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Text Identifier:"^how_should_the_morning_of_my_days$"

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How should the morning of my days

Author: Susanna Harrison Appears in 6 hymnals

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How should the morning of my days

Author: Susanna Harrison Hymnal: A New Selection of Hymns #XXX (1813) Languages: English
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How should the morning of my days

Hymnal: Songs in the Night (2nd ed.) #3 (1802)
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How should the morning of my days

Hymnal: Hymns for Family Worship with Prayers for Every Day in the Week, Selected from Various Authors #27 (1813) Languages: English

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Susannah Harrison

1752 - 1784 Person Name: Susanna Harrison Author of "How should the morning of my days" Harrison, Susanna, invalided from her work as a domestic servant at the age of 20, published Songs in the Night, 1780. This included 133 hymns, and passed through ten editions. She is known by "Begone, my worldly cares, away," and "O happy souls that love the Lord." Born in 1752 and died Aug. 3, 1784. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907) ================================ Harrison, Susanna. (1752--August 3, 1784, Ipswich, England). The preface to the first edition of her collected hymns, Songs in the night, 1780, states that she was "a very obscure young woman, and quite destitute of the advantages of education, as well as under great bodily affliction. Her father dying when she was young, and leaving a large family unprovided for, she went out to service at sixteen years of age." In August 1722, she became ill, probably with tuberculosis, and returned to her mother's home. She taught herself to write and in her remaining years she wrote 142 hymns which, with a few meditations, were published as Songs in the night by an anonymous editor, perhaps her rector. So sincere yet vivid is the expression of her faith as she faced certain death that by 1847 there had been eleven editions printed in England and seven additional ones in America. Individual hymns remained popular in America during much of the nineteenth century due to the constant preoccupation with death in both urban and frontier life, reflected in the large sections of funeral hymns in most hymnals. --Leonard Ellinwood, DNAH Archives