Dear Refuge of my [the] weary soul. Anne Steele. [God the Refuge.] First published in her Poems on Subjects chiefly Devotional, 1760, vol. i. p. 144, in 8 stanzas of 4 lines, and headed, "God the only Refuge of the troubled mind" (2nd edition 1780), and in D. Sedgwick's reprint of her Hymns, 1863, p. 89. It was given also in the Bristol Baptist Collection of Ash & Evans, 1769, and in Bickersteth's ChristianPsalmody, 1833, and was thus brought into congrega¬tional use. It is included in numerous hymnals, both in Great Britain and America. In some collections, as the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge Psalms & Hymns, 1853-69, it is given as, "Thou Refuge of my weary soul;" and again, as in Kennedy, 1863, "Thou Refuge of the weary soul."
--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)