Page 204
NEW
TOPIA.
C.M.D.
"He
that
soweth
iniquity
shall
reap
vanity,
and
the
rod
of
his
anger
shall
fall."-PROB.
22:
8.
Key
of
E
Minor.
MUNDAY.
Young
people
all, attention
give, And
hear
what
I
do
say;
I
want
your
souls
with
Christ
to
live, In
everlasting
day;
Young
people
all, attention
give,
And
hear
what
I
do
say;
I
want
your
souls
with
Christ
to
live,
In
ev-er-last-ing
day;
Remember, you
are
hast'ning
on
To
death's
dark, gloomy
Young
people
all, attention
give,
And
hear
what
I
do
say;
I
want
your
souls
with
Christ
to
live, In
everlasting
day;
Remember, you
are
hast'ning
on
To
death's
dark, gloomy
Remember, you
are
hast'ning
on
Your
joys
on
earth
will
soon
be
gone,
Your
joys
on
earth
will
soon
be
gone,
To
death's
dark, gloomy
shade;
Your
flesh
in
dust
be
laid,
Your,
&c.
shade;
Your
joys
on
earth
will
soon
be
gone,
Your
joys
on
earth
will
soon
be
gone
Your
flesh
in
dust
be
laid,
Your,
&c
Remember, you
are
hast'ning
on
Your
joys
on
earth
will
soon
be
gone,
Your
joys
on
earth
will
soon
be
gone,
To
death's
dark, gloomy, shade;
Your
flesh
in
dust
be
laid,
Your,
&c.
shade,
Your
joys
on
earth
will
soon
be
gone,
Your
joys
on
earth
will
soon
be
gone,
Your
flesh
in
dust
be
laid,
Your,
&c.
"New
Topia"
is
a
great
old
minor
piece
of
music,
It
is
probable
that
it
was
printed
in
the
early
books
of
the
19th
century.
See
"Missouri
Harmony,"
by
Carden
1827
and
1837,
page
74,
"Southern
Harmony"
by
William
Walker,
1835,
page
163,
the
"Social
Harp
by
John
G.
McCurry,
1855,
page
176,
"New
Harp
of
Columbia"
by
M.
L.
Swan,
page
163.
All
of
these
books
except
the
"Sacred
Harp"
credits
this
tune
to
Munday.
We
have
been
unable
to
find
anything
in
relation
to
him.
The
words
are
in
"Mercer's
Cluster"
by
Mercer,
1823,
page
146,
title
to
the
hymn
is
"Solemn
Address
to
Young
People."
See
further
statement
about
the
stanzas
under
tune
"Liverpool,"
page
37.