[1] O Lorde thou wylt be greatly praysed in Sion: and vnto thee shal vowes be perfourme[2]Thou that hearest a prayer: vnto thee shall all fleshe come[3][My] misdeedes haue preuayled against me: oh be thou mercifull vnto our wicked transgressions[4]Blessed is the man [whom] thou choosest and receauest vnto thee: he shall dwell in thy court, and we shalbe satisfied with the goodnes of thy house, euen of thy holy temple[5]Thou wylt heare vs, doyng wonderfull thinges in righteousnes O Lorde of our saluation: thou [art] the hope of all endes of the earth, and of them that dwell farre of at the sea coast[6]Thou art he who in his strength setleth fast the mountaines: and is gyrded about with power[7]Who stilleth the raging of the sea, and the noyse of his waues: and the vprore of the people[8]They also that dwel in the vtmost partes [of the earth] be afrayde at thy signes: thou makest them reioyce at the going foorth of the morning and euenyng[9]Thou visitest the earth, and thou makest it ouerflowne, thou enrichest it greatly: the riuer of God is full of water, thou preparest their corne, for so thou ordaynest it[10]Thou waterest her forowes, thou breakest downe her hillockes: thou makest it soft with the drops of rayne, and blessest the increase of it[11]Thou crownest the yere with thy goodnes: and thy cloudes drop fatnes[12]They drop vpon the dwellinges of the wyldernesse: and hilles be compassed with ioy[13]The downes be couered with sheepe: the valleys stande thicke with corne [so that] they showte [for ioy] and also sing