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Tune Identifier:"^pilgrimage_claribel$"

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PILGRIMAGE

Appears in 7 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Anonymous Incipit: 56533 21671 54325 Used With Text: Children of the Heavenly King

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Father, hear Thy children's call

Author: T. B. Pollock Appears in 96 hymnals Topics: God: His Attributes, Works and Word The Holy Trinity Scripture: Ezekiel 33:11 Used With Tune: LITANY

Advent tells us Christ is near

Author: Katherine Hankey Meter: 7.7.7.7 Appears in 18 hymnals Topics: Hymns for Children Used With Tune: PILGRIMAGE
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In our work, and in our play

Appears in 37 hymnals Used With Tune: PILGRIMAGE

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

Litany of the Incarnate Word

Author: Rev. T. B. Pollock Hymnal: The Book of Common Praise #680b (1939) Meter: 7.7.7.6 First Line: God the Father, God the Son Topics: Litanies; Christmas Tune Title: PILGRIMAGE

Advent tells us Christ is near

Author: Katherine Hankey Hymnal: The Book of Common Praise #701 (1939) Meter: 7.7.7.7 Topics: Hymns for Children Tune Title: PILGRIMAGE
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Advent tells us Christ is near!

Author: K. Hankey Hymnal: The Church Hymnal #603 (1920) Lyrics: 1 Advent tells us Christ is near! Christmas tells us Christ is here; In Epiphany we trace All the glory of His grace. 2 Those three Sundays before Lent Will prepare us to repent, That in Lent we may begin Earnestly to mourn for sin. 3 Holy Week and Easter, then, Tell Who died and rose again: O that happy Easter Day! 'Christ is risen indeed,' we say. 4 Yes, and Christ ascended, too, To prepare a place for you; So we give Him special praise After those great Forty Days. 5 Then He sent the Holy Ghost, On the day of Pentecost, With us ever to abide: Well may we keep Whitsuntide. 6 Last of all, we humbly sing Glory to our God and King, Glory to the One in Three On the Feast of Trinity. Topics: Youth and School Life Languages: English Tune Title: PILGRIMAGE

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Anonymous

Composer of "PILGRIMAGE" in Children's Hymnal In some hymnals, the editors noted that a hymn's author is unknown to them, and so this artificial "person" entry is used to reflect that fact. Obviously, the hymns attributed to "Author Unknown" "Unknown" or "Anonymous" could have been written by many people over a span of many centuries.

Kate Hankey

1834 - 1911 Person Name: K. Hankey Author of "Advent tells us Christ is near!" in The Church Hymnal Arabella Katherine Hankey (b. Clapham, England, 1834; d. Westminster, London, England, 1911) was the daughter of a wealthy banker and was associated with the Clapham sect of William Wilberforce, a group of prominent evangelical Anglicans from the Clapham area. This group helped to establish the British and Foreign Bible Society, promoted the abolition of slavery, and was involved in improving the lot of England's working classes. Hankey taught Bible classes for shop girls in London, visited the sick in local hospitals, and used the proceeds of her writings to support various mission causes. Her publications include Heart to Heart (1870) and The Old, Old Story and Other Verses (1879). Bert Polman =============== Hankey, Katharine, has published several hymns of great beauty and simplicity which are included in her:— (1) The Old, Old Story, 1866; (2) The Old, Old Story, and other Verses, 1879; (3) Heart to Heart, 1870, enlarged in 1873 and 1876. In 1878 it was republished with music by the author. Miss Hankey's hymns which have come into common use are:— 1. Advent tells us, Christ is near. The Christian Seasons. Written for the Sunday School of St. Peter's, Eaton Square, London, and printed on a card with music by the author. 2. I love to tell the story Of unseen things above. The love of Jesus. This is a cento from No. 3, and is given in Bliss's Gospel Songs, Cincinnati, 1874, and other American collections. 3. I saw Him leave His Father's throne. Lovest than Me? Written in 1868. It is No. 33 of the Old, Old Story, and other Verses, 1879. 4. Tell me the old, old story. This Life of Jesus in verse was written in two parts. Pt. i., "The Story Wanted," Jan. 29; and Pt. ii., "The Story Told," Nov. 18, 1866. It has since been published in several forms, and sometimes with expressive music by the author, and has also been translated into various languages, including Welsh, German, Italian, Spanish, &c. The form in which it is usually known is that in I. P. Sankey's Sacred Songs & Solos. This is Part i. slightly altered. Miss Hankey's works contain many suitable hymns for Mission Services and Sunday Schools, and may be consulted both for words and music with advantage. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

Thomas Benson Pollock

1836 - 1896 Person Name: T. B. Pollock Author of "Father, hear Thy children's call" in The Presbyterian Book of Praise Pollock, Thomas Benson, M.A., was born in 1836, and graduated at Trinity College, Dublin, B.A. 1859, M.A. 1863, where he also gained the Vice-Chancellor's Prize for English Verse in 1855. Taking Holy Orders in 1861, he was Curate of St. Luke's, Leek, Staffordshire; St. Thomas's, Stamford Hill, London; and St. Alban's, Birmingham. Mr. Pollock is a most successful writer of metrical Litanies. His Metrical Litanies for Special Services and General Use, Mowbray, Oxford, 1870, and other compositions of the same kind contributed subsequently to various collections, have greatly enriched modern hymnbooks. To the 1889 Supplemental Hymns to Hymns Ancient & Modern, Mr. Pollock contributed two hymns, “We are soldiers of Christ, Who is mighty to save" (Soldiers of Christ), and "We have not known Thee as we ought" (Seeking God), but they are by no means equal to his Litanies in beauty and finish. -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907) =================== Pollock, T. B. , 900, i. We note:— 1. God of mercy, loving all. Litany for Quinquagesima. In the Gospeller, 1872. 2. Great Creator, Lord of all. Holy Trinity. In the Gospeller, 1876. 3. Holy Saviour, hear me; on Thy Name I call. Litany of the Contrite. In the Gospeller, 1870. From it "Faithful Shepherd, feed me in the pastures green," is taken. 4. Jesu, in Thy dying woes, p. 678, ii. 36. Given in Thring's Collection, 1882, in 7 parts, was written for the Gos¬peller. 5. My Lord, my Master, at Thy feet adoring. Passiontide. Translation of "Est-ce vous quo je vois, 6 mon Maître adorable!" (text in Moorsom's Historical Comp. to Hymns Ancient & Modern, 1889, p. 266), by Jacques Bridaine, b. 1701, d. 1767. Moorsom says he was born. at Chuselay, near Uzes, in Languedoc, and was a Priest in the French Church. The translation made in 1887 was included in the 1889 Supplemental Hymns to Hymns Ancient & Modern. 6. We are soldiers of Christ, p. 900, i. In the Gospeller, 1875. 7. Weep not for Him Who onward bears. Passiontide. No. 495 in the 1889 Suppl. Hymns to Hymns Ancient & Modern is part of a hymn in the Gospeller, 1870. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, Appendix, Part II (1907)