The hymn was first published in 1848 in Mrs Cecil Alexander's
Hymns for Little Children. It consists of a series of stanzas that elaborate upon the clause of the
Apostles' Creed that describes God as "maker of heaven and earth", and has been described as asserting a
creationist view of the natural world. It has been suggested that a number of sources may have influenced Alexander's composition. The hymn may have been inspired by
Psalm 104, verses 24 and 25: "Oh Lord, how manifold are thy works! in wisdom hast thou made them all: the earth is full of thy riches. So is this great and wide sea, wherein are things creeping innumerable, both small and great beasts". The hymn may have been inspired as well by a verse from
Samuel Taylor Coleridge's
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner: "He prayeth best, who loveth best; All things great and small; For the dear God who loveth us; He made and loveth all." She is also known to have visited
Markree Castle near
Sligo, and some sources link Alexander's text with the surrounding gardens there. Alexander's travels also took her to the nearby village of
Dunster in Somerset in 1848, and the landscape of Grabbist Hill and the
River Avill are also claimed to be her inspiration. However, a more credible account is given by Sir John Heygate of Bellarena House in
County Londonderry, which links the hymn to the many visits paid by the Alexanders to what was then the Gage family residence, a family into which Sir John's ancestor, Sir Frederick Heygate, married in 1850. Writing in 1973, Sir John attributed "the purple headed mountain" to nearby
Benevenagh, and "the river running by" to the River Roe which flows past Bellerena House. Sir John had heard the story from the late
Sir Norman Stronge,
Speaker of the House of Commons of Northern Ireland, whose family also had ties to the area. File:Sugarloaf.JPG|The
Sugar Loaf, Monmouthshire File:RiverUskAbergavenny.jpg|
Blorenge, Monmouthshire, with the
River Usk running by File:Markree Castle.jpg|
Markree Castle gardens File:View towards Grabbist Hill (geograph 5910707).jpg|Grabbist Hill, Somerset File:View north east from Gallox Bridge - geograph.org.uk - 924840.jpg|the
River Avill, Somerset File:Seacoast Road looking towards Binevnagh - geograph.org.uk - 910906.jpg|
Benevenagh, County Londonderry File:Río Roe. Parque del Condado del Valle del Roe. Irlanda del Norte. Reino Unido.jpg|
River Roe, County Londonderry The third verse makes reference to "The rich man in his castle,/The poor man at his gate", and asserts that their social positions have been ordained by God. It has been interpreted as an expression of the theological view that society is ordered and upheld by
Divine providence. This view of social strata has been linked to Alexander's identity as an
Anglo-Irish person affirming the existing social order in the midst of the
Irish famine. An alternative interpretation of the third verse holds that Alexander was expressing the equality of rich and poor in the eyes of God. A comparable text in Alexander's
Verses for Holy Seasons (1846) makes reference to "The poor man in his straw-roofed cottage,/The rich man in his lordly hall" and states that their prayers to God are of equal importance: "He listens, and He answers all". Nevertheless, the sentiments of this verse are generally considered to be outdated and many later versions and performances of "All Things Bright and Beautiful" omit the third verse.
Percy Dearmer omitted this verse from
The English Hymnal (1906); he was sympathetic to
Christian socialism and stated that the words reflected the "passivity and inertia at the heart of the British Establishment in the face of huge inequalities in Edwardian society". Dearmer questioned whether Alexander had remembered the parable of the
Rich man and Lazarus (), and attributed her view of the world to her having "been brought up in the atmosphere of a land-agent on an Irish estate". The revised edition of
Hymns Ancient and Modern, published in 1950, also omits this verse. ==Words==