SACRED
POEMS AND HYMNS,
FOR
PUBLIC AND PRIVATE DEVOTION
BY
JAMES MONTGOMERY
"From young and old, with every breath,
Let prayer and praise arise,
Life be "the daily offering,"--Death,
"The evening sacrifice."
HYMN LXXV., p. 81.
WITH THE AUTHOR'S LATEST CORRECTIONS, AND AN INTRODUCTION BY JOHN HOLLAND.
NEW-YORK:
D. APPLETON AND COMPANY,
346 & 348 BROADWAY.
M.DCCC.LIV.
ENTERED, According to Act of Congress, in the year 1854, by
D. APPLETON AND COMPANY,
In the Clerk's office of the District Court for the Southern
District of
New-York.
PREFACE.
In the CHRISTIAN PSALMIST, compiled
twenty-five years ago, by the Author of the present
Volume, he became known as a Hymn-Writer;
and, since then, having frequently exercised his
vein in like manner, a considerable number of
his compositions have been republished (with or
without leave) by editors of similar Miscellanies,
or in authorized Hymn-Books. Of this he has
never complained, being rather humbly thankful,
that any imperfect strains of his should be
thus employed in giving "Glory to God in the
highest," promoting "On earth peace," and
diffusing "Good will toward men." But of the
liberties taken by some of these borrowers of
his effusions, to modify certain passages, according
to their peculiar taste and notions, he
must avail himself of the present opportunity
to remind them, that if good people (and such
he verily believes them to be) cannot conscientiously
adopt his diction and doctrine, it is
a little questionable in them to impose upon
him theirs, which he may as honestly hesitate to
receive. Yet this is the Cross, by which every
Author of a hymn, who hopes to be useful in
his generation, may expect to be tested, at the
pleasure of any Christian brother, however
incompetent or little qualified to amend what
he may deem amiss in one of the most delicate
and difficult exercises of a tender heart and an
enlightened understanding. This indeed is "a
thorn in the flesh," which the sufferer must
learn to bear with meekness, and, if possible, to
profit by the humiliation; though a versifier of
any other class might, perhaps, be forgiven, if
he indignantly resented it. It has been, on this
account, that the individual (who now presents
himself for judgment at a tribunal from which
there is no infallible appeal,) has emphatically
entitled his lucubrations,--"Original Hymns,
by J. M., meaning only thereby, that they are
now given to the world in that form of words,
for which he can, at present, hold himself
responsible; being persuaded, that they will be
generally accepted with the same candour and
indulgence with which a few of them have been
extensively read by private persons, and introduced
to churches and congregations by faithful
and true ministers of Christ's Gospel.
Having, on three former occasions, expatiated
freely on Hymnology and Sacred Poesy,See
Introductory Essays, by James Montgomery, to
the "Christian Psalmist," the "Christian Poet," and an
edition of the "Olney Hymns." Published by William
Collins. Glasgow.
I will close this egotistical preamble to the most
serious work of my long life (now passing
fourscore years), with a brief quotation from
what may be esteemed a sainted authority on
such a subject. Bishop Ken, somewhere, says,
beautifully, humbly, and poetically,--
"And should the well-meant song I leave behind,
With Jesus' lovers some acceptance find,
'Twill heighten even the joys of heaven to know,
That in my verse saints sing God's praise below."
And was not this hope prophetic! fulfilling
continually to this day, nor ever likely to fail
while the Gospel is preached throughout the
whole world in the language of Britain! It
may even be doubted whether there is a stanza
of four lines in the compass of our literature,
which has been so often remembered, repeated
and sung, as the Doxology, appended to each of
the good prelate's inestimable Triad of Hymns,
for Morning, Evening, and Night.
"Praise God, from whom all blessings flow,
Praise Him, all creatures here below;
Praise Him above, ye heavenly host,
Praise Father, Son, and Holy Ghost."
And who that has learned this rapturous strain
on earth, can be presumed to forget it in heaven,
if he reaches that consummation of glory, and of bliss?
JAMES MONTGOMERY.
THE MOUNT, SHEFFIELD,
January 1, 1853.
INTRODUCTION.
Twenty-five years ago, it was my happiness to be
commended to the good-will of American readers in their own country,In
a letter prefixed to a Memoir of the Rev. John Summerfield, published in
1829. by my honoured friend, James
Montgomery: it was one of a thousand acts of unsolicited
kindness for which I have been indebted
to him during the period of more than a quarter of
a century that I have enjoyed his confidence and
his counsel. It is now my privilege, publicly,--not
to return, but--to acknowledge the obligation "in
kind," by presuming, without authority, and mea
periculo, to prefix an INTRODUCTION to a work of
his. I must, however, at the outset, utterly repudiate
the possibility of a notion on my part, that any
thing from the pen of Montgomery, and least of all
such a volume as this, can require to be either
introduced or advocated in any place where his
mother tongue is spoken, where the love of English
poetry is enjoyed, and where the influence of Christianity
is recognized as leading not less to the refinement
of the intellectual, than to the purification
of the moral character of man.
To the literary and educated circles of society
in the United States, therefore, on the foregoing as
well as on other grounds of universally acknowledged
sympathy, the author of "The Wanderer
of Switzerland," "The West Indies," "The World
before the Flood," "The Pelican Island," &c., has
long been as familiar--may I not say always as
welcome?--as to similar classes of readers in his
own country. It is not, then, with any design of
bespeaking for my revered friend a more hearty
welcome, much less in any hope of sharing in that
welcome, that I venture to present myself in his
eompany on the present occasion. For however
little any of his former works might have been
presumed to require adventitious introduction, the
volume now in the reader's hand stands least in
need of it. For, to any people keenly alive to the
importance of an orthodox expression of evangelical
truth, in any form, or through whatever instrumentality,
and who are, at the same time, sufficiently
free from sectarian trammels to be allowed to welcome
it, every new and happy embodiment of a
precious Scriptural sentiment, wbether in prose or
verse, becomes a fresh and, if not a social, at least
a personal source of spiritual enjoyment and edification.
I record this opinion the more willingly
and distinctly here, because, if it applies generally
wherever the mind of the true believer and the
Word of God are alike "unfettered," it may perhaps
be urged with a more especial and happy significance
among a people whose sacred literature is
remarkable for its sound, expansive, and practical
character. For I entirely agree with Montgomery,
that, "In no walk of literature have our trans-atlantic
kindred so worthily rivalled, and so nearly equalled,
the writers of the parent country as in works of
divinity."Introduction to "A Voice from the Sanctuary," a series
of Missionary Discourses by American Divines. 1845.
It may be objected,--the recognized importance,
the influence, and the praise of sermons, whether as
delivered from the pulpit or the press, must not be
allowed to be tacitly transferred to compositions in
rhyme. Perhaps not; and yet the taste for good
poetry, the appreciation of congregational singing,
and the consequent requirement and requital of the
services of the minstrel or the vocalist--not more
surely in the saloon than in the sanctuary--are sufficient
evidences that the good people of the trans-atlantic
cities and villages, have at least the same
feelings and enjoyments as those of the "old country"
in these matters.
It may also, I presume, be affirmed of the leading
orthodox communities of Christians in the United
States, as of those in Great Britain, that they
generally use in their public worship either some
metrical version of the Psalms of David, the
Hymns of Dr. Watts, the collection made by the
Rev. John Wesley, or selections from some of
these, with more or less admixture of "original
matter." Into the relative merits or comparative
importance of the works here named, or alluded to,
it is not my present intention to enter; and this
would the less become me, as I shall have occasion
to cite higher authority than my own on this subject,
in the course of this Preface. With respect
to rhythmical versions of the Psalms for choral
uses, I may mention, in passing, that having several
years ago published a particular work on this
subject,The Psalmists of Britain. 2 vols. 1843.
I am prepared to assert that while certain
adventitious versifiers of the United States, early
and late, must be content to share with the elders
of their language in Europe the moderate praise
of having rather laudably aimed at, than of having
perfectly succeeded in the hopeless attempt at
giving to the sentiments of the inspired penmen
the same impressive tone in the choir service-book
that they possess in the "authorized version" of
the Bible, they have, nevertheless, exhibited some
specimens of a metrical rendering of the sacred
songs of the sweet singer of Israel, which are not
inferior to the best of those produced in the mother
country.
To come now more immediately to the author of
the work before us, it may be proper to show what
are his qualifications for the attempt to add "new
strings to the celestial lyre"--new strains of sacred
harmony to those which the church has so long
possessed and approved, and this without the risk
on his part of lessening a well-earned poetical reputation,
by an ill-timed contest for the cheap distinction
of a merely religious versifier. Those persons
who know any thing of the early life and education
of James Montgomery, as sketched by himself in
the Preface to his Collected Poems, will remember
that he was born and brought up among the Moravians,
a people in whose public worship and private
devotions singing, whether aided by instrumental
accompaniment or not, always formed a large and
delightful element. In this branch of divine service,
as maintained in the church of his fathers, the
youthful poet took an early and an abiding interest;
and, as might be expected, in imitations of the
simple but heart-touching compositions of the
Hymn Book then in use among the Brethren, and
long afterwards revised by him, the earliest kindlings
of his genius manifested themselves. Soon
after he came to reside in Sheffield, some years
before the commencement of the present century,
and thenceforward, as his poetical reputation increased,
and his religious character developed itself,
with a singular freedom from sectarian exclusiveness,
and coincidently with the origin of those various
institutions of piety which have so greatly distinguished
our times, he was often called upon to render
his rhythmical skill tributary to devotion, by
the production of hymns for occasional purposes.
Among the welcome, or, at least, willingly gratified
petitioners for services of this kind were not merely
the managers of Sunday-school, Missionary, and
Bible-Society anniversaries, &c., in the town where
he resided, and who could urge the local plea of religious
citizenship, but the compilers of Hymn
Books in every part of the United Kingdom. To
such an extent had the taste of the Poet, and the
solicitations of his admirers, concurred in this
heavenward direction, that, in 1825, he comprised
in a published work, which I shall presently more
particularly describe, one hundred Original Hymns.
He also tried his hand upon compositions in metre
founded on the Psalms; the result of which experiment
he published, in 1822, under the title
of "Songs of Zion." To these "Imitations," as
the author called them--sixty-seven in number--he
affixed a very brief preface, in which he says, "he
would venture to hope that, by avoiding the rugged
literality of some, and the diffusive paraphrases of
others, he may, in a few instances, have approached
nearer than either of them have generally done to
the ideal model of what devotional poems, in a
modern tongue, grounded upon the subjects of ancient
psalms, yet suited for Christian edification,
ought to be." The success and the value of this
experiment will, no doubt, be variously estimated
by different readers, as they privately peruse, or
publicly sing the several specimens of the "Songs
of Zion" which are comprised in the contents
of the present Hymn Book.
But Mr. Montgomery's connection with hymnology
has not been confined to his own metrical
achievements in the service of the sanctuary.
Willing to impart to others, so far as "the art unteachable,
untaught," can be communicated or improved
by precept, the secret of his own successful
practice, he has, in public lectures, printed essays,
prefaces to books, and in private conversations, advocated
the claims and explained the relations of
sacred literature--and, in his hands, almost all
literature became sacred--under the various forms
which poetry may assume. At present, however,
our concern is mainly with his opinions as they
relate to such lyric compositions as are adapted to
the elucidation or adornment of religious themes,
the exhibition of Scripture facts and doctrines, or
most chiefly to the expression of devotional sentiments
and feelings in private, social, or public worship.
Distributing the matter here alluded to
under four heads, we shall have:--
1. An examination of the prejudicial opinion,
grounded on some remarks by Dr. Johnson, to the
effect that sacred subjects are unfit for poetry, nay,
generally incapable of being combined with it.
2. The qualities requisite to give to authors and
hymns a title to acknowledged excellence.
3. An estimate of the comparative merits of
some of the more celebrated composers of this class; and,
4. A consideration of the claims of Montgomery
to his recognised rank as a hymnologist.
I. In proceeding to rebut the ignorant assumption
of the incompatibility of poetry with devotion,
Montgomery says:--"It is true that there is a
great deal of religious verse, which, as poetry, is
worthless; but it is equally true that there is a
great deal of genuine poetry associated with pure
and undefiled religion. With men of the world,
however, to whom religion is an abomination, all
poetry associated with it loses caste, and becomes
degraded beyond redemption by that which most
exalts it in the esteem of those who really know
what they judge.
"But the prejudice alluded to is not confined to
skeptics and profligates; many well-meaning people,
who never took the trouble to inquire anything
about the matter, in perfect simplicity believe this
slander against the two most excellent gifts which
God has conferred on intelligent and immortal man,
upon the authority of Dr. Johnson. Let us see
what that authority is. In his Life of Waller
occurs the following passage:--'It has been the
frequent lamentation of good men that verse has
been too little applied to the purposes of worship,
and many attempts have been made to animate devotion
by pious poetry; that they have very seldom
attained their end is sufficiently known, and it may
not be improper to inquire why they have miscarried.
Let no pious ear be offended if I advance,
in opposition to many authorities, that poetical devotion
cannot often please. The doctrines of religion
may indeed be defended in a didactic poem;
and he who has the happy power of arguing in
verse, will not lose it because his subject is sacred.
A poet may describe the beauty and grandeur of
nature, the flowers of the spring, and the harvests
of autumn, the vicissitudes of the tide, and the revolutions
of the sky, and praise his Maker in lines
which no reader shall lay aside. The subject of
the disputation is not piety, but the motives to piety;
that of the description is not God, but the
works of God. Contemplative piety, or the intercourse
between God and the human soul, cannot be
poetical. Man admitted to implore the mercy of
his Creator, and plead the merits of his Redeemer,
is already in a higher state than poetry can confer.
'The essence of poetry is invention; such invention
as, by producing something unexpected, surprises
and delights. The topics of devotion are
few, and, being few, are universally known; but
few as they are, they can be made no more; they
can receive no grace from novelty of sentiment,
and very little from novelty of expression. Poetry
pleases by exhibiting an idea more grateful in the
mind than things themselves afford. This effect
proceeds from the display of those parts of nature
which attract, and the concealment of those that
repel the imagination; but religion must be shown
as it is; suppression and addition equally corrupt
it; and such as it is, it is known already. From
poetry the reader justly expects, and from good
poetry always obtains, the enlargement of his comprehension
and the elevation of his fancy; but this
is rarely to be hoped for by Christians from metrical
devotion. Whatever is great, desirable, or tremendous,
is comprised in the name of the Supreme
Being. Omnipotence cannot exalted; infinity
cannot be amplified; perfection cannot be improved.
The employments of pious meditation are faith,
thanksgiving, repentance, and supplication.
Faith, invariably uniform, cannot be invested by
fancy with decorations. Thanksgiving, though the
most joyful of all holy effusions, yet addressed to a
Being without passions, is confined to few modes,
and is to be felt rather than expressed. Repentance,
trembling in the presence of the Judge, is
not at leisure for cadences and epithets. Supplication
to man may diffuse itself through many topics
of persuasion; but supplication to God can only
cry for mercy. Of sentiments purely religious, it
will be found that the most simple expression is
the most sublime. Poetry loses its lustre and its
power, because it is applied to the decoration of
soraething more excellent than itself. All that
pious verse can do is to help the memory, and delight
the ear: and for these purposes it may be
very useful; but it supplies nothing to the mind.
The ideas of Christian theology are too simple for
eloquence, too sacred for fiction, and too majestic
for ornament; to recommend them by tropes and
figures, is to modify by a concave mirror the sidereal hemisphere.'
One cannot but be amused to imagine how indignantly
this wisp of dazzling fallacies and solemn
truisms would have been dispersed, had they been
brought within the scope of the powerful apprehension
of the critic by any other person. Nor can we
fail to remember, that the persons who were formerly
most prone to adduce the dogmata against the
alliance of Religion with "Poetry, the eldest, the
rarest, and the most excellent of the fine arts,"
were almost as commonly the stoutest advocates
for the influence of rhetoric and music--if not also
for the merely esthetic achievements of architure,
statuary, and painting, as auxiliaries to Religion;
and this even when they did not also avow their
own sources of Polyhymnic idolatry in the inharmonious
and unedifying strains of Sternhold and Hopkins.
And "the sum of Dr. Johnson's argument,"
says Montgomery, "amounts to this, 'that contemplative
piety, or the intercourse between God and
the human soul, cannot be poetical;' and in the
sense in which he employs the words poetry and
poetical, this may be readily admitted; but that
sense is imperfect; for it is limited to the style,
rather than comprehending the spirit, of poetry, a
distinction quite as allowable as his own, between
poetry and motives to piety. He says, 'the essence
of poetry is invention;' his own romance of Rasselas
is a poem on this vague principle. Poetry must be
verse, and all the ingenuity of man cannot say
a better definition. Every thing else that may be
claimed as essential to good poetry, is not peculiar
to it, but may be associated, occasionally at least,
with prose. Prose, on the other hand, cannot be
changed into verse, without ceasing to be prose.
It is true, according to common parlance, that poetry
may be prosaic, that is, it may have the ordinary
qualities of prose, though it be in metre; and prose
may be poetical, that is, it may be invested with
all the ordinary qualities of poetry, except metre.
There is reason, as well as usage, in the conventional
simplicity which distinguishes prose, and the
conventional ornament which is allowed to verse;
but gorgeous ornament is no more essential to
verse, than naked simplicity is essential to prose.
This, however, is a subject which cannot be discussed
here; the assertion of the fact (and it cannot
be contradicted), is sufficient to prove that there
must be, in the compass of human language, a style
suitable for 'contemplative piety' in verse, as well
as in prose; consequently, there may be devotional
poetry, capable of animating the soul in its intercourse
with God, and suitable for expressing its
feelings, its fears, its hopes, and its desires. Of
course, this species of poetry will not parade invention,
for the purpose of 'producing something unexpected,
which surprises and delights;' it will not
be 'invested by fancy with decorations;' it will
not attempt to exalt Omnipotence, amplify infinity,
or improve perfection; but to 'sentiments purely
religious', it will give 'the most simple expression,'
which will also be 'the most sublime,' and certainly
not the less poetical on that account. Its topics
will be 'few, and, being few,' will be 'universally
known,'--an inestimable advantage in this kind of
verse, because, if properly worded (and more is not
required), they will be instantly understood, and
impressively felt, according to the predisposition
of the reader's mind, in all their force and tenderness
of meaning. If nothing can be poetry which
is not elevated above pure prose, by 'decorations
of fancy, tropes, figures, and epithets,' many of the
finest passages, in the finest poems which the world
has ever seen, must be outlawed, and branded with
the ignominy of being prose."
"It is begging the question," continues Montgomery,
"to say, that 'man admitted to implore
the mercy of his Creator, and plead the merits of
his Redeemer, is already in a higher state than poetry
can confer.' He is; but what of that? he
must follow the counsel of the prophet: 'Take with
you words, and turn unto the Lord: say unto
Him, Take away all iniquity, and receive us graciously,
so will we render the calves of our lips.
Asshur shall not save us; we will not ride upon
horses, neither will we say any more to the work
of our hands--Ye are our gods: for in Thee the
fatherless findeth mercy' (Hosea, xiv., 2-3). Here
is a prayer, dictated by the Spirit of God Himself,
which is verse in the original, and ought to be rendered
into verse when it would appear to be poetry,
not of the simplest and severest, but of the loftiest
and most embellished style: and does poetry here
'lose its lustre and power, because it is applied to
the decoration of something better than itself?'
Our critic says, 'The employments of pious meditation are faith,
thanksgiving, repentance, and supplication.'
He who denies that there can be a
strain of poetry suited to the expression of each of
these, in the most perfect manner, without either
extravagance or impiety, must be prepared to deny
that there is poetry in those very passages of the
Psalms, in which, according to the judgment of all
ages since they were written, there may be found
the greatest sublimity and
pathos."Introductory Essay to the Christian Poet.--1827.
The volume to which these sentiments are prefixed,
comprises "selections in verse on sacred subjects,"
from one hundred and fifty English poets,
many of whom, it must be admitted, have no other
title to the special epithet of "Christian," than because
they have occasionally shown themselves well aware
that their best strains might be surely derived
from, and, as certainly, elevated by, religious
subjects: but, of course, many others have holier
and higher aims; and have succeeded accordingly.
II. But from the Christian Poet's defence of the
use of verse in the service of religion in general,
we proceed to his remarks on that form of it which
is more particularly adapted to the service of the
sanctuary. "A hymn," says Montgomery, "ought
to be as regular in its structure as any other poem;
it should have a distinct subject, and that subject
should be simple, not complicated: so that whatever
skill or labour might be required in the author
to develope his plan, there should be little or none
required on the part of the reader to understand
it. Consequently, a hymn must have a beginning,
middle, and end. There should be a manifest gradation
in the thoughts, and their mutual dependence
should be so perceptible, that they could not
be transposed without injuring the unity of the
piece; every line carrying forward the connection,
and every verse adding a well-proportioned limb to
a symmetrical body. The reader should know
when the strain is complete, and be satisfied, as at
the close of an air in music; while defects and superfluities
should be felt by him as annoyances in
whatever part they might occur. The practice of
many good men in framing hymns, has been quite
the contrary. They have begun apparently with
the only idea in their mind at the time; another,
with little relationship to the former, has been forced
upon them by a refractory rhyme; a third became
necessary to eke out a verse, a fourth to begin one,
and so on, till having compiled a sufficient number
of stanzas of so many lines, and lines of so many
syllables, the operation has been euspended; whereas
it might, with equal consistency, have been continued
to any imaginable length, and the tenth or
ten thousandth link might have been struck out,
or changed places with any other, without the
slightest infraction of the chain; the whole being a
series of independent verses, collocated as they
came, and the burden a canto of phrases, figures,
and ideas, the common property of every writer who
bad none of his own, and, therefore, found in the
works of each, unimproved, if not unimpaired, from
generation to generation. Such rhapsodies may be
sung from time to time, and keep alive devotion already
kindled, but they leave no trace in the memory,
make no impression on the heart, and fall
through the mind as sounds glide through the
ear,--pleasant it may be in their passage, but never returning
to haunt the imagination in retirement, or
in the multitude of the thoughts to refresh the soul.
Of how contrary a character, how transcendently
superior in value, as well as influence, are those
hymns, which, once heard, are remembered without
effort, remembered involuntarily, yet remembered
with renewed and increasing delight at every revival!
It may be safely affirmed, that the permanent
favorites in every collection are those which,
in the requisites before mentioned, or for some
other peculiar excellence, are distinguished from
the rest. Authors who devote their talents to the
glory of God and the salvation of men, ought
surely to take as much pains to polish and perfect
their offerings of this kind, as secular and profane
poets bestow upon their works. "The faults in ordinary
hymns, are vulgar phrases, low words, hard
words, technical terms, inverted construction,
broken syntax, barbarous abbreviations that make
our beautiful English horrid even to the eye, bad
rhymes, or no rhymes where rhymes are expected,
but above all, numbers without cadence. A line is no
more metre because it contains a certain concatenation
of syllables, than so many crotchets and
quavers pricked at random, would constitute a bar
of music. The syllables in every division ought to
'ripple like a rivulet,' one producing another as its
natural effect, while the rhythm of each line,
falling into the general stream at its proper place,
should cause the verse to flow in progressive melody, deepening
and expanding like a river to the close; or,
to change the figure, each stanza should be a poetical
tune, played down to the last note. Such subservience
of every part to the harmony of the whole
is required in all other legitimate poetry, and why
it should not be observed in that which is worthiest
of all possible pre-eminence, it would be difficult to
say; why it is so rarely found in hymns, may be
accounted for from the circumstances already
stated, that few accomplished poets have enriched
their mother tongue with strains of this description."Introductory
Essay to Christian Psalmist.--1825.
III. Among English hymnologists the two most
prominent names are undoubtedly those of Watts
and Wesley; though there are others that enjoy a
proximate, and perhaps a few, in connection with
single compositions, even a higher celebrity. "Dr.
Watts," says Montgomery, "may almost be called
the inventor of hymns in our language; for he so
far departed from all precedent, that few of his
compositions resemble those of his forerunners;
while he so far established a precedent to all his
successors, that none have departed from it otherwise
than according to the peculiar turn of mind in
the writer, and the style of expressing Christian
truths employed by the denomination to which he
belonged. Dr. Watts himself, though a conscientious
dissenter, is so entirely catholic in his hymns,
that it cannot be discovered from any of these, so
far as we can recollect, that he belonged to any particular
sect; hence, happily for his fame--or rather,
it ought to be said, happily for the Church of
Christ--portions of his psalms and hymns have
been adopted in most places of worship where congregational
singing prevails. It might be expected
that, in the first models of a new species of poetry,
there would be many flaws and imperfections, which
later practitioners would discern and avoid. Such,
indeed, are too abundant in Dr. Watts' psalms and
hymns, and the worst of all is, that his authority
stands so high with many of his imitators, that,
while his faults and defects are most faithfully
adopted, his merits are unapproachable by them.
The faults are principally prosaic phraseology,
rhymes worse than none, and none where good ones
are absolutely wanted to raise the verse upon its
feet, and make it go, according to the saying, 'on
all-fours;' though, to do the Doctor justice, the
metre is generally free and natural, when his lines
want every other qualification of poetry. It is a
great temptation to the indolence of hymn-writers,
that the quartrain measures have been so often used
by Dr. Watts, without rhyme in the first and third
lines. He himself confessed that this was a defect;
and though some of the most beautiful hymns
are upon this model, if the thing itself be not a
fault, it is the cause of half the faults that may be
found in inferior compositions--negligence, feebleness,
and prosing.
"Next to Dr. Watts, as a hymn-writer, undoubtedly
stands the Rev. Charles Wesley. He was
probably the author of a greater number of compositions
of this kind, with less variety of matter
and manner, than any other man of genius that can
be named. Excepting his 'Short Hymns on Passages
of Scripture,' which of course make the whole
tour of Bible literature, and are of very unequal
merit--Christian experience, from the deeps of
affliction, through all the gradations of doubt, fear,
desire, faith, hope, expectation, to the transports of
perfect love, in the very beams of the beatific
vision--Christian experience furnishes him with
everlasting and inexhaustible themes; and it must
be confessed that he has celebrated them with an
affluence of diction and a splendour of colouring
rarely surpassed. At the same time, he has invested
them with a power of truth, and endeared
them both to the imagination and the affections,
with a pathos which makes feeling conviction, and
leaves the understanding little to do but to acquiesce
in the decisions of the heart. As the poet of
Methodism, he has sung the doctrines of the gospel,
as they are expounded among that people, dwelling
especially on the personal appropriation of the
words of eternal life to the sinner, or the saint, as
the test of his actual state before God, and admitting
nothing less than the full assurance of faith as
the privilege of believers."Christian Psalmist.
This is just and generous praise; but it has
always struck me as being less than its subject is
fairly entitled to, in two or three particulars. In
the first place, it may be questioned whether or not
the wider prevalence of the hymns of Dr. Watts,
as compared with those of Charles Wesley, be
mainly due to the more unsectarian character of the
former--may it not possibly be that they rather
coincide, negatively at least, with the doctrines of a
much larger sect, or with those of several sects?
In the second place, the merit attributed to "the
poet of Methodism," as having sung, however successfully,
"the doctrines of the gospel, as they are
expounded among that people," is liable to be taken
equivocally, as meaning something that may be
more or less than exactly scriptural. I merely hint
at these points. But there is a third; I mean the
poetical superiority of the hymns of Charles Wesley
to those of Dr. Watts, whether we take for comparison
the whole of them, as they appear in ordinary
collections, or select single specimens from
each, upon which it would be cowardice in me not
to insist. But both these "sweet singers" have
faults of versification, and some epithets and expressions
of questionable propriety. Is it proper
to point out these imperfections? Ought they to
be removed? Both these questions are important.
The worse than thankless reception of the Wesleyan Hymn Book
by one of the preachers of the connexion in
EnglandWesleyan Hymnology, by the Rev. W. P. Burgess. 1846.
affords small encouragement to answer the
first question with a practical affirmative; while, in
the preface to the very volume now in the reader's
hand, we have something like a formal and authoritative
negative reply to the latter question.
As it is one main object of this Introduction to
present an abstract of the opinions of our author,
as enunciated in three essays which are merely
named in the Preface to his "Original Hymns," I
must briefly allude to Montgomery's estimate of the
metrical piety of another of his predecessors. No
two individuals could be more unlike in their origin,
or more dissimilar in their natural character, and
their early history, than the Rev. John Newton and
William Cowper; and yet, through the signal operation
of divine grace, they not only became, after
their equally remarkable conversion to God, singularly
of one spirit in their life and doctrine--"one
in Christ Jesus"--but they have left, in the "Olney
Hymns," an enduring monument of their friendship
and piety. These earnest productions, even
where most clearly marked by the strong opinions
of the poet-preacher, or most deeply tinged with the
morbid melancholy of the preacher-poet, are justly
regarded as a precious legacy to the Church of
Christ; and few are the modern collections of verse
adapted for congregational singing which do not
contain some specimens of them. In allusion to two
large classes of these hymns, viz., those on portions
of the Old and New Testaments, and those of an
experimental character, the essayist anticipates and
answers a question which must often have presented
itself to others--"Are such compositions fit to be
sung in great congregations, consisting of all classes
of saints and sinners?" "It must be frankly
answered with respect to the far greater proportion--
No! except, upon the principle, that whatever may
be read by such an assembly may also be sung.
On no ground can either the reading or chaunting
of the Psalms from the Common Prayer Book of
the Church of England, or the singing of authorised
versions of the same be justified, except on this--
namely, that these are subjects to be impressed
upon the minds and memories of the people, for
individual application by themselves (when they can
be persuaded to make it); but generally, for
instruction, warning, reproof, correction, and example--in
reality as means of grace. The part which
a congregation of professing Christians can generally
take in the routine of divine service--in reading,
praying, responding, or singing--is a subject
(considering what the real usage is) almost too
awful to think upon in any other view than the
foregoing. Confining himself to this point of justification
alone, the writer of these remarks ventures
to add, that, whereas singing is only one of the
forms of utterance which God has given to man,
not which man has invented, any otherwise than he
may be said to have invented speech hy the faculty
which God gave him to do so--whatever a man
may without sin, recite with his lips, in the house
of God, he may also sing, when the same subjects
or sentiments are modelled into verse, or set forth
in numerous poems like the translated Psalms and
other poetical parts of Holy Writ suitable for
chaunting." * * * "This volume of Olney
Hymns ought to be for ever dear to the Christian
public as an unprecedented memorial in respect to
its authors of the power of divine grace. Those
may disparage the poetry of Cowper's Hymns who
hate or despise the doctrines of the GospeI; they
are, however, worthy of him, and honourable to
his Christian profession. These first-fruits of his
muse, after she had been baptized--but we must
drop the fictitious being, and say rather, after he
had been baptized 'with the Holy Ghost and with
fire,' will ever be precious (independent of their
other merits) as the transcripts of his happiest feelings,
the memorials of his walk with God, and his
daily experience (amidst conflict and discouragements),
of the consoling power of that religion, in
which he had found peace, and often enjoyed peace
to a degree that passed
understanding."Introductory Essay to Olney Hymns. 1829.
How exactly do these terms also characterise the author
of these "Original Hymns." Indeed, I have
transcribed the closing portion of the foregoing
extract for the purpose of adding that there has
been no man of genius between whom and Montgomery
the resemblance is so strong as the bard of
Olney. "Lamented Cowper! in thy steps I tread,"
&c., was the apostrophic language of the author of
the "West Indies;" and, assuredly, not only in their
common abhorrence of slavery, and their similar
exemplification of the influences of evangelical religion,
but in the Christian tone of their larger
works, the simplicity and purity of their lives, and
especially in the chaste and spiritual character of
their beautiful hymns, the two Christian poets alike
demonstrate that their inspiration flowed from the
source indicated by the angelic messenger "who
touch'd Isaiah's hallowed lips with fire."
On grounds like those indicated in the foregoing
remarks, not only have the hymns to which they
specifically refer, but those in other collections,
been exposed to the emendations of editors.
Among the most obviously defensible of these
interferences with an author's genuine text, are those
which go to remove or qualify expressions which
stretch perilously near, even if they lie really
within the bounds of allowable phraseology. And
here, I allude not to the assertion of those transcendant
attainments of Christian assurance, holiness,
and exaltation, about which the soberest
professors of religion sometimes differ, but rather
to those bold appropriations of the sensuous language
of Solomon's Song on the one hand, and of
the mysterious symbolisms of the Revelation of
St. John on the other, which none but the most
fanciful or the most fearless versifiers would nowadays
adopt. At the same time, the unwarrantable
liberties sometimes taken with favourite hymns, by
incompetent parties, should suggest caution in this kind of
dealing.I have just seen a new and elegantly printed collection
of Hymns for Public Worship, the editor of which
takes credit for not altering the productions of living
authors; while he explains that he has so altered a striking
composition by an American author, as to justify him in
giving the result under his own name.
Notwithstanding, however, some discouraging indications,
and the conviction that most parties
would much sooner assent to a proposed revisal of
the "authorised version" of the Holy Scriptures
than to any alteration in the text of their repective
Hymn Books, I humbly submit that the right of
any man, or any sect of men, to adopt their own
phraseology in devotional singing, is indisputable,
at least under the following limitations:--
1. Parties adopting the compositions of a living
author, are plainly bound to conform to the terms
on which he may choose to permit such use, either
during his own lifetime, or so long as his copyright exists.
2. The publication of an altered hymn, under
the name of the original author, and without acknowledgement
of such alteration, is worse than dishonest.
It is the clandestine insertion of a spurious
bud in a stalk of reputed excellence.
3. Emendations of a literary nature ought generally
to coincide with the original sentiment: in
other words--should be what it may be presumed
would have been the expression of the author himself
had he possessed the abilities, or could he have
anticipated the position of his editor. Hence, the
most allowable alterations in old hymns, are the
correction of obvious mistakes, and the supplantation
of harsh or obsolete terms: the most reprehensible,
those which purposely vitiate or subvert
the primary meaning of the poet. These remarks
are, of course, made with special reference to the
unauthorised version of compositions intended to
be sung; in other respects, the rights and usages
of editorial interference apply to hymns as to other
kinds of verse.
The least hazardous way of dealing with unacceptable
passages in an otherwise favourite hymn,
is undoubtedly by simply omitting the verses in
which they occur. This, I believe, would be the
direction of Montgomery himself in such cases.
He has indeed acted largely upon this principle in
"The Christian Psalmist," where, it must be admitted,
be has not less frequently exercised that
reformatory process so emphatically deprecated in
the Preface to his own Hymns. The plea of correction
and improvement, irrefragable as it may be,
when applied to his judicious touch, is very liable
to be urged or assumed with equal success by the
most dishonest or incompetent emendators. Still,
as I have said, since every person ought to be
allowed to use, and in a country where the exercise
of opinion and action in this matter is so little restricted
as in the United States, will select the
most agreeable phraseology, even the perilous privilege
of altering accredited hymns, as the alternative
of losing for a single expression, or perhaps a single
word, the pleasure and the profit of singing a strain
which is at once elegant, instructive, and devotional.
IV. We must now advert to the claims of Montgomery
to the title and reputation of a hymnologist.
In the work last quoted, he says, "One of
the most precious uses of the sacred oracles is their
infinite capability of personal application to the
mind and the heart, the circumstances and duties
of the Christian in every state of life and every
frame of spirit." Hence, "The most illiterate person,
who understands his Bible, will easily understand
the most elegant or emphatic expression of
all the feelings which are common to all; and, instead
of being passive under them, when they are
excited at particular seasons, he will avail himself
of the songs put into his mouth, and sing them
with gladness and refreshment, as if they were his
own. Then, though like Milton's, his genius can
ascend to the heaven of heavens, or, like Shakapeare's,
search out the secrets of Nature through
all her living combinations, blessed is the bard
who employs his resources thus; who, from the
fulness of his own bosom, pours his divinest
thoughts, in his selectest words, into the bosoms of
his readers, and enables them to appreciate the rich
communications to their personal exigencies, without
robbing him or hindering others from partaking
of the same abundant fountain of human inspiration--a
fountain flowing like the oil, at the command
of the prophet, from one vessel into as many
as could be borrowed, without exhausting the first,
though the whole were filled. If he who pens
these sentiments knows his own heart, though it
has deceived him too often to be trusted without
jealousy, he would rather be the anonymous author
of a few hymns, which should thus become an imperishable
inheritance to the people of God, than
bequeathe another epic poem to the world, which
should rank his name with Homer, Virgil, and 'our
greater Milton.' After these strong words, but
more especially after the freedom and severity
which he has exercised in judging the performances
of his predecessors, the author may offer, with many
misgivings, the hymns in the following collection as
his own. Tried by the standard which he has
himself set up, every one of them would be found
wanting."Christian Psalmist
The modest ambition and humble
disclaimer embodied in the preceding sentences,
characteristic as they are of the writer, will not be
allowed to outweigh the estimate which the world
and the church have long since formed of the man
of genins and the Christian poet.
In reference to the metrical compositions used in
Christian worship, the poorest of them are generally
as good as the taste of those who sing them; indeed,
paradoxical as it may seem, more persons may
easily be found capable of writing middling hymns
than of appreciating excellence in the best. Ministers
of religion themselves, when not compilers,Among
these compilers are many clergymen of the
Church of England, who, taking advantage of the ambiguous
and practically inoperative relation of the law to
what shall be sung in consecrated places, have not only
superseded the use of the old and new versions of the
Psalms, as they, perhaps on not much better authority,
have supplanted each other, by hymns of an evangelical
and devotional tone, but they have made and printed
selections suited to their own tastes respectively; thus
taking advantage--wisely, as many persons think--of the
only apparent outlet for individualising the nonconformity
of taste and feeling in this delightful branch of divine worship.
are frequently among the stiffest advocates for a severe sentence
on him who shall venture to think out the meaning
of the words of what he sings, as if the piety were
in the tune, and the edification in the aim of this
elevating act of devotion. Let, however, any competent
person carefully and candidly collate these
"Original Hymns," with the stringent canons of
composition promulgated by the author in the passages
above cited, and then let him try by the same
test an equal number of the compositions of a
similar character by other modern poets; the result
will probably be both instructive and conclusive.
Although labour is not genius, even in literature,
and Montgomery would probably be among the
foremost to deny that any one could, acquire the
"faculty divine" of the true poet by a mere apprenticeship
to verse-making, he would, I am sure,
be equally the first to lay stress on the supreme
importance of cultivating any talent in order to its
complete efficiency. Many persons who read his
hymns, and other pieces, so smooth in metre, so
sweet in their cadences, so natural and exact in
phraseology, may suppose they are struck off at a
beat, in moments of inspiration--in plain terms,
that they are produced with as little labour as they
are read. Nothing can be farther from the fact;
for, whatever may have been the mode of catching and
fixing first thoughts, the whole has been submitted
to frequent and careful elaboration or revision. As
it was my privilege to transcribe for the press the
greater part of the matter of the following pages
(of course, without the alteration of a single word
of the author's final corrections), I may be presumed
to know something of the process alluded
to, from the character of his manuscripts, most of
which presented abundant evidence of the limae labor;
and in addition to this palimpsest appearance
of the original copies, they were sometimes
multiplied in variorum forms, one hymn, I recollect,
existing in not fewer than ten different versions!
I mention this fact to show to young
persons, especially such as may happen to be gifted
with the "fatal facility" of religious verse-making,
how great a price even a veteran hymnologist feels
himself bound to pay for distinguished success.
In the language, not of hyperbole but of truth,
it may be said that the hymns of the Sheffield poet
present evidence of every variety of the excellence
which he has pointed out in others. In "catholicity,"
they are not inferior to those of Dr. Watts;
in "daring and victorious flights" of spiritual
aspiration, they sometimes rival those of Charles
Wesley; they are "very pleasing," like Addison's,
not only when, like his, they celebrate the blessings
of "the God of Providence," but because "the
God of Grace" is "more distinctly recognised in
them;" equally with Doddridge's "they shine in
the heauty of holiness;" with Toplady's, "there is,
in some of them a peculiarly ethereal spirit;"
while often, like Beddome's, a single idea is ingeniously
brought out, "not with a mere point at
the end, but with the terseness and simplicity of a
Greek epigram;" and all this is heightened and
deepened by the affecting conviction that the best
compositions of Montgomery, as of Cowper, "are
principally communings with his own heart, or
avowals of Christian experience; as such, they
are frequently applicable to every believer's feelings,
and touch unexpectedly the most secret springs
of joy and sorrow, faith, fear, hope, love, trial, despondency,
and triumph."
It would be easy to adduce, from the book before
us, examples of each of the foregoing forms of
hymnic excellence, and perhaps also occasional instances of
failure; for what human production is
perfect? But I am--and without hesitation I confess
it--too genuine and generous an admirer of
the poetry of my venerable friend, to be implicitly
trusted either as a discriminating or an impartial
eclectic in such an undertaking. I shall therefore
conclude this essay with a few miscellaneous remarks.
Allusion has already been made to the
"Songs of Zion;" one of these, commencing
"Hail to the Lord's annointed!" will be found at
page 276 of this volume; it is perhaps one of the
most elegant and mellifluous imitations of a psalm
in the English language. Dr. Adam Clarke, who
has quoted it at length in his learned Commentary
on the Holy Scriptures, says the author "has seized
the spirit and exhibited some of the Principal
beauties of the Hebrew bard." The solemn sentiments
condensed in Hymn 238, point to the fact
that "Eternity!" whether the direct or casual subject
of the poet's verse, seems to have been an
ever-present reality to his mind, influencing by the
awfulness of its collateral bearings and its final
meditations. The several hymns on
the Bible, the Sabbath, the advent of the Messiah,
and the preaching of the Gospel, are exceedingly
appropriate and beautiful. The same may be said
of several of the compositions which are rather of
a didactic, exegetical, or apostrophic, than of a
strictly devotional character, and which are better
adapted to be silently treasured up in the memory
than uttered in vocal harmony. Of these, the
verses on "Prayer," Hymn 62, have probably been
more admired by religious people in England, and
form to a greater extent one of the "Pleasures of
Memory," among old and young, than any modern
essay of rhyme of a similar class. A considerable
number were, as already intimated, composed on
special occasions. If any apology were necessary
for the perpetuation of these, it might surely be
found in their titles respectively; for, however
"few and far between" in their anticipated recurrence
jubilees and centenaries may be, these
exquisite mementos of their having been, will only
be repudiated, if at all, by sterner heads and
harder hearts than those which were in the first
instance gratefully affected by them; to say
nothing of the fact, familiar to most pious people,
that poetical forms of "sound words," when embodying
portions of scripture truth, even for fugitive
purposes, are rarely allowed to perish in the first using.
It need scarcely be added that the entire matter
of this book, from the first page to the last--from
the opening hymn of praise to the "Thrice Holy"
Lord God of Hosts, to the corresponding aspirations
of the closing Doxology--is strikingly evangelical;
indeed, so complete is the inter-penetration
of this hallowing element, that while there is
hardly a single verse which may not be consistently
appropriated by any denomination of orthodox
Ckristian worshippers, there is not one that can be
fairly pressed into any service incompatible with
the doctrine of "salvation through the blood of the Lamb."
I owe it to the delicacy of the gentleman with
whose name and works I have dealt so freely, but
not inconsiderately, in the foregoing pages, to say
that, should this Introduction ever meet his eye in
print, that will be the first intimation he will have
of its existence.
G. H.
SHEFFIELD, March 14, 1853.
ALPHABETICAL INDEX
TO
FIRST LINES.
A. |
A blessing on our pastor's head | 328 |
According to Thy gracious word | 131 |
A child, a youth, a man | 216 |
A child is born,--the birth proclaim | 33 |
A child of man, A child of GOD | 31 |
A children's temple here we build | 333 |
Again, on this rejoicing day | 105 |
Again our ears have heard the voice | 376 |
A grain of corn an infant's hand | 261 |
A hundred years ago, not one | 215 |
All glory to the Father be (Doxology) | 377 |
All hail! our Church's Elder dear | 287 |
All hearts are open to Thy view | 109 |
All hearts to Thee are open here | 118 |
All Thy works, with one accord | 95 |
All ye Gentiles, praise the LORD | 91 |
Almighty GOD, in humble prayer | 74 |
And did the Son of GOD appear | 128 |
Angels from the realms of glory | 239 |
Angels, the first-born sons of light | 35 |
Another day, a day of grace | 119 |
A race on earth, a race we run | 150 |
Arise and shine, your light is come | 267 |
Around the throne of grace we meet | 343 |
As from the winter sky | 302 |
Ask, and ye shall receive | 71 |
Assembled in Thy house of prayer | 101 |
As the heart, with eager looks | 99 |
A sure and tried foundation stone | 315 |
At every motion of our breath | 223 |
A world of sinners once was drown'd | 20 |
A year, another year is fled | 303 |
B. |
Behold the Book, whose leaves display | 23 |
Behold yon bright array | 818 |
Be known to us in breaking bread | 207 |
Blessed be Thy Name | 197 |
Body and soul to Thee I give | 182 |
Bow every knee at JESUS' name | 81 |
Bright and joyful is the morn | 17 |
Brother and friend, with heart and voice | 249 |
C. |
Call JEHOVAH thy salvation | 148 |
Children of Zion, know your King | 240 |
Come, and behold the works of GOD | 91 |
Come from your dwellings, girls and boys | 360 |
Come in, thou blessed of the LORD | 153 |
Come let us go to heaven;--the way | 120 |
Come let us sing the song of songs | 92 |
Come on, companions of our way | 156 |
Come see the place where JESUS lay | 129 |
Come to Calvary's holy mountain | 61 |
Come to the Morning Prayer | 84 |
Come to the throne of Grace:--it stands | 115 |
Come ye that fear the LORD | 38 |
Command thy blessing from above | 102 |
Communion of my Saviour's blood | 132 |
Could I command with voice or pen | 140 |
Creator, Redeemer, and Spirit of Truth | 22 |
D. |
DOXOLOGIES | 377 |
Daughter of Zion, from the dust | 241 |
Dust and ashes, sin and guilt | 168 |
E. |
Eternity! Eternity! | 238 |
F. |
Fair shines the morning star | 269 |
Faith, Hope, and Charity,--these three | 167 |
Fall down ye nations, and adore | 275 |
Father of eternal grace | 189 |
Father of glory, GOD of grace! | 317 |
Father of JESUS CHRIST our LORD | 105 |
Father of light, and life, sad love | 307 |
Father of lights! from whom alone | 149 |
Father! reveal Thy Son in me | 167 |
"Father, Thy will, not mine, be done!" | 182 |
Few, few and evil are thy days | 214 |
Fight the good fight; lay hold | 161 |
Flowers grow in sweet societies | 295 |
"For ever with the LORD!" | 231 |
Free, though in chains, the mountains stand | 157 |
Friend after friend departs | 359 |
Food, raiment, dwelling, health, and friends | 207 |
Friends of the poor, the young, the weak | 332 |
Full speed along the world's highway | 211 |
G. |
Give glory the LORD | 94 |
Glad was my heart to hear | 103 |
Glory, O Father! be (Doxology) | 377 |
Glory to the Father be (Doxology) | 378 |
Glory to the Father give | 355 |
GOD be merciful to me | 175 |
GOD in His temple let us meet | 104 |
GOD in the high and holy place | 10 |
GOD is in His holy temple | 110 |
GOD is my strong salvation | 192 |
GOD, o'er all supremely bless'd | 340 |
GOD over all, the sun by day | 368 |
GOD said, "Let there be light" | 341 |
GOD the Creator bless'd | 11 |
Go to dark Gethsemane | 64 |
Go to the grave in all thy glorious prime | 327 |
Go where a foot hath never trod | 61 |
Green pastures and clear streams | 57 |
H. |
Rail, all hail, the King of kings! | 5 |
Hail to the LORD's Anointed! | 276 |
Hallelujah! heart and voice | 329 |
Hallow'd be this humble spot | 323 |
Happy the child, who early makes | 334 |
Hark! the song of Jubilee! | 98 |
Head of Thy Church, her glorious Head! | 154 |
Hear me, O LORD! in my distress | 179 |
Heaven as a tent Thine hand display'd | 313 |
Heaven is a place of rest from sin | 225 |
He climb'd the mountain; and behold! | 52 |
Heralds of creation! cry | 12 |
Here young and old, here great and small | 110 |
"He saved others," scorners cried | 127 |
He that overcomes through Me | 198 |
Hid in the rock-cleft, let me stand | 199 |
High Priest for sinners, JESUS, LORD! | 75 |
Him wilt Then keep in perfect peace | 186 |
Holy, Holy, Holy LORD | 1 |
Home, kindred, friends, and country, these | 257 |
Hosanna be the children's song | 345 |
How amiable, how fair | 107 |
How beautiful the sight | 201 |
How many generations dead | 230 |
How shall a contrite spirit pray | 79 |
How shall we come before the LORD? | 100 |
Humbly, my GOD, with Thee I walk | 169 |
I. |
I build my house upon a rock | 366 |
I cannot call affliction sweet | 184 |
I left the GOD of truth and light | 173 |
I love the LORD;--He lent an ear | 124 |
In a garden man was placed | 263 |
In a land of strnnge delight | 212 |
In spirit when I took my flight | 183 |
In time of tribulation | 187 |
In the beginning, GOD said "Be!" | 2 |
In the morning hear my voice | 84 |
In the hour of trial | 195 |
In vain the preacher cried "Repent" | 19 |
Isaac was ransom'd when he lay | 352 |
Is summer ended,--harvest past | 299 |
Is this the day that gave me birth? | 248 |
I take the journey of a day | 194 |
It is the LORD!--behold His hand | 310 |
I will love the LORD; for He | 178 |
J. |
JESUS, our best-beloved friend | 87 |
Joyful in Thy House of Prayer | 117 |
L. |
Less than the least of all | 205 |
Let me go, the day is breaking | 134 |
Let not the strong, the rich, the wise | 36 |
Let songs of praise arise | 361 |
Let the land mourn through all its coasts | 309 |
"Let there be light:" thus spake the Word | 266 |
Lift up thine eyes, afflicted soul! | 181 |
Lift up your eyes, look round | 301 |
Lift up your beads, ye gates! and wide | 136 |
Lift up your heads, ye gates of brass! | 272 |
Like Mary, when the angel came | 56 |
LORD! are there eyes that see the sun | 370 |
LORD, for ever at Thy side | 190 |
LORD, give us ears to hear | 162 |
LORD GOD, the Holy Ghost | 139 |
LORD, I have put my trust in Thee | 219 |
LORD JESUS CHRIST, the children's Friend | 334 |
LORD, let my prayer like incense rise | 83 |
LORD of all power and might! | 145 |
LORD of Hosts, to Thee we raise | 320 |
LORD, teach us how to pray aright | 69 |
LORD, Thou hast been Thy people's rest | 49 |
LORD, when we search the human heart | 172 |
Love is the theme of saints above | 362 |
"Lovest thou Me?" I hear my Saviour say | 194 |
M. |
Maker, Upholder, Ruler!--Thee | 375 |
Mercy and goodness, O my GOD! | 229 |
Mercy alone can meet my case | 176 |
Millions within Thy courts have met | 121 |
Mine House shall be an House of Prayer | 114 |
Moments and minutes, hours and days | 204 |
Morning of the Sabbath day | 130 |
My GOD, beneath Thy watching eye | 210 |
My Son, give me thine heart, and let | 151 |
N. |
Not by the brazen trumpet's voice | 44 |
Not here, as to the prophet's eye | 316 |
Nothing into this world we brought | 217 |
Not in Jerusalem alone | 314 |
Not to the Mount that burn'd with fire | 111 |
Now in holy convocation | 204 |
Now Lord of lords, and King of kings | 373 |
Now weigh the anchor, hoist the sail | 246 |
O. |
O be joyful every nation! | 280 |
O come, let us raise | 356 |
O for the wisdom from above | 78 |
Of Him the sacred record saith | 441 |
O GOD! thou art my GOD alone | 70 |
O GOD unseen, but not unknown | 28 |
O GOD! we praise Thee, and we own | 96 |
Oh! "Valiant-for-the-Truth!" | 270 |
O LORD, our GOD! Thy light and truth | 335 |
O my soul! with all thy powers | 50 |
Once more to pay our annual vows | 253 |
Once more to Bethany,--once more | 138 |
One human pair, and only one | 13 |
One prayer I have,--all prayers in one | 89 |
One song of praise, one voice of prayer | 254 |
One thing with all my soul's desire | 123 |
On earth we meet again below | 344 |
On his pilgrimage of woe | 353 |
On our span-long pilgrimage | 218 |
On the first Christian Sabbath eve | 133 |
O Spirit of the living GOD! | 260 |
O take away this evil heart | 300 |
O that I knew where I might find | 180 |
O Thou in whom we live and move | 250 |
Our Heavenly Father! hear | 143 |
Our Heavenly Father! hear our prayer | 67 |
Our Master, JESUS, reign'd above | 268 |
Our parents, brothers, sisters, friends | 337 |
Our Saviour's words are, "Watch and Pray" | 165 |
Our schools are nurseries below | 372 |
Our soul shall magnify the LORD | 304 |
Out of the depths of woe | 86 |
O! what a privilege to kneel | 83 |
O where shall rest be found | 213 |
P. |
Palms of glory, raiment bright | 160 |
Patient prayer has power with GOD | 80 |
Peace that passeth understanding | 247 |
People of the living GOD | 54 |
Pour out Thy spirit from on high | 325 |
Power from on high, O GOD! impart | 88 |
Praise the LORD through every nation | 136 |
Praise the High, the Holy One! | 2 |
Praise ye the LORD, from pole to pole! | 144 |
Prayer is the soul's sincere desire | 66 |
Proclaim the year of Jubilee, | 292 |
R. |
Rest from thy labours, rest | 326 |
Return, my soul, unto thy rest | 23 |
S. |
Searcher of hearts! to Thee are known | 42 |
Send out thy light and truth, O GOD! | 256 |
Servant of GOD, well done! | 330 |
Sing a new song unto the LORD | 202 |
Sing Hallelujah; sing | 312 |
Sing we the song of those who stand | 202 |
Sleep, weary world, and take thy rest | 252 |
Songs of praise the angels sang | 93 |
Son of the living GOD, display | 113 |
Sow in the morn thy seed | 258 |
Spirit of power and might, behold | 18 |
Spring up, O well! sweet fountain, spring! | 60 |
Stand up, and bless the LORD | 90 |
Strangers, whence came ye to the West | 242 |
Sun, and moon, and stars, by day and night | 363 |
Sweet is Thy mercy, O My GOD! | 191 |
T. |
Thank and praise Jehovah's name | 46 |
The bird that soars on highest wing | 339 |
The blessing of a night's repose | 209 |
The brightest morning of the year | 358 |
The children's angels always view | 347 |
The Christian warrior,--see him stand | 43 |
The days and years of time are fled | 286 |
The days of Paradise were few | 15 |
Thee, in the watches of the night | 212 |
The end of all things is at hand | 220 |
The glorious universe around | 7 |
The GOD of harvest praise | 297 |
The GOD of nature and of grace | 4 |
The GOD of your forefathers praise | 285 |
The grace of JESUS CHRIST our LORD | 158 |
*The grace of JESUS CHRIST our LORD | 374 |
The ground on which this day we stand | 313 |
The heathen perish;--day by day | 260 |
The King of Glory we proclaim | 282 |
The lighthouse founded on a rock | 146 |
The LORD is King:--upon His throne | 41 |
The LORD is my Shepherd, no want shall I know | 40 |
The LORD will grace and glory give | 166 |
The morning dawns upon the place | 65 |
The morning stars in concert sang | 321 |
The mountains shall depart | 177 |
The Name, the Name o'er evey name | 34 |
The one thing needful be our choice | 147 |
The peace of GOD surpassing thought | 112 |
The poorest of the poor are we | 367 |
The pure and peaceful mind | 848 |
"There is a GOD," all Nature cries | 6 |
There is a river pure and bright | 227 |
The Sabbath of the LORD | 373 |
The scene around me disappears | 55 |
The sting of death is sin | 229 |
The sunbeams infinitely small | 290 |
The sun clear-shining after showers | 251 |
The tender mercies of our LORD | 206 |
The tongue, the tongue, with all its powers | 349 |
The wind that brake the rocks, and rent | 200 |
The Word of GOD, the word of truth | 26 |
The world in condemnation lay | 62 |
Thine arm, O LORD, of old | 283 |
Thine eye, LORD GOD, alone can see | 171 |
This is the day the LORD hath made | 99 |
This stone to Thee in faith we lay | 319 |
Thou Father of the fatherless | 365 |
Thou, GOD, art a consuming fire | 72 |
Though I walk the downward shade | 228 |
Though the fig tree's blossom fail | 200 |
Thousands, O Lord of Hosts! this day | 185 |
Thus far on life's perplexing path | 59 |
Thus saith the high and lofty One | 9 |
Thus saith the LORD,--"My Church, to thee | 142 |
Thy glory, LORD, the heavens declare | 16 |
Thy law is perfect, LORD of light! | 25 |
Thy throne, O GOD, in righteousness | 364 |
Thy word, Almighty LORD | 376 |
Time grown not old with length of years | 222 |
To Adam thus Jehovah spake | 11 |
To-day is added to our time | 221 |
To-day the LORD our Shepherd leads | 164 |
To GOD most awful and most high | 294 |
To me, though neither voice nor sound | 245 |
To me to live, let it be CHRIST | 125 |
To Thee in whom we live and move | 37 |
To Thy Temple I repair | 116 |
To us the voice of Wisdom cries | 27 |
U. |
Union of faith, and hope, and love | 155 |
Upon Thine altar, LORD, I lay | 170 |
W. |
Walking on the winged wind | 311 |
We bid Thee welcome in the Name | 324 |
Weep, little children, weep | 354 |
Weep no more Zion, dry thy streaming tears | 224 |
We know the condescending grace | 126 |
We lift our eyes, our hands, to Thee | 296 |
We plan foundations for the dead | 322 |
What are these in bright array | 237 |
What is our life?--a breath, a span | 163 |
What is the thing of greatest price | 8 |
What is the World?--a wildering maze | 24 |
What secret hand at morning-light | 208 |
What shall we ask of GOD in prayer? | 67 |
When Israel, press'd by Pharoab, stood | 308 |
When JESUS left his Father's throne | 346 |
When like a stranger on our sphere | 305 |
When men once more were multiplied | 21 |
When on Sinai's top I see | 54 |
When the overwhelming waters | 235 |
When Those who fear'd the LORD of old | 152 |
When war on earth suspended | 63 |
Where'er the Patriarch pitch'd his tent | 39 |
Where are the dead? in heaven or hell? | 225 |
While many cry in nature's night | 85 |
While saints and angels, glorious King | 366 |
While these commands endure | 114 |
While through this changing world we roam | 226 |
Why thus, my soul, cast down? | 81 |
Will e'er that Sabbath morning rise | 278 |
With heart and soul, with mind and might | 342 |
With lawless lips, unbridled tongues | 360 |
With men impossible! | 30 |
With reverence and with godly fear | 106 |
With wandering Jacob, let us say | 73 |
Words of eternal life to me | 24 |
Work while it is to-day! | 159 |
Y. |
Yea, I will extol Thee | 192 |
Youth, health, and strength are ours to-day | 336 |