External Link: [1] (http://www.flash.net/~gaylon/jnewton.htm)
Some versions of the hymn include an additional verse:
This verse is not by Newton. It was originally from a hymn called "Jerusalem, My Happy Home." It was added to a version of "Amazing Grace" by Harriet Beecher Stowe, as it appears in her novel Uncle Tom's Cabin. Uncle Tom has pied the lyrics of several hymns together; those who learned the lyrics from the nove have assumed that it belongs.
The now familiar and traditional melody of the hymn was not composed by Newton, and the words were sung to a number of tunes before the now inseparable melody was chanced upon. They first appear united in a shape note hymnal from 1831 called Virginia Harmony, where the tune is called "New Britain." Any original words sung to the tune are now lost. The melody is believed to be Scottish or Irish in origin; it is pentatonic and in the Dorian mode, and suggests a bagpipe tune; the hymn is frequently performed on bagpipes and has become associated with that instrument.
Newton's lyrics have become a favourite for Christians of all denominations, largely because the hymn vividly and briefly sums up the Christian doctrine of grace.
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