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Rh the End they are generally crowned with Happines here, and no one can doubt of their being o hereafter.

On this Occaion the following Hymn, or rather a Tranlation of the twenty-third Palm, is aid to have been written, and was oon after publihed in the Spectator.

I.

The Lord my Pature hall prepare,

And feed me with a Shepherd's Care:

His Preence hall my Wants upply.

And guard me with a watchful Eye;

My Noon-day Walks he hall attend,

And all my Midnight Hours defend.

II.

When in the ultry Glebe I faint,

Or on the thirty Mountain pant;

To fertile Vales and dewy Meads,

My weary wand'ring Steps he leads;

Where peaceful Rivers, oft and low,

Amid the verdant Landkip flow. III. Tho'.