Page:Our Hymns.djvu/425

 THEER AUTHORS AND ORIGIN. 405

&quot;Ye that in these courts are found.&quot; No. 504. Vide Kowland Hill, M.A., page 241.

&quot; The Spirit to our hearts.&quot; No. 519.

Vide H. U. Onderdonk, D.D., page 355.

&quot; To Thee, Thou bleeding Lamb, to Thee.&quot; No. 552.

This hymn is given without name in H. V. Elliott s Collection, 4th thousand, 1840.

&quot; Hallelujah ! song of gladness.&quot; No. 714.

A hymn of the thirteenth century- Dr. J. Mason Neale in his &quot; Medieval Hymns and Sequences Translated,&quot; has given a similar rendering of this &quot; Alleluia, dulce carmen,&quot; with his opinion that &quot;various reasons render it probable that it is not of earlier date than the thirteenth century.&quot;

&quot; We sing His love, who once was slain.&quot; No. 740.

Vide Rowland Hill, M.A., page 241.

&quot; How bright these glorious spirits shine.&quot; No. 750. Vide Isaac Watts, D.D., page 97.

&quot; Welcome sacrod day of rest.&quot; No. 762. Vide W. Brown, page 395.

&quot; Spirit of holiness descend.&quot; No. 813.

Vide S. F. Smith, D.D., page 395.

&quot; Lord cause Thy face on us to shine.&quot; No. 821. This is by Thomas Cotterill,M.A., 1819, altered from Doddridge.

&quot; Brother in Christ, and well-beloved.&quot; No. 811. Vide Charles Wesley, page 144.

&quot; Light up this house with glory, Lord.&quot; No. 882. Vide John Harris, D I)., page 372.

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