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Christian History Institute October 4, 1858 • Dorothy Gurney Wrote A Wedding Poem ©2007 |
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![]() Dorothy's words became popular at weddings after a royal wedding used it. Photo from Swift Jewel (cosmi.com)
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hat is the use of a sister who composes poetry if she cannot write new words to a favorite tune?" Dorothy's sister was serious. On a Sunday evening in 1883, a group of young people were enjoying a hymn sing at a home in Windermere, England. John Dyke's tune for the old Latin hymn "O Strength and Stay" particularly appealed to them. "I would like to use the tune at my wedding," said Dorothy's sister. Dorothy rose to the challenge. Taking a hymnbook in her hand, she said, "If no one will disturb me, I will go into the library and see what I can do." In just fifteen minutes she returned with these words: O perfect Love, all human thought transcending, Later, the song was set to another tune by Joseph Barnby and sung at a royal wedding. Dorothy Frances Blomfield had been born on this day, October 4, 1858 at Finsbury Circus. Her father, Frederick Blomfield was rector at St. Andrews Undershaft in London. In 1897, when she was almost forty, Dorothy married a man who had been an Anglican priest and an actor. Twenty-two years later, in 1919, the pair joined the Roman Catholic Church. During her lifetime, Dorothy published two volumes of verse and a devotional book called A Little Book of Quiet. Her most famous poem was not the wedding hymn "O Perfect Love," but "God's Garden," is also well-known. It notes that God himself planted a garden for man and walked with him in it. It includes these famous lines: The kiss of the sun for pardon, One of the gardens that Dorothy contemplated in her poem was the garden where Christ prayed before his crucifixion: Gethsemane: For He broke it* for us in a garden *Christ's heart Bibliography:
Last updated June, 2007 |
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