The Continental Harmony Music
Anthem
O Praise the Lord of Heaven
Anthem
Hear, Hear, O Heav’ns
Great-Plain
2. Jesus, the God of Might and Love,
New moulds our Limbs of cumb’rous Clay;
Quick as Seraphic-Flames we move,
Active and young, and Fair as they.
3. Our airy Feet with unknown Flight,
Swift as the Motions of Desire,
Runs up the Hills, of heav’nly Light,
And leave the welt’ring World in Fire.
Rocky-Nook
2. From torturing Pains to endless Joys
On fiery Wheels they rode,
And strangely wash’d their Raiment white
In Jesus’ dying Blood.
3. Now they approach a spotless God,
And bow before his Throne;
Their warbling Harps and sacred Songs
Adore the Holy One.
4. The unveil’d Glories of his Face
Among his Saints reside,
While the rich Treasure of his Grace
Sees all their Wants supply’d.
5. Tormenting Thirst shall leave their Souls,
And Hunger flee as fast;
The Fruit of Life’s immortal Tree
Shall be their sweet Repast.
6. The Lamb shall lead his heav’nly Flock
Where living Fountains rise,
And Love divine shall wipe away
The Sorrows of their Eyes.
West-Sudbury
2. No human Pow’r can stop the Hour
In which the Mortal dies;
A Caesar may be great to-day,
But Death will close his Eyes.
Though many strive and do arrive
To Riches and Renown,
Enjoying Health, and swim in Wealth,
Yet Death will bring them down.
3. The wanton Youth, who hates the Truth,
And chants the Organ sound,
Grim Death will try, and he must die,
And with the Dead be found.
Though Beauty grace the comely face
With rosy, white and red,
A dying Fall will spoil it all,
And Absolom is dead.
4. For some require the best Attire,
Appearing fine and fair,
Yet Death will come into the Room,
And strip them naked there.
The Princes high and Beggars die,
And mingle with the Dust,
The rich and brave, the negro Slave,
The wicked and the just.
5. Come let us hark, and now remark
The Mortal’s dying Day;
Behold how Death doth stop the Breath,
And change the Flesh to Clay.
His helpless Hands now feel the Bands
That cruel Death doth tye;
The vital Heat hath left its Seat,
And he begins to die.
6. Now at the Heart, that little Part,
The Force of Nature hangs,
But Heart and all its Powers fall
A Prey to dying Pangs.
The Pains of Death now stop the Breath,
The human Frame doth fall,
With bitter Cries in Ruin lies,
An awful Sight to all.
7. And when the Sound doth echo round,
The living Mortals must
Prepare a Bed to lodge the Dead,
And cover it with Dust.
Here in this Place the human Face
Deep in oblivion Lies,
Till Christ on high shall rend the Sky,
And bid the Dead to rise.
8. But though we die our Spirits fly
Beyond the lofty Poles;
Why do we dwell upon the Shell,
And let alone the Souls?
The Body must waste in the Dust,
But Spirits shall remain
In perfect Rest or be distrest
As long as God shall reign.
Norfolk
2. Behold, a God descends and dies,
To save my Soul from gaping Hell!
How the black Gulph, where Satan lies,
Yawn’d to receive me when I fell!
3. How Justice frown’d, and Vengeance stood
To drive me down to endless Pain!
But the great Son propos’d his Blood,
And heav’nly Wrath grew mild again.
4. Infinite Lover, gracious Lord!
To thee be endless Honors giv’n:
Thy wond’rous Name shall be ador’d,
Round the wide Earth and wider Heav’n.
Creation
St. John’s
2. “No Works, nor Duties, of your own,
Can for the smallest Sin atone;
The Robes which Nature may provide,
Will not your least Pollution hide.
3. “The softest Couch which Nature knows,
Can give the Conscience no repose:
Look to my Right’ousness, and live;
Comfort and Peace are mine to give.
4. “Ye Sons of Pride, who kindle Coals
With your own Hands to warm your Souls,
Walk in the Light of your own Fire,
Enjoy the Sparks which you desire.
5. “This is your Portion at my Hands;
Hell waits you with her iron Bands;
Ye shall lie down in Sorrow there,
In Death, in Darkness, and Despair.”
Cross-Street
2. When in the sultry Glebe I faint,
Or on the thirsty Mountains pant,
To fertile Vales and dewy Meads
My weary wandering Steps he leads,
Where peaceful Rivers, soft and slow,
Amid the verdant Landscapes flow.
3. Though in a bare and rugged Way,
Through devious lonely Wilds I stray;
His Bounty shall my Pains beguile;
The barren Wilderness shall smile
With lively Greens and Herbage crown’d,
And Streams shall murmur all around.
4. Though in the Paths of Death I tread,
With gloomy Horrours overspread,
My steadfast Heart shall fear no ill,
For thou, O Lord, art with me still;
Thy friendly Crook shall give me aid,
And guide me through the dismal Shade.
Invocation
Bellingham
2. Proclaim Salvation, from the Lord,
For wretched dying Men;
His Hand has writ the sacred Word
With an immortal Pen.
Engrav’d, as in eternal Brass,
The mighty Promise shines;
Nor can the Pow’rs of Darkness ’rase
Those everlasting Lines.
3. He, who can dash whole Worlds to Death,
And make them when he please;
But speaks—and that Almighty Breath
Fulfils his great Decrees.
His very Word of Grace is strong
As that which built the Skies;
The Voice, which rolls the Stars along,
Speaks all the Promises.
4. Oh, might I hear thy heav’nly Tongue
But whisper—thou art mine!
Those gentle Words should raise my Song
To Notes almost divine.
How would my leaping Heart rejoice,
And think my Heav’n secure!
I’d trust the all-creating Voice,
And Faith desires no more.
Cohasset
2. Life is the Hour that God has giv’n,
To ’scape from Hell, and fly to Heav’n;
The Day of Grace, and Mortals may
Secure the Blessings of the Day.
3. The Living know that they must die,
But all the Dead forgotten lie;
Their Mem’ry and their Sense is gone,
Alike unkowing and unknown.
4. Their Hatred and their Love is lost;
Their Envy buried in the Dust;
They have no Share in all that’s done
Beneath the Circuit of the Sun.
5. Then what my Thoughts design to do,
My Hands, with all your Might pursue,
Since no Device nor Work is found,
Nor Faith, nor Hope, beneath the Ground.
6. There are no Acts of Pardon past
In the cold Grave, to which we haste:
But Darkness, Death, and long Despair,
Reign in eternal Silence there.
Egypt
2. He made the ebbing Channel dry
While Isr’el pass’d the Flood;
There did the Church begin their Joy,
And Triumph in their God.
3. He rules by his resistless Might:
What rebel Mortals dare
Provoke th’ Eternal to the Fight,
And tempt that dreadful War?
4. O bless our God, and never cease!
Ye Saints, fulfil his Praise;
He keeps our Life, maintains our Peace,
And guides our doubtful Ways.
5. Lord, thou hast prov’d our suff’ring Souls,
To make our Graces shine;
So Silver bears the burning Coals,
The Metal to refine.
6. Thro’ wat’ry Deeps and fiery Ways,
We march at thy Command,
Led to possess the promis’d Place,
By thy unerring Hand.
Revelation
2. Not the most perfect Rules they gave
Could shew one Sin forgiv’n;
Nor lead a Step beyond the Grave;
But thine conduct to Heav’n.
3. I’ve seen the End of what we call
Perfection here below;
How short the Pow’rs of Nature fall,
And can no further go!
4. Yet Men would fain be just with God,
By Works their Hands have wrought;
But thy Commands, exceeding broad,
Extend to ev’ry Thought.
5. In vain we boast Perfection here,
While Sin defiles our Frame;
And sinks our Virtues down so far,
They scarce deserve the Name.
6. Our Faith, and Love, and ev’ry Grace
Fall far below thy Word;
But perfect Truth and Right’ousness
Dwell only with the Lord.
Washington-Street
2. God on his thirsty Zion’s Hill
Some Mercy-drops has thrown;
And solemn Oaths have bound his Love
To show’r Salvation down.
3. Why do we then indulge our Fears,
Suspicions, and Complaints?
Is he a God? And shall his Grace
Grow weary of his Saints?
4. Can a kind Woman e’er forget
The infant in her Womb?
And, ’mongst a thousand tender Thoughts,
Her Suckling have no Room?
5. “Yet,” saith the lord, “should Nature change,
And Mothers Monsters prove,
Zion still dwells upon the Heart
Of everlasting Love.
6. “Deep on the Palms of both my Hands,
I have engrav’d her Name:
My Hands shall raise her ruin’d Walls,
And build her broken Frame.”
Thomas-Town
St. Enoch
2. The Lord has through th’astonish’d World
Display’d his saving Might,
And made his righteous Acts appear
In all the Heathen’s Sight.
3. Of Isr’el’s House his Love and Truth
Have ever mindful been;
Wide Earth’s remotest Parts the Pow’r
Of Isr’el’s God has seen.
4. Let therefore Earth’s Inhabitants
Their Chearful Voices raise,
And all with universal Joy
Resound their Maker’s Praise.
5. With Harp and Hymns soft Melody
Into the Consort bring.
The Trumpet and shrill Cornet’s Sound
Before th’Almighty King.
6. Let the loud Ocean roar her Joy,
With all the Seas contain;
The Earth and her Inhabitants
Join Consort with the Main.
7. With Joy let Riv’lets swell to Streams,
To spreading Torrents they;
And echoing Vales, from Hill to Hill,
Redoubled Shouts convey;
8. To welcome down the World’s great Judge,
Who does with Justice come,
And, with impartial Equity,
Both to reward and doom.
Morning Hymn
2. Night unto Night his Name repeats,
The Day renews the Sound,
Wide as the Heav’n on which he sits
To turn the Seasons round.
3. ’Tis he supports my mortal Frame,
My Tongue shall speak his Praise;
My Sins would rouze his Wrath to Flame—
And yet his Wrath delays!
4. On a poor Worm thy Pow’r might tread,
And I could ne’er withstand;
Thy Justice might have crush’d me dead,
But Mercy held thine Hand.
5. A thousand wretched Souls are fled
Since the last setting Sun,
And yet thou length’nest out my Thread.
And yet my Moments run.
6. Dear God, let all my Hours be thine
While I enjoy the Light;
Then shall my Sun in Smiles decline,
And bring a pleasing Night.
Sudbury
2. For Christ shall rend the Skies
And bring the Man he chose,
Exceeding fair, beyond compare,
Appearing like a Rose.
The Resurrection Day
Shall crown the Saints with Joy,
When Christ shall come to fetch them Home
And all their Griefs destroy.
3. The glorious Lamp of Day
Shall pass a few more Rounds,
Before the Just shall leave the Dust,
And wear the golden Crowns.
How will they sing for Joy,
When they in Beauty rise!
Their Songs around the Planets sound,
As they ascend the Skies.
4. The Saints’ eternal Rest
Doth on this Day begin,
Now they shall be for ever free
From all Remains of Sin.
Eternal Joy indeed
With them is now begun,
They walk in white, and shine more bright
Than the meridian Sun.
5. Behold them on the Hill
Of perfect Rest above,
They all do share a Mansion there,
In God’s eternal Love.
Before the blessed Lamb
Their Songs shall ever sound
The Angels join, and all combine
To spread their Anthems round.
6. On Zion’s holy Mount
They find sufficient Room,
And dwelling there they all appear
For ever in the Bloom.
But have I quite forgot
The poor rebellious Worm,
His great Surprize when he shall rise,
And feel the Heavens burn?
7. Though now he quiet lies,
Where none can hurt or wound,
How will he quake when Christ shall make
His dreadful Trumpet sound!
Behold the Sinners rise
With loathsome Bodies bare,
The poison Snakes among the Brakes
Appear and look more fair.
8. But Christ will send them down,
Where cruel Devils roar,
And there in Hell the Wretches dwell,
And cry for evermore.
Come now, my Soul, beware,
And make thy Calling sure,
Sustain the Loss of Sin and Dross,
And gain the gradual Cure,
9. That at the Day of Doom,
When all the Dead shall rise,
I may ascend with Christ, my Friend,
Beyond the lofty Skies,
And view his Glory there.
And be for ever blest,
While Ages roll, to grant the Soul
A long and perfect Rest.
Anthem
Sing Praises to the Lord
Weymouth
2. Forbid it, mighty God!
Nor let it e’er be said,
That we, whose Sins are crucify’d,
Should raise them from the Dead.
3. We will be Slaves no more,
Since Christ has made us free,
Has nail’d our Tyrants to the Cross,
And bought our Liberty.
Anthem
I Am Come into My Garden
Rochester
Almighty to save,
And still he is nigh,
His Presence we have.
The great Congregation
His Triumph shall sing,
Ascribing Salvation
To Jesus our King.
3. Salvation to God,
Who sits on the Throne;
Let all cry aloud
And honour the Son.
Our Jesus’s Praises
The Angels proclaim,
Fall down on their Faces
And worship the Lamb.
4. Then let us adore
And give him his Right,
All Glory and Pow’r.
And Wisdom and Might;
All Honour and Blessing,
With Angels above;
And Thanks never ceasing,
And infinite Love.
Gilead
2. Bury’d in Sorrow, and in Sin,
At Hell’s dark Door we lay;
But we arise, by Grace divine,
To see a heav’nly Day.
3. Salvation! let the Echo fly
The spacious Earth around,
While all the Armies of the Sky
Conspire to raise the Sound.
South-Boston
What condescending Ways,
Doth our Redeemer use
To teach his heav’nly Grace!
Mine Eyes, with Joy
And Wonder, see
What Forms of Love
He bears for me.
3. Array’d in mortal Flesh,
He like an Angel stands,
And holds the Promises
And Pardons in his Hands.
Commission’d from
His Father’s Throne,
To make his Grace
To Mortals known.
4. Great Prophet of my God,
My Tongue would bless thy Name;
By Thee the joyful News
Of our Salvation came;
The joyful News
Of Sins forgiv’n,
Of Hell subdu’d,
And Peace with Heav’n!
5. Be thou my Counsellor,
My Pattern, and my Guide,
And thro’ this desert Land
Still keep me near thy Side.
O let my Feet
Ne’er run astray,
Nor rove, nor seek
The crooked Way!
6. I love my Shepherd’s Voice;
His watchful Eye shall keep
My wand’ring Soul among
The Thousands of his Sheep:
He feeds his Flock,
He calls their Names,
His Bosom bears
The tender Lambs.
7. To this dear Surety’s Hand
Will I commit my Cause;
He answers and fulfills
His Father’s broken Laws.
Behold my Soul
At Freedom set
My Surety paid
The dreadful Debt.
8. Jesus, my great High-Priest,
Offer’d his Blood and dy’d—
My guilty Conscience seeks
No Sacrifice beside.
His pow’rful Blood
Did once atone.
And now it pleads
Before the Throne.
9. My Advocate appears
For my Defence on high;
The Father bows his Ears,
And lays his Thunder by.
Not all which Hell
Or Sin can say
Shall turn his Heart,
His Love away.
10. My dear almighty Lord,
My Conqu’ror, and my King,
Thy Sceptre, and thy Sword,
Thy reigning Grace I sing,
Thine is the Pow’r—
Behold I sit
In willing Bonds
Beneath thy Feet.
11. Now let my Soul arise,
And tread the Tempter down;
My Captain leads me forth
To Conquest and a Crown.
A feeble Saint
Shall win the day,
Tho’ Death and Hell
Obstruct the Way.
12. Should all the Hosts of Death,
And Pow’rs of Hell unknown,
Put their most dreadful Forms
Of Rage and Mischief on;
I shall be safe—
For Christ displays
Superior Pow’r
And guardian Grace.
Anthem
We Have Heard with Our Ears
Dedham
Anthem: Universal Praise
O Praise God
Anthem
O Thou to Whom All Creatures Bow
Anthem
Hark! Hark! Hear You Not
St. Thomas
Broad Cove
2. The present Moments just appear,
Then slide away in Haste;
That we can never say—they’re here;
But only say—they’re past.
3. Our Life is ever on the Wing,
And Death is ever nigh;
The Moment when our Lives begin,
We all begin to die.
4. Yet, mighty God! our fleeting Days
Thy lasting Favors share;
Yet, with the Bounties of thy Grace,
Thou load’st the rolling Year.
5. Tis sov’reign Mercy finds us Food,
And we are cloath’d with Love:
While Grace stands pointing out the Road,
Which leads our Souls above.
6. His Goodness runs an endless Round—
All Mercy to the Lord:
His Mercy never knows a Bound—
And be his Name ador’d.
7. Thus we begin the lasting Song;
And when we close our Eyes,
Let Ages down thy Praise prolong,
’Till Time and Nature dies.
Anthem: Deliverance
I Will Love Thee
Anthem: Variety, without Method
O God, Thou Hast Been Displeased
Hopkinton
2. Now his Merits by the Harpers,
Thro’ th’eternal Deeps resounds!
Now resplendent shine his Nail-prints,
Every Eye shall see his Wounds!
They who pierced him,
Shall at his Appearing wail.
3. Every Island, Sea, and Mountain,
Heaven and Earth shall flee away!
All who hate him must, ashamed.
Hear the Trump proclaim his Day:
Come to Judgment!
Stand before the Son of Man!
4. All who love him view his Glory,
Shining in his bruised Face:
His dear Person on the Rainbow,
Now his People’s Heads shall raise:
Happy Mourners!
Now on Clouds He comes! He comes!
5. Now Redemption, long expected,
See, in solemn Pomp appear:
All his People, once despised,
Now shall meet him in the Air:
Hallelujah!
Now the promised Kingdom’s come!
6. View him smiling, now determined
Every Evil to destroy!
All the Nations now shall sing him
Songs of everlasting Joy!
O come quickly!
Hallelujah! come Lord, come!
Anthem
Mourn, Mourn
East Sudbury
2. Thou Sun, with dazzling Rays,
And Moon, that rul’st the Night,
Shine to your Maker’s Praise,
With Stars of twinkling Light.
His Pow’r declare,
Ye Floods on high,
And Clouds that fly
In empty air.
3. The shining Worlds above
In glorious Order stand,
Or in swift Courses move,
By his supreme Command.
He spake the Word,
And all their Frame,
From Nothing came,
To praise the Lord.
4. He mov’d their mighty Wheels
In unknown Ages past,
And each his Word fulfills
While Time and Nature last.
In diff’rent Ways
His Works proclaim
His wond’rous Name,
And speak his Praise.
5. Let all the earth-born Race,
And Monsters of the Deep,
The Fish which cleave the Seas,
Or in their Bosom sleep,
From Sea and Shore
Their Tribute pay,
And still display
Their Maker’s Pow’r.
6. Ye Vapours, Hail and Snow,
Praise ye th’almighty Lord,
And stormy Winds which blow
To execute his Word:
When Lightnings shine
Or Thunders roar,
Let Earth adore
His Hand divine.
7. Ye Mountains near the Skies,
With lofty Cedars there,
And Trees of humbler Size,
Which Fruit in Plenty bear,
Beasts, wild and tame,
Birds, Flies, and Worms,
In various Forms
Exalt his Name.
8. Ye Kings and Judges fear
The Lord, the sov’reign King;
And while you rule us here,
His heav’nly Honors sing:
Nor let the Dream
Of Pow’r and State
Make you forget
His Pow’r supreme.
9. Virgins and Youth engage
To sound his Praise divine,
While Infancy and Age
Their feebler Voices join.
Wide as he reigns
His Name be sung
By ev’ry Tongue
In endless Strains.
10. Let all the Nations fear
The God who rules above;
He brings his People near
And makes them taste his Love:
While Earth and Sky
Attempt his Praise,
His Saints shall raise
His Honors high.
Adams
Our Light and our Defence;
With Gifts his Hands are fill’d,
We draw our Blessings thence:
He shall bestow
On Jacob’s Race
Peculiar Grace
And Glory too.
3. The Lord his People loves;
His Hand no Good withholds
From those his Heart approves,
From pure and pious Souls:
Thrice happy he,
O God of Hosts,
Whose Spirit trusts
Alone in thee.
Claremont
2. If Angels, on that blessed Morn
The Saviour of the World was born,
Pour’d forth seraphic Songs:
Much more should we, of human Race,
Adore the Wonders of His Grace,
To whom the Grace belongs.
3. How wonderful!—How vast His Love!
Who left the shining Realms above,
Those happy Seats of Rest:
How much for lost Mankind he bore,
Their Peace and Pardon to restore,
Can never be express’d.
4. Whilst we adore His boundless Grace,
And pious Mirth, and Joy takes Place
Of Sorrow, Grief, and Pain:
Give Glory to our God on High,
And, that among the gen’ral Joy,
Peace and Goodwill to Men.
Anthem
I Charge You, O Ye Daughters
Anthem
When the Lord Turn’d Again
Anthem: The Dying Christian’s Last Farewell
My Friends, I Am Going
New-Plymouth
Suitable to be sung on the Anniversary of our Forefathers’ landing in New England, Nov. 20th. Anno Domini 1620.
2. For not their Courage, nor their Sword,
To them Possession gave;
Nor Strength, that, from unequal Force,
Their fainting Troops could save;
But thy Right-hand, and pow’rful Arm,
Whose Succour they implor’d;
Thy Presence with the chosen Race,
Who Thy great Name ador’d.
3. As Thee their God our Fathers own’d,
Thou art our Sov’reign King;
O! therefore, as Thou didst to them,
To us Deliv’rance bring!
Thro’ thy victorious Name, our Arms
The proudest Foes shall quell,
And crush them with repeated Strokes
As oft as they rebel.
4. I’ll neither trust my Bow nor Sword,
When I in Fight engage.
But Thee, who hast our Foes subdu’d
And sham’d their spiteful Rage.
To Thee the Triumph we ascribe,
From whom the Conquest came;
In God we will rejoice all Day
And ever bless his Name.
PART II
5. But Thou hast cast us off, and now
Most shamefully we yield;
For Thou no more vouchsaf’st to lead
Our Armies to the Field.
Since when, to ev’ry upstart Foe
We turn our Backs in Fight,
And with our Spoil their Malice feast,
Who bear us ancient Spite.
6. To Slaughter doom’d, we fall, like Sheep,
Into their butch’ring Hands;
Or (what’s more wretched yet) survive,
Dispers’d thro’ heathen Lands.
Thy People Thou hast sold for Slaves,
And set their Price so low,
That not thy Treasure by the Sale,
But their Disgrace, may grow;
7. Reproach’d by all the Nations round,
The Heathen’s Bye-word grown,
Whose Scorn of us is both in Speech
And mocking Gestures shown.
Confusion strikes me blind; my Face
In conscious Shame I hide;
While we are scoff’d, and God blasphem’d,
By their licentious Pride.
PART III
8. On us this Heap of Woes is fall’n;
All this we have endur’d;
Yet have not, Lord, renounc’d thy Name
Or Faith to Thee abjur’d:
But in thy righteous Paths have kept
Our Hearts and Steps with Care,
Tho’ Thou hast broken all our Strength,
And we almost despair.
9. Could we, forgetting thy great Name,
On other Gods rely,
And not the Searcher of all Hearts
The treach’rous Crime descry?
Thou seest what Suff’rings for thy Sake
We ev’ry Day sustain;
All slaughter’d, or reserv’d like Sheep
Appointed to be slain.
10. Awake, arise; let seeming Sleep
No longer Thee detain;
Nor let us, Lord, who sue to Thee,
For ever sue in vain.
Arise, O Lord, and timely Haste
To our Deliv’rance make:
Redeem us, Lord, if not for ours,
Yet for thy Mercies sake.
Victory
2. How have we chas’d them thro’ the Field,
And trod them to the Ground,
While thy Salvation was our Shield,
But they no Shelter found!
In vain to idol Saints they cry;
They perish in their Blood:
Where is a Rock so great, so high,
So pow’rful as our God?
3. The Rock of Isr’el ever lives;
His Name be ever blest;
’Tis his own Arm the Vict’ry gives,
And gives his People Rest.
On Saints, who live as David did,
He pours his Blessings down,
Secures their Priv’lege to their Seed,
And treats them as his own.
Anthem: Sublimity
The Heavens Declare the Glory of God
Anthem
O God, My Heart Is Fixed
St. Andrew’s
2. Let Elders worship at his Feet,
The Church adore around,
With Vials full of Odours sweet,
And Harps of sweetest Sound.
3. Those are the Prayers of all the Saints,
And these the Hymns they raise;
Jesus is kind to our Complaints,
He loves to hear our Praise.
4. Eternal Father, who shall look
Into thy secret Will?
Who but the Son shall take that Book,
And open ev’ry Seal?
5. He shall fulfil thy great Decrees;
The Son deserves it well;
Lo, in his Hand the sov’reign Keys
Of Heav’n, and Death, and Hell!
6. Now to the Lamb that once was slain,
Be endless Blessings paid;
Salvation, Glory, Joy remain
For ever on thy Head.
7. Thou hast redeem’d our Souls with Blood,
Hast set the Pris’ners free,
Hast made us Kings and Priests to God,
And we shall reign with thee.
8. The Worlds of Nature and of Grace
Are put beneath thy Pow’r;
Then shorten these delaying Days
And bring the promis’d Hour.
Cobham
2. See the vain Race of Mortals move
Like Shadows o’er the Plain;
They rage and strive, desire and love,
But all their Noise is vain.
Some walk in Honor’s gaudy Show,
Some dig for golden Ore,
They toil for Heirs they know not who,
And straight are seen no more.
3. What could I wish or wait for then
From Creatures, Earth, and Dust?
They make our Expectations vain,
And disappoint our Trust.
Now I forbid my carnal Hope,
My fond Desires recall;
I give my mortal Int’rest up,
And make my God my all.
Anthem
Sanctify a Fast