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Search Results

Text Identifier:"^once_again_to_meet_the_day$"

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Once again to meet the day

Appears in 5 hymnals Topics: Morning Used With Tune: ALTERBURG

Tunes

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[Once again to meet the day]

Appears in 3 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Dorsey W. Hyde Incipit: 55157 15432 43215 Used With Text: Once Again
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ALTERBURG

Appears in 40 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: M. Vulpius, 1560-1616? Incipit: 32123 45654 32135 Used With Text: Once again to meet the day

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
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Once Again

Author: John Coleridge Hymnal: The Bright Array #113 (1889) First Line: Once again to meet the day Refrain First Line: Once again, once again Lyrics: 1 Once again to meet the day, Time has brought us on our way; Once again to God we bring Prayer and praise, our offering. Refrain: Once again, once again, Once again we greet the day; Once again, once again, Once again we meet to pray. 2 Round us always as we move, Folded be Thy tender love; If we wander from the way, Lead us back, O Lord, we pray. [Refrain] 3 In our joy and in our care, Thou art with us everywhere; Under Thy all-seeing eye We must live, and we must die. [Refrain] Scripture: Psalm 100:4 Tune Title: [Once again to meet the day]
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Once Again

Author: John Coleridge Hymnal: The Glad Refrain for the Sunday School #65 (1886) First Line: Once again to meet the day Refrain First Line: Once again, once again Topics: Opening Languages: English Tune Title: [Once again to meet the day]
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Once Again

Author: John Coleridge Hymnal: Our Song Book #69 (1890) First Line: Once again to meet the day Refrain First Line: Once again, once again Languages: English Tune Title: [Once again to meet the day]

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Melchior Vulpius

1570 - 1615 Person Name: M. Vulpius, 1560-1616? Composer of "ALTERBURG" in Church Hymns Born into a poor family named Fuchs, Melchior Vulpius (b. Wasungen, Henneberg, Germany, c. 1570; d. Weimar, Germany, 1615) had only limited educational oppor­tunities and did not attend the university. He taught Latin in the school in Schleusingen, where he Latinized his surname, and from 1596 until his death served as a Lutheran cantor and teacher in Weimar. A distinguished composer, Vulpius wrote a St. Matthew Passion (1613), nearly two hundred motets in German and Latin, and over four hundred hymn tunes, many of which became popular in Lutheran churches, and some of which introduced the lively Italian balletto rhythms into the German hymn tunes. His music was published in Cantiones Sacrae (1602, 1604), Kirchengesangund Geistliche Lieder (1604, enlarged as Ein schon geistlich Gesanglmch, 1609), and posthumous­ly in Cantionale Sacrum (1646). Bert Polman

John D. Coleridge

1821 - 1894 Person Name: John Coleridge Author of "Once Again" in The Bright Array Coleridge, John Duke, Lord, eldest son of the Right Hon. Sir John Taylor Coleridge, was born in 1821, and educated at Eton, and Balliol College, Oxford. He subsequently became a Fellow of Exeter College. Called to the Bar in 1846, he become Recorder of Portsmouth, 1855-66; M.P. for Exeter, 1863; Solicitor-General, 1868; Attorney-General, 1871; and Lord Chief Justice. His hymns "Bending before Thee, let our hymn go upwards" (Divine Protection desired), and "Once again to meet the day" (Morning) in Thring's Collection make us wish we had more of his lyrics. These hymns were written for private use in the author's family, and were first published in Thring's Collection, 1880. In the latter stanza ii., line 4, read originally "Strike us back, O Lord, we pray." --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, Appendix, Part II (1907) ==================== Coleridge, John Duke, .Lord, p. 1557, i. He became Lord Chief Justice in 1880, and died in London, June 14, 1894. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)

Dorsey W. Hyde

Composer of "[Once again to meet the day]" in The Bright Array