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Tune Identifier:"^old_cornish_carol$"

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EASTERTIME (SANDYS)

Appears in 24 hymnals Tune Sources: English carol Incipit: 51712 34543 23171 Used With Text: 時方夜半,橄欖山頭, ('Tis midnight, and on Olive's brow)

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The Church Is Wherever God's People

Author: Carol Rose Ikeler Meter: 12.10.12.11 Appears in 10 hymnals First Line: The church is wherever God's people are praising Topics: Church in the World Discipleship: Witness; Children Praising; Church Dedication of a Building; Church Triumphant; Social Concerns; Witness; Epiphany 4 Year A; Proper 28 Year C Used With Tune: OLD CORNISH CAROL
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It is the Joyful Easter Time

Author: A. M. Milner-Barry Meter: 8.7.8.7 Appears in 7 hymnals Lyrics: 1 It is the joyful Easter time, let all sing Hallelujah! The merry bells ring out their chime, "But now hat Christ arisen." 2 The Church is bright with flowers gay, And all Christ's people praise and pray, For Jesus rose on Easter Day; Sing joyful Hallelujah! Topics: Easter Used With Tune: EASTERTIME

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

The Church Is Wherever God's People

Author: Carol Rose Ikeler Hymnal: Voices United #579 (1996) Meter: 12.10.12.11 First Line: The church is wherever God's people are praising Topics: Church in the World Discipleship: Witness; Children Praising; Church Dedication of a Building; Church Triumphant; Social Concerns; Witness; Epiphany 4 Year A; Proper 28 Year C Tune Title: OLD CORNISH CAROL

The Church Is Wherever God's People

Author: Carol Rose Ikeler, 1920- Hymnal: The Hymn Book of the Anglican Church of Canada and the United Church of Canada #148 (1971) Meter: 12.10.12.11 First Line: The church is wherever God's people are praising Tune Title: OLD CORNISH CAROL
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The glad Ascensiontide is here

Author: Alda Milner-Barry Hymnal: The Winchester Hymn Supplement #131 (1928) Languages: English Tune Title: CORNISH

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William B. Tappan

1794 - 1849 Author of "時方夜半,橄欖山頭, ('Tis midnight, and on Olive's brow)" in 生命聖詩 - Hymns of Life, 1986 See also in: Hymn Writers of the Church ============================= Tappan, William Bingham, was born at Beverley, Massachusetts, Oct. 29, 1794, and was apprenticed to a clockmaker at Boston in 1810. In 1815 he removed to Philadelphia, where he was engaged in business for a time. In 1822 he was engaged as Superintendent of the American Sunday School Union. In 1840 he was licensed to preach with the Congregational body, his sphere of usefulness on behalf of Sunday Schools being thereby considerably widened. He died suddenly, of cholera, at West Needham, Massachusetts, June 18,1849. His poetical works include:— (1) New England and Other Poems, 1819; (2) Poems, 1822; (3) Lyrics, 1822; (4) Poetry of the Heart, 1845; (5) Sacred and Miscellaneous Poems, 1848; (6) Poetry of Life, 1848; (7) The Sunday School and Other Poems, 1848; (8) Late and Early Poems, 1849; (9) Sacred Poems, 1849; (10) Gems of Sacred Poetry, 1860. Of these works the earliest are the most-important. His hymns in common use include the following:— 1. Holy be this as was the place. Public Worship. Included in his Lyrics, 1822; and given in Lyra Sacra Americana, 1868. 2. The ransomed spirit to her home. Love. Appeared in Nettleton's Village Hymns, 1824. This is probably his best hymn. 3. There is an hour of hallowed peace. Heaven, a Place of Rest. Given in his New England and Other Poems, 1819. 4. There is an hour of peaceful rest. Heaven a Place of Rest. The author's account of this hymn in his Gems of Sacred Poetry, 1860, is that it "was written by me, in Philadelphia, in the summer of 1818, for the Franklin Gazette, edited by Richard Bache, Esq., and was introduced by him to the public in terms sufficiently flattering to a young man who then certainly lacked confidence in himself. The piece was republished in England and on the Continent, in various newspapers and magazines, and was also extensively circulated in my own native land, where it has found a place in several hymn and music-books. It was published in my first volume of Poems, at Philadelphia, in 1819, and soon after was set to music by A. P. Heinrich, Esq., in the same city." It is in Lyra Sacra Americana, 1868, p. 265. 5. 'Tis midnight, and on Olive's brow. Gethsemane. Appeared in his Poems, 1822, and repeated in Lyra Sacra Americana, 1868, and several hymnals. 6. Wake, isles of the south, your redemption is near. Missions. Appeared in the Lyrics, 1822. It was sung at the wharf in New Haven at the embarkation of Missionaries for the Sandwich Islands, 1822. 7. When sorrow casts its shades around us. Resignation. From his New England and Other Poems, 1819. It is in Lyra Sacra Americana, 1868. 8. While the solemn note of time. Saturday Evening. Published in his Poems, 1822; repeated in Lyra Sacra Americana, 1868, and thence into Thring's Collection, 1882. [Rev F. M. Bird, M.A.] --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

Norman Mealy

1923 - 1987 Person Name: Norman Mealy (b. 1923) Harmonizer of "MY DANCING DAY" in More Hymns and Spiritual Songs

Alda M. Milner-Barry

1875 - 1940 Person Name: Alda Milner-Barry Author of "The glad Ascensiontide is here" in The Winchester Hymn Supplement
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