University of Virginia Library

Psalm XXXIX. Dixi custodiam.

Thus did I thinck, I well will marke my way,
Least by my tongue I happ to stray.
I musle will my mouth, while in the sight
I do abide of wicked wight.
And so I nothing said, but muett stood,
I silence kept, even in the good.
But still the more that I did hold my peace,
The more my sorrow did encrease.
The more me thought, my hart was hott in me,
And as I mus'd such world to see,
The fire, tooke fire, and forcibly out brake;
My tongue would needes and thus I spake:
Lord unto me my times just measure give,
Show me how long, I have to live:
Lo thou a spanns length, mad'st my living line.
A spanne? nay nothing in thine eyne.
What do we seeke? the greatest state I see,
At best is meerly vanity.
They are but shades, not true things where we live:
Vaine shades, and vaine, in vaine to grive.
Looke but on this: man still doth ritches heape,
And knowes not, who the fruite shall reape.
This beeing thus, for what ô Lord waite I?
I wait on thee, with hopefull ey.

240

O helpe, ô helpe me; this farre yet I crave,
From my transgressions me to save.
Lett me not be throwne down, to so base shame,
That fooles of me, maie make their game.
But I doe hush, why do I say thus much?
Since it is thou that mak'st one such.
Ah! yet from me lett thy plagues be displac'd,
For with thy handy stroakes I wast.
I know that manns fowle sinne doth cause thy wrath
For when his sinne thy scourging hath,
Thou moath-like makes his bewty fading be;
Soe what is manne, but vanity?
Heare Lord my suites, and cries: stopp not thine eares
At these my wordes all cloth'd in teares:
For I with thee; on earth a stranger am,
But baiting, as my fathers came.
Stay then thy wrath, that I maie strength receave,
Ere I my earthly beeing leave.