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Words: Annie Herbert Barker, 1883.
Music: Ira David Sankey :
I sang this hymn for the first time in The Free Trade Hall in Manchester, in 1883, at one of Mr. Moodys meetings. The service was held at eight oclock on a gloomy winter morning. The hall was densely crowded and filled with mist, so much so that the people could hardly be discerned at the farther end of the hall. I felt the need of something to brighten up the meeting, and then and there decided to launch this new song. It was received with much enthusiasm, and at once became a favourite of Mr. Moodys, and continued to be so until his death.
My Life and the Story of Gospel Hymns, by Ira D. Sankey (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: The Sunday School Times Company, 1907)
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When the
mists have rolled in splendor from the beauty of the hills,
And the sunlight falls in gladness on the rivers and the rills,
We recall our Fathers promise in the rainbow of the spray:
We shall know each other better when the mists have rolled away.
Refrain
We
shall know, as we are known, never more to walk alone,
In the dawning of the morning of that bright and happy day,
We shall know each other better, when the mists have rolled away.
Oft we tread
the path before us with a weary, hardened heart.
Oft we toil amid the shadows, and our fields are far apart.
But the Saviors Come, ye blessèd all our labor
will repay
When we gather in the morning where the mists have rolled away.
Refrain
We shall
come with joy and gladness, we shall gather round the throne.
Face to face with those that love us we shall know as we are
known.
And the song of our redemption shall resound through endless day
When the shadows have departed and the mists have rolled away.
Refrain
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