Scholarly study of Charles Wesley has been hampered by the absence of a reliable and accessible standard source for his published verse. The original works published during his lifetime are quite rare, scattered among research libraries. The 13-volume collection of The Poetical Works of John and Charles Wesley by George Osborn (1868–72) is more broadly spread; however, several features of the Osborn collection restrict its adequacy as a standard source (see the John Wesley page for more information).

The present online collection of the poetical works of John and Charles Wesley is intended to provide the standard for scholarly study and citation that has been needed. It was developed under a set of guidelines to maximize reliability and usefulness.

This subsection of the collection gathers the nearly 4,400 distinct poems and hymns published during Charles Wesley’s life that scholarly consensus traces to his pen.

The items included are organized in chronological order of their initial publication. Secondary collections in which Charles gathered poems which appeared first elsewhere are placed at the end. The text is available in two forms:

  1. retaining the original spelling and contractions
  2. with modern spelling and contractions

A list of the short titles and abbreviations (pdf) for Wesley publications that are used throughout this collection.

Citation Guidelines

Citation guidelines are available on the Research Resources page.

Texts

The texts are in a (pdf) format that is searchable using Adobe Reader 7.0 and above.

Download a zipped file containing a complete set of the original transcripts of these hymns (.zip file).

Primary Sources in Chronological Order

1739

Hymns and Sacred Poems (1739) – CW Verse

 

[original]

[modern]

 

“Universal Redemption” (1739)

 

[original]

[modern]

1740

Means of Grace (1740)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Life of Faith (1740)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Hymns and Sacred Poems (1740)

 

[original]

[modern]

1741

Collection of Psalms and Hymns (1741) – CW Verse

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Hymns on God’s Everlasting Love (1741)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

“Promise of Sanctification” (1741)

 

[original]

[modern]

1742

Hymns on God’s Everlasting Love, 2nd series (1742)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Hymns and Sacred Poems (1742)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Whole Armour of God (1742)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Taking of Jericho (1742)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Elegy on Robert Jones (1742)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Fourteenth Chapter of Isaiah (1742)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Thanksgiving for Colliers (1742)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Hymn for Condemned Prisoners (1742)

 

[original]

[modern]

1743

CPH (1743) – CW Psalms

 

[original]

[modern]

 

“Prayer for Those Convinced of Sin” (1743)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

“Primitive Christianity” (1743)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Hymn for Christmas Day (1743)

 

[original]

[modern]

1744

Moral and Sacred Poems, 3:206ff (1744)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Hymns for Times of Trouble (1744)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Hymns for Times of Trouble and Persecution (1744)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

“Bloody Issue” (1744)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Hymns for Christmas Day (1744)

 

[original]

[modern]

1745

“Act of Devotion” (1745)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Hymns on the Lord’s Supper (1745)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Hymns in Difference with Moravians (1745)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Hymns from Jeremiah (1745)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Hymns in Word in Season (1745)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Nativity Hymns (1745)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Hymns in Word to a Protestant (1745)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

“Hymns for 1745”

 

[original]

[modern]

1746

Funeral Hymns (1746)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Resurrection Hymns (1746)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Ascension Hymns (1746)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Whitsunday Hymns (1746)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Festival Hymns (1746)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Thanksgiving Hymns (1746)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Gloria Patri (1746)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Graces (1746)

 

[original]

[modern]

1747

Hymn at the Sacrament (1747)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

“Person Bearing Testimony” (1747)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Redemption Hymns (1747)

 

[original]

[modern]

1749

Hymns and Sacred Poems (1749), Vol. 1

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Hymns and Sacred Poems (1749), Vol. 2

 

[original]

[modern]

 

New Year’s Hymns (1749)

 

[original]

[modern]

1750

Earthquake Hymns, Pt. I (1750)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Earthquake Hymns, Pt. II (1750)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

“Death of Thomas Hogg” (1750)

 

[original]

[modern]

1755

Epistle to the Rev. John Wesley (1755)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

“Catholic Love” (1755)

 

[original]

[modern]

1756

“Hymn on the Lisbon Earthquake” (1756)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Hymns for the Year 1756

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Additional “Hymns for 1756”

 

[original]

[modern]

1758

Intercession Hymns (1758)

 

[original]

[modern]

1759

Intercession Hymns (1759)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Funeral Hymns (1759)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Invasion Hymns (1759)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

“Hymn for the People of Custrin” (1759) 

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Thanksgiving Hymns (1759)

 

[original]

[modern]

1760

“Hymns for the Methodist Preachers” (1760)

 

[original]

[modern]

1762

Scripture Hymns (1762), Vol. 1

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Scripture Hymns (1762), Vol. 2

 

[original]

[modern]

1763

Hymns for Children (1763)

 

[original]

[modern]

1767

Family Hymns (1767)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Trinity Hymns (1767)

 

[original]

[modern]

1770

“Hymn for Mary Langson” (1770)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

“Hymn for Whitefield” (1770)

 

[original]

[modern]

1771

Elegy on Whitefield (1771) 

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Epistle to Whitefield (1771) 

 

[original]

[modern]

1772

Preparation for Death (1772)

 

[original]

[modern]

1778

Arminian Magazine (1778–87)

 

[original]

[modern]

1779

Ode on Dr. Boyce (1779)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Hymn for John Wesley (1779)

 

[original]

[modern]

1780

Tumult Hymns (1780)

 

[original]

[modern]

1781

Protestant Association (1781)

 

[original]

[modern]

 

Hymns for the Nation (1781)

 

[original]

[modern]

1782

Hymns for the National Fast (1782)

 

[original]

[modern]

1785

Prayers for Condemned Malefactors (1785)

 

[original]

[modern]

Secondary Collections (likely) gathered by Charles Wesley

1747

Hymns and Sacred Poems (1747)

 

[original]

[modern]

1750

Watchnight Hymns (1750)

 

[original]

[modern]

1754

Answer to Gill (1754)

 

[original]

[modern]

1761

All in All (1761)

 

[original]

[modern]

Issues of Authorship

John or Charles Wesley?
The Issue of Authorship in Early Wesley Hymn Collections

One of the challenges in studying the poetical works of John and Charles Wesley is determining which brother authored specific texts in their early shared collections. This challenge was created by the brothers’ agreement not to indicate individual authorship in these collections.

In some cases the question can be settled by the survival of a particular item in the manuscript collections of one of the brothers. Beyond that, scholars are reduced to debating internal criteria for discerning whether John or Charles might be the author of a particular text. A sense of this debate can be gained by comparing Henry Bett, The Hymns of Methodism in their Literary Relations (London: Epworth, 1920), 21-33; to Frank Baker, Representative Verse of Charles Wesley (New York: Abingdon, 1962), lviii-lxi. See also the summary by Oliver Beckerlegge in his Introduction to Hymns (1780) in John Wesley’s Works, 7:35-38.

Three broad generalizations have emerged from this debate. First, scholars generally concur that John took the lead in selecting and adapting the poems and hymns by other authors that are included in the various collections issued jointly by the brothers. Second, scholars also converge in assigning John authorship of the translations of German and Spanish hymns in the collections (except for a couple of loose adaptations by Charles in the Collection of Moral and Sacred Poems). Finally, there is consensus that the vast majority of original contributions in the early joint collections were penned by Charles.

The challenge of distinguishing between the two brothers dissipates by 1749, as Charles Wesley turned to publishing most of his verse independent of his brother’s editorial hand.