Edward Farr, ed. Select Poetry of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth. 1845.
Psalm CXII. Archbishop Parker
1
Dixit Dominus Domino
T
Dyd say to Christ, my Lord, his Sonne,—
Set thou in power most glorious
On my right hand aboue the sunne;
Until I make thy foes euen all
Thy low footstoole to thee to fall
As subiectes thrall.
Of thy great power, imperiall,
The royall rod, and princely mace,
Whence grace shall spring originall:
Yea, God shall say,—Thou God vprise,
To raigne amids thyne enemies,
In princely wyse.
Shall offer giftes, in worship free,
As conquest day of thy great might
In shining shew of sanctitie:
For why? the dew of thy swete birth,
As morne new sprong, dropth ioyfull mirth,
So seene on earth.
He will hys worde no tyme repent,
Which sayd thou art a priest indeed,
A kyngly priest, aye permamant;
Of order namde Melchisedeck,
Whom peace and right doth ioyntly decke
As God’s elect.
To make thy raigne inuincible:
He shall subdue by sea and land
All power aduerse most forcible:
He shall great kyngs and Cæsars wound;
In day of wrath, all them confound
By fearefull sound.
As iudge among the Gentile sect;
All places he shall full surprise,
Wyth bodies dead, on earth proiect.
Abrode he shall in sunder smyte
The heds of realmes that him will spyte.
Or scorne hys myght.
And shall in way but water drynke
Of homely brooke as comth to hand,
Pursued to death, and wysht to sinke:
Yet he for thys humilitie
Shall lift hys head in dignitie
Eternally.
O Lord, the eternall Sonne of the Father, which wast begotten before the world was made, and art the first of all creatures, we lowly beseche thee that where, by the session of the ryhte hande of thy Father, thou subduest thy enemies, so make vs to subdue all the dominion of sinne rising against vs, to be made meete to serue thee in all godliness: who liuest and raignest one God wyth the Father, and the Holy Ghost. Amen.