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Text Identifier:"^wir_ruhmen_vom_himmlischen_lande$"

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Wie wird's dort sein?

Appears in 2 hymnals First Line: Wir rühmen vom himmlischen Lande Refrain First Line: O wie sein wird's dort sein

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O wie sein wird's dort sein

Author: E. Mills Hymnal: Gemeinschafts-Lieder. 7th ed. #82 (1917) First Line: Wir rühmen vom himmlischen Lande Languages: German
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Wie wird's dort sein?

Hymnal: Frohe Botschaft und Evangeliums-Lieder #178 (1881) First Line: Wir rühmen vom himmlischen Lande Refrain First Line: O wie sein wird's dort sein Languages: German

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Elizabeth Mills

1805 - 1829 Person Name: E. Mills Author of "O wie sein wird's dort sein" in Gemeinschafts-Lieder. 7th ed. Mills, Elizabeth, née King, daughter of Philip King, was born at Stoke Newington in 1805; married to Thomas Mills, M.P., and died at Finsbury Place, London, April 21, 1829. Her popular hymn:— We speak of the realms of the blest. [Heaven] is thus annotated in Miller's Singers and Songs, &c, 1869, p. 483: "We are much indebted to John Remington Mills, Esq., M.P. for information about this hymn, written by his accomplished relative. The original has 6 st. and was composed after reading ‘Bridges on the 119th Psalm' (on ver. 44, p. 116), ‘We speak of heaven, but oh! to be there.' . . . Already deservedly a favourite, new interest will be added to this hymn when we know that the authoress was early called to ‘the realms of the blest,' of which she sang so sweetly, and that she wrote this hymn a few weeks before her death." The text of this hymn is usually given in an imperfect form. The corrections are supplied by W. F. Stevenson in his Hymns for Church and Home, 1873, "Children's Hymns," No. 151, and the note thereon. Few children's hymns have been received with more favour. It is found in almost every hymn-book published for Children in Great Britain and America during the last fifty years. In some collections it begins, "We sing of the land of the blest"; and in others,"We talk of the land of the blest," --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)
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