1 Dear Saviour, when my thoughts recall
The wonders of thy grace,
Low at thy feet asham'd I fall,
And hide this wretched face.
2 Shall love like thine be thus repaid?
Ah vile, ungrateful heart!
By earth's low cares detain'd, betray'd,
From Jesus to depar —
3 From Jesus, who alone can give
True pleasure, peace and rest:
When absent from my Lord, I live
Unsatisfy'd, unblest.
4 But he, for his own mercy's sake,
My wandering soul restores:
He bids the mourning heart partake
The pardon it implores.
5 O while I breathe to thee, my Lord,
The penitential sigh,
Confirm the kind, forgiving word,
With pity in thine eye!
6 Then shall the mourner at thy feet
Rejoice to seek thy face,
And grateful own how kind, how sweet
Thy condescending grace!
Source: A Collection of Evangelical Hymns #CXXXVII
First Line: | Dear Savior, when my thoughts recall |
Title: | Penitence and hope |
Author: | Anne Steele |
Meter: | 8.6.8.6 |
Language: | English |
Copyright: | Public Domain |
Dear Saviour, when my thoughts recall. Anne Steele. [Lent.] First published in Miscellaneous Pieces, which were added as vol. iii. to her Poems on Subjects chiefly Devotional, in 1780, pp. 79-80, and not in the Poemsin 1760, as stated in Spurgeon's Our Own Hymn Book, No. 616, where it is given in an unaltered form. It was reprinted in D. Sedgwick's reprint of Miss Steele's Hymns, 1863, p. 137, the original title reading “Penitence and Hope." Its use in America is extensive.
--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)