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The Book of Psalms in English Metre

The Newest Version Fitted to the Common Tunes. By Charles Darby

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Psalm XXXIII.

1

Ye righteous in the Lord rejoyce;
It is a comely thing,
For upright men with chearful voice,
To praise the heavenly King.

2

Upon ten stringed instruments,
The harp and psaltery,
O sing new songs with loudest notes,
And sweetest harmony.

3

His word is pure, his works are right,
His ways are just and good:
And from his bounty every thing,
Receives its daily food.

4

The heavens high with all their host,
His word alone hath made:

48

And heaps of waters in the seas,
As in a store-house laid.

5

Let all that dwell upon the earth,
Fear God and stand in awe:
He spake the word, and it was done,
His pleasure was a law.

6

The thoughts and purposes of men,
The Lord doth bring to nought:
But none can change, or disannul,
His purpose or his thought.

7

O blessed is that nation then,
To whom the Lord is known:
And whom, as an inheritance,
He chooseth for his own.

8

The Lord from heaven the sons of men,
Doth severally behold:
He weighs their actions and observes,
Their temper and their mold.

9

No king by hosts, or men by strength,
Of safety can be sure:
Nor can a horse, though swift and strong,
His riders life secure.

10

But they that fear and hope in God,
On them he sets his eye;
To save from death, and keep alive,
In time of scarcity.

11

Our soul in God alone doth hope,
And waiteth patiently:
He only is our help and shield,
In our calamity.

49

12

Our heart shall in the Lord rejoyce,
Who on his name depend:
Then as we in thy mercy hope,
Let mercy us defend.