Edward Farr, ed. Select Poetry of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth. 1845.
The Lamentation of a SinnerCI. Anonymous
O L
From him that lyeth prostrate,
Lamenting sore his sinfull life
Before thy mercy-gate:
That doe lament their sinne:
Shut not that gate against me, Lord,
But let me enter in.
How I haue liued here;
For then I know right well, O Lord,
How vile I shall appeare.
I am sure thou canst tell:
What I haue beene and what I am,
I know thou knowest it well.
And eke the things that bee;
Thou knowest also what is to come:
Nothing is hid from thee.
Thou knowest what things were then,
As all things else that haue been since
Among the sonnes of men.
Be hidden from thee then?
Nay, nay, thou knowest them all, O Lord,
Where they were done, and when.
To beg and to intreate;
Euen as the child that hath done euill,
And feareth to be beate.
Where mercy doth abound;
Requiring mercy for my sinne,
To heale my deadly wound.
What I doe beg or craue;
Thou knowest, O Lord, before I aske,
The thing that I would haue.
This is the totall summe:
For mercy, Lord, is all my sute;
Lord, let thy mercy come.