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Tune Identifier:"^precious_savior_thou_hast_savd_boole$"

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[Hark! what mean those holy voices]

Appears in 39 hymnals Incipit: 51334 33113 27672 Used With Text: Hark! what mean those holy voices

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Full Salvation

Author: Louise M. Rouse Appears in 75 hymnals First Line: Precious Saviour, thou hast sav'd me Refrain First Line: Glory, glory, Jesus saves me Used With Tune: [Precious Saviour, thou hast sav'd me]
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Heil dem Lamm

Appears in 6 hymnals First Line: Preis sei Dir, mein teuer Heiland Refrain First Line: Preis sei Dir, mein teurer Heiland Used With Tune: [Preis sei Dir, mein teuer Heiland]
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Full Salvation

Author: L. M. R. Appears in 4 hymnals First Line: Precious Jesus, Thou hast saved me Refrain First Line: Glory, glory, Jesus saves me Used With Tune: [Precious Jesus, Thou hast saved me]

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
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Full Salvation

Author: Louise M. Rouse Hymnal: Joyful Songs of Salvation #51 (1903) First Line: Precious Savior, Thou hast sav'd me Refrain First Line: Glory, glory, Jesus saves me Languages: English Tune Title: [Precious Savior, Thou hast sav'd me]
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Full Salvation

Author: Louise M. Rouse Hymnal: The Evangel of Song #9 (1889) First Line: Precious Saviour, Thou hast sav'd me Refrain First Line: Glory, glory, Jesus saves me Languages: English Tune Title: [Precious Saviour, Thou hast sav'd me]
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Full Salvation

Author: Louise M. Rouse Hymnal: Revival Special #22 (1905) First Line: Precious Saviour, Thou hast sav'd me Refrain First Line: Glory, glory, Jesus saves me Languages: English Tune Title: [Precious Saviour, Thou hast sav'd me]

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Louisa M. R. Stead

1850 - 1917 Person Name: Louise M. Rouse Author of "Full Salvation" in Beulah Songs Louisa (Louise) Maria Rouse Stead Wodehouse b. Dover, Kent, 1 February 1846 [registered Louisa Maria Rouse, but often known as Louise] d. Penkridge, Southern Rhodesia, 18 January 1917 She grew up in England, in Kent and Sussex, becoming governess to a family in Lyminge, Kent, before emigrating to America, c. 1871. While living in Cincinnati, Ohio, she attended a camp meeting in Urbana, Ohio, and wrote her first hymn, ‘Precious Saviour, thou hast saved me’, which was published in Winnowed Hymns, 1873, with music by Dora Boole. In September 1873 she married George Stead, of Hempstead, Long Island, at St Paul Methodist Episcopal Church, Cincinnati, and moved to Hempstead. Her verses, ‘Saved from the power and the bondage of sin’ were published in The Advocate of Christian Holiness, August 1875. She was apparently in England from April to July 1876, with their infant daughter, Louise, when her husband drowned in Hempstead Bay in May 1876, while saving the life of his little boy (a son from his previous marriage). In 1880, she was still living in Hempstead with Louise (aged 5), but shortly afterwards went to South Africa, where she married Robert Wodehouse in Port Elizabeth in January 1882. Her best known-hymn, ‘Tis so sweet to trust in Jesus’, with music by William J. Kirkpatrick, was published in Songs of Triumph, 1882. They served as missionaries in Africa for about 15 years, before returning to Long Island, USA, where he was pastor of the Methodist Episcopal Church at East Meadow for several years. They returned to Africa in January 1901, to work in Umtali, Rhodesia. After retiring in 1911, she lived near Mutambara mission station, fifty miles from Umtali. Her daughter Louise (sometimes known as Lillie), followed her mother to Africa, where she married the Rev. David A. Carson, and was able to care for her mother in her later years. Gordon Taylor (research for Companion to the 2015 Song Book of the Salvation Army)

Anonymous

Translator of "A Jesús Alabaremos" in The Cyber Hymnal 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.

Dora Boole

Person Name: Miss Dora Boole Composer of "[Precious Saviour, thou hast sav'd me]" in Beulah Songs