The Hesperian Harp (William Hauser)/List
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List of Works
No. | Pg. | Title | Composer | Year | First Line | Author | AYR | Key | Meter | Vo. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | Old Hundred | 1551 | He reigns; the Lord, the Savior reigns | Isaac Watts | 1719 | A | L.M. | 4 | |
2 | 2a | Aylesbury | Book of Psalmody | 1717 | The Lord my shepherd is | Isaac Watts | 1719 | a | S.M. | 4 |
3 | 2b | Windham | 1785 | Broad is the road that leads to death | Isaac Watts | 1709 | f | L.M. | 4 | |
4 | 3 | Primrose | 1812 | Salvation, O the joyful sound | Isaac Watts | 1709 | A | C.M. | 4 | |
5 | 3b | Rochester | 1722 | Come, let us join our cheerful songs | Isaac Watts | 1707 | A | C.M. | 4 | |
6 | 4a | Rockbridge | 1812 | Sweet is the work, my God, my King | Isaac Watts | 1719 | C | L.M. | 4 | |
7 | 4b | Mear | Set of Tunes | 1720 | In God's own house pronounce his praise | Isaac Watts | 1719 | G | C.M. | 4 |
8 | 5a | Wakefield | 1835 | Come, weary souls, with sin distressed | Anne Steele | 1760 | F | L.M. | 4 | |
9 | 5b | Supplication | 1810 | Show pity, Lord! O Lord, forgive | Isaac Watts | 1719 | a | L.M. | 4 | |
10 | 6a | Solemnity | 1817 | Twas on that dark and doleful night | Isaac Watts | 1711 | a | L.M. | 4 | |
11 | 6b | Solemnity | 1817 | He dies, the friend of sinners dies | Isaac Watts | 1707 | a | L.M. | 3 | |
12 | 7a | Devotion | 1818 | Sweet is the work, my God, my King | Isaac Watts | 1719 | C | L.M. | 4 | |
13 | 7b | Devotion | 1787 | Sweet is the day of sacred rest | Isaac Watts | 1719 | C | L.M. | 4 | |
14 | 8a | Bourbon | Beauties of Harmony | 1814 | Twas on that dark and solemn night | Isaac Watts | 1711 | a | L.M. | 3 |
15 | 8b | Dismission | Beauties of Harmony | 1814 | I cannot bear thy absence, Lord | Isaac Watts | 1709 | a | L.M. | 3 |
16 | 9a | Wells | 1722 | Ye nations round the earth, rejoice | Isaac Watts | 1719 | F | L.M. | 4 | |
17 | 9b | Paris | 1779 | This spacious earth is all the Lord's | Isaac Watts | 1719 | A | L.M. | 4 | |
18 | 10a | Philippi | 1806 | Praise God from whom all blessings flow | Thomas Ken | 1674 | C | L.M. | 4 | |
19 | 10b | Jehalah | He dies, the friend of sinners dies | Isaac Watts | 1707 | A | L.M. | 4 | ||
20 | 11a | Tender Thought | 1816 | Arise, my tender thoughts, arise | Philip Doddridge | 1755 | a | L.M. | 4 | |
21 | 11b | Angel's Hymn | 1623 | The God of our salvation hears | Isaac Watts | 1719 | G | L.M. | 4 | |
22 | 12a | Portugal | 1778 | Praise to the Lord, of boundless might | Philip Doddridge | 1755 | G | L.M. | 4 | |
23 | 12b | Bridgewater | 1782 | From all that dwell below the skies | Isaac Watts | 1719 | C | L.M. | 4 | |
24 | 13a | Chester | 1770 | Let the high heavens your songs invite | Philip Doddridge | 1755 | F | L.M. | 4 | |
25 | 13b | Davisson's Retirement | 1820 | Jesus! and shall it ever be | Joseph Grigg | 1765 | f# | L.M. | 4 | |
26 | 14a | Williamstown | Beauties of Psalmody | 1786 | Show pity, Lord! O Lord, forgive | Isaac Watts | 1719 | a | L.M. | 4 |
27 | 14b | Litchfield | Musical Primer | 1793 | How soft the words my Savior speaks | Samuel Stennett | 1787 | A | L.M. | 4 |
28 | 15a | Gospel Armor | 1731 | Stand up, my soul, shake off thy fears | Isaac Watts | 1709 | F | L.M. | 4 | |
29 | 15b | Passover | 1821 | Twas on that dark and doleful night | Isaac Watts | 1711 | a | L.M. | 4 | |
30 | 16a | Iredell | 1818 | Oft have I turned my eyes within | Samuel Stennett | 1787 | C | L.M. | 4 | |
31 | 16b | The Humble Penitent | 1826 | Stay, thou insulted spirit, stay | Charles Wesley | 1749 | C | L.M. | 4 | |
32 | 17a | Salem | 1817 | He dies! the Friend of sinners dies | Isaac Watts | 1707 | b | L.M. | 4 | |
33 | 17b | Glasgow | 1813 | This life's a dream, an empty show | Isaac Watts | 1719 | G | L.M. | 4 | |
34 | 18 | Sweet Solitude | Southern Harmony | 1835 | Sweet solitude, thou blessed queen | Hannah More | 1782 | A | L.M. | 4 |
35 | 19 | Dover | 1792 | My soul, the great Creator praise | Isaac Watts | 1719 | C | L. M. D. | 4 | |
36 | 20a | New Jersey | 1789 | Lord, what was man when made at first | Isaac Watts | 1719 | e | L.M. | 4 | |
37 | 20b | Duke Street | 1793 | Lord, when thou didst ascend on high | Isaac Watts | 1719 | F | L.M. | 4 | |
38 | 21a | Park Street | 1815 | Wake, O my soul, and hail the morn | Anonymous | 1806 | A | L.M. | 4 | |
39 | 21b | Kedron | 1799 | Thou man of griefs, remember me | Charles Wesley | 1762 | e | L.M. | 4 | |
40 | 22a | Melinda | 1816 | In vain the wealthy mortals toil | Isaac Watts | 1707 | e | L. M. D. | 4 | |
41 | 22b | Whitestown | 1800 | Where nothing dwell but beasts of prey | Isaac Watts | 1719 | e | L.M. | 4 | |
42 | 24 | The Voice of Nature | 1793 | The spacious firmament on high | Joseph Addison | 1712 | C | L.M. | 4 | |
43 | 25 | Ballstown | 1809 | Great God, attend while Zion sings | Isaac Watts | 1719 | F | L.M. | 4 | |
44 | 26a | Russia | 1787 | My spirit looks to God alone | Isaac Watts | 1719 | a | L.M. | 4 | |
45 | 26b | Caldwell | 1801 | Sweet is the work, my God, my King | Isaac Watts | 1719 | D | L.M. | 4 | |
46 | 27a | Hallelujah | 1820 | He come, he comes, the Judge severe | Charles Wesley | 1758 | G | 86.86.87. | 4 | |
47 | 27b | Hebron | 1823 | Thus far the Lord hath led me on | Isaac Watts | 1707 | B♭ | L.M. | 4 | |
48 | 28 | Clamanda | Christian Harmony | 1805 | Say now, ye lovely social band | Anonymous | 1806 | e | L.M. | 4 |
49 | 29 | Bonnie Doon | 1831 | When marshalled on the nightly plain | Henry White | 1812 | G | L. M. D. | 4 | |
50 | 30a | Arnheim | 1791 | The Lord is come, the heavens proclaim | Isaac Watts | 1719 | D | L.M. | 3 | |
51 | 30b | Vesperia | Soft be the gently breathing notes | William Collyer | 1812 | B♭ | L.M. | 3 | ||
52 | 31a | Carvosso | 1848 | Holy and true and righteous Lord | Charles Wesley | 1742 | C | L.M. | 4 | |
53 | 31b | Ortonville | 1837 | Being of beings, God of love | Charles Wesley | 1739 | B♭ | C.M. | 4 | |
54 | 32a | Immensity | 1806 | Within thy circling power I stand | Isaac Watts | 1719 | a | L.M. | 4 | |
55 | 32b | Garden | 1800 | God, from his cloudy cistern, pours | Isaac Watts | 1719 | a | L.M. | 4 | |
56 | 33 | Prospect | 1835 | Why should we start and fear to die | Isaac Watts | 1709 | C | L.M. | 3 | |
57 | 34a | Haines | 1848 | Eternal power, whose high abode | Isaac Watts | 1706 | F | L.M. | 4 | |
58 | 34b | Carlisle | 1789 | Deep in our hearts, let us record | Isaac Watts | 1719 | a | L.M. | 4 | |
59 | 35 | Isle of Wight | Collection of Psalm Tunes in Four Parts | 1711 | Lord, shall we part with gold for dross | Anonymous | 1769 | a | C.M. | 4 |
60 | 36a | Jonesborough | 1825 | Jesus, my all, to heaven is gone | John Cennick | 1740 | a | L.M. | 3 | |
61 | 36b | Loving-Kindness | 1830 | Awake, my soul, to joyful lays | Samuel Medley | 1782 | A | L.M. | 3 | |
62 | 37 | Highbridge | Missouri Harmony | 1820 | Though every age, eternal God | Isaac Watts | 1719 | a | L.M. | 4 |
63 | 38a | Jackson | 1825 | The spacious firmament on high | Joseph Addison | 1712 | f# | L. M. D. | 3 | |
64 | 38b | Watchman's Call | 1835 | The watchmen blow the trumpet round | Unattributed | 1835 | f# | L. M. D. | 3 | |
65 | 39 | Third Creek | Lift up your hands, Emmanuel's friends | Anonymous | 1805 | e | L.M. | 4 | ||
66 | 40a | Camden | 1826 | When we, our weary limbs to rest | Tate and Brady | 1696 | a | L.M. | 4 | |
67 | 40b | Atlanta | 1826 | Young people all attention give | Anonymous | 1804 | A | L. M. D. | 4 | |
68 | 41 | Averet | 1803 | Children of God, renounce your fears | John Fawcett | 1789 | G | L.M. | 3 | |
69 | 42a | Frozen Heart | 1844 | O! For a glance of heavenly day | Joseph Hart | 1762 | F | L.M. | 4 | |
70 | 42b | Sabbath Summons | Not by the brazen trumpet's voice | James Montgomery | 1822 | G | L.M. | 4 | ||
71 | 43 | Corinth | 1844 | Say, which of you would see the Lord | Charles Wesley | 1742 | G | L.M. | 4 | |
72 | 44a | The Turtle Dove | Southern Harmony | 1835 | Hark! Don't you hear the turtle dove | Anonymous | 1839 | C | L. M. D. | 3 |
73 | 44b | Bethel Street | O, who will come and go with me | Anonymous | 1807 | a | L.M. | 3 | ||
74 | 45 | Lebanon New | 1831 | Come, sinners, to the gospel feast | Charles Wesley | 1747 | F | L.M. | 3 | |
75 | 46a | Departing Saint | 1805 | Hark! Hark! She bids her friends adieu | Isaac Watts | 1707 | G | L.M. | 4 | |
76 | 46b | Parting Hand | 1805 | My Christian friends, in bonds of love | Anonymous | 1823 | G | L.M. | 4 | |
77 | 47 | Home | There is a land of pure delight | Isaac Watts | 1709 | A | 86.86.76. | 3 | ||
78 | 48a | Peterborough | Musical Instructor | 1803 | Once more, my soul, the rising day | Isaac Watts | 1709 | G | C.M. | 4 |
79 | 48b | Suffield | 1779 | Teach me the measure of my days | Isaac Watts | 1719 | e | C.M. | 4 | |
80 | 49 | Duane Street | 1835 | A poor, wayfaring man of grief | James Montgomery | 1826 | A | L. M. D. | 3 | |
81 | 50a | Majesty New | Behold! A voice angelic sounds | Henry White | 1812 | F | L.M. | 3 | ||
82 | 50b | Mutual Love | 1835 | O, when shall I see Jesus | John Leland | 1793 | G | 76.76.D. | 3 | |
83 | 51 | Day of Worship | 1848 | Dear people, we have met today | Unattributed | 1848 | G | L. M. D. | 3 | |
84 | 52a | Winter | 1785 | The hoary frost, the fleecy snow | Isaac Watts | 1719 | F | C.M. | 4 | |
85 | 52b | Arlington | 1762 | Jesus, with all thy saints above | Isaac Watts | 1709 | G | C.M. | 4 | |
86 | 53 | Protection | 1808 | God, my supporter and my hope | Isaac Watts | 1719 | F | C.M. | 4 | |
87 | 54a | Oak's Creek | 1795 | Bless, O my soul, the living God | Isaac Watts | 1719 | C | L.M. | 4 | |
88 | 54b | Suffering Savior | 1830 | Alas! And did my Savior bleed | Isaac Watts | 1709 | e | C.M. | 4 | |
89 | 55a | Rockingham | 1813 | Thus saith the mercy of the Lord | Isaac Watts | 1707 | A | C.M. | 4 | |
90 | 55b | Tribulation | 1813 | Death! 'Tis a melancholy day | Isaac Watts | 1709 | d | C.M. | 4 | |
91 | 56a | St. Martin's | 1748 | With cheerful notes let all the earth | Tate and Brady | 1696 | A | C.M. | 4 | |
92 | 56b | Liberty Hall | 1810 | Death, what a solemn word to all | John Bulmer | 1834 | a | C.M. | 4 | |
93 | 57a | China | 1801 | Why do we mourn departing friends | Isaac Watts | 1709 | C | C.M. | 4 | |
94 | 57b | Union | 1781 | Lo! What an entertaining sight | Isaac Watts | 1719 | C | C.M. | 4 | |
95 | 58a | Consolation | 1812 | Once more, my soul, the rising day | Isaac Watts | 1709 | a | C.M. | 4 | |
96 | 58b | Georgia | Rudiments of Music | 1786 | Return, O God of love, return | Isaac Watts | 1719 | e | C.M. | 4 |
97 | 59a | Walsal | 1723 | Alas! And did my Savior bleed | Isaac Watts | 1709 | a | C.M. | 4 | |
98 | 59b | Funeral Thought | 1763 | Hark! From the tombs a doleful sound | Isaac Watts | 1709 | a | C.M. | 4 | |
99 | 60a | Ninety-Fifth | 1813 | When I can read my title clear | Isaac Watts | 1709 | A | C.M. | 4 | |
100 | 60b | Northfield | 1800 | O 'tis delight without alloy | Isaac Watts | 1706 | C | C.M. | 4 | |
101 | 61a | Blackburn | Sacred Harmony | 1784 | O why did I my Savior leave | Charles Wesley | 1740 | d | C.M. | 4 |
102 | 61b | Bladensburg | 1801 | Unite, my roving thoughts, unite | Philip Doddridge | 1755 | G | C.M. | 4 | |
103 | 62a | Fairfield | 1791 | With reverence let the saints appear | Isaac Watts | 1719 | a | C.M. | 4 | |
104 | 62b | Fairfield | 1791 | Come, humble sinner, in whose breast | Edmund Jones | 1787 | a | C.M. | 3 | |
105 | 63a | Condescension | 1816 | How condescending and how kind | Isaac Watts | 1711 | C | C.M. | 4 | |
106 | 63b | Reflection | 1816 | No sleep nor slumber to his eyes | Isaac Watts | 1719 | B♭ | C.M. | 4 | |
107 | 64a | Bray | 1554 | Awake, my heart, arise, my tongue | Isaac Watts | 1707 | G | C.M. | 4 | |
108 | 64b | Virginia | 1782 | Thy words the raging winds control | Isaac Watts | 1719 | e | C.M. | 4 | |
109 | 65 | New Orleans | 1816 | Why do we mourn departing friends | Isaac Watts | 1709 | e | C. M. D. | 4 | |
110 | 66a | Wesley | 1810 | With inward pain my heart-strings sound | Isaac Watts | 1706 | a | C.M. | 4 | |
111 | 66b | Akron | Keep me, Savior, near thy side | Unattributed | 1833 | G | 77.77. | 4 | ||
112 | 67a | Fiducia | 1813 | Father, I long, I fear to see | Isaac Watts | 1709 | a | C.M. | 4 | |
113 | 67b | Abbey | Scottish Psalter | 1615 | Jesus, in thy transporting name | Anne Steele | 1760 | G | C.M. | 4 |
114 | 68a | Farabee | Come, and taste along with me | John Leland | 1798 | a | 77.77.78.98. | 3 | ||
115 | 68b | Calhoun | 1848 | Lord, we come before thee now | William Hammond | 1745 | a | 77.77. | 4 | |
116 | 69a | Sutton | 1793 | Behold the man, threescore and ten | Anonymous | 1813 | e | C.M. | 4 | |
117 | 69b | Woodstock | 1830 | O, for a closer walk with God | William Cowper | 1779 | A | C.M. | 4 | |
118 | 70a | Sutton New | Save me, O God! The swelling floods | Isaac Watts | 1719 | f# | C.M. | 4 | ||
119 | 70b | Markham | 1848 | O! For a heart to praise my God | Charles Wesley | 1742 | F | C. M. D. | 4 | |
120 | 71a | Warwick | 1800 | Lord, in the morning thou shalt hear | Isaac Watts | 1719 | E | C.M. | 4 | |
121 | 71b | Salvation | 1816 | Come, humble sinner, in whose breast | Edmund Jones | 1787 | e | C. M. D. | 4 | |
122 | 72 | Enfield | 1785 | Before the rosy dawn of day | Elizabeth Rowe | 1739 | E | C.M. | 4 | |
123 | 73 | Berne | 1801 | Hear me, O Lord, nor hide thy face | Isaac Watts | 1719 | a | C.M. | 4 | |
124 | 74a | Calvary | 1785 | My thoughts, that often mount the skies | Isaac Watts | 1706 | a | C.M. | 4 | |
125 | 74b | Sherburne | 1785 | While shepherds watched their flocks by night | Tate and Brady | 1696 | D | C.M. | 4 | |
126 | 75 | Patmos | Sing to the Lord, ye distant lands | Isaac Watts | 1719 | B♭ | C.M. | 4 | ||
127 | 76 | Ocean | 1789 | Thy works of glory, mighty Lord | Isaac Watts | 1719 | F | C.M. | 4 | |
128 | 77 | Edom | 1797 | With songs and honors sounding loud | Isaac Watts | 1719 | F | C.M. | 4 | |
129 | 78a | Messiah | 1821 | He comes! He comes! To judge the world | Samuel Stennett | 1787 | f# | C.M. | 4 | |
130 | 78b | Hanover | 1791 | Vain man, thy fond pursuits forbear | Joseph Hart | 1759 | a | C.M. | 3 | |
131 | 79a | Liberty | 1800 | No more beneath the oppressive hand | Unattributed | 1800 | F | C.M. | 4 | |
132 | 79b | Wilson | 1848 | Death! 'Tis a melancholy day | Isaac Watts | 1709 | G | C.M. | 3 | |
133 | 80 | Never Part | Jerusalem, my happy home | Anonymous | 1600 | F | 86.86.8 10.86. | 4 | ||
134 | 81 | Mantua | 1800 | A blooming paradise of joy | Isaac Watts | 1709 | G | C. M. D. | 4 | |
135 | 82a | London New | Psalmes of David in Verse and Meeter | 1635 | Let every tongue thy goodness speak | Isaac Watts | 1719 | D | C.M. | 4 |
136 | 82b | Houston | On Jordan's stormy banks I stand | Samuel Stennett | 1787 | C | C.M. | 3 | ||
137 | 83a | Rindge | 1789 | Let every mortal ear attend | Isaac Watts | 1707 | A | C.M. | 4 | |
138 | 83b | Liverpool | Virginia Sacred Musical Repository | 1818 | My Savior, my almighty friend | Isaac Watts | 1719 | F | C.M. | 4 |
139 | 84 | Montgomery | 1790 | Early, my God, without delay | Isaac Watts | 1719 | C | C.M. | 4 | |
140 | 85 | Solitude New | 1798 | My refuge is the God of love | Isaac Watts | 1719 | a | C.M. | 4 | |
141 | 86a | Exhortation | 1796 | Lord, in the morning thou shalt hear | Isaac Watts | 1719 | F | C.M. | 4 | |
142 | 86b | Eliza | O could I find from day to day | Benjamin Cleveland | 1799 | A | C.M. | 4 | ||
143 | 87 | New Topia | 1816 | Young people all attention give | Anonymous | 1804 | e | C.M. | 4 | |
144 | 88 | Tunbridge | 1793 | Our sins, alas! How strong they be | Isaac Watts | 1709 | d | C.M. | 4 | |
145 | 89 | Westminster | 1793 | Thou great and sovereign Lord of all | F | C.M. | 4 | |||
146 | 90 | Majesty | 1778 | The Lord descended from above | Thomas Sternhold | 1561 | F | C.M. | 4 | |
147 | 91 | Sardinia | 1804 | Behold the love, the generous love | Isaac Watts | 1719 | e | C.M. | 4 | |
148 | 92 | Pilgrim's Triumph | To see a pilgrim as he dies | John Granade | 1794 | A | C.M. | 4 | ||
149 | 93 | Rainbow | 1785 | Tis by thy strength the mountains stand | Isaac Watts | 1719 | C | C.M. | 4 | |
150 | 94a | Retirement | Far from the world, O Lord, I flee | William Cowper | 1779 | C | C.M. | 4 | ||
151 | 94b | Christian Volunteers | Alas! And did my Savior bleed | Isaac Watts | 1709 | F | 86.86.55.85. | 3 | ||
152 | 95a | Blake | I love to steal awhile away | Phoebe Brown | 1818 | B♭ | C.M. | 4 | ||
153 | 95b | Balerma | 1840 | I love by faith to take a view | Phoebe Brown | 1824 | B♭ | C.M. | 4 | |
154 | 96 | Hamilton | Shepherds, rejoice, lift up your eyes | Isaac Watts | 1706 | A | C.M. | 4 | ||
155 | 97a | Solemn Warning | Young people all attention give | Anonymous | 1804 | a | C.M. | 4 | ||
156 | 97b | Emory | Through all the downward tracks of time | Anonymous | 1810 | a | C. M. D. | 3 | ||
157 | 98 | Jordan | 1786 | There is a land of pure delight | Isaac Watts | 1709 | A | C. M. D. | 4 | |
158 | 99a | Cambridge | 1786 | Jesus, I love thy glorious name | Philip Doddridge | 1755 | C | C.M. | 4 | |
159 | 99b | Buena Vista | Am I a soldier of the cross | Isaac Watts | 1723 | a | C.M. | 3 | ||
160 | 100a | Asbury | 1787 | Behold, the Savior of mankind | Samuel Wesley | 1707 | a | C.M. | 3 | |
161 | 100b | Dunlap's Creek | 1814 | Sing to the Lord, ye heavenly hosts | Isaac Watts | 1709 | G | C.M. | 4 | |
162 | 101a | Toccoa | Southern Harmony | 1835 | Happy the souls to Jesus joined | Charles Wesley | 1745 | C | C.M. | 4 |
163 | 101b | Perkins | Father, I stretch my hands to thee | Charles Wesley | 1741 | A | C.M. | 3 | ||
164 | 102a | Hallelujah | 1835 | Amazing grace, how sweet the sound | John Newton | 1779 | B♭ | C.M. | 3 | |
165 | 102b | Missouri Mission | 1844 | My span of life will soon be done | Frances Cowper | 1792 | e | C. M. D. | 3 | |
166 | 103a | Anticipation | 1799 | How happy every child of grace | Charles Wesley | 1759 | a | C. M. D. | 4 | |
167 | 103b | Watson | Father, I stretch my hands to thee | Charles Wesley | 1741 | a | C.M. | 4 | ||
168 | 104a | Heavenly Wisdom | London | 1760 | O happy is the man who hears | Michael Bruce | 1770 | A | C.M. | 4 |
169 | 104b | New Britain | Columbian Harmony | 1829 | When languor and disease invade | Augustus Toplady | 1759 | C | C.M. | 4 |
170 | 105 | Pleyel's Hymn Second | 1786 | While thee I seek, protecting Power | Helen Williams | 1786 | F | C. M. D. | 4 | |
171 | 106a | Minister's Farewell | Wyeth's Repository, Part Second | 1813 | Our cheerful voices let us raise | Unattributed | 1835 | G | C. M. D. | 4 |
172 | 106b | Minister's Farewell | Wyeth's Repository, Part Second | 1813 | Dear friends, farewell, I do you tell | Unattributed | 1797 | G | C.M. | 4 |
173 | 107a | Tranquillity | 1816 | My God, the spring of all my joys | Isaac Watts | 1709 | C | C.M. | 4 | |
174 | 107b | Chattanooga | 1790 | How sweet the name of Jesus sounds | John Newton | 1779 | C | C.M. | 4 | |
175 | 108a | Mortality | 1796 | Stoop down, my thoughts, that used to rise | Isaac Watts | 1709 | e | C.M. | 4 | |
176 | 108b | Alstead | 1788 | Shepherds, rejoice, lift up your eyes | Isaac Watts | 1706 | D | C.M. | 4 | |
177 | 109 | Huntsville | O, for a closer walk with God | William Cowper | 1779 | b | C.M. | 4 | ||
178 | 110a | Red Hill | Behold, the Savior of mankind | Samuel Wesley | 1707 | f# | C.M. | 3 | ||
179 | 110b | Bethelsdorf | Tis done, the precious ransom's paid | Samuel Wesley | 1700 | f | C.M. | 3 | ||
180 | 111a | Tempest | 1791 | Let earth stand strembling on her base | Mather Byles | 1744 | E♭ | C.M. | 4 | |
181 | 111b | Caroline | O for a closer walk with God | William Cowper | 1772 | A | C.M. | 4 | ||
182 | 112 | Pisgah | 1817 | And let this feeble body fail | Charles Wesley | 1759 | B♭ | C.M. | 4 | |
183 | 113 | Christian Triumph | O what has Jesus bought for me | Charles Wesley | 1759 | B♭ | C.M. | 4 | ||
184 | 114a | Garland | 1807 | With songs and honors sounding loud | Isaac Watts | 1719 | G | C.M. | 3 | |
185 | 114b | North Carolina | O that I were as heretofore | Charles Wesley | 1740 | F | C.M. | 4 | ||
186 | 115 | Newport | As on the cross the Savior hung | Samuel Stennett | 1789 | A | C.M. | 4 | ||
187 | 116a | Elevation | 1821 | Talk with us, Lord, thyself reveal | Charles Wesley | 1740 | C | C.M. | 4 | |
188 | 116b | Meditation | 1801 | My soul, come meditate the day | Isaac Watts | 1709 | a | C.M. | 4 | |
189 | 117 | Findley | 1825 | Jesus, I throw my arms around | Isaac Watts | 1709 | C | C.M. | 4 | |
190 | 118 | Penitence | Approach, my soul, the mercy seat | John Newton | 1779 | C | C.M. | 4 | ||
191 | 119a | Barby | 1742 | When rising from the bed of death | Joseph Addison | 1699 | A | C.M. | 4 | |
192 | 119b | Jerusalem New | 1835 | Jerusalem, my happy home | Anonymous | 1600 | a | C.M. | 3 | |
193 | 120 | New Jerusalem | 1796 | Lo! What a glorious sight appears | Isaac Watts | 1707 | G | C.M. | 4 | |
194 | 121a | Calvary New | 1821 | Now let our lips, with holy fear | Isaac Watts | 1719 | g | C. M. D. | 4 | |
195 | 121b | Canaan | 1818 | On Jordan's stormy banks I stand | Samuel Stennett | 1787 | G | C. M. D. | 3 | |
196 | 122a | Sweet Prospect | Southern Harmony | 1835 | On Jordan's stormy banks I stand | Samuel Stennett | 1787 | e | C.M. | 3 |
197 | 122b | Gaines | 1848 | O, for a thousand tongues to sing | Charles Wesley | 1740 | A | C.M. | 4 | |
198 | 123a | Thorn | 1848 | Save me, O God! The swelling flood | Isaac Watts | 1719 | A | C.M. | 4 | |
199 | 123b | Glenroy | Beneath our feet, and o'er our head | Reginald Heber | 1811 | B♭ | C.M. | 4 | ||
200 | 124 | Isle of Patmos | 1821 | Hear what the voice from heaven proclaims | Isaac Watts | 1707 | A | C.M. | 4 | |
201 | 125 | Providence | 1820 | What shall I render to my God | Isaac Watts | 1719 | A | C.M. | 3 | |
202 | 126a | Surprise | 1798 | Our life contains a thousand springs | Isaac Watts | 1709 | d | C.M. | 4 | |
203 | 126b | Dundee | Scottish Psalter | 1615 | The holy triumphs of my soul | Isaac Watts | 1709 | F | C.M. | 4 |
204 | 127a | Dublin | 1591 | Lord, what is man, poor feeble man | Isaac Watts | 1719 | a | C.M. | 4 | |
205 | 127b | Preston | When languor and disease invade | Augustus Toplady | 1759 | F | C.M. | 4 | ||
206 | 128a | Columbus | Columbian Harmony | 1829 | O, once I had a glorious view | Anonymous | 1823 | f# | C.M. | 3 |
207 | 128b | Immortality | Columbian Harmony | 1829 | Young people all attention give | Anonymous | 1804 | e | C. M. D. | 3 |
208 | 129 | Coronation | 1793 | All hail the power of Jesus' name | Edward Perronet | 1780 | A | C.M. | 4 | |
209 | 130a | Devizes | 1792 | Happy the souls to Jesus joined | Charles Wesley | 1745 | A | C.M. | 4 | |
210 | 130b | Clemmons | 1820 | Jehovah, God the Father, bless | Charles Wesley | 1767 | a | C.M. | 4 | |
211 | 131 | Milford | 1760 | If angels sung a savior's birth | Anonymous | 1803 | A | C.M. | 4 | |
212 | 132 | Grafton | 1793 | Jesus! The vision of thy face | Isaac Watts | 1707 | C | C.M. | 4 | |
213 | 133 | Silver Spring | 1790 | Were I in heaven without my God | Isaac Watts | 1719 | e | C.M. | 4 | |
214 | 134a | Augusta | 1808 | O God, our help in ages past | Isaac Watts | 1719 | d | C.M. | 4 | |
215 | 134b | True Riches | Divine Musical Miscellany | 1754 | I am not concerned to know | Isaac Watts | 1706 | G | 77.77. | 4 |
216 | 135 | One Hundred and Nineteenth Psalm | 1793 | My soul lies cleaving to the dust | Isaac Watts | 1719 | e | C.M. | 4 | |
217 | 136a | New Durham | 1803 | Hark! From the tombs a doleful sound | Isaac Watts | 1709 | b | C.M. | 4 | |
218 | 136b | Trumbull | 1783 | The promises of my Father's love | Isaac Watts | 1711 | a | C.M. | 4 | |
219 | 137 | Namur | Devout Singer's Guide | 1711 | Come, happy souls, approach your God | Isaac Watts | 1709 | G | C.M. | 4 |
220 | 138 | Repentance | 1796 | O if my soul were formed for woe | Isaac Watts | 1706 | f# | C.M. | 4 | |
221 | 139a | Joyful Sound | 1790 | O for a shout of sacred joy | Isaac Watts | 1719 | C | C.M. | 4 | |
222 | 139b | Winchester | Christian Harmony | 1794 | Who is this that comes from far | Charles Wesley | 1745 | G | 77.77. | 4 |
223 | 140a | Communion | 1805 | How sweet and awful is the place | Isaac Watts | 1711 | E | C. M. D. | 4 | |
224 | 140b | Tennessee | 1805 | Afflictions, though they seem severe | John Newton | 1779 | F | C. M. D. | 4 | |
225 | 141 | Conversion | 1794 | When God revealed his gracious name | Isaac Watts | 1719 | C | C.M. | 4 | |
226 | 142 | Vermont | 1778 | In vain we lavish out our lives | Isaac Watts | 1707 | e | C. M. D. | 4 | |
227 | 143a | Williams | That glorious day is drawing nigh | John Leland | 1790 | a | C. M. D. | 4 | ||
228 | 143b | Irwin | O for a thousand tongues to sing | Charles Wesley | 1740 | G | C. M. D. | 3 | ||
229 | 144a | Azmon | Joy is a fruit that will not grow | John Newton | 1779 | A | C.M. | 3 | ||
230 | 144b | Alton | 1848 | Plunged in a gulf of dark despair | Isaac Watts | 1709 | A | C. M. D. | 4 | |
231 | 145 | Velasco | My earth thou waterest from on high | Charles Wesley | 1742 | B♭ | C. M. D. | 4 | ||
232 | 146a | North Salem | 1799 | My soul, come meditate the day | Isaac Watts | 1709 | e | C.M. | 4 | |
233 | 146b | Sunday | 1801 | The Lord of Sabbath let us praise | Samuel Wesley | 1736 | A | C.M. | 4 | |
234 | 147 | Ashville | Christian Lyre | 1831 | Loving Jesus, gentle Lamb | Charles Wesley | 1742 | a | 77.77. | 3 |
235 | 148a | Salem | 1825 | How sweet the name of Jesus sounds | John Newton | 1779 | F | C.M. | 4 | |
236 | 148b | Warren | 1778 | Now begin the heavenly theme | Unattributed | 1763 | G | 77.77. | 3 | |
237 | 149a | Dove of Peace | 1835 | O tell me where the Dove has flown | Unattributed | 1835 | G | C.M. | 4 | |
238 | 149b | Sweet Hope | 1848 | O joyful sound of gospel grace | Charles Wesley | 1742 | D | C.M. | 3 | |
239 | 150 | The Prodigal | 1818 | Afflictions, though they seem severe | John Newton | 1779 | e | C. M. D. | 4 | |
240 | 151 | The Penitent Prodigal | Afflictions, though they seem severe | John Newton | 1779 | C | C.M. | 3 | ||
241 | 152a | The Converted Thief | 1825 | As on the cross the Savior hung | Samuel Stennett | 1789 | C | C. M. D. | 3 | |
242 | 152b | Returning Prodigal | 1825 | Behold the wretch whose lust and wine | Isaac Watts | 1707 | C | C.M. | 3 | |
243 | 153a | Land of Pleasure | Come, thou fount of every blessing | Robert Robinson | 1759 | C | 87.87. | 4 | ||
244 | 153b | Vicksburg | Far above yon glorious ceiling | Anonymous | 1803 | a | 87.87. | 3 | ||
245 | 154 | The Promised Land | Southern Harmony | 1835 | Come, let us join our friends above | Charles Wesley | 1759 | f# | C.M. | 4 |
246 | 155a | The Promised Land | Southern Harmony | 1835 | Our spirits, too, shall quickly join | Charles Wesley | 1759 | f# | C.M. | 3 |
247 | 155b | Masonic Dirge | 1848 | Solemn strikes the funeral chime | David Vinton | 1816 | A | 77.77. | 3 | |
248 | 156 | Washington | 1800 | Our souls by love together knit | Anonymous | 1803 | G | C. M. D. | 4 | |
249 | 158a | Detroit | 1814 | Do not I love thee, O my Lord | Philip Doddridge | 1755 | e | C.M. | 4 | |
250 | 158b | Latrobe | 1615 | Hail to the Lord's anointed | James Montgomery | 1821 | D | 76.76.D. | 3 | |
251 | 159 | Rusk | Columbian Harmony | 1825 | Hark! Listen to the trumpeters | John Granade | 1794 | G | C. M. D. | 4 |
252 | 160 | The Martial Trumpet | 1835 | Brethren, don't you hear the sound | Unattributed | 1830 | C | 79.79.D. | 4 | |
253 | 161 | Smyrna | 1796 | Why should the children of a King | Isaac Watts | 1707 | A | C.M. | 4 | |
254 | 162a | Burdened Pilgrim | 1848 | Pilgrim, burdened with thy sin | George Crabbe | 1834 | F | 77.77.D. | 4 | |
255 | 162b | Versailles | Tennessee Harmony | 1818 | Thy mercy, my God, is the theme of my song | Attrib. John Stocker | 1774 | a | 11 11.11 11. | 3 |
256 | 163 | Sweet Rivers | 1825 | Sweet rivers of redeeming love | John Granade | 1804 | F | C.M. | 4 | |
257 | 164a | Depravity | 1793 | How sad our state by nature is | Isaac Watts | 1709 | d | C.M. | 4 | |
258 | 164b | Golgotha | 1848 | Let me dwell in Golgotha | John Newton | 1779 | C | 77.77. | 4 | |
259 | 165a | The Lonesome Dove | Ye weary, heavy-laden souls | F | C. M. D. | 3 | ||||
260 | 165b | Sovereign Grace | Christian Lyre | 1830 | Sovereign grace has power alone | John Newton | 1779 | A | 77.77. | 4 |
261 | 166 | Solitude in the Grove | 1817 | My God, my refuge, hear my cries | Isaac Watts | 1719 | e | C. M. D. | 4 | |
262 | 167a | Cedar Bluff | Jerusalem, my happy home | Anonymous | 1600 | A | C.M. | 3 | ||
263 | 167b | Pleyel's Hymn | 1790 | Depth of mercy! Can there be | Charles Wesley | 1740 | A | 77.77. | 3 | |
264 | 168a | Conway | O tis delight without alloy | Isaac Watts | 1706 | D | C.M. | 4 | ||
265 | 168b | Tabor | Come and taste along with me | John Leland | 1798 | F | 77.77. | 4 | ||
266 | 169 | Aiken | 1846 | Thy gracious presence, O my God | Anne Steele | 1760 | F | C. M. D. | 4 | |
267 | 170a | Derrick | 1844 | Hark! The glad sound, the Savior comes | Philip Doddridge | 1755 | F | C. M. D. | 4 | |
268 | 170b | Separation | Tennessee Harmony | 1818 | Why do we mourn for dying friends | Isaac Watts | 1709 | f# | C. M. D. | 3 |
269 | 171 | Lovest Thou Me | 1821 | Hark, my soul, it is the Lord | William Cowper | 1768 | G | 77.77. | 4 | |
270 | 172a | Cincinnati | 1820 | Father, how wide thy glories shine | Isaac Watts | 1706 | a | C.M. | 4 | |
271 | 172b | Pilgrim Band | We're marching to the promised land | William Hunter | 1845 | G | C. M. D. | 3 | ||
272 | 173a | Babel's Streams | 1811 | By Babel's streams we sat and wept | Unattributed | 1615 | e | C. M. D. | 4 | |
273 | 173b | Barbauld | Sweeter songs than music knows | John Newton | 1779 | A | 77.77. | 4 | ||
274 | 174a | Sussex | 1831 | With glorious clouds encompassed round | Charles Wesley | 1767 | b | C. M. D. | 3 | |
275 | 174b | Holly Springs | 1848 | Why should the children of a King | Isaac Watts | 1707 | C | C.M. | 3 | |
276 | 175 | Maysville | 1848 | When, my Savior, shall I be | Charles Wesley | 1742 | A | 77.77. | 4 | |
277 | 176a | The Captive's Song | Christian Lyre | 1831 | O! No, we cannot sing the song | Unattributed | 1831 | A | C. M. D. | 3 |
278 | 176b | Floyd | 1848 | O thou who driest the mourner's tear | Thomas Moore | 1816 | A | C. M. D. | 3 | |
279 | 177a | Sark | 1803 | Jesus, all-redeeming Lord | Charles Wesley | 1763 | G | 77.77. | 4 | |
280 | 177b | Haven | Jesus, lover of my soul | Charles Wesley | 1740 | E | 77.77.D. | 4 | ||
281 | 178a | Leander | 1818 | My soul forbears her vain delights | Isaac Watts | 1709 | a | C. M. D. | 4 | |
282 | 178b | Easter Hymn | Lyra Davidica | 1708 | Christ the Lord has risen today | Charles Wesley | 1739 | D | 74.74.D. | 4 |
283 | 179 | Sunbury | O that I could revere | Charles Wesley | 1749 | d | S.M. | 4 | ||
284 | 180 | Middletown | 1778 | Hail the day that saw him rise | Charles Wesley | 1739 | A | 77.77.D. | 4 | |
285 | 181a | Campbell | 1848 | Lift up your hearts to things above | Charles Wesley | 1749 | C | C. M. D. | 4 | |
286 | 181b | Alabama | 1848 | Depth of mercy! Can there be | Charles Wesley | 1740 | a | 77.77. | 4 | |
287 | 182a | Inspiration | Now shall my inward joys arise | Isaac Watts | 1707 | G | C.M. | 4 | ||
288 | 182b | Fancy's Vision | Hesperian Harp | 1848 | The faithless world promiscuous flows | Unattributed | 1835 | G | 87.887. | 3 |
289 | 183a | The Faithless World | 1835 | The faithless world promiscuous flows | Unattributed | 1835 | G | 87.887. | 3 | |
290 | 183b | Winburne | Great Redeemer, friend of sinners | William Williams | 1745 | F | 87.87.D. | 4 | ||
291 | 184 | Come, ye disconsolate | 1820 | Come, ye disconsolate | Thomas Moore | 1816 | D | 11 10.11 10.11 10. | 2 | |
292 | 185a | Christian Travelers | Beauties of Harmony | 1828 | What poor, despised company | Unattributed | 1759 | F | C. M. D. | 4 |
293 | 185b | La Grange | Savior, visit thy plantation | John Newton | 1779 | A | 87.87.D. | 3 | ||
294 | 186a | Concordia | 1848 | How happy every child of grace | Charles Wesley | 1759 | G | C.M. | 4 | |
295 | 186b | Brownson | 1816 | Blessing, honor, thanks, and praise | Charles Wesley | 1742 | a | 77.77.D. | 4 | |
296 | 187 | New Hope | 1825 | O how I have longed for the coming of God | Anonymous | 1810 | a | 11 11.11 11. | 3 | |
297 | 188 | Watchman! Tell us of the night | 1844 | Watchman! Tell us of the night | John Bowring | 1825 | E | 77.77. | 3 | |
298 | 189a | Cumberland New | Beauties of Harmony | 1814 | Come, thou fount of every blessing | Robert Robinson | 1759 | A | 87.87. | 4 |
299 | 189b | Kingston | United States Sacred Harmony | 1799 | Agonizing in the garden | Joseph Hart | 1759 | a | 87.87.87. | 4 |
300 | 190a | Burnsville | Far above yon glorious ceiling | Anonymous | 1803 | A | 87.87.D. | 3 | ||
301 | 190b | Alabama | Southern Harmony | 1835 | Angels in shining order stand | Unattributed | 1835 | e | C. M. D. | 4 |
302 | 192a | Animation | Southern Harmony | 1835 | What is there here to court my say | Charles Wesley | 1759 | G | C. M. D. | 3 |
303 | 192b | Heavenly March | 1840 | On Jordan's stormy banks I stand | Samuel Stennett | 1787 | B♭ | C.M. | 3 | |
304 | 193 | Edneyville | All hail! Ye heirs of grace | James Edney | 1848 | G | S.M. | 4 | ||
305 | 194a | Judgment | 1813 | He comes, he comes, the Judge severe | Charles Wesley | 1758 | e | L. M. D. | 4 | |
306 | 194b | Judgment | 1793 | The Lord, the Judge, before his throne | Isaac Watts | 1719 | G | C. M. D. | 4 | |
307 | 196a | Concord | 1793 | The men of grace have found | Isaac Watts | 1709 | C | S.M. | 4 | |
308 | 196b | Brentwood | 1800 | Not all the blood of beasts | Isaac Watts | 1709 | E | S.M. | 4 | |
309 | 197a | Baldwin | 1848 | And let our bodies part | Charles Wesley | 1749 | a | S. M. D. | 4 | |
310 | 197b | Backslider | 1820 | Ah! Where am I now | Charles Wesley | 1749 | a | 559.669. | 3 | |
311 | 198 | Concert | 1707 | Come, thou everlasting Spirit | Charles Wesley | 1745 | a | 87.87.D. | 4 | |
312 | 199a | Evening Shade | 1805 | The day is past and gone | John Leland | 1790 | e | S.M. | 4 | |
313 | 199b | New Dover | Short and Easy Introduction | 1772 | Grace, tis a charming sound | Philip Doddridge | 1755 | F | S.M. | 4 |
314 | 200 | Williamsburg | 1500 | The God of Abraham praise | Thomas Olivers | 1772 | F | 66.86.D. | 4 | |
315 | 201a | Albion | 1816 | Come, ye that love the Lord | Isaac Watts | 1709 | G | S.M. | 4 | |
316 | 201b | Norwich | 1779 | My sorrows, like a flood | Isaac Watts | 1706 | a | S.M. | 4 | |
317 | 202a | Jefferson | Tennessee Harmony | 1818 | Glorious things of thee are spoken | John Newton | 1779 | a | 87.87.D. | 4 |
318 | 202b | New Monmouth | 1812 | Come, thou fount of every blessing | Robert Robinson | 1759 | a | 87.87. | 4 | |
319 | 203 | Marcellus | Soldiers of Christ! Arise | Charles Wesley | 1742 | G | S. M. D. | 4 | ||
320 | 204a | St. Thomas | 1763 | Hark! It is wisdom's voice | Philip Doddridge | 1755 | A | S.M. | 4 | |
321 | 204b | Brimner | Give to the winds thy fears | Paul Gerhardt | 1656 | C | S.M. | 4 | ||
322 | 205 | Sterling | 1793 | Come, ye that love the Lord | Isaac Watts | 1709 | E | S. M. D. | 4 | |
323 | 206a | Martyn | Hark! A voice divides the sky | Charles Wesley | 1742 | F | 77.77.D. | 4 | ||
324 | 206b | Religious Contentment | Divine Amusement | 1812 | Give me but some humble spot | William Hunter | 1845 | C | 77.77.D. | 3 |
325 | 207 | Good Shepherd | Wyeth's Repository, Part Second | 1813 | Let thy kingdom, blessed Savior | John Granade | 1794 | F | 87.87.D. | 3 |
326 | 208a | Sounding Joy | 1790 | Come, sound his praise abroad | Isaac Watts | 1719 | E♭ | S.M. | 4 | |
327 | 208b | Mocksville | 1848 | Glory to God on high | Isaac Watts | 1707 | C | S.M. | 4 | |
328 | 209a | Backslider's Sorrow | 1848 | Ah! Where am I now | Charles Wesley | 1749 | G | 559.669. | 3 | |
329 | 209b | Malette | Beauties of Sacred Harmony | 1817 | Tis religion that can give | Mary Masters | 1733 | G | 77.77.D. | 3 |
330 | 210a | America | 1798 | My soul, repeat his praise | Isaac Watts | 1719 | a | S.M. | 4 | |
331 | 210b | Wheeling | 1848 | And wilt thou yet be found | Charles Wesley | 1739 | a | S.M. | 3 | |
332 | 211a | Golden Hill | 1778 | With joy the people stand | Isaac Watts | 1719 | G | S.M. | 4 | |
333 | 211b | Golden Hill | 1778 | Give to the winds thy fears | Paul Gerhardt | 1656 | G | S.M. | 4 | |
334 | 212 | Rome | 1801 | Wandering pilgrims, mourning Christians | John Leland | 1794 | e | 87.87.D. | 4 | |
335 | 213a | The Soldier's Return | Virginia Sacred Musical Repository | 1818 | O! That I had some secret place | Unattributed | 1823 | C | 87.87.D. | 3 |
336 | 213b | Louisiana | I have my bitters and my sweets | Unattributed | 1823 | C | 87.87.D. | 3 | ||
337 | 214a | Shirland | 1799 | My God, my life, my love | Isaac Watts | 1709 | A | S.M. | 4 | |
338 | 214b | Bridgetown | 1813 | Grace! tis a charming sound | Philip Doddridge | 1755 | G | S.M. | 4 | |
339 | 215 | Newburg | 1798 | Let every creature join | Isaac Watts | 1719 | C | S. M. D. | 4 | |
340 | 216a | Texas | 1848 | Firm and unmoved are they | Isaac Watts | 1719 | C | S.M. | 4 | |
341 | 216b | Austin | 1825 | How happy are they | Charles Wesley | 1749 | a | 569.569. | 3 | |
342 | 217a | Brownsville | 1821 | Don't you see my Jesus coming | Caleb Taylor | 1810 | a | 87.87. | 3 | |
343 | 217b | Restoration | 1821 | Jordan's stream shall ne'er o'erflow me | Anonymous | 1833 | a | 87.87. | 4 | |
344 | 218a | Dauphin | 1793 | For life without thy love | Isaac Watts | 1719 | a | S.M. | 4 | |
345 | 218b | Doomsday | 1789 | Behold! With awful pomp | Joseph Hart | 1759 | C | S.M. | 4 | |
346 | 219 | Saints Bound For Heaven | Southern Harmony | 1840 | Our bondage it shall end, by and by | Unattributed | 1828 | C | 12 9.13 13 10. | 4 |
347 | 220 | Parsons | 1831 | Brother, thou art gone before us | Henry Milman | 1822 | e | 87.86.77.87. | 4 | |
348 | 221 | The Mouldering Vine | 1821 | Hail! Ye sighing sons of sorrow | Anonymous | 1795 | f | 87.87.D. | 4 | |
349 | 222 | Disciple | 1831 | Jesus, I my cross have taken | Henry Lyte | 1824 | A | 87.87.D. | 4 | |
350 | 223 | Jubilee | Supplement to the Kentucky Harmony | 1820 | Hark! The jubilee is sounding | Anonymous | 1801 | A | 87.87.D. | 4 |
351 | 224a | Mansfield | Collection of Psalm Tunes | 1780 | Let every creature join | Isaac Watts | 1719 | C | S.M. | 4 |
352 | 224b | Idumea | 1816 | O come and dwell in me | Charles Wesley | 1762 | a | S.M. | 4 | |
353 | 225 | Solemn Thought | 1821 | Remember, sinful youth, you must die | Anonymous | 1807 | a | 12 9.12 12 9. | 4 | |
354 | 226 | Geneva | 1821 | Come, my friends, and taste with me | Unattributed | 1821 | F | 776.77.76. | 4 | |
355 | 227a | New Concord | How happy are they | Charles Wesley | 1749 | C | 569.569. | 4 | ||
356 | 227b | Iantha | 1848 | Hark! The herald angels sing | Charles Wesley | 1739 | G | 77.77. | 4 | |
357 | 228a | Zion's Hill | 1778 | How beauteous are their feet | Isaac Watts | 1707 | F | S.M. | 4 | |
358 | 228b | Mount Helicon | How blessed are our eyes | Isaac Watts | 1707 | F | S.M. | 4 | ||
359 | 229a | Ingratitude | 1820 | Is this the kind return | Isaac Watts | 1709 | a | S.M. | 4 | |
360 | 229b | Swedesboro' | Welcome, sweet day of rest | Isaac Watts | 1709 | A | S.M. | 4 | ||
361 | 230a | Lisbon | 1785 | The Savior's glorious name | B♭ | S.M. | 4 | |||
362 | 230b | Mount Cumberland | Columbian Harmony | 1825 | Come, all ye happy race | Unattributed | 1839 | a | 669.669. | 3 |
363 | 231 | Creation | 1793 | Let every creature join | Isaac Watts | 1719 | A | S. M. D. | 4 | |
364 | 232 | Knoxville | 1820 | Rejoice, my friends, the Lord is King | Anonymous | 1813 | e | 88.887. | 4 | |
365 | 233 | Heavenly Union | 1805 | Come saints and sinners, hear me tell | Unattributed | 1811 | G | 88.887. | 4 | |
366 | 234 | Wondrous Love | 1840 | What wondrous love is this, O my soul | Anonymous | 1812 | g | 12 9.12 12 9. | 3 | |
367 | 235 | Thorny Desert | 1835 | Dark and thorny is the desert | Unattributed | 1810 | G | 87.87.D. | 3 | |
368 | 236 | Silver Street | 1780 | Come sound his praise abroad | Isaac Watts | 1719 | C | S.M. | 4 | |
369 | 237a | Longstreet | 1791 | Some sweet savor of thy favor | Anonymous | 1811 | B♭ | 87.77.84. | 4 | |
370 | 237b | Pilgrim's Prayer | Guide me, O thou great Jehovah | William Williams | 1745 | F | 87.87.47. | 4 | ||
371 | 238 | Rock of Salvation | 1848 | If life's pleasures charm thee | Francis Key | 1815 | G | 65.65.87.87. | 4 | |
372 | 239a | Zell | Praise to God the great Creator | John Taylor | 1795 | F | 87.87. | 4 | ||
373 | 239b | Cheerful Hope | 1791 | Though hard the winds are blowing | Unattributed | 1831 | G | 76.76. | 3 | |
374 | 240 | Mixture | 1835 | Mixtures of joy and sorrow | Levi Hathaway | 1820 | A | 76.76.D. | 4 | |
375 | 241 | Glorious Prospect | My soul's full of glory | John Granade | 1804 | E | 65.65.D. | 3 | ||
376 | 242a | Way to Zion | Farewell, my Christian brethren | John Leland | 1793 | C | 76.76.76. | 4 | ||
377 | 242b | New Hope | 1820 | Come, ye that love the Lord | Isaac Watts | 1709 | F | S.M. | 4 | |
378 | 243a | Hope | Collection of Psalm and Hymn Tunes | 1802 | My God, my life, my love | Isaac Watts | 1709 | G | S.M. | 4 |
379 | 243b | Blairsville | Did Christ o'er sinners weep | Benjamin Beddome | 1769 | f# | S.M. | 3 | ||
380 | 244a | Holy Manna | 1825 | Brethren, we have met to worship | George Atkins | 1819 | C | 87.87.D. | 4 | |
381 | 244b | Holy Manna | 1825 | Brethren, see poor sinners round you | George Atkins | 1819 | C | 87.87.D. | 4 | |
382 | 245a | Dalston | 1763 | How pleased and blessed was I | Isaac Watts | 1719 | B♭ | 668.668. | 4 | |
383 | 245b | Volusia | O! Cease, my wandering soul | William Muhlenberg | 1826 | G | S.M. | 4 | ||
384 | 246a | Amity | 1785 | My tongue repeats her vows | Isaac Watts | 1719 | A | 668.668. | 4 | |
385 | 246b | Boylston | 1832 | Our days are as the grass | Isaac Watts | 1719 | C | S.M. | 4 | |
386 | 247a | Nuremburg | Once I thought my mountain strong | John Newton | 1779 | B♭ | 77.77.77. | 4 | ||
387 | 247b | Bounding Billows | 1831 | Light of those whose dreary dwelling | Charles Wesley | 1745 | A | 87.87. | 3 | |
388 | 248 | Palestine | 1848 | Blest land of Judea, thrice hallowed of song | John Whittier | 1843 | C | 11 12.12 12. | 3 | |
389 | 249 | Wandering Sinner | Come tell me, wandering sinner | Unattributed | 1827 | D | 76.76.T | 3 | ||
390 | 250a | The Dying Pilgrim | Farewell, beloved companions | H. Bingham | 1840 | d | 76.76.D. | 3 | ||
391 | 250b | Dependence | 1813 | But I, with all my cares | Isaac Watts | 1719 | a | S.M. | 3 | |
392 | 251 | Pennsville | Along where murmuring waters | Unattributed | 1848 | D | 76.76.D. | 4 | ||
393 | 252 | The Trumpet | 1830 | The chariot, the chariot, its wheels roll in fire | Henry Milman | 1827 | D | 11 12.12 12. | 4 | |
394 | 253a | Lamberton | 1793 | Is this the kind return | Isaac Watts | 1709 | a | S.M. | 4 | |
395 | 253b | Warren | 1802 | Let all our tongues be one | Isaac Watts | 1711 | A | S.M. | 4 | |
396 | 254 | Douglass | 1831 | Holy Ghost! Dispel our sadness | Paul Gerhardt | 1650 | F | 87.87.77.87. | 4 | |
397 | 255a | Importunity | Savior, visit thy plantation | John Newton | 1779 | F | 87.87.D. | 4 | ||
398 | 255b | Greenville | Surely once thy garden flourished | John Newton | 1779 | F | 87.87.D. | 4 | ||
399 | 256 | Darley | 1844 | Come brethren and sisters, who love one another | Unattributed | 1840 | a | 12 8.12 8.D. | 3 | |
400 | 257 | The Romish Lady | Southern Harmony | 1835 | There was a Romish lady | Unattributed | 1835 | A | 76.76.D. | 3 |
401 | 258 | Christian's Delight | Young people all, now at the ball | G | 87.87.D. | 3 | ||||
402 | 259 | Mecklenburg | 1820 | Bright scenes of glory strike my sense | Unattributed | 1820 | g | 87.87.D. | 4 | |
403 | 260a | Tamworth | 1792 | Feed me with the heavenly manna | William Williams | 1745 | F | 87.87.D. | 4 | |
404 | 260b | Spring Place | O Zion, afflicted with wave after wave | James Grant | 1784 | a | 11 11.11 11. | 3 | ||
405 | 261 | Young Ladies' Farewell | 1848 | Like yon bright cloud new forms assuming | Miss J. W. Guding | 1848 | A | 98.98.D. | 4 | |
406 | 262 | Redeeming Grace | Wyeth's Repository, Part Second | 1813 | Come all who love my Lord and Master | Unattributed | 1813 | G | 98.98.D. | 4 |
407 | 263a | Florida | 1803 | Let sinners take their course | Isaac Watts | 1719 | e | S.M. | 4 | |
408 | 263b | Newingham | 1770 | Death! O the awful sound | William Billings | 1770 | a | S.M. | 4 | |
409 | 264 | Morality | David's Harp | 1803 | While beauty and youth are in their full prime | Unattributed | 1835 | G | 10 11.11 12. | 3 |
410 | 265a | Morality | David's Harp | 1803 | While beauty and youth are in their full prime | Unattributed | 1835 | G | 10 11.11 12. | 4 |
411 | 265b | Raleigh | To go from my home, and from kindred to part | Parley Pratt | 1840 | A | 12 11.12 11. | 3 | ||
412 | 266 | Babylonian Captivity | 1813 | Along the banks where Babel's current flows | Joel Barlow | 1785 | f# | 10 10.10 10. | 4 | |
413 | 267a | Happy Land | Hesperian Harp | 1848 | There is a happy land | Andrew Young | 1838 | E | 64.64.67.64. | 4 |
414 | 267b | Cornelia | O Jesus, my Savior, to thee I submit | Anonymous | 1810 | F | 11 11.11 11. | 3 | ||
415 | 268a | O Tell Me No More | 1835 | O tell me no more of this world's vain store | John Gambold | 1742 | G | 10 11.10 11. | 4 | |
416 | 268b | Kingsley | Who, who would like alway away from his God | F | 11 11.11 11. | 3 | ||||
417 | 269a | Unitia | 1812 | But this I do find, we two are so joined | John Gambold | 1742 | G | 10 11.10 11. | 4 | |
418 | 269b | Taladega | 1844 | Come, thou fount of every blessing | Robert Robinson | 1759 | A | 87.87.D. | 3 | |
419 | 270a | Davis | Wyeth's Repository, Part Second | 1813 | O thou in whose presence my soul takes delight | Joseph Swain | 1791 | G | 11 8.11 8. | 3 |
420 | 270b | Mount Bether | Where dost thou at noon-tide resort with thy sheep | Joseph Swain | 1791 | F | 11 8.11 8. | 4 | ||
421 | 271 | Samantha | Franklin Harmonie | 1821 | O why should I wander an alien from thee | Joseph Swain | 1791 | a | 11 8.11 8.D. | 4 |
422 | 272 | The Hermit | At the close of the day, when the hamlet is still | James Beattie | 1765 | C | 11 11.11 11.D. | 4 | ||
423 | 273 | Crucifixion | 1820 | Saw ye my Savior! Saw ye my Savior! | Anonymous | 1819 | F | 10 7.779. | 4 | |
424 | 274 | Behold the Lamb of God | Behold, behold the Lamb of God | Joseph Hoskins | 1789 | a | 86.86.88.86. | 4 | ||
425 | 275a | Restoration | Wyeth's Repository, Part Second | 1813 | Ye captives restored and saints of the Lord | Unattributed | 1804 | A | 10 11.11 11. | 4 |
426 | 275b | Christmas Hymn | 1743 | A virgin unspotted, the prophets foretold | Unattributed | 1800 | G | 11 11.11 11. | 4 | |
427 | 276 | De Kalb | Sweet the moments, rich in blessing | James Allen | 1757 | C | 87.87.D. | 4 | ||
428 | 277a | Road's Town | 1813 | Daniel's wisdm may I know | Anonymous | 1827 | a | 77.77.77. | 4 | |
429 | 277b | War Department | Southern Harmony | 1835 | No more shall the sound of the war-whoop be heard | Unattributed | 1835 | e | 11 11.11 11. | 3 |
430 | 278 | Melody | 1821 | O how I have longed for the coming of God | Anonymous | 1810 | C | 11 11.11 11.D. | 4 | |
431 | 279 | Day-Spring | Christian, see! The orient morning | John Leland | 1790 | G | 87.87.87. | 4 | ||
432 | 280 | Missionary Hymn | 1824 | From Greenland's icy mountains | Reginald Heber | 1811 | F | 76.76.D. | 4 | |
433 | 281 | The Gospel Among the Indians | 1848 | From realms where the day its first dawning extends | Anonymous | 1805 | C | 11 11.11 11. | 4 | |
434 | 282 | Missionary Song | 1841 | O'er the gloomy hills of darkness | William Pantycelyn | 1772 | D | 87.87.87. | 4 | |
435 | 283 | Missionaries in Palestine | 1832 | They have gone to the land where the patriarchs rest | Thomas Hastings | 1832 | C | 12 9.12 9.D. | 4 | |
436 | 284 | Isles of the South | 1848 | Wake, isles of the south! Your redemption is near | William Tappan | 1822 | E | 11 11.11 11 11. | 4 | |
437 | 285 | Missionary's Farewell | Yes, my native land, I love thee | A | 87.87.D. | 4 | ||||
438 | 286 | Missionary Call | On Thibet's snow-capped mountains | Deodatus Dutton | 1831 | C | 76.76.D. | 3 | ||
439 | 287 | Monroe | 1820 | Jesus, my all, to heaven is gone | John Cennick | 1740 | G | L. M. D. | 4 | |
440 | 288 | Gospel Morning | 1831 | The morning light is breaking | Samuel Smith | 1832 | C | 76.76.D. | 4 | |
441 | 289 | Drummond | 1845 | Away from his home and the friends of his youth | Unattributed | 1835 | A | 11 11.12 12. | 4 | |
442 | 290 | The Chariot of Mercy | 1841 | The chariot of mercy is speeding its way | Mary Dana | 1841 | F | 11 8.11 8.D. | 3 | |
443 | 291 | Babylon is Fallen | Hail the day so long expected | Richard McNemar | 1813 | G | 87.87.87.12 10. | 4 | ||
444 | 292a | Yarmouth | 1792 | When shall the voice of singing | James Edmeston | 1822 | G | 76.76.D. | 4 | |
445 | 292b | Palmyra | 1820 | Come, thou long-expected Jesus | Charles Wesley | 1745 | a | 87.87.D. | 4 | |
446 | 293 | Rock of Ages | 1831 | Rock of ages, cleft for me | Augustus Toplady | 1775 | D | 77.77.77. | 4 | |
447 | 294a | Ohio | Compilation of Genuine Church Music | 1835 | Come, my soul, and let us try | Joseph Hart | 1759 | A | 76.76.D. | 4 |
448 | 294b | Exultation | 1820 | Come, away to the skies, my beloved, arise | Charles Wesley | 1767 | a | 11.9.11.9. | 4 | |
449 | 295 | Redemption | 1805 | Come friends and relations, let's join heart and hand | Unattributed | 1803 | A | 11 11.11 11. | 4 | |
450 | 296 | Home, Sweet Home | An alien to God, and a stranger to grace | Anonymous | 1830 | F | 11 11.11 11.5 11. | 4 | ||
451 | 297 | Expostulation | Christian Lyre | 1830 | O turn ye, O turn ye, for why will ye die | Josiah Hopkins | 1830 | A | 11 11.11 11. | 4 |
452 | 298a | The Spiritual Sailor | The people called Christians | a | 76.76.D. | 4 | ||||
453 | 298b | The Resolve | Christian Lyre | 1831 | I'll try to prove faithful | Unattributed | 1831 | F | 66.10 7. | 4 |
454 | 299a | The Spiritual Sailor | 1835 | Many have been impatient | Anonymous | 1810 | a | 76.76.D. | 3 | |
455 | 299b | Grateful Tears | Who shall forbid our grateful woe | William Hunter | 1845 | G | C.M. | 3 | ||
456 | 300 | The Lord Will Provide | Though troubles assail, and dangers affright | John Newton | 1779 | G | 10 10.11 11.10 11. | 4 | ||
457 | 301a | Good Physician | 1806 | How lost was my condition | John Newton | 1779 | e | 76.76.D. | 3 | |
458 | 301b | Harrison | 1835 | The worst of all diseases | John Newton | 1779 | e | 76.76.D. | 3 | |
459 | 302 | Cumberland | Come, children of Zion, and help me to sing | Unattributed | 1832 | C | 11 11.11 11. | 4 | ||
460 | 303 | Begone Unbelief | Begone unbelief, my Savior is near | John Newton | 1779 | f# | 10 10.11 11. | 3 | ||
461 | 304a | Indiana | 1848 | Now with singing we praise | Charles Wesley | 1767 | C | 669.669. | 4 | |
462 | 304b | Solicitation | How happy are they | Charles Wesley | 1749 | a | 569.569. | 4 | ||
463 | 305a | Sweet Gliding Kedron | 1848 | Thou sweet gliding Kedron, by thy silver stream | Maria De Fleury | 1791 | G | 11 11.11 11. | 4 | |
464 | 305b | Morning's Sweetness | Awake with the sound of the bell | Unattributed | 1848 | e | L. M. D. | 4 | ||
465 | 306a | Star in the East | 1831 | Hail the blest morn, when the great Mediator | Reginald Heber | 1811 | a | 11 10.11 10.D. | 4 | |
466 | 306b | Star in the East | 1831 | Cold on his cradle the dew-drops are shining | Reginald Heber | 1811 | a | 11 10.11 10.D. | 4 | |
467 | 307a | Star of Glory | He is our friend in the midst of temptation | Reginald Heber | 1811 | C | 11 10.11 10. | 4 | ||
468 | 307b | Edgefield | How tedious and tasteless the hours | John Newton | 1779 | f# | L.M. | 4 | ||
469 | 308 | The Wanderer | 1848 | Mid scenes of confusion and creature complaints | David Denham | 1837 | a | 11 11.11 11.5 11. | 4 | |
470 | 309 | Lena | 1795 | See the Lord of glory dying | Joseph Hart | 1759 | f# | 887.887. | 4 | |
471 | 310 | The Family Bible | Southern Harmony | 1835 | How painfully pleasing the fond recollection | Unattributed | 1818 | C | 12 11.12 11.D. | 4 |
472 | 311 | Ellison | Agonizing in the garden | Joseph Hart | 1759 | A | 87.87.87. | 3 | ||
473 | 312 | The Rock | In seasons of grief to my God I'll repair | William Hunter | 1842 | A | 11 12.12 11.8 11. | 3 | ||
474 | 313a | Impressive Hour | In this calm, impressive hour | Thomas Hastings | 1820 | E | 77.77.77. | 4 | ||
475 | 313b | Kingswood | 1799 | Children of the heavenly King | John Cennick | 1740 | A | 77.77. | 4 | |
476 | 314a | Bartimeus | 1799 | Mercy, O thou Son of David | John Newton | 1779 | F | 87.87. | 4 | |
477 | 314b | Pentonville | 1795 | To bless thy chosen race | Tate and Brady | 1696 | A | S.M. | 3 | |
478 | 315a | Conquering Soldier | Christian Harmony | 1805 | O, when shall I see Jesus | John Leland | 17933 | e | 76.76.D. | 4 |
479 | 315b | McAnally | Haste, my dull soul, arise | Anonymous | 1843 | B♭ | 64.64.66.64. | 4 | ||
480 | 316 | Imandra | 1820 | O Jesus, my Savior, I know thou art mine | Attrib. Caleb Taylor | 1810 | a | 11 11.11 11. | 4 | |
481 | 317 | The Faithful Soldier | 1835 | O, when shall I see Jesus | John Leland | 1793 | A | 77.77.D. | 4 | |
482 | 318a | Parting Friends | Christian Lyre | 1831 | When shall we all meet again | Unattributed | 1835 | e | 77.77.77. | 4 |
483 | 318b | Indian's Farewell | Southern Harmony | 1835 | When our burnished locks are gray | Unattributed | 1835 | e | 77.77.77. | 3 |
484 | 319a | Mitylene | Come, ye weary, heavy-laden | Joseph Hart | 1759 | C | 87.87.87. | 4 | ||
485 | 319b | How Charming is Jesus | There we shall reign with Jesus | Anonymous | 1822 | E | 76.76.D. | 3 | ||
486 | 320 | Morning Star | 1820 | How splendid shines the morning star | Philip Nicolai | 1697 | a | 887.887.888. | 4 | |
487 | 321 | Zion's Call | My brethren all, on you I call | Anonymous | 1805 | B♭ | 87.87.D. | 4 | ||
488 | 322 | Lucas | Come, let us anew | Charles Wesley | 1749 | B♭ | 66.6 11.D. | 4 | ||
489 | 323 | Collins | O, hearken sinners, we have cause | Attrib. George Askins | 1817 | G | 87.87.77.77. | 3 | ||
490 | 324 | South Union | Hosanna to Jesus! I'm filled with his praises | Anonymous | 1805 | A | 12 11.12 11.D. | 3 | ||
491 | 325 | Invitation New | Come ye sinners, poor and wretched | Joseph Hart | 1759 | G | 87.87.D. | 3 | ||
492 | 326a | Kershaw | David's Harp | 1813 | Lift your heads, ye friends of Jesus | Charles Wesley | 1758 | a | 87.87.12 7. | 4 |
493 | 326b | Richmond | 1778 | My beloved, haste away | James Relly | 1779 | a | 78.78.78. | 4 | |
494 | 327 | The Bower of Prayer | To go from my home, and from kindred to part | Parley Pratt | 1840 | A | 11 11.10 12. | 3 | ||
495 | 328 | Montague | 1783 | Now let our mournful songs record | Isaac Watts | 1719 | d | L.M. | 4 | |
496 | 329 | Walworth | 1761 | The Lord, the Sovereign, sends his summons forth | Isaac Watts | 1719 | D | 10 10.10 10.10 10. | 3 | |
497 | 330 | Gospel Trumpet | 1799 | Hark! How the gospel trumpet sounds | Anonymous | 1810 | A | 88.88.84. | 4 | |
498 | 331a | North Cove | 1830 | There we shall in full chorus join | Unattributed | 1830 | G | 88.88.84. | 3 | |
499 | 331b | Amsterdam | 1730 | Rise, my soul, and stretch thy wings | Robert Seagrave | 1742 | G | 76.76.77.76. | 4 | |
500 | 332 | Light Street | David's Harp | 1813 | What now is my object, my object and aim | Charles Wesley | 1762 | G | 11 8.11 8.D. | 3 |
501 | 333 | Scriptures Fulfilling | See how the scriptures are fufilling | John Granade | 1804 | A | 98.98.D. | 4 | ||
502 | 334 | Stratfield | 1786 | Through every age, eternal God | Isaac Watts | 1719 | f# | L.M. | 4 | |
503 | 335 | Schenectady | 1805 | From all that dwell below the skies | Isaac Watts | 1719 | E♭ | L. M. D. | 4 | |
504 | 336 | Mount Moro | 1825 | Come, Christians, be valiant, our Jesus is near us | William Moore | 1825 | f# | 12 11.12 11. | 3 | |
505 | 337 | Spring | 1817 | Gently he draws my heart along | Isaac Watts | 1707 | g | L. M. D. | 4 | |
506 | 338a | Emerald Gates | 1820 | Burst, ye emerald gates, and bring | Richard Kempenfelt | 1777 | B♭ | 76.76.777. | 4 | |
507 | 338b | Elysian | 1821 | Four and twenty elders rise | Richard Kempenfelt | 1779 | G | 76.76.77.77. | 4 | |
508 | 339 | Shields | Wyeth's Repository, Part Second | 1813 | When quiet in my house I sit | Charles Wesley | 1762 | A | 88.88.88. | 4 |
509 | 340 | Ebenezer | 1831 | Love divine, all loves excelling | Charles Wesley | 1747 | C | 87.87.D. | 4 | |
510 | 341a | Sons of Sorrow | 1821 | Hail! Ye sighing sons of sorrow | Anonymous | 1795 | Em | 87.87.D. | 3 | |
511 | 341b | Roby | Hesperian Harp | 1848 | Tempest-tossed, troubled spirit | Anonymous | 1839 | a | 87.87.D. | 3 |
512 | 342 | Probation | 1835 | I find myself placed in a state of probation | Unattributed | 1835 | C | 12 11.12 11.D. | 3 | |
513 | 343 | Exhortation | 1800 | Now in the heat of yoithful blood | Isaac Watts | 1707 | a | L.M. | 4 | |
514 | 344 | Livonia | American Musical Magazine | 1800 | I'll praise my Maker with my breath | Isaac Watts | 1719 | e | 88.88.88. | 4 |
515 | 345 | Greenfields | Kentucky Harmonist | 1820 | How tedious and tasteless the hours | John Newton | 1779 | A | L. M. D. | 4 |
516 | 346 | Welsh | 1750 | There's a friend above all others | Marianne Nunn | 1817 | A | 84.84.88.84. | 3 | |
517 | 347a | Prescott | I would not live alway; I ask not to stay | William Muhlenberg | 1826 | F | 11 11.11 12. | 4 | ||
518 | 347b | Oregon | Heavenly Father, sovereign Lord | Charles Wesley | 1740 | C | 77.77. | 4 | ||
519 | 348 | The Landscape | 1848 | Tis night, and the landscape is lovely no more | James Beattie | 1770 | C | 11 11.11 11.D. | 4 | |
520 | 349 | Confidence | Supplement to the Kentucky Harmony | 1826 | Arise, my soul, arise | Charles Wesley | 1739 | a | 66.66.88. | 4 |
521 | 350 | Eighty-Ninth Psalm | Beauties of Psalmody | 1786 | Think, mighty God, on feeble man | Isaac Watts | 1719 | d | 888.888. | 4 |
522 | 351 | Gethsemane | 1848 | Go to dark Gethsemane | James Montgomery | 1825 | G | 77.77.77. | 4 | |
523 | 352 | Vernon | 1805 | Come, O thou traveller unknown | Charles Wesley | 1742 | e | 88.88.88. | 4 | |
524 | 353 | Cincinnati | Sinner, hear thy Savior's call | John Newton | 1779 | A | 76.76.77.76. | 4 | ||
525 | 354 | Christian's Hope | 1835 | A few more days on earth to spend | Anonymous | 1822 | A | 88.86.D. | 3 | |
526 | 355 | The Old Ship of Zion | Come along, come along, and let us go home | Unattributed | 1810 | A | 11 7.11 11. | 3 | ||
527 | 356 | Spring Hill | 1805 | The Lord into his garden comes | Anonymous | 1801 | G | 886.886. | 4 | |
528 | 357 | Garden Hymn | 1805 | The glorious time is coming on | Anonymous | 1801 | G | 886.886. | 3 | |
529 | 358 | Pilgrim's Farewell | Psalmodist's Companion | 1793 | Farewell, my friends, I must be gone | Samuel Crossman | 1664 | G | L. M. D. | 4 |
530 | 359 | Angels' Song | 1821 | He comes, he comes, the Judge severe | Charles Wesley | 1758 | G | L.M. | 4 | |
531 | 360a | Hamburgh | O Spirit of the living God | James Montgomery | 1823 | G | L.M. | 4 | ||
532 | 360b | World, Adieu | 1831 | World, adieu! Thou real cheat | Abijah Forbush | 1831 | a | 77.77.77. | 4 | |
533 | 361 | Eustacy | Now let me rise and join their song | Isaac Watts | 1706 | A | C.M. | 3 | ||
534 | 362 | Carnsville | 1844 | I love my blessed Savior | Anonymous | 1829 | B♭ | 77.76.D. | 4 | |
535 | 363 | Hope Hull | 1848 | Ye souls that are now bound for heaven | Anonymous | 1807 | G | 98.98.D. | 4 | |
536 | 364a | Knight | When thou, my righteous Judge, shall come | Selina, Countess Huntingdon | 1774 | C | 886.886. | 3 | ||
537 | 364b | New Preston | 1844 | The Savior meets his flock today | Anonymous | 1794 | G | 88.88.88. | 3 | |
538 | 365 | Invocation | Southern Harmony | 1835 | Rise, my soul, and stretch thy wings | Robert Seagrave | 1742 | G | 76.76.77.76. | 4 |
539 | 366a | Fidelity | Cast on the fidelity | Charles Wesley | 1767 | A | 76.76.78.76. | 3 | ||
540 | 366b | Mount Olive | Supplement to the Kentucky Harmony | 1826 | The King of saints, how fair his face | Isaac Watts | 1719 | G | L. M. D. | 3 |
541 | 368a | Sudbury | 1794 | What if the saint must die | John Peck | 1773 | C | S. M. D. | 4 | |
542 | 368b | Spring Valley | Easy Instructor | 1803 | I'll praise my Maker with my breath | Isaac Watts | 1719 | D | L. M. D. | 4 |
543 | 369 | Flower of Calvary | 1848 | The finest flower that ever blowed | Joseph Swain | 1791 | F | C.M. | 4 | |
544 | 370 | Nashville | 1820 | The Lord into his garden comes | Anonymous | 1801 | A | 886.886. | 4 | |
545 | 371 | Kingwood | 1820 | My days, my weeks, my months, my years | Thomas Greene | 1780 | A | 886.886. | 4 | |
546 | 372 | Christian Dirge | Thou art gone to the grave, but we will not deplore thee | Reginald Heber | 1818 | B♭ | 13 11.12 12. | 3 | ||
547 | 373 | Caldwell's Funeral Thought | 1837 | Thou art gone to the grave, but twere wrong to deplore thee | Reginald Heber | 1818 | F | 13 11.12 11. | 4 | |
548 | 374 | Holy City | Columbian Harmony | 1825 | There is a holy city | Anonymous | 1811 | A | 76.76.D. | 4 |
549 | 375 | Dominion | 1798 | Jesus shall reign where-e'er the sun | Isaac Watts | 1719 | E | L.M. | 4 | |
550 | 376 | Rhode Island | 1799 | Thou great mysterious God unknown | Charles Wesley | 1747 | c | 886.886. | 3 | |
551 | 377 | New Canaan | Wyeth's Repository, Part Second | 1813 | Ye children of Jesus, who're bound for the kingdom | John Granade | 1804 | C | 12 11.12 11.D. | 3 |
552 | 378a | Olney | Virginia Sacred Musical Repository | 1818 | Come, thou fount of every blessing | Robert Robinson | 1759 | G | 87.87.D. | 4 |
553 | 378b | Portuguese Hymn | 1799 | Hither, ye faithful, haste with songs of triumph | John Wade | 1730 | A | 11 11.11 10. | 3 | |
554 | 379 | True Love | Come away to the skies | Charles Wesley | 1767 | A | 669.669. | 4 | ||
555 | 380 | Bristol | 1785 | The spacious firmament on high | Joseph Addison | 1712 | F | L. M. D. | 4 | |
556 | 381 | Delight | 1798 | Upward I lift mine eyes | Isaac Watts | 1711 | e | 66.66.88. | 4 | |
557 | 382a | Complaint | 1790 | Save us, O Lord! Aloud we pray | Isaac Watts | 1719 | e | L.M. | 4 | |
558 | 382b | Greenfield | 1782 | God is our refuge in distress | Tate and Brady | 1696 | a | 888.888. | 4 | |
559 | 383 | Woodland | Southern Harmony | 1835 | There is an hour of peaceful rest | William Tappan | 1819 | G | 86.886. | 4 |
560 | 384 | Green Hills of Canaan | 1837 | Ye objects of sense, and enjoyments of time | Benjamin Fraancis | 1795 | C | 11 8.11 8. | 4 | |
561 | 385 | Joyful Spring | Virginia Sacred Musical Repository | 1818 | The voice of my beloved sounds | Isaac Watts | 1707 | G | 88.88.77. | 3 |
562 | 386 | Warwick | 1768 | The voice of my beloved sounds | Isaac Watts | 1707 | A | 88.88.77. | 4 | |
563 | 387 | Salutation | Western Harmony | 1824 | Good morning, brother pilgrim | Caleb Taylor | 1810 | d | 76.86.76.76. | 3 |
564 | 388 | Lenox | 1782 | Blow ye the trumpet, blow | Charles Wesley | 1749 | C | 66.66.88. | 4 | |
565 | 389 | Sharon | 1793 | How pleasant 'tis to see | Isaac Watts | 1719 | D | 668.668. | 4 | |
566 | 390 | The Jubilee Trump | 1825 | What sound is this salutes my ear | John Granade | 1804 | A | 886.886. | 3 | |
567 | 391 | Friendship | 1735 | Friendship, in every willing mind | Unattributed | 1786 | G | 87.87.88.87. | 4 | |
568 | 392 | Pilgrim | 1805 | Come, all ye mourning pilgrims dear | John Granade | 1794 | f# | 86.86.76.86. | 4 | |
569 | 393 | Jesus Crucified | Southern Harmony | 1835 | Vain, delusive world, adieu | Charles Wesley | 1742 | a | 76.76.78.76. | 4 |
570 | 394 | Carmarthen | Musica Sacra | 1778 | Rejoice, the Lord is King | Charles Wesley | 1746 | G | 66.66.88. | 4 |
571 | 395 | Lovely Story | Sacred Harp | 1844 | A story most lovely to tell | Unattributed | 1810 | A | L. M. D. | 4 |
572 | 396 | Southwell | 1786 | Tis finished, the Redeemer said | Joseph Stennett | 1769 | E | 886.886. | 4 | |
573 | 397 | Lovely Vine | 1805 | Behold, a lovely vine | Unattributed | 1800 | C | S.M. | 4 | |
574 | 398 | New Jordan | 1815 | On Jordan's stormy banks I stand | Samuel Stennett | 1787 | c# | C. M. D. | 4 | |
575 | 399 | The Rose Tree | 1820 | There is a land of pleasure | Anonymous | 1815 | A | 78.78.D. | 3 | |
576 | 400 | Paradise | 1796 | Now to the shinign realms above | Isaac Watts | 1709 | D | L. M. D. | 4 | |
577 | 401 | Bellevue | 1813 | Ye tribes of Adam, join | Isaac Watts | 1719 | F | 66.66.88. | 4 | |
578 | 402 | Few Happy Matches | 1788 | Say, mighty love, and teach my song | Isaac Watts | 1706 | A | 886.886. | 4 | |
579 | 403 | Eden | 1821 | The Lord is the fountain of goodness and love | Anonymous | 1811 | G | 11 11.11 11. | 4 | |
580 | 404 | Melodia | 1793 | The Lord of glory sends his summons forth | Isaac Watts | 1719 | E♭ | 10 10.10 10.10 10. | 4 | |
581 | 405 | Symphony | 1790 | Behold, the Judge descends, his guards are nigh | Isaac Watts | 1719 | E♭ | 10 10.10 10.10 10. | 4 | |
582 | 406 | Judgment | 1785 | Behold, my covenant stands forever good | Isaac Watts | 1719 | C | 10 10.10 10.10 10. | 4 | |
583 | 407 | Justice | 1786 | The God of glory sends his summonsforth | Isaac Watts | 1719 | C | 10 10.10 10.10 10. | 4 | |
584 | 408a | Solicitude | Virginia Sacred Musical Repository | 1818 | How firm a foundation, ye saints of the Lord | Robert Keen | 1787 | C | 11 11.11 11. | 4 |
585 | 408b | New Jerusalem | Tennessee Harmony | 1818 | My gracious Redeemer I love | Benjamin Francis | 1787 | a | L. M. D. | 4 |
586 | 409 | Amherst | 1770 | Lord of the worlds above | Isaac Watts | 1719 | G | 66.66.88. | 4 | |
587 | 410 | Fading, Still Fading | Fading, still fading, the last beam is shining | Unattributed | 1830 | E♭ | Irregular | 4 | ||
588 | 411 | Watts' Harp | Supplement to the Kentucky Harmony | 1820 | Say, mighty love, and teach my song | Isaac Watts | 1706 | G | 886.886. | 4 |
589 | 412 | Thou Art Passing Away | 1848 | Thou art passing away, thou art passing away | Unattributed | 1848 | G | 12 11.11 12. | 4 | |
590 | 413 | Lebanon | 1825 | Drooping souls, no longer grieve | Anonymous | 1823 | a | 76.76.D. | 4 | |
591 | 414 | Mourner | 1821 | Still out of the deepest abyss | Charles Wesley | 1747 | C | L. M. D. | 4 | |
592 | 415 | Liberty | David's Harp | 1813 | Prisoners of hope, lift up your heads | Charles Wesley | 1742 | A | 88.88.88. | 4 |
593 | 416 | Complainer | 1835 | I am a great complainer | Unattributed | 1835 | G | 76.76.D. | 4 | |
594 | 417 | Witham | Master, I own thy lawful claim | Charles Wesley | 1749 | F | 88.88.88. | 4 | ||
595 | 418 | Morgan | Easy Instructor | 1803 | With songs and honors sounding loud | Isaac Watts | 1719 | E | C. M. D. | 4 |
596 | 420 | Lenox New | 1848 | Through tribulation deep | Anonymous | 1804 | a | 66.66.88. | 4 | |
597 | 421 | Miss Hataway's Experience | Young women all, I pray draw near | A | L. M. D. | 3 | ||||
598 | 422a | Ganges | Columbian and European Harmony | 1802 | Awaked by Sinai's awful sound | Samson Occum | 1774 | D | 886.886. | 4 |
599 | 422b | Ninety-Third | 1805 | We lift our hearts to thee | Charles Wesley | 1741 | C | S.M. | 4 | |
600 | 423 | Psalm Forty-Sixth | 1565 | I'll praise my Maker with my breath | Isaac Watts | 1719 | F | 88.88.88. | 4 | |
601 | 424a | Anticipation | 1805 | When thou, my righteous Judge, shall come | Selina, Countess Huntingdon | 1774 | e | 886.886. | 4 | |
602 | 424b | Saint's Repose | 1790 | Death is a calm and sweet repose | Ralph Erskine | 1740 | E | L. M. D. | 4 | |
603 | 425 | Olivet | Easy Instructor | 1803 | On the cold ground, methinks I see | Anonymous | 1772 | d | 886.886. | 4 |
604 | 426 | De Beza | 1565 | Shout to Jehovah, all the earth | Henry Ainsworth | 1612 | F | L.M. | 4 | |
605 | 427 | Break of Day | 1848 | Let me go, the day is breaking | James Montgomery | 1825 | F | 87.87.77. | 4 | |
606 | 428 | Buckfield | 1802 | When strangers stand and hear me tell | Isaac Watts | 1707 | C | L.M. | 4 | |
607 | 429 | The Blue Bird | 1825 | O how charming are the radiant bands | James Denson | 1844 | a | Anthem | 3 | |
608 | 430 | Bruce's Address | Christian Lyre | 1831 | Soldiers of the cross, arise | Jared Waterbury | 1831 | A | 77.76.78.86. | 4 |
609 | 431 | Mount Sion | 1791 | The hill of Zion yields | Isaac Watts | 1709 | C | S. M. D. | 4 | |
610 | 432a | Bannockburn | Lord of mercy and of might | Reginald Heber | 1827 | C | 77.75.D. | 3 | ||
611 | 432b | Horeb | Hail to the Lord's anointed | James Montgomery | 1821 | D | 76.76.D. | 3 | ||
612 | 433 | Mount Hor | Southern Harmony | 1835 | The day of the Lord | Anonymous | 1823 | D | 11 11.66.76. | 3 |
613 | 434 | Mount Pleasant | 1793 | There is a house not made with hands | Isaac Watts | 1707 | F | C.M. | 4 | |
614 | 435 | Midnight Cry | 1835 | When the midnight cry began | Unattributed | 1832 | A | 76.76.D. | 4 | |
615 | 436 | Huntington | 1790 | Lord, what a thoughtless wretch was I | Isaac Watts | 1719 | A | L. M. D. | 4 | |
616 | 437 | Portsmouth | 1821 | Come, sinners, to the gospel feast | Charles Wesley | 1747 | C | L.M. | 4 | |
617 | 438 | Invitation | 1784 | Hark! The Redeemer from on high | Isaac Watts | 1707 | D | L. M. D. | 4 | |
618 | 439 | North Orange | 1801 | Jesus, the holy child, shall sit | Isaac Watts | 1707 | E | L. M. D. | 4 | |
619 | 440 | St. Helen's | 1750 | How lovely are thy tents, O Lord | Charles Wesley | 1742 | C | 88.88.88. | 4 | |
620 | 441 | Davis' Experience | Come all ye young people, of every relation | Unattributed | 1835 | A | 12 11.12 11.D. | 4 | ||
621 | 442a | David's Victory | 1825 | Now your festal rites prepare | Unattributed | 1825 | C | 77.77.10 10. | 4 | |
622 | 442b | Connecticut | 1792 | Join all the glorious names | Isaac Watts | 1707 | D | 66.66.88. | 4 | |
623 | 443 | Warrenton | 1822 | Whither goest thou, pilgrim stranger | Anonymous | 1822 | G | 87.87.789. | 3 | |
624 | 444 | Washington | 1813 | Dismiss us with thy blessing, Lord | Joseph Hart | 1759 | a | L. M. D. | 4 | |
625 | 445 | Petersburg | 1786 | Thus saith the high and lofty one | Isaac Watts | 1707 | D | L. M. D. | 3 | |
626 | 446 | Scotland | 1793 | Awake our souls, away our fears | Isaac Watts | 1707 | E | L. M. D. | 4 | |
627 | 447 | All Saints New | 1791 | O, if my Lord would come and meet | Isaac Watts | 1709 | d | L. M. D. | 4 | |
628 | 449a | Social Meeting | Draw nigh to us, Jehovah | Anonymous | 1835 | C | 77.76.D. | 4 | ||
629 | 449b | Spanish Hymn | Through thy protecting care | Anonymous | 1820 | B♭ | 65.65.66.65.65. | 4 | ||
630 | 450a | Annapolis | 1825 | Ah, lovely appearance of death | Charles Wesley | 1746 | D | L. M. D. | 3 | |
631 | 450b | Consolation New | Wyeth's Repository, Part Second | 1813 | Come on, my partners in distress | Charles Wesley | 1749 | a | 886.886. | 3 |
632 | 451 | O How Pleasant | Musical Reader | 1817 | O how pleasant 'tis to see | Isaac Watts | 1719 | F | 77.77. | 4 |
633 | 452 | Pastoral Elegy | 1810 | What sorrowful sounds do I hear | Timothy Dwight | 1798 | e | L. M. D. | 4 | |
634 | 453 | Hartford | 1779 | This spacious earth is all the Lord's | Isaac Watts | 1719 | d | L. M. D. | 4 | |
635 | 454 | Methodist and Formalist | Good morning, brother pilgrim | Caleb Taylor | 1810 | G | 12 12.12 12.D. | 3 | ||
636 | 456 | Sinai | 1801 | Lord, when thou didst ascend on high | Isaac Watts | 1719 | C | L. M. D. | 4 | |
637 | 457 | Middlebury | 1823 | We have laid up our love | Charles Wesley | 1767 | A | 669.669. | 4 | |
638 | 458 | Cumberland | 1796 | The God of glory sends his summons forth | Isaac Watts | 1719 | E | 10 10.11 11. | 4 | |
639 | 459 | Devotion | 1793 | Fly, fly me riches, fly me cares | Robert Seagrave | 1742 | F | Anthem | 4 | |
640 | 461a | Shepherd | 1742 | Ours is the Sabbath school | Anonymous | 1845 | A | S.M. | 4 | |
641 | 461b | How Kind the Saviour's Love | How kind the Savior's love | Anonymous | 1836 | G | 66.66.88. | 3 | ||
642 | 462a | Reneau | Children redeemed in every place | Unattributed | 1848 | A | 86.86.88. | 4 | ||
643 | 462b | Abingdon | 1820 | There is an hour when I must die | Isaac Watts | 1720 | A | L.M. | 4 | |
644 | 463 | Indian's Petition | 1846 | Let me go to my home in the far distant west | John Perry | 1833 | B♭ | 12 12.12 12. | 4 | |
645 | 464 | Mary's Lamb | Mary had a little lamb | Sarah Hale | 1830 | A | 76.86.86.86. | 4 | ||
646 | 465 | Sabbath School | All the week we spend | Thomas White | 1830 | E | 55.55.77. | 4 | ||
647 | 466 | Kidder | Come children young and lowly | W. Fraser | 1844 | A | 76.76.D. | 4 | ||
648 | 467 | Children's Hosannah | When his salvation bringing | John King | 1830 | G | 76.76.D. | 4 | ||
649 | 468 | Royal Proclamation | Southern Harmony | 1835 | Hear the royal proclamation | Anonymous | 1820 | F | 88.88.88. | 4 |
650 | 469a | Royal Proclamation | Southern Harmony | 1835 | Hear the royal proclamation | Anonymous | 1820 | F | 88.88.88. | 4 |
651 | 469b | Tippett | I saw a little child at play | Jemima Luke | 1842 | G | C.M. | 4 | ||
652 | 470 | Autumn Leaves | 1820 | See the leaves around us falling | George Horne | 1795 | G | 87.87.D. | 4 | |
653 | 471 | Sweet Spring | I have seen in the sweet spring time | Mary Schindler | 1842 | C | 11 9.11 9.88.11 9. | 4 | ||
654 | 472a | Erie | 1790 | Ye tribes of Adam, join | Isaac Watts | 1719 | F | 66.66.88. | 4 | |
655 | 472b | O come, come away | 1848 | O come, come away | Unattributed | 1848 | D | 11 14.88.65. | 4 | |
656 | 473 | Atkinson | Southern Harmony | 1835 | E'en down to old age all my people shall prove | Isaac Watts | 1706 | F | 11 11.11 11. | 3 |
657 | 474 | Alexander | Virginia Sacred Musical Repository | 1818 | Thou, my God, art good and wise | Charles Wesley | 1763 | A | 76.76.77.76. | 4 |
658 | 475a | New Farewell | Southern Harmony | 1835 | Farewell, my loving friends, farewell | Unattributed | 1793 | a | 87.87.D. | 4 |
659 | 475b | Dwight | As crushed by sudden storms | Lydia Sigourney | 1815 | A | C.M. | 4 | ||
660 | 476a | Chalmers | Happy the child whose tender years | Isaac Watts | 1720 | B♭ | C.M. | 4 | ||
661 | 476b | Laban | 1830 | There is beyond the sky | Isaac Watts | 1720 | D | S.M. | 4 | |
662 | 477 | Vesper Hymn | 1830 | Hark! The vesper hymn is stealing | Thomas Moore | 1816 | F | 87.87.86.87. | 3 | |
663 | 478 | Shed Not a Tear | 1833 | Shed not a tear o'er your friend's early bier | Mary Schindler | 1841 | F | 10 8.10 7.10 10.10 7. | 3 | |
664 | 479 | Jeshurun | None is like Jeshurun's God | Charles Wesley | 1742 | A | 76.76.77.76. | 4 | ||
665 | 480a | There's not a tint | 1835 | There's not a tint | John Wallace | 1825 | E | C.M. | 4 | |
666 | 480b | American Gratitude | Up to thee, almighty Father | Attrib. Lovell | 1842 | C | 87.87.D. | 4 | ||
667 | 481 | Sunday School Farewell | Farewell, dear friend! A long farewell | George Coles | 1827 | G | C. M. D. | 4 | ||
668 | 482a | Hinton | 1792 | O Zion, afflicted with wave upon wave | James Grant | 1784 | A | 11 11.11 11. | 3 | |
669 | 482b | Heavenly Welcome | O when shall I see Jesus | John Leland | 1793 | A | 76.76.D. | 3 | ||
670 | 483 | The Last Rose of Summer | Seraph | 1819 | Tis the last rose of summer | Traditional | 1830 | F | 12 12.11 12. | 4 |
671 | 484 | When Shall We Meet Again | When shall we meet again | Anonymous | 1829 | F | 65.65.66.65. | 4 | ||
672 | 485a | Cheering Thought | How charming the thought, that the spirits of bliss | Anonymous | 1845 | A | 11 11.11 11. | 4 | ||
673 | 485b | Joyful News | Compilation of the Litanies | 1787 | That Jesus hears when children pray | Anonymous | 1842 | F | C.M. | 3 |
674 | 486a | All is Well | Sacred Harp | 1844 | What's this that steals, that steals upon my frame | Anonymous | 1836 | A | 10 6.10 6.88.86. | 3 |
675 | 486b | All is Well | Sacred Harp | 1844 | Hark, hark, my Lord, my Lord and Master's voice | Anonymous | 1836 | A | 10 6.10 6.88.86. | 3 |
676 | 487 | The light of Sabbath eve | The light of Sabbath eve | James Edmeston | 1821 | G | 66.66.D. | 3 | ||
677 | 488a | The Scale | 1835 | Come, let us learn to sing | Thomas Hastings | 1835 | G | 68.68.778. | 3 | |
678 | 488b | Childhood's Gladness | We come in childhood's gladness | Anonymous | 1832 | F | 76.76.D. | 3 | ||
679 | 489 | America | Harmonia Anglicana | 1744 | My country, 'tis of thee | Samuel Smith | 1831 | F | 664.6664. | 4 |
680 | 490 | Ode on Science | 1798 | The morning sun shines from the east | Jazaniah Sumner | 1798 | G | L.M.D.D. | 4 | |
681 | 492 | Claremont | 1799 | Vital spark of heavenly flame | Alexander Pope | 1720 | C | Anthem | 4 | |
682 | 496 | The Prodigal Son | 1816 | Behold the wretch whose lust and wine | Isaac Watts | 1707 | b | Anthem | 4 | |
683 | 499 | John the Baptist | 1844 | In those days came John the Baptist | Matthew 3:1 | 0 | C | Anthem | 4 | |
684 | 501 | Danid's Lamentation | 1778 | David the King was grieved and moved | 2 Samuel 18:33 | 0 | a | Anthem | 4 | |
685 | 502 | Heavenly Vision | 1786 | I beheld, and lo! A great multitude | Revelation 7:9 | 0 | G | Anthem | 4 | |
686 | 506 | Judgment Anthem | 1790 | Hark ye mortals, hear the trumpet | Anonymous | 1789 | e | Anthem | 4 | |
687 | 514 | Easter Anthem | 1787 | The Lord is risen indeed | Edward Young | 1742 | A | Anthem | 4 | |
688 | 517 | Reverential Anthem | 1844 | Give unto the Lord the glory | C | Anthem | 3 | |||
689 | 518 | Rose of Sharon | 1778 | I am the rose of Sharon | Song of Solomon 2:1 | 0 | A | Anthem | 4 | |
690 | 524 | Funeral Anthem | 1778 | I heard a great voice from heaven | Revelation 11:12 | 0 | f# | Anthem | 4 | |
691 | 525 | Anthem of Praise | O! Praise God in his holiness | F | Anthem | 4 | ||||
692 | 527 | Farewell Anthem | 1783 | My friends, I am going a long and tedious journey | Unattributed | 1789 | a | Anthem | 4 | |
693 | 530 | The Drunkard's Burial | 1848 | Not a sigh was heard nor a wailing note | Unattributed | 1848 | G | 10 10.10 10.10 8.98. | 3 | |
694 | 531 | Meeting of the Waters | 1848 | O soft sleep the hills in their sunny repose | Unattributed | 1841 | A | 11 12.11 12. | 3 | |
695 | 532 | The Drink | The drink that's in the drunkard's bowl | John Marsh | 1841 | F | 86.86.88.66. | 4 | ||
696 | 533 | Ecstasy | 1806 | O that I could now adore him | Anonymous | 1794 | C | 87.87.44.47 | 4 | |
697 | 534 | Hail to the Cause | 1710 | Hail to the cause that in triumph advances | Miss Julia A. P_ | 1848 | D | 11 11.12 10. | 4 | |
698 | 536 | Washington Badge | Hesperian Harp | 1848 | Come, join our temperance army | Folk song | 1700 | G | 98.98.D. | 3 |
699 | 537 | Auld Lang Syne | Scottish Traditional | 1700 | Be days of drinking wine forgot | Unattributed | 1848 | G | C. M. D. | 4 |
700 | 538 | The Last Distiller | Twas the last sad distiller | A | 75.75.76.65. | 4 | ||||
701 | 539 | Naxos | 1848 | Onward! onward! Band victorious | Unattributed | 1842 | F | 87.87.D. | 4 | |
702 | 540 | Maltese Boatman's Song | 1650 | Hail, brothers Hail! We have met once more | E. M. Pendleton | 1848 | G | Irregular | 3 | |
703 | 541 | Away the Bowl | 1842 | Our youthful hearts with temperance burn | Anonymous | 1842 | C | 86.86.886. | 4 | |
704 | 542 | Sparkling and Bright | Sparking and bright in its liquid light | B♭ | 88.88.87.87. | 3 | ||||
705 | 543a | Sign of the Sons of Temperance | 1840 | O, sweet the strains are swelling | Peter Walker | 1848 | G | C. M. D. | 3 | |
706 | 543b | Drunkard's Wife | Sadly and hopelessly mourning her lot | E♭ | 10 10.10 10. | 4 | ||||
707 | 544 | Angels' Whisper | A baby was sleeping | Unattributed | 1848 | C | 66 12.77 12. | 4 | ||
708 | 545 | One Glass More | ' | 1800 | Stay, mortal, stay, Nor heedless thus | John Marsh | 1841 | B♭ | C. M. D.D. | 4 |
709 | 546 | Afflicted Zion | 1848 | Sitting by the streams that glide | Anonymous | 1840 | F | 77.777. | 3 | |
710 | 547 | Hail Columbia | 1789 | Hail, Columbia! Happy land | Joseph Hopkinson | 1789 | C | 77.88.88. | 3 | |
711 | 548 | The Inebriate's Lament | Farewell, farewell, ye blest scenes of my childhood | C | 11 11.12 11. | 3 | ||||
712 | 549 | The Star-Spangled Banner | ' | 1814 | O say can you see by the dawn's early light | Francis Key | 1815 | C | 11 13.12 13. | 3 |
713 | 550 | The American Star | 1842 | Come, strike the bold anthem, the war-dogs are howling | Unknown | 1770 | F | 12 11.12 11.D. | 3 | |
714 | 551 | Pilgrim Fathers | 1848 | The breaking waves dashed high | Felicia Hemans | 1828 | D | Irregular | 4 |