Early 20th century folk art carving of a woman in deep prayer, with the inscription "Sweet Hour of Prayer" on the pulpit.
Recently found in an old trunk on an Alabama plantation. Measures 9" tall.
"Sweet Hour of Prayer" was written in 1845 by a blind preacher named William Walford. The lyrics appeared in The New York Observer, September 13, 1845, with the following observation from a Thomas Salmon:
"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."
Friday, October 21, 2011
"Sweet Hour of Prayer"
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4 comments:
I love this lamp/creation on so many levels. It would be interesting to try and create a lampshade that goes with the base but doesn't take away from it.
Dixie
Plus, I grew up singing that song as a child in Georgia.
I know! I thought about what the lampshade must have been like as well. Something tells me it would have been pretty interesting. I love the fact that back then you saw a lot more homemade creations like lamps, sometimes with unique individual expressions. Something you'd never see today...
I wonder if it had some kind of mica shade like some arts and craft lamps do? Interesting to think about.
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