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Text Identifier:o_lord_hear_my_prayer_o_lord_hear

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Domine, exaudi

Appears in 2 hymnals First Line: Hear my prayer, O Lord, give ear to my supplications

Domine exaudi

Author: Thomas Norton Appears in 2 hymnals First Line: O hear my prayer Lord and let

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[Do not hide your face from me]

Appears in 4 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Randolph Currie; Chrysogonus Waddell Tune Key: a minor Incipit: 41716 44 Used With Text: Psalm 143
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DIMON

Appears in 2 hymnals Used With Text: Hear thou my prayer, O Lord
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DOLGELLEY

Meter: 6.6.6.6.8.8 Appears in 17 hymnals Tune Sources: Welsh hymn melody; alt. 2011 Tune Key: d minor or modal Incipit: 15432 15765 45554 Used With Text: O Hear my Prayer, LORD

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Domine, exaudi

Hymnal: Sunday-School Book #P8 (1896) First Line: Hear my prayer, O Lord, give ear to my supplications Languages: English Tune Title: [Hear my prayer, O Lord, give ear to my supplications]
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Domine exaudi

Author: N. Hymnal: The Whole Booke of Psalmes #56d (1640) First Line: O heare my prayer Lord and let Lyrics: 1 O heare thou my prayer Lord and let my cry come unto thee. 2 In time of trouble do hot hide, thy face away from me. 3 Incline thine eare to me, make hast to heare me when I call: For as the smoke doth fade, so do, my daies consume and fall. 4 And as an harth my bones are burnt, my heart is smitten dead: And withers like the grasse that I forget to eat lay bread. 5 By reason of my groaning voice, my bones cleave to my skin: 6 As Pelican in wildernesse, such case now am I in. 7 And as an Owle in desart is, Lo, I am such a one: I watch and as a Sparrow on the house top am alone. 8 Lo daily in reproachfull wise, my enemies do me scorne: And they that do against me rage, against me they have sworne. 9 Surely with ashes as with bread, my hunger I have fild; And mingled have my drink with teares that from my eyes have stild. 10 Because of thy displeasure Lord, thy wrath and great disdaine: For thou hast lifted me aloft, and cast me down againe. 11 The daies wherein I passe my life, are like the fleeting shade: And I am wither'd like the grasse, which soone away doth fade. 12 But thou O Lord for ever dost remaine in steady place: And thy remembrance ever doth abide from race to race. The second Part: 13 Thou wilt arise, and mercy thou to Sion wilt extend: The time of mercy, now the time foreset is come to end. 14 For even in the stones thereof thy servants do delight: And on the dust thereof they have compassion in their sprite. 15 Then shall the heathen people feare the Lords most holy Name: And all the Kings on earth shall dread his glory and thy fame. 16 Then when the Lord the mighty God againe shall Sion reare: And then when he most nobly in his glory shall appeare. 17 To prayer of the poor desolate, when he himselfe doth bend: When he shall not disdaine unto their prayers to attend. 18 This shall be written for the age that after shall succeed: The people yet imcreated the Lord's renown shall spread. 19 For he from his high Sancturary hath looked downe below: And out of heaven hath the Lord beheld the earth also. 20 That of the mourning captive he might heare the wofull cry: And that he might deliver those that damned are to die. 21 That they in Sion may declare the Lord's most holy Name: And in Jerusalem set forth the praises of the same. 22 Then when the people of the lands, and kingdomes with accord, Shall be assembled for to do their service to the Lord. The third Part. 213My former force of strength he hath abated in the way: And shorter he hath cut my daies, thus I therefore did say: 24 My God in midst of all my daies now take me not away: Thy yeares endure eternally, from age to age I say. 25 Thou the foundations of the earth before all time hast laid: And Lord the heavens are the work which thine own hands have made. 26 Yea they shall perish and decay, but thou shalt tarry still: And they shall all in time waxe old, e'en as a garment will. 25 Thou as a garment shalt them change, and changed they shall be: But thou dost still abide the same, thy yeares do never flee. 26 The children of thy servants shall continually endure: And in thy sight their happy seed for ever shall stand sure. Scripture: Psalm 102 Languages: English

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

John Daniel

Author of "We'll sing new songs"