[Page 116]
The Fifteenth Psalm Paraphras'd.
1 WHO on thy Holy Hill, my God, shall rest,
2 And be with everlasting Pleasures blest?
3 The Man who blameless is, and still sincere,
4 And who no Judge do's but his Conscience fear:
5 Whose Practice is a Transcript of thy Law,
6 And whom thy Omnipresence keeps in awe:
7 Who speaks the Truth, and wou'd much sooner die,
8 Than owe his Life to the loath'd Refuge of a Lie.
9 Whose Soul is free from Falshood and Design,
10 And in whose Words Integrity do's shine:
11 Who scorns to flatter, and by little Arts
12 To purchase Treasures, or inveagle Hearts:
13 Who to his Neighbour has no Mischief done,
14 Do's spiteful Actions with Abhorrence shun,
15 And cannot be to what's Inhuman won:
16 Who thinks the best, and none will e'er defame,
17 But as his own, preserves another's Name:
18 Who's ever humble, and is still inclin'd
19 T'inspect himself, and his own Failings find:
20 Who loves Reproofs, and a Respect do's pay
21 To those who kindly guide him in his Way,
22 Who loves the Good, those who to Virtue true,
23 Its Dictates always cheerfully pursue;
24 And a Regard for Honour in their Actions shew:
25 Who when he swears, true to his Oath will prove,
26 And whom nor Fear, nor Int'rest e'er can move,
27 (No, not tho' it to's Prejudice should be,)
28 To disappoint his greatest Enemy:
[Page 117]29 Much less, tho' to his Ruin it should tend,
30 Once to deceive a kind confiding Friend:
31 Who bravely avaricious Thoughts disdains,
32 And is a Stranger to base sordid Gains:
33 Who'd rather starve than th' Innocent betray,
34 Or to base undermining Thoughts give way:
35 He who lives thus, who this his Bus'ness makes,
36 And never once the Paths of Life forsakes,
37 Like some strong Tow'r unshaken shall remain,
38 And all the Batteries of Fate sustain.
Source edition
Chudleigh, Mary Lee, 1656-1710. Poems on several occasions. Together with the Song of the three children paraphras'd. By the Lady Chudleigh. London: Printed by W.B. for Bernard Lintott at the Middle Temple Gate in Fleetstreet, 1703, pp. 116-117. [16],125,[17],73,[1]p.; 8⁰. (ESTC T97275) (Page images digitized from a copy in the Bodleian Library [(OC) 280 j.452].)
Editorial principles
Typography, spelling, capitalization, and punctuation have been cautiously modernized. The source of the text is given and all significant editorial interventions have been recorded in textual notes. This ECPA text has been edited to conform to the recommendations found in Level 5 of the Best Practices for TEI in Libraries version 4.0.0.
Other works by Lady Mary Chudleigh
- The Choice. A Dialogue between Emilia and Marissa. ()
- A Dialogue between Alexis and Astrea. ()
- A Dialogue between Virgil and Mævius. ()
- The Elevation. ()
- FRIENDSHIP. ()
- The Happy Man. ()
- ICARUS. ()
- The Inquiry. A Dialogue between Cleanthe and Marissa. ()
- The Observation. ()
- The Offering. ()
- On the Death of his Highness the Duke of Glocester. ()
- On the Death of my dear Daughter Eliza Maria Chudleigh: A Dialogue between Lucinda and Marissa. ()
- On the Death of my Honoured Mother Mrs. Lee: A Dialogue between Lucinda and Marissa. ()
- On the Vanities of this Life: A Pindarick Ode. ()
- One of Lucian's Dialogues of the Dead Paraphras'd. ()
- A Pindarick Ode. ()
- The Resolution. ()
- The Resolve. ()
- Solitude. ()
- THE SONG OF THE Three Children PARAPHRAS'D. ()
- SONG. ()
- SONG. ()
- SONG. ()
- SONG. ()
- SONG. To Lerinda. ()
- To Almystrea. ()
- To Clorissa. ()
- To Eugenia. ()
- To Mr. Dryden, on his excellent Translation of Virgil. ()
- To the Ladies. ()
- To the Learn'd and Ingenious Dr. Musgrave of Exeter. ()
- To the QUEEN's most Excellent MAJESTY. ()
- To the QUEEN's most Excellent MAJESTY. ()
- The Wish. ()