Edward Farr, ed. Select Poetry of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth. 1845.
Psalme XIXVI. Sir Philip Sidney and the Countess of Pembroke
T
Of him that only thunders;
The firmament, so strangly bent,
Showes his hand-working wonders.
Their course doth it acknowledg:
And night to night succeeding right
In darknes teach cleare knowledg.
Is soe of skill bereaved,
But of the skies the teaching cries
They have heard and conceaved.
From soe faire booke proceeding;
Their wordes be sett in letters greate
For ev’ry bodie’s reading.
The tabernacle builded
There by his grace, for sunne’s faire face
In beames of beuty gilded?
From out his vailing places:
As gladd is hee as giantes be
To runne their mighty races.
About that vault he goeth:
There be no realmes hid from his beames;
His heate to all he throweth.
The very soule amending:
God’s wittnes sure for ay doth dure,
To simplest wisdome lending.
All his commandments being
So purely wise, they give the eies
Both light and force of seeing.
And so endures for ever:
His judgments be self verity,
They are unrighteous never.
Or glittring golden money?
By them is past, in sweetest tast,
Honny or combe of honny.
Most circumspectly guarded:
And who doth frame to keepe the same
Shall fully be rewarded.
His faultes know and acknowledg?
O Lord, clense me from faults that be
Most secret from all knowledg.
Presumptuous sinnes’ offences:
Let them not have me for their slave,
Nor raigne upon my sences.
In thought and conversation:
Soe shall I bide well purifide
From much abomination.
And my harte’s meditation,
My saving might, Lord, in thy sight
Receave good acceptation.