Thy gracious ear, O Lord, encline,

O hear me I thee pray,

For I am poor, and almost pine

With need, and sad decay.

Preserve my soul, for *I have trod Heb. I am good, loving,

Thy waies, and love the just, a doer of good and

Save thou thy servant O my God holy things

Who still in thee doth trust.

Pity me Lord for daily thee

I call; 4 O make rejoyce

Thy Servants Soul; for Lord to thee

I lift my soul and voice,

For thou art good, thou Lord art prone

To pardon, thou to all

Art full of mercy, thou alone

To them that on thee call.

Unto my supplication Lord

Give ear, and to the crie

Of my incessant praiers afford

Thy hearing graciously.

I in the day of my distress

Will call on thee for aid;

For thou wilt grant me free access

And answer, what I pray’d.

Like thee among the gods is none

O Lord, nor any works

Of all that other Gods have done

Like to thy glorious works.

The Nations all whom thou hast made

Shall come, and all shall frame

To bow them low before thee Lord,

And glorifie thy name.

For great thou art, and wonders great

By thy strong hand are done,

Thou in thy everlasting Seat

Remainest God alone.

Teach me O Lord thy way most right,

I in thy truth will hide,

To fear thy name my heart unite

So shall it never slide.

Thee will I praise O Lord my God

Thee honour, and adore

With my whole heart, and blaze abroad

Thy name for ever more.

For great thy mercy is toward me,

And thou hast free’d my Soul

Eev’n from the lowest Hell set free

From deepest darkness foul.

O God the proud against me rise

And violent men are met

To seek my life, and in their eyes

No fear of thee have set.

But thou Lord art the God most mild

Readiest thy grace to shew,

Slow to be angry, and art stil’d

Most mercifull, most true.

O turn to me thy face at length,

And me have mercy on,

Unto thy servant give thy strength,

And save thy hand-maids Son.

Some sign of good to me afford,

And let my foes then see

And be asham’d, because thou Lord

Do’st help and comfort me.

 

***

Biography of John Milton

More poems by John Milton