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Harriet Auber
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Harriet Auber (4 October 1773 — 20 January 1862) was an English poet and . She is best remembered for her collection The Spirit of the Psalms, The Spirit of the Psalms: Or, a Compressed Version of Select Portions of the Psalms of David, Adapted to Christian Worship. Harriet Auber Cadell, Rivington (1829) ASIN: B001P8AN4E published in 1829, and for her hymn "Our blest Redeemer, ere he breathed," a treatise on the and his work.Elsie Houghton, Christian Hymn Writers, Evangelical Press of Wales, Bridgend, Wales 1982


Early years
Henriette ("Harriet") Auber was born in , London, on 4 October 1773. Her actual name was Henriette, but she was known as Harriet.John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907) She was the daughter of James Auber, of Hackney, a Church of England clergyman. The family was of French Protestant extraction, and probably of the same lineage as the musical composer .


Career
Auber lived in a quiet and secluded home, first at , and then at , Hertfordshire, with her sisters. She occupied much of her time in poetic composition, most of which remained unpublished. She had a large circle of relatives and friends.

In 1829 The Spirit of the Psalms; or, a Compressed Version of Select Portions of the Psalms of David was published at anonymously. Several of these were transferred to the Church Psalmody, , 1831, and other collections, where they were credited to the Spirit of the Psalms. In 1834, Rev. Henry Francis Lyte's book appeared, also entitled The Spirit of the Psalms. Led simply by the title, and not aware that the two books were entirely different, or that there were two books of the same name, subsequent compilers credited these hymns to Rev. Lyte. However, the earlier work was the production of Auber, published when she was 56. It contains a few selections from well-known authors, to some of which the names are attached; the larger part of the pieces, however, were written by Auber.


Later years
During the latter years of her life, Auber lived with her valued friend, Miss Mary Jane McKenzie, the author of the tale "Private Life" as well as "Lectures on the Parables" and "Lectures on the Miracles". Auber died on 20 January 1862, at the age of 88, at her residence in , . She was buried there beside McKenzie, whom she had survived a few years.


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