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Text Identifier:"^o_god_my_heart_is_faint_and_weak$"

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I'll never despair, though the tempests

Author: Mary Dana Shindler Appears in 2 hymnals First Line: O God, my heart is faint and weak

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I'll never despair, though the tempests

Author: Mary S. B. Dana Shindler Hymnal: Sabbath School Trumpet #d58 (1864) First Line: O God, my heart is faint and weak
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I'll never despair, though the tempests

Hymnal: Hymns for the use of the Sabbath School of the Second Reformed Church, Albany N. Y. #152 (1868) First Line: O God, my heart is faint and weak Languages: English

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Mary Dana Shindler

1810 - 1883 Person Name: Mary Dana Shindler Author of "I'll never despair, though the tempests" Shindler, Mary Stanley Bunce, née Palmer, better known as Mrs. Dana, was born in Beaufort, South Carolina, Feb. 15, 1810. In 1835 she was married to Charles E. Dana, of New York, and removed with him to Bloomington, now Muscatine, Iowa, in 1838. Mr. Dana died in 1839, and Mrs. Dana returned to South Carolina. Subsequently she was married to the Rev. Robert D. Shindler, who was Professor in Shelby College, Kentucky, in 1851, and afterwards in Texas. Mrs. Shindler, originally a Presbyterian, was for some time an Unitarian; but of late years she has been a member of the Protestant Episcopal Church. As Mary S. B. Dana she published the Southern Harp, 1840, and the Northern Harp, 1841. From these works her hymns have been taken, 8 of which are in T. O. Summers's Songs of Zion, 1851. The best known are:— 1. Fiercely came the tempest sweeping. Christ stilling the storm. (1841.) 2. I'm a pilgrim, and I'm a stranger. A Christian Pilgrim. (1841.) 3. O sing to me of heaven. Heaven contemplated. (1840.) Sometimes given as "Come, sing to me of heaven." [Rev. F. M. Bird, M.A.] -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907) =================== Shindler, Mary S. B., p. 1055, i. Other hymns usually attributed to this writer, are "Prince of Peace, control my will" (Perfect Peace), in the Church of England Magazine, March 3, 1858, in 32 lines; and " Once upon the heaving ocean" (Jesus calming the Sea). --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, Appendix, Part II (1907)
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