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Text Identifier:"^when_forth_from_egypts_trembling_strand$"

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When forth from Egypt's trembling strand

Author: G. Burgess Hymnal: The Voice of Praise #75 (1873) Meter: 8.6.8.6 Lyrics: 1 When forth from Egypt's trembling strand The tribes of Israel sped, And Jacob in the stranger's land Departing banners spread;-- 2 The sea beheld, and, struck with dread, Rolled all its billows back; And Jordan, through his deepest bed, Revealed their destined track. 3 What ailed thee, O thou mighty sea, And rolled thy waves in dread? What bade thy tide, O Jordan, flee, And bare its deepest bed? 4 O earth, before the Lord, the God Of Jacob, trembling still; Who makes the waste a watered sod, The flint of gushing rill. Topics: Attributes of God Preserver; Implicit Confidence
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When forth from Egypt's trembling strand

Author: G. Burgess Hymnal: Plymouth Collection #a160 (1863)
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When forth from Egypt's trembling strand

Hymnal: Psalms and Hymns, for Christian Use and Worship #P114.2 (1845)

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George Burgess

1809 - 1866 Author of "When forth from Egypt's trembling strand" Burgess, George, D.D. Bishop Burgess was born at Providence, Rhode Island, Oct. 31, 1809, and graduated at Brown University, 1826, where he was for some time a tutor. After studying for two years in Germany, he took Holy Orders, and in 1834 became Rector of Christ Church, Hartford. In 1847 he was consecrated Bishop of Maine, and also entered upon the Rectory of Christ Church, Gardiner. He died in Haiti, April 3, 1866. His Life was published by bis brother in 18G9. His works include The Book of Psalms translated into English Verse, 1839; The American Metrical Psalter, N. Y., 1864; and Poems, Hartford, 1868. His Psalms and Hymns in use are;—- 1. Lord, in Thy Name we spread the sail, Sailor’s Hymn. This hymn is included in his Poems, 1868, p. 268, but is of unknown date and origin. The hymn, "While o'er the deep Thy servants sail," is an altered form of this hymn to be sung on behalf of sailors. It was apparently rewritten for the Connecticut Psalms and Hymns, 1845. 2. The harvest dawn is near. Ps. cxxvi. From his version of Ps. cxxvi., Book of Psalms, &c, 1839, beginning with st. v. Also his American Metrical Psalter, p. 250. It is widely used. 3. The floods, 0 Lord, lift up their voice. From Ps. xciii. in his Book of Psalms, 1839, stanza iii., found in his American Metrical Psalter, p. 179. 4. When forth from Egypt's trembling strand. Ps. cxiv. From his Book of Psalms, 1839, and Psalter, 1864. It has been included in Spurgeon's Our Own Hymn Book, 1866. Of these hymns Nos. 1 and 2 are found in almost every recent American collection but that of the Protestant Episcopal Church. [Rev. F. M. Bird, M.A.] -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)
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