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5 Give thanks aloud to God,
To God the heavenly King;
And let the spacious earth,
His works and glories sing.

Thy mercy, Lord,
Shall still endure;

137

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Len

FIRST PART.

And ever sure
Abides thy word.

10s. Savannah

Lamenting the Desolations of Zion.

ALONG the banks in

Our captive bands in deep despondence strayed,

While Zion's fall in sad remembrance rose,

Her friends, her children, mingled with the dead.

2 The tuneless harp, that once with joy we strung,
When praise employed and mirth inspired the lay,
In mournful silence on the willows hung,

And growing grief prolonged the tedious day. mf 3 Our hard oppressors, to increase our wo,

With taunting smiles a song of Zion claim;
Bid sacred praise in strains melodious flow,
While they blaspheme the great Jehovah's name.
mp 4 But how, in heathen chains, and lands unknown,
Shall Israel's sons a song of Zion raise ?-

O hapless Salem, God's terrestrial throne,
Thou land of glory-sacred mount of praise ;-

5 If e'er my memory lose thy lovely name,
If my cold heart neglect my kindred race,
Let dire destruction seize this guilty frame:
My hand shall perish and my voice shall cease.

137 SECOND PART. L. M. Sunderland.
WHEN we, our wearied limbs to rest,
Sat down by proud Euphrates' stream,
We wept-with doleful thoughts oppressed,
And Zion was our mournful theme.

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2 Our harps, that, when with joy we sung,
Were wont their tuneful parts to bear,
With silent strings, neglected hung,

On willow trees that withered there.

3 How shall we tune our voice to sing,
Or touch our harps with skilful hands?
Shall hymns of joy, to God our King,
Be sung by slaves in foreign lands?

4 O Salem, our once happy seat!
When I of thee forgetful prove,
Let then my trembling hand forget
The tuneful strings with art to move.

mf 5 If I to mention thee forbear,

Eternal silence seize my tongue;
Or if I sing one cheerful air,

137

Till thy deliverance is my song.

THIRD PART. L. M. Danvers.
WHY, on the hending willows hung,
Israel! still sleeps thy tuneful string?-
Still mute remains thy sullen tongue,
And Zion's song denies to sing?

2 Awake!-thy sweetest raptures raise;
Let harp and voice unite their strains:
Thy promised King his sceptre sways;
Jesus, thine own Messiah, reigns!

3 No taunting foes the song require:
No strangers mock thy captive chain:
But friends provoke the silent lyre,
And brethren ask the holy strain.

4 Nor fear thy Salem's hills to wrong,
If other lands thy triumph share:
<< A heavenly city claims thy song;
A brighter Salem rises there.

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5 By foreign streams no longer roam;
Nor, weeping, think of Jordan's flood:
In every clime behold a home,

In every temule see thy God.

137 FOURTH PART. S. M. Pentonville.

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I LOVE thy kingdom, Lord,
The house of thine abode,

The church our blest Redeemer saved
With his own precious blood.

2 I love thy church, O God!
Her walls before thee stand,
Dear as the apple of thine eye,
And graven on thy hand.

3 For her my tears shall fall;
For her my prayers ascend;
To her my cares and toils be given,
Till toils and cares shall end.

4 Beyond my highest joy

I prize her heavenly ways,

Her sweet communion-solemn vows,
Her hymns of love and praise.

5 Jesus, thou friend divine,

Our Saviour, and our King,
Thy hand from every snare and foe,
Shall great deliverance bring.

6 Sure as thy truth shall last,
To Zion shall be given

The brightest glories earth can yield,
And brighter bliss of heaven.

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138

f" W

L. M.

Praise for divine Protection.

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Brewer.

ITH all my powers of heart and tongue, I'll praise my Maker in my song; Angels shall hear the notes I raise, Approve the song, and join the praise. 2 To God I cried, when troubles rose; He heard me, and subdued my foes; He did my rising fears control, mf And strength diffused through all

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3 Amid a thousand snares I stand,
Upheld and guarded by thy hand;
Thy words my fainting soul revive,
And keep my dying faith alive.
4 I'll sing thy truth and mercy, Lord;
I'll sing the wonders of thy word;

soul.

Not all the works and names below,
So much thy power and glory show.

139

'FIRST PART. L. M.

Lynn.

Omniscience and Omnipresence of God. PLORD, thou hast searched and seen me thro', 4 Thine eye commands with piercing view, My rising and my resting hours,

My heart and flesh, with all their powers.

2 My thoughts, before they are my own,
Are to my God distinctly known

He knows the words I mean to speak,
Ere from my opening lips they break.

3 Within thy circling power I stand,
On every side I find thy hand:

mf Awake-asleep-at home-abroad,
I am surrounded still with God.

4 Amazing knowledge!-vast and great!
What large extent!_what lofty height!
My soul, with all the powers I boast,
Is in the boundless prospect lost.

Aff 5 Oh may these thoughts possess my breast,
Where'er I rove-where'er I rest;

Nor let my weaker passions dare

Len Consent to sin-for God is there.

139

SECOND PART. L. M.

Bath.

THOU, Lord, by strictest search hast known
My rising up and lying down;

My secret thoughts are known to thee,
Known long before conceived by me.
2 Could I so false, so faithless prove,
To leave thy service, and thy love-
Where, Lord, could I thy presence shun,
Or from thy dreadful glory run?

3 If up to heaven I take my flight,
'Tis there thou dwell'st,enthroned in light;
Or sink to hell's infernal plains,
'Tis there almighty vengeance reigns.
4 Or should I try to shun thy sight,
Beneath the sable wings of night;

One glance from thee-one piercing ray,
Would kindle darkness into day.

5 The vail of night is no disguise,
No screen from thy all-searching eyes:
Through midnight shades thou find'st thy way,
As in the blazing noon of day.

Aff 6 Search, O my God! my thoughts and heart,
If mischief Jurks in any part;

Correct me, where I go astray,
And guide me in thy perfect way.

139

THIRD PART. L. M.

Bath

God our Creator and Preserver.
"TWAS from thy hand, my God, I came,
A work of such a curious frame:
In me thy fearful wonders shine,
And each proclaims thy skill divine.

2 Great God, my feeble nature pays.
Immortal tribute to thy praise;
Thy thoughts of love to me surmount
The power of numbers to recount.

3 These on my heart are still impressed;
With these I give mine eyes to rest;
And at my waking hour I find

God and his love possess my mind.

139

FOURTH PART. C. M. Dundee.
Omniscience and Omnipresence of God.

Aff IN all my vast concerns with thee,
In vain my soul would try

To shun thy presence, Lord, or flee
The notice of thine eye.

2 Thine all-surrounding sight surveys
My rising and my rest,

My public walks-my private ways,
And secrets of my breast.

3 My thoughts lie open to the Lord,
Before they're formed within ;
And ere my lips pronounce the word,
He knows the sense I mean.

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