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Text Identifier:o_thou_great_teacher_from_the_skies

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O Thou Great Teacher from the Skies

Author: T. C. Upham Appears in 20 hymnals Topics: Almsgiving Used With Tune: MANOAH

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MANOAH

Appears in 660 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Rossini Incipit: 12321 77662 34321 Used With Text: O Thou Great Teacher from the Skies
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BEATITUDO

Appears in 451 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: J. B. Dykes Incipit: 12353 14367 13222 Used With Text: O thou great Teacher from the skies
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SILOAM

Appears in 233 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: I. B. Woodbury Incipit: 34536 53132 23532 Used With Text: O Thou great Teacher from the skies

Instances

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O Thou Great Teacher from the Skies

Author: T. C. Upham Hymnal: The Children's Hymnal #203 (1918) Languages: English Tune Title: [O thou great Teacher from the skies]
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O Thou Great Teacher from the Skies

Author: Thomas C. Upham Hymnal: The Cyber Hymnal #5377 Meter: 8.6.8.6 Lyrics: 1. O Thou great teacher from the skies, Who lived and died for men; Teach us with Thee to sympathize, And be as Thou wast then. 2. It was the glory of Thy heart, Whate’er Thou hadst to give; For others’ sufferings to impart, For others’ good to live. 3. Be Thou in us a living soul; Be Thou our spirit’s power; Its secret thought, its life’s control, To guide it every hour. 4. W need like Thee a spirit true, A just and generous mind, Which seeks, in all it has to do, The good of all mankind. Languages: English Tune Title: GARDINER
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O Thou Great Teacher from the Skies

Author: T. C. Upham Hymnal: The Friends' Hymnal, a Collection of Hymns and Tunes for the Public Worship of the Society #a551 (1908) Languages: English Tune Title: MANOAH

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

John Bacchus Dykes

1823 - 1876 Person Name: J. B. Dykes Composer of "BEATITUDO" in Hymns of Worship and Service As a young child John Bacchus Dykes (b. Kingston-upon-Hull' England, 1823; d. Ticehurst, Sussex, England, 1876) took violin and piano lessons. At the age of ten he became the organist of St. John's in Hull, where his grandfather was vicar. After receiving a classics degree from St. Catherine College, Cambridge, England, he was ordained in the Church of England in 1847. In 1849 he became the precentor and choir director at Durham Cathedral, where he introduced reforms in the choir by insisting on consistent attendance, increasing rehearsals, and initiating music festivals. He served the parish of St. Oswald in Durham from 1862 until the year of his death. To the chagrin of his bishop, Dykes favored the high church practices associated with the Oxford Movement (choir robes, incense, and the like). A number of his three hundred hymn tunes are still respected as durable examples of Victorian hymnody. Most of his tunes were first published in Chope's Congregational Hymn and Tune Book (1857) and in early editions of the famous British hymnal, Hymns Ancient and Modern. Bert Polman

William Gardiner

1770 - 1853 Composer of "GARDINER" in The Cyber Hymnal William Gardiner (b. Leicester, England, 1770; d. Leicester, 1853) The son of an English hosiery manufacturer, Gardiner took up his father's trade in addition to writing about music, composing, and editing. Having met Joseph Haydn and Ludwig van Beethoven on his business travels, Gardiner then proceeded to help popularize their compositions, especially Beethoven's, in England. He recorded his memories of various musicians in Music and Friends (3 volumes, 1838-1853). In the first two volumes of Sacred Melodies (1812, 1815), Gardiner turned melodies from composers such as Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven into hymn tunes in an attempt to rejuvenate the singing of psalms. His work became an important model for American editors like Lowell Mason (see Mason's Boston Handel and Haydn Collection, 1822), and later hymnbook editors often turned to Gardiner as a source of tunes derived from classical music. Bert Polman

I. B. Woodbury

1819 - 1858 Composer of "SILOAM" in Songs for the Lord's House Woodbury, Isaac Baker. (Beverly, Massachusetts, October 23, 1819--October 26, 1858, Columbia, South Carolina). Music editor. As a boy, he studied music in nearby Boston, then spent his nineteenth year in further study in London and Paris. He taught for six years in Boston, traveling throughout New England with the Bay State Glee Club. He later lived at Bellow Falls, Vermont, where he organized the New Hampshire and Vermont Musical Association. In 1849 he settled in New York City where he directed the music at the Rutgers Street Church until ill-health caused him to resign in 1851. He became editor of the New York Musical Review and made another trip to Europe in 1852 to collect material for the magazine. in the fall of 1858 his health broke down from overwork and he went south hoping to regain his strength, but died three days after reaching Columbia, South Carolina. He published a number of tune-books, of which the Dulcimer, of New York Collection of Sacred Music, went through a number of editions. His Elements of Musical Composition, 1844, was later issued as the Self-instructor in Musical Composition. He also assisted in the compilation of the Methodist Hymn Book of 1857. --Leonard Ellinwood, DNAH Archives