Short Name: | Amelia Opie |
Full Name: | Opie, Amelia, 1769-1853 |
Birth Year: | 1769 |
Death Year: | 1853 |
Opie, Amelia, née Alderson, daughter of Dr. Alderson, a physician at Norwich, was born there Nov. 12, 1769. In May 1798 she was married to John Opie, the painter, who died in 1807. Originally Mrs. Opie was an Unitarian, but in 1814 she joined the Society of Friends. Most of her subsequent life she lived at Castle Meadow, Norwich, where she died Dec. 2, 1853. Mrs. Opie's prose works were somewhat numerous, and included Father and Daughter, 1801, a most popular tale; Temper, 1812; Tales of Real Life, 1813; and others. Her poetical works were Miscellaneous Poems, 1802; The Warrior's Return and Other Poems, 1808; Lays for the Dead, 1833, &c. Very few of her poems have come into use as hymns. The best known is “There seems a voice in every gale."
--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)
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Opie, Amelia , p. 871, i. Another hymn by Mrs. Opie in common use is "When the disciples saw their Lord" (Travel by Sea and Land), in Com. Praise 1879. Dated 1838.
--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, Appendix, Part II (1907)
Texts by Amelia Opie (10) | As | Authority Languages | Instances |
---|---|---|---|
A voice in every gale, a tongue in every flower | Miss Opie (Author) | English | 2 |
Come ye mourners, plunged in sorrow | Amelia Opie (Author) | 2 | |
Great God, let thy constraining power | Amelia Opie (Author) | 3 | |
Pity, my Lord, my mental strife | Amelia Opie (Author) | 2 | |
There seems a voice in every gale | Amelia Opie (Author) | English | 54 |
There's not a leaf within the bower | Mrs. Opie (Author) | 3 | |
This is the place for solemn thought | Amelia Opie (Author) | 2 | |
Thoughts of the world, away | Amelia Opie (Author) | 2 | |
Watch not o'er these alone, O Lord | Amelia Opie (Author) | 3 | |
When the disciples saw the Lord | Amelia Opie (Author) | 2 |