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  • Full text of "The Psalmes of David, translated into divers and sundry kindes of verse .."
  • See other formats
  • lPreeenteD to
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  • THE
  • PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • [IP - S JTD> W
  • &~r^
  • THE
  • PSALMES OF DAVID
  • TRANSLATED INTO
  • DIVERS AND SUNDRY KINDES OF VERSE,
  • /MORE RARE AND EXCELLENT
  • FOR THE
  • i?itctj)ot> ant) 2Haucttc
  • THAN EVER YET HATH BEEN DONE IN ENGLISH.
  • BEGUN BY
  • THE NOBLE AND LEARNED GENT.
  • SIR PHILIP SIDNEY, KNT.
  • AND FINISHED BY
  • THE RIGHT HONORABLE
  • THE COUNTESS OF PEMBROKE,
  • b
  • \ \
  • NOW FIRST PRINTED FROM
  • % CDopn of tlj rigtnal JWanustrtpt,
  • TRANSCRIBED BY JOHN DA VIES, OF HEREFORD,
  • IN THE REIGN OF JAMES THE FIRST.
  • HIS SISTER. S\ 9" <^/K^~
  • 5"
  • from ti)t <2Ti>i0tDic& Press,
  • BY
  • C. WHITTINGHAM,
  • FOR
  • ROBERT TRIPHOOK,
  • OLD BOND STREET.
  • 1823.
  • oft
  • xT
  • ADVERTISEMENT.
  • In presenting this Version of the Psalms by Sir
  • Philip Sidney and his sister the Countess of
  • Pembroke to the notice of the literary world, it
  • is necessary to state, that it was undertaken at
  • the suggestion of James Boswell, Esq. who pur-
  • posed writing an Introduction, in which the dif-
  • ferent Versions were intended to have been com-
  • pared. His lamented death shortly after the
  • work had gone to press, caused this design to be
  • reluctantly given up.
  • The MS. from which it has been printed is in
  • folio, copied from the original by John Davies,
  • a 2
  • VI ADVERTISEMENT.
  • of Hereford (writing master to Prince Henry) ;
  • himself a poet of no mean attainments, and a
  • cotemporary of Sir Philip Sidney. It exhibits a
  • beautiful specimen of the Calligraphy of the
  • Time. The first letters of every line are in gold
  • ink, and it comprises specimens of all the hands
  • in use, more particularly the Italian, then much
  • in fashion at court. From the pains bestowed it
  • is by no means improbable that it was written
  • for the Prince.
  • By the kindness of the Rev. Dr. Cotton, of
  • Christ Church, Oxford, this has been carefully
  • collated with a MS. copy in his collection, and
  • some errors of transcription amended. Another
  • is in the library of Richard Heber, Esq. and it
  • is possible that the original Autograph MS. of
  • Sir Philip Sidney may still exist in the library at
  • Wilton. It would have been desirable to have
  • ascertained this, as it might prove which were
  • versified by him, and which by his sister. This
  • I have not been able to accomplish.
  • ADVERTISEMENT. Vll
  • The Rev. B. Bandinel, who has obliged me
  • with his notices on the subject, thinks (from the
  • title to one of the MS. in the Bodleian Library,
  • and which accords with the title prefixed to this)
  • that the first portion was written by Sir Philip,
  • and the latter by the Countess, and not certain
  • Psalms, or various parts, by either of them.
  • Mr. Bandinel's Account of Dr. Woodford's MS.
  • (also in the Bodleian) is as follows :
  • " The other copy is in the hand writing of Dr.
  • Samuel Woodford, who himself paraphrased the
  • Psalms. On the first leaf Dr. W. has written,
  • ' The original] Copy is by mee, given me by my
  • Brother Mr. John Woodford, who bought it
  • among other broken books to putt up Coffee
  • pouder as I remember.' "
  • The parts wanting are from Psalm lxxxviii. to
  • v. 22 of Psalm K)2, both inclusive, and from
  • Psalm cxxxi. to the end.
  • Vlll ADVERTISEMENT.
  • After the first hiatus Dr. W. has noted :
  • " But here all the leaves are torn off to the 23
  • verse of the cii. Psalm, to be supplyd if possible
  • from some other copy, of \v h ther is a fayre one
  • in Trinity Colledg Library in Cambridg, and of
  • w h many years since I had y e sight when I first
  • began my Paraphrase. Sam. Woodforde."
  • At the end of Psalm xliii. is written by Dr. VV.
  • " In the margin (that is of the original
  • MS.), hitherto Sir Ph. Sidney."
  • " Ita testor Sam. Woodforde, who for Sir
  • Philip Sidney's sake, and to preserve such a
  • remaine of him undertooke this tiresome task of
  • transcribing 169 y"
  • " It is to be remarked, that there are very few
  • alterations and corrections in these first forty-two
  • psalms, for Dr. W. has noticed all the scratches,
  • crosses, erasures, and various readings, which he
  • found in the original copy."
  • ADVERTISEMENT. IX
  • Before Psalm xliv. Dr. W. writes:
  • " The next Psalm has in the topp of it three
  • little crosses, thus [ + + + ], and the whole psalm is
  • lightly crossed with the pen. Quaere. Whether
  • further corrected or new made ?"
  • Mr. Bandinel, on reference to the first MS.
  • in the Bodleian, finds it totally different. Wood-
  • ford's copy has it thus :
  • " Our fathers, Lord, by hearing,
  • Have made us understand
  • Thy works before their eyes appearing 1 ,.
  • In time, gon long ago,
  • How rooling nations them thy hand
  • Did plant, and planted, nourish ;
  • The stock prophane did leafeless grow,
  • The faithlull branch did flourish."
  • In the other ISIS, this psalm stands thus :
  • " Lorde, ouie fathers true relation,
  • Often made, hath made us knowe
  • Howe thy power in each occasion,
  • Thou of owld for them didst showe;
  • Howe thy hand the Pagan foe
  • Rooting hence, thy folke implanting,
  • Leaveless made that braunch to growe,
  • This to spring, no verdure wanting."
  • X ADVERTISEMENT.
  • " There are other psalms also which differ, some
  • entirely, others in part; and in some instances
  • Dr. W. has given the rejected as well as amended
  • stanza."
  • There is no doubt that other copies are to be
  • found on a diligent search in the public libraries.
  • It is sufficient, however, to notice, that this is the
  • first time it has appeared in print, though it
  • has been incidentally mentioned in the following
  • works, in some of which specimens have been
  • given.
  • Daniel's Poetical Works. Vol. I. p. 256.
  • 12mo. 1739-
  • Defence of Poesie. By Sir P. S.
  • Donne's Poems. Edit. 1635, p. 366; and
  • edit. 1719, p> 299.
  • Ballard's Learned Ladies. " Countess of
  • "Pembroke."
  • The Guardian. No. XVIII.
  • Harington's Nuga? Antique, 3 vols. 12mo.
  • ADVERTISEMENT. XI
  • 2d edit. 1792, vol. i. p. 277, gives the following
  • Psalms as by the Countess, but it does not ap-
  • pear on what authority or from what MS.
  • Psalms 51, 69, 104, 112, 117, 120, and 137:
  • and in Mr. Park's Edition of the Nugae, vol. ii.
  • p. 407, only two are given, Psalms 1 12 and 137-
  • Zouch's Memoirs of Sir P. S. 2 Psalms,
  • printed (but incorrectly) at the end.
  • In the Christian Remembrancer for June,
  • 1821, p. 327, 331, is a paper by Dr. Cotton on
  • English Psalmody. In speaking of this transla-
  • tion, he says, " By what strange means it has
  • happened that this version has slept in unmerited
  • obscurity for nearly two centuries and a half, I
  • am utterly at a loss to divine. I see in many of
  • them passages of considerable beauty : and not-
  • withstanding the stiffness characteristic of the
  • poetry of the day, there is often peculiar hap-
  • piness of expression, a nerve and energy, a poetic
  • spirit that might have disarmed, even if it could
  • not extort praise, from the fastidious VVarton
  • himself."
  • Xli ADVERTISEMENT.
  • The Rev. H. I. Todd, in a volume just pub-
  • lished, entitled, " Observations upon the Metrical
  • Versions of the Psalms made by Sternhold,
  • Hopkins, and others," does not mention Sir Phi-
  • lip Sydney as a translator, but this may be ac-
  • counted for from its never having been printed.
  • There is also a volume, in small folio, of 150
  • pages, " A Preparation to the Psalter, by George
  • Wyther," printed in 1619, which contains much
  • interesting matter on the Psalms, but from its
  • great rarity it appears to have escaped the notice
  • of all the writers on the subject.
  • The edition of the Early English Poets, of
  • which this forms a portion, is limited to 250
  • copies.
  • THE
  • PSALMS OF DAVID
  • PSALM I.
  • Beatiis vir.
  • XX E blessed is who neither loosely treads
  • The straying steps as wicked councel leads,
  • Ne for bad mates in way of sinners waiteth,
  • Nor yet himself with idle scorners seateth ;
  • But on Gods law his whole delight doth hind,
  • Which night and day lie calls to marking mind.
  • He shall be like a freshly planted tree,
  • To which sweet springs of waters neighbours be ;
  • Whose branches faile not timely fruite to nourish.
  • Nor withered leaf shall make it faile to flourish :
  • So all the things whereto lhat man doth bend
  • Shall prosper still with well succeeding end.
  • A.
  • 2 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Such blessing shall not wicked wretches see,
  • But like vile chaff with wind shall scattred be ;
  • For neither shall the men in sinne delighted
  • Consist when they to highest doome are cited,
  • Ne yet shall suff'red be a place to take
  • Where godly men do their assembly make.
  • For God doth know, and knowing doth approve
  • The trade of them that just proceedings love:
  • But they that sinne in sinfull breast do cherish,
  • The way they go, shall be the way to perish.
  • PSALM II.
  • Quare fremuernnt gentes ?
  • What ailes this Hcath'nish rage? what do the people
  • To mutter murmurs vaine? [meane.
  • Why do these earthly kings and lords such meetings
  • And counccll joyntly take [make,
  • Against the Lord of Lords, the lord of ev'rie thing,
  • And his annointed king?
  • Come, let us break their bonds, say they, and fondly say,
  • And cast their yokes away.
  • But he shall them deride who by the Heav'ns is borne,
  • He them shall laugh to scorn,
  • And after speak to them with breath of wrathfull fire;
  • And vex them in his ire.
  • And say, O kings, yet have I set my King upon
  • My holy hill Sion ;
  • And I will (saith this king) the Lords decree display,
  • And say that he did say,
  • Thou art my Son indeed, this day begot by me:
  • Ask, I will give to thee
  • The heath'n for thy childs right, and will thy realm
  • Far as worlds farthest end ; [extend
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 3
  • With iron scepter bruise thou slialt and piecemeal break
  • These men like potsherds weak.
  • Therefore, O kings ! be wise, O rulers, rule your minde,
  • That knowledge you may finde.
  • Serve God, serve him with fear, rejoice in him, but soe
  • That joy with trembling goe;
  • With loving homage kiss that only Son lie hath,
  • Lest you inflame his wrath ;
  • Whereof if but a sparke once kindled be, you all
  • From your way perish shall ;
  • And then they that in him their only trust do rest,
  • O, they be rightly blest!
  • PSALM III.
  • Domine, quid multiplicati?
  • Loud, how do they increase
  • That batefull never cease
  • To breed my grievous trouble?
  • How many ones there be
  • That all against poor me
  • Their numerous strength redouble ?
  • Even multitudes be they
  • That to my soul do saye
  • No help for you remaineth
  • In God, on whom you build.
  • Yet, Lord, thou art my shield ;
  • In thee my glorie raigneth.
  • The Lord lifts up my head ;
  • To him my voice I spread;
  • From holy hill he heard me:
  • I laid mo downe and slept,
  • While he me safelie kept,
  • And safe from slcepe I rear'd me.
  • b 2
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • I will not be afraid,
  • Though legions round be laide,
  • Which all against me gather:
  • I say no more but this,
  • Up, Lord, now time it is,
  • Help me, my God, and Father!
  • For thou, with cruel blows
  • On jawbone of my foes,
  • My causelesse wrong hast wroken ;
  • Thou those men's teeth which bite,
  • Venomed with godlesse spight,
  • Hast in their malice broken.
  • Salvation doth belong
  • Unto the Lord most strong ;
  • He it is that defeudeth :
  • And on those blessed same
  • Which beare his people's name
  • His blessing he extendeth.
  • PSALM IV.
  • Cum invocarem.
  • Heare me, O, heare me when I call,
  • O God, God of my equity !
  • Thou sett'st me free when I was thrall,
  • Have mercy therefore still on me,
  • And hearken how I pray to thee.
  • O men, whose fathers were but men,
  • Till when will ye my honor high
  • Stain with your blasphemies? till when
  • Such pleasure take in vanity?
  • And only haunt where lies do lye.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Yet know this to, that God did take,
  • When he chose me, a godly one;
  • Such one, I say, that when I make
  • My cryeng plaintes to him alone,
  • He will give good eare to my moane.
  • O, tremble then with awfull will ;
  • Sinne from all ride in you depose,
  • Talk with your harts and yet be still;
  • And, when your chamber you do close,
  • Your selves, yet to your selves disclose.
  • The sacrifices sacrifie
  • Of just desires, on justice staid ;
  • Trust in that Lord that cannot ly.
  • Indeed full many folkes have said,
  • From whence shall come to us such aid?
  • But, Lord, lift thou upon our sight
  • The shining; clecrenes of thy face;
  • Where I have found more harts delight;
  • Then they whose store in harvests space
  • Of grain and wine fills stoaring place.
  • So I in peace and peaceful! blisse
  • Will lay me down and take my rest:
  • For it is thou, Lord, thou it is,
  • By pow'r of whose own onely brest
  • I dwell, laid up in safest neast.
  • 6 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • PSALM V.
  • Verba mea auribas.
  • Ponder the wordes, O Lord, that I do say,
  • Consider what I meditate in me:
  • O, barken to my voice which calls on thee,
  • My king; my God, for I to thee will pray.
  • Soe shall my voice clime to thiue eares betime:
  • For unto thee I will my praicr send
  • With earliest entry of the morning prime,
  • And will my waiting eies to thee-ward bend.
  • For thou art that same God, farre from delight
  • In that which of fowle wickednes doth smell:
  • No, nor with thee the naughty ones shall dwell,
  • Nor glorious fooles stand in thy aw full sight.
  • Thou hatest all whose workes in ill are plac'd,
  • And shall roote out the tongues to lyeing bent;
  • For thou, the Lord, in endles hatred hast
  • The murd'rous man, and soe the fraudulent.
  • But I my self will to thy howse addresse
  • With pasport of thy graces manifold ;
  • And in thy fearc, knees of my hart will fold,
  • Towardes the temple of thy hollinesse.
  • Thou Lord, thou Lord, the saver of thine owne;
  • Guide me, O in thy justice be my guide;
  • And make thy waies to me more plainly known,
  • For all I need, that with such foes do bide.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • For in their mouth not one cleare word is spent,
  • Mischief their soules for inmost lyning have:
  • Their throate it is an open swallowing grave,
  • Whereto their tong, is flattiing instrument.
  • Give them their due unto their guiltinesse,
  • Let their vile thoughts the thinckers mine be:
  • With heaped weights of their own sinns oppresse
  • These most ungratefull rebells unto thee.
  • So shal all they that trust on thee doe bend,
  • And love the sweete sound of thy name, rejoyce.
  • They ever shall send thee their praising voice ;
  • Since ever thou to them wilt succour send.
  • Thy work it is to blesse, thou blessedst them
  • The just in thee, on thee and justice build:
  • Thy work it is such men safe in to hemm
  • With kindest care, as with a certain shield.
  • PSALM VI.
  • Domine, ne in furore.
  • Lord, lett not mee a worm by thee be shent,
  • While thou art in the heate of tby r displeasure;
  • Nor let thy rage of my due punnishment
  • Become the measure.
  • But mercy, Lord, lett mercy thine descend,
  • For I am weake, and in my wcaknes languish :
  • Lord, help, for ev'n my bones their marrow spend
  • With cruel anguish.
  • Nay, ev'n my soule fell troubles do appall.
  • Alas! how long, my God, wilt thou delay me?
  • Turn thee, sweete Lord, and from this ougly fall,
  • My deere God, stay me.
  • 8 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Mercy, O, mercy, Lord, for mercy sake,
  • For death dotli kill the wittnes of thy glory,
  • Can of thy praise the tongues entombed make
  • A hcav'nly story.
  • Loe, T am tir'd while still I sigh and grone :
  • My moistned bed proofes of my sorrow showeth:
  • My bed (while I with black night moorn alone)
  • With my teares floweth.
  • Woe, like a moth, my faces ben tie eates,
  • And age pul'd on with paines all freshnes fretteth;
  • The while a swarm of foes with vexing feates
  • My life besetteth.
  • Get hence, you evil!, who in my ill rejoice,
  • In all whose works vainenesse is ever raigning,
  • For God hath heard the weeping sobbing voice
  • Of my complayning.
  • The Lord my suite did heare, and gently heare ;
  • They shall be sham'd and vext, that breed my cryeng-,
  • And turn their backs, and straight on backs appeare
  • Their shamfull tlyeng.
  • PSALM VII.
  • Domine, Dens meus.
  • O Lord, my God, thou art my trusfull stay:
  • O, save me from this persecutions show'r:
  • Deliver me in my endanger'd way.
  • Least lion-like he doe my soule devoure,
  • And cruelly in many peeces teare,
  • While I am voide of any helping pow'r.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 9
  • O Lord, my God, if I did not. forbeare
  • Ever from deede of any such desert :
  • If ought my hands of wickednes do beare:
  • If I have been unkinde for frendly part:
  • Nay, if I wrought not for his freedom's sake,
  • Who causlesse now yeeldes mc a hatefull hart:
  • Then let my foe chase me, and chasing take :
  • Then lctt his foote upon my neck be set :
  • Then in the dust Iett hym my honor rake.
  • Arise, O Lord, in wrath thy self up sett
  • Against such rage of foes: awake for me
  • To that high doom, which I by the must gett.
  • So shall all men with laudes inviron thee;
  • Therefore, O Lord, lift up thy throne on high,
  • That ev'ry folk thy wond'rous acts may see.
  • Thou, Lord, thy people shalt in judgment try:
  • Then, Lord, my Lord, give sentence on my side
  • After my clearnesse, and my equity.
  • O, let their wickednes no longer bide
  • From comming to the well deserved end ;
  • But still be thou to just men justest guide.
  • Thou righteous proofes to hartes and reines dost send:
  • And all my helpe from none but thee is sent,
  • Who dost thy saving-health to true men bend.
  • Thou righteous art, thou strong, thou pacient:
  • And each day art provok'd thyne ire to show:
  • And if this man will not learn to repent,
  • b3
  • 10 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • For hym thou vvhett'st thy sword and bend'st thy bow,
  • And hast thy deadly armes in order brought,
  • And ready art to lett thyne arrowes go.
  • Lo, he that first conceav'd a wretched thought,
  • And greate with child of mischief travel'd long,
  • Now brought a bed, hath brought nought foorth but
  • nought.
  • A pitt was digg'd by this man vainly strong;
  • But in the pitt he ruin'd first did fall,
  • Which fall he made, to doe his neigbonr wrong.
  • He against me doth throw; but down it shall
  • Upon his pate, his paine emploicd thus,
  • And his own ill his own head shall appall.
  • I will give thancks unto the Lord of us
  • According to his hcav'nly equity,
  • And will to highest name yield praises high.
  • PSALM VIII.
  • Domine, Dominus noster.
  • O Lord that rul'st our mortall lyne,
  • How through the world thy name doth shine
  • That bast of thine unmatched glory
  • Upon the heav'ns engrav'n the story.
  • From sucklings hath thy honor sprong,
  • Thy force hath flow'd from babies tongue,
  • Whereby thou stopp'st thine en'mies prating,
  • Bent to revenge and over hating.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 11
  • When I upon the heav'ns do look,
  • Which all from thee their essence took ;
  • When moon and starrs my thoughts beholdeth,
  • Whose life no life but of thee holdeth:
  • Then thinck I: ah, what is this man,
  • Whom that greate God remember can?
  • And what the race of him descended,
  • It should be ought of God attended.
  • For though in Jesse then angell's state
  • Thou planted hast this earthly mate:
  • Yet hast thou made ev'n hym an owner
  • Of glorious crown, and crowning honor.
  • Thou placest hym upon all landes
  • To rule the workes of thyne own handes :
  • And so thou hast all things ordained,
  • That ev'n his feete, have on them raigned.
  • Thou under his dominion plac't
  • Both sheepe and oxen wholy hast:
  • And all the beastes for ever breeding,
  • Which in the fertill fieldes be feeding.
  • The bird, free-burgesse of the aire,
  • The fish, of sea the native heire ;
  • And what things els of waters traceth
  • The unworn pathes, his rule embraceth.
  • O Lord, that rul'st our mortall lyne,
  • How through the world thy name doth shine.
  • 12 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • PSALM IX.
  • Confitebor tibi.
  • With all my hart, O Lord, I will praise thee,
  • My speaches all thy mcrvailes shall discry;
  • In thee my joyes and comfortes ever be,
  • Yea, ev'n my songs thy name shall magnify,
  • O Lord most hie.
  • Because my foes to fly are now constraint,
  • And they are fall'n, nay, perisht at thy sight;
  • For thou my cause, my right thou hast maintain'd,
  • Setting thy self, in throne which shined bright,
  • Of judging right.
  • The Gentiles thou rebuked sorely hast,
  • And wicked folks, from thee to wrack do wend:
  • And their renown, which seem'd so like to last,
  • Thou dost put out, and quite consuming send
  • To endles end.
  • O bragging foe, where is the endles wast
  • Of concjucr'd states, whereby such fame you got?
  • What! doth their memory no longer last?
  • Both mines, miners, and ruin'd plott
  • Be quite forgott.
  • But God shall silt in his eternall chaire,
  • Which he prepared to give his judgments high ;
  • Thither the world for justice shall repaire:
  • Thence he to all, his judgments shall apply
  • Perpetually.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 13
  • Thou, Lord, also th' oppressed wilt defend,
  • That they to thee in troublous tyme may flee:
  • They that know thee, on thee their trust will bend,
  • For thou Lord, found by them wilt ever he
  • That seake to thee.
  • O, praise the Lord, this Syon-dweller good ;
  • Shew foorth his actes, and this as act most high:
  • That he enquiring, doth require just blood,
  • Which he forgetteth not, nor letteth dy
  • Th' afflicted cry.
  • Have mercy, mercy, Lord, I once did say,
  • Ponder the paincs which on me loaden be
  • By them whose mindes on hateful! thoughts do stray:
  • Thou, Lord, that from death-gates hast lifted me,
  • 1 call to thee.
  • That I within the portes most bevvtifull
  • Of Sions daughter may sound foorth thy praise:
  • That I, ev'n I, of heav'nly comfort full,
  • May only joy in all thy saving waies
  • Through out my daies.
  • No sooner said, but lo, mine cnymies sinck
  • Downiu the pitt which they them selves had wrought:
  • And in that nett which they well hidden think,
  • Is their own foote, led by their own ill thought,
  • Most surely caught.
  • For then the Lord in judgment showes to raign.
  • When godlesse men be snai'd in their own snares:
  • When wicked soules be turned to hellish pain,
  • And that forgettfull sort which never cares
  • What God prepares.
  • 14 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • But, on the other side, the poore in sprite
  • Shall not be scrapt, from out of heav'nly score :
  • Nor meeke abiding of the pacient wight
  • Yet perish shall (although his paine be sore)
  • For ever more.
  • Up, Lord, and judge the Gentiles in thy right,
  • And lett not man have upper hand of thee:
  • With terrors greate, O Lord, doe thou them fright:
  • That by sharp proofes the heathen them selves may see
  • But men to be.
  • PSALM X.
  • TJt quid, Dotnine?
  • Why standest thou soe farre,
  • O God, our only starre,
  • In time most fitt for thee
  • To help who vexed be !
  • For Io, with pride, the wicked man
  • Still plagues the poore the most he can :
  • O, lett proud hym be throughly caught
  • In craft of his own crafty thought.
  • For he him self doth praise
  • When he his lust doth ease:
  • Extolling rav'nous gaine,
  • But doth God's self disdaine.
  • Nay so proud is his puffed thought,
  • That after God he never sought:
  • But rather much he fancies this;
  • The name of God a fable is.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 15
  • For while his waies doe prove,
  • On them he setts his love;
  • Thy judgments are to hie,
  • He can them not espy.
  • Therefore he doth defy all those
  • That dare them selves to him oppose:
  • And saieth in his bragging hart,
  • This gotten hlisse, shall never part,
  • Nor he removed be,
  • Nor danger ever see :
  • Yet from his mouth doth spring
  • Cursing and cosening;
  • Under his tongue do harbour'd ly
  • Both mischief and iniquity.
  • For proof, ofte laiue in wait he is,
  • In secrete by-way villages.
  • In such a place unknown
  • To slay the hurtlesse one ;
  • With wincking eies, ay bent
  • Against the innocent,
  • Like lurking lion in his den,
  • He waites to spoile the simple men:
  • Whom to their losse he still doth gett,
  • When once he draw'th his wily nett.
  • O, with how simple look
  • He ofte laieth out his hooke!
  • And with how humble showes
  • To trapp poore soules he goes !
  • Thus freely, saieth he in his sprite,
  • God sleepes, or hath forgotten quite ;
  • His farr-of sight now hud winck is,
  • He leisure wants to mark all this.
  • 10 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Then rise, and come abroad,
  • O Lord, our only God:
  • Lift up thy heav'nly hand,
  • And by the silly stand.
  • Why should the evill, so evill, despise
  • The pow'r of thy through-seeing eyes?
  • And why should he in hart so hard
  • Say, thou dost not thine own regard ?
  • But nak'd, before thine eyes,
  • All wrong and mischief lies:
  • For of them in thy handes
  • The ballance ev'nly standes.
  • But who aright poore-minded be
  • Committ their cause, them selves to thee,
  • The succour of the succourles,
  • The father of the fatherles.
  • Breake thou the wicked armc,
  • Whose fury bendes to harme:
  • Search them, and wicked be
  • Will straight way nothing be.
  • O Lord, we shall thy title sing,
  • Ever and ever, to be king;
  • Who hast the heath'ny folk destroi'd
  • From out thy land by them auoi'd.
  • Thou op'nest heav'nly dore
  • To praiers of the poore :
  • Thou first prepar'd their mind,
  • Then eare to them enclind ;
  • O, be thou still the orphan's aid,
  • That poore from ruyne may be staid :
  • Least we should ever feare the lust
  • Of earthly man, a lord of dust.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 17
  • PSALM XI.
  • In Domino eonfido.
  • Since I do trust Iehoua still,
  • Your fearfull wordes why do you spill?
  • That like a bird to some strong- hill
  • I now should fall a flyeng.
  • Behould the evill have bent their bow,
  • And sett their arrowes in a row,
  • To give unwares a mortall blow
  • To hartes that hate all lyeng:
  • But that in building* they begunn
  • With ground-plotts fall, shall be undunn:
  • For what, alas, have just men donn?
  • In them no cause is growing.
  • God in his holy temple is :
  • The throne of hcav'n is only his :
  • Naught his all seeing sight can misse;
  • His ey-lidds peise our going.
  • The Lord doth searcb the just man's reynes,
  • But hates, abhorrs, the wicked brains,
  • On them stormes, brimstone, coales he raines:
  • That is their share assigned.
  • But so of happy other side
  • His lovely face on them doth bide,
  • In race of life their feete to guide
  • Who be to God enclined.
  • 18 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • PSALM XII.
  • Salvum me fac.
  • Lord, helpe, it is hygh tytne for me to call,
  • No men are left that charity doth love :
  • Nay, ev'n the race of good men are decai'd.
  • Of things vaine with vaine mates they babble all;
  • Their abiect lipps, no breath but flattry move,
  • Sent from false hart, on double meaning staid.
  • But thou, O Lord, give them a thorough fall:
  • Those lyeing lipps from cosoning head remove,
  • In falshood wrapt, but in their pride displaid.
  • Our tongues, say they, beyond them all shall goe :
  • We both have pow'r, and will our tales to tell:
  • For what lord rules our brave embolden brest?
  • Ah ! now ev'n for their sakes, that tast of wo,
  • Whom troubles tosse, whose natures need doth quell ;
  • Ev'n for the sighes, true sighes of man distrest:
  • I will gett up, saith God, and my help show
  • Against all them, that against hym do swell:
  • Maugre his foes, I will him sett at rest.
  • These are Gods wordes, Gods words are ever pure:
  • Pure, purer then the silver throughly tride,
  • When fire seav'n tymes hath spent his earthy parts.
  • Then thou (O Lord) shalt keepe the good still sure:
  • By thee preserv'd, in thee they shall abide:
  • Yea, in no age thy blisse from them departes.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 39
  • Thou sees't each side the walking doth endure
  • Of these badd folks, more lifted up with pride,
  • Which if it last, wo to all simple harts.
  • PSALM XIII.
  • Usque quo, Domine ?
  • How long, O Lord, shall I forgotten be?
  • What? ever?
  • How long wilt thou thy hidden face from me
  • Dissever?
  • How long shall I consult with carefull sprite
  • In anguish?
  • How long shall I with foes triumphant might
  • Thus languish ?
  • Behold me, Lord ; let to thy hearing creep
  • My crying ;
  • Nay, give me eyes and light, least that I sleep
  • In dying:
  • Least my foe bragg, that in my ruyne he
  • Prevailed:
  • And at my fall they joy that, troublous, me
  • Assailed.
  • Noe! noe! I trust on thee, and joy in thy
  • Greate pitty:
  • Still therefore, of thy graces shall be my
  • Songs ditty.
  • 20 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • PSALM XIV.
  • Dixit insipiens.
  • The foolish man by flesh and fancy ledd,
  • His guilty hart with this fond thought hath fed:
  • There is noe God that raigneth.
  • And so thereafter he and all his mates
  • Do workes, which earth corrupt, and Heaven hates:
  • Not one that good remaineth.
  • Even God him self sent down his piercing ey,
  • If of this clayy race he could espy
  • One, that his wisdome learneth.
  • And loe, he findes that all a straycng went:
  • All plung'd in stineking filth, not one well bent,
  • Not one that God discernctb.
  • O maddnes of these folkes, thus loosly ledd!
  • These caniballs, who, as if they were bread,
  • Gods people do dcvower:
  • Nor ever call on God; but they shall quake
  • More then they now do bragg, when he shall take
  • The just into his power.
  • Indeede the poore, opprest by you, you mock:
  • Their councells are your common jesting stock:
  • But God is their recomfort.
  • Ah, when from Syon shall the saver come,
  • That Jacob, freed by thee, may glad become,
  • And Israel full of comfort?
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 2 L
  • PSALM XV.
  • Domine, quis habitabit.
  • In tabernacle thine, O Lord, who shall remaine?
  • Lord of thy holy hill, who shall the rest obtaine?
  • Ev'n he that leades a life of uncorrupted traine, [plain:
  • Whose deedes of righteous hart, whose harty wordes be
  • Who with deccitfull tongue hath never us'd to faine;
  • Nor neighboure hurtes by deede, nor doth with slander
  • stain :
  • Whose eyes a person vile doth hold in vile disdainc,
  • But doth, with honor greate, the godly entertaine:
  • Who othe and promise given doth faithfully maintain,
  • Although some worldly losse thereby he may sustain;
  • From bityng usury who ever doth refraine:
  • Who sells not guiltlesse cause for filthy love of gain,
  • Who thusproceedes for ay, in sacred mount shall raign.
  • PSALM XVI.
  • Conserva me.
  • Save me, Lord; for why, thou art
  • All the hope of all my hart:
  • Wittnesse thou, my soule, with me,
  • That to God, my God, I say;
  • Thou, my Lord, thou art my stay,
  • Though my workes reach not to thee.
  • This is all the best I prove:
  • Good and godly men I love :
  • And forsee their wretched paine,
  • Who to other gods doc runne:
  • Their blood offrings I do shunne;
  • Nay, to name their names disdainc.
  • 22 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • God my only portion is,
  • And of my childes part the blisse:
  • He then shall maintaine my lott.
  • Say then, is not my lott found
  • In a goodly pleasant ground?
  • Have not I faire partage gott?
  • Ever Lord I will blesse thee,
  • Who dost ever councell me,
  • Ev'n when Night with his black wing
  • Sleepy Darknes doth orecast,
  • In my inward raines I tast
  • Of my faultes and chastening.
  • My eyes still my God reguard,
  • And he my right hand doth guard;
  • So can I not be opprest,
  • So my hart is fully gladd,
  • So in joy my glory cladd :
  • Yea, my flesh in hope shall rest.
  • For I know the deadly grave
  • On my soule noe pow'r shall have:
  • For I know thou wilt defend
  • Even the body of thine own
  • Deare beloved holy one
  • From a fovvle corrupting end.
  • Thou lifes path wilt make me knowe,
  • In whose view doth plenty growe
  • All delights that soules can crave;
  • And whose bodies placed stand
  • On thy blessed making hand,
  • They all joies like-endless have.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 23
  • PSALM XVII.
  • Exaudi, Domine,justitiam.
  • My suite is just, just Lord, to my suite hark,
  • I piaine: sweete Lord, my plaint for pitty mark.
  • And, since my lipps i'aine not to thee,
  • Thync eares vouchsave to bend to me.
  • O, let my sentence passe from thine own face :
  • Shew that thine eyes respect a faithfull case,
  • Thou that by proofe accquainted art
  • With inward secretts of my hart.
  • Where silent Night might seeme all faultes to hide,
  • Then was I, by thy searching insight tride :
  • And then by thee, was guiltlesse found
  • From ill word, and ill meaning sound.
  • Not waighing ought how fleshly fancies runn,
  • Ledd by thy word, the rav'ners stepps I shun;
  • And pray that still you guide my way,
  • Least yet I slipp, or goc astray.
  • I say againe that I have cal'd on thee,
  • And boldly saie thou wilt give eare to me:
  • And let my wordes, my cries ascend,
  • Which to thy self my soule will send.
  • Show then, O Lord, thy wondrous kindnesse show:
  • Make us in mervailes of thy mercy know,
  • That thou by faithfull men wilt stand,
  • And save them from rebellious hand.
  • 24 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Then keepe me as the apple of an ey:
  • In thy wings shade then lett me hidden ly,
  • From my destroyeng wicked foes,
  • "Who for my death do me enclose.
  • Their eies doe swirame, their face doth shine in fait,
  • And cruell wordes their swelling tongues do chatt;
  • And yet their high hartes looke so low
  • As how to watch our overthrow.
  • Now like a lion, gaping to make praies,
  • Now like his whelpe, in denne, that lurking staies:
  • Up, Lord, prevent those gaping jawes,
  • And bring to naught those watching pawes.
  • Save me from them, thou usest as thy blade;
  • From men, I say, and from mens worldly trade:
  • Whose life doth seeme most greatly blest,
  • And count this life their portion best.
  • Whose bellies soe with dainties thou dost fill,
  • And soe with hidden treasures graunt their will:
  • That they in riches floorish doe,
  • And children have to leave it to.
  • What would they more? And I would not their case:
  • My joy shal be pure ; to enjoy thy face,
  • When waking of this sleepe of mine,
  • I shall see thee in likenesse thine.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 2i
  • PSALM XVIII.
  • Diligam te.
  • Thee will I love, O Lord, with all my hartes delight,
  • My strength, my strongest rock,which my defence hast born:
  • My God, and helping God, my might, and trustfull might,
  • My never-pierced shield, my ever-saving home,
  • My refuge, refuge then, when moste I am forlorne :
  • Whom then shall I invoke, but thee most worthy praise,
  • On whom (against my foes) my only safty staies?
  • On me the paines of death allready gan to pray :
  • The fludds of wickednesse on me did horrors throw;
  • Like in a winding sheete, wretch, I already lay,
  • This my distresse to God, with wailefull cries I show:
  • All-ready, ready to my snaring grave to goe,
  • My cries climb'd up, and he bent down from sacred throne
  • His eyes unto my case, his eares unto my moane.
  • And so the earth did fall to tremble and to quake,
  • The mountaines proudly high, and their foundations bent
  • With motion of his rage, did to the bottome shake.
  • He came, but came with smoake, from out his nostrells sent :
  • Flames issu'd from his mouth, and burning coals out went :
  • He bow'd the heav'ns, and from the bo w'd heav'ns did descend
  • With hugy darknes, which aboute his feete did wend.
  • The cherubins their backs, the windes did yeild their wings
  • To beare his sacred flight; in secrete place then clos'd;
  • About which he dimme cloudes, like a pavillion brings
  • Cloudes ev'n of waters darke, and thickest aire compos'd;
  • But streight his shining eyes this misty nmsse disclos'd :
  • Then haile, then firie coales, then thundred heav'nly sire,
  • Then spake he his lowd voice, then hailstones, coles, and fire.
  • c
  • 2G THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Then out his arrovves fly : and streight they scattred been
  • Lightning on lightning he did for their wrack augment ;
  • The gulphes of waters then were through their chanells seen :
  • The worldes foundations then lay bare; because he shent
  • With blasting breath, O Lord, that in thy chiding went.
  • Then sent he from above, and tooke me from below,
  • Ev'n from the waters depth, my God preserv'd me soe.
  • So did he save me from my mighty furious foe,
  • So did he save me from their then prevailing hate:
  • For they had caught me up when I was weake in woe :
  • But he, staff of my age, he staid my stumbling state :
  • This much : yet more, when I by him this freedom gate,
  • By him, because I did find in his eysight grace,
  • He lifted me, unto a largly noble place.
  • My justice, my iust handes thus did the Lord reward,
  • Because I walk'd his waies, nor gainst him evilly went:
  • Still to his judgmentes look't, still for his statutes car'd :
  • Sound and upright with him, to wickednes not bent.
  • Therefore, I say again, this goodues he me sent,
  • As he before his eyes did see my justice stand,
  • According as he saw the purenes of my hand.
  • Meeke to the meeke thou art, the good thy goodnes tast :
  • Pure, to the pure, thou deal'st with crooked crookedly.
  • Up then, thou lifts the poore, and downe the proud wilt cast;
  • Up, thou dost light, my light, and cleare my darkned ey.
  • I hoastes by thee orecome ; by thee ore walles I fly :
  • Thy way is soundly sure, thy word is purely tride :
  • To them that trust in thee, a shield thou dost abide.
  • For who is God besides this greate Iehova oures?
  • And so besides our God, who is indu'd with might?
  • This God then girded me in his all-mighty pow'rs,
  • He made my combrous way, to me most plainly right :
  • To match with lightfoote staggs, he made my foote so light
  • That I climb'd highest hill ; he me wane points did show,
  • Strengthning mine armes, that they could bfeake an iron bow
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 27
  • Tbou gav'st me saving shield ; thy right hand was my stay ;
  • Me in encreasing still, thy kindnesse did maintaine;
  • Unto my strengthrred stepps, thou didst enlardge the way,
  • My heeles,andplantes, thou didst from stumbling slip sustain;
  • What foes I did pursue, my force did them attain,
  • That I ere I retorn'd, destroi'd them utterly,
  • With such brave woundes, that they under my feete did ly.
  • For why? my fighting strength,by thy strength,strengthned was:
  • Not I, but thou throwst down, those who gainst me do rise,
  • Thou gavest me their necks, on them thou mad'st me passe :
  • Behoid they cry, but who to them his helpe applies?
  • Nay, unto thee they cri'd, but thou heard'st not their cries :
  • I belt those folkes as small as dust, which wind doth raise,
  • I bett them as the clay is bett, in beaten waies.
  • Thus freed from troublous men, thou makest me to raign;
  • Yea, thou makst me be serv'd by folks I never knew:
  • My name their eares, their eares their harts to me enchain'd:
  • Ev'n feare makes strangers shew much love, though much
  • But they do faile, and in their mazed corners rue : [untrue.
  • Then live Iehoua still, my rock still blessed be:
  • Lett hym be lifted up, that hath preserved me.
  • He that is my revenge, in whom I realmes subdue,
  • Who freed me from my foes, from rebells garded me,
  • And ridd me from the wrongs which cruell witts did brew.
  • Among the Gentiles then I (Lord) yeeld thancks to thee,
  • I to thy name will sing, and thus my song shall be ;
  • He nobly saves his king, and kindnes keepes in store,
  • For David his anoint' and his seed evermore.
  • c 2
  • 20 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • PSALM XIX.
  • Cceli enarrant.
  • The heav'nly frame setts foorth the fame
  • Of him that only thunders;
  • The firmament, so strangly bent,
  • Showes his hand-working wonders.
  • Day unto day, doth it display,
  • Their course doth it acknowledge :
  • And night to night succeeding right
  • In darknes teach cleare knowledg.
  • There is no speach, nor language, which
  • Is soe of skill bereaved:
  • But of the skies the teaching cries
  • They have heard and conceaved.
  • There be no eyne, but read the line
  • From soe faire book proceeding;
  • Their wordes be sett in letters greate
  • For ev'ry bodies reading.
  • Is not he blind that doth not find
  • The tabernacle builded
  • There by his grace, for sunnes faire face,
  • In beames of beuty guilded.
  • Who foorth doth come, like a bridegroome
  • From out his vailing places:
  • As gladd is hee, as giantes be
  • To runne their mighty races.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 29
  • His race is ev'n, from endes of heav'n,
  • About that vault he goeth:
  • There be no realmes hid from his beames,
  • His heate to all he throweth.
  • O law of his, how perfect tis !
  • The very soule amending;
  • Gods wittncs sure for ay doth dure,
  • To simplest, wisdome lending.
  • Gods doomes be right, and cheere the sprite :
  • All his commandments being
  • So purely wise they give the eies
  • Both light, and force of seeing.
  • Of him the feare, doth cleannes beare,
  • And soe endures for ever:
  • His judgments be self verity,
  • They are unrighteous never.
  • Then what man would so soone seeke gold,
  • Or glittring golden money?
  • By them is past, in sweetest tast,
  • Honny, or combe of honny.
  • By them is made thy servantes trade,
  • Most circumspectly guarded:
  • And who doth frame to keepe the same
  • Shall fully be rewarded.
  • Who is the man, that ever can
  • His faultes know and acknowledg !
  • O Lord, dense me from faultes that be
  • Most secret from all kuowledg.
  • 30 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Thy servant keepe, lest in him creepe
  • Presumptuous shines offences :
  • Let them not have me for their slave,
  • Nor raigne upon my sences.
  • Soe shall my sprite be still upright
  • In thought and conversation ;
  • Soe shall I bide, well purifide
  • From much abbomination.
  • Soe lett wordes sprong from my weake tongue,
  • And my liartes meditation ;
  • My saving might, Lord, in thy sight
  • Receave good acceptalion.
  • PSALM XX.
  • JExaudiat te Dominus.
  • Lktt God the Lord beare thee,
  • Even iu the day when most thy troubles be :
  • Let name of Jacob's God,
  • When thou on it dost cry,
  • Defend thee still from all thy lots abroad.
  • From santuary by
  • Let him come downe, and belpe to thee apply
  • From Sion's holy topp
  • Thence lett him undertake
  • With heav'nly strength thy earthly strength to propp.
  • Lett him notorious make,
  • That in good part he did thy offrings take.
  • Let fire for triall burne
  • (Yea, fire from him self sent)
  • Thy offrings, soe that they to ashes turne.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 31
  • And soe lett him consent
  • To graunt thy will, and perfect thy cnlent,
  • That in thy saving;, we
  • May ioy, and banners raise
  • Up to our God, when thy suites graunted be.
  • Now in me knowledge saies,
  • That God from fall his own annointed staies.
  • From heav'nly holy land
  • I know that he heares mee;
  • Yea, heares with powres, and help of helpfull hand.
  • Let trust of some men be
  • In chariotts arm'd, others in chivalry;
  • But lett all our conceite,
  • Upon Gods holy name,
  • Who is our Lord, with due remembrance waite.
  • Behold their broken shame !
  • We stand upright while they their fall did frame.
  • Assist us, Saviour deere;
  • Let that king daine to heare,
  • When as to him our praiers do appeare.
  • PSALM XXI.
  • Domine, in virtute tua.
  • New joy, new joy unto our king,
  • Lord, from thy strength is growing ;
  • Lord, what delight to him doth bring
  • His safly, from thee flowing.
  • Thou hast giv'n what his hart woulde have,
  • Nay, soone as he but moved,
  • His lipps to aske, what he would crave,
  • He had as him behoved.
  • 32 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Yea, thou prevent'st ere aske he could,
  • With many lib'rall blessing-,
  • Crown of his head with crown of gold
  • Of purest mettall dressing.
  • He did hut aske a life of thee,
  • Thou him a long - life gavest :
  • Loe ev'n unto eternity
  • The life of hym thou savest.
  • We may well call his glory greate,
  • That springs from thy salvation :
  • Thou, thou it is, that hast him sett
  • In soe high estimation.
  • Like storehouse thou of blessings mad'si
  • This man of everlasting :
  • Unspekably his hart thou glad'st,
  • On hym thy count'naunce casting.
  • And why all this? because our king-
  • In heav'n his trust hath laied ;
  • He only leanes on highest thing,
  • Soe from base slipp is staid.
  • Thy hand thy foes shall overtake,
  • That thee so evill hated :
  • Thou as in fyery ov'n shalt make
  • These mates to be amated.
  • The Lord on them with causfull ire
  • Shall use destroying power :
  • And flames of never-quenched fire
  • Shall these badd wightes devower.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 33
  • Their finite shalt thou from earthly face
  • Send unto desolation:
  • And from among the humane race
  • Roote out their generation.
  • For they to overthrow thy will
  • Full wilyly entended:
  • But all their bad mischevous skill
  • Shall fruitlessly be ended.
  • For like a mark thou shalt a row
  • Sett them in pointed places :
  • And ready make thy vengefull bow
  • Against their guilty faces.
  • Lord, in thy strength, Lord, in thy might,
  • Thy honor high be raised ;
  • And so shall in our songs delight
  • Thy power still be praised.
  • PSALM XXII.
  • Deus, Deus meus.
  • My God, my God, why hast thou me forsaken?
  • Wo me, from me why is thy presence taken ?
  • Soe farre from seeing, mine unhealthfull eyes :
  • Soe farre from heariug to my roaring cries.
  • O God, my God, I crie while day appeareth :
  • But God, thy eare my crying never heareth.
  • O God, the night is privie to my plaint,
  • Yet to my plaint thou hast not audience lent.
  • c3
  • 34 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • But thou art holy, and dost hold thy dwelling
  • Where Israeli thy lawdes is ever telling;
  • Our fathers still to thee their trust did beare ;
  • They trusted, and by thee delivered were.
  • They were sett free, when they upon thee called,
  • They hop'd on thee, and they were not appalled.
  • But I a worme, not 1 of mankind am,
  • Nay, shame of men, the peoples scorning game.
  • The lookers now at me, poore wretch, be mocking,
  • With mowes, and nodds, they stand about me flocking :
  • Let God help him (say they) whom he did trust;
  • Let God save hym in whom was all his lust.
  • And yet even from the wombe thy selfe did'st take me :
  • At mother's brests, thou did'st good hope betake me:
  • No sooner my child eyes could looke abroade,
  • Then I was giv'n to thee, thou wert my God.
  • O, be not farre, since paine so neeily presseth,
  • And since there is not one who it redresseth :
  • I am enclos'd with yong bulls madded rowt,
  • Nay, Basan's mighty bulls close me about.
  • With gaping mouthes, these folkes on me have chardged,
  • Like lions fierce, with roring jawes enlarged:
  • On me all this, who do like waters slide,
  • Whose loosed bones quite out of joynt be wried.
  • Whose hart, with these huge flames, like wax oreheated,
  • Doth melt away, though it be inmost seated :
  • My moistning strength is like a pottsheard dried,
  • My cleaving tongue close to my roofe doth bide.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 3
  • And now am brought, alas! brought by thy power
  • Unto the dust of my deathes running bower:
  • For bawling doggs have compast me about,
  • Yea, worse than doggs, a naughty wicked rowt.
  • My humble handes, my fainting feete they pearced ;
  • They Iooke, they gaze, my bones might be rehearsed:
  • Of my poore weedes they do partition make,
  • And doe cast lotts, who should my vesture take.
  • But be not farre, O Lord, my strength, my comfort,
  • Hasten to help me in this dcepe discomfort :
  • Ah, from the sword yet save my vitall sprite,
  • My desolated life from dogged might.
  • From lions mouth (O help) and show to hearc me,
  • By aiding, when fierce Vnicornes come neere me :
  • To brethern then I will declare thy fame, [name.
  • And with these wordes, when they meete, praise thy
  • Who feare the Lord, all praise and glory beare hym,
  • You Israelis seed, you come of Jacob, feare hym :
  • For Hee hath not abhor'd, nor yet disdain'd
  • The silly wretch, with fowle affliction stain'd.
  • Nor hid from him his faces faire appearing,
  • But when he cal'd, ths Lord did give hym hearing.
  • In congregation greate I will praise thee:
  • Who feare thee shall my vowes performed see.
  • Th' afflicted then shall eate, and be well pleased ;
  • And God shalbe by those his seakers praised.
  • Iudeede, O you, you that be such of mind,
  • You shall the life that ever liveth find.
  • 36 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • But what? I say, from earthes rcmotedst border,
  • Unto due thoughts, mankind his thoughts shall order:
  • And turne to God, and all the nations be
  • Made worshippers, before allmighty Thee.
  • And reason, since the crowne to God perlainelh,
  • And that by right upon all realmes he raigneth.
  • They that be made ev'n fatt with earthes fatt good
  • Shall feede, and laud the giver of their food.
  • To him shall kneele even who to dust bee stricken,
  • Even hee whose life no helpe of man can quicken:
  • His service shall from child to child desend,
  • His doomes one a?e shall to another send.
  • PSALM XXIII.
  • Dominus regit me.
  • The Lord, the Lord my shepheard is,
  • And so can never I
  • Tast missery.
  • He rests me in greene pasture his:
  • By waters still and sweete
  • He guides my feete.
  • Hee me revives ; leades me the way,
  • Which righteousnesse doth take,
  • For his name sake.
  • Yea, though I should through valleys stray
  • Of deathes dark shade, I will
  • Noe whitt feare ill.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 37
  • For thou, deere Lord, thou me besett'st ;
  • Thy rodd and thy staff be
  • To comfort me :
  • Before me thou a tabic sett'st,
  • Even when foes envious eye
  • Dotli it espy.
  • Thou oil'st my head, thou fill'st my cupp,
  • Nay, more, thou cndlesse good,
  • Shalt give me food.
  • To thee, I say, ascended up,
  • Where thou, the Lord of all,
  • Dost hold thy hall.
  • PSALM XXIV.
  • Domini est terra.
  • The earth is Gods, and what the globe of earth containeth,
  • And all who in that globe doe dwell:
  • For by his pow'r the land upon the ocean raigneth,
  • Through him the fludds to their bedds fell.
  • 6"
  • Who shall clime to the hill which God's own hill is named?
  • Who shall stand in his holy place?
  • He that hath hurtles handes, whose inward hart is framed
  • All purenesse ever to embrace.
  • Who shunning vanity and workes of vainenesse leaving,
  • Vainly doth not puff up his mind ;
  • Who never doth deceave, and much Iesse his deceaving
  • With penury doth falsly bind.
  • A blessing from the Lord, from God of his salvation
  • Sweete rightuousnesse shall he receave ;
  • Jacob, this is thy seede, God seeking generation,
  • Who search of Gods face never leave.
  • 33 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Lift up your heades,you gates, and you dores ever biding;
  • In comes the King of Glory bright:
  • Who is this glorious King? in might and power riding?
  • The Lord, whose strength makes battailes fight.
  • Liftupyour heades, you gates, and you dores ever biding ;
  • In comes the King of glory bright :
  • Who is this glorious King? the lord of armies guiding?
  • Even He the King of glory bight.
  • PSALM XXV.
  • Ad te, Domine.
  • To thee, O Lord most just,
  • I lift my inward sight :
  • My God, in thee I trust,
  • Lett me not ruine quight:
  • Let not those foes, that me annoy,
  • On my complaint build np their joy.
  • Sure, sure, who hope in thee,
  • Shall never suffer shame:
  • Lett them confounded be
  • That causlesse wrongs doe frame.
  • Yea, Lord, to me thy waies doe show;
  • Teach me, thus vext, what path to goe.
  • Guide me as thy truth guides ;
  • Teach me for why thou art
  • The God in whom abides
  • The saving me from smart.
  • For never day such changing wrought,
  • That I from trust in thee was brought.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 39
  • Remember, only King,
  • Thy mercies tendernesse :
  • To thy remembrance bring
  • Thy kincinessc, lovinguesse.
  • Let those things thy remembrance grave,
  • Since they eteruall essence have.
  • But, Lord, remember not
  • Sins brevv'd in youthfull glasse:
  • Nor my rebellious blott,
  • Since youth and they do passe :
  • But in thy kindnes me record,
  • Ev'n for thy mercies sake, O Lord.
  • Of grace and righteousnesse
  • The Lord such plenty hath;
  • That he deignes to expresse
  • To sinning men his path :
  • The meeke he doth in judgment leade,
  • And teach the humble how to tread.
  • And what thinck you, may be
  • The pathes of my greate God?
  • Ev'n spotlesse verity
  • And mercy spredd abroad,
  • To such as kecpe his covenaunt,
  • And on his testimonies plant.
  • O Lord, for thy name sake,
  • Lett my iniquity
  • Of thee some mercy take,
  • Though it be greate in me :
  • Oh, is there one with his feare fraught?
  • He shall be by best teacher taught.
  • 40 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Lo, how his blessing budds
  • Inward, an inward rest;
  • Outward, all outward goodes
  • By his seede eke possest.
  • For such he makes his secrett know,
  • To such hee doth his cov'uant show.
  • Where then should my eyes be,
  • But still on this Lord sett?
  • Who doth and will sett free
  • My feete from tangling nett.
  • O, look, O help, lett mercy fall,
  • For I am poore and least of all.
  • My woes are still encreast;
  • Shield me from these assaultcs:
  • See how I am opprest,
  • And pardon all my faultes.
  • Behold my foes, what stoare they be,
  • Who hate, yea, hate me cruelly.
  • My soule, which thou didst make,
  • Now made, O Lord, maintaine;
  • And me from these ills take,
  • Lest I rebuke sustaine.
  • For thou the Lord, thou only art,
  • Of whom the trust lives in my hart.
  • Lett my uprightness gaine
  • Some safety unto me:
  • I say, and say againe,
  • My hope is all in thee.
  • In fine, deliver Israel,
  • O Lord, from all his troubles fell.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 41
  • PSALM XXVI.
  • Judica me, Domine.
  • Lord, judge me and my case,
  • For I have made my race
  • Within the houndes of innocence to bide :
  • And setting thee for scope
  • Of all my trustfull hope;
  • I held for sure, that I should never slide.
  • Prove me, O Lord most high,
  • Me with thy touchstone try ;
  • Yea, sound my reynes, and inmost of my hart.
  • For so thy loving hand
  • Before my eyes doth stand,
  • That from thy truth I never will depart.
  • I did not them frequent,
  • Who be to vainesse bent,
  • Nor kept with base dissemblers company.
  • Nay, I did ev'n detest
  • Of wicked wights the neast,
  • And from the haunts of such bad folks did fly.
  • In th' innocence of me
  • My handes shall washed be ;
  • And with those handes about thy Alter waite ;
  • That I may still expresse
  • With voice of thanckfullnes
  • The works perform'd by thee, most wondrous greate.
  • 42 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Lord, I have loved well
  • The house where thou dost dwell,
  • Ev'n where thou mak'st thy honnor's biding place.
  • Sweete Lord, write not my soule
  • Within the sinner's rowle :
  • Nor my life's cause match with blood seekers case.
  • With handes of wicked shifts,
  • With right hands stained with gifts.
  • But while I walk in my unspotted waies
  • Redeeme and show mee grace
  • So I in publique place
  • Sett on plaine ground will thee Jehovah praise.
  • PSALM XXVII.
  • Dominus illuminatio.
  • The shining Lord he is my light;
  • The strong God my salvation is :
  • Who shall be able me to fright?
  • This Lord with strength my life doth blisse :
  • And shall I then
  • Feare might of men?
  • When wicked foike, even they that be
  • My foes, to uttmost of their pow'r,
  • With raging jawes inviron me,
  • My very flesh for to devow'r :
  • They stumble so,
  • That down they go.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 43
  • Then though against me armies were,
  • My courage should not be dismaid :
  • Though battailes btunt, I ncedes must beare,
  • While battailes brunt, on me were laid,
  • In this I would
  • My trust still hold.
  • One thing in-deede I did, and will
  • For ever crave : that dwell I may
  • In howse of high Jehova still,
  • On beautie his, mine eyes to stay,
  • And looke into
  • His temple too.
  • For when greate griefcs to me be ment,
  • In tabernacle his, he will
  • Hide me, ev'n closely in his tent:
  • Yea, noble height of rocky hill
  • He makes to be
  • A seate for me.
  • Now, now shall he lift up my head
  • On my besieging enimics :
  • So I in temple his shall spread
  • Offrings of joy and sacrifice :
  • And song accord,
  • To praise the Lord.
  • Heare, Lord, when I my voice display,
  • Heare to have mercy eake of me :
  • Seeke ycc my face, when thou did'st say,
  • In truth of hart, I answ'rd thee,
  • O Lord, I will
  • Seeke thy face still.
  • 44 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Hide not therefore from me that face;
  • Since all my aid in thee I gott :
  • In rage, thy servaunt doe not chase ;
  • Forsake not me, O, leave me not,
  • O God of my
  • Salvation hye.
  • Though fathers care and mothers love
  • Abandon'd me, yet my decay
  • Should be restor'd by hym above:
  • Teach, Lord, Lord, leade me thy right way,
  • Because of those
  • That be my foes.
  • Unto whose ever-hating lust
  • Oh, give me not, for there are sprong
  • Against me wittnesses unjust,
  • Even such, I say, whose lying tongue
  • Fiercely afTordes
  • Most cruell wordes.
  • What had I been, except I had
  • Bcleev'd Gods goodncs for to see,
  • In land with living creatures glad?
  • Hope, trust in God, be strong, and hee
  • Unto thy hart
  • Shall joy impart.
  • PSALM XXVIII.
  • Ad te, Domine.
  • To thee, Lord, my cry I send;
  • O my strength, stopp not thine eare :
  • Least if answeare thou forbeare,
  • I be like them that descend
  • To the pitt, where flesh doth end.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 45
  • Therefore while that I may cry,
  • While I that way hold my handes
  • Where thy sanctuary standes,
  • To thy self those wordes apply,
  • Which from suing voice do fly.
  • Linck not me in selfsame chaine
  • With the wicked working folk ;
  • Who their spotted thoughtes to cloak,
  • Neighbours friendly entertaine,
  • When in hartes they malice meane.
  • Spare not them, give them reward,
  • As their deedes have purchas'd it,
  • As deserves their wicked witt:
  • Fare they as their handes have far'd,
  • Ev'n so be their guerdon shar'd.
  • To thy workes they give no ey;
  • Lett them be thrown down by thee :
  • Lett them not restored be.
  • But lett me give praises high
  • To the Lord, that heares my cry.
  • That God is my strength, my shield :
  • All my trust on him was sett,
  • And soe I did safetie gett:
  • Soe shall I with joy be fil'd,
  • Soe my songes his laudes shall yeeld.
  • God on them his strength doth lay,
  • Who his anointed helped have;
  • Lord, then still thy people save ;
  • Blesse thine heritage, I say,
  • Feede and lift them up for ay.
  • I
  • 4G THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • PSALM XXIX.
  • Afferte Domino.
  • Asciuise unto the Lord of light,
  • Ye men of pow'r, ev'n by birth right,
  • Ascribe all glory and all might.
  • Ascribe due glory to his name;
  • And in his ever glorious frame
  • Of sanctuary doe the same.
  • His voice is on the waters found,
  • His voice doth threatning thunders sound,
  • Yea, through the waters doth resound.
  • The voice of that Lord ruling us
  • Is strong, though hee be gratious,
  • And ever, ever glorious.
  • By voice of high lehoua we
  • The highest cedars broken see,
  • Ev'n cedars which on Liban be.
  • Nay, like yong calves in Ieapes are born,
  • And Liban self with natures skoru :
  • And Shirion, like young unicorn.
  • His voice doth flashing flames devide;
  • His voice have trembling desertes tride ;
  • Ev'n deserts, where the Arabs bide.
  • His voice makes bindes their calves to cast:
  • His voice makes bald the forrest wast :
  • But in his church his fame is plast.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 47
  • He sitts on seas, he endlesse raignes,
  • His strength his peoples strength maintaines,
  • Which hlest by him in peace remaines.
  • PSALM XXX.
  • Exaltabo te, Domine.
  • Lord, thou hast exalted me,
  • And sav'd me from foes laughing scorn:
  • 1 owe thee praise, I will praise thee.
  • For when my hart with woes was torn,
  • In cries to thee, I shcw'd my cause :
  • And was from ev'l by thee upborne.
  • Yea, from the graves moist hungry jawes
  • Thou would'st not sett me in their score,
  • Whom death to his cold boosome drawes.
  • Praise, praise this Lord then evermore,
  • Ye saints of his, remembring still
  • With thancks his holinesse therefore.
  • For quickly endes his wrathfull will,
  • But his deere favour where it lies,
  • From age to age life joyes doth fill.
  • Well may the evening cloath the eies
  • In cloudes of teares, but soone as sunne
  • Doth rise againe, new joyes shall rise.
  • For proof, while I my race did runne,
  • Full of successe, fond I did say,
  • That I should never be undone,
  • 48 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • For then my bill, good God, did stay:
  • But ay, he straight his face did hide,
  • And what was I but wretched clay?
  • Then thus to thee I prayeng cride,
  • What serves, alas, the blood of me
  • When I with in the pitt doe bide
  • ?
  • \
  • Shall ever earth give thancks to thee ?
  • Or shall thy truth on mannkind laid
  • In deadly dust declared be ?
  • Lord, heare, lett mercy thine be staid
  • On me, from me helpe this annoy.
  • This much I said, this beeing said,
  • Lo, I that wail'd, now daunce for joy:
  • Thou did'st ungird my dolefull sack,
  • And mad'st me gladsome weedes enjoy.
  • Therefore my tongue shall never lack
  • Thy endless praise : O God, my king,
  • I will thee thancks for ever sing.
  • PSALM XXXI.
  • In te, Domine, speravi.
  • All, aH my trust, Lord, I have putt in thee,
  • Never, therefore, lett me confounded be,
  • But gentlie save me in thy righteousnes.
  • Bow down thine eare, to heare how much I need;
  • Deliver me, deliver me in speed :
  • Bee my strong rock, be thou my fortresse.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 49
  • In deede tliou art my rock and my fortresse:
  • Then since my tongue delights that name to blesse,
  • Direct me how to goe, and guide me right.
  • Preserve me from the wyly wrapping nett,
  • Which they for me with privie craft have sett:
  • For still I say, thou art my only might.
  • Into thy handes I doe commend my sprite:
  • For it is thou that hast restor'd my light:
  • O Lord, that art the God of vei itie.
  • I hated have those men, whose thoughtes do cleave
  • To vanities: which most trust, most deceave:
  • For all my hope fixt upon God doth lie.
  • Thy mercy shall fill me with jollity,
  • For my annoies have come before thine eye:
  • Thou well hast known what plague my soule was in.
  • And thou hast not for ay enclosed me
  • Within the hand of hatefull enmity:
  • But hast enlarg'd my fecte from mortall ginne.
  • O Lord, of thee, lett me still mercy wynne;
  • For troubles, of all sides, have hemm'd me in:
  • My eyes, my guts, yea my soule, grief doth wast,
  • My life with heavines, my yeares with moane,
  • Doe pine: my strength with paine is wholie gone:
  • And ev'n my bones consume, where they be plast.
  • All my fierce foes reproach on me did cast:
  • Yea neighbours, more, my mates were so agast,
  • That in the streetes from sight of me they fledd :
  • Now I, now I, my self forgotten find,
  • Even like a dead man, dreamed out of mind,
  • Or like a broken pott, in myre that's tredd.
  • D
  • 50 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • I understand what railing greate men spredd:
  • Feare was each where, while they their councells ledd
  • All to this pointe, how my poore life to take;
  • But I did trust in thee. Lord, I did say,
  • Thou art my God, my time on thee doth stay:
  • Save me from foes, who for my bane do seake.
  • Thy face to shine upon thy servaunt make,
  • And save me in, and for thy mercies sake ;
  • Lett me not tast of shame, O Lord, most hy.
  • For I have call'd on thee ; let wicked folk
  • Confounded be; and passe away like smoak;
  • Lett them in bedd of endlesse silence dy.
  • Lett those lipps be made dumb which love to ly;
  • Which, full of spight, of pride, and cruelty,
  • Doe throw their wordes against the most upright.
  • Oh, of thy grace what endlesse pleasure flowes
  • To whom feare thee? what thou hast donne for those
  • That trust in thee, eVn in most open sight?
  • And when neede were, from pride in privie plight
  • Thou hast hidd them ; yet leaving them thy light
  • From strife of tongues, in thy pavilions plast.
  • Then praise, then praise, I doe, the Lord of us,
  • Who was to me more then most gratious:
  • Farre, farre, more sure, then walls most firmly fast.
  • Yet I confesse in that terapestious hast,
  • I said, that I from out thy sight was cast :
  • But thou didst heare, when I to thee did moane,
  • Then love the Lord all ye that feele his grace :
  • For this our Lord preserves the faithfull race,
  • And to the proud in deede payes home their owtte.
  • Be strong, I say, this strength confirming you,
  • You that do trust in him who still is true,
  • And he shall your establishment renewe.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 51
  • PSALM XXXII.
  • Beati, quorum.
  • Blessed is hee whose filthy staine
  • The Lord with pardon doth make cleane,
  • Whose fault well hidden lieth.
  • Blessed, indeede, to whom the Lord
  • Imputes not sinnes to be abhord,
  • Whose spirit falshood flieth.
  • Thus I prest down with weight of paine,
  • Whether I silent did remaine,
  • Or roar'd, my bones still wasted.
  • For soe both day and night did stand
  • On wretched me, thy heavie hand,
  • My life hott tormentes tasted.
  • Till my self did my faultes confesse,
  • And open'd mine own wickednes,
  • Whereto my hart did give me :
  • So I my self accus'd to God,
  • And his sweete grace streight eas'd the rod,
  • And did due paine forgive me.
  • Therefore shall every godly one
  • In fitt time make to thee his moanc,
  • When thou wilt deigne to heare hym.
  • Sure, sure the flood of straying streames,
  • How ever they putt in their claimes,
  • Shall never dare come neere hym.
  • D 2
  • 52 THE PSALMS OP DAVID.
  • Thou art my safe and secrett place,
  • Who savest me from troublous case,
  • To songs and joyfull biding.
  • But who so will instructed be,
  • Come, come the way I will teach thee;
  • Guide thee by my eyes guiding.
  • Oh, be not like a horse or'mule,
  • Wholy devoide of reasons rule ;
  • Whose mouthes thy self dost bridle:
  • Knowing full well, that beastes they be,
  • And therefore soone would mischief me,
  • If thou remained'st idle.
  • Woes, woes shall come to wicked folkes,
  • But who on God his trust invokes
  • With mercies shall be swarmed.
  • Be glad you good, in God have joy,
  • Joy be to you, who doe enjoy
  • Your hartes with clearnesse armed.
  • PSALM XXXIII.
  • Exultate, justi.
  • Rejoyce in God, O ye
  • That righteous be :
  • For cheerefull thanckfullnesse
  • It is a comly part
  • In them, whose hart
  • Doth cherish rightfullnesse.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 53
  • O praise with hart the Lord,
  • O now accord
  • Violls with singing voice:
  • Lett tenne string'd instrument
  • O now be bent
  • To wittnes you rejoice.
  • A new, sing, a new song
  • To him most strong,
  • Sing lowd and merrily :
  • Because that word of his
  • Most righteous is,
  • And his deedes faitbfull be.
  • 10
  • Hee righteousnesse approves,
  • And judgment loves:
  • Gods goodnesse fills all Iandes.
  • His word made heav'nly coast,
  • And all that hoast
  • By breath of his mouth stands.
  • The waters of the seas
  • In heapes he laies,
  • And depthes in treasure his,
  • Let all the earth feare God:
  • And who abroad
  • Of world a dweller is.
  • For he spake not more soone,
  • Then it was done:
  • He bade, and it did stand.
  • He doth heathen councell breake,
  • And maketh weake
  • The might of peoples hand.
  • 54 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • But ever, ever shall
  • His counsells all
  • Throughout all ages last. *
  • The thinkings of that mind
  • No end shall find,
  • When times tyme shall be past.
  • That realme indeede hath blisse,
  • Whose God he is,
  • Who him for their Lord take :
  • Even that people, even those,
  • Whom this Lord chose
  • His heritage to make.
  • The Lorde lookes from the sky :
  • Full well his eye
  • Beholdes our mortall race.
  • Even where he dwelleth, he
  • Throughout doth see
  • Who dwell in duskie place.
  • Since he their hartes doth frame,
  • He knows the same:
  • Their workes he understandes.
  • Hosts doe the king not save;
  • Nor strong men have
  • Their help from mighty handes.
  • Of quick strength is an horse,
  • And yet his force
  • Is but a succour vaine :
  • Who trusts him sooner shall
  • Catch harmefull fall,
  • Then true deliveraunce gaine.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 55
  • But lo, Jehovas sight
  • On them doth light
  • Who him do truly feare :
  • And them which do the scope
  • Of all their hope
  • Upon his mercy heare.
  • His sight is them to save
  • Ev'n from the grave,
  • And keepe from famynes paine.
  • Then on that Lord most kind
  • Fix we our mind,
  • Whose shield shall us maintayne.
  • Our hartes sure shall enjoye
  • In hym much joye
  • Who hope on his name just.
  • O lett thy mercy greate
  • On us he sett;
  • We have no plea, but trust.
  • PSALM XXXIV.
  • Benedicam Domino.
  • I, even I, will alhvaics
  • Give harty thancks to hym on high,
  • And in my mouth contynually
  • Inhabit shall his praise.
  • My soule shall glory still
  • In that deere Lord with true delight:
  • That hearing it, the hartes contrite
  • May learne their joyes to fill.
  • 56 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Come then, and joyne with me,
  • Somwhat to speake of his due praise:
  • Strive we, that in some worthy phrase
  • His name may honor'd be.
  • Thus I beginne: I sought
  • This Lord, and he did heare my cry :
  • Yea, and from dreadfull misery,
  • He me, he only brought.
  • This shall mens fancies frame
  • To looke and runue to hym for aide,
  • Whose faces on his comfort staid
  • Shall never blush for shame.
  • For lo, this wretch did call,
  • And lo, his call the skies did clime:
  • And God freed hym in his worst tymc
  • From out his troubles all.
  • His angells armies round
  • Aboute them pitch, who hym do feare:
  • And watch, and ward for such do beare,
  • To keepe them safe and souude.
  • I say, but tast and see,
  • How sweete how gratious is his grace:
  • Lord hee is in thrice blessed ease
  • Whose trust is all on thee.
  • Feare God, ye saintes of his,
  • For nothing they can ever want
  • Who faithfull feares in hym do plant;
  • They have, and shall have blisse.
  • The lions ofte lack foode,
  • Those ravenors whelps oft starved be :
  • But who seeke God with constancy
  • Shall nothing neede that's good.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 57
  • Come, children, lend your eare
  • To me, and mark what I do saye;
  • For I will teach to you the waye
  • How this our Lord to feare.
  • Among you, who is heare,
  • That life, and length of life requires,
  • And blessing such, with length desires,
  • As life may good appeare.'
  • Keepe well thy lipps and tongue,
  • Least inward ills doe them defile;
  • Or that by wordes enwrapt in guile
  • Another man be stung.
  • Doe good, from faultes declyne,
  • Seeke peace, and follow after it :
  • For Gods own eyes on good men sit,
  • His eares to them enclyne.
  • Soe his high heavenly face
  • Is bent, but bent against those same
  • That wicked be, their very name
  • From earth quite to displace.
  • The just, when harmes approach,
  • Do cry, their cry of hym is heard;
  • And by his care from them is barr'd
  • All trouble, all reproach.
  • To humble broken myndes,
  • This Lord is ever, ever neere;
  • And will save whome his true sight cleere
  • In sprite afflicted findes.
  • Indeede the very best
  • Most greate and greevous paines doth beare:
  • But God shall him to safety reare,
  • When most he seemes opprest.
  • D 3
  • 58 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • His bones he keepeth all,
  • So that not one of them is broke ;
  • But malice shall the wicked choak,
  • Who hateth God shall fall.
  • God doth all soules redeeme
  • Who weare his blessed livery :
  • None, still I say, shall ruined be,
  • Who hym their truth esteeme.
  • PSALM XXXV.
  • Judica, Domine.
  • Speake thou for me against wrong speaking foes ;
  • Thy force, O Lord, against their force oppose:
  • Take up thy shield, and for my succour stand ;
  • Yea, take thy launce, and stoppe the way of those
  • That seeke my bane ; O make me understand
  • In sprite, that I shall have thy helping hand.
  • Confound those folks, thrust them in shamfull hole
  • That hunt so poore a prey as is my sonic.
  • Rebuke, and wrack, on those wrong-doers throw,
  • Who for my hurt each way their thoughtes did roule;
  • And as vile chaff away the wind did blow,
  • Let angell thine, a scatt'ring make them goe.
  • Let angell thine, pursue them as they fly,
  • But let their flight be dark and slippery ;
  • For causles they, both pitt and nett did sett:
  • For causles they, did seeke to make me die :
  • Let their sly witts unwares destruction gett,
  • Fall in self pitt, be caught in their own nett.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 59
  • Then shall I joy in thee, then sav'd by thee,
  • I both in mind and bones shall gladded be.
  • Ev'n bones shall say (O God), who is thy peere?
  • Who poore and weake, from rich and strong dost free :
  • Who helpest those whose mine was so neere,
  • From him whose force did in their soales appeere.
  • Who did me wrong against me wittnesse beare,
  • Laying such things as never in me were:
  • So my good deedes they pay with evill share,
  • With cruell mindes, my very soule to teare.
  • And whose? ev'n his, who then they sickness bare,
  • With inward woe, an outward sack cloth ware.
  • I did pull down my self, fasting for such,
  • I praid, with praiers, which my brest did touch :
  • In summe I shew'd, that I to them was bent
  • As brothers, or as frendes beloved much.
  • Still, still for them I humbly moorning went,
  • Like one that should his mothers death lament.
  • But lo, soone as they did me stagg'ring see,
  • Who joy but they? when they assembled be:
  • Then abiects, while I was unwitting quite
  • Against me swarme, causelesse to raile at me
  • With scoffers false, I was theyr feasts delight,
  • Even gnashing teeth, to witness more their spight.
  • Lord wilt thou see, and wilt thou suffer it?
  • Oh ! on my soule let not these tumults hitt.
  • Save me, distrest, from lions cruell kind,
  • I will thanek thee, where congregations sitt,
  • Even where I do most store of people find,
  • Most to thy laudes will I my speeches bind.
  • 60 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Then, then lett not my foes unjustly joy;
  • Let them not fleere who me would now destroy:
  • Who never word of peace yet utter Mould,
  • But hunt with craft the quiett mans annoy,
  • And said to me, wide mowing, as they could :
  • A, ha, Sir, now we see you where we should.
  • This thou hast seene: and wilt thou silent be?
  • O Lord, doe not absent thy selfe from me;
  • But rise, but wake, that I may judgment gett.
  • My Lord, my God, ev'n for my equity,
  • Judge, Lord : judge, God, ev'n in thy justice greate
  • Let not their joy upon my woes be sett.
  • Lett them not, Lord, within their harts thus say:
  • O soule, rejoyce, we made this wretch our prey.
  • But throw them down, put them to endles blame,
  • Who make a cause to joy of my decay.
  • Lett them be cloth'd in most confounding shame
  • That lift themselves my mine for to frame.
  • But make such glad and full of joyfullnesse
  • That yet beare love unto my rigbteousnesse :
  • Yet, lett them say, laud be to God allwaies,
  • Who loves with God his servanntes good to blesse.
  • As for my tongue, whiles I have any daies,
  • Thy justice witness shall, and speake thy praise.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 61
  • PSA.LM XXXVI.
  • Dixit injustus.
  • Me thincks amidst my hart I hear
  • What guilty vvickednes doth say,
  • Which wicked folkes doe holde soe deare :
  • Even thus it self it doth display,
  • No feare of God doth once appeare
  • Before his eyes that thus doth stray.
  • For those same eies his flatterers be,
  • Till his known ill doth hatred get:
  • His wordes deceipt, iniquity
  • His deedes; yea, thoughts all good forget.
  • A bedd on mischief muselh he,
  • Abroad his stepps be wrongly sett.
  • Lord, how the heav'ns thy mercy fills,
  • Thy truth above the cloudes most hy,
  • Thy righteousnesse like hugest hills,
  • Thy judgments like the deepes do ly:
  • Thy grace with safety man fulltills,
  • Yea beastes (made safe) thy goodnesse try.
  • O Lord, how excellent a thing
  • Thy mercy is, which makes mankind
  • Trust in the shadow of thy wing.
  • Who shall in thy house fattnesse find,
  • And drinck from out thy pleasure spring
  • Of pleasures past, the reach of mind.
  • 62 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • For why? the well of life thou art,
  • And in thy light shall we see light.
  • O then extend thy loving hart
  • To them that know thee, and thy might:
  • O then thy righteousnes impart
  • To them that he in soules upright.
  • Lett not proud feete make me their thrall,
  • Lett not ill handes disscomfit me;
  • Lo, there I now foresee their fall
  • Who doe ill workes ; loe, I do see
  • They are cast down, aud never shall
  • Have power againe to raised be.
  • PSALM XXXVII.
  • Noli cemulari.
  • Fret not thy self if thou do see
  • That wicked men do seeme to flourish ;
  • Nor envy in thy bosorne nourish,
  • Though ill deedes well succeeding be.
  • They soon shall be cut down like grasse,
  • And wither like green hearb or flower;
  • Do well, and trust on heav'nly power,
  • Thou shalt have both good foot and place.
  • Delight in God, and he shall breede
  • The fullnesse of thy own hartes lusting;
  • Guide thee by him, lay all thy trusting
  • On hym, and he will make it speed.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 63
  • For, like the light, he shall display
  • Thy justice in most shining lustre:
  • And of thy judgment make a muster
  • Like to the glory of noone day.
  • Waite on the Lord with patient hope,
  • Chafe not at some mans great good fortune,
  • Though all his plotts, without misfortune,
  • Attaine unto their wished scope.
  • Fume not, rage not, frett not, I say,
  • Lest such thinges synne in thy self cherish ;
  • For those bad folks at last shall perish.
  • Who stay for God, in blisse shall stay.
  • Watch but a while, and thou shalt see
  • The wicked by his own pride banisht;
  • Looke after him, he shall be vanisht,
  • And never found againe shall be.
  • But meeke men shall the earth possesse,
  • In quiet home they shall be planted:
  • And this delight to them is granted,
  • They shall have peace in plenteousnesse.
  • Evill men work ill to uttmost might,
  • Gnashing their teeth full of disdayning:
  • But God shall scorne their moody meaning,
  • For their short time is in his sight.
  • The ev'll bent bowes and swords they drew,
  • To have their heat on good soules wroken ;
  • But lo, their bowes they shall be broken,
  • Their swordes shall their own hartes imbrew.
  • 64 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Small goodes in good men better is,
  • Then of bad folkes the wealthy wonder;
  • For wicked armes shall breake asunder,
  • But God upholdes the just in blisse.
  • God keepes aceompt of good menns daies,
  • Their heritage shall last for ever:
  • In perill they shall perish never,
  • Nor want in dearth their want to ease.
  • Bad folkes shall fall, and fall for aye;
  • Who to make warre with God presumed,
  • Like fatt of lambes shall be consumed,
  • Ev'n with the smoke shall wast away.
  • The naughty borrowes, payeng not:
  • The good is kind and freely giveth :
  • Whom God doth bless, he blessed liveth :
  • Whom he doth curse, to naught shall rott.
  • The man whom God directs, doth stand
  • Firme in his way, his way God loveth ;
  • Though he doth fall, no wrack he proveth,
  • He is upheld by heav'nly hand.
  • I have heene yong, now old I am,
  • Yet I, the man that was betaken
  • To justice, never saw forsaken:
  • Nor that his seede to begin na: came.
  • 06'
  • He lendes, he gives, more he doth spend,
  • The more his seede in blessing flourish ;
  • Then fly all ill, and goodnesse nourish;
  • And thy good state shall never end.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 65
  • God loving right doth not forsake
  • His holy ones, they are preserved
  • From tyme to tyme, but who be swarved
  • To ill, both they and theirs shall wrack.
  • I say, I say, the righteous mindes
  • Shall have the land in their possessing,
  • Shall dwell thereon, and this their blessing
  • No time within his limitts bindes.
  • The good mouth will in wisdome bide,
  • His tongue of heav'nly judgments telleth;
  • For God's high law in his hart dwelleth,
  • What comes thereof? he shall not slide.
  • The wicked watch the righteous much,
  • And seeke of life for to bereave him;
  • But in their hand God will not leave him,
  • Nor lett him be condemn'd by such.
  • Waite thou on God, and keepe his way,
  • He will exalt thee unto honor:
  • And of the earth make thee an owner,
  • Yea, thou shalt see the ev'll decay.
  • I have the wicked seene full sound,
  • Like lawrell fresh him self out-spreading:
  • Lo, he was gone, print of his treading,
  • Though I did seeke, I never found.
  • Marke the upright, the just attend,
  • His end shall be in peace enjoyed ;
  • But strayers vile shall be destroied,
  • And quite cut of with helplcsse end.
  • 66 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Still, still the godly shall be staid
  • By God's most sure and sweete salvation :
  • In time of greatest tribulation
  • He shall be their true strength and aid.
  • He shall be their true strength and aid,
  • He shall save them from all the fetches
  • Against them used by wicked wretches;
  • Because on him their trust is laid.
  • PSALM XXXVIII.
  • Domine, ne in furore.
  • Lord, while that thy rage doth bide,
  • Do not chide :
  • Nor in anger chastise me,
  • For thy shafts have peirc'd me sore,
  • And yet more
  • Still thy handes upon me be.
  • No sound part caus'd by thy wrath
  • My flesh hath :
  • Nor my synns lett my bones rest.
  • For my faults are highly spred
  • On my head,
  • Whose foule weightes have me opprest.
  • My woundes putrify and stinke,
  • In the sinck
  • Of my filthy folly laid :
  • Earthly I do bow and crook,
  • With a look
  • Still in mourning cheere araid.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 61
  • In my reynes hott torment raignes,
  • There remaines
  • Nothing in my bodie sound.
  • I am weake and broken sore,
  • Yea, I roare ;
  • In my hart such griefe is found.
  • Lord, before thee I do lay
  • What I pray,
  • My sighes are not hid from thee,
  • My hart pants, gone is my might,
  • Even the light
  • Of myne eyes abandons me.
  • From my plague, kiune, neighbour, fiend,
  • Farre of wend :
  • But who for my life do waite,
  • They lay snares, they nimble be
  • Who hunt me,
  • Speaking ill, thinking deceite.
  • But I like a man become
  • Deaf and dumb,
  • Little hearing, speaking lesse ;
  • I even as such kind of wight,
  • Sencelesse quite,
  • Word with word do not represse.
  • For on thee, Lord, without end,
  • I attend :
  • My God, thou wilt heare my voice,
  • For I said, heare, lest they be
  • Glad on me
  • Whom my fall doth make rejoyce.
  • 68 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Sure I do but baiting goe,
  • And my woe
  • Still my o'rethwart neighbour is.
  • Lo, I now to mourne beginne,
  • For my sinne
  • Telling mine iniquities.
  • But the while they live and grow
  • In greate show,
  • Many mighty wrongfull foes,
  • Who do evill for good, to me
  • Enimies be;
  • Why ? because I vertue chose.
  • Do not, Lord, then me forsake,
  • Doe not take
  • Thy deere presence fane from me :
  • Haste, O Lord, that I be staid
  • By thy aid,
  • My salvation is in thee.
  • PSALM XXXIX.
  • Dixi, custodiam.
  • Thus did I think, I well will marke my way,
  • Lest by my tongue I hap to stray.
  • I muzzle will my mouth, while in the sight
  • I do abide of wicked wight.
  • And so I nothing said, but mute I stood,
  • I silence kept, even in the good.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. CO
  • But still the while that I did hold my peace,
  • The more my sorrow did increase :
  • The more me thought my hart was hott in me,
  • And as I mus'd this world to see,
  • The fire tooke fire, and forcibly out breake;
  • My tongue would needes, and thus I spake :
  • Lord, unto me my times just measure give,
  • Show me how long I have to live.
  • Lo, thou a spanns length, mad'st my living line.
  • A spanne? nay, nothing in thine eyne.
  • What do we seeke? the greatest state we see,
  • At best, is meerely vanity.
  • They are but shades, not true things where we live:
  • Vaine shades, and vaine, in vaine to grieve.
  • Looke but on this; man still doth riches heape,
  • And knows not who the fruite shall reape.
  • This beeing thus, for what, O Lord, waite I?
  • I waite on thee with hopefull eye.
  • helpe, O helpe me ; this farre yet I crave,
  • From my transgressions me to save.
  • Lett me not be throvvne down to so base shame,
  • That fooles of me, maie make their game.
  • But I doe hush, why do I say thus much ?
  • Since it is thou that mak'st of me such.
  • Ah ! yet from me lett thy plagues be displac'd,
  • For with thy handy stroakes I wast.
  • 1 know that mans foule sinne doth cause thy wrath,
  • For when his sinne thy scourging hath,
  • Thou moth-like mak'st his bewty fading be ;
  • Soe what is man but vanity?
  • 70 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Heare, Lord, my sutes and cries: stop not thine eares
  • At these my wordes all cloth'd in teares,
  • For I with thee on earth a stranger am,
  • But baiting as my fathers came.
  • Stay then thy wrath, that I may strength receave,
  • Ere I my earthly being leave.
  • PSALM XL.
  • Expectans expectavi.
  • While long I did, with patient constancy,
  • The pleasure of my God attend,
  • He did himself to me-ward bend,
  • And harkened how and why that I did cry.
  • And me from pitt bemired,
  • From dungeon he retired,
  • Where I in horrors lay,
  • Setting my feete upon
  • A steedfast rocky stone ;
  • And my weake stepps did stay.
  • Soe in my mouth he did a song afford,
  • New sung unto our God of praise,
  • Which many seeing hartes did raise
  • To feare with trust, and trust with feare the Lord.
  • Oh, he iudeede is blessed
  • Whose trust is so addressed;
  • Who bendes not wand'ring eyes
  • To greate mens peacock pride,
  • Nor ever turns a side
  • To follow after lies.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 71
  • My God, thy wondrous workes how manyfold!
  • What man thy thoughts can count to thee?'
  • I faine of them would speaking be;
  • But they are more then can by me be told.
  • Thou sacrifice nor off'rhig
  • Burnt off'ring, not sinne off'ring
  • Didst like, much lesse did'st crave:
  • But thou didst peirce my eare,
  • Which should thy lessons beare,
  • And wittnesse me thy slave.
  • Thus bound, I say'd, loe, Lord, I am at hand,
  • For in thy bookes rowle I am writt,
  • And sought with deedes thy will to hitt.
  • Yea, Lord, thy law within my hart doth stand :
  • I to greate congregation,
  • Thou know'st, made declaration
  • Of this sweete righteousnes;
  • My lipps shall still reveale,
  • My hart shall not conceale
  • Thy truth, health, gratiousncs.
  • Then, Lord, from me draw not thy tender grace :
  • Me still in truth and mercy save.
  • For endlesse woes me compass'd have,
  • >o prest with synnes I cannot see my case.
  • But triall well doth teach me,
  • Fowle faultes, sore paines, do reach me ;
  • More then my head hath haires;
  • So that my purest part,
  • My life-maintaining hart,
  • Failes me, with ugly feares.
  • 72 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Vouchsafe me helpe, O Lord, and helpe with hast:
  • Lett them have shame, yea, blush for shame,
  • Who joyntly sought my hale to frame:
  • Lett them be cast away that would me wast.
  • Lett them with shame be cloied,
  • Yea, lett them be destroied,
  • For guerdon of their shame :
  • Who so unpittious be,
  • As now to say to me,
  • A, ha! this is good game.
  • But fill their hartes with joy who bend their waies,
  • To seeke thy bewty past conceite,
  • Lett them that love thy saving seate,
  • Still gladly say, unto our God be praise.
  • Though I in want be shrinking, ,
  • Yet God on me is thinking:
  • Thou art my help, for ay,
  • Thou only thou art he
  • That dost deliver me ;
  • My God, O make noe stay.
  • PSALM XLI.
  • Beatus qui intelligit.
  • Hee blessed is who with wise temper can
  • Judge of th' afflicted man,
  • For God shall him deliver in the tyme
  • When most his troubles clime.
  • The Lord will keepe his life yet safe and sound,
  • With blessings of the ground ;
  • And will not him unto the will expose,
  • Of them that be his foes.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 73
  • When bed from rest becomes his seate of woe,
  • In God his strength shall growe,
  • And turne his couch, where sick he couched late
  • To well recovered state ;
  • Therefore I said in most infirmity
  • Have mercy, Lord, on me :
  • O, heale my soule, let there thy cure beginne,
  • Where 'gainst thee lay my sinne.
  • My foes evill wordes their hate of me display,
  • While thus, alas, they say :
  • When, when will death oretake this wretched wight,
  • And his name perish quite?
  • Their courteous visitings are courting lyes,
  • They inward evill disguise,
  • Ev'n heaps of wicked thoughts, which straight they show
  • As soone" as out they goe.
  • For then their hatefull heades close whisp'ring be,
  • With hurtfull thoughts to me.
  • Now he is wrackt, say they, loe their he lies,
  • Who never more must rise.
  • O, you my frend, to whome I did impart
  • The secrets of my hart,
  • My frend, I say, who at my table sate,
  • Did kick against my state.
  • Therefore, O Lord, abandon'd thus of all,
  • On me let mercy fall ;
  • ^nd raise me up, that I may once have might,
  • Their meritts to requite :
  • 3ut what? this cloth already well appeare
  • That I to thee am deere :
  • lince foes, nor have, nor shall have cause to be
  • Triumphing over me.
  • E
  • 74 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • But triumph well may I, whome thou did'st stay
  • In my sound rightfull way :
  • Whom thou (O place of places all) dost place,
  • For ay, before thy face.
  • So then be blest now, then, at home, abroad,
  • Of Israeli the god :
  • World without end, let still this blessing flow,
  • Oh soe ; oh be it soe.
  • PSALM XLII.
  • Quemadmodum.
  • As the chafed hart which braieth
  • Seeking some refreshing brooke,
  • So my soul in panting plaieth,
  • Thirsting on my God to looke.
  • My soul thirsts indeede in mee
  • After ever-living thee ;
  • Ah, when comes my blessed being,
  • Of thy face to have a seeing.
  • Day and night my teares out-flowing
  • Have been my ill feeding food,
  • With their daily questions throwing,
  • Where is now thy God soe good?
  • My hart melts remembring soe,
  • How in troupes I wont to goe :
  • Leading them, his praises singing,
  • Holy daunce to Gods house bringing.
  • Why art thou, my soule, soe sory,
  • And in me soe much dismaid ?
  • Waite on God, for yet his glory
  • In my song shall be displaid.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 75
  • When but with one looke of his
  • He shall me restore to blisse :
  • Ah, ray soule, it self appalleth,
  • In such longing thoughts it falleth,
  • For ray mynd on my God bideth,
  • Ev'n from Hermons dwelling lead,
  • From the groundes where Jordan slideth,
  • And from Myzars hilly head.
  • One deepe with noise of his fall,
  • Other deepes of woes doth call:
  • While my God, with wasting wonders,
  • On me wretch, his tempest thunders.
  • All thy floodes on me abounded,
  • Over me all thy waves went :
  • Yet thus still my hope is grounded,
  • That thy anger being spent,
  • I by day thy love shall tast,
  • I by night shall singing last,
  • Prayeng, praiers still bequeathing,
  • To my God that gave me breathing.
  • I will say, O Lord, my tower,
  • Why am 1 forgot by thee ?
  • Why should griefe my hart devower
  • While the foe oppresseth me ?
  • Those vile scoffs of naughty ones
  • Wound and rent me to the bones;
  • When foes aske, with foule deriding,
  • Where is now your God abiding ?
  • Why art thou, my soule, soe sory,
  • And in me so much dismaid?
  • Waite on God, for yet his glory
  • In my songe shall be displaid.
  • e2
  • 7fj THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • To him my thancks shall he said,
  • Who is still my present aid :
  • And in fine my soul he raised,
  • God is my God, by me praised.
  • PSALM XLIII.
  • Judica me, Deus.
  • Judge of all, judge me,
  • And protector be
  • Of my cause oppressed
  • Of most cruell sprites ;
  • Save me from bad wights,
  • In false collours dressed.
  • For, my God, thy sight,
  • Giveth me my might,
  • Why then hast thou left me?
  • Why walk I in woes,
  • While prevailing foes
  • Have of joye bereft me?
  • Send thy truth and light,
  • Let them guide me right
  • From the paths of folly :
  • Bringing me to thy
  • Tabernacle high,
  • In thy hill most holy.
  • To Gods Alters though
  • Will I boldly goe,
  • Shaking off all sadnes ;
  • To that God that is
  • God of all my blisse,
  • God of all my gladnes.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 77
  • Then loe, then I will
  • With sweete musieks skill,
  • Gratefull meaning show thee:
  • Then God, yea, my God,
  • I will sing abroade
  • What greate thanks I owe thee.
  • Why art thou, my soule,
  • Cast down in such dole?
  • What ailes thy discomfort?
  • Waite on God, for still
  • Thank my God, I will,
  • Sure aid, present comfort.
  • PSALM XLIV.
  • Deus, auribus.
  • Lorde, our fathers true relation
  • Often made, hath made us knowe
  • How thy power, on each occasion,
  • Thou of old, for them did showe.
  • How thy hand the Pagan foe
  • Rooting hence, thy folke implanting,
  • Leavelesse made that braunch to growe,
  • This to spring, noe verdure wanting.
  • Never could their sword procure them
  • Conquest of the promis'd land:
  • Never could their force assure them
  • When they did in danger stand.
  • Noe, it was thy arme, thy hand ;
  • Noe, it was thy favors treasure
  • Spent upon thy loved baud :
  • Loved, why? for thy wise pleasure.
  • 78 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Unto thee stand I subjected,
  • I that did of Jacob spring:
  • Bid then that I be protected,
  • Thou that art my God, my king:
  • By that succour thou didst bring,
  • We their pride that us assailed,
  • Downe did tread, and back did fling,
  • In thy name confus'd and quailed.
  • For my trust was not reposed
  • In my owne, though strongest bowe :
  • Nor my scabberd held enclosed
  • That, whence should my saftie flowe.
  • Thou, O God, from every foe
  • Didst us shield, our haters shaming :
  • Thence thy dailie praise we showe,
  • Still thy name with honor naming.
  • But aloofe thou now dost hover
  • Grieving us with all disgrace :
  • Hast resign'd, and given over
  • In our campe thy Captaines place.
  • Back we turne, that turned face,
  • Flieng them, that erst wee foiled :
  • See, our goods (O changed case,)
  • Spoil'd by them, that late we spoiled.
  • Right as sheepe to be devowred,
  • Helplesse heere we lie alone :
  • Scattringlie by thee out powred,
  • Slaves to dwell with lords unknown.
  • Sold wee are, but silver none
  • Told for us : by thee so prised,
  • As for nought to bee forgone ;
  • Gracelesse, worthlesse, vile, despised.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 70
  • By them all that dwell about us,
  • Tost we flie as balls of scorne,
  • All our neighbours laugh and flout us,
  • Men by thee in shame forlorne.
  • Proverb-like our name is worn,
  • Oh, how fast in foraine places !
  • What head shakings are forborne !
  • Wordlessc taunts and dumbe disgraces.
  • Soe rebuke before me goeth,
  • As my self doe daily goe :
  • Soe confusion on me growcth,
  • That my face I blush to show.
  • By reviling slaundring foe
  • Inly wounded thus I languish:
  • Wrathful spight with outward blow
  • Anguish adds to inward anguish.
  • All, this all on us hath lighted,
  • Yet to thee our love doth last :
  • As we were, we are delighted
  • Still to hold thy cov'nant fast.
  • Unto none our hartes have past:
  • Unto none our feete have slidden,
  • Though us downe to dragons cast
  • Thou in deadly shade hast hidden.
  • If our God wee had forsaken,
  • Or forgott what he assign'd,
  • If our selves we had betaken
  • Gods to serve of other kind.
  • Should not he our doubling find,
  • Though conceal'd, and closelie lurking ?
  • Since his eye of deepest minde
  • Deeper sincks then deepest working.
  • 80 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Surelie, Lord, this daily murther
  • For thie sake we thus sustaine:
  • For thy sake esteem'd no further
  • Then as sheepe that must he slaine.
  • Up, O Lord, up once againe,
  • Sleepe not ever, slack not ever:
  • Why dost thou forget our paine?
  • Why to hid thy face perserver ?
  • Heavie grief our soule abaseth,
  • Prostrate it on dust doth lie:
  • Earth our bodie fast embracetb,
  • Nothing can the claspe untie.
  • Rise, and us with helpe supplie ;
  • Lord, in mercie soe estecme us,
  • That we may thy mercie trie,
  • Mercie may from thrall redeeme us.
  • PSALM XLV.
  • Eructavit cor meum.
  • My harte endites an argument of worth,
  • The praise of him that doth the scepter swaye :
  • My tongue the pen to paynt his praises forth,
  • Shall write as swift, as swiftest writer may.
  • Then to the king these are the wordes I say:
  • Fairer art thou than sonnes of mortall race,
  • Because high God hath blessed thee for ay,
  • Thie lipps, as springs, doe flowe with speaking grace.
  • Thie honors sword gird to thy mightie side,
  • O thou that dost all things in might excell ;
  • With glory prosper, on with triumph ride,
  • Since justice, truth, and meeknes with thee dwell.
  • Soe that right hande of thine shall teaching tell,
  • Such things to thee, as well may terror bring,
  • And terror, such as never erst befell
  • To mortall mindes at sight of mortall king.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 81
  • Sharpe are thie sliaftes to cleave their hartes in twaine,
  • Whose heads doe cast thy conquest to withstand:
  • Good cause to make the meaner people faine
  • With willing hartes to undergoe thie hand.
  • Thie throne, O God, doth never-falling stand ;
  • Thie scepter ensigne of thie kinglie might,
  • To righteousnes is linckt with such a band.
  • That righteous hand still holds thie sceptre right.
  • Justice in love, in hate thou holdest wrong,
  • This makes that God who soe dotli hate and love
  • Glad-making oile, that oile on thee hath flong,
  • Which thee exaltes thine equalls far above.
  • The fragrant riches of Sabean grove,
  • Mirrh, Aloes, Cassia, all thy robes doe smell :
  • When thou from ivorie pallace dost remove
  • Thie breathing odors all thie traine excell.
  • Daughters of kings among thie courtlie band,
  • By honoring thee, of thee doe honor hold :
  • On thie right side thie dearest queene doth stand,
  • Richlie araid in cloth of Ophir gold.
  • O, daughter, heare what now to thee is told ;
  • Mark what thou hear'st, and what thou mark'st obey,
  • Forgett to keepe in memory enrold
  • The house, and folk, where first thou sawst the daie.
  • Soe in the king (thie king) a deere delight
  • Thie beautie shall both breed, and bred maintaine ;
  • For onlie bee on thee hath lordlie right,
  • Him onlie thou with awe must entertaine.
  • Then unto thee both Tyrus shall be faine
  • Presents present, and richest nations moe,
  • With humble sute thie royall grace to gaine,
  • To thee shall doe such homage as they owe.
  • E3
  • 82 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • The queene that can a king her father call,
  • Doth only she in upper garments shine?
  • Nay, under clothes, and what shee weareth all,
  • Golde is the stuffe, the fashion art divine,
  • Brought to the king in robe imbrodred fine,
  • Her maides of honor shall on her attend
  • With such, to whome more favoure shall assigne
  • In nearer place their happie daies to spend.
  • Brought shall they bee with mirth and mariage joy,
  • And enter soe the pallace of the king:
  • Then lett noe grief thie minde, O Queene, anoy,
  • Nor parents left thie sad remembrance sting,
  • In stead of parents, children thou shalt bring,
  • Of partag'd earth the kings and lords to bee :
  • My self thie name in lasting verse will sing,
  • The world shall make no ende of thancks to thee.
  • PSALM XL VI.
  • Deus noster refugium.
  • God gives us strength, anoTkeepes us sounde,
  • A present help when dangers call ;
  • Then feare not wee, lett quake the grounde,
  • And into seas let mountains fall,
  • Yea soe lett seas withall,
  • In watry hills arise,
  • As maie the earthlie hills appall,
  • With dread and dashing cries.
  • For lo, a river streaming joy,
  • With purling murmur safelie slides,
  • That cittie washing from annoy,
  • In holy shrine where God resides.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 83
  • God in her center bides:
  • What can this cittie shake?
  • God earlie aides and ever guides,
  • Who can this cittie take ?
  • When nations goe against her bent,
  • And kings with siege her walls enround:
  • The voide of aire his voice doth rent,
  • Earth fades their feete with melting ground.
  • To strength and keepe us sound,
  • The God of armies armes:
  • Our rock on Jacobs God wee found,
  • Above the reach of harmes.
  • O come with me, O come and view
  • The trophies of Jehovas hand:
  • What wracks from him our foes pursue,
  • How cleerly he hath purg'd our land.
  • By him warrs silent stand :
  • He brake the archers bow,
  • Made chariots wheele a firy brand,
  • And speare to shivers goe.
  • Bee still, saith he; know, God am I,
  • Know I will be with conquest crown'd,
  • Above all nations raised high,
  • High rais'd above this earthly round.
  • To strength and keepe us sound,
  • The God of armies armes :
  • Our rock on Jacob's God we found,
  • Above the reach of harmes.
  • 84 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • PSALM XLVII.
  • Omnes gentes, plaudite.
  • All people, to Jehovah bring
  • A glad applause of clapping hands :
  • To God a song of triumph sing,
  • Who high, and highlie feared stands,
  • Of all the earth sole-ruling king.
  • From whose allmightie grace it growes
  • That nations by our power opprest;
  • On foote on humbled countries goes,
  • Who Jacobs honor loved best,
  • An heritage for us hath chose.
  • There past hee by : hark, how did ring
  • Harmonious aire with trumpett's sound:
  • Praise, praise our God; praise, praise our king,
  • Kings of the world, your judgments sound,
  • With skilfull tunes his praises sing.
  • On sacred throne, not knowing end,
  • For God the king of kingdomes raignes,
  • The folk of Abrahams God to frend:
  • Hee, greatest prince, greate princes gaines,
  • Princes, the shields that earth defend.
  • PSALM XL VIII.
  • Magnus Dominus.
  • He that hath eternall beeing,
  • Glorious is, and glorious showes
  • In the cittie he hath chose,
  • Where stands his holie hill.
  • Hill Sion, hill of fairest seeing,
  • Cittie of the king most greate,
  • Seated in a northlie seate,
  • All climes with joy doth fill.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 85
  • 111 each pallace shee contained),
  • God a well-known rock remaineth.
  • One daie kings a daie appointed,
  • There with joined force to be,
  • See they it? the things they see
  • Amaze their mated mindes.
  • Flyeng, trembling, disappointed,
  • Soe theie feare, and soe they fare,
  • As the wife, whose wofiill care
  • The panges of child bed findes.
  • Right as shipps from Tarshish going,
  • Crusht with blasts of Eurus blowing.
  • Now our sight hath matched our hearing,
  • In what state Gods cittie stands,
  • How supported by his hands,
  • God ever holds the same.
  • In thy temples mid'st appeering,
  • We their favoure Lorde attend:
  • Righteous Lord both free from end,
  • Thie fame doth match thy name.
  • Thie just hand brings Sion gladnes,
  • Turns to mirth all Judaes sadnes.
  • Compasse Sion in her standing,
  • Tell her towres, mark her fortes,
  • Note with care the statelie portes
  • Her roiall houses beare.
  • For that ages understanding,
  • Which shall come when we shall goe,
  • Gladd in former time to know,
  • How manie, what they weare.
  • For God is our God for ever,
  • Us till death forsaking never.
  • 86 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • PSALM XLIX.
  • Audite hcec, omnes.
  • World-dwellers all, give heede to what I saie ;
  • To all I speake, to rich, poore, high and low;
  • Knowledge the suhject is my heart conceaves,
  • Wisdome the wordes shall from my mouth proceed,
  • Which I will measure by melodious eare,
  • And ridled speech to tuned harp accord.
  • The times of evil why should they me dismaie?
  • When mischief shall my foote stepps overflow?
  • And first from him whom fickle wealth deceaves,
  • "Which his too greate vaine confidence doth breed,
  • Since no man can his brothers life outbeare,
  • Nor yeeld for him his ransome to the Lord.
  • For deere the price that for a soule must paie,
  • And death his prisoner never will forgoe.
  • Naie, tell mee whome, but longer time hee leaves
  • Respited from the tombe for treasures meed?
  • Sure at his summons wise and fooles appeare,
  • And others spend the riches they did hoard.
  • A second thiukes his house shall not decaie,
  • Nor time his glorious buildings overthrow,
  • Narn'd proud lie of his name: where folly reaves
  • Exalted men of sence, and theie indeed
  • A brutish life and death, as beasts they weare,
  • Doe live and die, of whom is no record.
  • Yea these, whose race approves their peevish waie,
  • Death in the pitt his carrion foode doth stow :
  • And loe, the first succeeding light perceaves
  • The just installed in the greate mans steed;
  • Nay far his prince: when once that lovely cheere,
  • Lovely in house, in tombe becomes abhord.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 87
  • But God, my God, to intercept the praie
  • Of my life from the grave will not foreslowe,
  • For he it is, he only me receaves :
  • Then though one rich doe grow though glories seede
  • Spring with encrease : yet stand thou free from feare,
  • Of all his pomp death shall him nought affoord.
  • Please they them selves, and think at happiest stay
  • Who please them selves: yet to their fathers goe
  • Must they to endles dark : for folly reaves
  • Exalted men of sence, and they indeede
  • A hrutish life and death, as beastes they weare,
  • Doe live, and die, of whome is noe record.
  • PSALM L.
  • Deus Deorum.
  • The mightie God, the ever living lord,
  • All nations from earthes uttermost confines
  • Summoneth by his pursevant, his worde,
  • And out of beauties beautie Sion shines.
  • God comes, he comes, with earc and tongue restor'd;
  • His guarde huge stormes, hot flames his ushers goe :
  • And, called, their apparance to record,
  • Heav'n hasteth from above, earth from below.
  • He sits his peoples judge, and thus commandes :
  • Gather me hither that beloved line,
  • Whome solemn sacrifices holy bandes
  • Did in eternal league with me combine.
  • Then when the heav'ns subsigned with their handes,
  • That God injustice eminentlie raignes:
  • Controlling soe, as nothing counterstandes
  • What once decreed his sacred doome containes.
  • 88 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • You then, my folke, to me your God attend :
  • Hark, Israeli, and hear thy peoples blame:
  • Not want of sacrifice doth mee offend,
  • Nor doe I misse thy alters daily flame.
  • To mee thy stall no fatted bull shall send ;
  • Should I exact one hee-goat from thy fold ?
  • I, that as fair as hills, woodes, fieldes extende,
  • All birdes and beasts in known possession hold.
  • Suppose mee hungrie; yet to beg thy meate,
  • I would not tell thee that I hungrie were:
  • My self maie take, what needs mee then entrea?
  • Since earth is mine, and all that earth doth beare.
  • But doe I long the brawnie flesh to eate
  • Of that dull beast that serves the plowmans neede ?
  • Or doe I thirst to quench my thirsty heate,
  • In what the throates of bearded cattell breed?
  • no ; bring God of praise a sacrifice :
  • Thy vowed hearts unto the highest paie :
  • Invoke my name, to mee erect thy cries,
  • Thy praying plaints, when sorow stops thy waie
  • 1 will undoe the knott that anguish tyes,
  • And thou at peace shalt glorifie my name:
  • Mildly the good, God schooleth in this wise,
  • But this sharpe check doth to the godlesse frame:
  • How fitts it thee my statutes to report,
  • And of my cov'nant in thy talk to prate?
  • Hating to live in right reformed sort,
  • And leaving in neglect what I relate.
  • Seest thou a thief? thou grow'st of his consorte :
  • Dost with adult'rers to adultrie goe:
  • Thy mouth is slanders ever-open porte,
  • And from thy tongue doth nought but treason flow.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 89
  • Naie, ev'n thy brother thy rebukes disgrace,
  • And thou in spigot defam'st thy mothers sonne :
  • And for I wink awhile, thy thoughts imbrace :
  • God is like mee, and doth as I have done.
  • But loe, thou see'st I march another pace,
  • And come with truth thy falshood to diclose :
  • Thy sinne reviv'd upbraides thy blushing face,
  • Which thou long dead in silence did suppose.
  • O laie up this in marking memorie
  • You that are wont Gods judgments to forgett:
  • In vaine to others for release you flie,
  • If once on you I griping fingers sett.
  • And know the rest: my dearest worship I
  • In sweete perfume of offred praise doe place:
  • And who directs his goings orderlie,
  • By my conduct shall see Gods saving grace.
  • PSALM LI.
  • Miserere met, Dens.
  • O Lord, whose grace no limits comprehend;
  • Sweet Lord, whose mercies stand from measure free ;
  • To mee that grace, to mee that mercie send,
  • And wipe, O Lord, my sinnes from sinfull mee,
  • O dense, O wash my foule iniquitie:
  • Clense still my spotts, still wash awaie my staynings,
  • Till staines and spotts in me leave noe remaynings.
  • For I, alas, acknowledging doe know
  • Myfilthie fault, my faultie filthiness
  • To my soules eye uncessantlie doth show.
  • Which done to thee, to thee I doe confesse,
  • Just judge, true witnes ; that for righteousnes,
  • Thy doome may passe against my guilt awarded,
  • Thy evidence for truth maie be regarded.
  • 90 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • My mother, loe ! when I began to be,
  • Conceaving me, with me did sinne conceave :
  • And as with living heate she cherisht me,
  • Corruption did like cherishing receave.
  • But loe, thy love to purest good doth cleave,
  • My inward truth which hardlie els discerned,
  • My treward soule in thy hid schoole hath learned.
  • Then as thy self to lepers hast assign'd,
  • With hisop, Lord, thy hisop purge me soe;
  • And that shall dense the leaprie of my mind ;
  • Make over me thy mercies streames to flow,
  • Soe shall my whitenes scorn the whitest snow.
  • To eare and hart send soundes and thoughts of gladnes,
  • That brused bones maie daunce awaie their sadnes.
  • Thy ill-pleas'd eye from my misdeedes avert: %^
  • Cancell the registers my sinns containe :
  • Create in me a pure, cleane, spollesse heart :
  • Inspire a sprite where love of right maie raigne.
  • Ah ! cast me not from thee, take not againe
  • Thy breathing grace ! againe thy comfort send me,
  • Aud let the guard of thy free sp'rite attend me.
  • Soe I to them a guiding hand will be,
  • Whose faultie feete have wandred from thy way;
  • And turn'd from sinne will piake retorne to thee,
  • Whom turn'd from thee, sinne erst had ledd astraie.
  • O God, God of my health, O doe away
  • My bloody crime: soe shall my tongue be raised
  • To praise thy truth, enough can not be praised.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 91
  • Unlock my lipps, shut up with sinnfull shame :
  • Then shall my mouth, O Lord, thy honor sing,
  • For Weeding fuell for thy alters ilame,
  • To gaine thy grace what bootes it me to bring?
  • Burnt-offrings are to thee no pleasaunt thing.
  • The sacrifice that God will hold respected,
  • Is the heart-broken soule, the sprite dejected.
  • Lastly, O Lord, how soe I stand or fall,
  • Leave not thy loved Sion to embrace :
  • But with thy favour build up Salems wall,
  • And still in peace maintaine that peacefull place.
  • Then shalt thou turne a well-accepting face
  • To sacred fires with offred giftes perfumed :
  • Till ev'n whole calves on alters be consumed.
  • PSALM LII.
  • Quid gloriaris ?
  • Tyrant, why swel'st thou thus,
  • Of mischief vaunting ?
  • Since helpe from God to us
  • Is never wanting.
  • Lewd lies thy tongue contrives,
  • Lowd lies it soundeth:
  • Sharper then sharpest knives
  • With lies it woundeth.
  • Falshood thy witt approves,
  • All truth rejected;
  • Thy will all vices loves,
  • Vertue neglected.
  • 92 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Not wordes from cursed thee,
  • But gulfes are powred.
  • Gulfes wherin daily bee
  • Good men devoured.
  • Think'st thou to beare it soe ?
  • God shall displace thee.
  • God shall thee overthrow,
  • Crush thee, deface thee.
  • The just shall fearing see
  • These fearefull chauuces:
  • And laughing shoote at thee
  • With scornfull glances.
  • Loe, loe, the wretched wight,
  • Who God disdaining,
  • His mischief made his might,
  • His guard his gaining.
  • I, as an olive tree
  • Still green shall flourish;
  • Gods house the soile shall bee
  • My rootes to nourish.
  • My trust on his true love
  • Truly attending,
  • Shall never thence remove,
  • Never see ending.
  • Thee will I honor still
  • Lord for this justice:
  • There fix my hopes I will
  • Where thy saints trust is.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. i>3
  • Thy saints trust in thy name,
  • Thcrin they joy them :
  • Protected hy the same,
  • Nought can annoy them.
  • PSALM LIII.
  • Dixit insipiens.
  • There is no God, the foole doth saie,
  • If not in word, in thought and will :
  • This fancie rotten deedes bewraie,
  • And studies fixt on lothsome ill.
  • Not one doth good : from heav'nlie hill,
  • Jehovas eye one wiser minde
  • Could not discerne, that held the waie
  • To understand, and God to finde.
  • They all have strai'd, are cancred all :
  • Not one I saie, not one doth good.
  • But senslesnes, what should I call
  • Such carriage of this cursed brood?
  • My people are their bread, their food,
  • Upon ray name they scorn to cry;
  • Whome vaine affright doth yet appall,
  • Where no just ground of feare doth ly.
  • But on their bones shall wreaked be
  • All thy invaders force and guile,
  • In vile confusion cast by thee,
  • For God him self shall make them vile.
  • Ah! why delaies that happy while,
  • When Sun shall our saver bring?
  • The Lord his folk will one daie free,
  • Then Jacobs house shall daunce and sing.
  • 94 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • PSALM LIV.
  • Deus, in nomine.
  • Lord, let thy name my saving succour bee,
  • Defend my wronged cause by thy just might :
  • Lord, let my crieng voice be heard of thee,
  • Lett not my heavie words be counted light,
  • For strangers I against me risen see,
  • Who hunt me hard, and sore my soul affright :
  • Possest with feare of God in no degree.
  • But God, thou art my helper in my right,
  • Thou succour send'st to such as succour me ;
  • Then pay them home, who thus against me fight,
  • And let thy truth cut downe their treachery.
  • Soe I with offrings shall thy Altars dight,
  • Praising thy name which thus hast sett me free :
  • Giving me scope to soare with happie flight
  • Above my evills, and on my enemy,
  • Making me see what I to see delight.
  • PSALM LV.
  • Exaudi, Deus.
  • My God most glad to look, most prone to heere,
  • An open eare O let my praier find,
  • And from my plaint turne not thy face away;
  • Behold my gestures, hearken what I say
  • While uttering mones with most tormented mind :
  • My body I no lesse torment and tcare,
  • For loe, their fearful threatnings wound mine eare,
  • Who griefs on griefs on me still heaping laie,
  • A mark to wrath, and hate, and wrong assign'd:
  • Therefore my hart hath all his force resign'd
  • To trembling paths, death terrors on me prey,
  • I feare, nay shake, nay quiv'ring quake with feare.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 9-3
  • Then say I, O might I but cutt the wind
  • Born on the wings the fearfull dove doth beare,
  • Stay would I not till I in rest might stay ;
  • Far hence, O far, then would I take my way
  • Unfo the desert, and repose me there.
  • These storraes of woe, these tempests left behind,
  • But swallow them, O Lord, in darkness blind,
  • Confound their councells, leade their tongues astray,
  • That what they meane by wordes may not appeare,
  • For mother wrong within their townes each where,
  • And daughter strife their ensignes so display,
  • As if they only thither were confin'd.
  • These walk their citie walles both night and day,
  • Oppressions, tumults, guiles of every kind
  • Are burgesses, and dwell the middle neere,
  • About their streetes his masking robes doth weare
  • Mischief cloth'd in deceit with treason lin'd,
  • Where only he, he only beares the sway :
  • But not my foe with mee this pranck did play,
  • For then I would have borne with patient cheere
  • An unkind part from whom I know unkind.
  • Nor bee whose forehead envies mark had sign'd,
  • His trophies on my ruins sought to reare,
  • From whom to fly I might have made assay.
  • But this to thee, to thee impute I may,
  • My fellow my companion held most deere,
  • My soule, my other self, my inward friend,
  • Whom unto me, me unto whom did bind
  • Exchanged secrets, who together were
  • Gods temple wont to visit, there to pray.
  • 96 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • O lett a soddaine deatli work their decay,
  • Who speaking faire such canckred malice mind,
  • Let them be buried breathing in theyr beare,
  • But purple morn, black ev'n, and midday cleare,
  • Shall see my praying voice to God enclin'd,
  • Rowzing him up, and nought shall me dismay.
  • He ransom'd me, he for my safetie fin'd
  • In fight, where many sought my soule to slay,
  • He still him self (to no succeeding heire
  • Leaving his empire) shall no more forbeare :
  • But at my motion all these Atheists pay,
  • By whom (still one) such mischiefs are design'd,
  • Who but such caitives would have undermin'd,
  • Nay, overthrowne, from whome but kindnes mere
  • They never found? who would such trust betray?
  • What butterd wordes ! yet wars their harts bewray,
  • Their speach more sharp then sharpest sword or speare,
  • Yet softer flowes then balme from wounded rind.
  • But my ore loaden soule thy selfe upcheare,
  • Cast on Goes shoulders what thee down doth waigh,
  • Long borne by thee with bearing pain'd and pin'd,
  • To care for thee he shall be ever kinde,
  • By him the just in safety held allway:
  • Chaunglessc shall enter, live, and leave the yeare;
  • But, Lord, how long shall these men tarry here?
  • Fling them in pitt of death where never shin'd
  • The light of life, and while I make my stay
  • On thee; let who their thirst with bloud allay
  • Have their life-holding threed so weakly twin'd
  • That it half spunne, death may in sunder sheare.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. >7
  • PSALM LVI.
  • Miserere mei, Deus.
  • Fountaine of pitty now with pitty flow:
  • These monsters on me daily gaping goe,
  • Dailie me devoure these spies,
  • Swarmes of foes against me rise,
  • God that art more high than I am lowe.
  • Still when I fearc yet will I trust in thee,
  • Thy word, O God, my boast shall ever bee :
  • God shall be my hopefull stay,
  • Feare shall not that hope dismay,
  • For what can feeble flesh doe unto me?
  • 1 as I can, think, speake, and doe the best ;
  • They to the worst my thoughts, wordes, doings wrest:
  • All their hartes wilh one consent
  • Are to worke my mine bent,
  • From plotting which, they give their heads no rest.
  • To that intent they secret meetings make,
  • They presse me neere, my soule in snare to take,
  • Thinking sleight shall keepe them safe,
  • But thou, Lord, in wrathful chafe
  • Their league soe surely linckt in sunder shake.
  • Thou didst, O Lord, with carefull counting looke
  • On ev'ry journey I poore exile tooke ;
  • Ev'ry teare from my sad eyes
  • Saved in thy bottle lyes,
  • These matters are all entred in thy booke.
  • OS THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Then when soever my distressed sprite
  • Crying to thee brings these unto thy sight,
  • What remayncth for my foes?
  • Blames, and shames, and overthrowes,
  • For God him self I know for me will fight.
  • Gods never-falsed word my boast shall be,
  • My boast shall be his word to sett me free:
  • God shall be my hopefull stay,
  • Fcare shall not that hope dismay,
  • For what can mortall men doe unto me?
  • For this to thee how deeply stand I bound,
  • Lord that my soule dost save, my foes confound!
  • Ah, I can no paiment make,
  • But if thou for payment take
  • The vowes I pay, thy praises I resound.
  • Thy praises who from death hast set me free,
  • Whether my feete did headlong carry me :
  • Making me of thy free grace
  • There agayne to take my place,
  • Where light of life with living men I see.
  • s*
  • PSALM LVII.
  • Miserere mei, Dens.
  • Thy mercie Lord, Lord now thy mercy show,
  • On thee I ly,
  • To thee I fly,
  • Hide me, hive me as thine owne
  • Till these blasts be overblown,
  • Which now doe fiercely blow.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 9D
  • To highest God I will erect my cry,
  • Who quickly shall
  • Dispatch this all.
  • Hee shall from Heaven send,
  • From disgrace me to defend,
  • His love and verity.
  • My soule incaged lyes with lions brood,
  • Villains whose hands
  • Are fierie brands,
  • Teeth more sharp then shaft or speare,
  • Tongues farr better edge do beare
  • Then swords to shed my blond.
  • As high as highest heav'n can give thee place,
  • O Lord ascend,
  • And thence extend
  • With most bright, most glorious show,
  • Over all the earth below,
  • The sun-beames of thy face.
  • Me to entangle ev'ry waie they goe
  • Their trapp and nett
  • Is readie sett.
  • Holes they digg, but their own holes
  • Pitfalls make for their own soules:
  • Soe, Lord, O serve them soe.
  • My hart prepar'd, prepared is my hart,
  • To spread thy praise
  • With tuned laies:
  • Wake my tongue, my lute awake,
  • Thou my harp the consort make,
  • My self will beare a part.
  • f2
  • 100 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • My self when first the morning shall appeare,
  • With voice and string
  • Soe will thee sing:
  • That this earthly globe, and all
  • Treading on this earthly ball,
  • My praising notes shall heare.
  • For God, my only God, thy gracious love
  • Is mounted far
  • Above each star;
  • Thy unchanged verity
  • Heav'nly wings doe lift as hie
  • As cloudes have roome to move.
  • As high as highest hoav'n can give thee place,
  • O Lord ascend,
  • And thence extend,
  • With most bright, most glorious show,
  • Over all the earth below,
  • The sun-beames of thy face.
  • PSALM LVIII.
  • Si vere utique.
  • And call yee this to utter what is just,
  • You that of justice hold the sov'raign throne?
  • And call yee this to yield, O sonnes of dust,
  • To wronged brethren ev'ry one his own?
  • O no: it is your long malicious will
  • Now to the world to make by practice known,
  • With whose oppression you the ballance fill,
  • Just to your selves, indirf'rent else to none.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 101
  • But what could they, who ev'n in birth declin'd,
  • From truth and right to lies and injuries?
  • To shew the venom of their cancred mynd
  • The adders image scarcely can suffice.
  • Nay, scarce the aspick may with them contend,
  • On whom the charmer all in vaine applies
  • His skillful'st spells: ay, missing of his end,
  • While shee self-deaf, and unalfected lies.
  • Lord, crack their teeth, Lord, crush these lions jawes,
  • Soe lett them sinck as water in the sand:
  • When deadly bow their aiming fury drawes,
  • Shiver the shaft ere past the shooters hand.
  • So make them melt as the dishowsed snaile,
  • Or as the embrio, whose vitall band
  • Breakes ere it holdes, and formlesse eyes doe faile
  • To see the sun, though brought to lightfull land.
  • O let their brood, a brood of springing thornes,
  • Be by untymely rooting overthrowne
  • Ere bushes waxt, they push with pricking homes,
  • As fruites yet greene are oft by tempest blowne.
  • The good with gladnes this revenge shall see,
  • And bath his feete in blond of wicked one:
  • While all shall say, the just rewarded be,
  • There is a God that shares to each his own.
  • PSALM LIX.
  • Eripe me de inimicis.
  • Save me from such as me assaile:
  • Let not my foes,
  • O God, against my life prevaile :
  • Save me from those
  • Who make a trade of cursed wrong,
  • And bred in bloud, for bloud doe long.
  • 102 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Of these one sort doe seeke, by sleight,
  • My overthrow:
  • The stronger part with open might
  • Against me goe,
  • And yet thou God my wittnes be,
  • From all offence my soule is free.
  • But what if I from fault am free ?
  • Yet they are bent
  • To band and stand against poore me,
  • Poore innocent.
  • Rise, God, and see how these things goe,
  • And rescue me from instant woe.
  • Rise, God of armies, mighty God
  • Of Israel,
  • Looke on them all who spred abrode
  • On earth doe dwell,
  • And let thy hand no longer spare
  • Such as of malice wicked are.
  • When golden sun in west doth sett
  • Return'd againe,
  • As houndes that howle their food to gett
  • They runn amaine
  • The cittie through from street to street,
  • With hungry maw some prey to meet.
  • Night elder growne, their fittest day,
  • They balding prate,
  • How my left life extinguish may
  • Their deadly hate.
  • They prate and bable voide of fcare,
  • For tush, saie they, who now can hcare?
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 103
  • Even thou canst hcare, and hearing scorne,
  • All that they say
  • For them (if not by thee upborne)
  • What props doe stay?
  • Then will I, as they wait for me,
  • O God, my fortresse, wait on thee.
  • Thou ever me with thy free grace
  • Prevented hast:
  • With thee my praier shall take place
  • Ere from me past.
  • And I shall see who me doe hate
  • Beyond my wish in wofull state.
  • For feare my people it forgett
  • Slay not outright,
  • But scatter them, and soe them sett
  • In open sight,
  • That by thy might they may be knowne,
  • Disgrac'd, debas'd, and ovcrthrowne.
  • No witness of their wickednesse
  • I neede produce
  • But their owne lipps, fitt to expresse
  • Each vile abuse :
  • In cursing proud, proud when they ly,
  • O let them deare such pride aby.
  • At length, in rage, consume them soe,
  • That nought remajne:
  • Let them all beeing quite forgoe,
  • And make it playne,
  • That God, who Jacobs rule upholds,
  • Rules all, all-bearing earth enfolds.
  • 104 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Now thus they fare: when sun doth sett
  • Return'd againe,
  • As hounds that howle their food to gett,
  • They runn amayne
  • The city through from street to street,
  • With hungry mawes some prey to meet.
  • Abroad they range and hunt apace,
  • Now that, now this,
  • As famine trailes a hungry trace ;
  • And though they miss,
  • Yet will they not to kennell hye,
  • But all the night at bay do lye.
  • But I will of thy goodness sing,
  • And of thy might,
  • When early sun againe shall bring
  • His cheerefull light;
  • For thou my refuge and my fort
  • In all distress dost mee support.
  • My strength doth of thy strength depend,
  • To thee I sing,
  • Thou art my fort, me to defend.
  • My God, my king,
  • To thee I owe, and thy free grace,
  • That free I rest in fearless place.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 105
  • PSALM LX.
  • Deus, repulisti nos..
  • Thy anger erst in field
  • Our scatt'red squadrons brake:
  • O God bee reconcil'd,
  • Our leading now retake.
  • This land at thee did quake,
  • It chinckt and gaping lay:
  • O sound her ruptures make,
  • Her quaking bring to stay.
  • Worse happes no hart could think
  • Then did thy wrath ensue:
  • Dull horror was our drink,
  • We drinking giddy grew.
  • But now an ensigne new
  • Re-chearing all dismaies
  • To guide thy fearers view.
  • Thy truth our chiefe doth raise.
  • Then sett thy loved free,
  • Preserve mee when I pray :
  • Hark, hark, soe shall it be,
  • God from his bowse doth say.
  • Then make a merry stay:
  • And share we Sichems fields:
  • The land in percells lay,
  • That Succoths valley yields.
  • Mine, Gilead, lo, by this,
  • Manasses, lo, mine own:
  • My soldier Ephraim is,
  • My law by Judah shown.
  • f3
  • 10G THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • My washpott Moab grown,
  • My shoe at Edom tlong !
  • Pbilistia overthrown,
  • Sing now thy triumph song.
  • But whom shall I attend
  • Till I these conquests make?
  • On whose conduct depend
  • Till Edoms fortes I take?
  • O thine to whom we spake,
  • But spake before in vayn :
  • Thine, God, that didst forsake
  • Our troupes for warr to trayn.
  • Against distressing foes
  • Let us thy succour finde:
  • Who trust in man. repose,
  • Doe trust repose in winde.
  • In God lett hand and mind
  • Their force and vallor show,
  • Hee, hee in abject kind
  • Shall lay our haters low.
  • PSALM LXI.
  • Exaudi, Dens.
  • To thee I cry,
  • My crying he are.
  • To thee my praying voice doth fly :
  • Lord, lend my voice a listning care,
  • From country banished,
  • All comfort vanished,
  • To thee I run when storraes are nigh.
  • .THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 107
  • Up to thy hill,
  • Lord, make me clyme;
  • Which else to scale exceeds my skill:
  • For in my most distressed tyme
  • Thy eye attended me,
  • Thy hand defended me.
  • Against my foe, my fortresse still.
  • Then where a tent
  • For thee is made,
  • To harhor still is my cntent:
  • And to thy wings protecting shade
  • My self I carry will,
  • And there I tarry will,
  • Safe from all shot against me bent.
  • What first I crave
  • First graunt to me,
  • That I the roiall rule may have
  • Of such as feare and honor thee:
  • Let yeares as manifold,
  • As can be any told,
  • Thy king, O God, keepe from the grave.
  • Before thy face
  • Graunt ever he
  • Maie sitt, and lett thy truth and grace
  • His endless guard appointed be.
  • Then singing pleasantly,
  • Praising uncessantly,
  • I dayly vowes will pay to thee.
  • 108 THE PSALMS OF DAVITS
  • PSALM LXII.
  • Nonne Deo.
  • Yet shall my soule in silence still
  • On God, my help, attentive stay:
  • Yet he my fort, my health, my hill,
  • Remove I may not, move I may.
  • How long then shall your fruitlesse wilt
  • An enemy soe farr from thrall,
  • With weake endevor strive to kill,
  • Yon rotten hedge, you broken wall?
  • Forsooth that hee no more may rise
  • Advaunced oft to throne and crown;
  • To headlong him their thonghtes devise,
  • And past reliefe to tread him down.
  • Their love is only love of lies:
  • Their wordes, and deedes, dissenting soe,.
  • When from their lippes most blessing flyes,.
  • Then deepest curse in hart doth grow.
  • Yet shall my soule in silence still
  • On God my hope attentive stay:
  • Yet hee my fort, my health, my hill,
  • Remove I may not, move I may.
  • My God doth me with glory fill,
  • Not only shield me safe from harme:
  • To shun distresse, to concmer ill,
  • To him I clime, in him I arrn-c.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 109
  • O then, on God, our certaine stay,
  • All people in all times rely:
  • Your hartes before him naked lay,
  • To Adams sonnes tis vain to fly,
  • Soe vain, soe false, soe fraile are they,
  • Ev*n he that seemeth most of might
  • With lightnesse self if him you weigh,
  • Then lightuesse self will weigh more light.
  • In fraud and force noe trust repose:
  • Such idle hopes from thought expell,
  • And take good heed, when riches growes
  • Let not your hart on riches dwell.
  • All powre is Gods, his own word showes,
  • Once said by him, twice heard by me:
  • Yet from thee, Lord, all mercy flowes,
  • And each mans work is paid by thee.
  • PSALM LXIII.
  • Deus, Deus mens.
  • O God, the God where all my forces ly,
  • How doe I hunt for thee with early haste!
  • How is for thee my spirit thirsty dry!
  • How gaspes my soule for thy refreshing taste!
  • Witnesse this waterlesse, this weary waste :
  • Whence, O that I againe transfer'd might be,
  • Thy glorious might in sacred place to see.
  • Then on thy praise would I my lipps employ,
  • With whose kind mercies nothing may contend;
  • No, not this life it self, whose care and joy
  • In prayeng voice, and lifted hands should end.
  • This to my soule should such a banquet send,
  • That sweetly fed my mouth should sing thy name
  • In gladdest notes contented mirth could frame.
  • 110 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • And lo, ev'n here I mind thee in my bed,
  • And interrupt my sleepes with nightly thought,
  • How thou hast been the target of my head,
  • How thy wings shadow hath my safety wrought.
  • And though my body from thy view be brought,
  • Yet fixt on thee my loving sonic remaines,
  • Whose right right hand from falling me retaines.
  • But such as seeke my life to ruinate,
  • Them shall the earth in deepest gulph vcceave.
  • First murdring blade shall end their living date,
  • And then their flesh to teeth of foxes leave.
  • As for the king, the king shall then conceave
  • High joy in God, and all that God adore,
  • When lying mouthes, shall stopped, lye no more.
  • PSALM LXIV.
  • Exaudi, Dens.
  • With gracious hearing entertain
  • This voice, the agent of my woe :
  • And let my life, O God, remain
  • Safe in thy guard from feared foe.
  • Hide me where none may know
  • That hatefull plotts contrive;
  • And right to overthrow
  • With tumult wrongly strive.
  • For tongues they beare, not tongues, but swordes,
  • So piercing sharp they have them ground :
  • And words deliver, shaftes, not words,
  • With bitter dint soe deepe they wound.
  • Whose shott against the sound,
  • And harmlesse they direct:
  • In safe and fearelesse ground
  • Embusht without suspect.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. Ill
  • Nay, obstinate to ill they are,
  • And meeting, all their talk apply
  • Who can most closely couch his snare;
  • And who, say they, shall us discry?
  • No guile so low doth ly,
  • Nor in so hidden part,
  • But these will sound and try,
  • Even out of deepest hart.
  • But thou, O God, from sodain bow
  • Death striking them a shaft shalt send :
  • And their own tongues to their own woe
  • Shall all their wounding sharpnes bend.
  • Thus wounded shall they end,
  • Thus ending shall they make
  • Each mortall eye attend,
  • Each eye attending quake.
  • Not one, I say, but shall behold
  • This worke of God, which he agayn
  • Shall, as he can in wordes unfold,
  • If yet his feare he entertain.
  • In whom doth tymelesse raign
  • The just shall joy and hope :
  • The hartes uprightly playn
  • Shall have their vaunting scope.
  • PSALM LXV.
  • Te decet hymnus.
  • Sion it is where thou art praised,
  • Sion, O God, where vowes they pay thee :
  • There all mens praiers to thee raised
  • Returne possest of what they pray thee.
  • There thou my sinns prevailing to my shame
  • Dost turne to smoake of sacrificing flame.
  • 112 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • O, he of blisse is not deceived,
  • Whom chosen thou unto thee takest:
  • And whom into thy court receaved,
  • Thou of thy checkrole number makest.
  • The dainty viands of thy sacred store
  • Shall feede hym so he shall not hunger more.
  • From thence it is, thy threatning thunder,
  • (Lest we by wrong should be disgraced),
  • Doth strike our foes with feare and wonder:
  • O thou on whom their hopes are placed,
  • Whom either earth dost stedfastly sustayn,
  • Or cradle rockes the restlesse wavy playn.
  • Thy vertue staies the mighty mountaynes,
  • Girded with pow'r, with strength abounding:
  • The roaring damm of watry fountaines
  • Thy beck doth make surcease her sounding.
  • When stormy uproares tosse the peoples brayn,
  • That civill sea to calme thou bringst agayn.
  • Where earth doth end with endless ending,
  • All such as dwell, thy signes affright them :
  • And in thy praise their voices spending,
  • Both houses of the sun delight them;
  • Both whence he comes, when early he awakes,
  • And where he goes, when ev'ning rest he takes.
  • Thy eie from heav'n this land beholdeth,
  • Such fruitful! dewes down on it rayning.
  • That storehowse-like her lap enfoldeth
  • Assured hope of plowmans gayning,
  • Thy flowing streames her drought doth temper so,
  • That buried seed through yielding grave doth grow.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 113
  • Drunk is each ridge of thy cup drincking,
  • Each clodd relenteth at thy dressing:
  • Thy cloud-borne waters inly sincking,
  • Faire spring sproutes foorth, blest with thy blessing.
  • The fertile yeare is with thy bounty crown'd ;
  • And where thou go'st, thy goings fatt the ground.
  • Plenty bedewes the desert places:
  • A hedge of mirth the hills encloseth:
  • The fieldes with flockes have hid their faces:
  • A robe of corn the vallies clotheth.
  • Desertes, and hills, and feilds, and valleys all,
  • Rejoyce, shout, sing, and on thy name doe call.
  • PSALM LXVI.
  • Jubilate Deo.
  • All lands, the lymras of earthy round,
  • With triumph tunes Gods honor sound:
  • Sing of his name the praisefull glory,
  • And glorious make his praises story.
  • Tell God: O God, what frightfull wonder
  • Thy workes doe wittncs, whose great might,
  • Thy enimies so bringeth under,
  • Though frown in heart, they fawn in sight.
  • All earth, and ev'ry land therefore
  • Sing to this God, this God adore:
  • All earth, I say, and all earth dwellers,
  • Be of his worth the singing tellers.
  • O come behold, O note beholding
  • What dreadfull wonders from him flow :
  • More height, more weight, more force enfolding,
  • Then Adams earthy brood can show.
  • 114 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • The sea up-dried by his hand,
  • Became a field of dusty sand:
  • Through Jordaus streames we dry-shod waded
  • The joy whereof not yet is faded.
  • His throne of strength unmoved standeth :
  • His eie on ev'ry coast is cast:
  • The rebell who against him bandeth,
  • Of ruins cup shall quickly tast.
  • You folk his flock, come then employ
  • In lavvding him your songes of joy:
  • On God, our God, your voices spending,
  • Still praying, praising, never ending.
  • For he our life hath us re-given,
  • Nor would he let our goings slide:
  • Though for our trial) neerly driven,
  • Yea, silver like, in furnace tryde.
  • For God thou didst our feete innett,
  • And pinching saddles on us sett:
  • Nay (which is worse to be abidden),
  • Ev'n on our hacks a man hath ridden.
  • Hee rode us through where tiers flashed;
  • Where swelling streames did rudely roare:
  • Yet scorched thus, yet we thus washed,
  • Were sett by thee on plenties shoare.
  • I therefore to thy house will go,
  • To pay and offer what I owe:
  • To pay my vowes, my Iippes then vowed,
  • When under grief my body bowed.
  • To offer whole burut sacrifices,
  • The fatt of rams with sweete perfume :
  • Nay goates, nay bulls, of greater sizes,
  • And greater prises to consume.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 115
  • O come all yee tliat God doe feare,
  • come and lend attentive eare ;
  • While by my tongue shall be expressed,
  • How blessed he my soule hath blessed.
  • 1 cried to him, my cry procured
  • My free dischardge from all my bandes:
  • His care had not my voice endured,
  • But that my heart unstained standes.
  • Now as my heart was innocent,
  • God heard the hearty sighes I spent:
  • What I to praiers recommended,
  • Was gratiously by him attended.
  • Praise, praise him then, for what is left me,
  • But praise to him : who what I praid,
  • Rejected not, nor hath bereft me
  • My hopefull helpe, his mercies aid?
  • PSALM LXVII.
  • Dens miser eatur.
  • God, on us thy mercy show,
  • Make on us thy blessings flow:
  • Thy faces beames
  • From heav'n upon us show'r
  • In shining streames,
  • That all may see
  • The way of thee,
  • And know thy saving pow'i .
  • 116 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • God, the nations praise thee shall,
  • Thee shall praise the nations all:
  • To mirth and joy
  • All such as earth possesse
  • Shall them employ:
  • For thou their guide
  • Go'st never wide
  • From truth and righteousnes.
  • God, the nations praise thee shall,
  • Thee shall praise the nations all :
  • Then ev'ry field,
  • As far as earth hath end,
  • Rich fruites shall yield :
  • And God, our God,
  • With blisse shall load,
  • Who of his blisse depend.
  • God, I say, with plenteous blisse,
  • To enrich us shall not misse :
  • And from the place
  • The father of the yeere
  • Begins his race,
  • To Zephyrs west,
  • His races rest,
  • All lands his force shall feare.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 117
  • PSALM LXVIII.
  • Exurgat Dens.
  • '6'
  • Let God but rise, his very face shall cast
  • On all his haters flight and disarray:
  • As smoke in wind, as wax at fire doth wast,
  • At Gods aspect, th'unjust shall flitt away.
  • The just mcane while shall in Jehovah's presence
  • Play, sing, and daunce. Then unto him, I say,
  • Unto our God, nam'd of eternall essence,
  • Present your selves with song, and daunce, and play.
  • Prepare his path, who throned on delightes,
  • Doth sitt a father to the orphan sonne :
  • And in her cause the wronged widow rights,
  • God in his holy house late here begun.
  • With families he empty houses filleth,
  • The prisoners chaines are by his hands undone:
  • But barren sand their fruitlesse labour tilleth,
  • Who crossing him rebelliously doe runn.
  • O God, when thou in desert didst appeare,
  • What time thy folk that uncouth journey tooke:
  • Heav'n at thy sight did sweat with melting feare,
  • Earth bow'd her trembling knee, Mount Sinay shook.
  • The land bedew'd; all wants by thee restored,
  • That well thy people might the country brook,
  • As to a fold with sheep in plenty stored,
  • So to their state thy shepherds care did look.
  • 118 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • There, taught by thee, in this triumphant song,
  • A virgin army did their voices try :
  • Fled are these kings, fled are these armyes strong:
  • We share the spoiles that weake in bowse did ]y.
  • Though late the chymney made your beauties loathed,
  • Now shine you shall, and shine more gracefully,
  • Then lovely dove in cleare gold-silver cloathed,
  • That glides with feathered oare through wavy sky.
  • For when God had (that this may not seeme strange)
  • Expeld the kings with utter overthrow,
  • The very ground her mourning, clouds did change
  • To weather cleare, as cleare as Salmon snow.
  • Basan, huge Basan, that soe proudly standest,
  • Scorning the highest hills as basely low,
  • And with thy top soe many tops commandest,
  • Both thou, and they, what makes ye brave it so?
  • This mountainett, not you, doth God desire :
  • Here he entends his lodging plott to lay:
  • Hither Jehovah will him self retyre
  • To endlesse rest, and unremoved stay.
  • Here twice ten thousand, doubled twice he holdeth,
  • Of hooked chariotts, clad in wans array:
  • And hence more might, more majesty unfoldeth,
  • Then erst he did from Sinay mount display.
  • Ascended high, immorfall God thou art,
  • And captyves store thou hast led up with thee,
  • Whose gathered spoiles to men thou wilt impart:
  • Nay, late thy rebells, now thy servants bee.
  • Blest be the Lord, by whom our bliss encreaseth,
  • The God of might by whom we safety see:
  • God, our strong God, who us each way releaseth,
  • And ev'n through gates of death conducts us free.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 119
  • God of his enimies the heads shall wound,
  • And those proud lookes that stiff in mischief go,
  • From Basan safe, and from the deepe undrownd,
  • I brought thee once, and oft I will do so.
  • This said by hym, thy foote in bloud was. stained,
  • Thy doggs tongues died in bloud of slaughtred foe:
  • And God, my king, men saw thee entertained
  • In sacred house with this tryumphant show.
  • In vantgard marcht, who did with voices sing:
  • The rereward lowd on instruments did play:
  • The battaile maides, which did with tymbrells ring:
  • And all, in sweete consort, did jointly say:
  • Praise God, the Lord, of Jacob you descended,
  • Praise him upon each solemn meeting day:
  • Benjamin, little but with rule attended,
  • Judah's brave lordes, and troupes in faire array.
  • Sfout Nepthaly with noble Zabulon :
  • And si th our might thy bidding word did make,
  • Confirme, O God, what thou in us hast done,
  • From out thy house, and that for Salems sake.
  • So kings bring giftes, so in thee check Iheir ending
  • These furious wanton hulls, and calves shall take
  • These arrow-armed bands, which us offending,
  • Are now soe ready warr to undertake.
  • They shall bring silver stooping humbly low,
  • Egipts greate peeres with homage shall attend :
  • And JEthiop with them shall not forslow
  • To God with speed like service to commend.
  • Then kingdoms all to God present your praises,
  • And on the Lord your singing gladnes spend :
  • Above the heav'n of heav'ns his throne he raises,
  • And thence his voice, a voice of strength doth send.
  • 120 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Then of all strength acknowledge God the well,
  • With brave magnificence and glory bright
  • Shining no less on loved Israeli,
  • Then showing in the cloudes his thundring might,
  • Thou from the shryne where Jacob thee adoreth,
  • All folk, O God, with terror dost affright:
  • He (prais'd be he) with strength his people storeth,
  • His force it is in which their forces fight.
  • PSALM LXIX.
  • Salvum mefac.
  • Troublous seas my soule surround:
  • Save, O God, my sinking soule,
  • Sinking, where it feeles noe ground,
  • In this gulph, this whirling hole.
  • Waiting aid, with ernest eying,
  • Calling God with bootlesse crying:
  • Dymm and dry in me are found,
  • Eye to see, and throat to sound.
  • Wrongly sett to worke my woe,
  • Haters have I, more then hakes;
  • Force in my afflicting foe
  • Bettring still, in me impaires.
  • Thus to pay, and leese constrained,
  • What I never ought or gained,
  • Yet say I, thou God dost know
  • How my faultes and follies goe.
  • Mighty Lord, lett not my case
  • Blank the rest that hope in thee :
  • Lett not Jacobs God deface
  • All his friends in blush of me.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVrT). 121
  • Thyne it is, thyne only quarrell
  • Dighles roe thus in Shames apparell:
  • Mote, nor spott, nor least disgrace,
  • But for thee, could taint my face.
  • To my kynn a stranger quite,
  • Quite an alien am I grown :
  • In my very brethrens sight
  • Most nncar'd for, most unknown.
  • With thy temples zeale out-eaten,
  • With thy slanders scourges beaten,
  • While the shott of piercing spight
  • Bent at thee, on me doth light.
  • If I weepe, and weeping fast,
  • If in sackcloth sadd I mourn,
  • In my teeth the first they cast,
  • All to feast the last they turn.
  • Now in streetes, with publique prating,
  • Powring out their inward hating:
  • Private now at banquetts plac't,
  • Singing songs of wyny tast.
  • As for me to thee I praj',
  • Lord, in tyme of grace assign 'd:
  • Gratious God, my kindest stay,
  • In my aid be truly kind.
  • Keepe me safe unsunck, unmyred,
  • Safe from flowing foes retyred:
  • Calme these waves, these waters lay,
  • Leave me not this whirlpooles prey.
  • In the goodnes of thy grace,
  • Lord make answere to my mone:
  • Eye my ill, and rue my case,
  • In those mercies told by none.
  • 122 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Lett not by thy absence languish
  • Thy true server drownd in anguish.
  • Haste, and heare, come, come apace,
  • Free my soule from foeinens chase.
  • Unto thee what needes be told
  • My reproch, my blott, my blame?
  • Sith both these thou didst behold,
  • And canst all my haters name.
  • Whiles afflicted, whiles hart-broken,
  • Waiting yet some frendshipps token,
  • Some I lookt would me uphold,
  • Lookt, but found all comfort cold.
  • Comfort? nay (not seene before),
  • Needing food they sett me gall :
  • Vineger they fill'd me store,
  • When for drinck my thirst did call.
  • O then snare them in their pleasures,
  • Make them trapt ev'n in their treasures,
  • Gladly sad, and richly poore,
  • Sightlesse most, yet mightlesse more.
  • Downe upon them fury raine,
  • Lighten indignation downe :
  • Turne to wast, and desert plaine,
  • House and pallace, field and towne.
  • Lett not one be left abiding .
  • Where such rancor had residing,
  • Whome thou painest, more they paine :
  • Hurt by thee, by them is slaine.
  • Causing sinne on sinne to grow,
  • Add still cyphers to their sum,
  • Righter Iett them never goe,
  • Never to thy justice come.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 123
  • But from out the booke be crossed,
  • Where the good men live engrossed :
  • While my God, me poore and low,
  • High shall mount from need and woe.
  • Then by me his name with praise,
  • Gladsome praise, shall be upborne.
  • That shall more Jehova please
  • Then the beast with hoofe and home.
  • With what joy yee godly grieved
  • Shall your harts be then relieved ?
  • When Jehova takes such waies
  • Bound to loose, and falne to raise.
  • Laud him then O heav'nly skies,
  • Earth with thine, and seas witli yours :
  • For by him shall Sion rise,
  • He shall build up Juda's towres.
  • There his servantes, and their races,
  • Shall in fee possesse the places:
  • There his name who love and prize,
  • Stable stay shall eternize.
  • PSALM LXX.
  • Deus in arljutorium.
  • Lord, hie thee, me to save :
  • Lord, now to help me hast:
  • Shame lett them surely have,
  • And of confusion tast,
  • That hold my soule in chase.
  • Lett them be forced back,
  • And no disgraces lack,
  • That joy in my disgrace.
  • G 2
  • 3*21 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Back forced lett them be,
  • And for a faire reward
  • Their owne foule mine see
  • Who laugh, and laugh out hard.
  • When I most inly mone,
  • But mirth aud joy renew,
  • In them thy pathes ensue,
  • And love thy help alone.
  • Make them with glacldnes sing:
  • To God be ever praise.
  • And fade not me to bring
  • My down-cast state to raise.
  • Thy speedy aid and stay
  • In thee my succour growes :
  • From thee my freedom flowes :
  • Lord, make no long delay.
  • PSALM LXXI.
  • In te, Domine, speravi.
  • Lord, on thee my trust is grounded:
  • Leave me not with shame confounded ;
  • But injustice bring me aide.
  • Lett thine eare to me be bended :
  • Lett my life, from death defended,
  • Be by thee in safety staid.
  • Be my rock, my refuge tower,
  • Show thy unresisted power,
  • Working now thy wonted will :
  • Thou, I say, that never fainest
  • In thy biddings, but remainest
  • Still my rock, my refuge still.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 12-'
  • my God, my sole help-giver,
  • From the wicked me delyver,
  • From this wrongfull spightfull man :
  • In thee trusting, on thee standing,
  • With my childish understanding,
  • Nay, with life my hopes began.
  • Since imprison'd in my mother
  • Thou me freed'st, whom have I other
  • Held my stay, or made my song?
  • Yea, when all me so misdeemed,
  • 1 to most a monster seemed,
  • Yet in thee my hope was strong.
  • Yet of thee, the thankfull story
  • Filld my mouth, thy gratious glory
  • Was my ditty long the day.
  • Do not then, now age assaileth,
  • Courage, verdure, vertue faileth,
  • Do not leave me cast away.
  • They by whom my life is hated,
  • With their spies have now debated,
  • Of their talk, and lo, the summe:
  • God, say they, hath hym forsaken,
  • Now pursue, he must be taken,
  • None will to his rescue come.
  • O my God, bee not absented :
  • O my God, now, now, presented,
  • Let in haste thy succours be:
  • Make them fall disgraced, shamed,
  • All dissmighted, all diffamed,
  • Who this ill intend to me.
  • 126 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • As for me, resolv'd to tary
  • In my trust, and not to vary,
  • I will heape thy praise with praise:
  • Still will) mouth thy truthes recounting',
  • Still thy aides, though much surmounting,
  • Greatest sum that number laies.
  • Nay, my God, by thee secured,
  • Where will I not march assured?
  • In my talke who just but thou?
  • Who by thee from infant cradle
  • Taught still more, as still more able,
  • Have thy wonders spread till now.
  • Now that age hath me attainted,
  • Ages snow my head hath painted,
  • Leave me not, my God, forlorn.
  • Let me make thy mights relation
  • To the coming generation,
  • To the age as yet unborn.
  • God, thy justice, highest raised,
  • Thy greate workes, as highly praised :
  • Who thy peerc, O God, doth raign?
  • Thou into these woes dost drive me:
  • Thou againe shall thence revive me:
  • Lift me from this deepe againe.
  • Thou shall make my greatnes greater,
  • Make my. good with comfort better,
  • Thee my lute, my harpe shall sing:
  • Thee my God, that never slidest
  • From thy word, but constant bidest,
  • Jacobs holy heav'nly king.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 127
  • So my lips all joy declaring,
  • So my soule no honor sparing, ,
  • Shall thee sing, by thee secure.
  • So my tongue, all tymes, all places,
  • Tell thy wreakes and their disgraces,
  • Who this ill to me procure.
  • PSALM LXXII.
  • Deus judicium.
  • Teach the kings sonne, who king hym self shall be,
  • Thy judgmentes Lord, thy justice make hym learn:
  • To rule thy realme as justice shall decree,
  • And poore mens right in judgment to discern.
  • Then fearelesse peace,
  • With rich encrcase
  • The mountaynes proud shall fill:
  • And justice shall
  • Make plenty fall
  • On ev'ry humble hill.
  • Make him the weake support, th'opprest relieve,
  • Supply the poore, the quarrell-pickers quaile :
  • So ageless ages shall thee reverence give,
  • Till eyes of heav'n, the sun and moone, shall faile.
  • And thou againe
  • Shalt blessings rayne,
  • Which down shall mildly flow,
  • As showres thrown
  • On meades new mown
  • Wherby they freshly grow.
  • 128 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • During his rule the just shall ay be greene,
  • And peacefull plenty joine with plenteous peace:
  • While of sad night the many-formed queene
  • Decreas'd shall grow, and grown again decrease.
  • From sea to sea
  • He shall survey
  • All kingdoms as his own :
  • And from the trace
  • Of Perahs race,
  • As far as land is known.
  • The desert-dwellers at his beck shall bend,
  • His foes them suppliant at his feete shall fling,
  • The kinges of Thai-sis homage guifts shall send;
  • So Seba, Saba, ev'ry island king.
  • Nay all, ev'n all
  • Shall prostrate fall,
  • That crownes and scepters wearei
  • And all that stand
  • At their command,
  • That crownes and scepters beare.
  • For he shall heare the poore when they complaine,
  • And lend them help, who helplesse are opprest:
  • His mercy shall the needy sort sustaine;
  • His force shall free their lives that live distrest
  • From hidden sleight,
  • From open might,
  • Hee shall their soules redeeme :
  • His tender eyes
  • Shall highly prise,
  • And deare their bloud esteeme.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 12!>
  • So shall he long, so shall he happy live;
  • Health shall abound, and wealth shall never want:
  • They gold to hym. Arabia gold, shall give,
  • Which scantnes deare, and dearenes raaketh scant.
  • They still shall pray
  • That still he may
  • So live, and flourish so:
  • Without his praise
  • No nights, no daies,
  • Shall pasport have to go.
  • Looke how the woods, where enterlaced trees
  • Spread frendly armes each other to embrace,
  • Joyne at the head, though distant at the knees,
  • Waving with wind, and lording on the place :
  • So woods of come
  • By mountaynes borne
  • Shall on their shoulders wave:
  • And men shall passe_
  • The numerous grasse,
  • Such store each town shall have.
  • Looke how the sunne, so shall his name remayne ;
  • As that in light, so this in glory one :
  • All glories this, as that all lights shall stayne:
  • Nor that shall faile, nor this be overthrowne.
  • The dwellers all
  • Of earthly ball
  • In hym shall hold them blest:
  • As one that is
  • Of perfect blisse,
  • A patterne to the rest.
  • g3
  • 130 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • O God who art, from whom all beings be;
  • Eternall Lord, whom Jacobs stock adore,
  • And wondrous works are done by only thee,
  • Blessed be thou, most blessed evermore.
  • And lett thy name,
  • Thy glorious fame,
  • No end of blessing know :
  • Lett all this round
  • Thy honor sound,
  • So Lord, O be it so.
  • PSALM LXXIII.
  • Quam bonus Israel.
  • It is most true that God to Israeli,
  • I meane to men of undefined hartes,
  • Is only good, and nought but good impartes.
  • Most true, I see, allbe allmost I fell
  • From right conceit into a crooked mynd;
  • And from this truth with straying stepps declin'd.
  • For loe, my boiling brest did chafe and swell
  • When first I saw the wicked proudly stand,
  • Prevailing still in all they tooke in hand.
  • And sure no sicknes dwelleth where they dwell:
  • Nay, so they guarded are with health and might,
  • It seemes of them death dares not claime his right.
  • They seerne as priviledg'd from others paine :
  • The scourging plagues, which on their neighbours fall,
  • Torment not them, nay touch them not at all.
  • Therefore with pride, as with a gorgious chaine,
  • Their swelling necks encompassed they beare ;
  • All cloth'd in wrong, as if a robe it were.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 131
  • So fatt become, that fattnes doth constraine
  • Their eies to swell: and if they thinck on ought,
  • Their thought they have, yea have beyond their thought.
  • They wanton grow, and in malicious vaine
  • Talking of wrong, pronounce as from the skies!
  • Soe high a pitch their proud presumption flyes.
  • Nay heav'n it self, high heav'n escapes not free
  • From their base mouthes; and in their common talk
  • Their tongues no less then all the earth do walk.
  • Wherefore ev'n godly men, when so they see
  • Their home of plenty freshly flowing still,
  • Leaning to them, bend from their better will :
  • And thus, they reasons frame : how can it bee
  • That God doth understand? that he doth know,
  • "Who sitts in heav'n, how earthly matters goe?
  • See here the godlesse crew, (while godly wee
  • Unhappy pine,) all happiness possesse:
  • Their riches more, our wealth still growing lesse.
  • Nay, ev'n within my self, my self did say:
  • In vain my hart I purge, my hands in vain
  • In cleaness washt I keepe from filthy stayn,
  • Since thus afflictions scourge me ev'ry day:
  • Since never a day from early East is sent,
  • But brings my payne, my check, my chastisment.
  • And shall I then these thoughtes in wordes bewray .'
  • O lett me, Lord, give never such offence
  • To children thine that rest in thy defence.
  • So then I turn'd my thoughtes another way:
  • Sounding, if I, this secrets depth might find;
  • But combrous cloudes my inward sight did blynd.
  • 132 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Untill at length nigh weary of the chase,
  • Unto thy house I did my steps direct:
  • There loe I Iearn'd what end did these expect,
  • And what? but that in high, but slippery place,
  • Thou didst them sett : whence, when they least of all
  • To fall did feare, they fell with headlong fall.
  • For how are they in lesse then moments space
  • With mine overthrownc ? with frightful} feare
  • Consum'd soe cleane, as if they never were?
  • Right as a dreame, which waking doth deface:
  • So, Lord, most vaine thou dost their fancies make,
  • When thou dost them from carelesse sleepe awake t
  • Then for what purpose was it? to what end?
  • For me to fume with malecontented heart,
  • Tormenting so in me each inward part?
  • I was a foole (I can it not defend),
  • So quite depriv'd of understanding might,
  • That as a beast I bare me in thy sight.
  • But as I was, yet did I still attend,
  • Still follow thee, by whose upholding-hand,
  • When most I slide, yet still upright I stand.
  • Then guide me still, then still upon me spend
  • The treasures of thy sure advise, untill
  • Thou take me hence into thy glories hill.
  • O what is he will teach me clyme the skyes?
  • With thee, thee good, thee goodness to remaine?
  • No good on earth doth my desires detaine.
  • Often my mind, and oft my body tries
  • Their weake defectes : but thou, my God, thou art,
  • My endlesse lott, and fortresse of my hart.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID, 133
  • The faitlilesse fugitives who thee despise,
  • Shall perish all, they all shall be undone,
  • Who leaving thee to whoorish idolls run.
  • But as for me, nought better in my eyes
  • Then cleave to God, my hopes in hym to plaee,
  • To sing his workes while breath shall give me space.
  • PSALM LXXIV.
  • Tit quid, Deus.
  • O God, why hast thou thus
  • Repulst and scattred us?
  • Shall now thy wrath no lymits hold?
  • But ever smoke and burne?
  • Till it to Ashes turne
  • The chosen folk of thy deare fold?
  • Ah! think with milder thought
  • On them whom thou hast bought,
  • And purchased from endlesse daies:
  • Thinck of thy birthright lott,
  • Of Sion, on whose plott
  • Thy sacred house supported staies.
  • Come, Lord, O come with speed,
  • This sacrilegious seed
  • Roote quickly out, and headlong cast:
  • All that thy holy place
  • Did late adorne and grace,
  • Their hatefull hands have quite defast.
  • 134 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Their beastly trumpets rore,
  • Where heav'nly notes before
  • In praises of thy might did flow:
  • Within thy temple they
  • Their ensigns oft display,
  • The ensignes, which their conquest show,
  • As men, with axe on arme,
  • To some thick forrest swarmc,
  • To lopp the trees which stately stand :
  • They to thy temple flock,
  • And spoiling, cutt and knock
  • The curious workes of carving hand.
  • Thy most, most holy seate,
  • The greedy flames do eate,
  • And have such ruthlesse ruyns wrought,
  • That all thy house is raste;
  • So raste, and so defast,
  • That of that all remayneth nought.
  • Nay, they resolved are,
  • We all alike shall fare,
  • All of one cruell cup shall taste.
  • For not one house doth stand
  • Of God in all the land,
  • But they by fire have laide it waste.
  • We see the signes no more
  • We wont to see before,
  • Nor any now with sp'ryt divine
  • Amongst us more is found,
  • Who can to us expound,
  • What tearme these dolors shall define.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 135
  • How long, O God, how long
  • Wilt tliou winck at the wrong
  • Of thy reviling railing foe?
  • Shall he that hates thy name,
  • And hatred paintes with shame,
  • So do, and do for ever so?
  • Woe us! what is the cause
  • Thy hand his help withdrawes
  • That thy right hand far from us keepes
  • Ah, lett it once arise,
  • To plague thine enimies,
  • Which now embosom'd idly sleepes.
  • -
  • Thou art my God I know,
  • My king, who long ago
  • Didst undertake the chardge of me:
  • And in my hard distresse
  • Didst work me such release,
  • That all the earth did wondring see.
  • Thou by thy might didst make
  • That seas in sunder brake,
  • And dreadfull dragons, which before
  • In deepe, or swamme, or cravvl'd,
  • Such mortall strokes appal'd,
  • They floted dead to ev'ry shore.
  • Thou crusht that monsters head
  • Whom other monsters dread,
  • And so his fishy flesh did'st frame,
  • To serve as pleasing foode
  • To all the ravening brood,
  • Who had the desert for their dame.
  • \
  • 136 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Thou wondrously didst cause
  • Repealing natures lawes,
  • From thirsty flynt a fouutayne flow,
  • And of the rivers cleare,
  • The sandy beds appeare,
  • So dry thou mad'st their chanells grow.
  • The day arraid in light,
  • The shadow-clothed night,
  • Were made, and are maintain'd by thee.
  • The sunn, and sunn-like rays,
  • The boundes of nightes and daies,
  • Thy workmanshipp no lesse they be.
  • To thee the earth doth owe,
  • That earth in sea doth grow,
  • And sea doth earth from drowning spare:
  • The summers corny crowne,
  • The winters frosty gowne,
  • Nought but thy badge, thy lyvery are.
  • Thou then still one, the same,
  • Thiuck how thy glorious name
  • These brain-sick mens dispight have borne,
  • How abject enimies,
  • The Lord of highest skies,
  • With cursed taunting tongues have tome.
  • Ah ! give noe hauke the pow're
  • Thy turtle to devowre,
  • Which sighes to thee with moorning mones :
  • Nor utterly out-rase
  • From tables of thy grace
  • The flock of thy afflicted ones.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 137
  • But call thy league to mynd,
  • For horror all doth blind.
  • No light doth in the land remayne:
  • Rape, murther, violence,
  • Each outrage, each offence,
  • Each where doth range, and rage and raigne.
  • Enough, enough we mourne:
  • Let us no more returne
  • Repulst with blame and shame from thee,
  • But succour us opprest,
  • And give the troubled rest,
  • That of thy praise their songes may be.
  • Rise, God, pleade thyne owne case,
  • Forget not what disgrace
  • These fooles on thee each day bestow:
  • Forgett not with what cries
  • Thy foes against thee rise,
  • Which more and more to heav'n doe grow.
  • PSALM LXXV.
  • Conjitebimur tibi.
  • Thee, God, O thee, wee sing, we celebrate:
  • Thy actes with wonder who but doth relate?
  • So kindly nigh thy name our need attendeth.
  • Sure I, when once the chardge 1 undergo
  • Of this assembly, will not faile to show
  • My judgments such, as justest rule commendeth.
  • 138 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • The people loose, the land I shaken find :
  • This will I firmly prop, that straitly hind;
  • And then denounce my uncontrolled pleasure:
  • Bragg not you braggardes, and your saucy home
  • Lift not lewd mates: no more with heav'ns high scome
  • Daunce on in wordes your old repyning measure.
  • Where sun first showes, or last enshades his light,
  • Divides the day, or pricks the midst of night,
  • Seeke not the fountayne whence preferment springeth.
  • Gods only fixed course that all doth sway,
  • Lymits dishonors night, and honors day,
  • The king his crowne, the slave his fetters bringeth.
  • A troubled cupp is in Jehovas hand,
  • Where wine and wyny lees compounded stand,
  • Which franckly filld, as freely he bestoweth :
  • Yet for their draught ungodly men doth give,
  • Gives all (not one except) that lewdly lyve,
  • Only what from the dreggs by wringing floweth.
  • And I secure shall spend my happie tymes
  • In my (though lowly) never-dying rymes,
  • Singing with praise the God that Jacob loveth.
  • My princely care shall crop ill-doers low,
  • In glory plant, and make with glory grow
  • Who right approves, and doth what right approveth.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 130
  • PSALM LXXVI.
  • Notus in Judea.
  • Only to Judah God his will doth signify ;
  • Only in Jacob is his name notorious ;
  • His restfull tent doth only Salem dignify;
  • On Syon only stands his dwelling glorious;
  • Their bow, and shaft, and shield, ar.d sword he shivered,
  • Drave warr from us, and us from warr delivered.
  • Above proud princes, proudest in their theevery,
  • Thou art exalted high, and highly glorified:
  • Their weake attempt, thy valiant delivery,
  • Their spoile, thy conquest meete to be historified.
  • The mighty. handlesse grew as men that slumbered,
  • For hands grew mightlesse, sence and life encombered.
  • Nay, God, O God, true Jacobs sole devotion,
  • Thy check the very carrs and horses mortified,
  • Cast in dull slcepe, and quite depriv'd of motion.
  • Most fearefull God, O how must he be fortified!
  • Whose fearelesse foote to bide thy onsett tarieth,
  • When once thy wrath displaied ensigne carieth.
  • From out of heav'n thy .justice judgment thundred
  • When good by thee were sav'd, and bad were punished,
  • While earth at heav'n with feare and silence wondred.
  • Yea, the most ragefull in their rage astonished
  • Fell to praise thee: whom thou, how ever furious
  • Shalt oft restraine, if fury prove injurious.
  • 140 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Then lett your vowes be paid, your offrings offered
  • Unto the Lord, O you of his protection :
  • Unto the fearefull lett your giftes be proffered,
  • Who loppeth princes thoughts, prunes their affection.
  • And so him self most terrible doth verify,
  • In terrifying kings, that earth doth terrify.
  • PSALM LXXVII.
  • Voce mea ad Dominum.
  • To thee my crying call,
  • To thee my calling cry ;
  • I did, O God, adresse,
  • And thou didst me attend:
  • To nightly anguish thrall.
  • From thee I sought redresse;
  • To thee unceassantly
  • Did praying handes extend.
  • All comfort fled my soule: /
  • Yea, God to mind I cal'd,
  • Yet calling God to mynde
  • My thoughts could not appease :
  • Nought els but bitter dole
  • Could I in thincking finde:
  • My sprite with paine appal'd,
  • Could cntertaine no ease.
  • Whole troupes of busy cares.
  • Of cares that from thee came,
  • Tooke up their restlesse rest
  • In sleepie sleeplesse eies:
  • Soe lay I all opprest,
  • My hart in office lame,
  • My tongue as lamely fares,
  • No part his part supplies.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 14L
  • At length, with turned thought,
  • A new I fell to thinck
  • Upon the auncient tymes,
  • Upon the yeares of old:
  • Yea to my mynd was brought,
  • And in my hart did sinck,
  • What in my former rimes
  • My self of thee had told.
  • Loe then to search the truth
  • I sent my thoughts abroade;
  • Meane while my silent hart
  • Distracted thus did plaine:
  • Will God no more take ruth?
  • No further love impart?
  • No longer be my god?
  • Unmoved still remayne?
  • Are all the conduites dry
  • Of his erst flowing grace?
  • Could rusty teeth of tyme
  • To nought his promise turne?
  • Can mercy no more clyme
  • And come before his face?
  • Must all compassion dy?
  • Must nought but anger burne ?
  • Then lo, my wrack I see,
  • Say I, and do I know
  • That change lies in his hand,
  • Who changelesse sitts aloft?
  • Can I ought understand,
  • And yet unmindfull be,
  • What wonders from hym flow ?
  • What workes his will hath wrought?
  • 142 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Nay, still thy acts I minde ;
  • Still of thy deedes I muse;
  • Still see thy glories light
  • Within thy temple shine.
  • What god can any find?
  • (For tearme them so they use)
  • Whose majesty, whose might,
  • May strive, O God, with thine ?
  • Thou only wonders dost;
  • The wonders by thee done
  • All earth do wonder make,
  • As when thy hand of old
  • From servitude unjust
  • Both Jacobs sonnes did take;
  • And sonnes of Jacobs sonne,
  • Whom Jacobs sonnes had sold.
  • The waves thee saw, saw thee,
  • And fearefull fledd the field:
  • The deepe, with panting brest,
  • Engulphed quaking lay:
  • The cloudes thy fingers prest,
  • Did lushing rivers yield ;
  • Thy shaftes did flaming flee
  • Through fiery airy way.
  • Thy voices thundring crash
  • From one to other pole,
  • Twixt roofe of starry sphere
  • And earths then trembling flore,
  • While light of lightnings flash
  • Did pitchy cloudes encleare,
  • Did round with terror role,
  • And rattling horror rore.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 143
  • Meane while through duskie deepe
  • On seas discovered bed,
  • Where none thy trace could view,
  • A path by thee was wrought:
  • A path whereon thy crew
  • As shepherds use their sheepe,
  • Moses and Aron ledd,
  • And to glad pastures brought.
  • PSALM LXXVIII.
  • Attendite, popule.
  • A grave discourse to utter I entend;
  • The age of tyme I purpose to renew,
  • You, O my charge, to what I teach attend;
  • Heare what I speake, and what you heare ensue.
  • The thinges our fathers did to us commend,
  • The same are they I recommend to you:
  • Which, though but heard, we know most true to be:
  • We heard, but heard of who them selves did see.
  • Which never lett us soe ungrateful! grow,
  • As to conceale from such as shall succeed :
  • Let us the praises of Jehova show,
  • Each act of worth, each memorable deede,
  • Chiefly since he him self commanded so:
  • Giving a law to Jacob and his seed,
  • That fathers should this use to sonnes maintayne,
  • And sonnes to sonnes, and they to theirs again.
  • 144 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • That while the yong shall over-live the old,
  • And of their brood some yet shall be unborn ;
  • These memories, in memory enrold,
  • By fretting time may never thence be worn,
  • That still on God their anchor hope may hold ;
  • From him by no dispairefull tempest torn;
  • That with wise hartes and willing mindes they may
  • Think what he did, and what he bidds obey.
  • And not ensue their fathers froward trace,
  • Whoso steps from God rebelliously did stray:
  • A waiward, stubborn, stailesse, faithlesse race ;
  • Such as on Gd n0 nu 'd by hope could lay.
  • Like Ephraims sonnes, who durst not show their face,.
  • But from the battaill fcarefull fled away:
  • Yet bare, as men of warlike excellence,
  • Offending bowes, and armor for defence.
  • And why? they did not hold inviolate
  • The league of God ; nor in his pathes would go.
  • His famous workes and wonders they forgate,
  • "Which often hearing well might cause them know.
  • The workes and wonders which in hard estate
  • He did of old unto their fathers show:
  • Whereof all Egypt testimony yeelds,
  • And of all Egypt, chiefly Zoan fields.
  • There where the deepe did show his sandy flore,
  • And heaped waves an uncouth way enwall:
  • Whereby they past from one to other shore,
  • Walking on seas, and yet not vvett at all.
  • He ledd them so, a cloud was them before
  • While light did last: when night did darknes call,
  • A flaming piller glitt'ring in the skies
  • Their load starr was till sunne again did rise.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 145
  • He rift the rocks, and from their pierced sides,
  • To give them drinck, whole seas of water drew:
  • The desert sand no longer thirst abides;
  • The trickling springs to such huge rivers grew.
  • Yet not content their furie further slides;
  • In those wild waies they anger God anew.
  • As thirst before, now hunger stirrs their lust
  • To tempting thoughtes, bewraying want of trust.
  • And fond conceites begetting fonder wordes ;
  • Can God, say they, prepare with plentious hand
  • Deliciously to furnish out our boordes
  • Here in this waste, this hunger-starved land?
  • We see indeed the streanies the rock affordes:
  • We see in pooles the gathered waters stand:
  • But whither bread and flesh so ready be
  • For him to give, as yet we do not see.
  • This heard, but heard with most displeased eare,
  • That Jacobs race he did so dearly love,
  • Who in his favoure had no cause to feare,
  • Should now so wav'ring, so distrustful! prove;
  • The raked sparkes in flame began t' appeare,
  • And stajed choller fresh again to move ;
  • That from his trust their confidence should swerve,
  • Whose deedes had show'n, he could and would preserve.
  • Yet he unclos : d the garners of the skies,
  • And bade the cloudes ambrosian manna rain:
  • As morning frost on hoary pasture lies,
  • So strawed lay each where this heav'nly grain.
  • The finest cheat that princes dearest prise
  • The bread of heav'n could not in fineness stain:
  • Which he them gave, and gave them in such store,
  • Each had so much, he wish't to have no more.
  • H
  • 146 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • But that he might them each way satisfie,
  • He slipt the raines to east and southerne wind;
  • These on the cloudes their utmost forces try,
  • And bring in raine of admirable kind.
  • The dainty quailes that freely wont to fly,
  • In forced showers to drop were now assign'd :
  • And fell as thick as dust on sun-burnt field,
  • Or as the sand the thirsty shore doth yield.
  • Soe all the plain, whereon their army lay,
  • As farr abroad as any tent was piglit,
  • With feathred rain was wat'red ev'ry way,
  • Which showring down did on their lodgings light.
  • Then fell they to their easy gotten prey,
  • And fedd till fullnes vanquisht had delight:
  • Their lust still flam'd, still God the fuell brought,
  • And fedd their lust beyond their lustfull thought.
  • But fully filld, uot fully yet content,
  • While now the meate their weary chaps did chew
  • Gods wrathfull rage upon these gluttons sent,
  • Of all their troupes the principallest slew.
  • Among all them of Israelis descent
  • His stronger plague the strongest overthrew.
  • Yet not all this could wind them to his will,
  • Still worse they grew, and more untoward still.
  • Therfore he made them waste their weary yeares
  • Roaming in vain in that unpeopled place;
  • Possest with doubtfull cares and dreadfull feares:
  • But if at any time death show'd his face,
  • Then lo, to God they sued, and sued with teares :
  • Then they retorn'd, and early sought his grace :
  • Then they profcst, and all did mainly cry
  • In God their strength, their hope, their help did ly.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 147
  • But all was built upon no firmer ground
  • Then fawning mouthes, and tongues to lying train'd:
  • They made but showes, their hart was never sound:
  • Disloiall once, disloiall still remairTd.
  • Yet he (so much his mercy did abound)
  • Purged the filth, wherwith their soules were staind:
  • Destroid them not, but oft revok'd his ire,
  • And mildly quencht his indignations fire.
  • For kind compassion called to his mynd,
  • That they but men, that men but mortall were,
  • That mortall life, a blast of breathing wind,
  • As wind doth passe, and past no more appeare ;
  • And yet (good God) how ofte this crooked kind
  • Incenst him in the desert every where?
  • Againe repin'd, and murmured againe,
  • And would in boundes that boundles pow'r contain.
  • Forsooth their weake remembrance could not hold
  • His hand, whose force above all mortall hands
  • To ^Egipts wonder did it self unfold,
  • Loosing their fetters and their servile bands:
  • When Zoan plaines where christall rivers rold,
  • With all the rest of those surrounded lands,
  • Saw watry clearnes chang'd to bloudy gore,
  • Pining with thirst in midst of watry store.
  • Should I relate of flies the deadly swarmes?
  • Of filthy froggs the odious anoy?
  • Grashoppers waste, and catterpillers harmes,
  • Which did their fruites, their harvest hope enjoy?
  • How haile and lightning, breaking of the armes
  • Of vines and figgs, the bodies did destroy?
  • Lightning and haile, whose flamy, stony blowes,
  • Their beastes no less, and cattell overthrowes?
  • H 2
  • 148 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • These were but smokes of after-going fire:
  • Now, now his fury breaketh into flame :
  • Now dole and dread, now pine and paine conspire,
  • With angry angells wreak and wrack to frame.
  • Nought now is left to stopp his stailesse ire;
  • So plaine a way is opened to the same.
  • Abroad goes Death, the uttermost of ills,
  • In house, in field, and men and cattell kills.
  • All that rich land, where over Nilus trades
  • Of his wett robe the slymy seedy train,
  • With millions of mourning cries bewailes
  • Of ev'ry kind their first begotten slain.
  • Against this plague no wealth, no worth prevailes:
  • Of all that in the tentes of Cham remayn,
  • Who of their house the propps and pillers were,
  • Themselves do fall, much lesse can others beare.
  • Mcane while, as while a black tempestuous blast
  • Drowning the earth, in sunder rentes the skies,
  • A shepheard wise to howse his flock doth haste,
  • Taking neare waies, and where best passage lies :
  • God from this mine, through the barren waste
  • Conductes his troupes in such or safer wise:
  • And from the seas his sheepe he fcarelesse saves,
  • Leaving their wolves intombed in the waves.
  • But them leaves not until! they were possest
  • Of this his hill, of this his holy place,
  • Whereof full conquest did him Lord invest,
  • When all the dwellers fledd his peoples face,
  • By him subdu'd, and by his hand opprest.
  • Whose heritage he shared to the race,
  • The twelve-fold race of godly Israeli,
  • To lord their landes, and in their dwellings dwell.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 149
  • But what availes? not yet they make an end
  • To tempt high God, and stirre his angry gall :
  • From his prescript another way they wend,
  • And to their fathers crooked by-pathes fall.
  • So with vaine toile distorted bowes we bend:
  • Though level'd right, they shoote not right at all.
  • The idoll honor of their damned groves,
  • When God it heard, his jealous anger moves.
  • For God did hcare, detesting in his hart
  • The Israelites, a people soe perverse:
  • And from bis seate in Silo did depart,
  • The place where God did erst with men converse.
  • Right well content that foes on every part
  • His force captyve, his glory should reverse:
  • Right well content (so ill content he grew)
  • His peoples bloud should tyrantes blade imbrue.
  • Soe the young men the flame of life bereaves:
  • The virgins live despair'd of manage choise :
  • The sacred priests fall on the bloudy glaives;
  • No widow left to use her wailing voice.
  • But as a knight, whom wyne or slumber leaves,
  • Hearing alarm, is roused at the noise:
  • Soe God awakes: his haters fly for feare,
  • And of their shame eternall marks do beare.
  • But God chose not, as he before had chose,
  • In Josephs tents, or Ephraim to dwell :
  • But Juda takes, and to Mount Syon goes,
  • To Syon mount, the mount he loved well.
  • There he his house did castle-like enclose;
  • Of whose decay no after times shall tell:
  • While her own weight shall weighty earth sustain,
  • His sacred seate shall here unmov'd remain.
  • 130 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • And where his servant David did attend
  • A shepherds charge, with care of fold and field ;
  • He takes him thence, and to a nohler end
  • Converts his cares, appointing hinr to shield
  • His people, which of Jacob did descend,
  • And feede the ilock his heritage did yield:
  • And he the paines did gladly undergoe,
  • Which hart sincere, and hand discreet did show.
  • PSALM LXXIX.
  • Deus, venerunt.
  • The land of long by thee possessed,
  • The heathen, Lord, have now oppressed :
  • Thy temple holily maintained
  • Till now, is now prophanely stained.
  • Jerusalem quite spoil'd and burned,
  • Hath suffred sack
  • And utter wrack,
  • To stony heapes her buildings turned.
  • The livelesse carcasses of those
  • That liv'd thy servants, serve the crowes:
  • The flock soe derely lov'd of thee
  • To ravening beastes deare foode they be,
  • Their bloud doth streame in every streete
  • As water spilled :
  • Their bodies killed
  • With sepulture can no where meete.
  • To them that hold the neighbour places
  • We are but objects of disgraces :
  • On ev'ry coast who dwell about us,
  • In ev'ry kind deride and flout us.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. lol
  • Ah, Lord ! when shall thy wrath be ended?
  • Shall still thine yre,
  • As quenchless fire,
  • In deadly ardor be extended ?
  • O kindle there thy furies flame,
  • Where lives no notice of thy name:
  • There lett thy heavie anger fall,
  • Where no devotions on thee call.
  • For thence they be, who Jacob eate,
  • Who thus have rased,
  • Have thus defaced,
  • Thus desert laid his ancient seate.
  • Lord, ridd us from our sinnfull combers,
  • Count not of them the passed numbers:
  • But lett thy pitty soone prevent us,
  • For hard extreames have merely spent us.
  • Free us, O God, our freedome giver;
  • Our misery
  • With help supply:
  • And for thy glory us deliver.
  • Deliver us, and for thy name
  • With mercy cloth our sinnfull shame :
  • Ah ! why should this their byword be,
  • Where is your God? where now is he?
  • Make them, and us on them behold,
  • That not despised,
  • But deerly prised,
  • Thy wreakfull hand our bloud doth hold.
  • Where grace and glory thee enthroneth,
  • Admitt the grones the prisoner groneth :
  • The poore condem'd for death reserved
  • Let be by thee in life preserved.
  • 152 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • And for our neighbours, Lord, remember
  • Th' opprobrious shame
  • They lent thy name
  • With seav'n-fold gaine to them to render.
  • Soe we thy servantes, we thy sheep,
  • Whom thy lookes guide, thy pastures keepe:
  • Till death define our lyving daies,
  • Will never cease to sound thy praise.
  • Nay, when we leave to see the sunn,
  • The after goers
  • We will make knowers
  • From age to age what thou hast done.
  • PSALM LXXX.
  • Qui regis Israel.
  • Heare thou greate heardsman that dost Jacob feed:
  • Thou Josephs shepheard shine from cherubs throne :
  • In Ephraim, Benjamyn, Manasses need,
  • Awake thy power, and make thy puisance knowne.
  • Free us distressed, raise us overthrowne,
  • Reduce us straid, O God, restore us banish'd:
  • Display thy faces skie on us thine owne,
  • Soe we shall safely dwell, all darkuesse vanish'd.
  • Lord God of hosts, what end, what rneane appeares
  • Of thy wrathes fume against thy peoples cry?
  • Whom thou with teares for bread, for drink with teares
  • So diettest, lhat we abandon'd Iy,
  • To foes of laughter, and to dwellers by,
  • A field of brawll; but God restore us banish'd
  • Display on us thy faces cleered sky,
  • So we shall safely dwell, all darkness vanish'd.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAViD. 153
  • A vine thou didst translate from Zoan playnes,
  • And weeding them that held the place of old,
  • Nor planting care didst slack, nor pruning paines,
  • To fix her rootes, whom fieldes could not enfold.
  • The hills were cloked with her pleasing cold :
  • With cedars state her branches height contended:
  • Scarse here the sea, the river there controld
  • Her amies, her handes, soe wide she both extended.
  • Why hast thou now thy self dishedg'd this vine,
  • Carelesly left to passengers in prey?
  • Unseemly rooted by the woodbred swine,
  • Wasted by other beasts that wildly stray?
  • O God, retorne, and from thy starry stay
  • Review this vyne, reflect thy looking hither;
  • This vineyard see, whose plott thy hande dyd lay,
  • This plant of choise, ordained not to wither.
  • Consum'd with flames, with killing axes hewne,
  • All at thy frown they fall, and , and dy :
  • But heape thou might, on thy elected one,
  • That stablest man in whom we may afty.
  • Then we preserv'd thy name shall magnify
  • Without revolt, Lord God restore us banish'd:
  • Display on us thy faces cleered sky,
  • Soe we shall safely dwell, all darknesse vanish 'd.
  • PSALM LXXXI.
  • Exultate Deo.
  • All gladdnes, gladdest hartes can hold,
  • In meriest notes that mirth can yield,
  • Lett joyfnll songes to god unfold,
  • To Jacobs god our sword aud shield.
  • h3
  • 154 THE PSALMS OF DAVID,
  • Muster hither musicks joyes,
  • Lute, and lyre, and tahretts noise :
  • Lett noe instrument be wanting,
  • Chasing grief, and pleasure planting.
  • When ev'ry month beginning takes,
  • When fixed tymes bring sacred daics;
  • When any feast his people makes;
  • Lett trumpetts tunes report his praise.
  • This to us a law doth stand,
  • Pointed thus by Gods owne hand ;
  • Of his league a signe ordained,
  • When his plagues had ./Egipt pained.
  • There heard I, erst unheard by me,
  • The voice of God, who thus did say :
  • Thy shoulder I from burthen free,
  • Free sett thy hand from baked clay.
  • Vexed, thou my aide did'st crave ;
  • Thunder-hid I answer gave:
  • Till the streames where strife did move thee,
  • Still I did with triall prove thee.
  • I bade thee then attentive be,
  • And told thee thus: O Israeli,
  • This is my covenant that with thee
  • No false, nor forrein god shall dwell.
  • I am God, thy god, that wrought
  • That thou wert from ./Egipt brought:
  • Open me thy mouth, to feede thee
  • I will care, nought els shall neede thee.
  • But ah, my people scorn'd my voice,
  • And Israeli rebelled still:
  • So then I left them to the choise
  • Of fro ward way, and wayward will.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 155
  • Why alas ! why had not they
  • Heard my voice, and held my way?
  • Quickly I their foes had humbled,
  • All their haters headlong tumbled.
  • Subdu'd by me who them annoid,
  • Had serv'd them now in base estate:
  • And of my graunt they had cnjoy'd
  • A lease of blisse with endlesse date.
  • Flower of the finest wheate
  • Had been now their plenteous uieate:
  • Honey them from rocks distilled
  • Filled had, yea over filled.
  • PSALM LXXXII.
  • Deus stetit.
  • Where poore men plead at princes barre,
  • Who gods (as God's vicegerents) are:
  • The God of gods hath his tribunall pight,
  • Adjudging right
  • Both to the judge, and judged wight.
  • How long will ye just doome neglect?
  • How long, saith he, bad men respect?
  • You should his owne unto the helplesse give,
  • The poore releeve,
  • Ease him with right, whom wrong doth greeve.
  • You should the fatherlesse defend:
  • You should unto the weake extend
  • Your hand, to loose and quiet his estate
  • Through lewd mens hate
  • Entangled now in deepe debate.
  • 156 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • This should you doe: but what doe ye?
  • You nothing know, you nothing see:
  • No light, no law; fie, fie, the very ground
  • Becomes unsound,
  • Soe righte wrong, all your faultes confound.
  • Indeed to you the stile I gave
  • Of Gods, and sonnes of God, to have:
  • But err not, princes ; you as men must dy :
  • You that sitt high
  • Must fall, and low as others ly.
  • Since men are such, O God, arise:
  • Thy self most strong, most just, most wise,
  • Of all the earth king, judge, disposer be;
  • Since to decree
  • Of all the earth belongs to thee.
  • PSALM LXXXIII.
  • Deus, quis similis.
  • Be not, O be not silent still:
  • Rest not, O God, with endlesse rest :
  • For lo thine enemies
  • With noise and tumult rise;
  • Hate doth their hartes with fiercenes fill,
  • And lifts their heades who thee detest.
  • Against thy folk their witts they file
  • To sharpest point of secret sleight:
  • A world of trapps and traines
  • They forge in busy braines,
  • That they thy hid ones may beguile,
  • Whom thy wings shroud from searching sight.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 157
  • Come lett us of them nothing make:
  • Lett none, them more a people see:
  • Stopp we their verie name
  • Within the mouth of tame.
  • Such are the counsells these men take,
  • Such leagues they link, and these they be.
  • First Edoms sonnes, then Ismaell,
  • With Moab, Hagar, Geballs traine :
  • With these the Amonites,
  • The fierce Amalekites,
  • And who in Palestina dwell,
  • And who in tentes of Tyre remaine.
  • Ashur, though further of he lye,
  • Assisteth Lotts incestuous brood.
  • But, Lord, as Jabin thou
  • And Sisera didst bow:
  • As Midian did fall and dye
  • At Endor walls, and Kyson flood.
  • As Oreb, Zeb, and Zeba strong,
  • As Salmana who Iedd thy foes:
  • (Who meant, nay, said no lesse
  • Then that they would possesse
  • Gods heritage) became as dunge:
  • Soe, Lord, O soe, of these dispose.
  • Torment them, Lord, as tossed balls;
  • As stubble scatt'red in the aire:
  • Or as the branchy brood
  • Of some thick mountain wood,
  • To naught, or nought but ashes falls,
  • When flames doe singe their leavy haire.
  • 168 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • So with thy tempest them pursue,
  • So with thy whirlewind them affright:
  • So paint their daunted face,
  • With pencell of disgrace,
  • That they at length to thee may sue,
  • And give thy glorious name his right.
  • Add feare and shame, to shame and feare :
  • Confound them quite, and quite deface;
  • And make them know that none
  • But thou, and thou alone,
  • Dost that high name Jehovah beare,
  • High plac't above all earthly place.
  • PSALM LXXXIV.
  • Quam dilecta !
  • How lovely is thy dwelling,
  • Greate God, to whom all greatnes is belonging !
  • To view thy courtes farre, farre from any telling,
  • My soule doth long, and pine with longing.
  • Unto the God that liveth,
  • The God that all life giveth
  • My hart and body both aspire,
  • Above delight, beyond desire.
  • Alas ! the sparrow knoweth
  • The house, where free and fearelesse she resideth:
  • Directly to the neast the swallow goeth,
  • Where with her sonnes she safe abidcth.
  • O altars thine, most mighty
  • In warre, yea most allmighty:
  • Thy altars, Lord ! ah ! why should I
  • From altars thine excluded ly?
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 15$
  • happy who remaineth
  • Thy houshold-man, and still thy praise unfoldelh;
  • O happy who him self on thee sustaineth,
  • Who to thy house his jorney holdcth I
  • Me seemes I see them going
  • Where mulberies are growing:
  • How wells they digg in thirsty plaine,
  • And cisternes make for falling rayne.
  • Me seemes I see augmented
  • Still troop with troop, till all at length discover
  • Sion, wherto their sight is represented
  • The Lord of hostes, the Sion lover.
  • Lord, O God, most mighty
  • In warre, yea most all mighty :
  • Heare what I begg ; barken, I say,
  • O Jacob's God, to what I pray.
  • Thou art the shield us shieldeth :
  • Then, Lord, behold the face of thine anointed.
  • One day spent in thy courts more comfort yieldeth
  • Then thousands otherwise appointed.
  • 1 count it cleerer pleasure
  • To spend my ages treasure
  • Waiting a porter at thy gates,
  • Then dwell a lord with wicked mates.
  • Thou art the sunn that shincth,
  • Thou art the buckler, Lord, that us defendeth :
  • Glory and grace Jehovas hand assigneth :
  • And good, without refusall, sendeth
  • To him who truly treadeth
  • The path to purenes leadeth.
  • O Lord of might, thrice blessed he,
  • Whose confidence is built on thee.
  • 160 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • PSALM LXXXV.
  • Benedixisti, Domine.
  • Mighty Lord, from this thy land
  • Never was thy love estrang'd :
  • Jacobs servitude thy hand
  • Hath we know to freedome chang'd.
  • All thy peoples wicked parts
  • Have byn banisht from thy sight,
  • Thou on Ihem hast cured quite
  • AH the woundes of synnfnll dartes.
  • Still thy choller quenching soe,
  • Heate to flame did never grow.
  • Now then, God, as heretofore,
  • God, the God that dost us save,
  • Change our state, in us no more,
  • Lett thine anger object have.
  • Wilt thou thus for ever grieve?
  • Wilt thou of thy wrathfull rage
  • Draw the threed from age to age?
  • Never us againe relieve?
  • Lord, yet once our hartes to joy
  • Show thy grace, thy help employ.
  • What speake I? O lett me heare
  • What he speakes: for speake hee will.
  • Peace to whome he love doth beare,
  • Lest they fall to folly still.
  • Ever nigh to such as stand
  • In his feare his favour is :
  • How can then his glory misse
  • Shortly to enlight our land ?
  • Mercy now and truth shall meete :
  • Peace with kisse shall justice greete.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 161
  • Truth shall spring in ev'ry place,
  • As the hearb, the earthes attire:
  • Justices long absent face
  • Heav'n shall show, and Earth admire.
  • Then Jehova on us will
  • Good on good in plenty throw:
  • Then shall we in gladdnes mow,
  • Wheras now in grief we till.
  • Then before him in his way
  • All goe right, not one shall stray.
  • PSALM LXXXVI.
  • Inclina, D omine.
  • jEternall Lord, thine eare incline:
  • Heare me most helplesse, most oppressed:
  • This client save, this servant thine,
  • Whose hope is whole to thee addressed.
  • On me, Jehova, pitty take:
  • For daily cry to thee I make.
  • Thy servantes soule from depth of saddness
  • That climes to thee, advance to gladdnes.
  • O Lord, I know thee good and kind,
  • On all that aske much mercy spending:
  • Then heare, O Lord, with heedfull mynd
  • These carefull suites of my commending.
  • I only call when much I neede:
  • Needes of thy help I then must speed :
  • A God like whom (if gods be many)
  • Who is, or doth, there is not any.
  • 102 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • And therefore, Lord, before thy face
  • All nations which thy hand hath framed,
  • Shall come with low adoring grace,
  • And praise the name upon thee named.
  • For thou art greate, and thou alone
  • Dost wonders, God, done else by none:
  • O in thy truth my path discover,
  • And hold me fast thy fearing lover.
  • Lord, all my hart shall synge of thee:
  • By me thy name shall still be praised,
  • Whose goodnesse richly powr'd on me
  • From lowest pitt my soule hath raised.
  • And now againe mine enimies
  • Doe many, mighty, prowd arise :
  • By whom with hate my life is chased,
  • While in their sight thou least art placed.
  • But thou, Jehova, swift to grace,
  • On light entreaty pardon showest :
  • To wrath dost goe a heavy pace,
  • And full with truth and mercy flowest.
  • Then turne and take of me remorse :
  • With strength my weaknesse re-enforce :
  • Who in thy service have attended,
  • And of thy handmaid am descended.
  • O lett some token of thy love
  • Be eminently on me placed;
  • Some cognisance to teach and prove,
  • That thine I am, that by thee graced,
  • To dye their cheekes in shamefull hue,
  • That now with spite my soule pursue.
  • Eye-taught how me thou dost deliver
  • My endlesse aid and comfort giver.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 1G3
  • PSALM LXXXVII.
  • Fundamenta ejus.
  • Founded upon the hills of holinesse
  • Gods city stands: who more love beareth
  • To gates of Sion high in lowlinesse,
  • Then all the townes that Juda reareth.
  • City of God, in Gods decree
  • What noble things are said of thee !
  • I will, saith he, hence foorth be numbered
  • Egipt and Babell with my knowers .
  • That Palestine and Tyre, which combered
  • The fathers, with the after-goers
  • Shall joyne : soe iEthiope from whence
  • The borne shall be, as borne from hence.
  • Yea this, men shall of Sion signify :
  • To him, and him it gave first breathing;
  • Which highest God shall highly dignify,
  • Eternall stay to it bequeathing.
  • Jehova this account shall make,
  • When he of his shall muster take.
  • That he, and he who ever named be,
  • Shall be as borne in Sion named:
  • In Sion shall my musique framed be,
  • Of lute and voice most sweetly framed:
  • I will, saith he, to Sion bring
  • Of my fresh fountaines ev'ry spring.
  • If)4 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • PSALM LXXXVIII.
  • Domine Deus.
  • My God, ray Lord, my help, my health ;
  • To thee my cry
  • Doth restles fly,
  • Both when of sunn the day
  • The treasures doth display,
  • And night locks up his golden wealth.
  • Admit! to presence what I crave:
  • bow thine eare
  • My cry to he are,
  • Whose soule with ills and woes
  • So flowes, soe overflowes,
  • That now my life drawes nigh the grave.
  • With them that fall into the pitt
  • 1 stand csteem'd :
  • Quite forcelesse deem'd,
  • As one who free from strife,
  • And sturr of mortall life,
  • Among the dead at rest doth sitt.
  • Right like unto the murdrcd sort,
  • Who in the grave
  • Their biding have;
  • Who now thou dost no more
  • Remember as before,
  • Quite, quite cut on" from thy support.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 16*
  • Tlirowne downe into the grave of graves
  • In darknes deepe
  • Tliou dost me keepe :
  • Where lightning of thy wrath
  • Upon tne lighted hath,
  • All overwhelm'd with all thy waves.
  • Who did know me, whome I did know,
  • Remov'd by thee
  • Are gone from me,
  • Are gone? that is the best:
  • They all me so detest,
  • That now abrode I blush to goe.
  • My wasted eye doth melt away,
  • Fleeting amaine,
  • In streames of paine,
  • While I my praiers send,
  • While I my hands extend,
  • To thee my God, and fade noe day.
  • Alas, my Lord, wilt then be tyme,
  • When men are dead,
  • Thy truth to spread?
  • Shall they, whom death hath slaiue,
  • To praise thee live againe,
  • And from their lowly lodgings clime?
  • Shall buried mouthes thy mercies tell?
  • Dust and decay
  • Thy truth display ?
  • And shall thy workes of mark
  • Shine in the dreadfull dark?
  • Thy justice where oblivions dwell?
  • 166 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Good reason then I cry to thee,
  • And ere the light
  • Salute ray sight,
  • My plaint to thee direct:
  • Lord why dost thon reject
  • My soule, and hide thy face from me?
  • Ay me, alas, I faint, I dy,
  • So still, so still
  • Thou dost me fill,
  • And hast from yongest ycares,
  • With terrifying feares,
  • That I in traunce amaz'd doe ly.
  • All over me thy furies past:
  • Thy feares my mind
  • Doe fettling bind,
  • Flowing about me soe,
  • As flocking waters flow,
  • No day can overrun their haste,
  • Who erst to me were neare and deare,
  • Far now, O fair
  • Disjoyned are :
  • And when I would them see,
  • Who my acquaintance be,
  • As darknesse they to me appeare.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 167
  • PSALM LXXXIX.
  • Misericordias Domini.
  • The constant promises, the loving graces,
  • That cause our debt, eternall Lord, to thee,
  • Till ages shall fill up their still void spaces,
  • My thankfull songes unaltred theme shall be,
  • For of thy bounty thus my thoughtcs decree:
  • It shall be fully built, as fairely founded,
  • And of thy truth attesting heav'ns shall see
  • The boundlesse periods, though theirs be bounded.
  • Loe I have leagu'd, thou saist with my elected,
  • And thus have to my servant David svvorne :
  • Thy offspring kings, thy throne in state erected
  • By my support, all threates of time shall scorne:
  • And Lord, as running skies with wheeles unworne
  • Cease not to lend this wonder their commending:
  • Soe with one mind praises no lesse adorne
  • This truth, the holy troopes thy court attending.
  • For who among the clouds with thee compareth?
  • What angell there thy paragon doth raigne?
  • Whose majesty, whose peerelesse force declareth
  • The trembling awe of thine immortal traine.
  • Lord God, whom hostes redoubt, who can maintaine
  • With thee in powrfullnes a rivall's quarrell ?
  • Strongest art thou, and must to end remaine,
  • Whome compleate faith doth armor-like apparrell.
  • Thy lordlie check the seas proud courage quailed,
  • And highly swelling, lowly made reside:
  • To crush stout Pharaoh thy arme prevailed:
  • What one thy foe did undisperst abide ?
  • 168 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • The heav'n, the earth, and all in bosome wide
  • This huge rounde engine clipps, to thee pertaineth
  • Which firmly based, not to shake or slide,
  • The unseene hinge of North and South sustaineth.
  • For North and South were both by thee created,
  • And those crosse points our bounding hills behold,
  • Thabor and Hermon, in whose joy related
  • Thy glorious grace from East to West is told :
  • Thy arme all power, all puisance doth enfold,
  • Thy lifted hand a might of wonder showeth,
  • Justice and Judgment doe thy throne uphold,
  • Before thy presence Truth with Mercy goeth,
  • Happy the people, who with hasty running
  • Post to thy court when trumpets tryumph blow:
  • On pathes enlighted by thy faces sunning,
  • Their stepps, Jehova, unoffended goe.
  • Thy name both makes them glad and holds them so
  • High thought into their hartes thy justice powreth;
  • The worship of their strength from thee doth flow,
  • And in thy love their springing empire flowreth.
  • Tor by Jehovas shield stand we protected,
  • And thou gav'st Israel their sacred king,
  • What time in vision thus thy word directed
  • Thy loved prophet: ayd I will you bring.
  • Against that violence your state doth wring
  • From one among my folk by choise appointed :
  • David my servant : him to act the thing
  • Have I with holy oile my self anointed.
  • My hand shall bide his never-failing piller,
  • And from myne arme shall he derive his might:
  • Not closly undermin'd by cursed wilier,
  • Nor overthrown by foe in open fight,
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 1GD
  • For I will quaile his vexers in his sight,
  • All that him hate, by me shall be mischaunced,
  • My truth, my clemency, on him shall light,
  • And in my name his head shall be advaunced.
  • Advaunced so that twixt the watry borders
  • Of seas and flouds this noble land define;
  • All shall obey, subjected to the orders
  • Which his imperious hand for laws shall signe.
  • He unto me shall say, thou father mine,
  • Thou art my God, the fort of my salvation,
  • And I my first-bornes roome will him assigne,
  • More highly thron'd than king of greatest nation.
  • While circling time, still ending and beginning,
  • Shall runne the race where stopp nor start ap;:
  • My bounty towards him, not ever ending,
  • I will conserve nor write my league in yeares.
  • Nay more, his sonnes, whom fathers love endeares,
  • Shall find like blisse for legacie bequeathed,
  • A stedfast throne, I say, till heav'nly spheares
  • Shall faint, in course, where yet they never breathed.
  • Now if his children doe my lawes abandon,
  • And other pathes then my plaine judgments chuse,
  • Breake my behestes, prophanely walke at randon,
  • And what I bidd with froward hart refuse :
  • I meane indeede on their revolt to use
  • Correcting rodd, their sinne with whipps to chasten:
  • Not in their fault my loves defect excuse,
  • Nor loose the promise once my faith did fasten.
  • My league shall hold, my word persist unchanged,
  • Once sworne I have, and sworne in holinesse:
  • Never shall I from David be estranged,
  • His seede shall ever bide, his seate no lesse :
  • I
  • 170 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • The daies bright guide, the nightes pale governess
  • Shall claime no longer lease of their enduring,
  • Wliome I behold as heav'nly wittnesses,
  • In tearmlesse tunics, my tearmlessc truth assuring.
  • And yet, O now, by thee abjected, scorned,
  • Scorcht with thy wrath is thy anointed one,
  • Hated his league, the crowne him late adorned
  • Puld from his head, by thee, augments his moane.
  • Raz'd are his fortes, his walls to mine gone,
  • Not simplest passenger but on bym praieth,
  • His neighbours laugh, of all his haters none,
  • Rut boasts his wrack and at his sorrow plaieth.
  • Takes he his weapon? thou the edge rebatest:
  • Comes to the field to fight? thou makest him fly:
  • Would march with kjngly pomp? thou him unstatest:
  • Ascend his throne? it overthrowne doth ly.
  • His ages spring, and prime of jollity,
  • Winter of woe before the day defineth,
  • For praise, reproche, for honor, infamy
  • He over-loden beares, and bearing pineth.
  • How long, O Lord? what still in dark displeasure
  • Wilt thou thee hide? and shall thine angry thought
  • Still flame? O thinck how short our ages measure,
  • Thinck if wc all created were for nought,
  • For who is he whom birth to life hath brought,
  • But life to death, and death to grave subjecteth?
  • From this necessity (let all be sought)
  • No priviledge exemptes, noe age protecteth.
  • Kind Lord, where is the kindnesse once thou swarest,
  • Swarest in truth thy Davids stock should find ?
  • Show, Lord, yet show thou for thy servant carest,
  • Holding those shames in unforgetting mind
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 171
  • Which we embosom'd bearc of man)' a kind:
  • But ali at thee and at thy Christ directed,
  • To endlesse whom be endlesse praise assign'd,
  • Be this againe, I saie, be this effected.
  • PSALM XC.
  • Domine refugium.
  • Thou our refuge, thou our dwelling,
  • O Lord, hast byn from time to time:
  • Long ere Mountaines proudly swelling
  • Above the lowly dales did clime:
  • Long ere the earth embowl'd by thee
  • Bare the forme it now doth beare:
  • Yea, thou art God for ever, free
  • From all touch of age and yeare.
  • O but man by thee created,
  • As he at first of earth arose,
  • When thy word his end hath dated,.
  • In equall state to earth he goes.
  • Thou saist, and saying, makst it soe:
  • Be noe more, O Adams heyre;
  • From whence ye came, dispatch to goe,
  • Dust againe, as dust ye were.
  • Graunt a thousand yeares be spared
  • To mortall men of life and light:
  • What is that to thee compared?
  • One day, one quarter of a night.
  • When death upon them storm-like falls,
  • Like unto a dreame they grow:
  • Which goes and comes as fancy calls,
  • Nought in substance, all in show.
  • ' 12
  • 172 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • As the hearb that early groweth,
  • Which leaved greene, and flowred faire,
  • Ev'ning change with ruine nioweth,
  • And laies to rost in withering aire:
  • Soe in thy wrath we fade away,
  • With thy fury overthrowne:
  • When thou in sight onr faultes dost lay,
  • Looking on our synns unknown.
  • Therefore in thy angry fuming,
  • Our life of daies his measure spends:
  • All our yeares in death consuming,
  • Right like a sound that sounded ends.
  • Onr daies of life make seaventy yeares,
  • Eighty, if one stronger be :
  • Whose cropp is laboures, dolors, fearcs,
  • Then away in post we flee.
  • Yet who notes thy angry power,
  • As he should feare soe fearing thee ?
  • Make us count each vitall hour,
  • Make thou us wise, we wise shall be.
  • Turne, Lord: shall these things thus goe still?
  • Lett thy servantes peace obtainc:
  • Us with thy joyfull bounty fill,
  • Endlesse joyes in us shall raigne.
  • (Jlad us now as erst we greeved:
  • Send yeares of good, for yeares of ill :
  • When thy hand hath us releeved,
  • Show us and ours thy glory still.
  • Both them and us, not one exempt,
  • With thy beauty beautify:
  • Supply with aid what we attempt,
  • Our attempts with aid supply.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 1/3
  • PSALM XCI.
  • Qui habitat.
  • To him the highest keepes
  • In closet of his care :
  • Who in th'allmighties shadow sleepes,
  • For one affirme 1 dare :
  • Jehova is my fort,
  • My place of safe repaire :
  • My God, in whom of my support
  • All hopes reposed are.
  • From snare the fowler laies,
  • He shall thee sure unty:
  • The noisome blast that plaguing straies
  • Untoucht shall passe thee by.
  • . Soft hiv'd with wing and plume
  • Thou in his shrowd shalt ly,
  • And on his truth noe lesse presume,
  • Then most in shield afl'y.
  • Not mov'd with frightful] night,
  • Nor arrow shott by day:
  • Though plague, I say, in darknesse fight,
  • And wast at noontide slay.
  • Nay, all be thousands here,
  • Ten thousands there decay:
  • That mine to approach thee nere,
  • Shall iinde no force nor way.
  • 174 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • But thou shalt live to see,
  • And seeing to relate,
  • What recompences shared he
  • To ev'ry godlesse mate.
  • When once thou mak'st the Lord
  • Protector of thy state,
  • And with the highest canst accord
  • To dwell within his gate:
  • Then ill, nay, cause of ill,
  • Shall farr excluded goe:
  • Nought thee to hurt, much lesse to kilt,
  • Shall nere thy lodging grow.
  • For angclls shall attend
  • By him commanded soe:
  • And thee in all such waies defend,
  • As his directions show.
  • To beare thee with regard
  • Their hands shall both be spied:
  • Thy foote shall never dash too hard
  • Against the stone misled.
  • Soe thou on lions goe,
  • Soe on the aspicks head:
  • On lionet shalt hurtlesse soe,
  • And on the dragon tread.
  • Loe me, saith God, he loves,
  • I thcrfore will him free:
  • My name with knowledge he approves,
  • That shall his honor be.
  • He asks when paines are rife,
  • And streight receiv'd doth see
  • Help, glory, and his fill of life,
  • With endlesse health from me.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. I7>
  • PSALM XCII.
  • Bonum est confiteri.
  • O lovely thing,
  • To sing and praises frame,
  • To thee, O Lord, and thy high name.
  • Witk>early spring
  • Thy bounty to display,
  • Thy truth when night hath vanquish!; day
  • Yea soe to sing,
  • That ten string'd instrument
  • With lute, and harp, and voice consent.
  • For, Lord, my mind
  • Thy works with wonder fill ;
  • Thy doings are my comfort still.
  • What witt can find
  • How bravely thou hast wrought ?
  • Or deeply sound thy shallow'st thought?
  • The lbole is blind,
  • And blindly doth not know,
  • How like the grasse the wicked grow.
  • The wicked grow
  • Like fraile, though flowry grasse :
  • And falne to wrack past help doe passe.
  • But thou not soe,
  • But high thou still dost stay:
  • And loe thy haters fall away.
  • Thy haters loe
  • Decay and perish all;
  • All wicked hands to mine fall.
  • 17(> THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Fresh oiled I
  • Will lively lift my home,
  • And match the matehlesse uiiicorne:
  • Mine eye shall spy
  • My spies in spightfull case:
  • Mine eare shall heare my foes disgrace.
  • Like cedar high,
  • And like date-bearing tree,
  • For greene and growth the just shall be.
  • Where God doth dwell
  • Shall be his spreading place:
  • God's courts shall his faire bowes embrace.
  • Even then shall swell
  • His blossoms fatt and faire,
  • When aged rinde the stock shall beare.
  • And I shall tell
  • How God my rock is just,
  • So just, with him is nought unjust.
  • PSALM XCIII.
  • Dominus regnnvit.
  • Cloth'd with state, and girt with might,
  • Monarck-like Jehova raignes:
  • He who Earthes foundation pight,
  • Pight at first, and yet sustaines.
  • He whose stable throne disdaines
  • Motions shock, and ages flight:
  • He who endles one remaines,
  • One, the same, in chaugelesse plight.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 177
  • Rivers, yea, though rivers rore,
  • Roring though sea-billowes rise;
  • Vex the deepe, and breake the shore,
  • Stronger art thou, Lord of skies.
  • Firme and true thy promise lies
  • Now and still as heretofore:
  • Holy worshipp never dies
  • In thy howse where we adore.
  • /
  • PSALM XCIV.
  • Deus ultionum Dominus.
  • God of revenge, revenging God, appeare:
  • To recompence the proud, Earthes judge arise.
  • How long, O Lord, how long unpunisht beare
  • Shall these vile men their joyes, their jolities ?
  • How long thus talk, and talking tiranize?
  • Cursedly doe, and doing proudly boast?
  • This people crush by thee affected most?
  • This land afflict, where thy possession lies ?
  • For these the widow and the stranger slay :
  • These work the orphans deadly overthrow.
  • God shall not see them, in their thoughts, they say.
  • The God of Jacob, he shall never know.
  • O fooles, this folly when will you forgoe,
  • And wisdome learne? who first the eare did plant,
  • Shall he him self not heare? sight shall he want,
  • From whose first workmaushipp the eye did grow?
  • 13
  • 178 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Who checks the world, shall he not you reprove?
  • Shall knowledge lack, who all doth knowledge lend ?
  • Nay, ev'n the thoughts of men who raignes above,
  • He knowes, and knowes they more then vainly end.
  • Then blest who in thy schoole his age doth spend;
  • Whom thou, O Lord, dost in thy law enforme,
  • Thy harbour shall him shrowd from ruines storme,
  • While pitts are dig'd where such men shall descend.
  • For sure the Lord his folk will not forsake,
  • But ever prove to his possession true;
  • Judgment againe the course of justice take,
  • And all right hartes shall God their guide ensue.
  • See, if you doubt against the canckred crue,
  • Those mischief-masters, who for me did stand?
  • The Lord, none els: but for whose aiding hand,
  • Silence by now had held my soule in mew.
  • But, Lord, thy goodnes did me then uphold,
  • Ev'n when I said now, now I faint, I fall:
  • And quailed in mind-combats manifold
  • Thie consolations did my joyes recall.
  • Then what society hold'st thou at all,
  • What frendshiup with the throne of misery?
  • Which law pretends, intends, but injury,
  • And justice doth unjust vexation call.
  • To couusell where conspired caitives flock
  • The just to slay, and faultlesse bloud to spill?
  • O no : my God, Jehova is my rock,
  • My rock of refuge, my defensive hill,
  • He on their heades shall well repay their ill:
  • Jehova, loe! the God in whome we joy,
  • Destroy them shall, shall them at once destroy:
  • And what the rneane? their owue malicious will.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 179
  • PSALM XCV.
  • Venite exult emus.
  • Come, come Iett us with joyfull voice
  • Record and raise
  • Jehovas praise:
  • Come Ictt us in our saflies rock rejoyce.
  • Into his presence lett us goe,
  • And there with psalmes our gladdnes show,
  • For he is God, a god most greate,
  • Above all gods, a king in kingly seate.
  • What lowest lies in earthy masse,
  • What highest stands,
  • Stands in his hands:
  • The sea is his, and he the sea-wright was.
  • He made the sea, he made the shore:
  • Come let us fall, lett us adore:
  • Come let us kneelc with awfull grace
  • Before the Lord, the Lord our Makers face.
  • He is our God, he doth us kcepe:
  • We by him ledd.
  • And by him fodd,
  • His people are, we are his pasture sheepe.
  • To day if he some speach will use,
  • Doe not, O doe not you refuse
  • With hardned hartes his voice to heare,
  • As Masha now, or Meribah it were.
  • 180 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Where me your fathers, God doth say,
  • Did angring move,
  • And tempting prove :
  • Yet oft had seene my workes before that day.
  • Twise twenty times my post the sun
  • His yearly race to end had run,
  • While this fond nation, bent to ill,
  • Did tempt, and try, and vex, and greeve me still.
  • Which when I saw, thus said I, loe,
  • These men are mad,
  • And too too bad
  • Erre in their harts; my waies they will not know.
  • Thus therefore unto them I sweare :
  • (I angry can noe more forbeare)
  • The rest for you I did ordaine,
  • I will soe work you never shall attaine.
  • PSALM XCVI.
  • Cantate Domino.
  • Sing, and let the song be new,
  • Unto him that never endeth
  • Sing all earth, and all in you.
  • Sing to God and blesse his name,
  • Of the help, the health he sendeth,
  • Day by day new ditties frame.
  • Make each country know his worth ;
  • Of his actes the wondied story
  • Paint unto each people forth.
  • For Jehova greats alone,
  • All the gods, for awe and glory,
  • Farre above doth hold his throne.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 181
  • For but idolls, what are they,
  • Whom besides mad Earth adoreth.'
  • He the skies in frame did lay:
  • Grace and Honor are his guides,
  • Majesty his temple storeth :
  • Might in guard about him bides.
  • Kindreds come, Jehova give,
  • O give Jehova all together,
  • Force and fame whereso you live.
  • Give his name the glory fitt :
  • Take your ofl'riugs, get you thither,
  • Where he doth enshrined sitt.
  • Goe, adore him in the place
  • Where his pompe is most displaied:
  • Earth, O goe with quaking pace,
  • Goe proclaime Jehova king:
  • Staylesse world shall now be staied;
  • Righteous doome his rule shall bring.
  • Starry roofe, and earthy floore,
  • Sea and all thy widenesse yieldeth :
  • Now rcjojce and leape and rore.
  • Leavy infants of the wood,
  • Fieldes and all that on you feedeth,
  • Daunce, O daunce, at such a good.
  • For Jehova cometh loe !
  • Loe to raigne Jehova cometh:
  • Under whome you all shall goe.
  • He the world shall rightly guide:
  • Truly as a king becometh,
  • For the peoples weale provide.
  • 182 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Dominus regnavit.
  • PSALM XCVII.
  • Jehova comes to raigne.
  • Rejoyce, O earthy maine:
  • You isles with waves enclosed,
  • Be all to joy disposed,
  • Cloudes him round on all sides,
  • And pitchy darknesse hides.
  • Justice and judgment stand
  • As propps on either hand,
  • Whereon his throne abides.
  • The fire before him goes,
  • To asshes lurnes his foes:
  • His flashing lightnings maketh,
  • That Earth beholding quaketh.
  • The mountaines at his sight,
  • His sight that is by right
  • The Lord of all this all,
  • Doe fast on melting fall;
  • As wax by tiers might.
  • The heav'ns his justice tell,
  • Noe lesse they all that dwell.
  • And have on earth their beeing,
  • Are gladd his glory seeing.
  • Shame then, shame may you see,
  • That idoll-servers be:
  • And trust in idolls place,
  • But let before his face
  • All angells bow their knee.
  • THE PSALMS OF. DAVID. 183
  • When Sion this did heare,
  • How did her joyes appeare?
  • How were to mirth invited
  • All townes in Juda sited?
  • For thou, Lord, rulest right:
  • Thou thron'd in glory bright
  • Sitt'st high: they all by thee
  • Be ml'd, who rulers be,
  • Thy might above all might.
  • Who love God, love him still:
  • And haters be of ill.
  • For he their lives preserveth,
  • Whome he as his reserveth,
  • Now light and joy is sowne
  • To be by good men mowne.
  • You just with joy full voice
  • Then in the Lord rejoyce:
  • His holyuesse make knowne.
  • PSALM XCVIII.
  • Cantale Domino.
  • O SING Jehova, he hath wdnders wrought,
  • A song of praise that newnessc may commend :
  • His hand, his holy arme alone have brought
  • Conquest on all that durst with him contend.
  • He that salvation doth th' elect attend,
  • Long hid, at length hath sett in open view:
  • And now the unbeleeving nations taught
  • His heav'nly justice yelding each their due.
  • 184 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • His bounty and his truth the motives were,
  • Promis'd of yore to Jacob and his race,
  • Which ev'ry margine of this earthy spheare
  • Now sees performed in his saving grace.
  • Then earth, and all possessing earthy place,
  • O sing, O shout, O triumph, O rejoyce:
  • Make lute a part with vocall musique beare,
  • And entertaine this king with trumpctts noise.
  • Rore, Sea, and all that trace the bryny sands:
  • Thou totall globe and all that thee enjoy :
  • You streamy rivers clapp your swytnming hands:
  • You mountaines echo each at others joy,
  • See on the Lord this service you employ,
  • Who comes of Earth the crowne and rule to take;
  • And shall with upright justice judge the lands,
  • And equall lawes among the dwellers make.
  • PSALM XCIX.
  • Dominus regnavit.
  • What if nations rage and frett?
  • What if Earth doe ruine threate?
  • Loe, our state Jehova guideth,
  • He that on the cherubs rideth.
  • Greate Jehova Sion holdes,
  • High above what Earth enfolds:
  • Thence his sacred name with terror,
  • Forceth truth from tongues of error.
  • Thron'd he sitts a king of might,
  • Mighty soe, as bent to right:
  • For how can, but be maintained
  • Right by him who right ordained?
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 185
  • O then come, Jehova sing:
  • Sing our God, our Lord, our king:
  • At the footstoole sett hefore him,
  • (He is holy) come, adore him.
  • Moses erst and Aron soe,
  • (These did high in priesthood goe)
  • Samuell soe unto him crying,
  • Got their sutes without denying.
  • But from cloudy piller then
  • God did daigne to talk with men:
  • He enacting, ihey ohserviug,
  • From his will there was no swerving.
  • Then our God, Jehova thou,
  • Unto them thy eare didst bowe:
  • Gratious still and kindly harted,
  • Though for siune they somewhile smarted.
  • O then come, Jehova sing:
  • Sing our God, our Lord, our king.
  • In his Sion mount before him
  • (He is holy) come, adore him.
  • PSALM C.
  • Jubilate Deo.
  • O all you landes, the treasures of your joy,
  • In merry shout upon the Lord bestow :
  • Your service cheerfully on him imploy,
  • With triumph song into his presence goe.
  • 186 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Kuow first that he is God ; and after know
  • This God did us, not we our selves create:
  • We are his flock, for us his feedings grow:
  • We arc his folk, and he upholds our state.
  • With thankfullnesse O enter then his gate:
  • Make through each porch of his your praises ring,
  • All good, all grace, of his high name relate,
  • He of all grace and goodnesse is the spring.
  • Tytne in noe termes his mercy comprehends,
  • From age to age his truth it self extends.
  • PSALM CI.
  • Blisericordiam et judicium.
  • When, now appointed king, I king shall be,
  • What mercy then, what justice use I will,
  • I here, O Lord, in song protest to thee.
  • Till that day come thou me the crowne shalt give,
  • Deepe study I on vcrtue will bestow:
  • And pure in hart at home retired lyve.
  • My lowly eye shall levell at no ill:
  • Who fall from thee with me not one shall stand:
  • Their waies I shall pursue with hatred still.
  • Mischievous heads fane off from me shall goe:
  • Malicious hartes I never will admitt:
  • And whisp'ring biters all will overthrow.
  • Ill shall I brooke the proud ambitious band,
  • Whose eyes looke high, whose puffed hartes doe swell :
  • But for truth-tellers I will search the land.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 187
  • Such men with me my counsailors shall sitt :
  • Such evermore my officers shall be,
  • Men speaking right, and doing what is fitt.
  • Noe fraudulent within my house shall dwell:
  • The cunning coyning tongue shall in my sight
  • Be not endur'd, much lesse accepted well.
  • As soone as 1 in all the land shall see
  • A wicked wretch, I shall him hate outright;
  • And of vile men Jehovas city free.
  • PSALM CM.
  • Domine, exaudi.
  • O Lord, my praying heare:
  • Lord, lett my cry come to thine eare.
  • Hide not thy face away,
  • But haste, and aunswer me,
  • In this my most, most miserable day,
  • Wherein I pray and cry to thee.
  • My daies as smoke are past :
  • My bones as flaming fuell waste :
  • Mowne downe in me (alas)
  • With sithe of sharpest paine,
  • My hart is withered like the wounded grasse,
  • My stomach doth all foode disdaine.
  • Soe leane my woes me leave,
  • That to my flesh my bones do cleave:
  • And soe I bray and howle,
  • As use to howle and bray
  • The lonely pellican and desert owle,
  • Like whome I languish long the day.
  • 188 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • I languish soe the day,
  • The night in watch I waste away ;
  • Right as the sparow sitts,
  • Bereft of spowse or soune :
  • Which irk'd alone with dolors deadly fitts
  • To company will not he woiine.
  • As day to day succeeds,
  • So shame on shame to me proceeds
  • From them that doe me hate :
  • Who of my wrack soe boast,
  • That wishing ill, they wish but my estate,
  • Yet think they wish of ills the most.
  • Therefore my bread is clay,
  • Therefore my teares my wine alay:
  • For how else should it be,
  • Sith thou still angry art,
  • And seem'st for nought to have advanced me,
  • But me advanced to subvert?
  • The sunn of my life daies
  • Inclines to west with falling raies,
  • And I as hay am dride :
  • While yet in stedfast seate
  • Eternall thou eternally dost bide,
  • Thy memory noe yeares can freat.
  • O then at length arise:
  • On Sion cast thy mercies eyes.
  • Now is the time that thou
  • To mercy shouldst incline
  • Concerning her: O Lord, the tyme is now,
  • Thy self for mercy didst assigue.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 189
  • Thy servauntes waite the day
  • When she, who like a carcasse lay
  • Stretch'd forth on mines beere
  • Shall soe arise and live,
  • That nations all Jehovas name shall feare.
  • All kings to thee shall glory give.
  • Because thou hast a new
  • Made Sion stand, restor'd to view
  • Thy glorious presence there :
  • Because thou hast, I say,
  • Beheld our woes, and not refus'd to heare
  • What wretched we did playning pray.
  • This of record shall hide
  • To this and ev'ry age beside:
  • And they commend thee shall
  • Whome thou a new shalt make,
  • That from the prospect of thy heav'nly hall
  • Thy eye of earth survey did take.
  • IJarkning to prisoners grones,
  • And setting free condempned ones:
  • That they, when nations come,
  • And realmes to serve the Lord,
  • In Sion, and in Salem, might become
  • Fitt meanes his honor to record.
  • But what is this? if I
  • In the mid way should fall and dye?
  • My God, to thee I pray,
  • Who canst my praier give ;
  • Turne not to night the noonetide of my day,
  • Since endlesse thou dost agelesse live.
  • 190 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • The earth, the heaven stands
  • Once founded, formed by thy hands:
  • They perish, thou shalt bide:
  • They olde, as clothes shall weare,
  • Till changing still, full change shall them betide,
  • Uncloth'd of all the clothes they beare.
  • But thou art one, still one:
  • Tyme, interest in thee hath none,
  • Then hope, who godly be,
  • Or come of godly race:
  • Endlesse your blisse ; as never ending he,
  • His presence your unchanged place.
  • PSALM cm.
  • Benedic, anima.
  • My soule, my hart,
  • And every inward part,
  • Praise high Jehova, praise his holy name:
  • My hart, my soule,
  • Jehovas name extoll:
  • "What gratious he
  • Doth, and hath done for thee,
  • Be quick to mind, to utter be~not lame.
  • For his free grace
  • Doth all thy shines deface,
  • He cures thy sicknesse, healeth all thy harinc.
  • From greedy grave
  • That gapes thy life to have,
  • He setts thee free:
  • And kindly makes on thee
  • All his compassions, all his mercies swarme.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 191
  • He doth thee still
  • With flowing plenty fill:
  • He eagle-like doth oft thy age renew,
  • The Lord his right
  • Unto the wronged wight
  • Doth ever yield :
  • And never cease to shield
  • With justice them, whom guile and fraud e pursue.
  • His way and trade
  • He knowne to Moses made,
  • His wonders to the sonncs of Israeli,
  • The Lord, I meane,
  • Jehova; who doth leane
  • With mildest will
  • To ruth and mercy still;
  • As slow to wrath, as swift to doing well.
  • When he doth chide
  • He doth not chiding bide:
  • His anger is not in his treasures laide.
  • He doth not serve
  • Our synnes, as sinnes deserve:
  • Nor rccompence
  • Unto us each offence
  • With due revenge in equall ballance weighd.
  • For looke how fane
  • The sphere of farthest starre
  • Drownes that proportion earthly center beares :
  • Soe much, and more,
  • His never empty store
  • Of grace and love
  • Beyond his synnes doth prove,
  • AVho ever hym with due devotion feares.
  • 192 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Nay, looke how farre
  • From east removed are
  • The westerne lodgings of the weary sunne :
  • Soe farre, more farre,
  • From us removed are,
  • By that greate love
  • Our faultes from him doe prove,
  • What ever faultes and follies we have done.
  • And looke how much
  • The neerly touching touch
  • The father feeles towards his sonne most deare.
  • Affects his hart,
  • At ev'ry froward part
  • Plaid by his child :
  • Soe mercifull, soe mild,
  • Is he to them that beare him awfull feare.
  • Our potter he
  • Knowes how his vessells we
  • In earthy matter lodg'd this fickle forme:
  • Fickle as glasse
  • As flowres, that fading passe,
  • And vanish soe :
  • No, not their place we know,
  • Blasted to death with breath of blustring storme.
  • Such is our state;
  • But farre in other rate,
  • Gods endlesse justice and his mercy stand,
  • Both on the good,
  • And their religious brood ;
  • Who uncontrol'd
  • Sure league with him doe hold,
  • And doe his lawes not only understand.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 198
  • Jchova greate
  • Sits thron'd in starry scate :
  • His kingdome doth all kingdoms comprehend.
  • You angells strong,
  • That unto him belong,
  • "Whose deedes accord
  • With his commanding word,
  • Praises and thanks upon Jehova spend.
  • Spirits of might,
  • You that his battaills fight,
  • You ministers that willing work his will:
  • All things lhat he
  • Hath wrought, where soe they be,
  • His praise extoll:
  • Thou with the rest my soule,
  • Praises and thanks spend on Jehovas skill.
  • PSALM CIV.
  • JBenedic, anima mea.
  • Make, O my soule, the subject of thy songe,
  • Th' eteruall Lord: O Lord, O God of might,
  • To thee, to thee, all roiall pompes belonge,
  • Clothed art thou in state and glory bright:
  • For what is else this eye-delighting light;
  • But unto thee a garment wide and long?
  • The vaunted heaven but a curtaine right,
  • A canopy, thou over thee hast hunge?
  • K
  • 194 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • The rafters that his parlors roofe sustaine,
  • In Chev'ron he on christall waters hiudes:
  • He on the windes, he on the cloudes doth raigne,
  • Riding on cloudes, and walking on the windes.
  • AVhose winged blasts his word as ready findes
  • To post from him, as angells of his traine:
  • As to efi'ect the purposes he mindes
  • He makes no lesse the flamy fire faine.
  • By him the earth a stedfast base doth beare,
  • And stedfast soe, as tyme nor force can shake:
  • Which once round waters garment-like did wearc,
  • And hills in seas did lowly lodging take.
  • But seas from hills a swift descent did make,
  • When swelling high by thee they chidden were:
  • Thy thunders rore did cause their conduites quake,
  • Hastning with speed their spurr of hasty fcare.
  • So waters fledd, so monntaines high did rise,
  • So humble vallies deepely did descend,
  • All to the place thou didst for them devise :
  • Where bounding seas, with unremoved end,
  • Thou badst they should themselves no more extend,
  • To hide the earth which now unhidden lies:
  • Yet from the monntaines rocky sides didst send
  • Springs whispring murmurs, rivers roring cries.
  • Of these the beasts which on the plaines doe feede
  • All drink their fill: with these their thirst allay
  • The asses wild and all that wildly breede:
  • By these in their self-chosen stations stay
  • The free-borne fowles, which througli the empty wa
  • Of yielding aire wafted with winged speed,
  • To art-like notes of nature-tuned lay
  • Make earelesse bushes give attentive heed.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. VJo
  • Thou, thou of lieav'n the windowes dost unclose,
  • Dewing the mountaines with thy bounties raine:
  • Earth greate with young her longing doth not lose,
  • The hopefull ploughman hopeth not in vayne.
  • The vulgar grasse, whereof the beast is faine,
  • The rarer herb man for him self hath chose:
  • All things in breef, that life in life maintaine,
  • From Earths old bowells fresh and yongly growes.
  • Thence wyne, the counter-poison unto care:
  • Thence oilc, whose juyce unplaites the folded brow :
  • Thence bread, our best, I say, not daintiest fare,
  • Prop yet of hartes, which else would weakly bow:
  • Thence, Lord, thy leaved people bud and blow:
  • Whose princes thou, thy cedars, dost not spare,
  • A fuller draught of thy cupp to allow,
  • Thus highly rais'd above the rest they are.
  • Yet highly rais'd they doe not proudly scorne
  • To give small birdes an humble entertaine,
  • Whose brickie ncastes are on their branches borne,
  • While in the firrs the storks a lodging gaine.
  • Soe highest hills rock-loving goates sustayne;
  • And have their beads with clyming traces worne:
  • That safe in rocks the conyes may remaine,
  • To yield them caves, their rocky ribbs are tome.
  • Thou makst the mooue, the empresse of the night,
  • Hold constant course with most unconstant face:
  • Thou makst the sunne the chariot-man of light,
  • Well knowe the start, and stop of dayly race.
  • When he doth sett and night his beames deface,
  • To roame abroadc wood-burgesses delight,
  • Lions I meane, who roreing all that space,
  • Seerae then of thee to crave their food by right.
  • k2
  • 196 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • "When he retornes, they all from field retire,
  • And lay them downe in caves their home to rest:
  • They rest, man stirrs to win a workmans hire,
  • And works till sunn hath wrought his way to west.
  • Eternall Lord, who greatest art, and hest,
  • How I amaz'd thy mighty workes admire!
  • Wisdome in them hath every part possest,
  • Wherto in me no wisdome can aspire.
  • Behold the earth, how there thy bounties flow!
  • Looke on the sea extended hugely wide:
  • What watry troops swym, creep, and crawl, and go,
  • Of greatc and small, on that, this, ev'ry side!
  • There the saile-winged shipps on waves doe glide:
  • Sea-monsters there, their plaies and pastymes show:
  • And all at once in seasonable tyde
  • Their hungry eyes oil thee their feeder throw.
  • Thou givst, they take; thy hand it self displaies,
  • They filled feele the plenties of thy hand :
  • AH darkned lye, deprived of thy raies,
  • Thou tak'st their breath, not one can longer stand.
  • They dye, they turne to former dust and sand,
  • Till thy life-giving sprite doe mustiing raise
  • New companies, to reenforce each band,
  • Which still supplied, never whole decaies.
  • Soe may it, oh! soe may it ever goe,
  • Jehovas workes his glorious gladnesse be,
  • Who touching mountaynes, mountaynessmoaking grow,
  • Who eyeing Earth, Earth quakes with quivering knee.
  • As for my self, my scely self, in me
  • While life shall last, his worth in song to show
  • I framed have a resolute decree,
  • And thankfull be, till being I forgoe.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 197
  • O that my song might good acceptance finde :
  • How should my hart in greate Jehova joy !
  • O that some plague this irreligious kinde,
  • Ingrate to God, would from the earth destroy!
  • Meane while my soule uncessautly employ.
  • To high Jehovas praise my mouth and mynd :
  • Nay, all (since all his benefitts enjoy)
  • Praise him whom bandes of time noe age can binde.
  • PSALM CV.
  • Confitemini Domino.
  • Jehovas praise, Jehovas holy fame,
  • O shew, O sound, his actes to all relate:
  • To him your songs, your psalmes unto him frame;
  • Make your discourse his wonders celebrate.
  • Boast ye God-searchers in his sacred name,
  • And your contracted hartes with joy dilate:
  • To him, his arke, his face, lett be intended
  • Your due inquest, with service never ended.
  • Record, I say, in speciall memory
  • The miracles he wrought, the lawes he gave,
  • His servantes you, O Abrahams progeny,
  • You Jacobs sonnes, whome he doth chosen save.
  • We first and most on him our God relye :
  • All be noe boundes his jurisdiction have :
  • And he eternally that treaty mindeth,
  • Which him to us untearmed ages bindeth.
  • 198 THE PSALMS OF DAVID. ,
  • A treaty first with Abraham begun,
  • After againe by oath to Isaac bound,
  • Lastly to Isaacs god-beholding sonne
  • Confirm'd, and made inviolably sound.
  • I give in fee (for soe the grauut did runne),
  • Thee and thine heirs the Canauean ground:
  • And that when few they were, few, unregarded,
  • Yea strangers too, where he their lott awarded.
  • They strangers were, and roam'd from land to land,
  • From realme to realme : though seatlesse, yet secure ;
  • And soe remote from wrong of meaner hand
  • That kings for them did sharp rebuke endure.
  • Touch not, I chardge you, my anointed band,
  • Nor to my prophelts least oflencc procure.
  • Then he for famine spake : scarse had he spoken,
  • When famine came, the staff of bread was broken.
  • But he for them to ^Sgipt had foresent
  • The slave-sold Joseph kindly to prepare:
  • Whose feete if fretting irons did indent,
  • His soule was clog'd with steely boultes of care.
  • Till fame abroad of his divining went,
  • And heav'nly sawes such wisdome did declare;
  • That he a message from the king addressed
  • Of bondage ridd, of freedome repossessed.
  • Noe sooner freed, the monarch in his handes
  • Without controll both house and state doth lay ;
  • He rulers rules, commanders he commaudes;
  • Wills, and all doe: prescribes, and all obey.
  • While thus in tearmes of highest grace he stands,
  • Loe, Israeli to ^Kgipt takes his way,
  • And Jacobs lyne from holy Sem descended,
  • To sojournc comes where Cham his tentes extended.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 199
  • Who now but they in strength and number flowe?
  • Rais'd by their god their haters farre above ?
  • For, chang'd by him, their entertainers grow
  • With guile to hate, who erst with truth did love.
  • But he with sacred Moses wills to goe
  • Aron his choise, those mischiefes to remove :
  • By whose greate workes their senders glory blazed
  • Made Chams whole land with fi ightfull signes amazed.
  • Darknes from day the wonted sunne doth chase
  • (For both he bidds and neither dares rebell),
  • Late watry Nilus lookes with bloudy face:
  • How fishes die, what should I stand to tell?
  • Or how of noisome froggs the earth-bred race
  • Croak where their princes sleepe, not only dwell?
  • How lice and vermyn heav'nly voice attending
  • Doe swarming fall, what quarter not offending?
  • Noe rayny cloude but breakes in stony haile:
  • For cheerefull lightes dismayfull lightnings shine :
  • Not shine alone, their fiery strokes assaile
  • Each taller plant: worst fares the figg and vyne,
  • Nor, call'd to come, doe catterpillers fade
  • With locustes more then counting can define:
  • By these the grasse, the grace of fieldes is wasted,
  • The fruites consum'd by owners yet untasted.
  • Their eldest-borne, that countries hopefull spring,
  • Prime of their youth, his plague doth lastly wound;
  • Then rich with spoile, he out his flock doth bring;
  • In all their tribes not one a weakling found.
  • JEgipt once wisht, now fcares their tarrying,
  • And gladdly sees them on their journey bound;
  • Whome God in heate a shading cloude provideth
  • In dark with lamp of flamy piller guideth.
  • 200 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Brought from his store, at sute of Israeli,
  • Quailes, in whole beavies each remove pursuer
  • Him self from skies their hunger to repell,
  • Candies the grasse with sweete congealed dew.
  • He woundes the rock, the rock doth wounded, swell:
  • Swelling affoordes new streames to chanells new.
  • All for God's mindful! will can not be dryven,
  • From sacred word once to his Abraham given.
  • Soe then in joyfull plight, his loved bands
  • His chosen troopes with triumph on he traines:
  • Till full possession of the neighboure lands,
  • With painelesse harvest of their thancklesse paines,
  • He safely leaves in their victorious hands,
  • Where nought for them to doe henceforth remaines T
  • But only to observe and see fulfilled,
  • What he (to whome be praise) hath said and willed.
  • PSALM CVIv
  • Confitemini Domino.
  • Where are the hymnes, where are the honors due
  • To our good God, whose goodnes knowes no end?
  • Who of his force can utter what is true?
  • Who all his praise in praises comprehend?
  • O blessed they whose well advised sight
  • Of all their life the levell straight doe bend",
  • With endlesse ayming at the mark of right.
  • Lord, for the love thou dost thy people beare,
  • Graunt thought of me may harbor in thy mind:
  • Make me with them thy safeties liv'ry weare,
  • That I may once take notice in what kinde
  • Thy kindness is on thine elected showne :
  • That I may gladdnes in their gladdnes finde,
  • Boasting with them who boast to be thine owne*
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 201
  • Indeede wo have, as our fore-fathers done,
  • Done ill, done wronge, unjustly, wickedly:
  • For (that I may begin where they begun)
  • Thy workcs in Egipt wrought, they passed by,
  • Quite out of thought thy many bounties fell,
  • And at the sea they did thy pacience try:
  • At the Red Sea, they did, I say, rebell.
  • Yet God (O goodnes) saved for his name
  • These mutiners, that this his might might show,
  • For he the waters did rebuking blame,
  • The waters left at his rebuke to flow
  • On sandy deepe, as on the desert sands,
  • Unwett in waves he made his people goe:
  • Setting them safe from all their haters hands.
  • For look how fast their foes did them pursue,
  • Soe fast, more fast the sea pursu'd their foes :
  • All drencht, all dead, not one left of the crue.
  • Then loe beliefe, then thankfullnesse arose
  • In faithlesse, gracelesse hartes : but in a trice
  • Oblyvion all remembraunce overgrowes
  • Of his greate workes, or care of his advise.
  • For gluttonous they flesh in desert crave,
  • That they forsooth might try th'allmighties might;
  • As gluttons fitts, they flesh in desert have,
  • For fully fedd, yet far'd in pining plight.
  • What should I utter how from Moses they
  • And holy Aron sacred in Gods sight,
  • Through envy sought to take the rule away?
  • K3
  • 202 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • The very earth such mischiefe griev'd to beare,
  • And opning made her gaping throate the grave,
  • Where Dathan and Abiram buried were,
  • Buried alive with tcntes and all they have.
  • Whose complices the flash of angry fire
  • Surprised soe, none could from burning save,
  • In ashes rak'd they found their treasons hire.
  • A molten god they did in Horeb frame,
  • And what? forsoulh the suckling of a cow;
  • Their heav'nly glory chang'd to beastly shame,
  • They more then beastes, before a beast did bow.
  • A calfe, nay image of a calfe they serv'd,
  • Whose highest worshipp, hay they should alow,
  • God was forgott, who had them soe preserv'd.
  • Preserv'd them soe by miracles of might,
  • Done in the plaines where fertile Nilns flowes:
  • And wondied workes; which fearefully did fright,
  • The oker bancks their passage did inclose.
  • Therefore their wrack he meant; which while he meant,
  • Moses his chosen in the gapp arose,
  • And tnrn'd his wrath from wrackfull punishment.
  • What more? the land that well deserv'd desire
  • With fond disdaine mistrustfull they reject:
  • Their tentes doe flame with hott rebellious fire,
  • Jehovas wordes receav'd with no respect.
  • For which he in the desert overthrew
  • Them selves, their sonns, with fathers fault infect,
  • Scatt'red, exil'd, no certaine country knew.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 203
  • For (hey to Pehors, filthy idoll, went,
  • And what had bin to dead things sacrific'd,
  • Forbidden foode, abhominably spent,
  • Soc God with anger mightely smpris'd
  • His hurtfall hand against their health did raise;
  • But Phinees, justice done, their lives repris'd,
  • And for that justice purchas'd endlesse praise.
  • Could this suffice? Nay, farther at the brooke,
  • The brooke of Brail, they did the Lord incense:
  • Which then his name of their contention tooke;
  • Where Moses self did smart for their offence,
  • For inly angred that he rashly spake,
  • Forgetting due respect and reverence,
  • Which for his rashnesse God did angry make.
  • After their sonnes came to that lovely land,
  • Noe better minded, all be better blest,
  • Would not roote out (as stoode with his command)
  • The Pagan plants, who then the place possest,
  • But grew together up, and did as they,
  • In idoll service forward as the best:
  • In idoll service roote of their decay.
  • For they both sonnes and daughters offered
  • Unto their gods; gods? no, they devills were:
  • Whose guiltlesse bloud, which wastfully they shed,
  • Imbru'd the idolls Canaan did beare;
  • The land defiled was with murthers done,
  • Whiles they in workes no filthines forbeare,
  • And in concciptes a whooring mainly run.
  • 204 THE PSALMS OF DAVIDl
  • Soe God incensed grew against his owne,
  • And plainly did his heritage detest:
  • Left them to he hy strangers overthrowne,
  • Lorded by foes, by enimies opprcst.
  • Often he freed them by his force divine:
  • But when their witts would give his wrath no res* r
  • Left them at length in worthy plagues to pine.
  • He left them long, yet left them not at last,
  • But saw their woes, and heard their waylfull cries,.
  • Which made him call to thought his cov'nant past-
  • Soe chang'd, not only in him self did rise
  • Repentant pitty of their passed paines:
  • But their captivers now relenting eyes
  • His ruth of them to tender yclding traines.
  • Goe on, O God, as them, soe us to save:
  • Rally thy troopes that widely scattred be,
  • That their due thankes thy holyuesse may have;
  • Their glorious praise thy heav'nly pow'r may see-
  • O God of Izrael, our God, our Lord,
  • Eternall thankes be to cternall thee:
  • Lett all the earth with praise approve my word*
  • PSALM CVIL
  • Confitemini Domino.
  • O celebrate Jehovas praise,
  • For gratious he and good is found ;
  • And noe precinct, noe space of daies,
  • Can his greate grace and goodness boun
  • Say you with me, with me resound
  • Jehovas praise with thankfulnes:
  • Whose bands of perill he unbound,
  • When tyrants hate did you oppresse.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 205
  • How many, and how many tymes,
  • From early East, from evening West,
  • From thirsty coastes, from frosty c1ymes r
  • Hath he dispersed, brought to rest!
  • How many sav'd, who deepe distrest,
  • And straying fane from path and towne,
  • With want and drouth soe sore were prest,
  • That drouth well neer their lives did drowne !
  • They cry'd to him in woefull plight;
  • His succour sent did end their woe.
  • From error train'd he led them right,
  • And made to peopled places goe.
  • Such then in song his mercies show,
  • His wonders done to men display:
  • Who in the hungry hunger soe,
  • Soe doth in thirsty thirst alay.
  • How many fast imprisoned lye
  • In shade of death, and horror blind,
  • Whose feete as iron fetters tye,
  • Soe heavy anguish cloggs their mind!
  • Whom though the Lord did rebells fiudc.
  • Despising all he did advise ;
  • Yet when their hart with grief declin'd
  • Now hetplcsse quite and hopelesse lies.
  • They cry to him in wofull plight;
  • His succour sent doth end their woe.
  • From death to life, from darke to light,
  • With broken boltcs he makes them goe.
  • Such then in song his mercy show,
  • His wonders done to men display ;
  • The gates of brasse who breaketh so,
  • So makes the iron yield them way.
  • 206 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • How many wantonly missled,
  • While fooles, they follow follies traine,
  • For sinne confined to their bed
  • This guerdon of their folly gaine.
  • Their lothing soule doth foode refraine,
  • And hardly, hardly failing breath,
  • Can now his ending gasp restraine
  • From entring at the gate of death.
  • They cry to him in wofull plight:
  • His succour sent doth end their woe.
  • His word puts all their paine to flight,
  • And free from sicknesse makes them goe.
  • Such then in song his mercy show,
  • His wonders done to men display,
  • Tell gladly of his workes they know,
  • And sacrifice of praises pay.
  • How many mounting winged tree
  • For traffique leave retiring land,
  • And on huge waters busied be,
  • Which bancklesse flow on endlesse sand!
  • These, these indeed, well understand,
  • Enform'd by their feare-opeu eye,
  • The wonders of Jehovas hand
  • While on the waves they rocking lye.
  • He bids, and straight on moisty mains
  • The blustring tempest falling flies:
  • x The stairs doe dropp bedasht with raine,
  • Soe huge the waves in combat rise.
  • Now shipp with men do touch the skies:
  • Now downe, more downc then center falls;
  • Their might doth melt, their courage dies,
  • Such hideous fright each sence appalls.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 207
  • For now the whirlwinde makes them wlieele:
  • Now stop'd in midst of broken round
  • As drunckards use, they starring reele,
  • Whose head-lame feete can feele no ground.
  • What helpes to have a pilot sound?
  • Where wisdome wont to guide the stcrne
  • Now in dispairfull danger drownd,
  • Which wisdoms eye cannot discerne?
  • They cry to him in wofull plight,
  • His succour sent doth end their woe.
  • Of seas and winds he partes the fight:
  • To wisshed port with joy they row.
  • Such then in song his mercies show?
  • His wonders done to men display:
  • Make peoples presse his honor know,
  • At princes thrones his praise bewray.
  • How many where doth he convert
  • Well watred grounds to thirsty sand?
  • And saltes the soile for wicked hart
  • The dwellers heare that till the land!
  • How oft againe his gratious hand
  • To watry pooles doth desertes change?
  • And on the fields that fruitlesse stand,
  • Makes trickling springs unhoped range ?
  • Suppose of men that live in want
  • A colony he there do make,
  • They dwell, and build, and sow, and plant,
  • And of their paines greate profitt take.
  • His blessing doth not them forsake,
  • But multiplies their childrens store:
  • Nay, ev'n their cattaill, for their sake,
  • Augmentes in number more and more.
  • 208 THE PSALMS OF DAVtD.
  • Tliey stand while be their state sustaines:
  • Then comes againe that harmefull day
  • Which brings the enterchangc of paines,
  • And their encrease tnrnes to decay.
  • Nor strange ; for he exiled stray
  • Makes greatest kings, scorn'd where they goe:
  • The same from want the poore doth waigh,
  • And makes like beards their houses grow.
  • See this, and joy this thus to see,
  • All you whose judgmentes judge aright:
  • You whose conceites distorted be,
  • Stand mute amazed at the sight
  • How wise were he, whose wisdome might
  • Observe each course the Lord doth hold,
  • To light in men bis bounties light,
  • Whose providence doth all enfold?
  • PSALM CVIII.
  • Paratum cor meum.
  • To sing and play my hart is bent,
  • Is bent God's name to solemnize,
  • Thy service O my tongue, present:
  • Arise my lute, my harp arise.
  • My self will up with dawning skies,
  • And so in song report thy praise,
  • No eare but shall conceave my laies
  • As farre as earth extended lies.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 20&
  • For, Lord, the heav'ns how ever high,
  • Are lower farre then thy sweete grace:
  • Thy truth on stedfast wings doth fly,
  • Aspiring up to cloudy space.
  • O then thy self in highest place
  • Ahove the heav'ns, Jehova, show :
  • And thence on all this earth below
  • Display the sunn-beanies of thy face*
  • To sett thy dearly loved free,
  • To helpe and heare me when I pray.
  • Hark, hark, so shall, so shall it be,
  • Him self doth from his temple say.
  • Then make we heere a merry stay,
  • And let me part out Sichcms fields:
  • The land that Succothes valley yields,
  • By pearch and pole divided lay.
  • Myne Gilead is, Manasses mine:
  • Ephiaims armes shall guard the king:
  • By law shall Juda right define,
  • While I my shoe at Edom fling.
  • Thee, Moab, I will humbled bring
  • To wash my feete in servile place:
  • Thou Palestine, my late disgrace,
  • Triumphed, shalt my triumph sing.
  • But who shall cause us Edom take,
  • And enter Edoms strongest towne;
  • Who but thou, God, us'd to forsake
  • Our troppes, and at our sutes to frowne?
  • Then help us ere distrest we drowne:
  • Who trusts in man doth vainly trust.
  • In only God prevaile we must,
  • He, he, shall tread our haters downe.
  • 210 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • PSALM CIX.
  • Deus laudem.
  • Since thus the wicked, thus the fraudulent,
  • Since Hers thus enforce my hlame:
  • O God, God of my praise,
  • Be not in silence pent:
  • For their malitious vvordes against me raise
  • Engius of hate, and causelesse battry frame.
  • Causelesse? ay me! quite contrary to cause
  • My love they doe with hate repay :
  • With treasons lawlesse spight
  • They answer frendshipps lawes,
  • And good with ill, and help with harme requite:
  • What resteth now, but that to thee I pray ?
  • I pray then what? that lorded at command
  • Of some vile wretch I may him sec :
  • That fittly still his foe
  • To thwart his good may stand:
  • That judg'd from judgment he condemned goc,
  • Yea to his plague, his praier turned be.
  • That speedy death cutt off" his wofull life,
  • Another take his place and port:
  • His children fatherlesse,
  • And husbandlcsse his wife,
  • May wandring begg, and begg in such distrcssc,
  • Their beggred hopes may be their best resort.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 211
  • That usurers may all he hath ensnare,
  • And strangers reape what he hath sowne:
  • That none him friend at all,
  • None with compassions care
  • Embrace his brood, but they to wrack may fall,
  • And falne may lye in following age unknowne.
  • That not his owne alone, but ev'ry cryme
  • Of fathers and forefathers hand,
  • May in God's sight abide;
  • Yea, to eternall tyrne,
  • Synne of his mother, and his mothers side,
  • May in his mind, who is eternall, stand.
  • That he and they soe farre may be forgott,
  • That neither print of being leave
  • What humane nature will,
  • For he remembrcd not,
  • But sought a wretch inhumanly to spill,
  • And would of life an humbled hart bereave.
  • He loved mischief; mischief with him goe:
  • He did noe good ; then doe him none,
  • Be wretchednes his cloake,
  • Into him soaking soe,
  • As water dronken inwardly doth soake,
  • As oile through flesh doth search the hidden bone.
  • Be woe, I say, his garment large and wide,
  • Fast girt with girdle of the same.
  • So be it, be it aye,
  • Such misery betide
  • Unto all such as thirsting my decay,
  • Against my soule such deadly falshood frame.
  • 212 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • But thou, O Lord, my Lord, soe deale with me
  • As doth thy endlesse honor fitt:
  • And for thy glories sake
  • Let me deliverance see,
  • For want and woe my life their ohject make,
  • And in my brest my hart doth wounded sitt.
  • I fade, and faile as shade with falling sunn :
  • And as the grasshopper is tost,
  • Place after place I leese.
  • While fast hath nigh undone
  • The withcrd knotts of my disjoynted knees,
  • And dried flesh all juyce and moisture lost.
  • "Worse yet alas ! I am their scorne, their nod,
  • When in their presence I me show;
  • But thou, thou me uphold,
  • My Lord, my gratious God:
  • O save me in thy mercies manifold,
  • Thy hand, thy work, make all men on me know.
  • They curse me still, but blesse thou where they curse
  • They rise, but shame shall bring them downe.
  • And this my joy shall be,
  • As bad disgrace, or worse,
  • Shall them attyrc then ever clothed me,
  • Trailing in trayne a synfull shamefull gowne.
  • Then, then, will I Jehovas workes relate
  • Where multitudes their meeting have:
  • Because still nigh at hand
  • To men in hard estate
  • He in their most extreamities doth stand,
  • And guiltlesse lives from false condemners save.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 213
  • PSALM CX.
  • Dixit Domimis.
  • Thus to my Lord, the Lord did say :
  • Take up thy seate at my right hand,
  • Till all thy foes that proudly stand,
  • I prostrate at thy footestoole lay.
  • From me thy staffc of might
  • Sent out of Sion goes:
  • As victor then prevaile in fight,
  • And rule repining foes.
  • But as for them that willing yield,
  • In solempne robes they glad shall goe:
  • Attending thee when thou shalt show
  • Triumphantly thy troopes in field:
  • In field as thickly sett
  • With warlike youth full trayne,
  • As pearled plaine with dropps is wett,
  • Of sweete Auroras raine.
  • The Lord did sweare, and never he
  • What once he sware will disavow:
  • As was Melchisedech soe thou,
  • An everlasting priest shalt be.
  • At hand still ready prest
  • To guard thee from anoy,
  • Shall sitt the Lord that loves thee best,
  • And kings in wrath destroy.
  • 214 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Thy realme shall many realmes containe:
  • Thy slaughtred foes thick heaped lye:
  • With crusshed head ev'n he shall dye,
  • Who head of many realmes 'doth raignc.
  • If passing on these waies
  • Thou taste of troubled streames,
  • Shall that eclipse thy shyning raies?
  • Nay, light thy glories beanies.
  • PSALM CXI.
  • Confitehor tibi.
  • At home, abroad, most willingly I will
  • Bestow on God my praises uttmost skill:
  • Chaunting his workes, workes of unmatched might,
  • Deem'd so by them, who in their search delight.
  • Endlesse the honor to his powre pertaines:
  • From end as farre his justice eke remaines.
  • Gratious and good, and working wonders soe,
  • His wonders never can forgotten goe.
  • In hungry waste he fedd his faithfull crue,
  • Keeping his league, and still in promise true.
  • Lastly, his strength he caus'd them understand,
  • Making them lords of all the heathens land.
  • Now what could more each promise, doome, decree,
  • Of him confirme sure, just, unmov'd to be!
  • Preserv'd his folk, his league eternall framd,
  • Quake then with fcare when holy he is nam'd.
  • Reverence of him is perfect wisdoms well:
  • Stand in his lawe, so understand you well.
  • The praise of him (though wicked hartes repine)
  • Unbounded bides, noe time can it define.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 215
  • PSALM CXII.
  • Beatus vir.
  • O in how blessed state he standeth,
  • Who soe Jehova feareth,
  • That in the tilings the Lord commandeth
  • His most delight appeareth !
  • The branches from that body springing
  • On the earth shall freshly flourish :
  • Their pedigree from good men bringing
  • The Lord with blisse will nourish.
  • The happy house wherein he dwelleth
  • Well stored shall persever:
  • The treasures justly got he telleth,
  • Shall bide his ovvue for ever.
  • For he when woe them over-cloudeth
  • The darkned hartes enlighteth:
  • His mildness them and mercy shrowdeth,
  • His justice for them lighteth.
  • He is both good, and goodness lovcth,
  • Most liberal! and lending:
  • All business wherein he moveth
  • With sound advice attending:.
  • B"
  • He, firmly propt, for ever falling,
  • His name exempt from dying:
  • Can heare ill newes without appalling,
  • His hart on God relying.
  • 216 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • His hart (I say), which strongly staid,
  • Is free from feare preserved :
  • Till on his foes he view displaid
  • The plagues hy them deserved.
  • He gives where needs, nay rather straweth,
  • His justice never ending:
  • Soe honors hand, him higher drawcth
  • With glad applause ascending.
  • Of good I mcane: for wicked wretches
  • Shall seeing fume, and fuming
  • Consume to nought, their fruitless fetches
  • To nought with them consuming.
  • PSALM CXIII.
  • Laudate, pueri.
  • O you that serve the Lord,
  • To praise his name accord :
  • Jehova now and ever
  • Commending, ending never,
  • Whom all this earth resoundes,
  • From East to Westerne boundes.
  • He monarch raignes on high :
  • His glory treades the sky.
  • Like him, who can be counted,
  • That dwells soe highly mounted?
  • Yet stooping low beholds
  • What heav'n and earth enfolds.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 217
  • From dust the needy sonle,
  • The wreleli from miry hole
  • He lifts: yea kings he makes them,
  • Yea kings his people takes them,
  • He gives the barren wife
  • A fruitful! mothers life.
  • PSALM CXIV.
  • In exitu Israel.
  • At what tyme Jacobs race did leave of JEgipt take,
  • And ^Egipts barbrous folk forsake,
  • Then, then, our God, our king, elected Jacobs race
  • His temple there and throne to place.
  • The sea beheld and fledd: Jordan with swift returne
  • To twyned spring his streames did turne;
  • The mountaines bounded soe, as fedd in fruitful! ground
  • The fleezed rammes doe frisking bound,
  • The hillocks capreold soe, as wanton by their dammes
  • We capreoll see the lusty lambes.
  • O sea, why didst thou fly? Jordan, with swift returne
  • To twyned spring what made thee turne ?
  • Mountaines, why bounded ye, as fedd in fruitful] ground
  • The fleezed rammes doe frisking bound ?
  • Hillocks, why capreold ye, as wanton by their dammes
  • We capreoll see the lusty lambes?
  • Nay you, and Earth with you, quake ever at the sight
  • Of God Jehova, Jacobs might,
  • Who in the hardest rocks makes standing waters grow,
  • And purling springs from flints to flow.
  • 218 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • PSALM CXV.
  • Non nobis, Domine.
  • Not us, I say, not us,
  • But thine ovvne name respect, eternall Lord:
  • And make it glorious,
  • To show thy mercy and confirme thy word.
  • Why, Lord, why should these nations say
  • Where doth your God now make his stay?
  • You ask where our God is?
  • In heav'n enthron'd, no mark of mortal eye.
  • Nor hath, nor will he misse
  • What likes his will, to will effectually ;
  • What are your idolls? we demand :
  • Gold, silver, workes of workmens hand.
  • They mouthes, hut speechlesse, have:
  • Eyes sightlesse; eares, no newes of noise can tell ;
  • Who them their noses gave
  • Gave not their noses any sence of smell ;
  • Nor handes can feele, nor feete can goe,
  • Nor sigrne of sound their throates can show.
  • "O"
  • And wherin differ you,
  • Who, having made them, make of them your trust?
  • But Israel pursue
  • Thy trust in God, the targett of the just.
  • O Arons howse, the like doe yee :
  • He is their aid, their targett he.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 219
  • All that Jehovah feare,
  • Trust in Jehovah, he our aid and shield:
  • He us in mind doth beare,
  • He will to us aboundant blessings yield:
  • Will evermore with grace and good
  • Blesse Jacobs bowse, blesse A ions brood.
  • Blesse all that beare him awe,
  • Both great and small; the conduites of his store,
  • He never dry shall draw,
  • But you and youres enrich still more and more.
  • Blest, O thrice blest, whom he hath chose,
  • Who first with heav'ns did earth enclose.
  • Where height of highest skies
  • Removed most from fioore of lowly ground
  • With vaulted roofe doth rise :
  • Him self tooke up his dwelling there to found.
  • To mortall men he gratious gave
  • The lowly ground to hold and have.
  • And why? his praise to show:
  • Which how can dead men, Lord, in any wise?
  • Who downe descending goe
  • Into the place where silence lodged lies.
  • But save us : we thy praise record
  • Will now and still : O praise the Lord.
  • L 2
  • 220 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • PSALM CXVI.
  • Dilexi quoniam.
  • The Lord receaves my cry,
  • And me good eare doth give;
  • Theu love him still will I,
  • And praise him while I live.
  • Fast bound in bonds of death,
  • With deadly anguish thralled,
  • When grief nigh stopt my breath,
  • Upon his name I called.
  • I call'd, and thus I said :
  • Lord my bands unbind.
  • I found him prone to aid,
  • 1 found him just and kind:
  • The simples surest guard,
  • By me of right esteem'd:
  • Whom he distressed heard
  • From hard distresse redeem'd.
  • My soule turmoild with woes,
  • Now boldly turne to rest,
  • Such changes on thee showes
  • Who greatest is and best.
  • My life from death is past,
  • Mine eyes have dried their weeping
  • My slipping foote stands fast,
  • My self live in his keeping.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 221
  • Beleeving as I spake,
  • (Such woe my wilts did blind)
  • I said, when I did quake,
  • I all men Hers finde:
  • Which, finding false, to thee
  • What thancks. Lord, shall I render,
  • Who showring blisse on me
  • Dost me soe truly tender I
  • My cup with thanks shall flow
  • For freedom from my thrall,
  • Which I, in flames will throw,
  • And on thy name will call.
  • To thee my vowes will pay,
  • Thy people all beholding,
  • Who dear their deaths dost weigh,
  • That are to thee beholden.
  • This I thy servant taste,
  • Thy slave, thy handmaids sonne:
  • Whose bands thou broken hast,
  • And fettling chaiues undone.
  • Who unto thee for this
  • A sacrifice of praising
  • To offer will not misse,
  • Thy name with honor raising.
  • Thou whom no times enfold
  • Shalt have what I did vow:
  • And they shall all behold
  • Who to thy scepter bow.
  • The place, that holy place,
  • Before thy house extended;
  • The very middle space
  • In Sion comprehended.
  • 222 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • PSALM CXVII.
  • Laudate Dominum.
  • P raise him that aye
  • R cmaines the same :
  • A II tongues display
  • I eliovas fame.
  • S ing all that share
  • T his earthly ball,
  • H is mercies are
  • E xpos'd to all:
  • L ike as the word
  • O nee he doth give,
  • R old in record,
  • D oth lyme outlyve.
  • PSALM CXVQI.
  • Confitemini Domino.
  • The Lord is good, you see, and know,
  • Acknowledge then and praise him soe ;
  • For soe his bounty it cxtendeth,
  • Noe age can say, loe here it endeth.
  • Thou chosen Israel, all way
  • With me he prcst the same to say :
  • For soe his bounty it extendeth,
  • Noe age can say, loe here it endeth.
  • You that of sacred Aron came
  • Be prest with me to say the same:
  • For soe his bounty it cxtendeth,
  • Noe age can say, loe here it endeth.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 223
  • And you his fearers, all (he rest
  • The same to say with mc be prest:
  • For soe his bounty it extendeth,
  • Noe age can say, loe here it eudelh,
  • I somtiuie straitned lay in thrall ;
  • So lying, I on God did eall :
  • God answere gave me when I called,
  • And me unlarging, me unthralled.
  • Jehova doth my party take ;
  • Should feare of man then cause me quake?
  • Nay, with my fiends sith God is placed.
  • How can my foes but be disgraced?
  • More safe it is on God to stay
  • Then confidence on man to lay:
  • More safe who God his refuge taketh
  • Then he who kings his succour maketh.
  • Of enimies, all sortcs that be
  • On ev'ry part inviron'd me:
  • But I their sinewes cut and quailed,
  • Jehovas name soe much prevailed.
  • They me inviron'd yet againe,
  • Againe they did me strait ly strayne:
  • But I their sinewes cut and quailed,
  • Jehovas name soe much prevailed.
  • They me inviron'd yet anew,
  • And swarming fast like bees they flew :
  • As fire in thornes they quickly quailed,
  • Soe to their wrack his name prevailed.
  • 224 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Indeede thou sore at me didst thrust,
  • Yet by his succour stand I must :
  • In him my strength, of him my ditty,
  • He did my soule in thralldom pitty.
  • You righteous troupe with me rejoyce,
  • Consort with mine your joyful! voice,
  • Say, praise his hand, yea, double praised,
  • Be his strong hand so highly raised.
  • For be assur'd I shall not dye,
  • But live Gods works to testify:
  • Who though he sore did scourging paine me,
  • He hath but scourg'd, he hath not slaine mee>
  • Who opens to me justice gate ?
  • I, entring, may Gods praise relate.
  • This gate unto Jehova showeth,
  • By this to Him the righteous goeth.
  • Here, here O Lord, I will thee praise,
  • Who didst my life to safety raise.
  • The stone the builders erst refused
  • In corner now is laied and used.
  • This workmanship in deed divine
  • Doth in our eyes with wonder shine:
  • God made this day, he did us send it,
  • In joy and mirth then let us spend it
  • O help us, Lord, O help, we say,
  • O prosper, prosper us, we pray:
  • Blest in thy name who comming ridetb,
  • Blest in thy house who dwelling bidetb...
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 225
  • Thy house, Lord, mighty God, whence we
  • Both have our light and sight to see:
  • Tie fast the lambe on alter lying,
  • The cords to horned corners tying;.
  • O God, my mighty God thou art,
  • And I to thee will praise impart:
  • God thou art my God, and ever
  • 1 will extoll thee, ceasing never.
  • The Lord is good, you see and know,
  • Acknowledge then and praise him soe,
  • For soe his bounty it extendeth,
  • Noe age can say, loe here it endeth.
  • PSALM CXIX.
  • Beati immaculati.
  • An undefiled course who leadeth,
  • And in Jehovas doctrine treadeth,
  • How blessed he !
  • How blest they be
  • Who still his testimonies keeping,
  • Doe seeke him self with hearty seeking!
  • For whom in walke Gods way directeth,
  • Sure them no sinnfull blott infecteth
  • Of deede or word :
  • For thou, O Lord,
  • Hast to be done thy lawes commanded,
  • Not only to be understanded.
  • l3
  • 226 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • O weave my stepps soe staid from swerving,
  • That I me to thy hests observing
  • Might wholy give:
  • Then would I live
  • With constant chcerc all chaunces brooking,
  • To all thy precepts ever looking.
  • Then would I worshipp thee sincerely.
  • When what thy justice bidds severely
  • Thou shouldst me teach :
  • I would noe breach
  • Make of thy law to me betaken,
  • O leave me not in whole forsaken.
  • E.
  • By what correcting line
  • May a young man make streight his crooked way?
  • By levell of thy lore divine:
  • Sith then with soe good cause
  • My hart thee seekes, O Lord, I seeking pray
  • Let me not wander from thy lawes.
  • Thy speeches have I hid
  • Close locked up in caskett of my hart:
  • Fearing to do what they forbid.
  • But this cannott suffice:
  • Thou wisest Lord, who ever-blessed art,
  • Yet make me in thy statutes wise.
  • Then shall my lipps declare
  • The sacred lawes that from thy mouth proceed.
  • And teach all nations what they are :
  • For what thou dost decree
  • To my conceit farre more delight doth breed,
  • Then worlds of wealth, if worlds might be.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 227
  • Thy precepts therefore I
  • Will my coiitiuuall meditation make,
  • And to thy pathes will have good eye.
  • The orders by thee sett
  • Shall cause me in them greatest pleasure take,
  • Nor once will I thy wordes forgett.
  • Conferre, O Lord
  • This benefi tt on me,
  • That I may live and keepe thy word.
  • Open mine eyes,
  • They may the riches see,
  • Which in thy law enfolded lies.
  • A pilgrim right
  • On earth I wandring live,
  • O barre me not thy statutes light.
  • I wast and spill,
  • While still I longing grieve,
  • Grieve, longing for thy judgments still.
  • Thou proud and high
  • Dost low and lowly make :
  • Curst from thy rule who bend awry.
  • What shame they lay
  • On me then from me take ;
  • For I have kept thy will all way.
  • Let princes talk,
  • And talk their worst of me :
  • In thy decrees my thoughts shall walk.
  • All my delight
  • Thy witnest will shall be,
  • My councell to advise me right.
  • 228 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • D.
  • Dead as if I were,
  • My senile to dust doth cleave:
  • Lorde keepe thy word, and doe not leave
  • Me here :
  • But quicken me a new.
  • When I did confesse
  • My sinnfnll waies to thee,
  • As then thy eare thou didst to me
  • Addresse:
  • Soe teach me now thy statutes true.
  • Make that I may know
  • And throughly understand
  • What waie to walk thou dost command,
  • Then show
  • Will I thy wonders all.
  • Very woe and grief
  • My soule doe melt and fry;
  • Revive me Lord, and send me thy
  • Relief:
  • And lett on me thy comfort fall.
  • From the lyers trace,
  • From falshoods wreathed way,
  • O save me, Lord, and grauut I may
  • Embrace
  • The law thou dost commend.
  • For the path ay right,
  • Where truth unfained goes
  • My tongue to tread hath gladly chose :
  • My sight
  • Thy judgmentes doth as guides attend.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 229
  • Since therefore, Lord,
  • Still did I, still I doe
  • So neerly, deerly cleave unto
  • Thy word:
  • All shame from me avert.
  • Then loe, then I
  • Will tread, yea running tread
  • The trace which thy commandments lead^
  • When thy
  • Free grace hath fully freed my hart.
  • E.
  • Explaine, O Lord, the way to me
  • That thy divine edicts enfold,
  • And I to end will runne it right.
  • O make my blinded eyes to see,
  • And I thy law will hold : yea hold
  • Thy law with all my hartes delight.
  • O be my guide, O guide me soe,
  • I thy commandments path may pace ;
  • Wherein to walk my hart is faine.
  • O bend it then to things that show
  • True witness of thy might and grace,
  • And not to hungry thirst of gaine.
  • Avert mine eye, it may not view
  • Of vanity the falsed face :
  • And strength my treadings in thy trade.
  • Lett doings prove thy sayings true
  • To him that holds thy servants place,
  • And thee his awe, his feare hath made.
  • 230 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Thou then (my feare,) remove Ihe feaie
  • Of coming blame from careful! me:
  • For gratious are thy judgmentes still.
  • Behold, to me thy precepts deare,
  • Most deare, and most delightfull be.
  • O let thy justice aid my will.
  • Franckly poure, O Lord, on me
  • Saving grace to sett me free :
  • That supported I may see
  • Promise truly kept by thee.
  • That to them who me defame,
  • Roundly I may answere frame:
  • Who, because thy word and name
  • Are my trust, thus seeke my shame.
  • Thy true word O do not make
  • Utterly my mouth forsake :
  • Since I thus still waiting wake,
  • When thou wilt just vengaunce take.
  • Then loe I thy doctrine pure,
  • Sure I hold, will hold more sure :
  • Nought from it shall me allure,
  • All the time my time shall dure.
  • Then as brought to widest way
  • From restraint of straitest stay,
  • All their thincking night and day :
  • On thy law my thoughtes shall lay.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 231
  • Yea then unto any king
  • Wittnesse will I any thing,
  • That from thee can wittnesse bring:
  • In my face no blush shall spring.
  • Then will I sett forth to sight
  • With what pleasure, what delight,
  • I embrace thy preceptes right,
  • Whereunto all love I plight.
  • Then will I, with either hand
  • Clasp the rules of thy command:
  • There my study still shall stand,
  • Striving them to understand.
  • G.
  • Grave deeply in remembring mind
  • My trust, thy promise true :
  • This only joy in griefe I find,
  • Thy words my life renue.
  • Though proudly scorn'd, yet from thy lore
  • I no way have declin'd,
  • I hold for comfort what of yore
  • Thy doomes, O Lord, defin'd.
  • I quake to view how people vile
  • Doe from thy doctryne swerve :
  • Thy just edicts ev'n in exile
  • Did me for musick serve.
  • I keepe thy learning, and in night
  • Record Jehovas stile,
  • Observing still thy precepts right
  • Loe this I have the while.
  • 232
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • H.
  • High Johova once I say
  • For my clioise and lott I take,
  • I will sure his wordes obay.
  • Hott and harty sute I make,
  • Praying thus ev'n to thy lace,
  • Pitty me for thy words sake.
  • Ev'ry path, and every pace
  • Taught by thee, observing well,
  • To thy rule I frame my race.
  • Lest upon delaies I dwell
  • But to keepe contend with speed
  • What to me thy precepts tell.
  • By lewd robbers brought to need
  • From my losses of thy lavves
  • Never did neglect proceed.
  • Midnights watch thy praises cause,
  • While that me from bed and rest
  • Thought of thy just judgments drawes.
  • Fellowship and friendships best,
  • With thy fearers all I hold,
  • Such as hold thy biddings best.
  • Lord the earth can scarce enfold
  • What thou dost benignly give,
  • Let me then by thee be told
  • In thy learning how to live.
  • I.
  • In all kindnes, thou, O Lord,
  • Hast to me perform'd thy word :
  • This now resteth that I learne
  • From thy skill a skillfull tast,
  • Good from evill to discerne,
  • On thy lawes whose trust is plac't.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 233
  • Yet unhumbled I did sliay,
  • Now I will thy words obay.
  • Thou that art soe highly good
  • Nothing can thy goodness reach,
  • Thou where tloweth bounties flood
  • Willing me thy statutes teach.
  • What if proud men on me lie?
  • I will on thy lawes rely.
  • Wallow they in their delights,
  • Fatt in body, fatt in mind :
  • I the pleasures of my sp'rites
  • Will unto thy doctrine bind.
  • Now I find the good of woe,
  • How thy bests it makes me know :
  • Of whose mouth the lectures true
  • Are above all wealth to me:
  • Millions then, and mines adieu,
  • Gold and silver, drosse you be.
  • K.
  • Knitt and conformed by thy hand
  • Hath been ev'ry part of me:
  • Then make me well to understand,
  • Conceiving all thou dost command:
  • That when me thy fearers see
  • They for me may justly joy :
  • Seeing what 1 look't from thee
  • In thy word I now enjoy.
  • O Lord, thy judgmentes just I know,
  • When thy scourges scourged me,
  • Thou in that doing nought didst show
  • That might thy promise overthrow.
  • 234 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Let me then thy comfort see
  • Kindly sent as thou hast said,
  • Bring thy mercies life from thee,
  • On thy lawes my joyes are laid.
  • Let blame and shame the proud betide
  • Falsly who subverted me:
  • Whose meditations shall not slide,
  • But fast in thy commandments bide.
  • So shall I thy fearers see
  • On my part who know thy will :
  • While I purely worshipp thee
  • Blott nor blush my face shall fill.
  • L.
  • Looking and longing for deliverance
  • Upon thy promise, mightlesse is my mind,
  • Sightlesse myne eyes, which often I advaunce
  • Unto thy word,
  • Thus praying : when, O Lord,
  • When will it be I shall thy comfort find ?
  • I like a smoked bottle am become,
  • And yet the wine of thy commandments hold.
  • Ay me! when shall I see the totall siimme
  • Of all my woes?
  • When wilt thou on my foes
  • Make wronged me thy just revenge behold?
  • Their pride hath digged pitts me to ensnare,
  • Which with thy teachings how doth it agree?
  • True or more truly, Truth thy precepts are:
  • By falshood they
  • Would make of me their pray:
  • Let truth, O Lord, from falshood rescue me.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 235
  • Nigh quite consum'd by them on earth I lye,
  • Yet from thy statutes never did I swerve.
  • Lord, of thy goodnes quicken me, and I
  • Will still pursue
  • Thy testimonies true,
  • And all the biddings of thy lipps observe.
  • M.
  • Most plainly, Lord, the frame of sky
  • Doth show thy word decayeth never:
  • And constant stay of earth descry
  • Thy word, that staid it, staieth ever.
  • For by thy lawes they hold their standings,
  • Yea all tilings do thy service try;
  • But that I joy'd in thy commandings,
  • I had my self been sure to dye.
  • Thy word that hath revived me
  • I will retaine, forgetting never.
  • Lett me thine owne be sav'd by thee,
  • Whose statutes are my studies ever.
  • I mark thy will the while their standings
  • The wicked take, my bane to be :
  • For I no close of thy commandings,
  • Of best things else an end 1 see.
  • N.
  • Nought can enough declare
  • How I thy learning love,
  • Whereon all day my meditation lies.
  • By whose edicts I prove
  • Fane than my foes more wise,
  • For they a wisdome never-failing are.
  • 236 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • My teachers all of old
  • May now come learne of me,
  • Whose studies tend bat to thy vvittnes will:
  • Nay who most aged be,
  • Thought therefore most of skill,
  • In skill I passe, for I thy precepts hold,
  • I did refraine my feete
  • From ev'ry wicked way,
  • That they might firmly in thy statutes stand.
  • Nor ever did I stray
  • From what thy lawes command,
  • For I of thee have learned what is meete.
  • How pleasing to my tast!
  • How sweete thy speeches be!
  • Noe touch of bony soc affects my tongue.
  • From whose edicts in me
  • Hath such true wisdom sprung,
  • That all false waie^s quite out of love I cast.
  • O.
  • what a lanterne, what a lamp of light
  • Is thy pure word to me !
  • To cleere my pathes, and guide my goings right.
  • I sweare and svveare againe,
  • 1 of the statutes will observer be,
  • Thou justly dost ordaine.
  • The heavy weightes of grief oppresse me sore:
  • Lord, raise me by thy word.
  • As thou to me didst promise heretofore.
  • And this unforced praise,
  • I for an ofiring bring, accept, O Lord,
  • And show to me thy waies.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 237
  • What if my life lye naked in my hand,
  • To ev'ry chaunce expos'd,
  • Should I forgett what thou do*t me command ?
  • No, no, I will not stray
  • From thy edicts though round about enclos'd
  • With snares the wicked lay.
  • Thy testimonies as mine heritage,
  • I have retained still:
  • And unto them my hartes delight engage.
  • My hart which still doth bend,
  • And only hend to do what thou dost will,
  • And doe it to the end.
  • P.
  • People that inconstant be
  • Constant hatred have from me:
  • But thy doctrine ehanglesse^ever
  • Holds my love that changeth never.
  • For thou the closett where I hide
  • The shield whereby I safe abide:
  • My confidence expects thy promise just.
  • Hence, away, you cursed crue,
  • Gett you gon, that rid from you,
  • I at better ease and leisure
  • Maie performe my Gods good pleasure:
  • O Lord, as thou thy word didst give,
  • Sustaine me soe that I may live,
  • Nor make me blush, as frustrate of my trust.
  • Be my piller, be my stay,
  • Safe then I shall swerve no way:
  • All my witt and understanding
  • Shall then work on thy commanding,
  • 238 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • For under foote thou treadst them all,
  • Who swerving from thy preceptes fall :
  • And vainly in their guile and treason trust.
  • Yea the wicked sort by thee
  • All as drosse abjccted be :
  • Therefore what thy truth approveth,
  • That my love entirely loveth.
  • And such regard of thee I make,
  • For feare of Ihee my flesh doth quake,
  • And of thy lawes, thy lawes severely just.
  • Q.
  • Quitt and cleere from doing wrong,
  • O lett me not beti aied be
  • Unto them, who ever strong
  • Doe wrongly sceke to mine me.
  • Nay, my Lord,
  • Baile thy servant on thy word :
  • And lett not these that soare to high
  • By my low stoope, yet higher fly.
  • Eye doth failc while I not faile
  • With eye thy safety to pursue :
  • Looking when will once prevaile,
  • And take effect thy promise true.
  • All I crave
  • I at thy mercies hand would have :
  • And from thy wisdome, which I pray
  • May cause me know thy law and way.
  • Since thy servant still I stay,
  • My understanding Lord enlight,
  • So enlight it that I may
  • Thy ordinances know aright.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 239
  • Now, O now
  • The time requires, O Lord, that thou
  • Thy lawes defence shouldst undertake,
  • For now thy law they sorely shake.
  • Hope whereof makes that more deere
  • I thy edicts and statutes hold,
  • Then if gold to me they were,
  • Yea then they were the purest gold.
  • Makes that right
  • Are all thy precepts in my sight:
  • Makes that I hate each lying way,
  • That from their truth may cause me stray.
  • R.
  • Right wondcrfull thy testimonies be,
  • My hart to kcepe to them I therefore bend:
  • Their very threshold gives men light,
  • And gives men sight,
  • That light to see:
  • Yea ev'n to babes doth understanding lend.
  • Opening my mouth, I dranck a greedy draught,
  • And did upon them my whole pleasure place.
  • Looke then, O Lord, and pitty me
  • As erst I see
  • Ordain'd and taught
  • By thee for them whose hartes thy name embrace.
  • Of all my goings make thy word the guide,
  • Nor lett injustice now upon me raigne:
  • From them that false accusers be,
  • Lord, sett me free:
  • Soe never slide
  • Shall I from what thy statutes do ordayne.
  • 240 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Shine on thy servant with thy fares beames,
  • And thoroughly me thy commandments teach.
  • From fountaines of whose vvatry eyes
  • Doe welling rise
  • Of teares, huge streames,
  • Viewing each where thy doctrines daily breach.
  • Sure, Lord, thy self art just,
  • Thy lawes as rightful I he:
  • What rightly hid thou dost
  • Is firmly hound hy thee.
  • I flame with zeale to see
  • My foes thy word forgett :
  • Pure wordes, whereon hy me
  • A servantes love is sett.
  • Though bare, and though debast,
  • I ye.t thy rules retaine,
  • Whose doomes do endlesse last,
  • And doctrine true remayne.
  • In presure and in paine
  • My joyes thy preceptes give:
  • No date thy jndgmentes daine,
  • O make me wise to lyue.
  • T.
  • To thee my harty plaint I send,
  • Lord, turne thine eare
  • My plaint to heare,
  • For to thy law my life I bend.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Since I have envoked thee
  • Lett me Lord thy succour sec;
  • And what thy ordinaunces will
  • I will persist observing still.
  • My cry more early then the day
  • Doth daily rise,
  • Because mine eyes
  • Upon thy promise waiting stay.
  • Eyes, I say, which still prevent
  • Watches best to watching bent:
  • Esteeming it but pleasing paines
  • To muse on that thy word containes.
  • O in thy mercy hear my voice,
  • And as thy lawes
  • Afforde the cause,
  • So make me, Lord, revyv'd rejoyce.
  • Lord, thou seest the gracelesse crew
  • Presse me neere, who me pursue,
  • As for the doctrine of thy law
  • They fane from it themselves withdraw.
  • That Lord, thou seest, and this I see,
  • Thou ev'ry where
  • To me art neere,
  • For true, nay, truth thy precepts be.
  • Now, though not now first, I know,
  • (For I knew it long ago,)
  • That firmly founded once by thee.
  • Thy ordinance no end can see.
  • 241
  • M
  • 242 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • View how I am distressed,
  • And lett me be released,
  • For looke what me thy word hath bidden
  • Out of my mind hath never slidden.
  • Then be my causes deemer,
  • Be thou my soules redeemer :
  • And as good hope thy word doth give me,
  • Let with good help thy worke relieve me.
  • Where wickednesse is loved
  • There health is farre removed.
  • For since thy sole edicts containe it,
  • Who search not them how can thy gaine it ?
  • Thy mercies are so many,
  • Their number is not any:
  • Then as thou usest, Lord, to use me.
  • Revive me now, and not refuse me.
  • Exceeding is their number
  • That me pursue and cumber :
  • Yet what thy wittnesse hath defined
  • From that my steps have not declined.
  • I saw, and grieved seeing
  • Their waies, who wayward being,
  • With guilefull stubborness withstanded
  • What by thy speeches was commanded.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 243
  • Since therefore plaine is proved
  • That I thy lawes have loved :
  • Looke Lorde, and here thy bounty showing
  • Restore my life now feeble growing'.
  • This in thy doctrine raigneth,
  • It nought but truth containeth :
  • This in thy justice brightly shinelh,
  • Tby just edicts no date defineth.
  • W.
  • Wrong'd I was by men of might,
  • Hottly chas'd and hard assailed :
  • Little they my hart to fright,
  • But O much thy words prevailed :
  • Words to me of more delight
  • Then rich booty wonne by tight.
  • Fraud doe I with hate detest,
  • But with love embrace thy learnings,
  • Seav'n times daily ere I rest,
  • Sing thy doomes and right discernings.
  • Whom who love with peace are blest,
  • Plenteous peace without unrest.
  • Doing what thy precepts will
  • I thy help have long expected:
  • My soule by thy doctrine still
  • Loved most, is most directed.
  • Thy edicts my deedes fullfill
  • Who survaist my good and ill.
  • M 2
  • 244 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Yield me this favour, Lord,
  • My plaint may presse into thy sight,
  • And make me understand aright
  • According to thy word.
  • Ad mitt to sight I say
  • The praier that to thee I send,
  • And unto me thy help extend,
  • Who on thy promise stay.
  • Then from my lipps shall flow
  • A holy hymn of praise to thee :
  • When I thy scholer taught shall be
  • By thee thy lawes to know.
  • Then shall my tongue declare
  • And teach againe what thou hast taught:
  • All whose decrees to triall brought
  • Most just, nay justice are.
  • then reach out thy hand,
  • And yield me aid I justly crave
  • Since all things I forsaken have,
  • And chosen thy command.
  • 1 looke, I long, O Lord,
  • To see at length thy saving grace:
  • And only doe my gladnes place
  • In thy glad-making word.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 245
  • I know my soule shall live,
  • And living thee due honor yield:
  • I know thy law shall be my shield,
  • And me all succour give.
  • As sheep from shepherd gone
  • So wander I : O seeke thy sheep,
  • Who soe in mind thy precepts keep,
  • That I forgett not one.
  • PSALM GXX.
  • Ad Dominion.
  • As to th' Eternall often in anguishes
  • Erst have I called, never unanswered,
  • Againe I call, againe I calling
  • Doubt not againe to receave an answer.
  • Lord ridd my soule from treasonous eloquence
  • Of filthy forgers craftily fraudulent:
  • And from the tongue where lodg'd resideth
  • Poison'd abuse, ruine of belecvers.
  • Thou that reposest vainly thy confidence
  • In wily wronging, say by thy forgery
  • What good to thee? what gaine redoundeth?
  • What benefitt from a tongue deceitfull?
  • Though like an arrow strongly delivered
  • It deeply pierce, though like to a juniper
  • It coales doe cast, which quickly fired,
  • Flame very hott, very hardly quenching.
  • 24G THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Ah God! too long heere wander I banished,
  • Too long abiding barbarous injury:
  • With Kedar and with Mesech harbour'd,
  • How ? in a tent, in a howselesse harbour.
  • Too long, alas, to long have I dwelled here
  • With friendly peaces furious enemies :
  • Who when to peace I seeke to call them,
  • Faster I find to the wane they arme them.
  • PSALM CXXI.
  • Levavi oculos.
  • What? and doe I behold the lovely mountaines,
  • Whence comes all my rcliefe, my aid, my comfort?
  • O there, O there abides the worlds Creator,
  • Whence comes all my reliefe, my aid, my comfort.
  • March, march lustily on, redoubt no falling,
  • God shall guide thy going : the Lord thy keeper
  • Sleepes not, sleepes not a whit, no sleepe no slumber
  • Once shall enter in Israelis true keeper.
  • But whomc named I Israelis true keeper ?
  • Whome? but only Jehovah: whose true keeping
  • Thy saving shadow is : not ever absent
  • When present perill his reliefe requireth.
  • March then boldly, by day no sunne shall hurt thee
  • With beames too violently right reflected.
  • Feare no jornie by night, the moony vapours
  • Shall not cast any mist to breed thy grevaunce.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 247
  • Nay from ev'ry mishapp, from ev'ry mischief
  • Safe thou shalt by Jehovas hand be guarded :
  • Safe in ali thy goings, in all thy commings,
  • Now thou shalt by his hand, yea, still be guarded.
  • PSALM CXXII.
  • Lcetatus sum.
  • O fame most joyfull ! O joy most lively delightfull !
  • Loe, I do heare Gods temple, as erst, soe againe be frequented
  • And we within thy porches againe glad-wonted abiding,
  • Lovely Salem shall find : thou citty rebuilt as a citty,
  • Late disperst, but now united in absolute order.
  • Now there shall be the place for Gods holy people appointed,
  • First to behold his pledge, then sing allmighty Jehova.
  • Now there shall be the seate, where not to be justiced only,
  • All shall freely resort whom strife, hate, injury vexeth :
  • But where Davids house and ofspring heav'nly beloved
  • Shall both judges sitt, andraigne kings throned in honor.
  • Pray then peace to Salem : to her frends all happy proceeding,
  • Wish to her walls all rest, to her fortes all blessed aboundance.
  • This with cause doe I pray, sith from these blisses a blessing
  • My brother and kinsman, my friend and country deriveth :
  • This doe I wish and more, if more good rest to be wished,
  • Since our God here builds him an house, allmighty Jehova.
  • PSALM CXXIII.
  • Ad te levavi oculos meos.
  • Unto thee, oppressed, thou greate commander of heaven
  • Heav'nly good attending, lift I my earthy seeing.
  • Right as a waiters eye on a graceful master is holden ;
  • As the look of waitresse fix'd on a lady lieth.
  • 248 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Soe with erected face, until! by thy mercy relieved,
  • O Lord, expecting, beg we thy friendly favour.
  • Scorn of proud scorners, reproach of mighty reprochers,
  • Our sp'rites cleane ruined fill with an inly dolor.
  • Then friend us, favour us, Lord then with mercy relieve us,
  • Whose scornful! miseries greatly thy mercy needeth.
  • PSALM CXX1V.
  • Nisi quia Dominus.
  • Say Israel, doe not conceale a verity,
  • Had not the Lord assisted us,
  • Had not the Lord assisted us, what tyme arose
  • Against us our fierce enimies:
  • Us all at once long since they had devoured up,
  • They were soe fell, soe furious.
  • If not, the angry gulphes, the streames most horrible
  • Had drowned us: soe drowned us,
  • That in the deepe bene tombed, at least on the deepe
  • Had tumbled our dead carcases.
  • But Lord, what honor shall thy people yeeld to thee
  • From greedy teeth delivered?
  • Escaped as the fowle, that oft breaking the grynn,
  • Beguiles the fowlers wilynesse.
  • For sure this is thy work, thy name protecteth us,
  • Who heav'n, who earth hast fashioned.
  • PSALM CXXV.
  • Qui confidant.
  • As Sion standeth very firmly stedfast,
  • Never once shaking: soe on high Jehova
  • Who his hope buildefh, very firmly stedfast
  • Ever abideth.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 249
  • As Salem bravetli with her hilly bullwarkes,
  • Roundly enforted: soe the greate Jehova
  • Closeth his servantes, as a hilly bullwark
  • Ever abiding.
  • Though tirantes hard yoke with a heavy pressure
  • Wring the just shoulders: but a while it holdeth,
  • Lest the best minded by too hard abusing
  • Bend to abuses.
  • As the well-workers, soe the right beleevers:
  • Lord favour further, but a vaine deceiver,
  • Whose wryed footing not aright directed
  • Wandreth in error.
  • Lord hym abjected, set among the number
  • Whose doings lawlesse: study bent to mischiefe
  • Mischief expecteth : but upon thy chosen
  • Peace be for ever.
  • PSALM CXXVI.
  • In convertendo.
  • When long absent from lovely Sion
  • By the Lords conduct home we returned,
  • We our sences scarse beleeving,
  • Thought meere visions moved our fancy.
  • Then in our merry mouthes laughter abounded,
  • Tongues with gladdnes lowdly resounded,
  • While thus wondring nations whispered:
  • God with them most roially dealeth.
  • Most true with us thou roially dealest,
  • Woe is expired, sorow is vanished:
  • Now, Lord, to finish throughly thy working,
  • Bring to Jerusalem all that are exiles.
  • M 3
  • 250 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Bring to Jerusalem all that are exiles,
  • Soe by thy comfort newly refreshed :
  • As when southern sunn-burnt regions
  • Be by cold fountaines freshly relieved.
  • Oft to the plowman soe good happ happeneth,
  • What with teares to the ground he bequeathed,
  • Season of harvest timely retorning,
  • He, before wofull, joyfully reapeth.
  • Why to us may not as happily happen,
  • To sow our businesse wofully weeping :
  • Yet when businesse growes to due ripenesse.
  • To see our businesse joyfully reaped?
  • PSALM CXXVII.
  • Nisi Dominus.
  • The house Jehova builds not
  • We vainly strive to build it :
  • The towne Jehova guards not
  • We vainly watch to guard it.
  • No use of early rising :
  • As uselesse is thy watching:
  • Not aught at all it helpes thee
  • To eate thy bread with anguish.
  • As unto weary sehces
  • A sleepie rest unasked :
  • Soe bounty cometh uncaus'd
  • From him to his beloved.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 251
  • Noe not thy children hast thou
  • By choise, hy chaunce, by nature ;
  • They are, they are, Jehovas
  • Rewardes from him rewarding.
  • The multitude of infantes,
  • A good man holdes, resembleth
  • The multitude of arrowes,
  • A mighty archer holdeth.
  • Hys happines triumpheth
  • Who beares a quiver of them :
  • Noe countenance of haters
  • Shall unto him be dreadful!.
  • PSALM CXXV1II.
  • Beati omnes.
  • All happines shall thee betide,
  • That dost Jehova feare :
  • And walking in the pathes abide,
  • By him first troden were.
  • The labours of thy handes
  • Desired fruit shall beare.
  • And where thy dwelling stands
  • All blisse, all plenty there.
  • Thy wife a vine, a fruitfull vine
  • Shall in thy parlor spring:
  • Thy table compasse children thine
  • As olive plants in ring.
  • On thee I say, on thee,
  • That fear'st the heav'nly king,
  • Such happinesse shall be
  • He shall from Sion bring.
  • 252 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Yea, while to thee thy breath shall hold,
  • Though running longest race,
  • Thou Salem ever shalt behold
  • In wealth and wished case:
  • And childrens children view
  • While Jacobs dwelling place
  • Noe plagues of warre pursue,
  • But giftes of peace shall grace.
  • PSALM CXXIX.
  • Scepe expugnaverunt.
  • Oft and ever from my youth,
  • Soe now Israel may say:
  • Israel may say for truth,
  • Ofte and ever my decay
  • From my youth their force hath sought,
  • Yet efl'ect it never wrought.
  • Unto them my back did yeeld
  • Place and paine (O height of woe)
  • Where, as in a plowed field
  • Long and deepe did furrowes goe.
  • But O just Jehova, thou
  • Hast their plow-ropes cutt in two!
  • Tell me you that Sion hate,
  • What you think shall be your end ?
  • Terror shall your mindes amate,
  • Blush and shame your faces shentl.
  • Mark the wheate on bowses topp,
  • Such your harvest, such your cropp.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 253
  • Wither shall you where you stand ;
  • Gather'd? noe : but wantiug sapp:
  • Filling neither reapers hand
  • Nor the binders inbow'd lapp.
  • Nay who you shall reape or bind
  • Common kindnesse shall not find.
  • Such as travail by the way,
  • Where as they their paines imploy,
  • Shall not once saluting say,
  • God speed friendes, God give you joy :
  • He in whome all blessings raignes
  • Blesse your selves, and biesse your paines.
  • PSALM CXXX.
  • De profundis.
  • From depth of grief
  • Where droun'd I lye,
  • Lord, for relief
  • To thee I cry:
  • My earnest, vehement, cryeng, prayeng,
  • Graunt quick, attentive hearing, waighing.
  • O Lord, if thou
  • Offences mark,
  • Who shall not bow
  • To beare the cark?
  • But with thy justice mercy dwelleth,
  • Whereby thy worshipp more excelleth.
  • 254 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • On thee, my soule
  • On thee, O Lord
  • Dependeth whole,
  • And on thy word,
  • Though sore with hlott of sinne defaced.
  • Yet surest hope hath firmly placed.
  • Who longest watch,
  • Who soonest rise
  • Can nothing match
  • The early eyes ;
  • The greedy eyes my soule erecteth,
  • While Gods true promise it expecteth.
  • Then Israel
  • On God attend :
  • Attend him well
  • Who still thy friend,
  • In kindness hath thee deare esteemed,
  • And often, often, erst redeemed.
  • Now, as before,
  • Unchanged he
  • Will thee restore
  • Thy state will free :
  • All wickednes from Jacob driving,
  • Forgetting follies, faultes forgiving.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 255
  • PSALM CXXXI.
  • Domine, non est.
  • A lofty hart, a lifted eye
  • Lord thou dost know I never hare ;
  • Lesse have I borne in things to hygh
  • A medling mind, or clyming care.
  • Looke how the wained babe doth fare,
  • O did I not? yes soe did I:
  • None more for quiet might compare
  • Ev'n with the babe that wain'd doth lye :
  • Heare then and learue, O Jacobs race,
  • Such endlesse trust on God to place.
  • PSALM CXXXII.
  • Memento, Domine.
  • Lord call to mind, nay keepe in minde
  • Thy David and thy Davids paines :
  • Who once by oath and vow did bind
  • Himself to him who ay remaynes :
  • That mighty one,
  • The God in Jacob known.
  • My howse shall never harbor mee,
  • Nor bedd allow my body rest,
  • Nor eyes of sleepe the lodging bee,
  • Nor eye-lidds slendrest slumbers nest,
  • Untill I finde
  • A plott to please my mind.
  • 25G THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • I find, I say, my mind to please
  • A plott wheron I may erect
  • A Iiowse for him to dwell at ease,
  • Who is ador'd with due respect :
  • That mighty one
  • The God in Jacob known.
  • The plott thy David then did name,
  • We heard at Ephrata it lay :
  • We heard, but bent to find the same,
  • Were faine to seeke an other way :
  • Ev'n to the fields
  • That woody tear yeelds.
  • And yet not there, but here, O here
  • We find now settled what we sought:
  • Before Ihe stoole thy feete doth beare
  • Now entring in, we, as we ought,
  • Adore thee will,
  • And duly worship still.
  • Then enter, Lord, thy fixed rest,
  • With arke the token of thy strength,
  • And let thy priests be purely drest
  • In robes of justice laied at length:
  • Let them bee glad
  • Thy gracefull blisse have had.
  • For David once thy servants sake
  • Doe not our kings his seede reject :
  • For thou to him this oath did'st make,
  • This endles oath: I will erect,
  • And hold thy race
  • Enthron'd in roiall place.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 257
  • Nay if thy race my league observe,
  • And keepe the cov'nants I sett down,
  • Their race againe I will preserve
  • Eternally to wear thy crown :
  • No lesse thy throne
  • Shall ever be their owne.
  • For Syon which I loved best,
  • I chosen have noe seate of change:
  • Here, here shall bee my endless rest,
  • Here will I dwell, nor hence will range :
  • Unto the place
  • I beare such love and grace.
  • Such grace and love that evermore
  • A blisse from gratious loving me,
  • Shall bless her vittaile, blesse her store,
  • That ev'n the poore who in her be
  • With store of bread
  • Shall fully all be fedd.
  • In her my priests shall nought anoy :
  • Nay cladd they shall with safty be.
  • O how in her with cause shall joy
  • Who there as tenants hold of me!
  • Whose tenure is
  • By grace my fields of blisse.
  • O how in her shall sprowt and spring
  • The scepter Davids hand did beare
  • How I my Christ, my sacred king,
  • As light in lantern placed there,
  • With beames divine
  • Will make abroad to shine !
  • 258 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • But as for them who spite and hate
  • Conceave to him, they all shall down,
  • Down cast hy mee to shamefull state,
  • While on him self his happy crown
  • Shall up to skies
  • With fame and glory rise.
  • PSALM CXXXIII.
  • Ecce quant bonum.
  • How good, and how heseeming well
  • It is that we,
  • Who brethren be,
  • As brethren, should in concord dwell.
  • Like that deere oile that Aron beares,
  • Which fleeting down
  • To foote from crown
  • Embalms his beard and robe he weares.
  • Or like the teares the morne doth shedd,
  • Which ly on ground
  • Empearled round
  • On Sion or on Hermons head.
  • For join'd therewith the Lord doth give
  • Such grace, such blisse :
  • That where it is
  • Men may for ever blessed live.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 259
  • PSALM CXXXIV.
  • Ecce nunc.
  • You that Jehovas servants are,
  • Whose carefull watch, whose watchfull care
  • Within his house are spent;
  • Say thus, with one assent,
  • Jehovas name he praised.
  • Then let your handes he raised
  • To holiest place,
  • Where holiest grace
  • Doth ay
  • Remaine :
  • And say
  • Againe,
  • Jehovas name be praised.
  • Say last unto the company,
  • Who tarrying make
  • Their leave to take,
  • All blessings you accompany,
  • From him in plenty showered,
  • , Whom Sion holds embowered,
  • Who heav'n and earth of nought hath raised.
  • PSALM CXXXV.
  • Laudate nomen.
  • O praise the name whereby the Lord is known,
  • Praise him I say you that his servants be:
  • You whose attendance in his bowse is shown,
  • And in the courtes before his howse we see,
  • Praise God, right tearmed God, for good is he :
  • O sweetly sing
  • Unto his name the sweetest, sweetest thing.
  • 260 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • For of his goodnes Jacob hath he chose,
  • Chose Israel his own domain to he.
  • My tongue shall speake, for well my conscience knowes,
  • Greate is our God, above all gods is he.
  • Each branch of whose inviolate decree
  • Both heav'ns doe keepe,
  • And earth, and sea, and seas unbounded deepe.
  • From whose extreames drawne up by his command
  • In flaky mists, the reaking vapors rise :
  • Then high in cloudes incorporate they stand:
  • Last out of cloudes raine flowes, and lightning flies.
  • No lesse a treasure in his storehouse lies
  • Of breathing blasts,
  • Which oft drawn foorth in wind his pleasure wasts.
  • He from best man to most despised beast
  • ./Egipts first borne in one night overthrew:
  • And yet not so his dreadfull showes he ceas'd,
  • But did them still in iEgipts mid'st renew :
  • Not only meaner men had cause to rue,
  • But ev'n the best
  • Of Pharaos court, the king among the rest.
  • He many nations, mighty kings destroi'd :
  • Sehon for one, who rul'd the Amorites,
  • And huge-lim'd Og, who Basans crown enjoy 'd,
  • Yea all the kingdoms of the Cananites,
  • Whose heritage he gave the Isralites,
  • His chosen train,
  • Their heritage for ever to remain.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 261
  • Therefore O Lord, thy name is famous still,
  • The memory thy ancient wonders got,
  • Tyme well to world his message may fulfill,
  • And back retorue to thee, yet never blot
  • Out of our thoughts : for how should be forgot
  • The Lord that so
  • Forgives his servant, plagues his servants foe ?
  • What difference, what unproportional odds
  • To thee, these idolls gold and silver beare ?
  • Which men have made, yet men have made their gods.
  • Who though mouth, eye, and eare, and nose they weare,
  • Yet neither speake, nor looke, nor smell, nor heare.
  • O idolls right
  • Who idolls make, or idolls make your might.
  • But you that are of Israelis descent,
  • O praise the Lord: you that of Aron came
  • O praise the Lord : you Levies howse, assent
  • To praise the Lord : you all his fearers frame
  • Your highest praise to praise Jehovas name.
  • His praises still
  • Salem resound, resound O Sion bill.
  • PSALM CXXXVI.
  • Confitemini.
  • O praise the Lord where goodness dwells,
  • For his kindness lasteth ever:
  • O praise the God, all gods excells
  • For his bounty endelh never.
  • 262 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Praise him that is of lords the Lord,
  • For his kindnesse lasteth ever:
  • Who only wonders doth afford,
  • For his bounty endeth never.
  • Whose skillfull art did vault the skies,
  • For his kindnesse lasteth ever :
  • Made earth above the waters rise,
  • For his bounty endeth never.
  • Who did the luminaries make,
  • For his kindnesse lasteth ever:
  • The sun, of day the charge to take,
  • For his bounty endeth never.
  • The moone and starrs in night to raign,
  • For his kindnesse lasteth ever :
  • Who Egypts eldest born hath slayn,
  • For his bounty endeth never.
  • And brought out Israel from thence,
  • For his kindnesse lasteth ever:
  • With mighty hand and strong defence,
  • For his bounty endeth never.
  • Who cutt in two the russhy sea,
  • For his kindnesse lasteth ever:
  • And made the middest Jacobs way,
  • For his bounty endeth never.
  • Who Pharao and his army dronn'd,
  • For his kindnesse lasteth ever:
  • And led his folk through desert ground.
  • For his bounty endeth never.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 263
  • Greate kings in battaile overthrew,
  • For his kindnesse lasteth ever :
  • Yea mighty kings, most mighty slew,
  • For his bounty endeth never.
  • Both Sehon king of Amorites,
  • For his kindnesse lasteth ever:
  • And Ogg the king of Bashanites,
  • For his bounty endeth never.
  • For heritage his kingdoms gave,
  • For his kindnesse lasteth ever :
  • His Israeli to hold and have,
  • For his bounty endeth never.
  • Who minded us dejected low,
  • For his kindnesse lasteth ever :
  • And did us save from force of foe,
  • For his bounty endeth never.
  • Who fills with foode each feeding thing,
  • For his kindnesse lasteth ever :
  • Praise God who is of heav'ns the king,
  • For his bounty endeth never.
  • PSALM CXXXVII.
  • Super flumina.
  • Nigh seated where the river flowes
  • That watreth Babells thanckfull plaine,
  • Which then our teares in pearled rowes
  • Did help to water with their raiue :
  • The thought of Sion bred such woes,
  • That though our harpes we did retaine,
  • Yet uselesse, and untouched there
  • On willowes only hang'd they were.
  • 204 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Now while our harpes were hanged soe,
  • The men, whose captiyes then we lay
  • Did on our griefs insulting goe,
  • And more to grieve us thus did say:
  • "\ ou that of musique make such show
  • Come sing us now a Sion lay.
  • O no, we have nor voice, nor hand
  • For such a song, in such a land.
  • Though farre I lye, sweete Sion hill,
  • In forraine soile exil'd from thee,
  • Yet let my hand forgett his skill,
  • If ever thou forgotten be :
  • Yea lett my tongue fast glued still
  • Unto my roofe lye mute in me :
  • If thy neglect within me spring,
  • Or ought I do but Salem sing.
  • But thou, O Lord, will not forgett
  • To quit the paines of Edoms race,
  • Who causelessly, yet hotlly sett
  • Thy holy citty to deface,
  • Did thus the bloody victors whet
  • What time they entred first the place
  • Downe downe with it at any hand,
  • Make all flatt plaine, lett nothing stand.
  • And Babilon, that didst us wast,
  • Thy self shalt one daie wasted be :
  • And happy he, who what thou hast
  • Unto us done, shall do to thee,
  • Like bitterness shall make thee tast,
  • Like wofull objects cause thee see :
  • Yea happy, who thy little ones
  • Shall take and dash against the stones.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 265
  • PSALM CXXXVIII.
  • Confitehor tibi.
  • Ev'N before kings by thee as gods commended,
  • And angells all, by whom thou art attended,
  • In harty tunes I will thy honor tell.
  • The pallace where thy holiness doth dwell
  • Shall be the place, where falling downe before thee.
  • With reverence meete I prostrate will adore thee.
  • There will I sing how thou thy mercy semlest,
  • And to thy promise due performance Iendest,
  • Whereby thy name above all names doth fly.
  • There will I sing, how when my carefull cry
  • Mounted to thee, my care was streight released,
  • My courage mightily by thee encreased.
  • Sure, Lord, all kings that understand the. story
  • Of thy contract with me, nought but thy glory
  • And meanes shall sing whereby that glory grew.
  • Whose highly seated eye yet well doth view
  • With humbled look the soule that lowly lieth,
  • And farr aloofe aspiring things espieth.
  • On ev'ry side, though tribulation greive me,
  • Yet shall thou aid, yet shalt thou still relieve me,
  • From angry foe thy succor shall me save.
  • Thou Lord shalt finish what in hand I have,
  • Thou Lord, I say, whose mercy lasteth ever,
  • Thy work begun shall leave unended never.
  • N
  • 266 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • PSALM CXXXIX.
  • Domine, probasti.
  • O lord in me there lieth nought,
  • But to thy searcli revealed lies :
  • For when I sitt
  • Thou markest it:
  • No lesse thou notest when I rise :
  • Yea closest closett of my thought
  • Hath open windowes to thine eyes.
  • Thou walkest with me when I walk,
  • When to my bed for rest I go,
  • I find thee there,
  • And ev'ry where:
  • Not yongest thought in me doth grow,
  • No not one word I cast to talk,
  • But yet unutt'red thou dost know.
  • If forth I march, thou goest before,
  • If back I tornc, thou coin'st behind:
  • Soe forth nor back
  • Thy guard I lack,
  • Nay on me too thy hand I find.
  • Well I thy wisdom may adore,
  • But never reach with earthy mind.
  • To shun thy notice, leave thine eye,
  • O whither might I take my way?
  • To starry spheare ?
  • Thy throne is there.
  • To dead mens undelightsome stay ?
  • There is thy walk, and there to lye
  • Unknown, in vain I should assay.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 267
  • Sun, whorae light nor flight can match,
  • Suppose thy lightfull, flightfull wings
  • Thou lend to me
  • And I could flee
  • As farr as thee the ev'ning brings :
  • Ev'n led to West he would me catch,
  • Nor should I lurk with western things.
  • Doe thou thy best, O secret night,
  • In sable vaile to cover me :
  • Thy sable vaile
  • Shall vainly faile:
  • With day unmask'd my night shall be,
  • For night is day, and darkness light,
  • O father of all lights to thee.
  • Each inmost peece in me is thine,
  • While yet I in my mother dwelt,
  • All that me clad
  • From thee I had.
  • Thou in my frame hast strangly dealt :
  • Needes in my praise thy workes must shine,
  • So inly them my thoughts have felt.
  • Thou, how my back was beam-wise laid,
  • And raftring of my ribbs dost know :
  • Know'st ev'ry point
  • Of bone and joynt,
  • How to this whole these partes did grow,
  • In brave embrod'ry faire arraid,
  • Though wrought in shop both dark and low.
  • N 2
  • 268 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Nay, fashionless, ere forme I tooke,
  • Thy all and more beholding eye
  • My shapelcsse shape
  • Could not escape :
  • All these tymes fram'd successively,
  • Ere one had being, in the booke
  • Of thy foresight enrol'd did ly.
  • My God, how I these studies prize,
  • That doe thy hidden workings show!
  • Whose sum me is such,
  • Noe summc soe much:
  • Nay summ'd as sand they endlesse grow,
  • I lye to sleepe, from sleepe I rise,
  • Yet still in thought with thee I goe.
  • My God, if thou but one wouldst kill,
  • Then straight would leave my further chase.
  • This cursed brood
  • Inur'd to blood :
  • Whose gracelesse tauntes at thy disgrace
  • Have aimed oft: and haling still
  • Would with proud lies thy truth outface.
  • Hate not I them who thee doe hate?
  • Thyne, Lord, I will the censure be.
  • Detest I not
  • The canckred knott
  • Whom I against thee banded see?
  • O Lord, thou know'st in highest rate
  • I hate them all as foes to me.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 269
  • Search me, my God, and prove my hart,
  • Examyne me, and iry my thought,
  • And mark in me
  • If ought there he
  • That hath with cause their anger wrought.
  • If not (as not) my lives each part,
  • Lord safely guide from danger hrought.
  • PSALM CXL.
  • Eripe me, Domine.
  • Preserve me, Lord, preserve me, sett me free
  • From men that be
  • Soe vile, soe violent:
  • In whose entent
  • Both force and fraud doth lurk
  • My bane to work :
  • Whose tongues are sharper things
  • Then adders stings,
  • Whose rusty lipps enclose
  • A pois'nous sword, such in the aspick growes.
  • Save I say Lord, protect me, sett me free
  • From those that be
  • So vile, so violent:
  • Whose thoughts are spent
  • In thinking how they may
  • My stepps betray :
  • How nett of fowle mishape
  • May me entrapp:
  • Who hid in traitor grasse
  • Their conning cord may catch me as I passe.
  • 270 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • But this, O Lord, I hold, my God art thou :
  • Thou eare wilt bowe,
  • What time thy aid I pray,
  • In thee my stay,
  • Jehova: thou dost arme
  • Against all harme,
  • And guard my bed in field.
  • O then to yield
  • These wicked their desire
  • Do not accord, for still they will aspire.
  • But yeeld, O Lord, that ev'n the head of those
  • That me enclose,
  • Of this their hott pursute
  • May tast the frute,
  • With venome stong
  • Of their owne tongue,
  • Loe, loe, I see they shall:
  • Yea coales shall fall,
  • Yea flames shall fling them low,
  • Ay unrestor'd to drown in deepest woe.
  • For Hers, Lord, shall never firmly stand.
  • And from the land
  • Who violently live
  • Mischief shall drive:
  • But well I know the poore
  • Thou wilt restore :
  • Restore th' afflicted wight:
  • That in thy sight
  • The just may bowses frame,
  • And glad record the honor of thy name.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 27 L
  • PSALM CXLI.
  • Domine, clamavi.
  • To thee, Jehova, thee I lift my cryeng voice,
  • O banish all delay, and lett my plaintfull noise
  • By thy quick-hearing-eare be carefully respected.
  • As sweete perfume to skies, lett what I pray ascend :
  • Lett these uplifted hands, which prayeng, I extend,
  • As ev'ning sacrifice be unto thee directed.
  • Ward well my words, O Lord, (for that it is I pray)
  • A watchfull sentinell at my mouthes passage lay :
  • At wickett of my lipps stand ay a faithfull porter,
  • Incline me not to ill, nor lett me loosely goe
  • A mate in work with such, whence no good work doth grow,
  • And in their flattring hartes, lett me be no consorter.
  • But lett the good-man wound, most well I shall it take,
  • Yea price of his rebukes as deerest balme shall make,
  • Yea more shall for him pray, the more his words do grieve me,
  • And as for these, when once the leaders of their crue
  • By thee be brought to stoope, my wordes most sweetly true
  • Shall in the rest so worke that soon they shall believe me.
  • Mean while my bones the grave, the grave expects my bones,
  • Soe broken, hewn, disperst, as least respected stones,
  • By careless mason drawn from cave of worthless quarry:
  • But thou, O Lord, my Lord, since thus thy servants ey
  • Repleat with hopefull trust doth on thy help rely,
  • Faile not that trustful] hope, that for thy helpe doth tarry.
  • O soe direct my feete they may escape the hands
  • Of their entangling snare, which for me pitched stands:
  • And from the wicked netts for me with craft they cover.
  • Nay for these fowlers once, thy self a fowler be,
  • And make them foully fall where netts are laid by thee,
  • But where for me they lay, let me leap freely over.
  • 272 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • PSALM CXLII.
  • Voce men ad Dominion.
  • My voice to thee it self extreauily strayning,
  • Cries praying, Lord, againe it crying praycth,
  • Before thy face the cause of my complayning.
  • Before thy face my cases mapp it laieth.
  • Wherin my soule is painted
  • In doubtfull way a stranger:
  • But, Lord, thou art acquainted,
  • And knowst each path where stick thetoyls of danger.
  • For me, mine eye to ev'ry coast directed
  • Lights not on one that will soc much as know me :
  • My life by all neglected,
  • Ev'n hope of help is now quite perish'd from me.
  • Then with good cause to thee my spirit flieth,
  • Flieth, and saith, O Lord, my safe abiding
  • Abides in thee: in thee all-only licth
  • Lott of my life, and plott of my residing.
  • Alas, then yeeld me hearing.
  • For wearying woes have spent me :
  • And save me from their tearing,
  • Who hunt me hard, and daily worse torment me,
  • O change my state, unthrall my soule enthralled :
  • Of my escape then will I tell the story,
  • And with a crown enwalled
  • Of godly men, will glory in thy glory.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • PSALM CXLIII.
  • D omine, exaudi.
  • IIeare my entreaty Lord, the suite I send,
  • With heed attend,
  • And as my hope and trust is
  • Reposed whole in thee ;
  • So in thy truth and justice
  • Yeeld audience to me.
  • And make not least beginning
  • To judge thy servants sinning:
  • For Lord what living wight
  • Lives synnlesse in thy sight? ,
  • rather look with ruth upon my woes,
  • Whom ruthlesse foes
  • With long pursute have chased,
  • And chased at length have caught,
  • And caught in tomb have placed
  • With dead men out of thought.
  • Ay me ! what now is left me?
  • Alas ! all knowledge reft me,
  • All courage faintly fledd,
  • 1 have nor hart nor head.
  • The best I can is this, nay this is all
  • That I can call
  • Before my thoughts surveyeng,
  • Tymes evidences old,
  • All deedes with comfort waighing,
  • That thy hand-writyng hold.
  • Soe hand and hart conspiring
  • I lift, no lesse desiring
  • Thy grace I may obtayne,
  • Then drought desireth raine.
  • n3
  • 274 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Leave then delay, and let his cry prevaile,
  • Whom force doth failc :
  • Nor lett thy face be hidden
  • From one, who may compare
  • With them whose deatli hath bidden
  • Adiew to life and care.
  • My hope, let mercies morrow
  • Soone chase my night of sorrow.
  • My help, appoint my way,
  • I may not wandring stray.
  • My cave, my closett where I wont to hide
  • In troublous tyde :
  • Now from these troubles save me,
  • And since my God thou art,
  • Prescribe bow thon wouldst have me
  • Performe my duties part.
  • And lest awry I wander,
  • In walking this meander,
  • Be thy right sprite my guide,
  • To guard I go not wide.
  • Thy honor, justice, mercy crave of thee.
  • O Lord, that me
  • Reviv'd thou shouldst deliver
  • From pressure of my woes,
  • And in destructions river
  • Engulph and swallow those
  • Whose hate thus makes in anguish
  • My soule afflicted languish :
  • For mecte it is so kind,
  • Thy servant should thee find.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 275
  • PSALM CXLIV.
  • Benedictus Dominus.
  • Prais'd bee the Lord of might,
  • My rock in all allarras,
  • By whom my hands doe fight,
  • My fingers manage armes.
  • My grace, my guard, my fort,
  • On whom my safety staies :
  • To whom my hopes resort,
  • By whom my real me obaies.
  • Lord, what is man that thon
  • Should'st tender soe his fare ?
  • What hath his child to bow
  • Thy thoughts unto his care ?
  • Whose neerest kinn is nought,
  • No image of whose daies
  • More lively can bee thought,
  • Then shade that never staies.
  • Lord, bend thy arched skies
  • With ease to let thee down,
  • And make the stormes arise
  • From mountaines fuming crown.
  • Let follow flames from sky,
  • To back their stoutest stand :
  • Lett fast thy arrowes fly,
  • Dispersing thickest band.
  • Thy heav'nly helpe extend
  • And lift me from this flood :
  • Let mee thy hand defend
  • From hand of forraine brood,
  • 270 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Whose mouth no mouth at all,
  • But forge of false entent,
  • Wherto their hand doth fall
  • As aptest instrument.
  • Then in new song to thee
  • Will I exalt my voice:
  • Then shall O God with me
  • My tenn-string'd lute rejoyce.
  • Rejoyce in him, I say,
  • Who roiall right preserves,
  • And saves from swords decay
  • His David that hiin serves.
  • O Lord thy help extend,
  • And lift mee from this flood:
  • Lett me thy hand defend
  • From hand of forrain hrood.
  • Whose mouth no mouth at all,
  • But forge of false entent,
  • Whereto their hand doth fall
  • As aptest instrument.
  • Soe then our sonnes shall grow
  • As plants of timely spring,
  • Whom soone to fairest show
  • Their happy growth cloth bring.
  • As pillers both doe beare
  • And garnish kingly hall :
  • Our daughters straight and faire,
  • Each howse embellish shall,
  • Our store shall ay bee full,
  • Yea shall such fullness flnde,
  • Though all from thence wee pull,
  • Yet more shall rest behind.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 277
  • The millions of encrease
  • Shall breake the wonted fold :
  • Yea such the shecpy prease,
  • The streetes shall scantly hold.
  • Our hoards shall brave the best,
  • Abroad no foes alarme,
  • At home to breake our rest,
  • No cry the voice of harme.
  • If blessed tearme I may,
  • On whom such blessings fall ;
  • Then blessed, blessed they
  • Their God Jehovah call.
  • PSALM CXLV.
  • Exaltabo te.
  • My God, my king, to lift thy praise
  • And thank thy most thank-worthy name
  • I will not end, but all my daies
  • Will spend in seeking how to frame
  • Recordes of thy deserved fame,
  • Whose praise, past-praise, whose greatness such,
  • The greatest search can never touch.
  • Not in one age thy works shall dye,
  • But elder eft to younger tell
  • Thy praisefull powre : among them I
  • Thy excellencies all excell
  • Will muse and marke: my thoughts shall dwell
  • Upon the wonders wrought by thee,
  • Which wrought beyond all wonder be.
  • 278 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • Both they and I will tell and sing
  • How forcofull thou, and fearefull art:
  • Yea both will willing wittnes bring - .
  • And unto comming tymes impart
  • Thy greatness, goodness, just desert:
  • That all who are, or are to be,
  • This hymne with joy shall sing to thee.
  • Jehova doth with mildnes flow,
  • And full of mercy standeth he :
  • Greate doubt if he to wrath more slow,
  • Or unto pardon prompter be,
  • For nought is from his bounty free :
  • His mercies do on all things fall
  • That he hath made, and he made all.
  • Thus Lord, all creatures thou hast wrought,
  • Though dombe, shall their Creator sound:
  • But who can utt'rance add to thought?
  • They most whom speciall bonds have bound,
  • (For best they can, who best have found)
  • Shall blaze thy strength, and glad relate
  • Thy more then glorious kingdoms state.
  • That all may know the state, the strength
  • Thy more then glorious kingdom showes:
  • Which longest tyme to tymelessc length
  • Leaves undefin'd : nor ages close
  • As age to age succeeding growes,
  • Can with unstedfast change procure,
  • But still it must, and stedfast dure.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 279
  • Thou dost the faint from falling stay,
  • Nay, more, the falne againe dost raise :
  • On thee their lookes all creatures lay,
  • Whose hunger in due tyme allaies
  • Thy hand: which when thy will displaies.
  • Then all that on the aire do feede
  • Receave besides what food they neede.
  • Each way, each working of thy hand
  • Declare thou art both just and kind,
  • And nigh to all dost alway stand:
  • Who thee invoke, invoke with mynd,
  • Not only mouth : O they shall fiynd
  • He will his hearers wish fulfill,
  • Attend their cry, and cure their ill.
  • He will his lovers all preserve,
  • He will the wicked all destroy,
  • To praise him then as these deserve,
  • O thou my mouth thy might employ J
  • Nay all that breath recorde with joy
  • His sacred names eternall praise,
  • While race you runne of breathing daies.
  • PSALM CXLVI.
  • Lauda anima mea.
  • Up, up my soulc, advaunce Jehovas praise,
  • His only praise: for fixed is in me
  • To praise Jehova all my living daies,
  • And sing my God untyll I cease to be.
  • O lett not this decree
  • A fond conceite deface,
  • That trust thou maist in earthy princes place :
  • That any sonne of man
  • Can thee preserve, for not him self he can.
  • 280 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • His strength is none, if any in his breath;
  • Which vapor'd foorth to mother earth he goes:
  • Nay more, in his, his thoughts all find their death.
  • But blessed he, who for his succour knovves
  • The God that Jacob chose:
  • Whose rightly level'd hope
  • His God Jchova makes his only scope,
  • So strong he built the skies,
  • The feeldes, the waves, and all that in them lies.
  • He endless true doth yeeld the wronged right,
  • The hungry feedes, and setts the fett'red free:
  • The lame to lyms, the blind restores to sight,
  • Loveth the just, protects who strangers be.
  • The widowes piller he,
  • He orphans doth support:
  • But heavy lies upon the godlesse sort.
  • He everlasting raignes,
  • Syon, thy God from age to age remaines.
  • PSALM CXLVII.
  • Laudate Dominion.
  • Sing to the Lord, for what can better be,
  • Then of our God that we the honor sing?
  • With seemly pleasure what can more agree
  • Then praisfull voice and touch of tuned string?
  • For lo the Lord againe to forme doth bring
  • Jerusalems long ruinated walls :
  • And Jacobs house, which all the earth did see
  • Dispersed erst, to union now recalls.
  • And now by him their broken hearts made sound,
  • And now by him their bleeding wounds are bound.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 281
  • For what could not, who can (he number tell
  • Of stairs, the torches of his heav'nly hall?
  • And tell so readily, he knoweth well
  • How ev'ry starre by proper name to call.
  • What greate to him, whose greatnes dolh not fall
  • Within precincts? whose powre no lymits stay?
  • Whose knowledges all number soe excel!,
  • Not numbring number can their number lay?
  • Easy to him to lift the lowly just;
  • Easy to down proud wicked to the dust.
  • O then Jehovas causefull honor sing,
  • His, whom our God we by his goodnes find:
  • O make harmonious mix of voice and string,
  • To him, by whom the skies with cloudes are lin'd:
  • By whom the rayne from cloudes to dropp assign'd,
  • Supples the clods of sommer-scorched fields,
  • Fresheth the mountaines with such needfull spring.
  • Fuell of life to mountaine cattaile yieldes,
  • From whom yong ravens careless old forsake,
  • Croaking to him of almes their food to take.
  • The stately shape, the force Of bravest steed
  • Is farre loo weake to work in him delight :
  • No more in him can any pleasure breed
  • In flying footman foote of nymblest flight.
  • Nay which is more, his fearers in his sight
  • Can well of nothing but his bounty brave ;
  • Which, never failing, never letts them neede,
  • Who fixt their hopes upon his mercies have.
  • O then Jerusalem, Jehova praise.
  • With honor due thy God O Sion raise.
  • 282 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • His strength it is thy gates doth surely barre :
  • His grace in thee thy children multiplies :
  • By him thy borders ly secure from warre,
  • And finest flow re thy hunger satisfies.
  • Nor meanes he needes : for fast his pleasure flies,
  • Borne by his word, when ought him list to bid.
  • Snowes woolly locks by him wide scatt'red are,
  • And hoary plaines with frost as ashes hid,
  • Gross icy gobbetts from his hand he flings,
  • And blowes a cold too strong for strongest things.
  • He bidds again, and ice in water flowes,
  • As water erst in ice congealed lay :
  • Abroad the southern wind, his melter goes,
  • The streames relenting take their wonted way,
  • O much is this, but more I come to say,
  • The wordes of life he hath to Jacob tolde:
  • Taught Israeli, who by his teaching knowes
  • What lawes in life, what rules he wills to hold :
  • No nation else hath found him half soe kind,
  • For to his light, what olher is not blynd.
  • PSALM CXLVIII.
  • Laudate Dominum.
  • Inhabitants of heav'nly land
  • As loving subjectes praise your king:
  • You that among them highest stand,
  • In highest notes Jehova sing.
  • Sing angells all, on carefull wing,
  • You that his heralds fly,
  • And you whom he doth soldiers bring
  • In field his force to try.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. '23
  • O praise him suune, the sea of light,
  • O praise him Moone, the light of sea:
  • You pretie stairs in rohe of night,
  • As spangles twinckling do as they.
  • Thou spheare within whose bosom play,
  • The rest that earth emball :
  • You waters banck'd with starry bay,
  • O praise, Q praise him all.
  • All these I say advauuce that name,
  • That doth eternall being show :
  • Who bidding, into forme and frame,
  • Not being yet, they all did grow.
  • All formed, framed, founded so,
  • Till ages uttmost date,
  • They place retaine, they order know,
  • They keepe their first estate.
  • When heav'n hath prais'd, praise earth anew :
  • You dragons first, her deepest guests,
  • Then soundlesse deepes, and what in you
  • Residing low, or moves, or rests.
  • You flames affrighting mortall brests,
  • You cloudes that stones do cast,
  • You feathery snowes from wynters nests,
  • You vapors, sunnes appast.
  • You boisterous windes, whose breath fulfills
  • What in his word, his will setts down :
  • Ambitious mountaines, curteous hills,
  • You trees that hills and mountaines crown:
  • Both you that proud of native gown
  • Stand fresh and tall to see :
  • And you that have your more renown,
  • By what you beare, then be.
  • 284 THE PSALMS OF DAVID.
  • You beasts in woodes untam'd that range,
  • You that with men familier so,
  • You lat your place by creeping change
  • Or airy streamcs with feathers row.
  • You stately kings, you subjects low,
  • You lordes and judges all :
  • You others whose distinctions show
  • How sex or age may fall.
  • All these I say, advaunce that name
  • More hygh then skies, more low then ground
  • And since advaunced by the same
  • You Jacobs sonnes stand cheefly bound:
  • You Jacobs sonnes be cheefe to sound
  • Your God Jehovas praise:
  • So fitts tbem well on whom is found,
  • Such blisse he on you hues.
  • PSALM CXLIX.
  • Cantate Domino.
  • In an earst unused song
  • To Jehova lift your voices :
  • Make his favourites among
  • Sound his praise with cheereftill noises.
  • Jacob, thou with joy relate
  • Him that hath reform'd thy state :
  • Sonnes whom Sion entertaineth
  • Boast in him who on you raigneth.
  • Play on harp, on tabret play,
  • Daunce Jehovas publique daunces:
  • He their state that on him stay,
  • Most afflicted, most advaunces.
  • THE PSALMS OF DAVID. 285
  • O bow glad his saincts I see !
  • Ev'n in bed bow glad they be !
  • Heav'nly hymnes with throat unfolding,
  • Swordes in hand twice-edged holding.
  • Plague and chastise that they may
  • Nations such as erst them pained:
  • Yea, their kings in fetters lay,
  • Lay their nobles fast enchained.
  • That the doom no stay may lett,
  • By his sentence on them sett.
  • Lo! what honor all expecteth,
  • "Whom the Lord with love affecteth!
  • PSALM CL.
  • Laudate Dominum.
  • O laud the Lord, the God of hosts commend,
  • Exault his pow'r, advaunce his holyuesse,
  • With all your might lift his ailmightinesse:
  • Your greatest praise upon his greatness spend.
  • Make trumpetts noise in shrillest notes ascend,
  • Make lute and lyre his loved fame expresse,
  • Him lett the pipe, him lett the tablet blesse,
  • Him organs breath, that windes or waters lend.
  • Lett ringing timbrells soe his honor sound,
  • Lett sounding cymballs soe his glory ring,
  • That in their tunes such mellody be found,
  • As fitts the pompe of most triumphant king.
  • Conclude by all that aire or life enfold,
  • Lett high Jehova highly be extold.
  • FINIS.
  • i)ietoich ;
  • C. YVHITTINGHAM,
  • FOR
  • ROBERT TRIPHOOK,
  • 23, OLD BOND STREET.
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