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<--Mary Sidney

King David.
David Playing the Harp.


Psalm 84

How lovely is thy dwelling,
     Great God, to whom all greatness is belonging!
To view thy courts far, far from any telling,
     My soul doth long, and pine with longing.
          Unto the God that liveth
          The God that all life giveth
     My heart and body both aspire,
     Above delight, beyond desire.

Alas! the sparrow knoweth
     The house where free and fearless she resideth:
Directly to the nest the swallow goeth,
     Where with her sons she safe abideth.
          O altars thine, most mighty
          In war, yea most almighty:
     Thy altars, Lord! ah! why should I
     From altars thine excluded lie?

O happy who remaineth
     Thy household-man, and still thy praise unfoldeth;
O happy who himself on thee sustaineth,
     Who to thy house his journey holdeth!
          Me seems I see them going
          Where mulberries are growing:
     How wells they dig in thirsty plain,
     And cisterns make, for falling rain.

Me seems I see augmented
     Still troop with troop, till all at length discover
Sion, where to their sight is represented
     The Lord of hosts, the Sion lover.
     O Lord, O God, most mighty
     In war, yea most almighty:
     Hear what I beg; hearken, I say,
     O Jacob’s God, to what I pray.

Thou art the shield us shieldeth:
     Then, Lord, behold the face of thine anointed.
One day spent in thy courts more comfort yieldeth
     Than thousands otherwise appointed.
          I count it clearer pleasure
          To spend my age’s treasure
     Waiting a porter at thy gates,
     Than dwell a lord with wicked mates.

Thou art the sun that shineth,
     Thou art the buckler, Lord, that us defendeth:
Glory and grace Jehovah’s hand assigneth:
     And good, without refusal, sendeth
          To him who truly treadeth
          The path to pureness leadeth.
     O Lord of might, thrice blessed he,
     Whose confidence is built on thee.





 


Source:
Woodring, Carl R., ed.  The Columbia Anthology of British Poetry.
New York: Columbia University Press, 1995.  74-75.




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Elizabethan Theatre
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English Renaissance Drama


Images of London:
London in the time of Henry VII. MS. Roy. 16 F. ii.
London, 1510, the earliest view in print
Map of England from Saxton's Descriptio Angliae, 1579
Location Map of Elizabethan London
Plan of the Bankside, Southwark, in Shakespeare's time
Detail of Norden's Map of the Bankside, 1593
Bull and Bear Baiting Rings from the Agas Map (1569-1590, pub. 1631)
Sketch of the Swan Theatre, c. 1596
Westminster in the Seventeenth Century, by Hollar
Visscher's Panoramic View of London, 1616. COLOR



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