Far round the world

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}

{{Infobox musical composition

| name = Far round the world

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| genre = Hymn

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| text = Basil Joseph Mathews

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| written = before 1927

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| meter = 10.10.10.10

| melody = Dunblane Cathedral by Archie Fairbairn Barnes
Farley Castle by Henry Lawes
Parting by Jane W. Rhodes
Peel Castle arr. William Henry Gill
Rutgers by Charles Henry Doersam
Woodlands by Walter Greatorex

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Far round the world thy children sing their song is an English hymn written by Basil Joseph Mathews (1879 – 1951) published in Church Hymnary in 1927.[https://books.google.com/books?id=WSLUAwAAQBAJ&dq=far+round+the+world+hymn&pg=PA21 Dictionary of Composers for the Church in Great Britain and Ireland] – Maggie Humphries and Robert Evans, Mansell Publishing, 1997 (p. 21) {{isbn|0 7201 2330 5}}[https://hymnary.org/text/far_round_the_world_thy_children_sing_th Far round the world thy children sing their song at Hymnary.org][https://www.smallchurchmusic.com/Lyrics_Display-New.php?SID=3018 Far round the world Thy children sing at Small Church Music][https://www.unitarian.org.uk/sites/default/files/1937_School_Praise.pdf School Praise, 1937 Hymn No. 266 (page 114)]

Music

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"Far round the world" appears in hymnals with various tunes:

  • Dunblane Cathedral composed by Archie Fairbairn Barnes (1878 – 1960), published in 1927
  • Farley Castle composed by Henry Lawes (1596 – 1662) in 1638
  • Parting composed by Jane W. Rhodes in 1910
  • Peel Castle arranged by William Henry Gill (1839 – 1923)
  • Rutgers composed by Charles Henry Doersam (1879 – 1942)
  • Woodlands composed by Walter Greatorex (1877 – 1949) for Gresham's School (where he was Director of Music) in 1916. Woodlands is the name of a house at the school.

Words

Some hymnals present different verses: often the second verse below is omitted, and the final verse in School Praise is different to the final verse in other hymnals.

{{blockquote|

Far round the world thy children sing their song,

From east and west their voices sweetly blend,

Praising the Lord, in whom young lives are strong,

Jesus, our guide, our hero, and our friend.

Guide of the pilgrim clambering to the height,

Hero on whom our fearful hearts depend,

Friend of the wanderer yearning for the light,

Jesus, our guide, our hero, and our friend.

|source= Stanzas 1–2 from School Praise (1937) p. 224-225}}

References