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Text Identifier:"^a_lords_day_well_spent$"

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A Lord's Day well spent

Author: Sir Matthew Hale Appears in 2 hymnals Used With Tune: [A Lord's Day well spent]

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[A Lord's Day well spent]

Appears in 2 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: H. R. Palmer Incipit: 51333 31355 55356 Used With Text: The Lord's Day

[A Lord's Day well spent]

Appears in 1 hymnal Composer and/or Arranger: M. L. Pizzey Incipit: 15565 32143 22333 Used With Text: A Lord's Day well spent

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

A Lord's Day well spent

Author: Sir Matthew Hale Hymnal: The Voice of Thanksgiving No. 5 #24 (1946) Languages: English Tune Title: [A Lord's Day well spent]
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The Lord's Day

Hymnal: The Standard Sunday School Hymnal #125 (1888) First Line: A Lord's Day well spent Languages: English Tune Title: [A Lord's Day well spent]

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

H. R. Palmer

1834 - 1907 Composer of "[A Lord's Day well spent]" in The Standard Sunday School Hymnal Palmer, Horatio Richmond, MUS. DOC, was born April 26, 1834. He is the author of several works on the theory of music; and the editor of some musical editions of hymnbooks. To the latter he contributed numerous tunes, some of which have attained to great popularity, and 5 of which are in I. D. Sankey's Sacred Songs and Solos, London, 1881. His publications include Songs of Love for the Bible School; and Book of Anthems, the combined sale of which has exceeded one million copies. As a hymnwriter he is known by his "Yield not to temptation," which was written in 1868, and published in the National Sunday School Teachers' Magazine, from which it passed, with music by the author, into his Songs of Love, &c, 1874, and other collections. In America its use is extensive. Dr. Palmer's degree was conferred by the University of Chicago in 1880. -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907) =============== Palmer, H. R., p. 877, i. The hymn "Would you gain the best in life" (Steadfastness), in the Congregational Sunday School Supplement, 1891, the Council School Hymn Book, 1905, and others, is by this author. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)

Mary Whitwell Hale

1810 - 1862 Author of "The Lord's Day" Hale, Mary Whitwell, daughter of Eliphalet Hale of Boston, U.S.A., was born at Boston, Jan. 29, 1810. After receiving a good education she devoted herself to educational work in Boston, Taunton, Keene, N. H., and elsewhere. She died Nov. 17, 1862. Her hymn-writing was brought into notice by two hymns, one on "Home," and the second on "Music," which were written for a juvenile concert at the Unitarian Church in Taunton, April 1834. Several of the hymns and poetical pieces which she subsequently wrote were contributed to the Christian Register under the initials "Y. L. E.," the concluding letters of her name. Her Poems were published at Boston in 1840. A few of her hymns also appeared in the Unitarian Christian Hymns for Public and Private Worship, commonly known as the Cheshire Collection, in 1844. [American Hymnody, ยง vii.] Putnam (to whom we are indebted for these details) gives the following of her hymns, with others, in full in his Singers and Songs of the Liberal Faith, 1874 : 1. "Praise for the glorious light." Temperance Anniversary. 2. "This day let grateful praise ascend." Sunday. 3. "Whatever dims the sense of truth." A Mother's Counsel. 4. "When in silence o'er the deep." Christmas. These hymns were given in the Cheshire Collection, 1844. Nos. 2 and 3 were taken from her Poems. Some of the other pieces given by Putnam are worthy of attention. -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology

Matthew Hale

Person Name: Sir Matthew Hale Author of "A Lord's Day well spent" in The Voice of Thanksgiving No. 5
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