1 Say, why should friendship grieve for those
Who safe arrive on Canaan's shores?
Released from all their hurtful foes,
They are not lost, but gone before.
2 How many painful days on earth
Their fainting spirits numbered o'er!
Now they enjoy a heav'nly birth;
They are not lost, but gone before.
3 Dear is the spot where Christians sleep,
And sweet the strain which angels pour;
O why should we in anguish weep?
They are not lost, but gone before.
4 On Jordan's bank whene'er we come,
And hear the swelling waters roar,
Jesus, convey us safely home,
To friends not lost, but gone before.
Source: The Christian Hymnary. Bks. 1-4 #641
First Line: | Say, why should friendship grieve for those |
Title: | Not Lost, But Gone Before |
Author: | Benjamin Clark |
Language: | English |
Copyright: | Public Domain |
Say, why should friendship grieve for those? [Death and Burial]. This hymn appeared in the Evangelical Magazine in 1820, in 6 stanzas of 4 lines, headed "On seeing a mourning ring inscribed with the words ‘Not lost, but gone before,' "and is signed "B. C," the signature, it is said, of Benjamin Clark. In the enlarged edition of Psalms & Hymns, 1864, by Morrell and How it was given in a rewritten form in 4 stanzas of 4 lines as "Why mourn the dead with hopeless tears?" This in a slightly different form was in Kennedy, 1863. The 1820 text is in P. Maurice's Choral Hymn Book, 1861.
--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)