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Text Identifier:"^praise_ye_the_lord_again_again$"

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ARLINGTON

Appears in 1,017 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Thomas A. Arne Incipit: 13332 11123 54332 Used With Text: "Praise ye the Lord," again, again
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SAWLEY

Appears in 225 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: J. J. Walch Incipit: 17653 47653 21716 Used With Text: Praise Ye the Lord Again
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MELODY

Appears in 136 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: A. Chapin Incipit: 51232 16551 23455 Used With Text: "Praise ye the Lord," again, again

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
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Praise Ye the Lord Again

Hymnal: Celestial Songs #42 (1921) First Line: "Praise ye the Lord!" again, again Languages: English Tune Title: SAWLEY

“Praise ye the Lord,” again, again

Hymnal: Hymns of Truth and Praise #31 (1971) Languages: English Tune Title: ARLINGTON
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"Praise ye the Lord," again, again

Author: Anonymous Hymnal: Songs for the Service of Prayer #54 (1880) Languages: English Tune Title: MELODY

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Mary Peters

1813 - 1856 Person Name: Mary Bowley Peters Author of ""Praise ye the Lord," again, again" in Hymns of Worship and Remembrance Also known as Mary P. Bowly ======= Peters, Mary, née Bowly, daughter of Richard Bowly, of Cirencester, was born in 1813, and subsequently married to the Rev. John McWilliam Peters, sometime Rector of Quennington, Gloucestershire, and died at Clifton, July 29, 1856. Her prose work, The World’s History from the Creation to the Accession of Queen Victoria, was published in seven volumes. Several of her hymns were contributed to the Plymouth Brethren's Psalms, Hymns, and Spiritual Songs, London, D. Walther, 1842. These with others, 58 in all, were published by Nisbet & Co., London, 1847, as Hymns intended to help the Communion of Saints. Dr. Walker introduced several from these collections into his Cheltenham Psalms & Hymns, 1855. Many of these have been repeated in Snepp's Songs of Grace & Glory, 1872. and other Church of England hymnbooks. These include, besides those annotated under their respective first lines :— i. From Psalms, Hymns, & Sacred Songs, 1842:— 1. Blessed Lord, our hearts are panting. Buria. Given in later collections as "Blessed Lord, our souls are longing." 2. How can there be one holy thought! Holiness through Christ. 3. Jesus, how much Thy Name unfolds. The Name of Jesus. 4. Lord, we see the day approaching. Second Advent. 5. 0 Lord, we know it matters not. Taught by the Spirit. 6. The murmurs of the wilderness. Praise to Jesus. 7. The saints awhile dispersed abroad. God within us. 8. Unworthy is thanksgiving. Jesus the Mediator. 9. Whom have we, Lord, but Thee. Christ All in All. 10. With thankful hearts we meet, 0 Lord. Public Worship. From her Hymns, &c, 1847:— 11. Earth's firmest ties will perish. Burial. 12. Enquire, my soul, enquire. Second Advent. 13. Hallelujah, we are hastening. Journeying Heavenward. 14. Holy Father, we address Thee. Holy Trinity. 15. Jesus, of Thee we ne'er would tire. Holy Communion. 16. Lord Jesus, in Thy Name alone. Holy Communion. 17. Lord, through the desert drear and wide. Prayer for Perseverance. 18. Many sons to glory bring. Security in Christ. 19. 0 Lord, whilst we confess the worth. Dead in Christ. Sometimes it begins with st. ii., "Dead to the world we here avow." 20. Our God is light, we do not go. Christ the Guide. 21. Praise ye the Lord, again, again. Public Worship. 22. Salvation to our God. Passiontide. 23. The holiest we enter. Public Worship. Sometimes given as "The holiest now we enter." 24. Through the love of God our Saviour. Security in Christ. 25. Thy grace, 0 Lord, to us hath shown. Offertory. 26. We're pilgrims in the wilderness. Life a Pilgrimage. -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

Anonymous

Author of ""Praise ye the Lord," again, again" in Songs for the Service of Prayer In some hymnals, the editors noted that a hymn's author is unknown to them, and so this artificial "person" entry is used to reflect that fact. Obviously, the hymns attributed to "Author Unknown" "Unknown" or "Anonymous" could have been written by many people over a span of many centuries.

Thomas Augustine Arne

1710 - 1778 Person Name: Thomas A. Arne Composer of "ARLINGTON" in Hymns of Worship and Remembrance Dr. Thomas Augustine Arne was born March 12, 1710, in London; became early celebrated as a composer, and established his reputation by settling Milton's "Comus" to music - light, airy, and original; he composed many songs, and nearly all his attempts were successful; died March 5, 1778, aged 68. A Dictionary of Musical Information by John W. Moore, Boston: Oliver, Ditson & Company, 1876