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Text Identifier:"^the_master_has_come_and_he_calleth_for_t$"

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The Master Has Come

Author: William H. Clark Appears in 2 hymnals First Line: The Master has come and He calleth for thee Refrain First Line: O the Master has come

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[The Master has come and he calleth for thee]

Appears in 2 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Wm. J. Kirkpatrick Incipit: 51111 11217 13222 Used With Text: The Master Has Come

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The Master Has Come

Author: Wm. H. Clark Hymnal: Songs of the New Life #3 (1883) First Line: The Master has come and he calleth for thee Refrain First Line: O, the Master has come Languages: English Tune Title: [The Master has come and he calleth for thee]

The Master Has Come

Author: William H. Clark Hymnal: Gems of Praise (Choice Collection of Sacred Melodies) #d136 (1876) First Line: The Master has come and he calleth for thee Refrain First Line: O, the Master has come, O, the Master has come Languages: English Tune Title: [The Master has come and He calleth for thee]

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William J. Kirkpatrick

1838 - 1921 Person Name: W. J. Kirkpatrick Composer of "[The Master has come and He calleth for thee]" in Gems of Praise (Choice Collection of Sacred Melodies) William J. Kirkpatrick (b. Duncannon, PA, 1838; d. Philadelphia, PA, 1921) received his musical training from his father and several other private teachers. A carpenter by trade, he engaged in the furniture business from 1862 to 1878. He left that profession to dedicate his life to music, serving as music director at Grace Methodist Church in Philadelphia. Kirkpatrick compiled some one hundred gospel song collections; his first, Devotional Melodies (1859), was published when he was only twenty-one years old. Many of these collections were first published by the John Hood Company and later by Kirkpatrick's own Praise Publishing Company, both in Philadelphia. Bert Polman

William H. Clark

1854 - 1925 Author of "The Master Has Come" Clark, William Henry. (Racine, Wisconsin, April 8, 1854--November 8, 1925, Rome, New York). Free Methodist. In his infancy, his parents returned to their former home in New York State, where his mother soon died, and his father married a close friend of hers, who forecast, after William's conversion in 1873, that one day he would be a bishop. He served the Susquehanna Conference of his denomination as a pastor and district superintendent from 1876 until 1919, when his stepmother's prediction came true. Meanwhile, he had been a member of the joint commission of the Free and Wesleyan Methodist Churches which compiled the Hymnal of 1910, and contributed some items to it. He died in office, requesting no eulogy at his funeral. --Arlene Clyde, DNAH Archives, rev. Hugh McKellar