All is o'er;—the pain, the sorrow. J. Moultrie. [Easter Eve.] The original, entitled "Hymn for Easter Eve," is dated " April 2nd, 1836." It is in 20 stanzas of 6 lines, and was published in his work, My Brother's Grave and other Poems, 1837 (3rd ed. 1852, p. 262). In the Psalms & Hymns adapted to Public Worship, Rugby, 1839, commonly known as Buckoll’s Collection, a cento, composed of st. i., ii., iii. and xx., unaltered, was given as No. 2. This was repeated in later editions of the same work, and has passed from thence into many collections, both in Great Britain, and in America. In the American hymnals it is usually altered, as in the Hymnal of the Protestant Episcopal Church 1872, No. 92; Hymns & Song of Praise, 1874; Hymns of the Church, 1869, and others. In the last-named collection it is attributed to "J. E. L." (i.e. Jane E. Leeson) in error. The closing line of st. i. read in the original:—
"Yet once more to seal His doom,
Christ must sleep within the tomb."
These lines have been omitted from Thring's Collection, 1882, No. 186, in favour of :—
"Yet awhile, His own to save
Christ must linger in the grave"—
by the Rev. J. Ellerton.
-- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)