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William Drennan

William Drennan
www.hymntime.com/tch
Short Name: William Drennan
Full Name: Drennan, William, 1754-1820
Birth Year: 1754
Death Year: 1820

Drennan, William, M.D., b. at Belfast, May 23, 1754, and educated at Glasgow, where he graduated M.A. in 1771, and M.D. 1778. He subsequently practised at Belfast. He died Feb. 5, 1820. In 1815 he published Fugitive Pieces in Prose and Verse, Belfast, 1815; and his Poems were collected and published with a Memoir by his sons in 1859. Of his poems six are grouped under the heading of "Religious Poems." Seven hymns, including five of these "Religious Poems," were contributed to Aspland's Unitarian Selection, 1810; but in the 1859 Poems and Memoir most of them are in a longer form.

As most of these are still in common use amongst the Unitarians in Great Britain and America, we subjoin the list of first lines:—
1. All nature feels attractive power. Law of Love.
2. Bless’d who with generous pity glows. Charity.
3. Humanity! thou sent of God. Faith, Hope, Charity.
4. In this fair globe, with ocean bound. Love of God.
5. O sweeter than the fragrant flower. Being Good.
6. The heaven of heavens cannot contain. Divine Worship.
7. The husbandman goes forth afield. Fruits of Benevolence. [William T. Brooke]

-- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

Wikipedia Biography

William Drennan (23 May 1754 – 5 February 1820) was an Irish physician and writer who moved the formation in Belfast and Dublin of the Society of United Irishmen. He was the author of the Society's original "test" which, in the cause of representative government, committed "Irishmen of every religious persuasion" to a "brotherhood of affection". Drennan had been active in the Irish Volunteer movement and achieved renown with addresses to the public as his "fellow slaves" and to the British Viceroy urging "full and final" Catholic emancipation. After the suppression of the 1798 Rebellion, he sought to advance democratic reform through his continued journalism and through education. With other United Irish veterans, Drennan founded the Belfast [later the Royal Belfast] Academical Institution

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