O Master, let me walk with thee: Difference between revisions

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''O Master, let me walk with thee'' is a hymn by [[Washington Gladden]], first published in March 1879 in the ''Sunday Afternoon'', a periodical edited by Gladden. The text as originally published consisted of three 8-line stanzas.
''O Master, let me walk with thee'' is a hymn by [[Washington Gladden]], first published in March 1879 in the ''Sunday Afternoon'', a periodical edited by Gladden. The text as originally published consisted of three 8-line stanzas.


==Settings by composers==
==Settings by composers (automated)==
{{TextSettingsList}}
{{TextPageList}}


==Text and translations==
==Text and translations==

Latest revision as of 17:54, 23 March 2024

General information

O Master, let me walk with thee is a hymn by Washington Gladden, first published in March 1879 in the Sunday Afternoon, a periodical edited by Gladden. The text as originally published consisted of three 8-line stanzas.

Settings by composers (automated)

 

Text and translations

English.png English text

O Master, let me walk with thee
In lowly paths of service free;
Thy secret tell; help me to bear
The strain of toil, the fret of care.

Help me the slow of heart to move
By some clear winning word of love;
Teach me the wayward feet to stay,
And guide them in the homeward way.

Teach me thy patience; still with thee
In closer, dearer company,
In work that keeps faith sweet and strong,
In trust that triumphs over wrong,

In hope that sends a shining ray
Far down the future's broadening way,
In peace that only thou canst give,
With thee, O Master, let me live.
 

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