Shepherd of the ransomed flock. [The Good Shepherd.] In Miss Dorothy A. Thrupp's Thoughts for the Day, 1837, First series, p. 8, are the following lines, sometimes given as a hymn in 2 stanzas of 4 lines:—
"Shepherd of the little flock,
Lead me by the shadowing rock ;
Where the richest pasture grows;
Where the living water flows;
By that pure and silent stream,
Sheltered from the scorching beam,
Shepherd, Saviour, Guardian, Guide,
Keep me ever near Thy side."
In the Rev. T. Darling's Hymns for the Church of England, 1855, lines 1-4 of the above were given with alterations as the opening of the hymn "Shepherd of the ransomed flock," the remaining four stanzas being by Mr. Darling. This form of the hymn was repeated, with the addition of a doxology, in the 1863 Appendix to the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge Psalms & Hymns, and again in other collections. In Mr. Darling's Hymns, &c, 1887, it is condensed to 4 stanzas. It is specially adapted to the 2nd Sunday after Easter. [William T. Brooke]
--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)