Edward Farr, ed. Select Poetry of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth. 1845.
Psalme LXXVIIVI. Sir Philip Sidney and the Countess of Pembroke
T
To thee my calling cry,
I did, O God, addresse,
And thou didst me attend:
To nightly anguish thrall,
From thee I sought redresse;
To thee unceassantly
Did praying handes extend.
Yea, God to mind I call’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 entertaine no ease.
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.
Anew 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.
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?
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?
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?
Still of thy deedes I muse;
Still see thy glorie’s 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?
The wonders by thee done
All earth do wonder make:
As when thy hand of old
From servitude unjust
Both Jacob’s sonnes did take,
And sonnes of Jacob’s sonne
Whom Jacob’s sonnes had sold.
And fearefull fledd the field:
The deepe, with panting brest,
Engulphed quaking lay:
The cloudes thy fingers prest
Did rushing rivers yield;
Thy shaftes did flaming flee
Through fiery airy way.
From one to other pole,
Twixt roofe of starry sphere
And earth’s then trembling flore,
While light of lightning’s flash
Did pitchy cloudes encleare,
Did round with terror role,
And rattling horror rore.
On sea’s 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.