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Edward Farr, ed. Select Poetry of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth. 1845.

Psalm CV

XX. John Vicars

O LAUD the Lord with invocation

Amidst his holy congregation;

Shew forth his works, set forth his fame,

Sing praise, sing praise unto his name;

And let the heart, and tongue, and voice

Of them that love the Lord, rejoice.

O seeke the Lord our God eternall,

O seeke and search his power supernall;

O seeke and sue to come in sight

Of his most lovely beauty bright;

Of his most amiable face,

Full of refulgent heavenly grace.

Keepe still in due commemoration,

Recount with true gratification

The wondrous works which God had done,

By famous facts his honour wonne;

Let not his judgments just depart

From your most mindful, thankful heart.

Ye sacred sonnes regenerated,

Ye saint-like seed, first propagated

From Abraham, God’s servant deare,

Which him in faith doth loue and feare—

Ye sons of Jacob, his delight,

Extol the Lord’s majesticke might.

For Hee which safely us preserveth,

He only of us best deserveth

To be our Lord and Soveraigne blest,

Having apparently exprest

His judgments just, his equity;

Which all the world can testifie.

What he hath promised and protested

To all that in his promise rested,

Even to his saints a thousand fold,

Which on him with faith’s hand lay hold,

Unto his everlasting praise,

His word he hath made good always:

E’en that blest promise once compacted,

That cov’nant good, once precontracted

To Abraham and Isaac’s seed,

And so to Jacob’s sons decreed,

And unto Israel stablisht sure,

To time’s last period to endure;

When in these words the Lord affirmed,

And (thus) to those his truth confirmed;—

Behold, I Canaan freely give

To you and yours, therein to live;

This lot of your inheritance

My name and fame (there) to advance.

And tho’ the number of that nation

Was yet of slender valuation,

Did yet but very small appeare,

When (thus) his love esteemed them deare;

And that beside their number small,

They in the land were strangers all;

Walking from nation unto nation,

Without all settled habitation,

Now here, now there, conducted still

By their all prudent Pilot’s will;

Who suffered no man wrong to take

But plag’d princes for their sake.

And where they came, thus charg’d, appointed,

Let none offend my deare anointed,

Nor use my prophets spightfullie!

For these are precious in mine eye.

Fierce famine (then) the Lorde orelaide,

Whereby their staffe of bread decaide:

But God good Joseph then ordained,

By whom (foresent) they were sustained,

Tho’ thither he a slave was sould,

Tho’ foes in fetters him did hold,

Untill, in heaven’s appointed time,

God heard his cause, cleared him of crime.

Pharao him found a faithful liver,

And him from prison did deliver,

The Ægyptian king was to him kinde,

And in him did such wisdom finde,

That of his kingdom and whole state

He made him lord, prince, potentate.

That all his peeres might be instructed,

And to his lore and lure conducted,

His senators by Joseph taught:

Then Jacob was to Egypt brought—

I’ th’ land of Ham (then) Israell

Did as a harbour’d stranger dwell.

His flocke, his flock (there) fructified,

And to great numbers multiplied,

And then their foes did farre transcend:

Which only did their foes offend,

Which turned their love to hatred great,

Their smiles to guiles and slie deceipt.

Mild Moses then the Lord elected,

And holy Aaron much respected,

Both whom to Ægypt soone he sent,

There to declare his great intent,

And in the land of Ham to showe

His signs and wonders, to their woe.

Darknesse, strange darknesse, his commission,

Did them obey with expedition,

And overspread all Egypt’s land:

And by Heaven’s all ore-ruling hand

Their waters all gore blood became,

And slew all fishes in the same.

With croaking froggs he them infested,

The land and lodgings where they rested,

Not sparing Pharao’s chamber neate:

He sent huge swarms, noisome and greate,

Of crawling lice and stinging flies

’Mongst their heard-hearted enemies.

Instead of raine haile-stones he rained,

And with feirce flames of fire them bained,

And thereby totallie orethrew

Vines, fig-trees, yea, all trees that grew;

Their caterpillars did abound,

Great grasshoppers their fruits confound.

Their first-born babes he deadly wounded,

And strongest of their land confounded,

Yea, ev’n the prime of all their strength,

And led his servants forth at length,

All fraught with gold or silver store:

Not one was feeble, faint, or poore.

The Ægyptians’ hearts were then revived,

Being of their presence thus deprived,

Such feare of them had broke their hearte;

And as they thus did thence depart

A cloud by day hid them from heate,

Their guide by night a fire most great.

At their request he quailes down rained,

With manna sweet their state sustained,

Whiles through the wildernesse they went;

And then the rigid rocke he rent,

From whence did floods of water flow,

To quench their thirst, as they did goe.

For as he ever was delighted

With mindfulnesse of promise plighted,

So (then) the Lord did mind the same,

And, to his everlasting fame,

He brought them forth with mirth and joy

Whence they had lived in dire annoy.

Yea, such to them was his good pleasure,

That all the labours, lands, and treasure

Of heathen folke his flock did take,

That they might not his lawes forsake,

But faithfully observe his lore,—

Oh let us praise the Lord therefore!