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Text Identifier:"^farewell_brother_deep_and_lowly$"

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Farewell, Brother

Author: Edmund H. Sears Appears in 14 hymnals First Line: Farewell, brother, deep and lowly

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Farewell, brother! deep and lowly

Hymnal: Kind Words #17 (1871) Lyrics: 1 Farewell, brother! deep and lowly, Rest thee on thy bed of clay; Kindred spirits, angels holy, Bore thy heavenward soul away. 2 Sad we gave thee to the number, Laid in yonder icy halls; And shove thy peaceful slumber, Many a shower of sorrow falls. 3 Hear our prayer, O God of glory, Lowly breathed in sorrow's song; Bleeding hearts He bare before thee, Come, in holy trust made strong! 4 Hark! a voice moves nearer, stronger, From the shadowy land we dread; Mortals! mortals! seek no longer, Those that live among the dead." 5 Farewell, brother! soon we'll meet thee, Where no cloud of sorrow rolls; For glad tidings float, how sweetly, From the glorious land of souls. 6 Death's cold gloom now parts asunder, Lo! the folding shades are gone; Mourner, upward! yonder, yonder! God's broad day comes pouring on. Languages: English

Farewell, brother, deep and lowly

Author: Edmund H. Sears, 1810-1876; Edmund Hamilton Sears Hymnal: Glad Tidings #d21 (1867) Languages: English

Farewell, brother, deep and lowly

Author: Edmund H. Sears, 1810-1876; Edmund Hamilton Sears Hymnal: Kind Words #d21 (1891)

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Edmund H. Sears

1810 - 1876 Person Name: Edmund H. Sears, 1810-1876 Author of "Farewell, brother, deep and lowly" in Hymns for Schools and Families Edmund Hamilton Sears was born in Berkshire [County], Massachusetts, in 1810; graduated at Union College, Schenectady, in 1834, and at the Theological School of Harvard University, in 1837. He became pastor of the Unitarian Society in Wayland, Mass., in 1838; removed to Lancaster in 1840; but on account of ill health was obliged to retire from the active duties of the ministry in 1847; since then, residing in Wayland, he devoted himself to literature. He has published several works. --Annotations of the Hymnal, Charles Hutchins, M.A., 1872 ======================= Sears, Edmund Hamilton, D.D., son of Joseph Sears, was born at Sandisfield, Berkshire County, Massachusetts, April 6, 1810, and educated at Union College, Schenectady, N.Y., where he graduated in 1834; and at the Theological School at Cambridge. In 1838 he became pastor of the First Church (Unitarian) at Wayland, Massachusetts; then at Lancaster in the same State, in 1840; again at Wayland, in 1847; and finally at Weston, Massachusetts, in 1865. He died at Weston, Jan. 14, 1876. He published:— (1) Regeneration, 1854; (2) Pictures of the Olden Time, 1857; (3) Athanasia, or Foregleams of Immortality, 1858, enlarged ed., 1872; (4) The Fourth Gospel the Heart of Christ; (5) Sermons and Songs of the Christian Life, 1875, in which his hymns are collected. Also co-editor of the Monthly Religious Magazine. Of his hymns the following are in common use:— 1. Calm on the listening ear of night. Christmas. This hymn was first published in its original form, in the Boston Observer, 1834; afterwards, in the Christian Register, in 1835; subsequently it was emended by the author, and, as thus emended, was reprinted entire in the Monthly Magazine, vol. xxxv. Its use is extensive. 2. It came upon the midnight clear. Christmas. "Rev. Dr. Morison writes to us, Sears's second Christmas hymn was sent to me as editor of the Christian Register, I think, in December, 1849. I was very much delighted with it, and before it came out in the Register, read it at a Christmas celebration of Dr. Lunt's Sunday School in Quincy. I always feel that, however poor my Christmas sermon may be, the reading and singing of this hymn are enough to make up for all deficiences.'" 3. Ho, ye that rest beneath the rock. Charitable Meetings on behalf of Children. Appeared in Longfellow and Johnson's Hymns of the Spirit, Boston, 1864, in 2 stanzas of 8 lines. Dr. Sears's two Christmas hymns rank with the best on that holy season in the English language. Although a member of the Unitarian body, his views were rather Swedenborgian than Unitarian. He held always to the absolute Divinity of Christ. [Rev. F. M. Bird, M.A.] --Excerpts from John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)
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