Edward Farr, ed. Select Poetry of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth. 1845.
Psalm XIIIXLIV. Francis Davison
L
Quight forget, and quight neglect me?
How long, with a frowning brow,
Wilt thou from thy sight reject me?
Forth this maze of thoughts perplexed,
Where my griev’d mind, night and day,
Is with thinking tried and vexed?
(On my fall his greatness placing)
Build upon my overthrowe,
And be grac’d by my disgracing?
Mark my foe’s unjust abusing;
And illuminate mine eies,
Heavenly beams in them infusing:
And too infinite to nomber,
Rocke me soone, ’twixt hope and fear,
Into Death’s eternal slomber:
“Spight of right on him we trample;”
And in pride of mischief take,
Heartned by my sad example.
At thy mercies’ sacred anchor,
And undaunted will endure
Fiercest storms of wrong and rancour.
Sun-shine shall have his returning;
And my grief-dull’d heart, I knowe,
Into mirth shall change his mourning.
Hymnes to God in sacred measure,
Who to happie passe will bring
My just hopes, at his good pleasure!