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Hymnal, Number:nmps1901

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Hymnals

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Published hymn books and other collections
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New Manual of Praise

Publication Date: 1901 Publisher: E. J. Goodrich Publication Place: Oberlin, Oh. Editors: Fenelon B. Rice; G. Frederick Wright; Edward Dickinson; E. J. Goodrich

Texts

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Abide with me! fast falls the eventide

Author: Lyte Appears in 1,672 hymnals Used With Tune: EVENTIDE
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The Lord, our God, is full of might

Author: H. K. White Appears in 229 hymnals Used With Tune: GERONTIUS
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The Lord descended from above

Author: Sternhold Appears in 189 hymnals Used With Tune: ST. ANNS

Tunes

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CHESTERFIELD

Appears in 291 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Rev. Thomas Haweis Incipit: 51354 34213 25171 Used With Text: A glory gilds the sacred page
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JOY

Appears in 579 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: M. Teschner Incipit: 15567 11321 17151 Used With Text: Rejoice, rejoice, believers
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ST. AGNES

Appears in 1,057 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Dykes Incipit: 33323 47155 53225 Used With Text: Think gently of the erring one!

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
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Holy, holy, holy! Lord God Almighty!

Author: Reginald Heber Hymnal: NMPS1901 #1 (1901) Languages: English Tune Title: NICAEA
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Praise God from whom all blessings flow

Hymnal: NMPS1901 #2a (1901) Languages: English Tune Title: OLD HUNDRED
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From all that dwell below the skies

Author: Watts Hymnal: NMPS1901 #2b (1901) Languages: English Tune Title: OLD HUNDRED

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

John Stainer

1840 - 1901 Person Name: J. Stainer Hymnal Number: 350 Composer of "CROSS" in New Manual of Praise

Henry J. Gauntlett

1805 - 1876 Person Name: H. J. Gauntlett Hymnal Number: 499a Composer of "ST. GEORGE" in New Manual of Praise Henry J. Gauntlett (b. Wellington, Shropshire, July 9, 1805; d. London, England, February 21, 1876) When he was nine years old, Henry John Gauntlett (b. Wellington, Shropshire, England, 1805; d. Kensington, London, England, 1876) became organist at his father's church in Olney, Buckinghamshire. At his father's insistence he studied law, practicing it until 1844, after which he chose to devote the rest of his life to music. He was an organist in various churches in the London area and became an important figure in the history of British pipe organs. A designer of organs for William Hill's company, Gauntlett extend­ed the organ pedal range and in 1851 took out a patent on electric action for organs. Felix Mendelssohn chose him to play the organ part at the first performance of Elijah in Birmingham, England, in 1846. Gauntlett is said to have composed some ten thousand hymn tunes, most of which have been forgotten. Also a supporter of the use of plainchant in the church, Gauntlett published the Gregorian Hymnal of Matins and Evensong (1844). Bert Polman

Henry Hart Milman

1791 - 1868 Person Name: Milman Hymnal Number: 401 Author of "When our heads are bowed with woe" in New Manual of Praise Milman, Henry Hart, D.D., the youngest son of Sir Francis Milman (who received his Baronetage as an eminent Court physician), was born Feb. 10th, 1791, and educated at Dr. Burney's at Greenwich, and subsequently at Eton. His career at B. N. C. Oxford, was brilliant. He took a first class in classics, and carried off the Newdigate, Latin Verse, Latin Essay, and English Essay. His Newdigate on the Apollo Belvedere, 1812, is styled by Dean Stanley "the most perfect of Oxford prize poems." His literary career for several years promised to be poetical. His tragedy Fazio was played at Covent Garden, Miss O'Neill acting Bianca. Samor was written in the year of his appointment to St. Mary's, Reading (1817); The Fall of Jerusalem (1820); Belshazzar and The Martyr of Antioch (1822), and Anne Boleyn, gained a brilliant reception from the reviewers and the public. He was appointed Poetry Professor at Oxford in 1821, and was succeeded ten years after by Keble. It must have been before 1823, the date of Heber's consecration to Calcutta, that the 13 hymns he contributed to Heber's Hymns were composed. But his poetry was only the prelude to his larger work. The Bampton Lectures (1827) mark his transition to theological study, and the future direction of it was permanently fixed by his History of the Jews (1829). This book raised a storm of obloquy. It was denounced from the University pulpit, and in the British Critic. "It was the first decisive inroad of German theology into England, the first palpable indication that the Bible could be studied like another book, that the characters and events of the sacred history could be treated at once critically and reverently" (Dean Stanley). In 1835 he was presented by Sir Robert Peel to a Canonry at Westminster and the Rectory of St. Margaret's. In 1839 appeared his valuable edition of Gibbon's Decline and Fall; and in 1840 his History of Christianity to the Abolition of Paganism in the Roman Empire. Among his minor works in a different field were his Life of Keats and his edition and Life of Horace. It was not till 1854 that his greatest work—-for "vast and varied learning, indefatigable industry, calm impartiality, and subtle and acute criticism, among the most memorable in our language" (Quart Rev.)—-Latin Christianity—-appeared. He had been appointed Dean of St. Paul's in 1849. The great services under the dome originated in his tenure of the Deanery. His latest work, published after his death, Sept. 24, 1868, was The Annals of St. Paul’s. Though one of the most illustrious in the school of English liberal theology, he had no sympathy with the extreme speculations of Germany. The "criticism" of Tübingen "will rarely bear criticism." He "should like an Ewald to criticise Ewald." "Christianity will survive the criticism of Dr. Strauss," and the "bright flashing artillery" of Rénan. His historical style has been compared to Gibbon in its use of epigram and antithesis. His narrative is full of rapidity of movement. His long complex paragraphs have often a splendour of imagination as well as wealth of thought. All the varied powers of his mind found vent in his conversation; he was called, after his death, "the last of the great converters." The catalogue of his friends from the days of Heber, "his early friend," to those of Hallam, Macaulay, and Dean Stanley, was long and distinguished. Milman's 13 hymns were published in Heber's posthumous Hymns in 1827, and subsequently in his own Selection of Psalms & Hymns, 1837. The fine hymn for The Burial of the Dead, in Thring's Collection, "Brother, thou art gone before us," is from The Martyr of Antioch (1822). Like Heber's, they aim at higher literary expression and lyric grace. He makes free use of refrains. The structure is often excellent. His style is less florid and fuller of burning, sometimes lurid force than Heber's. His hymn for the 16th Sunday after Trinity, "When our heads are bowed with woe," has no peer in its presentation of Christ's human sympathy; the hymn for the 2nd Sunday in Lent, “Oh! help us, Lord! each hour of need," is a piece of pure deep devotion. "Ride on, ride on in majesty," the hymn for Palm Sunday, is one of our best hymns. And the stanzas for Good Friday, "Bound upon the accursed tree," form one of the finest meditations on the Passion. All his hymns are still in common use. [Rev.H.Leigh Bennett, M.A.] --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)