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Search Results

Tune Identifier:"^no_tears_in_yonder_home_woodbury$"

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Tunes

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[Stars of the summer night]

Appears in 21 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Isaac B. Woodbury Incipit: 54512 34313 22 Used With Text: Stars of the Summer Night

Texts

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Stars of the Summer Night

Author: Henry W. Longfellow Appears in 11 hymnals Used With Tune: [Stars of the summer night]
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No Tears in Yonder Home

Author: J. H. Entwisle Appears in 10 hymnals Used With Tune: [No tears in yonder home]
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Thou Art My All

Author: W. H. Ruebush Appears in 5 hymnals First Line: I need Thee Christ my all Used With Tune: [I need Thee Christ my all]

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
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No Tears

Author: F. E. Belden Hymnal: Christ in Song #949 (1908) First Line: No tears in yonder home Lyrics: 1. No tears in yonder home; Sorrow can never come; Joy echoes thro' the dome; Love rules the endless years, No tears, No tears in yonder home. 2. No pain in yonder home; Sickness has sealed her room; Health in immortal bloom Fills all the wide domain: No pain, No pain in yonder home. 3. No death in yonder home; No parting hour of gloom; Death lies dead in the tomb, Whence rose the dust of Faith: No death, No death in yonder home. 4. Clasping again our own, Knowing as we are known, Walking no more alone, Hail sinless Eden years! No tears, No tears in yonder home. Topics: The Home Eternal; Special Selections Male Voices Languages: English Tune Title: [No tears in yonder home]
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No Tears In Yonder Home

Author: J. Howard Entwisle Hymnal: Exalted Praise #89 (1901) Lyrics: 1 No tears in yonder home, There, all serene and bright, Sorrow and pain are o'er, Sickness and death—no more; No tears, no tears, but peace and light. 2 Blest home beyond death's sea, What sacred pleasures there! There—on the golden street Kindred and friends to greet; Blest home, blest home, so bright and fair! 3 Jesus, my all in all, Keep me till life is past; Though shadows 'round me fall, No darkness can appall; No fears, no fears within thy fold. Languages: English Tune Title: [No tears in yonder home]
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No Tears in Yonder Home

Author: J. H. Entwisle Hymnal: Bright Melodies #45 (1899) Languages: English Tune Title: [No tears in yonder home]

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

F. E. Belden

1858 - 1945 Author of "No Tears" in Songs for the King's Business Belden was born in Battle Creek, Michigan in 1858. He began writing music in his late teenage years after moving to California with his family. For health reasons he later moved to Colorado. He returned to Battle Creek with his wife in the early 1880s, and there he became involved in Adventist Church publishing. F. E. Belden wrote many hymn tunes, gospel songs, and related texts in the early years of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. Belden was able to rapidly write both music and poetry together which enabled him to write a song to fit a sermon while it was still being delivered. He also wrote songs for evang­el­ist Bil­ly Sun­day. Though Belden’s later years were marred by misunderstandings with the church leadership over his royalties, he did donate his papers and manuscripts to the church’s seminary at his death. He died on December 2, 1945 in Battle Creek, Michigan. N.N., Hymnary. Source: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/b/e/l/belden_fe.htm

E. A. Hoffman

1839 - 1929 Person Name: Rev. Elisha A. Hoffman Author of "Be Strong to Dare and Do" in Songs of the New Crusade Elisha Hoffman (1839-1929) after graduating from Union Seminary in Pennsylvania was ordained in 1868. As a minister he was appointed to the circuit in Napoleon, Ohio in 1872. He worked with the Evangelical Association's publishing arm in Cleveland for eleven years. He served in many chapels and churches in Cleveland and in Grafton in the 1880s, among them Bethel Home for Sailors and Seamen, Chestnut Ridge Union Chapel, Grace Congregational Church and Rockport Congregational Church. In his lifetime he wrote more than 2,000 gospel songs including"Leaning on the everlasting arms" (1894). The fifty song books he edited include Pentecostal Hymns No. 1 and The Evergreen, 1873. Mary Louise VanDyke ============ Hoffman, Elisha Albright, author of "Have you been to Jesus for the cleansing power?" (Holiness desired), in I. D. Sankey's Sacred Songs and Solos, 1881, was born in Pennsylvania, May 7, 1839. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, Appendix, Part II (1907) ==============

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

1807 - 1882 Person Name: Longfellow Author of "Stars of the Summer Night" in Sacred and Secular Selections Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth , D.C.L. was born at Portland, Maine, Feb. 27, 1807, and graduated at Bowdoin College, 1825. After residing in Europe for four years to qualify for the Chair of Modern Languages in that College, he entered upon the duties of the same. In 1835 he removed to Harvard, on his election as Professor of Modern Languages and Belles-Lettres. He retained that Professorship to 1854. His literary reputation is great, and his writings are numerous and well known. His poems, many of which are as household words in all English-speaking countries, display much learning and great poetic power. A few of these poems and portions of others have come into common use as hymns, but a hymn-writer in the strict sense of that term he was not and never claimed to be. His pieces in common use as hymns include:— 1. Alas, how poor and little worth. Life a Race. Translated from the Spanish of Don Jorge Manrique (d. 1479), in Longfellow's Poetry of Spain, 1833. 2. All is of God; if He but wave His hand. God All and in All. From his poem "The Two Angels," published in his Birds of Passage, 1858. It is in the Boston Hymns of the Spirit, 1864, &c. 3. Blind Bartimeus at the gate. Bartimeus. From his Miscellaneous Poems, 1841, into G. W. Conder's 1874 Appendix to the Leeds Hymn Book. 4. Christ to the young man said, "Yet one thing more." Ordination. Written for his brother's (S. Longfellow) ordination in 1848, and published in Seaside and Fireside, 1851. It was given in an altered form as "The Saviour said, yet one thing more," in H. W. Beecher's Plymouth Collection, 1855. 5. Sown the dark future through long generations. Peace. This, the closing part of his poem on "The Arsenal at Springfield," published in his Belfrey of Bruges, &c, 1845, was given in A Book of Hymns, 1848, and repeated in several collections. 6. Into the silent land. The Hereafter. A translation from the German. 7. Tell me not in mournful numbers. Psalm of Life. Published in his Voices of the Night, 1839, as "A Psalm of Life: What the heart of the Young Man said to the Psalmist." It is given in several hymnals in Great Britain and America. In some collections it begins with st. ii., "Life is real! Life is earnest." The universal esteem in which Longfellow was held as a poet and a man was marked in a special manner by his bust being placed in that temple of honour, Westminster Abbey. [Rev. F. M. Bird, M.A.] --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907), p. 685 ======================= http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Wadsworth_Longfellow
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