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Text Identifier:"^loving_words_will_cost_but_little$"

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Kinds words and deeds

Appears in 5 hymnals First Line: Loving words will cost but little

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[Loving words will cost but little]

Appears in 1 hymnal Composer and/or Arranger: J. Lincoln Hall Incipit: 34554 56533 22322 Used With Text: Loving Words
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[Loving words will cost but little]

Appears in 1 hymnal Composer and/or Arranger: J. R. M. Incipit: 55113 36622 54345 Used With Text: Loving Words
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LOVE DIVINE

Appears in 877 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: John Zundel Incipit: 55653 23217 61654 Used With Text: Loving words will cost but little

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
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Loving Words

Hymnal: Boundless Love #59 (1896) First Line: Loving words will cost but little Lyrics: 1 Loving words will cost but little, Journeying up the hill of life, But they make the weak and weary Stronger, braver for the strife. Do you count them only trifles? What on earth are sun and rain? Never was a kind word wasted, Never was one said in vain. 2 When the cares of life are many, And its burdens heavy grow For the ones who walk beside you, If you love them, tell them so. What you count of little value Has an almost magic pow’r, And beneath their cheering sunshine Hearts will blossom life a flower. 3 So, as up life’s hill we journey, Let us scatter all the way Kindly words, to serve as sunshine In the dark and cloudy day. Grudge no loving word, my brother, As along thro’ life you go, To the ones who journey with you; If you love them, tell them so. Languages: English Tune Title: [Loving words will cost but little]
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Loving Words

Hymnal: Little Sacred Songs #75 (1892) First Line: Loving words will cost but little Languages: English Tune Title: [Loving words will cost but little]
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Loving words will cost but little

Hymnal: Services and Songs #23 (1923) Languages: English Tune Title: LOVE DIVINE

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

J. Lincoln Hall

1866 - 1930 Composer of "[Loving words will cost but little]" in Boundless Love Used pseudonyms Maurice A. Clifton and Arthur Wilton. =============== Joseph Lincoln Hall DMus USA 1866-1930. Born in Philadelphia, PA, to musical parents, he also was musical, having a good tenor voice. He was an organist and music teacher. At age 19 he led a 100 member choir for 10 years. He studied music and graduated with honors from the University of PA, later receiving a Doctor of Music degree from Harriman University, from which he was an alumnus. In 1896 he married Eva Victoria Withington, and they had four children. Three lived to adulthood, Lincoln, Ralph, and Philip. A musician, he was a great song leader and choral conductor, conducting campmeeting choirs in PA, OH, and FL, at the Gainesville Bible Conference as well. He became a gospel song composer, arranger, editor, and publisher. He wrote cantatas, oratorios, choir anthems, and hundreds of gospel songs. He also edited several hymnals. Along with Irvin Mack, he founded the Hall-Mack Publishing Company (later Rodeheaver). They published nine songbooks. He was a member of the 7th Street Methodist Episcopal Church in Philadelphia. He died in Philadelphia. John Perry

James R. Murray

1841 - 1905 Person Name: J. R. M. Composer of "[Loving words will cost but little]" in Little Sacred Songs L.P.M. (1905, April 12). Obituary. New Church Messenger, p.209. Murray.--At Cincinnati, March 10, 1905, James Ramsey Murray. Funeral services in the Church of the New Jersualem, March 13th. James R. Murray was widely known in the musical world as the author of many songs and song books, and in the New Church in Chicago and Cincinnati as an affectionate, intelligent, and loyal New Churchman. He was born in Andover (Ballard Vale), Mass., March 17, 1841. In early life he developed musical talent, and composed many minor pieces for local and special occasions. Later at North Reading, Mass., he attended Dr. George F. Root's School of Music, and was associated with William Bradbury and Dr. Lowell Mason. He enlisted in the Fourteenth Regiment of infantry, commonly known as the Essex County Regiment, and afterwards was changed to the First Regiment, Massachusetts Heavy Artillery, which was engaged in most of the battles fought by the Second Army Corps up to the surrender of General Lee. "Daisy Deane," the first and most popular of his early song successes, was composed in 1863 in Virginia while in camp, words by his cousin, Thomas F. Winthrop. This song is known all over the world, and the Salvation Army is using an arrangement of it for one of their war cry songs. In 1868 Mr. Murray married Isabella Maria Taylor of Andover; and they removed to Chicago. Here three children were born to them, two passing early to their heavenly home, the youngest, Winthrop Root Murray, is still living. It was during these first years in Chicago that Mr. and Mrs. Murray became interested in the New Church, while he was engaged with Root and Cady as editor of the Long Visitor, afterwards merged with the Musical Visitor. After the great fire of 1871 Mr. and Mrs. Murray returned East, where he was engaged in teaching in Lawrence and Andover, and as organist at the Old South Church in Andover. In 1881 they removed to Cincinnati and Mr. Murray became the editor of the Musical Viistor [sic] and head of the publication department of the John Church Company. Among the most popular of his books are "Pure Diamonds," "Royal Gems," "The Prize" and "Murray's Sacred Songs." The following titles will recall some of his best loved sacred songs: "At Last," "Calm on the Listening Ear of Night," "I Shall Be Satisfied," "There Shall No Evil Befall Thee," "Thine, O Lord, Is the Greatness," "The Way Was Mine," "How Beautiful Upon the Mountains," "Angels from the Realms of Glory." His last great labor in the publishing department of the John Church Company was the seeing through the press five volumes of Wagner's music dramas, with full score and original German text, and an English translation. The immense and careful labor involved in the preparation of these volumes, with a really smooth and excellent English translation, had perhaps, as it was done under pressure, something to do with Mr. Murray's breakdown. Although for some reason Mr. Murray's name does not appear on the title page of these volumes, his friends knew of the place the work held in his affections and ambition. Mr. Murray was a member of the Church Council of the Cincinnati Society for the last four years and took a deep interest in the building of the New Church, and in the inauguration of services, with all the changes looking to the improvement of the musical part of the service. The vested choir, organized by Mr. and Mrs. Lawson, which Mr. Murray as councilman had urged from the beginning, in their entrance to the church each Sunday singing the processional hymn participated in the funeral service, with a congregation of brethren and friends, all moved by deep love and profound respect for the consistent life and faith of a worthy Churchman and beloved friend. --DNAH Archives =================================== For a discussion of Murray and the tune MUELLER, see: Stulken, M.K. (1981). Hymnal companion to the Lutheran Book of Worship. Philadelphia : Fortress Press, p.170. =================================== Also available in the DNAH Archives: 1. An excerpt from Christie, George A. (1927). New Free Church. In Music in Andover. Papers read at "Fagot Party" of the Andover Natural History Society. 2. Unsourced essay about Murray written soon after his death, likely from Andover, Mass., perhaps authored by Charlotte Helen Abbott.

John Zundel

1815 - 1882 Composer of "LOVE DIVINE" in Services and Songs John Zundel; b. 1815, near Stuttgart, Germany; organist in Brooklyn, N. Y., from 1847 to 1878; d. Cannstadt, Germany, 1882 Evangelical Lutheran Hymnal, 1908
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