TEXTS TUNES PEOPLE HYMNALS

Hymn Tune
TunesST. CRISPIN

Composer:George J. Elvey (1862)
Meter:8.8.8.8
Incipit:33351 22355 51766
Key:E♭ Major
Instances of this tune

More information

Composed by George J. Elvey (PHH 48) in 1862 for 'Just as I Am, without One Plea" (263), ST. CRISPIN was first published in the 1863 edition of Edward Thorne's Selection of Psalm and Hymn Tunes. The tune title honors a third-century Roman martyr, Crispin, who, along with Crispinian, preached in Gaul (modern-day France); these two missionaries are the patron saints of shoemakers and leather workers.

ST. CRISPIN has an attractive melodic contour. Its repeated notes are typical of other "generic" British hymn tunes from the later nineteenth century (for example, QUEBEC, 141,307; PENTECOST, 212; MORECAMBE, 419; and MARYTON, 573). Sing it in harmony, perhaps unaccompanied on one of the inner stanzas. The parallel structure of the text also invites singing stanzas in alternation between either men or women or two sides of the congregation.

--Psalter Hymnal Handbook

Related texts

Text
Just as I am, without one plea
God Loved the World So that He Gave
Teach Me, O Lord, Thy Way of Truth
Thy Wondrous Testimonies, Lord