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~From Greenland’s Icy Mountains
“Write
something for us to sing at the service tomorrow morning,” Dr.
Shepley, vicar of Wrexham, said to his son-in-law, Reginald Heber, in
1819.
Dr.
Shepley was to preach next day in behalf of foreign missions, and he was
chatting over the subject of his discourse with a few friends. Heber,
already known as a writer of verse, withdrew to another part of the
room, and soon returned with the first three stanzas of “From
Greenland’s Icy Mountains,” just as we sing them now. The only
exception: in the seventh line of the second verse he wrote savage,
which he afterward changed to heathen.
Dr.
Shepley was satisfied, but Heber was not until he added the triumphant
fourth stanza, beginning: “Waft,
waft, ye winds his story.”
In
1823 Heber went as a missionary to India, where he died after three
years of patient and loving service.
—W.
J. Hart
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From
Greenland’s Icy Mountains[1]
1
From Greenland’s icy mountains,
From
India’s coral strand,
Where
Afric’s sunny fountains
Roll
down their golden sand;
From
many an ancient river,
From
many a palmy plain,
They
call us to deliver
Their
land from error’s chain.
2
What tho the spicy breezes
Blow
soft o’er Ceylon’s isle,
Though
ev’ry prospect pleases,
And
only man is vile!
In
vain, with lavish kindness,
The
gifts of God are strown;
The
heathen, in their blindness,
Bow
down to wood and stone.
3
Shall we, whose souls are lighted
With
wisdom from on high,
Shall
we to men benighted
The
lamp of life deny?
Salvation!
O salvation!
The
joyful sound proclaim,
Till
earth’s remotest nation
Has
heard Messiah’s name.
[1]Eckert,
Paul, Steve Green’s MIDI Hymnal, (Oak Harbor, WA: Logos
Research Systems, Inc.) 1998.
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