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Text Identifier:"^look_up_to_heaven_the_industrious_sun$"

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Look up to heaven! th'industrious sun

Author: William Wordsworth Appears in 6 hymnals Used With Tune: TRURO

Tunes

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TRURO

Appears in 527 hymnals Tune Sources: T. Williams' Psalmodia Evangelica, 1790 Incipit: 13455 67151 54321 Used With Text: Look up to heaven! th'industrious sun
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ALSTONE

Appears in 128 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: C. E. Willing Incipit: 55651 32123 45653 Used With Text: Look up to heaven the industrious

Instances

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Look up to heaven! th'industrious sun

Author: William Wordsworth Hymnal: Hymns of the Kingdom of God #360 (1910) Lyrics: 1 Look up to heaven! th’industrious sun Already half his course hath run; He cannot halt nor go astray, But our immortal spirits may. 2 Lord, since his rising in the east If we have faltered or transgressed, Guide, from Thy love’s abundant source, What yet remains of this day’s course. 3 Help with Thy grace, through life’s short day, Our upward and our downward way, And glorify for us the west, When we shall sink to final rest. Languages: English Tune Title: TRURO
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Look up to heaven! the industrious sun

Author: Wordsworth Hymnal: A Collection of Hymns, for the Christian Church and Home #364 (1843) Languages: English
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Look up to heaven! th'industrious sun

Author: William Wordsworth Hymnal: Hymns of the Kingdom of God #323 (1923) Languages: English Tune Title: TRURO

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

William Wordsworth

1770 - 1850 Author of "Look up to heaven! th'industrious sun" in Hymns of the Kingdom of God Wordsworth, William, the poet, the son of an attorney, was born at Cockermouth in 1770, and educated at St. John's College, Cambridge, where he graduated B.A. in 1791. Devoting himself to literature, and especially to poetry, he gradually rose into the front rank of English poets. His works include Lyrical Ballads, 1798; Poems; The Prelude; The Excursion, 1814, &c. All his poetical productions were collected and republished under his own supervision in 7 vols., in 1842. He died at Kydal Mount, near Grasmere, in 1850. Notwithstanding his rank and reputation as a poet, his pieces used as hymns are limited to the following extracts from his poems:— 1. Not seldom clad in radiant vest. Christ, the Unchangeable. This is No. v. of five "Inscriptions supposed to be found In and near a Hermit's cell, 1818." It is in 5 stanzas of 4 lines, and is given in his Poetical Works, 1831, vol. iii., p. 290. It is in Stowell's Selection of Hymns, 1831-77; the American Plymouth Collection, 1855, &c. 2. Up to the throne of God is borne. Noonday. This is entitled "The Labourer's Noon-Day Hymn," is dated 1834, and is in 6 stanzas of 4 lines. (Poetical Work, 1837, vol. v. p. 122.) It is in common use in an abridged form, beginning with stanza i., and the latter part is also given in Martineau's Hymns, 1840, as "Look up to heaven, the industrious sun," as No. 535. -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

Christopher Edwin Willing

1830 - 1904 Person Name: C. E. Willing Composer of "ALSTONE" in The Hymnal of Praise Christopher Edwin Willing; Devon, England, 1830 Evangelical Lutheran Hymnal, 1908
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