Sunday once again brings the time to add another notch in my series Then Sings My Soul: The Hymns of My Youth. This week I’ve selected “Sweet Hour of Prayer,” by William W. Walford (1845) with music by William Bradbury (1861). Walford was a blind preacher in England. On September 13, 1845 the lyrics appeared in The New York Observer together with en explanation by Rev. Thomas Salmon, who was pastor of the Congregational Church at Coleshill in 1838 until 1842 when he went to the United States.
During my residence at Coleshill, Warwickshire, England, I became acquainted with W. W. Walford, the blind preacher, a man of obscure birth and connections and no education, but of strong mind and most retentive memory. In the pulpit he never failed to select a lesson well adapted to his subject, giving chapter and verse with unerring precision and scarcely ever misplacing a word in his repetition of the Psalms, every part of the New Testament, the prophecies, and some of the histories, so as to have the reputation of “knowing the whole Bible by heart.” He actually sat in the chimney corner, employing his mind in composing a sermon or two for Sabbath delivery, and his hands in cutting, shaping and polishing bones for shoe horns and other little useful implements. At intervals he attempted poetry. On one occasion, paying him a visit, he repeated two or three pieces which he had composed, and having no friend at home to commit them to paper, he had laid them up in the storehouse within. “How will this do?” asked he, as he repeated the following lines, with a complacent smile touched with some light lines of fear lest he subject himself to criticism. I rapidly copied the lines with my pencil, as he uttered them, and sent them for insertion in the Observer, if you should think them worthy of preservation.
I’m sure the lyrics will be familiar to some.
Sweet Hour of Prayer
Sweet hour of prayer! sweet hour of prayer!
That calls me from a world of care,
And bids me at my Father’s throne
Make all my wants and wishes known.
In seasons of distress and grief,
My soul has often found relief,
And oft escaped the tempter’s snare,
By thy return, sweet hour of prayer!Sweet hour of prayer! sweet hour of prayer!
The joys I feel, the bliss I share,
Of those whose anxious spirits burn
With strong desires for thy return!
With such I hasten to the place
Where God my Savior shows His face,
And gladly take my station there,
And wait for thee, sweet hour of prayer!Sweet hour of prayer! sweet hour of prayer!
Thy wings shall my petition bear
To Him whose truth and faithfulness
Engage the waiting soul to bless.
And since He bids me seek His face,
Believe His Word and trust His grace,
I’ll cast on Him my every care,
And wait for thee, sweet hour of prayer!Sweet hour of prayer! sweet hour of prayer!
May I thy consolation share,
Till, from Mount Pisgah’s lofty height,
I view my home and take my flight.
This robe of flesh I’ll drop, and rise
To seize the everlasting prize,
And shout, while passing through the air,
“Farewell, farewell, sweet hour of prayer!”
I must say that I remember a few lines — the beginning ones, of course — from my youth, but most of the lyrics are lost to me from that time. The description furnished by Thomas Salmon somehow helps to understand what the lyrics are saying. As a blind man with an exceptional memory, he sounds like he often sat in contemplation, making him apt to describe the hour of prayer has he does. As for Mount Pisgah, that’s a rather cryptic reference…. it’s Mt. Nebo (I confess, I looked it up). I must say that as I recall, I was less impressed with the music to which the lyrics were set… but like many such hymns that sit untouched for decades, their recollection still brings back the church of my youth. And after all, one of the points to this series is to recall a spiritual heritage that many of our modern songs don’t really convey.
Mt. Pisgah in Missouri was salvation for the people who were travelling,
through and stopped to refresh themselves. Mt. Nebo a high place and
barren and arid so what about it was significant besides viewing the
promised land?
Come thou font of every blessing suggests Ebenezer (help).