Index Entry |
Lyric, moral [beg] To thee all bounteous Lord and King
|
Location |
Philadelphia
|
Citation |
PG-P.767.044
1 Oct 1767:11,12 (2023)
To the printers. There is no collection of devout
compositions a greater diversity of matter than in the Psalm
of David. They appear to have been penned while the author
was under the immediate impression of those feelings which
he so admirably describes; . . . [12 lines] And there is
not a sublimer and more musical poem in the shorter
compositions of Addison, than that sweet Ode which is
wrought out of the 19th Psalm. . . [31 lines]
PSALM 145 PARAPHRASED.
1.
To Thee all-bounteous Lord and King,
My muse in sweetest strains shall sing;
Her morning and her evening lays
shall warble in they glorious praise;
Nor ever shall my grateful soul
Neglect thy goodness to extol.
. . . [64 lines follow, completing a total of 5 stanzas]
|
Generic Title |
Pennsylvania Gazette-Philadelphia
|
Date |
1767.10.01
|
Publisher |
Hall, David, and William Sellers
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City, State |
Philadelphia, PA
|
Year |
1767
|
Bibliography |
B0036761
|