamshire, and afterwards Rector of
+St. Mary of Woolnoth, London, where he died, Dec. 21, 1807. It was
+while living at Olney that he and Cowper wrote and published the _Olney
+Hymns_. His defiance to doubt in these lines is the blunt utterance of a
+sailor rather than the song of a poet:
+
+ Begone, unbelief, my Saviour is near,
+ And for my relief will surely appear.
+ By prayer let me wrestle and He will perform;
+ With Christ in the vessel I smile at the storm.
+
+
+_THE TUNE_
+
+Old "Hanover," by William Croft (1677-1727), carries Newton's hymn
+successfully, but Joseph Haydn's choral of "Lyons" is more familiar--and
+better music.
+
+"Hanover" often accompanies Charles Wesley's lyric,--
+
+ Ye servants of God, your Master proclaim.
+
+
+"HOW FIRM A FOUNDATION."
+
+The question of the author of this hymn is treated at length in Dr.
+Louis F. Benson's _Studies of Familiar Hymns_. The utmost that need to
+be said here is that two of the most thorough and indefatigable
+hymn-chasers, Dr. John Julian and Rev. H.L. Hastings, working
+independently of each other, found evidence fixing the authorship with
+strong probability upon Robert Keene, a precentor in Dr. John Rippon's
+church. Dr. Rippon was pastor of a Baptist Church in London from 1773
+to 1836, and in 1787 he published a song-manual called _A Selection of
+Hymns from the Best Authors_, etc., in which "How Firm a Foundation"
+appears as a new piece, with the signature "K----."
+
+The popularity of the hymn in America has been remarkable, and promises
+to continue. Indeed, there are few more reviving or more spiritually
+helpful. It is too familiar to need quotation. But one cannot suppress
+the last stanza, with its powerful and affecting emphasis on the Divine
+promise--
+
+ The soul that on Jesus has leaned for repose
+ I will not, I will not, desert to his foes;
+ That soul, though all hell should endeavor to shake,
+ I'll never, no never, no never forsake.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The grand harmony of "Portuguese Hymn" has always been identified with
+this song of trust.
+
+One opinion of the date of the music writes it "about 1780." Since the
+habit of crediting it to John Reading (1677-1764) has been discontinued,
+it has been in several hymnals ascribed to Marco Portogallo (Mark, the
+Portuguese), a musician born in Lisbon, 1763, who became a composer of
+operas in Italy, but was made Chapel-Master to the Portuguese King. In
+1807, when Napoleon invaded the Peninsula and dethroned the royal house
+of Braganza, Old King John VI. fled to Brazil and took Marco with him,
+where he lived till 1815, but returned and died in Italy, in 1830. Such
+is the story, and it is all true, only the man's name was Simao,
+instead of Marco. _Grove's Dictionary_ appends to Simao's biography the
+single sentence, "His brother wrote for the church." That the Brazilian
+episode may have been connected with this brother's history by a
+confusion of names, is imaginable, but it is not known that the
+brother's name was Marco.
+
+On the whole, this account of the authorship of the "Portuguese
+Hymn"--originally written for the old Christmas church song "Adeste
+Fideles"--is late and uncertain. Heard (perhaps for the first time) in
+the Portuguese Chapel, London, it was given the name which still clings
+to it. If proofs of its Portuguese origin exist, they may yet be found.
+
+"How Firm a Foundation" was the favorite of Deborah Jackson, President
+Andrew Jackson's beloved wife, and on his death-bed the warrior and
+statesman called for it. It was the favorite of Gen. Robert E. Lee, and
+was sung at his funeral. The American love and familiar preference for
+the remarkable hymn was never more strikingly illustrated than when on
+Christmas Eve, 1898, a whole corps of the United States army Northern
+and Southern, encamped on the Quemados hills, near Havana, took up the
+sacred tune and words--
+
+ "Fear not, I am with thee, O be not dismayed."
+
+Lieut. Col. Curtis Guild (since Governor Guild of Massachusetts) related
+the story in the Sunday School Times for Dec. 7, 1901, and Dr. Benson
+quotes it in his book.
+
+[Illustration: John Wesley]
+
+
+"WHILE THEE I SEEK, PROTECTING POWER."
+
+Miss Helen Maria Williams, who wrote this gentle hymn of confidence, in
+1786, was born in the north of England in 1762. When but a girl she won
+reputation by her brilliant literary talents and a mental grasp and
+vigor that led her, like Gail Hamilton, "to discuss public affairs,
+besides clothing bright fancies and devout thoughts in graceful verse."
+Most of her life was spent in London, and in Paris, where she died, Dec.
+14, 1827.
+
+ While Thee I seek, Protecting Power
+ Be my vain wishes stilled,
+ And may this consecrated hour
+ With better hopes be filled:
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ When gladness wings my favored hour,
+ Thy love my thoughts shall fill,
+ Resigned where storms of sorrow lower
+ My soul shall meet Thy will.
+
+ My lifted eye without a tear
+ The gathering storm shall see:
+ My steadfast heart shall know no fear:
+ My heart will rest on Thee.
+
+
+_THE TUNES._
+
+Old "Norwich," from _Day's Psalter_, and "Simpson," adapted from Louis
+Spohr, are found with the hymn in several later manuals. In the memories
+of older worshipers "Brattle-Street," with its melodious choral and duet
+arranged from Pleyel by Lowell Mason, is inseparable from Miss
+Williams' words; but modern hymnals have dropped it, probably because
+too elaborate for average congregational use.
+
+Ignaz Joseph Pleyel was born June 1, 1757, at Ruppersthal, Lower
+Austria. He was the _twenty-fourth_ child of a village schoolmaster. His
+early taste and talent for music procured him friends who paid for his
+education. Haydn became his master, and long afterwards spoke of him as
+his best and dearest pupil. Pleyel's work--entirely instrumental--was
+much admired by Mozart.
+
+During a few years spent in Italy, he composed the music of his
+best-known opera, "Iphigenia in Aulide," and, besides the thirty-four
+books of his symphonies and chamber-pieces, the results of his prolific
+genius make a list too long to enumerate. Most of his life was spent in
+Paris, where he founded the (present) house of Pleyel and Wolfe, piano
+makers and sellers. He died in that city, Nov. 14, 1831.
+
+
+"COME UNTO ME."
+
+ Come unto Me, when shadows darkly gather,
+ When the sad heart is weary and distressed,
+ Seeking for comfort from your heavenly Father,
+ Come unto Me, and I will give you rest.
+
+This sweet hymn, by Mrs. Catherine Esling, is well known to many
+thousands of mourners, as also is its equally sweet tune of "Henley," by
+Lowell Mason. Melody and words melt together like harp and flute.
+
+ Large are the mansions in thy Father's dwelling,
+ Glad are the homes that sorrows never dim,
+ Sweet are the harps in holy music swelling.
+ Soft are the tones that raise the heavenly hymn.
+
+Mrs. Catherine Harbison Waterman Esling was born in Philadelphia, Apr.
+12, 1812. A writer for many years under her maiden name, Waterman, she
+married, in 1840, Capt. George Esling, of the Merchant Marine, and lived
+in Rio Janeiro till her widowhood, in 1844.
+
+
+JOHN WESLEY'S HYMN.
+
+ How happy is the pilgrim's lot,
+ How free from every anxious thought.
+
+These are the opening lines of "John Wesley's Hymn," so called because
+his other hymns are mostly translations, and because of all his own it
+is the one commonly quoted and sung.
+
+John Wesley, the second son in the famous Epworth family of ministers,
+was a man who knew how to endure "hardness as a good soldier of Christ."
+He was born June 27, 1703, and studied at Charterhouse, London, and at
+Christ Church, Oxford, becoming a Fellow of Lincoln College. After
+taking holy orders he went as a missionary to Georgia, U.S., in 1735,
+and on his return began his remarkable work in England, preaching a more
+spiritual type of religion, and awakening the whole kingdom with his
+revival fervor and his brother's kindling songs. The following paragraph
+from his itinerant life, gathered probably from a page of his own
+journals, gives a glimpse of what the founder of the great Methodist
+denomination did and suffered while carrying his Evangelical message
+from place to place.
+
+On February 17, 1746, when days were short and weather far from
+favorable, he set out on horseback from Bristol to Newcastle, a distance
+between three and four hundred miles. The journey occupied ten days.
+Brooks were swollen, and in some places the roads were impassable,
+obliging the itinerant to go round through the fields. At Aldrige Heath,
+in Staffordshire, the rain turned to snow, which the northerly wind
+drove against him, and by which he was soon crusted over from head to
+foot. At Leeds the mob followed him, and pelted him with whatever came
+to hand. He arrived at Newcastle, February 26, "free from every anxious
+thought," and "every worldly fear."
+
+How lightly he regarded hardship and molestation appears from his
+verses--
+
+ Whatever molests or troubles life,
+ When past, as nothing we esteem,
+ And pain, like pleasure, is a dream.
+
+And that he actually enjoys the heroic freedom of a rough-rider
+missionary life is hinted in his hymn--
+
+ Confined to neither court nor cell,
+ His soul disdains on earth to dwell,
+ He only sojourns here.
+
+God evidently built John Wesley fire-proof and water-proof with a view
+to precisely what he was to undertake and accomplish. His frame was
+vigorous, and his spirit unconquerable. Besides all this he had the
+divine gift of a religious faith that could move mountains and a
+confidence in his mission that became a second nature. No wonder he
+could suffer, and _last_. The brave young man at thirty was the brave
+old man at nearly ninety. He died in London, March 2, 1791.
+
+ Blest with the scorn of finite good,
+ My soul is lightened of its load
+ And seeks the things above.
+
+ There is my house and portion fair;
+ My treasure and my heart are there,
+ And my abiding home.
+
+ For me my elder brethren stay,
+ And angels beckon me away.
+ And Jesus bids me come.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+An air found in the _Revivalist_ (1869), in sextuple time, that has the
+real camp-meeting swing, preserves the style of music in which the hymn
+was sung by the circuit-preachers and their congregations--ringing out
+the autobiographical verses with special unction. The favorite was--
+
+ No foot of land do I possess,
+ No cottage in this wilderness;
+ A poor wayfaring man,
+ I lodge awhile in tents below,
+ Or gladly wander to and fro
+ Till I my Canaan gain.
+
+More modern voices sing the John Wesley hymn to the tune "Habakkuk," by
+Edward Hodges. It has a lively three-four step, and finer melody than
+the old.
+
+Edward Hodges was born in Bristol, Eng., July 20, 1796, and died there
+Sept. 1876. Organist at Bristol in his youth, he was graduated at
+Cambridge and in 1825 received the doctorate of music from that
+University. In 1835 he went to Toronto, Canada, and two years later to
+New York city, where he was many years Director of Music at Trinity
+Church. Returned to Bristol in 1863.
+
+
+"WHEN GATHERING CLOUDS AROUND I VIEW."
+
+One of the restful strains breathed out of illness and affliction to
+relieve one soul and bless millions. It was written by Sir Robert Grant
+(1785-1838).
+
+ When gathering clouds around I view,
+ And days are dark, and friends are few,
+ On Him I lean who not in vain
+ Experienced every human pain.
+
+The lines are no less admirable for their literary beauty than for their
+feeling and their faith. Unconsciously, it may be, to the writer, in
+this and the following stanza are woven an epitome of the Saviour's
+history. He--
+
+ Experienced every human pain,
+ --felt temptation's power,
+ --wept o'er Lazarus dead,
+
+--and the crowning assurance of Jesus' human sympathy is expressed in
+the closing prayer,--
+
+ --when I have safely passed
+ Thro' every conflict but the last,
+ Still, still unchanging watch beside
+ My painful bed--for _Thou hast died_.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Of the few suitable six-line long metre part songs, the charming Russian
+tone-poem of "St. Petersburg" by Dimitri Bortniansky is borrowed for the
+hymn in some collections, and with excellent effect. It accords well
+with the mood and tenor of the words, and deserves to stay with it as
+long as the hymn holds its place.
+
+Dimitri Bortniansky, called "The Russian Palestrina," was born in 1752
+at Gloukoff, a village of the Ukraine. He studied music in Moscow, St.
+Petersburg, Vienna, Rome and Naples. Returning to his native land, he
+was made Director of Empress Catharine's church choir. He reformed and
+systematized Russian church music, and wrote original scores in the
+intervals of his teaching labors. His works are chiefly motets and
+concertos, which show his genius for rich harmony. Died 1825.
+
+
+"JUST AS I AM, WITHOUT ONE PLEA."
+
+Charlotte Elliott, of Brighton, Eng., would have been well-known through
+her admired and useful hymns,--
+
+ My God, my Father, while I stray,
+
+ My God, is any hour so sweet,
+
+ With tearful eyes I look around,
+
+--and many others. But in "Just as I am" she made herself a voice in the
+soul of every hesitating penitent. The currency of the hymn has been too
+swift for its authorship and history to keep up with, but it is a
+blessed law of influence that good works out-run biographies. This
+master-piece of metrical gospel might be called Miss Elliott's
+spiritual-birth hymn, for a reply of Dr. Cćsar Malan of Geneva was its
+prompting cause. The young lady was a stranger to personal religion
+when, one day, the good man, while staying at her father's house, in his
+gentle way introduced the subject. She resented it, but afterwards,
+stricken in spirit by his words, came to him with apologies and an
+inquiry that confessed a new concern of mind. "You speak of coming to
+Jesus, but how? I'm not fit to come."
+
+"Come just as you are," said Dr. Malan.
+
+The hymn tells the result.
+
+Like all the other hymns bound up in her _Invalid's Hymn-book_, it was
+poured from out the heart of one who, as the phrase is, "never knew a
+well day"--though she lived to see her eighty-second year.
+
+Illustrative of the way it appeals to the afflicted, a little anecdote
+was told by the eloquent John B. Gough of his accidental seat-mate in a
+city church service. A man of strange appearance was led by the kind
+usher or sexton to the pew he occupied. Mr. Gough eyed him with strong
+aversion. The man's face was mottled, his limbs and mouth twitched, and
+he mumbled singular sounds. When the congregation sang he attempted to
+sing, but made fearful work of it. During the organ interlude he leaned
+toward Mr. Gough and asked how the next verse began. It was--
+
+ Just as I am, poor, wretched, blind.
+
+"That's it," sobbed the strange man, "I'm blind--God help me!"--and the
+tears ran down his face--"and I'm wretched--and paralytic," and then he
+tried hard to sing the line with the rest.
+
+"After that," said Mr. Gough, "the poor paralytic's singing was as
+sweet to me as a Beethoven symphony."
+
+Charlotte Elliott was born March 18, 1789, and died in Brighton, Sept.
+22, 1871. She stands in the front rank of female hymn-writers.
+
+The tune of "Woodworth," by William B. Bradbury, has mostly superseded
+Mason's "Elliott," and is now the accepted music of this lyric of
+perfect faith and pious surrender.
+
+ Just as I am,--Thy love unknown
+ Hath broken every barrier down,
+ Now to be Thine, yea, Thine alone,
+ O Lamb of God, I come, I come.
+
+
+"MY HOPE IS BUILT ON NOTHING LESS."
+
+The Rev. Edward Mote was born in London, 1797. According to his own
+testimony his parents were not God-fearing people, and he "went to a
+school where no Bible was allowed;" but at the age of sixteen he
+received religious impressions from a sermon of John Hyatt in Tottenham
+Court Chapel, was converted two years later, studied for the ministry,
+and ultimately became a faithful preacher of the gospel. Settled as
+pastor of the Baptist Church in Horsham, Sussex, he remained there
+twenty-six years--until his death, Nov. 13, 1874. The refrain of his
+hymn came to him one Sabbath when on his way to Holborn to exchange
+pulpits:
+
+ On Christ the solid rock I stand,
+ All other ground is sinking sand.
+
+There were originally six stanzas, the first beginning:
+
+ Nor earth, nor hell, my soul can move,
+ I rest upon unchanging love.
+
+The refrain is a fine one, and really sums up the whole hymn, keeping
+constantly at the front the corner-stone of the poet's trust.
+
+ My hope is built on nothing less
+ Than Jesus' blood and righteousness.
+ I dare not trust the sweetest frame,
+ But only lean on Jesus' name.
+ On Christ the solid Rock I stand
+ All other ground is sinking sand.
+
+ When darkness veils His lovely face
+ I trust in His unchanging grace,
+ In every high and stormy gale
+ My anchor holds within the veil.
+ On Christ the solid Rock, etc.
+
+Wm. B. Bradbury composed the tune (1863). It is usually named "The Solid
+Rock."
+
+
+"ABIDE WITH ME! FAST FALLS THE EVENTIDE."
+
+The Rev. Henry Francis Lyte, author of this melodious hymn-prayer, was
+born at Ednam, near Kelso, Scotland, June first, 1793. A scholar,
+graduated at Trinity College, Dublin; a poet and a musician, the
+hard-working curate was a man of frail physique, with a face of almost
+feminine beauty, and a spirit as pure and gentle as a little child's.
+The shadow of consumption was over him all his life. His memory is
+chiefly associated with the district church at Lower Brixham,
+Devonshire, where he became "perpetual curate" in 1823. He died at Nice,
+France, Nov. 20, 1847.
+
+On the evening of his last Sunday preaching and communion service he
+handed to one of his family the manuscript of his hymn, "Abide with me,"
+and the music he had composed for it. It was not till eight years later
+that Henry Ward Beecher introduced it, or a part of it, to American
+Congregationalists, and fourteen years after the author's death it began
+to be sung as we now have it, in this country and England.
+
+ Abide with me! Fast falls the eventide,
+ The darkness deepens,--Lord with me abide!
+ When other helpers fail, and comforts flee,
+ Help of the helpless, O abide with me!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Hold Thou Thy cross before my closing eyes;
+ Shine through the gloom, and point me to the skies;
+ Heaven's morning breaks, and earth's vain shadows flee;
+ In life, in death, O Lord, abide with me!
+
+
+_THE TUNE_
+
+There is a pathos in the neglect and oblivion of Lyte's own tune set by
+himself to his words, especially as it was in a sense the work of a
+dying man who had hoped that he might not be "wholly mute and useless"
+while lying in his grave, and who had prayed--
+
+ O Thou whose touch can lend
+ Life to the dead. Thy quickening grace supply,
+ And grant me swan-like my last breath to spend
+ In song that may not die!
+
+His prayer was answered in God's own way. Another's melody hastened his
+hymn on its useful career, and revealed to the world its immortal
+value.
+
+By the time it had won its slow recognition in England, it was probably
+tuneless, and the compilers of _Hymns Ancient and Modern_ (1861)
+discovering the fact just as they were finishing their work, asked Dr.
+William Henry Monk, their music editor, to supply the want. "In ten
+minutes," it is said, "Dr. Monk composed the sweet, pleading chant that
+is wedded permanently to Lyte's swan song."
+
+William Henry Monk, Doctor of Music, was born in London, 1823. His
+musical education was early and thorough, and at the age of twenty-six
+he was organist and choir director in King's College, London. Elected
+(1876) professor of the National Training School, he interested himself
+actively in popular musical education, delivering lectures at various
+institutions, and establishing choral services.
+
+His hymn-tunes are found in many song-manuals of the English Church and
+in Scotland, and several have come to America.
+
+Dr. Monk died in 1889.
+
+
+"COME, YE DISCONSOLATE."
+
+By Thomas Moore--about 1814. The poem in its original form differed
+somewhat from the hymn we sing. Thomas Hastings--whose religious
+experience, perhaps, made him better qualified than Thomas Moore for
+spiritual expression--changed the second line,--
+
+ Come, at God's altar fervently kneel,
+
+--to--
+
+ Come to the mercy seat,
+
+--and in the second stanza replaced--
+
+ Hope when all others die,
+
+--with--
+
+ Hope of the penitent;
+
+--and for practically the whole of the last stanza--
+
+ Go ask the infidel what boon he brings us,
+ What charm for aching hearts he can reveal.
+ Sweet as that heavenly promise hope sings us,
+ "Earth has no sorrow that heaven cannot heal,"
+
+--Hastings substituted--
+
+ Here see the Bread of life, see waters flowing
+ Forth from the throne of God, pure from above!
+ Come to the feast Love, come ever knowing
+ Earth has no sorrow but heaven can remove.
+
+Dr. Hastings was not much of a poet, but he could make a _singable_
+hymn, and he knew the rhythm and accent needed in a hymn-tune. The
+determination was to make an evangelical hymn of a poem "too good to
+lose," and in that view perhaps the editorial liberties taken with it
+were excusable. It was to Moore, however, that the real hymn-thought and
+key-note first came, and the title-line and the sweet refrain are his
+own--for which the Christian world has thanked him, lo these many
+years.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Those who question why Dr. Hastings' interest in Moore's poem did not
+cause him to make a tune for it, must conclude that it came to him with
+its permanent melody ready made, and that the tune satisfied him.
+
+The "German Air" to which Moore tells us he wrote the words, probably
+took his fancy, if it did not induce his mood. Whether Samuel Webbe's
+tune now wedded to the hymn is an arrangement of the old air or wholly
+his own is immaterial. One can scarcely conceive a happier yoking of
+counterparts. Try singing "Come ye Disconsolate" to "Rescue the
+Perishing," for example, and we shall feel the impertinence of divorcing
+a hymn that has found its musical affinity.
+
+
+"JESUS, I MY CROSS HAVE TAKEN."
+
+This is another well-known and characteristic hymn of Henry Francis
+Lyte--originally six stanzas. We have been told that, besides his bodily
+affliction, the grief of an unhappy division or difference in his church
+weighed upon his spirit, and that it is alluded to in these lines--
+
+ Man may trouble and distress me,
+ 'Twill but drive me to Thy breast,
+ Life with trials hard may press me,
+ Heaven will bring me sweeter rest.
+
+ O, 'tis not in grief to harm me
+ While Thy love is left to me,
+ O, 'tis not in joy to charm me
+ Were that joy unmixed with Thee.
+
+Tunes, "Autumn," by F.H. Barthelemon, or "Ellesdie," (formerly called
+"Disciple") from Mozart--familiar in either.
+
+
+"FROM EVERY STORMY WIND THAT BLOWS."
+
+This is the much-sung and deeply-cherished hymn of Christian peace that
+a pious Manxman, Hugh Stowell, was inspired to write nearly a hundred
+years ago. Ever since it has carried consolation to souls in both
+ordinary and extraordinary trials.
+
+It was sung by the eight American martyrs, Revs. Albert Johnson, John E.
+Freeman, David E. Campbell and their wives, and Mr. and Mrs. McMullen,
+when by order of the bloody Nana Sahib the captive missionaries were
+taken prisoners and put to death at Cawnpore in 1857. Two little
+children, Fannie and Willie Campbell, suffered with their parents.
+
+ From every stormy wind that blows,
+ From every swelling tide of woes
+ There is a calm, a sure retreat;
+ 'Tis found beneath the Mercy Seat.
+
+ Ah, whither could we flee for aid
+ When tempted, desolate, dismayed,
+ Or how the hosts of hell defeat
+ Had suffering saints no Mercy Seat?
+
+ There, there on eagle wings we soar,
+ And sin and sense molest no more,
+ And heaven comes down our souls to greet
+ While glory crowns the Mercy Seat.
+
+[Illustration: John B. Dykes]
+
+Rev. Hugh Stowell was born at Douglas on the Isle of Man, Dec. 3, 1799.
+He was educated at Oxford and ordained to the ministry 1823, receiving
+twelve years later the appointment of Canon to Chester Cathedral.
+
+He was a popular and effective preacher and a graceful writer.
+Forty-seven hymns are credited to him, the above being the best known.
+To presume it is "his best," leaves a good margin of merit for the
+remainder.
+
+"From every stormy wind that blows" has practically but one tune. It has
+been sung to Hastings "Retreat" ever since the music was made.
+
+
+"CHILD OF SIN AND SORROW."
+
+ Child of sin and sorrow, filled with dismay,
+ Wait not for tomorrow, yield thee today.
+ Heaven bids thee come, while yet there's room,
+ Child of sin and sorrow, hear and obey.
+
+Words and music by Thomas Hastings.
+
+
+"LEAD, KINDLY LIGHT."
+
+John Henry Newman, born in London, Feb. 21, 1801--known in religious
+history as Cardinal Newman--wrote this hymn when he was a young
+clergyman of the Church of England. "Born within the sound of Bow
+bells," says Dr. Benson, "he was an imaginative boy, and so
+superstitious, that he used constantly to cross himself when going into
+the dark." Intelligent students of the fine hymn will note this habit of
+its author's mind--and surmise its influence on his religious musings.
+
+The agitations during the High Church movement, and the persuasions of
+Hurrell Froude, a Romanist friend, while he was a tutor at Oxford,
+gradually weakened his Protestant faith, and in his unrest he travelled
+to the Mediterranean coast, crossed to Sicily, where he fell violently
+ill, and after his recovery waited three weeks in Palermo for a return
+boat. On his trip to Marseilles he wrote the hymn--with no thought that
+it would ever be called a hymn.
+
+When complimented on the beautiful production after it became famous he
+modestly said, "It was not the hymn but the _tune_ that has gained the
+popularity. The tune is Dykes' and Dr. Dykes is a great master."
+
+Dr. Newman was created a Cardinal of the Church of Rome in the Catholic
+Cathedral of London, 1879. Died Aug. 11, 1890.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Lux Benigna," by Dr. Dykes, was composed in Aug. 1865, and was the tune
+chosen for this hymn by a committee preparing the Appendix to _Hymns
+Ancient and Modern_. Dr. Dykes' statement that the tune came into his
+head while walking through the Strand in London "presents a striking
+contrast with the solitary origin of the hymn itself" (Benson).
+
+ Lead, kindly Light, amid th' encircling gloom,
+ Lead Thou me on.
+ The night is dark and I am far from home;
+ Lead Thou me on.
+ Keep Thou my feet; I do not ask to see
+ The distant scene,--one step enough for me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ So long Thy power hath bless'd me, sure it still
+ Will lead me on,
+ O'er moor and fen, o'er crag and torrent, till
+ The night is gone,
+ And with the morn those angel faces smile
+ Which I have loved long since, and lost awhile.
+
+
+"I HEARD THE VOICE OF JESUS SAY."
+
+Few if any Christian writers of his generation have possessed tuneful
+gifts in greater opulence or produced more vital and lasting treasures
+of spiritual verse than Horatius Bonar of Scotland. He inherited some of
+his poetic faculty from his grandfather, a clergyman who wrote several
+hymns, and it is told of Horatius that hymns used to "come to" him while
+riding on railroad trains. He was educated in the Edinburgh University
+and studied theology with Dr. Chalmers, and his life was greatly
+influenced by Dr. Guthrie, whom he followed in the establishment of the
+Free Church of Scotland.
+
+Born in 1808 in Edinburgh, he was about forty years old when he came
+back from a successful pastorate at Kelso to the city of his home and
+Alma Mater, and became virtually Chalmers' successor as minister of the
+Chalmers Memorial Church.
+
+The peculiar richness of Bonar's sacred songs very early created for
+them a warm welcome in the religious world, and any devout lyric or poem
+with his name attached to it is sure to be read.
+
+Dr. Bonar died in Edinburgh, July 31, 1889. Writing of the hymn, "I
+heard the voice," etc., Dr. David Breed calls it "one of the most
+ingenious hymns in the language," referring to the fact that the
+invitation and response exactly halve each stanza between them--song
+followed by countersong. "Ingenious" seems hardly the right word for a
+division so obviously natural and almost automatic. It is a simple art
+beauty that a poet of culture makes by instinct. Bowring's "Watchman,
+tell us of the night," is not the only other instance of similar
+countersong structure, and the regularity in Thomas Scott's little hymn,
+"Hasten, sinner, to be wise," is only a simpler case of the way a poem
+plans itself by the compulsion of its subject.
+
+ I heard the voice of Jesus say,
+ Come unto me and rest,
+ Lay down, thou weary one, lay down
+ Thy head upon My breast:
+
+ I came to Jesus as I was,
+ Weary and worn and sad,
+ I found in Him a resting-place,
+ And He has made me glad.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The old melody of "Evan," long a favorite; and since known everywhere
+through the currency given to it in the _Gospel Hymns_, has been in many
+collections connected with the words. It is good congregational
+psalmody, and not unsuited to the sentiment, taken line by line, but it
+divides the stanzas into quatrains, which breaks the happy continuity.
+"Evan" was made by Dr. Mason in 1850 from a song written four years
+earlier by Rev. William Henry Havergal, Canon of Worcester Cathedral,
+Eng. He was the father of Frances Ridley Havergal.
+
+The more ancient "Athens," by Felice Giardini (1716-1796), author of the
+"Italian Hymn," has clung, and still clings lovingly to Bonar's hymn in
+many communities. Its simplicity, and the involuntary accent of its
+sextuple time, exactly reproducing the easy iambic of the verses,
+inevitably made it popular, and thousands of older singers today will
+have no other music with "I heard the voice of Jesus say."
+
+"Vox Jesu," from the andante in one of the quartets of Louis Spohr
+(1784-1859), is a psalm-tune of good harmony, but too little feeling.
+
+An excellent tune for all the shades of expression in the hymn, is the
+arrangement by Hubert P. Main from Franz Abt--in A flat, triple time.
+Gentle music through the first fifteen bars, in alternate duet and
+quartet, utters the Divine Voice with the true accent of the lines, and
+the second portion completes the harmony in glad, full chorus--the
+answer of the human heart.
+
+"Vox Dilecti," by Dr. Dykes, goes farther and writes the Voice in B flat
+_minor_--which seems a needless substitution of divine sadness for
+divine sweetness. It is a tune of striking chords, but its shift of key
+to G natural (major) after the first four lines marks it rather for
+trained choir performance than for assembly song.
+
+It is possible to make too much of a dramatic perfection or a supposed
+indication of structural design in a hymn. Textual equations, such as
+distinguish Dr. Bonar's beautiful stanzas, are not necessarily
+technical. To emphasize them as ingenious by an ingenious tune seems,
+somehow, a reflection on the spontaneity of the hymn.
+
+Louis Spohr was Director of the Court Theatre Orchestra in Cassel,
+Prussia, in the first half of the last century. He was an eminent
+composer of both vocal and instrumental music, and one of the greatest
+violinists of Europe.
+
+Hubert Platt Main was born in Ridgefield, Ct., Aug. 17, 1839. He read
+music at sight when only ten years old, and at sixteen commenced writing
+hymn-tunes. Was assistant compiler with both Bradbury and Woodbury in
+their various publications, and in 1868 became connected with the firm
+of Biglow and Main, and has been their book-maker until the present
+time. As music editor in the partnership he has superintended the
+publication of more than five hundred music-books, services, etc.
+
+
+"I LOVE TO STEAL AWHILE AWAY."
+
+The burdened wife and mother who wrote this hymn would, at the time,
+have rated her history with "the short and simple annals of the poor."
+But the poor who are "remembered for what they have done," may have a
+larger place in history than many rich who did nothing.
+
+Phebe Hinsdale Brown, was born in Canaan, N.Y., in 1783. Her father,
+George Hinsdale, who died in her early childhood, must have been a man
+of good abilities and religious feeling, being the reputed composer of
+the psalm-tune, "Hinsdale," found in some long-ago collections.
+
+Left an orphan at two years of age, Phebe "fell into the hands of a
+relative who kept the county jail," and her childhood knew little but
+the bitter fare and ceaseless drudgery of domestic slavery. She grew up
+with a crushed spirit, and was a timid, shrinking woman as long as she
+lived. She married Timothy H. Brown, a house-painter of Ellington, Ct.,
+and passed her days there and in Monson, Mass., where she lived some
+twenty-five years.
+
+In her humble home in the former town her children were born, and it was
+while caring for her own little family of four, and a sick sister, that
+the incident occurred (August 1818), which called forth her tender hymn.
+She was a devout Christian, and in pleasant weather, whenever she could
+find the leisure, she would "steal away" at sunset from her burdens a
+little while, to rest and commune with God. Her favorite place was a
+wealthy neighbor's large and beautiful flower garden. A servant reported
+her visits there to the mistress of the house, who called the "intruder"
+to account.
+
+"If you want anything, why don't you come in?" was the rude question,
+followed by a plain hint that no stealthy person was welcome.
+
+Wounded by the ill-natured rebuff, the sensitive woman sat down the next
+evening with her baby in her lap, and half-blinded by her tears, wrote
+"An Apology for my Twilight Rambles," in the verses that have made her
+celebrated.
+
+She sent the manuscript (nine stanzas) to her captious neighbor--with
+what result has never been told.
+
+Crude and simple as the little rhyme was, it contained a germ of lyric
+beauty and life. The Rev. Dr. Charles Hyde of Ellington, who was a
+neighbor of Mrs. Brown, procured a copy. He was assisting Dr. Nettleton
+to compile the _Village Hymns_, and the humble bit of devotional verse
+was at once judged worthy of a place in the new book. Dr. Hyde and his
+daughter Emeline giving it some kind touches of rhythmic amendment,
+
+ I love to steal awhile away
+ From little ones and care,
+
+--became,--
+
+ I love to steal awhile away
+ From _every cumb'ring_ care.
+
+In the last line of this stanza--
+
+ In gratitude and prayer
+
+--was changed to--
+
+ In humble, grateful prayer,
+
+--and the few other defects in syllabic smoothness or literary grace
+were affectionately repaired, but the slight furbishing it received did
+not alter the individuality of Mrs. Brown's work. It remained
+_hers_--and took its place among the immortals of its kind, another
+illustration of how little poetry it takes to make a good hymn. Only
+five stanzas were printed, the others being voted redundant by both
+author and editor. The second and third, as now sung, are--
+
+ I love in solitude to shed
+ The penitential tear,
+ And all His promises to plead
+ Where none but God can hear.
+
+ I love to think on mercies past
+ And future good implore,
+ And all my cares and sorrows cast
+ On Him whom I adore.
+
+Phebe Brown died at Henry, Ill., in 1861; but she had made the church
+and the world her debtor not only for her little lyric of pious trust,
+but by rearing a son, the Rev. Samuel Brown, D.D., who became the
+pioneer American missionary to Japan--to which Christian calling two of
+her grandchildren also consecrated themselves.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Mrs. Brown's son Samuel, who, besides being a good minister, inherited
+his grandfather's musical gift, composed the tune of "Monson," (named in
+his mother's honor, after her late home), and it may have been the first
+music set to her hymn. It was the fate of his offering, however, to lose
+its filial place, and be succeeded by different melodies, though his own
+still survives in a few collections, sometimes with Collyer's "O Jesus
+in this solemn hour." It is good music for a hymn of _praise_ rather
+than for meditative verse. Many years the hymn has been sung to
+"Woodstock," an appropriate and still familiar tune by Deodatus Dutton.
+
+Dutton's "Woodstock" and Bradbury's "Brown," which often replaces it,
+are worthy rivals of each other, and both continue in favor as fit
+choral interpretations of the much-loved hymn.
+
+Deodatus Dutton was born Dec. 22, 1808, and educated at Brown University
+and Washington College (now Trinity) Hartford Ct. While there he was a
+student of music and played the organ at Dr. Matthews' church. He
+studied theology in New York city, and had recently entered the ministry
+when he suddenly died, Dec. 16, 1832, a moment before rising to preach a
+sermon. During his brief life he had written several hymn-tunes, and
+published a book of psalmody. Mrs. Sigourney wrote a poem on his death.
+
+
+"THERE'S A WIDENESS IN GOD'S MERCY."
+
+Frederick William Faber, author of this favorite hymn-poem, had a
+peculiar genius for putting golden thoughts into common words, and
+making them sing. Probably no other sample of his work shows better than
+this his art of combining literary cleverness with the most reverent
+piety. Cant was a quality Faber never could put into his religious
+verse.
+
+He was born in Yorkshire, Eng., June 28, 1814, and received his
+education at Oxford. Settled as Rector of Elton, in Huntingdonshire, in
+1843, he came into sympathy with the "Oxford Movement," and followed
+Newman into the Romish Church. He continued his ministry as founder and
+priest for the London branch of the Catholic congregation of St. Philip
+Neri for fourteen years, dying Sept. 26, 1863, at the age of forty-nine.
+
+His godly hymns betray no credal shibboleth or doctrinal bias, but are
+songs for the whole earthly church of God.
+
+ There's a wideness in God's mercy
+ Like the wideness of the sea;
+ There's a kindness in His justice
+ Which is more than liberty.
+ There is welcome for the sinner
+ And more graces for the good;
+ There is mercy with the Saviour,
+ There is healing in His blood.
+
+ There's no place where earthly sorrows
+ Are more felt than up in heaven;
+ There's no place where earthly failings
+ Have such kindly judgment given.
+ There is plentiful redemption
+ In the blood that has been shed,
+ There is joy for all the members
+ In the sorrows of the Head.
+
+ For the love of God is broader
+ Than the measure of man's mind,
+ And the heart of the Eternal
+ Is most wonderfully kind.
+ If our love were but more simple
+ We should take Him at His word,
+ And our lives would be all sunshine
+ In the sweetness of the Lord.
+
+No tone of comfort has breathed itself more surely and tenderly into
+grieved hearts than these tuneful and singularly expressive sentences of
+Frederick Faber.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The music of S.J. Vail sung to Faber's hymn is one of that composer's
+best hymn-tunes, and its melody and natural movement impress the
+meaning as well as the simple beauty of the words.
+
+Silas Jones Vail, an American music-writer, was born Oct., 1818, and
+died May 20, 1883. Another charming tune is "Wellesley," by Lizzie S.
+Tourjee, daughter of the late Dr. Eben Tourjee.
+
+
+"HE LEADETH ME! OH, BLESSED THOUGHT."
+
+Professor Gilmore, of Rochester University, N.Y., when a young Baptist
+minister (1861) supplying a pulpit in Philadelphia "jotted down this
+hymn in Deacon Watson's parlor" (as he says) and passed it to his wife,
+one evening after he had made "a conference-room talk" on the 23d Psalm.
+
+Mrs. Gilmore, without his knowledge, sent it to the _Watchman and
+Reflector_ (now the _Watchman_).
+
+Years after its publication in that paper, when a candidate for the
+pastorate of the Second Baptist Church in Rochester, he was turning the
+leaves of the vestry hymnal in use there, and saw his hymn in it. Since
+that first publication in the _Devotional Hymn and Tune Book_ (1865) it
+has been copied in the hymnals of various denominations, and steadily
+holds its place in public favor. The refrain added by the tunemaker
+emphasizes the sentiment of the lines, and undoubtedly enhances the
+effect of the hymn.
+
+"He leadeth me" has the true hymn quality, combining all the simplicity
+of spontaneous thought and feeling with perfect accent and liquid
+rhythm.
+
+ He leadeth me! Oh, blessed thought,
+ Oh, words with heavenly comfort fraught;
+ Whate'er I do, where'er I be,
+ Still 'tis God's hand that leadeth me!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Lord, I would clasp Thy hand in mine,
+ Nor ever murmur nor repine--
+ Content, whatever lot I see,
+ Since 'tis my God that leadeth me.
+
+Professor Joseph Henry Gilmore was born in Boston, April 29, 1834. He
+was graduated at Phillips Academy, Andover, at Brown University, and at
+the Newton Theological Institution, where he was afterwards Hebrew
+instructor.
+
+After four years of pastoral service he was elected (1867) professor of
+the English Language and Literature in Rochester University. He has
+published _Familiar Chats on Books and Reading_, also several college
+text-books on rhetoric, logic and oratory.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The little hymn of four stanzas was peculiarly fortunate in meeting the
+eye of Mr. William B. Bradbury, (1863) and winning his musical sympathy
+and alliance. Few composers have so exactly caught the tone and spirit
+of their text as Bradbury did when he vocalized the gliding measures of
+"He leadeth me."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+CHRISTIAN BALLADS.
+
+
+Echoes of Hebrew thought, if not Hebrew psalmody, may have made their
+way into the more serious pagan literature. At least in the more
+enlightened pagans there has ever revealed itself more or less the
+instinct of the human soul that "feels after" God. St. Paul in his
+address to the Athenians made a tactful as well as scholarly point to
+preface a missionary sermon when he cited a line from a poem of Aratus
+(B.C. 272) familiar, doubtless, to the majority of his hearers.
+
+Dr. Lyman Abbot has thus translated the passage in which the line
+occurs:
+
+ Let us begin from God. Let every mortal raise
+ The grateful voice to tune God's endless praise,
+ God fills the heaven, the earth, the sea, the air;
+ We feel His spirit moving everywhere,
+ And we His offspring are.[17] He, ever good,
+ Daily provides for man his daily food.
+ To Him, the First, the Last, all homage yield,--
+ Our Father wonderful, our help, our shield.
+
+[Footnote 17: [Greek: Tou gar kai genos esmen.]]
+
+
+"RISE, CROWNED WITH LIGHT."
+
+Alexander Pope, a Roman Catholic poet, born in London 1688, died at
+Twickenham 1744, was not a hymnist, but passages in his most serious and
+exalted flights deserve a tuneful accompaniment. His translations of
+Homer made him famous, but his ethical poems, especially his "Essay on
+Man," are inexhaustible mines of quotation, many of the lines and
+couplets being common as proverbs. His "Messiah," written about 1711, is
+a religious anthem in which the prophecies of Holy Writ kindle all the
+splendor of his verse.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The closing strain, indicated by the above line, has been divided into
+stanzas of four lines suitable to a church hymn-tune. The melody
+selected by the compilers of the _Plymouth Hymnal_, and of the
+_Unitarian Hymn and Tune Book_ is "Savannah," an American sounding name
+for what is really one of Pleyel's chorals. The music is worthy of
+Pope's triumphal song.
+
+ The seas shall waste, the skies to smoke decay,
+ Rocks fall to dust, and mountains melt away,
+ But fixed His Word; His saving power remains:
+ Thy realm shall last; thy own Messiah reigns.
+
+
+"OH, WHY SHOULD THE SPIRIT?"
+
+This is a sombre poem, but its virile strength and its literary merit
+have given it currency, and commended it to the taste of many people,
+both weak and strong, who have the pensive temperament. Abraham Lincoln
+loved it and committed it to memory in his boyhood. Philip Phillips set
+it to music, and sang it--or a part of it--one day during the Civil war
+at the anniversary of the Christian Sanitary Commission, when President
+Lincoln, who was present, called for its repetition.[18] It was written
+by William Knox, born 1789, son of a Scottish farmer.
+
+[Footnote 18: This account so nearly resembles the story of Mrs. Gates'
+"Your Mission," sung to a similar audience, on a similar occasion, by
+the same man, that a possible confusion by the narrators of the incident
+has been suggested. But that Mr. Phillips sang twice before the
+President during the war does not appear to be contradicted. To what air
+he sang the above verses is uncertain.]
+
+The poem has fourteen stanzas, the following being the first and two
+last--
+
+ Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud?
+ Like a swift-fleeting meteor, a fast-flying cloud
+ A flash of the lightning, a break of the wave,
+ He passeth from life to rest in the grave.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Yea, hope and despondency, pleasure and pain,
+ Are mingled together like sunshine and rain;
+ And the smile and the tear, the song and the dirge,
+ Still follow each other like surge upon surge.
+
+ 'Tis the wink of an eye; 'tis the draft of a breath
+ From the blossom of health to the paleness of death,
+ From the gilded saloon to the bier and the shroud,
+ Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud?
+
+Philip Phillips was born in Jamestown, Chautauqua Co., N.Y., Aug. 11,
+1834, and died in Delaware, O., June 25, 1895. He wrote no hymns and was
+not an educated musician, but the airs of popular hymn-music came to him
+and were harmonized for him by others, most frequently by his friends,
+S.J. Vail and Hubert P. Main. He compiled and published thirty-one
+collections for Sunday-schools and gospel meetings, besides the
+_Methodist Hymn and Tune Book_, issued in 1866.
+
+He was a pioneer gospel singer, and his tuneful journeys through
+America, England and Australia gave him the name of the "Singing
+Pilgrim," the title of his song collection (1867).
+
+
+"WHEN ISRAEL OF THE LORD BELOVED."
+
+The "Song of Rebecca the Jewess," in "Ivanhoe," was written by Sir
+Walter Scott, author of the Waverly Novels, "Marmion," etc., born in
+Edinburgh, 1771, and died at Abbotsford, 1832. The lines purport to be
+the Hebrew hymn with which Rebecca closed her daily devotions while in
+prison under sentence of death.
+
+ When Israel of the Lord beloved
+ Out of the land of bondage came
+ Her fathers' God before her moved,
+ An awful Guide in smoke and flame.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Then rose the choral hymn of praise,
+ And trump and timbrel answered keen,
+ And Zion's daughters poured their lays.
+ With priest's and warrior's voice between.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ By day along th' astonished lands
+ The cloudy Pillar glided slow,
+ By night Arabia's crimson'd sands
+ Returned the fiery Column's glow.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ And O, when gathers o'er our path
+ In shade and storm the frequent night
+ Be Thou, long suffering, slow to wrath,
+ A burning and a shining Light!
+
+The "Hymn of Rebecca" has been set to music though never in common use
+as a hymn. Old "Truro", by Dr. Charles Burney (1726-1814) is a grand
+Scotch psalm harmony for the words, though one of the Unitarian hymnals
+borrows Zeuner's sonorous choral, the "Missionary Chant." Both sound the
+lyric of the Jewess in good Christian music.
+
+
+"WE SAT DOWN AND WEPT BY THE WATERS."
+
+The 137th Psalm has been for centuries a favorite with poets and
+poetical translators, and its pathos appealed to Lord Byron when engaged
+in writing his _Hebrew Melodies_.
+
+Byron was born in London, 1788, and died at Missolonghi, Western Greece,
+1824.
+
+ We sat down and wept by the waters
+ Of Babel, and thought of the day
+ When the foe, in the hue of his slaughters,
+ Made Salem's high places his prey,
+ And ye, Oh her desolate daughters,
+ Were scattered all weeping away.
+
+--Written April, 1814. It was the fashion then for musical societies to
+call on the popular poets for contributions, and tunes were composed for
+them, though these have practically passed into oblivion.
+
+Byron's ringing ballad (from II Kings 19:35)--
+
+ Th' Assyrian came down like a wolf on the fold
+ And his cohorts were gleaming in purple and gold,
+
+--has been so much a favorite for recitation and declamation that the
+loss of its tune is never thought of.
+
+Another poetic rendering of the "Captivity Psalm" is worthy of notice
+among the lay hymns not unworthy to supplement clerical sermons. It was
+written by the Hon. Joel Barlow in 1799, and published in a pioneer
+psalm-book at Northampton, Mass. It is neither a translation nor
+properly a hymn but a poem built upon the words of the Jewish lament,
+and really reproducing something of its plaintive beauty. Two stanzas of
+it are as follows:
+
+ Along the banks where Babel's current flows
+ Our captive bands in deep despondence strayed,
+ While Zion's fall in deep remembrance rose,
+ Her friends, her children mingled with the dead.
+
+ The tuneless harps that once with joy we strung
+ When praise employed, or mirth inspired the lay,
+ In mournful silence on the willows hung,
+ And growing grief prolonged the tedious day.
+
+Like Pope, this American poet loved onomatope and imitative verse, and
+the last line is a word-picture of home-sick weariness. This "psalm"
+was the best piece of work in Mr. Barlow's series of attempted
+improvements upon Isaac Watts--which on the whole were not very
+successful. The sweet cantabile of Mason's "Melton" gave "Along the
+banks" quite an extended lease of life, though it has now ceased to be
+sung.
+
+Joel Barlow was a versatile gentleman, serving his country and
+generation in almost every useful capacity, from chaplain in the
+continental army to foreign ambassador. He was born in Redding, Ct.,
+1755, and died near Cracow, Poland, Dec. 1812.
+
+
+"AS DOWN IN THE SUNLESS."
+
+Thomas Moore, the poet of glees and love-madrigals, had sober thoughts
+in the intervals of his gaiety, and employed his genius in writing
+religious and even devout poems, which have been spiritually helpful in
+many phases of Christian experience. Among them was this and the four
+following hymns, with thirty-four others, each of which he carefully
+labelled with the name of a music composer, though the particular tune
+is left indefinite. "The still prayer of devotion" here answers, in
+rhyme and reality, the simile of the sea-flower in the unseen deep, and
+the mariner's compass represents the constancy of a believer.
+
+ As, still to the star of its worship, though clouded,
+ The needle points faithfully o'er the dim sea,
+ So, dark as I roam in this wintry world shrouded,
+ The hope of my spirit turns trembling to Thee.
+
+It is sung in _Plymouth Hymnal_ to Barnby's "St. Botolph."
+
+
+"THE TURF SHALL BE MY FRAGRANT SHRINE"
+
+Is, in part, still preserved in hymn collections, and sung to the noble
+tune of "Louvan," Virgil Taylor's piece. The last stanza is especially
+reminiscent of the music.
+
+ There's nothing bright above, below,
+ From flowers that bloom to stars that glow;
+ But in its light my soul can see
+ Some feature of Thy deity.
+
+
+"O THOU WHO DRY'ST THE MOURNER'S TEAR"
+
+Is associated in the _Baptist Praise Book_ with Woodbury's "Siloam."
+
+
+"THE BIRD LET LOOSE IN EASTERN SKIES"
+
+Has been sung in Mason's "Coventry," and the _Plymouth Hymnal_ assigns
+it to "Spohr"--a namesake tune of Louis Spohr, while the _Unitarian Hymn
+and Tune Book_ unites to it a beautiful triple-time melody from Mozart,
+and bearing his name.
+
+
+"THOU ART, O GOD, THE LIFE AND LIGHT."
+
+This is the best of the Irish poet's sacred songs--always excepting,
+"Come, Ye Disconsolate." It is said to have been originally set to a
+secular melody composed by the wife of Hon. Richard Brinsley Sheridan.
+It is joined to the tune of "Brighton" in the Unitarian books, and
+William Monk's "Matthias" voices the words for the _Plymouth Hymnal_.
+The verses have the true lyrical glow, and make a real song of praise as
+well a composition of more than ordinary literary beauty.
+
+ Thou art, O God, the life and light
+ Of all this wondrous world we see;
+ Its glow by day, its smile by night
+ Are but reflections caught from Thee.
+ Where'er we turn Thy glories shine,
+ And all things fair and bright are Thine.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ When night with wings of starry gloom
+ O'ershadows all the earth, and skies
+ Like some dark, beauteous bird, whose plume
+ Is sparkling with unnumbered eyes,
+ That sacred gloom, those fires divine,
+ So grand, so countless, Lord, are Thine.
+
+ When youthful spring around us breathes,
+ Thy Spirit warms her fragrant sigh,
+ And every flower the summer wreathes
+ Is born beneath that kindling eye.
+ Where'er we turn Thy glories shine,
+ And all things fair and bright are Thine.
+
+
+"MOURNFULLY, TENDERLY, BEAR ON THE DEAD."
+
+A tender funeral ballad by Henry S. Washburn, composed in 1846 and
+entitled "The Burial of Mrs. Judson." It is rare now in sheet-music form
+but the _American Vocalist_, to be found in the stores of most great
+music publishers and dealers, preserves the full poem and score.
+
+Its occasion was the death at sea, off St. Helena, of the Baptist
+missionary, Mrs. Sarah Hall Boardman Judson, and the solemn committal of
+her remains to the dust on that historic island, Sept. 1, 1845. She was
+on her way to America from Burmah at the time of her death, and the ship
+proceeded on its homeward voyage immediately after her burial. The
+touching circumstances of the gifted lady's death, and the strange
+romance of her entombment where Napoleon's grave was made twenty-four
+years before, inspired Mr. Washburn, who was a prominent layman of the
+Baptist denomination, and interested in all its ecclesiastical and
+missionary activities, and he wrote this poetic memorial of the event:
+
+ Mournfully, tenderly, bear on the dead;
+ Where the warrior has lain, let the Christian be laid.
+ No place more befitting, O rock of the sea;
+ Never such treasure was hidden in thee.
+
+ Mournfully, tenderly, solemn and slow;
+ Tears are bedewing the path as ye go;
+ Kindred and strangers are mourners today;
+ Gently, so gently, O bear her away.
+
+ Mournfully, tenderly, gaze on that brow;
+ Beautiful is it in quietude now.
+ One look, and then settle the loved to her rest
+ The ocean beneath her, the turf on her breast.
+
+Mrs. Sarah Judson was the second wife of the Rev. Adoniram Judson, D.D.,
+the celebrated pioneer American Baptist missionary, and the mother by
+her first marriage, of the late Rev. George Dana Boardman, D.D., LL.D.,
+of Philadelphia.
+
+The Hon. Henry S. Washburn was born in Providence, R.I., 1813, and
+educated at Brown University. During most of his long life he resided in
+Massachusetts, and occupied there many positions of honor and trust,
+serving in the State Legislature both as Representative and Senator. He
+was the author of many poems and lyrics of high merit, some of
+which--notably "The Vacant Chair"--became popular in sheet-music and in
+books of religious and educational use. He died in 1903.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"The Burial of Mrs. Judson" became favorite parlor music when Lyman
+Heath composed the melody for it--of the same name. Its notes and
+movement were evidently inspired by the poem, for it reproduces the
+feeling of every line. The threnody was widely known and sung in the
+middle years of the last century, by people, too, who had scarcely heard
+of Mrs. Judson, and received in the music and words their first hint of
+her history. The poem prompted the tune, but the tune was the garland of
+the poem.
+
+Lyman Heath of Bow, N.H., was born there Aug. 24, 1804. He studied
+music, and became a vocalist and vocal composer. Died July 30, 1870.
+
+
+"TELL ME NOT IN MOURNFUL NUMBERS."
+
+Longfellow's "Psalm of Life" was written when he was a young man, and
+for some years it carried the title he gave it, "What the Young Man's
+Heart Said to the Psalmist"--a caption altogether too long to bear
+currency.
+
+The history of the beloved poet who wrote this optimistic ballad of hope
+and courage is too well known to need recounting here. He was born in
+Portland, Me., in 1807, graduated at Bowdoin College, and was for more
+than forty years professor of Belles Lettres in Harvard University. Died
+in Cambridge, March 4, 1882. Of his longer poems the most read and
+admired are his beautiful romance of "Evangeline," and his epic of
+"Hiawatha," but it is hardly too much to say that for the last sixty
+years, his "Psalm of Life" has been the common property of all American,
+if not English school-children, and a part of their education. When he
+was in London, Queen Victoria sent for him to come and see her at the
+palace. He went, and just as he was seating himself in the waiting coach
+after the interview, a man in working clothes appeared, hat in hand, at
+the coach window.
+
+"Please sir, yer honor," said he, "an' are you Mr. Longfellow?"
+
+"I am Mr. Longfellow," said the poet.
+
+"An' did you write the Psalm of Life?" he asked.
+
+"I wrote the Psalm of Life," replied the poet.
+
+"An', yer honor, would you be willing to take a workingman by the hand?"
+
+Mr. Longfellow gave the honest Englishman a hearty handshake, "And"
+(said he in telling the story) "I never in my life received a compliment
+that gave me more satisfaction."
+
+The incident has a delightful democratic flavor--and it is perfectly
+characteristic of the amiable author of the most popular poem in the
+English language. The "Psalm of Life" is a wonderful example of the
+power of commonplaces put into tuneful and elegant verse.
+
+The thought of setting the poem to music came to the compiler of one of
+the Unitarian church singing books. Some will question, however, whether
+the selection was the happiest that could have been made. The tune is
+"Rathbun," Ithamar Conkey's melody that always recalls Sir John
+Bowring's great hymn of praise.
+
+
+"BUILD THEE MORE NOBLE MANSIONS."
+
+This poem by Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, known among his works as "The
+Chambered Nautilus," was considered by himself as his worthiest
+achievement in verse, and his wish that it might live is likely to be
+fulfilled. It is stately, and in character and effect a rhythmic sermon
+from a text in "natural theology." The biography of one of the little
+molluscan sea-navigators that continually enlarges its shell to adapt it
+to its growth inspired the thoughtful lines. The third, fourth and
+fifth stanzas are as follows:
+
+ Year after year beheld the silent toil
+ That spread the lustrous coil;
+ Still, as the spiral grew,
+ He left the last year's dwelling for the new,
+ Stole with soft step the shining archway through,
+ Built up its idle door,
+ Stretched in his last-found home, and knew the old no more.
+
+ Thanks for the heavenly message brought by thee,
+ Child of the wand'ring sea,
+ Cast from her lap forlorn!
+ From thy dead lips a clearer note is born
+ Than ever Triton blew from wreathéd horn!
+ While on my ear it rings
+ Through the deep caves of thought I hear a voice that sings,
+
+ "Build thee more noble mansions, O my soul.
+ As the swift seasons roll:
+ Leave thy low-vaulted past!
+ Let each new temple, nobler than the last,
+ Shut thee from heaven with a dome more vast,
+ Till thou at length art free,
+ Leaving thy outgrown shell by life's unresting sea."
+
+Dr. Frederic Hedge included the poem in his hymn-book but without any
+singing-supplement to the words.
+
+
+WHITTIER'S SERVICE SONG.
+
+ It may not be our lot to wield
+ The sickle in the harvest field.
+
+If this stanza and the four following do not reveal all the strength of
+John G. Whittier's spirit, they convey its serious sweetness. The
+verses were loved and prized by both President Garfield and President
+McKinley. On the Sunday before the latter went from his Canton, O., home
+to his inauguration in Washington the poem was sung as a hymn at his
+request in the services at the Methodist church where he had been a
+constant worshipper.
+
+The second stanza is the one most generally recognized and oftenest
+quoted:
+
+ Yet where our duty's task is wrought
+ In unison with God's great thought,
+ The near and future blend in one,
+ And whatsoe'er is willed, is done.
+
+John Greenleaf Whittier, the poet of the oppressed, was born in
+Haverhill, Mass., 1807, worked on a farm and on a shoe-bench, and
+studied at the local academy, until, becoming of age, he went to
+Hartford, Conn., and began a brief experience in editorial life. Soon
+after his return to Massachusetts he was elected to the Legislature, and
+after his duties ended there he left the state for Philadelphia to edit
+the _Pennsylvania Freeman_. A few years later he returned again, and
+established his home in Amesbury, the town with which his life and works
+are always associated.
+
+He died in 1892 at Hampton Falls, N.H., where he had gone for his
+health.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Abends," the smooth triple-time choral joined to Whittier's poem by the
+music editor of the new _Methodist Hymnal_, speaks its meaning so well
+that it is scarcely worth while to look for another. Sir Herbert Stanley
+Oakeley, the composer, was born at Ealing, Eng., July 22, 1830, and
+educated at Rugby and Oxford. He studied music in Germany, and became a
+superior organist, winning great applause by his recitals at Edinburgh
+University, where he was elected Musical Professor.
+
+Archbishop Tait gave him the doctorate of music at Canterbury in 1871,
+and he was knighted by Queen Victoria in 1876.
+
+Besides vocal duets, Scotch melodies and student songs, he composed many
+anthems and tunes for the church--notably "Edina" ("Saviour, blessed
+Saviour") and "Abends," originally written to Keble's "Sun of my Soul."
+
+
+"THE BIRD WITH THE BROKEN PINION."
+
+This lay of a lost gift, with its striking lesson, might have been
+copied from the wounded bird's own song, it is so natural and so
+clear-toned. The opportune thought and pen of Mr. Hezekiah Butterworth
+gave being to the little ballad the day he heard the late Dr. George
+Lorimer preach from a text in the story of Samson's fall (Judges 16:21)
+"The Philistines took him, and put out his eyes, and brought him down to
+Gaza ... and he did grind in the prison-house." A sentence in the
+course of the doctor's sermon, "The bird with a broken pinion never
+soars as high again," was caught up by the listening author, and became
+the refrain of his impressive song. Rev. Frank M. Lamb, the tuneful
+evangelist, found it in print, and wrote a tune to it, and in his voice
+and the voices of other singers the little monitor has since told its
+story in revival meetings, and mission and gospel services throughout
+the land.
+
+ I walked through the woodland meadows
+ Where sweet the thrushes sing,
+ And found on a bed of mosses
+ A bird with a broken wing.
+ I healed its wound, and each morning
+ It sang its old sweet strain,
+ But the bird with a broken pinion
+ Never soared as high again.
+
+ I found a young life broken
+ By sin's seductive art;
+ And, touched with a Christ-like pity,
+ I took him to my heart.
+ He lived--with a noble purpose,
+ And struggled not in vain;
+ But the life that sin had stricken
+ Never soared as high again.
+
+ But the bird with a broken pinion
+ Kept another from the snare,
+ And the life that sin had stricken
+ Saved another from despair.
+ Each loss has its compensation,
+ There is healing for every pain
+ But the bird with a broken pinion
+ Never soars as high again.
+
+In the tune an extra stanza is added--as if something conventional were
+needed to make the poem a hymn. But the professional tone of the
+appended stanza, virtually all in its two lines--
+
+ Then come to the dear Redeemer,
+ He will cleanse you from every stain,
+
+--is forced into its connection. The poem told the truth, and stopped
+there; and should be left to fasten its own impression. There never was
+a more solemn warning uttered than in this little apologue. It promises
+"compensation" and "healing," but not perfect rehabilitation. Sin will
+leave its scars. Even He who "became sin for us" bore them in His
+resurrection body.
+
+Rev. Frank M. Lamb, composer and singer of the hymn-tune, was born in
+Poland, Me., 1860, and educated in the schools of Poland and Auburn. He
+was licensed to preach in 1888, and ordained the same year, and has
+since held pastorates in Maine, New York, and Massachusetts.
+
+Besides his tune, very pleasing and appropriate music has been written
+to the little ballad of the broken wing by Geo. C. Stebbins.
+
+[Illustration: Ellen M.H. Gates]
+
+
+UNDER THE PALMS.
+
+In the cantata, "Under the Palms" ("Captive Judah in Babylon")--the
+joint production of George F. Root[19] and Hezekiah Butterworth, several
+of the latter's songs detached themselves, with their music, from the
+main work, and lingered in choral or solo service in places where the
+sacred operetta was presented, both in America and England. One of these
+is an effective solo in deep contralto, with a suggestion of recitative
+and chant--
+
+ By the dark Euphrates' stream,
+ By the Tigris, sad and lone
+ I wandered, a captive maid;
+ And the cruel Assyrian said,
+ "Awake your harp's sweet tone!"
+
+ I had heard of my fathers' glory from the lips of holy men,
+ And I thought of the land of my fathers; I thought of my fathers'
+ land then.
+
+Another is--
+
+ O church of Christ! our blest abode,
+ Celestial grace is thine.
+ Thou art the dwelling-place of God,
+ The gate of joy divine.
+
+ Whene'er I come to thee in joy,
+ Whene'er I come in tears,
+ Still at the Gate called Beautiful
+ My risen Lord appears.
+
+--with the chorus--
+
+ Where'er for me the sun may set,
+ Wherever I may dwell,
+ My heart shall nevermore forget
+ Thy courts, Immanuel!
+
+[Footnote 19: See page 316.]
+
+
+"IF YOU CANNOT ON THE OCEAN."
+
+This popular Christian ballad, entitled "Your Mission," was written one
+stormy day in the winter of 1861-2 by Miss Ellen M. Huntington (Mrs.
+Isaac Gates), and made her reputation as one of the few didactic poets
+whose exquisite art wins a hearing for them everywhere. In a moment of
+revery, while looking through the window at the falling snow, the words
+came to her:
+
+ If you cannot on the ocean
+ Sail among the swiftest fleet.
+
+She turned away and wrote the lines on her slate, following with verse
+after verse till she finished the whole poem. "It wrote itself," she
+says in her own account of it.
+
+Reading afterwards what she had written, she was surprised at her work.
+The poem had a meaning and a "mission." So strong was the impression
+that the devout girl fell on her knees and consecrated it to a divine
+purpose. Free copies of it went to the Cooperstown, N.Y., local paper,
+and to the New York _Examiner_, and appeared in both. From that time the
+history and career of "Your Mission" presents a marked illustration of
+"catenal influence," or transmitted suggestion.
+
+In the later days of the Civil War Philip Phillips, who had a
+wonderfully sweet tenor voice, was invited to sing at a great meeting of
+the United States Christian Commission in the Senate Chamber at
+Washington, February, 1865, President Lincoln and Secretary Seward
+(then president of the commission) were there, and the hall was crowded
+with leading statesmen, army generals, and friends of the Union. The
+song selected by Mr. Phillips was Mrs. Gates' "Your Mission":
+
+ If you cannot on the ocean
+ Sail among the swiftest fleet,
+ Rocking on the highest billows,
+ Laughing at the storms you meet,
+ You can stand among the sailors
+ Anchored yet within the bay;
+ You can lend a hand to help them
+ As they launch their boats away.
+
+The hushed audience listened spell-bound as the sweet singer went on,
+their interest growing to feverish eagerness until the climax was
+reached in the fifth stanza:
+
+ If you cannot in the conflict
+ Prove yourself a soldier true,
+ If where fire and smoke are thickest
+ There's no work for you to do,
+ When the battlefield is silent
+ You can go with careful tread;
+ You can bear away the wounded,
+ You can cover up the dead.
+
+In the storm of enthusiasm that followed, President Lincoln handed a
+hastily scribbled line on a bit of paper to Chairman Seward,
+
+"Near the close let us have 'Your Mission' repeated."
+
+Mr. Phillips' great success on this occasion brought him so many calls
+for his services that he gave up everything and devoted himself to his
+tuneful art. "Your Mission" so gladly welcomed at Washington made him
+the first gospel songster, chanting round the world the divine message
+of the hymns. It was the singing by Philip Phillips that first impressed
+Ira D. Sankey with the amazing power of evangelical solo song, and
+helped him years later to resign his lucrative business as a revenue
+officer and consecrate his own rare vocal gift to the Christian ministry
+of sacred music. Heaven alone can show the birth-records of souls won to
+God all along the journeys of the "Singing Pilgrims," and the rich
+succession of Mr. Sankey's melodies, that can be traced back by a chain
+of causes to the poem that "wrote itself" and became a hymn. And the
+chain may not yet be complete. In the words of that providential poem--
+
+ Though they may forget the singer
+ They will not forget the song.
+
+Mrs. Ellen M.H. Gates, whose reputation as an author was made by this
+beautiful and always timely poem, was born in Torrington, Ct., and is
+the youngest sister of the late Collis P. Huntington. Her
+hymns--included in this volume and in other publications--are much
+admired and loved, both for their sweetness and elevated religious
+feeling, and for their poetic quality. Among her published books of
+verse are "Night," "At Noontide," and "Treasures of Kurium." Her address
+is New York City.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Sidney Martin Grannis, author of the tune, was born Sept. 23, 1827, in
+Geneseo, Livingston county, N.Y. Lived in Leroy, of the same state, from
+1831 to 1884, when he removed to Los Angeles, Cal., where several of his
+admirers presented him a cottage and grounds, which at last accounts he
+still occupies. Mr. Grannis won his first reputation as a popular
+musician by his song "Do They Miss Me at Home," and his "Only Waiting,"
+"Cling to the Union," and "People Will Talk You Know," had an equally
+wide currency. As a solo singer his voice was remarkable, covering a
+range of two octaves, and while travelling with members of the "Amphion
+Troupe," to which he belonged, he sang at more than five thousand
+concerts. His tune to "Your Mission" was composed in New Haven, Ct., in
+1864.
+
+
+"TOO LATE! TOO LATE! YE CANNOT ENTER NOW."
+
+"Too Late" is a thrilling fragment or side-song of Alfred Tennyson's,
+representing the vain plea of the five Foolish Virgins. Its tune bears
+the name of a London lady, "Miss Lindsay" (afterwards Mrs. J.
+Worthington Bliss). The arrangement of air, duo and quartet is very
+impressive[20].
+
+[Footnote 20: _Methodist Hymnal_, No. 743.]
+
+ "Late, late, so late! and dark the night and chill:
+ Late, late, so late! but we can enter still."
+ "Too late! too late! ye cannot enter now!"
+
+ "No light! so late! and dark and chill the night--
+ O let us in that we may find the light!"
+ "Too late! too late! ye cannot enter now!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Have we not heard the Bridegroom is so sweet?
+ O let us in that we may kiss his feet!"
+ "No, No--! too late! ye cannot enter now!"
+
+The words are found in "Queen Guinevere," a canto of the "Idyls of the
+King."
+
+
+"OH, GALILEE, SWEET GALILEE."
+
+This is the chorus of a charming poem of three stanzas that shaped
+itself in the mind of Mr. Robert Morris while sitting over the ruins on
+the traditional site of Capernaum by the Lake of Genneseret.
+
+ Each cooing dove, each sighing bough,
+ That makes the eve so blest to me,
+ Has something far diviner now,
+ It bears me back to Galilee.
+
+ CHORUS
+ Oh, Galilee, sweet Galilee,
+ Where Jesus loved so much to be;
+ Oh, Galilee, blue Galilee,
+ Come sing thy song again to me.
+
+Robert Morris, LL.D., born Aug. 31, 1818, was a scholar, and an expert
+in certain scientific subjects, and wrote works on numismatics and the
+"Poetry of Free Masonry." Commissioned to Palestine in 1868 on historic
+and archaeological service for the United Order, he explored the scenes
+of ancient Jewish and Christian life and event in the Holy Land, and
+being a religious man, followed the Saviour's earthly footsteps with a
+reverent zeal that left its inspiration with him while he lived. He died
+in the year 1888, but his Christian ballad secured him a lasting place
+in every devout memory.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The author wrote out his hymn in 1874 and sent it to his friend, the
+musician, Mr. Horatio R. Palmer,[21] and the latter learned it by heart,
+and carried it with him in his musings "till it floated out in the
+melody you know," (to use his own words.)
+
+[Footnote 21: See page 311.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+OLD REVIVAL HYMNS.
+
+
+The sober churches of the "Old Thirteen" states and of their successors
+far into the nineteenth century, sustained evening prayer-meetings more
+or less commonly, but necessity made them in most cases "cottage
+meetings" appointed on Sunday and here and there in the scattered homes
+of country parishes. Their intent was the same as that of "revival
+meetings," since so called, though the method--and the music--were
+different. The results in winning sinners, so far as they owed anything
+to the hymns and hymn-tunes, were apt to be a new generation of
+Christian recruits as sombre as the singing. "Lebanon" set forth the
+appalling shortness of human life; "Windham" gave its depressing story
+of the great majority of mankind on the "broad road," and other minor
+tunes proclaimed God's sovereignty and eternal decrees; or if a psalm
+had His love in it, it was likely to be sung in a similar melancholy
+key. Even in his gladness the good minister, Thomas Baldwin, of the
+Second Baptist Church, at Boston, North End, returning from Newport,
+N.H., where he had happily harmonized a discordant church, could not
+escape the strait-lace of a C minor for his thankful hymn--
+
+ From whence doth this union arise,
+ That hatred is conquered by love.
+
+"The Puritans took their pleasures seriously," and this did not cease to
+be true till at least two hundred years after the Pilgrims landed or
+Boston was founded.
+
+Time, that covered the ghastly faces on the old grave-stones with moss,
+gradually stole away the unction of minor-tune singing.
+
+The songs of the great revival of 1740 swept the country with positive
+rather than negative music. Even Jonathan Edwards admitted the need of
+better psalm-books and better psalmody.
+
+Edwards, during his life, spent some time among the Indians as a
+missionary teacher; but probably neither he nor David Brainerd ever saw
+a Christian hymn composed by an Indian. The following, from the early
+years of the last century, is apparently the first, certainly the only
+surviving, effort of a converted but half-educated red man to utter his
+thoughts in pious metre. Whoever trimmed the original words and measure
+into printable shape evidently took care to preserve the broken English
+of the simple convert. It is an interesting relic of the Christian
+thought and sentiment of a pagan just learning to prattle prayer and
+praise:
+
+ In de dark wood, no Indian nigh,
+ Den me look heaben, send up cry,
+ Upon my knees so low.
+ Dat God on high, in shinee place,
+ See me in night, with teary face,
+ De priest, he tell me so.
+
+ God send Him angel take me care;
+ Him come Heself and hear um prayer,
+ If Indian heart do pray.
+ God see me now, He know me here.
+ He say, poor Indian, neber fear,
+ Me wid you night and day.
+
+ So me lub God wid inside heart;
+ He fight for me, He take my part,
+ He save my life before.
+ God lub poor Indian in de wood;
+ So me lub God, and dat be good;
+ Me pray Him two times more.
+
+ When me be old, me head be gray,
+ Den He no lebe me, so He say:
+ Me wid you till you die.
+ Den take me up to shinee place,
+ See white man, red man, black man's face,
+ All happy 'like on high.
+
+ Few days, den God will come to me,
+ He knock off chains, He set me free,
+ Den take me up on high.
+ Den Indian sing His praises blest,
+ And lub and praise Him wid de rest,
+ And neber, neber cry.
+
+The above hymn, which may be found in different forms in old New England
+tracts and hymn-books, and which used to be sung in Methodist conference
+and prayer-meetings in the same way that old slave-hymns and the
+"Jubilee Singers" refrains are sometimes sung now, was composed by
+William Apes, a converted Indian, who was born in Massachusetts, in
+1798. His father was a white man, but married an Indian descended from
+the family of King Philip, the Indian warrior, and the last of the
+Indian chiefs. His grandmother was the king's granddaughter, as he
+claimed, and was famous for her personal beauty. He caused his
+autobiography and religious experience to be published. The original
+hymn is quite long, and contains some singular and characteristic
+expressions.
+
+The authorship of the tune to which the words were sung has been claimed
+for Samuel Cowdell, a schoolmaster of Annapolis Valley, Nova Scotia,
+1820, but the date of the lost tune was probably much earlier.
+
+In the early days of New England, before the Indian missions had been
+brought to an end by the sweeping away of the tribes, several fine hymns
+were composed by educated Indians, and were used in the churches. The
+best known is that beginning--
+
+ When shall we all meet again?
+
+It was composed by three Indians at the planting of a memorial pine on
+leaving Dartmouth College, where they had been studying. The lines
+indicate an expectation of missionary life and work.
+
+ When shall we all meet again?
+ When shall we all meet again?
+ Oft shall glowing hope expire,
+ Oft shall wearied love retire,
+ Oft shall death and sorrow reign
+ Ere we all shall meet again.
+
+ Though in distant lands we sigh,
+ Parched beneath a burning sky,
+ Though the deep between us rolls,
+ Friendship shall unite our souls;
+ And in fancy's wide domain,
+ There we all shall meet again.
+
+ When these burnished locks are gray,
+ Thinned by many a toil-spent day,
+ When around this youthful pine
+ Moss shall creep and ivy twine,
+ (Long may this loved bower remain!)
+ Here may we all meet again.
+
+ When the dreams of life are fled,
+ When its wasted lamps are dead,
+ When in cold oblivion's shade
+ Beauty, health, and strength are laid,
+ Where immortal spirits reign,
+ There we all shall meet again.
+
+This parting piece was sung in religious meetings as a hymn, like the
+other once so common, but later,--
+
+ "When shall we meet again,
+ Meet ne'er to sever?"
+
+--to a tune in B flat minor, excessively plaintive, and likely to sadden
+an emotional singer or hearer to tears. The full harmony is found in the
+_American Vocalist_, and the air is reprinted in the _Revivalist_
+(1868). The fact that minor music is the natural Indian tone in song
+makes it probable that the melody is as ancient as the hymn--though no
+date is given for either.
+
+Tradition says that nearly fifty years later the same three Indians were
+providentially drawn to the spot where they parted, and met again, and
+while they were together composed and sang another ode. Truth to tell,
+however, it had only one note of gladness, and that was in the first
+stanza:
+
+ Parted many a toil-spent year,
+ Pledged in youth to memory dear,
+ Still to friendship's magnet true,
+ We our social joys renew;
+ Bound by love's unsevered chain,
+ Here on earth we meet again.
+
+The remaining three stanzas dwell principally on the ravages time has
+made. The reunion ode of those stoical college classmates of a stoical
+race could have been sung in the same B flat minor.
+
+
+"AWAKED BY SINAI'S AWFUL SOUND."
+
+The name of the Indian, Samson Occum, who wrote this hymn (variously
+spelt Ockom, Ockum, Occam, Occom) is not borne by any public
+institution, but New England owes the foundation of Dartmouth College to
+his hard work. Dartmouth College was originally "Moore's Indian Charity
+School," organized (1750) in Lebanon, Ct., by Rev. Eleazer Wheelock and
+endowed (1755) by Joshua Moore (or More). Good men and women who had at
+heart the spiritual welfare of a fading race contributed to the school's
+support and young Indians resorted to it from both New England and the
+Middle States, but funds were insufficient, and it was foreseen that the
+charity must inevitably outgrow its missionary purpose and if continued
+at all must depend on a wider and more liberal patronage.
+
+Samson Occum was born in Mohegan, New London Co., Ct., probably in the
+year 1722. Converted from paganism in 1740 (possibly under the preaching
+of Whitefield, who was in this country at that time) he desired to
+become a missionary to his people, and entered Eleazer Wheelock's
+school. After four years study, then a young man of twenty-two, he began
+to teach and preach among the Montauk Indians, and in 1759 the
+Presbytery of Suffolk Co., L.I., ordained him to the ministry. A
+benevolent society in Scotland, hearing of, his ability and zeal, gave
+him an appointment, under its auspices, among the Oneidas in 1761, where
+he labored four years. The interests of the school at Lebanon, where he
+had been educated, were dear to him, and he was tireless in its cause,
+procuring pupils for it, and working eloquently as its advocate with
+voice and pen. In 1765 he crossed the Atlantic to solicit funds for the
+Indian school, and remained four years in England and Scotland,
+lecturing in its behalf, and preaching nearly four hundred sermons. As a
+result he raised ten thousand pounds. The donation was put in charge of
+a Board of Trustees of which Lord Dartmouth was chairman. When it was
+decided to remove the school from Lebanon, Ct., the efforts of Governor
+Wentworth, of New Hampshire, secured its location at Hanover in that
+state. It was christened after Lord Dartmouth--and the names of Occum,
+Moore and Wheelock retired into the encyclopedias.
+
+The Rev. Samson Occum died in 1779, while laboring among the Stockbridge
+(N.Y.) Indians. Several hymns were written by this remarkable man, and
+also "An Account of the Customs and Manners of the Montauks." The hymn,
+"Awaked by Sinai's Awful Sound," set to the stentorian tune of "Ganges,"
+was a tremendous sermon in itself to old-time congregations, and is
+probably as indicative of the doctrines which converted its writer as of
+the contemporary belief prominent in choir and pulpit.
+
+ Awaked by Sinai's awful sound,
+ My soul in bonds of guilt I found,
+ And knew not where to go,
+ Eternal truth did loud proclaim
+ "The sinner must be born again.
+ Or sink in endless woe."
+
+ When to the law I trembling fled,
+ It poured its curses on my head:
+ I no relief could find.
+ This fearful truth increased my pain,
+ "The sinner must be born again,"
+ And whelmed my troubled mind.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ But while I thus in anguish lay,
+ Jesus of Nazareth passed that way;
+ I felt His pity move.
+ The sinner, once by justice slain,
+ Now by His grace is born again,
+ And sings eternal Love!
+
+The rugged original has been so often and so variously altered and
+"toned down," that only a few unusually accurate aged memories can
+recall it. The hymn began going out of use fifty years ago, and is now
+seldom seen.
+
+The name "S. Chandler," attached to "Ganges," leaves the identity of the
+composer in shadow. It is supposed he was born in 1760. The tune
+appeared about 1790.
+
+
+"WHERE NOW ARE THE HEBREW CHILDREN?"
+
+This quaint old unison, repeating the above three times, followed by the
+answer (thrice repeated) and climaxed with--
+
+ Safely in the Promised Land,
+
+--was a favorite at ancient camp-meetings, and a good leader could keep
+it going in a congregation or a happy group of vocalists, improvising a
+new start-line after every stop until his memory or invention gave out.
+
+ They went up from the fiery furnace,
+ They went up from the fiery furnace,
+ They went up from the fiery furnace,
+ Safely to the Promised Land.
+
+Sometimes it was--
+
+ Where now is the good Elijah?
+
+--and,--
+
+ He went up in a chariot of fire;
+
+--and again,--
+
+ Where now is the good old Daniel?
+
+ He went up from the den of lions;
+
+--and so on, finally announcing--
+
+ By and by we'll go home for to meet him, [three times]
+ Safely in the Promised Land.
+
+The enthusiasm excited by the swinging rhythm of the tune sometimes rose
+to a passionate pitch, and it was seldom used in the more controlled
+religious assemblies. If any attempt was ever made to print the song[22]
+the singers had little need to read the music. Like the ancient runes,
+it came into being by spontaneous generation, and lived in phonetic
+tradition.
+
+[Footnote 22: Mr. Hubert P. Main believes he once saw "The Hebrew
+Children" in print in one of Horace Waters' editions of the _Sabbath
+Bell_.]
+
+A strange, wild pćan of exultant song was one often heard from Peter
+Cartwright, the muscular circuit-preacher. A remembered fragment shows
+its quality:
+
+ Then my soul mounted higher
+ In a chariot of fire,
+ And the moon it was under my feet.
+
+There is a tradition that he sang it over a stalwart blacksmith while
+chastising him for an ungodly defiance and assault in the course of one
+of his gospel journeys--and that the defeated blacksmith became his
+friend and follower.
+
+Peter Cartwright was born in Amherst county, Va., Sept. 1, 1785, and
+died near Pleasant Plains, Sangamon county, Ill., Sept., 1872.
+
+
+"THE EDEN OF LOVE."
+
+This song, written early in the last century, by John J. Hicks, recalls
+the name of the eccentric traveling evangelist, Lorenzo Dow, born in
+Coventry, Ct., October 16, 1777; died in Washington, D.C., Feb. 2,
+1834. It was the favorite hymn of his wife, the beloved Peggy Dow, and
+has furnished the key-word of more than one devotional rhyme that has
+uplifted the toiling souls of rural evangelists and their greenwood
+congregations:
+
+ How sweet to reflect on the joys that await me
+ In yon blissful region, the haven of rest,
+ Where glorified spirits with welcome shall greet me,
+ And lead me to mansions prepared for the blest.
+ There, dwelling in light, and with glory enshrouded,
+ My happiness perfect, my mind's sky unclouded,
+ I'll bathe in the ocean of pleasure unbounded,
+ And range with delight through the Eden of love.
+
+The words and tune were printed in _Leavitt's Christian Lyre_, 1830.
+
+The same strain in the same metre is continued in the hymn of Rev. Wm.
+Hunter, D.D., (1842) printed in his _Minstrel of Zion_ (1845). J.W.
+Dadmun's _Melodian_ (1860) copied it, retaining, apparently, the
+original music, with an added refrain of invitation, "Will you go? will
+you go?"
+
+ We are bound for the land of the pure and the holy,
+ The home of the happy, the kingdom of love;
+ Ye wand'rers from God on the broad road of folly,
+ O say, will you go to the Eden above?
+
+The old hymn-tune has a brisk out-door delivery, and is full of revival
+fervor and the ozone of the pines.
+
+
+"O CANA-AN, BRIGHT CANA-AN"
+
+Was one of the stimulating melodies of the old-time awakenings, which
+were simply airs, and were sung unisonously. "O Cana-an" (pronounced in
+three syllables) was the chorus, the hymn-lines being either improvised
+or picked up miscellaneously from memory, the interline, "I am bound for
+the land of Cana-an," occurring between every two. John Wesley's "How
+happy is the pilgrim's lot" was one of the snatched stanzas swept into
+the current of the song. An example of the tune-leader's improvisations
+to keep the hymn going was--
+
+ If you get there before I do,--
+ _I am bound for the land of Cana-an!_
+ Look out for me, I'm coming too--
+ _I am bound for the land of Cana-an!_
+
+And then hymn and tune took possession of the assembly and rolled on in
+a circle with--
+
+ O Cana-an, bright Cana-an!
+ I am bound for the land of Cana-an;
+ O Cana-an it is my hap-py home,
+ I am bound for the land of Cana-an
+
+--till the voices came back to another starting-line and began again.
+There was always a movement to the front when that tune was sung,
+and--with all due abatement for superficial results in the sensation of
+the moment--it is undeniable that many souls were truly born into the
+kingdom of God under the sound of that rude woodland song.
+
+Both its words and music are credited to Rev. John Maffit, who probably
+wrote the piece about 1829.
+
+
+"A CHARGE TO KEEP I HAVE."
+
+This hymn of Charles Wesley was often heard at the camp grounds, from
+the rows of tents in the morning while the good women prepared their
+pancakes and coffee, and
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+was invariably old "Kentucky," by Jeremiah Ingalls. Sung as a solo by a
+sweet and spirited voice, it slightly resembled "Golden Hill," but
+oftener its halting bars invited a more drawling style of execution
+unworthy of a hymn that merits a tune like "St. Thomas."
+
+Old "Kentucky" was not field music.
+
+
+"CHRISTIANS, IF YOUR HEARTS ARE WARM."
+
+Elder John Leland, born in Grafton, Mass., 1754, was not only a
+strenuous personality in the Baptist denomination, but was well known
+everywhere in New England, and, in fact, his preaching trip to
+Washington (1801) with the "Cheshire Cheese" made his fame national. He
+is spoken of as "the minister who wrote his own hymns"--a peculiarity in
+which he imitated Watts and Doddridge. When some natural shrinking was
+manifest in converts of his winter revivals, under his rigid rule of
+immediate baptism, he wrote this hymn to fortify them:
+
+ Christians, if your hearts are warm,
+ Ice and cold can do no harm;
+ If by Jesus you are prized
+ Rise, believe and be baptized.
+
+He found use for the hymn, too, in rallying church-members who staid
+away from his meetings in bad weather. The "poetry" expressed what he
+wanted to say--which, in his view, was sufficient apology for it. It was
+sung in revival meetings like others that he wrote, and a few hymnbooks
+now long obsolete contained it; but of Leland's hymns only one survives.
+Gray-headed men and women remember being sung to sleep by their mothers
+with that old-fashioned evening song to Amzi Chapin's[23] tune--
+
+ The day is past and gone,
+ The evening shades appear,
+ O may we all remember well
+ The night of death draws near;
+
+--and with all its solemnity and other-worldness it is dear to
+recollection, and its five stanzas are lovingly hunted up in the few
+hymnals where it is found. Bradbury's "Braden," (_Baptist Praise Book_,
+1873,) is one of its tunes.
+
+[Footnote 23: Amzi Chapin has left, apparently, nothing more than the
+record of his birth, March 2, 1768, and the memory of his tune. It
+appeared as early as 1805.]
+
+Elder Leland was a remarkable revival preacher, and his prayers--as was
+said of Elder Jabez Swan's fifty or sixty years later--"brought heaven
+and earth together." He traveled through the Eastern States as an
+evangelist, and spent a season in Virginia in the same work. In 1801 he
+revisited that region on a curious errand. The farmers of Cheshire,
+Mass., where Leland was then a settled pastor, conceived the plan of
+sending "the biggest cheese in America" to President Jefferson, and
+Leland (who was a good democrat) offered to go to Washington on an
+ox-team with it, and "preach all the way"--which he actually did.
+
+The cheese weighed 1450 lbs.
+
+Elder Leland died in North Adams, Mass., Jan. 14, 1844. Another of his
+hymns, which deserved to live with his "Evening Song," seemed to be
+answered in the brightness of his death-bed hope:
+
+ O when shall I see Jesus
+ And reign with Him above,
+ And from that flowing fountain
+ Drink everlasting love?
+
+
+"AWAKE, MY SOUL, TO JOYFUL LAYS."
+
+This glad hymn of Samuel Medley is his thanksgiving song, written soon
+after his conversion. In the places of rural worship no lay of
+Christian praise and gratitude was ever more heartily sung than this at
+the testimony meetings.
+
+ Awake, my soul, to joyful lays,
+ And sing thy great Redeemer's praise;
+ He justly claims a song from me:
+ His loving-kindness, oh, how free!
+ Loving-kindness, loving-kindness,
+ His loving-kindness, oh, how free!
+
+
+_THE TUNE,_
+
+With its queer curvet in every second line, had no other name than
+"Loving-Kindness," and was probably a camp-meeting melody in use for
+some time before its publication. It is found in _Leavitt's Christian
+Lyre_ as early as 1830. The name "William Caldwell" is all that is known
+of its composer, though he is supposed to have lived in Tennessee.
+
+
+"THE LORD INTO HIS GARDEN COMES."
+
+Was a common old-time piece sure to be heard at every religious rally,
+and every one present, saint and sinner, had it by heart, or at least
+the chorus of it--
+
+ Amen, amen, my soul replies,
+ I'm bound to meet you in the skies,
+ And claim my mansion there, etc.
+
+The anonymous[24] "Garden Hymn, as old, at least, as 1800," has nearly
+passed out of reach, except by the long arm of the antiquary; but it
+served its generation.
+
+[Footnote 24: A "Rev." Mr. Campbell, author of "The Glorious Light of
+Zion," "There is a Holy City," and "There is a Land of Pleasure," has
+been sometimes credited with the origin of the Garden Hymn.]
+
+Its vigorous tune is credited to Jeremiah Ingalls (1764-1838).
+
+ The Lord into His garden comes;
+ The spices yield a rich perfume,
+ The lilies grow and thrive,
+ The lilies grow and thrive.
+ Refreshing showers of grace divine
+ From Jesus flow to every vine,
+ Which makes the dead revive,
+ Which makes the dead revive.
+
+
+"THE CHARIOT! THE CHARIOT!"
+
+Henry Hart Milman, generally known as Dean Milman, was born in 1791, and
+was educated at Oxford. In 1821 he was installed as university professor
+of poetry at Oxford, and it was while filling this position that he
+wrote this celebrated hymn, under the title of "The Last Day." It is not
+only a hymn, but a poem--a sublime ode that recalls, in a different
+movement, the tones of the "Dies Irae."
+
+Dean Milman (of St Paul's), besides his many striking poems and learned
+historical works, wrote at least twelve hymns, among which are--
+
+ Ride on, ride on in majesty,
+
+ O help us Lord; each hour of need
+ Thy heavenly succor give,
+
+ When our heads are bowed with woe,
+
+--which last may have been written soon after he laid three of his
+children in one grave, in the north aisle of Westminster Abbey. He
+lived a laborious and useful life of seventy-seven years, dying Sept.
+24, 1868.
+
+There were times in the old revivals when the silver clarion of the
+"Chariot Hymn" must needs replace the ruder blast of Occum in old
+"Ganges" and sinners unmoved by the invisible God of Horeb be made to
+behold Him--in a vision of the "Last Day."
+
+ The Chariot! the Chariot! its wheels roll in fire
+ When the Lord cometh down in the pomp of His ire,
+ Lo, self-moving, it drives on its pathway of cloud,
+ And the heavens with the burden of Godhead are bowed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The Judgment! the Judgment! the thrones are all set,
+ Where the Lamb and the white-vested elders are met;
+ There all flesh is at once in the sight of the Lord,
+ And the doom of eternity hangs on His word.
+
+The name "Williams" or "J. Williams" is attached to various editions of
+the trumpet-like tune, but so far no guide book gives us location, date
+or sketch of the composer.
+
+
+"COME, MY BRETHREN."
+
+Another of the "unstudied" revival hymns of invitation.
+
+ Come, my brethren, let us try
+ For a little season
+ Every burden to lay by,
+ Come and let us reason.
+
+ What is this that casts you down.
+ What is this that grieves you?
+ Speak and let your wants be known;
+ Speaking may relieve you.
+
+This colloquial rhyme was apt to be started by some good brother or
+sister in one of the chilly pauses of a prayer-meeting. The air (there
+was never anything more to it) with a range of only a fifth, slurred the
+last syllable of every second line, giving the quaint effect of a bent
+note, and altogether the music was as homely as the verse. Both are
+anonymous. But the little chant sometimes served its purpose wonderfully
+well.
+
+
+"BRETHREN, WHILE WE SOJOURN HERE."
+
+This hymn was always welcome in the cottage meetings as well as in the
+larger greenwood assemblies. It was written by Rev. Joseph Swain, about
+1783.
+
+ Brethren, while we sojourn here
+ Fight we must, but should not fear.
+ Foes we have, but we've a Friend,
+ One who loves us to the end;
+ Forward then with courage go;
+ Long we shall not dwell below,
+ Soon the joyful news will come,
+ "Child, your Father calls, 'Come home.'"
+
+The tune was sometimes "Pleyel's Hymn," but oftener it was sung to a
+melody now generally forgotten of much the same movement but slurred in
+peculiarly sweet and tender turns. The cadence of the last tune gave
+the refrain line a melting effect:
+
+ Child, your Father calls, "Come home."
+
+Some of the spirit of this old tune (in the few hymnals where the hymn
+is now printed) is preserved in Geo. Kingsley's "Messiah" which
+accompanies the words, but the modulations are wanting.
+
+Joseph Swain was born in Birmingham, Eng. in 1761. Bred among mechanics,
+he was early apprenticed to the engraver's trade, but he was a boy of
+poetic temperament and fond of writing verses. After the spiritual
+change which brought a new purpose into his life, he was baptized by Dr.
+Rippon and studied for the ministry. At the age of about twenty-five, he
+was settled over the Baptist church in Walworth, where he remained till
+his death, April 16, 1796.
+
+For more than a century his hymns have lived and been loved in all the
+English-speaking world. Among those still in use are--
+
+ How sweet, how heavenly is the sight,
+
+ Pilgrims we are to Canaan bound,
+
+ O Thou in whose presence my soul takes delight.
+
+
+"HAPPY DAY."
+
+ O happy day that fixed my choice.
+ --_Doddridge_.
+ O how happy are they who the Saviour obey.
+ --_Charles Wesley_.
+
+These were voices as sure to be heard in converts' meetings as the
+leader's prayer or text, the former sung inevitably to Rimbault's tune,
+"Happy Day," and the latter to a "Western Melody" quite as closely akin
+to Wesley's words.
+
+Edward Francis Rimbault, born at Soho, Eng., June 13, 1816, was at
+sixteen years of age organist at the Soho Swiss Church, and became a
+skilled though not a prolific composer. He once received--and
+declined--the offer of an appointment as professor of music in Harvard
+College. Died of a lingering illness Sept, 26, 1876.
+
+
+"COME, HOLY SPIRIT, HEAVENLY DOVE."
+ --_Watts_.
+
+This was the immortal song-litany that fitted almost anywhere into every
+service. The Presbyterians and Congregationalists sang it in Tansur's
+"St. Martins," the Baptists in William Jones' "Stephens" and the
+Methodists in Maxim's "Turner" (which had the most music), but the hymn
+went about as well with one as with another.
+
+The Rev. William Jones (1726-1800) an English rector, and Abraham Maxim
+of Buckfield, Me., (1773-1829) contributed quite a liberal share of the
+"continental" tunes popular in the latter part of the 18th century.
+Maxim was eccentric, but the tradition that an unfortunate affair of the
+heart once drove him into the woods to make away with himself, but a
+bird on the roof of a logger's hut, making plaintive sounds,
+interrupted him, and he sat down and wrote the tune "Hallowell," on a
+strip of white birch bark, is more likely legendary. The following
+words, said to have inspired his minor tune, are still set to it in the
+old collections:
+
+ As on some lonely building's top
+ The sparrow makes her moan,
+ Far from the tents of joy and hope
+ I sit and grieve alone.[25]
+
+[Footnote 25: Versified by Nahum Tate from Ps. 102:7.]
+
+Maxim was fond of the minor mode, but his minors, like "Hallowell," "New
+Durham," etc., are things of the past. His major chorals and fugues,
+such as "Portland," "Buckfield," and "Turner" had in them the spirit of
+healthier melody and longer life. He published at least two collections,
+_The Oriental Harmony_, in 1802, and _The Northern Harmony_, in 1805.
+
+William Tansur (Tans-ur), author of "St. Martins" (1669-1783), was an
+organist, composer, compiler, and theoretical writer. He was born at
+Barnes, Surrey, Eng., (according to one account,) and died at St.
+Neot's.
+
+
+"COME, THOU FOUNT OF EVERY BLESSING."
+
+This hymn of Rev. Robert Robinson was almost always heard in the tune of
+"Nettleton," composed by John Wyeth, about 1812. The more wavy melody of
+"Sicily" (or "Sicilian Hymn") sometimes carried the verses, but never
+with the same sympathetic unction. The sing-song movement and accent of
+old "Nettleton" made it the country favorite.
+
+Robert Robinson, born in Norfolk, Eng., Sept. 27, 1735, was a poor boy,
+left fatherless at eight years of age, and apprenticed to a barber, but
+was converted by the preaching of Whitefield and studied till he
+obtained a good education, and was ordained to the Methodist ministry.
+He is supposed to have written his well-known hymn in 1758. A certain
+unsteadiness of mind, however, caused him to revise his religious
+beliefs too often for his spiritual health or enjoyment, and after
+preaching as a Methodist, a Baptist, and an Independent, he finally
+became a Socinian. On a stage-coach journey, when a lady
+fellow-passenger began singing "Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing," to
+relieve the monotony of the ride, he said to her, "Madam, I am the
+unhappy man who wrote that hymn many years ago; and I would give a
+thousand worlds, if I had them, if I could feel as I felt then."
+
+Robinson died June 9, 1790.
+
+John Wyeth was born in Cambridge, Mass., 1792, and died at Harrisburg,
+Pa., 1858. He was a musician and publisher, and issued a Music Book,
+_Wyeth's Repository of Sacred Music_.
+
+
+"A POOR WAYFARING MAN OF GRIEF,"
+
+Written by James Montgomery, Dec., 1826, was a hymn of tide and headway
+in George Coles' tune of "Duane St.," with a step that made every heart
+beat time. The four picturesque eight-line stanzas made a practical
+sermon in verse and song from Matt. 25:35, telling how--
+
+ A poor wayfaring man of grief
+ Hath often crossed me on my way,
+ Who sued so humbly for relief
+ That I could never answer nay.
+ I had no power to ask his name,
+ Whither he went or whence he came,
+ Yet there was something in his eye
+ That won my love, I knew not why;
+
+--and in the second and third stanzas the narrator relates how he
+entertained him, and this was the sequel--
+
+ Then in a moment to my view
+ The stranger started from disguise
+ The token in His hand I knew;
+ My Saviour stood before my eyes.
+
+When once that song was started, every tongue took it up, (and it was
+strange if every foot did not count the measure,) and the coldest
+kindled with gospel warmth as the story swept on.[26]
+
+[Footnote 26: Montgomery's poem, "The Stranger," has seven stanzas. The
+full dramatic effect of their connection could only be produced by a set
+piece.]
+
+
+"WHEN FOR ETERNAL WORLDS I STEER."
+
+It was no solitary experience for hearers in a house of prayer where the
+famous Elder Swan held the pulpit, to feel a climactic thrill at the
+sudden breaking out of the eccentric orator with this song in the very
+middle of his sermon--
+
+ When for eternal worlds I steer,
+ And seas are calm and skies are clear,
+ And faith in lively exercise,
+ And distant hills of Canaan rise,
+ My soul for joy then claps her wings,
+ And loud her lovely sonnet sings,
+ "Vain world, adieu!"
+
+ With cheerful hope her eyes explore
+ Each landmark on the distant shore,
+ The trees of life, the pastures green,
+ The golden streets, the crystal stream,
+ Again for joy, she claps her wings,
+ And loud her lovely sonnet sings,
+ "Vain world, adieu!"
+
+Elder Jabez Swan was born in Stonington, Ct., Feb. 23, 1800, and died
+1884. He was a tireless worker as a pastor (long in New London, Ct.,)
+and a still harder toiler in the field as an evangelist and as a helper
+eagerly called for in revivals; and, through all, he was as happy as a
+boy in vacation. He was unlearned in the technics of the schools, but
+always eloquent and armed with ready wit; unpolished, but poetical as a
+Hebrew prophet and as terrible in his treatment of sin. Scoffers and
+"hoodlums" who interrupted him in his meetings never interrupted him but
+once.
+
+[Illustration: James Montgomery]
+
+The more important and canonical hymnals and praise-books had no place
+for "Sonnet," as the bugle-like air to this hymn was called. Rev.
+Jonathan Aldrich, about 1860, harmonized it in his _Sacred Lyre_, but
+this, and the few other old vestry and field manuals that contain it,
+were compiled before it became the fashion to date and authenticate
+hymns and tunes. In this case both are anonymous. Another (and probably
+earlier) tune sung to the same words is credited to "S. Arnold," and
+appears to have been composed about 1790.
+
+
+"I'M A PILGRIM, AND I'M A STRANGER."
+
+This hymn still lives--and is likely to live, at least in collections
+that print revival music. Mrs. Mary Stanley (Bunce) Dana, born in
+Beaufort, S.C., Feb. 15, 1810, wrote it while living in a northern
+state, where her husband died. By the name Dana she is known in
+hymnology, though she afterwards became Mrs. Shindler. The tune
+identified with the hymn, "I'm a Pilgrim," is untraced, save that it is
+said to be an "Italian Air," and that its original title was "Buono
+Notte" (good night).
+
+No other hymn better expresses the outreaching of ardent faith. Its very
+repetitions emphasize and sweeten the vision of longed-for fruition.
+
+ I can tarry, I can tarry but a night,
+ Do not detain me, for I am going.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ There the sunbeams are ever shining,
+ O my longing heart, my longing heart is there.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Of that country to which I'm going,
+ My Redeemer, my Redeemer is the light.
+ There is no sorrow, nor any sighing,
+ Nor any sin there, nor any dying,
+ I'm a pilgrim, etc.
+
+The same devout poetess also wrote (1840) the once popular consolatory
+hymn,--
+
+ O sing to me of heaven
+ When I'm about to die,
+
+--sung to the familiar tune by Rev. E.W. Dunbar; also to a melody
+composed 1854 by Dr. William Miller.
+
+The line was first written--
+
+ When _I am called_ to die,
+
+--in the author's copy. The hymn (occasioned by the death of a pious
+friend) was written Jan. 15, 1840.
+
+Mrs. Dana (Shindler) died in Texas, Feb. 8, 1883.
+
+
+"JOYFULLY, JOYFULLY ONWARD I MOVE."
+
+The maker of this hymn has been confounded with the maker of its
+tune--partly, perhaps, from the fact that the real composer of the tune
+also wrote hymns. The author of the words was the Rev. William Hunter,
+D.D., an Irish-American, and a Methodist minister. He was born near
+Ballymoney, County Antrim, Ire., May, 1811, and was brought to America
+when a child six years old. He received his education in the common
+schools and at Madison College, Hamilton, N.Y., (now Madison
+University), and was successively a pastor, editor and Hebrew professor.
+Besides his work in these different callings, he wrote many helpful
+hymns--in all one hundred and twenty-five--of which "Joyfully,
+Joyfully," dated 1842, is the best. It began originally with the line--
+
+ Friends fondly cherished have passed on before,
+
+--and the line,--
+
+ Home to the land of delight I will go.
+
+--was written,--
+
+ Home to the land of bright spirits I'll go.
+
+Dr. Hunter died in Ohio, 1877.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Rev. Abraham Dow Merrill, the author of the music to this triumphal
+death-song, was born in Salem, N.H., 1796, and died April 29, 1878. He
+also was a Methodist minister, and is still everywhere remembered by the
+denomination to which he belonged in New Hampshire and Vermont. He rode
+over these states mingling in revival scenes many years. His picture
+bears a close resemblance to that of Washington, and he was somewhat
+famous for this resemblance. His work was everywhere blessed, and he
+left an imperishable influence in New England. The tune, linked with Dr.
+Hunter's hymn, formed the favorite melody which has been the dying song
+of many who learned to sing it amid the old revival scenes:
+
+ Death, with thy weapons of war lay me low;
+ Strike, king of terrors; I fear not the blow.
+ Jesus has broken the bars of the tomb,
+ Joyfully, joyfully haste to thy home.
+
+
+"TIS THE OLD SHIP OF ZION, HALLELUJAH!"
+
+This may be found, vocalized with full harmony, in the _American
+Vocalist_. With all the parts together (more or less) it must have made
+a vociferous song-service, but the hymn was oftener sung simply in
+soprano unison; and there was sound enough in the single melody to
+satisfy the most zealous.
+
+ All her passengers will land on the bright eternal shore,
+ O, glory hallelujah!
+ She has landed many thousands, and will land as many more,
+ O, glory hallelujah!
+
+Both hymn and tune have lost their creators' names, and, like many
+another "voice crying in the wilderness," they have left no record of
+their beginning of days.
+
+
+"MY BROTHER, I WISH YOU WELL."
+
+ My brother, I wish you well,
+ My brother, I wish you well;
+ When my Lord calls I trust you will
+ Be mentioned in the Promised Land.
+
+Echoes that remain to us of those fervid and affectionate, as well as
+resolute and vehement, expressions of religious life as sung in the
+early revivals of New England, in parts of the South, and especially in
+the Middle West, are suggestive of spontaneous melody forest-born, and
+as unconscious of scale, clef or tempo as the song of a bird. The above
+"hand-shaking" ditty at the altar gatherings apparently took its tune
+self-made, inspired in its first singer's soul by the feeling of the
+moment--and the strain was so simple that the convert could join in at
+once and chant--
+
+ When my Lord comes I trust _I shall_
+
+--through all the loving rotations of the crude hymn-tune. Such
+song-births of spiritual enthusiasm are beyond enumeration--and it is
+useless to hunt for author or composer. Under the momentum of a
+wrestling hour or a common rapture of experience, counterpoint was
+unthought of, and the same notes for every voice lifted pleading and
+praise in monophonic impromptu. The refrains--
+
+ O how I love Jesus,
+
+ O the Lamb, the Lamb, the loving Lamb,
+
+ I'm going home to die no more,
+
+ Pilgrims we are to Canaan's land,
+
+ O turn ye, O turn ye, for why will you die,
+
+ Come to Jesus, come to Jesus, just now,
+
+--each at the sound of its first syllable brought its own music to every
+singer's tongue, and all--male and female--were sopranos together. This
+habit in singing those rude liturgies of faith and fellowship was
+recognized by the editors of the _Revivalist_, and to a multitude of
+them space was given only for the printed melody, and of this sometimes
+only the three or four initial bars. The tunes were the church's rural
+field-tones that everybody knew.
+
+Culture smiles at this unclassic hymnody of long ago, but its history
+should disarm criticism. To wanderers its quaint music and "pedestrian"
+verse were threshold call and door-way welcome into the church of the
+living God. Even in the flaming days of the Second Advent following, in
+1842-3, they awoke in many hardened hearts the spiritual glow that never
+dies. The delusion passed away, but the grace remained.
+
+The church--and the world--owe a long debt to the old evangelistic
+refrains that rang through the sixty years before the Civil War, some of
+them flavored with tuneful piety of a remoter time. They preached
+righteousness, and won souls that sermons could not reach. They opened
+heaven to thousands who are now rejoicing there.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+SUNDAY-SCHOOL HYMNS.
+
+
+_SHEPHERD OF TENDER YOUTH._
+
+[Greek: Stomion pôlôn adaôn]
+
+We are assured by repeated references in the patristic writings that the
+primitive years of the Christian Church were not only years of suffering
+but years of song. That the despised and often persecuted "Nazarenes,"
+scattered in little colonies throughout the Roman Empire, did not forget
+to mingle tones of praise and rejoicing with their prayers could readily
+be believed from the much-quoted letter of a pagan lawyer, written about
+as long after Jesus' death, as from now back to the death of John Quincy
+Adams--the letter of Pliny the younger to the Emperor Trajan, in which
+he reports the Christians at their meetings singing "hymns to Christ as
+to a god."
+
+Those disciples who spoke Greek seem to have been especially tuneful,
+and their land of poets was doubtless the cradle of Christian hymnody.
+Believers taught their songs to their children, and it is as certain
+that the oldest Sunday-school hymn was written somewhere in the classic
+East as that the Book of Revelation was written on the Isle of Patmos.
+The one above indicated was found in an appendix to the _Tutor_, a book
+composed by Titus Flavius Clemens of Alexandria, a Christian philosopher
+and instructor whose active life began late in the second century. It
+follows a treatise on Jesus as the Great Teacher, and, though his own
+words elsewhere imply a more ancient origin of the poem, it is always
+called "Clement's Hymn." The line quoted above is the first of an
+English version by the late Rev. Henry Martyn Dexter, D.D. It does not
+profess to be a translation, but aims to transfer to our common tongue
+the spirit and leading thoughts of the original.
+
+ Shepherd of tender youth,
+ Guiding in love and truth
+ Through devious ways;
+ Christ, our triumphant King,
+ We come Thy name to sing,
+ Hither our children bring
+ To shout Thy praise.
+
+The last stanza of Dr. Dexter's version represents the sacred song
+spirit of both the earliest and the latest Christian centuries:
+
+ So now, and till we die
+ Sound we Thy praises high,
+ And joyful sing;
+ Infants, and the glad throng
+ Who to Thy church belong
+ Unite to swell the song
+ To Christ our King.
+
+While they give us the sentiment and the religious tone of the old hymn,
+these verses, however, recognize the extreme difficulty of anything like
+verbal fidelity in translating a Greek hymn, and in this instance there
+are metaphors to avoid as being strange to modern taste. The first
+stanza, literally rendered and construed, is as follows:
+
+ Bridle of untaught foals,
+ Wing of unwandering birds,
+ Helm and Girdle of babes,
+ Shepherd of royal lambs!
+ Assemble Thy simple children
+ To praise holily,
+ To hymn guilelessly
+ With innocent mouths
+ Christ, the Guide of children.
+
+Figures like--
+
+ Catching the chaste fishes,
+
+ Heavenly milk, etc.
+
+--are necessarily avoided in making good English of the lines, and the
+profusion of adoring epithets in the ancient poem (no less than
+twenty-one different titles of Christ) would embarrass a modern song.
+
+Dr. Dexter might have chosen an easier metre for his version, if (which
+is improbable) he intended it to be sung, since a tune written to sixes
+and fours takes naturally a more decided lyrical movement and emphasis
+than the hymn reveals in his stanzas, though the second and fifth
+possess much of the hymn quality and would sound well in Giardini's
+"Italian Hymn."
+
+More nearly a translation, and more in the cantabile style, is the
+version of a Scotch Presbyterian minister, Rev. Hamilton M. Macgill,
+D.D., two of whose stanzas are these:
+
+ Thyself, Lord, be the Bridle
+ These wayward wills to stay;
+ Be Thine the Wing unwand'ring,
+ To speed their upward way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Let them with songs adoring
+ Their artless homage bring
+ To Christ the Lord, and crown Him
+ The children's Guide and King.
+
+The Dexter version is set to Monk's slow harmony of "St. Ambrose" in the
+_Plymouth Hymnal_ (Ed. Dr. Lyman Abbott, 1894) without the writer's
+name--which is curious, inasmuch as the hymn was published in the
+_Congregationalist_ in 1849, in _Hedge and Huntington's_ (Unitarian)
+_Hymn-book_ in 1853, in the _Hymnal of the Presbyterian Church_ in 1866,
+and in Dr. Schaff's _Christ in Song_ in 1869.
+
+Clement died about A.D. 220.
+
+
+Rev. Henry Martyn Dexter, D.D., for twenty-three years the editor of the
+_Congregationalist_, was born in Plymouth, Mass., Aug. 13, 1821. He was
+a graduate of Yale (1840) and Andover Divinity School (1844), a
+well-known antiquarian writer and church historian. Died Nov. 13, 1890.
+
+
+"HOW HAPPY IS THE CHILD WHO HEARS."
+
+This hymn was quite commonly heard in Sunday-schools during the
+eighteen-thirties and forties, and, though retained in few modern
+collections, its Sabbath echo lingers in the memory of the living
+generation. It was written by Michael Bruce, born at Kinneswood,
+Kinross-shire, Scotland, March 27, 1746. He was the son of a weaver, but
+obtained a good education, taught school, and studied for the ministry.
+He died, however, while in preparation for his expected work, July 5,
+1767, at the age of twenty-one years, three months and eight days.
+
+Young Bruce wrote hymns, and several poems, but another person wore the
+honors of his work. John Logan, who was his literary executor,
+appropriated the youthful poet's Mss. verses, and the hymn above
+indicated--as well as the beautiful poem, "To the Cuckoo,"[27] still a
+classic in English literature,--bore the name of Logan for more than a
+hundred years. In _Julian's Dictionary of Hymnology_ is told at length
+the story of the inquiry and discussion which finally exposed the long
+fraud upon the fame of the rising genius who sank, like Henry Kirke
+White, in his morning of promise.
+
+[Footnote 27:
+ Hail, beauteous stranger of the wood,
+ Attendant on the Spring;
+ Now Heaven repairs thy rural seat,
+ And woods thy welcome ring.]
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Old "Balerma" was so long the musical mouth-piece of the pious
+boy-schoolmaster's verses that the two became one expression, and one
+could not be named without suggesting the other.
+
+"Balerma" (Palermo) was ages away in style and sound from the later type
+of Sunday-school tunes, resembling rather one of Palestrina's chorals
+than the tripping melodies that took its place; but in its day juvenile
+voices enjoyed it, and it suited very well the grave but winning words.
+
+ How happy is the child who hears
+ Instruction's warning voice,
+ And who celestial Wisdom makes
+ His early, only choice!
+
+ For she hath treasures greater far
+ Than East and West unfold,
+ And her rewards more precious are
+ Than all their stores of gold.
+
+ She guides the young with innocence
+ In pleasure's path to tread,
+ A crown of glory she bestows
+ Upon the hoary head.
+
+Robert Simpson, author of the old tune,[28] was a Scottish composer of
+psalmody; born, about 1722, in Glasgow; and died, in Greenock, June,
+1838.
+
+[Footnote 28: The tune was evidently reduced from the still older
+"Sardius" (or "Autumn")--_Hubert P. Main_.]
+
+
+"O DO NOT BE DISCOURAGED."
+
+Written about 1803, by the Rev. John A. Grenade, born in 1770; died
+1806.
+
+ O do not be discouraged, }
+ For Jesus is your Friend; } _bis_
+ He will give you grace to conquer,
+ And keep you to the end.
+
+ Fight on, ye little soldiers, }
+ The battle you shall win, } _bis_
+ For the Saviour is your Captain,
+ And He has vanquished sin.
+
+ And when the conflict's over, }
+ Before Him you shall stand, } _bis_
+ You shall sing His praise forever
+ In Canaan's happy land.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The hymn was made popular thirty or more years ago in a musical
+arrangement by Hubert P. Main, with a chorus,--
+
+ I'm glad I'm in this army,
+ And I'll battle for the school.
+
+Children took to the little song with a keen relish, and put their whole
+souls--and bodies--into it.
+
+
+"LITTLE TRAVELLERS ZIONWARD"
+
+Belongs to a generation long past. Its writer was an architect by
+occupation, and a man whose piety equalled his industry. He was born in
+London 1791, and his name was James Edmeston. He loved to compose
+religious verses--so well, in fact, that he is said to have prepared a
+new piece every week for Sunday morning devotions in his family and in
+this way accumulated a collection which he published and called
+_Cottager's Hymns_. Besides these he is credited with a hundred
+Sunday-school hymns.
+
+ Little travellers Zionward,
+ Each one entering into rest
+ In the Kingdom of your Lord,
+ In the mansions of the blest,
+
+ There to welcome Jesus waits,
+ Gives the crown His followers win,
+ Lift your heads, ye golden gates,
+ Let the little travellers in.
+
+The original tune is lost--and the hymn is vanishing with it; but the
+felicity of its rhyme and rhythm show how easily it adapted itself to
+music.
+
+
+"I'M BUT A STRANGER HERE."
+
+The simple beauty of this hymn, and the sympathetic sweetness of its
+tune made children love to sing it, and it found its way into a few
+Sunday-school collections, though not composed for such use.
+
+A young Congregational minister. Rev. Thomas Rawson Taylor, wrote it on
+the approach of his early end. He was born at Osset, near Wakefield,
+Yorkshire, Eng., May 9, 1807, and studied in Bradford, where his father
+had taken charge of a large church, and at Manchester Academy and
+Airesdale College. Sensible of a growing ailment that might shorten his
+days, he hastened to the work on which his heart was set, preaching in
+surrounding towns and villages while a student, and finally quitting
+college to be ordained to his sacred profession. He was installed as
+pastor of Howard St. Chapel, Sheffield, July, 1830, when only
+twenty-three. But in less than three years his strength failed, and he
+went back to Bradford, where he occasionally preached for his father,
+when able to do so, during his last days. He died there March 15, 1835.
+Taylor was a brave and lovely Christian--and his hymn is as sweet as his
+life.
+
+ I'm but a stranger here,
+ Heaven is my home;
+ Earth is a desert drear,
+ Heaven is my home.
+
+ Dangers and sorrows stand
+ Round me on every hand;
+ Heaven is my Fatherland--
+ Heaven is my home.
+
+ What though the tempest rage,
+ Heaven is my home;
+ Short is my pilgrimage,
+ Heaven is my home.
+
+ And time's wild, wintry blast
+ Soon will be overpast;
+ I shall reach home at last--
+ Heaven is my home.
+
+In his last attempt to preach, young Taylor uttered the words, "I want
+to die like a soldier, sword in hand." On the evening of the same
+Sabbath day he breathed his last. His words were memorable, and
+Montgomery, who loved and admired the man, made them the text of a poem,
+part of which is the familiar hymn "Servant of God, well done."[29]
+
+[Footnote 29: See page 498]
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Sir Arthur Sullivan put the words into classic expression, but, to
+American ears at least, the tune of "Oak," by Lowell Mason, is the
+hymn's true sister. It was composed in 1854.
+
+
+"DEAR JESUS, EVER AT MY SIDE."
+
+One of Frederick William Faber's sweet and simple lyrics. It voices that
+temper and spirit in the human heart which the Saviour first looks for
+and loves best. None better than Faber could feel and utter the real
+artlessness of Christian love and faith.
+
+ Dear Jesus, ever at my side,
+ How loving must Thou be
+ To leave Thy home in heaven to guard
+ A sinful child like me.
+ Thy beautiful and shining face
+ I see not, tho' so near;
+ The sweetness of Thy soft low voice
+ I am too deaf to hear.
+
+ I cannot feel Thee touch my hand
+ With pressure light and mild,
+ To check me as my mother did
+ When I was but a child;
+ But I have felt Thee in my thoughts
+ Fighting with sin for me,
+ And when my heart loves God I know
+ The sweetness is from Thee.
+
+[Illustration: Fanny J. Crosby (Mrs. Van Alstyne)]
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Audientes" by Sir Arthur Sullivan is a gentle, emotional piece,
+rendering the first quatrain of each stanza in E flat unison, and the
+second in C harmony.
+
+
+"TIS RELIGION THAT CAN GIVE."
+
+This simple rhyme, which has been sung perhaps in every Sunday-school in
+England and the United States, is from a small English book by Mary
+Masters. In the preface to the work, we read, "The author of the
+following poems never read a treatise of rhetoric or an art of poetry,
+nor was ever taught her English grammar. Her education rose no higher
+than the spelling-book or her writing-master,"
+
+ 'Tis religion that can give
+ Sweetest pleasure while we live;
+ 'Tis religion can supply
+ Solid comfort when we die.
+ After death its joys shall be
+ Lasting as eternity.
+
+Save the two sentences about herself, quoted above, there is no
+biography of the writer. That she was good is taken for granted.
+
+The tune-sister of the little hymn is as scant of date or history as
+itself. No. 422 points it out in _The Revivalist_, where the name and
+initial seem to ascribe the authorship to Horace Waters.[30]
+
+[Footnote 30: From his _Sabbath Bell_. Horace Waters, a prominent
+Baptist layman, was born in Jefferson, Lincoln Co., Me., Nov. 1, 1812,
+and died in New York City, April 22, 1893. He was a piano-dealer and
+publisher.]
+
+
+"THERE IS A HAPPY LAND FAR, FAR AWAY"
+
+This child's hymn was written by a lover of children, Mr. Andrew Young,
+head master of Niddrey St. School, Edinburgh, and subsequently English
+instructor at Madras College, E.I. He was born April 23, 1807, and died
+Nov. 30, 1899, and long before the end of the century which his
+life-time so nearly covered his little carol had become one of the
+universal hymns.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+A Hindoo air or natural chanson, that may have been hummed in a pagan
+temple in the hearing of Mr. Young, was the basis of the little melody
+since made familiar to millions of prattling tongues.
+
+Such running tone-rhythms create themselves in the instinct of the ruder
+nations and tribes, and even the South African savages have their
+incantations with the provincial "clicks" that mark the singers' time.
+With an ear for native chirrups and trills, the author of our pretty
+infant-school song succeeded in capturing one, and making a Christian
+tune of it.
+
+The musician, Samuel Sebastian Wesley, sometime in the eighteen-forties,
+tried to substitute another melody for the lines, but "There is a happy
+land" needs its own birth-music.
+
+
+"I HAVE A FATHER IN THE PROMISED LAND."
+
+Another cazonet for the infant class. Instead of a hymn, however, it is
+only a refrain, and--like the ring-chant of the "Hebrew Children," and
+even more simple--owes its only variety to the change of one word. The
+third and fourth lines,--
+
+ My father calls me, I must go
+ To meet Him in the Promised Land,
+
+--take their cue from the first, which may sing,--
+
+ I have a Saviour----
+ I have a mother----
+ I have a brother----
+
+--and so on ad libitum. But the little ones love every sound and
+syllable of the lisping song, for it is plain and pleasing, and when a
+pinafore school grows restless nothing will sooner charm them into quiet
+than to chime its innocent unison.
+
+Both words and tune are nameless and storyless.
+
+
+"I THINK WHEN I READ THAT SWEET STORY"
+
+While riding in a stage-coach, after a visit to a mission school for
+poor children, this hymn came to the mind of Mrs. Jemima Thompson Luke,
+of Islington, England. It speaks its own purpose plainly enough, to
+awaken religious feeling in young hearts, and guide and sanctify the
+natural childlike interest in the sweetest incident of the Saviour's
+life.
+
+ I think when I read that sweet story of old
+ When Jesus was here among men,
+ How He called little children as lambs to His fold,
+ I should like to have been with them then.
+
+ I wish that His hands had been laid on my head,
+ And I had been placed on His knee,
+ And that I might have seen His kind look when He said,
+ "Let the little ones come unto me."
+
+This is not poetry, but it phrases a wish in a child's own way, to be
+melodized and fixed in a child's reverent and sensitive memory.
+
+Mrs. Luke was born at Colebrook Terrace, near London, Aug. 19, 1813. She
+was an accomplished and benevolent lady who did much for the education
+and welfare of the poor. Her hymn--of five stanzas--was first sung in a
+village school at Poundford Park, and was not published until 1841.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+It is interesting, not to say curious, testimony to the vital quality of
+this meek production that so many composers have set it to music, or
+that successive hymn-book editors have kept it, and printed it to so
+many different harmonies. All the chorals that carry it have
+substantially the same movement--for the spondaic accent of the long
+lines is compulsory--but their offerings sing "to one clear harp in
+divers tones."
+
+The appearance of the words in one hymnal with Sir William Davenant's
+air (full scored) to Moore's love-song, "Believe me, if all those
+endearing young charms," now known as the tune of "Fair Harvard," is
+rather startling at first, but the adoption is quite in keeping with the
+policy of Luther and Wesley.
+
+"St. Kevin" written to it forty years ago by John Henry Cornell,
+organist of St. Paul's, New York City, is sweet and sympathetic.
+
+The newest church collection (1905) gives the beautiful air and harmony
+of "Athens" to the hymn, and notes the music as a "Greek Melody."
+
+But the nameless English tune, of uncertain authorship[31] that
+accompanies the words in the smaller old manuals, and which delighted
+Sunday-schools for a generation, is still the favorite in the memory of
+thousands, and may be the very music first written.
+
+[Footnote 31: Harmonized by Hubert P. Main.]
+
+
+"WE SPEAK OF THE REALMS OF THE BLEST."
+
+Mrs. Elizabeth Mills, wife of the Hon. Thomas Mills, M.P., was born at
+Stoke Newington, Eng., 1805. She was one of the brief voices that sing
+one song and die. This hymn was the only note of her minstrelsy, and it
+has outlived her by more than three-quarters of a century. She wrote it
+about three weeks before her decease in Finsbury Place, London, April
+21, 1839, at the age of twenty-four.
+
+ We speak of the land of the blest,
+ A country so bright and so fair,
+ And oft are its glories confest,
+ But what must it be to be there!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ We speak of its freedom from sin,
+ From sorrow, temptation and care,
+ From trials without and within,
+ But what must it be to be there!
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The hymn, like several of the Gospel hymns besides, was carried into the
+Sunday-schools by its music. Mr. Stebbins' popular duet-and-chorus is
+fluent and easily learned and rendered by rote; and while it captures
+the ear and compels the voice of the youngest, it expresses both the
+pathos and the exaltation of the words.
+
+George Coles Stebbins was born in East Carleton, Orleans Co., N.Y., Feb.
+26, 1846. Educated at common school, and an academy in Albany, he turned
+his attention to music and studied in Rochester, Chicago, and Boston. It
+was in Chicago that his musical career began, while chorister at the
+First Baptist Church; and while holding the same position at Clarendon
+St. Church, Boston, (1874-6), he entered on a course of evangelistic
+work with D.L. Moody as gospel singer and composer. He was co-editor
+with Sankey and McGranahan of _Gospel Hymns_.
+
+
+"ONLY REMEMBERED."
+
+This hymn, beginning originally with the lines,--
+
+ Up and away like the dew of the morning,
+ Soaring from earth to its home in the sun,
+
+--has been repeatedly altered since it left Dr. Bonar's hands. Besides
+the change of metaphors, the first personal pronoun singular is changed
+to the plural. There was strength, and a natural vivacity in--
+
+ So let _me_ steal away gently and lovingly,
+ Only remembered for what _I_ have done.
+
+As at present sung the first stanza reads--,
+
+ Fading away like the stars of the morning
+ Losing their light in the glorious sun,
+ Thus would _we_ pass from the earth and its toiling
+ Only remembered for what _we_ have done.
+
+The idea voiced in the refrain is true and beautiful, and the very
+euphony of its words helps to enforce its meaning and make the song
+pleasant and suggestive for young and old. It has passed into popular
+quotation, and become almost a proverb.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The tune (in _Gospel Hymns No. 6_) is Mr. Sankey's.
+
+Ira David Sankey was born in Edinburgh, Lawrence Co., Pa., Aug. 28,
+1840. He united with the Methodist Church at the age of fifteen, and
+became choir leader, Sunday-school superintendent and president of the
+Y.M.C.A., all in his native town. Hearing Philip Phillips sing impressed
+him deeply, when a young man, with the power of a gifted solo vocalist
+over assembled multitudes, but he did not fully realize his own
+capability till Dwight L. Moody heard his remarkable voice and
+convinced him of his divine mission to be a gospel singer.
+
+The success of his revival tours with Mr. Moody in America and England
+is history.
+
+Mr. Sankey has compiled at least five singing books, and has written the
+_Story of the Gospel Hymns_. Until overtaken by blindness, in his later
+years he frequently appeared as a lecturer on sacred music. The
+manuscript of his story of the _Gospel Hymns_ was destroyed by accident,
+but, undismayed by the ruin of his work, and the loss of his eye-sight,
+like Sir Isaac Newton and Thomas Carlyle, he began his task again. With
+the help of an amanuensis the book was restored and, in 1905, given to
+the public. (See page 258.)
+
+
+"SAVIOUR, LIKE A SHEPHERD LEAD US."
+
+Mrs. Dorothy Ann Thrupp, of Paddington Green, London, the author of this
+hymn, was born June 20, 1799, and died, in London, Dec. 14, 1847. Her
+hymns first appeared in Mrs. Herbert Mayo's _Selection of Poetry and
+Hymns for the Use of Infant and Juvenile Schools_, (1838).
+
+ We are Thine, do Thou befriend us,
+ Be the Guardian of our way:
+ Keep Thy flock, from sin defend us,
+ Seek us when we go astray;
+ Blessed Jesus,
+ Hear, O hear us when we pray.
+
+The tune everywhere accepted and loved is W.B. Bradbury's; written in
+1856.
+
+
+"YIELD NOT TO TEMPTATION"
+
+A much used and valued hymn, with a captivating tune and chorus for
+young assemblies. Both words and music are by H.R. Palmer, composed in
+1868.
+
+ Yield not to temptation,
+ For yielding is sin;
+ Each vict'ry will help you
+ Some other to win.
+
+ Fight manfully onward,
+ Dark passions subdue;
+ Look ever to Jesus,
+ He will carry you through.
+
+Horatio Richmond Palmer was born in Sherburne, N.Y., April 26. 1834, of
+a musical family, and sang alto in his father's choir when only nine. He
+studied music unremittingly, and taught music at fifteen. Brought up in
+a Christian home, his religious life began in his youth, and he
+consecrated his art to the good of man and the glory of God.
+
+He became well-known as a composer of sacred music, and as a
+publisher--the sales of his _Song Queen_ amounting to 200,000 copies. As
+a leader of musical conventions and in the Church Choral Union, his
+influence in elevating the standard of song-worship has been widely
+felt.
+
+
+"THERE ARE LONELY HEARTS TO CHERISH."
+
+"While the days are going by" is the refrain of the song, and the line
+by which it is recognized. The hymn or poem was written by George
+Cooper. He was born in New York City, May 14, 1840--a writer of poems
+and magazine articles,--composed "While the days are going by" in 1870.
+
+ There are lonely hearts to cherish
+ While the days are going by.
+ There are weary souls who perish
+ While the days are going by.
+ Up! then, trusty hearts and true,
+ Though the day comes, night comes, too:
+ Oh, the good we all may do
+ While the days are going by!
+
+There are few more practical and always-timely verses than this
+three-stanza poem.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+A very musical tune, with spirited chorus, (in _Gospel Hymns_) bears the
+name of the refrain, and was composed by Mr. Sankey.
+
+A sweet and quieter harmony (uncredited) is mated with the hymn in the
+old _Baptist Praise Book_ (p. 507) and this was long the fixture to the
+words, in both Sunday-school and week-day school song-books.
+
+
+"JESUS THE WATER OF LIFE WILL GIVE."
+
+This Sunday-school lyric is the work of Fanny J. Crosby (Mrs. Van
+Alstyne). Like her other and greater hymn, "Jesus keep me near the
+Cross," (noted on p. 156,) it reveals the habitual attitude of the pious
+author's mind, and the simple earnestness of her own faith as well as
+her desire to win others.
+
+ Jesus the water of life will give
+ Freely, freely, freely;
+ Jesus the water of life will give
+ Freely to those who love Him.
+
+ The Spirit and the Bride say "Come
+ Freely, freely, freely.
+ And he that is thirsty let him come
+ And drink the water of life."
+
+Full chorus,--
+
+ The Fountain of life is flowing,
+ Flowing, freely flowing;
+ The Fountain of life is flowing,
+ Is flowing for you and for me.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The hymn must be sung as it was _made_ to be sung, and the composer
+being many years _en rapport_ with the writer, knew how to put all her
+metrical rhythms into sweet sound. The tune--in Mr. Bradbury's _Fresh
+Laurels_ (1867)--is one of his sympathetic interpretations, and, with
+the duet sung by two of the best singers of the middle class
+Sunday-school girls, is a melodious and impressive piece.
+
+
+"WHEN HE COMETH, WHEN HE COMETH."
+
+The Rev. W.O. Cushing, with the beautiful thought in Malachi 3:17
+singing in his soul, composed this favorite Sunday-school hymn, which
+has gone round the world.
+
+ When He cometh, when He cometh
+ To make up His jewels,
+ All the jewels, precious jewels,
+ His loved and His own.
+ Like the stars of the morning,
+ His bright brow adorning
+ They shall shine in their beauty
+ Bright gems for His crown.
+
+ He will gather, He will gather
+ The gems for His Kingdom,
+ All the pure ones, all the bright ones,
+ His loved and His own.
+ Like the stars, etc.
+
+ Little children, little children
+ Who love their Redeemer,
+ Are the jewels, precious jewels
+ His loved and His own,
+ Like the stars, etc.
+
+Rev. William Orcutt Cushing of Hingham, Mass., born Dec. 31, 1823, wrote
+this little hymn when a young man (1856), probably with no idea of
+achieving a literary performance. But it rings; and even if it is a
+"ringing of changes" on pretty syllables, that is not all. There is a
+thought in it that _sings_. Its glory came to it, however, when it got
+its tune--and he must have had a subconsciousness of the tune he wanted
+when he made the lines for his Sunday-school. He died Oct. 19, 1902.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The composer of the music for the "Jewel Hymn"[32] was George F. Root,
+then living in Reading, Mass.
+
+[Footnote 32: Comparison of the "Jewel Hymn" tune with the old glee of
+"Johnny Schmoker" gives color to the assertion that Mr. Root caught up
+and adapted a popular ditty for his Christian melody--as was so often
+done in Wales, and in the Lutheran and Wesleyan reformations. He
+baptized the comic fugue, and promoted it from the vaudeville stage to
+the Sunday School.]
+
+A minister returning from Europe on an English steamer visited the
+steerage, and after some friendly talk proposed a singing service--it
+something could be started that "everybody" knew--for there were
+hundreds of emigrants there from nearly every part of Europe.
+
+"It will have to be an American tune, then," said the steerage-master;
+"try 'His jewels.'"
+
+The minister struck out at once with the melody and words,--
+
+ When He cometh, when He cometh,
+
+--and scores of the poor half-fare multitude joined voices with him.
+Many probably recognized the music of the old glee, and some had heard
+the sweet air played in the church-steeples at home. Other voices chimed
+in, male and female, catching the air, and sometimes the words--they
+were so easy and so many times repeated--and the volume of song
+increased, till the singing minister stood in the midst of an
+international concert, the most novel that he ever led.
+
+He tried other songs in similar visits during the rest of the voyage
+with some success, but the "Jewel Hymn" was the favorite; and by the
+time port was in sight the whole crowd of emigrants had it by heart.
+
+The steamer landed at Quebec, and when the trains, filled with the new
+arrivals, rolled away, the song was swelling from nearly every car,--
+
+ When He cometh, when He cometh,
+ To make up His jewels.
+
+The composer of the tune--with all the patriotic and sacred
+master-pieces standing to his credit--never reaped a richer triumph than
+he shared with his poet-partner that day, when "Precious Jewels" came
+back to them from over the sea. More than this, there was missionary joy
+for them both that their tuneful work had done something to hallow the
+homes of alien settlers with an American Christian psalm.
+
+George Frederick Root, Doctor of Music, was born in Sheffield, Mass.,
+1820, eldest of a family of eight children, and spent his youth on a
+farm. His genius for music drew him to Boston, where he became a pupil
+of Lowell Mason, and soon advanced so far as to teach music himself and
+lead the choir in Park St. church. Afterwards he went to New York as
+director of music in Dr. Deems's Church of the Strangers. In 1852,
+after a year's absence and study in Europe, he returned to New York,
+and founded the Normal Musical Institute. In 1860, he removed to Chicago
+where he spent the remainder of his life writing and publishing music.
+He died Aug. 6, 1895, in Maine.
+
+In the truly popular sense Dr. Root was the best-known American
+composer; not excepting Stephen C. Foster. Root's "Hazel Dell," "There's
+Music in the Air," and "Rosalie the Prairie Flower" were universal
+tunes--(words by Fanny Crosby,)--as also his music to Henry Washburn's
+"Vacant Chair." The songs in his cantata, "The Haymakers," were sung in
+the shops and factories everywhere, and his war-time music, in such
+melodies as "Shouting the Battle-cry of Freedom" and "Tramp, Tramp,
+Tramp, the Boys are Marching" took the country by storm.
+
+
+"SCATTER SEEDS OF KINDNESS."
+
+This amiable and tuneful poem, suggested by Rom. 12:10, is from the pen
+of Mary Louise Riley (Mrs. Albert Smith) of New York City. She was born
+in Brighton, Monroe Co., N.Y. May 27, 1843.
+
+ Let us gather up the sunbeams
+ Lying all along our path;
+ Let us keep the wheat and roses
+ Casting out the thorns and chaff.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ Then scatter seeds of kindness (_ter_)
+ For our reaping by and by.
+
+Silas Jones Vail, the tune-writer, for this hymn, was born Oct. 1818,
+and died May 20, 1883. For years he worked at the hatter's trade, with
+Beebe on Broadway, N.Y. and afterwards in an establishment of his own.
+His taste and talent led him into musical connections, and from time to
+time, after relinquishing his trade, he was with Horace Waters, Philip
+Phillips, W.B. Bradbury, and F.J. Smith, the piano dealer. He was a
+choir leader and a good composer.
+
+
+"BY COOL SILOAM'S SHADY RILL."
+
+This hymn of Bp. Heber inculcates the same lesson as that in the stanzas
+of Michael Bruce before noted, with added emphasis for the young on the
+briefness of time and opportunity even for them.
+
+ How fair the lily grows,
+
+--is answered by--
+
+ The lily must decay,
+
+--but, owing to the sweetness of the favorite melody, it was never a
+saddening hymn for children.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Though George Kingsley's "Heber" has in some books done service for the
+Bishop's lines, "Siloam," easy-flowing and finely harmonized, is knit
+to the words as no other tune can be. It was composed by Isaac Baker
+Woodbury on shipboard during a storm at sea. A stronger illustration of
+tranquil thought in terrible tumult was never drawn.
+
+"O Galilee, Sweet Galilee," whose history has been given at the end of
+chapter six, was not only often sung in Sunday-schools, but chimed (in
+the cities) on steeple-bells--nor is it by any means forgotten today--on
+the Sabbath and in social singing assemblies. Like "Precious Jewels," it
+has been, in many places, taken up by street boys with a relish, and
+often displaced the play-house ditties in the lips of little newsboys
+and bootblacks during a leisure hour or a happy mood.
+
+
+"I AM SO GLAD"
+
+This lively little melody is still a welcome choice to many a lady
+teacher of fluttering five-year-olds, when both vocal indulgence and
+good gospel are needed for the prattlers in her class. It has been as
+widely sung in Scotland as in America. Mr. Philip P. Bliss, hearing one
+day the words of the familiar chorus--
+
+ O, how I love Jesus,
+
+--suddenly thought to himself,--
+
+"I have sung long enough of my poor love to Christ, and now I will sing
+of His love for me." Under the inspiration of this thought, he wrote--
+
+ I am so glad that our Father in heaven
+ Tells of His love in the book He has given
+ Wonderful things in the Bible I see,
+ This is the dearest--that Jesus loves me.
+
+Both words and music are by Mr. Bliss.
+
+The history of modern Sunday-school hymnody--or much of it--is so nearly
+identified with that of the _Gospel Hymns_ that other selections like
+the last, which might be appropriate here, may be considered in a later
+chapter, where that eventful series of sacred songs receives special
+notice.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+PATRIOTIC HYMNS.
+
+
+The ethnic anthologies growing out of love of country are a mingled
+literature of filial and religious piety, ranging from war-like pćans to
+lyric prayers. They become the cherished inheritance of a nation, and,
+once fixed in the common memory and common heart, the people rarely let
+them die. The "Songs of the Fathers" have perennial breath, and in every
+generation--
+
+ The green woods of their native land
+ Shall whisper in the strain;
+ The voices of their household band
+ Shall sweetly speak again.
+ --_Felicia Hemans_.
+
+
+ULTIMA THULE.
+
+American pride has often gloried in Seneca's "Vision of the West," more
+than eighteen hundred years ago.
+
+ Venient annis
+ Sćcula seris, quibus Oceanus
+ Vincula rerum laxet, et ingens
+ Pateat tellus, Typhisque novos
+ Detegat orbes, nec sit terris
+ Ultima Thule.
+
+ A time will come in future ages far
+ When Ocean will his circling bounds unbar.
+ And, opening vaster to the Pilot's hand,
+ New worlds shall rise, where mightier kingdoms are,
+ Nor Thule longer be the utmost land.
+
+This poetic forecast, of which Washington Irving wrote "the predictions
+of the ancient oracles were rarely so unequivocal," is part of the
+"chorus" at the end of the second act of Seneca's "Medea," written near
+the date of St. Paul's first Epistle to the Thessalonians.
+
+Seneca, the celebrated Roman (Stoic) philosopher, was born at or very
+near the time of our Saviour's birth. There are legends of his
+acquaintance with Paul, at Rome, but though he wrote able and quotable
+treatises _On Consolation_, _On Providence_, _On Calmness of Soul_, and
+_On the Blessed Life_, there is no direct evidence that the savor of
+Christian faith ever qualified his works or his personal principles. He
+was a man of grand ideas and inspirations, but he was a time server and
+a flatterer of the Emperor Nero, who, nevertheless, caused his death
+when he had no further use for him.
+
+His compulsory suicide occurred A.D. 65, the year in which St. Paul is
+supposed to have suffered martyrdom.
+
+
+"THE BREAKING WAVES DASHED HIGH."
+
+Sitting at the tea-table one evening, near a century ago, Mrs. Hemans
+read an old account of the "Landing of the Pilgrims," and was inspired
+to write this poem, which became a favorite in America--like herself,
+and all her other works.
+
+The ballad is inaccurate in details, but presents the spirit of the
+scene with true poet insight. Mr. James T. Fields, the noted Boston
+publisher, visited the lady in her old age, and received an autograph
+copy of the poem, which is seen in Pilgrim Hall, Plymouth, Mass.
+
+ The breaking waves dashed high, on a stern and rock-bound coast,
+ And the woods against a stormy sky, their giant branches tossed,
+ And the heavy night hung dark, the hills and waters o'er,
+ When a band of exiles moored their bark on the wild New England
+ shore.
+
+ Not as the conqueror comes, they, the true-hearted, came;
+ Not with the roll of stirring drums, and the trumpet that sings
+ of fame;
+ Not as the flying come, in silence and in fear,--
+ _They_ shook the depths of the desert's gloom with their hymns of
+ lofty cheer.
+
+ Amidst the storm they sang, and the stars heard, and the sea!
+ And the sounding aisles of the dim woods rang to the anthem of the
+ free!
+ The ocean eagle soared from his nest by the white waves' foam,
+ And the rocking pines of the forest roared,--this was their welcome
+ home!
+
+ There were men with hoary hair amidst that pilgrim band,--
+ Why had _they_ come to wither there, away from their childhood's
+ land?
+ There was woman's fearless eye, lit by her deep love's truth;
+ There was manhood's brow, serenely high, and the fiery heart of
+ youth.
+
+ What sought they thus afar? bright jewels of the mine?
+ The wealth of seas? the spoils of war?--They sought a faith's pure
+ shrine!
+ Ay, call it holy ground, the soil where first they trod;
+ They left unstained what there they found,--freedom to worship God!
+
+Felicia Dorothea Browne (Mrs. Hemans) was born in Liverpool, Eng., 1766,
+and died 1845.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The original tune is not now accessible. It was composed by Mrs. Mary E.
+(Browne) Arkwright, Mrs. Hemans' sister, and published in England about
+1835. But the words have been sung in this country to "Silver St.," a
+choral not entirely forgotten, credited to an English composer, Isaac
+Smith, born, in London, about 1735, and died there in 1800.
+
+
+"WESTWARD THE COURSE OF EMPIRE."
+
+Usually misquoted "Westward the _Star_ of Empire," etc. This poem of
+Bishop Berkeley possesses no lyrical quality but, like the ancient
+Roman's words, partakes of the prophetic spirit, and has always been
+dear to the American heart by reason of the above line. It seems to
+formulate the "manifest destiny" of a great colonizing race that has
+already absorbed a continent, and extended its sway across the Pacific
+ocean.
+
+ Not such as Europe breeds in her decay;
+ Such as she bred when fresh and young,
+ When heavenly flame did animate her clay,
+ By future poets shall be sung.
+
+ Westward the course of empire takes its way;
+ The four first acts already past,
+ The fifth shall close the drama of the day:
+ Time's noblest offspring is the last.
+
+George Berkeley was born March 12, 1684, and educated at Trinity
+College, Dublin. A remarkable student, he became a remarkable man, as
+priest, prelate, and philosopher. High honors awaited him at home, but
+the missionary passion seized him. Inheriting a small fortune, he sailed
+to the West, intending to evangelize and educate the Indians of the
+"Summer Islands," but the ship lost her course, and landed him at
+Newport, R.I., instead of the Bermudas. Here he was warmly welcomed, but
+was disappointed in his plans and hopes of founding a native college by
+the failure of friends in England to forward funds, and after a
+residence of six years he returned home. He died at Cloyne, Ireland,
+1753.
+
+The house which Bishop Berkeley built is still shown (or was until very
+recently) at Newport after one hundred and seventy-eight years. He wrote
+the _Principles of Human Knowledge_, the _Minute Philosopher_, and many
+other works of celebrity in their time, and a scholarship in Yale bears
+his name; but he is best loved in this country for his _Ode to America_.
+
+Pope in his list of great men ascribes--
+
+ To Berkeley every virtue under heaven.
+
+
+"SOUND THE LOUD TIMBREL."
+
+One would scarcely guess that this bravura hymn of victory and "Come, ye
+disconsolate," were written by the same person, but both are by Thomas
+Moore. The song has all the vigor and vivacity of his "Harp That Once
+Through Tara's Halls," without its pathos. The Irish poet chose the song
+of Miriam instead of the song of Deborah doubtless because the sentiment
+and strain of the first of these two great female patriots lent
+themselves more musically to his lyric verse--and his poem is certainly
+martial enough to convey the spirit of both.
+
+ Sound the loud timbrel o'er Egypt's dark sea!
+ Jehovah hath triumphed, His people are free!
+ Sing, for the pride of the tyrant is broken;
+ His chariots, his horsemen, all splendid and brave--
+ How vain was their boasting, the Lord hath but spoken,
+ And chariots and horsemen are sunk in the wave.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Of all the different composers to whose music Moore's "sacred songs"
+were sung--Beethoven, Mozart, Stevenson, and the rest--Avison seems to
+be the only one whose name and tune have clung to the poet's words; and
+we have the man and the melody sent to us, as it were, by the lyrist
+himself. The tune is now rarely sung except at church festivals and
+village entertainments, but the life and clamor of the scene at the Red
+Sea are in it, and it is something more than a mere musical curiosity.
+Its style, however, is antiquated--with its timbrel beat and its
+canorous harmony and "coda fortis"--and modern choirs have little use in
+religious service for the sonata written for viols and horns.
+
+It was Moore's splendid hymn that gave it vogue in England and Ireland,
+and sent it across the sea to find itself in the house of its friends
+with the psalmody of Billings and Swan. Moore was the man of all men to
+take a fancy to it and make language to its string-and-trumpet concert.
+He was a musician himself, and equally able to adapt a tune and to
+create one. As a festival performance, replete with patriotic noise, let
+Avison's old "Sound the Timbrel" live.
+
+Charles Avison was born at Newcastle-on-Tyne, 1710. He studied in Italy,
+wrote works on music, and composed sonatas and concertos for stringed
+orchestras. For many years he was organist of St. Nicholas' Kirk in his
+native town.
+
+The tune to "Sound the Loud Timbrel" is a chorus from one of his longer
+compositions. He died in 1770.
+
+
+"THE HARP THAT ONCE THROUGH TARA'S HALLS."
+
+This is the only one of Moore's patriotic "Irish Melodies" that lives
+wherever sweet tones are loved and poetic feeling finds answering
+hearts. The exquisite sadness of its music and its text is strangely
+captivating, and its untold story beckons from its lines.
+
+Tara was the ancient home of the Irish kings. King Dermid, who had
+apostatized from the faith of St. Patrick and his followers, in A.D.,
+554, violated the Christian right of sanctuary by taking an escaped
+prisoner from the altar of refuge in Temple Ruadan (Tipperary) and
+putting him to death. The patron priest and his clergy marched to Tara
+and solemnly pronounced a curse upon the King. Not long afterwards
+Dermid was assassinated, and superstition shunned the place "as a castle
+under ban." The last human resident of "Tara's Hall" was the King's
+bard, who lingered there, forsaken and ostracized, till he starved to
+death. Years later one daring visitor found his skeleton and his broken
+harp.
+
+Moore utilized this story of tragic pathos as a figure in his song for
+"fallen Erin" lamenting her lost royalty--under a curse that had lasted
+thirteen hundred years.
+
+ The harp that once through Tara's halls
+ The soul of music shed,
+ Now hangs as mute on Tara's walls
+ As if that soul were fled.
+
+ So sleeps the pride of former days,
+ So glory's thrill is o'er,
+ And hearts that once beat high for praise
+ Now feel that pulse no more.
+
+No one can read the words without "thinking" the tune. It is supposed
+that Moore composed them both.
+
+
+THE MARSEILLAISE HYMN.
+
+ Ye sons of France, awake to glory!
+ Hark! hark! what millions bid you rise!
+
+The "Marseillaise Hymn" so long supposed to be the musical as well as
+verbal composition of Roget de Lisle, an army engineer, was proved to be
+only his words set to an air in the "Credo" of a German mass, which was
+the work of one Holzman in 1726. De Lisle was known to be a poet and
+musician as well as a soldier, and, as he is said to have played or sung
+at times in the churches and convents, it is probable that he found and
+copied the manuscript of Holzman's melody. His haste to rush his fiery
+"Hymn" before the public in the fever of the Revolution allowed him no
+time to make his own music, and he adapted the German's notes to his
+words and launched the song in the streets of Strasburg. It was first
+sung in Paris by a band of chanters from Marseilles, and, like the
+trumpets blown around Jericho, it shattered the walls of the French
+monarchy to their foundations.
+
+The "Marseillaise Hymn" is mentioned here for its patriotic birth and
+associations. An attempt to make a religious use of it is recorded in
+the Fourth Chapter.
+
+
+ODE ON SCIENCE.
+
+This is a "patriotic hymn," though a queer production with a queer name,
+considering its contents; and its author was no intimate of the Muses.
+Liberty is supposed to be somehow the corollary of learning, or vice
+versa--whichever the reader thinks.
+
+ The morning sun shines from the East
+ And spreads his glories to the West.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ So Science spreads her lucid ray
+ O'er lands that long in darkness lay;
+ She visits fair Columbia,
+ And sets her sons among the stars.
+ Fair Freedom, her attendant, waits, etc.
+
+
+_THE TUNE_
+
+Was the really notable part of this old-time "Ode," the favorite of
+village assemblies, and the inevitable practice-piece for amateur
+violinists. The author of the crude symphony was Deacon Janaziah (or
+Jazariah) Summer, of Taunton, Mass., who prepared it--music and probably
+words--for the semi-centennial of Simeon Dagget's Academy in 1798. The
+"Ode" was subsequently published in Philadelphia, and also in Albany. It
+was a song of the people, and sang itself through the country for fifty
+or sixty years, always culminating in the swift crescendo chorus and
+repeat--
+
+ The British yoke and Gallic chain
+ Were urged upon our necks in vain;
+ All haughty tyrants we disdain,
+ And shout "Long live America!"
+
+The average patriot did not mind it if "Columbi-_ay_" and "Ameri-_kay_"
+were not exactly classic orthoëpy.
+
+
+"HAIL COLUMBIA."
+
+This was written (1798) by Judge Joseph Hopkinson, born, in
+Philadelphia, 1770, and died there, 1843. He wrote it for a friend in
+that city who was a theatre singer, and wanted a song for Independence
+Day. The music (to which it is still sung) was "The President's March,"
+by a composer named Fyles, near the end of the 18th century.
+
+There is nothing hymn-like in the words, which are largely a
+glorification of Gen. Washington, but the tune, a concerted piece better
+for band than voices, has the drum-and-anvil chorus quality suitable for
+vociferous mass singing--and a zealous Salvation Army corps on field
+nights could even fit a processional song to it with gospel words.
+
+
+OLD "CHESTER."
+
+ Let tyrants shake their iron rod,
+ And slavery clank her galling chains:
+ We'll fear them not; we trust in God;
+ New England's God forever reigns.
+
+Old "Chester," both words and tune the work of William Billings, is
+another of the provincial freedom songs of the Revolutionary period, and
+of the days when the Republic was young. Billings was a zealous patriot,
+and (says a writer in Moore's _Cyclopedia of Music_) "one secret, no
+doubt, of the vast popularity his works obtained was the patriotic ardor
+they breathed. The words above quoted are an example, and 'Chester,' it
+is said, was frequently heard from every fife in the New England ranks.
+The spirit of the Revolution was also manifest in his 'Lamentation over
+Boston,' his 'Retrospect,' his 'Independence,' his 'Columbia,' and many
+other pieces."
+
+William Billings was born, in Boston, Oct. 7, 1746. He was a man of
+little education, but his genius for music spurred him to study the
+tuneful art, and enabled him to learn all that could be learned without
+a master. He began to make tunes and publish them, and his first book,
+the _New England Psalm-singer_ was a curiosity of youthful crudity and
+confidence, but in considerable numbers it was sold, and sung--and
+laughed at. He went on studying and composing, and compiled another
+work, which was so much of an improvement that it got the name of
+_Billings' Best_. A third singing-book followed, and finally a fourth
+entitled the _Psalm Singer's Amusement_, both of which were popular in
+their day. His "Majesty" has tremendous capabilities of sound, and its
+movement is fully up to the requirements of Nahum Tate's verses,--
+
+ And on the wings of mighty winds
+ Came flying all abroad.
+
+William Billings died in 1800, and his remains lie in an unmarked grave
+in the old "Granary" Burying Ground in the city of his birth.
+
+National feeling has taken maturer speech and finer melody, but it was
+these ruder voices that set the pitch. They were sung with native pride
+and affection at fireside vespers and rural feasts with the adopted
+songs of Burns and Moore and Mrs. Hemans, and, like the lays of Scotland
+and Provence, they breathed the flavor of the country air and soil, and
+taught the generation of home-born minstrelsy that gave us the
+Hutchinson family, Ossian E. Dodge, Covert with his "Sword of Bunker
+Hill," and Philip Phillips, the "Singing Pilgrim."
+
+
+THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER.
+
+Near the close of the last war with England, Francis Scott Key, of
+Baltimore, the author of this splendid national hymn, was detained under
+guard on the British flag-ship at the mouth of the Petapsco, where he
+had gone under a flag of truce to procure the release of a captured
+friend, Dr. William Beanes of Upper Marlboro, Md.
+
+The enemy's fleet was preparing to bombard Fort McHenry, and Mr. Key's
+return with his friend was forbidden lest their plans should be
+disclosed. Forced to stay and witness the attack on his country's flag,
+he walked the deck through the whole night of the bombardment until the
+break of day showed the brave standard still flying at full mast over
+the fort. Relieved of his patriotic anxiety, he pencilled the exultant
+lines and chorus of his song on the back of a letter, and, as soon as he
+was released, carried it to the city, where within twenty-four hours it
+was printed on flyers, circulated and sung in the streets to the air of
+"Anacreon in Heaven"--which has been the "Star Spangled Banner" tune
+ever since.
+
+ O say, can you see by the dawn's early light
+ What so proudly we hailed at the twilight's last gleaming?
+ Whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight
+ O'er the ramparts we watched, were so gallantly streaming,
+ And the rockets red glare, the bombs bursting in air
+ Gave proof through the night that the flag was still there:
+ O say, does the star-spangled banner yet wave,
+ O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ O thus be it ever when freemen shall stand,
+ Between their loved homes and the war's desolation;
+ Blessed with victory and peace, may the heaven-rescued land
+ Praise the Power that hath made and preserved us a nation.
+ Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just,
+ And this be our motto, "_In God is our trust_."
+ And the star-spangled banner in triumph shall wave,
+ O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave.
+
+The original star-spangled banner that waved over Fort McHenry in sight
+of the poet when he wrote the famous hymn was made and presented to the
+garrison by a girl of fifteen, afterwards Mrs. Sanderson, and is
+still preserved in the Sanderson family at Baltimore.
+
+[Illustration: Samuel F. Smith]
+
+The additional stanza to the "Star-Spangled Banner"--
+
+ When our land is illumined with Liberty's smile, etc.,
+
+--was composed by Dr. O.W. Holmes, in 1861.
+
+The tune "Anacreon in Heaven" was an old English hunting air composed by
+John Stafford Smith, born at Gloucester, Eng. 1750. He was composer for
+Covent Garden Theater, and conductor of the Academy of Ancient Music.
+Died Sep. 20, 1836. The melody was first used in America to Robert Treat
+Paine's song, "Adams and Liberty." Paine, born 1778--died 1811, was the
+son of Robert Treat Paine, signer of the Declaration of Independence.
+
+
+"STAND! THE GROUND'S YOUR OWN, MY BRAVES."
+
+Sympathetic admiration for the air, "Scots wha hae wi' Wallace bled,"
+(or "Bruce's address," as it was commonly called), with the syllables of
+Robert Burns' silvery verse, lingered long in the land after the wars
+were ended. It spoke in the poem of John Pierpont, who caught its
+pibroch thrill, and built the metre of "Warren's Address at the Battle
+of Bunker Hill" on the model of "Scots wha hae."
+
+ Stand! the ground's your own, my braves;
+ Will ye give it up to slaves?
+ Will ye look for greener graves?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ In the God of battles trust:
+ Die we may, or die we must,
+ But O where can dust to dust
+ Be consigned so well,
+
+ As where Heaven its dews shall shed,
+ On the martyred patriot's bed,
+ And the rocks shall raise their head
+ Of his deeds to tell?
+
+This poem, written about 1823, held a place many years in school-books,
+and was one of the favorite school-boy declamations. Whenever sung on
+patriotic occasions, the music was sure to be "Bruce's Address." That
+typical Scotch tune was played on the Highland bag-pipes long before
+Burns was born, and known as "Hey tuttie taite." "Heard on Fraser's
+hautboy, it used to fill my eyes with tears," Burns himself once wrote.
+
+Rev. John Pierpont was born in Litchfield, Ct., April 6, 1785. He was
+graduated at Yale, 1804, taught school, studied law, engaged in trade,
+and finally took a course in theology and became a Unitarian minister,
+holding the pastorate of Hollis St. Church, Boston, thirty-six years. He
+travelled in the East, and wrote "Airs of Palestine." His poem, "The
+Yankee Boy," has been much quoted. Died in Medford, Mass., Aug. 26,
+1866.
+
+
+"MY COUNTRY, 'TIS OF THEE."
+
+This simple lyric, honored so long with the name "America," and the
+title "Our National Hymn," was written by Samuel Francis Smith, while a
+theological student at Andover, Feb. 2, 1832. He had before him several
+hymn and song tunes which Lowell Mason had received from Germany, and,
+knowing young Smith to be a good linguist, had sent to him for
+translation. One of the songs, of national character, struck Smith as
+adaptable to home use if turned into American words, and he wrote four
+stanzas of his own to fit the tune.
+
+Mason printed them with the music, and under his magical management the
+hymn made its debut on a public occasion in Park St. Church, Boston,
+July 4, 1832. Its very simplicity, with its reverent spirit and
+easy-flowing language, was sure to catch the ear of the multitude and
+grow into familiar use with any suitable music, but it was the foreign
+tune that, under Mason's happy pilotage, winged it for the western world
+and launched it on its long flight.
+
+ My country, 'tis of thee,
+ Sweet land of liberty,
+ Of thee I sing;
+ Land where my fathers died,
+ Land of the pilgrims' pride,
+ From every mountain-side
+ Let freedom ring.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Let music swell the breeze,
+ And ring from all the trees
+ Sweet Freedom's song;
+ Let mortal tongues awake,
+ Let all that breathe partake,
+ Let rocks their silence break,
+ The sound prolong.
+
+ Our fathers' God, to Thee,
+ Author of liberty,
+ To Thee we sing;
+ Long may our land be bright
+ With Freedom's holy light;
+ Protect us by Thy might,
+ Great God, our King.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Pages, and at least two volumes, have been written to prove the origin
+of that cosmopolitan, half-Gregorian descant known here as "America,"
+and in England as "God Save the King." William C. Woodbridge of Boston
+brought it home with him from Germany. The Germans had been singing it
+for years (and are singing it now, more or less) to the words, "Heil Dir
+Im Siegel Kranz," and the Swiss to "Rufst Du mein Vaterland." It was
+sung in Sweden, also, and till 1833 it was in public use in Russia
+commonly enough to give it a national character. Von Weber introduced it
+in his "Jubel" overture, and Beethoven, in 1814, copied it in C Major
+and wrote piano variations on it. It has been ascribed to Henry Purcell
+(1696), to Lulli, a French composer (1670), to Dr. John Bull (1619), and
+to Thomas Ravenscroft and an old Scotch carol as old as 1609. One might
+fancy that the biography of the famous air resembled Melchizedek's.
+
+The truth appears to be that certain bars of music which might easily
+happen to be similar, or even identical, when plain-song was the common
+style, were produced at different times and places, and one man finally
+harmonized the wandering strains into a complete tune. It is now
+generally conceded that the man was Henry Carey, a popular English
+composer and dramatist of the first half of the 18th century, who sang
+the melody as it now is, in 1740, at a public dinner given in honor of
+Admiral Vernon after his capture of Porto Bello (Brazil). This antedates
+any authenticated use of the tune _ipsissima forma_ in England or
+continental Europe.
+
+The American history of it simply is that Woodbridge gave it to Mason
+and Mason gave it to Smith--and Smith gave it "My Country 'Tis of Thee."
+
+
+"BY THE RUDE BRIDGE."
+
+This genuinely American poem, written by Ralph Waldo Emerson and called
+usually the "Concord Hymn," was prepared for the dedication of the
+Battle-monument in Concord, April 19, 1836, and sung there to the tune
+of "Old Hundred." Apparently no change has been made in the original
+except of a single word in the first line.
+
+ By the rude bridge that arched the flood,
+ Their flag to April's breeze unfurled,
+ Here once the embattled farmers stood,
+ And fired the shot heard round the world.
+
+ The foe long since in silence slept;
+ Alike the conqueror silent sleeps;
+ And Time the ruined bridge has swept
+ Down the dark stream which seaward creeps.
+
+ On this green bank, by this soft stream,
+ We set today a votive stone;
+ That memory may their deed redeem,
+ When, like our sires, our sons are gone.
+
+ Spirit, that made those heroes dare
+ To die, and leave their children free,
+ Bid Time and Nature gently spare
+ The shaft we raise to them and Thee.
+
+This does not appear in the hymnals and owns no special tune. Its niche
+of honor is in the temple of anthology, but it will always be called the
+"Concord Hymn"--and the fourth line of its first stanza is a perennial
+quotation.
+
+Ralph Waldo Emerson, LL.D., the renowned American essayist and poet, was
+born in Boston, 1803. He graduated at Harvard in 1821, and was ordained
+to the Unitarian ministry, but turned his attention to literature,
+writing and lecturing on ethical and philosophical themes, and winning
+universal fame by his original and suggestive prose and verse. He died
+April 27, 1882.
+
+
+BATTLE HYMN OF THE REPUBLIC.
+
+After a visit to the Federal camps on the Potomac in 1861, Mrs. Julia
+Ward Howe returned to her lodgings in Washington, fatigued, as she says,
+by her "long, cold drive," and slept soundly. Awakening at early
+daybreak, she began "to twine the long lines of a hymn which promised to
+suit the measure of the 'John Brown' melody."
+
+This hymn was written out after a fashion in the dark, by Mrs. Howe, and
+she then went back to sleep.
+
+ Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord;
+ He is trampling out the vintage where the grapes of wrath are stored;
+ He hath loosed the fateful lightning of His terrible swift sword;
+ His truth is marching on.
+
+ I have seen Him in the watch-fires of a hundred circling camps,
+ They have builded Him an altar in the evening dews and damps;
+ I can read His righteous sentence by the dim and flaring lamps;
+ His day is marching on.
+
+ I have read a fiery gospel writ in burnished rows of steel;
+ "As ye deal with my contemners, so with you my grace shall deal;"
+ Let the Hero, born of woman, crush the serpent with His heel,
+ Since God is marching on.
+
+ He has sounded forth the trumpet that shall never call retreat;
+ He is sifting out the hearts of men before His judgment seat;
+ Oh, be swift, my soul, to answer Him! be jubilant my feet!
+ Our God is marching on.
+
+ In the beauty of the lilies Christ was born across the sea,
+ With a glory in His bosom that transfigures you and me;
+ As He died to make men holy, let us die to make men free.
+ While God is marching on.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The music of the old camp-meeting refrain,--
+
+ Say, brothers will you meet us?
+
+--or,--
+
+ O brother, will you meet me,
+
+(No. 173 in the _Revivalist_,) was written in 1855, by John William
+Steffe, of Richmond, Va., for a fire company, and was afterwards
+arranged by Franklin H. Lummis. The air of the "John Brown Song" was
+caught from this religious melody. The old hymn-tune had the "Glory,
+Hallelujah" coda, cadenced off with, "For ever, ever more."
+
+In 1860-61 the garrison of soldiers at work on the half-dismantled
+defenses of Fort Warren in Boston Harbor, were fain to lighten labor and
+mock fatigue with any species of fun suggested by circumstances or
+accident, and, as for music, they sang everything they could remember or
+make up. John Brown's memory and fate were fresh in the Northern mind,
+and the jollity of the not very reverent army men did not exclude
+frequent allusions to the rash old Harper's Ferry hero.
+
+A wag conjured his spirit into the camp with a witticism as to what he
+was doing, and a comrade retorted,
+
+"Marchin' on, of course."
+
+A third cried, "Pooh, John Brown's underground."
+
+A serio-comic debate added more words, and in the midst of the banter, a
+musical fellow strung a rhythmic sentence and trolled it to the
+Methodist tune. "John Brown's body lies a mould'rin' in the ground" was
+taken up by others who knew the air, the following line was improvised
+almost instantly, and soon, to the accompaniment of pick, shovel and
+crowbar,--
+
+ His soul goes marching on,
+
+--rounded the couplet with full lung power through all the repetitions,
+till the inevitable "glory, glory hallelujah" had the voice of every
+soldier in the fort. The song "took," and the marching chorus of the
+Federal armies of the Civil War was started on its way. Mrs. Howe gave
+it a poem that made its rusticity sublime, and the "Battle Hymn of the
+Republic" began a career that promises to run till battle hymns cease to
+be sung.
+
+Julia Ward was born in New York city, May 27, 1819. In 1843 she became
+the wife of Samuel Gridley Howe, the far-famed philanthropist and
+champion of liberty, and with him edited an anti-slavery paper, the
+_Boston Commonwealth_, until the Civil War closed its mission. During
+the war she was active and influential--and has never ceased to be
+so--in the cause of peace and justice, and in every philanthropic
+movement. Her great hymn first brought her prominently before the
+public, but her many other writings would have made a literary
+reputation. Her four surviving children are all eminent in the
+scientific and literary world.
+
+
+KELLER'S AMERICAN HYMN.
+
+Naturally the title suggests the authorship of the ode, but fate made
+Keller a musician rather than a poet and hymnist, and the honors of the
+fine anthem are divided. At the grand performance which created its
+reputation, the hymn of Dr. O.W. Holmes was substituted for the
+composer's words. This is Keller's first stanza:
+
+ Speed our republic, O Father on high!
+ Lead us in pathways of justice and right,
+ Rulers, as well as the ruled, one and all,
+ Girdle with virtue the armor of might.
+ Hail! three times hail, to our country and flag!
+ Rulers, as well as the ruled, one and all,
+ Girdle with virtue the armor of might;
+ Hail! three times hail, to our country and flag!
+
+"Flag" was the unhappy word at the end of every one of the four stanzas.
+To match a short vowel to an orotund concert note for two beats and a
+"hold" was impossible. When the great Peace Jubilee of 1872, in Boston,
+was projected, Dr. Holmes was applied to, and responded with a lyric
+that gave each stanza the rondeau effect designed by the composer, but
+replaced the flat final with a climax syllable of breadth and music:
+
+ Angel of Peace, thou hast wandered too long!
+ Spread thy white wings to the sunshine of love!
+ Come while our voices are blended in song,
+ Fly to our ark like the storm-beaten dove!
+ Fly to our ark on the wings of the dove,
+ Speed o'er the far-sounding billows of song,
+ Crown'd with thine olive-leaf garland of love,
+ Angel of Peace, thou hast waited too long!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Angels of Bethlehem, answer the strain!
+ Hark! a new birth-song is filling the sky!
+ Loud as the storm-wind that tumbles the main,
+ Bid the full breath of the organ reply,
+ Let the loud tempest of voices reply,
+ Roll its long surge like the earth-shaking main!
+ Swell the vast song till it mounts to the sky!
+ Angels of Bethlehem, echo the strain!
+
+But the glory of the _tune_ was Keller's own.
+
+Soon after the close of the war a prize of $500 had been offered by a
+committee of American gentlemen for the best "national hymn" (meaning
+words and music). Mr. Keller, though a foreigner, was a naturalized
+citizen and patriot and entered the lists as a competitor with the zeal
+of a native and the ambition of an artist. Sometime in 1866 he finished
+and copyrighted the noble anthem that bears his name, and then began the
+struggle to get it before the public and test its merit. To enable him
+to bring it out before the New York Academy of Music, where
+(unfortunately) he determined to make his first trial, his brother
+kindly lent him four hundred dollars (which he had laid by to purchase a
+little home), and he borrowed two hundred more elsewhere.
+
+The performance proved a failure, the total receipts being only
+forty-two dollars, Keller was $500 in debt, and his brother's
+house-money was gone. But he refused to accept his failure as final.
+Boston (where he should have begun) was introduced to his masterpiece at
+every opportunity, and gradually, with the help of the city bands and a
+few public concerts, a decided liking for it was worked up. It was
+entered on the program of the Peace Jubilee and sung by a chorus of ten
+thousand voices. The effect was magnificent. "Keller's American Hymn"
+became a recognized star number in the repertoire of "best" national
+tunes; and now few public occasions where patriotic music is demanded
+omit it in their menu of song.[33]
+
+[Footnote 33: In Butterworth's "_Story of the Tunes_," under the account
+of Keller's grand motet, the following sacred hymn is inserted as "often
+sung to it:"--
+
+ Father Almighty, we bow at thy feet;
+ Humbly thy grace and thy goodness we own.
+ Answer in love when thy children entreat,
+ Hear our thanksgiving ascend to thy throne.
+ Seeking thy blessing, in worship we meet,
+ Trusting our souls on thy mercy alone;
+ Father Almighty, we bow at thy feet.
+
+ Breathe, Holy Spirit, thy comfort divine,
+ Tune every voice to thy music of peace;
+ Hushed in our hearts, with one whisper of thine,
+ Pride and the tumult of passion will cease.
+ Joy of the watchful, who wait for thy sign,
+ Hope of the sinful, who long for release,
+ Breathe, Holy Spirit, thy comfort divine.
+
+ God of salvation, thy glory we sing,
+ Honors to thee in thy temple belong;
+ Welcome the tribute of gladness we bring,
+ Loud-pealing organ and chorus of song.
+ While our high praises, Redeemer and King,
+ Blend with the notes of the angelic throng,
+ God of salvation, thy glory we sing.
+ --_Theron Brown_.]
+
+It is pathetic to know that the composer's one great success brought him
+only a barren renown. The prize committee, on the ground that _none_ of
+the competing pieces reached the high standard of excellence
+contemplated, withheld the $500, and Keller's work received merely the
+compliment of being judged worth presentation. The artist had his
+copyright, but he remained a poor man.
+
+Matthias Keller was born at Ulm, Wurtemberg, March 20, 1813. In his
+youth he was both a musician and a painter. Coming to this country, he
+chose the calling that promised the better and quicker wages, playing in
+bands and theatre orchestras, but never accumulating money. He could
+make fine harmonies as well as play them, but English was not his
+mother-tongue, and though he wrote a hundred and fifty songs, only one
+made him well-known. When fame came to him it did not bring him wealth,
+and in his latter days, crippled by partial paralysis, he went back to
+his early art and earned a living by painting flowers and retouching
+portraits and landscapes. He died in 1875, only three years after his
+Coliseum triumph.
+
+
+"GOD BLESS OUR NATIVE LAND."
+
+This familiar patriotic hymn is notable--though not entirely
+singular--for having two authors. The older singing-books signed the
+name of J.S. Dwight to it, until inquiring correspondence brought out
+the testimony and the joint claim of Dwight and C.T. Brooks, and it
+appeared that both these scholars and writers translated it from the
+German. Later hymnals attach both their names to the hymn.[34]
+
+[Footnote 34: For a full account of this disputed hymn, and the curious
+trick of memory which confused _four_ names in the question of its
+authorship, see Dr. Benson's _Studies of Familiar Hymns_, pp. 179-190]
+
+John Sullivan Dwight, born, in Boston, May 13, 1813, was a virtuoso in
+music, and an enthusiastic student of the art and science of tonal
+harmony. He joined a Harvard musical club known as "The Pierian
+Sodality" while a student at the University, and after his graduation
+became a prolific writer on musical subjects. Six years of his life were
+passed in the "Brook Farm Community." He was best known by his serial
+magazine, Dwight's _Journal of Music_, which was continued from 1852 to
+1881. His death occurred in 1893.
+
+Rev. Charles Timothy Brooks, the translator of Faust, was born, in
+Salem, Mass., June 20, 1813, being only about a month younger than his
+friend Dwight. Was a student at Harvard University and Divinity School
+1829-1835, and was ordained to the Unitarian ministry and settled at
+Newport, R.I. He resigned his charge there (1871) on account of ill
+health, and occupied himself with literary work until his death, Jan.
+14, 1883.
+
+ God bless our native land!
+ Firm may she ever stand
+ Through storm and night!
+ When the wild tempests rave.
+ Ruler of wind and wave,
+ Do Thou our country save
+ By Thy great might!
+
+ For her our prayer shall rise
+ To God above the skies;
+ On Him we wait.
+ Thou who art ever nigh,
+ Guarding with watchful eye;
+ To Thee aloud we cry,
+ God save the State!
+
+The tune of "Dort," by Lowell Mason, has long been the popular melody
+for this hymn. Indeed the two were united by Mason himself. It is
+braver music than "America," and would have carried Dr. Smith's hymn
+nobly, but the borrowed tune, on the whole, better suits "My Country
+'tis of thee,"--and besides, it has the advantage of a middle-register
+harmony easy for a multitude of voices.
+
+
+"THOU, TOO, SAIL ON, O SHIP OF STATE,"
+
+The closing canto of Longfellow's "Launching of the Ship," almost
+deserves a patriotic hymn-tune, though its place and use are commonly
+with school recitations.
+
+
+"GOD OF OUR FATHERS, KNOWN OF OLD."
+
+Rudyard Kipling, in a moment of serious reflection on the flamboyant
+militarism of British sentiment during the South African War, wrote this
+remarkable "Recessional," so strikingly unlike his other war-time poems.
+It is to be hoped he did not suddenly repent his Christian impulse, but
+with the chauvinistic cry around him, "Our Country, right or wrong!" he
+seems to have felt the contrast of his prayer--and flung it into the
+waste-basket. His watchful wife rescued it (the story says) and bravely
+sent it to the London Times. The world owes her a debt. The hymn is not
+only an anthem for Peace Societies, but a tonic for true patriotism.
+When Freedom fights in self-defense, she need not force herself to
+"forget" the Lord of Hosts.
+
+ God of our fathers, known of old,
+ Lord of our far-flung battle-line,
+ Beneath whose awful hand we hold
+ Dominion over palm and pine;
+ Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet,
+ Lest we forget, lest we forget.
+
+ The tumult and the shouting dies,
+ The captains and the kings depart,
+ Still stands Thine ancient sacrifice,
+ An humble and a contrite heart.
+ Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet,
+ Lest we forget, lest we forget.
+
+ Far-called, our navies melt away,
+ On dune and headland sinks the fire;
+ Lo all our pomp of yesterday
+ Is one with Nineveh and Tyre.
+ Judge of the nations, spare us yet,
+ Lest we forget, lest we forget.
+
+ If, drunk with sight of power, we loose
+ Wild tongues that have not Thee in awe,
+ Such boasting as the Gentiles use
+ Or lesser breeds without the law,
+ Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet,
+ Lest we forget, lest we forget.
+
+ For heathen heart that puts her trust,
+ In recking tube and iron shard,
+ All valiant dust that builds on dust
+ And guarding, calls not Thee to guard,
+ For frantic boast and foolish word
+ Thy mercy on thy people, Lord!
+
+Had Kipling cared more for his poem, and kept it longer in hand, he
+might have revised a line or two that would possibly seem commonplace
+to him--and corrected the grammar in the first line of the second
+stanza. But of so fine a composition there is no call for finical
+criticism. The "Recessional" is a product of the poet's holiest mood.
+"The Spirit of the Lord came upon him"--as the old Hebrew phrase is, and
+for the time he was a rapt prophet, with a backward and a forward
+vision. Providence saved the hymn, and it touched and sank into the
+better mind of the nation. It is already learned by heart--and
+sung--wherever English is the common speech, and will be heard in
+numerous translations, with the wish that there were more patriotic
+hymns of the same Christian temper and strength.
+
+Rudyard Kipling was born in Hindostan in 1865. Even with his first
+youthful experiments in the field of literature he was hailed as the
+coming apostle of muscular poetry and prose. For a time he made America
+his home, and it was while here that he faced death through a fearful
+and protracted sickness that brought him very near to God. He has
+visited many countries and described them all, and, though sometimes his
+imagination drives a reckless pen, the Christian world hopes much from a
+man whose genius can make the dullest souls listen.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The music set to Kipling's hymn is Stainer's "Magdalen"--(not his
+"Magdalina," which is a common-metre tune)--and wonderfully fits the
+words and enhances their dignity. It is a grave and earnest melody in D
+flat, with two bars in unison at "Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet,"
+making the utterance of the prayer a deep and powerful finale.
+
+John Stainer, Doctor of Music, born June 6, 1840, was nine years the
+chorister of St. Paul's, London, and afterwards organist to the
+University of Oxford. He is a member of the various musical societies of
+the Kingdom, and a Chevalier of the Legion of Honor. His talent for
+sacred music is rare and versatile, and he seems to have consecrated
+himself as a musician and composer to the service of the church.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Every civilized nation has its patriotic hymns. In fact what makes a
+nation a nation is largely the unifying influences of its common song.
+Even the homeless Hebrew nation is kept together by its patriotic
+Psalms. The ethnic melodies would fill a volume with their story. The
+few presented in this chapter represent their range of quality and
+character--defiant as the Marseillaise, thrilling as "Scots' wha hae,"
+joyful as "The Star-spangled Banner," breezy and bold as the "Ranz de
+Vaches," or sweet as the "Switzers' Song of Home."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+SAILORS' HYMNS.
+
+
+The oldest sailors' hymn is found in the 107th Psalm, vss. 23-30:
+
+ They that go down to the sea in ships,
+ To do business in great waters,
+ These see the works of the Lord,
+ And His wonders in the deep, etc.
+
+Montgomery has made this metrical rendering of these verses:
+
+ They that toil upon the deep,
+ And in vessels light and frail
+ O'er the mighty waters sweep
+ With the billows and the gale,
+
+ Mark what wonders God performs
+ When He speaks, and, unconfined,
+ Rush to battle all His storms
+ In the chariots of the wind.
+
+The hymn is not in the collections, and has no tune. Addison paraphrased
+the succeeding verses of the Psalm in his hymn, "How are thy servants
+blessed O Lord," sung to Hugh Wilson's[35] tune of "Avon":
+
+ When by the dreadful tempest borne
+ High on the broken wave,
+ They know Thou art not slow to hear,
+ Nor impotent to save.
+
+ The storm is laid, the winds retire,
+ Obedient to Thy will;
+ The sea that roars at Thy command,
+ At Thy command is still.
+
+[Footnote 35: Hugh Wilson was a Scotch weaver of Kilmarnock, born 1764;
+died 1824.]
+
+
+"FIERCE WAS THE WILD BILLOW."
+
+([Greek: Zopheras trikumias])
+
+The ancient writer, Anatolius, who composed this hymn has for centuries
+been confounded with "St" Anatolius, patriarch of Constantinople, who
+died A.D. 458. The author of the hymn lived in the seventh century, and
+except that he wrote several hymns, and also poems in praise of the
+martyrs, nothing or next to nothing, is known of him. The "Wild Billow"
+song was the principle seaman's hymn of the early church. It is being
+introduced into modern psalmody, the translation in use ranking among
+the most successful of Dr. John Mason Neale's renderings from the Greek.
+
+ Fierce was the wild billow,
+ Dark was the night;
+ Oars labored heavily,
+ Foam glimmered white;
+ Trembled the mariners;
+ Peril was nigh;
+ Then said the God of God,
+ "Peace! It is I!"
+
+ Ridge of the mountain wave,
+ Lower thy crest!
+ Wall of Euroclydon,
+ Be thou at rest!
+ Sorrow can never be,
+ Darkness must fly,
+ When saith the Light of Light,
+ "Peace! It is I!"
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The desire to represent the antiquity of the hymn and the musical style
+of Its age, and on the other hand the wish to utilize it in the
+tune-manuals for Manners' Homes and Seamen's Bethels, makes a difficulty
+for composers to study--and the task is still open to competition.
+Considering the peculiar tone that sailors' singing instinctively
+takes--and has taken doubtless from time immemorial perhaps the
+plaintive melody of "Neale," by J.H. Cornell, comes as near to a vocal
+success as could be hoped. The music is of middle register and less than
+octave range, natural scale, minor, and the triple time lightens a
+little the dirge-like harmony while the weird sea-song effect is kept. A
+chorus of singing tars must create uncommon emotion, chanting this
+coronach of the storm.
+
+John Henry Cornell was born in New York city, May 8, 1838, and was for
+many years organist at St. Paul's Chapel, Trinity Church. He is the
+author of numerous educational works on the theory and practice of
+music. He composed the above tune in 1872. Died March 1, 1894.
+
+
+"AVE, MARIS STELLA."
+
+One of the titles which the Roman Catholic world applied to the Mother
+of Jesus, in the Middle Ages, was "Stella Maris," "Star of the Sea."
+Columbus, being a Catholic, sang this hymn, or caused it to be sung,
+every evening, it is said, during his perilous voyage to an unknown
+land. The marine epithet by which the Virgin Mary is addressed is
+admirable as a stroke of poetry, and the hymn--of six stanzas--is a
+prayer which, though offered to her as to a divine being, was no doubt
+sincere in the simple sailor hearts of 1492.
+
+The two following quatrains finish the voyagers' petition, and point it
+with a doxology--
+
+ Vitam praesta puram,
+ Iter para tutum,
+ Ut videntes Jesum
+ Semper collaetemur.
+
+ Sit laus Deo Patri,
+ Summo Christo decus,
+ Spiritui Sancto,
+ Tribus honor unus!
+
+A free translation is--
+
+ Guide us safe, unspotted
+ Through life's long endeavor
+ Till with Thee and Jesus
+ We rejoice forever.
+
+ Praise to God the Father,
+ Son and Spirit be;
+ One and equal honor
+ To the Holy Three.
+
+Inasmuch as this ancient hymn did not attain the height of its
+popularity and appear in all the breviaries until the 10th century, its
+assumed age has been doubted, but its reputed author, Venantius
+Fortunatus, Bishop of Poitiers, was born about 531, at Treviso, Italy,
+and died about 609. Though a religious teacher, he was a man of romantic
+and convivial instincts--a strange compound of priest, poet and _beau
+chevalier_. Duffield calls him "the last of the classics and first of
+the troubadours," and states that he was the "first of the Christian
+poets to begin that worship of the Virgin Mary which rose to a passion
+and sank to an idolatry."
+
+
+_TUNES_
+
+To this ancient rogation poem have been composed by Aiblinger (Johann
+Caspar), Bavarian, (1779-1867,) by Proch (Heinrich), Austrian,
+(1809-1878,) by Tadolini (Giovanni), Italian, (1803-1872,) and by many
+others. The "Ave, Maris Stella" is in constant use in the Romish church,
+and its English translation by Caswall is a favorite hymn in the _Lyra
+Catholica_.
+
+
+"AVE, SANCTISSIMA!"
+
+This beautiful hymn is not introduced here in order of time, but because
+it seems akin to the foregoing, and born of its faith and
+traditions--though it sounds rather too fine for a sailor song, on ship
+or shore. Like the other, the tuneful prayer is the voice of
+ultramontane piety accustomed to deify Mary, and is entitled the
+"Evening Song to the Virgin."
+
+ Ave Sanctissima! we lift our souls to Thee
+ Ora pro nobis! 'tis nightfall on the sea.
+ Watch us while shadows lie
+ Far o'er the waters spread;
+ Hear the heart's lonely sigh;
+ Thine, too, hath bled.
+
+ Thou that hast looked on death,
+ Aid us when death is near;
+ Whisper of heaven to faith;
+ Sweet Mother, hear!
+ Ora pro nobis! the wave must rock our sleep;
+ Ora, Mater, ora! Star of the Deep!
+
+This was first written in four separate quatrains, "'Tis nightfall on
+the sea" being part of the first instead of the second line, and "We
+lift our souls," etc., was "Our souls rise to Thee," while the
+apostrophe at the end read, "Thou Star of the Deep."
+
+The fact of the modern origin of the hymn does not make it less probable
+that the earlier one of Fortunatus suggested it. It was written by Mrs.
+Hemans, and occurs between the forty-third and forty-fourth stanzas of
+her long poem, "The Forest Sanctuary."
+
+A Spanish Christian who had embraced the Protestant faith fled to
+America (such is the story of the poem) to escape the cruelties of the
+Inquisition, and took with him his Catholic wife and his child. During
+the voyage the wife pined away and died, a martyr to her conjugal
+loyalty and love. The hymn to the Virgin purports to have been her daily
+evening song at sea, plaintively remembered by the broken-hearted
+husband and father in his forest retreat on the American shore with his
+motherless boy.
+
+The music was composed by a sister of Mrs. Hemans, Mrs. Hughes, who
+probably arranged the lines as they now stand in the tune.
+
+The song, though its words appear in the _Parochial Hymn-book_, seems to
+be in use rather as parlor music than as a part of the liturgy.
+
+
+"JESUS, LOVER OF MY SOUL."
+
+The golden quality of this best-known and loved of Charles Wesley's
+hymns is attested by two indorsements that cannot be impeached; its
+perennial life, and the blessings of millions who needed it.
+
+ Jesus, Lover of my soul
+ Let me to Thy bosom fly,
+ While the billows near me roll,
+ While the tempest still is high.
+
+ Hide me, O my Saviour, hide,
+ Till the storm of life is past,
+ Safe into the haven guide,
+ O receive my soul at last!
+
+Wesley is believed to have written it when a young man, and story and
+legend have been busy with the circumstances of its birth. The most
+poetical account alleges that a dove chased by a hawk dashed through
+his open window into his bosom, and the inspiration to write the line--
+
+ Let me to Thy bosom fly,
+
+--was the genesis of the poem. Another report has it that one day Mr.
+Wesley, being pursued by infuriated persecutors at Killalee, County
+Down, Ireland, took refuge in a milk-house on the homestead of the
+Island Band Farm. When the mob came up the farmer's wife, Mrs. Jane
+Lowrie Moore, offered them refreshments and secretly let out the
+fugitive through a window to the back garden, where he concealed himself
+under a hedge till his enemies went away. When they had gone he had the
+hymn in his mind and partly jotted down. This tale is circumstantial,
+and came through Mrs. Mary E. Hoover, Jane Moore's granddaughter, who
+told it many years ago to her pastor, Dr. William Laurie of Bellefonte,
+Pa. So careful a narrative deserves all the respect due to a family
+tradition. Whether this or still another theory of the incidental cause
+of the wonderful hymn shall have the last word may never be decided nor
+is it important.
+
+There is "antecedent probability," at least, in the statement that
+Wesley wrote the first two stanzas soon after his perilous experience in
+a storm at sea during his return voyage from America to England in 1736.
+In a letter dated Oct. 28 of that year, he describes the storm that
+washed away a large part of the ship's cargo, strained her seams so
+that the hardest pumping could not keep pace with the inrushing water,
+and finally forced the captain to cut the mizzen-mast away. Young Wesley
+was ill and sorely alarmed, but knew, he says, that he "abode under the
+shadow of the Almighty," and finally, "in this dreadful moment," he was
+able to encourage his fellow-passengers who were "in an agony of fear,"
+and to pray with and for them.
+
+It was his awful hazard and bare escape in that tempest that prompted
+the following stanzas--
+
+ O Thou who didst prepare
+ The ocean's caverned cell,
+ And teach the gathering waters there
+ To meet and dwell;
+ Toss'd in our reeling bark
+ Upon this briny sea,
+ Thy wondrous ways, O Lord, we mark,
+ And sing to Thee.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Borne on the dark'ning wave,
+ In measured sweep we go,
+ Nor dread th' unfathomable grave,
+ Which yawns below;
+ For He is nigh who trod
+ Amid the foaming spray,
+ Whose billows own'd th' Incarnate God,
+ And died away.
+
+And naturally the memory of his almost shipwreck on the wild Atlantic
+colored more or less the visions of his muse, and influenced the
+metaphors of his verse for years.
+
+The popularity of "Jesus, Lover of my Soul" not only procured it, at
+home, the name of "England's song of the sea," but carried it with "the
+course of Empire" to the West, where it has reigned with "Rock of Ages,"
+for more than a hundred and fifty years, joint primate of inspired human
+songs.
+
+Compiled incidents of its heavenly service would fill a chapter. A
+venerable minister tells of the supernal comfort that lightened his
+after years of sorrow from the dying bed of his wife who whispered with
+her last breath, "Hide me, O my Saviour, hide."
+
+A childless and widowed father in Washington remembers with a more than
+earthly peace, the wife and mother's last request for Wesley's hymn, and
+her departure to the sound of its music to join the spirit of her babe.
+
+A summer visitor in Philadelphia, waiting on a hot street-corner for a
+car to Fairmount Park, overheard a quavering voice singing the same hymn
+and saw an emaciated hand caressing a little plant in an open
+window--and carried away the picture of a fading life, and the words--
+
+ Other refuge have I none,
+ Hangs my helpless soul on Thee.
+
+On one of the fields of the Civil War, just after a bloody battle, the
+Rev. James Rankin of the United Presbyterian Church bent over a dying
+soldier. Asked if he had any special request to make, the brave fellow
+replied, "Yes, sing 'Jesus, Lover of my Soul.'"
+
+The clergyman belonged to a church that sang only Psalms. But what a
+tribute to that ubiquitous hymn that such a man knew it by heart! A
+moment's hesitation and he recalled the words, and, for the first time
+in his life, sang a sacred song that was not a Psalm. When he reached
+the lines,--
+
+ Safe into the haven guide,
+ O receive my soul at last,
+
+--his hand was in the frozen grip of a dead man, whose face wore "the
+light that never was on sea or land." The minister went away saying to
+himself, "If this hymn is good to die by, it is good to live by."
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Of all the tone-masters who have studied and felt this matchless hymn,
+and given it vocal wings--Marsh, Zundel, Bradbury, Dykes, Mason--none
+has so exquisitely uttered its melting prayer, syllable by syllable, as
+Joseph P. Holbrook in his "Refuge." Unfortunately for congregational
+use, it is a duo and quartet score for select voices; but the four-voice
+portion can be a chorus, and is often so sung. Its form excludes it from
+some hymnals or places it as an optional beside a congregational tune.
+But when rendered by the choir on special occasions its success in
+conveying the feeling and soul of the words is complete. There is a
+prayer in the swell of every semitone and the touch of every accidental,
+and the sweet concord of the duet--soprano with tenor or bass--pleads
+on to the end of the fourth line, where the full harmony reinforces it
+like an organ with every stop in play. The tune is a rill of melody
+ending in a river of song.[36]
+
+[Footnote 36: Holbrook has also an arrangement of Franz Abt's, "When the
+Swallows Homeward Fly" written to "Jesus, Lover of my Soul," but with
+Wesley's words it is far less effective than his original work. "Refuge"
+is not a manufacture but an inspiration.]
+
+For general congregational use, Mason's "Whitman" has wedded itself to
+the hymn perhaps closer than any other. It has revival associations
+reaching back more than sixty years.
+
+
+"WHEN MARSHALLED ON THE NIGHTLY PLAIN."
+
+Perhaps no line in all familiar hymnology more readily suggests the name
+of its author than this. In the galaxy of poets Henry Kirke White was a
+brief luminary whose brilliancy and whose early end have appealed to the
+hearts of three generations. He was born at Nottingham, Eng., in the
+year 1795. His father was a butcher, but the son, disliking the trade,
+was apprenticed to a weaver at the age of fourteen. Two years later he
+entered an attorney's office as copyist and student.
+
+The boy imbibed sceptical notions from some source, and might have
+continued to scoff at religion to the last but for the experience of his
+intimate friend, a youth named Almond, whose life was changed by
+witnessing one day the happy death of a Christian believer. Decided to
+be a Christian himself, it was some time before he mustered courage to
+face White's ridicule and resentment. He simply drew away from him. When
+White demanded the reason he was obliged to tell him that they two must
+henceforth walk different paths.
+
+"Good God!" exclaimed White, "you surely think worse of me than I
+deserve!"
+
+The separation was a severe shock to Henry, and the real grief of it
+sobered his anger to reflection and remorse. The light of a better life
+came to him when his heart melted--and from that time he and Almond were
+fellows in faith as well as friendship.
+
+In his hymn the young poet tells the stormy experience of his soul, and
+the vision that guided him to peace.
+
+ When, marshalled on the nightly plain,
+ The glittering host bestud the sky,
+ One star alone of all the train
+ Can fix the sinner's wandering eye.
+ Hark, hark! to God the chorus breaks,
+ From every host, from every gem,
+ But one alone the Saviour speaks;
+ It is the Star of Bethlehem.
+
+ Once on the raging seas I rode:
+ The storm was loud, the night was dark;
+ The ocean yawned, and rudely blowed
+ The wind that tossed my foundering bark.
+ Deep horror then my vitals froze,
+ Death-struck, I ceased the tide to stem,
+ When suddenly a star arose;
+ It was the Star of Bethlehem.
+
+ It was my guide, my light, my all,
+ It bade my dark forebodings cease;
+ And through the storm and danger's thrall,
+ It led me to the port of peace.
+ Now, safely moored, my perils o'er,
+ I'll sing, first in night's diadem,
+ For ever and for evermore,
+ The Star, the Star of Bethlehem!
+
+Besides this delightful hymn, with its graphic sea-faring metaphors, two
+others, at least, of the same boy-poet hold their place in many of the
+church and chapel collections:
+
+ The Lord our God is clothed with might,
+ The winds obey His will;
+ He speaks, and in his heavenly height
+ The rolling sun stands still.
+
+And--
+
+ Oft in danger, oft in woe,
+ Onward, Christians, onward go.
+
+Henry Kirke White died in the autumn of 1806, when he was scarcely
+twenty years old. His "Ode to Disappointment," and the miscellaneous
+flowers and fragments of his genius, make up a touching volume. The fire
+of a pure, strong spirit burning through a consumptive frame is in them
+all.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"When, marshalled on the mighty plain" has a choral set to it in the
+_Methodist Hymnal_--credited to Thos. Harris, and entitled
+"Crimea"--which divides the three stanzas into six, and breaks the
+continuity of the hymn. Better sing it in its original form--long metre
+double--to the dear old melody of "Bonny Doon." The voices of Scotland,
+England and America are blended in it.
+
+[Illustration: William B. Bradbury]
+
+The origin of this Caledonian air, though sometimes fancifully traced to
+an Irish harper and sometimes to a wandering piper of the Isle of Man,
+is probably lost in antiquity. Burns, however, whose name is linked with
+it, tells this whimsical story of it, though giving no date save "a good
+many years ago,"--(apparently about 1753). A virtuoso, Mr. James Millar,
+he writes, wishing he were able to compose a Scottish tune, was told by
+a musical friend to sit down to his harpsichord and make a rhythm of
+some kind _solely on the black keys_, and he would surely turn out a
+Scotch tune. The musical friend, pleased at the result of his jest,
+caught the string of plaintive sounds made by Millar, and fashioned it
+into "Bonny Doon."
+
+
+"LAND AHEAD!"
+
+The burden of this hymn was suggested by the dying words of John Adams,
+one of the crew of the English ship Bounty who in 1789 mutinied, set the
+captain and officers adrift, and ran the vessel to a tropical island,
+where they burned her. In a few years vice and violence had decimated
+the wicked crew, who had exempted themselves from all divine and human
+restraint, until the last man alive was left with only native women and
+half-breed children for company. His true name was Alexander Smith, but
+he had changed it to John Adams.
+
+The situation forced the lonely Englishman to a sense of solemn
+responsibility, and in bitter remorse, he sought to retrieve his wasted
+life, and spend the rest of his exile in repentance and repentant works.
+He found a Bible in one of the dead seamen's chests, studied it, and
+organized a community on the Christian plan. A new generation grew up
+around him, reverencing him as governor, teacher, preacher and judge,
+and speaking his language--and he was wise enough to exercise his
+authority for the common good, and never abuse it. Pitcairn's Island
+became "the Paradise of the Pacific." It has not yet belied its name.
+Besides its opulence of rural beauty and natural products, its
+inhabitants, now the third generation from the "mutineer missionary,"
+are a civilized community without the vices of civilization. There is no
+licentiousness, no profanity, no Sabbath-breaking, no rum or
+tobacco--and _no sickness_.
+
+John Adams died in 1829--after an island residence of forty years. In
+his extreme age, while he lay waiting for the end, he was asked how he
+felt in view of the final voyage.
+
+"Land ahead!" murmured the old sailor--and his last words were,
+"Rounding the Cape--into the harbor."
+
+That the veteran's death-song should be perpetuated in sacred music is
+not strange.
+
+ Land ahead! its fruits are waving
+ O'er the hills of fadeless green;
+ And the living waters laving
+ Shores where heavenly forms are seen.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ Rocks and storms I'll fear no more,
+ When on that eternal shore;
+ Drop the anchor! furl the sail!
+ I am safe within the veil.
+
+ Onward, bark! the cape I'm rounding;
+ See, the blessed wave their hands;
+ Hear the harps of God resounding
+ From the bright immortal bands.
+
+The authorship of the hymn is credited to Rev. E. Adams--whether or not
+a descendent of the Island Patriarch we have no information. It was
+written about 1869.
+
+The ringing melody that bears the words was composed by John Miller
+Evans, born Nov. 30, 1825; died Jan. 1, 1892. The original air--with a
+simple accompaniment--was harmonized by Hubert P. Main, and published in
+_Winnowed Hymns_ in 1873.
+
+
+"ETERNAL FATHER, STRONG TO SAVE."
+
+This is sung almost universally on English ships. It is said to have
+been one of Sir Evelyn Wood's favorites. The late William Whiting wrote
+it in 1860, and it was incorporated with some alterations in the
+standard English Church collection entitled _Hymns Ancient and Modern_.
+It is a translation from a Latin hymn, a triune litany addressing a
+stanza each to Father, Son and Holy Spirit. The whole four stanzas have
+the same refrain, and the appeal to the Father, who bids--
+
+ --the mighty ocean deep
+ Its own appointed limits keep,
+
+--varies in the appeal to Christ, who--
+
+ --_walked_ upon the foaming deep.
+
+The third and fourth stanzas are the following:
+
+ O Holy Spirit, Who didst brood
+ Upon the waters dark and rude,
+ And bid their angry tumult cease,
+ And give, for wild confusion, peace;
+ Oh, hear us when we cry to Thee
+ For those in peril on the sea.
+
+ O Trinity of love and power,
+ Our brethren shield in danger's hour;
+ From rock and tempest, fire and foe,
+ Protect them wheresoe'er they go:
+ Thus evermore shall rise to Thee
+ Glad hymns of praise from land to sea.
+
+William Whiting was born at Kensington, London, Nov. 1, 1825. He was
+Master of Winchester College Chorister's School Died in 1878.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The choral named "Melita" (in memory of St. Paul's shipwreck) was
+composed by Dr. Dykes in 1861, and its strong and easy chords and
+moderate note range are nobly suited to the devout hymn.
+
+
+"THE OCEAN HATH NO DANGER."
+
+This charming sailors' lyric is the work of the Rev. Godfrey Thring. Its
+probable date is 1862, and it appeared in Morell and Howe's collection
+and in _Hymns Congregational and Others_, published in 1866, which
+contained a number from his pen. Rector Thring was born at Alford,
+Somersetshire, Eng., March 25, 1823, and educated at Shrewsbury School
+and Baliol College, Oxford. In 1858 he succeeded his father as Rector of
+Alford.
+
+He compiled _A Church of England Hymnbook_ in 1880.
+
+ The ocean hath no danger
+ For those whose prayers are made
+ To Him who in a manger
+ A helpless Babe was laid,
+ Who, born to tribulation
+ And every human ill,
+ The Lord of His creation,
+ The wildest waves can still.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Though life itself be waning
+ And waves shall o'er us sweep,
+ The wild winds sad complaining
+ Shall lull us still to sleep,
+ For as a gentle slumber
+ E'en death itself shall prove
+ To those whom Christ doth number
+ As worthy of His love.
+
+The tune "Morlaix," given to the hymn by Dr. Dykes, is simple, but a
+very sweet and appropriate harmony.
+
+
+"FIERCE RAGED THE TEMPEST ON THE DEEP."
+
+This fine lyric, based on the incident in the storm on the Sea of
+Galilee, is the work of the same writer and owes its tune "St. Aelred"
+to the same composer.
+
+The melody has an impressive rallentando of dotted semibreves to the
+refrain, "Peace, be still," after the more rapid notes of the three-line
+stanzas.
+
+ The wild winds hushed, the angry deep
+ Sank like a little child to sleep,
+ The sullen waters ceased to leap.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ So when our life is clouded o'er
+ And storm-winds drift us from the shore
+ Say, lest we sink to rise no more,
+ "Peace! be still."
+
+
+"PULL FOR THE SHORE."
+
+When a shipwrecked crew off a rocky coast were hurrying to the
+long-boat, a sailor begged leave to run back to the ship's forecastle
+and save some of his belongings.
+
+"No sir," shouted the Captain, "she's sinking! There's nothing to do but
+to pull for the shore." Philip P. Bliss caught up the words, and wrought
+them into a hymn and tune.
+
+ Light in the darkness, sailor, day is at hand!
+ See o'er the foaming billows fair Haven's land;
+ Drear was the voyage, sailor, now almost o'er;
+ Safe in the life-boat, sailor, pull for the shore!
+
+ CHORUS.
+ Pull for the shore, sailor, pull for the shore!
+ Heed not the rolling waves, but bend to the oar;
+ Safe in the life-boat, sailor, cling to self no more;
+ Leave the poor old stranded wreck and pull for the shore!
+
+The hymn-tune is a buoyant allegro--solo and chorus--full of hope and
+courage, and both imagery and harmony appeal to the hearts of seamen. It
+is popular, and has long been one of the song numbers in demand at
+religious services both on sea and land.
+
+
+"JESUS, SAVIOUR, PILOT ME."
+
+The Rev. Edward Hopper, D.D. wrote this hymn while pastor of Mariner's
+Church at New York harbor, "The Church of the Sea and Land." He was born
+in 1818, and graduated at Union Theological Seminary in 1843.
+
+ Jesus, Saviour, pilot me
+ Over life's tempestuous sea,
+ Unknown waves before me roll,
+ Hiding rock and treacherous shoal;
+ Chart and compass come from Thee,
+ Jesus, Saviour, pilot me!
+
+Only three stanzas of this rather lengthy hymn are in common use.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Without title except "Savior, pilot me." A simple and pleasing melody
+composed by John Edgar Gould, late of the firm of Gould and Fischer,
+piano dealers, Phila., Pa. He was born in Bangor, Me., April 9, 1822.
+Conductor of music and composer of psalm and hymn tunes and glees, he
+also compiled and published no less than eight books of church,
+Sunday-school, and secular songs. Died in Algiers, Africa, Feb. 13,
+1875.
+
+
+"THROW OUT THE LIFE-LINE."
+
+This is one of the popular refrains that need but a single hearing to
+fix themselves in common memory and insure their own currency and
+_eclat_.
+
+The Rev. E.S. Ufford, well-known as a Baptist preacher, lecturer, and
+evangelist, was witnessing a drill at the life-saving station on Point
+Allerton, Nantasket Beach, when the order to "throw out the life-line"
+and the sight of the apparatus in action, combined with the story of a
+shipwreck on the spot, left an echo in his mind till it took the form of
+a song-sermon. Returning home, he pencilled the words of this rousing
+hymn, and, being himself a singer and player, sat down to his instrument
+to match the lines with a suitable air. It came to him almost as
+spontaneously as the music of "The Ninety and Nine" came to Mr. Sankey.
+In fifteen minutes the hymn-tune was made--so far as the melody went.
+It was published in sheet form in 1888, and afterwards purchased by Mr.
+Sankey, harmonized by Mr. Stebbins, and published in _Winnowed Songs_,
+1890. Included in _Gospel Hymns_, Nov. 6, 1891.
+
+Ever since it has been a favorite with singing seamen, and has done
+active service as one of our most stirring field-songs in revival work.
+
+ Throw out the Life-line across the dark wave,
+ There is a brother whom some one should save;
+ Somebody's brother! oh, who, then, will dare
+ To throw out the Life-line, his peril to share?
+
+ Throw out the Life-line with hand quick and strong!
+ Why do you tarry, why linger so long?
+ See! he is sinking; oh, hasten today--
+ And out with the Life-boat! away, then away!
+
+ CHORUS.
+ Throw out the Life-line!
+ Throw out the Life-line!
+ Some one is drifting away;
+ Throw out the Life-line!
+ Throw out the Life-line!
+ Some one is sinking today.
+
+One evening, in the midst of their hilarity at their card-tables, a
+convivial club in one of the large Pennsylvania cities heard a sweet,
+clear female voice singing this solo hymn, followed by a chime of
+mingled voices in the chorus. A room in the building had been hired for
+religious meetings, and tonight was the first of the series. A strange
+coolness dampened the merriment in the club-room, as the singing went
+on, and the gradual silence became a hush, till finally one member threw
+down his cards and declared, "If what they're saying is right, then
+we're wrong."
+
+Others followed his example, then another, and another.
+
+ There is a brother whom some one should save.
+
+Quietly the revellers left their cards, cigars and half-emptied glasses
+and went home.
+
+Said the ex-member who told the story years after to Mr. Ufford, "'Throw
+Out the Life-line' broke up that club."
+
+He is today one of the responsible editors of a great city daily--and
+his old club-mates are all holding positions of trust.
+
+A Christian man, a prosperous manufacturer in a city of Eastern
+Massachusetts, dates his first religious impressions from hearing this
+hymn when sung in public for the first time, twenty years ago.
+
+Visiting California recently, Mr. Ufford sang his hymn at a
+watch-meeting and told the story of the loss of the Elsie Smith on Cape
+Cod in 1902, exhibiting also the very life-line that had saved sixteen
+lives from the wreck. By chance one of those sixteen was in the
+audience.
+
+An English clergyman who was on duty at Gibraltar when an emigrant ship
+went on the rocks in a storm, tells with what pathetic power and effect
+"Throw out the Life-line" was sung at a special Sunday service for the
+survivors.
+
+At one of Evan Roberts' meetings in Laughor, Wales, one speaker related
+the story of a "vision," when in his room alone, and a Voice that bade
+him pray, and when he knelt but could not pray, commanded him to "Throw
+out the Life-line." He had scarcely uttered these words in his story
+when the whole great congregation sprang to its feet and shouted the
+hymn together like the sound of many waters.
+
+"There is more electricity in that song than in any other I ever heard,"
+Dr. Cuyler said to Mr. Sankey when he heard him sing it. Its electricity
+has carried it nearly round the world.
+
+The Rev. Edward Smith Ufford was born in Newark, N.J., 1851, and
+educated at Stratford Academy (Ct.) and Bates Theological Seminary, Me.
+He held several pastorates in Maine and Massachusetts, but a preference
+for evangelistic work led him to employ his talent for object-teaching
+in illustrated religious lectures through his own and foreign lands,
+singing his hymn and enforcing it with realistic representation. He is
+the author and compiler of several Sunday-school and chapel
+song-manuals, as _Converts' Praise_, _Life-long Songs_, _Wonderful Love_
+and _Gathered Gems_.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+HYMNS OF WALES.
+
+
+In writing this chapter the task of identifying the _tune_, and its
+author, in the case of every hymn, would have required more time and
+labor than, perhaps, the importance of the facts would justify.
+
+Peculiar interest, however, attaches to Welsh hymns, even apart from the
+airs which accompany them, and a general idea of Welsh music may be
+gathered from the tone and metre of the lyrics introduced. More
+particular information would necessitate printing the music itself.
+
+From the days of the Druids, Wales has been a land of song. From the
+later but yet ancient time when the people learned the Christian faith,
+it has had its Christian psalms. The "March of the White Monks of
+Bangor" (7th century) is an epic of bravery and death celebrating the
+advance of Christian martyrs to their bloody fate at the hands of the
+Saxon savages. "Its very rhythm pictures the long procession of
+white-cowled patriots bearing peaceful banners and in faith taking their
+way to Chester to stimulate the valor of their countrymen." And ever
+since the "Battle of the Hallelujahs"--near Chirk on the border, nine
+miles from Wrexham--when the invading Danes were driven from the field
+in fright by the rush of the Cymric army shouting that mighty cry, every
+Christian poet in Wales has had a hallelujah in his verse.
+
+Through the centuries, while chased and hunted by their conquerors among
+the Cambrian hills, but clinging to their independent faith, or even
+when paralyzed into spiritual apathy under tribute to a foreign church,
+the heavenly song still murmured in a few true hearts amidst the vain
+and vicious lays of carnal mirth. It survived even when people and
+priest alike seemed utterly degenerate and godless. The voice of Walter
+Bute (1372) rang true for the religion of Jesus in its purity. Brave
+John Oldcastle, the martyr, (1417) clung to the gospel he learned at
+the foot of the cross. William Wroth, _clergyman_, saved from fiddling
+at a drunken dance by a disaster that turned a house of revelry into a
+house of death, confessed his sins to God and became the "Apostle of
+South Wales." The young vicar, Rhys Pritchard (1579) rose from the
+sunken level of his profession, rescued through an incident less tragic.
+Accustomed to drink himself to inebriety at a public-house--a socially
+winked-at indulgence then--he one day took his pet goat with him, and
+poured liquor down the creature's throat. The refusal of the poor goat
+to go there again forced the reckless priest to reflect on his own ways.
+He forsook the ale-house and became a changed man.
+
+Among his writings--later than this--is found the following plain, blunt
+statement of what continued long to be true of Welsh society, as
+represented in the common use of Sunday time.
+
+ Of all the days throughout the rolling year
+ There's not a day we pass so much amiss,
+ There's not a day wherein we all appear
+ So irreligious, so profaned as this.
+
+ A day for drunkenness, a day for sport,
+ A day to dance, a day to lounge away,
+ A day for riot and excess, too short
+ Amongst the Welshmen is the Sabbath day.
+
+ A day to sit, a day to chat and spend,
+ A day when fighting 'mongst us most prevails,
+ A day to do the errands of the Fiend--
+ Such is the Sabbath in most parts of Wales.
+
+Meantime some who could read the language--and the better educated (like
+the author of the above rhymes) knew English as well as Welsh--had seen
+a rescued copy of _Wycliffs New Testament_, a precious publication
+seized and burnt (like the bones of its translator) by hostile
+ecclesiastics, and suppressed for nearly two hundred years. Walter Bute,
+like Obadiah who hid the hundred prophets, may well be credited with
+such secret salvage out of the general destruction. And there were
+doubtless others equally alert for the same quiet service. We can
+imagine how far the stealthy taste of that priceless book would help to
+strengthen a better religion than the one doled out professionally to
+the multitude by a Civil church; and how it kept the hallelujah alive
+in silent but constant souls; and in how many cases it awoke a
+conscience long hypnotized under corrupt custom, and showed a renegade
+Christian how morally untuned he was.
+
+Daylight came slowly after the morning star, but when the dawn reddened
+it was in welcome to Pritchard's and Penry's gospel song; and sunrise
+hastened at the call of Caradoc, and Powell, and Erbury, and Maurice,
+the holy men who followed them, some with the trumpet of Sinai and some
+with the harp of Calvary.
+
+Cambria was being prepared for its first great revival of religion.
+
+There was no rich portfolio of Christian hymns such as exists to-day,
+but surely there were not wanting pious words to the old chants of
+Bangor and the airs of "Wild Wales." When time brought Howell Harris and
+Daniel Rowland, and the great "Reformation" of the eighteenth century,
+the renowned William Williams, "the Watts of Wales," appeared, and began
+his tuneful work. The province soon became a land of hymns. The candles
+lit and left burning here and there by Penry, Maurice, and the Owens,
+blazed up to beacon-fires through all the twelve counties when Harris,
+at the head of the mighty movement, carried with him the sacred songs of
+Williams, kindling more lights everywhere between the Dee and the
+British Channel.
+
+William Williams of Pantycelyn was born in 1717, at Cefncoed Farm, near
+Llandovery. Three years younger than Harris, (an Oxford graduate,) and
+educated only at a village school and an academy at Llwynllwyd, he was
+the song protagonist of the holy campaign as the other was its champion
+preacher. From first to last Williams wrote nine hundred and sixteen
+hymns, some of which are still heard throughout the church militant, and
+others survive in local use and affection. He died Jan. 11, 1791, at
+Pantycelyn, where he had made his home after his marriage. One of the
+hymns in his _Gloria_, his second publication, may well have been his
+last. It was dear to him above others, and has been dear to devout souls
+in many lands.
+
+ My God, my portion and my love;
+ My all on earth, my all above,
+ My all within the tomb;
+ The treasures of this world below
+ Are but a vain, delusive show,
+ Thy bosom is my home.
+
+It was fitting that Williams should name the first collection of his
+hymns (all in his native Welsh) _The Hallelujah_. Its lyrics are full of
+adoration for the Redeemer, and thanksgivings for His work.
+
+
+"ONWARD RIDE IN TRIUMPH, JESUS,"
+
+_Marchog, Jesu, yn llwyddiannus_,
+
+Has been sung in Wales for a century and a half, and is still a
+favorite.
+
+ Onward ride in triumph, Jesus,
+ Gird thy sword upon thy thigh;
+ Neither earth nor Hell's own vastness
+ Can Thy mighty power defy.
+ In Thy Name such glory dwelleth
+ Every foe withdraws in fear,
+ All the wide creation trembleth
+ Whensoever Thou art near.[37]
+
+The unusual militant strain in this pćan of conquest soon disappears,
+and the gentler aspects of Christ's atoning sacrifice occupy the
+writer's mind and pen.
+
+[Footnote 37: The following shows the style of Rev. Elvet Lewis'
+translation:
+ Blessed Jesus, march victorious
+ With Thy sword fixed at Thy side;
+ Neither death nor hell can hinder
+ The God-Warrior in His ride.]
+
+
+"IN EDEN--O THE MEMORY!"
+
+_Yn Eden cofiaf hyny byth!_
+
+The text, "He was wounded for our transgressions," is amplified in this
+hymn, and the Saviour is shown bruising Himself while bruising the
+serpent.
+
+The first stanza gives the key-note,--
+
+ In Eden--O the memory!
+ What countless gifts were lost to me!
+ My crown, my glory fell;
+ But Calvary's great victory
+ Restored that vanished crown to me;
+ On this my songs shall dwell;
+
+--and the multitude of Williams' succeeding "songs" that chant the same
+theme shows how well he kept his promise. The following hymn in Welsh
+(_Cymmer, Jesu fi fel'r ydwyf_) antedates the advice of Dr. Malan to
+Charlotte Elliott, "Come just as you are"--
+
+ Take me as I am, O Saviour,
+ Better I can never be;
+ Thou alone canst bring me nearer,
+ Self but draws me far from Thee.
+ I can never
+ But within Thy wounds be saved;
+
+--and another (_Mi dafla maich oddi ar fy ngway_) reminds us of Bunyan's
+Pilgrim in sight of the Cross:
+
+ I'll cast my heavy burden down,
+ Remembering Jesus' pains;
+ Guilt high as towering mountain tops
+ Here turns to joyful strains.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ He stretched His pure white hands abroad,
+ A crown of thorns He wore,
+ That so the vilest sinner might
+ Be cleansed forevermore;
+
+Williams was called "The Sweet Singer of Wales" and "The Watts of Wales"
+because he was the chief poet and hymn-writer of his time, but the lady
+he married, Miss Mary Francis, was _literally_ a singer, with a voice so
+full and melodious that the people to whom he preached during his
+itineraries, which she sometimes shared with him, were often more moved
+by her sweet hymnody than by his exhortations. On one occasion the good
+man, accompanied by his wife, put up at Bridgend Tavern in Llangefin,
+Anglesea, and a mischievous crowd, wishing to plague the "Methodists,"
+planned to make night hideous in the house with a boisterous
+merry-making. The fiddler, followed by a gang of roughs, pushed his way
+to the parlor, and mockingly asked the two guests if they would "have a
+tune."
+
+"Yes," replied Williams, falling in with his banter, "anything you like,
+my lad; 'Nancy Jig' or anything else."
+
+And at a sign from her husband, as soon as the fellow began the jig,
+Mrs. Williams struck in with one of the poet-minister's well-known Welsh
+hymns in the same metre,--
+
+ _Gwaed Dy groes sy'n c' odi fyny_
+
+ Calvary's blood the weak exalteth
+ More than conquerors to be,[38]
+
+--and followed the player note for note, singing the sacred words in her
+sweet, clear voice, till he stopped ashamed, and took himself off with
+all his gang.
+
+[Footnote 38: A less literal but more hymn-like translation is:
+ Jesu's blood can raise the feeble
+ As a conqueror to stand;
+ Jesu's blood is all-prevailing
+ O'er the mighty of the land:
+ Let the breezes
+ Blow from Calvary on me.
+
+Says the author of _Sweet Singers of Wales_, "This refrain has been the
+password of many powerful revivals."]
+
+Another hymn--
+
+ _O' Llefara! addfwyn Jesu_,
+
+ Speak, O speak, thou gentle Jesus,
+
+--recalls the well-known verse of Newton, "How sweet the name of Jesus
+sounds." Like many of Williams' hymns, it was prompted by occasion. Some
+converts suffered for lack of a "clear experience" and complained to
+him. They were like the disciples in the ship, "It was dark, and Jesus
+had not yet come unto them." The poet-preacher immediately made this
+hymn-prayer for all souls similarly tried. Edward Griffiths translates
+it thus:
+
+ Speak, I pray Thee, gentle Jesus,
+ O how passing sweet Thy words,
+ Breathing o'er my troubled spirit,
+ Peace which never earth affords,
+ All the world's distracting voices,
+ All th' enticing tones of ill,
+ At Thy accents, mild, melodious
+ Are subdued, and all is still.
+
+ Tell me Thou art mine, O Saviour
+ Grant me an assurance clear,
+ Banish all my dark misgivings,
+ Still my doubting, calm my fear.
+
+Besides his Welsh hymns, published in the first and in the second and
+larger editions of his _Hallelujah_, and in two or three other
+collections, William Williams wrote and published two books of English
+hymns,[39] the _Hosanna_ (1759) and the _Gloria_ (1772). He fills so
+large a space in the hymnology and religious history of Wales that he
+will necessarily reappear in other pages of this chapter.
+
+[Footnote 39: Possibly they were written in Welsh, and translated into
+English by his friend and neighbor, Peter Williams.]
+
+From the days of the early religious awakenings under the 16th century
+preachers, and after the ecclesiastical dynasty of Rome had been
+replaced by that of the Church of England, there were periods when the
+independent conscience of a few pious Welshmen rose against religious
+formalism, and the credal constraints of "established" teaching--and
+suffered for it. Burning heretics at the stake had ceased to be a church
+practice before the 1740's, but Howell Harris, Daniel Rowlands, and the
+rest of the "Methodist Fathers," with their followers, were not only
+ostracised by society and haled before magistrates to be fined for
+preaching, and sometimes imprisoned, but they were chased and beaten by
+mobs, ducked in ponds and rivers, and pelted with mud and garbage when
+they tried to speak or sing. But they kept on talking and singing.
+Harris (who had joined the army in 1760) owned a commission, and once he
+saved himself from the fury of a mob while preaching--with cloak over
+his ordinary dress--by lifting his cape and showing the star on his
+breast. No one dared molest an officer of His Britannic Majesty. But all
+were not able to use St. Paul's expedient in critical moments.[40]
+
+[Footnote 40: Acts 22:25.]
+
+William Williams often found immunity in his hymns, for like Luther--and
+like Charles Wesley among the Cornwall sea-robbers--he caught up the
+popular glees and ballad-refrains of the street and market and his wife
+sang their music to his words. It is true many of these old Welsh airs
+were minors, like "Elvy" and "Babel" (a significant name in English) and
+would not be classed as "glees" in any other country--always excepting
+Scotland--but they had the _swing_, and their mode and style were catchy
+to a Welsh multitude. In fact many of these uncopyrighted bits of
+musical vernacular were appropriated by the hymnbook makers, and
+christened with such titles as "Pembroke," "Arabia," "Brymgfryd,"
+"Cwyfan," "Thydian," and the two mentioned above.
+
+It was the time when Whitefield and the Wesleys were sweeping the
+kingdom with their conquering eloquence, and Howell Harris (their
+fellow-student at Oxford) had sided with the conservative wing of the
+Gospel Reformation workers, and become a "Whitfield Methodist." The
+Welsh Methodists, _ad exemplum_, marched with this Calvinistic
+branch--as they do today. Each division had its Christian bard. Charles
+Wesley could put regenerating power into sweet, poetic hymns, and
+William Williams' lyrical preaching made the Bible a travelling pulpit.
+The great "Beibl Peter Williams" with its commentaries in Welsh, since
+so long reverenced and cherished in provincial families, was not
+published till 1770, and for many the printed Word was far to seek.[41]
+But the gospel minstrels carried the Word with them. Some of the long
+hymns contained nearly a whole body of divinity.
+
+[Footnote 41: As an incident contributory to the formation of the
+British and Foreign Bible Society, the story has been often repeated of
+the little girl who wept when she missed her Catechism appointment, and
+told Thomas Charles of Bala that the bad weather was the cause of it,
+for she had to walk seven miles to find a Bible every time she prepared
+her lessons. See page 380.]
+
+The Welsh learn their hymns by heart, as they do the Bible--a habit
+inherited from those old days of scarcity, when memory served pious
+people instead of print--so that a Welsh prayer-meeting is never
+embarrassed by a lack of books. An anecdote illustrates this
+characteristic readiness. In February, 1797, when Napoleon's name was a
+terror to England, the French landed some troops near Fishguard,
+Pembrokeshire. Mounted heralds spread the news through Wales, and in the
+village of Rhydybont, Cardiganshire, the fright nearly broke up a
+religious meeting; but one brave woman, Nancy Jones, stopped a panic by
+singing this stanza of one of Thomas Williams' hymns,--
+
+ _Diuw os wyt am ddylenu'r bya_
+
+ If Thou wouldst end the world, O Lord,
+ Accomplish first Thy promised Word,
+ And gather home with one accord
+ From every part Thine own,
+ Send out Thy Word from pole to pole,
+ And with Thy blood make thousands whole,
+ And, _after that come down_.
+
+Nancy Jones would have been a useful member of the "Singing Sisters"
+band, so efficient a century or more afterwards.
+
+The _tunes_ of the Reformation under the "Methodist Fathers" continued
+far down the century to be the country airs of the nation, and
+reverberations of the great spiritual movement were heard in their rude
+music in the mountain-born revival led by Jack Edward Watkin in 1779 and
+in the local awakenings of 1791 and 1817. Later in the 19th century new
+hymns, and many of the old, found new tunes, made for their sake or
+imported from England and America.
+
+The sanctified gift of song helped to make 1829 a year of jubilee in
+South Wales, nor was the same aid wanting during the plague in 1831,
+when the famous Presbyterian preacher, John Elias,[42] won nearly a
+whole county to Christ.
+
+[Footnote 42: Those who read his biography will call him the "Seraphic
+John Elias."
+
+His name was John Jones when he was admitted a member of the presbytery.
+What followed is a commentary on the embarrassing frequency of a common
+name, nowhere realized so universally as it is in Wales.
+
+"What is his father's name?" asked the moderator when John Jones was
+announced.
+
+"Elias Jones," was the answer.
+
+"Then call the young man John Elias," said the speaker, "otherwise we
+shall by and by have nobody but John Joneses."
+
+And "John Elias" it remained.]
+
+An accession of temperance hymns in Wales followed the spread of the
+"Washingtonian" movement on the other side of the Atlantic in 1840, and
+began a moral reformation in the county of Merioneth that resulted in a
+spiritual one, and added to the churches several thousand converts,
+scarcely any of whom fell away.
+
+The revival of 1851-2 was a local one, but was believed by many to have
+been inspired by a celestial antiphony. The remarkable sounds were
+either a miracle or a psychic wonder born of the intense imagination of
+a sensitive race. A few pious people in a small village of
+Montgomeryshire had been making special prayer for an outpouring of the
+spirit, but after a week of meetings with no sign of the result hoped
+for, they were returning to their homes, discouraged, when they heard
+strains of sweet music in the sky. They stopped in amazement, but the
+beautiful singing went on--voices as of a choir invisible, indistinct
+but melodious, in the air far above the roof of the chapel they had just
+left. Next day, when the astonished worshippers told the story, numbers
+in the district said they had heard the same sounds. Some had gone out
+at eleven o'clock to listen, and thought that angels must be singing.
+Whatever the music meant, the good brethren's and sisters' little
+meetings became crowded very soon after, and the longed-for out-pouring
+came mightily upon the neighborhood. Hundreds from all parts flocked to
+the churches, all ages joining in the prayers and hymns and testimonies,
+and a harvest of glad believers followed a series of meetings "led by
+the Holy Ghost."
+
+The sounds in the sky were never explained; but the belief that God sent
+His angels to sing an answer to the anxious prayers of those pious
+brethren and sisters did no one any harm.
+
+Whether this event in Montgomeryshire was a preparation for what took
+place six or seven years later is a suggestive question only, but when
+the wave of spiritual power from the great American revival of 1857-8
+reached England, its first messenger to Wales, Rev. H.R. Jones, a
+Wesleyan, had only to drop the spark that "lit a prairie fire." The
+reformation, chiefly under the leadership of Mr. Jones and Rev. David
+Morgan, a Presbyterian, with their singing bands, was general and
+lasting, hundreds of still robust and active Christians today dating
+their new birth from the Pentecost of 1859 and its ingathering of eighty
+thousand souls.
+
+A favorite hymn of that revival was the penitential cry,--
+
+ _O'th flaem, O Dduw! 'r wy'n dyfod_,
+
+--in the seven-six metre so much loved in Wales.
+
+ Unto Thy presence coming,
+ O God, far off I stand:
+ "A sinner" is my title,
+ No other I demand.
+
+ For mercy I am seeking
+ For mercy still shall cry;
+ Deny me not Thy mercy;
+ O grant it or I die!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ I heard of old that Jesus,
+ Who still abides the same,
+ To publicans gave welcome,
+ And sinners deep in shame.
+
+ Oh God! receive me with them,
+ Me also welcome in,
+ And pardon my transgression,
+ Forgetting all my sin.
+
+The author of the hymn was Thomas Williams of Glamorganshire, born 1761;
+died 1844. He published a volume of hymns, _Waters of Bethesda_ in 1823.
+
+The Welsh minor tune of "Clwyd" may appropriately have been the music to
+express the contrite prayer of the words. The living composer, John
+Jones, has several tunes in the Welsh revival manual of melodies, _Ail
+Attodiad_.
+
+The unparalleled religious movement of 1904-5 was a praying and singing
+revival. The apostle and spiritual prompter of that unbroken campaign of
+Christian victories--so far as any single human agency counted--was Evan
+Roberts, of Laughor, a humble young worker in the mines, who had prayed
+thirteen years for a mighty descent of the heavenly blessing on his
+country and for a clear indication of his own mission. His convictions
+naturally led him to the ministry, and he went to Newcastle Emlyn to
+study. Evangelical work had been done by two societies, made up of
+earnest Christians, and known as the "Forward Movement" and the
+"Simultaneous Mission." Beginnings of a special season of interest as a
+result of their efforts, appeared in the young people's prayer meetings
+in February, 1904, at New Quay, Cardiganshire. The interest increased,
+and when branch-work was organized a young praying and singing band
+visited Newcastle Emlyn in the course of one of their tours, and held a
+rally meeting. Evan Roberts went to the meeting and found his own
+mission. He left his studies and consecrated himself, soul and body, to
+revival work. In every spiritual and mental quality he was surpassingly
+well-equipped. To the quick sensibility of his poetic nature he added
+the inspiration of a seer and the zeal of a devotee. Like Moses, Elijah,
+and Paul in Arabian solitudes, and John in the Dead Sea wilds, he had
+prepared himself in silence and alone with God; and though, on occasion,
+he could use effectively his gift of words, he stood distinct in a land
+of matchless pulpit orators as "the silent leader." Without preaching he
+dominated the mood of his meetings, and without dictating he could
+change the trend of a service and shape the next song or prayer on the
+intuition of a moment. In fact, judged by its results, it was God
+Himself who directed the revival, only He endowed His minister with the
+power of divination to watch its progress and take the stumbling-blocks
+out of the way. By a kind of hallowed psychomancy, that humble man would
+detect a discordant presence, and hush the voices of a congregation till
+the stubborn soul felt God in the stillness, and penitently
+surrendered.
+
+Many tones of the great awakening of 1859 heard again in 1904-5,--the
+harvest season without a precedent, when men, women and children
+numbering ten per cent of the whole population of a province were
+gathered into the membership of the church of Christ. But there were
+tones a century older heard in the devotions of that harvest-home in
+Wales. A New England Christian would have felt at home, with the tuneful
+assemblies at Laughor, Trencynon, Bangor, Bethesda, Wrexham, Cardiff, or
+Liverpool, singing Lowell Mason's "Meribah" or the clarion melody of
+Edson's "Lenox" to Wesley's--
+
+ Blow ye the trumpet, blow,
+ The gladly solemn sound;
+
+--or to his other well-known--
+
+ Arise my soul, arise,
+ Shake off thy guilty fears,
+ The bleeding Sacrifice
+ In thy behalf appear.
+
+In short, the flood tide of 1904 and 1905 brought in very little new
+music and very few new hymns. "Aberystwyth" and "Tanymarian," the minor
+harmonies of Joseph Party and Stephens; E.M. Price's "St. Garmon;" R.M.
+Pritchard's, "Hyfrydol," and a few others, were choral favorites, but
+their composers were all dead, and the congregations loved the still
+older singers who had found familiar welcome at their altars and
+firesides. The most cherished and oftenest chosen hymns were those of
+William Williams and Ann Griffiths, of Charles Wesley, of Isaac
+Watts--indeed the very tongues of fire that appeared at Jerusalem took
+on the Cymric speech, and sang the burning lyrics of the poet-saints.
+And in their revival joy Calvinistic Wales sang the New Testament with
+more of its Johannic than of its Pauline texts. The covenant of
+peace--Christ and His Cross--is the theme of all their hymns.
+
+
+"HERE BEHOLD THE TENT OF MEETING."
+
+_Dyma Babell y cyfarfod._
+
+This hymn, written by Ann Griffiths, is entitled "Love Eternal," and
+praises the Divine plan to satisfy the Law and at the same time save the
+sinner. The first stanza gives an idea of the thought:
+
+ Here behold the tent of meeting,
+ In the blood a peace with heaven,
+ Refuge from the blood-avengers,
+ For the sick a Healer given.
+ Here the sinner nestles safely
+ At the very Throne divine,
+ And Heaven's righteous law, all holy.
+ Still on him shall smile and shine.
+
+
+"HOW SWEET THE COVENANT TO REMEMBER."
+
+_Bydd melus gofio y cyfammod._
+
+This, entitled "Mysteries of Grace," is also from the pen of Ann
+Griffiths. It has the literalness noticeable in much of the Welsh
+religious poetry, and there is a note of pietism in it. The two last
+stanzas are these:
+
+ He is the great Propitiation
+ Who with the thieves that anguish bare;
+ He nerved the arms of His tormentors
+ To drive the nails that fixed Him there.
+ While He discharged the sinner's ransom,
+ And made the Law in honor be,
+ Righteousness shone undimmed, resplendent,
+ And me the Covenant set free.
+
+ My soul, behold Him laid so lowly,
+ Of peace the Fount, of Kings the Head,
+ The vast creation in Him moving
+ And He low-lying with the dead!
+ The Life and portion of lost sinners,
+ The marvel of heaven's seraphim,
+ To sea and land the God Incarnate
+ The choir of heaven cries, "Unto Him!"
+
+Ann Griffiths' earliest hymn will be called her sweetest. Fortunately,
+too, it is more poetically translated. It was before the vivid
+consciousness and intensity of her religious experience had given her
+spiritual writings a more involved and mystical expression.
+
+ My soul, behold the fitness
+ Of this great Son of God,
+ Trust Him for life eternal
+ And cast on Him thy load,
+ A man--touched with the pity
+ Of every human woe,
+ A God--to claim the kingdom
+ And vanquish every foe.
+
+This stanza, the last of her little poem on the "Eternal Fitness of
+Jesus," came to her when, returning from an exciting service, filled
+with thoughts of her unworthiness and of the glorious beauty of her
+Saviour, she had turned down a sheltered lane to pray alone. There on
+her knees in communion with God her soul felt the spirit of the sacred
+song. By the time she reached home she had formed it into words.
+
+The first and second stanzas, written later, are these:
+
+ Great Author of salvation
+ And providence for man,
+ Thou rulest earth and heaven
+ With Thy far-reaching plan.
+ Today or on the morrow,
+ Whatever woe betide,
+ Grant us Thy strong assistance,
+ Within Thy hand to hide.
+
+ What though the winds be angry,
+ What though the waves be high
+ While wisdom is the Ruler,
+ The Lord of earth and sky?
+ What though the flood of evil
+ Rise stormily and dark?
+ No soul can sink within it;
+ God is Himself the ark.
+
+Mrs. Ann Griffiths, of Dolwar Fechan, Montgomeryshire, was born in 1776,
+and died in 1805. "She remains," says Dr. Parry, her fellow-countryman,
+"a romantic figure in the religious history of Wales. Her hymns leave
+upon the reader an undefinable impression both of sublimity and
+mysticism. Her brief life-history is most worthy of study both from a
+literary and a religious point of view."
+
+[Illustration: Isaac Watts, D.D.]
+
+A suggestive chapter of her short earthly career is compressed in a
+sentence by the author of "Sweet Singers of Wales:"
+
+"She had a Christian life of eight years and a married life of ten
+months."
+
+She died at the age of twenty-nine. In 1904, near the centennial of her
+death, amid the echoes of her own hymns, and the rising waves of the
+great Refreshing over her native land, the people of Dolwar Fechan
+dedicated the new "Ann Griffiths Memorial Chapel" to her name and to the
+glory of God.
+
+Although the Welsh were not slow to adopt the revival tones of other
+lands, it was the native, and what might be called the national, lyrics
+of that emotional race that were sung with the richest unction and
+_hwyl_ (as the Cymric word is) during the recent reformation, and that
+evinced the strongest hold on the common heart. Needless to say that
+with them was the world-famous song of William Williams,--
+
+ Guide me, O Thou Great Jehovah;
+
+ _Arglwydd ar wain truy'r anialoch_;
+
+--and that of Dr. Heber Evans,--
+
+ Keep me very near to Jesus,
+ Though beneath His Cross it be,
+ In this world of evil-doing
+ 'Tis the Cross that cleanseth me;
+
+--and also that native hymn of expectation, high and sweet, whose writer
+we have been unable to identify--
+
+ The glory is coming! God said it on high,
+ When light in the evening will break from the sky;
+ The North and South and the East and the West,
+ With joy of salvation and peace will be bless'd.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ O summer of holiness, hasten along!
+ The purpose of glory is constant and strong;
+ The winter will vanish, the clouds pass away;
+ O South wind of Heaven, breath softly today!
+
+Of the almost countless hymns that voiced the spirit of the great
+revival, the nine following are selected because they are
+representative, and all favorites--and because there is no room for a
+larger number. The first line of each is given in the original Welsh:
+
+
+"DWY ADEN COLOMEN PE CAWN."
+
+ O had I the wings of a dove
+ How soon would I wander away
+ To gaze from Mount Nebo I'd love
+ On realms that are fairer than day.
+ My vision, not clouded nor dim,
+ Beyond the dark river should run;
+ I'd sing, with my thoughts upon Him,
+ The sinless, the crucified one.
+
+This is another of Thomas Williams' hymns. One of the tunes suitable to
+its feeling and its measure was "Edom," by Thomas Evans. It was much
+sung in 1859, as well as in 1904.
+
+
+"CAELBOD YN FORSEC DAN YR IAN."
+
+ Early to bear the yoke excels
+ By far the joy in sin that dwells;
+ The paths of wisdom still are found
+ In peace and solace to abound.
+
+ The young who serve Him here below
+ The wrath to come shall never know;
+ Of such in heaven are pearls that shine
+ Unnumbered in the crown divine.
+
+Written for children and youth by Rev. Thomas Jones, of Denbigh, born
+1756; died 1820,--a Calvinistic Methodist preacher, author of a
+biography of Thomas Charles of Bala, and various theological works.
+
+
+"DYMA GARIAD FEL Y MOROEDD, TOSTURIASTHAN FEL Y LLI."
+
+ Love unfathomed as the ocean
+ Mercies boundless as the wave!
+ Lo the King of Life, the guiltless,
+ Dies my guilty soul to save;
+ Who can choose but think upon it,
+ Who can choose but praise and sing?
+ Here is love, while heaven endureth,
+ Nought can to oblivion bring.
+
+This is called "The great Welsh love-song." It was written by Rev.
+William Rees, D.D., eminent as a preacher, poet, politician and
+essayist. One of the greatest names of nineteenth century Wales. He died
+in 1883.
+
+The tune, "Cwynfan Prydian," sung to this hymn is one of the old Welsh
+minors that would sound almost weird to our ears, but Welsh voices can
+sing with strange sweetness the Saviour's passion on which Christian
+hearts of that nation love so well to dwell, and the shadow of it, with
+His love shining through, creates the paradox of a joyful lament in many
+of their chorals. We cannot imitate it.
+
+
+"RHYFEDDODAU DYDD YR ADGYFODIDD."
+
+ Unnumbered are the marvels
+ The Last Great Day shall see,
+ With earth's poor storm-tossed children
+ From tribulation free,
+ All in their shining raiment
+ Transfigured, bright and brave,
+ Like to their Lord ascending
+ In triumph from the grave.
+
+The author of this Easter hymn is unknown.
+
+The _most_ popular Welsh hymns would be named variously by different
+witnesses according to the breadth and length of their observation. Two
+of them, as a Wrexham music publisher testifies, are certainly the
+following; "Heaven and Home," and "Lo, a Saviour for the Fallen." The
+first of these was sung in the late revival with "stormy rapture."
+
+
+"O FRYNAU CAERSALEM CEIR GIVELED."
+
+ The heights of fair Salem ascended,
+ Each wilderness path we shall see;
+ Now thoughts of each difficult journey
+ A sweet meditation shall be.
+ On death, on the grave and its terrors
+ And storms we shall gaze from above
+ And freed from all cares we shall revel (?)
+ In transports of heavenly love.
+
+According to the mood of the meeting this was pitched in three sharps to
+Evelyn Evans' tune of "Eirinwg" or with equal Welsh enthusiasm in the C
+minor of old "Darby."
+
+The author of the hymn was the Rev. David Charles, of Carmarthen, born
+1762; died 1834. He was a heavenly-minded man who loved to dwell on the
+divine and eternal wonders of redemption. A volume of his sermons was
+spoken of as "Apples of gold in pictures of silver," and the beautiful
+piety of all his writings made them strings of pearls. He understood
+English as well as Welsh, and enjoyed the hymns not only of William and
+Thomas Williams but of Watts, Wesley, Cowper, and Newton.[43]
+
+[Footnote 43: The following verses were written by him in English:
+ Spirit of grace and love divine,
+ Help me to sing that Christ is mine;
+ And while the theme my tongue employs
+ Fill Thou my soul with living joys.
+
+ Jesus is mine--surpassing thought!
+ Well may I set the world at nought;
+ Jesus is mine, O can it be
+ That Jesus lived and died for me?]
+
+
+"DYMA GEIDWAD I R COLLEDIG."
+
+ Lo! a Saviour for the fallen,
+ Healer of the sick and sore,
+ One whose love the vilest sinners
+ Seeks to pardon and restore.
+ Praise Him, praise Him
+ Who has loved us evermore!
+
+The little now known of the Rev. Morgan Rhys, author of this hymn, is
+that he was a schoolmaster and preacher, and that he was a contemporary
+and friend of William Williams. Several of his hymns remain in use of
+which the oftenest sung is one cited above, and "_O agor fy llygaid i
+weled_:"
+
+ I open my eyes to this vision,
+ The deeps of Thy purpose and word;
+ The law of Thy lips is to thousands
+ Of gold and of silver preferred;
+ When earth is consumed, and its treasure,
+ God's words will unchanging remain,
+ And to know the God-man is my Saviour
+ Is life everlasting to gain.
+
+"Lo! a Saviour for the Fallen" finds an appropriate voice in W.M.
+Robert's tune of "Nesta," and also, like many others of the same
+measure, in the much-used minors "Llanietyn," "Catharine," and "Bryn
+Calfaria."
+
+
+"O SANCTEIDDIA F'ENAID ARGLWYDD."
+
+ Sanctify, O Lord, my spirit,
+ Every power and passion sway,
+ Bid Thy holy law within me
+ Dwell, my wearied soul to stay;
+ Let me never
+ Rove beyond Thy narrow way.
+
+This one more hymn of William Williams is from his "Song of a Cleansed
+Heart" and is amply provided with tunes, popular ones like "Tyddyn
+Llwyn," "Y Delyn Aur," or "Capel-Y-Ddol" lending their deep minors to
+its lines with a thrilling effect realized, perhaps, only in the land of
+Taliessin and the Druids.
+
+The singular history and inspiring cause of one old Welsh hymn which
+after various mutilations and vicissitudes survives as the key-note of a
+valued song of trust, seems to illustrate the Providence that will never
+let a good thing be lost. It is related of the Rev. David Williams, of
+Llandilo, an obscure but not entirely forgotten preacher, that he had a
+termagant wife, and one stormy night, when her bickerings became
+intolerable, he went out in the rain and standing by the river composed
+in his mind these lines of tender faith:
+
+ In the waves and mighty waters
+ No one will support my head
+ But my Saviour, my Beloved,
+ Who was stricken in my stead.
+ In the cold and mortal river
+ He would hold my head above;
+ I shall through the waves go singing
+ For one look of Him I love.
+
+Apparently the sentiment and substantially the expression of this humble
+hymn became the burden of more than one Christian lay. Altered and
+blended with a modern gospel hymn, it was sung at the crowded meetings
+of 1904 to Robert Lowry's air of "Jesus Only," and often rendered very
+impressively as a solo by a sweet female voice.
+
+ In the deep and mighty waters
+ There is none to hold my head
+ But my loving Bridegroom, Jesus,
+ Who upon the cross hath bled.
+
+ If I've Jesus, Jesus only
+ Then my sky will have a gem
+ He's the Sun of brightest splendor,
+ He's the Star of Bethlehem.
+
+ He's the Friend in Death's dark river,
+ He will lift me o'er the waves,
+ I will sing in the deep waters
+ If I only see His face.
+ If I've Jesus, Jesus only, etc.
+
+A few of the revival tunes have living authors and are of recent date;
+and the minor harmony of "Ebenezer" (marked "Ton Y Botel"), which was
+copied in this country by the New York _Examiner_, with its hymn, is
+apparently a contemporary piece. It was first sung at Bethany Chapel,
+Cardiff, Jan, 8, 1905, the hymn bearing the name of Rev. W.E. Winks.
+
+ Send Thy Spirit, I beseech Thee,
+ Gracious Lord, send while I pray;
+ Send the Comforter to teach me,
+ Guide me, help me in Thy way.
+ Sinful, wretched, I have wandered
+ Far from Thee in darkest night,
+ Precious time and talents squandered,
+ Lead, O lead me into light.
+
+ Thou hast heard me; light is breaking--
+ Light I never saw before.
+ Now, my soul with joy awaking,
+ Gropes in fearful gloom no more:
+ O the bliss! my soul, declare it;
+ Say what God hath done for thee;
+ Tell it out, let others share it--
+ Christ's salvation, full and free.
+
+One cannot help noticing the fondness of the Welsh for the 7-6, 8-7, and
+8-7-4 metres. These are favorites since they lend themselves so
+naturally to the rhythms of their national music--though their newest
+hymnals by no means exclude exotic lyrics and melodies. Even "O mother
+dear, Jerusalem," one of the echoes of Bernard of Cluny's great hymn, is
+cherished in their tongue (_O, Frynian Caerselem_) among the favorites
+of song. Old "Truro" by Dr. Burney appears among their tunes, Mason's
+"Ernan," "Lowell" and "Shawmut," I.B. Woodbury's "Nearer Home" (to Phebe
+Cary's hymn), and even George Hews' gently-flowing "Holley." Most of
+these tunes retain their own hymns, but in Welsh translation. To find
+our Daniel Read's old "Windham" there is no surprise. The minor mode--a
+song-instinct of the Welsh, if not of the whole Celtic family of
+nations, is their rural inheritance. It is in the wind of their
+mountains and the semitones of their streams; and their nature can make
+it a gladness as the Anglo-Saxon cannot. So far from being a gloomy
+people, their capacity for joy in spiritual life is phenomenal. In
+psalmody their emotions mount on wings, and they find ecstacy in solemn
+sounds.
+
+"A temporary excitement" is the verdict of skepticism on the Reformation
+wave that for a twelvemonth swept over Wales with its ringing symphonies
+of hymn and tune. But such excitements are the May-blossom seasons of
+God's eternal husbandry. They pass because human vigor cannot last at
+flood-tide, but in spiritual economy they will always have their place,
+"If the blossoms had not come and gone there would be no fruit."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+FIELD HYMNS.
+
+
+Hymns of the hortatory and persuasive tone are sufficiently numerous to
+make an "embarrassment of riches" in a compiler's hands. Not a few songs
+of invitation and awakening are either quoted or mentioned in the
+chapter on "Old Revival Hymns," and many appear among those in the last
+chapter, (on the _Hymns of Wales_;) but the _working_ songs of Christian
+hymnology deserve a special space _as_ such.
+
+
+"COME HITHER ALL YE WEARY SOULS,"
+
+Sung to "Federal St.," is one of the older soul-winning calls from the
+great hymn-treasury of Dr. Watts; and another note of the same sacred
+bard,--
+
+ Life is the time to serve the Lord,
+
+--is always coupled with the venerable tune of "Wells."[44] Aged
+Christians are still remembered who were wont to repeat or sing with
+quavering voices the second stanza,--
+
+ The living know that they must die,
+ But all the dead forgotten lie;
+ Their memory and their sense are gone,
+ Alike unknowing and unknown.
+
+And likewise from the fourth stanza,--
+
+ There are no acts of pardon passed
+ In the cold grave to which we haste.
+
+[Footnote 44: One of Israel Holroyd's tunes. He was born in England,
+about 1690, and was both a composer and publisher of psalmody. His chief
+collection is dated 1746.]
+
+
+"AND WILL THE JUDGE DESCEND?"
+
+Is one of Doddridge's monitory hymns, once sung to J.C. Woodman's tune
+of "State St." with the voice of both the Old and New Testaments in the
+last verse:
+
+ Ye sinners, seek His grace
+ Whose wrath ye cannot bear;
+ Fly to the shelter of His Cross,
+ And find Salvation there.
+
+Jonathan Call Woodman was born in Newburyport, Mass., July 12, 1813,
+and was a teacher, composer, and compiler. Was organist of St. George's
+Chapel, in Flushing, L.I., and in 1858 published _The Musical Casket_.
+Died January, 1894. He wrote "State St." for William B. Bradbury, in
+August, 1844.
+
+
+"HASTEN SINNER, TO BE WISE"
+
+Is one of the few unforgotten hymns of Thomas Scott, every second line
+repeating the solemn caution,--
+
+ Stay not for tomorrow's sun,
+
+--and every line enforcing its exhortation with a new word, "To be
+wise," "to implore," "to return," and "to be blest" were natural
+cumulatives that summoned and wooed the sinner careless and astray. It
+is a finished piece of work, but it owes its longevity less to its
+structural form than to its spirit. For generations it has been sung to
+"Pleyel's Hymn."
+
+The Rev. Thomas Scott (not Rev. Thomas Scott the Commentator) was born
+in Norwich, Eng., in 1705, and died at Hupton, in Norfolk, 1776. He was
+a Dissenting minister, pastor for twenty-one years--until disabled by
+feeble health--at Lowestoft in Suffolk. He was the author of--
+
+ Angels roll the rock away.
+
+
+"MUST JESUS BEAR THE CROSS ALONE?"
+
+This emotional and appealing hymn still holds its own in the hearts of
+millions, though probably two hundred years old. It was written by a
+clergyman of the Church of England, the Rev. Thomas Shepherd, Vicar of
+Tilbrook, born in 1665. Joining the Nonconformists in 1694, he settled
+first in Castle Hill, Nottingham, and afterward in Bocking, Essex, where
+he remained until his death, January, 1739. He published a selection of
+his sermons, and _Penitential Cries_, a book of sacred lyrics, some of
+which still appear in collections.
+
+The startling question in the above line is answered with emphasis in
+the third of the stanza,--
+
+ _No_! There's a cross for every one,
+ And there's a cross for _me_,
+
+--and this is followed by the song of resolve and triumph,--
+
+ The consecrated cross I'll bear,
+ Till death shall set me free.
+ And then go home my crown to wear,
+ For there's a crown for me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ O precious cross! O glorious crown!
+ O Resurrection Day!
+ Ye angels from the stars flash down
+ And bear my soul away!
+
+The hymn is a personal New Testament. No one who analyzes it and feels
+its Christian vitality will wonder why it has lived so long.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+For half a century George N. Allen, composer of "Maitland," the music
+inseparable from the hymn, was credited with the authorship of the words
+also, but his vocal aid to the heart-stirring poem earned him sufficient
+praise. The tune did not meet the hymn till the latter was so old that
+the real author was mostly forgotten, for Allen wrote the music in 1849;
+but if the fine stanzas needed any renewing it was his tune that made
+them new. Since it was published nobody has wanted another.
+
+George Nelson Allen was born in Mansfield, Mass., Sept. 7, 1812, and
+lived at Oberlin, O. It was there that he composed "Maitland," and
+compiled the _Social and Sabbath Hymn-book_--besides songs for the
+_Western Bell_, published by Oliver Ditson and Co. He died in
+Cincinnati, Dec. 9, 1877.
+
+
+"AWAKE MY SOUL, STRETCH EVERY NERVE!"
+
+This most popular of Dr. Doddridge's hymns is also the richest one of
+all in lyrical and spiritual life. It is a stadium song that sounds the
+starting-note for every young Christian at the outset of his career, and
+the slogan for every faint Christian on the way.
+
+ A _heavenly_ race demands thy zeal,
+ And an immortal crown.
+
+Like the "Coronation" hymn, it transports the devout singer till he
+feels only the momentum of the words and forgets whether it is common or
+hallelujah metre that carries him along.
+
+ A cloud of witnesses around
+ Hold thee in full survey;
+ Forget the steps already trod,
+ And onward urge thy way!
+
+ 'Tis God's all-animating voice
+ That calls thee from on high,
+ 'Tis His own hand presents the prize
+ To thine aspiring eye.
+
+In all persuasive hymnology there is no more kindling lyric that this.
+As a field-hymn it is indispensable.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Whenever and by whomsoever the brave processional known as "Christmas"
+was picked from among the great Handel's Songs and mated with
+Doddridge's lines, the act gave both hymn and tune new reason to endure,
+and all posterity rejoices in the blend. Old "Christmas" was originally
+one of the melodies in the great Composer's Opera of "Ciroe" (Cyrus)
+1738. It was written to Latin words (_Non vi piacque_) and afterwards
+adapted to an English versification of Job 29:15, "I was eyes to the
+blind."
+
+Handel himself became blind at the age of sixty eight (1753).
+
+
+"THERE IS A GREEN HILL FAR AWAY."
+
+Written in 1848 by Miss Cecil Frances Humphreys, an Irish lady, daughter
+of Major John Humphreys of Dublin. She was born in that city in 1823.
+Her best known name is Mrs. Cecil Frances Alexander, her husband being
+the Rt. Rev. William Alexander, Bishop of Derry. Among her works are
+_Hymns for Little Children_, _Narrative Hymns_, _Hymns Descriptive and
+Devotional_, and _Moral Songs_. Died 1895.
+
+"There is a _green_ hill" is poetic license, but the hymn is sweet and
+sympathetic, and almost childlike in its simplicity.
+
+ There is a green hill far away
+ Without the city wall,
+ Where our dear Lord was crucified
+ Who died to save us all.
+
+ We may not know, we cannot tell
+ What pains He had to bear;
+ But we believe it was for us
+ He hung and suffered there.
+
+[Illustration: George Frederick Handel]
+
+
+_THE TUNES._
+
+There is no room here to describe them all. Airs and chorals by Berthold
+Tours, Pinsuti, John Henry Cornell, Richard Storrs Willis, George C.
+Stebbins and Hubert P. Main have been adapted to the words--one or two
+evidently composed for them. It is a hymn that attracts
+tune-makers--literally so commonplace and yet so quiet and tender, with
+such a theme and such natural melody of line--but most of the scores
+indicated are choir music rather than congregational. Mr. Stebbins'
+composition comes nearest to being the favorite, if one judges by the
+extent and frequency of its use. It can be either partly or wholly
+choral; and the third stanza makes the refrain--
+
+ O dearly, dearly has He loved
+ And we must love Him too,
+ And trust in His redeeming blood,
+ And try His works to do.
+
+
+"REJOICE AND BE GLAD!"
+
+This musical shout of joy, written by Dr. Horatius Bonar, scarcely needs
+a new song helper, as did Bishop Heber's famous hymn--not because it is
+better than Heber's but because It was wedded at once to a tune worthy
+of it.
+
+ Rejoice and be glad! for our King is on high;
+ He pleadeth for us on His throne in the sky.
+ Rejoice and be glad! for He cometh again;
+ He cometh in glory, the Lamb that was slain
+ Hallelujah! Amen.
+
+The hymn was composed in 1874.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The author of the "English Melody" (as ascribed in _Gospel Hymns_) is
+said to have been John Jenkins Husband, born in Plymouth, Eng., about
+1760. He was clerk at Surrey Chapel and composed several anthems. Came
+to the United States In 1809. Settled in Philadelphia, where he taught
+music and was clerk of St. Paul's P.E. Church. Died there in 1825.
+
+His tune, exactly suited to the hymn, is a true Christian pćan. It has
+few equals as a rouser to a sluggish prayer-meeting--whether sung to
+Bonar's words or those of Rev. William Paton Mackay (1866)--
+
+ We praise Thee, O God, for the Son of Thy love,
+
+--with the refrain of similar spirit in both hymns--
+
+ Hallelujah! Thine the glory, Hallelujah! Amen,
+ Hallelujah! Thine the glory; revive us again;
+
+--or,--
+
+ Sound His praises! tell the story of Him who was slain!
+ Sound His praises! tell with gladness, "He liveth again."
+
+Husband's tune is supposed to have been written very early in the last
+century. Another tune composed by him near the same date to the words--
+
+ "We are on our journey home
+ To the New Jerusalem,"
+
+--is equally musical and animating, and with a vocal range that brings
+out the full strength of choir and congregation.
+
+
+"COME, SINNER, COME."
+
+A singular case of the same tune originating in the brain of both author
+and composer is presented in the history of this hymn of Rev. William
+Ellsworth Witter, D.D., born in La Grange, N.Y., Dec. 9, 1854. He wrote
+the hymn in the autumn of 1878, while teaching a district school near
+his home. The first line--
+
+ While Jesus whispers to you,
+
+--came to him during a brief turn of outdoor work by the roadside and
+presently grew to twenty-four lines. Soon after, Prof. Horatio Palmer,
+knowing Witter to be a verse writer, invited him to contribute a hymn to
+a book he had in preparation, and this hymn was sent. Dr. Palmer set it
+to music, it soon entered into several collections, and Mr. Sankey sang
+it in England at the Moody meetings.
+
+Dr. Witter gives this curious testimony,
+
+"While I cannot sing myself, though very fond of music, the hymn sang
+itself to me by the roadside _in almost the exact tune given to it by
+Professor Palmer_." Which proves that Professor Palmer had the feeling
+of the hymn--and that the maker of a true hymn has at least a
+sub-consciousness of its right tune, though he may be neither a musician
+nor a poet.
+
+ While Jesus whispers to you,
+ Come, sinner, come!
+ While we are praying for you,
+ Come, sinner, come!
+ Now is the time to own Him,
+ Come, sinner, come!
+ Now is the time to know Him,
+ Come, sinner, come!
+
+
+"ONE MORE DAY'S WORK FOR JESUS."
+
+The writer of this hymn was Miss Anna Warner, one of the well-known
+"Wetherell Sisters," joint authors of _The Wide World_, _Queechy_, and a
+numerous succession of healthful romances very popular in the middle and
+later years of the last century. Her own pen name is "Amy Lothrop,"
+under which she has published many religious poems, hymns and other
+varieties of literary work. She was born in 1820, at Martlaer, West
+Point, N.Y., where she still resides.
+
+ One more day's work for Jesus,
+ One less of life for me:
+ But heaven is nearer,
+ And Christ is dearer
+ Than yesterday to me.
+ His love and light
+ Fill all my soul tonight.
+
+ REFRAIN:--
+ One more day's work for Jesus, (_ter_)
+ One less of life for me.
+
+The hymn has five stanzas all expressing the gentle fervor of an active
+piety loving service:
+
+
+_THE TUNE_
+
+was composed by the Rev. Robert Lowry, and first published in _Bright
+Jewels_.
+
+
+THE GOSPEL HYMNS.
+
+These popular religious songs have been criticised as "degenerate
+psalmody" but those who so style them do not seem to consider the need
+that made them.
+
+The great majority of mankind can only be reached by missionary methods,
+and in these art and culture do not play a conspicuous part. The
+multitude could be supplied with technical preaching and technical music
+for their religious wants, but they would not rise to the bait, whereas
+nothing so soon kindles their better emotions or so surely appeals to
+their better nature as even the humblest sympathetic hymn sung to a
+simple and stirring tune. If the music is unclassical and the hymn crude
+there is no critical audience to be offended.
+
+The artless, almost colloquial, words "of a happily rhymed camp-meeting
+lyric and the wood-notes wild" of a new melody meet a situation. Moral
+and spiritual lapse makes it necessary at times for religion to put on
+again her primitive raiment, and be "a voice crying in the wilderness."
+
+Between the slums and the boulevards live the masses that shape the
+generations, and make the state. They are wage-earners who never hear
+the great composers nor have time to form fine musical and literary
+tastes. The spiritual influences that really reach them are of a very
+direct and simple kind; and for the good of the church--and the
+nation--it is important that at least this elementary education in the
+school of Christ should be supplied them.
+
+It is the popular hymn tunes that speed a reformation. So say history
+and experience. Once in two hundred years a great revival movement may
+produce a Charles Wesley, but the humbler singers carry the divine fire
+that quickens religious life in the years between.
+
+All this is not saying that the gospel hymns, as a whole, are or ever
+professed to be suitable for the stated service of the sanctuary. Their
+very style and movement show exactly what they were made for--to win the
+hearing of the multitude, and put the music of God's praise and Jesus'
+love into the mouths and hearts of thousands who had been strangers to
+both. They are the modern lay songs that go with the modern lay sermons.
+They give voice to the spirit and sentiment of the conference, prayer
+and inquiry meetings, the Epworth League and Christian Endeavor
+meetings, the temperance and other reform meetings, and of the
+mass-meetings in the cities or the seaside camps.
+
+During their evangelistic mission in England and Scotland in 1873,
+Dwight L. Moody and Ira D. Sankey used the hymnbook of Philip Phillips,
+a compilation entitled _Hallowed Songs_, some of them his own. To these
+Mr. Sankey added others of his own composing from time to time which
+were so enthusiastically received that he published them in a pamphlet.
+This, with the simultaneous publication in America of the revival
+melodies of Philip P. Bliss, was the beginning of that series of popular
+hymn-and-tune books, which finally numbered six volumes. Sankey's
+_Sacred Songs and Solos_ combined with Bliss's _Gospel Songs_ were the
+foundation of the _Gospel Hymns_.
+
+Subjectively their utterances are indicative of ardent piety and
+unquestioning faith, and on the other hand their direct and intimate
+appeal and dramatic address are calculated to affect a throng as if each
+individual in it was the person meant by the words. The refrain or
+chorus feature is notable in nearly all.
+
+A selection of between thirty and forty of the most characteristic is
+here given.
+
+
+"HALLELUJAH! 'TIS DONE."
+
+This is named from its chorus. The song is one of the spontaneous
+thanksgivings in revival meetings that break out at the announcement of
+a new conversion.
+
+ 'Tis the promise of God full salvation to give
+ Unto him who on Jesus His Son will believe,
+ Hallelujah! 'tis done; I believe on the Son;
+ I am saved by the blood of the crucified One.
+
+ Though the pathway be lonely and dangerous too,
+ Surely Jesus is able to carry me through--
+ Hallelujah! etc.
+
+The words and music are both by P.P. Bliss.
+
+
+THE NINETY AND NINE.
+
+The hymn was written by Mrs. Elizabeth Cecilia Clephane at Melrose,
+Scotland, early in 1868. She was born in Edinburgh, June 10, 1830, and
+died of consumption, Feb. 19, 1869. The little poem was seen by Mr.
+Sankey in the _Christian Age_, and thinking it might be useful, he cut
+it out. At an impressive moment in one of the great meetings in
+Edinburgh, Mr. Moody said to him in a quiet aside, "Sing something."
+Precisely what was wanted for the hour and theme, and for the thought in
+the general mind, was in Mr. Sankey's vest pocket. But how could it be
+sung without a tune? With a silent prayer for help, the musician took
+out the slip containing Mrs. Clephane's poem, laid it on the little
+reed-organ and began playing, and singing. He had to read the
+unfamiliar words and at the same time make up the music. The tune
+came--and grew as he went along till he finished the first verse. He
+remembered it well enough to repeat it with the second, and after that
+it was easy to finish the hymn. A new melody was born--in the presence
+of more than a thousand pairs of eyes and ears. It was a feat of
+invention, of memory, of concentration--and such was the elocution of
+the trained soloist that not a word was lost. He had a tearful audience
+at the close to reward him; but we can easily credit his testimony,
+
+"It was the most intense moment of my life."
+
+In a touching interview afterwards, a sister of Mrs. Clephane told Mr.
+Sankey the authoress had not lived to see her hymn in print and to know
+of its blessed mission.
+
+The first six lines give the situation of the lost sheep in the parable
+of that name--
+
+ There were ninety and nine that safely lay
+ In the shelter of the fold;
+ But one was out on the hills away,
+ Far off from the gates of gold.
+ Away on the mountains wild and bare,
+ Away from the tender Shepherd's care.
+
+And, after describing the Shepherd's arduous search, the joy at his
+return is sketched and spiritualized in the concluding stanza--
+
+ But all through the mountains, thunder-riven,
+ And up from the rocky steeps
+ There arose a cry to the gate of heaven,
+ "Rejoice! I have found my sheep."
+ And the angels echoed around the Throne,
+ "Rejoice! for the Lord brings back His own."
+
+
+"HOLD THE FORT!"
+
+This is named also from its chorus. The historic foundation of the hymn
+was the flag-signal waved to Gen. G.M. Corse by Gen. Sherman's order
+from Kenesaw Mountain to Altoona during the "March through Georgia," in
+October, 1863. The flag is still in the possession of A.D. Frankenberry,
+one of the Federal Signal-Corps whose message to the besieged General
+said, "Hold the fort! We are coming!" A visit to the scene of the
+incident inspired P.P. Bliss to write both the words and the music.
+
+ Ho! my comrades, see the signal
+ Waving in the sky!
+ Reinforcements now appearing,
+ Victory is nigh.
+ "Hold the fort, for I am coming!"
+ Jesus signals still;
+ Wave the answer back to heaven,
+ "By Thy grace we will!"
+
+The popularity of the song (it has been translated into several
+languages), made it the author's chief memento in many localities. On
+his monument in Rome, Pennsylvania, is inscribed "P.P. Bliss--author of
+'Hold the Fort.'"
+
+
+"RESCUE THE PERISHING."
+
+Few hymns, ancient or modern, have been more useful, or more variously
+used, than this little sermon in song from Luke 14:23, by the blind
+poet, Fanny J. Crosby, (Mrs. Van Alstyne). It is sung not only in the
+church prayer-meetings with its spiritual meaning and application, but
+in Salvation Army camps and marches, in mission-school devotions, in
+social settlement services, in King's Daughters and Sons of Temperance
+Meetings, and in the rallies of every reform organization that seeks the
+lost and fallen.
+
+ Rescue the perishing, care for the dying,
+ Snatch them in pity from sin and the grave;
+ Weep o'er the erring ones, lift up the fallen,
+ Tell them of Jesus, the Mighty to Save.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Down in the human heart crushed by the Tempter,
+ Feelings lie buried that grace can restore.
+ Touched by a loving heart, wakened by kindness,
+ Chords that were broken will vibrate once more.
+
+The tune is by W.H. Doane, Mus.D., composed in 1870.
+
+
+"WHAT A FRIEND WE HAVE IN JESUS."
+
+The author was a pious gentleman of Dublin, Ireland, who came to Canada
+when he was twenty-five. His name was Joseph Scriven, born in Dublin,
+1820, and graduated at Trinity College. The accidental death by drowning
+of his intended bride on the eve of their wedding day, led him to
+consecrate his life and fortune to the service of Christ. He died in
+Canada, Oct. 10, 1886, (Sankey's _Story of the Gospel Hymns_, pp.
+245-6.)
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The music was composed by Charles Crozat Converse, LL.D., musician,
+lawyer, and writer. He was born in Warren, Mass., 1832; a descendant of
+Edward Converse, the friend of Gov. Winthrop and founder of Woburn,
+Mass. He pursued musical and other studies in Leipsic and Berlin. His
+compositions are numerous including concert overtures, symphonies and
+many sacred and secular pieces. Residence at Highwood, Bergen Co., N.J.
+
+The hymn is one of the most helpful of the Gospel Collections, and the
+words and music have strengthened many a weak and failing soul to "try
+again."
+
+ Have we trials and temptations?
+ Is there trouble anywhere?
+ We should never be discouraged:
+ Take it to the Lord in prayer.
+
+
+"I HEAR THE SAVIOUR SAY."
+
+This is classed with the _Gospel Hymns_, but it was a much-used and
+much-loved revival hymn--especially in the Methodist churches--several
+years before Mr. Moody's great evangelical movement. It was written by
+Mrs. Elvina M. Hall (since Mrs. Myers) who was born in Alexandria, Va.,
+in 1818. She composed it in the spring of 1865, while sitting in the
+choir of the M.E. Church, Baltimore, and the first draft was pencilled
+on a fly-leaf of a singing book, _The New Lute of Zion_.
+
+ I hear the Saviour say,
+ Thy strength indeed is small;
+ Child of weakness, watch and pray,
+ Find in me thine all in all.
+
+The music of the chorus helped to fix its words in the common mind, and
+some idea of the Atonement acceptable, apparently, to both Arminians and
+Calvinists; for Sunday-school children in the families of both, hummed
+the tune or sang the refrain when alone--
+
+ Jesus paid it all,
+ All to Him I owe,
+ Sin had left a crimson stain;
+ He washed it white as snow.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+John Thomas Grape, who wrote the music, was born in Baltimore, Md., May
+6, 1833. His modest estimate of his work appears in his remark that he
+"dabbled" in music for his own amusement. Few composers have amused
+themselves with better results.
+
+
+"TELL ME THE OLD, OLD STORY."
+
+Miss Kate Hankey, born about 1846, the daughter of an English banker,
+is the author of this very devout and tender Christian poem, written
+apparently in the eighteen-sixties. At least it is said that her little
+volume, _Heart to Heart_, was published in 1865 or 1866, and this volume
+contains "Tell me the Old, Old Story," and its answer.
+
+We have been told that Miss Hankey was recovering from a serious
+illness, and employed her days of convalescence in composing this song
+of devotion, beginning it in January and finishing it in the following
+November.
+
+The poem is very long--a thesaurus of evangelical thoughts, attitudes,
+and moods of faith--and also a magazine of hymns. Four quatrains of it,
+or two eight-line stanzas, are the usual length of a hymnal selection,
+and editors can pick and choose anywhere among its expressive verses.
+
+ Tell me the old, old story
+ Of unseen things above,
+ Of Jesus and His glory,
+ Of Jesus and His love.
+
+ Tell me the story simply
+ As to a little child,
+ For I am weak and weary,
+ And helpless and defiled.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Tell me the story simply
+ That I may take it in--
+ That wonderful Redemption,
+ God's remedy for sin.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Dr. W.H. Doane was present at the International Conference of the
+Y.M.C.A. at Montreal in 1867, and heard the poem read--with tears and in
+a broken voice--by the veteran Major-General Russell. It impressed him
+so much that he borrowed and copied it, and subsequently set it to music
+during a vacation in the White Mountains.
+
+The poem of fifty stanzas was entitled "The Story Wanted;" the sequel or
+answer to it, by Miss Hankey, was named "The Story Told." This second
+hymn, of the same metre but different accent, was supplied with a tune
+by William Gustavus Fischer.
+
+ I love to tell the story
+ Of unseen things above,
+ Of Jesus and His glory,
+ Of Jesus and His love.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ I love to tell the story
+ Because I know its true;
+ It satisfies my longings
+ As nothing else can do.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ I love to tell the story;
+ 'Twill be my theme in glory;
+ To tell the old, old story
+ Of Jesus and his love.
+
+William Gustavus Fischer was born in Baltimore, Md., Oct. 14, 1835. He
+was a piano-dealer in the firm (formerly) of Gould and Fischer. His
+melody to the above hymn was written in 1869, and was harmonized the
+next year by Hubert P. Main.
+
+
+THE PRODIGAL CHILD.
+
+This is not only an impressive hymn as sung in sympathetic music, but a
+touching poem.
+
+ Come home! come home!
+ You are weary at heart,
+ For the way has been dark
+ And so lonely and wild--
+ O prodigal child,
+ Come home!
+
+ Come home! Come home!
+ For we watch and we wait,
+ And we stand at the gate
+ While the shadows are piled;
+ O prodigal child,
+ Come home!
+
+The author is Mrs. Ellen M.H. Gates, known to the English speaking world
+by her famous poem, "Your Mission."
+
+
+_THE TUNE_
+
+To "The Prodigal Child" was composed by Dr. Doane in 1869 and no hymn
+ever had a fitter singing ally. All a mother's yearning is in the
+refrain and cadence.
+
+ Come home! Oh, come home!
+
+
+"LET THE LOWER LIGHTS BE BURNING!"
+
+An illustration, recited in Mr. Moody's graphic fashion in one of his
+discourses, suggested this hymn to P.P. Bliss.
+
+"A stormy night on Lake Erie, and the sky pitch dark."
+
+'Pilot, are you sure this is Cleveland? There's only one light.'
+
+'Quite sure, Cap'n.'
+
+'Where are the lower lights?'
+
+'Gone out, sir.'
+
+'Can you run in?'
+
+'_We've got to_, Cap'n--or die.'
+
+"The brave old pilot did his best, but, alas, he missed the channel. The
+boat was wrecked, with a loss of many lives. The lower lights had gone
+out.
+
+"Brethren, the Master will take care of the great Lighthouse. It is our
+work to keep the lower lights burning!"
+
+ Brightly beams our Father's mercy
+ From His lighthouse evermore;
+ But to us He gives the keeping
+ Of the lights along the shore.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ Let the lower lights be burning!
+ Send a gleam across the wave;
+ Some poor fainting, struggling seaman
+ You may rescue, you may save.
+
+Both words and music--composed in 1871--are by Mr. Bliss. There are
+wakening chords in the tune--and especially the chorus--when the
+counterpoint is well vocalized; and the effect is more pronounced the
+greater the symphony of voices. Congregations find a zest in every note.
+"Hold the Fort" can be sung in the street. "Let the Lower Lights be
+Burning" is at home between echoing walls.
+
+The use of the song in "Bethel" meetings classes it with sailors' hymns.
+
+
+"SWEET HOUR OF PRAYER."
+
+Included with the _Gospel Hymns_, but of older date. Rev. William W.
+Walford, a blind English minister, was the author, and it was probably
+written about the year 1842. It was recited to Rev. Thomas Salmon,
+Congregational pastor at Coleshill, Eng., who took it down and brought
+it to New York, where it was published in the New York _Observer_.
+
+Little is known of Mr. Walford save that in his blindness, besides
+preaching occasionally, he employed his mechanical skill in making small
+useful articles of bone and ivory.
+
+The tune was composed by W.B. Bradbury in 1859, and first appeared with
+the hymn in _Cottage Melodies_.
+
+ Sweet hour of prayer, sweet hour of prayer
+ That calls me from a world of care,
+ And bids me at my Father's throne
+ Make all my wants and wishes known.
+ In seasons of distress and grief
+ My soul has often found relief,
+ And oft escaped the tempter's snare
+ By thy return, sweet hour of prayer.
+
+
+"O BLISS OF THE PURIFIED! BLISS OF THE FREE!"
+
+Rev. Francis Bottome, D.D., born in Belper, Derbyshire, Eng., May 26,
+1823, removed to the United States in 1850, and entered the Methodist
+ministry. A man of sterling character and exemplary piety. He received
+the degree of Doctor of Divinity at Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa. Was
+assistant compiler of several singing books, and wrote original hymns.
+The above, entitled "O sing of His mighty love" was composed by him in
+1869. The last stanza reads,--
+
+ O Jesus the Crucified! Thee will I sing,
+ My blessed Redeemer, my God and my King!
+ My soul, filled with rapture shall shout o'er the grave
+ And triumph in death in the Mighty to save.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ O sing of His mighty love (_ter_)
+ Mighty to save!
+
+Dr. Bottome returned to England, and died at Tavistock June 29, 1894.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Bradbury's "Songs of the Beautiful" (in _Fresh Laurels_). The hymn was
+set to this chorus in 1871.
+
+
+"WHAT SHALL THE HARVEST BE?"
+
+Very popular in England. Mr. Sankey in his _Story of the Gospel Hymns_
+relates at length the experience of Rev. W.O. Lattimore, pastor of a
+large church in Evanston, Ill., who was saved to Christian manhood and
+usefulness by this hymn. It has suffered some alterations, but its
+original composition was Mrs. Emily Oakey's work. The Parables of the
+Sower and of the Tares may have been in her mind when she wrote the
+lines in 1850, but more probably it was the text in Gal. 6:7--
+
+ Sowing the seed by the daylight fair,
+ Sowing the seed by the noonday glare,
+ Sowing the seed by the fading light,
+ Sowing the seed in the solemn night.
+ O, what shall the harvest be?
+
+Lattimore, the man whose history was so strangely linked with this hymn,
+entered the army in 1861, a youth of eighteen with no vices, but when
+promoted to first lieutenant he learned to drink in the officers' mess.
+The habit so contracted grew upon him till when the war was over, though
+he married and tried to lead a sober life, he fell a victim to his
+appetite, and became a physical wreck. One day in the winter of 1876 he
+found himself in a half-drunken condition, in the gallery of Moody's
+Tabernacle, Chicago. Discovering presently that he had made a mistake,
+he rose to go out, but Mr. Sankey's voice chained him. He sat down and
+heard the whole of the thrilling hymn from beginning to end. Then he
+stumbled out with the words ringing in his ears.
+
+ Sowing the seed of a lingering pain,
+ Sowing the seed of a maddened brain,
+ Sowing the seed of a tarnished name,
+ Sowing the seed of Eternal shame.
+ O, what shall the harvest be?
+
+In the saloon, where he went to drown the awakenings of remorse, those
+words stood in blazing letters on every bottle and glass. The voice of
+God in that terrible song of conviction forced him back to the
+Tabernacle, with his drink untasted. He went into the inquiry meeting
+where he found friends, and was led to Christ. His wife and child, from
+whom he had long been exiled, were sent for and work was found for him
+to do. A natural eloquence made him an attractive and efficient helper
+in the meetings, and he was finally persuaded to study for the ministry.
+His faithful pastorate of twenty years in Evanston ended with his death
+in 1899.
+
+Mrs. Emily Sullivan Oakey was an author and linguist by profession, and
+though in her life of nearly fifty-four years she "never enjoyed a day
+of good health," she earned a grateful memory. Born in Albany, N.Y.,
+Oct. 8, 1829, she was educated at the Albany Female Academy, and fitted
+herself for the position of teacher of languages and English literature
+in the same school, which she honored by her service while she lived.
+Her contributions to the daily press and to magazine literature were
+numerous, but she is best known by her remarkable hymn. Her death
+occurred on the 11th of May, 1883.
+
+
+_THE TUNE_,
+
+By P.P. Bliss, is one of that composer's tonal successes. The march of
+the verses with their recurrent words is so automatic that it would
+inevitably suggest to him the solo and its organ-chords; and the chorus
+with its sustained soprano note dominating the running concert adds the
+last emphasis to the solemn repetition. The song with its warning cry
+owes no little of its power to this choral appendix--
+
+ Gathered in time or eternity,
+ Sure, ah sure will the harvest be.
+
+
+"O THINK OF THE HOME OVER THERE."
+
+A hymn of Rev. D.W.C. Huntington, suggested by Ps. 55:6. It was a
+favorite from the first.
+
+Rev. DeWitt Clinton Huntington was born at Townshend, Vt., Apr. 27,
+1830. He graduated at the Syracuse University, and received the degrees
+of D.D. and LL.D. from Genesee College. Preacher, instructor and
+author--Removed to Lincoln, Nebraska.
+
+ O think of the home over there,
+ By the side of the river of light,
+ Where the saints all immortal and fair
+ Are robed in their garments of white.
+ Over there, (_rep_)
+
+ O think of the friends over there,
+ Who before us the journey have trod,
+ Of the songs that they breathe on the air,
+ In their home in the palace of God.
+ Over there. (_rep_)
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The melody was composed by Tullius Clinton O'Kane, born in Delaware, O.,
+March 10, 1830, a hymnist and musician. It is a flowing tune, with sweet
+chords, and something of the fugue feature in the chorus as an
+accessory. The voices of a multitude in full concord make a building
+tremble with it.
+
+
+"WHEN JESUS COMES."
+
+ Down life's dark vale we wander
+ Till Jesus comes;
+ We watch and wait and wonder
+ Till Jesus comes.
+
+Both words and music are by Mr. Bliss. A relative of his family, J.S.
+Ellsworth, says the song was written in Peoria, Illinois, in 1872, and
+was suggested by a conversation on the second coming of Christ, a
+subject very near his heart. The thought lingered in his mind, and as he
+came down from his room, soon after, the verses and notes came to him
+simultaneously on the stairs. Singing them over, he seized pencil and
+paper, and in a few minutes fixed hymn and tune in the familiar harmony
+so well known.
+
+ No more heart-pangs nor sadness
+ When Jesus comes;
+ All peace and joy and gladness
+ When Jesus comes.
+
+The choral abounds in repetition, and is half refrain, but among all
+Gospel Hymns remarkable for their tone-delivery this is unsurpassed in
+the swing of its rhythm.
+
+ All joy his loved ones bringing
+ When Jesus comes.
+ All praise thro' heaven ringing
+ When Jesus comes.
+ All beauty bright and vernal
+ When Jesus comes.
+ All glory grand, eternal
+ When Jesus comes.
+
+
+"TO THE WORK, TO THE WORK."
+
+One of Fanny Crosby's most animating hymns--with Dr. W.H. Doane's full
+part harmony to re-enforce its musical accent. Mr. Sankey says, "I sang
+it for the first time in the home of Mr. and Mrs. J.B. Cornell at Long
+Branch. The servants gathered from all parts of the house while I was
+singing, and looked into the parlor where I was seated. When I was
+through one of them said, 'That is the finest hymn I have heard for a
+long time,' I felt that this was a test case, and if the hymn had such
+power over those servants it would be useful in reaching other people as
+well; so I published it in the _Gospel Hymns_ in 1875, where it became
+one of the best work-songs for our meetings that we had." (_Story of
+the Gospel Hymns_.)
+
+The hymn, written in 1870, was first published in 1871 in "_Pure
+Gold_"--a book that had a sale of one million two hundred thousand
+copies.
+
+ To the work! to the work! there is labor for all,
+ For the Kingdom of darkness and error shall fall,
+ And the name of Jehovah exalted shall be,
+ In the loud-swelling chorus, "Salvation is free!"
+
+ CHORUS.
+ Toiling on, toiling on, toiling on, toiling on! (_rep_)
+ Let us hope and trust, let us watch and pray,
+ And labor till the Master comes.
+
+
+"O WHERE ARE THE REAPERS?"
+
+Matt. 13:30 is the text of this lyric from the pen of Eben E. Rexford.
+
+ Go out in the by-ways, and search them all,
+ The wheat may be there though the weeds are tall;
+ Then search in the highway, and pass none by,
+ But gather them all for the home on high.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ Where are the reapers? O who will come,
+ And share in the glory of the harvest home?
+ O who will help us to garner in
+ The sheaves of good from the fields of sin?
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Hymn and tune are alike. The melody and harmony by Dr. George F. Root
+have all the eager trip and tread of so many of the gospel hymns, and
+of so much of his music, and the lines respond at every step. Any other
+composer could not have escaped the compulsion of the final spondees,
+and much less the author of "Tramp, Tramp, Tramp," and all the best
+martial song-tunes of the great war. In this case neither words nor
+notes can say to the other, "We have piped unto you and ye have not
+danced," but a little caution will guard too enthusiastic singing
+against falling into the drum-rhythm, and travestying a sacred piece.
+
+Eben Eugene Rexford was born in Johnsburg, N.Y., July 16, 1841, and has
+been a writer since he was fourteen years old. He is the author of
+several popular songs, as "Silver Threads Among the Gold," "Only a Pansy
+Blossom" etc., and many essays and treatises on flowers, of which he is
+passionately fond.
+
+
+"IT IS WELL WITH MY SOUL."
+
+Horatio Gates Spafford, the writer of this hymn, was a lawyer, a native
+of New York state, born Oct. 30, 1828. While connected with an
+institution in Chicago, as professor of medical jurisprudence, he lost a
+great part of his fortune by the great fire in that city. This disaster
+was followed by the loss of his children on the steamer, Ville de Havre,
+Nov. 22, 1873. He seems to have been a devout Christian, for he wrote
+his hymn of submissive faith towards the end of the same year--
+
+ When peace like a river attendeth my way,
+ When sorrows like sea-billows roll--
+ Whatever my lot, Thou hast taught me to say,
+ "It is well, it is well with my soul."
+
+A friend of Spafford who knew his history read this hymn while repining
+under an inferior affliction of his own. "If he can feel like that after
+suffering what he has suffered," he said, "I will cease my complaints."
+
+It may not have been the weight of Mr. Spafford's sorrows wearing him
+down, but one would infer some mental disturbance in the man seven or
+eight years later. "In 1881" [writes Mr. Hubert P. Main] "he went to
+Jerusalem under the hallucination that he was a second Messiah--and died
+there on the seventh anniversary of his landing in Palestine, Sept. 5,
+1888." The aberrations of an over-wrought mind are beckonings to God's
+compassion. When reason wanders He takes the soul of His helpless child
+into his own keeping--and "it is well."
+
+The tune to Spafford's hymn is by P.P. Bliss; a gentle, gliding melody
+that suits the mood of the words.
+
+
+"WAITING AND WATCHING FOR ME."
+
+Written by Mrs. Marianne Farningham Hearn, born in Kent, Eng., Dec. 17,
+1834. The hymn was first published in the fall of 1864 in the _London
+Church World_. Its unrhythmical first line--
+
+ When mysterious whispers are floating about,
+
+--was replaced by the one now familiar--
+
+ When my final farewell to the world I have said,
+ And gladly lain down to my rest,
+ When softly the watchers shall say, "He is dead,"
+ And fold my pale hands on my breast,
+ And when with my glorified vision at last
+ The walls of that City I see,
+ Will any one there at the Beautiful Gate
+ Be waiting and watching for me?
+
+Mrs. Hearn--a member of the Baptist denomination--has long been the
+editor of the (English) _Sunday School Times_, but her literary work has
+been more largely in connection with the _Christian World_ newspaper of
+which she has been a staff-member since its foundation.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The long lines, not easily manageable for congregational singing, are
+wisely set by Mr. Bliss to duet music. There is a weighty thought in the
+hymn for every Christian, and experience has shown that a pair of good
+singers can make it very affecting, but the only use of the repeat, by
+way of a chorus, seems to be to give the miscellaneous voices a brief
+chance to sing.
+
+
+"HE WILL HIDE ME."
+
+(Isa. 49:2.)
+
+Miss Mary Elizabeth Servoss, the author of this trustful hymn, was born
+in Schenectady, N.Y., Aug. 22, 1849. When a very young girl her
+admiration of Fanny Crosby's writings, and the great and good service
+they were doing in the world, inspired her with a longing to resemble
+her. Though her burden was as real, it was not like the other's, and her
+opportunities for religious meditation and literary work were fewer than
+those of the elder lady, but the limited number of hymns she has written
+have much of the spirit and beauty of their model.
+
+Providence decreed for her a life of domestic care and patient waiting.
+For eighteen years she was the constant attendant of a disabled
+grandmother, and long afterwards love and duty made her the home nurse
+during her mother's protracted illness and the last sickness of her
+father, until both parents passed away.
+
+From her present home in Edeson, Ill., some utterances of her chastened
+spirit have found their way to the public, and been a gospel of
+blessing. Besides "He Will Hide Me" other hymns of Miss Servoss are
+"Portals of Light," "He Careth," "Patiently Enduring," and "Gates of
+Praise," the last being the best known.
+
+ When the storms of life are raging.
+ Tempests wild on sea and land,
+ I will seek a place of refuge
+ In the shadow of God's hand.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ He will hide me, He will hide me,
+ Where no harm can e'er betide me,
+ He will hide me, safely hide me
+ In the shadow of His hand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ So while here the cross I'm bearing,
+ Meeting storms and billows wild,
+ Jesus for my soul is caring,
+ Naught can harm His Father's child.
+ He will hide me, etc.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+An animating choral in nine-eight tempo, with a swinging movement and
+fugue chorus, is rather florid for the hymn, but undeniably musical. Mr.
+James McGranahan was the composer. He was born in Adamsville, Pa., July
+4, 1840. His education was acquired mostly at the public schools, and
+both in general knowledge and in musical accomplishments it may be said
+of him that he is "self-made."
+
+Music was born in him, and at the age of nineteen, with some valuable
+help from men like Bassini, Webb, Root and Zerrahn, he had studied to so
+good purpose that he taught music classes himself. This talent, joined
+to the gift of a very sweet tenor voice, made him the natural successor
+of the lamented Bliss, and, with Major D.W. Whittle, he entered on a
+career of gospel work, making between 1881 and 1885 two successful tours
+of England, Scotland and Ireland, and through the chief American
+cities.
+
+Among his publications are the _Male Chorus Book_, _Songs of the Gospel_
+and the _Gospel Male Choir_.
+
+Resides at Kinsman, O.
+
+
+"REVIVE THY WORK, O LORD."
+
+(Heb. 3:2.)
+
+The supposed date of the hymn is 1860; the author, Albert Midlane. He
+was born at Newport on the Isle of Wight, Jan. 23, 1825 a business man,
+but, being a Sunday-school teacher, he was prompted to write verses for
+children. The habit grew upon him till he became a frequent and
+acceptable hymn-writer, both for juvenile and for general use. English
+collections have at least three hundred credited to him.
+
+ Revive Thy work, O Lord,
+ Thy mighty arm make bare,
+ Speak with the voice that wakes the dead,
+ And make Thy people hear.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Music and words together make a song-litany alive with all the old
+psalm-tune unction and the new vigor; and both were upon Mr. McGranahan
+when he wrote the choral. It is one of his successes.
+
+ Revive thy work, O Lord,
+ Exalt Thy precious name,
+ And by the Holy Ghost our love
+ For Thee and Thine inflame.
+
+ REFRAIN.
+ Revive Thy work, O Lord,
+ And give refreshing showers;
+ The glory shall be all Thine own,
+ The blessing shall be ours.
+
+
+"WHERE IS MY WANDERING BOY TO-NIGHT?"
+
+This remarkable composition--words and music by Rev. Robert Lowry--has a
+record among sacred songs like that of "The Prodigal Son" among
+parables.
+
+A widowed lady of culture, about forty years of age, who was an
+accomplished vocalist, had ceased to sing, though her sweet voice was
+still in its prime. The cause was her sorrow for her runaway boy. She
+had not heard from him for five years. While spending a week with
+friends in a city distant from home, her hidden talent was betrayed by
+the friends to the pastor of their church, where a revival was in
+progress, and persuasion that seemed to put a duty upon her finally
+procured her consent to sing a solo.
+
+The church was crowded. With a force and feeling that can easily be
+guessed she sang "Where Is My Boy Tonight?" and finished the first
+stanza. She began the second,--
+
+ Once he was pure as morning dew,
+ As he knelt at his mother's knee,
+ No face was so bright, no heart more true,
+ And none were so sweet as he;
+
+--and as the congregation caught up the refrain,--
+
+ O where is my boy tonight?
+ O where is my boy tonight?
+ My heart overflows, for I love him he knows,
+ O where is my boy tonight?
+
+--a young man who had been sitting in a back seat made his way up the
+aisle and sobbed, "Mother, I'm here!" The embrace of that mother and her
+long-lost boy turned the service into a general hallelujah. At the
+inquiry meeting that night there were many souls at the Mercy Seat who
+never knelt there before--and the young wanderer was one.
+
+[Illustration: Philip Doddridge, D.D.]
+
+Mr. Sankey, when in California with Mr. Moody, sang this hymn in one of
+the meetings and told the story of a mother in the far east who had
+commissioned him to search for her missing son. By a happy providence
+the son was in the house--and the story and the song sent him home
+repentant.
+
+At another time Mr. Sankey sang the same hymn from the steps of a
+snow-bound train, and a man between whose father and himself had been
+trouble and a separation, was touched, and returned to be reconciled
+after an absence of twenty years.
+
+At one evening service in Stanberry, Mo., the singing of the hymn by the
+leader of the choir led to the conversion of one boy who was present,
+and whose parents were that night praying for him in an eastern state,
+and inspired such earnest prayer in the hearts of two other runaway
+boys' parents that the same answer followed.
+
+There would not be room in a dozen pages to record all the similar
+saving incidents connected with the singing of "Where Is My Wandering
+Boy?" The rhetoric of love is strong in every note and syllable of the
+solo, and the tender chorus of voices swells the song to heaven like an
+antiphonal prayer.
+
+Strange to say, Dr. Lowry set lightly by his hymns and tunes, and
+deprecated much mention of them though he could not deny their success.
+An active Christian since seventeen years of age, through his early
+pulpit service, his six years' professorship, and the long pastorate in
+Plainfield, N.J., closed by his death, he considered preaching to be his
+supreme function as it certainly was his first love. Music was to him "a
+side-issue," an "efflorescence," and writing a hymn ranked far below
+making and delivering a sermon. "I felt a sort of meanness when I began
+to be known as a composer," he said. And yet he was the author of a hymn
+and tune which "has done more to bring back wandering boys than any
+other" ever written.[45]
+
+[Footnote 45: "Where Is My Boy Tonight" was composed for a book of
+temperance hymns, _The Fountain of Song_, 1877.]
+
+
+"ETERNITY."
+
+This is the title and refrain of both Mrs. Ellen M.H. Gates' impressive
+poem and its tune.
+
+ O the clanging bells of Time!
+ Night and day they never cease;
+ We are weaned with their chime,
+ For they do not bring us peace.
+ And we hush our hearts to hear,
+ And we strain our eyes to see
+ If thy shores are drawing near
+ Eternity! Eternity!
+
+Skill was needed to vocalize this great word, but the ear of Mr. Bliss
+for musical prosody did not fail to make it effective. After the
+beautiful harmony through the seven lines, the choral reverently softens
+under the rallentando of the closing bars, and dwelling on the
+awe-inspiring syllables, solemnly dies away.
+
+
+TRIUMPH BY AND BY.
+
+This rally-song of the Christian arena is wonderfully stirring,
+especially in great meetings, for it sings best in full choral volume.
+
+ The prize is set before us,
+ To win His words implore us,
+ The eye of God is o'er us
+ From on high.
+ His loving tones are falling
+ While sin is dark, appalling,
+ 'Tis Jesus gently calling;
+ He is nigh!
+
+ CHORUS.
+ By and by we shall meet Him,
+ By and by we shall greet Him,
+ And with Jesus reign in glory,
+ By and by!
+
+ We'll follow where He leadeth,
+ We'll pasture where He feedeth,
+ We'll yield to Him who pleadeth
+ From on high.
+ Then nought from Him shall sever,
+ Our hope shall brighten ever
+ And faith shall fail us never;
+ He is nigh.
+
+ CHORUS-- By and by, etc.
+
+Dr. Christopher Ruby Blackall, the author of the hymn, was born in
+Albany, N.Y., Sept. 18, 1830. He was a surgeon in the Civil War, and in
+medical practice fifteen years, but afterwards became connected with the
+American Baptist Publication Society as manager of one of its branches.
+He has written several Sunday-school songs set to music by W.H. Doane.
+
+
+_THE TUNE_,
+
+By Horatio R. Palmer is exactly what the hymn demands. The range
+scarcely exceeds an octave, but with the words "From on high," the
+stroke of the soprano on upper D carries the feeling to unseen summits,
+and verifies the title of the song. From that note, through melody and
+chorus the "Triumph by and by" rings clear.
+
+
+"NOT HALF HAS EVER BEEN TOLD"
+
+This is emotional, but every word and note is uplifting, and creates the
+mood for religious impressions. The writer, Rev. John Bush Atchison, was
+born at Wilson, N.Y., Feb. 18, 1840, and died July 15, 1882.
+
+ I have read of a beautiful city
+ Far away in the kingdom of God,
+ I have read how its walls are of jasper,
+ How its streets are all golden and broad;
+ In the midst of the street is Life's River
+ Clear as crystal and pure to behold,
+ But not half of that city's bright glory
+ To mortals has ever been told.
+
+The chorus (twice sung)--
+
+ Not half has been told,
+
+--concludes with repeat of the two last lines of this first stanza.
+
+Mr. Atchison was a Methodist clergyman who composed several good hymns.
+"Behold the Stone is Rolled Away," "O Crown of Rejoicing," and "Fully
+Persuaded," indicate samples of his work more or less well-known. "Not
+Half Has Ever Been Told" was written in 1875.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Dr. Otis F. Presbry, the composer, was a young farmer of York,
+Livingston Co., N.Y., born there the 20th of December, 1820. Choice of a
+professional life led him to Berkshire Medical College, where he
+graduated in 1847. In after years his natural love of musical studies
+induced him to give his time to compiling and publishing religious
+tunes, with hymns more especially for Sunday-schools.
+
+He became a composer and wrote the melody to Atchison's words in 1877,
+which was arranged by a blind musician of Washington, D.C., J.W.
+Bischoff by name, with whom he had formed a partnership. The solo is
+long--would better, perhaps, have been four-line instead of eight--but
+well sung, it is a flight of melody that holds an assembly, and touches
+hearts.
+
+Dr. Presbry's best known book was _Gospel Bells_ (1883), the joint
+production of himself, Bischoff, and Rev. J.E. Rankin. He died Aug. 20,
+1901.
+
+
+"COME."
+
+One of the most characteristic (both words and music) of the _Gospel
+Hymns_--"Mrs. James Gibson Johnson" is the name attached to it as its
+author, though we have been unable to trace and verify her claim.
+
+ O, word of words the sweetest,
+ O, words in which there lie
+ All promise, all fulfillment,
+ And end of mystery;
+ Lamenting or rejoicing,
+ With doubt or terror nigh,
+ I hear the "Come" of Jesus,
+ And to His cross I fly.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ Come, come--
+ Weary, heavy-laden, come, O come to me.
+
+
+_THE TUNE_,
+
+Composed by James McGranahan, delivers the whole stanza in soprano or
+tenor solo, when the alto, joining the treble, leads off the refrain in
+duet, the male voices striking alternate notes until the full harmony in
+the last three bars. The style and movement of the chorus are somewhat
+suggestive of a popular glee, but the music of the duet is flexible and
+sweet, and the bass and tenor progress with it not in the
+ride-and-tie-fashion but marking time with the title-syllable.
+
+The contrast between the spiritual and the intellectual effect of the
+hymn and its wakeful tune is illustrated by a case in Baltimore. While
+Moody and Sankey were doing their gospel work in that city, a man, who,
+it seems, had brought a copy of the _Gospel Hymns_, walked out of one of
+the meetings after hearing this hymn-tune, and on reaching home, tore
+out the leaves that contained the song and threw them into the fire,
+saying he had "never heard such twaddle" in all his life.
+
+The sequel showed that he had been too hasty. The hymn would not leave
+him. After hearing it night and day in his mind till he began to
+realize what it meant, he went to Mr. Moody and told him he was "a vile
+sinner" and wanted to know how he could "come" to Christ. The divine
+invitation was explained, and the convicted man underwent a vital
+change. His converted opinion of the hymn was quite as remarkably
+different. He declared it was "the sweetest one in the book." (_Story of
+the Gospel Hymns_.)
+
+
+"ALMOST PERSUADED."
+
+The Rev. Mr. Brundage tells the origin of this hymn. In a sermon
+preached by him many years ago, the closing words were:
+
+"He who is almost persuaded is almost saved, but to be almost saved is
+to be entirely lost." Mr. Bliss, being in the audience, was impressed
+with the thought, and immediately set about the composition of what
+proved one of his most popular songs, deriving his inspiration from the
+sermon of his friend, Mr. Brundage. _Memoir of Bliss_.
+
+ Almost persuaded now to believe,
+ Almost persuaded Christ to receive;
+ Seems now some soul to say
+ "Go Spirit, go thy way,
+ Some more convenient day
+ On Thee I'll call."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Almost persuaded--the harvest is past!
+
+Both hymn and tune are by Mr. Bliss--and the omission of a chorus is in
+proper taste. This revival piece brings the eloquence of sense and
+sound to bear upon the conscience in one monitory pleading. Incidents in
+this country and in England related in Mr. Sankey's book, illustrate its
+power. It has a convicting and converting history.
+
+
+"MY AIN COUNTREE."
+
+This hymn was written by Miss Mary Augusta Lee one Sabbath day in 1860
+at Bowmount, Croton Falls, N.Y., and first published in the _New York
+Observer_, Dec, 1861. The authoress had been reading the story of John
+Macduff who, with his wife, left Scotland for the United States, and
+accumulated property by toil and thrift in the great West. In her
+leisure after the necessity for hard work was past, the Scotch woman
+grew homesick and pined for her "ain countree." Her husband, at her
+request, came east and settled with her in sight of the Atlantic where
+she could see the waters that washed the Scotland shore. But she still
+pined, and finally to save her life, John Macduff took her back to the
+heather hills of the mother-land, where she soon recovered her health
+and spirits.
+
+ I am far from my hame an' I'm weary aften whiles
+ For the langed-for hame-bringing an' my Father's welcome smiles.
+ I'll ne'er be fu' content until mine eyes do see
+ The shinin' gates o' heaven an' mine ain countree.
+
+ The airt' is flecked wi' flowers mony-tinted, frish an' gay,
+ The birdies warble blithely, for my Father made them sae,
+ But these sights an' these soun's will naething be to me
+ When I hear the angels singin' in my ain countree.
+
+Miss Lee was born in Croton Falls in 1838, and was of Scotch descent,
+and cared for by her grandfather and a Scotch nurse, her mother dying in
+her infancy. In 1870 she became the wife of a Mr. Demarest, and her
+married life was spent in Passaic, N.J., until their removal to
+Pasadena, Cal., in hope of restoring her failing health. She died at Los
+Angeles, Jan. 8, 1888.
+
+
+_THE TUNE_
+
+Is an air written in 1864 in the Scottish style by Mrs. Ione T. Hanna,
+wife of a banker in Denver, Colo., and harmonized for choral use by
+Hubert P. Main in 1873. Its plaintive sweetness suits the words which
+probably inspired it. The tone and metre of the hymn were natural to the
+young author's inheritance; a memory of her grandfather's home-land
+melodies, with which he once crooned "little Mary" to sleep.
+
+Sung as a closing hymn, "My ain countree" sends the worshipper away with
+a tender, unworldly thought that lingers.
+
+Mrs. Demarest wrote an additional stanza in 1881 at the request of Mr.
+Main.
+
+Some really good gospel hymns and tunes among those omitted in this
+chapter will cry out against the choice that passed them by. Others are
+of the more ephemeral sort, the phenomena (and the demand) of a
+generation. Carols of pious joy with inordinate repetition, choruses
+that surprise old lyrics with modern thrills, ballads of ringing sound
+and slender verse, are the spray of tuneful emotion that sparkles on
+every revival high-tide, but rarely leaves floodmarks that time will not
+erase. Religious songs of the demonstrative, not to say sensational,
+kind spring impromptu from the conditions of their time--and give place
+to others equally spontaneous when the next spiritual wave sweeps by.
+Their value lingers in the impulse their novelty gave to the life of
+sanctuary worship, and in the Christian characters their emotional power
+helped into being.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+HYMNS, FESTIVAL AND OCCASIONAL.
+
+
+_CHRISTMAS._
+
+
+"ADESTE FIDELES."
+
+This hymn is of doubtful authorship, by some assigned to as late a date
+as 1680, and by others to the 13th century as one of the Latin poems of
+St. Bonaventura, Bishop of Albano, who was born at Bagnarea in Tuscany,
+A.D. 1221. He was a learned man, a Franciscan friar, one of the greatest
+teachers and writers of his church, and finally a cardinal. Certainly
+Roman Catholic in its origin, whoever was its author, it is a Christian
+hymn qualified in every way to be sung by the universal church.
+
+ Adeste, fideles
+ Laeti triumphantes,
+ Venite, venite in Bethlehem;
+ Natum videte Regem angelorum.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ Venite, adoremus,
+ Venite, adoremus!
+ Venite, adoremus Dominum.
+
+This has been translated by Rev. Frederick Oakeley (1808-1880) and by
+Rev. Edward Caswall (1814-1878) the version of the former being the one
+in more general use. The ancient hymn is much abridged in the hymnals,
+and even the translations have been altered and modernized in the three
+or four stanzas commonly sung. Caswall's version renders the first line
+"Come hither, ye faithful," literally construing the Latin words.
+
+The following is substantially Oakeley's English of the "Adeste,
+fideles."
+
+ O come all ye faithful
+ Joyful and triumphant,
+ To Bethlehem hasten now with glad accord;
+ Come and behold Him,
+ Born the King of Angels.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ O come, let us adore Him,
+ O come, let us adore Him,
+ O come, let us adore Him,
+ Christ, the Lord.
+
+ Sing choirs of angels,
+ Sing in exultation
+ Through Heaven's high arches be your praises poured;
+ Now to our God be
+ Glory in the highest!
+ O come, let us adore Him!
+
+ Yea, Lord, we bless Thee,
+ Born for our salvation
+ Jesus, forever be Thy name adored!
+ Word of the Father
+ Now in flesh appearing;
+ O come, let us adore Him!
+
+The hymn with its primitive music as chanted in the ancient churches,
+was known as "The Midnight Mass," and was the processional song of the
+religious orders on their way to the sanctuaries where they gathered in
+preparation for the Christmas morning service. The modern tune--or
+rather the tune in modern use--is the one everywhere familiar as the
+"Portuguese Hymn." (See page 205.)
+
+
+MILTON'S HYMN TO THE NATIVITY.
+
+ It was the winter wild
+ While the Heavenly Child
+ All meanly wrapped in the rude manger lies.
+ Nature in awe of Him
+ Had doffed her gaudy trim
+ With her great Master so to sympathize.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ No war nor battle sound
+ Was heard the world around.
+ The idle spear and shield were high uphung.
+ The hooked chariot stood
+ Unstained with hostile blood,
+ The trumpets spake not to the armed throng,
+ And Kings sat still with awful eye
+ As if they knew their Sovereign Lord was by.
+
+This exalted song--the work of a boy of scarcely twenty-one--is a Greek
+ode in form, of two hundred and sixteen lines in twenty-seven strophes.
+Some of its figures and fancies are more to the taste of the seventeenth
+century than to ours, but it is full of poetic and Christian
+sublimities, and its high periods will be heard in the Christmas hymnody
+of coming centuries, though it is not the fashion to sing it now.
+
+John Milton, son and grandson of John Miltons, was born in Breadstreet,
+London, Dec. 9, 1608, fitted for the University in St. Paul's school,
+and studied seven years at Cambridge. His parents intended him for the
+church, but he chose literature as a profession, travelled and made
+distinguished friendships in Italy, Switzerland and France, and when
+little past his majority was before the public as a poet, author of the
+Ode to the Nativity, of a Masque, and of many songs and elegies. In
+later years he entered political life under the stress of his Puritan
+sympathies, and served under Cromwell and his successor as Latin
+Secretary of State through the time of the Commonwealth. While in public
+duty he became blind, but in his retirement composed "Paradise Lost and
+Paradise Regained." Died in 1676.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+In the old "Carmina Sacra" a noble choral (without name except "No war
+nor battle sound") well interprets portions of the 4th and 5th stanzas
+of the great hymn, but replaces the line--
+
+ "The idle spear and shield were high uphung."
+
+--with the more modern and less figurative--
+
+ "No hostile chiefs to furious combat ran."
+
+Three stanzas are also added, by the Rev. H.O. Dwight, missionary to
+Constantinople. The substituted line, which is also, perhaps, the
+composition of Mr. Dwight, rhymes with--
+
+ "His reign of peace upon the earth began,"
+
+--and as it is not un-Miltonic, few singers have ever known that it was
+not Milton's own.
+
+Dr. John Knowles Paine, Professor of Music at Harvard University, and
+author of the Oratorio of "St. Peter," composed a cantata to the great
+Christmas Ode of Milton, probably about 1868.
+
+Professor Paine died Apr. 25, 1906.
+
+It is worth noting that John Milton senior, the great poet's father, was
+a skilled musician and a composer of psalmody. The old tunes "York" and
+"Norwich," in Ravenscroft's collection and copied from it in many early
+New England singing-books, are supposed to be his.
+
+The Miltons were an old Oxfordshire Catholic family, and John, the
+poet's father, was disinherited for turning Protestant, but he prospered
+in business, and earned the comfort of a country gentleman. He died,
+very aged, in May, 1646, and his son addressed a Latin poem ("Ad
+Patrem") to his memory.
+
+
+"HARK! THE HERALD ANGELS SING."
+
+This hymn of Charles Wesley, dating about 1730, was evidently written
+with the "Adeste Fideles" in mind, some of the stanzas, in fact, being
+almost like translations of it. The form of the two first lines was
+originally--
+
+ Hark! how all the welkin rings,
+ "Glory to the King of Kings!"
+
+--but was altered thirty years later by Rev. Martin Madan (1726-1790)
+to--
+
+ Hark! the herald angels sing
+ Glory to the new-born King!
+
+Other changes by the same hand modified the three following stanzas, and
+a fifth stanza was added by John Wesley--
+
+ Hail the heavenly Prince of Peace!
+ Hail the Sun of Righteousness!
+ Light and life to all He brings,
+ Ris'n with healing in His wings.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Mendelssohn" is the favorite musical interpreter of the hymn. It is a
+noble and spirited choral from Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy's cantata,
+"Gott ist Licht."
+
+
+"JOY TO THE WORLD, THE LORD IS COME!"
+
+This inspirational lyric of Dr. Watts never grows old. It was written in
+1719.
+
+ Joy to the world! the Saviour reigns!
+ Let men their songs employ
+ While fields and floods, rocks, hills and plains
+ Repeat the sounding joy.
+
+Dr. Edward Hodges (1796-1867) wrote an excellent psalm-tune to it which
+is still in occasional use, but the music united to the hymn in the
+popular heart is "Antioch," an adaptation from Handel's Messiah. This
+companionship holds unbroken from hymnal to hymnal and has done so for
+sixty or seventy years; and, in spite of its fugue, the tune--apparently
+by some magic of its own--contrives to enlist the entire voice of a
+congregation, the bass falling in on the third beat as if by intuition.
+The truth is, the tune has become the habit of the hymn, and to the
+thousands who have it by heart, as they do in every village where there
+is a singing school, "Antioch" is "Joy to the World," and "Joy to the
+World" is "Antioch."
+
+
+"HARK! WHAT MEAN THOSE HOLY VOICES?"
+
+This fine hymn, so many years appearing with the simple sign "Cawood" or
+"J. Cawood" printed under it, still holds its place by universal
+welcome.
+
+ Hark! what mean those holy voices
+ Sweetly sounding through the skies?
+ Lo th' angelic host rejoices;
+ Heavenly hallelujahs rise.
+
+ Hear them tell the wondrous story,
+ Hear them chant in hymns of joy,
+ Glory in the highest, glory,
+ Glory be to God on high!
+
+The Rev. John Cawood, a farmer's son, was born at Matlock, Derbyshire,
+Eng., March 18, 1775, graduated at Oxford, 1801, and was appointed
+perpetual curate of St. Anne's in Bendly, Worcestershire. Died Nov. 7,
+1852. He is said to have written seventeen hymns, but was too modest to
+publish any.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Dr. Dykes' "Oswald," and Henry Smart's "Bethany" are worthy expressions
+of the feeling in Cawood's hymn. In America, Mason's "Amaland," with
+fugue in the second and third lines, has long been a favorite.
+
+
+"WHILE SHEPHERDS WATCHED THEIR FLOCKS."
+
+This was written by Nahum Tate (1652-1715), and after two hundred years
+the church remembers and sings the song. Six generations have grown up
+with their childhood memory of its pictorial verses illustrating St.
+Luke's Christmas story.
+
+ While shepherds watched their flocks by night,
+ All seated on the ground,
+ The angel of the Lord came down
+ And glory shone around.
+
+ "Fear not" said he, for mighty dread
+ Had seized their troubled mind,
+ "Glad tidings of great joy I bring
+ To you and all mankind."
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Modern hymnals have substituted "Christmas" and other more or less
+spirited tunes for Read's "Sherburne," which was the first musical
+translation of the hymn to American ears. But, to show the traditional
+hold that the New England fugue melody maintains on the people, many
+collections print it as alternate tune. Some modifications have been
+made in it, but its survival is a tribute to its real merit.
+
+Daniel Read, the creator of "Sherburne," "Windham," "Russia,"
+"Stafford," "Lisbon," and many other tunes characteristic of a bygone
+school of psalmody, was born in Rehoboth, Mass., Nov. 2, 1757. He
+published _The American Singing Book_, 1785, _Columbian Harmony_, 1793,
+and several other collections. Died in New Haven, Ct., 1836.
+
+
+"IT CAME UPON THE MIDNIGHT CLEAR."
+
+Rev. Edmund Hamilton Sears, author of this beautiful hymn-poem, was born
+at Sandisfield, Berkshire Co., Mass., April 6, 1810, and educated at
+Union College and Harvard University. He became pastor of the Unitarian
+Church in Wayland, Mass., 1838. Died in the adjoining town of Weston,
+Jan. 14, 1876. The hymn first appeared in the _Christian Register_ in
+1857.
+
+ It came upon the midnight clear,
+ That glorious song of old,
+ From angels bending near the earth
+ To touch their harps of gold.
+
+ "Peace to the earth, good will to men
+ From Heaven's all-gracious King."
+ The world in solemn stillness lay,
+ To hear the angels sing.
+
+ Still through the cloven skies they come
+ With peaceful wings unfurled
+ And still their heavenly music floats
+ O'er all the weary world.
+
+ Above its sad and lonely plains
+ They bend on hovering wing,
+ And ever o'er its Babel sounds
+ The blessed angels sing.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+No more sympathetic music has been written to these lines than "Carol,"
+the tune composed by Richard Storrs Willis, a brother of Nathaniel
+Parker Willis the poet, and son of Deacon Nathaniel Willis, the founder
+of the _Youth's Companion_. He was born Feb, 10, 1819, graduated at Yale
+in 1841, and followed literature as a profession. He was also a musician
+and composer. For many years he edited the _N.Y. Musical World_, and,
+besides contributing frequently to current literature, published _Church
+Chorals and Choir Studies_, _Our Church Music_ and several other volumes
+on musical subjects. Died in Detroit, May 7, 1900.
+
+The much-loved and constantly used advent psalm of Mr. Sears,--
+
+ Calm on the listening ear of night
+ Come heaven's melodious strains
+ Where wild Judea stretches far
+ Her silver-mantled plains,
+
+--was set to music by John Edgar Gould, and the smooth choral with its
+sweet chords is a remarkable example of blended voice and verse.
+
+
+"O LITTLE TOWN OF BETHLEHEM!"
+
+Phillips Brooks, the eloquent bishop of Massachusetts, loved to write
+simple and tender poems for the children of his church and diocese. They
+all reveal his loving heart and the beauty of his consecrated
+imagination. This one, the best of his _Christmas Songs_, was slow in
+coming to public notice, but finally found its place in hymn-tune
+collections.
+
+ O little town of Bethlehem,
+ How still we see thee lie!
+ Above thy deep and dreamless sleep
+ The silent stars go by;
+ Yet in thy dark streets shineth
+ The everlasting light;
+ The hopes and fears of all the years
+ Are met in thee tonight.
+
+ For Christ is born of Mary,
+ And gathered all above,
+ While mortals sleep, the angels keep
+ Their watch of wondering love.
+ O morning stars, together
+ Proclaim the holy birth!
+ And praises sing to God the King
+ And peace to men on earth.
+
+ How silently, how silently,
+ The wondrous gift is given!
+ So God imparts to human hearts
+ The blessings of His heaven.
+ No ear may hear His coming,
+ But in this world of sin,
+ Where meek souls will receive Him still
+ The dear Christ enters in.
+
+Phillips Brooks, late bishop of the diocese of Massachusetts, was born
+in Boston, Dec. 13, 1835; died Jan. 23, 1893. He was graduated at
+Harvard in 1855, and at the Episcopal Divinity School of Alexandria,
+Va., 1859. The first ten years of his ministry were spent in
+Pennsylvania, after which he became rector of Trinity Church, Boston,
+and was elected bishop in 1891. He was an inspiring teacher and
+preacher, an eloquent pulpit orator, and a man of deep and rich
+religious life.
+
+The hymn was written in 1868, and it was, no doubt, the ripened thought
+of his never-forgotten visit to the "little town of Bethlehem" two years
+before.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Bethlehem" is the appropriate name of a tune written by J. Barnby, and
+adapted to the words, but it is the hymn's first melody (named "St.
+Louis" by the compiler who first printed it in the _Church Porch_ from
+original leaflets) that has the credit of carrying it to popularity.
+
+The composer was Mr. Redner, organist of the Church of the Holy Trinity,
+Philadelphia, of which Rector Brooks was then in charge. Lewis Henry
+Redner, born 1831, was not only near the age of his friend and pastor
+but as much devoted to the interests of the Sunday-school, for whose use
+the hymn was written, and he had promised to write a score to which it
+could be sung on the coming Sabbath. Waking in the middle of the night,
+after a busy Saturday that sent him to bed with his brain "in a whirl,"
+he heard "an angel strain," and immediately rose and pricked the notes
+of the melody. The tune had come to him just in time to be sung. A much
+admired tune has also been written to this hymn by Hubert P. Main.
+
+
+
+_PALM SUNDAY_.
+
+
+FAURE'S "PALM BRANCHES."
+
+ _Sur nos chemins les rameaux et les fleurs
+ Sont repandos--_
+
+ O'er all the way green palms and blossoms gay
+ Are strewn to-day in festive preparation,
+ Where Jesus comes to wipe our tears away.
+ E'en now the throng to welcome Him prepare;
+ Join all and sing.--
+
+Jean Baptiste Faure, author of the words and music, was born at Moulins,
+France, Jan. 15, 1830. As a boy he was gifted with a beautiful voice,
+and crowds used to gather wherever he sang in the streets of Paris.
+Little is known of his parentage, and apparently the sweet voice of the
+wandering lad was his only fortune. He found wealthy friends who sent
+him to the _Conservatoire_, but when his voice matured it ceased to
+serve him as a singer. He went on with his study of instrumental music,
+but mourned for his lost vocal triumphs, and his longing became a
+subject of prayer. He promised God that if his power to sing were given
+back to him he would use it for charity and the good of mankind. By
+degrees he recovered his voice, and became known as a great baritone. As
+professional singer and composer at the Paris _Grand Opera_, he had been
+employed largely in dramatic work, but his "Ode to Charity" is one of
+his enduring and celebrated pieces, and his songs written for benevolent
+and religious services have found their way into all Christian lands.
+
+His "Palm-Branches" has come to be a _sine qua non_ on its calendar
+Sunday wherever church worship is planned with any regard to the Feasts
+of the Christian year.
+
+
+
+_EASTER._
+
+
+Perhaps the most notable feature in the early hymnology of the Oriental
+Church was its Resurrection songs. Being hymns of joy, they called forth
+all the ceremony and spectacle of ecclesiastical pomp. Among them--and
+the most ancient one of those preserved--is the hymn of John of
+Damascus, quoted in the second chapter (p. 54). This was the
+proclamation-song in the watch-assemblies, when exactly on the midnight
+moment at the shout of "Christos egerthe!" ([Greek: Christos ęgerthę].)
+"Christ is risen!" thousands of torches were lit, bells and trumpets
+pealed, and (in the later centuries) salvos of cannon shook the air.
+
+Another favorite hymn of the Eastern Church was the "_Salve, Beate
+Mane_," "Welcome, Happy Morning," of Fortunatus. (Chap. 10, p. 357.) This
+poem furnished cantos for Easter hymns of the Middle Ages. Jerome of
+Prague sang stanzas of it on his way to the stake.
+
+An anonymous hymn, "_Poneluctum, Magdelena_," in medieval Latin rhyme,
+is addressed to Mary Magdelene weeping at the empty sepulchre. The
+following are the 3d and 4th stanzas, with a translation by Prof. C.S.
+Harrington of Wesleyan University:
+
+ Gaude, plaude, Magdalena!
+ Tumba Christus exiit!
+ Tristis est peracta scena,
+ Victor mortis rediit;
+ Quem deflebas morientem,
+ Nunc arride resurgentem!
+ Alleluia!
+
+ Tolle vultum, Magdalena!
+ Redivivum aspice;
+ Vide frons quam sit amoena,
+ Quinque plagas inspice;
+ Fulgent, sic ut margaritć,
+ Ornamenta novć vitć.
+ Alleluia!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Magdalena, shout for gladness!
+ Christ has left the gloomy grave;
+ Finished is the scene of sadness;
+ Death destroyed, He comes to save;
+ Whom with grief thou sawest dying,
+ Greet with smiles, the tomb defying.
+ Hallelujah!
+
+ Lift thine eyes, O Magdalena!
+ Lo! thy Lord before thee stands;
+ See! how fair the thorn-crowned forehead;
+ Mark His feet, His side, His hands;
+ Glow His wounds with pearly whiteness!
+ Hallowing life with heavenly brightness!
+ Hallelujah!
+
+The hymnaries of the Christian Church for seventeen hundred years are so
+rich in Easter hallelujahs and hosannas that to introduce them all would
+swell a chapter to the size of an encyclopedia--and even to make a
+selection is a responsible task.
+
+Simple mention must suffice of Luther's--
+
+ In the bonds of death He lay;
+
+--of Watts'--
+
+ He dies, the Friend of sinners dies;
+
+--of John Wesley's--
+
+ Our Lord has gone up on high;
+
+--of C.F. Gellert's--
+
+ Christ is risen! Christ is risen!
+ He hath burst His bonds in twain;
+
+--omitting hundreds which have been helpful in psalmody, and are,
+perhaps, still in choir or congregational use.
+
+
+"CHRIST THE LORD IS RISEN TODAY"
+
+Begins a hymn of Charles Wesley's and is also the first line of a hymn
+prepared for Sunday-school use by Mrs. Storrs, wife of the late Dr.
+Richard Salter Storrs of Brooklyn, N.Y.
+
+Wesley's hymn is sung--with or without the hallelujah interludes--to
+"Telemann's Chant," (Zeuner), to an air of Mendelssohn, and to John
+Stainer's "Paschale Gaudium." Like the old New England "Easter Anthem"
+it appears to have been suggested by an anonymous translation of some
+more ancient (Latin) antiphony.
+
+ Jesus Christ is risen to day,
+ Hallelujah!
+ Our triumphant holy day,
+ Hallelujah!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Who endured the cross and grave.
+ Hallelujah!
+ Sinners to redeem and save,
+ Hallelujah!
+
+
+AN ANTHEM FOR EASTER.
+
+This work of an amateur genius, with its rustic harmonies, suited the
+taste of colonial times, and no doubt the devout church-goers of that
+day found sincere worship and thanksgiving in its flamboyant music. "An
+Anthem for Easter," in A major by William Billings (1785) occupied
+several pages in the early collections of psalmody and "the sounding
+joy" was in it. Organs were scarce, but beyond the viols of the village
+choirs it needed no instrumental accessories. The language is borrowed
+from the New Testament and _Young's Night Thoughts_.
+
+ The Lord is risen indeed!
+ Hallelujah!
+ The Lord is risen indeed!
+ Hallelujah!
+
+Following this triumphant overture, a recitative bass solo repeats I
+Cor. 15:20, and the chorus takes it up with crowning hallelujahs.
+Different parts, _per fugam_, inquire from clef to clef--
+
+ And did He rise?
+ And did He rise?--
+ Hear [the answer], O ye nations!
+ Hear it, O ye dead!
+
+Then duet, trio and chorus sing it, successively--
+
+ He rose! He rose! He rose!
+ He burst the bars of death,
+ And triumphed o'er the grave!
+
+The succeeding thirty-four bars--duet and chorus--take home the sacred
+gladness to the heart of humanity--
+
+ Then, then _I_ rose,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ And seized eternal youth,
+ Man all immortal, hail!
+ Heaven's all the glory, man's the boundless bliss.
+
+
+"YES, THE REDEEMER ROSE."
+
+In the six-eight syllable verse once known as "hallelujah
+metre"--written by Dr. Doddridge to be sung after a sermon on the text
+in 1st Corinthians noted in the above anthem--
+
+ Yes, the Redeemer rose,
+ The Saviour left the dead,
+ And o'er our hellish foes
+ High raised His conquering head.
+ In wild dismay the guards around
+ Fall to the ground and sink away.
+
+Lewis Edson's "Lenox" (1782) is an old favorite among its musical
+interpreters.
+
+
+"O SHORT WAS HIS SLUMBER."
+
+This hymn for the song-service of the Ruggles St. Church, Boston, was
+written by Rev. Theron Brown.
+
+ O short was His slumber; He woke from the dust;
+ The Saviour death's chain could not hold;
+ And short, since He rose, is the sleep of the just;
+ They shall wake, and His glory behold.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Dear grave in the garden; hope smiled at its door
+ Where love's brightest triumph was told;
+ Christ lives! and His life will His people restore!
+ They shall wake, and His glory behold.
+
+The music is Bliss' tune to Spafford's "When Peace Like a River."
+
+Another by the same writer, sung by the same church chorus, is--
+
+ He rose! O morn of wonder!
+ They saw His light go down
+ Whose hate had crushed Him under,
+ A King without a crown.
+ No plume, no garland wore He,
+ Despised death's Victor lay,
+ And wrapped in night His glory,
+ That claimed a grander day.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ He rose! He burst immortal
+ From death's dark realm alone,
+ And left its heavenward portal
+ Swung wide for all his own.
+ Nor need one terror seize us
+ To face earth's final pain,
+ For they who follow Jesus,
+ But die to live again.
+
+The composer's name is lost, the tune being left nameless when printed.
+The impression is that it was a secular melody. A very suitable tune for
+the hymn is Geo. J. Webb's "Millennial Dawn" ("the Morning Light is
+breaking.")
+
+
+
+_THANKSGIVING._
+
+
+"DIE FELDER WIR PFLÜGEN UND STREUEN."
+
+ We plow the fields and scatter
+ The good seed on the land,
+ But it is fed and watered
+ By God's Almighty hand,
+ He sends the snow in winter,
+ The warmth to swell the grain,
+ The breezes, and the sunshine
+ And soft, refreshing rain,
+ All, all good gifts around us
+ Are sent from heaven above
+ Then thank the Lord, O thank the Lord
+ For all His love!
+
+Matthias Claudius, who wrote the German original of this little poem,
+was a native of Reinfeld, Holstein, born 1770 and died 1815. He wrote
+lyrics, humorous, pathetic and religious, some of which are still
+current in Germany.
+
+The translator of the verses is Miss Jane Montgomery Campbell, whose
+identity has not been traced. Hers is evidently one of the retiring
+names brought to light by one unpretending achievement. English readers
+owe to her the above modest and devout hymn, which was first published
+here in Rev. C.S. Bere's _Garland of Songs with Tunes_, 1861.
+
+Little is known of Arthur Cottman, composer to Miss Campbell's words. He
+was born in 1842, and died in 1879.
+
+[Illustration: Lowell Mason]
+
+
+"WITH SONGS AND HONORS SOUNDING LOUD."
+
+Stanzas of this enduring hymn of Watts' have been as often recited as
+sung.
+
+ He sends His showers of blessing down
+ To cheer the plains below;
+ He makes the grass the mountains crown,
+ And corn in valleys grow.
+
+
+_THE TUNE_,
+
+One of the chorals--if not the best--to claim partnership with this
+sacred classic, is John Cole's "Geneva," distinguished among the few
+fugue tunes which the singing world refuses to dismiss. There is a
+growing grandeur in the opening solo and its following duet as they
+climb the first tetra-chord, when the full harmony suddenly reveals the
+majesty of the music. The little parenthetic duo at the eighth bar
+breaks the roll of the song for one breath, and the concord of voices
+closes in again like a diapason. One thinks of a bird-note making a
+waterfall listen.
+
+
+"HARVEST HOME."
+
+ Let us sing of the sheaves, when the summer is done,
+ And the garners are stored with the gifts of the sun.
+ Shouting home from the fields like the voice of the sea,
+ Let us join with the reapers in glad jubilee,--
+
+ _Refrain._
+ Harvest home! (_double rep._)
+ Let us chant His praise who has crowned our days
+ With bounty of the harvest home.
+
+ Who hath ripened the fruits into golden and red?
+ Who hath grown in the valleys our treasures of bread,
+ That the owner might heap, and the stranger might glean
+ For the days when the cold of the winter is keen?
+ Harvest home!
+ Let us chant, etc.
+
+ For the smile of the sunshine, again and again,
+ For the dew on the garden, the showers on the plain,
+ For the year, with its hope and its promise that end,
+ Crowned with plenty and peace, let thanksgiving ascend,
+ Harvest home!
+ Let us chant, etc.
+
+ We shall gather a harvest of glory, we know,
+ From the furrows of life where in patience we sow.
+ Buried love in the field of the heart never dies,
+ And its seed scattered here will be sheaves in the skies,
+ Harvest home!
+ Let us chant, etc.
+
+Thanksgiving Hymn. Boston, 1890. Theron Brown.
+
+Tune "To the Work, To the Work." W.H. Doane.
+
+
+"THE GOD OF HARVEST PRAISE."
+
+Written by James Montgomery in 1840, and published in the _Evangelical
+Magazine_ as the Harvest Hymn for that year.
+
+ The God of harvest praise;
+ In loud thanksgiving raise
+ Heart, hand and voice.
+ The valleys smile and sing,
+ Forests and mountains sing,
+ The plains their tribute bring,
+ The streams rejoice.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The God of harvest praise;
+ Hearts, hands and voices raise
+ With sweet accord;
+ From field to garner throng,
+ Bearing your sheaves along,
+ And in your harvest song
+ Bless ye the Lord.
+
+Tune, "Dort"--Lowell Mason.
+
+
+
+_MORNING._
+
+
+"STILL, STILL WITH THEE."
+
+These stanzas of Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe, with their poetic beauty
+and grateful religious spirit, have furnished an orison worthy of a
+place in all the hymn books. In feeling and in faith the hymn is a matin
+song for the world, supplying words and thoughts to any and every heart
+that worships.
+
+ Still, still with Thee, when purple morning breaketh,
+ When the bird waketh and the shadows flee;
+ Fairer than morning, lovelier than daylight,
+ Dawns the sweet consciousness, I am with Thee.
+
+ Alone with Thee, amid the mystic shadows
+ The solemn hush of nature newly born;
+ Alone with Thee, in breathless adoration,
+ In the calm dew and freshness of the morn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ When sinks the soul, subdued by toil, to slumber,
+ Its closing eyes look up to Thee in prayer,
+ Sweet the repose beneath Thy wings o'ershadowing,
+ But sweeter still to wake and find Thee there.
+
+
+_THE TUNES._
+
+Barnby's "Windsor," and "Stowe" by Charles H. Morse (1893)--both written
+to the words.
+
+Mendelssohn's "Consolation" is a classic interpretation of the hymn, and
+finely impressive when skillfully sung, but simpler--and sweeter to the
+popular ear--is Mason's "Henley," written to Mrs. Eslings'--
+
+ "Come unto me when shadows darkly gather."
+
+
+
+_EVENING HYMNS._
+
+John Keble's beautiful meditation--
+
+ Sun of my soul, Thou Saviour dear;
+
+John Leland's--
+
+ The day is past and gone;
+
+and Phebe Brown's--
+
+ I love to steal awhile away;
+
+--have already been noticed. Bishop Doane's gentle and spiritual lines
+express nearly everything that a worshipping soul would include in a
+moment of evening thought. The first and last stanzas are the ones most
+commonly sung.
+
+ Softly now the light of day
+ Fades upon my sight away:
+ Free from care, from labor free,
+ Lord I would commune with Thee.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Soon for me the light of day
+ Shall forever pass away;
+ Then, from sin and sorrow free,
+ Take me, Lord, to dwell with Thee.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Both Kozeluck and J.E. Gould, besides Louis M. Gottschalk and Dr. Henry
+John Gauntlett, have tried their skill in fitting music to this hymn,
+but only Gottschalk and Kozeluck approach the mood into which its quiet
+words charm a pious and reflective mind. Possibly its frequent
+association with "Holley," composed by George Hews, may influence a
+hearer's judgement of other melodies but there is something in that tune
+that makes it cling to the hymn as if by instinctive kinship.
+
+Others may have as much or more artistic music but "Holley" in its soft
+modulations seems to breathe the spirit of every word.
+
+It was this tune to which a stranger recently heard a group of
+mill-girls singing Bishop Doane's verses. The lady, a well-known
+Christian worker, visited a certain factory, and the superintendent,
+after showing her through the building, opened a door into a long
+work-room, where the singing of the girls delighted and surprised her.
+It was sunset, and their hymn was--
+
+ Softly now the light of day.
+
+Several of the girls were Sunday-school teachers, who had encouraged
+others to sing at that hour, and it had become a habit.
+
+"Has it made a difference?" the lady inquired.
+
+"There is seldom any quarrelling or coarse joking among them now," said
+the superintendent with a smile.
+
+Dr. S.F. Smith's hymn of much the same tone and tenor--
+
+ Softly fades the twilight ray
+ Of the holy Sabbath day,
+
+--is commonly sung to the tune of "Holley."
+
+George Hews, an American composer and piano-maker, was born in
+Massachusetts 1800, and died July 6, 1873. No intelligence of him or his
+work or former locality is at hand, beyond this brief note in Baptie,
+"He is believed to have followed his trade in Boston, and written music
+for some of Mason's earlier books."
+
+
+_DEDICATION._
+
+
+"CHRIST IS OUR CORNER-STONE."
+
+This reproduces in Chandler's translation a song-service in an ancient
+Latin liturgy (_angulare fundamentum_).
+
+ Christ is our Corner-Stone;
+ On Him alone we build,
+ With His true saints alone
+ The courts of heaven are filled,
+ On His great love
+ Our hopes we place
+ Of present grace
+ And joys above.
+
+ O then with hymns of praise
+ These hallowed courts shall ring;
+ Our voices we will raise
+ The Three-in-One to sing.
+ And thus proclaim
+ In joyful song
+ But loud and long
+ That glorious Name.
+
+The Rev. John Chandler was born at Witley, Surrey, Eng. June 16, 1806.
+He took his A.M. degree at Oxford, and entered the ministry of the
+Church of England, was Vicar of Witley many years, and became well-known
+for his translations of hymns of the primitive church. Died at Putney,
+July 1, 1876.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Sebastian Wesley's "Harewood" is plainer and of less compass, but
+Zundel's "Brooklyn" is more than its rival, both in melody and vivacity.
+
+
+"OH LORD OF HOSTS WHOSE GLORY FILLS THE BOUNDS OF THE ETERNAL HILLS."
+
+A hymn of Dr. John Mason Neale--
+
+ Endue the creatures with Thy grace
+ That shall adorn Thy dwelling-place
+ The beauty of the oak and pine,
+ The gold and silver, make them Thine.
+
+ The heads that guide endue with skill,
+ The hands that work preserve from ill,
+ That we who these foundations lay
+ May raise the top-stone in its day.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Welton," by Rev. Caesar Malan--author of "Hendon," once familiar to
+American singers.
+
+Henri Abraham Cćsar Malan was born at Geneva, Switzerland, 1787, and
+educated at Geneva College. Ordained to the ministry of the State
+church, (Reformed,) he was dismissed for preaching against its formalism
+and spiritual apathy; but he built a chapel of his own, and became a
+leader with D'Aubigne, Monod, and others in reviving the purity of the
+Evangelical faith and laboring for the conversion of souls.
+
+Malan wrote many hymns, and published a large collection, the "_Chants
+de Sion_," for the Evangelical Society and the French Reformed Church.
+He composed the music of his own hymns. Died at Vandosurre, 1864.
+
+
+"DAUGHTER OF ZION, FROM THE DUST."
+
+Cases may occur where an _exhortation_ hymn earns a place with
+dedication hymns.
+
+The charred fragment of a hymn-book leaf hangs in a frame on the
+auditorium wall of the "New England Church," Chicago. The former edifice
+of that church, all the homes of its resident members, and all their
+business offices except one, were destroyed in the great fire. In the
+ruins of their sanctuary the only scrap of paper found on which there
+was a legible word was this bit of a hymn-book leaf with the two first
+stanzas of Montgomery's hymn,
+
+ Daughter of Zion, from the dust,
+ Exalt thy fallen head;
+ Again in thy Redeemer trust,
+ He calls thee from the dead.
+
+ Awake, awake! put on thy strength,
+ Thy beautiful array;
+ The day of freedom dawns at length,
+ The Lord's appointed day.
+
+The third verse was not long in coming to every mind--
+
+ Rebuild thy walls! thy bounds enlarge!
+
+--and even without that added word the impoverished congregation
+evidently enough had received a message from heaven. They took heart of
+grace, overcame all difficulties, and in good time replaced their ruined
+Sabbath-home with the noble house in which they worship today.[46]
+
+[Footnote 46: The story is told by Rev. William E. Barton D.D. of Oak
+Park, Ill.]
+
+If the "New England Church" of Chicago did not sing this hymn at the
+dedication of their new temple it was for some other reason than lack of
+gratitude--not to say reverence.
+
+
+_THE SABBATH_.
+
+
+The very essence of all song-worship pitched on this key-note is the
+ringing hymn of Watts--
+
+ Sweet is the day of sacred rest,
+ No mortal cares disturb my breast, etc.
+
+--but it has vanished from the hymnals with its tune. Is it because
+profane people or thoughtless youth made a travesty of the two next
+lines--
+
+ O may my heart in tune be found
+ Like David's harp of solemn sound?
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Old "Portland" by Abraham Maxim, a fugue tune in F major of the canon
+style, expressed all the joy that a choir could put into music, though
+with more sound than skill. The choral is a relic among relics now, but
+it is a favorite one.
+
+"Sweet is the Light of Sabbath Eve" by Edmeston; Stennett's "Another Six
+Days' Work is Done," sung to "Spohr," the joint tune of Louis Spohr and
+J.E. Gould; and Doddridge's "Thine Earthly Sabbath, Lord, We Love"
+retain a feeble hold among some congregations. And Hayward's "Welcome
+Delightful Morn," to the impossible tune of "Lischer," survived
+unaccountably long in spite of its handicap. But special Sabbath hymns
+are out of fashion, those classed under that title taking an incidental
+place under the general head of "Worship."
+
+
+_COMMUNION._
+
+
+"BREAD OF HEAVEN, ON THEE WE FEED."
+
+This hymn of Josiah Conder, copying the physical metaphors of the 6th of
+John, is still occasionally used at the Lord's Supper.
+
+ Vine of Heaven, Thy blood supplies
+ This blest cup of sacrifice,
+ Lord, Thy wounds our healing give,
+ To Thy Cross we look and live.
+
+The hymn is notable for the felicity with which it combines imagery and
+reality. Figure and fact are always in sight of each other.
+
+Josiah Conder was born in London, September 17, 1789. He edited the
+_Eclectic Review_, and was the author of numerous prose works on
+historic and religious subjects. Rev. Garrett Horder says that more of
+his hymns are in common use now than those of any other except Watts and
+Doddridge. More _in proportion to the relative number_ may be nearer the
+truth. In his lifetime Conder wrote about sixty hymns. He died Dec. 27,
+1855.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The tune "Corsica" sometimes sung to the words, though written by the
+famous Von Gluck, shows no sign of the genius of its author. Born at
+Weissenwang, near New Markt, Prussia, July 2, 1714, he spent his life in
+the service of operatic art, and is called "the father of the lyric
+drama," but he paid little attention to sacred music. Queen Marie
+Antoinette was for a while his pupil. Died Nov. 25, 1787.
+
+"Wilmot," (from Von Weber) one of Mason's popular hymn-tune
+arrangements, is a melody with which the hymn is well acquainted. It has
+a fireside rhythm which old and young of the same circles take up
+naturally in song.
+
+
+"HERE, O MY LORD, I SEE THEE FACE TO FACE."
+
+Written in October, 1855, by Dr. Horatius Bonar. James Bonar, brother of
+the poet-preacher, just after the communion for that month, asked him to
+furnish a hymn for the communion record. It was the church custom to
+print a memorandum of each service at the Lord's table, with an
+appropriate hymn attached, and an original one would be thrice welcome.
+Horatius in a day or two sent this hymn:
+
+ Here, O my Lord, I see Thee face to face,
+ Here would I touch and handle things unseen
+ Here grasp with firmer hand th' eternal grace
+ And all my weariness upon Thee lean.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Too soon we rise; the symbols disappear;
+ The feast, though not the love, is past and gone;
+ The bread and wine remove, but Thou art here
+ Nearer than ever--still my Shield and Sun.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Morecambe" is an anonymous composition printed with the words by the
+_Plymouth Hymnal_ editors. "Berlin" by Mendelssohn is better. The metre
+of Bonar's hymn is unusual, and melodies to fit it are not numerous, but
+for a meditative service it is worth a tune of its own.
+
+
+"O THOU MY SOUL, FORGET NO MORE."
+
+The author of this hymn found in the Baptist hymnals, and often sung at
+the sacramental seasons of that denomination, was the first Hindoo
+convert to Christianity.
+
+Krishna Pal, a native carpenter, in consequence of an accident, came
+under the care of Mr. Thomas, a missionary who had been a surgeon in the
+East Indies and was now an associate worker with William Carey. Mr.
+Thomas set the man's broken arm, and talked of Jesus to him and the
+surrounding crowd with so much tact and loving kindness that Krishna Pal
+was touched. He became a pupil of the missionaries; embraced Christ, and
+influenced his wife and daughter and his brother to accept his new
+faith.
+
+He alone, however, dared the bitter persecution of his caste, and
+presented himself for church-membership. He and Carey's son were
+baptized in the Ganges by Dr. Carey, Dec. 28, 1800, in the presence of
+the English Governor and an immense concourse of people representing
+four or five different religions.
+
+Krishna Pal wrote several hymns. The one here noted was translated from
+the Bengalee by Dr. Marshman.
+
+ O thou, my soul, forget no more
+ The Friend who all thy sorrows bore;
+ Let every idol be forgot;
+ But, O my soul, forget him not.
+
+ Renounce thy works and ways, with grief,
+ And fly to this divine relief;
+ Nor Him forget, who left His throne,
+ And for thy life gave up His own.
+
+ Eternal truth and mercy shine
+ In Him, and He Himself is thine:
+ And canst thou then, with sin beset,
+ Such charms, such matchless charms forget?
+
+ Oh, no; till life itself depart,
+ His name shall cheer and warm my heart;
+ And lisping this, from earth I'll rise,
+ And join the chorus of the skies.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+There is no scarcity of good long-metre tunes to suit the sentiment of
+this hymn. More commonly in the Baptist manuals its vocal mate is
+Bradbury's "Rolland" or the sweet and serious Scotch melody of "Ward,"
+arranged by Mason. Best of all is "Hursley," the beautiful Ritter-Monk
+choral set to "Sun of My Soul."
+
+
+_NEW YEAR._
+
+
+Two representative hymns of this class are John Newton's--
+
+ While with ceaseless course the sun,
+
+--and Charles Wesley's--
+
+ Come let us anew our journey pursue;
+
+the one a voice at the next year's threshold, the other a song at the
+open door.
+
+ While with ceaseless course the sun
+ Hasted thro' the former year
+ Many souls their race have run
+ Nevermore to meet us here.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ As the winged arrow flies
+ Speedily the mark to find,
+ As the lightening from the skies
+ Darts and leaves no trace behind,
+ Swiftly thus our fleeting days
+ Bear we down life's rapid stream,
+ Upward, Lord, our spirits raise;
+ All below is but a dream.
+
+A grave occasion, whether unexpected or periodical, will force
+reflection, and so will a grave truth; and when both present themselves
+at once, the truth needs only commonplace statement. If the statement is
+in rhyme and measure more attention is secured. Add a _tune_ to it, and
+the most frivolous will take notice. Newton's hymn sung on the last
+evening of the year has its opportunity--and never fails to produce a
+solemn effect; but it is to the immortal music given to it in Samuel
+Webbe's "Benevento" that it owes its unique and permanent place. Dykes'
+"St. Edmund" may be sung in England, but in America it will never
+replace Webbe's simple and wonderfully impressive choral.
+
+Charles Wesley's hymn is the antipode of Newton's in metre and movement.
+
+ Come, let us anew our journey pursue,
+ Roll round with the year
+ And never stand still till the Master appear.
+ His adorable will let us gladly fulfil
+ And our talents improve
+ By the patience of hope and the labor of love.
+
+ Our life is a dream, our time as a stream
+ Glides swiftly away,
+ And the fugitive moment refuses to stay.
+ The arrow is flown, the moment is gone,
+ The millennial year,
+ Rushes on to our view, and eternity's near.
+
+[Illustration: Carl von Weber]
+
+One could scarcely imagine a greater contrast than between this hymn and
+Newton's. In spite of its eccentric metre one cannot dismiss it as
+rhythmical jingle, for it is really a sermon shaped into a popular
+canticle, and the surmise is not a difficult one that he had in mind a
+secular air that was familiar to the crowd. But the hymn is not one of
+Wesley's _poems_. Compilers who object to its lilting measure omit it
+from their books, but it holds its place in public use, for it carries
+weighty thoughts in swift sentences.
+
+ O that each in the Day of His coming may say,
+ "I have fought my way through,
+ I have finished the work Thou didst give me to do."
+ O that each from the Lord may receive the glad word,
+ "Well and faithfully done,
+ Enter into my joy, and sit down on my throne."
+
+For a hundred and fifty years this has been sung in the Methodist
+watch-meetings, and it will be long before it ceases to be sung--and
+reprinted in Methodist, and some Baptist hymnals.
+
+The tune of "Lucas," named after James Lucas, its composer, is the
+favorite vehicle of song for the "Watch-hymn." Like the tune to "O How
+Happy Are They," it has the movement of the words and the emphasis of
+their meaning.
+
+No knowledge of James Lucas is at hand except that he lived in England,
+where one brief reference gives his birth-date as 1762 and "about 1805"
+as the birth-date of the tune.
+
+
+"GREAT GOD, WE SING THAT MIGHTY HAND."
+
+The admirable hymn of Dr. Doddridge may be noted in this division with
+its equally admirable tune of "Melancthon," one of the old Lutheran
+chorals of Germany.
+
+ Great God, we sing that mighty hand
+ By which supported still we stand.
+ The opening year Thy mercy shows;
+ Thy mercy crown it till its close!
+
+ By day, by night, at home, abroad,
+ Still we are guarded by our God.
+
+As this last couplet stood--and ought now to stand--pious parents
+teaching the hymn to their children heard them repeat--
+
+ By day, by night, at home, abroad,
+ _We are surrounded still with God_.
+
+Many are now living whose first impressive sense of the Divine
+Omnipresence came with that line.
+
+
+_PARTING._
+
+
+"GOD BE WITH YOU TILL WE MEET AGAIN."
+
+A lyric of benediction, born, apparently, at the divine moment for the
+need of the great "Society of Christian Endeavor," and now adopted into
+the Christian song-service of all lands. The author, Rev. Jeremiah Eames
+Rankin, D.D., LL.D., was born in Thornton, N.H., Jan. 2, 1828. He was
+graduated at Middlebury College, Vt., in 1848, and labored as a
+Congregational pastor more than thirty years. For thirteen years he was
+President of Howard University, Washington, D.C. Besides the "Parting
+Hymn" he wrote _The Auld Scotch Mither_, _Ingleside Rhymes_, _Hymns pro
+Patria_, and various practical works and religious essays. Died 1904.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+As in a thousand other partnerships of hymnist and musician, Dr. Rankin
+was fortunate in his composer. The tune is a symphony of hearts--subdued
+at first, but breaking into a chorus strong with the uplift of hope. It
+is a farewell with a spiritual thrill in it.
+
+Its author, William Gould Tomer, was born in Finesville, Warren Co.,
+N.J., October 5, 1832; died in Phillipsburg, N.J., Sept. 26, 1896. He
+was a soldier in the Civil War and a writer of good ability as well as a
+composer. For some time he was editor of the _High Bridge Gazette_, and
+music with him was an avocation rather than a profession. He wrote the
+melody to Dr. Rankin's hymn in 1880, Prof. J.W. Bischoff supplying the
+harmony, and the tune was first published in _Gospel Bells_ the same
+year.
+
+
+_FUNERALS._
+
+
+The style of singing at funerals, as well as the character of the hymns,
+has greatly changed--if, indeed, music continues to be a part of the
+service, as frequently, in ordinary cases, it is not. "China" with its
+comforting words--and terrifying chords--is forever obsolete, and not
+only that, but Dr. Muhlenberg's, "I Would Not Live Alway," with its
+sadly sentimental tune of "Frederick," has passed out of common use.
+Anna Steele's "So Fades the Lovely, Blooming Flower," on the death of a
+child, is occasionally heard, and now and then Dr. S.F. Smith's,
+"Sister, Thou Wast Mild and Lovely," (with its gentle air of "Mt.
+Vernon,") on the death of a young lady. Standard hymns like Watts',
+"Unveil Thy Bosom, Faithful Tomb," to the slow, tender melody of the
+"Dead March," (from Handel's oratorio of "Saul") and Montgomery's
+"Servant of God, Well Done," to "Olmutz," or Woodbury's "Forever with
+the Lord," still retain their prestige, the music of the former being
+played on steeple-chimes on some burial occasions in cities, during the
+procession--
+
+ Nor pain nor grief nor anxious fear
+ Invade thy bounds; no mortal woes
+ Can reach the peaceful sleeper here
+ While angels watch the soft repose.
+
+The latter hymn (Montgomery's) is biographical--as described on page
+301--
+
+ Servant of God, well done;
+ Rest from thy loved employ;
+ The battle fought, the victory won,
+ Enter thy Master's joy.
+
+Only five stanzas of this long poem are now in use.
+
+The exquisite elegy of Montgomery, entitled "The Grave,"--
+
+ There is a calm for those who weep,
+ A rest for weary mortals found
+ They softly lie and sweetly sleep
+ Low in the ground.
+
+--is by no means discontinued on funeral occasions, nor Margaret
+Mackay's beloved hymn,--
+
+ Asleep in Jesus, blessed sleep,
+
+--melodized in Bradbury's "Rest."
+
+Mrs. Margaret Mackay was born in 1801, the daughter of Capt. Robert
+Mackay of Hedgefield, Inverness, and wife of a major of the same name.
+She was the author of several prose works and _Lays of Leisure Hours_,
+containing seventy-two original hymns and poems, of which "Asleep in
+Jesus" is one. She died in 1887.
+
+
+"MY JESUS, AS THOU WILT."
+
+(_Mein Jesu, wie du willst._)
+
+This sweet hymn for mourners, known to us here in Jane Borthwick's
+translation, was written by Benjamin Schmolke (or Schmolk) late in the
+17th century. He was born at Brauchitzchdorf, in Silesia, Dec. 21, 1672,
+and received his education at the Labau Gymnasium and Leipsic
+University. A sermon preached while a youth, for his father, a Lutheran
+pastor, showed such remarkable promise that a wealthy man paid the
+expenses of his education for the ministry. He was ordained and settled
+as pastor of the Free Church at Schweidnitz, Silesia, in which charge he
+continued from 1701 till his death.
+
+Schmolke was the most popular hymn-writer of his time, author of some
+nine hundred church pieces, besides many for special occasions. Withal
+he was a man of exalted piety and a pastor of rare wisdom and influence.
+
+His death, of paralysis, occurred on the anniversary of his wedding,
+Feb. 12, 1737.
+
+ My Jesus, as Thou wilt,
+ Oh may Thy will be mine!
+ Into Thy hand of love
+ I would my all resign.
+ Thro' sorrow or thro' joy
+ Conduct me as Thine own,
+ And help me still to say,
+ My Lord, Thy will be done.
+
+The last line is the refrain of the hymn of four eight-line stanzas.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Sussex," by Joseph Barnby, a plain-song with a fine harmony, is good
+congregational music for the hymn.
+
+But "Jewett," one of Carl Maria Von Weber's exquisite flights of song,
+is like no other in its intimate interpretation of the prayerful words.
+We hear Luther's "bird in the heart" singing softly in every inflection
+of the tender melody as it glides on. The tune, arranged by Joseph
+Holbrook, is from an opera--the overture to Weber's Der Freischutz--but
+one feels that the gentle musician when he wrote it must have caught an
+inspiration of divine trust and peace. The wish among the last words he
+uttered when dying in London of slow disease was, "Let me go back to my
+own (home), and then God's will be done." That wish and the sentiment of
+Schmolke's hymn belong to each other, for they end in the same way.
+
+ My Jesus, as Thou wilt:
+ All shall be well for me;
+ Each changing future scene
+ I gladly trust with Thee.
+ Straight to my home above
+ I travel calmly on,
+ And sing in life or death
+ My Lord, Thy will be done.
+
+
+"I CANNOT ALWAYS TRACE THE WAY."
+
+In later years, when funeral music is desired, the employment of a male
+quartette has become a favorite custom. Of the selections sung in this
+manner few are more suitable or more generally welcomed than the tender
+and trustful hymn of Sir John Bowring, rendered sometimes in Dr. Dykes'
+"Almsgiving," but better in the less-known but more flexible tune
+composed by Howard M. Dow--
+
+ I cannot always trace the way
+ Where Thou, Almighty One, dost move,
+ But I can always, always say
+ That God is love.
+
+ When fear her chilling mantle flings
+ O'er earth, my soul to heaven above
+ As to her native home upsprings,
+ For God is love.
+
+ When mystery clouds my darkened path,
+ I'll check my dread, my doubts reprove;
+ In this my soul sweet comfort hath
+ That God is love.
+
+ Yes, God is love. A thought like this
+ Can every gloomy thought remove,
+ And turn all tears, all woes to bliss
+ For God is love.
+
+The first line of the hymn was originally, "'Tis seldom I can trace the
+way."
+
+Howard M. Dow has been many years a resident of Boston, and organist of
+the Grand Lodge of Freemasons at the Tremont St. (Masonic) Temple.
+
+
+_WEDDING._
+
+
+Time was when hymns were sung at weddings, though in America the
+practice was never universal. Marriage, among Protestants, is not one of
+the sacraments, and no masses are chanted for it by ecclesiastical
+ordinance. The question of music at private marriages depends on
+convenience, vocal or instrumental equipment, and the general drift of
+the occasion. At public weddings the organ's duty is the "Wedding
+March."
+
+To revive a fashion of singing at home marriages would be considered an
+oddity--and, where civil marriages are legal, a superfluity--but in the
+religious ceremony, just after the prayer that follows the completion of
+the nuptial formula, it will occur to some that a hymn would "tide over"
+a proverbially awkward moment. Even good, quaint old John Berridge's
+lines would happily relieve the embarrassment--besides reminding the
+more thoughtless that a wedding is not a mere piece of social fun--
+
+ Since Jesus truly did appear
+ To grace a marriage feast
+ O Lord, we ask Thy presence here
+ To make a wedding guest.
+
+ Upon the bridal pair look down
+ Who now have plighted hands;
+ Their union with Thy favor crown
+ And bless the nuptial bands
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ In purest love these souls unite
+ That they with Christian care
+ May make domestic burdens light
+ By taking each a share.
+
+Tune, "Lanesboro," Mason.
+
+A wedding hymn of more poetic beauty is the one written by Miss Dorothy
+Bloomfield (now Mrs. Gurney), born 1858, for her sister's marriage in
+1883.
+
+ O perfect Love, all human thought transcending,
+ Lowly we kneel in prayer before Thy throne
+ That their's may be a love which knows no ending
+ Whom Thou forevermore dost join in one.
+
+ O perfect Life, be Thou their first assurance
+ Of tender charity and steadfast faith,
+ Of patient hope and quiet, brave endurance,
+ With childlike trust that fears nor pain nor death.
+
+ Grant them the joy which brightens earthly sorrow,
+ Grant them the peace which calms all earthly strife,
+ And to their day the glorious unknown morrow
+ That dawns upon eternal love and life.
+
+Tune by Joseph Barnby, "O Perfect Love."
+
+
+_FRUITION DAY._
+
+
+"LO! HE COMES WITH CLOUDS DESCENDING."
+
+Thomas Olivers begins one of his hymns with this line. The hymn is a
+Judgment-day lyric of rude strength and once in current use, but now
+rarely printed. The "Lo He Comes," here specially noted, is the
+production of John Cennick, the Moravian.
+
+ Lo! He comes with clouds descending
+ Once for favored sinners slain,
+ Thousand thousand saints attending
+ Swell the triumph of His train.
+ Hallelujah!
+ God appears on earth to reign.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Yea, amen; let all adore Thee
+ High on Thy eternal throne.
+ Saviour, take the power and glory,
+ Claim the kingdom for thine own;
+ O come quickly;
+ Hallelujah! Come, Lord, come.
+
+
+_THE TUNES._
+
+Various composers have written music to this universal hymn, but none
+has given it a choral that it can claim as peculiarly its own. "Brest,"
+Lowell Mason's plain-song, has a limited range, and runs low on the
+staff, but its solemn chords are musical and commanding. As much can be
+said of the tunes of Dr. Dykes and Samuel Webbe, which have more
+variety. Those who feel that the hymn calls for a more ornate melody
+will prefer Madan's "Helmsley."
+
+
+"LO! WHAT A GLORIOUS SIGHT APPEARS."
+
+The great Southampton bard who wrote "Sweet fields beyond the swelling
+flood" was quick to kindle at every reminder of Fruition Day.
+
+ Lo! what a glorious sight appears
+ To our believing eyes!
+ The earth and seas are passed away,
+ And the old rolling skies.
+ From the third heaven, where God resides,
+ That holy, happy place,
+ The New Jerusalem comes down,
+ Adorned with shining grace.
+
+This hymn of Watts' sings one of his most exalted visions. It has been
+dear for two hundred years to every Christian soul throbbing with
+millennial thoughts and wishful of the day when--
+
+ The God of glory down to men
+ Removes His best abode,
+
+--and when--
+
+ His own kind hand shall wipe the tears
+ From every weeping eye,
+ And pains and groans, and griefs and fears,
+ And death itself shall die,
+
+--and the yearning cry of the last stanza, when the vision fades, has
+been the household ? [A] of myriads of burdened and sorrowing saints--
+
+ How long, dear Saviour, O how long
+ Shall this bright hour delay?
+ Fly swifter round ye wheels of Time,
+ And bring the welcome day!
+
+[Footnote A: Transcriber's note--This question mark is in the original.
+It is possibly a compositor's query which the author missed when
+correcting the proofs. The missing text could be "word".]
+
+
+_THE TUNES._
+
+By right of long appropriation both "Northfield" and "New Jerusalem" own
+a near relationship to these glorious verses. Ingalls, one of the
+constellation of early Puritan psalmodists, to which Billings and Swan
+belonged, evidently loved the hymn, and composed his "New Jerusalem" to
+the verse, "From the third heaven," and his "Northfield" to "How long,
+dear Saviour." The former is now sung only as a reminiscence of the
+music of the past, at church festivals, charity fairs and
+entertainments of similar design, but the action and hearty joy in it
+always evoke sympathetic applause. "Northfield" is still in occasional
+use, and it is a jewel of melody, however irretrievably out of fashion.
+Its union to that immortal stanza, if no other reason, seems likely to
+insure its permanent place in the lists of sacred song.
+
+John Cole's "Annapolis," still found in a few hymnals with these words,
+is a little too late to be called a contemporary piece, but there are
+some reminders of Ingalls' "New Jerusalem" in its style and vigor, and
+it really partakes the flavor of the old New England church music.
+
+Jeremiah Ingalls was born in Andover, Mass., March 1, 1764. A natural
+fondness for music increased with his years, but opportunities to
+educate it were few and far between, and he seemed like to become no
+more than a fairly good bass-viol player in the village choir. But his
+determination carried him higher, and in time his self-taught talent
+qualified him for a singing-school master, and for many years he
+travelled through Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Vermont, training the
+raw vocal material in the country towns, and organizing choirs.
+
+Between his thirtieth and fortieth years, he composed a number of tunes,
+and, in 1804 published a two hundred page collection of his own and
+others' music, which he called the _Christian Harmony_.
+
+His home was for some time in Newberry, Vt., but he subsequently lived
+at Rochester and at Hancock in the same state.
+
+Among the traditions of him is this anecdote of the origin of his famous
+tune "Northfield," which may indicate something of his temper and
+religious habit. During his travels as a singing-school teacher he
+stopped at a tavern in the town of Northfield and ordered his dinner. It
+was very slow in coming, but the inevitable "how long?" that formulated
+itself in his hungry thoughts, instead of sharpening into profane
+complaint, fell into the rhythm of Watts' sacred line--and the tune came
+with it. To call it "Northfield" was natural enough; the place where its
+melody first beguiled him from his bodily wants to a dream of the final
+Fruition Day.
+
+Ingalls died in Hancock, Vt., April 6, 1828.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+HYMNS OF HOPE AND CONSOLATION.
+
+
+"JERUSALEM THE GOLDEN."
+
+_Urbs Sion Aurea._
+
+"The Seven Great Hymns" of the Latin Church are:
+
+ Laus Patriae Coelestis,--(Praise of the Heavenly Country).
+ Veni, Sancte Spiritus,--(Come, Holy Spirit)
+ Veni, Creator Spiritus,--(Come, Creator Spirit)
+ Dies Irae,--(The Day of Wrath)
+ Stabat Mater,--(The Mother Stood By)
+ Mater Speciosa,--(The Fair Mother.)
+ Vexilla Regis.--(The Banner of the King.)
+
+Chief of these is the first named, though that is but part of a
+religious poem of three thousand lines, which the author, Bernard of
+Cluny, named "De Contemptu Mundi" (Concerning Disdain of the World.)
+
+Bernard was of English parentage, though born at Morlaix, a seaport town
+in the north of France. The exact date of his birth is unknown, though
+it was probably about A.D. 1100. He is called Bernard of Cluny because
+he lived and wrote at that place, a French town on the Grone where he
+was abbot of a famous monastery, and also to distinguish him from
+Bernard of Clairvaux.
+
+His great poem is rarely spoken of as a whole, but in three portions, as
+if each were a complete work. The first is the long exordium, exhausting
+the pessimistic title (contempt of the world), and passing on to the
+second, where begins the real "Laus Patriae Coelestis." This being cut
+in two, making a third portion, has enriched the Christian world with
+two of its best hymns, "For Thee, O Dear, Dear Country," and "Jerusalem
+the Golden."
+
+Bernard wrote the medieval or church Latin in its prime of literary
+refinement, and its accent is so obvious and its rhythm so musical that
+even one ignorant of the language could pronounce it, and catch its
+rhymes. The "Contemptu Mundi" begins with these two lines, in a
+hexameter impossible to copy in translation:
+
+ Hora novissima; tempora pessima sunt; Vigilemus!
+ Ecce minaciter imminet Arbiter, Ille Supremus!
+
+ 'Tis the last hour; the times are at their worst;
+ Watch; lo the Judge Supreme stands threat'ning nigh!
+
+Or, as Dr. Neale paraphrases and softens it,--
+
+ The World is very evil,
+ The times are waxing late,
+ Be sober and keep vigil,
+ The Judge is at the gate,
+
+--and, after the poet's long, dark diorama of the world's wicked
+condition, follows the "Praise of the Heavenly Fatherland," when a
+tender glory dawns upon the scene till it breaks into sunrise with the
+vision of the Golden City. All that an opulent and devout imagination
+can picture of the beauty and bounty of heaven, and all that faith can
+construct from the glimpses in the Revelation of its glory and happiness
+is poured forth in the lavish poetry of the inspired monk of Cluny--
+
+ Urbs Sion aurea, patria lactea, cive decora,
+ Omne cor obruis, omnibus obstruis, et cor et ora.
+ Nescio, nescio quae jubilatio lux tibi qualis,
+ Quam socialia gaudia, gloria quam specialis.
+
+ Jerusalem, the golden;
+ With milk and honey blest;
+ Beneath thy contemplation
+ Sink heart and voice opprest.
+ I know not, O I know not
+ What joys await us there,
+ With radiancy of glory,
+ With bliss beyond compare.
+
+ They stand, those halls of Zion,
+ All jubilant with song,[47]
+ And bright with many an angel;
+ And all the martyr throng.
+ The Prince is ever in them,
+ The daylight is serene;
+ The pastures of the blessed
+ Are decked in glorious sheen.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ O sweet and blessed country,
+ The home of God's elect!
+ O sweet and blessed country,
+ That eager hearts expect!
+ Jesu, in mercy bring us
+ To that dear land of rest,
+ Who art, with God the Father,
+ And Spirit, ever blest.
+
+[Footnote 47: In first editions, "_conjubilant_ with song."]
+
+Dr. John Mason Neale, the translator, was obliged to condense Bernard's
+exuberant verse, and he has done so with unsurpassable grace and melody.
+He made his translation while "inhibited" from his priestly functions in
+the Church of England for his high ritualistic views and practice, and
+so poor that he wrote stories for children to earn his living. His
+poverty added to the wealth of Christendom.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The music of "Jerusalem the Golden" used in most churches is the
+composition of Alexander Ewing, a paymaster in the English army. He was
+born in Aberdeen, Scotland, Jan. 3d, 1830, and educated there at
+Marischal College. The tune bears his name, and this honor, and its
+general favor with the public, are so much testimony to its merit. It is
+a stately harmony in D major with sonorous and impressive chords. Ewing
+died in 1895.
+
+
+"WHY SHOULD WE START AND FEAR TO DIE?"
+
+Probably it is an embarrassment of riches and despair of space that have
+crowded this hymn--perhaps the sweetest that Watts ever wrote--out of
+some of our church singing-books. It is pleasant to find it in the new
+_Methodist Hymnal_, though with an indifferent tune.
+
+Christians of today should surely sing the last two stanzas with the
+same exalted joy and hope that made them sacred to pious generations
+past and gone--
+
+ O if my Lord would come and meet,
+ My soul would stretch her wings in haste.
+ Fly fearless through death's iron gate,
+ Nor feel the terrors as she passed.
+ Jesus can make a dying bed
+ Feel soft as downy pillows are,
+ While on His breast I lean my head
+ And breathe my life out sweetly there.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The plain-music of William Boyd's "Pentecost," (with modulations in the
+tenor), creates a new accent for the familiar lines. Preferable in every
+sense are Bradbury's tender "Zephyr" or "Rest."
+
+No coming generation will ever feel the pious gladness of Amariah Hall's
+"All Saints New" in E flat major as it stirred the Christian choirs of
+seventy five years ago. Fitted to this heart-felt lyric of Watts, it
+opened with the words--
+
+ O if my Lord would come and meet,
+
+in full harmony and four-four time, continuing to the end of the stanza.
+The melody, with its slurred syllables and beautiful modulations was
+almost blithe in its brightness, while the strong musical bass and the
+striking chords of the "counter," chastened it and held the anthem to
+its due solemnity of tone and expression. Then the fugue took up--
+
+ Jesus can make a dying bed,
+
+--bass, treble and tenor adding voice after voice in the manner of the
+old "canon" song, and the full harmony again carried the words, with
+loving repetitions, to the final bar. The music closed with a minor
+concord that was strangely effective and sweet.
+
+Amariah Hall was born in Raynham, Mass., April 28, 1785, and died there
+Feb. 8, 1827. He "farmed it," manufactured straw-bonnets, kept tavern
+and taught singing-school. Music was only an avocation with him, but he
+was an artist in his way, and among his compositions are found in some
+ancient Tune books his "Morning Glory," "Canaan," "Falmouth,"
+"Restoration," "Massachusetts," "Raynham," "Crucifixion," "Harmony,"
+"Devotion," "Zion," and "Hosanna."
+
+"All Saints New" was his masterpiece.
+
+
+"WHEN I CAN READ MY TITLE CLEAR."
+
+No sacred song has been more profanely parodied by the thoughtless, or
+more travestied, (if we may use so strong a word), in popular religious
+airs, than this golden hymn which has made Isaac Watts a benefactor to
+every prisoner of hope. Not to mention the fancy figures and refrains
+of camp-meeting music, which have cheapened it, neither John Cole's
+"Annapolis" nor Arne's "Arlington" nor a dozen others that have borrowed
+these speaking lines, can wear out their association with "Auld lang
+Syne." The hymn has permeated the tune, and, without forgetting its own
+words, the Scotch melody preforms both a social and religious mission.
+Some arrangements of it make it needlessly repetitious, but its pathos
+will always best vocalize the hymn, especially the first and last
+stanzas--
+
+ When I can read my title clear
+ To mansions in the skies
+ I'll bid farewell to every fear
+ And wipe my weeping eyes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ There shall I bathe my weary soul
+ In seas of heavenly rest,
+ And not a wave of trouble roll
+ Across my peaceful breast.
+
+
+"VITAL SPARK OF HEAVENLY FLAME."
+
+This paraphrase, by Alexander Pope, of the Emperor Adrian's death-bed
+address to his soul--
+
+ Animula, vagula, blandula,
+ Hospes, comesque corporis,
+
+--transfers the poetry and constructs a hymnic theme.
+
+An old hymn writer by the name of Flatman wrote a Pindaric, somewhat
+similar to "Adrian's Address," as follows:
+
+ When on my sick-bed I languish,
+ Full of sorrow, full of anguish,
+ Fainting, gasping, trembling, crying,
+ Panting, groaning, speechless, dying;
+ Methinks I hear some gentle spirit say,
+ "Be not fearful, come away."
+
+Pope combined these two poems with the words of Divine inspiration, "O
+death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory?" and made a
+pagan philosopher's question the text for a triumphant Christian anthem
+of hope.
+
+ Vital spark of heavenly flame,
+ Quit, oh quit this mortal frame.
+ Trembling, hoping, ling'ring, flying,
+ Oh the pain, the bliss of dying!
+ Cease, fond nature, cease thy strife,
+ And let me languish into life.
+
+ Hark! they whisper: angels say,
+ "Sister spirit, come away!"
+ What is this absorbs me quite,
+ Steals my senses, shuts my sight,
+ Drowns my spirit, draws my breath,
+ Tell me, my soul, can this be death?
+
+ The world recedes: it disappears:
+ Heaven opens on my eyes; my ears
+ With sounds seraphic ring.
+ Lend, lend your wings! I mount! I fly!
+ O grave where is thy victory?
+ O death, where is thy sting?
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The old anthem, "The Dying Christian," or "The Dying Christian to his
+Soul," which first made this lyric familiar in America as a musical
+piece, will never be sung again except at antique entertainments, but it
+had an importance in its day.
+
+Beginning in quadruple time on four flats minor, it renders the first
+stanza in flowing concords largo affettuoso, and a single bass fugue,
+Then suddenly shifting to one flat, major, duple time, it executes the
+second stanza, "Hark! they whisper" ... "What is this, etc.," in
+alternate pianissimo and forte phrases; and finally, changing to triple
+time, sings the third triumphant stanza, andante, through staccato and
+fortissimo. The shout in the last adagio, on the four final bars, "O
+Death! O Death!" softening with "where is thy sting?" is quite in the
+style of old orchestral magnificence.
+
+Since "The Dying Christian" ceased to appear in church music, the poem,
+for some reason, seems not to have been recognized as a hymn. It is,
+however, a Christian poem, and a true lyric of hope and consolation,
+whatever the character of the author or however pagan the original that
+suggested it.
+
+The most that is now known of Edward Harwood, the composer of the
+anthem, is that he was an English musician and psalmodist, born near
+Blackburn, Lancaster Co., 1707, and died about 1787.
+
+
+"YOUR HARPS, YE TREMBLING SAINTS."
+
+This hymn of Toplady,--unlike "A Debtor to Mercy Alone," and "Inspirer
+and Hearer of Prayer," both now little used,--stirs no controversial
+feeling by a single line of his aggressive Calvinism. It is simply a
+song of Christian gratitude and joy.
+
+ Your harps, ye trembling saints
+ Down from the willows take;
+ Loud to the praise of Love Divine
+ Bid every string awake.
+
+ Though in a foreign land,
+ We are not far from home,
+ And nearer to our house above
+ We every moment come.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Blest is the man, O God,
+ That stays himself on Thee,
+ Who waits for Thy salvation, Lord,
+ Shall Thy salvation see.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Olmutz" was arranged by Lowell Mason from a Gregorian chant. He set it
+himself to Toplady's hymn, and it seems the natural music for it. The
+words are also sometimes written and sung to Jonathan Woodman's "State
+St."
+
+Jonathan Call Woodman was born in Newburyport, Mass., July 12, 1813. He
+was the organist of St. George's Chapel, Flushing L.I. and a teacher,
+composer and compiler. His _Musical Casket_ was not issued until Dec.
+1858, but he wrote the tune of "State St." in August, 1844. It was a
+contribution to Bradbury's _Psalmodist_, which was published the same
+year.
+
+
+"YE GOLDEN LAMPS OF HEAVEN, FAREWELL."
+
+Dr. Doddridge's "farewell" is not a note of regret. Unlike Bernard, he
+appreciates this world while he anticipates the better one, but his
+contemplation climbs from God's footstool to His throne. His thought is
+in the last two lines of the second stanza, where he takes leave of the
+sun--
+
+ My soul that springs beyond thy sphere
+ No more demands thine aid.
+
+But his fancy will find a function for the "golden lamps" even in the
+glory that swallows up their light--
+
+ Ye stars are but the shining dust
+ Of my divine abode,
+ The pavement of those heavenly courts
+ Where I shall dwell with God.
+
+ The Father of eternal light
+ Shall there His beams display,
+ Nor shall one moment's darkness mix
+ With that unvaried day.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The hymn has been assigned to "Mt. Auburn," a composition of George
+Kingsley, but a far better interpretation--if not best of all--is H.K.
+Oliver's tune of "Merton," (1847,) older, but written purposely for the
+words.
+
+
+"TRIUMPHANT ZION, LIFT THY HEAD."
+
+This fine and stimulating lyric is Doddridge in another tone. Instead of
+singing hope to the individual, he sounds a note of encouragement to
+the church.
+
+ Put all thy beauteous garments on,
+ And let thy excellence be known;
+ Decked in the robes of righteousness,
+ The world thy glories shall confess.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ God from on high has heard thy prayer;
+ His hand thy ruins shall repair,
+ Nor will thy watchful Monarch cease
+ To guard thee in eternal peace.
+
+The tune, "Anvern," is one of Mason's charming melodies, full of vigor
+and cheerful life, and everything can be said of it that is said of the
+hymn. Duffield compares the hymn and tune to a ring and its jewel.
+
+It is one of the inevitable freaks of taste that puts so choice a strain
+of psalmody out of fashion. Many younger pieces in the church manuals
+could be better spared.
+
+
+"SHRINKING FROM THE COLD HAND OF DEATH."
+
+This is a hymn of contrast, the dark of recoiling nature making the
+background of the rainbow. Written by Charles Wesley, it has passed
+among his forgotten or mostly forgotten productions but is notable for
+the frequent use of its 3rd stanza by his brother John. John Wesley, in
+his old age, did not so much shrink from death as from the thought of
+its too slow approach. His almost constant prayer was, "Lord, let me not
+live to be useless." "At every place," says Belcher, "after giving to
+his societies what he desired them to consider his last advice, he
+invariably concluded with the stanza beginning--
+
+ "'Oh that, without a lingering groan,
+ I may the welcome word receive.
+ My body with my charge lay down,
+ And cease at once to work and live.'"
+
+The anticipation of death itself by both the great evangelists ended
+like the ending of the hymn--
+
+ No anxious doubt, no guilty gloom
+ Shall daunt whom Jesus' presence cheers;
+ My Light, my Life, my God is come,
+ And glory in His face appears.
+
+
+"FOREVER WITH THE LORD."
+
+Montgomery had the Ambrosian gift of spiritual song-writing. Whatever
+may be thought of his more ambitious descriptive or heroic pages of
+verse, and his long narrative poems, his lyrics and cabinet pieces are
+gems. The poetry in some exquisite stanzas of his "Grave" is a dream of
+peace:
+
+ There is a calm for those who weep,
+ A rest for weary mortals found;
+ They softly lie and sweetly sleep
+ Low in the ground.
+
+ The storms that wreck the winter's sky
+ No more disturb their deep repose
+ Than summer evening's latest sigh
+ That shuts the rose.
+
+But in the poem, "At Home in Heaven," which we are considering--with its
+divine text in I Thess. 4:17--the Sheffield bard rises to the heights of
+vision. He wrote it when he was an old man. The contemplation so
+absorbed him that he could not quit his theme till he had composed
+twenty-two quatrains. Only four or five--or at most only seven of
+them--are now in general use. Like his "Prayer is the Soul's Sincere
+Desire," they have the pith of devotional thought in them, but are less
+subjective and analytical.
+
+ Forever with the Lord!
+ Amen, so let it be,
+ Life from the dead is in that word;
+ 'Tis immortality.
+
+ Here in the body pent,
+ Absent from Him I roam,
+ Yet nightly pitch my moving tent
+ A day's march nearer home.
+
+ My Father's house on high!
+ Home of my soul, how near
+ At times to faith's foreseeing eye
+ Thy golden gates appear.
+
+ I hear at morn and even,
+ At noon and midnight hour,
+ The choral harmonies of heaven
+ Earth's Babel tongues o'erpower.
+
+The last line has been changed to read--
+
+ Seraphic music pour,
+
+--and finally the hymnals have dropped the verse and substituted others.
+The new line is an improvement in melody but not in rhyme, and,
+besides, it robs the stanza of its leading thought--heaven and earth
+offsetting each other, and heavenly music drowning earthly noise--a
+thought that is missed even in the rich cantos of "Jerusalem the
+Golden."
+
+
+_THE TUNES._
+
+Nearly the whole school of good short metre tunes, from "St. Thomas" to
+"Boylston" have offered their notes to Montgomery's "At Home in Heaven,"
+but the two most commonly recognized as its property are "Mornington,"
+named from Lord Mornington, its author, and I.B. Woodbury's familiar
+harmony, "Forever with the Lord."
+
+Garret Colley Wellesley, Earl of Mornington, and ancestor of the Duke of
+Wellington, was born in Dagan, Ireland, July 19, 1735. Remarkable for
+musical talent when a child, he became a skilled violinist, organ-player
+and composer in boyhood, with little aid beyond his solitary study and
+practice. When scarcely twenty-one, the University of Dublin conferred
+on him the degree of Doctor of Music, and a professorship. He excelled
+as a composer of glees, but wrote also tunes and anthems for the church,
+some of which are still extant in the choir books of the Dublin
+Cathedral Died March 22, 1781.
+
+
+"HARK! HARK, MY SOUL!"
+
+The Methodist Reformation, while it had found no practical sympathy
+within the established church, left a deep sense of its reason and
+purpose in the minds of the more devout Episcopalians, and this feeling,
+instead of taking form in popular revival methods, prompted them to
+deeper sincerity and more spiritual fervor in their traditional rites of
+worship. Many of the next generation inherited this pious
+ecclesiasticism, and carried their loyalty to the old Christian culture
+to the extreme of devotion till they saw in the sacraments the highest
+good of the soul. It was Keble's "Christian Year" and his "Assize
+Sermon" that began the Tractarian movement at Oxford which brought to
+the front himself and such men as Henry Newman and Frederick William
+Faber.
+
+The hymns and sacred poems of these sacramentarian Christians would
+certify to their earnest piety, even if their lives were unknown.
+
+Faber's hymn "Hark, Hark My Soul," is welcomed and loved by every
+Christian sect for its religious spirit and its lyric beauty.
+
+ Hark! hark, my soul! angelic songs are swelling
+ O'er earth's green fields and ocean's wave-beat shore;
+ How sweet the truth those blessed strains are telling
+ Of that new life where sin shall be no more.
+
+ REFRAIN
+ Angels of Jesus, angels of light
+ Singing to welcome the pilgrims of the night.
+
+ Onward we go, for still we hear them singing
+ "Come, weary souls, for Jesus bids you come,"
+ And through the dark, its echoes sweetly ringing,
+ The music of the gospel leads us home.
+ Angels of Jesus.
+
+ Far, far away, like bells at evening pealing,
+ The voice of Jesus sounds o'er land and sea,
+ And laden souls, by thousands meekly stealing,
+ Kind Shepherd, turn their weary steps to Thee.
+ Angels of Jesus.
+
+
+_THE TUNES._
+
+John B. Dykes and Henry Smart--both masters of hymn-tune
+construction--have set this hymn to music. "Vox Angelica" in B flat, the
+work of the former, is a noble composition for choir or congregation,
+but "Pilgrim," the other's interpretation, though not dissimilar in
+movement and vocal range, has, perhaps, the more sympathetic melody. It
+is, at least, the favorite in many localities. Some books print the two
+on adjacent pages as optionals.
+
+Another much-loved hymn of Faber's is--
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise!
+ Who doth not crave for rest?
+ Who would not see the happy land
+ Where they that loved are blest?
+
+ REFRAIN
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ The world is growing old;
+ Who would not be at rest and free
+ Where love is never cold.
+
+ Where loyal hearts and true.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ I greatly long to see
+ The special place my dearest Lord,
+ In love prepares for me.
+
+ Where loyal hearts and true.
+
+This aspiration, from the ardent soul of the poet has been interpreted
+in song by the same two musicians, and by Joseph Barnby--all with the
+title "Paradise." Their similarity of style and near equality of merit
+have compelled compilers to print at least two of them side by side for
+the singers' choice. A certain pathos in the strains of Barnby's
+composition gives it a peculiar charm to many, and in America it is
+probably the oftenest sung to the words.
+
+Dr. David Breed, speaking of Faber's "unusual" imagination, says, "He
+got more out of language than any other poet of the English tongue, and
+used words--even simple words--so that they rendered him a service which
+no other poet ever secured from them." The above hymns are
+characteristic to a degree, but the telling simplicity of his
+style--almost quaint at times--is more marked in "There's a Wideness in
+God's Mercy," given on p. 234.
+
+[Illustration: Horatius Bonar, D.D.]
+
+
+"BEYOND THE SMILING AND THE WEEPING."
+
+This song of hope--one of the most strangely tuneful and rune-like of
+Dr. Bonar's hymn-poems--is less frequently sung owing to the peculiarity
+of its stanza form. But it scarcely needs a staff of notes--
+
+ Beyond the smiling and the weeping
+ I shall be soon;
+ Beyond the waking and the sleeping,
+ Beyond the sowing and the reaping
+ I shall be soon.
+
+ REFRAIN
+ Love, rest and home!
+ Sweet hope!
+ Lord, tarry not, but come.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Beyond the parting and the meeting
+ I shall be soon;
+ Beyond the farewell and the greeting,
+ Beyond the pulses' fever-beating
+ I shall be soon.
+ Love, rest and home!
+
+ Beyond the frost-chain and the fever
+ I shall be soon;
+ Beyond the rock-waste and the river
+ Beyond the ever and the never
+ I shall be soon.
+ Love, rest and home!
+
+The wild contrasts and reverses of earthly vicissitude are spoken and
+felt here in the sequence of words. Perpetual black-and-white through
+time; then the settled life and untreacherous peace of eternity.
+Everywhere in the song the note of heavenly hope interrupts the wail of
+disappointment, and the chorus returns to transport the soul from the
+land of emotional whirlwinds to unbroken rest.
+
+
+_THE TUNES._
+
+Mr. Bradbury wrote an admirable tune to this hymn, though the one since
+composed by Mr. Stebbins has in some localities superseded it in popular
+favor. Skill in following the accent and unequal rhythms produces a
+melodious tone-poem, and completes the impression of Bonar's singular
+but sweet lyric of hope which suggests a chant-choral rather than a
+regular polyphonic harmony. W.A. Tarbutton and the young composer, Karl
+Harrington, have set the hymn to music, but the success of their work
+awaits the public test.
+
+
+"WE SHALL MEET BEYOND THE RIVER."
+
+The words were written by Rev. John Atkinson, D.D., in January, 1867,
+soon after the death of his mother. He had been engaged in revival work
+and one night in his study, "that song, in substance, seemed," he says,
+"to sing itself into my heart." He said to himself, "I would better
+write it down, or I shall lose it."
+
+"There," he adds, "in the silence of my study, and not far from
+midnight, I wrote the hymn."
+
+ We shall meet beyond the river
+ By and by, by and by;
+ And the darkness will be over
+ By and by, by and by.
+
+ With the toilsome journey done,
+ And the glorious battle won.
+ We shall shine forth as the sun
+ By and by, by and by.
+
+The Rev. John Atkinson was born in Deerfield, N.J. Sept. 6, 1835. A
+clergyman of the Methodist denomination, he is well-known as one of its
+writers. The _Centennial History of American Methodism_ is his work, and
+besides the above hymn, he has written and published _The Garden of
+Sorrows_, and _The Living Way_. He died Dec. 8, 1897.
+
+The tune to "We Shall Meet," by Hubert P. Main, composed in 1867,
+exactly translates the emotional hymn into music. S.J. Vail also wrote
+music to the words. The hymn, originally six eight-line stanzas, was
+condensed at his request to its present length and form by Fanny Crosby.
+
+
+"ONE SWEETLY SOLEMN THOUGHT."
+
+Phebe Cary, the author of this happy poem, was the younger of the two
+Cary sisters, Alice and Phebe, names pleasantly remembered in American
+literature. The praise of one reflects the praise of the other when we
+are told that Phebe possessed a loving and trustful soul, and her life
+was an honor to true womanhood and a blessing to the poor. She had to
+struggle with hardship and poverty in her early years: "I have cried in
+the street because I was poor," she said in her prosperous years, "and
+the poor always seem nearer to me than the rich."
+
+When reputation came to her as a writer, she removed from her little
+country home near Cincinnati, O., where she was born, in 1824, and
+settled in New York City with her sister. She died at Newport, N.Y.,
+July 31, 1871, and her hymn was sung at her funeral. Her remains rest in
+Greenwood Cemetery.
+
+"One Sweetly Solemn Thought," was written in 1852, during a visit to one
+of her friends. She wrote (to her friend's inquiry) years afterwards
+that it first saw the light "in your own house ... in the little back
+third-story bedroom, one Sunday after coming from church." It was a
+heart experience noted down without literary care or artistic effort,
+and in its original form was in too irregular measure to be sung. She
+set little value upon it as a poem, but when shown hesitatingly to
+inquiring compilers, its intrinsic worth was seen, and various revisions
+of it were made. The following is one of the best versions--stanzas one,
+two and three:--
+
+ One sweetly solemn thought
+ Comes to me o'er and o'er,
+ I am nearer home to-day,
+ Than I ever have been before.
+
+ Nearer my Father's house,
+ Where the many mansions be,
+ Nearer the great white throne,
+ Nearer the crystal sea.
+
+ Nearer the bound of life,
+ Where we lay our burdens down,
+ Nearer leaving the cross
+ Nearer gaining the crown.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The old revival tune of "Dunbar," with its chorus, "There'll be no more
+sorrow there," has been sung to the hymn, but the tone-lyric of Philip
+Phillips, "Nearer Home," has made the words its own, and the public are
+more familiar with it than with any other. It was this air that a young
+man in a drinking house in Macao, near Hong-Kong, began humming
+thoughtlessly while his companion was shuffling the cards for a new
+game. Both were Americans, the man with the cards more than twenty years
+the elder. Noticing the tune, he threw down the pack. Every word of the
+hymn had come back to him with the echo of the music.
+
+"Harry, where did you learn that hymn?"
+
+"What hymn?"
+
+"Why the one you have been singing."
+
+The young man said he did not know what he had been singing. But when
+the older one repeated some of the lines, he said they were learned in
+the Sunday-school.
+
+"Come, Harry," said the older one, "here's what I've won from you. As
+for me, as God sees me, I have played my last game, and drank my last
+bottle. I have misled you, Harry, and I am sorry for it. Give me your
+hand, my boy, and say that, for old America's sake, if for no other,
+you will quit this infernal business."
+
+Col. Russel H. Conwell, of Boston, (now Rev. Dr. Conwell of
+Philadelphia) who was then visiting China, and was an eye-witness of the
+scene, says that the reformation was a permanent one for both.
+
+
+"I WILL SING YOU A SONG OF THAT BEAUTIFUL LAND."
+
+One day, in the year 1865, Mrs. Ellen M.H. Gates received a letter from
+Philip Phillips noting the passage in the _Pilgrim's Progress_ which
+describes the joyful music of heaven when Christian and Hopeful enter on
+its shining shore beyond the river of death, and asking her to write a
+hymn in the spirit of the extract, as one of the numbers in his _Singing
+Pilgrim_. Mrs. Gates complied--and the sequel of the hymn she wrote is
+part of the modern song-history of the church. Mr. Phillips has related
+how, when he received it, he sat down with his little boy on his knee,
+read again the passage in Bunyan, then the poem again, and, turning to
+his organ, pencil in hand, pricked the notes of the melody. "The 'Home
+of the Soul,'" he says, "seems to have had God's blessing from the
+beginning, and has been a comfort to many a bereaved soul. Like many
+loved hymns, it has had a peculiar history, for its simple melody has
+flowed from the lips of High Churchmen, and has sought to make itself
+heard above the din of Salvation Army cymbals and drums. It has been
+sung in prisons and in jailyards, while the poor convict was waiting to
+be launched into eternity, and on hundreds of funeral occasions. One man
+writes me that he has led the singing of it at one hundred and twenty
+funerals. It was sung at my dear boy's funeral, who sat on my knee when
+I wrote it. It is my prayer that God may continue its solace and
+comfort. I have books containing the song now printed in seven different
+languages."
+
+A writer in the _Golden Rule_ (now the _Christian Endeavor World_) calls
+attention to an incident on a night railroad train narrated in the late
+Benjamin F. Taylor's _World on Wheels_, in which "this hymn appears as a
+sort of Traveller's Psalm." Among the motley collection of passengers,
+some talkative, some sleepy, some homesick and cross, all tired, sat two
+plain women who, "would make capital country aunts.... If they were
+mothers at all they were good ones." Suddenly in a dull silence, near
+twelve o'clock, a voice, sweet and flexible, struck up a tune. The
+singer was one of those women. "She sang on, one after another the good
+Methodist and Baptist melodies of long ago," and the growing interest of
+the passengers became chained attention when she began--
+
+ "I will sing you a song of that beautiful land,
+ The far-away home of the soul,
+ Where no storms can beat on the glittering strand,
+ While the years of eternity roll.
+
+ O, that home of the soul, in my visions and dreams,
+ Its bright jasper walls I can see;
+ Till I fancy but thinly the veil intervenes
+ Between the fair city and me."
+
+"The car was a wakeful hush long before she had ended; it was as if a
+beautiful spirit were floating through the air. None that heard will
+ever forget. Philip Phillips can never bring that 'home of the soul' any
+nearer to anybody. And never, I think, was quite so sweet a voice lifted
+in a storm of a November night on the rolling plains of Iowa."
+
+In an autograph copy of her hymn, sent to the editor, Mrs. Gates changes
+"harps" to "palms." Is it an improvement? "Palms" is a word of two
+meanings.
+
+ O how sweet it will be in that beautiful land,
+ So free from all sorrow and pain,
+ With songs on our lips and with harps in our hands
+ To meet one another again.
+
+
+"THERE'S A LAND THAT IS FAIRER THAN DAY."
+
+This belongs rather with "Christian Ballads" than with genuine hymns,
+but the song has had and still has an uplifting mission among the lowly
+whom literary perfection and musical nicety could not touch--and the
+first two lines, at least, are good hymn-writing. Few of the best sacred
+lyrics have been sung with purer sentiment and more affectionate fervor
+than "The Sweet By-and-By." To any company keyed to sympathy by time,
+place, and condition, the feeling of the song brings unshed tears.
+
+As nearly as can be ascertained it was in the year 1867 that a man about
+forty-eight years old, named Webster, entered the office of Dr. Bennett
+in Elkhorn. Wis., wearing a melancholy look, and was rallied
+good-naturedly by the doctor for being so blue--Webster and Bennett were
+friends, and the doctor was familiar with the other's frequent fits of
+gloom.
+
+The two men had been working in a sort of partnership, Webster being a
+musician and Bennett a ready verse-writer, and together they had created
+and published a number of sheet-music songs. When Webster was in a fit
+of melancholy, it was the doctor's habit to give him a "dose" of new
+verses and cure him by putting him to work. Today the treatment turned
+out to be historic.
+
+"What's the matter now," was the doctor's greeting when his "patient"
+came with the tell-tale face.
+
+"O, nothing," said Webster. "It'll be all right by and by."
+
+"Why not make a song of the sweet by and by?" rejoined the doctor,
+cheerfully.
+
+"I don't know," said Webster, after thinking a second or two. "If you'll
+make the words, I'll write the music."
+
+The doctor went to his desk, and in a short time produced three stanzas
+and a chorus to which his friend soon set the notes of a lilting air,
+brightening up with enthusiasm as he wrote. Seizing his violin, which
+he had with him, he played the melody, and in a few minutes more he had
+filled in the counterpoint and made a complete hymn-tune. By that time
+two other friends, who could sing, had come in and the quartette tested
+the music on the spot. Here different accounts divide widely as to the
+immediate sequel of the new-born song.
+
+A Western paper in telling its story a year or two ago, stated that
+Webster took the "Sweet By and By" (in sheet-music form), with a batch
+of other pieces, to Chicago, and that it was the only song of the lot
+that Root and Cady would not buy; and finally, after he had tried in
+vain to sell it, Lyon and Healy took it "out of pity," and paid him
+twenty dollars. They sold eight or ten copies (the story continued) and
+stowed it away with dead goods, and it was not till apparently a long
+time after, when a Sunday-school hymn-book reprinted it, and began to
+sell rapidly on its account, that the "Sweet By and By" started on its
+career round the world.
+
+This seems circumstantial enough, and the author of the hymn in his own
+story of it might have chosen to omit some early particulars, but,
+untrustworthy as the chronology of mere memory is, he would hardly
+record immediate popularity of a song that lay in obscurity for years.
+Dr. Bennett's words are, "I think it was used in public shortly after
+[its production], for within two weeks children on the street were
+singing it."
+
+The explanation may be partly the different method and order of the
+statements, partly lapses of memory (after thirty years) and partly in
+collateral facts. The Sunday-school hymn-book was evidently _The Signet
+Ring_, which Bennett and Webster were at work upon and into which first
+went the "Sweet By and By"--whatever efforts may have been made to
+dispose of it elsewhere or whatever copyright arrangement could have
+warranted Mr. Healy in purchasing a song already printed. The _Signet
+Ring_ did not begin to profit by the song until the next year, after a
+copy of it appeared in the publishers' circulars, and started a demand;
+so that the _immediate_ popularity implied in Doctor Bennett's account
+was limited to the children of Elkhorn village.
+
+The piece had its run, but with no exceptional result as to its hold on
+the public, until in 1873 Ira D. Sankey took it up as one of his working
+hymns. Modified from its first form in the "_Signet Ring_" with
+pianoforte accompaniment and chorus, it appeared that year in _Winnowed
+Hymns_ as arranged by Hubert P. Main, and it has so been sung ever
+since.
+
+Sanford Filmore Bennett, born in 1836, appears to have been a native of
+the West, or, at least, removed there when a young man. In 1861 he
+settled in Elkhorn to practice his profession. Died Oct., 1898.
+
+Joseph Philbrick Webster was born in Manchester, N.H. March 22, 1819. He
+was an active member of the Handel and Haydn Society, and various other
+musical associations. Removed to Madison, Ind. 1851, Racine, Wis. 1856,
+and Elkhorn, Wis., 1857, where he died Jan. 18, 1875. His _Signet Ring_
+was published in 1868.
+
+ There's a land that is fairer than day,
+ And by faith I can see it afar
+ For the Father waits over the way
+ To prepare us a dwelling-place there.
+
+ CHORUS
+ In the sweet by and by
+ We shall meet on that beautiful shore.
+
+ We shall sing on that beautiful shore
+ The melodious songs of the blest,
+ And our spirits shall sorrow no more,
+ Nor sigh for the blessing of rest.
+ In the sweet by and by, etc.
+
+
+"SUNSET AND EVENING STAR."
+
+Was it only a poet's imagination that made Alfred Tennyson approach
+perhaps nearest of all great Protestants to a sense of the real
+"Presence," every time he took the Holy Communion at the altar? Whatever
+the feeling was, it characterized all his maturer life, so far as its
+spiritual side was known. His remark to a niece expressed it, while
+walking with her one day on the seashore, "God is with us now, on this
+down, just as truly as Jesus was with his two disciples on the way to
+Emmaus."
+
+Such a man's faith would make no room for dying terrors.
+
+ Sunset and evening star,
+ And one clear call for me,
+ And may there be no moaning of the bar
+ When I put out to sea,
+
+ But such a tide as, moving, seems asleep,
+ Too full for sound and foam,
+ When that which drew from out the boundless deep
+ Turns again home.
+
+ Twilight and evening bell,
+ And after that the dark,
+ And may there be no sadness of farewell
+ When I embark.
+
+ For though from out our bourne of time and place
+ The flood may bear me far,
+ I hope to see my Pilot face to face
+ When I have crossed the bar.
+
+Tennyson lived three years after penning this sublime prayer. But it was
+his swan-song. Born at Somersby, Lincolnshire, Aug. 63 1809, dying at
+Farringford, Oct. 6, 1892, he filled out the measure of a good old age.
+And his prayer was answered, for his death was serene and dreadless. His
+unseen Pilot guided him gently "across the bar"--and then _he saw Him_.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Joseph Barnby's "Crossing the Bar" has supplied a noble choral to this
+poem. It will go far to make it an accepted tone in church worship,
+among the more lyrical strains of verse that sing hope and euthanasia.
+
+
+"SAFE IN THE ARMS OF JESUS."
+
+If Tennyson had the mistaken feeling (as Dr. Benson intimates) "that
+hymns were expected to be commonplace," it was owing both to his mental
+breeding and his mental stature. Genius in a colossal frame cannot
+otherwise than walk in strides. What is technically a hymn he never
+wrote, but it is significant that as he neared the Shoreless Sea, and
+looked into the Infinite, his sense of the Divine presence instilled
+something of the hymn spirit into his last verses.
+
+Between Alfred Tennyson singing trustfully of his Pilot and Fanny Crosby
+singing "Safe in the Arms of Jesus," is only the width of the choir. The
+organ tone and the flute-note breathe the same song. The stately poem
+and the sweet one, the masculine and the feminine, both have wings, but
+while the one is lifted in anthem and solemn chant in the great
+sanctuaries, the other is echoing Isaiah's tender text[48] in prayer
+meeting and Sunday-school and murmuring it at the humble firesides like
+a mother's lullaby.
+
+[Footnote 48: Isa. 40:11.]
+
+ Safe in the arms of Jesus,
+ Safe on His gentle breast,
+ There by His love o'ershaded
+ Sweetly my soul shall rest.
+ Hark! 'tis the voice of angels
+ Borne in a song to me
+ Over the fields of glory,
+ Over the jasper sea.
+
+ REFRAIN
+ Safe in the arms of Jesus (1st four lines rep.).
+
+ Safe in the arms of Jesus,
+ Safe from corroding care,
+ Safe from the world's temptations,
+ Sin cannot harm me there.
+ Free from the blight of sorrow,
+ Free from my doubts and fears,
+ Only a few more trials,
+ Only a few more tears.
+
+ Safe in the arms of Jesus.
+
+ Jesus, my heart's dear refuge
+ Jesus has died for me;
+ Firm on the Rock of Ages
+ Ever my trust shall be,
+ Here let me with patience,
+ Wait till the night is o'er,
+ Wait till I see the morning
+ Break on the Golden Shore.
+
+ Safe in the arms of Jesus.
+
+ --Composed 1868.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Those who have characterized the _Gospel Hymns_ as "sensational" have
+always been obliged to except this modest lyric of Christian peace and
+its sweet and natural musical supplement by Dr. W.H. Doane. No hurried
+and high-pitched chorus disturbs the quiet beauty of the hymn, a simple
+_da capo_ being its only refrain. "Safe in the Arms of Jesus" sang
+itself into public favor with the pulses of hymn and tune beating
+together.
+
+
+
+
+ INDEX OF NAMES.
+
+ ABBOT, Lyman, 237, 326
+ ABT, Franz, 228, 364
+ ADAMS, E., 369
+ ADAMS, John, 368
+ ADAMS, John Quincy, 293
+ ADAMS, Sarah F., 152
+ ADDISON, Joseph, 113, 114, 353
+ ADRIAN, (Emperor), 515
+ AIBLINGER, Johan Caspar, 357
+ ALDRICH, Jonathan, 287
+ ALEXANDER, Mrs. C.F., 414
+ ALLEN, George N., 412
+ ALLEN, J.O., 129
+ ALMOND, ----, 364, 365
+ ALTENBURG, Johan M., 84
+ AMBROSE, xiii, 1, 2, 3
+ ANATOLIUS, 354
+ APES, William, 265
+ ARATUS, 237
+ ARNE, Thomas A., 107, 108
+ ARNOLD, Matthew, 109
+ ARNOLD, S., 287
+ ATCHISON, John B., 451
+ ATKINSON, John, 528, 529
+ AUBER, Harriet, 168, 169
+ AUGUSTINE, ix, 2, 3
+ AVISON, Charles, 327
+
+ BACH, Emanuel, 9
+ BACH, Sebastian, 9, 71
+ BAILEY, Thomas H., 112
+ BAKER, Sir Henry, 57
+ BALDWIN, Thomas, 262
+ BARLOW, Joel, 242, 243
+ BARNBY, Joseph, 102, 111, 469, 500,
+ 504, 526, 539
+ BARNES, Albert, 35
+ BARTHELEMON, F.H., 202, 222
+ BASIL THE GREAT, 56
+ BASSINI, ----, 444
+ BEANES, William, 333
+ BEDDOME, Benjamin, 160, 169
+ BEECHER, Henry Ward, 218
+ BEETHOVEN, Ludwig Von, 5, 193, 327, 338
+ BELCHER, Dr., 44
+ BENNETT, Sanford F., 535-537
+ BENSON, Louis F., 204, 206
+ BENTHAM, Jeremy, 97
+ BERKELEY, Bp. George, 324-326
+ BERNARD OF CLAIRVAUX, 100
+ BERNARD OF CLUNY, 407, 510, 511, 519
+ BERRIDGE, John, 122, 123, 503
+ BERTHOLD OF TOURS, 55
+ BEZA, Theodore, xvi
+ BIGLOW AND MAIN, 229
+ BILLINGS, William, 16, 327, 332, 333, 475
+ BISHOP, Sir Henry, 135
+ BLACKALL, C.R., 450
+ BLISS, Mrs. J. Worthington, 259
+ BLISS, Philip P., 155, 156, 319, 372,
+ 421, 422, 424, 431,
+ 436, 437, 442, 444, 454
+ BLOOMFIELD, Dorothy, 503
+ BOARDMAN, George Dana, 247
+ BOHLER, Peter, 46
+ BONAPARTE, Napoleon, 97, 389
+ BONAR, Horatius, 225, 226, 228,
+ 309, 490, 415, 527
+ BONAR, James, 490
+ BONAVENTURA, 54, 458
+ BORTHWICK, Jane, 103, 499
+ BORTNIANSKY, Dimitri, 213
+ BOTTOME, Francis, 433
+ BOURDALOUE, 13
+ BOURGEOIS, Louis, 15
+ BOWRING, Sir John, 97, 98, 170, 501
+ BOYD, William, 513
+ BRADBURY, William B., 106, 107, 215,
+ 217, 235, 311, 312,
+ 363, 410, 513, 528
+ BRADY, Nicholas, 12, 14, 193
+ BRAINERD, David, 263
+ BREED, David R., 171, 176, 180, 226, 526
+ BROOKS, Charles T., 348
+ BROOKS, Bp. Phillips, x, 164, 169
+ BROWN, John, 342
+ BROWN, Phebe H., 229-232, 482
+ BROWN, Samuel, 232
+ BROWN, Theron, 188, 476, 480
+ BROWN, Timothy H., 229
+ BRUCE, Michael, 297
+ BRUNDAGE, ----, 454
+ BULL, John, 338
+ BURGMÜLLER, F., 425
+ BURNEY, Charles, 241, 407
+ BURNS, Robert, 333, 336, 367
+ BUTE, Walter, 379, 380
+ BUTTERWORTH, Hezekiah, v, vi, 186,
+ 187, 252, 254
+
+ CALDWELL, William, 277
+ CAMPBELL, David E., 222
+ CAMPBELL, Jane M., 478
+ CAMPBELL, Robert, 61
+ CARADOC, ----, 381
+ CAREY, Henry, 339
+ CAREY, William, 172, 491, 492
+ CAROLINE, (Queen), 203
+ CARY, Phebe, 407, 529, 530
+ CARTWRIGHT, Peter, 271, 272
+ CASE, Charles C., 187
+ CASWALL, Edward, 75, 101, 459
+ CAWOOD, John, 414, 465
+ CELANO, Thomas di., 62, 63
+ CENNICK, John, 124, 126, 504
+ CHALMERS, Thomas, 225, 226
+ CHANDLER, John, 485
+ CHANDLER, S., 270
+ CHAPIN, Amzi, 275
+ CHARLEMAGNE, 5
+ CHARLES, David, 403
+ CHARLES, Thomas, 401
+ CIBBER, Mrs., 108
+ CLARK, Jeremiah, 9
+ CLARKE, Adam, 177
+ CLAUDIUS, Matthias, 478
+ CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA, 294, 296
+ CLEPHANE, Elizabeth C., 423
+ CLICHTOVIUS, 5
+ COLE, John, 115, 479, 507, 515
+ COLES, George, 126, 127, 285
+ COLLYER, William B., 72, 73
+ COLUMBUS, Christopher, 356
+ CONDER, Josiah, 489
+ CONKEY, Ithamar, 99, 249
+ CONVERSE, Charles Crozat, 426
+ CONWELL, Russell H., 532
+ COOK, Martha A.W., 148, 149
+ COOK, Parsons, 148, 149
+ COOPER, George, 312
+ CORELLI, Arcangelo, 39
+ CORNELL, J.B., 438
+ CORNELL, John Henry, 96, 355, 415
+ CORSE, Gen. G.M., 424
+ COUSIN, Anne R., 78, 82
+ COVERT, 333
+ COWDELL, Samuel, 265
+ COWPER, William, x, 129, 131,
+ 176, 192, 403
+ CROFT, William, 204
+ CROSBY, Fanny J., 156, 184, 312,
+ 425, 438, 546
+ CUYLER, Theodore L., 377
+ CYPRIAN OF CARTHAGE, 1
+
+ DADMUN, J.W., 272
+ DAGGET, Simeon, 330
+ DANA, Mary S.B., 287, 288
+ DARTMOUTH, Lord, 269
+ DAVENANT, Sir William, 306
+ DE GROOTE, Gerard, 67
+ DE LA MOTHE, Jeanne M.B., 190, 191
+ DE LISLE, Roget, 329
+ DENHAM, David, 134
+ DERMID, (King), 328
+ DEXTER, Henry M., 294, 296
+ DITSON, Oliver, vii, 413
+ DIXON, William, 36
+ DOANE, Bp. George W., 482, 483
+ DOANE, William H., 157, 425, 429, 430,
+ 438, 450, 480, 541
+ DODDRIDGE, Philip, 116, 117, 169, 410,
+ 413, 476, 488, 495, 519
+ DODGE, Ossian E., 333
+ DOUGLAS, George, vii
+ DOW, Howard M., 502
+ DOW, Lorenzo, 272
+ DOW, Peggy, 272
+ DRAPER, Bourne H., 171
+ DUNBAR, E.W., 288
+ D'URHAN, Christian, 82
+ DUTTON, Deodatus, 232
+ DWIGHT, H.O., 462
+ DWIGHT, John S., 347, 348
+ DWIGHT, Timothy, 29, 133, 134
+ DYKES, John B., 51, 57, 65, 104,
+ 152, 224, 228, 363,
+ 370, 372, 465, 525
+ EDMESTON, James, 299, 488
+ EDSON, Lewis, 395, 476
+ EDWARDS, Jonathan, 263
+ ELIAS, John, 390
+ ELIZABETH, (Queen), 17
+ ELLIOTT, Charlotte, 214, 215
+ ELLIOT, Ebenezer, 183
+ ELLSWORTH, J.S., 437
+ EMERSON, Ralph Waldo, 339, 340
+ EPHREM, Syrus, 56
+ ERBURY, ----, 381
+ ESLING, Catherine, 208, 209, 482
+ EVANS, Evelyn, 407
+ EVANS, Heber, 399
+ EVANS, John Miller, 369
+ EVANS, Thomas, 401
+ EWING, Alexander, 512
+
+ FABER, Frederick W., 233, 234, 302, 524
+ FAURE, Jean Baptiste, 470
+ FAWCETT, John, 132, 133
+ FINDLATER, Mrs., 103
+ FISCHER, William Gustavus, 429
+ FLATMAN, ----, 515
+ FORTUNATUS, Venantius, 357, 472
+ FOSTER, Paul, vii
+ FRANC, Guillaume, 194
+ FRANCIS, Benjamin, 132
+ FRANKENBERRY, A.D., 424
+ FREDERICK, (King), 94
+ FREEMAN, John E., 222
+ FROTHINGHAM, N.L., ix
+ FULBERT, Bp., 59-61
+
+ GARDINER, William, 48, 130
+ GATES, Bernard, 96
+ GATES, Ellen M.H., vii, 256, 258,
+ 430, 449, 532, 534
+ GAUNTLETT, Henry I., 48, 483
+ GELLERT, C.F., 473
+ GEORGE I, (King), 11
+ GERHARDT, Paul, 84, 85, 87, 88, 93
+ GIARDINI, Felice, 227
+ GILMORE, Joseph Henry, 235, 236
+ GLADSTONE, William E., 139, 140
+ GLASER, Carl, 48
+ GLENELG, Lord, 22
+ GOODE, William, 14, 31
+ GORDON, A.J., 162, 164
+ GORDON, Mrs. A.J., vii
+ GOTTSCHALK, Louis, 483
+ GOUGH, John B., 215
+ GOULD, Eliza, 151
+ GOULD, John Edgar, 374, 468, 488
+ GOULD, Sabine Baring, 185
+ GRANNIS, Sidney M., 259
+ GRAPE, John T., 429
+ GRANT, Sir Robert, 21, 22, 212
+ GREGORY NAZIANZEN, 56
+ GREGORY THE GREAT, (Pope), xiii, xiv, 8, 10
+ GRENADE, John, 298
+ GRIFFITHS, Ann, 396-399
+ GRIFFITHS, Edward, 386
+ GRIGGS, ----, 102
+ GROOTE, Gerald de, 67
+ GUIDO, Arentino, xiv
+ GUILD, Curtis, 206
+ GURNEY, Mrs., 503
+ GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS, (King), 82-84
+ GUYON, Madame, 190, 192
+
+ HAGUE, John R., vii
+ HALL, Amasiah, 513, 514
+ HALL, Elvina M., 426
+ HAMMOND, William, 29
+ HANDEL, George Frederick, 11, 31, 134,
+ 166, 414
+ HANKEY, Kate, 427, 429
+ HANNA, Ione T., 456
+ HARRINGTON, C.S., 149
+ HARRINGTON, Karl, 528
+ HARRIS, Howell, 381, 387, 388
+ HARRIS, Thomas, 366
+ HARRISON, Ralph, 48
+ HART, Joseph, 119, 121
+ HAREWOOD, Edward, 517
+ HASTINGS, H.L., 204
+ HASTINGS, Thomas, 25, 59, 142, 160,
+ 168, 174, 219-221, 223
+ HATFIELD, C.F., 14
+ HATTON, John, 37
+ HATTON, John Liphot, 37
+ HAVERGAL, Frances Ridley, 154, 155
+ HAVERGAL, William Henry, 227
+ HAWKES, Annie S., 153
+ HAWKES, Robert, 14
+ HAYDN, Joseph, 32
+ HAYWARD, Thomas, 488
+ HEARN, Marianne Farningham, 441, 442
+ HEATH, George, 143
+ HEATH, Lyman, 247
+ HEBER, Bp. Reginald, 4, 50, 51,
+ 178, 179, 318
+ HEDGE, Frederick H., 71
+ HEMANS, Felicia, 196, 359, 323, 324, 333
+ HENRY vii, (King), 18
+ HEWS, George, 407, 483, 484
+ HICKS, John J., 272
+ HILARY, Bp., xiii
+ HILLER, Ferdinand, 65, 66
+ HINSDALE, George, 229
+ HODGES, Edward, 212, 464
+ HOLBROOK, Joseph P., 360, 364, 501
+ HOLDEN, Oliver, 27, 28
+ HOLMES, O.W., 52, 249, 344
+ HOLROYD, Israel, 409
+ HOLZMAN, ----, 329
+ HOPKINS, Edward, 30, 112
+ HOPKINS, John, 15
+ HOPKINSON, Joseph, 331
+ HOPPER, Edward, 373
+ HORDER, Garrett, 489
+ HOWARD, John, 24
+ HOWE, Julia Ward, 340, 343
+ HUCBALD, xiii
+ HUFFER, Francis, 95
+ HUGHES AND SON, vii
+ HUGHES, Mrs., 359
+ HUMPHREYS, Cecil Frances, 414
+ HUNTER, William, 272, 288, 289
+ HUNTINGDON, (Lady) Selina, 25, 88, 89,
+ 119, 128, 201
+ HUNTINGTON, DeWitt C., 436
+ HUSBAND, John Jenkins, 416
+ HYATT, John, 216
+ HYDE, Charles, 230
+
+ INGALLS, Jeremiah, 121, 274, 278, 507
+ IRVING, Washington, 322
+ ISAAC, Heinrich, 91, 112
+
+ JACKSON, Andrew, 206
+ JACKSON, Deborah, 206
+ JEROME OF PRAGUE, 472
+ JOHN OF DAMASCUS, 53, 54, 57
+ JOHNSON, Albert, 222
+ JOHNSON, Mrs. James G., 452
+ JONES, H.R., 392
+ JONES, John, 393
+ JONES, Nancy, 389, 390
+ JONES, Thomas, 401
+ JUDAH, Daniel Ben, 20
+ JUDSON, Sarah B., 246
+ JULIAN, John, 204
+
+ KEBLE, John, 159, 252, 482
+ KEENE, Robert, 204
+ KELLER, Matthias, 343, 345, 347
+ KELLY, Thomas, 173, 174
+ KEMPIS, Thomas ŕ, 67
+ KEN, Bp., 13, 14
+ KEY, Francis Scott, 49, 333
+ KEY, John R., 49
+ KING, Jacob, 71
+ KING ROBERT II, 11, 57, 58, 60
+ KINGSLEY, George, 34, 102, 158,
+ 281, 318, 519
+ KIPLING, Rudyard, 349-351
+ KOZELUCK, ----, 483
+ KRISHNA PAL, 491
+
+ LAMB, Frank M., 253, 254
+ LATTIMORE, W.O., 434
+ LEE, Mary Augusta, 455, 456
+ LEE, Gen. Robert E., 206
+ LELAND, John, 224, 276, 482
+ LINCOLN, Abraham, 239, 256
+ LINDSAY, Miss, 259
+ LOGAN, John, 279
+ LONGFELLOW, Henry W., 248, 249
+ LONGFELLOW, Samuel, ix
+ LORIMER, George, 252
+ LOUIS, (King), 5, 191
+ LOWRY, J.C., 118
+ LOWRY, Robert, 39, 148, 153,
+ 406, 419, 446, 448
+ LOYOLA, Ignatius, 74
+ LUCAS, James, 495
+ LUDWIG, Duke, 121
+ LUKE, Jemima T., 305, 306
+ LULLI, ----, 338
+ LUMMIS, Franklin H., 342
+ LUTHER, Martin, xvi, 8, 69-71, 388
+ LYON, Meyer, 20
+ LYTE, Henry Francis, 217, 221
+
+ MACGILL, Hamilton M., 296
+ MACKAY, Charles, 135
+ MACKAY, Margaret, 499
+ MACKAY, William Paton, 416
+ MADAN, Martin, 29, 30, 41, 463, 505
+ MAFFIT, John, 274
+ MAIN, Hubert P., vi, vii, 115, 134,
+ 228, 240, 299, 307,
+ 369, 415, 430, 470, 537
+ MALAN, Cćsar, xvi, 214, 384, 436
+ MARCO, (?), Portugalis, 205, 206
+ MAROT, Clement, xvi
+ MARSH, ----, 363
+ MARVIN, Bp., 151
+ MARY, (Queen), 12, 18
+ MARY, (Princess), 12, 18
+ MARY, (Virgin), 356, 358
+ MARY STUART, (Queen), 77
+ MASON, Francis, 175
+ MASON, Lowell, 36, 91, 93, 105,
+ 106, 111, 118, 131, 133, 146,
+ 170, 173, 179, 196, 302, 337,
+ 339, 348, 363, 581, 526
+ MASTERS, Mary, 303
+ MAURICE, ----, 381
+ MAXIM, Abraham, 282, 283, 488
+ MAYO, Mrs. Herbert, 310
+ MAZZINGHI, Joseph, 202, 203
+ McGRANAHAN, James, 308, 444, 452
+ McKEEVER, F.G., vii
+ McKINLEY, William, 151, 251
+ McMULLEN, Mr. and Mrs., 222
+ MEEK, William T., vii
+ MEDLEY, Samuel, 136, 276
+ MELANCTHON, Philip, 69
+ MENDELSSOHN, Felix, 463, 482, 491
+ MERRIAM, Edmund F., vii
+ MERRILL, Abraham, D., 269
+ MIDLANE, Albert, 445
+ MILLER, James, 367
+ MILMAN, Henry Hart, 278
+ MILLS, Elizabeth, 307
+ MILTON, John, 461, 462
+ MOHAMMED, 5
+ MONK, William H., 160, 219, 245
+ MONTGOMERY, James, 21, 144, 145,
+ 176, 177, 285, 353,
+ 480, 487, 499, 521
+ MOODY, Dwight L., 308, 310, 421, 426, 431
+ MOORE, (More), Joshua, 267, 269
+ MOORE, Thomas, 112, 219, 243, 325-328, 333
+ MORGAN, David, 392
+ MORNINGTON, Garret,
+ Colley Wellesley, Earl of 523
+ MORRIS, Robert, 260
+ MORSE, Charles H., 482
+ MOTE, Edward, 216
+ MOZART, Johan Wolfgang, 222, 244, 327
+ MUHLENBERG, Henry M., 158, 498
+ MUHLENBERG, W.A., 157, 158
+ MURILLO, Bartolomeo, 162
+
+ NÄGELI, Johan G., 161, 162
+ NAPOLEON, 97, 389
+ NARES, James, 95
+ NEALE, John M., 6, 7, 55, 57, 354, 512
+ NERO, (Emperor), 322
+ NEWELL, Harriet, 175
+ NEWMAN, John Henry, 223, 224, 524
+ NEWTON, John, 130, 203, 204, 286,
+ 386, 403, 493
+ NICHOLSON, Ludovic, 201
+ NOVELLO, Vincent, 73, 74
+ NUTTER, Dr., 180
+
+ OAKELEY, Frederick, 459
+ OAKELEY, Sir. Herbert S., 252
+ OAKEY, Emily, 434, 435
+ OCCUM, Samson, 267-269, 279
+ O'KANE, Tullius C., 437
+ OLDCASTLE, John, 379
+ OLIVER, Henry K., 104, 105
+ OLIVERS, Thomas, 19, 20, 22, 504
+ OSBORNE, John, 146
+
+ PAINE, John K., 462
+ PAINE, Robert T., 335
+ PALESTRINA, xiv-xvi
+ PALMER, Horatio R., 261, 311, 417, 450
+ PALMER, Ray, 59
+ PARKER, Theodore, ix
+ PARRY; Joseph, 395, 398
+ PATRICK, St., 328
+ PAYNE John Howard, 135
+ PELOUBET, F.N., 188
+ PENRY, ----, 381
+ PERRONET, Edward, 25, 27, 31, 59
+ PHELPS, A.S., vii
+ PHELPS, S.D., 147
+ PHELPS, W.L., vii
+ PHILIP, "King", 265
+ PHILLIPS, Philip, 149, 150, 239,
+ 256, 267, 309, 333,
+ 421, 531, 532, 534
+ PHIPPS, George, 188, 189
+ PIERPONT, John, 335, 336
+ PINSUTI, 415
+ PLEYEL, Ignace, 126, 208
+ PLINY, 293
+ POPE, Alexander, 238, 326, 515, 516
+ POWELL, John, 381
+ PRESBRY, Otis F., 451, 452
+ PRICE, Dr., 41
+ PRICE, E.M., 395
+ PRITCHARD, Rhys M., 379, 396
+ PROCH, Heinrich, 357
+ PURCELL, Henry, 338
+
+ RALEIGH, Sir Walter, 76
+ RANKIN, James, 362
+ RANKIN, Jeremiah E., 496
+ RAVENSCROFT, Thomas, 338
+ READ, Daniel, 407, 466
+ READING, John, 205
+ REDHEAD, Richard, 50
+ REDNER, Louis H., 469
+ REES, William, 402
+ REINAGLE, Alexander R., 87
+ REXFORD, Eben E., 439, 440
+ RHYE, Morgan, 404
+ RICHARDSON, John, 76
+ RIDLEY, Bp., 4
+ RILEY, Mary Louise, 317
+ RIMBAULT, Edward F., 282
+ RINGWALDT, Bartholomew, 71, 73
+ RIPPON, John, 27, 204, 281
+ RITTER, Peter, 160
+ ROBERT II, (King), 57, 58, 60
+ ROBERTS, Evan, 377, 393, 394
+ ROBERTS, W.M., 404
+ ROBINSON, Charles, 171, 179
+ ROBINSON, Robert, 283, 284
+ ROMAINE, William, 31
+ ROOSEVELT, Theodore, 151
+ ROOT, George F., 155, 156,254,
+ 315, 317, 439, 444
+ ROUSSEAU, J.J., 112, 113
+ ROWE, Elizabeth, 45
+ ROWLANDS, Daniel, 381, 387
+ RUTHERFORD, Samuel, 78, 79, 81
+
+ SALMON, Thomas, 432
+ SANDERSON, Mrs., 335
+ SANKEY, Ira D., 184, 258, 308-311,
+ 374, 375, 417, 421-423,
+ 434, 438, 447, 537
+ SCHMOLKE, Benjamin, 499
+ SCHUMANN, Robert, 87
+ SCOTT, Thomas, 226, 411
+ SCOTT, Sir Walter, 240
+ SCRIVEN, Joseph, 425
+ SEAGRAVE, Robert, 94
+ SEARS, Edmund H., 466
+ SENECA, 320, 322
+ SERVOSS, Mary Elizabeth, 442, 443
+ SEWARD, William H., 257
+ SHEPHERD, Thomas, 411
+ SHERIDAN, Mrs. Richard Brinsley, 244
+ SHIPLEY, Dean, 178
+ SHIRLEY, Sir Walter, 127, 128, 202
+ SIMAO, Portugalis, 206
+ SIMPSON, Robert, 298
+ SINGER, Elizabeth, 45
+ SMART, Henry, 4, 5, 10, 137, 465, 525
+ SMITH, Mrs. Albert, 317
+ SMITH, Alexander, 368
+ SMITH, Goldwin, x
+ SMITH, Isaac, 324
+ SMITH, John Stafford, 335
+ SMITH, Samuel Francis, 180-182, 337, 339
+ SPAFFORD, Horatio G., 440, 441
+ SPOHR, L., 126, 207, 227, 228, 244, 488
+ STAINER, John, 65, 66, 352, 474
+ STANLEY, (Dean), Arthur P., 65, 66, 148
+ STEAD, William, 150, 151
+ STEBBINS, George C., 254, 308, 375,
+ 415, 528
+ STEELE, Anna, 197
+ STEFFE, John W., 342
+ ST. FULBERT, 59-61
+ STENNETT, Joseph, 23, 488
+ STENNETT, Samuel, 23, 24
+ STEPHENS, ----, 395
+ STEPHEN, (St.), the Sabaite, 57
+ STERNHOLD, Thomas, 15, 16
+ STEVENSON, ----, 317
+ STOKES, Walter, 84
+ STORES, Richard S., 35, 474
+ STORRS, Mrs. R.S., 474
+ STOWE, Harriet Beecher, 481
+ STOWELL, Hugh, 222, 223
+ STUART, Charles M., 34
+ SUMNER, Janaziah, 330
+ SWAIN, Joseph, 28, 281
+ SWAN, Jabez, 286
+ SWAN, Timothy, 194, 195, 327, 506
+
+ TADOLINI, Giovanni, 357
+ TAIT, Abp., 252
+ TALLIS, Thomas, xv, 17, 18
+ TANSUR, William, 282, 283
+ TARBUTTON, W.A., 528
+ TATE, Nahum, 12, 14, 193, 283
+ TAYLOR, Benjamin F., 533
+ TAYLOR, James, 61
+ TAYLOR, Thomas R., 300, 301
+ TAYLOR, V.C., 52, 244
+ TENNYSON, Alfred, 259, 538-540
+ TERSTEEGEN, Gerhard, 102
+ TESCHNER, Melchior, 8
+ THEODULPH, Bp., 5, 6, 7
+ THOMAS ŕ KEMPIS, 67
+ THOMAS DI CELANO, 62, 63
+ THRING, Godfrey, 371
+ THRUPP, Dorothy A., 310
+ TOMER, William G., 497
+ TOPLADY, A.M., 137, 138, 517, 18
+ TOURJEE, Eben, 149, 150, 235
+ TOURJEE, Lizzie S., 235
+ TOURS, Berthold, 415
+ TRAJAN, (Emperor), 293
+ TYLER, Mrs. Fanny, 28
+
+ UFFORD, E.S., 374, 376, 377
+ UPHAM, Thomas, 192
+ URHAN, Christian, 82
+
+ VAIL, Silas J., 8, 234, 235
+ VAN ALSTYNE, Mrs., 156, 184, 312, 425, 438
+ VERNON, (Admiral), 339
+ VICTORIA, (Queen), 139, 248, 252
+ VOKES, Mrs., 171, 173
+ VOLTAIRE, 43
+ VON GLUCK, 490
+ VON WEBER, C.M., 121, 338, 490, 500
+
+ WADE, ----, 102
+ WALFORD, William W., 432
+ WALTHER, Johan, xvi
+ WARNER, Anna, 418
+ WASHBURN, Henry S., 245, 247
+ WATERS, Horace, 303
+ WATKIN, Jack E., 390
+ WATSON, Bp., 151
+ WATSON, Richard, 120
+ WATTS, Isaac, 14, 29, 33, 35, 37,
+ 40, 41-45, 47, 60, 105, 107-109,
+ 133, 134, 165, 166, 167,
+ 243, 396, 403, 463, 506, 513
+ WAYLAND, Francis, 42
+ WEBB, George J., 182, 444
+ WEBBE, Samuel, 116, 505
+ WEBSTER, Joseph P., 535-537
+ WELLS, G.C., 111
+ WENTWORTH, (Gov.), 269
+ WESLEY, Charles, 14, 26, 45, 47, 94,
+ 111, 118, 204, 274, 359-361, 388,
+ 396, 403, 420, 463, 474, 493, 520
+ WESLEY, John, 14, 209, 211, 273, 520
+ WESLEY, Samuel, 45, 178
+ WESLEY, Samuel Sebastian, 45, 177, 178,
+ 304, 485
+ WHEELOCK, Eleazer, 267, 269
+ WHITE, Henry Kirke, 297, 364-366
+ WHITEFIELD, George, 19, 31, 88,
+ 124, 132, 201
+ WHITING, William, 369, 370
+ WHITTIER, John G., 250, 251
+ WHITTLE, D.W., 444
+ WILLIAM, (King), 12, 13
+ WILLIAMS, Aaron, 130, 134
+ WILLIAMS, David, 405
+ WILLIAMS, Helen M., 125, 126, 206
+ WILLIAMS, Peter, 199, 201, 387, 389
+ WILLIAMS, Thomas, 393, 401, 403
+ WILLIAMS, William, 166-168, 199, 381-386,
+ 388, 396, 399, 405
+ WILLIS, Richard Storrs, 415, 467
+ WILLIS, Nathaniel, 467
+ WILLIS, N.P., 467
+ WILSON, Hugh, 353
+ WINKS, W.E., 406
+ WINKWORTH, Catherine, 84
+ WOODBRIDGE, William C., 338, 339
+ WOODBURY, Isaac B., 111, 183, 244,
+ 319, 407
+ WOODMAN, J.C., 410, 415
+ WOOD, Sir Evelyn, 368
+ WROTH, William, 379
+ WYETH, John, 283, 284
+
+ XAVIER, Francis, 74
+
+ YOUNG, Andrew, 304
+
+ ZERRAHN, Carl, 444
+ ZEUNER, Heinrich, 172, 241
+ ZINZENDORF, (Count), 91, 92
+ ZUNDEL, John, 363, 485
+
+
+
+
+ INDEX OF TUNES.
+
+ ABENDS, 252
+ ABERYSTWYTH, 395
+ ABIDE WITH ME, 219
+ AELRED, 372
+ AIN, 38, 39
+ ALMOST PERSUADED, 454
+ ALSACE, 193
+ ALL SAINTS, NEW, 513
+ AMALAND, 465
+ AMERICA, 336-339
+ AMES, 34
+ AMSTERDAM, 95, 96
+ ANACREON IN HEAVEN, 334
+ ANNAPOLIS, 507, 515
+ ANTHEM FOR EASTER, 474
+ ANTIOCH, 166, 464
+ ANTIPHONALS, xiii
+ ANVERN, 520
+ ARABIA, 388
+ ARIEL, 137
+ ARLINGTON, 107, 118, 515
+ ATHENS, 227, 307
+ AUDIENTES, 303
+ AULD LANG SYNE, 515
+ AURELIA, 177
+ AUTUMN, (Sardius), 222
+ AZMON, 47, 48
+
+ BABEL, 388
+ BALERMA, 297, 298
+ BATTLE HYMN ETC., 341-343
+ BELMONT, 116
+ BENEVENTO, 494
+ BERLIN, 491
+ BETHANY, 153, 465
+ BEYOND THE SMILING AND THE WEEPING, 528
+ BIRMINGHAM, 132
+ BONNY DOON, 367
+ BOSWORTH, 105
+ BOWER OF PRAYER, THE, 147
+ BOWRING, 170
+ BOYLSTON, 133, 169, 523
+ BRADEN, 276
+ BRATTLE STREET, 126, 207
+ BREST, 505
+ BRIGHT CANAAN, 273, 274
+ BRIGHTON, 245
+ BROKEN PINION, THE, 254
+ BROOKLYN, 485
+ BROWN, 232
+ BRUCE'S ADDRESS, 335, 336
+ BRYMGFRYD, 388
+ BUCKFIELD, 283
+ BURIAL OF MRS. JUDSON, 247
+
+ CALM ON THE LISTENING EAR, (EPIPHANY), 468
+ CANAAN, 514
+ CANONS, 11
+ CAPEL Y DDOL, 405
+ CAROL, 467
+ CATHARINE, 404
+ CHESTER, 331, 332
+ CHINA, 194
+ CHRISTMAS, 414, 466
+ CLWYD, 393
+ COLEBROOK, 137
+ COLUMBIA, 332
+ COME, 453
+ COME, MY BRETHREN, 280
+ COME, YE DISCONSOLATE, 221
+ COME, YE FAITHFUL, 55
+ CONSOLATION, 482
+ CONVENTION HYMN, 187
+ CORONATION, 27, 59
+ CORSICA, 490
+ COUNTERPOINT, xv
+ CREATION, 40
+ CRIMEA, 366
+ CROSSING THE BAR, 539
+ CRUCIFIXION, 514
+ CWYFAN, 388
+ CWYNFAN PRYDIAN, 402
+
+ DARBY, 403
+ DEAD MARCH IN "SAUL", 498
+ DEDHAM, 48, 130
+ DENMARK, 41
+ DENNIS, 133, 161
+ DEVONSHIRE, 105
+ DEVOTION, 514
+ DIES IRAE, 65
+ DORT, 187, 348, 481
+ DUNBAR, 531
+ DUNDEE, 194
+ DUKE STREET, 37, 166
+
+ EASTER ANTHEM, 474
+ EBENEZER, 406
+ EDEN OF LOVE, 272, 273
+ EDINA, 252
+ EDOM, 401
+ EIN FESTE BURG, 71
+ EIRINWG, 403
+ ELLACOMBE, 177
+ ELLIOTT, 215
+ ELVY, 388
+ EMMONS, 125
+ EPIPHANY (CALM ON THE LISTENING), 468
+ ERNAN, 407
+ ETERNITY, 449
+ EUCHARIST, 111
+ EVAN, 227
+ EVENING SONG TO THE VIRGIN, 359
+ EXCELSIUS, 96
+
+ FAIR HARVARD, 307
+ FALMOUTH, 514
+ FEDERAL STREET, 104, 105
+ FITZWILLIAM, 4
+ FOREVER WITH THE LORD, 498
+ FREDERICK, 158, 498
+ FROM GREENLAND'S ICY, 179
+
+ GANGES, 119, 269, 270
+ GARDEN HYMN, THE, 277, 278
+ GENEVA, 115
+ GOLDEN HILL, 108, 274
+ GOD BE WITH YOU, 497
+ GOOD MORNING IN GLORY, 164
+ GOTT IST LICHT, 463
+ GREENVILLE, 112, 121
+ GRIGGS, 102
+
+ HABAKKUK, 212
+ HAIL COLUMBIA, 331
+ HALLELUJAH! 'TIS DONE! 422
+ HALLOWELL, 283
+ HAMBURG, 111
+ HANOVER, 204
+ HAPPY DAY, 282
+ HAPPY LAND, 304
+ HAREWOOD, 485
+ HARMONY, 514
+ HARMONY GROVE, 105
+ HARVEST HOME, 479
+ HAYDN, 31
+ HEBER, 102, 318
+ HE LEADETH ME, 236
+ HELMSLEY, 505
+ HENDON, 486
+ HE WILL HIDE ME, 444
+ HOLD THE FORT, 424, 432
+ HOLLEY, 407, 483, 484
+ HOLY CROSS, 102
+ HOLY, HOLY, HOLY, 51
+ HOLY TRINITY, 102
+ HOME OF THE SOUL, THE, 532, 533
+ HOME, SWEET HOME, 135
+ HORBURY, 152
+ HOSANNA, 512
+ HUDSON, 105
+ HURSLEY, 160, 493
+ HYFRYDOL, 375
+
+ I'M GLAD I'M IN THIS ARMY, 299
+ IMMANUEL'S BANNER, 188
+ INDEPENDENCE, 332
+ INNSBRUCK, 91
+ IT IS WELL, 440
+ (See Index of Hymns)
+
+ JAZER, 118
+ JEWETT, 500
+ JOYFULLY, JOYFULLY, 289, 290
+ (See Index of Hymns)
+
+ KEBLE, 52
+ KELLER'S AMERICAN HYMN, 433-445
+ KENT, 105
+ KENTUCKY, 274
+
+ LABAN, 143
+ LAMENT OVER BOSTON, 332
+ LAND AHEAD, 369
+ LANESBORO, 36, 503
+ LA SPEZIA, 61
+ LENOX, 395, 476
+ LEONI, 20
+ LET THE LOWER LIGHTS, 434
+ LISBON, 466
+ LISCHER, 488
+ LLANIETYN, 404
+ LOUVAN, 52, 244
+ LOVING-KINDNESS, 277
+ LOWELL, 407
+ LUCAS, 494
+ LUTHER'S HYMN, 73
+ LUX BENIGNA, 224
+
+ MAGDALEN, 351
+ MAGNIFICAT, xi, xii, 10
+ MAITLAND, 412
+ MAJESTY, 16
+ MALVERN, 93
+ MANOAH, 116
+ MARSEILLAISE, 174, 329, 352
+ MASSACHUSETTS, 514
+ MATTHIAS, 245
+ MEAR, 130
+ MELANCTHON, 496
+ MELITA, 370
+ MILTON, 243
+ MENDELSSOHN, 463
+ MERIBAH, 90, 91, 119, 395
+ MERTON, 105, 519
+ MESSIAH, 281
+ MIDNIGHT MASS, 460
+ MIGDOL, 173
+ MILLENNIAL DAWN, 177, 182, 477
+ MISSIONARY CHANT, 172, 291
+ MONSON, 232
+ MONTGOMERY, 35
+ MORECAMBE, 491
+ MORLAIX, 372
+ MORNING, 105
+ MORNING GLORY, 504
+ MORNINGTON, 523
+ MOZART, 244
+ MT. AUBURN, 519
+ MT. VERNON, 498
+ MY AIN COUNTREE, 456
+ MY BROTHER I WISH YOU WELL, 91
+ MY JESUS, I LOVE THEE, 162, 163
+
+ NANCY JIG, 385
+ NAOMI, 198
+ NEALE, 355
+ NEARER HOME, 407, 531
+ NESTA, 404
+ NETTLETON, 112, 283, 284
+ NEW DURHAM, 283
+ NEW JERUSALEM, 506, 507
+ NICĆA, 51
+ NORTHFIELD, 506-508
+ NORWICH, 207, 462
+ NOT HALF HAS EVER BEEN TOLD, 451
+ NOTTINGHAM, 16
+ NO WAR NOR BATTLE SOUND, 461
+
+ OAK, 302
+ ODE ON SCIENCE, 330
+ O DO NOT BE DISCOURAGED, 299
+ OLD HUNDRED, xvi, 15, 41, 166, 339
+ OLMUTZ, 518
+ OLD SHIP OF ZION, 290
+ ONE MORE DAY'S WORK, ETC., 418
+ ONLY REMEMBERED, 309
+ ONWARD, CHRISTIAN SOLDIERS, 56, 186
+ O, PERFECT LOVE, 504
+ ORTONVILLE, 25
+ OVER THERE, 436
+
+ PALESTINE, 202
+ PALM BRANCHES, 470
+ PARADISE, 526
+ PART-SONG, xv
+ PASCHALE GAUDIUM, 474
+ PENTECOST, 513
+ PETERBOROUGH, 48
+ PILGRIM, 25
+ PISGAH, 118
+ PLAIN-SONG, xii, 10
+ PLEYEL'S HYMN, 280, 411
+ POLYPHONIC, xv
+ PORTLAND, 283, 488
+ PORTUGUESE HYMN, 205, 206, 460
+ PRECIOUS JEWELS, 315, 316
+ PRESIDENT'S MARCH, 331
+
+ RANZ DE VACHES, 352
+ RATHBUN, 99, 249
+ RAVENDALE, 84
+ RAYNHAM, 514
+ REFUGE, 363
+ REJOICE AND BE GLAD, 415
+ RESCUE THE PERISHING, 425
+ REST, 499, 513
+ RESTORATION, 514
+ RETREAT, 223
+ RETROSPECT, 332
+ REVIVE THY WORK, 445
+ RHINE, 125
+ RIVAULX, 104
+ ROLLAND, 106, 493
+ ROCKINGHAM, 131
+ ROTTERDAM, 55
+ RUSSIA, 466
+ RUTHERFORD, 82
+
+ SAFE IN THE ARMS OF JESUS, 541
+ SALEM, 123
+ SALISBURY PLAIN, 105
+ SAMSON, 166
+ SARDIUS, (AUTUMN), 201
+ SAVANNAH, 238
+ SAVIOUR, LIKE A SHEPHERD, 310, 311
+ SAVIOUR, PILOT ME, 374
+ SCALE, THE, xiii, xiv
+ SCATTER SEEDS OF KINDNESS, 318
+ SCHUMANN, 87
+ SCOTS WHA HAE, 336
+ SEQUENCES, (FOOT NOTE [7]), 8
+ SHAWMUT, 407
+ SHERBURNE, 466
+ SICILY, 129, 283
+ SILOAM, 244, 318, 319
+ SILVER STREET, 324
+ SIMPSON, 126
+ SOMETHING FOR JESUS, 148
+ SONGS OF THE BEAUTIFUL, 483
+ SONNET, 287
+ SOUND THE LOUD TIMBREL, 327
+ SPEED AWAY, 184
+ SPOHR, 244
+ STAFFORD, 466
+ STAR-SPANGLED BANNER, THE, 49, 333-335
+ STATE STREET, 410, 515
+ ST. AMBROSE, 296
+ ST. ANSELM, (we plow the fields), 478
+ ST. ATHANASIUS, 59
+ ST. BERNARD, 75
+ ST. BOTOLPH, 244
+ ST. CHAD, 50
+ ST. EDMUND, 152
+ ST. GARMON, 395
+ ST. KEVIN, 307
+ ST. LOUIS, 469
+ ST. MAGNUS, 16
+ ST. PETERSBURG, 213
+ ST. PHILIP, 30
+ ST. THOMAS, 38, 134, 523
+ STEPHENS, 282
+ STOWE, 482
+ SUSSEX, 500
+ SWEET BY AND BY, 534-537
+ SWEET GALILEE, 261, 319
+ SWEET HOUR OF PRAYER, 432
+ SWITZER'S SONG OF HOME, 352
+
+ TALLIS' EVENING HYMN, xvi, 16,17
+ TE DEUM, 1-4
+ TELEMANN'S CHANT, 474
+ THACHER, 109
+ THE BOWER OF PRAYER, 147
+ THE BROKEN PINION, 254
+ THE CHARIOT, 279
+ THE DYING CHRISTIAN, 516, 517
+ THE EDEN OF LOVE, 272, 273
+ THE GARDEN HYMN, 277, 278
+ THE HARP THAT ONCE, 328
+ THE HEBREW CHILDREN, 271
+ THE HOME OF THE SOUL, 532, 533
+ THE LAND OF THE BLEST, 308
+ THE MORNING LIGHT IS BREAKING, 177,
+ 182, 477
+ THE NINETY AND NINE, 422
+ THE OLD, OLD STORY, 429
+ THE PRODIGAL CHILD, 430
+ THE SOLID ROCK, 317
+ THE STAR-SPANGLED BANNER, 333
+ THERE IS A GREEN HILL, 414
+ THROW OUT THE LIFE-LINE, 374
+ THYDIAN, 388
+ TO THE WORK, 438, 480
+ TOPLADY, 59, 142
+ TRENCYNON, 395
+ TRIUMPH BY AND BY, 450
+ TRURO, 241, 407
+ TURNER, 282
+
+ UXBRIDGE, 93
+
+ VOX ANGELICA, 525
+ VOX DILECTI, 238
+ VOX JESU, 227
+
+ WAITING AND WATCHING, 443
+ WALNUT GROVE, 105
+ WARD, 196, 493
+ WARE, 34
+ WATCHMAN, 170
+ WEBB, 177, 182
+ WEIMAR, 9
+ WELLS, 409
+ WELLESLEY, 235
+ WELTON, 486
+ WE SHALL MEET, 529
+ WHAT A FRIEND WE HAVE 425
+ WHAT SHALL THE HARVEST BE, 435, 436
+ WHEN JESUS COMES, 437
+ WHEN PEACE LIKE A, 477
+ WHEN SHALL WE ALL MEET, 266
+ WHEN THE SWALLOWS HOMEWARD FLY, 364
+ WHERE ARE THE REAPERS, 429
+ WHERE IS MY WANDERING BOY, 446
+ WHILE THE DAYS ARE GOING, 312
+ WHITMAN, 146, 364
+ WILMOT, 121, 490
+ WINDHAM, 407, 466
+ WINDSOR, 482
+ WOODSTOCK, 232
+ WOODWORTH, 215
+
+ Y DELYN AUR, 405
+ YORK, 462
+ YOUR MISSION, 259
+
+ ZEPHYR, 513
+ ZION, (T. Hastings), 168, 174
+ ZION, (A. Hall), 514
+
+
+
+
+ INDEX OF HYMNS.
+
+ A CHARGE TO KEEP I HAVE, 274
+ ABIDE WITH ME, FAST FALLS, 217
+ ADAMS AND LIBERTY, 335
+ ADESTE, FIDELES, 458
+ ALAS, WHAT HOURLY DANGERS RISE, 198
+ ALL GLORY, LAUD AND HONOR, 5
+ ALL HAIL THE POWER OF JESUS' NAME, 25-27
+ ALL PRAISE TO THEE, ETERNAL LORD, 8
+ ALMOST PERSUADED, 454
+ ALONG THE BANKS WHERE BABEL'S CURRENT, 242, 243
+ A MIGHTY FORTRESS IS OUR GOD, 69
+ AND IS THIS LIFE PROLONGED TO YOU, 43
+ AND WILL THE JUDGE DESCEND, 410
+ ANGEL OF PEACE, THOU HAS WAITED, 344
+ ANGELS ROLL THE ROCK AWAY, 411
+ ANOTHER SIX DAYS' WORK IS DONE 23, 488
+ A POOR WAYFARING MAN OF GRIEF, 285
+ ARISE, MY SOUL, ARISE, 395
+ ART THOU WEARY, ART THOU LANGUID, 57
+ AS DOWN IN THE SUNLESS RETREATS, 243
+ ASLEEP IN JESUS, BLESSED SLEEP, 499
+ AT ANCHOR LAID REMOTE FROM HOME, 138
+ AVE, MARIS STELLA, 356
+ AVE, SANCTISSIMA, 357
+ AWAKE AND SING THE SONG, 29
+ AWAKE MY SOUL, STRETCH EVERY NERVE, 413
+ AWAKE, MY SOUL, TO JOYFUL LAYS, 276, 277
+ AWAKED BY SINAI'S AWFUL SOUND, 267
+
+ BATTLE HYMN OF THE REPUBLIC, 340, 343
+ BEFORE JEHOVAH'S AWFUL THRONE, 40, 41
+ BEGONE UNBELIEF, MY SAVIOUR IS NEAR, 203
+ BEHOLD THE GLORIES OF THE LAMB, 42
+ BEHOLD, THE STONE IS ROLLED AWAY, 451
+ BE THOU EXALTED, O MY GOD, 40
+ BE THOU, O GOD, EXALTED HIGH, 111
+ BEYOND THE SMILING AND THE WEEPING, 527
+ BLEST BE THE TIE THAT BINDS, 132
+ BLOW YE THE TRUMPET, BLOW, 395
+ BREAD OF HEAVEN, ON THEE WE FEED, 489
+ BRETHREN, WHILE WE SOJOURN HERE, 280
+ BRIGHTLY BEAMS THE FATHER'S MERCY, 431
+ BUILD THEE MORE STATELY MANSIONS, 249
+ BY COOL SILOAM'S SHADY RILL, 318
+ BY THE RUDE BRIDGE THAT ARCHED THE FLOOD, 339
+ CALVARY'S BLOOD THE WEAK EXALTETH, 385
+ CHILD OF SIN AND SORROW, 223
+ CHRISTIANS, IF YOUR HEARTS ARE WARM, 274, 275
+ CHRIST IS OUR CORNER STONE, 485
+ CHRIST IS RISEN! CHRIST IS RISEN! 473
+ CHRIST THE LORD IS RISEN TODAY, 474
+ COME HITHER, ALL YE WEARY SOULS, 409
+ COME HITHER, YE FAITHFUL, 459
+ COME, HOLY GHOST, IN LOVE, 59
+ COME, HOLY SPIRIT, HEAVENLY DOVE, 282
+ COME HOME, COME HOME, 430
+ COME, LET US ANEW, 494
+ COME, MY BRETHREN, LET US TRY, 279
+ COME, SINNER, COME, 417
+ COME, THOU FOUNT OF EVERY BLESSING, 283, 284
+ COME, THOU HOLY SPIRIT, COME, 58
+ COME TO JESUS JUST NOW, 291
+ COME UNTO ME WHEN SHADOWS, 208, 209
+ COME, WE THAT LOVE THE LORD, 37, 38
+ COME, YE DISCONSOLATE, 219, 220, 326
+ COME, YE FAITHFUL, RAISE THE STRAIN, 54
+ COME, YE SINNERS, POOR AND NEEDY, 119
+ COMMIT THOU ALL THY GRIEFS, 84-85
+ CROWN HIS HEAD WITH ENDLESS BLESSING, 30
+
+ DAUGHTER OF ZION, FROM THE DUST, 486, 489
+ DAY OF WRATH: THAT DAY OF BURNING, 62-64
+ DEAR JESUS, EVER AT MY SIDE, 302
+ DEAR REFUGE OF MY WEARY SOUL, 196
+ DID CHRIST O'ER SINNERS WEEP, 160, 161
+ DIE FELDER WIR PFLÜGEN, 478
+ DIES IRAE, DIES ILLA, 62-64
+
+ EARLY, MY GOD, WITHOUT DELAY, 35
+ EARLY TO BEAR THE YOKE EXCELS, 401
+ EIN FESTE BURG IST UNSER GOTT, 69
+ ETERNAL FATHER, STRONG TO SAVE, 369
+
+ FADING AWAY LIKE THE STARS, 309
+ FATHER, WHATEVER OF EARTHLY BLISS, 196
+ FEAR NOT, O LITTLE FLOCK, THE FOE, 82
+ FIERCE RAGED THE TEMPEST, 372
+ FIERCE WAS THE WILD BILLOW, 354
+ FOREVER WITH THE LORD, 521
+ FROM EVERY STORMY WIND, 222
+ FROM GREENLAND'S ICY MOUNTAINS, 178, 179
+ FROM WHENCE DOTH THIS UNION ARISE, 263
+ FULLY PERSUADED, 451
+
+ GAUDE, PLAUDE, MAGDALENA, 472
+ GIVE ME MY SCALLOP-SHELL OF QUIET, 76
+ GIVE TO THE WINDS THY FEARS, 88
+ GLORIA, xii
+ GLORY TO THEE, MY GOD, THIS NIGHT, xvi, 16
+ GOD BE WITH YOU TILL WE MEET, 496
+ GOD BLESS OUR NATIVE LAND, 347, 348
+ GOD CALLING YET? 102, 103
+ GOD IS THE REFUGE OF HIS SAINTS, 196
+ GOD OF OUR FATHERS, KNOWN OF OLD, 349, 350
+ GOD'S FURNACE DOTH IN ZION STAND, 89
+ GREAT AUTHOR OF SALVATION, 398
+ GREAT GOD, WE SING THAT MIGHTY HAND, 496
+ GREAT GOD, WHAT DO I SEE AND HEAR! 71
+ GUIDE ME, O THOU GREAT JEHOVAH, 198, 399
+
+ HAIL COLUMBIA, HAPPY LAND, 331
+ HAIL TO THE LORD'S ANOINTED, 175
+ HALLELUJAH! 'TIS DONE! 422
+ HARK! HARK, MY SOUL! 524
+ HARK! THE HERALD ANGELS SING, 463
+ HARK! WHAT MEAN THOSE HOLY VOICES, 464
+ HASTEN, LORD, THE GLORIOUS TIME, 168
+ HASTEN, SINNER, TO BE WISE, 410
+ HE DIES! THE FRIEND OF SINNERS, 473
+ HE LEADETH ME, 235, 236
+ HERE AT THY TABLE, LORD, WE MEET, 24
+ HERE BEHOLD THE TENT OF MEETING, 396
+ HERE, O MY GOD, I SEE THEE, 490
+ HE ROSE! O MORN OF WONDER! 477
+ HIGH THE ANGEL CHOIRS ARE RAISING, 68
+ HOLY, HOLY, HOLY, LORD GOD, 50, 51
+ HO, MY COMRADES, SEE THE SIGNAL, 424
+ HORA NOVISSIMA, 510
+ HOW FIRM A FOUNDATION, 204, 206
+ HOW HAPPY IS THE CHILD WHO HEARS, 297
+ HOW HAPPY IS THE PILGRIM'S LOT, 207
+ HOW SWEETLY FLOWED THE GOSPEL SOUND, 98
+ HOW SWEET, HOW HEAVENLY IS THE SIGHT, 281
+ HOW SWEET THE COVENANT TO REMEMBER, 396
+ HOW, UNAPPROACHED! SHALL MIND OF MAN, 56
+ HOW VAIN ARE ALL THINGS HERE BELOW, 45
+ HOW VAST A TREASURE WE POSSESS, 43
+
+ I AM FAR FRAE MY HAME, 445
+ I AM SO GLAD THAT OUR FATHER, 319
+ I CANNOT ALWAYS TRACE THE WAY, 502
+ IF I WERE A VOICE, 181
+ IF THOU WOULDST END THE WORLD, 389
+ IF YOU CANNOT ON THE OCEAN, 256-258
+ I GAVE MY LIFE FOR THEE, 154
+ I HAVE A FATHER, 305
+ I HAVE READ OF A BEAUTIFUL CITY, 451
+ I HEAR THE SAVIOUR SAY, 426
+ I HEARD THE VOICE OF JESUS SAY, 225-227
+ I'LL CAST MY HEAVY BURDEN DOWN, 384
+ I LOVE THY KINGDOM, LORD, 133
+ I LOVE TO STEAL AWHILE AWAY, 229, 231
+ I LOVE TO TELL THE STORY, 429
+ I'M A PILGRIM, 278, 288
+ I'M BUT A STRANGER HERE, 300, 301
+ I'M GOING HOME, 291
+ I'M NOT ASHAMED, 107
+ IN DE DARK WOOD, 264
+ IN EDEN, O THE MEMORY!, 383
+ I NEED THEE EVERY HOUR, 153
+ IN SOME WAY OR OTHER, 148, 149
+ IN THE BONDS OF DEATH HE LAY, 473
+ IN THE CROSS OF CHRIST I GLORY, 97
+ IN THE DEEP AND MIGHTY WATERS, 406
+ IN THE WAVES AND MIGHTY WATERS, 405
+ I OPEN MY EYES TO THIS VISION, 404
+ IS THIS THE KIND RETURN? 108
+ IT CAME UPON THE MIDNIGHT CLEAR, 466
+ I THINK WHEN I READ THAT SWEET, 305
+ IT MAY NOT BE OUR LOT TO YIELD, 250
+ IT WAS THE WINTER WILD, 460
+ I WALKED IN THE WOODLAND MEADOWS, 251, 252
+ I WILL SING YOU A SONG OF THAT, 532
+
+ JERUSALEM THE GOLDEN, 509, 511
+ JESU, DULCIS MEMORIA, 100
+ JESUS' BLOOD CAN RAISE THE FEEBLE, 385
+ JESUS, I LOVE THY CHARMING NAME, 116
+ JESUS, I MY CROSS HAVE TAKEN, 221
+ JESUS, KEEP ME NEAR THE CROSS, 156, 157
+ JESUS, LOVER OF MY SOUL, 359, 364
+ JESUS MY ALL TO HEAVEN IS GONE, 126
+ JESUS, SAVIOUR, PILOT ME, 373
+ JESUS SHALL REIGN WHERE'ER THE SUN, 165
+ JESUS, THE VERY THOUGHT OF THEE, 100
+ JESUS THE WATER OF LIFE WILL GIVE, 312
+ JESUS, THY BLOOD AND RIGHTEOUSNESS, 91
+ JOHN WESLEY'S HYMN, 209
+ JOYFULLY, JOYFULLY ONWARD, 288-290
+ JOY TO THE WORLD! THE LORD IS COME, 166, 463
+
+ KEEP ME VERY NEAR TO JESUS, 400
+ KELLER'S AMERICAN HYMN, 343, 345
+
+ LAND AHEAD! THE FRUITS ARE WAVING, 367
+ LEAD, KINDLY LIGHT, 223
+ LET PARTY NAMES NO MORE, 169
+ LET TYRANTS SHAKE THEIR IRON ROD, 331
+ LET US GATHER UP THE SUNBEAMS, 317
+ LET US SING OF THE SHEAVES, 479
+ LIFE IS THE TIME TO SERVE THE LORD, 409
+ LITTLE TRAVELLERS ZIONWARD, 299
+ LO! A SAVIOUR FOR THE FALLEN, 404
+ LO! HE COMES, WITH CLOUDS DESCENDING, 504
+ LO! ON A NARROW NECK OF LAND, 118
+ LO! WHAT A GLORIOUS SIGHT APPEARS, 505
+ LORD, HOW MYSTERIOUS ARE THY WAYS, 198
+ LORD OF ALL BEING, THRONED AFAR, 52
+ LORD, WITH GLOWING HEART I'D PRAISE, 49, 50
+ LOVE DIVINE, ALL LOVES EXCELLING, 47, 111
+ LOVE UNFATHOMED AS THE OCEAN, 401
+
+ MAGDALENA, SHOUT FOR GLADNESS, 473
+ MAGNIFICAT ANIMA MEA, xii, 10
+ MAJESTIC SWEETNESS SITS ENTHRONED, 23
+ MARSEILLAISE HYMN, 174, 329, 352
+ MEIN JESU, WIE DU WILLST, 499
+ MID SCENES OF CONFUSION, 134
+ MINE EYES HAVE SEEN THE GLORY OF THE, 341
+ MOURNFULLY, TENDERLY BEAR ON THE DEAD, 245, 246
+ MUST JESUS BEAR THE CROSS ALONE, 411
+ MY BROTHER, I WISH YOU WELL, 290
+ MY COUNTRY 'TIS OF THEE, 336-338
+ MY GOD, HOW ENDLESS IS THY LOVE, 105, 106
+ MY GOD, I LOVE THEE, NOT BECAUSE, 75
+ MY GOD, IS ANY HOUR SO SWEET, 214
+ MY GOD, MY FATHER, WHILE I STRAY, 214
+ MY GOD, MY PORTION AND MY LOVE, 382
+ MY GRACIOUS REDEEMER, I LOVE, 132
+ MY HOPE IS BUILT ON NOTHING LESS, 216, 217
+ MY JESUS, AS THOU WILT, 499, 500
+ MY JESUS, I LOVE THEE, 162, 163
+ MY LORD AND MY GOD, I HAVE TRUSTED, 77
+ MY LORD, HOW FULL OF SWEET CONTENT, 190, 192
+ MY SAVIOUR KEEPS ME COMPANY, 189
+ MY SOUL, BEHOLD THE FITNESS, 397
+
+ NEARER, MY GOD, TO THEE, 150-152
+ NO CHANGE OF TIME SHALL EVER SHOCK, 193
+ NOT ALL THE BLOOD OF BEASTS, 44
+ NOW TO THE LORD A NOBLE SONG, 33
+
+ O BLISS OF THE PURIFIED, 433
+ O CANAAN, BRIGHT CANAAN, 273
+ O CHURCH, ARISE AND SING, 186
+ O COME, ALL YE FAITHFUL, 459
+ O COULD I SPEAK THE MATCHLESS WORTH, 136
+ O CROWN OF REJOICING, 451
+ ODE ON SCIENCE, 330
+ O DEUS, EGO AMO TE, 74
+ O DO NOT BE DISCOURAGED, 298
+ O'ER ALL THE WAY GREEN PALMS, 470
+ O'ER THE GLOOMY HILLS OF DARKNESS, 166
+ O FOR A CLOSER WALK WITH GOD, 129
+ O FOR A THOUSAND TONGUES TO SING, 45, 46
+ OFT IN DANGER, OFT IN WOE, 366
+ O GALILEE SWEET GALILEE, 260, 319
+ O HAD I THE WINGS OF A DOVE, 400
+ O HAPPY DAY THAT FIXED MY CHOICE, 281
+ O HAPPY SAINTS THAT DWELL IN LIGHT, 122
+ O HELP US, LORD; EACH HOUR OF NEED, 278
+ O HOW HAPPY ARE THEY, 281
+ O HOW I LOVE JESUS, 291
+ O LITTLE TOWN OF BETHLEHEM, 468
+ O LORD OF HOSTS, WHOSE GLORY FILLS, 485
+ ONE MORE DAY'S WORK FOR JESUS, 418
+ ONE SWEETLY SOLEMN THOUGHT, 529
+ ON JORDAN'S STORMY BANKS, 24
+ ONLY REMEMBERED, 308
+ ON THE MOUNTAIN TOP APPEARING, 173
+ ONWARD, CHRISTIAN SOLDIERS, 185, 186
+ ONWARD RIDE IN TRIUMPH, JESUS, 382
+ O PARADISE! O PARADISE! 525
+ O PERFECT LOVE, 504
+ O SACRED HEAD, NOW WOUNDED, 86
+ O SING TO ME OF HEAVEN, 288
+ O THE CLANGING BELLS OF TIME, 449
+ O THE LAMB, THE LOVING LAMB, 271
+ O THINK OF THE HOME OVER THERE, 463
+ O THOU IN WHOSE PRESENCE MY SOUL, 281
+ O THOU, MY SOUL, FORGET NO MORE, 492
+ O THOU WHO DIDST PREPARE, 361
+ O THOU WHO DRY'ST THE MOURNER'S TEAR, 244
+ O THOU WHOSE TENDER MERCY HEARS, 198
+ O TURN YE, O TURN YE, FOR WHY, 291
+ OUR LORD HAS GONE UP ON HIGH, 473
+ O WHEN SHALL I SEE JESUS, 276
+ O WHERE SHALL REST BE FOUND, 145
+ O WHY SHOULD THE SPIRIT OF MORTAL, 238
+ O WORSHIP THE KING ALL GLORIOUS ABOVE, 22
+
+ PARTED MANY A TOIL-SPENT YEAR, 267
+ PATIENTLY ENDURING, 443
+ PEACE, TROUBLED SOUL, WHOSE PLAINTIVE, 202
+ PEOPLE OF THE LIVING GOD, 144
+ PILGRIMS WE ARE TO ZION BOUND, 281
+ PORTALS OF LIGHT, 443
+ PRAISE GOD FROM WHOM ALL BLESSINGS, 13
+ PULL FOR THE SHORE, 372
+
+ REJOICE AND BE GLAD, 415
+ RESCUE THE PERISHING, 425
+ REVIVE THY WORK, O LORD, 445
+ RISE, CROWNED WITH LIGHT, 238
+ RISE, MY SOUL, AND STRETCH THY WINGS, 94
+ ROCK OF AGES, CLEFT FOR ME, 137
+
+ SAFE IN THE ARMS OF JESUS, 540
+ SANCTIFY, O LORD, MY SPIRIT, 405
+ SAVIOUR, LIKE A SHEPHERD LEAD US, 310
+ SAVIOUR, THY DYING LOVE, 147
+ SCATTER SEEDS OF KINDNESS, 317
+ SCOTS WHA HAE WI WALLACE BLED, 335, 352
+ SEE GENTLE PATIENCE SMILE ON PAIN, 104
+ SEND THY SPIRIT, I BESEECH THEE, 406
+ SERVANT OF GOD, WELL DONE, 498
+ SHEPHERD OF TENDER YOUTH, 293-296
+ SHOW PITY, LORD, O LORD FORGIVE, 44
+ SHRINKING FROM THE COLD HAND OF DEATH, 520
+ SINCE JESUS TRULY DID APPEAR, 503
+ SISTER, THOU WAST MILD AND LOVELY, 498
+ SO FADES THE LOVELY, BLOOMING FLOWER, 104, 198, 498
+ SOFTLY FADES THE TWILIGHT RAY, 484
+ SOFTLY NOW THE LIGHT OF DAY, 483
+ SOON MAY THE LAST GLAD SONG ARISE, 173
+ SOUND THE LOUD TIMBREL, 326, 327
+ SPEAK, O SPEAK, THOU GENTLE JESUS, 386
+ SPEED AWAY, SPEED AWAY, 184
+ SPIRIT OF GRACE AND LOVE DIVINE, 403
+ STAND! THE GROUND'S YOUR OWN, 335
+ STAR-SPANGLED BANNER, 49, 333-335
+ STILL, STILL WITH THEE, 481
+ SUN OF MY SOUL, MY SAVIOUR DEAR, 159
+ SUNSET AND EVENING STAR, 535
+ SUR NOS CHEMINS LES RAMEAUX, 470
+ SWEET HOUR OF PRAYER, 432
+ SWEET IS THE DAY OF SACRED REST, 488
+ SWEET IS THE LIGHT OF SABBATH EVE, 488
+ SWEET IS WORK, MY GOD, MY KING, 37
+ SWEET IS THE WORK, O LORD, 168
+ SWEET THE MOMENTS, RICH IN BLESSING, 127
+
+ TAKE ME AS I AM, O SAVIOUR, 384
+ TE DEUM LAUDAMUS, 1
+ TELL ME NOT IN MOURNFUL NUMBERS, 248
+ TELL ME THE OLD, OLD STORY, 427
+ THE BANNER OF IMMANUEL, 188, 189
+ THE BIRD LET LOOSE IN EASTERN SKIES, 244
+ THE BREAKING WAVES DASHED HIGH, 323
+ THE CHARIOT! THE CHARIOT! 278
+ THE DAY IS PAST AND GONE, 275
+ THE DAY OF RESURRECTION, 54, 55
+ THE EDEN OF LOVE, 272
+ THE GLORY IS COMING, GOD SAID IT, 400
+ THE GOD OF ABRAHAM PRAISE, 18
+ THE GOD OF HARVEST PRAISE, 481
+ THE HARP THAT ONCE THRO TARA'S HALL, 326, 328
+ THE HEIGHTS OF FAIR SALEM ASCENDED, 403
+ THE LORD DESCENDED FROM ABOVE, 15
+ THE LORD INTO HIS GARDEN COMES, 277
+ THE LORD IS RISEN INDEED, 475
+ THE LORD OUR GOD IS CLOTHED WITH MIGHT, 366
+ THE MORNING LIGHT IS BREAKING, 179, 180
+ THE OCEAN HATH NO DANGER, 371
+ THE PRIZE IS SET BEFORE US, 449
+ THE SANDS OF TIME ARE SINKING, 78
+ THE TURF SHALL BE MY FRAGRANT SHRINE, 244
+ THE WORLD IS VERY EVIL, 510
+ THERE ARE LONELY HEARTS TO CHERISH, 312
+ THERE IS A CALM FOR THOSE WHO WEEP, 499, 521
+ THERE IS A GREEN HILL FAR AWAY, 414
+ THERE IS A HAPPY LAND, 304
+ THERE'S A LAND THAT IS FAIRER THAN DAY, 532
+ THERE'S A WIDENESS IN GOD'S MERCY, 233, 234
+ THERE WERE NINETY AND NINE, 422
+ THEY THAT DWELL UPON THE DEEP, 353
+ THINE EARTHLY SABBATHS, LORD, WE LOVE, 488
+ THOU ART, O GOD, THE LIFE AND LIGHT, 244
+ THOU DEAR REDEEMER, DYING LAMB, 124
+ THOU LOVELY SOURCE OF TRUE DELIGHT, 198
+ THROW OUT THE LIFE-LINE, 374-377
+ 'TIS FINISHED! SO THE SAVIOUR CRIED, 24
+ 'TIS RELIGION THAT CAN GIVE, 303
+ TO CHRIST THE LORD LET EVERY TONGUE, 25
+ TO GOD THE FATHER, GOD THE SON, 14
+ TO LEAVE MY DEAR FRIENDS, AND FROM NEIGHBORS, 146
+ TO THE WORK, TO THE WORK! 438
+ TOO LATE! TOO LATE! 259
+ TRIUMPHANT ZION, LIFT THY HEAD, 510
+
+ ULTIMA THULE, 320
+ UNDER THE PALMS, 254
+ UNNUMBERED ARE THE MARVELS, 402
+ UNTO THY PRESENCE COMING, 392
+ UNVEIL THY BOSOM FAITHFUL TOMB, 44, 498
+ UP AND AWAY LIKE THE DEW, 308
+ URBS SION AUREA, 509, 511
+ VENI, SANCTE SPIRITUS, 57, 58
+ VERZAGE NICHT, DU HAUFLEIN KLEIN, 82
+ VITAL SPARK OF HEAVENLY FLAME, 515
+
+ WATCHMAN, TELL US OF THE NIGHT, 170
+ WE ARE ON OUR JOURNEY HOME, 417
+ WELCOME, DELIGHTFUL MORN, 488
+ WE PLOW THE FIELDS AND SCATTER, 478
+ WE PRAISE THEE, O GOD, FOR THE SON, 416
+ WE SAT DOWN AND WEPT BY THE WATERS, 241
+ WE SHALL MEET BEYOND THE RIVER, 528
+ WE SPEAK OF THE LAND OF THE BLEST, 307
+ WESTWARD THE COURSE OF EMPIRE, 324
+ WHAT A FRIEND WE HAVE IN JESUS, 425
+ WHAT SHALL A DYING SINNER DO, 43
+ WHAT SHALL THE HARVEST BE, 434
+ WHAT VARIOUS HINDRANCES WE MEET, 131
+ WHEN ALL THY MERCIES, O MY GOD, 113
+ WHEN FOR ETERNAL WORLDS I STEER, 286
+ WHEN HE COMETH, WHEN HE COMETH, 314
+ WHEN I CAN READ MY TITLE CLEAR, 43, 514
+ WHEN GATHERING CLOUDS AROUND I VIEW, 212
+ WHEN ISRAEL OF THE LORD BELOVED, 240
+ WHEN I SURVEY THE WONDROUS CROSS, 42, 109
+ WHEN LANGUOR AND DISEASE INVADE, 137
+ WHEN MARSHALLED ON THE NIGHTLY PLAIN, 364
+ WHEN MY FINAL FAREWELL TO THE WORLD, 441, 442
+ WHEN OUR HEADS ARE BOWED WITH WOE, 278
+ WHEN PEACE LIKE A RIVER, 440
+ WHEN SHALL WE ALL MEET AGAIN, 265, 266
+ WHEN TWO OR THREE WITH SWEET ACCORD, 24
+ WHERE IS MY WANDERING BOY TO-NIGHT? 446
+ WHERE NOW ARE THE HEBREW CHILDREN? 270
+ WHILE JESUS WHISPERS TO YOU, 418
+ WHILE SHEPHERDS WATCHED THEIR FLOCKS, 465
+ WHILE THEE I SEEK, PROTECTING POWER, 125, 207
+ WHILE WITH CEASELESS COURSE THE SUN, 493
+ WHY SHOULD WE START AND FEAR TO DIE, 512
+ WIDE, YE HEAVENLY GATES UNFOLD, 168
+ WITH JOY WE HAIL THE SACRED DAY, 168
+ WITH SONGS AND HONORS SOUNDING LOUD, 479
+ WITH TEARFUL EYES I LOOK AROUND, 214
+
+ YE CHOIRS OF NEW JERUSALEM, 59, 60
+ YE CHRISTIAN HERALDS, GO PROCLAIM, 171, 172
+ YE CHRISTIAN HEROES, WAKE TO GLORY, 174
+ YE GOLDEN LAMPS OF HEAVEN, FAREWELL, 519
+ YE SERVANTS OF GOD, YOUR MASTER PROCLAIM, 204
+ YES, MY NATIVE LAND, I LOVE THEE, 180
+ YES, THE REDEEMER ROSE, 476
+ YOUR HARPS; YE TREMBLING SAINTS, 517
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+ Obvious spelling/typographical and punctuation errors
+ have been corrected after careful comparison with other
+ occurences within the text and consultation of external
+ sources. Details can be found in the HTML version.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY OF THE HYMNS AND TUNES***
+
+
+******* This file should be named 18444-8.txt or 18444-8.zip *******
+
+
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/8/4/4/18444
+
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://www.gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/pglaf.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://www.gutenberg.org/about/contact
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit:
+https://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
diff --git a/18444-8.zip b/18444-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..658c2a1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h.zip b/18444-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d3a3f6f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/18444-h.htm b/18444-h/18444-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5e60ec6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/18444-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,33833 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
+<html>
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1" />
+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Story of the Hymns and Tunes, by Theron Brown and Hezekiah Butterworth</title>
+<style type="text/css">
+ <!--
+
+ /* original pagenumbers: not printed, optional screen display */
+ @media print {
+ samp.pgmark { /* border-top: thin solid silver; */
+ /* border-bottom: thin solid silver; */
+ font-size: xx-small; text-align: left;
+ text-indent:0; font-style: normal;
+ margin: 0;padding: .05em 0.5em;
+ position: absolute; left: 1%;
+ display: none; visibility: hidden; }
+ samp.pgmark span.png {display: none; }
+ }
+ @media screen {
+ /* depending on your browser, change */
+ /* "none" to "inline" to unhide the numbers */
+ /* which should appear in the left margin */
+ samp.pgmark { /* border-top: thin solid silver; */
+ /* border-bottom: thin solid silver; */
+ font-size: xx-small; text-align: left;
+ text-indent:0; font-style: normal;
+ margin: 0;padding: .05em 0.5em;
+ position: absolute; left: 1%;
+ display: none; }
+ /* change "none" to "inline" to see the */
+ /* scan numbers too */
+ samp.pgmark span.png {display: none; }
+ }
+
+ /* We deliberately use lengths/dimensions which are */
+ /* relative (to window or font size) so that we don't */
+ /* impose too much on people's defaults */
+
+ body {font-size: medium;
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;}
+ div.main {max-width: 30em; } /* for comfortable reading */
+ p {text-indent: 1.5em;
+ margin-top: .1em;
+ font-size: medium;
+ text-align: justify;
+ margin-bottom: .05em; }
+ p.runon {text-indent: 0;
+ margin-top: 0;
+ font-size: medium;
+ text-align: justify;
+ margin-bottom: .05em; }
+
+ .right {text-align: right;
+ text-indent: 0;
+ margin: 0; }
+
+ /* for a thoughtbreak or omitted stanzas */
+ p.stars {margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em;
+ text-align: center;
+ text-indent: 0;
+ letter-spacing: 0.5em; }
+
+ /* div to achieve equivalent of 'align="center"' */
+ div.ctr {text-align: center;} /* position: relative; }*/
+ div.ctr table {margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+ text-align: left; }
+ div.ctr img {margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; }
+
+ /* styling for hymns */
+ /* we use the "approved" div method for most */
+
+ div.hymn {text-align: left; max-width: 30em;
+ margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: 1em;
+ margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 5%;
+ font-size: small;
+ }
+ div.hymn.wide {text-align: left; max-width: 30em;
+ margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: 1em;
+ margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 5%;
+ font-size: small;
+ }
+ div.hymn .stanza {margin-top: .75em; /* vertical break between stanzas */
+ }
+ .stanza div { /* default line */
+ line-height: 1.2em;
+ margin-top: 0em;
+ margin-left: 2em;
+ text-indent: -2em; position: relative;}
+ /* various levels of indentation */
+ div.hymn .i1 {margin-left: 3.5em;}
+ div.hymn .i2 {margin-left: 5.5em;}
+ div.hymn .i3 {margin-left: 8em;}
+ div.hymn .i4 {margin-left: 11em; white-space: nowrap;}
+ div.hymn .i5 {margin-left: 18em; white-space: nowrap;}
+ div.hymn .i0 {position: relative;
+ left: -15%; }
+ div.hymn .refrain {margin: 0 0 .05em 0;
+ text-indent:0;
+ font-variant: small-caps;
+ position: relative;
+ left: -10%; }
+ .stanza span {margin:0;
+ text-indent: 0;
+ display: inline; }
+ /* for omitted stanzas */
+ .stanza .stars { vertical-align: -0.2ex; /* bring the stars down a bit */
+ text-align: left;
+ letter-spacing: 0.5em; }
+ /* for (rare) situations where a hymn is centred */
+ /* eg when there is a verse used as a heading */
+ /* we hack a solution which works in IE and Opera */
+ /* but not in Mozilla :-( "inline-block" is CSS2.1 */
+ p.ctrhymn { margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em;
+ text-align: center;
+ text-indent: 0;
+ font-size: small;
+ margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 5%;}
+ p.ctrhymn span, p.quote span {display: inline-block;
+ text-align: left; white-space: nowrap; }
+ p.ctrhymn.attrib {text-align: right;
+ margin-top:0; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 0;
+ position: relative; top: -1em; }
+
+ p.quote {text-align: center;
+ text-indent:0;
+ font-size: small;
+ line-height: 1.75em;
+ margin-bottom: 0.5em;}
+
+ ul.quote {font-size: small;
+ margin-top: 0.75em; margin-bottom: 0.75em;
+ margin-left: 0;
+ text-align: left;}
+ ul.quote li {margin-left: 2em;
+ text-indent: -2em;
+ list-style-type: none;}
+
+ blockquote {font-size: small;
+ margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;
+ margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em;
+ text-align: justify; }
+ blockquote div {margin-top: 0em;
+ margin-left: 2em;
+ text-indent: -2em; }
+
+ /* headings and rules */
+ h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6 {text-align: center; }
+ h1 {word-spacing: 0.5em; }
+ h1.pg {word-spacing: 0em; }
+ .ord {word-spacing: normal; letter-spacing: normal; }
+ h2.chap {margin-top: 3em; clear: both;
+ word-spacing: 0.75em; letter-spacing: 0.05em; }
+ hr.chap {width: 6em;
+ margin-top: 0.5em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em; }
+ hr.full {width: 100%; }
+ hr.chapbreak {width: 65%;
+ margin-top: 2.5em;
+ margin-bottom: 1.5em; }
+ hr.pg {width: 100%;
+ height: 5px;
+ margin-top: 15px;
+ margin-bottom: 15px; }
+ h3.chapbreak {margin-top: 3em; }
+ h3.subhead {margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em;
+ font-size: large;
+ font-style: italic;
+ clear: both; }
+
+ /* headings for hymns are double-underlined */
+ h4.hymn {margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em;
+ font-size: medium;
+ line-height: 2em;
+ clear: both; }
+ h4.hymn span {border-color: black;
+ border-style: double;
+ border-top-width: 0;
+ border-left-width: 0;
+ border-right-width: 0;
+ display: inline;
+ width: auto;
+ margin-left: 0; }
+ /* headings for tunes are simple italic */
+ h4.tune {margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em;
+ font-size: medium;
+ font-style: italic;
+ font-weight: normal; }
+ h4.normal {font-size: medium;
+ font-weight: normal; }
+ h4.quote {font-size: small;
+ font-weight: normal;
+ margin-bottom: 1em; }
+
+ /* links */
+ a:link {text-decoration:none; }
+ a:visited {text-decoration:none; }
+
+ /* illustrations */
+ /* note we actually place the illustrations using a */
+ /* table, to get the caption and decoration at the side */
+ div.illus {text-indent: 0;
+ text-align: center;
+ margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em;
+ margin-right: 1em;
+ margin-left: 15%;
+ font-size: medium;
+ font-style: italic;
+ float: none; }
+ /* the only non-relative size we use, */
+ /* because images are pixel-based anyway */
+ .illus img {padding-top: 10px; }
+
+ /* ToC, indexes */
+ table.contents {width: 80%; }
+ td.contents {text-align: right;
+ padding-left: 0.5em;
+ width: 2.5em; }
+ td.portraits {text-align: right;
+ padding-left: 0.5em;
+ width: 6.5em; }
+ td.portraits span {float: left;
+ margin-left: 2em; margin-right: 2em; }
+ td.cont {font-variant: small-caps;
+ font-size: small;
+ text-align: left;
+ padding-right: 0.5em; }
+ /* indexes are fixed width because we use a separate */
+ /* table for each letter of the alphabet */
+ table.index {width: 20em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em; }
+ table.hymnindex {width: 25em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em; }
+ td.index {font-size: small;
+ text-align: right; }
+ /* by floating the index entry we can have long lists */
+ /* of page refs wrapping around compactly */
+ td.index span {float: left;
+ text-align: left;
+ margin-right: 0.5em; }
+ /* we hijack the <em> tag for smallcaps because */
+ /* Opera stuffs up <span>s within <span>s */
+ td.index em {font-style: normal;
+ font-variant: small-caps;
+ margin-right: 0; }
+
+ /* for the boilerplate */
+ div.info h3 {margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em; }
+ div.info p {text-indent: 0;
+ margin-top: 1em;
+ font-size: small;
+ text-align: left;
+ margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
+ pre {font-size: small; }
+
+ /* footnotes are placed at the end of a paragraph */
+ /* with a coloured background to distinguish them */
+ /* we change the vertical alignment to stop */
+ /* footnotemarks messing up lineheights, */
+ /* especially inside hymns */
+ sup {font-size: small;
+ vertical-align:top; }
+ div.footnote {margin-right: 15%;
+ margin-bottom: 1em;
+ padding-top: 0.25em;
+ padding-bottom: 0.25em;
+ padding-right: 0.75em;
+ background-color: #eeeeee;
+ color: #000000; }
+ div.footnote p {text-indent: -.75em;
+ margin-left: .75em;
+ margin-top: 0;
+ margin-bottom: 0;
+ margin-right:0;
+ font-size: small;
+ text-align: justify; }
+ div.footnote p.b {text-indent: .75em;
+ margin-left: .75em;
+ margin-top: 0;
+ margin-bottom: 0;
+ font-size: small;
+ text-align: justify; }
+ div.footnote div.hymn {margin-top: 0.5em;
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 0;
+ margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
+ /* the footnote rule goes above, not inside, the */
+ /* coloured area, hence we don't use "div.footnote hr" */
+ /* because absolute positioning with "top" doesn't work */
+ /* in any browser I've tried :( Also, the text-align */
+ /* doesn't work in Mozilla, hence the margins */
+ hr.footnote {width: 5em;
+ margin: 1em auto 0.2em 0;
+ text-align: left; }
+
+ /* for recording typos etc */
+ ins.transcriber {text-decoration: none;
+ border-bottom: thin dotted silver; }
+
+ .thoughtbreak {margin-top: 1em; }
+ .smc {font-variant: small-caps;}
+
+ // -->
+
+</style>
+</head>
+<body>
+<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Story of the Hymns and Tunes, by Theron
+Brown and Hezekiah Butterworth</h1>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: The Story of the Hymns and Tunes</p>
+<p>Author: Theron Brown and Hezekiah Butterworth</p>
+<p>Release Date: May 24, 2006 [eBook #18444]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY OF THE HYMNS AND TUNES***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, David Wilson,<br />
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
+ (http://www.pgdp.net/)</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<hr class="pg" noshade="noshade" />
+
+<div class="main">
+<a id="png:001" name="png:001"></a>
+<h1>THE STORY OF THE<br />
+HYMNS AND TUNES</h1>
+
+<h4 class="normal">BY</h4>
+
+<h2>THERON BROWN</h2>
+<h4 class="normal">AND</h4>
+<h2>HEZEKIAH BUTTERWORTH</h2>
+
+<h4 class="tune" style="margin-top: 4em;">
+Multae terricolis linguae, coelestibus una.</h4>
+
+<hr style="width: 6em; margin-top: 0; margin-bottom: 0;" />
+
+<h4 class="tune">Ten thousand, thousand are their tongues,<br />
+But all their joys are one.</h4>
+
+<h6 style="margin-top:10em;">NEW YORK, 1906</h6>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<a id="png:002" name="png:002"></a>
+<a id="png:003" name="png:003"></a>
+<div class="illus"><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">3/</span>Frontispiece</samp>
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="portrait of Thomas Ken">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus1" name="Illus1"
+ ><img src="images/illus01-thomasken-cameo.jpg" alt=
+ "Thomas Ken" width="224" height="237" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td><a href="#png:033">Thomas Ken</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+<a id="png:005" name="png:005"></a>
+
+<h2 class="chap">CONTENTS</h2>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<div class="ctr">
+<table summary="Table of Contents" class="contents">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont" colspan="2"><a href="#png:007">Preface</a>,</td>
+<td class="contents"><a href="#png:007">v</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont" colspan="2"><a href="#png:011">Introduction</a>,</td>
+<td class="contents"><a href="#png:011">ix</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="contents">1.</td>
+<td class="cont"><a href="#png:021">Hymns of praise and worship</a>,</td>
+<td class="contents"><a href="#png:021">1</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="contents">2.</td>
+<td class="cont"><a href="#png:079">Some hymns of great witnesses</a>,</td>
+<td class="contents"><a href="#png:079">53</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="contents">3.</td>
+<td class="cont"><a href="#png:130"
+>Hymns of christian devotion and experience</a>,</td>
+<td class="contents"><a href="#png:130">100</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="contents">4.</td>
+<td class="cont"><a href="#png:201">Missionary hymns</a>,</td>
+<td class="contents"><a href="#png:201">165</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="contents">5.</td>
+<td class="cont"><a href="#png:228">Hymns of suffering and trust</a>,</td>
+<td class="contents"><a href="#png:228">190</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="contents">6.</td>
+<td class="cont"><a href="#png:281">Christian ballads</a>,</td>
+<td class="contents"><a href="#png:281">237</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="contents">7.</td>
+<td class="cont"><a href="#png:308">Old revival hymns</a>,</td>
+<td class="contents"><a href="#png:308">262</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="contents">8.</td>
+<td class="cont"><a href="#png:341">Sunday school hymns</a>,</td>
+<td class="contents"><a href="#png:341">293</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="contents">9.</td>
+<td class="cont"><a href="#png:371">Patriotic hymns</a>,</td>
+<td class="contents"><a href="#png:371">321</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="contents">10.</td>
+<td class="cont"><a href="#png:405">Sailor's hymns</a>,</td>
+<td class="contents"><a href="#png:405">353</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="contents">11.</td>
+<td class="cont"><a href="#png:432">Hymns of Wales</a>,</td>
+<td class="contents"><a href="#png:432">378</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="contents">12.</td>
+<td class="cont"><a href="#png:465">Field hymns</a>,</td>
+<td class="contents"><a href="#png:465">409</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="contents">13.</td>
+<td class="cont"><a href="#png:518">Hymns, festival and occasional</a>,</td>
+<td class="contents"><a href="#png:518">458</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="contents">14.</td>
+<td class="cont"><a href="#png:573">Hymns of hope and consolation</a>,</td>
+<td class="contents"><a href="#png:573">509</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont" colspan="2"><a href="#png:609"
+>Indexes of names, tunes, and hymns</a>,</td>
+<td class="contents"><a href="#png:609">543</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<a id="png:006" name="png:006"></a>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="chap">LIST OF PORTRAITS.</h2>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<div class="ctr">
+<table summary="List of Portraits" class="contents">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus1">Thomas Ken</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><a href="#Illus1">Frontispiece</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus2">Oliver Holden</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><a href="#Illus2">Opp. page 14</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus3">Joseph Haydn</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus3"> 30</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus4">Charles Wesley</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus4"> 46</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus5">Martin Luther</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus5"> 62</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus6">Lady Huntingdon</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus6"> 94</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus7">Augustus Montague Toplady</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus7"> 126</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus8">Thomas Hastings</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus8"> 142</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus9">Frances Ridley Havergal</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus9"> 158</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus10">Reginald Heber</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus10"> 174</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus11">George James Webb</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus11"> 190</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus12">John Wesley</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus12"> 206</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus13">John B. Dykes</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus13"> 222</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus14">Ellen M.H. Gates</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus14"> 254</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus15">James Montgomery</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus15"> 286</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus16">Fanny J. Crosby</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus16"> 302</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus17">Samuel F. Smith</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus17"> 334</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus18">William B. Bradbury</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus18"> 366</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus19">Isaac Watts</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus19"> 398</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus20">George Frederick Handel</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus20"> 414</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus21">Philip Doddridge</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus21"> 446</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus22">Lowell Mason</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus22"> 478</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus23">Carl von Weber</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus23"> 494</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="cont"><a href="#Illus24">Horatius Bonar</a>,</td>
+<td class="portraits"><span>"</span><a href="#Illus24"> 526</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p><a id="png:007" name="png:007"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">7 /</span> v</samp></p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<h2 class="chap">PREFACE.</h2>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<p>When the lapse of time and accumulation of
+fresh material suggested the need of a new and
+revised edition of Mr. Hezekiah Butterworth's
+<i>Story of the Hymns</i>, which had been a popular
+text book on that subject for nearly a generation,
+the publishers requested him to prepare such a
+work, reviewing the whole field of hymnology and
+its literature down to date. He undertook the task,
+but left it unfinished at his lamented death, committing
+the manuscript to me in his last hours to
+arrange and complete.</p>
+
+<p>To do this proved a labor of considerable magnitude,
+since what had been done showed evidence
+of the late author's failing strength, and when, in
+a conference with the publishers, it was proposed
+to combine the two books of Mr. Butterworth,
+the <i>Story of the Hymns</i> and the <i>Story of the
+Tunes</i>, in one volume, the task was doubled.</p>
+
+<p>The charming popular style and story-telling
+gift of the well-known compiler of these books had
+kept them in demand, the one for thirty and the
+other for fifteen years, but later information had
+discounted some of their historic and biographical
+<a id="png:008" name="png:008"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">8 /</span> vi</samp>
+matter, and, while many of the monographs were
+too meagre, others were unduly long. Besides,
+the <i>Story of the Tunes</i>, so far from being the
+counterpart of the <i>Story of the Hymns</i>, bore no
+special relationship to it, only a small portion of its
+selections answering to any in the hymn-list of the
+latter book. For a personal friend and practically
+unknown writer, to follow Mr. Butterworth, and
+&ldquo;improve&rdquo; his earlier work to the more modern
+conditions, was a venture of no little difficulty and
+delicacy. The result is submitted as simply a conscientious
+effort to give the best of the old with the
+new.</p>
+
+<p>So far as was possible, matter from the two
+previous books, and from the crude manuscript,
+has been used, and passages here and there transcribed,
+but so much of independent plan and
+original research has been necessary in arranging
+and verifying the substance of the chapters that
+the <i>Story of the Hymns and Tunes</i> is in fact a
+new volume rather than a continuation. The
+chapter containing the account of the <i>Gospel
+Hymns</i> is recent work with scarcely an exception,
+and the one on the <i>Hymns of Wales</i> is entirely new.</p>
+
+<p>Without increasing the size of this volume beyond
+easy purchase and convenient use, it was impossible
+to discuss the great oratorios and dramatic
+set-pieces, festival and occasional, and only passing
+references are made to them or their authors.</p>
+
+<p>Among those who have helped me in my work
+special acknowledgements are due to Mr. Hubert
+<a id="png:009" name="png:009"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">9 /</span> vii</samp>
+P. Main of Newark, N.J.; Messrs. Hughes &amp; Son
+of Wrexham, Wales; the American Tract Society,
+New York; Mr. William T. Meek, Mrs. A.J.
+Gordon, Mr. Paul Foster, Mr. George Douglas,
+and Revs. John R. Hague and Edmund F. Merriam
+of Boston; Professor William L. Phelps of
+New Haven, Conn.; Mrs. Ellen M.H. Gates of
+New York; Rev. Franklin G. McKeever of New
+London, Conn.; and Rev. Arthur S. Phelps of
+Greeley, Colorado. Further obligations are gratefully
+remembered to Oliver Ditson &amp; Co. for
+answers to queries and access to publications, to
+the Historic-and-Geneological Society and the
+custodians and attendants of the Boston Public
+Library (notably in the Music Department) for
+their uniform courtesy and pains in placing every
+resource within my reach.</p>
+
+<p style="text-align: right; margin-top: 0.5em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em;">THERON BROWN.</p>
+<p class="runon">Boston, May 15th, 1906.
+<a id="png:011" name="png:011"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">11 /</span> ix</samp></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="chap">INTRODUCTION.</h2>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<p>Augustine defines a hymn as &ldquo;praise to God
+with song,&rdquo; and another writer calls hymn-singing
+&ldquo;a devotional approach to God in our emotions,&rdquo;&mdash;which
+of course applies to both the
+words and the music. This religious emotion,
+reverently acknowledging the Divine Being in
+song, is a constant element, and wherever felt it
+makes the song a worship, irrespective of sect or
+creed. An eminent Episcopal divine, (says the
+<i>Christian Register</i>,) one Trinity Sunday, at the
+close of his sermon, read three hymns by Unitarian
+authors: one to God the Father, by Samuel
+Longfellow, one to Jesus, by Theodore Parker,
+and one to the Holy Spirit, by N.L. Frothingham.
+&ldquo;There,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you have the Trinity&mdash;Father,
+Son, and Holy Ghost.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It is natural to speak of hymns as &ldquo;poems,&rdquo;
+indiscriminately, for they have the same structure.
+But a hymn is not necessarily a poem, while a
+poem that can be sung as a hymn is something
+more than a poem. Imagination makes poems;
+devotion makes hymns. There can be poetry
+without emotion, but a hymn never. A poem may
+<a id="png:012" name="png:012"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">12 /</span> x</samp>
+argue; a hymn must not. In short to be a hymn,
+what is written must express spiritual feelings and
+desires. The music of faith, hope and charity will
+be somewhere in its strain.</p>
+
+<p>Philosophy composes poems, but not hymns.
+&ldquo;It is no love-symphony we hear when the lion
+thinkers roar,&rdquo; some blunt writer has said. &ldquo;The
+moles of Science have never found the heavenly
+dove's nest, and the Sea of Reason touches no shore
+where balm for sorrow grows.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>On the contrary there are thousands of true
+hymns that have no standing at the court of the
+muses. Even Cowper's Olney hymns, as Goldwin
+Smith has said, &ldquo;have not any serious value as
+poetry. Hymns rarely have,&rdquo; he continues.
+&ldquo;There is nothing in them on which the creative
+imagination can be exercised. Hymns can be little
+more than the incense of a worshipping soul.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>A fellow-student of Phillips Brooks tells us that
+&ldquo;most of his verse he wrote rapidly without revising,
+not putting much thought into it but using
+it as the vehicle and outlet of his feelings. It was the
+sign of responding love or gratitude and joy.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>To produce a hymn one needs something more
+exalting than poetic fancy; an influence</p>
+
+<div class="hymn" style="margin-top: 0.1em; margin-bottom: 0.1em;">
+<div class="stanza" style="margin-top: 0;">
+<div>&ldquo;&mdash;subtler than the sun-light in the leaf-bud</div>
+<div>That thrills thro' all the forest, making May.&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">It is the Divine Spirit wakening the human heart
+to lyric language.</p>
+
+<p>Religion sings; that is true, though all &ldquo;religions&rdquo;
+do not sing. There is no voice of sacred
+<a id="png:013" name="png:013"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">13 /</span> xi</samp>
+song in Islamism. The muezzin call from the
+minarets is not music. One listens in vain for
+melody among the worshippers of the &ldquo;Light of
+Asia.&rdquo; The hum of pagoda litanies, and the
+shouts and gongs of idol processions are not
+psalms. But many historic faiths have lost their
+melody, and we must go far back in the annals
+of ethnic life to find the songs they sung.</p>
+
+<p>Worship appears to have been a primitive human
+instinct; and even when many gods took the place
+of One in the blinder faith of men it was nature
+worship making deities of the elements and addressing
+them with supplication and praise.
+Ancient hymns have been found on the monumental
+tablets of the cities of Nimrod; fragments
+of the Orphic and Homeric hymns are preserved
+in Greek anthology; many of the Vedic hymns are
+extant in India; and the exhumed stones of Egypt
+have revealed segments of psalm-prayers and
+liturgies that antedate history. Dr. Wallis Budge,
+the English Orientalist, notes the discovery of a
+priestly hymn two thousand years older than the
+time of Moses, which invokes One Supreme Being
+who &ldquo;cannot be figured in stone.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>So far as we have any real evidence, however,
+the Hebrew people surpassed all others in both
+the custom and the spirit of devout song. We get
+snatches of their inspired lyrics in the song of Moses
+and Miriam, the song of Deborah and Barak, and
+the song of Hannah (sometimes called &ldquo;the Old
+Testament Magnificat&rdquo;), in the hymns of David
+<a id="png:014" name="png:014"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">14 /</span> xii</samp>
+and Solomon and all the Temple Psalms, and
+later where the New Testament gives us the
+&ldquo;Gloria&rdquo; of the Christmas angels, the thanksgiving
+of Elizabeth (benedictus minor), Mary's
+Magnificat, the song of Zacharias (benedictus
+major), the &ldquo;nunc dimittis&rdquo; of Simeon, and the
+celestial ascriptions and hallelujahs heard by St.
+John in his Patmos dream. For what we know of
+the first <em>formulated</em> human prayer and praise we
+are mostly indebted to the Hebrew race. They
+seem to have been at least the only ancient nation
+that had a complete psalter&mdash;and their collection is
+the mother hymn-book of the world.</p>
+
+<p>Probably the first form of hymn-worship was
+the plain-song&mdash;a declamatory unison of assembled
+singers, every voice on the same pitch, and
+within the compass of five notes&mdash;and so continued,
+from whatever may have stood for plain-song
+in Tabernacle and Temple days down to the
+earliest centuries of the Christian church. It was
+mere melodic progression and volume of tone, and
+there were no instruments&mdash;after the captivity.
+Possibly it was the memory of the harps hung
+silent by the rivers of Babylon that banished the
+timbrel from the sacred march and the ancient lyre
+from the post-exilic synagogues. Only the Feast
+trumpet was left. But the Jews sang. Jesus and
+his disciples sang. Paul and Silas sang; and so
+did the post-apostolic Christians; but until towards
+the close of the 16th century there were no
+instruments allowed in religious worship.
+<a id="png:015" name="png:015"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">15 /</span> xiii</samp></p>
+
+<p>St. Hilary, Bishop of Poitiers has been called
+&ldquo;the father of Christian hymnology.&rdquo; About the
+middle of the 4th century he regulated the ecclesiastical
+song-service, wrote chant music (to Scripture
+words or his own) and prescribed its place and use
+in his choirs. He died A.D. 368. In the Church
+calendars, Jan. 13th (following &ldquo;Twelfth Night&rdquo;),
+is still kept as &ldquo;St. Hilary's Day&rdquo; in the Church of
+England, and Jan. 14th in the Church of Rome.</p>
+
+<p>St. Ambrose, Bishop of Milan, a few years later,
+improved the work of his predecessor, adding
+words and music of his own. The &ldquo;Ambrosian
+Chant&rdquo; was the antiphonal plain-song arranged
+and systematized to statelier effect in choral
+symphony. Ambrose died A.D. 397.</p>
+
+<p>Toward the end of the 6th century Christian
+music showed a decline in consequence of impatient
+meddling with the slow canonical psalmody,
+and &ldquo;reformers&rdquo; had impaired its solemnity
+by introducing fanciful embellishments. Gregory
+the Great (Pope of Rome, 590&ndash;604) banished these
+from the song service, founded a school of sacred
+melody, composed new chants and established the
+distinctive character of ecclesiastical hymn worship.
+The Gregorian chant&mdash;on the diatonic eight sounds
+and seven syllables of equal length&mdash;continued,
+with its majestic choral step, to be the basis of
+cathedral music for a thousand years. In the
+meantime (930) Hucbald, the Flanders monk,
+invented <em>sight</em> music, or written notes&mdash;happily
+called the art of &ldquo;hearing with the eyes and seeing
+<a id="png:016" name="png:016"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">16 /</span> xiv</samp>
+with the ears"; and Guido Arentino (1024) contrived
+the present scale, or the &ldquo;hexachord&rdquo; on
+which the present scale was perfected.</p>
+
+<p>In this long interval, however, the &ldquo;established&rdquo;
+system of hymn service did not escape the intrusion
+of inevitable novelties that crept in with the change
+of popular taste. Unrhythmical singing could not
+always hold its own; and when polyphonic music
+came into public favor, secular airs gradually found
+their way into the choirs. Legatos, with their pleasing
+turn and glide, caught the ear of the multitude.
+Tripping allegrettos sounded sweeter to the vulgar
+sense than the old largos of Pope Gregory the Great.</p>
+
+<p>The guardians of the ancient order took alarm.
+One can imagine the pained amazement of conservative
+souls today on hearing &ldquo;Ring the Bells
+of Heaven&rdquo; substituted in church for &ldquo;Mear&rdquo; or
+the long-metre Doxology, and can understand the
+extreme distaste of the ecclesiastical reactionaries
+for the worldly frivolities of an A.D. 1550 choir.
+Presumably that modern abomination, the <em>vibrato</em>,
+with its shake of artificial fright, had not been
+invented then, and sanctuary form was saved one
+indignity. But the innovations became an abuse
+so general that the Council of Trent commissioned
+a select board of cardinals and musicians to arrest
+the degeneration of church song-worship.</p>
+
+<p>One of the experts consulted in this movement
+was an eminent Italian composer born twenty
+miles from Rome. His full name was Giovanni
+Pietro Aloysio da Palestrina, and at that time he
+<a id="png:017" name="png:017"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">17 /</span> xv</samp>
+was in the prime of his powers. He was master of
+polyphonic music as well as plain-song, and he
+proposed applying it to grace the older mode, preserving
+the solemn beauty of the chant but adding
+the charming chords of counterpoint. He wrote
+three &ldquo;masses,&rdquo; one of them being his famous
+&ldquo;Requiem.&rdquo; These were sung under his direction
+before the Commission. Their magnificence and
+purity revealed to the censors the possibilities of
+contrapuntal music in sanctuary devotion and
+praise. The sanction of the cardinals was given&mdash;and
+part-song harmony became permanently one
+of the angel voices of the Christian church.</p>
+
+<p>Palestrina died in 1594, but hymn-tunes adapted
+from his motets and masses are sung today. He
+was the father of the choral tune. He lived to
+see musical instruments and congregational singing
+introduced<sup>*</sup> in public worship, and to know
+(possibly with secret pleasure, though he was a
+Romanist) how richly in popular assemblies, during
+the Protestant Reformation, the new freedom
+of his helpful art had multiplied the creation of
+spiritual hymns.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+But not fully established in use till about 1625.</p></div>
+
+<p>Contemporary in England with Palestrina in
+Italy was Thomas Tallis who developed the
+Anglican school of church music, which differed
+less from the Italian (or Catholic) psalmody than
+that of the Continental churches, where the revolt
+of the Reformation extended to the tune-worship
+as notably as to the sacraments and sermons. This
+<a id="png:018" name="png:018"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">18 /</span> xvi</samp>
+difference created a division of method and practice
+even in England, and extreme Protestants who
+repudiated everything artistic or ornate formed
+the Puritan or Genevan School. Their style is
+represented among our hymn-tunes by &ldquo;Old Hundred,&rdquo;
+while the representative of the Anglican
+is &ldquo;Tallis' Evening Hymn.&rdquo; The division was only
+temporary. The two schools were gradually reconciled,
+and together made the model after which
+the best sacred tunes are built. It is Tallis who is
+called &ldquo;The father of English Cathedral music.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In Germany, after the invention of harmony,
+church music was still felt to be too formal for a
+working force, and there was a reaction against the
+motets and masses of Palestrina as being too stately
+and difficult. Lighter airs of the popular sort,
+such as were sung between the acts of the &ldquo;mystery
+plays,&rdquo; were subsidized by Luther, who wrote compositions
+and translations to their measure. Part-song
+was simplified, and Johan Walther compiled
+a hymnal of religious songs in the vernacular for
+from four to six voices. The reign of rhythmic
+hymn music soon extended through Europe.</p>
+
+<p>Necessarily&mdash;except in ultra-conservative localities
+like Scotland&mdash;the exclusive use of the Psalms
+(metrical or unmetrical) gave way to religious lyrics
+inspired by occasion. Clement Marot and Theodore
+Beza wrote hymns to the music of various
+composers, and Caesar Malan composed both hymns
+and their melodies. By the beginning of the 18th
+century the triumph of the hymn-tune and the
+<a id="png:019" name="png:019"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">19 /</span> xvii</samp>
+hymnal for lay voices was established for all time.</p>
+
+<p class="stars">* * * * * *</p>
+
+<p>In the following pages no pretence is made of
+selecting <em>all</em> the best and most-used hymns, but the
+purpose has been to notice as many as possible of
+the standard pieces&mdash;and a few others which seem
+to add or re-shape a useful thought or introduce a
+new strain.</p>
+
+<p>To present each hymn <em>with its tune</em> appeared
+the natural and most satisfactory way, as in most
+cases it is impossible to dissociate the two. The
+melody is the psychological co&euml;fficient of the metrical
+text. Without it the verse of a seraph
+would be smothered praise. Like a flower and
+its fragrance, hymn and tune are one creature, and
+stand for a whole value and a full effect. With
+this normal combination a <em>complete</em> descriptive
+list of the hymns and tunes would be a historic
+dictionary. Such a book may one day be made,
+but the present volume is an attempt to the same
+end within easier limits.
+<a id="png:021" name="png:021"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">21 /</span> 1</samp></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="chap">CHAPTER I.</h2>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h1>HYMNS OF PRAISE AND
+WORSHIP.</h1>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>TE DEUM LAUDAMUS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This famous church confession in song was composed
+A.D. 387 by Ambrose, Bishop of Milan, probably
+both words and music.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Te Deum laudamus, Te Dominum confitemur</div>
+<div>Te aeternum Patrem omnis terra veneratur</div>
+<div>Tibi omnes angeli, tibi coeli et universae potestates,</div>
+<div>Tibi cherubim et seraphim inaccessibili voce proclamant</div>
+<div>Sanctus, sanctus Dominus Deus Sabaoth.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>In the whole hymn there are thirty lines. The
+saying that the early Roman hymns were echoes
+of Christian Greece, as the Greek hymns were
+echoes of Jerusalem, is probably true, but they were
+only echoes. In A.D. 252, St. Cyprian, writing his
+consolatory epistle<sup>*</sup> during the plague in Carthage,
+when hundreds were dying every day, says,
+&ldquo;Ah, perfect and perpetual bliss! [in heaven.]
+There is the glorious company of the apostles<ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: punctuation inferred">;</ins>
+<a id="png:022" name="png:022"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">22 /</span> 2</samp>
+there is the fellowship of the prophets rejoicing;
+there is the innumerable multitude of martyrs
+crowned.&rdquo; Which would suggest that lines or
+fragments of what afterwards crystalized into the
+formula of the &ldquo;Te Deum&rdquo; were already familiar in
+the Christian church. But it is generally believed
+that the tongue of Ambrose gave the anthem its
+final form.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+<i title="[Greek: Peri tou thnętou]"
+>&#928;&#949;&#961;&#8054; &#964;&#959;&#8161;
+&#952;&#957;&#951;&#964;&#959;&#8161;</i>,
+&ldquo;On the Mortality.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>Ambrose was born in Gaul about the middle of
+the fourth century and raised to his bishopric in
+A.D. 374. Very early he saw and appreciated the
+popular effect of musical sounds, and what an
+evangelical instrument a chorus of chanting voices
+could be in preaching the Christian faith; and he
+introduced the responsive singing of psalms and
+sacred cantos in the worship of the church. &ldquo;A
+grand thing is that singing, and nothing can stand
+before it,&rdquo; he said, when the critics of his time
+complained that his innovation was sensational.
+That such a charge could be made against the
+Ambrosian mode of music, with its slow movement
+and unmetrical lines, seems strange to us,
+but it was <em>new</em>&mdash;and conservatism is the same in
+all ages.</p>
+
+<p>The great bishop carried all before him. His
+school of song-worship prevailed in Christian
+Europe more than two hundred years. Most of
+his hymns are lost, (the Benedictine writers credit
+him with twelve), but, judging by their effect on
+the powerful mind of Augustine, their influence
+among the common people must have been
+<a id="png:023" name="png:023"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">23 /</span> 3</samp>
+profound, and far more lasting than the author's life.
+&ldquo;Their voices sank into mine ears, and their truths
+distilled into my heart,&rdquo; wrote Augustine, long
+afterwards, of these hymns; &ldquo;tears ran down, and
+I rejoiced in them.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Poetic tradition has dramatized the story of the
+birth of the &ldquo;Te Deum,&rdquo; dating it on an Easter
+Sunday, and dividing the honor of its composition
+between Ambrose and his most eminent convert.
+It was the day when the bishop baptized Augustine,
+in the presence of a vast throng that crowded
+the Basilica of Milan. As if foreseeing with a
+prophet's eye that his brilliant candidate would
+become one of the ruling stars of Christendom,
+Ambrose lifted his hands to heaven and chanted
+in a holy rapture,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>We praise Thee, O God! We acknowledge Thee to be the Lord;</div>
+<div>All the Earth doth worship Thee, the Father Everlasting.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">He paused, and from the lips of the baptized disciple
+came the response,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>To Thee all the angels cry aloud: the heavens and all
+ the powers therein.</div>
+<div>To Thee cherubim and seraphim continually do cry,</div>
+<div>&ldquo;Holy, holy, holy Lord God of Sabaoth;</div>
+<div>Heaven and Earth are full of the majesty of Thy glory!&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">and so, stave by stave, in alternating strains, sprang
+that day from the inspired lips of Ambrose and
+Augustine the &ldquo;Te Deum Laudamus,&rdquo; which has
+ever since been the standard anthem of Christian
+praise.</p>
+
+<a id="png:024" name="png:024"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">24 /</span> 4</samp>
+<p>Whatever the foundation of the story, we may
+at least suppose the first public singing<sup>*</sup> of the
+great chant to have been associated with that
+eventful baptism.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+The &ldquo;Te Deum&rdquo; was first sung <em>in English</em> by the martyr,
+Bishop Ridley, at Hearne Church, where he was at one time vicar.</p></div>
+
+<p>The various anthems, sentences and motets in
+all Christian languages bearing the titles &ldquo;Trisagion&rdquo;
+or &ldquo;Tersanctus,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Te Deum&rdquo; are
+taken from portions of this royal hymn. The sublime
+and beautiful &ldquo;Holy, Holy, Holy&rdquo; of Bishop
+Heber was suggested by it.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>No echo remains, so far as is known, of the
+responsive chant actually sung by Ambrose, but
+one of the best modern choral renderings of the
+&ldquo;Te Deum&rdquo; is the one by Henry Smart in his
+<i>Morning and Evening Service</i>. In an ordinary
+church hymnal it occupies seven pages. The staff-directions
+with the music indicate the part or cue of
+the antiphonal singers by the words Decani (Dec.)
+and Cantor (Can.), meaning first the division of the
+choir on the Dean's side, and second the division
+on the Cantor's or Precentor's side.</p>
+
+<p>Henry Smart was one of the five great English
+composers that followed our American Mason.
+He was born in London, Oct. 25, 1812, and chose
+music for a profession in preference to an offered
+commission in the East Indian army. His talent
+<a id="png:025" name="png:025"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">25 /</span> 5</samp>
+as a composer, especially of sacred music, was
+<ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'marvelous'">marvellous</ins>, and, though he became blind, his loss
+of sight was no more hindrance to his genius than
+loss of hearing to Beethoven.</p>
+
+<p>No composer of his time equalled Henry Smart
+as a writer of music for female voices. His cantatas
+have been greatly admired, and his hymn
+tunes are unsurpassed for their purity and sweetness,
+while his anthems, his oratorio of &ldquo;Jacob,&rdquo;
+and indeed all that he wrote, show the hand and the
+inventive gift of a great musical artist.</p>
+
+<p>He died July 10, 1879, universally mourned for
+his inspired work, and his amiable character.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>ALL GLORY, LAUD AND HONOR.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<h4 class="tune">Gloria, Laus et Honor.</h4>
+
+
+<p>This stately Latin hymn of the early part of the
+9th century was composed in A.D. 820, by Theodulph,
+Bishop of Orleans, while a captive in the
+cloister of Anjou. King Louis (le Debonnaire)
+son of Charlemagne, had trouble with his royal
+relatives, and suspecting Theodulph to be in
+sympathy with them, shut him up in prison. A
+pretty story told by Clichtovius, an old church
+writer of A.D. 1518, relates how on Palm Sunday
+the king, celebrating the feast with his people,
+passed in procession before the cloister, where the
+face of the venerable prisoner at his cell window
+caused an involuntary halt, and, in the moment of
+silence, the bishop raised his voice and sang this
+<a id="png:026" name="png:026"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">26 /</span> 6</samp>
+hymn; and how the delighted king released the
+singer, and restored him to his bishopric. This
+tale, told after seven hundred years, is not the only
+legend that grew around the hymn and its author,
+but the fact that he composed it in the cloister of
+Anjou while confined there is not seriously disputed.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Gloria, laus et honor Tibi sit, Rex Christe Redemptor,</div>
+<div>Cui puerile decus prompsit Hosanna pium.</div>
+<div>Israel Tu Rex, Davidis et inclyta proles,</div>
+<div>Nomine qui in Domini Rex benedicte venis</div>
+<div class="i5"> Gloria, laus et honor.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Theodulph was born in Spain, but of Gothic pedigree,
+a child of the race of conquerors who, in the
+5th century, overran Southern Europe. He died
+in 821, but whether a free man or still a prisoner
+at the time of his death is uncertain. Some
+accounts allege that he was poisoned in the cloister.
+The Roman church canonized him, and his hymn
+is still sung as a processional in Protestant as well
+as Catholic churches. The above Latin lines are
+the first four of the original seventy-eight. The
+following is J.M. Neale's translation of the portion
+now in use:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>All glory, laud, and honor,</div>
+<div class="i1"> To Thee, Redeemer, King:</div>
+<div>To whom the lips of children</div>
+<div class="i1"> Made sweet Hosannas ring.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Thou are the King of Israel,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Thou David's royal Son,</div>
+<div>Who in the Lord's name comest,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The King and Blessed One.
+<span style="position: absolute; left: 16em; white-space: nowrap;">
+ All glory, etc.</span></div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:027" name="png:027"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">27 /</span> 7</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The company of angels</div>
+<div class="i1"> Are praising Thee on high;</div>
+<div>And mortal men, and all things</div>
+<div class="i1"> Created, make reply.
+<span style="position: absolute; left: 16em; white-space: nowrap;">
+ All glory, etc.</span></div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>The people of the Hebrews</div>
+<div class="i1"> With palms before Thee went;</div>
+<div>Our praise and prayer and anthems</div>
+<div class="i1"> Before Thee we present.
+<span style="position: absolute; left: 16em; white-space: nowrap;">
+ All glory, etc.</span></div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>To Thee before Thy Passion</div>
+<div class="i1"> They sang their hymns of praise;</div>
+<div>To Thee, now high exalted</div>
+<div class="i1"> Our melody we raise.
+<span style="position: absolute; left: 16em; white-space: nowrap;">
+ All glory, etc.</span></div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Thou didst accept their praises;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Accept the prayers we bring,</div>
+<div>Who in all good delightest,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Thou good and gracious King.
+<span style="position: absolute; left: 16em; white-space: nowrap;">
+ All glory, etc.</span></div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The translator, Rev. John Mason Neale, D.D.,
+was born in London, Jan. 24, 1818, and graduated
+at Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1840. He was a
+prolific writer, and after taking holy orders he
+held the office of Warden of Sackville College,
+East Grimstead, Sussex. Best known among his
+published works are <i>Medi&aelig;val Hymns and Sequences</i>,
+<i>Hymns for Children</i>, <i>Hymns of the Eastern
+Church</i> and <i>The Rhythms of Morlaix</i>. He
+died Aug. 6, 1866.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>There is no certainty as to the original tune of
+Theodulph's Hymn, or how long it survived, but
+various modern composers have given it music
+<a id="png:028" name="png:028"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">28 /</span> 8</samp>
+in more or less keeping with its character, notably
+Melchior Teschner, whose harmony, &ldquo;St. Theodulph,&rdquo;
+appears in the new <i>Methodist Hymnal</i>.
+It well represents the march of the bishop's Latin.</p>
+
+<p>Melchior Teschner, a Prussian musician, was
+Precentor at Frauenstadt, Silesia, about 1613.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>ALL PRAISE TO THEE, ETERNAL LORD.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">Gelobet Seist du Jesu Christ.</h4>
+
+
+<p>This introductory hymn of worship, a favorite
+Christmas hymn in Germany, is ancient, and
+appears to be a versification of a Latin prose
+&ldquo;Sequence&rdquo; variously ascribed to a 9th century
+author, and to Gregory the Great in the 6th
+century. Its German form is still credited to
+Luther in most hymnals. Julian gives an earlier
+German form (1370) of the &ldquo;Gelobet,&rdquo; but attributes
+all but the first stanza to Luther, as the hymn
+now stands. The following translation, printed
+first in the <i>Sabbath Hymn Book</i>, Andover,
+1858, is the one adopted by <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Scharff'">Schaff</ins>
+in his <i><ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Christian'">Christ</ins>
+in Song</i>:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>All praise to Thee, eternal Lord,</div>
+<div>Clothed in the garb of flesh and blood;</div>
+<div>Choosing a manger for Thy throne,</div>
+<div>While worlds on worlds are Thine alone!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Once did the skies before Thee bow;</div>
+<div>A virgin's arms contain Thee now;</div>
+<div>Angels, who did in Thee rejoice,</div>
+<div>Now listen for Thine infant voice.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:029" name="png:029"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">29 /</span> 9</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>A little child, Thou art our guest,</div>
+<div>That weary ones in Thee may rest;</div>
+<div>Forlorn and lowly in Thy birth,</div>
+<div>That we may rise to heaven from earth.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Thou comest in the darksome night<ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has period">,</ins></div>
+<div>To make us children of the light;</div>
+<div>To make us, in the realms divine,</div>
+<div>Like Thine own angels round Thee shine.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>All this for us Thy love hath done:</div>
+<div>By this to Thee our love is won;</div>
+<div>For this we tune our cheerful lays,</div>
+<div>And shout our thanks in endless praise.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The 18th century tune of &ldquo;Weimar&rdquo;
+(<i>Evangelical Hymnal</i>), by Emanuel Bach, suits the
+spiritual tone of the hymn, and suggests the Gregorian
+dignity of its origin.</p>
+
+<p>Karl Philip Emanuel Bach, called &ldquo;the Berlin
+Bach&rdquo; to distinguish him from his father, the
+great Sebastian Bach of Saxe Weimar, was born
+in Weimar, March 14, 1714. He early devoted himself
+to music, and coming to Berlin when twenty-four
+years old was appointed Chamber musician
+(Kammer Musicus) in the Royal Chapel, where he
+often accompanied Frederick the Great (who was
+an accomplished flutist) on the harpsichord. His
+most numerous compositions were piano music but
+he wrote a celebrated &ldquo;Sanctus,&rdquo; and two oratorios,
+besides a number of chorals, of which &ldquo;Weimar&rdquo;
+is one. He died in Hamburg, Dec. 14, 1788.</p>
+
+<a id="png:030" name="png:030"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">30 /</span> 10</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>THE MAGNIFICAT.</span></h4>
+
+
+<h4 class="quote" title="[Greek: Megalunei hę psuchę mou ton Kurion.]"
+>&#924;&#949;&#947;&#945;&#955;&#8059;&#957;&#949;&#953;
+&#7969; &#968;&#965;&#967;&#8053; &#956;&#959;&#965;
+&#964;&#8056;&#957; &#922;&#8059;&#961;&#953;&#959;&#957;.</h4>
+
+<p class="ctrhymn"><span>
+Magnificat anima mea Dominum,<br />
+Et exultavit Spiritus meus in Deo salutari meo.
+</span></p>
+<p class="ctrhymn attrib">Luke 1:46&ndash;55.</p>
+
+
+<p>We can date with some certainty the hymn itself
+composed by the Virgin Mary, but when it first
+became a song of the Christian Church no one
+can tell. Its thanksgiving may have found tone
+among the earliest martyrs, who, as Pliny tells
+us, sang hymns in their secret worship. We can
+only trace it back to the oldest chant music, when
+it was doubtless sung by both the Eastern and
+Western Churches. In the rude liturgies of the
+4th and 5th centuries it must have begun to assume
+ritual form; but it remained for the more modern
+school of composers hundreds of years later to
+illustrate the &ldquo;Magnificat&rdquo; with the melody of art
+and genius. Superseding the primitive unisonous
+plain-song, the old parallel concords, and the
+simple faburden (faux bourdon) counterpoint
+that succeeded Gregory, they taught how musical
+tones can better assist worship with the beauty
+of harmony and the precision of scientific taste.
+Musicians in Italy, France, Germany and England
+have contributed their scores to this inspired
+hymn. Some of them still have place in the
+hymnals, a noble one especially by the blind English
+tone-master, Henry Smart, author of the oratorio
+of &ldquo;Jacob.&rdquo; None, however, have equaled
+<a id="png:031" name="png:031"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">31 /</span> 11</samp>
+the work of Handel. His &ldquo;Magnificat&rdquo; was one
+of his favorite productions, and he borrowed strains
+from it in several of his later and lesser productions.</p>
+
+<p>George Frederic Handel, author of the immortal
+&ldquo;Messiah,&rdquo; was born at Halle, Saxony, in
+1685, and died in London in 1759. The musical
+bent of his genius was apparent almost from his
+infancy. At the age of eighteen he was earning
+his living with his violin, and writing his first
+opera. After a sojourn in Italy, he settled in
+Hanover as Chapel Master to the Elector, who
+afterwards became the English king, George&nbsp;I.
+The friendship of the king and several of his
+noblemen drew him to England, where he spent
+forty-seven years and composed his greatest works.</p>
+
+<p>He wrote three hymn-tunes (it is said at the
+request of a converted actress), &ldquo;Canons,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Fitzwilliam,&rdquo;
+and &ldquo;Gopsall,&rdquo; the first an invitation,
+&ldquo;Sinners, Obey the Gospel Word,&rdquo; the second a
+meditation, &ldquo;O Love Divine, How Sweet Thou Art,&rdquo;
+and the third a resurrection song to Welsey's
+words &ldquo;Rejoice, the Lord is King.&rdquo; This last still
+survives in some hymnals.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>THE DOXOLOGIES.</span></h4>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Be Thou, O God, exalted high,</div>
+<div>And as Thy glory fills the sky</div>
+<div>So let it be on earth displayed</div>
+<div>Till Thou art here as there obeyed.</div>
+</div></div>
+<a id="png:032" name="png:032"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">32 /</span> 12</samp>
+
+<p>This sublime quatrain, attributed to Nahum
+Tate, like the Lord's Prayer, is suited to all occasions,
+to all Christian denominations, and to all places
+and conditions of men. It has been translated
+into all civilized languages, and has been rising
+to heaven for many generations from congregations
+round the globe wherever the faith of Christendom
+has built its altars. This doxology is the first
+stanza of a sixteen line hymn (possibly longer
+originally), the rest of which is forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>Nahum Tate was born in Dublin, in 1652, and
+educated there at Trinity College. He was appointed
+poet-laureate by King William&nbsp;III. in
+1690, and it was in conjunction with Dr. Nicholas
+Brady that he executed his &ldquo;New&rdquo; metrical version
+of the Psalms. The entire Psalter, with an appendix
+of Hymns, was licensed by William and Mary
+and published in 1703. The <em>hymns</em> in the volume
+are all by Tate. He died in London, Aug. 12, 1717.</p>
+
+<p>Rev. Nicholas Brady, D.D., was an Irishman,
+son of an officer in the royal army, and was born
+at Bandon, County of Cork, Oct. 28, 1659. He
+studied in the <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Westminister'">Westminster</ins> School at Oxford,
+but afterwards entered Trinity College, Dublin,
+where he graduated in 1685. William made him
+Queen Mary's Chaplain. He died May 20, 1726.</p>
+
+<p>The other nearly contemporary form of doxology
+is in common use, but though elevated and
+devotional in spirit, it cannot be universal, owing
+to its credal line being objectionable to non-Trinitarian
+Protestants:</p>
+
+<a id="png:033" name="png:033"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">33 /</span> 13</samp>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Praise God from whom all blessings flow,</div>
+<div>Praise Him all creatures here below,</div>
+<div>Praise Him above, ye heavenly host,</div>
+<div>Praise Father, Son and Holy Ghost.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The author, the Rev. Thomas Ken, was born in
+Berkhampstead, Hertfordshire, Eng., July, 1637,
+and was educated at Winchester School, Hertford
+College, and New College, Oxford. In 1662 he
+took holy orders, and seventeen years later the king
+(Charles&nbsp;II.) appointed him chaplain to his sister
+Mary, Princess of Orange. Later the king, just
+before his death, made him Bishop of Bath and
+Wells.</p>
+
+<p>Like John the Baptist, and Bourdaloue, and
+Knox, he was a faithful spiritual monitor and
+adviser during all his days at court. &ldquo;I must go in
+and hear Ken tell me my faults,&rdquo; the king used to
+say at chapel time. The &ldquo;good little man&rdquo; (as
+he called the bishop) never lost the favor of the
+dissipated monarch. As Macaulay says, &ldquo;Of all
+the prelates, he liked Ken the best.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Under James, the Papist, Ken was a loyal
+subject, though once arrested as one of the &ldquo;seven
+bishops&rdquo; for his opposition to the king's religion,
+and he kept his oath of allegiance so firmly that it
+cost him his place. William&nbsp;III. deprived him of his
+<ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'bishopic'">bishopric</ins>, and he retired in poverty to a home
+kindly offered him by Lord Viscount Weymouth
+in Longleat, near Frome, in Somersetshire, where he
+spent a serene and beloved old age. He died &aelig;t.
+seventy-four, March 17, 1711 (N.S.), and was
+<a id="png:034" name="png:034"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">34 /</span> 14</samp>
+carried to his grave, according to his request, by
+&ldquo;six of the poorest men in the parish.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>His great doxology is the refrain or final stanza
+of each of his three long hymns, &ldquo;Morning,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Evening&rdquo; and &ldquo;Midnight,&rdquo; printed in a <i>Prayer
+Manual</i> for the use of the students of Winchester
+College. The &ldquo;Evening Hymn&rdquo; drew scenic inspiration,
+it is told, from the lovely view in
+Horningsham Park at &ldquo;Heaven's Gate Hill,&rdquo;
+while walking to and from church.</p>
+
+<p>Another four-line doxology, adopted probably
+from Dr. Hatfield (1807&ndash;1883), is almost entirely
+superseded by Ken's stanza, being of even more
+pronounced credal character.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>To God the Father, God the Son,</div>
+<div>And God the Spirit, Three in One.</div>
+<div>Be honor, praise and glory given</div>
+<div>By all on earth and all in heaven.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p title="Illustration of Oliver Holden originally opposite">The
+<i>Methodist Hymnal</i> prints a collection of
+ten doxologies, two by Watts, one by Charles
+Wesley, one by John Wesley, one by William
+Goode, one by Edwin F. Hatfield, one attributed
+to &ldquo;Tate and Brady,&rdquo; one by Robert Hawkes,
+and the one by Ken above noted. These are all
+technically and intentionally doxologies. To give
+a history of doxologies in the general sense of the
+word would carry one through every Christian age
+and language and end with a concordance of the
+Book of Psalms.</p>
+
+<a id="png:037" name="png:037"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">37 /</span> 15</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Few would think of any music more appropriate
+to a standard doxology than &ldquo;Old Hundred.&rdquo;
+This grand Gregorian harmony has been claimed
+to be Luther's production, while some have
+believed that Louis Bourgeois, editor of the French
+<i>Genevan Psalter</i>, composed the tune, but the
+weight of evidence seems to indicate that it was
+the work of Guillaume le Franc, (William Franck
+or William the Frenchman,) of Rouen, in France,
+who founded a music school in Geneva, 1541.
+He was Chapel Master there, but removed to
+Lausanne, where he played in the Catholic choir
+and wrote the tunes for an Edition of Marot's
+and Beza's Psalms. Died in Lausanne,
+1570.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>THE LORD DESCENDED FROM ABOVE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>A flash of genuine inspiration was vouchsafed
+to Thomas Sternhold when engaged with Rev.
+John Hopkins in versifying the Eighteenth Psalm.
+The ridicule heaped upon Sternhold and Hopkins's
+psalmbook has always stopped, and sobered into
+admiration and even reverence at the two stanzas
+beginning with this leading line&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The Lord descended from above</div>
+<div class="i1"> And bowed the heavens most high,</div>
+<div>And underneath His feet He cast</div>
+<div class="i1"> The darkness of the sky.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:038" name="png:038"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">38 /</span> 16</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>On cherub and on cherubim</div>
+<div class="i1"> Full royally He rode,</div>
+<div>And on the wings of mighty winds</div>
+<div class="i1"> Came flying all abroad.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Thomas Sternhold was born in Gloucestershire,
+Eng. He was Groom of the Robes to Henry&nbsp;VIII,
+and Edward&nbsp;VI., but is only remembered for
+his <i>Psalter</i> published in 1562, thirteen years after
+his death in 1549.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Nottingham&rdquo; (now sometimes entitled &ldquo;St.
+Magnus&rdquo;) is a fairly good echo of the grand verses,
+a dignified but spirited choral in A flat. Jeremiah
+Clark, the composer, was born in London, 1670.
+Educated at the Chapel Royal, he became organist
+of Winchester College and finally to St. Paul's
+Cathedral where he was appointed Gentleman of
+the Chapel. He died July, 1707.</p>
+
+<p>The tune of &ldquo;Majesty&rdquo; by William Billings will
+be noticed in a <a href="#Majesty">later chapter</a>.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>TALLIS' EVENING HYMN.</span></h4>
+
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Glory to Thee, my God, this night</div>
+<div>For all the blessings of the light,</div>
+<div>Keep me, O keep me, King of kings,</div>
+<div>Under Thine own Almighty wings.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This stanza begins the second of Bp. Ken's three
+beautiful hymn-prayers in his <i>Manual</i> mentioned
+on a <a href="#png:034">previous page</a>.</p>
+
+<a id="png:039" name="png:039"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">39 /</span> 17</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>For more than three hundred and fifty years
+devout people have enjoyed that melody of
+mingled dignity and sweetness known as &ldquo;Tallis'
+Evening Hymn.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Thomas Tallis was an Englishman, born about
+1520, and at an early age was a boy chorister at
+St. Paul's. After his voice changed, he played the
+organ at Waltham Abbey, and some time later
+was chosen organist royal to Queen Elizabeth.
+His pecuniary returns for his talent did not make
+him rich, though he bore the title after 1542 of
+Gentleman of the Chapel Royal, for his stipend was
+sevenpence a day. Some gain may possibly have
+come to him, however, from his publication, late
+in life, under the queen's special patent, of a collection
+of hymns and tunes.</p>
+
+<p>He wrote much and was the real founder of the
+English Church school of composers, but though
+St. Paul's was at one time well supplied with his
+motets and anthems, it is impossible now to give a
+list of Tallis' compositions for the Church. His
+music was written originally to Latin words, but
+when, after the Reformation, the use of vernacular
+hymns, was introduced he probably adapted his
+scores to either language.</p>
+
+<p>It is inferred that he was in attendance on Queen
+Elizabeth at her palace in Greenwich when he
+died, for he was buried in the old parish church
+there in November, 1585. The rustic rhymer who
+<a id="png:040" name="png:040"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">40 /</span> 18</samp>
+indited his epitaph evidently did the best he could
+to embalm the virtues of the great musician as a
+man, a citizen, and a husband:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Enterred here doth ly a worthy wyght,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Who for long time in musick bore the bell:</div>
+<div>His name to shew was Thomas Tallis hyght;</div>
+<div class="i1"> In honest vertuous lyff he dyd excell.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>He served long tyme in chappel with grete prayse,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Fower sovereygnes reignes, (a thing not often seene);</div>
+<div>I mean King Henry and Prince Edward's dayes,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Quene Marie, and Elizabeth our quene.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>He maryed was, though children he had none,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And lyv'd in love full three and thirty yeres</div>
+<div>With loyal spowse, whose name yclept was Jone,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Who, here entombed, him company now bears.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>As he dyd lyve, so also dyd he dy,</div>
+<div class="i1"> In myld and quyet sort, O happy man!</div>
+<div>To God ful oft for mercy did he cry;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Wherefore he lyves, let Deth do what he can.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>THE GOD OF ABRAHAM PRAISE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This is one of the thanksgivings of the ages.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The God of Abraham praise,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Who reigns enthroned above;</div>
+<div>Ancient of everlasting days,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And God of love.</div>
+<div>Jehovah, Great I AM!</div>
+<div class="i1"> By earth and heaven confessed,</div>
+<div>I bow and bless the sacred Name,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Forever blest.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The hymn, of twelve eight-line stanzas, is too long
+<a id="png:041" name="png:041"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">41 /</span> 19</samp>
+to quote entire, but is found in both the <i>Plymouth</i>
+and <i>Methodist Hymnals</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Thomas Olivers, born in Tregynon, near Newtown,
+Montgomeryshire, Wales, 1725, was, according
+to local testimony, &ldquo;the worst boy known
+in all that country, for thirty years.&rdquo; It is more
+charitable to say that he was a poor fellow who
+had no friends. Left an orphan at five years of
+age, he was passed from one relative to another
+until all were tired of him, and he was &ldquo;bound
+out&rdquo; to a shoemaker. Almost inevitably the
+neglected lad grew up wicked, for no one appeared
+to care for his habits and morals, and as he sank
+lower in the various vices encouraged by bad
+company, there were more kicks for him than
+helping hands. At the age of eighteen his reputation
+in the town had become so unsavory that he
+was forced to shift for himself elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>Providence led him, when shabby and penniless,
+to the old seaport town of Bristol, where Whitefield
+was at that time preaching,<sup>*</sup> and there the young
+sinner heard the divine message that lifted him to
+his feet.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+Whitefield's text was, &ldquo;Is not this a brand plucked out of the
+fire?&rdquo; Zach. 3:2.</p></div>
+
+<p>&ldquo;When that sermon began,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I was one
+of the most abandoned and profligate young men
+living; before it ended I was a new creature. The
+world was all changed for Tom Olivers.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>His new life, thus begun, lasted on earth more
+than sixty useful years. He left a shining record
+<a id="png:042" name="png:042"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">42 /</span> 20</samp>
+as a preacher of righteousness, and died in the
+triumphs of faith, November, 1799. Before he
+passed away he saw at least thirty editions of his
+hymn published, but the soul-music it has awakened
+among the spiritual children of Abraham can only
+reach him in heaven. Some of its words have been
+the last earthly song of many, as they were of the
+eminent Methodist theologian, Richard Watson&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> I shall behold His face,</div>
+<div class="i1"> I shall His power adore,</div>
+<div>And sing the wonders of His grace</div>
+<div class="i2"> Forevermore.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The precise date of the tune &ldquo;Leoni&rdquo; is unknown,
+as also the precise date of the hymn. The
+story is that Olivers visited the great &ldquo;Duke's
+Place&rdquo; Synagogue, Aldgate, London, and heard
+Meyer Lyon (Leoni) sing the Yigdal or long
+doxology to an air so noble and impressive that
+it haunted him till he learned it and fitted to it the
+sublime stanzas of his song. Lyon, a noted Jewish
+musician and vocalist, was chorister of this
+London Synagogue during the latter part of the
+18th century and the Yigdal was a portion of
+the Hebrew Liturgy composed in medieval times,
+it is said, by Daniel Ben Judah. The fact that
+the Methodist leaders took Olivers from his
+bench to be one of their preachers answers any
+suggestion that the converted shoemaker <em>copied</em>
+the Jewish hymn and put Christian phrases in it.
+<a id="png:043" name="png:043"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">43 /</span> 21</samp>
+He knew nothing of Hebrew, and had he known
+it, a literal translation of the Yigdal will show
+hardly a similarity to his evangelical lines. Only
+the music as Leoni sang it prompted his own song,
+and he gratefully put the singer's name to it.
+Montgomery, who admired the majestic style of
+the hymn, and its glorious imagery, said of its
+author, &ldquo;The man who wrote that hymn must
+have had the finest ear imaginable, for on account
+of the peculiar measure, none but a person of equal
+musical and poetic taste could have produced the
+harmony perceptible in the verse.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Whether the hymnist or some one else fitted the
+hymn to the tune, the &ldquo;fine ear&rdquo; and &ldquo;poetic
+taste&rdquo; that Montgomery applauded are evident
+enough in the union.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>O WORSHIP THE KING ALL GLORIOUS ABOVE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn of Sir Robert Grant has become
+almost universally known, and is often used as
+a morning or opening service song by choirs and
+congregations of all creeds. The favorite stanzas
+are the first four&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O worship the King all-glorious above,</div>
+<div>And gratefully sing His wonderful love&mdash;</div>
+<div>Our Shield and Defender, the Ancient of Days,</div>
+<div>Pavilioned in splendor, and girded with praise.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>O tell of His might, and sing of His grace,</div>
+<div>Whose robe is the light, whose canopy, space;</div>
+<div>His chariots of wrath the deep thunder-clouds form,</div>
+<div>And dark is His path on the wings of the storm.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:044" name="png:044"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">44 /</span> 22</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Thy bountiful care what tongue can recite?</div>
+<div>It breathes in the air, it shines in the light,</div>
+<div>It streams from the hills, it descends to the plain,</div>
+<div>And sweetly distils in the dew and the rain.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Frail children of dust, and feeble as frail,</div>
+<div>In Thee do we trust, nor find Thee to fail.</div>
+<div>Thy mercies how tender! how firm to the end!</div>
+<div>Our Maker, Defender, Redeemer, and Friend!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This is a model hymn of worship. Like the
+previous one by Thomas Olivers, it is strongly
+Hebrew in its tone and diction, and drew its inspiration
+from the Old Testament Psalter, the
+text-book of all true praise-song.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Robert Grant was born in the county of Inverness,
+Scotland, in 1785, and educated at Cambridge.
+He was many years member of Parliament
+for Inverness and a director in the East India
+Company, and 1834 was appointed Governor of
+Bombay. He died at Dapoorie, Western India,
+July 9, 1838.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Robert was a man of deep Christian feeling
+and a poetic mind. His writings were not numerous,
+but their thoughtful beauty endeared him to
+a wide circle of readers. In 1839 his brother,
+Lord Glenelg, published twelve of his poetical
+pieces, and a new edition in 1868. The volume
+contains the more or less well-known hymns&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+The starry firmament on high,<br />
+Saviour, when in dust to Thee,
+</p>
+
+<p class="runon">and&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+When gathering clouds around I view.
+</p>
+
+<a id="png:045" name="png:045"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">45 /</span> 23</samp>
+<p>Sir Robert's death, when scarcely past his prime,
+would indicate a decline by reason of illness, and
+perhaps other serious affliction, that justified the
+poetic license in the submissive verses beginning&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Thy mercy heard my infant prayer.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>And now <em>in age</em> and grief Thy name</div>
+<div>Does still my languid heart inflame,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And bow my faltering knee.</div>
+<div>Oh, yet this bosom feels the fire,</div>
+<div>This trembling hand and drooping lyre</div>
+<div class="i1"> Have yet a strain for Thee.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Several musical pieces written to the hymn,
+&ldquo;O, Worship the King,&rdquo; have appeared in church
+psalm-books, and others have been borrowed for
+it, but the one oftenest sung to its words is Haydn's
+&ldquo;Lyons.&rdquo; Its vigor and spirit best fit it for
+Grant's noble lyric.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>MAJESTIC SWEETNESS SITS ENTHRONED.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<p>Rev. Samuel Stennett D.D., the author of this
+hymn, was the son of Rev. Joseph Stennett, and
+grandson of Rev. Joseph Stennett D.D., who
+wrote&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Another six days' work is done,</div>
+<div>Another Sabbath is begun.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">All were Baptist ministers. Samuel was born in
+1727, at Exeter, Eng., and at the age of twenty-one
+<a id="png:046" name="png:046"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">46 /</span> 24</samp>
+became his father's assistant, and subsequently
+his successor over the church in Little
+Wild Street, Lincoln's Inn Fields, London.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Majestic sweetness sits enthroned</div>
+<div class="i1"> Upon the Saviour's brow;</div>
+<div>His head with radiant glories crowned,</div>
+<div class="i1"> His lips with grace o'erflow.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>To Him I owe my life and breath</div>
+<div class="i1"> And all the joys I have;</div>
+<div>He makes me triumph over death,</div>
+<div class="i1"> He saves me from the grave.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Since from His bounty I receive</div>
+<div class="i1"> Such proofs of love divine,</div>
+<div>Had I a thousand hearts to give,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Lord, they should all be Thine.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Samuel Stennett was one of the most respected
+and influential ministers of the Dissenting persuasion,
+and a confidant of many of the most distinguished
+statesmen of his time. The celebrated
+John Howard was his parishoner and intimate
+friend. His degree of Doctor of Divinity was bestowed
+upon him by Aberdeen University. Besides
+his theological writings he composed and published
+thirty-eight hymns, among them&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote"><span>
+On Jordan's stormy banks I stand,
+<br />
+When two or three with sweet accord,
+<br />
+Here at Thy table, Lord, we meet,
+</span></p>
+<p class="runon">and&mdash;</p>
+<p class="quote">
+&ldquo;'Tis finished,&rdquo; so the Saviour cried.
+</p>
+
+<a id="png:047" name="png:047"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">47 /</span> 25</samp>
+<p class="runon">&ldquo;Majestic Sweetness&rdquo; began the third stanza of
+his longer hymn&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+To Christ the Lord let every tongue.
+</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Stennett died in London, Aug. 24, 1795.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>For fifty or sixty years &ldquo;Ortonville&rdquo; has been
+linked with this devout hymn, and still maintains
+its fitting fellowship. The tune, composed
+in 1830, was the work of Thomas Hastings, and
+is almost as well-known and as often sung
+as his immortal &ldquo;Toplady.&rdquo; (See chap. 3,
+&ldquo;<a href="#RockofAges">Rock of Ages</a>.&rdquo;)</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>ALL HAIL THE POWER OF JESUS' NAME.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This inspiring lyric of praise appears to have
+been written about the middle of the eighteenth
+century. Its author, the Rev. Edward Perronet,
+son of Rev. Vincent Perronet, Vicar of Shoreham,
+Eng., was a man of great faith and humility but
+zealous in his convictions, sometimes to his serious
+expense. He was born in 1721, and, though
+eighteen years younger than Charles Wesley, the
+two became bosom friends, and it was under the
+direction of the Wesleys that Perronet became a
+preacher in the evangelical movement. Lady
+Huntingdon later became his patroness, but some
+needless and imprudent expressions in a satirical
+poem, &ldquo;The Mitre,&rdquo; revealing his hostility to the
+union of church and state, cost him her favor,
+<a id="png:048" name="png:048"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">48 /</span> 26</samp>
+and his contention against John Wesley's law that
+none but the regular parish ministers had the right
+to administer the sacraments, led to his complete
+separation from both the Wesleys. He subsequently
+became the pastor of a small church of
+Dissenters in Canterbury, where he died, in January,
+1792. His piety uttered itself when near his
+happy death, and his last words were a Gloria.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>All hail the power of Jesus' name!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Let angels prostrate fall;</div>
+<div>Bring forth the royal diadem,</div>
+<div class="i1"> To crown Him Lord of all.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Ye seed of Israel's chosen race,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Ye ransomed of the fall,</div>
+<div>Hail Him Who saves you by His grace,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And crown Him Lord of all.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Sinners, whose love can ne'er forget</div>
+<div class="i1"> The wormwood and the gall,</div>
+<div>Go, spread your trophies at His feet,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And crown Him Lord of all.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Let every tribe and every tongue</div>
+<div class="i1"> That bound creation's call,</div>
+<div>Now shout the universal song,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The crown&eacute;d Lord of all.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">With two disused stanzas omitted, the hymn as it
+stands differs from the original chiefly in the last
+stanza, though in the second the initial line is now
+transposed to read&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Ye chosen seed of Israel's race.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">The fourth stanza now reads&mdash;</p>
+<a id="png:049" name="png:049"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">49 /</span> 27</samp>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Let every kindred, every tribe</div>
+<div class="i1"> On this terrestrial ball</div>
+<div>To Him all majesty ascribe,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And crown Him Lord of all.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">And what is now the favorite last stanza is the one
+added by Dr. Rippon&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O that with yonder sacred throng</div>
+<div class="i1"> We at His feet may fall,</div>
+<div>And join the everlasting song,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And crown Him Lord of all.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Everyone now calls it &ldquo;Old Coronation,&rdquo; and it
+is entitled to the adjective by this time, being <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'considererably'">considerably</ins>
+more than a hundred years of age.
+It was composed in the very year of Perronet's
+death and one wonders just how long the hymn
+and tune waited before they came together; for
+Heaven evidently meant them to be wedded for all
+time. This is an American opinion, and no
+reflection on the earlier English melody of &ldquo;Miles
+Lane,&rdquo; composed during Perronet's lifetime by
+William Shrubsole and published with the words
+in 1780 in the <i>Gospel Magazine</i>. There is also a
+fine processional tune sung in the English Church
+to Perronet's hymn.</p>
+
+<a id="png:035" name="png:035"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">35 /</span> opp 14</samp>
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of Oliver Holden">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus2" name="Illus2"
+ ><img src="images/illus02-oliverholden-cameo.jpg" alt=
+ "Oliver Holden" width="218" height="294" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>Oliver Holden</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+<p>The author of &ldquo;Coronation&rdquo; was Oliver Holden,
+a self-taught musician, born in Shirley, Mass.,
+1765, and bred to the carpenter's trade. The little
+pipe organ on which tradition says he struck the
+first notes of the famous tune is now in the
+<a id="png:050" name="png:050"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">50 /</span> 28</samp>
+Historical rooms of the Old State House, Boston, placed
+there by its late owner, Mrs. Fanny Tyler, the old
+musician's granddaughter. Its tones are as mellow
+as ever, and the times that &ldquo;Coronation&rdquo; has
+been played upon it by admiring visitors would far
+outnumber the notes of its score.</p>
+
+<p>Holden wrote a number of other hymn-tunes,
+among which &ldquo;Cowper,&rdquo; &ldquo;Confidence,&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;Concord&rdquo; are remembered, but none of them
+had the wings of &ldquo;Coronation,&rdquo; his American
+&ldquo;Te Deum.&rdquo; His first published collection was
+entitled <i>The American Harmony</i>, and this was
+followed by the <i>Union Harmony</i>, and the <i>Worcester
+Collection</i>. He also wrote and published
+&ldquo;Mt. Vernon,&rdquo; and several other patriotic anthems,
+mainly for special occasions, to some of which he
+supplied the words. He was no hymnist, though
+he did now and then venture into sacred metre.
+The new <i>Methodist Hymnal</i> preserves a simple
+four-stanza specimen of his experiments in verse:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>They who seek the throne of grace</div>
+<div>Find that throne in every place:</div>
+<div>If we lead a life of prayer</div>
+<div>God is present everywhere.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Sacred music, however, was the good man's passion
+to the last. He died in 1844.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Such beautiful themes!&rdquo; he whispered on his
+death bed, &ldquo;Such beautiful themes! But I can
+write no more.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The enthusiasm always and everywhere aroused
+by the singing of &ldquo;Coronation,&rdquo; dates from the
+<a id="png:051" name="png:051"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">51 /</span> 29</samp>
+time it first went abroad in America in its new
+wedlock of music and words. &ldquo;This tune,&rdquo; says
+an accompanying note over the score in the old
+<i>Carmina Sacra</i>, &ldquo;was a great favorite with the late
+Dr. Dwight of Yale College (1798). It was often
+sung by the college choir, while he, catching, as it
+were, the music of the heavenly world, would join
+them, and lead with the most ardent devotion.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>AWAKE AND SING THE SONG.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn of six stanzas is abridged from a
+longer one indited by the Rev. William Hammond,
+and published in <i>Lady Huntingdon's Hymn-book</i>.
+It was much in use in early Methodist revivals.
+It appears now as it was slightly altered by Rev.
+Martin Madan&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Awake and sing the song</div>
+<div class="i1"> Of Moses and the Lamb;</div>
+<div>Join every heart and every tongue</div>
+<div class="i1"> To praise the Savior's name.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The sixth verse is a variation of one of Watts'
+hymns, and was added in the <i>Brethren's Hymn-book</i>,
+1801&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>There shall each heart and tongue</div>
+<div class="i1"> His endless praise proclaim,</div>
+<div>And sweeter voices join the song</div>
+<div class="i1"> Of Moses and the Lamb.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The Rev. William Hammond was born Jan. 6,
+1719, at Battle, Sussex, Eng., and educated at St.
+<a id="png:052" name="png:052"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">52 /</span> 30</samp>
+John's College, Cambridge. Early in his ministerial
+life he was a Calvinistic Methodist, but
+ultimately joined the Moravians. Died in London,
+Aug. 19, 1793. His collection of <i>Psalms and
+Hymns and Spiritual Songs</i> was published in 1745.</p>
+
+<p>The Rev. Martin Madan, son of Col. Madan,
+was born 1726. He founded Lock Hospital, Hyde
+Park, and long officiated as its chaplain. As a
+preacher he was popular, and his reputation as a
+composer of music was considerable. There is
+no proof that he wrote any original hymns, but
+he amended, pieced and expanded the work of
+others. Died in 1770.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p title="Illustration of Joseph Haydn originally opposite">The hymn
+has had a variety of musical interpretations.
+The more modern piece is &ldquo;St. Philip,&rdquo;
+by Edward John Hopkins, Doctor of Music, born
+at Westminster, London, June 30, 1818. From a
+member of the Chapel Royal boy choir he became
+organist of the Michtam Church, Surrey, and
+afterwards of the Temple Church, London. Received
+his Doctor's degree from the Archbishop
+of Canterbury in 1882.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>CROWN HIS HEAD WITH ENDLESS BLESSING.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The writer of this hymn was William Goode,
+who helped to found the English Church Missionary
+Society, and was for twenty years the Secretary of
+the &ldquo;Society for the Relief of Poor Pious Clergymen.&rdquo;
+<a id="png:055" name="png:055"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">55 /</span> 31</samp>
+For celebrating the praise of the Saviour, he
+seems to have been of like spirit and genius with
+Perronet. He was born in Buckingham, Eng.,
+April 2, 1762; studied for the ministry and became
+a curate, successor of William Romaine. His
+spiritual maturity was early, and his habits of
+thought were formed amid associations such as
+the young Wesleys and Whitefield sought. Like
+them, even in his student days he proved his aspiration
+for purer religious life by an evangelical zeal
+that cost him the ridicule of many of his school-fellows,
+but the meetings for conference and prayer
+which he organized among them were not unattended,
+and were lasting and salutary in their effect.</p>
+
+<p>Jesus was the theme of his life and song, and
+was his last word. He died in 1816.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Crown His head with endless blessing</div>
+<div class="i1"> Who in God the Father's name</div>
+<div>With compassion never ceasing</div>
+<div class="i1"> Comes salvation to proclaim.</div>
+<div>Hail, ye saints who know His favor,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Who within His gates are found.</div>
+<div>Hail, ye saints, th' exalted Saviour,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Let His courts with praise resound.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:053" name="png:053"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">53 /</span> opp 30</samp>
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of Joseph Haydn">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus3" name="Illus3"
+ ><img src="images/illus03-josephhaydn-cameo.jpg" alt=
+ "Joseph Haydn" width="223" height="273" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>Joseph Haydn</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Haydn,&rdquo; bearing the name of its great composer,
+is in several important hymnals the chosen
+music for William Goode's devout words. Its
+strain and spirit are lofty and melodious and in
+entire accord with the pious poet's praise.</p>
+
+<a id="png:056" name="png:056"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">56 /</span> 32</samp>
+
+<p>Joseph Haydn, son of a poor wheelwright, was
+born 1732, in Rohron, a village on the borders of
+Hungary and Austria. His precocity of musical
+talent was such that he began composing at the
+age of ten years. Prince Esterhazy discovered his
+genius when he was poor and friendless, and his
+fortune was made. While Music Master for the
+Prince's Private Chapel (twenty years) he wrote
+many of his beautiful symphonies which placed him
+among the foremost in that class of music. Invited
+to England, he received the Doctor's degree
+at Oxford, and composed his great oratorio of
+&ldquo;The Creation,&rdquo; besides his &ldquo;Twelve Grand
+Symphonies,&rdquo; and a long list of minor musical
+works secular and sacred. His invention was inexhaustible.</p>
+
+<p>Haydn seems to have been a sincerely pious
+man. When writing his great oratorio of &ldquo;The
+Creation&rdquo; at sixty-seven years of age, &ldquo;I knelt
+down every day,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;and prayed God to
+strengthen me for my work.&rdquo; This daily spiritual
+preparation was similar to Handel's when he
+was creating his &ldquo;Messiah.&rdquo; Change one word
+and it may be said of sacred music as truly as
+of astronomy, &ldquo;The undevout composer is mad.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Near Haydn's death, in Vienna, 1809, when he
+heard for the last time his magnificent chorus,
+&ldquo;Let there be Light!&rdquo; he exclaimed, &ldquo;Not mine,
+not mine. It all came to me from above.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<a id="png:057" name="png:057"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">57 /</span> 33</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>NOW TO THE LORD A NOBLE SONG.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>When Watts finished this hymn he had achieved
+a &ldquo;noble song,&rdquo; whether he was conscious of it or
+not; and it deserves a foremost place, where it
+can help future worshippers in their praise as it
+has the past. It is not so common in the later
+hymnals, but it is imperishable, and still later
+collections will not forget it.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Now to the Lord a noble song,</div>
+<div>Awake my soul, awake my tongue!</div>
+<div>Hosanna to the Eternal Name,</div>
+<div>And all His boundless love proclaim.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>See where it shines in Jesus' face,</div>
+<div>The brightest image of His grace!</div>
+<div>God in the person of His Son</div>
+<div>Has all His mightiest works outdone.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>A rather finical question has occurred to some
+minds as to the theology of the word &ldquo;works&rdquo; in
+the last line, making the second person in the Godhead
+apparently a creature; and in a few hymn-books
+the previous line has been made to read&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>God in the <em>Gospel</em> of His Son.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">But the question is a rhetorical one, and the poet's
+free expression&mdash;here as in hundreds of other
+cases&mdash;has never disturbed the general confidence
+in his orthodoxy.</p>
+
+<p>Montgomery called Watts &ldquo;the inventor of
+hymns in our language,&rdquo; and the credit stands
+practically undisputed, for Watts made a hymn
+style that no human master taught him, and his
+<a id="png:058" name="png:058"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">58 /</span> 34</samp>
+model has been the ideal one for song worship ever
+since; and we can pardon the climax when Professor
+Charles M. Stuart speaks of him as &ldquo;writer,
+scholar, thinker and saint,&rdquo; for in addition to all
+the rest he was a very good man.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Old &ldquo;Ames&rdquo; was for many years the choir
+favorite, and the words of the hymn printed with
+it in the note-book made the association familiar.
+It was, and <em>is</em>, an appropriate selection, though
+in later manuals George Kingsley's &ldquo;Ware&rdquo; is
+evidently thought to be better suited to the high-toned
+verse. Good old tunes never &ldquo;wear out,&rdquo;
+but they do go out of fashion.</p>
+
+<p>The composer of &ldquo;Ames,&rdquo; Sigismund Neukomm,
+Chevalier, was born in Salzburg, Austria,
+July 10, 1778, and was a pupil of Haydn. Though
+not a great genius, his talents procured him access
+and even intimacy in the courts of Germany, France,
+Italy, Portugal and England, and for thirty years he
+composed church anthems and oratorios with prodigious
+industry. Neukomm's musical productions,
+numbering no less than one thousand, and popular in
+their day, are, however, mostly forgotten, excepting
+his oratorio of &ldquo;David&rdquo; and one or two hymn-tunes.</p>
+
+<p>George Kingsley, author of &ldquo;Ware,&rdquo; was born
+in Northampton, Mass., July 7, 1811. Died in
+the Hospital, in the same city, March 14, 1884. He
+compiled eight books of music for young people and
+several manuals of church psalmody, and was for
+<a id="png:059" name="png:059"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">59 /</span> 35</samp>
+some time a music teacher in Boston, where he played
+the organ at the Hollis St. church. Subsequently he
+became professor of music in Girard College, Philadelphia,
+and music instructor in the public schools,
+being employed successively as organist (on Lord's
+Day) at Dr. Albert Barnes' and Arch St. churches,
+and finally in Brooklyn at Dr. Storrs' Church
+of the Pilgrims. Returned to Northampton, 1853.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>EARLY, MY GOD, WITHOUT DELAY.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This and the five following hymns, all by Watts,
+are placed in immediate succession, for unity's
+sake&mdash;with a fuller notice of the greatest of hymn-writers
+at the end of the series.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Early, my God, without delay</div>
+<div class="i1"> I haste to seek Thy face,</div>
+<div>My thirsty spirit faints away</div>
+<div class="i1"> Without Thy cheering grace.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>In the memories of very old men and women,
+who sang the fugue music of Morgan's &ldquo;Montgomery,&rdquo;
+still lingers the second stanza and some
+of the &ldquo;spirit and understanding&rdquo; with which it
+used to be rendered in meeting on Sunday mornings.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>So pilgrims on the scorching sand,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Beneath a burning sky,</div>
+<div>Long for a cooling stream at hand</div>
+<div class="i1"> And they must drink or die.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Many of the earlier pieces assigned to this hymn
+were either too noisy or too tame. The best and
+<a id="png:060" name="png:060"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">60 /</span> 36</samp>
+longest-serving is &ldquo;Lanesboro,&rdquo; which, with its
+expressive duet in the middle and its soaring final
+strain of harmony, never fails to carry the meaning
+of the words. It was composed by William
+Dixon, and arranged and adapted by Lowell Mason.</p>
+
+<p>William Dixon, an English composer, was a
+music engraver and publisher, and author also of
+several glees and anthems. He was born 1750,
+and died about 1825.</p>
+
+<p>Lowell Mason, born in Medfield, Mass., 1792, has
+been called, not without reason, &ldquo;the father of American
+choir singing.&rdquo; Returning from Savannah,
+Ga., where he spent sixteen years of his younger life
+as clerk in a bank, he located in Boston (1827), being
+already known there as the composer of &ldquo;The Missionary
+Hymn.&rdquo; He had not neglected his musical
+studies while living in the South, and it was in Savannah
+that he made the glorious harmony of that tune.</p>
+
+<p>He became president of the Handel and Haydn
+Society, went abroad for special study, was made
+Doctor of Music, and collected a store of themes
+among the great models of song to bring home for
+his future work.</p>
+
+<p>The Boston Academy of Music was founded by
+him and what he did for the song-service of the
+Church in America by his singing schools, and
+musical conventions, and published manuals, to
+form and organize the choral branch of divine
+worship, has no parallel, unless it is Noah Webster's
+service to the English language.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Mason died in Orange, N.J., in 1872.</p>
+
+<a id="png:061" name="png:061"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">61 /</span> 37</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>SWEET IS THE WORK, MY GOD, MY KING.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This is one of the hymns that helped to give its
+author the title of &ldquo;The Seraphic Watts.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Sweet is the work, my God, my King</div>
+<div>To praise Thy name, give thanks and sing</div>
+<div>To show Thy love by morning light,</div>
+<div>And talk of all Thy truth at night.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>No nobler one, and more akin in spirit to the
+hymn, can be found than &ldquo;Duke Street,&rdquo; Hatton's
+imperishable choral.</p>
+
+<p>Little is known of the John Hatton who wrote
+&ldquo;Duke St.&rdquo; He was earlier by nearly a century
+than John Liphot Hatton of Liverpool (born in
+1809), who wrote the opera of &ldquo;Pascal Bruno,&rdquo;
+the cantata of &ldquo;Robin Hood&rdquo; and the sacred
+drama of &ldquo;Hezekiah.&rdquo; The biographical index
+of the <i>Evangelical Hymnal</i> says of John Hatton, the
+author of &ldquo;Duke St.&rdquo;: &ldquo;John, of Warrington; afterwards
+of St. Helens, then resident in Duke St. in
+the township of Windle; composed several hymn-tunes;
+died in 1793.<sup>*</sup> His funeral sermon was
+preached at the Presbyterian Chapel, St. Helens,
+Dec. 13.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+Tradition says he was killed by being thrown from a stage-coach.</p></div>
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>COME, WE THAT LOVE THE LORD.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Watts entitled this hymn &ldquo;Heavenly Joy on
+Earth.&rdquo; He could possibly, like Madame Guyon,
+<a id="png:062" name="png:062"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">62 /</span> 38</samp>
+have written such a hymn in a dungeon, but it is
+no less spiritual for its birth (as tradition will have
+it) amid the lovely scenery of Southampton where
+he could find in nature &ldquo;glory begun below.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Come, we that love the Lord,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And let our joys be known;</div>
+<div>Join in a song with sweet accord,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And thus surround the throne.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>There shall we see His face,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And never, never sin;</div>
+<div>There, from the rivers of His grace,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Drink endless pleasures in.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Children of grace have found</div>
+<div class="i1"> Glory begun below:</div>
+<div>Celestial fruits on earthly ground</div>
+<div class="i1"> From faith and hope may grow.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Mortality and immortality blend their charms
+in the next stanza. The unfailing beauty of the
+vision will be dwelt upon with delight so long as
+Christians sing on earth.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The hill of Sion yields</div>
+<div class="i1"> A thousand sacred sweets,</div>
+<div>Before we reach the heavenly fields,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Or walk the golden streets.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>&ldquo;St. Thomas&rdquo; has often been the interpreter of
+the hymn, and still clings to the words in the
+memory of thousands.</p>
+
+<p>The Italian tune of &ldquo;Ain&rdquo; has more music. It
+is a fugue piece (simplified in some tune-books),
+<a id="png:063" name="png:063"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">63 /</span> 39</samp>
+and the joyful traverse of its notes along the staff
+in four-four time, with the momentum of a good
+choir, is exhilarating in the extreme.</p>
+
+<p>Corelli, the composer, was a master violinist, the
+greatest of his day, and wrote a great deal of
+violin music; and the thought of his glad instrument
+may have influenced his work when harmonizing
+the four voices of &ldquo;Ain.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Arcangelo Corelli was born at Fusignano, in
+1653. He was a sensitive artist, and although
+faultless in Italian music, he was not sure of himself
+in playing French scores, and once while
+performing with Handel (who resented the slightest
+error), and once again with Scarlatti, leading an
+orchestra in Naples when the king was present, he
+made a mortifying mistake. He took the humiliation
+so much to heart that he brooded over it till
+he died, in Rome, Jan. 18, 1717.</p>
+
+<p>For revival meetings the modern tune set to
+&ldquo;Come we that love the Lord,&rdquo; by Robert Lowry,
+should be mentioned. A shouting chorus is appended
+to it, but it has melody and plenty of stimulating
+motion.</p>
+
+<p>The Rev. Robert Lowry was born in Philadelphia,
+March 12, 1826, and educated at Lewisburg, Pa.
+From his 28th year till his death, 1899, he was a
+faithful and successful minister of Christ, but
+is more widely known as a composer of sacred
+music.</p>
+
+<a id="png:064" name="png:064"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">64 /</span> 40</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>BE THOU EXALTED, O MY GOD.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>In this hymn the thought of Watts touches the
+eternal summits. Taken from the 57th and 108th
+Psalms&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Be Thou exalted, O my God,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Above the heavens where angels dwell;</div>
+<div>Thy power on earth be known abroad</div>
+<div class="i1"> And land to land Thy wonders tell.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>High o'er the earth His mercy reigns,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And reaches to the utmost sky;</div>
+<div>His truth to endless years remains</div>
+<div class="i1"> When lower worlds dissolve and die.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Haydn furnished it out of his chorus of morning
+stars, and it was christened &ldquo;Creation,&rdquo; after the
+name of his great oratorio. It is a march of
+trumpets.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>BEFORE JEHOVAH'S AWFUL THRONE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>No one could mistake the style of Watts in this
+sublime ode. He begins with his foot on Sinai,
+but flies to Calvary with the angel preacher whom
+St. John saw in his Patmos vision:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Before Jehovah's awful throne</div>
+<div class="i1"> Ye nations bow with sacred joy;</div>
+<div>Know that the Lord is God alone;</div>
+<div class="i1"> He can create and He destroy.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:065" name="png:065"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">65 /</span> 41</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>His sovereign power without our aid</div>
+<div class="i1"> Made us of clay and formed us men,</div>
+<div>And when like wandering sheep we stray,</div>
+<div class="i1"> He brought us to His fold again.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>We'll crowd Thy gates with thankful songs,</div>
+<div class="i1"> High as the heaven our voices raise,</div>
+<div>And earth with her ten thousand tongues</div>
+<div class="i1"> Shall fill Thy courts with sounding praise.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">TUNE&mdash;OLD HUNDRED.</h4>
+
+<p>Martin Madan's four-page anthem, &ldquo;Denmark,&rdquo;
+has some grand strains in it, but it is a
+tune of florid and difficult vocalization, and is now
+heard only in Old Folks' Concerts.</p>
+
+<p class="thoughtbreak">
+The Rev. Isaac Watts, D.D., was born at
+Southampton, Eng., in 1674. His father was a
+deacon of the Independent Church there, and
+though not an uncultured man himself, he is said
+to have had little patience with the incurable
+penchant of his boy for making rhymes and verses.
+We hear nothing of the lad's mother, but we can
+fancy her hand and spirit in the indulgence of his
+poetic tastes as well as in his religious training.
+The tradition handed down from Dr. Price, a
+colleague of Watts, relates that at the age of
+eighteen Isaac became so irritated at the crabbed
+and untuneful hymns sung at the Nonconformist
+meetings that he complained bitterly of them to
+his father. The deacon may have felt something
+<a id="png:066" name="png:066"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">66 /</span> 42</samp>
+as Dr. Wayland did when a rather &ldquo;fresh&rdquo; student
+criticised the Proverbs, and hinted that making such
+things could not be &ldquo;much of a job,&rdquo; and the Doctor
+remarked, &ldquo;Suppose <em>you</em> make a few.&rdquo; Possibly
+there was the same gentle sarcasm in the reply
+of Deacon Watts to his son, &ldquo;Make some yourself,
+then.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Isaac was in just the mood to take his father at
+his word, and he retired and wrote the hymn&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+Behold the glories of the Lamb.
+</p>
+
+<p>There must have been a decent tune to carry it,
+for it pleased the worshippers greatly, when it was
+sung in meeting&mdash;and that was the beginning of
+Isaac Watts' career as a hymnist.</p>
+
+<p>So far as scholarship was an advantage, the young
+writer must have been well equipped already, for
+as early as the entering of his fifth year he was
+learning Latin, and at nine learning Greek; at
+eleven, French; and at thirteen, Hebrew. From
+the day of his first success he continued to indite
+hymns for the home church, until by the end of his
+twenty-second year he had written one hundred
+and ten, and in the two following years a hundred
+and forty-four more, besides preparing himself for
+the ministry. No.&nbsp;7 in the edition of the first one
+hundred and ten, was that royal jewel of all his
+lyric work&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+When I survey the wondrous cross.
+</p>
+
+<p>Isaac Watts was ordained pastor of an Independent
+Church in Mark Lane, London, 1702, but
+<a id="png:067" name="png:067"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">67 /</span> 43</samp>
+repeated illness finally broke up his ministry, and
+he retired, an invalid, to the beautiful home of Sir
+Thomas Abney at Theobaldo, invited, as he supposed,
+to spend a week, but it was really to spend
+the rest of his life&mdash;thirty-six years.</p>
+
+<p>Numbers of his hymns are cited as having biographical
+or reminiscent color. The stanza in&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When I can read my title clear,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;which reads in the original copy,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Should earth against my soul engage</div>
+<div>And <em>hellish darts be hurled</em>,</div>
+<div>Then I can smile at <em>Satan's rage</em></div>
+<div>And face a frowning world,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;is said to have been an allusion to Voltaire and his
+attack upon the church, while the calm beauty of
+the harbor within view of his home is supposed to
+have been in his eye when he composed the last
+stanza,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>There shall I bathe my weary soul</div>
+<div class="i1"> In seas of heavenly rest,</div>
+<div>And not a wave of trouble roll</div>
+<div class="i1"> Across my peaceful breast.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">According to the record,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>What shall the dying sinner do?</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;was one of his &ldquo;pulpit hymns,&rdquo;
+and followed a sermon preached from Rom. 1:16. Another,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>And is this life prolonged to you?</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;after a sermon from I&nbsp;Cor. 3:22;
+and another,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>How vast a treasure we possess,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:068" name="png:068"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">68 /</span> 44</samp>
+<p class="runon">&mdash;enforced his text, &ldquo;All things are yours.&rdquo;
+The hymn,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Not all the blood of beasts</div>
+<div>On Jewish altars slain,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;was, as some say, suggested to the writer by a
+visit to the <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'abbatoir'">abattoir</ins> in Smithfield Market. The
+same hymn years afterwards, discovered, we are
+told, in a printed paper wrapped around a shop
+bundle, converted a Jewess, and influenced her to a
+life of Christian faith and sacrifice.</p>
+
+<p>A young man, hardened by austere and minatory
+sermons, was melted, says Dr. Belcher, by
+simply reading,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Show pity Lord, O Lord, forgive,</div>
+<div>Let a repenting sinner live.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and became partaker of a rich religious
+experience.</p>
+
+<p>The summer scenery of Southampton, with its
+distant view of the Isle of Wight, was believed to
+have inspired the hymnist sitting at a parlor
+window and gazing across the river Itchen, to
+write the stanza&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Sweet fields beyond the swelling flood</div>
+<div class="i1"> Stand drest in living green;</div>
+<div>So to the Jews old Canaan stood</div>
+<div class="i1"> While Jordan rolled between.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The hymn, &ldquo;Unveil thy bosom, faithful tomb,&rdquo;
+was personal, addressed by Watts &ldquo;to Lucius on
+the death of Seneca.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>A severe heart-trial was the occasion of another
+hymn. When a young man he proposed marriage
+<a id="png:069" name="png:069"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">69 /</span> 45</samp>
+to Miss Elizabeth Singer, a much-admired young
+lady, talented, beautiful, and good. She rejected
+him&mdash;kindly but finally. The disappointment
+was bitter, and in the first shadow of it he wrote,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>How vain are all things here below,</div>
+<div>How false and yet how fair.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Miss Singer became the celebrated Mrs. Elizabeth
+Rowe, the spiritual and poetic beauty of
+whose <i>Meditations</i> once made a devotional text-book
+for pious souls. Of Dr. Watts and his
+offer of his hand and heart, she always said, &ldquo;I
+loved the jewel, but I did not admire the casket.&rdquo;
+The poet suitor was undersized, in habitually
+delicate health&mdash;and not handsome.</p>
+
+<p>But the good minister and scholar found noble
+employment to keep his mind from preying upon
+itself and shortening his days. During his long
+though afflicted leisure he versified the Psalms,
+wrote a treatise on <i>Logic</i>, an <i>Introduction to the
+Study of Astronomy and Geography</i>, and a work
+<i>On the Improvement of the Mind</i>; and died in
+1748, at the age of seventy-four.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>O FOR A THOUSAND TONGUES TO SING.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Charles Wesley, the author of this hymn, took up
+the harp of Watts when the older poet laid it down.
+He was born at Epworth, Eng., in 1708, the third
+son of Rev. Samuel Wesley, and died in London,
+March 29, 1788. The hymn is believed to have
+<a id="png:070" name="png:070"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">70 /</span> 46</samp>
+been written May 17, 1739, for the anniversary of
+his own conversion:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O for a thousand tongues to sing</div>
+<div class="i1"> My great Redeemer's praise,</div>
+<div>The glories of my God and King,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And triumphs of His grace.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The remark of a fervent Christian friend, Peter
+Bohler, &ldquo;Had I a thousand tongues I would praise
+Christ Jesus with them all,&rdquo; struck an answering
+chord in Wesley's heart, and he embalmed the
+wish in his fluent verse. The third stanza (printed
+as second in some hymnals), has made language for
+pardoned souls for at least four generations:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Jesus! the name that calms our fears</div>
+<div class="i1"> And bids our sorrows cease;</div>
+<div>'Tis music in the sinner's ears,</div>
+<div class="i1"> 'Tis life and health and peace.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Charles Wesley was the poet of the soul, and
+knew every mood. In the words of Isaac Taylor,
+&ldquo;There is no main article of belief ... no moral
+sentiment peculiarly characteristic of the gospel
+that does not find itself ... pointedly and clearly
+conveyed in some stanza of Charles Wesley's
+poetry.&rdquo; And it does not dim the lustre of Watts,
+considering the marvellous brightness, versatility and
+felicity of his greatest successor, to say of the latter,
+with the <i>London Quarterly</i>, that he &ldquo;was, perhaps,
+the most gifted minstrel of the modern Church.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<a id="png:071" name="png:071"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">71 /</span> opp 46</samp>
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of Charles Wesley">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus4" name="Illus4"
+ ><img src="images/illus04-charleswesley-cameo.jpg" alt=
+ "Charles Wesley" width="221" height="296" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>Charles Wesley</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+<a id="png:073" name="png:073"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">73 /</span> 47</samp>
+
+<p>Most of the hymns of this good man were hymns
+of experience&mdash;and this is why they are so dear to
+the Christian heart. The music of eternal life is
+in them. The happy glow of a single line in one
+of them&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+Love Divine, all loves excelling,
+</p>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;thrills through them all. He led a spotless life
+from youth to old age, and grew unceasingly in
+spiritual knowledge and sweetness. His piety
+and purity were the weapons that alike humbled
+his scoffing fellow scholars at Oxford, and conquered
+the wild colliers of Kingwood. With his
+brother John, through persecution and ridicule, he
+preached and sang that Divine Love to his countrymen
+and in the wilds of America, and on their
+return to England his quenchless melodies multiplied
+till they made an Evangelical literature
+around his name. His hymns&mdash;he wrote no less
+than six thousand&mdash;are a liturgy not only for the
+Methodist Church but for English-speaking Christendom.</p>
+
+<p>The voices of Wesley and Watts cannot be
+hidden, whatever province of Christian life and
+service is traversed in themes of song, and in these
+chapters they will be heard again and again.</p>
+
+<p>A Watts-and-Wesley Scholarship would grace
+any Theological Seminary, to encourage the study
+and discussion of the best lyrics of the two great
+Gospel bards.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNES.</h4>
+
+<p>The musical mouth-piece of &ldquo;O for a thousand
+tongues,&rdquo; nearest to its own date, is old &ldquo;Azmon&rdquo;
+<a id="png:074" name="png:074"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">74 /</span> 48</samp>
+by Carl Glaser (1734&ndash;1829), appearing as No. 1
+in the <i>New Methodist Hymnal</i>. Arranged by
+Lowell Mason, 1830, it is still comparatively
+familiar, and the flavor of devotion is in its tone
+and style.</p>
+
+<p>Henry John Gauntlett, an English lawyer and
+composer, wrote a tune for it in 1872, noble in its
+uniform step and time, but scarcely uttering the
+hymnist's characteristic ardor.</p>
+
+<p>The tune of &ldquo;Dedham,&rdquo; by William Gardiner,
+now venerable but surviving by true merit, is not
+unlike &ldquo;Azmon&rdquo; in movement and character.
+Though less closely associated with the hymn, as
+a companion melody it is not inappropriate. But
+whatever the range of vocalization or the dignity
+of swells and cadences, a slow pace of single semibreves
+or quarters is not suited to Wesley's hymns.
+They are flights.</p>
+
+<p>Professor William Gardiner wrote many works
+on musical subjects early in the last century, and
+composed vocal harmonies, secular and sacred.
+He was born in Leicester, Eng., March 5, 1770,
+and died there Nov. 16, 1853.</p>
+
+<p>There is an old-fashioned unction and vigor in
+the style of &ldquo;Peterborough&rdquo; by Rev. Ralph
+Harrison (1748&ndash;1810) that after all best satisfies
+the singer who enters heart and soul into the spirit
+of the hymn. <i>Old Peterborough</i> was composed in
+1786.</p>
+
+<a id="png:075" name="png:075"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">75 /</span> 49</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>LORD WITH GLOWING HEART I'D PRAISE THEE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This was written in 1817 by the author of the
+&ldquo;Star Spangled Banner,&rdquo; and is a noble American
+hymn of which the country may well be proud,
+both because of its merit and for its birth in the
+heart of a national poet who was no less a Christian
+than a patriot.</p>
+
+<p>Francis Scott Key, lawyer, was born on the
+estate of his father, John Ross Key, in Frederick,
+Md., Aug. 1st, 1779; and died in Baltimore, Jan.
+11, 1843. A bronze statue of him over his grave,
+and another in Golden Gate Park, San Francisco,
+represent the nationality of his fame and the
+gratitude of a whole land.</p>
+
+<p>Though a slaveholder by inheritance, Mr. Key
+deplored the existence of human slavery, and not
+only originated a scheme of African colonization,
+but did all that a model master could do for the
+chattels on his plantation, in compliance with the
+Scripture command,<sup>*</sup> to lighten their burdens.
+He helped them in their family troubles, defended
+them gratuitously in the courts, and held regular
+Sunday-school services for them.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+Eph. 6:9, Coloss. 4:1.</p></div>
+
+<p>Educated at St. John's College, an active
+member of the Episcopal Church, he was not only
+a scholar but a devout and exemplary man.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Lord, with glowing heart I'd praise Thee</div>
+<div class="i1"> For the bliss Thy love bestows,</div>
+<div>For the pardoning grace that saves me,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And the peace that from it flows.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:076" name="png:076"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">76 /</span> 50</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Help, O Lord, my weak endeavor;</div>
+<div class="i1"> This dull soul to rapture raise;</div>
+<div>Thou must light the flame or never</div>
+<div class="i1"> Can my love be warmed to praise.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Lord, this bosom's ardent feeling</div>
+<div class="i1"> Vainly would my life express;</div>
+<div>Low before Thy footstool kneeling,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Deign Thy suppliant's prayer to bless.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Let Thy grace, my soul's chief treasure,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Love's pure flame within me raise,</div>
+<div>And, since words can never measure,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Let my life show forth Thy praise.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>&ldquo;St. Chad,&rdquo; a choral in D, with a four-bar
+unison, in the <i>Evangelical Hymnal</i>, is worthy of
+the hymn. Richard Redhead, the composer,
+organist of the Church of St. Mary Magdalene,
+Paddington, Eng., was born at Harrow, Middlesex,
+March 1, 1820, and educated at Magdalene
+College, Oxford. Graduated Bachelor of Music
+at Oxford, 1871. He published <i>Laudes Domin&aelig;</i>,
+a Gregorian Psalter, 1843, a Book of Tunes for
+the <i>Christian Year</i>, and is the author of much ritual
+music.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>HOLY, HOLY, HOLY, LORD GOD ALMIGHTY.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>There is nothing so majestic in Protestant hymnology
+as this Tersanctus of Bishop Heber.</p>
+
+<p>The Rt. Rev. Reginald Heber, son of a clergyman
+of the same name, was born in Malpas,
+<a id="png:077" name="png:077"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">77 /</span> 51</samp>
+Cheshire, Eng., April 21st, 1783, and educated
+at Oxford. He served the church in Hodnet,
+Shropshire, for about twenty years, and was then
+appointed Bishop of Calcutta, E.I. His labors
+there were cut short in the prime of his life, his
+death occurring in 1826, at Trichinopoly on the
+3d of April, his natal month.</p>
+
+<p>His hymns, numbering fifty-seven, were collected
+by his widow, and published with his poetical
+works in 1842.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Holy! holy! holy! Lord God Almighty!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Early in the morning our song shall rise to Thee.</div>
+<div>Holy! holy! holy! merciful and mighty,</div>
+<div class="i1"> God in Three Persons, blessed Trinity.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Holy! holy! holy! all the saints adore Thee,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Casting down their golden crowns around the glassy sea;</div>
+<div>Cherubim and seraphim, falling down before Thee,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Which wert, and art, and evermore shall be.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Grand as the hymn is, it did not come to its full
+grandeur of sentiment and sound in song-worship
+till the remarkable music of Dr. John B. Dykes
+was joined to it. None was ever written that in
+performance illustrates more admirably the solemn
+beauty of congregational praise. The name
+&ldquo;Nic&aelig;a&rdquo; attached to the tune means nothing to
+the popular ear and mind, and it is known everywhere
+by the initial words of the first line.</p>
+
+<p>Rev. John Bacchus Dykes, Doctor of Music,
+was born at Kingston-upon-Hull, in 1823; and
+<a id="png:078" name="png:078"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">78 /</span> 52</samp>
+graduated at Cambridge, in 1847. He became a
+master of tone and choral harmony, and did much
+to reform and elevate congregational psalmody
+in England. He was perhaps the first to demonstrate
+that hymn-tune making can be reduced to a
+science without impairing its spiritual purpose.
+Died Jan. 22, 1876.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>LORD OF ALL BEING, THRONED AFAR.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This noble hymn was composed by Dr. Oliver
+Wendell Holmes, born in Cambridge, Mass., 1809,
+and graduated at Harvard University. A physician
+by profession, he was known as a practitioner
+chiefly in literature, being a brilliant writer and
+long the leading poetical wit of America. He was,
+however, a man of deep religious feeling, and a
+devout attendant at King's Chapel, Unitarian, in
+Boston where he spent his life. He held the
+Harvard Professorship of Anatomy and Physiology
+more than fifty years, but his enduring work is in
+his poems, and his charming volume, <i>The Autocrat
+of the Breakfast Table</i>. Died Jan. 22, 1896.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Holmes' hymn is sung in some churches to
+&ldquo;Louvan,&rdquo; V.C. Taylor's admirable praise tune.
+Other hymnals prefer with it the music of &ldquo;Keble,&rdquo;
+one of Dr. Dykes' appropriate and finished melodies.</p>
+
+<p>Virgil Corydon Taylor, an American vocal composer,
+was born in Barkhamstead, Conn., April 2,
+1817, died 1891.</p>
+
+<a id="png:079" name="png:079"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">79 /</span> 53</samp>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="chap">CHAPTER II.</h2>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<h1>SOME HYMNS OF GREAT
+WITNESSES.</h1>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>JOHN OF DAMASCUS.</span></h4>
+
+<h4 class="quote" title="[Greek: Erchesthe, ô pistoi, Anastaseôs Hęmera]"
+>&#7964;&#961;&#967;&#949;&#963;&#952;&#949;,
+&#8038; &#960;&#953;&#963;&#964;&#959;&#8055;,<br />
+&#7944;&#957;&#945;&#963;&#964;&#8049;&#963;&#949;&#969;&#962;
+&#7977;&#956;&#8051;&#961;&#945;.</h4>
+
+
+
+<p>John of Damascus, called also St. John of
+Jerusalem, a theologian and poet, was the last
+but one of the Christian Fathers of the Greek
+Church. This eminent man was named by the
+Arabs &ldquo;Ibn Mansur,&rdquo; Son (Servant?) of a Conqueror,
+either in honor of his father Sergius or
+because it was a Semitic translation of his family
+title. He was born in Damascus early in the 8th
+century, and seems to have been in favor with the
+Caliph, and served under him many years in some
+important civil capacity, until, retiring to Palestine,
+he entered the monastic order, and late in life was
+ordained a priest of the Jerusalem Church. He
+died in the Convent of St. Sabas near that city
+about A.D. 780.</p>
+
+<p>His lifetime appears to have been passed in
+<a id="png:080" name="png:080"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">80 /</span> 54</samp>
+comparative peace. Mohammed having died
+before completing the conquest of Syria, the
+Moslem rule before whose advance Oriental
+Christianity was to lose its first field of triumph
+had not yet asserted its persecuting power in the
+north. This devout monk, in his meditations at
+St. Sabas, dwelt much upon the birth and the
+resurrection of Christ, and made hymns to celebrate
+them. It was probably four hundred years
+before Bonaventura (?) wrote the Christmas
+&ldquo;Adeste Fideles&rdquo; of the Latin West that John of
+Damascus composed his Greek &ldquo;Adeste Fideles&rdquo;
+for a Resurrection song in Jerusalem.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Come ye faithful, raise the strain</div>
+<div class="i1"> Of triumphant gladness.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>'Tis the spring of souls today</div>
+<div class="i1"> Christ hath burst His prison;</div>
+<div>From the frost and gloom of death</div>
+<div class="i1"> Light and life have risen.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The nobler of the two hymns preserved to us,
+(or six stanzas of it) through eleven centuries is
+entitled &ldquo;The Day of Resurrection.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The day of resurrection,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Earth, tell its joys abroad:</div>
+<div>The Passover of gladness,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The Passover of God.</div>
+<div>From death to life eternal,</div>
+<div class="i1"> From earth unto the sky,</div>
+<div>Our Christ hath brought us over,</div>
+<div class="i1"> With hymns of victory.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:081" name="png:081"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">81 /</span> 55</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Our hearts be pure from evil,</div>
+<div class="i1"> That we may see aright</div>
+<div>The Lord in rays eternal</div>
+<div class="i1"> Of resurrection light;</div>
+<div>And, listening to His accents,</div>
+<div class="i1"> May hear, so calm and plain,</div>
+<div>His own, &ldquo;All hail!&rdquo; and hearing,</div>
+<div class="i1"> May raise the victor-strain.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Now let the heavens be joyful,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Let earth her song begin,</div>
+<div>Let all the world keep triumph,</div>
+<div class="i1"> All that dwell therein.</div>
+<div>In grateful exultation,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Their notes let all things blend,</div>
+<div>For Christ the Lord is risen,</div>
+<div class="i1"> O joy that hath no end!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Both these hymns of John of Damascus were
+translated by John Mason Neale.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The Day of Resurrection&rdquo; is sung in the
+modern hymnals to the tune of &ldquo;Rotterdam,&rdquo;
+composed by Berthold of Tours, born in that city of
+the Netherlands, Dec. 17, 1838. He was educated
+at the conservatory in Leipsic, and later made
+London his permanent residence, writing both
+vocal and instrumental music. Died 1897. &ldquo;Rotterdam&rdquo;
+is a stately, sonorous piece and conveys
+the flavor of the ancient hymn.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Come ye faithful&rdquo; has for its modern interpreter
+Sir Arthur Sullivan, the celebrated composer
+of both secular and sacred works, but best
+<a id="png:082" name="png:082"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">82 /</span> 56</samp>
+known in hymnody as author of the great Christian
+march, &ldquo;Onward Christian Soldiers.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Hymns are known to have been written by the
+earlier Greek Fathers, Ephrem Syrus of Mesopotamia
+(A.D. 307&ndash;373), Basil the Great, Bishop
+of Cappadocia (A.D. 329&ndash;379) Gregory Nazianzen,
+Bishop of Constantinople (A.D. 335&ndash;390)
+and others, but their fragments of song which have
+come down to us scarcely rank them among the
+great witnesses&mdash;with the possible exception of the
+last name. An English scholar, Rev. Allen W.
+Chatfield, has translated the hymns extant of
+Gregory Nazianzen. The following stanzas give
+an idea of their quality. The lines are from an
+address to the Deity:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>How, Unapproached! shall mind of man</div>
+<div class="i1"> Descry Thy dazzling throne,</div>
+<div>And pierce and find Thee out, and scan</div>
+<div class="i1"> Where Thou dost dwell alone?</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Unuttered Thou! all uttered things</div>
+<div class="i1"> Have had their birth from Thee;</div>
+<div>The One Unknown, from Thee the spring</div>
+<div class="i1"> Of all we know and see.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>And lo! all things abide in Thee</div>
+<div class="i1"> And through the complex whole,</div>
+<div>Thou spreadst Thine own divinity,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Thyself of all the Goal.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This is reverent, but rather philosophical than
+evangelical, and reminds us of the Hymn of
+Aratus, more than two centuries before Christ
+was born.</p>
+
+<a id="png:083" name="png:083"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">83 /</span> 57</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>ST. STEPHEN, THE SABAITE.</span></h4>
+
+
+<p>This pious Greek monk, (734&ndash;794,) nephew of
+St. John of Damascus, spent his life, from the age
+of ten, in the monastery of St. Sabas. His sweet
+hymn, known in Neale's translation,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Art thou weary, art thou languid,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Art thou sore distrest?</div>
+<div>Come to Me, saith One, and coming</div>
+<div class="i3"> Be at rest,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;is still in the hymnals, with the tunes of Dykes,
+and Sir Henry W. Baker (1821&ndash;1877), Vicar of
+Monkland, Herefordshire.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>KING ROBERT II.</span></h4>
+
+
+<h4 class="quote"><i>Veni, Sancte Spiritus</i>.</h4>
+
+
+<p>Robert the Second, surnamed &ldquo;Robert the Sage&rdquo;
+and &ldquo;Robert the Devout,&rdquo; succeeded Hugh Capet,
+his father, upon the throne of France, about the
+year 997. He has been called the gentlest monarch
+that ever sat upon a throne, and his amiability of
+character poorly prepared him to cope with his
+dangerous and wily adversaries. His last years
+were embittered by the opposition of his own sons,
+and the political agitations of the times. He died
+at Melun in 1031, and was buried at St. Denis.</p>
+
+<p>Robert possessed a reflective mind, and was fond
+of learning and musical art. He was both a poet
+and a musician. He was deeply religious, and, from
+unselfish motives, was much devoted to the church.</p>
+
+<a id="png:084" name="png:084"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">84 /</span> 58</samp>
+
+<p>Robert's hymn, &ldquo;Veni, Sancte Spiritus,&rdquo; is given
+below. He himself was a chorister; and there was
+no kingly service that he seemed to love so well.
+We are told that it was his custom to go to the
+church of St. Denis, and in his royal robes, with
+his crown upon his head, to direct the choir at
+matins and vespers, and join in the singing. Few
+kings have left a better legacy to the Christian
+church than his own hymn, which, after nearly a
+thousand years, is still an influence in the world:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Come, Thou Holy Spirit, come,</div>
+<div>And from Thine eternal home</div>
+<div class="i1"> Shed the ray of light divine;</div>
+<div>Come, Thou Father of the poor,</div>
+<div>Come, Thou Source of all our store,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Come, within our bosoms shine.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Thou of Comforters the best,</div>
+<div>Thou the soul's most welcome Guest,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Sweet Refreshment here below!</div>
+<div>In our labor Rest most sweet,</div>
+<div>Grateful Shadow from the heat,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Solace in the midst of woe!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Oh, most blessed Light Divine,</div>
+<div>Shine within these hearts of Thine,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And our inmost being fill;</div>
+<div>If Thou take Thy grace away,</div>
+<div>Nothing pure in man will stay,</div>
+<div class="i1"> All our good is turned to ill.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Heal our wounds; our strength renew</div>
+<div>On our dryness pour Thy dew;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Wash the stains of guilt away!</div>
+<div>Bend the stubborn heart and will,</div>
+<a id="png:085" name="png:085"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">85 /</span> 59</samp>
+<div>Melt the frozen, warm the chill,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Guide the steps that go astray.</div>
+</div>
+<div class="right"><i>Neale's Translation</i>.</div>
+</div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The metre and six-line stanza, being uniform
+with those of &ldquo;Rock of Ages,&rdquo; have tempted some
+to borrow &ldquo;Toplady&rdquo; for this ancient hymn, but
+Hastings' tune would refuse to sing other words;
+and, besides, the alternate rhymes would mar the
+euphony. Not unsuitable in spirit are several
+existing tunes of the right measure&mdash;like &ldquo;Nassau&rdquo;
+or &ldquo;St. Athanasius&rdquo;&mdash;but in truth the &ldquo;Veni,
+Sancte Spiritus&rdquo; in English waits for its perfect
+setting. Dr. Ray Palmer's paraphrase of it in
+sixes-and-fours, to fit &ldquo;Olivet,&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+Come, Holy Ghost in love, etc.
+</p>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;is objectionable both because the word Ghost is
+an archaism in Christian worship and more
+especially because Dr. Palmer's altered version
+usurps the place of his own hymn. &ldquo;Olivet&rdquo;
+with &ldquo;My faith looks up to Thee&rdquo; makes as inviolable
+a case of psalmodic monogamy as &ldquo;Toplady&rdquo;
+with &ldquo;Rock of Ages.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>ST. FULBERT.</span></h4>
+
+<h4 class="quote">&ldquo;<i>Chori Cantores Hierusalem Novae</i>.&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>St. Fulbert's hymn is a worthy companion of
+Perronet's &ldquo;Coronation&rdquo;&mdash;if, indeed, it was not
+<a id="png:086" name="png:086"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">86 /</span> 60</samp>
+its original prompter&mdash;as King <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original reads Roberts'">Robert's</ins> great
+litany was the mother song of Watts' &ldquo;Come, Holy
+Spirit, heavenly Dove;&rdquo; and the countless other
+sacred lyrics beginning with similar words. As
+the translation stands in the Church of England,
+there are six stanzas now sung, though in America
+but four appear, and not in the same sequence.
+The first four of the six in their regular succession
+are as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Ye choirs of New Jerusalem,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Your sweetest notes employ,</div>
+<div>The Paschal victory to hymn</div>
+<div class="i1"> In strains of holy joy.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>For Judah's Lion bursts His chains,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Crushing the serpent's head;</div>
+<div>And cries aloud, through death's domains</div>
+<div class="i1"> To wake the imprisoned dead.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Devouring depths of hell their prey</div>
+<div class="i1"> At His command restore;</div>
+<div>His ransomed hosts pursue their way</div>
+<div class="i1"> Where Jesus goes before.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Triumphant in His glory now,</div>
+<div class="i1"> To Him all power is given;</div>
+<div>To Him in one communion bow</div>
+<div class="i1"> All saints in earth and heaven.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Bishop Fulbert, known in the Roman and in
+the Protestant ritualistic churches as St. Fulbert of
+Chartres, was a man of brilliant and versatile
+mind, and one of the most eminent prelates of his
+time. He was a contemporary of Robert&nbsp;II, and
+his intimate friend, continuing so after the Pope
+<a id="png:087" name="png:087"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">87 /</span> 61</samp>
+(Gregory&nbsp;V.) excommunicated the king for marrying
+a cousin, which was forbidden by the canons of
+the church.</p>
+
+<p>Fulbert was for some time head of the Theological
+College at Chartres, a cathedral town of
+France, anciently the capital of Celtic Gaul, and
+afterwards he was consecrated as Bishop of that
+diocese. He died about 1029.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The modern tone-interpreter of Fulbert's hymn
+bears the name &ldquo;La Spezia&rdquo; in some collections,
+and was composed by James Taylor about the
+time the hymn was translated into English by
+Robert Campbell. Research might discover the
+ancient tune&mdash;for the hymn is said to have been
+sung in the English church during Fulbert's lifetime&mdash;but
+the older was little likely to be the better
+music. &ldquo;La Spezia&rdquo; is a choral of enlivening but
+easy chords, and a tread of triumph in its musical
+motion that suits the march of &ldquo;Judah's Lion&rdquo;:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>His ransomed hosts pursue their way</div>
+<div class="i1">Where Jesus goes before.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>James Taylor, born 1833, is a Doctor of Music,
+organist of the University of Oxford and Director
+of the Oxford Philharmonic Society.</p>
+
+<p>Robert Campbell, the translator, was a Scotch
+lawyer, born in Edinburgh, who besides his work
+as an advocate wrote original hymns, and in other
+ways exercised a natural literary gift. He compiled
+<a id="png:088" name="png:088"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">88 /</span> 62</samp>
+the excellent Hymnal of the diocese of St. Andrews,
+and this was his best work. The date of his death
+is given as Dec. 29, 1868.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>THOMAS OF CELANO.</span></h4>
+
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> Dies irae! dies illa,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Solvet saeclum in favilla,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Teste David cum Sybilla.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Day of wrath! that day of burning,</div>
+<div>All the world to ashes turning,</div>
+<div>Sung by prophets far discerning.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Latin ecclesiastical poetry reached its high
+water mark in that awful hymn. The solitaire of
+its sphere and time in the novelty of its rhythmic
+triplets, it stood a wonder to the church and
+hierarchy accustomed to the slow spondees of the
+ancient chant. There could be such a thing as a
+trochaic hymn!&mdash;and majestic, too!</p>
+
+<p>It was a discovery that did not stale. The compelling
+grandeur of the poem placed it distinct and
+alone, and the very difficulty of staffing it for vocal
+and instrumental use gave it a zest, and helped to
+keep it unique through the ages.</p>
+
+<p title="Illustration of Martin Luther originally opposite">Latin hymnody
+and hymnography, appealing
+to the popular ear and heart, had gradually substituted
+accent for quantity in verse; for the common
+people could never be moved by a Christian
+song in the prosody of the classics. The religion
+of the cross, with the song-preaching of its propagandists,
+created medieval Latin and made it
+<a id="png:091" name="png:091"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">91 /</span> 63</samp>
+a secondary classic&mdash;mother of four anthem
+languages of Western and Southern Europe. Its
+golden age was the 12th and 13th centuries. The
+new and more flexible school of speech and music
+in hymn and tune had perfected rhythmic beauty
+and brought in the winsome assonance of rhyme.</p>
+
+<p>The &ldquo;Dies Irae&rdquo; was born, it is believed, about
+the year 1255. Its authorship has been debated,
+but competent testimony assures us that the
+original draft of the great poem was found in a
+box among the effects of Thomas di Celano after
+his death. Thomas&mdash;surnamed Thomas of Celano
+from his birthplace, the town of Celano in the province
+of Aquila, Southern Italy&mdash;was the pupil, friend
+and co-laborer of St. Francis of Assisi, and wrote his
+memoirs. He is supposed to have died near the end
+of the 13th century. That he wrote the sublime
+judgment song there is now practically no question.</p>
+
+<p>The label on the discovered manuscript would
+suggest that the writer did not consider it either
+a hymn or a poem. Like the inspired prophets he
+had meditated&mdash;and while he was musing the fire
+burned. The only title he wrote over it was
+&ldquo;<i>Prosa de mortuis</i>,&rdquo; Prosa (or prosa oratio)&mdash;from
+<i>prorsus</i>, &ldquo;straight forward&rdquo;&mdash;appears here
+in the truly conventional sense it was beginning to
+bear, but not yet as the antipode of &ldquo;poetry.&rdquo;
+The modest author, unconscious of the magnitude
+of his work, called it simply &ldquo;Plain speech concerning
+the dead."<sup>*</sup></p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+&ldquo;Proses&rdquo; were original passages introduced into ecclesiastical
+chants in the 10th century. During and after the 11th century they were called
+&ldquo;Sequences&rdquo; (i.e. <em>following</em> the &ldquo;Gospel&rdquo; in
+the liturgy), and were in metrical form, having a prayerful tone.
+&ldquo;Sequentia pro defunctis&rdquo; was the later title of the &ldquo;Dies
+Irae.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<a id="png:092" name="png:092"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">92 /</span> 64</samp>
+
+<p>The hymn is much too long to quote entire, but
+can be found in <i>Daniel's Thesaurus</i> in any large
+public library. As to the translations of it, they
+number hundreds&mdash;in English and German alone,
+and Italy, Spain and Portugal have their vernacular
+versions&mdash;not to mention the Greek and
+Russian and even the Hebrew. A few stanzas follow,
+with their renderings into English (always
+imperfect) selected almost at random:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> Quantus tremor est futurus</div>
+<div class="i1"> Quando Judex est venturus,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Cuncta stricte discussurus!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> Tuba mirum spargens sonum</div>
+<div class="i1"> Per sepulcra regionum,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Coget omnes ante thronum!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>O the dread, the contrite kneeling</div>
+<div>When the Lord, in Judgment dealing,</div>
+<div>Comes each hidden thing revealing!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>When the trumpet's awful tone</div>
+<div>Through the realms sepulchral blown,</div>
+<div>Summons all before the Throne!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The solemn strength and vibration of these
+tremendous trilineals suffers no general injury by
+the variant readings&mdash;and there are a good many.
+As a sample, the first stanza was changed by some
+canonical redactor to get rid of the heathen word
+Sybilla, and the second line was made the third:</p>
+
+<a id="png:093" name="png:093"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">93 /</span> 65</samp>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> Dies Irae, dies illa</div>
+<div class="i1"> Crucis expandens vexilla,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Solvet saeclum in favilla.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Day of wrath! that day foretold,</div>
+<div>With the cross-flag wide unrolled,</div>
+<div>Shall the world in fire enfold!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>In some readings the original &ldquo;in favilla&rdquo; is
+changed to &ldquo;<em>cum</em> favilla,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;<em>with</em> ashes&rdquo; instead of
+&ldquo;in ashes&rdquo;; and &ldquo;Teste Petro&rdquo; is substituted
+for &ldquo;Teste David.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The varieties of music set to the &ldquo;Hymn of
+Judgment&rdquo; in the different sections and languages
+of Christendom during seven hundred years are
+probably as numerous as the pictures of the Holy
+Family in Christian art. It is enough to say that
+one of the best at hand, or, at least, accessible, is
+the solemn minor melody of Dr. Dykes in William
+Henry Monk's <i>Hymns Ancient and Modern</i>. It
+was composed about the middle of the last century.
+Both the <i>Evangelical</i> and <i>Methodist Hymnals</i> have
+Dean Stanley's translation of the hymn, the
+former with thirteen stanzas (six-line) to a D
+minor of John Stainer, and the latter to a C major
+of Timothy Matthews. The <i>Plymouth Hymnal</i>
+has seventeen of the trilineal stanzas, by an unknown
+translator, to Ferdinand Hiller's tune in
+F minor, besides one verse to another F minor&mdash;hymn
+and tune both nameless.</p>
+
+<a id="png:094" name="png:094"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">94 /</span> 66</samp>
+
+<p>All the composers above named are musicians
+of fame. John Stainer, organist of St. Paul's
+Cathedral, was a Doctor of Music and Chevalier of
+the Legion of Honor, and celebrated for his works
+in sacred music, to which he mainly devoted his
+time. He was born June 6, 1840. He died March
+31, 1901.</p>
+
+<p>Rev. Timothy Richard Matthews, born at Colmworth,
+Eng., Nov. 20, 1826, is a clergyman of the
+Church of England, incumbent of a Lancaster
+charge to which he was appointed by Queen Alexandra.</p>
+
+<p>Ferdinand Hiller, born 1811 at Frankfort-on-the-Main,
+of Hebrew parentage, was one of Germany's
+most eminent musicians. For many years he was
+Chapel Master at Cologne, and organized the
+Cologne Conservatory. His compositions are
+mostly for instrumental performance, but he wrote
+cantatas, motets, male choruses, and two oratorios,
+one on the &ldquo;Destruction of Jerusalem.&rdquo; Died
+May 10, 1855.</p>
+
+<p>The Very Rev. Arthur Penrhyn Stanley, Dean
+of Westminster, was an author and scholar whom
+all sects of Christians delighted to honor. His
+writings on the New Testament and his published
+researches in Palestine, made him an authority in
+Biblical study, and his contributions to sacred
+literature were looked for and welcomed as eagerly
+as a new hymn by Bonar or a new poem by Tennyson.
+Dean Stanley was born in 1815, and died
+July 18th, 1881.</p>
+
+<a id="png:095" name="png:095"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">95 /</span> 67</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>THOMAS &Agrave; KEMPIS.</span></h4>
+
+
+<p>Thomas &agrave; Kempis, sub-prior of the Convent
+of St. Agnes, was born at Hamerkin, Holland,
+about the year 1380, and died at Zwoll, 1471. This
+pious monk belonged to an order called the
+&ldquo;Brethren of the Common Life&rdquo; founded by
+Gerard de Groote, and his fame rests entirely upon
+his one book, the <i>Imitation of Christ</i>, which
+continues to be printed as a religious classic, and
+is unsurpassed as a manual of private devotion.
+His monastic life&mdash;as was true generally of the
+monastic life of the middle ages&mdash;was not one of
+useless idleness. The Brethren taught school and
+did mechanical work. Besides, before the invention
+of printing had been perfected and brought
+into common service, the multiplication of books
+was principally the work of monkish pens. Kempis
+spent his days copying the Bible and good
+books&mdash;as well as in exercises of devotion that
+promoted religious calm.</p>
+
+<p>His idea of heaven, and the idea of his order,
+was expressed in that clause of John's description
+of the City of God, Rev. 22:3, &ldquo;<i>and His servants
+shall serve Him</i>.&rdquo; Above all other heavenly joys
+that was his favorite thought. We can well understand
+that the pious quietude wrought in his mind
+and manners by his habit of life made him a saint
+in the eyes of the people. The frontispiece of one
+edition of his <i>Imitatio Christi</i> pictures him as
+<a id="png:096" name="png:096"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">96 /</span> 68</samp>
+being addressed before the door of a convent by
+a troubled pilgrim,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>&ldquo;O where is peace?&mdash;for thou its paths hast trod,&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and his answer completes the couplet,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>&ldquo;In poverty, retirement, and with God.&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Of all that is best in inward spiritual life, much
+can be learned from this inspired Dutchman.
+He wrote no hymns, but in his old age he composed
+a poem on &ldquo;Heaven's Joys,&rdquo; which is sometimes
+called &ldquo;Thomas &agrave; Kempis' Hymn&rdquo;:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>High the angel choirs are raising</div>
+<div class="i1"> Heart and voice in harmony;</div>
+<div>The Creator King still praising</div>
+<div class="i1"> Whom in beauty there they see.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Sweetest strains from soft harps stealing,</div>
+<div>Trumpets' notes of triumph pealing,</div>
+<div>Radiant wings and white stoles gleaming</div>
+<div>Up the steps of glory streaming;</div>
+<div>Where the heavenly bells are ringing;</div>
+<div>&ldquo;Holy! holy! holy!&rdquo; singing</div>
+<div class="i1"> To the mighty Trinity!</div>
+<div>&ldquo;Holy! holy! holy!&rdquo; crying,</div>
+<div>For all earthly care and sighing</div>
+<div class="i1"> In that city cease to be!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>These lines are not in the hymnals of today&mdash;and
+whether they ever found their way into choral
+use in ancient times we are not told. Worse poetry
+has been sung&mdash;and more un-hymnlike. Some
+future composer will make a tune to the words of a
+Christian who stood almost in sight of his hundredth
+year&mdash;and of the eternal home he writes about.</p>
+
+
+
+<a id="png:089" name="png:089"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">89 /</span> opp 62</samp>
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of Martin Luther">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus5" name="Illus5"
+ ><img src="images/illus05-martinluther-cameo.jpg" alt=
+ "Martin Luther" width="229" height="253" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>Dr. Martin Luther</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+<a id="png:097" name="png:097"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">97 /</span> 69</samp>
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>MARTIN LUTHER.</span></h4>
+
+<h4 class="quote">&ldquo;<i>Ein Feste Burg Ist Unser Gott</i>.&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Of Martin Luther Coleridge said, &ldquo;He did as
+much for the Reformation by his hymns as he did
+by his translation of the Bible.&rdquo; The remark is so
+true that it has become a commonplace.</p>
+
+<p>The above line&mdash;which may be seen inscribed
+on Luther's tomb at <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Wittenburg'">Wittenberg</ins>&mdash;is the opening
+sentence and key-note of the Reformer's grandest
+hymn. The forty-sixth Psalm inspired it, and it
+is in harmony with sublime historical periods
+from its very nature, boldness, and sublimity. It
+was written, according to Welles, in the memorable
+year when the evangelical princes delivered their
+protest at the Diet of Spires, from which the word and
+the meaning of the word &ldquo;Protestant&rdquo; is derived.
+&ldquo;Luther used often to sing it in 1530, while the
+Diet of Augsburg was sitting. It soon became the
+favorite psalm with the people. It was one of the
+watchwords of the Reformation, cheering armies
+to conflict, and sustaining believers in the hours of
+fiery trial.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;After Luther's death, Melancthon, his affectionate
+coadjutor, being one day at Weimar with his
+banished friends, Jonas and Creuziger, heard a
+little maid singing this psalm in the street, and
+said, &lsquo;Sing on, my little girl, you little know whom
+you comfort:&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>A mighty fortress is our God,</div>
+<div class="i1"> A bulwark never failing;</div>
+<a id="png:098" name="png:098"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">98 /</span> 70</samp>
+<div>Our helper He, amid the flood</div>
+<div class="i1"> Of mortal ills prevailing.</div>
+<div>For still our ancient foe</div>
+<div>Doth seek to work us woe;</div>
+<div>His craft and power are great,</div>
+<div>And, armed with cruel hate,</div>
+<div class="i1"> On earth is not his equal.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>The Prince of Darkness grim&mdash;</div>
+<div>We tremble not for him:</div>
+<div>His rage we can endure,</div>
+<div>For lo! his doom is sure,</div>
+<div class="i1"> One little word shall fell him.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>That word above all earthly powers&mdash;</div>
+<div class="i1"> No thanks to them&mdash;abideth;</div>
+<div>The Spirit and the gifts are ours,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Through Him who with us sideth.</div>
+<div>Let goods and kindred go,</div>
+<div>This mortal life also;</div>
+<div>The body they may kill,</div>
+<div>God's truth abideth still,</div>
+<div class="i1"> His kingdom is for ever.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Martin Luther was born in Eisleben, in Saxony,
+Nov. 10, 1483. He was educated at the University
+of Erfurth, and became an Augustinian monk
+and Professor of Philosophy and Divinity in the
+University of Wittenberg. In 1517 he composed
+and placarded his ninety-five Theses condemning
+certain practices of the Romish Church and three
+years later the Pope published a bull excommunicating
+him, which he burnt openly before a
+sympathetic multitude in Wittenberg. His life
+was a stormy one, and he was more than once in
+<a id="png:099" name="png:099"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">99 /</span> 71</samp>
+mortal danger by reason of his antagonism to the
+papal authority, but he found powerful patrons,
+and lived to see the Reformation an organized fact.
+He died in his birthplace, Eisleben, Feb. 18th,
+1546.</p>
+
+<p>The translation of the &ldquo;Ein feste burg,&rdquo; given
+above, in part, is by Rev. Frederick Henry Hedge,
+D.D., born in Cambridge, March 1805, a graduate
+of Harvard, and formerly minister of the Unitarian
+Church in Bangor, Me. Died, 1890.</p>
+
+<p>Luther wrote thirty-six hymns, to some of which
+he fitted his own music, for he was a musician and
+singer as well as an eloquent preacher. The tune
+in which &ldquo;Ein feste Burg&rdquo; is sung in the hymnals,
+was composed by himself. The hymn has also a
+noble rendering in the music of Sebastian Bach,
+8-4 time, found in <i>Hymns Ancient and Modern</i>.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>BARTHOLOMEW RINGWALDT.</span></h4>
+
+<h4 class="quote">&ldquo;Great God, What Do I See and Hear?&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<p>The history of this hymn is somewhat indefinite,
+though common consent now attributes to Ringwaldt
+the stanza beginning with the above line.
+The imitation of the &ldquo;Dies Irae&rdquo; in German
+which was first in use was printed in Jacob Klug's
+&ldquo;<i>Gesangbuch</i>&rdquo; in 1535. Ringwaldt's hymn of
+the Last Day, also inspired from the ancient Latin
+original, appears in his <i>Handbuchlin</i> of 1586,
+but does not contain this stanza. The first line is,
+&ldquo;The awful Day will surely come,&rdquo; (Es ist
+<a id="png:100" name="png:100"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">100 /</span> 72</samp>
+gewisslich an der Zeit). Nevertheless through
+the more than two hundred years that the hymn
+has been translated and re-translated, and gone
+through inevitable revisions, some vital identity
+in the spirit and tone of the one seven-line stanza
+has steadily connected it with Ringwaldt's name.
+Apparently it is the single survivor of a great lost
+hymn&mdash;edited and altered out of recognition.
+But its power evidently inspired the added verses,
+as we have them. Dr. Collyer found it, and,
+regretting that it was too short to sing in public
+service, composed stanzas 2d, 3d and 4th. It is
+likely that Collyer first met with it in <i>Psalms and
+Hymns for Public and Private Devotion</i>, Sheffield
+1802, where it appeared anonymously. So far as
+known this was its first publication in English.
+Ringwaldt's stanza and two of Collyer's are here
+given:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Great God, what do I see and hear!</div>
+<div class="i1"> The end of things created!</div>
+<div>The Judge of mankind doth appear</div>
+<div class="i1"> On clouds of glory seated.</div>
+<div>The trumpet sounds, the graves restore</div>
+<div>The dead which they contained before;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Prepare, my soul, to meet Him.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>The dead in Christ shall first arise</div>
+<div class="i1"> At the last trumpet sounding,</div>
+<div>Caught up to meet Him in the skies,</div>
+<div class="i1"> With joy their Lord surrounding.</div>
+<div>No gloomy fears their souls dismay</div>
+<div>His presence sheds eternal day</div>
+<div class="i1"> On those prepared to meet Him.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<a id="png:101" name="png:101"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">101 /</span> 73</samp>
+<div>Far over space to distant spheres</div>
+<div class="i1"> The lightnings are prevailing</div>
+<div>Th' ungodly rise, and all their tears</div>
+<div class="i1"> And sighs are unavailing.</div>
+<div>The day of grace is past and gone;</div>
+<div>They shake before the Judge's Throne</div>
+<div class="i1"> All unprepared to meet Him.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: origninal has 'Batholomew'">Bartholomew</ins> Ringwaldt, pastor of the Lutheran
+Church of Longfeld, Prussia, was born in 1531,
+and died in 1599. His hymns appear in a collection
+entitled <i>Hymns for the Sundays and Festivals
+of the Whole Year</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Rev. William Bengo Collyer D.D., was born
+at Blackheath near London, April 14, 1782,
+educated at Homerton College and settled over a
+Congregational Church in Peckham. In 1812 he
+published a book of hymns, and in 1837 a <i>Service
+Book</i> to which he contributed eighty-nine hymns.
+He died Jan, 9, 1854.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Probably it was the customary singing of Ringwaldt's
+hymn (in Germany) to Luther's tune that
+gave it for some time the designation of &ldquo;Luther's
+Hymn,&rdquo; the title by which the music is still known&mdash;an
+air either composed or adapted by Luther,
+and rendered perhaps unisonously or with extempore
+chords. It was not until early in the last
+century that Vincent Novello wrote to it the noble
+arrangement now in use. It is a strong, even-time
+harmony with lofty tenor range, and very
+<a id="png:102" name="png:102"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">102 /</span> 74</samp>
+impressive with full choir and organ or the vocal
+volume of a congregation. In <i>Cheetham's Psalmody</i>
+is it written with a trumpet obligato.</p>
+
+<p>Vincent Novello, born in London, Sept. 6, 1781,
+the intimate friend of Lamb, Shelley, Keats, Hunt
+and Hazlitt, was a professor of music who attained
+great eminence as an organist and composer of
+hymn-tunes and sacred pieces. He was the
+founder of the publishing house of Novello and
+Ewer, and father of a famous musical family.
+Died at Nice, Aug. 9, 1861.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>ST. FRANCIS XAVIER.</span></h4>
+
+<h4 class="quote">&ldquo;<i>O Deus, Ego Amo Te</i>.&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<p>Francis Xavier, the celebrated Jesuit missionary,
+called &ldquo;The Apostle of the Indies,&rdquo; was a Spaniard,
+born in 1506. While a student in Paris he met
+Ignatius Loyola, and joined him in the formation
+of the new &ldquo;Society for the Propagation of the
+Faith.&rdquo; He was sent out on a mission to the East
+Indies and Japan, and gave himself to the work
+with a martyr's devotion. The stations he established
+in Japan were maintained more than a
+hundred years. He died in China, Dec. 1552.</p>
+
+<p>His hymn, some time out of use, is being revived
+in later singing-books as expressive of the purest
+and highest Christian sentiment:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1">O Deus, ego amo Te.</div>
+<div class="i1">Nec amo Te, ut salves me,</div>
+<div class="i1">Aut quia non amantes Te</div>
+<div class="i1">&AElig;terno punis igne.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:103" name="png:103"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">103 /</span> 75</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>My God, I love Thee&mdash;not because</div>
+<div class="i1"> I hope for heaven thereby;</div>
+<div>Nor yet because who love Thee not</div>
+<div class="i1"> Must burn eternally.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>After recounting Christ's vicarious sufferings
+as the chief claim to His disciples' unselfish love,
+the hymn continues,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> Cur igitur non amem Te,</div>
+<div class="i1"> O Jesu amantissime!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Non, ut in c&oelig;lo salves me,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Aut in &aelig;ternum damnes me.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Then why, O blessed Jesus Christ,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Should I not love Thee well?</div>
+<div>Not for the sake of winning heaven,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Nor of escaping hell;</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Not with the hope of gaining aught,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Nor seeking a reward,</div>
+<div>But as Thyself hast lov&eacute;d me,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Oh, ever-loving Lord!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>E'en so I love Thee, and will love,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And in Thy praise will sing;</div>
+<div>Solely because Thou art my God</div>
+<div class="i1"> And my eternal King.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The translation is by Rev. Edward Caswall,
+1814&ndash;1878, a priest in the Church of Rome.
+Besides his translations, he published the <i>Lyra
+Catholica</i>, the <i>Masque of Mary</i>, and several other
+poetical works. (<a href="#png:131">Page 101</a>.)</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>&ldquo;St. Bernard&rdquo;&mdash;apparently so named because
+originally composed to Caswall's translation of
+<a id="png:104" name="png:104"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">104 /</span> 76</samp>
+one of Bernard of Clairvaux's hymns&mdash;is by
+John Richardson, born in Preston, Eng., Dec.
+4, 1817, and died there April 13, 1879. He was
+an organist in Liverpool, and noted as a composer
+of glees, but was the author of several sacred
+tunes.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>SIR WALTER RALEIGH.</span></h4>
+
+<h4 class="quote">&ldquo;Give Me My Scallop-Shell of Quiet.&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<p>Few of the hymns of the Elizabethan era survive,
+though the Ambrosian Midnight Hymn, &ldquo;Hark,
+'tis the Midnight Cry,&rdquo; and the hymns of St. Bernard
+and Bernard of Cluny, are still tones in the
+church, and the religious poetry of Sir Walter
+Raleigh comes down to us associated with the
+history of his brilliant, though tragic career. The
+following poem has some fine lines in the quaint
+English style of the period, and was composed by
+Sir Walter during his first imprisonment:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Give me my scallop-shell of quiet,</div>
+<div class="i1"> My staff of faith to walk upon,</div>
+<div>My scrip of joy&mdash;immortal diet&mdash;</div>
+<div class="i1"> My bottle of salvation,</div>
+<div>My gown of glory, hope's true gage&mdash;</div>
+<div>And thus I take my pilgrimage.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Blood must be my body's balmer,</div>
+<div>While my soul, like faithful palmer,</div>
+<div>Travelleth toward the land of heaven;</div>
+<div>Other balm will not be given.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Over the silver mountains</div>
+<div>Where spring the nectar fountains,</div>
+<a id="png:105" name="png:105"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">105 /</span> 77</samp>
+<div>There will I kiss the bowl of bliss,</div>
+<div>And drink my everlasting fill,</div>
+<div>Upon every milken hill;</div>
+<div>My soul will be a-dry before,</div>
+<div>But after that will thirst no more.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The musings of the unfortunate but high-souled
+nobleman in expectation of ignominious
+death are interesting and pathetic, but they have
+no claim to a tune, even if they were less rugged
+and unmetrical. But the poem stands notable
+among the pious witnesses.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS.</span></h4>
+
+<h4 class="quote">&ldquo;<i>O Domine Deus, Speravi in Te</i>.&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<p>This last passionate prayer of the unhappy
+Mary Stuart just before her execution&mdash;in a
+language which perhaps flowed from her pen more
+easily than even her English or French&mdash;is another
+witness of supplicating faith that struggles out of
+darkness with a song. In her extremity the devoted
+Catholic forgets her petitions to the Virgin,
+and comes to Christ:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> O Domine Deus, Speravi in Te;</div>
+<div class="i1"> O care mi Jesu, nunc libera me!</div>
+<div>In dura catena, in misera poena</div>
+<div class="i2"> Desidero Te!</div>
+<div>Languendo, gemendo, et genuflectendo</div>
+<div>Adoro, imploro ut liberes me!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>My Lord and my God! I have trusted in Thee;</div>
+<div>O Jesus, my Saviour belov'd, set me free:</div>
+<div>In rigorous chains, in piteous pains,</div>
+<a id="png:106" name="png:106"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">106 /</span> 78</samp>
+<div class="i2"> I am longing for Thee!</div>
+<div>In weakness appealing, in agony kneeling,</div>
+<div>I pray, I beseech Thee, O Lord, set me free!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>One would, at first thought, judge this simple
+but eloquent cry worthy of an appropriate tone-expression&mdash;to
+be sung by prison evangelists like
+the Volunteers of America, to convicts in the jails
+and penitentiaries. But its special errand and
+burden are voiced so literally that hardened
+hearers would probably misapply it&mdash;however
+sincerely the petitioner herself meant to invoke
+spiritual rather than temporal deliverance. The
+hymn, if we may call it so, is <em>too</em> literal. Possibly
+at some time or other it may have been set to
+music but not for ordinary choir service.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>SAMUEL RUTHERFORD.</span></h4>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The sands of time are sinking,</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>But, glory, glory dwelleth</div>
+<div>In Immanuel's Land.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This hymn is biographical, but not autobiographical.
+Like the discourses in Herodotus and
+Plutarch, it is the voice of the dead speaking
+through the sympathetic genius of the living after
+long generations. The strong, stern Calvinist of
+1636 in Aberdeen was not a poet, but he bequeathed
+his spirit and life to the verse of a poet of
+1845 in Melrose. Anne Ross Cousin read his two
+hundred and twenty letters written during a two
+<a id="png:107" name="png:107"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">107 /</span> 79</samp>
+years' captivity for his fidelity to the purer faith,
+and studied his whole history and experience till
+her soul took his soul's place and felt what he felt.
+Her poem of nineteen stanzas (152 lines) is the
+voice of Rutherford the Covenanter, with the
+prolixity of his manner and age sweetened by his
+triumphant piety, and that is why it belongs with
+the <i>Hymns of Great Witnesses</i>. The three or
+four stanzas still occasionally printed and sung
+are only recalled to memory by the above three
+lines.</p>
+
+<p>Samuel Rutherford was born in Nisbet Parish,
+Scotland, in 1600. His settled ministry was at
+Anworth, in Galloway&mdash;1630&ndash;1651&mdash;with a break
+between 1636 and 1638, when Charles&nbsp;I. angered
+by his anti-prelatical writings, silenced and banished
+him. Shut up in Aberdeen, but allowed, like
+Paul in Rome, to live &ldquo;in his own hired house&rdquo; and
+write letters, he poured out his heart's love in Epistles
+to his Anworth flock and to the Non-conformists
+of Scotland. When his countrymen rose against
+the attempted imposition of a new holy Romish
+service-book on their churches, he escaped to his
+people, and soon after appeared in Edinburgh and
+signed the covenant with the assembled ministers.
+Thirteen years later, after Cromwell's death and
+the accession of Charles&nbsp;II. the wrath of the prelates
+fell on him at St. Andrews, where the Presbytery
+had made him rector of the college. The
+King's decree indicted him for treason, stripped
+him of all his offices, and would have forced him to
+<a id="png:108" name="png:108"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">108 /</span> 80</samp>
+the block had he not been stricken with his last sickness.
+When the officers came to take him he said,
+&ldquo;I am summoned before a higher Judge and Judicatory,
+and I am behooved to attend them.&rdquo; He
+died soon after, in the year 1661.</p>
+
+<p>The first, and a few other of the choicest stanzas
+of the hymn inspired by his life and death are here
+given:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The sands of time are sinking,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The dawn of heaven breaks,</div>
+<div>The summer morn I've sighed for&mdash;</div>
+<div class="i1"> The fair, sweet morn&mdash;awakes.</div>
+<div>Dark, dark hath been the midnight,</div>
+<div class="i1"> But dayspring is at hand;</div>
+<div>And glory, glory dwelleth</div>
+<div class="i1"> In Immanuel's land.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Oh! well it is for ever&mdash;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Oh! well for evermore:</div>
+<div>My nest hung in no forest</div>
+<div class="i1"> Of all this death-doomed shore;</div>
+<div>Yea, let this vain world vanish,</div>
+<div class="i1"> As from the ship the strand,</div>
+<div>While glory, glory dwelleth</div>
+<div class="i1"> In Immanuel's land.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>The little birds of Anworth&mdash;</div>
+<div class="i1"> I used to count them blest;</div>
+<div>Now beside happier altars</div>
+<div class="i1"> I go to build my nest;</div>
+<div>O'er these there broods no silence</div>
+<div class="i1"> No graves around them stand;</div>
+<div>For glory deathless dwelleth</div>
+<div class="i1"> In Immanuel's land.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:109" name="png:109"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">109 /</span> 81</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I have borne scorn and hatred,</div>
+<div class="i1"> I have borne wrong and shame,</div>
+<div>Earth's proud ones have reproached me</div>
+<div class="i1"> For Christ's thrice bless&eacute;d name.</div>
+<div>Where God's seals set the fairest,</div>
+<div class="i1"> They've stamped their foulest brand;</div>
+<div>But judgment shines like noonday</div>
+<div class="i1"> In Immanuel's land.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>They've summoned me before them,</div>
+<div class="i1"> But there I may not come;</div>
+<div>My Lord says, &ldquo;Come up hither;&rdquo;</div>
+<div class="i1"> My Lord says, &ldquo;Welcome home;&rdquo;</div>
+<div>My King at His white throne</div>
+<div class="i1"> My presence doth command,</div>
+<div>Where glory, glory dwelleth,</div>
+<div class="i1"> In Immanuel's land.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>A reminiscence of St. Paul in his second Epistle
+to Timothy (chap. 4) comes with the last two
+stanzas.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The tender and appropriate choral in B flat,
+named &ldquo;Rutherford&rdquo; was composed by D'Urhan,
+a French musician, probably a hundred years ago.
+It was doubtless named by those who long afterwards
+fitted it to the words, and knew whose spiritual
+proxy the lady stood who indited the hymn. It
+is reprinted in Peloubet's <i>Select Songs</i>, and in the
+<i>Coronation Hymnal</i>. Naturally in the days of the
+hymn's more frequent use people became accustomed
+to calling &ldquo;The sands of time are sinking,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Rutherford's Hymn.&rdquo; Rutherford's own
+<a id="png:110" name="png:110"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">110 /</span> 82</samp>
+words certainly furnished the memorable refrain
+with its immortal glow and gladness. One of his
+joyful exclamations as he lay dying of his lingering
+disease was, &ldquo;Glory shineth in Immanuel's Land!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Chretien (Christian) Urhan, or D'Urhan, was
+born at Montjoie, France, about 1788, and died, in
+Paris, 1845. He was a noted violin-player, and composer,
+also, of vocal and instrumental music.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Anne Ross (Cundell) Cousin, daughter of
+David Ross Cundell, M.D., and widow of Rev. William
+Cousin of the Free church of Scotland, was
+born in Melrose (?), 1824. She wrote many poems,
+most of which are beautiful meditations rather
+than lyrics suitable for public song. Her &ldquo;Rutherford
+Hymn&rdquo; was first published in the <i>Christian
+Treasury</i>, 1857.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS.</span></h4>
+
+<h4 class="quote">&ldquo;<i>Verzage Nicht Du Hauflein Klein</i>.&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<p>The historian tells us that before the battle of
+Lutzen, during the Thirty Years' War (1618&ndash;1648),
+King Gustavus of Sweden, in the thick fog of an
+autumn morning, with the Bohemian and Austrian
+armies of Emperor Ferdinand in front of him, knelt
+before his troops, and his whole army knelt with
+him in prayer. Then ten thousand voices and the
+whole concert of regimental bands burst forth in
+this brave song:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Fear not, O little flock, the foe</div>
+<div>Who madly seeks your overthrow,</div>
+<a id="png:111" name="png:111"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">111 /</span> 83</samp>
+<div class="i1"> Dread not his rage and power:</div>
+<div>What though your courage sometimes faints,</div>
+<div>His seeming triumph o'er God's saints</div>
+<div class="i1"> Lasts but a little hour.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Be of good cheer, your cause belongs</div>
+<div>To Him who can avenge your wrongs;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Leave it to Him, our Lord:</div>
+<div>Though hidden yet from all our eyes,</div>
+<div>He sees the Gideon who shall rise</div>
+<div class="i1"> To save us and His word.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>As true as God's own word is true,</div>
+<div>Nor earth nor hell with all their crew,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Against us shall prevail:</div>
+<div>A jest and by-word they are grown;</div>
+<div>God is with us, we are His own,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Our victory cannot fail.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Amen, Lord Jesus, grant our prayer!</div>
+<div>Great Captain, now Thine arm make bare,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Fight for us once again:</div>
+<div>So shall Thy saints and martyrs raise</div>
+<div>A mighty chorus to Thy praise,</div>
+<div class="i1"> World without end. Amen.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The army of Gustavus moved forward to victory
+as the fog lifted; but at the moment of triumph a
+riderless horse came galloping back to the camp.
+It was the horse of the martyred King.</p>
+
+<p>The battle song just quoted&mdash;next to Luther's
+&ldquo;Ein feste Burg&rdquo; the most famous German hymn&mdash;has
+always since that day been called &ldquo;Gustavus
+Adolphus' Hymn&rdquo;; and the mingled sorrow and
+joy of the event at Lutzen named it also &ldquo;King
+Gustavus' Swan Song.&rdquo; Gustavus Adolphus did
+<a id="png:112" name="png:112"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">112 /</span> 84</samp>
+not write hymns. He could sing them, and he could
+make them historic&mdash;and it was this connection
+that identified him with the famous battle song. Its
+author was the Rev. Johan Michael Altenburg, a
+Lutheran clergyman, who composed apparently
+both hymn and tune on receiving news of the
+king's victory at Leipsic a year before.</p>
+
+<p>Gustavus Adolphus was born in 1594. His
+death on the battlefield occurred Nov. 5, 1632&mdash;when
+he was in the prime of his manhood. He was
+one of the greatest military commanders in history,
+besides being a great ruler and administrator, and
+a devout Christian. He was, during the Thirty
+Years' War (until his untimely death), the leading
+champion of Protestantism in Europe.</p>
+
+<p>The English translator of the battle song was
+Miss Catherine Winkworth, born in London, Sept.
+13, 1827. She was an industrious and successful
+translator of German hymns, contributing many
+results of her work to two English editions of the
+<i>Lyra Germania</i>, to the <i>Church Book of England</i>, and
+to <i>Christian Singers of Germany</i>. She died in 1878.</p>
+
+<p>The tune of &ldquo;Ravendale&rdquo; by Walter Stokes
+(born 1847) is the best modern rendering of the
+celebrated hymn.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>PAUL GERHARDT.</span></h4>
+
+<h4 class="quote">&ldquo;<i>Befiehl Du Deine Wege.</i>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<p>Paul Gerhardt was one of those minstrels of experience
+who are&mdash;</p>
+
+<a id="png:113" name="png:113"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">113 /</span> 85</samp>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>&ldquo;Cradled into poetry by wrong,</div>
+<div>And learn in suffering what they teach in song.&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">He was a graduate of that school when he wrote
+his &ldquo;Hymn of Trust:&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Commit thou all thy griefs</div>
+<div class="i1"> And ways into His hands;</div>
+<div>To His sure trust and tender care</div>
+<div class="i1"> Who earth and heaven commands.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Thou on the Lord rely,</div>
+<div class="i1"> So, safe, shalt thou go on;</div>
+<div>Fix on His work thy steadfast eye,</div>
+<div class="i1"> So shall thy work be done.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Give to the winds thy fears;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Hope, and be undismayed;</div>
+<div>God hears thy sighs and counts thy tears,</div>
+<div class="i1"> He shall lift up thy head.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Through waves and clouds and storms</div>
+<div class="i1"> He gently clears thy way;</div>
+<div>Wait thou His time, so shall this night</div>
+<div class="i1"> Soon end in joyous day.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Gerhardt was born at Grafenheinchen, Saxony,
+1606. Through the first and best years of manhood's
+strength (during the Thirty <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original reads Year's">Years'</ins> War),
+a wandering preacher tossed from place to place,
+he was without a parish and without a home.</p>
+
+<p>After the peace of Westphalia he settled in the
+little village of Mittenwalde. He was then forty-four
+years old. Four years later he married and removed
+to a Berlin church. During his residence
+there he buried his wife, and four of his children,
+<a id="png:114" name="png:114"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">114 /</span> 86</samp>
+was deposed from the ministry because his Lutheran
+doctrines offended the Elector Frederick, and
+finally retired as a simple arch-deacon to a small
+parish in Lubben, where he preached, toiled, and
+suffered amid a rough and uncongenial people till
+he died, Jan. 16, 1676.</p>
+
+<p>Few men have ever lived whose case more needed
+a &ldquo;Hymn of Trust&rdquo;&mdash;and fewer still could have
+written it themselves. Through all those trial
+years he was pouring forth his soul in devout
+verses, making in all no less than a hundred and
+twenty-five hymns&mdash;every one of them a comfort
+to others as well as to himself.</p>
+
+<p>He became a favorite, and for a time <em>the</em> favorite,
+hymn-writer of all the German-speaking
+people. Among these tones of calm faith and joy
+we recognize today (in the English tongue),&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote"><span>
+Since Jesus is my Friend,
+<br />
+Thee, O Immanuel, we praise,
+<br />
+All my heart this night rejoices,
+<br />
+How shall I meet Thee,
+</span></p>
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and the English translation of his
+&ldquo;O Haupt voll
+Blut und Wunden,&rdquo; turned into German by himself
+from St. Bernard Clairvaux's &ldquo;Salve caput
+cruentatum,&rdquo; and made dear to us in Rev. James
+Alexander's beautiful lines&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O sacred head now wounded,</div>
+<div class="i1"> With grief and shame weighed down,</div>
+<div>Now scornfully surrounded</div>
+<div class="i1"> With thorns, Thine only crown.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:115" name="png:115"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">115 /</span> 87</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>A plain-song by Alexander Reinagle is used by
+some congregations, but is not remarkably expressive.
+Reinagle, Alexander Robert, (1799&ndash;1877)
+of Kidlington, Eng., was organist to the
+church of St. Peter-in-the-East, Oxford.</p>
+
+<p>The great &ldquo;Hymn of Trust&rdquo; could have found
+no more sympathetic interpreter than the musician
+of Gerhardt's own land and language, Schumann,
+the gentle genius of Zwickau. It bears the name
+&ldquo;Schumann,&rdquo; appropriately enough, and its elocution
+makes a volume of each quatrain, notably
+the one&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Who points the clouds their course,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Whom wind and seas obey;</div>
+<div>He shall direct thy wandering feet,</div>
+<div class="i1"> He shall prepare thy way.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Robert Schumann, Ph.D., was born in Zwickau,
+Saxony, June 8, 1810. He was a music director
+and conservatory teacher, and the master-mind of
+the pre-Wagnerian period. His compositions became
+popular, having a character of their own,
+combining the intellectual and beautiful in art.
+He published in Leipsic a journal promotive of his
+school of music, and founded a choral society in
+Dresden. Happy in the co&ouml;peration of his wife, herself
+a skilled musician, he extended his work to Vienna
+and the Netherlands; but his zeal wore him out,
+and he died at the age of forty-six, universally
+lamented as &ldquo;the eminent man who had done so
+much for the happiness of others.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<a id="png:116" name="png:116"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">116 /</span> 88</samp>
+<p>Gerhardt's Hymn (ten quatrains) is rarely
+printed entire, and where six are printed only four
+are usually sung. Different collections choose portions
+according to the compiler's taste, the stanza
+beginning&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+Give to the winds thy fears,
+</p>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;being with some a favorite first verse.</p>
+
+<p>The translation of the hymn from the German is
+John Wesley's.</p>
+
+<p>Purely legendary is the beautiful story of the
+composition of the hymn, &ldquo;Commit thou all thy
+griefs&rdquo;; how, after his exile from Berlin, traveling
+on foot with his weeping wife, Gerhardt stopped
+at a wayside inn and wrote the lines while he rested;
+and how a messenger from Duke Christian found
+him there, and offered him a home in Meresburg.
+But the most ordinary imagination can fill in the
+possible incidents in a life of vicissitudes such as
+Gerhardt's was.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>LADY HUNTINGDON.</span></h4>
+
+<h4 class="quote">&ldquo;When Thou My Righteous Judge Shalt Come.&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<p>Selina Shirley, Countess of Huntingdon, born
+1707, died 1791, is familiarly known as the titled
+friend and patroness of Whitefield and his fellow-preachers.
+She early consecrated herself to God,
+and in the great spiritual awakening under Whitefield
+and the Wesleys she was a punctual and
+sympathetic helper. Uniting with the Calvinistic
+Methodists, she nevertheless stood aloof from none
+<a id="png:117" name="png:117"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">117 /</span> 89</samp>
+who preached a personal Christ, and whose watchwords
+were the salvation of souls and the purification
+of the Church. For more than fifty years
+she devoted her wealth to benevolence and spiritual
+ministries, and died at the age of eighty-four. &ldquo;I
+have done my work,&rdquo; was her last testimony.
+&ldquo;I have nothing to do but to go to my Father.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<a id="png:123" name="png:123"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">123 /</span> opp 94</samp>
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of Selina Huntingdon">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus6" name="Illus6"
+ ><img src="images/illus06-ladyhuntingdon-cameo.jpg" alt=
+ "Lady Huntingdon" width="217" height="256" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>S.&nbsp;Huntingdon</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+<p>At various times Lady Huntingdon expressed
+her religious experience in verse, and the manful
+vigor of her school of faith recalls the unbending
+confidence of Job, for she was not a stranger to
+affliction.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>God's furnace doth in Zion stand,</div>
+<div class="i1"> But Zion's God sits by,</div>
+<div>As the refiner views his gold,</div>
+<div class="i1"> With an observant eye.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>His thoughts are high, His love is wise,</div>
+<div class="i1"> His wounds a cure intend;</div>
+<div>And, though He does not always smile,</div>
+<div class="i1"> He loves unto the end.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Her great hymn, that keeps her memory green,
+has the old-fashioned flavor. &ldquo;Massa made God
+BIG!&rdquo; was the comment on Dr. Bellany made by
+his old negro servant after that noted minister's
+death. In Puritan piety the sternest self-depreciation
+qualified every thought of the creature, while
+every allusion to the Creator was a magnificat.
+Lady Huntingdon's hymn has no flattering phrases
+for the human subject. &ldquo;Worthless worm,&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;vilest of them all&rdquo; indicate the true Pauline or
+Oriental prostration of self before a superior
+<a id="png:118" name="png:118"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">118 /</span> 90</samp>
+being; but there is grandeur in the metre, the
+awful reverence, and the scene of judgment in
+the stanzas&mdash;always remembering the mighty
+choral that has so long given the lyric its voice in
+the church, and is ancillary to its fame:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When Thou, my righteous Judge, shalt come</div>
+<div>To take Thy ransomed people home,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Shall I among them stand?</div>
+<div>Shall such a worthless worm as I,</div>
+<div>Who sometimes am afraid to die,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Be found at Thy right hand?</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>I love to meet Thy people now,</div>
+<div>Before Thy feet with them to bow,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Though vilest of them all;</div>
+<div>But can I bear the piercing thought,</div>
+<div>What if my name should be left out,</div>
+<div class="i1"> When Thou for them shalt call?</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>O Lord, prevent it by Thy grace:</div>
+<div>Be Thou my only hiding place,</div>
+<div class="i1"> In this th' accepted day;</div>
+<div>Thy pardoning voice, oh let me hear,</div>
+<div>To still my unbelieving fear,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Nor let me fall, I pray.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Among Thy saints let me be found,</div>
+<div>Whene'er the archangel's trump shall sound,</div>
+<div class="i1"> To see Thy smiling face;</div>
+<div>Then loudest of the throng I'll sing,</div>
+<div>While heaven's resounding arches ring</div>
+<div class="i1"> With shouts of sovereign grace.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The tune of &ldquo;Meribah,&rdquo; in which this hymn has
+been sung for the last sixty or more years, is one of
+<a id="png:119" name="png:119"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">119 /</span> 91</samp>
+Dr. Lowell Mason's masterpieces. An earlier
+German harmony attributed to Heinrich Isaac
+and named &ldquo;Innsbruck&rdquo; has in some few cases
+claimed association with the words, though composed
+two hundred years before Lady Huntingdon
+was born. It is strong and solemn, but its cold
+psalm-tune movement does not utter the deep
+emotion of the author's lines. &ldquo;Meribah&rdquo; was
+inspired by the hymn itself, and there is nothing
+invidious in saying it illustrates the fact, memorable
+in all hymnology, of the natural obligation of
+a hymn to its tune.</p>
+
+<p>Apropos of both, it is related that Mason was
+once presiding at choir service in a certain church
+where the minister gave out &ldquo;When thou my
+righteous Judge shalt come&rdquo; and by mistake
+directed the singers to &ldquo;omit the second stanza.&rdquo;
+Mason sat at the organ, and while playing the last
+strain, &ldquo;Be found at thy right hand,&rdquo; glanced
+ahead in the hymnbook and turned with a start
+just in time to command, &ldquo;Sing the <em>next</em> verse!&rdquo;
+The choir did so, and &ldquo;O Lord, prevent it by Thy
+grace!&rdquo; was saved from being a horrible prayer
+to be kept out of heaven.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>ZINZENDORF.</span></h4>
+
+<h4 class="quote">&ldquo;Jesus, Thy Blood and Righteousness.&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<p>Nicolaus Ludwig, Count Von Zinzendorf, was
+born at Dresden, May 26, 1700, and educated at
+Halle and Wittenberg. From his youth he evinced
+<a id="png:120" name="png:120"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">120 /</span> 92</samp>
+marked seriousness of mind, and deep religious
+sensibilities, and this character appeared in his
+sympathy with the persecuted Moravians, to whom
+he gave domicile and domain on his large estate.
+For eleven years he was Councillor to the Elector
+of Saxony, but subsequently, uniting with the
+Brethren's Church, he founded the settlement
+of Herrnhut, the first home and refuge of the
+reorganized sect, and became a Moravian minister
+and bishop.</p>
+
+<p>Zinzendorf was a man of high culture, as well
+as profound and sincere piety and in his hymns
+(of which he wrote more than two thousand) he
+preached Christ as eloquently as with his voice.
+The real birth-moment of his religious life is said
+to have been simultaneous with his study of the
+&ldquo;Ecce Homo&rdquo; in the Dusseldorf Gallery, a wonderful
+painting of Jesus crowned with thorns.
+Visiting the gallery one day when a young man, he
+gazed on the sacred face and read the legend
+superscribed, &ldquo;All this I have done for thee;
+What doest thou for me?&rdquo; Ever afterwards his
+motto was &ldquo;I have but one passion, and that is
+He, and only He&rdquo;&mdash;a version of Paul's &ldquo;For me
+to live is Christ.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Jesus, Thy blood and righteousness</div>
+<div>My beauty are, my glorious dress:</div>
+<div>'Midst flaming worlds, in these arrayed,</div>
+<div>With joy shall I lift up my head<ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has comma">.</ins></div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Bold shall I stand in Thy great day,</div>
+<div>For who aught to my charge shall lay?</div>
+<a id="png:121" name="png:121"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">121 /</span> 93</samp>
+<div>Fully absolved through these I am&mdash;</div>
+<div>From sin and fear, from guilt and shame.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Lord, I believe were sinners more</div>
+<div>Than sands upon the ocean shore,</div>
+<div>Thou hast for all a ransom paid,</div>
+<div>For all a full atonement made.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Nearly all the hymns of the great Moravian are
+now out of general use, having accomplished their
+mission, like the forgotten ones of Gerhardt, and
+been superseded by others. More sung in Europe,
+probably, now than any of the survivors is, &ldquo;Jesus,
+geh voran,&rdquo; (&ldquo;Jesus, lead on,&rdquo;) which has been
+translated into English by Jane Borthwick<sup>*</sup>
+(1854). Two others, both translated by John
+Wesley, are with us, the one above quoted, and
+&ldquo;Glory to God, whose witness train.&rdquo; &ldquo;Jesus,
+Thy blood,&rdquo; which is the best known, frequently appears
+with the alteration&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Jesus, Thy <em>robe</em> of righteousness</div>
+<div>My beauty <em>is</em>, my glorious dress.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+Born in Edinburgh 1813.</p></div>
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Malvern,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Uxbridge&rdquo; a pure Gregorian,
+both by Lowell Mason, are common expressions
+of the hymn&mdash;the latter, perhaps, generally preferred,
+being less plaintive and speaking with a
+surer and more restful emphasis.</p>
+
+
+<a id="png:122" name="png:122"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">122 /</span> 94</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>ROBERT SEAGRAVE.</span></h4>
+
+<h4 class="quote">&ldquo;Rise, My Soul, and Stretch Thy Wings.&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn was written early in the 18th century,
+by the Rev. Robert Seagrave, born at Twyford,
+Leicestershire, Eng., Nov. 22, 1693. Educated
+at Cambridge, he took holy orders in the Established
+Church, but espoused the cause of the great
+evangelistic movement, and became a hearty co-worker
+with the Wesleys. Judging by the lyric
+fire he could evidently put into his verses, one
+involuntarily asks if he would not have written
+more, and been in fact the song-leader of the
+spiritual reformation if there had been no Charles
+Wesley. There is not a hymn of Wesley's in use
+on the same subject equal to the one immortal
+hymn of Seagrave, and the only other near its
+time that approaches it in vigor and appealing
+power is Doddridge's &ldquo;Awake my soul, stretch
+every nerve.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But Providence gave Wesley the harp and appointed
+to the elder poet a branch of possibly
+equal usefulness, where he was kept too busy to
+enter the singers' ranks.</p>
+
+<p title="Illustration of Lady Huntingdon originally opposite">For eleven
+years he was the Sunday-evening
+lecturer at Lorimer's Hall, London, and often
+preached in Whitefield's Tabernacle. His hymn
+is one of the most soul-stirring in the English
+language:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>Rise, my soul, and stretch thy wings;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Thy better portion trace;</div>
+<a id="png:125" name="png:125"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">125 /</span> 95</samp>
+<div>Rise from transitory things</div>
+<div class="i1"> Toward Heaven, thy native place;</div>
+<div>Sun and moon and stars decay,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Time shall soon this earth remove;</div>
+<div>Rise, my soul and haste away</div>
+<div class="i1"> To seats prepared above.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Rivers to the ocean run,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Nor stay in all their course;</div>
+<div>Fire ascending seeks the sun;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Both speed them to their source:</div>
+<div>So a soul that's born of God</div>
+<div class="i1"> Pants to view His glorious face,</div>
+<div>Upward tends to His abode</div>
+<div class="i1"> To rest in His embrace.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Cease, ye pilgrims, cease to mourn,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Press onward to the prize;</div>
+<div>Soon your Saviour will return</div>
+<div class="i1"> Triumphant in the skies.</div>
+<div>Yet a season, and you know</div>
+<div class="i1"> Happy entrance will be given;</div>
+<div>All our sorrows left below,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And earth exchanged for heaven.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This hymn must have found its predestinated
+organ when it found&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Amsterdam,&rdquo; the work of James Nares, had
+its birth and baptism soon after the work of
+Seagrave; and they have been breath and bugle
+to the church of God ever since they became one
+song. In <i>The Great Musicians</i>, edited by Francis
+Huffer, is found this account of James Nares:</p>
+
+<a id="png:126" name="png:126"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">126 /</span> 96</samp>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He was born at Hanwell, Middlesex, in 1715;
+was admitted chorister at the Chapel Royal, under
+Bernard Gates, and when he was able to play the
+organ was appointed deputy for Pigott, of St.
+George's Chapel, Windsor, and became organist
+at York Minster in 1734. He succeeded Greene
+as organist and composer to the Chapel Royal in
+1756, and in the same year was made Doctor of
+Music at Cambridge. He was appointed master
+of the children of the Chapel Royal in 1757, on
+the death of Gates. This post he resigned in
+1780, and he died in 1783, (February 10,) and
+was buried in St. Margaret's Church, Westminster.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He had the reputation of being an excellent
+trainer of boy's voices, many of his anthems having
+been written to exhibit the accomplishments of
+his young pupils. The degree of excellence the
+boys attained was not won in those days without
+the infliction of much corporal punishment.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Judging from the high pulse and action in the
+music of &ldquo;Amsterdam,&rdquo; one would guess the
+energy of the man who made boy choirs&mdash;and
+made good ones. In the old time the rule was,
+&ldquo;Birds that can sing and won't sing, must be made
+to sing"; and the rule was sometimes enforced
+with the master's time-stick.</p>
+
+<p>A tune entitled &ldquo;Excelsius,&rdquo; written a hundred
+years later by John Henry Cornell, so nearly
+resembles &ldquo;Amsterdam&rdquo; as to suggest an intention
+to amend it. It changes the modal note from G
+<a id="png:127" name="png:127"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">127 /</span> 97</samp>
+to A, but while it marches at the same pace it
+lacks the jubilant modulations and the choral
+glory of the 18th-century piece.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>SIR JOHN BOWRING.</span></h4>
+
+<h4 class="quote">&ldquo;In the Cross of Christ I Glory.&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<p>In this hymn we see, sitting humbly at the feet
+of the great author of our religion, a man who impressed
+himself perhaps more than any other save
+Napoleon Bonaparte upon his own generation,
+and who was the wonder of Europe for his immense
+attainments and the versatility of his powers.
+Statesman, philanthropist, biographer, publicist,
+linguist, historian, financier, naturalist, poet,
+political economist&mdash;there is hardly a branch of
+knowledge or a field of research from which he
+did not enrich himself and others, or a human
+condition that he did not study and influence.</p>
+
+<p>Sir John Bowring was born in 1792. When a
+youth he was Jeremy Bentham's political pupil,
+but gained his first fame by his vast knowledge of
+European literature, becoming acquainted with
+no less than thirteen<sup>*</sup> continental languages and
+dialects. He served in consular appointments at
+seven different capitals, carried important reform
+measures in Parliament, was Minister Plenipotentiary
+to China and Governor of Hong Kong, and
+concluded a commercial treaty with Siam, where
+every previous commissioner had failed. But in
+<a id="png:128" name="png:128"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">128 /</span> 98</samp>
+all his crowded years the pen of this tireless and
+successful man was busy. Besides his political,
+economic and religious essays, which made him
+a member of nearly every learned society in
+Europe, his translations were countless, and
+poems and hymns of his own composing found
+their way to the public, among them the tender
+spiritual song,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>How sweetly flowed the Gospel sound</div>
+<div class="i1"> From lips of gentleness and grace</div>
+<div>When listening thousands gathered round,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And joy and gladness filled the place,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and the more famous hymn indicated at the head
+of this sketch. Knowledge of all religions only
+qualified him to worship the Crucified with both
+faith and reason. Though nominally a Unitarian,
+to him, as to Channing and Martineau and Edmund
+Sears, Christ was &ldquo;all we know of God.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+Exaggerated in some accounts to <em>forty</em>.</p></div>
+
+<p>Bowring died Nov. 23, 1872. But his hymn
+to the Cross will never die:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>In the cross of Christ I glory,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Towering o'er the wrecks of time;</div>
+<div>All the light of sacred story</div>
+<div class="i1"> Gathers round its head sublime.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>When the woes of life o'ertake me</div>
+<div class="i1"> Hopes deceive, and fears annoy,</div>
+<div>Never shall the cross forsake me;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Lo! it glows with peace and joy.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>When the sun of bliss is beaming</div>
+<div class="i1"> Light and love upon my way,</div>
+<div>From the cross the radiance streaming</div>
+<div class="i1"> Adds new lustre to the day.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:129" name="png:129"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">129 /</span> 99</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Bane and blessing, pain and pleasure</div>
+<div class="i1"> By the cross are sanctified,</div>
+<div>Peace is there that knows no measure,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Joys that through all time abide.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Ithamar Conkey's &ldquo;Rathbun&rdquo; fits the adoring
+words as if they had waited for it. Its air, swelling
+through diatonic fourth and third to the supreme
+syllable, bears on its waves the homage of the lines
+from bar to bar till the four voices come home to
+rest full and satisfied in the final chord&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+Gathers round its head sublime.
+</p>
+
+<p>Ithamar Conkey, was born of Scotch ancestry,
+in Shutesbury, Mass., May 5th, 1815. He was a
+noted bass singer, and was for a long time connected
+with the choir of the Calvary church, New
+York City, and sang the oratorio solos. His tune
+of &ldquo;Rathbun&rdquo; was composed in 1847, and published
+in Greatorex's collection in 1851. He died
+in Elizabeth, N.J., April 30, 1867.</p>
+
+<a id="png:130" name="png:130"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">130 /</span> 100</samp>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="chap">CHAPTER III.</h2>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<h1>HYMNS OF CHRISTIAN DEVOTION
+AND EXPERIENCE.</h1>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>JESU DULCIS MEMORIA.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<h4 class="quote">&ldquo;Jesus the Very Thought of Thee.&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<p>The original of this delightful hymn is one of
+the devout meditations of Bernard of Clairvaux,
+a Cistercian monk (1091&ndash;1153). He was born of
+a noble family in or near Dijon, Burgundy, and
+when only twenty-three years old established a
+monastery at Clairvaux, France, over which he
+presided as its first abbot. Educated in the
+University of Paris, and possessing great natural
+abilities, he soon made himself felt in both the
+religious and political affairs of Europe. For more
+than thirty years he was the personal power that
+directed belief, quieted turbulence, and arbitrated
+disputes, and kings and even popes sought his
+counsel. It was his eloquent preaching that inspired
+the second crusade.</p>
+
+<p>His fine poem of feeling, in fifty Latin stanzas,
+has been a source of pious song in several languages:</p>
+
+<a id="png:131" name="png:131"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">131 /</span> 101</samp>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Jesu, dulcis memoria</div>
+<div>Dans vera cordi gaudia,</div>
+<div>Sed super mel et omnium</div>
+<div>Ejus dulcis presentia.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">Literally&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Jesus! a sweet memory</div>
+<div>Giving true joys to the heart,</div>
+<div>But sweet above honey and all things</div>
+<div>His <em>presence</em> [is].</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The five stanzas (of Caswall's free translation)
+now in use are familiar and dear to all English-speaking
+believers:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Jesus, the very thought of Thee</div>
+<div class="i1"> With sweetness fills my breast,</div>
+<div>But sweeter far Thy face to see,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And in Thy presence rest.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Nor voice can sing nor heart can frame</div>
+<div class="i1"> Nor can the memory find,</div>
+<div>A sweeter sound than Thy blest name,</div>
+<div class="i1"> O Saviour of mankind.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The Rev. Edward Caswall was born in Hampshire,
+Eng., July 15, 1814, the son of a clergyman.
+He graduated with honors at Brazenose College,
+Oxford, and after ten years of service in the ministry
+of the Church of England joined Henry Newman's
+Oratory at Birmingham, was confirmed in the
+Church of Rome, and devoted the rest of his life to
+works of piety and charity. He died Jan. 2, 1878.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>No single melody has attached itself to this
+hymn, the scope of selection being as large as the
+<a id="png:132" name="png:132"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">132 /</span> 102</samp>
+supply of appropriate common-metre tunes. Barnby's
+&ldquo;Holy Trinity,&rdquo; Wade's &ldquo;Holy Cross&rdquo; and
+Griggs' tune (of his own name) are all good, but
+many, on the giving out of the hymn, would associate
+it at once with the more familiar &ldquo;Heber&rdquo;
+by George Kingsley and expect to hear it sung.
+It has the uplift and unction of John Newton's&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>How sweet the name of Jesus sounds</div>
+<div class="i1"> In the believer's ear.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>GOD CALLING YET! SHALL I NOT HEAR?</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Gerhard Tersteegen, the original author of the
+hymn, and one of the most eminent religious poets
+of the Reformed German church in its early days,
+was born in 1697, in the town of Mors, in Westphalia.
+He was left an orphan in boyhood by the
+death of his father, and as his mother's means were
+limited, he was put to work as an apprentice when
+very young, at Muhlheim on the <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'Rhur'">Ruhr</ins>, and became
+a ribbon weaver. Here, when about fifteen
+years of age, he became deeply concerned for his
+soul, and experienced a deep and abiding spiritual
+work. As a Christian, his religion partook of the
+ascetic type, but his mysticism did not make him
+useless to his fellow-men.</p>
+
+<p>At the age of twenty-seven, he dedicated all his
+resources and energies to the cause of Christ,
+writing the dedication in his own blood. &ldquo;God
+graciously called me,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;out of the world,
+and granted me the desire to belong to Him, and
+<a id="png:133" name="png:133"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">133 /</span> 103</samp>
+to be willing to follow Him.&rdquo; He gave up secular
+employments altogether, and devoted his whole
+time to religious instruction and to the poor. His
+house became famous as the &ldquo;Pilgrims' Cottage,&rdquo;
+and was visited by people high and humble from
+all parts of Germany. In his lifetime he is said
+to have written one hundred and eleven hymns.
+Died April 3, 1769.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>God calling yet! shall I not hear?</div>
+<div>Earth's pleasures shall I still hold dear?</div>
+<div>Shall life's swift-passing years all fly,</div>
+<div>And still my soul in slumber lie?</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>God calling yet! I cannot stay;</div>
+<div>My heart I yield without delay.</div>
+<div>Vain world, farewell; from thee I part;</div>
+<div>The voice of God hath reached my heart.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The hymn was translated from the German by
+Miss Jane Borthwick, born in Edinburgh, 1813.
+She and her younger sister, Mrs. Findlater, jointly
+translated and published, in 1854, <i>Hymns From
+the Land of Luther</i>, and contributed many poetical
+pieces to the <i>Family Treasury</i>. She died in 1897.</p>
+
+<p>Another translation, imitating the German metre,
+is more euphonious, though less literal and less
+easily fitted to music not specially composed for it,
+on account of its &ldquo;feminine&rdquo; rhymes:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>God calling yet! and shall I never hearken?</div>
+<div>But still earth's witcheries my spirit darken;</div>
+<div>This passing life, these passing joys all flying,</div>
+<div>And still my soul in dreamy slumbers lying?</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:134" name="png:134"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">134 /</span> 104</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Dr. Dykes' &ldquo;Rivaulx&rdquo; is a sober choral that
+articulates the hymn-writer's sentiment with sincerity
+and with considerable earnestness, but
+breathes too faintly the interrogative and expostulary
+tone of the lines. To voice the devout
+solicitude and self-remonstrance of the hymn there
+is no tune superior to &ldquo;Federal St.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Hon. Henry Kemble Oliver, author of &ldquo;Federal
+St.,&rdquo; was born in Salem, Mass., March, 1800,
+and was addicted to music from his childhood.
+His father compelled him to relinquish it as a
+profession, but it remained his favorite avocation,
+and after his graduation from Harvard the cares
+of none of the various public positions he held,
+from schoolmaster to treasurer of the state of
+Massachusetts, could ever wean him from the study
+of music and its practice. At the age of thirty-one,
+while sitting one day in his study, the last verse of
+Anne Steele's hymn&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+So fades the lovely blooming flower,
+</p>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;floated into his mind, and an unbidden melody
+came with it. As he hummed it to himself the
+words shaped the air, and the air shaped the
+words.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Then gentle patience smiles on pain,</div>
+<div>Then dying hope revives again,</div>
+</div></div>
+<p class="runon">&mdash;became&mdash;</p>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>See gentle patience smile on pain;</div>
+<div>See dying hope revive again;</div>
+</div></div>
+<a id="png:135" name="png:135"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">135 /</span> 105</samp>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and with the change of a word and a tense the
+hymn created the melody, and soon afterward
+the complete tune was made. Two years later it
+was published by Lowell Mason, and Oliver gave
+it the name of the street in Salem on which his
+wife was born, wooed, won, and married. It adds
+a pathos to its history that &ldquo;Federal St.&rdquo; was sung
+at her burial.</p>
+
+<p>This first of Oliver's tunes was followed by
+&ldquo;Harmony Grove,&rdquo; &ldquo;Morning,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Walnut Grove,&rdquo; &ldquo;Merton,&rdquo; &ldquo;Hudson,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Bosworth,&rdquo; &ldquo;Salisbury
+Plain,&rdquo; several anthems and motets, and a &ldquo;Te
+Deum.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In his old age, at the great Peace Jubilee in
+Boston, 1872, the baton was put into his hands,
+and the gray-haired composer conducted the
+chorus of ten thousand voices as they sang the
+words and music of his noble harmony. The
+incident made &ldquo;Federal St.&rdquo; more than ever a
+feature of New England history. Oliver died in 1885.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>MY GOD, HOW ENDLESS IS THY LOVE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The spirited tune to this hymn of Watts, by
+Frederick Lampe, variously named &ldquo;Kent&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;Devonshire,&rdquo; historically reaches back so near
+to the poet's time that it must have been one of the
+earliest expressions of his fervent words.</p>
+
+<p>Johan Friedrich Lampe, born 1693, in Saxony,
+was educated in music at Helmstadt, and came to
+<a id="png:136" name="png:136"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">136 /</span> 106</samp>
+England in 1725 as a band musician and composer
+to Covent Garden Theater. His best-known secular
+piece is the music written to Henry Carey's
+burlesque, &ldquo;The Dragon of Wantley.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Rich, wife of the lessee of the theater, was
+converted under the preaching of the Methodists,
+and after her husband's death her house became
+the home of Lampe and his wife, where Charles
+Wesley often met him.</p>
+
+<p>The influence of Wesley won him to more serious
+work, and he became one of the evangelist's
+helpers, supplying tunes to his singing campaigns.
+Wesley became attached to him, and after his
+death&mdash;in Edinburgh, 1752&mdash;commemorated the
+musician in a funeral hymn.</p>
+
+<p>In popular favor Bradbury's tune of &ldquo;Rolland&rdquo;
+has now superseded the old music sung to Watts' lines&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>My God, how endless is Thy love,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Thy gifts are every evening new,</div>
+<div>And morning mercies from above</div>
+<div class="i1"> Gently distil like early dew.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>I yield my powers to Thy command;</div>
+<div class="i1"> To Thee I consecrate my days;</div>
+<div>Perpetual blessings from Thy hand</div>
+<div class="i1"> Demand perpetual songs of praise.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>William Batchelder Bradbury, a pupil of Dr.
+Lowell Mason, and the pioneer in publishing
+Sunday-school music, was born 1816, in York, Me.
+His father, a veteran of the Revolution, was a
+<a id="png:137" name="png:137"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">137 /</span> 107</samp>
+choir leader, and William's love of music was inherited.
+He left his father's farm, and came to
+Boston, where he first heard a church-organ.
+Encouraged by Mason and others to follow music
+as a profession, he went abroad, studied at Leipsic,
+and soon after his return became known as a
+composer of sacred tunes. He died in Montclair,
+N.J., 1868.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>I'M NOT ASHAMED TO OWN MY LORD.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The favorite tune for this spiritual hymn, also by
+Watts, is old &ldquo;Arlington,&rdquo; one of the most useful
+church melodies in the whole realm of English
+psalmody. Its name clings to a Boston street, and
+the beautiful chimes of Arlington St. church
+(Unitarian) annually ring its music on special
+occasions, as it has since the bells were tuned:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I'm not ashamed to own my Lord</div>
+<div class="i1"> Or to defend His cause,</div>
+<div>Maintain the honor of His Word,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The glory of His cross.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Jesus, my God!&mdash;I know His Name;</div>
+<div class="i1"> His Name is all my trust,</div>
+<div>Nor will He put my soul to shame</div>
+<div class="i1"> Nor let my hope be lost.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Dr. Thomas Augustine Arne, the creator of
+&ldquo;Arlington,&rdquo; was born in London, 1710, the son
+of a King St. upholsterer. He studied at Eton, and
+though intended for the legal profession, gave his
+whole mind to music. At twenty-three he began
+<a id="png:138" name="png:138"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">138 /</span> 108</samp>
+writing operas for his sister, Susanna (a singer
+who afterwards became the famous tragic actress,
+Mrs. Cibber).</p>
+
+<p>Arne's music to Milton's &ldquo;Comus,&rdquo; and to
+&ldquo;Rule Brittannia&rdquo; established his reputation. He
+was engaged as composer to Drury Lane Theater,
+and in 1759 received from Oxford his degree of
+Music Doctor. Later in life he turned his attention
+to oratorios, and other forms of sacred music, and
+was the first to introduce female voices in choir
+singing. He died March 5, 1778, chanting hallelujahs,
+it is said, with his last breath.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>IS THIS THE KIND RETURN?</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Dr. Watts in this hymn gave experimental piety
+its hour and language of reflection and penitence:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Is this the kind return?</div>
+<div class="i1"> Are these the thanks we owe,</div>
+<div>Thus to abuse Eternal Love</div>
+<div class="i1"> Whence all our blessings flow?</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Let past ingratitude</div>
+<div class="i1"> Provoke our weeping eyes.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>United in loving wedlock with these words in
+former years was &ldquo;Golden Hill,&rdquo; a chime of sweet
+counterpoint too rare to bury its authorship under
+the vague phrase &ldquo;A Western Melody.&rdquo; It was
+caught evidently from a forest bird<sup>*</sup> that flutes its
+clear solo in the sunsets of May and June. There
+<a id="png:139" name="png:139"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">139 /</span> 109</samp>
+can be no mistaking the imitation&mdash;the same compass,
+the same upward thrill, the same fall and
+warbled turn. Old-time folk used to call for
+it, &ldquo;Sing, my Fairweather Bird.&rdquo; It lingers in a
+few of the twenty- or thirty-years-ago collections,
+but stronger voices have drowned it out of the new.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+The wood thrush.</p></div>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Thacher,&rdquo; (set to the same hymn,) faintly recalls
+its melody. Nevertheless &ldquo;Thacher&rdquo; is a
+good tune. Though commonly written in sharps,
+contrasting the B flat of its softer and more liquid
+rival of other days, it is one of Handel's strains,
+and lends the meaning and pathos of the lyric text
+to voice and instrument.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WHEN I SURVEY THE WONDROUS CROSS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This crown of all the sacred odes of Dr. Watts
+for the song-service of the church of God was
+called by Matthew Arnold the &ldquo;greatest hymn in
+the English language.&rdquo; The day the eminent
+critic died he heard it sung in the Sefton Park
+Presbyterian Church, and repeated the opening
+lines softly to himself again and again after the
+services. The hymn is certainly <em>one</em> of the greatest
+in the language. It appeared as No. 7 in Watts'
+third edition (about 1710) containing five stanzas.
+The second line&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>On which the Prince of Glory died,</div>
+</div></div>
+<p class="runon">&mdash;read originally&mdash;</p>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Where the young Prince of Glory died.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:140" name="png:140"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">140 /</span> 110</samp>
+
+<p class="runon">Only four stanzas are now generally used. The
+omitted one&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>His dying crimson like a robe</div>
+<div class="i1"> Spreads o'er His body on the tree;</div>
+<div>Then am I dead to all the globe,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And all the globe is dead to me.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;is a flash of tragic imagination, showing the
+sanguine intensity of Christian vision in earlier
+time, when contemplating the Saviour's passion;
+but it is too realistic for the spirit and genius of
+song-worship. That the great hymn was designed
+by the writer for communion seasons, and was
+inspired by Gal. 6:14, explains the two last lines if
+not the whole of the highly colored verse.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+
+<p>One has a wide field of choice in seeking the
+best musical interpretation of this royal song of
+faith and self-effacement:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When I survey the wondrous Cross</div>
+<div class="i1"> On which the Prince of Glory died,</div>
+<div>My richest gain I count but loss,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And pour contempt on all my pride.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Forbid it, Lord, that I should boast</div>
+<div class="i1"> Save in the death of Christ my God;</div>
+<div>All the vain things that charm me most,</div>
+<div class="i1"> I sacrifice them to His blood.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>See from His head, His hands, His feet,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Sorrow and love flow mingled down;</div>
+<div>Did e'er such love and sorrow meet;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Or thorns compose so rich a crown?</div>
+<a id="png:141" name="png:141"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">141 /</span> 111</samp>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Were the whole realm of Nature mine,</div>
+<div class="i1"> That were a present far too small;</div>
+<div>Love so amazing, so divine,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Demands my soul, my life, my all.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>To match the height and depth of these words
+with fitting glory of sound might well have been
+an ambition of devout composers. Rev. G.C.
+Wells' tune in the <i>Revivalist</i>, with its emotional
+chorus, I.B. Woodbury's &ldquo;Eucharist&rdquo; in the
+<i>Methodist Hymnal</i>, Henry Smart's effective choral
+in Barnby's <i>Hymnary</i> (No. 170), and a score
+of others, have woven the feeling lines into melody
+with varying success. Worshippers in spiritual
+sympathy with the words may question if, after
+all, old &ldquo;Hamburg,&rdquo; the best of Mason's loved
+Gregorians, does not, alone, in tone and elocution,
+rise to the level of the hymn.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>LOVE DIVINE, ALL LOVES EXCELLING.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This evergreen song-wreath to the Crucified,
+was contributed by Charles Wesley, in 1746. It is
+found in his collection of 1756, <i>Hymns for Those
+That Seek and Those That Have Redemption in
+the Blood of Jesus Christ</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Love Divine all loves excelling,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Joy of Heaven to earth come down,</div>
+<div>Fix in us Thy humble dwelling,</div>
+<div class="i1"> All Thy faithful mercies crown.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Come Almighty to deliver,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Let us all Thy life receive,</div>
+<a id="png:142" name="png:142"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">142 /</span> 112</samp>
+<div>Suddenly return, and never,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Nevermore Thy temples leave.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Finish then Thy new creation;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Pure and spotless let us be;</div>
+<div>Let us see our whole salvation</div>
+<div class="i1"> Perfectly secured by Thee.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Changed from glory into glory</div>
+<div class="i1"> Till in Heaven we take our place,</div>
+<div>Till we cast our crowns before Thee</div>
+<div class="i1"> Lost in wonder, love and praise!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The hymn has been set to H. Isaac's ancient
+tune (1490), to Wyeth's &ldquo;Nettleton&rdquo; (1810), to
+Thos. H. Bailey's (1777&ndash;1839) &ldquo;Isle of Beauty, fare
+thee well&rdquo; (named from Thomas Moore's song),
+to Edward Hopkins' &ldquo;St. Joseph,&rdquo; and to a multitude
+of others more or less familiar.</p>
+
+<p>Most familiar of all perhaps, (as in the instance
+of &ldquo;Far from mortal cares retreating,&rdquo;) is its
+association with &ldquo;Greenville,&rdquo; the production of
+that brilliant but erratic genius and freethinker,
+Jean Jacques Rousseau. It was originally a love
+serenade, (&ldquo;Days of absence, sad and dreary&rdquo;)
+from the opera of <i>Le Devin du Village</i>, written
+about 1752. The song was commonly known
+years afterwards as &ldquo;Rousseau's Dream.&rdquo; But
+the unbelieving philosopher, musician, and misguided
+moralist builded better than he knew, and
+probably better than he meant when he wrote his
+immortal choral. Whatever he heard in his
+&ldquo;dream&rdquo; (and one legend says it was a &ldquo;song of
+<a id="png:143" name="png:143"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">143 /</span> 113</samp>
+angels&rdquo;) he created a harmony dear to the church
+he despised, and softened the hearts of the Christian
+world towards an evil teacher who was inspired,
+like Balaam, to utter one sacred strain.</p>
+
+<p>Rousseau was born in Geneva, 1712, but he
+never knew his mother, and neither the affection
+or interest of his father or of his other relatives
+was of the quality to insure the best bringing up of
+a child.</p>
+
+<p>He died July, 1778. But his song survives, while
+the world gladly forgets everything else he wrote.
+It is almost a pardonable exaggeration to say that
+every child in Christendom knows &ldquo;Greenville.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WHEN ALL THY MERCIES, O MY GOD.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This charming hymn was written by Addison,
+the celebrated English poet and essayist, about
+1701, in grateful commemoration of his delivery
+from shipwreck in a storm off the coast of Genoa,
+Italy. It originally contained thirteen stanzas,
+but no more than four or six are commonly sung.
+It has put the language of devotional gratitude
+into the mouths of thousands of humble disciples
+who could but feebly frame their own:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When all Thy mercies, O my God</div>
+<div class="i1"> My rising soul surveys,</div>
+<div>Transported with the view I'm lost</div>
+<div class="i1"> In wonder, love and praise.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Unnumbered comforts on my soul</div>
+<div class="i1"> Thy tender care bestowed</div>
+<a id="png:144" name="png:144"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">144 /</span> 114</samp>
+<div>Before my infant heart conceived</div>
+<div class="i1"> From whom those comforts flowed.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>When in the slippery paths of youth</div>
+<div class="i1"> With heedless steps I ran,</div>
+<div>Thine arm unseen conveyed me safe,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And led me up to man.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">Another hymn of Addison&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+How are Thy servants bless'd, O Lord,
+</p>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;was probably composed after the same return
+from a foreign voyage. It has been called his
+&ldquo;Traveller's Hymn.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Joseph Addison, the best English writer of his
+time, was the son of Lancelot Addison, rector of
+Milston, Wiltshire, and afterwards Dean of
+Litchfield. The distinguished author was born in
+Milston Rectory, May 1, 1672, and was educated
+at Oxford. His excellence in poetry, both English
+and Latin, gave him early reputation, and a
+patriotic ode obtained for him the patronage of
+Lord Somers. A pension from King William&nbsp;III.
+assured him a comfortable income, which was
+increased by further honors, for in 1704 he was
+appointed Commissioner of Appeals, then secretary
+of the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, and in 1717
+Secretary of State. He died in Holland House,
+Kensington, near London, June 17, 1719.</p>
+
+<p>His hymns are not numerous, (said to be only five),
+but they are remarkable for the simple beauty
+of their style, as well as for their Christian spirit.
+Of his fine metrical version of the 23rd Psalm,&mdash;</p>
+
+<a id="png:145" name="png:145"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">145 /</span> 115</samp>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The Lord my pasture shall prepare,</div>
+<div>And feed me with a shepherd's care,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;one of his earliest productions, the tradition is
+that he gathered its imagery when a boy living
+at Netheravon, near Salisbury Plain, during his
+lonely two-mile walks to school at Amesbury and
+back again. All his hymns appeared first in the
+<i>Spectator</i>, to which he was a prolific contributor.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+
+<p>The hymn &ldquo;When all Thy mercies&rdquo; still has
+&ldquo;Geneva&rdquo; for its vocal mate in some congregational
+manuals. The tune is one of the rare
+survivals of the old &ldquo;canon&rdquo; musical method, the
+parts coming in one after another with identical
+notes. It is always delightful as a performance
+with its glory of harmony and its sweet duet, and
+for generations it had no other words than Addison's hymn.</p>
+
+<p>John Cole, author of &ldquo;Geneva,&rdquo; was born in
+Tewksbury, Eng., 1774, and came to the United
+States in his boyhood (1785). Baltimore, Md.
+became his American home, and he was educated
+there. Early in life he became a musician and
+music publisher. At least twelve of his principal
+song collections from 1800 to 1832 are mentioned
+by Mr. Hubert P. Main, most of them sacred and
+containing many of his own tunes.</p>
+
+<p>He continued to compose music till his death,
+Aug. 17, 1855. Mr. Cole was leader of the
+<a id="png:146" name="png:146"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">146 /</span> 116</samp>
+regimental band known as &ldquo;The Independent Blues,&rdquo;
+which played in the war of 1812, and was present
+at the &ldquo;North Point&rdquo; fight, and other battles.</p>
+
+<p>Besides &ldquo;Geneva,&rdquo; for real feeling and harmonic
+beauty &ldquo;Manoah,&rdquo; adapted from Haydn's
+Creation, deserves mention as admirably suited
+to &ldquo;Addison's&rdquo; hymn, and also &ldquo;Belmont,&rdquo; by
+Samuel Webbe, which resembles it in style and
+sentiment.</p>
+
+<p>Samuel Webbe, composer of &ldquo;Belmont,&rdquo; was
+of English parentage but was born in Minorca,
+Balearic Islands, in 1740, where his father at that
+time held a government appointment; but his
+father, dying suddenly, left his family poor, and
+Samuel was apprenticed to a cabinet-maker. He
+served his apprenticeship, and immediately repaired
+to a London teacher and began the study
+of music and languages. Surmounting great difficulties,
+he became a competent musician, and made
+himself popular as a composer of glees. He was
+also the author of several masses, anthems, and
+hymn-tunes, the best of which are still in occasional
+use. Died in London, 1816.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>JESUS, I LOVE THY CHARMING NAME.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>When Dr. Doddridge, the author of this hymn,
+during his useful ministry, had finished the preparation
+of a pulpit discourse that strongly impressed
+him, he was accustomed, while his heart
+was yet glowing with the sentiment that had
+<a id="png:147" name="png:147"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">147 /</span> 117</samp>
+inspired him, to put the principal thoughts into
+metre, and use the hymn thus written at the conclusion
+of the preaching of the sermon. This hymn
+of Christian ardor was written to be sung after a
+sermon from Romans 8:35, &ldquo;Who shall separate
+us from the love of Christ?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Jesus, I love Thy charming name,</div>
+<div class="i1"> 'Tis music to mine ear:</div>
+<div>Fain would I sound it out so loud</div>
+<div class="i1"> That earth and heaven should hear.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>I'll speak the honors of Thy name</div>
+<div class="i1"> With my last laboring breath,</div>
+<div>Then speechless, clasp Thee in my arms,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The conqueror of death.</div>
+</div></div>
+<p class="runon">Earlier copies have&mdash;</p>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> The <em>antidote</em> of death.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Philip Doddridge, D.D., was born in London,
+June 26, 1702. Educated at Kingston Grammar
+School and Kibworth Academy, he became a
+scholar of respectable attainments, and was ordained
+to the Non-conformist ministry. He was
+pastor of the Congregational church at Northampton,
+from 1729 until his death, acting meanwhile
+as principal of the Theological School in
+that place. In 1749 he ceased to preach and went
+to Lisbon for his health, but died there about two
+years later, of consumption, Oct. 26, 1752.</p>
+
+<a id="png:148" name="png:148"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">148 /</span> 118</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+
+<p>The hymn has been sometimes sung to &ldquo;Pisgah,&rdquo;
+an old revival piece by J.C. Lowry (1820)
+once much heard in camp-meetings, but it is a pedestrian
+tune with too many quavers, and a headlong
+tempo.</p>
+
+<p>Bradbury's &ldquo;Jazer,&rdquo; in three-four time, is a
+melody with modulations, though more sympathetic,
+but it is hard to divorce the hymn from its
+long-time consort, old &ldquo;Arlington.&rdquo; It has the accent
+of its sincerity, and the breath of its devotion.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>LO, ON A NARROW NECK OF LAND.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn of Charles Wesley is always designated
+now by the above line, the first of the <em>second</em>
+stanza as originally written. It is said to have been
+composed at Land's End, in Cornwall, with the
+British Channel and the broad Atlantic in view
+and surging on both sides around a &ldquo;narrow neck
+of land.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Lo! on a narrow neck of land,</div>
+<div>Twixt two unbounded seas, I stand,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Secure, insensible:</div>
+<div>A point of time, a moment's space,</div>
+<div>Removes me to that heavenly place,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Or shuts me up in hell.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>O God, mine inmost soul convert,</div>
+<div>And deeply on my thoughtful heart</div>
+<div class="i1"> Eternal things impress:</div>
+<div>Give me to feel their solemn weight,</div>
+<a id="png:149" name="png:149"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">149 /</span> 119</samp>
+<div>And tremble on the brink of fate,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And wake to righteousness.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The preachers and poets of the great spiritual
+movement of the eighteenth century in England
+abated nothing in the candor of their words. The
+terrible earnestness of conviction tipped their
+tongues and pens with fire.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Lady Huntingdon would have lent &ldquo;Meribah&rdquo;
+gladly to this hymn, but Mason was not yet born.
+Many times it has been borrowed for Wesley's
+words since it came to its own, and the spirit of the
+pious Countess has doubtless approved the loan. It
+is rich enough to furnish forth her own lyric and
+more than one other of like matter and metre.</p>
+
+<p>The muscular music of &ldquo;Ganges&rdquo; has sometimes
+carried the hymn, and there are those who think its
+thunder is not a whit more Hebraic than the words require.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>COME YE SINNERS POOR AND NEEDY.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Few hymns have been more frequently sung in
+prayer-meetings and religious assemblies during the
+last hundred and fifty years. Its author, Joseph
+Hart, spoke what he knew and testified what he
+felt. Born in London, 1712, and liberally educated,
+he was in his young manhood very religious, but he
+went so far astray as to indulge in evil practices, and
+<a id="png:150" name="png:150"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">150 /</span> 120</samp>
+even published writings, both original and translated,
+against Christianity and religion of any kind.
+But he could not drink at the Dead Sea and live.
+The apples of Sodom sickened him. Conscience
+asserted itself, and the pangs of remorse nearly
+drove him to despair till he turned back to the
+source he had forsaken. He alludes to this experience
+in the lines&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Let not conscience make you linger,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Nor of fitness fondly dream;</div>
+<div>All the fitness He requireth</div>
+<div class="i1"> Is to feel your need of Him.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>During Passion Week, 1767, he had an amazing
+view of the sufferings of Christ, under the stress of
+which his heart was changed. In the joy of this experience
+he wrote&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Come ye sinners poor and needy,</div>
+</div></div>
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and&mdash;</p>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Come all ye chosen saints of God.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Probably no two hymn-lines have been oftener
+repeated than&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>If you tarry till you're better</div>
+<div class="i1"> You will never come at all.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The complete form of the original stanzas is:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Come ye sinners poor and needy,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Weak and wounded, sick and sore;</div>
+<div>Jesus ready stands to save you, </div>
+<div class="i1"> Full of pity, love and power.</div>
+<div class="i2"> He is able,</div>
+<div class="i1">He is willing; doubt no more.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:151" name="png:151"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">151 /</span> 121</samp>
+
+<p>The whole hymn&mdash;ten stanzas&mdash;is not sung
+now as one, but two, the second division beginning
+with the line&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+Come ye weary, heavy laden.
+</p>
+
+<p>Rev. Joseph Hart became minister of Jewin St.
+Congregational Chapel, London, about 1760,
+where he labored till his death, May 24, 1768.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+
+<p>A revival song by Jeremiah Ingalls (1764&ndash;1828),
+written about 1804, with an easy, popular swing
+and a <i>sforzando</i> chorus&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+Turn to the Lord and seek salvation,
+</p>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;monopolized this hymn for a good many years.
+The tunes commonly assigned to it have since been
+&ldquo;Greenville&rdquo; and Von Weber's &ldquo;Wilmot,&rdquo; in which
+last it is now more generally sung&mdash;dropping the
+echo lines at the end of each stanza.</p>
+
+<p>Carl Maria Von Weber, son of a roving musician,
+was born in Eutin, Germany, 1786. He developed
+no remarkable genius till he was about twenty
+years old, though being a fine vocalist, his singing
+brought him popularity and gain; but in 1806 he
+nearly lost his voice by accidently drinking nitric
+acid. He was for several years private secretary to
+Duke Ludwig at Stuttgart, and in 1813 Chapel-Master
+at Prague, from which place he went to
+Dresden in 1817 as Musik-Director.</p>
+
+<p>Von Weber's Korner songs won the hearts of all
+Germany; and his immortal &ldquo;Der Freischutz&rdquo;
+<a id="png:152" name="png:152"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">152 /</span> 122</samp>
+(the Free Archer), and numerous tender melodies
+like the airs to &ldquo;John Anderson, my Jo&rdquo; and &ldquo;O
+Poortith Cauld&rdquo; have gone to all civilized nations. No
+other composer had such feeling for beauty of sound.</p>
+
+<p>This beloved musician was physically frail and
+delicate, and died of untimely decline, during a
+visit to London in 1826.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>O HAPPY SAINTS WHO DWELL IN LIGHT.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Sometimes printed &ldquo;O happy <em>souls</em>.&rdquo; This poetical
+and flowing hymn seems to have been forgotten
+in the making up of most modern church
+hymnals. Hymns on heaven and heavenly joys
+abound in embarrassing numbers, but it is difficult
+to understand why this beautiful lyric should
+be <em>universally</em> neglected. It was written probably
+about 1760, by Rev. John Berridge, from the text,
+&ldquo;Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord,&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The first line of the second stanza&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+Released from sorrow, toil and strife,
+</p>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;has been tinkered in some of the older hymn-books,
+where it is found to read&mdash;,</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+Released from sorrows toil and <em>grief</em>,
+</p>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;not only committing a tautology, but destroying
+the perfect rhyme with &ldquo;life&rdquo; in the next line. The
+whole hymn, too, has been much altered by substituted
+words and shifted lines, though not generally
+to the serious detriment of its meaning and music.</p>
+
+<a id="png:153" name="png:153"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">153 /</span> 123</samp>
+
+<p>The Rev. John Berridge&mdash;friend of the Wesleys,
+Whitefield, and Lady Huntingdon&mdash;was an eccentric
+but very worthy and spiritual minister, born
+the son of a farmer, in Kingston, Nottinghamshire,
+Eng., Mar. 1, 1716. He studied at Cambridge, and
+was ordained curate of Stapleford and subsequently
+located as vicar of Everton, 1775. He died
+Jan. 22, 1793. He loved to preach, and he was determined
+that his tombstone should preach after
+his voice was still. His epitaph, composed by himself,
+is both a testimony and a memoir:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<div>&ldquo;Here lie the earthly remains of John Berridge, late vicar of
+Everton, and an itinerant servant of Jesus Christ, who loved
+his Master and His work, and after running His errands
+many years, was called up to wait on Him above.</div>
+
+<div>&ldquo;Reader, art thou born again?</div>
+
+<div>&ldquo;No salvation without the new birth.</div>
+
+<div>&ldquo;I was born in sin, February, 1716.</div>
+
+<div>&ldquo;Remained ignorant of my fallen state till 1730.</div>
+
+<div>&ldquo;Lived proudly on faith and works for salvation till 1751.</div>
+
+<div>&ldquo;Admitted to Everton vicarage, 1755.</div>
+
+<div>&ldquo;Fled to Jesus alone for refuge, 1756.</div>
+
+<div>&ldquo;Fell asleep in Jesus Christ,&mdash;&rdquo; (1793.)</div>
+</blockquote>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+
+<p>The once popular score that easily made the
+hymn a favorite, was &ldquo;Salem,&rdquo; in the old <i>Psalmodist</i>.
+It still appears in some note-books, though
+the name of its composer is uncertain. Its notes
+(in 6-8 time) succeed each other in syllabic modulations
+that give a soft dactylic accent to the measure
+and a wavy current to the lines:</p>
+
+<a id="png:154" name="png:154"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">154 /</span> 124</samp>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O happy saints that dwell in light,</div>
+<div>And walk with Jesus clothed in white,</div>
+<div>Safe landed on that peaceful shore,</div>
+<div>Where pilgrims meet to part no more:</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Released from sorrow, toil and strife,</div>
+<div>Death was the gate to endless life,</div>
+<div>And now they range the heavenly plains</div>
+<div>And sing His love in melting strains.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">Another version reads:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>&mdash;&mdash;and welcome to an endless life,</div>
+<div>Their souls have now begun to prove</div>
+<div>The height and depth of Jesus' love.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>THOU DEAR REDEEMER, DYING LAMB.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The author, John Cennick, like Joseph Hart,
+was led to Christ after a reckless boyhood and
+youth, by the work of the Divine Spirit in his soul,
+independent of any direct outward influence.
+Sickened of his cards, novels, and playhouse
+pleasures, he had begun a sort of mechanical
+reform, when one day, walking in the streets of
+London, he suddenly seemed to hear the text
+spoken &ldquo;I am thy salvation!&rdquo; His consecration
+began at that moment.</p>
+
+<p>He studied for the ministry, and became a
+preacher, first under direction of the Wesleys,
+then under Whitefield, but afterwards joined the
+Moravians, or &ldquo;Brethren.&rdquo; He was born at Reading,
+Derbyshire, Eng., Dec. 12, 1718<ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has period">,</ins> and died in
+London, July 4, 1755.</p>
+
+<a id="png:155" name="png:155"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">155 /</span> 125</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The word &ldquo;Rhine&rdquo; (in some collections&mdash;in
+others &ldquo;Emmons&rdquo;) names a revival tune once so
+linked with this hymn and so well known that few
+religious people now past middle life could enjoy
+singing it to any other. With a compass one note
+beyond an octave and a third, it utters every line
+with a clear, bold gladness sure to infect a meeting
+with its own spiritual fervor.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Thou dear Redeemer, dying Lamb,</div>
+<div class="i1"> I love to hear of Thee;</div>
+<div>No music like Thy charming name,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Nor half so sweet can be.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The composer of the bright legato melody just
+described was Frederick Burgm&uuml;ller, a young
+German musician, born in 1804. He was a remarkable
+genius, both in composition and execution,
+but his health was frail, and he did not live to
+fulfil the rich possibilities that lay within him. He
+died in 1824&mdash;only twenty years old. The tune
+&ldquo;Rhine&rdquo; (&ldquo;Emmons&rdquo;) is from one of his marches.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WHILE THEE I SEEK, PROTECTING POWER.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Helen Maria Williams wrote this sweet hymn,
+probably about the year 1800. She was a brilliant
+woman, better known in literary society for
+her political verses and essays than by her hymns;
+but the hymn here noted bears sufficient witness
+to her deep religious feeling:</p>
+
+<a id="png:156" name="png:156"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">156 /</span> 126</samp>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>While Thee I seek, Protecting Power,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Be my vain wishes stilled,</div>
+<div>And may this consecrated hour</div>
+<div class="i1"> With better hopes be filled.</div>
+<div>Thy love the power of thought bestowed;</div>
+<div class="i1"> To Thee my thoughts would soar,</div>
+<div>Thy mercy o'er my life has flowed,</div>
+<div class="i1"> That mercy I adore.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Miss Williams was born in the north of England,
+Nov. 30, 1762, but spent much of her life in
+London, and in Paris, where she died, Dec. 14, 1827.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Wedded so many years to the gentle, flowing
+music of Pleyel's &ldquo;Brattle Street,&rdquo; few lovers of
+the hymn recall its words without the melody of
+that emotional choral.</p>
+
+<p>The plain psalm-tune, &ldquo;Simpson,&rdquo; by Louis
+Spohr, divides the stanzas into quatrains.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>JESUS MY ALL TO HEAVEN IS GONE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn, by Cennick, was familiarized to the
+public more than two generations ago by its revival
+tune, sometimes called &ldquo;Duane Street,&rdquo; long-<ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'meter'">metre</ins>
+double. It is staffed in various keys, but
+its movement is full of life and emphasis, and its
+melody is contagious. The piece was composed
+by Rev. George Coles, in 1835.</p>
+
+<p title="Illustration of Augusus Montague Toplady originally opposite">The
+fact that this hymn of Cennick with Coles's
+tune appears in the <i>New Methodist Hymnal</i>
+indicates the survival of both in modern favor.</p>
+
+<a id="png:159" name="png:159"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">159 /</span> 127</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Jesus my all to heaven is gone,</div>
+<div>He whom I fixed my hopes upon;</div>
+<div>His track I see, and I'll pursue</div>
+<div>The narrow way till Him I view.</div>
+<div>The way the holy prophets went,</div>
+<div>The road that leads from banishment,</div>
+<div>The King's highway of holiness</div>
+<div>I'll go for all Thy paths are peace.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The memory has not passed away of the hearty
+unison with which prayer-meeting and camp-meeting
+assemblies used to &ldquo;crescendo&rdquo; the last
+stanza&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Then will I tell to sinners round</div>
+<div>What a dear Saviour I have found;</div>
+<div>I'll point to His redeeming blood,</div>
+<div>And say &ldquo;Behold the way to God.&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The Rev. George Coles was born in Stewkley,
+Eng., Jan. 2, 1792, and died in New York City,
+May 1, 1858. He was editor of the <i>N.Y. Christian
+Advocate</i>, and <i>Sunday School Advocate</i>, for
+several years, and was a musician of some ability,
+besides being a good singer.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>SWEET THE MOMENTS, RICH IN BLESSING.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The Hon. and Rev. <a id="Shirley" name="Shirley">Walter Shirley</a>,
+Rector of Loughgree, county of Galway, Ireland, revised this
+hymn under the chastening discipline of a most
+trying experience. His brother, the Earl of
+Ferrars, a licentious man, murdered an old and
+faithful servant in a fit of rage, and was executed
+at Tyburn for the crime. Sir Walter, after the
+<a id="png:160" name="png:160"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">160 /</span> 128</samp>
+disgrace and long distress of the imprisonment,
+trial, and final tragedy, returned to his little parish
+in Ireland, humbled but driven nearer to the Cross.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Sweet the moments, rich in blessing</div>
+<div class="i1"> Which before the Cross I spend;</div>
+<div>Life and health and peace possessing</div>
+<div class="i1"> From the sinner's dying Friend.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>All the emotion of one who buries a mortifying
+sorrow in the heart of Christ, and tries to forget,
+trembles in the lines of the above hymn as he
+changed and adapted it in his saddest but devoutest
+hours. Its original writer was the Rev. James
+Allen, nearly twenty years younger than himself,
+a man of culture and piety, but a Christian of
+shifting creeds. It is not impossible that he sent
+his hymn to Shirley to revise. At all events it owes
+its present form to Shirley's hand.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Truly <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'blessčd'">bless&eacute;d</ins> is the station</div>
+<div class="i1"> Low before His cross to lie,</div>
+<div>While I see Divine Compassion</div>
+<div class="i1"> Beaming in His gracious eye.<sup>*</sup></div>
+</div></div>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+&ldquo;Floating in His languid eye&rdquo; seems to have been the
+earlier version.</p></div>
+
+<p>The influence of Sir Walter's family misfortune
+is evident also in the mood out of which breathed
+his other trustful lines&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Peace, troubled soul, whose plaintive moan<br /></div>
+<div>Hath taught these rocks the notes of woe,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">(changed now to &ldquo;hath taught
+<em>these scenes</em>&rdquo; etc).</p>
+
+<p>Sir Walter Shirley, cousin of the Countess of
+Huntingdon, was born 1725, and died in 1786.
+<a id="png:161" name="png:161"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">161 /</span> 129</samp>
+Even in his last sickness he continued to preach to
+his people in his house, seated in his chair.</p>
+
+<p>Rev. James Oswald Allen was born at Gayle,
+Yorkshire, Eng., June 24, 1743. He left the
+University of Cambridge after a year's study, and
+became an itinerant preacher, but seems to have
+been a man of unstable religious views. After
+roving from one Christian denomination to another
+several times, he built a Chapel, and for forty
+years ministered there to a small Independent
+congregation. He died in Gayle, Oct. 31, 1804.</p>
+
+<p>The tune long and happily associated with
+&ldquo;Sweet the Moments&rdquo; is &ldquo;Sicily,&rdquo; or the
+&ldquo;Sicilian Hymn&rdquo;&mdash;from an old Latin hymn-tune,
+&ldquo;O Sanctissima.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>O FOR A CLOSER WALK WITH GOD.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The author, William Cowper, son of a clergyman,
+was born at Berkhampstead, Hertfordshire,
+Eng., Nov. 15, 1731, and died at Dereham,
+Norfolk, April 25, 1800. Through much of his
+adult life he was afflicted with a mental ailment
+inducing melancholia and at times partial insanity,
+during which he once attempted suicide. He
+sought literary occupation as an antidote to his
+disorder of mind, and besides a great number of
+lighter pieces which diverted him and his friends,
+composed &ldquo;The Task,&rdquo; an able and delightful
+moral and domestic poetic treatise in blank verse,
+and in the same style of verse translated Homer's
+<i>Odyssey</i> and <i>Iliad</i>.</p>
+
+<a id="png:162" name="png:162"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">162 /</span> 130</samp>
+
+<p>One of the most beloved of English poets, this
+suffering man was also a true Christian, and wrote
+some of our sweetest and most spiritual hymns.
+Most of these were composed at Olney, where he
+resided for a time with John Newton, his fellow
+hymnist, and jointly with him issued the volume
+known as the <i>Olney Hymns</i>.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Music more or less closely identified with this
+familiar hymn is Gardiner's &ldquo;Dedham,&rdquo; and also
+&ldquo;Mear,&rdquo; often attributed to Aaron Williams. Both,
+about equally with the hymn, are seasoned by time,
+but have not worn out their harmony&mdash;or their
+fitness to Cowper's prayer.</p>
+
+<p>William Gardiner was born in Leicester, Eng.,
+March 15, 1770, and died there Nov. 11, 1853.
+He was a vocal composer and a &ldquo;musicographer&rdquo;
+or writer on musical subjects.</p>
+
+<p>One Aaron Williams, to whom &ldquo;Mear&rdquo; has by
+some been credited, was of Welsh descent, a composer
+of psalmody and clerk of the Scotch church
+in London. He was born in 1734, and died in
+1776. Another account, and the more probable
+one, names a minister of Boston of still earlier
+date as the author of the noble old harmony. It
+is found in a small New England collection of
+1726, but not in any English or Scotch collection.
+&ldquo;Mear&rdquo; is presumably an American tune.</p>
+
+<a id="png:163" name="png:163"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">163 /</span> 131</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WHAT VARIOUS HINDRANCES WE MEET.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Another hymn of Cowper's; and no one ever
+suffered more deeply the plaintive regret in the
+opening lines, or better wrought into poetic expression
+an argument for prayer.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>What various hindrances we meet</div>
+<div>In coming to a mercy-seat!</div>
+<div>Yet who that knows the worth of prayer</div>
+<div>But wishes to be often there?</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Prayer makes the darkest clouds withdraw,</div>
+<div>Prayer climbs the ladder Jacob saw.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The whole hymn is (or once was) so thoroughly
+learned by heart as to be fixed in the church among
+its household words. Preachers to the diffident
+do not forget to quote&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Have you no words? ah, think again;</div>
+<div>Words flow apace when you <em>complain</em>.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Were half the breath thus vainly spent</div>
+<div>To Heaven in supplication sent,</div>
+<div>Our cheerful song would oftener be,</div>
+<div>&ldquo;Hear what the Lord hath done for me!&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>And there is all the lifetime of a proverb in the
+couplet&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Satan trembles when he sees</div>
+<div>The weakest saint upon his knees.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Tune, Lowell Mason's &ldquo;Rockingham.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<a id="png:164" name="png:164"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">164 /</span> 132</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>MY GRACIOUS REDEEMER I LOVE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This is one of Benjamin Francis's lays of devotion.
+The Christian Welshman who bore that
+name was a Gospel minister full of Evangelical
+zeal, who preached in many places, though his
+pastoral home was with the Baptist church in
+Shortwood, Wales. Flattering calls to London
+could not tempt him away from his first and only
+parish, and he remained there till his triumphant
+death. He was born in 1734, and died in 1799.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>My gracious Redeemer I love,</div>
+<div class="i1"> His praises aloud I'll proclaim,</div>
+<div>And join with the armies above,</div>
+<div class="i1"> To shout His adorable name.</div>
+<div>To gaze on His glories divine</div>
+<div class="i1"> Shall be my eternal employ;</div>
+<div>To see them incessantly shine,</div>
+<div class="i1"> My boundless, ineffable joy.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Tune, &ldquo;Birmingham&rdquo;&mdash;an English melody.
+Anonymous.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>BLEST BE THE TIE THAT BINDS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Perhaps the best hymn-expression of sacred
+brotherhood, at least it has had, and still has the
+indorsement of constant use. The author, John
+Fawcett, D.D., is always quoted as the example
+of his own words, since he sacrificed ambition
+and personal interest to Christian affection.</p>
+
+<p>Born near Bradford, Yorkshire, Jan. 6, 1739,
+and converted under the preaching of Whitefield,
+<a id="png:165" name="png:165"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">165 /</span> 133</samp>
+he joined the Methodists, but afterwards became
+a member of the new Baptist church in Bradford.
+Seven years later he was ordained over the Baptist
+Society at Wainsgate. In 1772 he received a call
+to succeed the celebrated Dr. Gill, in London, and
+accepted. But at the last moment, when his
+goods were packed for removal, the clinging love
+of his people, weeping their farewells around him,
+melted his heart. Their passionate regrets were
+more than either he or his good wife could withstand.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I will <em>stay</em>,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;you may unpack my
+goods, and we will live for the Lord lovingly
+together.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It was out of this heart experience that the
+tender hymn was born.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Our fears, our hopes, our aims are one,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Our comforts and our cares.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Dr. Fawcett died July 25, 1817.</p>
+
+<p>Tune, &ldquo;Boylston,&rdquo; L. Mason; or &ldquo;Dennis,&rdquo;
+H.G. N&auml;geli.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>I LOVE THY KINGDOM, LORD.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>&ldquo;Dr. Dwight's Hymn,&rdquo; as this is known <i>par
+eminence</i> among many others from his pen, is
+one of the imperishable lyrics of the Christian
+Church. The real spirit of the hundred and
+twenty-second Psalm is in it, and it is worthy of
+Watts in his best moments.</p>
+
+<a id="png:166" name="png:166"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">166 /</span> 134</samp>
+
+<p>Timothy Dwight was born at Northampton,
+Mass, May 14, 1752, and graduated at Yale
+College at the age of thirteen. He wrote several
+religious poems of considerable length. In 1795
+he was elected President of Yale College, and in
+1800 he revised Watts' Psalms, at the request of the
+General Association of Connecticut, adding a number
+of translations of his own.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I love Thy kingdom, Lord,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The house of Thine abode,</div>
+<div>The Church our blest Redeemer saved</div>
+<div class="i1"> With His own precious blood.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>I love Thy Church, O God;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Her walls before Thee stand,</div>
+<div>Dear as the apple of Thine eye,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And graven on Thy hand.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Dr. Dwight died Jan. 11, 1817.</p>
+
+<p>Tune, &ldquo;St. Thomas,&rdquo; Aaron Williams, (1734&ndash;1776.)</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hubert P. Main, however, believes the
+author to be Handel. It appeared as the second
+movement of a four-movement tune in Williams's
+1762 collection, which contained pieces by the
+great masters, with his own; but while not credited
+to Handel, Williams did not claim it himself.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>MID SCENES OF CONFUSION.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn, common in chapel hymnbooks
+half a century and more ago, is said to have been
+written by the Rev. David Denham, about 1826.</p>
+
+<a id="png:167" name="png:167"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">167 /</span> 135</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Home, Sweet Home&rdquo; was composed, according
+to the old account, by John Howard Payne as
+one of the airs in his opera of &ldquo;Clari, the Maid of
+Milan,&rdquo; which was brought out in London at
+Drury Lane in 1823. But Charles Mackay, the
+English poet, in the London Telegraph, asserts
+that Sir Henry Bishop, an eminent musician, in
+his vain search for a Sicilian national air, <em>invented</em>
+one, and that it was the melody of &ldquo;Home, sweet
+Home,&rdquo; which he afterwards set to Howard Payne's
+words. Mr. Mackay had this story from Sir
+Henry himself.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Mid scenes of confusion and creature complaints</div>
+<div>How sweet to my soul is communion with saints,</div>
+<div>To find at the banquet of mercy there's room</div>
+<div>And feel in the presence of Jesus at home.</div>
+<div class="i1"> Home, home, sweet, sweet home!</div>
+<div>Prepare me, dear Savior for glory, my home.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>John Howard Payne, author at least, of the
+original <em>words</em> of &ldquo;Home, Sweet Home,&rdquo; was born
+in New York City June 9, 1791. He was a singer,
+and became an actor and theatrical writer. He composed
+the words of his immortal song in the year
+1823, when he was himself homeless and hungry
+and sheltered temporarily in an attic in Paris.</p>
+
+<p>His fortunes improved at last, and he was appointed
+to represent his native country as consul
+in Tunis, where he died, Apr. 9, 1852.</p>
+
+<a id="png:168" name="png:168"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">168 /</span> 136</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>O, COULD I SPEAK THE MATCHLESS WORTH.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The writer of this hymn of worshiping ardor
+and exalted Christian love was an English Baptist
+minister, the Rev. Samuel Medley. He was born
+at Cheshunt, Hertfordshire, June 23, 1738, and at
+eighteen years of age entered the Royal Navy,
+where, though he had been piously educated, he
+became dissipated and morally reckless. Wounded
+in a sea fight off Cape Lagos, and in dread of amputation
+he prayed penitently through nearly a
+whole night, and in the morning the surprised
+surgeon told him his limb could be saved.</p>
+
+<p>The voice of his awakened conscience was not
+wholly disregarded, though it was not till some
+time after he left the navy that his vow to begin a
+religious life was sincerely kept. After teaching
+school for four years, he began to preach in 1766,
+Wartford in Hertfordshire being the first scene of
+his godly labors. He died in Liverpool July 17,
+1799, at the end of a faithful ministry there of
+twenty-seven years. A small edition of his hymns
+was published during his lifetime, in 1789.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O could I speak the matchless worth,</div>
+<div>O could I sound the glories forth</div>
+<div class="i1"> Which in my Saviour shine,</div>
+<div>I'd soar and touch the heavenly strings</div>
+<div>And vie with Gabriel while he sings,</div>
+<div class="i1"> In notes almost divine!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:169" name="png:169"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">169 /</span> 137</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Colebrook,&rdquo; a plain choral; but with a noble
+movement, by Henry Smart, is the English music
+to this fine lyric, but Dr. Mason's &ldquo;Ariel&rdquo; is the
+American favorite. It justifies its name, for it has
+wings&mdash;in both full harmony and duet&mdash;and its
+melody feels the glory of the hymn at every bar.</p>
+
+<a id="png:157" name="png:157"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">157 /</span> opp 126</samp>
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of Augustus Toplady">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus7" name="Illus7"
+ ><img src="images/illus07-augustusmontaguetoplady-cameo.jpg"
+ alt="Augustus Montague Toplady" width="216" height="238" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>Augustus Montague Toplady</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>ROCK OF AGES CLEFT FOR ME.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Augustus Montagu Toplady, author of this
+almost universal hymn, was born at Farnham,
+Surrey, Eng., Nov. 4, 1740. Educated at <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Westminister'">Westminster</ins>
+School, and Trinity College, Dublin, he
+took orders in the Established Church. In his
+doctrinal debates with the Wesleys he was a harsh
+controversialist; but his piety was sincere, and
+marked late in life by exalted moods. Physically
+he was frail, and his fiery zeal wore out his body.
+Transferred from his vicarage at Broad Hembury,
+Devonshire, to Knightsbridge, London, at
+twenty-eight years of age, his health began to
+fail before he was thirty-five, and in one of his
+periods of illness he wrote&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When languor and disease invade</div>
+<div class="i1"> This trembling house of clay,</div>
+<div>'Tis sweet to look beyond my pains</div>
+<div class="i1"> And long to fly away.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">And the same homesickness for heaven appears
+under a different figure in another hymn&mdash;</p>
+
+<a id="png:170" name="png:170"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">170 /</span> 138</samp>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>At anchor laid remote from home,</div>
+<div>Toiling I cry, &ldquo;Sweet Spirit, come!</div>
+<div>Celestial breeze, no longer stay,</div>
+<div>But swell my sails, and speed my way!&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Possessed of an ardent religious nature, his
+spiritual frames exemplified in a notable degree
+the emotional side of Calvinistic piety. Edward
+Payson himself, was not more enraptured in
+immediate view of death than was this young
+London priest and poet. Unquestioning faith
+became perfect certainty. As in the bold metaphor
+of &ldquo;Rock of Ages,&rdquo; the faith finds voice in&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+A debtor to mercy alone,
+</p>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and other hymns in his collection of 1776, two
+years before the end came. Most of this devout
+writing was done in his last days, and he continued
+it as long as strength was left, until, on the
+11th of August, 1778, he joyfully passed away.</p>
+
+<p>Somehow there was always something peculiarly
+heartsome and &ldquo;filling&rdquo; to pious minds in the
+lines of Toplady in days when his minor hymns
+were more in vogue than now, and they were often
+quoted, without any idea whose making they were.
+&ldquo;At anchor laid&rdquo; was crooned by good old ladies
+at their spinning-wheels, and godly invalids found
+&ldquo;When languor and disease invade&rdquo; a comfort
+next to their Bibles.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Rock of Ages&rdquo; is said to have been written
+after the author, during a suburban walk, had
+been forced to shelter himself from a thunder
+<a id="png:171" name="png:171"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">171 /</span> 139</samp>
+shower, under a cliff. This is, however, but one of
+several stories about the birth-occasion of the
+hymn.</p>
+
+<p>It has been translated into many languages.
+One of the foreign dignitaries visiting Queen
+Victoria at her &ldquo;Golden Jubilee&rdquo; was a native of
+Madagascar, who surprised her by asking leave
+to sing, but delighted her, when leave was given,
+by singing &ldquo;Rock of Ages.&rdquo; It was a favorite of
+hers&mdash;and of Prince Albert, who whispered it
+when he was dying. People who were school-children
+when Rev. Justus Vinton came home to
+Willington, Ct., with two Karen pupils, repeat to-day
+the &ldquo;la-pa-ta, i-oo-i-oo&rdquo; caught by sound
+from the brown-faced boys as they sang their
+native version of &ldquo;Rock of Ages.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Gen. J.E.B. Stuart, the famous Confederate
+Cavalry leader, mortally wounded at Yellow
+Tavern, Va., and borne to a Richmond hospital,
+called for his minister and requested that &ldquo;Rock
+of Ages&rdquo; be sung to him.</p>
+
+<p>The last sounds heard by the few saved from
+the wreck of the steamer &ldquo;London&rdquo; in the Bay of
+Biscay, 1866, were the voices of the helpless passengers
+singing &ldquo;Rock of Ages&rdquo; as the ship went
+down.</p>
+
+<p>A company of Armenian Christians sang &ldquo;Rock
+of Ages&rdquo; in their native tongue while they were
+being massacred in Constantinople.</p>
+
+<p>No history of this grand hymn of faith forgets
+the incident of Gladstone writing a Latin
+<a id="png:172" name="png:172"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">172 /</span> 140</samp>
+translation of it while sitting in the House of Commons.
+That remarkable man was as masterly in his
+scholarly recreations as in his statesmanship.
+The supreme Christian sentiment of the hymn
+had permeated his soul till it spoke to him in a
+dead language as eloquently as in the living one;
+and this is what he made of it:</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">TOPLADY.</h4>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Rock of ages, cleft for me,</div>
+<div>Let me hide myself in Thee;</div>
+<div>Let the water and the blood,</div>
+<div>From Thy riven side which flowed,</div>
+<div>Be of sin the double cure,</div>
+<div>Cleanse me from its guilt and power.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Not the labor of my hands</div>
+<div>Can fulfil Thy law's demands;</div>
+<div>Could my zeal no respite know,</div>
+<div>Could my tears for ever flow,</div>
+<div>All for sin could not atone,</div>
+<div>Thou must save, and Thou alone.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Nothing in my hand I bring,</div>
+<div>Simply to Thy cross I cling;</div>
+<div>Naked, come to Thee for dress,</div>
+<div>Helpless, look to Thee for grace:</div>
+<div>Foul, I to the fountain fly;</div>
+<div>Wash, me, Saviour, or I die.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Whilst I draw this fleeting breath,</div>
+<div>When my eyestrings break in death;</div>
+<div>When I soar through tracts unknown,</div>
+<div>See Thee on Thy judgment throne,</div>
+<div>Rock of ages, cleft for me,</div>
+<div>Let me hide myself in Thee.</div>
+</div></div>
+<a id="png:173" name="png:173"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">173 /</span> 141</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">GLADSTONE.</h4>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>Jesus, pro me perforatus,</div>
+<div>Condar intra tuum latus;</div>
+<div>Tu per lympham profluentem,</div>
+<div>Tu per sanguinem tepentem,</div>
+<div>In peccata mi redunda,</div>
+<div>Tolle culpam, sordes munda!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Coram Te nec justus forem</div>
+<div>Quamvis tota vi laborem,</div>
+<div>Nec si fide nunquam cesso,</div>
+<div>Fletu stillans indefesso;</div>
+<div>Tibi soli tantum munus&mdash;</div>
+<div>Salva me, Salvator Unus!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Nil in manu mecum fero,</div>
+<div>Sed me versus crucem gero:</div>
+<div>Vestimenta nudus oro,</div>
+<div>Opem debilis imploro,</div>
+<div>Fontem Christi qu&aelig;ro immundus,</div>
+<div>Nisi laves, moribundus.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Dum hos artus vita regit,</div>
+<div>Quando nox sepulcro legit;</div>
+<div>Mortuos quum stare jubes,</div>
+<div>Sedens Judex inter nubes;&mdash;</div>
+<div>Jesus, pro me perforatus,</div>
+<div>Condar intra tuum latus!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The wonderful hymn has suffered the mutations
+common to time and taste.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When I soar thro' tracts unknown</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;becomes&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When I soar to worlds unknown,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;getting rid of the unpoetic word, and bettering
+the elocution, but missing the writer's thought
+<a id="png:174" name="png:174"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">174 /</span> 142</samp>
+(of the unknown <em>path</em>,&mdash;instead of going to many
+&ldquo;worlds&rdquo;). The Unitarians have their version,
+with substitutes for the &ldquo;atonement lines.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But the Christian lyric maintains its life and
+inspiration through the vicissitudes of age and
+use, as all intrinsically superior things can and
+will,&mdash;and as in the twentieth line,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When my eyestrings break in death;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;modernized to&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When my eyelids close in death,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;the hymn will ever adapt itself to the new
+exigencies of common speech, without losing its
+vitality and power.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>A happy inspiration of
+<a id="RockofAges" name="RockofAges">Dr. Thomas Hastings</a>
+made the hymn and music inevitably one. Almost
+anywhere to call for the tune of &ldquo;Toplady&rdquo;
+(namesake of the pious poet) is as unintelligible
+to the multitude as &ldquo;Key&rdquo; would be to designate
+the &ldquo;Star-spangled Banner.&rdquo; The common people&mdash;thanks
+to Dr. Hastings&mdash;have learned &ldquo;Rock
+of Ages&rdquo; by <em>sound</em>.</p>
+
+<p>Thomas Hastings was born in Washington, Ct.,
+1784. For eight years he was editor of the <i>Western
+Recorder,</i> but he gave his life to church music,
+and besides being a talented tone-poet he wrote as
+many as six hundred hymns. In 1832, by invitation
+from twelve New York churches, he went
+<a id="png:177" name="png:177"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">177 /</span> 143</samp>
+to that city, and did the main work of his life
+there, dying, in 1872, at the good old age of eighty-nine.
+His musical collections number fifty-three.
+He wrote his famous tune in 1830.</p>
+
+<a id="png:175" name="png:175"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">175 /</span> opp 142</samp>
+
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of Thomas Hastings">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus8" name="Illus8"
+ ><img src="images/illus08-thomashastings-cameo.jpg" alt=
+ "Thomas Hastings" width="203" height="289" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>Thomas Hastings</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>MY SOUL BE ON THY GUARD</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Strangely enough, this hymn, a trumpet note
+of Christian warning and resolution, was written
+by one who himself fell into unworthy ways.<sup>*</sup> But
+the one strong and spiritual watch-song by which
+he is remembered appeals for him, and lets us
+know possibly, something of his own conflicts.
+We can be thankful for the struggle he once
+made, and for the hymn it inspired. It is a voice
+of caution to others.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+I have been unable to verify this statement found in Mr. Butterworth's
+&ldquo;Story of the Hymns.&rdquo;&mdash;T.B.</p></div>
+
+<p>George Heath, the author, was an English minister,
+born in 1781; died 1822. For a time he was
+pastor of a Presbyterian Church at Honiton, Devonshire,
+and was evidently a prolific writer, having
+composed a hundred and forty-four hymns,
+an edition of which was printed.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>No other has been so familiarly linked with the
+words as Lowell Mason's &ldquo;Laban&rdquo; (1830). It has
+dash and animation enough to re&euml;nforce the hymn,
+and give it popular life, even if the hymn had less
+earnestness and vigor of its own.</p>
+
+<a id="png:178" name="png:178"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">178 /</span> 144</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Ne'er think the <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'vic'try'">vict'ry</ins> won</div>
+<div class="i1"> Nor lay thine armor down:</div>
+<div>Thy arduous work will not be done</div>
+<div class="i1"> Till thou hast gained thy crown.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Fight on, my soul till death</div>
+<div class="i1"> Shall bring thee to thy God;</div>
+<div>He'll take thee at thy parting breath</div>
+<div class="i1"> To His divine abode.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>PEOPLE OF THE LIVING GOD.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Montgomery <em>felt</em> every line of this hymn as he
+committed it to paper. He wrote it when, after
+years in the &ldquo;swim&rdquo; of social excitements and
+ambitions, where his young independence swept
+him on, he came back to the little church of his
+boyhood. His father and mother had gone to the
+West Indies as missionaries, and died there. He
+was forty-three years old when, led by divine light,
+he sought readmission to the Moravian &ldquo;meeting&rdquo;
+at Fulneck, and anchored happily in a haven of
+peace.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>People of the living God</div>
+<div class="i1"> I have sought the world around,</div>
+<div>Paths of sin and sorrow trod,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Peace and comfort nowhere found:</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Now to you my spirit turns&mdash;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Turns a fugitive unblest;</div>
+<div>Brethren, where your altar burns,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Oh, receive me into rest.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>James Montgomery, son of Rev. John Montgomery,
+was born at Irvine, Ayeshire, Scotland,
+<a id="png:179" name="png:179"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">179 /</span> 145</samp>
+Nov. 4, 1771, and educated at the Moravian
+Seminary at Fulneck, Yorkshire, Eng. He became
+the editor of the <i>Sheffield Iris</i>, and his
+pen was busy in non-professional as well as professional
+work until old age. He died in Sheffield,
+April 30, 1854.</p>
+
+<p>His literary career was singularly successful;
+and a glance through any complete edition of his
+poems will tell us why. His hymns were all
+published during his lifetime, and all, as well as
+his longer pieces, have the purity and polished
+beauty, if not the strength, of Addison's work.
+Like Addison, too, he could say that he had written
+no line which, dying, he would wish to blot.</p>
+
+<p>The best of Montgomery was in his hymns.
+These were too many to enumerate here, and the
+more enduring ones too familiar to need enumeration.
+The church and the world will not soon
+forget &ldquo;The Home in Heaven,&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Forever with the Lord,</div>
+<div>Amen, so let it be.</div>
+<div>Life from the dead is in that word;</div>
+<div>'Tis immortality.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">Nor&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O where shall rest be found,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;with its impressive couplet&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>'Tis not the whole of life to live</div>
+<div>Nor all of death to die.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">Nor the haunting sweetness of&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>There is a calm for those who weep.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:180" name="png:180"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">180 /</span> 146</samp>
+
+<p class="runon">Nor, indeed, the hymn of Christian love just now
+before us.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The melody exactly suited to the gentle trochaic
+step of the home-song, &ldquo;People of the living God,&rdquo;
+is &ldquo;Whitman,&rdquo; composed for it by Lowell Mason.
+Few Christians, in America, we venture to say,
+could hear an instrument play &ldquo;Whitman&rdquo; without
+mentally repeating Montgomery's words.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>TO LEAVE MY DEAR FRIENDS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn, called &ldquo;The Bower of Prayer,&rdquo; was
+dear to Christian hearts in many homes and
+especially in rural chapel worship half a century
+ago and earlier, and its sweet legato melody still
+lingers in the memories of aged men and women.</p>
+
+<p>Elder John Osborne, a New Hampshire preacher
+of the &ldquo;Christian&rdquo; (<i>Christ-ian</i>) denomination,
+is said to have composed the tune (and possibly
+the words) about 1815&mdash;though apparently the
+music was arranged from a flute interlude in one
+of Haydn's themes. The warbling notes of the
+air are full of heart-feeling, and usually the best
+available treble voice sang it as a solo.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn wide"><div class="stanza">
+<div>To leave my dear friends and from neighbors to part,</div>
+<div>And go from my home, it affects not my heart</div>
+<div>Like the thought of absenting myself for a day</div>
+<div>From that blest retreat I have chosen to pray,</div>
+<div class="i5"> I have chosen to pray.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<a id="png:181" name="png:181"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">181 /</span> 147</samp>
+<div>The early shrill notes of the loved nightingale</div>
+<div>That dwelt in the bower, I observed as my bell:</div>
+<div>It called me to duty, while birds in the air</div>
+<div>Sang anthems of praises as I went to prayer,</div>
+<div class="i5"> As I went to prayer.<sup>*</sup></div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>How sweet were the zephyrs perfumed by the pine,</div>
+<div>The ivy, the balsam, the wild eglantine,</div>
+<div>But sweeter, O, sweeter superlative were</div>
+<div>The joys that I tasted in answer to prayer,</div>
+<div class="i5"> In answer to prayer.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+The <i>American Vocalist</i> omits this stanza as too fanciful
+as well as too crude</p></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>SAVIOUR, THY DYING LOVE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn of grateful piety was written in
+1862, by Rev. S. Dryden Phelps, D.D., of New
+Haven, and first published in <i>Pure Gold</i>, 1871;
+afterwards in the (earlier) <i>Baptist Hymn and
+Tune Book</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Saviour, Thy dying love</div>
+<div class="i1"> Thou gavest me,</div>
+<div>Nor should I aught withhold</div>
+<div class="i1"> Dear Lord, from Thee.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Give me a faithful heart,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Likeness to Thee,</div>
+<div>That each departing day</div>
+<div class="i1"> Henceforth may see</div>
+<div>Some work of love begun,</div>
+<div>Some deed of kindness done,</div>
+<div>Some wand'rer sought and won,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Something for Thee.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The penultimate line, originally &ldquo;Some sinful
+wanderer won,&rdquo; was altered by the author himself.
+<a id="png:182" name="png:182"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">182 /</span> 148</samp>
+The hymn is found in most Baptist hymnals,
+and was inserted by Mr. Sankey in <i>Gospel Hymns
+No.&nbsp;1</i>. It has since won its way into several
+revival collections and undenominational manuals.</p>
+
+<p>Rev. Sylvester Dryden Phelps, D.D., was born
+in Suffield, Ct., May 15, 1816, and studied at the
+Connecticut Literary Institution in that town.
+An early call to the ministry turned his talents to
+the service of the church, and his long settlement&mdash;comprising
+what might be called his principal
+life work&mdash;was in New Haven, where he was
+pastor of the First Baptist church twenty-nine
+years. He died there Nov. 23, 1895.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The Rev. Robert Lowry admired the hymn, and
+gave it a tune perfectly suited to its metre and
+spirit. It has never been sung in any other.
+The usual title of it is &ldquo;Something for Jesus.&rdquo;
+The meaning and sentiment of both words and
+music are not unlike Miss Havergal's&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+I gave my life for thee.
+</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>IN SOME WAY OR OTHER.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This song of Christian confidence was written
+by Mrs. Martha A.W. Cook, wife of the Rev.
+Parsons Cook, editor of the <i>Puritan Recorder</i>,
+Boston.</p>
+
+<p>It was published in the <i>American Messenger</i> in
+1870, and is still in use here, as a German
+<a id="png:183" name="png:183"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">183 /</span> 149</samp>
+version of it is in Germany. The first stanza follows,
+in the two languages:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>In some way or other the Lord will provide.</div>
+<div class="i2"> It may not be my way,</div>
+<div class="i2"> It may not be thy way,</div>
+<div class="i2"> And yet in His own way</div>
+<div class="i2"> The Lord will provide.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Sei's so oder anders, der Herr wird's versehn;</div>
+<div class="i2"> Mag's nicht sein, wie ich will,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Mag's nicht sein, wie du willst,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Doch wird's sein, wie Er will:</div>
+<div class="i2"> Der Herr wird's versehn.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>In the English version the easy flow of the two
+last lines into one sentence is an example of
+rhythmic advantage over the foreign syntax.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Cook was married to the well-known
+clergyman and editor, Parsons Cook, (1800&ndash;1865)
+in Bridgeport, Ct., and survived him at his death
+in Lynn, Mass. She was Miss Martha Ann
+Woodbridge, afterwards Mrs. Hawley, and a
+widow at the time of her re-marriage as Mr. Cook's
+second wife.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Professor Calvin S. Harrington, of Wesleyan
+University, Middletown, Ct., set music to the
+words as printed in <i>Winnowed Hymns</i> (1873) and
+arranged by Dr. Eben Tourjee, organizer of the
+great American Peace Jubilee in Boston. In the
+<i>Gospel Hymns</i> it is, however, superseded by the
+more popular composition of Philip Phillips.</p>
+
+<a id="png:184" name="png:184"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">184 /</span> 150</samp>
+
+<p>Dr. Eben Tourjee, late Dean of the College of
+Music in Boston University, and founder and head
+of the New England Conservatory, was born in Warwick,
+R.I., June 1, 1834. With only an academy
+education he rose by native genius, from a
+hard-working boyhood to be a teacher of music
+and a master of its science. From a course of
+study in Europe he returned and soon made his
+reputation as an organizer of musical schools and
+sangerfests. The New England Conservatory of
+Music was first established by him in Providence,
+but removed in 1870 to Boston, its permanent
+home. His doctorate of music was conferred
+upon him by Wesleyan University. Died in Boston,
+April 12, 1891.</p>
+
+<p>Philip Phillips, known as &ldquo;the singing Pilgrim,&rdquo;
+was born in Jamestown, Chautauqua, Co., N.Y.,
+Aug. 13, 1834. He compiled twenty-nine collections
+of sacred music for Sunday schools,
+gospel meetings, etc.; also a <i>Methodist Hymn and
+Tune Book</i>, 1866. He composed a great number
+of tunes, but wrote no hymns. Some of his books
+were published in London, for he was a cosmopolitan
+singer, and traveled through Europe and
+Australia as well as America. Died in Delaware,
+O., June 25, 1875.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>NEARER, MY GOD, TO THEE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Mr. William Stead, fond of noting what is
+often believed to be the &ldquo;providential chain of
+<a id="png:185" name="png:185"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">185 /</span> 151</samp>
+causes&rdquo; in everything that happens, recalls the
+fact that Benjamin Flower, editor of the <i>Cambridge
+Intelligencer</i>, while in jail (1798) at the
+instigation of Bp. Watson for an article defending
+the French Revolution, and criticising the Bishop's
+political course, was visited by several sympathizing
+ladies, one of whom was Miss Eliza Gould.
+The young lady's first acquaintance with him
+there in his cell led to an attachment which eventuated
+in marriage. Of that marriage Sarah
+Flower was born. By the theory of providential
+sequences Mr. Stead makes it appear that the
+forgotten vindictiveness of a British prelate &ldquo;was
+the <i>causa causans</i> of one of the most spiritual and
+aspiring hymns in the Christian Hymnary.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Nearer, My God, to Thee&rdquo; was on the lips of
+President McKinley as he lay dying by a murderer's
+wicked shot. It is dear to President Roosevelt
+for its memories of the battle of Las Quasimas,
+where the Rough Riders sang it at the burial of
+their slain comrades. Bishop Marvin was saved
+by it from hopeless dejection, while practically an
+exile during the Civil War, by hearing it sung in
+the wilds of Arkansas, by an old woman in a log
+hut.</p>
+
+<p>A letter from Pittsburg, Pa., to a leading Boston
+paper relates the name and experience of a forger
+who had left the latter city and wandered eight
+years a fugitive from justice. On the 5th of
+November, (Sunday,) 1905, he found himself in
+Pittsburg, and ventured into the Dixon Theatre,
+<a id="png:186" name="png:186"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">186 /</span> 152</samp>
+where a religious service was being held, to hear
+the music. The hymn &ldquo;Nearer, My God, to Thee&rdquo;
+so overcame him that he went out weeping bitterly.
+He walked the floor of his room all night, and in
+the morning telephoned for the police, confessed
+his name and crime, and surrendered himself to be
+taken back to the Boston authorities.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Sarah Flower Adams, author of the noble
+hymn (supposed to have been written in 1840),
+was born at Harlow, Eng., Feb. 22, 1805, and died
+there in 1848. At her funeral another of her
+hymns was sung, ending&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When falls the shadow, cold in death</div>
+<div>I yet will sing with fearless breath,</div>
+<div>As comes to me in shade or sun,</div>
+<div>&ldquo;Father, Thy will, not mine, be done.&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The attempts to <em>evangelize</em> &ldquo;Nearer, My God, to
+Thee&rdquo; by those who cannot forget that Mrs.
+Adams was a Unitarian, are to be deplored. Such
+zeal is as needless as trying to sectarianize an Old
+Testament Psalm. The poem is a perfect religious
+piece&mdash;to be sung as it stands, with thanks that it
+was ever created.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>In English churches (since 1861) the hymn was
+and may still be sung to &ldquo;Horbury,&rdquo; composed
+by Rev. John B. Dykes, and &ldquo;St. Edmund,&rdquo; by
+Sir Arthur Sullivan. Both tunes are simple and
+appropriate, but such a hymn earns and inevitably
+<a id="png:187" name="png:187"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">187 /</span> 153</samp>
+acquires a single tune-voice, so that its music instantly
+names it by its words when played on instruments.
+Such a voice was given it by Lowell
+Mason's &ldquo;Bethany,&rdquo; (1856). (Why not &ldquo;Bethel,&rdquo;
+instead, every one who notes the imagery of the
+words must wonder.) &ldquo;Bethany&rdquo; appealed to the
+popular heart, and long ago (in America) hymn
+and tune became each other's property. It is
+even simpler than the English tunes, and a single
+hearing fixes it in memory.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>I NEED THEE EVERY HOUR.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Mrs. Annie Sherwood Hawks, who wrote this
+hymn in 1872, was born in Hoosick, N.Y., in 1835.</p>
+
+<p>She sent the hymn (five stanzas) to Dr. Lowry,
+who composed its tune, adding a chorus, to make
+it more effective. It first appeared in a small
+collection of original songs prepared by Lowry
+and Doane for the National Baptist Sunday School
+Association, which met at Cincinnati, O., November,
+1872, and was sung there.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I need Thee every hour,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Most gracious Lord,</div>
+<div>No tender voice like Thine</div>
+<div class="i1"> Can peace afford.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Chorus.</div>
+<div>I need Thee, Oh, I need Thee,</div>
+<div>Every hour I need Thee;</div>
+<div>Oh, bless me now, my Saviour,</div>
+<div class="i1"> I come to Thee!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:188" name="png:188"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">188 /</span> 154</samp>
+
+<p>One instance, at least, of a hymn made doubly
+impressive by its chorus will be attested by all who
+have sung or heard the pleading words and music
+of Mrs. Hawks' and Dr. Lowry's &ldquo;I need Thee,
+Oh, I need Thee.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>I GAVE MY LIFE FOR THEE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This was written in her youth by Frances Ridley
+Havergal, and was suggested by the motto over the
+head of Christ in the great picture, &ldquo;Ecce Homo,&rdquo;
+in the Art Gallery of Dusseldorf, Prussia, where she
+was at school. The sight&mdash;as was the case with
+young Count Zinzendorf&mdash;seems to have had
+much to do with the gifted girl's early religious
+experience, and indeed exerted its influence on
+her whole life. The motto read &ldquo;I did this for
+thee; what doest thou for me?&rdquo; and the generative
+effect of the solemn picture and its question soon
+appeared in the hymn that flowed from Miss
+Havergal's heart and pen.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I gave my life for thee,</div>
+<div class="i1"> My precious blood I shed,</div>
+<div>That thou might'st ransomed be</div>
+<div class="i1"> And quickened from the dead.</div>
+<div>I gave my life for thee:</div>
+<div>What hast thou given for me?</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Miss Frances Ridley Havergal, sometimes called
+&ldquo;The Theodosia of the 19th century,&rdquo; was born
+at Astley, Worcestershire, Eng., Dec. 14, 1836.
+Her father, Rev. William Henry Havergal, a
+<a id="png:189" name="png:189"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">189 /</span> 155</samp>
+clergyman of the Church of England, was himself
+a poet and a skilled musician, and much of the
+daughter's ability came to her by natural bequest
+as well as by education. Born a poet, she became
+a fine instrumentalist, a composer and an accomplished
+linguist. Her health was frail, but her life
+was a devoted one, and full of good works. Her
+consecrated <em>words</em> were destined to outlast her by
+many generations.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Writing is <em>praying</em> with me,&rdquo; she said. Death
+met her in 1879, when still in the prime of womanhood.</p>
+
+<a id="png:193" name="png:193"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">193 /</span> opp 158</samp>
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of Frances Ridley Havergal">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus9" name="Illus9"
+ ><img src="images/illus09-francesridleyhavergal-cameo.jpg"
+ alt="Frances Ridley Havergal" width="203" height="248" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>Frances Ridley Havergal</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The music that has made this hymn of Miss
+Havergal familiar in America is named from its
+first line, and was composed by the lamented
+Philip P. Bliss (christened Philipp Bliss<sup>*</sup>), a pupil
+of Dr. George F. Root.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+Mr. Bliss himself changed the spelling of his name, preferring to let the
+third P. do duty alone, as a middle initial.</p></div>
+
+<p>He was born in Rome, Pa., Jan. 9, 1838, and less
+than thirty-nine years later suddenly ended his life,
+a victim of the awful railroad disaster at Ashtabula
+O., Dec. 29, 1876, while returning from a visit to
+his aged mother. His wife, Lucy Young Bliss,
+perished with him there, in the swift flames that
+enveloped the wreck of the train.</p>
+
+<p>The name of Mr. Bliss had become almost a
+household word through his numerous popular
+Christian melodies, which were the American
+<a id="png:190" name="png:190"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">190 /</span> 156</samp>
+beginning of the series of <i>Gospel Hymns</i>. Many
+of these are still favorite prayer-meeting tunes
+throughout the country and are heard in song-service
+at Sunday-school and city mission meetings.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>JESUS KEEP ME NEAR THE CROSS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn, one of the best and probably most
+enduring of Fanny J. Crosby's sacred lyrics, was
+inspired by Col. 1:29.</p>
+
+<p>Frances Jane Crosby (Mrs. Van Alstyne) the
+blind poet and hymnist, was born in Southeast,
+N.Y., March 24, 1820. She lost her eyesight at
+the age of six. Twelve years of her younger life
+were spent in the New York Institution for the
+Blind, where she became a teacher, and in 1858
+was happily married to a fellow inmate, Mr.
+Alexander Van Alstyne, a musician.</p>
+
+<p>George F. Root was for a time musical instructor
+at the Institution, and she began early to write
+words to his popular song-tunes. &ldquo;Rosalie, the
+Prairie Flower,&rdquo; and the long favorite melody,
+&ldquo;There's Music in the Air&rdquo; are among the many
+to which she supplied the text and the song name.</p>
+
+<p>She resides in Bridgeport, Ct., where she enjoys
+a serene and happy old age. She has written over
+six thousand hymns, and possibly will add other
+pearls to the cluster before she goes up to join the
+singing saints.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Jesus, keep me near the Cross,</div>
+<div class="i1"> There a precious Fountain</div>
+<a id="png:191" name="png:191"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">191 /</span> 157</samp>
+<div>Free to all, a healing stream,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Flows from Calv'ry's mountain.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Chorus.</div>
+<div>In the Cross, in the Cross</div>
+<div class="i1"> Be my glory ever,</div>
+<div>Till my raptured soul shall find</div>
+<div class="i1"> Rest beyond the river.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Near the Cross! O Lamb of God,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Bring its scenes before me;</div>
+<div>Help me walk from day to day</div>
+<div class="i1"> With its shadows o'er me.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Chorus.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>William Howard Doane, writer of the music to
+this hymn, was born in Preston, Ct., Feb. 3, 1831.
+He studied at Woodstock Academy, and subsequently
+acquired a musical education which earned
+him the degree of Doctor of Music conferred upon
+him by Denison University in 1875. Having a
+mechanical as well as musical gift, he patented
+more than seventy inventions, and was for some
+years engaged with manufacturing concerns, both
+as <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: Original reads 'employe'">employee</ins>
+and manager, but his interest in song-worship
+and in Sunday-school and church work
+never abated, and he is well known as a trainer of
+choirs and composer of some of the best modern
+devotional tunes. His home is in Cincinnati, O.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>I WOULD NOT LIVE ALWAY.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This threnody (we may almost call it) of W.A.
+Muhlenberg, illustrating one phase of Christian
+<a id="png:192" name="png:192"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">192 /</span> 158</samp>
+experience, was the outpouring of a poetic melancholy
+not uncommon to young and finely strung souls.
+He composed it in his twenties,&mdash;long before he became
+&ldquo;Doctor&rdquo; Muhlenberg,&mdash;and for years afterwards
+tried repeatedly to alter it to a more cheerful
+tone. But the poem had its mission, and it had
+fastened itself in the public imagination, either by
+its contagious sentiment or the felicity of its tune,
+and the author was obliged to accept the fame of it
+as it originally stood.</p>
+
+<p>William Augustus Muhlenberg D.D. was born
+in Philadelphia, Sept. 16, 1796, the great-grandson
+of Dr. Henry M. Muhlenberg, founder of the Lutheran
+church in America. In 1817 he left his ancestral
+communion, and became an Episcopal
+priest.</p>
+
+<p title="Illustration of Frances Ridley Havergal originally opposite">As
+Rector of St. James church, Lancaster, Pa.,
+he interested himself in the improvement of ecclesiastical
+hymnody, and did much good reforming
+work. After a noble and very active life as promoter
+of religious education and Christian union,
+and as a friend and benefactor of the poor, he
+died April, 8, 1877, in St. Luke's Hospital, N.Y.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>This was composed by Mr. George Kingsley in
+1833, and entitled &ldquo;Frederick&rdquo; (dedicated to the
+Rev. Frederick T. Gray). Issued first as sheet
+music, it became popular, and soon found a place
+in the hymnals. Dr. Louis Benson says of the
+<a id="png:195" name="png:195"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">195 /</span> 159</samp>
+conditions and the fancy of the time, &ldquo;The standard
+of church music did not differ materially from
+that of parlor music.... Several editors have
+attempted to put a newer tune in the place of Mr.
+Kingsley's. It was in vain, simply because words
+and melody both appeal to the same taste.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>SUN OF MY SOUL, MY SAVIOUR DEAR.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This gem from Keble's <i>Christian Year</i> illustrates
+the life and character of its pious author, and, like
+all the hymns of that celebrated collection, is an
+incitive to spiritual thought for the thoughtless, as
+well as a language for those who stand in the Holy
+of Holies.</p>
+
+<p>The Rev. John Keble was born in Caln, St. Aldwyn,
+April 25, 1792. He took his degree of A.M.
+and was ordained and settled at Fairford, where he
+began the parochial work that ceased only with his
+life. He died at Bournmouth, March 29, 1866.</p>
+
+<p>His settlement at Fairford, in charge of three
+small curacies, satisfied his modest ambition,
+though altogether they brought him only about Ł100
+per year. Here he preached, wrote his hymns and
+translations, performed his pastoral work, and
+was happy. Temptation to wider fields and larger
+salary never moved him.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The music to this hymn of almost unparalleled
+poetic and spiritual beauty was arranged from a
+<a id="png:196" name="png:196"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">196 /</span> 160</samp>
+German Choral of Peter Ritter (1760&ndash;1846) by
+William Henry Monk, Mus. Doc., born London,
+1823. Dr. Monk was a lecturer, composer, editor,
+and professor of vocal music at King's College.
+This noble tune appears sometimes under the
+name &ldquo;Hursley&rdquo; and supersedes an earlier one
+(&ldquo;Halle&rdquo;) by Thomas Hastings.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>Sun of my soul, my Saviour dear,</div>
+<div>It is not night if Thou be near.</div>
+<div>O may no earth-born cloud arise</div>
+<div>To hide Thee from Thy servants' eyes.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Abide with me from morn till eve,</div>
+<div>For without Thee I cannot live</div>
+<div>Abide with me when night is nigh,</div>
+<div>For without Thee I cannot die.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The tune &ldquo;Hursley&rdquo; is a choice example of polyphonal
+sweetness in uniform long notes of perfect
+chord.</p>
+
+<p>The tune of &ldquo;Canonbury,&rdquo; by Robert Schumann,
+set to Keble's hymn, &ldquo;New every morning
+is the love,&rdquo; is deservedly a favorite for flowing
+long metres, but it could never replace
+&ldquo;Hursley&rdquo; with &ldquo;Sun of my soul.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>DID CHRIST O'ER SINNERS WEEP?</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The Rev. Benjamin Beddome wrote this tender
+hymn-poem while pastor of the Baptist Congregation
+at Bourton-on-the-water, Gloucestershire,
+Eng. He was born at Henley, Chatwickshire, Jan.
+<a id="png:197" name="png:197"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">197 /</span> 161</samp>
+23, 1717. Settled in 1743, he remained with the
+same church till his death, Sept. 3, 1795. His
+hymns were not collected and published till 1818.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Dennis,&rdquo; a soft and smoothly modulated harmony,
+is oftenest sung to the words, and has no
+note out of sympathy with their deep feeling.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Did Christ o'er sinners weep,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And shall our cheeks be dry?</div>
+<div>Let floods of penitential grief</div>
+<div class="i1"> Burst forth from every eye.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>The Son of God in tears</div>
+<div class="i1"> Admiring angels see!</div>
+<div>Be thou astonished, O my soul;</div>
+<div class="i1"> He shed those tears for thee.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>He wept that we might weep;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Each sin demands a tear:</div>
+<div>In heaven alone no sin is found,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And there's no weeping there.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The tune of &ldquo;Dennis&rdquo; was adapted by Lowell
+Mason from Johann Georg N&auml;geli, a Swiss music
+publisher, composer and poet. He was born in
+Zurich, 1768. It is told of him that his irrepressible
+genius once tempted him to violate the ethics
+of authorship. While publishing Beethoven's three
+great solo sonatas (Opus 31) he interpolated two
+bars of his own, an act much commented upon in
+musical circles, but which does not seem to have
+cost him Beethoven's friendship. Possibly, like
+<a id="png:198" name="png:198"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">198 /</span> 162</samp>
+Murillo to the servant who meddled with his paintings,
+the great master forgave the liberty, because
+the work was so good.</p>
+
+<p>N&auml;geli's compositions are mostly vocal, for school
+and church use, though some are of a gay and playful
+nature. The best remembered of his secular and
+sacred styles are his blithe aria to the song of Moore,
+&ldquo;Life let us cherish, while yet the taper glows&rdquo;
+and the sweet choral that voices Beddome's hymn.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>MY JESUS, I LOVE THEE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The real originator of the <i>Coronation Hymnal</i>,
+a book into whose making went five years of prayer,
+was Dr. A.J. Gordon, late Pastor of the Clarendon
+St. Baptist church, Boston. While the volume was
+slowly taking form and plan he was wont to hum to
+himself, or cause to be played by one of his family,
+snatches and suggestions of new airs that came to
+him in connection with his own hymns, and
+others which seemed to have no suitable music.
+The anonymous hymn, &ldquo;My Jesus, I Love Thee,&rdquo;
+he found in a London hymn-book, and though the
+tune to which it had been sung in England was
+sent to him some time later, it did not sound sympathetic.
+Dissatisfied, and with the ideal in his
+mind of what the feeling should be in the melody
+to such a hymn, he meditated and prayed over the
+words till in a moment of inspiration the beautiful
+air sang itself to him<sup>*</sup> which with its simple concords
+has carried the hymn into the chapels of every denomination.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+The fact that this sweet melody recalls to some a similar tune sung
+sixty years ago reminds us again of the story of the tune
+&ldquo;America.&rdquo; It is not impossible that an unconscious
+<em>memory</em> helped to shape the air that came
+to Dr. Gordon's mind; though unborrowed similarities have been inevitable
+in the whole history of music.</p></div>
+
+<a id="png:199" name="png:199"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">199 /</span> 163</samp>
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>My Jesus, I love Thee, I know Thou art mine,</div>
+<div>For Thee all the pleasures of sin I resign;</div>
+<div>My gracious Redeemer, my Saviour art Thou,</div>
+<div>If ever I loved Thee, my Jesus, 'tis now.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>I will love Thee in life, I will love Thee in death,</div>
+<div>And praise Thee as long as Thou lendest me breath,</div>
+<div>And say when the death-dew lies cold on my brow,</div>
+<div>If ever I loved Thee, my Jesus, 'tis now.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>In mansions of glory and endless delight</div>
+<div>I'll ever adore Thee, unveiled to my sight,</div>
+<div>And sing, with the glittering crown on my brow,</div>
+<div>If ever I loved Thee, my Jesus, 'tis now.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The memory of the writer returns to a day in a
+railway-car en route to the great Columbian Fair in
+Chicago when the tired passengers were suddenly
+surprised and charmed by the music of this melody.
+A young Christian man and woman, husband and
+wife, had begun to sing &ldquo;My Jesus, I love Thee.&rdquo;
+Their voices (a tenor and soprano) were clear and
+sweet, and every one of the company sat up to listen
+with a look of mingled admiration and relief.
+Here was something, after all, to make a long journey
+less tedious. They sang all the four verses and
+paused. There was no clapping of hands, for a reverential
+hush had been cast over the audience by
+<a id="png:200" name="png:200"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">200 /</span> 164</samp>
+the sacred music. Instead of the inevitable applause
+that follows mere entertainment, a gentle
+but eager request for more secured the repetition of
+the delightful duet. This occurred again and again,
+till every one in the car&mdash;and some had never heard
+the tune or words before&mdash;must have learned them
+by heart. Fatigue was forgotten, miles had been
+reduced to furlongs in a weary trip, and a company
+of strangers had been lifted to a holier plane of
+thought.</p>
+
+<p>Besides this melody there are four tunes by Dr.
+Gordon in his collection, three of them with his own
+words. In all there are eleven of his hymns. Of
+these the &ldquo;Good morning in Glory,&rdquo; set to his
+music, is an emotional lyric admirable in revival
+meetings, and the one beginning &ldquo;O Holy Ghost,
+Arise&rdquo; is still sung, and called for affectionately as
+&ldquo;Gordon's Hymn.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Rev. Adoniram Judson Gordon D.D. was born
+in New Hampton, N.H., April 19, 1836, and died in
+Boston, Feb. 2d, 1895, after a life of unsurpassed
+usefulness to his fellowmen and devotion to his
+Divine Master. Like Phillips Brooks he went to his
+grave &ldquo;in all his glorious prime,&rdquo; and his loss is
+equally lamented. He was a descendant of John
+Robinson of Leyden.</p>
+
+<a id="png:201" name="png:201"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">201 /</span> 165</samp>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="chap">CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<h1>MISSIONARY HYMNS.</h1>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>JESUS SHALL REIGN WHERE'ER THE SUN.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>One of Watts' sublimest hymns, this Hebrew
+ode to the final King and His endless dominion
+expands the majestic prophesy in the seventy-second
+Psalm:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Jesus shall reign where'er the sun</div>
+<div>Does his successive journeys run,</div>
+<div>His kingdom stretch from shore to shore</div>
+<div>Till moons shall wax and wane no more.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The hymn itself could almost claim to be known
+&ldquo;where'er the sun&rdquo; etc., for Christian missionaries
+have sung it in every land, if not in every language.</p>
+
+<p>One of the native kings in the South Sea Islands,
+who had been converted through the ministry of
+English missionaries, substituted a Christian for
+a pagan constitution in 1862. There were five
+thousand of his subjects gathered at the ceremonial,
+and they joined as with one voice in singing
+this hymn.</p>
+
+<a id="png:202" name="png:202"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">202 /</span> 166</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+
+<p>&ldquo;Old Hundred&rdquo; has often lent the notes of
+its great plain-song to the sonorous lines, and
+&ldquo;Duke Street,&rdquo; with superior melody and scarcely
+inferior grandeur, has given them wings; but
+the choice of many for music that articulates the
+life of the hymn would be the tune of &ldquo;Samson,&rdquo;
+from Handel's Oratorio so named. It appears as
+No. 469 in the <i>Evangelical Hymnal</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Handel had no peer in the art or instinct of
+making a note speak a word.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>JOY TO THE WORLD! THE LORD IS COME!</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn, also by Watts, is often sung as a
+Christmas song; but &ldquo;The Saviour Reigns&rdquo; and &ldquo;He
+Rules the World&rdquo; are bursts of prophetic triumph
+always apt and stimulating in missionary meetings.</p>
+
+<p>Here, again, the great Handel lends appropriate
+aid, for &ldquo;Antioch,&rdquo; the popular tone-consort of
+the hymn, is an adaptation from his &ldquo;Messiah.&rdquo;
+The arrangement has been credited to Lowell
+Mason, but he seems to have taken it from an
+English collection by Clark of Canterbury.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>O'ER THE GLOOMY HILLS OF DARKNESS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<h4 class="quote"><i>Dros y brinian tywyl niwliog</i>.</h4>
+
+
+<p>This notable hymn was written, probably about
+1750, by the Rev. William Williams, a Welsh
+Calvinistic Methodist, born at Cefnycoed, Jan.
+<a id="png:203" name="png:203"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">203 /</span> 167</samp>
+7, 1717, near <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Llandover'">Llandovery</ins>. He began the study of
+medicine, but took deacon's orders, and was for
+a time an itinerant preacher, having left the
+established Church. Died at Pantycelyn, Jan.
+1, 1781.</p>
+
+<p>His hymn, like the two preceding, antedates
+the great Missionary Movement by many years.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O'er the gloomy hills of darkness</div>
+<div class="i1"> Look my soul! be still, and gaze!</div>
+<div>See the promises advancing</div>
+<div class="i1"> To a glorious Day of grace!</div>
+<div class="i2"> Blessed Jubilee,</div>
+<div>Let thy glorious morning dawn!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Let the dark, benighted pagan,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Let the rude barbarian see</div>
+<div>That divine and glorious conquest</div>
+<div class="i1"> Once obtained on Calvary.</div>
+<div class="i2"> Let the Gospel</div>
+<div>Loud resound from pole to pole.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This song of anticipation has dropped out of the
+modern hymnals, but the last stanza lingers in
+many memories.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Fly abroad, thou mighty Gospel!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Win and conquer, never cease;</div>
+<div>May thy lasting wide dominion</div>
+<div class="i1"> Multiply and still increase.</div>
+<div class="i2"> Sway Thy scepter,</div>
+<div>Saviour, all the world around!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+
+<p>Oftener than any other the music of &ldquo;Zion&rdquo;
+has been the expression of William Williams'
+<a id="png:204" name="png:204"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">204 /</span> 168</samp>
+Missionary Hymn. It was composed by Thomas
+Hastings, in Washington, Ct., 1830.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>HASTEN, LORD, THE GLORIOUS TIME.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Hasten, Lord, the glorious time</div>
+<div class="i1"> When beneath Messiah's sway</div>
+<div>Every nation, every clime</div>
+<div class="i1"> Shall the Gospel call obey.</div>
+<div>Mightiest kings its power shall own,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Heathen tribes His name adore,</div>
+<div>Satan and his host o'erthrown</div>
+<div class="i1"> Bound in chains shall hurt no more.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Miss Harriet Auber, the author of this melodious
+hymn, was a daughter of James Auber of London,
+and was born in that city, Oct. 4, 1773. After
+leaving London she led a secluded life at Broxbourne
+and Hoddesdon, in Hertfordshire, writing
+devotional poetry and sacred songs and paraphrases.</p>
+
+<p>Her <i>Spirit of the Psalms</i>, published in 1829,
+was a collection of lyrics founded on the Biblical
+Psalms. &ldquo;Hasten Lord,&rdquo; etc., is from Ps. 72, known
+for centuries to Christendom as one of the Messianic
+Psalms. Her best-known hymns have the
+same inspiration, as&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote"><span>
+Wide, ye heavenly gates, unfold.
+<br />
+Sweet is the work, O Lord.
+<br />
+With joy we hail the sacred day.
+</span></p>
+
+<p>Miss Auber died in Hoddesdon, Jan. 20, 1862.
+She lived to witness and sympathise with the
+pioneer missionary enterprise of the 19th century,
+<a id="png:205" name="png:205"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">205 /</span> 169</samp>
+and, although she could not stand among the
+leaders of the battle-line in extending the conquest
+of the world for Christ, she was happy in having
+written a campaign hymn which they loved to sing.
+(It is curious that so pains-taking a work as
+Julian's <i>Dictionary of Hymns and Hymn-writers</i>
+credits &ldquo;With joy we hail the sacred day&rdquo; to both
+Miss Auber and Henry Francis Lyte. Coincidences
+are known where different hymns by different
+authors begin with the same line; and in this
+case one writer was dead before the other's works
+were published. Possibly the collector may have
+seen a forgotten hymn of Lyte's, with that first line.)</p>
+
+<p>The tune that best interprets this hymn in spirit
+and in living <em>music</em> is Lowell Mason's &ldquo;Eltham.&rdquo;
+Its harmony is like a chime of bells.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>LET PARTY NAMES NO MORE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Let party names no more</div>
+<div class="i1"> The Christian world o'erspread;</div>
+<div>Gentile and Jew, and bond and free,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Are one in Christ the Head.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This hymn of Rev. Benjamin Beddome sounds
+like a prelude to the grand rally of the Christian
+Churches a generation later for united advance
+into foreign fields. It was an after-sermon hymn&mdash;like
+so many of Watts and Doddridge&mdash;and
+spoke a good man's longing to see all sects stand
+shoulder to shoulder in a common crusade.</p>
+
+<p>Tune&mdash;Boylston.</p>
+
+<a id="png:206" name="png:206"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">206 /</span> 170</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WATCHMAN, TELL US OF THE NIGHT.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The tune written to this pealing hymn of Sir
+John Bowring by Lowell Mason has never been
+superseded. In animation and vocal splendor
+it catches the author's own clear call, echoing the
+shout of Zion's sentinels from city to city, and
+happily reproducing in movement and phrase the
+great song-dialogue. Words and music together,
+the piece ranks with the foremost missionary
+lyrics. Like the greater Mason-Heber world-song,
+it has acquired no arbitrary name, appearing
+in Mason's own tune-books under its first hymn-line
+and likewise in many others. A few hymnals
+have named it &ldquo;Bowring,&rdquo; (and why not?) and
+some later ones simply &ldquo;Watchman.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i3">1.</div>
+<div>Watchman, tell us of the night.</div>
+<div class="i1"> What its signs of promise are!</div>
+<div class="i2"> (Antistrophe)</div>
+<div>Traveler, on yon mountain height.</div>
+<div class="i1"> See that glory-beaming star!</div>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i3">2</div>
+<div>Watchman, does its beauteous ray</div>
+<div class="i1"> Aught of hope or joy foretell?</div>
+<div class="i2"> (Antistrophe)</div>
+<div>Trav'ler, yes; it brings the day,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Promised day of Israel.</div>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i3">3</div>
+<div>Watchman, tell us of the night;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Higher yet that star ascends.</div>
+<div class="i2"> (Antistrophe)</div>
+<a id="png:207" name="png:207"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">207 /</span> 171</samp>
+<div>Trav'ler, blessedness and light</div>
+<div class="i1"> Peace and truth its course portends.</div>
+</div>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i3">4</div>
+<div>Watchman, will its beams alone</div>
+<div class="i1"> Gild the spot that gave them birth?</div>
+<div class="i2"> (Antistrophe)</div>
+<div>Trav'ler, ages are its own.</div>
+<div class="i1"> See! it bursts o'er all the earth.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>YE CHRISTIAN HERALDS, GO PROCLAIM.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>In some versions &ldquo;Ye Christian <em>heroes</em>,&rdquo; etc.</p>
+
+<p>Professor David R. Breed attributes this stirring
+hymn to Mrs. Vokes (or Voke) an English or
+Welsh lady, who is supposed to have written it
+somewhere near 1780, and supports the claim by
+its date of publication in <i>Missionary and Devotional
+Hymns</i> at Portsea, Wales, in 1797. In
+this Dr. Breed follows (he says) &ldquo;the accepted
+tradition.&rdquo; On the other hand the <i>Coronation
+Hymnal</i> (1894) refers the authorship to a Baptist
+minister, the Rev. Bourne Hall Draper, of Southampton
+(Eng.), born 1775, and this choice has the
+approval of Dr. Charles Robinson. The question
+occurs whether, when the hymn was published in
+good faith as Mrs. Vokes', it was really the work
+of a then unknown youth of twenty-two.</p>
+
+<p>The probability is that the hymn owns a mother
+instead of a father&mdash;and a grand hymn it is; one
+of the most stimulating in Missionary song-literature.</p>
+
+<p>The stanza&mdash;</p>
+
+<a id="png:208" name="png:208"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">208 /</span> 172</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>God shield you with a wall of fire!</div>
+<div>With flaming zeal your breasts inspire;</div>
+<div>Bid raging winds their fury cease,</div>
+<div>And hush the tumult into peace,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;has been tampered with by editors, altering the
+last line to &ldquo;Calm the troubled seas,&rdquo; etc., (for the
+sake of the longer vowel;) but the substitution,
+&ldquo;<em>He'll</em> shield you,&rdquo; etc., in the first line, turns a
+prayer into a mere statement.</p>
+
+<p>The hymn was&mdash;and should remain&mdash;a God-speed
+to men like William Carey, who had already
+begun to think and preach his immortal motto,
+&ldquo;Attempt great things for God; expect great things
+of God.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE</h4>
+
+<p class="runon">Is the &ldquo;Missionary Chant,&rdquo; and no other. Its
+composer, Heinrich Christopher Zeuner, was born
+in Eisleben, Saxony, Sept. 20, 1795. He came to
+the United States in 1827, and was for many
+years organist at Park Street Church, Boston, and
+for the Handel and Haydn Society. In 1854 he
+removed to Philadelphia where he served three
+years as organist to St. Andrews Church, and Arch
+Street Presbyterian. He became insane in 1857, and
+in November of that year died by his own hand.</p>
+
+<p>He published an oratorio &ldquo;The Feast of Tabernacles,&rdquo;
+and two popular books, the <i>American
+Harp,</i> 1832, and <i>The Ancient Lyre</i>, 1833. His
+compositions are remarkably spirited and vigorous,
+and his work as a tune-maker was much
+<a id="png:209" name="png:209"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">209 /</span> 173</samp>
+in demand during his life, and is sure to continue,
+in its best examples, as long as good sacred music
+is appreciated.</p>
+
+<p>To another beautiful missionary hymn of Mrs.
+Vokes, of quieter tone, but songful and sweet,
+Dr. Mason wrote the tune of &ldquo;Migdol.&rdquo; It is its
+musical twin.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Soon may the last glad song arise</div>
+<div>Through all the millions of the skies.</div>
+<div>That song of triumph which records</div>
+<div>That &ldquo;all the earth is now the Lord's.&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>ON THE MOUNTAIN TOP APPEARING.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This admired and always popular church hymn
+was written near the beginning of the last century
+by the Rev. Thomas Kelly, born in Dublin, 1760.
+He was the son of the Hon. Chief Baron Thomas
+Kelly of that city, a judge of the Irish Court of
+Common Pleas. His father designed him for the
+legal profession, but after his graduation at
+Trinity College he took holy orders in the Episcopal
+Church, and labored as a clergyman among the
+scenes of his youth for more than sixty years,
+becoming a Nonconformist in his later ministry.
+He was a sweet-souled man, who made troops of
+friends, and was honored as much for his piety as
+for his poetry, music, and oriental learning.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I expect never to die,&rdquo; he said, when Lord
+Plunkett once told him he would reach a great age.
+He finished his earthly work on the 14th of May,
+<a id="png:210" name="png:210"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">210 /</span> 174</samp>
+1855, when he was eighty-five years old. But he
+still lives. His zeal for the coming of the Kingdom
+of Christ prompted his best hymn.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>On the mountain-top appearing,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Lo! the sacred herald stands,</div>
+<div>Joyful news to Zion bearing,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Zion long in hostile lands;</div>
+<div class="i2"> Mourning captive,</div>
+<div>God himself will loose thy bands.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Has the night been long and mournful?</div>
+<div class="i1"> Have thy friends unfaithful proved?</div>
+<div>Have thy foes been proud and scornful,</div>
+<div class="i1"> By thy sighs and tears unmoved?</div>
+<div class="i2"> Cease thy mourning;</div>
+<div>Zion still is well beloved.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+
+<p title="Illustration of Reginald Heber originally opposite">To presume that
+Kelly made both words and
+music together is possible, for he was himself a
+composer, but no such original tune seems to
+survive. In modern use Dr. Hastings' &ldquo;Zion&rdquo; is
+most frequently attached to the hymn, and was
+probably written for it.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>YE CHRISTIAN HEROES, WAKE TO GLORY.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This rather crude parody on the &ldquo;<ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'Marsellaise'">Marseillaise</ins>
+Hymn&rdquo; (see <a href="#png:379">Chap. 9</a>) is printed in the <i>American
+Vocalist,</i> among numerous samples of early New
+England psalmody of untraced authorship. It
+might have been sung at primitive missionary
+meetings, to spur the zeal and faith of a Francis
+<a id="png:213" name="png:213"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">213 /</span> 175</samp>
+Mason or a Harriet Newell. It expresses, at least,
+the new-kindled evangelical spirit of the long-ago
+consecrations in American church life that first
+sent the Christian ambassadors to foreign lands,
+and followed them with benedictions.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Ye Christian heroes, wake to glory:</div>
+<div class="i1"> Hark, hark! what millions bid you rise!</div>
+<div>See heathen nations bow before you,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Behold their tears, and hear their cries.</div>
+<div>Shall pagan priest, their errors breeding,</div>
+<div class="i1"> With darkling hosts, and flags unfurled,</div>
+<div>Spread their delusions o'er the world,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Though Jesus on the Cross hung bleeding?</div>
+<div class="i3"> To arms! To arms!</div>
+<div class="i2"> Christ's banner fling abroad!</div>
+<div>March on! March on! all hearts resolved</div>
+<div class="i1"> To bring the world to God.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>O, Truth of God! can man resign thee,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Once having felt thy glorious flame?</div>
+<div>Can rolling oceans e'er prevent thee,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Or gold the Christian's spirit tame?</div>
+<div>Too long we slight the world's undoing;</div>
+<div class="i1"> The word of God, salvation's plan,</div>
+<div>Is yet almost unknown to man,</div>
+<div class="i1"> While millions throng the road to ruin.</div>
+<div class="i3"> To arms! to arms!</div>
+<div class="i1"> The Spirit's sword unsheath:</div>
+<div>March on! March on! all hearts resolved,</div>
+<div class="i2"> To victory or death.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>HAIL TO THE LORD'S ANOINTED.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>James Montgomery (says Dr. Breed) is &ldquo;distinguished
+as the only layman besides Cowper
+<a id="png:214" name="png:214"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">214 /</span> 176</samp>
+among hymn-writers of the front rank in the
+English language.&rdquo; How many millions have
+recited and sung his fine and exhaustively descriptive
+poem,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+Prayer is the soul's sincere desire,
+</p>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;selections from almost any part of which are
+perfect definitions, and have been standard hymns
+on prayer for three generations. English Hymnology
+would as unwillingly part with his missionary
+hymns,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote"><span>
+The king of glory we proclaim.
+<br />
+Hark, the song of jubilee!
+</span></p>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and, noblest of all, the lyric of prophecy and
+praise which heads this paragraph.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Hail to the Lord's anointed,</div>
+<div class="i1"> King David's greater Son!</div>
+<div>Hail, in the time appointed</div>
+<div class="i1"> His reign on earth begun.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Arabia's desert ranger</div>
+<div class="i1"> To Him shall bow the knee,</div>
+<div>The Ethiopian stranger</div>
+<div class="i1"> His glory come to see.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Kings shall fall down before Him</div>
+<div class="i1"> And gold and incense bring;</div>
+<div>All nations shall adore Him,</div>
+<div class="i1"> His praise all people sing.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The hymn is really the seventy-second Psalm
+in metre, and as a version it suffers nothing by
+<a id="png:215" name="png:215"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">215 /</span> 177</samp>
+comparison with that of Watts. Montgomery
+wrote it as a Christmas ode. It was sung Dec.
+25, 1821, at a Moravian Convocation, but in 1822
+he recited it at a great missionary meeting in
+Liverpool, and Dr. Adam Clarke was so charmed
+with it that he inserted it in his famous <i>Commentary</i>.
+In no long time afterwards it found its
+way into general use.</p>
+
+<p>The spirit of his missionary parents was Montgomery's
+Christian legacy, and in exalted poetical
+moments it stirred him as the divine afflatus kindled
+the old prophets.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+
+<p>The music editors in some hymnals have borrowed
+the favorite choral variously named &ldquo;Webb&rdquo;
+in honor of its author, and &ldquo;The Morning Light
+is Breaking&rdquo; from the first line of its hymn.
+Later hymnals have chosen Sebastian Wesley's
+&ldquo;Aurelia&rdquo; to fit the hymn, with a movement similar
+to that of &ldquo;Webb&rdquo;; also a German B flat
+melody &ldquo;Ellacombe,&rdquo; undated, with livelier step
+and a ringing chime of parts. No one of these
+is inappropriate.</p>
+
+<p>Samuel Sebastian Wesley, grandson of Charles
+Wesley the great hymnist, was born in London,
+1810. Like his father, Samuel, he became a
+distinguished musician, and was organist at
+Exeter, Winchester and Gloucester Cathedrals.
+Oxford gave him the degree of Doctor of Music.
+<a id="png:216" name="png:216"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">216 /</span> 178</samp>
+He composed instrumental melodies besides many
+anthems, services, and other sacred pieces for
+choir and congregational singing. Died in Gloucester,
+April 19, 1876.</p>
+
+<a id="png:211" name="png:211"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">211 /</span> opp 174</samp>
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of Bishop Heber">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus10" name="Illus10"
+ ><img src="images/illus10-reginaldheber-cameo.jpg" alt=
+ "Bishop Reginald Heber" width="213" height="260" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>The Right Rev. Reginald Heber, D.D.</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>FROM GREENLAND'S ICY MOUNTAINS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The familiar story of this hymn scarcely needs
+repeating; how one Saturday afternoon in the
+year 1819, young Reginald Heber, Rector of
+Hodnet, sitting with his father-in-law, Dean
+Shipley, and a few friends in the Wrexham
+Vicarage, was suddenly asked by the Dean to
+&ldquo;write something to sing at the missionary meeting
+tomorrow,&rdquo; and retired to another part of the room
+while the rest went on talking; how, very soon after,
+he returned with three stanzas, which were hailed
+with delighted approval; how he then insisted
+upon adding another octrain to the hymn and
+came back with&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Waft, waft, ye winds, His story,</div>
+<div>And you, ye waters, roll;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and how the great lyric was sung in Wrexham
+Church on Sunday morning for the first time in its
+life. The story is old but always fresh. Nothing
+could better have emphasized the good Dean's
+sermon that day in aid of &ldquo;The Society for the
+Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts,&rdquo; than
+that unexpected and glorious lyric of his poet son-in-law.</p>
+
+<a id="png:217" name="png:217"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">217 /</span> 179</samp>
+
+<p>By common consent Heber's &ldquo;Missionary Hymn&rdquo;
+is the silver trumpet among all the rallying bugles
+of the church.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+
+<p>The union of words and music in this instance
+is an example of spiritual affinity. &ldquo;What God
+hath joined together let no man put asunder.&rdquo;
+The story of the tune is a record of providential
+birth quite as interesting as that of the hymn. In
+1823, a lady in Savannah, Ga., having received
+and admired a copy of Heber's lyric from England,
+desired to sing it or hear it sung, but knew no
+music to fit the metre. She finally thought of a
+young clerk in a bank close by, Lowell Mason by
+name, who sometimes wrote music for recreation,
+and sent her son to ask him if he would make a
+tune that would sing the lines. The boy returned
+in half an hour with the composition that doubled
+Heber's fame and made his own.</p>
+
+<p>In the words of Dr. Charles Robinson, &ldquo;Like
+the hymn it voices, it was done at a stroke, and
+it will last through the ages.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>THE MORNING LIGHT IS BREAKING.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Not far behind Dr. Heber's <i>chef-d'&oelig;uvre</i> in
+lyric merit is the still more famous missionary
+hymn of Dr. S.F. Smith, author of &ldquo;My Country,
+'Tis of Thee.&rdquo; Another missionary hymn of his
+which is widely used is&mdash;</p>
+
+<a id="png:218" name="png:218"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">218 /</span> 180</samp>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Yes, my native land, I love thee,</div>
+<div> All thy scenes, I love them well.</div>
+<div>Friends, connections, happy country,</div>
+<div> Can I bid you all farewell?</div>
+<div class="i2"> Can I leave you</div>
+<div>Far in heathen lands to dwell?</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Drs. Nutter and Breed speak of &ldquo;The Morning
+Light is Breaking,&rdquo; and its charm as a hymn of
+peace and promise, and intimate that it has &ldquo;gone
+farther and been more frequently sung than any
+other missionary hymn.&rdquo; Besides the English,
+there are versions of it in four Latin nations, the
+Italian, Spanish, Portuguese and French, and
+oriental translations in Chinese and several East
+Indian tongues and dialects, as well as one in
+Swedish. It author had the rare felicity, while on
+a visit to his son, a missionary in Burmah, of
+hearing it sung by native Christians in their language,
+and of being welcomed with an ovation
+when they knew who he was.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The morning light is breaking!</div>
+<div class="i1"> The darkness disappears;</div>
+<div>The sons of earth are waking</div>
+<div class="i1"> To penitential tears;</div>
+<div>Each breeze that sweeps the ocean</div>
+<div class="i1"> Brings tidings from afar,</div>
+<div>Of nations in commotion,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Prepared for Zion's war.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Rich dews of grace come o'er us</div>
+<div class="i1"> In many a gentle shower,</div>
+<div>And brighter scenes before us</div>
+<div class="i1"> Are opening every hour.</div>
+<a id="png:219" name="png:219"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">219 /</span> 181</samp>
+<div>Each cry to heaven going</div>
+<div class="i1"> Abundant answer brings,</div>
+<div>And heavenly gales are blowing</div>
+<div class="i1"> With peace upon their wings.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Blest river of Salvation,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Pursue thy onward way;</div>
+<div>Flow thou to every nation,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Nor in thy richness stay.</div>
+<div>Stay not till all the lowly</div>
+<div class="i1"> Triumphant reach their home;</div>
+<div>Stay not till all the holy</div>
+<div class="i1">Proclaim, &ldquo;The Lord is come!&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Samuel Francis Smith, D.D., was born in
+Boston in 1808, and educated in Harvard University
+(1825&ndash;1829). He prepared for the ministry,
+and was pastor of Baptist churches at Waterville,
+Me., and Newton, Mass., before entering the
+service of the American Baptist Missionary union
+as editor of its <i>Missionary Magazine</i>.</p>
+
+<p>He was a scholarly and graceful writer, both in
+verse and prose, and besides his editorial work,
+he was frequently an invited participant or guest
+of honor on public occasions, owing to his fame
+as author of the national hymn. His pure and gentle
+character made him everywhere beloved and
+reverenced, and to know him intimately in his
+happy old age was a benediction. He died suddenly
+and painlessly in his seat on a railway train,
+November 16, 1895 in his eighty-eighth year.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Smith wrote twenty-six hymns now more or
+<a id="png:220" name="png:220"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">220 /</span> 182</samp>
+less in use in church worship, and eight for Sabbath
+school collections.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+
+<p>&ldquo;Millennial Dawn&rdquo; is the title given it by a Boston
+compiler, about 1844, but since the music and
+hymn became &ldquo;one and indivisable&rdquo; it has been
+named &ldquo;Webb,&rdquo; and popularly <em>known</em> as &ldquo;Morning
+Light&rdquo; or oftener still by its first hymn-line,
+&ldquo;The morning light is breaking.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>George James Webb was born near Salisbury,
+Wiltshire, Eng., June 24, 1803. He studied music
+in Salisbury and for several years played the
+organ at Falmouth Church. When still a young
+man (1830), he came to the United States, and
+settled in Boston where he was long the leading
+organist and music teacher of the city. He was
+associate director of the Boston Academy of Music
+with Lowell Mason, and joint author and editor
+with him of several church-music collections. Died
+in Orange, N.J., Nov. 7, 1887.</p>
+
+<a id="png:229" name="png:229"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">229 /</span> opp 190</samp>
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of George James Webb">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus11" name="Illus11"
+ ><img src="images/illus11-georgejameswebb-cameo.jpg" alt=
+ "George James Webb" width="214" height="307" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>George James Webb</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+<p>Dr. Webb's own account of the tune &ldquo;Millennial
+Dawn&rdquo; states that he wrote it at sea while on
+his way to America&mdash;and to secular words and
+that he had no idea who first adapted it to the
+hymn, nor when.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>IF I WERE A VOICE, A PERSUASIVE VOICE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This animating lyric was written by Charles
+Mackay. Sung by a good vocalist, the fine solo
+air composed (with its organ chords) by I.B.
+Woodbury, is still a feature in some missionary
+meetings, especially the fourth stanza&mdash;</p>
+<a id="png:221" name="png:221"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">221 /</span> 183</samp>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>If I were a voice, an immortal voice,</div>
+<div class="i1"> I would fly the earth around:</div>
+<div>And wherever man to his idols bowed,<br /></div>
+<div>I'd publish in notes both long and loud</div>
+<div class="i1"> The Gospel's joyful sound.</div>
+<div>I would fly, I would fly, on the wings of day,<br /></div>
+<div>Proclaiming peace on my world-wide way,<br /></div>
+<div>Bidding the saddened earth rejoice&mdash;<br /></div>
+<div>If I were a voice, an immortal voice,</div>
+<div class="i1"> I would fly, I would fly,</div>
+<div>I would fly on the wings of day.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Charles Mackay, the poet, was born in Perth,
+Scotland, 1814, and educated in London and
+Brussels; was engaged in editorial work on the
+<i>London Morning Chronicle</i> and <i>Glasgow Argus</i>,
+and during the Corn Law agitation wrote popular
+songs, notably &ldquo;The Voice of the Crowd&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;There's a Good Time Coming,&rdquo; which (like the
+far inferior poetry of Ebenezer Elliot) won the lasting
+love of the masses for a superior man who could
+be &ldquo;The People's Singer and Friend.&rdquo; He came
+to the United States in 1857 as a lecturer, and
+again in 1862, remaining three years as war
+correspondent of the <i>London Times</i>. Glasgow
+University made him LL.D. in 1847. His numerous
+songs and poems were collected in a London
+edition. Died Dec. 24, 1889.</p>
+
+<p>Isaac Baker Woodbury was born in Beverly,
+Mass., 1819, and rose from the station of a blacksmith's
+apprentice to be a tone-teacher in the
+church. He educated himself in Europe, returned
+<a id="png:222" name="png:222"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">222 /</span> 184</samp>
+and sang his life songs, and died in 1858 at the
+age of thirty-nine.</p>
+
+<p>A tune preferred by many as the finer music is
+the one written to the words by Mr. Sankey,
+<i>Sacred Songs</i>, No. 2.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>SPEED AWAY! SPEED AWAY!</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This inspiriting song of farewell to departing
+missionaries was written in 1890 to Woodbury's
+appropriate popular melody by Fanny J. Crosby,
+at the request of Ira D. Sankey. The key-word
+and refrain are adapted from the original song by
+Woodbury (1848), but in substance and language
+the three hymn-stanzas are the new and
+independent work of this later writer.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Speed away! speed away on your mission of light,</div>
+<div>To the lands that are lying in darkness and night;</div>
+<div>'Tis the Master's command; go ye forth in His name,</div>
+<div>The wonderful gospel of Jesus proclaim;</div>
+<div>Take your lives in your hand, to the work while 'tis day,</div>
+<div>Speed away! speed away! speed away!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Speed away, speed away with the life-giving Word,</div>
+<div>To the nations that know not the voice of the Lord;</div>
+<div>Take the wings of the morning and fly o'er the wave,</div>
+<div>In the strength of your Master the lost ones to save;</div>
+<div>He is calling once more, not a moment's delay,</div>
+<div>Speed away! speed away! speed away!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Speed away, speed away with the message of rest,</div>
+<div>To the souls by the tempter in bondage oppressed;</div>
+<div>For the Saviour has purchased their ransom from sin,</div>
+<a id="png:223" name="png:223"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">223 /</span> 185</samp>
+<div>And the banquet is ready. O gather them in;</div>
+<div>To the rescue make haste, there's no time for delay,</div>
+<div>Speed away! speed away! speed away!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>ONWARD CHRISTIAN SOLDIERS!</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Rev. Sabine Baring-Gould, the author of this
+rousing hymn of Christian warfare, a rector of the
+Established Church of England and a writer of
+note, was born at Exeter, Eng., Jan. 28, 1834.
+Educated at Clare College, Cambridge, he entered
+the service of the church, and was appointed
+Rector of East Mersea, Essex, in 1871. He was
+the author of several hymns, original and translated,
+and introduced into England from Flanders,
+numbers of carols with charming old Christmas
+music. The &ldquo;Christian Soldiers&rdquo; hymn is one of his
+(original) processionals, and the most inspiring.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>Onward, Christian soldiers,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Marching as to war,</div>
+<div>With the cross of Jesus</div>
+<div class="i1"> Going on before.</div>
+<div>Christ the Royal Master</div>
+<div>Leads against the foe;</div>
+<div>Forward into battle,</div>
+<div class="i1"> See, His banners go!</div>
+<div class="i2"> Onward, Christian soldiers, etc.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Like a mighty army</div>
+<div class="i1"> Moves the Church of God;</div>
+<div>Brothers, we are treading</div>
+<div class="i1"> Where the saints have trod;</div>
+<a id="png:224" name="png:224"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">224 /</span> 186</samp>
+<div>We are not divided,</div>
+<div class="i1"> All one body we,</div>
+<div>One in hope, in doctrine,</div>
+<div class="i1"> One in charity.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Sir Arthur Seymour Sullivan, Doctor of Music,
+who wrote the melody for this hymn, was born in
+London, May 13, 1842. He gained the Mendelssohn
+Scholarship at the Royal Academy of
+Music, and also at the Conservatory of Leipsic.
+He was a fertile genius, and his compositions included
+operettas, symphonies, overtures, anthems,
+hymn-tunes, an oratorio (&ldquo;The Prodigal Son&rdquo;),
+and almost every variety of tone production, vocal
+and instrumental. Queen Victoria knighted him
+in 1883.</p>
+
+<p>The grand rhythm of &ldquo;Onward, Christian
+Soldiers&rdquo;&mdash;hymn and tune&mdash;is irresistible whether
+in band march or congregational worship. Sir
+Arthur died in London, November 22, 1900.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>O CHURCH ARISE AND SING</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Designed originally for children's voices, the
+hymn of five stanzas beginning with this line was
+written by Hezekiah Butterworth, author of the
+<i>Story of the Hymns</i> (1875), <i>Story</i>
+<!-- HTMLTidy complains about an "ins" inside an "i", hence the
+ multiple italic tags -->
+<ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'oft he'"><i>of the</i></ins>
+<i>Tunes</i> (1890), and many popular books of historic
+interest for the young, the most widely read of
+which is <i>Zigzag Journeys in Many Lands</i>. He
+<a id="png:225" name="png:225"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">225 /</span> 187</samp>
+also composed and published many poems and
+hymns. He was born in Warren, R.I., Dec. 22,
+1839, and for twenty-five years was connected
+with the <i>Youth's Companion</i> as regular contributor
+and member of its editorial staff. He died in
+Warren, R.I., Sept. 5, 1905.</p>
+
+<p>The hymn &ldquo;O Church, arise&rdquo; was sung in
+Mason's tune of &ldquo;Dort&rdquo; until Prof. Case wrote a
+melody for it, when it took the name of the &ldquo;Convention
+Hymn.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Professor Charles Clinton Case, music composer
+and teacher, was born in Linesville, Pa., June,
+1843. Was a pupil of George F. Root and pursued
+musical study in Chicago, Ill., Ashland, O., and
+South Bend, Ind. He was associated with Root,
+McGranahan, and others in making secular and
+church music books, and later with D.L. Moody
+in evangelical work.</p>
+
+<p>As author and compiler he has published numerous
+works, among them <i>Church Anthems</i>, the <i>Harvest
+Song</i> and <i>Case's Chorus Collection</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O Church! arise and sing</div>
+<div>The triumphs of your King,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Whose reign is love;</div>
+<div>Sing your enlarged desires,</div>
+<div>That conquering faith inspires,</div>
+<div>Renew your signal fires,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And forward move!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Beneath the glowing arch</div>
+<div>The ransomed armies march,</div>
+<div class="i1"> We follow on;</div>
+<a id="png:226" name="png:226"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">226 /</span> 188</samp>
+<div>Lead on, O cross of Light,</div>
+<div>From conquering height to height,</div>
+<div>And add new victories bright</div>
+<div class="i1"> To triumphs won!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>THE BANNER OF IMMANUEL!</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn, set to music and copyrighted in
+Buffalo as a floating waif of verse by an unknown
+author, and used in Sunday-school work, first
+appeared in Dr. F.N. Peloubet's <i>Select Songs</i>
+(Biglow and Main, 1884) with a tune by Rev.
+George Phipps.</p>
+
+<p>The hymn was written by Rev. Theron Brown,
+a Baptist minister, who was pastor (1859&ndash;1870) of
+churches in South Framingham and Canton, Mass.
+He was born in Willimantic, Ct., April 29, 1832.</p>
+
+<p>Retired from pastoral work, owing to vocal
+disability, he has held contributory and editorial
+relations with the <i>Youth's Companion</i> for more
+than forty years, for the last twenty years a member
+of the office staff.</p>
+
+<p>Between 1880 and 1890 he contributed hymns
+more or less regularly to the quartet and antiphonal
+chorus service at the Ruggles St. Church,
+Boston, the &ldquo;Banner of Immanuel&rdquo; being one of the
+number. <i>The Blount Family</i>, <i>Nameless Women of
+the Bible</i>, <i>Life Songs</i> (a volume of poems), and several
+books for boys, are among his published works.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn wide">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The banner of Immanuel! beneath its glorious folds</div>
+<div>For life or death to serve and fight we pledge our loyal souls.</div>
+<a id="png:227" name="png:227"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">227 /</span> 189</samp>
+<div>No other flag such honor boasts, or bears so proud a name,</div>
+<div>And far its red-cross signal flies as flies the lightning's flame.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i3">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Salvation by the blood of Christ! the shouts of triumph ring;</div>
+<div>No other watchword leads the host that serves so grand a King.</div>
+<div>Then rally, soldiers of the Cross! Keep every fold unfurled,</div>
+<div>And by Redemption's holy sign we'll conquer all the world.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The Rev. George Phipps, composer of the tune,
+&ldquo;Immanuel's Banner,&rdquo; was born in Franklin,
+Mass., Dec. 11, 1838, was graduated at Amherst
+College, 1862, and at Andover Theological Seminary,
+1865. Settled as pastor of the Congregational
+Church in Wellesley, Mass., ten years, and at
+Newton Highlands fifteen years.</p>
+
+<p>He has written many Sunday-school melodies,
+notably the music to &ldquo;My Saviour Keeps Me Company.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<a id="png:228" name="png:228"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">228 /</span> 190</samp>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="chap">CHAPTER V.</h2>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h1>HYMNS OF SUFFERING AND
+TRUST.</h1>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<p>One inspiring chapter in the compensations of
+life is the record of immortal verses that were
+sorrow-born. It tells us in the most affecting way
+how affliction refines the spirit and &ldquo;the agonizing
+throes of thought bring forth glory.&rdquo; Often a broken
+life has produced a single hymn. It took the long
+living under trial to shape the supreme experience.</p>
+
+<p class="ctrhymn"><span>
+&mdash;The anguish of the singer<br />
+Made the sweetness of the song.
+</span></p>
+
+<p title="Illustration of George James Webb originally opposite">Indeed,
+if there had been no sorrow there would have been no song.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>MY LORD, HOW FULL OF SWEET CONTENT.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Jeanne M.B. de la Mothe&mdash;known always as
+Madame Guyon&mdash;the lady who wrote these words
+in exile, probably sang more &ldquo;songs in the night&rdquo;
+than any hymn-writer outside of the Dark Ages.
+She was born at Montargis, France, in 1648, and
+<a id="png:231" name="png:231"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">231 /</span> 191</samp>
+died in her seventieth year, 1771, in the ancient
+city of Blois, on the Loire.</p>
+
+<p>A convent-educated girl of high family, a wife at
+the age of fifteen, and a widow at twenty-eight,
+her early piety, ridiculed in the dazzling but corrupt
+society of Louis XIV's time, blossomed through
+a long life in religious ministries and flowers of
+sacred poetry.</p>
+
+<p>She became a mystic, and her book <i>Spiritual
+Torrents</i> indicates the impetuous ardors of her
+soul. It was the way Divine Love came to her.
+She was the incarnation of the spiritualized Book
+of Canticles. An induction to these intense subjective
+visions and raptures had been the remark
+of a pious old Franciscan father, &ldquo;Seek God in
+your heart, and you will find Him.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She began to teach as well as enjoy the new
+light so different from the glitter of the traditional
+worship. But her &ldquo;aggressive holiness&rdquo; was obnoxious
+to the established Church. &ldquo;Quietism&rdquo; was
+the brand set upon her written works and the
+offense that was punished in her person. Bossuet,
+the king of preachers, was her great adversary.
+The saintly Fenelon was her friend, but he could
+not shield her. She was shut up like a lunatic in
+prison after prison, till, after four years of dungeon
+life in the Bastile, expecting every hour to be executed
+for heresy, she was banished to a distant
+province to end her days.</p>
+
+<p>Question as we may the usefulness of her pietistic
+books, the visions of her excessively exalted
+<a id="png:232" name="png:232"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">232 /</span> 192</samp>
+moods, and the passionate, almost erotic phraseology
+of her <i>Contemplations</i>, Madame Guyon has
+held the world's admiration for her martyr spirit,
+and even her love-flights of devotion in poetry and
+prose do not conceal the angel that walked in the
+flame.</p>
+
+<p>Today, when religious persecution is unknown,
+we can but dimly understand the perfect triumph
+of her superior soul under suffering and the transports
+of her utter absorption in God that could
+make the stones of her dungeon &ldquo;look like jewels.&rdquo;
+When we emulate a faith like hers&mdash;with all the
+weight of absolute certainty in it&mdash;we can sing her
+hymn:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>My Lord, how full of sweet content</div>
+<div>I pass my years of banishment.</div>
+<div>Where'er I dwell, I dwell with Thee,</div>
+<div>In heaven or earth, or on the sea.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>To me remains nor place nor time:</div>
+<div>My country is in every clime;</div>
+<div>I can be calm and free from care</div>
+<div>On any shore, since God is there.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>And could a dearer <i>vade mecum</i> enrich a Christian's
+outfit than these lines treasured in memory?</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>While place we seek or place we shun,</div>
+<div>The soul finds happiness in none;</div>
+<div>But, with a God to guide our way,</div>
+<div>'Tis equal joy to go or stay.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Cowper, and also Dr. Thomas Upham, translated
+(from the French) the religious poems of Madame
+Guyon. This hymn is Cowper's translation.</p>
+
+<a id="png:233" name="png:233"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">233 /</span> 193</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>A gentle and sympathetic melody entitled &ldquo;Alsace&rdquo;
+well represents the temper of the words&mdash;and
+in name links the nationalities of writer and
+composer. It is a choral arranged from a sonata
+of the great Ludwig von Beethoven, born in
+Bonn, Germany, 1770, and died in Vienna, Mar.
+1827. Like the author of the hymn he felt the
+hand of affliction, becoming totally deaf soon after
+his fortieth year. But, in spite of the privation, he
+kept on writing sublime and exquisite strains
+that only his soul could hear. His fame rests upon
+his oratorio, &ldquo;The Mount of Olives,&rdquo; the opera
+of &ldquo;Fidelio&rdquo; and his nine wonderful &ldquo;Symphonies.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>NO CHANGE IN TIME SHALL EVER SHOCK.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Altered to common metre from the awkward
+long metre of Tate and Brady, the three or four
+stanzas found in earlier hymnals are part of their
+version (probably Tate's) of the 31st Psalm&mdash;and
+it is worth calling to mind here that there is no
+hymn treasury so rich in tuneful faith and reliance
+upon God in trouble as the Book of Psalms. This
+feeling of the Hebrew poet was never better expressed
+(we might say, translated) in English than
+by the writer of this single verse&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>No change of time shall ever shock</div>
+<div class="i1"> My trust, O Lord, in Thee,</div>
+<a id="png:234" name="png:234"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">234 /</span> 194</samp>
+<div>For Thou hast always been my Rock,</div>
+<div class="i1"> A sure defense to me.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The sweet, tranquil choral long ago wedded
+to this hymn is lost from the church collections,
+and its very name forgotten. In fact the hymn
+itself is now seldom seen. If it ever comes back,
+old &ldquo;Dundee&rdquo; (Guillaume Franc 1500&ndash;1570) will
+sing for it, or some new composer may rise up to put
+the spirit of the psalm into inspired notes.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WHY DO WE MOURN DEPARTED FRIENDS?</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn of holy comfort, by Dr. Watts, was
+long associated with a remarkable tune in C
+minor, &ldquo;a queer medley of melody&rdquo; as Lowell
+Mason called it, still familiar to many old people
+as &ldquo;China.&rdquo; It was composed by Timothy Swan
+when he was about twenty-six years of age (1784)
+and published in 1801 in the <i>New England Harmony.</i>
+It may have sounded consolatory to mature
+mourners, singers and hearers in the days when
+religious emotion habitually took a sad key, but
+its wild and thrilling chords made children weep.
+The tune is long out of use&mdash;though, strange to
+say, one of the most recent hymnals prints the
+hymn with a <em>new minor</em> tune.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Why do we mourn departed friends,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Or shake at death's alarms?</div>
+<a id="png:235" name="png:235"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">235 /</span> 195</samp>
+<div>'Tis but the voice that Jesus sends</div>
+<div class="i1"> To call them to His arms.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Are we not tending upward too</div>
+<div class="i1"> As fast as time can move?</div>
+<div>Nor should we wish the hours more slow</div>
+<div class="i1"> To keep us from our Love.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>The graves of all His saints He blessed</div>
+<div class="i1"> And softened every bed:</div>
+<div>Where should the dying members rest</div>
+<div class="i1"> But with their dying Head?</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Timothy Swan was born in Worcester, Mass.,
+July 23, 1758, and died in Suffield, Ct., July 23,
+1842. He was a self-taught musician, his only
+&ldquo;course of study&rdquo; lasting three weeks,&mdash;in a country
+singing school at Groton. When sixteen years
+old he went to Northfield, Mass., and learned the
+hatter's trade, and while at work began to practice
+making psalm-tunes. &ldquo;Montague,&rdquo; in two parts,
+was his first achievement. From that time for
+thirty years, mostly spent in Suffield, Ct., he wrote
+and taught music while supporting himself by his
+trade. Many of his tunes were published by himself,
+and had a wide currency a century ago.</p>
+
+<p>Swan was a genius in his way, and it was a true
+comment on his work that &ldquo;his tunes were remarkable
+for their originality as well as singularity&mdash;unlike
+any other melodies.&rdquo; &ldquo;China,&rdquo; his
+masterpiece, will be long kept track of as a curio,
+and preserved in replicates of old psalmody to illustrate
+self-culture in the art of song. But the major
+<a id="png:236" name="png:236"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">236 /</span> 196</samp>
+mode will replace the minor when tender voices
+on burial days sing&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Why do we mourn departed friends?</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Another hymn of Watts,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>God is the refuge of His saints</div>
+<div class="i1"> When storms of sharp distress invade,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;sung to Lowell Mason's liquid tune of
+&ldquo;Ward,&rdquo; and the priceless stanza,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Jesus can make a dying bed</div>
+<div class="i1"> Feel soft as downy pillows are,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">doubly prove the claim of the Southampton bard
+to a foremost place with the song-preachers of
+Christian trust.</p>
+
+<p>The psalm (Amsterdam version), &ldquo;God is the
+refuge,&rdquo; etc., is said to have been sung by John
+Howland in the shallop of the Mayflower when
+an attempt was made to effect a landing in spite
+of tempestuous weather. A tradition of this had
+doubtless reached Mrs. Hemans when she wrote&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Amid the storm they sang, etc.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>FATHER, WHATE'ER OF EARTHLY BLISS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn had originally ten stanzas, of which
+the three usually sung are the three last. The
+above line is the first of the eighth stanza, altered
+from&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+And O, whate'er of earthly bliss.
+</p>
+<a id="png:237" name="png:237"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">237 /</span> 197</samp>
+
+
+<p>Probably for more than a century the familiar
+surname &ldquo;Steele&rdquo; attached to this and many other
+hymns in the hymn-books conveyed to the general
+public no hint of a mind and hand more feminine
+than Cowper's or Montgomery's. Even intelligent
+people, who had chanced upon sundry copies of
+<i>The Spectator</i>, somehow fell into the habit of
+putting &ldquo;Steele&rdquo; and &ldquo;Addison&rdquo; in the same
+category of hymn names, and Sir Richard Steele
+got a credit he never sought. But since stories
+of the hymns began to be published&mdash;and made
+the subject of evening talks in church conference
+rooms&mdash;many have learned what &ldquo;Steele&rdquo; in the
+hymn-book means. It introduces us now to a
+very retiring English lady, Miss Anna Steele, a
+Baptist minister's daughter. She was born in 1706,
+at Broughton, Hampshire, in her father's parsonage,
+and in her father's parsonage she spent her
+life, dying there Nov. 1778.</p>
+
+<p>She was many years a severe sufferer from
+bodily illness, and a lasting grief of mind and heart
+was the loss of her intended husband, who was
+drowned the day before their appointed wedding.
+It is said that this hymn was written under the
+recent sorrow of that loss.</p>
+
+<p>In 1760 and 1780 volumes of her works in
+verse and prose were published with her name,
+&ldquo;Theodosia,&rdquo; and reprinted in 1863 as &ldquo;<i>Hymns,
+Psalms, and Poems</i>, by Anna Steele.&rdquo; The hymn
+&ldquo;Father, whate'er,&rdquo; etc., is estimated as her best,
+though some rank it only next to her&mdash;</p>
+
+<a id="png:238" name="png:238"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">238 /</span> 198</samp>
+
+<p class="quote">
+Dear Refuge of my weary soul.
+</p>
+
+<p>Other more or less well-known hymns of this
+devout and loving writer are,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote"><span>
+Lord, how mysterious are Thy ways,
+<br />
+O Thou whose tender mercy hears,
+<br />
+Thou lovely Source of true delight,
+<br />
+Alas, what hourly dangers rise,
+<br />
+So fades the lovely blooming flower.
+</span></p>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;to a stanza of which latter the world owes the
+tune of &ldquo;Federal St.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The true musical mate of the sweet hymn-prayer
+came to it probably about the time of its
+hundredth birthday; but it came to stay. Lowell
+Mason's &ldquo;Naomi&rdquo; blends with it like a symphony
+of nature.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Father, whate'er of earthly bliss</div>
+<div class="i1"> Thy sovereign will denies,</div>
+<div>Accepted at Thy throne of grace</div>
+<div class="i1"> Let this petition rise.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Give me a calm and thankful heart</div>
+<div class="i1"> From every murmer free.</div>
+<div>The blessings of Thy grace impart,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And make me live to Thee.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>GUIDE ME, O THOU GREAT JEHOVAH.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This great hymn has a double claim on the name
+of Williams. We do not have it exactly in its
+<a id="png:239" name="png:239"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">239 /</span> 199</samp>
+original form as written by Rev. William Williams,
+&ldquo;The Watts of Wales,&rdquo; familiarly known as &ldquo;Williams
+of Pantycelyn.&rdquo; His fellow countryman and
+contemporary, Rev. Peter Williams, or &ldquo;Williams
+of Carmarthen,&rdquo; who translated it from Welsh
+into English (1771) made alterations and substitutions
+in the hymn with the result that only the
+first stanza belongs indisputably to Williams of
+Pantycelyn, the others being Peter's own or the
+joint production of the two. As the former, however,
+is said to have approved and revised the English
+translation, we may suppose the hymn retained
+the name of its original author by mutual consent.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Guide me, O Thou Great Jehovah,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Pilgrim through this barren land.</div>
+<div>I am weak, but Thou art mighty,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Hold me by Thy powerful hand;</div>
+<div class="i2"> Bread of heaven,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Feed me till I want no more.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Open Thou the crystal Fountain</div>
+<div class="i1"> Whence the healing streams do flow,</div>
+<div>Let the fiery cloudy pillar</div>
+<div class="i1"> Lead me all my journey through.</div>
+<div class="i2"> Strong Deliverer,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Be Thou still my Strength and Shield!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>When I tread the verge of Jordan</div>
+<div class="i1"> Bid my anxious fears subside;</div>
+<div>Death of death, and hell's destruction,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Land me safe on Canaan's side.</div>
+<div class="i2"> Songs of praises</div>
+<div class="i1"> I will ever give to Thee.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:240" name="png:240"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">240 /</span> 200</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Musing on my habitation,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Musing on my heavenly home,</div>
+<div>Fills my heart with holy longing;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Come, Lord Jesus, quickly come.</div>
+<div class="i2"> Vanity is all I see,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Lord, I long to be with Thee.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The second and third stanzas have not escaped
+the touch of critical editors. The line,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Whence the healing streams do flow</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;becomes,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Whence the healing waters flow,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;with which alteration there is no fault to find
+except that it is needless, and obliterates the ancient
+mark. But the third stanza, besides losing its
+second line for&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Bid the swelling stream divide,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;is weakened by a more needless substitution.
+Its original third line&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Death of death, and hell's destruction,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;is exchanged for the commonplace&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Bear me through the swelling current.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>That is modern taste; but when modern taste
+meddles with a stalwart old hymn it is sometimes
+more nice than wise.</p>
+
+<p>It is probable that the famous hymn was sung
+in America before it obtained a European
+<a id="png:241" name="png:241"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">241 /</span> 201</samp>
+reputation. Its history is as follows: Lady Huntingdon
+having read one of Williams' books with much
+spiritual satisfaction, persuaded him to prepare
+a collection of hymns, to be called the <i>Gloria in
+Excelsis</i>, for special use in Mr. Whitefield's
+Orphans' House in America. In this collection
+appeared the original stanzas of &ldquo;Guide me, O
+Thou Great Jehovah.&rdquo; In 1774, two years after its
+publication in the <i>Gloria in Excelsis</i>, it was republished
+in England in Mr. Whitefield's collections of
+hymns.</p>
+
+<p>The Rev. Peter Williams was born in the parish
+of Llansadurnen, Carmarthenshire, Wales, Jan.
+7, 1722, and was educated in Carmarthen College.
+He was ordained in the Established Church and
+appointed to a curacy, but in 1748 joined the
+Calvinistic Methodists. He was an Independent
+of the Independents however, and preached where
+ever he chose. Finally he built a chapel for himself
+on his paternal estate, where he ministered during
+the rest of his life. Died Aug. 8, 1796.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>If &ldquo;Sardius,&rdquo; the splendid old choral (triple
+time) everywhere identified with the hymn, be not
+its original music, its age at least entitles it to its
+high partnership. <i>The Sacred Lyre</i> (1858) ascribes
+it to Ludovic Nicholson, of Paisley, Scotland,
+violinist and amateur composer, born 1770; died
+1852; but this is not beyond dispute. Of several
+<a id="png:242" name="png:242"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">242 /</span> 202</samp>
+names one more confidently referred to as its author
+is F.H. Barthelemon (1741&ndash;1808).</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>PEACE, TROUBLED SOUL</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p class="runon">Is the brave faith-song of a Christian under deep
+but blameless humiliation&mdash;Sir Walter Shirley.<sup>*</sup></p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+See <a href="#Shirley">page 127</a></p></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Apparently the favorite in several (not recent)
+hymnals for the subdued but confident spirit of
+this hymn of Sir Walter Shirley is Mazzinghi's
+&ldquo;Palestine,&rdquo; appearing with various tone-signatures
+in different books. The treble and alto lead in a
+sweet duet with slur-flights, like an obligato to the
+bass and tenor. The melody needs rich and cultured
+voices, and is unsuited for congregational singing.
+So, perhaps, is the hymn itself.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Peace, troubled soul, whose plaintive moan</div>
+<div class="i1"> Hath taught these rocks the notes of woe;</div>
+<div>Cease thy complaint&mdash;suppress thy groan,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And let thy tears forget to flow;</div>
+<div>Behold the precious balm is found,</div>
+<div>To lull thy pain, to heal thy wound.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Come, freely come, by sin oppressed,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Unburden here thy weighty load;</div>
+<div>Here find thy refuge and thy rest,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And trust the mercy of thy God.</div>
+<div>Thy God's thy Saviour&mdash;glorious word!</div>
+<div>For ever love and praise the Lord.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:243" name="png:243"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">243 /</span> 203</samp>
+<p>As now sung the word &ldquo;scenes&rdquo; is substituted
+for &ldquo;rocks&rdquo; in the second line, eliminating the
+poetry. Rocks give an <em>echo</em>; and the vivid thought
+in the author's mind is flattened to an unmeaning
+generality.</p>
+
+<p>Count Joseph Mazzinghi, son of Tommasso
+Mazzinghi, a Corsican musician, was born in London,
+1765. He was a boy of precocious talent.
+When only ten years of age he was appointed organist
+of the Portuguese Chapel, and when nineteen
+years old was made musical director and composer
+at the King's Theatre. For many years he held the
+honor of Music Master to the Princess of Wales,
+afterwards Queen Caroline, and his compositions
+were almost numberless. Some of his songs and
+glees that caught the popular fancy are still remembered
+in England, as &ldquo;The Turnpike Gate,&rdquo; &ldquo;The
+Exile,&rdquo; and the rustic duet, &ldquo;When a Little Farm
+We Keep.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Of sacred music he composed only one mass and
+six hymn-tunes, of which latter &ldquo;Palestine&rdquo; is one.
+Mazzinghi died in 1844, in his eightieth year.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>BEGONE UNBELIEF, MY SAVIOUR IS NEAR.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The Rev. John Newton, author of this hymn,
+was born in London, July 24, 1725. The son of a
+sea-captain, he became a sailor, and for several
+years led a reckless life. Converted, he took holy
+orders and was settled as curate of Olney, Buckinghamshire,
+and afterwards Rector of St. Mary of
+<a id="png:244" name="png:244"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">244 /</span> 204</samp>
+Woolnoth, London, where he died, Dec. 21, 1807.
+It was while living at Olney that he and Cowper
+wrote and published the <i>Olney Hymns</i>. His defiance
+to doubt in these lines is the blunt utterance
+of a sailor rather than the song of a poet:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Begone, unbelief, my Saviour is near,</div>
+<div>And for my relief will surely appear.</div>
+<div>By prayer let me wrestle and He will perform;</div>
+<div>With Christ in the vessel I smile at the storm.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE</h4>
+
+<p>Old &ldquo;Hanover,&rdquo; by William Croft (1677&ndash;1727),
+carries Newton's hymn successfully, but Joseph
+Haydn's choral of &ldquo;Lyons&rdquo; is more familiar&mdash;and
+better music.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Hanover&rdquo; often accompanies Charles Wesley's
+lyric,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+Ye servants of God, your Master proclaim.
+</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>HOW FIRM A FOUNDATION.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The question of the author of this hymn is treated
+at length in Dr. Louis F. Benson's <i>Studies of
+Familiar Hymns</i>. The utmost that need to be
+said here is that two of the most thorough and
+indefatigable hymn-chasers, Dr. John Julian and
+Rev. H.L. Hastings, working independently of
+each other, found evidence fixing the authorship
+with strong probability upon Robert Keene, a precentor
+in Dr. John Rippon's church. Dr. Rippon
+was pastor of a Baptist Church in London from
+<a id="png:245" name="png:245"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">245 /</span> 205</samp>
+1773 to 1836, and in 1787 he published a song-manual
+called <i>A Selection of Hymns from the Best
+Authors,</i> etc., in which &ldquo;How Firm a Foundation&rdquo;
+appears as a new piece, with the signature &ldquo;K&mdash;&mdash;.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The popularity of the hymn in America has been
+remarkable, and promises to continue. Indeed,
+there are few more reviving or more spiritually
+helpful. It is too familiar to need quotation. But
+one cannot suppress the last stanza, with its powerful
+and affecting emphasis on the Divine promise&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The soul that on Jesus has leaned for repose</div>
+<div>I will not, I will not, desert to his foes;</div>
+<div>That soul, though all hell should endeavor to shake,</div>
+<div>I'll never, no never, no never forsake.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The grand harmony of &ldquo;Portuguese Hymn&rdquo; has
+always been identified with this song of trust.</p>
+
+<p>One opinion of the date of the music writes it
+&ldquo;about 1780.&rdquo; Since the habit of crediting it to
+John Reading (1677&ndash;1764) has been discontinued,
+it has been in several hymnals ascribed to Marco
+Portogallo (Mark, the Portuguese), a musician born
+in Lisbon, 1763, who became a composer of operas
+in Italy, but was made Chapel-Master to the Portuguese
+King. In 1807, when Napoleon invaded
+the Peninsula and dethroned the royal house of
+Braganza, Old King John VI. fled to Brazil and
+took Marco with him, where he lived till 1815, but
+returned and died in Italy, in 1830. Such is the
+story, and it is all true, only the man's name was
+<a id="png:246" name="png:246"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">246 /</span> 206</samp>
+Simao, instead of Marco. <i>Grove's Dictionary</i> appends
+to Simao's biography the single sentence,
+&ldquo;His brother wrote for the church.&rdquo; That the
+Brazilian episode may have been connected with
+this brother's history by a confusion of names, is
+imaginable, but it is not known that the brother's
+name was Marco.</p>
+
+<p>On the whole, this account of the authorship of
+the &ldquo;Portuguese Hymn&rdquo;&mdash;originally written for
+the old Christmas church song &ldquo;Adeste Fideles&rdquo;&mdash;is
+late and uncertain. Heard (perhaps for the first
+time) in the Portuguese Chapel, London, it was
+given the name which still clings to it. If proofs
+of its Portuguese origin exist, they may yet be found.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;How Firm a Foundation&rdquo; was the favorite of
+Deborah Jackson, President Andrew Jackson's beloved
+wife, and on his death-bed the warrior and
+statesman called for it. It was the favorite of Gen.
+Robert E. Lee, and was sung at his funeral. The
+American love and familiar preference for the remarkable
+hymn was never more strikingly illustrated
+than when on Christmas Eve, 1898, a whole
+corps of the United States army Northern and
+Southern, encamped on the Quemados hills, near
+Havana, took up the sacred tune and words&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+&ldquo;Fear not, I am with thee, O be not dismayed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p title="Illustration of John Wesley originally opposite">Lieut. Col. Curtis
+Guild (since Governor Guild
+of Massachusetts) related the story in the Sunday
+School Times for Dec. 7, 1901, and Dr. Benson
+quotes it in his book.</p>
+
+
+<a id="png:249" name="png:249"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">249 /</span> 207</samp>
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WHILE THEE I SEEK, PROTECTING POWER.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Miss Helen Maria Williams, who wrote this gentle
+hymn of confidence, in 1786, was born in the
+north of England in 1762. When but a girl she
+won reputation by her brilliant literary talents and
+a mental grasp and vigor that led her, like Gail
+Hamilton, &ldquo;to discuss public affairs, besides clothing
+bright fancies and devout thoughts in graceful
+verse.&rdquo; Most of her life was spent in London,
+and in Paris, where she died, Dec. 14, 1827.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>While Thee I seek, Protecting Power</div>
+<div class="i1"> Be my vain wishes stilled,</div>
+<div>And may this consecrated hour</div>
+<div class="i1"> With better hopes be filled:</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>When gladness wings my favored hour,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Thy love my thoughts shall fill,</div>
+<div>Resigned where storms of sorrow lower</div>
+<div class="i1"> My soul shall meet Thy will.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>My lifted eye without a tear</div>
+<div class="i1"> The gathering storm shall see:</div>
+<div>My steadfast heart shall know no fear:</div>
+<div class="i1"> My heart will rest on Thee.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNES.</h4>
+
+<p>Old &ldquo;Norwich,&rdquo; from <i>Day's Psalter</i>,
+and &ldquo;Simpson,&rdquo;
+adapted from Louis Spohr, are found with
+the hymn in several later manuals. In the memories
+of older worshipers &ldquo;Brattle-Street,&rdquo; with its
+melodious choral and duet arranged from Pleyel
+<a id="png:250" name="png:250"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">250 /</span> 208</samp>
+by Lowell Mason, is inseparable from Miss Williams'
+words; but modern hymnals have dropped
+it, probably because too elaborate for average congregational
+use.</p>
+
+<p>Ignaz Joseph Pleyel was born June 1, 1757,
+at Ruppersthal, Lower Austria. He was the
+<em>twenty-fourth</em> child of a village schoolmaster.
+His early taste and talent for music procured
+him friends who paid for his education. Haydn
+became his master, and long afterwards spoke of
+him as his best and dearest pupil. Pleyel's work&mdash;entirely
+instrumental&mdash;was much admired by
+Mozart.</p>
+
+<p>During a few years spent in Italy, he composed
+the music of his best-known opera, &ldquo;Iphigenia in
+Aulide,&rdquo; and, besides the thirty-four books of his
+symphonies and chamber-pieces, the results of his
+prolific genius make a list too long to enumerate.
+Most of his life was spent in Paris, where he founded
+the (present) house of Pleyel and Wolfe, piano
+makers and sellers. He died in that city, Nov. 14,
+1831.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>COME UNTO ME.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Come unto Me, when shadows darkly gather,</div>
+<div>When the sad heart is weary and distressed,</div>
+<div>Seeking for comfort from your heavenly Father,</div>
+<div>Come unto Me, and I will give you rest.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This sweet hymn, by Mrs. Catherine Esling, is
+well known to many thousands of mourners, as also
+is its equally sweet tune of &ldquo;Henley,&rdquo; by Lowell
+<a id="png:251" name="png:251"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">251 /</span> 209</samp>
+Mason. Melody and words melt together like harp
+and flute.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Large are the mansions in thy Father's dwelling,</div>
+<div>Glad are the homes that sorrows never dim,</div>
+<div>Sweet are the harps in holy music swelling.</div>
+<div>Soft are the tones that raise the heavenly hymn.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Mrs. Catherine Harbison Waterman Esling was
+born in Philadelphia, Apr. 12, 1812. A writer for
+many years under her maiden name, Waterman,
+she married, in 1840, Capt. George Esling, of the
+Merchant Marine, and lived in Rio Janeiro till her
+widowhood, in 1844.</p>
+
+<a id="png:247" name="png:247"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">247 /</span> opp 206</samp>
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of John Wesley">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus12" name="Illus12"
+ ><img src="images/illus12-johnwesley-cameo.jpg" alt=
+ "John Wesley" width="275" height="279" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>John Wesley</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>JOHN WESLEY'S HYMN.</span></h4>
+
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>How happy is the pilgrim's lot,</div>
+<div>How free from every anxious thought.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>These are the opening lines of &ldquo;John Wesley's
+Hymn,&rdquo; so called because his other hymns are
+mostly translations, and because of all his own it is
+the one commonly quoted and sung.</p>
+
+<p>John Wesley, the second son in the famous
+Epworth family of ministers, was a man who
+knew how to endure &ldquo;hardness as a good soldier
+of Christ.&rdquo; He was born June 27, 1703, and studied
+at Charterhouse, London, and at Christ
+Church, Oxford, becoming a Fellow of Lincoln
+College. After taking holy orders he went as a
+missionary to Georgia, U.S., in 1735, and on his
+return began his remarkable work in England,
+preaching a more spiritual type of religion, and
+<a id="png:252" name="png:252"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">252 /</span> 210</samp>
+awakening the whole kingdom with his revival
+fervor and his brother's kindling songs. The following
+paragraph from his itinerant life, gathered
+probably from a page of his own journals, gives
+a glimpse of what the founder of the great Methodist
+denomination did and suffered while carrying his
+Evangelical message from place to place.</p>
+
+<p>On February 17, 1746, when days were short
+and weather far from favorable, he set out on
+horseback from Bristol to Newcastle, a distance between
+three and four hundred miles. The journey
+occupied ten days. Brooks were swollen, and in
+some places the roads were <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'impassble'">impassable</ins>,
+obliging the
+itinerant to go round through the fields. At Aldrige
+Heath, in Staffordshire, the rain turned to
+snow, which the northerly wind drove against
+him, and by which he was soon crusted over from
+head to foot. At Leeds the mob followed him, and
+pelted him with whatever came to hand. He arrived
+at Newcastle, February 26, &ldquo;free from every
+anxious thought,&rdquo; and &ldquo;every worldly fear.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>How lightly he regarded hardship and molestation
+appears from his verses&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Whatever molests or troubles life,</div>
+<div>When past, as nothing we esteem,</div>
+<div>And pain, like pleasure, is a dream.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">And that he actually enjoys the heroic freedom of
+a rough-rider missionary life is hinted in his hymn&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Confined to neither court nor cell,</div>
+<div>His soul disdains on earth to dwell,</div>
+<div class="i1"> He only sojourns here.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:253" name="png:253"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">253 /</span> 211</samp>
+<p>God evidently built John Wesley fire-proof and
+water-proof with a view to precisely what he was
+to undertake and accomplish. His frame was
+vigorous, and his spirit unconquerable. Besides
+all this he had the divine gift of a religious faith
+that could move mountains and a confidence in
+his mission that became a second nature. No
+wonder he could suffer, and <em>last</em>. The brave
+young man at thirty was the brave old man at
+nearly ninety. He died in London, March 2, 1791. </p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Blest with the scorn of finite good,</div>
+<div>My soul is lightened of its load</div>
+<div class="i2"> And seeks the things above.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>There is my house and portion fair;</div>
+<div>My treasure and my heart are there,</div>
+<div class="i2"> And my abiding home.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>For me my elder brethren stay,</div>
+<div>And angels beckon me away.</div>
+<div class="i2"> And Jesus bids me come.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>An air found in the <i>Revivalist</i> (1869), in sextuple
+time, that has the real camp-meeting swing,
+preserves the style of music in which the hymn
+was sung by the circuit-preachers and their congregations&mdash;ringing
+out the autobiographical verses
+with special unction. The favorite was&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>No foot of land do I possess,</div>
+<div>No cottage in this wilderness;</div>
+<div class="i1"> A poor wayfaring man,</div>
+<a id="png:254" name="png:254"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">254 /</span> 212</samp>
+<div>I lodge awhile in tents below,</div>
+<div>Or gladly wander to and fro</div>
+<div class="i1"> Till I my Canaan gain.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>More modern voices sing the John Wesley
+hymn to the tune &ldquo;<ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Habbakuk'">Habakkuk</ins>,&rdquo; by Edward Hodges.
+It has a lively three-four step, and finer melody
+than the old.</p>
+
+<p>Edward Hodges was born in Bristol, Eng.,
+July 20, 1796, and died there Sept. 1876. Organist
+at Bristol in his youth, he was graduated
+at Cambridge and in 1825 received the doctorate
+of music from that University. In 1835 he went
+to Toronto, Canada, and two years later to New
+York city, where he was many years Director of
+Music at Trinity Church. Returned to Bristol
+in 1863.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WHEN GATHERING CLOUDS AROUND I VIEW.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>One of the restful strains breathed out of illness
+and affliction to relieve one soul and bless millions.
+It was written by Sir Robert Grant (1785&ndash;1838).</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When gathering clouds around I view,</div>
+<div>And days are dark, and friends are few,</div>
+<div>On Him I lean who not in vain</div>
+<div>Experienced every human pain.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">The lines are no less admirable for their literary
+beauty than for their feeling and their faith. Unconsciously,
+it may be, to the writer, in this and
+the following stanza are woven an epitome of the
+Saviour's history. He&mdash;</p>
+
+<a id="png:255" name="png:255"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">255 /</span> 213</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Experienced every human pain,</div>
+<div>&mdash;felt temptation's power,</div>
+<div>&mdash;wept o'er Lazarus dead,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and the crowning assurance of Jesus' human
+sympathy is expressed in the closing prayer,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>&mdash;when I have safely passed</div>
+<div>Thro' every conflict but the last,</div>
+<div>Still, still unchanging watch beside</div>
+<div>My painful bed&mdash;for <em>Thou hast died</em>.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Of the few suitable six-line long metre part songs,
+the charming Russian tone-poem of &ldquo;St. Petersburg&rdquo;
+by Dimitri Bortniansky is borrowed for the
+hymn in some collections, and with excellent
+effect. It accords well with the mood and tenor
+of the words, and deserves to stay with it as long
+as the hymn holds its place.</p>
+
+<p>Dimitri Bortniansky, called &ldquo;The Russian
+Palestrina,&rdquo; was born in 1752 at Gloukoff, a
+village of the Ukraine. He studied music in
+Moscow, St. Petersburg, Vienna, Rome and
+Naples. Returning to his native land, he was
+made Director of Empress Catharine's church choir.
+He reformed and systematized Russian church music,
+and wrote original scores in the intervals of his
+teaching labors. His works are chiefly motets and
+concertos, which show his genius for rich harmony.
+Died 1825.</p>
+<a id="png:256" name="png:256"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">256 /</span> 214</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>JUST AS I AM, WITHOUT ONE PLEA.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Charlotte Elliott, of Brighton, Eng., would have
+been well-known through her admired and useful
+hymns,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote"><span>
+My God, my Father, while I stray,
+<br />
+My God, is any hour so sweet,
+<br />
+With tearful eyes I look around,
+</span></p>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and many others. But in &ldquo;Just as I am&rdquo; she
+made herself a voice in the soul of every hesitating
+penitent. The currency of the hymn has been too
+swift for its authorship and history to keep up
+with, but it is a blessed law of influence that good
+works out-run biographies. This master-piece
+of metrical gospel might be called Miss Elliott's
+spiritual-birth hymn, for a reply of Dr. C&aelig;sar
+Malan of Geneva was its prompting cause. The
+young lady was a stranger to personal religion
+when, one day, the good man, while staying at her
+father's house, in his gentle way introduced the
+subject. She resented it, but afterwards, stricken
+in spirit by his words, came to him with apologies
+and an inquiry that confessed a new concern of
+mind. &ldquo;You speak of coming to Jesus, but how?
+I'm not fit to come.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Come just as you are,&rdquo; said Dr. Malan.</p>
+
+<p>The hymn tells the result.</p>
+
+<p>Like all the other hymns bound up in her
+<i>Invalid's Hymn-book</i>, it was poured from out the
+heart of one who, as the phrase is, &ldquo;never knew a
+<a id="png:257" name="png:257"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">257 /</span> 215</samp>
+well day&rdquo;&mdash;though she lived to see her eighty-second
+year.</p>
+
+<p>Illustrative of the way it appeals to the afflicted,
+a little anecdote was told by the eloquent John B.
+Gough of his accidental seat-mate in a city church
+service. A man of strange appearance was led
+by the kind usher or sexton to the pew he occupied.
+Mr. Gough eyed him with strong aversion. The
+man's face was mottled, his limbs and mouth
+twitched, and he mumbled singular sounds.
+When the congregation sang he attempted to
+sing, but made fearful work of it. During the
+organ interlude he leaned toward Mr. Gough and
+asked how the next verse began. It was&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+Just as I am, poor, wretched, blind.
+</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;That's it,&rdquo; sobbed the strange man, &ldquo;I'm
+blind&mdash;God help me!&rdquo;&mdash;and the tears ran down
+his face&mdash;&ldquo;and I'm wretched&mdash;and paralytic,&rdquo; and
+then he tried hard to sing the line with the rest.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;After that,&rdquo; said Mr. Gough, &ldquo;the poor
+paralytic's singing was as sweet to me as a Beethoven
+symphony.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Charlotte Elliott was born March 18, 1789,
+and died in Brighton, Sept. 22, 1871. She stands
+in the front rank of female hymn-writers.</p>
+
+<p>The tune of &ldquo;Woodworth,&rdquo; by William B. Bradbury,
+has mostly superseded Mason's &ldquo;Elliott,&rdquo;
+and is now the accepted music of this lyric of
+perfect faith and pious surrender.</p>
+
+<a id="png:258" name="png:258"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">258 /</span> 216</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Just as I am,&mdash;Thy love unknown</div>
+<div>Hath broken every barrier down,</div>
+<div>Now to be Thine, yea, Thine alone,</div>
+<div>O Lamb of God, I come, I come.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>MY HOPE IS BUILT ON NOTHING LESS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The Rev. Edward Mote was born in London,
+1797. According to his own testimony his parents
+were not God-fearing people, and he &ldquo;went to a
+school where no Bible was allowed;&rdquo; but at the
+age of sixteen he received religious impressions
+from a sermon of John Hyatt in Tottenham Court
+Chapel, was converted two years later, studied for
+the ministry, and ultimately became a faithful
+preacher of the gospel. Settled as pastor of the
+Baptist Church in Horsham, Sussex, he remained
+there twenty-six years&mdash;until his death, Nov. 13,
+1874. The refrain of his hymn came to him one
+Sabbath when on his way to Holborn to exchange
+pulpits:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>On Christ the solid rock I stand,</div>
+<div>All other ground is sinking sand.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">There were originally six stanzas, the first beginning:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Nor earth, nor hell, my soul can move,</div>
+<div>I rest upon unchanging love.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The refrain is a fine one, and really sums up the
+whole hymn, keeping constantly at the front the
+corner-stone of the poet's trust.</p>
+
+<a id="png:259" name="png:259"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">259 /</span> 217</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>My hope is built on nothing less</div>
+<div>Than Jesus' blood and righteousness.</div>
+<div>I dare not trust the sweetest frame,</div>
+<div>But only lean on Jesus' name.</div>
+<div>On Christ the solid Rock I stand</div>
+<div>All other ground is sinking sand.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>When darkness veils His lovely face</div>
+<div>I trust in His unchanging grace,</div>
+<div>In every high and stormy gale</div>
+<div>My anchor holds within the veil.</div>
+<div>On Christ the solid Rock, etc.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Wm. B. Bradbury composed the tune (1863).
+It is usually named &ldquo;The Solid Rock.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>ABIDE WITH ME! FAST FALLS THE EVENTIDE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The Rev. Henry Francis Lyte, author of this melodious
+hymn-prayer, was born at Ednam, near Kelso,
+Scotland, June first, 1793. A scholar, graduated
+at Trinity College, Dublin; a poet and a musician,
+the hard-working curate was a man of frail physique,
+with a face of almost feminine beauty, and
+a spirit as pure and gentle as a little child's. The
+shadow of consumption was over him all his life.
+His memory is chiefly associated with the district
+church at Lower Brixham, Devonshire, where he
+became &ldquo;perpetual curate&rdquo; in 1823. He died at
+Nice, France, Nov. 20, 1847.</p>
+
+<p>On the evening of his last Sunday preaching
+and communion service he handed to one of his
+family the manuscript of his hymn, &ldquo;Abide with
+me,&rdquo; and the music he had composed for it. It
+<a id="png:260" name="png:260"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">260 /</span> 218</samp>
+was not till eight years later that Henry Ward
+Beecher introduced it, or a part of it, to American
+Congregationalists, and fourteen years after the
+author's death it began to be sung as we now
+have it, in this country and England.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Abide with me! Fast falls the eventide,</div>
+<div>The darkness deepens,&mdash;Lord with me abide!</div>
+<div>When other helpers fail, and comforts flee,</div>
+<div>Help of the helpless, O abide with me!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Hold Thou Thy cross before my closing eyes;</div>
+<div>Shine through the gloom, and point me to the skies;</div>
+<div>Heaven's morning breaks, and earth's vain shadows flee;</div>
+<div>In life, in death, O Lord, abide with me!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE</h4>
+
+<p>There is a pathos in the neglect and oblivion of
+Lyte's own tune set by himself to his words,
+especially as it was in a sense the work of a dying
+man who had hoped that he might not be &ldquo;wholly
+mute and useless&rdquo; while lying in his grave, and
+who had prayed&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> O Thou whose touch can lend</div>
+<div>Life to the dead. Thy quickening grace supply,</div>
+<div>And grant me swan-like my last breath to spend</div>
+<div class="i1"> In song that may not die!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>His prayer was answered in God's own way.
+Another's melody hastened his hymn on its useful
+career, and revealed to the world its immortal
+value.</p>
+
+<a id="png:261" name="png:261"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">261 /</span> 219</samp>
+<p>By the time it had won its slow recognition in
+England, it was probably tuneless, and the compilers
+of <i>Hymns Ancient and Modern</i> (1861) discovering
+the fact just as they were finishing their
+work, asked Dr. William Henry Monk, their
+music editor, to supply the want. &ldquo;In ten minutes,&rdquo;
+it is said, &ldquo;Dr. Monk composed the sweet, pleading
+chant that is wedded permanently to Lyte's swan
+song.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>William Henry Monk, Doctor of Music, was
+born in London, 1823. His musical education
+was early and thorough, and at the age of twenty-six
+he was organist and choir director in King's
+College, London. Elected (1876) professor of the
+National Training School, he interested himself
+actively in popular musical education, delivering
+lectures at various institutions, and establishing
+choral services.</p>
+
+<p>His hymn-tunes are found in many song-manuals
+of the English Church and in Scotland, and several
+have come to America.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Monk died in 1889.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>COME, YE DISCONSOLATE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>By Thomas Moore&mdash;about 1814. The poem
+in its original form differed somewhat from the
+hymn we sing. Thomas Hastings&mdash;whose religious
+experience, perhaps, made him better qualified
+than Thomas Moore for spiritual expression&mdash;changed
+the second line,&mdash;</p>
+<a id="png:262" name="png:262"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">262 /</span> 220</samp>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Come, at God's altar fervently kneel,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;to&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Come to the mercy seat,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and in the second stanza replaced&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Hope when all others die,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;with&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Hope of the penitent;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and for practically the whole
+of the last stanza&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Go ask the infidel what boon he brings us,</div>
+<div>What charm for aching hearts he can reveal.</div>
+<div>Sweet as that heavenly promise hope sings us,</div>
+<div>&ldquo;Earth has no sorrow that heaven cannot heal,&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;Hastings substituted&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Here see the Bread of life, see waters flowing</div>
+<div>Forth from the throne of God, pure from above!</div>
+<div>Come to the feast Love, come ever knowing</div>
+<div>Earth has no sorrow but heaven can remove.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Dr. Hastings was not much of a poet, but he
+could make a <em>singable</em> hymn, and he knew the
+rhythm and accent needed in a hymn-tune. The
+determination was to make an evangelical hymn
+of a poem &ldquo;too good to lose,&rdquo; and in that view
+perhaps the editorial liberties taken with it were
+excusable. It was to Moore, however, that the
+real hymn-thought and key-note first came, and
+the title-line and the sweet refrain are his own&mdash;for
+which the Christian world has thanked him,
+lo these many years.</p>
+
+<a id="png:263" name="png:263"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">263 /</span> 221</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Those who question why Dr. Hastings' interest
+in Moore's poem did not cause him to make a
+tune for it, must conclude that it came to him with
+its permanent melody ready made, and that the
+tune satisfied him.</p>
+
+<p>The &ldquo;German Air&rdquo; to which Moore tells us he
+wrote the words, probably took his fancy, if it did
+not induce his mood. Whether Samuel Webbe's
+tune now wedded to the hymn is an arrangement
+of the old air or wholly his own is immaterial. One
+can scarcely conceive a happier yoking of counterparts.
+Try singing &ldquo;Come ye Disconsolate&rdquo; to
+&ldquo;Rescue the Perishing,&rdquo; for example, and we
+shall feel the impertinence of divorcing a hymn
+that has found its musical affinity.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>JESUS, I MY CROSS HAVE TAKEN.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This is another well-known and characteristic
+hymn of Henry Francis Lyte&mdash;originally six
+stanzas. We have been told that, besides his
+bodily affliction, the grief of an unhappy division
+or difference in his church weighed upon his
+spirit, and that it is alluded to in these lines&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>Man may trouble and distress me,</div>
+<div>'Twill but drive me to Thy breast,</div>
+<div>Life with trials hard may press me,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Heaven will bring me sweeter rest.</div>
+<a id="png:264" name="png:264"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">264 /</span> 222</samp>
+<div>O, 'tis not in grief to harm me</div>
+<div class="i1"> While Thy love is left to me,</div>
+<div>O, 'tis not in joy to charm me</div>
+<div class="i1"> Were that joy unmixed with Thee.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Tunes, &ldquo;Autumn,&rdquo; by F.H. Barthelemon, or
+&ldquo;Ellesdie,&rdquo; (formerly called &ldquo;Disciple&rdquo;) from
+Mozart&mdash;familiar in either.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>FROM EVERY STORMY WIND THAT BLOWS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This is the much-sung and deeply-cherished
+hymn of Christian peace that a pious Manxman,
+Hugh Stowell, was inspired to write nearly a
+hundred years ago. Ever since it has carried
+consolation to souls in both ordinary and extraordinary
+trials.</p>
+
+<p title="Illustration of John B. Dykes originally opposite">It was sung
+by the eight American martyrs,
+Revs. Albert Johnson, John E. Freeman, David
+E. Campbell and their wives, and Mr. and Mrs.
+McMullen, when by order of the bloody Nana
+Sahib the captive missionaries were taken prisoners
+and put to death at Cawnpore in 1857. Two
+little children, Fannie and Willie Campbell,
+suffered with their parents.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>From every stormy wind that blows,</div>
+<div>From every swelling tide of woes</div>
+<div>There is a calm, a sure retreat;</div>
+<div>'Tis found beneath the Mercy Seat.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Ah, whither could we flee for aid</div>
+<div>When tempted, desolate, dismayed,</div>
+<div>Or how the hosts of hell defeat</div>
+<div>Had suffering saints no Mercy Seat?</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:267" name="png:267"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">267 /</span> 223</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>There, there on eagle wings we soar,</div>
+<div>And sin and sense molest no more,</div>
+<div>And heaven comes down our souls to greet</div>
+<div>While glory crowns the Mercy Seat.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Rev. Hugh Stowell was born at Douglas on the
+Isle of Man, Dec. 3, 1799. He was educated at
+Oxford and ordained to the ministry 1823, receiving
+twelve years later the appointment of
+Canon to Chester Cathedral.</p>
+
+<p>He was a popular and effective preacher and a
+graceful writer. Forty-seven hymns are credited
+to him, the above being the best known. To
+presume it is &ldquo;his best,&rdquo; leaves a good margin of
+merit for the remainder.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;From every stormy wind that blows&rdquo; has
+practically but one tune. It has been sung to
+Hastings &ldquo;Retreat&rdquo; ever since the music was made.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>CHILD OF SIN AND SORROW.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Child of sin and sorrow, filled with dismay,</div>
+<div>Wait not for tomorrow, yield thee today.</div>
+<div>Heaven bids thee come, while yet there's room,</div>
+<div>Child of sin and sorrow, hear and obey.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Words and music by Thomas Hastings.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>LEAD, KINDLY LIGHT.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>John Henry Newman, born in London, Feb.
+21, 1801&mdash;known in religious history as Cardinal
+Newman&mdash;wrote this hymn when he was a young
+clergyman of the Church of England. &ldquo;Born
+<a id="png:268" name="png:268"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">268 /</span> 224</samp>
+within the sound of Bow bells,&rdquo; says Dr. Benson,
+&ldquo;he was an imaginative boy, and so superstitious,
+that he used constantly to cross himself when
+going into the dark.&rdquo; Intelligent students of the
+fine hymn will note this habit of its author's mind&mdash;and
+surmise its influence on his religious
+musings.</p>
+
+<p>The agitations during the High Church movement,
+and the persuasions of Hurrell Froude, a
+Romanist friend, while he was a tutor at Oxford,
+gradually weakened his Protestant faith, and in
+his unrest he travelled to the Mediterranean coast,
+crossed to Sicily, where he fell violently ill, and after
+his recovery waited three weeks in Palermo for
+a return boat. On his trip to <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Marsailles'">Marseilles</ins> he wrote
+the hymn&mdash;with no thought that it would ever be
+called a hymn.</p>
+
+<p>When complimented on the beautiful production
+after it became famous he modestly said,
+&ldquo;It was not the hymn but the <em>tune</em> that has gained
+the popularity. The tune is Dykes' and Dr. Dykes
+is a great master.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<a id="png:265" name="png:265"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">265 /</span> opp 222</samp>
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of John B. Dykes">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus13" name="Illus13"
+ ><img src="images/illus13-johnbdykes-cameo.jpg" alt=
+ "John B. Dykes" width="223" height="245" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>John B. Dykes</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+<p>Dr. Newman was created a Cardinal of the Church
+of Rome in the Catholic Cathedral of London, 1879.
+Died Aug. 11, 1890.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Lux Benigna,&rdquo; by Dr. Dykes, was composed
+in Aug. 1865, and was the tune chosen for this
+hymn by a committee preparing the Appendix
+<a id="png:269" name="png:269"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">269 /</span> 225</samp>
+to <i>Hymns Ancient and Modern</i>. Dr. Dykes'
+statement that the tune came into his head while
+walking through the Strand in London &ldquo;presents
+a striking contrast with the solitary origin of the
+hymn itself&rdquo; (Benson).</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Lead, kindly Light, amid th' encircling gloom,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Lead Thou me on.</div>
+<div>The night is dark and I am far from home;</div>
+<div class="i2"> Lead Thou me on.</div>
+<div>Keep Thou my feet; I do not ask to see</div>
+<div>The distant scene,&mdash;one step enough for me.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i2">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>So long Thy power hath bless'd me, sure it still</div>
+<div class="i2"> Will lead me on,</div>
+<div>O'er moor and fen, o'er crag and torrent, till</div>
+<div class="i2"> The night is gone,</div>
+<div>And with the morn those angel faces smile</div>
+<div>Which I have loved long since, and lost awhile.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>I HEARD THE VOICE OF JESUS SAY.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Few if any Christian writers of his generation
+have possessed tuneful gifts in greater opulence
+or produced more vital and lasting treasures of
+spiritual verse than Horatius Bonar of Scotland.
+He inherited some of his poetic faculty from his
+grandfather, a clergyman who wrote several
+hymns, and it is told of Horatius that hymns used
+to &ldquo;come to&rdquo; him while riding on railroad trains.
+He was educated in the Edinburgh University
+and studied theology with Dr. Chalmers, and his
+<a id="png:270" name="png:270"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">270 /</span> 226</samp>
+life was greatly influenced by Dr. Guthrie, whom
+he followed in the establishment of the Free
+Church of Scotland.</p>
+
+<p>Born in 1808 in Edinburgh, he was about forty
+years old when he came back from a successful pastorate
+at Kelso to the city of his home and Alma
+Mater, and became virtually Chalmers' successor
+as minister of the Chalmers Memorial Church.</p>
+
+<p>The peculiar richness of Bonar's sacred songs
+very early created for them a warm welcome in the
+religious world, and any devout lyric or poem with
+his name attached to it is sure to be read.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Bonar died in Edinburgh, July 31, 1889.
+Writing of the hymn, &ldquo;I heard the voice,&rdquo; etc., Dr.
+David Breed calls it &ldquo;one of the most ingenious
+hymns in the language,&rdquo; referring to the fact that
+the invitation and response exactly halve each
+stanza between them&mdash;song followed by countersong.
+&ldquo;Ingenious&rdquo; seems hardly the right word
+for a division so obviously natural and almost
+automatic. It is a simple art beauty that a poet
+of culture makes by instinct. Bowring's &ldquo;Watchman,
+tell us of the night,&rdquo; is not the only other instance
+of similar countersong structure, and the
+regularity in Thomas Scott's little hymn, &ldquo;Hasten,
+sinner, to be wise,&rdquo; is only a simpler case of the
+way a poem plans itself by the compulsion of its
+subject.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I heard the voice of Jesus say,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Come unto me and rest,</div>
+<div>Lay down, thou weary one, lay down</div>
+<div class="i1"> Thy head upon My breast:</div>
+<a id="png:271" name="png:271"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">271 /</span> 227</samp>
+<div>I came to Jesus as I was,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Weary and worn and sad,</div>
+<div>I found in Him a resting-place,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And He has made me glad.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The old melody of &ldquo;Evan,&rdquo; long a favorite;
+and since known everywhere through the currency
+given to it in the <i>Gospel Hymns</i>, has been in
+many collections connected with the words. It is
+good congregational psalmody, and not unsuited to
+the sentiment, taken line by line, but it divides the
+stanzas into quatrains, which breaks the happy
+continuity. &ldquo;Evan&rdquo; was made by Dr. Mason in
+1850 from a song written four years earlier by
+Rev. William Henry Havergal, Canon of Worcester
+Cathedral, Eng. He was the father of Frances
+Ridley Havergal.</p>
+
+<p>The more ancient &ldquo;Athens,&rdquo; by Felice Giardini
+(1716&ndash;1796), author of the &ldquo;Italian Hymn,&rdquo;
+has clung, and still clings lovingly to Bonar's
+hymn in many communities. Its simplicity, and
+the involuntary accent of its sextuple time, exactly
+reproducing the easy iambic of the verses, inevitably
+made it popular, and thousands of older
+singers today will have no other music with &ldquo;I
+heard the voice of Jesus say.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Vox Jesu,&rdquo; from the andante in one of the
+quartets of Louis Spohr (1784&ndash;1859), is a psalm-tune
+of good harmony, but too little feeling.</p>
+
+<p>An excellent tune for all the shades of expression
+<a id="png:272" name="png:272"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">272 /</span> 228</samp>
+in the hymn, is the arrangement by Hubert P. Main
+from Franz Abt&mdash;in A flat, triple time. Gentle
+music through the first fifteen bars, in alternate
+duet and quartet, utters the Divine Voice with
+the true accent of the lines, and the second portion
+completes the harmony in glad, full chorus&mdash;the
+answer of the human heart.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Vox Dilecti,&rdquo; by Dr. Dykes, goes farther and
+writes the Voice in B flat <em>minor</em>&mdash;which seems a
+needless substitution of divine sadness for divine
+sweetness. It is a tune of striking chords, but its
+shift of key to G natural (major) after the first
+four lines marks it rather for trained choir performance
+than for assembly song.</p>
+
+<p>It is possible to make too much of a dramatic
+perfection or a supposed indication of structural
+design in a hymn. Textual equations, such as
+distinguish Dr. Bonar's beautiful stanzas, are not
+necessarily technical. To emphasize them as ingenious
+by an ingenious tune seems, somehow, a
+reflection on the spontaneity of the hymn.</p>
+
+<p>Louis Spohr was Director of the Court Theatre
+Orchestra in Cassel, Prussia, in the first half of the
+last century. He was an eminent composer of
+both vocal and instrumental music, and one of the
+greatest violinists of Europe.</p>
+
+<p>Hubert Platt Main was born in Ridgefield, Ct.,
+Aug. 17, 1839. He read music at sight when only
+ten years old, and at sixteen commenced writing
+hymn-tunes. Was assistant compiler with both
+Bradbury and Woodbury in their various
+<a id="png:273" name="png:273"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">273 /</span> 229</samp>
+publications, and in 1868 became connected with the
+firm of Biglow and Main, and has been their book-maker
+until the present time. As music editor in
+the partnership he has superintended the publication
+of more than five hundred music-books, services,
+etc.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>I LOVE TO STEAL AWHILE AWAY.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The burdened wife and mother who wrote this
+hymn would, at the time, have rated her history
+with &ldquo;the short and simple annals of the poor.&rdquo;
+But the poor who are &ldquo;remembered for what they
+have done,&rdquo; may have a larger place in history
+than many rich who did nothing.</p>
+
+<p>Phebe Hinsdale Brown, was born in Canaan,
+N.Y., in 1783. Her father, George Hinsdale, who
+died in her early childhood, must have been a
+man of good abilities and religious feeling, being
+the reputed composer of the psalm-tune, &ldquo;Hinsdale,&rdquo;
+found in some long-ago collections.</p>
+
+<p>Left an orphan at two years of age, Phebe &ldquo;fell
+into the hands of a relative who kept the county
+jail,&rdquo; and her childhood knew little but the bitter
+fare and ceaseless drudgery of domestic slavery.
+She grew up with a crushed spirit, and was a
+timid, shrinking woman as long as she lived. She
+married Timothy H. Brown, a house-painter of
+Ellington, Ct., and passed her days there and in
+Monson, Mass., where she lived some twenty-five
+years.</p>
+
+<a id="png:274" name="png:274"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">274 /</span> 230</samp>
+
+<p>In her humble home in the former town her
+children were born, and it was while caring for her
+own little family of four, and a sick sister, that the
+incident occurred (August 1818), which called
+forth her tender hymn. She was a devout Christian,
+and in pleasant weather, whenever she could
+find the leisure, she would &ldquo;steal away&rdquo; at sunset
+from her burdens a little while, to rest and commune
+with God. Her favorite place was a
+wealthy neighbor's large and beautiful flower
+garden. A servant reported her visits there to the
+mistress of the house, who called the &ldquo;intruder&rdquo;
+to account.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;If you want anything, why don't you come in?&rdquo;
+was the rude question, followed by a plain hint that
+no stealthy person was welcome.</p>
+
+<p>Wounded by the ill-natured rebuff, the sensitive
+woman sat down the next evening with her baby
+in her lap, and half-blinded by her tears, wrote
+&ldquo;An Apology for my Twilight Rambles,&rdquo; in the
+verses that have made her celebrated.</p>
+
+<p>She sent the manuscript (nine stanzas) to her
+captious neighbor&mdash;with what result has never
+been told.</p>
+
+<p>Crude and simple as the little rhyme was, it
+contained a germ of lyric beauty and life. The
+Rev. Dr. Charles Hyde of Ellington, who was a
+neighbor of Mrs. Brown, procured a copy. He
+was assisting Dr. Nettleton to compile the <i>Village
+Hymns</i>, and the humble bit of devotional verse
+was at once judged worthy of a place in the new
+<a id="png:275" name="png:275"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">275 /</span> 231</samp>
+book. Dr. Hyde and his daughter Emeline giving
+it some kind touches of rhythmic amendment,</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I love to steal awhile away</div>
+<div class="i1"> From little ones and care,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;became,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I love to steal awhile away</div>
+<div class="i1"> From <em>every cumb'ring</em> care.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>In the last line of this stanza&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>In gratitude and prayer</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;was changed to&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>In humble, grateful prayer,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and the few other defects in syllabic smoothness
+or literary grace were affectionately repaired, but
+the slight furbishing it received did not alter the
+individuality of Mrs. Brown's work. It remained
+<em>hers</em>&mdash;and took its place among the immortals of its
+kind, another illustration of how little poetry it takes
+to make a good hymn. Only five stanzas were
+printed, the others being voted redundant by both
+author and editor. The second and third, as now
+sung, are&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I love in solitude to shed</div>
+<div class="i1"> The penitential tear,</div>
+<div>And all His promises to plead</div>
+<div class="i1"> Where none but God can hear.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>I love to think on mercies past</div>
+<div class="i1"> And future good implore,</div>
+<div>And all my cares and sorrows cast</div>
+<div class="i1"> On Him whom I adore.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:276" name="png:276"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">276 /</span> 232</samp>
+
+<p>Phebe Brown died at Henry, Ill., in 1861; but she
+had made the church and the world her debtor
+not only for her little lyric of pious trust, but by
+rearing a son, the Rev. Samuel Brown, D.D., who
+became the pioneer American missionary to Japan&mdash;to
+which Christian calling two of her grandchildren
+also consecrated themselves.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Mrs. Brown's son Samuel, who, besides being a
+good minister, inherited his grandfather's musical
+gift, composed the tune of &ldquo;Monson,&rdquo; (named in his
+mother's honor, after her late home), and it may
+have been the first music set to her hymn. It was
+the fate of his offering, however, to lose its filial
+place, and be succeeded by different melodies,
+though his own still survives in a few collections,
+sometimes with Collyer's &ldquo;O Jesus in this solemn
+hour.&rdquo; It is good music for a hymn of <em>praise</em>
+rather than for meditative verse. Many years the
+hymn has been sung to &ldquo;Woodstock,&rdquo; an appropriate
+and still familiar tune by Deodatus Dutton.</p>
+
+<p>Dutton's &ldquo;Woodstock&rdquo; and Bradbury's &ldquo;Brown,&rdquo;
+which often replaces it, are worthy rivals of each
+other, and both continue in favor as fit choral interpretations
+of the much-loved hymn.</p>
+
+<p>Deodatus Dutton was born Dec. 22, 1808, and
+educated at Brown University and Washington
+College (now Trinity) Hartford Ct. While there
+he was a student of music and played the organ
+ <a id="png:277" name="png:277"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">277 /</span> 233</samp>
+at Dr. Matthews' church. He studied theology
+in New York city, and had recently entered the
+ministry when he suddenly died, Dec. 16, 1832, a
+moment before rising to preach a sermon. During
+his brief life he had written several hymn-tunes,
+and published a book of psalmody. Mrs.
+Sigourney wrote a poem on his death.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>THERE'S A WIDENESS IN GOD'S MERCY.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Frederick William Faber, author of this favorite
+hymn-poem, had a peculiar genius for putting
+golden thoughts into common words, and making
+them sing. Probably no other sample of his work
+shows better than this his art of combining literary
+cleverness with the most reverent piety. Cant was
+a quality Faber never could put into his religious
+verse.</p>
+
+<p>He was born in Yorkshire, Eng., June 28, 1814,
+and received his education at Oxford. Settled
+as Rector of Elton, in Huntingdonshire, in 1843,
+he came into sympathy with the &ldquo;Oxford Movement,&rdquo;
+and followed Newman into the Romish
+Church. He continued his ministry as founder
+and priest for the London branch of the Catholic
+congregation of St. Philip Neri for fourteen
+years, dying Sept. 26, 1863, at the age of forty-nine.</p>
+
+<p>His godly hymns betray no credal shibboleth or
+doctrinal bias, but are songs for the whole earthly
+church of God.</p>
+
+<a id="png:278" name="png:278"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">278 /</span> 234</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>There's a wideness in God's mercy</div>
+<div class="i1"> Like the wideness of the sea;</div>
+<div>There's a kindness in His justice</div>
+<div class="i1"> Which is more than liberty.</div>
+<div>There is welcome for the sinner</div>
+<div class="i1"> And more graces for the good;</div>
+<div>There is mercy with the Saviour,</div>
+<div class="i1"> There is healing in His blood.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>There's no place where earthly sorrows</div>
+<div class="i1"> Are more felt than up in heaven;</div>
+<div>There's no place where earthly failings</div>
+<div class="i1"> Have such kindly judgment given.</div>
+<div>There is plentiful redemption</div>
+<div class="i1"> In the blood that has been shed,</div>
+<div>There is joy for all the members</div>
+<div class="i1"> In the sorrows of the Head.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>For the love of God is broader</div>
+<div class="i1"> Than the measure of man's mind,</div>
+<div>And the heart of the Eternal</div>
+<div class="i1"> Is most wonderfully kind.</div>
+<div>If our love were but more simple</div>
+<div class="i1"> We should take Him at His word,</div>
+<div>And our lives would be all sunshine</div>
+<div class="i1"> In the sweetness of the Lord.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>No tone of comfort has breathed itself more
+surely and tenderly into grieved hearts than these
+tuneful and singularly expressive sentences of
+Frederick Faber.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The music of S.J. Vail sung to Faber's hymn
+is one of that composer's best hymn-tunes, and its
+<a id="png:279" name="png:279"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">279 /</span> 235</samp>
+melody and natural movement impress the meaning
+as well as the simple beauty of the words.</p>
+
+<p>Silas Jones Vail, an American music-writer, was
+born Oct., 1818, and died May 20, 1883. Another
+charming tune is &ldquo;Wellesley,&rdquo; by Lizzie S. Tourjee,
+daughter of the late Dr. Eben Tourjee.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>HE LEADETH ME! OH, BLESSED THOUGHT.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Professor Gilmore, of Rochester University,
+N.Y., when a young Baptist minister (1861) supplying
+a pulpit in Philadelphia &ldquo;jotted down this
+hymn in Deacon Watson's parlor&rdquo; (as he says) and
+passed it to his wife, one evening after he had made
+&ldquo;a conference-room talk&rdquo; on the 23d Psalm.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Gilmore, without his knowledge, sent it to
+the <i>Watchman and Reflector</i> (now the <i>Watchman</i>).</p>
+
+<p>Years after its publication in that paper, when a
+candidate for the pastorate of the Second Baptist
+Church in Rochester, he was turning the leaves of
+the vestry hymnal in use there, and saw his hymn
+in it. Since that first publication in the <i>Devotional
+Hymn and Tune Book</i> (1865) it has been copied in
+the hymnals of various denominations, and steadily
+holds its place in public favor. The refrain added
+by the tunemaker emphasizes the sentiment of the
+lines, and undoubtedly enhances the effect of the
+hymn.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He leadeth me&rdquo; has the true hymn quality,
+combining all the simplicity of spontaneous thought
+and feeling with perfect accent and liquid rhythm.</p>
+
+<a id="png:280" name="png:280"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">280 /</span> 236</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>He leadeth me! Oh, blessed thought,</div>
+<div>Oh, words with heavenly comfort fraught;</div>
+<div>Whate'er I do, where'er I be,</div>
+<div>Still 'tis God's hand that leadeth me!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Lord, I would clasp Thy hand in mine,</div>
+<div>Nor ever murmur nor repine&mdash;</div>
+<div>Content, whatever lot I see,</div>
+<div>Since 'tis my God that leadeth me.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Professor Joseph Henry Gilmore was born in
+Boston, April 29, 1834. He was graduated at Phillips
+Academy, Andover, at Brown University, and
+at the Newton Theological Institution, where he
+was afterwards Hebrew instructor.</p>
+
+<p>After four years of pastoral service he was elected
+(1867) professor of the English Language and
+Literature in Rochester University. He has published
+<i>Familiar Chats on Books and Reading</i>, also
+several college text-books on rhetoric, logic and
+oratory.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The little hymn of four stanzas was peculiarly
+fortunate in meeting the eye of Mr. William B.
+Bradbury, (1863) and winning his musical sympathy
+and alliance. Few composers have so exactly caught
+the tone and spirit of their text as Bradbury did
+when he vocalized the gliding measures of &ldquo;He
+leadeth me.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<a id="png:281" name="png:281"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">281 /</span> 237</samp>
+
+
+
+<h2 class="chap">CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h1>CHRISTIAN BALLADS.</h1>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<p>Echoes of Hebrew thought, if not Hebrew
+psalmody, may have made their way into the more
+serious pagan literature. At least in the more enlightened
+pagans there has ever revealed itself
+more or less the instinct of the human soul that
+&ldquo;feels after&rdquo; God. St. Paul in his address to the
+Athenians made a tactful as well as scholarly point
+to preface a missionary sermon when he cited a line
+from a poem of Aratus (B.C. 272) familiar, doubtless,
+to the majority of his hearers.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Lyman Abbot has thus translated the passage
+in which the line occurs:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Let us begin from God.&nbsp; Let every mortal raise</div>
+<div>The grateful voice to tune God's endless praise,</div>
+<div>God fills the heaven, the earth, the sea, the air;</div>
+<div>We feel His spirit moving everywhere,</div>
+<div>And we His offspring are.<sup>*</sup>&nbsp; He, ever good,</div>
+<div>Daily provides for man his daily food.</div>
+<div>To Him, the First, the Last, all homage yield,&mdash;</div>
+<div>Our Father wonderful, our help, our shield<ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original adds closing quote marks">.</ins></div>
+</div></div>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p title="[Greek: Tou gar kai genos esmen.]">*
+&#932;&#959;&#8161; &#947;&#8048;&#961; &#954;&#945;&#8054;
+&#947;&#8051;&#957;&#959;&#962; &#7952;&#963;&#956;&#8051;&#957;.</p></div>
+
+<a id="png:282" name="png:282"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">282 /</span> 238</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>RISE, CROWNED WITH LIGHT.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<p>Alexander Pope, a Roman Catholic poet, born in
+London 1688, died at Twickenham 1744, was not
+a hymnist, but passages in his most serious and exalted
+flights deserve a tuneful accompaniment.
+His translations of Homer made him famous, but
+his ethical poems, especially his &ldquo;Essay on Man,&rdquo;
+are inexhaustible mines of quotation, many of the
+lines and couplets being common as proverbs. His
+&ldquo;Messiah,&rdquo; written about 1711, is a religious anthem
+in which the prophecies of Holy Writ kindle
+all the splendor of his verse.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The closing strain, indicated by the above line,
+has been divided into stanzas of four lines suitable
+to a church hymn-tune. The melody selected by
+the compilers of the <i>Plymouth Hymnal</i>, and of the
+<i>Unitarian Hymn and Tune Book</i> is &ldquo;Savannah,&rdquo;
+an American sounding name for what is really one
+of Pleyel's chorals. The music is worthy of Pope's
+triumphal song.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The seas shall waste, the skies to smoke decay,</div>
+<div>Rocks fall to dust, and mountains melt away,</div>
+<div>But fixed His Word; His saving power remains:</div>
+<div>Thy realm shall last; thy own Messiah reigns.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>OH, WHY SHOULD THE SPIRIT?</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This is a sombre poem, but its virile strength and
+its literary merit have given it currency, and
+<a id="png:283" name="png:283"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">283 /</span> 239</samp>
+commended it to the taste of many people, both weak
+and strong, who have the pensive temperament.
+Abraham Lincoln loved it and committed it to
+memory in his boyhood. Philip Phillips set it to
+music, and sang it&mdash;or a part of it&mdash;one day during
+the Civil war at the anniversary of the Christian
+Sanitary Commission, when President Lincoln,
+who was present, called for its repetition.<sup>*</sup> It was
+written by William Knox, born 1789, son of a
+Scottish farmer.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+This account so nearly resembles the story of Mrs. Gates'
+&ldquo;Your Mission,&rdquo; sung to a similar audience, on a similar occasion,
+by the same man, that a possible confusion by the narrators of the incident
+has been suggested. But that Mr. Phillips sang twice before the President
+during the war does not appear to be contradicted. To what air he sang the
+above verses is uncertain.</p></div>
+
+<p>The poem has fourteen stanzas, the following
+being the first and two last&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud?</div>
+<div>Like a swift-fleeting meteor, a fast-flying cloud</div>
+<div>A flash of the lightning, a break of the wave,</div>
+<div>He passeth from life to rest in the grave.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Yea, hope and despondency, pleasure and pain,</div>
+<div>Are mingled together like sunshine and rain;</div>
+<div>And the smile and the tear, the song and the dirge,</div>
+<div>Still follow each other like surge upon surge.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>'Tis the wink of an eye; 'tis the draft of a breath</div>
+<div>From the blossom of health to the paleness of death,</div>
+<div>From the gilded saloon to the bier and the shroud,</div>
+<div>Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud?</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Philip Phillips was born in Jamestown, Chautauqua
+Co., N.Y., Aug. 11, 1834, and died in
+<a id="png:284" name="png:284"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">284 /</span> 240</samp>
+Delaware, O., June 25, 1895. He wrote no hymns
+and was not an educated musician, but the airs of
+popular hymn-music came to him and were harmonized
+for him by others, most frequently by his
+friends, S.J. Vail and Hubert P. Main. He compiled
+and published thirty-one collections for Sunday-schools
+and gospel meetings, besides the <i>Methodist
+Hymn and Tune Book</i>, issued in 1866.</p>
+
+<p>He was a pioneer gospel singer, and his tuneful
+journeys through America, England and Australia
+gave him the name of the &ldquo;Singing Pilgrim,&rdquo; the
+title of his song collection (1867).</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WHEN ISRAEL OF THE LORD BELOVED.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The &ldquo;Song of Rebecca the Jewess,&rdquo; in &ldquo;Ivanhoe,&rdquo;
+was written by Sir Walter Scott, author of the
+Waverly Novels, &ldquo;Marmion,&rdquo; etc., born in Edinburgh,
+1771, and died at Abbotsford, 1832. The
+lines purport to be the Hebrew hymn with which
+Rebecca closed her daily devotions while in prison
+under sentence of death.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When Israel of the Lord beloved</div>
+<div class="i1"> Out of the land of bondage came</div>
+<div>Her fathers' God before her moved,</div>
+<div class="i1"> An awful Guide in smoke and flame.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Then rose the choral hymn of praise,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And trump and timbrel answered keen,</div>
+<div>And Zion's daughters poured their lays.</div>
+<div class="i1"> With priest's and warrior's voice between.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+<a id="png:285" name="png:285"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">285 /</span> 241</samp>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>By day along th' astonished lands</div>
+<div class="i1"> The cloudy Pillar glided slow,</div>
+<div>By night Arabia's crimson'd sands</div>
+<div class="i1"> Returned the fiery Column's glow.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>And O, when gathers o'er our path</div>
+<div class="i1"> In shade and storm the frequent night</div>
+<div>Be Thou, long suffering, slow to wrath,</div>
+<div class="i1"> A burning and a shining Light!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The &ldquo;Hymn of Rebecca&rdquo; has been set to music
+though never in common use as a hymn. Old
+&ldquo;Truro&rdquo;, by Dr. Charles Burney (1726&ndash;1814)
+is a grand Scotch psalm harmony for the words,
+though one of the Unitarian hymnals borrows Zeuner's
+sonorous choral, the &ldquo;Missionary Chant.&rdquo;
+Both sound the lyric of the Jewess in good Christian
+music.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WE SAT DOWN AND WEPT BY THE WATERS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The 137th Psalm has been for centuries a favorite
+with poets and poetical translators, and its
+pathos appealed to Lord Byron when engaged in
+writing his <i>Hebrew Melodies</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Byron was born in London, 1788, and died at
+Missolonghi, Western Greece, 1824.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>We sat down and wept by the waters</div>
+<div class="i1"> Of Babel, and thought of the day</div>
+<div>When the foe, in the hue of his slaughters,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Made Salem's high places his prey,</div>
+<div>And ye, Oh her desolate daughters,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Were scattered all weeping away.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:286" name="png:286"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">286 /</span> 242</samp>
+<p class="runon">&mdash;Written April, 1814. It was the fashion then for
+musical societies to call on the popular poets for
+contributions, and tunes were composed for them,
+though these have practically passed into oblivion.</p>
+
+<p>Byron's ringing ballad (from II Kings 19:35)&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Th' Assyrian came down like a wolf on the fold</div>
+<div>And his cohorts were gleaming in purple and gold,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;has been so much a favorite for recitation and
+declamation that the loss of its tune is never
+thought of.</p>
+
+<p>Another poetic rendering of the &ldquo;Captivity
+Psalm&rdquo; is worthy of notice among the lay hymns
+not unworthy to supplement clerical sermons. It
+was written by the Hon. Joel Barlow in 1799, and
+published in a pioneer psalm-book at Northampton,
+Mass. It is neither a translation nor properly
+a hymn but a poem built upon the words of the
+Jewish lament, and really reproducing something
+of its plaintive beauty. Two stanzas of it are as
+follows:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Along the banks where Babel's current flows</div>
+<div class="i1"> Our captive bands in deep despondence strayed,</div>
+<div>While Zion's fall in deep remembrance rose,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Her friends, her children mingled with the dead.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>The tuneless harps that once with joy we strung</div>
+<div class="i1"> When praise employed, or mirth inspired the lay,</div>
+<div>In mournful silence on the willows hung,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And growing grief prolonged the tedious day.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Like Pope, this American poet loved onomatope
+and imitative verse, and the last line is a word-picture
+<a id="png:287" name="png:287"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">287 /</span> 243</samp>
+of home-sick weariness. This &ldquo;psalm&rdquo;
+was the best piece of work in Mr. Barlow's series of
+attempted improvements upon Isaac Watts&mdash;which
+on the whole were not very successful. The
+sweet cantabile of Mason's &ldquo;Melton&rdquo; gave &ldquo;Along
+the banks&rdquo; quite an extended lease of life, though
+it has now ceased to be sung.</p>
+
+<p>Joel Barlow was a versatile gentleman, serving
+his country and generation in almost every useful
+capacity, from chaplain in the continental army
+to foreign ambassador. He was born in Redding,
+Ct., 1755, and died near Cracow, Poland, Dec.
+1812.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>AS DOWN IN THE SUNLESS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Thomas Moore, the poet of glees and love-madrigals,
+had sober thoughts in the intervals of
+his gaiety, and employed his genius in writing
+religious and even devout poems, which have been
+spiritually helpful in many phases of Christian
+experience. Among them was this and the four
+following hymns, with thirty-four others, each of
+which he carefully labelled with the name of a music
+composer, though the particular tune is left indefinite.
+&ldquo;The still prayer of devotion&rdquo; here
+answers, in rhyme and reality, the simile of the
+sea-flower in the unseen deep, and the mariner's
+compass represents the constancy of a believer.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>As, still to the star of its worship, though clouded,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The needle points faithfully o'er the dim sea,</div>
+<div>So, dark as I roam in this wintry world shrouded,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The hope of my spirit turns trembling to Thee.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:288" name="png:288"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">288 /</span> 244</samp>
+<p class="runon">It is sung in <i>Plymouth Hymnal</i> to Barnby's &ldquo;St.
+Botolph.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>THE TURF SHALL BE MY FRAGRANT SHRINE</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p class="runon">Is, in part, still preserved in hymn collections, and
+sung to the noble tune of &ldquo;Louvan,&rdquo; Virgil Taylor's
+piece. The last stanza is especially reminiscent
+of the music.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>There's nothing bright above, below,</div>
+<div>From flowers that bloom to stars that glow;</div>
+<div>But in its light my soul can see</div>
+<div>Some feature of Thy deity.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>O THOU WHO DRY'ST THE MOURNER'S TEAR</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p class="runon">Is associated in the <i>Baptist Praise Book</i> with
+Woodbury's &ldquo;Siloam.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>THE BIRD LET LOOSE IN EASTERN SKIES</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p class="runon">Has been sung in Mason's &ldquo;Coventry,&rdquo; and the
+<i>Plymouth Hymnal</i> assigns it to &ldquo;Spohr&rdquo;&mdash;a namesake
+tune of Louis Spohr, while the <i>Unitarian
+Hymn and Tune Book</i> unites to it a beautiful triple-time
+melody from Mozart, and bearing his name.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>THOU ART, O GOD, THE LIFE AND LIGHT.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This is the best of the Irish poet's sacred songs&mdash;always
+excepting, &ldquo;Come, Ye Disconsolate.&rdquo; It is
+said to have been originally set to a secular melody
+composed by the wife of Hon. Richard Brinsley
+<a id="png:289" name="png:289"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">289 /</span> 245</samp>
+Sheridan. It is joined to the tune of &ldquo;Brighton&rdquo;
+in the Unitarian books, and William Monk's
+&ldquo;Matthias&rdquo; voices the words for the <i>Plymouth
+Hymnal.</i> The verses have the true lyrical glow,
+and make a real song of praise as well a composition
+of more than ordinary literary beauty.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Thou art, O God, the life and light</div>
+<div class="i1"> Of all this wondrous world we see;</div>
+<div>Its glow by day, its smile by night</div>
+<div class="i1"> Are but reflections caught from Thee.</div>
+<div>Where'er we turn Thy glories shine,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And all things fair and bright are Thine.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>When night with wings of starry gloom</div>
+<div class="i1"> O'ershadows all the earth, and skies</div>
+<div>Like some dark, beauteous bird, whose plume</div>
+<div class="i1"> Is sparkling with unnumbered eyes,</div>
+<div>That sacred gloom, those fires divine,</div>
+<div class="i1"> So grand, so countless, Lord, are Thine.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>When youthful spring around us breathes,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Thy Spirit warms her fragrant sigh,</div>
+<div>And every flower the summer wreathes</div>
+<div class="i1"> Is born beneath that kindling eye.</div>
+<div>Where'er we turn Thy glories shine,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And all things fair and bright are Thine.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>MOURNFULLY, TENDERLY, BEAR ON THE DEAD.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>A tender funeral ballad by Henry S. Washburn,
+composed in 1846 and entitled &ldquo;The Burial of Mrs.
+Judson.&rdquo; It is rare now in sheet-music form but
+the <i>American Vocalist</i>, to be found in the stores
+<a id="png:290" name="png:290"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">290 /</span> 246</samp>
+of most great music publishers and dealers, preserves
+the full poem and score.</p>
+
+<p>Its occasion was the death at sea, off St. Helena,
+of the Baptist missionary, Mrs. Sarah Hall
+Boardman Judson, and the solemn committal of
+her remains to the dust on that historic island,
+Sept. 1, 1845. She was on her way to America
+from Burmah at the time of her death, and the
+ship proceeded on its homeward voyage immediately
+after her burial. The touching circumstances
+of the gifted lady's death, and the strange
+romance of her entombment where Napoleon's
+grave was made twenty-four years before, inspired
+Mr. Washburn, who was a prominent layman of
+the Baptist denomination, and interested in all its
+ecclesiastical and missionary activities, and he
+wrote this poetic memorial of the event:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Mournfully, tenderly, bear on the dead;</div>
+<div>Where the warrior has lain, let the Christian be laid.</div>
+<div>No place more befitting, O rock of the sea;</div>
+<div>Never such treasure was hidden in thee.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Mournfully, tenderly, solemn and slow;</div>
+<div>Tears are bedewing the path as ye go;</div>
+<div>Kindred and strangers are mourners today;</div>
+<div>Gently, so gently, O bear her away.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Mournfully, tenderly, gaze on that brow;</div>
+<div>Beautiful is it in quietude now.</div>
+<div>One look, and then settle the loved to her rest</div>
+<div>The ocean beneath her, the turf on her breast.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Mrs. Sarah Judson was the second wife of the
+Rev. Adoniram Judson, D.D., the celebrated pioneer
+<a id="png:291" name="png:291"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">291 /</span> 247</samp>
+American Baptist missionary, and the
+mother by her first marriage, of the late Rev.
+George Dana Boardman, D.D., LL.D., of Philadelphia.</p>
+
+<p>The Hon. Henry S. Washburn was born in
+Providence, R.I., 1813, and educated at Brown
+University. During most of his long life he resided
+in Massachusetts, and occupied there many
+positions of honor and trust, serving in the State
+Legislature both as Representative and Senator.
+He was the author of many poems and lyrics of
+high merit, some of which&mdash;notably &ldquo;The Vacant
+Chair&rdquo;&mdash;became popular in sheet-music and in
+books of religious and educational use. He died
+in 1903.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The Burial of Mrs. Judson&rdquo; became favorite
+parlor music when Lyman Heath composed the
+melody for it&mdash;of the same name. Its notes and
+movement were evidently inspired by the poem,
+for it reproduces the feeling of every line. The
+threnody was widely known and sung in the
+middle years of the last century, by people, too,
+who had scarcely heard of Mrs. Judson, and received
+in the music and words their first hint of her
+history. The poem prompted the tune, but the
+tune was the garland of the poem.</p>
+
+<p>Lyman Heath of Bow, N.H., was born there
+Aug. 24, 1804. He studied music, and became a
+vocalist and vocal composer. Died July 30, 1870.</p>
+
+<a id="png:292" name="png:292"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">292 /</span> 248</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>TELL ME NOT IN MOURNFUL NUMBERS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Longfellow's &ldquo;Psalm of Life&rdquo; was written when
+he was a young man, and for some years it carried
+the title he gave it, &ldquo;What the Young Man's Heart
+Said to the Psalmist&rdquo;&mdash;a caption altogether too
+long to bear currency.</p>
+
+<p>The history of the beloved poet who wrote this
+optimistic ballad of hope and courage is too well
+known to need recounting here. He was born in
+Portland, Me., in 1807, graduated at Bowdoin
+College, and was for more than forty years professor
+of Belles Lettres in Harvard University.
+Died in Cambridge, March 4, 1882. Of his longer
+poems the most read and admired are his beautiful
+romance of &ldquo;Evangeline,&rdquo; and his epic of &ldquo;Hiawatha,&rdquo;
+but it is hardly too much to say that for
+the last sixty years, his &ldquo;Psalm of Life&rdquo; has been
+the common property of all American, if not
+English school-children, and a part of their education.
+When he was in London, Queen Victoria
+sent for him to come and see her at the palace.
+He went, and just as he was seating himself in the
+waiting coach after the interview, a man in working
+clothes appeared, hat in hand, at the coach window.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Please sir, yer honor,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;an' are you
+Mr. Longfellow?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I am Mr. Longfellow,&rdquo; said the poet.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;An' did you write the Psalm of Life?&rdquo; he
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I wrote the Psalm of Life,&rdquo; replied the poet.</p>
+
+<a id="png:293" name="png:293"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">293 /</span> 249</samp>
+
+<p>&ldquo;An', yer honor, would you be willing to take
+a workingman by the hand?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Longfellow gave the honest Englishman a
+hearty handshake, &ldquo;And&rdquo; (said he in telling the
+story) &ldquo;I never in my life received a compliment
+that gave me more satisfaction.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The incident has a delightful democratic flavor&mdash;and
+it is perfectly characteristic of the amiable
+author of the most popular poem in the English
+language. The &ldquo;Psalm of Life&rdquo; is a wonderful
+example of the power of commonplaces put into
+tuneful and elegant verse.</p>
+
+<p>The thought of setting the poem to music came
+to the compiler of one of the Unitarian church
+singing books. Some will question, however,
+whether the selection was the happiest that could
+have been made. The tune is &ldquo;Rathbun,&rdquo; Ithamar
+Conkey's melody that always recalls Sir John Bowring's
+great hymn of praise.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>BUILD THEE MORE NOBLE MANSIONS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This poem by Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes,
+known among his works as &ldquo;The Chambered
+Nautilus,&rdquo; was considered by himself as his
+worthiest achievement in verse, and his wish that
+it might live is likely to be fulfilled. It is stately,
+and in character and effect a rhythmic sermon
+from a text in &ldquo;natural theology.&rdquo; The biography
+of one of the little molluscan sea-navigators that
+continually enlarges its shell to adapt it to its
+<a id="png:294" name="png:294"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">294 /</span> 250</samp>
+growth inspired the thoughtful lines. The third,
+fourth and fifth stanzas are as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> Year after year beheld the silent toil</div>
+<div class="i2"> That spread the lustrous coil;</div>
+<div class="i2"> Still, as the spiral grew,</div>
+<div class="i1"> He left the last year's dwelling for the new,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Stole with soft step the shining archway through,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Built up its idle door,</div>
+<div> Stretched in his last-found home, and knew the old no more.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> Thanks for the heavenly message brought by thee,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Child of the wand'ring sea,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Cast from her lap forlorn!</div>
+<div class="i1"> From thy dead lips a clearer note is born</div>
+<div class="i1"> Than ever Triton blew from <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'wreathčd'">wreath&eacute;d</ins> horn!</div>
+<div class="i2"> While on my ear it rings</div>
+<div>Through the deep caves of thought I hear a voice that sings,</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> &ldquo;Build thee more noble mansions, O my soul.</div>
+<div class="i2"> As the swift seasons roll:</div>
+<div class="i2"> Leave thy low-vaulted past!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Let each new temple, nobler than the last,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Shut thee from heaven with a dome more vast,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Till thou at length art free,</div>
+<div>Leaving thy outgrown shell by life's unresting sea.&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Dr. Frederic Hedge included the poem in his
+hymn-book but without any singing-supplement to
+the words.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>WHITTIER'S SERVICE SONG.</span></h4>
+
+<p class="ctrhymn"><span>
+It may not be our lot to wield<br />
+The sickle in the harvest field.
+</span></p>
+
+<p>If this stanza and the four following do not
+reveal all the strength of John G. Whittier's spirit,
+<a id="png:295" name="png:295"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">295 /</span> 251</samp>
+they convey its serious sweetness. The verses
+were loved and prized by both President Garfield
+and President McKinley. On the Sunday before
+the latter went from his Canton, O., home to his
+inauguration in Washington the poem was sung
+as a hymn at his request in the services at the
+Methodist church where he had been a constant
+worshipper.</p>
+
+<p>The second stanza is the one most generally
+recognized and oftenest quoted:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Yet where our duty's task is wrought</div>
+<div>In unison with God's great thought,</div>
+<div>The near and future blend in one,</div>
+<div>And whatsoe'er is willed, is done.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>John Greenleaf Whittier, the poet of the
+oppressed, was born in Haverhill, Mass., 1807,
+worked on a farm and on a shoe-bench, and studied
+at the local academy, until, becoming of age, he
+went to Hartford, Conn., and began a brief
+experience in editorial life. Soon after his return
+to Massachusetts he was elected to the Legislature,
+and after his duties ended there he left the state
+for Philadelphia to edit the <i>Pennsylvania Freeman</i>.
+A few years later he returned again, and
+established his home in Amesbury, the town with
+which his life and works are always associated.</p>
+
+<p>He died in 1892 at Hampton Falls, N.H., where
+he had gone for his health.</p>
+
+<a id="png:296" name="png:296"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">296 /</span> 252</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Abends,&rdquo; the smooth triple-time choral joined
+to Whittier's poem by the music editor of the new
+<i>Methodist Hymnal</i>, speaks its meaning so well
+that it is scarcely worth while to look for another.
+Sir Herbert Stanley Oakeley, the composer, was
+born at Ealing, Eng., July 22, 1830, and educated
+at Rugby and Oxford. He studied music in
+Germany, and became a superior organist, winning
+great applause by his recitals at Edinburgh University,
+where he was elected Musical Professor.</p>
+
+<p>Archbishop Tait gave him the doctorate of music at
+Canterbury in 1871, and he was knighted by Queen
+Victoria in 1876.</p>
+
+<p>Besides vocal duets, Scotch melodies and student
+songs, he composed many anthems and tunes for
+the church&mdash;notably &ldquo;Edina&rdquo; (&ldquo;Saviour, blessed
+Saviour&rdquo;) and &ldquo;Abends,&rdquo; originally written to Keble's
+&ldquo;Sun of my Soul.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>THE BIRD WITH THE BROKEN PINION.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This lay of a lost gift, with its striking lesson,
+might have been copied from the wounded bird's
+own song, it is so natural and so clear-toned.
+The opportune thought and pen of Mr. Hezekiah
+Butterworth gave being to the little ballad the
+day he heard the late Dr. George Lorimer preach
+from a text in the story of Samson's fall (Judges
+16:21) &ldquo;The Philistines took him, and put out
+his eyes, and brought him down to Gaza ...
+<a id="png:297" name="png:297"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">297 /</span> 253</samp>
+and he did grind in the prison-house.&rdquo; A sentence
+in the course of the doctor's sermon, &ldquo;The bird
+with a broken pinion never soars as high again,&rdquo;
+was caught up by the listening author, and became
+the refrain of his impressive song. Rev. Frank M.
+Lamb, the tuneful evangelist, found it in print, and
+wrote a tune to it, and in his voice and the voices
+of other singers the little monitor has since told its
+story in revival meetings, and mission and gospel services
+throughout the land.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I walked through the woodland meadows</div>
+<div class="i1"> Where sweet the thrushes sing,</div>
+<div>And found on a bed of mosses</div>
+<div class="i1"> A bird with a broken wing.</div>
+<div>I healed its wound, and each morning</div>
+<div class="i1"> It sang its old sweet strain,</div>
+<div>But the bird with a broken pinion</div>
+<div class="i1"> Never soared as high again.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>I found a young life broken</div>
+<div class="i1"> By sin's seductive art;</div>
+<div>And, touched with a Christ-like pity,</div>
+<div class="i1"> I took him to my heart.</div>
+<div>He lived&mdash;with a noble purpose,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And struggled not in vain;</div>
+<div>But the life that sin had stricken</div>
+<div class="i1"> Never soared as high again.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>But the bird with a broken pinion</div>
+<div class="i1"> Kept another from the snare,</div>
+<div>And the life that sin had stricken</div>
+<div class="i1"> Saved another from despair.</div>
+<div>Each loss has its compensation,</div>
+<div class="i1"> There is healing for every pain</div>
+<div>But the bird with a broken pinion</div>
+<div class="i1"> Never soars as high again.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:298" name="png:298"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">298 /</span> 254</samp>
+
+<p>In the tune an extra stanza is added&mdash;as if
+something conventional were needed to make the
+poem a hymn. But the professional tone of the
+appended stanza, virtually all in its two lines&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Then come to the dear Redeemer,</div>
+<div>He will cleanse you from every <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'strain'">stain</ins>,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;is forced into its connection. The poem told the
+truth, and stopped there; and should be left to
+fasten its own impression. There never was a
+more solemn warning uttered than in this little
+apologue. It promises &ldquo;compensation&rdquo; and &ldquo;healing,&rdquo;
+but not perfect rehabilitation. Sin will
+leave its scars. Even He who &ldquo;became sin for us&rdquo;
+bore them in His resurrection body.</p>
+
+<p>Rev. Frank M. Lamb, composer and singer of
+the hymn-tune, was born in Poland, Me., 1860,
+and educated in the schools of Poland and Auburn.
+He was licensed to preach in 1888, and ordained the
+same year, and has since held pastorates in Maine,
+New York, and Massachusetts.</p>
+
+<p title="Illustration of Ellen M.H. Gates originally opposite">Besides
+his tune, very pleasing and appropriate
+music has been written to the little ballad of
+the broken wing by Geo. C. Stebbins.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>UNDER THE PALMS.</span></h4>
+
+
+<p>In the cantata, &ldquo;Under the Palms&rdquo; (&ldquo;Captive
+Judah in Babylon&rdquo;)&mdash;the joint production of
+George F. Root<sup>*</sup> and Hezekiah Butterworth, several
+<a id="png:301" name="png:301"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">301 /</span> 255</samp>
+of the latter's songs detached themselves, with their
+music, from the main work, and lingered in choral
+or solo service in places where the sacred operetta
+was presented, both in America and England.
+One of these is an effective solo in deep contralto,
+with a suggestion of recitative and chant&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>By the dark Euphrates' stream,</div>
+<div>By the Tigris, sad and lone</div>
+<div class="i1"> I wandered, a captive maid;</div>
+<div class="i1"> And the cruel Assyrian said,</div>
+<div>&ldquo;Awake your harp's sweet tone!&rdquo;</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="i0">
+I had heard of my fathers' glory from the lips of holy men,</div>
+<div class="i0">
+And I thought of the land of my fathers; I thought of my
+fathers' land then.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">Another is&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O church of Christ! our blest abode,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Celestial grace is thine.</div>
+<div>Thou art the dwelling-place of God,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The gate of joy divine.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Whene'er I come to thee in joy,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Whene'er I come in tears,</div>
+<div>Still at the Gate called Beautiful</div>
+<div class="i1"> My risen Lord appears.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;with the chorus&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Where'er for me the sun may set,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Wherever I may dwell,</div>
+<div>My heart shall nevermore forget</div>
+<div class="i1"> Thy courts, Immanuel!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+See <a href="#Root">page 316</a>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="illus">
+<a id="png:299" name="png:299"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">299 /</span> opp 254</samp>
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of Ellen M.H. Gates">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus14" name="Illus14"
+ ><img src="images/illus14-ellengates-cameo.jpg" alt=
+ "Ellen M.H. Gates" width="227" height="305" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>Ellen M.H. Gates</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table>
+<a id="png:302" name="png:302"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">302 /</span> 256</samp>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>IF YOU CANNOT ON THE OCEAN.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<p>This popular Christian ballad, entitled &ldquo;Your
+Mission,&rdquo; was written one stormy day in the winter
+of 1861&ndash;2 by Miss Ellen M. Huntington (Mrs.
+Isaac Gates), and made her reputation as one of
+the few didactic poets whose exquisite art wins a
+hearing for them everywhere. In a moment of
+revery, while looking through the window at the
+falling snow, the words came to her:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>If you cannot on the ocean</div>
+<div>Sail among the swiftest fleet.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>She turned away and wrote the lines on her
+slate, following with verse after verse till she
+finished the whole poem. &ldquo;It wrote itself,&rdquo; she
+says in her own account of it.</p>
+
+<p>Reading afterwards what she had written, she
+was surprised at her work. The poem had a meaning
+and a &ldquo;mission.&rdquo; So strong was the impression
+that the devout girl fell on her knees and consecrated
+it to a divine purpose. Free copies of it
+went to the Cooperstown, N.Y., local paper, and
+to the New York <i>Examiner</i>, and appeared in both.
+From that time the history and career of &ldquo;Your
+Mission&rdquo; presents a marked illustration of &ldquo;catenal
+influence,&rdquo; or transmitted suggestion.</p>
+
+<p>In the later days of the Civil War Philip Phillips,
+who had a wonderfully sweet tenor voice, was invited
+to sing at a great meeting of the United States Christian
+Commission in the Senate Chamber at Washington,
+February, 1865, President Lincoln and
+<a id="png:303" name="png:303"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">303 /</span> 257</samp>
+Secretary Seward (then president of the commission)
+were there, and the hall was crowded with
+leading statesmen, army generals, and friends of
+the Union. The song selected by Mr. Phillips was
+Mrs. Gates' &ldquo;Your Mission&rdquo;:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>If you cannot on the ocean</div>
+<div class="i1"> Sail among the swiftest fleet,</div>
+<div>Rocking on the highest billows,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Laughing at the storms you meet,</div>
+<div>You can stand among the sailors</div>
+<div class="i1"> Anchored yet within the bay;</div>
+<div>You can lend a hand to help them</div>
+<div class="i1"> As they launch their boats away.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The hushed audience listened spell-bound as
+the sweet singer went on, their interest growing to
+feverish eagerness until the climax was reached
+in the fifth stanza:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>If you cannot in the conflict</div>
+<div class="i1"> Prove yourself a soldier true,</div>
+<div>If where fire and smoke are thickest</div>
+<div class="i1"> There's no work for you to do,</div>
+<div>When the battlefield is silent</div>
+<div class="i1"> You can go with careful tread;</div>
+<div>You can bear away the wounded,</div>
+<div class="i1"> You can cover up the dead.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>In the storm of enthusiasm that followed, President
+Lincoln handed a hastily scribbled line on
+a bit of paper to Chairman Seward,</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Near the close let us have &lsquo;Your Mission&rsquo;
+repeated.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Phillips' great success on this occasion
+brought him so many calls for his services that he
+<a id="png:304" name="png:304"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">304 /</span> 258</samp>
+gave up everything and devoted himself to his
+tuneful art. &ldquo;Your Mission&rdquo; so gladly welcomed
+at Washington made him the first gospel songster,
+chanting round the world the divine message of the
+hymns. It was the singing by Philip Phillips that
+first impressed Ira D. Sankey with the amazing
+power of evangelical solo song, and helped him
+years later to resign his lucrative business as a
+revenue officer and consecrate his own rare vocal
+gift to the Christian ministry of sacred music.
+Heaven alone can show the birth-records of souls
+won to God all along the journeys of the &ldquo;Singing
+Pilgrims,&rdquo; and the rich succession of Mr. Sankey's
+melodies, that can be traced back by a chain of
+causes to the poem that &ldquo;wrote itself&rdquo; and became
+a hymn. And the chain may not yet be complete.
+In the words of that providential poem&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Though they may forget the singer</div>
+<div class="i1"> They will not forget the song.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Mrs. Ellen M.H. Gates, whose reputation as an
+author was made by this beautiful and always
+timely poem, was born in Torrington, Ct., and is
+the youngest sister of the late Collis P. Huntington.
+Her hymns&mdash;included in this volume and in other
+publications&mdash;are much admired and loved, both
+for their sweetness and elevated religious feeling,
+and for their poetic quality. Among her published
+books of verse are &ldquo;Night,&rdquo; &ldquo;At Noontide,&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;Treasures of Kurium.&rdquo; Her address is New
+York City.</p>
+
+<a id="png:305" name="png:305"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">305 /</span> 259</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Sidney Martin Grannis, author of the tune, was
+born Sept. 23, 1827, in Geneseo, Livingston county,
+N.Y. Lived in Leroy, of the same state, from
+1831 to 1884, when he removed to Los Angeles,
+Cal., where several of his admirers presented him
+a cottage and grounds, which at last accounts he
+still occupies. Mr. Grannis won his first reputation
+as a popular musician by his song &ldquo;Do They
+Miss Me at Home,&rdquo; and his &ldquo;Only Waiting,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Cling to the Union,&rdquo; and &ldquo;People Will Talk You
+Know,&rdquo; had an equally wide currency. As a solo
+singer his voice was remarkable, covering a range
+of two octaves, and while travelling with members
+of the &ldquo;Amphion Troupe,&rdquo; to which he belonged,
+he sang at more than five thousand concerts.
+His tune to &ldquo;Your Mission&rdquo; was composed in New
+Haven, Ct., in 1864.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>TOO LATE! TOO LATE! YE CANNOT ENTER NOW.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>&ldquo;Too Late&rdquo; is a thrilling fragment or side-song
+of Alfred Tennyson's, representing the vain plea
+of the five Foolish Virgins. Its tune bears the
+name of a London lady, &ldquo;Miss Lindsay&rdquo; (afterwards
+Mrs. J. Worthington Bliss). The arrangement
+of air, duo and quartet is very impressive<sup>*</sup>.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+<i>Methodist Hymnal</i>, No. 743.</p></div>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> &ldquo;Late, late, so late!
+ and dark the night and chill:</div>
+<div class="i1"> Late, late, so late! but we can enter still."</div>
+<div>&ldquo;Too late! too late! ye cannot enter now!&rdquo;</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:306" name="png:306"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">306 /</span> 260</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> &ldquo;No light! so late!
+ and dark and chill the night&mdash;</div>
+<div class="i1"> O let us in that we may find the light!"</div>
+<div>&ldquo;Too late! too late! ye cannot enter now!&rdquo;</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i2">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> &ldquo;Have we not heard the Bridegroom is so sweet?</div>
+<div class="i1"> O let us in that we may kiss his feet!"</div>
+<div>&ldquo;No, No&mdash;! too late! ye cannot enter now!&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The words are found in &ldquo;Queen Guinevere,&rdquo; a
+canto of the &ldquo;Idyls of the King.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>OH, GALILEE, SWEET GALILEE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This is the chorus of a charming poem of three
+stanzas that shaped itself in the mind of Mr.
+Robert Morris while sitting over the ruins on the
+traditional site of Capernaum by the Lake of
+Genneseret.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>Each cooing dove, each sighing bough,</div>
+<div class="i1"> That makes the eve so blest to me,</div>
+<div>Has something far diviner now,</div>
+<div class="i1"> It bears me back to Galilee.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Chorus</div>
+<div>Oh, Galilee, sweet Galilee,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Where Jesus loved so much to be;</div>
+<div>Oh, Galilee, blue Galilee,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Come sing thy song again to me.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Robert Morris, LL.D., born Aug. 31, 1818,
+was a scholar, and an expert in certain scientific
+subjects, and wrote works on numismatics and the
+&ldquo;Poetry of Free Masonry.&rdquo; Commissioned to
+Palestine in 1868 on historic and <ins class="transcriber" title=
+ "Transcriber's note: original reads 'archeological'">archaeological</ins>
+service for the United Order, he explored the
+<a id="png:307" name="png:307"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">307 /</span> 261</samp>
+scenes of ancient Jewish and Christian life and
+event in the Holy Land, and being a religious man,
+followed the Saviour's earthly footsteps with a
+reverent zeal that left its inspiration with him
+while he lived. He died in the year 1888, but his
+Christian ballad secured him a lasting place in
+every devout memory.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+
+<p>The author wrote out his hymn in 1874 and
+sent it to his friend, the musician, Mr. Horatio R.
+Palmer,<sup>*</sup> and the latter learned it by heart, and
+carried it with him in his musings &ldquo;till it floated out
+in the melody you know,&rdquo; (to use his own words.)</p>
+
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+See <a href="#png:361">page 311</a>.</p></div>
+
+<a id="png:308" name="png:308"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">308 /</span> 262</samp>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="chap">CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h1>OLD REVIVAL HYMNS.</h1>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<p>The sober churches of the &ldquo;Old Thirteen&rdquo;
+states and of their successors far into the nineteenth
+century, sustained evening prayer-meetings more
+or less commonly, but necessity made them in
+most cases &ldquo;cottage meetings&rdquo; appointed on
+Sunday and here and there in the scattered homes
+of country parishes. Their intent was the same
+as that of &ldquo;revival meetings,&rdquo; since so called,
+though the method&mdash;and the music&mdash;were
+<ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'diferent'">different</ins>.
+The results in winning sinners, so far as
+they owed anything to the hymns and hymn-tunes,
+were apt to be a new generation of Christian
+recruits as sombre as the singing. &ldquo;Lebanon&rdquo;
+set forth the appalling shortness of human life;
+&ldquo;Windham&rdquo; gave its depressing story of the great
+majority of mankind on the &ldquo;broad road,&rdquo; and
+other minor tunes proclaimed God's sovereignty
+and eternal decrees; or if a psalm had His love in
+it, it was likely to be sung in a similar melancholy
+key. Even in his gladness the good minister,
+Thomas Baldwin, of the Second Baptist Church,
+<a id="png:309" name="png:309"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">309 /</span> 263</samp>
+at Boston, North End, returning from Newport,
+N.H., where he had happily harmonized a discordant
+church, could not escape the strait-lace
+of a C minor for his thankful hymn&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>From whence doth this union arise,</div>
+<div>That hatred is conquered by love.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The Puritans took their pleasures seriously,&rdquo;
+and this did not cease to be true till at least two
+hundred years after the Pilgrims landed or Boston
+was founded.</p>
+
+<p>Time, that covered the ghastly faces on the old
+grave-stones with moss, gradually stole away the
+unction of minor-tune singing.</p>
+
+<p>The songs of the great revival of 1740 swept the
+country with positive rather than negative music.
+Even Jonathan Edwards admitted the need of better
+psalm-books and better psalmody.</p>
+
+<p>Edwards, during his life, spent some time among
+the Indians as a missionary teacher; but probably
+neither he nor David Brainerd ever saw a Christian
+hymn composed by an Indian. The following,
+from the early years of the last century, is apparently
+the first, certainly the only surviving, effort
+of a converted but half-educated red man to utter
+his thoughts in pious metre. Whoever trimmed
+the original words and measure into printable
+shape evidently took care to preserve the broken
+English of the simple convert. It is an interesting
+relic of the Christian thought and sentiment of a
+pagan just learning to prattle prayer and praise:</p>
+
+<a id="png:310" name="png:310"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">310 /</span> 264</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>In de dark wood, no Indian nigh,</div>
+<div>Den me look heaben, send up cry,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Upon my knees so low.</div>
+<div>Dat God on high, in shinee place,</div>
+<div>See me in night, with teary face,</div>
+<div class="i1"> De priest, he tell me so.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>God send Him angel take me care;</div>
+<div>Him come Heself and hear um prayer,</div>
+<div class="i1"> If Indian heart do pray.</div>
+<div>God see me now, He know me here.</div>
+<div>He say, poor Indian, neber fear,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Me wid you night and day.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>So me lub God wid inside heart;</div>
+<div>He fight for me, He take my part,</div>
+<div class="i1"> He save my life before.</div>
+<div>God lub poor Indian in de wood;</div>
+<div>So me lub God, and dat be good;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Me pray Him two times more.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>When me be old, me head be gray,</div>
+<div>Den He no lebe me, so He say:</div>
+<div class="i1"> Me wid you till you die.</div>
+<div>Den take me up to shinee place,</div>
+<div>See white man, red man, black man's face,</div>
+<div class="i1"> All happy 'like on high.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Few days, den God will come to me,</div>
+<div>He knock off chains, He set me free,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Den take me up on high.</div>
+<div>Den Indian sing His praises blest,</div>
+<div>And lub and praise Him wid de rest,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And neber, neber cry.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The above hymn, which may be found in different
+forms in old New England tracts and hymn-books,
+and which used to be sung in Methodist
+<a id="png:311" name="png:311"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">311 /</span> 265</samp>
+conference and prayer-meetings in the same way that
+old slave-hymns and the &ldquo;Jubilee Singers&rdquo; refrains
+are sometimes sung now, was composed by
+William Apes, a converted Indian, who was born
+in Massachusetts, in 1798. His father was a white
+man, but married an Indian descended from the
+family of King Philip, the Indian warrior, and the
+last of the Indian chiefs. His grandmother was the
+king's granddaughter, as he claimed, and was famous
+for her personal beauty. He caused his autobiography
+and religious experience to be published.
+The original hymn is quite long, and contains some
+singular and characteristic expressions.</p>
+
+<p>The authorship of the tune to which the words
+were sung has been claimed for Samuel Cowdell, a
+schoolmaster of Annapolis Valley, Nova Scotia,
+1820, but the date of the lost tune was probably
+much earlier.</p>
+
+<p>In the early days of New England, before the
+Indian missions had been brought to an end by the
+sweeping away of the tribes, several fine hymns
+were composed by educated Indians, and were
+used in the churches. The best known is that beginning&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When shall we all meet again?</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>It was composed by three Indians at the planting
+of a memorial pine on leaving Dartmouth College,
+where they had been studying. The lines indicate
+an expectation of missionary life and work.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When shall we all meet again?</div>
+<div>When shall we all meet again?</div>
+<a id="png:312" name="png:312"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">312 /</span> 266</samp>
+<div>Oft shall glowing hope expire,</div>
+<div>Oft shall wearied love retire,</div>
+<div>Oft shall death and sorrow reign</div>
+<div>Ere we all shall meet again.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Though in distant lands we sigh,</div>
+<div>Parched beneath a burning sky,</div>
+<div>Though the deep between us rolls,</div>
+<div>Friendship shall unite our souls;</div>
+<div>And in fancy's wide domain,</div>
+<div>There we all shall meet again.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>When these burnished locks are gray,</div>
+<div>Thinned by many a toil-spent day,</div>
+<div>When around this youthful pine</div>
+<div>Moss shall creep and ivy twine,</div>
+<div>(Long may this loved bower remain!)</div>
+<div>Here may we all meet again.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>When the dreams of life are fled,</div>
+<div>When its wasted lamps are dead,</div>
+<div>When in cold oblivion's shade</div>
+<div>Beauty, health, and strength are laid,</div>
+<div>Where immortal spirits reign,</div>
+<div>There we all shall meet again.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This parting piece was sung in religious meetings
+as a hymn, like the other once so common, but
+later,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>&ldquo;When shall we meet again,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Meet ne'er to sever?&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;to a tune in B flat minor, excessively plaintive, and
+likely to sadden an <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'emoional'">emotional</ins>
+singer or hearer to
+tears. The full harmony is found in the <i>American
+Vocalist</i>, and the air is reprinted in the <i>Revivalist</i>
+(1868). The fact that minor music is the natural
+<a id="png:313" name="png:313"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">313 /</span> 267</samp>
+Indian tone in song makes it probable that the
+melody is as ancient as the hymn&mdash;though no date
+is given for either.</p>
+
+<p>Tradition says that nearly fifty years later the
+same three Indians were providentially drawn to
+the spot where they parted, and met again, and
+while they were together composed and sang another
+ode. Truth to tell, however, it had only one
+note of gladness, and that was in the first stanza:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Parted many a toil-spent year,</div>
+<div>Pledged in youth to memory dear,</div>
+<div>Still to friendship's magnet true,</div>
+<div>We our social joys renew;</div>
+<div>Bound by love's unsevered chain,</div>
+<div>Here on earth we meet again.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The remaining three stanzas dwell principally on
+the ravages time has made. The reunion ode of those
+stoical college classmates of a stoical race could
+have been sung in the same B flat minor.</p>
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>AWAKED BY SINAI'S AWFUL SOUND.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<p>The name of the Indian, Samson Occum, who
+wrote this hymn (variously spelt Ockom, Ockum,
+Occam, Occom) is not borne by any public institution,
+but New England owes the foundation of
+Dartmouth College to his hard work. Dartmouth
+College was originally &ldquo;Moore's Indian Charity
+School,&rdquo; organized (1750) in Lebanon, Ct., by Rev.
+Eleazer Wheelock and endowed (1755) by Joshua
+Moore (or More). Good men and women who
+<a id="png:314" name="png:314"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">314 /</span> 268</samp>
+had at heart the spiritual welfare of a fading race
+contributed to the school's support and young
+Indians resorted to it from both New England and
+the Middle States, but funds were insufficient, and
+it was foreseen that the charity must inevitably
+outgrow its missionary purpose and if continued at
+all must depend on a wider and more liberal patronage.</p>
+
+<p>Samson Occum was born in Mohegan, New
+London Co., Ct., probably in the year 1722. Converted
+from paganism in 1740 (possibly under the
+preaching of Whitefield, who was in this country
+at that time) he desired to become a missionary to
+his people, and entered Eleazer Wheelock's school.
+After four years study, then a young man of twenty-two,
+he began to teach and preach among the Montauk
+Indians, and in 1759 the Presbytery of Suffolk
+Co., L.I., ordained him to the ministry. A benevolent
+society in Scotland, hearing of, his ability and
+zeal, gave him an appointment, under its auspices,
+among the Oneidas in 1761, where he labored
+four years. The interests of the school at Lebanon,
+where he had been educated, were dear to him, and
+he was tireless in its cause, procuring pupils for it,
+and working eloquently as its advocate with voice
+and pen. In 1765 he crossed the Atlantic to solicit
+funds for the Indian school, and remained
+four years in England and Scotland, lecturing in its
+behalf, and preaching nearly four hundred sermons.
+As a result he raised ten thousand pounds.
+The donation was put in charge of a Board of
+<a id="png:315" name="png:315"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">315 /</span> 269</samp>
+Trustees of which Lord Dartmouth was chairman.
+When it was decided to remove the school from
+Lebanon, Ct., the efforts of Governor Wentworth, of
+New Hampshire, secured its location at Hanover in
+that state. It was christened after Lord Dartmouth&mdash;and
+the names of Occum, Moore and Wheelock
+retired into the encyclopedias.</p>
+
+<p>The Rev. Samson Occum died in 1779, while
+laboring among the Stockbridge (N.Y.) Indians.
+Several hymns were written by this remarkable
+man, and also &ldquo;An Account of the Customs and
+Manners of the Montauks.&rdquo; The hymn, &ldquo;Awaked
+by Sinai's Awful Sound,&rdquo; set to the stentorian tune
+of &ldquo;Ganges,&rdquo; was a tremendous sermon in itself
+to old-time congregations, and is probably as indicative
+of the doctrines which converted its writer as
+of the <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'cotemporary'">contemporary</ins>
+belief prominent in choir and pulpit.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Awaked by Sinai's awful sound,</div>
+<div>My soul in bonds of guilt I found,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And knew not where to go,</div>
+<div>Eternal truth did loud proclaim</div>
+<div>&ldquo;The sinner must be born again.</div>
+<div class="i1"> Or sink in endless woe.&rdquo;</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>When to the law I trembling fled,</div>
+<div>It poured its curses on my head:</div>
+<div class="i1"> I no relief could find.</div>
+<div>This fearful truth increased my pain,</div>
+<div>&ldquo;The sinner must be born again,&rdquo;</div>
+<div class="i1"> And whelmed my troubled mind.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<a id="png:316" name="png:316"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">316 /</span> 270</samp>
+<div>But while I thus in anguish lay,</div>
+<div>Jesus of Nazareth passed that way;</div>
+<div class="i1"> I felt His pity move.</div>
+<div>The sinner, once by justice slain,</div>
+<div>Now by His grace is born again,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And sings eternal Love!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The rugged original has been so often and so
+variously altered and &ldquo;toned down,&rdquo; that only a
+few unusually accurate aged memories can recall
+it. The hymn began going out of use fifty
+years ago, and is now seldom seen.</p>
+
+<p>The name &ldquo;S. Chandler,&rdquo; attached to &ldquo;Ganges,&rdquo;
+leaves the identity of the composer in shadow. It
+is supposed he was born in 1760. The tune appeared
+about 1790.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WHERE NOW ARE THE HEBREW CHILDREN?</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This quaint old unison, repeating the above three
+times, followed by the answer (thrice repeated) and
+climaxed with&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1">Safely in the Promised Land,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;was a favorite at ancient camp-meetings, and a
+good leader could keep it going in a congregation
+or a happy group of vocalists, improvising a new
+start-line after every stop until his memory or invention
+gave out.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>They went up from the fiery furnace,</div>
+<div>They went up from the fiery furnace,</div>
+<div>They went up from the fiery furnace,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Safely to the Promised Land.</div>
+</div></div>
+<a id="png:317" name="png:317"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">317 /</span> 271</samp>
+<p class="runon">Sometimes it was&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Where now is the good Elijah?</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>He went up in a chariot of fire;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and again,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Where now is the good old Daniel?</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>He went up from the den of lions;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and so on, finally announcing&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>By and by we'll go home for to meet him, [three&nbsp;times]</div>
+<div class="i1"> Safely in the Promised Land.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">The enthusiasm excited by the swinging rhythm of
+the tune sometimes rose to a passionate pitch, and
+it was seldom used in the more controlled religious
+assemblies. If any attempt was ever made to
+print the song<sup>*</sup> the singers had little need to read
+the music. Like the ancient runes, it came into
+being by spontaneous generation, and lived in phonetic
+tradition.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+Mr. Hubert P. Main believes he once saw &ldquo;The Hebrew Children&rdquo; in
+print in one of Horace Waters' editions of the <i>Sabbath Bell</i>.</p></div>
+
+<p>A strange, wild p&aelig;an of exultant song was one
+often heard from Peter Cartwright, the muscular
+circuit-preacher. A remembered fragment shows
+its quality:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Then my soul mounted higher</div>
+<div class="i1"> In a chariot of fire,</div>
+<div>And the moon it was under my feet.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">There is a tradition that he sang it over a stalwart
+blacksmith while chastising him for an ungodly
+<a id="png:318" name="png:318"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">318 /</span> 272</samp>
+defiance and assault in the course of one of his gospel
+journeys&mdash;and that the defeated blacksmith became
+his friend and follower.</p>
+
+<p>Peter Cartwright was born in Amherst county,
+Va., Sept. 1, 1785, and died near Pleasant Plains,
+Sangamon county, Ill., Sept., 1872.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>THE EDEN OF LOVE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This song, written early in the last century, by
+John J. Hicks, recalls the name of the eccentric
+traveling evangelist, Lorenzo Dow, born in Coventry,
+Ct., October 16, 1777; died in Washington,
+D.C., Feb. 2, 1834. It was the favorite hymn of his
+wife, the beloved Peggy Dow, and has furnished
+the key-word of more than one devotional rhyme
+that has uplifted the toiling souls of rural evangelists
+and their greenwood congregations:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>How sweet to reflect on the joys that await me</div>
+<div class="i1"> In yon blissful region, the haven of rest,</div>
+<div>Where glorified spirits with welcome shall greet me,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And lead me to mansions prepared for the blest.</div>
+<div>There, dwelling in light, and with glory enshrouded,</div>
+<div class="i1"> My happiness perfect, my mind's sky unclouded,</div>
+<div>I'll bathe in the ocean of pleasure unbounded,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And range with delight through the Eden of love.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The words and tune were printed in <i>Leavitt's
+Christian Lyre</i>, 1830.</p>
+
+<p>The same strain in the same metre is continued in
+the hymn of Rev. Wm. Hunter, D.D., (1842) printed
+in his <i>Minstrel of Zion</i> (1845). J.W. Dadmun's
+<i>Melodian</i> (1860) copied it, retaining, apparently,
+<a id="png:319" name="png:319"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">319 /</span> 273</samp>
+the original music, with an added refrain of invitation,
+&ldquo;Will you go? will you go?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>We are bound for the land of the pure and the holy,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The home of the happy, the kingdom of love;</div>
+<div>Ye wand'rers from God on the broad road of folly,</div>
+<div class="i1"> O say, will you go to the Eden above?</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The old hymn-tune has a brisk out-door delivery,
+and is full of revival fervor and the ozone of the
+pines.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>O CANA-AN, BRIGHT CANA-AN</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p class="runon">Was one of the stimulating melodies of the old-time
+awakenings, which were simply airs, and were sung
+unisonously. &ldquo;O Cana-an&rdquo; (pronounced in three
+syllables) was the chorus, the hymn-lines being
+either improvised or picked up miscellaneously
+from memory, the interline, &ldquo;I am bound for the
+land of Cana-an,&rdquo; occurring between every two.
+John Wesley's &ldquo;How happy is the pilgrim's lot&rdquo;
+was one of the snatched stanzas swept into the
+current of the song. An example of the tune-leader's
+improvisations to keep the hymn going
+was&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>If you get there before I do,&mdash;</div>
+<div class="i1"> <i>I am bound for the land of Cana-an!</i></div>
+<div>Look out for me, I'm coming too&mdash;</div>
+<div class="i1"> <i>I am bound for the land of Cana-an!</i></div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">And then hymn and tune took possession of the
+assembly and rolled on in a circle with&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>O Cana-an, bright Cana-an!</div>
+<div>I am bound for the land of Cana-an;</div>
+<a id="png:320" name="png:320"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">320 /</span> 274</samp>
+<div>O Cana-an it is my hap-py home,</div>
+<div>I am bound for the land of Cana-an</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;till the voices came back to another starting-line
+and began again. There was always a movement
+to the front when that tune was sung, and&mdash;with all
+due abatement for superficial results in the sensation
+of the moment&mdash;it is undeniable that many
+souls were truly born into the kingdom of God under
+the sound of that rude woodland song.</p>
+
+<p>Both its words and music are credited to Rev. John
+Maffit, who probably wrote the piece about 1829.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>A CHARGE TO KEEP I HAVE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn of Charles Wesley was often heard
+at the camp grounds, from the rows of tents in the
+morning while the good women prepared their
+pancakes and coffee, and</p>
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p class="runon">was invariably old &ldquo;Kentucky,&rdquo;
+by Jeremiah Ingalls.
+Sung as a solo by a sweet and spirited voice, it
+slightly resembled &ldquo;Golden Hill,&rdquo; but oftener its
+halting bars invited a more drawling style of execution
+unworthy of a hymn that merits a tune like
+&ldquo;St. Thomas.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Old &ldquo;Kentucky&rdquo; was not field music.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>CHRISTIANS, IF YOUR HEARTS ARE WARM.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Elder John Leland, born in Grafton, Mass., 1754,
+was not only a strenuous personality in the Baptist
+<a id="png:321" name="png:321"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">321 /</span> 275</samp>
+denomination, but was well known everywhere in
+New England, and, in fact, his preaching trip to
+Washington (1801) with the &ldquo;Cheshire Cheese&rdquo;
+made his fame national. He is spoken of as &ldquo;the
+minister who wrote his own hymns&rdquo;&mdash;a peculiarity
+in which he imitated Watts and Doddridge. When
+some natural shrinking was manifest in converts of
+his winter revivals, under his rigid rule of immediate
+baptism, he wrote this hymn to fortify them:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Christians, if your hearts are warm,</div>
+<div>Ice and cold can do no harm;</div>
+<div>If by Jesus you are prized</div>
+<div>Rise, believe and be baptized.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>He found use for the hymn, too, in rallying
+church-members who staid away from his meetings
+in bad weather. The &ldquo;poetry&rdquo; expressed what he
+wanted to say&mdash;which, in his view, was sufficient
+apology for it. It was sung in revival meetings like
+others that he wrote, and a few hymnbooks now
+long obsolete contained it; but of Leland's hymns
+only one survives. Gray-headed men and women
+remember being sung to sleep by their mothers
+with that old-fashioned evening song to Amzi
+Chapin's<sup>*</sup> tune&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The day is past and gone,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The evening shades appear,</div>
+<div>O may we all remember well</div>
+<div class="i1"> The night of death draws near;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:322" name="png:322"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">322 /</span> 276</samp>
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and with all its solemnity and other-worldness it
+is dear to recollection, and its five stanzas are lovingly
+hunted up in the few hymnals where it is found.
+Bradbury's &ldquo;Braden,&rdquo; <i>(Baptist Praise Book</i>, 1873,)
+is one of its tunes.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+Amzi Chapin has left, apparently, nothing more than the record of his
+birth, March 2, 1768, and the memory of his tune. It appeared as early as
+1805.</p></div>
+
+<p>Elder Leland was a remarkable revival preacher,
+and his prayers&mdash;as was said of Elder Jabez Swan's
+fifty or sixty years later&mdash;&ldquo;brought heaven and
+earth together.&rdquo; He traveled through the Eastern
+States as an evangelist, and spent a season in
+Virginia in the same work. In 1801 he revisited
+that region on a curious errand. The farmers of
+Cheshire, Mass., where Leland was then a settled
+pastor, conceived the plan of sending &ldquo;the biggest
+cheese in America&rdquo; to President Jefferson, and
+Leland (who was a good democrat) offered to go
+to Washington on an ox-team with it, and &ldquo;preach
+all the way&rdquo;&mdash;which he actually did.</p>
+
+<p>The cheese weighed 1450 lbs.</p>
+
+<p>Elder Leland died in North Adams, Mass., Jan.
+14, 1844. Another of his hymns, which deserved to
+live with his &ldquo;Evening Song,&rdquo; seemed to be answered
+in the brightness of his death-bed hope:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O when shall I see Jesus</div>
+<div class="i1"> And reign with Him above,</div>
+<div>And from that flowing fountain</div>
+<div class="i1"> Drink everlasting love?</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>AWAKE, MY SOUL, TO JOYFUL LAYS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This glad hymn of Samuel Medley is his thanksgiving
+song, written soon after his conversion. In
+<a id="png:323" name="png:323"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">323 /</span> 277</samp>
+the places of rural worship no lay of Christian
+praise and gratitude was ever more heartily sung
+than this at the testimony meetings.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Awake, my soul, to joyful lays,</div>
+<div>And sing thy great Redeemer's praise;</div>
+<div>He justly claims a song from me:</div>
+<div>His loving-kindness, oh, how free!</div>
+<div>Loving-kindness, loving-kindness,</div>
+<div>His loving-kindness, oh, how free!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE,</h4>
+
+<p class="runon">With its queer curvet in every second line, had no
+other name than &ldquo;Loving-Kindness,&rdquo; and was
+probably a camp-meeting melody in use for some
+time before its publication. It is found in <i>Leavitt's
+Christian Lyre</i> as early as 1830. The name
+&ldquo;William Caldwell&rdquo; is all that is known of its composer,
+though he is supposed to have lived in
+Tennessee.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>THE LORD INTO HIS GARDEN COMES.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p class="runon">Was a common old-time piece sure to be heard at
+every religious rally, and every one present, saint and
+sinner, had it by heart, or at least the chorus of it&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Amen, amen, my soul replies,</div>
+<div>I'm bound to meet you in the skies,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And claim my mansion there, etc.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The anonymous<sup>*</sup> &ldquo;Garden Hymn, as old, at
+<a id="png:324" name="png:324"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">324 /</span> 278</samp>
+least, as 1800,&rdquo; has nearly passed out of reach,
+except by the long arm of the antiquary; but it
+served its generation.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+A &ldquo;Rev.&rdquo; Mr. Campbell, author of &ldquo;The Glorious Light
+of Zion,&rdquo; &ldquo;There is a Holy City,&rdquo; and &ldquo;There is a
+Land of Pleasure,&rdquo; has been sometimes
+credited with the origin of the Garden Hymn.</p></div>
+
+<p>Its vigorous tune is credited to Jeremiah Ingalls
+(1764&ndash;1838).</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The Lord into His garden comes;</div>
+<div>The spices yield a rich perfume,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The lilies grow and thrive,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The lilies grow and thrive.</div>
+<div>Refreshing showers of grace divine</div>
+<div>From Jesus flow to every vine,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Which makes the dead revive,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Which makes the dead revive.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>THE CHARIOT! THE CHARIOT!</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Henry Hart Milman, generally known as Dean
+Milman, was born in 1791, and was educated at
+Oxford. In 1821 he was installed as university
+professor of poetry at Oxford, and it was while
+filling this position that he wrote this celebrated
+hymn, under the title of &ldquo;The Last Day.&rdquo; It is not
+only a hymn, but a poem&mdash;a sublime ode that recalls,
+in a different movement, the tones of the
+&ldquo;Dies Irae.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Dean Milman (of St Paul's), besides his many
+striking poems and learned historical works, wrote
+at least twelve hymns, among which are&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote"><span>
+Ride on, ride on in majesty,
+<br />
+<span style="line-height: 1.2em; margin-top: 0.5em;
+ display: inline;">O help us Lord; each hour of need<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em; margin-top: 0;
+ display: inline;"> Thy heavenly succor give,</span></span>
+<br />
+When our heads are bowed with woe,
+</span></p>
+<a id="png:325" name="png:325"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">325 /</span> 279</samp>
+<p class="runon">&mdash;which last may have been written soon after he laid
+three of his children in one grave, in the north
+aisle of <ins class="transcriber" title=
+ "Transcriber's note: original has 'Westminister'">Westminster</ins> Abbey. He lived a laborious
+and useful life of seventy-seven years, dying Sept.
+24, 1868.</p>
+
+<p>There were times in the old revivals when the
+silver clarion of the &ldquo;Chariot Hymn&rdquo; must needs
+replace the ruder blast of Occum in old &ldquo;Ganges&rdquo;
+and sinners unmoved by the invisible God of Horeb
+be made to behold Him&mdash;in a vision of the &ldquo;Last
+Day.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The Chariot! the Chariot! its wheels roll in fire</div>
+<div>When the Lord cometh down in the pomp of His ire,</div>
+<div>Lo, self-moving, it drives on its pathway of cloud,</div>
+<div>And the heavens with the burden of Godhead are bowed.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i2">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>The Judgment! the Judgment! the thrones are all set,</div>
+<div>Where the Lamb and the white-vested elders are met;</div>
+<div>There all flesh is at once in the sight of the Lord,</div>
+<div>And the doom of eternity hangs on His word.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The name &ldquo;Williams&rdquo; or &ldquo;J.&nbsp;Williams&rdquo;
+is attached to various editions of the trumpet-like tune, but
+so far no guide book gives us location, date or sketch
+of the composer.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>COME, MY BRETHREN.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Another of the &ldquo;unstudied&rdquo; revival hymns of
+invitation.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Come, my brethren, let us try</div>
+<div class="i1"> For a little season</div>
+<div>Every burden to lay by,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Come and let us reason.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:326" name="png:326"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">326 /</span> 280</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>What is this that casts you down.</div>
+<div class="i1"> What is this that grieves you?</div>
+<div>Speak and let your wants be known;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Speaking may relieve you.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This colloquial rhyme was apt to be started by
+some good brother or sister in one of the chilly
+pauses of a prayer-meeting. The air (there was
+never anything more to it) with a range of only a
+fifth, slurred the last syllable of every second line,
+giving the quaint effect of a bent note, and altogether
+the music was as homely as the verse. Both
+are anonymous. But the little chant sometimes
+served its purpose wonderfully well.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>BRETHREN, WHILE WE SOJOURN HERE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn was always welcome in the cottage
+meetings as well as in the larger greenwood
+assemblies. It was written by Rev. Joseph Swain,
+about 1783.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Brethren, while we sojourn here</div>
+<div>Fight we must, but should not fear.</div>
+<div>Foes we have, but we've a Friend,</div>
+<div>One who loves us to the end;</div>
+<div>Forward then with courage go;</div>
+<div>Long we shall not dwell below,</div>
+<div>Soon the joyful news will come,</div>
+<div>&ldquo;Child, your Father calls, &lsquo;Come home.&rsquo;&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The tune was sometimes &ldquo;Pleyel's Hymn,&rdquo;
+but oftener it was sung to a melody now generally
+forgotten of much the same movement but slurred
+in peculiarly sweet and tender turns. The cadence
+<a id="png:327" name="png:327"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">327 /</span> 281</samp>
+of the last tune gave the refrain line a melting
+effect:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Child, your Father calls, &ldquo;Come home.&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Some of the spirit of this old tune (in the few
+hymnals where the hymn is now printed) is preserved
+in Geo. Kingsley's &ldquo;Messiah&rdquo; which accompanies
+the words, but the modulations are wanting.</p>
+
+<p>Joseph Swain was born in Birmingham, Eng.
+in 1761. Bred among mechanics, he was early
+apprenticed to the engraver's trade, but he was a
+boy of poetic temperament and fond of writing
+verses. After the spiritual change which brought
+a new purpose into his life, he was baptized by Dr.
+Rippon and studied for the ministry. At the age
+of about twenty-five, he was settled over the Baptist
+church in Walworth, where he remained till his
+death, April 16, 1796.</p>
+
+<p>For more than a century his hymns have lived
+and been loved in all the English-speaking world.
+Among those still in use are&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote"><span>
+How sweet, how heavenly is the sight,
+<br />
+Pilgrims we are to Canaan bound,
+<br />
+O Thou in whose presence my soul takes delight.
+</span></p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>HAPPY DAY.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="i1">O happy day that fixed my choice.</div>
+<div class="i5"> &mdash;<i>Doddridge.</i></div>
+<div class="i1">O how happy are they who the Saviour obey.</div>
+<div class="i5"> &mdash;<i>Charles Wesley</i>.</div>
+</div>
+
+<a id="png:328" name="png:328"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">328 /</span> 282</samp>
+<p>These were voices as sure to be heard in converts'
+meetings as the leader's prayer or text, the
+former sung inevitably to Rimbault's tune,
+&ldquo;Happy Day,&rdquo; and the latter to a &ldquo;Western Melody&rdquo;
+quite as closely akin to Wesley's words.</p>
+
+<p>Edward Francis Rimbault, born at Soho, Eng.,
+June 13, 1816, was at sixteen years of age organist
+at the Soho Swiss Church, and became a skilled
+though not a prolific composer. He once received&mdash;and
+declined&mdash;the offer of an appointment as
+professor of music in Harvard College. Died of a
+lingering illness Sept, 26, 1876.</p>
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>COME, HOLY SPIRIT, HEAVENLY DOVE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+<h4 class="quote" style="text-align: right">&mdash;<i>Watts.</i></h4>
+
+<p>This was the immortal song-litany that fitted
+almost anywhere into every service. The Presbyterians
+and Congregationalists sang it in Tansur's
+&ldquo;St. Martins,&rdquo; the Baptists in William Jones'
+&ldquo;Stephens&rdquo; and the Methodists in Maxim's
+&ldquo;Turner&rdquo; (which had the most music), but the
+hymn went about as well with one as with another.</p>
+
+<p>The Rev. William Jones (1726&ndash;1800) an English
+rector, and Abraham Maxim of Buckfield, Me.,
+(1773&ndash;1829) contributed quite a liberal share of
+the &ldquo;continental&rdquo; tunes popular in the latter part
+of the 18th century. Maxim was eccentric, but
+the tradition that an unfortunate affair of the heart
+once drove him into the woods to make away with
+himself, but a bird on the roof of a logger's hut,
+<a id="png:329" name="png:329"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">329 /</span> 283</samp>
+making plaintive sounds, interrupted him, and he
+sat down and wrote the tune &ldquo;Hallowell,&rdquo; on a
+strip of white birch bark, is more likely legendary.
+The following words, said to have inspired
+his minor tune, are still set to it in the old collections:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>As on some lonely building's top</div>
+<div class="i1"> The sparrow makes her moan,</div>
+<div>Far from the tents of joy and hope</div>
+<div class="i1"> I sit and grieve alone.<sup>*</sup></div>
+</div></div>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+Versified by Nahum Tate from Ps. 102:7.</p></div>
+
+<p>Maxim was fond of the minor mode, but his
+minors, like &ldquo;Hallowell,&rdquo; &ldquo;New Durham,&rdquo; etc.,
+are things of the past. His major chorals and
+fugues, such as &ldquo;Portland,&rdquo; &ldquo;Buckfield,&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;Turner&rdquo; had in them the spirit of healthier
+melody and longer life. He published at least two
+collections, <i>The Oriental Harmony</i>, in 1802, and
+<i>The Northern Harmony</i>, in 1805.</p>
+
+<p>William Tansur (Tans-ur), author of &ldquo;St. Martins&rdquo;
+(1669&ndash;1783), was an organist, composer, compiler,
+and theoretical writer. He was born at
+Barnes, Surrey, Eng., (according to one account,)
+and died at St. Neot's.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>COME, THOU FOUNT OF EVERY BLESSING.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn of Rev. Robert Robinson was almost
+always heard in the tune of &ldquo;Nettleton,&rdquo; composed
+by John Wyeth, about 1812. The more
+<a id="png:330" name="png:330"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">330 /</span> 284</samp>
+wavy melody of &ldquo;Sicily&rdquo; (or &ldquo;Sicilian Hymn&rdquo;)
+sometimes carried the verses, but never with the
+same sympathetic unction. The sing-song movement
+and accent of old &ldquo;Nettleton&rdquo; made it the
+country favorite.</p>
+
+<p>Robert Robinson, born in Norfolk, Eng., Sept.
+27, 1735, was a poor boy, left fatherless at eight
+years of age, and apprenticed to a barber, but was
+converted by the preaching of Whitefield and
+studied till he obtained a good education, and was
+ordained to the Methodist ministry. He is
+supposed to have written his well-known hymn in
+1758. A certain unsteadiness of mind, however,
+caused him to revise his religious beliefs too often
+for his spiritual health or enjoyment, and after
+preaching as a Methodist, a Baptist, and an
+Independent, he finally became a Socinian. On
+a stage-coach journey, when a lady fellow-passenger
+began singing &ldquo;Come, Thou Fount of Every
+Blessing,&rdquo; to relieve the monotony of the ride, he
+said to her, &ldquo;Madam, I am the unhappy man
+who wrote that hymn many years ago; and I
+would give a thousand worlds, if I had them, if I
+could feel as I felt then.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Robinson died June 9, 1790.</p>
+
+<p>John Wyeth was born in Cambridge, Mass.,
+1792, and died at Harrisburg, Pa., 1858. He was
+a musician and publisher, and issued a Music
+Book, <i>Wyeth's Repository of Sacred Music</i>.</p>
+
+<a id="png:331" name="png:331"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">331 /</span> 285</samp>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>A POOR WAYFARING MAN OF GRIEF,</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p class="runon">Written by James Montgomery, Dec., 1826, was a
+hymn of tide and headway in George Coles' tune of
+&ldquo;Duane St.,&rdquo; with a step that made every heart
+beat time. The four picturesque eight-line stanzas
+made a practical sermon in verse and song from
+Matt. 25:35, telling how&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>A poor wayfaring man of grief</div>
+<div class="i1"> Hath often crossed me on my way,</div>
+<div>Who sued so humbly for relief</div>
+<div class="i1"> That I could never answer nay.</div>
+<div>I had no power to ask his name,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Whither he went or whence he came,</div>
+<div>Yet there was something in his eye</div>
+<div class="i1"> That won my love, I knew not why;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and in the second and third stanzas the narrator
+relates how he entertained him, and this was the
+sequel&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Then in a moment to my view</div>
+<div class="i1"> The stranger started from disguise</div>
+<div>The token in His hand I knew;</div>
+<div class="i1"> My Saviour stood before my eyes.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>When once that song was started, every tongue
+took it up, (and it was strange if every foot did
+not count the measure,) and the coldest kindled
+with gospel warmth as the story swept on.<sup>*</sup></p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+Montgomery's poem, &ldquo;The Stranger,&rdquo; has seven stanzas.
+The full dramatic effect of their connection could only be produced
+by a set piece.</p></div>
+
+<a id="png:333" name="png:333"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">333 /</span> opp 286</samp>
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of James Montgomery">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus15" name="Illus15"
+ ><img src="images/illus15-jamesmontgomery-cameo.jpg" alt=
+ "James Montgomery" width="222" height="243" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>James Montgomery</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+<a id="png:332" name="png:332"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">332 /</span> 286</samp>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WHEN FOR ETERNAL WORLDS I STEER.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>It was no solitary experience for hearers in a
+house of prayer where the famous Elder Swan held
+the pulpit, to feel a climactic thrill at the sudden
+breaking out of the eccentric orator with this song
+in the very middle of his sermon&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When for eternal worlds I steer,</div>
+<div>And seas are calm and skies are clear,</div>
+<div>And faith in lively exercise,</div>
+<div>And distant hills of Canaan rise,</div>
+<div>My soul for joy then claps her wings,</div>
+<div>And loud her lovely sonnet sings,</div>
+<div class="i1">&ldquo;Vain world, adieu!&rdquo;</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>With cheerful hope her eyes explore</div>
+<div>Each landmark on the distant shore,</div>
+<div>The trees of life, the pastures green,</div>
+<div>The golden streets, the crystal stream,</div>
+<div>Again for joy, she claps her wings,</div>
+<div>And loud her lovely sonnet sings,</div>
+<div class="i1">&ldquo;Vain world, adieu!&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p title="Illustration of James Montgomery originally opposite">Elder Jabez
+Swan was born in Stonington, Ct.,
+Feb. 23, 1800, and died 1884. He was a tireless
+worker as a pastor (long in New London, Ct.,) and
+a still harder toiler in the field as an evangelist and
+as a helper eagerly called for in revivals; and,
+through all, he was as happy as a boy in vacation.
+He was unlearned in the technics of the schools,
+but always eloquent and armed with ready wit;
+unpolished, but poetical as a Hebrew prophet and
+as terrible in his treatment of sin. Scoffers and
+&ldquo;hoodlums&rdquo; who interrupted him in his meetings
+never interrupted him but once.</p>
+
+<a id="png:335" name="png:335"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">335 /</span> 287</samp>
+
+<p>The more important and canonical hymnals and
+praise-books had no place for &ldquo;Sonnet,&rdquo; as the
+bugle-like air to this hymn was called. Rev.
+Jonathan Aldrich, about 1860, harmonized it in
+his <i>Sacred Lyre</i>, but this, and the few other old
+vestry and field manuals that contain it, were compiled
+before it became the fashion to date and
+authenticate hymns and tunes. In this case both
+are anonymous. Another (and probably earlier)
+tune sung to the same words is credited to &ldquo;S.
+Arnold,&rdquo; and appears to have been composed
+about 1790.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>I'M A PILGRIM, AND I'M A STRANGER.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn still lives&mdash;and is likely to live, at
+least in collections that print revival music. Mrs.
+Mary Stanley (Bunce) Dana, born in Beaufort,
+S.C., Feb. 15, 1810, wrote it while living in a
+northern state, where her husband died. By the
+name Dana she is known in hymnology, though
+she afterwards became Mrs. Shindler. The tune
+identified with the hymn, &ldquo;I'm a Pilgrim,&rdquo; is
+untraced, save that it is said to be an &ldquo;Italian
+Air,&rdquo; and that its original title was &ldquo;Buono Notte&rdquo;
+(good night).</p>
+
+<p>No other hymn better expresses the outreaching
+of ardent faith. Its very repetitions emphasize and
+sweeten the vision of longed-for fruition.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I can tarry, I can tarry but a night,</div>
+<div>Do not detain me, for I am going.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<a id="png:336" name="png:336"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">336 /</span> 288</samp>
+<div>There the sunbeams are ever shining,</div>
+<div>O my longing heart, my longing heart is there.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Of that country to which I'm going,</div>
+<div>My Redeemer, my Redeemer is the light.</div>
+<div>There is no sorrow, nor any sighing,</div>
+<div>Nor any sin there, nor any dying,</div>
+<div class="i1"> I'm a pilgrim, etc.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The same devout poetess also wrote (1840) the
+once popular consolatory hymn,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O sing to me of heaven</div>
+<div>When I'm about to die,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;sung to the familiar tune by Rev. E.W. Dunbar;
+also to a melody composed 1854 by Dr. William
+Miller.</p>
+
+<p>The line was first written&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When <em>I am called</em> to die,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;in the author's copy. The hymn (occasioned by
+the death of a pious friend) was written Jan.
+15, 1840.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Dana (Shindler) died in Texas, Feb. 8,
+1883.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>JOYFULLY, JOYFULLY ONWARD I MOVE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The maker of this hymn has been confounded
+with the maker of its tune&mdash;partly, perhaps, from
+the fact that the real composer of the tune also
+wrote hymns. The author of the words was the
+Rev. William Hunter, D.D., an Irish-American,
+<a id="png:337" name="png:337"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">337 /</span> 289</samp>
+and a Methodist minister. He was born near
+Ballymoney, County Antrim, Ire., May, 1811, and
+was brought to America when a child six years
+old. He received his education in the common
+schools and at Madison College, Hamilton, N.Y.,
+(now Madison University), and was successively
+a pastor, editor and Hebrew professor. Besides
+his work in these different callings, he wrote many
+helpful hymns&mdash;in all one hundred and twenty-five&mdash;of
+which &ldquo;Joyfully, Joyfully,&rdquo; dated 1842,
+is the best. It began originally with the line&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Friends fondly cherished have passed on before,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and the line,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Home to the land of delight I will go.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;was written,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Home to the land of bright spirits I'll go.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Dr. Hunter died in Ohio, 1877.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Rev. Abraham Dow Merrill, the author of the
+music to this triumphal death-song, was born in
+Salem, N.H., 1796, and died April 29, 1878. He
+also was a Methodist minister, and is still everywhere
+remembered by the denomination to which
+he belonged in New Hampshire and Vermont.
+He rode over these states mingling in revival
+scenes many years. His picture bears a close
+resemblance to that of Washington, and he was
+<a id="png:338" name="png:338"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">338 /</span> 290</samp>
+somewhat famous for this resemblance. His work
+was everywhere blessed, and he left an imperishable
+influence in New England. The tune, linked
+with Dr. Hunter's hymn, formed the favorite
+melody which has been the dying song of many
+who learned to sing it amid the old revival scenes:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Death, with thy weapons of war lay me low;</div>
+<div>Strike, king of terrors; I fear not the blow.</div>
+<div>Jesus has broken the bars of the tomb,</div>
+<div>Joyfully, joyfully haste to thy home.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>TIS THE OLD SHIP OF ZION, HALLELUJAH!</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This may be found, vocalized with full harmony,
+in the <i>American Vocalist</i>. With all the parts together
+(more or less) it must have made a vociferous
+song-service, but the hymn was oftener sung
+simply in soprano unison; and there was sound
+enough in the single melody to satisfy the most
+zealous.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>All her passengers will land on the bright eternal shore,</div>
+<div class="i2"> O, glory hallelujah!</div>
+<div>She has landed many thousands, and will land as many more,</div>
+<div class="i2"> O, glory hallelujah!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Both hymn and tune have lost their creators'
+names, and, like many another &ldquo;voice crying in
+the wilderness,&rdquo; they have left no record of their
+beginning of days.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>MY BROTHER, I WISH YOU WELL.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>My brother, I wish you well,</div>
+<div>My brother, I wish you well;</div>
+<a id="png:339" name="png:339"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">339 /</span> 291</samp>
+<div>When my Lord calls I trust you will</div>
+<div>Be mentioned in the Promised Land.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Echoes that remain to us of those fervid and
+affectionate, as well as resolute and vehement,
+expressions of religious life as sung in the early
+revivals of New England, in parts of the South,
+and especially in the Middle West, are suggestive
+of spontaneous melody forest-born, and as unconscious
+of scale, clef or tempo as the song of a
+bird. The above &ldquo;hand-shaking&rdquo; ditty at the
+altar gatherings apparently took its tune self-made,
+inspired in its first singer's soul by the feeling of
+the moment&mdash;and the strain was so simple that the
+convert could join in at once and chant&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+When my Lord comes I trust <em>I shall</em>
+</p>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;through all the loving rotations of the crude
+hymn-tune. Such song-births of spiritual enthusiasm
+are beyond enumeration&mdash;and it is useless to
+hunt for author or composer. Under the momentum
+of a wrestling hour or a common rapture of
+experience, counterpoint was unthought of, and
+the same notes for every voice lifted pleading and
+praise in monophonic impromptu. The refrains&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote"><span>
+O how I love Jesus,
+<br />
+O the Lamb, the Lamb, the loving Lamb,
+<br />
+I'm going home to die no more,
+<br />
+Pilgrims we are to Canaan's land,
+<br />
+O turn ye, O turn ye, for why will you die,
+<br />
+Come to Jesus, come to Jesus, just now,
+</span></p>
+
+<a id="png:340" name="png:340"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">340 /</span> 292</samp>
+<p class="runon">&mdash;each at the sound of its first syllable brought its
+own music to every singer's tongue, and all&mdash;male
+and female&mdash;were sopranos together. This habit
+in singing those rude liturgies of faith and fellowship
+was recognized by the editors of the <i>Revivalist</i>,
+and to a multitude of them space was given only
+for the printed melody, and of this sometimes only
+the three or four initial bars. The tunes were the
+church's rural field-tones that everybody knew.</p>
+
+<p>Culture smiles at this unclassic hymnody of long
+ago, but its history should disarm criticism. To
+wanderers its quaint music and &ldquo;pedestrian&rdquo;
+verse were threshold call and door-way welcome
+into the church of the living God. Even in the
+flaming days of the Second Advent following,
+in 1842&ndash;3, they awoke in many hardened hearts
+the spiritual glow that never dies. The delusion
+passed away, but the grace remained.</p>
+
+<p>The church&mdash;and the world&mdash;owe a long debt
+to the old evangelistic refrains that rang through
+the sixty years before the Civil War, some of them
+flavored with tuneful piety of a remoter time.
+They preached righteousness, and won souls that
+sermons could not reach. They opened heaven
+to thousands who are now rejoicing there.</p>
+
+<a id="png:341" name="png:341"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">341 /</span> 293</samp>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="chap">CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h1>SUNDAY-SCHOOL HYMNS.</h1>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>SHEPHERD OF TENDER YOUTH.</span></h4>
+
+
+<h4 class="quote" title="[Greek: Stomion pôlôn adaôn]"
+>&#931;&#964;&#8057;&#956;&#953;&#959;&#957;
+&#960;&#8061;&#955;&#969;&#957;
+&#7936;&#948;&#8049;&#969;&#957;</h4>
+
+
+<p>We are assured by repeated references in the
+patristic writings that the primitive years of the
+Christian Church were not only years of suffering
+but years of song. That the despised and often
+persecuted &ldquo;Nazarenes,&rdquo; scattered in little colonies
+throughout the Roman Empire, did not forget
+to mingle tones of praise and rejoicing with their
+prayers could readily be believed from the much-quoted
+letter of a pagan lawyer, written about as
+long after Jesus' death, as from now back to the
+death of John Quincy Adams&mdash;the letter of Pliny
+the younger to the Emperor Trajan, in which
+he reports the Christians at their meetings singing
+&ldquo;hymns to Christ as to a god.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Those disciples who spoke Greek seem to have
+been especially tuneful, and their land of poets
+was doubtless the cradle of Christian hymnody.
+Believers taught their songs to their children, and
+<a id="png:342" name="png:342"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">342 /</span> 294</samp>
+it is as certain that the oldest Sunday-school hymn
+was written somewhere in the classic East as that
+the Book of Revelation was written on the Isle of
+Patmos. The one above indicated was found in
+an appendix to the <i>Tutor</i>, a book composed by
+Titus Flavius Clemens of Alexandria, a Christian
+philosopher and instructor whose active life began
+late in the second century. It follows a treatise
+on Jesus as the Great Teacher, and, though his own
+words elsewhere imply a more ancient origin of
+the poem, it is always called &ldquo;Clement's Hymn.&rdquo;
+The line quoted above is the first of an English
+version by the late Rev. Henry Martyn Dexter,
+D.D. It does not profess to be a translation, but
+aims to transfer to our common tongue the spirit
+and leading thoughts of the original.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Shepherd of tender youth,</div>
+<div>Guiding in love and truth</div>
+<div class="i1"> Through devious ways;</div>
+<div>Christ, our triumphant King,</div>
+<div>We come Thy name to sing,</div>
+<div>Hither our children bring</div>
+<div class="i1"> To shout Thy praise.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The last stanza of Dr. Dexter's version represents
+the sacred song spirit of both the earliest and
+the latest Christian centuries:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>So now, and till we die</div>
+<div>Sound we Thy praises high,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And joyful sing;</div>
+<div>Infants, and the glad throng</div>
+<div>Who to Thy church belong</div>
+<div>Unite to swell the song</div>
+<div class="i1"> To Christ our King.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:343" name="png:343"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">343 /</span> 295</samp>
+
+<p>While they give us the sentiment and the religious
+tone of the old hymn, these verses, however,
+recognize the extreme difficulty of anything like
+verbal fidelity in translating a Greek hymn, and
+in this instance there are metaphors to avoid as
+being strange to modern taste. The first stanza,
+literally rendered and construed, is as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Bridle of untaught foals,</div>
+<div>Wing of unwandering birds,</div>
+<div>Helm and Girdle of babes,</div>
+<div>Shepherd of royal lambs!</div>
+<div>Assemble Thy simple children</div>
+<div>To praise holily,</div>
+<div>To hymn guilelessly</div>
+<div>With innocent mouths</div>
+<div>Christ, the Guide of children.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">Figures like&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Catching the chaste fishes,</div>
+<div>Heavenly milk, etc.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;are necessarily avoided in making good English
+of the lines, and the profusion of adoring epithets in
+the ancient poem (no less than twenty-one different
+titles of Christ) would embarrass a modern song.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Dexter might have chosen an easier metre
+for his version, if (which is improbable) he intended
+it to be sung, since a tune written to sixes and
+fours takes naturally a more decided lyrical movement
+and emphasis than the hymn reveals in his
+stanzas, though the second and fifth possess much
+of the hymn quality and would sound well in
+Giardini's &ldquo;Italian Hymn.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<a id="png:344" name="png:344"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">344 /</span> 296</samp>
+<p>More nearly a translation, and more in the
+cantabile style, is the version of a Scotch Presbyterian
+minister, Rev. Hamilton M. Macgill, D.D.,
+two of whose stanzas are these:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Thyself, Lord, be the Bridle</div>
+<div class="i1"> These wayward wills to stay;</div>
+<div>Be Thine the Wing unwand'ring,</div>
+<div class="i1"> To speed their upward way.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Let them with songs adoring</div>
+<div class="i1"> Their artless homage bring</div>
+<div>To Christ the Lord, and crown Him</div>
+<div class="i1"> The children's Guide and King.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The Dexter version is set to Monk's slow harmony
+of &ldquo;St. Ambrose&rdquo; in the <i>Plymouth Hymnal</i>
+(Ed. Dr. Lyman Abbott, 1894) without the
+writer's name&mdash;which is curious, inasmuch as the
+hymn was published in the <i>Congregationalist</i> in
+1849, in <i>Hedge and Huntington's</i> (Unitarian)
+<i>Hymn-book</i> in 1853, in the <i>Hymnal of the Presbyterian
+Church</i> in 1866, and in Dr. Schaff's <i>Christ
+in Song</i> in 1869.</p>
+
+<p>Clement died about A.D. 220.</p>
+
+<p class="thoughtbreak">Rev. Henry Martyn Dexter, D.D., for twenty-three
+years the editor of the <i>Congregationalist</i>, was
+born in Plymouth, Mass., Aug. 13, 1821. He was
+a graduate of Yale (1840) and Andover Divinity
+School (1844), a well-known antiquarian writer
+and church historian. Died Nov. 13, 1890.</p>
+
+<a id="png:345" name="png:345"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">345 /</span> 297</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>HOW HAPPY IS THE CHILD WHO HEARS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn was quite commonly heard in Sunday-schools
+during the eighteen-thirties and forties,
+and, though retained in few modern collections,
+its Sabbath echo lingers in the memory of the
+living generation. It was written by Michael
+Bruce, born at Kinneswood, Kinross-shire, Scotland,
+March 27, 1746. He was the son of a weaver,
+but obtained a good education, taught school, and
+studied for the ministry. He died, however, while in
+preparation for his expected work, July 5, 1767, at the
+age of twenty-one years, three months and eight days.</p>
+
+<p>Young Bruce wrote hymns, and several poems,
+but another person wore the honors of his work.
+John Logan, who was his literary executor, appropriated
+the youthful poet's Mss. verses, and
+the hymn above indicated&mdash;as well as the beautiful
+poem, &ldquo;To the Cuckoo,&rdquo;<sup>*</sup> still a classic in English
+literature,&mdash;bore the name of Logan for more than
+a hundred years. In <i>Julian's Dictionary of Hymnology</i>
+is told at length the story of the inquiry and
+discussion which finally exposed the long fraud
+upon the fame of the rising genius who sank, like
+Henry Kirke White, in his morning of promise.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+Hail, beauteous stranger of the wood,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Attendant on the Spring;<br />
+Now Heaven repairs thy rural seat,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; And woods thy welcome ring.</p></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Old &ldquo;Balerma&rdquo; was so long the musical mouth-piece
+of the pious boy-schoolmaster's verses that
+<a id="png:346" name="png:346"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">346 /</span> 298</samp>
+the two became one expression, and one could
+not be named without suggesting the other.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Balerma&rdquo; (Palermo) was ages away in style
+and sound from the later type of Sunday-school
+tunes, resembling rather one of Palestrina's chorals
+than the tripping melodies that took its place; but
+in its day juvenile voices enjoyed it, and it suited
+very well the grave but winning words.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>How happy is the child who hears</div>
+<div class="i1"> Instruction's warning voice,</div>
+<div>And who celestial Wisdom makes</div>
+<div class="i1"> His early, only choice!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>For she hath treasures greater far</div>
+<div class="i1"> Than East and West unfold,</div>
+<div>And her rewards more precious are</div>
+<div class="i1"> Than all their stores of gold.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>She guides the young with innocence</div>
+<div class="i1"> In pleasure's path to tread,</div>
+<div>A crown of glory she bestows</div>
+<div class="i1"> Upon the hoary head.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Robert Simpson, author of the old tune,<sup>*</sup> was a
+Scottish composer of psalmody; born, about 1722,
+in Glasgow; and died, in Greenock, June, 1838.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+The tune was evidently reduced from the still older &ldquo;Sardius&rdquo; (or
+&ldquo;Autumn&rdquo;)&mdash;<i>Hubert P. Main</i>.</p></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>O DO NOT BE DISCOURAGED.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<p>Written about 1803, by the Rev. John A. Grenade,
+born in 1770; died 1806.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O do not be discouraged,
+<span style="position: absolute; left: 16.5em;">}</span></div>
+<div class="i1"> For Jesus is your Friend;
+<span style="position: absolute; left: 15em;">} <i>bis</i></span></div>
+<div>He will give you grace to conquer,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And keep you to the end.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<a id="png:347" name="png:347"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">347 /</span> 299</samp>
+<div>Fight on, ye little soldiers,
+<span style="position: absolute; left: 16.5em;">}</span></div>
+<div class="i1"> The battle you shall win,
+<span style="position: absolute; left: 15em;">} <i>bis</i></span></div>
+<div>For the Saviour is your Captain,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And He has vanquished sin.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>And when the conflict's over,
+<span style="position: absolute; left: 16.5em;">}</span></div>
+<div class="i1"> Before Him you shall stand,
+<span style="position: absolute; left: 15em;">} <i>bis</i></span></div>
+<div>You shall sing His praise forever</div>
+<div class="i1"> In Canaan's happy land.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The hymn was made popular thirty or more
+years ago in a musical arrangement by Hubert P.
+Main, with a chorus,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>I'm glad I'm in this army,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And I'll battle for the school.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Children took to the little song with a keen relish,
+and put their whole souls&mdash;and bodies&mdash;into it.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>LITTLE TRAVELLERS ZIONWARD</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p class="runon">Belongs to a generation long past. Its writer was
+an architect by occupation, and a man whose piety
+equalled his industry. He was born in London
+1791, and his name was James Edmeston. He
+loved to compose religious verses&mdash;so well, in fact,
+that he is said to have prepared a new piece every
+week for Sunday morning devotions in his family
+and in this way accumulated a collection which
+he published and called <i>Cottager's Hymns</i>. Besides
+these he is credited with a hundred Sunday-school
+hymns.</p>
+
+<a id="png:348" name="png:348"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">348 /</span> 300</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Little travellers Zionward,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Each one entering into rest</div>
+<div>In the Kingdom of your Lord,</div>
+<div class="i1"> In the mansions of the blest,</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>There to welcome Jesus waits,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Gives the crown His followers win,</div>
+<div>Lift your heads, ye golden gates,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Let the little travellers in.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The original tune is lost&mdash;and the hymn is
+vanishing with it; but the felicity of its rhyme and
+rhythm show how easily it adapted itself to music.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>I'M BUT A STRANGER HERE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The simple beauty of this hymn, and the
+sympathetic sweetness of its tune made children
+love to sing it, and it found its way into a few Sunday-school
+collections, though not composed for
+such use.</p>
+
+<p>A young Congregational minister. Rev. Thomas
+Rawson Taylor, wrote it on the approach of his
+early end. He was born at Osset, near Wakefield,
+Yorkshire, Eng., May 9, 1807, and studied in
+Bradford, where his father had taken charge of a
+large church, and at Manchester Academy and
+Airesdale College. Sensible of a growing ailment
+that might shorten his days, he hastened to the
+work on which his heart was set, preaching in
+surrounding towns and villages while a student,
+and finally quitting college to be ordained to his
+sacred profession. He was installed as pastor of
+Howard St. Chapel, Sheffield, July, 1830, when
+<a id="png:349" name="png:349"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">349 /</span> 301</samp>
+only twenty-three. But in less than three years
+his strength failed, and he went back to Bradford,
+where he occasionally preached for his father, when
+able to do so, during his last days. He died there
+March 15, 1835. Taylor was a brave and lovely
+Christian&mdash;and his hymn is as sweet as his life.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I'm but a stranger here,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Heaven is my home;</div>
+<div>Earth is a desert drear,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Heaven is my home.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Dangers and sorrows stand</div>
+<div class="i1"> Round me on every hand;</div>
+<div>Heaven is my Fatherland&mdash;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Heaven is my home.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>What though the tempest rage,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Heaven is my home;</div>
+<div>Short is my pilgrimage,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Heaven is my home.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>And time's wild, wintry blast</div>
+<div class="i1"> Soon will be overpast;</div>
+<div>I shall reach home at last&mdash;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Heaven is my home.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><a id="Servant1" name="Servant1">In his last attempt to preach</a>,
+young Taylor uttered the words, &ldquo;I want to die like a soldier,
+sword in hand.&rdquo; On the evening of the same
+Sabbath day he breathed his last. His words were
+memorable, and Montgomery, who loved and admired
+the man, made them the text of a poem,
+part of which is the familiar hymn &ldquo;Servant of
+God, well done."<sup>*</sup></p>
+
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+See <a href="#Servant2">page 498</a></p></div>
+
+<a id="png:350" name="png:350"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">350 /</span> 302</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Sir Arthur Sullivan put the words into classic
+expression, but, to American ears at least, the tune
+of &ldquo;Oak,&rdquo; by Lowell Mason, is the hymn's true
+sister. It was composed in 1854.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>DEAR JESUS, EVER AT MY SIDE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p title="Illustration of Fanny Crosby originally opposite">One of
+Frederick William Faber's sweet and
+simple lyrics. It voices that temper and spirit in
+the human heart which the Saviour first looks for
+and loves best. None better than Faber could feel
+and utter the real artlessness of Christian love and
+faith.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Dear Jesus, ever at my side,</div>
+<div class="i1"> How loving must Thou be</div>
+<div>To leave Thy home in heaven to guard</div>
+<div class="i1"> A sinful child like me.</div>
+<div>Thy beautiful and shining face</div>
+<div class="i1"> I see not, tho' so near;</div>
+<div>The sweetness of Thy soft low voice</div>
+<div class="i1"> I am too deaf to hear.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>I cannot feel Thee touch my hand</div>
+<div class="i1"> With pressure light and mild,</div>
+<div>To check me as my mother did</div>
+<div class="i1"> When I was but a child;</div>
+<div>But I have felt Thee in my thoughts</div>
+<div class="i1"> Fighting with sin for me,</div>
+<div>And when my heart loves God I know</div>
+<div class="i1"> The sweetness is from Thee.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:353" name="png:353"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">353 /</span> 303</samp>
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Audientes&rdquo; by Sir Arthur Sullivan is a gentle,
+emotional piece, rendering the first quatrain of
+each stanza in E flat unison, and the second in C
+harmony.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>TIS RELIGION THAT CAN GIVE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This simple rhyme, which has been sung
+perhaps in every Sunday-school in England and
+the United States, is from a small English book
+by Mary Masters. In the preface to the work, we
+read, &ldquo;The author of the following poems never
+read a treatise of rhetoric or an art of poetry, nor
+was ever taught her English grammar. Her education
+rose no higher than the spelling-book or her
+writing-master,&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>'Tis religion that can give</div>
+<div>Sweetest pleasure while we live;</div>
+<div>'Tis religion can supply</div>
+<div>Solid comfort when we die.</div>
+<div>After death its joys shall be</div>
+<div>Lasting as eternity.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Save the two sentences about herself, quoted
+above, there is no biography of the writer. That
+she was good is taken for granted.</p>
+
+<p>The tune-sister of the little hymn is as scant of
+date or history as itself. No. 422 points it out in
+<i>The Revivalist</i>, where the name and initial seem to
+ascribe the authorship to Horace Waters.<sup>*</sup></p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+From his <i>Sabbath Bell</i>. Horace Waters, a prominent Baptist layman,
+was born in Jefferson, Lincoln Co., Me., Nov. 1, 1812, and died in New
+York City, April 22, 1893. He was a piano-dealer and publisher.</p></div>
+
+<a id="png:354" name="png:354"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">354 /</span> 304</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>THERE IS A HAPPY LAND FAR, FAR AWAY</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This child's hymn was written by a lover of
+children, Mr. Andrew Young, head master of
+Niddrey St. School, Edinburgh, and subsequently
+English instructor at Madras College, E.I. He
+was born April 23, 1807, and died Nov. 30, 1899,
+and long before the end of the century which his
+life-time so nearly covered his little carol had
+become one of the universal hymns.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>A <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'Hindoo,'">Hindoo</ins>
+air or natural chanson, that may
+have been hummed in a pagan temple in the hearing
+of Mr. Young, was the basis of the little melody
+since made familiar to millions of prattling
+tongues.</p>
+
+<p>Such running tone-rhythms create themselves in
+the instinct of the ruder nations and tribes, and
+even the South African savages have their incantations
+with the provincial &ldquo;clicks&rdquo; that mark
+the singers' time. With an ear for native chirrups
+and trills, the author of our pretty infant-school
+song succeeded in capturing one, and making a
+Christian tune of it.</p>
+
+<p>The musician, Samuel Sebastian Wesley, sometime
+in the eighteen-forties, tried to substitute
+another melody for the lines, but &ldquo;There is a happy
+land&rdquo; needs its own birth-music.</p>
+
+<a id="png:355" name="png:355"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">355 /</span> 305</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>I HAVE A FATHER IN THE PROMISED LAND.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Another cazonet for the infant class. Instead of a
+hymn, however, it is only a refrain, and&mdash;like the
+ring-chant of the &ldquo;Hebrew Children,&rdquo; and even
+more simple&mdash;owes its only variety to the change
+of one word. The third and fourth lines,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>My father calls me, I must go</div>
+<div>To meet Him in the Promised Land,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;take their cue from the first,
+which may sing,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I have a Saviour&mdash;&mdash;</div>
+<div>I have a mother&mdash;&mdash;</div>
+<div>I have a brother&mdash;&mdash;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and so on ad libitum. But the little ones love
+every sound and syllable of the lisping song, for
+it is plain and pleasing, and when a pinafore school
+grows restless nothing will sooner charm them into
+quiet than to chime its innocent unison.</p>
+
+<p>Both words and tune are nameless and storyless.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>I THINK WHEN I READ THAT SWEET STORY</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>While riding in a stage-coach, after a visit to a
+mission school for poor children, this hymn came
+to the mind of Mrs. Jemima Thompson Luke, of
+Islington, England. It speaks its own purpose
+plainly enough, to awaken religious feeling in
+young hearts, and guide and sanctify the natural
+childlike interest in the sweetest incident of the
+Saviour's life.</p>
+
+<a id="png:356" name="png:356"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">356 /</span> 306</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I think when I read that sweet story of old</div>
+<div>When Jesus was here among men,</div>
+<div>How He called little children as lambs to His fold,</div>
+<div>I should like to have been with them then.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>I wish that His hands had been laid on my head,</div>
+<div>And I had been placed on His knee,</div>
+<div>And that I might have seen His kind look when He said,</div>
+<div>&ldquo;Let the little ones come unto me.&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This is not poetry, but it phrases a wish in a
+child's own way, to be melodized and fixed in a
+child's reverent and sensitive memory.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Luke was born at Colebrook Terrace, near
+London, Aug. 19, 1813. She was an accomplished
+and benevolent lady who did much for the education
+and welfare of the poor. Her hymn&mdash;of
+five stanzas&mdash;was first sung in a village school
+at Poundford Park, and was not published until
+1841.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>It is interesting, not to say curious, testimony to
+the vital quality of this meek production that so
+many composers have set it to music, or that
+successive hymn-book editors have kept it, and
+printed it to so many different harmonies. All the
+chorals that carry it have substantially the same
+movement&mdash;for the spondaic accent of the long
+lines is compulsory&mdash;but their offerings sing &ldquo;to
+one clear harp in divers tones.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The appearance of the words in one hymnal
+with Sir William Davenant's air (full scored) to
+Moore's love-song, &ldquo;Believe me, if all those
+<a id="png:357" name="png:357"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">357 /</span> 307</samp>
+endearing young charms,&rdquo; now known as the tune
+of &ldquo;Fair Harvard,&rdquo; is rather startling at first, but
+the adoption is quite in keeping with the policy of
+Luther and Wesley.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;St. Kevin&rdquo; written to it forty years ago by
+John Henry Cornell, organist of St. Paul's, New
+York City, is sweet and sympathetic.</p>
+
+<p>The newest church collection (1905) gives the
+beautiful air and harmony of &ldquo;Athens&rdquo; to the
+hymn, and notes the music as a &ldquo;Greek Melody.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>But the nameless English tune, of uncertain
+authorship<sup>*</sup> that accompanies the words in the
+smaller old manuals, and which delighted Sunday-schools
+for a generation, is still the favorite in the
+memory of thousands, and may be the very music
+first written.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+Harmonized by Hubert P. Main.</p></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WE SPEAK OF THE REALMS OF THE BLEST.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Mrs. Elizabeth Mills, wife of the Hon. Thomas
+Mills, M.P., was born at Stoke Newington, Eng.,
+1805. She was one of the brief voices that sing one
+song and die. This hymn was the only note of her
+minstrelsy, and it has outlived her by more than
+three-quarters of a century. She wrote it about
+three weeks before her decease in Finsbury Place,
+London, April 21, 1839, at the age of twenty-four.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>We speak of the land of the blest,</div>
+<div class="i1"> A country so bright and so fair,</div>
+<div>And oft are its glories confest,</div>
+<div class="i1"> But what must it be to be there!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<a id="png:358" name="png:358"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">358 /</span> 308</samp>
+<div>We speak of its freedom from sin,</div>
+<div class="i1"> From sorrow, temptation and care,</div>
+<div>From trials without and within,</div>
+<div class="i1"> But what must it be to be there!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The hymn, like several of the Gospel hymns
+besides, was carried into the Sunday-schools by
+its music. Mr. Stebbins' popular duet-and-chorus
+is fluent and easily learned and rendered by rote;
+and while it captures the ear and compels the voice
+of the youngest, it expresses both the pathos and
+the exaltation of the words.</p>
+
+<p>George Coles Stebbins was born in East Carleton,
+Orleans Co., N.Y., Feb. 26, 1846. Educated
+at common school, and an academy in Albany,
+he turned his attention to music and studied in
+Rochester, Chicago, and Boston. It was in Chicago
+that his musical career began, while chorister
+at the First Baptist Church; and while holding
+the same position at Clarendon St. Church, Boston,
+(1874&ndash;6), he entered on a course of evangelistic
+work with D.L. Moody as gospel singer and composer.
+He was co-editor with Sankey and McGranahan
+of <i>Gospel Hymns</i>.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>ONLY REMEMBERED.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn, beginning originally with the lines,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Up and away like the dew of the morning,</div>
+<div>Soaring from earth to its home in the sun,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:359" name="png:359"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">359 /</span> 309</samp>
+<p class="runon">&mdash;has been repeatedly altered since it left Dr. Bonar's
+hands. Besides the change of metaphors, the
+first personal pronoun singular is changed to the
+plural. There was strength, and a natural vivacity
+in&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>So let <em>me</em> steal away gently and lovingly,</div>
+<div>Only remembered for what <em>I</em> have done.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>As at present sung the first stanza reads&mdash;,</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Fading away like the stars of the morning</div>
+<div class="i1"> Losing their light in the glorious sun,</div>
+<div>Thus would <em>we</em> pass from the earth and its toiling</div>
+<div class="i1"> Only remembered for what <em>we</em> have done.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The idea voiced in the refrain is true and beautiful,
+and the very euphony of its words helps to
+enforce its meaning and make the song pleasant
+and suggestive for young and old. It has passed
+into popular quotation, and become almost a proverb.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The tune (in <i>Gospel Hymns No</i>. 6) is Mr.
+Sankey's.</p>
+
+<p>Ira David Sankey was born in Edinburgh, Lawrence
+Co., Pa., Aug. 28, 1840. He united with
+the Methodist Church at the age of fifteen, and
+became choir leader, Sunday-school superintendent
+and president of the Y.M.C.A., all in his native
+town. Hearing Philip Phillips sing impressed him
+deeply, when a young man, with the power of a
+gifted solo vocalist over assembled multitudes, but
+he did not fully realize his own capability till Dwight
+<a id="png:360" name="png:360"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">360 /</span> 310</samp>
+L. Moody heard his remarkable voice and convinced
+him of his divine mission to be a gospel
+singer.</p>
+
+<p>The success of his revival tours with Mr. Moody
+in America and England is history.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Sankey has compiled at least five singing
+books, and has written the <i>Story of the Gospel
+Hymns</i>. Until overtaken by blindness, in his later
+years he frequently appeared as a lecturer on sacred
+music. The manuscript of his story of the <i>Gospel
+Hymns</i> was destroyed by accident, but, undismayed
+by the ruin of his work, and the loss
+of his eye-sight, like Sir Isaac Newton and Thomas
+Carlyle, he began his task again. With the
+help of an amanuensis the book was restored
+and, in 1905, given to the public. (See <a href="#png:304">page 258</a>.)</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>SAVIOUR, LIKE A SHEPHERD LEAD US.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Mrs. Dorothy Ann Thrupp, of Paddington
+Green, London, the author of this hymn, was born
+June 20, 1799, and died, in London, Dec. 14, 1847.
+Her hymns first appeared in Mrs. Herbert Mayo's
+<i>Selection of Poetry and Hymns for the Use of
+Infant and Juvenile Schools</i>, (1838).</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>We are Thine, do Thou befriend us,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Be the Guardian of our way:</div>
+<div>Keep Thy flock, from sin defend us,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Seek us when we go astray;</div>
+<div class="i2"> Blessed Jesus,</div>
+<div>Hear, O hear us when we pray.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:361" name="png:361"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">361 /</span> 311</samp>
+
+<p>The tune everywhere accepted and loved is W.B.
+Bradbury's; written in 1856.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>YIELD NOT TO TEMPTATION</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>A much used and valued hymn, with a captivating
+tune and chorus for young assemblies. Both
+words and music are by H.R. Palmer, composed
+in 1868.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Yield not to temptation,</div>
+<div>For yielding is sin;</div>
+<div>Each vict'ry will help you</div>
+<div>Some other to win.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Fight manfully onward,</div>
+<div>Dark passions subdue;</div>
+<div>Look ever to Jesus,</div>
+<div>He will carry you through.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Horatio Richmond Palmer was born in Sherburne,
+N.Y., April 26. 1834, of a musical family,
+and sang alto in his father's choir when only nine.
+He studied music unremittingly, and taught music at
+fifteen. Brought up in a Christian home, his religious
+life began in his youth, and he consecrated his
+art to the good of man and the glory of God.</p>
+
+<p>He became well-known as a composer of sacred
+music, and as a publisher&mdash;the sales of his <i>Song
+Queen</i> amounting to 200,000 copies. As a leader
+of musical conventions and in the Church Choral
+Union, his influence in elevating the standard of
+song-worship has been widely felt.</p>
+
+<a id="png:362" name="png:362"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">362 /</span> 312</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>THERE ARE LONELY HEARTS TO CHERISH.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>&ldquo;While the days are going by&rdquo; is the refrain
+of the song, and the line by which it is recognized.
+The hymn or poem was written by George Cooper.
+He was born in New York City, May 14, 1840&mdash;a
+writer of poems and magazine articles,&mdash;composed
+&ldquo;While the days are going by&rdquo; in 1870.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>There are lonely hearts to cherish</div>
+<div class="i1"> While the days are going by.</div>
+<div>There are weary souls who perish</div>
+<div class="i1"> While the days are going by.</div>
+<div class="i1"> Up! then, trusty hearts and true,</div>
+<div>Though the day comes, night comes, too:</div>
+<div class="i1"> Oh, the good we all may do</div>
+<div class="i1"> While the days are going by!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>There are few more practical and always-timely
+verses than this three-stanza poem.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>A very musical tune, with spirited chorus, (in
+<i>Gospel Hymns</i>) bears the name of the refrain, and
+was composed by Mr. Sankey.</p>
+
+<p>A sweet and quieter harmony (uncredited) is
+mated with the hymn in the old <i>Baptist Praise
+Book</i> (p. 507) and this was long the fixture to the
+words, in both Sunday-school and week-day school
+song-books.</p>
+
+<a id="png:351" name="png:351"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">351 /</span> opp 302</samp>
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of Fanny J. Crosby">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus16" name="Illus16"
+ ><img src="images/illus16-fannycrosby-cameo.jpg" alt=
+ "Fanny J. Crosby" width="202" height="281" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>Fanny J. Crosby<br /> (Mrs. Van Alstyne)</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>JESUS THE WATER OF LIFE WILL GIVE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This Sunday-school lyric is the work of Fanny
+J. Crosby (Mrs. Van Alstyne). Like her other and
+<a id="png:363" name="png:363"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">363 /</span> 313</samp>
+greater hymn, &ldquo;Jesus keep me near the Cross,&rdquo;
+(noted on p. 156,) it reveals the habitual attitude of
+the pious author's mind, and the simple earnestness
+of her own faith as well as her desire to win
+others.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Jesus the water of life will give</div>
+<div class="i1"> Freely, freely, freely;</div>
+<div>Jesus the water of life will give</div>
+<div class="i1"> Freely to those who love Him.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>The Spirit and the Bride say &ldquo;Come</div>
+<div class="i1"> Freely, freely, freely.</div>
+<div>And he that is thirsty let him come</div>
+<div class="i1"> And drink the water of life.&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">Full chorus,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The Fountain of life is flowing,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Flowing, freely flowing;</div>
+<div>The Fountain of life is flowing,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Is flowing for you and for me.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The hymn must be sung as it was <em>made</em> to be
+sung, and the composer being many years <i>en
+rapport</i> with the writer, knew how to put all her
+metrical rhythms into sweet sound. The tune&mdash;in
+Mr. Bradbury's <i>Fresh Laurels</i> (1867)&mdash;is one of
+his sympathetic interpretations, and, with the duet
+sung by two of the best singers of the middle class
+Sunday-school girls, is a melodious and impressive
+piece.</p>
+
+<a id="png:364" name="png:364"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">364 /</span> 314</samp>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WHEN HE COMETH, WHEN HE COMETH.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The Rev. W.O. Cushing, with the beautiful
+thought in Malachi 3:17 singing in his soul, composed
+this favorite Sunday-school hymn, which has
+gone round the world.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When He cometh, when He cometh</div>
+<div class="i1"> To make up His jewels,</div>
+<div>All the jewels, precious jewels,</div>
+<div class="i1"> His loved and His own.</div>
+<div>Like the stars of the morning,</div>
+<div class="i1"> His bright brow adorning</div>
+<div>They shall shine in their beauty</div>
+<div class="i1"> Bright gems for His crown.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>He will gather, He will gather</div>
+<div class="i1"> The gems for His Kingdom,</div>
+<div>All the pure ones, all the bright ones,</div>
+<div class="i1"> His loved and His own.</div>
+<div class="i2"> Like the stars, etc.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Little children, little children</div>
+<div class="i1"> Who love their Redeemer,</div>
+<div>Are the jewels, precious jewels</div>
+<div class="i1"> His loved and His own,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Like the stars, etc.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Rev. William Orcutt Cushing of Hingham,
+Mass., born Dec. 31, 1823, wrote this little hymn
+when a young man (1856), probably with no idea
+of achieving a literary performance. But it rings;
+and even if it is a &ldquo;ringing of changes&rdquo; on pretty
+syllables, that is not all. There is a thought in it
+that <em>sings</em>. Its glory came to it, however, when it
+<a id="png:365" name="png:365"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">365 /</span> 315</samp>
+got its tune&mdash;and he must have had a subconsciousness
+of the tune he wanted when he made
+the lines for his Sunday-school. He died Oct. 19,
+1902.</p>
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The composer of the music for the &ldquo;Jewel
+Hymn"<sup>*</sup> was George F. Root, then living in Reading,
+Mass.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+Comparison of the &ldquo;Jewel Hymn&rdquo; tune with the old glee of
+&ldquo;Johnny Schmoker&rdquo; gives color to the assertion that Mr. Root
+caught up and adapted a popular ditty for his Christian melody&mdash;as was
+so often done in Wales, and
+in the Lutheran and Wesleyan reformations. He baptized the comic fugue,
+and promoted it from the vaudeville stage to the Sunday School.</p></div>
+
+<p>A minister returning from Europe on an English
+steamer visited the steerage, and after some
+friendly talk proposed a singing service&mdash;it something
+could be started that &ldquo;everybody&rdquo; knew&mdash;for
+there were hundreds of emigrants there from
+nearly every part of Europe.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;It will have to be an American tune, then,&rdquo;
+said the steerage-master; &ldquo;try &lsquo;His jewels.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The minister struck out at once with the melody
+and words,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+When He cometh, when He cometh,
+</p>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and scores of the poor half-fare multitude joined
+voices with him. Many probably recognized the
+music of the old glee, and some had heard the sweet
+air played in the church-steeples at home. Other
+voices chimed in, male and female, catching the
+air, and sometimes the words&mdash;they were so easy
+and so many times repeated&mdash;and the volume of
+<a id="png:366" name="png:366"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">366 /</span> 316</samp>
+song increased, till the singing minister stood in
+the midst of an international concert, the most
+novel that he ever led.</p>
+
+<p>He tried other songs in similar visits during the rest
+of the voyage with some success, but the &ldquo;Jewel
+Hymn&rdquo; was the favorite; and by the time port
+was in sight the whole crowd of emigrants had it by
+heart.</p>
+
+<p>The steamer landed at Quebec, and when the
+trains, filled with the new arrivals, rolled away, the
+song was swelling from nearly every car,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When He cometh, when He cometh,</div>
+<div class="i1"> To make up His jewels.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The composer of the tune&mdash;with all the patriotic
+and sacred master-pieces standing to his
+credit&mdash;never reaped a richer triumph than he
+shared with his poet-partner that day, when
+&ldquo;Precious Jewels&rdquo; came back to them from over
+the sea. More than this, there was missionary joy
+for them both that their tuneful work had done
+something to hallow the homes of alien settlers
+with an American Christian psalm.</p>
+
+<p><a id="Root" name="Root">George Frederick Root</a>, Doctor of Music, was
+born in Sheffield, Mass., 1820, eldest of a family of
+eight children, and spent his youth on a farm. His
+genius for music drew him to Boston, where he
+became a pupil of Lowell Mason, and soon advanced
+so far as to teach music himself and lead the choir
+in Park St. church. Afterwards he went to New York
+as director of music in Dr. Deems's Church of the
+<a id="png:367" name="png:367"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">367 /</span> 317</samp>
+Strangers. In 1852, after a year's absence and study
+in Europe, he returned to New York, and founded
+the Normal Musical Institute. In 1860, he removed
+to Chicago where he spent the remainder of his life
+writing and publishing music. He died Aug. 6,
+1895, in Maine.</p>
+
+<p>In the truly popular sense Dr. Root was the best-known
+American composer; not excepting Stephen
+C. Foster. Root's &ldquo;Hazel Dell,&rdquo; &ldquo;There's Music
+in the Air,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Rosalie the Prairie Flower&rdquo; were
+universal tunes&mdash;(words by Fanny Crosby,)&mdash;as
+also his music to Henry Washburn's &ldquo;Vacant
+Chair.&rdquo; The songs in his cantata, &ldquo;The Haymakers,&rdquo;
+were sung in the shops and factories
+everywhere, and his war-time music, in such melodies
+as &ldquo;Shouting the Battle-cry of Freedom&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;Tramp, Tramp, Tramp, the Boys are Marching&rdquo;
+took the country by storm.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>SCATTER SEEDS OF KINDNESS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This amiable and tuneful poem, suggested by
+Rom. 12:10, is from the pen of Mary Louise Riley
+(Mrs. Albert Smith) of New York City. She was
+born in Brighton, Monroe Co., N.Y. May 27,
+1843.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Let us gather up the sunbeams</div>
+<div class="i1"> Lying all along our path;</div>
+<div>Let us keep the wheat and roses</div>
+<div class="i1"> Casting out the thorns and chaff.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<a id="png:368" name="png:368"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">368 /</span> 318</samp>
+<div class="refrain">Chorus.</div>
+<div>Then scatter seeds of kindness (<i>ter</i>)</div>
+<div class="i1"> For our reaping by and by.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Silas Jones Vail, the tune-writer, for this hymn,
+was born Oct. 1818, and died May 20, 1883. For
+years he worked at the hatter's trade, with Beebe
+on Broadway, N.Y. and afterwards in an establishment
+of his own. His taste and talent led him into
+musical connections, and from time to time, after
+relinquishing his trade, he was with Horace
+Waters, Philip Phillips, W.B. Bradbury, and F.J.
+Smith, the piano dealer. He was a choir leader
+and a good composer.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>BY COOL SILOAM'S SHADY RILL.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn of Bp. Heber inculcates the same
+lesson as that in the stanzas of Michael Bruce before
+noted, with added emphasis for the young on
+the briefness of time and opportunity even for them.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>How fair the lily grows,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;is answered by&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The lily must decay,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;but, owing to the sweetness of the favorite melody,
+it was never a saddening hymn for children.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Though George Kingsley's &ldquo;Heber&rdquo; has in some
+books done service for the Bishop's lines, &ldquo;Siloam,&rdquo;
+<a id="png:369" name="png:369"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">369 /</span> 319</samp>
+easy-flowing and finely harmonized, is knit to the
+words as no other tune can be. It was composed
+by Isaac Baker Woodbury on shipboard during a
+storm at sea. A stronger illustration of tranquil
+thought in terrible tumult was never drawn.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;O Galilee, Sweet Galilee,&rdquo; whose history has
+been given at the <a href="#png:306">end of chapter six</a>, was not only
+often sung in Sunday-schools, but chimed (in the
+cities) on steeple-bells&mdash;nor is it by any means forgotten
+today&mdash;on the Sabbath and in social singing
+assemblies. Like &ldquo;Precious Jewels,&rdquo; it has been,
+in many places, taken up by street boys with a
+relish, and often displaced the play-house ditties in
+the lips of little newsboys and bootblacks during a
+leisure hour or a happy mood.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>I AM SO GLAD</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This lively little melody is still a welcome choice
+to many a lady teacher of fluttering five-year-olds,
+when both vocal indulgence and good gospel are
+needed for the prattlers in her class. It has been
+as widely sung in Scotland as in America. Mr.
+Philip P. Bliss, hearing one day the words of the
+familiar chorus&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+O, how I love Jesus,
+</p>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;suddenly thought to himself,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I have sung long enough of my poor love to
+Christ, and now I will sing of His love for me.&rdquo;
+Under the inspiration of this thought, he wrote&mdash;</p>
+<a id="png:370" name="png:370"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">370 /</span> 320</samp>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I am so glad that our Father in heaven</div>
+<div>Tells of His love in the book He has given</div>
+<div>Wonderful things in the Bible I see,</div>
+<div>This is the dearest&mdash;that Jesus loves me.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">Both words and music are by Mr. Bliss.</p>
+
+<p class="thoughtbreak">The history of modern Sunday-school hymnody&mdash;or
+much of it&mdash;is so nearly identified with that of
+the <i>Gospel Hymns</i> that other selections like the
+last, which might be appropriate here, may be considered
+in a later chapter, where that eventful
+series of sacred songs receives special notice.</p>
+
+<a id="png:371" name="png:371"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">371 /</span> 321</samp>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="chap">CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<h1>PATRIOTIC HYMNS.</h1>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<p>The ethnic anthologies growing out of love of
+country are a mingled literature of filial and religious
+piety, ranging from war-like p&aelig;ans to
+lyric prayers. They become the cherished inheritance
+of a nation, and, once fixed in the common
+memory and common heart, the people rarely let
+them die. The &ldquo;Songs of the Fathers&rdquo; have perennial
+breath, and in every generation&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The green woods of their native land</div>
+<div class="i1"> Shall whisper in the strain;</div>
+<div>The voices of their household band</div>
+<div class="i1"> Shall sweetly speak again.</div>
+
+<div class="i4">&mdash;<i>Felicia Hemans.</i></div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>ULTIMA THULE.</span></h4>
+
+
+<p>American pride has often gloried in Seneca's
+&ldquo;Vision of the West,&rdquo; more than eighteen hundred
+years ago.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i3"> Venient annis</div>
+<div class="i2"> S&aelig;cula seris, quibus Oceanus</div>
+<div class="i2"> Vincula rerum laxet, et ingens</div>
+<a id="png:372" name="png:372"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">372 /</span> 322</samp>
+<div class="i2"> Pateat tellus, Typhisque novos</div>
+<div class="i2"> Detegat orbes, nec sit terris</div>
+<div class="i3"> Ultima Thule.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>A time will come in future ages far</div>
+<div>When Ocean will his circling bounds unbar.</div>
+<div>And, opening vaster to the Pilot's hand,</div>
+<div>New worlds shall rise, where mightier kingdoms are,</div>
+Nor Thule longer be the utmost land.
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This poetic forecast, of which Washington Irving
+wrote &ldquo;the predictions of the ancient oracles were
+rarely so unequivocal,&rdquo; is part of the &ldquo;chorus&rdquo; at
+the end of the second act of Seneca's &ldquo;Medea,&rdquo; written
+near the date of St. Paul's first Epistle to the
+Thessalonians.</p>
+
+<p>Seneca, the celebrated Roman (Stoic) philosopher,
+was born at or very near the time of our Saviour's
+birth. There are legends of his acquaintance
+with Paul, at Rome, but though he wrote able and
+quotable treatises <i>On Consolation</i>, <i>On Providence</i>,
+<i>On Calmness of Soul</i>, and <i>On the Blessed Life</i>, there
+is no direct evidence that the savor of Christian
+faith ever qualified his works or his personal
+principles. He was a man of grand ideas and
+inspirations, but he was a time server and a flatterer
+of the Emperor Nero, who, nevertheless, caused
+his death when he had no further use for him.</p>
+
+<p>His compulsory suicide occurred A.D. 65, the
+year in which St. Paul is supposed to have suffered
+martyrdom.</p>
+
+<a id="png:373" name="png:373"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">373 /</span> 323</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>THE BREAKING WAVES DASHED HIGH.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Sitting at the tea-table one evening, near a
+century ago, Mrs. Hemans read an old account
+of the &ldquo;Landing of the Pilgrims,&rdquo; and was inspired
+to write this poem, which became a favorite in
+America&mdash;like herself, and all her other works.</p>
+
+<p>The ballad is inaccurate in details, but presents
+the spirit of the scene with true poet insight. Mr.
+James T. Fields, the noted Boston publisher, visited
+the lady in her old age, and received an autograph
+copy of the poem, which is seen in Pilgrim
+Hall, Plymouth, Mass.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn wide"><div class="stanza">
+<div>The breaking waves dashed high, on a stern and rock-bound coast,</div>
+<div>And the woods against a stormy sky, their giant branches tossed,</div>
+<div>And the heavy night hung dark, the hills and waters o'er,</div>
+<div>When a band of exiles moored their bark on the wild New England
+ shore.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Not as the conqueror comes, they, the true-hearted, came;</div>
+<div>Not with the roll of stirring drums, and the trumpet that sings
+ of fame;</div>
+<div>Not as the flying come, in silence and in fear,&mdash;</div>
+<div><em>They</em> shook the depths of the desert's gloom with their
+ hymns of lofty cheer.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Amidst the storm they sang, and the stars heard, and the sea!</div>
+<div>And the sounding aisles of the dim woods rang to the anthem
+ of the free!</div>
+<div>The ocean eagle soared from his nest by the white waves' foam,</div>
+<div>And the rocking pines of the forest roared,&mdash;this was their
+ welcome home!</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:374" name="png:374"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">374 /</span> 324</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>There were men with hoary hair amidst that pilgrim band,&mdash;</div>
+<div>Why had <em>they</em> come to wither there, away from their
+ childhood's land?</div>
+<div>There was woman's fearless eye, lit by her deep love's truth;</div>
+<div>There was manhood's brow, serenely high, and the fiery heart
+ of youth.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>What sought they thus afar? bright jewels of the mine?</div>
+<div>The wealth of seas? the spoils of war?&mdash;They sought a faith's
+ pure shrine!</div>
+<div>Ay, call it holy ground, the soil where first they trod;</div>
+<div>They left unstained what there they found,&mdash;freedom to worship
+ God!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Felicia Dorothea Browne (Mrs. Hemans) was
+born in Liverpool, Eng., 1766, and died 1845.</p>
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The original tune is not now accessible. It was
+composed by Mrs. Mary E. (Browne) Arkwright,
+Mrs. Hemans' sister, and published in England
+about 1835. But the words have been sung in
+this country to &ldquo;Silver St.,&rdquo; a choral not entirely
+forgotten, credited to an English composer, Isaac
+Smith, born, in London, about 1735, and died there
+in 1800.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WESTWARD THE COURSE OF EMPIRE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Usually misquoted &ldquo;Westward the <em>Star</em> of Empire,&rdquo;
+etc. This poem of Bishop Berkeley possesses
+no lyrical quality but, like the ancient
+Roman's words, partakes of the prophetic spirit,
+and has always been dear to the American heart
+<a id="png:375" name="png:375"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">375 /</span> 325</samp>
+by reason of the above line. It seems to formulate
+the &ldquo;manifest destiny&rdquo; of a great colonizing race
+that has already absorbed a continent, and extended
+its sway across the Pacific ocean.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Not such as Europe breeds in her decay;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Such as she bred when fresh and young,</div>
+<div>When heavenly flame did animate her clay,</div>
+<div class="i1"> By future poets shall be sung.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Westward the course of empire takes its way;</div>
+<div class="i1"> The four first acts already past,</div>
+<div>The fifth shall close the drama of the day:</div>
+<div class="i1"> Time's noblest offspring is the last.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>George Berkeley was born March 12, 1684, and
+educated at Trinity College, Dublin. A remarkable
+student, he became a remarkable man, as priest,
+prelate, and philosopher. High honors awaited
+him at home, but the missionary passion seized him.
+Inheriting a small fortune, he sailed to the West,
+intending to evangelize and educate the Indians of
+the &ldquo;Summer Islands,&rdquo; but the ship lost her course,
+and landed him at Newport, R.I., instead of the
+Bermudas. Here he was warmly welcomed, but
+was disappointed in his plans and hopes of founding
+a native college by the failure of friends in England
+to forward funds, and after a residence of six years
+he returned home. He died at Cloyne, Ireland,
+1753.</p>
+
+<p>The house which Bishop Berkeley built is still
+shown (or was until very recently) at Newport
+after one hundred and seventy-eight years. He
+wrote the <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has opening double quotes"><i>Principles
+of Human Knowledge</i></ins>,
+<a id="png:376" name="png:376"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">376 /</span> 326</samp>
+the <i>Minute Philosopher</i>, and many other works
+of celebrity in their time, and a scholarship in Yale
+bears his name; but he is best loved in this country
+for his <i>Ode to America</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Pope in his list of great men ascribes&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+To Berkeley every virtue under heaven.
+</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>SOUND THE LOUD TIMBREL.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>One would scarcely guess that this bravura
+hymn of victory and &ldquo;Come, ye disconsolate,&rdquo; were
+written by the same person, but both are by
+Thomas Moore. The song has all the vigor and
+vivacity of his &ldquo;Harp That Once Through Tara's
+Halls,&rdquo; without its pathos. The Irish poet chose
+the song of Miriam instead of the song of Deborah
+doubtless because the sentiment and strain of the
+first of these two great female patriots lent themselves
+more musically to his lyric verse&mdash;and his
+poem is certainly martial enough to convey the
+spirit of both.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Sound the loud timbrel o'er Egypt's dark sea!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Jehovah hath triumphed, His people are free!</div>
+<div>Sing, for the pride of the tyrant is broken;</div>
+<div class="i1"> His chariots, his horsemen,
+ all splendid and brave&mdash;</div>
+<div>How vain was their boasting, the Lord hath but spoken,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And chariots and horsemen are sunk in the wave.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Of all the different composers to whose music
+Moore's &ldquo;sacred songs&rdquo; were sung&mdash;Beethoven,
+<a id="png:377" name="png:377"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">377 /</span> 327</samp>
+Mozart, Stevenson, and the rest&mdash;Avison seems to
+be the only one whose name and tune have clung
+to the poet's words; and we have the man and the
+melody sent to us, as it were, by the lyrist himself.
+The tune is now rarely sung except at church
+festivals and village entertainments, but the life
+and clamor of the scene at the Red Sea are in it,
+and it is something more than a mere musical
+curiosity. Its style, however, is antiquated&mdash;with
+its timbrel beat and its canorous harmony and
+&ldquo;coda fortis&rdquo;&mdash;and modern choirs have little use
+in religious service for the sonata written for viols
+and horns.</p>
+
+<p>It was Moore's splendid hymn that gave it
+vogue in England and Ireland, and sent it across
+the sea to find itself in the house of its friends with
+the psalmody of Billings and Swan. Moore was
+the man of all men to take a fancy to it and make
+language to its string-and-trumpet concert. He
+was a musician himself, and equally able to adapt
+a tune and to create one. As a festival performance,
+replete with patriotic noise, let Avison's old
+&ldquo;Sound the Timbrel&rdquo; live.</p>
+
+<p>Charles Avison was born at Newcastle-on-Tyne,
+1710. He studied in Italy, wrote works on music,
+and composed sonatas and concertos for stringed
+orchestras. For many years he was organist of
+St. Nicholas' Kirk in his native town.</p>
+
+<p>The tune to &ldquo;Sound the Loud Timbrel&rdquo; is a
+chorus from one of his longer compositions. He
+died in 1770.</p>
+
+<a id="png:378" name="png:378"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">378 /</span> 328</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>THE HARP THAT ONCE THROUGH TARA'S HALLS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This is the only one of Moore's patriotic &ldquo;Irish
+Melodies&rdquo; that lives wherever sweet tones are
+loved and poetic feeling finds answering hearts.
+The exquisite sadness of its music and its text is
+strangely captivating, and its untold story beckons
+from its lines.</p>
+
+<p>Tara was the ancient home of the Irish kings.
+King Dermid, who had apostatized from the faith
+of St. Patrick and his followers, in A.D., 554,
+violated the Christian right of sanctuary by taking
+an escaped prisoner from the altar of refuge in
+Temple Ruadan (Tipperary) and putting him to
+death. The patron priest and his clergy marched
+to Tara and solemnly pronounced a curse upon
+the King. Not long afterwards Dermid was
+assassinated, and superstition shunned the place
+&ldquo;as a castle under ban.&rdquo; The last human resident
+of &ldquo;Tara's Hall&rdquo; was the King's bard, who
+lingered there, forsaken and ostracized, till he
+starved to death. Years later one daring visitor
+found his skeleton and his broken harp.</p>
+
+<p>Moore utilized this story of tragic pathos as a
+figure in his song for &ldquo;fallen Erin&rdquo; lamenting her
+lost royalty&mdash;under a curse that had lasted thirteen
+hundred years.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>The harp that once through Tara's halls</div>
+<div class="i1"> The soul of music shed,</div>
+<div>Now hangs as mute on Tara's walls</div>
+<div class="i1"> As if that soul were fled.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:379" name="png:379"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">379 /</span> 329</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>So sleeps the pride of former days,</div>
+<div class="i1"> So glory's thrill is o'er,</div>
+<div>And hearts that once beat high for praise</div>
+<div class="i1"> Now feel that pulse no more.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>No one can read the words without &ldquo;thinking&rdquo;
+the tune. It is supposed that Moore composed
+them both.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>THE MARSEILLAISE HYMN.</span></h4>
+
+
+<p class="ctrhymn"><span>
+Ye sons of France, awake to glory!<br />
+Hark! hark! what millions bid you rise!
+</span></p>
+
+<p>The &ldquo;Marseillaise Hymn&rdquo; so long supposed to be
+the musical as well as verbal composition of
+Roget de Lisle, an army engineer, was proved to
+be only his words set to an air in the &ldquo;Credo&rdquo; of a
+German mass, which was the work of one Holzman
+in 1726. De Lisle was known to be a poet
+and musician as well as a soldier, and, as he is said to
+have played or sung at times in the churches and
+convents, it is probable that he found and copied
+the manuscript of Holzman's melody. His haste
+to rush his fiery &ldquo;Hymn&rdquo; before the public in the
+fever of the Revolution allowed him no time to
+make his own music, and he adapted the German's
+notes to his words and launched the song in the
+streets of Strasburg. It was first sung in Paris by
+a band of chanters from Marseilles, and, like the
+trumpets blown around Jericho, it shattered the
+walls of the French monarchy to their foundations.</p>
+
+<p>The &ldquo;Marseillaise Hymn&rdquo; is mentioned here for
+its patriotic birth and associations. An attempt to
+<a id="png:380" name="png:380"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">380 /</span> 330</samp>
+make a religious use of it is recorded in the <a href="#png:210">Fourth
+Chapter</a>.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>ODE ON SCIENCE.</span></h4>
+
+
+<p>This is a &ldquo;patriotic hymn,&rdquo; though a queer production
+with a queer name, considering its contents;
+and its author was no intimate of the Muses.
+Liberty is supposed to be somehow the corollary
+of learning, or vice versa&mdash;whichever the reader
+thinks.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The morning sun shines from the East</div>
+<div>And spreads his glories to the West.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>So Science spreads her lucid ray</div>
+<div>O'er lands that long in darkness lay;</div>
+<div>She visits fair Columbia,</div>
+<div>And sets her sons among the stars.</div>
+<div>Fair Freedom, her attendant, waits, etc.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE</h4>
+
+<p class="runon">Was the really notable part of this old-time
+&ldquo;Ode,&rdquo; the favorite of village assemblies, and the inevitable
+practice-piece for amateur violinists. The author
+of the crude symphony was Deacon Janaziah (or
+Jazariah) Summer, of Taunton, Mass., who prepared
+it&mdash;music and probably words&mdash;for the
+semi-centennial of Simeon Dagget's Academy in
+1798. The &ldquo;Ode&rdquo; was subsequently published
+in Philadelphia, and also in Albany. It was a song
+of the people, and sang itself through the country
+<a id="png:381" name="png:381"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">381 /</span> 331</samp>
+for fifty or sixty years, always culminating in the
+swift crescendo chorus and repeat&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The British yoke and Gallic chain</div>
+<div>Were urged upon our necks in vain;</div>
+<div>All haughty tyrants we disdain,</div>
+<div>And shout &ldquo;Long live America!&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The average patriot did not mind it if &ldquo;Columbi-<em>ay</em>&rdquo;
+and &ldquo;Ameri-<em>kay</em>&rdquo; were not exactly classic
+ortho&euml;py.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>HAIL COLUMBIA.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This was written (1798) by Judge Joseph Hopkinson,
+born, in Philadelphia, 1770, and died there,
+1843. He wrote it for a friend in that city who
+was a theatre singer, and wanted a song for Independence
+Day. The music (to which it is still
+sung) was &ldquo;The President's March,&rdquo; by a composer
+named Fyles, near the end of the 18th
+century.</p>
+
+<p>There is nothing hymn-like in the words, which
+are largely a glorification of Gen. Washington, but
+the tune, a concerted piece better for band than
+voices, has the drum-and-anvil chorus quality suitable
+for vociferous mass singing&mdash;and a zealous
+Salvation Army corps on field nights could even fit
+a processional song to it with gospel words.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>OLD &ldquo;CHESTER.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Let tyrants shake their iron rod,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And slavery clank her galling chains:</div>
+<div>We'll fear them not; we trust in God;</div>
+<div class="i1"> New England's God forever reigns.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:382" name="png:382"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">382 /</span> 332</samp>
+<p>Old &ldquo;Chester,&rdquo; both words and tune the work
+of William Billings, is another of the provincial
+freedom songs of the Revolutionary period, and of
+the days when the Republic was young. Billings
+was a zealous patriot, and (says a writer in Moore's
+<i>Cyclopedia of Music</i>) &ldquo;one secret, no doubt, of the
+vast popularity his works obtained was the patriotic
+ardor they breathed. The words above quoted
+are an example, and &lsquo;Chester,&rsquo; it is said, was
+frequently heard from every fife in the New England
+ranks. The spirit of the Revolution was also
+manifest in his &lsquo;Lamentation over Boston,&rsquo; his
+&lsquo;Retrospect,&rsquo; his &lsquo;Independence,&rsquo;
+his &lsquo;Columbia,&rsquo; and many other pieces.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>William Billings was born, in Boston, Oct. 7, 1746.
+He was a man of little education, but his genius for
+music spurred him to study the tuneful art, and enabled
+him to learn all that could be learned without
+a master. He began to make tunes and publish
+them, and his first book, the <i>New England
+Psalm-singer</i> was a curiosity of youthful crudity and
+confidence, but in considerable numbers it was sold,
+and sung&mdash;and laughed at. He went on studying
+and composing, and compiled another work, which
+was so much of an improvement that it got the name
+of <i>Billings' Best</i>. A third singing-book followed, and
+finally a fourth entitled the <i>Psalm Singer's Amusement</i>,
+both of which were popular in their day. His
+<a id="Majesty" name="Majesty">&ldquo;Majesty&rdquo;</a> has tremendous
+capabilities of sound,
+and its movement is fully up to the requirements of
+Nahum Tate's verses,&mdash;</p>
+
+<a id="png:383" name="png:383"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">383 /</span> 333</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>And on the wings of mighty winds</div>
+<div class="i1"> Came flying all abroad.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>William Billings died in 1800, and his remains
+lie in an unmarked grave in the old &ldquo;Granary&rdquo;
+Burying Ground in the city of his birth.</p>
+
+<p>National feeling has taken maturer speech and
+finer melody, but it was these ruder voices that set
+the pitch. They were sung with native pride and
+affection at fireside vespers and rural feasts with
+the adopted songs of Burns and Moore and Mrs.
+Hemans, and, like the lays of Scotland and Provence,
+they breathed the flavor of the country air
+and soil, and taught the generation of home-born
+minstrelsy that gave us the Hutchinson family,
+Ossian E. Dodge, Covert with his &ldquo;Sword of
+Bunker Hill,&rdquo; and Philip Phillips, the &ldquo;Singing
+Pilgrim.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER.</span></h4>
+
+
+<p>Near the close of the last war with England,
+Francis Scott Key, of Baltimore, the author of this
+splendid national hymn, was detained under guard
+on the British flag-ship at the mouth of the Petapsco,
+where he had gone under a flag of truce to
+procure the release of a captured friend, Dr. William
+Beanes of Upper Marlboro, Md.</p>
+
+<p>The enemy's fleet was preparing to bombard
+Fort McHenry, and Mr. Key's return with his
+friend was forbidden lest their plans should be
+disclosed. Forced to stay and witness the attack
+on his country's flag, he walked the deck through
+<a id="png:384" name="png:384"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">384 /</span> 334</samp>
+the whole night of the bombardment until the
+break of day showed the brave standard still flying
+at full mast over the fort. Relieved of his patriotic
+anxiety, he pencilled the exultant lines and chorus
+of his song on the back of a letter, and, as soon as he
+was released, carried it to the city, where within
+twenty-four hours it was printed on flyers, circulated
+and sung in the streets to the air of &ldquo;Anacreon
+in Heaven&rdquo;&mdash;which has been the &ldquo;Star Spangled
+Banner&rdquo; tune ever since.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn wide">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O say, can you see by the dawn's early light</div>
+<div>What so proudly we hailed at the twilight's last gleaming?</div>
+<div>Whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight</div>
+<div>O'er the ramparts we watched, were so gallantly streaming,</div>
+<div>And the rockets red glare, the bombs bursting in air</div>
+<div>Gave proof through the night that the flag was still there:</div>
+<div class="i1"> O say, does the star-spangled banner yet wave,</div>
+<div class="i1"> O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave?</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i2">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> O thus be it ever when freemen shall stand,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Between their loved homes and the war's desolation;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Blessed with victory and peace,
+ may the heaven-rescued land</div>
+<div class="i1"> Praise the Power that hath made
+ and preserved us a nation.</div>
+<div class="i1"> Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And this be our motto,
+ &ldquo;<i>In God is our trust</i>.&rdquo;</div>
+<div class="i1"> And the star-spangled banner in triumph shall wave,</div>
+<div class="i1"> O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p title="Illustation of Samuel Smith originally opposite">The original
+star-spangled banner that waved
+over Fort McHenry in sight of the poet when he
+wrote the famous hymn was made and presented
+to the garrison by a girl of fifteen, afterwards Mrs.
+<a id="png:387" name="png:387"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">387 /</span> 335</samp>
+Sanderson, and is still preserved in the Sanderson
+family at Baltimore.</p>
+
+<p>The additional stanza to the &ldquo;Star-Spangled
+Banner&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When our land is illumined with Liberty's smile, etc.,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;was composed by Dr. O.W. Holmes, in 1861.</p>
+
+<p>The tune &ldquo;Anacreon in Heaven&rdquo; was an old
+English hunting air composed by John Stafford
+Smith, born at Gloucester, Eng. 1750. He was
+composer for Covent Garden Theater, and conductor
+of the Academy of Ancient Music. Died
+Sep. 20, 1836. The melody was first used in
+America to Robert Treat Paine's song, &ldquo;Adams
+and Liberty.&rdquo; Paine, born 1778&mdash;died 1811, was
+the son of Robert Treat Paine, signer of the Declaration
+of Independence.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>STAND! THE GROUND'S YOUR OWN, MY BRAVES.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Sympathetic admiration for the air, &ldquo;Scots wha
+hae wi' Wallace bled,&rdquo; (or &ldquo;Bruce's address,&rdquo; as it
+was commonly called), with the syllables of Robert
+Burns' silvery verse, lingered long in the land after
+the wars were ended. It spoke in the poem of
+John Pierpont, who caught its pibroch thrill, and
+built the metre of &ldquo;Warren's Address at the Battle
+of Bunker Hill&rdquo; on the model of &ldquo;Scots wha hae.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Stand! the ground's your own, my braves;</div>
+<div>Will ye give it up to slaves?</div>
+<div>Will ye look for greener graves?</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:388" name="png:388"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">388 /</span> 336</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>In the God of battles trust:</div>
+<div>Die we may, or die we must,</div>
+<div>But O where can dust to dust</div>
+<div class="i1"> Be consigned so well,</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>As where Heaven its dews shall shed,</div>
+<div>On the martyred patriot's bed,</div>
+<div>And the rocks shall raise their head</div>
+<div class="i1"> Of his deeds to tell?</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This poem, written about 1823, held a place
+many years in school-books, and was one of the
+favorite school-boy declamations. Whenever sung
+on patriotic occasions, the music was sure to be
+&ldquo;Bruce's Address.&rdquo; That typical Scotch tune was
+played on the Highland bag-pipes long before
+Burns was born, and known as &ldquo;Hey tuttie taite.&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Heard on Fraser's hautboy, it used to fill my
+eyes with tears,&rdquo; Burns himself once wrote.</p>
+
+<p>Rev. John Pierpont was born in Litchfield, Ct.,
+April 6, 1785. He was graduated at Yale, 1804,
+taught school, studied law, engaged in trade, and
+finally took a course in theology and became a
+Unitarian minister, holding the pastorate of Hollis
+St. Church, Boston, thirty-six years. He travelled
+in the East, and wrote &ldquo;Airs of Palestine.&rdquo; His
+poem, &ldquo;The Yankee Boy,&rdquo; has been much quoted.
+Died in Medford, Mass., Aug. 26, 1866.</p>
+
+<a id="png:385" name="png:385"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">385 /</span> opp 334</samp>
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of Samuel F. Smith">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus17" name="Illus17"
+ ><img src="images/illus17-samuelsmith-cameo.jpg" alt=
+ "Samuel F. Smith" width="216" height="268" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>Samuel F. Smith</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>MY COUNTRY, 'TIS OF THEE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This simple lyric, honored so long with the name
+&ldquo;America,&rdquo; and the title &ldquo;Our National Hymn,&rdquo;
+<a id="png:389" name="png:389"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">389 /</span> 337</samp>
+was written by Samuel Francis Smith, while a
+theological student at Andover, Feb. 2, 1832. He
+had before him several hymn and song tunes which
+Lowell Mason had received from Germany, and,
+knowing young Smith to be a good linguist, had
+sent to him for translation. One of the songs, of
+national character, struck Smith as adaptable to
+home use if turned into American words, and he
+wrote four stanzas of his own to fit the tune.</p>
+
+<p>Mason printed them with the music, and under
+his magical management the hymn made its debut
+on a public occasion in Park St. Church, Boston,
+July 4, 1832. Its very simplicity, with its reverent
+spirit and easy-flowing language, was sure to
+catch the ear of the multitude and grow into familiar
+use with any suitable music, but it was the
+foreign tune that, under Mason's happy pilotage,
+winged it for the western world and launched it
+on its long flight.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>My country, 'tis of thee,</div>
+<div>Sweet land of liberty,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Of thee I sing;</div>
+<div>Land where my fathers died,</div>
+<div>Land of the pilgrims' pride,</div>
+<div>From every mountain-side</div>
+<div class="i1"> Let freedom ring.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Let music swell the breeze,</div>
+<div>And ring from all the trees</div>
+<div class="i1"> Sweet Freedom's song;</div>
+<div>Let mortal tongues awake,</div>
+<a id="png:390" name="png:390"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">390 /</span> 338</samp>
+<div>Let all that breathe partake,</div>
+<div>Let rocks their silence break,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The sound prolong.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Our fathers' God, to Thee,</div>
+<div>Author of liberty,</div>
+<div class="i1"> To Thee we sing;</div>
+<div>Long may our land be bright</div>
+<div>With Freedom's holy light;</div>
+<div>Protect us by Thy might,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Great God, our King.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Pages, and at least two volumes, have been written
+to prove the origin of that cosmopolitan, half-Gregorian
+descant known here as &ldquo;America,&rdquo; and
+in England as &ldquo;God Save the King.&rdquo; William C.
+Woodbridge of Boston brought it home with him
+from Germany. The Germans had been singing
+it for years (and are singing it now, more or less)
+to the words, &ldquo;Heil Dir Im Siegel Kranz,&rdquo; and the
+Swiss to &ldquo;Rufst Du mein Vaterland.&rdquo; It was
+sung in Sweden, also, and till 1833 it was in public
+use in Russia commonly enough to give it a national
+character. Von Weber introduced it in his
+&ldquo;Jubel&rdquo; overture, and Beethoven, in 1814, copied
+it in C Major and wrote piano variations on it.
+It has been ascribed to Henry Purcell (1696), to
+Lulli, a French composer (1670), to Dr. John Bull
+(1619), and to Thomas Ravenscroft and an old
+Scotch carol as old as 1609. One might fancy that
+the biography of the famous air resembled Melchizedek's.</p>
+<a id="png:391" name="png:391"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">391 /</span> 339</samp>
+
+<p>The truth appears to be that certain bars of
+music which might easily happen to be similar,
+or even identical, when plain-song was the common
+style, were produced at different times and places,
+and one man finally harmonized the wandering
+strains into a complete tune. It is now generally
+conceded that the man was Henry Carey, a popular
+English composer and dramatist of the first half
+of the 18th century, who sang the melody as it now
+is, in 1740, at a public dinner given in honor of
+Admiral Vernon after his capture of Porto Bello
+(Brazil). This antedates any authenticated use
+of the tune <i>ipsissima forma</i> in England or continental
+Europe.</p>
+
+<p>The American history of it simply is that Woodbridge
+gave it to Mason and Mason gave it to
+Smith&mdash;and Smith gave it &ldquo;My Country 'Tis of
+Thee.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>BY THE RUDE BRIDGE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This genuinely American poem, written by
+Ralph Waldo Emerson and called usually the
+&ldquo;Concord Hymn,&rdquo; was prepared for the dedication
+of the Battle-monument in Concord, April 19, 1836,
+and sung there to the <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'time'">tune</ins> of &ldquo;Old Hundred.&rdquo;
+Apparently no change has been made in the
+original except of a single word in the first line.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>By the rude bridge that arched the flood,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Their flag to April's breeze unfurled,</div>
+<div>Here once the embattled farmers stood,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And fired the shot heard round the world.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:392" name="png:392"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">392 /</span> 340</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The foe long since in silence slept;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Alike the conqueror silent sleeps;</div>
+<div>And Time the ruined bridge has swept</div>
+<div class="i1"> Down the dark stream which seaward creeps.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>On this green bank, by this soft stream,</div>
+<div class="i1"> We set today a votive stone;</div>
+<div>That memory may their deed redeem,</div>
+<div class="i1"> When, like our sires, our sons are gone.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Spirit, that made those heroes dare</div>
+<div class="i1"> To die, and leave their children free,</div>
+<div>Bid Time and Nature gently spare</div>
+<div class="i1"> The shaft we raise to them and Thee.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This does not appear in the hymnals and owns
+no special tune. Its niche of honor is in the temple
+of anthology, but it will always be called the &ldquo;Concord
+Hymn&rdquo;&mdash;and the fourth line of its first stanza
+is a perennial quotation.</p>
+
+<p>Ralph Waldo Emerson, LL.D., the renowned
+American essayist and poet, was born in Boston,
+1803. He graduated at Harvard in 1821, and was
+ordained to the Unitarian ministry, but turned his
+attention to literature, writing and lecturing on
+ethical and philosophical themes, and winning
+universal fame by his original and suggestive prose
+and verse. He died April 27, 1882.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>BATTLE HYMN OF THE REPUBLIC.</span></h4>
+
+
+<p>After a visit to the Federal camps on the Potomac
+in 1861, Mrs. Julia Ward Howe returned to
+her lodgings in Washington, fatigued, as she says,
+by her &ldquo;long, cold drive,&rdquo; and slept soundly.
+<a id="png:393" name="png:393"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">393 /</span> 341</samp>
+Awakening at early daybreak, she began &ldquo;to twine
+the long lines of a hymn which promised to suit the
+measure of the &lsquo;John Brown&rsquo; melody.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>This hymn was written out after a fashion in the
+dark, by Mrs. Howe, and she then went back to sleep.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn wide">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord;</div>
+<div>He is trampling out the vintage
+ where the grapes of wrath are stored;</div>
+<div>He hath loosed the fateful lightning of His terrible swift sword;</div>
+<div class="i2"> His truth is marching on.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>I have seen Him in the watch-fires of a hundred circling camps,</div>
+<div>They have builded Him an altar in the evening dews and damps;</div>
+<div>I can read His righteous sentence by the dim and flaring lamps;</div>
+<div class="i2"> His day is marching on.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>I have read a fiery gospel writ in burnished rows of steel;</div>
+<div>&ldquo;As ye deal with my contemners,
+ so with you my grace shall deal;&rdquo;</div>
+<div>Let the Hero, born of woman, crush the serpent with His heel,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Since God is marching on.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>He has sounded forth the trumpet that shall never call retreat;</div>
+<div>He is sifting out the hearts of men before His judgment seat;</div>
+<div>Oh, be swift, my soul, to answer Him! be jubilant my feet!</div>
+<div class="i2"> Our God is marching on.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>In the beauty of the lilies Christ was born across the sea,</div>
+<div>With a glory in His bosom that transfigures you and me;</div>
+<div>As He died to make men holy, let us die to make men free.</div>
+<div class="i2"> While God is marching on.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The music of the old camp-meeting refrain,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Say, brothers will you meet us?</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;or,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O brother, will you meet me,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:394" name="png:394"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">394 /</span> 342</samp>
+<p class="runon">(No. 173 in the <i>Revivalist</i>,) was written in 1855, by
+John William Steffe, of Richmond, Va., for a fire
+company, and was afterwards arranged by Franklin
+H. Lummis. The air of the &ldquo;John Brown
+Song&rdquo; was caught from this religious melody. The
+old hymn-tune had the &ldquo;Glory, Hallelujah&rdquo; coda,
+cadenced off with, &ldquo;For ever, ever more.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In 1860&ndash;61 the garrison of soldiers at work on
+the half-dismantled defenses of Fort Warren in
+Boston Harbor, were fain to lighten labor and mock
+fatigue with any species of fun suggested by circumstances
+or accident, and, as for music, they sang
+everything they could remember or make up.
+John Brown's memory and fate were fresh in the
+Northern mind, and the jollity of the not very
+reverent army men did not exclude frequent allusions
+to the rash old Harper's Ferry hero.</p>
+
+<p>A wag conjured his spirit into the camp with a witticism
+as to what he was doing, and a comrade retorted,</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Marchin' on, of course.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>A third cried, &ldquo;Pooh, John Brown's underground.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>A serio-comic debate added more words, and in
+the midst of the banter, a musical fellow strung a
+rhythmic sentence and trolled it to the Methodist
+tune. &ldquo;John Brown's body lies a mould'rin' in the
+ground&rdquo; was taken up by others who knew the air,
+the following line was improvised almost instantly,
+and soon, to the accompaniment of pick, shovel
+and crowbar,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+His soul goes marching on,
+</p>
+
+<a id="png:395" name="png:395"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">395 /</span> 343</samp>
+<p class="runon">&mdash;rounded the couplet with full lung power through
+all the repetitions, till the inevitable &ldquo;glory, glory
+hallelujah&rdquo; had the voice of every soldier in the
+fort. The song &ldquo;took,&rdquo; and the marching chorus
+of the Federal armies of the Civil War was started
+on its way. Mrs. Howe gave it a poem that made
+its rusticity sublime, and the &ldquo;Battle Hymn of the
+Republic&rdquo; began a career that promises to run till
+battle hymns cease to be sung.</p>
+
+<p>Julia Ward was born in New York city, May 27,
+1819. In 1843 she became the wife of Samuel
+Gridley Howe, the far-famed philanthropist and
+champion of liberty, and with him edited an anti-slavery
+paper, the <i>Boston Commonwealth</i>, until the
+Civil War closed its mission. During the war she
+was active and influential&mdash;and has never ceased
+to be so&mdash;in the cause of peace and justice, and in
+every philanthropic movement. Her great hymn
+first brought her prominently before the public, but
+her many other writings would have made a literary
+reputation. Her four surviving children are all eminent
+in the scientific and literary world.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>KELLER'S AMERICAN HYMN.</span></h4>
+
+
+<p>Naturally the title suggests the authorship of the
+ode, but fate made Keller a musician rather than
+a poet and hymnist, and the honors of the fine
+anthem are divided. At the grand performance
+which created its reputation, the hymn of Dr. O.W.
+Holmes was substituted for the composer's words.
+This is Keller's first stanza:</p>
+
+<a id="png:396" name="png:396"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">396 /</span> 344</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Speed our republic, O Father on high!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Lead us in pathways of justice and right,</div>
+<div>Rulers, as well as the ruled, one and all,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Girdle with virtue the armor of might.</div>
+<div>Hail! three times hail, to our country and flag!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Rulers, as well as the ruled, one and all,</div>
+<div>Girdle with virtue the armor of might;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Hail! three times hail, to our country and flag!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Flag&rdquo; was the unhappy word at the end of
+every one of the four stanzas. To match a short
+vowel to an orotund concert note for two beats and
+a &ldquo;hold&rdquo; was impossible. When the great Peace
+Jubilee of 1872, in Boston, was projected, Dr.
+Holmes was applied to, and responded with a lyric
+that gave each stanza the rondeau effect designed
+by the composer, but replaced the flat final with a
+climax syllable of breadth and music:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Angel of Peace, thou hast wandered too long!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Spread thy white wings to the sunshine of love!</div>
+<div>Come while our voices are blended in song,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Fly to our ark like the storm-beaten dove!</div>
+<div>Fly to our ark on the wings of the dove,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Speed o'er the far-sounding billows of song,</div>
+<div>Crown'd with thine olive-leaf garland of love,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Angel of Peace, thou hast waited too long!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Angels of Bethlehem, answer the strain!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Hark! a new birth-song is filling the sky!</div>
+<div>Loud as the storm-wind that tumbles the main,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Bid the full breath of the organ reply,</div>
+<div>Let the loud tempest of voices reply,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Roll its long surge like the earth-shaking main!</div>
+<div>Swell the vast song till it mounts to the sky!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Angels of Bethlehem, echo the strain!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:397" name="png:397"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">397 /</span> 345</samp>
+<p>But the glory of the <em>tune</em> was Keller's own.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after the close of the war a prize of $500 had
+been offered by a committee of American gentlemen
+for the best &ldquo;national hymn&rdquo; (meaning words and
+music). Mr. Keller, though a foreigner, was a
+naturalized citizen and patriot and entered the lists
+as a competitor with the zeal of a native and the
+ambition of an artist. Sometime in 1866 he finished
+and copyrighted the noble anthem that bears his
+name, and then began the struggle to get it before
+the public and test its merit. To enable him to
+bring it out before the New York Academy of
+Music, where (unfortunately) he determined to
+make his first trial, his brother kindly lent him four
+hundred dollars (which he had laid by to purchase
+a little home), and he borrowed two hundred more
+elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>The performance proved a failure, the total
+receipts being only forty-two dollars, Keller was
+$500 in debt, and his brother's house-money was
+gone. But he refused to accept his failure as final.
+Boston (where he should have begun) was introduced
+to his masterpiece at every opportunity, and
+gradually, with the help of the city bands and a few
+public concerts, a decided liking for it was worked
+up. It was entered on the program of the Peace Jubilee
+and sung by a chorus of ten thousand voices.
+The effect was magnificent. &ldquo;Keller's American
+Hymn&rdquo; became a recognized star number in the
+repertoire of &ldquo;best&rdquo; national tunes; and now few
+<a id="png:398" name="png:398"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">398 /</span> 346</samp>
+public occasions where patriotic music is demanded
+omit it in their menu of song.<sup>*</sup></p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote" style="margin-right: 10%;"><p>*
+In Butterworth's &ldquo;<i>Story of the Tunes</i>,&rdquo; under the account
+of Keller's grand motet, the following sacred hymn is inserted as
+&ldquo;often sung to it:&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Father Almighty, we bow at thy feet;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Humbly thy grace and thy goodness we own.</div>
+<div>Answer in love when thy children entreat,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Hear our thanksgiving ascend to thy throne.</div>
+<div>Seeking thy blessing, in worship we meet,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Trusting our souls on thy mercy alone;</div>
+<div>Father Almighty, we bow at thy feet.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Breathe, Holy Spirit, thy comfort divine,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Tune every voice to thy music of peace;</div>
+<div>Hushed in our hearts, with one whisper of thine,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Pride and the tumult of passion will cease.</div>
+<div>Joy of the watchful, who wait for thy sign,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Hope of the sinful, who long for release,</div>
+<div>Breathe, Holy Spirit, thy comfort divine.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>God of salvation, thy glory we sing,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Honors to thee in thy temple belong;</div>
+<div>Welcome the tribute of gladness we bring,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Loud-pealing organ and chorus of song.</div>
+<div>While our high praises, Redeemer and King,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Blend with the notes of the angelic throng,</div>
+<div>God of salvation, thy glory we sing.</div>
+<div class="right">&mdash;<i>Theron Brown</i>.</div>
+</div></div>
+</div>
+
+<p>It is pathetic to know that the composer's one
+great success brought him only a barren renown.
+The prize committee, on the ground that <em>none</em>
+of the competing pieces reached the high standard of
+excellence contemplated, withheld the $500, and
+Keller's work received merely the compliment of
+being judged worth presentation. The artist had
+his copyright, but he remained a poor man.</p>
+
+<p>Matthias Keller was born at Ulm, Wurtemberg,
+March 20, 1813. In his youth he was both a
+<a id="png:399" name="png:399"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">399 /</span> 347</samp>
+musician and a painter. Coming to this country, he
+chose the calling that promised the better and
+quicker wages, playing in bands and theatre
+orchestras, but never accumulating money. He
+could make fine harmonies as well as play them,
+but English was not his mother-tongue, and though
+he wrote a hundred and fifty songs, only one made
+him well-known. When fame came to him it did
+not bring him wealth, and in his latter days, crippled
+by partial paralysis, he went back to his early art
+and earned a living by painting flowers and retouching
+portraits and landscapes. He died in
+1875, only three years after his Coliseum triumph.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>GOD BLESS OUR NATIVE LAND.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This familiar patriotic hymn is notable&mdash;though
+not entirely singular&mdash;for having two authors.
+The older singing-books signed the name of J.S.
+Dwight to it, until inquiring correspondence
+brought out the testimony and the joint claim of
+Dwight and C.T. Brooks, and it appeared that
+both these scholars and writers translated it from
+the German. Later hymnals attach both their
+names to the hymn.<sup>*</sup></p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+For a full account of this disputed hymn, and the curious trick of memory
+which confused <em>four</em> names in the question of its authorship, see
+Dr. Benson's <i>Studies of Familiar Hymns</i>, pp. 179&ndash;190</p></div>
+
+<p>John Sullivan Dwight, born, in Boston, May 13,
+1813, was a virtuoso in music, and an enthusiastic
+student of the art and science of tonal harmony.
+He joined a Harvard musical club known as &ldquo;The
+<a id="png:400" name="png:400"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">400 /</span> 348</samp>
+Pierian Sodality&rdquo; while a student at the University,
+and after his graduation became a prolific writer
+on musical subjects. Six years of his life were
+passed in the &ldquo;Brook Farm Community.&rdquo; He
+was best known by his serial magazine, Dwight's
+<i>Journal of Music</i>, which was continued from 1852
+to 1881. His death occurred in 1893.</p>
+
+<p>Rev. Charles Timothy Brooks, the translator of
+Faust, was born, in Salem, Mass., June 20, 1813,
+being only about a month younger than his friend
+Dwight. Was a student at Harvard University
+and Divinity School 1829&ndash;1835, and was ordained
+to the Unitarian ministry and settled at Newport,
+R.I. He resigned his charge there (1871) on account
+of ill health, and occupied himself with literary
+work until his death, Jan. 14, 1883.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>God bless our native land!</div>
+<div>Firm may she ever stand</div>
+<div class="i1"> Through storm and night!</div>
+<div>When the wild tempests rave.</div>
+<div>Ruler of wind and wave,</div>
+<div>Do Thou our country save</div>
+<div class="i1"> By Thy great might!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>For her our prayer shall rise</div>
+<div>To God above the skies;</div>
+<div class="i1"> On Him we wait.</div>
+<div>Thou who art ever nigh,</div>
+<div>Guarding with watchful eye;</div>
+<div>To Thee aloud we cry,</div>
+<div class="i1"> God save the State!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The tune of &ldquo;Dort,&rdquo; by Lowell Mason, has long
+been the popular melody for this hymn. Indeed
+<a id="png:401" name="png:401"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">401 /</span> 349</samp>
+the two were united by Mason himself. It is
+braver music than &ldquo;America,&rdquo; and would have
+carried Dr. Smith's hymn nobly, but the borrowed
+tune, on the whole, better suits &ldquo;My Country 'tis
+of thee,&rdquo;&mdash;and besides, it has the advantage of a
+middle-register harmony easy for a multitude of
+voices.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>THOU, TOO, SAIL ON, O SHIP OF STATE,</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p class="runon">The closing canto of Longfellow's &ldquo;Launching
+of the Ship,&rdquo; almost deserves a patriotic hymn-tune,
+though its place and use are commonly with
+school recitations.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>GOD OF OUR FATHERS, KNOWN OF OLD.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Rudyard Kipling, in a moment of serious reflection
+on the flamboyant militarism of British
+sentiment during the South African War, wrote
+this remarkable &ldquo;Recessional,&rdquo; so strikingly unlike
+his other war-time poems. It is to be hoped
+he did not suddenly repent his Christian impulse,
+but with the chauvinistic cry around him, &ldquo;Our
+Country, right or wrong!&rdquo; he seems to have felt
+the contrast of his prayer&mdash;and flung it into the
+waste-basket. His watchful wife rescued it (the
+story says) and bravely sent it to the London
+Times. The world owes her a debt. The hymn
+is not only an anthem for Peace Societies, but a
+tonic for true patriotism. When Freedom fights
+in self-defense, she need not force herself to &ldquo;forget&rdquo;
+the Lord of Hosts.</p>
+
+<a id="png:402" name="png:402"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">402 /</span> 350</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>God of our fathers, known of old,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Lord of our far-flung battle-line,</div>
+<div>Beneath whose awful hand we hold</div>
+<div class="i1"> Dominion over palm and pine;</div>
+<div>Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Lest we forget, lest we forget.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>The tumult and the shouting dies,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The captains and the kings depart,</div>
+<div>Still stands Thine ancient sacrifice,</div>
+<div class="i1"> An humble and a contrite heart.</div>
+<div>Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Lest we forget, lest we forget.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Far-called, our navies melt away,</div>
+<div class="i1"> On dune and headland sinks the fire;</div>
+<div>Lo all our pomp of yesterday</div>
+<div class="i1"> Is one with Nineveh and Tyre.</div>
+<div>Judge of the nations, spare us yet,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Lest we forget, lest we forget.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>If, drunk with sight of power, we loose</div>
+<div class="i1"> Wild tongues that have not Thee in awe,</div>
+<div>Such boasting as the Gentiles use</div>
+<div class="i1"> Or lesser breeds without the law,</div>
+<div>Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Lest we forget, lest we forget.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>For heathen heart that puts her trust,</div>
+<div class="i1"> In recking tube and iron shard,</div>
+<div>All valiant dust that builds on dust</div>
+<div class="i1"> And guarding, calls not Thee to guard,</div>
+<div>For frantic boast and foolish word</div>
+<div class="i1"> Thy mercy on thy people, Lord!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Had Kipling cared more for his poem, and kept
+it longer in hand, he might have revised a line or
+two that would possibly seem commonplace to
+<a id="png:403" name="png:403"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">403 /</span> 351</samp>
+him&mdash;and corrected the grammar in the first line
+of the second stanza. But of so fine a composition
+there is no call for finical criticism. The &ldquo;Recessional&rdquo;
+is a product of the poet's holiest mood.
+&ldquo;The Spirit of the Lord came upon him&rdquo;&mdash;as the
+old Hebrew phrase is, and for the time he was a
+rapt prophet, with a backward and a forward
+vision. Providence saved the hymn, and it touched
+and sank into the better mind of the nation. It is
+already learned by heart&mdash;and sung&mdash;wherever
+English is the common speech, and will be heard
+in numerous translations, with the wish that there
+were more patriotic hymns of the same Christian
+temper and strength.</p>
+
+<p>Rudyard Kipling was born in Hindostan in 1865.
+Even with his first youthful experiments in the field
+of literature he was hailed as the coming apostle of
+muscular poetry and prose. For a time he made
+America his home, and it was while here that he
+faced death through a fearful and protracted sickness
+that brought him very near to God. He has visited
+many countries and described them all, and, though
+sometimes his imagination drives a reckless pen,
+the Christian world hopes much from a man whose
+genius can make the dullest souls listen.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The music set to Kipling's hymn is Stainer's
+&ldquo;Magdalen&rdquo;&mdash;(not his &ldquo;Magdalina,&rdquo; which is a
+common-metre tune)&mdash;and wonderfully fits the
+<a id="png:404" name="png:404"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">404 /</span> 352</samp>
+words and enhances their dignity. It is a grave
+and earnest melody in D flat, with two bars in
+unison at &ldquo;Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet,&rdquo;
+making the utterance of the prayer a deep and powerful
+finale.</p>
+
+<p>John Stainer, Doctor of Music, born June 6, 1840,
+was nine years the chorister of St. Paul's, London,
+and afterwards organist to the University of Oxford.
+He is a member of the various musical societies of
+the Kingdom, and a Chevalier of the Legion of
+Honor. His talent for sacred music is rare and versatile,
+and he seems to have consecrated himself as a
+musician and composer to the service of the church.</p>
+
+<p class="thoughtbreak">Every civilized nation has its patriotic hymns. In
+fact what makes a nation a nation is largely the unifying
+influences of its common song. Even the
+homeless Hebrew nation is kept together by its
+patriotic Psalms. The ethnic melodies would fill
+a volume with their story. The few presented in
+this chapter represent their range of quality and
+character&mdash;defiant as the Marseillaise, thrilling as
+&ldquo;Scots' wha hae,&rdquo; joyful as &ldquo;The Star-spangled
+Banner,&rdquo; breezy and bold as the &ldquo;Ranz de
+Vaches,&rdquo; or sweet as the &ldquo;Switzers' Song of Home.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<a id="png:405" name="png:405"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">405 /</span> 353</samp>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="chap">CHAPTER X.</h2>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h1>SAILORS' HYMNS.</h1>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<p>The oldest sailors' hymn is found in the 107th
+Psalm, vss. 23&ndash;30:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>They that go down to the sea in ships,</div>
+<div class="i1"> To do business in great waters,</div>
+<div class="i1"> These see the works of the Lord,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And His wonders in the deep, etc.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Montgomery has made this metrical rendering
+of these verses:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>They that toil upon the deep,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And in vessels light and frail</div>
+<div>O'er the mighty waters sweep</div>
+<div class="i1"> With the billows and the gale,</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Mark what wonders God performs</div>
+<div class="i1"> When He speaks, and, unconfined,</div>
+<div>Rush to battle all His storms</div>
+<div class="i1"> In the chariots of the wind.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">The hymn is not in the collections, and has no tune.
+Addison paraphrased the succeeding verses of the
+Psalm in his hymn, &ldquo;How are thy servants blessed
+O Lord,&rdquo; sung to Hugh Wilson's<sup>*</sup> tune
+of &ldquo;Avon&rdquo;:</p>
+
+<a id="png:406" name="png:406"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">406 /</span> 354</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When by the dreadful tempest borne</div>
+<div class="i1"> High on the broken wave,</div>
+<div>They know Thou art not slow to hear,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Nor impotent to save.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>The storm is laid, the winds retire,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Obedient to Thy will;</div>
+<div>The sea that roars at Thy command,</div>
+<div class="i1"> At Thy command is still.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+Hugh Wilson was a Scotch weaver of Kilmarnock, born 1764; died 1824.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>FIERCE WAS THE WILD BILLOW.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<h4 class="quote" title="[Greek: Zopheras trikumias]"
+>(&#918;&#959;&#966;&#949;&#961;&#8113;&#962;
+&#964;&#961;&#953;&#954;&#965;&#956;&#8055;&#945;&#962;)</h4>
+
+<p>The ancient writer, Anatolius, who composed
+this hymn has for centuries been confounded with
+&ldquo;St&rdquo; Anatolius, patriarch of Constantinople, who
+died A.D. 458. The author of the hymn lived in
+the seventh century, and except that he wrote several
+hymns, and also poems in praise of the martyrs,
+nothing or next to nothing, is known of him. The
+&ldquo;Wild Billow&rdquo; song was the principle seaman's
+hymn of the early church. It is being introduced into
+modern psalmody, the translation in use ranking
+among the most successful of Dr. John Mason
+Neale's renderings from the Greek.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Fierce was the wild billow,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Dark was the night;</div>
+<div>Oars labored heavily,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Foam glimmered white;</div>
+<div>Trembled the mariners;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Peril was nigh;</div>
+<div>Then said the God of God,</div>
+<div class="i1"> &ldquo;Peace! It is I!&rdquo;</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:407" name="png:407"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">407 /</span> 355</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Ridge of the mountain wave,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Lower thy crest!</div>
+<div>Wall of Euroclydon,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Be thou at rest!</div>
+<div>Sorrow can never be,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Darkness must fly,</div>
+<div>When saith the Light of Light,</div>
+<div class="i1"> &ldquo;Peace! It is I!&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The desire to represent the antiquity of the hymn
+and the musical style of Its age, and on the other
+hand the wish to utilize it in the tune-manuals for
+Manners' Homes and Seamen's Bethels, makes a
+difficulty for composers to study&mdash;and the task is
+still open to competition. Considering the peculiar
+tone that sailors' singing instinctively takes&mdash;and
+has taken doubtless from time immemorial perhaps
+the plaintive melody of &ldquo;Neale,&rdquo; by J.H.
+Cornell, comes as near to a vocal success as could
+be hoped. The music is of middle register and less
+than octave range, natural scale, minor, and the
+triple time lightens a little the dirge-like harmony
+while the weird sea-song effect is kept. A chorus
+of singing tars must create uncommon emotion,
+chanting this coronach of the storm.</p>
+
+<p>John Henry Cornell was born in New York city,
+May 8, 1838, and was for many years organist at
+St. Paul's Chapel, Trinity Church. He is the author
+of numerous educational works on the theory and
+practice of music. He composed the above tune in
+1872. Died March 1, 1894.</p>
+
+<a id="png:408" name="png:408"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">408 /</span> 356</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>AVE, MARIS STELLA.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>One of the titles which the Roman Catholic world
+applied to the Mother of Jesus, in the Middle Ages,
+was &ldquo;Stella Maris,&rdquo; &ldquo;Star of the Sea.&rdquo; Columbus,
+being a Catholic, sang this hymn, or caused it to be
+sung, every evening, it is said, during his perilous
+voyage to an unknown land. The marine epithet
+by which the Virgin Mary is addressed is admirable
+as a stroke of poetry, and the hymn&mdash;of six
+stanzas&mdash;is a prayer which, though offered to her
+as to a divine being, was no doubt sincere in the
+simple sailor hearts of 1492.</p>
+
+<p>The two following quatrains finish the voyagers'
+petition, and point it with a doxology&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Vitam praesta puram,</div>
+<div>Iter para tutum,</div>
+<div>Ut videntes Jesum</div>
+<div>Semper collaetemur.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Sit laus Deo Patri,</div>
+<div>Summo Christo decus,</div>
+<div>Spiritui Sancto,</div>
+<div>Tribus honor unus!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">A free translation is&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Guide us safe, unspotted</div>
+<div>Through life's long endeavor</div>
+<div>Till with Thee and Jesus</div>
+<div>We rejoice forever.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Praise to God the Father,</div>
+<div>Son and Spirit be;</div>
+<div>One and equal honor</div>
+<div>To the Holy Three.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:409" name="png:409"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">409 /</span> 357</samp>
+<p class="runon">Inasmuch as this ancient hymn did not attain the
+height of its popularity and appear in all the breviaries
+until the 10th century, its assumed age has
+been doubted, but its reputed author, Venantius
+Fortunatus, Bishop of Poitiers, was born about 531,
+at Treviso, Italy, and died about 609. Though a
+religious teacher, he was a man of romantic and convivial
+instincts&mdash;a strange compound of priest, poet
+and <i>beau chevalier</i>. Duffield calls him &ldquo;the last
+of the classics and first of the troubadours,&rdquo; and
+states that he was the &ldquo;first of the Christian poets
+to begin that worship of the Virgin Mary which
+rose to a passion and sank to an idolatry.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">TUNES</h4>
+
+<p class="runon">To this ancient rogation poem have been composed
+by Aiblinger (Johann Caspar), Bavarian, (1779&ndash;1867,)
+by Proch (Heinrich), Austrian, (1809&ndash;1878,)
+by Tadolini (Giovanni), Italian, (1803&ndash;1872,) and by
+many others. The &ldquo;Ave, Maris Stella&rdquo; is in constant
+use in the Romish church, and its English
+translation by Caswall is a favorite hymn in the
+<i>Lyra Catholica</i>.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>AVE, SANCTISSIMA!</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This beautiful hymn is not introduced here in
+order of time, but because it seems akin to the
+foregoing, and born of its faith and traditions&mdash;though
+it sounds rather too fine for a sailor song, on
+<a id="png:410" name="png:410"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">410 /</span> 358</samp>
+ship or shore. Like the other, the tuneful prayer is
+the voice of ultramontane piety accustomed to deify
+Mary, and is entitled the &ldquo;Evening Song to the
+Virgin.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Ave Sanctissima! we lift our souls to Thee</div>
+<div>Ora pro nobis! 'tis nightfall on the sea.</div>
+<div>Watch us while shadows lie</div>
+<div>Far o'er the waters spread;</div>
+<div>Hear the heart's lonely sigh;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Thine, too, hath bled.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Thou that hast looked on death,</div>
+<div>Aid us when death is near;</div>
+<div>Whisper of heaven to faith;</div>
+<div>Sweet Mother, hear!</div>
+<div>Ora pro nobis! the wave must rock our sleep;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Ora, Mater, ora! Star of the Deep!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This was first written in four separate quatrains,
+&ldquo;'Tis nightfall on the sea&rdquo; being part of the first
+instead of the second line, and &ldquo;We lift our souls,&rdquo;
+etc., was &ldquo;Our souls rise to Thee,&rdquo; while the apostrophe
+at the end read, &ldquo;Thou Star of the Deep.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The fact of the modern origin of the hymn does
+not make it less probable that the earlier one of
+Fortunatus suggested it. It was written by Mrs.
+Hemans, and occurs between the forty-third and
+forty-fourth stanzas of her long poem, &ldquo;The
+Forest Sanctuary.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>A Spanish Christian who had embraced the
+Protestant faith fled to America (such is the story
+of the poem) to escape the cruelties of the Inquisition,
+and took with him his Catholic wife and
+his child. During the voyage the wife pined away
+<a id="png:411" name="png:411"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">411 /</span> 359</samp>
+and died, a martyr to her conjugal loyalty and
+love. The hymn to the Virgin purports to have
+been her daily evening song at sea, plaintively
+remembered by the broken-hearted husband and
+father in his forest retreat on the American shore
+with his motherless boy.</p>
+
+<p>The music was composed by a sister of Mrs.
+Hemans, Mrs. Hughes, who probably arranged
+the lines as they now stand in the tune.</p>
+
+<p>The song, though its words appear in the <i>Parochial
+Hymn-book</i>, seems to be in use rather as
+parlor music than as a part of the liturgy.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>JESUS, LOVER OF MY SOUL.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The golden quality of this best-known and loved
+of Charles Wesley's hymns is attested by two indorsements
+that cannot be impeached; its perennial
+life, and the blessings of millions who needed
+it.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Jesus, Lover of my soul</div>
+<div class="i1"> Let me to Thy bosom fly,</div>
+<div>While the billows near me roll,</div>
+<div class="i1"> While the tempest still is high.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Hide me, O my Saviour, hide,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Till the storm of life is past,</div>
+<div>Safe into the haven guide,</div>
+<div class="i1"> O receive my soul at last!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Wesley is believed to have written it when a
+young man, and story and legend have been busy
+with the circumstances of its birth. The most
+poetical account alleges that a dove chased by a
+<a id="png:412" name="png:412"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">412 /</span> 360</samp>
+hawk dashed through his open window into his
+bosom, and the inspiration to write the line&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+Let me to Thy bosom fly,
+</p>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;was the genesis of the poem. Another report has it
+that one day Mr. Wesley, being pursued by infuriated
+persecutors at Killalee, County Down,
+Ireland, took refuge in a milk-house on the homestead
+of the Island Band Farm. When the mob
+came up the farmer's wife, Mrs. Jane Lowrie
+Moore, offered them refreshments and secretly
+let out the fugitive through a window to the back
+garden, where he concealed himself under a hedge
+till his enemies went away. When they had gone
+he had the hymn in his mind and partly jotted
+down. This tale is circumstantial, and came
+through Mrs. Mary E. Hoover, Jane Moore's
+granddaughter, who told it many years ago to her
+pastor, Dr. William Laurie of Bellefonte, Pa. So
+careful a narrative deserves all the respect due to
+a family tradition. Whether this or still another
+theory of the incidental cause of the wonderful
+hymn shall have the last word may never be decided
+nor is it important.</p>
+
+<p>There is &ldquo;antecedent probability,&rdquo; at least, in
+the statement that Wesley wrote the first two
+stanzas soon after his perilous experience in a
+storm at sea during his return voyage from America
+to England in 1736. In a letter dated Oct. 28 of
+that year, he describes the storm that washed away
+a large part of the ship's cargo, strained her seams
+<a id="png:413" name="png:413"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">413 /</span> 361</samp>
+so that the hardest pumping could not keep pace
+with the inrushing water, and finally forced the
+captain to cut the mizzen-mast away. Young
+Wesley was ill and sorely alarmed, but knew, he
+says, that he &ldquo;abode under the shadow of the Almighty,&rdquo;
+and finally, &ldquo;in this dreadful moment,&rdquo;
+he was able to encourage his fellow-passengers who
+were &ldquo;in an agony of fear,&rdquo; and to pray with and
+for them.</p>
+
+<p>It was his awful hazard and bare escape in that
+tempest that prompted the following stanzas&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> O Thou who didst prepare</div>
+<div class="i1"> The ocean's caverned cell,</div>
+<div>And teach the gathering waters there</div>
+<div class="i2"> To meet and dwell;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Toss'd in our reeling bark</div>
+<div class="i1"> Upon this briny sea,</div>
+<div>Thy wondrous ways, O Lord, we mark,</div>
+<div class="i2"> And sing to Thee.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> Borne on the dark'ning wave,</div>
+<div class="i1"> In measured sweep we go,</div>
+<div>Nor dread th' unfathomable grave,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Which yawns below;</div>
+<div class="i1"> For He is nigh who trod</div>
+<div class="i1"> Amid the foaming spray,</div>
+<div>Whose billows own'd th' Incarnate God,</div>
+<div class="i2"> And died away.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>And naturally the memory of his almost shipwreck
+on the wild Atlantic colored more or less the
+visions of his muse, and influenced the metaphors
+of his verse for years.</p>
+
+<a id="png:414" name="png:414"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">414 /</span> 362</samp>
+<p>The popularity of &ldquo;Jesus, Lover of my Soul&rdquo; not
+only procured it, at home, the name of &ldquo;England's
+song of the sea,&rdquo; but carried it with &ldquo;the course of
+Empire&rdquo; to the West, where it has reigned with
+&ldquo;Rock of Ages,&rdquo; for more than a hundred and
+fifty years, joint primate of inspired human songs.</p>
+
+<p>Compiled incidents of its heavenly service would
+fill a chapter. A venerable minister tells of the
+supernal comfort that lightened his after years of
+sorrow from the dying bed of his wife who whispered
+with her last breath, &ldquo;Hide me, O my
+Saviour, hide.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>A childless and widowed father in Washington
+remembers with a more than earthly peace, the wife
+and mother's last request for Wesley's hymn, and
+her departure to the sound of its music to join the
+spirit of her babe.</p>
+
+<p>A summer visitor in Philadelphia, waiting on a
+hot street-corner for a car to Fairmount Park, overheard
+a quavering voice singing the same hymn
+and saw an emaciated hand caressing a little plant
+in an open window&mdash;and carried away the picture
+of a fading life, and the words&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Other refuge have I none,</div>
+<div>Hangs my helpless soul on Thee.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>On one of the fields of the Civil War, just after
+a bloody battle, the Rev. James Rankin of the
+United Presbyterian Church bent over a dying
+soldier. Asked if he had any special request to
+make, the brave fellow replied, &ldquo;Yes, sing &lsquo;Jesus,
+Lover of my Soul.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<a id="png:415" name="png:415"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">415 /</span> 363</samp>
+<p>The clergyman belonged to a church that sang
+only Psalms. But what a tribute to that ubiquitous
+hymn that such a man knew it by heart! A
+moment's hesitation and he recalled the words, and,
+for the first time in his life, sang a sacred song that
+was not a Psalm. When he reached the lines,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Safe into the haven guide,</div>
+<div class="i1"> O receive my soul at last,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;his hand was in the frozen grip of a dead man,
+whose face wore &ldquo;the light that never was on sea
+or land.&rdquo; The minister went away saying to himself,
+&ldquo;If this hymn is good to die by, it is good to live
+by.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<a id="png:419" name="png:419"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">419 /</span> opp 366</samp>
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of William B. Bradbury">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus18" name="Illus18"
+ ><img src="images/illus18-williambradbury-cameo.jpg" alt=
+ "William B. Bradbury" width="183" height="263" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>William B. Bradbury</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Of all the tone-masters who have studied and
+felt this matchless hymn, and given it vocal wings&mdash;Marsh,
+Zundel, Bradbury, Dykes, Mason&mdash;none
+has so exquisitely uttered its melting prayer,
+syllable by syllable, as Joseph P. Holbrook in his
+&ldquo;Refuge.&rdquo; Unfortunately for congregational use,
+it is a duo and quartet score for select voices; but
+the four-voice portion can be a chorus, and is often
+so sung. Its form excludes it from some hymnals
+or places it as an optional beside a congregational
+tune. But when rendered by the choir on special
+occasions its success in conveying the feeling
+and soul of the words is complete. There is a
+prayer in the swell of every semitone and the touch
+of every accidental, and the sweet concord of the
+<a id="png:416" name="png:416"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">416 /</span> 364</samp>
+duet&mdash;soprano with tenor or bass&mdash;pleads on to
+the end of the fourth line, where the full harmony
+reinforces it like an organ with every stop in play.
+The tune is a rill of melody ending in a river of
+song.<sup>*</sup></p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+Holbrook has also an arrangement of Franz Abt's, &ldquo;When the Swallows
+Homeward Fly&rdquo; written to &ldquo;Jesus, Lover of my Soul,&rdquo;
+but with Wesley's words it is far less effective than his original work.
+&ldquo;Refuge&rdquo; is not a manufacture but an inspiration.</p></div>
+
+<p>For general congregational use, Mason's &ldquo;Whitman&rdquo;
+has wedded itself to the hymn perhaps
+closer than any other. It has revival associations
+reaching back more than sixty years.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WHEN MARSHALLED ON THE NIGHTLY PLAIN.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Perhaps no line in all familiar hymnology more
+readily suggests the name of its author than this.
+In the galaxy of poets Henry Kirke White was a
+brief luminary whose brilliancy and whose early
+end have appealed to the hearts of three generations.
+He was born at Nottingham, Eng., in the
+year 1795. His father was a butcher, but the son,
+disliking the trade, was apprenticed to a weaver
+at the age of fourteen. Two years later he entered
+an attorney's office as copyist and student.</p>
+
+<p>The boy imbibed sceptical notions from some
+source, and might have continued to scoff at
+religion to the last but for the experience of his
+intimate friend, a youth named Almond, whose life
+was changed by witnessing one day the happy
+death of a Christian believer. Decided to be a
+<a id="png:417" name="png:417"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">417 /</span> 365</samp>
+Christian himself, it was some time before he
+mustered courage to face White's ridicule and
+resentment. He simply drew away from him.
+When White demanded the reason he was obliged
+to tell him that they two must henceforth walk
+different paths.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Good God!&rdquo; exclaimed White, &ldquo;you surely
+think worse of me than I deserve!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The separation was a severe shock to Henry,
+and the real grief of it sobered his anger to reflection
+and remorse. The light of a better life came
+to him when his heart melted&mdash;and from that time
+he and Almond were fellows in faith as well as
+friendship.</p>
+
+<p>In his hymn the young poet tells the stormy
+experience of his soul, and the vision that guided
+him to peace.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When, marshalled on the nightly plain,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The glittering host bestud the sky,</div>
+<div>One star alone of all the train</div>
+<div class="i1"> Can fix the sinner's wandering eye.</div>
+<div>Hark, hark! to God the chorus breaks,</div>
+<div class="i1"> From every host, from every gem,</div>
+<div>But one alone the Saviour speaks;</div>
+<div class="i1"> It is the Star of Bethlehem.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Once on the raging seas I rode:</div>
+<div class="i1"> The storm was loud, the night was dark;</div>
+<div>The ocean yawned, and rudely blowed</div>
+<div class="i1"> The wind that tossed my foundering bark.</div>
+<div>Deep horror then my vitals froze,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Death-struck, I ceased the tide to stem,</div>
+<div>When suddenly a star arose;</div>
+<div class="i1"> It was the Star of Bethlehem.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:418" name="png:418"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">418 /</span> 366</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>It was my guide, my light, my all,</div>
+<div class="i1"> It bade my dark forebodings cease;</div>
+<div>And through the storm and danger's thrall,</div>
+<div class="i1"> It led me to the port of peace.</div>
+<div>Now, safely moored, my perils o'er,</div>
+<div class="i1"> I'll sing, first in night's diadem,</div>
+<div>For ever and for evermore,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The Star, the Star of Bethlehem!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Besides this delightful hymn, with its graphic
+sea-faring metaphors, two others, at least, of the
+same boy-poet hold their place in many of the
+church and chapel collections:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The Lord our God is clothed with might,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The winds obey His will;</div>
+<div>He speaks, and in his heavenly height</div>
+<div class="i1"> The rolling sun stands still.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">And&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Oft in danger, oft in woe,</div>
+<div>Onward, Christians, onward go.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Henry Kirke White died in the autumn of 1806,
+when he was scarcely twenty years old. His &ldquo;Ode
+to Disappointment,&rdquo; and the miscellaneous flowers
+and fragments of his genius, make up a touching
+volume. The fire of a pure, strong spirit burning
+through a consumptive frame is in them all.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p title="Illustration of William Bradbury originally opposite">&ldquo;When,
+marshalled on the mighty plain&rdquo; has
+a choral set to it in the <i>Methodist Hymnal</i>&mdash;credited
+to Thos. Harris, and entitled &ldquo;Crimea&rdquo;&mdash;which
+divides the three stanzas into six, and
+<a id="png:421" name="png:421"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">421 /</span> 367</samp>
+breaks the continuity of the hymn. Better sing it
+in its original form&mdash;long metre double&mdash;to the
+dear old melody of &ldquo;Bonny Doon.&rdquo; The voices
+of Scotland, England and America are blended in it.</p>
+
+<p>The origin of this Caledonian air, though sometimes
+fancifully traced to an Irish harper and
+sometimes to a wandering piper of the Isle of Man,
+is probably lost in antiquity. Burns, however,
+whose name is linked with it, tells this whimsical
+story of it, though giving no date save &ldquo;a good
+many years ago,&rdquo;&mdash;(apparently about 1753). A
+virtuoso, Mr. James Millar, he writes, wishing he
+were able to compose a Scottish tune, was told by a
+musical friend to sit down to his harpsichord and
+make a rhythm of some kind <em>solely on the black
+keys</em>, and he would surely turn out a Scotch tune.
+The musical friend, pleased at the result of his
+jest, caught the string of plaintive sounds made by
+Millar, and fashioned it into &ldquo;Bonny Doon.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>LAND AHEAD!</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The burden of this hymn was suggested by the
+dying words of John Adams, one of the crew of
+the English ship Bounty who in 1789 mutinied,
+set the captain and officers adrift, and ran the
+vessel to a tropical island, where they burned her.
+In a few years vice and violence had decimated
+the wicked crew, who had exempted themselves
+from all divine and human restraint, until the last
+man alive was left with only native women and
+<a id="png:422" name="png:422"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">422 /</span> 368</samp>
+half-breed children for company. His true name
+was Alexander Smith, but he had changed it to John
+Adams.</p>
+
+<p>The situation forced the lonely Englishman to
+a sense of solemn responsibility, and in bitter remorse,
+he sought to retrieve his wasted life, and
+spend the rest of his exile in repentance and repentant
+works. He found a Bible in one of the dead
+seamen's chests, studied it, and organized a community
+on the Christian plan. A new generation
+grew up around him, reverencing him as governor,
+teacher, preacher and judge, and speaking his
+language&mdash;and he was wise enough to exercise his
+authority for the common good, and never abuse it.
+Pitcairn's Island became &ldquo;the Paradise of the
+Pacific.&rdquo; It has not yet belied its name. Besides
+its opulence of rural beauty and natural products,
+its inhabitants, now the third generation from the
+&ldquo;mutineer missionary,&rdquo; are a civilized community
+without the vices of civilization. There is no
+licentiousness, no profanity, no Sabbath-breaking,
+no rum or tobacco&mdash;and <em>no sickness</em>.</p>
+
+<p>John Adams died in 1829&mdash;after an island residence
+of forty years. In his extreme age, while he
+lay waiting for the end, he was asked how he felt in
+view of the final voyage.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Land ahead!&rdquo; murmured the old sailor&mdash;and
+his last words were, &ldquo;Rounding the Cape&mdash;into
+the harbor.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>That the veteran's death-song should be perpetuated
+in sacred music is not strange.</p>
+
+<a id="png:423" name="png:423"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">423 /</span> 369</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Land ahead! its fruits are waving</div>
+<div class="i1"> O'er the hills of fadeless green;</div>
+<div>And the living waters laving</div>
+<div class="i1"> Shores where heavenly forms are seen.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Chorus.</div>
+<div>Rocks and storms I'll fear no more,</div>
+<div>When on that eternal shore;</div>
+<div>Drop the anchor! furl the sail!</div>
+<div>I am safe within the veil.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Onward, bark! the cape I'm rounding;</div>
+<div class="i1"> See, the blessed wave their hands;</div>
+<div>Hear the harps of God resounding</div>
+<div class="i1"> From the bright immortal bands.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The authorship of the hymn is credited to Rev.
+E. Adams&mdash;whether or not a <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'descendent'">descendant</ins> of the
+Island Patriarch we have no information. It was
+written about 1869.</p>
+
+<p>The ringing melody that bears the words was
+composed by John Miller Evans, born Nov. 30,
+1825; died Jan. 1, 1892. The original air&mdash;with a
+simple accompaniment&mdash;was harmonized by Hubert
+P. Main, and published in <i>Winnowed Hymns</i>
+in 1873.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>ETERNAL FATHER, STRONG TO SAVE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This is sung almost universally on English ships.
+It is said to have been one of Sir Evelyn Wood's
+favorites. The late William Whiting wrote it in
+1860, and it was incorporated with some alterations
+in the standard English Church collection
+<a id="png:424" name="png:424"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">424 /</span> 370</samp>
+entitled <i>Hymns Ancient and Modern</i>. It is a
+translation from a Latin hymn, a triune litany addressing
+a stanza each to Father, Son and Holy
+Spirit. The whole four stanzas have the same
+refrain, and the appeal to the Father, who bids&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>&mdash;the mighty ocean deep</div>
+<div>Its own appointed limits keep,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;varies in the appeal to Christ, who&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>&mdash;<em>walked</em> upon the foaming deep.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">The third and fourth stanzas are the following:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O Holy Spirit, Who didst brood</div>
+<div>Upon the waters dark and rude,</div>
+<div>And bid their angry tumult cease,</div>
+<div>And give, for wild confusion, peace;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Oh, hear us when we cry to Thee</div>
+<div>For those in peril on the sea.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>O Trinity of love and power,</div>
+<div>Our brethren shield in danger's hour;</div>
+<div>From rock and tempest, fire and foe,</div>
+<div>Protect them wheresoe'er they go:</div>
+<div class="i1"> Thus evermore shall rise to Thee</div>
+<div>Glad hymns of praise from land to sea.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>William Whiting was born at Kensington, London,
+Nov. 1, 1825. He was Master of Winchester
+College Chorister's School Died in 1878.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The choral named &ldquo;Melita&rdquo; (in memory of St.
+Paul's shipwreck) was composed by Dr. Dykes
+in 1861, and its strong and easy chords and
+<a id="png:425" name="png:425"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">425 /</span> 371</samp>
+moderate note range are nobly suited to the devout
+hymn.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>THE OCEAN HATH NO DANGER.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This charming sailors' lyric is the work of the
+Rev. Godfrey Thring. Its probable date is 1862,
+and it appeared in Morell and Howe's collection
+and in <i>Hymns Congregational and Others</i>, published
+in 1866, which contained a number from
+his pen. Rector Thring was born at Alford, Somersetshire,
+Eng., March 25, 1823, and educated at
+Shrewsbury School and Baliol College, Oxford.
+In 1858 he succeeded his father as Rector of Alford.</p>
+
+<p>He compiled <i>A Church of England Hymnbook</i>
+in 1880.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The ocean hath no danger</div>
+<div class="i1"> For those whose prayers are made</div>
+<div>To Him who in a manger</div>
+<div class="i1"> A helpless Babe was laid,</div>
+<div>Who, born to tribulation</div>
+<div class="i1"> And every human ill,</div>
+<div>The Lord of His creation,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The wildest waves can still.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Though life itself be waning</div>
+<div class="i1"> And waves shall o'er us sweep,</div>
+<div>The wild winds sad complaining</div>
+<div class="i1"> Shall lull us still to sleep,</div>
+<div>For as a gentle slumber</div>
+<div class="i1"> E'en death itself shall prove</div>
+<div>To those whom Christ doth number</div>
+<div class="i1"> As worthy of His love.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:426" name="png:426"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">426 /</span> 372</samp>
+<p>The tune &ldquo;Morlaix,&rdquo; given to the hymn by Dr.
+Dykes, is simple, but a very sweet and appropriate
+harmony.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>FIERCE RAGED THE TEMPEST ON THE DEEP.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This fine lyric, based on the incident in the storm
+on the Sea of Galilee, is the work of the same writer
+and owes its tune &ldquo;St. Aelred&rdquo; to the same composer.</p>
+
+<p>The melody has an impressive rallentando of
+dotted semibreves to the refrain, &ldquo;Peace, be still,&rdquo;
+after the more rapid notes of the three-line stanzas.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The wild winds hushed, the angry deep<br /></div>
+<div>Sank like a little child to sleep,<br /></div>
+<div>The sullen waters ceased to leap.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>So when our life is clouded o'er<br /></div>
+<div>And storm-winds drift us from the shore<br /></div>
+<div>Say, lest we sink to rise no more,</div>
+<div class="i2"> &ldquo;Peace! be still.&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>PULL FOR THE SHORE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>When a shipwrecked crew off a rocky coast were
+hurrying to the long-boat, a sailor begged leave to
+run back to the ship's forecastle and save some of
+his belongings.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;No sir,&rdquo; shouted the Captain, &ldquo;she's sinking!
+There's nothing to do but to pull for the shore.&rdquo;
+Philip P. Bliss caught up the words, and wrought
+them into a hymn and tune.</p>
+
+<a id="png:427" name="png:427"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">427 /</span> 373</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Light in the darkness, sailor, day is at hand!</div>
+<div>See o'er the foaming billows fair Haven's land;</div>
+<div>Drear was the voyage, sailor, now almost o'er;</div>
+<div>Safe in the life-boat, sailor, pull for the shore!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Chorus.</div>
+<div>Pull for the shore, sailor, pull for the shore!</div>
+<div>Heed not the rolling waves, but bend to the oar;</div>
+<div>Safe in the life-boat, sailor, cling to self no more;</div>
+<div>Leave the poor old stranded wreck and pull for the shore!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The hymn-tune is a buoyant allegro&mdash;solo and
+chorus&mdash;full of hope and courage, and both imagery
+and harmony appeal to the hearts of seamen. It is
+popular, and has long been one of the song numbers
+in demand at religious services both on sea and land.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>JESUS, SAVIOUR, PILOT ME.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The Rev. Edward Hopper, D.D. wrote this
+hymn while pastor of Mariner's Church at New
+York harbor, &ldquo;The Church of the Sea and Land.&rdquo;
+He was born in 1818, and graduated at Union
+Theological Seminary in 1843.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Jesus, Saviour, pilot me</div>
+<div>Over life's tempestuous sea,</div>
+<div>Unknown waves before me roll,</div>
+<div>Hiding rock and treacherous shoal;</div>
+<div>Chart and compass come from Thee,</div>
+<div>Jesus, Saviour, pilot me!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Only three stanzas of this rather lengthy hymn
+are in common use.</p>
+
+<a id="png:428" name="png:428"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">428 /</span> 374</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p class="runon">Without title except &ldquo;Savior, pilot me.&rdquo;
+A simple and pleasing melody composed by John Edgar
+Gould, late of the firm of Gould and Fischer, piano
+dealers, Phila., Pa. He was born in Bangor, Me.,
+April 9, 1822. Conductor of music and composer of
+psalm and hymn tunes and glees, he also compiled
+and published no less than eight books of church,
+Sunday-school, and secular songs. Died in Algiers,
+Africa, Feb. 13, 1875.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>THROW OUT THE LIFE-LINE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This is one of the popular refrains that need but
+a single hearing to fix themselves in common
+memory and insure their own currency and <i>eclat</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The Rev. E.S. Ufford, well-known as a Baptist
+preacher, lecturer, and evangelist, was witnessing
+a drill at the life-saving station on Point Allerton,
+Nantasket Beach, when the order to &ldquo;throw out
+the life-line&rdquo; and the sight of the apparatus in
+action, combined with the story of a shipwreck on
+the spot, left an echo in his mind till it took the
+form of a song-sermon. Returning home, he
+pencilled the words of this rousing hymn, and,
+being himself a singer and player, sat down to his
+instrument to match the lines with a suitable air.
+It came to him almost as spontaneously as the
+music of &ldquo;The Ninety and Nine&rdquo; came to Mr.
+Sankey. In fifteen minutes the hymn-tune was
+<a id="png:429" name="png:429"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">429 /</span> 375</samp>
+made&mdash;so far as the melody went. It was published
+in sheet form in 1888, and afterwards purchased
+by Mr. Sankey, harmonized by Mr. Stebbins,
+and published in <i>Winnowed Songs</i>, 1890.
+Included in <i>Gospel Hymns</i>, Nov. 6, 1891.</p>
+
+<p>Ever since it has been a favorite with singing
+seamen, and has done active service as one of our
+most stirring field-songs in revival work.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>Throw out the Life-line across the dark wave,</div>
+<div>There is a brother whom some one should save;</div>
+<div>Somebody's brother! oh, who, then, will dare</div>
+<div>To throw out the Life-line, his peril to share?</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Throw out the Life-line with hand quick and strong!</div>
+<div>Why do you tarry, why linger so long?</div>
+<div>See! he is sinking; oh, hasten today&mdash;</div>
+<div>And out with the Life-boat! away, then away!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Chorus.</div>
+<div class="i1"> Throw out the Life-line!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Throw out the Life-line!</div>
+<div>Some one is drifting away;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Throw out the Life-line!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Throw out the Life-line!</div>
+<div>Some one is sinking today.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>One evening, in the midst of their hilarity at
+their card-tables, a convivial club in one of the large
+Pennsylvania cities heard a sweet, clear female
+voice singing this solo hymn, followed by a chime
+of mingled voices in the chorus. A room in the
+building had been hired for religious meetings, and
+tonight was the first of the series. A strange coolness
+dampened the merriment in the club-room,
+<a id="png:430" name="png:430"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">430 /</span> 376</samp>
+as the singing went on, and the gradual silence
+became a hush, till finally one member threw down
+his cards and declared, &ldquo;If what they're saying is
+right, then we're wrong.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Others followed his example, then another, and
+another.</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+There is a brother whom some one should save.
+</p>
+
+<p class="runon">Quietly the revellers left their cards, cigars and
+half-emptied glasses and went home.</p>
+
+<p>Said the ex-member who told the story years
+after to Mr. Ufford, &ldquo;&lsquo;Throw Out the Life-line&rsquo;
+broke up that club.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>He is today one of the responsible editors of a
+great city daily&mdash;and his old club-mates are all
+holding positions of trust.</p>
+
+<p>A Christian man, a prosperous manufacturer in
+a city of Eastern Massachusetts, dates his first
+religious impressions from hearing this hymn when
+sung in public for the first time, twenty years ago.</p>
+
+<p>Visiting California recently, Mr. Ufford sang his
+hymn at a watch-meeting and told the story of the
+loss of the Elsie Smith on Cape Cod in 1902, exhibiting
+also the very life-line that had saved sixteen
+lives from the wreck. By chance one of those sixteen
+was in the audience.</p>
+
+<p>An English clergyman who was on duty at Gibraltar
+when an emigrant ship went on the rocks
+in a storm, tells with what pathetic power and
+effect &ldquo;Throw out the Life-line&rdquo; was sung at a
+special Sunday service for the survivors.</p>
+
+<a id="png:431" name="png:431"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">431 /</span> 377</samp>
+
+<p>At one of Evan Roberts' meetings in Laughor,
+Wales, one speaker related the story of a &ldquo;vision,&rdquo;
+when in his room alone, and a Voice that bade him
+pray, and when he knelt but could not pray, commanded
+him to &ldquo;Throw out the Life-line.&rdquo; He
+had scarcely uttered these words in his story when
+the whole great congregation sprang to its feet and
+shouted the hymn together like the sound of many
+waters.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There is more electricity in that song than in
+any other I ever heard,&rdquo; Dr. Cuyler said to Mr.
+Sankey when he heard him sing it. Its electricity
+has carried it nearly round the world.</p>
+
+<p>The Rev. Edward Smith Ufford was born in
+Newark, N.J., 1851, and educated at Stratford
+Academy (Ct.) and Bates Theological Seminary,
+Me. He held several pastorates in Maine and
+Massachusetts, but a preference for evangelistic
+work led him to employ his talent for object-teaching
+in illustrated religious lectures through his own
+and foreign lands, singing his hymn and enforcing
+it with realistic representation. He is the author
+and compiler of several Sunday-school and chapel
+song-manuals, as <i>Converts' Praise</i>, <i>Life-long Songs</i>,
+<i>Wonderful Love</i> and <i>Gathered Gems</i>.</p>
+
+<a id="png:432" name="png:432"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">432 /</span> 378</samp>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="chap">CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h1>HYMNS OF WALES.</h1>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<p>In writing this chapter the task of identifying
+the <em>tune</em>, and its author, in the case of every hymn,
+would have required more time and labor than,
+perhaps, the importance of the facts would justify.</p>
+
+<p>Peculiar interest, however, attaches to Welsh
+hymns, even apart from the airs which accompany
+them, and a general idea of Welsh music may be
+gathered from the tone and metre of the lyrics introduced.
+More particular information would
+necessitate printing the music itself.</p>
+
+<p>From the days of the Druids, Wales has been a
+land of song. From the later but yet ancient time
+when the people learned the Christian faith, it has
+had its Christian psalms. The &ldquo;March of the
+White Monks of Bangor&rdquo; (7th century) is an epic
+of bravery and death celebrating the advance of
+Christian martyrs to their bloody fate at the hands
+of the Saxon savages. &ldquo;Its very rhythm pictures
+the long procession of white-cowled patriots bearing
+peaceful banners and in faith taking their way
+to Chester to stimulate the valor of their countrymen.&rdquo;
+<a id="png:433" name="png:433"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">433 /</span> 379</samp>
+And ever since the &ldquo;Battle of the Hallelujahs&rdquo;&mdash;near
+Chirk on the border, nine miles from
+Wrexham&mdash;when the invading Danes were driven
+from the field in fright by the rush of the Cymric
+army shouting that mighty cry, every Christian
+poet in Wales has had a hallelujah in his verse.</p>
+
+<p>Through the centuries, while chased and hunted
+by their conquerors among the Cambrian hills, but
+clinging to their independent faith, or even when
+paralyzed into spiritual apathy under tribute to a
+foreign church, the heavenly song still murmured
+in a few true hearts amidst the vain and vicious
+lays of carnal mirth. It survived even when people
+and priest alike seemed utterly degenerate and godless.
+The voice of Walter Bute (1372) rang true for
+the religion of Jesus in its purity. Brave John
+Oldcastle, the martyr, (1417) clung to the gospel
+he learned at the foot of the cross. William Wroth,
+<em>clergyman</em>, saved from fiddling at a drunken dance
+by a disaster that turned a house of revelry into a
+house of death, confessed his sins to God and became
+the &ldquo;Apostle of South Wales.&rdquo; The young
+vicar, Rhys Pritchard (1579) rose from the sunken
+level of his profession, rescued through an incident
+less tragic. Accustomed to drink himself to inebriety
+at a public-house&mdash;a socially winked-at indulgence
+then&mdash;he one day took his pet goat with
+him, and poured liquor down the creature's throat.
+The refusal of the poor goat to go there again forced
+the reckless priest to reflect on his own ways. He
+forsook the ale-house and became a changed man.</p>
+
+<a id="png:434" name="png:434"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">434 /</span> 380</samp>
+<p>Among his writings&mdash;later than this&mdash;is found
+the following plain, blunt statement of what continued
+long to be true of Welsh society, as represented
+in the common use of Sunday time.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Of all the days throughout the rolling year</div>
+<div>There's not a day we pass so much amiss,</div>
+<div>There's not a day wherein we all appear</div>
+<div>So irreligious, so profaned as this.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>A day for drunkenness, a day for sport,</div>
+<div>A day to dance, a day to lounge away,</div>
+<div>A day for riot and excess, too short</div>
+<div>Amongst the Welshmen is the Sabbath day.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>A day to sit, a day to chat and spend,</div>
+<div>A day when fighting 'mongst us most prevails,</div>
+<div>A day to do the errands of the Fiend&mdash;</div>
+<div>Such is the Sabbath in most parts of Wales.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Meantime some who could read the language&mdash;and
+the better educated (like the author of the
+above rhymes) knew English as well as Welsh&mdash;had
+seen a rescued copy of <i>Wycliffs New Testament</i>,
+a precious publication seized and burnt (like
+the bones of its translator) by hostile ecclesiastics,
+and suppressed for nearly two hundred years.
+Walter Bute, like Obadiah who hid the hundred
+prophets, may well be credited with such secret
+salvage out of the general destruction. And there
+were doubtless others equally alert for the same
+quiet service. We can imagine how far the stealthy
+taste of that priceless book would help to strengthen
+a better religion than the one doled out professionally
+to the multitude by a Civil church; and how
+<a id="png:435" name="png:435"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">435 /</span> 381</samp>
+it kept the hallelujah alive in silent but constant souls;
+and in how many cases it awoke a conscience long
+hypnotized under corrupt custom, and showed a
+renegade Christian how morally untuned he was.</p>
+
+<p>Daylight came slowly after the morning star,
+but when the dawn reddened it was in welcome to
+Pritchard's and Penry's gospel song; and sunrise
+hastened at the call of Caradoc, and Powell, and
+Erbury, and Maurice, the holy men who followed
+them, some with the trumpet of Sinai and some
+with the harp of Calvary.</p>
+
+<p>Cambria was being prepared for its first great
+revival of religion.</p>
+
+<p>There was no rich portfolio of Christian hymns
+such as exists to-day, but surely there were not
+wanting pious words to the old chants of Bangor
+and the airs of &ldquo;Wild Wales.&rdquo; When time brought
+Howell Harris and Daniel Rowland, and the great
+&ldquo;Reformation&rdquo; of the eighteenth century, the
+renowned William Williams, &ldquo;the Watts of Wales,&rdquo;
+appeared, and began his tuneful work. The
+province soon became a land of hymns. The
+candles lit and left burning here and there by
+Penry, Maurice, and the Owens, blazed up to
+beacon-fires through all the twelve counties when
+Harris, at the head of the mighty movement, carried
+with him the sacred songs of Williams, kindling
+more lights everywhere between the Dee and the
+British Channel.</p>
+
+<p>William Williams of Pantycelyn was born in
+1717, at Cefncoed Farm, near Llandovery. Three
+<a id="png:436" name="png:436"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">436 /</span> 382</samp>
+years younger than Harris, (an Oxford graduate,)
+and educated only at a village school and an
+academy at Llwynllwyd, he was the song protagonist
+of the holy campaign as the other was its
+champion preacher. From first to last Williams
+wrote nine hundred and sixteen hymns, some of
+which are still heard throughout the church militant,
+and others survive in local use and affection.
+He died Jan. 11, 1791, at Pantycelyn, where he had
+made his home after his marriage. One of the
+hymns in his <i>Gloria</i>, his second publication, may
+well have been his last. It was dear to him above
+others, and has been dear to devout souls in many
+lands.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>My God, my portion and my love;</div>
+<div>My all on earth, my all above,</div>
+<div class="i1"> My all within the tomb;</div>
+<div>The treasures of this world below</div>
+<div>Are but a vain, delusive show,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Thy bosom is my home.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>It was fitting that Williams should name the
+first collection of his hymns (all in his native Welsh)
+<i>The Hallelujah</i>. Its lyrics are full of adoration
+for the Redeemer, and thanksgivings for His work.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>ONWARD RIDE IN TRIUMPH, JESUS,</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<h4 class="quote"><i>Marchog, Jesu, yn llwyddiannus</i>,</h4>
+
+
+<p class="runon">Has been sung in Wales for a century and a half,
+and is still a favorite.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Onward ride in triumph, Jesus,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Gird thy sword upon thy thigh;</div>
+<a id="png:437" name="png:437"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">437 /</span> 383</samp>
+<div>Neither earth nor Hell's own vastness</div>
+<div class="i1"> Can Thy mighty power defy.</div>
+<div>In Thy Name such glory dwelleth</div>
+<div class="i1"> Every foe withdraws in fear,</div>
+<div>All the wide creation trembleth</div>
+<div class="i1"> Whensoever Thou art near.<sup>*</sup></div>
+</div></div>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+The following shows the style of Rev. Elvet Lewis' translation:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Blessed Jesus, march victorious</div>
+<div class="i1"> With Thy sword fixed at Thy side;</div>
+<div>Neither death nor hell can hinder</div>
+<div class="i1"> The God-Warrior in His ride.</div>
+</div></div>
+</div>
+
+<p>The unusual militant strain in this p&aelig;an of
+conquest soon disappears, and the gentler aspects
+of Christ's atoning sacrifice occupy the writer's
+mind and pen.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>IN EDEN&mdash;O THE MEMORY!</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<h4 class="quote"><i>Yn Eden cofiaf hyny byth!</i></h4>
+
+<p>The text, &ldquo;He was wounded for our transgressions,&rdquo;
+is amplified in this hymn, and the
+Saviour is shown bruising Himself while bruising
+the serpent.</p>
+
+<p>The first stanza gives the key-note,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>In Eden&mdash;O the memory!</div>
+<div>What countless gifts were lost to me!</div>
+<div class="i1"> My crown, my glory fell;</div>
+<div>But Calvary's great victory</div>
+<div>Restored that vanished crown to me;</div>
+<div class="i1"> On this my songs shall dwell;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and the multitude of Williams' succeeding
+&ldquo;songs&rdquo; that chant the same theme shows how well he kept
+<a id="png:438" name="png:438"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">438 /</span> 384</samp>
+his promise. The following hymn in Welsh
+(<i>Cymmer, Jesu fi fel'r ydwyf</i>) antedates the advice
+of Dr. Malan to Charlotte Elliott, &ldquo;Come just
+as you are&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Take me as I am, O Saviour,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Better I can never be;</div>
+<div>Thou alone canst bring me nearer,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Self but draws me far from Thee.</div>
+<div class="i2"> I can never</div>
+<div>But within Thy wounds be saved;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and another (<i>Mi dafla maich oddi ar fy ngway</i>)
+reminds us of Bunyan's Pilgrim in sight of the
+Cross:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I'll cast my heavy burden down,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Remembering Jesus' pains;</div>
+<div>Guilt high as towering mountain tops</div>
+<div class="i1"> Here turns to joyful strains.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>He stretched His pure white hands abroad,</div>
+<div class="i1"> A crown of thorns He wore,</div>
+<div>That so the vilest sinner might</div>
+<div class="i1"> Be cleansed forevermore;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Williams was called &ldquo;The Sweet Singer of
+Wales&rdquo; and &ldquo;The Watts of Wales&rdquo; because he was
+the chief poet and hymn-writer of his time, but
+the lady he married, Miss Mary Francis, was
+<em>literally</em> a singer, with a voice so full and melodious
+that the people to whom he preached during
+his itineraries, which she sometimes shared with
+him, were often more moved by her sweet hymnody
+than by his exhortations. On one occasion
+<a id="png:439" name="png:439"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">439 /</span> 385</samp>
+the good man, accompanied by his wife, put up at
+Bridgend Tavern in Llangefin, Anglesea, and a
+mischievous crowd, wishing to plague the &ldquo;Methodists,&rdquo;
+planned to make night hideous in the house
+with a boisterous merry-making. The fiddler, followed
+by a gang of roughs, pushed his way to the
+parlor, and mockingly asked the two guests if they
+would &ldquo;have a tune.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied Williams, falling in with his
+banter, &ldquo;anything you like, my lad; &lsquo;Nancy Jig&rsquo;
+or anything else.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>And at a sign from her husband, as soon as the
+fellow began the jig, Mrs. Williams struck in with
+one of the poet-minister's well-known Welsh hymns
+in the same metre,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div><i>Gwaed Dy groes sy'n c' odi fyny</i></div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Calvary's blood the weak exalteth</div>
+<div class="i1"> More than conquerors to be,<sup>*</sup></div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and followed the player note for note, singing the
+sacred words in her sweet, clear voice, till he
+stopped ashamed, and took himself off with all his
+gang.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+A less literal but more hymn-like translation is:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Jesu's blood can raise the feeble</div>
+<div class="i1"> As a conqueror to stand;</div>
+<div>Jesu's blood is all-prevailing</div>
+<div class="i1"> O'er the mighty of the land:</div>
+<div class="i2"> Let the breezes</div>
+<div class="i1"> Blow from Calvary on me.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="b">
+Says the author of <i>Sweet Singers of Wales</i>, &ldquo;This refrain has
+been the password of many powerful revivals.&rdquo;</p></div>
+<a id="png:440" name="png:440"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">440 /</span> 386</samp>
+
+<p>Another hymn&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div><i>O' Llefara! addfwyn Jesu,</i></div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Speak, O speak, thou gentle Jesus,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;recalls the well-known verse of Newton, &ldquo;How
+sweet the name of Jesus sounds.&rdquo; Like many
+of Williams' hymns, it was prompted by occasion.
+Some converts suffered for lack of a &ldquo;clear experience&rdquo;
+and complained to him. They were
+like the disciples in the ship, &ldquo;It was dark, and
+Jesus had not yet come unto them.&rdquo; The poet-preacher
+immediately made this hymn-prayer for
+all souls similarly tried. Edward Griffiths translates
+it thus:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Speak, I pray Thee, gentle Jesus,</div>
+<div class="i1"> O how passing sweet Thy words,</div>
+<div>Breathing o'er my troubled spirit,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Peace which never earth affords,</div>
+<div>All the world's distracting voices,</div>
+<div class="i1"> All th' enticing tones of ill,</div>
+<div>At Thy accents, mild, melodious</div>
+<div class="i1"> Are subdued, and all is still.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Tell me Thou art mine, O Saviour</div>
+<div class="i1"> Grant me an assurance clear,</div>
+<div>Banish all my dark misgivings,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Still my doubting, calm my fear.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Besides his Welsh hymns, published in the first
+and in the second and larger editions of his
+<i>Hallelujah</i>, and in two or three other collections,
+William Williams wrote and published two books
+<a id="png:441" name="png:441"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">441 /</span> 387</samp>
+of English hymns,<sup>*</sup> the <i>Hosanna</i> (1759) and the
+<i>Gloria</i> (1772). He fills so large a space in the
+hymnology and religious history of Wales that he
+will necessarily reappear in other pages of this
+chapter.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+Possibly they were written in Welsh, and translated into English by his
+friend and neighbor, Peter Williams.</p></div>
+
+<p>From the days of the early religious awakenings
+under the 16th century preachers, and after the
+ecclesiastical dynasty of Rome had been replaced
+by that of the Church of England, there were
+periods when the independent conscience of a few
+pious Welshmen rose against religious formalism,
+and the credal constraints of &ldquo;established&rdquo; teaching&mdash;and
+suffered for it. Burning heretics at the
+stake had ceased to be a church practice before
+the 1740's, but Howell Harris, Daniel Rowlands,
+and the rest of the &ldquo;Methodist Fathers,&rdquo; with
+their followers, were not only ostracised by society
+and haled before magistrates to be fined for preaching,
+and sometimes imprisoned, but they were
+chased and beaten by mobs, ducked in ponds and
+rivers, and pelted with mud and garbage when they
+tried to speak or sing. But they kept on talking
+and singing. Harris (who had joined the army in
+1760) owned a commission, and once he saved
+himself from the fury of a mob while preaching&mdash;with
+cloak over his ordinary dress&mdash;by lifting his
+cape and showing the star on his breast. No one
+dared molest an officer of His Britannic Majesty.
+<a id="png:442" name="png:442"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">442 /</span> 388</samp>
+But all were not able to use St. Paul's expedient in
+critical moments.<sup>*</sup></p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+Acts 22:25.</p></div>
+
+<p>William Williams often found immunity in his
+hymns, for like Luther&mdash;and like Charles Wesley
+among the Cornwall sea-robbers&mdash;he caught up the
+popular glees and ballad-refrains of the street and
+market and his wife sang their music to his words.
+It is true many of these old Welsh airs were minors,
+like &ldquo;Elvy&rdquo; and &ldquo;Babel&rdquo; (a significant name in
+English) and would not be classed as &ldquo;glees&rdquo; in
+any other country&mdash;always excepting Scotland&mdash;but
+they had the <em>swing</em>, and their mode and style
+were catchy to a Welsh multitude. In fact many of
+these uncopyrighted bits of musical vernacular
+were appropriated by the hymnbook makers, and
+christened with such titles as &ldquo;Pembroke,&rdquo; &ldquo;Arabia,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Brymgfryd,&rdquo; &ldquo;Cwyfan,&rdquo; &ldquo;Thydian,&rdquo; and
+the two mentioned above.</p>
+
+<p>It was the time when Whitefield and the Wesleys
+were sweeping the kingdom with their conquering
+eloquence, and Howell Harris (their fellow-student
+at Oxford) had sided with the conservative
+wing of the Gospel Reformation workers, and become
+a &ldquo;Whitfield Methodist.&rdquo; The Welsh
+Methodists, <i>ad exemplum</i>, marched with this Calvinistic
+branch&mdash;as they do today. Each division
+had its Christian bard. Charles Wesley could put
+regenerating power into sweet, poetic hymns, and
+William Williams' lyrical preaching made the Bible
+a travelling pulpit. The great &ldquo;Beibl Peter
+<a id="png:443" name="png:443"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">443 /</span> 389</samp>
+Williams&rdquo; with its commentaries in Welsh, since so
+long reverenced and cherished in provincial families,
+was not published till 1770, and for many the
+printed Word was far to seek.<sup>*</sup> But the gospel
+minstrels carried the Word with them. Some of the
+long hymns contained nearly a whole body of
+divinity.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+As an incident contributory to the formation of the British and Foreign Bible
+Society, the story has been often repeated of the little girl who wept when
+she missed her Catechism appointment, and told Thomas Charles of Bala that
+the bad weather was the cause of it, for she had to walk seven miles to find
+a Bible every time she prepared her lessons.
+See <a href="#png:434">page 380</a>.</p></div>
+
+<p>The Welsh learn their hymns by heart, as they
+do the Bible&mdash;a habit inherited from those old days
+of scarcity, when memory served pious people instead
+of print&mdash;so that a Welsh prayer-meeting is
+never embarrassed by a lack of books. An anecdote
+illustrates this characteristic readiness. In
+February, 1797, when Napoleon's name was a
+terror to England, the French landed some troops
+near Fishguard, Pembrokeshire. Mounted heralds
+spread the news through Wales, and in the village
+of Rhydybont, Cardiganshire, the fright nearly
+broke up a religious meeting; but one brave
+woman, Nancy Jones, stopped a panic by singing
+this stanza of one of Thomas Williams'
+hymns,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div><i>Diuw os wyt am ddylenu'r bya</i></div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>If Thou wouldst end the world, O Lord,</div>
+<div>Accomplish first Thy promised Word,</div>
+<div>And gather home with one accord</div>
+<div class="i1"> From every part Thine own,</div>
+<a id="png:444" name="png:444"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">444 /</span> 390</samp>
+<div>Send out Thy Word from pole to pole,</div>
+<div>And with Thy blood make thousands whole,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And, <em>after that come down</em>.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">Nancy Jones would have been a useful member of
+the &ldquo;Singing Sisters&rdquo; band, so efficient a century
+or more afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>The <em>tunes</em> of the Reformation under the &ldquo;Methodist
+Fathers&rdquo; continued far down the century to be
+the country airs of the nation, and reverberations
+of the great spiritual movement were heard in their
+rude music in the mountain-born revival led by
+Jack Edward Watkin in 1779 and in the local
+awakenings of 1791 and 1817. Later in the 19th
+century new hymns, and many of the old, found
+new tunes, made for their sake or imported from
+England and America.</p>
+
+<p>The sanctified gift of song helped to make 1829
+a year of jubilee in South Wales, nor was the same
+aid wanting during the plague in 1831, when the
+famous Presbyterian preacher, John Elias,<sup>*</sup> won
+nearly a whole county to Christ.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+Those who read his biography will call him the
+&ldquo;Seraphic John Elias.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="b">His name was John Jones when he was admitted a member of the
+presbytery. What followed is a commentary on the embarrassing frequency of a
+common name, nowhere realized so universally as it is in Wales.</p>
+
+<p class="b">&ldquo;What is his father's name?&rdquo; asked the moderator
+when John Jones was announced.</p>
+
+<p class="b">&ldquo;Elias Jones,&rdquo; was the answer.</p>
+
+<p class="b">&ldquo;Then call the young man John Elias,&rdquo; said the
+speaker, &ldquo;otherwise we shall by and by have nobody but
+John Joneses.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p class="b">And &ldquo;John Elias&rdquo; it remained.</p></div>
+
+<p>An accession of temperance hymns in Wales
+followed the spread of the &ldquo;Washingtonian&rdquo;
+<a id="png:445" name="png:445"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">445 /</span> 391</samp>
+movement on the other side of the Atlantic in 1840,
+and began a moral reformation in the county of
+Merioneth that resulted in a spiritual one, and
+added to the churches several thousand converts,
+scarcely any of whom fell away.</p>
+
+<p>The revival of 1851&ndash;2 was a local one, but was
+believed by many to have been inspired by a
+celestial antiphony. The remarkable sounds were
+either a miracle or a psychic wonder born of the
+intense imagination of a sensitive race. A few
+pious people in a small village of Montgomeryshire
+had been making special prayer for an outpouring
+of the spirit, but after a week of meetings
+with no sign of the result hoped for, they were
+returning to their homes, discouraged, when they
+heard strains of sweet music in the sky. They
+stopped in amazement, but the beautiful singing
+went on&mdash;voices as of a choir invisible, indistinct but
+melodious, in the air far above the roof of the chapel
+they had just left. Next day, when the astonished
+worshippers told the story, numbers in the district
+said they had heard the same sounds. Some had
+gone out at eleven o'clock to listen, and thought that
+angels must be singing. Whatever the music meant,
+the good brethren's and sisters' little meetings became
+crowded very soon after, and the longed-for
+out-pouring came mightily upon the neighborhood.
+Hundreds from all parts flocked to the churches, all
+ages joining in the prayers and hymns and testimonies,
+and a harvest of glad believers followed
+a series of meetings &ldquo;led by the Holy Ghost.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<a id="png:446" name="png:446"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">446 /</span> 392</samp>
+
+<p>The sounds in the sky were never explained;
+but the belief that God sent His angels to sing an
+answer to the anxious prayers of those pious
+brethren and sisters did no one any harm.</p>
+
+<p>Whether this event in Montgomeryshire was a
+preparation for what took place six or seven years
+later is a suggestive question only, but when the
+wave of spiritual power from the great American
+revival of 1857&ndash;8 reached England, its first messenger
+to Wales, Rev. H.R. Jones, a Wesleyan, had
+only to drop the spark that &ldquo;lit a prairie fire.&rdquo;
+The reformation, chiefly under the leadership of
+Mr. Jones and Rev. David Morgan, a Presbyterian,
+with their singing bands, was general and
+lasting, hundreds of still robust and active Christians
+today dating their new birth from the Pentecost
+of 1859 and its ingathering of eighty thousand
+souls.</p>
+
+<p>A favorite hymn of that revival was the penitential
+cry,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+<i>O'th flaem, O Dduw! 'r wy'n dyfod,</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;in the seven-six metre so much loved in Wales.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Unto Thy presence coming,</div>
+<div class="i1"> O God, far off I stand:</div>
+<div>&ldquo;A sinner&rdquo; is my title,</div>
+<div class="i1"> No other I demand.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>For mercy I am seeking</div>
+<div class="i1"> For mercy still shall cry;</div>
+<div>Deny me not Thy mercy;</div>
+<div class="i1"> O grant it or I die!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<a id="png:447" name="png:447"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">447 /</span> 393</samp>
+<div>I heard of old that Jesus,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Who still abides the same,</div>
+<div>To publicans gave welcome,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And sinners deep in shame.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Oh God! receive me with them,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Me also welcome in,</div>
+<div>And pardon my transgression,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Forgetting all my sin.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The author of the hymn was Thomas Williams of
+Glamorganshire, born 1761; died 1844. He published
+a volume of hymns, <i>Waters of Bethesda</i> in 1823.</p>
+
+<p>The Welsh minor tune of &ldquo;Clwyd&rdquo; may appropriately
+have been the music to express the contrite
+prayer of the words. The living composer, John
+Jones, has several tunes in the Welsh revival
+manual of melodies, <i>Ail Attodiad</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'unparalled'">unparalleled</ins> religious movement of 1904&ndash;5
+was a praying and singing revival. The apostle
+and spiritual prompter of that unbroken campaign
+of Christian victories&mdash;so far as any single
+human agency counted&mdash;was Evan Roberts, of
+Laughor, a humble young worker in the mines, who
+had prayed thirteen years for a mighty descent of
+the heavenly blessing on his country and for a clear
+indication of his own mission. His convictions
+naturally led him to the ministry, and he went to
+Newcastle Emlyn to study. Evangelical work had
+been done by two societies, made up of earnest
+Christians, and known as the &ldquo;Forward Movement&rdquo;
+and the &ldquo;Simultaneous Mission.&rdquo; Beginnings
+of a special season of interest as a result of
+<a id="png:448" name="png:448"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">448 /</span> 394</samp>
+their efforts, appeared in the young people's prayer
+meetings in February, 1904, at New Quay, Cardiganshire.
+The interest increased, and when branch-work
+was organized a young praying and singing
+band visited Newcastle Emlyn in the course of
+one of their tours, and held a rally meeting. Evan
+Roberts went to the meeting and found his own
+mission. He left his studies and consecrated himself,
+soul and body, to revival work. In every
+spiritual and mental quality he was surpassingly
+well-equipped. To the quick sensibility of his
+poetic nature he added the inspiration of a seer
+and the zeal of a devotee. Like Moses, Elijah,
+and Paul in Arabian solitudes, and John in the
+Dead Sea wilds, he had prepared himself in
+silence and alone with God; and though, on
+occasion, he could use effectively his gift of words,
+he stood distinct in a land of matchless pulpit
+orators as &ldquo;the silent leader.&rdquo; Without preaching
+he dominated the mood of his meetings, and without
+dictating he could change the trend of a service
+and shape the next song or prayer on the intuition
+of a moment. In fact, judged by its results, it
+was God Himself who directed the revival, only
+He endowed His minister with the power of divination
+to watch its progress and take the stumbling-blocks
+out of the way. By a kind of hallowed
+psychomancy, that humble man would detect a
+discordant presence, and hush the voices of a congregation
+till the stubborn soul felt God in the
+stillness, and penitently surrendered.</p>
+
+<a id="png:449" name="png:449"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">449 /</span> 395</samp>
+<p>Many tones of the great awakening of 1859
+heard again in 1904&ndash;5,&mdash;the harvest season without
+a precedent, when men, women and children
+numbering ten per cent of the whole population of
+a province were gathered into the membership of
+the church of Christ. But there were tones a century
+older heard in the devotions of that harvest-home
+in Wales. A New England Christian would
+have felt at home, with the tuneful assemblies at
+Laughor, Trencynon, Bangor, Bethesda, Wrexham,
+Cardiff, or Liverpool, singing Lowell Mason's
+&ldquo;Meribah&rdquo; or the clarion melody of Edson's
+&ldquo;Lenox&rdquo; to Wesley's&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Blow ye the trumpet, blow,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The gladly solemn sound;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;or to his other well-known&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Arise my soul, arise,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Shake off thy guilty fears,</div>
+<div>The bleeding Sacrifice</div>
+<div class="i1"> In thy behalf appear.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>In short, the flood tide of 1904 and 1905 brought
+in very little new music and very few new hymns.
+&ldquo;Aberystwyth&rdquo; and &ldquo;Tanymarian,&rdquo; the minor
+harmonies of Joseph Party and Stephens; E.M.
+Price's &ldquo;St. Garmon;&rdquo; R.M. Pritchard's, &ldquo;Hyfrydol,&rdquo;
+and a few others, were choral favorites,
+but their composers were all dead, and the congregations
+loved the still older singers who had
+found familiar welcome at their altars and firesides.
+The most cherished and oftenest chosen hymns
+<a id="png:450" name="png:450"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">450 /</span> 396</samp>
+were those of William Williams and Ann Griffiths,
+of Charles Wesley, of Isaac Watts&mdash;indeed the
+very tongues of fire that appeared at Jerusalem
+took on the Cymric speech, and sang the burning
+lyrics of the poet-saints. And in their revival joy
+Calvinistic Wales sang the New Testament with
+more of its Johannic than of its Pauline texts. The
+covenant of peace&mdash;Christ and His Cross&mdash;is the
+theme of all their hymns.</p>
+
+
+<a id="png:453" name="png:453"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">453 /</span> opp 398</samp>
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of Isaac Watts">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus19" name="Illus19"
+ ><img src="images/illus19-isaacwatts-cameo.jpg" alt=
+ "Isaac Watts" width="199" height="277" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>Isaac Watts, D.D.</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>HERE BEHOLD THE TENT OF MEETING.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<h4 class="quote"><i>Dyma Babell y cyfarfod.</i></h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn, written by Ann Griffiths, is entitled
+&ldquo;Love Eternal,&rdquo; and praises the Divine plan to
+satisfy the Law and at the same time save the
+sinner. The first stanza gives an idea of the
+thought:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Here behold the tent of meeting,</div>
+<div class="i1"> In the blood a peace with heaven,</div>
+<div>Refuge from the blood-avengers,</div>
+<div class="i1"> For the sick a Healer given.</div>
+<div>Here the sinner nestles safely</div>
+<div class="i1"> At the very Throne divine,</div>
+<div>And Heaven's righteous law, all holy.</div>
+<div class="i1"> Still on him shall smile and shine.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>HOW SWEET THE COVENANT TO REMEMBER.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<h4 class="quote"><i>Bydd melus gofio y cyfammod.</i></h4>
+
+
+<p>This, entitled &ldquo;Mysteries of Grace,&rdquo; is also
+from the pen of Ann Griffiths. It has the literalness
+<a id="png:451" name="png:451"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">451 /</span> 397</samp>
+noticeable in much of the Welsh religious
+poetry, and there is a note of pietism in it. The
+two last stanzas are these:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>He is the great Propitiation</div>
+<div class="i1">Who with the thieves that anguish bare;</div>
+<div>He nerved the arms of His tormentors</div>
+<div class="i1">To drive the nails that fixed Him there.</div>
+<div>While He discharged the sinner's ransom,</div>
+<div class="i1">And made the Law in honor be,</div>
+<div>Righteousness shone undimmed, resplendent,</div>
+<div class="i1">And me the Covenant set free.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>My soul, behold Him laid so lowly,</div>
+<div class="i1">Of peace the Fount, of Kings the Head,</div>
+<div>The vast creation in Him moving</div>
+<div class="i1">And He low-lying with the dead!</div>
+<div>The Life and portion of lost sinners,</div>
+<div class="i1">The marvel of heaven's seraphim,</div>
+<div>To sea and land the God Incarnate</div>
+<div class="i1">The choir of heaven cries, &ldquo;Unto Him!&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Ann Griffiths' earliest hymn will be called her
+sweetest. Fortunately, too, it is more poetically
+translated. It was before the vivid consciousness
+and intensity of her religious experience had given
+her spiritual writings a more involved and mystical
+expression.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>My soul, behold the fitness</div>
+<div class="i1">Of this great Son of God,</div>
+<div>Trust Him for life eternal</div>
+<div class="i1">And cast on Him thy load,</div>
+<div>A man&mdash;touched with the pity</div>
+<div class="i1">Of every human woe,</div>
+<a id="png:452" name="png:452"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">452 /</span> 398</samp>
+<div>A God&mdash;to claim the kingdom</div>
+<div class="i1">And vanquish every foe.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This stanza, the last of her little poem on the
+&ldquo;Eternal Fitness of Jesus,&rdquo; came to her when,
+returning from an exciting service, filled with
+thoughts of her unworthiness and of the glorious
+beauty of her Saviour, she had turned down a
+sheltered lane to pray alone. There on her knees
+in communion with God her soul felt the spirit of
+the sacred song. By the time she reached home
+she had formed it into words.</p>
+
+<p>The first and second stanzas, written later, are
+these:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Great Author of salvation</div>
+<div class="i1">And providence for man,</div>
+<div>Thou rulest earth and heaven</div>
+<div class="i1">With Thy far-reaching plan.</div>
+<div>Today or on the morrow,</div>
+<div class="i1">Whatever woe betide,</div>
+<div>Grant us Thy strong assistance,</div>
+<div class="i1">Within Thy hand to hide.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>What though the winds be angry,</div>
+<div class="i1">What though the waves be high</div>
+<div>While wisdom is the Ruler,</div>
+<div class="i1">The Lord of earth and sky?</div>
+<div>What though the flood of evil</div>
+<div class="i1">Rise stormily and dark?</div>
+<div>No soul can sink within it;</div>
+<div class="i1">God is Himself the ark.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p title="Illustration of Isaac Watts originally opposite">Mrs.
+Ann Griffiths, of Dolwar Fechan, Montgomeryshire,
+was born in 1776, and died in 1805.
+&ldquo;She remains,&rdquo; says Dr. Parry, her fellow-countryman,
+<a id="png:455" name="png:455"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">455 /</span> 399</samp>
+&ldquo;a romantic figure in the religious history of
+Wales. Her hymns leave upon the reader an undefinable
+impression both of sublimity and mysticism.
+Her brief life-history is most worthy of study
+both from a literary and a religious point of
+view.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>A suggestive chapter of her short earthly career
+is compressed in a sentence by the author of
+&ldquo;Sweet Singers of Wales:&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;She had a Christian life of eight years and a
+married life of ten months.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>She died at the age of twenty-nine. In 1904,
+near the centennial of her death, amid the echoes of
+her own hymns, and the rising waves of the great
+Refreshing over her native land, the people of
+Dolwar Fechan dedicated the new &ldquo;Ann Griffiths
+Memorial Chapel&rdquo; to her name and to the glory
+of God.</p>
+
+<p>Although the Welsh were not slow to adopt the
+revival tones of other lands, it was the native, and
+what might be called the national, lyrics of that
+emotional race that were sung with the richest
+unction and <i>hwyl</i> (as the Cymric word is) during
+the recent reformation, and that evinced the strongest
+hold on the common heart. Needless to say
+that with them was the world-famous song of
+William Williams,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Guide me, O Thou Great Jehovah;</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div><i>Arglwydd ar wain truy'r anialoch</i>;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and that of Dr. Heber Evans,&mdash;</p>
+
+<a id="png:456" name="png:456"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">456 /</span> 400</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Keep me very near to Jesus,</div>
+<div class="i1">Though beneath His Cross it be,</div>
+<div>In this world of evil-doing</div>
+<div class="i1">'Tis the Cross that cleanseth me;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and also that native hymn of expectation, high
+and sweet, whose writer we have been unable to
+identify&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The glory is coming! God said it on high,</div>
+<div>When light in the evening will break from the sky;</div>
+<div>The North and South and the East and the West,</div>
+<div>With joy of salvation and peace will be bless'd.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i2">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>O summer of holiness, hasten along!</div>
+<div>The purpose of glory is constant and strong;</div>
+<div>The winter will vanish, the clouds pass away;</div>
+<div>O South wind of Heaven, breath softly today!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Of the almost countless hymns that voiced the
+spirit of the great revival, the nine following are
+selected because they are representative, and all
+favorites&mdash;and because there is no room for a
+larger number. The first line of each is given in
+the original Welsh:</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>DWY ADEN COLOMEN PE CAWN.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O had I the wings of a dove</div>
+<div class="i1"> How soon would I wander away</div>
+<div>To gaze from Mount Nebo I'd love</div>
+<div class="i1"> On realms that are fairer than day.</div>
+<div>My vision, not clouded nor dim,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Beyond the dark river should run;</div>
+<div>I'd sing, with my thoughts upon Him,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The sinless, the crucified one.</div>
+</div></div>
+<a id="png:457" name="png:457"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">457 /</span> 401</samp>
+
+<p>This is another of Thomas Williams' hymns.
+One of the tunes suitable to its feeling and its
+measure was &ldquo;Edom,&rdquo; by Thomas Evans. It was
+much sung in 1859, as well as in 1904.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>CAELBOD YN FORSEC DAN YR IAN.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Early to bear the yoke excels</div>
+<div>By far the joy in sin that dwells;</div>
+<div>The paths of wisdom still are found</div>
+<div>In peace and solace to abound.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>The young who serve Him here below</div>
+<div>The wrath to come shall never know;</div>
+<div>Of such in heaven are pearls that shine</div>
+<div>Unnumbered in the crown divine.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Written for children and youth by Rev. Thomas
+Jones, of Denbigh, born 1756; died 1820,&mdash;a
+Calvinistic Methodist preacher, author of a biography
+of Thomas Charles of Bala, and various
+theological works.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>DYMA GARIAD FEL Y MOROEDD,
+ TOSTURIASTHAN FEL Y LLI.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Love unfathomed as the ocean</div>
+<div class="i1"> Mercies boundless as the wave!</div>
+<div>Lo the King of Life, the guiltless,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Dies my guilty soul to save;</div>
+<div>Who can choose but think upon it,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Who can choose but praise and sing?</div>
+<div>Here is love, while heaven endureth,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Nought can to oblivion bring.</div>
+</div></div>
+<a id="png:458" name="png:458"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">458 /</span> 402</samp>
+
+<p>This is called &ldquo;The great Welsh love-song.&rdquo;
+It was written by Rev. William Rees, D.D.,
+eminent as a preacher, poet, politician and essayist.
+One of the greatest names of nineteenth century
+Wales. He died in 1883.</p>
+
+<p>The tune, &ldquo;Cwynfan Prydian,&rdquo; sung to this
+hymn is one of the old Welsh minors that would
+sound almost weird to our ears, but Welsh voices
+can sing with strange sweetness the Saviour's passion
+on which Christian hearts of that nation love so
+well to dwell, and the shadow of it, with His love
+shining through, creates the paradox of a joyful
+lament in many of their chorals. We cannot
+imitate it.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>RHYFEDDODAU DYDD YR ADGYFODIDD.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Unnumbered are the marvels</div>
+<div class="i1"> The Last Great Day shall see,</div>
+<div>With earth's poor storm-tossed children</div>
+<div class="i1"> From tribulation free,</div>
+<div>All in their shining raiment</div>
+<div class="i1"> Transfigured, bright and brave,</div>
+<div>Like to their Lord ascending</div>
+<div class="i1"> In triumph from the grave.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">The author of this Easter hymn is unknown.</p>
+
+<p>The <em>most</em> popular Welsh hymns would be
+named variously by different witnesses according
+to the breadth and length of their observation.
+Two of them, as a Wrexham music publisher
+testifies, are certainly the following; &ldquo;Heaven and
+Home,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Lo, a Saviour for the Fallen.&rdquo; The
+<a id="png:459" name="png:459"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">459 /</span> 403</samp>
+first of these was sung in the late revival with
+&ldquo;stormy rapture.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>O FRYNAU CAERSALEM CEIR GIVELED.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The heights of fair Salem ascended,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Each wilderness path we shall see;</div>
+<div>Now thoughts of each difficult journey</div>
+<div class="i1"> A sweet meditation shall be.</div>
+<div>On death, on the grave and its terrors</div>
+<div class="i1"> And storms we shall gaze from above</div>
+<div>And freed from all cares we shall revel (?)</div>
+<div class="i1"> In transports of heavenly love.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>According to the mood of the meeting this was
+pitched in three sharps to Evelyn Evans' tune of
+&ldquo;Eirinwg&rdquo; or with equal Welsh enthusiasm in
+the C minor of old &ldquo;Darby.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The author of the hymn was the Rev. David
+Charles, of Carmarthen, born 1762; died 1834.
+He was a heavenly-minded man who loved to
+dwell on the divine and eternal wonders of redemption.
+A volume of his sermons was spoken
+of as &ldquo;Apples of gold in pictures of silver,&rdquo; and
+the beautiful piety of all his writings made them
+strings of pearls. He understood English as well
+as Welsh, and enjoyed the hymns not only of
+William and Thomas Williams but of Watts,
+Wesley, Cowper, and Newton.<sup>*</sup></p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+The following verses were written by him in English:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Spirit of grace and love divine,<br /></div>
+<div>Help me to sing that Christ is mine;<br /></div>
+<div>And while the theme my tongue employs<br /></div>
+<div>Fill Thou my soul with living joys.<br /></div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Jesus is mine&mdash;surpassing thought!<br /></div>
+<div>Well may I set the world at nought;<br /></div>
+<div>Jesus is mine, O can it be<br /></div>
+<div>That Jesus lived and died for me?</div>
+</div></div></div>
+<a id="png:460" name="png:460"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">460 /</span> 404</samp>
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>DYMA GEIDWAD I R COLLEDIG.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Lo! a Saviour for the fallen,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Healer of the sick and sore,</div>
+<div>One whose love the vilest sinners</div>
+<div class="i1"> Seeks to pardon and restore.</div>
+<div>Praise Him, praise Him</div>
+<div class="i1"> Who has loved us evermore!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The little now known of the Rev. Morgan
+Rhys, author of this hymn, is that he was a schoolmaster
+and preacher, and that he was a contemporary
+and friend of William Williams. Several of
+his hymns remain in use of which the oftenest sung
+is one cited above, and &ldquo;<i>O agor fy llygaid i weled:</i>&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I open my eyes to this vision,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The deeps of Thy purpose and word;</div>
+<div>The law of Thy lips is to thousands</div>
+<div class="i1"> Of gold and of silver preferred;</div>
+<div>When earth is consumed, and its treasure,</div>
+<div class="i1"> God's words will unchanging remain,</div>
+<div>And to know the God-man is my Saviour</div>
+<div class="i1"> Is life everlasting to gain.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Lo! a Saviour for the Fallen&rdquo; finds an appropriate
+voice in W.M. Robert's tune of &ldquo;Nesta,&rdquo; and
+also, like many others of the same measure, in the
+much-used minors &ldquo;Llanietyn,&rdquo; &ldquo;Catharine,&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;Bryn Calfaria.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<a id="png:461" name="png:461"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">461 /</span> 405</samp>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>O SANCTEIDDIA F'ENAID ARGLWYDD.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Sanctify, O Lord, my spirit,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Every power and passion sway,</div>
+<div>Bid Thy holy law within me</div>
+<div class="i1"> Dwell, my wearied soul to stay;</div>
+<div class="i2"> Let me never</div>
+<div class="i1"> Rove beyond Thy narrow way.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This one more hymn of William Williams is
+from his &ldquo;Song of a Cleansed Heart&rdquo; and is
+amply provided with tunes, popular ones like
+&ldquo;Tyddyn Llwyn,&rdquo; &ldquo;Y Delyn Aur,&rdquo; or
+&ldquo;Capel-Y-Ddol&rdquo; lending their deep minors to its lines with a
+thrilling effect realized, perhaps, only in the land
+of Taliessin and the Druids.</p>
+
+<p>The singular history and inspiring cause of one
+old Welsh hymn which after various mutilations
+and vicissitudes survives as the key-note of a
+valued song of trust, seems to illustrate the Providence
+that will never let a good thing be lost. It
+is related of the Rev. David Williams, of Llandilo,
+an obscure but not entirely forgotten preacher,
+that he had a termagant wife, and one stormy
+night, when her bickerings became intolerable, he
+went out in the rain and standing by the river composed
+in his mind these lines of tender faith:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>In the waves and mighty waters</div>
+<div class="i1"> No one will support my head</div>
+<div>But my Saviour, my Beloved,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Who was stricken in my stead.</div>
+<div>In the cold and mortal river</div>
+<a id="png:462" name="png:462"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">462 /</span> 406</samp>
+<div class="i1"> He would hold my head above;</div>
+<div>I shall through the waves go singing</div>
+<div class="i1"> For one look of Him I love.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Apparently the sentiment and substantially the
+expression of this humble hymn became the burden
+of more than one Christian lay. Altered and
+blended with a modern gospel hymn, it was sung
+at the crowded meetings of 1904 to Robert Lowry's
+air of &ldquo;Jesus Only,&rdquo; and often rendered very
+impressively as a solo by a sweet female voice.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>In the deep and mighty waters</div>
+<div class="i1"> There is none to hold my head</div>
+<div>But my loving Bridegroom, Jesus,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Who upon the cross hath bled.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>If I've Jesus, Jesus only</div>
+<div class="i1"> Then my sky will have a gem</div>
+<div>He's the Sun of brightest splendor,</div>
+<div class="i1"> He's the Star of Bethlehem.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>He's the Friend in Death's dark river,</div>
+<div class="i1"> He will lift me o'er the waves,</div>
+<div>I will sing in the deep waters</div>
+<div class="i1"> If I only see His face.</div>
+<div>If I've Jesus, Jesus only, etc.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>A few of the revival tunes have living authors
+and are of recent date; and the minor harmony of
+&ldquo;Ebenezer&rdquo; (marked &ldquo;Ton Y Botel&rdquo;), which was
+copied in this country by the New York <i>Examiner,</i>
+with its hymn, is apparently a <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'cotemporary'">contemporary</ins>
+piece. It was first sung at Bethany Chapel, Cardiff, Jan,
+8, 1905, the hymn bearing the name of Rev. W.E.
+Winks.</p>
+
+<a id="png:463" name="png:463"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">463 /</span> 407</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Send Thy Spirit, I beseech Thee,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Gracious Lord, send while I pray;</div>
+<div>Send the Comforter to teach me,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Guide me, help me in Thy way.</div>
+<div>Sinful, wretched, I have wandered</div>
+<div class="i1"> Far from Thee in darkest night,</div>
+<div>Precious time and talents squandered,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Lead, O lead me into light.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Thou hast heard me; light is breaking&mdash;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Light I never saw before.</div>
+<div>Now, my soul with joy awaking,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Gropes in fearful gloom no more:</div>
+<div>O the bliss! my soul, declare it;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Say what God hath done for thee;</div>
+<div>Tell it out, let others share it&mdash;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Christ's salvation, full and free.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>One cannot help noticing the fondness of the
+Welsh for the 7-6, 8-7, and 8-7-4 metres. These
+are favorites since they lend themselves so naturally
+to the rhythms of their national music&mdash;though
+their newest hymnals by no means exclude
+exotic lyrics and melodies. Even &ldquo;O mother dear,
+Jerusalem,&rdquo; one of the echoes of Bernard of
+Cluny's great hymn, is cherished in their tongue
+(<i>O, Frynian Caerselem</i>) among the favorites of
+song. Old &ldquo;Truro&rdquo; by Dr. Burney appears
+among their tunes, Mason's &ldquo;Ernan,&rdquo; &ldquo;Lowell&rdquo;
+and &ldquo;Shawmut,&rdquo; I.B. Woodbury's &ldquo;Nearer
+Home&rdquo; (to Phebe Cary's hymn), and even George
+Hews' gently-flowing &ldquo;Holley.&rdquo; Most of these tunes
+retain their own hymns, but in Welsh translation.
+To find our Daniel Read's old &ldquo;Windham&rdquo; there
+<a id="png:464" name="png:464"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">464 /</span> 408</samp>
+is no surprise. The minor mode&mdash;a song-instinct
+of the Welsh, if not of the whole Celtic family of
+nations, is their rural inheritance. It is in the
+wind of their mountains and the semitones of their
+streams; and their nature can make it a gladness
+as the Anglo-Saxon cannot. So far from being a
+gloomy people, their capacity for joy in spiritual
+life is phenomenal. In psalmody their emotions
+mount on wings, and they find ecstacy in solemn
+sounds.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;A temporary excitement&rdquo; is the verdict of
+skepticism on the Reformation wave that for a
+twelvemonth swept over Wales with its ringing
+symphonies of hymn and tune. But such excitements
+are the May-blossom seasons of God's
+eternal husbandry. They pass because human
+vigor cannot last at flood-tide, but in spiritual
+economy they will always have their place, &ldquo;If
+the blossoms had not come and gone there would
+be no fruit.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<a id="png:465" name="png:465"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">465 /</span> 409</samp>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="chap">CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h1>FIELD HYMNS.</h1>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<p>Hymns of the hortatory and persuasive tone are
+sufficiently numerous to make an &ldquo;embarrassment
+of riches&rdquo; in a compiler's hands. Not a few songs
+of invitation and awakening are either quoted or
+mentioned in the chapter on &ldquo;Old Revival Hymns,&rdquo;
+and many appear among those in the last chapter,
+(on the <i>Hymns of Wales</i>;) but the <em>working</em> songs of
+Christian hymnology deserve a special space <em>as</em> such.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>COME HITHER ALL YE WEARY SOULS,</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p class="runon">Sung to &ldquo;Federal St.,&rdquo; is one of the older
+soul-winning calls from the great hymn-treasury of Dr.
+Watts; and another note of the same sacred bard,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Life is the time to serve the Lord,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;is always coupled with the venerable tune of
+&ldquo;Wells.&rdquo;<sup>*</sup> Aged Christians are still remembered
+who were wont to repeat or sing with quavering
+voices the second stanza,&mdash;</p>
+
+<a id="png:466" name="png:466"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">466 /</span> 410</samp>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The living know that they must die,</div>
+<div class="i1"> But all the dead forgotten lie;</div>
+<div>Their memory and their sense are gone,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Alike unknowing and unknown.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">And likewise from the fourth stanza,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>There are no acts of pardon passed</div>
+<div class="i1"> In the cold grave to which we haste.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+One of Israel Holroyd's tunes. He was born in England, about 1690, and
+was both a composer and publisher of psalmody. His chief collection is dated
+1746.</p></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>AND WILL THE JUDGE DESCEND?</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p class="runon">Is one of Doddridge's monitory hymns, once sung
+to J.C. Woodman's tune of &ldquo;State St.&rdquo; with the
+voice of both the Old and New Testaments in the
+last verse:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Ye sinners, seek His grace</div>
+<div class="i1">Whose wrath ye cannot bear;</div>
+<div>Fly to the shelter of His Cross,</div>
+<div class="i1">And find Salvation there.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Jonathan Call Woodman was born in Newburyport,
+Mass., July 12, 1813, and was a teacher, composer,
+and compiler. Was organist of St. George's
+Chapel, in Flushing, L.I., and in 1858 published
+<i>The Musical Casket</i>. Died January, 1894. He
+wrote &ldquo;State St.&rdquo; for William B. Bradbury, in
+August, 1844.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>HASTEN SINNER, TO BE WISE</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p class="runon">Is one of the few unforgotten hymns of Thomas
+Scott, every second line repeating the solemn
+caution,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+Stay not for tomorrow's sun,
+</p>
+
+<a id="png:467" name="png:467"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">467 /</span> 411</samp>
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and every line enforcing its exhortation with a
+new word, &ldquo;To be wise,&rdquo; &ldquo;to implore,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;to return,&rdquo;
+and &ldquo;to be blest&rdquo; were natural cumulatives
+that summoned and wooed the sinner careless and
+astray. It is a finished piece of work, but it owes its
+longevity less to its structural form than to its spirit.
+For generations it has been sung to &ldquo;Pleyel's
+Hymn.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The Rev. Thomas Scott (not Rev. Thomas Scott
+the Commentator) was born in Norwich, Eng., in
+1705, and died at Hupton, in Norfolk, 1776. He
+was a Dissenting minister, pastor for twenty-one
+years&mdash;until disabled by feeble health&mdash;at Lowestoft
+in Suffolk. He was the author of&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+Angels roll the rock away.
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>MUST JESUS BEAR THE CROSS ALONE?</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This emotional and appealing hymn still holds
+its own in the hearts of millions, though probably
+two hundred years old. It was written by a clergyman
+of the Church of England, the Rev. Thomas
+Shepherd, Vicar of Tilbrook, born in 1665. Joining
+the Nonconformists in 1694, he settled first in
+Castle Hill, Nottingham, and afterward in Bocking,
+Essex, where he remained until his death, January,
+1739. He published a selection of his sermons,
+and <i>Penitential Cries</i>, a book of sacred lyrics, some
+of which still appear in collections.</p>
+
+<p>The startling question in the above line is answered
+with emphasis in the third of the stanza,&mdash;</p>
+<a id="png:468" name="png:468"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">468 /</span> 412</samp>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div><em>No!</em> There's a cross for every one,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And there's a cross for <em>me</em>,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and this is followed by the song of resolve and
+triumph,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The consecrated cross I'll bear,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Till death shall set me free.</div>
+<div>And then go home my crown to wear,</div>
+<div class="i1"> For there's a crown for me.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>O precious cross! O glorious crown!</div>
+<div class="i1">O Resurrection Day!</div>
+<div>Ye angels from the stars flash down</div>
+<div class="i1">And bear my soul away!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The hymn is a personal New Testament. No
+one who analyzes it and feels its Christian vitality
+will wonder why it has lived so long.</p>
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>For half a century George N. Allen, composer
+of &ldquo;Maitland,&rdquo; the music inseparable from the
+hymn, was credited with the authorship of the
+words also, but his vocal aid to the heart-stirring
+poem earned him sufficient praise. The tune did
+not meet the hymn till the latter was so old that the
+real author was mostly forgotten, for Allen wrote
+the music in 1849; but if the fine stanzas needed
+any renewing it was his tune that made them new.
+Since it was published nobody has wanted another.</p>
+
+<p>George Nelson Allen was born in Mansfield,
+Mass., Sept. 7, 1812, and lived at Oberlin, O. It
+<a id="png:469" name="png:469"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">469 /</span> 413</samp>
+was there that he composed &ldquo;Maitland,&rdquo; and compiled
+the <i>Social and Sabbath Hymn-book</i>&mdash;besides
+songs for the <i>Western Bell</i>, published by Oliver
+Ditson and Co. He died in Cincinnati, Dec. 9,
+1877.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>AWAKE MY SOUL, STRETCH EVERY NERVE!</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This most popular of Dr. Doddridge's hymns
+is also the richest one of all in lyrical and spiritual
+life. It is a stadium song that sounds the starting-note
+for every young Christian at the outset of his
+career, and the slogan for every faint Christian on
+the way.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>A <em>heavenly</em> race demands thy zeal,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And an immortal crown.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Like the &ldquo;Coronation&rdquo; hymn, it transports the
+devout singer till he feels only the momentum of
+the words and forgets whether it is common or
+hallelujah metre that carries him along.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>A cloud of witnesses around</div>
+<div class="i1"> Hold thee in full survey;</div>
+<div>Forget the steps already trod,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And onward urge thy way!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>'Tis God's all-animating voice</div>
+<div class="i1"> That calls thee from on high,</div>
+<div>'Tis His own hand presents the prize</div>
+<div class="i1"> To thine aspiring eye.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>In all persuasive hymnology there is no more
+kindling lyric that this. As a field-hymn it is
+indispensable.</p>
+
+<a id="png:470" name="png:470"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">470 /</span> 414</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Whenever and by whomsoever the brave processional
+known as &ldquo;Christmas&rdquo; was picked from
+among the great Handel's Songs and mated with
+Doddridge's lines, the act gave both hymn and
+tune new reason to endure, and all posterity
+rejoices in the blend. Old &ldquo;Christmas&rdquo; was originally
+one of the melodies in the great Composer's
+Opera of &ldquo;Cir&oelig;&rdquo; (Cyrus) 1738. It was written
+to Latin words (<i>Non vi piacque</i>) and afterwards
+adapted to an English versification of Job 29:15,
+&ldquo;I was eyes to the blind.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Handel, himself became blind at the age of sixty
+eight (1753).</p>
+
+<a id="png:471" name="png:471"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">471 /</span> opp 414</samp>
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of Handel">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus20" name="Illus20"
+ ><img src="images/illus20-gfhandel-cameo.jpg"
+ alt="George Frederick Handel" width="211" height="302" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>George Frederick Handel</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>THERE IS A GREEN HILL FAR AWAY.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Written in 1848 by Miss Cecil Frances Humphreys,
+an Irish lady, daughter of Major John
+Humphreys of Dublin. She was born in that city
+in 1823. Her best known name is Mrs. Cecil
+Frances Alexander, her husband being the Rt. Rev.
+William Alexander, Bishop of Derry. Among her
+works are <i>Hymns for Little Children</i>, <i>Narrative
+Hymns</i>, <i>Hymns Descriptive and Devotional</i>, and
+<i>Moral Songs</i>. Died 1895.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There is a <em>green</em> hill&rdquo; is poetic license, but the
+hymn is sweet and sympathetic, and almost childlike
+in its simplicity.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>There is a green hill far away</div>
+<div class="i1"> Without the city wall,</div>
+<a id="png:473" name="png:473"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">473 /</span> 415</samp>
+<div>Where our dear Lord was crucified</div>
+<div class="i1"> Who died to save us all.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>We may not know, we cannot tell</div>
+<div class="i1"> What pains He had to bear;</div>
+<div>But we believe it was for us</div>
+<div class="i1"> He hung and suffered there.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNES.</h4>
+
+<p>There is no room here to describe them all. Airs
+and chorals by Berthold Tours, Pinsuti, John
+Henry Cornell, Richard Storrs Willis, George C.
+Stebbins and Hubert P. Main have been adapted
+to the words&mdash;one or two evidently composed for
+them. It is a hymn that attracts tune-makers&mdash;literally
+so commonplace and yet so quiet and
+tender, with such a theme and such natural melody
+of line&mdash;but most of the scores indicated are choir
+music rather than congregational. Mr. Stebbins'
+composition comes nearest to being the favorite, if
+one judges by the extent and frequency of its use.
+It can be either partly or wholly choral; and the
+third stanza makes the refrain&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O dearly, dearly has He loved</div>
+<div class="i1"> And we must love Him too,</div>
+<div>And trust in His redeeming blood,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And try His works to do.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>REJOICE AND BE GLAD!</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This musical shout of joy, written by Dr. Horatius
+Bonar, scarcely needs a new song helper, as did
+<a id="png:474" name="png:474"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">474 /</span> 416</samp>
+Bishop Heber's famous hymn&mdash;not because it is
+better than Heber's but because It was wedded at
+once to a tune worthy of it.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Rejoice and be glad! for our King is on high;<br /></div>
+<div>He pleadeth for us on His throne in the sky.<br /></div>
+<div>Rejoice and be glad! for He cometh again;<br /></div>
+<div>He cometh in glory, the Lamb that was slain</div>
+<div class="i5"> Hallelujah! Amen.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The hymn was composed in 1874.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The author of the &ldquo;English Melody&rdquo; (as ascribed
+in <i>Gospel Hymns</i>) is said to have been John
+Jenkins Husband, born in Plymouth, Eng., about
+1760. He was clerk at Surrey Chapel and composed
+several anthems. Came to the United States
+In 1809. Settled in Philadelphia, where he taught
+music and was clerk of St. Paul's P.E. Church.
+Died there in 1825.</p>
+
+<p>His tune, exactly suited to the hymn, is a true
+Christian p&aelig;an. It has few equals as a rouser to a
+sluggish prayer-meeting&mdash;whether sung to Bonar's
+words or those of Rev. William Paton Mackay
+(1866)&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>We praise Thee, O God, for the Son of Thy love,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;with the refrain of similar spirit
+in both hymns&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Hallelujah! Thine the glory, Hallelujah! Amen,</div>
+<div>Hallelujah! Thine the glory; revive us again;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;or,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Sound His praises! tell the story of Him who was slain!</div>
+<div>Sound His praises! tell with gladness,
+ &ldquo;He liveth again.&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:475" name="png:475"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">475 /</span> 417</samp>
+<p>Husband's tune is supposed to have been written
+very early in the last century. Another tune composed
+by him near the same date to the words&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>&ldquo;We are on our journey home</div>
+<div>To the New Jerusalem,&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;is equally musical and animating, and with a vocal
+range that brings out the full strength of choir and
+congregation.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>COME, SINNER, COME.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>A singular case of the same tune originating in
+the brain of both author and composer is presented
+in the history of this hymn of Rev. William Ellsworth
+Witter, D.D., born in La Grange, N.Y.,
+Dec. 9, 1854. He wrote the hymn in the autumn of
+1878, while teaching a district school near his home.
+The first line&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+While Jesus whispers to you,
+</p>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;came to him during a brief turn of outdoor work
+by the roadside and presently grew to twenty-four
+lines. Soon after, Prof. Horatio Palmer, knowing
+Witter to be a verse writer, invited him to contribute
+a hymn to a book he had in preparation, and
+this hymn was sent. Dr. Palmer set it to music, it
+soon entered into several collections, and Mr. Sankey
+sang it in England at the Moody meetings.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Witter gives this curious testimony,</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;While I cannot sing myself, though very fond of
+music, the hymn sang itself to me by the roadside
+<a id="png:476" name="png:476"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">476 /</span> 418</samp>
+<em>in almost the exact tune given to it by Professor Palmer</em>.&rdquo;
+Which proves that Professor Palmer had
+the feeling of the hymn&mdash;and that the maker of a
+true hymn has at least a sub-consciousness of its
+right tune, though he may be neither a musician nor
+a poet.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>While Jesus whispers to you,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Come, sinner, come!</div>
+<div>While we are praying for you,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Come, sinner, come!</div>
+<div>Now is the time to own Him,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Come, sinner, come!</div>
+<div>Now is the time to know Him,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Come, sinner, come!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>ONE MORE DAY'S WORK FOR JESUS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The writer of this hymn was Miss Anna Warner,
+one of the well-known &ldquo;Wetherell Sisters,&rdquo;
+joint authors of <i>The Wide World</i>, <i>Queechy</i>, and a
+numerous succession of healthful romances very
+popular in the middle and later years of the last
+century. Her own pen name is &ldquo;Amy Lothrop,&rdquo;
+under which she has published many religious
+poems, hymns and other varieties of literary work.
+She was born in 1820, at Martlaer, West Point,
+N.Y., where she still resides.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>One more day's work for Jesus,</div>
+<div>One less of life for me:</div>
+<div class="i1"> But heaven is nearer,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And Christ is dearer</div>
+<div>Than yesterday to me.</div>
+<a id="png:477" name="png:477"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">477 /</span> 419</samp>
+<div class="i1"> His love and light</div>
+<div>Fill all my soul tonight.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Refrain:&mdash;</div>
+<div>One more day's work for Jesus, <i>(ter)</i></div>
+<div>One less of life for me.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The hymn has five stanzas all expressing the
+gentle fervor of an active piety loving service:</p>
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE</h4>
+
+<p class="runon">was composed by the Rev. Robert Lowry, and
+first published in <i>Bright Jewels</i>.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>THE GOSPEL HYMNS.</span></h4>
+
+
+<p>These popular religious songs have been criticised
+as &ldquo;degenerate psalmody&rdquo; but those who so
+style them do not seem to consider the need that
+made them.</p>
+
+<p>The great majority of mankind can only be
+reached by missionary methods, and in these art
+and culture do not play a conspicuous part. The
+multitude could be supplied with technical preaching
+and technical music for their religious wants,
+but they would not rise to the bait, whereas nothing
+so soon kindles their better emotions or so surely
+appeals to their better nature as even the humblest
+sympathetic hymn sung to a simple and stirring
+tune. If the music is unclassical and the hymn
+crude there is no critical audience to be offended.</p>
+
+<a id="png:478" name="png:478"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">478 /</span> 420</samp>
+<p>The artless, almost colloquial, words &ldquo;of a happily
+rhymed camp-meeting lyric and the wood-notes
+wild&rdquo; of a new melody meet a situation. Moral
+and spiritual lapse makes it necessary at times for
+religion to put on again her primitive raiment, and
+be &ldquo;a voice crying in the wilderness.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Between the slums and the boulevards live the
+masses that shape the generations, and make the
+state. They are wage-earners who never hear the
+great composers nor have time to form fine musical
+and literary tastes. The spiritual influences that
+really reach them are of a very direct and simple
+kind; and for the good of the church&mdash;and the
+nation&mdash;it is important that at least this elementary
+education in the school of Christ should be supplied
+them.</p>
+
+<p>It is the popular hymn tunes that speed a reformation.
+So say history and experience. Once in
+two hundred years a great revival movement may
+produce a Charles Wesley, but the humbler singers
+carry the divine fire that quickens religious life
+in the years between.</p>
+
+<p>All this is not saying that the gospel hymns, as a
+whole, are or ever professed to be suitable for the
+stated service of the sanctuary. Their very style
+and movement show exactly what they were made
+for&mdash;to win the hearing of the multitude, and put
+the music of God's praise and Jesus' love into the
+mouths and hearts of thousands who had been
+strangers to both. They are the modern lay songs
+that go with the modern lay sermons. They give
+<a id="png:479" name="png:479"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">479 /</span> 421</samp>
+voice to the spirit and sentiment of the conference,
+prayer and inquiry meetings, the Epworth League
+and Christian Endeavor meetings, the temperance
+and other reform meetings, and of the mass-meetings
+in the cities or the seaside camps.</p>
+
+<p>During their evangelistic mission in England
+and Scotland in 1873, Dwight L. Moody and Ira
+D. Sankey used the hymnbook of Philip Phillips,
+a compilation entitled <i>Hallowed Songs</i>, some of them
+his own. To these Mr. Sankey added others of his
+own composing from time to time which were so
+enthusiastically received that he published them in
+a pamphlet. This, with the simultaneous publication
+in America of the revival melodies of Philip
+P. Bliss, was the beginning of that series of popular
+hymn-and-tune books, which finally numbered six
+volumes. Sankey's <i>Sacred Songs and Solos</i> combined
+with Bliss's <i>Gospel Songs</i> were the foundation
+of the <i>Gospel Hymns</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Subjectively their utterances are indicative of
+ardent piety and unquestioning faith, and on the
+other hand their direct and intimate appeal and
+dramatic address are calculated to affect a throng
+as if each individual in it was the person meant by
+the words. The refrain or chorus feature is notable
+in nearly all.</p>
+
+<p>A selection of between thirty and forty of the
+most characteristic is here given.</p>
+
+<a id="png:480" name="png:480"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">480 /</span> 422</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>HALLELUJAH! 'TIS DONE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This is named from its chorus. The song is one
+of the spontaneous thanksgivings in revival meetings
+that break out at the announcement of a new
+conversion.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>'Tis the promise of God full salvation to give</div>
+<div>Unto him who on Jesus His Son will believe,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Hallelujah! 'tis done; I believe on the Son;</div>
+<div class="i1"> I am saved by the blood of the crucified One.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Though the pathway be lonely and dangerous too,</div>
+<div>Surely Jesus is able to carry me through&mdash;</div>
+<div class="i2">Hallelujah! etc.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">The words and music are both by P.P. Bliss.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>THE NINETY AND NINE.</span></h4>
+
+
+<p>The hymn was written by Mrs. Elizabeth Cecilia
+Clephane at Melrose, Scotland, early in 1868.
+She was born in Edinburgh, June 10, 1830, and
+died of consumption, Feb. 19, 1869. The little
+poem was seen by Mr. Sankey in the <i>Christian Age</i>,
+and thinking it might be useful, he cut it out. At an
+impressive moment in one of the great meetings in
+Edinburgh, Mr. Moody said to him in a quiet aside,
+&ldquo;Sing something.&rdquo; Precisely what was wanted for
+the hour and theme, and for the thought in the general
+mind, was in Mr. Sankey's vest pocket. But how
+could it be sung without a tune? With a silent prayer
+for help, the musician took out the slip containing
+Mrs. Clephane's poem, laid it on the little reed-organ
+<a id="png:481" name="png:481"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">481 /</span> 423</samp>
+and began playing, and singing. He had to
+read the unfamiliar words and at the same time
+make up the music. The tune came&mdash;and grew as
+he went along till he finished the first verse. He
+remembered it well enough to repeat it with the second,
+and after that it was easy to finish the hymn.
+A new melody was born&mdash;in the presence of more
+than a thousand pairs of eyes and ears. It was a
+feat of invention, of memory, of concentration&mdash;
+and such was the elocution of the trained soloist
+that not a word was lost. He had a tearful audience
+at the close to reward him; but we can easily credit
+his testimony,</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was the most intense moment of my life.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>In a touching interview afterwards, a sister of
+Mrs. Clephane told Mr. Sankey the authoress had
+not lived to see her hymn in print and to know of
+its blessed mission.</p>
+
+<p>The first six lines give the situation of the lost
+sheep in the parable of that name&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>There were ninety and nine that safely lay</div>
+<div class="i1"> In the shelter of the fold;</div>
+<div>But one was out on the hills away,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Far off from the gates of gold.</div>
+<div>Away on the mountains wild and bare,</div>
+<div>Away from the tender Shepherd's care.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>And, after describing the Shepherd's arduous
+search, the joy at his return is sketched and spiritualized
+in the concluding stanza&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>But all through the mountains, thunder-riven,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And up from the rocky steeps</div>
+<a id="png:482" name="png:482"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">482 /</span> 424</samp>
+<div>There arose a cry to the gate of heaven,</div>
+<div class="i1"> &ldquo;Rejoice! I have found my sheep.&rdquo;</div>
+<div>And the angels echoed around the Throne,</div>
+<div>&ldquo;Rejoice! for the Lord brings back His own.&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>HOLD THE FORT!</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This is named also from its chorus. The historic
+foundation of the hymn was the flag-signal waved
+to Gen. G.M. Corse by Gen. Sherman's order from
+Kenesaw Mountain to Altoona during the &ldquo;March
+through Georgia,&rdquo; in October, 1863. The flag is
+still in the possession of A.D. Frankenberry, one of
+the Federal Signal-Corps whose message to the
+besieged General said, &ldquo;Hold the fort! We are
+coming!&rdquo; A visit to the scene of the incident inspired
+P.P. Bliss to write both the words and the
+music.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Ho! my comrades, see the signal</div>
+<div class="i1"> Waving in the sky!</div>
+<div>Reinforcements now appearing,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Victory is nigh.</div>
+<div>&ldquo;Hold the fort, for I am coming!&rdquo;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Jesus signals still;</div>
+<div>Wave the answer back to heaven,</div>
+<div class="i1"> &ldquo;By Thy grace we will!&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The popularity of the song (it has been translated
+into several languages), made it the author's
+chief memento in many localities. On his monument
+in Rome, Pennsylvania, is inscribed &ldquo;P.P.
+Bliss&mdash;author of &lsquo;Hold the Fort.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+
+<a id="png:483" name="png:483"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">483 /</span> 425</samp>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>RESCUE THE PERISHING.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Few hymns, ancient or modern, have been more
+useful, or more variously used, than this little sermon
+in song from Luke 14:23, by the blind poet,
+Fanny J. Crosby, (Mrs. Van Alstyne). It is sung
+not only in the church prayer-meetings with its
+spiritual meaning and application, but in Salvation
+Army camps and marches, in mission-school
+devotions, in social settlement services, in King's
+Daughters and Sons of Temperance Meetings, and
+in the rallies of every reform organization that
+seeks the lost and fallen.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Rescue the perishing, care for the dying,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Snatch them in pity from sin and the grave;</div>
+<div>Weep o'er the erring ones, lift up the fallen,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Tell them of Jesus, the Mighty to Save.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Down in the human heart crushed by the Tempter,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Feelings lie buried that grace can restore.</div>
+<div>Touched by a loving heart, wakened by kindness,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Chords that were broken will vibrate once more.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The tune is by W.H. Doane, Mus. D., composed
+in 1870.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WHAT A FRIEND WE HAVE IN JESUS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The author was a pious gentleman of Dublin,
+Ireland, who came to Canada when he was twenty-five.
+His name was Joseph Scriven, born in Dublin,
+1820, and graduated at Trinity College. The
+accidental death by drowning of his intended bride
+<a id="png:484" name="png:484"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">484 /</span> 426</samp>
+on the eve of their wedding day, led him to consecrate
+his life and fortune to the service of Christ.
+He died in Canada, Oct. 10, 1886, (Sankey's <i>Story
+of the Gospel Hymns</i>, pp. 245&ndash;6.)</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The music was composed by Charles Crozat
+Converse, LL.D., musician, lawyer, and writer.
+He was born in Warren, Mass., 1832; a descendant
+of Edward Converse, the friend of Gov. Winthrop
+and founder of Woburn, Mass. He pursued
+musical and other studies in Leipsic and Berlin.
+His compositions are numerous including concert
+overtures, symphonies and many sacred and secular
+pieces. Residence at Highwood, Bergen Co., N.J.</p>
+
+<p>The hymn is one of the most helpful of the
+Gospel Collections, and the words and music have
+strengthened many a weak and failing soul to &ldquo;try
+again.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Have we trials and temptations?</div>
+<div class="i1"> Is there trouble anywhere?</div>
+<div>We should never be discouraged:</div>
+<div class="i1"> Take it to the Lord in prayer.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>I HEAR THE SAVIOUR SAY.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This is classed with the <i>Gospel Hymns</i>, but it
+was a much-used and much-loved revival hymn&mdash;especially
+in the Methodist churches&mdash;several years
+before Mr. Moody's great evangelical movement.
+It was written by Mrs. Elvina M. Hall (since Mrs.
+<a id="png:485" name="png:485"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">485 /</span> 427</samp>
+Myers) who was born in Alexandria, Va., in 1818.
+She composed it in the spring of 1865, while sitting
+in the choir of the M.E. Church, Baltimore, and
+the first draft was pencilled on a fly-leaf of a singing
+book, <i>The New Lute of Zion</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I hear the Saviour say,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Thy strength indeed is small;</div>
+<div>Child of weakness, watch and pray,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Find in me thine all in all.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The music of the chorus helped to fix its words
+in the common mind, and some idea of the Atonement
+acceptable, apparently, to both Arminians
+and Calvinists; for Sunday-school children in the
+families of both, hummed the tune or sang the
+refrain when alone&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> Jesus paid it all,</div>
+<div class="i1"> All to Him I owe,</div>
+<div>Sin had left a crimson stain;</div>
+<div class="i1"> He washed it white as snow.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>John Thomas Grape, who wrote the music, was
+born in Baltimore, Md., May 6, 1833. His modest
+estimate of his work appears in his remark that he
+&ldquo;dabbled&rdquo; in music for his own amusement. Few
+composers have amused themselves with better
+results.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>TELL ME THE OLD, OLD STORY.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Miss Kate Hankey, born about 1846, the daughter
+<a id="png:486" name="png:486"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">486 /</span> 428</samp>
+of an English banker, is the author of this very
+devout and tender Christian poem, written apparently
+in the eighteen-sixties. At least it is said that
+her little volume, <i>Heart to Heart</i>, was published in
+1865 or 1866, and this volume contains &ldquo;Tell me
+the Old, Old Story,&rdquo; and its answer.</p>
+
+<p>We have been told that Miss Hankey was recovering
+from a serious illness, and employed her
+days of convalescence in composing this song of
+devotion, beginning it in January and finishing it in
+the following November.</p>
+
+<p>The poem is very long&mdash;a thesaurus of evangelical
+thoughts, attitudes, and moods of faith&mdash;and
+also a magazine of hymns. Four quatrains of
+it, or two eight-line stanzas, are the usual length of
+a hymnal selection, and editors can pick and
+choose anywhere among its expressive verses.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Tell me the old, old story</div>
+<div class="i1"> Of unseen things above,</div>
+<div>Of Jesus and His glory,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Of Jesus and His love.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Tell me the story simply</div>
+<div class="i1"> As to a little child,</div>
+<div>For I am weak and weary,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And helpless and defiled.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Tell me the story simply</div>
+<div class="i1"> That I may take it in&mdash;</div>
+<div>That wonderful Redemption,</div>
+<div class="i1"> God's remedy for sin.</div>
+</div></div>
+<a id="png:487" name="png:487"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">487 /</span> 429</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Dr. W.H. Doane was present at the International
+Conference of the Y.M.C.A. at Montreal
+in 1867, and heard the poem read&mdash;with tears and
+in a broken voice&mdash;by the veteran Major-General
+Russell. It impressed him so much that he borrowed
+and copied it, and subsequently set it to
+music during a vacation in the White Mountains.</p>
+
+<p>The poem of fifty stanzas was entitled &ldquo;The
+Story Wanted;&rdquo; the sequel or answer to it, by
+Miss Hankey, was named &ldquo;The Story Told.&rdquo;
+This second hymn, of the same metre but different
+accent, was supplied with a tune by William
+Gustavus Fischer.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I love to tell the story</div>
+<div class="i1"> Of unseen things above,</div>
+<div>Of Jesus and His glory,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Of Jesus and His love.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>I love to tell the story</div>
+<div class="i1"> Because I know its true;</div>
+<div>It satisfies my longings</div>
+<div class="i1"> As nothing else can do.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Chorus.</div>
+<div>I love to tell the story;</div>
+<div>'Twill be my theme in glory;</div>
+<div>To tell the old, old story</div>
+<div class="i1"> Of Jesus and his love.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>William Gustavus Fischer was born in Baltimore,
+Md., Oct. 14, 1835. He was a piano-dealer in the
+<a id="png:488" name="png:488"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">488 /</span> 430</samp>
+firm (formerly) of Gould and Fischer. His melody
+to the above hymn was written in 1869, and was
+harmonized the next year by Hubert P. Main.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>THE PRODIGAL CHILD.</span></h4>
+
+
+<p>This is not only an impressive hymn as sung in
+sympathetic music, but a touching poem.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Come home! come home!</div>
+<div class="i1"> You are weary at heart,</div>
+<div>For the way has been dark</div>
+<div class="i1"> And so lonely and wild&mdash;</div>
+<div class="i2"> O prodigal child,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Come home!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Come home! Come home!</div>
+<div class="i1"> For we watch and we wait,</div>
+<div>And we stand at the gate</div>
+<div class="i1"> While the shadows are piled;</div>
+<div class="i2"> O prodigal child,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Come home!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The author is Mrs. Ellen M.H. Gates, known
+to the English speaking world by her famous poem,
+&ldquo;Your Mission.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE</h4>
+
+<p class="runon">To &ldquo;The Prodigal Child&rdquo; was composed by Dr.
+Doane in 1869 and no hymn ever had a fitter singing
+ally. All a mother's yearning is in the refrain
+and cadence.</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+Come home! Oh, come home!
+</p>
+<a id="png:489" name="png:489"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">489 /</span> 431</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>LET THE LOWER LIGHTS BE BURNING!</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>An illustration, recited in Mr. Moody's graphic
+fashion in one of his discourses, suggested this
+hymn to P.P. Bliss.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;A stormy night on Lake Erie, and the sky pitch
+dark.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&lsquo;Pilot, are you sure this is Cleveland? There's
+only one light.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&lsquo;Quite sure, Cap'n.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&lsquo;Where are the lower lights?&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&lsquo;Gone out, sir.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&lsquo;Can you run in?&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&lsquo;<em>We've got to</em>, Cap'n&mdash;or die.&rsquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;The brave old pilot did his best, but, alas, he
+missed the channel. The boat was wrecked, with
+a loss of many lives. The lower lights had gone
+out.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Brethren, the Master will take care of the great
+Lighthouse. It is our work to keep the lower lights
+burning!&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Brightly beams our Father's mercy</div>
+<div class="i1"> From His lighthouse evermore;</div>
+<div>But to us He gives the keeping</div>
+<div class="i1"> Of the lights along the shore.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Chorus.</div>
+<div>Let the lower lights be burning!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Send a gleam across the wave;</div>
+<div>Some poor fainting, struggling seaman</div>
+<div class="i1"> You may rescue, you may save.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Both words and music&mdash;composed in 1871&mdash;are
+by Mr. Bliss. There are wakening chords in
+<a id="png:490" name="png:490"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">490 /</span> 432</samp>
+the tune&mdash;and especially the chorus&mdash;when the
+counterpoint is well vocalized; and the effect is
+more pronounced the greater the symphony of
+voices. Congregations find a zest in every note.
+&ldquo;Hold the Fort&rdquo; can be sung in the street. &ldquo;Let
+the Lower Lights be Burning&rdquo; is at home between
+echoing walls.</p>
+
+<p>The use of the song in &ldquo;Bethel&rdquo; meetings classes
+it with sailors' hymns.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>SWEET HOUR OF PRAYER.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Included with the <i>Gospel Hymns</i>, but of older
+date. Rev. William W. Walford, a blind English
+minister, was the author, and it was probably
+written about the year 1842. It was recited to
+Rev. Thomas Salmon, Congregational pastor at
+Coleshill, Eng., who took it down and brought it
+to New York, where it was published in the New
+York <i>Observer</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Little is known of Mr. Walford save that in his
+blindness, besides preaching occasionally, he
+employed his mechanical skill in making small
+useful articles of bone and ivory.</p>
+
+<p>The tune was composed by W.B. Bradbury in
+1859, and first appeared with the hymn in <i>Cottage
+Melodies</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Sweet hour of prayer, sweet hour of prayer</div>
+<div>That calls me from a world of care,</div>
+<div>And bids me at my Father's throne</div>
+<div>Make all my wants and wishes known.</div>
+<a id="png:491" name="png:491"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">491 /</span> 433</samp>
+<div>In seasons of distress and grief</div>
+<div>My soul has often found relief,</div>
+<div>And oft escaped the tempter's snare</div>
+<div>By thy return, sweet hour of prayer.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>O BLISS OF THE PURIFIED! BLISS OF THE FREE!</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Rev. Francis Bottome, D.D., born in Belper,
+Derbyshire, Eng., May 26, 1823, removed to the
+United States in 1850, and entered the Methodist
+ministry. A man of sterling character and exemplary
+piety. He received the degree of Doctor
+of Divinity at Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa.
+Was assistant compiler of several singing books,
+and wrote original hymns. The above, entitled &ldquo;O
+sing of His mighty love&rdquo; was composed by him in
+1869. The last stanza reads,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O Jesus the Crucified! Thee will I sing,</div>
+<div>My blessed Redeemer, my God and my King!</div>
+<div>My soul, filled with rapture shall shout o'er the grave</div>
+<div>And triumph in death in the Mighty to save.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Chorus.</div>
+<div class="i1"> O sing of His mighty love (<i>ter</i>)</div>
+<div class="i2"> Mighty to save!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Dr. Bottome returned to England, and died at
+Tavistock June 29, 1894.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Bradbury's &ldquo;Songs of the Beautiful&rdquo; (in <i>Fresh
+Laurels</i>). The hymn was set to this chorus in 1871.</p>
+
+<a id="png:492" name="png:492"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">492 /</span> 434</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>WHAT SHALL THE HARVEST BE?</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Very popular in England. Mr. Sankey in his
+<i>Story of the Gospel Hymns</i> relates at length the
+experience of Rev. W.O. Lattimore, pastor of a
+large church in Evanston, Ill., who was saved to
+Christian manhood and usefulness by this hymn.
+It has suffered some alterations, but its original
+composition was Mrs. Emily Oakey's work. The
+Parables of the Sower and of the Tares may have
+been in her mind when she wrote the lines in 1850,
+but more probably it was the text in Gal. 6:7&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Sowing the seed by the daylight fair,</div>
+<div>Sowing the seed by the noonday glare,</div>
+<div>Sowing the seed by the fading light,</div>
+<div>Sowing the seed in the solemn night.</div>
+<div class="i1"> O, what shall the harvest be?</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Lattimore, the man whose history was so strangely
+linked with this hymn, entered the army in 1861,
+a youth of eighteen with no vices, but when promoted
+to first lieutenant he learned to drink in the
+officers' mess. The habit so contracted grew upon
+him till when the war was over, though he married
+and tried to lead a sober life, he fell a victim
+to his appetite, and became a physical wreck. One
+day in the winter of 1876 he found himself in a half-drunken
+condition, in the gallery of Moody's Tabernacle,
+Chicago. Discovering presently that he had
+made a mistake, he rose to go out, but Mr. Sankey's
+voice chained him. He sat down and heard the
+whole of the thrilling hymn from beginning to end.
+<a id="png:493" name="png:493"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">493 /</span> 435</samp>
+Then he stumbled out with the words ringing in
+his ears.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Sowing the seed of a lingering pain,</div>
+<div>Sowing the seed of a maddened brain,</div>
+<div>Sowing the seed of a tarnished name,</div>
+<div>Sowing the seed of Eternal shame.</div>
+<div class="i1"> O, what shall the harvest be?</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>In the saloon, where he went to drown the awakenings
+of remorse, those words stood in blazing
+letters on every bottle and glass. The voice of God
+in that terrible song of conviction forced him back
+to the Tabernacle, with his drink untasted. He
+went into the inquiry meeting where he found
+friends, and was led to Christ. His wife and child,
+from whom he had long been exiled, were sent for
+and work was found for him to do. A natural eloquence
+made him an attractive and efficient helper
+in the meetings, and he was finally persuaded to
+study for the ministry. His faithful pastorate of
+twenty years in Evanston ended with his death in
+1899.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Emily Sullivan Oakey was an author and
+linguist by profession, and though in her life of
+nearly fifty-four years she &ldquo;never enjoyed a day of
+good health,&rdquo; she earned a grateful memory. Born
+in Albany, N.Y., Oct. 8, 1829, she was educated at
+the Albany Female Academy, and fitted herself for
+the position of teacher of languages and English
+literature in the same school, which she honored
+by her service while she lived. Her contributions
+to the daily press and to magazine literature were
+<a id="png:494" name="png:494"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">494 /</span> 436</samp>
+numerous, but she is best known by her remarkable
+hymn. Her death occurred on the 11th of May,
+1883.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE,</h4>
+
+<p class="runon">By P.P. Bliss, is one of that composer's tonal successes.
+The march of the verses with their recurrent
+words is so automatic that it would inevitably
+suggest to him the solo and its organ-chords;
+and the chorus with its sustained soprano
+note dominating the running concert adds the last
+emphasis to the solemn repetition. The song with
+its warning cry owes no little of its power to this
+choral appendix&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Gathered in time or eternity,</div>
+<div>Sure, ah sure will the harvest be.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>O THINK OF THE HOME OVER THERE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>A hymn of Rev. D.W.C. Huntington, suggested
+by Ps. 55:6. It was a favorite from the first.</p>
+
+<p>Rev. DeWitt Clinton Huntington was born at
+Townshend, <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: Original reads 'Vt. Apr.,'">Vt., Apr.</ins>
+27, 1830. He graduated at
+the Syracuse University, and received the degrees
+of D.D. and LL.D. from Genesee College. Preacher,
+instructor and author&mdash;Removed to Lincoln,
+Nebraska.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O think of the home over there,</div>
+<div class="i1"> By the side of the river of light,</div>
+<div>Where the saints all immortal and fair</div>
+<div class="i1"> Are robed in their garments of white.</div>
+<div class="i4"> Over there, (<i>rep</i>)</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:495" name="png:495"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">495 /</span> 437</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O think of the friends over there,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Who before us the journey have trod,</div>
+<div>Of the songs that they breathe on the air,</div>
+<div class="i1"> In their home in the palace of God.</div>
+<div class="i4"> Over there. (<i>rep</i>)</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The melody was composed by Tullius Clinton
+O'Kane, born in Delaware, O., March 10, 1830, a
+hymnist and musician. It is a flowing tune, with
+sweet chords, and something of the fugue feature
+in the chorus as an accessory. The voices of a multitude
+in full concord make a building tremble with it.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>WHEN JESUS COMES.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Down life's dark vale we wander</div>
+<div class="i1"> Till Jesus comes;</div>
+<div>We watch and wait and wonder</div>
+<div class="i1"> Till Jesus comes.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Both words and music are by Mr. Bliss. A
+relative of his family, J.S. Ellsworth, says the song
+was written in Peoria, Illinois, in 1872, and was
+suggested by a conversation on the second coming
+of Christ, a subject very near his heart. The
+thought lingered in his mind, and as he came down
+from his room, soon after, the verses and notes
+came to him simultaneously on the stairs. Singing
+them over, he seized pencil and paper, and in a few
+minutes fixed hymn and tune in the familiar
+harmony so well known.</p>
+
+<a id="png:496" name="png:496"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">496 /</span> 438</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>No more heart-pangs nor sadness</div>
+<div class="i1"> When Jesus comes;</div>
+<div>All peace and joy and gladness</div>
+<div class="i1"> When Jesus comes.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The choral abounds in repetition, and is half
+refrain, but among all Gospel Hymns remarkable
+for their tone-delivery this is unsurpassed in the
+swing of its rhythm.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>All joy his loved ones bringing</div>
+<div class="i1"> When Jesus comes.</div>
+<div>All praise thro' heaven ringing</div>
+<div class="i1"> When Jesus comes.</div>
+<div>All beauty bright and vernal</div>
+<div class="i1"> When Jesus comes.</div>
+<div>All glory grand, eternal</div>
+<div class="i1"> When Jesus comes.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>TO THE WORK, TO THE WORK.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>One of Fanny Crosby's most animating hymns&mdash;with
+Dr. W.H. Doane's full part harmony to re-enforce
+its musical accent. Mr. Sankey says, &ldquo;I
+sang it for the first time in the home of Mr. and
+Mrs. J.B. Cornell at Long Branch. The servants
+gathered from all parts of the house while I was singing,
+and looked into the parlor where I was seated.
+When I was through one of them said, &lsquo;That is
+the finest hymn I have heard for a long time,&rsquo; I felt
+that this was a test case, and if the hymn had such
+power over those servants it would be useful in
+reaching other people as well; so I published it in
+the <i>Gospel Hymns</i> in 1875, where it became one of
+<a id="png:497" name="png:497"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">497 /</span> 439</samp>
+the best work-songs for our meetings that we had.&rdquo;
+(<i>Story of the Gospel Hymns</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>The hymn, written in 1870, was first published
+in 1871 in &ldquo;<i>Pure Gold</i>&rdquo;&mdash;a book that had a sale
+of one million two hundred thousand copies.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>To the work! to the work! there is labor for all,</div>
+<div>For the Kingdom of darkness and error shall fall,</div>
+<div>And the name of Jehovah exalted shall be,</div>
+<div>In the loud-swelling chorus, &ldquo;Salvation is free!&rdquo;</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Chorus.</div>
+<div>Toiling on, toiling on, toiling on, toiling on! (<i>rep</i>)</div>
+<div>Let us hope and trust, let us watch and pray,</div>
+<div>And labor till the Master comes.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>O WHERE ARE THE REAPERS?</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p class="runon">Matt. 13:30 is the text of this lyric from the pen of
+Eben E. Rexford.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Go out in the by-ways, and search them all,</div>
+<div>The wheat may be there though the weeds are tall;</div>
+<div>Then search in the highway, and pass none by,</div>
+<div>But gather them all for the home on high.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Chorus.</div>
+<div>Where are the reapers? O who will come,</div>
+<div>And share in the glory of the harvest home?</div>
+<div>O who will help us to garner in</div>
+<div>The sheaves of good from the fields of sin?</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Hymn and tune are alike. The melody and harmony
+by Dr. George F. Root have all the eager
+<a id="png:498" name="png:498"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">498 /</span> 440</samp>
+trip and tread of so many of the gospel hymns, and
+of so much of his music, and the lines respond at
+every step. Any other composer could not have
+escaped the compulsion of the final spondees, and
+much less the author of &ldquo;Tramp, Tramp, Tramp,&rdquo;
+and all the best martial song-tunes of the great war.
+In this case neither words nor notes can say to the
+other, &ldquo;We have piped unto you and ye have not
+danced,&rdquo; but a little caution will guard too enthusiastic
+singing against falling into the drum-rhythm,
+and travestying a sacred piece.</p>
+
+<p>Eben Eugene Rexford was born in Johnsburg,
+N.Y., July 16, 1841, and has been a writer since he
+was fourteen years old. He is the author of several
+popular songs, as &ldquo;Silver Threads Among the
+Gold,&rdquo; &ldquo;Only a Pansy Blossom&rdquo; etc., and many
+essays and treatises on flowers, of which he is passionately
+fond.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>IT IS WELL WITH MY SOUL.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Horatio Gates Spafford, the writer of this hymn,
+was a lawyer, a native of New York state, born
+Oct. 30, 1828. While connected with an institution
+in Chicago, as professor of medical jurisprudence,
+he lost a great part of his fortune by the great fire
+in that city. This disaster was followed by the loss
+of his children on the steamer, Ville de Havre, Nov.
+22, 1873. He seems to have been a devout Christian,
+for he wrote his hymn of submissive faith towards
+the end of the same year&mdash;</p>
+
+<a id="png:499" name="png:499"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">499 /</span> 441</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When peace like a river attendeth my way,</div>
+<div>When sorrows like sea-billows roll&mdash;</div>
+<div>Whatever my lot, Thou hast taught me to say,</div>
+<div>&ldquo;It is well, it is well with my soul.&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>A friend of Spafford who knew his history read
+this hymn while repining under an inferior affliction
+of his own. &ldquo;If he can feel like that after
+suffering what he has suffered,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I will
+cease my complaints.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>It may not have been the weight of Mr. Spafford's
+sorrows wearing him down, but one would
+infer some mental disturbance in the man seven or
+eight years later. &ldquo;In 1881&rdquo; [writes Mr. Hubert
+P. Main] &ldquo;he went to Jerusalem under the hallucination
+that he was a second Messiah&mdash;and died there
+on the seventh anniversary of his landing in Palestine,
+Sept. 5, 1888.&rdquo; The aberrations of an over-wrought
+mind are beckonings to God's compassion.
+When reason wanders He takes the soul of His helpless
+child into his own keeping&mdash;and &ldquo;it is well.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The tune to Spafford's hymn is by P.P. Bliss; a
+gentle, gliding melody that suits the mood of the
+words.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>WAITING AND WATCHING FOR ME.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Written by Mrs. Marianne Farningham Hearn,
+born in Kent, Eng., Dec. 17, 1834. The hymn was
+first published in the fall of 1864 in the <i>London
+Church World</i>. Its <ins class="transcriber" title=
+ "Transcriber's note: original has 'unrythmical'">unrhythmical</ins> first line&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When mysterious whispers are floating about,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;was replaced by the one now familiar&mdash;</p>
+
+<a id="png:500" name="png:500"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">500 /</span> 442</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When my final farewell to the world I have said,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And gladly lain down to my rest,</div>
+<div>When softly the watchers shall say, &ldquo;He is dead,&rdquo;</div>
+<div class="i1"> And fold my pale hands on my breast,</div>
+<div>And when with my glorified vision at last</div>
+<div class="i1"> The walls of that City I see,</div>
+<div>Will any one there at the Beautiful Gate</div>
+<div class="i1"> Be waiting and watching for me?</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Mrs. Hearn&mdash;a member of the Baptist denomination&mdash;has
+long been the editor of the (English)
+<i>Sunday School Times</i>, but her literary work has
+been more largely in connection with the <i>Christian
+World</i> newspaper of which she has been a staff-member
+since its foundation.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The long lines, not easily manageable for congregational
+singing, are wisely set by Mr. Bliss to
+duet music. There is a weighty thought in the
+hymn for every Christian, and experience has
+shown that a pair of good singers can make it very
+affecting, but the only use of the repeat, by way of
+a chorus, seems to be to give the miscellaneous
+voices a brief chance to sing.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>HE WILL HIDE ME.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<h4 class="quote">(Isa. 49:2.)</h4>
+
+
+<p>Miss Mary Elizabeth Servoss, the author of this
+trustful hymn, was born in Schenectady, N.Y.,
+Aug. 22, 1849. When a very young girl her
+<a id="png:501" name="png:501"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">501 /</span> 443</samp>
+admiration of Fanny Crosby's writings, and the great
+and good service they were doing in the world,
+inspired her with a longing to resemble her.
+Though her burden was as real, it was not like the
+other's, and her opportunities for religious meditation
+and literary work were fewer than those of
+the elder lady, but the limited number of hymns
+she has written have much of the spirit and beauty
+of their model.</p>
+
+<p>Providence decreed for her a life of domestic
+care and patient waiting. For eighteen years she
+was the constant attendant of a disabled grandmother,
+and long afterwards love and duty made
+her the home nurse during her mother's protracted
+illness and the last sickness of her father, until both
+parents passed away.</p>
+
+<p>From her present home in Edeson, Ill., some
+utterances of her chastened spirit have found their
+way to the public, and been a gospel of blessing.
+Besides &ldquo;He Will Hide Me&rdquo; other hymns of Miss
+Servoss are &ldquo;Portals of Light,&rdquo; &ldquo;He Careth,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Patiently Enduring,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Gates of Praise,&rdquo; the
+last being the best known.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>When the storms of life are raging.</div>
+<div class="i1"> Tempests wild on sea and land,</div>
+<div>I will seek a place of refuge</div>
+<div class="i1"> In the shadow of God's hand.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Chorus.</div>
+<div>He will hide me, He will hide me,</div>
+<div>Where no harm can e'er betide me,</div>
+<a id="png:502" name="png:502"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">502 /</span> 444</samp>
+<div>He will hide me, safely hide me</div>
+<div class="i1"> In the shadow of His hand.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>So while here the cross I'm bearing,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Meeting storms and billows wild,</div>
+<div>Jesus for my soul is caring,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Naught can harm His Father's child.</div>
+<div class="i2"> He will hide me, etc.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+
+<p>An animating choral in nine-eight tempo, with a
+swinging movement and fugue chorus, is rather
+florid for the hymn, but undeniably musical. Mr.
+James McGranahan was the composer. He was
+born in Adamsville, Pa., July 4, 1840. His education
+was acquired mostly at the public schools,
+and both in general knowledge and in musical
+accomplishments it may be said of him that he is
+&ldquo;self-made.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Music was born in him, and at the age of nineteen,
+with some valuable help from men like
+Bassini, Webb, Root and Zerrahn, he had studied
+to so good purpose that he taught music classes
+himself. This talent, joined to the gift of a very
+sweet tenor voice, made him the natural successor
+of the lamented Bliss, and, with Major D.W.
+Whittle, he entered on a career of gospel work,
+making between 1881 and 1885 two successful
+tours of England, Scotland and Ireland, and
+through the chief American cities.</p>
+
+<a id="png:503" name="png:503"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">503 /</span> 445</samp>
+
+<p>Among his publications are the <i>Male Chorus
+Book</i>, <i>Songs of the Gospel</i> and the <i>Gospel Male
+Choir</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Resides at Kinsman, O.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>REVIVE THY WORK, O LORD.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<h4 class="quote">(Heb. 3:2.)</h4>
+
+
+<p>The supposed date of the hymn is 1860; the
+author, Albert Midlane. He was born at Newport
+on the Isle of Wight, Jan. 23, 1825 a business
+man, but, being a Sunday-school teacher, he was
+prompted to write verses for children. The habit
+grew upon him till he became a frequent and
+acceptable hymn-writer, both for juvenile and for
+general use. English collections have at least three
+hundred credited to him.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Revive Thy work, O Lord,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Thy mighty arm make bare,</div>
+<div>Speak with the voice that wakes the dead,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And make Thy people hear.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+
+<p>Music and words together make a song-litany
+alive with all the old psalm-tune unction and the
+new vigor; and both were upon Mr. McGranahan
+when he wrote the choral. It is one of his successes.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Revive thy work, O Lord,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Exalt Thy precious name,</div>
+<a id="png:504" name="png:504"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">504 /</span> 446</samp>
+<div>And by the Holy Ghost our love</div>
+<div class="i1"> For Thee and Thine inflame.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Refrain.</div>
+<div>Revive Thy work, O Lord,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And give refreshing showers;</div>
+<div>The glory shall be all Thine own,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The blessing shall be ours.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WHERE IS MY WANDERING BOY TO-NIGHT?</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This remarkable composition&mdash;words and music
+by Rev. Robert Lowry&mdash;has a record among sacred
+songs like that of &ldquo;The Prodigal Son&rdquo; among
+parables.</p>
+
+<p>A widowed lady of culture, about forty years of
+age, who was an accomplished vocalist, had ceased
+to sing, though her sweet voice was still in its prime.
+The cause was her sorrow for her runaway boy.
+She had not heard from him for five years. While
+spending a week with friends in a city distant from
+home, her hidden talent was betrayed by the friends
+to the pastor of their church, where a revival was
+in progress, and persuasion that seemed to put a
+duty upon her finally procured her consent to sing
+a solo.</p>
+
+<p title="Illustration of Philip Doddridge originally opposite">The church
+was crowded. With a force and
+feeling that can easily be guessed she sang &ldquo;Where
+Is My Boy Tonight?&rdquo; and finished the first stanza.
+She began the second,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Once he was pure as morning dew,</div>
+<div class="i1"> As he knelt at his mother's knee,</div>
+<a id="png:507" name="png:507"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">507 /</span> 447</samp>
+<div>No face was so bright, no heart more true,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And none were so sweet as he;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and as the congregation caught up the
+refrain,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> O where is my boy tonight?</div>
+<div class="i1"> O where is my boy tonight?</div>
+<div>My heart overflows, for I love him he knows,</div>
+<div class="i1"> O where is my boy tonight?</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;a young man who had been sitting in a back
+seat made his way up the aisle and sobbed,
+&ldquo;Mother, I'm here!&rdquo; The embrace of that mother
+and her long-lost boy turned the service into a
+general hallelujah. At the inquiry meeting that
+night there were many souls at the Mercy Seat who
+never knelt there before&mdash;and the young wanderer
+was one.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Sankey, when in California with Mr. Moody,
+sang this hymn in one of the meetings and told the
+story of a mother in the far east who had commissioned
+him to search for her missing son. By a
+happy providence the son was in the house&mdash;and
+the story and the song sent him home repentant.</p>
+
+<p>At another time Mr. Sankey sang the same
+hymn from the steps of a snow-bound train, and
+a man between whose father and himself had been
+trouble and a separation, was touched, and returned
+to be reconciled after an absence of twenty years.</p>
+
+<p>At one evening service in Stanberry, Mo., the
+singing of the hymn by the leader of the choir led
+<a id="png:508" name="png:508"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">508 /</span> 448</samp>
+to the conversion of one boy who was present, and
+whose parents were that night praying for him in
+an eastern state, and inspired such earnest prayer
+in the hearts of two other runaway boys' parents
+that the same answer followed.</p>
+
+<p>There would not be room in a dozen pages to
+record all the similar saving incidents connected
+with the singing of &ldquo;Where Is My Wandering Boy?&rdquo;
+The rhetoric of love is strong in every note and
+syllable of the solo, and the tender chorus of voices
+swells the song to heaven like an antiphonal prayer.</p>
+
+<p>Strange to say, Dr. Lowry set lightly by his
+hymns and tunes, and deprecated much mention of
+them though he could not deny their success. An
+active Christian since seventeen years of age,
+through his early pulpit service, his six years'
+professorship, and the long pastorate in Plainfield,
+N.J., closed by his death, he considered preaching
+to be his supreme function as it certainly was his
+first love. Music was to him &ldquo;a side-issue,&rdquo; an
+&ldquo;efflorescence,&rdquo; and writing a hymn ranked far
+below making and delivering a sermon. &ldquo;I felt a
+sort of meanness when I began to be known as a
+composer,&rdquo; he said. And yet he was the author
+of a hymn and tune which &ldquo;has done more to
+bring back wandering boys than any other&rdquo; ever
+written.<sup>*</sup></p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+&ldquo;Where Is My Boy Tonight&rdquo; was composed for a book of temperance
+hymns, <i>The Fountain of Song</i>, 1877.</p></div>
+<a id="png:509" name="png:509"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">509 /</span> 449</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>ETERNITY.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This is the title and refrain of both Mrs. Ellen
+M.H. Gates' impressive poem and its tune.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O the clanging bells of Time!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Night and day they never cease;</div>
+<div>We are weaned with their chime,</div>
+<div class="i1"> For they do not bring us peace.</div>
+<div>And we hush our hearts to hear,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And we strain our eyes to see</div>
+<div>If thy shores are drawing near</div>
+<div class="i2"> Eternity! Eternity!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Skill was needed to vocalize this great word, but
+the ear of Mr. Bliss for musical prosody did not
+fail to make it effective. After the beautiful harmony
+through the seven lines, the choral reverently
+softens under the rallentando of the closing bars,
+and dwelling on the awe-inspiring syllables, solemnly
+dies away.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>TRIUMPH BY AND BY.</span></h4>
+
+
+<p>This rally-song of the Christian arena is wonderfully
+stirring, especially in great meetings, for it
+sings best in full choral volume.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The prize is set before us,</div>
+<div>To win His words implore us,</div>
+<div>The eye of God is o'er us</div>
+<div class="i1"> From on high.</div>
+<div>His loving tones are falling</div>
+<div>While sin is dark, appalling,</div>
+<div>'Tis Jesus gently calling;</div>
+<div class="i1"> He is nigh!</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:510" name="png:510"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">510 /</span> 450</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Chorus.</div>
+<div>By and by we shall meet Him,</div>
+<div>By and by we shall greet Him,</div>
+<div>And with Jesus reign in glory,</div>
+<div class="i1"> By and by!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>We'll follow where He leadeth,</div>
+<div>We'll pasture where He feedeth,</div>
+<div>We'll yield to Him who pleadeth</div>
+<div class="i1"> From on high.</div>
+<div>Then nought from Him shall sever,</div>
+<div>Our hope shall brighten ever</div>
+<div>And faith shall fail us never;</div>
+<div class="i1"> He is nigh.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Chorus&mdash; <span style="margin-left: 4em;
+ font-variant: normal; display: inline;">By and by, etc.</span></div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Dr. Christopher Ruby Blackall, the author of
+the hymn, was born in Albany, N.Y., Sept. 18,
+1830. He was a surgeon in the Civil War, and in
+medical practice fifteen years, but afterwards became
+connected with the American Baptist Publication
+Society as manager of one of its branches.
+He has written several Sunday-school songs set to
+music by W.H. Doane.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE,</h4>
+
+<p class="runon">By Horatio R. Palmer is exactly what the hymn
+demands. The range scarcely exceeds an octave,
+but with the words &ldquo;From on high,&rdquo; the stroke of
+the soprano on upper D carries the feeling to
+unseen summits, and verifies the title of the song.
+From that note, through melody and chorus the
+&ldquo;Triumph by and by&rdquo; rings clear.</p>
+
+<a id="png:511" name="png:511"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">511 /</span> 451</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>NOT HALF HAS EVER BEEN TOLD</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This is emotional, but every word and note is
+uplifting, and creates the mood for religious
+impressions. The writer, Rev. John Bush Atchison,
+was born at Wilson, N.Y., Feb. 18, 1840, and
+died July 15, 1882.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I have read of a beautiful city</div>
+<div class="i1"> Far away in the kingdom of God,</div>
+<div>I have read how its walls are of jasper,</div>
+<div class="i1"> How its streets are all golden and broad;</div>
+<div>In the midst of the street is Life's River</div>
+<div class="i1"> Clear as crystal and pure to behold,</div>
+<div>But not half of that city's bright glory</div>
+<div class="i1"> To mortals has ever been told.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">The chorus (twice sung)&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+Not half has been told,
+</p>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;concludes with repeat of the two last lines of this
+first stanza.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Atchison was a Methodist clergyman who
+composed several good hymns. &ldquo;Behold the Stone
+is Rolled Away,&rdquo; &ldquo;O Crown of Rejoicing,&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;Fully Persuaded,&rdquo; indicate samples of his work
+more or less well-known. &ldquo;Not Half Has Ever
+Been Told&rdquo; was written in 1875.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Dr. Otis F. Presbry, the composer, was a young
+farmer of York, Livingston Co., N.Y., born there
+the 20th of December, 1820. Choice of a
+<a id="png:512" name="png:512"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">512 /</span> 452</samp>
+professional life led him to Berkshire Medical College,
+where he graduated in 1847. In after years his
+natural love of musical studies induced him to give
+his time to compiling and publishing religious
+tunes, with hymns more especially for Sunday-schools.</p>
+
+<p>He became a composer and wrote the melody
+to Atchison's words in 1877, which was arranged
+by a blind musician of Washington, D.C., J.W.
+Bischoff by name, with whom he had formed a
+partnership. The solo is long&mdash;would better,
+perhaps, have been four-line instead of eight&mdash;but
+well sung, it is a flight of melody that holds an
+assembly, and touches hearts.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Presbry's best known book was <i>Gospel Bells</i>
+(1883), the joint production of himself, Bischoff,
+and Rev. J.E. Rankin. He died Aug. 20, 1901.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>COME.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>One of the most characteristic (both words and
+music) of the <i>Gospel Hymns</i>&mdash;&ldquo;Mrs. James Gibson
+Johnson&rdquo; is the name attached to it as its
+author, though we have been unable to trace and
+verify her claim.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O, word of words the sweetest,</div>
+<div class="i1"> O, words in which there lie</div>
+<div>All promise, all fulfillment,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And end of mystery;</div>
+<div>Lamenting or rejoicing,</div>
+<div class="i1"> With doubt or terror nigh,</div>
+<a id="png:513" name="png:513"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">513 /</span> 453</samp>
+<div>I hear the &ldquo;Come&rdquo; of Jesus,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And to His cross I fly.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Chorus.</div>
+<div class="i1"> Come, come&mdash;</div>
+<div>Weary, heavy-laden, come, O come to me.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE,</h4>
+
+<p class="runon">Composed by James McGranahan, delivers the
+whole stanza in soprano or tenor solo, when the
+alto, joining the treble, leads off the refrain in duet,
+the male voices striking alternate notes until the
+full harmony in the last three bars. The style and
+movement of the chorus are somewhat suggestive
+of a popular glee, but the music of the duet is
+flexible and sweet, and the bass and tenor progress
+with it not in the ride-and-tie-fashion but marking
+time <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'wtih'">with</ins>
+the title-syllable.</p>
+
+<p>The contrast between the spiritual and the intellectual
+effect of the hymn and its wakeful tune is
+illustrated by a case in Baltimore. While Moody
+and Sankey were doing their gospel work in that
+city, a man, who, it seems, had brought a copy of
+the <i>Gospel Hymns</i>, walked out of one of the meetings
+after hearing this hymn-tune, and on reaching
+home, tore out the leaves that contained the song
+and threw them into the fire, saying he had &ldquo;never
+heard such twaddle&rdquo; in all his life.</p>
+
+<p>The sequel showed that he had been too hasty.
+The hymn would not leave him. After hearing it
+night and day in his mind till he began to realize
+<a id="png:514" name="png:514"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">514 /</span> 454</samp>
+what it meant, he went to Mr. Moody and told him
+he was &ldquo;a vile sinner&rdquo; and wanted to know how he
+could &ldquo;come&rdquo; to Christ. The divine invitation
+was explained, and the convicted man underwent
+a vital change. His converted opinion of the hymn
+was quite as remarkably different. He declared it
+was &ldquo;the sweetest one in the book.&rdquo; (<i>Story of the
+Gospel Hymns</i>.)</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>ALMOST PERSUADED.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The Rev. Mr. Brundage tells the origin of this
+hymn. In a sermon preached by him many years
+ago, the closing words were:</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;He who is almost persuaded is almost saved,
+but to be almost saved is to be entirely lost.&rdquo; Mr.
+Bliss, being in the audience, was impressed with
+the thought, and immediately set about the composition
+of what proved one of his most popular
+songs, deriving his inspiration from the sermon of
+his friend, Mr. Brundage. <i>Memoir of Bliss</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Almost persuaded now to believe,</div>
+<div>Almost persuaded Christ to receive;</div>
+<div>Seems now some soul to say</div>
+<div>&ldquo;Go Spirit, go thy way,</div>
+<div>Some more convenient day</div>
+<div class="i2"> On Thee I'll call.&rdquo;</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Almost persuaded&mdash;the harvest is past!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Both hymn and tune are by Mr. Bliss&mdash;and the
+omission of a chorus is in proper taste. This
+<a id="png:515" name="png:515"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">515 /</span> 455</samp>
+revival piece brings the eloquence of sense and sound
+to bear upon the conscience in one monitory pleading.
+Incidents in this country and in England
+related in Mr. Sankey's book, illustrate its power.
+It has a convicting and converting history.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>MY AIN COUNTREE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn was written by Miss Mary Augusta
+Lee one Sabbath day in 1860 at Bowmount, Croton
+Falls, N.Y., and first published in the <i>New York
+Observer</i>, Dec, 1861. The authoress had been
+reading the story of John Macduff who, with his
+wife, left Scotland for the United States, and accumulated
+property by toil and thrift in the great West.
+In her leisure after the necessity for hard work
+was past, the Scotch woman grew homesick and
+pined for her &ldquo;ain countree.&rdquo; Her husband, at
+her request, came east and settled with her in sight
+of the Atlantic where she could see the waters that
+washed the Scotland shore. But she still pined,
+and finally to save her life, John <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Macdruff'">Macduff</ins> took her
+back to the heather hills of the mother-land, where
+she soon recovered her health and spirits.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn wide">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I am far from my hame an' I'm weary aften whiles</div>
+<div>For the langed-for hame-bringing an' my Father's welcome smiles.</div>
+<div>I'll ne'er be fu' content until mine eyes do see</div>
+<div>The shinin' gates o' heaven an' mine ain countree.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>The airt' is flecked wi' flowers mony-tinted, frish an' gay,</div>
+<div>The birdies warble blithely, for my Father made them sae,</div>
+<a id="png:516" name="png:516"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">516 /</span> 456</samp>
+<div>But these sights an' these soun's will naething be to me</div>
+<div>When I hear the angels singin' in my ain countree.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Miss Lee was born in Croton Falls in 1838, and
+was of Scotch descent, and cared for by her grandfather
+and a Scotch nurse, her mother dying in her
+infancy. In 1870 she became the wife of a Mr.
+Demarest, and her married life was spent in
+Passaic, N.J., until their removal to Pasadena,
+Cal., in hope of restoring her failing health. She
+died at Los Angeles, Jan. 8, 1888.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE</h4>
+
+<p class="runon">Is an air written in 1864 in the Scottish style by
+Mrs. Ione T. Hanna, wife of a banker in Denver,
+Colo., and harmonized for choral use by Hubert
+P<ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: punctuation inferred">.</ins> Main in 1873. Its plaintive sweetness suits the
+words which probably inspired it. The tone and
+metre of the hymn were natural to the young
+author's inheritance; a memory of her grandfather's
+home-land melodies, with which he once
+crooned &ldquo;little Mary&rdquo; to sleep.</p>
+
+<p>Sung as a closing hymn, &ldquo;My ain countree&rdquo;
+sends the worshipper away with a tender, unworldly
+thought that lingers.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Demarest wrote an additional stanza in
+1881 at the request of Mr. Main.</p>
+
+<p class="thoughtbreak">Some really good gospel hymns and tunes
+among those omitted in this chapter will cry out
+against the choice that passed them by. Others
+are of the more ephemeral sort, the phenomena
+<a id="png:517" name="png:517"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">517 /</span> 457</samp>
+(and the demand) of a generation. Carols of pious
+joy with inordinate repetition, choruses that surprise
+old lyrics with modern thrills, ballads of
+ringing sound and slender verse, are the spray of
+tuneful emotion that sparkles on every revival high-tide,
+but rarely leaves floodmarks that time will not
+erase. Religious songs of the demonstrative, not
+to say sensational, kind spring impromptu from
+the conditions of their time&mdash;and give place to
+others equally spontaneous when the next spiritual
+wave sweeps by. Their value lingers in the impulse
+their novelty gave to the life of sanctuary
+worship, and in the Christian characters their
+emotional power helped into being.</p>
+
+<a id="png:518" name="png:518"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">518 /</span> 458</samp>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="chap">CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h1>HYMNS,
+FESTIVAL AND OCCASIONAL.</h1>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<h3 class="subhead">CHRISTMAS.</h3>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>ADESTE FIDELES.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn is of doubtful authorship, by some
+assigned to as late a date as 1680, and by others to
+the 13th century as one of the Latin poems of St.
+Bonaventura, Bishop of Albano, who was born at
+Bagnarea in Tuscany, A.D. 1221. He was a learned
+man, a Franciscan friar, one of the greatest teachers
+and writers of his church, and finally a cardinal.
+Certainly Roman Catholic in its origin, whoever was
+its author, it is a Christian hymn qualified in every
+way to be sung by the universal church.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Adeste, fideles</div>
+<div>Laeti triumphantes,</div>
+<div>Venite, venite in Bethlehem;</div>
+<div>Natum videte Regem angelorum.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:519" name="png:519"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">519 /</span> 459</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Chorus.</div>
+<div>Venite, adoremus,</div>
+<div>Venite, adoremus!</div>
+<div>Venite, adoremus Dominum.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">This has been translated by Rev. Frederick Oakeley
+(1808&ndash;1880) and by Rev. Edward Caswall
+(1814&ndash;1878) the version of the former being the one
+in more general use. The ancient hymn is much
+abridged in the hymnals, and even the translations
+have been altered and modernized in the three or
+four stanzas commonly sung. Caswall's version
+renders the first line &ldquo;Come hither, ye faithful,&rdquo;
+literally construing the Latin words.</p>
+
+<p>The following is substantially Oakeley's English
+of the &ldquo;Adeste, fideles.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> O come all ye faithful</div>
+<div class="i1"> Joyful and triumphant,</div>
+<div>To Bethlehem hasten now with glad accord;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Come and behold Him,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Born the King of Angels.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Chorus.</div>
+<div class="i1"> O come, let us adore Him,</div>
+<div class="i1"> O come, let us adore Him,</div>
+<div class="i1"> O come, let us adore Him,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Christ, the Lord.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> Sing choirs of angels,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Sing in exultation</div>
+<div>Through Heaven's high arches be your praises poured;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Now to our God be</div>
+<div class="i1"> Glory in the highest!</div>
+<div class="i2"> O come, let us adore Him!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<a id="png:520" name="png:520"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">520 /</span> 460</samp>
+<div class="i1"> Yea, Lord, we bless Thee,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Born for our salvation</div>
+<div>Jesus, forever be Thy name adored!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Word of the Father</div>
+<div class="i1"> Now in flesh appearing;</div>
+<div class="i2"> O come, let us adore Him!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The hymn with its primitive music as chanted
+in the ancient churches, was known as &ldquo;The Midnight
+Mass,&rdquo; and was the processional song of the
+religious orders on their way to the sanctuaries
+where they gathered in preparation for the Christmas
+morning service. The modern tune&mdash;or rather
+the tune in modern use&mdash;is the one everywhere
+familiar as the &ldquo;Portuguese Hymn.&rdquo; (See
+<a href="#png:245">page 205</a>.)</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>MILTON'S HYMN TO THE NATIVITY.</span></h4>
+
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i2"> It was the winter wild</div>
+<div class="i2"> While the Heavenly Child</div>
+<div>All meanly wrapped in the rude manger lies.</div>
+<div class="i2"> Nature in awe of Him</div>
+<div class="i2"> Had doffed her gaudy trim</div>
+<div>With her great Master so to sympathize.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="i2"> No war nor battle sound</div>
+<div class="i2"> Was heard the world around.</div>
+<div>The idle spear and shield were high uphung.</div>
+<div class="i2"> The hooked chariot stood</div>
+<div class="i2"> Unstained with hostile blood,</div>
+<div>The trumpets spake not to the armed throng,</div>
+<div class="i2"> And Kings sat still with awful eye</div>
+<div>As if they knew their Sovereign Lord was by.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This exalted song&mdash;the work of a boy of scarcely
+twenty-one&mdash;is a Greek ode in form, of two
+<a id="png:521" name="png:521"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">521 /</span> 461</samp>
+hundred and sixteen lines in twenty-seven strophes.
+Some of its figures and fancies are more to the
+taste of the seventeenth century than to ours, but it
+is full of poetic and Christian sublimities, and its
+high periods will be heard in the Christmas hymnody
+of coming centuries, though it is not the fashion
+to sing it now.</p>
+
+<p>John Milton, son and grandson of John Miltons,
+was born in Breadstreet, London, Dec. 9, 1608,
+fitted for the University in St. Paul's school, and
+studied seven years at Cambridge. His parents
+intended him for the church, but he chose literature
+as a profession, travelled and made distinguished
+friendships in Italy, Switzerland and France, and
+when little past his majority was before the public
+as a poet, author of the Ode to the Nativity, of a
+Masque, and of many songs and elegies. In later
+years he entered political life under the stress of his
+Puritan sympathies, and served under Cromwell and
+his successor as Latin Secretary of State through
+the time of the Commonwealth. While in public
+duty he became blind, but in his retirement composed
+&ldquo;Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained.&rdquo;
+Died in 1676.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>In the old &ldquo;Carmina Sacra&rdquo; a noble choral
+(without name except &ldquo;No war nor battle
+sound&rdquo;) well interprets portions of the 4th and
+5th stanzas of the great hymn, but replaces the
+line&mdash;</p>
+
+<a id="png:522" name="png:522"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">522 /</span> 462</samp>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>&ldquo;The idle spear and shield were high uphung.&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;with the more modern and less figurative&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>&ldquo;No hostile chiefs to furious combat ran.&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Three stanzas are also added, by the Rev. H.O.
+Dwight, missionary to Constantinople. The substituted
+line, which is also, perhaps, the composition
+of Mr. Dwight, rhymes with&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>&ldquo;His reign of peace upon the earth began,&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and as it is not un-Miltonic, few singers have
+ever known that it was not Milton's own.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. John Knowles Paine, Professor of Music at
+Harvard University, and author of the Oratorio
+of &ldquo;St. Peter,&rdquo; composed a cantata to the great
+Christmas Ode of Milton, probably about 1868.</p>
+
+<p>Professor Paine died Apr. 25, 1906.</p>
+
+<p>It is worth noting that John Milton senior, the
+great poet's father, was a skilled musician and a composer
+of psalmody. The old tunes &ldquo;York&rdquo; and
+&ldquo;Norwich,&rdquo; in Ravenscroft's collection and copied
+from it in many early New England singing-books,
+are supposed to be his.</p>
+
+<p>The Miltons were an old Oxfordshire Catholic
+family, and John, the poet's father, was disinherited
+for turning Protestant, but he prospered in
+business, and earned the comfort of a country
+gentleman. He died, very aged, in May, 1646, and
+his son addressed a Latin poem (&ldquo;Ad Patrem&rdquo;) to
+his memory.</p>
+
+<a id="png:523" name="png:523"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">523 /</span> 463</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>HARK! THE HERALD ANGELS SING.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn of Charles Wesley, dating about 1730,
+was evidently written with the &ldquo;Adeste Fideles&rdquo; in
+mind, some of the stanzas, in fact, being almost
+like translations of it. The form of the two first
+lines was originally&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Hark! how all the welkin rings,</div>
+<div>&ldquo;Glory to the King of Kings!&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;but was altered thirty years later by Rev. Martin
+Madan (1726&ndash;1790) to&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Hark! the herald angels sing</div>
+<div>Glory to the new-born King!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">Other changes by the same hand modified the three
+following stanzas, and a fifth stanza was added by
+John Wesley&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Hail the heavenly Prince of Peace!</div>
+<div>Hail the Sun of Righteousness!</div>
+<div>Light and life to all He brings,</div>
+<div>Ris'n with healing in His wings.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p class="runon">&ldquo;Mendelssohn&rdquo; is the favorite musical
+interpreter of the hymn. It is a noble and spirited choral from
+Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy's cantata, &ldquo;Gott ist Licht.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>JOY TO THE WORLD, THE LORD IS COME!</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This inspirational lyric of Dr. Watts never grows
+old. It was written in 1719.</p>
+
+<a id="png:524" name="png:524"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">524 /</span> 464</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Joy to the world! the Saviour reigns!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Let men their songs employ</div>
+<div>While fields and floods, rocks, hills and plains</div>
+<div class="i1"> Repeat the sounding joy.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Dr. Edward Hodges (1796&ndash;1867) wrote an excellent
+psalm-tune to it which is still in occasional
+use, but the music united to the hymn in the popular
+heart is &ldquo;Antioch,&rdquo; an adaptation from
+Handel's Messiah. This companionship holds
+unbroken from hymnal to hymnal and has done so
+for sixty or seventy years; and, in spite of its fugue,
+the tune&mdash;apparently by some magic of its own&mdash;contrives
+to enlist the entire voice of a congregation,
+the bass falling in on the third beat as if by intuition.
+The truth is, the tune has become the habit
+of the hymn, and to the thousands who have it by
+heart, as they do in every village where there is a
+singing school, &ldquo;Antioch&rdquo; is &ldquo;Joy to the World,&rdquo;
+and &ldquo;Joy to the World&rdquo; is &ldquo;Antioch.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>HARK! WHAT MEAN THOSE HOLY VOICES?</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This fine hymn, so many years appearing with
+the simple sign &ldquo;Cawood&rdquo; or &ldquo;J. Cawood&rdquo; printed
+under it, still holds its place by universal welcome.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Hark! what mean those holy voices</div>
+<div class="i1"> Sweetly sounding through the skies?</div>
+<div>Lo th' angelic host rejoices;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Heavenly hallelujahs rise.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Hear them tell the wondrous story,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Hear them chant in hymns of joy,</div>
+<a id="png:525" name="png:525"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">525 /</span> 465</samp>
+<div>Glory in the highest, glory,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Glory be to God on high!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The Rev. John Cawood, a farmer's son, was born
+at Matlock, Derbyshire, Eng., March 18, 1775, graduated
+at Oxford, 1801, and was appointed perpetual
+curate of St. Anne's in Bendly, Worcestershire.
+Died Nov. 7, 1852. He is said to have written seventeen
+hymns, but was too modest to publish any.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+
+<p>Dr. Dykes' &ldquo;Oswald,&rdquo; and Henry Smart's
+&ldquo;Bethany&rdquo; are worthy expressions of the feeling
+in Cawood's hymn. In America, Mason's &ldquo;Amaland,&rdquo;
+with fugue in the second and third lines,
+has long been a favorite.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WHILE SHEPHERDS WATCHED THEIR FLOCKS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This was written by Nahum Tate (1652&ndash;1715),
+and after two hundred years the church remembers
+and sings the song. Six generations have grown
+up with their childhood memory of its pictorial
+verses illustrating St. Luke's Christmas story.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>While shepherds watched their flocks by night,</div>
+<div class="i1"> All seated on the ground,</div>
+<div>The angel of the Lord came down</div>
+<div class="i1"> And glory shone around.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>&ldquo;Fear not&rdquo; said he, for mighty dread</div>
+<div class="i1"> Had seized their troubled mind,</div>
+<div>&ldquo;Glad tidings of great joy I bring</div>
+<div class="i1"> To you and all mankind.&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:526" name="png:526"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">526 /</span> 466</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Modern hymnals have substituted &ldquo;Christmas&rdquo;
+and other more or less spirited tunes for Read's
+&ldquo;Sherburne,&rdquo; which was the first musical translation
+of the hymn to American ears. But, to show
+the traditional hold that the New England fugue
+melody maintains on the people, many collections
+print it as alternate tune. Some modifications have
+been made in it, but its survival is a tribute to its
+real merit.</p>
+
+<p>Daniel Read, the creator of &ldquo;Sherburne,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Windham,&rdquo; &ldquo;Russia,&rdquo; &ldquo;Stafford,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Lisbon,&rdquo; and
+many other tunes characteristic of a bygone school
+of psalmody, was born in Rehoboth, Mass., Nov.
+2, 1757. He published <i>The American Singing
+Book</i>, 1785, <i>Columbian Harmony</i>, 1793, and several
+other collections. Died in New Haven, Ct.,
+1836.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>IT CAME UPON THE MIDNIGHT CLEAR.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Rev. Edmund Hamilton Sears, author of this
+beautiful hymn-poem, was born at Sandisfield,
+Berkshire Co., Mass., April 6, 1810, and educated
+at Union College and Harvard University. He
+became pastor of the Unitarian Church in Wayland,
+Mass., 1838. Died in the adjoining town
+of Weston, Jan. 14, 1876. The hymn first appeared
+in the <i>Christian Register</i> in 1857.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>It came upon the midnight clear,</div>
+<div class="i1"> That glorious song of old,</div>
+<a id="png:527" name="png:527"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">527 /</span> 467</samp>
+<div>From angels bending near the earth</div>
+<div class="i1"> To touch their harps of gold.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>&ldquo;Peace to the earth, good will to men</div>
+<div class="i1"> From Heaven's all-gracious King.&rdquo;</div>
+<div>The world in solemn stillness lay,</div>
+<div class="i1"> To hear the angels sing.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Still through the cloven skies they come</div>
+<div class="i1"> With peaceful wings unfurled</div>
+<div>And still their heavenly music floats</div>
+<div class="i1"> O'er all the weary world.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Above its sad and lonely plains</div>
+<div class="i1"> They bend on hovering wing,</div>
+<div>And ever o'er its Babel sounds</div>
+<div class="i1"> The blessed angels sing.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+
+<p>No more sympathetic music has been written
+to these lines than &ldquo;Carol,&rdquo; the tune composed by
+Richard Storrs Willis, a brother of Nathaniel Parker
+Willis the poet, and son of Deacon Nathaniel
+Willis, the founder of the <i>Youth's Companion</i>. He
+was born Feb, 10, 1819, graduated at Yale in 1841,
+and followed literature as a profession. He was
+also a musician and composer. For many years
+he edited the <i>N.Y. Musical World</i>, and, besides
+contributing frequently to current literature, published
+<i>Church Chorals and Choir Studies</i>, <i>Our
+Church Music</i> and several other volumes on
+musical subjects. Died in Detroit, May 7, 1900.</p>
+
+<p>The much-loved and constantly used advent
+psalm of Mr. Sears,&mdash;</p>
+
+<a id="png:528" name="png:528"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">528 /</span> 468</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Calm on the listening ear of night</div>
+<div class="i1"> Come heaven's melodious strains</div>
+<div>Where wild Judea stretches far</div>
+<div class="i1"> Her silver-mantled plains,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;was set to music by John Edgar Gould, and the
+smooth choral with its sweet chords is a remarkable
+example of blended voice and verse.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>O LITTLE TOWN OF BETHLEHEM!</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Phillips Brooks, the eloquent bishop of Massachusetts,
+loved to write simple and tender poems
+for the children of his church and diocese. They
+all reveal his loving heart and the beauty of his
+consecrated imagination. This one, the best of his
+<i>Christmas Songs</i>, was slow in coming to public
+notice, but finally found its place in hymn-tune
+collections.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O little town of Bethlehem,</div>
+<div class="i1"> How still we see thee lie!</div>
+<div>Above thy deep and dreamless sleep</div>
+<div class="i1"> The silent stars go by;</div>
+<div>Yet in thy dark streets shineth</div>
+<div class="i1"> The everlasting light;</div>
+<div>The hopes and fears of all the years</div>
+<div class="i1"> Are met in thee tonight.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>For Christ is born of Mary,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And gathered all above,</div>
+<div>While mortals sleep, the angels keep</div>
+<div class="i1"> Their watch of wondering love.</div>
+<div>O morning stars, together</div>
+<div class="i1"> Proclaim the holy birth!</div>
+<div>And praises sing to God the King</div>
+<div class="i1"> And peace to men on earth.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:529" name="png:529"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">529 /</span> 469</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>How silently, how silently,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The wondrous gift is given!</div>
+<div>So God imparts to human hearts</div>
+<div class="i1"> The blessings of His heaven.</div>
+<div>No ear may hear His coming,</div>
+<div class="i1"> But in this world of sin,</div>
+<div>Where meek souls will receive Him still</div>
+<div class="i1"> The dear Christ enters in.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Phillips Brooks, late bishop of the diocese of
+Massachusetts, was born in Boston, Dec. 13, 1835;
+died Jan. 23, 1893. He was graduated at Harvard
+in 1855, and at the Episcopal Divinity School of
+Alexandria, Va., 1859. The first ten years of his
+ministry were spent in Pennsylvania, after which
+he became rector of Trinity Church, Boston, and
+was elected bishop in 1891. He was an inspiring
+teacher and preacher, an eloquent pulpit orator,
+and a man of deep and rich religious life.</p>
+
+<p>The hymn was written in 1868, and it was, no
+doubt, the ripened thought of his never-forgotten
+visit to the &ldquo;little town of Bethlehem&rdquo; two years before.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+
+<p>&ldquo;Bethlehem&rdquo; is the appropriate name of a tune
+written by J. Barnby, and adapted to the words,
+but it is the hymn's first melody (named &ldquo;St.
+Louis&rdquo; by the compiler who first printed it in the
+<i>Church Porch</i> from original leaflets) that has the
+credit of carrying it to popularity.</p>
+
+<p>The composer was Mr. Redner, organist of the
+Church of the Holy Trinity, Philadelphia, of which
+<a id="png:530" name="png:530"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">530 /</span> 470</samp>
+Rector Brooks was then in charge. Lewis Henry
+Redner, born 1831, was not only near the age of his
+friend and pastor but as much devoted to the interests
+of the Sunday-school, for whose use the
+hymn was written, and he had promised to write
+a score to which it could be sung on the coming
+Sabbath. Waking in the middle of the night, after
+a busy Saturday that sent him to bed with his
+brain &ldquo;in a whirl,&rdquo; he heard &ldquo;an angel strain,&rdquo;
+and immediately rose and pricked the notes of the
+melody. The tune had come to him just in time
+to be sung. A much admired tune has also been
+written to this hymn by Hubert P. Main.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h3 class="subhead">PALM SUNDAY.</h3>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>FAURE'S &ldquo;PALM BRANCHES.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p class="ctrhymn"><span>
+<i>Sur nos chemins les rameaux et les fleurs<br />
+Sont repandos&mdash;</i>
+</span></p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>O'er all the way green palms and blossoms gay</div>
+<div>Are strewn to-day in festive preparation,</div>
+<div>Where Jesus comes to wipe our tears away.</div>
+<div>E'en now the throng to welcome Him prepare;</div>
+<div>Join all and sing.&mdash;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Jean Baptiste Faure, author of the words and
+music, was born at Moulins, France, Jan. 15, 1830.
+As a boy he was gifted with a beautiful voice, and
+crowds used to gather wherever he sang in the
+<a id="png:531" name="png:531"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">531 /</span> 471</samp>
+streets of Paris. Little is known of his parentage,
+and apparently the sweet voice of the wandering
+lad was his only fortune. He found wealthy friends
+who sent him to the <i>Conservatoire</i>, but when his
+voice matured it ceased to serve him as a singer.
+He went on with his study of instrumental music,
+but mourned for his lost vocal triumphs, and his
+longing became a subject of prayer. He promised
+God that if his power to sing were given back to
+him he would use it for charity and the good of
+mankind. By degrees he recovered his voice, and
+became known as a great baritone. As professional
+singer and composer at the Paris <i>Grand
+Opera</i>, he had been employed largely in dramatic
+work, but his &ldquo;Ode to Charity&rdquo; is one of his enduring
+and celebrated pieces, and his songs written
+for benevolent and religious services have found
+their way into all Christian lands.</p>
+
+<p>His &ldquo;Palm-Branches&rdquo; has come to be a <i>sine
+qua non</i> on its calendar Sunday wherever church
+worship is planned with any regard to the Feasts
+of the Christian year.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h3 class="subhead">EASTER.</h3>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<p>Perhaps the most notable feature in the early
+hymnology of the Oriental Church was its Resurrection
+songs. Being hymns of joy, they called
+forth all the ceremony and spectacle of ecclesiastical
+<a id="png:532" name="png:532"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">532 /</span> 472</samp>
+pomp. Among them&mdash;and the most ancient
+one of those preserved&mdash;is the hymn of John of
+Damascus, quoted in the second chapter (<a href="#png:080">p.&nbsp;54</a>).
+This was the proclamation-song in the watch-assemblies,
+when exactly on the midnight moment
+at the shout of &ldquo;Christos egerthe!&rdquo;
+(<span title="[Greek: Christos ęgerthę]"
+>&#935;&#961;&#953;&#963;&#964;&#8056;&#962;
+&#7968;&#947;&#8051;&#961;&#952;&#951;</span>.)
+&ldquo;Christ is risen!&rdquo; thousands of torches were lit,
+bells and trumpets pealed, and (in the later centuries)
+salvos of cannon shook the air.</p>
+
+<p>Another favorite hymn of the Eastern Church
+was the &ldquo;<i>Salve, Beate Mane</i>,&rdquo; &ldquo;Welcome, Happy
+Morning,&rdquo; of Fortunatus.
+(Chap. 10, <a href="#png:409">p.&nbsp;357</a>.) This
+poem furnished cantos for Easter hymns of the
+Middle Ages. Jerome of Prague sang stanzas of
+it on his way to the stake.</p>
+
+<p>An anonymous hymn, &ldquo;<i>Poneluctum, Magdelena</i>,&rdquo;
+in medieval Latin rhyme, is addressed to Mary
+Magdelene weeping at the empty sepulchre. The
+following are the 3d and 4th stanzas, with a translation
+by Prof. C.S. Harrington of <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Weslyan'">Wesleyan</ins> University:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Gaude, plaude, Magdalena!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Tumba Christus exiit!</div>
+<div>Tristis est peracta scena,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Victor mortis rediit;</div>
+<div>Quem deflebas morientem,</div>
+<div>Nunc arride resurgentem!</div>
+<div class="i2"> Alleluia!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Tolle vultum, Magdalena!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Redivivum aspice;</div>
+<div>Vide frons quam sit am&oelig;na,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Quinque plagas inspice;</div>
+<div>Fulgent, sic ut margarit&aelig;,</div>
+<a id="png:533" name="png:533"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">533 /</span> 473</samp>
+<div>Ornamenta nov&aelig; vit&aelig;.</div>
+<div class="i2"> Alleluia!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Magdalena, shout for gladness!</div>
+<div>Christ has left the gloomy grave;</div>
+<div>Finished is the scene of sadness;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Death destroyed, He comes to save;</div>
+<div>Whom with grief thou sawest dying,</div>
+<div>Greet with smiles, the tomb defying.</div>
+<div class="i2"> Hallelujah!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Lift thine eyes, O Magdalena!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Lo! thy Lord before thee stands;</div>
+<div>See! how fair the thorn-crowned forehead;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Mark His feet, His side, His hands;</div>
+<div>Glow His wounds with pearly whiteness!</div>
+<div>Hallowing life with heavenly brightness!</div>
+<div class="i2"> Hallelujah!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The hymnaries of the Christian Church for
+seventeen hundred years are so rich in Easter
+hallelujahs and hosannas that to introduce them
+all would swell a chapter to the size of an encyclopedia&mdash;and
+even to make a selection is a responsible
+task.</p>
+
+<p>Simple mention must suffice of Luther's&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>In the bonds of death He lay;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;of Watts'&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>He dies, the Friend of sinners dies;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;of John Wesley's&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Our Lord has gone up on high;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;of C.F. Gellert's&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Christ is risen! Christ is risen!</div>
+<div class="i1"> He hath burst His bonds in twain;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:534" name="png:534"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">534 /</span> 474</samp>
+<p class="runon">&mdash;omitting hundreds which have been helpful in
+psalmody, and are, perhaps, still in choir or congregational use.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>CHRIST THE LORD IS RISEN TODAY</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p class="runon">Begins a hymn of Charles Wesley's and is also the
+first line of a hymn prepared for Sunday-school use
+by Mrs. Storrs, wife of the late Dr. Richard Salter
+Storrs of Brooklyn, N.Y.</p>
+
+<p>Wesley's hymn is sung&mdash;with or without the
+hallelujah interludes&mdash;to &ldquo;Telemann's Chant,&rdquo;
+(Zeuner), to an air of Mendelssohn, and to John
+<ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'Strainer'">Stainer's</ins>
+&ldquo;Paschale Gaudium.&rdquo; Like the old
+New England &ldquo;Easter Anthem&rdquo; it appears to have
+been suggested by an anonymous translation of
+some more ancient (Latin) antiphony.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Jesus Christ is risen to day,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Hallelujah!</div>
+<div>Our triumphant holy day,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Hallelujah!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Who endured the cross and grave.</div>
+<div class="i2"> Hallelujah!</div>
+<div>Sinners to redeem and save,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Hallelujah!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"><span>AN ANTHEM FOR EASTER.</span></h4>
+
+
+<p>This work of an amateur genius, with its rustic
+harmonies, suited the taste of colonial times, and
+no doubt the devout church-goers of that day
+<a id="png:535" name="png:535"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">535 /</span> 475</samp>
+found sincere worship and thanksgiving in its
+flamboyant music. &ldquo;An Anthem for Easter,&rdquo; in
+A major by William Billings (1785) occupied
+several pages in the early collections of psalmody
+and &ldquo;the sounding joy&rdquo; was in it. Organs were
+scarce, but beyond the viols of the village choirs it
+needed no instrumental accessories. The language
+is borrowed from the New Testament and
+<i>Young's Night Thoughts</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The Lord is risen indeed!</div>
+<div class="i2"> Hallelujah!</div>
+<div>The Lord is risen indeed!</div>
+<div class="i2"> Hallelujah!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Following this triumphant overture, a recitative
+bass solo repeats I Cor. 15:20, and the chorus takes
+it up with crowning hallelujahs. Different parts,
+<i>per fugam</i>, inquire from clef to clef&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i1"> And did He rise?</div>
+<div class="i1"> And did He rise?&mdash;</div>
+<div>Hear [the answer], O ye nations!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Hear it, O ye dead!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">Then duet, trio and chorus sing it, successively&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>He rose! He rose! He rose!</div>
+<div class="i1"> He burst the bars of death,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And triumphed o'er the grave!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The succeeding thirty-four bars&mdash;duet and chorus&mdash;take
+home the sacred gladness to the heart of
+humanity&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i2">Then, then <em>I</em> rose,</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:536" name="png:536"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">536 /</span> 476</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="i2"> And seized eternal youth,</div>
+<div class="i2"> Man all immortal, hail!</div>
+<div>Heaven's all the glory, man's the boundless bliss.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:505" name="png:505"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">505 /</span> opp 446</samp>
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of Philip Doddridge">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus21" name="Illus21"
+ ><img src="images/illus21-philipdoddridge-cameo.jpg" alt=
+ "Philip Doddridge" width="225" height="263" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>Philip Doddridge, D.D.</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>YES, THE REDEEMER ROSE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>In the six-eight syllable verse once known as
+&ldquo;hallelujah metre&rdquo;&mdash;written by Dr. Doddridge
+to be sung after a sermon on the text in 1st Corinthians
+noted in the above anthem&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Yes, the Redeemer rose,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The Saviour left the dead,</div>
+<div>And o'er our hellish foes</div>
+<div class="i1"> High raised His conquering head.</div>
+<div>In wild dismay the guards around</div>
+<div>Fall to the ground and sink away.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Lewis Edson's &ldquo;Lenox&rdquo; (1782) is an old favorite
+among its musical interpreters.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>O SHORT WAS HIS SLUMBER.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn for the song-service of the Ruggles
+St. Church, Boston, was written by Rev. Theron
+Brown.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O short was His slumber; He woke from the dust;</div>
+<div class="i1"> The Saviour death's chain could not hold;</div>
+<div>And short, since He rose, is the sleep of the just;</div>
+<div class="i1"> They shall wake, and His glory behold.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i2">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Dear grave in the garden; hope smiled at its door</div>
+<div class="i1"> Where love's brightest triumph was told;</div>
+<div>Christ lives! and His life will His people restore!</div>
+<div class="i1"> They shall wake, and His glory behold.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:537" name="png:537"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">537 /</span> 477</samp>
+
+<p>The music is Bliss' tune to Spafford's &ldquo;When
+Peace Like a River.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Another by the same writer, sung by the same
+church chorus, is&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>He rose! O morn of wonder!</div>
+<div class="i1"> They saw His light go down</div>
+<div>Whose hate had crushed Him under,</div>
+<div class="i1"> A King without a crown.</div>
+<div>No plume, no garland wore He,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Despised death's Victor lay,</div>
+<div>And wrapped in night His glory,</div>
+<div class="i1"> That claimed a grander day.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>He rose! He burst immortal</div>
+<div class="i1"> From death's dark realm alone,</div>
+<div>And left its heavenward portal</div>
+<div class="i1"> Swung wide for all his own.</div>
+<div>Nor need one terror seize us</div>
+<div class="i1"> To face earth's final pain,</div>
+<div>For they who follow Jesus,</div>
+<div class="i1"> But die to live again.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The composer's name is lost, the tune being left
+nameless when printed. The impression is that
+it was a secular melody. A very suitable tune for
+the hymn is Geo. J. Webb's &ldquo;Millennial Dawn&rdquo;
+(&ldquo;the Morning Light is breaking.&rdquo;)</p>
+
+<a id="png:538" name="png:538"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">538 /</span> 478</samp>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h3 class="subhead">THANKSGIVING.</h3>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>DIE FELDER WIR PFL&Uuml;GEN UND STREUEN.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>We plow the fields and scatter</div>
+<div class="i1"> The good seed on the land,</div>
+<div>But it is fed and watered</div>
+<div class="i1"> By God's Almighty hand,</div>
+<div>He sends the snow in winter,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The warmth to swell the grain,</div>
+<div>The breezes, and the sunshine</div>
+<div class="i1"> And soft, refreshing rain,</div>
+<div>All, all good gifts around us</div>
+<div class="i1"> Are sent from heaven above</div>
+<div>Then thank the Lord, O thank the Lord</div>
+<div class="i2"> For all His love!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Matthias Claudius, who wrote the German
+original of this little poem, was a native of Reinfeld,
+Holstein, born 1770 and died 1815. He wrote
+lyrics, humorous, pathetic and religious, some of
+which are still current in Germany.</p>
+
+<p>The translator of the verses is Miss Jane Montgomery
+Campbell, whose identity has not been
+traced. Hers is evidently one of the retiring names
+brought to light by one unpretending achievement.
+English readers owe to her the above modest and
+devout hymn, which was first published here in
+Rev. C.S. Bere's <i>Garland of Songs with Tunes</i>,
+1861.</p>
+
+<p title="illustration of Lowell Mason originally opposite">Little is known
+of Arthur Cottman, composer to
+Miss Campbell's words. He was born in 1842,
+and died in 1879.</p>
+
+<a id="png:541" name="png:541"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">541 /</span> 479</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WITH SONGS AND HONORS SOUNDING LOUD.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Stanzas of this enduring hymn of Watts' have
+been as often recited as sung.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>He sends His showers of blessing down</div>
+<div class="i1"> To cheer the plains below;</div>
+<div>He makes the grass the mountains crown,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And corn in valleys grow.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE,</h4>
+
+<p>One of the chorals&mdash;if not the best&mdash;to claim
+partnership with this sacred classic, is John Cole's
+&ldquo;Geneva,&rdquo; distinguished among the few fugue
+tunes which the singing world refuses to dismiss.
+There is a growing grandeur in the opening solo
+and its following duet as they climb the first tetra-chord,
+when the full harmony suddenly reveals
+the majesty of the music. The little parenthetic
+duo at the eighth bar breaks the roll of the song
+for one breath, and the concord of voices closes in
+again like a diapason. One thinks of a bird-note
+making a waterfall listen.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>HARVEST HOME.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Let us sing of the sheaves, when the summer is done,</div>
+<div>And the garners are stored with the gifts of the sun.</div>
+<div>Shouting home from the fields like the voice of the sea,</div>
+<div>Let us join with the reapers in glad jubilee,&mdash;</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Refrain.</div>
+<div class="i3"> Harvest home! &nbsp; (<i>double rep</i>.)</div>
+<div>Let us chant His praise who has crowned our days</div>
+<div class="i2"> With bounty of the harvest home.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:542" name="png:542"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">542 /</span> 480</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Who hath ripened the fruits into golden and red?</div>
+<div>Who hath grown in the valleys our treasures of bread,</div>
+<div>That the owner might heap, and the stranger might glean</div>
+<div>For the days when the cold of the winter is keen?</div>
+<div class="i3"> Harvest home!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="i5"> Let us chant, etc.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>For the smile of the sunshine, again and again,</div>
+<div>For the dew on the garden, the showers on the plain,</div>
+<div>For the year, with its hope and its promise that end,</div>
+<div>Crowned with plenty and peace, let thanksgiving ascend,</div>
+<div class="i3"> Harvest home!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="i5"> Let us chant, etc.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>We shall gather a harvest of glory, we know,</div>
+<div>From the furrows of life where in patience we sow.</div>
+<div>Buried love in the field of the heart never dies,</div>
+<div>And its seed scattered here will be sheaves in the skies,</div>
+<div class="i3"> Harvest home!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="i5"> Let us chant, etc.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Thanksgiving Hymn. Boston, 1890. Theron
+Brown.</p>
+
+<p>Tune &ldquo;To the Work, To the Work.&rdquo; W.H.
+Doane.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>THE GOD OF HARVEST PRAISE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Written by James Montgomery in 1840, and
+published in the <i>Evangelical Magazine</i> as the
+Harvest Hymn for that year.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>The God of harvest praise;</div>
+<div>In loud thanksgiving raise</div>
+<div class="i1"> Heart, hand and voice.</div>
+<div>The valleys smile and sing,</div>
+<div>Forests and mountains sing,</div>
+<div>The plains their tribute bring,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The streams rejoice.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<a id="png:543" name="png:543"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">543 /</span> 481</samp>
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>The God of harvest praise;</div>
+<div>Hearts, hands and voices raise</div>
+<div class="i1"> With sweet accord;</div>
+<div>From field to garner throng,</div>
+<div>Bearing your sheaves along,</div>
+<div>And in your harvest song</div>
+<div class="i1"> Bless ye the Lord.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Tune, &ldquo;Dort&rdquo;&mdash;Lowell Mason.</p>
+
+<a id="png:539" name="png:539"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">539 /</span> opp 478</samp>
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of Lowell Mason">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus22" name="Illus22"
+ ><img src="images/illus22-lowellmason-cameo.jpg" alt=
+ "Lowell Mason" width="149" height="259" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>Lowell Mason</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h3 class="subhead">MORNING.</h3>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>STILL, STILL WITH THEE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>These stanzas of Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe,
+with their poetic beauty and grateful religious
+spirit, have furnished an orison worthy of a place
+in all the hymn books. In feeling and in faith the
+hymn is a matin song for the world, supplying
+words and thoughts to any and every heart that
+worships.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Still, still with Thee, when purple morning breaketh,</div>
+<div class="i1"> When the bird waketh and the shadows flee;</div>
+<div>Fairer than morning, lovelier than daylight,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Dawns the sweet consciousness, I am with Thee.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Alone with Thee, amid the mystic shadows</div>
+<div class="i1"> The solemn hush of nature newly born;</div>
+<div>Alone with Thee, in breathless adoration,</div>
+<div class="i1"> In the calm dew and freshness of the morn.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<a id="png:544" name="png:544"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">544 /</span> 482</samp>
+<div>When sinks the soul, subdued by toil, to slumber,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Its closing eyes look up to Thee in prayer,</div>
+<div>Sweet the repose beneath Thy wings o'ershadowing,</div>
+<div class="i1"> But sweeter still to wake and find Thee there.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNES.</h4>
+
+<p>Barnby's &ldquo;Windsor,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Stowe&rdquo; by Charles
+H. Morse (1893)&mdash;both written to the words.</p>
+
+<p>Mendelssohn's &ldquo;Consolation&rdquo; is a classic interpretation
+of the hymn, and finely impressive
+when skillfully sung, but simpler&mdash;and sweeter
+to the popular ear&mdash;is Mason's &ldquo;Henley,&rdquo; written
+to Mrs. Eslings'&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+&ldquo;Come unto me when shadows darkly gather.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h3 class="subhead">EVENING HYMNS.</h3>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p>John Keble's beautiful meditation&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Sun of my soul, Thou Saviour dear;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">John Leland's&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The day is past and gone;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">and Phebe Brown's&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I love to steal awhile away;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;have already been noticed. Bishop Doane's
+gentle and spiritual lines express nearly everything
+that a worshipping soul would include in a moment
+of evening thought. The first and last stanzas are
+the ones most commonly sung.</p>
+
+<a id="png:545" name="png:545"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">545 /</span> 483</samp>
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>Softly now the light of day</div>
+<div>Fades upon my sight away:</div>
+<div>Free from care, from labor free,</div>
+<div>Lord I would commune with Thee.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Soon for me the light of day</div>
+<div>Shall forever pass away;</div>
+<div>Then, from sin and sorrow free,</div>
+<div>Take me, Lord, to dwell with Thee.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+
+<p>Both Kozeluck and J.E. Gould, besides Louis
+M. Gottschalk and Dr. Henry John Gauntlett,
+have tried their skill in fitting music to this hymn,
+but only Gottschalk and Kozeluck approach the
+mood into which its quiet words charm a pious and
+reflective mind. Possibly its frequent association
+with &ldquo;Holley,&rdquo; composed by George Hews, may
+influence a hearer's judgement of other melodies
+but there is something in that tune that makes
+it cling to the hymn as if by instinctive kinship.</p>
+
+<p>Others may have as much or more artistic music
+but &ldquo;Holley&rdquo; in its soft modulations seems to
+breathe the spirit of every word.</p>
+
+<p>It was this tune to which a stranger recently
+heard a group of mill-girls singing Bishop Doane's
+verses. The lady, a well-known Christian worker,
+visited a certain factory, and the superintendent,
+after showing her through the building, opened a
+door into a long work-room, where the singing of the
+<a id="png:546" name="png:546"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">546 /</span> 484</samp>
+girls delighted and surprised her. It was sunset,
+and their hymn was&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+Softly now the light of day.
+</p>
+
+<p>Several of the girls were Sunday-school teachers,
+who had encouraged others to sing at that hour,
+and it had become a habit.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Has it made a difference?&rdquo; the lady inquired.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There is seldom any quarrelling or coarse joking
+among them now,&rdquo; said the superintendent with
+a smile.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. S.F. Smith's hymn of much the same tone
+and tenor&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Softly fades the twilight ray</div>
+<div>Of the holy Sabbath day,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;is commonly sung to the tune of
+&ldquo;Holley.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>George Hews, an American composer and piano-maker,
+was born in Massachusetts 1800, and died
+July 6, 1873. No intelligence of him or his work
+or former locality is at hand, beyond this brief note
+in Baptie, &ldquo;He is believed to have followed his
+trade in Boston, and written music for some of
+Mason's earlier books.<ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: punctuation inferred">&rdquo;</ins></p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h3 class="subhead">DEDICATION.</h3>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>CHRIST IS OUR CORNER-STONE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This reproduces in Chandler's translation a song-service
+in an ancient Latin liturgy (<i>angulare fundamentum</i>).</p>
+
+<a id="png:547" name="png:547"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">547 /</span> 485</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Christ is our Corner-Stone;</div>
+<div class="i1"> On Him alone we build,</div>
+<div>With His true saints alone</div>
+<div class="i1"> The courts of heaven are filled,</div>
+<div class="i2"> On His great love</div>
+<div class="i2"> Our hopes we place</div>
+<div class="i2"> Of present grace</div>
+<div class="i3"> And joys above.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>O then with hymns of praise</div>
+<div class="i1"> These hallowed courts shall ring;</div>
+<div>Our voices we will raise</div>
+<div class="i1"> The Three-in-One to sing.</div>
+<div class="i2"> And thus proclaim</div>
+<div class="i2"> In joyful song</div>
+<div class="i2"> But loud and long</div>
+<div class="i3"> That glorious Name.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The Rev. John Chandler was born at Witley,
+Surrey, Eng. June 16, 1806. He took his A.M.
+degree at Oxford, and entered the ministry of the
+Church of England, was Vicar of Witley many
+years, and became well-known for his translations
+of hymns of the primitive church. Died at Putney,
+July 1, 1876.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+
+<p>Sebastian Wesley's &ldquo;Harewood&rdquo; is plainer and of
+less compass, but Zundel's &ldquo;Brooklyn&rdquo; is more
+than its rival, both in melody and vivacity.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>OH LORD OF HOSTS WHOSE GLORY FILLS
+THE BOUNDS OF THE ETERNAL HILLS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p class="runon">A hymn of Dr. John Mason Neale&mdash;</p>
+
+<a id="png:548" name="png:548"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">548 /</span> 486</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Endue the creatures with Thy grace</div>
+<div>That shall adorn Thy dwelling-place</div>
+<div>The beauty of the oak and pine,</div>
+<div>The gold and silver, make them Thine.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>The heads that guide endue with skill,</div>
+<div>The hands that work preserve from ill,</div>
+<div>That we who these foundations lay</div>
+<div>May raise the top-stone in its day.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Welton,&rdquo; by Rev. Caesar Malan&mdash;author of
+&ldquo;Hendon,&rdquo; once familiar to American singers.</p>
+
+<p>Henri Abraham C&aelig;sar Malan was born at Geneva,
+Switzerland, 1787, and educated at Geneva
+College. Ordained to the ministry of the State
+church, (Reformed,) he was dismissed for preaching
+against its formalism and spiritual apathy; but
+he built a chapel of his own, and became a leader
+with D'Aubigne, Monod, and others in reviving
+the purity of the Evangelical faith and laboring for
+the conversion of souls.</p>
+
+<p>Malan wrote many hymns, and published a large
+collection, the &ldquo;<i>Chants de Sion</i>,&rdquo; for the Evangelical
+Society and the French Reformed Church.
+He composed the music of his own hymns. Died
+at Vandosurre, 1864.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>DAUGHTER OF ZION, FROM THE DUST.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Cases may occur where an <em>exhortation</em> hymn
+earns a place with dedication hymns.</p>
+
+<a id="png:549" name="png:549"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">549 /</span> 487</samp>
+
+<p>The charred fragment of a hymn-book leaf
+hangs in a frame on the auditorium wall of the
+&ldquo;New England Church,&rdquo; Chicago. The former
+edifice of that church, all the homes of its resident
+members, and all their business offices except one,
+were destroyed in the great fire. In the ruins of
+their sanctuary the only scrap of paper found on
+which there was a legible word was this bit of a
+hymn-book leaf with the two first stanzas of Montgomery's
+hymn,</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Daughter of Zion, from the dust,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Exalt thy fallen head;</div>
+<div>Again in thy Redeemer trust,</div>
+<div class="i1"> He calls thee from the dead.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Awake, awake! put on thy strength,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Thy beautiful array;</div>
+<div>The day of freedom dawns at length,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The Lord's appointed day.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">The third verse was not long in coming to every
+mind&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="quote">
+Rebuild thy walls! thy bounds enlarge!
+</p>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and even without that added word the impoverished
+congregation evidently enough had received
+a message from heaven. They took heart of grace,
+overcame all difficulties, and in good time replaced
+their ruined Sabbath-home with the noble house
+in which they worship today.<sup>*</sup></p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+The story is told by Rev. William E. Barton D.D. of Oak Park, Ill.</p></div>
+
+<p>If the &ldquo;New England Church&rdquo; of Chicago did
+not sing this hymn at the dedication of their new
+<a id="png:550" name="png:550"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">550 /</span> 488</samp>
+temple it was for some other reason than lack of
+gratitude&mdash;not to say reverence.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h3 class="subhead">THE SABBATH.</h3>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p>The very essence of all song-worship pitched on
+this key-note is the ringing hymn of Watts&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Sweet is the day of sacred rest,</div>
+<div>No mortal cares disturb my breast, etc.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;but it has vanished from the hymnals with its tune.
+Is it because profane people or thoughtless youth
+made a travesty of the two next lines&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O may my heart in tune be found</div>
+<div>Like David's harp of solemn sound?</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Old &ldquo;Portland&rdquo; by Abraham Maxim, a fugue
+tune in F major of the canon style, expressed all
+the joy that a choir could put into music, though
+with more sound than skill. The choral is a relic
+among relics now, but it is a favorite one.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sweet is the Light of Sabbath Eve&rdquo; by Edmeston;
+Stennett's &ldquo;Another Six Days' Work is Done,&rdquo;
+sung to &ldquo;Spohr,&rdquo; the joint tune of Louis Spohr and
+J.E. Gould; and Doddridge's &ldquo;Thine Earthly Sabbath,
+Lord, We Love&rdquo; retain a feeble hold among
+some congregations. And Hayward's &ldquo;Welcome
+Delightful Morn,&rdquo; to the impossible tune of
+<a id="png:551" name="png:551"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">551 /</span> 489</samp>
+&ldquo;Lischer,&rdquo; survived unaccountably long in spite of its
+handicap. But special Sabbath hymns are out of
+fashion, those classed under that title taking an incidental
+place under the general head of &ldquo;Worship.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h3 class="subhead">COMMUNION.</h3>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>BREAD OF HEAVEN, ON THEE WE FEED.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn of Josiah Conder, copying the physical
+metaphors of the 6th of John, is still occasionally
+used at the Lord's Supper.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Vine of Heaven, Thy blood supplies</div>
+<div>This blest cup of sacrifice,</div>
+<div>Lord, Thy wounds our healing give,</div>
+<div>To Thy Cross we look and live.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The hymn is notable for the felicity with which
+it combines imagery and reality. Figure and fact
+are always in sight of each other.</p>
+
+<p>Josiah Conder was born in London, September
+17, 1789. He edited the <i>Eclectic Review</i>, and was
+the author of numerous prose works on historic
+and religious subjects. Rev. Garrett Horder says
+that more of his hymns are in common use now
+than those of any other except Watts and Doddridge.
+More <em>in proportion to the relative number</em>
+may be nearer the truth. In his lifetime Conder
+wrote about sixty hymns. He died Dec. 27, 1855.</p>
+
+<a id="png:552" name="png:552"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">552 /</span> 490</samp>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The tune &ldquo;Corsica&rdquo; sometimes sung to the
+words, though written by the famous Von Gluck,
+shows no sign of the genius of its author. Born at
+Weissenwang, near New Markt, Prussia, July 2,
+1714, he spent his life in the service of operatic
+art, and is called &ldquo;the father of the lyric drama,&rdquo;
+but he paid little attention to sacred music. Queen
+Marie Antoinette was for a while his pupil. Died
+Nov. 25, 1787.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Wilmot,&rdquo; (from Von Weber) one of Mason's
+popular hymn-tune arrangements, is a melody with
+which the hymn is well acquainted. It has a fireside
+rhythm which old and young of the same
+circles take up naturally in song.</p>
+
+<a id="png:557" name="png:557"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">557 /</span> opp 494</samp>
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of Carl von Weber">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus23" name="Illus23"
+ ><img src="images/illus23-carlvonweber-cameo.jpg" alt=
+ "Carl von Weber" width="205" height="287" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>Carl von Weber</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>HERE, O MY LORD, I SEE THEE FACE TO FACE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Written in October, 1855, by Dr. Horatius Bonar.
+James Bonar, brother of the poet-preacher, just
+after the communion for that month, asked him to
+furnish a hymn for the communion record. It was
+the church custom to print a memorandum of each
+service at the Lord's table, with an appropriate
+hymn attached, and an original one would be thrice
+welcome. Horatius in a day or two sent this
+hymn:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Here, O my Lord, I see Thee face to face,</div>
+<div>Here would I touch and handle things unseen</div>
+<div>Here grasp with firmer hand th' eternal grace</div>
+<div>And all my weariness upon Thee lean.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:553" name="png:553"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">553 /</span> 491</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Too soon we rise; the symbols disappear;</div>
+<div>The feast, though not the love, is past and gone;</div>
+<div>The bread and wine remove, but Thou art here</div>
+<div>Nearer than ever&mdash;still my Shield and Sun.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Morecambe&rdquo; is an anonymous composition
+printed with the words by the <i>Plymouth Hymnal</i>
+editors. &ldquo;Berlin&rdquo; by Mendelssohn is better. The
+metre of Bonar's hymn is unusual, and melodies to
+fit it are not numerous, but for a meditative service
+it is worth a tune of its own.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>O THOU MY SOUL, FORGET NO MORE.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The author of this hymn found in the Baptist
+hymnals, and often sung at the sacramental seasons
+of that denomination, was the first Hindoo convert
+to Christianity.</p>
+
+<p>Krishna Pal, a native carpenter, in consequence
+of an accident, came under the care of Mr. Thomas,
+a missionary who had been a surgeon in the East
+Indies and was now an associate worker with
+William Carey. Mr. Thomas set the man's broken
+arm, and talked of Jesus to him and the surrounding
+crowd with so much tact and loving kindness
+that Krishna Pal was touched. He became a pupil
+of the missionaries; embraced Christ, and influenced
+his wife and daughter and his brother to
+accept his new faith.</p>
+
+<a id="png:554" name="png:554"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">554 /</span> 492</samp>
+
+<p>He alone, however, dared the bitter persecution
+of his caste, and presented himself for church-membership.
+He and Carey's son were baptized
+in the Ganges by Dr. Carey, Dec. 28, 1800, in the
+presence of the English Governor and an immense
+concourse of people representing four or five different
+religions.</p>
+
+<p>Krishna Pal wrote several hymns. The one here
+noted was translated from the Bengalee by Dr.
+Marshman.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O thou, my soul, forget no more</div>
+<div>The Friend who all thy sorrows bore;</div>
+<div>Let every idol be forgot;</div>
+<div>But, O my soul, forget him not.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Renounce thy works and ways, with grief,</div>
+<div>And fly to this divine relief;</div>
+<div>Nor Him forget, who left His throne,</div>
+<div>And for thy life gave up His own.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Eternal truth and mercy shine</div>
+<div>In Him, and He Himself is thine:</div>
+<div>And canst thou then, with sin beset,</div>
+<div>Such charms, such matchless charms forget?</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Oh, no; till life itself depart,</div>
+<div>His name shall cheer and warm my heart;</div>
+<div>And lisping this, from earth I'll rise,</div>
+<div>And join the chorus of the skies.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>There is no scarcity of good long-metre tunes to
+suit the sentiment of this hymn. More commonly
+in the Baptist manuals its vocal mate is Bradbury's
+<a id="png:555" name="png:555"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">555 /</span> 493</samp>
+&ldquo;Rolland&rdquo; or the sweet and serious Scotch
+melody of &ldquo;Ward,&rdquo; arranged by Mason. Best of
+all is &ldquo;Hursley,&rdquo; the beautiful Ritter-Monk
+choral set to &ldquo;Sun of My Soul.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h3 class="subhead">NEW YEAR.</h3>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<p>Two representative hymns of this class are John
+Newton's&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>While with ceaseless course the sun,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and Charles Wesley's&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>Come let us anew our journey pursue;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">the one a voice at the next year's threshold, the
+other a song at the open door.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>While with ceaseless course the sun</div>
+<div>Hasted thro' the former year</div>
+<div>Many souls their race have run</div>
+<div>Nevermore to meet us here.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>As the winged arrow flies</div>
+<div>Speedily the mark to find,</div>
+<div>As the lightening from the skies</div>
+<div>Darts and leaves no trace behind,</div>
+<div>Swiftly thus our fleeting days</div>
+<div>Bear we down life's rapid stream,</div>
+<div>Upward, Lord, our spirits raise;</div>
+<div>All below is but a dream.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>A grave occasion, whether unexpected or periodical,
+will force reflection, and so will a grave
+<a id="png:556" name="png:556"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">556 /</span> 494</samp>
+truth; and when both present themselves at once,
+the truth needs only commonplace statement. If
+the statement is in rhyme and measure more attention
+is secured. Add a <em>tune</em> to it, and the most
+frivolous will take notice. Newton's hymn sung
+on the last evening of the year has its opportunity&mdash;and
+never fails to produce a solemn effect; but
+it is to the immortal music given to it in Samuel
+Webbe's &ldquo;Benevento&rdquo; that it owes its unique and
+permanent place. Dykes' &ldquo;St. Edmund&rdquo; may be
+sung in England, but in America it will never replace
+Webbe's simple and wonderfully impressive
+choral.</p>
+
+<p>Charles Wesley's hymn is the antipode of Newton's
+in metre and movement.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Come, let us anew our journey pursue,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Roll round with the year</div>
+<div>And never stand still till the Master appear.</div>
+<div>His adorable will let us gladly fulfil</div>
+<div class="i1"> And our talents improve</div>
+<div>By the patience of hope and the labor of love.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Our life is a dream, our time as a stream</div>
+<div class="i1"> Glides swiftly away,</div>
+<div>And the fugitive moment refuses to stay.</div>
+<div>The arrow is flown, the moment is gone,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The millennial year,</div>
+<div>Rushes on to our view, and eternity's near.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p title="Illustration of Carl von Weber originally opposite">One could
+scarcely imagine a greater contrast
+than between this hymn and Newton's. In spite
+of its eccentric metre one cannot dismiss it as
+rhythmical jingle, for it is really a sermon shaped
+into a popular canticle, and the surmise is not a
+<a id="png:559" name="png:559"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">559 /</span> 495</samp>
+difficult one that he had in mind a secular air that
+was familiar to the crowd. But the hymn is not
+one of Wesley's <em>poems</em>. Compilers who object to
+its lilting measure omit it from their books, but it
+holds its place in public use, for it carries weighty
+thoughts in swift sentences.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O that each in the Day of His coming may say,</div>
+<div class="i1"> &ldquo;I have fought my way through,</div>
+<div>I have finished the work Thou didst give me to do.&rdquo;</div>
+<div>O that each from the Lord may receive the glad word,</div>
+<div class="i1"> &ldquo;Well and faithfully done,</div>
+<div>Enter into my joy, and sit down on my throne.&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>For a hundred and fifty years this has been sung
+in the Methodist watch-meetings, and it will be
+long before it ceases to be sung&mdash;and reprinted in
+Methodist, and some Baptist hymnals.</p>
+
+<p>The tune of &ldquo;Lucas,&rdquo; named after James Lucas,
+its composer, is the favorite vehicle of song for
+the &ldquo;Watch-hymn.&rdquo; Like the tune to &ldquo;O How
+Happy Are They,&rdquo; it has the movement of the words
+and the emphasis of their meaning.</p>
+
+<p>No knowledge of James Lucas is at hand except
+that he lived in England, where one brief reference
+gives his birth-date as 1762 and &ldquo;about 1805&rdquo; as
+the birth-date of the tune.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>GREAT GOD, WE SING THAT MIGHTY HAND.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The admirable hymn of Dr. Doddridge may be
+noted in this division with its equally admirable
+<a id="png:560" name="png:560"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">560 /</span> 496</samp>
+tune of &ldquo;Melancthon,&rdquo; one of the old Lutheran
+chorals of Germany.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Great God, we sing that mighty hand</div>
+<div>By which supported still we stand.</div>
+<div>The opening year Thy mercy shows;</div>
+<div>Thy mercy crown it till its close!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>By day, by night, at home, abroad,</div>
+<div>Still we are guarded by our God.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>As this last couplet stood&mdash;and ought now to
+stand&mdash;pious parents teaching the hymn to their
+children heard them repeat&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>By day, by night, at home, abroad,</div>
+<div><em>We are surrounded still with God</em>.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Many are now living whose first impressive
+sense of the Divine Omnipresence came with that
+line.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h3 class="subhead">PARTING.</h3>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>GOD BE WITH YOU TILL WE MEET AGAIN.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>A lyric of benediction, born, apparently, at the
+divine moment for the need of the great &ldquo;Society
+of Christian Endeavor,&rdquo; and now adopted into the
+Christian song-service of all lands. The author,
+Rev. Jeremiah Eames Rankin, D.D., LL.D., was
+born in Thornton, N.H., Jan. 2, 1828. He was
+graduated at Middlebury College, Vt., in 1848,
+and labored as a Congregational pastor more
+<a id="png:561" name="png:561"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">561 /</span> 497</samp>
+than thirty years. For thirteen years he was
+President of Howard University, Washington,
+D.C. Besides the &ldquo;Parting Hymn&rdquo; he wrote <i>The
+Auld Scotch Mither</i>, <i>Ingleside Rhymes</i>, <i>Hymns
+pro Patria</i>, and various practical works and religious
+essays. Died 1904.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>As in a thousand other partnerships of hymnist
+and musician, Dr. Rankin was fortunate in his
+composer. The tune is a symphony of hearts&mdash;subdued
+at first, but breaking into a chorus strong
+with the uplift of hope. It is a farewell with a
+spiritual thrill in it.</p>
+
+<p>Its author, William Gould Tomer, was born in
+Finesville, Warren Co., N.J., October 5, 1832;
+died in Phillipsburg, N.J., Sept. 26, 1896. He was
+a soldier in the Civil War and a writer of good
+ability as well as a composer. For some time he
+was editor of the <i>High Bridge Gazette</i>, and music
+with him was an avocation rather than a profession.
+He wrote the melody to Dr. Rankin's
+hymn in 1880, Prof. J.W. Bischoff supplying the
+harmony, and the tune was first published in
+<i>Gospel Bells</i> the same year.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h3 class="subhead">FUNERALS.</h3>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<p>The style of singing at funerals, as well as the
+character of the hymns, has greatly changed&mdash;if,
+<a id="png:562" name="png:562"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">562 /</span> 498</samp>
+indeed, music continues to be a part of the service,
+as frequently, in ordinary cases, it is not. &ldquo;China&rdquo;
+with its comforting words&mdash;and terrifying chords&mdash;is
+forever obsolete, and not only that, but Dr.
+Muhlenberg's, &ldquo;I Would Not Live Alway,&rdquo; with its
+sadly sentimental tune of &ldquo;Frederick,&rdquo; has passed
+out of common use. Anna Steele's &ldquo;So Fades the
+Lovely, Blooming Flower,&rdquo; on the death of a child,
+is occasionally heard, and now and then Dr. S.F.
+Smith's, &ldquo;Sister, Thou Wast Mild and Lovely,&rdquo;
+(with its gentle air of &ldquo;Mt. Vernon,&rdquo;) on the death
+of a young lady. Standard hymns like Watts',
+&ldquo;Unveil Thy Bosom, Faithful Tomb,&rdquo; to the slow,
+tender melody of the &ldquo;Dead March,&rdquo; (from Handel's
+oratorio of &ldquo;Saul&rdquo;) and Montgomery's
+&ldquo;Servant of God, Well Done,&rdquo; to &ldquo;Olmutz,&rdquo; or
+Woodbury's &ldquo;Forever with the Lord,&rdquo; still retain
+their prestige, the music of the former being
+played on steeple-chimes on some burial occasions
+in cities, during the procession&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Nor pain nor grief nor anxious fear</div>
+<div class="i1"> Invade thy bounds; no mortal woes</div>
+<div>Can reach the peaceful sleeper here</div>
+<div class="i1"> While angels watch the soft repose.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><a id="Servant2" name="Servant2">The latter hymn</a>
+(Montgomery's) is biographical&mdash;as
+described on <a href="#Servant1">page 301</a>&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Servant of God, well done;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Rest from thy loved employ;</div>
+<div>The battle fought, the victory won,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Enter thy Master's joy.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:563" name="png:563"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">563 /</span> 499</samp>
+
+<p>Only five stanzas of this long poem are now in
+use.</p>
+
+<p>The exquisite elegy of Montgomery, entitled
+&ldquo;The Grave,&rdquo;&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>There is a calm for those who weep,</div>
+<div class="i1"> A rest for weary mortals found</div>
+<div>They softly lie and sweetly sleep</div>
+<div class="i1"> Low in the ground.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;is by no means discontinued on funeral occasions,
+nor Margaret Mackay's beloved hymn,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Asleep in Jesus, blessed sleep,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;melodized in Bradbury's &ldquo;Rest.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Margaret Mackay was born in 1801, the
+daughter of Capt. Robert Mackay of Hedgefield,
+Inverness, and wife of a major of the same name.
+She was the author of several prose works and
+<i>Lays of Leisure Hours</i>, containing seventy-two
+original hymns and poems, of which &ldquo;Asleep in
+Jesus&rdquo; is one. She died in 1887.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>MY JESUS, AS THOU WILT.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<h4 class="quote">(<i>Mein Jesu, wie du willst</i>.)</h4>
+
+
+<p>This sweet hymn for mourners, known to us
+here in Jane Borthwick's translation, was written
+by Benjamin Schmolke (or Schmolk) late in the
+17th century. He was born at Brauchitzchdorf,
+in Silesia, Dec. 21, 1672, and received his education
+at the Labau Gymnasium and Leipsic University.
+A sermon preached while a youth, for his
+<a id="png:564" name="png:564"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">564 /</span> 500</samp>
+father, a Lutheran pastor, showed such remarkable
+promise that a wealthy man paid the expenses
+of his education for the ministry. He was ordained
+and settled as pastor of the Free Church at
+Schweidnitz, Silesia, in which charge he continued
+from 1701 till his death.</p>
+
+<p>Schmolke was the most popular hymn-writer of
+his time, author of some nine hundred church
+pieces, besides many for special occasions. Withal
+he was a man of exalted piety and a pastor of rare
+wisdom and influence.</p>
+
+<p>His death, of paralysis, occurred on the anniversary
+of his wedding, Feb. 12, 1737.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>My Jesus, as Thou wilt,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Oh may Thy will be mine!</div>
+<div>Into Thy hand of love</div>
+<div class="i1"> I would my all resign.</div>
+<div>Thro' sorrow or thro' joy</div>
+<div class="i1"> Conduct me as Thine own,</div>
+<div>And help me still to say,</div>
+<div class="i1"> My Lord, Thy will be done.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The last line is the refrain of the hymn of four
+eight-line stanzas.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Sussex,&rdquo; by Joseph Barnby, a plain-song with
+a fine harmony, is good congregational music for
+the hymn.</p>
+
+<p>But &ldquo;Jewett,&rdquo; one of Carl Maria Von Weber's
+exquisite flights of song, is like no other in its
+intimate interpretation of the prayerful words.
+<a id="png:565" name="png:565"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">565 /</span> 501</samp>
+We hear Luther's &ldquo;bird in the heart&rdquo; singing
+softly in every inflection of the tender melody as it
+glides on. The tune, arranged by Joseph Holbrook,
+is from an opera&mdash;the overture to Weber's
+Der <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Freischütz'">Freischutz</ins>&mdash;but one feels that the gentle
+musician when he wrote it must have caught an
+inspiration of divine trust and peace. The wish
+among the last words he uttered when dying in
+London of slow disease was, &ldquo;Let me go back
+to my own (home), and then God's will be done.&rdquo;
+That wish and the sentiment of Schmolke's hymn
+belong to each other, for they end in the same
+way.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>My Jesus, as Thou wilt:</div>
+<div class="i1"> All shall be well for me;</div>
+<div>Each changing future scene</div>
+<div class="i1"> I gladly trust with Thee.</div>
+<div>Straight to my home above</div>
+<div class="i1"> I travel calmly on,</div>
+<div>And sing in life or death</div>
+<div class="i1"> My Lord, Thy will be done.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>I CANNOT ALWAYS TRACE THE WAY.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>In later years, when funeral music is desired,
+the employment of a male quartette has become a
+favorite custom. Of the selections sung in this
+manner few are more suitable or more generally
+welcomed than the tender and trustful hymn of
+Sir John Bowring, rendered sometimes in Dr.
+Dykes' &ldquo;Almsgiving,&rdquo; but better in the less-known
+but more flexible tune composed by Howard M.
+Dow&mdash;</p>
+<a id="png:566" name="png:566"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">566 /</span> 502</samp>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>I cannot always trace the way</div>
+<div class="i1"> Where Thou, Almighty One, dost move,</div>
+<div>But I can always, always say</div>
+<div class="i1"> That God is love.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>When fear her chilling mantle flings</div>
+<div class="i1"> O'er earth, my soul to heaven above</div>
+<div>As to her native home upsprings,</div>
+<div class="i1"> For God is love.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>When mystery clouds my darkened path,</div>
+<div class="i1"> I'll check my dread, my doubts reprove;</div>
+<div>In this my soul sweet comfort hath</div>
+<div class="i1"> That God is love.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Yes, God is love. A thought like this</div>
+<div class="i1"> Can every gloomy thought remove,</div>
+<div>And turn all tears, all woes to bliss</div>
+<div class="i1"> For God is love.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The first line of the hymn was originally, &ldquo;'Tis
+seldom I can trace the way.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Howard M. Dow has been many years a resident
+of Boston, and organist of the Grand Lodge of
+Freemasons at the Tremont St. (Masonic) Temple.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h3 class="subhead">WEDDING.</h3>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p>Time was when hymns were sung at weddings,
+though in America the practice was never universal.
+Marriage, among Protestants, is not one
+of the sacraments, and no masses are chanted for
+it by ecclesiastical ordinance. The question of
+music at private marriages depends on convenience,
+<a id="png:567" name="png:567"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">567 /</span> 503</samp>
+vocal or instrumental equipment, and the
+general drift of the occasion. At public weddings
+the organ's duty is the &ldquo;Wedding March.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>To revive a fashion of singing at home marriages
+would be considered an oddity&mdash;and, where civil
+marriages are legal, a superfluity&mdash;but in the
+religious ceremony, just after the prayer that
+follows the completion of the nuptial formula, it
+will occur to some that a hymn would &ldquo;tide over&rdquo;
+a proverbially awkward moment. Even good,
+quaint old John Berridge's lines would happily
+relieve the embarrassment&mdash;besides reminding the
+more thoughtless that a wedding is not a mere
+piece of social fun&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Since Jesus truly did appear</div>
+<div class="i1"> To grace a marriage feast</div>
+<div>O Lord, we ask Thy presence here</div>
+<div class="i1"> To make a wedding guest.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Upon the bridal pair look down</div>
+<div class="i1"> Who now have plighted hands;</div>
+<div>Their union with Thy favor crown</div>
+<div class="i1"> And bless the nuptial bands</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>In purest love these souls unite</div>
+<div class="i1"> That they with Christian care</div>
+<div>May make domestic burdens light</div>
+<div class="i1"> By taking each a share.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Tune, &ldquo;Lanesboro,&rdquo; Mason.</p>
+
+<p>A wedding hymn of more poetic beauty is the
+one written by Miss Dorothy Bloomfield (now Mrs.
+Gurney), born 1858, for her sister's marriage in
+1883.</p>
+
+<a id="png:568" name="png:568"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">568 /</span> 504</samp>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O perfect Love, all human thought transcending,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Lowly we kneel in prayer before Thy throne</div>
+<div>That their's may be a love which knows no ending</div>
+<div class="i1"> Whom Thou forevermore dost join in one.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>O perfect Life, be Thou their first assurance</div>
+<div class="i1"> Of tender charity and steadfast faith,</div>
+<div>Of patient hope and quiet, brave endurance,</div>
+<div class="i1"> With childlike trust that fears nor pain nor death.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Grant them the joy which brightens earthly sorrow,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Grant them the peace which calms all earthly strife,</div>
+<div>And to their day the glorious unknown morrow</div>
+<div class="i1"> That dawns upon eternal love and life.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Tune by Joseph Barnby, &ldquo;O Perfect Love.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h3 class="subhead">FRUITION DAY.</h3>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>LO! HE COMES WITH CLOUDS DESCENDING.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Thomas Olivers begins one of his hymns with
+this line. The hymn is a Judgment-day lyric of
+rude strength and once in current use, but now
+rarely printed. The &ldquo;Lo He Comes,&rdquo; here specially
+noted, is the production of John Cennick, the
+Moravian.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Lo! He comes with clouds descending</div>
+<div class="i1"> Once for favored sinners slain,</div>
+<div>Thousand thousand saints attending</div>
+<div class="i1"> Swell the triumph of His train.</div>
+<div class="i2"> Hallelujah!</div>
+<div>God appears on earth to reign.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:569" name="png:569"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">569 /</span> 505</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Yea, amen; let all adore Thee</div>
+<div class="i1"> High on Thy eternal throne.</div>
+<div>Saviour, take the power and glory,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Claim the kingdom for thine own;</div>
+<div class="i2"> O come quickly;</div>
+<div>Hallelujah! Come, Lord, come.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNES.</h4>
+
+<p>Various composers have written music to this
+universal hymn, but none has given it a choral
+that it can claim as peculiarly its own. &ldquo;Brest,&rdquo;
+Lowell Mason's plain-song, has a limited range,
+and runs low on the staff, but its solemn chords are
+musical and commanding. As much can be said
+of the tunes of Dr. Dykes and Samuel Webbe,
+which have more variety. Those who feel that the
+hymn calls for a more ornate melody will prefer
+Madan's &ldquo;Helmsley.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>LO! WHAT A GLORIOUS SIGHT APPEARS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+<p>The great Southampton bard who wrote
+&ldquo;Sweet fields beyond the swelling flood&rdquo; was
+quick to kindle at every reminder of Fruition Day.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Lo! what a glorious sight appears</div>
+<div class="i1"> To our believing eyes!</div>
+<div>The earth and seas are passed away,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And the old rolling skies.</div>
+<div>From the third heaven, where God resides,</div>
+<div class="i1"> That holy, happy place,</div>
+<div>The New Jerusalem comes down,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Adorned with shining grace.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:570" name="png:570"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">570 /</span> 506</samp>
+<p>This hymn of Watts' sings one of his most exalted
+visions. It has been dear for two hundred years
+to every Christian soul throbbing with millennial
+thoughts and wishful of the day when&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The God of glory down to men</div>
+<div class="i1"> Removes His best abode,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and when&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>His own kind hand shall wipe the tears</div>
+<div class="i1"> From every weeping eye,</div>
+<div>And pains and groans, and griefs and fears,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And death itself shall die,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and the yearning cry of the last stanza, when the
+vision fades, has been the household ?<sup>&dagger;</sup> of myriads of
+burdened and sorrowing saints&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>How long, dear Saviour, O how long</div>
+<div class="i1"> Shall this bright hour delay?</div>
+<div>Fly swifter round ye wheels of Time,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And bring the welcome day!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>&dagger;
+Transcriber's note: This question mark is in the original.
+It is possibly a compositor's query which the author missed
+when correcting the proofs. The missing text could be
+&lsquo;word&rsquo;.</p></div>
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNES.</h4>
+
+<p>By right of long appropriation both &ldquo;Northfield&rdquo;
+and &ldquo;New Jerusalem&rdquo; own a near relationship
+to these glorious verses. Ingalls, one of the
+constellation of early Puritan psalmodists, to which
+Billings and Swan belonged, evidently loved the
+hymn, and composed his &ldquo;New Jerusalem&rdquo; to the
+verse, &ldquo;From the third heaven,&rdquo; and his &ldquo;Northfield&rdquo;
+to &ldquo;How long, dear Saviour.&rdquo; The former
+is now sung only as a reminiscence of the music of
+the past, at church festivals, charity fairs and
+<a id="png:571" name="png:571"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">571 /</span> 507</samp>
+entertainments of similar design, but the action and
+hearty joy in it always evoke sympathetic
+applause. &ldquo;Northfield&rdquo; is still in occasional
+use, and it is a jewel of melody, however irretrievably
+out of fashion. Its union to that immortal
+stanza, if no other reason, seems likely to
+insure its permanent place in the lists of sacred
+song.</p>
+
+<p>John Cole's &ldquo;Annapolis,&rdquo; still found in a few
+hymnals with these words, is a little too late to be
+called a contemporary piece, but there are some
+reminders of <ins class="transcriber" title=
+ "Transcriber's note: original lacks apostrophe">Ingalls'</ins>
+&ldquo;New Jerusalem&rdquo; in its style
+and vigor, and it really partakes the flavor of the
+old New England church music.</p>
+
+<p>Jeremiah Ingalls was born in Andover, Mass.,
+<ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'March.'">March</ins>
+1, 1764. A natural fondness for music increased
+with his years, but opportunities to educate
+it were few and far between, and he seemed like
+to become no more than a fairly good bass-viol
+player in the village choir. But his determination
+carried him higher, and in time his self-taught
+talent qualified him for a singing-school master,
+and for many years he travelled through Massachusetts,
+New Hampshire and Vermont, training
+the raw vocal material in the country towns, and
+organizing choirs.</p>
+
+<p>Between his thirtieth and fortieth years, he composed
+a number of tunes, and, in 1804 published
+a two hundred page collection of his own and
+others' music, which he called the <i>Christian
+Harmony</i>.</p>
+
+<a id="png:572" name="png:572"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">572 /</span> 508</samp>
+<p>His home was for some time in Newberry, Vt.,
+but he subsequently lived at Rochester and at
+Hancock in the same state.</p>
+
+<p>Among the traditions of him is this anecdote of
+the origin of his famous tune &ldquo;Northfield,&rdquo; which
+may indicate something of his temper and religious
+habit. During his travels as a singing-school
+teacher he stopped at a tavern in the town of
+Northfield and ordered his dinner. It was very
+slow in coming, but the inevitable &ldquo;how long?&rdquo;
+that formulated itself in his hungry thoughts, instead
+of sharpening into profane complaint, fell into
+the rhythm of Watts' sacred line&mdash;and the tune
+came with it. To call it &ldquo;Northfield&rdquo; was natural
+enough; the place where its melody first beguiled
+him from his bodily wants to a dream of the final
+Fruition Day.</p>
+
+<p>Ingalls died in Hancock, Vt., April 6, 1828.</p>
+
+<a id="png:573" name="png:573"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">573 /</span> 509</samp>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="chap">CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<h1>HYMNS OF HOPE AND CONSOLATION.</h1>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>JERUSALEM THE GOLDEN.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<h4 class="quote"><i>Urbs Sion Aurea</i>.</h4>
+
+
+<p>&ldquo;The Seven Great Hymns&rdquo; of the Latin Church
+are:</p>
+
+<ul class="quote">
+<li>Laus Patriae Coelestis,&mdash;(Praise of the Heavenly Country).</li>
+<li>Veni, Sancte Spiritus,&mdash;(Come, Holy Spirit)</li>
+<li>Veni, Creator Spiritus,&mdash;(Come, Creator Spirit)</li>
+<li>Dies Irae,&mdash;(The Day of Wrath)</li>
+<li>Stabat Mater,&mdash;(The Mother Stood By)</li>
+<li>Mater Speciosa,&mdash;(The Fair Mother.)</li>
+<li>Vexilla Regis.&mdash;(The Banner of the King.)</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p>Chief of these is the first named, though that is
+but part of a religious poem of three thousand lines,
+which the author, Bernard of Cluny, named &ldquo;De
+Contemptu Mundi&rdquo; (Concerning Disdain of the
+World.)</p>
+
+<p>Bernard was of English parentage, though born
+at Morlaix, a seaport town in the north of France.
+<a id="png:574" name="png:574"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">574 /</span> 510</samp>
+The exact date of his birth is unknown, though it
+was probably about A.D. 1100. He is called Bernard
+of Cluny because he lived and wrote at that
+place, a French town on the Grone where he was
+abbot of a famous monastery, and also to distinguish
+him from Bernard of Clairvaux.</p>
+
+<p>His great poem is rarely spoken of as a whole,
+but in three portions, as if each were a complete
+work. The first is the long exordium, exhausting
+the pessimistic title (contempt of the world), and
+passing on to the second, where begins the real
+&ldquo;Laus Patriae Coelestis.&rdquo; This being cut in two,
+making a third portion, has enriched the Christian
+world with two of its best hymns, &ldquo;For Thee, O
+Dear, Dear Country,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Jerusalem the Golden.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Bernard wrote the medieval or church Latin in
+its prime of literary refinement, and its accent is so
+obvious and its rhythm so musical that even one
+ignorant of the language could pronounce it, and
+catch its rhymes. The &ldquo;Contemptu Mundi&rdquo; begins
+with these two lines, in a hexameter impossible
+to copy in translation:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn wide">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Hora novissima; tempora pessima sunt; Vigilemus!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Ecce minaciter imminet Arbiter, Ille Supremus!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>'Tis the last hour; the times are at their worst;</div>
+<div class="i1"> Watch; lo the Judge Supreme stands threat'ning nigh!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">Or, as Dr. Neale paraphrases and softens it,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>The World is very evil,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The times are waxing late,</div>
+<div>Be sober and keep vigil,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The Judge is at the gate,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:575" name="png:575"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">575 /</span> 511</samp>
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and, after the poet's long, dark diorama of the
+world's wicked condition, follows the &ldquo;Praise of the
+Heavenly Fatherland,&rdquo; when a tender glory dawns
+upon the scene till it breaks into sunrise with the
+vision of the Golden City. All that an opulent and
+devout imagination can picture of the beauty and
+bounty of heaven, and all that faith can construct
+from the glimpses in the Revelation of its glory
+and happiness is poured forth in the lavish poetry
+of the inspired monk of Cluny&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<div class="hymn wide">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Urbs Sion aurea, patria lactea, cive decora,</div>
+<div>Omne cor obruis, omnibus obstruis, et cor et ora.</div>
+<div>Nescio, nescio quae jubilatio lux tibi qualis,</div>
+<div>Quam socialia gaudia, gloria quam specialis.</div>
+</div></div>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Jerusalem, the golden;</div>
+<div class="i1"> With milk and honey blest;</div>
+<div>Beneath thy contemplation</div>
+<div class="i1"> Sink heart and voice opprest.</div>
+<div>I know not, O I know not</div>
+<div class="i1"> What joys await us there,</div>
+<div>With radiancy of glory,</div>
+<div class="i1"> With bliss beyond compare.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div> They stand, those halls of Zion,</div>
+<div class="i1"> All jubilant with song,<sup>*</sup></div>
+<div> And bright with many an angel;</div>
+<div class="i1"> And all the martyr throng.</div>
+<div> The Prince is ever in them,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The daylight is serene;</div>
+<div> The pastures of the blessed</div>
+<div class="i1"> Are decked in glorious sheen.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<a id="png:576" name="png:576"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">576 /</span> 512</samp>
+<div>O sweet and blessed country,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The home of God's elect!</div>
+<div>O sweet and blessed country,</div>
+<div class="i1"> That eager hearts expect!</div>
+<div>Jesu, in mercy bring us</div>
+<div class="i1"> To that dear land of rest,</div>
+<div>Who art, with God the Father,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And Spirit, ever blest.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+In first editions, &ldquo;<em>conjubilant</em> with song.&rdquo;</p></div>
+
+<p>Dr. John Mason Neale, the translator, was
+obliged to condense Bernard's exuberant verse,
+and he has done so with unsurpassable grace and
+melody. He made his translation while &ldquo;inhibited&rdquo;
+from his priestly functions in the Church of
+England for his high ritualistic views and practice,
+and so poor that he wrote stories for children to
+earn his living. His poverty added to the wealth
+of Christendom.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The music of &ldquo;Jerusalem the Golden&rdquo; used in
+most churches is the composition of Alexander
+Ewing, a paymaster in the English army. He was
+born in Aberdeen, Scotland, Jan. 3d, 1830, and
+educated there at Marischal College. The tune
+bears his name, and this honor, and its general
+favor with the public, are so much testimony to its
+merit. It is a stately harmony in D major with
+sonorous and impressive chords. Ewing died in 1895.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WHY SHOULD WE START AND FEAR TO DIE?</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Probably it is an embarrassment of riches and
+despair of space that have crowded this hymn&mdash;
+<a id="png:577" name="png:577"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">577 /</span> 513</samp>
+perhaps the sweetest that Watts ever wrote&mdash;out of
+some of our church singing-books. It is pleasant
+to find it in the new <i>Methodist Hymnal</i>, though
+with an indifferent tune.</p>
+
+<p>Christians of today should surely sing the last
+two stanzas with the same exalted joy and hope
+that made them sacred to pious generations past
+and gone&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O if my Lord would come and meet,</div>
+<div class="i1"> My soul would stretch her wings in haste.</div>
+<div>Fly fearless through death's iron gate,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Nor feel the terrors as she passed.</div>
+<div>Jesus can make a dying bed</div>
+<div class="i1"> Feel soft as downy pillows are,</div>
+<div>While on His breast I lean my head</div>
+<div class="i1"> And breathe my life out sweetly there.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The plain-music of William Boyd's &ldquo;Pentecost,&rdquo;
+(with modulations in the tenor), creates a new
+accent for the familiar lines. Preferable in every
+sense are Bradbury's tender &ldquo;Zephyr&rdquo; or &ldquo;Rest.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>No coming generation will ever feel the pious
+gladness of Amariah Hall's &ldquo;All Saints New&rdquo; in
+E flat major as it stirred the Christian choirs of
+seventy five years ago. Fitted to this heart-felt
+lyric of Watts, it opened with the words&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+O if my Lord would come and meet,
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">in full harmony and four-four time, continuing to
+the end of the stanza. The melody, with its slurred
+syllables and beautiful modulations was almost
+<a id="png:578" name="png:578"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">578 /</span> 514</samp>
+blithe in its brightness, while the strong musical
+bass and the striking chords of the &ldquo;counter,&rdquo;
+chastened it and held the anthem to its due solemnity
+of tone and expression. Then the fugue took
+up&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+Jesus can make a dying bed,
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;bass, treble and tenor adding voice after voice in
+the manner of the old &ldquo;canon&rdquo; song, and the full
+harmony again carried the words, with loving
+repetitions, to the final bar. The music closed with
+a minor concord that was strangely effective and
+sweet.</p>
+
+<p>Amariah Hall was born in Raynham, Mass.,
+April 28, 1785, and died there Feb. 8, 1827. He
+&ldquo;farmed it,&rdquo; manufactured straw-bonnets, kept
+tavern and taught singing-school. Music was only
+an avocation with him, but he was an artist in his
+way, and among his compositions are found in
+some ancient Tune books his &ldquo;Morning Glory,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Canaan,&rdquo; &ldquo;Falmouth,&rdquo; &ldquo;Restoration,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Massachusetts,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Raynham,&rdquo; &ldquo;Crucifixion,&rdquo; &ldquo;Harmony,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Devotion,&rdquo; &ldquo;Zion,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Hosanna.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;All Saints New&rdquo; was his masterpiece.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WHEN I CAN READ MY TITLE CLEAR.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>No sacred song has been more profanely parodied
+by the thoughtless, or more travestied, (if we
+may use so strong a word), in popular religious
+airs, than this golden hymn which has made Isaac
+Watts a benefactor to every prisoner of hope. Not
+<a id="png:579" name="png:579"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">579 /</span> 515</samp>
+to mention the fancy figures and refrains of camp-meeting
+music, which have cheapened it, neither
+John Cole's &ldquo;Annapolis&rdquo; nor Arne's &ldquo;Arlington&rdquo;
+nor a dozen others that have borrowed these speaking
+lines, can wear out their association with &ldquo;Auld
+lang Syne.&rdquo; The hymn has permeated the tune,
+and, without forgetting its own words, the Scotch
+melody preforms both a social and religious mission.
+Some arrangements of it make it needlessly
+repetitious, but its pathos will always best vocalize
+the hymn, especially the first and last stanzas&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When I can read my title clear</div>
+<div class="i1"> To mansions in the skies</div>
+<div>I'll bid farewell to every fear</div>
+<div class="i1"> And wipe my weeping eyes.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>There shall I bathe my weary soul</div>
+<div class="i1"> In seas of heavenly rest,</div>
+<div>And not a wave of trouble roll</div>
+<div class="i1"> Across my peaceful breast.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>VITAL SPARK OF HEAVENLY FLAME.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This paraphrase, by Alexander Pope, of the
+Emperor Adrian's death-bed address to his soul&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Animula, vagula, blandula,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Hospes, comesque corporis,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;transfers the poetry and constructs a hymnic
+theme.</p>
+
+<p>An old hymn writer by the name of Flatman
+wrote a Pindaric, somewhat similar to &ldquo;Adrian's
+Address,&rdquo; as follows:</p>
+
+<a id="png:580" name="png:580"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">580 /</span> 516</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>When on my sick-bed I languish,</div>
+<div>Full of sorrow, full of anguish,</div>
+<div>Fainting, gasping, trembling, crying,</div>
+<div>Panting, groaning, speechless, dying;</div>
+<div>Methinks I hear some gentle spirit say,</div>
+<div>&ldquo;Be not fearful, come away.&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Pope combined these two poems with the words
+of Divine inspiration, &ldquo;O death, where is thy
+sting? O grave, where is thy victory?&rdquo; and made
+a pagan philosopher's question the text for a triumphant
+Christian anthem of hope.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Vital spark of heavenly flame,</div>
+<div>Quit, oh quit this mortal frame.</div>
+<div>Trembling, hoping, ling'ring, flying,</div>
+<div>Oh the pain, the bliss of dying!</div>
+<div>Cease, fond nature, cease thy strife,</div>
+<div>And let me languish into life.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Hark! they whisper: angels say,</div>
+<div>&ldquo;Sister spirit, come away!&rdquo;</div>
+<div>What is this absorbs me quite,</div>
+<div>Steals my senses, shuts my sight,</div>
+<div>Drowns my spirit, draws my breath,</div>
+<div>Tell me, my soul, can this be death?</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>The world recedes: it disappears:</div>
+<div>Heaven opens on my eyes; my ears</div>
+<div class="i1"> With sounds seraphic ring.</div>
+<div>Lend, lend your wings! I mount! I fly!</div>
+<div>O grave where is thy victory?</div>
+<div class="i1"> O death, where is thy sting?</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The old anthem, &ldquo;The Dying Christian,&rdquo; or &ldquo;The
+Dying Christian to his Soul,&rdquo; which first made this
+<a id="png:581" name="png:581"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">581 /</span> 517</samp>
+lyric familiar in America as a musical piece, will
+never be sung again except at antique entertainments,
+but it had an importance in its day.</p>
+
+<p>Beginning in quadruple time on four flats minor,
+it renders the first stanza in flowing concords largo
+affettuoso, and a single bass fugue, Then suddenly
+shifting to one flat, major, duple time, it executes
+the second stanza, &ldquo;Hark! they whisper&rdquo; ... &ldquo;What
+is this, etc.,&rdquo; in alternate pianissimo and forte
+phrases; and finally, changing to triple time, sings
+the third triumphant stanza, andante, through
+staccato and fortissimo. The shout in the last
+adagio, on the four final bars, &ldquo;O Death! O Death!&rdquo;
+softening with &ldquo;where is thy sting?&rdquo; is quite in the
+style of old orchestral magnificence.</p>
+
+<p>Since &ldquo;The Dying Christian&rdquo; ceased to appear
+in church music, the poem, for some reason, seems
+not to have been recognized as a hymn. It is, however,
+a Christian poem, and a true lyric of hope and
+consolation, whatever the character of the author
+or however pagan the original that suggested it.</p>
+
+<p>The most that is now known of Edward Harwood,
+the composer of the anthem, is that he
+was an English musician and psalmodist, born near
+Blackburn, Lancaster Co., 1707, and died about
+1787.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>YOUR HARPS, YE TREMBLING SAINTS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This hymn of Toplady,&mdash;unlike &ldquo;A Debtor to
+Mercy Alone,&rdquo; and &ldquo;Inspirer and Hearer of Prayer,&rdquo;
+both now little used,&mdash;stirs no controversial
+<a id="png:582" name="png:582"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">582 /</span> 518</samp>
+feeling by a single line of his aggressive Calvinism.
+It is simply a song of Christian gratitude and joy.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Your harps, ye trembling saints</div>
+<div class="i1"> Down from the willows take;</div>
+<div>Loud to the praise of Love Divine</div>
+<div class="i1"> Bid every string awake.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Though in a foreign land,</div>
+<div class="i1"> We are not far from home,</div>
+<div>And nearer to our house above</div>
+<div class="i1"> We every moment come.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Blest is the man, O God,</div>
+<div class="i1"> That stays himself on Thee,</div>
+<div>Who waits for Thy salvation, Lord,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Shall Thy salvation see.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Olmutz&rdquo; was arranged by Lowell Mason from
+a Gregorian chant. He set it himself to Toplady's
+hymn, and it seems the natural music for it. The
+words are also sometimes written and sung to Jonathan
+Woodman's &ldquo;State St.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Jonathan Call Woodman was born in Newburyport,
+Mass., July 12, 1813. He was the organist
+of St. George's Chapel, Flushing L.I. and a
+teacher, composer and compiler. His <i>Musical
+Casket</i> was not issued until Dec. 1858, but he
+wrote the tune of &ldquo;State St.&rdquo; in August, 1844. It
+was a contribution to Bradbury's <i>Psalmodist</i>, which
+was published the same year.</p>
+
+<a id="png:583" name="png:583"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">583 /</span> 519</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>YE GOLDEN LAMPS OF HEAVEN, FAREWELL.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Dr. Doddridge's &ldquo;farewell&rdquo; is not a note of regret.
+Unlike Bernard, he appreciates this world
+while he anticipates the better one, but his contemplation
+climbs from God's footstool to His
+throne. His thought is in the last two lines of the
+second stanza, where he takes leave of the sun&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>My soul that springs beyond thy sphere</div>
+<div class="i1"> No more demands thine aid.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>But his fancy will find a function for the &ldquo;golden
+lamps&rdquo; even in the glory that swallows up their
+light&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Ye stars are but the shining dust</div>
+<div class="i1"> Of my divine abode,</div>
+<div>The pavement of those heavenly courts</div>
+<div class="i1"> Where I shall dwell with God.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>The Father of eternal light</div>
+<div class="i1"> Shall there His beams display,</div>
+<div>Nor shall one moment's darkness mix</div>
+<div class="i1"> With that unvaried day.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>The hymn has been assigned to &ldquo;Mt. Auburn,&rdquo;
+a composition of George Kingsley, but a far better
+interpretation&mdash;if not best of all&mdash;is H.K. Oliver's
+tune of &ldquo;Merton,&rdquo; (1847,) older, but written purposely
+for the words.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>TRIUMPHANT ZION, LIFT THY HEAD.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This fine and stimulating lyric is Doddridge in
+another tone. Instead of singing hope to the
+<a id="png:584" name="png:584"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">584 /</span> 520</samp>
+individual, he sounds a note of encouragement to the
+church.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Put all thy beauteous garments on,</div>
+<div>And let thy excellence be known;</div>
+<div>Decked in the robes of righteousness,</div>
+<div>The world thy glories shall confess.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>God from on high has heard thy prayer;</div>
+<div>His hand thy ruins shall repair,</div>
+<div>Nor will thy watchful Monarch cease</div>
+<div>To guard thee in eternal peace.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The tune, &ldquo;Anvern,&rdquo; is one of Mason's charming
+melodies, full of vigor and cheerful life, and
+everything can be said of it that is said of the
+hymn. Duffield compares the hymn and tune to a
+ring and its jewel.</p>
+
+<p>It is one of the inevitable freaks of taste that puts
+so choice a strain of psalmody out of fashion.
+Many younger pieces in the church manuals could
+be better spared.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>SHRINKING FROM THE COLD HAND OF DEATH.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This is a hymn of contrast, the dark of recoiling
+nature making the background of the rainbow.
+Written by Charles Wesley, it has passed among
+his forgotten or mostly forgotten productions but
+is notable for the frequent use of its 3rd stanza by
+his brother John. John Wesley, in his old age, did
+not so much shrink from death as from the thought
+of its too slow approach. His almost constant
+prayer was, &ldquo;Lord, let me not live to be useless.&rdquo;
+<a id="png:585" name="png:585"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">585 /</span> 521</samp>
+&ldquo;At every place,&rdquo; says Belcher, &ldquo;after giving to his
+societies what he desired them to consider his last
+advice, he invariably concluded with the stanza beginning&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>&ldquo;&lsquo;Oh that, without a lingering groan,</div>
+<div class="i1"> I may the welcome word receive.</div>
+<div>My body with my charge lay down,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And cease at once to work and live.&rsquo;&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The anticipation of death itself by both the great
+evangelists ended like the ending of the hymn&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>No anxious doubt, no guilty gloom</div>
+<div class="i1"> Shall daunt whom Jesus' presence cheers;</div>
+<div>My Light, my Life, my God is come,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And glory in His face appears.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>FOREVER WITH THE LORD.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Montgomery had the Ambrosian gift of spiritual
+song-writing. Whatever may be thought of his
+more ambitious descriptive or heroic pages of
+verse, and his long narrative poems, his lyrics and
+cabinet pieces are gems. The poetry in some
+exquisite stanzas of his &ldquo;Grave&rdquo; is a dream of
+peace:</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>There is a calm for those who weep,</div>
+<div class="i1"> A rest for weary mortals found;</div>
+<div>They softly lie and sweetly sleep</div>
+<div class="i1"><span> Low in the ground.</span></div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>The storms that wreck the winter's sky</div>
+<div class="i1"> No more disturb their deep repose</div>
+<div>Than summer evening's latest sigh</div>
+<div class="i1"><span> That shuts the rose.</span></div>
+</div></div>
+
+<a id="png:586" name="png:586"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">586 /</span> 522</samp>
+
+<p>But in the poem, &ldquo;At Home in Heaven,&rdquo; which
+we are considering&mdash;with its divine text in
+<span class="smc">i</span>&nbsp;Thess.
+4:17&mdash;the Sheffield bard rises to the heights of
+vision. He wrote it when he was an old man. The
+contemplation so absorbed him that he could not
+quit his theme till he had composed twenty-two
+quatrains. Only four or five&mdash;or at most only
+seven of them&mdash;are now in general use. Like his
+&ldquo;Prayer is the Soul's Sincere Desire,&rdquo; they have the
+pith of devotional thought in them, but are less
+subjective and analytical.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Forever with the Lord!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Amen, so let it be,</div>
+<div>Life from the dead is in that word;</div>
+<div class="i1"> 'Tis immortality.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Here in the body pent,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Absent from Him I roam,</div>
+<div>Yet nightly pitch my moving tent</div>
+<div class="i1"> A day's march nearer home.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>My Father's house on high!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Home of my soul, how near</div>
+<div>At times to faith's foreseeing eye</div>
+<div class="i1"> Thy golden gates appear.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>I hear at morn and even,</div>
+<div class="i1"> At noon and midnight hour,</div>
+<div>The choral harmonies of heaven</div>
+<div class="i1"> Earth's Babel tongues o'erpower.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The last line has been changed to read&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Seraphic music pour,</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&mdash;and finally the hymnals have dropped the verse
+and substituted others. The new line is an
+<a id="png:587" name="png:587"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">587 /</span> 523</samp>
+improvement in melody but not in rhyme, and, besides,
+it robs the stanza of its leading thought&mdash;heaven
+and earth offsetting each other, and
+heavenly music drowning earthly noise&mdash;a thought
+that is missed even in the rich cantos of &ldquo;Jerusalem
+the Golden.&rdquo;</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNES.</h4>
+
+
+<p>Nearly the whole school of good short metre
+tunes, from &ldquo;St. Thomas&rdquo; to &ldquo;Boylston&rdquo; have
+offered their notes to Montgomery's &ldquo;At Home
+in Heaven,&rdquo; but the two most commonly recognized
+as its property are &ldquo;Mornington,&rdquo; named
+from Lord Mornington, its author, and I.B. Woodbury's
+familiar harmony, &ldquo;Forever with the Lord.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Garret Colley Wellesley, Earl of Mornington,
+and ancestor of the Duke of Wellington, was born
+in Dagan, Ireland, July 19, 1735. Remarkable
+for musical talent when a child, he became a skilled
+violinist, organ-player and composer in boyhood,
+with little aid beyond his solitary study and
+practice. When scarcely twenty-one, the University
+of Dublin conferred on him the degree of
+Doctor of Music, and a professorship. He excelled
+as a composer of glees, but wrote also tunes and
+anthems for the church, some of which are still
+extant in the choir books of the Dublin Cathedral
+Died <ins class="transcriber" title=
+ "Transcriber's note: original reads 'March.'">March</ins> 22, 1781.</p>
+
+<a id="png:588" name="png:588"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">588 /</span> 524</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>HARK! HARK, MY SOUL!</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The Methodist Reformation, while it had found
+no practical sympathy within the established
+church, left a deep sense of its reason and purpose
+in the minds of the more devout Episcopalians,
+and this feeling, instead of taking form in popular
+revival methods, prompted them to deeper sincerity
+and more spiritual fervor in their traditional
+rites of worship. Many of the next generation
+inherited this pious ecclesiasticism, and carried
+their loyalty to the old Christian culture to the
+extreme of devotion till they saw in the sacraments
+the highest good of the soul. It was Keble's
+&ldquo;Christian Year&rdquo; and his &ldquo;Assize Sermon&rdquo; that
+began the Tractarian movement at Oxford which
+brought to the front himself and such men as
+Henry Newman and Frederick William Faber.</p>
+
+<p>The hymns and sacred poems of these sacramentarian
+Christians would certify to their earnest
+piety, even if their lives were unknown.</p>
+
+<p>Faber's hymn &ldquo;Hark, Hark My Soul,&rdquo; is welcomed
+and loved by every Christian sect for its
+religious spirit and its lyric beauty.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Hark! hark, my soul! angelic songs are swelling</div>
+<div class="i1"> O'er earth's green fields and ocean's wave-beat shore;</div>
+<div>How sweet the truth those blessed strains are telling</div>
+<div class="i1"> Of that new life where sin shall be no more.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Refrain</div>
+<div>Angels of Jesus, angels of light</div>
+<div class="i1"> Singing to welcome the pilgrims of the night.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:589" name="png:589"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">589 /</span> 525</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Onward we go, for still we hear them singing</div>
+<div class="i1"> &ldquo;Come, weary souls,
+ for Jesus bids you come,&rdquo;</div>
+<div>And through the dark, its echoes sweetly ringing,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The music of the gospel leads us home.</div>
+<div class="i5"> Angels of Jesus.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Far, far away, like bells at evening pealing,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The voice of Jesus sounds o'er land and sea,</div>
+<div>And laden souls, by thousands meekly stealing,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Kind Shepherd, turn their weary steps to Thee.</div>
+<div class="i5"> Angels of Jesus.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNES.</h4>
+
+<p>John B. Dykes and Henry Smart&mdash;both masters
+of hymn-tune construction&mdash;have set this hymn to
+music. &ldquo;Vox Angelica&rdquo; in B flat, the work of the
+former, is a noble composition for choir or congregation,
+but &ldquo;Pilgrim,&rdquo; the other's interpretation,
+though not dissimilar in movement and vocal
+range, has, perhaps, the more sympathetic melody.
+It is, at least, the favorite in many localities. Some
+books print the two on adjacent pages as optionals.</p>
+
+<p>Another much-loved hymn of Faber's is&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O Paradise, O Paradise!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Who doth not crave for rest?</div>
+<div>Who would not see the happy land</div>
+<div class="i1"> Where they that loved are blest?</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Refrain</div>
+<div>Where loyal hearts and true</div>
+<div class="i1"> Stand ever in the light,</div>
+<div>All rapture through and through</div>
+<div class="i1"> In God's most holy sight.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>O Paradise, O Paradise,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The world is growing old;</div>
+<a id="png:590" name="png:590"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">590 /</span> 526</samp>
+<div>Who would not be at rest and free</div>
+<div class="i1"> Where love is never cold.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="i4"> Where loyal hearts and true.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>O Paradise, O Paradise,</div>
+<div class="i1"> I greatly long to see</div>
+<div>The special place my dearest Lord,</div>
+<div class="i1"> In love prepares for me.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="i4"> Where loyal hearts and true.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>This aspiration, from the ardent soul of the poet
+has been interpreted in song by the same two
+musicians, and by Joseph Barnby&mdash;all with the
+title &ldquo;Paradise.&rdquo; Their similarity of style and
+near equality of merit have compelled compilers
+to print at least two of them side by side for the
+singers' choice. A certain pathos in the strains of
+Barnby's composition gives it a peculiar charm to
+many, and in America it is probably the oftenest
+sung to the words.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. David Breed, speaking of Faber's &ldquo;unusual&rdquo;
+imagination, says, &ldquo;He got more out of
+language than any other poet of the English tongue,
+and used words&mdash;even simple words&mdash;so that
+they rendered him a service which no other poet
+ever secured from them.&rdquo; The above hymns are
+characteristic to a degree, but the telling simplicity
+of his style&mdash;almost quaint at times&mdash;is more
+marked in &ldquo;There's a Wideness in God's Mercy,&rdquo;
+given on <a href="#png:278">p.&nbsp;234</a>.</p>
+
+<a id="png:591" name="png:591"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">591 /</span> opp 526</samp>
+<div class="illus">
+<table cellspacing="40" summary="Portrait of Horatius Bonar">
+ <tr valign="bottom">
+ <td><a id="Illus24" name="Illus24"
+ ><img src="images/illus24-horatiusbonar-cameo.jpg" alt=
+ "Horatius Bonar" width="202" height="260" /></a></td>
+ <td><table summary="Caption">
+ <tr><td>Horatius Bonar, D.D.</td></tr>
+ <tr><td><img src="images/hymnal.png" alt="Hymnal"
+ width="40" height="40" /></td></tr>
+ </table></td>
+</tr></table></div>
+
+<a id="png:593" name="png:593"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">593 /</span> 527</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>BEYOND THE SMILING AND THE WEEPING.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This song of hope&mdash;one of the most strangely
+tuneful and rune-like of Dr. Bonar's hymn-poems&mdash;is
+less frequently sung owing to the peculiarity
+of its stanza form. But it scarcely needs a staff of notes&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Beyond the smiling and the weeping</div>
+<div class="i2"> I shall be soon;</div>
+<div>Beyond the waking and the sleeping,</div>
+<div>Beyond the sowing and the reaping</div>
+<div class="i2"> I shall be soon.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Refrain</div>
+<div>Love, rest and home!</div>
+<div class="i1"> Sweet hope!</div>
+<div>Lord, tarry not, but come.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="stars i1">* * * * * *</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Beyond the parting and the meeting</div>
+<div class="i2"> I shall be soon;</div>
+<div>Beyond the farewell and the greeting,</div>
+<div>Beyond the pulses' fever-beating</div>
+<div class="i2"> I shall be soon.</div>
+<div class="i4"> Love, rest and home!</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Beyond the frost-chain and the fever</div>
+<div class="i2"> I shall be soon;</div>
+<div>Beyond the rock-waste and the river</div>
+<div>Beyond the ever and the never</div>
+<div class="i2"> I shall be soon.</div>
+<div class="i4"> Love, rest and home!</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The wild contrasts and reverses of earthly vicissitude
+are spoken and felt here in the sequence
+of words. Perpetual black-and-white through
+time; then the settled life and untreacherous
+<a id="png:594" name="png:594"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">594 /</span> 528</samp>
+peace of eternity. Everywhere in the song the note
+of heavenly hope interrupts the wail of disappointment,
+and the chorus returns to transport the soul
+from the land of emotional whirlwinds to unbroken
+rest.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNES.</h4>
+
+<p>Mr. Bradbury wrote an admirable tune to this
+hymn, though the one since composed by Mr.
+Stebbins has in some localities superseded it in
+popular favor. Skill in following the accent and
+unequal rhythms produces a melodious tone-poem,
+and completes the impression of Bonar's
+singular but sweet lyric of hope which suggests a
+chant-choral rather than a regular polyphonic
+harmony. W.A. Tarbutton and the young composer,
+Karl Harrington, have set the hymn to
+music, but the success of their work awaits the
+public test.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>WE SHALL MEET BEYOND THE RIVER.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>The words were written by Rev. John Atkinson,
+D.D., in January, 1867, soon after the death of his
+mother. He had been engaged in revival work
+and one night in his study, &ldquo;that song, in substance,
+seemed,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;to sing itself into my heart.&rdquo;
+He said to himself, &ldquo;I would better write it down,
+or I shall lose it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;There,&rdquo; he adds, &ldquo;in the silence of my
+study, and not far from midnight, I wrote the
+hymn.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<a id="png:595" name="png:595"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">595 /</span> 529</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>We shall meet beyond the river</div>
+<div class="i1"> By and by, by and by;</div>
+<div>And the darkness will be over</div>
+<div class="i1"> By and by, by and by.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>With the toilsome journey done,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And the glorious battle won.</div>
+<div>We shall shine forth as the sun</div>
+<div class="i1"> By and by, by and by.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The Rev. John Atkinson was born in Deerfield,
+N.J. Sept. 6, 1835. A clergyman of the Methodist
+denomination, he is well-known as one of its
+writers. The <i>Centennial History of American Methodism</i>
+is his work, and besides the above hymn, he has
+written and published <i>The Garden of Sorrows</i>,
+and <i>The Living Way</i>. He died Dec. 8, 1897.</p>
+
+<p>The tune to &ldquo;We Shall Meet,&rdquo; by Hubert P.
+Main, composed in 1867, exactly translates the
+emotional hymn into music. S.J. Vail also wrote
+music to the words. The hymn, originally six
+eight-line stanzas, was condensed at his request
+to its present length and form by Fanny Crosby.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>ONE SWEETLY SOLEMN THOUGHT.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Phebe Cary, the author of this happy poem, was
+the younger of the two Cary sisters, Alice and
+Phebe, names pleasantly remembered in American
+literature. The praise of one reflects the praise of
+the other when we are told that Phebe possessed a
+loving and trustful soul, and her life was an honor
+to true womanhood and a blessing to the poor. She
+had to struggle with hardship and poverty in her
+<a id="png:596" name="png:596"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">596 /</span> 530</samp>
+early years: &ldquo;I have cried in the street because I
+was poor,&rdquo; she said in her prosperous years, &ldquo;and
+the poor always seem nearer to me than the rich.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>When reputation came to her as a writer, she removed
+from her little country home near Cincinnati,
+O., where she was born, in 1824, and settled
+in New York City with her sister. She died at
+Newport, N.Y., July 31, 1871, and her hymn was
+sung at her funeral. Her remains rest in Greenwood
+Cemetery.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;One Sweetly Solemn Thought,&rdquo; was written in
+1852, during a visit to one of her friends. She
+wrote (to her friend's inquiry) years afterwards
+that it first saw the light &ldquo;in your own house ... in
+the little back third-story bedroom, one Sunday
+after coming from church.&rdquo; It was a heart experience
+noted down without literary care or artistic
+effort, and in its original form was in too irregular
+measure to be sung. She set little value upon it as
+a poem, but when shown hesitatingly to inquiring
+compilers, its intrinsic worth was seen, and various
+revisions of it were made. The following is one of
+the best versions&mdash;stanzas one, two and three:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>One sweetly solemn thought</div>
+<div class="i1"> Comes to me o'er and o'er,</div>
+<div>I am nearer home to-day,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Than I ever have been before.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Nearer my Father's house,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Where the many mansions be,</div>
+<div>Nearer the great white throne,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Nearer the crystal sea.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:597" name="png:597"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">597 /</span> 531</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Nearer the bound of life,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Where we lay our burdens down,</div>
+<div>Nearer leaving the cross</div>
+<div class="i1"> Nearer gaining the crown.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+
+<p>The old revival tune of &ldquo;Dunbar,&rdquo; with its
+chorus, &ldquo;There'll be no more sorrow there,&rdquo; has
+been sung to the hymn, but the tone-lyric of Philip
+Phillips, &ldquo;Nearer Home,&rdquo; has made the words its
+own, and the public are more familiar with it than
+with any other. It was this air that a young man
+in a drinking house in Macao, near Hong-Kong,
+began humming thoughtlessly while his companion
+was shuffling the cards for a new game. Both were
+Americans, the man with the cards more than twenty
+years the elder. Noticing the tune, he threw
+down the pack. Every word of the hymn had
+come back to him with the echo of the music.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Harry, where did you learn that hymn?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What hymn?&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why the one you have been singing.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The young man said he did not know what he
+had been singing. But when the older one repeated
+some of the lines, he said they were learned in the
+Sunday-school.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Come, Harry,&rdquo; said the older one, &ldquo;here's what
+I've won from you. As for me, as God sees me, I
+have played my last game, and drank my last
+bottle. I have misled you, Harry, and I am sorry
+for it. Give me your hand, my boy, and say that,
+<a id="png:598" name="png:598"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">598 /</span> 532</samp>
+for old America's sake, if for no other, you will
+quit this infernal business.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Col. Russel H. Conwell, of Boston, (now Rev.
+Dr. Conwell of Philadelphia) who was then visiting
+China, and was an eye-witness of the scene,
+says that the reformation was a permanent one for both.</p>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>I WILL SING YOU A SONG
+ OF THAT BEAUTIFUL LAND.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>One day, in the year 1865, Mrs. Ellen M.H.
+Gates received a letter from Philip Phillips noting
+the passage in the <i>Pilgrim's Progress</i> which describes
+the joyful music of heaven when Christian
+and Hopeful enter on its shining shore beyond the
+river of death, and asking her to write a hymn in
+the spirit of the extract, as one of the numbers in
+his <i>Singing Pilgrim</i>. Mrs. Gates complied&mdash;and
+the sequel of the hymn she wrote is part of the modern
+song-history of the church. Mr. Phillips has
+related how, when he received it, he sat down with
+his little boy on his knee, read again the passage in
+Bunyan, then the poem again, and, turning to his
+organ, pencil in hand, pricked the notes of the
+melody. &ldquo;The &lsquo;Home of the Soul,&rsquo;&rdquo; he says,
+&ldquo;seems to have had God's blessing from the
+beginning, and has been a comfort to many a
+bereaved soul. Like many loved hymns, it has
+had a peculiar history, for its simple melody has
+flowed from the lips of High Churchmen, and has
+<a id="png:599" name="png:599"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">599 /</span> 533</samp>
+sought to make itself heard above the din of Salvation
+Army cymbals and drums. It has been sung
+in prisons and in jailyards, while the poor convict
+was waiting to be launched into eternity, and on
+hundreds of funeral occasions. One man writes
+me that he has led the singing of it at one hundred
+and twenty funerals. It was sung at my dear boy's
+funeral, who sat on my knee when I wrote it. It is
+my prayer that God may continue its solace and
+comfort. I have books containing the song now
+printed in seven different languages.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>A writer in the <i>Golden Rule</i> (now the <i>Christian
+Endeavor World</i>) calls attention to an incident on
+a night railroad train narrated in the late Benjamin
+F. Taylor's <i>World on Wheels</i>, in which
+&ldquo;this hymn appears as a sort of Traveller's Psalm.&rdquo;
+Among the motley collection of passengers, some
+talkative, some sleepy, some homesick and cross, all
+tired, sat two plain women who, &ldquo;would make capital
+country aunts.... If they were mothers at all
+they were good ones.&rdquo; Suddenly in a dull silence,
+near twelve o'clock, a voice, sweet and flexible,
+struck up a tune. The singer was one of those
+women. &ldquo;She sang on, one after another the good
+Methodist and Baptist melodies of long ago,&rdquo; and
+the growing interest of the passengers became
+chained attention when she began&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>&ldquo;I will sing you a song of that beautiful land,</div>
+<div class="i1"> The far-away home of the soul,</div>
+<div>Where no storms can beat on the glittering strand,</div>
+<div class="i1"> While the years of eternity roll.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:600" name="png:600"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">600 /</span> 534</samp>
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O, that home of the soul, in my visions and dreams,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Its bright jasper walls I can see;</div>
+<div>Till I fancy but thinly the veil intervenes</div>
+<div class="i1"> Between the fair city and me.&rdquo;</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="runon">&ldquo;The car was a wakeful hush long before she had
+ended; it was as if a beautiful spirit were floating
+through the air. None that heard will ever forget.
+Philip Phillips can never bring that &lsquo;home of
+the soul&rsquo; any nearer to anybody. And never, I
+think, was quite so sweet a voice lifted in a storm
+of a November night on the rolling plains of Iowa.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>In an autograph copy of her hymn, sent to the
+editor, Mrs. Gates changes &ldquo;harps&rdquo; to &ldquo;palms.&rdquo;
+Is it an improvement? &ldquo;Palms&rdquo; is a word of two meanings.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>O how sweet it will be in that beautiful land,</div>
+<div class="i1"> So free from all sorrow and pain,</div>
+<div>With songs on our lips and with harps in our hands</div>
+<div class="i1"> To meet one another again.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn"
+>&ldquo;<span>THERE'S A LAND THAT IS FAIRER THAN DAY.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>This belongs rather with &ldquo;Christian Ballads&rdquo;
+than with genuine hymns, but the song has had and
+still has an uplifting mission among the lowly
+whom literary perfection and musical nicety could
+not touch&mdash;and the first two lines, at least, are
+good hymn-writing. Few of the best sacred lyrics
+have been sung with purer sentiment and more
+affectionate fervor than &ldquo;The Sweet By-and-By.&rdquo;
+To any company keyed to sympathy by time, place,
+<a id="png:601" name="png:601"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">601 /</span> 535</samp>
+and condition, the feeling of the song brings unshed tears.</p>
+
+<p>As nearly as can be ascertained it was in the year
+1867 that a man about forty-eight years old, named
+Webster, entered the office of Dr. Bennett in Elkhorn.
+Wis., wearing a melancholy look, and was
+rallied good-naturedly by the doctor for being so
+blue&mdash;Webster and Bennett were friends, and the
+doctor was familiar with the other's frequent fits
+of gloom.</p>
+
+<p>The two men had been working in a sort of partnership,
+Webster being a musician and Bennett a
+ready verse-writer, and together they had created
+and published a number of sheet-music songs.
+When Webster was in a fit of melancholy, it was the
+doctor's habit to give him a &ldquo;dose&rdquo; of new verses
+and cure him by putting him to work. Today the
+treatment turned out to be historic.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;What's the matter now,&rdquo; was the doctor's greeting
+when his &ldquo;patient&rdquo; came with the tell-tale face.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;O, nothing,&rdquo; said Webster. &ldquo;It'll be all right
+by and by.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;Why not make a song of the sweet by and by?&rdquo;
+rejoined the doctor, cheerfully.</p>
+
+<p>&ldquo;I don't know,&rdquo; said Webster, after thinking a
+second or two. &ldquo;If you'll make the words, I'll
+write the music.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>The doctor went to his desk, and in a short time
+produced three stanzas and a chorus to which his
+friend soon set the notes of a lilting air, brightening
+up with enthusiasm as he wrote. Seizing his
+<a id="png:602" name="png:602"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">602 /</span> 536</samp>
+violin, which he had with him, he played the melody,
+and in a few minutes more he had filled in the
+counterpoint and made a complete hymn-tune.
+By that time two other friends, who could sing, had
+come in and the quartette tested the music on the
+spot. Here different accounts divide widely
+as to the immediate sequel of the new-born song.</p>
+
+<p>A Western paper in telling its story a year or two
+ago, stated that Webster took the &ldquo;Sweet By and
+By&rdquo; (in sheet-music form), with a batch of other
+pieces, to Chicago, and that it was the only song
+of the lot that Root and Cady would not buy; and
+finally, after he had tried in vain to sell it, Lyon
+and Healy took it &ldquo;out of pity,&rdquo; and paid him
+twenty dollars. They sold eight or ten copies (the
+story continued) and stowed it away with dead
+goods, and it was not till apparently a long time
+after, when a Sunday-school hymn-book reprinted
+it, and began to sell rapidly on its account, that
+the &ldquo;Sweet By and By&rdquo; started on its career round
+the world.</p>
+
+<p>This seems circumstantial enough, and the author
+of the hymn in his own story of it might have chosen
+to omit some early particulars, but, untrustworthy
+as the chronology of mere memory is, he
+would hardly record immediate popularity of a
+song that lay in obscurity for years. Dr. Bennett's
+words are, &ldquo;I think it was used in public shortly
+after [its production], for within two weeks children
+on the street were singing it.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<a id="png:603" name="png:603"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">603 /</span> 537</samp>
+
+<p>The explanation may be partly the different
+method and order of the statements, partly lapses
+of memory (after thirty years) and partly in collateral
+facts. The Sunday-school hymn-book was
+evidently <i>The Signet Ring</i>, which Bennett and
+Webster were at work upon and into which first
+went the &ldquo;Sweet By and By&rdquo;&mdash;whatever efforts
+may have been made to dispose of it elsewhere or
+whatever copyright arrangement could have warranted
+Mr. Healy in purchasing a song already
+printed. The <i>Signet Ring</i> did not begin to profit
+by the song until the next year, after a copy of it
+appeared in the publishers' circulars, and started
+a demand; so that the <em>immediate</em> popularity implied
+in Doctor Bennett's account was limited to
+the children of Elkhorn village.</p>
+
+<p>The piece had its run, but with no exceptional
+result as to its hold on the public, until in 1873 Ira
+D. Sankey took it up as one of his working hymns.
+Modified from its first form in the &ldquo;<i>Signet Ring</i>&rdquo;
+with pianoforte accompaniment and chorus, it
+appeared that year in <i>Winnowed Hymns</i> as arranged
+by Hubert P. Main, and it has so been
+sung ever since.</p>
+
+<p>Sanford Filmore Bennett, born in 1836, appears
+to have been a native of the West, or, at least,
+removed there when a young man. In 1861 he
+settled in Elkhorn to practice his profession. Died
+Oct., 1898.</p>
+
+<p>Joseph Philbrick Webster was born in Manchester,
+N.H. March 22, 1819. He was an active
+<a id="png:604" name="png:604"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">604 /</span> 538</samp>
+member of the Handel and Haydn Society, and
+various other musical associations. Removed to
+Madison, Ind. 1851, Racine, Wis. 1856, and Elkhorn,
+Wis., 1857, where he died Jan. 18, 1875.
+His <i>Signet Ring</i> was published in 1868.</p>
+
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>There's a land that is fairer than day,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And by faith I can see it afar</div>
+<div>For the Father waits over the way</div>
+<div class="i1"> To prepare us a dwelling-place there.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Chorus</div>
+<div class="i1"> In the sweet by and by</div>
+<div>We shall meet on that beautiful shore.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>We shall sing on that beautiful shore</div>
+<div class="i1"> The melodious songs of the blest,</div>
+<div>And our spirits shall sorrow no more,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Nor sigh for the blessing of rest.</div>
+<div class="i4"> In the sweet by and by, etc.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>SUNSET AND EVENING STAR.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>Was it only a poet's imagination that made
+Alfred Tennyson approach perhaps nearest of all
+great Protestants to a sense of the real &ldquo;Presence,&rdquo;
+every time he took the Holy Communion at the
+altar? Whatever the feeling was, it characterized
+all his maturer life, so far as its spiritual side was
+known. His remark to a niece expressed it, while
+walking with her one day on the seashore, &ldquo;God
+is with us now, on this down, just as truly as Jesus
+was with his two <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'diciples'">disciples</ins> on the way to Emmaus.&rdquo;</p>
+
+<p>Such a man's faith would make no room for
+dying terrors.</p>
+
+<a id="png:605" name="png:605"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">605 /</span> 539</samp>
+<div class="hymn">
+<div class="stanza">
+<div>Sunset and evening star,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And one clear call for me,</div>
+<div>And may there be no moaning of the bar</div>
+<div class="i1"> When I put out to sea,</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>But such a tide as, moving, seems asleep,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Too full for sound and foam,</div>
+<div>When that which drew from out the boundless deep</div>
+<div class="i1"> Turns again home.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Twilight and evening bell,</div>
+<div class="i1"> And after that the dark,</div>
+<div>And may there be no sadness of farewell</div>
+<div class="i1"> When I embark.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>For though from out our bourne of time and place</div>
+<div class="i1"> The flood may bear me far,</div>
+<div>I hope to see my Pilot face to face</div>
+<div class="i1"> When I have crossed the bar.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Tennyson lived three years after penning this
+sublime prayer. But it was his swan-song. Born
+at Somersby, Lincolnshire, Aug. 63 1809, dying at
+Farringford, Oct. 6, 1892, he filled out the measure
+of a good old age. And his prayer was answered,
+for his death was serene and dreadless. His unseen
+Pilot guided him gently &ldquo;across the bar&rdquo;&mdash;and
+then <em>he saw Him</em>.</p>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Joseph Barnby's &ldquo;Crossing the Bar&rdquo; has supplied
+a noble choral to this poem. It will go far to
+make it an accepted tone in church worship,
+among the more lyrical strains of verse that sing
+hope and euthanasia.</p>
+
+<a id="png:606" name="png:606"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">606 /</span> 540</samp>
+
+
+
+<h4 class="hymn">&ldquo;<span>SAFE IN THE ARMS OF JESUS.</span>&rdquo;</h4>
+
+
+<p>If Tennyson had the mistaken feeling (as Dr.
+Benson intimates) &ldquo;that hymns were expected to
+be commonplace,&rdquo; it was owing both to his mental
+breeding and his mental stature. Genius in a colossal
+frame cannot otherwise than walk in strides.
+What is technically a hymn he never wrote, but it
+is significant that as he neared the Shoreless Sea,
+and looked into the Infinite, his sense of the Divine
+presence instilled something of the hymn spirit
+into his last verses.</p>
+
+<p>Between Alfred Tennyson singing trustfully of
+his Pilot and Fanny Crosby singing &ldquo;Safe in the
+Arms of Jesus,&rdquo; is only the width of the choir. The
+organ tone and the flute-note breathe the same song.
+The stately poem and the sweet one, the masculine
+and the feminine, both have wings, but while the
+one is lifted in anthem and solemn chant in the
+great sanctuaries, the other is echoing Isaiah's
+tender text<sup>*</sup> in prayer meeting and Sunday-school
+and murmuring it at the humble firesides like a
+mother's lullaby.</p>
+
+<hr class="footnote" />
+<div class="footnote"><p>*
+Isa. 40:11.</p></div>
+
+<div class="hymn"><div class="stanza">
+<div>Safe in the arms of Jesus,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Safe on His gentle breast,</div>
+<div>There by His love o'ershaded</div>
+<div class="i1"> Sweetly my soul shall rest.</div>
+<div>Hark! 'tis the voice of angels</div>
+<div class="i1"> Borne in a song to me</div>
+<div>Over the fields of glory,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Over the jasper sea.</div>
+</div>
+<a id="png:607" name="png:607">
+</a><div class="stanza">
+<div class="refrain">Refrain</div>
+<div>Safe in the arms of Jesus (1st four lines rep.).</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Safe in the arms of Jesus,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Safe from corroding care,</div>
+<div>Safe from the world's temptations,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Sin cannot harm me there.</div>
+<div>Free from the blight of sorrow,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Free from my doubts and fears,</div>
+<div>Only a few more trials,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Only a few more tears.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="i4"> Safe in the arms of Jesus.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div>Jesus, my heart's dear refuge</div>
+<div class="i1"> Jesus has died for me;</div>
+<div>Firm on the Rock of Ages</div>
+<div class="i1"> Ever my trust shall be,</div>
+<div>Here let me with patience,</div>
+<div class="i1"> Wait till the night is o'er,</div>
+<div>Wait till I see the morning</div>
+<div class="i1"> Break on the Golden Shore.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="i4"> Safe in the arms of Jesus.</div>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<div class="right">&mdash;Composed 1868.</div>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h4 class="tune">THE TUNE.</h4>
+
+<p>Those who have characterized the <i>Gospel Hymns</i>
+as &ldquo;sensational&rdquo; have always been obliged to except
+this modest lyric of Christian peace and its sweet
+and natural musical supplement by Dr. W.H.
+Doane. No hurried and high-pitched chorus disturbs
+the quiet beauty of the hymn, a simple <i>da
+capo</i> being its only refrain. &ldquo;Safe in the Arms of
+Jesus&rdquo; sang itself into public favor with the pulses
+of hymn and tune beating together.</p>
+
+<a id="png:609" name="png:609"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">609 /</span> 543</samp>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="chap">INDEX OF NAMES.</h2>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<div class="ctr">
+<table summary="Index of Names: A" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Abt</em>, Franz,</span>
+ <a href="#png:272">228</a>,
+ <a href="#png:416">364</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Adams</em>, E.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:423">369</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Adams</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:422">368</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Adams</em>, John Quincy,</span>
+ <a href="#png:341">293</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Adams</em>, Sarah F.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:186">152</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Addison</em>, Joseph,</span>
+ <a href="#png:143">113</a>,
+ <a href="#png:144">114</a>,
+ <a href="#png:405">353</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Adrian</em>, (Emperor),</span>
+ <a href="#png:579">515</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em><ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: origninal has 'Aibilinger'">Aiblinger</ins></em>, Johan Caspar,</span>
+ <a href="#png:409">357</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Aldrich</em>, Jonathan,</span>
+ <a href="#png:335">287</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Alexander</em>, Mrs. C.F.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:470">414</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Allen</em>, George N.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:468">412</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Allen</em>, J.O.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:161">129</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Almond</em>, &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;,</span>
+ <a href="#png:416">364</a>,
+ <a href="#png:417">365</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em><ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: origninal has 'Altenberg'">Altenburg</ins></em>, Johan M.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:112">84</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ambrose</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:015">xiii</a>,
+ <a href="#png:021">1</a>,
+ <a href="#png:022">2</a>,
+ <a href="#png:023">3</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Anatolius</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:406">354</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Apes</em>, William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:311">265</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Aratus</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:281">237</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Arne</em>, Thomas A.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:137">107</a>,
+ <a href="#png:138">108</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Arnold</em>, Matthew,</span>
+ <a href="#png:139">109</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Arnold</em>, S.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:335">287</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Atchison</em>, John B.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:511">451</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Atkinson</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:594">528</a>,
+ <a href="#png:595">529</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Auber</em>, Harriet,</span>
+ <a href="#png:204">168</a>,
+ <a href="#png:205">169</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Augustine</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:011">ix</a>,
+ <a href="#png:022">2</a>,
+ <a href="#png:023">3</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Avison</em>, Charles,</span>
+ <a href="#png:377">327</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: B" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bach</em>, Emanuel,</span>
+ <a href="#png:029">9</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bach</em>, Sebastian,</span>
+ <a href="#png:029">9</a>,
+ <a href="#png:099">71</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bailey</em>, Thomas H.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:142">112</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Baker</em>, Sir Henry,</span>
+ <a href="#png:083">57</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Baldwin</em>, Thomas,</span>
+ <a href="#png:308">262</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Barlow</em>, Joel,</span>
+ <a href="#png:286">242</a>,
+ <a href="#png:287">243</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Barnby</em>, Joseph,</span>
+ <a href="#png:132">102</a>,
+ <a href="#png:141">111</a>,
+ <a href="#png:529">469</a>,
+ <a href="#png:564">500</a>,
+ <a href="#png:568">504</a>,
+ <a href="#png:590">526</a>,
+ <a href="#png:605">539</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Barnes</em>, Albert,</span>
+ <a href="#png:059">35</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Barthelemon</em>, F.H.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:242">202</a>,
+ <a href="#png:264">222</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Basil the great</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:082">56</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bassini</em>, &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;,</span>
+ <a href="#png:502">444</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Beanes</em>, William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:383">333</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Beddome</em>, Benjamin,</span>
+ <a href="#png:196">160</a>,
+ <a href="#png:205">169</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Beecher</em>, Henry Ward,</span>
+ <a href="#png:260">218</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Beethoven</em>, Ludwig Von,</span>
+ <a href="#png:025">5</a>,
+ <a href="#png:233">193</a>,
+ <a href="#png:377">327</a>,
+ <a href="#png:390">338</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Belcher</em>, Dr.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:068">44</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bennett</em>, Sanford F.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:601">535</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:603">537</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Benson</em>, Louis F.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:244">204</a>,
+ <a href="#png:246">206</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bentham</em>, Jeremy,</span>
+ <a href="#png:127">97</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Berkeley</em>, Bp. George,</span>
+ <a href="#png:374">324</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:376">326</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bernard of clairvaux</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:130">100</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bernard of cluny</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:463">407</a>,
+ <a href="#png:574">510</a>,
+ <a href="#png:575">511</a>,
+ <a href="#png:583">519</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Berridge</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:152">122</a>,
+ <a href="#png:153">123</a>,
+ <a href="#png:567">503</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Berthold of tours</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:081">55</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Beza</em>, Theodore,</span>
+ <a href="#png:018">xvi</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Biglow and main</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:273">229</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Billings</em>, William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:038">16</a>,
+ <a href="#png:377">327</a>,
+ <a href="#png:382">332</a>,
+ <a href="#png:383">333</a>,
+ <a href="#png:535">475</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bishop</em>, Sir Henry,</span>
+ <a href="#png:167">135</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Blackall</em>, C.R.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:510">450</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bliss</em>, Mrs. J. Worthington,</span>
+ <a href="#png:305">259</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bliss</em>, Philip P.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:189">155</a>,
+ <a href="#png:190">156</a>,
+ <a href="#png:369">319</a>,
+ <a href="#png:426">372</a>,
+ <a href="#png:479">421</a>,
+ <a href="#png:480">422</a>,
+ <a href="#png:482">424</a>,
+ <a href="#png:489">431</a>,
+ <a href="#png:494">436</a>,
+ <a href="#png:495">437</a>,
+ <a href="#png:500">442</a>,
+ <a href="#png:502">444</a>,
+ <a href="#png:514">454</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bloomfield</em>, Dorothy,</span>
+ <a href="#png:567">503</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<!-- checked to here: &ndash;es don't get done in fixed version -->
+<!-- PROBLEM: if an anchor is at a linebreak IE loses it :-((( -->
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Boardman</em>, George Dana,</span>
+ <a href="#png:291">247</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bohler</em>, Peter,</span>
+ <a href="#png:070">46</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bonaparte</em>, Napoleon,</span>
+ <a href="#png:127">97</a>,
+ <a href="#png:443">389</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bonar</em>, Horatius,</span>
+ <a href="#png:269">225</a>,
+ <a href="#png:270">226</a>,
+ <a href="#png:272">228</a>,
+ <a href="#png:359">309</a>,
+ <a href="#png:552">490</a>,
+ <a href="#png:473">415</a>,
+ <a href="#png:593">527</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bonar</em>, James,</span>
+ <a href="#png:552">490</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bonaventura</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:080">54</a>,
+ <a href="#png:518">458</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Borthwick</em>, Jane,</span>
+ <a href="#png:133">103</a>,
+ <a href="#png:563">499</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bortniansky</em>, Dimitri,</span>
+ <a href="#png:255">213</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bottome</em>, Francis,</span>
+ <a href="#png:491">433</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bourdaloue</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:033">13</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em><ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Bourgevis'">Bourgeois</ins></em>, Louis,</span>
+ <a href="#png:035">15</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bowring</em>, Sir John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:127">97</a>,
+ <a href="#png:128">98</a>,
+ <a href="#png:206">170</a>,
+ <a href="#png:565">501</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Boyd</em>, William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:577">513</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bradbury</em>, William B.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:136">106</a>,
+ <a href="#png:137">107</a>,
+ <a href="#png:257">215</a>,
+ <a href="#png:259">217</a>,
+ <a href="#png:279">235</a>,
+ <a href="#png:361">311</a>,
+ <a href="#png:362">312</a>,
+ <a href="#png:415">363</a>,
+ <a href="#png:466">410</a>,
+ <a href="#png:577">513</a>,
+ <a href="#png:594">528</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Brady</em>, Nicholas,</span>
+ <a href="#png:032">12</a>,
+ <a href="#png:034">14</a>,
+ <a href="#png:233">193</a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">610 /</span> 544</samp>
+ <a id="png:610" name="png:610" title="544"></a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Brainerd</em>, David,</span>
+ <a href="#png:309">263</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Breed</em>, David R.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:207">171</a>,
+ <a href="#png:214">176</a>,
+ <a href="#png:218">180</a>,
+ <a href="#png:270">226</a>,
+ <a href="#png:590">526</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Brooks</em>, Charles T.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:400">348</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Brooks</em>, Bp. Phillips,</span>
+ <a href="#png:012">x</a>,
+ <a href="#png:200">164</a>,
+ <a href="#png:205">169</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Brown</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:394">342</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Brown</em>, Phebe H.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:273">229</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:276">232</a>,
+ <a href="#png:544">482</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Brown</em>, Samuel,</span>
+ <a href="#png:276">232</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Brown</em>, Theron,</span>
+ <a href="#png:226">188</a>,
+ <a href="#png:536">476</a>,
+ <a href="#png:542">480</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Brown</em>, Timothy H.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:273">229</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bruce</em>, Michael,</span>
+ <a href="#png:345">297</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Brundage</em>, &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;,</span>
+ <a href="#png:514">454</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bull</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:390">338</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em><ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Burgmuller'">Burgm&uuml;ller</ins></em>, F.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:483">425</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Burney</em>, Charles,</span>
+ <a href="#png:285">241</a>,
+ <a href="#png:463">407</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Burns</em>, Robert,</span>
+ <a href="#png:383">333</a>,
+ <a href="#png:388">336</a>,
+ <a href="#png:421">367</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bute</em>, Walter,</span>
+ <a href="#png:433">379</a>,
+ <a href="#png:434">380</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Butterworth</em>, Hezekiah,</span>
+ <a href="#png:007">v</a>,
+ <a href="#png:008">vi</a>,
+ <a href="#png:224">186</a>,
+ <a href="#png:225">187</a>,
+ <a href="#png:296">252</a>,
+ <a href="#png:298">254</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: C" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Caldwell</em>, William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:323">277</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Campbell</em>, David E.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:264">222</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Campbell</em>, Jane M.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:538">478</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Campbell</em>, Robert,</span>
+ <a href="#png:087">61</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Caradoc</em>, &mdash;&mdash;,</span>
+ <a href="#png:435">381</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Carey</em>, Henry,</span>
+ <a href="#png:391">339</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Carey</em>, William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:208">172</a>,
+ <a href="#png:553">491</a>,
+ <a href="#png:554">492</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Caroline</em>, (Queen),</span>
+ <a href="#png:243">203</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Cary</em>, Phebe,</span>
+ <a href="#png:463">407</a>,
+ <a href="#png:595">529</a>,
+ <a href="#png:596">530</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Cartwright</em>, Peter,</span>
+ <a href="#png:317">271</a>,
+ <a href="#png:318">272</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Case</em>, Charles C.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:225">187</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Caswall</em>, Edward,</span>
+ <a href="#png:103">75</a>,
+ <a href="#png:131">101</a>,
+ <a href="#png:519">459</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Cawood</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:470">414</a>,
+ <a href="#png:525">465</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Celano</em>, Thomas di.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:088">62</a>,
+ <a href="#png:091">63</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Cennick</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:154">124</a>,
+ <a href="#png:156">126</a>,
+ <a href="#png:568">504</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Chalmers</em>, Thomas,</span>
+ <a href="#png:269">225</a>,
+ <a href="#png:270">226</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Chandler</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:547">485</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Chandler</em>, S.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:316">270</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Chapin</em>, Amzi,</span>
+ <a href="#png:321">275</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Charlemagne</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:025">5</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Charles</em>, David,</span>
+ <a href="#png:459">403</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Charles</em>, Thomas,</span>
+ <a href="#png:457">401</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Cibber</em>, Mrs.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:138">108</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Clark</em>, Jeremiah,</span>
+ <a href="#png:029">9</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Clarke</em>, Adam,</span>
+ <a href="#png:215">177</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Claudius</em>, Matthias,</span>
+ <a href="#png:538">478</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Clement of alexandria</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:342">294</a>,
+ <a href="#png:344">296</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Clephane</em>, Elizabeth C.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:481">423</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Clichtovius</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:025">5</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Cole</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:145">115</a>,
+ <a href="#png:541">479</a>,
+ <a href="#png:571">507</a>,
+ <a href="#png:579">515</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Coles</em>, George,</span>
+ <a href="#png:156">126</a>,
+ <a href="#png:159">127</a>,
+ <a href="#png:331">285</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Collyer</em>, William B.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:100">72</a>,
+ <a href="#png:101">73</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Columbus</em>, Christopher,</span>
+ <a href="#png:408">356</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Conder</em>, Josiah,</span>
+ <a href="#png:551">489</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Conkey</em>, Ithamar,</span>
+ <a href="#png:129">99</a>,
+ <a href="#png:293">249</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Converse</em>, Charles Crozat,</span>
+ <a href="#png:484">426</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Conwell</em>, Russell H.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:598">532</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Cook</em>, Martha A.W.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:182">148</a>,
+ <a href="#png:183">149</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Cook</em>, Parsons,</span>
+ <a href="#png:182">148</a>,
+ <a href="#png:183">149</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Cooper</em>, George,</span>
+ <a href="#png:362">312</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Corelli</em>, Arcangelo,</span>
+ <a href="#png:063">39</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Cornell</em>, J.B.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:496">438</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Cornell</em>, John Henry,</span>
+ <a href="#png:126">96</a>,
+ <a href="#png:407">355</a>,
+ <a href="#png:473">415</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Corse</em>, Gen. G.M.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:482">424</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Cousin</em>, Anne R.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:106">78</a>,
+ <a href="#png:110">82</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Covert</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:383">333</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Cowdell</em>, Samuel,</span>
+ <a href="#png:311">265</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Cowper</em>, William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:012">x</a>,
+ <a href="#png:161">129</a>,
+ <a href="#png:163">131</a>,
+ <a href="#png:214">176</a>,
+ <a href="#png:232">192</a>,
+ <a href="#png:459">403</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Croft</em>, William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:244">204</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Crosby</em>, Fanny J.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:190">156</a>,
+ <a href="#png:222">184</a>,
+ <a href="#png:362">312</a>,
+ <a href="#png:483">425</a>,
+ <a href="#png:496">438</a>,
+ <a href="#png:612">546</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Cuyler</em>, Theodore L.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:431">377</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Cyprian of carthage</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:021">1</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: D" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dadmun</em>, J.W.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:318">272</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dagget</em>, Simeon,</span>
+ <a href="#png:380">330</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dana</em>, Mary S.B.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:335">287</a>,
+ <a href="#png:336">288</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dartmouth</em>, Lord,</span>
+ <a href="#png:315">269</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Davenant</em>, Sir William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:356">306</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>De Groote</em>, Gerard,</span>
+ <a href="#png:095">67</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>De la Mothe</em>, Jeanne M.B.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:228">190</a>,
+ <a href="#png:231">191</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>De Lisle</em>, Roget,</span>
+ <a href="#png:379">329</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Denham</em>, David,</span>
+ <a href="#png:166">134</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dermid</em>, (King),</span>
+ <a href="#png:378">328</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dexter</em>, Henry M.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:342">294</a>,
+ <a href="#png:344">296</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ditson</em>, Oliver,</span>
+ <a href="#png:009">vii</a>,
+ <a href="#png:469">413</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dixon</em>, William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:060">36</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Doane</em>, Bp. George W.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:544">482</a>,
+ <a href="#png:545">483</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Doane</em>, William H.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:191">157</a>,
+ <a href="#png:483">425</a>,
+ <a href="#png:487">429</a>,
+ <a href="#png:488">430</a>,
+ <a href="#png:496">438</a>,
+ <a href="#png:510">450</a>,
+ <a href="#png:542">480</a>,
+ <a href="#png:607">541</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Doddridge</em>, Philip,</span>
+ <a href="#png:146">116</a>,
+ <a href="#png:147">117</a>,
+ <a href="#png:205">169</a>,
+ <a href="#png:466">410</a>,
+ <a href="#png:469">413</a>,
+ <a href="#png:536">476</a>,
+ <a href="#png:550">488</a>,
+ <a href="#png:559">495</a>,
+ <a href="#png:583">519</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dodge</em>, Ossian E.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:383">333</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Douglas</em>, George,</span>
+ <a href="#png:009">vii</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dow</em>, Howard M.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:566">502</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dow</em>, Lorenzo,</span>
+ <a href="#png:318">272</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dow</em>, Peggy,</span>
+ <a href="#png:318">272</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Draper</em>, Bourne H.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:207">171</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dunbar</em>, E.W.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:336">288</a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">611 /</span> 545</samp>
+ <a id="png:611" name="png:611" title="545"></a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>D'Urhan</em>, Christian,</span>
+ <a href="#png:110">82</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dutton</em>, Deodatus,</span>
+ <a href="#png:276">232</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dwight</em>, H.O.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:522">462</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dwight</em>, John S.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:399">347</a>,
+ <a href="#png:400">348</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dwight</em>, Timothy,</span>
+ <a href="#png:051">29</a>,
+ <a href="#png:165">133</a>,
+ <a href="#png:166">134</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dykes</em>, John B.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:077">51</a>,
+ <a href="#png:083">57</a>,
+ <a href="#png:093">65</a>,
+ <a href="#png:134">104</a>,
+ <a href="#png:186">152</a>,
+ <a href="#png:268">224</a>,
+ <a href="#png:272">228</a>,
+ <a href="#png:415">363</a>,
+ <a href="#png:424">370</a>,
+ <a href="#png:426">372</a>,
+ <a href="#png:525">465</a>,
+ <a href="#png:589">525</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: E" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Edmeston</em>, James,</span>
+ <a href="#png:347">299</a>,
+ <a href="#png:550">488</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Edson</em>, Lewis,</span>
+ <a href="#png:449">395</a>,
+ <a href="#png:536">476</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Edwards</em>, Jonathan,</span>
+ <a href="#png:309">263</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Elias</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:444">390</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Elizabeth</em>, (Queen),</span>
+ <a href="#png:039">17</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Elliott</em>, Charlotte,</span>
+ <a href="#png:256">214</a>,
+ <a href="#png:257">215</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Elliot</em>, Ebenezer,</span>
+ <a href="#png:221">183</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ellsworth</em>, J.S.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:495">437</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Emerson</em>, Ralph Waldo,</span>
+ <a href="#png:391">339</a>,
+ <a href="#png:392">340</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ephrem</em>, Syrus,</span>
+ <a href="#png:082">56</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Erbury</em>, &mdash;&mdash;,</span>
+ <a href="#png:435">381</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Esling</em>, Catherine,</span>
+ <a href="#png:250">208</a>,
+ <a href="#png:251">209</a>,
+ <a href="#png:544">482</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Evans</em>, Evelyn,</span>
+ <a href="#png:463">407</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Evans</em>, Heber,</span>
+ <a href="#png:455">399</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Evans</em>, John Miller,</span>
+ <a href="#png:423">369</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Evans</em>, Thomas,</span>
+ <a href="#png:457">401</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ewing</em>, Alexander,</span>
+ <a href="#png:576">512</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: F" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Faber</em>, Frederick W.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:277">233</a>,
+ <a href="#png:278">234</a>,
+ <a href="#png:350">302</a>,
+ <a href="#png:588">524</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Faure</em>, Jean Baptiste,</span>
+ <a href="#png:530">470</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Fawcett</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:164">132</a>,
+ <a href="#png:165">133</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Findlater</em>, Mrs.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:133">103</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Fischer</em>, William Gustavus,</span>
+ <a href="#png:487">429</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Flatman</em>, &mdash;&mdash;,</span>
+ <a href="#png:579">515</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Fortunatus</em>, Venantius,</span>
+ <a href="#png:409">357</a>,
+ <a href="#png:532">472</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Foster</em>, Paul,</span>
+ <a href="#png:009">vii</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Franc</em>, Guillaume,</span>
+ <a href="#png:234">194</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Francis</em>, Benjamin,</span>
+ <a href="#png:164">132</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Frankenberry</em>, A.D.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:482">424</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Frederick</em>, (King),</span>
+ <a href="#png:122">94</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Freeman</em>, John E.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:264">222</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Frothingham</em>, N.L.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:011">ix</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Fulbert</em>, Bp.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:085">59</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:087">61</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: G" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gardiner</em>, William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:074">48</a>,
+ <a href="#png:162">130</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gates</em>, Bernard,</span>
+ <a href="#png:126">96</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gates</em>, Ellen M.H.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:009">vii</a>,
+ <a href="#png:302">256</a>,
+ <a href="#png:304">258</a>,
+ <a href="#png:488">430</a>,
+ <a href="#png:509">449</a>,
+ <a href="#png:598">532</a>,
+ <a href="#png:600">534</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gauntlett</em>, Henry I.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:074">48</a>,
+ <a href="#png:545">483</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gellert</em>, C.F.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:533">473</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>George i</em>, (King),</span>
+ <a href="#png:031">11</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gerhardt</em>, Paul,</span>
+ <a href="#png:112">84</a>,
+ <a href="#png:113">85</a>,
+ <a href="#png:115">87</a>,
+ <a href="#png:116">88</a>,
+ <a href="#png:121">93</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Giardini</em>, Felice,</span>
+ <a href="#png:271">227</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gilmore</em>, Joseph Henry,</span>
+ <a href="#png:279">235</a>,
+ <a href="#png:280">236</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gladstone</em>, William E.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:171">139</a>,
+ <a href="#png:172">140</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Glaser</em>, Carl,</span>
+ <a href="#png:074">48</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Glenelg</em>, Lord,</span>
+ <a href="#png:044">22</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Goode</em>, William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:034">14</a>,
+ <a href="#png:055">31</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gordon</em>, A.J.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:198">162</a>,
+ <a href="#png:200">164</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gordon</em>, Mrs. A.J.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:009">vii</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gottschalk</em>, Louis,</span>
+ <a href="#png:545">483</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gough</em>, John B.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:257">215</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gould</em>, Eliza,</span>
+ <a href="#png:185">151</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gould</em>, John Edgar,</span>
+ <a href="#png:428">374</a>,
+ <a href="#png:528">468</a>,
+ <a href="#png:550">488</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gould</em>, Sabine Baring,</span>
+ <a href="#png:223">185</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Grannis</em>, Sidney M.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:305">259</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Grape</em>, John T.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:487">429</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Grant</em>, Sir Robert,</span>
+ <a href="#png:043">21</a>,
+ <a href="#png:044">22</a>,
+ <a href="#png:254">212</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gregory nazianzen</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:082">56</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gregory the great</em>, (Pope),</span>
+ <a href="#png:015">xiii</a>,
+ <a href="#png:016">xiv</a>,
+ <a href="#png:028">8</a>,
+ <a href="#png:030">10</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Grenade</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:346">298</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Griffiths</em>, Ann,</span>
+ <a href="#png:450">396</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:453">399</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Griffiths</em>, Edward,</span>
+ <a href="#png:440">386</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Griggs</em>, &mdash;&mdash;,</span>
+ <a href="#png:132">102</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Groote</em>, Gerald de,</span>
+ <a href="#png:095">67</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Guido</em>, Arentino,</span>
+ <a href="#png:016">xiv</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Guild</em>, Curtis,</span>
+ <a href="#png:246">206</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gurney</em>, Mrs.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:567">503</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gustavus adolphus</em>, (King),</span>
+ <a href="#png:110">82</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:112">84</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Guyon</em>, Madame,</span>
+ <a href="#png:228">190</a>,
+ <a href="#png:232">192</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: H" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hague</em>, John R.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:009">vii</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hall</em>, Amasiah,</span>
+ <a href="#png:577">513</a>,
+ <a href="#png:578">514</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hall</em>, Elvina M.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:484">426</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hammond</em>, William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:051">29</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Handel</em>, George Frederick,</span>
+ <a href="#png:031">11</a>,
+ <a href="#png:055">31</a>,
+ <a href="#png:166">134</a>,
+ <a href="#png:202">166</a>,
+ <a href="#png:470">414</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hankey</em>, Kate,</span>
+ <a href="#png:485">427</a>,
+ <a href="#png:487">429</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hanna</em>, Ione T.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:516">456</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Harrington</em>, C.S.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:183">149</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Harrington</em>, Karl,</span>
+ <a href="#png:594">528</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Harris</em>, Howell,</span>
+ <a href="#png:435">381</a>,
+ <a href="#png:441">387</a>,
+ <a href="#png:442">388</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Harris</em>, Thomas,</span>
+ <a href="#png:418">366</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Harrison</em>, Ralph,</span>
+ <a href="#png:074">48</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hart</em>, Joseph,</span>
+ <a href="#png:149">119</a>,
+ <a href="#png:151">121</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Harewood</em>, Edward,</span>
+ <a href="#png:581">517</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hastings</em>, H.L.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:244">204</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hastings</em>, Thomas,</span>
+ <a href="#png:047">25</a>,
+ <a href="#png:085">59</a>,
+ <a href="#png:174">142</a>,
+ <a href="#png:196">160</a>,
+ <a href="#png:204">168</a>,
+ <a href="#png:210">174</a>,
+ <a href="#png:261">219</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:263">221</a>,
+ <a href="#png:267">223</a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">612 /</span> 546</samp>
+ <a id="png:612" name="png:612" title="546"></a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hatfield</em>, C.F.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:034">14</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hatton</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:061">37</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hatton</em>, John Liphot,</span>
+ <a href="#png:061">37</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Havergal</em>, Frances Ridley,</span>
+ <a href="#png:188">154</a>,
+ <a href="#png:189">155</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Havergal</em>, William Henry,</span>
+ <a href="#png:271">227</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hawkes</em>, Annie S.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:187">153</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hawkes</em>, Robert,</span>
+ <a href="#png:034">14</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Haydn</em>, Joseph,</span>
+ <a href="#png:056">32</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hayward</em>, Thomas,</span>
+ <a href="#png:550">488</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hearn</em>, Marianne Farningham,</span>
+ <a href="#png:499">441</a>,
+ <a href="#png:500">442</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Heath</em>, George,</span>
+ <a href="#png:177">143</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Heath</em>, Lyman,</span>
+ <a href="#png:291">247</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Heber</em>, Bp. Reginald,</span>
+ <a href="#png:024">4</a>,
+ <a href="#png:076">50</a>,
+ <a href="#png:077">51</a>,
+ <a href="#png:216">178</a>,
+ <a href="#png:217">179</a>,
+ <a href="#png:368">318</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hedge</em>, Frederick H.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:099">71</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hemans</em>, Felicia,</span>
+ <a href="#png:236">196</a>,
+ <a href="#png:411">359</a>,
+ <a href="#png:373">323</a>,
+ <a href="#png:374">324</a>,
+ <a href="#png:383">333</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Henry vii</em>, (King),</span>
+ <a href="#png:040">18</a></td>
+
+</tr>
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hews</em>, George,</span>
+ <a href="#png:463">407</a>,
+ <a href="#png:545">483</a>,
+ <a href="#png:546">484</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hicks</em>, John J,</span>
+ <a href="#png:318">272</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hilary</em>, Bp.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:015">xiii</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hiller</em>, Ferdinand,</span>
+ <a href="#png:093">65</a>,
+ <a href="#png:094">66</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hinsdale</em>, George,</span>
+ <a href="#png:273">229</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hodges</em>, Edward,</span>
+ <a href="#png:254">212</a>,
+ <a href="#png:524">464</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Holbrook</em>, Joseph P.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:412">360</a>,
+ <a href="#png:416">364</a>,
+ <a href="#png:565">501</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Holden</em>, Oliver,</span>
+ <a href="#png:049">27</a>,
+ <a href="#png:050">28</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Holmes</em>, O.W.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:078">52</a>,
+ <a href="#png:293">249</a>,
+ <a href="#png:396">344</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Holroyd</em>, Israel,</span>
+ <a href="#png:465">409</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Holzman</em>, &mdash;&mdash;,</span>
+ <a href="#png:379">329</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hopkins</em>, Edward,</span>
+ <a href="#png:052">30</a>,
+ <a href="#png:142">112</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hopkins</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:037">15</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hopkinson</em>, Joseph,</span>
+ <a href="#png:381">331</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hopper</em>, Edward,</span>
+ <a href="#png:427">373</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Horder</em>, <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Garret'">Garrett</ins>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:551">489</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Howard</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:046">24</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Howe</em>, Julia Ward,</span>
+ <a href="#png:392">340</a>,
+ <a href="#png:395">343</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hucbald</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:015">xiii</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Huffer</em>, Francis,</span>
+ <a href="#png:125">95</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hughes and son</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:009">vii</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hughes</em>, Mrs.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:411">359</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Humphreys</em>, Cecil Frances,</span>
+ <a href="#png:470">414</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hunter</em>, William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:318">272</a>,
+ <a href="#png:336">288</a>,
+ <a href="#png:337">289</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Huntingdon</em>, (Lady) Selina,</span>
+ <a href="#png:047">25</a>,
+ <a href="#png:116">88</a>,
+ <a href="#png:117">89</a>,
+ <a href="#png:149">119</a>,
+ <a href="#png:160">128</a>,
+ <a href="#png:241">201</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Huntington</em>, DeWitt C.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:494">436</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Husband</em>, John Jenkins,</span>
+ <a href="#png:474">416</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hyatt</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:258">216</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hyde</em>, Charles,</span>
+ <a href="#png:274">230</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: I" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ingalls</em>, Jeremiah,</span>
+ <a href="#png:151">121</a>,
+ <a href="#png:320">274</a>,
+ <a href="#png:324">278</a>,
+ <a href="#png:571">507</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Irving</em>, Washington,</span>
+ <a href="#png:372">322</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Isaac</em>, Heinrich,</span>
+ <a href="#png:119">91</a>,
+ <a href="#png:142">112</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: J" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jackson</em>, Andrew,</span>
+ <a href="#png:246">206</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jackson</em>, Deborah,</span>
+ <a href="#png:246">206</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jerome of prague</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:532">472</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>John of damascus</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:079">53</a>,
+ <a href="#png:080">54</a>,
+ <a href="#png:083">57</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Johnson</em>, Albert,</span>
+ <a href="#png:264">222</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Johnson</em>, Mrs. James G.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:512">452</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jones</em>, H.R.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:446">392</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jones</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:447">393</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jones</em>, Nancy,</span>
+ <a href="#png:443">389</a>,
+ <a href="#png:444">390</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jones</em>, Thomas,</span>
+ <a href="#png:457">401</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Judah</em>, Daniel Ben,</span>
+ <a href="#png:042">20</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Judson</em>, Sarah B.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:290">246</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Julian</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:244">204</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: K" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Keble</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:195">159</a>,
+ <a href="#png:296">252</a>,
+ <a href="#png:544">482</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Keene</em>, Robert,</span>
+ <a href="#png:244">204</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Keller</em>, Matthias,</span>
+ <a href="#png:395">343</a>,
+ <a href="#png:397">345</a>,
+ <a href="#png:399">347</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em><ins class="transciber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Kelley'">Kelly</ins></em>, Thomas,</span>
+ <a href="#png:209">173</a>,
+ <a href="#png:210">174</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Kempis</em>, Thomas &agrave;,</span>
+ <a href="#png:095">67</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ken</em>, Bp.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:033">13</a>,
+ <a href="#png:034">14</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Key</em>, Francis Scott,</span>
+ <a href="#png:075">49</a>,
+ <a href="#png:383">333</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Key</em>, John R.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:075">49</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>King</em>, Jacob,</span>
+ <a href="#png:099">71</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>King robert ii</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:031">11</a>,
+ <a href="#png:083">57</a>,
+ <a href="#png:084">58</a>,
+ <a href="#png:086">60</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Kingsley</em>, George,</span>
+ <a href="#png:058">34</a>,
+ <a href="#png:132">102</a>,
+ <a href="#png:192">158</a>,
+ <a href="#png:327">281</a>,
+ <a href="#png:368">318</a>,
+ <a href="#png:583">519</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Kipling</em>, Rudyard,</span>
+ <a href="#png:401">349</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:403">351</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Kozeluck</em>, &mdash;&mdash;,</span>
+ <a href="#png:545">483</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Krishna pal</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:553">491</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: L" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lamb</em>, Frank M.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:297">253</a>,
+ <a href="#png:298">254</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lattimore</em>, W.O.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:492">434</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lee</em>, Mary Augusta,</span>
+ <a href="#png:515">455</a>,
+ <a href="#png:516">456</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lee</em>, Gen. Robert E.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:246">206</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Leland</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:268">224</a>,
+ <a href="#png:322">276</a>,
+ <a href="#png:544">482</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lincoln</em>, Abraham,</span>
+ <a href="#png:283">239</a>,
+ <a href="#png:302">256</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lindsay</em>, Miss,</span>
+ <a href="#png:305">259</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Logan</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:325">279</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Longfellow</em>, Henry W.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:292">248</a>,
+ <a href="#png:293">249</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Longfellow</em>, Samuel,</span>
+ <a href="#png:011">ix</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lorimer</em>, George,</span>
+ <a href="#png:296">252</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Louis</em>, (King),</span>
+ <a href="#png:025">5</a>,
+ <a href="#png:231">191</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lowry</em>, J.C.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:148">118</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lowry</em>, Robert,</span>
+ <a href="#png:063">39</a>,
+ <a href="#png:182">148</a>,
+ <a href="#png:187">153</a>,
+ <a href="#png:462">406</a>,
+ <a href="#png:477">419</a>,
+ <a href="#png:504">446</a>,
+ <a href="#png:508">448</a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">613 /</span> 547</samp>
+ <a id="png:613" name="png:613" title="547"></a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Loyola</em>, Ignatius,</span>
+ <a href="#png:102">74</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lucas</em>, James,</span>
+ <a href="#png:559">495</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ludwig</em>, Duke,</span>
+ <a href="#png:151">121</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Luke</em>, Jemima T.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:355">305</a>,
+ <a href="#png:356">306</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lulli</em>, &mdash;&mdash;,</span>
+ <a href="#png:390">338</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lummis</em>, Franklin H.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:394">342</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Luther</em>, Martin,</span>
+ <a href="#png:018">xvi</a>,
+ <a href="#png:028">8</a>,
+ <a href="#png:097">69</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:099">71</a>,
+ <a href="#png:442">388</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lyon</em>, Meyer,</span>
+ <a href="#png:042">20</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lyte</em>, Henry Francis,</span>
+ <a href="#png:259">217</a>,
+ <a href="#png:263">221</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: M" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Macgill</em>, Hamilton M.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:344">296</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mackay</em>, Charles,</span>
+ <a href="#png:167">135</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mackay</em>, Margaret,</span>
+ <a href="#png:563">499</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mackay</em>, William Paton,</span>
+ <a href="#png:474">416</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Madan</em>, Martin,</span>
+ <a href="#png:051">29</a>,
+ <a href="#png:052">30</a>,
+ <a href="#png:065">41</a>,
+ <a href="#png:523">463</a>,
+ <a href="#png:569">505</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Maffit</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:320">274</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Main</em>, Hubert P.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:008">vi</a>,
+ <a href="#png:009">vii</a>,
+ <a href="#png:145">115</a>,
+ <a href="#png:166">134</a>,
+ <a href="#png:272">228</a>,
+ <a href="#png:284">240</a>,
+ <a href="#png:347">299</a>,
+ <a href="#png:357">307</a>,
+ <a href="#png:423">369</a>,
+ <a href="#png:473">415</a>,
+ <a href="#png:488">430</a>,
+ <a href="#png:530">470</a>,
+ <a href="#png:603">537</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Malan</em>, Caesar,</span>
+ <a href="#png:018">xvi</a>,
+ <a href="#png:256">214</a>,
+ <a href="#png:438">384</a>,
+ <a href="#png:494">436</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Marco</em>, (?), Portugalis,</span>
+ <a href="#png:245">205</a>,
+ <a href="#png:246">206</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Marot</em>, Clement,</span>
+ <a href="#png:018">xvi</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Marsh</em>, &mdash;&mdash;,</span>
+ <a href="#png:415">363</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Marvin</em>, Bp.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:185">151</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mary</em>, (Queen),</span>
+ <a href="#png:032">12</a>,
+ <a href="#png:040">18</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mary</em>, (Princess),</span>
+ <a href="#png:032">12</a>,
+ <a href="#png:040">18</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mary</em>, (Virgin),</span>
+ <a href="#png:408">356</a>,
+ <a href="#png:410">358</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mary Stuart</em>, (Queen),</span>
+ <a href="#png:105">77</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mason</em>, Francis,</span>
+ <a href="#png:213">175</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mason</em>, Lowell,</span>
+ <a href="#png:060">36</a>,
+ <a href="#png:119">91</a>,
+ <a href="#png:121">93</a>,
+ <a href="#png:135">105</a>,
+ <a href="#png:136">106</a>,
+ <a href="#png:141">111</a>,
+ <a href="#png:148">118</a>,
+ <a href="#png:163">131</a>,
+ <a href="#png:165">133</a>,
+ <a href="#png:180">146</a>,
+ <a href="#png:206">170</a>,
+ <a href="#png:209">173</a>,
+ <a href="#png:217">179</a>,
+ <a href="#png:236">196</a>,
+ <a href="#png:350">302</a>,
+ <a href="#png:389">337</a>,
+ <a href="#png:391">339</a>,
+ <a href="#png:400">348</a>,
+ <a href="#png:415">363</a>,
+ <a href="#png:543"><ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: was printed 581, but more likely 481.">481</ins></a>,
+ <a href="#png:590">526</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Masters</em>, Mary,</span>
+ <a href="#png:353">303</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Maurice</em>, &mdash;&mdash;,</span>
+ <a href="#png:435">381</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Maxim</em>, Abraham,</span>
+ <a href="#png:328">282</a>,
+ <a href="#png:329">283</a>,
+ <a href="#png:550">488</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mayo</em>, Mrs. Herbert,</span>
+ <a href="#png:360">310</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mazzinghi</em>, Joseph,</span>
+ <a href="#png:242">202</a>,
+ <a href="#png:243">203</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>McGranahan</em>, James,</span>
+ <a href="#png:358">308</a>,
+ <a href="#png:502">444</a>,
+ <a href="#png:512">452</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>McKeever</em>, F.G.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:009">vii</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>McKinley</em>, William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:185">151</a>,
+ <a href="#png:295">251</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>McMullen</em>, Mr. and Mrs.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:264">222</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Meek</em>, William T.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:009">vii</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Medley</em>, Samuel,</span>
+ <a href="#png:168">136</a>,
+ <a href="#png:322">276</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Melancthon</em>, Philip,</span>
+ <a href="#png:097">69</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mendelssohn</em>, Felix,</span>
+ <a href="#png:523">463</a>,
+ <a href="#png:544">482</a>,
+ <a href="#png:553">491</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Merriam</em>, Edmund F.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:009">vii</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Merrill</em>, Abraham, D.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:315">269</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Midlane</em>, Albert,</span>
+ <a href="#png:503">445</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Miller</em>, James,</span>
+ <a href="#png:421">367</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Milman</em>, Henry Hart,</span>
+ <a href="#png:324">278</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mills</em>, Elizabeth,</span>
+ <a href="#png:357">307</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Milton</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:521">461</a>,
+ <a href="#png:522">462</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mohammed</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:025">5</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Monk</em>, William H.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:196">160</a>,
+ <a href="#png:261">219</a>,
+ <a href="#png:289">245</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Montgomery</em>, James,</span>
+ <a href="#png:043">21</a>,
+ <a href="#png:178">144</a>,
+ <a href="#png:179">145</a>,
+ <a href="#png:214">176</a>,
+ <a href="#png:215">177</a>,
+ <a href="#png:331">285</a>,
+ <a href="#png:405">353</a>,
+ <a href="#png:542">480</a>,
+ <a href="#png:549">487</a>,
+ <a href="#png:563">499</a>,
+ <a href="#png:585">521</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Moody</em>, Dwight L.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:358">308</a>,
+ <a href="#png:360">310</a>,
+ <a href="#png:479">421</a>,
+ <a href="#png:484">426</a>,
+ <a href="#png:489">431</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Moore</em>, (More), Joshua,</span>
+ <a href="#png:313">267</a>,
+ <a href="#png:315">269</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Moore</em>, Thomas,</span>
+ <a href="#png:142">112</a>,
+ <a href="#png:261">219</a>,
+ <a href="#png:287">243</a>,
+ <a href="#png:375">325</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:378">328</a>,
+ <a href="#png:383">333</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Morgan</em>, David,</span>
+ <a href="#png:446">392</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mornington</em>, Garret, Colley Wellesley,
+ Earl of</span>
+ <a href="#png:587">523</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Morris</em>, Robert,</span>
+ <a href="#png:306">260</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Morse</em>, Charles H.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:544">482</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mote</em>, Edward,</span>
+ <a href="#png:258">216</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mozart</em>, Johan Wolfgang,</span>
+ <a href="#png:264">222</a>,
+ <a href="#png:288">244</a>,
+ <a href="#png:377">327</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Muhlenberg</em>, Henry M.</span>
+ <a href="#png:192">158</a>,
+ <a href="#png:562">498</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Muhlenberg</em>, W.A.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:191">157</a>,
+ <a href="#png:192">158</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Murillo</em>, Bartolomeo,</span>
+ <a href="#png:198">162</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: N" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em><ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Nageli'">N&auml;geli</ins></em>, Johan G.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:197">161</a>,
+ <a href="#png:198">162</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Napoleon</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:127">97</a>,
+ <a href="#png:443">389</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Nares</em>, James,</span>
+ <a href="#png:125">95</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Neale</em>, John M.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:026">6</a>,
+ <a href="#png:027">7</a>,
+ <a href="#png:081">55</a>,
+ <a href="#png:083">57</a>,
+ <a href="#png:406">354</a>,
+ <a href="#png:576">512</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Nero</em>, (Emperor),</span>
+ <a href="#png:372">322</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Newell</em>, Harriet,</span>
+ <a href="#png:213">175</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Newman</em>, John Henry,</span>
+ <a href="#png:267">223</a>,
+ <a href="#png:268">224</a>,
+ <a href="#png:588">524</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Newton</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:162">130</a>,
+ <a href="#png:243">203</a>,
+ <a href="#png:244">204</a>,
+ <a href="#png:332">286</a>,
+ <a href="#png:440">386</a>,
+ <a href="#png:459">403</a>,
+ <a href="#png:555">493</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Nicholson</em>, Ludovic,</span>
+ <a href="#png:241">201</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Novello</em>, Vincent,</span>
+ <a href="#png:101">73</a>,
+ <a href="#png:102">74</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Nutter</em>, Dr.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:218">180</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: O" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Oakeley</em>, Frederick,</span>
+ <a href="#png:519">459</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em><ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Oakely'">Oakeley</ins></em>, Sir Herbert S.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:296">252</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Oakey</em>, Emily,</span>
+ <a href="#png:492">434</a>,
+ <a href="#png:493">435</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Occum</em>, Samson,</span>
+ <a href="#png:313">267</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:315">269</a>,
+ <a href="#png:325">279</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O'Kane</em>, Tullius C.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:495">437</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Oldcastle</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:433">379</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Oliver</em>, Henry K.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:134">104</a>,
+ <a href="#png:135">105</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Olivers</em>, Thomas,</span>
+ <a href="#png:041">19</a>,
+ <a href="#png:042">20</a>,
+ <a href="#png:044">22</a>,
+ <a href="#png:568">504</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Osborne</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:180">146</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: P" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Paine</em>, John K.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:522">462</a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">614 /</span> 548</samp>
+ <a id="png:614" name="png:614" title="548"></a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Paine</em>, Robert T.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:387">335</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Palestrina</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:016">xiv</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:018">xvi</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Palmer</em>, Horatio R.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:307">261</a>,
+ <a href="#png:361">311</a>,
+ <a href="#png:475">417</a>,
+ <a href="#png:510">450</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Palmer</em>, Ray,</span>
+ <a href="#png:085">59</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Parker</em>, Theodore,</span>
+ <a href="#png:011">ix</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Parry</em>, Joseph,</span>
+ <a href="#png:449">395</a>,
+ <a href="#png:452">398</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Patrick</em>, St.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:378">328</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Payne</em>, John Howard,</span>
+ <a href="#png:167">135</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Peloubet</em>, F.N.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:226">188</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Penry</em>, &mdash;&mdash;,</span>
+ <a href="#png:435">381</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Perronet</em>, Edward,</span>
+ <a href="#png:047">25</a>,
+ <a href="#png:049">27</a>,
+ <a href="#png:055">31</a>,
+ <a href="#png:085">59</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Phelps</em>, A.S.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:009">vii</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Phelps</em>, S.D.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:181">147</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Phelps</em>, W.L.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:009">vii</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Philip</em>, &ldquo;King&rdquo;,</span>
+ <a href="#png:311">265</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Phillips</em>, Philip,</span>
+ <a href="#png:183">149</a>,
+ <a href="#png:184">150</a>,
+ <a href="#png:283">239</a>,
+ <a href="#png:302">256</a>,
+ <a href="#png:313">267</a>,
+ <a href="#png:359">309</a>,
+ <a href="#png:383">333</a>,
+ <a href="#png:479">421</a>,
+ <a href="#png:597">531</a>,
+ <a href="#png:598">532</a>,
+ <a href="#png:600">534</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Phipps</em>, George,</span>
+ <a href="#png:226">188</a>,
+ <a href="#png:227">189</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Pierpont</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:387">335</a>,
+ <a href="#png:388">336</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Pinsuti</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:473">415</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Pleyel</em>, Ignace,</span>
+ <a href="#png:156">126</a>,
+ <a href="#png:250">208</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Pliny</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:341">293</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Pope</em>, Alexander,</span>
+ <a href="#png:282">238</a>,
+ <a href="#png:376">326</a>,
+ <a href="#png:579">515</a>,
+ <a href="#png:580">516</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Powell</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:435">381</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Presbry</em>, Otis F.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:511">451</a>,
+ <a href="#png:512">452</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Price</em>, Dr.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:065">41</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Price</em>, E.M.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:449">395</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Pritchard</em>, Rhys M.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:433">379</a>,
+ <a href="#png:450">396</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Proch</em>, Heinrich,</span>
+ <a href="#png:409">357</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Purcell</em>, Henry,</span>
+ <a href="#png:390">338</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: R" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Raleigh</em>, Sir Walter,</span>
+ <a href="#png:104">76</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rankin</em>, James,</span>
+ <a href="#png:414">362</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rankin</em>, Jeremiah E.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:560">496</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ravenscroft</em>, Thomas,</span>
+ <a href="#png:390">338</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Read</em>, Daniel,</span>
+ <a href="#png:463">407</a>,
+ <a href="#png:526">466</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Reading</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:245">205</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Redhead</em>, Richard,</span>
+ <a href="#png:076">50</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Redner</em>, Louis H.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:529">469</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rees</em>, William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:458">402</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Reinagle</em>, Alexander R.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:115">87</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rexford</em>, Eben E.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:497">439</a>,
+ <a href="#png:498">440</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rhye</em>, Morgan,</span>
+ <a href="#png:460">404</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Richardson</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:104">76</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ridley</em>, Bp.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:024">4</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Riley</em>, Mary Louise,</span>
+ <a href="#png:367">317</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rimbault</em>, Edward F.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:328">282</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ringwaldt</em>, Bartholomew,</span>
+ <a href="#png:099">71</a>,
+ <a href="#png:101">73</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rippon</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:049">27</a>,
+ <a href="#png:244">204</a>,
+ <a href="#png:327">281</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ritter</em>, Peter,</span>
+ <a href="#png:196">160</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Robert ii</em>, (King),</span>
+ <a href="#png:083">57</a>,
+ <a href="#png:084">58</a>,
+ <a href="#png:086">60</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Roberts</em>, Evan,</span>
+ <a href="#png:431">377</a>,
+ <a href="#png:447">393</a>,
+ <a href="#png:448">394</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Roberts</em>, W.M.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:460">404</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Robinson</em>, Charles,</span>
+ <a href="#png:207">171</a>,
+ <a href="#png:217">179</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Robinson</em>, Robert,</span>
+ <a href="#png:329">283</a>,
+ <a href="#png:330">284</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Romaine</em>, William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:055">31</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Roosevelt</em>, Theodore,</span>
+ <a href="#png:185">151</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Root</em>, George F.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:189">155</a>,
+ <a href="#png:190">156</a>,
+ <a href="#png:298">254</a>,
+ <a href="#png:365">315</a>,
+ <a href="#png:367">317</a>,
+ <a href="#png:497">439</a>,
+ <a href="#png:502">444</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rousseau</em>, J.J.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:142">112</a>,
+ <a href="#png:143">113</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rowe</em>, Elizabeth,</span>
+ <a href="#png:069">45</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rowlands</em>, Daniel,</span>
+ <a href="#png:435">381</a>,
+ <a href="#png:441">387</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rutherford</em>, Samuel,</span>
+ <a href="#png:106">78</a>,
+ <a href="#png:107">79</a>,
+ <a href="#png:109">81</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: S" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Salmon</em>, Thomas,</span>
+ <a href="#png:490">432</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sanderson</em>, Mrs.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:387">335</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sankey</em>, Ira D.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:222">184</a>,
+ <a href="#png:304">258</a>,
+ <a href="#png:358">308</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:361">311</a>,
+ <a href="#png:428">374</a>,
+ <a href="#png:429">375</a>,
+ <a href="#png:475">417</a>,
+ <a href="#png:479">421</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:481">423</a>,
+ <a href="#png:492">434</a>,
+ <a href="#png:496">438</a>,
+ <a href="#png:507">447</a>,
+ <a href="#png:603">537</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Schmolke</em>, Benjamin,</span>
+ <a href="#png:563">499</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Schumann</em>, Robert,</span>
+ <a href="#png:115">87</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Scott</em>, Thomas,</span>
+ <a href="#png:270">226</a>,
+ <a href="#png:467">411</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Scott</em>, Sir Walter,</span>
+ <a href="#png:284">240</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Scriven</em>, Joseph,</span>
+ <a href="#png:483">425</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Seagrave</em>, Robert,</span>
+ <a href="#png:122">94</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sears</em>, Edmund H.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:526">466</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Seneca</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:370">320</a>,
+ <a href="#png:372">322</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Servoss</em>, Mary Elizabeth,</span>
+ <a href="#png:500">442</a>,
+ <a href="#png:501">443</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Seward</em>, William H.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:303">257</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Shepherd</em>, Thomas,</span>
+ <a href="#png:467">411</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sheridan</em>, Mrs. Richard Brinsley,</span>
+ <a href="#png:288">244</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Shipley</em>, Dean,</span>
+ <a href="#png:216">178</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Shirley</em>, Sir Walter,</span>
+ <a href="#png:159">127</a>,
+ <a href="#png:160">128</a>,
+ <a href="#png:242">202</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Simao</em>, Portugalis,</span>
+ <a href="#png:246">206</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Simpson</em>, Robert,</span>
+ <a href="#png:346">298</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Singer</em>, Elizabeth,</span>
+ <a href="#png:069">45</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Smart</em>, Henry,</span>
+ <a href="#png:024">4</a>,
+ <a href="#png:025">5</a>,
+ <a href="#png:030">10</a>,
+ <a href="#png:169">137</a>,
+ <a href="#png:525">465</a>,
+ <a href="#png:589">525</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Smith</em>, Mrs. Albert,</span>
+ <a href="#png:367">317</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Smith</em>, Alexander,</span>
+ <a href="#png:422">368</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Smith</em>, Goldwin,</span>
+ <a href="#png:012">x</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Smith</em>, Isaac,</span>
+ <a href="#png:374">324</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Smith</em>, John Stafford,</span>
+ <a href="#png:387">335</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Smith</em>, Samuel Francis,</span>
+ <a href="#png:218">180</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:220">182</a>,
+ <a href="#png:389">337</a>,
+ <a href="#png:391">339</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Spafford</em>, Horatio G.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:498">440</a>,
+ <a href="#png:499">441</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Spohr</em>, L.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:156">126</a>,
+ <a href="#png:249">207</a>,
+ <a href="#png:271">227</a>,
+ <a href="#png:272">228</a>,
+ <a href="#png:288">244</a>,
+ <a href="#png:550">488</a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">615 /</span> 549</samp>
+ <a id="png:615" name="png:615" title="549"></a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Stainer</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:093">65</a>,
+ <a href="#png:094">66</a>,
+ <a href="#png:404">352</a>,
+ <a href="#png:534">474</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Stanley</em>, (Dean), Arthur P.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:093">65</a>,
+ <a href="#png:094">66</a>,
+ <a href="#png:182">148</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Stead</em>, William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:184">150</a>,
+ <a href="#png:185">151</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Stebbins</em>, George C.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:298">254</a>,
+ <a href="#png:358">308</a>,
+ <a href="#png:429">375</a>,
+ <a href="#png:473">415</a>,
+ <a href="#png:594">528</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Steele</em>, Anna,</span>
+ <a href="#png:237">197</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Steffe</em>, John W.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:394">342</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>St. Fulbert</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:085">59</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:087">61</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em><ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Stennet'">Stennett</ins></em>, Joseph,</span>
+ <a href="#png:045">23</a>,
+ <a href="#png:550">488</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em><ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Stennet'">Stennett</ins></em>, Samuel,</span>
+ <a href="#png:045">23</a>,
+ <a href="#png:046">24</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Stephens</em>, &mdash;&mdash;,</span>
+ <a href="#png:449">395</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Stephen</em>, (St.), the Sabaite,</span>
+ <a href="#png:083">57</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sternhold</em>, Thomas,</span>
+ <a href="#png:037">15</a>,
+ <a href="#png:038">16</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Stevenson</em>, &mdash;&mdash;,</span>
+ <a href="#png:367">317</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Stokes</em>, Walter,</span>
+ <a href="#png:112">84</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Stores</em>, Richard S,</span>
+ <a href="#png:059">35</a>,
+ <a href="#png:534">474</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Storrs</em>, Mrs. R.S.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:534">474</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Stowe</em>, Harriet Beecher,</span>
+ <a href="#png:543">481</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Stowell</em>, Hugh,</span>
+ <a href="#png:264">222</a>,
+ <a href="#png:267">223</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Stuart</em>, Charles M.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:058">34</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sumner</em>, Janaziah,</span>
+ <a href="#png:380">330</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Swain</em>, Joseph,</span>
+ <a href="#png:050">28</a>,
+ <a href="#png:327">281</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Swan</em>, Jabez,</span>
+ <a href="#png:332">286</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Swan</em>, Timothy,</span>
+ <a href="#png:234">194</a>,
+ <a href="#png:235">195</a>,
+ <a href="#png:377">327</a>,
+ <a href="#png:570">506</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: T" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Tadolini</em>, Giovanni,</span>
+ <a href="#png:409">357</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Tait</em>, Abp.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:296">252</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Tallis</em>, Thomas,</span>
+ <a href="#png:017">xv</a>,
+ <a href="#png:039">17</a>,
+ <a href="#png:040">18</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Tansur</em>, William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:328">282</a>,
+ <a href="#png:329">283</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Tarbutton</em>, W.A.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:594">528</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Tate</em>, Nahum,</span>
+ <a href="#png:032">12</a>,
+ <a href="#png:034">14</a>,
+ <a href="#png:233">193</a>,
+ <a href="#png:329">283</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Taylor</em>, Benjamin F.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:599">533</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Taylor</em>, James,</span>
+ <a href="#png:087">61</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Taylor</em>, Thomas R.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:348">300</a>,
+ <a href="#png:349">301</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Taylor</em>, V.C.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:078">52</a>,
+ <a href="#png:288">244</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Tennyson</em>, Alfred,</span>
+ <a href="#png:305">259</a>,
+ <a href="#png:604">538</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:606">540</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Tersteegen</em>, Gerhard,</span>
+ <a href="#png:132">102</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Teschner</em>, Melchior,</span>
+ <a href="#png:028">8</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Theodulph</em>, Bp.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:025">5</a>,
+ <a href="#png:026">6</a>,
+ <a href="#png:027">7</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Thomas &agrave; Kempis</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:095">67</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Thomas di Celano</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:088">62</a>,
+ <a href="#png:091">63</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Thring</em>, Godfrey,</span>
+ <a href="#png:425">371</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Thrupp</em>, Dorothy A.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:360">310</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Tomer</em>, William G.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:561">497</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Toplady</em>, A.M.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:169">137</a>,
+ <a href="#png:170">138</a>,
+ <a href="#png:581">517</a>,
+ <a href="#png:040">18</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Tourjee</em>, Eben,</span>
+ <a href="#png:183">149</a>,
+ <a href="#png:184">150</a>,
+ <a href="#png:279">235</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Tourjee</em>, Lizzie S.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:279">235</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Tours</em>, Berthold,</span>
+ <a href="#png:473">415</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Trajan</em>, (Emperor),</span>
+ <a href="#png:341">293</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Tyler</em>, Mrs. Fanny,</span>
+ <a href="#png:050">28</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: U" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ufford</em>, E.S.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:428">374</a>,
+ <a href="#png:430">376</a>,
+ <a href="#png:431">377</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Upham</em>, Thomas,</span>
+ <a href="#png:232">192</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Urhan</em>, Christian,</span>
+ <a href="#png:110">82</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: V" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Vail</em>, Silas J.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:028">8</a>,
+ <a href="#png:278">234</a>,
+ <a href="#png:279">235</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Van Alstyne</em>, Mrs.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:190">156</a>,
+ <a href="#png:222">184</a>,
+ <a href="#png:362">312</a>,
+ <a href="#png:483">425</a>,
+ <a href="#png:496">438</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Vernon</em>, (Admiral),</span>
+ <a href="#png:391">339</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Victoria</em>, (Queen),</span>
+ <a href="#png:171">139</a>,
+ <a href="#png:292">248</a>,
+ <a href="#png:296">252</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Vokes</em>, Mrs.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:207">171</a>,
+ <a href="#png:209">173</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Voltaire</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:067">43</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Von Gluck</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:552">490</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Von Weber</em>, C.M.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:151">121</a>,
+ <a href="#png:390">338</a>,
+ <a href="#png:552">490</a>,
+ <a href="#png:564">500</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: W" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Wade</em>, &mdash;&mdash;,</span>
+ <a href="#png:132">102</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Walford</em>, William W.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:490">432</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Walther</em>, Johan,</span>
+ <a href="#png:018">xvi</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Warner</em>, Anna,</span>
+ <a href="#png:476">418</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Washburn</em>, Henry S.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:289">245</a>,
+ <a href="#png:291">247</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Waters</em>, Horace,</span>
+ <a href="#png:353">303</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em><ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Watkins'">Watkin</ins></em>, Jack E.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:444">390</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Watson</em>, Bp.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:185">151</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Watson</em>, Richard,</span>
+ <a href="#png:150">120</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Watts</em>, Isaac,</span>
+ <a href="#png:034">14</a>,
+ <a href="#png:051">29</a>,
+ <a href="#png:057">33</a>,
+ <a href="#png:059">35</a>,
+ <a href="#png:061">37</a>,
+ <a href="#png:064">40</a>,
+ <a href="#png:065">41</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:069">45</a>,
+ <a href="#png:073">47</a>,
+ <a href="#png:086">60</a>,
+ <a href="#png:135">105</a>,
+ <a href="#png:137">107</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:139">109</a>,
+ <a href="#png:165">133</a>,
+ <a href="#png:166">134</a>,
+ <a href="#png:201">165</a>,
+ <a href="#png:202">166</a>,
+ <a href="#png:203">167</a>,
+ <a href="#png:287">243</a>,
+ <a href="#png:450">396</a>,
+ <a href="#png:459">403</a>,
+ <a href="#png:523">463</a>,
+ <a href="#png:570">506</a>,
+ <a href="#png:577">513</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Wayland</em>, Francis,</span>
+ <a href="#png:066">42</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Webb</em>, George J.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:220">182</a>,
+ <a href="#png:502">444</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Webbe</em>, Samuel,</span>
+ <a href="#png:146">116</a>,
+ <a href="#png:569">505</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Webster</em>, Joseph P.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:601">535</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:603">537</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Wells</em>, G.C.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:141">111</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Wentworth</em>, (Gov.),</span>
+ <a href="#png:315">269</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Wesley</em>, Charles,</span>
+ <a href="#png:034">14</a>,
+ <a href="#png:048">26</a>,
+ <a href="#png:069">45</a>,
+ <a href="#png:073">47</a>,
+ <a href="#png:122">94</a>,
+ <a href="#png:141">111</a>,
+ <a href="#png:148">118</a>,
+ <a href="#png:244">204</a>,
+ <a href="#png:320">274</a>,
+ <a href="#png:411">359</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:413">361</a>,
+ <a href="#png:442">388</a>,
+ <a href="#png:450">396</a>,
+ <a href="#png:459">403</a>,
+ <a href="#png:478">420</a>,
+ <a href="#png:523">463</a>,
+ <a href="#png:534">474</a>,
+ <a href="#png:555">493</a>,
+ <a href="#png:584">520</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Wesley</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:034">14</a>,
+ <a href="#png:251">209</a>,
+ <a href="#png:253">211</a>,
+ <a href="#png:319">273</a>,
+ <a href="#png:584">520</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Wesley</em>, Samuel,</span>
+ <a href="#png:069">45</a>,
+ <a href="#png:216">178</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Wesley</em>, Samuel Sebastian,</span>
+ <a href="#png:069">45</a>,
+ <a href="#png:215">177</a>,
+ <a href="#png:216">178</a>,
+ <a href="#png:354">304</a>,
+ <a href="#png:547">485</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Wheelock</em>, Eleazer,</span>
+ <a href="#png:313">267</a>,
+ <a href="#png:315">269</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>White</em>, Henry Kirke,</span>
+ <a href="#png:345">297</a>,
+ <a href="#png:416">364</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:418">366</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Whitefield</em>, George,</span>
+ <a href="#png:041">19</a>,
+ <a href="#png:055">31</a>,
+ <a href="#png:116">88</a>,
+ <a href="#png:154">124</a>,
+ <a href="#png:164">132</a>,
+ <a href="#png:241">201</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Whiting</em>, William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:423">369</a>,
+ <a href="#png:424">370</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Whittier</em>, John G.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:294">250</a>,
+ <a href="#png:295">251</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Whittle</em>, D.W.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:502">444</a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">616 /</span> 550</samp>
+ <a id="png:616" name="png:616" title="550"></a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>William</em>, (King),</span>
+ <a href="#png:032">12</a>,
+ <a href="#png:033">13</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Williams</em>, Aaron,</span>
+ <a href="#png:162">130</a>,
+ <a href="#png:166">134</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Williams</em>, David,</span>
+ <a href="#png:461">405</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Williams</em>, Helen M.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:155">125</a>,
+ <a href="#png:156">126</a>,
+ <a href="#png:246">206</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Williams</em>, Peter,</span>
+ <a href="#png:239">199</a>,
+ <a href="#png:241">201</a>,
+ <a href="#png:441">387</a>,
+ <a href="#png:443">389</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Williams</em>, Thomas,</span>
+ <a href="#png:447">393</a>,
+ <a href="#png:457">401</a>,
+ <a href="#png:459">403</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Williams</em>, William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:202">166</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:204">168</a>,
+ <a href="#png:239">199</a>,
+ <a href="#png:435">381</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:440">386</a>,
+ <a href="#png:442">388</a>,
+ <a href="#png:450">396</a>,
+ <a href="#png:455">399</a>,
+ <a href="#png:461">405</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Willis</em>, Richard Storrs,</span>
+ <a href="#png:473">415</a>,
+ <a href="#png:527">467</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Willis</em>, Nathaniel,</span>
+ <a href="#png:527">467</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Willis</em>, N.P.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:527">467</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Wilson</em>, Hugh,</span>
+ <a href="#png:405">353</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Winks</em>, W.E.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:462">406</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Winkworth</em>, Catherine,</span>
+ <a href="#png:112">84</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Woodbridge</em>, William C.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:390">338</a>,
+ <a href="#png:391">339</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Woodbury</em>, Isaac B.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:141">111</a>,
+ <a href="#png:221">183</a>,
+ <a href="#png:288">244</a>,
+ <a href="#png:369">319</a>,
+ <a href="#png:463">407</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Woodman</em>, J.C.,</span>
+ <a href="#png:466">410</a>,
+ <a href="#png:473">415</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Wood</em>, Sir Evelyn,</span>
+ <a href="#png:422">368</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Wroth</em>, William,</span>
+ <a href="#png:433">379</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Wyeth</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:329">283</a>,
+ <a href="#png:330">284</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: X" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Xavier</em>, Francis,</span>
+ <a href="#png:102">74</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: Y" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Young</em>, Andrew,</span>
+ <a href="#png:354">304</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Names: Z" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Zerrahn</em>, Carl,</span>
+ <a href="#png:502">444</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Zeuner</em>, Heinrich,</span>
+ <a href="#png:208">172</a>,
+ <a href="#png:285">241</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Zinzendorf</em>, (Count),</span>
+ <a href="#png:119">91</a>,
+ <a href="#png:120">92</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Zundel</em>, John,</span>
+ <a href="#png:415">363</a>,
+ <a href="#png:547">485</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">617 /</span> 551</samp>
+</div>
+<a id="png:617" name="png:617" title="551"></a>
+
+
+<h2 class="chap">INDEX OF TUNES.</h2>
+<hr class="chap" />
+<!-- The original for this index and the following one
+ has the names of the tunes and the hymns in all lowercase
+ smallcaps, but there is a bug in IE6 which gets the baseline
+ alignment wrong if there is only a single word. Hence we
+ capitalize the first word, and proper names, as a workaround -->
+
+<div class="ctr">
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: A" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Abends</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:296">252</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em><ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Aberystwith'">Aberystwyth</ins></em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:449">395</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Abide with me</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:261">219</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Aelred</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:426">372</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ain</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:062">38</a>,
+ <a href="#png:063">39</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Almost persuaded</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:514">454</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Alsace</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:233">193</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>All saints, new</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:577">513</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Amaland</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:525">465</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>America</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:388">336</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:391">339</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ames</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:058">34</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Amsterdam</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:125">95</a>,
+ <a href="#png:126">96</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Anacreon in heaven</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:384">334</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Annapolis</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:571">507</a>,
+ <a href="#png:579">515</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Anthem for easter</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:534">474</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Antioch</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:202">166</a>,
+ <a href="#png:524">464</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Antiphonals</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:015">xiii</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Anvern</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:584">520</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Arabia</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:442">388</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ariel</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:169">137</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Arlington</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:137">107</a>,
+ <a href="#png:148">118</a>,
+ <a href="#png:579">515</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Athens</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:271">227</a>,
+ <a href="#png:357">307</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Audientes</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:353">303</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Auld lang syne</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:579">515</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Aurelia</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:215">177</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Autumn</em>, (Sardius),</span>
+ <a href="#png:264">222</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Azmon</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:073">47</a>,
+ <a href="#png:074">48</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: B" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Babel</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:442">388</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Balerma</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:345">297</a>,
+ <a href="#png:346">298</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Battle hymn etc.</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:393">341</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:395">343</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Belmont</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:146">116</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Benevento</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:556">494</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Berlin</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:553">491</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bethany</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:187">153</a>,
+ <a href="#png:525">465</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Beyond the smiling and the weeping</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:594">528</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Birmingham</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:164">132</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bonny doon</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:421">367</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bosworth</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:135">105</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bower of prayer, the</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:181">147</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bowring</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:206">170</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Boylston</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:165">133</a>,
+ <a href="#png:205">169</a>,
+ <a href="#png:587">523</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Braden</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:322">276</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Brattle street</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:156">126</a>,
+ <a href="#png:249">207</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Brest</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:569">505</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bright Canaan</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:319">273</a>,
+ <a href="#png:320">274</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Brighton</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:289">245</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Broken pinion, the</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:298">254</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Brooklyn</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:547">485</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Brown</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:276">232</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bruce's address</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:387">335</a>,
+ <a href="#png:388">336</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Brymgfryd</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:442">388</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Buckfield</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:329">283</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Burial of Mrs. Judson</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:291">247</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: C" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Calm on the listening ear, (epiphany)</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:528">468</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Canaan</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:578">514</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Canons</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:031">11</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Capel y ddol</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:461">405</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Carol</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:527">467</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Catharine</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:460">404</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Chester</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:381">331</a>,
+ <a href="#png:382">332</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>China</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:234">194</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Christmas</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:470">414</a>,
+ <a href="#png:526">466</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Clwyd</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:447">393</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Colebrook</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:169">137</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Columbia</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:382">332</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Come</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:513">453</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Come, my brethren</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:326">280</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Come, ye disconsolate</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:263">221</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Come, ye faithful</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:081">55</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Consolation</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:544">482</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Convention hymn</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:225">187</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Coronation</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:049">27</a>,
+ <a href="#png:085">59</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Corsica</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:552">490</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Counterpoint</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:017">xv</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Creation</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:064">40</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Crimea</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:418">366</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Crossing the bar</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:605">539</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Crucifixion</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:578">514</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Cwyfan</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:442">388</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Cwynfan prydian</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:458">402</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+<a id="png:618" name="png:618"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">618 /</span> 552</samp>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: D" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Darby</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:459">403</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dead march in &ldquo;Saul&rdquo;</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:562">498</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dedham</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:074">48</a>,
+ <a href="#png:162">130</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Denmark</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:065">41</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dennis</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:165">133</a>,
+ <a href="#png:197">161</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Devonshire</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:135">105</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Devotion</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:578">514</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dies irae</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:093">65</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dort</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:225">187</a>,
+ <a href="#png:400">348</a>,
+ <a href="#png:543">481</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dunbar</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:597">531</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dundee</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:234">194</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Duke street</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:061">37</a>,
+ <a href="#png:202">166</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: E" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Easter anthem</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:534">474</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ebenezer</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:462">406</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Eden of love</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:318">272</a>,
+ <a href="#png:319">273</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Edina</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:296">252</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Edom</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:457">401</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ein feste Burg</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:099">71</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Eirinwg</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:459">403</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ellacombe</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:215">177</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Elliott</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:257">215</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Elvy</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:442">388</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Emmons</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:155">125</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Epiphany (calm on the listening)</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:528">468</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ernan</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:463">407</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Eternity</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:509">449</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Eucharist</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:141">111</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Evan</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:271">227</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Evening song to the virgin</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:411">359</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Excelsius</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:126">96</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: F" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Fair Harvard</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:357">307</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Falmouth</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:578">514</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Federal street</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:134">104</a>,
+ <a href="#png:135">105</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Fitzwilliam</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:024">4</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Forever with the Lord</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:562">498</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Frederick</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:192">158</a>,
+ <a href="#png:562">498</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>From Greenland's icy</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:217">179</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: G" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ganges</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:149">119</a>,
+ <a href="#png:315">269</a>,
+ <a href="#png:316">270</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Garden hymn, the</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:323">277</a>,
+ <a href="#png:324">278</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Geneva</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:145">115</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Golden hill</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:138">108</a>,
+ <a href="#png:320">274</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>God be with you</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:561">497</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Good morning in glory</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:200">164</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gott ist licht</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:523">463</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Greenville</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:142">112</a>,
+ <a href="#png:151">121</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Griggs</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:132">102</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: H" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Habakkuk</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:254">212</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hail Columbia</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:381">331</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hallelujah! 'tis done!</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:480">422</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hallowell</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:329">283</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hamburg</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:141">111</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hanover</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:244">204</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Happy day</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:328">282</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Happy land</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:354">304</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Harewood</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:547">485</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Harmony</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:578">514</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Harmony grove</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:135">105</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Harvest home</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:541">479</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Haydn</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:055">31</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Heber</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:132">102</a>,
+ <a href="#png:368">318</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>He leadeth me</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:280">236</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Helmsley</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:569">505</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hendon</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:548">486</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>He will hide me</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:502">444</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hold the fort</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:482">424</a>,
+ <a href="#png:490">432</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Holley</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:463">407</a>,
+ <a href="#png:545">483</a>,
+ <a href="#png:546">484</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Holy cross</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:132">102</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Holy, holy, holy</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:077">51</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Holy trinity</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:132">102</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Home of the soul, the</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:598">532</a>,
+ <a href="#png:599">533</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Home, sweet home</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:167">135</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Horbury</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:186">152</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hosanna</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:576">512</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hudson</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:135">105</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hursley</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:196">160</a>,
+ <a href="#png:555">493</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hyfrydol</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:429">375</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: I" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I'm glad I'm in this army</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:347">299</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Immanuel's banner</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:226">188</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Independence</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:382">332</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Innsbruck</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:119">91</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>It is well</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:498">440</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="index" style="text-align: center">
+(See <a href="#png:622">Index of Hymns</a>)</td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: J" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jazer</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:148">118</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jewett</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:564">500</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Joyfully, joyfully</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:337">289</a>,
+ <a href="#png:338">290</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td class="index" style="text-align: center">
+(See <a href="#png:622">Index of Hymns</a>)</td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: K" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Keble</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:078">52</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Keller's American hymn</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:491">433</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:503">445</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Kent</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:135">105</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Kentucky</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:320">274</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: L" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Laban</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:177">143</a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">619 /</span> 553</samp>
+ <a id="png:619" name="png:619" title="553"></a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lament over Boston</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:382">332</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Land ahead</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:423">369</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lanesboro</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:060">36</a>,
+ <a href="#png:567">503</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>La spezia</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:087">61</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lenox</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:449">395</a>,
+ <a href="#png:536">476</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Leoni</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:042">20</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Let the lower lights</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:492">434</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lisbon</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:526">466</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lischer</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:550">488</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Llanietyn</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:460">404</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Louvan</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:078">52</a>,
+ <a href="#png:288">244</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Loving-kindness</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:323">277</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lowell</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:463">407</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lucas</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:556">494</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Luther's hymn</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:101">73</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lux benigna</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:268">224</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: M" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Magdalen</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:403">351</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Magnificat</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:013">xi</a>,
+ <a href="#png:014">xii</a>,
+ <a href="#png:030">10</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Maitland</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:468">412</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Majesty</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:038">16</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Malvern</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:121">93</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Manoah</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:146">116</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Marseillaise</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:210">174</a>,
+ <a href="#png:379">329</a>,
+ <a href="#png:404">352</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Massachusetts</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:578">514</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Matthias</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:289">245</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mear</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:162">130</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Melancthon</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:560">496</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Melita</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:424">370</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Milton</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:287">243</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mendelssohn</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:523">463</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Meribah</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:118">90</a>,
+ <a href="#png:119">91</a>,
+ <a href="#png:149">119</a>,
+ <a href="#png:449">395</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Merton</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:135">105</a>,
+ <a href="#png:583">519</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Messiah</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:327">281</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Midnight mass</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:520">460</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Migdol</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:209">173</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Millennial dawn</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:215">177</a>,
+ <a href="#png:220">182</a>,
+ <a href="#png:537">477</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Missionary chant</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:208">172</a>,
+ <a href="#png:339">291</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Monson</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:276">232</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Montgomery</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:059">35</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Morecambe</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:553">491</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Morlaix</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:426">372</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Morning</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:135">105</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Morning glory</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:568">504</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mornington</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:587">523</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mozart</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:288">244</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mt. Auburn</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:583">519</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mt. Vernon</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:562">498</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>My ain countree</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:516">456</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>My brother, I wish you well</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:119">91</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>My jesus, I love thee</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:198">162</a>,
+ <a href="#png:199">163</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: N" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Nancy jig</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:439">385</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Naomi</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:238">198</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Neale</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:407">355</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Nearer home</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:463">407</a>,
+ <a href="#png:597">531</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Nesta</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:460">404</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Nettleton</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:142">112</a>,
+ <a href="#png:329">283</a>,
+ <a href="#png:330">284</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>New Durham</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:329">283</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>New Jerusalem</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:570">506</a>,
+ <a href="#png:571">507</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Nic&aelig;a</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:077">51</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Northfield</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:570">506</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:572">508</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Norwich</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:249">207</a>,
+ <a href="#png:522">462</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Not half has ever been told</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:511">451</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Nottingham</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:038">16</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>No war nor battle sound</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:521">461</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: O" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Oak</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:350">302</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ode on science</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:380">330</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O do not be discouraged</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:347">299</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Old hundred</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:018">xvi</a>,
+ <a href="#png:037">15</a>,
+ <a href="#png:065">41</a>,
+ <a href="#png:202">166</a>,
+ <a href="#png:391">339</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Olmutz</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:582">518</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Old ship of Zion</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:338">290</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>One more day's work, etc.</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:476">418</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Only remembered</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:359">309</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Onward, christian soldiers</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:082">56</a>,
+ <a href="#png:224">186</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O, perfect love</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:568">504</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ortonville</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:047">25</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Over there</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:494">436</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: P" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Palestine</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:242">202</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Palm branches</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:530">470</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Paradise</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:590">526</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Part-song</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:017">xv</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Paschale gaudium</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:534">474</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Pentecost</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:577">513</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Peterborough</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:074">48</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Pilgrim</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:047">25</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Pisgah</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:148">118</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Plain-song</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:014">xii</a>,
+ <a href="#png:030">10</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Pleyel's hymn</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:326">280</a>,
+ <a href="#png:467">411</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Polyphonic</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:017">xv</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Portland</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:329">283</a>,
+ <a href="#png:550">488</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Portuguese hymn</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:245">205</a>,
+ <a href="#png:246">206</a>,
+ <a href="#png:520">460</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Precious jewels</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:365">315</a>,
+ <a href="#png:366">316</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>President's march</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:381">331</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: R" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em><ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: Original has 'Rand'">Ranz</ins> de Vaches</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:404">352</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rathbun</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:129">99</a>,
+ <a href="#png:293">249</a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">620 /</span> 554</samp>
+ <a id="png:620" name="png:620" title="554"></a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ravendale</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:112">84</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Raynham</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:578">514</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Refuge</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:415">363</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rejoice and be glad</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:473">415</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rescue the perishing</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:483">425</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rest</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:563">499</a>,
+ <a href="#png:577">513</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Restoration</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:578">514</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Retreat</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:267">223</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Retrospect</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:382">332</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Revive thy work</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:503">445</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rhine</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:155">125</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rivaulx</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:134">104</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rolland</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:136">106</a>,
+ <a href="#png:555">493</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rockingham</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:163">131</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rotterdam</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:081">55</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Russia</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:526">466</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rutherford</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:110">82</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: S" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Safe in the arms of Jesus</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:607">541</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Salem</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:153">123</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Salisbury plain</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:135">105</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Samson</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:202">166</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sardius, (autumn)</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:241">201</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Savannah</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:282">238</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Saviour, like a shepherd</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:360">310</a>,
+ <a href="#png:361">311</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Saviour, pilot me</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:428">374</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Scale, the</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:015">xiii</a>,
+ <a href="#png:016">xiv</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Scatter seeds of kindness</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:368">318</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Schumann</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:115">87</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Scots wha hae</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:388">336</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sequences</em>, (footnote),</span>
+ <a href="#png:028">8</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Shawmut</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:463">407</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sherburne</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:526">466</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sicily</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:161">129</a>,
+ <a href="#png:329">283</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Siloam</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:288">244</a>,
+ <a href="#png:368">318</a>,
+ <a href="#png:369">319</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Silver street</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:374">324</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Simpson</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:156">126</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Something for Jesus</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:182">148</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Songs of the beautiful</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:545">483</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sonnet</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:335">287</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sound the loud timbrel</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:377">327</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Speed away</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:222">184</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Spohr</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:288">244</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Stafford</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:526">466</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Star-spangled banner, the</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:075">49</a>,
+ <a href="#png:383">333</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:385">335</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>State street</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:466">410</a>,
+ <a href="#png:579">515</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>St. Ambrose</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:344">296</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>St. Anselm</em>, (we plow the fields),</span>
+ <a href="#png:538">478</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>St. Athanasius</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:085">59</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>St. Bernard</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:103">75</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>St. Botolph</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:288">244</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>St. Chad</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:076">50</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>St. Edmund</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:186">152</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>St. Garmon</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:449">395</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>St. <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'Kevier'">Kevin</ins></em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:357">307</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>St. Louis</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:529">469</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>St. Magnus</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:038">16</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>St. Petersburg</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:255">213</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>St. Philip</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:052">30</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>St. Thomas</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:062">38</a>,
+ <a href="#png:166">134</a>,
+ <a href="#png:587">523</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Stephens</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:328">282</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Stowe</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:544">482</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sussex</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:564">500</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sweet by and by</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:600">534</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:603">537</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sweet Galilee</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:307">261</a>,
+ <a href="#png:369">319</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sweet hour of prayer</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:490">432</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Switzer's song of home</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:404">352</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: T" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Tallis' evening hymn</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:018">xvi</a>,
+ <a href="#png:038">16</a>,
+ <a href="#png:039">17</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Te Deum</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:021">1</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:024">4</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Telemann's chant</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:534">474</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Thacher</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:139">109</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The bower of prayer</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:181">147</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The broken pinion</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:298">254</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The chariot</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:325">279</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The dying christian</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:580">516</a>,
+ <a href="#png:581">517</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The eden of love</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:318">272</a>,
+ <a href="#png:319">273</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The garden hymn</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:323">277</a>,
+ <a href="#png:324">278</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The harp that once</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:378">328</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The hebrew children</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:317">271</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The home of the soul</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:598">532</a>,
+ <a href="#png:599">533</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The land of the blest</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:358">308</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The morning light is breaking</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:215">177</a>,
+ <a href="#png:220">182</a>,
+ <a href="#png:537">477</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The ninety and nine</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:480">422</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The old, old story</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:487">429</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The prodigal child</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:488">430</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The solid rock</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:367">317</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The star-spangled banner</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:383">333</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>There is a green hill</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:470">414</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Throw out the life-line</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:428">374</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Thydian</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:442">388</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>To the work</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:496">438</a>,
+ <a href="#png:542">480</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Toplady</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:085">59</a>,
+ <a href="#png:174">142</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Trencynon</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:449">395</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Triumph by and by</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:510">450</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Truro</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:285">241</a>,
+ <a href="#png:463">407</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Turner</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:328">282</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<a id="png:621" name="png:621"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">621 /</span> 555</samp>
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: U" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Uxbridge</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:121">93</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: V" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Vox angelica</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:589">525</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Vox dilecti</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:282">238</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Vox Jesu</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:271">227</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: W" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Waiting and watching</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:501">443</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Walnut grove</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:135">105</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ward</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:236">196</a>,
+ <a href="#png:555">493</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ware</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:058">34</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Watchman</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:206">170</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Webb</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:215">177</a>,
+ <a href="#png:220">182</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Weimar</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:029">9</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Wells</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:465">409</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Wellesley</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:279">235</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Welton</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:548">486</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>We shall meet</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:595">529</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>What a friend we have</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:483">425</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>What shall the harvest be</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:493">435</a>,
+ <a href="#png:494">436</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>When Jesus comes</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:495">437</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>When peace like a</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:537">477</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>When shall we all meet</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:312">266</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>When the swallows homeward fly</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:416">364</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Where are the reapers</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:487">429</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Where is my wandering boy</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:504">446</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>While the days are going</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:362">312</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Whitman</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:180">146</a>,
+ <a href="#png:416">364</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Wilmot</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:151">121</a>,
+ <a href="#png:552">490</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Windham</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:463">407</a>,
+ <a href="#png:526">466</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Windsor</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:544">482</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Woodstock</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:276">232</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Woodworth</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:257">215</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: Y" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Y delyn aur</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:461">405</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>York</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:522">462</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Your mission</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:305">259</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Tunes: Z" class="index">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Zephyr</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:577">513</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Zion</em>, (T. Hastings),</span>
+ <a href="#png:204">168</a>,
+ <a href="#png:210">174</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Zion</em>, (A. Hall),</span>
+ <a href="#png:578">514</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="chap">INDEX OF HYMNS.<a id="png:622" name="png:622"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">622 /</span> 556</samp></h2>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<div class="ctr">
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: A" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>A charge to keep I have</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:320">274</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Abide with me, fast falls</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:259">217</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Adams and liberty</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:387">335</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Adeste, fideles</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:518">458</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Alas, what hourly dangers rise</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:238">198</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>All glory, laud and honor</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:025">5</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>All hail the power of Jesus' name</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:047">25</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:049">27</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>All praise to thee, eternal Lord</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:028">8</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Almost persuaded</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:514">454</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Along the banks where Babel's current</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:286">242</a>,
+ <a href="#png:287">243</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>A mighty fortress is our God</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:097">69</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>And is this life prolonged to you</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:067">43</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>And will the judge descend</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:466">410</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Angel of peace, thou has waited</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:396">344</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Angels roll the rock away</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:467">411</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Another six days' work is done</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:045">23</a>,
+ <a href="#png:550">488</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>A poor wayfaring man of grief</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:331">285</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Arise, my soul, arise</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:449">395</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Art thou weary, art thou languid</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:083">57</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>As down in the sunless retreats</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:287">243</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Asleep in Jesus, blessed sleep</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:563">499</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>At anchor laid remote from home</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:170">138</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ave, maris stella</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:408">356</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ave, sanctissima</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:409">357</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Awake and sing the song</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:051">29</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Awake my soul, stretch every nerve</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:469">413</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Awake, my soul, to joyful lays</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:322">276</a>,
+ <a href="#png:323">277</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Awaked by Sinai's awful sound</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:313">267</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: B" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Battle hymn of the republic</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:392">340</a>,
+ <a href="#png:395">343</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Before Jehovah's awful throne</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:064">40</a>,
+ <a href="#png:065">41</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Begone unbelief, my saviour is near</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:243">203</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Behold the glories of the lamb</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:066">42</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Behold, the stone is rolled away</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:511">451</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Be thou exalted, O my God</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:064">40</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Be thou, O God, exalted high</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:141">111</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Beyond the smiling and the weeping</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:593">527</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Blest be the tie that binds</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:164">132</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Blow ye the trumpet, blow</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:449">395</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Bread of heaven, on thee we feed</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:551">489</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Brethren, while we sojourn here</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:326">280</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Brightly beams the father's mercy</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:489">431</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Build thee more stately mansions</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:293">249</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>By cool Siloam's shady rill</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:368">318</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>By the rude bridge
+ that arched the flood</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:391">339</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+<a id="png:623" name="png:623"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">623 /</span> 557</samp>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: C" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Calvary's blood the weak exalteth</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:439">385</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Child of sin and sorrow</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:267">223</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Christians, if your hearts are warm</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:320">274</a>,
+ <a href="#png:321">275</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Christ is our corner stone</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:547">485</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Christ is risen! Christ is risen!</em></span>
+ <a href="#png:533">473</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Christ the Lord is risen today</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:534">474</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Come hither, all ye weary souls</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:465">409</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Come hither, ye faithful</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:519">459</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Come, Holy Ghost, in love</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:085">59</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Come, Holy Spirit, heavenly dove</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:328">282</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Come home, come home</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:488">430</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Come, let us anew</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:556">494</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Come, my brethren, let us try</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:325">279</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Come, sinner, come</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:475">417</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Come, thou fount of every blessing</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:329">283</a>,
+ <a href="#png:330">284</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Come, thou Holy Spirit, come</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:084">58</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Come to Jesus just now</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:339">291</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Come unto me when shadows</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:250">208</a>,
+ <a href="#png:251">209</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Come, we that love the Lord</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:061">37</a>,
+ <a href="#png:062">38</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Come, ye disconsolate</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:261">219</a>,
+ <a href="#png:262">220</a>,
+ <a href="#png:376">326</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Come, ye faithful, raise the strain</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:080">54</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Come, ye sinners, poor and needy</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:149">119</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Commit thou all thy griefs</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:112">84</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:113">85</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Crown his head with endless blessing</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:052">30</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: D" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Daughter of Zion, from the dust</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:548">486</a>,
+ <a href="#png:551">489</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Day of wrath: that day of burning</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:088">62</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:092">64</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dear Jesus, ever at my side</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:350">302</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dear refuge of my weary soul</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:236">196</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Did Christ o'er sinners weep</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:196">160</a>,
+ <a href="#png:197">161</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Die Felder wir <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'pflugen'">pfl&uuml;gen</ins></em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:538">478</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Dies irae, dies illa</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:088">62</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:092">64</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: E" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Early, my God, without delay</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:059">35</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Early to bear the yoke excels</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:457">401</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ein feste Burg ist unser Gott</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:097">69</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Eternal father, strong to save</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:423">369</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: F" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Fading away like the stars</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:359">309</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Father, whatever of earthly bliss</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:236">196</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Fear not, O little flock, the foe</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:110">82</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Fierce raged the tempest</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:426">372</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Fierce was the wild billow</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:406">354</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Forever with the Lord</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:585">521</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>From every stormy wind</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:264">222</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>From Greenland's icy mountains</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:216">178</a>,
+ <a href="#png:217">179</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>From whence doth this union arise</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:309">263</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Fully persuaded</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:511">451</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: G" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gaude, plaude, magdalena</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:532">472</a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">624 /</span> 558</samp>
+ <a id="png:624" name="png:624" title="558"></a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Give me my scallop-shell of quiet</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:104">76</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Give to the winds thy fears</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:116">88</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Gloria</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:014">xii</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Glory to thee, my God, this night</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:018">xvi</a>,
+ <a href="#png:038">16</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>God be with you till we meet</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:560">496</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>God bless our native land</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:399">347</a>,
+ <a href="#png:400">348</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>God calling yet?</em></span>
+ <a href="#png:132">102</a>,
+ <a href="#png:133">103</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>God is the refuge of his saints</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:236">196</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>God of our fathers, known of old</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:401">349</a>,
+ <a href="#png:402">350</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>God's furnace doth in Zion stand</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:117">89</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Great author of salvation</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:452">398</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Great God, we sing that mighty hand</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:560">496</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Great God, what do I see and hear!</em></span>
+ <a href="#png:099">71</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Guide me, O thou great Jehovah</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:238">198</a>,
+ <a href="#png:455">399</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: H" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hail Columbia, happy land</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:381">331</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hail to the Lord's anointed</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:213">175</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hallelujah! 'tis done!</em></span>
+ <a href="#png:480">422</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hark! hark, my soul!</em></span>
+ <a href="#png:588">524</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hark! the herald angels sing</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:523">463</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hark! what mean those holy voices</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:524">464</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hasten, Lord, the glorious time</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:204">168</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hasten, sinner, to be wise</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:466">410</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>He dies! the friend of sinners</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:533">473</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>He leadeth me</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:279">235</a>,
+ <a href="#png:280">236</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Here at thy table, Lord, we meet</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:046">24</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Here behold the tent of meeting</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:450">396</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Here, O my God, i see thee</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:552">490</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>He rose! O morn of wonder!</em></span>
+ <a href="#png:537">477</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>High the angel choirs are raising</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:096">68</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Holy, holy, holy, Lord God</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:076">50</a>,
+ <a href="#png:077">51</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ho, my comrades, see the signal</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:482">424</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Hora novissima</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:574">510</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>How firm a foundation</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:244">204</a>,
+ <a href="#png:246">206</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>How happy is the child who hears</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:345">297</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>How happy is the pilgrim's lot</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:249">207</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>How sweetly flowed the gospel sound</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:128">98</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>How sweet, how heavenly is the sight</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:327">281</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>How sweet the covenant to remember</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:450">396</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>How, unapproached! shall mind of man</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:082">56</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>How vain are all things here below</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:069">45</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>How vast a treasure we possess</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:067">43</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: I" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I am far frae my hame</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:503">445</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I am so glad that our father</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:369">319</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I cannot always trace the way</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:566">502</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>If I were a voice</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:219">181</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>If thou wouldst end the world</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:443">389</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>If you cannot on the ocean</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:302">256</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:304">258</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I gave my life for thee</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:188">154</a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">625 /</span> 559</samp>
+ <a id="png:625" name="png:625" title="559"></a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I have a father</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:355">305</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I have read of a beautiful city</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:511">451</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I hear the saviour say</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:484">426</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I heard the voice of Jesus say</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:269">225</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:271">227</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I'll cast my heavy burden down</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:438">384</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I love thy kingdom, Lord</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:165">133</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I love to steal awhile away</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:273">229</a>,
+ <a href="#png:275">231</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I love to tell the story</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:487">429</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I'm a pilgrim</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:324">278</a>,
+ <a href="#png:336">288</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I'm but a stranger here</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:348">300</a>,
+ <a href="#png:349">301</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I'm going home</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:339">291</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I'm not ashamed</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:137">107</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>In de dark wood</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:310">264</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>In eden, O the memory!</em></span>
+ <a href="#png:437">383</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I need thee every hour</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:187">153</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>In some way or other</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:182">148</a>,
+ <a href="#png:183">149</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>In the bonds of death he lay</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:533">473</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>In the cross of Christ I glory</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:127">97</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>In the deep and mighty waters</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:462">406</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>In the waves and mighty waters</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:461">405</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I open my eyes to this vision</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:460">404</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Is this the kind return?</em></span>
+ <a href="#png:138">108</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>It came upon the midnight clear</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:526">466</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I think when I read that sweet</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:355">305</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>It may not be our lot to yield</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:294">250</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>It was the winter wild</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:520">460</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I walked in the woodland meadows</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:295">251</a>,
+ <a href="#png:296">252</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>I will sing you a song of that</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:598">532</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: J" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jerusalem the golden</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:573">509</a>,
+ <a href="#png:575">511</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jesu, dulcis memoria</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:130">100</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jesus' blood can raise the feeble</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:439">385</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jesus, I love thy charming name</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:146">116</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jesus, I my cross have taken</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:263">221</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jesus, keep me near the cross</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:190">156</a>,
+ <a href="#png:191">157</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jesus, lover of my soul</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:411">359</a>,
+ <a href="#png:416">364</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jesus my all to heaven is gone</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:156">126</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jesus, saviour, pilot me</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:427">373</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jesus shall reign where'er the sun</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:201">165</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jesus, the very thought of thee</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:130">100</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jesus the water of life will give</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:362">312</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Jesus, thy blood and righteousness</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:119">91</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>John Wesley's hymn</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:251">209</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Joyfully, joyfully onward</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:336">288</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:338">290</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Joy to the world! the Lord is come</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:202">166</a>,
+ <a href="#png:523">463</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: K" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Keep me very near to Jesus</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:456">400</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Keller's American hymn</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:395">343</a>,
+ <a href="#png:397">345</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: L" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Land ahead! the fruits are waving</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:421">367</a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">626 /</span> 560</samp>
+ <a id="png:626" name="png:626" title="560"></a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lead, kindly light</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:267">223</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Let party names no more</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:205">169</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Let tyrants shake their iron rod</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:381">331</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Let us gather up the sunbeams</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:367">317</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Let us sing of the sheaves</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:541">479</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Life is the time to serve the Lord</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:465">409</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Little travellers Zionward</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:347">299</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lo! a saviour for the fallen</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:460">404</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lo! he comes, with clouds descending</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:568">504</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lo! on a narrow neck of land</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:148">118</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lo! what a glorious sight appears</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:569">505</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lord, how mysterious are thy ways</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:238">198</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lord of all being, throned afar</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:078">52</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Lord, with glowing heart I'd praise</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:075">49</a>,
+ <a href="#png:076">50</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Love divine, all loves excelling</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:073">47</a>,
+ <a href="#png:141">111</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Love unfathomed as the ocean</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:457">401</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: M" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Magdalena, shout for gladness</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:533">473</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Magnificat anima mea</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:014">xii</a>,
+ <a href="#png:030">10</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Majestic sweetness sits enthroned</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:045">23</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Marseillaise hymn</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:210">174</a>,
+ <a href="#png:379">329</a>,
+ <a href="#png:404">352</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mein Jesu, wie du willst</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:563">499</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mid scenes of confusion</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:166">134</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mine eyes have seen the glory of the</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:393">341</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Mournfully, tenderly bear on the dead</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:289">245</a>,
+ <a href="#png:290">246</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Must Jesus bear the cross alone</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:467">411</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>My brother, I wish you well</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:338">290</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>My country 'tis of thee</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:388">336</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:390">338</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>My God, how endless is thy love</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:135">105</a>,
+ <a href="#png:136">106</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>My God, I love thee, not because</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:103">75</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>My God, is any hour so sweet</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:256">214</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>My God, my father, while I stray</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:256">214</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>My God, my portion and my love</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:436">382</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>My gracious redeemer, I love</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:164">132</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>My hope is built on nothing less</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:258">216</a>,
+ <a href="#png:259">217</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>My Jesus, as thou wilt</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:563">499</a>,
+ <a href="#png:564">500</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>My Jesus, I love thee</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:198">162</a>,
+ <a href="#png:199">163</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>My lord and my God, I have trusted</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:105">77</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>My Lord, how full of sweet content</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:228">190</a>,
+ <a href="#png:232">192</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>My saviour keeps me company</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:227">189</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>My soul, behold the fitness</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:451">397</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: N" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Nearer, my God, to thee</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:184">150</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:186">152</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>No change of time shall ever shock</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:233">193</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Not all the blood of beasts</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:068">44</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Now to the Lord a noble song</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:057">33</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: O" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O bliss of the purified</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:491">433</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O Canaan, bright Canaan</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:319">273</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O church, arise and sing</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:224">186</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O come, all ye faithful</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:519">459</a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">627 /</span> 561</samp>
+ <a id="png:627" name="png:627" title="561"></a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O could I speak the matchless worth</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:168">136</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O crown of rejoicing</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:511">451</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ode on science</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:380">330</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O Deus, ego amo te</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:102">74</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O do not be discouraged</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:346">298</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O'er all the way green palms</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:530">470</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O'er the gloomy hills of darkness</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:202">166</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O for a closer walk with God</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:161">129</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O for a thousand tongues to sing</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:069">45</a>,
+ <a href="#png:070">46</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Oft in danger, oft in woe</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:418">366</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O Galilee sweet Galilee</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:306">260</a>,
+ <a href="#png:369">319</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O had I the wings of a dove</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:456">400</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O happy day that fixed my choice</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:327">281</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O happy saints that dwell in light</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:152">122</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O help us, Lord; each hour of need</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:324">278</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O how happy are they</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:327">281</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O how i love Jesus</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:339">291</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O little town of Bethlehem</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:528">468</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O Lord of hosts, whose glory fills</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:547">485</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>One more day's work for Jesus</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:476">418</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>One sweetly solemn thought</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:595">529</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>On Jordan's stormy banks</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:046">24</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Only remembered</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:358">308</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>On the mountain top appearing</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:209">173</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Onward, christian soldiers</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:223">185</a>,
+ <a href="#png:224">186</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Onward ride in triumph, Jesus</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:436">382</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O paradise! O paradise!</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:589">525</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O perfect love</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:568">504</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O sacred head, now wounded</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:114">86</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O sing to me of heaven</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:336">288</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O the clanging bells of time</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:509">449</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O the lamb, the loving lamb</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:317">271</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O think of the home over there</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:523">463</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O thou in whose presence my soul</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:327">281</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O thou, my soul, forget no more</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:554">492</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O thou who didst prepare</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:413">361</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O thou who dry'st the mourner's tear</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:288">244</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O thou whose tender mercy hears</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:238">198</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O turn ye, O turn ye, for why</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:339">291</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Our Lord has gone up on high</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:533">473</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O when shall I see Jesus</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:322">276</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O where shall rest be found</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:179">145</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O why should the spirit of mortal</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:282">238</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>O worship the king all glorious above</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:044">22</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: P" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Parted many a toil-spent year</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:313">267</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Patiently enduring</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:501">443</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Peace, troubled soul, whose plaintive</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:242">202</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>People of the living God</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:178">144</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Pilgrims we are to Zion bound</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:327">281</a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">628 /</span> 562</samp>
+ <a id="png:628" name="png:628" title="562"></a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Portals of light</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:501">443</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Praise God from whom all blessings</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:033">13</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Pull for the shore</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:426">372</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: R" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rejoice and be glad</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:473">415</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rescue the perishing</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:483">425</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Revive thy work, O Lord</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:503">445</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rise, crowned with light</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:282">238</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rise, my soul, and stretch thy wings</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:122">94</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Rock of ages, cleft for me</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:169">137</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: S" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Safe in the arms of Jesus</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:606">540</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sanctify, O Lord, my spirit</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:461">405</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Saviour, like a shepherd lead us</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:360">310</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Saviour, thy dying love</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:181">147</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Scatter seeds of kindness</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:367">317</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Scots wha hae wi wallace bled</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:387">335</a>,
+ <a href="#png:404">352</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>See gentle patience smile on pain</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:134">104</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Send thy Spirit, I beseech thee</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:462">406</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Servant of God, well done</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:562">498</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Shepherd of tender youth</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:341">293</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:344">296</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Show pity, Lord, O Lord forgive</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:068">44</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Shrinking from the cold hand of death</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:584">520</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Since Jesus truly did appear</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:567">503</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sister, thou wast mild and lovely</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:562">498</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>So fades the lovely, blooming flower</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:134">104</a>,
+ <a href="#png:238">198</a>,
+ <a href="#png:562">498</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Softly fades the twilight ray</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:546">484</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Softly now the light of day</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:545">483</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Soon may the last glad song arise</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:209">173</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sound the loud timbrel</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:376">326</a>,
+ <a href="#png:377">327</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Speak, O speak, thou gentle Jesus</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:440">386</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Speed away, speed away</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:222">184</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Spirit of grace and love divine</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:459">403</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Stand! the ground's your own</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:387">335</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Star-spangled banner</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:075">49</a>,
+ <a href="#png:383">333</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:385">335</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Still, still with thee</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:543">481</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sun of my soul, my saviour dear</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:195">159</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sunset and evening star</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:601">535</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sur nos chemins les rameaux</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:530">470</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sweet hour of prayer</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:490">432</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sweet is the day of sacred rest</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:550">488</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sweet is the light of sabbath eve</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:550">488</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sweet is work, my God, my king</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:061">37</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sweet is the work, O Lord</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:204">168</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Sweet the moments, rich in blessing</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:159">127</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: T" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Take me as I am, O saviour</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:438">384</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Te Deum laudamus</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:021">1</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Tell me not in mournful numbers</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:292">248</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Tell me the old, old story</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:485">427</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The banner of Immanuel</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:226">188</a>,
+ <a href="#png:227">189</a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">629 /</span> 563</samp>
+ <a id="png:629" name="png:629" title="563"></a>
+</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The bird let loose in eastern skies</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:288">244</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The breaking waves dashed high</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:373">323</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The chariot! the chariot!</em></span>
+ <a href="#png:324">278</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The day is past and gone</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:321">275</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The day of <ins class="transcriber"
+ title="Transcriber's note: original has 'ressurrection'">resurrection</ins></em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:080">54</a>,
+ <a href="#png:081">55</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The Eden of love</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:318">272</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The glory is coming, God said it</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:456">400</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The God of Abraham praise</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:040">18</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The God of harvest praise</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:543">481</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The harp that once thro Tara's hall</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:376">326</a>,
+ <a href="#png:378">328</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The heights of fair Salem ascended</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:459">403</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The Lord descended from above</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:037">15</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The Lord into his garden comes</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:323">277</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The Lord is risen indeed</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:535">475</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The Lord our God
+ is clothed with might</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:418">366</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The morning light is breaking</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:217">179</a>,
+ <a href="#png:218">180</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The ocean hath no danger</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:425">371</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The prize is set before us</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:509">449</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The sands of time are sinking</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:106">78</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The turf shall be my fragrant shrine</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:288">244</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>The world is very evil</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:574">510</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>There are lonely hearts to cherish</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:362">312</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>There is a calm for those who weep</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:563">499</a>,
+ <a href="#png:585">521</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>There is a green hill far away</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:470">414</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>There is a happy land</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:354">304</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>There's a land that is
+ fairer than day</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:598">532</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>There's a wideness in God's mercy</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:277">233</a>,
+ <a href="#png:278">234</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>There were ninety and nine</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:480">422</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>They that dwell upon the deep</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:405">353</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Thine earthly sabbaths, Lord, we love</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:550">488</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Thou art, O God, the life and light</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:288">244</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Thou dear redeemer, dying lamb</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:154">124</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Thou lovely source of true delight</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:238">198</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Throw out the life-line</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:428">374</a>&ndash;<a href="#png:431">377</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>'Tis finished! so the saviour cried</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:046">24</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>'Tis religion that can give</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:353">303</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>To Christ the Lord let every tongue</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:047">25</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>To God the father, God the son</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:034">14</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>To leave my dear friends,
+ and from neighbors</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:180">146</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>To the work, to the work!</em></span>
+ <a href="#png:496">438</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Too late! too late!</em></span>
+ <a href="#png:305">259</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Triumphant Zion, lift thy head</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:574">510</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: U" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ultima thule</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:370">320</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Under the palms</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:298">254</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Unnumbered are the marvels</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:458">402</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Unto thy presence coming</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:446">392</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Unveil thy bosom faithful tomb</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:068">44</a>,
+ <a href="#png:562">498</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Up and away like the dew</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:358">308</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Urbs Sion aurea</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:573">509</a>,
+ <a href="#png:575">511</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<a id="png:630" name="png:630"></a><samp class="pgmark"
+ ><span class="png">630 /</span>564</samp>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: V" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Veni, Sancte Spiritus</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:083">57</a>,
+ <a href="#png:084">58</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Verzage nicht, du hauflein klein</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:110">82</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Vital spark of heavenly flame</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:579">515</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: W" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Watchman, tell us of the night</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:206">170</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>We are on our journey home</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:475">417</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Welcome, delightful morn</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:550">488</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>We plow the fields and scatter</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:538">478</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>We praise thee, O God, for the son</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:474">416</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>We sat down and wept by the waters</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:285">241</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>We shall meet beyond the river</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:594">528</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>We speak of the land of the blest</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:357">307</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Westward the course of empire</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:374">324</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>What a friend we have in Jesus</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:483">425</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>What shall a dying sinner do</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:067">43</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>What shall the harvest be</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:492">434</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>What various hindrances we meet</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:163">131</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>When all thy mercies, O my God</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:143">113</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>When for eternal worlds I steer</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:332">286</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>When he cometh, when he cometh</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:364">314</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>When I can read my title clear</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:067">43</a>,
+ <a href="#png:578">514</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>When gathering clouds around I view</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:254">212</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>When Israel of the Lord beloved</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:284">240</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>When I survey the wondrous cross</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:066">42</a>,
+ <a href="#png:139">109</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>When languor and disease invade</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:169">137</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>When marshalled on the nightly plain</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:416">364</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>When my final farewell to the world</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:499">441</a>,
+ <a href="#png:500">442</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>When our heads are bowed with woe</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:324">278</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>When peace like a river</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:498">440</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>When shall we all meet again</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:311">265</a>,
+ <a href="#png:312">266</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>When two or three with sweet accord</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:046">24</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Where is my wandering boy to-night?</em></span>
+ <a href="#png:504">446</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Where now are the hebrew children?</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:316">270</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>While Jesus whispers to you</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:476">418</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>While shepherds watched their flocks</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:525">465</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>While thee I seek, protecting power</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:155">125</a>,
+ <a href="#png:249">207</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>While with ceaseless course the sun</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:555">493</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Why should we start and fear to die</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:576">512</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Wide, ye heavenly gates unfold</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:204">168</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>With joy we hail the sacred day</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:204">168</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>With songs and honors sounding loud</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:541">479</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>With tearful eyes I look around</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:256">214</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<table summary="Index of Hymns: Y" class="hymnindex">
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ye choirs of new Jerusalem</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:085">59</a>,
+ <a href="#png:086">60</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ye christian heralds, go proclaim</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:207">171</a>,
+ <a href="#png:208">172</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ye christian heroes, wake to glory</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:210">174</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ye golden lamps of heaven, farewell</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:583">519</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Ye servants of God,
+ your master proclaim</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:244">204</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Yes, my native land, I love thee</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:218">180</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Yes, the redeemer rose</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:536">476</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr valign="baseline">
+<td class="index"><span><em>Your harps; ye trembling saints</em>,</span>
+ <a href="#png:581">517</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+<hr class="pg" noshade="noshade" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY OF THE HYMNS AND TUNES***</p>
+<p>******* This file should be named 18444-h.txt or 18444-h.zip *******</p>
+<p>This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:<br />
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/8/4/4/18444">http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/4/4/18444</a></p>
+<p>Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.</p>
+
+<p>Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.</p>
+
+
+
+<pre>
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/license">http://www.gutenberg.org/license)</a>.
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS,' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/pglaf.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://www.gutenberg.org/about/contact
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/pglaf
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+Each eBook is in a subdirectory of the same number as the eBook's
+eBook number, often in several formats including plain vanilla ASCII,
+compressed (zipped), HTML and others.
+
+Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks replace the old file and take over
+the old filename and etext number. The replaced older file is renamed.
+VERSIONS based on separate sources are treated as new eBooks receiving
+new filenames and etext numbers.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org">http://www.gutenberg.org</a>
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+EBooks posted prior to November 2003, with eBook numbers BELOW #10000,
+are filed in directories based on their release date. If you want to
+download any of these eBooks directly, rather than using the regular
+search system you may utilize the following addresses and just
+download by the etext year.
+
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext06/">http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext06/</a>
+
+ (Or /etext 05, 04, 03, 02, 01, 00, 99,
+ 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90)
+
+EBooks posted since November 2003, with etext numbers OVER #10000, are
+filed in a different way. The year of a release date is no longer part
+of the directory path. The path is based on the etext number (which is
+identical to the filename). The path to the file is made up of single
+digits corresponding to all but the last digit in the filename. For
+example an eBook of filename 10234 would be found at:
+
+http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/0/2/3/10234
+
+or filename 24689 would be found at:
+http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/4/6/8/24689
+
+An alternative method of locating eBooks:
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/GUTINDEX.ALL">http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/GUTINDEX.ALL</a>
+
+*** END: FULL LICENSE ***
+</pre>
+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/18444-h/images/hymnal.png b/18444-h/images/hymnal.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..fac1489
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/hymnal.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus01-thomasken-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus01-thomasken-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..40fa7fb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus01-thomasken-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus02-oliverholden-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus02-oliverholden-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2a2c9f7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus02-oliverholden-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus03-josephhaydn-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus03-josephhaydn-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..194703d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus03-josephhaydn-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus04-charleswesley-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus04-charleswesley-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2730dad
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus04-charleswesley-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus05-martinluther-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus05-martinluther-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..39f7fe9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus05-martinluther-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus06-ladyhuntingdon-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus06-ladyhuntingdon-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..cb0ed3c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus06-ladyhuntingdon-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus07-augustusmontaguetoplady-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus07-augustusmontaguetoplady-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..865c373
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus07-augustusmontaguetoplady-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus08-thomashastings-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus08-thomashastings-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6419a2a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus08-thomashastings-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus09-francesridleyhavergal-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus09-francesridleyhavergal-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..39bd5e0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus09-francesridleyhavergal-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus10-reginaldheber-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus10-reginaldheber-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8f7bca2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus10-reginaldheber-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus11-georgejameswebb-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus11-georgejameswebb-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0199f26
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus11-georgejameswebb-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus12-johnwesley-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus12-johnwesley-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..76d5ec1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus12-johnwesley-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus13-johnbdykes-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus13-johnbdykes-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..109600e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus13-johnbdykes-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus14-ellengates-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus14-ellengates-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..32ded75
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus14-ellengates-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus15-jamesmontgomery-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus15-jamesmontgomery-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..c44d71b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus15-jamesmontgomery-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus16-fannycrosby-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus16-fannycrosby-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..52b96d6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus16-fannycrosby-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus17-samuelsmith-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus17-samuelsmith-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1295204
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus17-samuelsmith-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus18-williambradbury-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus18-williambradbury-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f88d778
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus18-williambradbury-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus19-isaacwatts-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus19-isaacwatts-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5093b61
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus19-isaacwatts-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus20-gfhandel-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus20-gfhandel-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..37e2a0f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus20-gfhandel-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus21-philipdoddridge-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus21-philipdoddridge-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6f308a1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus21-philipdoddridge-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus22-lowellmason-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus22-lowellmason-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7aee24
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus22-lowellmason-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus23-carlvonweber-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus23-carlvonweber-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b246140
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus23-carlvonweber-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444-h/images/illus24-horatiusbonar-cameo.jpg b/18444-h/images/illus24-horatiusbonar-cameo.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a5d3eae
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444-h/images/illus24-horatiusbonar-cameo.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/18444.txt b/18444.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..caf7d4a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,18953 @@
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Story of the Hymns and Tunes, by Theron
+Brown and Hezekiah Butterworth
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Story of the Hymns and Tunes
+
+
+Author: Theron Brown and Hezekiah Butterworth
+
+
+
+Release Date: May 24, 2006 [eBook #18444]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY OF THE HYMNS AND TUNES***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, David Wilson, and the Project
+Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (https://www.pgdp.net/)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 18444-h.htm or 18444-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/8/4/4/18444/18444-h/18444-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/8/4/4/18444/18444-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+THE STORY OF THE HYMNS AND TUNES
+
+by
+
+THERON BROWN and HEZEKIAH BUTTERWORTH
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ _Multae terricolis linguae, coelestibus una._
+
+ _Ten thousand, thousand are their tongues,
+ But all their joys are one._
+
+
+
+
+New York, 1906
+
+
+
+[Frontispiece: Thomas Ken]
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ PREFACE, v
+
+ INTRODUCTION, ix
+
+ 1. HYMNS OF PRAISE AND WORSHIP, 1
+
+ 2. SOME HYMNS OF GREAT WITNESSES, 53
+
+ 3. HYMNS OF CHRISTIAN DEVOTION AND EXPERIENCE, 100
+
+ 4. MISSIONARY HYMNS, 165
+
+ 5. HYMNS OF SUFFERING AND TRUST, 190
+
+ 6. CHRISTIAN BALLADS, 237
+
+ 7. OLD REVIVAL HYMNS, 262
+
+ 8. SUNDAY SCHOOL HYMNS, 293
+
+ 9. PATRIOTIC HYMNS, 321
+
+ 10. SAILOR'S HYMNS, 353
+
+ 11. HYMNS OF WALES, 378
+
+ 12. FIELD HYMNS, 409
+
+ 13. HYMNS, FESTIVAL AND OCCASIONAL, 458
+
+ 14. HYMNS OF HOPE AND CONSOLATION, 509
+
+ INDEXES OF NAMES, TUNES, AND HYMNS, 543
+
+
+LIST OF PORTRAITS.
+
+ THOMAS KEN, Frontispiece
+ OLIVER HOLDEN, Opp. page 14
+ JOSEPH HAYDN, " 30
+ CHARLES WESLEY, " 46
+ MARTIN LUTHER, " 62
+ LADY HUNTINGDON, " 94
+ AUGUSTUS MONTAGUE TOPLADY, " 126
+ THOMAS HASTINGS, " 142
+ FRANCES RIDLEY HAVERGAL, " 158
+ REGINALD HEBER, " 174
+ GEORGE JAMES WEBB, " 190
+ JOHN WESLEY, " 206
+ JOHN B. DYKES, " 222
+ ELLEN M.H. GATES, " 254
+ JAMES MONTGOMERY, " 286
+ FANNY J. CROSBY, " 302
+ SAMUEL F. SMITH, " 334
+ WILLIAM B. BRADBURY, " 366
+ ISAAC WATTS, " 398
+ GEORGE FREDERICK HANDEL, " 414
+ PHILIP DODDRIDGE, " 446
+ LOWELL MASON, " 478
+ CARL VON WEBER, " 494
+ HORATIUS BONAR, " 526
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+When the lapse of time and accumulation of fresh material suggested the
+need of a new and revised edition of Mr. Hezekiah Butterworth's _Story
+of the Hymns_, which had been a popular text book on that subject for
+nearly a generation, the publishers requested him to prepare such a
+work, reviewing the whole field of hymnology and its literature down to
+date. He undertook the task, but left it unfinished at his lamented
+death, committing the manuscript to me in his last hours to arrange and
+complete.
+
+To do this proved a labor of considerable magnitude, since what had been
+done showed evidence of the late author's failing strength, and when, in
+a conference with the publishers, it was proposed to combine the two
+books of Mr. Butterworth, the _Story of the Hymns_ and the _Story of the
+Tunes_, in one volume, the task was doubled.
+
+The charming popular style and story-telling gift of the well-known
+compiler of these books had kept them in demand, the one for thirty and
+the other for fifteen years, but later information had discounted some
+of their historic and biographical matter, and, while many of the
+monographs were too meagre, others were unduly long. Besides, the _Story
+of the Tunes_, so far from being the counterpart of the _Story of the
+Hymns_, bore no special relationship to it, only a small portion of its
+selections answering to any in the hymn-list of the latter book. For a
+personal friend and practically unknown writer, to follow Mr.
+Butterworth, and "improve" his earlier work to the more modern
+conditions, was a venture of no little difficulty and delicacy. The
+result is submitted as simply a conscientious effort to give the best of
+the old with the new.
+
+So far as was possible, matter from the two previous books, and from the
+crude manuscript, has been used, and passages here and there
+transcribed, but so much of independent plan and original research has
+been necessary in arranging and verifying the substance of the chapters
+that the _Story of the Hymns and Tunes_ is in fact a new volume rather
+than a continuation. The chapter containing the account of the _Gospel
+Hymns_ is recent work with scarcely an exception, and the one on the
+_Hymns of Wales_ is entirely new.
+
+Without increasing the size of this volume beyond easy purchase and
+convenient use, it was impossible to discuss the great oratorios and
+dramatic set-pieces, festival and occasional, and only passing
+references are made to them or their authors.
+
+Among those who have helped me in my work special acknowledgements are
+due to Mr. Hubert P. Main of Newark, N.J.; Messrs. Hughes & Son of
+Wrexham, Wales; the American Tract Society, New York; Mr. William T.
+Meek, Mrs. A.J. Gordon, Mr. Paul Foster, Mr. George Douglas, and Revs.
+John R. Hague and Edmund F. Merriam of Boston; Professor William L.
+Phelps of New Haven, Conn.; Mrs. Ellen M.H. Gates of New York; Rev.
+Franklin G. McKeever of New London, Conn.; and Rev. Arthur S. Phelps of
+Greeley, Colorado. Further obligations are gratefully remembered to
+Oliver Ditson & Co. for answers to queries and access to publications,
+to the Historic-and-Geneological Society and the custodians and
+attendants of the Boston Public Library (notably in the Music
+Department) for their uniform courtesy and pains in placing every
+resource within my reach.
+
+THERON BROWN.
+
+Boston, May 15th, 1906.
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+Augustine defines a hymn as "praise to God with song," and another
+writer calls hymn-singing "a devotional approach to God in our
+emotions,"--which of course applies to both the words and the music.
+This religious emotion, reverently acknowledging the Divine Being in
+song, is a constant element, and wherever felt it makes the song a
+worship, irrespective of sect or creed. An eminent Episcopal divine,
+(says the _Christian Register_,) one Trinity Sunday, at the close of his
+sermon, read three hymns by Unitarian authors: one to God the Father, by
+Samuel Longfellow, one to Jesus, by Theodore Parker, and one to the Holy
+Spirit, by N.L. Frothingham. "There," he said, "you have the
+Trinity--Father, Son, and Holy Ghost."
+
+It is natural to speak of hymns as "poems," indiscriminately, for they
+have the same structure. But a hymn is not necessarily a poem, while a
+poem that can be sung as a hymn is something more than a poem.
+Imagination makes poems; devotion makes hymns. There can be poetry
+without emotion, but a hymn never. A poem may argue; a hymn must not.
+In short to be a hymn, what is written must express spiritual feelings
+and desires. The music of faith, hope and charity will be somewhere in
+its strain.
+
+Philosophy composes poems, but not hymns. "It is no love-symphony we
+hear when the lion thinkers roar," some blunt writer has said. "The
+moles of Science have never found the heavenly dove's nest, and the Sea
+of Reason touches no shore where balm for sorrow grows."
+
+On the contrary there are thousands of true hymns that have no standing
+at the court of the muses. Even Cowper's Olney hymns, as Goldwin Smith
+has said, "have not any serious value as poetry. Hymns rarely have," he
+continues. "There is nothing in them on which the creative imagination
+can be exercised. Hymns can be little more than the incense of a
+worshipping soul."
+
+A fellow-student of Phillips Brooks tells us that "most of his verse he
+wrote rapidly without revising, not putting much thought into it but
+using it as the vehicle and outlet of his feelings. It was the sign of
+responding love or gratitude and joy."
+
+To produce a hymn one needs something more exalting than poetic fancy;
+an influence
+
+ "--subtler than the sun-light in the leaf-bud
+ That thrills thro' all the forest, making May."
+
+It is the Divine Spirit wakening the human heart to lyric language.
+
+Religion sings; that is true, though all "religions" do not sing. There
+is no voice of sacred song in Islamism. The muezzin call from the
+minarets is not music. One listens in vain for melody among the
+worshippers of the "Light of Asia." The hum of pagoda litanies, and the
+shouts and gongs of idol processions are not psalms. But many historic
+faiths have lost their melody, and we must go far back in the annals of
+ethnic life to find the songs they sung.
+
+Worship appears to have been a primitive human instinct; and even when
+many gods took the place of One in the blinder faith of men it was
+nature worship making deities of the elements and addressing them with
+supplication and praise. Ancient hymns have been found on the monumental
+tablets of the cities of Nimrod; fragments of the Orphic and Homeric
+hymns are preserved in Greek anthology; many of the Vedic hymns are
+extant in India; and the exhumed stones of Egypt have revealed segments
+of psalm-prayers and liturgies that antedate history. Dr. Wallis Budge,
+the English Orientalist, notes the discovery of a priestly hymn two
+thousand years older than the time of Moses, which invokes One Supreme
+Being who "cannot be figured in stone."
+
+So far as we have any real evidence, however, the Hebrew people
+surpassed all others in both the custom and the spirit of devout song.
+We get snatches of their inspired lyrics in the song of Moses and
+Miriam, the song of Deborah and Barak, and the song of Hannah (sometimes
+called "the Old Testament Magnificat"), in the hymns of David and
+Solomon and all the Temple Psalms, and later where the New Testament
+gives us the "Gloria" of the Christmas angels, the thanksgiving of
+Elizabeth (benedictus minor), Mary's Magnificat, the song of Zacharias
+(benedictus major), the "nunc dimittis" of Simeon, and the celestial
+ascriptions and hallelujahs heard by St. John in his Patmos dream. For
+what we know of the first _formulated_ human prayer and praise we are
+mostly indebted to the Hebrew race. They seem to have been at least the
+only ancient nation that had a complete psalter--and their collection is
+the mother hymn-book of the world.
+
+Probably the first form of hymn-worship was the plain-song--a
+declamatory unison of assembled singers, every voice on the same pitch,
+and within the compass of five notes--and so continued, from whatever
+may have stood for plain-song in Tabernacle and Temple days down to the
+earliest centuries of the Christian church. It was mere melodic
+progression and volume of tone, and there were no instruments--after the
+captivity. Possibly it was the memory of the harps hung silent by the
+rivers of Babylon that banished the timbrel from the sacred march and
+the ancient lyre from the post-exilic synagogues. Only the Feast trumpet
+was left. But the Jews sang. Jesus and his disciples sang. Paul and
+Silas sang; and so did the post-apostolic Christians; but until towards
+the close of the 16th century there were no instruments allowed in
+religious worship.
+
+St. Hilary, Bishop of Poitiers has been called "the father of Christian
+hymnology." About the middle of the 4th century he regulated the
+ecclesiastical song-service, wrote chant music (to Scripture words or
+his own) and prescribed its place and use in his choirs. He died A.D.
+368. In the Church calendars, Jan. 13th (following "Twelfth Night"), is
+still kept as "St. Hilary's Day" in the Church of England, and Jan. 14th
+in the Church of Rome.
+
+St. Ambrose, Bishop of Milan, a few years later, improved the work of
+his predecessor, adding words and music of his own. The "Ambrosian
+Chant" was the antiphonal plain-song arranged and systematized to
+statelier effect in choral symphony. Ambrose died A.D. 397.
+
+Toward the end of the 6th century Christian music showed a decline in
+consequence of impatient meddling with the slow canonical psalmody, and
+"reformers" had impaired its solemnity by introducing fanciful
+embellishments. Gregory the Great (Pope of Rome, 590-604) banished these
+from the song service, founded a school of sacred melody, composed new
+chants and established the distinctive character of ecclesiastical hymn
+worship. The Gregorian chant--on the diatonic eight sounds and seven
+syllables of equal length--continued, with its majestic choral step, to
+be the basis of cathedral music for a thousand years. In the meantime
+(930) Hucbald, the Flanders monk, invented _sight_ music, or written
+notes--happily called the art of "hearing with the eyes and seeing with
+the ears"; and Guido Arentino (1024) contrived the present scale, or the
+"hexachord" on which the present scale was perfected.
+
+In this long interval, however, the "established" system of hymn service
+did not escape the intrusion of inevitable novelties that crept in with
+the change of popular taste. Unrhythmical singing could not always hold
+its own; and when polyphonic music came into public favor, secular airs
+gradually found their way into the choirs. Legatos, with their pleasing
+turn and glide, caught the ear of the multitude. Tripping allegrettos
+sounded sweeter to the vulgar sense than the old largos of Pope Gregory
+the Great.
+
+The guardians of the ancient order took alarm. One can imagine the
+pained amazement of conservative souls today on hearing "Ring the Bells
+of Heaven" substituted in church for "Mear" or the long-metre Doxology,
+and can understand the extreme distaste of the ecclesiastical
+reactionaries for the worldly frivolities of an A.D. 1550 choir.
+Presumably that modern abomination, the _vibrato_, with its shake of
+artificial fright, had not been invented then, and sanctuary form was
+saved one indignity. But the innovations became an abuse so general that
+the Council of Trent commissioned a select board of cardinals and
+musicians to arrest the degeneration of church song-worship.
+
+One of the experts consulted in this movement was an eminent Italian
+composer born twenty miles from Rome. His full name was Giovanni Pietro
+Aloysio da Palestrina, and at that time he was in the prime of his
+powers. He was master of polyphonic music as well as plain-song, and he
+proposed applying it to grace the older mode, preserving the solemn
+beauty of the chant but adding the charming chords of counterpoint. He
+wrote three "masses," one of them being his famous "Requiem." These were
+sung under his direction before the Commission. Their magnificence and
+purity revealed to the censors the possibilities of contrapuntal music
+in sanctuary devotion and praise. The sanction of the cardinals was
+given--and part-song harmony became permanently one of the angel voices
+of the Christian church.
+
+Palestrina died in 1594, but hymn-tunes adapted from his motets and
+masses are sung today. He was the father of the choral tune. He lived to
+see musical instruments and congregational singing introduced[1] in
+public worship, and to know (possibly with secret pleasure, though he
+was a Romanist) how richly in popular assemblies, during the Protestant
+Reformation, the new freedom of his helpful art had multiplied the
+creation of spiritual hymns.
+
+[Footnote 1: But not fully established in use till about 1625.]
+
+Contemporary in England with Palestrina in Italy was Thomas Tallis who
+developed the Anglican school of church music, which differed less from
+the Italian (or Catholic) psalmody than that of the Continental
+churches, where the revolt of the Reformation extended to the
+tune-worship as notably as to the sacraments and sermons. This
+difference created a division of method and practice even in England,
+and extreme Protestants who repudiated everything artistic or ornate
+formed the Puritan or Genevan School. Their style is represented among
+our hymn-tunes by "Old Hundred," while the representative of the
+Anglican is "Tallis' Evening Hymn." The division was only temporary. The
+two schools were gradually reconciled, and together made the model after
+which the best sacred tunes are built. It is Tallis who is called "The
+father of English Cathedral music."
+
+In Germany, after the invention of harmony, church music was still felt
+to be too formal for a working force, and there was a reaction against
+the motets and masses of Palestrina as being too stately and difficult.
+Lighter airs of the popular sort, such as were sung between the acts of
+the "mystery plays," were subsidized by Luther, who wrote compositions
+and translations to their measure. Part-song was simplified, and Johan
+Walther compiled a hymnal of religious songs in the vernacular for from
+four to six voices. The reign of rhythmic hymn music soon extended
+through Europe.
+
+Necessarily--except in ultra-conservative localities like Scotland--the
+exclusive use of the Psalms (metrical or unmetrical) gave way to
+religious lyrics inspired by occasion. Clement Marot and Theodore Beza
+wrote hymns to the music of various composers, and Caesar Malan composed
+both hymns and their melodies. By the beginning of the 18th century the
+triumph of the hymn-tune and the hymnal for lay voices was established
+for all time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the following pages no pretence is made of selecting _all_ the best
+and most-used hymns, but the purpose has been to notice as many as
+possible of the standard pieces--and a few others which seem to add or
+re-shape a useful thought or introduce a new strain.
+
+To present each hymn _with its tune_ appeared the natural and most
+satisfactory way, as in most cases it is impossible to dissociate the
+two. The melody is the psychological coefficient of the metrical text.
+Without it the verse of a seraph would be smothered praise. Like a
+flower and its fragrance, hymn and tune are one creature, and stand for
+a whole value and a full effect. With this normal combination a
+_complete_ descriptive list of the hymns and tunes would be a historic
+dictionary. Such a book may one day be made, but the present volume is
+an attempt to the same end within easier limits.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+HYMNS OF PRAISE AND WORSHIP.
+
+
+"TE DEUM LAUDAMUS."
+
+This famous church confession in song was composed A.D. 387 by Ambrose,
+Bishop of Milan, probably both words and music.
+
+ Te Deum laudamus, Te Dominum confitemur
+ Te aeternum Patrem omnis terra veneratur
+ Tibi omnes angeli, tibi coeli et universae potestates,
+ Tibi cherubim et seraphim inaccessibili voce proclamant
+ Sanctus, sanctus Dominus Deus Sabaoth.
+
+In the whole hymn there are thirty lines. The saying that the early
+Roman hymns were echoes of Christian Greece, as the Greek hymns were
+echoes of Jerusalem, is probably true, but they were only echoes. In
+A.D. 252, St. Cyprian, writing his consolatory epistle[2] during the
+plague in Carthage, when hundreds were dying every day, says, "Ah,
+perfect and perpetual bliss! [in heaven.] There is the glorious company
+of the apostles; there is the fellowship of the prophets rejoicing;
+there is the innumerable multitude of martyrs crowned." Which would
+suggest that lines or fragments of what afterwards crystalized into the
+formula of the "Te Deum" were already familiar in the Christian church.
+But it is generally believed that the tongue of Ambrose gave the anthem
+its final form.
+
+[Footnote 2: [Greek: Peri tou thnetou], "On the Mortality."]
+
+Ambrose was born in Gaul about the middle of the fourth century and
+raised to his bishopric in A.D. 374. Very early he saw and appreciated
+the popular effect of musical sounds, and what an evangelical instrument
+a chorus of chanting voices could be in preaching the Christian faith;
+and he introduced the responsive singing of psalms and sacred cantos in
+the worship of the church. "A grand thing is that singing, and nothing
+can stand before it," he said, when the critics of his time complained
+that his innovation was sensational. That such a charge could be made
+against the Ambrosian mode of music, with its slow movement and
+unmetrical lines, seems strange to us, but it was _new_--and
+conservatism is the same in all ages.
+
+The great bishop carried all before him. His school of song-worship
+prevailed in Christian Europe more than two hundred years. Most of his
+hymns are lost, (the Benedictine writers credit him with twelve), but,
+judging by their effect on the powerful mind of Augustine, their
+influence among the common people must have been profound, and far more
+lasting than the author's life. "Their voices sank into mine ears, and
+their truths distilled into my heart," wrote Augustine, long afterwards,
+of these hymns; "tears ran down, and I rejoiced in them."
+
+Poetic tradition has dramatized the story of the birth of the "Te Deum,"
+dating it on an Easter Sunday, and dividing the honor of its composition
+between Ambrose and his most eminent convert. It was the day when the
+bishop baptized Augustine, in the presence of a vast throng that crowded
+the Basilica of Milan. As if foreseeing with a prophet's eye that his
+brilliant candidate would become one of the ruling stars of Christendom,
+Ambrose lifted his hands to heaven and chanted in a holy rapture,--
+
+ We praise Thee, O God! We acknowledge Thee to be the Lord;
+ All the Earth doth worship Thee, the Father Everlasting.
+
+He paused, and from the lips of the baptized disciple came the
+response,--
+
+ To Thee all the angels cry aloud: the heavens and all the powers
+ therein.
+ To Thee cherubim and seraphim continually do cry,
+ "Holy, holy, holy Lord God of Sabaoth;
+ Heaven and Earth are full of the majesty of Thy glory!"
+
+and so, stave by stave, in alternating strains, sprang that day from the
+inspired lips of Ambrose and Augustine the "Te Deum Laudamus," which has
+ever since been the standard anthem of Christian praise.
+
+Whatever the foundation of the story, we may at least suppose the first
+public singing[3] of the great chant to have been associated with that
+eventful baptism.
+
+[Footnote 3: The "Te Deum" was first sung _in English_ by the martyr,
+Bishop Ridley, at Hearne Church, where he was at one time vicar.]
+
+The various anthems, sentences and motets in all Christian languages
+bearing the titles "Trisagion" or "Tersanctus," and "Te Deum" are taken
+from portions of this royal hymn. The sublime and beautiful "Holy, Holy,
+Holy" of Bishop Heber was suggested by it.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+No echo remains, so far as is known, of the responsive chant actually
+sung by Ambrose, but one of the best modern choral renderings of the "Te
+Deum" is the one by Henry Smart in his _Morning and Evening Service_. In
+an ordinary church hymnal it occupies seven pages. The staff-directions
+with the music indicate the part or cue of the antiphonal singers by the
+words Decani (Dec.) and Cantor (Can.), meaning first the division of the
+choir on the Dean's side, and second the division on the Cantor's or
+Precentor's side.
+
+Henry Smart was one of the five great English composers that followed
+our American Mason. He was born in London, Oct. 25, 1812, and chose
+music for a profession in preference to an offered commission in the
+East Indian army. His talent as a composer, especially of sacred music,
+was marvellous, and, though he became blind, his loss of sight was no
+more hindrance to his genius than loss of hearing to Beethoven.
+
+No composer of his time equalled Henry Smart as a writer of music for
+female voices. His cantatas have been greatly admired, and his hymn
+tunes are unsurpassed for their purity and sweetness, while his anthems,
+his oratorio of "Jacob," and indeed all that he wrote, show the hand and
+the inventive gift of a great musical artist.
+
+He died July 10, 1879, universally mourned for his inspired work, and
+his amiable character.
+
+
+"ALL GLORY, LAUD AND HONOR."
+_Gloria, Laus et Honor._
+
+This stately Latin hymn of the early part of the 9th century was
+composed in A.D. 820, by Theodulph, Bishop of Orleans, while a captive
+in the cloister of Anjou. King Louis (le Debonnaire) son of Charlemagne,
+had trouble with his royal relatives, and suspecting Theodulph to be in
+sympathy with them, shut him up in prison. A pretty story told by
+Clichtovius, an old church writer of A.D. 1518, relates how on Palm
+Sunday the king, celebrating the feast with his people, passed in
+procession before the cloister, where the face of the venerable prisoner
+at his cell window caused an involuntary halt, and, in the moment of
+silence, the bishop raised his voice and sang this hymn; and how the
+delighted king released the singer, and restored him to his bishopric.
+This tale, told after seven hundred years, is not the only legend that
+grew around the hymn and its author, but the fact that he composed it in
+the cloister of Anjou while confined there is not seriously disputed.
+
+ Gloria, laus et honor Tibi sit, Rex Christe Redemptor,
+ Cui puerile decus prompsit Hosanna pium.
+ Israel Tu Rex, Davidis et inclyta proles,
+ Nomine qui in Domini Rex benedicte venis
+ Gloria, laus et honor.
+
+Theodulph was born in Spain, but of Gothic pedigree, a child of the race
+of conquerors who, in the 5th century, overran Southern Europe. He died
+in 821, but whether a free man or still a prisoner at the time of his
+death is uncertain. Some accounts allege that he was poisoned in the
+cloister. The Roman church canonized him, and his hymn is still sung as
+a processional in Protestant as well as Catholic churches. The above
+Latin lines are the first four of the original seventy-eight. The
+following is J.M. Neale's translation of the portion now in use:
+
+ All glory, laud, and honor,
+ To Thee, Redeemer, King:
+ To whom the lips of children
+ Made sweet Hosannas ring.
+
+ Thou are the King of Israel,
+ Thou David's royal Son,
+ Who in the Lord's name comest,
+ The King and Blessed One. All glory, etc.
+
+ The company of angels
+ Are praising Thee on high;
+ And mortal men, and all things
+ Created, make reply. All glory, etc.
+
+ The people of the Hebrews
+ With palms before Thee went;
+ Our praise and prayer and anthems
+ Before Thee we present. All glory, etc.
+
+ To Thee before Thy Passion
+ They sang their hymns of praise;
+ To Thee, now high exalted
+ Our melody we raise. All glory, etc.
+
+ Thou didst accept their praises;
+ Accept the prayers we bring,
+ Who in all good delightest,
+ Thou good and gracious King. All glory, etc.
+
+The translator, Rev. John Mason Neale, D.D., was born in London, Jan.
+24, 1818, and graduated at Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1840. He was a
+prolific writer, and after taking holy orders he held the office of
+Warden of Sackville College, East Grimstead, Sussex. Best known among
+his published works are _Mediaeval Hymns and Sequences_, _Hymns for
+Children_, _Hymns of the Eastern Church_ and _The Rhythms of Morlaix_.
+He died Aug. 6, 1866.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+There is no certainty as to the original tune of Theodulph's Hymn, or
+how long it survived, but various modern composers have given it music
+in more or less keeping with its character, notably Melchior Teschner,
+whose harmony, "St. Theodulph," appears in the new _Methodist Hymnal_.
+It well represents the march of the bishop's Latin.
+
+Melchior Teschner, a Prussian musician, was Precentor at Frauenstadt,
+Silesia, about 1613.
+
+
+"ALL PRAISE TO THEE, ETERNAL LORD."
+_Gelobet Seist du Jesu Christ._
+
+This introductory hymn of worship, a favorite Christmas hymn in Germany,
+is ancient, and appears to be a versification of a Latin prose
+"Sequence" variously ascribed to a 9th century author, and to Gregory
+the Great in the 6th century. Its German form is still credited to
+Luther in most hymnals. Julian gives an earlier German form (1370) of
+the "Gelobet," but attributes all but the first stanza to Luther, as the
+hymn now stands. The following translation, printed first in the
+_Sabbath Hymn Book_, Andover, 1858, is the one adopted by Schaff in his
+_Christ in Song_:
+
+ All praise to Thee, eternal Lord,
+ Clothed in the garb of flesh and blood;
+ Choosing a manger for Thy throne,
+ While worlds on worlds are Thine alone!
+
+ Once did the skies before Thee bow;
+ A virgin's arms contain Thee now;
+ Angels, who did in Thee rejoice,
+ Now listen for Thine infant voice.
+
+ A little child, Thou art our guest,
+ That weary ones in Thee may rest;
+ Forlorn and lowly in Thy birth,
+ That we may rise to heaven from earth.
+
+ Thou comest in the darksome night,
+ To make us children of the light;
+ To make us, in the realms divine,
+ Like Thine own angels round Thee shine.
+
+ All this for us Thy love hath done:
+ By this to Thee our love is won;
+ For this we tune our cheerful lays,
+ And shout our thanks in endless praise.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The 18th century tune of "Weimar" (_Evangelical Hymnal_), by Emanuel
+Bach, suits the spiritual tone of the hymn, and suggests the Gregorian
+dignity of its origin.
+
+Karl Philip Emanuel Bach, called "the Berlin Bach" to distinguish him
+from his father, the great Sebastian Bach of Saxe Weimar, was born in
+Weimar, March 14, 1714. He early devoted himself to music, and coming to
+Berlin when twenty-four years old was appointed Chamber musician (Kammer
+Musicus) in the Royal Chapel, where he often accompanied Frederick the
+Great (who was an accomplished flutist) on the harpsichord. His most
+numerous compositions were piano music but he wrote a celebrated
+"Sanctus," and two oratorios, besides a number of chorals, of which
+"Weimar" is one. He died in Hamburg, Dec. 14, 1788.
+
+
+THE MAGNIFICAT.
+[Greek: Megalunei he psuche mou ton Kurion.]
+
+ Magnificat anima mea Dominum,
+ Et exultavit Spiritus meus in Deo salutari meo.
+ Luke 1:46-55.
+
+We can date with some certainty the hymn itself composed by the Virgin
+Mary, but when it first became a song of the Christian Church no one can
+tell. Its thanksgiving may have found tone among the earliest martyrs,
+who, as Pliny tells us, sang hymns in their secret worship. We can only
+trace it back to the oldest chant music, when it was doubtless sung by
+both the Eastern and Western Churches. In the rude liturgies of the 4th
+and 5th centuries it must have begun to assume ritual form; but it
+remained for the more modern school of composers hundreds of years later
+to illustrate the "Magnificat" with the melody of art and genius.
+Superseding the primitive unisonous plain-song, the old parallel
+concords, and the simple faburden (faux bourdon) counterpoint that
+succeeded Gregory, they taught how musical tones can better assist
+worship with the beauty of harmony and the precision of scientific
+taste. Musicians in Italy, France, Germany and England have contributed
+their scores to this inspired hymn. Some of them still have place in the
+hymnals, a noble one especially by the blind English tone-master, Henry
+Smart, author of the oratorio of "Jacob." None, however, have equaled
+the work of Handel. His "Magnificat" was one of his favorite
+productions, and he borrowed strains from it in several of his later and
+lesser productions.
+
+George Frederic Handel, author of the immortal "Messiah," was born at
+Halle, Saxony, in 1685, and died in London in 1759. The musical bent of
+his genius was apparent almost from his infancy. At the age of eighteen
+he was earning his living with his violin, and writing his first opera.
+After a sojourn in Italy, he settled in Hanover as Chapel Master to the
+Elector, who afterwards became the English king, George I. The
+friendship of the king and several of his noblemen drew him to England,
+where he spent forty-seven years and composed his greatest works.
+
+He wrote three hymn-tunes (it is said at the request of a converted
+actress), "Canons," "Fitzwilliam," and "Gopsall," the first an
+invitation, "Sinners, Obey the Gospel Word," the second a meditation, "O
+Love Divine, How Sweet Thou Art," and the third a resurrection song to
+Welsey's words "Rejoice, the Lord is King." This last still survives in
+some hymnals.
+
+
+THE DOXOLOGIES.
+
+ Be Thou, O God, exalted high,
+ And as Thy glory fills the sky
+ So let it be on earth displayed
+ Till Thou art here as there obeyed.
+
+This sublime quatrain, attributed to Nahum Tate, like the Lord's Prayer,
+is suited to all occasions, to all Christian denominations, and to all
+places and conditions of men. It has been translated into all civilized
+languages, and has been rising to heaven for many generations from
+congregations round the globe wherever the faith of Christendom has
+built its altars. This doxology is the first stanza of a sixteen line
+hymn (possibly longer originally), the rest of which is forgotten.
+
+Nahum Tate was born in Dublin, in 1652, and educated there at Trinity
+College. He was appointed poet-laureate by King William III. in 1690,
+and it was in conjunction with Dr. Nicholas Brady that he executed his
+"New" metrical version of the Psalms. The entire Psalter, with an
+appendix of Hymns, was licensed by William and Mary and published in
+1703. The _hymns_ in the volume are all by Tate. He died in London, Aug.
+12, 1717.
+
+Rev. Nicholas Brady, D.D., was an Irishman, son of an officer in the
+royal army, and was born at Bandon, County of Cork, Oct. 28, 1659. He
+studied in the Westminster School at Oxford, but afterwards entered
+Trinity College, Dublin, where he graduated in 1685. William made him
+Queen Mary's Chaplain. He died May 20, 1726.
+
+The other nearly contemporary form of doxology is in common use, but
+though elevated and devotional in spirit, it cannot be universal, owing
+to its credal line being objectionable to non-Trinitarian Protestants:
+
+ Praise God from whom all blessings flow,
+ Praise Him all creatures here below,
+ Praise Him above, ye heavenly host,
+ Praise Father, Son and Holy Ghost.
+
+The author, the Rev. Thomas Ken, was born in Berkhampstead,
+Hertfordshire, Eng., July, 1637, and was educated at Winchester School,
+Hertford College, and New College, Oxford. In 1662 he took holy orders,
+and seventeen years later the king (Charles II.) appointed him chaplain
+to his sister Mary, Princess of Orange. Later the king, just before his
+death, made him Bishop of Bath and Wells.
+
+Like John the Baptist, and Bourdaloue, and Knox, he was a faithful
+spiritual monitor and adviser during all his days at court. "I must go
+in and hear Ken tell me my faults," the king used to say at chapel time.
+The "good little man" (as he called the bishop) never lost the favor of
+the dissipated monarch. As Macaulay says, "Of all the prelates, he liked
+Ken the best."
+
+Under James, the Papist, Ken was a loyal subject, though once arrested
+as one of the "seven bishops" for his opposition to the king's religion,
+and he kept his oath of allegiance so firmly that it cost him his place.
+William III. deprived him of his bishopric, and he retired in poverty to
+a home kindly offered him by Lord Viscount Weymouth in Longleat, near
+Frome, in Somersetshire, where he spent a serene and beloved old age. He
+died aet. seventy-four, March 17, 1711 (N.S.), and was carried to his
+grave, according to his request, by "six of the poorest men in the
+parish."
+
+His great doxology is the refrain or final stanza of each of his three
+long hymns, "Morning," "Evening" and "Midnight," printed in a _Prayer
+Manual_ for the use of the students of Winchester College. The "Evening
+Hymn" drew scenic inspiration, it is told, from the lovely view in
+Horningsham Park at "Heaven's Gate Hill," while walking to and from
+church.
+
+Another four-line doxology, adopted probably from Dr. Hatfield
+(1807-1883), is almost entirely superseded by Ken's stanza, being of
+even more pronounced credal character.
+
+ To God the Father, God the Son,
+ And God the Spirit, Three in One.
+ Be honor, praise and glory given
+ By all on earth and all in heaven.
+
+The _Methodist Hymnal_ prints a collection of ten doxologies, two by
+Watts, one by Charles Wesley, one by John Wesley, one by William Goode,
+one by Edwin F. Hatfield, one attributed to "Tate and Brady," one by
+Robert Hawkes, and the one by Ken above noted. These are all technically
+and intentionally doxologies. To give a history of doxologies in the
+general sense of the word would carry one through every Christian age
+and language and end with a concordance of the Book of Psalms.
+
+[Illustration: Oliver Holden]
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Few would think of any music more appropriate to a standard doxology
+than "Old Hundred." This grand Gregorian harmony has been claimed to be
+Luther's production, while some have believed that Louis Bourgeois,
+editor of the French _Genevan Psalter_, composed the tune, but the
+weight of evidence seems to indicate that it was the work of Guillaume
+le Franc, (William Franck or William the Frenchman,) of Rouen, in
+France, who founded a music school in Geneva, 1541. He was Chapel Master
+there, but removed to Lausanne, where he played in the Catholic choir
+and wrote the tunes for an Edition of Marot's and Beza's Psalms. Died in
+Lausanne, 1570.
+
+
+"THE LORD DESCENDED FROM ABOVE."
+
+A flash of genuine inspiration was vouchsafed to Thomas Sternhold when
+engaged with Rev. John Hopkins in versifying the Eighteenth Psalm. The
+ridicule heaped upon Sternhold and Hopkins's psalmbook has always
+stopped, and sobered into admiration and even reverence at the two
+stanzas beginning with this leading line--
+
+ The Lord descended from above
+ And bowed the heavens most high,
+ And underneath His feet He cast
+ The darkness of the sky.
+
+ On cherub and on cherubim
+ Full royally He rode,
+ And on the wings of mighty winds
+ Came flying all abroad.
+
+Thomas Sternhold was born in Gloucestershire, Eng. He was Groom of the
+Robes to Henry VIII, and Edward VI., but is only remembered for his
+_Psalter_ published in 1562, thirteen years after his death in 1549.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Nottingham" (now sometimes entitled "St. Magnus") is a fairly good echo
+of the grand verses, a dignified but spirited choral in A flat. Jeremiah
+Clark, the composer, was born in London, 1670. Educated at the Chapel
+Royal, he became organist of Winchester College and finally to St.
+Paul's Cathedral where he was appointed Gentleman of the Chapel. He died
+July, 1707.
+
+The tune of "Majesty" by William Billings will be noticed in a later
+chapter.
+
+
+TALLIS' EVENING HYMN.
+
+ Glory to Thee, my God, this night
+ For all the blessings of the light,
+ Keep me, O keep me, King of kings,
+ Under Thine own Almighty wings.
+
+This stanza begins the second of Bp. Ken's three beautiful hymn-prayers
+in his _Manual_ mentioned on a previous page.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+For more than three hundred and fifty years devout people have enjoyed
+that melody of mingled dignity and sweetness known as "Tallis' Evening
+Hymn."
+
+Thomas Tallis was an Englishman, born about 1520, and at an early age
+was a boy chorister at St. Paul's. After his voice changed, he played
+the organ at Waltham Abbey, and some time later was chosen organist
+royal to Queen Elizabeth. His pecuniary returns for his talent did not
+make him rich, though he bore the title after 1542 of Gentleman of the
+Chapel Royal, for his stipend was sevenpence a day. Some gain may
+possibly have come to him, however, from his publication, late in life,
+under the queen's special patent, of a collection of hymns and tunes.
+
+He wrote much and was the real founder of the English Church school of
+composers, but though St. Paul's was at one time well supplied with his
+motets and anthems, it is impossible now to give a list of Tallis'
+compositions for the Church. His music was written originally to Latin
+words, but when, after the Reformation, the use of vernacular hymns, was
+introduced he probably adapted his scores to either language.
+
+It is inferred that he was in attendance on Queen Elizabeth at her
+palace in Greenwich when he died, for he was buried in the old parish
+church there in November, 1585. The rustic rhymer who indited his
+epitaph evidently did the best he could to embalm the virtues of the
+great musician as a man, a citizen, and a husband:
+
+ Enterred here doth ly a worthy wyght,
+ Who for long time in musick bore the bell:
+ His name to shew was Thomas Tallis hyght;
+ In honest vertuous lyff he dyd excell.
+
+ He served long tyme in chappel with grete prayse,
+ Fower sovereygnes reignes, (a thing not often seene);
+ I mean King Henry and Prince Edward's dayes,
+ Quene Marie, and Elizabeth our quene.
+
+ He maryed was, though children he had none,
+ And lyv'd in love full three and thirty yeres
+ With loyal spowse, whose name yclept was Jone,
+ Who, here entombed, him company now bears.
+
+ As he dyd lyve, so also dyd he dy,
+ In myld and quyet sort, O happy man!
+ To God ful oft for mercy did he cry;
+ Wherefore he lyves, let Deth do what he can.
+
+
+"THE GOD OF ABRAHAM PRAISE."
+
+This is one of the thanksgivings of the ages.
+
+ The God of Abraham praise,
+ Who reigns enthroned above;
+ Ancient of everlasting days,
+ And God of love.
+ Jehovah, Great I AM!
+ By earth and heaven confessed,
+ I bow and bless the sacred Name,
+ Forever blest.
+
+The hymn, of twelve eight-line stanzas, is too long to quote entire,
+but is found in both the _Plymouth_ and _Methodist Hymnals_.
+
+Thomas Olivers, born in Tregynon, near Newtown, Montgomeryshire, Wales,
+1725, was, according to local testimony, "the worst boy known in all
+that country, for thirty years." It is more charitable to say that he
+was a poor fellow who had no friends. Left an orphan at five years of
+age, he was passed from one relative to another until all were tired of
+him, and he was "bound out" to a shoemaker. Almost inevitably the
+neglected lad grew up wicked, for no one appeared to care for his habits
+and morals, and as he sank lower in the various vices encouraged by bad
+company, there were more kicks for him than helping hands. At the age of
+eighteen his reputation in the town had become so unsavory that he was
+forced to shift for himself elsewhere.
+
+Providence led him, when shabby and penniless, to the old seaport town
+of Bristol, where Whitefield was at that time preaching,[4] and there
+the young sinner heard the divine message that lifted him to his feet.
+
+[Footnote 4: Whitefield's text was, "Is not this a brand plucked out of
+the fire?" Zach. 3:2.]
+
+"When that sermon began," he said, "I was one of the most abandoned and
+profligate young men living; before it ended I was a new creature. The
+world was all changed for Tom Olivers."
+
+His new life, thus begun, lasted on earth more than sixty useful years.
+He left a shining record as a preacher of righteousness, and died in the
+triumphs of faith, November, 1799. Before he passed away he saw at least
+thirty editions of his hymn published, but the soul-music it has
+awakened among the spiritual children of Abraham can only reach him in
+heaven. Some of its words have been the last earthly song of many, as
+they were of the eminent Methodist theologian, Richard Watson--
+
+ I shall behold His face,
+ I shall His power adore,
+ And sing the wonders of His grace
+ Forevermore.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The precise date of the tune "Leoni" is unknown, as also the precise
+date of the hymn. The story is that Olivers visited the great "Duke's
+Place" Synagogue, Aldgate, London, and heard Meyer Lyon (Leoni) sing the
+Yigdal or long doxology to an air so noble and impressive that it
+haunted him till he learned it and fitted to it the sublime stanzas of
+his song. Lyon, a noted Jewish musician and vocalist, was chorister of
+this London Synagogue during the latter part of the 18th century and the
+Yigdal was a portion of the Hebrew Liturgy composed in medieval times,
+it is said, by Daniel Ben Judah. The fact that the Methodist leaders
+took Olivers from his bench to be one of their preachers answers any
+suggestion that the converted shoemaker _copied_ the Jewish hymn and put
+Christian phrases in it. He knew nothing of Hebrew, and had he known
+it, a literal translation of the Yigdal will show hardly a similarity to
+his evangelical lines. Only the music as Leoni sang it prompted his own
+song, and he gratefully put the singer's name to it. Montgomery, who
+admired the majestic style of the hymn, and its glorious imagery, said
+of its author, "The man who wrote that hymn must have had the finest ear
+imaginable, for on account of the peculiar measure, none but a person of
+equal musical and poetic taste could have produced the harmony
+perceptible in the verse."
+
+Whether the hymnist or some one else fitted the hymn to the tune, the
+"fine ear" and "poetic taste" that Montgomery applauded are evident
+enough in the union.
+
+
+"O WORSHIP THE KING ALL GLORIOUS ABOVE."
+
+This hymn of Sir Robert Grant has become almost universally known, and
+is often used as a morning or opening service song by choirs and
+congregations of all creeds. The favorite stanzas are the first four--
+
+ O worship the King all-glorious above,
+ And gratefully sing His wonderful love--
+ Our Shield and Defender, the Ancient of Days,
+ Pavilioned in splendor, and girded with praise.
+
+ O tell of His might, and sing of His grace,
+ Whose robe is the light, whose canopy, space;
+ His chariots of wrath the deep thunder-clouds form,
+ And dark is His path on the wings of the storm.
+
+ Thy bountiful care what tongue can recite?
+ It breathes in the air, it shines in the light,
+ It streams from the hills, it descends to the plain,
+ And sweetly distils in the dew and the rain.
+
+ Frail children of dust, and feeble as frail,
+ In Thee do we trust, nor find Thee to fail.
+ Thy mercies how tender! how firm to the end!
+ Our Maker, Defender, Redeemer, and Friend!
+
+This is a model hymn of worship. Like the previous one by Thomas
+Olivers, it is strongly Hebrew in its tone and diction, and drew its
+inspiration from the Old Testament Psalter, the text-book of all true
+praise-song.
+
+Sir Robert Grant was born in the county of Inverness, Scotland, in 1785,
+and educated at Cambridge. He was many years member of Parliament for
+Inverness and a director in the East India Company, and 1834 was
+appointed Governor of Bombay. He died at Dapoorie, Western India, July
+9, 1838.
+
+Sir Robert was a man of deep Christian feeling and a poetic mind. His
+writings were not numerous, but their thoughtful beauty endeared him to
+a wide circle of readers. In 1839 his brother, Lord Glenelg, published
+twelve of his poetical pieces, and a new edition in 1868. The volume
+contains the more or less well-known hymns--
+
+ The starry firmament on high.
+
+ Saviour, when in dust to Thee,
+
+and--
+
+ When gathering clouds around I view.
+
+Sir Robert's death, when scarcely past his prime, would indicate a
+decline by reason of illness, and perhaps other serious affliction, that
+justified the poetic license in the submissive verses beginning--
+
+ Thy mercy heard my infant prayer.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ And now _in age_ and grief Thy name
+ Does still my languid heart inflame,
+ And bow my faltering knee.
+ Oh, yet this bosom feels the fire,
+ This trembling hand and drooping lyre
+ Have yet a strain for Thee.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Several musical pieces written to the hymn, "O, Worship the King," have
+appeared in church psalm-books, and others have been borrowed for it,
+but the one oftenest sung to its words is Haydn's "Lyons." Its vigor and
+spirit best fit it for Grant's noble lyric.
+
+
+"MAJESTIC SWEETNESS SITS ENTHRONED."
+
+Rev. Samuel Stennett D.D., the author of this hymn, was the son of Rev.
+Joseph Stennett, and grandson of Rev. Joseph Stennett D.D., who wrote--
+
+ Another six days' work is done,
+ Another Sabbath is begun.
+
+All were Baptist ministers. Samuel was born in 1727, at Exeter, Eng.,
+and at the age of twenty-one became his father's assistant, and
+subsequently his successor over the church in Little Wild Street,
+Lincoln's Inn Fields, London.
+
+ Majestic sweetness sits enthroned
+ Upon the Saviour's brow;
+ His head with radiant glories crowned,
+ His lips with grace o'erflow.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ To Him I owe my life and breath
+ And all the joys I have;
+ He makes me triumph over death,
+ He saves me from the grave.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Since from His bounty I receive
+ Such proofs of love divine,
+ Had I a thousand hearts to give,
+ Lord, they should all be Thine.
+
+Samuel Stennett was one of the most respected and influential ministers
+of the Dissenting persuasion, and a confidant of many of the most
+distinguished statesmen of his time. The celebrated John Howard was his
+parishoner and intimate friend. His degree of Doctor of Divinity was
+bestowed upon him by Aberdeen University. Besides his theological
+writings he composed and published thirty-eight hymns, among them--
+
+ On Jordan's stormy banks I stand,
+
+ When two or three with sweet accord,
+
+ Here at Thy table, Lord, we meet,
+
+and--
+
+ "'Tis finished," so the Saviour cried.
+
+"Majestic Sweetness" began the third stanza of his longer hymn--
+
+ To Christ the Lord let every tongue.
+
+Dr. Stennett died in London, Aug. 24, 1795.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+For fifty or sixty years "Ortonville" has been linked with this devout
+hymn, and still maintains its fitting fellowship. The tune, composed in
+1830, was the work of Thomas Hastings, and is almost as well-known and
+as often sung as his immortal "Toplady." (See chap. 3, "Rock of Ages.")
+
+
+"ALL HAIL THE POWER OF JESUS' NAME."
+
+This inspiring lyric of praise appears to have been written about the
+middle of the eighteenth century. Its author, the Rev. Edward Perronet,
+son of Rev. Vincent Perronet, Vicar of Shoreham, Eng., was a man of
+great faith and humility but zealous in his convictions, sometimes to
+his serious expense. He was born in 1721, and, though eighteen years
+younger than Charles Wesley, the two became bosom friends, and it was
+under the direction of the Wesleys that Perronet became a preacher in
+the evangelical movement. Lady Huntingdon later became his patroness,
+but some needless and imprudent expressions in a satirical poem, "The
+Mitre," revealing his hostility to the union of church and state, cost
+him her favor, and his contention against John Wesley's law that none
+but the regular parish ministers had the right to administer the
+sacraments, led to his complete separation from both the Wesleys. He
+subsequently became the pastor of a small church of Dissenters in
+Canterbury, where he died, in January, 1792. His piety uttered itself
+when near his happy death, and his last words were a Gloria.
+
+ All hail the power of Jesus' name!
+ Let angels prostrate fall;
+ Bring forth the royal diadem,
+ To crown Him Lord of all.
+
+ Ye seed of Israel's chosen race,
+ Ye ransomed of the fall,
+ Hail Him Who saves you by His grace,
+ And crown Him Lord of all.
+
+ Sinners, whose love can ne'er forget
+ The wormwood and the gall,
+ Go, spread your trophies at His feet,
+ And crown Him Lord of all.
+
+ Let every tribe and every tongue
+ That bound creation's call,
+ Now shout the universal song,
+ The crowned Lord of all.
+
+With two disused stanzas omitted, the hymn as it stands differs from the
+original chiefly in the last stanza, though in the second the initial
+line is now transposed to read--
+
+ Ye chosen seed of Israel's race.
+
+The fourth stanza now reads--
+
+ Let every kindred, every tribe
+ On this terrestrial ball
+ To Him all majesty ascribe,
+ And crown Him Lord of all.
+
+And what is now the favorite last stanza is the one added by Dr.
+Rippon--
+
+ O that with yonder sacred throng
+ We at His feet may fall,
+ And join the everlasting song,
+ And crown Him Lord of all.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Everyone now calls it "Old Coronation," and it is entitled to the
+adjective by this time, being considerably more than a hundred years
+of age. It was composed in the very year of Perronet's death and one
+wonders just how long the hymn and tune waited before they came
+together; for Heaven evidently meant them to be wedded for all time.
+This is an American opinion, and no reflection on the earlier English
+melody of "Miles Lane," composed during Perronet's lifetime by William
+Shrubsole and published with the words in 1780 in the _Gospel Magazine_.
+There is also a fine processional tune sung in the English Church to
+Perronet's hymn.
+
+The author of "Coronation" was Oliver Holden, a self-taught musician,
+born in Shirley, Mass., 1765, and bred to the carpenter's trade. The
+little pipe organ on which tradition says he struck the first notes of
+the famous tune is now in the Historical rooms of the Old State House,
+Boston, placed there by its late owner, Mrs. Fanny Tyler, the old
+musician's granddaughter. Its tones are as mellow as ever, and the times
+that "Coronation" has been played upon it by admiring visitors would far
+outnumber the notes of its score.
+
+Holden wrote a number of other hymn-tunes, among which "Cowper,"
+"Confidence," and "Concord" are remembered, but none of them had the
+wings of "Coronation," his American "Te Deum." His first published
+collection was entitled _The American Harmony_, and this was followed by
+the _Union Harmony_, and the _Worcester Collection_. He also wrote and
+published "Mt. Vernon," and several other patriotic anthems, mainly for
+special occasions, to some of which he supplied the words. He was no
+hymnist, though he did now and then venture into sacred metre. The new
+_Methodist Hymnal_ preserves a simple four-stanza specimen of his
+experiments in verse:
+
+ They who seek the throne of grace
+ Find that throne in every place:
+ If we lead a life of prayer
+ God is present everywhere.
+
+Sacred music, however, was the good man's passion to the last. He died
+in 1844.
+
+"Such beautiful themes!" he whispered on his death bed, "Such beautiful
+themes! But I can write no more."
+
+The enthusiasm always and everywhere aroused by the singing of
+"Coronation," dates from the time it first went abroad in America in
+its new wedlock of music and words. "This tune," says an accompanying
+note over the score in the old _Carmina Sacra_, "was a great favorite
+with the late Dr. Dwight of Yale College (1798). It was often sung by
+the college choir, while he, catching, as it were, the music of the
+heavenly world, would join them, and lead with the most ardent
+devotion."
+
+
+"AWAKE AND SING THE SONG."
+
+This hymn of six stanzas is abridged from a longer one indited by the
+Rev. William Hammond, and published in _Lady Huntingdon's Hymn-book_. It
+was much in use in early Methodist revivals. It appears now as it was
+slightly altered by Rev. Martin Madan--
+
+ Awake and sing the song
+ Of Moses and the Lamb;
+ Join every heart and every tongue
+ To praise the Savior's name.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The sixth verse is a variation of one of Watts' hymns, and was added in
+the _Brethren's Hymn-book_, 1801--
+
+ There shall each heart and tongue
+ His endless praise proclaim,
+ And sweeter voices join the song
+ Of Moses and the Lamb.
+
+The Rev. William Hammond was born Jan. 6, 1719, at Battle, Sussex, Eng.,
+and educated at St. John's College, Cambridge. Early in his ministerial
+life he was a Calvinistic Methodist, but ultimately joined the
+Moravians. Died in London, Aug. 19, 1793. His collection of _Psalms and
+Hymns and Spiritual Songs_ was published in 1745.
+
+The Rev. Martin Madan, son of Col. Madan, was born 1726. He founded Lock
+Hospital, Hyde Park, and long officiated as its chaplain. As a preacher
+he was popular, and his reputation as a composer of music was
+considerable. There is no proof that he wrote any original hymns, but he
+amended, pieced and expanded the work of others. Died in 1770.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The hymn has had a variety of musical interpretations. The more modern
+piece is "St. Philip," by Edward John Hopkins, Doctor of Music, born at
+Westminster, London, June 30, 1818. From a member of the Chapel Royal
+boy choir he became organist of the Michtam Church, Surrey, and
+afterwards of the Temple Church, London. Received his Doctor's degree
+from the Archbishop of Canterbury in 1882.
+
+[Illustration: Joseph Haydn]
+
+
+"CROWN HIS HEAD WITH ENDLESS BLESSING."
+
+The writer of this hymn was William Goode, who helped to found the
+English Church Missionary Society, and was for twenty years the
+Secretary of the "Society for the Relief of Poor Pious Clergymen." For
+celebrating the praise of the Saviour, he seems to have been of like
+spirit and genius with Perronet. He was born in Buckingham, Eng., April
+2, 1762; studied for the ministry and became a curate, successor of
+William Romaine. His spiritual maturity was early, and his habits of
+thought were formed amid associations such as the young Wesleys and
+Whitefield sought. Like them, even in his student days he proved his
+aspiration for purer religious life by an evangelical zeal that cost him
+the ridicule of many of his school-fellows, but the meetings for
+conference and prayer which he organized among them were not unattended,
+and were lasting and salutary in their effect.
+
+Jesus was the theme of his life and song, and was his last word. He died
+in 1816.
+
+ Crown His head with endless blessing
+ Who in God the Father's name
+ With compassion never ceasing
+ Comes salvation to proclaim.
+ Hail, ye saints who know His favor,
+ Who within His gates are found.
+ Hail, ye saints, th' exalted Saviour,
+ Let His courts with praise resound.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Haydn," bearing the name of its great composer, is in several important
+hymnals the chosen music for William Goode's devout words. Its strain
+and spirit are lofty and melodious and in entire accord with the pious
+poet's praise.
+
+Joseph Haydn, son of a poor wheelwright, was born 1732, in Rohron, a
+village on the borders of Hungary and Austria. His precocity of musical
+talent was such that he began composing at the age of ten years. Prince
+Esterhazy discovered his genius when he was poor and friendless, and his
+fortune was made. While Music Master for the Prince's Private Chapel
+(twenty years) he wrote many of his beautiful symphonies which placed
+him among the foremost in that class of music. Invited to England, he
+received the Doctor's degree at Oxford, and composed his great oratorio
+of "The Creation," besides his "Twelve Grand Symphonies," and a long
+list of minor musical works secular and sacred. His invention was
+inexhaustible.
+
+Haydn seems to have been a sincerely pious man. When writing his great
+oratorio of "The Creation" at sixty-seven years of age, "I knelt down
+every day," he says, "and prayed God to strengthen me for my work." This
+daily spiritual preparation was similar to Handel's when he was creating
+his "Messiah." Change one word and it may be said of sacred music as
+truly as of astronomy, "The undevout composer is mad."
+
+Near Haydn's death, in Vienna, 1809, when he heard for the last time his
+magnificent chorus, "Let there be Light!" he exclaimed, "Not mine, not
+mine. It all came to me from above."
+
+
+"NOW TO THE LORD A NOBLE SONG."
+
+When Watts finished this hymn he had achieved a "noble song," whether he
+was conscious of it or not; and it deserves a foremost place, where it
+can help future worshippers in their praise as it has the past. It is
+not so common in the later hymnals, but it is imperishable, and still
+later collections will not forget it.
+
+ Now to the Lord a noble song,
+ Awake my soul, awake my tongue!
+ Hosanna to the Eternal Name,
+ And all His boundless love proclaim.
+
+ See where it shines in Jesus' face,
+ The brightest image of His grace!
+ God in the person of His Son
+ Has all His mightiest works outdone.
+
+A rather finical question has occurred to some minds as to the theology
+of the word "works" in the last line, making the second person in the
+Godhead apparently a creature; and in a few hymn-books the previous line
+has been made to read--
+
+ God in the _Gospel_ of His Son.
+
+But the question is a rhetorical one, and the poet's free
+expression--here as in hundreds of other cases--has never disturbed the
+general confidence in his orthodoxy.
+
+Montgomery called Watts "the inventor of hymns in our language," and the
+credit stands practically undisputed, for Watts made a hymn style that
+no human master taught him, and his model has been the ideal one for
+song worship ever since; and we can pardon the climax when Professor
+Charles M. Stuart speaks of him as "writer, scholar, thinker and saint,"
+for in addition to all the rest he was a very good man.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Old "Ames" was for many years the choir favorite, and the words of the
+hymn printed with it in the note-book made the association familiar. It
+was, and _is_, an appropriate selection, though in later manuals George
+Kingsley's "Ware" is evidently thought to be better suited to the
+high-toned verse. Good old tunes never "wear out," but they do go out of
+fashion.
+
+The composer of "Ames," Sigismund Neukomm, Chevalier, was born in
+Salzburg, Austria, July 10, 1778, and was a pupil of Haydn. Though not a
+great genius, his talents procured him access and even intimacy in the
+courts of Germany, France, Italy, Portugal and England, and for thirty
+years he composed church anthems and oratorios with prodigious industry.
+Neukomm's musical productions, numbering no less than one thousand, and
+popular in their day, are, however, mostly forgotten, excepting his
+oratorio of "David" and one or two hymn-tunes.
+
+George Kingsley, author of "Ware," was born in Northampton, Mass., July
+7, 1811. Died in the Hospital, in the same city, March 14, 1884. He
+compiled eight books of music for young people and several manuals of
+church psalmody, and was for some time a music teacher in Boston, where
+he played the organ at the Hollis St. church. Subsequently he became
+professor of music in Girard College, Philadelphia, and music instructor
+in the public schools, being employed successively as organist (on
+Lord's Day) at Dr. Albert Barnes' and Arch St. churches, and finally in
+Brooklyn at Dr. Storrs' Church of the Pilgrims. Returned to Northampton,
+1853.
+
+
+"EARLY, MY GOD, WITHOUT DELAY."
+
+This and the five following hymns, all by Watts, are placed in immediate
+succession, for unity's sake--with a fuller notice of the greatest of
+hymn-writers at the end of the series.
+
+ Early, my God, without delay
+ I haste to seek Thy face,
+ My thirsty spirit faints away
+ Without Thy cheering grace.
+
+In the memories of very old men and women, who sang the fugue music of
+Morgan's "Montgomery," still lingers the second stanza and some of the
+"spirit and understanding" with which it used to be rendered in meeting
+on Sunday mornings.
+
+ So pilgrims on the scorching sand,
+ Beneath a burning sky,
+ Long for a cooling stream at hand
+ And they must drink or die.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Many of the earlier pieces assigned to this hymn were either too noisy
+or too tame. The best and longest-serving is "Lanesboro," which, with
+its expressive duet in the middle and its soaring final strain of
+harmony, never fails to carry the meaning of the words. It was composed
+by William Dixon, and arranged and adapted by Lowell Mason.
+
+William Dixon, an English composer, was a music engraver and publisher,
+and author also of several glees and anthems. He was born 1750, and died
+about 1825.
+
+Lowell Mason, born in Medfield, Mass., 1792, has been called, not
+without reason, "the father of American choir singing." Returning from
+Savannah, Ga., where he spent sixteen years of his younger life as clerk
+in a bank, he located in Boston (1827), being already known there as the
+composer of "The Missionary Hymn." He had not neglected his musical
+studies while living in the South, and it was in Savannah that he made
+the glorious harmony of that tune.
+
+He became president of the Handel and Haydn Society, went abroad for
+special study, was made Doctor of Music, and collected a store of themes
+among the great models of song to bring home for his future work.
+
+The Boston Academy of Music was founded by him and what he did for the
+song-service of the Church in America by his singing schools, and
+musical conventions, and published manuals, to form and organize the
+choral branch of divine worship, has no parallel, unless it is Noah
+Webster's service to the English language.
+
+Dr. Mason died in Orange, N.J., in 1872.
+
+
+"SWEET IS THE WORK, MY GOD, MY KING."
+
+This is one of the hymns that helped to give its author the title of
+"The Seraphic Watts."
+
+ Sweet is the work, my God, my King
+ To praise Thy name, give thanks and sing
+ To show Thy love by morning light,
+ And talk of all Thy truth at night.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+No nobler one, and more akin in spirit to the hymn, can be found than
+"Duke Street," Hatton's imperishable choral.
+
+Little is known of the John Hatton who wrote "Duke St." He was earlier
+by nearly a century than John Liphot Hatton of Liverpool (born in 1809),
+who wrote the opera of "Pascal Bruno," the cantata of "Robin Hood" and
+the sacred drama of "Hezekiah." The biographical index of the
+_Evangelical Hymnal_ says of John Hatton, the author of "Duke St.":
+"John, of Warrington; afterwards of St. Helens, then resident in Duke
+St. in the township of Windle; composed several hymn-tunes; died in
+1793.[5] His funeral sermon was preached at the Presbyterian Chapel, St.
+Helens, Dec. 13."
+
+[Footnote 5: Tradition says he was killed by being thrown from a
+stage-coach.]
+
+
+"COME, WE THAT LOVE THE LORD."
+
+Watts entitled this hymn "Heavenly Joy on Earth." He could possibly,
+like Madame Guyon, have written such a hymn in a dungeon, but it is no
+less spiritual for its birth (as tradition will have it) amid the lovely
+scenery of Southampton where he could find in nature "glory begun
+below."
+
+ Come, we that love the Lord,
+ And let our joys be known;
+ Join in a song with sweet accord,
+ And thus surround the throne.
+
+ There shall we see His face,
+ And never, never sin;
+ There, from the rivers of His grace,
+ Drink endless pleasures in.
+
+ Children of grace have found
+ Glory begun below:
+ Celestial fruits on earthly ground
+ From faith and hope may grow.
+
+Mortality and immortality blend their charms in the next stanza. The
+unfailing beauty of the vision will be dwelt upon with delight so long
+as Christians sing on earth.
+
+ The hill of Sion yields
+ A thousand sacred sweets,
+ Before we reach the heavenly fields,
+ Or walk the golden streets.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"St. Thomas" has often been the interpreter of the hymn, and still
+clings to the words in the memory of thousands.
+
+The Italian tune of "Ain" has more music. It is a fugue piece
+(simplified in some tune-books), and the joyful traverse of its notes
+along the staff in four-four time, with the momentum of a good choir, is
+exhilarating in the extreme.
+
+Corelli, the composer, was a master violinist, the greatest of his day,
+and wrote a great deal of violin music; and the thought of his glad
+instrument may have influenced his work when harmonizing the four voices
+of "Ain."
+
+Arcangelo Corelli was born at Fusignano, in 1653. He was a sensitive
+artist, and although faultless in Italian music, he was not sure of
+himself in playing French scores, and once while performing with Handel
+(who resented the slightest error), and once again with Scarlatti,
+leading an orchestra in Naples when the king was present, he made a
+mortifying mistake. He took the humiliation so much to heart that he
+brooded over it till he died, in Rome, Jan. 18, 1717.
+
+For revival meetings the modern tune set to "Come we that love the
+Lord," by Robert Lowry, should be mentioned. A shouting chorus is
+appended to it, but it has melody and plenty of stimulating motion.
+
+The Rev. Robert Lowry was born in Philadelphia, March 12, 1826, and
+educated at Lewisburg, Pa. From his 28th year till his death, 1899, he
+was a faithful and successful minister of Christ, but is more widely
+known as a composer of sacred music.
+
+
+"BE THOU EXALTED, O MY GOD."
+
+In this hymn the thought of Watts touches the eternal summits. Taken
+from the 57th and 108th Psalms--
+
+ Be Thou exalted, O my God,
+ Above the heavens where angels dwell;
+ Thy power on earth be known abroad
+ And land to land Thy wonders tell.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ High o'er the earth His mercy reigns,
+ And reaches to the utmost sky;
+ His truth to endless years remains
+ When lower worlds dissolve and die.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Haydn furnished it out of his chorus of morning stars, and it was
+christened "Creation," after the name of his great oratorio. It is a
+march of trumpets.
+
+
+"BEFORE JEHOVAH'S AWFUL THRONE."
+
+No one could mistake the style of Watts in this sublime ode. He begins
+with his foot on Sinai, but flies to Calvary with the angel preacher
+whom St. John saw in his Patmos vision:
+
+ Before Jehovah's awful throne
+ Ye nations bow with sacred joy;
+ Know that the Lord is God alone;
+ He can create and He destroy.
+
+ His sovereign power without our aid
+ Made us of clay and formed us men,
+ And when like wandering sheep we stray,
+ He brought us to His fold again.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ We'll crowd Thy gates with thankful songs,
+ High as the heaven our voices raise,
+ And earth with her ten thousand tongues
+ Shall fill Thy courts with sounding praise.
+
+
+_TUNE--OLD HUNDRED._
+
+Martin Madan's four-page anthem, "Denmark," has some grand strains in
+it, but it is a tune of florid and difficult vocalization, and is now
+heard only in Old Folks' Concerts.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Rev. Isaac Watts, D.D., was born at Southampton, Eng., in 1674. His
+father was a deacon of the Independent Church there, and though not an
+uncultured man himself, he is said to have had little patience with the
+incurable penchant of his boy for making rhymes and verses. We hear
+nothing of the lad's mother, but we can fancy her hand and spirit in the
+indulgence of his poetic tastes as well as in his religious training.
+The tradition handed down from Dr. Price, a colleague of Watts, relates
+that at the age of eighteen Isaac became so irritated at the crabbed and
+untuneful hymns sung at the Nonconformist meetings that he complained
+bitterly of them to his father. The deacon may have felt something as
+Dr. Wayland did when a rather "fresh" student criticised the Proverbs,
+and hinted that making such things could not be "much of a job," and the
+Doctor remarked, "Suppose _you_ make a few." Possibly there was the same
+gentle sarcasm in the reply of Deacon Watts to his son, "Make some
+yourself, then."
+
+Isaac was in just the mood to take his father at his word, and he
+retired and wrote the hymn--
+
+ Behold the glories of the Lamb.
+
+There must have been a decent tune to carry it, for it pleased the
+worshippers greatly, when it was sung in meeting--and that was the
+beginning of Isaac Watts' career as a hymnist.
+
+So far as scholarship was an advantage, the young writer must have been
+well equipped already, for as early as the entering of his fifth year he
+was learning Latin, and at nine learning Greek; at eleven, French; and
+at thirteen, Hebrew. From the day of his first success he continued to
+indite hymns for the home church, until by the end of his twenty-second
+year he had written one hundred and ten, and in the two following years
+a hundred and forty-four more, besides preparing himself for the
+ministry. No. 7 in the edition of the first one hundred and ten, was
+that royal jewel of all his lyric work--
+
+ When I survey the wondrous cross.
+
+Isaac Watts was ordained pastor of an Independent Church in Mark Lane,
+London, 1702, but repeated illness finally broke up his ministry, and
+he retired, an invalid, to the beautiful home of Sir Thomas Abney at
+Theobaldo, invited, as he supposed, to spend a week, but it was really
+to spend the rest of his life--thirty-six years.
+
+Numbers of his hymns are cited as having biographical or reminiscent
+color. The stanza in--
+
+ When I can read my title clear,
+
+--which reads in the original copy,--
+
+ Should earth against my soul engage
+ And _hellish darts be hurled_,
+ Then I can smile at _Satan's rage_
+ And face a frowning world,
+
+--is said to have been an allusion to Voltaire and his attack upon the
+church, while the calm beauty of the harbor within view of his home is
+supposed to have been in his eye when he composed the last stanza,--
+
+ There shall I bathe my weary soul
+ In seas of heavenly rest,
+ And not a wave of trouble roll
+ Across my peaceful breast.
+
+According to the record,--
+
+ What shall the dying sinner do?
+
+--was one of his "pulpit hymns," and followed a sermon preached from
+Rom. 1:16. Another,--
+
+ And is this life prolonged to you?
+
+--after a sermon from 1 Cor. 3:22; and another,--
+
+ How vast a treasure we possess,
+
+--enforced his text, "All things are yours." The hymn,--
+
+ Not all the blood of beasts
+ On Jewish altars slain,
+
+--was, as some say, suggested to the writer by a visit to the abattoir
+in Smithfield Market. The same hymn years afterwards, discovered, we are
+told, in a printed paper wrapped around a shop bundle, converted a
+Jewess, and influenced her to a life of Christian faith and sacrifice.
+
+A young man, hardened by austere and minatory sermons, was melted, says
+Dr. Belcher, by simply reading,--
+
+ Show pity Lord, O Lord, forgive,
+ Let a repenting sinner live.
+
+--and became partaker of a rich religious experience.
+
+The summer scenery of Southampton, with its distant view of the Isle of
+Wight, was believed to have inspired the hymnist sitting at a parlor
+window and gazing across the river Itchen, to write the stanza--
+
+ Sweet fields beyond the swelling flood
+ Stand drest in living green;
+ So to the Jews old Canaan stood
+ While Jordan rolled between.
+
+The hymn, "Unveil thy bosom, faithful tomb," was personal, addressed by
+Watts "to Lucius on the death of Seneca."
+
+A severe heart-trial was the occasion of another hymn. When a young man
+he proposed marriage to Miss Elizabeth Singer, a much-admired young
+lady, talented, beautiful, and good. She rejected him--kindly but
+finally. The disappointment was bitter, and in the first shadow of it he
+wrote,--
+
+ How vain are all things here below,
+ How false and yet how fair.
+
+Miss Singer became the celebrated Mrs. Elizabeth Rowe, the spiritual and
+poetic beauty of whose _Meditations_ once made a devotional text-book
+for pious souls. Of Dr. Watts and his offer of his hand and heart, she
+always said, "I loved the jewel, but I did not admire the casket." The
+poet suitor was undersized, in habitually delicate health--and not
+handsome.
+
+But the good minister and scholar found noble employment to keep his
+mind from preying upon itself and shortening his days. During his long
+though afflicted leisure he versified the Psalms, wrote a treatise on
+_Logic_, an _Introduction to the Study of Astronomy and Geography_, and
+a work _On the Improvement of the Mind_; and died in 1748, at the age of
+seventy-four.
+
+
+"O FOR A THOUSAND TONGUES TO SING."
+
+Charles Wesley, the author of this hymn, took up the harp of Watts when
+the older poet laid it down. He was born at Epworth, Eng., in 1708, the
+third son of Rev. Samuel Wesley, and died in London, March 29, 1788. The
+hymn is believed to have been written May 17, 1739, for the anniversary
+of his own conversion:
+
+ O for a thousand tongues to sing
+ My great Redeemer's praise,
+ The glories of my God and King,
+ And triumphs of His grace.
+
+The remark of a fervent Christian friend, Peter Bohler, "Had I a
+thousand tongues I would praise Christ Jesus with them all," struck an
+answering chord in Wesley's heart, and he embalmed the wish in his
+fluent verse. The third stanza (printed as second in some hymnals), has
+made language for pardoned souls for at least four generations:
+
+ Jesus! the name that calms our fears
+ And bids our sorrows cease;
+ 'Tis music in the sinner's ears,
+ 'Tis life and health and peace.
+
+Charles Wesley was the poet of the soul, and knew every mood. In the
+words of Isaac Taylor, "There is no main article of belief ... no moral
+sentiment peculiarly characteristic of the gospel that does not find
+itself ... pointedly and clearly conveyed in some stanza of Charles
+Wesley's poetry." And it does not dim the lustre of Watts, considering
+the marvellous brightness, versatility and felicity of his greatest
+successor, to say of the latter, with the _London Quarterly_, that he
+"was, perhaps, the most gifted minstrel of the modern Church."
+
+[Illustration: Charles Wesley]
+
+Most of the hymns of this good man were hymns of experience--and this is
+why they are so dear to the Christian heart. The music of eternal life
+is in them. The happy glow of a single line in one of them--
+
+ Love Divine, all loves excelling,
+
+--thrills through them all. He led a spotless life from youth to old
+age, and grew unceasingly in spiritual knowledge and sweetness. His
+piety and purity were the weapons that alike humbled his scoffing fellow
+scholars at Oxford, and conquered the wild colliers of Kingwood. With
+his brother John, through persecution and ridicule, he preached and sang
+that Divine Love to his countrymen and in the wilds of America, and on
+their return to England his quenchless melodies multiplied till they
+made an Evangelical literature around his name. His hymns--he wrote no
+less than six thousand--are a liturgy not only for the Methodist Church
+but for English-speaking Christendom.
+
+The voices of Wesley and Watts cannot be hidden, whatever province of
+Christian life and service is traversed in themes of song, and in these
+chapters they will be heard again and again.
+
+A Watts-and-Wesley Scholarship would grace any Theological Seminary, to
+encourage the study and discussion of the best lyrics of the two great
+Gospel bards.
+
+
+_THE TUNES._
+
+The musical mouth-piece of "O for a thousand tongues," nearest to its
+own date, is old "Azmon" by Carl Glaser (1734-1829), appearing as No. 1
+in the _New Methodist Hymnal_. Arranged by Lowell Mason, 1830, it is
+still comparatively familiar, and the flavor of devotion is in its tone
+and style.
+
+Henry John Gauntlett, an English lawyer and composer, wrote a tune for
+it in 1872, noble in its uniform step and time, but scarcely uttering
+the hymnist's characteristic ardor.
+
+The tune of "Dedham," by William Gardiner, now venerable but surviving
+by true merit, is not unlike "Azmon" in movement and character. Though
+less closely associated with the hymn, as a companion melody it is not
+inappropriate. But whatever the range of vocalization or the dignity of
+swells and cadences, a slow pace of single semibreves or quarters is not
+suited to Wesley's hymns. They are flights.
+
+Professor William Gardiner wrote many works on musical subjects early in
+the last century, and composed vocal harmonies, secular and sacred. He
+was born in Leicester, Eng., March 5, 1770, and died there Nov. 16,
+1853.
+
+There is an old-fashioned unction and vigor in the style of
+"Peterborough" by Rev. Ralph Harrison (1748-1810) that after all best
+satisfies the singer who enters heart and soul into the spirit of the
+hymn. _Old Peterborough_ was composed in 1786.
+
+
+"LORD WITH GLOWING HEART I'D PRAISE THEE."
+
+This was written in 1817 by the author of the "Star Spangled Banner,"
+and is a noble American hymn of which the country may well be proud,
+both because of its merit and for its birth in the heart of a national
+poet who was no less a Christian than a patriot.
+
+Francis Scott Key, lawyer, was born on the estate of his father, John
+Ross Key, in Frederick, Md., Aug. 1st, 1779; and died in Baltimore, Jan.
+11, 1843. A bronze statue of him over his grave, and another in Golden
+Gate Park, San Francisco, represent the nationality of his fame and the
+gratitude of a whole land.
+
+Though a slaveholder by inheritance, Mr. Key deplored the existence of
+human slavery, and not only originated a scheme of African colonization,
+but did all that a model master could do for the chattels on his
+plantation, in compliance with the Scripture command,[6] to lighten
+their burdens. He helped them in their family troubles, defended them
+gratuitously in the courts, and held regular Sunday-school services for
+them.
+
+[Footnote 6: Eph. 6:9, Coloss. 4:1.]
+
+Educated at St. John's College, an active member of the Episcopal
+Church, he was not only a scholar but a devout and exemplary man.
+
+ Lord, with glowing heart I'd praise Thee
+ For the bliss Thy love bestows,
+ For the pardoning grace that saves me,
+ And the peace that from it flows.
+
+ Help, O Lord, my weak endeavor;
+ This dull soul to rapture raise;
+ Thou must light the flame or never
+ Can my love be warmed to praise.
+
+ Lord, this bosom's ardent feeling
+ Vainly would my life express;
+ Low before Thy footstool kneeling,
+ Deign Thy suppliant's prayer to bless.
+
+ Let Thy grace, my soul's chief treasure,
+ Love's pure flame within me raise,
+ And, since words can never measure,
+ Let my life show forth Thy praise.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"St. Chad," a choral in D, with a four-bar unison, in the _Evangelical
+Hymnal_, is worthy of the hymn. Richard Redhead, the composer, organist
+of the Church of St. Mary Magdalene, Paddington, Eng., was born at
+Harrow, Middlesex, March 1, 1820, and educated at Magdalene College,
+Oxford. Graduated Bachelor of Music at Oxford, 1871. He published
+_Laudes Dominae_, a Gregorian Psalter, 1843, a Book of Tunes for the
+_Christian Year_, and is the author of much ritual music.
+
+
+"HOLY, HOLY, HOLY, LORD GOD ALMIGHTY."
+
+There is nothing so majestic in Protestant hymnology as this Tersanctus
+of Bishop Heber.
+
+The Rt. Rev. Reginald Heber, son of a clergyman of the same name, was
+born in Malpas, Cheshire, Eng., April 21st, 1783, and educated at
+Oxford. He served the church in Hodnet, Shropshire, for about twenty
+years, and was then appointed Bishop of Calcutta, E.I. His labors there
+were cut short in the prime of his life, his death occurring in 1826, at
+Trichinopoly on the 3d of April, his natal month.
+
+His hymns, numbering fifty-seven, were collected by his widow, and
+published with his poetical works in 1842.
+
+ Holy! holy! holy! Lord God Almighty!
+ Early in the morning our song shall rise to Thee.
+ Holy! holy! holy! merciful and mighty,
+ God in Three Persons, blessed Trinity.
+
+ Holy! holy! holy! all the saints adore Thee,
+ Casting down their golden crowns around the glassy sea;
+ Cherubim and seraphim, falling down before Thee,
+ Which wert, and art, and evermore shall be.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Grand as the hymn is, it did not come to its full grandeur of sentiment
+and sound in song-worship till the remarkable music of Dr. John B. Dykes
+was joined to it. None was ever written that in performance illustrates
+more admirably the solemn beauty of congregational praise. The name
+"Nicaea" attached to the tune means nothing to the popular ear and mind,
+and it is known everywhere by the initial words of the first line.
+
+Rev. John Bacchus Dykes, Doctor of Music, was born at
+Kingston-upon-Hull, in 1823; and graduated at Cambridge, in 1847. He
+became a master of tone and choral harmony, and did much to reform and
+elevate congregational psalmody in England. He was perhaps the first to
+demonstrate that hymn-tune making can be reduced to a science without
+impairing its spiritual purpose. Died Jan. 22, 1876.
+
+
+"LORD OF ALL BEING, THRONED AFAR."
+
+This noble hymn was composed by Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, born in
+Cambridge, Mass., 1809, and graduated at Harvard University. A physician
+by profession, he was known as a practitioner chiefly in literature,
+being a brilliant writer and long the leading poetical wit of America.
+He was, however, a man of deep religious feeling, and a devout attendant
+at King's Chapel, Unitarian, in Boston where he spent his life. He held
+the Harvard Professorship of Anatomy and Physiology more than fifty
+years, but his enduring work is in his poems, and his charming volume,
+_The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table_. Died Jan. 22, 1896.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Holmes' hymn is sung in some churches to "Louvan," V.C. Taylor's
+admirable praise tune. Other hymnals prefer with it the music of
+"Keble," one of Dr. Dykes' appropriate and finished melodies.
+
+Virgil Corydon Taylor, an American vocal composer, was born in
+Barkhamstead, Conn., April 2, 1817, died 1891.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+SOME HYMNS OF GREAT WITNESSES.
+
+
+JOHN OF DAMASCUS.
+
+[Greek: Erchesthe, o pistoi,
+ Anastaseos Hemera.]
+
+John of Damascus, called also St. John of Jerusalem, a theologian and
+poet, was the last but one of the Christian Fathers of the Greek Church.
+This eminent man was named by the Arabs "Ibn Mansur," Son (Servant?) of
+a Conqueror, either in honor of his father Sergius or because it was a
+Semitic translation of his family title. He was born in Damascus early
+in the 8th century, and seems to have been in favor with the Caliph, and
+served under him many years in some important civil capacity, until,
+retiring to Palestine, he entered the monastic order, and late in life
+was ordained a priest of the Jerusalem Church. He died in the Convent of
+St. Sabas near that city about A.D. 780.
+
+His lifetime appears to have been passed in comparative peace. Mohammed
+having died before completing the conquest of Syria, the Moslem rule
+before whose advance Oriental Christianity was to lose its first field
+of triumph had not yet asserted its persecuting power in the north. This
+devout monk, in his meditations at St. Sabas, dwelt much upon the birth
+and the resurrection of Christ, and made hymns to celebrate them. It was
+probably four hundred years before Bonaventura (?) wrote the Christmas
+"Adeste Fideles" of the Latin West that John of Damascus composed his
+Greek "Adeste Fideles" for a Resurrection song in Jerusalem.
+
+ Come ye faithful, raise the strain
+ Of triumphant gladness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ 'Tis the spring of souls today
+ Christ hath burst His prison;
+ From the frost and gloom of death
+ Light and life have risen.
+
+The nobler of the two hymns preserved to us, (or six stanzas of it)
+through eleven centuries is entitled "The Day of Resurrection."
+
+ The day of resurrection,
+ Earth, tell its joys abroad:
+ The Passover of gladness,
+ The Passover of God.
+ From death to life eternal,
+ From earth unto the sky,
+ Our Christ hath brought us over,
+ With hymns of victory.
+
+ Our hearts be pure from evil,
+ That we may see aright
+ The Lord in rays eternal
+ Of resurrection light;
+ And, listening to His accents,
+ May hear, so calm and plain,
+ His own, "All hail!" and hearing,
+ May raise the victor-strain.
+
+ Now let the heavens be joyful,
+ Let earth her song begin,
+ Let all the world keep triumph,
+ All that dwell therein.
+ In grateful exultation,
+ Their notes let all things blend,
+ For Christ the Lord is risen,
+ O joy that hath no end!
+
+Both these hymns of John of Damascus were translated by John Mason
+Neale.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"The Day of Resurrection" is sung in the modern hymnals to the tune of
+"Rotterdam," composed by Berthold of Tours, born in that city of the
+Netherlands, Dec. 17, 1838. He was educated at the conservatory in
+Leipsic, and later made London his permanent residence, writing both
+vocal and instrumental music. Died 1897. "Rotterdam" is a stately,
+sonorous piece and conveys the flavor of the ancient hymn.
+
+"Come ye faithful" has for its modern interpreter Sir Arthur Sullivan,
+the celebrated composer of both secular and sacred works, but best
+known in hymnody as author of the great Christian march, "Onward
+Christian Soldiers."
+
+Hymns are known to have been written by the earlier Greek Fathers,
+Ephrem Syrus of Mesopotamia (A.D. 307-373), Basil the Great, Bishop of
+Cappadocia (A.D. 329-379) Gregory Nazianzen, Bishop of Constantinople
+(A.D. 335-390) and others, but their fragments of song which have come
+down to us scarcely rank them among the great witnesses--with the
+possible exception of the last name. An English scholar, Rev. Allen W.
+Chatfield, has translated the hymns extant of Gregory Nazianzen. The
+following stanzas give an idea of their quality. The lines are from an
+address to the Deity:
+
+ How, Unapproached! shall mind of man
+ Descry Thy dazzling throne,
+ And pierce and find Thee out, and scan
+ Where Thou dost dwell alone?
+
+ Unuttered Thou! all uttered things
+ Have had their birth from Thee;
+ The One Unknown, from Thee the spring
+ Of all we know and see.
+
+ And lo! all things abide in Thee
+ And through the complex whole,
+ Thou spreadst Thine own divinity,
+ Thyself of all the Goal.
+
+This is reverent, but rather philosophical than evangelical, and reminds
+us of the Hymn of Aratus, more than two centuries before Christ was
+born.
+
+
+ST. STEPHEN, THE SABAITE.
+
+This pious Greek monk, (734-794,) nephew of St. John of Damascus, spent
+his life, from the age of ten, in the monastery of St. Sabas. His sweet
+hymn, known in Neale's translation,--
+
+ Art thou weary, art thou languid,
+ Art thou sore distrest?
+ Come to Me, saith One, and coming
+ Be at rest,
+
+--is still in the hymnals, with the tunes of Dykes, and Sir Henry W.
+Baker (1821-1877), Vicar of Monkland, Herefordshire.
+
+
+KING ROBERT II.
+
+_Veni, Sancte Spiritus._
+
+Robert the Second, surnamed "Robert the Sage" and "Robert the Devout,"
+succeeded Hugh Capet, his father, upon the throne of France, about the
+year 997. He has been called the gentlest monarch that ever sat upon a
+throne, and his amiability of character poorly prepared him to cope with
+his dangerous and wily adversaries. His last years were embittered by
+the opposition of his own sons, and the political agitations of the
+times. He died at Melun in 1031, and was buried at St. Denis.
+
+Robert possessed a reflective mind, and was fond of learning and musical
+art. He was both a poet and a musician. He was deeply religious, and,
+from unselfish motives, was much devoted to the church.
+
+Robert's hymn, "Veni, Sancte Spiritus," is given below. He himself was a
+chorister; and there was no kingly service that he seemed to love so
+well. We are told that it was his custom to go to the church of St.
+Denis, and in his royal robes, with his crown upon his head, to direct
+the choir at matins and vespers, and join in the singing. Few kings have
+left a better legacy to the Christian church than his own hymn, which,
+after nearly a thousand years, is still an influence in the world:
+
+ Come, Thou Holy Spirit, come,
+ And from Thine eternal home
+ Shed the ray of light divine;
+ Come, Thou Father of the poor,
+ Come, Thou Source of all our store,
+ Come, within our bosoms shine.
+
+ Thou of Comforters the best,
+ Thou the soul's most welcome Guest,
+ Sweet Refreshment here below!
+ In our labor Rest most sweet,
+ Grateful Shadow from the heat,
+ Solace in the midst of woe!
+
+ Oh, most blessed Light Divine,
+ Shine within these hearts of Thine,
+ And our inmost being fill;
+ If Thou take Thy grace away,
+ Nothing pure in man will stay,
+ All our good is turned to ill.
+
+ Heal our wounds; our strength renew
+ On our dryness pour Thy dew;
+ Wash the stains of guilt away!
+ Bend the stubborn heart and will,
+ Melt the frozen, warm the chill,
+ Guide the steps that go astray.
+
+ _Neale's Translation_.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The metre and six-line stanza, being uniform with those of "Rock of
+Ages," have tempted some to borrow "Toplady" for this ancient hymn, but
+Hastings' tune would refuse to sing other words; and, besides, the
+alternate rhymes would mar the euphony. Not unsuitable in spirit are
+several existing tunes of the right measure--like "Nassau" or "St.
+Athanasius"--but in truth the "Veni, Sancte Spiritus" in English waits
+for its perfect setting. Dr. Ray Palmer's paraphrase of it in
+sixes-and-fours, to fit "Olivet,"--
+
+ Come, Holy Ghost in love, etc.
+
+--is objectionable both because the word Ghost is an archaism in
+Christian worship and more especially because Dr. Palmer's altered
+version usurps the place of his own hymn. "Olivet" with "My faith looks
+up to Thee" makes as inviolable a case of psalmodic monogamy as
+"Toplady" with "Rock of Ages."
+
+
+ST. FULBERT.
+
+"_Chori Cantores Hierusalem Novae._"
+
+St. Fulbert's hymn is a worthy companion of Perronet's "Coronation"--if,
+indeed, it was not its original prompter--as King Robert's great litany
+was the mother song of Watts' "Come, Holy Spirit, heavenly Dove;" and
+the countless other sacred lyrics beginning with similar words. As the
+translation stands in the Church of England, there are six stanzas now
+sung, though in America but four appear, and not in the same sequence.
+The first four of the six in their regular succession are as follows:
+
+ Ye choirs of New Jerusalem,
+ Your sweetest notes employ,
+ The Paschal victory to hymn
+ In strains of holy joy.
+
+ For Judah's Lion bursts His chains,
+ Crushing the serpent's head;
+ And cries aloud, through death's domains
+ To wake the imprisoned dead.
+
+ Devouring depths of hell their prey
+ At His command restore;
+ His ransomed hosts pursue their way
+ Where Jesus goes before.
+
+ Triumphant in His glory now,
+ To Him all power is given;
+ To Him in one communion bow
+ All saints in earth and heaven.
+
+Bishop Fulbert, known in the Roman and in the Protestant ritualistic
+churches as St. Fulbert of Chartres, was a man of brilliant and
+versatile mind, and one of the most eminent prelates of his time. He was
+a contemporary of Robert II, and his intimate friend, continuing so
+after the Pope (Gregory V.) excommunicated the king for marrying a
+cousin, which was forbidden by the canons of the church.
+
+Fulbert was for some time head of the Theological College at Chartres, a
+cathedral town of France, anciently the capital of Celtic Gaul, and
+afterwards he was consecrated as Bishop of that diocese. He died about
+1029.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The modern tone-interpreter of Fulbert's hymn bears the name "La Spezia"
+in some collections, and was composed by James Taylor about the time the
+hymn was translated into English by Robert Campbell. Research might
+discover the ancient tune--for the hymn is said to have been sung in the
+English church during Fulbert's lifetime--but the older was little
+likely to be the better music. "La Spezia" is a choral of enlivening but
+easy chords, and a tread of triumph in its musical motion that suits the
+march of "Judah's Lion":
+
+ His ransomed hosts pursue their way
+ Where Jesus goes before.
+
+James Taylor, born 1833, is a Doctor of Music, organist of the
+University of Oxford and Director of the Oxford Philharmonic Society.
+
+Robert Campbell, the translator, was a Scotch lawyer, born in Edinburgh,
+who besides his work as an advocate wrote original hymns, and in other
+ways exercised a natural literary gift. He compiled the excellent
+Hymnal of the diocese of St. Andrews, and this was his best work. The
+date of his death is given as Dec. 29, 1868.
+
+
+THOMAS OF CELANO.
+
+ Dies irae! dies illa,
+ Solvet saeclum in favilla,
+ Teste David cum Sybilla.
+
+ Day of wrath! that day of burning,
+ All the world to ashes turning,
+ Sung by prophets far discerning.
+
+Latin ecclesiastical poetry reached its high water mark in that awful
+hymn. The solitaire of its sphere and time in the novelty of its
+rhythmic triplets, it stood a wonder to the church and hierarchy
+accustomed to the slow spondees of the ancient chant. There could be
+such a thing as a trochaic hymn!--and majestic, too!
+
+It was a discovery that did not stale. The compelling grandeur of the
+poem placed it distinct and alone, and the very difficulty of staffing
+it for vocal and instrumental use gave it a zest, and helped to keep it
+unique through the ages.
+
+Latin hymnody and hymnography, appealing to the popular ear and heart,
+had gradually substituted accent for quantity in verse; for the common
+people could never be moved by a Christian song in the prosody of the
+classics. The religion of the cross, with the song-preaching of its
+propagandists, created medieval Latin and made it a secondary
+classic--mother of four anthem languages of Western and Southern Europe.
+Its golden age was the 12th and 13th centuries. The new and more
+flexible school of speech and music in hymn and tune had perfected
+rhythmic beauty and brought in the winsome assonance of rhyme.
+
+[Illustration: Dr. Martin Luther]
+
+The "Dies Irae" was born, it is believed, about the year 1255. Its
+authorship has been debated, but competent testimony assures us that the
+original draft of the great poem was found in a box among the effects of
+Thomas di Celano after his death. Thomas--surnamed Thomas of Celano from
+his birthplace, the town of Celano in the province of Aquila, Southern
+Italy--was the pupil, friend and co-laborer of St. Francis of Assisi,
+and wrote his memoirs. He is supposed to have died near the end of the
+13th century. That he wrote the sublime judgment song there is now
+practically no question.
+
+The label on the discovered manuscript would suggest that the writer did
+not consider it either a hymn or a poem. Like the inspired prophets he
+had meditated--and while he was musing the fire burned. The only title
+he wrote over it was "_Prosa de mortuis_," Prosa (or prosa oratio)--from
+_prorsus_, "straight forward"--appears here in the truly conventional
+sense it was beginning to bear, but not yet as the antipode of "poetry."
+The modest author, unconscious of the magnitude of his work, called it
+simply "Plain speech concerning the dead."[7]
+
+[Footnote 7: "Proses" were original passages introduced into
+ecclesiastical chants in the 10th century. During and after the 11th
+century they were called "Sequences" (i.e. _following_ the "Gospel" in
+the liturgy), and were in metrical form, having a prayerful tone.
+"Sequentia pro defunctis" was the later title of the "Dies Irae."]
+
+The hymn is much too long to quote entire, but can be found in _Daniel's
+Thesaurus_ in any large public library. As to the translations of it,
+they number hundreds--in English and German alone, and Italy, Spain and
+Portugal have their vernacular versions--not to mention the Greek and
+Russian and even the Hebrew. A few stanzas follow, with their renderings
+into English (always imperfect) selected almost at random:
+
+ Quantus tremor est futurus
+ Quando Judex est venturus,
+ Cuncta stricte discussurus!
+
+ Tuba mirum spargens sonum
+ Per sepulcra regionum,
+ Coget omnes ante thronum!
+
+ O the dread, the contrite kneeling
+ When the Lord, in Judgment dealing,
+ Comes each hidden thing revealing!
+
+ When the trumpet's awful tone
+ Through the realms sepulchral blown,
+ Summons all before the Throne!
+
+The solemn strength and vibration of these tremendous trilineals suffers
+no general injury by the variant readings--and there are a good many. As
+a sample, the first stanza was changed by some canonical redactor to get
+rid of the heathen word Sybilla, and the second line was made the
+third:
+
+ Dies Irae, dies illa
+ Crucis expandens vexilla,
+ Solvet saeclum in favilla.
+
+ Day of wrath! that day foretold,
+ With the cross-flag wide unrolled,
+ Shall the world in fire enfold!
+
+In some readings the original "in favilla" is changed to "_cum_
+favilla," "_with_ ashes" instead of "in ashes"; and "Teste Petro" is
+substituted for "Teste David."
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The varieties of music set to the "Hymn of Judgment" in the different
+sections and languages of Christendom during seven hundred years are
+probably as numerous as the pictures of the Holy Family in Christian
+art. It is enough to say that one of the best at hand, or, at least,
+accessible, is the solemn minor melody of Dr. Dykes in William Henry
+Monk's _Hymns Ancient and Modern_. It was composed about the middle of
+the last century. Both the _Evangelical_ and _Methodist Hymnals_ have
+Dean Stanley's translation of the hymn, the former with thirteen stanzas
+(six-line) to a D minor of John Stainer, and the latter to a C major of
+Timothy Matthews. The _Plymouth Hymnal_ has seventeen of the trilineal
+stanzas, by an unknown translator, to Ferdinand Hiller's tune in F
+minor, besides one verse to another F minor--hymn and tune both
+nameless.
+
+All the composers above named are musicians of fame. John Stainer,
+organist of St. Paul's Cathedral, was a Doctor of Music and Chevalier of
+the Legion of Honor, and celebrated for his works in sacred music, to
+which he mainly devoted his time. He was born June 6, 1840. He died
+March 31, 1901.
+
+Rev. Timothy Richard Matthews, born at Colmworth, Eng., Nov. 20, 1826,
+is a clergyman of the Church of England, incumbent of a Lancaster charge
+to which he was appointed by Queen Alexandra.
+
+Ferdinand Hiller, born 1811 at Frankfort-on-the-Main, of Hebrew
+parentage, was one of Germany's most eminent musicians. For many years
+he was Chapel Master at Cologne, and organized the Cologne Conservatory.
+His compositions are mostly for instrumental performance, but he wrote
+cantatas, motets, male choruses, and two oratorios, one on the
+"Destruction of Jerusalem." Died May 10, 1855.
+
+The Very Rev. Arthur Penrhyn Stanley, Dean of Westminster, was an author
+and scholar whom all sects of Christians delighted to honor. His
+writings on the New Testament and his published researches in Palestine,
+made him an authority in Biblical study, and his contributions to sacred
+literature were looked for and welcomed as eagerly as a new hymn by
+Bonar or a new poem by Tennyson. Dean Stanley was born in 1815, and died
+July 18th, 1881.
+
+
+THOMAS A KEMPIS.
+
+Thomas a Kempis, sub-prior of the Convent of St. Agnes, was born at
+Hamerkin, Holland, about the year 1380, and died at Zwoll, 1471. This
+pious monk belonged to an order called the "Brethren of the Common Life"
+founded by Gerard de Groote, and his fame rests entirely upon his one
+book, the _Imitation of Christ_, which continues to be printed as a
+religious classic, and is unsurpassed as a manual of private devotion.
+His monastic life--as was true generally of the monastic life of the
+middle ages--was not one of useless idleness. The Brethren taught school
+and did mechanical work. Besides, before the invention of printing had
+been perfected and brought into common service, the multiplication of
+books was principally the work of monkish pens. Kempis spent his days
+copying the Bible and good books--as well as in exercises of devotion
+that promoted religious calm.
+
+His idea of heaven, and the idea of his order, was expressed in that
+clause of John's description of the City of God, Rev. 22:3, "_and His
+servants shall serve Him_." Above all other heavenly joys that was his
+favorite thought. We can well understand that the pious quietude wrought
+in his mind and manners by his habit of life made him a saint in the
+eyes of the people. The frontispiece of one edition of his _Imitatio
+Christi_ pictures him as being addressed before the door of a convent
+by a troubled pilgrim,--
+
+ "O where is peace?--for thou its paths hast trod,"
+
+--and his answer completes the couplet,--
+
+ "In poverty, retirement, and with God."
+
+Of all that is best in inward spiritual life, much can be learned from
+this inspired Dutchman. He wrote no hymns, but in his old age he
+composed a poem on "Heaven's Joys," which is sometimes called "Thomas a
+Kempis' Hymn":
+
+ High the angel choirs are raising
+ Heart and voice in harmony;
+ The Creator King still praising
+ Whom in beauty there they see.
+
+ Sweetest strains from soft harps stealing,
+ Trumpets' notes of triumph pealing,
+ Radiant wings and white stoles gleaming
+ Up the steps of glory streaming;
+ Where the heavenly bells are ringing;
+ "Holy! holy! holy!" singing
+ To the mighty Trinity!
+ "Holy! holy! holy!" crying,
+ For all earthly care and sighing
+ In that city cease to be!
+
+These lines are not in the hymnals of today--and whether they ever found
+their way into choral use in ancient times we are not told. Worse poetry
+has been sung--and more un-hymnlike. Some future composer will make a
+tune to the words of a Christian who stood almost in sight of his
+hundredth year--and of the eternal home he writes about.
+
+
+MARTIN LUTHER.
+
+"_Ein Feste Burg Ist Unser Gott._"
+
+Of Martin Luther Coleridge said, "He did as much for the Reformation by
+his hymns as he did by his translation of the Bible." The remark is so
+true that it has become a commonplace.
+
+The above line--which may be seen inscribed on Luther's tomb at
+Wittenberg--is the opening sentence and key-note of the Reformer's
+grandest hymn. The forty-sixth Psalm inspired it, and it is in harmony
+with sublime historical periods from its very nature, boldness, and
+sublimity. It was written, according to Welles, in the memorable year
+when the evangelical princes delivered their protest at the Diet of
+Spires, from which the word and the meaning of the word "Protestant" is
+derived. "Luther used often to sing it in 1530, while the Diet of
+Augsburg was sitting. It soon became the favorite psalm with the people.
+It was one of the watchwords of the Reformation, cheering armies to
+conflict, and sustaining believers in the hours of fiery trial."
+
+"After Luther's death, Melancthon, his affectionate coadjutor, being one
+day at Weimar with his banished friends, Jonas and Creuziger, heard a
+little maid singing this psalm in the street, and said, 'Sing on, my
+little girl, you little know whom you comfort:'"
+
+ A mighty fortress is our God,
+ A bulwark never failing;
+ Our helper He, amid the flood
+ Of mortal ills prevailing.
+ For still our ancient foe
+ Doth seek to work us woe;
+ His craft and power are great,
+ And, armed with cruel hate,
+ On earth is not his equal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The Prince of Darkness grim--
+ We tremble not for him:
+ His rage we can endure,
+ For lo! his doom is sure,
+ One little word shall fell him.
+
+ That word above all earthly powers--
+ No thanks to them--abideth;
+ The Spirit and the gifts are ours,
+ Through Him who with us sideth.
+ Let goods and kindred go,
+ This mortal life also;
+ The body they may kill,
+ God's truth abideth still,
+ His kingdom is for ever.
+
+Martin Luther was born in Eisleben, in Saxony, Nov. 10, 1483. He was
+educated at the University of Erfurth, and became an Augustinian monk
+and Professor of Philosophy and Divinity in the University of
+Wittenberg. In 1517 he composed and placarded his ninety-five Theses
+condemning certain practices of the Romish Church and three years later
+the Pope published a bull excommunicating him, which he burnt openly
+before a sympathetic multitude in Wittenberg. His life was a stormy one,
+and he was more than once in mortal danger by reason of his antagonism
+to the papal authority, but he found powerful patrons, and lived to see
+the Reformation an organized fact. He died in his birthplace, Eisleben,
+Feb. 18th, 1546.
+
+The translation of the "Ein feste burg," given above, in part, is by
+Rev. Frederick Henry Hedge, D.D., born in Cambridge, March 1805, a
+graduate of Harvard, and formerly minister of the Unitarian Church in
+Bangor, Me. Died, 1890.
+
+Luther wrote thirty-six hymns, to some of which he fitted his own music,
+for he was a musician and singer as well as an eloquent preacher. The
+tune in which "Ein feste Burg" is sung in the hymnals, was composed by
+himself. The hymn has also a noble rendering in the music of Sebastian
+Bach, 8-4 time, found in _Hymns Ancient and Modern_.
+
+
+BARTHOLOMEW RINGWALDT.
+
+"Great God, What Do I See and Hear?"
+
+The history of this hymn is somewhat indefinite, though common consent
+now attributes to Ringwaldt the stanza beginning with the above line.
+The imitation of the "Dies Irae" in German which was first in use was
+printed in Jacob Klug's "_Gesangbuch_" in 1535. Ringwaldt's hymn of the
+Last Day, also inspired from the ancient Latin original, appears in his
+_Handbuchlin_ of 1586, but does not contain this stanza. The first line
+is, "The awful Day will surely come," (Es ist gewisslich an der Zeit).
+Nevertheless through the more than two hundred years that the hymn has
+been translated and re-translated, and gone through inevitable
+revisions, some vital identity in the spirit and tone of the one
+seven-line stanza has steadily connected it with Ringwaldt's name.
+Apparently it is the single survivor of a great lost hymn--edited and
+altered out of recognition. But its power evidently inspired the added
+verses, as we have them. Dr. Collyer found it, and, regretting that it
+was too short to sing in public service, composed stanzas 2d, 3d and
+4th. It is likely that Collyer first met with it in _Psalms and Hymns
+for Public and Private Devotion_, Sheffield 1802, where it appeared
+anonymously. So far as known this was its first publication in English.
+Ringwaldt's stanza and two of Collyer's are here given:
+
+ Great God, what do I see and hear!
+ The end of things created!
+ The Judge of mankind doth appear
+ On clouds of glory seated.
+ The trumpet sounds, the graves restore
+ The dead which they contained before;
+ Prepare, my soul, to meet Him.
+
+ The dead in Christ shall first arise
+ At the last trumpet sounding,
+ Caught up to meet Him in the skies,
+ With joy their Lord surrounding.
+ No gloomy fears their souls dismay
+ His presence sheds eternal day
+ On those prepared to meet Him.
+
+ Far over space to distant spheres
+ The lightnings are prevailing
+ Th' ungodly rise, and all their tears
+ And sighs are unavailing.
+ The day of grace is past and gone;
+ They shake before the Judge's Throne
+ All unprepared to meet Him.
+
+Bartholomew Ringwaldt, pastor of the Lutheran Church of Longfeld,
+Prussia, was born in 1531, and died in 1599. His hymns appear in a
+collection entitled _Hymns for the Sundays and Festivals of the Whole
+Year_.
+
+Rev. William Bengo Collyer D.D., was born at Blackheath near London,
+April 14, 1782, educated at Homerton College and settled over a
+Congregational Church in Peckham. In 1812 he published a book of hymns,
+and in 1837 a _Service Book_ to which he contributed eighty-nine hymns.
+He died Jan, 9, 1854.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Probably it was the customary singing of Ringwaldt's hymn (in Germany)
+to Luther's tune that gave it for some time the designation of "Luther's
+Hymn," the title by which the music is still known--an air either
+composed or adapted by Luther, and rendered perhaps unisonously or with
+extempore chords. It was not until early in the last century that
+Vincent Novello wrote to it the noble arrangement now in use. It is a
+strong, even-time harmony with lofty tenor range, and very impressive
+with full choir and organ or the vocal volume of a congregation. In
+_Cheetham's Psalmody_ is it written with a trumpet obligato.
+
+Vincent Novello, born in London, Sept. 6, 1781, the intimate friend of
+Lamb, Shelley, Keats, Hunt and Hazlitt, was a professor of music who
+attained great eminence as an organist and composer of hymn-tunes and
+sacred pieces. He was the founder of the publishing house of Novello and
+Ewer, and father of a famous musical family. Died at Nice, Aug. 9, 1861.
+
+
+ST. FRANCIS XAVIER.
+
+"_O Deus, Ego Amo Te._"
+
+Francis Xavier, the celebrated Jesuit missionary, called "The Apostle of
+the Indies," was a Spaniard, born in 1506. While a student in Paris he
+met Ignatius Loyola, and joined him in the formation of the new "Society
+for the Propagation of the Faith." He was sent out on a mission to the
+East Indies and Japan, and gave himself to the work with a martyr's
+devotion. The stations he established in Japan were maintained more than
+a hundred years. He died in China, Dec. 1552.
+
+His hymn, some time out of use, is being revived in later singing-books
+as expressive of the purest and highest Christian sentiment:
+
+ O Deus, ego amo Te.
+ Nec amo Te, ut salves me,
+ Aut quia non amantes Te
+ AEterno punis igne.
+
+ My God, I love Thee--not because
+ I hope for heaven thereby;
+ Nor yet because who love Thee not
+ Must burn eternally.
+
+After recounting Christ's vicarious sufferings as the chief claim to His
+disciples' unselfish love, the hymn continues,--
+
+ Cur igitur non amem Te,
+ O Jesu amantissime!
+ Non, ut in coelo salves me,
+ Aut in aeternum damnes me.
+
+ Then why, O blessed Jesus Christ,
+ Should I not love Thee well?
+ Not for the sake of winning heaven,
+ Nor of escaping hell;
+
+ Not with the hope of gaining aught,
+ Nor seeking a reward,
+ But as Thyself hast loved me,
+ Oh, ever-loving Lord!
+
+ E'en so I love Thee, and will love,
+ And in Thy praise will sing;
+ Solely because Thou art my God
+ And my eternal King.
+
+The translation is by Rev. Edward Caswall, 1814-1878, a priest in the
+Church of Rome. Besides his translations, he published the _Lyra
+Catholica_, the _Masque of Mary_, and several other poetical works.
+(Page 101.)
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"St. Bernard"--apparently so named because originally composed to
+Caswall's translation of one of Bernard of Clairvaux's hymns--is by
+John Richardson, born in Preston, Eng., Dec. 4, 1817, and died there
+April 13, 1879. He was an organist in Liverpool, and noted as a composer
+of glees, but was the author of several sacred tunes.
+
+
+SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
+
+"Give Me My Scallop-Shell of Quiet."
+
+Few of the hymns of the Elizabethan era survive, though the Ambrosian
+Midnight Hymn, "Hark, 'tis the Midnight Cry," and the hymns of St.
+Bernard and Bernard of Cluny, are still tones in the church, and the
+religious poetry of Sir Walter Raleigh comes down to us associated with
+the history of his brilliant, though tragic career. The following poem
+has some fine lines in the quaint English style of the period, and was
+composed by Sir Walter during his first imprisonment:
+
+ Give me my scallop-shell of quiet,
+ My staff of faith to walk upon,
+ My scrip of joy--immortal diet--
+ My bottle of salvation,
+ My gown of glory, hope's true gage--
+ And thus I take my pilgrimage.
+
+ Blood must be my body's balmer,
+ While my soul, like faithful palmer,
+ Travelleth toward the land of heaven;
+ Other balm will not be given.
+
+ Over the silver mountains
+ Where spring the nectar fountains,
+ There will I kiss the bowl of bliss,
+ And drink my everlasting fill,
+ Upon every milken hill;
+ My soul will be a-dry before,
+ But after that will thirst no more.
+
+The musings of the unfortunate but high-souled nobleman in expectation
+of ignominious death are interesting and pathetic, but they have no
+claim to a tune, even if they were less rugged and unmetrical. But the
+poem stands notable among the pious witnesses.
+
+
+MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS.
+
+"_O Domine Deus, Speravi in Te._"
+
+This last passionate prayer of the unhappy Mary Stuart just before her
+execution--in a language which perhaps flowed from her pen more easily
+than even her English or French--is another witness of supplicating
+faith that struggles out of darkness with a song. In her extremity the
+devoted Catholic forgets her petitions to the Virgin, and comes to
+Christ:
+
+ O Domine Deus, Speravi in Te;
+ O care mi Jesu, nunc libera me!
+ In dura catena, in misera poena
+ Desidero Te!
+ Languendo, gemendo, et genuflectendo
+ Adoro, imploro ut liberes me!
+
+ My Lord and my God! I have trusted in Thee;
+ O Jesus, my Saviour belov'd, set me free:
+ In rigorous chains, in piteous pains,
+ I am longing for Thee!
+ In weakness appealing, in agony kneeling,
+ I pray, I beseech Thee, O Lord, set me free!
+
+One would, at first thought, judge this simple but eloquent cry worthy
+of an appropriate tone-expression--to be sung by prison evangelists like
+the Volunteers of America, to convicts in the jails and penitentiaries.
+But its special errand and burden are voiced so literally that hardened
+hearers would probably misapply it--however sincerely the petitioner
+herself meant to invoke spiritual rather than temporal deliverance. The
+hymn, if we may call it so, is _too_ literal. Possibly at some time or
+other it may have been set to music but not for ordinary choir service.
+
+
+SAMUEL RUTHERFORD.
+
+ The sands of time are sinking,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ But, glory, glory dwelleth
+ In Immanuel's Land.
+
+This hymn is biographical, but not autobiographical. Like the discourses
+in Herodotus and Plutarch, it is the voice of the dead speaking through
+the sympathetic genius of the living after long generations. The strong,
+stern Calvinist of 1636 in Aberdeen was not a poet, but he bequeathed
+his spirit and life to the verse of a poet of 1845 in Melrose. Anne Ross
+Cousin read his two hundred and twenty letters written during a two
+years' captivity for his fidelity to the purer faith, and studied his
+whole history and experience till her soul took his soul's place and
+felt what he felt. Her poem of nineteen stanzas (152 lines) is the voice
+of Rutherford the Covenanter, with the prolixity of his manner and age
+sweetened by his triumphant piety, and that is why it belongs with the
+_Hymns of Great Witnesses_. The three or four stanzas still occasionally
+printed and sung are only recalled to memory by the above three lines.
+
+Samuel Rutherford was born in Nisbet Parish, Scotland, in 1600. His
+settled ministry was at Anworth, in Galloway--1630-1651--with a break
+between 1636 and 1638, when Charles I. angered by his anti-prelatical
+writings, silenced and banished him. Shut up in Aberdeen, but allowed,
+like Paul in Rome, to live "in his own hired house" and write letters,
+he poured out his heart's love in Epistles to his Anworth flock and to
+the Non-conformists of Scotland. When his countrymen rose against the
+attempted imposition of a new holy Romish service-book on their
+churches, he escaped to his people, and soon after appeared in Edinburgh
+and signed the covenant with the assembled ministers. Thirteen years
+later, after Cromwell's death and the accession of Charles II. the wrath
+of the prelates fell on him at St. Andrews, where the Presbytery had
+made him rector of the college. The King's decree indicted him for
+treason, stripped him of all his offices, and would have forced him to
+the block had he not been stricken with his last sickness. When the
+officers came to take him he said, "I am summoned before a higher Judge
+and Judicatory, and I am behooved to attend them." He died soon after,
+in the year 1661.
+
+The first, and a few other of the choicest stanzas of the hymn inspired
+by his life and death are here given:
+
+ The sands of time are sinking,
+ The dawn of heaven breaks,
+ The summer morn I've sighed for--
+ The fair, sweet morn--awakes.
+ Dark, dark hath been the midnight,
+ But dayspring is at hand;
+ And glory, glory dwelleth
+ In Immanuel's land.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Oh! well it is for ever--
+ Oh! well for evermore:
+ My nest hung in no forest
+ Of all this death-doomed shore;
+ Yea, let this vain world vanish,
+ As from the ship the strand,
+ While glory, glory dwelleth
+ In Immanuel's land.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The little birds of Anworth--
+ I used to count them blest;
+ Now beside happier altars
+ I go to build my nest;
+ O'er these there broods no silence
+ No graves around them stand;
+ For glory deathless dwelleth
+ In Immanuel's land.
+
+ I have borne scorn and hatred,
+ I have borne wrong and shame,
+ Earth's proud ones have reproached me
+ For Christ's thrice blessed name.
+ Where God's seals set the fairest,
+ They've stamped their foulest brand;
+ But judgment shines like noonday
+ In Immanuel's land.
+
+ They've summoned me before them,
+ But there I may not come;
+ My Lord says, "Come up hither;"
+ My Lord says, "Welcome home;"
+ My King at His white throne
+ My presence doth command,
+ Where glory, glory dwelleth,
+ In Immanuel's land.
+
+A reminiscence of St. Paul in his second Epistle to Timothy (chap. 4)
+comes with the last two stanzas.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The tender and appropriate choral in B flat, named "Rutherford" was
+composed by D'Urhan, a French musician, probably a hundred years ago. It
+was doubtless named by those who long afterwards fitted it to the words,
+and knew whose spiritual proxy the lady stood who indited the hymn. It
+is reprinted in Peloubet's _Select Songs_, and in the _Coronation
+Hymnal_. Naturally in the days of the hymn's more frequent use people
+became accustomed to calling "The sands of time are sinking,"
+"Rutherford's Hymn." Rutherford's own words certainly furnished the
+memorable refrain with its immortal glow and gladness. One of his joyful
+exclamations as he lay dying of his lingering disease was, "Glory
+shineth in Immanuel's Land!"
+
+Chretien (Christian) Urhan, or D'Urhan, was born at Montjoie, France,
+about 1788, and died, in Paris, 1845. He was a noted violin-player, and
+composer, also, of vocal and instrumental music.
+
+Mrs. Anne Ross (Cundell) Cousin, daughter of David Ross Cundell, M.D.,
+and widow of Rev. William Cousin of the Free church of Scotland, was
+born in Melrose (?), 1824. She wrote many poems, most of which are
+beautiful meditations rather than lyrics suitable for public song. Her
+"Rutherford Hymn" was first published in the _Christian Treasury_, 1857.
+
+
+GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS.
+
+"_Verzage Nicht Du Hauflein Klein._"
+
+The historian tells us that before the battle of Lutzen, during the
+Thirty Years' War (1618-1648), King Gustavus of Sweden, in the thick fog
+of an autumn morning, with the Bohemian and Austrian armies of Emperor
+Ferdinand in front of him, knelt before his troops, and his whole army
+knelt with him in prayer. Then ten thousand voices and the whole concert
+of regimental bands burst forth in this brave song:
+
+ Fear not, O little flock, the foe
+ Who madly seeks your overthrow,
+ Dread not his rage and power:
+ What though your courage sometimes faints,
+ His seeming triumph o'er God's saints
+ Lasts but a little hour.
+
+ Be of good cheer, your cause belongs
+ To Him who can avenge your wrongs;
+ Leave it to Him, our Lord:
+ Though hidden yet from all our eyes,
+ He sees the Gideon who shall rise
+ To save us and His word.
+
+ As true as God's own word is true,
+ Nor earth nor hell with all their crew,
+ Against us shall prevail:
+ A jest and by-word they are grown;
+ God is with us, we are His own,
+ Our victory cannot fail.
+
+ Amen, Lord Jesus, grant our prayer!
+ Great Captain, now Thine arm make bare,
+ Fight for us once again:
+ So shall Thy saints and martyrs raise
+ A mighty chorus to Thy praise,
+ World without end. Amen.
+
+The army of Gustavus moved forward to victory as the fog lifted; but at
+the moment of triumph a riderless horse came galloping back to the camp.
+It was the horse of the martyred King.
+
+The battle song just quoted--next to Luther's "Ein feste Burg" the most
+famous German hymn--has always since that day been called "Gustavus
+Adolphus' Hymn"; and the mingled sorrow and joy of the event at Lutzen
+named it also "King Gustavus' Swan Song." Gustavus Adolphus did not
+write hymns. He could sing them, and he could make them historic--and it
+was this connection that identified him with the famous battle song. Its
+author was the Rev. Johan Michael Altenburg, a Lutheran clergyman, who
+composed apparently both hymn and tune on receiving news of the king's
+victory at Leipsic a year before.
+
+Gustavus Adolphus was born in 1594. His death on the battlefield
+occurred Nov. 5, 1632--when he was in the prime of his manhood. He was
+one of the greatest military commanders in history, besides being a
+great ruler and administrator, and a devout Christian. He was, during
+the Thirty Years' War (until his untimely death), the leading champion
+of Protestantism in Europe.
+
+The English translator of the battle song was Miss Catherine Winkworth,
+born in London, Sept. 13, 1827. She was an industrious and successful
+translator of German hymns, contributing many results of her work to two
+English editions of the _Lyra Germania_, to the _Church Book of
+England_, and to _Christian Singers of Germany_. She died in 1878.
+
+The tune of "Ravendale" by Walter Stokes (born 1847) is the best modern
+rendering of the celebrated hymn.
+
+
+PAUL GERHARDT.
+
+"_Befiehl Du Deine Wege._"
+
+Paul Gerhardt was one of those minstrels of experience who are--
+
+ "Cradled into poetry by wrong,
+ And learn in suffering what they teach in song."
+
+He was a graduate of that school when he wrote his "Hymn of Trust:"
+
+ Commit thou all thy griefs
+ And ways into His hands;
+ To His sure trust and tender care
+ Who earth and heaven commands.
+
+ Thou on the Lord rely,
+ So, safe, shalt thou go on;
+ Fix on His work thy steadfast eye,
+ So shall thy work be done.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Give to the winds thy fears;
+ Hope, and be undismayed;
+ God hears thy sighs and counts thy tears,
+ He shall lift up thy head.
+
+ Through waves and clouds and storms
+ He gently clears thy way;
+ Wait thou His time, so shall this night
+ Soon end in joyous day.
+
+Gerhardt was born at Grafenheinchen, Saxony, 1606. Through the first and
+best years of manhood's strength (during the Thirty Years' War), a
+wandering preacher tossed from place to place, he was without a parish
+and without a home.
+
+After the peace of Westphalia he settled in the little village of
+Mittenwalde. He was then forty-four years old. Four years later he
+married and removed to a Berlin church. During his residence there he
+buried his wife, and four of his children, was deposed from the
+ministry because his Lutheran doctrines offended the Elector Frederick,
+and finally retired as a simple arch-deacon to a small parish in Lubben,
+where he preached, toiled, and suffered amid a rough and uncongenial
+people till he died, Jan. 16, 1676.
+
+Few men have ever lived whose case more needed a "Hymn of Trust"--and
+fewer still could have written it themselves. Through all those trial
+years he was pouring forth his soul in devout verses, making in all no
+less than a hundred and twenty-five hymns--every one of them a comfort
+to others as well as to himself.
+
+He became a favorite, and for a time _the_ favorite, hymn-writer of all
+the German-speaking people. Among these tones of calm faith and joy we
+recognize today (in the English tongue),--
+
+ Since Jesus is my Friend,
+
+ Thee, O Immanuel, we praise,
+
+ All my heart this night rejoices,
+
+ How shall I meet Thee,
+
+--and the English translation of his "O Haupt voll Blut und Wunden,"
+turned into German by himself from St. Bernard Clairvaux's "Salve caput
+cruentatum," and made dear to us in Rev. James Alexander's beautiful
+lines--
+
+ O sacred head now wounded,
+ With grief and shame weighed down,
+ Now scornfully surrounded
+ With thorns, Thine only crown.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+A plain-song by Alexander Reinagle is used by some congregations, but is
+not remarkably expressive. Reinagle, Alexander Robert, (1799-1877) of
+Kidlington, Eng., was organist to the church of St. Peter-in-the-East,
+Oxford.
+
+The great "Hymn of Trust" could have found no more sympathetic
+interpreter than the musician of Gerhardt's own land and language,
+Schumann, the gentle genius of Zwickau. It bears the name "Schumann,"
+appropriately enough, and its elocution makes a volume of each quatrain,
+notably the one--
+
+ Who points the clouds their course,
+ Whom wind and seas obey;
+ He shall direct thy wandering feet,
+ He shall prepare thy way.
+
+Robert Schumann, Ph.D., was born in Zwickau, Saxony, June 8, 1810. He
+was a music director and conservatory teacher, and the master-mind of
+the pre-Wagnerian period. His compositions became popular, having a
+character of their own, combining the intellectual and beautiful in art.
+He published in Leipsic a journal promotive of his school of music, and
+founded a choral society in Dresden. Happy in the cooeperation of his
+wife, herself a skilled musician, he extended his work to Vienna and the
+Netherlands; but his zeal wore him out, and he died at the age of
+forty-six, universally lamented as "the eminent man who had done so much
+for the happiness of others."
+
+Gerhardt's Hymn (ten quatrains) is rarely printed entire, and where six
+are printed only four are usually sung. Different collections choose
+portions according to the compiler's taste, the stanza beginning--
+
+ Give to the winds thy fears,
+
+--being with some a favorite first verse.
+
+The translation of the hymn from the German is John Wesley's.
+
+Purely legendary is the beautiful story of the composition of the hymn,
+"Commit thou all thy griefs"; how, after his exile from Berlin,
+traveling on foot with his weeping wife, Gerhardt stopped at a wayside
+inn and wrote the lines while he rested; and how a messenger from Duke
+Christian found him there, and offered him a home in Meresburg. But the
+most ordinary imagination can fill in the possible incidents in a life
+of vicissitudes such as Gerhardt's was.
+
+
+LADY HUNTINGDON.
+
+"When Thou My Righteous Judge Shalt Come."
+
+Selina Shirley, Countess of Huntingdon, born 1707, died 1791, is
+familiarly known as the titled friend and patroness of Whitefield and
+his fellow-preachers. She early consecrated herself to God, and in the
+great spiritual awakening under Whitefield and the Wesleys she was a
+punctual and sympathetic helper. Uniting with the Calvinistic
+Methodists, she nevertheless stood aloof from none who preached a
+personal Christ, and whose watchwords were the salvation of souls and
+the purification of the Church. For more than fifty years she devoted
+her wealth to benevolence and spiritual ministries, and died at the age
+of eighty-four. "I have done my work," was her last testimony. "I have
+nothing to do but to go to my Father."
+
+At various times Lady Huntingdon expressed her religious experience in
+verse, and the manful vigor of her school of faith recalls the unbending
+confidence of Job, for she was not a stranger to affliction.
+
+ God's furnace doth in Zion stand,
+ But Zion's God sits by,
+ As the refiner views his gold,
+ With an observant eye.
+
+ His thoughts are high, His love is wise,
+ His wounds a cure intend;
+ And, though He does not always smile,
+ He loves unto the end.
+
+Her great hymn, that keeps her memory green, has the old-fashioned
+flavor. "Massa made God BIG!" was the comment on Dr. Bellany made by his
+old negro servant after that noted minister's death. In Puritan piety
+the sternest self-depreciation qualified every thought of the creature,
+while every allusion to the Creator was a magnificat. Lady Huntingdon's
+hymn has no flattering phrases for the human subject. "Worthless worm,"
+and "vilest of them all" indicate the true Pauline or Oriental
+prostration of self before a superior being; but there is grandeur in
+the metre, the awful reverence, and the scene of judgment in the
+stanzas--always remembering the mighty choral that has so long given the
+lyric its voice in the church, and is ancillary to its fame:
+
+ When Thou, my righteous Judge, shalt come
+ To take Thy ransomed people home,
+ Shall I among them stand?
+ Shall such a worthless worm as I,
+ Who sometimes am afraid to die,
+ Be found at Thy right hand?
+
+ I love to meet Thy people now,
+ Before Thy feet with them to bow,
+ Though vilest of them all;
+ But can I bear the piercing thought,
+ What if my name should be left out,
+ When Thou for them shalt call?
+
+ O Lord, prevent it by Thy grace:
+ Be Thou my only hiding place,
+ In this th' accepted day;
+ Thy pardoning voice, oh let me hear,
+ To still my unbelieving fear,
+ Nor let me fall, I pray.
+
+ Among Thy saints let me be found,
+ Whene'er the archangel's trump shall sound,
+ To see Thy smiling face;
+ Then loudest of the throng I'll sing,
+ While heaven's resounding arches ring
+ With shouts of sovereign grace.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The tune of "Meribah," in which this hymn has been sung for the last
+sixty or more years, is one of Dr. Lowell Mason's masterpieces. An
+earlier German harmony attributed to Heinrich Isaac and named
+"Innsbruck" has in some few cases claimed association with the words,
+though composed two hundred years before Lady Huntingdon was born. It is
+strong and solemn, but its cold psalm-tune movement does not utter the
+deep emotion of the author's lines. "Meribah" was inspired by the hymn
+itself, and there is nothing invidious in saying it illustrates the
+fact, memorable in all hymnology, of the natural obligation of a hymn to
+its tune.
+
+Apropos of both, it is related that Mason was once presiding at choir
+service in a certain church where the minister gave out "When thou my
+righteous Judge shalt come" and by mistake directed the singers to "omit
+the second stanza." Mason sat at the organ, and while playing the last
+strain, "Be found at thy right hand," glanced ahead in the hymnbook and
+turned with a start just in time to command, "Sing the _next_ verse!"
+The choir did so, and "O Lord, prevent it by Thy grace!" was saved from
+being a horrible prayer to be kept out of heaven.
+
+
+ZINZENDORF.
+
+"Jesus, Thy Blood and Righteousness."
+
+Nicolaus Ludwig, Count Von Zinzendorf, was born at Dresden, May 26,
+1700, and educated at Halle and Wittenberg. From his youth he evinced
+marked seriousness of mind, and deep religious sensibilities, and this
+character appeared in his sympathy with the persecuted Moravians, to
+whom he gave domicile and domain on his large estate. For eleven years
+he was Councillor to the Elector of Saxony, but subsequently, uniting
+with the Brethren's Church, he founded the settlement of Herrnhut, the
+first home and refuge of the reorganized sect, and became a Moravian
+minister and bishop.
+
+Zinzendorf was a man of high culture, as well as profound and sincere
+piety and in his hymns (of which he wrote more than two thousand) he
+preached Christ as eloquently as with his voice. The real birth-moment
+of his religious life is said to have been simultaneous with his study
+of the "Ecce Homo" in the Dusseldorf Gallery, a wonderful painting of
+Jesus crowned with thorns. Visiting the gallery one day when a young
+man, he gazed on the sacred face and read the legend superscribed, "All
+this I have done for thee; What doest thou for me?" Ever afterwards his
+motto was "I have but one passion, and that is He, and only He"--a
+version of Paul's "For me to live is Christ."
+
+ Jesus, Thy blood and righteousness
+ My beauty are, my glorious dress:
+ 'Midst flaming worlds, in these arrayed,
+ With joy shall I lift up my head.
+
+ Bold shall I stand in Thy great day,
+ For who aught to my charge shall lay?
+ Fully absolved through these I am--
+ From sin and fear, from guilt and shame.
+
+ Lord, I believe were sinners more
+ Than sands upon the ocean shore,
+ Thou hast for all a ransom paid,
+ For all a full atonement made.
+
+Nearly all the hymns of the great Moravian are now out of general use,
+having accomplished their mission, like the forgotten ones of Gerhardt,
+and been superseded by others. More sung in Europe, probably, now than
+any of the survivors is, "Jesus, geh voran," ("Jesus, lead on,") which
+has been translated into English by Jane Borthwick[8] (1854). Two
+others, both translated by John Wesley, are with us, the one above
+quoted, and "Glory to God, whose witness train." "Jesus, Thy blood,"
+which is the best known, frequently appears with the alteration--
+
+ Jesus, Thy _robe_ of righteousness
+ My beauty _is_, my glorious dress.
+
+[Footnote 8: Born in Edinburgh 1813.]
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Malvern," and "Uxbridge" a pure Gregorian, both by Lowell Mason, are
+common expressions of the hymn--the latter, perhaps, generally
+preferred, being less plaintive and speaking with a surer and more
+restful emphasis.
+
+
+ROBERT SEAGRAVE.
+
+"Rise, My Soul, and Stretch Thy Wings."
+
+This hymn was written early in the 18th century, by the Rev. Robert
+Seagrave, born at Twyford, Leicestershire, Eng., Nov. 22, 1693. Educated
+at Cambridge, he took holy orders in the Established Church, but
+espoused the cause of the great evangelistic movement, and became a
+hearty co-worker with the Wesleys. Judging by the lyric fire he could
+evidently put into his verses, one involuntarily asks if he would not
+have written more, and been in fact the song-leader of the spiritual
+reformation if there had been no Charles Wesley. There is not a hymn of
+Wesley's in use on the same subject equal to the one immortal hymn of
+Seagrave, and the only other near its time that approaches it in vigor
+and appealing power is Doddridge's "Awake my soul, stretch every nerve."
+
+But Providence gave Wesley the harp and appointed to the elder poet a
+branch of possibly equal usefulness, where he was kept too busy to enter
+the singers' ranks.
+
+For eleven years he was the Sunday-evening lecturer at Lorimer's Hall,
+London, and often preached in Whitefield's Tabernacle. His hymn is one
+of the most soul-stirring in the English language:
+
+[Illustration: S. Huntingdon]
+
+ Rise, my soul, and stretch thy wings;
+ Thy better portion trace;
+ Rise from transitory things
+ Toward Heaven, thy native place;
+ Sun and moon and stars decay,
+ Time shall soon this earth remove;
+ Rise, my soul and haste away
+ To seats prepared above.
+
+ Rivers to the ocean run,
+ Nor stay in all their course;
+ Fire ascending seeks the sun;
+ Both speed them to their source:
+ So a soul that's born of God
+ Pants to view His glorious face,
+ Upward tends to His abode
+ To rest in His embrace.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Cease, ye pilgrims, cease to mourn,
+ Press onward to the prize;
+ Soon your Saviour will return
+ Triumphant in the skies.
+ Yet a season, and you know
+ Happy entrance will be given;
+ All our sorrows left below,
+ And earth exchanged for heaven.
+
+This hymn must have found its predestinated organ when it found--
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Amsterdam," the work of James Nares, had its birth and baptism soon
+after the work of Seagrave; and they have been breath and bugle to the
+church of God ever since they became one song. In _The Great Musicians_,
+edited by Francis Huffer, is found this account of James Nares:
+
+"He was born at Hanwell, Middlesex, in 1715; was admitted chorister at
+the Chapel Royal, under Bernard Gates, and when he was able to play the
+organ was appointed deputy for Pigott, of St. George's Chapel, Windsor,
+and became organist at York Minster in 1734. He succeeded Greene as
+organist and composer to the Chapel Royal in 1756, and in the same year
+was made Doctor of Music at Cambridge. He was appointed master of the
+children of the Chapel Royal in 1757, on the death of Gates. This post
+he resigned in 1780, and he died in 1783, (February 10,) and was buried
+in St. Margaret's Church, Westminster.
+
+"He had the reputation of being an excellent trainer of boy's voices,
+many of his anthems having been written to exhibit the accomplishments
+of his young pupils. The degree of excellence the boys attained was not
+won in those days without the infliction of much corporal punishment."
+
+Judging from the high pulse and action in the music of "Amsterdam," one
+would guess the energy of the man who made boy choirs--and made good
+ones. In the old time the rule was, "Birds that can sing and won't sing,
+must be made to sing"; and the rule was sometimes enforced with the
+master's time-stick.
+
+A tune entitled "Excelsius," written a hundred years later by John Henry
+Cornell, so nearly resembles "Amsterdam" as to suggest an intention to
+amend it. It changes the modal note from G to A, but while it marches
+at the same pace it lacks the jubilant modulations and the choral glory
+of the 18th-century piece.
+
+
+SIR JOHN BOWRING.
+
+"In the Cross of Christ I Glory."
+
+In this hymn we see, sitting humbly at the feet of the great author of
+our religion, a man who impressed himself perhaps more than any other
+save Napoleon Bonaparte upon his own generation, and who was the wonder
+of Europe for his immense attainments and the versatility of his powers.
+Statesman, philanthropist, biographer, publicist, linguist, historian,
+financier, naturalist, poet, political economist--there is hardly a
+branch of knowledge or a field of research from which he did not enrich
+himself and others, or a human condition that he did not study and
+influence.
+
+Sir John Bowring was born in 1792. When a youth he was Jeremy Bentham's
+political pupil, but gained his first fame by his vast knowledge of
+European literature, becoming acquainted with no less than thirteen[9]
+continental languages and dialects. He served in consular appointments
+at seven different capitals, carried important reform measures in
+Parliament, was Minister Plenipotentiary to China and Governor of Hong
+Kong, and concluded a commercial treaty with Siam, where every previous
+commissioner had failed. But in all his crowded years the pen of this
+tireless and successful man was busy. Besides his political, economic
+and religious essays, which made him a member of nearly every learned
+society in Europe, his translations were countless, and poems and hymns
+of his own composing found their way to the public, among them the
+tender spiritual song,--
+
+ How sweetly flowed the Gospel sound
+ From lips of gentleness and grace
+ When listening thousands gathered round,
+ And joy and gladness filled the place,
+
+--and the more famous hymn indicated at the head of this sketch.
+Knowledge of all religions only qualified him to worship the Crucified
+with both faith and reason. Though nominally a Unitarian, to him, as to
+Channing and Martineau and Edmund Sears, Christ was "all we know of
+God."
+
+[Footnote 9: Exaggerated in some accounts to _forty_.]
+
+Bowring died Nov. 23, 1872. But his hymn to the Cross will never die:
+
+ In the cross of Christ I glory,
+ Towering o'er the wrecks of time;
+ All the light of sacred story
+ Gathers round its head sublime.
+
+ When the woes of life o'ertake me
+ Hopes deceive, and fears annoy,
+ Never shall the cross forsake me;
+ Lo! it glows with peace and joy.
+
+ When the sun of bliss is beaming
+ Light and love upon my way,
+ From the cross the radiance streaming
+ Adds new lustre to the day.
+
+ Bane and blessing, pain and pleasure
+ By the cross are sanctified,
+ Peace is there that knows no measure,
+ Joys that through all time abide.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Ithamar Conkey's "Rathbun" fits the adoring words as if they had waited
+for it. Its air, swelling through diatonic fourth and third to the
+supreme syllable, bears on its waves the homage of the lines from bar to
+bar till the four voices come home to rest full and satisfied in the
+final chord--
+
+ Gathers round its head sublime.
+
+Ithamar Conkey, was born of Scotch ancestry, in Shutesbury, Mass., May
+5th, 1815. He was a noted bass singer, and was for a long time connected
+with the choir of the Calvary church, New York City, and sang the
+oratorio solos. His tune of "Rathbun" was composed in 1847, and
+published in Greatorex's collection in 1851. He died in Elizabeth, N.J.,
+April 30, 1867.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+HYMNS OF CHRISTIAN DEVOTION AND EXPERIENCE.
+
+
+"JESU DULCIS MEMORIA."
+
+"Jesus the Very Thought of Thee."
+
+The original of this delightful hymn is one of the devout meditations of
+Bernard of Clairvaux, a Cistercian monk (1091-1153). He was born of a
+noble family in or near Dijon, Burgundy, and when only twenty-three
+years old established a monastery at Clairvaux, France, over which he
+presided as its first abbot. Educated in the University of Paris, and
+possessing great natural abilities, he soon made himself felt in both
+the religious and political affairs of Europe. For more than thirty
+years he was the personal power that directed belief, quieted
+turbulence, and arbitrated disputes, and kings and even popes sought his
+counsel. It was his eloquent preaching that inspired the second crusade.
+
+His fine poem of feeling, in fifty Latin stanzas, has been a source of
+pious song in several languages:
+
+ Jesu, dulcis memoria
+ Dans vera cordi gaudia,
+ Sed super mel et omnium
+ Ejus dulcis presentia.
+
+Literally--
+
+ Jesus! a sweet memory
+ Giving true joys to the heart,
+ But sweet above honey and all things
+ His _presence_ [is].
+
+The five stanzas (of Caswall's free translation) now in use are familiar
+and dear to all English-speaking believers:
+
+ Jesus, the very thought of Thee
+ With sweetness fills my breast,
+ But sweeter far Thy face to see,
+ And in Thy presence rest.
+
+ Nor voice can sing nor heart can frame
+ Nor can the memory find,
+ A sweeter sound than Thy blest name,
+ O Saviour of mankind.
+
+The Rev. Edward Caswall was born in Hampshire, Eng., July 15, 1814, the
+son of a clergyman. He graduated with honors at Brazenose College,
+Oxford, and after ten years of service in the ministry of the Church of
+England joined Henry Newman's Oratory at Birmingham, was confirmed in
+the Church of Rome, and devoted the rest of his life to works of piety
+and charity. He died Jan. 2, 1878.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+No single melody has attached itself to this hymn, the scope of
+selection being as large as the supply of appropriate common-metre
+tunes. Barnby's "Holy Trinity," Wade's "Holy Cross" and Griggs' tune (of
+his own name) are all good, but many, on the giving out of the hymn,
+would associate it at once with the more familiar "Heber" by George
+Kingsley and expect to hear it sung. It has the uplift and unction of
+John Newton's--
+
+ How sweet the name of Jesus sounds
+ In the believer's ear.
+
+
+"GOD CALLING YET! SHALL I NOT HEAR?"
+
+Gerhard Tersteegen, the original author of the hymn, and one of the most
+eminent religious poets of the Reformed German church in its early days,
+was born in 1697, in the town of Mors, in Westphalia. He was left an
+orphan in boyhood by the death of his father, and as his mother's means
+were limited, he was put to work as an apprentice when very young, at
+Muhlheim on the Ruhr, and became a ribbon weaver. Here, when about
+fifteen years of age, he became deeply concerned for his soul, and
+experienced a deep and abiding spiritual work. As a Christian, his
+religion partook of the ascetic type, but his mysticism did not make him
+useless to his fellow-men.
+
+At the age of twenty-seven, he dedicated all his resources and energies
+to the cause of Christ, writing the dedication in his own blood. "God
+graciously called me," he says, "out of the world, and granted me the
+desire to belong to Him, and to be willing to follow Him." He gave up
+secular employments altogether, and devoted his whole time to religious
+instruction and to the poor. His house became famous as the "Pilgrims'
+Cottage," and was visited by people high and humble from all parts of
+Germany. In his lifetime he is said to have written one hundred and
+eleven hymns. Died April 3, 1769.
+
+ God calling yet! shall I not hear?
+ Earth's pleasures shall I still hold dear?
+ Shall life's swift-passing years all fly,
+ And still my soul in slumber lie?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ God calling yet! I cannot stay;
+ My heart I yield without delay.
+ Vain world, farewell; from thee I part;
+ The voice of God hath reached my heart.
+
+The hymn was translated from the German by Miss Jane Borthwick, born in
+Edinburgh, 1813. She and her younger sister, Mrs. Findlater, jointly
+translated and published, in 1854, _Hymns From the Land of Luther_, and
+contributed many poetical pieces to the _Family Treasury_. She died in
+1897.
+
+Another translation, imitating the German metre, is more euphonious,
+though less literal and less easily fitted to music not specially
+composed for it, on account of its "feminine" rhymes:
+
+ God calling yet! and shall I never hearken?
+ But still earth's witcheries my spirit darken;
+ This passing life, these passing joys all flying,
+ And still my soul in dreamy slumbers lying?
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Dr. Dykes' "Rivaulx" is a sober choral that articulates the
+hymn-writer's sentiment with sincerity and with considerable
+earnestness, but breathes too faintly the interrogative and expostulary
+tone of the lines. To voice the devout solicitude and self-remonstrance
+of the hymn there is no tune superior to "Federal St."
+
+The Hon. Henry Kemble Oliver, author of "Federal St.," was born in
+Salem, Mass., March, 1800, and was addicted to music from his childhood.
+His father compelled him to relinquish it as a profession, but it
+remained his favorite avocation, and after his graduation from Harvard
+the cares of none of the various public positions he held, from
+schoolmaster to treasurer of the state of Massachusetts, could ever wean
+him from the study of music and its practice. At the age of thirty-one,
+while sitting one day in his study, the last verse of Anne Steele's
+hymn--
+
+ So fades the lovely blooming flower,
+
+--floated into his mind, and an unbidden melody came with it. As he
+hummed it to himself the words shaped the air, and the air shaped the
+words.
+
+ Then gentle patience smiles on pain,
+ Then dying hope revives again,
+
+--became--
+
+ See gentle patience smile on pain;
+ See dying hope revive again;
+
+--and with the change of a word and a tense the hymn created the melody,
+and soon afterward the complete tune was made. Two years later it was
+published by Lowell Mason, and Oliver gave it the name of the street in
+Salem on which his wife was born, wooed, won, and married. It adds a
+pathos to its history that "Federal St." was sung at her burial.
+
+This first of Oliver's tunes was followed by "Harmony Grove," "Morning,"
+"Walnut Grove," "Merton," "Hudson," "Bosworth," "Salisbury Plain,"
+several anthems and motets, and a "Te Deum."
+
+In his old age, at the great Peace Jubilee in Boston, 1872, the baton
+was put into his hands, and the gray-haired composer conducted the
+chorus of ten thousand voices as they sang the words and music of his
+noble harmony. The incident made "Federal St." more than ever a feature
+of New England history. Oliver died in 1885.
+
+
+"MY GOD, HOW ENDLESS IS THY LOVE."
+
+The spirited tune to this hymn of Watts, by Frederick Lampe, variously
+named "Kent" and "Devonshire," historically reaches back so near to the
+poet's time that it must have been one of the earliest expressions of
+his fervent words.
+
+Johan Friedrich Lampe, born 1693, in Saxony, was educated in music at
+Helmstadt, and came to England in 1725 as a band musician and composer
+to Covent Garden Theater. His best-known secular piece is the music
+written to Henry Carey's burlesque, "The Dragon of Wantley."
+
+Mrs. Rich, wife of the lessee of the theater, was converted under the
+preaching of the Methodists, and after her husband's death her house
+became the home of Lampe and his wife, where Charles Wesley often met
+him.
+
+The influence of Wesley won him to more serious work, and he became one
+of the evangelist's helpers, supplying tunes to his singing campaigns.
+Wesley became attached to him, and after his death--in Edinburgh,
+1752--commemorated the musician in a funeral hymn.
+
+In popular favor Bradbury's tune of "Rolland" has now superseded the old
+music sung to Watts' lines--
+
+ My God, how endless is Thy love,
+ Thy gifts are every evening new,
+ And morning mercies from above
+ Gently distil like early dew.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ I yield my powers to Thy command;
+ To Thee I consecrate my days;
+ Perpetual blessings from Thy hand
+ Demand perpetual songs of praise.
+
+William Batchelder Bradbury, a pupil of Dr. Lowell Mason, and the
+pioneer in publishing Sunday-school music, was born 1816, in York, Me.
+His father, a veteran of the Revolution, was a choir leader, and
+William's love of music was inherited. He left his father's farm, and
+came to Boston, where he first heard a church-organ. Encouraged by Mason
+and others to follow music as a profession, he went abroad, studied at
+Leipsic, and soon after his return became known as a composer of sacred
+tunes. He died in Montclair, N.J., 1868.
+
+
+"I'M NOT ASHAMED TO OWN MY LORD."
+
+The favorite tune for this spiritual hymn, also by Watts, is old
+"Arlington," one of the most useful church melodies in the whole realm
+of English psalmody. Its name clings to a Boston street, and the
+beautiful chimes of Arlington St. church (Unitarian) annually ring its
+music on special occasions, as it has since the bells were tuned:
+
+ I'm not ashamed to own my Lord
+ Or to defend His cause,
+ Maintain the honor of His Word,
+ The glory of His cross.
+
+ Jesus, my God!--I know His Name;
+ His Name is all my trust,
+ Nor will He put my soul to shame
+ Nor let my hope be lost.
+
+Dr. Thomas Augustine Arne, the creator of "Arlington," was born in
+London, 1710, the son of a King St. upholsterer. He studied at Eton, and
+though intended for the legal profession, gave his whole mind to music.
+At twenty-three he began writing operas for his sister, Susanna (a
+singer who afterwards became the famous tragic actress, Mrs. Cibber).
+
+Arne's music to Milton's "Comus," and to "Rule Brittannia" established
+his reputation. He was engaged as composer to Drury Lane Theater, and in
+1759 received from Oxford his degree of Music Doctor. Later in life he
+turned his attention to oratorios, and other forms of sacred music, and
+was the first to introduce female voices in choir singing. He died March
+5, 1778, chanting hallelujahs, it is said, with his last breath.
+
+
+"IS THIS THE KIND RETURN?"
+
+Dr. Watts in this hymn gave experimental piety its hour and language of
+reflection and penitence:
+
+ Is this the kind return?
+ Are these the thanks we owe,
+ Thus to abuse Eternal Love
+ Whence all our blessings flow?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Let past ingratitude
+ Provoke our weeping eyes.
+
+United in loving wedlock with these words in former years was "Golden
+Hill," a chime of sweet counterpoint too rare to bury its authorship
+under the vague phrase "A Western Melody." It was caught evidently from
+a forest bird[10] that flutes its clear solo in the sunsets of May and
+June. There can be no mistaking the imitation--the same compass, the
+same upward thrill, the same fall and warbled turn. Old-time folk used
+to call for it, "Sing, my Fairweather Bird." It lingers in a few of the
+twenty- or thirty-years-ago collections, but stronger voices have
+drowned it out of the new.
+
+[Footnote 10: The wood thrush.]
+
+"Thacher," (set to the same hymn,) faintly recalls its melody.
+Nevertheless "Thacher" is a good tune. Though commonly written in
+sharps, contrasting the B flat of its softer and more liquid rival of
+other days, it is one of Handel's strains, and lends the meaning and
+pathos of the lyric text to voice and instrument.
+
+
+"WHEN I SURVEY THE WONDROUS CROSS."
+
+This crown of all the sacred odes of Dr. Watts for the song-service of
+the church of God was called by Matthew Arnold the "greatest hymn in the
+English language." The day the eminent critic died he heard it sung in
+the Sefton Park Presbyterian Church, and repeated the opening lines
+softly to himself again and again after the services. The hymn is
+certainly _one_ of the greatest in the language. It appeared as No. 7 in
+Watts' third edition (about 1710) containing five stanzas. The second
+line--
+
+ On which the Prince of Glory died,
+
+--read originally--
+
+ Where the young Prince of Glory died.
+
+Only four stanzas are now generally used. The omitted one--
+
+ His dying crimson like a robe
+ Spreads o'er His body on the tree;
+ Then am I dead to all the globe,
+ And all the globe is dead to me.
+
+--is a flash of tragic imagination, showing the sanguine intensity of
+Christian vision in earlier time, when contemplating the Saviour's
+passion; but it is too realistic for the spirit and genius of
+song-worship. That the great hymn was designed by the writer for
+communion seasons, and was inspired by Gal. 6:14, explains the two last
+lines if not the whole of the highly colored verse.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+One has a wide field of choice in seeking the best musical
+interpretation of this royal song of faith and self-effacement:
+
+ When I survey the wondrous Cross
+ On which the Prince of Glory died,
+ My richest gain I count but loss,
+ And pour contempt on all my pride.
+
+ Forbid it, Lord, that I should boast
+ Save in the death of Christ my God;
+ All the vain things that charm me most,
+ I sacrifice them to His blood.
+
+ See from His head, His hands, His feet,
+ Sorrow and love flow mingled down;
+ Did e'er such love and sorrow meet;
+ Or thorns compose so rich a crown?
+
+ Were the whole realm of Nature mine,
+ That were a present far too small;
+ Love so amazing, so divine,
+ Demands my soul, my life, my all.
+
+To match the height and depth of these words with fitting glory of sound
+might well have been an ambition of devout composers. Rev. G.C. Wells'
+tune in the _Revivalist_, with its emotional chorus, I.B. Woodbury's
+"Eucharist" in the _Methodist Hymnal_, Henry Smart's effective choral in
+Barnby's _Hymnary_ (No. 170), and a score of others, have woven the
+feeling lines into melody with varying success. Worshippers in spiritual
+sympathy with the words may question if, after all, old "Hamburg," the
+best of Mason's loved Gregorians, does not, alone, in tone and
+elocution, rise to the level of the hymn.
+
+
+"LOVE DIVINE, ALL LOVES EXCELLING."
+
+This evergreen song-wreath to the Crucified, was contributed by Charles
+Wesley, in 1746. It is found in his collection of 1756, _Hymns for Those
+That Seek and Those That Have Redemption in the Blood of Jesus Christ_.
+
+ Love Divine all loves excelling,
+ Joy of Heaven to earth come down,
+ Fix in us Thy humble dwelling,
+ All Thy faithful mercies crown.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Come Almighty to deliver,
+ Let us all Thy life receive,
+ Suddenly return, and never,
+ Nevermore Thy temples leave.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Finish then Thy new creation;
+ Pure and spotless let us be;
+ Let us see our whole salvation
+ Perfectly secured by Thee.
+
+ Changed from glory into glory
+ Till in Heaven we take our place,
+ Till we cast our crowns before Thee
+ Lost in wonder, love and praise!
+
+The hymn has been set to H. Isaac's ancient tune (1490), to Wyeth's
+"Nettleton" (1810), to Thos. H. Bailey's (1777-1839) "Isle of Beauty,
+fare thee well" (named from Thomas Moore's song), to Edward Hopkins'
+"St. Joseph," and to a multitude of others more or less familiar.
+
+Most familiar of all perhaps, (as in the instance of "Far from mortal
+cares retreating,") is its association with "Greenville," the production
+of that brilliant but erratic genius and freethinker, Jean Jacques
+Rousseau. It was originally a love serenade, ("Days of absence, sad and
+dreary") from the opera of _Le Devin du Village_, written about 1752.
+The song was commonly known years afterwards as "Rousseau's Dream." But
+the unbelieving philosopher, musician, and misguided moralist builded
+better than he knew, and probably better than he meant when he wrote his
+immortal choral. Whatever he heard in his "dream" (and one legend says
+it was a "song of angels") he created a harmony dear to the church he
+despised, and softened the hearts of the Christian world towards an evil
+teacher who was inspired, like Balaam, to utter one sacred strain.
+
+Rousseau was born in Geneva, 1712, but he never knew his mother, and
+neither the affection or interest of his father or of his other
+relatives was of the quality to insure the best bringing up of a child.
+
+He died July, 1778. But his song survives, while the world gladly
+forgets everything else he wrote. It is almost a pardonable exaggeration
+to say that every child in Christendom knows "Greenville."
+
+
+"WHEN ALL THY MERCIES, O MY GOD."
+
+This charming hymn was written by Addison, the celebrated English poet
+and essayist, about 1701, in grateful commemoration of his delivery from
+shipwreck in a storm off the coast of Genoa, Italy. It originally
+contained thirteen stanzas, but no more than four or six are commonly
+sung. It has put the language of devotional gratitude into the mouths of
+thousands of humble disciples who could but feebly frame their own:
+
+ When all Thy mercies, O my God
+ My rising soul surveys,
+ Transported with the view I'm lost
+ In wonder, love and praise.
+
+ Unnumbered comforts on my soul
+ Thy tender care bestowed
+ Before my infant heart conceived
+ From whom those comforts flowed.
+
+ When in the slippery paths of youth
+ With heedless steps I ran,
+ Thine arm unseen conveyed me safe,
+ And led me up to man.
+
+Another hymn of Addison--
+
+ How are Thy servants bless'd, O Lord,
+
+--was probably composed after the same return from a foreign voyage. It
+has been called his "Traveller's Hymn."
+
+Joseph Addison, the best English writer of his time, was the son of
+Lancelot Addison, rector of Milston, Wiltshire, and afterwards Dean of
+Litchfield. The distinguished author was born in Milston Rectory, May 1,
+1672, and was educated at Oxford. His excellence in poetry, both English
+and Latin, gave him early reputation, and a patriotic ode obtained for
+him the patronage of Lord Somers. A pension from King William III.
+assured him a comfortable income, which was increased by further honors,
+for in 1704 he was appointed Commissioner of Appeals, then secretary of
+the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, and in 1717 Secretary of State. He died
+in Holland House, Kensington, near London, June 17, 1719.
+
+His hymns are not numerous, (said to be only five), but they are
+remarkable for the simple beauty of their style, as well as for their
+Christian spirit. Of his fine metrical version of the 23rd Psalm,--
+
+ The Lord my pasture shall prepare,
+ And feed me with a shepherd's care,
+
+--one of his earliest productions, the tradition is that he gathered its
+imagery when a boy living at Netheravon, near Salisbury Plain, during
+his lonely two-mile walks to school at Amesbury and back again. All his
+hymns appeared first in the _Spectator_, to which he was a prolific
+contributor.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The hymn "When all Thy mercies" still has "Geneva" for its vocal mate in
+some congregational manuals. The tune is one of the rare survivals of
+the old "canon" musical method, the parts coming in one after another
+with identical notes. It is always delightful as a performance with its
+glory of harmony and its sweet duet, and for generations it had no other
+words than Addison's hymn.
+
+John Cole, author of "Geneva," was born in Tewksbury, Eng., 1774, and
+came to the United States in his boyhood (1785). Baltimore, Md. became
+his American home, and he was educated there. Early in life he became a
+musician and music publisher. At least twelve of his principal song
+collections from 1800 to 1832 are mentioned by Mr. Hubert P. Main, most
+of them sacred and containing many of his own tunes.
+
+He continued to compose music till his death, Aug. 17, 1855. Mr. Cole
+was leader of the regimental band known as "The Independent Blues,"
+which played in the war of 1812, and was present at the "North Point"
+fight, and other battles.
+
+Besides "Geneva," for real feeling and harmonic beauty "Manoah," adapted
+from Haydn's Creation, deserves mention as admirably suited to
+"Addison's" hymn, and also "Belmont," by Samuel Webbe, which resembles
+it in style and sentiment.
+
+Samuel Webbe, composer of "Belmont," was of English parentage but was
+born in Minorca, Balearic Islands, in 1740, where his father at that
+time held a government appointment; but his father, dying suddenly, left
+his family poor, and Samuel was apprenticed to a cabinet-maker. He
+served his apprenticeship, and immediately repaired to a London teacher
+and began the study of music and languages. Surmounting great
+difficulties, he became a competent musician, and made himself popular
+as a composer of glees. He was also the author of several masses,
+anthems, and hymn-tunes, the best of which are still in occasional use.
+Died in London, 1816.
+
+
+"JESUS, I LOVE THY CHARMING NAME."
+
+When Dr. Doddridge, the author of this hymn, during his useful ministry,
+had finished the preparation of a pulpit discourse that strongly
+impressed him, he was accustomed, while his heart was yet glowing with
+the sentiment that had inspired him, to put the principal thoughts into
+metre, and use the hymn thus written at the conclusion of the preaching
+of the sermon. This hymn of Christian ardor was written to be sung after
+a sermon from Romans 8:35, "Who shall separate us from the love of
+Christ?"
+
+ Jesus, I love Thy charming name,
+ 'Tis music to mine ear:
+ Fain would I sound it out so loud
+ That earth and heaven should hear.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ I'll speak the honors of Thy name
+ With my last laboring breath,
+ Then speechless, clasp Thee in my arms,
+ The conqueror of death.
+
+Earlier copies have--
+
+ The _antidote_ of death.
+
+Philip Doddridge, D.D., was born in London, June 26, 1702. Educated at
+Kingston Grammar School and Kibworth Academy, he became a scholar of
+respectable attainments, and was ordained to the Non-conformist
+ministry. He was pastor of the Congregational church at Northampton,
+from 1729 until his death, acting meanwhile as principal of the
+Theological School in that place. In 1749 he ceased to preach and went
+to Lisbon for his health, but died there about two years later, of
+consumption, Oct. 26, 1752.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The hymn has been sometimes sung to "Pisgah," an old revival piece by
+J.C. Lowry (1820) once much heard in camp-meetings, but it is a
+pedestrian tune with too many quavers, and a headlong tempo.
+
+Bradbury's "Jazer," in three-four time, is a melody with modulations,
+though more sympathetic, but it is hard to divorce the hymn from its
+long-time consort, old "Arlington." It has the accent of its sincerity,
+and the breath of its devotion.
+
+
+"LO, ON A NARROW NECK OF LAND."
+
+This hymn of Charles Wesley is always designated now by the above line,
+the first of the _second_ stanza as originally written. It is said to
+have been composed at Land's End, in Cornwall, with the British Channel
+and the broad Atlantic in view and surging on both sides around a
+"narrow neck of land."
+
+ Lo! on a narrow neck of land,
+ Twixt two unbounded seas, I stand,
+ Secure, insensible:
+ A point of time, a moment's space,
+ Removes me to that heavenly place,
+ Or shuts me up in hell.
+
+ O God, mine inmost soul convert,
+ And deeply on my thoughtful heart
+ Eternal things impress:
+ Give me to feel their solemn weight,
+ And tremble on the brink of fate,
+ And wake to righteousness.
+
+The preachers and poets of the great spiritual movement of the
+eighteenth century in England abated nothing in the candor of their
+words. The terrible earnestness of conviction tipped their tongues and
+pens with fire.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Lady Huntingdon would have lent "Meribah" gladly to this hymn, but Mason
+was not yet born. Many times it has been borrowed for Wesley's words
+since it came to its own, and the spirit of the pious Countess has
+doubtless approved the loan. It is rich enough to furnish forth her own
+lyric and more than one other of like matter and metre.
+
+The muscular music of "Ganges" has sometimes carried the hymn, and there
+are those who think its thunder is not a whit more Hebraic than the
+words require.
+
+
+"COME YE SINNERS POOR AND NEEDY."
+
+Few hymns have been more frequently sung in prayer-meetings and
+religious assemblies during the last hundred and fifty years. Its
+author, Joseph Hart, spoke what he knew and testified what he felt. Born
+in London, 1712, and liberally educated, he was in his young manhood
+very religious, but he went so far astray as to indulge in evil
+practices, and even published writings, both original and translated,
+against Christianity and religion of any kind. But he could not drink at
+the Dead Sea and live. The apples of Sodom sickened him. Conscience
+asserted itself, and the pangs of remorse nearly drove him to despair
+till he turned back to the source he had forsaken. He alludes to this
+experience in the lines--
+
+ Let not conscience make you linger,
+ Nor of fitness fondly dream;
+ All the fitness He requireth
+ Is to feel your need of Him.
+
+During Passion Week, 1767, he had an amazing view of the sufferings of
+Christ, under the stress of which his heart was changed. In the joy of
+this experience he wrote--
+
+ Come ye sinners poor and needy,
+
+--and--
+
+ Come all ye chosen saints of God.
+
+Probably no two hymn-lines have been oftener repeated than--
+
+ If you tarry till you're better
+ You will never come at all.
+
+The complete form of the original stanzas is:
+
+ Come ye sinners poor and needy,
+ Weak and wounded, sick and sore;
+ Jesus ready stands to save you,
+ Full of pity, love and power.
+ He is able,
+ He is willing; doubt no more.
+
+The whole hymn--ten stanzas--is not sung now as one, but two, the second
+division beginning with the line--
+
+ Come ye weary, heavy laden.
+
+Rev. Joseph Hart became minister of Jewin St. Congregational Chapel,
+London, about 1760, where he labored till his death, May 24, 1768.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+A revival song by Jeremiah Ingalls (1764-1828), written about 1804, with
+an easy, popular swing and a _sforzando_ chorus--
+
+ Turn to the Lord and seek salvation,
+
+--monopolized this hymn for a good many years. The tunes commonly
+assigned to it have since been "Greenville" and Von Weber's "Wilmot," in
+which last it is now more generally sung--dropping the echo lines at the
+end of each stanza.
+
+Carl Maria Von Weber, son of a roving musician, was born in Eutin,
+Germany, 1786. He developed no remarkable genius till he was about
+twenty years old, though being a fine vocalist, his singing brought him
+popularity and gain; but in 1806 he nearly lost his voice by accidently
+drinking nitric acid. He was for several years private secretary to Duke
+Ludwig at Stuttgart, and in 1813 Chapel-Master at Prague, from which
+place he went to Dresden in 1817 as Musik-Director.
+
+Von Weber's Korner songs won the hearts of all Germany; and his immortal
+"Der Freischutz" (the Free Archer), and numerous tender melodies like
+the airs to "John Anderson, my Jo" and "O Poortith Cauld" have gone to
+all civilized nations. No other composer had such feeling for beauty of
+sound.
+
+This beloved musician was physically frail and delicate, and died of
+untimely decline, during a visit to London in 1826.
+
+
+"O HAPPY SAINTS WHO DWELL IN LIGHT."
+
+Sometimes printed "O happy _souls_." This poetical and flowing hymn
+seems to have been forgotten in the making up of most modern church
+hymnals. Hymns on heaven and heavenly joys abound in embarrassing
+numbers, but it is difficult to understand why this beautiful lyric
+should be _universally_ neglected. It was written probably about 1760,
+by Rev. John Berridge, from the text, "Blessed are the dead who die in
+the Lord,"
+
+The first line of the second stanza--
+
+ Released from sorrow, toil and strife,
+
+--has been tinkered in some of the older hymn-books, where it is found
+to read--,
+
+ Released from sorrows toil and _grief_,
+
+--not only committing a tautology, but destroying the perfect rhyme with
+"life" in the next line. The whole hymn, too, has been much altered by
+substituted words and shifted lines, though not generally to the serious
+detriment of its meaning and music.
+
+The Rev. John Berridge--friend of the Wesleys, Whitefield, and Lady
+Huntingdon--was an eccentric but very worthy and spiritual minister,
+born the son of a farmer, in Kingston, Nottinghamshire, Eng., Mar. 1,
+1716. He studied at Cambridge, and was ordained curate of Stapleford and
+subsequently located as vicar of Everton, 1775. He died Jan. 22, 1793.
+He loved to preach, and he was determined that his tombstone should
+preach after his voice was still. His epitaph, composed by himself, is
+both a testimony and a memoir:
+
+ "Here lie the earthly remains of John Berridge, late vicar of
+ Everton, and an itinerant servant of Jesus Christ, who loved his
+ Master and His work, and after running His errands many years, was
+ called up to wait on Him above.
+
+ "Reader, art thou born again?
+
+ "No salvation without the new birth.
+
+ "I was born in sin, February, 1716.
+
+ "Remained ignorant of my fallen state till 1730.
+
+ "Lived proudly on faith and works for salvation till 1751.
+
+ "Admitted to Everton vicarage, 1755.
+
+ "Fled to Jesus alone for refuge, 1756.
+
+ "Fell asleep in Jesus Christ,--" (1793.)
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The once popular score that easily made the hymn a favorite, was
+"Salem," in the old _Psalmodist_. It still appears in some note-books,
+though the name of its composer is uncertain. Its notes (in 6-8 time)
+succeed each other in syllabic modulations that give a soft dactylic
+accent to the measure and a wavy current to the lines:
+
+ O happy saints that dwell in light,
+ And walk with Jesus clothed in white,
+ Safe landed on that peaceful shore,
+ Where pilgrims meet to part no more:
+
+ Released from sorrow, toil and strife,
+ Death was the gate to endless life,
+ And now they range the heavenly plains
+ And sing His love in melting strains.
+
+Another version reads:
+
+ ----and welcome to an endless life,
+ Their souls have now begun to prove
+ The height and depth of Jesus' love.
+
+
+"THOU DEAR REDEEMER, DYING LAMB."
+
+The author, John Cennick, like Joseph Hart, was led to Christ after a
+reckless boyhood and youth, by the work of the Divine Spirit in his
+soul, independent of any direct outward influence. Sickened of his
+cards, novels, and playhouse pleasures, he had begun a sort of
+mechanical reform, when one day, walking in the streets of London, he
+suddenly seemed to hear the text spoken "I am thy salvation!" His
+consecration began at that moment.
+
+He studied for the ministry, and became a preacher, first under
+direction of the Wesleys, then under Whitefield, but afterwards joined
+the Moravians, or "Brethren." He was born at Reading, Derbyshire, Eng.,
+Dec. 12, 1718, and died in London, July 4, 1755.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The word "Rhine" (in some collections--in others "Emmons") names a
+revival tune once so linked with this hymn and so well known that few
+religious people now past middle life could enjoy singing it to any
+other. With a compass one note beyond an octave and a third, it utters
+every line with a clear, bold gladness sure to infect a meeting with its
+own spiritual fervor.
+
+ Thou dear Redeemer, dying Lamb,
+ I love to hear of Thee;
+ No music like Thy charming name,
+ Nor half so sweet can be.
+
+The composer of the bright legato melody just described was Frederick
+Burgmueller, a young German musician, born in 1804. He was a remarkable
+genius, both in composition and execution, but his health was frail, and
+he did not live to fulfil the rich possibilities that lay within him. He
+died in 1824--only twenty years old. The tune "Rhine" ("Emmons") is from
+one of his marches.
+
+
+"WHILE THEE I SEEK, PROTECTING POWER."
+
+Helen Maria Williams wrote this sweet hymn, probably about the year
+1800. She was a brilliant woman, better known in literary society for
+her political verses and essays than by her hymns; but the hymn here
+noted bears sufficient witness to her deep religious feeling:
+
+ While Thee I seek, Protecting Power,
+ Be my vain wishes stilled,
+ And may this consecrated hour
+ With better hopes be filled.
+ Thy love the power of thought bestowed;
+ To Thee my thoughts would soar,
+ Thy mercy o'er my life has flowed,
+ That mercy I adore.
+
+Miss Williams was born in the north of England, Nov. 30, 1762, but spent
+much of her life in London, and in Paris, where she died, Dec. 14, 1827.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Wedded so many years to the gentle, flowing music of Pleyel's "Brattle
+Street," few lovers of the hymn recall its words without the melody of
+that emotional choral.
+
+The plain psalm-tune, "Simpson," by Louis Spohr, divides the stanzas
+into quatrains.
+
+
+"JESUS MY ALL TO HEAVEN IS GONE."
+
+This hymn, by Cennick, was familiarized to the public more than two
+generations ago by its revival tune, sometimes called "Duane Street,"
+long-metre double. It is staffed in various keys, but its movement is
+full of life and emphasis, and its melody is contagious. The piece was
+composed by Rev. George Coles, in 1835.
+
+The fact that this hymn of Cennick with Coles's tune appears in the _New
+Methodist Hymnal_ indicates the survival of both in modern favor.
+
+[Illustration: Augustus Montague Toplady]
+
+ Jesus my all to heaven is gone,
+ He whom I fixed my hopes upon;
+ His track I see, and I'll pursue
+ The narrow way till Him I view.
+ The way the holy prophets went,
+ The road that leads from banishment,
+ The King's highway of holiness
+ I'll go for all Thy paths are peace.
+
+The memory has not passed away of the hearty unison with which
+prayer-meeting and camp-meeting assemblies used to "crescendo" the last
+stanza--
+
+ Then will I tell to sinners round
+ What a dear Saviour I have found;
+ I'll point to His redeeming blood,
+ And say "Behold the way to God."
+
+The Rev. George Coles was born in Stewkley, Eng., Jan. 2, 1792, and died
+in New York City, May 1, 1858. He was editor of the _N.Y. Christian
+Advocate_, and _Sunday School Advocate_, for several years, and was a
+musician of some ability, besides being a good singer.
+
+
+"SWEET THE MOMENTS, RICH IN BLESSING."
+
+The Hon. and Rev. Walter Shirley, Rector of Loughgree, county of Galway,
+Ireland, revised this hymn under the chastening discipline of a most
+trying experience. His brother, the Earl of Ferrars, a licentious man,
+murdered an old and faithful servant in a fit of rage, and was executed
+at Tyburn for the crime. Sir Walter, after the disgrace and long
+distress of the imprisonment, trial, and final tragedy, returned to his
+little parish in Ireland, humbled but driven nearer to the Cross.
+
+ Sweet the moments, rich in blessing
+ Which before the Cross I spend;
+ Life and health and peace possessing
+ From the sinner's dying Friend.
+
+All the emotion of one who buries a mortifying sorrow in the heart of
+Christ, and tries to forget, trembles in the lines of the above hymn as
+he changed and adapted it in his saddest but devoutest hours. Its
+original writer was the Rev. James Allen, nearly twenty years younger
+than himself, a man of culture and piety, but a Christian of shifting
+creeds. It is not impossible that he sent his hymn to Shirley to revise.
+At all events it owes its present form to Shirley's hand.
+
+ Truly blessed is the station
+ Low before His cross to lie,
+ While I see Divine Compassion
+ Beaming in His gracious eye.[11]
+
+[Footnote 11: "Floating in His languid eye" seems to have been the
+earlier version.]
+
+The influence of Sir Walter's family misfortune is evident also in the
+mood out of which breathed his other trustful lines--
+
+ Peace, troubled soul, whose plaintive moan
+ Hath taught these rocks the notes of woe,
+
+(changed now to "hath taught _these scenes_" etc).
+
+Sir Walter Shirley, cousin of the Countess of Huntingdon, was born 1725,
+and died in 1786. Even in his last sickness he continued to preach to
+his people in his house, seated in his chair.
+
+Rev. James Oswald Allen was born at Gayle, Yorkshire, Eng., June 24,
+1743. He left the University of Cambridge after a year's study, and
+became an itinerant preacher, but seems to have been a man of unstable
+religious views. After roving from one Christian denomination to another
+several times, he built a Chapel, and for forty years ministered there
+to a small Independent congregation. He died in Gayle, Oct. 31, 1804.
+
+The tune long and happily associated with "Sweet the Moments" is
+"Sicily," or the "Sicilian Hymn"--from an old Latin hymn-tune, "O
+Sanctissima."
+
+
+"O FOR A CLOSER WALK WITH GOD."
+
+The author, William Cowper, son of a clergyman, was born at
+Berkhampstead, Hertfordshire, Eng., Nov. 15, 1731, and died at Dereham,
+Norfolk, April 25, 1800. Through much of his adult life he was afflicted
+with a mental ailment inducing melancholia and at times partial
+insanity, during which he once attempted suicide. He sought literary
+occupation as an antidote to his disorder of mind, and besides a great
+number of lighter pieces which diverted him and his friends, composed
+"The Task," an able and delightful moral and domestic poetic treatise in
+blank verse, and in the same style of verse translated Homer's _Odyssey_
+and _Iliad_.
+
+One of the most beloved of English poets, this suffering man was also a
+true Christian, and wrote some of our sweetest and most spiritual hymns.
+Most of these were composed at Olney, where he resided for a time with
+John Newton, his fellow hymnist, and jointly with him issued the volume
+known as the _Olney Hymns_.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Music more or less closely identified with this familiar hymn is
+Gardiner's "Dedham," and also "Mear," often attributed to Aaron
+Williams. Both, about equally with the hymn, are seasoned by time, but
+have not worn out their harmony--or their fitness to Cowper's prayer.
+
+William Gardiner was born in Leicester, Eng., March 15, 1770, and died
+there Nov. 11, 1853. He was a vocal composer and a "musicographer" or
+writer on musical subjects.
+
+One Aaron Williams, to whom "Mear" has by some been credited, was of
+Welsh descent, a composer of psalmody and clerk of the Scotch church in
+London. He was born in 1734, and died in 1776. Another account, and the
+more probable one, names a minister of Boston of still earlier date as
+the author of the noble old harmony. It is found in a small New England
+collection of 1726, but not in any English or Scotch collection. "Mear"
+is presumably an American tune.
+
+
+"WHAT VARIOUS HINDRANCES WE MEET."
+
+Another hymn of Cowper's; and no one ever suffered more deeply the
+plaintive regret in the opening lines, or better wrought into poetic
+expression an argument for prayer.
+
+ What various hindrances we meet
+ In coming to a mercy-seat!
+ Yet who that knows the worth of prayer
+ But wishes to be often there?
+
+ Prayer makes the darkest clouds withdraw,
+ Prayer climbs the ladder Jacob saw.
+
+The whole hymn is (or once was) so thoroughly learned by heart as to be
+fixed in the church among its household words. Preachers to the
+diffident do not forget to quote--
+
+ Have you no words? ah, think again;
+ Words flow apace when you _complain_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Were half the breath thus vainly spent
+ To Heaven in supplication sent,
+ Our cheerful song would oftener be,
+ "Hear what the Lord hath done for me!"
+
+And there is all the lifetime of a proverb in the couplet--
+
+ Satan trembles when he sees
+ The weakest saint upon his knees.
+
+Tune, Lowell Mason's "Rockingham."
+
+
+"MY GRACIOUS REDEEMER I LOVE."
+
+This is one of Benjamin Francis's lays of devotion. The Christian
+Welshman who bore that name was a Gospel minister full of Evangelical
+zeal, who preached in many places, though his pastoral home was with the
+Baptist church in Shortwood, Wales. Flattering calls to London could not
+tempt him away from his first and only parish, and he remained there
+till his triumphant death. He was born in 1734, and died in 1799.
+
+ My gracious Redeemer I love,
+ His praises aloud I'll proclaim,
+ And join with the armies above,
+ To shout His adorable name.
+ To gaze on His glories divine
+ Shall be my eternal employ;
+ To see them incessantly shine,
+ My boundless, ineffable joy.
+
+Tune, "Birmingham"--an English melody. Anonymous.
+
+
+"BLEST BE THE TIE THAT BINDS."
+
+Perhaps the best hymn-expression of sacred brotherhood, at least it has
+had, and still has the indorsement of constant use. The author, John
+Fawcett, D.D., is always quoted as the example of his own words, since
+he sacrificed ambition and personal interest to Christian affection.
+
+Born near Bradford, Yorkshire, Jan. 6, 1739, and converted under the
+preaching of Whitefield, he joined the Methodists, but afterwards
+became a member of the new Baptist church in Bradford. Seven years later
+he was ordained over the Baptist Society at Wainsgate. In 1772 he
+received a call to succeed the celebrated Dr. Gill, in London, and
+accepted. But at the last moment, when his goods were packed for
+removal, the clinging love of his people, weeping their farewells around
+him, melted his heart. Their passionate regrets were more than either he
+or his good wife could withstand.
+
+"I will _stay_," he said; "you may unpack my goods, and we will live for
+the Lord lovingly together."
+
+It was out of this heart experience that the tender hymn was born.
+
+ Our fears, our hopes, our aims are one,
+ Our comforts and our cares.
+
+Dr. Fawcett died July 25, 1817.
+
+Tune, "Boylston," L. Mason; or "Dennis," H.G. Naegeli.
+
+
+"I LOVE THY KINGDOM, LORD."
+
+"Dr. Dwight's Hymn," as this is known _par eminence_ among many others
+from his pen, is one of the imperishable lyrics of the Christian Church.
+The real spirit of the hundred and twenty-second Psalm is in it, and it
+is worthy of Watts in his best moments.
+
+Timothy Dwight was born at Northampton, Mass, May 14, 1752, and
+graduated at Yale College at the age of thirteen. He wrote several
+religious poems of considerable length. In 1795 he was elected President
+of Yale College, and in 1800 he revised Watts' Psalms, at the request of
+the General Association of Connecticut, adding a number of translations
+of his own.
+
+ I love Thy kingdom, Lord,
+ The house of Thine abode,
+ The Church our blest Redeemer saved
+ With His own precious blood.
+
+ I love Thy Church, O God;
+ Her walls before Thee stand,
+ Dear as the apple of Thine eye,
+ And graven on Thy hand.
+
+Dr. Dwight died Jan. 11, 1817.
+
+Tune, "St. Thomas," Aaron Williams, (1734-1776.)
+
+Mr. Hubert P. Main, however, believes the author to be Handel. It
+appeared as the second movement of a four-movement tune in Williams's
+1762 collection, which contained pieces by the great masters, with his
+own; but while not credited to Handel, Williams did not claim it
+himself.
+
+
+"MID SCENES OF CONFUSION."
+
+This hymn, common in chapel hymnbooks half a century and more ago, is
+said to have been written by the Rev. David Denham, about 1826.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Home, Sweet Home" was composed, according to the old account, by John
+Howard Payne as one of the airs in his opera of "Clari, the Maid of
+Milan," which was brought out in London at Drury Lane in 1823. But
+Charles Mackay, the English poet, in the London Telegraph, asserts that
+Sir Henry Bishop, an eminent musician, in his vain search for a Sicilian
+national air, _invented_ one, and that it was the melody of "Home, sweet
+Home," which he afterwards set to Howard Payne's words. Mr. Mackay had
+this story from Sir Henry himself.
+
+ Mid scenes of confusion and creature complaints
+ How sweet to my soul is communion with saints,
+ To find at the banquet of mercy there's room
+ And feel in the presence of Jesus at home.
+ Home, home, sweet, sweet home!
+ Prepare me, dear Savior for glory, my home.
+
+John Howard Payne, author at least, of the original _words_ of "Home,
+Sweet Home," was born in New York City June 9, 1791. He was a singer,
+and became an actor and theatrical writer. He composed the words of his
+immortal song in the year 1823, when he was himself homeless and hungry
+and sheltered temporarily in an attic in Paris.
+
+His fortunes improved at last, and he was appointed to represent his
+native country as consul in Tunis, where he died, Apr. 9, 1852.
+
+
+"O, COULD I SPEAK THE MATCHLESS WORTH."
+
+The writer of this hymn of worshiping ardor and exalted Christian love
+was an English Baptist minister, the Rev. Samuel Medley. He was born at
+Cheshunt, Hertfordshire, June 23, 1738, and at eighteen years of age
+entered the Royal Navy, where, though he had been piously educated, he
+became dissipated and morally reckless. Wounded in a sea fight off Cape
+Lagos, and in dread of amputation he prayed penitently through nearly a
+whole night, and in the morning the surprised surgeon told him his limb
+could be saved.
+
+The voice of his awakened conscience was not wholly disregarded, though
+it was not till some time after he left the navy that his vow to begin a
+religious life was sincerely kept. After teaching school for four years,
+he began to preach in 1766, Wartford in Hertfordshire being the first
+scene of his godly labors. He died in Liverpool July 17, 1799, at the
+end of a faithful ministry there of twenty-seven years. A small edition
+of his hymns was published during his lifetime, in 1789.
+
+ O could I speak the matchless worth,
+ O could I sound the glories forth
+ Which in my Saviour shine,
+ I'd soar and touch the heavenly strings
+ And vie with Gabriel while he sings,
+ In notes almost divine!
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Colebrook," a plain choral; but with a noble movement, by Henry Smart,
+is the English music to this fine lyric, but Dr. Mason's "Ariel" is the
+American favorite. It justifies its name, for it has wings--in both full
+harmony and duet--and its melody feels the glory of the hymn at every
+bar.
+
+
+"ROCK OF AGES CLEFT FOR ME."
+
+Augustus Montagu Toplady, author of this almost universal hymn, was born
+at Farnham, Surrey, Eng., Nov. 4, 1740. Educated at Westminster School,
+and Trinity College, Dublin, he took orders in the Established Church.
+In his doctrinal debates with the Wesleys he was a harsh
+controversialist; but his piety was sincere, and marked late in life by
+exalted moods. Physically he was frail, and his fiery zeal wore out his
+body. Transferred from his vicarage at Broad Hembury, Devonshire, to
+Knightsbridge, London, at twenty-eight years of age, his health began to
+fail before he was thirty-five, and in one of his periods of illness he
+wrote--
+
+ When languor and disease invade
+ This trembling house of clay,
+ 'Tis sweet to look beyond my pains
+ And long to fly away.
+
+And the same homesickness for heaven appears under a different figure in
+another hymn--
+
+ At anchor laid remote from home,
+ Toiling I cry, "Sweet Spirit, come!
+ Celestial breeze, no longer stay,
+ But swell my sails, and speed my way!"
+
+Possessed of an ardent religious nature, his spiritual frames
+exemplified in a notable degree the emotional side of Calvinistic piety.
+Edward Payson himself, was not more enraptured in immediate view of
+death than was this young London priest and poet. Unquestioning faith
+became perfect certainty. As in the bold metaphor of "Rock of Ages," the
+faith finds voice in--
+
+ A debtor to mercy alone,
+
+--and other hymns in his collection of 1776, two years before the end
+came. Most of this devout writing was done in his last days, and he
+continued it as long as strength was left, until, on the 11th of August,
+1778, he joyfully passed away.
+
+Somehow there was always something peculiarly heartsome and "filling" to
+pious minds in the lines of Toplady in days when his minor hymns were
+more in vogue than now, and they were often quoted, without any idea
+whose making they were. "At anchor laid" was crooned by good old ladies
+at their spinning-wheels, and godly invalids found "When languor and
+disease invade" a comfort next to their Bibles.
+
+"Rock of Ages" is said to have been written after the author, during a
+suburban walk, had been forced to shelter himself from a thunder
+shower, under a cliff. This is, however, but one of several stories
+about the birth-occasion of the hymn.
+
+It has been translated into many languages. One of the foreign
+dignitaries visiting Queen Victoria at her "Golden Jubilee" was a native
+of Madagascar, who surprised her by asking leave to sing, but delighted
+her, when leave was given, by singing "Rock of Ages." It was a favorite
+of hers--and of Prince Albert, who whispered it when he was dying.
+People who were school-children when Rev. Justus Vinton came home to
+Willington, Ct., with two Karen pupils, repeat to-day the "la-pa-ta,
+i-oo-i-oo" caught by sound from the brown-faced boys as they sang their
+native version of "Rock of Ages."
+
+Gen. J.E.B. Stuart, the famous Confederate Cavalry leader, mortally
+wounded at Yellow Tavern, Va., and borne to a Richmond hospital, called
+for his minister and requested that "Rock of Ages" be sung to him.
+
+The last sounds heard by the few saved from the wreck of the steamer
+"London" in the Bay of Biscay, 1866, were the voices of the helpless
+passengers singing "Rock of Ages" as the ship went down.
+
+A company of Armenian Christians sang "Rock of Ages" in their native
+tongue while they were being massacred in Constantinople.
+
+No history of this grand hymn of faith forgets the incident of Gladstone
+writing a Latin translation of it while sitting in the House of
+Commons. That remarkable man was as masterly in his scholarly
+recreations as in his statesmanship. The supreme Christian sentiment of
+the hymn had permeated his soul till it spoke to him in a dead language
+as eloquently as in the living one; and this is what he made of it:
+
+
+_TOPLADY._
+
+ Rock of ages, cleft for me,
+ Let me hide myself in Thee;
+ Let the water and the blood,
+ From Thy riven side which flowed,
+ Be of sin the double cure,
+ Cleanse me from its guilt and power.
+
+ Not the labor of my hands
+ Can fulfil Thy law's demands;
+ Could my zeal no respite know,
+ Could my tears for ever flow,
+ All for sin could not atone,
+ Thou must save, and Thou alone.
+
+ Nothing in my hand I bring,
+ Simply to Thy cross I cling;
+ Naked, come to Thee for dress,
+ Helpless, look to Thee for grace:
+ Foul, I to the fountain fly;
+ Wash, me, Saviour, or I die.
+
+ Whilst I draw this fleeting breath,
+ When my eyestrings break in death;
+ When I soar through tracts unknown,
+ See Thee on Thy judgment throne,
+ Rock of ages, cleft for me,
+ Let me hide myself in Thee.
+
+
+_GLADSTONE._
+
+ Jesus, pro me perforatus,
+ Condar intra tuum latus;
+ Tu per lympham profluentem,
+ Tu per sanguinem tepentem,
+ In peccata mi redunda,
+ Tolle culpam, sordes munda!
+
+ Coram Te nec justus forem
+ Quamvis tota vi laborem,
+ Nec si fide nunquam cesso,
+ Fletu stillans indefesso;
+ Tibi soli tantum munus--
+ Salva me, Salvator Unus!
+
+ Nil in manu mecum fero,
+ Sed me versus crucem gero:
+ Vestimenta nudus oro,
+ Opem debilis imploro,
+ Fontem Christi quaero immundus,
+ Nisi laves, moribundus.
+
+ Dum hos artus vita regit,
+ Quando nox sepulcro legit;
+ Mortuos quum stare jubes,
+ Sedens Judex inter nubes;--
+ Jesus, pro me perforatus,
+ Condar intra tuum latus!
+
+The wonderful hymn has suffered the mutations common to time and taste.
+
+ When I soar thro' tracts unknown
+
+--becomes--
+
+ When I soar to worlds unknown,
+
+--getting rid of the unpoetic word, and bettering the elocution, but
+missing the writer's thought (of the unknown _path_,--instead of going
+to many "worlds"). The Unitarians have their version, with substitutes
+for the "atonement lines."
+
+But the Christian lyric maintains its life and inspiration through the
+vicissitudes of age and use, as all intrinsically superior things can
+and will,--and as in the twentieth line,--
+
+ When my eyestrings break in death;
+
+--modernized to--
+
+ When my eyelids close in death,
+
+--the hymn will ever adapt itself to the new exigencies of common
+speech, without losing its vitality and power.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+A happy inspiration of Dr. Thomas Hastings made the hymn and music
+inevitably one. Almost anywhere to call for the tune of "Toplady"
+(namesake of the pious poet) is as unintelligible to the multitude as
+"Key" would be to designate the "Star-spangled Banner." The common
+people--thanks to Dr. Hastings--have learned "Rock of Ages" by _sound_.
+
+Thomas Hastings was born in Washington, Ct., 1784. For eight years he
+was editor of the _Western Recorder_, but he gave his life to church
+music, and besides being a talented tone-poet he wrote as many as six
+hundred hymns. In 1832, by invitation from twelve New York churches, he
+went to that city, and did the main work of his life there, dying, in
+1872, at the good old age of eighty-nine. His musical collections number
+fifty-three. He wrote his famous tune in 1830.
+
+[Illustration: Thomas Hastings]
+
+
+"MY SOUL BE ON THY GUARD"
+
+Strangely enough, this hymn, a trumpet note of Christian warning and
+resolution, was written by one who himself fell into unworthy ways.[12]
+But the one strong and spiritual watch-song by which he is remembered
+appeals for him, and lets us know possibly, something of his own
+conflicts. We can be thankful for the struggle he once made, and for the
+hymn it inspired. It is a voice of caution to others.
+
+[Footnote 12: I have been unable to verify this statement found in Mr.
+Butterworth's "Story of the Hymns."--T.B.]
+
+George Heath, the author, was an English minister, born in 1781; died
+1822. For a time he was pastor of a Presbyterian Church at Honiton,
+Devonshire, and was evidently a prolific writer, having composed a
+hundred and forty-four hymns, an edition of which was printed.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+No other has been so familiarly linked with the words as Lowell Mason's
+"Laban" (1830). It has dash and animation enough to reenforce the hymn,
+and give it popular life, even if the hymn had less earnestness and
+vigor of its own.
+
+ Ne'er think the vict'ry won
+ Nor lay thine armor down:
+ Thy arduous work will not be done
+ Till thou hast gained thy crown.
+
+ Fight on, my soul till death
+ Shall bring thee to thy God;
+ He'll take thee at thy parting breath
+ To His divine abode.
+
+
+"PEOPLE OF THE LIVING GOD."
+
+Montgomery _felt_ every line of this hymn as he committed it to paper.
+He wrote it when, after years in the "swim" of social excitements and
+ambitions, where his young independence swept him on, he came back to
+the little church of his boyhood. His father and mother had gone to the
+West Indies as missionaries, and died there. He was forty-three years
+old when, led by divine light, he sought readmission to the Moravian
+"meeting" at Fulneck, and anchored happily in a haven of peace.
+
+ People of the living God
+ I have sought the world around,
+ Paths of sin and sorrow trod,
+ Peace and comfort nowhere found:
+
+ Now to you my spirit turns--
+ Turns a fugitive unblest;
+ Brethren, where your altar burns,
+ Oh, receive me into rest.
+
+James Montgomery, son of Rev. John Montgomery, was born at Irvine,
+Ayrshire, Scotland, Nov. 4, 1771, and educated at the Moravian Seminary
+at Fulneck, Yorkshire, Eng. He became the editor of the _Sheffield
+Iris_, and his pen was busy in non-professional as well as professional
+work until old age. He died in Sheffield, April 30, 1854.
+
+His literary career was singularly successful; and a glance through any
+complete edition of his poems will tell us why. His hymns were all
+published during his lifetime, and all, as well as his longer pieces,
+have the purity and polished beauty, if not the strength, of Addison's
+work. Like Addison, too, he could say that he had written no line which,
+dying, he would wish to blot.
+
+The best of Montgomery was in his hymns. These were too many to
+enumerate here, and the more enduring ones too familiar to need
+enumeration. The church and the world will not soon forget "The Home in
+Heaven,"--
+
+ Forever with the Lord,
+ Amen, so let it be.
+ Life from the dead is in that word;
+ 'Tis immortality.
+
+Nor--
+
+ O where shall rest be found,
+
+--with its impressive couplet--
+
+ 'Tis not the whole of life to live
+ Nor all of death to die.
+
+Nor the haunting sweetness of--
+
+ There is a calm for those who weep.
+
+Nor, indeed, the hymn of Christian love just now before us.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The melody exactly suited to the gentle trochaic step of the home-song,
+"People of the living God," is "Whitman," composed for it by Lowell
+Mason. Few Christians, in America, we venture to say, could hear an
+instrument play "Whitman" without mentally repeating Montgomery's words.
+
+
+"TO LEAVE MY DEAR FRIENDS."
+
+This hymn, called "The Bower of Prayer," was dear to Christian hearts in
+many homes and especially in rural chapel worship half a century ago and
+earlier, and its sweet legato melody still lingers in the memories of
+aged men and women.
+
+Elder John Osborne, a New Hampshire preacher of the "Christian"
+(_Christ-ian_) denomination, is said to have composed the tune (and
+possibly the words) about 1815--though apparently the music was arranged
+from a flute interlude in one of Haydn's themes. The warbling notes of
+the air are full of heart-feeling, and usually the best available treble
+voice sang it as a solo.
+
+ To leave my dear friends and from neighbors to part,
+ And go from my home, it affects not my heart
+ Like the thought of absenting myself for a day
+ From that blest retreat I have chosen to pray,
+ I have chosen to pray.
+
+ The early shrill notes of the loved nightingale
+ That dwelt in the bower, I observed as my bell:
+ It called me to duty, while birds in the air
+ Sang anthems of praises as I went to prayer,
+ As I went to prayer.[13]
+
+ How sweet were the zephyrs perfumed by the pine,
+ The ivy, the balsam, the wild eglantine,
+ But sweeter, O, sweeter superlative were
+ The joys that I tasted in answer to prayer,
+ In answer to prayer.
+
+[Footnote 13: The _American Vocalist_ omits this stanza as too fanciful
+as well as too crude]
+
+
+"SAVIOUR, THY DYING LOVE."
+
+This hymn of grateful piety was written in 1862, by Rev. S. Dryden
+Phelps, D.D., of New Haven, and first published in _Pure Gold_, 1871;
+afterwards in the (earlier) _Baptist Hymn and Tune Book_.
+
+ Saviour, Thy dying love
+ Thou gavest me,
+ Nor should I aught withhold
+ Dear Lord, from Thee.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Give me a faithful heart,
+ Likeness to Thee,
+ That each departing day
+ Henceforth may see
+ Some work of love begun,
+ Some deed of kindness done,
+ Some wand'rer sought and won,
+ Something for Thee.
+
+The penultimate line, originally "Some sinful wanderer won," was altered
+by the author himself. The hymn is found in most Baptist hymnals, and
+was inserted by Mr. Sankey in _Gospel Hymns No. 1_. It has since won its
+way into several revival collections and undenominational manuals.
+
+Rev. Sylvester Dryden Phelps, D.D., was born in Suffield, Ct., May 15,
+1816, and studied at the Connecticut Literary Institution in that town.
+An early call to the ministry turned his talents to the service of the
+church, and his long settlement--comprising what might be called his
+principal life work--was in New Haven, where he was pastor of the First
+Baptist church twenty-nine years. He died there Nov. 23, 1895.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The Rev. Robert Lowry admired the hymn, and gave it a tune perfectly
+suited to its metre and spirit. It has never been sung in any other. The
+usual title of it is "Something for Jesus." The meaning and sentiment of
+both words and music are not unlike Miss Havergal's--
+
+ I gave my life for thee.
+
+
+"IN SOME WAY OR OTHER."
+
+This song of Christian confidence was written by Mrs. Martha A.W. Cook,
+wife of the Rev. Parsons Cook, editor of the _Puritan Recorder_, Boston.
+
+It was published in the _American Messenger_ in 1870, and is still in
+use here, as a German version of it is in Germany. The first stanza
+follows, in the two languages:
+
+ In some way or other the Lord will provide.
+ It may not be my way,
+ It may not be thy way,
+ And yet in His own way
+ The Lord will provide.
+
+ Sei's so oder anders, der Herr wird's versehn;
+ Mag's nicht sein, wie ich will,
+ Mag's nicht sein, wie du willst,
+ Doch wird's sein, wie Er will:
+ Der Herr wird's versehn.
+
+In the English version the easy flow of the two last lines into one
+sentence is an example of rhythmic advantage over the foreign syntax.
+
+Mrs. Cook was married to the well-known clergyman and editor, Parsons
+Cook, (1800-1865) in Bridgeport, Ct., and survived him at his death in
+Lynn, Mass. She was Miss Martha Ann Woodbridge, afterwards Mrs. Hawley,
+and a widow at the time of her re-marriage as Mr. Cook's second wife.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Professor Calvin S. Harrington, of Wesleyan University, Middletown, Ct.,
+set music to the words as printed in _Winnowed Hymns_ (1873) and
+arranged by Dr. Eben Tourjee, organizer of the great American Peace
+Jubilee in Boston. In the _Gospel Hymns_ it is, however, superseded by
+the more popular composition of Philip Phillips.
+
+Dr. Eben Tourjee, late Dean of the College of Music in Boston
+University, and founder and head of the New England Conservatory, was
+born in Warwick, R.I., June 1, 1834. With only an academy education he
+rose by native genius, from a hard-working boyhood to be a teacher of
+music and a master of its science. From a course of study in Europe he
+returned and soon made his reputation as an organizer of musical schools
+and sangerfests. The New England Conservatory of Music was first
+established by him in Providence, but removed in 1870 to Boston, its
+permanent home. His doctorate of music was conferred upon him by
+Wesleyan University. Died in Boston, April 12, 1891.
+
+Philip Phillips, known as "the singing Pilgrim," was born in Jamestown,
+Chautauqua, Co., N.Y., Aug. 13, 1834. He compiled twenty-nine
+collections of sacred music for Sunday schools, gospel meetings, etc.;
+also a _Methodist Hymn and Tune Book_, 1866. He composed a great number
+of tunes, but wrote no hymns. Some of his books were published in
+London, for he was a cosmopolitan singer, and traveled through Europe
+and Australia as well as America. Died in Delaware, O., June 25, 1875.
+
+
+"NEARER, MY GOD, TO THEE."
+
+Mr. William Stead, fond of noting what is often believed to be the
+"providential chain of causes" in everything that happens, recalls the
+fact that Benjamin Flower, editor of the _Cambridge Intelligencer_,
+while in jail (1798) at the instigation of Bp. Watson for an article
+defending the French Revolution, and criticising the Bishop's political
+course, was visited by several sympathizing ladies, one of whom was Miss
+Eliza Gould. The young lady's first acquaintance with him there in his
+cell led to an attachment which eventuated in marriage. Of that marriage
+Sarah Flower was born. By the theory of providential sequences Mr. Stead
+makes it appear that the forgotten vindictiveness of a British prelate
+"was the _causa causans_ of one of the most spiritual and aspiring hymns
+in the Christian Hymnary."
+
+"Nearer, My God, to Thee" was on the lips of President McKinley as he
+lay dying by a murderer's wicked shot. It is dear to President Roosevelt
+for its memories of the battle of Las Quasimas, where the Rough Riders
+sang it at the burial of their slain comrades. Bishop Marvin was saved
+by it from hopeless dejection, while practically an exile during the
+Civil War, by hearing it sung in the wilds of Arkansas, by an old woman
+in a log hut.
+
+A letter from Pittsburg, Pa., to a leading Boston paper relates the name
+and experience of a forger who had left the latter city and wandered
+eight years a fugitive from justice. On the 5th of November, (Sunday,)
+1905, he found himself in Pittsburg, and ventured into the Dixon
+Theatre, where a religious service was being held, to hear the music.
+The hymn "Nearer, My God, to Thee" so overcame him that he went out
+weeping bitterly. He walked the floor of his room all night, and in the
+morning telephoned for the police, confessed his name and crime, and
+surrendered himself to be taken back to the Boston authorities.
+
+Mrs. Sarah Flower Adams, author of the noble hymn (supposed to have been
+written in 1840), was born at Harlow, Eng., Feb. 22, 1805, and died
+there in 1848. At her funeral another of her hymns was sung, ending--
+
+ When falls the shadow, cold in death
+ I yet will sing with fearless breath,
+ As comes to me in shade or sun,
+ "Father, Thy will, not mine, be done."
+
+The attempts to _evangelize_ "Nearer, My God, to Thee" by those who
+cannot forget that Mrs. Adams was a Unitarian, are to be deplored. Such
+zeal is as needless as trying to sectarianize an Old Testament Psalm.
+The poem is a perfect religious piece--to be sung as it stands, with
+thanks that it was ever created.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+In English churches (since 1861) the hymn was and may still be sung to
+"Horbury," composed by Rev. John B. Dykes, and "St. Edmund," by Sir
+Arthur Sullivan. Both tunes are simple and appropriate, but such a hymn
+earns and inevitably acquires a single tune-voice, so that its music
+instantly names it by its words when played on instruments. Such a voice
+was given it by Lowell Mason's "Bethany," (1856). (Why not "Bethel,"
+instead, every one who notes the imagery of the words must wonder.)
+"Bethany" appealed to the popular heart, and long ago (in America) hymn
+and tune became each other's property. It is even simpler than the
+English tunes, and a single hearing fixes it in memory.
+
+
+"I NEED THEE EVERY HOUR."
+
+Mrs. Annie Sherwood Hawks, who wrote this hymn in 1872, was born in
+Hoosick, N.Y., in 1835.
+
+She sent the hymn (five stanzas) to Dr. Lowry, who composed its tune,
+adding a chorus, to make it more effective. It first appeared in a small
+collection of original songs prepared by Lowry and Doane for the
+National Baptist Sunday School Association, which met at Cincinnati, O.,
+November, 1872, and was sung there.
+
+ I need Thee every hour,
+ Most gracious Lord,
+ No tender voice like Thine
+ Can peace afford.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ I need Thee, Oh, I need Thee,
+ Every hour I need Thee;
+ Oh, bless me now, my Saviour,
+ I come to Thee!
+
+One instance, at least, of a hymn made doubly impressive by its chorus
+will be attested by all who have sung or heard the pleading words and
+music of Mrs. Hawks' and Dr. Lowry's "I need Thee, Oh, I need Thee."
+
+
+"I GAVE MY LIFE FOR THEE."
+
+This was written in her youth by Frances Ridley Havergal, and was
+suggested by the motto over the head of Christ in the great picture,
+"Ecce Homo," in the Art Gallery of Dusseldorf, Prussia, where she was at
+school. The sight--as was the case with young Count Zinzendorf--seems to
+have had much to do with the gifted girl's early religious experience,
+and indeed exerted its influence on her whole life. The motto read "I
+did this for thee; what doest thou for me?" and the generative effect of
+the solemn picture and its question soon appeared in the hymn that
+flowed from Miss Havergal's heart and pen.
+
+ I gave my life for thee,
+ My precious blood I shed,
+ That thou might'st ransomed be
+ And quickened from the dead.
+ I gave my life for thee:
+ What hast thou given for me?
+
+Miss Frances Ridley Havergal, sometimes called "The Theodosia of the
+19th century," was born at Astley, Worcestershire, Eng., Dec. 14, 1836.
+Her father, Rev. William Henry Havergal, a clergyman of the Church of
+England, was himself a poet and a skilled musician, and much of the
+daughter's ability came to her by natural bequest as well as by
+education. Born a poet, she became a fine instrumentalist, a composer
+and an accomplished linguist. Her health was frail, but her life was a
+devoted one, and full of good works. Her consecrated _words_ were
+destined to outlast her by many generations.
+
+"Writing is _praying_ with me," she said. Death met her in 1879, when
+still in the prime of womanhood.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The music that has made this hymn of Miss Havergal familiar in America
+is named from its first line, and was composed by the lamented Philip P.
+Bliss (christened Philipp Bliss[14]), a pupil of Dr. George F. Root.
+
+[Footnote 14: Mr. Bliss himself changed the spelling of his name,
+preferring to let the third P. do duty alone, as a middle initial.]
+
+He was born in Rome, Pa., Jan. 9, 1838, and less than thirty-nine years
+later suddenly ended his life, a victim of the awful railroad disaster
+at Ashtabula O., Dec. 29, 1876, while returning from a visit to his aged
+mother. His wife, Lucy Young Bliss, perished with him there, in the
+swift flames that enveloped the wreck of the train.
+
+The name of Mr. Bliss had become almost a household word through his
+numerous popular Christian melodies, which were the American beginning
+of the series of _Gospel Hymns_. Many of these are still favorite
+prayer-meeting tunes throughout the country and are heard in
+song-service at Sunday-school and city mission meetings.
+
+
+"JESUS KEEP ME NEAR THE CROSS."
+
+This hymn, one of the best and probably most enduring of Fanny J.
+Crosby's sacred lyrics, was inspired by Col. 1:29.
+
+Frances Jane Crosby (Mrs. Van Alstyne) the blind poet and hymnist, was
+born in Southeast, N.Y., March 24, 1820. She lost her eyesight at the
+age of six. Twelve years of her younger life were spent in the New York
+Institution for the Blind, where she became a teacher, and in 1858 was
+happily married to a fellow inmate, Mr. Alexander Van Alstyne, a
+musician.
+
+George F. Root was for a time musical instructor at the Institution, and
+she began early to write words to his popular song-tunes. "Rosalie, the
+Prairie Flower," and the long favorite melody, "There's Music in the
+Air" are among the many to which she supplied the text and the song
+name.
+
+She resides in Bridgeport, Ct., where she enjoys a serene and happy old
+age. She has written over six thousand hymns, and possibly will add
+other pearls to the cluster before she goes up to join the singing
+saints.
+
+ Jesus, keep me near the Cross,
+ There a precious Fountain
+ Free to all, a healing stream,
+ Flows from Calv'ry's mountain.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ In the Cross, in the Cross
+ Be my glory ever,
+ Till my raptured soul shall find
+ Rest beyond the river.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Near the Cross! O Lamb of God,
+ Bring its scenes before me;
+ Help me walk from day to day
+ With its shadows o'er me.
+
+ CHORUS.
+
+William Howard Doane, writer of the music to this hymn, was born in
+Preston, Ct., Feb. 3, 1831. He studied at Woodstock Academy, and
+subsequently acquired a musical education which earned him the degree of
+Doctor of Music conferred upon him by Denison University in 1875. Having
+a mechanical as well as musical gift, he patented more than seventy
+inventions, and was for some years engaged with manufacturing concerns,
+both as employee and manager, but his interest in song-worship and in
+Sunday-school and church work never abated, and he is well known as a
+trainer of choirs and composer of some of the best modern devotional
+tunes. His home is in Cincinnati, O.
+
+
+"I WOULD NOT LIVE ALWAY."
+
+This threnody (we may almost call it) of W.A. Muhlenberg, illustrating
+one phase of Christian experience, was the outpouring of a poetic
+melancholy not uncommon to young and finely strung souls. He composed it
+in his twenties,--long before he became "Doctor" Muhlenberg,--and for
+years afterwards tried repeatedly to alter it to a more cheerful tone.
+But the poem had its mission, and it had fastened itself in the public
+imagination, either by its contagious sentiment or the felicity of its
+tune, and the author was obliged to accept the fame of it as it
+originally stood.
+
+William Augustus Muhlenberg D.D. was born in Philadelphia, Sept. 16,
+1796, the great-grandson of Dr. Henry M. Muhlenberg, founder of the
+Lutheran church in America. In 1817 he left his ancestral communion, and
+became an Episcopal priest.
+
+As Rector of St. James church, Lancaster, Pa., he interested himself in
+the improvement of ecclesiastical hymnody, and did much good reforming
+work. After a noble and very active life as promoter of religious
+education and Christian union, and as a friend and benefactor of the
+poor, he died April, 8, 1877, in St. Luke's Hospital, N.Y.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+This was composed by Mr. George Kingsley in 1833, and entitled
+"Frederick" (dedicated to the Rev. Frederick T. Gray). Issued first as
+sheet music, it became popular, and soon found a place in the hymnals.
+Dr. Louis Benson says of the conditions and the fancy of the time, "The
+standard of church music did not differ materially from that of parlor
+music.... Several editors have attempted to put a newer tune in the
+place of Mr. Kingsley's. It was in vain, simply because words and melody
+both appeal to the same taste."
+
+[Illustration: Frances Ridley Havergal]
+
+
+"SUN OF MY SOUL, MY SAVIOUR DEAR."
+
+This gem from Keble's _Christian Year_ illustrates the life and
+character of its pious author, and, like all the hymns of that
+celebrated collection, is an incitive to spiritual thought for the
+thoughtless, as well as a language for those who stand in the Holy of
+Holies.
+
+The Rev. John Keble was born in Caln, St. Aldwyn, April 25, 1792. He
+took his degree of A.M. and was ordained and settled at Fairford, where
+he began the parochial work that ceased only with his life. He died at
+Bournmouth, March 29, 1866.
+
+His settlement at Fairford, in charge of three small curacies, satisfied
+his modest ambition, though altogether they brought him only about L100
+per year. Here he preached, wrote his hymns and translations, performed
+his pastoral work, and was happy. Temptation to wider fields and larger
+salary never moved him.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The music to this hymn of almost unparalleled poetic and spiritual
+beauty was arranged from a German Choral of Peter Ritter (1760-1846) by
+William Henry Monk, Mus. Doc., born London, 1823. Dr. Monk was a
+lecturer, composer, editor, and professor of vocal music at King's
+College. This noble tune appears sometimes under the name "Hursley" and
+supersedes an earlier one ("Halle") by Thomas Hastings.
+
+ Sun of my soul, my Saviour dear,
+ It is not night if Thou be near.
+ O may no earth-born cloud arise
+ To hide Thee from Thy servants' eyes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Abide with me from morn till eve,
+ For without Thee I cannot live
+ Abide with me when night is nigh,
+ For without Thee I cannot die.
+
+The tune "Hursley" is a choice example of polyphonal sweetness in
+uniform long notes of perfect chord.
+
+The tune of "Canonbury," by Robert Schumann, set to Keble's hymn, "New
+every morning is the love," is deservedly a favorite for flowing long
+metres, but it could never replace "Hursley" with "Sun of my soul."
+
+
+"DID CHRIST O'ER SINNERS WEEP?"
+
+The Rev. Benjamin Beddome wrote this tender hymn-poem while pastor of
+the Baptist Congregation at Bourton-on-the-water, Gloucestershire, Eng.
+He was born at Henley, Chatwickshire, Jan. 23, 1717. Settled in 1743,
+he remained with the same church till his death, Sept. 3, 1795. His
+hymns were not collected and published till 1818.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Dennis," a soft and smoothly modulated harmony, is oftenest sung to the
+words, and has no note out of sympathy with their deep feeling.
+
+ Did Christ o'er sinners weep,
+ And shall our cheeks be dry?
+ Let floods of penitential grief
+ Burst forth from every eye.
+
+ The Son of God in tears
+ Admiring angels see!
+ Be thou astonished, O my soul;
+ He shed those tears for thee.
+
+ He wept that we might weep;
+ Each sin demands a tear:
+ In heaven alone no sin is found,
+ And there's no weeping there.
+
+The tune of "Dennis" was adapted by Lowell Mason from Johann Georg
+Naegeli, a Swiss music publisher, composer and poet. He was born in
+Zurich, 1768. It is told of him that his irrepressible genius once
+tempted him to violate the ethics of authorship. While publishing
+Beethoven's three great solo sonatas (Opus 31) he interpolated two bars
+of his own, an act much commented upon in musical circles, but which
+does not seem to have cost him Beethoven's friendship. Possibly, like
+Murillo to the servant who meddled with his paintings, the great master
+forgave the liberty, because the work was so good.
+
+Naegeli's compositions are mostly vocal, for school and church use,
+though some are of a gay and playful nature. The best remembered of his
+secular and sacred styles are his blithe aria to the song of Moore,
+"Life let us cherish, while yet the taper glows" and the sweet choral
+that voices Beddome's hymn.
+
+
+"MY JESUS, I LOVE THEE."
+
+The real originator of the _Coronation Hymnal_, a book into whose making
+went five years of prayer, was Dr. A.J. Gordon, late Pastor of the
+Clarendon St. Baptist church, Boston. While the volume was slowly taking
+form and plan he was wont to hum to himself, or cause to be played by
+one of his family, snatches and suggestions of new airs that came to him
+in connection with his own hymns, and others which seemed to have no
+suitable music. The anonymous hymn, "My Jesus, I Love Thee," he found in
+a London hymn-book, and though the tune to which it had been sung in
+England was sent to him some time later, it did not sound sympathetic.
+Dissatisfied, and with the ideal in his mind of what the feeling should
+be in the melody to such a hymn, he meditated and prayed over the words
+till in a moment of inspiration the beautiful air sang itself to him[15]
+which with its simple concords has carried the hymn into the chapels of
+every denomination.
+
+[Footnote 15: The fact that this sweet melody recalls to some a similar
+tune sung sixty years ago reminds us again of the story of the tune
+"America." It is not impossible that an unconscious _memory_ helped to
+shape the air that came to Dr. Gordon's mind; though unborrowed
+similarities have been inevitable in the whole history of music.]
+
+ My Jesus, I love Thee, I know Thou art mine,
+ For Thee all the pleasures of sin I resign;
+ My gracious Redeemer, my Saviour art Thou,
+ If ever I loved Thee, my Jesus, 'tis now.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ I will love Thee in life, I will love Thee in death,
+ And praise Thee as long as Thou lendest me breath,
+ And say when the death-dew lies cold on my brow,
+ If ever I loved Thee, my Jesus, 'tis now.
+
+ In mansions of glory and endless delight
+ I'll ever adore Thee, unveiled to my sight,
+ And sing, with the glittering crown on my brow,
+ If ever I loved Thee, my Jesus, 'tis now.
+
+The memory of the writer returns to a day in a railway-car en route to
+the great Columbian Fair in Chicago when the tired passengers were
+suddenly surprised and charmed by the music of this melody. A young
+Christian man and woman, husband and wife, had begun to sing "My Jesus,
+I love Thee." Their voices (a tenor and soprano) were clear and sweet,
+and every one of the company sat up to listen with a look of mingled
+admiration and relief. Here was something, after all, to make a long
+journey less tedious. They sang all the four verses and paused. There
+was no clapping of hands, for a reverential hush had been cast over the
+audience by the sacred music. Instead of the inevitable applause that
+follows mere entertainment, a gentle but eager request for more secured
+the repetition of the delightful duet. This occurred again and again,
+till every one in the car--and some had never heard the tune or words
+before--must have learned them by heart. Fatigue was forgotten, miles
+had been reduced to furlongs in a weary trip, and a company of strangers
+had been lifted to a holier plane of thought.
+
+Besides this melody there are four tunes by Dr. Gordon in his
+collection, three of them with his own words. In all there are eleven of
+his hymns. Of these the "Good morning in Glory," set to his music, is an
+emotional lyric admirable in revival meetings, and the one beginning "O
+Holy Ghost, Arise" is still sung, and called for affectionately as
+"Gordon's Hymn."
+
+Rev. Adoniram Judson Gordon D.D. was born in New Hampton, N.H., April
+19, 1836, and died in Boston, Feb. 2d, 1895, after a life of unsurpassed
+usefulness to his fellowmen and devotion to his Divine Master. Like
+Phillips Brooks he went to his grave "in all his glorious prime," and
+his loss is equally lamented. He was a descendant of John Robinson of
+Leyden.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+MISSIONARY HYMNS.
+
+
+"JESUS SHALL REIGN WHERE'ER THE SUN."
+
+One of Watts' sublimest hymns, this Hebrew ode to the final King and His
+endless dominion expands the majestic prophesy in the seventy-second
+Psalm:
+
+ Jesus shall reign where'er the sun
+ Does his successive journeys run,
+ His kingdom stretch from shore to shore
+ Till moons shall wax and wane no more.
+
+The hymn itself could almost claim to be known "where'er the sun" etc.,
+for Christian missionaries have sung it in every land, if not in every
+language.
+
+One of the native kings in the South Sea Islands, who had been converted
+through the ministry of English missionaries, substituted a Christian
+for a pagan constitution in 1862. There were five thousand of his
+subjects gathered at the ceremonial, and they joined as with one voice
+in singing this hymn.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Old Hundred" has often lent the notes of its great plain-song to the
+sonorous lines, and "Duke Street," with superior melody and scarcely
+inferior grandeur, has given them wings; but the choice of many for
+music that articulates the life of the hymn would be the tune of
+"Samson," from Handel's Oratorio so named. It appears as No. 469 in the
+_Evangelical Hymnal_.
+
+Handel had no peer in the art or instinct of making a note speak a word.
+
+
+"JOY TO THE WORLD! THE LORD IS COME!"
+
+This hymn, also by Watts, is often sung as a Christmas song; but "The
+Saviour Reigns" and "He Rules the World" are bursts of prophetic triumph
+always apt and stimulating in missionary meetings.
+
+Here, again, the great Handel lends appropriate aid, for "Antioch," the
+popular tone-consort of the hymn, is an adaptation from his "Messiah."
+The arrangement has been credited to Lowell Mason, but he seems to have
+taken it from an English collection by Clark of Canterbury.
+
+
+"O'ER THE GLOOMY HILLS OF DARKNESS."
+
+_Dros y brinian tywyl niwliog._
+
+This notable hymn was written, probably about 1750, by the Rev. William
+Williams, a Welsh Calvinistic Methodist, born at Cefnycoed, Jan. 7,
+1717, near Llandovery. He began the study of medicine, but took deacon's
+orders, and was for a time an itinerant preacher, having left the
+established Church. Died at Pantycelyn, Jan. 1, 1781.
+
+His hymn, like the two preceding, antedates the great Missionary
+Movement by many years.
+
+ O'er the gloomy hills of darkness
+ Look my soul! be still, and gaze!
+ See the promises advancing
+ To a glorious Day of grace!
+ Blessed Jubilee,
+ Let thy glorious morning dawn!
+
+ Let the dark, benighted pagan,
+ Let the rude barbarian see
+ That divine and glorious conquest
+ Once obtained on Calvary.
+ Let the Gospel
+ Loud resound from pole to pole.
+
+This song of anticipation has dropped out of the modern hymnals, but the
+last stanza lingers in many memories.
+
+ Fly abroad, thou mighty Gospel!
+ Win and conquer, never cease;
+ May thy lasting wide dominion
+ Multiply and still increase.
+ Sway Thy scepter,
+ Saviour, all the world around!
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Oftener than any other the music of "Zion" has been the expression of
+William Williams' Missionary Hymn. It was composed by Thomas Hastings,
+in Washington, Ct., 1830.
+
+
+"HASTEN, LORD, THE GLORIOUS TIME."
+
+ Hasten, Lord, the glorious time
+ When beneath Messiah's sway
+ Every nation, every clime
+ Shall the Gospel call obey.
+ Mightiest kings its power shall own,
+ Heathen tribes His name adore,
+ Satan and his host o'erthrown
+ Bound in chains shall hurt no more.
+
+Miss Harriet Auber, the author of this melodious hymn, was a daughter of
+James Auber of London, and was born in that city, Oct. 4, 1773. After
+leaving London she led a secluded life at Broxbourne and Hoddesdon, in
+Hertfordshire, writing devotional poetry and sacred songs and
+paraphrases.
+
+Her _Spirit of the Psalms_, published in 1829, was a collection of
+lyrics founded on the Biblical Psalms. "Hasten Lord," etc., is from Ps.
+72, known for centuries to Christendom as one of the Messianic Psalms.
+Her best-known hymns have the same inspiration, as--
+
+ Wide, ye heavenly gates, unfold.
+
+ Sweet is the work, O Lord.
+
+ With joy we hail the sacred day.
+
+Miss Auber died in Hoddesdon, Jan. 20, 1862. She lived to witness and
+sympathise with the pioneer missionary enterprise of the 19th century,
+and, although she could not stand among the leaders of the battle-line
+in extending the conquest of the world for Christ, she was happy in
+having written a campaign hymn which they loved to sing. (It is curious
+that so pains-taking a work as Julian's _Dictionary of Hymns and
+Hymn-writers_ credits "With joy we hail the sacred day" to both Miss
+Auber and Henry Francis Lyte. Coincidences are known where different
+hymns by different authors begin with the same line; and in this case
+one writer was dead before the other's works were published. Possibly
+the collector may have seen a forgotten hymn of Lyte's, with that first
+line.)
+
+The tune that best interprets this hymn in spirit and in living _music_
+is Lowell Mason's "Eltham." Its harmony is like a chime of bells.
+
+
+"LET PARTY NAMES NO MORE."
+
+ Let party names no more
+ The Christian world o'erspread;
+ Gentile and Jew, and bond and free,
+ Are one in Christ the Head.
+
+This hymn of Rev. Benjamin Beddome sounds like a prelude to the grand
+rally of the Christian Churches a generation later for united advance
+into foreign fields. It was an after-sermon hymn--like so many of Watts
+and Doddridge--and spoke a good man's longing to see all sects stand
+shoulder to shoulder in a common crusade.
+
+Tune--Boylston.
+
+
+"WATCHMAN, TELL US OF THE NIGHT."
+
+The tune written to this pealing hymn of Sir John Bowring by Lowell
+Mason has never been superseded. In animation and vocal splendor it
+catches the author's own clear call, echoing the shout of Zion's
+sentinels from city to city, and happily reproducing in movement and
+phrase the great song-dialogue. Words and music together, the piece
+ranks with the foremost missionary lyrics. Like the greater Mason-Heber
+world-song, it has acquired no arbitrary name, appearing in Mason's own
+tune-books under its first hymn-line and likewise in many others. A few
+hymnals have named it "Bowring," (and why not?) and some later ones
+simply "Watchman."
+
+ 1.
+ Watchman, tell us of the night.
+ What its signs of promise are!
+ (Antistrophe)
+ Traveler, on yon mountain height.
+ See that glory-beaming star!
+
+ 2
+ Watchman, does its beauteous ray
+ Aught of hope or joy foretell?
+ (Antistrophe)
+ Trav'ler, yes; it brings the day,
+ Promised day of Israel.
+
+ 3
+ Watchman, tell us of the night;
+ Higher yet that star ascends.
+ (Antistrophe)
+ Trav'ler, blessedness and light
+ Peace and truth its course portends.
+
+ 4
+ Watchman, will its beams alone
+ Gild the spot that gave them birth?
+ (Antistrophe)
+ Trav'ler, ages are its own.
+ See! it bursts o'er all the earth.
+
+
+"YE CHRISTIAN HERALDS, GO PROCLAIM."
+
+In some versions "Ye Christian _heroes_," etc.
+
+Professor David R. Breed attributes this stirring hymn to Mrs. Vokes (or
+Voke) an English or Welsh lady, who is supposed to have written it
+somewhere near 1780, and supports the claim by its date of publication
+in _Missionary and Devotional Hymns_ at Portsea, Wales, in 1797. In this
+Dr. Breed follows (he says) "the accepted tradition." On the other hand
+the _Coronation Hymnal_ (1894) refers the authorship to a Baptist
+minister, the Rev. Bourne Hall Draper, of Southampton (Eng.), born 1775,
+and this choice has the approval of Dr. Charles Robinson. The question
+occurs whether, when the hymn was published in good faith as Mrs.
+Vokes', it was really the work of a then unknown youth of twenty-two.
+
+The probability is that the hymn owns a mother instead of a father--and
+a grand hymn it is; one of the most stimulating in Missionary
+song-literature.
+
+The stanza--
+
+ God shield you with a wall of fire!
+ With flaming zeal your breasts inspire;
+ Bid raging winds their fury cease,
+ And hush the tumult into peace,
+
+--has been tampered with by editors, altering the last line to "Calm the
+troubled seas," etc., (for the sake of the longer vowel;) but the
+substitution, "_He'll_ shield you," etc., in the first line, turns a
+prayer into a mere statement.
+
+The hymn was--and should remain--a God-speed to men like William
+Carey, who had already begun to think and preach his immortal motto,
+"Attempt great things for God; expect great things of God."
+
+
+_THE TUNE_
+
+Is the "Missionary Chant," and no other. Its composer, Heinrich
+Christopher Zeuner, was born in Eisleben, Saxony, Sept. 20, 1795. He
+came to the United States in 1827, and was for many years organist at
+Park Street Church, Boston, and for the Handel and Haydn Society. In
+1854 he removed to Philadelphia where he served three years as organist
+to St. Andrews Church, and Arch Street Presbyterian. He became insane in
+1857, and in November of that year died by his own hand.
+
+He published an oratorio "The Feast of Tabernacles," and two popular
+books, the _American Harp_, 1832, and _The Ancient Lyre_, 1833. His
+compositions are remarkably spirited and vigorous, and his work as a
+tune-maker was much in demand during his life, and is sure to continue,
+in its best examples, as long as good sacred music is appreciated.
+
+To another beautiful missionary hymn of Mrs. Vokes, of quieter tone, but
+songful and sweet, Dr. Mason wrote the tune of "Migdol." It is its
+musical twin.
+
+ Soon may the last glad song arise
+ Through all the millions of the skies.
+ That song of triumph which records
+ That "all the earth is now the Lord's."
+
+
+"ON THE MOUNTAIN TOP APPEARING."
+
+This admired and always popular church hymn was written near the
+beginning of the last century by the Rev. Thomas Kelly, born in Dublin,
+1760. He was the son of the Hon. Chief Baron Thomas Kelly of that city,
+a judge of the Irish Court of Common Pleas. His father designed him for
+the legal profession, but after his graduation at Trinity College he
+took holy orders in the Episcopal Church, and labored as a clergyman
+among the scenes of his youth for more than sixty years, becoming a
+Nonconformist in his later ministry. He was a sweet-souled man, who made
+troops of friends, and was honored as much for his piety as for his
+poetry, music, and oriental learning.
+
+"I expect never to die," he said, when Lord Plunkett once told him he
+would reach a great age. He finished his earthly work on the 14th of
+May, 1855, when he was eighty-five years old. But he still lives. His
+zeal for the coming of the Kingdom of Christ prompted his best hymn.
+
+ On the mountain-top appearing,
+ Lo! the sacred herald stands,
+ Joyful news to Zion bearing,
+ Zion long in hostile lands;
+ Mourning captive,
+ God himself will loose thy bands.
+
+ Has the night been long and mournful?
+ Have thy friends unfaithful proved?
+ Have thy foes been proud and scornful,
+ By thy sighs and tears unmoved?
+ Cease thy mourning;
+ Zion still is well beloved.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+To presume that Kelly made both words and music together is possible,
+for he was himself a composer, but no such original tune seems to
+survive. In modern use Dr. Hastings' "Zion" is most frequently attached
+to the hymn, and was probably written for it.
+
+
+"YE CHRISTIAN HEROES, WAKE TO GLORY."
+
+This rather crude parody on the "Marseillaise Hymn" (see Chap. 9) is
+printed in the _American Vocalist_, among numerous samples of early New
+England psalmody of untraced authorship. It might have been sung at
+primitive missionary meetings, to spur the zeal and faith of a Francis
+Mason or a Harriet Newell. It expresses, at least, the new-kindled
+evangelical spirit of the long-ago consecrations in American church life
+that first sent the Christian ambassadors to foreign lands, and followed
+them with benedictions.
+
+[Illustration: The Right Rev. Reginald Heber, D.D.]
+
+ Ye Christian heroes, wake to glory:
+ Hark, hark! what millions bid you rise!
+ See heathen nations bow before you,
+ Behold their tears, and hear their cries.
+ Shall pagan priest, their errors breeding,
+ With darkling hosts, and flags unfurled,
+ Spread their delusions o'er the world,
+ Though Jesus on the Cross hung bleeding?
+ To arms! To arms!
+ Christ's banner fling abroad!
+ March on! March on! all hearts resolved
+ To bring the world to God.
+
+ O, Truth of God! can man resign thee,
+ Once having felt thy glorious flame?
+ Can rolling oceans e'er prevent thee,
+ Or gold the Christian's spirit tame?
+ Too long we slight the world's undoing;
+ The word of God, salvation's plan,
+ Is yet almost unknown to man,
+ While millions throng the road to ruin.
+ To arms! to arms!
+ The Spirit's sword unsheath:
+ March on! March on! all hearts resolved,
+ To victory or death.
+
+
+"HAIL TO THE LORD'S ANOINTED."
+
+James Montgomery (says Dr. Breed) is "distinguished as the only layman
+besides Cowper among hymn-writers of the front rank in the English
+language." How many millions have recited and sung his fine and
+exhaustively descriptive poem,--
+
+ Prayer is the soul's sincere desire,
+
+--selections from almost any part of which are perfect definitions, and
+have been standard hymns on prayer for three generations. English
+Hymnology would as unwillingly part with his missionary hymns,--
+
+ The king of glory we proclaim.
+
+ Hark, the song of jubilee!
+
+--and, noblest of all, the lyric of prophecy and praise which heads
+this paragraph.
+
+ Hail to the Lord's anointed,
+ King David's greater Son!
+ Hail, in the time appointed
+ His reign on earth begun.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Arabia's desert ranger
+ To Him shall bow the knee,
+ The Ethiopian stranger
+ His glory come to see.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Kings shall fall down before Him
+ And gold and incense bring;
+ All nations shall adore Him,
+ His praise all people sing.
+
+The hymn is really the seventy-second Psalm in metre, and as a version
+it suffers nothing by comparison with that of Watts. Montgomery wrote
+it as a Christmas ode. It was sung Dec. 25, 1821, at a Moravian
+Convocation, but in 1822 he recited it at a great missionary meeting in
+Liverpool, and Dr. Adam Clarke was so charmed with it that he inserted
+it in his famous _Commentary_. In no long time afterwards it found its
+way into general use.
+
+The spirit of his missionary parents was Montgomery's Christian legacy,
+and in exalted poetical moments it stirred him as the divine afflatus
+kindled the old prophets.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The music editors in some hymnals have borrowed the favorite choral
+variously named "Webb" in honor of its author, and "The Morning Light is
+Breaking" from the first line of its hymn. Later hymnals have chosen
+Sebastian Wesley's "Aurelia" to fit the hymn, with a movement similar to
+that of "Webb"; also a German B flat melody "Ellacombe," undated, with
+livelier step and a ringing chime of parts. No one of these is
+inappropriate.
+
+Samuel Sebastian Wesley, grandson of Charles Wesley the great hymnist,
+was born in London, 1810. Like his father, Samuel, he became a
+distinguished musician, and was organist at Exeter, Winchester and
+Gloucester Cathedrals. Oxford gave him the degree of Doctor of Music.
+He composed instrumental melodies besides many anthems, services, and
+other sacred pieces for choir and congregational singing. Died in
+Gloucester, April 19, 1876.
+
+
+"FROM GREENLAND'S ICY MOUNTAINS."
+
+The familiar story of this hymn scarcely needs repeating; how one
+Saturday afternoon in the year 1819, young Reginald Heber, Rector of
+Hodnet, sitting with his father-in-law, Dean Shipley, and a few friends
+in the Wrexham Vicarage, was suddenly asked by the Dean to "write
+something to sing at the missionary meeting tomorrow," and retired to
+another part of the room while the rest went on talking; how, very soon
+after, he returned with three stanzas, which were hailed with delighted
+approval; how he then insisted upon adding another octrain to the hymn
+and came back with--
+
+ Waft, waft, ye winds, His story,
+ And you, ye waters, roll;
+
+--and how the great lyric was sung in Wrexham Church on Sunday morning
+for the first time in its life. The story is old but always fresh.
+Nothing could better have emphasized the good Dean's sermon that day in
+aid of "The Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts,"
+than that unexpected and glorious lyric of his poet son-in-law.
+
+By common consent Heber's "Missionary Hymn" is the silver trumpet among
+all the rallying bugles of the church.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The union of words and music in this instance is an example of spiritual
+affinity. "What God hath joined together let no man put asunder." The
+story of the tune is a record of providential birth quite as interesting
+as that of the hymn. In 1823, a lady in Savannah, Ga., having received
+and admired a copy of Heber's lyric from England, desired to sing it or
+hear it sung, but knew no music to fit the metre. She finally thought of
+a young clerk in a bank close by, Lowell Mason by name, who sometimes
+wrote music for recreation, and sent her son to ask him if he would make
+a tune that would sing the lines. The boy returned in half an hour with
+the composition that doubled Heber's fame and made his own.
+
+In the words of Dr. Charles Robinson, "Like the hymn it voices, it was
+done at a stroke, and it will last through the ages."
+
+
+"THE MORNING LIGHT IS BREAKING."
+
+Not far behind Dr. Heber's _chef-d'oeuvre_ in lyric merit is the still
+more famous missionary hymn of Dr. S.F. Smith, author of "My Country,
+'Tis of Thee." Another missionary hymn of his which is widely used is--
+
+ Yes, my native land, I love thee,
+ All thy scenes, I love them well.
+ Friends, connections, happy country,
+ Can I bid you all farewell?
+ Can I leave you
+ Far in heathen lands to dwell?
+
+Drs. Nutter and Breed speak of "The Morning Light is Breaking," and its
+charm as a hymn of peace and promise, and intimate that it has "gone
+farther and been more frequently sung than any other missionary hymn."
+Besides the English, there are versions of it in four Latin nations, the
+Italian, Spanish, Portuguese and French, and oriental translations in
+Chinese and several East Indian tongues and dialects, as well as one in
+Swedish. It author had the rare felicity, while on a visit to his son, a
+missionary in Burmah, of hearing it sung by native Christians in their
+language, and of being welcomed with an ovation when they knew who he
+was.
+
+ The morning light is breaking!
+ The darkness disappears;
+ The sons of earth are waking
+ To penitential tears;
+ Each breeze that sweeps the ocean
+ Brings tidings from afar,
+ Of nations in commotion,
+ Prepared for Zion's war.
+
+ Rich dews of grace come o'er us
+ In many a gentle shower,
+ And brighter scenes before us
+ Are opening every hour.
+ Each cry to heaven going
+ Abundant answer brings,
+ And heavenly gales are blowing
+ With peace upon their wings.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Blest river of Salvation,
+ Pursue thy onward way;
+ Flow thou to every nation,
+ Nor in thy richness stay.
+ Stay not till all the lowly
+ Triumphant reach their home;
+ Stay not till all the holy
+ Proclaim, "The Lord is come!"
+
+Samuel Francis Smith, D.D., was born in Boston in 1808, and educated in
+Harvard University (1825-1829). He prepared for the ministry, and was
+pastor of Baptist churches at Waterville, Me., and Newton, Mass., before
+entering the service of the American Baptist Missionary union as editor
+of its _Missionary Magazine_.
+
+He was a scholarly and graceful writer, both in verse and prose, and
+besides his editorial work, he was frequently an invited participant or
+guest of honor on public occasions, owing to his fame as author of the
+national hymn. His pure and gentle character made him everywhere beloved
+and reverenced, and to know him intimately in his happy old age was a
+benediction. He died suddenly and painlessly in his seat on a railway
+train, November 16, 1895 in his eighty-eighth year.
+
+Dr. Smith wrote twenty-six hymns now more or less in use in church
+worship, and eight for Sabbath school collections.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Millennial Dawn" is the title given it by a Boston compiler, about
+1844, but since the music and hymn became "one and indivisable" it has
+been named "Webb," and popularly _known_ as "Morning Light" or oftener
+still by its first hymn-line, "The morning light is breaking."
+
+George James Webb was born near Salisbury, Wiltshire, Eng., June 24,
+1803. He studied music in Salisbury and for several years played the
+organ at Falmouth Church. When still a young man (1830), he came to the
+United States, and settled in Boston where he was long the leading
+organist and music teacher of the city. He was associate director of the
+Boston Academy of Music with Lowell Mason, and joint author and editor
+with him of several church-music collections. Died in Orange, N.J., Nov.
+7, 1887.
+
+Dr. Webb's own account of the tune "Millennial Dawn" states that he
+wrote it at sea while on his way to America--and to secular words and
+that he had no idea who first adapted it to the hymn, nor when.
+
+
+"IF I WERE A VOICE, A PERSUASIVE VOICE."
+
+This animating lyric was written by Charles Mackay. Sung by a good
+vocalist, the fine solo air composed (with its organ chords) by I.B.
+Woodbury, is still a feature in some missionary meetings, especially the
+fourth stanza--
+
+ If I were a voice, an immortal voice,
+ I would fly the earth around:
+ And wherever man to his idols bowed,
+ I'd publish in notes both long and loud
+ The Gospel's joyful sound.
+ I would fly, I would fly, on the wings of day,
+ Proclaiming peace on my world-wide way,
+ Bidding the saddened earth rejoice--
+ If I were a voice, an immortal voice,
+ I would fly, I would fly,
+ I would fly on the wings of day.
+
+Charles Mackay, the poet, was born in Perth, Scotland, 1814, and
+educated in London and Brussels; was engaged in editorial work on the
+_London Morning Chronicle_ and _Glasgow Argus_, and during the Corn Law
+agitation wrote popular songs, notably "The Voice of the Crowd" and
+"There's a Good Time Coming," which (like the far inferior poetry of
+Ebenezer Elliot) won the lasting love of the masses for a superior man
+who could be "The People's Singer and Friend." He came to the United
+States in 1857 as a lecturer, and again in 1862, remaining three years
+as war correspondent of the _London Times_. Glasgow University made him
+LL.D. in 1847. His numerous songs and poems were collected in a London
+edition. Died Dec. 24, 1889.
+
+Isaac Baker Woodbury was born in Beverly, Mass., 1819, and rose from the
+station of a blacksmith's apprentice to be a tone-teacher in the church.
+He educated himself in Europe, returned and sang his life songs, and
+died in 1858 at the age of thirty-nine.
+
+A tune preferred by many as the finer music is the one written to the
+words by Mr. Sankey, _Sacred Songs_, No. 2.
+
+
+"SPEED AWAY! SPEED AWAY!"
+
+This inspiriting song of farewell to departing missionaries was written
+in 1890 to Woodbury's appropriate popular melody by Fanny J. Crosby, at
+the request of Ira D. Sankey. The key-word and refrain are adapted from
+the original song by Woodbury (1848), but in substance and language the
+three hymn-stanzas are the new and independent work of this later
+writer.
+
+ Speed away! speed away on your mission of light,
+ To the lands that are lying in darkness and night;
+ 'Tis the Master's command; go ye forth in His name,
+ The wonderful gospel of Jesus proclaim;
+ Take your lives in your hand, to the work while 'tis day,
+ Speed away! speed away! speed away!
+
+ Speed away, speed away with the life-giving Word,
+ To the nations that know not the voice of the Lord;
+ Take the wings of the morning and fly o'er the wave,
+ In the strength of your Master the lost ones to save;
+ He is calling once more, not a moment's delay,
+ Speed away! speed away! speed away!
+
+ Speed away, speed away with the message of rest,
+ To the souls by the tempter in bondage oppressed;
+ For the Saviour has purchased their ransom from sin,
+ And the banquet is ready. O gather them in;
+ To the rescue make haste, there's no time for delay,
+ Speed away! speed away! speed away!
+
+
+"ONWARD CHRISTIAN SOLDIERS!"
+
+Rev. Sabine Baring-Gould, the author of this rousing hymn of Christian
+warfare, a rector of the Established Church of England and a writer of
+note, was born at Exeter, Eng., Jan. 28, 1834. Educated at Clare
+College, Cambridge, he entered the service of the church, and was
+appointed Rector of East Mersea, Essex, in 1871. He was the author of
+several hymns, original and translated, and introduced into England from
+Flanders, numbers of carols with charming old Christmas music. The
+"Christian Soldiers" hymn is one of his (original) processionals, and
+the most inspiring.
+
+ Onward, Christian soldiers,
+ Marching as to war,
+ With the cross of Jesus
+ Going on before.
+ Christ the Royal Master
+ Leads against the foe;
+ Forward into battle,
+ See, His banners go!
+ Onward, Christian soldiers, etc.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Like a mighty army
+ Moves the Church of God;
+ Brothers, we are treading
+ Where the saints have trod;
+ We are not divided,
+ All one body we,
+ One in hope, in doctrine,
+ One in charity.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Sir Arthur Seymour Sullivan, Doctor of Music, who wrote the melody for
+this hymn, was born in London, May 13, 1842. He gained the Mendelssohn
+Scholarship at the Royal Academy of Music, and also at the Conservatory
+of Leipsic. He was a fertile genius, and his compositions included
+operettas, symphonies, overtures, anthems, hymn-tunes, an oratorio ("The
+Prodigal Son"), and almost every variety of tone production, vocal and
+instrumental. Queen Victoria knighted him in 1883.
+
+The grand rhythm of "Onward, Christian Soldiers"--hymn and tune--is
+irresistible whether in band march or congregational worship. Sir Arthur
+died in London, November 22, 1900.
+
+
+"O CHURCH ARISE AND SING"
+
+Designed originally for children's voices, the hymn of five stanzas
+beginning with this line was written by Hezekiah Butterworth, author of
+the _Story of the Hymns_ (1875), _Story of the Tunes_ (1890), and many
+popular books of historic interest for the young, the most widely read
+of which is _Zigzag Journeys in Many Lands_. He also composed and
+published many poems and hymns. He was born in Warren, R.I., Dec. 22,
+1839, and for twenty-five years was connected with the _Youth's
+Companion_ as regular contributor and member of its editorial staff. He
+died in Warren, R.I., Sept. 5, 1905.
+
+The hymn "O Church, arise" was sung in Mason's tune of "Dort" until
+Prof. Case wrote a melody for it, when it took the name of the
+"Convention Hymn."
+
+Professor Charles Clinton Case, music composer and teacher, was born in
+Linesville, Pa., June, 1843. Was a pupil of George F. Root and pursued
+musical study in Chicago, Ill., Ashland, O., and South Bend, Ind. He was
+associated with Root, McGranahan, and others in making secular and
+church music books, and later with D.L. Moody in evangelical work.
+
+As author and compiler he has published numerous works, among them
+_Church Anthems_, the _Harvest Song_ and _Case's Chorus Collection_.
+
+ O Church! arise and sing
+ The triumphs of your King,
+ Whose reign is love;
+ Sing your enlarged desires,
+ That conquering faith inspires,
+ Renew your signal fires,
+ And forward move!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Beneath the glowing arch
+ The ransomed armies march,
+ We follow on;
+ Lead on, O cross of Light,
+ From conquering height to height,
+ And add new victories bright
+ To triumphs won!
+
+
+"THE BANNER OF IMMANUEL!"
+
+This hymn, set to music and copyrighted in Buffalo as a floating waif of
+verse by an unknown author, and used in Sunday-school work, first
+appeared in Dr. F.N. Peloubet's _Select Songs_ (Biglow and Main, 1884)
+with a tune by Rev. George Phipps.
+
+The hymn was written by Rev. Theron Brown, a Baptist minister, who was
+pastor (1859-1870) of churches in South Framingham and Canton, Mass. He
+was born in Willimantic, Ct., April 29, 1832.
+
+Retired from pastoral work, owing to vocal disability, he has held
+contributory and editorial relations with the _Youth's Companion_ for
+more than forty years, for the last twenty years a member of the office
+staff.
+
+Between 1880 and 1890 he contributed hymns more or less regularly to the
+quartet and antiphonal chorus service at the Ruggles St. Church, Boston,
+the "Banner of Immanuel" being one of the number. _The Blount Family_,
+_Nameless Women of the Bible_, _Life Songs_ (a volume of poems), and
+several books for boys, are among his published works.
+
+ The banner of Immanuel! beneath its glorious folds
+ For life or death to serve and fight we pledge our loyal souls.
+ No other flag such honor boasts, or bears so proud a name,
+ And far its red-cross signal flies as flies the lightning's flame.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Salvation by the blood of Christ! the shouts of triumph ring;
+ No other watchword leads the host that serves so grand a King.
+ Then rally, soldiers of the Cross! Keep every fold unfurled,
+ And by Redemption's holy sign we'll conquer all the world.
+
+The Rev. George Phipps, composer of the tune, "Immanuel's Banner," was
+born in Franklin, Mass., Dec. 11, 1838, was graduated at Amherst
+College, 1862, and at Andover Theological Seminary, 1865. Settled as
+pastor of the Congregational Church in Wellesley, Mass., ten years, and
+at Newton Highlands fifteen years.
+
+He has written many Sunday-school melodies, notably the music to "My
+Saviour Keeps Me Company."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+HYMNS OF SUFFERING AND TRUST.
+
+
+One inspiring chapter in the compensations of life is the record of
+immortal verses that were sorrow-born. It tells us in the most affecting
+way how affliction refines the spirit and "the agonizing throes of
+thought bring forth glory." Often a broken life has produced a single
+hymn. It took the long living under trial to shape the supreme
+experience.
+
+ --The anguish of the singer
+ Made the sweetness of the song.
+
+Indeed, if there had been no sorrow there would have been no song.
+
+[Illustration: George James Webb]
+
+
+"MY LORD, HOW FULL OF SWEET CONTENT."
+
+Jeanne M.B. de la Mothe--known always as Madame Guyon--the lady who
+wrote these words in exile, probably sang more "songs in the night" than
+any hymn-writer outside of the Dark Ages. She was born at Montargis,
+France, in 1648, and died in her seventieth year, 1771, in the ancient
+city of Blois, on the Loire.
+
+A convent-educated girl of high family, a wife at the age of fifteen,
+and a widow at twenty-eight, her early piety, ridiculed in the dazzling
+but corrupt society of Louis XIV's time, blossomed through a long life
+in religious ministries and flowers of sacred poetry.
+
+She became a mystic, and her book _Spiritual Torrents_ indicates the
+impetuous ardors of her soul. It was the way Divine Love came to her.
+She was the incarnation of the spiritualized Book of Canticles. An
+induction to these intense subjective visions and raptures had been the
+remark of a pious old Franciscan father, "Seek God in your heart, and
+you will find Him."
+
+She began to teach as well as enjoy the new light so different from the
+glitter of the traditional worship. But her "aggressive holiness" was
+obnoxious to the established Church. "Quietism" was the brand set upon
+her written works and the offense that was punished in her person.
+Bossuet, the king of preachers, was her great adversary. The saintly
+Fenelon was her friend, but he could not shield her. She was shut up
+like a lunatic in prison after prison, till, after four years of dungeon
+life in the Bastile, expecting every hour to be executed for heresy, she
+was banished to a distant province to end her days.
+
+Question as we may the usefulness of her pietistic books, the visions of
+her excessively exalted moods, and the passionate, almost erotic
+phraseology of her _Contemplations_, Madame Guyon has held the world's
+admiration for her martyr spirit, and even her love-flights of devotion
+in poetry and prose do not conceal the angel that walked in the flame.
+
+Today, when religious persecution is unknown, we can but dimly
+understand the perfect triumph of her superior soul under suffering and
+the transports of her utter absorption in God that could make the stones
+of her dungeon "look like jewels." When we emulate a faith like
+hers--with all the weight of absolute certainty in it--we can sing her
+hymn:
+
+ My Lord, how full of sweet content
+ I pass my years of banishment.
+ Where'er I dwell, I dwell with Thee,
+ In heaven or earth, or on the sea.
+
+ To me remains nor place nor time:
+ My country is in every clime;
+ I can be calm and free from care
+ On any shore, since God is there.
+
+And could a dearer _vade mecum_ enrich a Christian's outfit than these
+lines treasured in memory?
+
+ While place we seek or place we shun,
+ The soul finds happiness in none;
+ But, with a God to guide our way,
+ 'Tis equal joy to go or stay.
+
+Cowper, and also Dr. Thomas Upham, translated (from the French) the
+religious poems of Madame Guyon. This hymn is Cowper's translation.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+A gentle and sympathetic melody entitled "Alsace" well represents the
+temper of the words--and in name links the nationalities of writer and
+composer. It is a choral arranged from a sonata of the great Ludwig von
+Beethoven, born in Bonn, Germany, 1770, and died in Vienna, Mar. 1827.
+Like the author of the hymn he felt the hand of affliction, becoming
+totally deaf soon after his fortieth year. But, in spite of the
+privation, he kept on writing sublime and exquisite strains that only
+his soul could hear. His fame rests upon his oratorio, "The Mount of
+Olives," the opera of "Fidelio" and his nine wonderful "Symphonies."
+
+
+"NO CHANGE IN TIME SHALL EVER SHOCK."
+
+Altered to common metre from the awkward long metre of Tate and Brady,
+the three or four stanzas found in earlier hymnals are part of their
+version (probably Tate's) of the 31st Psalm--and it is worth calling to
+mind here that there is no hymn treasury so rich in tuneful faith and
+reliance upon God in trouble as the Book of Psalms. This feeling of the
+Hebrew poet was never better expressed (we might say, translated) in
+English than by the writer of this single verse--
+
+ No change of time shall ever shock
+ My trust, O Lord, in Thee,
+ For Thou hast always been my Rock,
+ A sure defense to me.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The sweet, tranquil choral long ago wedded to this hymn is lost from the
+church collections, and its very name forgotten. In fact the hymn itself
+is now seldom seen. If it ever comes back, old "Dundee" (Guillaume Franc
+1500-1570) will sing for it, or some new composer may rise up to put the
+spirit of the psalm into inspired notes.
+
+
+"WHY DO WE MOURN DEPARTED FRIENDS?"
+
+This hymn of holy comfort, by Dr. Watts, was long associated with a
+remarkable tune in C minor, "a queer medley of melody" as Lowell Mason
+called it, still familiar to many old people as "China." It was composed
+by Timothy Swan when he was about twenty-six years of age (1784) and
+published in 1801 in the _New England Harmony_. It may have sounded
+consolatory to mature mourners, singers and hearers in the days when
+religious emotion habitually took a sad key, but its wild and thrilling
+chords made children weep. The tune is long out of use--though, strange
+to say, one of the most recent hymnals prints the hymn with a _new
+minor_ tune.
+
+ Why do we mourn departed friends,
+ Or shake at death's alarms?
+ 'Tis but the voice that Jesus sends
+ To call them to His arms.
+
+ Are we not tending upward too
+ As fast as time can move?
+ Nor should we wish the hours more slow
+ To keep us from our Love.
+
+ The graves of all His saints He blessed
+ And softened every bed:
+ Where should the dying members rest
+ But with their dying Head?
+
+Timothy Swan was born in Worcester, Mass., July 23, 1758, and died in
+Suffield, Ct., July 23, 1842. He was a self-taught musician, his only
+"course of study" lasting three weeks,--in a country singing school at
+Groton. When sixteen years old he went to Northfield, Mass., and learned
+the hatter's trade, and while at work began to practice making
+psalm-tunes. "Montague," in two parts, was his first achievement. From
+that time for thirty years, mostly spent in Suffield, Ct., he wrote and
+taught music while supporting himself by his trade. Many of his tunes
+were published by himself, and had a wide currency a century ago.
+
+Swan was a genius in his way, and it was a true comment on his work that
+"his tunes were remarkable for their originality as well as
+singularity--unlike any other melodies." "China," his masterpiece, will
+be long kept track of as a curio, and preserved in replicates of old
+psalmody to illustrate self-culture in the art of song. But the major
+mode will replace the minor when tender voices on burial days sing--
+
+ Why do we mourn departed friends?
+
+Another hymn of Watts,--
+
+ God is the refuge of His saints
+ When storms of sharp distress invade,
+
+--sung to Lowell Mason's liquid tune of "Ward," and the priceless
+stanza,--
+
+ Jesus can make a dying bed
+ Feel soft as downy pillows are,
+
+doubly prove the claim of the Southampton bard to a foremost place with
+the song-preachers of Christian trust.
+
+The psalm (Amsterdam version), "God is the refuge," etc., is said to
+have been sung by John Howland in the shallop of the Mayflower when an
+attempt was made to effect a landing in spite of tempestuous weather. A
+tradition of this had doubtless reached Mrs. Hemans when she wrote--
+
+ Amid the storm they sang, etc.
+
+
+"FATHER, WHATE'ER OF EARTHLY BLISS."
+
+This hymn had originally ten stanzas, of which the three usually sung
+are the three last. The above line is the first of the eighth stanza,
+altered from--
+
+ And O, whate'er of earthly bliss.
+
+Probably for more than a century the familiar surname "Steele" attached
+to this and many other hymns in the hymn-books conveyed to the general
+public no hint of a mind and hand more feminine than Cowper's or
+Montgomery's. Even intelligent people, who had chanced upon sundry
+copies of _The Spectator_, somehow fell into the habit of putting
+"Steele" and "Addison" in the same category of hymn names, and Sir
+Richard Steele got a credit he never sought. But since stories of the
+hymns began to be published--and made the subject of evening talks in
+church conference rooms--many have learned what "Steele" in the
+hymn-book means. It introduces us now to a very retiring English lady,
+Miss Anna Steele, a Baptist minister's daughter. She was born in 1706,
+at Broughton, Hampshire, in her father's parsonage, and in her father's
+parsonage she spent her life, dying there Nov. 1778.
+
+She was many years a severe sufferer from bodily illness, and a lasting
+grief of mind and heart was the loss of her intended husband, who was
+drowned the day before their appointed wedding. It is said that this
+hymn was written under the recent sorrow of that loss.
+
+In 1760 and 1780 volumes of her works in verse and prose were published
+with her name, "Theodosia," and reprinted in 1863 as "_Hymns, Psalms,
+and Poems_, by Anna Steele." The hymn "Father, whate'er," etc., is
+estimated as her best, though some rank it only next to her--
+
+ Dear Refuge of my weary soul.
+
+Other more or less well-known hymns of this devout and loving writer
+are,--
+
+ Lord, how mysterious are Thy ways,
+
+ O Thou whose tender mercy hears,
+
+ Thou lovely Source of true delight,
+
+ Alas, what hourly dangers rise,
+
+ So fades the lovely blooming flower.
+
+--to a stanza of which latter the world owes the tune of "Federal St."
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The true musical mate of the sweet hymn-prayer came to it probably about
+the time of its hundredth birthday; but it came to stay. Lowell Mason's
+"Naomi" blends with it like a symphony of nature.
+
+ Father, whate'er of earthly bliss
+ Thy sovereign will denies,
+ Accepted at Thy throne of grace
+ Let this petition rise.
+
+ Give me a calm and thankful heart
+ From every murmer free.
+ The blessings of Thy grace impart,
+ And make me live to Thee.
+
+
+"GUIDE ME, O THOU GREAT JEHOVAH."
+
+This great hymn has a double claim on the name of Williams. We do not
+have it exactly in its original form as written by Rev. William
+Williams, "The Watts of Wales," familiarly known as "Williams of
+Pantycelyn." His fellow countryman and contemporary, Rev. Peter
+Williams, or "Williams of Carmarthen," who translated it from Welsh into
+English (1771) made alterations and substitutions in the hymn with the
+result that only the first stanza belongs indisputably to Williams of
+Pantycelyn, the others being Peter's own or the joint production of the
+two. As the former, however, is said to have approved and revised the
+English translation, we may suppose the hymn retained the name of its
+original author by mutual consent.
+
+ Guide me, O Thou Great Jehovah,
+ Pilgrim through this barren land.
+ I am weak, but Thou art mighty,
+ Hold me by Thy powerful hand;
+ Bread of heaven,
+ Feed me till I want no more.
+
+ Open Thou the crystal Fountain
+ Whence the healing streams do flow,
+ Let the fiery cloudy pillar
+ Lead me all my journey through.
+ Strong Deliverer,
+ Be Thou still my Strength and Shield!
+
+ When I tread the verge of Jordan
+ Bid my anxious fears subside;
+ Death of death, and hell's destruction,
+ Land me safe on Canaan's side.
+ Songs of praises
+ I will ever give to Thee.
+
+ Musing on my habitation,
+ Musing on my heavenly home,
+ Fills my heart with holy longing;
+ Come, Lord Jesus, quickly come.
+ Vanity is all I see,
+ Lord, I long to be with Thee.
+
+The second and third stanzas have not escaped the touch of critical
+editors. The line,--
+
+ Whence the healing streams do flow
+
+--becomes,--
+
+ Whence the healing waters flow,
+
+--with which alteration there is no fault to find except that it is
+needless, and obliterates the ancient mark. But the third stanza,
+besides losing its second line for--
+
+ Bid the swelling stream divide,
+
+--is weakened by a more needless substitution. Its original third line--
+
+ Death of death, and hell's destruction,
+
+--is exchanged for the commonplace--
+
+ Bear me through the swelling current.
+
+That is modern taste; but when modern taste meddles with a stalwart old
+hymn it is sometimes more nice than wise.
+
+It is probable that the famous hymn was sung in America before it
+obtained a European reputation. Its history is as follows: Lady
+Huntingdon having read one of Williams' books with much spiritual
+satisfaction, persuaded him to prepare a collection of hymns, to be
+called the _Gloria in Excelsis_, for special use in Mr. Whitefield's
+Orphans' House in America. In this collection appeared the original
+stanzas of "Guide me, O Thou Great Jehovah." In 1774, two years after
+its publication in the _Gloria in Excelsis_, it was republished in
+England in Mr. Whitefield's collections of hymns.
+
+The Rev. Peter Williams was born in the parish of Llansadurnen,
+Carmarthenshire, Wales, Jan. 7, 1722, and was educated in Carmarthen
+College. He was ordained in the Established Church and appointed to a
+curacy, but in 1748 joined the Calvinistic Methodists. He was an
+Independent of the Independents however, and preached where ever he
+chose. Finally he built a chapel for himself on his paternal estate,
+where he ministered during the rest of his life. Died Aug. 8, 1796.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+If "Sardius," the splendid old choral (triple time) everywhere
+identified with the hymn, be not its original music, its age at least
+entitles it to its high partnership. _The Sacred Lyre_ (1858) ascribes
+it to Ludovic Nicholson, of Paisley, Scotland, violinist and amateur
+composer, born 1770; died 1852; but this is not beyond dispute. Of
+several names one more confidently referred to as its author is F.H.
+Barthelemon (1741-1808).
+
+
+"PEACE, TROUBLED SOUL"
+
+Is the brave faith-song of a Christian under deep but blameless
+humiliation--Sir Walter Shirley[16].
+
+[Footnote 16: See page 127]
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Apparently the favorite in several (not recent) hymnals for the subdued
+but confident spirit of this hymn of Sir Walter Shirley is Mazzinghi's
+"Palestine," appearing with various tone-signatures in different books.
+The treble and alto lead in a sweet duet with slur-flights, like an
+obligato to the bass and tenor. The melody needs rich and cultured
+voices, and is unsuited for congregational singing. So, perhaps, is the
+hymn itself.
+
+ Peace, troubled soul, whose plaintive moan
+ Hath taught these rocks the notes of woe;
+ Cease thy complaint--suppress thy groan,
+ And let thy tears forget to flow;
+ Behold the precious balm is found,
+ To lull thy pain, to heal thy wound.
+
+ Come, freely come, by sin oppressed,
+ Unburden here thy weighty load;
+ Here find thy refuge and thy rest,
+ And trust the mercy of thy God.
+ Thy God's thy Saviour--glorious word!
+ For ever love and praise the Lord.
+
+As now sung the word "scenes" is substituted for "rocks" in the second
+line, eliminating the poetry. Rocks give an _echo_; and the vivid
+thought in the author's mind is flattened to an unmeaning generality.
+
+Count Joseph Mazzinghi, son of Tommasso Mazzinghi, a Corsican musician,
+was born in London, 1765. He was a boy of precocious talent. When only
+ten years of age he was appointed organist of the Portuguese Chapel, and
+when nineteen years old was made musical director and composer at the
+King's Theatre. For many years he held the honor of Music Master to the
+Princess of Wales, afterwards Queen Caroline, and his compositions were
+almost numberless. Some of his songs and glees that caught the popular
+fancy are still remembered in England, as "The Turnpike Gate," "The
+Exile," and the rustic duet, "When a Little Farm We Keep."
+
+Of sacred music he composed only one mass and six hymn-tunes, of which
+latter "Palestine" is one. Mazzinghi died in 1844, in his eightieth
+year.
+
+
+"BEGONE UNBELIEF, MY SAVIOUR IS NEAR."
+
+The Rev. John Newton, author of this hymn, was born in London, July 24,
+1725. The son of a sea-captain, he became a sailor, and for several
+years led a reckless life. Converted, he took holy orders and was
+settled as curate of Olney, Buckinghamshire, and afterwards Rector of
+St. Mary of Woolnoth, London, where he died, Dec. 21, 1807. It was
+while living at Olney that he and Cowper wrote and published the _Olney
+Hymns_. His defiance to doubt in these lines is the blunt utterance of a
+sailor rather than the song of a poet:
+
+ Begone, unbelief, my Saviour is near,
+ And for my relief will surely appear.
+ By prayer let me wrestle and He will perform;
+ With Christ in the vessel I smile at the storm.
+
+
+_THE TUNE_
+
+Old "Hanover," by William Croft (1677-1727), carries Newton's hymn
+successfully, but Joseph Haydn's choral of "Lyons" is more familiar--and
+better music.
+
+"Hanover" often accompanies Charles Wesley's lyric,--
+
+ Ye servants of God, your Master proclaim.
+
+
+"HOW FIRM A FOUNDATION."
+
+The question of the author of this hymn is treated at length in Dr.
+Louis F. Benson's _Studies of Familiar Hymns_. The utmost that need to
+be said here is that two of the most thorough and indefatigable
+hymn-chasers, Dr. John Julian and Rev. H.L. Hastings, working
+independently of each other, found evidence fixing the authorship with
+strong probability upon Robert Keene, a precentor in Dr. John Rippon's
+church. Dr. Rippon was pastor of a Baptist Church in London from 1773
+to 1836, and in 1787 he published a song-manual called _A Selection of
+Hymns from the Best Authors_, etc., in which "How Firm a Foundation"
+appears as a new piece, with the signature "K----."
+
+The popularity of the hymn in America has been remarkable, and promises
+to continue. Indeed, there are few more reviving or more spiritually
+helpful. It is too familiar to need quotation. But one cannot suppress
+the last stanza, with its powerful and affecting emphasis on the Divine
+promise--
+
+ The soul that on Jesus has leaned for repose
+ I will not, I will not, desert to his foes;
+ That soul, though all hell should endeavor to shake,
+ I'll never, no never, no never forsake.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The grand harmony of "Portuguese Hymn" has always been identified with
+this song of trust.
+
+One opinion of the date of the music writes it "about 1780." Since the
+habit of crediting it to John Reading (1677-1764) has been discontinued,
+it has been in several hymnals ascribed to Marco Portogallo (Mark, the
+Portuguese), a musician born in Lisbon, 1763, who became a composer of
+operas in Italy, but was made Chapel-Master to the Portuguese King. In
+1807, when Napoleon invaded the Peninsula and dethroned the royal house
+of Braganza, Old King John VI. fled to Brazil and took Marco with him,
+where he lived till 1815, but returned and died in Italy, in 1830. Such
+is the story, and it is all true, only the man's name was Simao,
+instead of Marco. _Grove's Dictionary_ appends to Simao's biography the
+single sentence, "His brother wrote for the church." That the Brazilian
+episode may have been connected with this brother's history by a
+confusion of names, is imaginable, but it is not known that the
+brother's name was Marco.
+
+On the whole, this account of the authorship of the "Portuguese
+Hymn"--originally written for the old Christmas church song "Adeste
+Fideles"--is late and uncertain. Heard (perhaps for the first time) in
+the Portuguese Chapel, London, it was given the name which still clings
+to it. If proofs of its Portuguese origin exist, they may yet be found.
+
+"How Firm a Foundation" was the favorite of Deborah Jackson, President
+Andrew Jackson's beloved wife, and on his death-bed the warrior and
+statesman called for it. It was the favorite of Gen. Robert E. Lee, and
+was sung at his funeral. The American love and familiar preference for
+the remarkable hymn was never more strikingly illustrated than when on
+Christmas Eve, 1898, a whole corps of the United States army Northern
+and Southern, encamped on the Quemados hills, near Havana, took up the
+sacred tune and words--
+
+ "Fear not, I am with thee, O be not dismayed."
+
+Lieut. Col. Curtis Guild (since Governor Guild of Massachusetts) related
+the story in the Sunday School Times for Dec. 7, 1901, and Dr. Benson
+quotes it in his book.
+
+[Illustration: John Wesley]
+
+
+"WHILE THEE I SEEK, PROTECTING POWER."
+
+Miss Helen Maria Williams, who wrote this gentle hymn of confidence, in
+1786, was born in the north of England in 1762. When but a girl she won
+reputation by her brilliant literary talents and a mental grasp and
+vigor that led her, like Gail Hamilton, "to discuss public affairs,
+besides clothing bright fancies and devout thoughts in graceful verse."
+Most of her life was spent in London, and in Paris, where she died, Dec.
+14, 1827.
+
+ While Thee I seek, Protecting Power
+ Be my vain wishes stilled,
+ And may this consecrated hour
+ With better hopes be filled:
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ When gladness wings my favored hour,
+ Thy love my thoughts shall fill,
+ Resigned where storms of sorrow lower
+ My soul shall meet Thy will.
+
+ My lifted eye without a tear
+ The gathering storm shall see:
+ My steadfast heart shall know no fear:
+ My heart will rest on Thee.
+
+
+_THE TUNES._
+
+Old "Norwich," from _Day's Psalter_, and "Simpson," adapted from Louis
+Spohr, are found with the hymn in several later manuals. In the memories
+of older worshipers "Brattle-Street," with its melodious choral and duet
+arranged from Pleyel by Lowell Mason, is inseparable from Miss
+Williams' words; but modern hymnals have dropped it, probably because
+too elaborate for average congregational use.
+
+Ignaz Joseph Pleyel was born June 1, 1757, at Ruppersthal, Lower
+Austria. He was the _twenty-fourth_ child of a village schoolmaster. His
+early taste and talent for music procured him friends who paid for his
+education. Haydn became his master, and long afterwards spoke of him as
+his best and dearest pupil. Pleyel's work--entirely instrumental--was
+much admired by Mozart.
+
+During a few years spent in Italy, he composed the music of his
+best-known opera, "Iphigenia in Aulide," and, besides the thirty-four
+books of his symphonies and chamber-pieces, the results of his prolific
+genius make a list too long to enumerate. Most of his life was spent in
+Paris, where he founded the (present) house of Pleyel and Wolfe, piano
+makers and sellers. He died in that city, Nov. 14, 1831.
+
+
+"COME UNTO ME."
+
+ Come unto Me, when shadows darkly gather,
+ When the sad heart is weary and distressed,
+ Seeking for comfort from your heavenly Father,
+ Come unto Me, and I will give you rest.
+
+This sweet hymn, by Mrs. Catherine Esling, is well known to many
+thousands of mourners, as also is its equally sweet tune of "Henley," by
+Lowell Mason. Melody and words melt together like harp and flute.
+
+ Large are the mansions in thy Father's dwelling,
+ Glad are the homes that sorrows never dim,
+ Sweet are the harps in holy music swelling.
+ Soft are the tones that raise the heavenly hymn.
+
+Mrs. Catherine Harbison Waterman Esling was born in Philadelphia, Apr.
+12, 1812. A writer for many years under her maiden name, Waterman, she
+married, in 1840, Capt. George Esling, of the Merchant Marine, and lived
+in Rio Janeiro till her widowhood, in 1844.
+
+
+JOHN WESLEY'S HYMN.
+
+ How happy is the pilgrim's lot,
+ How free from every anxious thought.
+
+These are the opening lines of "John Wesley's Hymn," so called because
+his other hymns are mostly translations, and because of all his own it
+is the one commonly quoted and sung.
+
+John Wesley, the second son in the famous Epworth family of ministers,
+was a man who knew how to endure "hardness as a good soldier of Christ."
+He was born June 27, 1703, and studied at Charterhouse, London, and at
+Christ Church, Oxford, becoming a Fellow of Lincoln College. After
+taking holy orders he went as a missionary to Georgia, U.S., in 1735,
+and on his return began his remarkable work in England, preaching a more
+spiritual type of religion, and awakening the whole kingdom with his
+revival fervor and his brother's kindling songs. The following paragraph
+from his itinerant life, gathered probably from a page of his own
+journals, gives a glimpse of what the founder of the great Methodist
+denomination did and suffered while carrying his Evangelical message
+from place to place.
+
+On February 17, 1746, when days were short and weather far from
+favorable, he set out on horseback from Bristol to Newcastle, a distance
+between three and four hundred miles. The journey occupied ten days.
+Brooks were swollen, and in some places the roads were impassable,
+obliging the itinerant to go round through the fields. At Aldrige Heath,
+in Staffordshire, the rain turned to snow, which the northerly wind
+drove against him, and by which he was soon crusted over from head to
+foot. At Leeds the mob followed him, and pelted him with whatever came
+to hand. He arrived at Newcastle, February 26, "free from every anxious
+thought," and "every worldly fear."
+
+How lightly he regarded hardship and molestation appears from his
+verses--
+
+ Whatever molests or troubles life,
+ When past, as nothing we esteem,
+ And pain, like pleasure, is a dream.
+
+And that he actually enjoys the heroic freedom of a rough-rider
+missionary life is hinted in his hymn--
+
+ Confined to neither court nor cell,
+ His soul disdains on earth to dwell,
+ He only sojourns here.
+
+God evidently built John Wesley fire-proof and water-proof with a view
+to precisely what he was to undertake and accomplish. His frame was
+vigorous, and his spirit unconquerable. Besides all this he had the
+divine gift of a religious faith that could move mountains and a
+confidence in his mission that became a second nature. No wonder he
+could suffer, and _last_. The brave young man at thirty was the brave
+old man at nearly ninety. He died in London, March 2, 1791.
+
+ Blest with the scorn of finite good,
+ My soul is lightened of its load
+ And seeks the things above.
+
+ There is my house and portion fair;
+ My treasure and my heart are there,
+ And my abiding home.
+
+ For me my elder brethren stay,
+ And angels beckon me away.
+ And Jesus bids me come.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+An air found in the _Revivalist_ (1869), in sextuple time, that has the
+real camp-meeting swing, preserves the style of music in which the hymn
+was sung by the circuit-preachers and their congregations--ringing out
+the autobiographical verses with special unction. The favorite was--
+
+ No foot of land do I possess,
+ No cottage in this wilderness;
+ A poor wayfaring man,
+ I lodge awhile in tents below,
+ Or gladly wander to and fro
+ Till I my Canaan gain.
+
+More modern voices sing the John Wesley hymn to the tune "Habakkuk," by
+Edward Hodges. It has a lively three-four step, and finer melody than
+the old.
+
+Edward Hodges was born in Bristol, Eng., July 20, 1796, and died there
+Sept. 1876. Organist at Bristol in his youth, he was graduated at
+Cambridge and in 1825 received the doctorate of music from that
+University. In 1835 he went to Toronto, Canada, and two years later to
+New York city, where he was many years Director of Music at Trinity
+Church. Returned to Bristol in 1863.
+
+
+"WHEN GATHERING CLOUDS AROUND I VIEW."
+
+One of the restful strains breathed out of illness and affliction to
+relieve one soul and bless millions. It was written by Sir Robert Grant
+(1785-1838).
+
+ When gathering clouds around I view,
+ And days are dark, and friends are few,
+ On Him I lean who not in vain
+ Experienced every human pain.
+
+The lines are no less admirable for their literary beauty than for their
+feeling and their faith. Unconsciously, it may be, to the writer, in
+this and the following stanza are woven an epitome of the Saviour's
+history. He--
+
+ Experienced every human pain,
+ --felt temptation's power,
+ --wept o'er Lazarus dead,
+
+--and the crowning assurance of Jesus' human sympathy is expressed in
+the closing prayer,--
+
+ --when I have safely passed
+ Thro' every conflict but the last,
+ Still, still unchanging watch beside
+ My painful bed--for _Thou hast died_.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Of the few suitable six-line long metre part songs, the charming Russian
+tone-poem of "St. Petersburg" by Dimitri Bortniansky is borrowed for the
+hymn in some collections, and with excellent effect. It accords well
+with the mood and tenor of the words, and deserves to stay with it as
+long as the hymn holds its place.
+
+Dimitri Bortniansky, called "The Russian Palestrina," was born in 1752
+at Gloukoff, a village of the Ukraine. He studied music in Moscow, St.
+Petersburg, Vienna, Rome and Naples. Returning to his native land, he
+was made Director of Empress Catharine's church choir. He reformed and
+systematized Russian church music, and wrote original scores in the
+intervals of his teaching labors. His works are chiefly motets and
+concertos, which show his genius for rich harmony. Died 1825.
+
+
+"JUST AS I AM, WITHOUT ONE PLEA."
+
+Charlotte Elliott, of Brighton, Eng., would have been well-known through
+her admired and useful hymns,--
+
+ My God, my Father, while I stray,
+
+ My God, is any hour so sweet,
+
+ With tearful eyes I look around,
+
+--and many others. But in "Just as I am" she made herself a voice in the
+soul of every hesitating penitent. The currency of the hymn has been too
+swift for its authorship and history to keep up with, but it is a
+blessed law of influence that good works out-run biographies. This
+master-piece of metrical gospel might be called Miss Elliott's
+spiritual-birth hymn, for a reply of Dr. Caesar Malan of Geneva was its
+prompting cause. The young lady was a stranger to personal religion
+when, one day, the good man, while staying at her father's house, in his
+gentle way introduced the subject. She resented it, but afterwards,
+stricken in spirit by his words, came to him with apologies and an
+inquiry that confessed a new concern of mind. "You speak of coming to
+Jesus, but how? I'm not fit to come."
+
+"Come just as you are," said Dr. Malan.
+
+The hymn tells the result.
+
+Like all the other hymns bound up in her _Invalid's Hymn-book_, it was
+poured from out the heart of one who, as the phrase is, "never knew a
+well day"--though she lived to see her eighty-second year.
+
+Illustrative of the way it appeals to the afflicted, a little anecdote
+was told by the eloquent John B. Gough of his accidental seat-mate in a
+city church service. A man of strange appearance was led by the kind
+usher or sexton to the pew he occupied. Mr. Gough eyed him with strong
+aversion. The man's face was mottled, his limbs and mouth twitched, and
+he mumbled singular sounds. When the congregation sang he attempted to
+sing, but made fearful work of it. During the organ interlude he leaned
+toward Mr. Gough and asked how the next verse began. It was--
+
+ Just as I am, poor, wretched, blind.
+
+"That's it," sobbed the strange man, "I'm blind--God help me!"--and the
+tears ran down his face--"and I'm wretched--and paralytic," and then he
+tried hard to sing the line with the rest.
+
+"After that," said Mr. Gough, "the poor paralytic's singing was as
+sweet to me as a Beethoven symphony."
+
+Charlotte Elliott was born March 18, 1789, and died in Brighton, Sept.
+22, 1871. She stands in the front rank of female hymn-writers.
+
+The tune of "Woodworth," by William B. Bradbury, has mostly superseded
+Mason's "Elliott," and is now the accepted music of this lyric of
+perfect faith and pious surrender.
+
+ Just as I am,--Thy love unknown
+ Hath broken every barrier down,
+ Now to be Thine, yea, Thine alone,
+ O Lamb of God, I come, I come.
+
+
+"MY HOPE IS BUILT ON NOTHING LESS."
+
+The Rev. Edward Mote was born in London, 1797. According to his own
+testimony his parents were not God-fearing people, and he "went to a
+school where no Bible was allowed;" but at the age of sixteen he
+received religious impressions from a sermon of John Hyatt in Tottenham
+Court Chapel, was converted two years later, studied for the ministry,
+and ultimately became a faithful preacher of the gospel. Settled as
+pastor of the Baptist Church in Horsham, Sussex, he remained there
+twenty-six years--until his death, Nov. 13, 1874. The refrain of his
+hymn came to him one Sabbath when on his way to Holborn to exchange
+pulpits:
+
+ On Christ the solid rock I stand,
+ All other ground is sinking sand.
+
+There were originally six stanzas, the first beginning:
+
+ Nor earth, nor hell, my soul can move,
+ I rest upon unchanging love.
+
+The refrain is a fine one, and really sums up the whole hymn, keeping
+constantly at the front the corner-stone of the poet's trust.
+
+ My hope is built on nothing less
+ Than Jesus' blood and righteousness.
+ I dare not trust the sweetest frame,
+ But only lean on Jesus' name.
+ On Christ the solid Rock I stand
+ All other ground is sinking sand.
+
+ When darkness veils His lovely face
+ I trust in His unchanging grace,
+ In every high and stormy gale
+ My anchor holds within the veil.
+ On Christ the solid Rock, etc.
+
+Wm. B. Bradbury composed the tune (1863). It is usually named "The Solid
+Rock."
+
+
+"ABIDE WITH ME! FAST FALLS THE EVENTIDE."
+
+The Rev. Henry Francis Lyte, author of this melodious hymn-prayer, was
+born at Ednam, near Kelso, Scotland, June first, 1793. A scholar,
+graduated at Trinity College, Dublin; a poet and a musician, the
+hard-working curate was a man of frail physique, with a face of almost
+feminine beauty, and a spirit as pure and gentle as a little child's.
+The shadow of consumption was over him all his life. His memory is
+chiefly associated with the district church at Lower Brixham,
+Devonshire, where he became "perpetual curate" in 1823. He died at Nice,
+France, Nov. 20, 1847.
+
+On the evening of his last Sunday preaching and communion service he
+handed to one of his family the manuscript of his hymn, "Abide with me,"
+and the music he had composed for it. It was not till eight years later
+that Henry Ward Beecher introduced it, or a part of it, to American
+Congregationalists, and fourteen years after the author's death it began
+to be sung as we now have it, in this country and England.
+
+ Abide with me! Fast falls the eventide,
+ The darkness deepens,--Lord with me abide!
+ When other helpers fail, and comforts flee,
+ Help of the helpless, O abide with me!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Hold Thou Thy cross before my closing eyes;
+ Shine through the gloom, and point me to the skies;
+ Heaven's morning breaks, and earth's vain shadows flee;
+ In life, in death, O Lord, abide with me!
+
+
+_THE TUNE_
+
+There is a pathos in the neglect and oblivion of Lyte's own tune set by
+himself to his words, especially as it was in a sense the work of a
+dying man who had hoped that he might not be "wholly mute and useless"
+while lying in his grave, and who had prayed--
+
+ O Thou whose touch can lend
+ Life to the dead. Thy quickening grace supply,
+ And grant me swan-like my last breath to spend
+ In song that may not die!
+
+His prayer was answered in God's own way. Another's melody hastened his
+hymn on its useful career, and revealed to the world its immortal
+value.
+
+By the time it had won its slow recognition in England, it was probably
+tuneless, and the compilers of _Hymns Ancient and Modern_ (1861)
+discovering the fact just as they were finishing their work, asked Dr.
+William Henry Monk, their music editor, to supply the want. "In ten
+minutes," it is said, "Dr. Monk composed the sweet, pleading chant that
+is wedded permanently to Lyte's swan song."
+
+William Henry Monk, Doctor of Music, was born in London, 1823. His
+musical education was early and thorough, and at the age of twenty-six
+he was organist and choir director in King's College, London. Elected
+(1876) professor of the National Training School, he interested himself
+actively in popular musical education, delivering lectures at various
+institutions, and establishing choral services.
+
+His hymn-tunes are found in many song-manuals of the English Church and
+in Scotland, and several have come to America.
+
+Dr. Monk died in 1889.
+
+
+"COME, YE DISCONSOLATE."
+
+By Thomas Moore--about 1814. The poem in its original form differed
+somewhat from the hymn we sing. Thomas Hastings--whose religious
+experience, perhaps, made him better qualified than Thomas Moore for
+spiritual expression--changed the second line,--
+
+ Come, at God's altar fervently kneel,
+
+--to--
+
+ Come to the mercy seat,
+
+--and in the second stanza replaced--
+
+ Hope when all others die,
+
+--with--
+
+ Hope of the penitent;
+
+--and for practically the whole of the last stanza--
+
+ Go ask the infidel what boon he brings us,
+ What charm for aching hearts he can reveal.
+ Sweet as that heavenly promise hope sings us,
+ "Earth has no sorrow that heaven cannot heal,"
+
+--Hastings substituted--
+
+ Here see the Bread of life, see waters flowing
+ Forth from the throne of God, pure from above!
+ Come to the feast Love, come ever knowing
+ Earth has no sorrow but heaven can remove.
+
+Dr. Hastings was not much of a poet, but he could make a _singable_
+hymn, and he knew the rhythm and accent needed in a hymn-tune. The
+determination was to make an evangelical hymn of a poem "too good to
+lose," and in that view perhaps the editorial liberties taken with it
+were excusable. It was to Moore, however, that the real hymn-thought and
+key-note first came, and the title-line and the sweet refrain are his
+own--for which the Christian world has thanked him, lo these many
+years.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Those who question why Dr. Hastings' interest in Moore's poem did not
+cause him to make a tune for it, must conclude that it came to him with
+its permanent melody ready made, and that the tune satisfied him.
+
+The "German Air" to which Moore tells us he wrote the words, probably
+took his fancy, if it did not induce his mood. Whether Samuel Webbe's
+tune now wedded to the hymn is an arrangement of the old air or wholly
+his own is immaterial. One can scarcely conceive a happier yoking of
+counterparts. Try singing "Come ye Disconsolate" to "Rescue the
+Perishing," for example, and we shall feel the impertinence of divorcing
+a hymn that has found its musical affinity.
+
+
+"JESUS, I MY CROSS HAVE TAKEN."
+
+This is another well-known and characteristic hymn of Henry Francis
+Lyte--originally six stanzas. We have been told that, besides his bodily
+affliction, the grief of an unhappy division or difference in his church
+weighed upon his spirit, and that it is alluded to in these lines--
+
+ Man may trouble and distress me,
+ 'Twill but drive me to Thy breast,
+ Life with trials hard may press me,
+ Heaven will bring me sweeter rest.
+
+ O, 'tis not in grief to harm me
+ While Thy love is left to me,
+ O, 'tis not in joy to charm me
+ Were that joy unmixed with Thee.
+
+Tunes, "Autumn," by F.H. Barthelemon, or "Ellesdie," (formerly called
+"Disciple") from Mozart--familiar in either.
+
+
+"FROM EVERY STORMY WIND THAT BLOWS."
+
+This is the much-sung and deeply-cherished hymn of Christian peace that
+a pious Manxman, Hugh Stowell, was inspired to write nearly a hundred
+years ago. Ever since it has carried consolation to souls in both
+ordinary and extraordinary trials.
+
+It was sung by the eight American martyrs, Revs. Albert Johnson, John E.
+Freeman, David E. Campbell and their wives, and Mr. and Mrs. McMullen,
+when by order of the bloody Nana Sahib the captive missionaries were
+taken prisoners and put to death at Cawnpore in 1857. Two little
+children, Fannie and Willie Campbell, suffered with their parents.
+
+ From every stormy wind that blows,
+ From every swelling tide of woes
+ There is a calm, a sure retreat;
+ 'Tis found beneath the Mercy Seat.
+
+ Ah, whither could we flee for aid
+ When tempted, desolate, dismayed,
+ Or how the hosts of hell defeat
+ Had suffering saints no Mercy Seat?
+
+ There, there on eagle wings we soar,
+ And sin and sense molest no more,
+ And heaven comes down our souls to greet
+ While glory crowns the Mercy Seat.
+
+[Illustration: John B. Dykes]
+
+Rev. Hugh Stowell was born at Douglas on the Isle of Man, Dec. 3, 1799.
+He was educated at Oxford and ordained to the ministry 1823, receiving
+twelve years later the appointment of Canon to Chester Cathedral.
+
+He was a popular and effective preacher and a graceful writer.
+Forty-seven hymns are credited to him, the above being the best known.
+To presume it is "his best," leaves a good margin of merit for the
+remainder.
+
+"From every stormy wind that blows" has practically but one tune. It has
+been sung to Hastings "Retreat" ever since the music was made.
+
+
+"CHILD OF SIN AND SORROW."
+
+ Child of sin and sorrow, filled with dismay,
+ Wait not for tomorrow, yield thee today.
+ Heaven bids thee come, while yet there's room,
+ Child of sin and sorrow, hear and obey.
+
+Words and music by Thomas Hastings.
+
+
+"LEAD, KINDLY LIGHT."
+
+John Henry Newman, born in London, Feb. 21, 1801--known in religious
+history as Cardinal Newman--wrote this hymn when he was a young
+clergyman of the Church of England. "Born within the sound of Bow
+bells," says Dr. Benson, "he was an imaginative boy, and so
+superstitious, that he used constantly to cross himself when going into
+the dark." Intelligent students of the fine hymn will note this habit of
+its author's mind--and surmise its influence on his religious musings.
+
+The agitations during the High Church movement, and the persuasions of
+Hurrell Froude, a Romanist friend, while he was a tutor at Oxford,
+gradually weakened his Protestant faith, and in his unrest he travelled
+to the Mediterranean coast, crossed to Sicily, where he fell violently
+ill, and after his recovery waited three weeks in Palermo for a return
+boat. On his trip to Marseilles he wrote the hymn--with no thought that
+it would ever be called a hymn.
+
+When complimented on the beautiful production after it became famous he
+modestly said, "It was not the hymn but the _tune_ that has gained the
+popularity. The tune is Dykes' and Dr. Dykes is a great master."
+
+Dr. Newman was created a Cardinal of the Church of Rome in the Catholic
+Cathedral of London, 1879. Died Aug. 11, 1890.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Lux Benigna," by Dr. Dykes, was composed in Aug. 1865, and was the tune
+chosen for this hymn by a committee preparing the Appendix to _Hymns
+Ancient and Modern_. Dr. Dykes' statement that the tune came into his
+head while walking through the Strand in London "presents a striking
+contrast with the solitary origin of the hymn itself" (Benson).
+
+ Lead, kindly Light, amid th' encircling gloom,
+ Lead Thou me on.
+ The night is dark and I am far from home;
+ Lead Thou me on.
+ Keep Thou my feet; I do not ask to see
+ The distant scene,--one step enough for me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ So long Thy power hath bless'd me, sure it still
+ Will lead me on,
+ O'er moor and fen, o'er crag and torrent, till
+ The night is gone,
+ And with the morn those angel faces smile
+ Which I have loved long since, and lost awhile.
+
+
+"I HEARD THE VOICE OF JESUS SAY."
+
+Few if any Christian writers of his generation have possessed tuneful
+gifts in greater opulence or produced more vital and lasting treasures
+of spiritual verse than Horatius Bonar of Scotland. He inherited some of
+his poetic faculty from his grandfather, a clergyman who wrote several
+hymns, and it is told of Horatius that hymns used to "come to" him while
+riding on railroad trains. He was educated in the Edinburgh University
+and studied theology with Dr. Chalmers, and his life was greatly
+influenced by Dr. Guthrie, whom he followed in the establishment of the
+Free Church of Scotland.
+
+Born in 1808 in Edinburgh, he was about forty years old when he came
+back from a successful pastorate at Kelso to the city of his home and
+Alma Mater, and became virtually Chalmers' successor as minister of the
+Chalmers Memorial Church.
+
+The peculiar richness of Bonar's sacred songs very early created for
+them a warm welcome in the religious world, and any devout lyric or poem
+with his name attached to it is sure to be read.
+
+Dr. Bonar died in Edinburgh, July 31, 1889. Writing of the hymn, "I
+heard the voice," etc., Dr. David Breed calls it "one of the most
+ingenious hymns in the language," referring to the fact that the
+invitation and response exactly halve each stanza between them--song
+followed by countersong. "Ingenious" seems hardly the right word for a
+division so obviously natural and almost automatic. It is a simple art
+beauty that a poet of culture makes by instinct. Bowring's "Watchman,
+tell us of the night," is not the only other instance of similar
+countersong structure, and the regularity in Thomas Scott's little hymn,
+"Hasten, sinner, to be wise," is only a simpler case of the way a poem
+plans itself by the compulsion of its subject.
+
+ I heard the voice of Jesus say,
+ Come unto me and rest,
+ Lay down, thou weary one, lay down
+ Thy head upon My breast:
+
+ I came to Jesus as I was,
+ Weary and worn and sad,
+ I found in Him a resting-place,
+ And He has made me glad.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The old melody of "Evan," long a favorite; and since known everywhere
+through the currency given to it in the _Gospel Hymns_, has been in many
+collections connected with the words. It is good congregational
+psalmody, and not unsuited to the sentiment, taken line by line, but it
+divides the stanzas into quatrains, which breaks the happy continuity.
+"Evan" was made by Dr. Mason in 1850 from a song written four years
+earlier by Rev. William Henry Havergal, Canon of Worcester Cathedral,
+Eng. He was the father of Frances Ridley Havergal.
+
+The more ancient "Athens," by Felice Giardini (1716-1796), author of the
+"Italian Hymn," has clung, and still clings lovingly to Bonar's hymn in
+many communities. Its simplicity, and the involuntary accent of its
+sextuple time, exactly reproducing the easy iambic of the verses,
+inevitably made it popular, and thousands of older singers today will
+have no other music with "I heard the voice of Jesus say."
+
+"Vox Jesu," from the andante in one of the quartets of Louis Spohr
+(1784-1859), is a psalm-tune of good harmony, but too little feeling.
+
+An excellent tune for all the shades of expression in the hymn, is the
+arrangement by Hubert P. Main from Franz Abt--in A flat, triple time.
+Gentle music through the first fifteen bars, in alternate duet and
+quartet, utters the Divine Voice with the true accent of the lines, and
+the second portion completes the harmony in glad, full chorus--the
+answer of the human heart.
+
+"Vox Dilecti," by Dr. Dykes, goes farther and writes the Voice in B flat
+_minor_--which seems a needless substitution of divine sadness for
+divine sweetness. It is a tune of striking chords, but its shift of key
+to G natural (major) after the first four lines marks it rather for
+trained choir performance than for assembly song.
+
+It is possible to make too much of a dramatic perfection or a supposed
+indication of structural design in a hymn. Textual equations, such as
+distinguish Dr. Bonar's beautiful stanzas, are not necessarily
+technical. To emphasize them as ingenious by an ingenious tune seems,
+somehow, a reflection on the spontaneity of the hymn.
+
+Louis Spohr was Director of the Court Theatre Orchestra in Cassel,
+Prussia, in the first half of the last century. He was an eminent
+composer of both vocal and instrumental music, and one of the greatest
+violinists of Europe.
+
+Hubert Platt Main was born in Ridgefield, Ct., Aug. 17, 1839. He read
+music at sight when only ten years old, and at sixteen commenced writing
+hymn-tunes. Was assistant compiler with both Bradbury and Woodbury in
+their various publications, and in 1868 became connected with the firm
+of Biglow and Main, and has been their book-maker until the present
+time. As music editor in the partnership he has superintended the
+publication of more than five hundred music-books, services, etc.
+
+
+"I LOVE TO STEAL AWHILE AWAY."
+
+The burdened wife and mother who wrote this hymn would, at the time,
+have rated her history with "the short and simple annals of the poor."
+But the poor who are "remembered for what they have done," may have a
+larger place in history than many rich who did nothing.
+
+Phebe Hinsdale Brown, was born in Canaan, N.Y., in 1783. Her father,
+George Hinsdale, who died in her early childhood, must have been a man
+of good abilities and religious feeling, being the reputed composer of
+the psalm-tune, "Hinsdale," found in some long-ago collections.
+
+Left an orphan at two years of age, Phebe "fell into the hands of a
+relative who kept the county jail," and her childhood knew little but
+the bitter fare and ceaseless drudgery of domestic slavery. She grew up
+with a crushed spirit, and was a timid, shrinking woman as long as she
+lived. She married Timothy H. Brown, a house-painter of Ellington, Ct.,
+and passed her days there and in Monson, Mass., where she lived some
+twenty-five years.
+
+In her humble home in the former town her children were born, and it was
+while caring for her own little family of four, and a sick sister, that
+the incident occurred (August 1818), which called forth her tender hymn.
+She was a devout Christian, and in pleasant weather, whenever she could
+find the leisure, she would "steal away" at sunset from her burdens a
+little while, to rest and commune with God. Her favorite place was a
+wealthy neighbor's large and beautiful flower garden. A servant reported
+her visits there to the mistress of the house, who called the "intruder"
+to account.
+
+"If you want anything, why don't you come in?" was the rude question,
+followed by a plain hint that no stealthy person was welcome.
+
+Wounded by the ill-natured rebuff, the sensitive woman sat down the next
+evening with her baby in her lap, and half-blinded by her tears, wrote
+"An Apology for my Twilight Rambles," in the verses that have made her
+celebrated.
+
+She sent the manuscript (nine stanzas) to her captious neighbor--with
+what result has never been told.
+
+Crude and simple as the little rhyme was, it contained a germ of lyric
+beauty and life. The Rev. Dr. Charles Hyde of Ellington, who was a
+neighbor of Mrs. Brown, procured a copy. He was assisting Dr. Nettleton
+to compile the _Village Hymns_, and the humble bit of devotional verse
+was at once judged worthy of a place in the new book. Dr. Hyde and his
+daughter Emeline giving it some kind touches of rhythmic amendment,
+
+ I love to steal awhile away
+ From little ones and care,
+
+--became,--
+
+ I love to steal awhile away
+ From _every cumb'ring_ care.
+
+In the last line of this stanza--
+
+ In gratitude and prayer
+
+--was changed to--
+
+ In humble, grateful prayer,
+
+--and the few other defects in syllabic smoothness or literary grace
+were affectionately repaired, but the slight furbishing it received did
+not alter the individuality of Mrs. Brown's work. It remained
+_hers_--and took its place among the immortals of its kind, another
+illustration of how little poetry it takes to make a good hymn. Only
+five stanzas were printed, the others being voted redundant by both
+author and editor. The second and third, as now sung, are--
+
+ I love in solitude to shed
+ The penitential tear,
+ And all His promises to plead
+ Where none but God can hear.
+
+ I love to think on mercies past
+ And future good implore,
+ And all my cares and sorrows cast
+ On Him whom I adore.
+
+Phebe Brown died at Henry, Ill., in 1861; but she had made the church
+and the world her debtor not only for her little lyric of pious trust,
+but by rearing a son, the Rev. Samuel Brown, D.D., who became the
+pioneer American missionary to Japan--to which Christian calling two of
+her grandchildren also consecrated themselves.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Mrs. Brown's son Samuel, who, besides being a good minister, inherited
+his grandfather's musical gift, composed the tune of "Monson," (named in
+his mother's honor, after her late home), and it may have been the first
+music set to her hymn. It was the fate of his offering, however, to lose
+its filial place, and be succeeded by different melodies, though his own
+still survives in a few collections, sometimes with Collyer's "O Jesus
+in this solemn hour." It is good music for a hymn of _praise_ rather
+than for meditative verse. Many years the hymn has been sung to
+"Woodstock," an appropriate and still familiar tune by Deodatus Dutton.
+
+Dutton's "Woodstock" and Bradbury's "Brown," which often replaces it,
+are worthy rivals of each other, and both continue in favor as fit
+choral interpretations of the much-loved hymn.
+
+Deodatus Dutton was born Dec. 22, 1808, and educated at Brown University
+and Washington College (now Trinity) Hartford Ct. While there he was a
+student of music and played the organ at Dr. Matthews' church. He
+studied theology in New York city, and had recently entered the ministry
+when he suddenly died, Dec. 16, 1832, a moment before rising to preach a
+sermon. During his brief life he had written several hymn-tunes, and
+published a book of psalmody. Mrs. Sigourney wrote a poem on his death.
+
+
+"THERE'S A WIDENESS IN GOD'S MERCY."
+
+Frederick William Faber, author of this favorite hymn-poem, had a
+peculiar genius for putting golden thoughts into common words, and
+making them sing. Probably no other sample of his work shows better than
+this his art of combining literary cleverness with the most reverent
+piety. Cant was a quality Faber never could put into his religious
+verse.
+
+He was born in Yorkshire, Eng., June 28, 1814, and received his
+education at Oxford. Settled as Rector of Elton, in Huntingdonshire, in
+1843, he came into sympathy with the "Oxford Movement," and followed
+Newman into the Romish Church. He continued his ministry as founder and
+priest for the London branch of the Catholic congregation of St. Philip
+Neri for fourteen years, dying Sept. 26, 1863, at the age of forty-nine.
+
+His godly hymns betray no credal shibboleth or doctrinal bias, but are
+songs for the whole earthly church of God.
+
+ There's a wideness in God's mercy
+ Like the wideness of the sea;
+ There's a kindness in His justice
+ Which is more than liberty.
+ There is welcome for the sinner
+ And more graces for the good;
+ There is mercy with the Saviour,
+ There is healing in His blood.
+
+ There's no place where earthly sorrows
+ Are more felt than up in heaven;
+ There's no place where earthly failings
+ Have such kindly judgment given.
+ There is plentiful redemption
+ In the blood that has been shed,
+ There is joy for all the members
+ In the sorrows of the Head.
+
+ For the love of God is broader
+ Than the measure of man's mind,
+ And the heart of the Eternal
+ Is most wonderfully kind.
+ If our love were but more simple
+ We should take Him at His word,
+ And our lives would be all sunshine
+ In the sweetness of the Lord.
+
+No tone of comfort has breathed itself more surely and tenderly into
+grieved hearts than these tuneful and singularly expressive sentences of
+Frederick Faber.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The music of S.J. Vail sung to Faber's hymn is one of that composer's
+best hymn-tunes, and its melody and natural movement impress the
+meaning as well as the simple beauty of the words.
+
+Silas Jones Vail, an American music-writer, was born Oct., 1818, and
+died May 20, 1883. Another charming tune is "Wellesley," by Lizzie S.
+Tourjee, daughter of the late Dr. Eben Tourjee.
+
+
+"HE LEADETH ME! OH, BLESSED THOUGHT."
+
+Professor Gilmore, of Rochester University, N.Y., when a young Baptist
+minister (1861) supplying a pulpit in Philadelphia "jotted down this
+hymn in Deacon Watson's parlor" (as he says) and passed it to his wife,
+one evening after he had made "a conference-room talk" on the 23d Psalm.
+
+Mrs. Gilmore, without his knowledge, sent it to the _Watchman and
+Reflector_ (now the _Watchman_).
+
+Years after its publication in that paper, when a candidate for the
+pastorate of the Second Baptist Church in Rochester, he was turning the
+leaves of the vestry hymnal in use there, and saw his hymn in it. Since
+that first publication in the _Devotional Hymn and Tune Book_ (1865) it
+has been copied in the hymnals of various denominations, and steadily
+holds its place in public favor. The refrain added by the tunemaker
+emphasizes the sentiment of the lines, and undoubtedly enhances the
+effect of the hymn.
+
+"He leadeth me" has the true hymn quality, combining all the simplicity
+of spontaneous thought and feeling with perfect accent and liquid
+rhythm.
+
+ He leadeth me! Oh, blessed thought,
+ Oh, words with heavenly comfort fraught;
+ Whate'er I do, where'er I be,
+ Still 'tis God's hand that leadeth me!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Lord, I would clasp Thy hand in mine,
+ Nor ever murmur nor repine--
+ Content, whatever lot I see,
+ Since 'tis my God that leadeth me.
+
+Professor Joseph Henry Gilmore was born in Boston, April 29, 1834. He
+was graduated at Phillips Academy, Andover, at Brown University, and at
+the Newton Theological Institution, where he was afterwards Hebrew
+instructor.
+
+After four years of pastoral service he was elected (1867) professor of
+the English Language and Literature in Rochester University. He has
+published _Familiar Chats on Books and Reading_, also several college
+text-books on rhetoric, logic and oratory.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The little hymn of four stanzas was peculiarly fortunate in meeting the
+eye of Mr. William B. Bradbury, (1863) and winning his musical sympathy
+and alliance. Few composers have so exactly caught the tone and spirit
+of their text as Bradbury did when he vocalized the gliding measures of
+"He leadeth me."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+CHRISTIAN BALLADS.
+
+
+Echoes of Hebrew thought, if not Hebrew psalmody, may have made their
+way into the more serious pagan literature. At least in the more
+enlightened pagans there has ever revealed itself more or less the
+instinct of the human soul that "feels after" God. St. Paul in his
+address to the Athenians made a tactful as well as scholarly point to
+preface a missionary sermon when he cited a line from a poem of Aratus
+(B.C. 272) familiar, doubtless, to the majority of his hearers.
+
+Dr. Lyman Abbot has thus translated the passage in which the line
+occurs:
+
+ Let us begin from God. Let every mortal raise
+ The grateful voice to tune God's endless praise,
+ God fills the heaven, the earth, the sea, the air;
+ We feel His spirit moving everywhere,
+ And we His offspring are.[17] He, ever good,
+ Daily provides for man his daily food.
+ To Him, the First, the Last, all homage yield,--
+ Our Father wonderful, our help, our shield.
+
+[Footnote 17: [Greek: Tou gar kai genos esmen.]]
+
+
+"RISE, CROWNED WITH LIGHT."
+
+Alexander Pope, a Roman Catholic poet, born in London 1688, died at
+Twickenham 1744, was not a hymnist, but passages in his most serious and
+exalted flights deserve a tuneful accompaniment. His translations of
+Homer made him famous, but his ethical poems, especially his "Essay on
+Man," are inexhaustible mines of quotation, many of the lines and
+couplets being common as proverbs. His "Messiah," written about 1711, is
+a religious anthem in which the prophecies of Holy Writ kindle all the
+splendor of his verse.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The closing strain, indicated by the above line, has been divided into
+stanzas of four lines suitable to a church hymn-tune. The melody
+selected by the compilers of the _Plymouth Hymnal_, and of the
+_Unitarian Hymn and Tune Book_ is "Savannah," an American sounding name
+for what is really one of Pleyel's chorals. The music is worthy of
+Pope's triumphal song.
+
+ The seas shall waste, the skies to smoke decay,
+ Rocks fall to dust, and mountains melt away,
+ But fixed His Word; His saving power remains:
+ Thy realm shall last; thy own Messiah reigns.
+
+
+"OH, WHY SHOULD THE SPIRIT?"
+
+This is a sombre poem, but its virile strength and its literary merit
+have given it currency, and commended it to the taste of many people,
+both weak and strong, who have the pensive temperament. Abraham Lincoln
+loved it and committed it to memory in his boyhood. Philip Phillips set
+it to music, and sang it--or a part of it--one day during the Civil war
+at the anniversary of the Christian Sanitary Commission, when President
+Lincoln, who was present, called for its repetition.[18] It was written
+by William Knox, born 1789, son of a Scottish farmer.
+
+[Footnote 18: This account so nearly resembles the story of Mrs. Gates'
+"Your Mission," sung to a similar audience, on a similar occasion, by
+the same man, that a possible confusion by the narrators of the incident
+has been suggested. But that Mr. Phillips sang twice before the
+President during the war does not appear to be contradicted. To what air
+he sang the above verses is uncertain.]
+
+The poem has fourteen stanzas, the following being the first and two
+last--
+
+ Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud?
+ Like a swift-fleeting meteor, a fast-flying cloud
+ A flash of the lightning, a break of the wave,
+ He passeth from life to rest in the grave.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Yea, hope and despondency, pleasure and pain,
+ Are mingled together like sunshine and rain;
+ And the smile and the tear, the song and the dirge,
+ Still follow each other like surge upon surge.
+
+ 'Tis the wink of an eye; 'tis the draft of a breath
+ From the blossom of health to the paleness of death,
+ From the gilded saloon to the bier and the shroud,
+ Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud?
+
+Philip Phillips was born in Jamestown, Chautauqua Co., N.Y., Aug. 11,
+1834, and died in Delaware, O., June 25, 1895. He wrote no hymns and was
+not an educated musician, but the airs of popular hymn-music came to him
+and were harmonized for him by others, most frequently by his friends,
+S.J. Vail and Hubert P. Main. He compiled and published thirty-one
+collections for Sunday-schools and gospel meetings, besides the
+_Methodist Hymn and Tune Book_, issued in 1866.
+
+He was a pioneer gospel singer, and his tuneful journeys through
+America, England and Australia gave him the name of the "Singing
+Pilgrim," the title of his song collection (1867).
+
+
+"WHEN ISRAEL OF THE LORD BELOVED."
+
+The "Song of Rebecca the Jewess," in "Ivanhoe," was written by Sir
+Walter Scott, author of the Waverly Novels, "Marmion," etc., born in
+Edinburgh, 1771, and died at Abbotsford, 1832. The lines purport to be
+the Hebrew hymn with which Rebecca closed her daily devotions while in
+prison under sentence of death.
+
+ When Israel of the Lord beloved
+ Out of the land of bondage came
+ Her fathers' God before her moved,
+ An awful Guide in smoke and flame.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Then rose the choral hymn of praise,
+ And trump and timbrel answered keen,
+ And Zion's daughters poured their lays.
+ With priest's and warrior's voice between.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ By day along th' astonished lands
+ The cloudy Pillar glided slow,
+ By night Arabia's crimson'd sands
+ Returned the fiery Column's glow.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ And O, when gathers o'er our path
+ In shade and storm the frequent night
+ Be Thou, long suffering, slow to wrath,
+ A burning and a shining Light!
+
+The "Hymn of Rebecca" has been set to music though never in common use
+as a hymn. Old "Truro", by Dr. Charles Burney (1726-1814) is a grand
+Scotch psalm harmony for the words, though one of the Unitarian hymnals
+borrows Zeuner's sonorous choral, the "Missionary Chant." Both sound the
+lyric of the Jewess in good Christian music.
+
+
+"WE SAT DOWN AND WEPT BY THE WATERS."
+
+The 137th Psalm has been for centuries a favorite with poets and
+poetical translators, and its pathos appealed to Lord Byron when engaged
+in writing his _Hebrew Melodies_.
+
+Byron was born in London, 1788, and died at Missolonghi, Western Greece,
+1824.
+
+ We sat down and wept by the waters
+ Of Babel, and thought of the day
+ When the foe, in the hue of his slaughters,
+ Made Salem's high places his prey,
+ And ye, Oh her desolate daughters,
+ Were scattered all weeping away.
+
+--Written April, 1814. It was the fashion then for musical societies to
+call on the popular poets for contributions, and tunes were composed for
+them, though these have practically passed into oblivion.
+
+Byron's ringing ballad (from II Kings 19:35)--
+
+ Th' Assyrian came down like a wolf on the fold
+ And his cohorts were gleaming in purple and gold,
+
+--has been so much a favorite for recitation and declamation that the
+loss of its tune is never thought of.
+
+Another poetic rendering of the "Captivity Psalm" is worthy of notice
+among the lay hymns not unworthy to supplement clerical sermons. It was
+written by the Hon. Joel Barlow in 1799, and published in a pioneer
+psalm-book at Northampton, Mass. It is neither a translation nor
+properly a hymn but a poem built upon the words of the Jewish lament,
+and really reproducing something of its plaintive beauty. Two stanzas of
+it are as follows:
+
+ Along the banks where Babel's current flows
+ Our captive bands in deep despondence strayed,
+ While Zion's fall in deep remembrance rose,
+ Her friends, her children mingled with the dead.
+
+ The tuneless harps that once with joy we strung
+ When praise employed, or mirth inspired the lay,
+ In mournful silence on the willows hung,
+ And growing grief prolonged the tedious day.
+
+Like Pope, this American poet loved onomatope and imitative verse, and
+the last line is a word-picture of home-sick weariness. This "psalm"
+was the best piece of work in Mr. Barlow's series of attempted
+improvements upon Isaac Watts--which on the whole were not very
+successful. The sweet cantabile of Mason's "Melton" gave "Along the
+banks" quite an extended lease of life, though it has now ceased to be
+sung.
+
+Joel Barlow was a versatile gentleman, serving his country and
+generation in almost every useful capacity, from chaplain in the
+continental army to foreign ambassador. He was born in Redding, Ct.,
+1755, and died near Cracow, Poland, Dec. 1812.
+
+
+"AS DOWN IN THE SUNLESS."
+
+Thomas Moore, the poet of glees and love-madrigals, had sober thoughts
+in the intervals of his gaiety, and employed his genius in writing
+religious and even devout poems, which have been spiritually helpful in
+many phases of Christian experience. Among them was this and the four
+following hymns, with thirty-four others, each of which he carefully
+labelled with the name of a music composer, though the particular tune
+is left indefinite. "The still prayer of devotion" here answers, in
+rhyme and reality, the simile of the sea-flower in the unseen deep, and
+the mariner's compass represents the constancy of a believer.
+
+ As, still to the star of its worship, though clouded,
+ The needle points faithfully o'er the dim sea,
+ So, dark as I roam in this wintry world shrouded,
+ The hope of my spirit turns trembling to Thee.
+
+It is sung in _Plymouth Hymnal_ to Barnby's "St. Botolph."
+
+
+"THE TURF SHALL BE MY FRAGRANT SHRINE"
+
+Is, in part, still preserved in hymn collections, and sung to the noble
+tune of "Louvan," Virgil Taylor's piece. The last stanza is especially
+reminiscent of the music.
+
+ There's nothing bright above, below,
+ From flowers that bloom to stars that glow;
+ But in its light my soul can see
+ Some feature of Thy deity.
+
+
+"O THOU WHO DRY'ST THE MOURNER'S TEAR"
+
+Is associated in the _Baptist Praise Book_ with Woodbury's "Siloam."
+
+
+"THE BIRD LET LOOSE IN EASTERN SKIES"
+
+Has been sung in Mason's "Coventry," and the _Plymouth Hymnal_ assigns
+it to "Spohr"--a namesake tune of Louis Spohr, while the _Unitarian Hymn
+and Tune Book_ unites to it a beautiful triple-time melody from Mozart,
+and bearing his name.
+
+
+"THOU ART, O GOD, THE LIFE AND LIGHT."
+
+This is the best of the Irish poet's sacred songs--always excepting,
+"Come, Ye Disconsolate." It is said to have been originally set to a
+secular melody composed by the wife of Hon. Richard Brinsley Sheridan.
+It is joined to the tune of "Brighton" in the Unitarian books, and
+William Monk's "Matthias" voices the words for the _Plymouth Hymnal_.
+The verses have the true lyrical glow, and make a real song of praise as
+well a composition of more than ordinary literary beauty.
+
+ Thou art, O God, the life and light
+ Of all this wondrous world we see;
+ Its glow by day, its smile by night
+ Are but reflections caught from Thee.
+ Where'er we turn Thy glories shine,
+ And all things fair and bright are Thine.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ When night with wings of starry gloom
+ O'ershadows all the earth, and skies
+ Like some dark, beauteous bird, whose plume
+ Is sparkling with unnumbered eyes,
+ That sacred gloom, those fires divine,
+ So grand, so countless, Lord, are Thine.
+
+ When youthful spring around us breathes,
+ Thy Spirit warms her fragrant sigh,
+ And every flower the summer wreathes
+ Is born beneath that kindling eye.
+ Where'er we turn Thy glories shine,
+ And all things fair and bright are Thine.
+
+
+"MOURNFULLY, TENDERLY, BEAR ON THE DEAD."
+
+A tender funeral ballad by Henry S. Washburn, composed in 1846 and
+entitled "The Burial of Mrs. Judson." It is rare now in sheet-music form
+but the _American Vocalist_, to be found in the stores of most great
+music publishers and dealers, preserves the full poem and score.
+
+Its occasion was the death at sea, off St. Helena, of the Baptist
+missionary, Mrs. Sarah Hall Boardman Judson, and the solemn committal of
+her remains to the dust on that historic island, Sept. 1, 1845. She was
+on her way to America from Burmah at the time of her death, and the ship
+proceeded on its homeward voyage immediately after her burial. The
+touching circumstances of the gifted lady's death, and the strange
+romance of her entombment where Napoleon's grave was made twenty-four
+years before, inspired Mr. Washburn, who was a prominent layman of the
+Baptist denomination, and interested in all its ecclesiastical and
+missionary activities, and he wrote this poetic memorial of the event:
+
+ Mournfully, tenderly, bear on the dead;
+ Where the warrior has lain, let the Christian be laid.
+ No place more befitting, O rock of the sea;
+ Never such treasure was hidden in thee.
+
+ Mournfully, tenderly, solemn and slow;
+ Tears are bedewing the path as ye go;
+ Kindred and strangers are mourners today;
+ Gently, so gently, O bear her away.
+
+ Mournfully, tenderly, gaze on that brow;
+ Beautiful is it in quietude now.
+ One look, and then settle the loved to her rest
+ The ocean beneath her, the turf on her breast.
+
+Mrs. Sarah Judson was the second wife of the Rev. Adoniram Judson, D.D.,
+the celebrated pioneer American Baptist missionary, and the mother by
+her first marriage, of the late Rev. George Dana Boardman, D.D., LL.D.,
+of Philadelphia.
+
+The Hon. Henry S. Washburn was born in Providence, R.I., 1813, and
+educated at Brown University. During most of his long life he resided in
+Massachusetts, and occupied there many positions of honor and trust,
+serving in the State Legislature both as Representative and Senator. He
+was the author of many poems and lyrics of high merit, some of
+which--notably "The Vacant Chair"--became popular in sheet-music and in
+books of religious and educational use. He died in 1903.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"The Burial of Mrs. Judson" became favorite parlor music when Lyman
+Heath composed the melody for it--of the same name. Its notes and
+movement were evidently inspired by the poem, for it reproduces the
+feeling of every line. The threnody was widely known and sung in the
+middle years of the last century, by people, too, who had scarcely heard
+of Mrs. Judson, and received in the music and words their first hint of
+her history. The poem prompted the tune, but the tune was the garland of
+the poem.
+
+Lyman Heath of Bow, N.H., was born there Aug. 24, 1804. He studied
+music, and became a vocalist and vocal composer. Died July 30, 1870.
+
+
+"TELL ME NOT IN MOURNFUL NUMBERS."
+
+Longfellow's "Psalm of Life" was written when he was a young man, and
+for some years it carried the title he gave it, "What the Young Man's
+Heart Said to the Psalmist"--a caption altogether too long to bear
+currency.
+
+The history of the beloved poet who wrote this optimistic ballad of hope
+and courage is too well known to need recounting here. He was born in
+Portland, Me., in 1807, graduated at Bowdoin College, and was for more
+than forty years professor of Belles Lettres in Harvard University. Died
+in Cambridge, March 4, 1882. Of his longer poems the most read and
+admired are his beautiful romance of "Evangeline," and his epic of
+"Hiawatha," but it is hardly too much to say that for the last sixty
+years, his "Psalm of Life" has been the common property of all American,
+if not English school-children, and a part of their education. When he
+was in London, Queen Victoria sent for him to come and see her at the
+palace. He went, and just as he was seating himself in the waiting coach
+after the interview, a man in working clothes appeared, hat in hand, at
+the coach window.
+
+"Please sir, yer honor," said he, "an' are you Mr. Longfellow?"
+
+"I am Mr. Longfellow," said the poet.
+
+"An' did you write the Psalm of Life?" he asked.
+
+"I wrote the Psalm of Life," replied the poet.
+
+"An', yer honor, would you be willing to take a workingman by the hand?"
+
+Mr. Longfellow gave the honest Englishman a hearty handshake, "And"
+(said he in telling the story) "I never in my life received a compliment
+that gave me more satisfaction."
+
+The incident has a delightful democratic flavor--and it is perfectly
+characteristic of the amiable author of the most popular poem in the
+English language. The "Psalm of Life" is a wonderful example of the
+power of commonplaces put into tuneful and elegant verse.
+
+The thought of setting the poem to music came to the compiler of one of
+the Unitarian church singing books. Some will question, however, whether
+the selection was the happiest that could have been made. The tune is
+"Rathbun," Ithamar Conkey's melody that always recalls Sir John
+Bowring's great hymn of praise.
+
+
+"BUILD THEE MORE NOBLE MANSIONS."
+
+This poem by Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, known among his works as "The
+Chambered Nautilus," was considered by himself as his worthiest
+achievement in verse, and his wish that it might live is likely to be
+fulfilled. It is stately, and in character and effect a rhythmic sermon
+from a text in "natural theology." The biography of one of the little
+molluscan sea-navigators that continually enlarges its shell to adapt it
+to its growth inspired the thoughtful lines. The third, fourth and
+fifth stanzas are as follows:
+
+ Year after year beheld the silent toil
+ That spread the lustrous coil;
+ Still, as the spiral grew,
+ He left the last year's dwelling for the new,
+ Stole with soft step the shining archway through,
+ Built up its idle door,
+ Stretched in his last-found home, and knew the old no more.
+
+ Thanks for the heavenly message brought by thee,
+ Child of the wand'ring sea,
+ Cast from her lap forlorn!
+ From thy dead lips a clearer note is born
+ Than ever Triton blew from wreathed horn!
+ While on my ear it rings
+ Through the deep caves of thought I hear a voice that sings,
+
+ "Build thee more noble mansions, O my soul.
+ As the swift seasons roll:
+ Leave thy low-vaulted past!
+ Let each new temple, nobler than the last,
+ Shut thee from heaven with a dome more vast,
+ Till thou at length art free,
+ Leaving thy outgrown shell by life's unresting sea."
+
+Dr. Frederic Hedge included the poem in his hymn-book but without any
+singing-supplement to the words.
+
+
+WHITTIER'S SERVICE SONG.
+
+ It may not be our lot to wield
+ The sickle in the harvest field.
+
+If this stanza and the four following do not reveal all the strength of
+John G. Whittier's spirit, they convey its serious sweetness. The
+verses were loved and prized by both President Garfield and President
+McKinley. On the Sunday before the latter went from his Canton, O., home
+to his inauguration in Washington the poem was sung as a hymn at his
+request in the services at the Methodist church where he had been a
+constant worshipper.
+
+The second stanza is the one most generally recognized and oftenest
+quoted:
+
+ Yet where our duty's task is wrought
+ In unison with God's great thought,
+ The near and future blend in one,
+ And whatsoe'er is willed, is done.
+
+John Greenleaf Whittier, the poet of the oppressed, was born in
+Haverhill, Mass., 1807, worked on a farm and on a shoe-bench, and
+studied at the local academy, until, becoming of age, he went to
+Hartford, Conn., and began a brief experience in editorial life. Soon
+after his return to Massachusetts he was elected to the Legislature, and
+after his duties ended there he left the state for Philadelphia to edit
+the _Pennsylvania Freeman_. A few years later he returned again, and
+established his home in Amesbury, the town with which his life and works
+are always associated.
+
+He died in 1892 at Hampton Falls, N.H., where he had gone for his
+health.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Abends," the smooth triple-time choral joined to Whittier's poem by the
+music editor of the new _Methodist Hymnal_, speaks its meaning so well
+that it is scarcely worth while to look for another. Sir Herbert Stanley
+Oakeley, the composer, was born at Ealing, Eng., July 22, 1830, and
+educated at Rugby and Oxford. He studied music in Germany, and became a
+superior organist, winning great applause by his recitals at Edinburgh
+University, where he was elected Musical Professor.
+
+Archbishop Tait gave him the doctorate of music at Canterbury in 1871,
+and he was knighted by Queen Victoria in 1876.
+
+Besides vocal duets, Scotch melodies and student songs, he composed many
+anthems and tunes for the church--notably "Edina" ("Saviour, blessed
+Saviour") and "Abends," originally written to Keble's "Sun of my Soul."
+
+
+"THE BIRD WITH THE BROKEN PINION."
+
+This lay of a lost gift, with its striking lesson, might have been
+copied from the wounded bird's own song, it is so natural and so
+clear-toned. The opportune thought and pen of Mr. Hezekiah Butterworth
+gave being to the little ballad the day he heard the late Dr. George
+Lorimer preach from a text in the story of Samson's fall (Judges 16:21)
+"The Philistines took him, and put out his eyes, and brought him down to
+Gaza ... and he did grind in the prison-house." A sentence in the
+course of the doctor's sermon, "The bird with a broken pinion never
+soars as high again," was caught up by the listening author, and became
+the refrain of his impressive song. Rev. Frank M. Lamb, the tuneful
+evangelist, found it in print, and wrote a tune to it, and in his voice
+and the voices of other singers the little monitor has since told its
+story in revival meetings, and mission and gospel services throughout
+the land.
+
+ I walked through the woodland meadows
+ Where sweet the thrushes sing,
+ And found on a bed of mosses
+ A bird with a broken wing.
+ I healed its wound, and each morning
+ It sang its old sweet strain,
+ But the bird with a broken pinion
+ Never soared as high again.
+
+ I found a young life broken
+ By sin's seductive art;
+ And, touched with a Christ-like pity,
+ I took him to my heart.
+ He lived--with a noble purpose,
+ And struggled not in vain;
+ But the life that sin had stricken
+ Never soared as high again.
+
+ But the bird with a broken pinion
+ Kept another from the snare,
+ And the life that sin had stricken
+ Saved another from despair.
+ Each loss has its compensation,
+ There is healing for every pain
+ But the bird with a broken pinion
+ Never soars as high again.
+
+In the tune an extra stanza is added--as if something conventional were
+needed to make the poem a hymn. But the professional tone of the
+appended stanza, virtually all in its two lines--
+
+ Then come to the dear Redeemer,
+ He will cleanse you from every stain,
+
+--is forced into its connection. The poem told the truth, and stopped
+there; and should be left to fasten its own impression. There never was
+a more solemn warning uttered than in this little apologue. It promises
+"compensation" and "healing," but not perfect rehabilitation. Sin will
+leave its scars. Even He who "became sin for us" bore them in His
+resurrection body.
+
+Rev. Frank M. Lamb, composer and singer of the hymn-tune, was born in
+Poland, Me., 1860, and educated in the schools of Poland and Auburn. He
+was licensed to preach in 1888, and ordained the same year, and has
+since held pastorates in Maine, New York, and Massachusetts.
+
+Besides his tune, very pleasing and appropriate music has been written
+to the little ballad of the broken wing by Geo. C. Stebbins.
+
+[Illustration: Ellen M.H. Gates]
+
+
+UNDER THE PALMS.
+
+In the cantata, "Under the Palms" ("Captive Judah in Babylon")--the
+joint production of George F. Root[19] and Hezekiah Butterworth, several
+of the latter's songs detached themselves, with their music, from the
+main work, and lingered in choral or solo service in places where the
+sacred operetta was presented, both in America and England. One of these
+is an effective solo in deep contralto, with a suggestion of recitative
+and chant--
+
+ By the dark Euphrates' stream,
+ By the Tigris, sad and lone
+ I wandered, a captive maid;
+ And the cruel Assyrian said,
+ "Awake your harp's sweet tone!"
+
+ I had heard of my fathers' glory from the lips of holy men,
+ And I thought of the land of my fathers; I thought of my fathers'
+ land then.
+
+Another is--
+
+ O church of Christ! our blest abode,
+ Celestial grace is thine.
+ Thou art the dwelling-place of God,
+ The gate of joy divine.
+
+ Whene'er I come to thee in joy,
+ Whene'er I come in tears,
+ Still at the Gate called Beautiful
+ My risen Lord appears.
+
+--with the chorus--
+
+ Where'er for me the sun may set,
+ Wherever I may dwell,
+ My heart shall nevermore forget
+ Thy courts, Immanuel!
+
+[Footnote 19: See page 316.]
+
+
+"IF YOU CANNOT ON THE OCEAN."
+
+This popular Christian ballad, entitled "Your Mission," was written one
+stormy day in the winter of 1861-2 by Miss Ellen M. Huntington (Mrs.
+Isaac Gates), and made her reputation as one of the few didactic poets
+whose exquisite art wins a hearing for them everywhere. In a moment of
+revery, while looking through the window at the falling snow, the words
+came to her:
+
+ If you cannot on the ocean
+ Sail among the swiftest fleet.
+
+She turned away and wrote the lines on her slate, following with verse
+after verse till she finished the whole poem. "It wrote itself," she
+says in her own account of it.
+
+Reading afterwards what she had written, she was surprised at her work.
+The poem had a meaning and a "mission." So strong was the impression
+that the devout girl fell on her knees and consecrated it to a divine
+purpose. Free copies of it went to the Cooperstown, N.Y., local paper,
+and to the New York _Examiner_, and appeared in both. From that time the
+history and career of "Your Mission" presents a marked illustration of
+"catenal influence," or transmitted suggestion.
+
+In the later days of the Civil War Philip Phillips, who had a
+wonderfully sweet tenor voice, was invited to sing at a great meeting of
+the United States Christian Commission in the Senate Chamber at
+Washington, February, 1865, President Lincoln and Secretary Seward
+(then president of the commission) were there, and the hall was crowded
+with leading statesmen, army generals, and friends of the Union. The
+song selected by Mr. Phillips was Mrs. Gates' "Your Mission":
+
+ If you cannot on the ocean
+ Sail among the swiftest fleet,
+ Rocking on the highest billows,
+ Laughing at the storms you meet,
+ You can stand among the sailors
+ Anchored yet within the bay;
+ You can lend a hand to help them
+ As they launch their boats away.
+
+The hushed audience listened spell-bound as the sweet singer went on,
+their interest growing to feverish eagerness until the climax was
+reached in the fifth stanza:
+
+ If you cannot in the conflict
+ Prove yourself a soldier true,
+ If where fire and smoke are thickest
+ There's no work for you to do,
+ When the battlefield is silent
+ You can go with careful tread;
+ You can bear away the wounded,
+ You can cover up the dead.
+
+In the storm of enthusiasm that followed, President Lincoln handed a
+hastily scribbled line on a bit of paper to Chairman Seward,
+
+"Near the close let us have 'Your Mission' repeated."
+
+Mr. Phillips' great success on this occasion brought him so many calls
+for his services that he gave up everything and devoted himself to his
+tuneful art. "Your Mission" so gladly welcomed at Washington made him
+the first gospel songster, chanting round the world the divine message
+of the hymns. It was the singing by Philip Phillips that first impressed
+Ira D. Sankey with the amazing power of evangelical solo song, and
+helped him years later to resign his lucrative business as a revenue
+officer and consecrate his own rare vocal gift to the Christian ministry
+of sacred music. Heaven alone can show the birth-records of souls won to
+God all along the journeys of the "Singing Pilgrims," and the rich
+succession of Mr. Sankey's melodies, that can be traced back by a chain
+of causes to the poem that "wrote itself" and became a hymn. And the
+chain may not yet be complete. In the words of that providential poem--
+
+ Though they may forget the singer
+ They will not forget the song.
+
+Mrs. Ellen M.H. Gates, whose reputation as an author was made by this
+beautiful and always timely poem, was born in Torrington, Ct., and is
+the youngest sister of the late Collis P. Huntington. Her
+hymns--included in this volume and in other publications--are much
+admired and loved, both for their sweetness and elevated religious
+feeling, and for their poetic quality. Among her published books of
+verse are "Night," "At Noontide," and "Treasures of Kurium." Her address
+is New York City.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Sidney Martin Grannis, author of the tune, was born Sept. 23, 1827, in
+Geneseo, Livingston county, N.Y. Lived in Leroy, of the same state, from
+1831 to 1884, when he removed to Los Angeles, Cal., where several of his
+admirers presented him a cottage and grounds, which at last accounts he
+still occupies. Mr. Grannis won his first reputation as a popular
+musician by his song "Do They Miss Me at Home," and his "Only Waiting,"
+"Cling to the Union," and "People Will Talk You Know," had an equally
+wide currency. As a solo singer his voice was remarkable, covering a
+range of two octaves, and while travelling with members of the "Amphion
+Troupe," to which he belonged, he sang at more than five thousand
+concerts. His tune to "Your Mission" was composed in New Haven, Ct., in
+1864.
+
+
+"TOO LATE! TOO LATE! YE CANNOT ENTER NOW."
+
+"Too Late" is a thrilling fragment or side-song of Alfred Tennyson's,
+representing the vain plea of the five Foolish Virgins. Its tune bears
+the name of a London lady, "Miss Lindsay" (afterwards Mrs. J.
+Worthington Bliss). The arrangement of air, duo and quartet is very
+impressive[20].
+
+[Footnote 20: _Methodist Hymnal_, No. 743.]
+
+ "Late, late, so late! and dark the night and chill:
+ Late, late, so late! but we can enter still."
+ "Too late! too late! ye cannot enter now!"
+
+ "No light! so late! and dark and chill the night--
+ O let us in that we may find the light!"
+ "Too late! too late! ye cannot enter now!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Have we not heard the Bridegroom is so sweet?
+ O let us in that we may kiss his feet!"
+ "No, No--! too late! ye cannot enter now!"
+
+The words are found in "Queen Guinevere," a canto of the "Idyls of the
+King."
+
+
+"OH, GALILEE, SWEET GALILEE."
+
+This is the chorus of a charming poem of three stanzas that shaped
+itself in the mind of Mr. Robert Morris while sitting over the ruins on
+the traditional site of Capernaum by the Lake of Genneseret.
+
+ Each cooing dove, each sighing bough,
+ That makes the eve so blest to me,
+ Has something far diviner now,
+ It bears me back to Galilee.
+
+ CHORUS
+ Oh, Galilee, sweet Galilee,
+ Where Jesus loved so much to be;
+ Oh, Galilee, blue Galilee,
+ Come sing thy song again to me.
+
+Robert Morris, LL.D., born Aug. 31, 1818, was a scholar, and an expert
+in certain scientific subjects, and wrote works on numismatics and the
+"Poetry of Free Masonry." Commissioned to Palestine in 1868 on historic
+and archaeological service for the United Order, he explored the scenes
+of ancient Jewish and Christian life and event in the Holy Land, and
+being a religious man, followed the Saviour's earthly footsteps with a
+reverent zeal that left its inspiration with him while he lived. He died
+in the year 1888, but his Christian ballad secured him a lasting place
+in every devout memory.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The author wrote out his hymn in 1874 and sent it to his friend, the
+musician, Mr. Horatio R. Palmer,[21] and the latter learned it by heart,
+and carried it with him in his musings "till it floated out in the
+melody you know," (to use his own words.)
+
+[Footnote 21: See page 311.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+OLD REVIVAL HYMNS.
+
+
+The sober churches of the "Old Thirteen" states and of their successors
+far into the nineteenth century, sustained evening prayer-meetings more
+or less commonly, but necessity made them in most cases "cottage
+meetings" appointed on Sunday and here and there in the scattered homes
+of country parishes. Their intent was the same as that of "revival
+meetings," since so called, though the method--and the music--were
+different. The results in winning sinners, so far as they owed anything
+to the hymns and hymn-tunes, were apt to be a new generation of
+Christian recruits as sombre as the singing. "Lebanon" set forth the
+appalling shortness of human life; "Windham" gave its depressing story
+of the great majority of mankind on the "broad road," and other minor
+tunes proclaimed God's sovereignty and eternal decrees; or if a psalm
+had His love in it, it was likely to be sung in a similar melancholy
+key. Even in his gladness the good minister, Thomas Baldwin, of the
+Second Baptist Church, at Boston, North End, returning from Newport,
+N.H., where he had happily harmonized a discordant church, could not
+escape the strait-lace of a C minor for his thankful hymn--
+
+ From whence doth this union arise,
+ That hatred is conquered by love.
+
+"The Puritans took their pleasures seriously," and this did not cease to
+be true till at least two hundred years after the Pilgrims landed or
+Boston was founded.
+
+Time, that covered the ghastly faces on the old grave-stones with moss,
+gradually stole away the unction of minor-tune singing.
+
+The songs of the great revival of 1740 swept the country with positive
+rather than negative music. Even Jonathan Edwards admitted the need of
+better psalm-books and better psalmody.
+
+Edwards, during his life, spent some time among the Indians as a
+missionary teacher; but probably neither he nor David Brainerd ever saw
+a Christian hymn composed by an Indian. The following, from the early
+years of the last century, is apparently the first, certainly the only
+surviving, effort of a converted but half-educated red man to utter his
+thoughts in pious metre. Whoever trimmed the original words and measure
+into printable shape evidently took care to preserve the broken English
+of the simple convert. It is an interesting relic of the Christian
+thought and sentiment of a pagan just learning to prattle prayer and
+praise:
+
+ In de dark wood, no Indian nigh,
+ Den me look heaben, send up cry,
+ Upon my knees so low.
+ Dat God on high, in shinee place,
+ See me in night, with teary face,
+ De priest, he tell me so.
+
+ God send Him angel take me care;
+ Him come Heself and hear um prayer,
+ If Indian heart do pray.
+ God see me now, He know me here.
+ He say, poor Indian, neber fear,
+ Me wid you night and day.
+
+ So me lub God wid inside heart;
+ He fight for me, He take my part,
+ He save my life before.
+ God lub poor Indian in de wood;
+ So me lub God, and dat be good;
+ Me pray Him two times more.
+
+ When me be old, me head be gray,
+ Den He no lebe me, so He say:
+ Me wid you till you die.
+ Den take me up to shinee place,
+ See white man, red man, black man's face,
+ All happy 'like on high.
+
+ Few days, den God will come to me,
+ He knock off chains, He set me free,
+ Den take me up on high.
+ Den Indian sing His praises blest,
+ And lub and praise Him wid de rest,
+ And neber, neber cry.
+
+The above hymn, which may be found in different forms in old New England
+tracts and hymn-books, and which used to be sung in Methodist conference
+and prayer-meetings in the same way that old slave-hymns and the
+"Jubilee Singers" refrains are sometimes sung now, was composed by
+William Apes, a converted Indian, who was born in Massachusetts, in
+1798. His father was a white man, but married an Indian descended from
+the family of King Philip, the Indian warrior, and the last of the
+Indian chiefs. His grandmother was the king's granddaughter, as he
+claimed, and was famous for her personal beauty. He caused his
+autobiography and religious experience to be published. The original
+hymn is quite long, and contains some singular and characteristic
+expressions.
+
+The authorship of the tune to which the words were sung has been claimed
+for Samuel Cowdell, a schoolmaster of Annapolis Valley, Nova Scotia,
+1820, but the date of the lost tune was probably much earlier.
+
+In the early days of New England, before the Indian missions had been
+brought to an end by the sweeping away of the tribes, several fine hymns
+were composed by educated Indians, and were used in the churches. The
+best known is that beginning--
+
+ When shall we all meet again?
+
+It was composed by three Indians at the planting of a memorial pine on
+leaving Dartmouth College, where they had been studying. The lines
+indicate an expectation of missionary life and work.
+
+ When shall we all meet again?
+ When shall we all meet again?
+ Oft shall glowing hope expire,
+ Oft shall wearied love retire,
+ Oft shall death and sorrow reign
+ Ere we all shall meet again.
+
+ Though in distant lands we sigh,
+ Parched beneath a burning sky,
+ Though the deep between us rolls,
+ Friendship shall unite our souls;
+ And in fancy's wide domain,
+ There we all shall meet again.
+
+ When these burnished locks are gray,
+ Thinned by many a toil-spent day,
+ When around this youthful pine
+ Moss shall creep and ivy twine,
+ (Long may this loved bower remain!)
+ Here may we all meet again.
+
+ When the dreams of life are fled,
+ When its wasted lamps are dead,
+ When in cold oblivion's shade
+ Beauty, health, and strength are laid,
+ Where immortal spirits reign,
+ There we all shall meet again.
+
+This parting piece was sung in religious meetings as a hymn, like the
+other once so common, but later,--
+
+ "When shall we meet again,
+ Meet ne'er to sever?"
+
+--to a tune in B flat minor, excessively plaintive, and likely to sadden
+an emotional singer or hearer to tears. The full harmony is found in the
+_American Vocalist_, and the air is reprinted in the _Revivalist_
+(1868). The fact that minor music is the natural Indian tone in song
+makes it probable that the melody is as ancient as the hymn--though no
+date is given for either.
+
+Tradition says that nearly fifty years later the same three Indians were
+providentially drawn to the spot where they parted, and met again, and
+while they were together composed and sang another ode. Truth to tell,
+however, it had only one note of gladness, and that was in the first
+stanza:
+
+ Parted many a toil-spent year,
+ Pledged in youth to memory dear,
+ Still to friendship's magnet true,
+ We our social joys renew;
+ Bound by love's unsevered chain,
+ Here on earth we meet again.
+
+The remaining three stanzas dwell principally on the ravages time has
+made. The reunion ode of those stoical college classmates of a stoical
+race could have been sung in the same B flat minor.
+
+
+"AWAKED BY SINAI'S AWFUL SOUND."
+
+The name of the Indian, Samson Occum, who wrote this hymn (variously
+spelt Ockom, Ockum, Occam, Occom) is not borne by any public
+institution, but New England owes the foundation of Dartmouth College to
+his hard work. Dartmouth College was originally "Moore's Indian Charity
+School," organized (1750) in Lebanon, Ct., by Rev. Eleazer Wheelock and
+endowed (1755) by Joshua Moore (or More). Good men and women who had at
+heart the spiritual welfare of a fading race contributed to the school's
+support and young Indians resorted to it from both New England and the
+Middle States, but funds were insufficient, and it was foreseen that the
+charity must inevitably outgrow its missionary purpose and if continued
+at all must depend on a wider and more liberal patronage.
+
+Samson Occum was born in Mohegan, New London Co., Ct., probably in the
+year 1722. Converted from paganism in 1740 (possibly under the preaching
+of Whitefield, who was in this country at that time) he desired to
+become a missionary to his people, and entered Eleazer Wheelock's
+school. After four years study, then a young man of twenty-two, he began
+to teach and preach among the Montauk Indians, and in 1759 the
+Presbytery of Suffolk Co., L.I., ordained him to the ministry. A
+benevolent society in Scotland, hearing of, his ability and zeal, gave
+him an appointment, under its auspices, among the Oneidas in 1761, where
+he labored four years. The interests of the school at Lebanon, where he
+had been educated, were dear to him, and he was tireless in its cause,
+procuring pupils for it, and working eloquently as its advocate with
+voice and pen. In 1765 he crossed the Atlantic to solicit funds for the
+Indian school, and remained four years in England and Scotland,
+lecturing in its behalf, and preaching nearly four hundred sermons. As a
+result he raised ten thousand pounds. The donation was put in charge of
+a Board of Trustees of which Lord Dartmouth was chairman. When it was
+decided to remove the school from Lebanon, Ct., the efforts of Governor
+Wentworth, of New Hampshire, secured its location at Hanover in that
+state. It was christened after Lord Dartmouth--and the names of Occum,
+Moore and Wheelock retired into the encyclopedias.
+
+The Rev. Samson Occum died in 1779, while laboring among the Stockbridge
+(N.Y.) Indians. Several hymns were written by this remarkable man, and
+also "An Account of the Customs and Manners of the Montauks." The hymn,
+"Awaked by Sinai's Awful Sound," set to the stentorian tune of "Ganges,"
+was a tremendous sermon in itself to old-time congregations, and is
+probably as indicative of the doctrines which converted its writer as of
+the contemporary belief prominent in choir and pulpit.
+
+ Awaked by Sinai's awful sound,
+ My soul in bonds of guilt I found,
+ And knew not where to go,
+ Eternal truth did loud proclaim
+ "The sinner must be born again.
+ Or sink in endless woe."
+
+ When to the law I trembling fled,
+ It poured its curses on my head:
+ I no relief could find.
+ This fearful truth increased my pain,
+ "The sinner must be born again,"
+ And whelmed my troubled mind.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ But while I thus in anguish lay,
+ Jesus of Nazareth passed that way;
+ I felt His pity move.
+ The sinner, once by justice slain,
+ Now by His grace is born again,
+ And sings eternal Love!
+
+The rugged original has been so often and so variously altered and
+"toned down," that only a few unusually accurate aged memories can
+recall it. The hymn began going out of use fifty years ago, and is now
+seldom seen.
+
+The name "S. Chandler," attached to "Ganges," leaves the identity of the
+composer in shadow. It is supposed he was born in 1760. The tune
+appeared about 1790.
+
+
+"WHERE NOW ARE THE HEBREW CHILDREN?"
+
+This quaint old unison, repeating the above three times, followed by the
+answer (thrice repeated) and climaxed with--
+
+ Safely in the Promised Land,
+
+--was a favorite at ancient camp-meetings, and a good leader could keep
+it going in a congregation or a happy group of vocalists, improvising a
+new start-line after every stop until his memory or invention gave out.
+
+ They went up from the fiery furnace,
+ They went up from the fiery furnace,
+ They went up from the fiery furnace,
+ Safely to the Promised Land.
+
+Sometimes it was--
+
+ Where now is the good Elijah?
+
+--and,--
+
+ He went up in a chariot of fire;
+
+--and again,--
+
+ Where now is the good old Daniel?
+
+ He went up from the den of lions;
+
+--and so on, finally announcing--
+
+ By and by we'll go home for to meet him, [three times]
+ Safely in the Promised Land.
+
+The enthusiasm excited by the swinging rhythm of the tune sometimes rose
+to a passionate pitch, and it was seldom used in the more controlled
+religious assemblies. If any attempt was ever made to print the song[22]
+the singers had little need to read the music. Like the ancient runes,
+it came into being by spontaneous generation, and lived in phonetic
+tradition.
+
+[Footnote 22: Mr. Hubert P. Main believes he once saw "The Hebrew
+Children" in print in one of Horace Waters' editions of the _Sabbath
+Bell_.]
+
+A strange, wild paean of exultant song was one often heard from Peter
+Cartwright, the muscular circuit-preacher. A remembered fragment shows
+its quality:
+
+ Then my soul mounted higher
+ In a chariot of fire,
+ And the moon it was under my feet.
+
+There is a tradition that he sang it over a stalwart blacksmith while
+chastising him for an ungodly defiance and assault in the course of one
+of his gospel journeys--and that the defeated blacksmith became his
+friend and follower.
+
+Peter Cartwright was born in Amherst county, Va., Sept. 1, 1785, and
+died near Pleasant Plains, Sangamon county, Ill., Sept., 1872.
+
+
+"THE EDEN OF LOVE."
+
+This song, written early in the last century, by John J. Hicks, recalls
+the name of the eccentric traveling evangelist, Lorenzo Dow, born in
+Coventry, Ct., October 16, 1777; died in Washington, D.C., Feb. 2,
+1834. It was the favorite hymn of his wife, the beloved Peggy Dow, and
+has furnished the key-word of more than one devotional rhyme that has
+uplifted the toiling souls of rural evangelists and their greenwood
+congregations:
+
+ How sweet to reflect on the joys that await me
+ In yon blissful region, the haven of rest,
+ Where glorified spirits with welcome shall greet me,
+ And lead me to mansions prepared for the blest.
+ There, dwelling in light, and with glory enshrouded,
+ My happiness perfect, my mind's sky unclouded,
+ I'll bathe in the ocean of pleasure unbounded,
+ And range with delight through the Eden of love.
+
+The words and tune were printed in _Leavitt's Christian Lyre_, 1830.
+
+The same strain in the same metre is continued in the hymn of Rev. Wm.
+Hunter, D.D., (1842) printed in his _Minstrel of Zion_ (1845). J.W.
+Dadmun's _Melodian_ (1860) copied it, retaining, apparently, the
+original music, with an added refrain of invitation, "Will you go? will
+you go?"
+
+ We are bound for the land of the pure and the holy,
+ The home of the happy, the kingdom of love;
+ Ye wand'rers from God on the broad road of folly,
+ O say, will you go to the Eden above?
+
+The old hymn-tune has a brisk out-door delivery, and is full of revival
+fervor and the ozone of the pines.
+
+
+"O CANA-AN, BRIGHT CANA-AN"
+
+Was one of the stimulating melodies of the old-time awakenings, which
+were simply airs, and were sung unisonously. "O Cana-an" (pronounced in
+three syllables) was the chorus, the hymn-lines being either improvised
+or picked up miscellaneously from memory, the interline, "I am bound for
+the land of Cana-an," occurring between every two. John Wesley's "How
+happy is the pilgrim's lot" was one of the snatched stanzas swept into
+the current of the song. An example of the tune-leader's improvisations
+to keep the hymn going was--
+
+ If you get there before I do,--
+ _I am bound for the land of Cana-an!_
+ Look out for me, I'm coming too--
+ _I am bound for the land of Cana-an!_
+
+And then hymn and tune took possession of the assembly and rolled on in
+a circle with--
+
+ O Cana-an, bright Cana-an!
+ I am bound for the land of Cana-an;
+ O Cana-an it is my hap-py home,
+ I am bound for the land of Cana-an
+
+--till the voices came back to another starting-line and began again.
+There was always a movement to the front when that tune was sung,
+and--with all due abatement for superficial results in the sensation of
+the moment--it is undeniable that many souls were truly born into the
+kingdom of God under the sound of that rude woodland song.
+
+Both its words and music are credited to Rev. John Maffit, who probably
+wrote the piece about 1829.
+
+
+"A CHARGE TO KEEP I HAVE."
+
+This hymn of Charles Wesley was often heard at the camp grounds, from
+the rows of tents in the morning while the good women prepared their
+pancakes and coffee, and
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+was invariably old "Kentucky," by Jeremiah Ingalls. Sung as a solo by a
+sweet and spirited voice, it slightly resembled "Golden Hill," but
+oftener its halting bars invited a more drawling style of execution
+unworthy of a hymn that merits a tune like "St. Thomas."
+
+Old "Kentucky" was not field music.
+
+
+"CHRISTIANS, IF YOUR HEARTS ARE WARM."
+
+Elder John Leland, born in Grafton, Mass., 1754, was not only a
+strenuous personality in the Baptist denomination, but was well known
+everywhere in New England, and, in fact, his preaching trip to
+Washington (1801) with the "Cheshire Cheese" made his fame national. He
+is spoken of as "the minister who wrote his own hymns"--a peculiarity in
+which he imitated Watts and Doddridge. When some natural shrinking was
+manifest in converts of his winter revivals, under his rigid rule of
+immediate baptism, he wrote this hymn to fortify them:
+
+ Christians, if your hearts are warm,
+ Ice and cold can do no harm;
+ If by Jesus you are prized
+ Rise, believe and be baptized.
+
+He found use for the hymn, too, in rallying church-members who staid
+away from his meetings in bad weather. The "poetry" expressed what he
+wanted to say--which, in his view, was sufficient apology for it. It was
+sung in revival meetings like others that he wrote, and a few hymnbooks
+now long obsolete contained it; but of Leland's hymns only one survives.
+Gray-headed men and women remember being sung to sleep by their mothers
+with that old-fashioned evening song to Amzi Chapin's[23] tune--
+
+ The day is past and gone,
+ The evening shades appear,
+ O may we all remember well
+ The night of death draws near;
+
+--and with all its solemnity and other-worldness it is dear to
+recollection, and its five stanzas are lovingly hunted up in the few
+hymnals where it is found. Bradbury's "Braden," (_Baptist Praise Book_,
+1873,) is one of its tunes.
+
+[Footnote 23: Amzi Chapin has left, apparently, nothing more than the
+record of his birth, March 2, 1768, and the memory of his tune. It
+appeared as early as 1805.]
+
+Elder Leland was a remarkable revival preacher, and his prayers--as was
+said of Elder Jabez Swan's fifty or sixty years later--"brought heaven
+and earth together." He traveled through the Eastern States as an
+evangelist, and spent a season in Virginia in the same work. In 1801 he
+revisited that region on a curious errand. The farmers of Cheshire,
+Mass., where Leland was then a settled pastor, conceived the plan of
+sending "the biggest cheese in America" to President Jefferson, and
+Leland (who was a good democrat) offered to go to Washington on an
+ox-team with it, and "preach all the way"--which he actually did.
+
+The cheese weighed 1450 lbs.
+
+Elder Leland died in North Adams, Mass., Jan. 14, 1844. Another of his
+hymns, which deserved to live with his "Evening Song," seemed to be
+answered in the brightness of his death-bed hope:
+
+ O when shall I see Jesus
+ And reign with Him above,
+ And from that flowing fountain
+ Drink everlasting love?
+
+
+"AWAKE, MY SOUL, TO JOYFUL LAYS."
+
+This glad hymn of Samuel Medley is his thanksgiving song, written soon
+after his conversion. In the places of rural worship no lay of
+Christian praise and gratitude was ever more heartily sung than this at
+the testimony meetings.
+
+ Awake, my soul, to joyful lays,
+ And sing thy great Redeemer's praise;
+ He justly claims a song from me:
+ His loving-kindness, oh, how free!
+ Loving-kindness, loving-kindness,
+ His loving-kindness, oh, how free!
+
+
+_THE TUNE,_
+
+With its queer curvet in every second line, had no other name than
+"Loving-Kindness," and was probably a camp-meeting melody in use for
+some time before its publication. It is found in _Leavitt's Christian
+Lyre_ as early as 1830. The name "William Caldwell" is all that is known
+of its composer, though he is supposed to have lived in Tennessee.
+
+
+"THE LORD INTO HIS GARDEN COMES."
+
+Was a common old-time piece sure to be heard at every religious rally,
+and every one present, saint and sinner, had it by heart, or at least
+the chorus of it--
+
+ Amen, amen, my soul replies,
+ I'm bound to meet you in the skies,
+ And claim my mansion there, etc.
+
+The anonymous[24] "Garden Hymn, as old, at least, as 1800," has nearly
+passed out of reach, except by the long arm of the antiquary; but it
+served its generation.
+
+[Footnote 24: A "Rev." Mr. Campbell, author of "The Glorious Light of
+Zion," "There is a Holy City," and "There is a Land of Pleasure," has
+been sometimes credited with the origin of the Garden Hymn.]
+
+Its vigorous tune is credited to Jeremiah Ingalls (1764-1838).
+
+ The Lord into His garden comes;
+ The spices yield a rich perfume,
+ The lilies grow and thrive,
+ The lilies grow and thrive.
+ Refreshing showers of grace divine
+ From Jesus flow to every vine,
+ Which makes the dead revive,
+ Which makes the dead revive.
+
+
+"THE CHARIOT! THE CHARIOT!"
+
+Henry Hart Milman, generally known as Dean Milman, was born in 1791, and
+was educated at Oxford. In 1821 he was installed as university professor
+of poetry at Oxford, and it was while filling this position that he
+wrote this celebrated hymn, under the title of "The Last Day." It is not
+only a hymn, but a poem--a sublime ode that recalls, in a different
+movement, the tones of the "Dies Irae."
+
+Dean Milman (of St Paul's), besides his many striking poems and learned
+historical works, wrote at least twelve hymns, among which are--
+
+ Ride on, ride on in majesty,
+
+ O help us Lord; each hour of need
+ Thy heavenly succor give,
+
+ When our heads are bowed with woe,
+
+--which last may have been written soon after he laid three of his
+children in one grave, in the north aisle of Westminster Abbey. He
+lived a laborious and useful life of seventy-seven years, dying Sept.
+24, 1868.
+
+There were times in the old revivals when the silver clarion of the
+"Chariot Hymn" must needs replace the ruder blast of Occum in old
+"Ganges" and sinners unmoved by the invisible God of Horeb be made to
+behold Him--in a vision of the "Last Day."
+
+ The Chariot! the Chariot! its wheels roll in fire
+ When the Lord cometh down in the pomp of His ire,
+ Lo, self-moving, it drives on its pathway of cloud,
+ And the heavens with the burden of Godhead are bowed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The Judgment! the Judgment! the thrones are all set,
+ Where the Lamb and the white-vested elders are met;
+ There all flesh is at once in the sight of the Lord,
+ And the doom of eternity hangs on His word.
+
+The name "Williams" or "J. Williams" is attached to various editions of
+the trumpet-like tune, but so far no guide book gives us location, date
+or sketch of the composer.
+
+
+"COME, MY BRETHREN."
+
+Another of the "unstudied" revival hymns of invitation.
+
+ Come, my brethren, let us try
+ For a little season
+ Every burden to lay by,
+ Come and let us reason.
+
+ What is this that casts you down.
+ What is this that grieves you?
+ Speak and let your wants be known;
+ Speaking may relieve you.
+
+This colloquial rhyme was apt to be started by some good brother or
+sister in one of the chilly pauses of a prayer-meeting. The air (there
+was never anything more to it) with a range of only a fifth, slurred the
+last syllable of every second line, giving the quaint effect of a bent
+note, and altogether the music was as homely as the verse. Both are
+anonymous. But the little chant sometimes served its purpose wonderfully
+well.
+
+
+"BRETHREN, WHILE WE SOJOURN HERE."
+
+This hymn was always welcome in the cottage meetings as well as in the
+larger greenwood assemblies. It was written by Rev. Joseph Swain, about
+1783.
+
+ Brethren, while we sojourn here
+ Fight we must, but should not fear.
+ Foes we have, but we've a Friend,
+ One who loves us to the end;
+ Forward then with courage go;
+ Long we shall not dwell below,
+ Soon the joyful news will come,
+ "Child, your Father calls, 'Come home.'"
+
+The tune was sometimes "Pleyel's Hymn," but oftener it was sung to a
+melody now generally forgotten of much the same movement but slurred in
+peculiarly sweet and tender turns. The cadence of the last tune gave
+the refrain line a melting effect:
+
+ Child, your Father calls, "Come home."
+
+Some of the spirit of this old tune (in the few hymnals where the hymn
+is now printed) is preserved in Geo. Kingsley's "Messiah" which
+accompanies the words, but the modulations are wanting.
+
+Joseph Swain was born in Birmingham, Eng. in 1761. Bred among mechanics,
+he was early apprenticed to the engraver's trade, but he was a boy of
+poetic temperament and fond of writing verses. After the spiritual
+change which brought a new purpose into his life, he was baptized by Dr.
+Rippon and studied for the ministry. At the age of about twenty-five, he
+was settled over the Baptist church in Walworth, where he remained till
+his death, April 16, 1796.
+
+For more than a century his hymns have lived and been loved in all the
+English-speaking world. Among those still in use are--
+
+ How sweet, how heavenly is the sight,
+
+ Pilgrims we are to Canaan bound,
+
+ O Thou in whose presence my soul takes delight.
+
+
+"HAPPY DAY."
+
+ O happy day that fixed my choice.
+ --_Doddridge_.
+ O how happy are they who the Saviour obey.
+ --_Charles Wesley_.
+
+These were voices as sure to be heard in converts' meetings as the
+leader's prayer or text, the former sung inevitably to Rimbault's tune,
+"Happy Day," and the latter to a "Western Melody" quite as closely akin
+to Wesley's words.
+
+Edward Francis Rimbault, born at Soho, Eng., June 13, 1816, was at
+sixteen years of age organist at the Soho Swiss Church, and became a
+skilled though not a prolific composer. He once received--and
+declined--the offer of an appointment as professor of music in Harvard
+College. Died of a lingering illness Sept, 26, 1876.
+
+
+"COME, HOLY SPIRIT, HEAVENLY DOVE."
+ --_Watts_.
+
+This was the immortal song-litany that fitted almost anywhere into every
+service. The Presbyterians and Congregationalists sang it in Tansur's
+"St. Martins," the Baptists in William Jones' "Stephens" and the
+Methodists in Maxim's "Turner" (which had the most music), but the hymn
+went about as well with one as with another.
+
+The Rev. William Jones (1726-1800) an English rector, and Abraham Maxim
+of Buckfield, Me., (1773-1829) contributed quite a liberal share of the
+"continental" tunes popular in the latter part of the 18th century.
+Maxim was eccentric, but the tradition that an unfortunate affair of the
+heart once drove him into the woods to make away with himself, but a
+bird on the roof of a logger's hut, making plaintive sounds,
+interrupted him, and he sat down and wrote the tune "Hallowell," on a
+strip of white birch bark, is more likely legendary. The following
+words, said to have inspired his minor tune, are still set to it in the
+old collections:
+
+ As on some lonely building's top
+ The sparrow makes her moan,
+ Far from the tents of joy and hope
+ I sit and grieve alone.[25]
+
+[Footnote 25: Versified by Nahum Tate from Ps. 102:7.]
+
+Maxim was fond of the minor mode, but his minors, like "Hallowell," "New
+Durham," etc., are things of the past. His major chorals and fugues,
+such as "Portland," "Buckfield," and "Turner" had in them the spirit of
+healthier melody and longer life. He published at least two collections,
+_The Oriental Harmony_, in 1802, and _The Northern Harmony_, in 1805.
+
+William Tansur (Tans-ur), author of "St. Martins" (1669-1783), was an
+organist, composer, compiler, and theoretical writer. He was born at
+Barnes, Surrey, Eng., (according to one account,) and died at St.
+Neot's.
+
+
+"COME, THOU FOUNT OF EVERY BLESSING."
+
+This hymn of Rev. Robert Robinson was almost always heard in the tune of
+"Nettleton," composed by John Wyeth, about 1812. The more wavy melody of
+"Sicily" (or "Sicilian Hymn") sometimes carried the verses, but never
+with the same sympathetic unction. The sing-song movement and accent of
+old "Nettleton" made it the country favorite.
+
+Robert Robinson, born in Norfolk, Eng., Sept. 27, 1735, was a poor boy,
+left fatherless at eight years of age, and apprenticed to a barber, but
+was converted by the preaching of Whitefield and studied till he
+obtained a good education, and was ordained to the Methodist ministry.
+He is supposed to have written his well-known hymn in 1758. A certain
+unsteadiness of mind, however, caused him to revise his religious
+beliefs too often for his spiritual health or enjoyment, and after
+preaching as a Methodist, a Baptist, and an Independent, he finally
+became a Socinian. On a stage-coach journey, when a lady
+fellow-passenger began singing "Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing," to
+relieve the monotony of the ride, he said to her, "Madam, I am the
+unhappy man who wrote that hymn many years ago; and I would give a
+thousand worlds, if I had them, if I could feel as I felt then."
+
+Robinson died June 9, 1790.
+
+John Wyeth was born in Cambridge, Mass., 1792, and died at Harrisburg,
+Pa., 1858. He was a musician and publisher, and issued a Music Book,
+_Wyeth's Repository of Sacred Music_.
+
+
+"A POOR WAYFARING MAN OF GRIEF,"
+
+Written by James Montgomery, Dec., 1826, was a hymn of tide and headway
+in George Coles' tune of "Duane St.," with a step that made every heart
+beat time. The four picturesque eight-line stanzas made a practical
+sermon in verse and song from Matt. 25:35, telling how--
+
+ A poor wayfaring man of grief
+ Hath often crossed me on my way,
+ Who sued so humbly for relief
+ That I could never answer nay.
+ I had no power to ask his name,
+ Whither he went or whence he came,
+ Yet there was something in his eye
+ That won my love, I knew not why;
+
+--and in the second and third stanzas the narrator relates how he
+entertained him, and this was the sequel--
+
+ Then in a moment to my view
+ The stranger started from disguise
+ The token in His hand I knew;
+ My Saviour stood before my eyes.
+
+When once that song was started, every tongue took it up, (and it was
+strange if every foot did not count the measure,) and the coldest
+kindled with gospel warmth as the story swept on.[26]
+
+[Footnote 26: Montgomery's poem, "The Stranger," has seven stanzas. The
+full dramatic effect of their connection could only be produced by a set
+piece.]
+
+
+"WHEN FOR ETERNAL WORLDS I STEER."
+
+It was no solitary experience for hearers in a house of prayer where the
+famous Elder Swan held the pulpit, to feel a climactic thrill at the
+sudden breaking out of the eccentric orator with this song in the very
+middle of his sermon--
+
+ When for eternal worlds I steer,
+ And seas are calm and skies are clear,
+ And faith in lively exercise,
+ And distant hills of Canaan rise,
+ My soul for joy then claps her wings,
+ And loud her lovely sonnet sings,
+ "Vain world, adieu!"
+
+ With cheerful hope her eyes explore
+ Each landmark on the distant shore,
+ The trees of life, the pastures green,
+ The golden streets, the crystal stream,
+ Again for joy, she claps her wings,
+ And loud her lovely sonnet sings,
+ "Vain world, adieu!"
+
+Elder Jabez Swan was born in Stonington, Ct., Feb. 23, 1800, and died
+1884. He was a tireless worker as a pastor (long in New London, Ct.,)
+and a still harder toiler in the field as an evangelist and as a helper
+eagerly called for in revivals; and, through all, he was as happy as a
+boy in vacation. He was unlearned in the technics of the schools, but
+always eloquent and armed with ready wit; unpolished, but poetical as a
+Hebrew prophet and as terrible in his treatment of sin. Scoffers and
+"hoodlums" who interrupted him in his meetings never interrupted him but
+once.
+
+[Illustration: James Montgomery]
+
+The more important and canonical hymnals and praise-books had no place
+for "Sonnet," as the bugle-like air to this hymn was called. Rev.
+Jonathan Aldrich, about 1860, harmonized it in his _Sacred Lyre_, but
+this, and the few other old vestry and field manuals that contain it,
+were compiled before it became the fashion to date and authenticate
+hymns and tunes. In this case both are anonymous. Another (and probably
+earlier) tune sung to the same words is credited to "S. Arnold," and
+appears to have been composed about 1790.
+
+
+"I'M A PILGRIM, AND I'M A STRANGER."
+
+This hymn still lives--and is likely to live, at least in collections
+that print revival music. Mrs. Mary Stanley (Bunce) Dana, born in
+Beaufort, S.C., Feb. 15, 1810, wrote it while living in a northern
+state, where her husband died. By the name Dana she is known in
+hymnology, though she afterwards became Mrs. Shindler. The tune
+identified with the hymn, "I'm a Pilgrim," is untraced, save that it is
+said to be an "Italian Air," and that its original title was "Buono
+Notte" (good night).
+
+No other hymn better expresses the outreaching of ardent faith. Its very
+repetitions emphasize and sweeten the vision of longed-for fruition.
+
+ I can tarry, I can tarry but a night,
+ Do not detain me, for I am going.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ There the sunbeams are ever shining,
+ O my longing heart, my longing heart is there.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Of that country to which I'm going,
+ My Redeemer, my Redeemer is the light.
+ There is no sorrow, nor any sighing,
+ Nor any sin there, nor any dying,
+ I'm a pilgrim, etc.
+
+The same devout poetess also wrote (1840) the once popular consolatory
+hymn,--
+
+ O sing to me of heaven
+ When I'm about to die,
+
+--sung to the familiar tune by Rev. E.W. Dunbar; also to a melody
+composed 1854 by Dr. William Miller.
+
+The line was first written--
+
+ When _I am called_ to die,
+
+--in the author's copy. The hymn (occasioned by the death of a pious
+friend) was written Jan. 15, 1840.
+
+Mrs. Dana (Shindler) died in Texas, Feb. 8, 1883.
+
+
+"JOYFULLY, JOYFULLY ONWARD I MOVE."
+
+The maker of this hymn has been confounded with the maker of its
+tune--partly, perhaps, from the fact that the real composer of the tune
+also wrote hymns. The author of the words was the Rev. William Hunter,
+D.D., an Irish-American, and a Methodist minister. He was born near
+Ballymoney, County Antrim, Ire., May, 1811, and was brought to America
+when a child six years old. He received his education in the common
+schools and at Madison College, Hamilton, N.Y., (now Madison
+University), and was successively a pastor, editor and Hebrew professor.
+Besides his work in these different callings, he wrote many helpful
+hymns--in all one hundred and twenty-five--of which "Joyfully,
+Joyfully," dated 1842, is the best. It began originally with the line--
+
+ Friends fondly cherished have passed on before,
+
+--and the line,--
+
+ Home to the land of delight I will go.
+
+--was written,--
+
+ Home to the land of bright spirits I'll go.
+
+Dr. Hunter died in Ohio, 1877.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Rev. Abraham Dow Merrill, the author of the music to this triumphal
+death-song, was born in Salem, N.H., 1796, and died April 29, 1878. He
+also was a Methodist minister, and is still everywhere remembered by the
+denomination to which he belonged in New Hampshire and Vermont. He rode
+over these states mingling in revival scenes many years. His picture
+bears a close resemblance to that of Washington, and he was somewhat
+famous for this resemblance. His work was everywhere blessed, and he
+left an imperishable influence in New England. The tune, linked with Dr.
+Hunter's hymn, formed the favorite melody which has been the dying song
+of many who learned to sing it amid the old revival scenes:
+
+ Death, with thy weapons of war lay me low;
+ Strike, king of terrors; I fear not the blow.
+ Jesus has broken the bars of the tomb,
+ Joyfully, joyfully haste to thy home.
+
+
+"TIS THE OLD SHIP OF ZION, HALLELUJAH!"
+
+This may be found, vocalized with full harmony, in the _American
+Vocalist_. With all the parts together (more or less) it must have made
+a vociferous song-service, but the hymn was oftener sung simply in
+soprano unison; and there was sound enough in the single melody to
+satisfy the most zealous.
+
+ All her passengers will land on the bright eternal shore,
+ O, glory hallelujah!
+ She has landed many thousands, and will land as many more,
+ O, glory hallelujah!
+
+Both hymn and tune have lost their creators' names, and, like many
+another "voice crying in the wilderness," they have left no record of
+their beginning of days.
+
+
+"MY BROTHER, I WISH YOU WELL."
+
+ My brother, I wish you well,
+ My brother, I wish you well;
+ When my Lord calls I trust you will
+ Be mentioned in the Promised Land.
+
+Echoes that remain to us of those fervid and affectionate, as well as
+resolute and vehement, expressions of religious life as sung in the
+early revivals of New England, in parts of the South, and especially in
+the Middle West, are suggestive of spontaneous melody forest-born, and
+as unconscious of scale, clef or tempo as the song of a bird. The above
+"hand-shaking" ditty at the altar gatherings apparently took its tune
+self-made, inspired in its first singer's soul by the feeling of the
+moment--and the strain was so simple that the convert could join in at
+once and chant--
+
+ When my Lord comes I trust _I shall_
+
+--through all the loving rotations of the crude hymn-tune. Such
+song-births of spiritual enthusiasm are beyond enumeration--and it is
+useless to hunt for author or composer. Under the momentum of a
+wrestling hour or a common rapture of experience, counterpoint was
+unthought of, and the same notes for every voice lifted pleading and
+praise in monophonic impromptu. The refrains--
+
+ O how I love Jesus,
+
+ O the Lamb, the Lamb, the loving Lamb,
+
+ I'm going home to die no more,
+
+ Pilgrims we are to Canaan's land,
+
+ O turn ye, O turn ye, for why will you die,
+
+ Come to Jesus, come to Jesus, just now,
+
+--each at the sound of its first syllable brought its own music to every
+singer's tongue, and all--male and female--were sopranos together. This
+habit in singing those rude liturgies of faith and fellowship was
+recognized by the editors of the _Revivalist_, and to a multitude of
+them space was given only for the printed melody, and of this sometimes
+only the three or four initial bars. The tunes were the church's rural
+field-tones that everybody knew.
+
+Culture smiles at this unclassic hymnody of long ago, but its history
+should disarm criticism. To wanderers its quaint music and "pedestrian"
+verse were threshold call and door-way welcome into the church of the
+living God. Even in the flaming days of the Second Advent following, in
+1842-3, they awoke in many hardened hearts the spiritual glow that never
+dies. The delusion passed away, but the grace remained.
+
+The church--and the world--owe a long debt to the old evangelistic
+refrains that rang through the sixty years before the Civil War, some of
+them flavored with tuneful piety of a remoter time. They preached
+righteousness, and won souls that sermons could not reach. They opened
+heaven to thousands who are now rejoicing there.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+SUNDAY-SCHOOL HYMNS.
+
+
+_SHEPHERD OF TENDER YOUTH._
+
+[Greek: Stomion polon adaon]
+
+We are assured by repeated references in the patristic writings that the
+primitive years of the Christian Church were not only years of suffering
+but years of song. That the despised and often persecuted "Nazarenes,"
+scattered in little colonies throughout the Roman Empire, did not forget
+to mingle tones of praise and rejoicing with their prayers could readily
+be believed from the much-quoted letter of a pagan lawyer, written about
+as long after Jesus' death, as from now back to the death of John Quincy
+Adams--the letter of Pliny the younger to the Emperor Trajan, in which
+he reports the Christians at their meetings singing "hymns to Christ as
+to a god."
+
+Those disciples who spoke Greek seem to have been especially tuneful,
+and their land of poets was doubtless the cradle of Christian hymnody.
+Believers taught their songs to their children, and it is as certain
+that the oldest Sunday-school hymn was written somewhere in the classic
+East as that the Book of Revelation was written on the Isle of Patmos.
+The one above indicated was found in an appendix to the _Tutor_, a book
+composed by Titus Flavius Clemens of Alexandria, a Christian philosopher
+and instructor whose active life began late in the second century. It
+follows a treatise on Jesus as the Great Teacher, and, though his own
+words elsewhere imply a more ancient origin of the poem, it is always
+called "Clement's Hymn." The line quoted above is the first of an
+English version by the late Rev. Henry Martyn Dexter, D.D. It does not
+profess to be a translation, but aims to transfer to our common tongue
+the spirit and leading thoughts of the original.
+
+ Shepherd of tender youth,
+ Guiding in love and truth
+ Through devious ways;
+ Christ, our triumphant King,
+ We come Thy name to sing,
+ Hither our children bring
+ To shout Thy praise.
+
+The last stanza of Dr. Dexter's version represents the sacred song
+spirit of both the earliest and the latest Christian centuries:
+
+ So now, and till we die
+ Sound we Thy praises high,
+ And joyful sing;
+ Infants, and the glad throng
+ Who to Thy church belong
+ Unite to swell the song
+ To Christ our King.
+
+While they give us the sentiment and the religious tone of the old hymn,
+these verses, however, recognize the extreme difficulty of anything like
+verbal fidelity in translating a Greek hymn, and in this instance there
+are metaphors to avoid as being strange to modern taste. The first
+stanza, literally rendered and construed, is as follows:
+
+ Bridle of untaught foals,
+ Wing of unwandering birds,
+ Helm and Girdle of babes,
+ Shepherd of royal lambs!
+ Assemble Thy simple children
+ To praise holily,
+ To hymn guilelessly
+ With innocent mouths
+ Christ, the Guide of children.
+
+Figures like--
+
+ Catching the chaste fishes,
+
+ Heavenly milk, etc.
+
+--are necessarily avoided in making good English of the lines, and the
+profusion of adoring epithets in the ancient poem (no less than
+twenty-one different titles of Christ) would embarrass a modern song.
+
+Dr. Dexter might have chosen an easier metre for his version, if (which
+is improbable) he intended it to be sung, since a tune written to sixes
+and fours takes naturally a more decided lyrical movement and emphasis
+than the hymn reveals in his stanzas, though the second and fifth
+possess much of the hymn quality and would sound well in Giardini's
+"Italian Hymn."
+
+More nearly a translation, and more in the cantabile style, is the
+version of a Scotch Presbyterian minister, Rev. Hamilton M. Macgill,
+D.D., two of whose stanzas are these:
+
+ Thyself, Lord, be the Bridle
+ These wayward wills to stay;
+ Be Thine the Wing unwand'ring,
+ To speed their upward way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Let them with songs adoring
+ Their artless homage bring
+ To Christ the Lord, and crown Him
+ The children's Guide and King.
+
+The Dexter version is set to Monk's slow harmony of "St. Ambrose" in the
+_Plymouth Hymnal_ (Ed. Dr. Lyman Abbott, 1894) without the writer's
+name--which is curious, inasmuch as the hymn was published in the
+_Congregationalist_ in 1849, in _Hedge and Huntington's_ (Unitarian)
+_Hymn-book_ in 1853, in the _Hymnal of the Presbyterian Church_ in 1866,
+and in Dr. Schaff's _Christ in Song_ in 1869.
+
+Clement died about A.D. 220.
+
+
+Rev. Henry Martyn Dexter, D.D., for twenty-three years the editor of the
+_Congregationalist_, was born in Plymouth, Mass., Aug. 13, 1821. He was
+a graduate of Yale (1840) and Andover Divinity School (1844), a
+well-known antiquarian writer and church historian. Died Nov. 13, 1890.
+
+
+"HOW HAPPY IS THE CHILD WHO HEARS."
+
+This hymn was quite commonly heard in Sunday-schools during the
+eighteen-thirties and forties, and, though retained in few modern
+collections, its Sabbath echo lingers in the memory of the living
+generation. It was written by Michael Bruce, born at Kinneswood,
+Kinross-shire, Scotland, March 27, 1746. He was the son of a weaver, but
+obtained a good education, taught school, and studied for the ministry.
+He died, however, while in preparation for his expected work, July 5,
+1767, at the age of twenty-one years, three months and eight days.
+
+Young Bruce wrote hymns, and several poems, but another person wore the
+honors of his work. John Logan, who was his literary executor,
+appropriated the youthful poet's Mss. verses, and the hymn above
+indicated--as well as the beautiful poem, "To the Cuckoo,"[27] still a
+classic in English literature,--bore the name of Logan for more than a
+hundred years. In _Julian's Dictionary of Hymnology_ is told at length
+the story of the inquiry and discussion which finally exposed the long
+fraud upon the fame of the rising genius who sank, like Henry Kirke
+White, in his morning of promise.
+
+[Footnote 27:
+ Hail, beauteous stranger of the wood,
+ Attendant on the Spring;
+ Now Heaven repairs thy rural seat,
+ And woods thy welcome ring.]
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Old "Balerma" was so long the musical mouth-piece of the pious
+boy-schoolmaster's verses that the two became one expression, and one
+could not be named without suggesting the other.
+
+"Balerma" (Palermo) was ages away in style and sound from the later type
+of Sunday-school tunes, resembling rather one of Palestrina's chorals
+than the tripping melodies that took its place; but in its day juvenile
+voices enjoyed it, and it suited very well the grave but winning words.
+
+ How happy is the child who hears
+ Instruction's warning voice,
+ And who celestial Wisdom makes
+ His early, only choice!
+
+ For she hath treasures greater far
+ Than East and West unfold,
+ And her rewards more precious are
+ Than all their stores of gold.
+
+ She guides the young with innocence
+ In pleasure's path to tread,
+ A crown of glory she bestows
+ Upon the hoary head.
+
+Robert Simpson, author of the old tune,[28] was a Scottish composer of
+psalmody; born, about 1722, in Glasgow; and died, in Greenock, June,
+1838.
+
+[Footnote 28: The tune was evidently reduced from the still older
+"Sardius" (or "Autumn")--_Hubert P. Main_.]
+
+
+"O DO NOT BE DISCOURAGED."
+
+Written about 1803, by the Rev. John A. Grenade, born in 1770; died
+1806.
+
+ O do not be discouraged, }
+ For Jesus is your Friend; } _bis_
+ He will give you grace to conquer,
+ And keep you to the end.
+
+ Fight on, ye little soldiers, }
+ The battle you shall win, } _bis_
+ For the Saviour is your Captain,
+ And He has vanquished sin.
+
+ And when the conflict's over, }
+ Before Him you shall stand, } _bis_
+ You shall sing His praise forever
+ In Canaan's happy land.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The hymn was made popular thirty or more years ago in a musical
+arrangement by Hubert P. Main, with a chorus,--
+
+ I'm glad I'm in this army,
+ And I'll battle for the school.
+
+Children took to the little song with a keen relish, and put their whole
+souls--and bodies--into it.
+
+
+"LITTLE TRAVELLERS ZIONWARD"
+
+Belongs to a generation long past. Its writer was an architect by
+occupation, and a man whose piety equalled his industry. He was born in
+London 1791, and his name was James Edmeston. He loved to compose
+religious verses--so well, in fact, that he is said to have prepared a
+new piece every week for Sunday morning devotions in his family and in
+this way accumulated a collection which he published and called
+_Cottager's Hymns_. Besides these he is credited with a hundred
+Sunday-school hymns.
+
+ Little travellers Zionward,
+ Each one entering into rest
+ In the Kingdom of your Lord,
+ In the mansions of the blest,
+
+ There to welcome Jesus waits,
+ Gives the crown His followers win,
+ Lift your heads, ye golden gates,
+ Let the little travellers in.
+
+The original tune is lost--and the hymn is vanishing with it; but the
+felicity of its rhyme and rhythm show how easily it adapted itself to
+music.
+
+
+"I'M BUT A STRANGER HERE."
+
+The simple beauty of this hymn, and the sympathetic sweetness of its
+tune made children love to sing it, and it found its way into a few
+Sunday-school collections, though not composed for such use.
+
+A young Congregational minister. Rev. Thomas Rawson Taylor, wrote it on
+the approach of his early end. He was born at Osset, near Wakefield,
+Yorkshire, Eng., May 9, 1807, and studied in Bradford, where his father
+had taken charge of a large church, and at Manchester Academy and
+Airesdale College. Sensible of a growing ailment that might shorten his
+days, he hastened to the work on which his heart was set, preaching in
+surrounding towns and villages while a student, and finally quitting
+college to be ordained to his sacred profession. He was installed as
+pastor of Howard St. Chapel, Sheffield, July, 1830, when only
+twenty-three. But in less than three years his strength failed, and he
+went back to Bradford, where he occasionally preached for his father,
+when able to do so, during his last days. He died there March 15, 1835.
+Taylor was a brave and lovely Christian--and his hymn is as sweet as his
+life.
+
+ I'm but a stranger here,
+ Heaven is my home;
+ Earth is a desert drear,
+ Heaven is my home.
+
+ Dangers and sorrows stand
+ Round me on every hand;
+ Heaven is my Fatherland--
+ Heaven is my home.
+
+ What though the tempest rage,
+ Heaven is my home;
+ Short is my pilgrimage,
+ Heaven is my home.
+
+ And time's wild, wintry blast
+ Soon will be overpast;
+ I shall reach home at last--
+ Heaven is my home.
+
+In his last attempt to preach, young Taylor uttered the words, "I want
+to die like a soldier, sword in hand." On the evening of the same
+Sabbath day he breathed his last. His words were memorable, and
+Montgomery, who loved and admired the man, made them the text of a poem,
+part of which is the familiar hymn "Servant of God, well done."[29]
+
+[Footnote 29: See page 498]
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Sir Arthur Sullivan put the words into classic expression, but, to
+American ears at least, the tune of "Oak," by Lowell Mason, is the
+hymn's true sister. It was composed in 1854.
+
+
+"DEAR JESUS, EVER AT MY SIDE."
+
+One of Frederick William Faber's sweet and simple lyrics. It voices that
+temper and spirit in the human heart which the Saviour first looks for
+and loves best. None better than Faber could feel and utter the real
+artlessness of Christian love and faith.
+
+ Dear Jesus, ever at my side,
+ How loving must Thou be
+ To leave Thy home in heaven to guard
+ A sinful child like me.
+ Thy beautiful and shining face
+ I see not, tho' so near;
+ The sweetness of Thy soft low voice
+ I am too deaf to hear.
+
+ I cannot feel Thee touch my hand
+ With pressure light and mild,
+ To check me as my mother did
+ When I was but a child;
+ But I have felt Thee in my thoughts
+ Fighting with sin for me,
+ And when my heart loves God I know
+ The sweetness is from Thee.
+
+[Illustration: Fanny J. Crosby (Mrs. Van Alstyne)]
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Audientes" by Sir Arthur Sullivan is a gentle, emotional piece,
+rendering the first quatrain of each stanza in E flat unison, and the
+second in C harmony.
+
+
+"TIS RELIGION THAT CAN GIVE."
+
+This simple rhyme, which has been sung perhaps in every Sunday-school in
+England and the United States, is from a small English book by Mary
+Masters. In the preface to the work, we read, "The author of the
+following poems never read a treatise of rhetoric or an art of poetry,
+nor was ever taught her English grammar. Her education rose no higher
+than the spelling-book or her writing-master,"
+
+ 'Tis religion that can give
+ Sweetest pleasure while we live;
+ 'Tis religion can supply
+ Solid comfort when we die.
+ After death its joys shall be
+ Lasting as eternity.
+
+Save the two sentences about herself, quoted above, there is no
+biography of the writer. That she was good is taken for granted.
+
+The tune-sister of the little hymn is as scant of date or history as
+itself. No. 422 points it out in _The Revivalist_, where the name and
+initial seem to ascribe the authorship to Horace Waters.[30]
+
+[Footnote 30: From his _Sabbath Bell_. Horace Waters, a prominent
+Baptist layman, was born in Jefferson, Lincoln Co., Me., Nov. 1, 1812,
+and died in New York City, April 22, 1893. He was a piano-dealer and
+publisher.]
+
+
+"THERE IS A HAPPY LAND FAR, FAR AWAY"
+
+This child's hymn was written by a lover of children, Mr. Andrew Young,
+head master of Niddrey St. School, Edinburgh, and subsequently English
+instructor at Madras College, E.I. He was born April 23, 1807, and died
+Nov. 30, 1899, and long before the end of the century which his
+life-time so nearly covered his little carol had become one of the
+universal hymns.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+A Hindoo air or natural chanson, that may have been hummed in a pagan
+temple in the hearing of Mr. Young, was the basis of the little melody
+since made familiar to millions of prattling tongues.
+
+Such running tone-rhythms create themselves in the instinct of the ruder
+nations and tribes, and even the South African savages have their
+incantations with the provincial "clicks" that mark the singers' time.
+With an ear for native chirrups and trills, the author of our pretty
+infant-school song succeeded in capturing one, and making a Christian
+tune of it.
+
+The musician, Samuel Sebastian Wesley, sometime in the eighteen-forties,
+tried to substitute another melody for the lines, but "There is a happy
+land" needs its own birth-music.
+
+
+"I HAVE A FATHER IN THE PROMISED LAND."
+
+Another cazonet for the infant class. Instead of a hymn, however, it is
+only a refrain, and--like the ring-chant of the "Hebrew Children," and
+even more simple--owes its only variety to the change of one word. The
+third and fourth lines,--
+
+ My father calls me, I must go
+ To meet Him in the Promised Land,
+
+--take their cue from the first, which may sing,--
+
+ I have a Saviour----
+ I have a mother----
+ I have a brother----
+
+--and so on ad libitum. But the little ones love every sound and
+syllable of the lisping song, for it is plain and pleasing, and when a
+pinafore school grows restless nothing will sooner charm them into quiet
+than to chime its innocent unison.
+
+Both words and tune are nameless and storyless.
+
+
+"I THINK WHEN I READ THAT SWEET STORY"
+
+While riding in a stage-coach, after a visit to a mission school for
+poor children, this hymn came to the mind of Mrs. Jemima Thompson Luke,
+of Islington, England. It speaks its own purpose plainly enough, to
+awaken religious feeling in young hearts, and guide and sanctify the
+natural childlike interest in the sweetest incident of the Saviour's
+life.
+
+ I think when I read that sweet story of old
+ When Jesus was here among men,
+ How He called little children as lambs to His fold,
+ I should like to have been with them then.
+
+ I wish that His hands had been laid on my head,
+ And I had been placed on His knee,
+ And that I might have seen His kind look when He said,
+ "Let the little ones come unto me."
+
+This is not poetry, but it phrases a wish in a child's own way, to be
+melodized and fixed in a child's reverent and sensitive memory.
+
+Mrs. Luke was born at Colebrook Terrace, near London, Aug. 19, 1813. She
+was an accomplished and benevolent lady who did much for the education
+and welfare of the poor. Her hymn--of five stanzas--was first sung in a
+village school at Poundford Park, and was not published until 1841.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+It is interesting, not to say curious, testimony to the vital quality of
+this meek production that so many composers have set it to music, or
+that successive hymn-book editors have kept it, and printed it to so
+many different harmonies. All the chorals that carry it have
+substantially the same movement--for the spondaic accent of the long
+lines is compulsory--but their offerings sing "to one clear harp in
+divers tones."
+
+The appearance of the words in one hymnal with Sir William Davenant's
+air (full scored) to Moore's love-song, "Believe me, if all those
+endearing young charms," now known as the tune of "Fair Harvard," is
+rather startling at first, but the adoption is quite in keeping with the
+policy of Luther and Wesley.
+
+"St. Kevin" written to it forty years ago by John Henry Cornell,
+organist of St. Paul's, New York City, is sweet and sympathetic.
+
+The newest church collection (1905) gives the beautiful air and harmony
+of "Athens" to the hymn, and notes the music as a "Greek Melody."
+
+But the nameless English tune, of uncertain authorship[31] that
+accompanies the words in the smaller old manuals, and which delighted
+Sunday-schools for a generation, is still the favorite in the memory of
+thousands, and may be the very music first written.
+
+[Footnote 31: Harmonized by Hubert P. Main.]
+
+
+"WE SPEAK OF THE REALMS OF THE BLEST."
+
+Mrs. Elizabeth Mills, wife of the Hon. Thomas Mills, M.P., was born at
+Stoke Newington, Eng., 1805. She was one of the brief voices that sing
+one song and die. This hymn was the only note of her minstrelsy, and it
+has outlived her by more than three-quarters of a century. She wrote it
+about three weeks before her decease in Finsbury Place, London, April
+21, 1839, at the age of twenty-four.
+
+ We speak of the land of the blest,
+ A country so bright and so fair,
+ And oft are its glories confest,
+ But what must it be to be there!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ We speak of its freedom from sin,
+ From sorrow, temptation and care,
+ From trials without and within,
+ But what must it be to be there!
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The hymn, like several of the Gospel hymns besides, was carried into the
+Sunday-schools by its music. Mr. Stebbins' popular duet-and-chorus is
+fluent and easily learned and rendered by rote; and while it captures
+the ear and compels the voice of the youngest, it expresses both the
+pathos and the exaltation of the words.
+
+George Coles Stebbins was born in East Carleton, Orleans Co., N.Y., Feb.
+26, 1846. Educated at common school, and an academy in Albany, he turned
+his attention to music and studied in Rochester, Chicago, and Boston. It
+was in Chicago that his musical career began, while chorister at the
+First Baptist Church; and while holding the same position at Clarendon
+St. Church, Boston, (1874-6), he entered on a course of evangelistic
+work with D.L. Moody as gospel singer and composer. He was co-editor
+with Sankey and McGranahan of _Gospel Hymns_.
+
+
+"ONLY REMEMBERED."
+
+This hymn, beginning originally with the lines,--
+
+ Up and away like the dew of the morning,
+ Soaring from earth to its home in the sun,
+
+--has been repeatedly altered since it left Dr. Bonar's hands. Besides
+the change of metaphors, the first personal pronoun singular is changed
+to the plural. There was strength, and a natural vivacity in--
+
+ So let _me_ steal away gently and lovingly,
+ Only remembered for what _I_ have done.
+
+As at present sung the first stanza reads--,
+
+ Fading away like the stars of the morning
+ Losing their light in the glorious sun,
+ Thus would _we_ pass from the earth and its toiling
+ Only remembered for what _we_ have done.
+
+The idea voiced in the refrain is true and beautiful, and the very
+euphony of its words helps to enforce its meaning and make the song
+pleasant and suggestive for young and old. It has passed into popular
+quotation, and become almost a proverb.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The tune (in _Gospel Hymns No. 6_) is Mr. Sankey's.
+
+Ira David Sankey was born in Edinburgh, Lawrence Co., Pa., Aug. 28,
+1840. He united with the Methodist Church at the age of fifteen, and
+became choir leader, Sunday-school superintendent and president of the
+Y.M.C.A., all in his native town. Hearing Philip Phillips sing impressed
+him deeply, when a young man, with the power of a gifted solo vocalist
+over assembled multitudes, but he did not fully realize his own
+capability till Dwight L. Moody heard his remarkable voice and
+convinced him of his divine mission to be a gospel singer.
+
+The success of his revival tours with Mr. Moody in America and England
+is history.
+
+Mr. Sankey has compiled at least five singing books, and has written the
+_Story of the Gospel Hymns_. Until overtaken by blindness, in his later
+years he frequently appeared as a lecturer on sacred music. The
+manuscript of his story of the _Gospel Hymns_ was destroyed by accident,
+but, undismayed by the ruin of his work, and the loss of his eye-sight,
+like Sir Isaac Newton and Thomas Carlyle, he began his task again. With
+the help of an amanuensis the book was restored and, in 1905, given to
+the public. (See page 258.)
+
+
+"SAVIOUR, LIKE A SHEPHERD LEAD US."
+
+Mrs. Dorothy Ann Thrupp, of Paddington Green, London, the author of this
+hymn, was born June 20, 1799, and died, in London, Dec. 14, 1847. Her
+hymns first appeared in Mrs. Herbert Mayo's _Selection of Poetry and
+Hymns for the Use of Infant and Juvenile Schools_, (1838).
+
+ We are Thine, do Thou befriend us,
+ Be the Guardian of our way:
+ Keep Thy flock, from sin defend us,
+ Seek us when we go astray;
+ Blessed Jesus,
+ Hear, O hear us when we pray.
+
+The tune everywhere accepted and loved is W.B. Bradbury's; written in
+1856.
+
+
+"YIELD NOT TO TEMPTATION"
+
+A much used and valued hymn, with a captivating tune and chorus for
+young assemblies. Both words and music are by H.R. Palmer, composed in
+1868.
+
+ Yield not to temptation,
+ For yielding is sin;
+ Each vict'ry will help you
+ Some other to win.
+
+ Fight manfully onward,
+ Dark passions subdue;
+ Look ever to Jesus,
+ He will carry you through.
+
+Horatio Richmond Palmer was born in Sherburne, N.Y., April 26. 1834, of
+a musical family, and sang alto in his father's choir when only nine. He
+studied music unremittingly, and taught music at fifteen. Brought up in
+a Christian home, his religious life began in his youth, and he
+consecrated his art to the good of man and the glory of God.
+
+He became well-known as a composer of sacred music, and as a
+publisher--the sales of his _Song Queen_ amounting to 200,000 copies. As
+a leader of musical conventions and in the Church Choral Union, his
+influence in elevating the standard of song-worship has been widely
+felt.
+
+
+"THERE ARE LONELY HEARTS TO CHERISH."
+
+"While the days are going by" is the refrain of the song, and the line
+by which it is recognized. The hymn or poem was written by George
+Cooper. He was born in New York City, May 14, 1840--a writer of poems
+and magazine articles,--composed "While the days are going by" in 1870.
+
+ There are lonely hearts to cherish
+ While the days are going by.
+ There are weary souls who perish
+ While the days are going by.
+ Up! then, trusty hearts and true,
+ Though the day comes, night comes, too:
+ Oh, the good we all may do
+ While the days are going by!
+
+There are few more practical and always-timely verses than this
+three-stanza poem.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+A very musical tune, with spirited chorus, (in _Gospel Hymns_) bears the
+name of the refrain, and was composed by Mr. Sankey.
+
+A sweet and quieter harmony (uncredited) is mated with the hymn in the
+old _Baptist Praise Book_ (p. 507) and this was long the fixture to the
+words, in both Sunday-school and week-day school song-books.
+
+
+"JESUS THE WATER OF LIFE WILL GIVE."
+
+This Sunday-school lyric is the work of Fanny J. Crosby (Mrs. Van
+Alstyne). Like her other and greater hymn, "Jesus keep me near the
+Cross," (noted on p. 156,) it reveals the habitual attitude of the pious
+author's mind, and the simple earnestness of her own faith as well as
+her desire to win others.
+
+ Jesus the water of life will give
+ Freely, freely, freely;
+ Jesus the water of life will give
+ Freely to those who love Him.
+
+ The Spirit and the Bride say "Come
+ Freely, freely, freely.
+ And he that is thirsty let him come
+ And drink the water of life."
+
+Full chorus,--
+
+ The Fountain of life is flowing,
+ Flowing, freely flowing;
+ The Fountain of life is flowing,
+ Is flowing for you and for me.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The hymn must be sung as it was _made_ to be sung, and the composer
+being many years _en rapport_ with the writer, knew how to put all her
+metrical rhythms into sweet sound. The tune--in Mr. Bradbury's _Fresh
+Laurels_ (1867)--is one of his sympathetic interpretations, and, with
+the duet sung by two of the best singers of the middle class
+Sunday-school girls, is a melodious and impressive piece.
+
+
+"WHEN HE COMETH, WHEN HE COMETH."
+
+The Rev. W.O. Cushing, with the beautiful thought in Malachi 3:17
+singing in his soul, composed this favorite Sunday-school hymn, which
+has gone round the world.
+
+ When He cometh, when He cometh
+ To make up His jewels,
+ All the jewels, precious jewels,
+ His loved and His own.
+ Like the stars of the morning,
+ His bright brow adorning
+ They shall shine in their beauty
+ Bright gems for His crown.
+
+ He will gather, He will gather
+ The gems for His Kingdom,
+ All the pure ones, all the bright ones,
+ His loved and His own.
+ Like the stars, etc.
+
+ Little children, little children
+ Who love their Redeemer,
+ Are the jewels, precious jewels
+ His loved and His own,
+ Like the stars, etc.
+
+Rev. William Orcutt Cushing of Hingham, Mass., born Dec. 31, 1823, wrote
+this little hymn when a young man (1856), probably with no idea of
+achieving a literary performance. But it rings; and even if it is a
+"ringing of changes" on pretty syllables, that is not all. There is a
+thought in it that _sings_. Its glory came to it, however, when it got
+its tune--and he must have had a subconsciousness of the tune he wanted
+when he made the lines for his Sunday-school. He died Oct. 19, 1902.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The composer of the music for the "Jewel Hymn"[32] was George F. Root,
+then living in Reading, Mass.
+
+[Footnote 32: Comparison of the "Jewel Hymn" tune with the old glee of
+"Johnny Schmoker" gives color to the assertion that Mr. Root caught up
+and adapted a popular ditty for his Christian melody--as was so often
+done in Wales, and in the Lutheran and Wesleyan reformations. He
+baptized the comic fugue, and promoted it from the vaudeville stage to
+the Sunday School.]
+
+A minister returning from Europe on an English steamer visited the
+steerage, and after some friendly talk proposed a singing service--it
+something could be started that "everybody" knew--for there were
+hundreds of emigrants there from nearly every part of Europe.
+
+"It will have to be an American tune, then," said the steerage-master;
+"try 'His jewels.'"
+
+The minister struck out at once with the melody and words,--
+
+ When He cometh, when He cometh,
+
+--and scores of the poor half-fare multitude joined voices with him.
+Many probably recognized the music of the old glee, and some had heard
+the sweet air played in the church-steeples at home. Other voices chimed
+in, male and female, catching the air, and sometimes the words--they
+were so easy and so many times repeated--and the volume of song
+increased, till the singing minister stood in the midst of an
+international concert, the most novel that he ever led.
+
+He tried other songs in similar visits during the rest of the voyage
+with some success, but the "Jewel Hymn" was the favorite; and by the
+time port was in sight the whole crowd of emigrants had it by heart.
+
+The steamer landed at Quebec, and when the trains, filled with the new
+arrivals, rolled away, the song was swelling from nearly every car,--
+
+ When He cometh, when He cometh,
+ To make up His jewels.
+
+The composer of the tune--with all the patriotic and sacred
+master-pieces standing to his credit--never reaped a richer triumph than
+he shared with his poet-partner that day, when "Precious Jewels" came
+back to them from over the sea. More than this, there was missionary joy
+for them both that their tuneful work had done something to hallow the
+homes of alien settlers with an American Christian psalm.
+
+George Frederick Root, Doctor of Music, was born in Sheffield, Mass.,
+1820, eldest of a family of eight children, and spent his youth on a
+farm. His genius for music drew him to Boston, where he became a pupil
+of Lowell Mason, and soon advanced so far as to teach music himself and
+lead the choir in Park St. church. Afterwards he went to New York as
+director of music in Dr. Deems's Church of the Strangers. In 1852,
+after a year's absence and study in Europe, he returned to New York,
+and founded the Normal Musical Institute. In 1860, he removed to Chicago
+where he spent the remainder of his life writing and publishing music.
+He died Aug. 6, 1895, in Maine.
+
+In the truly popular sense Dr. Root was the best-known American
+composer; not excepting Stephen C. Foster. Root's "Hazel Dell," "There's
+Music in the Air," and "Rosalie the Prairie Flower" were universal
+tunes--(words by Fanny Crosby,)--as also his music to Henry Washburn's
+"Vacant Chair." The songs in his cantata, "The Haymakers," were sung in
+the shops and factories everywhere, and his war-time music, in such
+melodies as "Shouting the Battle-cry of Freedom" and "Tramp, Tramp,
+Tramp, the Boys are Marching" took the country by storm.
+
+
+"SCATTER SEEDS OF KINDNESS."
+
+This amiable and tuneful poem, suggested by Rom. 12:10, is from the pen
+of Mary Louise Riley (Mrs. Albert Smith) of New York City. She was born
+in Brighton, Monroe Co., N.Y. May 27, 1843.
+
+ Let us gather up the sunbeams
+ Lying all along our path;
+ Let us keep the wheat and roses
+ Casting out the thorns and chaff.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ Then scatter seeds of kindness (_ter_)
+ For our reaping by and by.
+
+Silas Jones Vail, the tune-writer, for this hymn, was born Oct. 1818,
+and died May 20, 1883. For years he worked at the hatter's trade, with
+Beebe on Broadway, N.Y. and afterwards in an establishment of his own.
+His taste and talent led him into musical connections, and from time to
+time, after relinquishing his trade, he was with Horace Waters, Philip
+Phillips, W.B. Bradbury, and F.J. Smith, the piano dealer. He was a
+choir leader and a good composer.
+
+
+"BY COOL SILOAM'S SHADY RILL."
+
+This hymn of Bp. Heber inculcates the same lesson as that in the stanzas
+of Michael Bruce before noted, with added emphasis for the young on the
+briefness of time and opportunity even for them.
+
+ How fair the lily grows,
+
+--is answered by--
+
+ The lily must decay,
+
+--but, owing to the sweetness of the favorite melody, it was never a
+saddening hymn for children.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Though George Kingsley's "Heber" has in some books done service for the
+Bishop's lines, "Siloam," easy-flowing and finely harmonized, is knit
+to the words as no other tune can be. It was composed by Isaac Baker
+Woodbury on shipboard during a storm at sea. A stronger illustration of
+tranquil thought in terrible tumult was never drawn.
+
+"O Galilee, Sweet Galilee," whose history has been given at the end of
+chapter six, was not only often sung in Sunday-schools, but chimed (in
+the cities) on steeple-bells--nor is it by any means forgotten today--on
+the Sabbath and in social singing assemblies. Like "Precious Jewels," it
+has been, in many places, taken up by street boys with a relish, and
+often displaced the play-house ditties in the lips of little newsboys
+and bootblacks during a leisure hour or a happy mood.
+
+
+"I AM SO GLAD"
+
+This lively little melody is still a welcome choice to many a lady
+teacher of fluttering five-year-olds, when both vocal indulgence and
+good gospel are needed for the prattlers in her class. It has been as
+widely sung in Scotland as in America. Mr. Philip P. Bliss, hearing one
+day the words of the familiar chorus--
+
+ O, how I love Jesus,
+
+--suddenly thought to himself,--
+
+"I have sung long enough of my poor love to Christ, and now I will sing
+of His love for me." Under the inspiration of this thought, he wrote--
+
+ I am so glad that our Father in heaven
+ Tells of His love in the book He has given
+ Wonderful things in the Bible I see,
+ This is the dearest--that Jesus loves me.
+
+Both words and music are by Mr. Bliss.
+
+The history of modern Sunday-school hymnody--or much of it--is so nearly
+identified with that of the _Gospel Hymns_ that other selections like
+the last, which might be appropriate here, may be considered in a later
+chapter, where that eventful series of sacred songs receives special
+notice.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+PATRIOTIC HYMNS.
+
+
+The ethnic anthologies growing out of love of country are a mingled
+literature of filial and religious piety, ranging from war-like paeans to
+lyric prayers. They become the cherished inheritance of a nation, and,
+once fixed in the common memory and common heart, the people rarely let
+them die. The "Songs of the Fathers" have perennial breath, and in every
+generation--
+
+ The green woods of their native land
+ Shall whisper in the strain;
+ The voices of their household band
+ Shall sweetly speak again.
+ --_Felicia Hemans_.
+
+
+ULTIMA THULE.
+
+American pride has often gloried in Seneca's "Vision of the West," more
+than eighteen hundred years ago.
+
+ Venient annis
+ Saecula seris, quibus Oceanus
+ Vincula rerum laxet, et ingens
+ Pateat tellus, Typhisque novos
+ Detegat orbes, nec sit terris
+ Ultima Thule.
+
+ A time will come in future ages far
+ When Ocean will his circling bounds unbar.
+ And, opening vaster to the Pilot's hand,
+ New worlds shall rise, where mightier kingdoms are,
+ Nor Thule longer be the utmost land.
+
+This poetic forecast, of which Washington Irving wrote "the predictions
+of the ancient oracles were rarely so unequivocal," is part of the
+"chorus" at the end of the second act of Seneca's "Medea," written near
+the date of St. Paul's first Epistle to the Thessalonians.
+
+Seneca, the celebrated Roman (Stoic) philosopher, was born at or very
+near the time of our Saviour's birth. There are legends of his
+acquaintance with Paul, at Rome, but though he wrote able and quotable
+treatises _On Consolation_, _On Providence_, _On Calmness of Soul_, and
+_On the Blessed Life_, there is no direct evidence that the savor of
+Christian faith ever qualified his works or his personal principles. He
+was a man of grand ideas and inspirations, but he was a time server and
+a flatterer of the Emperor Nero, who, nevertheless, caused his death
+when he had no further use for him.
+
+His compulsory suicide occurred A.D. 65, the year in which St. Paul is
+supposed to have suffered martyrdom.
+
+
+"THE BREAKING WAVES DASHED HIGH."
+
+Sitting at the tea-table one evening, near a century ago, Mrs. Hemans
+read an old account of the "Landing of the Pilgrims," and was inspired
+to write this poem, which became a favorite in America--like herself,
+and all her other works.
+
+The ballad is inaccurate in details, but presents the spirit of the
+scene with true poet insight. Mr. James T. Fields, the noted Boston
+publisher, visited the lady in her old age, and received an autograph
+copy of the poem, which is seen in Pilgrim Hall, Plymouth, Mass.
+
+ The breaking waves dashed high, on a stern and rock-bound coast,
+ And the woods against a stormy sky, their giant branches tossed,
+ And the heavy night hung dark, the hills and waters o'er,
+ When a band of exiles moored their bark on the wild New England
+ shore.
+
+ Not as the conqueror comes, they, the true-hearted, came;
+ Not with the roll of stirring drums, and the trumpet that sings
+ of fame;
+ Not as the flying come, in silence and in fear,--
+ _They_ shook the depths of the desert's gloom with their hymns of
+ lofty cheer.
+
+ Amidst the storm they sang, and the stars heard, and the sea!
+ And the sounding aisles of the dim woods rang to the anthem of the
+ free!
+ The ocean eagle soared from his nest by the white waves' foam,
+ And the rocking pines of the forest roared,--this was their welcome
+ home!
+
+ There were men with hoary hair amidst that pilgrim band,--
+ Why had _they_ come to wither there, away from their childhood's
+ land?
+ There was woman's fearless eye, lit by her deep love's truth;
+ There was manhood's brow, serenely high, and the fiery heart of
+ youth.
+
+ What sought they thus afar? bright jewels of the mine?
+ The wealth of seas? the spoils of war?--They sought a faith's pure
+ shrine!
+ Ay, call it holy ground, the soil where first they trod;
+ They left unstained what there they found,--freedom to worship God!
+
+Felicia Dorothea Browne (Mrs. Hemans) was born in Liverpool, Eng., 1766,
+and died 1845.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The original tune is not now accessible. It was composed by Mrs. Mary E.
+(Browne) Arkwright, Mrs. Hemans' sister, and published in England about
+1835. But the words have been sung in this country to "Silver St.," a
+choral not entirely forgotten, credited to an English composer, Isaac
+Smith, born, in London, about 1735, and died there in 1800.
+
+
+"WESTWARD THE COURSE OF EMPIRE."
+
+Usually misquoted "Westward the _Star_ of Empire," etc. This poem of
+Bishop Berkeley possesses no lyrical quality but, like the ancient
+Roman's words, partakes of the prophetic spirit, and has always been
+dear to the American heart by reason of the above line. It seems to
+formulate the "manifest destiny" of a great colonizing race that has
+already absorbed a continent, and extended its sway across the Pacific
+ocean.
+
+ Not such as Europe breeds in her decay;
+ Such as she bred when fresh and young,
+ When heavenly flame did animate her clay,
+ By future poets shall be sung.
+
+ Westward the course of empire takes its way;
+ The four first acts already past,
+ The fifth shall close the drama of the day:
+ Time's noblest offspring is the last.
+
+George Berkeley was born March 12, 1684, and educated at Trinity
+College, Dublin. A remarkable student, he became a remarkable man, as
+priest, prelate, and philosopher. High honors awaited him at home, but
+the missionary passion seized him. Inheriting a small fortune, he sailed
+to the West, intending to evangelize and educate the Indians of the
+"Summer Islands," but the ship lost her course, and landed him at
+Newport, R.I., instead of the Bermudas. Here he was warmly welcomed, but
+was disappointed in his plans and hopes of founding a native college by
+the failure of friends in England to forward funds, and after a
+residence of six years he returned home. He died at Cloyne, Ireland,
+1753.
+
+The house which Bishop Berkeley built is still shown (or was until very
+recently) at Newport after one hundred and seventy-eight years. He wrote
+the _Principles of Human Knowledge_, the _Minute Philosopher_, and many
+other works of celebrity in their time, and a scholarship in Yale bears
+his name; but he is best loved in this country for his _Ode to America_.
+
+Pope in his list of great men ascribes--
+
+ To Berkeley every virtue under heaven.
+
+
+"SOUND THE LOUD TIMBREL."
+
+One would scarcely guess that this bravura hymn of victory and "Come, ye
+disconsolate," were written by the same person, but both are by Thomas
+Moore. The song has all the vigor and vivacity of his "Harp That Once
+Through Tara's Halls," without its pathos. The Irish poet chose the song
+of Miriam instead of the song of Deborah doubtless because the sentiment
+and strain of the first of these two great female patriots lent
+themselves more musically to his lyric verse--and his poem is certainly
+martial enough to convey the spirit of both.
+
+ Sound the loud timbrel o'er Egypt's dark sea!
+ Jehovah hath triumphed, His people are free!
+ Sing, for the pride of the tyrant is broken;
+ His chariots, his horsemen, all splendid and brave--
+ How vain was their boasting, the Lord hath but spoken,
+ And chariots and horsemen are sunk in the wave.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Of all the different composers to whose music Moore's "sacred songs"
+were sung--Beethoven, Mozart, Stevenson, and the rest--Avison seems to
+be the only one whose name and tune have clung to the poet's words; and
+we have the man and the melody sent to us, as it were, by the lyrist
+himself. The tune is now rarely sung except at church festivals and
+village entertainments, but the life and clamor of the scene at the Red
+Sea are in it, and it is something more than a mere musical curiosity.
+Its style, however, is antiquated--with its timbrel beat and its
+canorous harmony and "coda fortis"--and modern choirs have little use in
+religious service for the sonata written for viols and horns.
+
+It was Moore's splendid hymn that gave it vogue in England and Ireland,
+and sent it across the sea to find itself in the house of its friends
+with the psalmody of Billings and Swan. Moore was the man of all men to
+take a fancy to it and make language to its string-and-trumpet concert.
+He was a musician himself, and equally able to adapt a tune and to
+create one. As a festival performance, replete with patriotic noise, let
+Avison's old "Sound the Timbrel" live.
+
+Charles Avison was born at Newcastle-on-Tyne, 1710. He studied in Italy,
+wrote works on music, and composed sonatas and concertos for stringed
+orchestras. For many years he was organist of St. Nicholas' Kirk in his
+native town.
+
+The tune to "Sound the Loud Timbrel" is a chorus from one of his longer
+compositions. He died in 1770.
+
+
+"THE HARP THAT ONCE THROUGH TARA'S HALLS."
+
+This is the only one of Moore's patriotic "Irish Melodies" that lives
+wherever sweet tones are loved and poetic feeling finds answering
+hearts. The exquisite sadness of its music and its text is strangely
+captivating, and its untold story beckons from its lines.
+
+Tara was the ancient home of the Irish kings. King Dermid, who had
+apostatized from the faith of St. Patrick and his followers, in A.D.,
+554, violated the Christian right of sanctuary by taking an escaped
+prisoner from the altar of refuge in Temple Ruadan (Tipperary) and
+putting him to death. The patron priest and his clergy marched to Tara
+and solemnly pronounced a curse upon the King. Not long afterwards
+Dermid was assassinated, and superstition shunned the place "as a castle
+under ban." The last human resident of "Tara's Hall" was the King's
+bard, who lingered there, forsaken and ostracized, till he starved to
+death. Years later one daring visitor found his skeleton and his broken
+harp.
+
+Moore utilized this story of tragic pathos as a figure in his song for
+"fallen Erin" lamenting her lost royalty--under a curse that had lasted
+thirteen hundred years.
+
+ The harp that once through Tara's halls
+ The soul of music shed,
+ Now hangs as mute on Tara's walls
+ As if that soul were fled.
+
+ So sleeps the pride of former days,
+ So glory's thrill is o'er,
+ And hearts that once beat high for praise
+ Now feel that pulse no more.
+
+No one can read the words without "thinking" the tune. It is supposed
+that Moore composed them both.
+
+
+THE MARSEILLAISE HYMN.
+
+ Ye sons of France, awake to glory!
+ Hark! hark! what millions bid you rise!
+
+The "Marseillaise Hymn" so long supposed to be the musical as well as
+verbal composition of Roget de Lisle, an army engineer, was proved to be
+only his words set to an air in the "Credo" of a German mass, which was
+the work of one Holzman in 1726. De Lisle was known to be a poet and
+musician as well as a soldier, and, as he is said to have played or sung
+at times in the churches and convents, it is probable that he found and
+copied the manuscript of Holzman's melody. His haste to rush his fiery
+"Hymn" before the public in the fever of the Revolution allowed him no
+time to make his own music, and he adapted the German's notes to his
+words and launched the song in the streets of Strasburg. It was first
+sung in Paris by a band of chanters from Marseilles, and, like the
+trumpets blown around Jericho, it shattered the walls of the French
+monarchy to their foundations.
+
+The "Marseillaise Hymn" is mentioned here for its patriotic birth and
+associations. An attempt to make a religious use of it is recorded in
+the Fourth Chapter.
+
+
+ODE ON SCIENCE.
+
+This is a "patriotic hymn," though a queer production with a queer name,
+considering its contents; and its author was no intimate of the Muses.
+Liberty is supposed to be somehow the corollary of learning, or vice
+versa--whichever the reader thinks.
+
+ The morning sun shines from the East
+ And spreads his glories to the West.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ So Science spreads her lucid ray
+ O'er lands that long in darkness lay;
+ She visits fair Columbia,
+ And sets her sons among the stars.
+ Fair Freedom, her attendant, waits, etc.
+
+
+_THE TUNE_
+
+Was the really notable part of this old-time "Ode," the favorite of
+village assemblies, and the inevitable practice-piece for amateur
+violinists. The author of the crude symphony was Deacon Janaziah (or
+Jazariah) Summer, of Taunton, Mass., who prepared it--music and probably
+words--for the semi-centennial of Simeon Dagget's Academy in 1798. The
+"Ode" was subsequently published in Philadelphia, and also in Albany. It
+was a song of the people, and sang itself through the country for fifty
+or sixty years, always culminating in the swift crescendo chorus and
+repeat--
+
+ The British yoke and Gallic chain
+ Were urged upon our necks in vain;
+ All haughty tyrants we disdain,
+ And shout "Long live America!"
+
+The average patriot did not mind it if "Columbi-_ay_" and "Ameri-_kay_"
+were not exactly classic orthoepy.
+
+
+"HAIL COLUMBIA."
+
+This was written (1798) by Judge Joseph Hopkinson, born, in
+Philadelphia, 1770, and died there, 1843. He wrote it for a friend in
+that city who was a theatre singer, and wanted a song for Independence
+Day. The music (to which it is still sung) was "The President's March,"
+by a composer named Fyles, near the end of the 18th century.
+
+There is nothing hymn-like in the words, which are largely a
+glorification of Gen. Washington, but the tune, a concerted piece better
+for band than voices, has the drum-and-anvil chorus quality suitable for
+vociferous mass singing--and a zealous Salvation Army corps on field
+nights could even fit a processional song to it with gospel words.
+
+
+OLD "CHESTER."
+
+ Let tyrants shake their iron rod,
+ And slavery clank her galling chains:
+ We'll fear them not; we trust in God;
+ New England's God forever reigns.
+
+Old "Chester," both words and tune the work of William Billings, is
+another of the provincial freedom songs of the Revolutionary period, and
+of the days when the Republic was young. Billings was a zealous patriot,
+and (says a writer in Moore's _Cyclopedia of Music_) "one secret, no
+doubt, of the vast popularity his works obtained was the patriotic ardor
+they breathed. The words above quoted are an example, and 'Chester,' it
+is said, was frequently heard from every fife in the New England ranks.
+The spirit of the Revolution was also manifest in his 'Lamentation over
+Boston,' his 'Retrospect,' his 'Independence,' his 'Columbia,' and many
+other pieces."
+
+William Billings was born, in Boston, Oct. 7, 1746. He was a man of
+little education, but his genius for music spurred him to study the
+tuneful art, and enabled him to learn all that could be learned without
+a master. He began to make tunes and publish them, and his first book,
+the _New England Psalm-singer_ was a curiosity of youthful crudity and
+confidence, but in considerable numbers it was sold, and sung--and
+laughed at. He went on studying and composing, and compiled another
+work, which was so much of an improvement that it got the name of
+_Billings' Best_. A third singing-book followed, and finally a fourth
+entitled the _Psalm Singer's Amusement_, both of which were popular in
+their day. His "Majesty" has tremendous capabilities of sound, and its
+movement is fully up to the requirements of Nahum Tate's verses,--
+
+ And on the wings of mighty winds
+ Came flying all abroad.
+
+William Billings died in 1800, and his remains lie in an unmarked grave
+in the old "Granary" Burying Ground in the city of his birth.
+
+National feeling has taken maturer speech and finer melody, but it was
+these ruder voices that set the pitch. They were sung with native pride
+and affection at fireside vespers and rural feasts with the adopted
+songs of Burns and Moore and Mrs. Hemans, and, like the lays of Scotland
+and Provence, they breathed the flavor of the country air and soil, and
+taught the generation of home-born minstrelsy that gave us the
+Hutchinson family, Ossian E. Dodge, Covert with his "Sword of Bunker
+Hill," and Philip Phillips, the "Singing Pilgrim."
+
+
+THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER.
+
+Near the close of the last war with England, Francis Scott Key, of
+Baltimore, the author of this splendid national hymn, was detained under
+guard on the British flag-ship at the mouth of the Petapsco, where he
+had gone under a flag of truce to procure the release of a captured
+friend, Dr. William Beanes of Upper Marlboro, Md.
+
+The enemy's fleet was preparing to bombard Fort McHenry, and Mr. Key's
+return with his friend was forbidden lest their plans should be
+disclosed. Forced to stay and witness the attack on his country's flag,
+he walked the deck through the whole night of the bombardment until the
+break of day showed the brave standard still flying at full mast over
+the fort. Relieved of his patriotic anxiety, he pencilled the exultant
+lines and chorus of his song on the back of a letter, and, as soon as he
+was released, carried it to the city, where within twenty-four hours it
+was printed on flyers, circulated and sung in the streets to the air of
+"Anacreon in Heaven"--which has been the "Star Spangled Banner" tune
+ever since.
+
+ O say, can you see by the dawn's early light
+ What so proudly we hailed at the twilight's last gleaming?
+ Whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight
+ O'er the ramparts we watched, were so gallantly streaming,
+ And the rockets red glare, the bombs bursting in air
+ Gave proof through the night that the flag was still there:
+ O say, does the star-spangled banner yet wave,
+ O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ O thus be it ever when freemen shall stand,
+ Between their loved homes and the war's desolation;
+ Blessed with victory and peace, may the heaven-rescued land
+ Praise the Power that hath made and preserved us a nation.
+ Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just,
+ And this be our motto, "_In God is our trust_."
+ And the star-spangled banner in triumph shall wave,
+ O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave.
+
+The original star-spangled banner that waved over Fort McHenry in sight
+of the poet when he wrote the famous hymn was made and presented to the
+garrison by a girl of fifteen, afterwards Mrs. Sanderson, and is
+still preserved in the Sanderson family at Baltimore.
+
+[Illustration: Samuel F. Smith]
+
+The additional stanza to the "Star-Spangled Banner"--
+
+ When our land is illumined with Liberty's smile, etc.,
+
+--was composed by Dr. O.W. Holmes, in 1861.
+
+The tune "Anacreon in Heaven" was an old English hunting air composed by
+John Stafford Smith, born at Gloucester, Eng. 1750. He was composer for
+Covent Garden Theater, and conductor of the Academy of Ancient Music.
+Died Sep. 20, 1836. The melody was first used in America to Robert Treat
+Paine's song, "Adams and Liberty." Paine, born 1778--died 1811, was the
+son of Robert Treat Paine, signer of the Declaration of Independence.
+
+
+"STAND! THE GROUND'S YOUR OWN, MY BRAVES."
+
+Sympathetic admiration for the air, "Scots wha hae wi' Wallace bled,"
+(or "Bruce's address," as it was commonly called), with the syllables of
+Robert Burns' silvery verse, lingered long in the land after the wars
+were ended. It spoke in the poem of John Pierpont, who caught its
+pibroch thrill, and built the metre of "Warren's Address at the Battle
+of Bunker Hill" on the model of "Scots wha hae."
+
+ Stand! the ground's your own, my braves;
+ Will ye give it up to slaves?
+ Will ye look for greener graves?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ In the God of battles trust:
+ Die we may, or die we must,
+ But O where can dust to dust
+ Be consigned so well,
+
+ As where Heaven its dews shall shed,
+ On the martyred patriot's bed,
+ And the rocks shall raise their head
+ Of his deeds to tell?
+
+This poem, written about 1823, held a place many years in school-books,
+and was one of the favorite school-boy declamations. Whenever sung on
+patriotic occasions, the music was sure to be "Bruce's Address." That
+typical Scotch tune was played on the Highland bag-pipes long before
+Burns was born, and known as "Hey tuttie taite." "Heard on Fraser's
+hautboy, it used to fill my eyes with tears," Burns himself once wrote.
+
+Rev. John Pierpont was born in Litchfield, Ct., April 6, 1785. He was
+graduated at Yale, 1804, taught school, studied law, engaged in trade,
+and finally took a course in theology and became a Unitarian minister,
+holding the pastorate of Hollis St. Church, Boston, thirty-six years. He
+travelled in the East, and wrote "Airs of Palestine." His poem, "The
+Yankee Boy," has been much quoted. Died in Medford, Mass., Aug. 26,
+1866.
+
+
+"MY COUNTRY, 'TIS OF THEE."
+
+This simple lyric, honored so long with the name "America," and the
+title "Our National Hymn," was written by Samuel Francis Smith, while a
+theological student at Andover, Feb. 2, 1832. He had before him several
+hymn and song tunes which Lowell Mason had received from Germany, and,
+knowing young Smith to be a good linguist, had sent to him for
+translation. One of the songs, of national character, struck Smith as
+adaptable to home use if turned into American words, and he wrote four
+stanzas of his own to fit the tune.
+
+Mason printed them with the music, and under his magical management the
+hymn made its debut on a public occasion in Park St. Church, Boston,
+July 4, 1832. Its very simplicity, with its reverent spirit and
+easy-flowing language, was sure to catch the ear of the multitude and
+grow into familiar use with any suitable music, but it was the foreign
+tune that, under Mason's happy pilotage, winged it for the western world
+and launched it on its long flight.
+
+ My country, 'tis of thee,
+ Sweet land of liberty,
+ Of thee I sing;
+ Land where my fathers died,
+ Land of the pilgrims' pride,
+ From every mountain-side
+ Let freedom ring.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Let music swell the breeze,
+ And ring from all the trees
+ Sweet Freedom's song;
+ Let mortal tongues awake,
+ Let all that breathe partake,
+ Let rocks their silence break,
+ The sound prolong.
+
+ Our fathers' God, to Thee,
+ Author of liberty,
+ To Thee we sing;
+ Long may our land be bright
+ With Freedom's holy light;
+ Protect us by Thy might,
+ Great God, our King.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Pages, and at least two volumes, have been written to prove the origin
+of that cosmopolitan, half-Gregorian descant known here as "America,"
+and in England as "God Save the King." William C. Woodbridge of Boston
+brought it home with him from Germany. The Germans had been singing it
+for years (and are singing it now, more or less) to the words, "Heil Dir
+Im Siegel Kranz," and the Swiss to "Rufst Du mein Vaterland." It was
+sung in Sweden, also, and till 1833 it was in public use in Russia
+commonly enough to give it a national character. Von Weber introduced it
+in his "Jubel" overture, and Beethoven, in 1814, copied it in C Major
+and wrote piano variations on it. It has been ascribed to Henry Purcell
+(1696), to Lulli, a French composer (1670), to Dr. John Bull (1619), and
+to Thomas Ravenscroft and an old Scotch carol as old as 1609. One might
+fancy that the biography of the famous air resembled Melchizedek's.
+
+The truth appears to be that certain bars of music which might easily
+happen to be similar, or even identical, when plain-song was the common
+style, were produced at different times and places, and one man finally
+harmonized the wandering strains into a complete tune. It is now
+generally conceded that the man was Henry Carey, a popular English
+composer and dramatist of the first half of the 18th century, who sang
+the melody as it now is, in 1740, at a public dinner given in honor of
+Admiral Vernon after his capture of Porto Bello (Brazil). This antedates
+any authenticated use of the tune _ipsissima forma_ in England or
+continental Europe.
+
+The American history of it simply is that Woodbridge gave it to Mason
+and Mason gave it to Smith--and Smith gave it "My Country 'Tis of Thee."
+
+
+"BY THE RUDE BRIDGE."
+
+This genuinely American poem, written by Ralph Waldo Emerson and called
+usually the "Concord Hymn," was prepared for the dedication of the
+Battle-monument in Concord, April 19, 1836, and sung there to the tune
+of "Old Hundred." Apparently no change has been made in the original
+except of a single word in the first line.
+
+ By the rude bridge that arched the flood,
+ Their flag to April's breeze unfurled,
+ Here once the embattled farmers stood,
+ And fired the shot heard round the world.
+
+ The foe long since in silence slept;
+ Alike the conqueror silent sleeps;
+ And Time the ruined bridge has swept
+ Down the dark stream which seaward creeps.
+
+ On this green bank, by this soft stream,
+ We set today a votive stone;
+ That memory may their deed redeem,
+ When, like our sires, our sons are gone.
+
+ Spirit, that made those heroes dare
+ To die, and leave their children free,
+ Bid Time and Nature gently spare
+ The shaft we raise to them and Thee.
+
+This does not appear in the hymnals and owns no special tune. Its niche
+of honor is in the temple of anthology, but it will always be called the
+"Concord Hymn"--and the fourth line of its first stanza is a perennial
+quotation.
+
+Ralph Waldo Emerson, LL.D., the renowned American essayist and poet, was
+born in Boston, 1803. He graduated at Harvard in 1821, and was ordained
+to the Unitarian ministry, but turned his attention to literature,
+writing and lecturing on ethical and philosophical themes, and winning
+universal fame by his original and suggestive prose and verse. He died
+April 27, 1882.
+
+
+BATTLE HYMN OF THE REPUBLIC.
+
+After a visit to the Federal camps on the Potomac in 1861, Mrs. Julia
+Ward Howe returned to her lodgings in Washington, fatigued, as she says,
+by her "long, cold drive," and slept soundly. Awakening at early
+daybreak, she began "to twine the long lines of a hymn which promised to
+suit the measure of the 'John Brown' melody."
+
+This hymn was written out after a fashion in the dark, by Mrs. Howe, and
+she then went back to sleep.
+
+ Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord;
+ He is trampling out the vintage where the grapes of wrath are stored;
+ He hath loosed the fateful lightning of His terrible swift sword;
+ His truth is marching on.
+
+ I have seen Him in the watch-fires of a hundred circling camps,
+ They have builded Him an altar in the evening dews and damps;
+ I can read His righteous sentence by the dim and flaring lamps;
+ His day is marching on.
+
+ I have read a fiery gospel writ in burnished rows of steel;
+ "As ye deal with my contemners, so with you my grace shall deal;"
+ Let the Hero, born of woman, crush the serpent with His heel,
+ Since God is marching on.
+
+ He has sounded forth the trumpet that shall never call retreat;
+ He is sifting out the hearts of men before His judgment seat;
+ Oh, be swift, my soul, to answer Him! be jubilant my feet!
+ Our God is marching on.
+
+ In the beauty of the lilies Christ was born across the sea,
+ With a glory in His bosom that transfigures you and me;
+ As He died to make men holy, let us die to make men free.
+ While God is marching on.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The music of the old camp-meeting refrain,--
+
+ Say, brothers will you meet us?
+
+--or,--
+
+ O brother, will you meet me,
+
+(No. 173 in the _Revivalist_,) was written in 1855, by John William
+Steffe, of Richmond, Va., for a fire company, and was afterwards
+arranged by Franklin H. Lummis. The air of the "John Brown Song" was
+caught from this religious melody. The old hymn-tune had the "Glory,
+Hallelujah" coda, cadenced off with, "For ever, ever more."
+
+In 1860-61 the garrison of soldiers at work on the half-dismantled
+defenses of Fort Warren in Boston Harbor, were fain to lighten labor and
+mock fatigue with any species of fun suggested by circumstances or
+accident, and, as for music, they sang everything they could remember or
+make up. John Brown's memory and fate were fresh in the Northern mind,
+and the jollity of the not very reverent army men did not exclude
+frequent allusions to the rash old Harper's Ferry hero.
+
+A wag conjured his spirit into the camp with a witticism as to what he
+was doing, and a comrade retorted,
+
+"Marchin' on, of course."
+
+A third cried, "Pooh, John Brown's underground."
+
+A serio-comic debate added more words, and in the midst of the banter, a
+musical fellow strung a rhythmic sentence and trolled it to the
+Methodist tune. "John Brown's body lies a mould'rin' in the ground" was
+taken up by others who knew the air, the following line was improvised
+almost instantly, and soon, to the accompaniment of pick, shovel and
+crowbar,--
+
+ His soul goes marching on,
+
+--rounded the couplet with full lung power through all the repetitions,
+till the inevitable "glory, glory hallelujah" had the voice of every
+soldier in the fort. The song "took," and the marching chorus of the
+Federal armies of the Civil War was started on its way. Mrs. Howe gave
+it a poem that made its rusticity sublime, and the "Battle Hymn of the
+Republic" began a career that promises to run till battle hymns cease to
+be sung.
+
+Julia Ward was born in New York city, May 27, 1819. In 1843 she became
+the wife of Samuel Gridley Howe, the far-famed philanthropist and
+champion of liberty, and with him edited an anti-slavery paper, the
+_Boston Commonwealth_, until the Civil War closed its mission. During
+the war she was active and influential--and has never ceased to be
+so--in the cause of peace and justice, and in every philanthropic
+movement. Her great hymn first brought her prominently before the
+public, but her many other writings would have made a literary
+reputation. Her four surviving children are all eminent in the
+scientific and literary world.
+
+
+KELLER'S AMERICAN HYMN.
+
+Naturally the title suggests the authorship of the ode, but fate made
+Keller a musician rather than a poet and hymnist, and the honors of the
+fine anthem are divided. At the grand performance which created its
+reputation, the hymn of Dr. O.W. Holmes was substituted for the
+composer's words. This is Keller's first stanza:
+
+ Speed our republic, O Father on high!
+ Lead us in pathways of justice and right,
+ Rulers, as well as the ruled, one and all,
+ Girdle with virtue the armor of might.
+ Hail! three times hail, to our country and flag!
+ Rulers, as well as the ruled, one and all,
+ Girdle with virtue the armor of might;
+ Hail! three times hail, to our country and flag!
+
+"Flag" was the unhappy word at the end of every one of the four stanzas.
+To match a short vowel to an orotund concert note for two beats and a
+"hold" was impossible. When the great Peace Jubilee of 1872, in Boston,
+was projected, Dr. Holmes was applied to, and responded with a lyric
+that gave each stanza the rondeau effect designed by the composer, but
+replaced the flat final with a climax syllable of breadth and music:
+
+ Angel of Peace, thou hast wandered too long!
+ Spread thy white wings to the sunshine of love!
+ Come while our voices are blended in song,
+ Fly to our ark like the storm-beaten dove!
+ Fly to our ark on the wings of the dove,
+ Speed o'er the far-sounding billows of song,
+ Crown'd with thine olive-leaf garland of love,
+ Angel of Peace, thou hast waited too long!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Angels of Bethlehem, answer the strain!
+ Hark! a new birth-song is filling the sky!
+ Loud as the storm-wind that tumbles the main,
+ Bid the full breath of the organ reply,
+ Let the loud tempest of voices reply,
+ Roll its long surge like the earth-shaking main!
+ Swell the vast song till it mounts to the sky!
+ Angels of Bethlehem, echo the strain!
+
+But the glory of the _tune_ was Keller's own.
+
+Soon after the close of the war a prize of $500 had been offered by a
+committee of American gentlemen for the best "national hymn" (meaning
+words and music). Mr. Keller, though a foreigner, was a naturalized
+citizen and patriot and entered the lists as a competitor with the zeal
+of a native and the ambition of an artist. Sometime in 1866 he finished
+and copyrighted the noble anthem that bears his name, and then began the
+struggle to get it before the public and test its merit. To enable him
+to bring it out before the New York Academy of Music, where
+(unfortunately) he determined to make his first trial, his brother
+kindly lent him four hundred dollars (which he had laid by to purchase a
+little home), and he borrowed two hundred more elsewhere.
+
+The performance proved a failure, the total receipts being only
+forty-two dollars, Keller was $500 in debt, and his brother's
+house-money was gone. But he refused to accept his failure as final.
+Boston (where he should have begun) was introduced to his masterpiece at
+every opportunity, and gradually, with the help of the city bands and a
+few public concerts, a decided liking for it was worked up. It was
+entered on the program of the Peace Jubilee and sung by a chorus of ten
+thousand voices. The effect was magnificent. "Keller's American Hymn"
+became a recognized star number in the repertoire of "best" national
+tunes; and now few public occasions where patriotic music is demanded
+omit it in their menu of song.[33]
+
+[Footnote 33: In Butterworth's "_Story of the Tunes_," under the account
+of Keller's grand motet, the following sacred hymn is inserted as "often
+sung to it:"--
+
+ Father Almighty, we bow at thy feet;
+ Humbly thy grace and thy goodness we own.
+ Answer in love when thy children entreat,
+ Hear our thanksgiving ascend to thy throne.
+ Seeking thy blessing, in worship we meet,
+ Trusting our souls on thy mercy alone;
+ Father Almighty, we bow at thy feet.
+
+ Breathe, Holy Spirit, thy comfort divine,
+ Tune every voice to thy music of peace;
+ Hushed in our hearts, with one whisper of thine,
+ Pride and the tumult of passion will cease.
+ Joy of the watchful, who wait for thy sign,
+ Hope of the sinful, who long for release,
+ Breathe, Holy Spirit, thy comfort divine.
+
+ God of salvation, thy glory we sing,
+ Honors to thee in thy temple belong;
+ Welcome the tribute of gladness we bring,
+ Loud-pealing organ and chorus of song.
+ While our high praises, Redeemer and King,
+ Blend with the notes of the angelic throng,
+ God of salvation, thy glory we sing.
+ --_Theron Brown_.]
+
+It is pathetic to know that the composer's one great success brought him
+only a barren renown. The prize committee, on the ground that _none_ of
+the competing pieces reached the high standard of excellence
+contemplated, withheld the $500, and Keller's work received merely the
+compliment of being judged worth presentation. The artist had his
+copyright, but he remained a poor man.
+
+Matthias Keller was born at Ulm, Wurtemberg, March 20, 1813. In his
+youth he was both a musician and a painter. Coming to this country, he
+chose the calling that promised the better and quicker wages, playing in
+bands and theatre orchestras, but never accumulating money. He could
+make fine harmonies as well as play them, but English was not his
+mother-tongue, and though he wrote a hundred and fifty songs, only one
+made him well-known. When fame came to him it did not bring him wealth,
+and in his latter days, crippled by partial paralysis, he went back to
+his early art and earned a living by painting flowers and retouching
+portraits and landscapes. He died in 1875, only three years after his
+Coliseum triumph.
+
+
+"GOD BLESS OUR NATIVE LAND."
+
+This familiar patriotic hymn is notable--though not entirely
+singular--for having two authors. The older singing-books signed the
+name of J.S. Dwight to it, until inquiring correspondence brought out
+the testimony and the joint claim of Dwight and C.T. Brooks, and it
+appeared that both these scholars and writers translated it from the
+German. Later hymnals attach both their names to the hymn.[34]
+
+[Footnote 34: For a full account of this disputed hymn, and the curious
+trick of memory which confused _four_ names in the question of its
+authorship, see Dr. Benson's _Studies of Familiar Hymns_, pp. 179-190]
+
+John Sullivan Dwight, born, in Boston, May 13, 1813, was a virtuoso in
+music, and an enthusiastic student of the art and science of tonal
+harmony. He joined a Harvard musical club known as "The Pierian
+Sodality" while a student at the University, and after his graduation
+became a prolific writer on musical subjects. Six years of his life were
+passed in the "Brook Farm Community." He was best known by his serial
+magazine, Dwight's _Journal of Music_, which was continued from 1852 to
+1881. His death occurred in 1893.
+
+Rev. Charles Timothy Brooks, the translator of Faust, was born, in
+Salem, Mass., June 20, 1813, being only about a month younger than his
+friend Dwight. Was a student at Harvard University and Divinity School
+1829-1835, and was ordained to the Unitarian ministry and settled at
+Newport, R.I. He resigned his charge there (1871) on account of ill
+health, and occupied himself with literary work until his death, Jan.
+14, 1883.
+
+ God bless our native land!
+ Firm may she ever stand
+ Through storm and night!
+ When the wild tempests rave.
+ Ruler of wind and wave,
+ Do Thou our country save
+ By Thy great might!
+
+ For her our prayer shall rise
+ To God above the skies;
+ On Him we wait.
+ Thou who art ever nigh,
+ Guarding with watchful eye;
+ To Thee aloud we cry,
+ God save the State!
+
+The tune of "Dort," by Lowell Mason, has long been the popular melody
+for this hymn. Indeed the two were united by Mason himself. It is
+braver music than "America," and would have carried Dr. Smith's hymn
+nobly, but the borrowed tune, on the whole, better suits "My Country
+'tis of thee,"--and besides, it has the advantage of a middle-register
+harmony easy for a multitude of voices.
+
+
+"THOU, TOO, SAIL ON, O SHIP OF STATE,"
+
+The closing canto of Longfellow's "Launching of the Ship," almost
+deserves a patriotic hymn-tune, though its place and use are commonly
+with school recitations.
+
+
+"GOD OF OUR FATHERS, KNOWN OF OLD."
+
+Rudyard Kipling, in a moment of serious reflection on the flamboyant
+militarism of British sentiment during the South African War, wrote this
+remarkable "Recessional," so strikingly unlike his other war-time poems.
+It is to be hoped he did not suddenly repent his Christian impulse, but
+with the chauvinistic cry around him, "Our Country, right or wrong!" he
+seems to have felt the contrast of his prayer--and flung it into the
+waste-basket. His watchful wife rescued it (the story says) and bravely
+sent it to the London Times. The world owes her a debt. The hymn is not
+only an anthem for Peace Societies, but a tonic for true patriotism.
+When Freedom fights in self-defense, she need not force herself to
+"forget" the Lord of Hosts.
+
+ God of our fathers, known of old,
+ Lord of our far-flung battle-line,
+ Beneath whose awful hand we hold
+ Dominion over palm and pine;
+ Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet,
+ Lest we forget, lest we forget.
+
+ The tumult and the shouting dies,
+ The captains and the kings depart,
+ Still stands Thine ancient sacrifice,
+ An humble and a contrite heart.
+ Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet,
+ Lest we forget, lest we forget.
+
+ Far-called, our navies melt away,
+ On dune and headland sinks the fire;
+ Lo all our pomp of yesterday
+ Is one with Nineveh and Tyre.
+ Judge of the nations, spare us yet,
+ Lest we forget, lest we forget.
+
+ If, drunk with sight of power, we loose
+ Wild tongues that have not Thee in awe,
+ Such boasting as the Gentiles use
+ Or lesser breeds without the law,
+ Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet,
+ Lest we forget, lest we forget.
+
+ For heathen heart that puts her trust,
+ In recking tube and iron shard,
+ All valiant dust that builds on dust
+ And guarding, calls not Thee to guard,
+ For frantic boast and foolish word
+ Thy mercy on thy people, Lord!
+
+Had Kipling cared more for his poem, and kept it longer in hand, he
+might have revised a line or two that would possibly seem commonplace
+to him--and corrected the grammar in the first line of the second
+stanza. But of so fine a composition there is no call for finical
+criticism. The "Recessional" is a product of the poet's holiest mood.
+"The Spirit of the Lord came upon him"--as the old Hebrew phrase is, and
+for the time he was a rapt prophet, with a backward and a forward
+vision. Providence saved the hymn, and it touched and sank into the
+better mind of the nation. It is already learned by heart--and
+sung--wherever English is the common speech, and will be heard in
+numerous translations, with the wish that there were more patriotic
+hymns of the same Christian temper and strength.
+
+Rudyard Kipling was born in Hindostan in 1865. Even with his first
+youthful experiments in the field of literature he was hailed as the
+coming apostle of muscular poetry and prose. For a time he made America
+his home, and it was while here that he faced death through a fearful
+and protracted sickness that brought him very near to God. He has
+visited many countries and described them all, and, though sometimes his
+imagination drives a reckless pen, the Christian world hopes much from a
+man whose genius can make the dullest souls listen.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The music set to Kipling's hymn is Stainer's "Magdalen"--(not his
+"Magdalina," which is a common-metre tune)--and wonderfully fits the
+words and enhances their dignity. It is a grave and earnest melody in D
+flat, with two bars in unison at "Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet,"
+making the utterance of the prayer a deep and powerful finale.
+
+John Stainer, Doctor of Music, born June 6, 1840, was nine years the
+chorister of St. Paul's, London, and afterwards organist to the
+University of Oxford. He is a member of the various musical societies of
+the Kingdom, and a Chevalier of the Legion of Honor. His talent for
+sacred music is rare and versatile, and he seems to have consecrated
+himself as a musician and composer to the service of the church.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Every civilized nation has its patriotic hymns. In fact what makes a
+nation a nation is largely the unifying influences of its common song.
+Even the homeless Hebrew nation is kept together by its patriotic
+Psalms. The ethnic melodies would fill a volume with their story. The
+few presented in this chapter represent their range of quality and
+character--defiant as the Marseillaise, thrilling as "Scots' wha hae,"
+joyful as "The Star-spangled Banner," breezy and bold as the "Ranz de
+Vaches," or sweet as the "Switzers' Song of Home."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+SAILORS' HYMNS.
+
+
+The oldest sailors' hymn is found in the 107th Psalm, vss. 23-30:
+
+ They that go down to the sea in ships,
+ To do business in great waters,
+ These see the works of the Lord,
+ And His wonders in the deep, etc.
+
+Montgomery has made this metrical rendering of these verses:
+
+ They that toil upon the deep,
+ And in vessels light and frail
+ O'er the mighty waters sweep
+ With the billows and the gale,
+
+ Mark what wonders God performs
+ When He speaks, and, unconfined,
+ Rush to battle all His storms
+ In the chariots of the wind.
+
+The hymn is not in the collections, and has no tune. Addison paraphrased
+the succeeding verses of the Psalm in his hymn, "How are thy servants
+blessed O Lord," sung to Hugh Wilson's[35] tune of "Avon":
+
+ When by the dreadful tempest borne
+ High on the broken wave,
+ They know Thou art not slow to hear,
+ Nor impotent to save.
+
+ The storm is laid, the winds retire,
+ Obedient to Thy will;
+ The sea that roars at Thy command,
+ At Thy command is still.
+
+[Footnote 35: Hugh Wilson was a Scotch weaver of Kilmarnock, born 1764;
+died 1824.]
+
+
+"FIERCE WAS THE WILD BILLOW."
+
+([Greek: Zopheras trikumias])
+
+The ancient writer, Anatolius, who composed this hymn has for centuries
+been confounded with "St" Anatolius, patriarch of Constantinople, who
+died A.D. 458. The author of the hymn lived in the seventh century, and
+except that he wrote several hymns, and also poems in praise of the
+martyrs, nothing or next to nothing, is known of him. The "Wild Billow"
+song was the principle seaman's hymn of the early church. It is being
+introduced into modern psalmody, the translation in use ranking among
+the most successful of Dr. John Mason Neale's renderings from the Greek.
+
+ Fierce was the wild billow,
+ Dark was the night;
+ Oars labored heavily,
+ Foam glimmered white;
+ Trembled the mariners;
+ Peril was nigh;
+ Then said the God of God,
+ "Peace! It is I!"
+
+ Ridge of the mountain wave,
+ Lower thy crest!
+ Wall of Euroclydon,
+ Be thou at rest!
+ Sorrow can never be,
+ Darkness must fly,
+ When saith the Light of Light,
+ "Peace! It is I!"
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The desire to represent the antiquity of the hymn and the musical style
+of Its age, and on the other hand the wish to utilize it in the
+tune-manuals for Manners' Homes and Seamen's Bethels, makes a difficulty
+for composers to study--and the task is still open to competition.
+Considering the peculiar tone that sailors' singing instinctively
+takes--and has taken doubtless from time immemorial perhaps the
+plaintive melody of "Neale," by J.H. Cornell, comes as near to a vocal
+success as could be hoped. The music is of middle register and less than
+octave range, natural scale, minor, and the triple time lightens a
+little the dirge-like harmony while the weird sea-song effect is kept. A
+chorus of singing tars must create uncommon emotion, chanting this
+coronach of the storm.
+
+John Henry Cornell was born in New York city, May 8, 1838, and was for
+many years organist at St. Paul's Chapel, Trinity Church. He is the
+author of numerous educational works on the theory and practice of
+music. He composed the above tune in 1872. Died March 1, 1894.
+
+
+"AVE, MARIS STELLA."
+
+One of the titles which the Roman Catholic world applied to the Mother
+of Jesus, in the Middle Ages, was "Stella Maris," "Star of the Sea."
+Columbus, being a Catholic, sang this hymn, or caused it to be sung,
+every evening, it is said, during his perilous voyage to an unknown
+land. The marine epithet by which the Virgin Mary is addressed is
+admirable as a stroke of poetry, and the hymn--of six stanzas--is a
+prayer which, though offered to her as to a divine being, was no doubt
+sincere in the simple sailor hearts of 1492.
+
+The two following quatrains finish the voyagers' petition, and point it
+with a doxology--
+
+ Vitam praesta puram,
+ Iter para tutum,
+ Ut videntes Jesum
+ Semper collaetemur.
+
+ Sit laus Deo Patri,
+ Summo Christo decus,
+ Spiritui Sancto,
+ Tribus honor unus!
+
+A free translation is--
+
+ Guide us safe, unspotted
+ Through life's long endeavor
+ Till with Thee and Jesus
+ We rejoice forever.
+
+ Praise to God the Father,
+ Son and Spirit be;
+ One and equal honor
+ To the Holy Three.
+
+Inasmuch as this ancient hymn did not attain the height of its
+popularity and appear in all the breviaries until the 10th century, its
+assumed age has been doubted, but its reputed author, Venantius
+Fortunatus, Bishop of Poitiers, was born about 531, at Treviso, Italy,
+and died about 609. Though a religious teacher, he was a man of romantic
+and convivial instincts--a strange compound of priest, poet and _beau
+chevalier_. Duffield calls him "the last of the classics and first of
+the troubadours," and states that he was the "first of the Christian
+poets to begin that worship of the Virgin Mary which rose to a passion
+and sank to an idolatry."
+
+
+_TUNES_
+
+To this ancient rogation poem have been composed by Aiblinger (Johann
+Caspar), Bavarian, (1779-1867,) by Proch (Heinrich), Austrian,
+(1809-1878,) by Tadolini (Giovanni), Italian, (1803-1872,) and by many
+others. The "Ave, Maris Stella" is in constant use in the Romish church,
+and its English translation by Caswall is a favorite hymn in the _Lyra
+Catholica_.
+
+
+"AVE, SANCTISSIMA!"
+
+This beautiful hymn is not introduced here in order of time, but because
+it seems akin to the foregoing, and born of its faith and
+traditions--though it sounds rather too fine for a sailor song, on ship
+or shore. Like the other, the tuneful prayer is the voice of
+ultramontane piety accustomed to deify Mary, and is entitled the
+"Evening Song to the Virgin."
+
+ Ave Sanctissima! we lift our souls to Thee
+ Ora pro nobis! 'tis nightfall on the sea.
+ Watch us while shadows lie
+ Far o'er the waters spread;
+ Hear the heart's lonely sigh;
+ Thine, too, hath bled.
+
+ Thou that hast looked on death,
+ Aid us when death is near;
+ Whisper of heaven to faith;
+ Sweet Mother, hear!
+ Ora pro nobis! the wave must rock our sleep;
+ Ora, Mater, ora! Star of the Deep!
+
+This was first written in four separate quatrains, "'Tis nightfall on
+the sea" being part of the first instead of the second line, and "We
+lift our souls," etc., was "Our souls rise to Thee," while the
+apostrophe at the end read, "Thou Star of the Deep."
+
+The fact of the modern origin of the hymn does not make it less probable
+that the earlier one of Fortunatus suggested it. It was written by Mrs.
+Hemans, and occurs between the forty-third and forty-fourth stanzas of
+her long poem, "The Forest Sanctuary."
+
+A Spanish Christian who had embraced the Protestant faith fled to
+America (such is the story of the poem) to escape the cruelties of the
+Inquisition, and took with him his Catholic wife and his child. During
+the voyage the wife pined away and died, a martyr to her conjugal
+loyalty and love. The hymn to the Virgin purports to have been her daily
+evening song at sea, plaintively remembered by the broken-hearted
+husband and father in his forest retreat on the American shore with his
+motherless boy.
+
+The music was composed by a sister of Mrs. Hemans, Mrs. Hughes, who
+probably arranged the lines as they now stand in the tune.
+
+The song, though its words appear in the _Parochial Hymn-book_, seems to
+be in use rather as parlor music than as a part of the liturgy.
+
+
+"JESUS, LOVER OF MY SOUL."
+
+The golden quality of this best-known and loved of Charles Wesley's
+hymns is attested by two indorsements that cannot be impeached; its
+perennial life, and the blessings of millions who needed it.
+
+ Jesus, Lover of my soul
+ Let me to Thy bosom fly,
+ While the billows near me roll,
+ While the tempest still is high.
+
+ Hide me, O my Saviour, hide,
+ Till the storm of life is past,
+ Safe into the haven guide,
+ O receive my soul at last!
+
+Wesley is believed to have written it when a young man, and story and
+legend have been busy with the circumstances of its birth. The most
+poetical account alleges that a dove chased by a hawk dashed through
+his open window into his bosom, and the inspiration to write the line--
+
+ Let me to Thy bosom fly,
+
+--was the genesis of the poem. Another report has it that one day Mr.
+Wesley, being pursued by infuriated persecutors at Killalee, County
+Down, Ireland, took refuge in a milk-house on the homestead of the
+Island Band Farm. When the mob came up the farmer's wife, Mrs. Jane
+Lowrie Moore, offered them refreshments and secretly let out the
+fugitive through a window to the back garden, where he concealed himself
+under a hedge till his enemies went away. When they had gone he had the
+hymn in his mind and partly jotted down. This tale is circumstantial,
+and came through Mrs. Mary E. Hoover, Jane Moore's granddaughter, who
+told it many years ago to her pastor, Dr. William Laurie of Bellefonte,
+Pa. So careful a narrative deserves all the respect due to a family
+tradition. Whether this or still another theory of the incidental cause
+of the wonderful hymn shall have the last word may never be decided nor
+is it important.
+
+There is "antecedent probability," at least, in the statement that
+Wesley wrote the first two stanzas soon after his perilous experience in
+a storm at sea during his return voyage from America to England in 1736.
+In a letter dated Oct. 28 of that year, he describes the storm that
+washed away a large part of the ship's cargo, strained her seams so
+that the hardest pumping could not keep pace with the inrushing water,
+and finally forced the captain to cut the mizzen-mast away. Young Wesley
+was ill and sorely alarmed, but knew, he says, that he "abode under the
+shadow of the Almighty," and finally, "in this dreadful moment," he was
+able to encourage his fellow-passengers who were "in an agony of fear,"
+and to pray with and for them.
+
+It was his awful hazard and bare escape in that tempest that prompted
+the following stanzas--
+
+ O Thou who didst prepare
+ The ocean's caverned cell,
+ And teach the gathering waters there
+ To meet and dwell;
+ Toss'd in our reeling bark
+ Upon this briny sea,
+ Thy wondrous ways, O Lord, we mark,
+ And sing to Thee.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Borne on the dark'ning wave,
+ In measured sweep we go,
+ Nor dread th' unfathomable grave,
+ Which yawns below;
+ For He is nigh who trod
+ Amid the foaming spray,
+ Whose billows own'd th' Incarnate God,
+ And died away.
+
+And naturally the memory of his almost shipwreck on the wild Atlantic
+colored more or less the visions of his muse, and influenced the
+metaphors of his verse for years.
+
+The popularity of "Jesus, Lover of my Soul" not only procured it, at
+home, the name of "England's song of the sea," but carried it with "the
+course of Empire" to the West, where it has reigned with "Rock of Ages,"
+for more than a hundred and fifty years, joint primate of inspired human
+songs.
+
+Compiled incidents of its heavenly service would fill a chapter. A
+venerable minister tells of the supernal comfort that lightened his
+after years of sorrow from the dying bed of his wife who whispered with
+her last breath, "Hide me, O my Saviour, hide."
+
+A childless and widowed father in Washington remembers with a more than
+earthly peace, the wife and mother's last request for Wesley's hymn, and
+her departure to the sound of its music to join the spirit of her babe.
+
+A summer visitor in Philadelphia, waiting on a hot street-corner for a
+car to Fairmount Park, overheard a quavering voice singing the same hymn
+and saw an emaciated hand caressing a little plant in an open
+window--and carried away the picture of a fading life, and the words--
+
+ Other refuge have I none,
+ Hangs my helpless soul on Thee.
+
+On one of the fields of the Civil War, just after a bloody battle, the
+Rev. James Rankin of the United Presbyterian Church bent over a dying
+soldier. Asked if he had any special request to make, the brave fellow
+replied, "Yes, sing 'Jesus, Lover of my Soul.'"
+
+The clergyman belonged to a church that sang only Psalms. But what a
+tribute to that ubiquitous hymn that such a man knew it by heart! A
+moment's hesitation and he recalled the words, and, for the first time
+in his life, sang a sacred song that was not a Psalm. When he reached
+the lines,--
+
+ Safe into the haven guide,
+ O receive my soul at last,
+
+--his hand was in the frozen grip of a dead man, whose face wore "the
+light that never was on sea or land." The minister went away saying to
+himself, "If this hymn is good to die by, it is good to live by."
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Of all the tone-masters who have studied and felt this matchless hymn,
+and given it vocal wings--Marsh, Zundel, Bradbury, Dykes, Mason--none
+has so exquisitely uttered its melting prayer, syllable by syllable, as
+Joseph P. Holbrook in his "Refuge." Unfortunately for congregational
+use, it is a duo and quartet score for select voices; but the four-voice
+portion can be a chorus, and is often so sung. Its form excludes it from
+some hymnals or places it as an optional beside a congregational tune.
+But when rendered by the choir on special occasions its success in
+conveying the feeling and soul of the words is complete. There is a
+prayer in the swell of every semitone and the touch of every accidental,
+and the sweet concord of the duet--soprano with tenor or bass--pleads
+on to the end of the fourth line, where the full harmony reinforces it
+like an organ with every stop in play. The tune is a rill of melody
+ending in a river of song.[36]
+
+[Footnote 36: Holbrook has also an arrangement of Franz Abt's, "When the
+Swallows Homeward Fly" written to "Jesus, Lover of my Soul," but with
+Wesley's words it is far less effective than his original work. "Refuge"
+is not a manufacture but an inspiration.]
+
+For general congregational use, Mason's "Whitman" has wedded itself to
+the hymn perhaps closer than any other. It has revival associations
+reaching back more than sixty years.
+
+
+"WHEN MARSHALLED ON THE NIGHTLY PLAIN."
+
+Perhaps no line in all familiar hymnology more readily suggests the name
+of its author than this. In the galaxy of poets Henry Kirke White was a
+brief luminary whose brilliancy and whose early end have appealed to the
+hearts of three generations. He was born at Nottingham, Eng., in the
+year 1795. His father was a butcher, but the son, disliking the trade,
+was apprenticed to a weaver at the age of fourteen. Two years later he
+entered an attorney's office as copyist and student.
+
+The boy imbibed sceptical notions from some source, and might have
+continued to scoff at religion to the last but for the experience of his
+intimate friend, a youth named Almond, whose life was changed by
+witnessing one day the happy death of a Christian believer. Decided to
+be a Christian himself, it was some time before he mustered courage to
+face White's ridicule and resentment. He simply drew away from him. When
+White demanded the reason he was obliged to tell him that they two must
+henceforth walk different paths.
+
+"Good God!" exclaimed White, "you surely think worse of me than I
+deserve!"
+
+The separation was a severe shock to Henry, and the real grief of it
+sobered his anger to reflection and remorse. The light of a better life
+came to him when his heart melted--and from that time he and Almond were
+fellows in faith as well as friendship.
+
+In his hymn the young poet tells the stormy experience of his soul, and
+the vision that guided him to peace.
+
+ When, marshalled on the nightly plain,
+ The glittering host bestud the sky,
+ One star alone of all the train
+ Can fix the sinner's wandering eye.
+ Hark, hark! to God the chorus breaks,
+ From every host, from every gem,
+ But one alone the Saviour speaks;
+ It is the Star of Bethlehem.
+
+ Once on the raging seas I rode:
+ The storm was loud, the night was dark;
+ The ocean yawned, and rudely blowed
+ The wind that tossed my foundering bark.
+ Deep horror then my vitals froze,
+ Death-struck, I ceased the tide to stem,
+ When suddenly a star arose;
+ It was the Star of Bethlehem.
+
+ It was my guide, my light, my all,
+ It bade my dark forebodings cease;
+ And through the storm and danger's thrall,
+ It led me to the port of peace.
+ Now, safely moored, my perils o'er,
+ I'll sing, first in night's diadem,
+ For ever and for evermore,
+ The Star, the Star of Bethlehem!
+
+Besides this delightful hymn, with its graphic sea-faring metaphors, two
+others, at least, of the same boy-poet hold their place in many of the
+church and chapel collections:
+
+ The Lord our God is clothed with might,
+ The winds obey His will;
+ He speaks, and in his heavenly height
+ The rolling sun stands still.
+
+And--
+
+ Oft in danger, oft in woe,
+ Onward, Christians, onward go.
+
+Henry Kirke White died in the autumn of 1806, when he was scarcely
+twenty years old. His "Ode to Disappointment," and the miscellaneous
+flowers and fragments of his genius, make up a touching volume. The fire
+of a pure, strong spirit burning through a consumptive frame is in them
+all.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"When, marshalled on the mighty plain" has a choral set to it in the
+_Methodist Hymnal_--credited to Thos. Harris, and entitled
+"Crimea"--which divides the three stanzas into six, and breaks the
+continuity of the hymn. Better sing it in its original form--long metre
+double--to the dear old melody of "Bonny Doon." The voices of Scotland,
+England and America are blended in it.
+
+[Illustration: William B. Bradbury]
+
+The origin of this Caledonian air, though sometimes fancifully traced to
+an Irish harper and sometimes to a wandering piper of the Isle of Man,
+is probably lost in antiquity. Burns, however, whose name is linked with
+it, tells this whimsical story of it, though giving no date save "a good
+many years ago,"--(apparently about 1753). A virtuoso, Mr. James Millar,
+he writes, wishing he were able to compose a Scottish tune, was told by
+a musical friend to sit down to his harpsichord and make a rhythm of
+some kind _solely on the black keys_, and he would surely turn out a
+Scotch tune. The musical friend, pleased at the result of his jest,
+caught the string of plaintive sounds made by Millar, and fashioned it
+into "Bonny Doon."
+
+
+"LAND AHEAD!"
+
+The burden of this hymn was suggested by the dying words of John Adams,
+one of the crew of the English ship Bounty who in 1789 mutinied, set the
+captain and officers adrift, and ran the vessel to a tropical island,
+where they burned her. In a few years vice and violence had decimated
+the wicked crew, who had exempted themselves from all divine and human
+restraint, until the last man alive was left with only native women and
+half-breed children for company. His true name was Alexander Smith, but
+he had changed it to John Adams.
+
+The situation forced the lonely Englishman to a sense of solemn
+responsibility, and in bitter remorse, he sought to retrieve his wasted
+life, and spend the rest of his exile in repentance and repentant works.
+He found a Bible in one of the dead seamen's chests, studied it, and
+organized a community on the Christian plan. A new generation grew up
+around him, reverencing him as governor, teacher, preacher and judge,
+and speaking his language--and he was wise enough to exercise his
+authority for the common good, and never abuse it. Pitcairn's Island
+became "the Paradise of the Pacific." It has not yet belied its name.
+Besides its opulence of rural beauty and natural products, its
+inhabitants, now the third generation from the "mutineer missionary,"
+are a civilized community without the vices of civilization. There is no
+licentiousness, no profanity, no Sabbath-breaking, no rum or
+tobacco--and _no sickness_.
+
+John Adams died in 1829--after an island residence of forty years. In
+his extreme age, while he lay waiting for the end, he was asked how he
+felt in view of the final voyage.
+
+"Land ahead!" murmured the old sailor--and his last words were,
+"Rounding the Cape--into the harbor."
+
+That the veteran's death-song should be perpetuated in sacred music is
+not strange.
+
+ Land ahead! its fruits are waving
+ O'er the hills of fadeless green;
+ And the living waters laving
+ Shores where heavenly forms are seen.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ Rocks and storms I'll fear no more,
+ When on that eternal shore;
+ Drop the anchor! furl the sail!
+ I am safe within the veil.
+
+ Onward, bark! the cape I'm rounding;
+ See, the blessed wave their hands;
+ Hear the harps of God resounding
+ From the bright immortal bands.
+
+The authorship of the hymn is credited to Rev. E. Adams--whether or not
+a descendent of the Island Patriarch we have no information. It was
+written about 1869.
+
+The ringing melody that bears the words was composed by John Miller
+Evans, born Nov. 30, 1825; died Jan. 1, 1892. The original air--with a
+simple accompaniment--was harmonized by Hubert P. Main, and published in
+_Winnowed Hymns_ in 1873.
+
+
+"ETERNAL FATHER, STRONG TO SAVE."
+
+This is sung almost universally on English ships. It is said to have
+been one of Sir Evelyn Wood's favorites. The late William Whiting wrote
+it in 1860, and it was incorporated with some alterations in the
+standard English Church collection entitled _Hymns Ancient and Modern_.
+It is a translation from a Latin hymn, a triune litany addressing a
+stanza each to Father, Son and Holy Spirit. The whole four stanzas have
+the same refrain, and the appeal to the Father, who bids--
+
+ --the mighty ocean deep
+ Its own appointed limits keep,
+
+--varies in the appeal to Christ, who--
+
+ --_walked_ upon the foaming deep.
+
+The third and fourth stanzas are the following:
+
+ O Holy Spirit, Who didst brood
+ Upon the waters dark and rude,
+ And bid their angry tumult cease,
+ And give, for wild confusion, peace;
+ Oh, hear us when we cry to Thee
+ For those in peril on the sea.
+
+ O Trinity of love and power,
+ Our brethren shield in danger's hour;
+ From rock and tempest, fire and foe,
+ Protect them wheresoe'er they go:
+ Thus evermore shall rise to Thee
+ Glad hymns of praise from land to sea.
+
+William Whiting was born at Kensington, London, Nov. 1, 1825. He was
+Master of Winchester College Chorister's School Died in 1878.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The choral named "Melita" (in memory of St. Paul's shipwreck) was
+composed by Dr. Dykes in 1861, and its strong and easy chords and
+moderate note range are nobly suited to the devout hymn.
+
+
+"THE OCEAN HATH NO DANGER."
+
+This charming sailors' lyric is the work of the Rev. Godfrey Thring. Its
+probable date is 1862, and it appeared in Morell and Howe's collection
+and in _Hymns Congregational and Others_, published in 1866, which
+contained a number from his pen. Rector Thring was born at Alford,
+Somersetshire, Eng., March 25, 1823, and educated at Shrewsbury School
+and Baliol College, Oxford. In 1858 he succeeded his father as Rector of
+Alford.
+
+He compiled _A Church of England Hymnbook_ in 1880.
+
+ The ocean hath no danger
+ For those whose prayers are made
+ To Him who in a manger
+ A helpless Babe was laid,
+ Who, born to tribulation
+ And every human ill,
+ The Lord of His creation,
+ The wildest waves can still.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Though life itself be waning
+ And waves shall o'er us sweep,
+ The wild winds sad complaining
+ Shall lull us still to sleep,
+ For as a gentle slumber
+ E'en death itself shall prove
+ To those whom Christ doth number
+ As worthy of His love.
+
+The tune "Morlaix," given to the hymn by Dr. Dykes, is simple, but a
+very sweet and appropriate harmony.
+
+
+"FIERCE RAGED THE TEMPEST ON THE DEEP."
+
+This fine lyric, based on the incident in the storm on the Sea of
+Galilee, is the work of the same writer and owes its tune "St. Aelred"
+to the same composer.
+
+The melody has an impressive rallentando of dotted semibreves to the
+refrain, "Peace, be still," after the more rapid notes of the three-line
+stanzas.
+
+ The wild winds hushed, the angry deep
+ Sank like a little child to sleep,
+ The sullen waters ceased to leap.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ So when our life is clouded o'er
+ And storm-winds drift us from the shore
+ Say, lest we sink to rise no more,
+ "Peace! be still."
+
+
+"PULL FOR THE SHORE."
+
+When a shipwrecked crew off a rocky coast were hurrying to the
+long-boat, a sailor begged leave to run back to the ship's forecastle
+and save some of his belongings.
+
+"No sir," shouted the Captain, "she's sinking! There's nothing to do but
+to pull for the shore." Philip P. Bliss caught up the words, and wrought
+them into a hymn and tune.
+
+ Light in the darkness, sailor, day is at hand!
+ See o'er the foaming billows fair Haven's land;
+ Drear was the voyage, sailor, now almost o'er;
+ Safe in the life-boat, sailor, pull for the shore!
+
+ CHORUS.
+ Pull for the shore, sailor, pull for the shore!
+ Heed not the rolling waves, but bend to the oar;
+ Safe in the life-boat, sailor, cling to self no more;
+ Leave the poor old stranded wreck and pull for the shore!
+
+The hymn-tune is a buoyant allegro--solo and chorus--full of hope and
+courage, and both imagery and harmony appeal to the hearts of seamen. It
+is popular, and has long been one of the song numbers in demand at
+religious services both on sea and land.
+
+
+"JESUS, SAVIOUR, PILOT ME."
+
+The Rev. Edward Hopper, D.D. wrote this hymn while pastor of Mariner's
+Church at New York harbor, "The Church of the Sea and Land." He was born
+in 1818, and graduated at Union Theological Seminary in 1843.
+
+ Jesus, Saviour, pilot me
+ Over life's tempestuous sea,
+ Unknown waves before me roll,
+ Hiding rock and treacherous shoal;
+ Chart and compass come from Thee,
+ Jesus, Saviour, pilot me!
+
+Only three stanzas of this rather lengthy hymn are in common use.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Without title except "Savior, pilot me." A simple and pleasing melody
+composed by John Edgar Gould, late of the firm of Gould and Fischer,
+piano dealers, Phila., Pa. He was born in Bangor, Me., April 9, 1822.
+Conductor of music and composer of psalm and hymn tunes and glees, he
+also compiled and published no less than eight books of church,
+Sunday-school, and secular songs. Died in Algiers, Africa, Feb. 13,
+1875.
+
+
+"THROW OUT THE LIFE-LINE."
+
+This is one of the popular refrains that need but a single hearing to
+fix themselves in common memory and insure their own currency and
+_eclat_.
+
+The Rev. E.S. Ufford, well-known as a Baptist preacher, lecturer, and
+evangelist, was witnessing a drill at the life-saving station on Point
+Allerton, Nantasket Beach, when the order to "throw out the life-line"
+and the sight of the apparatus in action, combined with the story of a
+shipwreck on the spot, left an echo in his mind till it took the form of
+a song-sermon. Returning home, he pencilled the words of this rousing
+hymn, and, being himself a singer and player, sat down to his instrument
+to match the lines with a suitable air. It came to him almost as
+spontaneously as the music of "The Ninety and Nine" came to Mr. Sankey.
+In fifteen minutes the hymn-tune was made--so far as the melody went.
+It was published in sheet form in 1888, and afterwards purchased by Mr.
+Sankey, harmonized by Mr. Stebbins, and published in _Winnowed Songs_,
+1890. Included in _Gospel Hymns_, Nov. 6, 1891.
+
+Ever since it has been a favorite with singing seamen, and has done
+active service as one of our most stirring field-songs in revival work.
+
+ Throw out the Life-line across the dark wave,
+ There is a brother whom some one should save;
+ Somebody's brother! oh, who, then, will dare
+ To throw out the Life-line, his peril to share?
+
+ Throw out the Life-line with hand quick and strong!
+ Why do you tarry, why linger so long?
+ See! he is sinking; oh, hasten today--
+ And out with the Life-boat! away, then away!
+
+ CHORUS.
+ Throw out the Life-line!
+ Throw out the Life-line!
+ Some one is drifting away;
+ Throw out the Life-line!
+ Throw out the Life-line!
+ Some one is sinking today.
+
+One evening, in the midst of their hilarity at their card-tables, a
+convivial club in one of the large Pennsylvania cities heard a sweet,
+clear female voice singing this solo hymn, followed by a chime of
+mingled voices in the chorus. A room in the building had been hired for
+religious meetings, and tonight was the first of the series. A strange
+coolness dampened the merriment in the club-room, as the singing went
+on, and the gradual silence became a hush, till finally one member threw
+down his cards and declared, "If what they're saying is right, then
+we're wrong."
+
+Others followed his example, then another, and another.
+
+ There is a brother whom some one should save.
+
+Quietly the revellers left their cards, cigars and half-emptied glasses
+and went home.
+
+Said the ex-member who told the story years after to Mr. Ufford, "'Throw
+Out the Life-line' broke up that club."
+
+He is today one of the responsible editors of a great city daily--and
+his old club-mates are all holding positions of trust.
+
+A Christian man, a prosperous manufacturer in a city of Eastern
+Massachusetts, dates his first religious impressions from hearing this
+hymn when sung in public for the first time, twenty years ago.
+
+Visiting California recently, Mr. Ufford sang his hymn at a
+watch-meeting and told the story of the loss of the Elsie Smith on Cape
+Cod in 1902, exhibiting also the very life-line that had saved sixteen
+lives from the wreck. By chance one of those sixteen was in the
+audience.
+
+An English clergyman who was on duty at Gibraltar when an emigrant ship
+went on the rocks in a storm, tells with what pathetic power and effect
+"Throw out the Life-line" was sung at a special Sunday service for the
+survivors.
+
+At one of Evan Roberts' meetings in Laughor, Wales, one speaker related
+the story of a "vision," when in his room alone, and a Voice that bade
+him pray, and when he knelt but could not pray, commanded him to "Throw
+out the Life-line." He had scarcely uttered these words in his story
+when the whole great congregation sprang to its feet and shouted the
+hymn together like the sound of many waters.
+
+"There is more electricity in that song than in any other I ever heard,"
+Dr. Cuyler said to Mr. Sankey when he heard him sing it. Its electricity
+has carried it nearly round the world.
+
+The Rev. Edward Smith Ufford was born in Newark, N.J., 1851, and
+educated at Stratford Academy (Ct.) and Bates Theological Seminary, Me.
+He held several pastorates in Maine and Massachusetts, but a preference
+for evangelistic work led him to employ his talent for object-teaching
+in illustrated religious lectures through his own and foreign lands,
+singing his hymn and enforcing it with realistic representation. He is
+the author and compiler of several Sunday-school and chapel
+song-manuals, as _Converts' Praise_, _Life-long Songs_, _Wonderful Love_
+and _Gathered Gems_.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+HYMNS OF WALES.
+
+
+In writing this chapter the task of identifying the _tune_, and its
+author, in the case of every hymn, would have required more time and
+labor than, perhaps, the importance of the facts would justify.
+
+Peculiar interest, however, attaches to Welsh hymns, even apart from the
+airs which accompany them, and a general idea of Welsh music may be
+gathered from the tone and metre of the lyrics introduced. More
+particular information would necessitate printing the music itself.
+
+From the days of the Druids, Wales has been a land of song. From the
+later but yet ancient time when the people learned the Christian faith,
+it has had its Christian psalms. The "March of the White Monks of
+Bangor" (7th century) is an epic of bravery and death celebrating the
+advance of Christian martyrs to their bloody fate at the hands of the
+Saxon savages. "Its very rhythm pictures the long procession of
+white-cowled patriots bearing peaceful banners and in faith taking their
+way to Chester to stimulate the valor of their countrymen." And ever
+since the "Battle of the Hallelujahs"--near Chirk on the border, nine
+miles from Wrexham--when the invading Danes were driven from the field
+in fright by the rush of the Cymric army shouting that mighty cry, every
+Christian poet in Wales has had a hallelujah in his verse.
+
+Through the centuries, while chased and hunted by their conquerors among
+the Cambrian hills, but clinging to their independent faith, or even
+when paralyzed into spiritual apathy under tribute to a foreign church,
+the heavenly song still murmured in a few true hearts amidst the vain
+and vicious lays of carnal mirth. It survived even when people and
+priest alike seemed utterly degenerate and godless. The voice of Walter
+Bute (1372) rang true for the religion of Jesus in its purity. Brave
+John Oldcastle, the martyr, (1417) clung to the gospel he learned at
+the foot of the cross. William Wroth, _clergyman_, saved from fiddling
+at a drunken dance by a disaster that turned a house of revelry into a
+house of death, confessed his sins to God and became the "Apostle of
+South Wales." The young vicar, Rhys Pritchard (1579) rose from the
+sunken level of his profession, rescued through an incident less tragic.
+Accustomed to drink himself to inebriety at a public-house--a socially
+winked-at indulgence then--he one day took his pet goat with him, and
+poured liquor down the creature's throat. The refusal of the poor goat
+to go there again forced the reckless priest to reflect on his own ways.
+He forsook the ale-house and became a changed man.
+
+Among his writings--later than this--is found the following plain, blunt
+statement of what continued long to be true of Welsh society, as
+represented in the common use of Sunday time.
+
+ Of all the days throughout the rolling year
+ There's not a day we pass so much amiss,
+ There's not a day wherein we all appear
+ So irreligious, so profaned as this.
+
+ A day for drunkenness, a day for sport,
+ A day to dance, a day to lounge away,
+ A day for riot and excess, too short
+ Amongst the Welshmen is the Sabbath day.
+
+ A day to sit, a day to chat and spend,
+ A day when fighting 'mongst us most prevails,
+ A day to do the errands of the Fiend--
+ Such is the Sabbath in most parts of Wales.
+
+Meantime some who could read the language--and the better educated (like
+the author of the above rhymes) knew English as well as Welsh--had seen
+a rescued copy of _Wycliffs New Testament_, a precious publication
+seized and burnt (like the bones of its translator) by hostile
+ecclesiastics, and suppressed for nearly two hundred years. Walter Bute,
+like Obadiah who hid the hundred prophets, may well be credited with
+such secret salvage out of the general destruction. And there were
+doubtless others equally alert for the same quiet service. We can
+imagine how far the stealthy taste of that priceless book would help to
+strengthen a better religion than the one doled out professionally to
+the multitude by a Civil church; and how it kept the hallelujah alive
+in silent but constant souls; and in how many cases it awoke a
+conscience long hypnotized under corrupt custom, and showed a renegade
+Christian how morally untuned he was.
+
+Daylight came slowly after the morning star, but when the dawn reddened
+it was in welcome to Pritchard's and Penry's gospel song; and sunrise
+hastened at the call of Caradoc, and Powell, and Erbury, and Maurice,
+the holy men who followed them, some with the trumpet of Sinai and some
+with the harp of Calvary.
+
+Cambria was being prepared for its first great revival of religion.
+
+There was no rich portfolio of Christian hymns such as exists to-day,
+but surely there were not wanting pious words to the old chants of
+Bangor and the airs of "Wild Wales." When time brought Howell Harris and
+Daniel Rowland, and the great "Reformation" of the eighteenth century,
+the renowned William Williams, "the Watts of Wales," appeared, and began
+his tuneful work. The province soon became a land of hymns. The candles
+lit and left burning here and there by Penry, Maurice, and the Owens,
+blazed up to beacon-fires through all the twelve counties when Harris,
+at the head of the mighty movement, carried with him the sacred songs of
+Williams, kindling more lights everywhere between the Dee and the
+British Channel.
+
+William Williams of Pantycelyn was born in 1717, at Cefncoed Farm, near
+Llandovery. Three years younger than Harris, (an Oxford graduate,) and
+educated only at a village school and an academy at Llwynllwyd, he was
+the song protagonist of the holy campaign as the other was its champion
+preacher. From first to last Williams wrote nine hundred and sixteen
+hymns, some of which are still heard throughout the church militant, and
+others survive in local use and affection. He died Jan. 11, 1791, at
+Pantycelyn, where he had made his home after his marriage. One of the
+hymns in his _Gloria_, his second publication, may well have been his
+last. It was dear to him above others, and has been dear to devout souls
+in many lands.
+
+ My God, my portion and my love;
+ My all on earth, my all above,
+ My all within the tomb;
+ The treasures of this world below
+ Are but a vain, delusive show,
+ Thy bosom is my home.
+
+It was fitting that Williams should name the first collection of his
+hymns (all in his native Welsh) _The Hallelujah_. Its lyrics are full of
+adoration for the Redeemer, and thanksgivings for His work.
+
+
+"ONWARD RIDE IN TRIUMPH, JESUS,"
+
+_Marchog, Jesu, yn llwyddiannus_,
+
+Has been sung in Wales for a century and a half, and is still a
+favorite.
+
+ Onward ride in triumph, Jesus,
+ Gird thy sword upon thy thigh;
+ Neither earth nor Hell's own vastness
+ Can Thy mighty power defy.
+ In Thy Name such glory dwelleth
+ Every foe withdraws in fear,
+ All the wide creation trembleth
+ Whensoever Thou art near.[37]
+
+The unusual militant strain in this paean of conquest soon disappears,
+and the gentler aspects of Christ's atoning sacrifice occupy the
+writer's mind and pen.
+
+[Footnote 37: The following shows the style of Rev. Elvet Lewis'
+translation:
+ Blessed Jesus, march victorious
+ With Thy sword fixed at Thy side;
+ Neither death nor hell can hinder
+ The God-Warrior in His ride.]
+
+
+"IN EDEN--O THE MEMORY!"
+
+_Yn Eden cofiaf hyny byth!_
+
+The text, "He was wounded for our transgressions," is amplified in this
+hymn, and the Saviour is shown bruising Himself while bruising the
+serpent.
+
+The first stanza gives the key-note,--
+
+ In Eden--O the memory!
+ What countless gifts were lost to me!
+ My crown, my glory fell;
+ But Calvary's great victory
+ Restored that vanished crown to me;
+ On this my songs shall dwell;
+
+--and the multitude of Williams' succeeding "songs" that chant the same
+theme shows how well he kept his promise. The following hymn in Welsh
+(_Cymmer, Jesu fi fel'r ydwyf_) antedates the advice of Dr. Malan to
+Charlotte Elliott, "Come just as you are"--
+
+ Take me as I am, O Saviour,
+ Better I can never be;
+ Thou alone canst bring me nearer,
+ Self but draws me far from Thee.
+ I can never
+ But within Thy wounds be saved;
+
+--and another (_Mi dafla maich oddi ar fy ngway_) reminds us of Bunyan's
+Pilgrim in sight of the Cross:
+
+ I'll cast my heavy burden down,
+ Remembering Jesus' pains;
+ Guilt high as towering mountain tops
+ Here turns to joyful strains.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ He stretched His pure white hands abroad,
+ A crown of thorns He wore,
+ That so the vilest sinner might
+ Be cleansed forevermore;
+
+Williams was called "The Sweet Singer of Wales" and "The Watts of Wales"
+because he was the chief poet and hymn-writer of his time, but the lady
+he married, Miss Mary Francis, was _literally_ a singer, with a voice so
+full and melodious that the people to whom he preached during his
+itineraries, which she sometimes shared with him, were often more moved
+by her sweet hymnody than by his exhortations. On one occasion the good
+man, accompanied by his wife, put up at Bridgend Tavern in Llangefin,
+Anglesea, and a mischievous crowd, wishing to plague the "Methodists,"
+planned to make night hideous in the house with a boisterous
+merry-making. The fiddler, followed by a gang of roughs, pushed his way
+to the parlor, and mockingly asked the two guests if they would "have a
+tune."
+
+"Yes," replied Williams, falling in with his banter, "anything you like,
+my lad; 'Nancy Jig' or anything else."
+
+And at a sign from her husband, as soon as the fellow began the jig,
+Mrs. Williams struck in with one of the poet-minister's well-known Welsh
+hymns in the same metre,--
+
+ _Gwaed Dy groes sy'n c' odi fyny_
+
+ Calvary's blood the weak exalteth
+ More than conquerors to be,[38]
+
+--and followed the player note for note, singing the sacred words in her
+sweet, clear voice, till he stopped ashamed, and took himself off with
+all his gang.
+
+[Footnote 38: A less literal but more hymn-like translation is:
+ Jesu's blood can raise the feeble
+ As a conqueror to stand;
+ Jesu's blood is all-prevailing
+ O'er the mighty of the land:
+ Let the breezes
+ Blow from Calvary on me.
+
+Says the author of _Sweet Singers of Wales_, "This refrain has been the
+password of many powerful revivals."]
+
+Another hymn--
+
+ _O' Llefara! addfwyn Jesu_,
+
+ Speak, O speak, thou gentle Jesus,
+
+--recalls the well-known verse of Newton, "How sweet the name of Jesus
+sounds." Like many of Williams' hymns, it was prompted by occasion. Some
+converts suffered for lack of a "clear experience" and complained to
+him. They were like the disciples in the ship, "It was dark, and Jesus
+had not yet come unto them." The poet-preacher immediately made this
+hymn-prayer for all souls similarly tried. Edward Griffiths translates
+it thus:
+
+ Speak, I pray Thee, gentle Jesus,
+ O how passing sweet Thy words,
+ Breathing o'er my troubled spirit,
+ Peace which never earth affords,
+ All the world's distracting voices,
+ All th' enticing tones of ill,
+ At Thy accents, mild, melodious
+ Are subdued, and all is still.
+
+ Tell me Thou art mine, O Saviour
+ Grant me an assurance clear,
+ Banish all my dark misgivings,
+ Still my doubting, calm my fear.
+
+Besides his Welsh hymns, published in the first and in the second and
+larger editions of his _Hallelujah_, and in two or three other
+collections, William Williams wrote and published two books of English
+hymns,[39] the _Hosanna_ (1759) and the _Gloria_ (1772). He fills so
+large a space in the hymnology and religious history of Wales that he
+will necessarily reappear in other pages of this chapter.
+
+[Footnote 39: Possibly they were written in Welsh, and translated into
+English by his friend and neighbor, Peter Williams.]
+
+From the days of the early religious awakenings under the 16th century
+preachers, and after the ecclesiastical dynasty of Rome had been
+replaced by that of the Church of England, there were periods when the
+independent conscience of a few pious Welshmen rose against religious
+formalism, and the credal constraints of "established" teaching--and
+suffered for it. Burning heretics at the stake had ceased to be a church
+practice before the 1740's, but Howell Harris, Daniel Rowlands, and the
+rest of the "Methodist Fathers," with their followers, were not only
+ostracised by society and haled before magistrates to be fined for
+preaching, and sometimes imprisoned, but they were chased and beaten by
+mobs, ducked in ponds and rivers, and pelted with mud and garbage when
+they tried to speak or sing. But they kept on talking and singing.
+Harris (who had joined the army in 1760) owned a commission, and once he
+saved himself from the fury of a mob while preaching--with cloak over
+his ordinary dress--by lifting his cape and showing the star on his
+breast. No one dared molest an officer of His Britannic Majesty. But all
+were not able to use St. Paul's expedient in critical moments.[40]
+
+[Footnote 40: Acts 22:25.]
+
+William Williams often found immunity in his hymns, for like Luther--and
+like Charles Wesley among the Cornwall sea-robbers--he caught up the
+popular glees and ballad-refrains of the street and market and his wife
+sang their music to his words. It is true many of these old Welsh airs
+were minors, like "Elvy" and "Babel" (a significant name in English) and
+would not be classed as "glees" in any other country--always excepting
+Scotland--but they had the _swing_, and their mode and style were catchy
+to a Welsh multitude. In fact many of these uncopyrighted bits of
+musical vernacular were appropriated by the hymnbook makers, and
+christened with such titles as "Pembroke," "Arabia," "Brymgfryd,"
+"Cwyfan," "Thydian," and the two mentioned above.
+
+It was the time when Whitefield and the Wesleys were sweeping the
+kingdom with their conquering eloquence, and Howell Harris (their
+fellow-student at Oxford) had sided with the conservative wing of the
+Gospel Reformation workers, and become a "Whitfield Methodist." The
+Welsh Methodists, _ad exemplum_, marched with this Calvinistic
+branch--as they do today. Each division had its Christian bard. Charles
+Wesley could put regenerating power into sweet, poetic hymns, and
+William Williams' lyrical preaching made the Bible a travelling pulpit.
+The great "Beibl Peter Williams" with its commentaries in Welsh, since
+so long reverenced and cherished in provincial families, was not
+published till 1770, and for many the printed Word was far to seek.[41]
+But the gospel minstrels carried the Word with them. Some of the long
+hymns contained nearly a whole body of divinity.
+
+[Footnote 41: As an incident contributory to the formation of the
+British and Foreign Bible Society, the story has been often repeated of
+the little girl who wept when she missed her Catechism appointment, and
+told Thomas Charles of Bala that the bad weather was the cause of it,
+for she had to walk seven miles to find a Bible every time she prepared
+her lessons. See page 380.]
+
+The Welsh learn their hymns by heart, as they do the Bible--a habit
+inherited from those old days of scarcity, when memory served pious
+people instead of print--so that a Welsh prayer-meeting is never
+embarrassed by a lack of books. An anecdote illustrates this
+characteristic readiness. In February, 1797, when Napoleon's name was a
+terror to England, the French landed some troops near Fishguard,
+Pembrokeshire. Mounted heralds spread the news through Wales, and in the
+village of Rhydybont, Cardiganshire, the fright nearly broke up a
+religious meeting; but one brave woman, Nancy Jones, stopped a panic by
+singing this stanza of one of Thomas Williams' hymns,--
+
+ _Diuw os wyt am ddylenu'r bya_
+
+ If Thou wouldst end the world, O Lord,
+ Accomplish first Thy promised Word,
+ And gather home with one accord
+ From every part Thine own,
+ Send out Thy Word from pole to pole,
+ And with Thy blood make thousands whole,
+ And, _after that come down_.
+
+Nancy Jones would have been a useful member of the "Singing Sisters"
+band, so efficient a century or more afterwards.
+
+The _tunes_ of the Reformation under the "Methodist Fathers" continued
+far down the century to be the country airs of the nation, and
+reverberations of the great spiritual movement were heard in their rude
+music in the mountain-born revival led by Jack Edward Watkin in 1779 and
+in the local awakenings of 1791 and 1817. Later in the 19th century new
+hymns, and many of the old, found new tunes, made for their sake or
+imported from England and America.
+
+The sanctified gift of song helped to make 1829 a year of jubilee in
+South Wales, nor was the same aid wanting during the plague in 1831,
+when the famous Presbyterian preacher, John Elias,[42] won nearly a
+whole county to Christ.
+
+[Footnote 42: Those who read his biography will call him the "Seraphic
+John Elias."
+
+His name was John Jones when he was admitted a member of the presbytery.
+What followed is a commentary on the embarrassing frequency of a common
+name, nowhere realized so universally as it is in Wales.
+
+"What is his father's name?" asked the moderator when John Jones was
+announced.
+
+"Elias Jones," was the answer.
+
+"Then call the young man John Elias," said the speaker, "otherwise we
+shall by and by have nobody but John Joneses."
+
+And "John Elias" it remained.]
+
+An accession of temperance hymns in Wales followed the spread of the
+"Washingtonian" movement on the other side of the Atlantic in 1840, and
+began a moral reformation in the county of Merioneth that resulted in a
+spiritual one, and added to the churches several thousand converts,
+scarcely any of whom fell away.
+
+The revival of 1851-2 was a local one, but was believed by many to have
+been inspired by a celestial antiphony. The remarkable sounds were
+either a miracle or a psychic wonder born of the intense imagination of
+a sensitive race. A few pious people in a small village of
+Montgomeryshire had been making special prayer for an outpouring of the
+spirit, but after a week of meetings with no sign of the result hoped
+for, they were returning to their homes, discouraged, when they heard
+strains of sweet music in the sky. They stopped in amazement, but the
+beautiful singing went on--voices as of a choir invisible, indistinct
+but melodious, in the air far above the roof of the chapel they had just
+left. Next day, when the astonished worshippers told the story, numbers
+in the district said they had heard the same sounds. Some had gone out
+at eleven o'clock to listen, and thought that angels must be singing.
+Whatever the music meant, the good brethren's and sisters' little
+meetings became crowded very soon after, and the longed-for out-pouring
+came mightily upon the neighborhood. Hundreds from all parts flocked to
+the churches, all ages joining in the prayers and hymns and testimonies,
+and a harvest of glad believers followed a series of meetings "led by
+the Holy Ghost."
+
+The sounds in the sky were never explained; but the belief that God sent
+His angels to sing an answer to the anxious prayers of those pious
+brethren and sisters did no one any harm.
+
+Whether this event in Montgomeryshire was a preparation for what took
+place six or seven years later is a suggestive question only, but when
+the wave of spiritual power from the great American revival of 1857-8
+reached England, its first messenger to Wales, Rev. H.R. Jones, a
+Wesleyan, had only to drop the spark that "lit a prairie fire." The
+reformation, chiefly under the leadership of Mr. Jones and Rev. David
+Morgan, a Presbyterian, with their singing bands, was general and
+lasting, hundreds of still robust and active Christians today dating
+their new birth from the Pentecost of 1859 and its ingathering of eighty
+thousand souls.
+
+A favorite hymn of that revival was the penitential cry,--
+
+ _O'th flaem, O Dduw! 'r wy'n dyfod_,
+
+--in the seven-six metre so much loved in Wales.
+
+ Unto Thy presence coming,
+ O God, far off I stand:
+ "A sinner" is my title,
+ No other I demand.
+
+ For mercy I am seeking
+ For mercy still shall cry;
+ Deny me not Thy mercy;
+ O grant it or I die!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ I heard of old that Jesus,
+ Who still abides the same,
+ To publicans gave welcome,
+ And sinners deep in shame.
+
+ Oh God! receive me with them,
+ Me also welcome in,
+ And pardon my transgression,
+ Forgetting all my sin.
+
+The author of the hymn was Thomas Williams of Glamorganshire, born 1761;
+died 1844. He published a volume of hymns, _Waters of Bethesda_ in 1823.
+
+The Welsh minor tune of "Clwyd" may appropriately have been the music to
+express the contrite prayer of the words. The living composer, John
+Jones, has several tunes in the Welsh revival manual of melodies, _Ail
+Attodiad_.
+
+The unparalleled religious movement of 1904-5 was a praying and singing
+revival. The apostle and spiritual prompter of that unbroken campaign of
+Christian victories--so far as any single human agency counted--was Evan
+Roberts, of Laughor, a humble young worker in the mines, who had prayed
+thirteen years for a mighty descent of the heavenly blessing on his
+country and for a clear indication of his own mission. His convictions
+naturally led him to the ministry, and he went to Newcastle Emlyn to
+study. Evangelical work had been done by two societies, made up of
+earnest Christians, and known as the "Forward Movement" and the
+"Simultaneous Mission." Beginnings of a special season of interest as a
+result of their efforts, appeared in the young people's prayer meetings
+in February, 1904, at New Quay, Cardiganshire. The interest increased,
+and when branch-work was organized a young praying and singing band
+visited Newcastle Emlyn in the course of one of their tours, and held a
+rally meeting. Evan Roberts went to the meeting and found his own
+mission. He left his studies and consecrated himself, soul and body, to
+revival work. In every spiritual and mental quality he was surpassingly
+well-equipped. To the quick sensibility of his poetic nature he added
+the inspiration of a seer and the zeal of a devotee. Like Moses, Elijah,
+and Paul in Arabian solitudes, and John in the Dead Sea wilds, he had
+prepared himself in silence and alone with God; and though, on occasion,
+he could use effectively his gift of words, he stood distinct in a land
+of matchless pulpit orators as "the silent leader." Without preaching he
+dominated the mood of his meetings, and without dictating he could
+change the trend of a service and shape the next song or prayer on the
+intuition of a moment. In fact, judged by its results, it was God
+Himself who directed the revival, only He endowed His minister with the
+power of divination to watch its progress and take the stumbling-blocks
+out of the way. By a kind of hallowed psychomancy, that humble man would
+detect a discordant presence, and hush the voices of a congregation till
+the stubborn soul felt God in the stillness, and penitently
+surrendered.
+
+Many tones of the great awakening of 1859 heard again in 1904-5,--the
+harvest season without a precedent, when men, women and children
+numbering ten per cent of the whole population of a province were
+gathered into the membership of the church of Christ. But there were
+tones a century older heard in the devotions of that harvest-home in
+Wales. A New England Christian would have felt at home, with the tuneful
+assemblies at Laughor, Trencynon, Bangor, Bethesda, Wrexham, Cardiff, or
+Liverpool, singing Lowell Mason's "Meribah" or the clarion melody of
+Edson's "Lenox" to Wesley's--
+
+ Blow ye the trumpet, blow,
+ The gladly solemn sound;
+
+--or to his other well-known--
+
+ Arise my soul, arise,
+ Shake off thy guilty fears,
+ The bleeding Sacrifice
+ In thy behalf appear.
+
+In short, the flood tide of 1904 and 1905 brought in very little new
+music and very few new hymns. "Aberystwyth" and "Tanymarian," the minor
+harmonies of Joseph Party and Stephens; E.M. Price's "St. Garmon;" R.M.
+Pritchard's, "Hyfrydol," and a few others, were choral favorites, but
+their composers were all dead, and the congregations loved the still
+older singers who had found familiar welcome at their altars and
+firesides. The most cherished and oftenest chosen hymns were those of
+William Williams and Ann Griffiths, of Charles Wesley, of Isaac
+Watts--indeed the very tongues of fire that appeared at Jerusalem took
+on the Cymric speech, and sang the burning lyrics of the poet-saints.
+And in their revival joy Calvinistic Wales sang the New Testament with
+more of its Johannic than of its Pauline texts. The covenant of
+peace--Christ and His Cross--is the theme of all their hymns.
+
+
+"HERE BEHOLD THE TENT OF MEETING."
+
+_Dyma Babell y cyfarfod._
+
+This hymn, written by Ann Griffiths, is entitled "Love Eternal," and
+praises the Divine plan to satisfy the Law and at the same time save the
+sinner. The first stanza gives an idea of the thought:
+
+ Here behold the tent of meeting,
+ In the blood a peace with heaven,
+ Refuge from the blood-avengers,
+ For the sick a Healer given.
+ Here the sinner nestles safely
+ At the very Throne divine,
+ And Heaven's righteous law, all holy.
+ Still on him shall smile and shine.
+
+
+"HOW SWEET THE COVENANT TO REMEMBER."
+
+_Bydd melus gofio y cyfammod._
+
+This, entitled "Mysteries of Grace," is also from the pen of Ann
+Griffiths. It has the literalness noticeable in much of the Welsh
+religious poetry, and there is a note of pietism in it. The two last
+stanzas are these:
+
+ He is the great Propitiation
+ Who with the thieves that anguish bare;
+ He nerved the arms of His tormentors
+ To drive the nails that fixed Him there.
+ While He discharged the sinner's ransom,
+ And made the Law in honor be,
+ Righteousness shone undimmed, resplendent,
+ And me the Covenant set free.
+
+ My soul, behold Him laid so lowly,
+ Of peace the Fount, of Kings the Head,
+ The vast creation in Him moving
+ And He low-lying with the dead!
+ The Life and portion of lost sinners,
+ The marvel of heaven's seraphim,
+ To sea and land the God Incarnate
+ The choir of heaven cries, "Unto Him!"
+
+Ann Griffiths' earliest hymn will be called her sweetest. Fortunately,
+too, it is more poetically translated. It was before the vivid
+consciousness and intensity of her religious experience had given her
+spiritual writings a more involved and mystical expression.
+
+ My soul, behold the fitness
+ Of this great Son of God,
+ Trust Him for life eternal
+ And cast on Him thy load,
+ A man--touched with the pity
+ Of every human woe,
+ A God--to claim the kingdom
+ And vanquish every foe.
+
+This stanza, the last of her little poem on the "Eternal Fitness of
+Jesus," came to her when, returning from an exciting service, filled
+with thoughts of her unworthiness and of the glorious beauty of her
+Saviour, she had turned down a sheltered lane to pray alone. There on
+her knees in communion with God her soul felt the spirit of the sacred
+song. By the time she reached home she had formed it into words.
+
+The first and second stanzas, written later, are these:
+
+ Great Author of salvation
+ And providence for man,
+ Thou rulest earth and heaven
+ With Thy far-reaching plan.
+ Today or on the morrow,
+ Whatever woe betide,
+ Grant us Thy strong assistance,
+ Within Thy hand to hide.
+
+ What though the winds be angry,
+ What though the waves be high
+ While wisdom is the Ruler,
+ The Lord of earth and sky?
+ What though the flood of evil
+ Rise stormily and dark?
+ No soul can sink within it;
+ God is Himself the ark.
+
+Mrs. Ann Griffiths, of Dolwar Fechan, Montgomeryshire, was born in 1776,
+and died in 1805. "She remains," says Dr. Parry, her fellow-countryman,
+"a romantic figure in the religious history of Wales. Her hymns leave
+upon the reader an undefinable impression both of sublimity and
+mysticism. Her brief life-history is most worthy of study both from a
+literary and a religious point of view."
+
+[Illustration: Isaac Watts, D.D.]
+
+A suggestive chapter of her short earthly career is compressed in a
+sentence by the author of "Sweet Singers of Wales:"
+
+"She had a Christian life of eight years and a married life of ten
+months."
+
+She died at the age of twenty-nine. In 1904, near the centennial of her
+death, amid the echoes of her own hymns, and the rising waves of the
+great Refreshing over her native land, the people of Dolwar Fechan
+dedicated the new "Ann Griffiths Memorial Chapel" to her name and to the
+glory of God.
+
+Although the Welsh were not slow to adopt the revival tones of other
+lands, it was the native, and what might be called the national, lyrics
+of that emotional race that were sung with the richest unction and
+_hwyl_ (as the Cymric word is) during the recent reformation, and that
+evinced the strongest hold on the common heart. Needless to say that
+with them was the world-famous song of William Williams,--
+
+ Guide me, O Thou Great Jehovah;
+
+ _Arglwydd ar wain truy'r anialoch_;
+
+--and that of Dr. Heber Evans,--
+
+ Keep me very near to Jesus,
+ Though beneath His Cross it be,
+ In this world of evil-doing
+ 'Tis the Cross that cleanseth me;
+
+--and also that native hymn of expectation, high and sweet, whose writer
+we have been unable to identify--
+
+ The glory is coming! God said it on high,
+ When light in the evening will break from the sky;
+ The North and South and the East and the West,
+ With joy of salvation and peace will be bless'd.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ O summer of holiness, hasten along!
+ The purpose of glory is constant and strong;
+ The winter will vanish, the clouds pass away;
+ O South wind of Heaven, breath softly today!
+
+Of the almost countless hymns that voiced the spirit of the great
+revival, the nine following are selected because they are
+representative, and all favorites--and because there is no room for a
+larger number. The first line of each is given in the original Welsh:
+
+
+"DWY ADEN COLOMEN PE CAWN."
+
+ O had I the wings of a dove
+ How soon would I wander away
+ To gaze from Mount Nebo I'd love
+ On realms that are fairer than day.
+ My vision, not clouded nor dim,
+ Beyond the dark river should run;
+ I'd sing, with my thoughts upon Him,
+ The sinless, the crucified one.
+
+This is another of Thomas Williams' hymns. One of the tunes suitable to
+its feeling and its measure was "Edom," by Thomas Evans. It was much
+sung in 1859, as well as in 1904.
+
+
+"CAELBOD YN FORSEC DAN YR IAN."
+
+ Early to bear the yoke excels
+ By far the joy in sin that dwells;
+ The paths of wisdom still are found
+ In peace and solace to abound.
+
+ The young who serve Him here below
+ The wrath to come shall never know;
+ Of such in heaven are pearls that shine
+ Unnumbered in the crown divine.
+
+Written for children and youth by Rev. Thomas Jones, of Denbigh, born
+1756; died 1820,--a Calvinistic Methodist preacher, author of a
+biography of Thomas Charles of Bala, and various theological works.
+
+
+"DYMA GARIAD FEL Y MOROEDD, TOSTURIASTHAN FEL Y LLI."
+
+ Love unfathomed as the ocean
+ Mercies boundless as the wave!
+ Lo the King of Life, the guiltless,
+ Dies my guilty soul to save;
+ Who can choose but think upon it,
+ Who can choose but praise and sing?
+ Here is love, while heaven endureth,
+ Nought can to oblivion bring.
+
+This is called "The great Welsh love-song." It was written by Rev.
+William Rees, D.D., eminent as a preacher, poet, politician and
+essayist. One of the greatest names of nineteenth century Wales. He died
+in 1883.
+
+The tune, "Cwynfan Prydian," sung to this hymn is one of the old Welsh
+minors that would sound almost weird to our ears, but Welsh voices can
+sing with strange sweetness the Saviour's passion on which Christian
+hearts of that nation love so well to dwell, and the shadow of it, with
+His love shining through, creates the paradox of a joyful lament in many
+of their chorals. We cannot imitate it.
+
+
+"RHYFEDDODAU DYDD YR ADGYFODIDD."
+
+ Unnumbered are the marvels
+ The Last Great Day shall see,
+ With earth's poor storm-tossed children
+ From tribulation free,
+ All in their shining raiment
+ Transfigured, bright and brave,
+ Like to their Lord ascending
+ In triumph from the grave.
+
+The author of this Easter hymn is unknown.
+
+The _most_ popular Welsh hymns would be named variously by different
+witnesses according to the breadth and length of their observation. Two
+of them, as a Wrexham music publisher testifies, are certainly the
+following; "Heaven and Home," and "Lo, a Saviour for the Fallen." The
+first of these was sung in the late revival with "stormy rapture."
+
+
+"O FRYNAU CAERSALEM CEIR GIVELED."
+
+ The heights of fair Salem ascended,
+ Each wilderness path we shall see;
+ Now thoughts of each difficult journey
+ A sweet meditation shall be.
+ On death, on the grave and its terrors
+ And storms we shall gaze from above
+ And freed from all cares we shall revel (?)
+ In transports of heavenly love.
+
+According to the mood of the meeting this was pitched in three sharps to
+Evelyn Evans' tune of "Eirinwg" or with equal Welsh enthusiasm in the C
+minor of old "Darby."
+
+The author of the hymn was the Rev. David Charles, of Carmarthen, born
+1762; died 1834. He was a heavenly-minded man who loved to dwell on the
+divine and eternal wonders of redemption. A volume of his sermons was
+spoken of as "Apples of gold in pictures of silver," and the beautiful
+piety of all his writings made them strings of pearls. He understood
+English as well as Welsh, and enjoyed the hymns not only of William and
+Thomas Williams but of Watts, Wesley, Cowper, and Newton.[43]
+
+[Footnote 43: The following verses were written by him in English:
+ Spirit of grace and love divine,
+ Help me to sing that Christ is mine;
+ And while the theme my tongue employs
+ Fill Thou my soul with living joys.
+
+ Jesus is mine--surpassing thought!
+ Well may I set the world at nought;
+ Jesus is mine, O can it be
+ That Jesus lived and died for me?]
+
+
+"DYMA GEIDWAD I R COLLEDIG."
+
+ Lo! a Saviour for the fallen,
+ Healer of the sick and sore,
+ One whose love the vilest sinners
+ Seeks to pardon and restore.
+ Praise Him, praise Him
+ Who has loved us evermore!
+
+The little now known of the Rev. Morgan Rhys, author of this hymn, is
+that he was a schoolmaster and preacher, and that he was a contemporary
+and friend of William Williams. Several of his hymns remain in use of
+which the oftenest sung is one cited above, and "_O agor fy llygaid i
+weled_:"
+
+ I open my eyes to this vision,
+ The deeps of Thy purpose and word;
+ The law of Thy lips is to thousands
+ Of gold and of silver preferred;
+ When earth is consumed, and its treasure,
+ God's words will unchanging remain,
+ And to know the God-man is my Saviour
+ Is life everlasting to gain.
+
+"Lo! a Saviour for the Fallen" finds an appropriate voice in W.M.
+Robert's tune of "Nesta," and also, like many others of the same
+measure, in the much-used minors "Llanietyn," "Catharine," and "Bryn
+Calfaria."
+
+
+"O SANCTEIDDIA F'ENAID ARGLWYDD."
+
+ Sanctify, O Lord, my spirit,
+ Every power and passion sway,
+ Bid Thy holy law within me
+ Dwell, my wearied soul to stay;
+ Let me never
+ Rove beyond Thy narrow way.
+
+This one more hymn of William Williams is from his "Song of a Cleansed
+Heart" and is amply provided with tunes, popular ones like "Tyddyn
+Llwyn," "Y Delyn Aur," or "Capel-Y-Ddol" lending their deep minors to
+its lines with a thrilling effect realized, perhaps, only in the land of
+Taliessin and the Druids.
+
+The singular history and inspiring cause of one old Welsh hymn which
+after various mutilations and vicissitudes survives as the key-note of a
+valued song of trust, seems to illustrate the Providence that will never
+let a good thing be lost. It is related of the Rev. David Williams, of
+Llandilo, an obscure but not entirely forgotten preacher, that he had a
+termagant wife, and one stormy night, when her bickerings became
+intolerable, he went out in the rain and standing by the river composed
+in his mind these lines of tender faith:
+
+ In the waves and mighty waters
+ No one will support my head
+ But my Saviour, my Beloved,
+ Who was stricken in my stead.
+ In the cold and mortal river
+ He would hold my head above;
+ I shall through the waves go singing
+ For one look of Him I love.
+
+Apparently the sentiment and substantially the expression of this humble
+hymn became the burden of more than one Christian lay. Altered and
+blended with a modern gospel hymn, it was sung at the crowded meetings
+of 1904 to Robert Lowry's air of "Jesus Only," and often rendered very
+impressively as a solo by a sweet female voice.
+
+ In the deep and mighty waters
+ There is none to hold my head
+ But my loving Bridegroom, Jesus,
+ Who upon the cross hath bled.
+
+ If I've Jesus, Jesus only
+ Then my sky will have a gem
+ He's the Sun of brightest splendor,
+ He's the Star of Bethlehem.
+
+ He's the Friend in Death's dark river,
+ He will lift me o'er the waves,
+ I will sing in the deep waters
+ If I only see His face.
+ If I've Jesus, Jesus only, etc.
+
+A few of the revival tunes have living authors and are of recent date;
+and the minor harmony of "Ebenezer" (marked "Ton Y Botel"), which was
+copied in this country by the New York _Examiner_, with its hymn, is
+apparently a contemporary piece. It was first sung at Bethany Chapel,
+Cardiff, Jan, 8, 1905, the hymn bearing the name of Rev. W.E. Winks.
+
+ Send Thy Spirit, I beseech Thee,
+ Gracious Lord, send while I pray;
+ Send the Comforter to teach me,
+ Guide me, help me in Thy way.
+ Sinful, wretched, I have wandered
+ Far from Thee in darkest night,
+ Precious time and talents squandered,
+ Lead, O lead me into light.
+
+ Thou hast heard me; light is breaking--
+ Light I never saw before.
+ Now, my soul with joy awaking,
+ Gropes in fearful gloom no more:
+ O the bliss! my soul, declare it;
+ Say what God hath done for thee;
+ Tell it out, let others share it--
+ Christ's salvation, full and free.
+
+One cannot help noticing the fondness of the Welsh for the 7-6, 8-7, and
+8-7-4 metres. These are favorites since they lend themselves so
+naturally to the rhythms of their national music--though their newest
+hymnals by no means exclude exotic lyrics and melodies. Even "O mother
+dear, Jerusalem," one of the echoes of Bernard of Cluny's great hymn, is
+cherished in their tongue (_O, Frynian Caerselem_) among the favorites
+of song. Old "Truro" by Dr. Burney appears among their tunes, Mason's
+"Ernan," "Lowell" and "Shawmut," I.B. Woodbury's "Nearer Home" (to Phebe
+Cary's hymn), and even George Hews' gently-flowing "Holley." Most of
+these tunes retain their own hymns, but in Welsh translation. To find
+our Daniel Read's old "Windham" there is no surprise. The minor mode--a
+song-instinct of the Welsh, if not of the whole Celtic family of
+nations, is their rural inheritance. It is in the wind of their
+mountains and the semitones of their streams; and their nature can make
+it a gladness as the Anglo-Saxon cannot. So far from being a gloomy
+people, their capacity for joy in spiritual life is phenomenal. In
+psalmody their emotions mount on wings, and they find ecstacy in solemn
+sounds.
+
+"A temporary excitement" is the verdict of skepticism on the Reformation
+wave that for a twelvemonth swept over Wales with its ringing symphonies
+of hymn and tune. But such excitements are the May-blossom seasons of
+God's eternal husbandry. They pass because human vigor cannot last at
+flood-tide, but in spiritual economy they will always have their place,
+"If the blossoms had not come and gone there would be no fruit."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+FIELD HYMNS.
+
+
+Hymns of the hortatory and persuasive tone are sufficiently numerous to
+make an "embarrassment of riches" in a compiler's hands. Not a few songs
+of invitation and awakening are either quoted or mentioned in the
+chapter on "Old Revival Hymns," and many appear among those in the last
+chapter, (on the _Hymns of Wales_;) but the _working_ songs of Christian
+hymnology deserve a special space _as_ such.
+
+
+"COME HITHER ALL YE WEARY SOULS,"
+
+Sung to "Federal St.," is one of the older soul-winning calls from the
+great hymn-treasury of Dr. Watts; and another note of the same sacred
+bard,--
+
+ Life is the time to serve the Lord,
+
+--is always coupled with the venerable tune of "Wells."[44] Aged
+Christians are still remembered who were wont to repeat or sing with
+quavering voices the second stanza,--
+
+ The living know that they must die,
+ But all the dead forgotten lie;
+ Their memory and their sense are gone,
+ Alike unknowing and unknown.
+
+And likewise from the fourth stanza,--
+
+ There are no acts of pardon passed
+ In the cold grave to which we haste.
+
+[Footnote 44: One of Israel Holroyd's tunes. He was born in England,
+about 1690, and was both a composer and publisher of psalmody. His chief
+collection is dated 1746.]
+
+
+"AND WILL THE JUDGE DESCEND?"
+
+Is one of Doddridge's monitory hymns, once sung to J.C. Woodman's tune
+of "State St." with the voice of both the Old and New Testaments in the
+last verse:
+
+ Ye sinners, seek His grace
+ Whose wrath ye cannot bear;
+ Fly to the shelter of His Cross,
+ And find Salvation there.
+
+Jonathan Call Woodman was born in Newburyport, Mass., July 12, 1813,
+and was a teacher, composer, and compiler. Was organist of St. George's
+Chapel, in Flushing, L.I., and in 1858 published _The Musical Casket_.
+Died January, 1894. He wrote "State St." for William B. Bradbury, in
+August, 1844.
+
+
+"HASTEN SINNER, TO BE WISE"
+
+Is one of the few unforgotten hymns of Thomas Scott, every second line
+repeating the solemn caution,--
+
+ Stay not for tomorrow's sun,
+
+--and every line enforcing its exhortation with a new word, "To be
+wise," "to implore," "to return," and "to be blest" were natural
+cumulatives that summoned and wooed the sinner careless and astray. It
+is a finished piece of work, but it owes its longevity less to its
+structural form than to its spirit. For generations it has been sung to
+"Pleyel's Hymn."
+
+The Rev. Thomas Scott (not Rev. Thomas Scott the Commentator) was born
+in Norwich, Eng., in 1705, and died at Hupton, in Norfolk, 1776. He was
+a Dissenting minister, pastor for twenty-one years--until disabled by
+feeble health--at Lowestoft in Suffolk. He was the author of--
+
+ Angels roll the rock away.
+
+
+"MUST JESUS BEAR THE CROSS ALONE?"
+
+This emotional and appealing hymn still holds its own in the hearts of
+millions, though probably two hundred years old. It was written by a
+clergyman of the Church of England, the Rev. Thomas Shepherd, Vicar of
+Tilbrook, born in 1665. Joining the Nonconformists in 1694, he settled
+first in Castle Hill, Nottingham, and afterward in Bocking, Essex, where
+he remained until his death, January, 1739. He published a selection of
+his sermons, and _Penitential Cries_, a book of sacred lyrics, some of
+which still appear in collections.
+
+The startling question in the above line is answered with emphasis in
+the third of the stanza,--
+
+ _No_! There's a cross for every one,
+ And there's a cross for _me_,
+
+--and this is followed by the song of resolve and triumph,--
+
+ The consecrated cross I'll bear,
+ Till death shall set me free.
+ And then go home my crown to wear,
+ For there's a crown for me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ O precious cross! O glorious crown!
+ O Resurrection Day!
+ Ye angels from the stars flash down
+ And bear my soul away!
+
+The hymn is a personal New Testament. No one who analyzes it and feels
+its Christian vitality will wonder why it has lived so long.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+For half a century George N. Allen, composer of "Maitland," the music
+inseparable from the hymn, was credited with the authorship of the words
+also, but his vocal aid to the heart-stirring poem earned him sufficient
+praise. The tune did not meet the hymn till the latter was so old that
+the real author was mostly forgotten, for Allen wrote the music in 1849;
+but if the fine stanzas needed any renewing it was his tune that made
+them new. Since it was published nobody has wanted another.
+
+George Nelson Allen was born in Mansfield, Mass., Sept. 7, 1812, and
+lived at Oberlin, O. It was there that he composed "Maitland," and
+compiled the _Social and Sabbath Hymn-book_--besides songs for the
+_Western Bell_, published by Oliver Ditson and Co. He died in
+Cincinnati, Dec. 9, 1877.
+
+
+"AWAKE MY SOUL, STRETCH EVERY NERVE!"
+
+This most popular of Dr. Doddridge's hymns is also the richest one of
+all in lyrical and spiritual life. It is a stadium song that sounds the
+starting-note for every young Christian at the outset of his career, and
+the slogan for every faint Christian on the way.
+
+ A _heavenly_ race demands thy zeal,
+ And an immortal crown.
+
+Like the "Coronation" hymn, it transports the devout singer till he
+feels only the momentum of the words and forgets whether it is common or
+hallelujah metre that carries him along.
+
+ A cloud of witnesses around
+ Hold thee in full survey;
+ Forget the steps already trod,
+ And onward urge thy way!
+
+ 'Tis God's all-animating voice
+ That calls thee from on high,
+ 'Tis His own hand presents the prize
+ To thine aspiring eye.
+
+In all persuasive hymnology there is no more kindling lyric that this.
+As a field-hymn it is indispensable.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Whenever and by whomsoever the brave processional known as "Christmas"
+was picked from among the great Handel's Songs and mated with
+Doddridge's lines, the act gave both hymn and tune new reason to endure,
+and all posterity rejoices in the blend. Old "Christmas" was originally
+one of the melodies in the great Composer's Opera of "Ciroe" (Cyrus)
+1738. It was written to Latin words (_Non vi piacque_) and afterwards
+adapted to an English versification of Job 29:15, "I was eyes to the
+blind."
+
+Handel himself became blind at the age of sixty eight (1753).
+
+
+"THERE IS A GREEN HILL FAR AWAY."
+
+Written in 1848 by Miss Cecil Frances Humphreys, an Irish lady, daughter
+of Major John Humphreys of Dublin. She was born in that city in 1823.
+Her best known name is Mrs. Cecil Frances Alexander, her husband being
+the Rt. Rev. William Alexander, Bishop of Derry. Among her works are
+_Hymns for Little Children_, _Narrative Hymns_, _Hymns Descriptive and
+Devotional_, and _Moral Songs_. Died 1895.
+
+"There is a _green_ hill" is poetic license, but the hymn is sweet and
+sympathetic, and almost childlike in its simplicity.
+
+ There is a green hill far away
+ Without the city wall,
+ Where our dear Lord was crucified
+ Who died to save us all.
+
+ We may not know, we cannot tell
+ What pains He had to bear;
+ But we believe it was for us
+ He hung and suffered there.
+
+[Illustration: George Frederick Handel]
+
+
+_THE TUNES._
+
+There is no room here to describe them all. Airs and chorals by Berthold
+Tours, Pinsuti, John Henry Cornell, Richard Storrs Willis, George C.
+Stebbins and Hubert P. Main have been adapted to the words--one or two
+evidently composed for them. It is a hymn that attracts
+tune-makers--literally so commonplace and yet so quiet and tender, with
+such a theme and such natural melody of line--but most of the scores
+indicated are choir music rather than congregational. Mr. Stebbins'
+composition comes nearest to being the favorite, if one judges by the
+extent and frequency of its use. It can be either partly or wholly
+choral; and the third stanza makes the refrain--
+
+ O dearly, dearly has He loved
+ And we must love Him too,
+ And trust in His redeeming blood,
+ And try His works to do.
+
+
+"REJOICE AND BE GLAD!"
+
+This musical shout of joy, written by Dr. Horatius Bonar, scarcely needs
+a new song helper, as did Bishop Heber's famous hymn--not because it is
+better than Heber's but because It was wedded at once to a tune worthy
+of it.
+
+ Rejoice and be glad! for our King is on high;
+ He pleadeth for us on His throne in the sky.
+ Rejoice and be glad! for He cometh again;
+ He cometh in glory, the Lamb that was slain
+ Hallelujah! Amen.
+
+The hymn was composed in 1874.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The author of the "English Melody" (as ascribed in _Gospel Hymns_) is
+said to have been John Jenkins Husband, born in Plymouth, Eng., about
+1760. He was clerk at Surrey Chapel and composed several anthems. Came
+to the United States In 1809. Settled in Philadelphia, where he taught
+music and was clerk of St. Paul's P.E. Church. Died there in 1825.
+
+His tune, exactly suited to the hymn, is a true Christian paean. It has
+few equals as a rouser to a sluggish prayer-meeting--whether sung to
+Bonar's words or those of Rev. William Paton Mackay (1866)--
+
+ We praise Thee, O God, for the Son of Thy love,
+
+--with the refrain of similar spirit in both hymns--
+
+ Hallelujah! Thine the glory, Hallelujah! Amen,
+ Hallelujah! Thine the glory; revive us again;
+
+--or,--
+
+ Sound His praises! tell the story of Him who was slain!
+ Sound His praises! tell with gladness, "He liveth again."
+
+Husband's tune is supposed to have been written very early in the last
+century. Another tune composed by him near the same date to the words--
+
+ "We are on our journey home
+ To the New Jerusalem,"
+
+--is equally musical and animating, and with a vocal range that brings
+out the full strength of choir and congregation.
+
+
+"COME, SINNER, COME."
+
+A singular case of the same tune originating in the brain of both author
+and composer is presented in the history of this hymn of Rev. William
+Ellsworth Witter, D.D., born in La Grange, N.Y., Dec. 9, 1854. He wrote
+the hymn in the autumn of 1878, while teaching a district school near
+his home. The first line--
+
+ While Jesus whispers to you,
+
+--came to him during a brief turn of outdoor work by the roadside and
+presently grew to twenty-four lines. Soon after, Prof. Horatio Palmer,
+knowing Witter to be a verse writer, invited him to contribute a hymn to
+a book he had in preparation, and this hymn was sent. Dr. Palmer set it
+to music, it soon entered into several collections, and Mr. Sankey sang
+it in England at the Moody meetings.
+
+Dr. Witter gives this curious testimony,
+
+"While I cannot sing myself, though very fond of music, the hymn sang
+itself to me by the roadside _in almost the exact tune given to it by
+Professor Palmer_." Which proves that Professor Palmer had the feeling
+of the hymn--and that the maker of a true hymn has at least a
+sub-consciousness of its right tune, though he may be neither a musician
+nor a poet.
+
+ While Jesus whispers to you,
+ Come, sinner, come!
+ While we are praying for you,
+ Come, sinner, come!
+ Now is the time to own Him,
+ Come, sinner, come!
+ Now is the time to know Him,
+ Come, sinner, come!
+
+
+"ONE MORE DAY'S WORK FOR JESUS."
+
+The writer of this hymn was Miss Anna Warner, one of the well-known
+"Wetherell Sisters," joint authors of _The Wide World_, _Queechy_, and a
+numerous succession of healthful romances very popular in the middle and
+later years of the last century. Her own pen name is "Amy Lothrop,"
+under which she has published many religious poems, hymns and other
+varieties of literary work. She was born in 1820, at Martlaer, West
+Point, N.Y., where she still resides.
+
+ One more day's work for Jesus,
+ One less of life for me:
+ But heaven is nearer,
+ And Christ is dearer
+ Than yesterday to me.
+ His love and light
+ Fill all my soul tonight.
+
+ REFRAIN:--
+ One more day's work for Jesus, (_ter_)
+ One less of life for me.
+
+The hymn has five stanzas all expressing the gentle fervor of an active
+piety loving service:
+
+
+_THE TUNE_
+
+was composed by the Rev. Robert Lowry, and first published in _Bright
+Jewels_.
+
+
+THE GOSPEL HYMNS.
+
+These popular religious songs have been criticised as "degenerate
+psalmody" but those who so style them do not seem to consider the need
+that made them.
+
+The great majority of mankind can only be reached by missionary methods,
+and in these art and culture do not play a conspicuous part. The
+multitude could be supplied with technical preaching and technical music
+for their religious wants, but they would not rise to the bait, whereas
+nothing so soon kindles their better emotions or so surely appeals to
+their better nature as even the humblest sympathetic hymn sung to a
+simple and stirring tune. If the music is unclassical and the hymn crude
+there is no critical audience to be offended.
+
+The artless, almost colloquial, words "of a happily rhymed camp-meeting
+lyric and the wood-notes wild" of a new melody meet a situation. Moral
+and spiritual lapse makes it necessary at times for religion to put on
+again her primitive raiment, and be "a voice crying in the wilderness."
+
+Between the slums and the boulevards live the masses that shape the
+generations, and make the state. They are wage-earners who never hear
+the great composers nor have time to form fine musical and literary
+tastes. The spiritual influences that really reach them are of a very
+direct and simple kind; and for the good of the church--and the
+nation--it is important that at least this elementary education in the
+school of Christ should be supplied them.
+
+It is the popular hymn tunes that speed a reformation. So say history
+and experience. Once in two hundred years a great revival movement may
+produce a Charles Wesley, but the humbler singers carry the divine fire
+that quickens religious life in the years between.
+
+All this is not saying that the gospel hymns, as a whole, are or ever
+professed to be suitable for the stated service of the sanctuary. Their
+very style and movement show exactly what they were made for--to win the
+hearing of the multitude, and put the music of God's praise and Jesus'
+love into the mouths and hearts of thousands who had been strangers to
+both. They are the modern lay songs that go with the modern lay sermons.
+They give voice to the spirit and sentiment of the conference, prayer
+and inquiry meetings, the Epworth League and Christian Endeavor
+meetings, the temperance and other reform meetings, and of the
+mass-meetings in the cities or the seaside camps.
+
+During their evangelistic mission in England and Scotland in 1873,
+Dwight L. Moody and Ira D. Sankey used the hymnbook of Philip Phillips,
+a compilation entitled _Hallowed Songs_, some of them his own. To these
+Mr. Sankey added others of his own composing from time to time which
+were so enthusiastically received that he published them in a pamphlet.
+This, with the simultaneous publication in America of the revival
+melodies of Philip P. Bliss, was the beginning of that series of popular
+hymn-and-tune books, which finally numbered six volumes. Sankey's
+_Sacred Songs and Solos_ combined with Bliss's _Gospel Songs_ were the
+foundation of the _Gospel Hymns_.
+
+Subjectively their utterances are indicative of ardent piety and
+unquestioning faith, and on the other hand their direct and intimate
+appeal and dramatic address are calculated to affect a throng as if each
+individual in it was the person meant by the words. The refrain or
+chorus feature is notable in nearly all.
+
+A selection of between thirty and forty of the most characteristic is
+here given.
+
+
+"HALLELUJAH! 'TIS DONE."
+
+This is named from its chorus. The song is one of the spontaneous
+thanksgivings in revival meetings that break out at the announcement of
+a new conversion.
+
+ 'Tis the promise of God full salvation to give
+ Unto him who on Jesus His Son will believe,
+ Hallelujah! 'tis done; I believe on the Son;
+ I am saved by the blood of the crucified One.
+
+ Though the pathway be lonely and dangerous too,
+ Surely Jesus is able to carry me through--
+ Hallelujah! etc.
+
+The words and music are both by P.P. Bliss.
+
+
+THE NINETY AND NINE.
+
+The hymn was written by Mrs. Elizabeth Cecilia Clephane at Melrose,
+Scotland, early in 1868. She was born in Edinburgh, June 10, 1830, and
+died of consumption, Feb. 19, 1869. The little poem was seen by Mr.
+Sankey in the _Christian Age_, and thinking it might be useful, he cut
+it out. At an impressive moment in one of the great meetings in
+Edinburgh, Mr. Moody said to him in a quiet aside, "Sing something."
+Precisely what was wanted for the hour and theme, and for the thought in
+the general mind, was in Mr. Sankey's vest pocket. But how could it be
+sung without a tune? With a silent prayer for help, the musician took
+out the slip containing Mrs. Clephane's poem, laid it on the little
+reed-organ and began playing, and singing. He had to read the
+unfamiliar words and at the same time make up the music. The tune
+came--and grew as he went along till he finished the first verse. He
+remembered it well enough to repeat it with the second, and after that
+it was easy to finish the hymn. A new melody was born--in the presence
+of more than a thousand pairs of eyes and ears. It was a feat of
+invention, of memory, of concentration--and such was the elocution of
+the trained soloist that not a word was lost. He had a tearful audience
+at the close to reward him; but we can easily credit his testimony,
+
+"It was the most intense moment of my life."
+
+In a touching interview afterwards, a sister of Mrs. Clephane told Mr.
+Sankey the authoress had not lived to see her hymn in print and to know
+of its blessed mission.
+
+The first six lines give the situation of the lost sheep in the parable
+of that name--
+
+ There were ninety and nine that safely lay
+ In the shelter of the fold;
+ But one was out on the hills away,
+ Far off from the gates of gold.
+ Away on the mountains wild and bare,
+ Away from the tender Shepherd's care.
+
+And, after describing the Shepherd's arduous search, the joy at his
+return is sketched and spiritualized in the concluding stanza--
+
+ But all through the mountains, thunder-riven,
+ And up from the rocky steeps
+ There arose a cry to the gate of heaven,
+ "Rejoice! I have found my sheep."
+ And the angels echoed around the Throne,
+ "Rejoice! for the Lord brings back His own."
+
+
+"HOLD THE FORT!"
+
+This is named also from its chorus. The historic foundation of the hymn
+was the flag-signal waved to Gen. G.M. Corse by Gen. Sherman's order
+from Kenesaw Mountain to Altoona during the "March through Georgia," in
+October, 1863. The flag is still in the possession of A.D. Frankenberry,
+one of the Federal Signal-Corps whose message to the besieged General
+said, "Hold the fort! We are coming!" A visit to the scene of the
+incident inspired P.P. Bliss to write both the words and the music.
+
+ Ho! my comrades, see the signal
+ Waving in the sky!
+ Reinforcements now appearing,
+ Victory is nigh.
+ "Hold the fort, for I am coming!"
+ Jesus signals still;
+ Wave the answer back to heaven,
+ "By Thy grace we will!"
+
+The popularity of the song (it has been translated into several
+languages), made it the author's chief memento in many localities. On
+his monument in Rome, Pennsylvania, is inscribed "P.P. Bliss--author of
+'Hold the Fort.'"
+
+
+"RESCUE THE PERISHING."
+
+Few hymns, ancient or modern, have been more useful, or more variously
+used, than this little sermon in song from Luke 14:23, by the blind
+poet, Fanny J. Crosby, (Mrs. Van Alstyne). It is sung not only in the
+church prayer-meetings with its spiritual meaning and application, but
+in Salvation Army camps and marches, in mission-school devotions, in
+social settlement services, in King's Daughters and Sons of Temperance
+Meetings, and in the rallies of every reform organization that seeks the
+lost and fallen.
+
+ Rescue the perishing, care for the dying,
+ Snatch them in pity from sin and the grave;
+ Weep o'er the erring ones, lift up the fallen,
+ Tell them of Jesus, the Mighty to Save.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Down in the human heart crushed by the Tempter,
+ Feelings lie buried that grace can restore.
+ Touched by a loving heart, wakened by kindness,
+ Chords that were broken will vibrate once more.
+
+The tune is by W.H. Doane, Mus.D., composed in 1870.
+
+
+"WHAT A FRIEND WE HAVE IN JESUS."
+
+The author was a pious gentleman of Dublin, Ireland, who came to Canada
+when he was twenty-five. His name was Joseph Scriven, born in Dublin,
+1820, and graduated at Trinity College. The accidental death by drowning
+of his intended bride on the eve of their wedding day, led him to
+consecrate his life and fortune to the service of Christ. He died in
+Canada, Oct. 10, 1886, (Sankey's _Story of the Gospel Hymns_, pp.
+245-6.)
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The music was composed by Charles Crozat Converse, LL.D., musician,
+lawyer, and writer. He was born in Warren, Mass., 1832; a descendant of
+Edward Converse, the friend of Gov. Winthrop and founder of Woburn,
+Mass. He pursued musical and other studies in Leipsic and Berlin. His
+compositions are numerous including concert overtures, symphonies and
+many sacred and secular pieces. Residence at Highwood, Bergen Co., N.J.
+
+The hymn is one of the most helpful of the Gospel Collections, and the
+words and music have strengthened many a weak and failing soul to "try
+again."
+
+ Have we trials and temptations?
+ Is there trouble anywhere?
+ We should never be discouraged:
+ Take it to the Lord in prayer.
+
+
+"I HEAR THE SAVIOUR SAY."
+
+This is classed with the _Gospel Hymns_, but it was a much-used and
+much-loved revival hymn--especially in the Methodist churches--several
+years before Mr. Moody's great evangelical movement. It was written by
+Mrs. Elvina M. Hall (since Mrs. Myers) who was born in Alexandria, Va.,
+in 1818. She composed it in the spring of 1865, while sitting in the
+choir of the M.E. Church, Baltimore, and the first draft was pencilled
+on a fly-leaf of a singing book, _The New Lute of Zion_.
+
+ I hear the Saviour say,
+ Thy strength indeed is small;
+ Child of weakness, watch and pray,
+ Find in me thine all in all.
+
+The music of the chorus helped to fix its words in the common mind, and
+some idea of the Atonement acceptable, apparently, to both Arminians and
+Calvinists; for Sunday-school children in the families of both, hummed
+the tune or sang the refrain when alone--
+
+ Jesus paid it all,
+ All to Him I owe,
+ Sin had left a crimson stain;
+ He washed it white as snow.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+John Thomas Grape, who wrote the music, was born in Baltimore, Md., May
+6, 1833. His modest estimate of his work appears in his remark that he
+"dabbled" in music for his own amusement. Few composers have amused
+themselves with better results.
+
+
+"TELL ME THE OLD, OLD STORY."
+
+Miss Kate Hankey, born about 1846, the daughter of an English banker,
+is the author of this very devout and tender Christian poem, written
+apparently in the eighteen-sixties. At least it is said that her little
+volume, _Heart to Heart_, was published in 1865 or 1866, and this volume
+contains "Tell me the Old, Old Story," and its answer.
+
+We have been told that Miss Hankey was recovering from a serious
+illness, and employed her days of convalescence in composing this song
+of devotion, beginning it in January and finishing it in the following
+November.
+
+The poem is very long--a thesaurus of evangelical thoughts, attitudes,
+and moods of faith--and also a magazine of hymns. Four quatrains of it,
+or two eight-line stanzas, are the usual length of a hymnal selection,
+and editors can pick and choose anywhere among its expressive verses.
+
+ Tell me the old, old story
+ Of unseen things above,
+ Of Jesus and His glory,
+ Of Jesus and His love.
+
+ Tell me the story simply
+ As to a little child,
+ For I am weak and weary,
+ And helpless and defiled.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Tell me the story simply
+ That I may take it in--
+ That wonderful Redemption,
+ God's remedy for sin.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Dr. W.H. Doane was present at the International Conference of the
+Y.M.C.A. at Montreal in 1867, and heard the poem read--with tears and in
+a broken voice--by the veteran Major-General Russell. It impressed him
+so much that he borrowed and copied it, and subsequently set it to music
+during a vacation in the White Mountains.
+
+The poem of fifty stanzas was entitled "The Story Wanted;" the sequel or
+answer to it, by Miss Hankey, was named "The Story Told." This second
+hymn, of the same metre but different accent, was supplied with a tune
+by William Gustavus Fischer.
+
+ I love to tell the story
+ Of unseen things above,
+ Of Jesus and His glory,
+ Of Jesus and His love.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ I love to tell the story
+ Because I know its true;
+ It satisfies my longings
+ As nothing else can do.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ I love to tell the story;
+ 'Twill be my theme in glory;
+ To tell the old, old story
+ Of Jesus and his love.
+
+William Gustavus Fischer was born in Baltimore, Md., Oct. 14, 1835. He
+was a piano-dealer in the firm (formerly) of Gould and Fischer. His
+melody to the above hymn was written in 1869, and was harmonized the
+next year by Hubert P. Main.
+
+
+THE PRODIGAL CHILD.
+
+This is not only an impressive hymn as sung in sympathetic music, but a
+touching poem.
+
+ Come home! come home!
+ You are weary at heart,
+ For the way has been dark
+ And so lonely and wild--
+ O prodigal child,
+ Come home!
+
+ Come home! Come home!
+ For we watch and we wait,
+ And we stand at the gate
+ While the shadows are piled;
+ O prodigal child,
+ Come home!
+
+The author is Mrs. Ellen M.H. Gates, known to the English speaking world
+by her famous poem, "Your Mission."
+
+
+_THE TUNE_
+
+To "The Prodigal Child" was composed by Dr. Doane in 1869 and no hymn
+ever had a fitter singing ally. All a mother's yearning is in the
+refrain and cadence.
+
+ Come home! Oh, come home!
+
+
+"LET THE LOWER LIGHTS BE BURNING!"
+
+An illustration, recited in Mr. Moody's graphic fashion in one of his
+discourses, suggested this hymn to P.P. Bliss.
+
+"A stormy night on Lake Erie, and the sky pitch dark."
+
+'Pilot, are you sure this is Cleveland? There's only one light.'
+
+'Quite sure, Cap'n.'
+
+'Where are the lower lights?'
+
+'Gone out, sir.'
+
+'Can you run in?'
+
+'_We've got to_, Cap'n--or die.'
+
+"The brave old pilot did his best, but, alas, he missed the channel. The
+boat was wrecked, with a loss of many lives. The lower lights had gone
+out.
+
+"Brethren, the Master will take care of the great Lighthouse. It is our
+work to keep the lower lights burning!"
+
+ Brightly beams our Father's mercy
+ From His lighthouse evermore;
+ But to us He gives the keeping
+ Of the lights along the shore.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ Let the lower lights be burning!
+ Send a gleam across the wave;
+ Some poor fainting, struggling seaman
+ You may rescue, you may save.
+
+Both words and music--composed in 1871--are by Mr. Bliss. There are
+wakening chords in the tune--and especially the chorus--when the
+counterpoint is well vocalized; and the effect is more pronounced the
+greater the symphony of voices. Congregations find a zest in every note.
+"Hold the Fort" can be sung in the street. "Let the Lower Lights be
+Burning" is at home between echoing walls.
+
+The use of the song in "Bethel" meetings classes it with sailors' hymns.
+
+
+"SWEET HOUR OF PRAYER."
+
+Included with the _Gospel Hymns_, but of older date. Rev. William W.
+Walford, a blind English minister, was the author, and it was probably
+written about the year 1842. It was recited to Rev. Thomas Salmon,
+Congregational pastor at Coleshill, Eng., who took it down and brought
+it to New York, where it was published in the New York _Observer_.
+
+Little is known of Mr. Walford save that in his blindness, besides
+preaching occasionally, he employed his mechanical skill in making small
+useful articles of bone and ivory.
+
+The tune was composed by W.B. Bradbury in 1859, and first appeared with
+the hymn in _Cottage Melodies_.
+
+ Sweet hour of prayer, sweet hour of prayer
+ That calls me from a world of care,
+ And bids me at my Father's throne
+ Make all my wants and wishes known.
+ In seasons of distress and grief
+ My soul has often found relief,
+ And oft escaped the tempter's snare
+ By thy return, sweet hour of prayer.
+
+
+"O BLISS OF THE PURIFIED! BLISS OF THE FREE!"
+
+Rev. Francis Bottome, D.D., born in Belper, Derbyshire, Eng., May 26,
+1823, removed to the United States in 1850, and entered the Methodist
+ministry. A man of sterling character and exemplary piety. He received
+the degree of Doctor of Divinity at Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa. Was
+assistant compiler of several singing books, and wrote original hymns.
+The above, entitled "O sing of His mighty love" was composed by him in
+1869. The last stanza reads,--
+
+ O Jesus the Crucified! Thee will I sing,
+ My blessed Redeemer, my God and my King!
+ My soul, filled with rapture shall shout o'er the grave
+ And triumph in death in the Mighty to save.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ O sing of His mighty love (_ter_)
+ Mighty to save!
+
+Dr. Bottome returned to England, and died at Tavistock June 29, 1894.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Bradbury's "Songs of the Beautiful" (in _Fresh Laurels_). The hymn was
+set to this chorus in 1871.
+
+
+"WHAT SHALL THE HARVEST BE?"
+
+Very popular in England. Mr. Sankey in his _Story of the Gospel Hymns_
+relates at length the experience of Rev. W.O. Lattimore, pastor of a
+large church in Evanston, Ill., who was saved to Christian manhood and
+usefulness by this hymn. It has suffered some alterations, but its
+original composition was Mrs. Emily Oakey's work. The Parables of the
+Sower and of the Tares may have been in her mind when she wrote the
+lines in 1850, but more probably it was the text in Gal. 6:7--
+
+ Sowing the seed by the daylight fair,
+ Sowing the seed by the noonday glare,
+ Sowing the seed by the fading light,
+ Sowing the seed in the solemn night.
+ O, what shall the harvest be?
+
+Lattimore, the man whose history was so strangely linked with this hymn,
+entered the army in 1861, a youth of eighteen with no vices, but when
+promoted to first lieutenant he learned to drink in the officers' mess.
+The habit so contracted grew upon him till when the war was over, though
+he married and tried to lead a sober life, he fell a victim to his
+appetite, and became a physical wreck. One day in the winter of 1876 he
+found himself in a half-drunken condition, in the gallery of Moody's
+Tabernacle, Chicago. Discovering presently that he had made a mistake,
+he rose to go out, but Mr. Sankey's voice chained him. He sat down and
+heard the whole of the thrilling hymn from beginning to end. Then he
+stumbled out with the words ringing in his ears.
+
+ Sowing the seed of a lingering pain,
+ Sowing the seed of a maddened brain,
+ Sowing the seed of a tarnished name,
+ Sowing the seed of Eternal shame.
+ O, what shall the harvest be?
+
+In the saloon, where he went to drown the awakenings of remorse, those
+words stood in blazing letters on every bottle and glass. The voice of
+God in that terrible song of conviction forced him back to the
+Tabernacle, with his drink untasted. He went into the inquiry meeting
+where he found friends, and was led to Christ. His wife and child, from
+whom he had long been exiled, were sent for and work was found for him
+to do. A natural eloquence made him an attractive and efficient helper
+in the meetings, and he was finally persuaded to study for the ministry.
+His faithful pastorate of twenty years in Evanston ended with his death
+in 1899.
+
+Mrs. Emily Sullivan Oakey was an author and linguist by profession, and
+though in her life of nearly fifty-four years she "never enjoyed a day
+of good health," she earned a grateful memory. Born in Albany, N.Y.,
+Oct. 8, 1829, she was educated at the Albany Female Academy, and fitted
+herself for the position of teacher of languages and English literature
+in the same school, which she honored by her service while she lived.
+Her contributions to the daily press and to magazine literature were
+numerous, but she is best known by her remarkable hymn. Her death
+occurred on the 11th of May, 1883.
+
+
+_THE TUNE_,
+
+By P.P. Bliss, is one of that composer's tonal successes. The march of
+the verses with their recurrent words is so automatic that it would
+inevitably suggest to him the solo and its organ-chords; and the chorus
+with its sustained soprano note dominating the running concert adds the
+last emphasis to the solemn repetition. The song with its warning cry
+owes no little of its power to this choral appendix--
+
+ Gathered in time or eternity,
+ Sure, ah sure will the harvest be.
+
+
+"O THINK OF THE HOME OVER THERE."
+
+A hymn of Rev. D.W.C. Huntington, suggested by Ps. 55:6. It was a
+favorite from the first.
+
+Rev. DeWitt Clinton Huntington was born at Townshend, Vt., Apr. 27,
+1830. He graduated at the Syracuse University, and received the degrees
+of D.D. and LL.D. from Genesee College. Preacher, instructor and
+author--Removed to Lincoln, Nebraska.
+
+ O think of the home over there,
+ By the side of the river of light,
+ Where the saints all immortal and fair
+ Are robed in their garments of white.
+ Over there, (_rep_)
+
+ O think of the friends over there,
+ Who before us the journey have trod,
+ Of the songs that they breathe on the air,
+ In their home in the palace of God.
+ Over there. (_rep_)
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The melody was composed by Tullius Clinton O'Kane, born in Delaware, O.,
+March 10, 1830, a hymnist and musician. It is a flowing tune, with sweet
+chords, and something of the fugue feature in the chorus as an
+accessory. The voices of a multitude in full concord make a building
+tremble with it.
+
+
+"WHEN JESUS COMES."
+
+ Down life's dark vale we wander
+ Till Jesus comes;
+ We watch and wait and wonder
+ Till Jesus comes.
+
+Both words and music are by Mr. Bliss. A relative of his family, J.S.
+Ellsworth, says the song was written in Peoria, Illinois, in 1872, and
+was suggested by a conversation on the second coming of Christ, a
+subject very near his heart. The thought lingered in his mind, and as he
+came down from his room, soon after, the verses and notes came to him
+simultaneously on the stairs. Singing them over, he seized pencil and
+paper, and in a few minutes fixed hymn and tune in the familiar harmony
+so well known.
+
+ No more heart-pangs nor sadness
+ When Jesus comes;
+ All peace and joy and gladness
+ When Jesus comes.
+
+The choral abounds in repetition, and is half refrain, but among all
+Gospel Hymns remarkable for their tone-delivery this is unsurpassed in
+the swing of its rhythm.
+
+ All joy his loved ones bringing
+ When Jesus comes.
+ All praise thro' heaven ringing
+ When Jesus comes.
+ All beauty bright and vernal
+ When Jesus comes.
+ All glory grand, eternal
+ When Jesus comes.
+
+
+"TO THE WORK, TO THE WORK."
+
+One of Fanny Crosby's most animating hymns--with Dr. W.H. Doane's full
+part harmony to re-enforce its musical accent. Mr. Sankey says, "I sang
+it for the first time in the home of Mr. and Mrs. J.B. Cornell at Long
+Branch. The servants gathered from all parts of the house while I was
+singing, and looked into the parlor where I was seated. When I was
+through one of them said, 'That is the finest hymn I have heard for a
+long time,' I felt that this was a test case, and if the hymn had such
+power over those servants it would be useful in reaching other people as
+well; so I published it in the _Gospel Hymns_ in 1875, where it became
+one of the best work-songs for our meetings that we had." (_Story of
+the Gospel Hymns_.)
+
+The hymn, written in 1870, was first published in 1871 in "_Pure
+Gold_"--a book that had a sale of one million two hundred thousand
+copies.
+
+ To the work! to the work! there is labor for all,
+ For the Kingdom of darkness and error shall fall,
+ And the name of Jehovah exalted shall be,
+ In the loud-swelling chorus, "Salvation is free!"
+
+ CHORUS.
+ Toiling on, toiling on, toiling on, toiling on! (_rep_)
+ Let us hope and trust, let us watch and pray,
+ And labor till the Master comes.
+
+
+"O WHERE ARE THE REAPERS?"
+
+Matt. 13:30 is the text of this lyric from the pen of Eben E. Rexford.
+
+ Go out in the by-ways, and search them all,
+ The wheat may be there though the weeds are tall;
+ Then search in the highway, and pass none by,
+ But gather them all for the home on high.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ Where are the reapers? O who will come,
+ And share in the glory of the harvest home?
+ O who will help us to garner in
+ The sheaves of good from the fields of sin?
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Hymn and tune are alike. The melody and harmony by Dr. George F. Root
+have all the eager trip and tread of so many of the gospel hymns, and
+of so much of his music, and the lines respond at every step. Any other
+composer could not have escaped the compulsion of the final spondees,
+and much less the author of "Tramp, Tramp, Tramp," and all the best
+martial song-tunes of the great war. In this case neither words nor
+notes can say to the other, "We have piped unto you and ye have not
+danced," but a little caution will guard too enthusiastic singing
+against falling into the drum-rhythm, and travestying a sacred piece.
+
+Eben Eugene Rexford was born in Johnsburg, N.Y., July 16, 1841, and has
+been a writer since he was fourteen years old. He is the author of
+several popular songs, as "Silver Threads Among the Gold," "Only a Pansy
+Blossom" etc., and many essays and treatises on flowers, of which he is
+passionately fond.
+
+
+"IT IS WELL WITH MY SOUL."
+
+Horatio Gates Spafford, the writer of this hymn, was a lawyer, a native
+of New York state, born Oct. 30, 1828. While connected with an
+institution in Chicago, as professor of medical jurisprudence, he lost a
+great part of his fortune by the great fire in that city. This disaster
+was followed by the loss of his children on the steamer, Ville de Havre,
+Nov. 22, 1873. He seems to have been a devout Christian, for he wrote
+his hymn of submissive faith towards the end of the same year--
+
+ When peace like a river attendeth my way,
+ When sorrows like sea-billows roll--
+ Whatever my lot, Thou hast taught me to say,
+ "It is well, it is well with my soul."
+
+A friend of Spafford who knew his history read this hymn while repining
+under an inferior affliction of his own. "If he can feel like that after
+suffering what he has suffered," he said, "I will cease my complaints."
+
+It may not have been the weight of Mr. Spafford's sorrows wearing him
+down, but one would infer some mental disturbance in the man seven or
+eight years later. "In 1881" [writes Mr. Hubert P. Main] "he went to
+Jerusalem under the hallucination that he was a second Messiah--and died
+there on the seventh anniversary of his landing in Palestine, Sept. 5,
+1888." The aberrations of an over-wrought mind are beckonings to God's
+compassion. When reason wanders He takes the soul of His helpless child
+into his own keeping--and "it is well."
+
+The tune to Spafford's hymn is by P.P. Bliss; a gentle, gliding melody
+that suits the mood of the words.
+
+
+"WAITING AND WATCHING FOR ME."
+
+Written by Mrs. Marianne Farningham Hearn, born in Kent, Eng., Dec. 17,
+1834. The hymn was first published in the fall of 1864 in the _London
+Church World_. Its unrhythmical first line--
+
+ When mysterious whispers are floating about,
+
+--was replaced by the one now familiar--
+
+ When my final farewell to the world I have said,
+ And gladly lain down to my rest,
+ When softly the watchers shall say, "He is dead,"
+ And fold my pale hands on my breast,
+ And when with my glorified vision at last
+ The walls of that City I see,
+ Will any one there at the Beautiful Gate
+ Be waiting and watching for me?
+
+Mrs. Hearn--a member of the Baptist denomination--has long been the
+editor of the (English) _Sunday School Times_, but her literary work has
+been more largely in connection with the _Christian World_ newspaper of
+which she has been a staff-member since its foundation.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The long lines, not easily manageable for congregational singing, are
+wisely set by Mr. Bliss to duet music. There is a weighty thought in the
+hymn for every Christian, and experience has shown that a pair of good
+singers can make it very affecting, but the only use of the repeat, by
+way of a chorus, seems to be to give the miscellaneous voices a brief
+chance to sing.
+
+
+"HE WILL HIDE ME."
+
+(Isa. 49:2.)
+
+Miss Mary Elizabeth Servoss, the author of this trustful hymn, was born
+in Schenectady, N.Y., Aug. 22, 1849. When a very young girl her
+admiration of Fanny Crosby's writings, and the great and good service
+they were doing in the world, inspired her with a longing to resemble
+her. Though her burden was as real, it was not like the other's, and her
+opportunities for religious meditation and literary work were fewer than
+those of the elder lady, but the limited number of hymns she has written
+have much of the spirit and beauty of their model.
+
+Providence decreed for her a life of domestic care and patient waiting.
+For eighteen years she was the constant attendant of a disabled
+grandmother, and long afterwards love and duty made her the home nurse
+during her mother's protracted illness and the last sickness of her
+father, until both parents passed away.
+
+From her present home in Edeson, Ill., some utterances of her chastened
+spirit have found their way to the public, and been a gospel of
+blessing. Besides "He Will Hide Me" other hymns of Miss Servoss are
+"Portals of Light," "He Careth," "Patiently Enduring," and "Gates of
+Praise," the last being the best known.
+
+ When the storms of life are raging.
+ Tempests wild on sea and land,
+ I will seek a place of refuge
+ In the shadow of God's hand.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ He will hide me, He will hide me,
+ Where no harm can e'er betide me,
+ He will hide me, safely hide me
+ In the shadow of His hand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ So while here the cross I'm bearing,
+ Meeting storms and billows wild,
+ Jesus for my soul is caring,
+ Naught can harm His Father's child.
+ He will hide me, etc.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+An animating choral in nine-eight tempo, with a swinging movement and
+fugue chorus, is rather florid for the hymn, but undeniably musical. Mr.
+James McGranahan was the composer. He was born in Adamsville, Pa., July
+4, 1840. His education was acquired mostly at the public schools, and
+both in general knowledge and in musical accomplishments it may be said
+of him that he is "self-made."
+
+Music was born in him, and at the age of nineteen, with some valuable
+help from men like Bassini, Webb, Root and Zerrahn, he had studied to so
+good purpose that he taught music classes himself. This talent, joined
+to the gift of a very sweet tenor voice, made him the natural successor
+of the lamented Bliss, and, with Major D.W. Whittle, he entered on a
+career of gospel work, making between 1881 and 1885 two successful tours
+of England, Scotland and Ireland, and through the chief American
+cities.
+
+Among his publications are the _Male Chorus Book_, _Songs of the Gospel_
+and the _Gospel Male Choir_.
+
+Resides at Kinsman, O.
+
+
+"REVIVE THY WORK, O LORD."
+
+(Heb. 3:2.)
+
+The supposed date of the hymn is 1860; the author, Albert Midlane. He
+was born at Newport on the Isle of Wight, Jan. 23, 1825 a business man,
+but, being a Sunday-school teacher, he was prompted to write verses for
+children. The habit grew upon him till he became a frequent and
+acceptable hymn-writer, both for juvenile and for general use. English
+collections have at least three hundred credited to him.
+
+ Revive Thy work, O Lord,
+ Thy mighty arm make bare,
+ Speak with the voice that wakes the dead,
+ And make Thy people hear.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Music and words together make a song-litany alive with all the old
+psalm-tune unction and the new vigor; and both were upon Mr. McGranahan
+when he wrote the choral. It is one of his successes.
+
+ Revive thy work, O Lord,
+ Exalt Thy precious name,
+ And by the Holy Ghost our love
+ For Thee and Thine inflame.
+
+ REFRAIN.
+ Revive Thy work, O Lord,
+ And give refreshing showers;
+ The glory shall be all Thine own,
+ The blessing shall be ours.
+
+
+"WHERE IS MY WANDERING BOY TO-NIGHT?"
+
+This remarkable composition--words and music by Rev. Robert Lowry--has a
+record among sacred songs like that of "The Prodigal Son" among
+parables.
+
+A widowed lady of culture, about forty years of age, who was an
+accomplished vocalist, had ceased to sing, though her sweet voice was
+still in its prime. The cause was her sorrow for her runaway boy. She
+had not heard from him for five years. While spending a week with
+friends in a city distant from home, her hidden talent was betrayed by
+the friends to the pastor of their church, where a revival was in
+progress, and persuasion that seemed to put a duty upon her finally
+procured her consent to sing a solo.
+
+The church was crowded. With a force and feeling that can easily be
+guessed she sang "Where Is My Boy Tonight?" and finished the first
+stanza. She began the second,--
+
+ Once he was pure as morning dew,
+ As he knelt at his mother's knee,
+ No face was so bright, no heart more true,
+ And none were so sweet as he;
+
+--and as the congregation caught up the refrain,--
+
+ O where is my boy tonight?
+ O where is my boy tonight?
+ My heart overflows, for I love him he knows,
+ O where is my boy tonight?
+
+--a young man who had been sitting in a back seat made his way up the
+aisle and sobbed, "Mother, I'm here!" The embrace of that mother and her
+long-lost boy turned the service into a general hallelujah. At the
+inquiry meeting that night there were many souls at the Mercy Seat who
+never knelt there before--and the young wanderer was one.
+
+[Illustration: Philip Doddridge, D.D.]
+
+Mr. Sankey, when in California with Mr. Moody, sang this hymn in one of
+the meetings and told the story of a mother in the far east who had
+commissioned him to search for her missing son. By a happy providence
+the son was in the house--and the story and the song sent him home
+repentant.
+
+At another time Mr. Sankey sang the same hymn from the steps of a
+snow-bound train, and a man between whose father and himself had been
+trouble and a separation, was touched, and returned to be reconciled
+after an absence of twenty years.
+
+At one evening service in Stanberry, Mo., the singing of the hymn by the
+leader of the choir led to the conversion of one boy who was present,
+and whose parents were that night praying for him in an eastern state,
+and inspired such earnest prayer in the hearts of two other runaway
+boys' parents that the same answer followed.
+
+There would not be room in a dozen pages to record all the similar
+saving incidents connected with the singing of "Where Is My Wandering
+Boy?" The rhetoric of love is strong in every note and syllable of the
+solo, and the tender chorus of voices swells the song to heaven like an
+antiphonal prayer.
+
+Strange to say, Dr. Lowry set lightly by his hymns and tunes, and
+deprecated much mention of them though he could not deny their success.
+An active Christian since seventeen years of age, through his early
+pulpit service, his six years' professorship, and the long pastorate in
+Plainfield, N.J., closed by his death, he considered preaching to be his
+supreme function as it certainly was his first love. Music was to him "a
+side-issue," an "efflorescence," and writing a hymn ranked far below
+making and delivering a sermon. "I felt a sort of meanness when I began
+to be known as a composer," he said. And yet he was the author of a hymn
+and tune which "has done more to bring back wandering boys than any
+other" ever written.[45]
+
+[Footnote 45: "Where Is My Boy Tonight" was composed for a book of
+temperance hymns, _The Fountain of Song_, 1877.]
+
+
+"ETERNITY."
+
+This is the title and refrain of both Mrs. Ellen M.H. Gates' impressive
+poem and its tune.
+
+ O the clanging bells of Time!
+ Night and day they never cease;
+ We are weaned with their chime,
+ For they do not bring us peace.
+ And we hush our hearts to hear,
+ And we strain our eyes to see
+ If thy shores are drawing near
+ Eternity! Eternity!
+
+Skill was needed to vocalize this great word, but the ear of Mr. Bliss
+for musical prosody did not fail to make it effective. After the
+beautiful harmony through the seven lines, the choral reverently softens
+under the rallentando of the closing bars, and dwelling on the
+awe-inspiring syllables, solemnly dies away.
+
+
+TRIUMPH BY AND BY.
+
+This rally-song of the Christian arena is wonderfully stirring,
+especially in great meetings, for it sings best in full choral volume.
+
+ The prize is set before us,
+ To win His words implore us,
+ The eye of God is o'er us
+ From on high.
+ His loving tones are falling
+ While sin is dark, appalling,
+ 'Tis Jesus gently calling;
+ He is nigh!
+
+ CHORUS.
+ By and by we shall meet Him,
+ By and by we shall greet Him,
+ And with Jesus reign in glory,
+ By and by!
+
+ We'll follow where He leadeth,
+ We'll pasture where He feedeth,
+ We'll yield to Him who pleadeth
+ From on high.
+ Then nought from Him shall sever,
+ Our hope shall brighten ever
+ And faith shall fail us never;
+ He is nigh.
+
+ CHORUS-- By and by, etc.
+
+Dr. Christopher Ruby Blackall, the author of the hymn, was born in
+Albany, N.Y., Sept. 18, 1830. He was a surgeon in the Civil War, and in
+medical practice fifteen years, but afterwards became connected with the
+American Baptist Publication Society as manager of one of its branches.
+He has written several Sunday-school songs set to music by W.H. Doane.
+
+
+_THE TUNE_,
+
+By Horatio R. Palmer is exactly what the hymn demands. The range
+scarcely exceeds an octave, but with the words "From on high," the
+stroke of the soprano on upper D carries the feeling to unseen summits,
+and verifies the title of the song. From that note, through melody and
+chorus the "Triumph by and by" rings clear.
+
+
+"NOT HALF HAS EVER BEEN TOLD"
+
+This is emotional, but every word and note is uplifting, and creates the
+mood for religious impressions. The writer, Rev. John Bush Atchison, was
+born at Wilson, N.Y., Feb. 18, 1840, and died July 15, 1882.
+
+ I have read of a beautiful city
+ Far away in the kingdom of God,
+ I have read how its walls are of jasper,
+ How its streets are all golden and broad;
+ In the midst of the street is Life's River
+ Clear as crystal and pure to behold,
+ But not half of that city's bright glory
+ To mortals has ever been told.
+
+The chorus (twice sung)--
+
+ Not half has been told,
+
+--concludes with repeat of the two last lines of this first stanza.
+
+Mr. Atchison was a Methodist clergyman who composed several good hymns.
+"Behold the Stone is Rolled Away," "O Crown of Rejoicing," and "Fully
+Persuaded," indicate samples of his work more or less well-known. "Not
+Half Has Ever Been Told" was written in 1875.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Dr. Otis F. Presbry, the composer, was a young farmer of York,
+Livingston Co., N.Y., born there the 20th of December, 1820. Choice of a
+professional life led him to Berkshire Medical College, where he
+graduated in 1847. In after years his natural love of musical studies
+induced him to give his time to compiling and publishing religious
+tunes, with hymns more especially for Sunday-schools.
+
+He became a composer and wrote the melody to Atchison's words in 1877,
+which was arranged by a blind musician of Washington, D.C., J.W.
+Bischoff by name, with whom he had formed a partnership. The solo is
+long--would better, perhaps, have been four-line instead of eight--but
+well sung, it is a flight of melody that holds an assembly, and touches
+hearts.
+
+Dr. Presbry's best known book was _Gospel Bells_ (1883), the joint
+production of himself, Bischoff, and Rev. J.E. Rankin. He died Aug. 20,
+1901.
+
+
+"COME."
+
+One of the most characteristic (both words and music) of the _Gospel
+Hymns_--"Mrs. James Gibson Johnson" is the name attached to it as its
+author, though we have been unable to trace and verify her claim.
+
+ O, word of words the sweetest,
+ O, words in which there lie
+ All promise, all fulfillment,
+ And end of mystery;
+ Lamenting or rejoicing,
+ With doubt or terror nigh,
+ I hear the "Come" of Jesus,
+ And to His cross I fly.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ Come, come--
+ Weary, heavy-laden, come, O come to me.
+
+
+_THE TUNE_,
+
+Composed by James McGranahan, delivers the whole stanza in soprano or
+tenor solo, when the alto, joining the treble, leads off the refrain in
+duet, the male voices striking alternate notes until the full harmony in
+the last three bars. The style and movement of the chorus are somewhat
+suggestive of a popular glee, but the music of the duet is flexible and
+sweet, and the bass and tenor progress with it not in the
+ride-and-tie-fashion but marking time with the title-syllable.
+
+The contrast between the spiritual and the intellectual effect of the
+hymn and its wakeful tune is illustrated by a case in Baltimore. While
+Moody and Sankey were doing their gospel work in that city, a man, who,
+it seems, had brought a copy of the _Gospel Hymns_, walked out of one of
+the meetings after hearing this hymn-tune, and on reaching home, tore
+out the leaves that contained the song and threw them into the fire,
+saying he had "never heard such twaddle" in all his life.
+
+The sequel showed that he had been too hasty. The hymn would not leave
+him. After hearing it night and day in his mind till he began to
+realize what it meant, he went to Mr. Moody and told him he was "a vile
+sinner" and wanted to know how he could "come" to Christ. The divine
+invitation was explained, and the convicted man underwent a vital
+change. His converted opinion of the hymn was quite as remarkably
+different. He declared it was "the sweetest one in the book." (_Story of
+the Gospel Hymns_.)
+
+
+"ALMOST PERSUADED."
+
+The Rev. Mr. Brundage tells the origin of this hymn. In a sermon
+preached by him many years ago, the closing words were:
+
+"He who is almost persuaded is almost saved, but to be almost saved is
+to be entirely lost." Mr. Bliss, being in the audience, was impressed
+with the thought, and immediately set about the composition of what
+proved one of his most popular songs, deriving his inspiration from the
+sermon of his friend, Mr. Brundage. _Memoir of Bliss_.
+
+ Almost persuaded now to believe,
+ Almost persuaded Christ to receive;
+ Seems now some soul to say
+ "Go Spirit, go thy way,
+ Some more convenient day
+ On Thee I'll call."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Almost persuaded--the harvest is past!
+
+Both hymn and tune are by Mr. Bliss--and the omission of a chorus is in
+proper taste. This revival piece brings the eloquence of sense and
+sound to bear upon the conscience in one monitory pleading. Incidents in
+this country and in England related in Mr. Sankey's book, illustrate its
+power. It has a convicting and converting history.
+
+
+"MY AIN COUNTREE."
+
+This hymn was written by Miss Mary Augusta Lee one Sabbath day in 1860
+at Bowmount, Croton Falls, N.Y., and first published in the _New York
+Observer_, Dec, 1861. The authoress had been reading the story of John
+Macduff who, with his wife, left Scotland for the United States, and
+accumulated property by toil and thrift in the great West. In her
+leisure after the necessity for hard work was past, the Scotch woman
+grew homesick and pined for her "ain countree." Her husband, at her
+request, came east and settled with her in sight of the Atlantic where
+she could see the waters that washed the Scotland shore. But she still
+pined, and finally to save her life, John Macduff took her back to the
+heather hills of the mother-land, where she soon recovered her health
+and spirits.
+
+ I am far from my hame an' I'm weary aften whiles
+ For the langed-for hame-bringing an' my Father's welcome smiles.
+ I'll ne'er be fu' content until mine eyes do see
+ The shinin' gates o' heaven an' mine ain countree.
+
+ The airt' is flecked wi' flowers mony-tinted, frish an' gay,
+ The birdies warble blithely, for my Father made them sae,
+ But these sights an' these soun's will naething be to me
+ When I hear the angels singin' in my ain countree.
+
+Miss Lee was born in Croton Falls in 1838, and was of Scotch descent,
+and cared for by her grandfather and a Scotch nurse, her mother dying in
+her infancy. In 1870 she became the wife of a Mr. Demarest, and her
+married life was spent in Passaic, N.J., until their removal to
+Pasadena, Cal., in hope of restoring her failing health. She died at Los
+Angeles, Jan. 8, 1888.
+
+
+_THE TUNE_
+
+Is an air written in 1864 in the Scottish style by Mrs. Ione T. Hanna,
+wife of a banker in Denver, Colo., and harmonized for choral use by
+Hubert P. Main in 1873. Its plaintive sweetness suits the words which
+probably inspired it. The tone and metre of the hymn were natural to the
+young author's inheritance; a memory of her grandfather's home-land
+melodies, with which he once crooned "little Mary" to sleep.
+
+Sung as a closing hymn, "My ain countree" sends the worshipper away with
+a tender, unworldly thought that lingers.
+
+Mrs. Demarest wrote an additional stanza in 1881 at the request of Mr.
+Main.
+
+Some really good gospel hymns and tunes among those omitted in this
+chapter will cry out against the choice that passed them by. Others are
+of the more ephemeral sort, the phenomena (and the demand) of a
+generation. Carols of pious joy with inordinate repetition, choruses
+that surprise old lyrics with modern thrills, ballads of ringing sound
+and slender verse, are the spray of tuneful emotion that sparkles on
+every revival high-tide, but rarely leaves floodmarks that time will not
+erase. Religious songs of the demonstrative, not to say sensational,
+kind spring impromptu from the conditions of their time--and give place
+to others equally spontaneous when the next spiritual wave sweeps by.
+Their value lingers in the impulse their novelty gave to the life of
+sanctuary worship, and in the Christian characters their emotional power
+helped into being.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+HYMNS, FESTIVAL AND OCCASIONAL.
+
+
+_CHRISTMAS._
+
+
+"ADESTE FIDELES."
+
+This hymn is of doubtful authorship, by some assigned to as late a date
+as 1680, and by others to the 13th century as one of the Latin poems of
+St. Bonaventura, Bishop of Albano, who was born at Bagnarea in Tuscany,
+A.D. 1221. He was a learned man, a Franciscan friar, one of the greatest
+teachers and writers of his church, and finally a cardinal. Certainly
+Roman Catholic in its origin, whoever was its author, it is a Christian
+hymn qualified in every way to be sung by the universal church.
+
+ Adeste, fideles
+ Laeti triumphantes,
+ Venite, venite in Bethlehem;
+ Natum videte Regem angelorum.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ Venite, adoremus,
+ Venite, adoremus!
+ Venite, adoremus Dominum.
+
+This has been translated by Rev. Frederick Oakeley (1808-1880) and by
+Rev. Edward Caswall (1814-1878) the version of the former being the one
+in more general use. The ancient hymn is much abridged in the hymnals,
+and even the translations have been altered and modernized in the three
+or four stanzas commonly sung. Caswall's version renders the first line
+"Come hither, ye faithful," literally construing the Latin words.
+
+The following is substantially Oakeley's English of the "Adeste,
+fideles."
+
+ O come all ye faithful
+ Joyful and triumphant,
+ To Bethlehem hasten now with glad accord;
+ Come and behold Him,
+ Born the King of Angels.
+
+ CHORUS.
+ O come, let us adore Him,
+ O come, let us adore Him,
+ O come, let us adore Him,
+ Christ, the Lord.
+
+ Sing choirs of angels,
+ Sing in exultation
+ Through Heaven's high arches be your praises poured;
+ Now to our God be
+ Glory in the highest!
+ O come, let us adore Him!
+
+ Yea, Lord, we bless Thee,
+ Born for our salvation
+ Jesus, forever be Thy name adored!
+ Word of the Father
+ Now in flesh appearing;
+ O come, let us adore Him!
+
+The hymn with its primitive music as chanted in the ancient churches,
+was known as "The Midnight Mass," and was the processional song of the
+religious orders on their way to the sanctuaries where they gathered in
+preparation for the Christmas morning service. The modern tune--or
+rather the tune in modern use--is the one everywhere familiar as the
+"Portuguese Hymn." (See page 205.)
+
+
+MILTON'S HYMN TO THE NATIVITY.
+
+ It was the winter wild
+ While the Heavenly Child
+ All meanly wrapped in the rude manger lies.
+ Nature in awe of Him
+ Had doffed her gaudy trim
+ With her great Master so to sympathize.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ No war nor battle sound
+ Was heard the world around.
+ The idle spear and shield were high uphung.
+ The hooked chariot stood
+ Unstained with hostile blood,
+ The trumpets spake not to the armed throng,
+ And Kings sat still with awful eye
+ As if they knew their Sovereign Lord was by.
+
+This exalted song--the work of a boy of scarcely twenty-one--is a Greek
+ode in form, of two hundred and sixteen lines in twenty-seven strophes.
+Some of its figures and fancies are more to the taste of the seventeenth
+century than to ours, but it is full of poetic and Christian
+sublimities, and its high periods will be heard in the Christmas hymnody
+of coming centuries, though it is not the fashion to sing it now.
+
+John Milton, son and grandson of John Miltons, was born in Breadstreet,
+London, Dec. 9, 1608, fitted for the University in St. Paul's school,
+and studied seven years at Cambridge. His parents intended him for the
+church, but he chose literature as a profession, travelled and made
+distinguished friendships in Italy, Switzerland and France, and when
+little past his majority was before the public as a poet, author of the
+Ode to the Nativity, of a Masque, and of many songs and elegies. In
+later years he entered political life under the stress of his Puritan
+sympathies, and served under Cromwell and his successor as Latin
+Secretary of State through the time of the Commonwealth. While in public
+duty he became blind, but in his retirement composed "Paradise Lost and
+Paradise Regained." Died in 1676.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+In the old "Carmina Sacra" a noble choral (without name except "No war
+nor battle sound") well interprets portions of the 4th and 5th stanzas
+of the great hymn, but replaces the line--
+
+ "The idle spear and shield were high uphung."
+
+--with the more modern and less figurative--
+
+ "No hostile chiefs to furious combat ran."
+
+Three stanzas are also added, by the Rev. H.O. Dwight, missionary to
+Constantinople. The substituted line, which is also, perhaps, the
+composition of Mr. Dwight, rhymes with--
+
+ "His reign of peace upon the earth began,"
+
+--and as it is not un-Miltonic, few singers have ever known that it was
+not Milton's own.
+
+Dr. John Knowles Paine, Professor of Music at Harvard University, and
+author of the Oratorio of "St. Peter," composed a cantata to the great
+Christmas Ode of Milton, probably about 1868.
+
+Professor Paine died Apr. 25, 1906.
+
+It is worth noting that John Milton senior, the great poet's father, was
+a skilled musician and a composer of psalmody. The old tunes "York" and
+"Norwich," in Ravenscroft's collection and copied from it in many early
+New England singing-books, are supposed to be his.
+
+The Miltons were an old Oxfordshire Catholic family, and John, the
+poet's father, was disinherited for turning Protestant, but he prospered
+in business, and earned the comfort of a country gentleman. He died,
+very aged, in May, 1646, and his son addressed a Latin poem ("Ad
+Patrem") to his memory.
+
+
+"HARK! THE HERALD ANGELS SING."
+
+This hymn of Charles Wesley, dating about 1730, was evidently written
+with the "Adeste Fideles" in mind, some of the stanzas, in fact, being
+almost like translations of it. The form of the two first lines was
+originally--
+
+ Hark! how all the welkin rings,
+ "Glory to the King of Kings!"
+
+--but was altered thirty years later by Rev. Martin Madan (1726-1790)
+to--
+
+ Hark! the herald angels sing
+ Glory to the new-born King!
+
+Other changes by the same hand modified the three following stanzas, and
+a fifth stanza was added by John Wesley--
+
+ Hail the heavenly Prince of Peace!
+ Hail the Sun of Righteousness!
+ Light and life to all He brings,
+ Ris'n with healing in His wings.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Mendelssohn" is the favorite musical interpreter of the hymn. It is a
+noble and spirited choral from Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy's cantata,
+"Gott ist Licht."
+
+
+"JOY TO THE WORLD, THE LORD IS COME!"
+
+This inspirational lyric of Dr. Watts never grows old. It was written in
+1719.
+
+ Joy to the world! the Saviour reigns!
+ Let men their songs employ
+ While fields and floods, rocks, hills and plains
+ Repeat the sounding joy.
+
+Dr. Edward Hodges (1796-1867) wrote an excellent psalm-tune to it which
+is still in occasional use, but the music united to the hymn in the
+popular heart is "Antioch," an adaptation from Handel's Messiah. This
+companionship holds unbroken from hymnal to hymnal and has done so for
+sixty or seventy years; and, in spite of its fugue, the tune--apparently
+by some magic of its own--contrives to enlist the entire voice of a
+congregation, the bass falling in on the third beat as if by intuition.
+The truth is, the tune has become the habit of the hymn, and to the
+thousands who have it by heart, as they do in every village where there
+is a singing school, "Antioch" is "Joy to the World," and "Joy to the
+World" is "Antioch."
+
+
+"HARK! WHAT MEAN THOSE HOLY VOICES?"
+
+This fine hymn, so many years appearing with the simple sign "Cawood" or
+"J. Cawood" printed under it, still holds its place by universal
+welcome.
+
+ Hark! what mean those holy voices
+ Sweetly sounding through the skies?
+ Lo th' angelic host rejoices;
+ Heavenly hallelujahs rise.
+
+ Hear them tell the wondrous story,
+ Hear them chant in hymns of joy,
+ Glory in the highest, glory,
+ Glory be to God on high!
+
+The Rev. John Cawood, a farmer's son, was born at Matlock, Derbyshire,
+Eng., March 18, 1775, graduated at Oxford, 1801, and was appointed
+perpetual curate of St. Anne's in Bendly, Worcestershire. Died Nov. 7,
+1852. He is said to have written seventeen hymns, but was too modest to
+publish any.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Dr. Dykes' "Oswald," and Henry Smart's "Bethany" are worthy expressions
+of the feeling in Cawood's hymn. In America, Mason's "Amaland," with
+fugue in the second and third lines, has long been a favorite.
+
+
+"WHILE SHEPHERDS WATCHED THEIR FLOCKS."
+
+This was written by Nahum Tate (1652-1715), and after two hundred years
+the church remembers and sings the song. Six generations have grown up
+with their childhood memory of its pictorial verses illustrating St.
+Luke's Christmas story.
+
+ While shepherds watched their flocks by night,
+ All seated on the ground,
+ The angel of the Lord came down
+ And glory shone around.
+
+ "Fear not" said he, for mighty dread
+ Had seized their troubled mind,
+ "Glad tidings of great joy I bring
+ To you and all mankind."
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Modern hymnals have substituted "Christmas" and other more or less
+spirited tunes for Read's "Sherburne," which was the first musical
+translation of the hymn to American ears. But, to show the traditional
+hold that the New England fugue melody maintains on the people, many
+collections print it as alternate tune. Some modifications have been
+made in it, but its survival is a tribute to its real merit.
+
+Daniel Read, the creator of "Sherburne," "Windham," "Russia,"
+"Stafford," "Lisbon," and many other tunes characteristic of a bygone
+school of psalmody, was born in Rehoboth, Mass., Nov. 2, 1757. He
+published _The American Singing Book_, 1785, _Columbian Harmony_, 1793,
+and several other collections. Died in New Haven, Ct., 1836.
+
+
+"IT CAME UPON THE MIDNIGHT CLEAR."
+
+Rev. Edmund Hamilton Sears, author of this beautiful hymn-poem, was born
+at Sandisfield, Berkshire Co., Mass., April 6, 1810, and educated at
+Union College and Harvard University. He became pastor of the Unitarian
+Church in Wayland, Mass., 1838. Died in the adjoining town of Weston,
+Jan. 14, 1876. The hymn first appeared in the _Christian Register_ in
+1857.
+
+ It came upon the midnight clear,
+ That glorious song of old,
+ From angels bending near the earth
+ To touch their harps of gold.
+
+ "Peace to the earth, good will to men
+ From Heaven's all-gracious King."
+ The world in solemn stillness lay,
+ To hear the angels sing.
+
+ Still through the cloven skies they come
+ With peaceful wings unfurled
+ And still their heavenly music floats
+ O'er all the weary world.
+
+ Above its sad and lonely plains
+ They bend on hovering wing,
+ And ever o'er its Babel sounds
+ The blessed angels sing.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+No more sympathetic music has been written to these lines than "Carol,"
+the tune composed by Richard Storrs Willis, a brother of Nathaniel
+Parker Willis the poet, and son of Deacon Nathaniel Willis, the founder
+of the _Youth's Companion_. He was born Feb, 10, 1819, graduated at Yale
+in 1841, and followed literature as a profession. He was also a musician
+and composer. For many years he edited the _N.Y. Musical World_, and,
+besides contributing frequently to current literature, published _Church
+Chorals and Choir Studies_, _Our Church Music_ and several other volumes
+on musical subjects. Died in Detroit, May 7, 1900.
+
+The much-loved and constantly used advent psalm of Mr. Sears,--
+
+ Calm on the listening ear of night
+ Come heaven's melodious strains
+ Where wild Judea stretches far
+ Her silver-mantled plains,
+
+--was set to music by John Edgar Gould, and the smooth choral with its
+sweet chords is a remarkable example of blended voice and verse.
+
+
+"O LITTLE TOWN OF BETHLEHEM!"
+
+Phillips Brooks, the eloquent bishop of Massachusetts, loved to write
+simple and tender poems for the children of his church and diocese. They
+all reveal his loving heart and the beauty of his consecrated
+imagination. This one, the best of his _Christmas Songs_, was slow in
+coming to public notice, but finally found its place in hymn-tune
+collections.
+
+ O little town of Bethlehem,
+ How still we see thee lie!
+ Above thy deep and dreamless sleep
+ The silent stars go by;
+ Yet in thy dark streets shineth
+ The everlasting light;
+ The hopes and fears of all the years
+ Are met in thee tonight.
+
+ For Christ is born of Mary,
+ And gathered all above,
+ While mortals sleep, the angels keep
+ Their watch of wondering love.
+ O morning stars, together
+ Proclaim the holy birth!
+ And praises sing to God the King
+ And peace to men on earth.
+
+ How silently, how silently,
+ The wondrous gift is given!
+ So God imparts to human hearts
+ The blessings of His heaven.
+ No ear may hear His coming,
+ But in this world of sin,
+ Where meek souls will receive Him still
+ The dear Christ enters in.
+
+Phillips Brooks, late bishop of the diocese of Massachusetts, was born
+in Boston, Dec. 13, 1835; died Jan. 23, 1893. He was graduated at
+Harvard in 1855, and at the Episcopal Divinity School of Alexandria,
+Va., 1859. The first ten years of his ministry were spent in
+Pennsylvania, after which he became rector of Trinity Church, Boston,
+and was elected bishop in 1891. He was an inspiring teacher and
+preacher, an eloquent pulpit orator, and a man of deep and rich
+religious life.
+
+The hymn was written in 1868, and it was, no doubt, the ripened thought
+of his never-forgotten visit to the "little town of Bethlehem" two years
+before.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Bethlehem" is the appropriate name of a tune written by J. Barnby, and
+adapted to the words, but it is the hymn's first melody (named "St.
+Louis" by the compiler who first printed it in the _Church Porch_ from
+original leaflets) that has the credit of carrying it to popularity.
+
+The composer was Mr. Redner, organist of the Church of the Holy Trinity,
+Philadelphia, of which Rector Brooks was then in charge. Lewis Henry
+Redner, born 1831, was not only near the age of his friend and pastor
+but as much devoted to the interests of the Sunday-school, for whose use
+the hymn was written, and he had promised to write a score to which it
+could be sung on the coming Sabbath. Waking in the middle of the night,
+after a busy Saturday that sent him to bed with his brain "in a whirl,"
+he heard "an angel strain," and immediately rose and pricked the notes
+of the melody. The tune had come to him just in time to be sung. A much
+admired tune has also been written to this hymn by Hubert P. Main.
+
+
+
+_PALM SUNDAY_.
+
+
+FAURE'S "PALM BRANCHES."
+
+ _Sur nos chemins les rameaux et les fleurs
+ Sont repandos--_
+
+ O'er all the way green palms and blossoms gay
+ Are strewn to-day in festive preparation,
+ Where Jesus comes to wipe our tears away.
+ E'en now the throng to welcome Him prepare;
+ Join all and sing.--
+
+Jean Baptiste Faure, author of the words and music, was born at Moulins,
+France, Jan. 15, 1830. As a boy he was gifted with a beautiful voice,
+and crowds used to gather wherever he sang in the streets of Paris.
+Little is known of his parentage, and apparently the sweet voice of the
+wandering lad was his only fortune. He found wealthy friends who sent
+him to the _Conservatoire_, but when his voice matured it ceased to
+serve him as a singer. He went on with his study of instrumental music,
+but mourned for his lost vocal triumphs, and his longing became a
+subject of prayer. He promised God that if his power to sing were given
+back to him he would use it for charity and the good of mankind. By
+degrees he recovered his voice, and became known as a great baritone. As
+professional singer and composer at the Paris _Grand Opera_, he had been
+employed largely in dramatic work, but his "Ode to Charity" is one of
+his enduring and celebrated pieces, and his songs written for benevolent
+and religious services have found their way into all Christian lands.
+
+His "Palm-Branches" has come to be a _sine qua non_ on its calendar
+Sunday wherever church worship is planned with any regard to the Feasts
+of the Christian year.
+
+
+
+_EASTER._
+
+
+Perhaps the most notable feature in the early hymnology of the Oriental
+Church was its Resurrection songs. Being hymns of joy, they called forth
+all the ceremony and spectacle of ecclesiastical pomp. Among them--and
+the most ancient one of those preserved--is the hymn of John of
+Damascus, quoted in the second chapter (p. 54). This was the
+proclamation-song in the watch-assemblies, when exactly on the midnight
+moment at the shout of "Christos egerthe!" ([Greek: Christos egerthe].)
+"Christ is risen!" thousands of torches were lit, bells and trumpets
+pealed, and (in the later centuries) salvos of cannon shook the air.
+
+Another favorite hymn of the Eastern Church was the "_Salve, Beate
+Mane_," "Welcome, Happy Morning," of Fortunatus. (Chap. 10, p. 357.) This
+poem furnished cantos for Easter hymns of the Middle Ages. Jerome of
+Prague sang stanzas of it on his way to the stake.
+
+An anonymous hymn, "_Poneluctum, Magdelena_," in medieval Latin rhyme,
+is addressed to Mary Magdelene weeping at the empty sepulchre. The
+following are the 3d and 4th stanzas, with a translation by Prof. C.S.
+Harrington of Wesleyan University:
+
+ Gaude, plaude, Magdalena!
+ Tumba Christus exiit!
+ Tristis est peracta scena,
+ Victor mortis rediit;
+ Quem deflebas morientem,
+ Nunc arride resurgentem!
+ Alleluia!
+
+ Tolle vultum, Magdalena!
+ Redivivum aspice;
+ Vide frons quam sit amoena,
+ Quinque plagas inspice;
+ Fulgent, sic ut margaritae,
+ Ornamenta novae vitae.
+ Alleluia!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Magdalena, shout for gladness!
+ Christ has left the gloomy grave;
+ Finished is the scene of sadness;
+ Death destroyed, He comes to save;
+ Whom with grief thou sawest dying,
+ Greet with smiles, the tomb defying.
+ Hallelujah!
+
+ Lift thine eyes, O Magdalena!
+ Lo! thy Lord before thee stands;
+ See! how fair the thorn-crowned forehead;
+ Mark His feet, His side, His hands;
+ Glow His wounds with pearly whiteness!
+ Hallowing life with heavenly brightness!
+ Hallelujah!
+
+The hymnaries of the Christian Church for seventeen hundred years are so
+rich in Easter hallelujahs and hosannas that to introduce them all would
+swell a chapter to the size of an encyclopedia--and even to make a
+selection is a responsible task.
+
+Simple mention must suffice of Luther's--
+
+ In the bonds of death He lay;
+
+--of Watts'--
+
+ He dies, the Friend of sinners dies;
+
+--of John Wesley's--
+
+ Our Lord has gone up on high;
+
+--of C.F. Gellert's--
+
+ Christ is risen! Christ is risen!
+ He hath burst His bonds in twain;
+
+--omitting hundreds which have been helpful in psalmody, and are,
+perhaps, still in choir or congregational use.
+
+
+"CHRIST THE LORD IS RISEN TODAY"
+
+Begins a hymn of Charles Wesley's and is also the first line of a hymn
+prepared for Sunday-school use by Mrs. Storrs, wife of the late Dr.
+Richard Salter Storrs of Brooklyn, N.Y.
+
+Wesley's hymn is sung--with or without the hallelujah interludes--to
+"Telemann's Chant," (Zeuner), to an air of Mendelssohn, and to John
+Stainer's "Paschale Gaudium." Like the old New England "Easter Anthem"
+it appears to have been suggested by an anonymous translation of some
+more ancient (Latin) antiphony.
+
+ Jesus Christ is risen to day,
+ Hallelujah!
+ Our triumphant holy day,
+ Hallelujah!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Who endured the cross and grave.
+ Hallelujah!
+ Sinners to redeem and save,
+ Hallelujah!
+
+
+AN ANTHEM FOR EASTER.
+
+This work of an amateur genius, with its rustic harmonies, suited the
+taste of colonial times, and no doubt the devout church-goers of that
+day found sincere worship and thanksgiving in its flamboyant music. "An
+Anthem for Easter," in A major by William Billings (1785) occupied
+several pages in the early collections of psalmody and "the sounding
+joy" was in it. Organs were scarce, but beyond the viols of the village
+choirs it needed no instrumental accessories. The language is borrowed
+from the New Testament and _Young's Night Thoughts_.
+
+ The Lord is risen indeed!
+ Hallelujah!
+ The Lord is risen indeed!
+ Hallelujah!
+
+Following this triumphant overture, a recitative bass solo repeats I
+Cor. 15:20, and the chorus takes it up with crowning hallelujahs.
+Different parts, _per fugam_, inquire from clef to clef--
+
+ And did He rise?
+ And did He rise?--
+ Hear [the answer], O ye nations!
+ Hear it, O ye dead!
+
+Then duet, trio and chorus sing it, successively--
+
+ He rose! He rose! He rose!
+ He burst the bars of death,
+ And triumphed o'er the grave!
+
+The succeeding thirty-four bars--duet and chorus--take home the sacred
+gladness to the heart of humanity--
+
+ Then, then _I_ rose,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ And seized eternal youth,
+ Man all immortal, hail!
+ Heaven's all the glory, man's the boundless bliss.
+
+
+"YES, THE REDEEMER ROSE."
+
+In the six-eight syllable verse once known as "hallelujah
+metre"--written by Dr. Doddridge to be sung after a sermon on the text
+in 1st Corinthians noted in the above anthem--
+
+ Yes, the Redeemer rose,
+ The Saviour left the dead,
+ And o'er our hellish foes
+ High raised His conquering head.
+ In wild dismay the guards around
+ Fall to the ground and sink away.
+
+Lewis Edson's "Lenox" (1782) is an old favorite among its musical
+interpreters.
+
+
+"O SHORT WAS HIS SLUMBER."
+
+This hymn for the song-service of the Ruggles St. Church, Boston, was
+written by Rev. Theron Brown.
+
+ O short was His slumber; He woke from the dust;
+ The Saviour death's chain could not hold;
+ And short, since He rose, is the sleep of the just;
+ They shall wake, and His glory behold.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Dear grave in the garden; hope smiled at its door
+ Where love's brightest triumph was told;
+ Christ lives! and His life will His people restore!
+ They shall wake, and His glory behold.
+
+The music is Bliss' tune to Spafford's "When Peace Like a River."
+
+Another by the same writer, sung by the same church chorus, is--
+
+ He rose! O morn of wonder!
+ They saw His light go down
+ Whose hate had crushed Him under,
+ A King without a crown.
+ No plume, no garland wore He,
+ Despised death's Victor lay,
+ And wrapped in night His glory,
+ That claimed a grander day.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ He rose! He burst immortal
+ From death's dark realm alone,
+ And left its heavenward portal
+ Swung wide for all his own.
+ Nor need one terror seize us
+ To face earth's final pain,
+ For they who follow Jesus,
+ But die to live again.
+
+The composer's name is lost, the tune being left nameless when printed.
+The impression is that it was a secular melody. A very suitable tune for
+the hymn is Geo. J. Webb's "Millennial Dawn" ("the Morning Light is
+breaking.")
+
+
+
+_THANKSGIVING._
+
+
+"DIE FELDER WIR PFLUeGEN UND STREUEN."
+
+ We plow the fields and scatter
+ The good seed on the land,
+ But it is fed and watered
+ By God's Almighty hand,
+ He sends the snow in winter,
+ The warmth to swell the grain,
+ The breezes, and the sunshine
+ And soft, refreshing rain,
+ All, all good gifts around us
+ Are sent from heaven above
+ Then thank the Lord, O thank the Lord
+ For all His love!
+
+Matthias Claudius, who wrote the German original of this little poem,
+was a native of Reinfeld, Holstein, born 1770 and died 1815. He wrote
+lyrics, humorous, pathetic and religious, some of which are still
+current in Germany.
+
+The translator of the verses is Miss Jane Montgomery Campbell, whose
+identity has not been traced. Hers is evidently one of the retiring
+names brought to light by one unpretending achievement. English readers
+owe to her the above modest and devout hymn, which was first published
+here in Rev. C.S. Bere's _Garland of Songs with Tunes_, 1861.
+
+Little is known of Arthur Cottman, composer to Miss Campbell's words. He
+was born in 1842, and died in 1879.
+
+[Illustration: Lowell Mason]
+
+
+"WITH SONGS AND HONORS SOUNDING LOUD."
+
+Stanzas of this enduring hymn of Watts' have been as often recited as
+sung.
+
+ He sends His showers of blessing down
+ To cheer the plains below;
+ He makes the grass the mountains crown,
+ And corn in valleys grow.
+
+
+_THE TUNE_,
+
+One of the chorals--if not the best--to claim partnership with this
+sacred classic, is John Cole's "Geneva," distinguished among the few
+fugue tunes which the singing world refuses to dismiss. There is a
+growing grandeur in the opening solo and its following duet as they
+climb the first tetra-chord, when the full harmony suddenly reveals the
+majesty of the music. The little parenthetic duo at the eighth bar
+breaks the roll of the song for one breath, and the concord of voices
+closes in again like a diapason. One thinks of a bird-note making a
+waterfall listen.
+
+
+"HARVEST HOME."
+
+ Let us sing of the sheaves, when the summer is done,
+ And the garners are stored with the gifts of the sun.
+ Shouting home from the fields like the voice of the sea,
+ Let us join with the reapers in glad jubilee,--
+
+ _Refrain._
+ Harvest home! (_double rep._)
+ Let us chant His praise who has crowned our days
+ With bounty of the harvest home.
+
+ Who hath ripened the fruits into golden and red?
+ Who hath grown in the valleys our treasures of bread,
+ That the owner might heap, and the stranger might glean
+ For the days when the cold of the winter is keen?
+ Harvest home!
+ Let us chant, etc.
+
+ For the smile of the sunshine, again and again,
+ For the dew on the garden, the showers on the plain,
+ For the year, with its hope and its promise that end,
+ Crowned with plenty and peace, let thanksgiving ascend,
+ Harvest home!
+ Let us chant, etc.
+
+ We shall gather a harvest of glory, we know,
+ From the furrows of life where in patience we sow.
+ Buried love in the field of the heart never dies,
+ And its seed scattered here will be sheaves in the skies,
+ Harvest home!
+ Let us chant, etc.
+
+Thanksgiving Hymn. Boston, 1890. Theron Brown.
+
+Tune "To the Work, To the Work." W.H. Doane.
+
+
+"THE GOD OF HARVEST PRAISE."
+
+Written by James Montgomery in 1840, and published in the _Evangelical
+Magazine_ as the Harvest Hymn for that year.
+
+ The God of harvest praise;
+ In loud thanksgiving raise
+ Heart, hand and voice.
+ The valleys smile and sing,
+ Forests and mountains sing,
+ The plains their tribute bring,
+ The streams rejoice.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The God of harvest praise;
+ Hearts, hands and voices raise
+ With sweet accord;
+ From field to garner throng,
+ Bearing your sheaves along,
+ And in your harvest song
+ Bless ye the Lord.
+
+Tune, "Dort"--Lowell Mason.
+
+
+
+_MORNING._
+
+
+"STILL, STILL WITH THEE."
+
+These stanzas of Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe, with their poetic beauty
+and grateful religious spirit, have furnished an orison worthy of a
+place in all the hymn books. In feeling and in faith the hymn is a matin
+song for the world, supplying words and thoughts to any and every heart
+that worships.
+
+ Still, still with Thee, when purple morning breaketh,
+ When the bird waketh and the shadows flee;
+ Fairer than morning, lovelier than daylight,
+ Dawns the sweet consciousness, I am with Thee.
+
+ Alone with Thee, amid the mystic shadows
+ The solemn hush of nature newly born;
+ Alone with Thee, in breathless adoration,
+ In the calm dew and freshness of the morn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ When sinks the soul, subdued by toil, to slumber,
+ Its closing eyes look up to Thee in prayer,
+ Sweet the repose beneath Thy wings o'ershadowing,
+ But sweeter still to wake and find Thee there.
+
+
+_THE TUNES._
+
+Barnby's "Windsor," and "Stowe" by Charles H. Morse (1893)--both written
+to the words.
+
+Mendelssohn's "Consolation" is a classic interpretation of the hymn, and
+finely impressive when skillfully sung, but simpler--and sweeter to the
+popular ear--is Mason's "Henley," written to Mrs. Eslings'--
+
+ "Come unto me when shadows darkly gather."
+
+
+
+_EVENING HYMNS._
+
+John Keble's beautiful meditation--
+
+ Sun of my soul, Thou Saviour dear;
+
+John Leland's--
+
+ The day is past and gone;
+
+and Phebe Brown's--
+
+ I love to steal awhile away;
+
+--have already been noticed. Bishop Doane's gentle and spiritual lines
+express nearly everything that a worshipping soul would include in a
+moment of evening thought. The first and last stanzas are the ones most
+commonly sung.
+
+ Softly now the light of day
+ Fades upon my sight away:
+ Free from care, from labor free,
+ Lord I would commune with Thee.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Soon for me the light of day
+ Shall forever pass away;
+ Then, from sin and sorrow free,
+ Take me, Lord, to dwell with Thee.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Both Kozeluck and J.E. Gould, besides Louis M. Gottschalk and Dr. Henry
+John Gauntlett, have tried their skill in fitting music to this hymn,
+but only Gottschalk and Kozeluck approach the mood into which its quiet
+words charm a pious and reflective mind. Possibly its frequent
+association with "Holley," composed by George Hews, may influence a
+hearer's judgement of other melodies but there is something in that tune
+that makes it cling to the hymn as if by instinctive kinship.
+
+Others may have as much or more artistic music but "Holley" in its soft
+modulations seems to breathe the spirit of every word.
+
+It was this tune to which a stranger recently heard a group of
+mill-girls singing Bishop Doane's verses. The lady, a well-known
+Christian worker, visited a certain factory, and the superintendent,
+after showing her through the building, opened a door into a long
+work-room, where the singing of the girls delighted and surprised her.
+It was sunset, and their hymn was--
+
+ Softly now the light of day.
+
+Several of the girls were Sunday-school teachers, who had encouraged
+others to sing at that hour, and it had become a habit.
+
+"Has it made a difference?" the lady inquired.
+
+"There is seldom any quarrelling or coarse joking among them now," said
+the superintendent with a smile.
+
+Dr. S.F. Smith's hymn of much the same tone and tenor--
+
+ Softly fades the twilight ray
+ Of the holy Sabbath day,
+
+--is commonly sung to the tune of "Holley."
+
+George Hews, an American composer and piano-maker, was born in
+Massachusetts 1800, and died July 6, 1873. No intelligence of him or his
+work or former locality is at hand, beyond this brief note in Baptie,
+"He is believed to have followed his trade in Boston, and written music
+for some of Mason's earlier books."
+
+
+_DEDICATION._
+
+
+"CHRIST IS OUR CORNER-STONE."
+
+This reproduces in Chandler's translation a song-service in an ancient
+Latin liturgy (_angulare fundamentum_).
+
+ Christ is our Corner-Stone;
+ On Him alone we build,
+ With His true saints alone
+ The courts of heaven are filled,
+ On His great love
+ Our hopes we place
+ Of present grace
+ And joys above.
+
+ O then with hymns of praise
+ These hallowed courts shall ring;
+ Our voices we will raise
+ The Three-in-One to sing.
+ And thus proclaim
+ In joyful song
+ But loud and long
+ That glorious Name.
+
+The Rev. John Chandler was born at Witley, Surrey, Eng. June 16, 1806.
+He took his A.M. degree at Oxford, and entered the ministry of the
+Church of England, was Vicar of Witley many years, and became well-known
+for his translations of hymns of the primitive church. Died at Putney,
+July 1, 1876.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Sebastian Wesley's "Harewood" is plainer and of less compass, but
+Zundel's "Brooklyn" is more than its rival, both in melody and vivacity.
+
+
+"OH LORD OF HOSTS WHOSE GLORY FILLS THE BOUNDS OF THE ETERNAL HILLS."
+
+A hymn of Dr. John Mason Neale--
+
+ Endue the creatures with Thy grace
+ That shall adorn Thy dwelling-place
+ The beauty of the oak and pine,
+ The gold and silver, make them Thine.
+
+ The heads that guide endue with skill,
+ The hands that work preserve from ill,
+ That we who these foundations lay
+ May raise the top-stone in its day.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Welton," by Rev. Caesar Malan--author of "Hendon," once familiar to
+American singers.
+
+Henri Abraham Caesar Malan was born at Geneva, Switzerland, 1787, and
+educated at Geneva College. Ordained to the ministry of the State
+church, (Reformed,) he was dismissed for preaching against its formalism
+and spiritual apathy; but he built a chapel of his own, and became a
+leader with D'Aubigne, Monod, and others in reviving the purity of the
+Evangelical faith and laboring for the conversion of souls.
+
+Malan wrote many hymns, and published a large collection, the "_Chants
+de Sion_," for the Evangelical Society and the French Reformed Church.
+He composed the music of his own hymns. Died at Vandosurre, 1864.
+
+
+"DAUGHTER OF ZION, FROM THE DUST."
+
+Cases may occur where an _exhortation_ hymn earns a place with
+dedication hymns.
+
+The charred fragment of a hymn-book leaf hangs in a frame on the
+auditorium wall of the "New England Church," Chicago. The former edifice
+of that church, all the homes of its resident members, and all their
+business offices except one, were destroyed in the great fire. In the
+ruins of their sanctuary the only scrap of paper found on which there
+was a legible word was this bit of a hymn-book leaf with the two first
+stanzas of Montgomery's hymn,
+
+ Daughter of Zion, from the dust,
+ Exalt thy fallen head;
+ Again in thy Redeemer trust,
+ He calls thee from the dead.
+
+ Awake, awake! put on thy strength,
+ Thy beautiful array;
+ The day of freedom dawns at length,
+ The Lord's appointed day.
+
+The third verse was not long in coming to every mind--
+
+ Rebuild thy walls! thy bounds enlarge!
+
+--and even without that added word the impoverished congregation
+evidently enough had received a message from heaven. They took heart of
+grace, overcame all difficulties, and in good time replaced their ruined
+Sabbath-home with the noble house in which they worship today.[46]
+
+[Footnote 46: The story is told by Rev. William E. Barton D.D. of Oak
+Park, Ill.]
+
+If the "New England Church" of Chicago did not sing this hymn at the
+dedication of their new temple it was for some other reason than lack of
+gratitude--not to say reverence.
+
+
+_THE SABBATH_.
+
+
+The very essence of all song-worship pitched on this key-note is the
+ringing hymn of Watts--
+
+ Sweet is the day of sacred rest,
+ No mortal cares disturb my breast, etc.
+
+--but it has vanished from the hymnals with its tune. Is it because
+profane people or thoughtless youth made a travesty of the two next
+lines--
+
+ O may my heart in tune be found
+ Like David's harp of solemn sound?
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Old "Portland" by Abraham Maxim, a fugue tune in F major of the canon
+style, expressed all the joy that a choir could put into music, though
+with more sound than skill. The choral is a relic among relics now, but
+it is a favorite one.
+
+"Sweet is the Light of Sabbath Eve" by Edmeston; Stennett's "Another Six
+Days' Work is Done," sung to "Spohr," the joint tune of Louis Spohr and
+J.E. Gould; and Doddridge's "Thine Earthly Sabbath, Lord, We Love"
+retain a feeble hold among some congregations. And Hayward's "Welcome
+Delightful Morn," to the impossible tune of "Lischer," survived
+unaccountably long in spite of its handicap. But special Sabbath hymns
+are out of fashion, those classed under that title taking an incidental
+place under the general head of "Worship."
+
+
+_COMMUNION._
+
+
+"BREAD OF HEAVEN, ON THEE WE FEED."
+
+This hymn of Josiah Conder, copying the physical metaphors of the 6th of
+John, is still occasionally used at the Lord's Supper.
+
+ Vine of Heaven, Thy blood supplies
+ This blest cup of sacrifice,
+ Lord, Thy wounds our healing give,
+ To Thy Cross we look and live.
+
+The hymn is notable for the felicity with which it combines imagery and
+reality. Figure and fact are always in sight of each other.
+
+Josiah Conder was born in London, September 17, 1789. He edited the
+_Eclectic Review_, and was the author of numerous prose works on
+historic and religious subjects. Rev. Garrett Horder says that more of
+his hymns are in common use now than those of any other except Watts and
+Doddridge. More _in proportion to the relative number_ may be nearer the
+truth. In his lifetime Conder wrote about sixty hymns. He died Dec. 27,
+1855.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The tune "Corsica" sometimes sung to the words, though written by the
+famous Von Gluck, shows no sign of the genius of its author. Born at
+Weissenwang, near New Markt, Prussia, July 2, 1714, he spent his life in
+the service of operatic art, and is called "the father of the lyric
+drama," but he paid little attention to sacred music. Queen Marie
+Antoinette was for a while his pupil. Died Nov. 25, 1787.
+
+"Wilmot," (from Von Weber) one of Mason's popular hymn-tune
+arrangements, is a melody with which the hymn is well acquainted. It has
+a fireside rhythm which old and young of the same circles take up
+naturally in song.
+
+
+"HERE, O MY LORD, I SEE THEE FACE TO FACE."
+
+Written in October, 1855, by Dr. Horatius Bonar. James Bonar, brother of
+the poet-preacher, just after the communion for that month, asked him to
+furnish a hymn for the communion record. It was the church custom to
+print a memorandum of each service at the Lord's table, with an
+appropriate hymn attached, and an original one would be thrice welcome.
+Horatius in a day or two sent this hymn:
+
+ Here, O my Lord, I see Thee face to face,
+ Here would I touch and handle things unseen
+ Here grasp with firmer hand th' eternal grace
+ And all my weariness upon Thee lean.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Too soon we rise; the symbols disappear;
+ The feast, though not the love, is past and gone;
+ The bread and wine remove, but Thou art here
+ Nearer than ever--still my Shield and Sun.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Morecambe" is an anonymous composition printed with the words by the
+_Plymouth Hymnal_ editors. "Berlin" by Mendelssohn is better. The metre
+of Bonar's hymn is unusual, and melodies to fit it are not numerous, but
+for a meditative service it is worth a tune of its own.
+
+
+"O THOU MY SOUL, FORGET NO MORE."
+
+The author of this hymn found in the Baptist hymnals, and often sung at
+the sacramental seasons of that denomination, was the first Hindoo
+convert to Christianity.
+
+Krishna Pal, a native carpenter, in consequence of an accident, came
+under the care of Mr. Thomas, a missionary who had been a surgeon in the
+East Indies and was now an associate worker with William Carey. Mr.
+Thomas set the man's broken arm, and talked of Jesus to him and the
+surrounding crowd with so much tact and loving kindness that Krishna Pal
+was touched. He became a pupil of the missionaries; embraced Christ, and
+influenced his wife and daughter and his brother to accept his new
+faith.
+
+He alone, however, dared the bitter persecution of his caste, and
+presented himself for church-membership. He and Carey's son were
+baptized in the Ganges by Dr. Carey, Dec. 28, 1800, in the presence of
+the English Governor and an immense concourse of people representing
+four or five different religions.
+
+Krishna Pal wrote several hymns. The one here noted was translated from
+the Bengalee by Dr. Marshman.
+
+ O thou, my soul, forget no more
+ The Friend who all thy sorrows bore;
+ Let every idol be forgot;
+ But, O my soul, forget him not.
+
+ Renounce thy works and ways, with grief,
+ And fly to this divine relief;
+ Nor Him forget, who left His throne,
+ And for thy life gave up His own.
+
+ Eternal truth and mercy shine
+ In Him, and He Himself is thine:
+ And canst thou then, with sin beset,
+ Such charms, such matchless charms forget?
+
+ Oh, no; till life itself depart,
+ His name shall cheer and warm my heart;
+ And lisping this, from earth I'll rise,
+ And join the chorus of the skies.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+There is no scarcity of good long-metre tunes to suit the sentiment of
+this hymn. More commonly in the Baptist manuals its vocal mate is
+Bradbury's "Rolland" or the sweet and serious Scotch melody of "Ward,"
+arranged by Mason. Best of all is "Hursley," the beautiful Ritter-Monk
+choral set to "Sun of My Soul."
+
+
+_NEW YEAR._
+
+
+Two representative hymns of this class are John Newton's--
+
+ While with ceaseless course the sun,
+
+--and Charles Wesley's--
+
+ Come let us anew our journey pursue;
+
+the one a voice at the next year's threshold, the other a song at the
+open door.
+
+ While with ceaseless course the sun
+ Hasted thro' the former year
+ Many souls their race have run
+ Nevermore to meet us here.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ As the winged arrow flies
+ Speedily the mark to find,
+ As the lightening from the skies
+ Darts and leaves no trace behind,
+ Swiftly thus our fleeting days
+ Bear we down life's rapid stream,
+ Upward, Lord, our spirits raise;
+ All below is but a dream.
+
+A grave occasion, whether unexpected or periodical, will force
+reflection, and so will a grave truth; and when both present themselves
+at once, the truth needs only commonplace statement. If the statement is
+in rhyme and measure more attention is secured. Add a _tune_ to it, and
+the most frivolous will take notice. Newton's hymn sung on the last
+evening of the year has its opportunity--and never fails to produce a
+solemn effect; but it is to the immortal music given to it in Samuel
+Webbe's "Benevento" that it owes its unique and permanent place. Dykes'
+"St. Edmund" may be sung in England, but in America it will never
+replace Webbe's simple and wonderfully impressive choral.
+
+Charles Wesley's hymn is the antipode of Newton's in metre and movement.
+
+ Come, let us anew our journey pursue,
+ Roll round with the year
+ And never stand still till the Master appear.
+ His adorable will let us gladly fulfil
+ And our talents improve
+ By the patience of hope and the labor of love.
+
+ Our life is a dream, our time as a stream
+ Glides swiftly away,
+ And the fugitive moment refuses to stay.
+ The arrow is flown, the moment is gone,
+ The millennial year,
+ Rushes on to our view, and eternity's near.
+
+[Illustration: Carl von Weber]
+
+One could scarcely imagine a greater contrast than between this hymn and
+Newton's. In spite of its eccentric metre one cannot dismiss it as
+rhythmical jingle, for it is really a sermon shaped into a popular
+canticle, and the surmise is not a difficult one that he had in mind a
+secular air that was familiar to the crowd. But the hymn is not one of
+Wesley's _poems_. Compilers who object to its lilting measure omit it
+from their books, but it holds its place in public use, for it carries
+weighty thoughts in swift sentences.
+
+ O that each in the Day of His coming may say,
+ "I have fought my way through,
+ I have finished the work Thou didst give me to do."
+ O that each from the Lord may receive the glad word,
+ "Well and faithfully done,
+ Enter into my joy, and sit down on my throne."
+
+For a hundred and fifty years this has been sung in the Methodist
+watch-meetings, and it will be long before it ceases to be sung--and
+reprinted in Methodist, and some Baptist hymnals.
+
+The tune of "Lucas," named after James Lucas, its composer, is the
+favorite vehicle of song for the "Watch-hymn." Like the tune to "O How
+Happy Are They," it has the movement of the words and the emphasis of
+their meaning.
+
+No knowledge of James Lucas is at hand except that he lived in England,
+where one brief reference gives his birth-date as 1762 and "about 1805"
+as the birth-date of the tune.
+
+
+"GREAT GOD, WE SING THAT MIGHTY HAND."
+
+The admirable hymn of Dr. Doddridge may be noted in this division with
+its equally admirable tune of "Melancthon," one of the old Lutheran
+chorals of Germany.
+
+ Great God, we sing that mighty hand
+ By which supported still we stand.
+ The opening year Thy mercy shows;
+ Thy mercy crown it till its close!
+
+ By day, by night, at home, abroad,
+ Still we are guarded by our God.
+
+As this last couplet stood--and ought now to stand--pious parents
+teaching the hymn to their children heard them repeat--
+
+ By day, by night, at home, abroad,
+ _We are surrounded still with God_.
+
+Many are now living whose first impressive sense of the Divine
+Omnipresence came with that line.
+
+
+_PARTING._
+
+
+"GOD BE WITH YOU TILL WE MEET AGAIN."
+
+A lyric of benediction, born, apparently, at the divine moment for the
+need of the great "Society of Christian Endeavor," and now adopted into
+the Christian song-service of all lands. The author, Rev. Jeremiah Eames
+Rankin, D.D., LL.D., was born in Thornton, N.H., Jan. 2, 1828. He was
+graduated at Middlebury College, Vt., in 1848, and labored as a
+Congregational pastor more than thirty years. For thirteen years he was
+President of Howard University, Washington, D.C. Besides the "Parting
+Hymn" he wrote _The Auld Scotch Mither_, _Ingleside Rhymes_, _Hymns pro
+Patria_, and various practical works and religious essays. Died 1904.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+As in a thousand other partnerships of hymnist and musician, Dr. Rankin
+was fortunate in his composer. The tune is a symphony of hearts--subdued
+at first, but breaking into a chorus strong with the uplift of hope. It
+is a farewell with a spiritual thrill in it.
+
+Its author, William Gould Tomer, was born in Finesville, Warren Co.,
+N.J., October 5, 1832; died in Phillipsburg, N.J., Sept. 26, 1896. He
+was a soldier in the Civil War and a writer of good ability as well as a
+composer. For some time he was editor of the _High Bridge Gazette_, and
+music with him was an avocation rather than a profession. He wrote the
+melody to Dr. Rankin's hymn in 1880, Prof. J.W. Bischoff supplying the
+harmony, and the tune was first published in _Gospel Bells_ the same
+year.
+
+
+_FUNERALS._
+
+
+The style of singing at funerals, as well as the character of the hymns,
+has greatly changed--if, indeed, music continues to be a part of the
+service, as frequently, in ordinary cases, it is not. "China" with its
+comforting words--and terrifying chords--is forever obsolete, and not
+only that, but Dr. Muhlenberg's, "I Would Not Live Alway," with its
+sadly sentimental tune of "Frederick," has passed out of common use.
+Anna Steele's "So Fades the Lovely, Blooming Flower," on the death of a
+child, is occasionally heard, and now and then Dr. S.F. Smith's,
+"Sister, Thou Wast Mild and Lovely," (with its gentle air of "Mt.
+Vernon,") on the death of a young lady. Standard hymns like Watts',
+"Unveil Thy Bosom, Faithful Tomb," to the slow, tender melody of the
+"Dead March," (from Handel's oratorio of "Saul") and Montgomery's
+"Servant of God, Well Done," to "Olmutz," or Woodbury's "Forever with
+the Lord," still retain their prestige, the music of the former being
+played on steeple-chimes on some burial occasions in cities, during the
+procession--
+
+ Nor pain nor grief nor anxious fear
+ Invade thy bounds; no mortal woes
+ Can reach the peaceful sleeper here
+ While angels watch the soft repose.
+
+The latter hymn (Montgomery's) is biographical--as described on page
+301--
+
+ Servant of God, well done;
+ Rest from thy loved employ;
+ The battle fought, the victory won,
+ Enter thy Master's joy.
+
+Only five stanzas of this long poem are now in use.
+
+The exquisite elegy of Montgomery, entitled "The Grave,"--
+
+ There is a calm for those who weep,
+ A rest for weary mortals found
+ They softly lie and sweetly sleep
+ Low in the ground.
+
+--is by no means discontinued on funeral occasions, nor Margaret
+Mackay's beloved hymn,--
+
+ Asleep in Jesus, blessed sleep,
+
+--melodized in Bradbury's "Rest."
+
+Mrs. Margaret Mackay was born in 1801, the daughter of Capt. Robert
+Mackay of Hedgefield, Inverness, and wife of a major of the same name.
+She was the author of several prose works and _Lays of Leisure Hours_,
+containing seventy-two original hymns and poems, of which "Asleep in
+Jesus" is one. She died in 1887.
+
+
+"MY JESUS, AS THOU WILT."
+
+(_Mein Jesu, wie du willst._)
+
+This sweet hymn for mourners, known to us here in Jane Borthwick's
+translation, was written by Benjamin Schmolke (or Schmolk) late in the
+17th century. He was born at Brauchitzchdorf, in Silesia, Dec. 21, 1672,
+and received his education at the Labau Gymnasium and Leipsic
+University. A sermon preached while a youth, for his father, a Lutheran
+pastor, showed such remarkable promise that a wealthy man paid the
+expenses of his education for the ministry. He was ordained and settled
+as pastor of the Free Church at Schweidnitz, Silesia, in which charge he
+continued from 1701 till his death.
+
+Schmolke was the most popular hymn-writer of his time, author of some
+nine hundred church pieces, besides many for special occasions. Withal
+he was a man of exalted piety and a pastor of rare wisdom and influence.
+
+His death, of paralysis, occurred on the anniversary of his wedding,
+Feb. 12, 1737.
+
+ My Jesus, as Thou wilt,
+ Oh may Thy will be mine!
+ Into Thy hand of love
+ I would my all resign.
+ Thro' sorrow or thro' joy
+ Conduct me as Thine own,
+ And help me still to say,
+ My Lord, Thy will be done.
+
+The last line is the refrain of the hymn of four eight-line stanzas.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Sussex," by Joseph Barnby, a plain-song with a fine harmony, is good
+congregational music for the hymn.
+
+But "Jewett," one of Carl Maria Von Weber's exquisite flights of song,
+is like no other in its intimate interpretation of the prayerful words.
+We hear Luther's "bird in the heart" singing softly in every inflection
+of the tender melody as it glides on. The tune, arranged by Joseph
+Holbrook, is from an opera--the overture to Weber's Der Freischutz--but
+one feels that the gentle musician when he wrote it must have caught an
+inspiration of divine trust and peace. The wish among the last words he
+uttered when dying in London of slow disease was, "Let me go back to my
+own (home), and then God's will be done." That wish and the sentiment of
+Schmolke's hymn belong to each other, for they end in the same way.
+
+ My Jesus, as Thou wilt:
+ All shall be well for me;
+ Each changing future scene
+ I gladly trust with Thee.
+ Straight to my home above
+ I travel calmly on,
+ And sing in life or death
+ My Lord, Thy will be done.
+
+
+"I CANNOT ALWAYS TRACE THE WAY."
+
+In later years, when funeral music is desired, the employment of a male
+quartette has become a favorite custom. Of the selections sung in this
+manner few are more suitable or more generally welcomed than the tender
+and trustful hymn of Sir John Bowring, rendered sometimes in Dr. Dykes'
+"Almsgiving," but better in the less-known but more flexible tune
+composed by Howard M. Dow--
+
+ I cannot always trace the way
+ Where Thou, Almighty One, dost move,
+ But I can always, always say
+ That God is love.
+
+ When fear her chilling mantle flings
+ O'er earth, my soul to heaven above
+ As to her native home upsprings,
+ For God is love.
+
+ When mystery clouds my darkened path,
+ I'll check my dread, my doubts reprove;
+ In this my soul sweet comfort hath
+ That God is love.
+
+ Yes, God is love. A thought like this
+ Can every gloomy thought remove,
+ And turn all tears, all woes to bliss
+ For God is love.
+
+The first line of the hymn was originally, "'Tis seldom I can trace the
+way."
+
+Howard M. Dow has been many years a resident of Boston, and organist of
+the Grand Lodge of Freemasons at the Tremont St. (Masonic) Temple.
+
+
+_WEDDING._
+
+
+Time was when hymns were sung at weddings, though in America the
+practice was never universal. Marriage, among Protestants, is not one of
+the sacraments, and no masses are chanted for it by ecclesiastical
+ordinance. The question of music at private marriages depends on
+convenience, vocal or instrumental equipment, and the general drift of
+the occasion. At public weddings the organ's duty is the "Wedding
+March."
+
+To revive a fashion of singing at home marriages would be considered an
+oddity--and, where civil marriages are legal, a superfluity--but in the
+religious ceremony, just after the prayer that follows the completion of
+the nuptial formula, it will occur to some that a hymn would "tide over"
+a proverbially awkward moment. Even good, quaint old John Berridge's
+lines would happily relieve the embarrassment--besides reminding the
+more thoughtless that a wedding is not a mere piece of social fun--
+
+ Since Jesus truly did appear
+ To grace a marriage feast
+ O Lord, we ask Thy presence here
+ To make a wedding guest.
+
+ Upon the bridal pair look down
+ Who now have plighted hands;
+ Their union with Thy favor crown
+ And bless the nuptial bands
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ In purest love these souls unite
+ That they with Christian care
+ May make domestic burdens light
+ By taking each a share.
+
+Tune, "Lanesboro," Mason.
+
+A wedding hymn of more poetic beauty is the one written by Miss Dorothy
+Bloomfield (now Mrs. Gurney), born 1858, for her sister's marriage in
+1883.
+
+ O perfect Love, all human thought transcending,
+ Lowly we kneel in prayer before Thy throne
+ That their's may be a love which knows no ending
+ Whom Thou forevermore dost join in one.
+
+ O perfect Life, be Thou their first assurance
+ Of tender charity and steadfast faith,
+ Of patient hope and quiet, brave endurance,
+ With childlike trust that fears nor pain nor death.
+
+ Grant them the joy which brightens earthly sorrow,
+ Grant them the peace which calms all earthly strife,
+ And to their day the glorious unknown morrow
+ That dawns upon eternal love and life.
+
+Tune by Joseph Barnby, "O Perfect Love."
+
+
+_FRUITION DAY._
+
+
+"LO! HE COMES WITH CLOUDS DESCENDING."
+
+Thomas Olivers begins one of his hymns with this line. The hymn is a
+Judgment-day lyric of rude strength and once in current use, but now
+rarely printed. The "Lo He Comes," here specially noted, is the
+production of John Cennick, the Moravian.
+
+ Lo! He comes with clouds descending
+ Once for favored sinners slain,
+ Thousand thousand saints attending
+ Swell the triumph of His train.
+ Hallelujah!
+ God appears on earth to reign.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Yea, amen; let all adore Thee
+ High on Thy eternal throne.
+ Saviour, take the power and glory,
+ Claim the kingdom for thine own;
+ O come quickly;
+ Hallelujah! Come, Lord, come.
+
+
+_THE TUNES._
+
+Various composers have written music to this universal hymn, but none
+has given it a choral that it can claim as peculiarly its own. "Brest,"
+Lowell Mason's plain-song, has a limited range, and runs low on the
+staff, but its solemn chords are musical and commanding. As much can be
+said of the tunes of Dr. Dykes and Samuel Webbe, which have more
+variety. Those who feel that the hymn calls for a more ornate melody
+will prefer Madan's "Helmsley."
+
+
+"LO! WHAT A GLORIOUS SIGHT APPEARS."
+
+The great Southampton bard who wrote "Sweet fields beyond the swelling
+flood" was quick to kindle at every reminder of Fruition Day.
+
+ Lo! what a glorious sight appears
+ To our believing eyes!
+ The earth and seas are passed away,
+ And the old rolling skies.
+ From the third heaven, where God resides,
+ That holy, happy place,
+ The New Jerusalem comes down,
+ Adorned with shining grace.
+
+This hymn of Watts' sings one of his most exalted visions. It has been
+dear for two hundred years to every Christian soul throbbing with
+millennial thoughts and wishful of the day when--
+
+ The God of glory down to men
+ Removes His best abode,
+
+--and when--
+
+ His own kind hand shall wipe the tears
+ From every weeping eye,
+ And pains and groans, and griefs and fears,
+ And death itself shall die,
+
+--and the yearning cry of the last stanza, when the vision fades, has
+been the household ? [A] of myriads of burdened and sorrowing saints--
+
+ How long, dear Saviour, O how long
+ Shall this bright hour delay?
+ Fly swifter round ye wheels of Time,
+ And bring the welcome day!
+
+[Footnote A: Transcriber's note--This question mark is in the original.
+It is possibly a compositor's query which the author missed when
+correcting the proofs. The missing text could be "word".]
+
+
+_THE TUNES._
+
+By right of long appropriation both "Northfield" and "New Jerusalem" own
+a near relationship to these glorious verses. Ingalls, one of the
+constellation of early Puritan psalmodists, to which Billings and Swan
+belonged, evidently loved the hymn, and composed his "New Jerusalem" to
+the verse, "From the third heaven," and his "Northfield" to "How long,
+dear Saviour." The former is now sung only as a reminiscence of the
+music of the past, at church festivals, charity fairs and
+entertainments of similar design, but the action and hearty joy in it
+always evoke sympathetic applause. "Northfield" is still in occasional
+use, and it is a jewel of melody, however irretrievably out of fashion.
+Its union to that immortal stanza, if no other reason, seems likely to
+insure its permanent place in the lists of sacred song.
+
+John Cole's "Annapolis," still found in a few hymnals with these words,
+is a little too late to be called a contemporary piece, but there are
+some reminders of Ingalls' "New Jerusalem" in its style and vigor, and
+it really partakes the flavor of the old New England church music.
+
+Jeremiah Ingalls was born in Andover, Mass., March 1, 1764. A natural
+fondness for music increased with his years, but opportunities to
+educate it were few and far between, and he seemed like to become no
+more than a fairly good bass-viol player in the village choir. But his
+determination carried him higher, and in time his self-taught talent
+qualified him for a singing-school master, and for many years he
+travelled through Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Vermont, training the
+raw vocal material in the country towns, and organizing choirs.
+
+Between his thirtieth and fortieth years, he composed a number of tunes,
+and, in 1804 published a two hundred page collection of his own and
+others' music, which he called the _Christian Harmony_.
+
+His home was for some time in Newberry, Vt., but he subsequently lived
+at Rochester and at Hancock in the same state.
+
+Among the traditions of him is this anecdote of the origin of his famous
+tune "Northfield," which may indicate something of his temper and
+religious habit. During his travels as a singing-school teacher he
+stopped at a tavern in the town of Northfield and ordered his dinner. It
+was very slow in coming, but the inevitable "how long?" that formulated
+itself in his hungry thoughts, instead of sharpening into profane
+complaint, fell into the rhythm of Watts' sacred line--and the tune came
+with it. To call it "Northfield" was natural enough; the place where its
+melody first beguiled him from his bodily wants to a dream of the final
+Fruition Day.
+
+Ingalls died in Hancock, Vt., April 6, 1828.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+HYMNS OF HOPE AND CONSOLATION.
+
+
+"JERUSALEM THE GOLDEN."
+
+_Urbs Sion Aurea._
+
+"The Seven Great Hymns" of the Latin Church are:
+
+ Laus Patriae Coelestis,--(Praise of the Heavenly Country).
+ Veni, Sancte Spiritus,--(Come, Holy Spirit)
+ Veni, Creator Spiritus,--(Come, Creator Spirit)
+ Dies Irae,--(The Day of Wrath)
+ Stabat Mater,--(The Mother Stood By)
+ Mater Speciosa,--(The Fair Mother.)
+ Vexilla Regis.--(The Banner of the King.)
+
+Chief of these is the first named, though that is but part of a
+religious poem of three thousand lines, which the author, Bernard of
+Cluny, named "De Contemptu Mundi" (Concerning Disdain of the World.)
+
+Bernard was of English parentage, though born at Morlaix, a seaport town
+in the north of France. The exact date of his birth is unknown, though
+it was probably about A.D. 1100. He is called Bernard of Cluny because
+he lived and wrote at that place, a French town on the Grone where he
+was abbot of a famous monastery, and also to distinguish him from
+Bernard of Clairvaux.
+
+His great poem is rarely spoken of as a whole, but in three portions, as
+if each were a complete work. The first is the long exordium, exhausting
+the pessimistic title (contempt of the world), and passing on to the
+second, where begins the real "Laus Patriae Coelestis." This being cut
+in two, making a third portion, has enriched the Christian world with
+two of its best hymns, "For Thee, O Dear, Dear Country," and "Jerusalem
+the Golden."
+
+Bernard wrote the medieval or church Latin in its prime of literary
+refinement, and its accent is so obvious and its rhythm so musical that
+even one ignorant of the language could pronounce it, and catch its
+rhymes. The "Contemptu Mundi" begins with these two lines, in a
+hexameter impossible to copy in translation:
+
+ Hora novissima; tempora pessima sunt; Vigilemus!
+ Ecce minaciter imminet Arbiter, Ille Supremus!
+
+ 'Tis the last hour; the times are at their worst;
+ Watch; lo the Judge Supreme stands threat'ning nigh!
+
+Or, as Dr. Neale paraphrases and softens it,--
+
+ The World is very evil,
+ The times are waxing late,
+ Be sober and keep vigil,
+ The Judge is at the gate,
+
+--and, after the poet's long, dark diorama of the world's wicked
+condition, follows the "Praise of the Heavenly Fatherland," when a
+tender glory dawns upon the scene till it breaks into sunrise with the
+vision of the Golden City. All that an opulent and devout imagination
+can picture of the beauty and bounty of heaven, and all that faith can
+construct from the glimpses in the Revelation of its glory and happiness
+is poured forth in the lavish poetry of the inspired monk of Cluny--
+
+ Urbs Sion aurea, patria lactea, cive decora,
+ Omne cor obruis, omnibus obstruis, et cor et ora.
+ Nescio, nescio quae jubilatio lux tibi qualis,
+ Quam socialia gaudia, gloria quam specialis.
+
+ Jerusalem, the golden;
+ With milk and honey blest;
+ Beneath thy contemplation
+ Sink heart and voice opprest.
+ I know not, O I know not
+ What joys await us there,
+ With radiancy of glory,
+ With bliss beyond compare.
+
+ They stand, those halls of Zion,
+ All jubilant with song,[47]
+ And bright with many an angel;
+ And all the martyr throng.
+ The Prince is ever in them,
+ The daylight is serene;
+ The pastures of the blessed
+ Are decked in glorious sheen.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ O sweet and blessed country,
+ The home of God's elect!
+ O sweet and blessed country,
+ That eager hearts expect!
+ Jesu, in mercy bring us
+ To that dear land of rest,
+ Who art, with God the Father,
+ And Spirit, ever blest.
+
+[Footnote 47: In first editions, "_conjubilant_ with song."]
+
+Dr. John Mason Neale, the translator, was obliged to condense Bernard's
+exuberant verse, and he has done so with unsurpassable grace and melody.
+He made his translation while "inhibited" from his priestly functions in
+the Church of England for his high ritualistic views and practice, and
+so poor that he wrote stories for children to earn his living. His
+poverty added to the wealth of Christendom.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The music of "Jerusalem the Golden" used in most churches is the
+composition of Alexander Ewing, a paymaster in the English army. He was
+born in Aberdeen, Scotland, Jan. 3d, 1830, and educated there at
+Marischal College. The tune bears his name, and this honor, and its
+general favor with the public, are so much testimony to its merit. It is
+a stately harmony in D major with sonorous and impressive chords. Ewing
+died in 1895.
+
+
+"WHY SHOULD WE START AND FEAR TO DIE?"
+
+Probably it is an embarrassment of riches and despair of space that have
+crowded this hymn--perhaps the sweetest that Watts ever wrote--out of
+some of our church singing-books. It is pleasant to find it in the new
+_Methodist Hymnal_, though with an indifferent tune.
+
+Christians of today should surely sing the last two stanzas with the
+same exalted joy and hope that made them sacred to pious generations
+past and gone--
+
+ O if my Lord would come and meet,
+ My soul would stretch her wings in haste.
+ Fly fearless through death's iron gate,
+ Nor feel the terrors as she passed.
+ Jesus can make a dying bed
+ Feel soft as downy pillows are,
+ While on His breast I lean my head
+ And breathe my life out sweetly there.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The plain-music of William Boyd's "Pentecost," (with modulations in the
+tenor), creates a new accent for the familiar lines. Preferable in every
+sense are Bradbury's tender "Zephyr" or "Rest."
+
+No coming generation will ever feel the pious gladness of Amariah Hall's
+"All Saints New" in E flat major as it stirred the Christian choirs of
+seventy five years ago. Fitted to this heart-felt lyric of Watts, it
+opened with the words--
+
+ O if my Lord would come and meet,
+
+in full harmony and four-four time, continuing to the end of the stanza.
+The melody, with its slurred syllables and beautiful modulations was
+almost blithe in its brightness, while the strong musical bass and the
+striking chords of the "counter," chastened it and held the anthem to
+its due solemnity of tone and expression. Then the fugue took up--
+
+ Jesus can make a dying bed,
+
+--bass, treble and tenor adding voice after voice in the manner of the
+old "canon" song, and the full harmony again carried the words, with
+loving repetitions, to the final bar. The music closed with a minor
+concord that was strangely effective and sweet.
+
+Amariah Hall was born in Raynham, Mass., April 28, 1785, and died there
+Feb. 8, 1827. He "farmed it," manufactured straw-bonnets, kept tavern
+and taught singing-school. Music was only an avocation with him, but he
+was an artist in his way, and among his compositions are found in some
+ancient Tune books his "Morning Glory," "Canaan," "Falmouth,"
+"Restoration," "Massachusetts," "Raynham," "Crucifixion," "Harmony,"
+"Devotion," "Zion," and "Hosanna."
+
+"All Saints New" was his masterpiece.
+
+
+"WHEN I CAN READ MY TITLE CLEAR."
+
+No sacred song has been more profanely parodied by the thoughtless, or
+more travestied, (if we may use so strong a word), in popular religious
+airs, than this golden hymn which has made Isaac Watts a benefactor to
+every prisoner of hope. Not to mention the fancy figures and refrains
+of camp-meeting music, which have cheapened it, neither John Cole's
+"Annapolis" nor Arne's "Arlington" nor a dozen others that have borrowed
+these speaking lines, can wear out their association with "Auld lang
+Syne." The hymn has permeated the tune, and, without forgetting its own
+words, the Scotch melody preforms both a social and religious mission.
+Some arrangements of it make it needlessly repetitious, but its pathos
+will always best vocalize the hymn, especially the first and last
+stanzas--
+
+ When I can read my title clear
+ To mansions in the skies
+ I'll bid farewell to every fear
+ And wipe my weeping eyes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ There shall I bathe my weary soul
+ In seas of heavenly rest,
+ And not a wave of trouble roll
+ Across my peaceful breast.
+
+
+"VITAL SPARK OF HEAVENLY FLAME."
+
+This paraphrase, by Alexander Pope, of the Emperor Adrian's death-bed
+address to his soul--
+
+ Animula, vagula, blandula,
+ Hospes, comesque corporis,
+
+--transfers the poetry and constructs a hymnic theme.
+
+An old hymn writer by the name of Flatman wrote a Pindaric, somewhat
+similar to "Adrian's Address," as follows:
+
+ When on my sick-bed I languish,
+ Full of sorrow, full of anguish,
+ Fainting, gasping, trembling, crying,
+ Panting, groaning, speechless, dying;
+ Methinks I hear some gentle spirit say,
+ "Be not fearful, come away."
+
+Pope combined these two poems with the words of Divine inspiration, "O
+death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory?" and made a
+pagan philosopher's question the text for a triumphant Christian anthem
+of hope.
+
+ Vital spark of heavenly flame,
+ Quit, oh quit this mortal frame.
+ Trembling, hoping, ling'ring, flying,
+ Oh the pain, the bliss of dying!
+ Cease, fond nature, cease thy strife,
+ And let me languish into life.
+
+ Hark! they whisper: angels say,
+ "Sister spirit, come away!"
+ What is this absorbs me quite,
+ Steals my senses, shuts my sight,
+ Drowns my spirit, draws my breath,
+ Tell me, my soul, can this be death?
+
+ The world recedes: it disappears:
+ Heaven opens on my eyes; my ears
+ With sounds seraphic ring.
+ Lend, lend your wings! I mount! I fly!
+ O grave where is thy victory?
+ O death, where is thy sting?
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The old anthem, "The Dying Christian," or "The Dying Christian to his
+Soul," which first made this lyric familiar in America as a musical
+piece, will never be sung again except at antique entertainments, but it
+had an importance in its day.
+
+Beginning in quadruple time on four flats minor, it renders the first
+stanza in flowing concords largo affettuoso, and a single bass fugue,
+Then suddenly shifting to one flat, major, duple time, it executes the
+second stanza, "Hark! they whisper" ... "What is this, etc.," in
+alternate pianissimo and forte phrases; and finally, changing to triple
+time, sings the third triumphant stanza, andante, through staccato and
+fortissimo. The shout in the last adagio, on the four final bars, "O
+Death! O Death!" softening with "where is thy sting?" is quite in the
+style of old orchestral magnificence.
+
+Since "The Dying Christian" ceased to appear in church music, the poem,
+for some reason, seems not to have been recognized as a hymn. It is,
+however, a Christian poem, and a true lyric of hope and consolation,
+whatever the character of the author or however pagan the original that
+suggested it.
+
+The most that is now known of Edward Harwood, the composer of the
+anthem, is that he was an English musician and psalmodist, born near
+Blackburn, Lancaster Co., 1707, and died about 1787.
+
+
+"YOUR HARPS, YE TREMBLING SAINTS."
+
+This hymn of Toplady,--unlike "A Debtor to Mercy Alone," and "Inspirer
+and Hearer of Prayer," both now little used,--stirs no controversial
+feeling by a single line of his aggressive Calvinism. It is simply a
+song of Christian gratitude and joy.
+
+ Your harps, ye trembling saints
+ Down from the willows take;
+ Loud to the praise of Love Divine
+ Bid every string awake.
+
+ Though in a foreign land,
+ We are not far from home,
+ And nearer to our house above
+ We every moment come.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Blest is the man, O God,
+ That stays himself on Thee,
+ Who waits for Thy salvation, Lord,
+ Shall Thy salvation see.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+"Olmutz" was arranged by Lowell Mason from a Gregorian chant. He set it
+himself to Toplady's hymn, and it seems the natural music for it. The
+words are also sometimes written and sung to Jonathan Woodman's "State
+St."
+
+Jonathan Call Woodman was born in Newburyport, Mass., July 12, 1813. He
+was the organist of St. George's Chapel, Flushing L.I. and a teacher,
+composer and compiler. His _Musical Casket_ was not issued until Dec.
+1858, but he wrote the tune of "State St." in August, 1844. It was a
+contribution to Bradbury's _Psalmodist_, which was published the same
+year.
+
+
+"YE GOLDEN LAMPS OF HEAVEN, FAREWELL."
+
+Dr. Doddridge's "farewell" is not a note of regret. Unlike Bernard, he
+appreciates this world while he anticipates the better one, but his
+contemplation climbs from God's footstool to His throne. His thought is
+in the last two lines of the second stanza, where he takes leave of the
+sun--
+
+ My soul that springs beyond thy sphere
+ No more demands thine aid.
+
+But his fancy will find a function for the "golden lamps" even in the
+glory that swallows up their light--
+
+ Ye stars are but the shining dust
+ Of my divine abode,
+ The pavement of those heavenly courts
+ Where I shall dwell with God.
+
+ The Father of eternal light
+ Shall there His beams display,
+ Nor shall one moment's darkness mix
+ With that unvaried day.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The hymn has been assigned to "Mt. Auburn," a composition of George
+Kingsley, but a far better interpretation--if not best of all--is H.K.
+Oliver's tune of "Merton," (1847,) older, but written purposely for the
+words.
+
+
+"TRIUMPHANT ZION, LIFT THY HEAD."
+
+This fine and stimulating lyric is Doddridge in another tone. Instead of
+singing hope to the individual, he sounds a note of encouragement to
+the church.
+
+ Put all thy beauteous garments on,
+ And let thy excellence be known;
+ Decked in the robes of righteousness,
+ The world thy glories shall confess.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ God from on high has heard thy prayer;
+ His hand thy ruins shall repair,
+ Nor will thy watchful Monarch cease
+ To guard thee in eternal peace.
+
+The tune, "Anvern," is one of Mason's charming melodies, full of vigor
+and cheerful life, and everything can be said of it that is said of the
+hymn. Duffield compares the hymn and tune to a ring and its jewel.
+
+It is one of the inevitable freaks of taste that puts so choice a strain
+of psalmody out of fashion. Many younger pieces in the church manuals
+could be better spared.
+
+
+"SHRINKING FROM THE COLD HAND OF DEATH."
+
+This is a hymn of contrast, the dark of recoiling nature making the
+background of the rainbow. Written by Charles Wesley, it has passed
+among his forgotten or mostly forgotten productions but is notable for
+the frequent use of its 3rd stanza by his brother John. John Wesley, in
+his old age, did not so much shrink from death as from the thought of
+its too slow approach. His almost constant prayer was, "Lord, let me not
+live to be useless." "At every place," says Belcher, "after giving to
+his societies what he desired them to consider his last advice, he
+invariably concluded with the stanza beginning--
+
+ "'Oh that, without a lingering groan,
+ I may the welcome word receive.
+ My body with my charge lay down,
+ And cease at once to work and live.'"
+
+The anticipation of death itself by both the great evangelists ended
+like the ending of the hymn--
+
+ No anxious doubt, no guilty gloom
+ Shall daunt whom Jesus' presence cheers;
+ My Light, my Life, my God is come,
+ And glory in His face appears.
+
+
+"FOREVER WITH THE LORD."
+
+Montgomery had the Ambrosian gift of spiritual song-writing. Whatever
+may be thought of his more ambitious descriptive or heroic pages of
+verse, and his long narrative poems, his lyrics and cabinet pieces are
+gems. The poetry in some exquisite stanzas of his "Grave" is a dream of
+peace:
+
+ There is a calm for those who weep,
+ A rest for weary mortals found;
+ They softly lie and sweetly sleep
+ Low in the ground.
+
+ The storms that wreck the winter's sky
+ No more disturb their deep repose
+ Than summer evening's latest sigh
+ That shuts the rose.
+
+But in the poem, "At Home in Heaven," which we are considering--with its
+divine text in I Thess. 4:17--the Sheffield bard rises to the heights of
+vision. He wrote it when he was an old man. The contemplation so
+absorbed him that he could not quit his theme till he had composed
+twenty-two quatrains. Only four or five--or at most only seven of
+them--are now in general use. Like his "Prayer is the Soul's Sincere
+Desire," they have the pith of devotional thought in them, but are less
+subjective and analytical.
+
+ Forever with the Lord!
+ Amen, so let it be,
+ Life from the dead is in that word;
+ 'Tis immortality.
+
+ Here in the body pent,
+ Absent from Him I roam,
+ Yet nightly pitch my moving tent
+ A day's march nearer home.
+
+ My Father's house on high!
+ Home of my soul, how near
+ At times to faith's foreseeing eye
+ Thy golden gates appear.
+
+ I hear at morn and even,
+ At noon and midnight hour,
+ The choral harmonies of heaven
+ Earth's Babel tongues o'erpower.
+
+The last line has been changed to read--
+
+ Seraphic music pour,
+
+--and finally the hymnals have dropped the verse and substituted others.
+The new line is an improvement in melody but not in rhyme, and,
+besides, it robs the stanza of its leading thought--heaven and earth
+offsetting each other, and heavenly music drowning earthly noise--a
+thought that is missed even in the rich cantos of "Jerusalem the
+Golden."
+
+
+_THE TUNES._
+
+Nearly the whole school of good short metre tunes, from "St. Thomas" to
+"Boylston" have offered their notes to Montgomery's "At Home in Heaven,"
+but the two most commonly recognized as its property are "Mornington,"
+named from Lord Mornington, its author, and I.B. Woodbury's familiar
+harmony, "Forever with the Lord."
+
+Garret Colley Wellesley, Earl of Mornington, and ancestor of the Duke of
+Wellington, was born in Dagan, Ireland, July 19, 1735. Remarkable for
+musical talent when a child, he became a skilled violinist, organ-player
+and composer in boyhood, with little aid beyond his solitary study and
+practice. When scarcely twenty-one, the University of Dublin conferred
+on him the degree of Doctor of Music, and a professorship. He excelled
+as a composer of glees, but wrote also tunes and anthems for the church,
+some of which are still extant in the choir books of the Dublin
+Cathedral Died March 22, 1781.
+
+
+"HARK! HARK, MY SOUL!"
+
+The Methodist Reformation, while it had found no practical sympathy
+within the established church, left a deep sense of its reason and
+purpose in the minds of the more devout Episcopalians, and this feeling,
+instead of taking form in popular revival methods, prompted them to
+deeper sincerity and more spiritual fervor in their traditional rites of
+worship. Many of the next generation inherited this pious
+ecclesiasticism, and carried their loyalty to the old Christian culture
+to the extreme of devotion till they saw in the sacraments the highest
+good of the soul. It was Keble's "Christian Year" and his "Assize
+Sermon" that began the Tractarian movement at Oxford which brought to
+the front himself and such men as Henry Newman and Frederick William
+Faber.
+
+The hymns and sacred poems of these sacramentarian Christians would
+certify to their earnest piety, even if their lives were unknown.
+
+Faber's hymn "Hark, Hark My Soul," is welcomed and loved by every
+Christian sect for its religious spirit and its lyric beauty.
+
+ Hark! hark, my soul! angelic songs are swelling
+ O'er earth's green fields and ocean's wave-beat shore;
+ How sweet the truth those blessed strains are telling
+ Of that new life where sin shall be no more.
+
+ REFRAIN
+ Angels of Jesus, angels of light
+ Singing to welcome the pilgrims of the night.
+
+ Onward we go, for still we hear them singing
+ "Come, weary souls, for Jesus bids you come,"
+ And through the dark, its echoes sweetly ringing,
+ The music of the gospel leads us home.
+ Angels of Jesus.
+
+ Far, far away, like bells at evening pealing,
+ The voice of Jesus sounds o'er land and sea,
+ And laden souls, by thousands meekly stealing,
+ Kind Shepherd, turn their weary steps to Thee.
+ Angels of Jesus.
+
+
+_THE TUNES._
+
+John B. Dykes and Henry Smart--both masters of hymn-tune
+construction--have set this hymn to music. "Vox Angelica" in B flat, the
+work of the former, is a noble composition for choir or congregation,
+but "Pilgrim," the other's interpretation, though not dissimilar in
+movement and vocal range, has, perhaps, the more sympathetic melody. It
+is, at least, the favorite in many localities. Some books print the two
+on adjacent pages as optionals.
+
+Another much-loved hymn of Faber's is--
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise!
+ Who doth not crave for rest?
+ Who would not see the happy land
+ Where they that loved are blest?
+
+ REFRAIN
+ Where loyal hearts and true
+ Stand ever in the light,
+ All rapture through and through
+ In God's most holy sight.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ The world is growing old;
+ Who would not be at rest and free
+ Where love is never cold.
+
+ Where loyal hearts and true.
+
+ O Paradise, O Paradise,
+ I greatly long to see
+ The special place my dearest Lord,
+ In love prepares for me.
+
+ Where loyal hearts and true.
+
+This aspiration, from the ardent soul of the poet has been interpreted
+in song by the same two musicians, and by Joseph Barnby--all with the
+title "Paradise." Their similarity of style and near equality of merit
+have compelled compilers to print at least two of them side by side for
+the singers' choice. A certain pathos in the strains of Barnby's
+composition gives it a peculiar charm to many, and in America it is
+probably the oftenest sung to the words.
+
+Dr. David Breed, speaking of Faber's "unusual" imagination, says, "He
+got more out of language than any other poet of the English tongue, and
+used words--even simple words--so that they rendered him a service which
+no other poet ever secured from them." The above hymns are
+characteristic to a degree, but the telling simplicity of his
+style--almost quaint at times--is more marked in "There's a Wideness in
+God's Mercy," given on p. 234.
+
+[Illustration: Horatius Bonar, D.D.]
+
+
+"BEYOND THE SMILING AND THE WEEPING."
+
+This song of hope--one of the most strangely tuneful and rune-like of
+Dr. Bonar's hymn-poems--is less frequently sung owing to the peculiarity
+of its stanza form. But it scarcely needs a staff of notes--
+
+ Beyond the smiling and the weeping
+ I shall be soon;
+ Beyond the waking and the sleeping,
+ Beyond the sowing and the reaping
+ I shall be soon.
+
+ REFRAIN
+ Love, rest and home!
+ Sweet hope!
+ Lord, tarry not, but come.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Beyond the parting and the meeting
+ I shall be soon;
+ Beyond the farewell and the greeting,
+ Beyond the pulses' fever-beating
+ I shall be soon.
+ Love, rest and home!
+
+ Beyond the frost-chain and the fever
+ I shall be soon;
+ Beyond the rock-waste and the river
+ Beyond the ever and the never
+ I shall be soon.
+ Love, rest and home!
+
+The wild contrasts and reverses of earthly vicissitude are spoken and
+felt here in the sequence of words. Perpetual black-and-white through
+time; then the settled life and untreacherous peace of eternity.
+Everywhere in the song the note of heavenly hope interrupts the wail of
+disappointment, and the chorus returns to transport the soul from the
+land of emotional whirlwinds to unbroken rest.
+
+
+_THE TUNES._
+
+Mr. Bradbury wrote an admirable tune to this hymn, though the one since
+composed by Mr. Stebbins has in some localities superseded it in popular
+favor. Skill in following the accent and unequal rhythms produces a
+melodious tone-poem, and completes the impression of Bonar's singular
+but sweet lyric of hope which suggests a chant-choral rather than a
+regular polyphonic harmony. W.A. Tarbutton and the young composer, Karl
+Harrington, have set the hymn to music, but the success of their work
+awaits the public test.
+
+
+"WE SHALL MEET BEYOND THE RIVER."
+
+The words were written by Rev. John Atkinson, D.D., in January, 1867,
+soon after the death of his mother. He had been engaged in revival work
+and one night in his study, "that song, in substance, seemed," he says,
+"to sing itself into my heart." He said to himself, "I would better
+write it down, or I shall lose it."
+
+"There," he adds, "in the silence of my study, and not far from
+midnight, I wrote the hymn."
+
+ We shall meet beyond the river
+ By and by, by and by;
+ And the darkness will be over
+ By and by, by and by.
+
+ With the toilsome journey done,
+ And the glorious battle won.
+ We shall shine forth as the sun
+ By and by, by and by.
+
+The Rev. John Atkinson was born in Deerfield, N.J. Sept. 6, 1835. A
+clergyman of the Methodist denomination, he is well-known as one of its
+writers. The _Centennial History of American Methodism_ is his work, and
+besides the above hymn, he has written and published _The Garden of
+Sorrows_, and _The Living Way_. He died Dec. 8, 1897.
+
+The tune to "We Shall Meet," by Hubert P. Main, composed in 1867,
+exactly translates the emotional hymn into music. S.J. Vail also wrote
+music to the words. The hymn, originally six eight-line stanzas, was
+condensed at his request to its present length and form by Fanny Crosby.
+
+
+"ONE SWEETLY SOLEMN THOUGHT."
+
+Phebe Cary, the author of this happy poem, was the younger of the two
+Cary sisters, Alice and Phebe, names pleasantly remembered in American
+literature. The praise of one reflects the praise of the other when we
+are told that Phebe possessed a loving and trustful soul, and her life
+was an honor to true womanhood and a blessing to the poor. She had to
+struggle with hardship and poverty in her early years: "I have cried in
+the street because I was poor," she said in her prosperous years, "and
+the poor always seem nearer to me than the rich."
+
+When reputation came to her as a writer, she removed from her little
+country home near Cincinnati, O., where she was born, in 1824, and
+settled in New York City with her sister. She died at Newport, N.Y.,
+July 31, 1871, and her hymn was sung at her funeral. Her remains rest in
+Greenwood Cemetery.
+
+"One Sweetly Solemn Thought," was written in 1852, during a visit to one
+of her friends. She wrote (to her friend's inquiry) years afterwards
+that it first saw the light "in your own house ... in the little back
+third-story bedroom, one Sunday after coming from church." It was a
+heart experience noted down without literary care or artistic effort,
+and in its original form was in too irregular measure to be sung. She
+set little value upon it as a poem, but when shown hesitatingly to
+inquiring compilers, its intrinsic worth was seen, and various revisions
+of it were made. The following is one of the best versions--stanzas one,
+two and three:--
+
+ One sweetly solemn thought
+ Comes to me o'er and o'er,
+ I am nearer home to-day,
+ Than I ever have been before.
+
+ Nearer my Father's house,
+ Where the many mansions be,
+ Nearer the great white throne,
+ Nearer the crystal sea.
+
+ Nearer the bound of life,
+ Where we lay our burdens down,
+ Nearer leaving the cross
+ Nearer gaining the crown.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+The old revival tune of "Dunbar," with its chorus, "There'll be no more
+sorrow there," has been sung to the hymn, but the tone-lyric of Philip
+Phillips, "Nearer Home," has made the words its own, and the public are
+more familiar with it than with any other. It was this air that a young
+man in a drinking house in Macao, near Hong-Kong, began humming
+thoughtlessly while his companion was shuffling the cards for a new
+game. Both were Americans, the man with the cards more than twenty years
+the elder. Noticing the tune, he threw down the pack. Every word of the
+hymn had come back to him with the echo of the music.
+
+"Harry, where did you learn that hymn?"
+
+"What hymn?"
+
+"Why the one you have been singing."
+
+The young man said he did not know what he had been singing. But when
+the older one repeated some of the lines, he said they were learned in
+the Sunday-school.
+
+"Come, Harry," said the older one, "here's what I've won from you. As
+for me, as God sees me, I have played my last game, and drank my last
+bottle. I have misled you, Harry, and I am sorry for it. Give me your
+hand, my boy, and say that, for old America's sake, if for no other,
+you will quit this infernal business."
+
+Col. Russel H. Conwell, of Boston, (now Rev. Dr. Conwell of
+Philadelphia) who was then visiting China, and was an eye-witness of the
+scene, says that the reformation was a permanent one for both.
+
+
+"I WILL SING YOU A SONG OF THAT BEAUTIFUL LAND."
+
+One day, in the year 1865, Mrs. Ellen M.H. Gates received a letter from
+Philip Phillips noting the passage in the _Pilgrim's Progress_ which
+describes the joyful music of heaven when Christian and Hopeful enter on
+its shining shore beyond the river of death, and asking her to write a
+hymn in the spirit of the extract, as one of the numbers in his _Singing
+Pilgrim_. Mrs. Gates complied--and the sequel of the hymn she wrote is
+part of the modern song-history of the church. Mr. Phillips has related
+how, when he received it, he sat down with his little boy on his knee,
+read again the passage in Bunyan, then the poem again, and, turning to
+his organ, pencil in hand, pricked the notes of the melody. "The 'Home
+of the Soul,'" he says, "seems to have had God's blessing from the
+beginning, and has been a comfort to many a bereaved soul. Like many
+loved hymns, it has had a peculiar history, for its simple melody has
+flowed from the lips of High Churchmen, and has sought to make itself
+heard above the din of Salvation Army cymbals and drums. It has been
+sung in prisons and in jailyards, while the poor convict was waiting to
+be launched into eternity, and on hundreds of funeral occasions. One man
+writes me that he has led the singing of it at one hundred and twenty
+funerals. It was sung at my dear boy's funeral, who sat on my knee when
+I wrote it. It is my prayer that God may continue its solace and
+comfort. I have books containing the song now printed in seven different
+languages."
+
+A writer in the _Golden Rule_ (now the _Christian Endeavor World_) calls
+attention to an incident on a night railroad train narrated in the late
+Benjamin F. Taylor's _World on Wheels_, in which "this hymn appears as a
+sort of Traveller's Psalm." Among the motley collection of passengers,
+some talkative, some sleepy, some homesick and cross, all tired, sat two
+plain women who, "would make capital country aunts.... If they were
+mothers at all they were good ones." Suddenly in a dull silence, near
+twelve o'clock, a voice, sweet and flexible, struck up a tune. The
+singer was one of those women. "She sang on, one after another the good
+Methodist and Baptist melodies of long ago," and the growing interest of
+the passengers became chained attention when she began--
+
+ "I will sing you a song of that beautiful land,
+ The far-away home of the soul,
+ Where no storms can beat on the glittering strand,
+ While the years of eternity roll.
+
+ O, that home of the soul, in my visions and dreams,
+ Its bright jasper walls I can see;
+ Till I fancy but thinly the veil intervenes
+ Between the fair city and me."
+
+"The car was a wakeful hush long before she had ended; it was as if a
+beautiful spirit were floating through the air. None that heard will
+ever forget. Philip Phillips can never bring that 'home of the soul' any
+nearer to anybody. And never, I think, was quite so sweet a voice lifted
+in a storm of a November night on the rolling plains of Iowa."
+
+In an autograph copy of her hymn, sent to the editor, Mrs. Gates changes
+"harps" to "palms." Is it an improvement? "Palms" is a word of two
+meanings.
+
+ O how sweet it will be in that beautiful land,
+ So free from all sorrow and pain,
+ With songs on our lips and with harps in our hands
+ To meet one another again.
+
+
+"THERE'S A LAND THAT IS FAIRER THAN DAY."
+
+This belongs rather with "Christian Ballads" than with genuine hymns,
+but the song has had and still has an uplifting mission among the lowly
+whom literary perfection and musical nicety could not touch--and the
+first two lines, at least, are good hymn-writing. Few of the best sacred
+lyrics have been sung with purer sentiment and more affectionate fervor
+than "The Sweet By-and-By." To any company keyed to sympathy by time,
+place, and condition, the feeling of the song brings unshed tears.
+
+As nearly as can be ascertained it was in the year 1867 that a man about
+forty-eight years old, named Webster, entered the office of Dr. Bennett
+in Elkhorn. Wis., wearing a melancholy look, and was rallied
+good-naturedly by the doctor for being so blue--Webster and Bennett were
+friends, and the doctor was familiar with the other's frequent fits of
+gloom.
+
+The two men had been working in a sort of partnership, Webster being a
+musician and Bennett a ready verse-writer, and together they had created
+and published a number of sheet-music songs. When Webster was in a fit
+of melancholy, it was the doctor's habit to give him a "dose" of new
+verses and cure him by putting him to work. Today the treatment turned
+out to be historic.
+
+"What's the matter now," was the doctor's greeting when his "patient"
+came with the tell-tale face.
+
+"O, nothing," said Webster. "It'll be all right by and by."
+
+"Why not make a song of the sweet by and by?" rejoined the doctor,
+cheerfully.
+
+"I don't know," said Webster, after thinking a second or two. "If you'll
+make the words, I'll write the music."
+
+The doctor went to his desk, and in a short time produced three stanzas
+and a chorus to which his friend soon set the notes of a lilting air,
+brightening up with enthusiasm as he wrote. Seizing his violin, which
+he had with him, he played the melody, and in a few minutes more he had
+filled in the counterpoint and made a complete hymn-tune. By that time
+two other friends, who could sing, had come in and the quartette tested
+the music on the spot. Here different accounts divide widely as to the
+immediate sequel of the new-born song.
+
+A Western paper in telling its story a year or two ago, stated that
+Webster took the "Sweet By and By" (in sheet-music form), with a batch
+of other pieces, to Chicago, and that it was the only song of the lot
+that Root and Cady would not buy; and finally, after he had tried in
+vain to sell it, Lyon and Healy took it "out of pity," and paid him
+twenty dollars. They sold eight or ten copies (the story continued) and
+stowed it away with dead goods, and it was not till apparently a long
+time after, when a Sunday-school hymn-book reprinted it, and began to
+sell rapidly on its account, that the "Sweet By and By" started on its
+career round the world.
+
+This seems circumstantial enough, and the author of the hymn in his own
+story of it might have chosen to omit some early particulars, but,
+untrustworthy as the chronology of mere memory is, he would hardly
+record immediate popularity of a song that lay in obscurity for years.
+Dr. Bennett's words are, "I think it was used in public shortly after
+[its production], for within two weeks children on the street were
+singing it."
+
+The explanation may be partly the different method and order of the
+statements, partly lapses of memory (after thirty years) and partly in
+collateral facts. The Sunday-school hymn-book was evidently _The Signet
+Ring_, which Bennett and Webster were at work upon and into which first
+went the "Sweet By and By"--whatever efforts may have been made to
+dispose of it elsewhere or whatever copyright arrangement could have
+warranted Mr. Healy in purchasing a song already printed. The _Signet
+Ring_ did not begin to profit by the song until the next year, after a
+copy of it appeared in the publishers' circulars, and started a demand;
+so that the _immediate_ popularity implied in Doctor Bennett's account
+was limited to the children of Elkhorn village.
+
+The piece had its run, but with no exceptional result as to its hold on
+the public, until in 1873 Ira D. Sankey took it up as one of his working
+hymns. Modified from its first form in the "_Signet Ring_" with
+pianoforte accompaniment and chorus, it appeared that year in _Winnowed
+Hymns_ as arranged by Hubert P. Main, and it has so been sung ever
+since.
+
+Sanford Filmore Bennett, born in 1836, appears to have been a native of
+the West, or, at least, removed there when a young man. In 1861 he
+settled in Elkhorn to practice his profession. Died Oct., 1898.
+
+Joseph Philbrick Webster was born in Manchester, N.H. March 22, 1819. He
+was an active member of the Handel and Haydn Society, and various other
+musical associations. Removed to Madison, Ind. 1851, Racine, Wis. 1856,
+and Elkhorn, Wis., 1857, where he died Jan. 18, 1875. His _Signet Ring_
+was published in 1868.
+
+ There's a land that is fairer than day,
+ And by faith I can see it afar
+ For the Father waits over the way
+ To prepare us a dwelling-place there.
+
+ CHORUS
+ In the sweet by and by
+ We shall meet on that beautiful shore.
+
+ We shall sing on that beautiful shore
+ The melodious songs of the blest,
+ And our spirits shall sorrow no more,
+ Nor sigh for the blessing of rest.
+ In the sweet by and by, etc.
+
+
+"SUNSET AND EVENING STAR."
+
+Was it only a poet's imagination that made Alfred Tennyson approach
+perhaps nearest of all great Protestants to a sense of the real
+"Presence," every time he took the Holy Communion at the altar? Whatever
+the feeling was, it characterized all his maturer life, so far as its
+spiritual side was known. His remark to a niece expressed it, while
+walking with her one day on the seashore, "God is with us now, on this
+down, just as truly as Jesus was with his two disciples on the way to
+Emmaus."
+
+Such a man's faith would make no room for dying terrors.
+
+ Sunset and evening star,
+ And one clear call for me,
+ And may there be no moaning of the bar
+ When I put out to sea,
+
+ But such a tide as, moving, seems asleep,
+ Too full for sound and foam,
+ When that which drew from out the boundless deep
+ Turns again home.
+
+ Twilight and evening bell,
+ And after that the dark,
+ And may there be no sadness of farewell
+ When I embark.
+
+ For though from out our bourne of time and place
+ The flood may bear me far,
+ I hope to see my Pilot face to face
+ When I have crossed the bar.
+
+Tennyson lived three years after penning this sublime prayer. But it was
+his swan-song. Born at Somersby, Lincolnshire, Aug. 63 1809, dying at
+Farringford, Oct. 6, 1892, he filled out the measure of a good old age.
+And his prayer was answered, for his death was serene and dreadless. His
+unseen Pilot guided him gently "across the bar"--and then _he saw Him_.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Joseph Barnby's "Crossing the Bar" has supplied a noble choral to this
+poem. It will go far to make it an accepted tone in church worship,
+among the more lyrical strains of verse that sing hope and euthanasia.
+
+
+"SAFE IN THE ARMS OF JESUS."
+
+If Tennyson had the mistaken feeling (as Dr. Benson intimates) "that
+hymns were expected to be commonplace," it was owing both to his mental
+breeding and his mental stature. Genius in a colossal frame cannot
+otherwise than walk in strides. What is technically a hymn he never
+wrote, but it is significant that as he neared the Shoreless Sea, and
+looked into the Infinite, his sense of the Divine presence instilled
+something of the hymn spirit into his last verses.
+
+Between Alfred Tennyson singing trustfully of his Pilot and Fanny Crosby
+singing "Safe in the Arms of Jesus," is only the width of the choir. The
+organ tone and the flute-note breathe the same song. The stately poem
+and the sweet one, the masculine and the feminine, both have wings, but
+while the one is lifted in anthem and solemn chant in the great
+sanctuaries, the other is echoing Isaiah's tender text[48] in prayer
+meeting and Sunday-school and murmuring it at the humble firesides like
+a mother's lullaby.
+
+[Footnote 48: Isa. 40:11.]
+
+ Safe in the arms of Jesus,
+ Safe on His gentle breast,
+ There by His love o'ershaded
+ Sweetly my soul shall rest.
+ Hark! 'tis the voice of angels
+ Borne in a song to me
+ Over the fields of glory,
+ Over the jasper sea.
+
+ REFRAIN
+ Safe in the arms of Jesus (1st four lines rep.).
+
+ Safe in the arms of Jesus,
+ Safe from corroding care,
+ Safe from the world's temptations,
+ Sin cannot harm me there.
+ Free from the blight of sorrow,
+ Free from my doubts and fears,
+ Only a few more trials,
+ Only a few more tears.
+
+ Safe in the arms of Jesus.
+
+ Jesus, my heart's dear refuge
+ Jesus has died for me;
+ Firm on the Rock of Ages
+ Ever my trust shall be,
+ Here let me with patience,
+ Wait till the night is o'er,
+ Wait till I see the morning
+ Break on the Golden Shore.
+
+ Safe in the arms of Jesus.
+
+ --Composed 1868.
+
+
+_THE TUNE._
+
+Those who have characterized the _Gospel Hymns_ as "sensational" have
+always been obliged to except this modest lyric of Christian peace and
+its sweet and natural musical supplement by Dr. W.H. Doane. No hurried
+and high-pitched chorus disturbs the quiet beauty of the hymn, a simple
+_da capo_ being its only refrain. "Safe in the Arms of Jesus" sang
+itself into public favor with the pulses of hymn and tune beating
+together.
+
+
+
+
+ INDEX OF NAMES.
+
+ ABBOT, Lyman, 237, 326
+ ABT, Franz, 228, 364
+ ADAMS, E., 369
+ ADAMS, John, 368
+ ADAMS, John Quincy, 293
+ ADAMS, Sarah F., 152
+ ADDISON, Joseph, 113, 114, 353
+ ADRIAN, (Emperor), 515
+ AIBLINGER, Johan Caspar, 357
+ ALDRICH, Jonathan, 287
+ ALEXANDER, Mrs. C.F., 414
+ ALLEN, George N., 412
+ ALLEN, J.O., 129
+ ALMOND, ----, 364, 365
+ ALTENBURG, Johan M., 84
+ AMBROSE, xiii, 1, 2, 3
+ ANATOLIUS, 354
+ APES, William, 265
+ ARATUS, 237
+ ARNE, Thomas A., 107, 108
+ ARNOLD, Matthew, 109
+ ARNOLD, S., 287
+ ATCHISON, John B., 451
+ ATKINSON, John, 528, 529
+ AUBER, Harriet, 168, 169
+ AUGUSTINE, ix, 2, 3
+ AVISON, Charles, 327
+
+ BACH, Emanuel, 9
+ BACH, Sebastian, 9, 71
+ BAILEY, Thomas H., 112
+ BAKER, Sir Henry, 57
+ BALDWIN, Thomas, 262
+ BARLOW, Joel, 242, 243
+ BARNBY, Joseph, 102, 111, 469, 500,
+ 504, 526, 539
+ BARNES, Albert, 35
+ BARTHELEMON, F.H., 202, 222
+ BASIL THE GREAT, 56
+ BASSINI, ----, 444
+ BEANES, William, 333
+ BEDDOME, Benjamin, 160, 169
+ BEECHER, Henry Ward, 218
+ BEETHOVEN, Ludwig Von, 5, 193, 327, 338
+ BELCHER, Dr., 44
+ BENNETT, Sanford F., 535-537
+ BENSON, Louis F., 204, 206
+ BENTHAM, Jeremy, 97
+ BERKELEY, Bp. George, 324-326
+ BERNARD OF CLAIRVAUX, 100
+ BERNARD OF CLUNY, 407, 510, 511, 519
+ BERRIDGE, John, 122, 123, 503
+ BERTHOLD OF TOURS, 55
+ BEZA, Theodore, xvi
+ BIGLOW AND MAIN, 229
+ BILLINGS, William, 16, 327, 332, 333, 475
+ BISHOP, Sir Henry, 135
+ BLACKALL, C.R., 450
+ BLISS, Mrs. J. Worthington, 259
+ BLISS, Philip P., 155, 156, 319, 372,
+ 421, 422, 424, 431,
+ 436, 437, 442, 444, 454
+ BLOOMFIELD, Dorothy, 503
+ BOARDMAN, George Dana, 247
+ BOHLER, Peter, 46
+ BONAPARTE, Napoleon, 97, 389
+ BONAR, Horatius, 225, 226, 228,
+ 309, 490, 415, 527
+ BONAR, James, 490
+ BONAVENTURA, 54, 458
+ BORTHWICK, Jane, 103, 499
+ BORTNIANSKY, Dimitri, 213
+ BOTTOME, Francis, 433
+ BOURDALOUE, 13
+ BOURGEOIS, Louis, 15
+ BOWRING, Sir John, 97, 98, 170, 501
+ BOYD, William, 513
+ BRADBURY, William B., 106, 107, 215,
+ 217, 235, 311, 312,
+ 363, 410, 513, 528
+ BRADY, Nicholas, 12, 14, 193
+ BRAINERD, David, 263
+ BREED, David R., 171, 176, 180, 226, 526
+ BROOKS, Charles T., 348
+ BROOKS, Bp. Phillips, x, 164, 169
+ BROWN, John, 342
+ BROWN, Phebe H., 229-232, 482
+ BROWN, Samuel, 232
+ BROWN, Theron, 188, 476, 480
+ BROWN, Timothy H., 229
+ BRUCE, Michael, 297
+ BRUNDAGE, ----, 454
+ BULL, John, 338
+ BURGMUeLLER, F., 425
+ BURNEY, Charles, 241, 407
+ BURNS, Robert, 333, 336, 367
+ BUTE, Walter, 379, 380
+ BUTTERWORTH, Hezekiah, v, vi, 186,
+ 187, 252, 254
+
+ CALDWELL, William, 277
+ CAMPBELL, David E., 222
+ CAMPBELL, Jane M., 478
+ CAMPBELL, Robert, 61
+ CARADOC, ----, 381
+ CAREY, Henry, 339
+ CAREY, William, 172, 491, 492
+ CAROLINE, (Queen), 203
+ CARY, Phebe, 407, 529, 530
+ CARTWRIGHT, Peter, 271, 272
+ CASE, Charles C., 187
+ CASWALL, Edward, 75, 101, 459
+ CAWOOD, John, 414, 465
+ CELANO, Thomas di., 62, 63
+ CENNICK, John, 124, 126, 504
+ CHALMERS, Thomas, 225, 226
+ CHANDLER, John, 485
+ CHANDLER, S., 270
+ CHAPIN, Amzi, 275
+ CHARLEMAGNE, 5
+ CHARLES, David, 403
+ CHARLES, Thomas, 401
+ CIBBER, Mrs., 108
+ CLARK, Jeremiah, 9
+ CLARKE, Adam, 177
+ CLAUDIUS, Matthias, 478
+ CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA, 294, 296
+ CLEPHANE, Elizabeth C., 423
+ CLICHTOVIUS, 5
+ COLE, John, 115, 479, 507, 515
+ COLES, George, 126, 127, 285
+ COLLYER, William B., 72, 73
+ COLUMBUS, Christopher, 356
+ CONDER, Josiah, 489
+ CONKEY, Ithamar, 99, 249
+ CONVERSE, Charles Crozat, 426
+ CONWELL, Russell H., 532
+ COOK, Martha A.W., 148, 149
+ COOK, Parsons, 148, 149
+ COOPER, George, 312
+ CORELLI, Arcangelo, 39
+ CORNELL, J.B., 438
+ CORNELL, John Henry, 96, 355, 415
+ CORSE, Gen. G.M., 424
+ COUSIN, Anne R., 78, 82
+ COVERT, 333
+ COWDELL, Samuel, 265
+ COWPER, William, x, 129, 131,
+ 176, 192, 403
+ CROFT, William, 204
+ CROSBY, Fanny J., 156, 184, 312,
+ 425, 438, 546
+ CUYLER, Theodore L., 377
+ CYPRIAN OF CARTHAGE, 1
+
+ DADMUN, J.W., 272
+ DAGGET, Simeon, 330
+ DANA, Mary S.B., 287, 288
+ DARTMOUTH, Lord, 269
+ DAVENANT, Sir William, 306
+ DE GROOTE, Gerard, 67
+ DE LA MOTHE, Jeanne M.B., 190, 191
+ DE LISLE, Roget, 329
+ DENHAM, David, 134
+ DERMID, (King), 328
+ DEXTER, Henry M., 294, 296
+ DITSON, Oliver, vii, 413
+ DIXON, William, 36
+ DOANE, Bp. George W., 482, 483
+ DOANE, William H., 157, 425, 429, 430,
+ 438, 450, 480, 541
+ DODDRIDGE, Philip, 116, 117, 169, 410,
+ 413, 476, 488, 495, 519
+ DODGE, Ossian E., 333
+ DOUGLAS, George, vii
+ DOW, Howard M., 502
+ DOW, Lorenzo, 272
+ DOW, Peggy, 272
+ DRAPER, Bourne H., 171
+ DUNBAR, E.W., 288
+ D'URHAN, Christian, 82
+ DUTTON, Deodatus, 232
+ DWIGHT, H.O., 462
+ DWIGHT, John S., 347, 348
+ DWIGHT, Timothy, 29, 133, 134
+ DYKES, John B., 51, 57, 65, 104,
+ 152, 224, 228, 363,
+ 370, 372, 465, 525
+ EDMESTON, James, 299, 488
+ EDSON, Lewis, 395, 476
+ EDWARDS, Jonathan, 263
+ ELIAS, John, 390
+ ELIZABETH, (Queen), 17
+ ELLIOTT, Charlotte, 214, 215
+ ELLIOT, Ebenezer, 183
+ ELLSWORTH, J.S., 437
+ EMERSON, Ralph Waldo, 339, 340
+ EPHREM, Syrus, 56
+ ERBURY, ----, 381
+ ESLING, Catherine, 208, 209, 482
+ EVANS, Evelyn, 407
+ EVANS, Heber, 399
+ EVANS, John Miller, 369
+ EVANS, Thomas, 401
+ EWING, Alexander, 512
+
+ FABER, Frederick W., 233, 234, 302, 524
+ FAURE, Jean Baptiste, 470
+ FAWCETT, John, 132, 133
+ FINDLATER, Mrs., 103
+ FISCHER, William Gustavus, 429
+ FLATMAN, ----, 515
+ FORTUNATUS, Venantius, 357, 472
+ FOSTER, Paul, vii
+ FRANC, Guillaume, 194
+ FRANCIS, Benjamin, 132
+ FRANKENBERRY, A.D., 424
+ FREDERICK, (King), 94
+ FREEMAN, John E., 222
+ FROTHINGHAM, N.L., ix
+ FULBERT, Bp., 59-61
+
+ GARDINER, William, 48, 130
+ GATES, Bernard, 96
+ GATES, Ellen M.H., vii, 256, 258,
+ 430, 449, 532, 534
+ GAUNTLETT, Henry I., 48, 483
+ GELLERT, C.F., 473
+ GEORGE I, (King), 11
+ GERHARDT, Paul, 84, 85, 87, 88, 93
+ GIARDINI, Felice, 227
+ GILMORE, Joseph Henry, 235, 236
+ GLADSTONE, William E., 139, 140
+ GLASER, Carl, 48
+ GLENELG, Lord, 22
+ GOODE, William, 14, 31
+ GORDON, A.J., 162, 164
+ GORDON, Mrs. A.J., vii
+ GOTTSCHALK, Louis, 483
+ GOUGH, John B., 215
+ GOULD, Eliza, 151
+ GOULD, John Edgar, 374, 468, 488
+ GOULD, Sabine Baring, 185
+ GRANNIS, Sidney M., 259
+ GRAPE, John T., 429
+ GRANT, Sir Robert, 21, 22, 212
+ GREGORY NAZIANZEN, 56
+ GREGORY THE GREAT, (Pope), xiii, xiv, 8, 10
+ GRENADE, John, 298
+ GRIFFITHS, Ann, 396-399
+ GRIFFITHS, Edward, 386
+ GRIGGS, ----, 102
+ GROOTE, Gerald de, 67
+ GUIDO, Arentino, xiv
+ GUILD, Curtis, 206
+ GURNEY, Mrs., 503
+ GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS, (King), 82-84
+ GUYON, Madame, 190, 192
+
+ HAGUE, John R., vii
+ HALL, Amasiah, 513, 514
+ HALL, Elvina M., 426
+ HAMMOND, William, 29
+ HANDEL, George Frederick, 11, 31, 134,
+ 166, 414
+ HANKEY, Kate, 427, 429
+ HANNA, Ione T., 456
+ HARRINGTON, C.S., 149
+ HARRINGTON, Karl, 528
+ HARRIS, Howell, 381, 387, 388
+ HARRIS, Thomas, 366
+ HARRISON, Ralph, 48
+ HART, Joseph, 119, 121
+ HAREWOOD, Edward, 517
+ HASTINGS, H.L., 204
+ HASTINGS, Thomas, 25, 59, 142, 160,
+ 168, 174, 219-221, 223
+ HATFIELD, C.F., 14
+ HATTON, John, 37
+ HATTON, John Liphot, 37
+ HAVERGAL, Frances Ridley, 154, 155
+ HAVERGAL, William Henry, 227
+ HAWKES, Annie S., 153
+ HAWKES, Robert, 14
+ HAYDN, Joseph, 32
+ HAYWARD, Thomas, 488
+ HEARN, Marianne Farningham, 441, 442
+ HEATH, George, 143
+ HEATH, Lyman, 247
+ HEBER, Bp. Reginald, 4, 50, 51,
+ 178, 179, 318
+ HEDGE, Frederick H., 71
+ HEMANS, Felicia, 196, 359, 323, 324, 333
+ HENRY vii, (King), 18
+ HEWS, George, 407, 483, 484
+ HICKS, John J., 272
+ HILARY, Bp., xiii
+ HILLER, Ferdinand, 65, 66
+ HINSDALE, George, 229
+ HODGES, Edward, 212, 464
+ HOLBROOK, Joseph P., 360, 364, 501
+ HOLDEN, Oliver, 27, 28
+ HOLMES, O.W., 52, 249, 344
+ HOLROYD, Israel, 409
+ HOLZMAN, ----, 329
+ HOPKINS, Edward, 30, 112
+ HOPKINS, John, 15
+ HOPKINSON, Joseph, 331
+ HOPPER, Edward, 373
+ HORDER, Garrett, 489
+ HOWARD, John, 24
+ HOWE, Julia Ward, 340, 343
+ HUCBALD, xiii
+ HUFFER, Francis, 95
+ HUGHES AND SON, vii
+ HUGHES, Mrs., 359
+ HUMPHREYS, Cecil Frances, 414
+ HUNTER, William, 272, 288, 289
+ HUNTINGDON, (Lady) Selina, 25, 88, 89,
+ 119, 128, 201
+ HUNTINGTON, DeWitt C., 436
+ HUSBAND, John Jenkins, 416
+ HYATT, John, 216
+ HYDE, Charles, 230
+
+ INGALLS, Jeremiah, 121, 274, 278, 507
+ IRVING, Washington, 322
+ ISAAC, Heinrich, 91, 112
+
+ JACKSON, Andrew, 206
+ JACKSON, Deborah, 206
+ JEROME OF PRAGUE, 472
+ JOHN OF DAMASCUS, 53, 54, 57
+ JOHNSON, Albert, 222
+ JOHNSON, Mrs. James G., 452
+ JONES, H.R., 392
+ JONES, John, 393
+ JONES, Nancy, 389, 390
+ JONES, Thomas, 401
+ JUDAH, Daniel Ben, 20
+ JUDSON, Sarah B., 246
+ JULIAN, John, 204
+
+ KEBLE, John, 159, 252, 482
+ KEENE, Robert, 204
+ KELLER, Matthias, 343, 345, 347
+ KELLY, Thomas, 173, 174
+ KEMPIS, Thomas a, 67
+ KEN, Bp., 13, 14
+ KEY, Francis Scott, 49, 333
+ KEY, John R., 49
+ KING, Jacob, 71
+ KING ROBERT II, 11, 57, 58, 60
+ KINGSLEY, George, 34, 102, 158,
+ 281, 318, 519
+ KIPLING, Rudyard, 349-351
+ KOZELUCK, ----, 483
+ KRISHNA PAL, 491
+
+ LAMB, Frank M., 253, 254
+ LATTIMORE, W.O., 434
+ LEE, Mary Augusta, 455, 456
+ LEE, Gen. Robert E., 206
+ LELAND, John, 224, 276, 482
+ LINCOLN, Abraham, 239, 256
+ LINDSAY, Miss, 259
+ LOGAN, John, 279
+ LONGFELLOW, Henry W., 248, 249
+ LONGFELLOW, Samuel, ix
+ LORIMER, George, 252
+ LOUIS, (King), 5, 191
+ LOWRY, J.C., 118
+ LOWRY, Robert, 39, 148, 153,
+ 406, 419, 446, 448
+ LOYOLA, Ignatius, 74
+ LUCAS, James, 495
+ LUDWIG, Duke, 121
+ LUKE, Jemima T., 305, 306
+ LULLI, ----, 338
+ LUMMIS, Franklin H., 342
+ LUTHER, Martin, xvi, 8, 69-71, 388
+ LYON, Meyer, 20
+ LYTE, Henry Francis, 217, 221
+
+ MACGILL, Hamilton M., 296
+ MACKAY, Charles, 135
+ MACKAY, Margaret, 499
+ MACKAY, William Paton, 416
+ MADAN, Martin, 29, 30, 41, 463, 505
+ MAFFIT, John, 274
+ MAIN, Hubert P., vi, vii, 115, 134,
+ 228, 240, 299, 307,
+ 369, 415, 430, 470, 537
+ MALAN, Caesar, xvi, 214, 384, 436
+ MARCO, (?), Portugalis, 205, 206
+ MAROT, Clement, xvi
+ MARSH, ----, 363
+ MARVIN, Bp., 151
+ MARY, (Queen), 12, 18
+ MARY, (Princess), 12, 18
+ MARY, (Virgin), 356, 358
+ MARY STUART, (Queen), 77
+ MASON, Francis, 175
+ MASON, Lowell, 36, 91, 93, 105,
+ 106, 111, 118, 131, 133, 146,
+ 170, 173, 179, 196, 302, 337,
+ 339, 348, 363, 581, 526
+ MASTERS, Mary, 303
+ MAURICE, ----, 381
+ MAXIM, Abraham, 282, 283, 488
+ MAYO, Mrs. Herbert, 310
+ MAZZINGHI, Joseph, 202, 203
+ McGRANAHAN, James, 308, 444, 452
+ McKEEVER, F.G., vii
+ McKINLEY, William, 151, 251
+ McMULLEN, Mr. and Mrs., 222
+ MEEK, William T., vii
+ MEDLEY, Samuel, 136, 276
+ MELANCTHON, Philip, 69
+ MENDELSSOHN, Felix, 463, 482, 491
+ MERRIAM, Edmund F., vii
+ MERRILL, Abraham, D., 269
+ MIDLANE, Albert, 445
+ MILLER, James, 367
+ MILMAN, Henry Hart, 278
+ MILLS, Elizabeth, 307
+ MILTON, John, 461, 462
+ MOHAMMED, 5
+ MONK, William H., 160, 219, 245
+ MONTGOMERY, James, 21, 144, 145,
+ 176, 177, 285, 353,
+ 480, 487, 499, 521
+ MOODY, Dwight L., 308, 310, 421, 426, 431
+ MOORE, (More), Joshua, 267, 269
+ MOORE, Thomas, 112, 219, 243, 325-328, 333
+ MORGAN, David, 392
+ MORNINGTON, Garret,
+ Colley Wellesley, Earl of 523
+ MORRIS, Robert, 260
+ MORSE, Charles H., 482
+ MOTE, Edward, 216
+ MOZART, Johan Wolfgang, 222, 244, 327
+ MUHLENBERG, Henry M., 158, 498
+ MUHLENBERG, W.A., 157, 158
+ MURILLO, Bartolomeo, 162
+
+ NAeGELI, Johan G., 161, 162
+ NAPOLEON, 97, 389
+ NARES, James, 95
+ NEALE, John M., 6, 7, 55, 57, 354, 512
+ NERO, (Emperor), 322
+ NEWELL, Harriet, 175
+ NEWMAN, John Henry, 223, 224, 524
+ NEWTON, John, 130, 203, 204, 286,
+ 386, 403, 493
+ NICHOLSON, Ludovic, 201
+ NOVELLO, Vincent, 73, 74
+ NUTTER, Dr., 180
+
+ OAKELEY, Frederick, 459
+ OAKELEY, Sir. Herbert S., 252
+ OAKEY, Emily, 434, 435
+ OCCUM, Samson, 267-269, 279
+ O'KANE, Tullius C., 437
+ OLDCASTLE, John, 379
+ OLIVER, Henry K., 104, 105
+ OLIVERS, Thomas, 19, 20, 22, 504
+ OSBORNE, John, 146
+
+ PAINE, John K., 462
+ PAINE, Robert T., 335
+ PALESTRINA, xiv-xvi
+ PALMER, Horatio R., 261, 311, 417, 450
+ PALMER, Ray, 59
+ PARKER, Theodore, ix
+ PARRY; Joseph, 395, 398
+ PATRICK, St., 328
+ PAYNE John Howard, 135
+ PELOUBET, F.N., 188
+ PENRY, ----, 381
+ PERRONET, Edward, 25, 27, 31, 59
+ PHELPS, A.S., vii
+ PHELPS, S.D., 147
+ PHELPS, W.L., vii
+ PHILIP, "King", 265
+ PHILLIPS, Philip, 149, 150, 239,
+ 256, 267, 309, 333,
+ 421, 531, 532, 534
+ PHIPPS, George, 188, 189
+ PIERPONT, John, 335, 336
+ PINSUTI, 415
+ PLEYEL, Ignace, 126, 208
+ PLINY, 293
+ POPE, Alexander, 238, 326, 515, 516
+ POWELL, John, 381
+ PRESBRY, Otis F., 451, 452
+ PRICE, Dr., 41
+ PRICE, E.M., 395
+ PRITCHARD, Rhys M., 379, 396
+ PROCH, Heinrich, 357
+ PURCELL, Henry, 338
+
+ RALEIGH, Sir Walter, 76
+ RANKIN, James, 362
+ RANKIN, Jeremiah E., 496
+ RAVENSCROFT, Thomas, 338
+ READ, Daniel, 407, 466
+ READING, John, 205
+ REDHEAD, Richard, 50
+ REDNER, Louis H., 469
+ REES, William, 402
+ REINAGLE, Alexander R., 87
+ REXFORD, Eben E., 439, 440
+ RHYE, Morgan, 404
+ RICHARDSON, John, 76
+ RIDLEY, Bp., 4
+ RILEY, Mary Louise, 317
+ RIMBAULT, Edward F., 282
+ RINGWALDT, Bartholomew, 71, 73
+ RIPPON, John, 27, 204, 281
+ RITTER, Peter, 160
+ ROBERT II, (King), 57, 58, 60
+ ROBERTS, Evan, 377, 393, 394
+ ROBERTS, W.M., 404
+ ROBINSON, Charles, 171, 179
+ ROBINSON, Robert, 283, 284
+ ROMAINE, William, 31
+ ROOSEVELT, Theodore, 151
+ ROOT, George F., 155, 156,254,
+ 315, 317, 439, 444
+ ROUSSEAU, J.J., 112, 113
+ ROWE, Elizabeth, 45
+ ROWLANDS, Daniel, 381, 387
+ RUTHERFORD, Samuel, 78, 79, 81
+
+ SALMON, Thomas, 432
+ SANDERSON, Mrs., 335
+ SANKEY, Ira D., 184, 258, 308-311,
+ 374, 375, 417, 421-423,
+ 434, 438, 447, 537
+ SCHMOLKE, Benjamin, 499
+ SCHUMANN, Robert, 87
+ SCOTT, Thomas, 226, 411
+ SCOTT, Sir Walter, 240
+ SCRIVEN, Joseph, 425
+ SEAGRAVE, Robert, 94
+ SEARS, Edmund H., 466
+ SENECA, 320, 322
+ SERVOSS, Mary Elizabeth, 442, 443
+ SEWARD, William H., 257
+ SHEPHERD, Thomas, 411
+ SHERIDAN, Mrs. Richard Brinsley, 244
+ SHIPLEY, Dean, 178
+ SHIRLEY, Sir Walter, 127, 128, 202
+ SIMAO, Portugalis, 206
+ SIMPSON, Robert, 298
+ SINGER, Elizabeth, 45
+ SMART, Henry, 4, 5, 10, 137, 465, 525
+ SMITH, Mrs. Albert, 317
+ SMITH, Alexander, 368
+ SMITH, Goldwin, x
+ SMITH, Isaac, 324
+ SMITH, John Stafford, 335
+ SMITH, Samuel Francis, 180-182, 337, 339
+ SPAFFORD, Horatio G., 440, 441
+ SPOHR, L., 126, 207, 227, 228, 244, 488
+ STAINER, John, 65, 66, 352, 474
+ STANLEY, (Dean), Arthur P., 65, 66, 148
+ STEAD, William, 150, 151
+ STEBBINS, George C., 254, 308, 375,
+ 415, 528
+ STEELE, Anna, 197
+ STEFFE, John W., 342
+ ST. FULBERT, 59-61
+ STENNETT, Joseph, 23, 488
+ STENNETT, Samuel, 23, 24
+ STEPHENS, ----, 395
+ STEPHEN, (St.), the Sabaite, 57
+ STERNHOLD, Thomas, 15, 16
+ STEVENSON, ----, 317
+ STOKES, Walter, 84
+ STORES, Richard S., 35, 474
+ STORRS, Mrs. R.S., 474
+ STOWE, Harriet Beecher, 481
+ STOWELL, Hugh, 222, 223
+ STUART, Charles M., 34
+ SUMNER, Janaziah, 330
+ SWAIN, Joseph, 28, 281
+ SWAN, Jabez, 286
+ SWAN, Timothy, 194, 195, 327, 506
+
+ TADOLINI, Giovanni, 357
+ TAIT, Abp., 252
+ TALLIS, Thomas, xv, 17, 18
+ TANSUR, William, 282, 283
+ TARBUTTON, W.A., 528
+ TATE, Nahum, 12, 14, 193, 283
+ TAYLOR, Benjamin F., 533
+ TAYLOR, James, 61
+ TAYLOR, Thomas R., 300, 301
+ TAYLOR, V.C., 52, 244
+ TENNYSON, Alfred, 259, 538-540
+ TERSTEEGEN, Gerhard, 102
+ TESCHNER, Melchior, 8
+ THEODULPH, Bp., 5, 6, 7
+ THOMAS a KEMPIS, 67
+ THOMAS DI CELANO, 62, 63
+ THRING, Godfrey, 371
+ THRUPP, Dorothy A., 310
+ TOMER, William G., 497
+ TOPLADY, A.M., 137, 138, 517, 18
+ TOURJEE, Eben, 149, 150, 235
+ TOURJEE, Lizzie S., 235
+ TOURS, Berthold, 415
+ TRAJAN, (Emperor), 293
+ TYLER, Mrs. Fanny, 28
+
+ UFFORD, E.S., 374, 376, 377
+ UPHAM, Thomas, 192
+ URHAN, Christian, 82
+
+ VAIL, Silas J., 8, 234, 235
+ VAN ALSTYNE, Mrs., 156, 184, 312, 425, 438
+ VERNON, (Admiral), 339
+ VICTORIA, (Queen), 139, 248, 252
+ VOKES, Mrs., 171, 173
+ VOLTAIRE, 43
+ VON GLUCK, 490
+ VON WEBER, C.M., 121, 338, 490, 500
+
+ WADE, ----, 102
+ WALFORD, William W., 432
+ WALTHER, Johan, xvi
+ WARNER, Anna, 418
+ WASHBURN, Henry S., 245, 247
+ WATERS, Horace, 303
+ WATKIN, Jack E., 390
+ WATSON, Bp., 151
+ WATSON, Richard, 120
+ WATTS, Isaac, 14, 29, 33, 35, 37,
+ 40, 41-45, 47, 60, 105, 107-109,
+ 133, 134, 165, 166, 167,
+ 243, 396, 403, 463, 506, 513
+ WAYLAND, Francis, 42
+ WEBB, George J., 182, 444
+ WEBBE, Samuel, 116, 505
+ WEBSTER, Joseph P., 535-537
+ WELLS, G.C., 111
+ WENTWORTH, (Gov.), 269
+ WESLEY, Charles, 14, 26, 45, 47, 94,
+ 111, 118, 204, 274, 359-361, 388,
+ 396, 403, 420, 463, 474, 493, 520
+ WESLEY, John, 14, 209, 211, 273, 520
+ WESLEY, Samuel, 45, 178
+ WESLEY, Samuel Sebastian, 45, 177, 178,
+ 304, 485
+ WHEELOCK, Eleazer, 267, 269
+ WHITE, Henry Kirke, 297, 364-366
+ WHITEFIELD, George, 19, 31, 88,
+ 124, 132, 201
+ WHITING, William, 369, 370
+ WHITTIER, John G., 250, 251
+ WHITTLE, D.W., 444
+ WILLIAM, (King), 12, 13
+ WILLIAMS, Aaron, 130, 134
+ WILLIAMS, David, 405
+ WILLIAMS, Helen M., 125, 126, 206
+ WILLIAMS, Peter, 199, 201, 387, 389
+ WILLIAMS, Thomas, 393, 401, 403
+ WILLIAMS, William, 166-168, 199, 381-386,
+ 388, 396, 399, 405
+ WILLIS, Richard Storrs, 415, 467
+ WILLIS, Nathaniel, 467
+ WILLIS, N.P., 467
+ WILSON, Hugh, 353
+ WINKS, W.E., 406
+ WINKWORTH, Catherine, 84
+ WOODBRIDGE, William C., 338, 339
+ WOODBURY, Isaac B., 111, 183, 244,
+ 319, 407
+ WOODMAN, J.C., 410, 415
+ WOOD, Sir Evelyn, 368
+ WROTH, William, 379
+ WYETH, John, 283, 284
+
+ XAVIER, Francis, 74
+
+ YOUNG, Andrew, 304
+
+ ZERRAHN, Carl, 444
+ ZEUNER, Heinrich, 172, 241
+ ZINZENDORF, (Count), 91, 92
+ ZUNDEL, John, 363, 485
+
+
+
+
+ INDEX OF TUNES.
+
+ ABENDS, 252
+ ABERYSTWYTH, 395
+ ABIDE WITH ME, 219
+ AELRED, 372
+ AIN, 38, 39
+ ALMOST PERSUADED, 454
+ ALSACE, 193
+ ALL SAINTS, NEW, 513
+ AMALAND, 465
+ AMERICA, 336-339
+ AMES, 34
+ AMSTERDAM, 95, 96
+ ANACREON IN HEAVEN, 334
+ ANNAPOLIS, 507, 515
+ ANTHEM FOR EASTER, 474
+ ANTIOCH, 166, 464
+ ANTIPHONALS, xiii
+ ANVERN, 520
+ ARABIA, 388
+ ARIEL, 137
+ ARLINGTON, 107, 118, 515
+ ATHENS, 227, 307
+ AUDIENTES, 303
+ AULD LANG SYNE, 515
+ AURELIA, 177
+ AUTUMN, (Sardius), 222
+ AZMON, 47, 48
+
+ BABEL, 388
+ BALERMA, 297, 298
+ BATTLE HYMN ETC., 341-343
+ BELMONT, 116
+ BENEVENTO, 494
+ BERLIN, 491
+ BETHANY, 153, 465
+ BEYOND THE SMILING AND THE WEEPING, 528
+ BIRMINGHAM, 132
+ BONNY DOON, 367
+ BOSWORTH, 105
+ BOWER OF PRAYER, THE, 147
+ BOWRING, 170
+ BOYLSTON, 133, 169, 523
+ BRADEN, 276
+ BRATTLE STREET, 126, 207
+ BREST, 505
+ BRIGHT CANAAN, 273, 274
+ BRIGHTON, 245
+ BROKEN PINION, THE, 254
+ BROOKLYN, 485
+ BROWN, 232
+ BRUCE'S ADDRESS, 335, 336
+ BRYMGFRYD, 388
+ BUCKFIELD, 283
+ BURIAL OF MRS. JUDSON, 247
+
+ CALM ON THE LISTENING EAR, (EPIPHANY), 468
+ CANAAN, 514
+ CANONS, 11
+ CAPEL Y DDOL, 405
+ CAROL, 467
+ CATHARINE, 404
+ CHESTER, 331, 332
+ CHINA, 194
+ CHRISTMAS, 414, 466
+ CLWYD, 393
+ COLEBROOK, 137
+ COLUMBIA, 332
+ COME, 453
+ COME, MY BRETHREN, 280
+ COME, YE DISCONSOLATE, 221
+ COME, YE FAITHFUL, 55
+ CONSOLATION, 482
+ CONVENTION HYMN, 187
+ CORONATION, 27, 59
+ CORSICA, 490
+ COUNTERPOINT, xv
+ CREATION, 40
+ CRIMEA, 366
+ CROSSING THE BAR, 539
+ CRUCIFIXION, 514
+ CWYFAN, 388
+ CWYNFAN PRYDIAN, 402
+
+ DARBY, 403
+ DEAD MARCH IN "SAUL", 498
+ DEDHAM, 48, 130
+ DENMARK, 41
+ DENNIS, 133, 161
+ DEVONSHIRE, 105
+ DEVOTION, 514
+ DIES IRAE, 65
+ DORT, 187, 348, 481
+ DUNBAR, 531
+ DUNDEE, 194
+ DUKE STREET, 37, 166
+
+ EASTER ANTHEM, 474
+ EBENEZER, 406
+ EDEN OF LOVE, 272, 273
+ EDINA, 252
+ EDOM, 401
+ EIN FESTE BURG, 71
+ EIRINWG, 403
+ ELLACOMBE, 177
+ ELLIOTT, 215
+ ELVY, 388
+ EMMONS, 125
+ EPIPHANY (CALM ON THE LISTENING), 468
+ ERNAN, 407
+ ETERNITY, 449
+ EUCHARIST, 111
+ EVAN, 227
+ EVENING SONG TO THE VIRGIN, 359
+ EXCELSIUS, 96
+
+ FAIR HARVARD, 307
+ FALMOUTH, 514
+ FEDERAL STREET, 104, 105
+ FITZWILLIAM, 4
+ FOREVER WITH THE LORD, 498
+ FREDERICK, 158, 498
+ FROM GREENLAND'S ICY, 179
+
+ GANGES, 119, 269, 270
+ GARDEN HYMN, THE, 277, 278
+ GENEVA, 115
+ GOLDEN HILL, 108, 274
+ GOD BE WITH YOU, 497
+ GOOD MORNING IN GLORY, 164
+ GOTT IST LICHT, 463
+ GREENVILLE, 112, 121
+ GRIGGS, 102
+
+ HABAKKUK, 212
+ HAIL COLUMBIA, 331
+ HALLELUJAH! 'TIS DONE! 422
+ HALLOWELL, 283
+ HAMBURG, 111
+ HANOVER, 204
+ HAPPY DAY, 282
+ HAPPY LAND, 304
+ HAREWOOD, 485
+ HARMONY, 514
+ HARMONY GROVE, 105
+ HARVEST HOME, 479
+ HAYDN, 31
+ HEBER, 102, 318
+ HE LEADETH ME, 236
+ HELMSLEY, 505
+ HENDON, 486
+ HE WILL HIDE ME, 444
+ HOLD THE FORT, 424, 432
+ HOLLEY, 407, 483, 484
+ HOLY CROSS, 102
+ HOLY, HOLY, HOLY, 51
+ HOLY TRINITY, 102
+ HOME OF THE SOUL, THE, 532, 533
+ HOME, SWEET HOME, 135
+ HORBURY, 152
+ HOSANNA, 512
+ HUDSON, 105
+ HURSLEY, 160, 493
+ HYFRYDOL, 375
+
+ I'M GLAD I'M IN THIS ARMY, 299
+ IMMANUEL'S BANNER, 188
+ INDEPENDENCE, 332
+ INNSBRUCK, 91
+ IT IS WELL, 440
+ (See Index of Hymns)
+
+ JAZER, 118
+ JEWETT, 500
+ JOYFULLY, JOYFULLY, 289, 290
+ (See Index of Hymns)
+
+ KEBLE, 52
+ KELLER'S AMERICAN HYMN, 433-445
+ KENT, 105
+ KENTUCKY, 274
+
+ LABAN, 143
+ LAMENT OVER BOSTON, 332
+ LAND AHEAD, 369
+ LANESBORO, 36, 503
+ LA SPEZIA, 61
+ LENOX, 395, 476
+ LEONI, 20
+ LET THE LOWER LIGHTS, 434
+ LISBON, 466
+ LISCHER, 488
+ LLANIETYN, 404
+ LOUVAN, 52, 244
+ LOVING-KINDNESS, 277
+ LOWELL, 407
+ LUCAS, 494
+ LUTHER'S HYMN, 73
+ LUX BENIGNA, 224
+
+ MAGDALEN, 351
+ MAGNIFICAT, xi, xii, 10
+ MAITLAND, 412
+ MAJESTY, 16
+ MALVERN, 93
+ MANOAH, 116
+ MARSEILLAISE, 174, 329, 352
+ MASSACHUSETTS, 514
+ MATTHIAS, 245
+ MEAR, 130
+ MELANCTHON, 496
+ MELITA, 370
+ MILTON, 243
+ MENDELSSOHN, 463
+ MERIBAH, 90, 91, 119, 395
+ MERTON, 105, 519
+ MESSIAH, 281
+ MIDNIGHT MASS, 460
+ MIGDOL, 173
+ MILLENNIAL DAWN, 177, 182, 477
+ MISSIONARY CHANT, 172, 291
+ MONSON, 232
+ MONTGOMERY, 35
+ MORECAMBE, 491
+ MORLAIX, 372
+ MORNING, 105
+ MORNING GLORY, 504
+ MORNINGTON, 523
+ MOZART, 244
+ MT. AUBURN, 519
+ MT. VERNON, 498
+ MY AIN COUNTREE, 456
+ MY BROTHER I WISH YOU WELL, 91
+ MY JESUS, I LOVE THEE, 162, 163
+
+ NANCY JIG, 385
+ NAOMI, 198
+ NEALE, 355
+ NEARER HOME, 407, 531
+ NESTA, 404
+ NETTLETON, 112, 283, 284
+ NEW DURHAM, 283
+ NEW JERUSALEM, 506, 507
+ NICAEA, 51
+ NORTHFIELD, 506-508
+ NORWICH, 207, 462
+ NOT HALF HAS EVER BEEN TOLD, 451
+ NOTTINGHAM, 16
+ NO WAR NOR BATTLE SOUND, 461
+
+ OAK, 302
+ ODE ON SCIENCE, 330
+ O DO NOT BE DISCOURAGED, 299
+ OLD HUNDRED, xvi, 15, 41, 166, 339
+ OLMUTZ, 518
+ OLD SHIP OF ZION, 290
+ ONE MORE DAY'S WORK, ETC., 418
+ ONLY REMEMBERED, 309
+ ONWARD, CHRISTIAN SOLDIERS, 56, 186
+ O, PERFECT LOVE, 504
+ ORTONVILLE, 25
+ OVER THERE, 436
+
+ PALESTINE, 202
+ PALM BRANCHES, 470
+ PARADISE, 526
+ PART-SONG, xv
+ PASCHALE GAUDIUM, 474
+ PENTECOST, 513
+ PETERBOROUGH, 48
+ PILGRIM, 25
+ PISGAH, 118
+ PLAIN-SONG, xii, 10
+ PLEYEL'S HYMN, 280, 411
+ POLYPHONIC, xv
+ PORTLAND, 283, 488
+ PORTUGUESE HYMN, 205, 206, 460
+ PRECIOUS JEWELS, 315, 316
+ PRESIDENT'S MARCH, 331
+
+ RANZ DE VACHES, 352
+ RATHBUN, 99, 249
+ RAVENDALE, 84
+ RAYNHAM, 514
+ REFUGE, 363
+ REJOICE AND BE GLAD, 415
+ RESCUE THE PERISHING, 425
+ REST, 499, 513
+ RESTORATION, 514
+ RETREAT, 223
+ RETROSPECT, 332
+ REVIVE THY WORK, 445
+ RHINE, 125
+ RIVAULX, 104
+ ROLLAND, 106, 493
+ ROCKINGHAM, 131
+ ROTTERDAM, 55
+ RUSSIA, 466
+ RUTHERFORD, 82
+
+ SAFE IN THE ARMS OF JESUS, 541
+ SALEM, 123
+ SALISBURY PLAIN, 105
+ SAMSON, 166
+ SARDIUS, (AUTUMN), 201
+ SAVANNAH, 238
+ SAVIOUR, LIKE A SHEPHERD, 310, 311
+ SAVIOUR, PILOT ME, 374
+ SCALE, THE, xiii, xiv
+ SCATTER SEEDS OF KINDNESS, 318
+ SCHUMANN, 87
+ SCOTS WHA HAE, 336
+ SEQUENCES, (FOOT NOTE [7]), 8
+ SHAWMUT, 407
+ SHERBURNE, 466
+ SICILY, 129, 283
+ SILOAM, 244, 318, 319
+ SILVER STREET, 324
+ SIMPSON, 126
+ SOMETHING FOR JESUS, 148
+ SONGS OF THE BEAUTIFUL, 483
+ SONNET, 287
+ SOUND THE LOUD TIMBREL, 327
+ SPEED AWAY, 184
+ SPOHR, 244
+ STAFFORD, 466
+ STAR-SPANGLED BANNER, THE, 49, 333-335
+ STATE STREET, 410, 515
+ ST. AMBROSE, 296
+ ST. ANSELM, (we plow the fields), 478
+ ST. ATHANASIUS, 59
+ ST. BERNARD, 75
+ ST. BOTOLPH, 244
+ ST. CHAD, 50
+ ST. EDMUND, 152
+ ST. GARMON, 395
+ ST. KEVIN, 307
+ ST. LOUIS, 469
+ ST. MAGNUS, 16
+ ST. PETERSBURG, 213
+ ST. PHILIP, 30
+ ST. THOMAS, 38, 134, 523
+ STEPHENS, 282
+ STOWE, 482
+ SUSSEX, 500
+ SWEET BY AND BY, 534-537
+ SWEET GALILEE, 261, 319
+ SWEET HOUR OF PRAYER, 432
+ SWITZER'S SONG OF HOME, 352
+
+ TALLIS' EVENING HYMN, xvi, 16,17
+ TE DEUM, 1-4
+ TELEMANN'S CHANT, 474
+ THACHER, 109
+ THE BOWER OF PRAYER, 147
+ THE BROKEN PINION, 254
+ THE CHARIOT, 279
+ THE DYING CHRISTIAN, 516, 517
+ THE EDEN OF LOVE, 272, 273
+ THE GARDEN HYMN, 277, 278
+ THE HARP THAT ONCE, 328
+ THE HEBREW CHILDREN, 271
+ THE HOME OF THE SOUL, 532, 533
+ THE LAND OF THE BLEST, 308
+ THE MORNING LIGHT IS BREAKING, 177,
+ 182, 477
+ THE NINETY AND NINE, 422
+ THE OLD, OLD STORY, 429
+ THE PRODIGAL CHILD, 430
+ THE SOLID ROCK, 317
+ THE STAR-SPANGLED BANNER, 333
+ THERE IS A GREEN HILL, 414
+ THROW OUT THE LIFE-LINE, 374
+ THYDIAN, 388
+ TO THE WORK, 438, 480
+ TOPLADY, 59, 142
+ TRENCYNON, 395
+ TRIUMPH BY AND BY, 450
+ TRURO, 241, 407
+ TURNER, 282
+
+ UXBRIDGE, 93
+
+ VOX ANGELICA, 525
+ VOX DILECTI, 238
+ VOX JESU, 227
+
+ WAITING AND WATCHING, 443
+ WALNUT GROVE, 105
+ WARD, 196, 493
+ WARE, 34
+ WATCHMAN, 170
+ WEBB, 177, 182
+ WEIMAR, 9
+ WELLS, 409
+ WELLESLEY, 235
+ WELTON, 486
+ WE SHALL MEET, 529
+ WHAT A FRIEND WE HAVE 425
+ WHAT SHALL THE HARVEST BE, 435, 436
+ WHEN JESUS COMES, 437
+ WHEN PEACE LIKE A, 477
+ WHEN SHALL WE ALL MEET, 266
+ WHEN THE SWALLOWS HOMEWARD FLY, 364
+ WHERE ARE THE REAPERS, 429
+ WHERE IS MY WANDERING BOY, 446
+ WHILE THE DAYS ARE GOING, 312
+ WHITMAN, 146, 364
+ WILMOT, 121, 490
+ WINDHAM, 407, 466
+ WINDSOR, 482
+ WOODSTOCK, 232
+ WOODWORTH, 215
+
+ Y DELYN AUR, 405
+ YORK, 462
+ YOUR MISSION, 259
+
+ ZEPHYR, 513
+ ZION, (T. Hastings), 168, 174
+ ZION, (A. Hall), 514
+
+
+
+
+ INDEX OF HYMNS.
+
+ A CHARGE TO KEEP I HAVE, 274
+ ABIDE WITH ME, FAST FALLS, 217
+ ADAMS AND LIBERTY, 335
+ ADESTE, FIDELES, 458
+ ALAS, WHAT HOURLY DANGERS RISE, 198
+ ALL GLORY, LAUD AND HONOR, 5
+ ALL HAIL THE POWER OF JESUS' NAME, 25-27
+ ALL PRAISE TO THEE, ETERNAL LORD, 8
+ ALMOST PERSUADED, 454
+ ALONG THE BANKS WHERE BABEL'S CURRENT, 242, 243
+ A MIGHTY FORTRESS IS OUR GOD, 69
+ AND IS THIS LIFE PROLONGED TO YOU, 43
+ AND WILL THE JUDGE DESCEND, 410
+ ANGEL OF PEACE, THOU HAS WAITED, 344
+ ANGELS ROLL THE ROCK AWAY, 411
+ ANOTHER SIX DAYS' WORK IS DONE 23, 488
+ A POOR WAYFARING MAN OF GRIEF, 285
+ ARISE, MY SOUL, ARISE, 395
+ ART THOU WEARY, ART THOU LANGUID, 57
+ AS DOWN IN THE SUNLESS RETREATS, 243
+ ASLEEP IN JESUS, BLESSED SLEEP, 499
+ AT ANCHOR LAID REMOTE FROM HOME, 138
+ AVE, MARIS STELLA, 356
+ AVE, SANCTISSIMA, 357
+ AWAKE AND SING THE SONG, 29
+ AWAKE MY SOUL, STRETCH EVERY NERVE, 413
+ AWAKE, MY SOUL, TO JOYFUL LAYS, 276, 277
+ AWAKED BY SINAI'S AWFUL SOUND, 267
+
+ BATTLE HYMN OF THE REPUBLIC, 340, 343
+ BEFORE JEHOVAH'S AWFUL THRONE, 40, 41
+ BEGONE UNBELIEF, MY SAVIOUR IS NEAR, 203
+ BEHOLD THE GLORIES OF THE LAMB, 42
+ BEHOLD, THE STONE IS ROLLED AWAY, 451
+ BE THOU EXALTED, O MY GOD, 40
+ BE THOU, O GOD, EXALTED HIGH, 111
+ BEYOND THE SMILING AND THE WEEPING, 527
+ BLEST BE THE TIE THAT BINDS, 132
+ BLOW YE THE TRUMPET, BLOW, 395
+ BREAD OF HEAVEN, ON THEE WE FEED, 489
+ BRETHREN, WHILE WE SOJOURN HERE, 280
+ BRIGHTLY BEAMS THE FATHER'S MERCY, 431
+ BUILD THEE MORE STATELY MANSIONS, 249
+ BY COOL SILOAM'S SHADY RILL, 318
+ BY THE RUDE BRIDGE THAT ARCHED THE FLOOD, 339
+ CALVARY'S BLOOD THE WEAK EXALTETH, 385
+ CHILD OF SIN AND SORROW, 223
+ CHRISTIANS, IF YOUR HEARTS ARE WARM, 274, 275
+ CHRIST IS OUR CORNER STONE, 485
+ CHRIST IS RISEN! CHRIST IS RISEN! 473
+ CHRIST THE LORD IS RISEN TODAY, 474
+ COME HITHER, ALL YE WEARY SOULS, 409
+ COME HITHER, YE FAITHFUL, 459
+ COME, HOLY GHOST, IN LOVE, 59
+ COME, HOLY SPIRIT, HEAVENLY DOVE, 282
+ COME HOME, COME HOME, 430
+ COME, LET US ANEW, 494
+ COME, MY BRETHREN, LET US TRY, 279
+ COME, SINNER, COME, 417
+ COME, THOU FOUNT OF EVERY BLESSING, 283, 284
+ COME, THOU HOLY SPIRIT, COME, 58
+ COME TO JESUS JUST NOW, 291
+ COME UNTO ME WHEN SHADOWS, 208, 209
+ COME, WE THAT LOVE THE LORD, 37, 38
+ COME, YE DISCONSOLATE, 219, 220, 326
+ COME, YE FAITHFUL, RAISE THE STRAIN, 54
+ COME, YE SINNERS, POOR AND NEEDY, 119
+ COMMIT THOU ALL THY GRIEFS, 84-85
+ CROWN HIS HEAD WITH ENDLESS BLESSING, 30
+
+ DAUGHTER OF ZION, FROM THE DUST, 486, 489
+ DAY OF WRATH: THAT DAY OF BURNING, 62-64
+ DEAR JESUS, EVER AT MY SIDE, 302
+ DEAR REFUGE OF MY WEARY SOUL, 196
+ DID CHRIST O'ER SINNERS WEEP, 160, 161
+ DIE FELDER WIR PFLUeGEN, 478
+ DIES IRAE, DIES ILLA, 62-64
+
+ EARLY, MY GOD, WITHOUT DELAY, 35
+ EARLY TO BEAR THE YOKE EXCELS, 401
+ EIN FESTE BURG IST UNSER GOTT, 69
+ ETERNAL FATHER, STRONG TO SAVE, 369
+
+ FADING AWAY LIKE THE STARS, 309
+ FATHER, WHATEVER OF EARTHLY BLISS, 196
+ FEAR NOT, O LITTLE FLOCK, THE FOE, 82
+ FIERCE RAGED THE TEMPEST, 372
+ FIERCE WAS THE WILD BILLOW, 354
+ FOREVER WITH THE LORD, 521
+ FROM EVERY STORMY WIND, 222
+ FROM GREENLAND'S ICY MOUNTAINS, 178, 179
+ FROM WHENCE DOTH THIS UNION ARISE, 263
+ FULLY PERSUADED, 451
+
+ GAUDE, PLAUDE, MAGDALENA, 472
+ GIVE ME MY SCALLOP-SHELL OF QUIET, 76
+ GIVE TO THE WINDS THY FEARS, 88
+ GLORIA, xii
+ GLORY TO THEE, MY GOD, THIS NIGHT, xvi, 16
+ GOD BE WITH YOU TILL WE MEET, 496
+ GOD BLESS OUR NATIVE LAND, 347, 348
+ GOD CALLING YET? 102, 103
+ GOD IS THE REFUGE OF HIS SAINTS, 196
+ GOD OF OUR FATHERS, KNOWN OF OLD, 349, 350
+ GOD'S FURNACE DOTH IN ZION STAND, 89
+ GREAT AUTHOR OF SALVATION, 398
+ GREAT GOD, WE SING THAT MIGHTY HAND, 496
+ GREAT GOD, WHAT DO I SEE AND HEAR! 71
+ GUIDE ME, O THOU GREAT JEHOVAH, 198, 399
+
+ HAIL COLUMBIA, HAPPY LAND, 331
+ HAIL TO THE LORD'S ANOINTED, 175
+ HALLELUJAH! 'TIS DONE! 422
+ HARK! HARK, MY SOUL! 524
+ HARK! THE HERALD ANGELS SING, 463
+ HARK! WHAT MEAN THOSE HOLY VOICES, 464
+ HASTEN, LORD, THE GLORIOUS TIME, 168
+ HASTEN, SINNER, TO BE WISE, 410
+ HE DIES! THE FRIEND OF SINNERS, 473
+ HE LEADETH ME, 235, 236
+ HERE AT THY TABLE, LORD, WE MEET, 24
+ HERE BEHOLD THE TENT OF MEETING, 396
+ HERE, O MY GOD, I SEE THEE, 490
+ HE ROSE! O MORN OF WONDER! 477
+ HIGH THE ANGEL CHOIRS ARE RAISING, 68
+ HOLY, HOLY, HOLY, LORD GOD, 50, 51
+ HO, MY COMRADES, SEE THE SIGNAL, 424
+ HORA NOVISSIMA, 510
+ HOW FIRM A FOUNDATION, 204, 206
+ HOW HAPPY IS THE CHILD WHO HEARS, 297
+ HOW HAPPY IS THE PILGRIM'S LOT, 207
+ HOW SWEETLY FLOWED THE GOSPEL SOUND, 98
+ HOW SWEET, HOW HEAVENLY IS THE SIGHT, 281
+ HOW SWEET THE COVENANT TO REMEMBER, 396
+ HOW, UNAPPROACHED! SHALL MIND OF MAN, 56
+ HOW VAIN ARE ALL THINGS HERE BELOW, 45
+ HOW VAST A TREASURE WE POSSESS, 43
+
+ I AM FAR FRAE MY HAME, 445
+ I AM SO GLAD THAT OUR FATHER, 319
+ I CANNOT ALWAYS TRACE THE WAY, 502
+ IF I WERE A VOICE, 181
+ IF THOU WOULDST END THE WORLD, 389
+ IF YOU CANNOT ON THE OCEAN, 256-258
+ I GAVE MY LIFE FOR THEE, 154
+ I HAVE A FATHER, 305
+ I HAVE READ OF A BEAUTIFUL CITY, 451
+ I HEAR THE SAVIOUR SAY, 426
+ I HEARD THE VOICE OF JESUS SAY, 225-227
+ I'LL CAST MY HEAVY BURDEN DOWN, 384
+ I LOVE THY KINGDOM, LORD, 133
+ I LOVE TO STEAL AWHILE AWAY, 229, 231
+ I LOVE TO TELL THE STORY, 429
+ I'M A PILGRIM, 278, 288
+ I'M BUT A STRANGER HERE, 300, 301
+ I'M GOING HOME, 291
+ I'M NOT ASHAMED, 107
+ IN DE DARK WOOD, 264
+ IN EDEN, O THE MEMORY!, 383
+ I NEED THEE EVERY HOUR, 153
+ IN SOME WAY OR OTHER, 148, 149
+ IN THE BONDS OF DEATH HE LAY, 473
+ IN THE CROSS OF CHRIST I GLORY, 97
+ IN THE DEEP AND MIGHTY WATERS, 406
+ IN THE WAVES AND MIGHTY WATERS, 405
+ I OPEN MY EYES TO THIS VISION, 404
+ IS THIS THE KIND RETURN? 108
+ IT CAME UPON THE MIDNIGHT CLEAR, 466
+ I THINK WHEN I READ THAT SWEET, 305
+ IT MAY NOT BE OUR LOT TO YIELD, 250
+ IT WAS THE WINTER WILD, 460
+ I WALKED IN THE WOODLAND MEADOWS, 251, 252
+ I WILL SING YOU A SONG OF THAT, 532
+
+ JERUSALEM THE GOLDEN, 509, 511
+ JESU, DULCIS MEMORIA, 100
+ JESUS' BLOOD CAN RAISE THE FEEBLE, 385
+ JESUS, I LOVE THY CHARMING NAME, 116
+ JESUS, I MY CROSS HAVE TAKEN, 221
+ JESUS, KEEP ME NEAR THE CROSS, 156, 157
+ JESUS, LOVER OF MY SOUL, 359, 364
+ JESUS MY ALL TO HEAVEN IS GONE, 126
+ JESUS, SAVIOUR, PILOT ME, 373
+ JESUS SHALL REIGN WHERE'ER THE SUN, 165
+ JESUS, THE VERY THOUGHT OF THEE, 100
+ JESUS THE WATER OF LIFE WILL GIVE, 312
+ JESUS, THY BLOOD AND RIGHTEOUSNESS, 91
+ JOHN WESLEY'S HYMN, 209
+ JOYFULLY, JOYFULLY ONWARD, 288-290
+ JOY TO THE WORLD! THE LORD IS COME, 166, 463
+
+ KEEP ME VERY NEAR TO JESUS, 400
+ KELLER'S AMERICAN HYMN, 343, 345
+
+ LAND AHEAD! THE FRUITS ARE WAVING, 367
+ LEAD, KINDLY LIGHT, 223
+ LET PARTY NAMES NO MORE, 169
+ LET TYRANTS SHAKE THEIR IRON ROD, 331
+ LET US GATHER UP THE SUNBEAMS, 317
+ LET US SING OF THE SHEAVES, 479
+ LIFE IS THE TIME TO SERVE THE LORD, 409
+ LITTLE TRAVELLERS ZIONWARD, 299
+ LO! A SAVIOUR FOR THE FALLEN, 404
+ LO! HE COMES, WITH CLOUDS DESCENDING, 504
+ LO! ON A NARROW NECK OF LAND, 118
+ LO! WHAT A GLORIOUS SIGHT APPEARS, 505
+ LORD, HOW MYSTERIOUS ARE THY WAYS, 198
+ LORD OF ALL BEING, THRONED AFAR, 52
+ LORD, WITH GLOWING HEART I'D PRAISE, 49, 50
+ LOVE DIVINE, ALL LOVES EXCELLING, 47, 111
+ LOVE UNFATHOMED AS THE OCEAN, 401
+
+ MAGDALENA, SHOUT FOR GLADNESS, 473
+ MAGNIFICAT ANIMA MEA, xii, 10
+ MAJESTIC SWEETNESS SITS ENTHRONED, 23
+ MARSEILLAISE HYMN, 174, 329, 352
+ MEIN JESU, WIE DU WILLST, 499
+ MID SCENES OF CONFUSION, 134
+ MINE EYES HAVE SEEN THE GLORY OF THE, 341
+ MOURNFULLY, TENDERLY BEAR ON THE DEAD, 245, 246
+ MUST JESUS BEAR THE CROSS ALONE, 411
+ MY BROTHER, I WISH YOU WELL, 290
+ MY COUNTRY 'TIS OF THEE, 336-338
+ MY GOD, HOW ENDLESS IS THY LOVE, 105, 106
+ MY GOD, I LOVE THEE, NOT BECAUSE, 75
+ MY GOD, IS ANY HOUR SO SWEET, 214
+ MY GOD, MY FATHER, WHILE I STRAY, 214
+ MY GOD, MY PORTION AND MY LOVE, 382
+ MY GRACIOUS REDEEMER, I LOVE, 132
+ MY HOPE IS BUILT ON NOTHING LESS, 216, 217
+ MY JESUS, AS THOU WILT, 499, 500
+ MY JESUS, I LOVE THEE, 162, 163
+ MY LORD AND MY GOD, I HAVE TRUSTED, 77
+ MY LORD, HOW FULL OF SWEET CONTENT, 190, 192
+ MY SAVIOUR KEEPS ME COMPANY, 189
+ MY SOUL, BEHOLD THE FITNESS, 397
+
+ NEARER, MY GOD, TO THEE, 150-152
+ NO CHANGE OF TIME SHALL EVER SHOCK, 193
+ NOT ALL THE BLOOD OF BEASTS, 44
+ NOW TO THE LORD A NOBLE SONG, 33
+
+ O BLISS OF THE PURIFIED, 433
+ O CANAAN, BRIGHT CANAAN, 273
+ O CHURCH, ARISE AND SING, 186
+ O COME, ALL YE FAITHFUL, 459
+ O COULD I SPEAK THE MATCHLESS WORTH, 136
+ O CROWN OF REJOICING, 451
+ ODE ON SCIENCE, 330
+ O DEUS, EGO AMO TE, 74
+ O DO NOT BE DISCOURAGED, 298
+ O'ER ALL THE WAY GREEN PALMS, 470
+ O'ER THE GLOOMY HILLS OF DARKNESS, 166
+ O FOR A CLOSER WALK WITH GOD, 129
+ O FOR A THOUSAND TONGUES TO SING, 45, 46
+ OFT IN DANGER, OFT IN WOE, 366
+ O GALILEE SWEET GALILEE, 260, 319
+ O HAD I THE WINGS OF A DOVE, 400
+ O HAPPY DAY THAT FIXED MY CHOICE, 281
+ O HAPPY SAINTS THAT DWELL IN LIGHT, 122
+ O HELP US, LORD; EACH HOUR OF NEED, 278
+ O HOW HAPPY ARE THEY, 281
+ O HOW I LOVE JESUS, 291
+ O LITTLE TOWN OF BETHLEHEM, 468
+ O LORD OF HOSTS, WHOSE GLORY FILLS, 485
+ ONE MORE DAY'S WORK FOR JESUS, 418
+ ONE SWEETLY SOLEMN THOUGHT, 529
+ ON JORDAN'S STORMY BANKS, 24
+ ONLY REMEMBERED, 308
+ ON THE MOUNTAIN TOP APPEARING, 173
+ ONWARD, CHRISTIAN SOLDIERS, 185, 186
+ ONWARD RIDE IN TRIUMPH, JESUS, 382
+ O PARADISE! O PARADISE! 525
+ O PERFECT LOVE, 504
+ O SACRED HEAD, NOW WOUNDED, 86
+ O SING TO ME OF HEAVEN, 288
+ O THE CLANGING BELLS OF TIME, 449
+ O THE LAMB, THE LOVING LAMB, 271
+ O THINK OF THE HOME OVER THERE, 463
+ O THOU IN WHOSE PRESENCE MY SOUL, 281
+ O THOU, MY SOUL, FORGET NO MORE, 492
+ O THOU WHO DIDST PREPARE, 361
+ O THOU WHO DRY'ST THE MOURNER'S TEAR, 244
+ O THOU WHOSE TENDER MERCY HEARS, 198
+ O TURN YE, O TURN YE, FOR WHY, 291
+ OUR LORD HAS GONE UP ON HIGH, 473
+ O WHEN SHALL I SEE JESUS, 276
+ O WHERE SHALL REST BE FOUND, 145
+ O WHY SHOULD THE SPIRIT OF MORTAL, 238
+ O WORSHIP THE KING ALL GLORIOUS ABOVE, 22
+
+ PARTED MANY A TOIL-SPENT YEAR, 267
+ PATIENTLY ENDURING, 443
+ PEACE, TROUBLED SOUL, WHOSE PLAINTIVE, 202
+ PEOPLE OF THE LIVING GOD, 144
+ PILGRIMS WE ARE TO ZION BOUND, 281
+ PORTALS OF LIGHT, 443
+ PRAISE GOD FROM WHOM ALL BLESSINGS, 13
+ PULL FOR THE SHORE, 372
+
+ REJOICE AND BE GLAD, 415
+ RESCUE THE PERISHING, 425
+ REVIVE THY WORK, O LORD, 445
+ RISE, CROWNED WITH LIGHT, 238
+ RISE, MY SOUL, AND STRETCH THY WINGS, 94
+ ROCK OF AGES, CLEFT FOR ME, 137
+
+ SAFE IN THE ARMS OF JESUS, 540
+ SANCTIFY, O LORD, MY SPIRIT, 405
+ SAVIOUR, LIKE A SHEPHERD LEAD US, 310
+ SAVIOUR, THY DYING LOVE, 147
+ SCATTER SEEDS OF KINDNESS, 317
+ SCOTS WHA HAE WI WALLACE BLED, 335, 352
+ SEE GENTLE PATIENCE SMILE ON PAIN, 104
+ SEND THY SPIRIT, I BESEECH THEE, 406
+ SERVANT OF GOD, WELL DONE, 498
+ SHEPHERD OF TENDER YOUTH, 293-296
+ SHOW PITY, LORD, O LORD FORGIVE, 44
+ SHRINKING FROM THE COLD HAND OF DEATH, 520
+ SINCE JESUS TRULY DID APPEAR, 503
+ SISTER, THOU WAST MILD AND LOVELY, 498
+ SO FADES THE LOVELY, BLOOMING FLOWER, 104, 198, 498
+ SOFTLY FADES THE TWILIGHT RAY, 484
+ SOFTLY NOW THE LIGHT OF DAY, 483
+ SOON MAY THE LAST GLAD SONG ARISE, 173
+ SOUND THE LOUD TIMBREL, 326, 327
+ SPEAK, O SPEAK, THOU GENTLE JESUS, 386
+ SPEED AWAY, SPEED AWAY, 184
+ SPIRIT OF GRACE AND LOVE DIVINE, 403
+ STAND! THE GROUND'S YOUR OWN, 335
+ STAR-SPANGLED BANNER, 49, 333-335
+ STILL, STILL WITH THEE, 481
+ SUN OF MY SOUL, MY SAVIOUR DEAR, 159
+ SUNSET AND EVENING STAR, 535
+ SUR NOS CHEMINS LES RAMEAUX, 470
+ SWEET HOUR OF PRAYER, 432
+ SWEET IS THE DAY OF SACRED REST, 488
+ SWEET IS THE LIGHT OF SABBATH EVE, 488
+ SWEET IS WORK, MY GOD, MY KING, 37
+ SWEET IS THE WORK, O LORD, 168
+ SWEET THE MOMENTS, RICH IN BLESSING, 127
+
+ TAKE ME AS I AM, O SAVIOUR, 384
+ TE DEUM LAUDAMUS, 1
+ TELL ME NOT IN MOURNFUL NUMBERS, 248
+ TELL ME THE OLD, OLD STORY, 427
+ THE BANNER OF IMMANUEL, 188, 189
+ THE BIRD LET LOOSE IN EASTERN SKIES, 244
+ THE BREAKING WAVES DASHED HIGH, 323
+ THE CHARIOT! THE CHARIOT! 278
+ THE DAY IS PAST AND GONE, 275
+ THE DAY OF RESURRECTION, 54, 55
+ THE EDEN OF LOVE, 272
+ THE GLORY IS COMING, GOD SAID IT, 400
+ THE GOD OF ABRAHAM PRAISE, 18
+ THE GOD OF HARVEST PRAISE, 481
+ THE HARP THAT ONCE THRO TARA'S HALL, 326, 328
+ THE HEIGHTS OF FAIR SALEM ASCENDED, 403
+ THE LORD DESCENDED FROM ABOVE, 15
+ THE LORD INTO HIS GARDEN COMES, 277
+ THE LORD IS RISEN INDEED, 475
+ THE LORD OUR GOD IS CLOTHED WITH MIGHT, 366
+ THE MORNING LIGHT IS BREAKING, 179, 180
+ THE OCEAN HATH NO DANGER, 371
+ THE PRIZE IS SET BEFORE US, 449
+ THE SANDS OF TIME ARE SINKING, 78
+ THE TURF SHALL BE MY FRAGRANT SHRINE, 244
+ THE WORLD IS VERY EVIL, 510
+ THERE ARE LONELY HEARTS TO CHERISH, 312
+ THERE IS A CALM FOR THOSE WHO WEEP, 499, 521
+ THERE IS A GREEN HILL FAR AWAY, 414
+ THERE IS A HAPPY LAND, 304
+ THERE'S A LAND THAT IS FAIRER THAN DAY, 532
+ THERE'S A WIDENESS IN GOD'S MERCY, 233, 234
+ THERE WERE NINETY AND NINE, 422
+ THEY THAT DWELL UPON THE DEEP, 353
+ THINE EARTHLY SABBATHS, LORD, WE LOVE, 488
+ THOU ART, O GOD, THE LIFE AND LIGHT, 244
+ THOU DEAR REDEEMER, DYING LAMB, 124
+ THOU LOVELY SOURCE OF TRUE DELIGHT, 198
+ THROW OUT THE LIFE-LINE, 374-377
+ 'TIS FINISHED! SO THE SAVIOUR CRIED, 24
+ 'TIS RELIGION THAT CAN GIVE, 303
+ TO CHRIST THE LORD LET EVERY TONGUE, 25
+ TO GOD THE FATHER, GOD THE SON, 14
+ TO LEAVE MY DEAR FRIENDS, AND FROM NEIGHBORS, 146
+ TO THE WORK, TO THE WORK! 438
+ TOO LATE! TOO LATE! 259
+ TRIUMPHANT ZION, LIFT THY HEAD, 510
+
+ ULTIMA THULE, 320
+ UNDER THE PALMS, 254
+ UNNUMBERED ARE THE MARVELS, 402
+ UNTO THY PRESENCE COMING, 392
+ UNVEIL THY BOSOM FAITHFUL TOMB, 44, 498
+ UP AND AWAY LIKE THE DEW, 308
+ URBS SION AUREA, 509, 511
+ VENI, SANCTE SPIRITUS, 57, 58
+ VERZAGE NICHT, DU HAUFLEIN KLEIN, 82
+ VITAL SPARK OF HEAVENLY FLAME, 515
+
+ WATCHMAN, TELL US OF THE NIGHT, 170
+ WE ARE ON OUR JOURNEY HOME, 417
+ WELCOME, DELIGHTFUL MORN, 488
+ WE PLOW THE FIELDS AND SCATTER, 478
+ WE PRAISE THEE, O GOD, FOR THE SON, 416
+ WE SAT DOWN AND WEPT BY THE WATERS, 241
+ WE SHALL MEET BEYOND THE RIVER, 528
+ WE SPEAK OF THE LAND OF THE BLEST, 307
+ WESTWARD THE COURSE OF EMPIRE, 324
+ WHAT A FRIEND WE HAVE IN JESUS, 425
+ WHAT SHALL A DYING SINNER DO, 43
+ WHAT SHALL THE HARVEST BE, 434
+ WHAT VARIOUS HINDRANCES WE MEET, 131
+ WHEN ALL THY MERCIES, O MY GOD, 113
+ WHEN FOR ETERNAL WORLDS I STEER, 286
+ WHEN HE COMETH, WHEN HE COMETH, 314
+ WHEN I CAN READ MY TITLE CLEAR, 43, 514
+ WHEN GATHERING CLOUDS AROUND I VIEW, 212
+ WHEN ISRAEL OF THE LORD BELOVED, 240
+ WHEN I SURVEY THE WONDROUS CROSS, 42, 109
+ WHEN LANGUOR AND DISEASE INVADE, 137
+ WHEN MARSHALLED ON THE NIGHTLY PLAIN, 364
+ WHEN MY FINAL FAREWELL TO THE WORLD, 441, 442
+ WHEN OUR HEADS ARE BOWED WITH WOE, 278
+ WHEN PEACE LIKE A RIVER, 440
+ WHEN SHALL WE ALL MEET AGAIN, 265, 266
+ WHEN TWO OR THREE WITH SWEET ACCORD, 24
+ WHERE IS MY WANDERING BOY TO-NIGHT? 446
+ WHERE NOW ARE THE HEBREW CHILDREN? 270
+ WHILE JESUS WHISPERS TO YOU, 418
+ WHILE SHEPHERDS WATCHED THEIR FLOCKS, 465
+ WHILE THEE I SEEK, PROTECTING POWER, 125, 207
+ WHILE WITH CEASELESS COURSE THE SUN, 493
+ WHY SHOULD WE START AND FEAR TO DIE, 512
+ WIDE, YE HEAVENLY GATES UNFOLD, 168
+ WITH JOY WE HAIL THE SACRED DAY, 168
+ WITH SONGS AND HONORS SOUNDING LOUD, 479
+ WITH TEARFUL EYES I LOOK AROUND, 214
+
+ YE CHOIRS OF NEW JERUSALEM, 59, 60
+ YE CHRISTIAN HERALDS, GO PROCLAIM, 171, 172
+ YE CHRISTIAN HEROES, WAKE TO GLORY, 174
+ YE GOLDEN LAMPS OF HEAVEN, FAREWELL, 519
+ YE SERVANTS OF GOD, YOUR MASTER PROCLAIM, 204
+ YES, MY NATIVE LAND, I LOVE THEE, 180
+ YES, THE REDEEMER ROSE, 476
+ YOUR HARPS; YE TREMBLING SAINTS, 517
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+ Obvious spelling/typographical and punctuation errors
+ have been corrected after careful comparison with other
+ occurences within the text and consultation of external
+ sources. Details can be found in the HTML version.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY OF THE HYMNS AND TUNES***
+
+
+******* This file should be named 18444.txt or 18444.zip *******
+
+
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/8/4/4/18444
+
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://www.gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/pglaf.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://www.gutenberg.org/about/contact
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit:
+https://www.gutenberg.org/fundraising/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
diff --git a/18444.zip b/18444.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2fe37f5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/18444.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..cc5d921
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #18444 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/18444)