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Text Identifier:"^all_souls_o_lord_are_thine$"

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All souls are mine

Author: Epes Sargent Appears in 5 hymnals First Line: All souls, O Lord, are thine

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LANGRAN

Appears in 270 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Langran Incipit: 31235 43321 33252 Used With Text: All Souls, O Lord, are Thine

Instances

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All Souls, O Lord, are Thine

Hymnal: Sunday School Hymnal #119 (1912) Languages: English Tune Title: LANGRAN

All souls, O Lord, are thine

Author: Epes Sargent Hymnal: Songs of Work and Worship #d4 (1923) Languages: English
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All souls, O Lord, are thine

Author: Epes Sargent Hymnal: Church Harmonies #415 (1876) Languages: English

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James Langran

1835 - 1909 Composer of "LANGRAN" in Hymns of the Spirit for Use in the Free Churches of America James Langran (b. St. Pancras, London, England, November 10, 1835; d. Tottenham, London, England, June 8, 1909) studied organ as a youth but did not receive his Bachelor of Music degree from Oxford until he was forty-nine years old. He had several organist positions–the longest was at St. Paul's Church, Tottenham, England, from 1870 to 1909. He also taught music at St. Katherine's Training College for Schoolmistresses (1878-1909). Music editor of theNew Mitre Hymnal (1875), Langran composed around fifty hymn tunes and contributed several of them to early editions of Hymns Ancient and Modern. Bert Polman

Epes Sargent

1813 - 1880 Author of "All souls, O Lord, are thine" in Hymns of the Spirit for Use in the Free Churches of America Sargent, Epes. (Gloucester, Massachusetts, September 27, 1813--December 30, 1880, Boston, Mass.). He was a Universalist layman, a journalist by profession. In "The Press," (1859), he printed his translation of "Dies Irae" beginning, "Day of ire, that day impending." He also wrote a hymn beginning "All souls, O Lord, are thine," which was included in Church Harmonies (1873), in Hymns of the Church (1917), and in Hymns of the Spirit (1937). --Henry Wilder Foote, DNAH Archives
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