A New Version of the Psalms
PSALM CXXXIII.
Tate and Brady
How vast must their advantage be,
How great their pleasure prove:
Who live like brethren, and consent
In offices of love!
2 True love is like that precious oil,
Which, pour'd on Aaron's head,
Ran down his beard, and o'er his robes
Its costly moisture shed.
3 'Tis like refreshing dew, which does
On Hermon's top distil;
Or like the early drops that fall
On Sion's fruitful hill.
4 For Sion is the chosen seat,
Where the Almighty King
The promis'd blessing has ordain'd,
And life's eternal spring.
Authors:
Abraham Coles
Anne Steele
Charles H. Spurgeon
Charles Wesley
Edward Osler
George Burgess
Harriett Auber
Henry Francis Lyte
Isaac Watts
James Merrick
James Montgomery
John Beaumont
John Hopkins
John Milton
John Newton
John Ryland
Joseph Addison
Joseph Irons
Josiah Conder
Richard Mant
Robert Allan Scott
Sir Robert Grant
Tate and Brady
Thomas Sternhold
Various/Unknown
William Allen
William Goode
William Hiley Bathurat
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Poetry of the Psalms
The "Poetry of the Psalms" is a collection of poems expressing the struggles, fears, anger, joy and love revealed in the Psalms of the Bible. They were written over hundreds of years by various authors, including Isaac Watts, Charles Wesley, George Burgess, Charles Spurgeon, Abraham Coles, Augustus Toplady, Tate and Brady.
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