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Tune Identifier:"^though_the_days_be_dark_kirkpatrick$"

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[Tho' the days be dark and dreary]

Appears in 2 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Wm. J. Kirkpatrick Incipit: 12333 33555 52244 Used With Text: The King is Coming

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The King is Coming

Author: Priscilla J. Owens Appears in 2 hymnals First Line: Tho' the days be dark and dreary Refrain First Line: The King is coming, the King is coming Used With Tune: [Tho' the days be dark and dreary]

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The King is Coming

Author: Priscilla J. Owens Hymnal: The Emory Hymnal No. 2 #155 (1891) First Line: Tho' the days be dark and dreary Refrain First Line: The King is coming, the King is coming Languages: English Tune Title: [Tho' the days be dark and dreary]
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The King Is Coming

Author: Priscilla J. Owens Hymnal: Sunlit Songs #155 (1890) First Line: Tho' the days be dark and dreary Refrain First Line: The King is coming, the King is coming Languages: English Tune Title: [Tho' the days be dark and dreary]

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William J. Kirkpatrick

1838 - 1921 Person Name: Wm. J. Kirkpatrick Composer of "[Tho' the days be dark and dreary]" in The Emory Hymnal No. 2 William J. Kirkpatrick (b. Duncannon, PA, 1838; d. Philadelphia, PA, 1921) received his musical training from his father and several other private teachers. A carpenter by trade, he engaged in the furniture business from 1862 to 1878. He left that profession to dedicate his life to music, serving as music director at Grace Methodist Church in Philadelphia. Kirkpatrick compiled some one hundred gospel song collections; his first, Devotional Melodies (1859), was published when he was only twenty-one years old. Many of these collections were first published by the John Hood Company and later by Kirkpatrick's own Praise Publishing Company, both in Philadelphia. Bert Polman

Priscilla Jane Owens

1829 - 1907 Person Name: Priscilla J. Owens Author of "The King is Coming" in The Emory Hymnal No. 2 Owens, Priscilla Jane, was born July 21, 1829, of Scotch and Welsh descent, and is now (1906) resident at Baltimore, where she is engaged in public-school work. For 50 years Miss Owen has interested herself in Sunday-school work, and most of her hymns were written for children's services. Her hymn in the Scotch Church Hymnary, 1898, "We have heard a joyful sound" (Missions), was written for a Sunday-school Mission Anniversary, and the words were adapted to the chorus "Vive le Roi" in the opera The Huguenots. [Rev. James Bonar, M.A.] --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, Appendix II (1907) ========================= Owens, Priscilla Jane. (July 21, 1829--December 5, 1907). Of Scottish and Welsh ancestry, she spent her entire life in Baltimore. She was a public school teacher there for 49 years. She was a member of the Union Square Methodist Church and took particular interest in its Sunday School. Her literary efforts, both in prose and poetry, appeared in such religious periodicals as the Methodist Protestant and the Christian Standard. --William J. Reynolds, DNAH Archives
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