388. Father of men, in whom are one

Henry Cary Shuttleworth, 1850-1900

A deeply sympathetic Christian hymn, written for the Friendly Societies of the Church of England, but may appropriately be used for many occasions of a more general character. It is especially useful in the life of a college campus.

The author, Henry Cary Shuttleworth, was educated at Oxford for the Anglican ministry. He was a minor canon in St. Paul’s Cathedral, 1876-84, and rector of St. Nicholas Cole Abbey, London, from 1883. Concerned for the poor and down-trodden of London, Shuttleworth became a prominent member of the Christian Social movement. For a time he was Professor of Pastoral and Liturgical Theology in King’s College, London. An able musician, he wrote many carols and hymns and published a book, The Place of Music in Public Worship. The present hymn appeared in the St. Nicholas Cole Abbey Hymnal Appendix, 1897, and in the Church Monthly, 1898, with music by the author.

MUSIC. ST. LO is a unique melody, constructed on three phrases of three measures each. It is a simple, diatonic tune, moving within the pitch range of a sixth, with the third phrase a repetition of the first. It should be sung in a quiet manner, and is well adapted for unison singing. The tune, an old Breton melody, appeared in School Worship, London, 1926, from whence it was introduced into the Presbyterian Hymnal of 1935 and from thence to the Hymnary.