William Austin

Short Name: William Austin
Full Name: Austin, William, 1587-1634
Birth Year: 1587
Death Year: 1634

Austin, William. A lawyer of Lincoln's Inn in the time of Charles I. His widow, Ann Austin, published in 1635, his

    Devotionis Avgvstinianae Flamma. This contains 3 carols for Christmas Day, 3 poems for Good Friday, 1 for tbe Annunciation, and a poem by himself in anticipation of his own death. They are all of merit, and 4 may be found reprinted in Days & Seasons, 3rd ed., 1857, London, Mozley. In the Harleian manuscript Kalph Crane's A Handful of Celestial Flowers contains other hymns, one of which, with Austin's initials, has been printed by Farr in his Select Poetry of James I. It begins, "What a gracious God have we." The popular carol--
      "All this night bright Angels sing,
      Never was such carolling."

    No. xli. in Bramley and Stainer's Christmas Carols, New & Old, 2nd Series, is his—

      "All this Night shrill Chauntecleere
      Daye's proclaiming Trumpeter,"
      the first of his "Carrols for Christmas-day."

Austin died Jan. 16, 1633, and lies in the north transept of St. Saviour's, Southwark, where there is a stately monument representing him, his wife, and all his children, in the quaint fashion of those times. [William T. Brooke]

--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology,, p. 97 (1907)


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