Edward Farr, ed. Select Poetry of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth. 1845.
Psalme VIVI. Sir Philip Sidney and the Countess of Pembroke
L
While thou art in the heate of thy displeasure;
Nor let thy rage of my due punishment
Become the measure.
For I am weake, and in my weaknes languish:
Lord, help, for ev’n my bones their marrow spend
With cruel anguish.
Alas! how long, my God, wilt thou delay me?
Turn thee, sweete Lord, and from this ougly fall,
My deere God, stay me.
For death doth kill the wittnes of thy glory:
Can of thy praise the tongues entombed make
A heavenly story?
My moistned bed proofes of my sorrow showeth:
My bed—while I with black night moorn alone—
With my teares floweth.
And age pul’d on with paines all freshnes fretteth;
The while a swarm of foes with vexing feates
My life besetteth.
In all whose workes vainenesse is ever raigning;
For God hath heard the weeping sobbing voice
Of my complayning.
They shall be sham’d and vext, that breed my crying,
And turn their backs, and straight on backs appeare
Their shamfull flying.