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The Story of the Hymns and Tunes
by Theron Brown and Hezekiah Butterworth
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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.



"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 Stebbins has in some localities superseded it in popular favor.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



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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.

THE END

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