1 I shall not want, in deserts wild
Thou spreadst Thy table for thy child;
While grace in streams for thirsting souls,
Thro' earth and heav'n forever rolls.
2 I shall not want, my darkest night,
Thy loving smile shall fill with light;
While promises around me bloom,
And cheer me with divine perfume.
3 I shall not want, Thy righteousness
My soul shall clothe with glorious dress,
My blood-washed robe shall be more fair,
Than garments kings or angels wear.
Born: December 4, 1820, Baltimore, Maryland.
Died: November 18, 1893, Staten Island, New York.
Buried: Moravian Cemetery, New Dorp, New York.
Grandson of a Methodist minister, Deems began preaching temperance at the tender age of 13. He studied at Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pennsylvania, intending to become a lawyer. Instead, after graduating in 1839, became a Methodist minister in Asbury, New Jersey. The next year, he began working for the American Bible Society of North Carolina, and later became a professor of logic and rhetoric at the University of North Carolina (1842-48). In 1849, h… Go to person page >
Derived from the fourth piano piece in Robert A. Schumann's Nachtstücke, Opus 23 (1839), CANONBURY first appeared as a hymn tune in J. Ireland Tucker's Hymnal with Tunes, Old and New (1872). The tune, whose title refers to a street and square in Islington, London, England, is often matched to Haver…
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