Edward Farr, ed. Select Poetry of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth. 1845.
Psalme CXXIXVI. Sir Philip Sidney and the Countess of Pembroke
O
Soe now Israël may say:
Israël may say for truth,
Ofte and ever my decay
From my youth their force hath sought,
Yet effect it never wrought.
Place and paine: O height of woe!
Where, as in a plowed field,
Long and deepe did furrowes goe.
But, O just Jehova, thou
Hast their plow-ropes cutt in two!
What you think shall be your end?
Terror shall your mindes amate,
Blush and shame your faces shend:
Marke the wheate on howses’ topp;
Such your harvest, such your cropp.
Gather’d? noe: but wanting sapp,
Filling neither reaper’s hand,
Nor the binder’s inbowd lapp.
Nay, who you shall reape, or bind,
Common kindnesse shall not find.
Where as they their paines imploy,
Shall not once saluting say,
“God speed friendes, God give you joy;
He in whome all blessings raignes
Blesse your selves, and blesse your paines.”