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Full text of "The Roman Breviary : reformed by order of the Holy cumenical Council of Trent ; published by order of Pope St. Pius V; and revised by Clement VIII., Urban VIII., and Leo XIII ; together with the offices since granted and the martyrology"



THE ROMAN BREVIARY 




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THE ROMAN BREVIARY 

REFORMED BY ORDER OF THE HOLY 
OECUMENICAL COUNCIL OF TRENT; 
PUBLISHED BY ORDER OF POPE ST 
PIUS V.; AND REVISED BY CLEMENT 
VIII., URBAN VIII., AND LEO XIII. 

TOGETHER WITH THE 

OFFICES SINCE GRANTED 
AND THE MARTYROLOGY 



TRANSLATED OUT OF 
LATIN INTO ENGLISH BY 

JOHN, MARQUESS OF BUTE, K.T. 



A NEW EDITION 
FOR USE IN ENGLAND 

IN FOUR VOLS. 
VOL. II.— SPRING 




WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS 

EDINBURGH AND LONDON 

MCMVIII 



All Rights resrriirr? 



CONTENTS. 



THE PIE 

TWO EASY TABLES .... 
THE KALENDAR .... 

PRAYERS. ABSOLUTIONS AND BLESSINGS 



PAGE 

See vol. i. p. xix 

ix 

xix 

xxxiii 



THE PSALTER- 

MATTINS — 
SUNDAY 
MONDAY 
TUESDAY 
WEDNESDAY 
THURSDAY 
FRIDAY 
SATURDAY 

LAUDS 

SUNDAY 

MONDAY 

TUESDAY 

WEDNESDAY 

THURSDAY 

FRIDAY 

SATURDAY 

PRIME 

SUNDAY 
WEEK-DAYS 



I 

73 
92 
108 
123 
140 
157 

22 

87 
105 
120 
137 
153 
171 

35 
45 



VI 






THE PSALTER— 
RCI 

NON I 

g — 

. 

KSDAY 

DAY . 
THURSDAY 
FRIDAY 
SATURDAY . 
COM PL I 



59 
66 

176 
185 
188 

190 

193 
197 
200 
205 



PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON— 

LENT 

PASSION WEEK 

HOLY WEEK 

R . 
ROGATION 
ASCENSION 
WHITSUNTIDE 



3^5 

351 

337 

453 
497 



THE COMMON OF SAINTS— 

FOR APOSTLES' R\ 5 1 3 

FOR APOSTLE^, E\ ANGELISTS, AND MARTYRS, IN EASTRR-TIDE . 5 1 4 

FOR APOSTLES AND EVANGELISTS OUT OF EASTER- 1 II >1 

! ARTYR OUT Ol 1 111 

FOR MANY MARTYRS OUT OF 1 IDE 

AND O iNl kssOR 

R A CONFESSOR NOT A BISHOP . 

R DOCTOR 

. 

636 
N . 
\TION OF A CHURi 



CONTENTS. Vli 
PROPER OFFICE OF THE SAINTS— 

FEAST-DAYS IN FEBRUARY . 68 1 

it MARCH 725 

n APRIL . . 789 

11 MAY . 839 

M JUNE 931 



ADDITIONAL SERVICES- 
LITTLE OFFICE OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY 
OFFICE FOR THE DEAD .... 

GRADUAL PSALMS 

SEVEN PENITENTIAL PSALMS AND LITANY 
GRACE BEFORE AND AFTER MEAT 
PRAYERS FOR A JOURNEY 
PREPARATION FOR COMMUNION 
THANKSGIVING AFTER COMMUNION . 
DEVOTIONS AFTER COMMUNION 



965 
974 

993 

994 

998 

1 00 1 

1003 

1009 

IOI I 



THE VOTIVE OFFICES- 
ALL HOLY ANGELS . . . 1 1 4 

ALL THE HOLY APOSTLES . . . . . . . 102 1 

ST JOSEPH, SPOUSE OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY . . . IO24 

THE MOST HOLY SACRAMENT OF THE ALTAR . . . . I03I 

THE PASSION OF OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST .... IO44 

THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY IO54 



GENERAL APPENDIX 

OFFICES PECULIAR TO IRELAND 



1063 
"39 



ERRATA. 



Page 925, 2nd col., line 8 from foot, for Antiphon read Commemoration. 
11 928, 2nd col., line 1 1 from top, before Octave insert preceding, of the. 



TWO EASY TABLES. ix 



TWO EASY TABLES, 

COMPILED FROM THE PIE. 



And in which it can be seen at a glance what is to be done 

( I ) When the Second Vespers of one Office fall on the same evening with the First 
Vespers of another Office. 

(2) When two Offices fall on the same day. 

To use these Tables, find the little square in which lines drawn from the 
designations of the two Offices meet at right angles, and then look what direction 
is given underneath the Table, with the number inscribed in the square. 

For instance, in Table A a Double of the Second Class meets a Semi-double 
in a square containing the numeral 4. And 4 gives the Rule " all of the former, 
with a Commemoration of the latter," but if the case be reversed they meet in 1, 
and the Service is " all of the latter, nothing of the former. " And so in Table B, 
the case of a Double of the Second Class and a Semi-double falling on the same 
day is provided for in 4 and 3, and it is ordered that the Semi-double be com- 
memorated and the Double of the Second Class observed, o indicates a case 
which either cannot occur, or which is the subject of special directions in its own 
place. However, it is first needful to know the rank of the different Offices. 



LIST OF FEASTS ACCORDING TO THEIR CLASS. 

Doubles of the First Class. 

Christmas Day. Dec. 25. 
Twelfth-Day. Jan. 6. 
Maundy Thursday. 
Good Friday. 
Holy Saturday. 
Easter Day. 
Easter Monday. 
Easter Tuesday. 
Ascension Day. 
Whitsun Day. 
Whitsun Monday. 
Whitsun Tuesday. 
Corpus Christi. 
The Sacred Heart. 

The Immaculate Conception. Dec. 8. 
Lady Day. March 25. 
vol. 11. a 2 



l nu I" 



ASY . 



option. 

The Birth 24. 

seph. M 

L June 1 
All Sa 

omai ot' Cantertrai 
-eorge. April 

:y. Mtl 
The I in of' the Particular Church. 

'ltular of the Particular Church. 
The Pent of the Chief Patron or Patrons of the diocese. 

tiki of the Second Class. 

The Circumcision. Jan. 1. 
The Holy Name. 

Holy Trii 
- Precious Blood, 
ling of the Cross. May 3. 
Candlemas Day. Feb. 2. 
The Visitation. Jul 
The Birth of the Blessed Virgin. Sept. 8. 

Solemnity of the Most Holy Rosary. 
Michaelm 

Patronage of St Joseph. 
The Feasts of the Eleven Apostles, and of the Evangelists. 
St Stephen. Dec. 2^>. 
The Holy Innocents. Dec. 28. 

wrence. Aug. 10. 
St Anne. Jul\ 
St Joachim. 

I Gregory the Great. March 12. 
St Ed Oct. 13. 

Greater Doubles. 

The Commemorations — 
Of the Prayer of our Lord, 
Of His Suffer 
Of His Coronation, 
Of His Piercing, 
Of I oudment, 

Of Hi 

Of 1 i Blood. 

The Moat Holy Redeem 

>'])t. I4. 

m of the Choi 
> Rtgmi '. i 1 



TWO EASY TABLES. xi 

The Expectation of the Blessed Virgin. Dec. 18. 

Her Espousal. Jan. 23. 

Her Sorrows (the two Feasts). 

The Blessed Virgin styled Help of Christians. May 24. 

The Blessed Virgin styled of Mount Carmel. July 1 6. 

Dedication of St Mary's of the Snows. Aug. 5. 

The Name of Mary. 

The Blessed Virgin styled of Ransom. Sept. 24. 

The Presentation of the Blessed Virgin. 

Her Motherhood. 

Her Purity. 

Her Patronage. 

Manifestation of St Michael. May 8. 

St Gabriel. March 18. 

St Raphael. Oct. 24. 

The Guardian Angels. Oct. 2. 

The Beheading of the Baptist. Aug. 29. 

St Peter's Chair at Rome. Jan. 18. 

St Peter's Chair at Antioch. Feb. 22. 

St Peter's Chains. Aug. 1. 

The Conversion of St Paul. January 25. 

Commemoration of St Paul. June 30. 

Dedication of the Churches of SS. Peter and Paul. Nov. 18. 

St John before the Latin Gate. May 6. 

St Barnabas. June 1 1 . 

The Blessed John and his companions. May 4. 

St Bede the Venerable. May 27. 

St Alban. June 22. 

Translation of St Thomas of Canterbury. July 7. 

The Holy Relics (second Sunday in July). 

St Ursula. Oct. 21. 

St Edmund the Martyr. Nov. 20. 

St Benedict. March 21. 

St Dominic. Aug. 4. 

St Francis. Oct. 4. 

St Patrick. March 17. 

St Francis Xavier. Dec. 3. 1 

Sundays of the First Class. 

The First Sunday of Advent. 
The First Sunday of Lent. 
Passion Sunday. 
Palm Sunday. 
Easter Sunday. 
Low Sunday. 
Whitsunday. 
Trinity Sunday. 

1 The Feast was an Ordinary Double when the Office given in this Breviary was printed. 



xii TWO 

Jays of the Second Class. 
Mid, Third, and Fourth Sundays in Adi 

-una Sum: 
Quinquagesima Su: 
Trn id Fourth Sundays of Lent. 



Greater Week-days. 



Thi> rent. 

Those of Lent. 
The Em: 
Rogation Mor. 



/;; the General Appendix will be found the following Greater Doubles. 

Translation of the Holy House of Loreto. 

Finding of the Child Jesus in the Temple. 
The Holy Home. 

The Blessed Thomas Plumtree and his Companions. 
The Flight of our Lord Jesus Christ into Egypt. 
The Blessed Virgin Mary, styled of Good Counsel. 
The Blessed Virgin Mary, styled the Mother of the Lord our Shepherd. 
Lowliness of the Blessed Virgin Mary. 
The Blessed Virgin Mary, styled Mother of Grace. 

nslation of St Edmund. 
The Blessed Virgin Mary, styled of Perpetual Succour. 
The Blessed John Fisher. 
The Blessed Thomas More. 
Translation of St Cuthbert. 
The Blessed Thomas Percy. 



LIST OF PRIMARY FEASTS. 

I . Doubles of the First Class. 



Christ! 
Twelfi 

: 
I 



TWO EASY TABLES. xiii 

SS. Peter and Paul. 

All Saints. 

St Thomas of Canterbury. 

St George. 

St Augustine of Canterbury. 

The Dedication of the Particular Church. 

The Patron or Titular. 

The principal Patron or Patrons of the district or diocese. 

II. Doubles of the Second Class. 

The Circumcision. 

The Most Holy Trinity. 

Candlemas Day. 

The Visitation. 

The Nativity of the Blessed Virgin. 

Michaelmas Day. 

The Feasts of the Eleven Apostles, and of the Evangelists. 

St Stephen. Dec. 26. 

The Holy Innocents. 

St Lawrence. 

St Anne. 

St Joachim. 

St Gregory the Great. 

St Edward. 

III. Greater Doubles. 

The Transfiguration. 

The Dedication of St Saviour's. 

Dedication of St Mary's of the Snows. 

The Angels Guardian. 

The Dedication of the Basilicas of SS. Peter and Paul. 

St Barnabas. 

St Benedict. 

St Dominic. 

St Francis. 

St Gabriel. 

St Raphael. 

The Blessed John and his Companions. 

St Bede the Venerable. 

St Alban. 

The Holy Relics. 

St Ursula. 

St Edmund the Martyr. 

St Patrick. 

St Francis Xavier. 

IV. Doubles. 
The Birthday (or day kept as such) of each Saint. 






LIST OF SECONDARY F] 

I . Doubles of the First Class. 
The Most Sac i 

I I . Doubles of the Second Class. 

Finding of the Holy Cross. 
The Feast of tin Mo • Precious Blood. 
The Solemnity of the Most Holy Rosary. 
The Patronage of St Joseph. 

III. Greater Doubles. 

The Exaltation of the Holy Cross. 

The Sorrows of the Blessed Virgin (the two Feasts). 

The Blessed Virgin styled of Mount Carmel. 

Her Holy Name. 

The Blessed Virgin styled of Ransom. 

Her Presentation. 

The Manifestation of St Michael. 

The Beheading of St John the Baptist. 

St Peter's Chair at Rome. 

St Peter's Chair at Antioch. 

Vter's Chains. 
The Conversion of St Paul. 
The Commemoration of St Paul. 

ohn before the Latin Gate. 
The Commemorations — 

Of the Prayer of our Lord, 

Of His Sufferings, 

O: -nation, 

Of His I 

Of 1 : roudment, 

Of His ! rids, 

Of 1 1 »lood. 

of the Mo Redeemer. 

•in. 
Her 

the Blew 

All 



TWO EASY TABLES. 



XV 



TABLE A. 



If the Second Vespers of 




An Higher Sunday (*>«, of the First or 
Second Class) ..... 


4 


3 


4 


4 


3 


3 


3 


3 


3 


O 




An Ordinary Sunday .... 


4 


5 


4 


4 


3 


3 


l 


< 


1 


O 


A Double of the First Class . 


2 


4 


2 


4 


4 


4 


6 


4 


6 


4 


A Double of the Second Class 


4 


4 


4 


4 


4 


4 


3 


6 


3 


4 


A Patron or Titular .... 


2 


4 


2 


4 


4 


4 





4 


6 


4 


A Greater Double .... 


4 


4 


4 


4 


4 


6 


1 


3 


1 


4 


A Double 


4 


5 


4 


4 


5 


3 


1 


3 


1 


4 


A Semi-double ..... 


4 


3 


4 


5 


3 


3 


1 


1 


1 


5 


An Octave-day ..... 


4 


5 


4 


4 


5 


3 


1 


3 


1 


4 


A Day within an Octave 





3 


4 


3 


3 


3 


1 


1 


1 


5 


i . All of the latter, nothing of the former. 

2. All of the former, nothing of the latter. 

3. All of the latter, but with a Com- 

memoration of the former. 

4. All of the former, but with a Com- 

memoration of the latter. 

5. All of the former till the Chapter, ex- 

clusive ; then of the latter, from the 
Chapter, inclusive, but with a Com- 
memoration of the former. 

6. All of the more important, but with 

a Commemoration of the less 
important ; if equal, Vespers of the 
latter from the Chapter inclusive. 


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fall on the same evening with the 
First Vespers of 



Note. 

At the First Vespers of the Octave-days of the Ascension and of Corpus 
Jhristi and of other Primary Feasts of our Lord, the whole Service is of the 
Ictave. If a Double Feast have occupied the day, it is only commemorated, 



XVI 

unless it be of the Fir* or Secoru >e the Service is of it, with 

a Commemoration of the First Vespers of the CK* 

If t: 1 Vespers of the Octave-days of the Feasts of our Lord which 

mn, such as those of Twelfth- . the 

e others, clash with the ! ;>ers of a Double (including 

lohn the Baptist), the Double ommemorated, 

unless it be of the First or Second Class, the Patron, Titular, or Dedication 

alar Church, in which cases th( is of the Double, 

with a Co mmem o rat ion of the Second Vespers of the Octave. 

On . Feasts of the Bleated Virgin, the Angels, 

\>hn the 1 . ;nd the Holj . there is only a C 

men of an Ordinary or I >ouble that precedes or follows. 

cen reduced to the condition of a 

Simple according to the Pie, Chap, x., and a Double of the First Class fall 

upon the day before, the reduced Feast is commemorated at the Second Vespers 

of the Double of the 1 : is to be commemorated at the Lauds 

of the succeeding day, that is to say of its own day ; but upon Doubles of the 

nd Class such a reduced Feast is commemorated at both Vespers in the 

same way as an O. or a Sunday would be ; but a day within an Octave 

nmemorated unless the next day's Office be of the same. 

Wh Commemorations are to be made, they are arranged in the order 

ed Sunday ; 2, Octave-Day ; 3, Greater Double ; 4, Reduced 

Double ; 5, Ordinary Sunday ; 6, Day within the Octave of Corpus Christi ; 

nmi-double ; 8, Day within an Octave, reduced to the form of Simple; 

10, Simple. 






TWO EASY TABLES. 



XV11 



TABLE B. 



If 








A Double of the First Class 


6 


4 |6 


6 


4 


6 


6 


2 


2 


2 


8 


4 


4 


I 



&■ 

C/5 

P 

3 
n> 

a 

p 

1 


A Double of the Second Class . 


4 


4 


4 


4 


4 


6 


4 


2 


2 


8 


1 


4 
4 


1 

1 


I 
I 


A Greater Double . 


4 


4 


4 


4 


1 


4 


4 


2 


8 


1 


I 


A Double of a Doctor 


4 


4 


4 


4 


1 


4 





O 


1 


1 


I 


4 


1 


I 


A Double .... 


4 


4 


4 


4 


3 


4 


7 


O 


3 


3 


5 


4 


3 


3 


A Day within an Octave . 


4 


4 


4 


3 


3 


7 


3 


3 


3 


5 


5 


3 
4 


3 
3 


3 

3 


An Octave-day 


4 


4 


4 


4 


7 


4 


4 


2 


2 


3 


3 


A Semi-double 


4 


4 


4 


7 


3 


4 


3 


3 


3 


3 


5 


3 


3 


3 


A Simple .... 


3 


3 





3 


3 


3 


3 


3 


3 


3 


5 


3 


3 


3 


A Greater Week-day 


6 





4 


3 


3 


3 


3 


3 


3 


3 


3 











An Eve ..... 





5 


4 


3 


3 


3 


3 


3 


3 


3 

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i. The former is transferred, and 
the latter observed. 

2. The former is observed, and 

the latter transferred. 

3. The latter is observed, and 

the former commemorated. 

4. The former is observed, and 

the latter commemorated. 

5. The former is altogether 

omitted, and the latter 
observed. 

6. The former is observed, and 

the latter altogether omitted. 

7. The more important is ob- 

served, and the less im- 
portant commemorated. 

8. The more important is ob- 

served, and the less im- 
portant transferred. 


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VOL. II. 



a 3 



TVY* 






1 )ouble of any sort, even the Patron, Titular, or Dedication Feast of the 
ular Ch on Dec. 24, Whitsu: .n. 1 or 13, 

cension Day, Corpus Christi 
Midsumn March i<;, June 29, or 

I can be transferred, but if not, it is simply com- 
memorated upon its OT totally omitted, as may be directed in the Pie. 

of the Epiphany no Feast can be kept except Double 

Feasts of thi s, and that with Commemoration of the Octave. Other 

essons are permanently fixed on the first free day after the 

ve ; Simples are commemorated only. Within the Octave of Corpus Cl. 

1-doubles are reduced to the rank of Simples and commemorated, neither can 

)les be transferred thither unless they be of the First or Second Class, and a 

lmemoration is always made of the Octave. Within those Octaves, in which 

the observance of Feasts is allowed, a Semi-double, if it fall on a Sunday, is 

commemorated as prescribed by the Pie. 

The Octaves of Christmas, Twelfth -Day, and Corpus Christi, are com- 
memorated at every Vespers and Lauds, whatever be the Office. 

Other O ich are not in the Kalendar, 1 are not observed from Ash 

Low Sunday, or Whitsun Eve to Trinity Sunday, both inch: 
or from Dec. 1 7 to Jan. 6. 

ly can never be transferred. Therefore, if Corpus Christi fall 
on Midsummer Day, and the Feast of St John were consequently kept on June 
! uly 1 would be kept as the Octave of Corpus Christi, with a Commemoration 
of the Octave of St John at both Vespers and at Lauds. 

If some other Saints be mentioned in the Kalendar on the same day with the 
Patron or Titular, the Feast of the Patron or Titular alone is observed. If the 
ut be a Double or Semi-double, it is permanently fixed on the first free 
u 1 Semi-double. If it is a Double of the First or Second C 
milarlv transferred and kept as on its own d 
The rent and Lent, if not kept as such, are always com- 

d at both Vespers and Lauds, whatever be the Office; 1 nil 

Lauds only. But if an Eve fall in Advent or 
Double of the First Class, or the Patronal, Titular, 
the particular Church, no n< ken of it, even in 

Lauds. 

1 But in the diocese of Hexham there is a special privilege permitting the obsc 
Octave in honoui 

irch, it has 



KALENDAR. xix 



KALENDAR. 

JANUARY. 

i . Circumcision of our Lord. Double of the Second Class. 

2. Octave of St Stephen. Double. Commemoration of the Octaves of St 

Thomas of Canterbury, of St John, and of the Holy Innocents. 

3. Octave of St John, Apostle and Evangelist. Double. Commemoration of 

St Thomas of Canterbury, and of the Octave of the Holy Innocents. 

4. Octave of the Holy Innocents, Martyrs. Double. Commemoration of St 

Thomas of Canterbury. 

5. Octave of St Thomas of Canterbury, Martyr. Double. Commemoration of 

the Eve of the Epiphany and of St Telesphorus, Pope of Rome, Martyr. 

6. Epiphany of Our Lord. Double of the First Class. 

7. Within the Octave of the Epiphany. 

8. Within the Octave. 

9. Within the Octave. 

10. Within the Octave. 

1 1 . Within the Octave. Commemoration of St Hyginus, Pope of Rome, and 

Martyr. 

12. Within the Octave. 

* Lord's Day within the Octave of the Epiphany. [The Finding of the Child 

JESUS in the Temple. Greater Double. General Appendix.] 

13. Octave of the Epiphany. Double. 

* Second Lord's Day after the Epiphany. Feast of the Most Holy Name of 

JESUS. Double of the Second Class. Commemoration of the Sunday. 

14. Hilary, Bishop [of Poitiers,] Confessor, and Doctor of the Church. Double. 

Commemoration of St Felix, Priest and Martyr. 
1 5. Paul, the First Hermit. Double. Commemoration of St Maurus, Abbat. 

16. Marcellus, Pope and Martyr. Semi-double. 

17. Antony, Abbat. Double. 

1 8. The Chair of St Peter at Rome. Greater Double. Commemoration of St 

Paul and of St Prisca, Virgin and Martyr. 

19. Wolstan, Bishop [of Worcester,] Confessor. Double. Commemoration of 

SS. Maris, Audifax, Abachum, and Martha, Martyrs. 

* Third Lord's Day after the Epiphany. [The Feast of the Holy Home, 

JESUS, Mary, and Joseph. Greater Double. Gen. App.] 

20. Fabian and Sebastian, Martyrs. Double. 

21. Agnes, Virgin and Martyr. Double. 

22. Vincent and Anastasius. Semi-double. 

23. Espousal of the Blessed Virgin Mary to St Joseph. Greater Double. Com- 

memoration of St Joseph and of Emerentiana, Virgin and Martyr. 

24. Timothy, Bishop [of Ephesus,] Martyr. Double. 



KAI 

25. Conversio- ter Double. Commemoration of St Peter, 

ishop [ot D'Aiblc. 

tantinople,] Confessor and Doctor of 
Me. 

:ifessor. Semi- Double. 1 Commemoration oi 
: the second time. 
Ic Sales, Bishop [of Geneva,] Confessor, and Doctor of the 
Church. Double. 

30. M Semi-Double. 

[Double in the Provim minster.] 

31. P Double. 
tuagetinui Sim r of our Lord in the Garden of 

Get bs etna ne. I Double. 

ma Sunday, Sufferings of our Lord. Greater Double. 



-► 



■>■ 



FEBRUARY. 

hop [of Antioch,] Martyr. Double, 
ion of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Double of the Second CJ 

archbishop of Canterbury, Confessor. Double. Commemoration 
of Blase, Bishop of Sebaste in Armenia, Martyr. 

-mi, Bishop [of Fiesole,] Confessor. Double. 
rgin and Martyr. Double. 
irehbishop [of Gortyna in Crete,] Confessor. Double. Commem- 
oration oi n and Martyr. 
7. Romuald, Abbat. Double. 

>hn de la Mata, Confessor. Double. 
nl, Pope of Alexandria, Confessor, and Doctor of the Church. Double. 
memoration of St Apollonia, Virgin and Martyr. 
[The Twenty-six Holy Martyrs who suffered in Japan. Double. ( 






10. Si ible. 

11. Gilbert [oi Smipringham,] Confessor. Semi-double. 

cop, Abbat, Confessor. Double. 
13. '1 iers of the Servite Order, Confessors. Double. 

ishop [of Glasgow,] Confessor. Double. Gen. App.] 

-mas Plumtrce and his Companions, Martyrs. Greater Double. Gen. 

i'P-] 

tyrs. 

I 7. ['J • of our I I reater Double. Gen. 

of Jerusalem,] M 



KALENDAR. xxi 

20. 
21. 

22. The Chair of St Peter at Antioch. Greater Double. Commemoration of St 

Paul. 

23. Peter Damian, [Cardinal] Bishop [of Ostia,] Confessor, and Doctor of the 

Church. Double. Commemoration of the Eve. 

24. Matthias, Apostle. Double of the Second Class. 

26. Ethelbert, King of Kent, Confessor. Double. 

27. [Margaret of Cortona, Penitent. Semi-double. Gen. App.] 



28. 



In Leap- Year February has 29 days, the additional day is inserted after the 
23rd, the 24th is then the Eve of St Matthias, and the following days 
are each counted one later, the Feast of St Matthias being the 25th, &c. 
* First Friday in Lent, Coronation of our Lord with Thorns. Greater 
Double. 

Second Friday in Lent, Piercing of Our Lord with Spear and Nails. 
Greater Double. 

Third Friday in Lent, Enshroudment of our Lord. Greater Double. 

Fourth Friday in Lent, The Five Most Holy Wounds of our Lord. 
Greater Double. 



MARCH. 

1. David, Archbishop [of Caerleon,] Confessor. Double. 

2. Chad, Bishop [of Lichfield,] Confessor. Double. 

3. Aelred, Abbat, Confessor. Semi-double. 

4. Casimir, Confessor. Semi-double. Commemoration of St Lucius, Pope of 

Rome, and Martyr. 

5- 

6. 

7. Thomas of Aquino, Confessor, and Doctor of the Church. Double. Com- 

memoration of SS. Perpetua and Felicitas, Martyrs. 

8. Felix, Bishop [of Dunwich,] Confessor. Double. 

9. Frances of Rome, Widow. Double. 

10. The Forty Martyrs. Semi-double. 

1 1 . John of God, Confessor. Double. 

12. Gregory {the Great, - ] Pope of Rome, Doctor of the Church, and Apostle of 

England. Double of the Second Class. 

*3- 
14. 

15- 

16. 

17. Patrick, Archbishop [of Armagh,] Confessor. Greater Double. 

1 8. The Archangel Gabriel. Greater Double. 

19. Joseph, Husband of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Double of the First 

Class. 



xx ii KALEN1 

20. Cutis 

[In the dioce is an Oct. 

..rch. Double. 
t King of England* Mad pp.] 

IY. Double of the First Cll 

luteal Thi p.] 

or of the Church. Double. 
ssor. Semi-double. 



Friday in Passion Week, Sorrows of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Greater 
Double. 



APRIL. 

rancis of Paola, Confessor. Double. 

3. Richard, Bishop [of Chichester,] Confessor. Double. 

4. Isidore, Archbishop [of Seville,] Confessor, and Doctor of the Church. 

Me. 

Double. 



1 1. I > • Pope of Rome, Confessor, and Doctor of the Church. 

Double. 

uble. 
He. Commemoration OJ . \ :.in, and 






Semi-double. Comnici: 

19. A. Double. 

21. AriM-lm, . . ich. 

22. Sotcr and 



KALENDAR. XXlli 

23. George, Martyr, Patron of England. Double of the First Class. 

24. Faithful of Sigmaringen, Martyr. Double. Commemoration of the Octave 

of St George and of St Mellitus, Archbishop of Canterbury. 

25. Mark, Evangelist. Double of the Second Class. 

26. Cletus and Marcellinus, Popes of Rome, and Martyrs. Semi- double. Com- 

memoration of the Octave of St George. 
[The Blessed Virgin Mary, styled of Good Counsel. Greater Double. 
Gen. App.] 

27. Egbert, Confessor. Semi-double. Commemoration of the Octave of St 

George. 

28. Paul of the Cross, Confessor. Double. Commemoration of the Octave of 

St George and of St Vitalis, Martyr. 

29. Peter, Martyr. Double. Commemoration of the Octave of St George. 

30. Octave of St George, Martyr. Double. 

* Third Lord's Day after Easter, Patronage of St Joseph. Double of the 

Second Class. Commemoration of the Sunday. 
[In some dioceses this Feast has an Octave. See Gen. App.] 



MAY. 

1 . Philip and James, Apostles. Double of the Second Class. Commemoration 

of St Asaph, Bishop of St Asaph. 
[* First Lord's Day in May, The Blessed Virgin Mary, styled the Mother 
of the Lord our Shepherd. Greater Double. Gen. App.] 

2. Athanasius, Pope of Alexandria, Confessor, and Doctor of the Church. 

Double. 

3. Finding of the Holy Cross. Double of the Second Class. Commemoration 

of SS. Alexander, Eventius, and Theodulus, Martyrs, and Juvenal, Bishop 
of Narni, Confessor. 

4. John, Cardinal Bishop of Rochester, Thomas More, and their companions, 

Martyrs. Greater Double. 

5. Katharine of Sienna, Virgin. Double. 

6. John, Apostle and Evangelist, before the Latin Gate. Greater Double. 

7. Stanislaw, Bishop [of Crakow,] Martyr. Double. 

8. Manifestation of the Archangel St Michael. Greater Double. 

9. Gregory of Nazianzus, Patriarch [of Constantinople,] Confessor, and Doctor 

of the Church. Double. 

10. Antonine, Archbishop [of Florence,] Confessor. Double. Commemoration 

of SS. Gordian and Epimachus, Martyrs. 

1 1. Pius V., Pope of Rome, Confessor. Double. 

[John Rochester and James Walworth and their Companions, Martyrs. 
Double. Gen. App.] 

12. Nereus, Achilles, the Virgin Domitilla, and Pancras, Martyrs. Semi-double. 
[Lowliness of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Greater Double. Gen. App.] 

13. Walburg, Virgin. Double. 

14. Monica, Widow. Double. Commemoration of St Boniface, Martyr. 



{CALENDAR. 

| tiste dc la Sa! 
[The BK t Grace. Greater Double. 

vpO 

1 7. 7*>. 

[8. \'r:. ..::::,. . 

Dunstan, Archbishop [of Canterbury,] Confessor. Double. Com me r.. 

tion of St Pudentiana, Virgin, 
lernardme of Sienna. S um Jow U i. 
ii. F e of Rom tMe. 

shop [of Gubbio,] Confessor. Semi-double. . 
Ohn Bapti ible. 

24. The Bl Help of Christians." Greater Double. 

[In the di .:ry and Westminster, Double of the First CLiss, 

with ( ien. App.] 

A Id helm, Bishop [of Sherborne,] Confessor. Double. Commemoration of 
Pope of Rome, and Mart 

LftCHBiSHOi ikrbury, Confessor, Apostle of En 01 

Double of the First CI 
: ~ . Bede the Venerable, Confessor, and Doctor of the Church. Greater Double. 
Commemoration of the Octave of St Augustine and of St John I., 
dome, and Ma 
Gregory VII., Pope of Rome, Confessor. Double. Commemoration of the 

Augustine. 
[The Blessed Mar- tret Pole, Countess [of Salisbury,] Martyr. Double. 
1. App.] 

Pope of Rome, Martyr. Double. Commemoration of the 
Octave of St Augustine. 

30. John of Nepomuc, Martyr. Double. Commemoration of the Octave of St 

Augustine and of St Felix, Pope of Rome, and Martyr. 

31. Angela M .gin. Double. Commemorations of the Octave of 

Augustine a- Petronilla, Virgin. 

* Third Lord's Day after Pentecost, the Most S\; .rt of JESUS, 

Double of the First Class. Commemoration of the Sunday. 



JUN1 . 

Wigustine of Canterbury. 

2. O' Dterbury. Double. Commemoration Oi 

Marcellinus, '' i l.lmo, Mart 

3. Mary M ible. 

ible. 

ible. 
[In 

6. No ' Double 



KALENDAR. XXV 

8. William, Archbishop of York, Confessor. Double. 

9. Primus and Felician, Martyrs. 

\_In the diocese of Portsmouth, Translation of St Edmund, Archbishop of 
Canterbury, Confessor. Greater Double. Gen. App.] 

10. Margaret, Queen of Scots, Widow. Double. 

1 1 . Barnabas, Apostle. Greater Double. 

12. John of San Fagondez. Double. Commemoration of SS. Basilides, Cyrinus, 

Nabor, and Nazarius, Martyrs. 

13. Anthony of Padua, Confessor. Double. 

14. Basil the Great, Archbishop [of Cgesarea-in-Pontus,] Confessor and Doctor 

of the Church. Double. 

15. Philip Neri, Confessor. Double. Commemoration of SS. Vitus, Modestus, 

and Crescentia, Martyrs. 
16. 

17. Botolph, Abbat, Confessor. Semi-double. 

[Lord's Day before the birth of St John the Baptist, the Blessed Virgin 
Mary, styled of Perpetual Succour. Greater Double. Gen. App.J 

18. Mark and Marcellian, Martyrs. 

19. Juliana de' Falconieri, Virgin. Double. Commemoration of SS. Gervase 

and Protase, Martyrs. 

20. Silverius, Pope of Rome, and Martyr. 

21. Aloysius Gonzaga, Confessor. Double. 

22. Alban, Proto-Martyr of Britain. Greater Double. Commemoration of 

Paulinus, Bishop of Nola, Confessor. 
[First Free Day after June 22, the Blessed John Fisher, Cardinal Bishop of 
Rochester, Martyr. Greater Double. Gen. App.] 

23. Etheldreda, Virgin. Double. Commemoration of Midsummer Eve. 

24. Birth of St John the Baptist. Double of the First Class. 

25. William, Abbat, Confessor. Double. Commemoration of the Octave of St 

John. 

26. John and Paul, Martyrs. Double. Commemoration of the Octave of St 

John. 

27. Within the Octave of the Birth of St John. 

28. Leo II., Pope of Rome, and Confessor. Semi-double. Commemoration of 

the Octave of St John, and of the Eve of the Apostles. 

29. Peter and Paul, Apostles. Double of the First Class. 
[Commemoration of all the Holy Apostles. Gen. App.]] 

30. Commemoration of St Paul. Greater Double. Commemoration of St Peter, 

and of the Octave of St John. 



JULY. 

* First Lord's Day in July, the Most Precious Blood of our Lord JESUS 
Christ. Double of the Second Class. Commemoration of the Sunday. 
. Octave of the Birth of St John the Baptist. Double. Commemoration of 
the Octave of SS. Peter and Paul. 



XXVI 

. Blessed Virgin M ;b!c of th 

memor. 
;. Within thi I 

Vithin the ' 

the 
(X 

: the Hoi 

July f>, tin More, Martyr. Gi 

- SL App.] 
oofThoi rrbury], Martyr. Great 

10 July, the Holy Relics. Greater Double. I 
memoration of the Sun 

low. Semi-double. 
Willibald, Bishop of Eichstad, Confessor. Double. 
10. The Seven Brethren and the Holy Virgins Rufina and Secunda, all Mai 

Semi-double. 
ii. Cyril, of Moravia, and Methodius, Bishop of Kieff, Confessors, 

linemoration of St Pius I., Pope and Martyr. 

12. John Gualberto, Abbat [of Passignano,] Double. Commemoration of 

!ix, Mat' 

13. Ana. Come, and Martyr. Semi-double. 

1 4. " Buona-ventura," [Cardinal] Bishop [of Albano,] Confessor, and Doctor 

of the Church. Double. 

1 5. Swithun, Bishop [of Winchester,] Confessor. Double. 

[The Division of the Apostles. Double. Gen. App.] 
[Third Sunday in July, Commemoration of All the Holy Bishops of Rome. 
:i. App.] 
Virgin Mary, styled of Mount Carmel. Greater Double. 
[In the diocese of Salford, Double of the First Class. Gen. App.] 
;d, Bishop [of Salisbury,] Confessor. Double. 

1 elli, Confessor. Double. Commemoration of St Symphorosa 
and her Seven Sons, Martyrs. 

or. Double. 
20. Jerome Miani, Confessor. Double. Commemoration of St Margaret, Virgin 

and Mart 
zi. Eiei nperor of the Romans, Confessor. Semi-double. Commem- 

irgm. 

2 2. M Double. 

Martyr. Double. Commemoration I 

M 

24. . -double. Commemoration of the 1 \e of S 

. \ ii gin and 

Double of the s. Commemoration I 

•the lilesi I >!e of the 

[//J I j>.] 

. Martyrs, iad im 



KALENDAR. XXvii 

29. Martha, Virgin. Semi-double. Commemoration of SS. Felix, Simplicius, 

Faustinus, and Beatrix, Martyrs. 

30. Germanus, Bishop of Auxerre, Confessor. Double. Commemoration of SS. 

Abdon and Sennen, Martyrs. 
3 1 . Ignatius, Confessor. Double. 



AUGUST. 

1. The Chains of St Peter. Greater Double. Commemoration of the Holy 

Machabees, Martyrs. 

2. Alphonsus Mary de' Liguori, Bishop [of Santa-Agata-de'-Goti,] Confessor, 

and Doctor of the Church. Double. Commemoration of St Stephen, 
Pope of Rome, and Martyr. 

3. Finding of the body of St Stephen, the First Martyr. Semi-double. 

4. Dominick, Confessor. Greater Double. 

5. Dedication of St Mary's of the Snows. Greater Double. 

6. Transfiguration of our Lord. Greater Double. Commemoration of St 

Xystus, Pope of Rome, and SS. Felicissimus and Agapitus, Martyrs. 

7. Gaetan, Confessor. Double. Commemoration of St Donatus, Bishop of 

Arezzo, Martyr. 

8. Cyriacus, Largus, and Smaragdus, Martyrs. Semi-double. 

9. Oswald, King of the Northumbrians, Martyr. Double. Commemoration of 

the Eve of St Lawrence, and of St Romanus, Martyr. 
1 o. Lawrence, Martyr. Double of the Second Class. 

11. Within the Octave of St Lawrence. Commemoration of SS. Tiburtius and 

Susanna. 

12. Clare, Virgin. Double. Commemoration of the Octave of St Lawrence. 

13. Within the Octave of St Lawrence. Commemoration of SS. Hippolytus 

and Cassian, Martyrs. 

14. Within the Octave of St Lawrence. Commemoration of the Eve of the 

Assumption, and of St Eusebius, Confessor. 

15. Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Double of the First Class. 

* The Lord's Day within the Octave of the Assumption, St Joachim, Con- 
fessor, Father of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Double of the Second Class. 
Commemoration of the Sunday. 

1 6. Hyacinth, Confessor. Double. Commemoration of the two Octaves. 

17. Octave of St Lawrence. Double. Commemoration of the Octave of the 

Assumption. 

1 8. Helen, Empress of the Romans, Widow. Double. Commemoration of the 

Octave of the Assumption, and of St Agapitus, Martyr. 

19. Within the Octave of the Assumption. 

20. Bernard, Abbat [of Clairvaux,] Confessor, and Doctor of the Church. 

Double. Commemoration of the Octave of the Assumption. 

21. Jeanne Frances Fremiot de Chantal, Widow. Double. Commemoration of 

the Octave of the Assumption. 

22. Octave of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Double. Com- 

memoration of SS. Timothy, Hippolytus, and Symphorian, Martyrs. 



xxviii KALEN1 

j after the Octave of the Assumption of the Blessed V 
[PJfe* °f the Most it of the Blessed Virgin. (. 

23. Philip Be »nfessor. Double. Commemoration of tl 

tboloroew. 

24. B . Double of the Second Class. 
: ;. Louis IX., King of dde. 

:tyr. 
. 
tin, Bishop [of Hippo,] ( . and Doctor of the Church. Double. 

Commemoration of St Hermes, Martyr. 

St John the Baptist. Greater Double. Commemoration of St 
Sa 
30. Rose of Lima, Virgin. Double. Commemoration of SS. Felix and him 
that joined him, 

iiop [of Lindisfarne,] Confessor. Double. 



SEPTEMBER. 



1. Raymond the Unborn, Confessor. Double. Commemoration of St Giles, 
Abbat, and of the Twelve Holy Brethren, Martyrs. 
. King of Hungary, Confessor. Semi-double. 

3* 

4. [Translation of St Cuthbert, Bishop [of Lindisfarne] and Confessor. Greater 

Double in the diocese of Hex bam. Gen. App.] 

v Lawrence de' Giustiniani, Patriarch of Venice, Confessor. Semi-double. 

6. 

Hirth of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Double of the Second Class. Commem- 
• Adrian, Martyr. 
.'lie Lord's Day within the Octave, The Holy Name of the Blessed / 
Mary. Greater Double. Commemoration of the Sum! 

.<■ Birth of the Blessed Virgin. Commemoration of 
, Martyr. 
10. N 1 ntino. Double. Commemoration of the he Birth 

the Blessed Virgin. 
1 1. Within the () c Birth of the Blessed Virgin. Commemoration of 

id Hyacinth, Martyrs. 
Birth of the 1' 

1 j. Within tin Birth of tl I Virgin. 

DottUi. Commemoration of the 

rtn of the Blessed Vii , 

15, ' Birth of the Blessed Virgin. Double. Commen 

/" the Blcs 



KALENDAR. xxix 

1 6. Cornelius, Pope of Rome, and Cyprian, Bishop of Carthage, Martyrs. 

Semi-double. Commemoration of SS. Euphemia, Lucy, and Geminian, 
Martyrs. 

17. Marking of the Body of St Francis with the marks of Our Lord. Double. 

1 8. Joseph of Cupertino, Confessor. Double. 

1 9. Januarius, Bishop [of Benevento,] and his Companions, Martyrs. Double. 

20. Eustace, Agapitus, Theopistus, and Theopista, Martyrs. Double. Com- 

memoration of the Eve of St Matthew. 

2 1 . Matthew, Apostle and Evangelist. Double of the Second Class. 

22. Thomas of Villanueva, Archbishop [of Valencia,] Confessor. Double. 

Commemoration of St Maurice and his Companions, Martyrs. 

23. Linus, Pope of Rome, and Martyr. Semi-double. Commemoration of St 

Thecla, Virgin and Martyr. 

24. The Blessed Virgin Mary, styled " of Ransom." Greater Double. 

25. Ninian, Bishop [of Galloway,] Confessor. Double. 

26. Theodore, Archbishop of Canterbury, Confessor. Double. Commemoration 

of SS. Cyprian and Justina, Martyrs. 

27. Cosmas and Damian, Martyrs. Semi-double. 

28. Wenceslaus, Duke [of Bohemia,] Martyr. Semi-double. 

29. Dedication of the Church of St Michael, the Archangel. Double of the Second 

Class. 
[In the dioceses of Menevia and Newport, St Michael and All Angels. 
Double of the First Class. Gen. App.] 

30. Jerome, Priest, Confessor, and Doctor of the Church. Double. Com- 

memoration of St Honorius, Archbishop of Canterbury. 



OCTOBER. 

* First Lord's Day in the Month, The Holy Rosary of the Blessed Virgin 

Mary. Double of the Second Class. Commemoration of the Sunday. 

1 . Remy, Bishop of Rheims, Confessor. Simple or Semi-double at will. 

2. The Guardian Angels. Greater Double. 

3. Thomas, Bishop of Hereford, Confessor. Double. 

4. Francis, Confessor. Greater Double. 

5. Placidus and his Companions, Martyrs. 

6. Bruno, Confessor. Double. 

7. Mark, Pope of Rome, Confessor. Commemoration of SS. Sergius and his 

Companions, Martyrs. 

* Second Lord's Day in the Month, Motherhood of the Blessed Virgin Mary. 

Greater Double. Commemoration of the Sunday. 

8. Bridget, Princess of Nericia, Widow. Double. 

9. Denys, Bishop of Paris, Rusticus, and Eleutherius, Martyrs. Semi-double. 

10. Paulinus, Archbishop of York, Confessor. Double. 

11. Francis Borgia, Confessor. Semi-double. 

12. Wilfred, Archbishop [of York,] Confessor. Double. 

13. Edward, King of England, Confessor. Double of the Second Class. 



KALI 

14. Kail of Ron: Commemoration of the Octave 

* Third Lord's Day in the Month, Purity tf the Blessed Virgin J 
memoration of the »Su: 
D'.ulk. Commemoration of the Octave of St Edward. 
A'ithin tht 

ible. Commemoration of the Octa\ 

ngelist. Double of the Second CI 

.lie. Commemoration of the Octave 
of St Edward. 

[In the di Shrewsbury, Double of the First 'Class. Gen. App.] 

20. Octave ot lie. 

II. Ursula and her Companions, Virgins and M er Double. I 

memoration of St Hilarion, Abbat. 

OVIth Lr€ 10 the Month, Patronage of the Blessed Virgin J. 

Gn Me. Commemoration of the Sunday, 

'ohn of K ofetsor. Double. 

I >st Holy Redeemer. Greater Double. 
The Archangel Raphael. Greater Double. 
2;. John of 1 Archbishop [of York,] Confessor. Double. Commem- 

. Chrysanthus and Daria, Martyrs. 
•us, Pope of Rome, Martyr. 
17. I ». Simon and Jude. 

1 and Jude, sfpostles. Double of the Second Class. 

3°- 

31. Eve of All Saints. 



NOVEMBER. 

1. Pi LIT or All the Saints. Double of the First CI: 

2. Within the Octave of All Saints. Commemoration of all the Faithful 

Depart 

3. Wu rgin and Martyr. Double. Commemoration of the ' 

All San 

4. Charles, [Cardinal] Archbishop [of Milan,] Co: 

men I the O All Saints, and of Saints \ 

ata. 
• All Sail 
re ot All 
8. Of Dfmbit* Commemo 

• 1 lolv Sariour. G 



KALENDAR. XXXI 

10. Andrew Avellino, Confessor. Double. Commemoration of SS. Tryphon, 
Respicius, and the Virgin Nympha, Martyrs, and of St Justus, Bishop of 
Rochester, Confessor. 

ii. Martin, Bishop [of Tours,] Confessor. Double. Commemoration of St 
Mennas, Martyr. 

12. Martin, Pope of Rome, Martyr. Semi-double. 

13. Diego, Confessor. Semi-double. 

14. Erconwald, Bishop of London, Confessor. Double. 

[Thomas Percy, Earl of Northumberland, Martyr. Greater Double. Gen. 
A PP .] 

15. Gertrude, Virgin. Double. 

16. Edmund Rich, Archbishop of Canterbury, Confessor. Double. 

[In the diocese of Portsmouth, Edmund of Canterbury. Double of the 
First Class. Gen. App.] 

17. Hew, Bishop of Lincoln, Confessor. Double. 

18. Dedication of the Churches of SS. Peter and Paul. Greater Double. 

19. Elizabeth, Widow. Double. Commemoration of St Pontian, Pope of 

Rome, and Martyr. 

20. Edmund, King of the East Angles, Martyr. Greater Double. 

21. Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Greater Double. 

22. Cecily, Virgin and Martyr. Double. 

23. Clement, Pope of Rome, Martyr. Double. Commemoration of St Felicity, 

Martyr. 

24. John of the Cross, Confessor. Double. Commemoration of St Chrysogonus, 

Martyr. 

25. Katharine, Virgin and Martyr. Double. 

26. Sylvester, Abbat, Confessor. Double. Commemoration of St Peter, Pope 

of Alexandria, Martyr. 

27. Gregory, the Wonder-worker, Bishop [of Neo-Caesarea in Pontus,] Con- 

fessor. Double. 

28. Jehoshaphat, Archbishop of Polotsk, Martyr. Double. 

29. Willibrord, Archbishop of Utrecht, Confessor. Double. Commemoration of 

the Eve of St Andrew, if out of Advent, and of St Saturninus, Martyr. 
[Cuthbert Maine, Martyr. Double. Gen. App.] 

30. Andrew, Apostle. Double of the Second Class. 



DECEMBER. 

1. Felix de Valois, Confessor. Double. 

[Edmund Campion and his Companions, Martyrs. Double. Gen. App.] 

2. Bibiana, Virgin and Martyr. Semi-double. 

3. Francis Xavier, Confessor. Double. 1 

4. Peter Chrysologus, Archbishop [of Ravenna,] Confessor, and Doctor of the 

Church. Double. Commemoration of St Barbara, Virgin and Martyr. 

1 Since raised to the rank of a Greater Double. 



XXXtl KALENDAR. 

:iop [of Dorchester,] C tUt. Commemoration « 

;>bat. 
irchbishop [of Mvra,] Confe ible. 

[In diocese of I rhrerpool, Double of t 1 M'PO 

-. Ambrose, Bishop [of Milan,] Confessor, and Doctor of the Church. 
Double. 
lCOLATI t s of tmi BUSBBD Vll Double of the 

I 
Within the Octave of the Conception. 
10. Within tl the Conception. Commemoration of St Melchu 

Pope of Rome, Martyr. 
[Translation of the Holy House of Loreto. Greater Double. Gen. App.] 
ii. Damasus, Pope of Rome, Confessor. Semi-double. Commemoration of the 

Octave of the Conception, 
i 2. Within the Octave of the Conception. 
13. Lucy, Virgin and Martyr. Double. Commemoration of the Octave of the 

Conception. 
[4, Within the Octave of the Conception. 

1 ;. Octave of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin. Double. 
usebius, Bishop [of Vcrcelli,] Martyr. Semi-double. 

'"■ , 

The Blessed Virgin Mary looking shortly to be delivered. Greater Double. 

20. Eve of St Thou 

Thomas , apostle. Double of the Second Class. 
22. 

24. Christmas I 

Birthday of Our Lord Jesus Christ. Double of the First Class. 
Stephen, the First Martyr. Double of the Second Class. Commemoration 

of the Octave of Christmas. 
John , Apostle and Evangelist. Double of the Second Class. Commemora- 
tion of the O Christmas and of St Stephen. 

Holy Innocents. Double of the Second Class. Commemoration ot the 
Octaves of Christmas, of St Stephen, and of St John. 

mas, Archbishop of Canterbury, Martyr. Double ot the I 
Class. 1 Commemoration of the Octaves of Christmas, [of St Stephen, 
of St John, and of the Innocents.] 

30. Office of the Sunday within tin of Christmas, or of the O, 

Miemorations of the () [Christmas,] of St Thorn 

Dterbury, 1 hen, of Si John, and of the Innocents. 

31. Pope of Rome, ( Double Commemoration of the 

[*hOTOSJ of Canterbury, of St St( 
of St John, and of the Innocents. 

1 Sf< ( >ftke in the 



PRAYERS. ABSOLUTIONS AND BLESSINGS. XXxiii 

PRAYERS. ABSOLUTIONS AND BLESSINGS. 

A Prayer before a Service. 

O Lord, open Thou my mouth that I may bless Thy Holy Name. Cleanse 
my heart from all vain, evil, and wandering thoughts ; enlighten my under- 
standing ; kindle my affections, that I may pray to, and praise Thee with 
attention and devotion ; and may worthily be heard before the presence of 
Thy Divine Majesty. Through Christ our Lord. Amen. 

Lord, in union with that Divine Intention wherewith Thou didst Thyself 
praise God, while as Thou wast on earth, I offer these Hours unto Thee. 



A P 



RAYER after a 



In respect of which Pope Leo X. has granted to all persons <who after saying 
the Divine Office shall devoutly recite it on their knees, condonation of the shortcomings 
and faults committed by them from human frailty in saying the Office. 

To the Most Holy and undivided Trinity, to the Manhood of our Lord 
Jesus Christ Crucified, to the fruitful Virginity of the most blessed and most 
glorious Mary, always a Virgin, and to the holiness of all the Saints be ascribed 
everlasting praise, honour, and glory, by all creatures, and to us be granted the 
forgiveness of all our sins, world without end. Amen. 

Verse. Blessed be the womb of the Virgin Mary which bore the Son of 
the Eternal Father. 

Answer. And blessed be the paps which gave suck to Christ our Lord. 

Then are said the Lord's Prayer and the Angelic Salutation. 



Summary of the Absolutions and Blessings pronounced at Mattins. 

In the First Nocturn, and on Monday and Thursday. 

Absolution. 

Graciously hear, O Lord Jesus Christ, the prayers of Thy servants, and 
have mercy upon us : Who livest and reignest with the Father, and the Holy 
Ghost, world without end. Amen. 

First Blessing. 

May the Eternal Father bless us 
With an eternal blessing. Amen. 

Second Blessing. 

May the Son, the Sole-begotten, 
Mercifully bless and keep us. Amen. 



xxxiv PRA TIONS AND BLESSIN 

of God the Spirit 
All our heart and mind enlighten. A 

In the S :urn y and i,i\. 

Absolution. 

His loving-kindness and mercy help us, Who liveth and reigneth with 
the Father, and the Holy Ghost, world without end. Amen. 

Fourth Bless; 

•her Omnipotent, 
Be to us merciful and clement. Amen. 

Fifth Blessing. 

May Christ to all His people give, 
For ever in His sight to live. Amen. 

Sixth Blessing. 

May the Spirit's fire Divine 

In our hearts enkindled shine. Amen. 

In the Third Nocturn y and on Wednesday and Saturday. 
Absolution. 

May the Almighty and merciful Lord loose us from the bonds of our 
sins. Amen. 

Seventh Blessing. 

May the Gospel's holy lection 

our safety and protection. Amen. 

Eighth Blessing. 

i's most mighty strength alway 

tfand stay. Amen. 

For Feasts of Saints. 

He (or she or they) wli< 

) with God. 

U of the Blessr. 

ire keeping — 
!ens, 



PRAYERS. ABSOLUTIONS AND BLESSINGS. XXXV 



Ninth Blessing. 

May He that is the Angels' King 

To that high realm His people bring. Amen. 

Or, if another Gospel and Homily are to be begun, 

May the Gospel's glorious word 
Cleansing to our souls afford. 

On days of Three Lessons the Absolution and Blessings are as above, according 
to the Week-day, with the following exceptions : First Blessing on Wednesday or 
Saturday, (not the Simple Office of the Blessed Virgin,) if the First Lesson be 
not Gospel with Homily, 

May His blessing be upon us 
Who doth live and reign for ever. 

Whenever the First Lesson is Gospel with Homily, the Blessings are from the 
Third Nocturn. 

If the Office be of a Saint or Saints, the Blessings are : 

First Blessing. 

May His blessing be upon us 
Who doth live and reign for ever. 

Second Blessing. 

He [or she or they) whose feast-day we are keeping, 
Be our Advocate [or Advocates) with God. 

Third Blessing. 

May He that is the Angels' King 

To that high realm His people bring. Amen. 

The Absolution and Blessings in the Simple Office of the Blessed Virgin for 
Saturdays are peculiar to that Office, and are given in their own place. 



Cite falter, 



OR, 



BOOK OF PSALMS, 

DIVIDED ACCORDING TO THE DAYS OF THE WEEK, TOGETHER WITH 
THE ORDINARY OFFICE FOR THE DIFFERENT SEASONS. 



MATTINS, 1 OR MORNING PRAYER. 
FOR THE LORD'S DAY, SUNDAY. 



Before Mat tins, and every other 
Hour, except Lauds and Compline, 
there is said inaudibly? 

/^UR Father, Who art in heaven, 
^-S Hallowed be Thy Name. 
Thy kingdom come. Thy will be 
done on earth, as it is in heaven. 
Give us this day our daily bread. 
And forgive us our trespasses, as we 
forgive them that trespass against us. 
And lead us not into temptation ; 
but deliver us from evil. Amen. 



HAIL, Mary, full of grace ; 
The Lord is with thee : 
blessed art thou among women, 
and blessed is the fruit of thy 
womb, Jesus. 

Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray 
for us sinners, now and at the hour 
of our death. Amen. 

At the begimii?ig of Mat tins and 
Prime, a?td at the end of Compli?ie, 
is then said inaudibly the Apostles 
Creed. 



1 The proper hour for Mattins is midnight, at which time it is said in many Convents. 
In others it is said at 2 or 5 a.m. In the Cathedral of Rome (St. John Lateran's) and 
other Churches of the same country, the hour is about 7 A.M. It is allowable to say it at 
any hour after the sun has begun to decline, and an ordinary practice is to do so late in the 
afternoon. 

2 The reason why the Lord's Prayer and the Apostles' Creed are recited inaudibly during 
the Office seems to be, that in the early Church these formulae were concealed from the 
unbaptized until very shortly before their baptism. Now, all were allowed to be present 
at the Office, of which these formulae are a part, and therefore they were then so said that 
the unbaptized could not hear them. The " Hail, Mary," having been added as a sort of 
appendix to the Lord's Prayer, follows the same rule with it. The Lord's Prayer is said 
aloud during the Canon of the Mass, because only the faithful were then present. 

VOL. II. A 



THE 



I BE] i God l 

Aln 

and earth. And in Jesus Christ, 
only Son, our 

th<- H< 
M 

[fied, 

:d buried I 
into hell : the third da) 1 1 

nded 
into md sitteth on the right 

hand the Father Almighty : 

from tin •: 

the quick and the dead. I be- 

the Holy 

the Communion 

ness of sins, 

don of the body, and 

the I Amen. 

is said at 

rseJ ►!« ( ) LoitD, open Thou 
my lips. 

And my mouth shall 
forth Thy pi 

rse* *J« Make haste, O God, 
me. 

haste to help me, 

KI>. 

the Father, and to the 

in the beginning, 

• rid with- 
out end. \lleluia. 4 

to 
Maw Alleluia 



Ce. en, 

O Eternal K 

Th i 

piph- 

ima Sunday^ and 

Ad- 

Invitatory. Let us worship the 

Lord, for * He is our Maker. 

Let us worship the 

Lord, for * He is our Maker. 



Psalm XCH 

[ Vulgate and LX.V 
by David."] 

OCOME, let us sing unto the 
Lord, let us make a joyful 
noise to the God of our Salva- 
tion : let us come before His 
presence with thank and 

make a joyful noise unto Him 
with psalms. 

Let us worship the Lord, for He 
is our Maker. 

For the Lord is a great God, and 
a great King above all gods : for the 
Lord will not cast off His people: 
for in His hand are all the ends of 
the earth ; and the heights of the 
hills are 1 lis also. 

He is our Mak 

For the sea 4s His, and He made 

it : and His hands formed tin- 
land : *0 come, let us WOI 
and fall down ; let us cry unto 






in the 

t.tit runs thus : " ( rlory l'< 

::i.ll. " .1 II' 

■ 



SUNDAY AT MATTINS. 



Lord our Maker. * For He is 
the Lord our God ; and we are 
His people, and the sheep of His 
pasture. 

Let us worship the Lord, for He 
is our Maker. 

To-day if ye will hear His voice, 
harden not your heart; as in "the 
Provocation," and as in the day of 
" Temptation " in the wilderness : 
when your fathers tempted Me, 
proved Me, and saw My works. 1 

He is our Maker. 

Forty years long was I grieved 
with that generation 2 and said, It is 
a people that do alway err in their 
heart, and they have not known My 
ways : unto whom I sware in My 
wrath that they should not enter 
into My rest. 

Let us worship the Lord, for He 
is our Maker. 

Glory be to the Father, and to 
the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 
As it was in the beginning, is now, 
and ever shall be, world without 
end. Amen. 

He is our Maker. 

Let us worship the Lord, for He 
is our Maker. 

The following Hy?nn is then said, 
from the Octave of the Epiphany to the 
First Sunday in Lent, and from the first 
Sunday of October to Advent. 



Hymn. 3 

'T'O-DAY the Blessed Three in One 
-*■ Began the earth and skies ; 
To-day a Conqueror, God the Son, 

Did from the grave arise ; 
We too will wake, and, in despite 
Of sloth and languor, all unite, 
As Psalmists bid, through the dim night 
Waiting with wistful eyes. 

So may He hear, and heed each vow, 

And prayer to Him addrest ; 
And grant an instant cleansing now, 

A future glorious rest. 
So may He plentifully shower, 
On all who hymn His love and power, 
In this most still and sacred hour, 
His sweetest gifts and best. 

Father of purity and light ! 

Thy presence if we win, 
'Twill shield us from the deeds of night, 

The burning darts of sin ; 
Lest aught defiled or dissolute 
Relax our bodies or imbrute, 
And fires eternal be the fruit 

Of fire now lit within. 

Fix in our hearts, Redeemer dear, 

The ever-gushing spring 
Of grace to cleanse, of life to cheer 

Souls sick and sorrowing. 
Thee, bounteous Father, we entreat, 
And only Son, awful and sweet, 
And life-creating Paraclete, 

The Everlasting King. 

Amen. 

Instead of the foregoing the follow- 
ing Hynm is scad from the Octave of 
Pentecost to the first Sunday of Oc- 
tober. 



1 The occasion here referred to is that described in Exodus xvii. 1-7. The children of 
Israel while travelling through the desert became rebellious from want of water. It was 
given them from the smitten rock. Then is added : " And he [Moses] called the name of 
the place Temptation" (Hebrew and LXX. add "and Provocation"), "because of the 
chiding of the children of Israel, and because they tempted the Lord, saying : Is the Lord 
among us, or not?" 

2 Namely, that particular generation which had come out of Egypt. The next clauses 
relate to that which is written in Numbers xiv. 22 : " Because all these men which have 
seen My glory, and My miracles, which I did in Egypt, and in the wilderness, have tempted 
Me now these ten times, and have not hearkened to My voice, surely they shall not see the 
land which I sware unto their fathers, neither shall any of them that provoked Me see it." 
And this is confirmed with an oath, in verse 28 : " As truly as I live, saith the Lord, as ye 
have spoken in Mine ears, so will I do to you : your carcasses shall fall in this wilderness." 

3 Ascribed to Pope St. Gregory the Great, but altered, one verse omitted, and the last 
verse added. Translation by the late Card. Newman. 



Till. 



HYI 

And meditate alwa 

-:ht 

With them w 

Lif< 

rthly pain. 

And Spirit, < 
To whom all worship shall be done 
In every time and place. 

Amen. 

When the Invitatories. Hymns, 6r*c> 
.Afferent from the above they are 



OF 

\ 

\Hphon j nt. Behold, 

there cometh the King. 

r the rest of the year. 

Paschal time. Al- 
leluia. 

Psalm I. 

Bl is the man that walk- 
eth not in the counsel of the 
ungodly, nor standeth in the way of 
sinners, * nor sitteth in the seat of 

But his delight is in the Law of 

the LORD ; * and in I I doth 

like a trrr 

r , * 
i his fruit in his 

hall 
1 AIm> a- 



i »dly, not so : 
* hut are like the chaff which the 
wind driveth away from the fa< 
arth. 

Therefore the ungodly shall not 
I in the judgment : * nor sin- 
in the congregation of the 
righteous. 

: the Lord knoweth the way 
of the righteous : * but the way of 
the ungodly shall perish. 

Glory he to the Lather, and to 
the Son, * and to the Holy Ghost. 

As it was in the beginning 
now, and ever shall be, * world 
without end. Amen. 

This Doxology is said at the end of 
•Im unless special 
are given to the contrm 

Psalm II. 

[In Acts iv. 25, 26, the authorship of this 
Psalm is attributed to David.] 

WHY do the heathen rage, * 
and the peoples del 

vain thing? 

The kings of the earth set them- 
selves, and the rulers take COU 

:her * against the Lord, and 
against His Anoint 

Let us break their hands asun- 
der : * and cast away their j 
from us. 

He That sitteth in the hea\ 
shall laugh them to scorn : * and 
the Lord shall have them in 
rision. 

Then shall He speak unto them 
in His wrath : * and plague them in 

1 lis sore displeasure. 

: hath He set me I 

Upon His holy hill 









SUNDAY AT MATTINS. 



5 



The Lord hath said unto me : 
* Thou art My Son, this day have 
I begotten thee. 

Ask of Me, and I shall give 
thee the heathen for thine inheri- 
tance, * and the uttermost parts 
of the earth for thy possession. 

Thou shalt rule them with a rod 
of iron, * and shalt dash them in 
pieces like a potter's vessel. 

Be wise now, therefore, O ye 
kings ; * be instructed, ye judges 
of the earth. 

Serve the Lord with fear : * and 
rejoice with trembling before Him. 

Lay hold of instruction, lest the 
Lord be angry, * and ye perish from 
the righteous way. 

When His wrath is kindled sud- 
denly, * blessed are all they that 
put their trust in Him. 

Psalm III. 

[Intituled "A Psalm of David, when he 
fled from Absalom his son." See the his- 
tory in 2 Kings (Sam.) xv., xvi., xviii.] 

,." ORD, how are they increased 
-*— ' that trouble me ? * many are 
they that rise up against me. 

Many there be that say of my 
soul : * There is no help for him 
in his God. 1 

But Thou, O Lord, art a shield 
for me, * my glory, and the Lifter 
up of mine head. 

I cried unto the Lord with my 
voice : * and He heard me out of 
His holy hill. 2 

I laid me down and slept ; * I 
awaked, for the Lord sustained me. 

I will not be afraid of thousands 



of people that have set themselves 
against me round about : * arise, O 
Lord, save me, O my God. 

For Thou hast smitten all them 
that fought against me without a 
cause 3 : * Thou hast broken the 
teeth of the ungodly. 

Salvation belongeth unto the 
Lord : * and Thy blessing is upon 
Thy people. 2 

Psalm VI. 

[Intituled "A Psalm of David." The 
title also contains directions, probably musi- 
cal, the meaning of which is now uncertain.] 

f^\ LORD, rebuke me not in 

^S Thine anger : * neither 
chasten me in Thine hot dis- 
pleasure. 

Have mercy upon me, O Lord, 
for I am weak : * O Lord, heal me, 
for my bones are shaken. 

My soul also is sore vexed : * but 
Thou, O Lord, how long ? 

Return, O Lord, deliver my soul : 
* O save me for Thy mercy's sake. 

For in death there is no one that 
remembereth Thee : * and in the 
grave who shall give Thee thanks ? 

I am weary with my groaning, 
every night I wash my bed : * I 
water my couch with my tears. 

Mine eye is grown dim because 
of grief : * I am waxen old because 
of all mine enemies. 

Depart from me, all ye workers 
of iniquity : * for the Lord hath 
heard the voice of my weeping. 

The Lord hath heard my suppli- 



cation 
my prayer. 



the Lord hath received 



1 Here occur in the Hebrew the letters SLH, or "Selah." The meaning of this is un- 
certain. Gesenius thinks "it seems to have been used to mark a short pause in singing 
the words of the Psalm, so that the singer would be silent, while the instrumental music 
continued." 2 SLH, again. 

a But the Hebrew reads, not, " without a cause," but, "on the jaw-bone." 



THE PSALTER. 



I all mine 
and ' let them return 

and be asham aly. 

Antiphon for Adivnt. Behold, 
eometh the K: the 

High, with 

:is. Alleluia. 

r, and re- 
vith trembling before Him. 

/// Paschal time there is only one 
Antiphott to the whole Nocturtu 

Second Antiphon for Advent. 

phon for the rest of the 
year. Go hteous judge. 

aim VII. 

[Intitule nn of David, which 

concerning the words 

! his Cush is sup- 
imei, whose curs- 

arrated in 2 Kings Sam. 

I nickname for Saul.] 

OLORD my Cod, in Thee do 
I take refuge : * save me 
all them that persecute mc, 
and deli\ 

my BOul like a lion, * 
whi! or to 

O Lord my God, if I have done 

* if there he iniquity in mine 
ith evil them 

I ti mine 

■ 

: lay 
1 1. 



Arise, LORD, in Thine anger : 

* and lift up Thyself against the 

rs of mine enem 
And awake for me, () Lord my 

that 
Thou bast made s * so shall the 
congregation of the people com- 
I'hcc about. 
■r their takes, therefore, return 
Thou on high : * the Lord judgetfa 
the peoples. 

Judge me, O Lord, according to 
my righteousness, * and according 
to mine integrity that is in me. 

let the wickedness of the 
wicked come to an end, and 
tablish the just; * (iod trieth the 
hearts and reins. 

Mine help is righteous, coming 
from the Lord, * Who saveth the 
upright in heart. 

God is a righteous judg< 
and patient : * is He not provoked 
every day ? 

If ye turn not, He will whet His 
sword : * He hath bent His bow and 
made it ready. 

And hath fitted thereon the in- 
struments of death, * He hath 
ordained His an ainst the 

persecutors. 

Behold, he travaileth with iniquity : 

* he hath conceived mischief, and 
brought forth false!; 

1 le made a pit and t : * 
and is fallen into the ditch which he 
made. 

His mischief shall return upon 
his own head : * and his iniquity 

shall tome down upon his 

1 will praise tin 
to His i * and 

! the 
High. 



SUNDAY AT MATTINS. 



Psalm VIII. 

[Intituled "A Psalm of David." It has 
also a title which seems to show that it was 
a song for the vintage.] 

OLORD, our Lord, * how ex- 
cellent is Thy Name in all 
the earth ! 

For Thy glory is exalted * above 
the heavens. 

1 Out of the mouth of babes and 
sucklings hast Thou perfected praise 
because of Thine enemies, * that 
Thou mightest destroy the enemy 
and the avenger. 

When I consider Thine heavens, 
the work of Thy fingers : * the moon 
and the stars which Thou hast or- 
dained : 

What is man, that Thou art mind- 
ful of him ? * or the son of man, 
that Thou visitest him ? 

Thou hast made him a little lower 
than the angels, Thou hast crowned 
him with glory and honour, * and 
madest him to have dominion over 
the works of Thine hands. 

Thou hast put all things under 
his feet, * all sheep and oxen, yea, 
and the beasts of the field. 

The fowl of the air, and the fish 
of the sea, * that pass through the 
paths of the sea. 

Lord, our Lord, * how excel- 
lent is Thy Name in all the earth ! 

Psalm IX. 

[Intituled " A Psalm of David." It has 
also a superscription the meaning of which 
is not now certain. The Targum connects 
it with the slaying of Goliath.] 

I WILL praise Thee, O Lord, 
*- with mine whole heart : * I will 
show forth all Thy marvellous works. 

1 will be glad and rejoice in 

1 This verse was quoted by our Lord, co: 
Sunday, Matthew xxi. 16. 



Thee : * I will sing praise to Thy 
Name, O Thou Most High. 

When mine enemies are turned 
back, * they shall fall and perish at 
Thy presence. 

For Thou hast maintained my 
right and my cause : * Thou satest 
in the throne judging right. 

Thou hast rebuked the heathen, 
and the wicked are perished : * 
Thou hast put out their name for 
ever, even for ever and ever. 

The swords of the enemy have 
failed utterly : * and their cities 
Thou hast destroyed. 

Their memorial is perished with 
a crash : * and the Lord endureth 
for ever. 

He hath prepared His throne for 
judgment : * and He shall judge 
the world in righteousness, He shall 
minister judgment to the people in 
uprightness. 

The Lord also is a refuge for the 
poor : 

And 

name put their trust in Thee : * for 
Thou, Lord, hast not forsaken them 
that seek Thee. 

Sing praises to the Lord, Who 
dwelleth in Zion : * declare among 
the people His doings. 

For when He maketh inquisition 
for blood He remembereth them : * 
He forgetteth not the cry of the 
afflicted. 

Have mercy upon me, O Lord : 
* consider my trouble [which I 
suffer] of them that hate me. 

Thou That liftest me up from the 
gates of death : * that I may show 
forth all Thy praises in the gates of 
the daughter of Zion ! 

I will rejoice in Thy salvation : * 

erniru? those who cried Hosannah on Palm 



* a refuge in times of trouble, 
let them that know Thy 



8 



THE PSALTER. 



the heathen arc Mink down in the 

pit that they made. 

In the net which they hid, * is 
their own foot tak 

Tin known when He 

iteth judgment : * thi 
d in the work of his 
ham: 

Tl U he turned into 

hell : * all the nations that forget 

For the thai] n«>t alway be 

forgotten : * I tation of the 

poor shall not perish for ever. 

Arise, I let not man pre- 

vail : * let the heathen be judged in 
Thy - 

Put Thou a master over them, O 
Lord : * let the nations know them- 
tit men. 1 

Why standest Thou afar off, O 
Lord, * why hidest Thou Thyself 
in times of trouble ? 

The wicked in his pride doth per- 

«>r : * they are taken 

in the devices that they have im- 

ked is praised accord- 
ing to his soul's desire : * and the 
unrighteous is deemed blessed. 

Tli- provoketh the Lord : 

* in th< : his scornful 

indignation he doth not <\ 

re his eyes : * his 
-as. 
Thy jud Ear out of his 

ath dominion over his 

H lid in his heart : * I 

shall itinn 

I shall | 
ity. 
Hi^ mouth is full oi 



bitterness, ami fraud : * under his 
tongue is mischief and sot: 

He sitteth in the lurki; 
with the rich : in the secret p] 
* doth he murder the innocent. 

His eyes are privily set against 
the poor : * he lieth in wait secretly, 
lion in his den. 

He lieth in wait to catch the 
poor : * to catch the poor when 
he draweth him [after him]. 

In his snare doth he bring him 
down : * yet shall he himself totter 
and fall down, when he hath mas- 
tered the poor. 

He hath said in his heart : God 
hath forgotten : * He turneth away 
His face so that He shall never see it. 

Arise, O Lord, O God, lift up 
Thine hand : * forget not the 
afflicted. 

Wherefore doth the wicked pro- 
voke God? * for he hath said in 
his heart : He will not require it. 

Thou seest it, for Thou beholdest 
labour and sorrow : * to deliver 
them into Thine own hand. 

The poor leaveth himself unto 
Thee : * Thou wilt be the h« 
of the fatheii. 

break Thou the arm of the 
wicked and the evil man : * his 
wickedness shall be sought after and 
shall not be found. 

The Lord shall be K 
and ever: * the heathen shall pi 
out of His land. 

The Lord hath heard the petition 
of the pOOt : * Thine ear hath hi 
the desire of his heart. 

the father] the 

oppressed, * that man ma\ 
li no more upon earth. 



• I ! 



SUNDAY AT MATTINS. 



Psalm X. 

[Intituled " Of David." There is also a 
superscription perhaps musical, but now of 
uncertain meaning.] 

IN the Lord put I my trust; 
how say ye to my soul, * 
Flee as a bird to the mountain? 

For lo, the wicked bend their 
bow, they make ready their arrows 
in the quiver, * that they may 
privily shoot at the upright in 
heart. 

For they have destroyed that 
which Thou hast established : * 
and what hath the righteous done ? 

The Lord is in His holy temple : 
* the Lord's throne is in heaven. 

His eyes behold the poor : * His 
eyelids try the children of men. 

The Lord trieth the righteous 
and the wicked : * but he that 
loveth iniquity hateth his own soul. 

Upon the wicked He shall rain 
snares : * fire, and brimstone, and 
an horrible tempest, this shall be 
the portion of their cup. 

For the righteous Lord loveth 
righteousness : * His countenance 
doth behold uprightness. 

Antiphon for Advent. x Strengthen 
ye the weak hands : be strong • say : 
Behold, our God will come, and 
save us, Alleluia. 

Antiphon for the rest of the year. 
2 God is a righteous judge, strong, 
and patient : is He not provoked 
every day? 

Third Antiphon for Advent. Re- 
joice, all ye. 

Third Antiphon for the rest of the 
year. Thou shalt keep us. 

Psalm XI. 
[Intituled "A Psalm of David," with some 
other words, of meaning now uncertain, as 
before.] 



Isa. xxxv. 3, 4. 



HELP, Lord, for the godly 
man ceaseth : * for the truth 
faileth from among the children of 
men. 

They speak vanity every one with 
his neighbour : * with flattering lips, 
with a double heart, do they speak. 

The Lord shall cut off all flat- 
tering lips, * and the tongue that 
speaketh proud things. 

Who have said : With our tongue 
will w T e prevail, our lips are our 
own : * who is lord over us ? 

For the oppression of the poor, 
and the sighing of the needy, * now 
will I arise, saith the Lord. 

I will set him in safety : * I will 
deal faithfully with him. 

The words of the Lord are pure 
words : * silver tried in a furnace, 
purged of dross, purified seven times. 
Thou shalt keep us, O Lord, and 
preserve us * from this generation 
for ever. 

The wicked walk on every side : 
* the increase of men is according 
to Thy secret counsel. 

Psalm XII. 

[This Psalm has the same title as the 
last.] 

HOW long wilt Thou forget 
me, O Lord? for ever? * 
How long hidest Thou Thy face 
from me? 

How long shall I take counsel 
in my soul, * having sorrow in mine 
heart daily? 

How long shall mine enemy be 
exalted over me ? * Consider, and 
hear me, O Lord my God. 

Lighten mine eyes, lest I sleep the 
sleep of death : * lest mine enemy 
say : I have prevailed against him. 
2 Ps. vii. 12. 



VOL. II. 



IO 



THE 



n the generation 
of th have shamed 

ounsel of the poor: * 
ipe. 
O that the salvation of Israel v. 
come out of Zion ! * when the 
i: back the captivity of 
His ; icob shall rejoice and 

shall be glad. 

Psalm XIV. 

[Intituled "A I'salm of David."] 

LORD, who shall abide in Thy 
tabernacle ? * who shall 
dwell in Thine holy hill ? 

He that walketh uprightly, * and 
worketh righteousn 

He that speaketh the truth in his 
heart, * he that deceiveth not with 
his tongue. 

He that hath not done evil to his 
neighbour, * nor taken up a reproach 
against his neighbour. 

In whose eyes a vile person is 
despised : * but he honoureth them 
that fear the Lord. 

He that sweareth to his neighbour, 
and deceiveth him not, * he that 
putteth not out his money to usury, 
nor taketh reward against the in- 
nocent. 

He that doeth these things, * 
shall never be moved. 

all ye. and be glad : for, behold, the 

Lord will come with \ 

will briii He will 

nd save as. 
tiphonfor th 
»u shalt keep us, ( > I 

us. 

round in tl 



that trouble me will re- 
joice if I am * but I have 

Mine heart shall rejoice in Thy 
. 1 will sin- unto the I 

..It bountifully 
with me : * and I will sin- pi 
to the name of the Lord N - 

in XIII. 

a x. 1 

Tl 1 E tool hath said in his heart : 
* Thci >d. 

They are corrupt, and have be- 
come abominable in their works : 

* there is none that doeth good, 
no, not one. 

The Lord looked down from 
pen upon the children of men: 

* to see if there were any that did 
understand, < I >od. 

They are all gone aside, they are 
altogether become unprofitable : * 
Done that doeth good, no, 
not one. 

1 heir throat i n sepul- 

chre : with their tongues they have 
son of asps is 
under their li] 

Their mouth is full of cursing and 
bitterness : * their feet are swift to 
i blood. 

are in 
.nd the way of : 
• known I * there is no 

Iniquity 

1 up my 

11 not Upon * I : * 



SUNDAY AT MATTINS. 



II 



Antiphon for Paschal time. Al- 
leluia. * The stone was rolled away, 
Alleluia, from the door of the sepul- 
chre. Alleluia, alleluia. 

Then is said a Verse and Answer. 
In Advent. 

Verse. 2 Out of Zion, the Per- 
fection of beauty. 

Answer. Our God shall come 
manifestly. 

During the rest of the year. 

Verse. 3 I have remembered Thy 
name, O Lord, in the night. 

Answer. And have kept Thy 
law. 

hi Le?it. 

Verse. 4 He hath delivered me 
from the snare of the fowler. 

Answer. And from the noisome 
pestilence. 

In Passion time. 

Verse. 5 God, deliver my soul 
from the sword. 

Answer. And my darling from 
the power of the dog. 

In Paschal time. 

Verse. The Lord is risen from 
the grave, Alleluia. 

Answer. Who hung for us upon 
the tree, Alleluia. 

Then is said the Lords Prayer. 

/"AUR Father (inaudioly), Who 

^^ art in heaven, Hallowed be 
Thy Name. Thy kingdom come. 
Thy will be done on earth, as it is 



in heaven. Give us this day our 
daily bread. And forgive us our 
trespasses, as we forgive them that 
trespass against us. {Aloud.) 

Verse. And lead us not into 
temptation. 

Answer. But deliver us from 
evil. 

Then this Absolution. 

/GRACIOUSLY hear, O Lord 
^ r Jesus Christ, the prayers of 
Thy servants, and have mercy upon 
us : Who livest and reignest with 
the Father and the Holy Ghost, 
world without end. 
Answer. Amen. 

The?i the reader says : 
6 Sir, be pleased to give the bless- 



ing. 



First Blessing. 



May the Eternal Father bless us 
With an everlasting blessing. 
Answer. Amen. 

Then is read the First Lesson, and at 
the end the reader says : 

But Thou, O Lord, have mercy 
upon us. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

Then is said the First Responsory, 
after which the reader says : 

Sir, be pleased to give the bless- 



ing. 



Second Blessing. 

May the Son the Sole-begotten 
In His mercy bless and help us. 
Answer. Amen. 

3 Ps. cxviii. 55. 



1 Mark xvi. 3. a Ps. xlix. 2. 

4 Ps. xc. 3. 5 Ps. xxi. 20. 

6 Some persons bound to say the Office, when reciting alone, are accustomed to substi- 
tute for this the words, " Command Thy blessing, O Lord ! " 



12 



THE PSALTER. 



. and 
at the end the • 

I Thou, Lord, have m 
upon 

l bank * >od. 

Th uory, 

ing. 

7V//>v/ Blessing. 

May the gn >d the Spirit 

All our heart and mind enlighten. 

Amen. 

Then is read th* Third Lesson, and 
at the end the read. 

I J ut Thou, O Lord, have mercy 
upon us. 

Thanks be to God. 

Then is said the Third Responsory. 

Second Nocturn, or Watch of 
uii. Night. 

Antiphon for Advent. Rejoice 
tly. 

Antiphon for the rest of the 1 
Thou hast no need. 

Antiphon for Paschal time. Al- 
leluia. 

aim XV. 

[Intituled a v. :.*' but the 

i is not now of 
certain meaning. ] 

Pird, for in 
Thee do I put my trust : * 
I have said unto the LORD : Thou 

; bou hast no 

IHtl that are in i 
land, ■ i ! my will 

lie. 

as are multiplied, * 



In their assemblies for blood - 
shedding will I have no part : * nor 
mention their names with my lips. 

The LORD is the portion of mine 
inheritance, and of my cup : * 
Thou art He That shall 
mine inheritance unto n 

The lines are fallen unto me in 
pleasant places : * yea, I ha\ ■. 
goodly heritage. 

I will bless the Lord, Who hath 
given me counsel : * my n 
instruct me in the night seas 

I have set the Lord always be- 
fore my face : * because He is at 
my right hand, I shall never be 
moved. 

Therefore mine heart is glad, and 
my tongue rejoiceth : * my flesh 
also shall rest in hope, 

For Thou wilt not leave my soul 
in hell : * neither wilt Thou suffer 
Thine Holy One to see corruption. 

Thou hast shown me the path 
of life, Thou shalt fill me with joy 
in Thy presence : * at Thy right 
hand there are pleasures for i 
more. 

Antiphon for Advent. l Rejoice 
greatly, O daughter of Jerusalem : 
behold, thy King cometh into thee, 
O Zion ; fear not, for thy salvation 
cometh quickly. 

Antiphon for the res.' 
l Th0U hast no need I 
in Thee do 1 put my trust. 

me, ( ) Lord. 

/// Paschal time the> 
Antiphon to the whole \ 

( In ist <»ur King. 

I'.v tin- words. 






SUNDAY AT MATTINS. 



13 



Psalm XVI. 
[Intituled "A Prayer of David."] 

HEAR my right, Lord, * 
attend unto my cry. 

Give ear unto my prayer, * that 
goeth not out of feigned lips. 

Let my sentence come forth from 
Thy presence : * let Thine eyes be- 
hold the things that are equal. 

Thou hast proved mine heart, 
and visited it by night : * Thou 
hast tried me with fire, and found 
no wickedness in me. 

That my mouth may not speak 
concerning the works of men : * by 
the words of Thy lips I have kept 
me to strait paths. 

Hold up my goings in Thy paths, 
* that my footsteps slip not. 

I have called upon Thee, for 
Thou hast heard me, O God ; * in- 
cline Thine ear unto me, and hear 
my speech. 

Show Thy marvellous loving- 
kindness, * O Thou That savest 
them which put their trust in Thee ! 

From those that rise up against 
Thy right hand keep me, * as the 
apple of the eye. 

Hide me under the shadow of 
Thy wings, * from the face of the 
wicked that oppress me. 

Mine enemies compass my soul 
round about, they are inclosed in 
their own fat : * with their mouth 
they speak proudly. 

They that drave me out have 
now compassed me : * they have 
set their eyes bowing down to the 
earth. 

They have lain in wait for me, as 
a lion that is ready for his prey : * 
and as it were a young lion lurking 
in secret places. 

1 John i. 36. 



Arise, O Lord, disappoint him, 
and cast him down : * deliver my 
soul from the wicked, Thy sword 
from them that hate Thine hand. 

O Lord, part them in their life 
from the precious things of the 
earth : * their belly is filled with 
Thine hidden treasure. 

They have children to the full : * 
and leave the rest of their substance 
to their babes. 

As for me, I will behold Thy face 
in righteousness : * I shall be satis- 
fied when Thy glory shall appear. 

Antiphon for Advent. Christ 
our King cometh, 1 Whom John 
preached, saying ; Behold the Lamb 
That should come ! 

Antiphon for the rest of the year. 
2 By the words of Thy lips I have 
kept me to strait paths. 

Third Antiphon for Advent. Be- 
hold, I come. 

Third Antiphon for the rest of the 
year. I will love Thee. 

When this Antiphon is used the 
Psalm begins with the words, "O 
Lord, my strength." 

Psalm XVII. 

[After a superscription, of meaning now 
uncertain, the title of this Psalm proceeds, 
" Of David, the servant of the Lord, who 
spake unto the Lord the words of this song, 
in the day that the Lord delivered him 
from the hand of all his enemies, and from 
the hand of Saul : and he said : — " It is 
found also, with a few slight differences, in 
2 Kings (Sam.) xxii.] 

T WILL love Thee, O Lord, 
*- my strength : * the Lord is 
my rock, and my fortress, and 
my Deliverer. 

My God, mine Helper, * in 
Whom I trust. 

2 Ps. xvi. 4. 



•4 



I UK PSALTER. 



ME] . and the horn of my 

ion, * and m 
I called upon the LORD with 
" and am saved from mine 

The son a compai 

* and the floods of wi< 
made m> 
The sorrows of hell compa 
me about : * the snares of death 
apOD me. 
In my distress I called upon the 
Lord, * and cried unto my God. 

And He heard my voice out of 
Hi- holy temple: * and my I rv 
came before Him, even into His 

The earth shook and trembled : 

* the foundations of the hills moved 
and quaki roth. 

There went up a smoke in His 

wrath, and fire burst forth before 

were kindled 

the heav . and 

down : * and darkness was 
under His f< 

And He rode upon the Cherubim l 
and did fly : * yea, He did fly upon 
the wings of the wind. 

And He made darkness His - 

! round about 

: * dark . thick clouds 

of th 

the brightness that was be- 
ii, the thick cloud 

* ha: tin-. 

■ 1 in the 

: 

and ■ He 



out many lightnings and discomfited 
them. 

And the fountains of wa: 
. * and the foundations ot 
world were discovered. 

Thy rebuke, O LORD, * at 
the blast of the breath of Thy 
wrath ! 

He sent from above, and I 
me : * and drew me out of many 
rs. 

1 te delivered me from th. 
if mine enemies, and from them 
which hated me : * for they were too 
strong for me. 

They came upon me in the day 
of my calamity, * but the Lord was 
ni)- stay. 

He brought me forth also into a 
large place : * He delivered me be- 
cause He delighted in me. 

And the Lord shall reward me 
according to my righteousness, * 
and according to the cleannef 
mine hands shall 11< recomp 
me. 

For I have kept the ways of the 
Lord, * and have not wicked] \ 
parted from my CioD. 

: all 1 1 is judgments we: 
me: * and I did not put away His 
statutes from me. 

I shall also be upright with Him, 

* and keep myself from mine 
iquity. 

And tin- Lord shall rei 

•ding to my s, * 

and according to the cleanness of 
mine hands in His eye sight. 

With the holy Thou shah be h< 

* and with tli. nt Thou shah 
be innocent 

And with the purr Thou shah be 



i 
an clalx>ratc acco 

iy in A|><>, 



SUNDAY AT MATTINS. 



15 



pure, * and with the contentious 
Thou shalt be contentious. 

For Thou wilt save the afflicted 
people, * and bring down high 
looks. 

For Thou lightest my lamp, O 
Lord : * my God, enlighten my 
darkness ! 

For by Thee shall I be delivered 
from temptation, * and by my God 
shall I leap over a wall. 

As for my God, His way is per- 
fect ; the word of the Lord is tried 
in the fire : * He is a buckler to all 
those that trust in Him. 

For who is God save the Lord ? 
* or who is God save our God ? 

It is God that girdeth me with 
strength, * and maketh my way 
perfect. 

He maketh my feet like hinds' 
feet, * and setteth me upon mine 
high places. 

He teacheth my hands to war, * 
and maketh mine arms like a bow 
of brass. 

Thou hast also given me the 
shield of Thy salvation : * and Thy 
right hand hath holden me up. 

Thy correction also hath made 
me great : * and Thy chastening it 
is that shall teach me. 

Thou hast enlarged my steps 
under me, * and my feet have not 
slipped. 

I will pursue mine enemies and 
overtake them : * neither will I turn 
again till they be consumed. 

I will wound them that they shall 
not be able to rise : * they shall fall 
under my feet. 

Thou hast girded me also with 
strength unto the battle, * and hast 
subdued under me those that rose 
up against me. 

1 Apoc. 



And hast made mine enemies to 
turn their back toward me, * and 
hast destroyed them that hate me. 

They cried, but there was none 
to save them, even unto the Lord, 

* but He answered them not. 
And I will beat them small, as 

the dust before the wind : * I will 
cast them out as the dirt in the 
streets. 

Thou shalt deliver me from the 
gainsayings of the people : * Thou 
shalt make me the head of the 
heathen. 

A people whom I knew not have 
served me : * as soon. as they heard 
of me they obeyed me. 

The strangers feigned obedience 
unto me : * the strangers were 
wearied out, and stumbled in their 
paths. 

The Lord liveth, and blessed be 
my God : * and let the God of my 
salvation be exalted ! 

It is Thou, O God, That avengest 
me, and subduest the people under 
me. * Thou art my deliverer from 
my wrathful adversaries. 

And Thou shalt lift me up above 
those that rise up against me : * 
Thou shalt deliver me from the 
wicked man. 

Therefore will I give thanks unto 
Thee, O Lord, among the heathen, 

* and sing praises unto Thy name. 

Great deliverance giveth He to 
His king, and showeth mercy to 
His Anointed, to David, * and to 
his seed for evermore. 

Antiphon for Advent. l Behold, 
I come quickly, saith the Lord, 
and My reward is with Me, to give 
every man according as his work 
shall be. 



16 



THE PSA1 



Anttpfion Jor t/i 

1 I will love Thee, < > i 
stren§ 

'/ time. Al- 
leluia. 'Woman, whom se< 
thou? Alleluia. The Living among 

the dead ? Alleluia. Allel 

77. 

/// Advent. 

ttd forth the Lamb, 

O Lord, the ruler of the land. 

Answer. From the "Rock" of 
the wilderness unto the mount of 
the daughter of Zion. 

During the rest of the , 

Vet r Thou lightest my 

candle, O Lord. 

1 iod, enlighten my 
dark i 

In Lent 

He shall cover thee with 
ings. 
Answer. And under His feathers 
shalt thou trust. 



Thy will be done on earth, as it is 

in heaven. dive us this day our 

daily bread. And forgive us our 

we forgive them that 

DSt us. (A loud.) 

rse. And lead us not into 

temptation. 

Answer. Hut deliver us from 

Then this Absolution. 

lV/T AY His loving-kindness and 
*y*- His mercy help US, Who 
liveth and reigneth with the Father, 
and the Holy Ghost, world without 
end. 

Answer. Amen. 

Then the reader says : 
Sir, be pleased to give the bless- 



ing. 



Fourth Bl 



God the Father the Almighty, 
Show on us His grace and mercy. 
Answer. Amen. 



/// Passion n 

Verse. e O Lord, save me from 
the lion's mouth. 

Answer. And mine affliction from 
the horns of the unicorns. 

/// Paschal time. 

r<e. " The Ford is risen indeed, 
Alleluia. 

r. And bath appeared unto 

Mleluia. 

Other {inaudiblyy Who 
1 be 

Thy kingdom i 



■ 



' 



Then is read the Fourth Lesson, and 
at the end the read, > 

But Thou, O Lord, have mercy 
upon us. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 



Then is said the Fourth Respot: 
after ichieh th 

Sir, be pleased to give the 1 
ing. 

M.iv ( 'hrist to all His people 

sight to lii 

Amen. 
22. '• Lulu 



SUNDAY AT MATTINS. 



17 



Then is read the Fifth Lesson, and at 
the end the reader says : 

But Thou, O Lord, have mercy 
upon us. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

Then is said the Fifth Responsory, 
after which the reader says : 

Sir, be pleased to give the bless- 



ing. 



Sixth Blessing. 



May the Spirit's fire Divine 
In our inmost being shine. 
Answer. Amen. 

Then is read the Sixth Lesson, and 
at the end the reader says : 

But Thou, O Lord, have mercy 
upon us. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

Then is said the Sixth Responsory. 

Third Nocturn, or Watch of 
the Night. 

Antiphon for Advent. The Angel 
Gabriel. 

Antiphon for the rest of the year. 
There is no speech. 

Antiphon for Paschal time. Al- 
leluia. 

Psalm XVIII. 

[Intituled "A Psalm of David," with the 
same farther obscure superscription, as in 
Pss. xii. and xiii.] 



THE heavens declare the glory 
of God, * and the firmament 
showeth His handy-work. 

Day .unto day uttereth speech, 

* and night unto night showeth 
knowledge. 

There is no speech nor lan- 
guage, * where their voice is not 
heard. 

Their sound is gone out through 
all the earth : * and their words to 
the ends of the world. 

He hath set His tabernacle in the 
sun : x * which is as a bridegroom 
coming out of his chamber. 

He rejoiceth as a strong man to 
run a race : * his going forth is from 
the end of the heaven. 

And his circuit unto the ends of 
it : * and there is nothing hid from 
the heat thereof. 

The law of the Lord is perfect, 
converting the soul : * the testimony 
of the Lord is sure, making wise the 
simple. 

The statutes of the Lord are 
right, rejoicing the heart : * the 
commandment of the Lord is clear, 
giving light unto the eyes. 

The fear of the Lord is holy, 
enduring for ever and ever : * the 
judgments of the Lord are true, 
righteous altogether. 

More to be desired are they than 
gold and store of precious stones, 

* sweeter also than honey and the 
honeycomb. 

Verily, Thy servant keepeth them : 



1 So the LXX., as well as the Vulgate. Cf. Ps. cii. 19 ; ciii. 2, 3. The sense seems 
to be that the physical source of the light and life of this system is represented as a kind of 
celestial counterpart of the tabernacle, which was the centre of the Divine authority as re- 
vealed upon earth. The Hebrew, however, which is supported by St. Jerome, reads, "In 
them {i.e., the starry heavens) hath He set a tabernacle for the sun," and this reading 
seems to commend itself to Archbishop Kenrick, who suggests that the " tabernacle " may 
signify the region below the horizon, into which the sun retires nightly, as into a tent, to 
sleep, and from which he issues in renewed glory every morning. Targum : — "In them 
hath He set splendour as a tabernacle for the sun." 



8 



THE PSA1 



* in hem there 

Who can understand bif 

&Om .secret faults : 

* pr from 

If they get not domi: 
then shall I be undefiled : * and 
d from the 
ion. 
the words of my mouth, 
and the med I mine h 

* be tile in Thy sight for 

O Lord mine Helper, * and my 
Redeem* 

1 The An- 
gel Gabriel Spake unto . fag : 
. thou that art full of grace, the 
Lord is with thee : blessed art thou 
among women. 

T the rest of the year. 
<h nor lan- 
guage where their voice is not 
heard. 

/// Past hul time only one Antiphon is 

"tid Antiphon for Advent. 
id. 

the rest of the 

Wk \ the 

! [ear 

;ic same ii 



T 



in i 



ie of 



help from the sanc- 
tuary, * and strengthen thee out of 
Zion. 

ill thine offerings, * 
and accept thy burnt sacrifice. 3 

•it thee according to thine 
own heart, * and fulfil all thy 
counsel. 

We will rejoice in Thy salvation : 

* and in the name of our God will 

.ult. 
The Lord fulfil all thy petitio: 

* now know I that the Lord saveth 

\nointed. 

He will hear him from His holy 
heaven, * strong is the salvation of 
His right hand. 

Some trust in chariots and some 
in horses : * but we will call 
upon the name of the Lord our 
God. 

They are brought down and fal- 
len : * but we are risen, and stand 
upright. 

O Lord, save the king : * and 
hear us in the day when we call 
upon Thee. 

AtUiphoH for Advent. i Mary 
said : What manner of salutation 
is this? My soul is troubled. 
Shall I bear the King? And will 
He not break the seal of my vir- 
ginity? 

Antiphon for the rest 
f 'The Lord hear thee in ti 
trouble. 

Third Antiphon j The 

Third Antiphon ' 

I he king. 

When /■' 
Psalm l>ee Miall 












I. II 



SUNDAY AT MATTINS. 



19 



Psalm XX. 

[This Psalm also bears the same title as 
the xviiith.] 

THE king shall joy in Thy 
strength, Lord : * and in 
Thy salvation how greatly shall he 
rejoice ! 

Thou hast given him his heart's 
desire, * and hast not withholden 
the request of his lips. 1 

For Thou hast met him with the 
blessings of sweetness : * Thou hast 
set a crown of precious stones upon 
his head. 

He asked life of Thee : * and 
Thou gavest him length of days for 
ever and ever. 

His glory is great in Thy salva- 
tion : * honour and great majesty 
shalt Thou lay upon him. 

For Thou wilt give him to be a 
blessing for ever : * Thou shalt 
make him exceeding glad with Thy 
countenance. 

For the king trusteth in the 
Lord, * and, through the mercy 
of the Most High, he shall not be 
moved. 

Thine hand shall find out all 
thine enemies : * thy right hand 
shall find out all those that hate 
thee. 

Thou shalt make them as a fiery 
oven in the time of thine anger : * 
the Lord shall cut them off in His 
wrath, and the fire shall devour them. 

Their fruit shalt thou destroy from 
the earth, * and their seed from 
among the children of men. 

For they intended evil against 
thee : * they imagined a device, 
which they were not able to perform. 

Therefore shalt thou cast them 



behind thee : * thou shalt leave 
their faces lying in thy track. 

Be Thou exalted, O Lord, in 
Thine own strength : * we will sing 
and praise Thy power. 

Antiphon for Advent. The King, 
even the Most High, cometh ; there- 
fore let the hearts of men be purified 
to go forth to meet Him, for, behold, 

2 He will come and will not tarry. 

Antiphon for the rest of the year. 

3 The king shall joy in Thy strength, 
O Lord. 

Antiphon for Paschal time. Alle- 
luia, Weep not, Mary, Alleluia : the 
Lord is risen, Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Then is said a Verse and Answer. 
In Advent. 

Verse. 4 The Lord cometh out of 
His holy place. 

Answer. He will come and save 
His people. 

During the rest of the year. 

Verse. 5 Be Thou exalted, O 
Lord, in Thine own strength. 

Answer. We will sing and praise 
Thy power. 

In Lent. 

Verse. 6 His truth shall be thy 
shield. 

Answer. Thou shalt not be afraid 
for the terror by night. 

In Passion time. 

Verse. 7 Take not away my soul 
with sinners, O God ! 

Answer. Nor my life with bloody 
men. 



J SLH. 

4 Isa. xxxv. 4 ; Micah i. 3. 



2 Heb. x. 37. 
5 Ps. xx. 14. 



8 PS. XX. 2. 

6 Ps. xc. 5. 7 Ps. xxv. 9. 



20 



THE 






l The di 

Alleluia. 

A When tl 

Lord, Alleluia. 

T/n> 

OUR Fathe Who 

art in I be 

..e. Thy kingdom come. 

Thy will be done on . it is 

in heaven. Give us this day our 
daily bread. And fol our 

them that 
against us. Aloud.) 

us not into 
temptation. 

Answer* But deliver us from evil. 

Then the Absolut: 

AT AY the Almighty and merci- 
^**- ful Lord loose us from the 
bonds of our 
Answer. Amen. 

Then the reader says : 
Sir, be pleased to give the bless- 



ing. 



■ . 



•ng Lord 
ord. 

Amen. 

77/ < . and 

• Thou, <> Lord, have mercy 
upon us. 

.od. 

wry, 






most mighty strength al- 
iff and stay. 

Tin tli Lesson, and 

at the end the read 

But Thou, O Lord, have mercy 
upon us. 

Answer. Thank I iod. 

Then is said the Eighth Responsory, 
after which the reader says: 

Sir, be pleased to give the bless 
ing. 

Ninth Bless: 

May He That is the Angels' 

King 
To that high realm His people 

bring. 
Answer. Amen. 

Or, if another Gospel and Horn il 
to be read: 

May the Gospel's glorious word 
Cleansing to our souls afford. 

Then is read the Ninth Lesson, and 
at the end the rea.i 

But Thou, O Lord, have m< 
upon us. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

Then is said a Ninth A', 
unless this Hymn, "We pra 
O G vbstituted 

Hymn " W Thee. ( > 

in this />/■; 
: day in the ye 

Holy / if it fall 

, but 






SUNDAY AT MATTINS. 



21 



1 \A7'E praise Thee, O God: we 

* * acknowledge Thee to be 
the Lord. 

All the earth doth worship Thee, 
the Father everlasting. 

To Thee all Angels cry aloud, 
the heavens, and all the Powers 
therein. 

To Thee Cherubim 2 and Sera- 
phim 3 continually do cry : 

Holy, Holy, Holy Lord God of 
Sabaoth. 4 

Heaven and earth are full of the 
majesty of Thy glory. 

The glorious company of the 
Apostles praise Thee : 

The goodly fellowship of the 
Prophets praise Thee : 

The white-robed army of Mar- 
tyrs praise Thee : 

The holy Church throughout all 
the world doth acknowledge Thee : 

The Father of an infinite Ma- 
jesty : 

Thine honourable, true and only 
Son : 

Also the Holy Ghost, the Com- 
forter. 

Thou art the King of glory, O 
Christ ! 

Thou art the everlasting Son of 
the Father. 

When Thou tookest upon Thee 
to deliver man, Thou didst not 
abhor the Virgin's womb : 

When Thou hadst overcome the 
sharpness of death, Thou didst 
open the kingdom of heaven to 
all believers : 

Thou sittest at the right hand of 
God, in the glory of the Father : 



We believe that Thou shalt come 
to be our Judge : 

5 We therefore pray Thee, help 
Thy servants, whom Thou hast re- 
deemed with Thy precious Blood. 

Make them to be numbered with 
Thy Saints in glory everlasting. 6 

7 Lord, save Thy people, and 
bless Thine inheritance. 

Govern them, and lift them up 
for ever. 

Day by day we magnify Thee ; 

And we worship Thy name, 
ever world without end. 

Vouchsafe, O Lord, this day, 
to keep us without sin. 

8 Have mercy upon us, O Lord, 
have mercy upon us. 

9 O Lord, let Thy mercy lighten 
upon us, as our trust is in Thee. 

10 O Lord, in Thee have I trust- 
ed : let me never be confounded. 

If Lauds be not immediately to follow^ 
Mattins end thus : 

Verse. Hear my prayer, O Lord. 
Answer. And let my cry come 
unto Thee. 

Let us pray. 

Then the Prayer for the day ; then 

Verse. Hear my prayer, O Lord. 

Answer. And let my cry come 
unto Thee. 

Verse. Bless we the Lord. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

Verse. May the souls of the 
faithful, through the mercy of God, 
rest in peace. 

Answer. Amen. 

Then the Lord's Prayer. 



1 The authorship of this Hymn, which is prescribed in the Rule of St. Benedict (born A.D. 
to, died 543), is uncertain. 2 See Ezek. i. 3 See Isaiah vi. 2. 

4 Hebrew feminine Plural, meaning "hosts," "armies." 

5 During this verse it is usual to kneel. 6 Here ends the original Hymn. 
7 Ps. xxvii. 9. 8 Ps. cxxii. 3. 9 Ps. xxxii. 22. 10 Ps. xxx. 2. 






LAUDS, OR THE MORNING PRAIS 
OF GOD. 1 



SJtrafcag. 

Thk Lord's Day. 

V li to 

deliver 1; 

Make haste to help me, 
O Lord. 

Glory be to the Father, and to 
<on, and to the Holy (.host. 
in the beginning, is 
now, and ever shall be, world with- 
out end. Amen, Alleluia. 

ima Sunday to 
:dy Thursday instead of " Alle- 
U said : 

Ceaseless praise to Thee be given, 
O Eternal King <>f II raven. 

Hi ilms and 

irtt Sunday in 
iflertkt < > 

rima 

::Il the ( ' 

Intiphons 
are gi ud in the 

i. During t/:< 

of tl: 

Alleluia. 



Psalm XCII. 

[Tl and the Targu 

superscription; but the LXX. and the 
Vulgate nai 

for the eve of the Sabbath when the earth 

itablished "— i.< 
proper for the close of Friday before the 
setting -ill of the Sabbath; the tii: 
which it is said (Gen. i. 31, ii. 1 : 
God saw every thing that He had 1 
and, behold, it was very good. And the 
evening and the morning were the sixth 
day. Thus the heavens and the earth 
were finished, and all the host of the 

THE Lord reigneth, He is 
clothed with majesty : * the 
Lord is clothed with strength, where- 
with He hath girded Himself. 

He hath established the world 
also, * that it cannot be moved. 

Thy throne is established of old : 
* Thou art from everlasting. 

The floods have lifted up, O 
Lord, * the floods have lifted up 
their voice — 

The floods lift up their waves. * 
But Mightier than the 
many waters— 

Than the mighty breakers of the 
* is tin- LORD on high ! 



1 



1 01 this pui 
.•.nil the Midnic 
1 
lid at thai time, 

■ 



SUNDAY AT LAUDS. 



23 



Thy testimonies are very sure : * 
holiness becometh Thine house, O 
Lord, for ever ! 

When there are Five Antiphons the 
First is repeated, and the Second begun 
or said through the first time here. 

Psalm XCIX. 

[Intituled in the Vulgate and the LXX., 
" A Psalm of Thanksgiving."] 

MAKE a joyful noise unto God, 
all ye lands : * serve the 
Lord with gladness. 

Come before His presence, * with 
singing. 

Know ye that the Lord, He is 
God : * it is He That hath made 
us, and not x we ourselves : 

We are His people, and the sheep 
of His pasture. * Enter into His gates 
with thanksgiving, and into His courts 
with praise : give thanks unto Him, 

Praise His Name. For the Lord 
is good, His mercy is everlasting : 
* and His truth endureth to all 
generations. 

Whe?i there are Five Antiphoiis the 
Second is repeated, and the Third begun 
or said through the first time here. 

Psalm LXII. 

[Intituled "A Psalm of David, when he 
was in the wilderness of Judah." This was 
one of the most perilous periods of David's 
life, when he was flying from the pursuit of 
Saul, and hiding in different forests and 
wildernesses in the south of Palestine. He 
was betrayed again and again, and had the 
most hairbreadth escapes. The history 
will be found in I Kings (Sam.) xxii. and 
xxiii.] 

GOD, Thou art my God, * 
early will I seek Thee : 
My soul thirsteth for Thee, * my 
flesh longeth for Thee, 



o 



In a dry and desert land, with- 
out water. * So have I appeared 
before Thee in the Sanctuary, to see 
Thy power and Thy glory. 

Because Thy loving-kindness is 
better than life, * my lips shall praise 
Thee. 

Thus will I bless Thee while I 
live : * and will lift up mine hands 
in Thy name. 

My soul shall be satisfied as 
with marrow and fatness ; * and 
my mouth shall praise Thee with 
joyful lips. 

When I remember Thee upon my 
bed, I meditate upon Thee in the 
night watches : * because Thou 
hast been mine help : 

And in the shadow of Thy wings 
will I rejoice. My soul followeth 
hard after Thee : * Thy right hand 
upholdeth me. 

But those that seek my soul to 
destroy it, shall go into the lower 
parts of the earth : * they shall fall 
by the sword, they shall be a portion 
for foxes. 

But the King shall rejoice in 
God : every one that sweareth by 
him shall glory : * for the mouth 
of them that speak lies shall be 
stopped. 

Here the Doxology, " Glory be to the 
Father, &c," is not said. 



Psalm LXVI. 

[Besides a musical superscription, the 
Hebrew and the Targum give no title ex- 
cept " A Psalm, a Psalm." But the Vulgate 
and the LXX. ascribe the authorship to 
David.] 

/^OD be merciful unto us, and 
^-^ bless us : * cause His face 



1 The Hebrew tradition attributes the negative to an eccentric spelling, and translates 
and His we are.' : 



24 



THE 



nine upon us, and be merciful 
unto us. 1 

That Thy way may be known 
upon earth : * Thy health 

among all natio: 

I the people prai , O 

: * let all the people p 

I 

O let the nations he glad and 
: * for Thou jud 
people r:_ ivern- 

ihe nations upon earth. - 

ople prai , O 

. let all the people praise Thee. 
* The earth hath yielded her in- 

our own God, 
bless us : let (iod bless us : * and 
let all the ends of the earth fear 
Him. 

en there are J ire A n tip/ions, Hie 
Third is repeated, and the Fourth begun 
or said through the first time here. 

Ordinary Antiphon throughout the 

Allehlia, Alleluia. 
Second Ordinary AntipJion. The 

command 

An tip// ischal time. W- 

leluia, Alleluia, Alleluia ; Alleluia, 
Alleluia, Alleluia ; Alleluia, Alleluia, 
Alleluia. 

. Antiphon for Paschal time. 
bit delivi 

IH ! i Hul.Y 

el iii. 57.) 

[It is udi ki. oaag 

I, and 
y the heathen, Shadi 

p an idol, 

in. . in 

long 

U put 



• 






them in, > en hot 

with resin, pitch, tOW, and small w 

that the flame , e the 

furnace forty and nine . tl the 

1 of the Lord came down ii:' 
.er with Azarial. 

mote the flame of the fire out 

and made the midst of the furn 
it had been a moist whist ii. 
the fire touched them not at all, neither 
hurt nor troubled them. Then the three, 
' of one mouth, praised, gloiified, and 
1 in the furn.; • " the 

tl, of which that in the text 
The first five verses are omitted.] 

/^\ ALL ye works of the Lord, 
^^ bless ye the Lord : * pi 
Him, and exalt Him above all for 
ever. 

O ye Angels of the Lord, bles 
the Lord : * O ye heavens, bless ye 
the Lord. 

O all ye waters that be above the 
heavens, bless ye the Lord : * O all 
ye powers of the Lord, bless ye the 
Lord. 

O ye Sun and Moon, bless ye the 
Lord : * O ye stars of heaven, I 
ye the Lord. 

O ye showers and dew, bles- 
the Lord : * O ye winds of God, 
bless ye the Lord. 

O ye fire and heat, bless ye the 
Lord : * O ye winter and summer, 
bless ye the Lord. 

O ye dews and rime, bless ye the 
Lord : * O ye frost and cold. I 
ye the Lord. 

O ye ice and snow. the 

Lord : * O ye nights and days. ; 

ye the Lord. 

.<• light and darki 
the Lord : * O ye lightnings and 
clouds, bless ye the Lord. 

let the earth bless the Lord : 

lit Him il 

all fi 

erciful unto us" is neculiai t< 



SUNDAY AT LAUDS. 



25 



O ye mountains and hills, bless 
ye the Lord : * O all ye green 
things upon the earth, bless ye the 
Lord. 

O ye wells, bless ye the Lord : 

* O ye seas and floods, bless ye the 
Lord. 

O ye whales, and all that move 
in the waters, bless ye the Lord : 

* O all ye fowls of the air, bless 
ye the Lord. 

O all ye beasts and cattle, bless 
ye the Lord : * O ye children of 
men, bless ye the Lord. 

O let Israel bless the Lord : * let 
him praise and exalt Him above all 
for ever ! 

O ye Priests of the Lord, bless ye 
the Lord : * O ye servants of the 
Lord, bless ye the Lord. 

O ye spirits and souls of the 
righteous, bless ye the Lord : * O 
ye holy and humble men of heart, 
bless ye the Lord. 

Ananias, Azarias, and Misael, 
bless ye the Lord : * praise and 
exalt Him above all for ever. 

1 Bless we the Father, and the 
Son, and the Holy Ghost : * let us 
praise and exalt Him above all for 
ever. 

Blessed art Thou, O Lord, in the 
firmament of heaven : * and to be 
praised, and glorified, and exalted 
above all for ever. 

Here the Doxology, " Glory be to the 
Father, &c," is not said, nor "Amen" 
answered. But the other Canticles are 
treated like ordinary Psalms. 

When there are Five Antiphojis, the 
Fourth is repeated, a?id the Fifth begun 
or said through the first time here. 

Ordinary Antiphon throughout the 



year. The king commanded, and 
the Three Children were cast into 
the furnace, fearing not the flame 
of the fire, but saying : Blessed be 
God! 

Antiphon for Paschal time. He 
That delivered the Three Children 
from the burning fiery furnace, even 
Christ, is risen from the grave. 
Alleluia. 

Third Antiphon. Alleluia. 

Psalm CXLVIII. 

[To this Psalm is prefixed "Alleluia." 
The LXX. connect it with the Prophets 
Haggai and Zechariah. See Thursday and 
Friday in the fifth week of November. ] 

DRAISE ye the Lord from the 
*■ heavens : * praise Him in the 
heights. 

Praise ye Him, all His Angels : * 
praise ye Him, all His hosts. 

Praise ye Him, sun and moon : 

* praise Him, all ye stars and light. 
Praise Him, ye heavens of heavens : 

* and all the waters that be above 
the heavens. Let them praise the 
Name of the Lord ! 

For He spake, and they were 
made 2 : * He commanded, and they 
were created. 

He hath established them for 
ever and ever : * He hath made a 
decree which shall not pass. 

Praise the Lord from the earth, 

* ye dragons, and all deeps : — 
Fire, hail, snow, ice, stormy wind, 

* fulfilling His word : — 
Mountains, and all hills, * fruitful 

trees, and all cedars : — 

Beasts, and all cattle, * creeping 

things, and flying fowl : — 

Kings of the earth, and all people ; 

1 This verse is, of course, a later addition ; more than two verses are omitted, and the last 
given is one of those omitted at the beginning. 

2 Taken from Ps. xxxii. 9. 






THK 



* pi the 

earth : — 

. and old 

I them pi 
i> — * fol 

H and 

earth. * :eth the horn 

Th of all Hi> Saints, * 

Of the- chil. 

U unto Him. 

[Here "Alklu 

//, ' he to the 

Fathe 



dm (XL IX. 

[Here - Alleluia." ] 

SINV, onto the Lord a new- 
song : * His praise in the 
congregation of Saints. 

e in Him That 

him : * and let the children 

mmi be joyful in their King. 

I them J »raisc His Name in 

the dance : * let them sing praises 

unto Him with the timbrel and 

harp. 

iketh pleasure in 

ile : * 1 i .vill exalt 

the meek unto salvation. 

till in glory : 
* let th< .doud upon their 

tod be in 

nth : * and a | 

heati upon 

■ 

e* with ' 

the judg- 



ment written : * this honour haw- 
all His Saints. 

[Here "Alleluia."] 

litre th ' .lory be to the 

I - at hi 



dm ci.. 

[Here " Alleluia."] 

DRAISE the Lord in His sanc- 

* tuary ! * praise Him in the 

firmament of His power ! 

Praise Him in His mighty a 

* praise Him according to His 
cellent greatness ! 

Praise Him with the sound of 
the trumpet ! * praise Him with the 
psaltery and harp ! 

1 'raise Him with the timbrel and 
dance! * praise Him with stringed 
instruments and organs ! 

Praise Him upon the loud cym- 
bals, praise Him upon the high- 
sounding cymbals ! * Let c\ 
thing that hath breath praise the 
Lord ! 

| Here ,; Alleluia."] 

Antiphon. Alleluia, Alleluia. .' 
luia. 

{The l<> 

Tfu 
First Sun :-<•/// to U 

Sunday after the i 
Septuagesima Sunt 
Sunday after Pent 

tlu- remaining Suit. 

(I! \M I | 

| >i I SSING, an 
*■ ' dom, and thanl 

rid might 



SUNDAY AT LAUDS. 



27 



unto our God for ever and ever. 
Amen. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

This answer is always made after 
the Chapter. 

Then follows the Hymn. From the 
First Sunday in Advent till the Octave 
of the Epiphany and from the First 
Sunday in Lent till the Octave of Pen- 
tecost, as also on all Feasts, a special 
Hymn is given. On the remaining 
Sundays the Hymn given here is said, 
except between the Octave of Pentecost 
and the first Sunday of October. 

Hymn. 1 

FRAMER of the earth and sky, 
Ruler of the day and night, 
With a glad variety, 
Tempering all, and making light ; 

Gleams upon our dark path flinging, 
Cutting short each night begun, 
Hark ! for chanticleer is singing, 
Hark ! he chides the lingering sun. 

And the morning star replies, 
And lets loose the imprison'd day ; 
And the godless bandit flies 
From his haunt, and from his prey. 

Shrill it sounds, the storm relenting 
Soothes the weary seamen's ears ; 
Once it wrought a great repenting, 
In that flood of Peter's tears. 

Rouse we ; let the blithesome cry 
Of that bird our hearts awaken ; 
Chide the slumberers as they lie, 
And arrest the sin-o'ertaken. 

Hope and health are in his strain, 
To the fearful and the ailing ; 
Murder sheathes his blade profane, 
Faith revives when faith was failing. 

Jesu, Master ! when we sin, 
Turn on us Thy healing Face ; 
It will melt the offence within 
Into penitential grace : 



Beam on our bewildered mind, 
Till its dreamy shadows flee ; 
Stones cry out where Thou hast shined, 
Jesu ! musical with Thee. 

To the Father and the Son, 
And the Spirit, Who in heaven 
Ever witness, Three and One, 
Praise on earth be ever given. 

Amen. 

The followi7ig Hymn is said from the 
Fourth Sunday after Pentecost till the 
first Simday of October. 

Hymn. 2 

PALER have grown the shades of 
night, 
And nearer draws the day, 
Checkering the sky with streaks of 
light, 
Since we began to pray : 

To pray for mercy when we sin, 

For cleansing and release, 
For ghostly safety, and within 

For everlasting peace. 



Praise to the Only Son, 

Praise to the Holy Paraclete, 

While endless ages run. 

Amen. 

Then is said a Verse and Answer. 
In Advent and from Septuagesima 
Sunday till the end of Paschal time, as 
also on all Feasts, a special Verse and 
Answer are given. 

Verse. 3 The Lord reigneth, He 
is clothed with majesty. 

Answer. The Lord is clothed 
with strength, and hath girded Him- 
self with power. 

Then is said the followi7ig Song from 
the Gospel. It has an Anliphon, which 
is always special, and which is either 



1 By St. Ambrose, or at least of the Ambrosian school, except the last verse. Translation 
by the late Card. Newman. 

2 By Pope St. Gregory the Great, but a good deal altered. Translation by the late 



Card. Newman. 



a Ps. xcii. I. 



28 



THE PSALTER 






[On the occa-; 

OI 

* ' * for He hath visited 

and redeemed 

And hath raised up an horn of 
:ion for us, * in the house of 
ant David : 

As He spake by the mouth of 
holy Prophets. * which have 
been since the world began : 

That we should be saved from 
our enemies, * and from the hand of 
all that hate us : 

perform the mercy promised 

to our fathers, * and to remember 

holy covenant : 

The oath which He sware to our 

father Abraham, * that He would 

grant unto us, 

That we, being delivered out of 
the hand of our enemies, * might 
DO without fear, 
In holiness and righteousness be- 
fore Him * all the days of our life. 

And thou, child, shalt be called 
the I : the Highest : * for 

thou shalt go before the face of the 
Lord to pi 

tOWledgf :ion 

people, * by the remi 

of th. 

v of our 
from 

<>n high hath \ 

in d. m <»f 

I the 






Fathl ind then the 

(fed. 

Verse. Hear my prayer, O Lo 
Answer. And let my cry come 
unto Thee. 

us pray. 

Then follows (he Prayer for the 
at the end of which 

wer. Amen. 

Afterwards are made any Comtnem- 
us necessary, by the Antiphon 
for the Song of Zacharias, the I 
and Answer after the Hymn, and the 
Prayer {preceded by " Let us pi 
from the superseded Office which is to 
be commemorated. After which the 
following Common Commemorations 
arc made, if required, accordii: 
Chapter xxxv. of the General Ru 

When more than two Pray, 
be said, the last clause of c,r 
ning " Through our Lord, 
" Who livest, &c.,") is omitted in all 
except the first and the last, H 
"Amen ;! answered except after these 

'te that if these Com me mora 
: :-day, kept as 
out of Paschal time, th 
by the Commemoration of the ( 
hereafter at the end of the I 
Ion day.) 



I. Commemoration of the Blessed 
in Mary. 

{Omitted if the < 

little 

( ) II. u\ V 
thou an help to tin 

strength to the fearful. 

wful ; pray for the DC 

plead for the 

all women \ 

iv all that 



SUNDAY AT LAUDS. 



29 



remembrance, feel the might of 
thine assistance. 

Verse. Pray for us, holy 
Mother of God. 

Answer. That we may be made 
worthy of the promises of Christ. 

Let us pray. 

/^RANT, we beseech Thee, 
^J" Lord God, unto all Thy 
servants, that they may continually 
enjoy soundness both of mind and 
of body, and by the glorious inter- 
cession of the Blessed Mary, always 
a Virgin, may be delivered from 
present sadness, and enter into the 
joy of Thine eternal gladness. 

From the Octave of the Epiphany to 
Candlemas, the Antiphon is the same, 
but the rest is as follows : 

Verse. After thy delivery thou 
still remainest a Virgin undefiled. 

Answer. Mother of God, pray 
for us. 

Let us pray. 

OGOD, Who, by the fruitful 
virginity of the Blessed 
Mary, hast given unto mankind the 
rewards of everlasting life ; grant, 
we beseech Thee, that we may con- 
tinually feel the might of her inter- 
cession, through whom we have 
worthily received the Author of our 
life, our Lord Jesus Christ Thy Son. 

II. Commemoration of St. Joseph, 
Patron of the Universal Church. 

(Omitted in his Votive Office?) 

Antiphon. 1 Jesus Himself began 
to be about thirty years of age, being 
(as was supposed) the son of Joseph. 



Verse. 2 The mouth of the right- 
eous speaketh wisdom. 

Answer. And his tongue talketh 
judgment. 

Let us pray. 

r\ GOD, Who, in Thine un- 
^-S speakable foreknowledge, 
didst choose Thy blessed servant 
Joseph to be the husband of Thine 
Own most holy Mother; mercifully 
grant that now that he is in heaven 
with Thee, we who on earth do 
reverence him for our defender, 
may worthily be holpen by the 
succour of his prayers to Thee on 
our behalf. 



III. Commemoration of the Holy 
Apostles, Peter and Paul. 

(Omitted in the Votive Office of the 
Apostles.} 

Antiphon. 3 These are glorious 
princes over all the earth, they 
loved one another in their lives, 
and in their death they were not 
divided. 

Verse. 4 Their sound is gone out 
through all the earth. 

Answer. And their words to the 
ends of the world. 

Let us pray. 

OGOD, Whose Right Hand 
caught the Blessed Peter 
when he walked upon the water, 
and began to sink, 5 and thrice de- 
livered his fellow-Apostle Paul from 
the deep of the sea, when he suf- 
fered shipwreck ; 6 graciously hear 
us, and grant, for the sake of them 



1 Luke iii. 23. 
4 Ps. xviii. 5. 



Ps. xxx vi. 30. 
Matth. xiv. 31. 



3 2 Kings (Sam.) i. 23. 
6 2 Cor. xi. 25. 



30 Till 

both, that into r Peau. 

Antiphon. Give peace in our 
time, I > Lord, 



1 In : 

. Patron of England* 

ints through faith subdued kingdoms, wrought 
right tained promis 

i. u hast (1 him. 

With Thy favour as with a shield. 

us pray. 

OlD, Who dost gladden us through the worthy deeds and prayers of 
Thy r (leorge ; mercifully grant that all they that 

Thy favour through him, may effectually obtain the gift of Thy grace. 
thus it is said within tk 

In ihe D « not commemorated, but instead, the foil" v. 

■ uthbert : 

phon. Holy C uthbert, our Protector, grace and glory of our father- 
land, look down upon us from Heaven, and pray God for us, that He grant 
ting joy. 
At the praye; -ed Cuthbert and for his sake, 

merciful unto Thy people, O Lord. 

Let us pray. 

0»1), Who, through the priceless gift of Thy grace, dost make Thine 
holv irious, mercifully grant, that the prayers of Thy Bl 

ihop Cuthbert may help us worthily there to attain, where 
are the spirits of just men made perfect 

In tin- D thampton the following commemoration of St Th< 

bury thai of St. George: 

Antiphon, <>od Shepherd, and know My sheep, and am 

:i of Mine, and 1 lay down My lite for tl 
your pati< 
WiT. ! • your souls. 

Qi Ihurch the glorious Bishop Thomas fell 
by tl iricked men, grant, wt beseech Thee, that all that 

their petition. 

i men, did Bl< 

* li- i. 19. 



SUNDAY AT LAUDS. 3 1 

none other that fighteth for us, but our hearts may be set to obey Thy 
only Thou, O our God. commandments, and also that by 

Verse. 1 Peace be within thy Thee we being defended from the 
walls. fear of our enemies, may pass our 

Ansiver. And prosperity within time in rest and quietness. Through 
thy palaces. our Lord Jesus Christ, Thy Son, 

Who liveth and reigneth with Thee, 
Let us pray. m tne umt y of the Holy Ghost, one 

God, world without end. 

OGOD, from Whom all holy Answer. Amen, 

desires, all good counsels, 

and all just works do proceed ; give J, r ?£f* M f?M a f ter Low S ^Z 

_. J . r u • u till the Eve of the Ascension, instead of 

unto Thy servants that peace which the p receding Commemorations, is said 

the world cannot give, that both the following: 

gain for Christ, and forasmuch as he made himself like unto an Apostle, he 
hath purchased unto himself a great reward in Heaven along with the 
Apostles. 

Verse. Be strong in the Lord, be strong. 

Answer. That ye may live for ever with God. 

Let us pray. 

OGOD, Who wast pleased to make the zeal of Thy Blessed Martyr and 
Bishop Boniface the mean whereby Thou didst cause many peoples 
to know Thy Name, mercifully grant unto us who honour his memory to be 
feelingly holpen by the succour of his protection. 

{And so it is said within the Octave.) 

In the Diocese of Portsmouth the following commemoration of St. Edmund of Can- 
terbury is made after that of St. George : 

Antiphon. He loved righteousness and hated iniquity, and therefore he 
died in exile. 

Verse. Cast out upon a world of woes, 
In exile here we roam. 
Answer. O Blessed Edmund, by thy prayers, 
Gain us the love of home. 

Let us pray. 

OGOD, Who in the abundance of Thy goodness toward Thy Church 
hast made her bright by the illustrious life of Thy blessed Confessor 
and Bishop Edmund, and gladdened her by his glorious and wondrous 
works, mercifully grant unto Thy servants that they may be bettered in 
following after his ensample, and shielded by his protection from all things 
that may rise up against them. 

1 Ps. cxxi. 7. 



32 



THE 



{Omitted in the Votive OM 
Blessed Sacrum 

upfwn. He Thai 
fied from tl. and 

hath redeemed us. Alleluia, Al- 
leluia. 

1 Say among the heathen 
— Alleluia. 

That tin- LORD n 
eth from the tree — Alleluia. 

us pray. 

OGOD, Who didst send Thy 
Son to suffer death for us 
upon the Cross, that Thou might- 
est deliver us from the power of 
the enemy : grant unto us Thy 
to be made partakers of 
Resurrection. Through the 
Same our Lord Jesus Christ Thy 
Son, Who liveth and reigneth with 
Thee in the unity of the Holy 
Ghost, one God, world without end. 
Answer. Amen. 

After the last Prayer is said : 

I [ear my prayer, O Lord. 
At \nd let my cry come 

unto Th< 

I .ord. 
wer, I bank] be to c.od. 

lor the Litany 
ithout the Penitential Psalms) 

oi/nediatelw it is begun 

The 

M. ; . Faithful 



through the men I rest in 

Amen. 

the Office ends th 
Th< r is said in audibly : 

OUR lather. Who art in he 
Hallowed be Thy Name. Thy 
kingdom come. Thy will he done 
on earth, as it is in heaven. * 
us this day our daily bread. And 
forgive us our tresp. 
forgive them that trespass against 
us. And lead us not into temp- 
tation : but deliver us from evil. 
Amen. 

Then aloud : 

Verse. The .Lord give us His 
peace. 

Answer. And life everlasting. 

Amen. 

Then follows one of th. .inti- 

phons oj the Blessed Virgin Mar 
cording to the season of the y 

I. From the First Sunday in Ad- 
vent to Candlemas, both ine/us: 

Antifhon. - Maiden, Mothi ■ 
Him that redeemed us, thou that 
abi«: 

I leaven's op Star 

of the Sea, come, succour the fallen ! 

Fallen indeed ll 'Ut fain 

would rise by thy BUCCOUT. 

Thou that beyond nature's course, 

hast borne in time the Eternal : 

Thou that a Virgin and 

after that childbirth reman 



[phon •>( ii 



SUNDAY AT LAUDS. 



33 



From the Archangel's lips the 
quickening message receiving, 

Mother of Jesus and us, turn 
thine eyes of mercy on sinners. 

Verse. The Angel of the Lord 
announced unto Mary. 

Answer. And she conceived by 
the Holy Ghost. 



w 



Let us pray. 

E beseech Thee, O Lord, 
pour Thy grace into our 
hearts ; that, as we have known 
the Incarnation of Thy Son Christ 
by the message of an Angel, so by 
His Passion and Cross we may be 
brought unto the glory of the 
Resurrection. Through the same 
Christ our Lord. 
Ansiver. Amen. 

In and after the First Vespers of 
Christinas Day the Verse and Answer 
a?id Prayer are as follows : 

Verse. After thy delivery thou 
still remainest a Virgin undefiled. 

Answer. Mother of God, pray 
for us. 

Let us pray. 

r\ GOD, Who, by the fruitful 
^^ virginity of the Blessed Mary, 
hast given unto mankind the re- 
wards of everlasting life ; grant, we 
beseech Thee, that we may con- 
tinually feel the might of her inter- 
cession, through whom we have 
worthily received the Author of 
our life, even our Lord Jesus 
Christ Thy Son. 
Answer. Amen. 



II. From Candlemas to Maundy 
Thursday, both exclusive} 

Antiphon. Hail, O Mary, Queen 
of Heaven, 

Queen of Angel worlds on high, 
Hail, O Rod to Jesse given, 
Blessed Portal of the sky, 

Hail, O Lady, bright and glorious, 
Clad in beauty pure and true, 
Virgin ! o'er sin's stain victorious, 
Sinners for thy succour sue. 

Verse. Holy Virgin, my praise 
by thee accepted be. 

Ansiver. Give me strength against 
thine enemies. 

Let us pray. 

GRANT, we beseech Thee, O 
most merciful God, a succour 
unto the frailty of our nature, that 
as we keep ever alive the memory 
of the holy Mother of God, so by 
the help of her intercession we may 
be raised up from the bondage of 
our sins. 
our Lord. 

Answer. Amen 



Through the same Christ 



III. From Easter Sunday 2 till the 
Saturday after Pentecost, both in- 
clusive. 

Antiphon. Rejoice! rejoice! thou 
Queen of Heaven, Alleluia, 

For He That thee for Son was 
given, Alleluia, 

As He promised is arisen. Alle- 
luia. 



1 i.e., it is said for the first time after Compline on Feb. 2 (even if the Feast of the 
Purification be transferred), and for the last time after Compline on Wednesday in Holy 
Week. The authorship is unknown ; it seems to date from about the eleventh century. 

2 i.e., it is said for the first time after Compline on Easter Eve. The date and author- 
ship are unknown ; but a legend has become attached to it to the effect that St. Gregory 
the Great heard the three first lines uttered by an angel, and himself added the fourth, on 
the same occasion from which was instituted the procession upon St. Mark's Day. 

VOL. II. B 



34 



THE PSALTER. 



Mother, Him for u 

luia. 

lor the I 
indeed, Alleluia. 

us pray. 

r \ GOD, Who art pleased to 

^^ i the whole world by 

the : on of Thy Son our 

Lord be- 

the help of 

His Mother the Virgin Mary, we 

may finally attain unto the glad- 

of life ever Through 

EUne Chri>t our I,ord. 

Amen. 

IV. from Trinity Sunday l till the 

turday before Adroit Sunday, 
both inclusive. 

tiphon. Hail, O Queen, Mother 
of mercy I hail, our life, our sweet- 
and our hop* ' [*0 thee we 
the banished sons of Eve. To- 
ward th< ping and 
groaning in this vale of tears. Ah, 
. thou our Advocate, turn on us 
merciful eyea of thine! And, 

after this our exile, show to us 
Fruit of thy 



womb. I 

\ bgin Mary : 

rse. Pray for us, O holy Mother 
of God, 

That be made 

worthy of the prom irist 

us pray, 

r\ ALMIGHTY and everla 
^^ God, Who, by the co-opera- 
tion of the Holy (ihost, didst make 
ready both the body and soul of the 
glorious Virgin and Mother Mary 
worthily to become a meet dwelling 
for Thy Son ; grant that as we re- 
joice in her memory, so by her piti- 
ful intercession we may be deli\ 
from the evils that continually hang 
over us, and finally from everla 
death. Through the same Christ 
our Lord. 

Answer. Amen. 

After each of these An tip ho us is said 
this Blessing : 

God's most mighty strength alway 
Be His people's staff and stay. 
Answer. Amen. 

Feasts. Th, 
for Sunday, is also said on all J\ 
what* ven Simp. 

in Paschal time. 



DM after Vespers, if the Antiphon of the B.^ 
in any case line, on the Saturday evening before Trinit) The 

admitted to he an exclamation uttered by St. Bernard ox in 

mii the authorship <»1 the rest is disputed, it to 

ompostella, 
•Velay). [1 been well know 

. century. 



35. 



PRIME, OR THE FIRST HOUR. 



Suntmg. 

The Lord's Day. 

Before Prime is said inaudibly the 
Lord's Prayer, the A?igelic Salutation, 
and the Apostles" Creed. 

OUR Father, Who art in heaven, 
Hallowed be Thy Name. 
Thy kingdom come. Thy will be 
done on earth, as it is in heaven. 
Give us this day our daily bread. 
And forgive us our trespasses, as 
we forgive them that trespass against 
us. And lead us not into tempta- 
tion ; but deliver us from evil. 
Amen. 

IT AIL, Mary, full of grace; The 
■*■ -■■ Lord is with thee : blessed 
art thou among women, and blessed 
is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus. 

Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray 
for us sinners, now and at the hour 
of our death. Amen. 

f BELIEVE in God the Father 
■*- Almighty, Maker of heaven and 
earth. And in Jesus Christ, His 
Only Son, our Lord ; Who was con- 
ceived by the Holy Ghost, Born of 



the Virgin Mary, suffered under 
Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead, 
and buried : He descended into 
hell : the third day He rose again 
from the dead : He ascended into 
heaven, and sitteth on the right 
hand of God the Father Almighty : 
from thence He shall come to judge 
the quick and the dead. I believe 
in the Holy Ghost, the holy Catholic 
Church, the Communion of Saints, 
the Forgiveness of sins, the Resur- 
rection of the body, and the Life 
everlasting. Amen. 

Then is said aloud : 

Verse. *%< Make haste, O God, 
to deliver me. 

Answer. Make haste to help me, 
O Lord. 

Glory be to the Father, and to the 
Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

As it was in the beginning, is now, 
and ever shall be, world without end. 
Amen. Alleluia. 

From Septuagesima Sunday to 
Maundy Thursday instead of "Alle- 
luia" is said: 

Ceaseless praise to Thee be given, 
O Eternal King of heaven. 

1 Prime is the first service of the Church for the day-time, Mattins and Lauds being for 
the middle and close of night. Its proper hour is when the sun has fairly risen, and day 
begun, which is reckoned to be about 6 a.m., about which time it is generally said in 
choirs. Sometimes Mattins, Lauds, and Prime are said together early in the morning, 
forming the complete morning service of the Church. It is from this aggregation that the 
Xl Morning Prayer" of the Anglican Prayer Book is derived. , 



36 



THE PSA1 



Hymn. 1 

T"* I morn to night sue • 

I therefore 

in all otu 

harm this day. 

n us still 
From tones of I ill, 

And :nd and dose our i 

h and thoughts that gender 
une 

I r in our b ide, 

And painful abstinences tame 
Of wanton flesh the pride ; 

So when the is o'er, 

And night and stillness come once 
more, 

Blameless and clean from spot of earth 
• with reverent mirth — 

be, 
And to His Only Son, 
And to the Spirit. One and Three, 
While endless ages run. 

Amen. 

The last verse is sometimes said thus, 
''the Incarnation : 

_ in-born, to Thee 
iven, 
With i Three, 

Here as it is in heaven. 

Amen. 

/// PasJial time it is said thus, altered 
in honour of the Resurrection : 

<te, 
While en< run. 

Amen. 

It : ,/t- 

d in 



Antiphons have been 
/ these 
is the Antiphon at Prime, othe> 
here is ft 

Antiphon. Alleluia. 



Im LIII. 

[The superscription of this Psalm, after 
some words which arc probably a m 

direction, proceeds "[A Psalm] of I 1 

when the Ziphim came and said to 
not David hide himself with 
This was during the same period of his life 
in the South in which he compose 
lxii. The Ziphim, or peasantry of the 
neighbourhood of Ziph, betrayed him 
d, and both times, especially tin 
he was in imminent peril. I Killgl (Sam.) 
xxiii. 19-29, xwi.] 

SAVE me, O God, in Thy Name, 
* and judge me in Thy 
power. 

Hear my prayer, God : * give 
ear to the words of my mouth. 

For strangers are risen up against 
me, and oppressors seek after my 
soul : * and have not set God be- 
fore them.* 2 

Behold God is mine Helper : * 
and the Lord upholdeth my soul. 

Reward Thou evil unto mine 
enemies : * and cut them off in 
Thy truth. 

I will freely sacrifice unto Tl: 
* and praise Th\ 
for it is good. 

For Thou hast delivered me out 
of all trouble : * and mine 
hath seen [n ] upon mine 

eneii! 

The foil, 
unto the LOR] . 

: till 



11 hymn. 



si. H 



PRIME, OR THE FIRST HOUR. 



37 



Easter ; but then is substituted for it 
Psalm xcii., "The Lord reigneth " 
(give?i at the begimiing of Lauds). 

Psalm CXVII. 

[From some verses it seems as though this 
Psalm was written for the Feast of Taber- 
nacles, and perhaps as a processional at the 
entry of the King (David ?) into the place 
of worship. The Vulgate and the LXX. 
prefix the word Alleluia.] 

OGIVE thanks unto the Lord, 
for He is good : * for His 
mercy endureth for ever. 

Let Israel now say that He is 
good : * for His mercy endureth 
for ever. 

Let the house of Aaron now say, 

* that His mercy endureth for ever. 
Let them now that fear the Lord 

say, * that His mercy endureth for 
ever. 

I called upon the Lord in dis- 
tress : * and the Lord heard me 
[and set me] at large. 

The Lord is on my side : * I 
will not fear what man can do 
unto me. 

The Lord is on my side : * and 
I shall see [my desire upon] them 
that hate me. 

It is better to put confidence in 
the Lord, * than to put confidence 
in man. 

It is better to trust in the Lord, 

* than to trust in princes. 

All nations compassed me about : 

* but in the Name of the Lord ! 1 
I was avenged on them. 

They compassed me about, yea, 
they compassed me about : * but 
in the Name of the Lord ! I was 
avenged on them. 



They compassed me about like 
bees ; they burnt out as the fire 
of thorns : * but in the Name 
of the Lord ! I was avenged on 
them. 

They thrust sore at me, that I 
might fall : * but the Lord helped 
me. 

The Lord is my strength and 
my song, * and is become my 
salvation. 

The voice of rejoicing and salva- 
tion * is in the tabernacles 2 of the 
righteous. 

The right hand of the Lord hath 
done valiantly. The right hand of 
the Lord hath exalted me : * the 
right hand of the Lord hath done 
valiantly. 

I shall not die, but live, * and 
declare the works of the Lord. 

The Lord hath chastened me 
sore : * but He hath not given me 
over unto death. 

Open to me the gates of right- 
eousness ; I will go into them and 
praise the Lord. * This is the gate 
of the Lord, into which the righteous 
shall enter. 

I will praise Thee, for Thou hast 
heard me, * and art become my 
salvation. 

3 The stone which the builders 
refused * is become the head-stone 
of the corner. 

This is the Lord's doing : * and 
it is marvellous in our eyes. 

This is the day which the Lord 
hath made : * let us rejoice and be 
glad in it. 

Save me now, O Lord ! O Lord, 
send Thou prosperity. * Blessed 



1 Probably a war-cry. 

2 The allusion is to the ceremonial of the Feast of Tabernacles, Lev. xxiii. 42, 
dwell in booths seven days." 

3 These two verses were quoted by our Lord. Matth. xxi. 42; Mark xii. 10. 



Ye shall 



38 



Tin- 



be he that cometh in the Name of 
the I 

We have blessed you out of the 
house of the Lord. * God is the 
i and hath showed us 1 

with 
Ighs, * even unto the horns 

of tii 

Thou art my Gbd, and I will 
* Thou art my God, 
and I will exalt Thee. 

I will give thanks unto Thee, for 
Thou hast heard me, * and art l>e 
come my salvation. 

O give thanks unto the Lord, 
for He is good : * for His mercy 
endureth for c 



Psalm CXVIII. 3 

« 

OLESSED are the undented in 
-"-* the way, * who walk in the 
law of the Lord. 

Blessed are they that keep His 
testimonies: * that seek Him with 
the whole heart. 

that work iniquity, * 
walk not in His v. 

Thou hast commanded us * to 
Thy precepts diligently. 
that my ways were directed * 
I hy stat-, • 
Then shall I not be ashamed, * 



unto all Thy 
commandmc: 

I will praise Thee with upright- 
of heart, * when I shall 
Learned Thy righteous juci. 

I will keep Thy statutes : * O 
forsake me not utterly. 



Here ike Poxology, 

Fat hi 



he to the 



n 4 

\17 HEREWITH AL shall a young 

* * man keep his way ? * By 
taking heed unto Thy word. 

With my whole heart have I sought 
Thee : * O let me not wander from 
Thy commandments ! 

Thy word have I hid in mine 
heart, * that I might not sin against 
Thee. 

Blessed art Thou, O Lord : * teach 
me Thy statute 

With my lips * have I declared 
all the judgments of Thy mouth. 

I have rejoiced in the way of Thy 
testimonies, * as much as in all 
riches. 

I will meditate on Thy pre- 
cepts, * and have respect unto 
Thy v> 

I will delight myself in 
statutes : * I will not forget Thy 
word. 



ice that tin e which was sung during the Palm S 

The word II n option of its third and fourth w< w 

xxiii. 40. "And ye shall take you on (he first (lay the boug 
ana the boughs of thick trees, and w 

'. 

A hy " thu 

aise of th< * hich the Churcl 

. ided into 1 



II 






PRIME, OR THE FIRST HOUR. 



39 



Contmuation of the same Psalm. 

a 1 

r^EAL bountifully with Thy ser- 
*^* vant, quicken me, * and I 
will keep Thy word. 

Open Thou mine eyes, * that I 
may behold wondrous things out of 
Thy law. 

I am a stranger in the earth : * 
hide not Thy commandments from 
me. 

My soul is an-hungered for the 
longing that it hath unto Thy 
judgments * at all times. 

Thou hast rebuked the proud : * 
they are cursed that do err from 
Thy commandments. 

Remove from me reproach and 
contempt : * for I have kept Thy 
testimonies. 

Princes also did sit and speak 
against me : * but Thy servant did 
meditate on Thy statutes. 

Thy testimonies also are my de- 
light, * and Thy precepts my coun- 
sellors. 

Here the Doxology, " Glory be to the 
Father, &o," is not said. 



1\/TY soul cleaveth unto the 
^^ ground : * quicken Thou 
me according to Thy word. 

I have declared my ways and 
Thou heardest me : * teach me Thy 
statutes. 

Make me to understand the way 



of Thy precepts : * so shall I talk 
of Thy wondrous works. 

My soul sleepeth for heaviness : * 
strengthen Thou me according unto 
Thy word. 

Remove from me the way of lying : 

* and grant me Thy law graciously. 
I have chosen the way of truth : 

* Thy judgments have I not for- 
gotten. 

I cleave unto Thy testimonies, O 
Lord : * put me not to shame ! 

I have run the way of Thy com- 
mandments, * since Thou hast en- 
larged mine heart. 

The following Creed is only said on 
Sundays when the Office is of the Sun- 
day, and on Trinity Sunday. The ex- 
ceptio7is are Easter and Pentecost Sun- 
days, when it is not said, because they 
are treated as Festivals. 

The Creed of St Athanasius. 3 

WHOSOEVER willeth to be 
safe, * before all things it 
is necessary that he hold the 
Catholic Faith. 

Which faith except every one do 
keep whole and undefiled, * without 
doubt he shall perish eternally. 

Now the Catholic Faith is this, * 
that we worship One God in Trinity, 
and Trinity in Unity. 

Neither confounding the Persons, 

* nor dividing the Substance. 

For there is one Person of the 
Father, another of the Son, * and 
another of the Holy Ghost. 
: But the Godhead of the Father, 



1 Here begins the letter Ghimel, answering partly to our G. 

2 Here begins the letter Daleth, answering partly to our D. 

3 The translation largely follows that in the Rev. A. E. Burn's ' Introduction to the 
Creeds.' The origin and date of this hymn have been the subject of much discussion. 
" It is agreed that it was not written by St Athanasius, and that it was written in Latin." 
In the opinion of Mr Burn the indications point to the South of Gaul as its place of origin, 
and to the decade a.d. 420-430 as the period of its composition. 



40 



THE PSALTER. 



nd of the II 

* the I jiial, the 

oaL 

the 
Son, * ami such is the H0I3 

the Son 
d, * and the Holy Ghost 

The Father Infinite, the Son In- 
finite, * and the Hi In- 
finite. 

The Father Eternal, the Son 1 
nal, * and the Holy C.host Eternal. 

And yet They are not Three 

* but One Eternal. 

also They are not Three Un- 
DOr Three Infinites, * but 
One Un< nd One Infinite. 

So likewise the Father is Almighty, 
the Son Almighty, * and the Holy 
Ghost Almighty. 

An re not Three Al- 

mighties, * but One Almighty. 

So the Father is God, the Son 

God, * and the Holy (ihost God. 

re not Three Gods, 

• but One God. 

So the Father is Lord, the Son 
Ix>rd, * and the Holy (ihost Lord. 
They are not Three 
' but ( )ne Lord. 

1 ompeUed by 

dan truth to acta 
n b) Himself to be (iod and 
forbidden by the 
Religion to lay, there be 
Thre 

ther is none, * 

neitl. Of begot!' 

1 alone : 

• not n, .: Be- 

:ier, 
D, but 

ling. 



Father, not Three 
Fathers ; One Son, not Three Sons ; 

* One Holy Ghost, not Three Holy 

And in this Trinity is nothing 
afore or after, nothing is greater or 
less; * but the whole Three Per- 
sons are Co -Eternal together, and 
Co- Equal. 

So that in all things, as is a: 
said, * the Unity in 'Trinity, and 
the 'Trinity in Unity is to be wor- 
shipped. 

He therefore that willeth to be 
safe, * let him thus think of the 
'Trinity. 

but it is necessary to eternal 
salvation, * that he also believe- 
faithfully the Incarnation of our 
Lord Jesus Chri 

The right Faith therefore is, that 
we believe and confess, * that our 
Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, 
is God and Man. 

God, of the Substance of the 
Father, Begotten before the worlds : 

* and Man, of the substance ot 
mother, born in the world. 

Perfect God, Perfect Man, * of 
a reasoning Soul and human 1 
subsisting. 

Equal to the Father as touching 
His Godhead, * inferior to the 
Father as touching 1 1 1 ^ Man! 

Who, although He be (iod and 
Man, * yet He i^ not Two, but I 
( 'hrist. 

One. however, not by coi 
of the Godhead inl * but by 

taking of the Manhood int 

One altogether, not by eontu 
of Substance, * but by I 
on. 

-nil and 
flesh man, * and 

1 rist 



PRIME, OR THE FIRST HOUR. 



41 



Who suffered for our salvation, 
descended into hell, * rose again 
the third day from the dead. 

He ascended into heaven, He sit- 
teth on the right hand of the Father, 
God Almighty, * from whence He 
shall come to judge the quick and 
the dead. 

At Whose coming all men shall 
rise again with their bodies, * and 
shall give account for their own 
works. 

And they that have done good 
shall go into life eternal, * but 
they that have done evil into 
eternal fire. 

This is the Catholic Faith, * which 
except a man believe faithfully and 
firmly, he cannot be safe. 

Here is said the Doxology, "Glory 
be to the Father, &c." 

Antiphon. Alleluia, Alleluia, Alle- 
luia. 

In Paschal time is said a fourth 
time, Alleluia. 

Then is said the Chapter. 

Chapter, (i Tim. i. 17.) 

T JNTO the King Eternal, Im- 
^ mortal and Invisible, the 
only God, be honour and glory for 
ever and ever. Amen. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

Then follows the Short Responsory. 

Christ, Thou Son of the Living 
God, have mercy on us. 

Answer. Christ, Thou Son of the 
Living God, have mercy on us. 

Verse. Thou That sittest at the 
right hand of the Father. 

Ansiver. Have mercy on us. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 



and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. Christ, Thou Son of the 
Living God, have mercy on us. 

Verse. 1 Arise, O Christ, and help 
us. 

Answer. And deliver us for Thy 
Name's sake. 

This Responsory is occasionally al- 
tered, which alterations are given in 
their proper places. From Low Sun- 
day inclusive till Ascension Day ex- 
clusive it is said thus : 

Christ, Thou Son of the Living 
God, have mercy on us. Alleluia, 
Alleluia. 

Answer. Christ, Thou Son of the 
Living God, have mercy on us. Alle- 
luia, Alleluia. 

Verse. Thou That art arisen 
from the dead. 

Ansiver. Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. Christ, Thou Son of the 
Living God, have mercy on us. Alle- 
luia, Alleluia. 

Verse. Arise, O Christ, and help 
us. Alleluia. 

Answer. And deliver us for Thy 
Name's sake. Alleluia. 

From Ascension Day inclusive till 
Pentecost exclusive it is the same, ex- 
cept that instead of "Thou That art 
arisen from the dead" is said: 

Verse. Thou That art gone up 
above the stars. 

During the Octave of Pentecost it is 
still the same except that this Verse is 
said thus : 

Verse. Thou That sittest at the 
right hand of the Father. 



Ps. xliii. 26. 



VOL. II. 



B 2 



4- 



THE KSA1 



After the Short Response) 

they the murk *. 

1 K . >ii. 

Christe clc: 

Kvrie eleison. 

OUR Father [i*audibty\ Who art 
in heaven, Hallowed be Thy 
1'hy kingdom come. Thy 
will be done on earth, as it is in 
heaven. Give us this day our daily 
bread. And forgive us our toes 
them that tres- 
against i: id.) 

id lead us not into 
temptation. 

Answer. But deliver us from 
evil. 



I BELIEVE (inaudibly) in God 
the Father Almighty, Maker of 
ren and earth. And in Jesus 
Chri- only Son, our Lord: 

was conceived by the Holy 
st, born of the Virgin Mary, 
suffered under Pontius Pilate, was 
crucified, dead, and buried : He de- 
led into hell : the third day He 
rose again from the dead: H< 

ded into 1 nd sitteth on 

the right hand of God the Father 
Almighty : from thence He shall 
come to ju<L i the 

I believe in the 1 [oiy Ghost, 
the I irch, the Com- 

munion of Saints, the 1 - 

the 

And ' 



Verse. - And unto Thee ha\ 1 

J M>, 
Ansiuer. And in the morning 
shall my praj 
fore i 

Va et my mouth be filled 

with Thy praise. 

' . That I may sing of Thy 
glory, all the day long _reat- 

Verse. 4 O Lord, hide Thy : 
from my sins. 

Answer, And blot out all mine 
iniquities. 

Verse. Create in me a clean heart, 
O God. 

Answer. And renew a right spirit 
within me. 

Verse. Cast me not away from 
Thy presence. 

Answer. And take not Thine 
holy Spirit from me. 

Verse. Restore unto me the 
of Thy salvation. 

Answer. And uphold me with 
Thy free spirit. 

Verse. 5 *%* Our help is in the 
name of the Lord. 

Answer. Who made heaven and 
earth. 

The General Confession. 

T CONFESS t. 

* to the Blessed > 

a Virgin, to the Hit 

the Archangel, to the I John 

the Baptist, to tl 

: and Paul, and to all the 
Saints, that I have .Mimed e\< 
ingly in thought, word, and d 

by my fault, by my fault, by my 
evous fault Thi 






PRIME, OR THE FIRST HOUR. 



43 



a Virgin, the Blessed Michael the 
Archangel, the Blessed John the 
Baptist, the Holy Apostles Peter 
and Paul, and all the Saints, to 
pray to the Lord our God for me. 

The Absolution. 

ALMIGHTY God have mercy 
on us, forgive us our sins, 
and bring us to life everlasting. 
Answer. Amen. 

►J*1\/TAY the Almighty and mer- 

-*-*-*- ciful Lord grant us pardon, 
absolution, and remission of all our 
sins. 

Answer. Amen. 

Then the Office cotitinues as follows : 

Verse. Vouchsafe, O Lord, this 
day. 

Answer. To keep us without 
sin. 

Verse. Have mercy upon us, O 
Lord. 

Answer. Have mercy upon us. 

Verse. O Lord, let Thy mercy 
lighten upon us. 

Answer. As our trust is in Thee. 

Here the Office is resumed when the 
Preces have been omitted. 

* Verse. Hear my prayer, O 
Lord. 

Answer. And let my cry come 
unto Thee. 

Let us pray. 

OLORD God Almighty, Who 
hast safely brought us to the 
beginning of this day, defend us 
in the same with Thy mighty power : 
and grant that this day we fall into 
no sin, but that all our thoughts, 

1 Whether the Martyrology has been read or not. The Martyrology is never binding 
out of Choir. 2 Ps. cxv. 6. 



words, and works may be ordered 
by Thy governance to do always 
that is righteous in Thy sight. 
Through our Lord Jesus Christ, 
Thy Son, Who liveth and reigneth 
with Thee, in the unity of the Holy 
Ghost, one God, world without end. 

Answer. Amen. 

Verse. Hear my prayer, O Lord. 

Answer. And let my cry come 
unto Thee. 

Verse. Bless we the Lord. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

If the Prime of the Little Office of the 
Blessed Virgin Mary is to be said, it is 
said now. Then is read the Martyr- 
ology of the morrow, if it be to be read, 
the reader concluding with the words : 

And in other places many other 
holy Martyrs and Confessors and 
holy Virgins. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

After which the Office proceeds thus : 1 

Verse. 2 Precious in the sight of 
the Lord. 

Answer. Is the death of His 
Saints. 

TV/fAY Holy Mary and all the 
^*- Saints plead for us with the 
Lord, that we may worthily be 
holpen and delivered by Him Who 
liveth and reigneth for ever and 
ever. 

Answer. Amen. 

Verse. Make haste, O God, to 
deliver me. 

Answer. Make haste to help me, 
O Lord. 

Verse. Make haste, O God, to 
deliver me. 

Answer. Make haste to help me, 
O Lord. 



44 



THE PSALTER, 



Verse. Make haste, O God, to 
deliver me. 

Make haste to help 
O Lord. 

Glory be to the Father, and to 
the Son, and to the I Loly ( i 

it was in the beginning] 
and ever shall be, world with- 
out end. Amen. 

OUR Father (inaudibly), Who 
art in heaven, Hallowed be 
Thy Name. Thy kingdom come. 
Thy will be done on earth, as it is 
in heaven. Give us this day our 
daily bread. And forgive us our 
asses, as we forgive them that 
trespass against us. {Aloud.) 

Verse. And lead us not into 
temptation. 

Answer. But deliver us from 
evil. 

Verse. 1 Look upon Thy ser- 
vants, O Lord, and upon the works 
of Thine hands, and order the go- 
ings of their children. 

wer. And let the beauty of 

the LORD our God be upon us, 

and establish Thou the work of 

our hands upon l 'he work 

ir hands, establish Thou it. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to t and to the Holy 

It 

Answer. As it was in tin- 
ginn; m, and ever shall be, 

world without I uen. 

OLORD God 
and earth, may it pi© 

this day I and to hallow, to 



rule and to govern our hearts and 
our bodies, our thoughts, our w 
and our works, according to Thy 
law and in the doing of Thy com- 
mandments, that we, being holpen 
of Thee, may here, and for 
and ever, worthily be saved and de- 
(1 by Thee, O Saviour of the 
world, Who livest and reignest for 
ever and ever. 
Answer. Amen. 

Sir, be pleased to give the 1/. 
ing. 

The Blessing. 

The Lord Almighty order our 
days and deeds in His peace. 
Answer. Amen. 

Then is read the Short Lesson. On all 
Feasts, even Simples, and some other 
days, this is the same as the Chapter 
which is to be read at None, which will 
be found in its proper place. On other 
days one of the following is read, ac- 
cording to the Season of the year. 

I. From the Octave of the Epiphany 
till the First Sunday in Lent, and 
from the Octave of Pentecost till 
Advent Sunday, all exclus; 

2 Thess. iii. 5. 

And the Ix>rd direct your hearts 
into the love of (iod, and into the 

patience of ( 'hrist. 
2. From Advent Sunda 

Chris tn: 

O Lord, b >us unto 

waited tor 1 

Thou our arm ever) mon 

ition also in the time 

trouble. 






PRIME, OR THE FIRST HOUR. 



45 



3. From the First Sunday in Lent in- 
clusive till Passion Sunday exclusive. 

Isa. lv. 6. 

Seek ye the Lord, while He may 
be found : call ye upon Him while 
He is near. 



4. From Passion Sunday inclusive till 
Maundy Thursday exclusive. 

Isa. 1. 6. 

I hid not my face from shame 
and spitting. The Lord God 1 
will help me, therefore also shall 
I not be confounded. 

5. From Easter Sunday inclusive till 
Ascension Day exclusive. 

Col. iii. 1. 

If ye be risen with Christ, seek 
those things which are above, where 
Christ sitteth at the right hand of 
God : set your affections on things 
above, not on things on the earth. 

When the Reader has finished the 
Short Lesson, he says: 

But Thou, O Lord, have mercy 
upon us. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

Verse. Our help is in the name 
of the Lord. 

Answer. Who made heaven and 
earth. 

Verse. Bless ye. 

Answer. May God [bless us]. 

The Blessing. 

*fc The Lord bless us, and keep 
us from all evil, and bring us to life 
everlasting; and may the souls of 
the Faithful, through the mercy of 
God, rest in peace. 

Answer. Amen. 



Lastly, unless some other Hour is to 
follow immediately, the Lord's Prayer 
is said inaudibly. 

OUR Father, Who art in heaven, 
Hallowed be Thy Name. Thy 
kingdom come. Thy will be done 
on earth, as it is in heaven. Give 
us this day our daily bread. And 
forgive us our trespasses, as we 
forgive them that trespass against 
us. And lead us not into tempta- 
tion ; but deliver us from evil. 
Amen. 

Note. When Office is said in Choir 
the Service is ended with the Antiphon 
of the Blessed Virgin Mary every time 
the Choir is left. Otherwise it is only 
said as given in this book, at the end of 
Lauds {or the aggregatio?i of which 
Lauds for?ns a part) and Compline. 

Feasts. The above Office appointed 
for Sundays is also said on all Feasts 
whatsoever, even Simples, and every 
day in Paschal time. 



PRIME ON WEEK-DAYS. 

All the same as on Sunday, except as 
otherwise given here. 

Ordinary Antiphon during the 
year. Blessed are they that walk. 

In Advent the Antiphon is the First 
Antiphon which has been said at Lauds 
on Sunday, unless the day have a set of 
its own. 

Antiphon in Lent. As I live. 

Antiphon for Passiontide. De- 
liver me, O Lord. 

Psalm cxvii., " O give thanks unto 
the Lord," is not said. On Saturday 
it is siniply omitted, and only the three 
Feast- Day Psalms {viz. liii. and the two 
first sections oj 'cxviii.) are said, but o?i 
the other days of the week one of the 
Psahns following is put in its place. 



The Divine Name. 



4 6 






fftontum 

m XXIII. 

[Inikulol "A I'sa. 

1 "for the 

THE earth is the Lord's and 
the fulness thereof: * the 
:, and they that dwell there- 
in. 

hath founded it upon the 
seas, * and established it upon the 
floo< 

Who shall ascend into the moun- 
tain of the Lord? * or who shall 
stand in His holy place? 

He that hath clean hands and 
a pure heart, * who hath not 
lifted up his soul unto vanity, nor 
sworn deceitfully unto his neigh- 
bour. 

He shall receive a blessing from 
the Lord, * and mercy from the 
ilvation. 
This is the generation of them 
that seek Him, * that seek the 
of the Cod of Jacob. 1 
Lift up tes, O ye princes, 

and !:ft up, ye everlasting 

doors ! * and the King of glory 
shall come in. 

Who is this King of -lory? * 
Lord strong and mighty, the 

nighty in battle. 
Lift up 

lift Up, ye everl.; 

shall ' 

Who is thj lory? * 

the 
King of 



ftucstum 

Psalm XXIV. 

[Intituled "Of David." This Psalm is 
Damn.] 

UNTO Thee, O Lord, do I lift 
up my soul : * O my God, 
I trust in Thee, let me not be 
ashamed. 

Neither let mine enemies triumph 
over me : * for none that wait < >n 
Thee shall be asham< 

Let them be ashamed that 
transgress * without cause. 

Show me Thy ways, O Lord, * 
and teach me Thy paths. 

Lead me in Thy truth and teach 
me ; * for Thou art the God of 
my salvation : and on Thee do I 
wait all the day. 

Remember, O Lord, Thy tender 
mercies, * and Thy loving-kind- 
nesses, which have been ever of 
old. 

Remember not the sins of my 
youth, * nor my transgressions : 

According to Thy mercy remem- 
ber Thou me, * for Thy good: 
sake, O Lord. 

Good and upright is the Lord; 
* therefore will He teach sinners 
in the way. 

The meek will He guide in i' 
ment : * the meek will He U 
His \ 

All the paths of ti, 

•id truth, * unto 
Mt and l 

nion: 

r Thy Name LORDj 

pardon mine iniquity ; * 



PRIME, OR THE FIRST HOUR. 



47 



What man is he that feareth the 
Lord ? * him shall He teach in the 
way that He shall choose. 

His soul shall dwell at ease : * 
and his seed shall inherit the earth. 

The Lord is a strong rock unto 
them that fear Him; * and His 
covenant shall be made known to 
them. 

Mine eyes are ever toward the 
Lord : * for He shall pluck my feet 
out of the net. 

Turn Thee unto me, and have 
mercy upon me, * for I am desolate 
and afflicted. 

The troubles of mine heart are 
enlarged : * O bring me out of my 
distresses. 

Look upon mine affliction and my 
pain : * and forgive all my sins. 

Consider mine enemies, for they 
are many : * and they hate me with 
cruel hatred. 

O keep my soul, and deliver me : 
* let me not be ashamed, for I put 
my trust in Thee. 

The undefiled and the upright 
cleave to me : * for I wait on Thee. 

Redeem Israel, O God, * out of 
all his troubles ! 



Psalm XXV. 
[Intituled "Of David."] 

JUDGE me, O Lord, for I have 
walked in mine innocence : * I 
have trusted also in the Lord ; I 
shall not slide. 

Examine me, O Lord, and prove 
me : * try as by fire my reins and 
mine heart. 

For Thy loving-kindness is before 
mine eyes : * and I have walked in 
Thy truth. 



I have not sat with vain persons, 

* neither will I go in with wrong- 
doers. 

I hate the congregation of evil 
doers : * and will not sit with the 
wicked. 

I will wash mine hands in inno- 
cency, * and I will compass Thine 
Altar, O Lord. 

That I may hear the voice of 
thanksgiving, * and tell of all Thy 
wondrous works. 

Lord, I have loved the beauty of 
Thine house, * and the place where 
Thy glory dwelleth. 

Make not my soul to perish with 
sinners, O God, * nor my life with 
bloody men : 

In whose hands is mischief, * and 
their right hand is full of bribes. 

But as for me, I will walk in 
mine innocence : * redeem me, and 
be merciful unto me. 

My foot standeth in uprightness : 

* in the congregations will I bless 
Thee, O Lord. 

STfjurstras* 

Psalm XXII. 
[Intituled "A Psalm of David."] 

THE Lord is my Shepherd, I 
shall not want. * He maketh 
me to lie down in green pastures : 

He leadeth me beside the still 
waters. * He restoreth my soul : 

He leadeth me in the paths of 
righteousness, * for His Name's 
sake. 

Yea, though I walk through the 
valley of the shadow of death, I will 
fear no evil : * for Thou art with 
me : 

Thy rod and Thy staff * they 
comfort me. 



48 



TH1. PSA1 



Thou prepa: 

* in the ; 

mine head with 

* and mil .owing CU] 

all follow me 

* all 

II will dwell in the houft 
the IX)RD * t 

JTntuy. 

in XXI. 

[Intitule I." It has 

a musical (?) superscription, from part of 
which it appears that it was written for a 
tune called "The hind <»f the morning."] 

MY God, my God, look upon 
me * : why hast Thou for- 
saken me? * the voice of mine of- 
:i Thy deliverance far 
from 

my God, I cry in the day-time, 
and Thou nearest not : * and in the 
night season — and still it is not fool- 
ishness in me. 

But Thou dwellest in holiness, * 

.ou Praise of Israel ! 
Our fathers trusted in Thee : * 
.nd Thou didst deliver 
• 

'IT. unto Thee, and v. 

delivered : * they trusted in I 
and were not confoum 

ma worm and no man : * 
h of men, an< d of 

shoot out the lip, and 

i !-• trust* d in t let Him 

• let Him deliver him, 
• i in him. 



J lu t Thou art He That took me 

out of the womb : * Thou art mine 

from my mother's hi' asts. I 

upon Thee from the womb: 

Thou art my (iod from my 

mother's belly. * He not far from 

For trouble is near : * for there is 
none to help. 

Many bulls have compassed me : 

* strong bulls hav me round. 

They gaped upon me with their 
mouths, * as a ravening and a roar- 
ing lion. 

I am poured out like water, * and 
all my bones are out of joint ; 

Mine heart is like melting wax * 
in the midst of my bowels. 

My strength is dried up like a 
potsherd, and my tongue cleaveth to 
my jaws : * and Thou hast brought 
me into the dust of death. 

For many dogs have compa 
me : * the assembly of the wicked 
inclosed me. 

They pierced mine hands and my 
: * they have told all my bones : 

They look and stare upon me. * 
They part my garments among them, 
and upon my vesture do they 
lots. 

But let not Thine help be far from 
me ; Lord, * haste The 
mc 

(lod, deliver my soul from the 
sword : * my darling from the p 

of the dog! 

• m the Lion's mouth ; * 
and mine affliction from the horns of 
the unicorns. 

1 \\ ill declare Thy name unto my 

brethren i * in the midst of the 
lion will I praise Thi 



I ast Then 

1 . 34). 



PRIME, OR THE FIRST HOUR. 



49 



Ye that fear the Lord, praise 
Him : * all ye seed of Jacob, glorify 
Him ; 

Let all the seed of Israel fear 
Him. * For He hath not despised 
nor abhorred the prayer of the 
poor; 

Neither hath He hid His face 
from me : * but when I cried unto 
Him, He heard me. 

My praise shall be of Thee in the 
great congregation : * I will pay my 
vows before them that fear Him. 

The poor shall eat and be satis- 
fied, and they shall praise the Lord 
that seek Him : * their heart shall 
live for ever. 

All the ends of the earth * shall 
remember and turn unto the Lord. 

And all the kindreds of the na- 
tions * shall worship before Him. 

For the kingdom is the Lord's : 

* and He hath dominion among the 
nations. 

All they that be fat upon earth 
shall eat and worship : * all they 
that go down to the dust shall fall 
down before Him : 

My soul also shall live unto Him ; 

* and my seed shall serve Him : 
The generation to come shall tell 

it unto the Lord : * and the heavens 
shall declare His righteousness unto 
a people that shall be born, whom 
the Lord hath made. 



Saturtiag. 

Psalm cxvii. is simply omitted and 
no other is substituted for it. 

Ordinary Antiphon during the 
year. Blessed are they that walk 
in Thy law, O Lord. 



In Advent the Antiphon is the First 
Antiphon which has been said at Lauds 
on Sunday, unless the day have a set of 
its own. 

Aittiphon in Lent. 1 As I live, 
saith the Lord, I have no pleasure 
in the death of the wicked, but 
rather that he turn from his way and 
live. 

Antiphon for Passiontide. 2 De- 
liver me, O Lord, and set me be- 
side Thee : and any man's hand 
may fight against me. 

Chapter. (Zech. viii. 19.) 

LOVE peace and truth, saith the 
Lord Almighty. 

If the Preces have not been said at 
Lauds, then the Preces are now said, 
as on Sunday ; but if the Lauds Preces 
have been said, the following longer 
form is used, all kneeling: 

Kyrie eleison. 

Answer. Christe eleison. 

Kyrie eleison. 



OUR Father (inaudibly), Who 
art in heaven, Hallowed be 
Thy Name. Thy kingdom come. 
Thy will be done on earth, as it is 
in heaven. Give us this day our 
daily bread. And forgive us our 
trespasses, as we forgive them that 
trespass against us. (Aloud.) 

Verse. And lead us not into 
temptation. 

Answer. 
evil. 



But deliver us from 



T BELIEVE (inaudibly) in God 
^ the Father Almighty, Maker of 
heaven and earth. And in Jesus 



Ezek. xxxiii. 11. 



Job xvii. 3. 



50 



PSALTER. 



i, our I 

the H<>ly 

Ghost, born of f in Mary, 

suffered under Pontius Pilate, 

crucified, dead, and buried : He 

nded into hell : the third day 

i from the dead : He 

ascended int« teth 

he right hand of God the 

Father Almighty \ from thence He 

shall come to judge the quick and 

the dead. I believe in the Holy 

ioly Catholic Church, 

the Communion of Saints, the For- 

<d.) 

Verse. The Resurrection of the 

body. 

At \nd the Life everlast- 

ing. Amen. 

ne. And unto Thee have I 
i, O Lord. 

\nd in the morning 
shall my prayer come betimes before 
Thee. 

Vtr | my mouth be filled 

with Thy praise. 

r. That I may sing of 
Thy glory, all the day long of Thy 

rse. O Lord, hide Thy face 
tan my 

tod blot out all mine 
iniqur 

a dean 
heart, O < 

pirit 
within 

! Ilir I)' • 

Thy i 

I !nne 



Verse. Restore unto me the joy 
of Thy salvation. 

Answer. And uphold me with 
Thy free spirit. 

Verse. l Deliver me, O Lord, 
from the evil man. 

Answer. And preserve me from 
the wicked man. 

Verse. 2 Deliver me from mine 
enemies, O my God. 

Answer. And defend me from 
them that rise up against me. 

Verse. Deliver me from the 
workers of iniquity. 

Answer. And save me from 
bloody men. 

Verse. 3 So will I sing unto Thy 
Name for ever. 

A?iswer. That I may daily per- 
form my vows. 

Verse. 4 Answer us, O God of 
our salvation. 

Answer. Who art the confidence 
of all the ends of the earth, and of 
them that are afar off upon the E 

Verse. Make haste, O God, to 
deliver me. 

Answer. Make haste to help 
O Lord. 

Verse. 6 Holy God, Holy Mighty, 
Holy Immortal. 

Answer, Haw mercy on us. 

the Lord, () my 
soul. 

And all that is within 
me, bless His holy Name. 

1 my soul. 
And forget not all his 

benefits. 

ne, Wfc tli all thine 

iniquities. 



i 

Up into the air durii 

ftantinojjl< probably much 

l.r 



PRIME, OR THE FIRST HOUR. 



51 



Answer. Who healeth all thy 
diseases. 

Verse. Who redeemeth thy life 
from destruction. 

Answer. Who crowneth thee 
with loving - kindness and tender 
mercies. 

Verse. Who satisfieth thy desire 
with good things. 



Answer. Thy youth is renewed 
like the eagle's. 

Verse. ^ Our help is in the 
name of the Lord. 

Answer. Who made heaven and 
earth. 



Then is made the General Confession, 
and all proceeds as on Sunday. 






TE1 >k THE THIRD HOUR. 1 



©ffkr for rbcru tjau in the 
JHrrfc. 

At the beginning of T ord's 

tat ion are 
/.- tudibly. 

OUR Father, Who art in hi 
I lallowed be Thy Name. Thy 
lom come. Thy will be done 
it is in heaven. Give 
us this day our daily bread. And 
forgive us our trespasses, as we for- 
them that trespass against us. 
And lead us not into temptation ; 
but deliver us from evil. Amen. 

IT All ill of grace; The 

* A Lord is with thee: blessed 
art thou among women, and blessed 
fruit of thy womb, Jksus. 
Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray 
for n . now, and at the hour 

of our death. An 

Then is said aloud : 
Verse. >j« M O < 

<• to help 
( l i 
Glory be to the Father, and to the 



As it was in the beginning, is I 
and ever shall be, world without end. 
Amen. Alleluia. 

From Septuagesima Sunday 
Maundy Thursday instead of "Alle- 
luia" is said: 

Ceaseless praise to Thee be given. 
O Eternal King of heaven. 

Then is said the follow: 

Hymn. 1 

COME, Holy Ghost, Who ever One, 
Reigntst with Father and with 
Son, 
3 It is the hour, our souls possess 
With Thy full flood of holiness. 

Let flesh, and heart, and lips, and mind, 
Sound forth our witness to mankind ; 
And love light up our mortal frame 
Till others catch the living flame. 

Now to the Father, to the Son, 

And to the Spirit, Three in One, 

Be praise, and thanks, and glory given, 

By men on earth, by Saints in heaven. 

Ti: r is some:. thus, 

altered in honour of the Incarnati, 

in-born, to Thee, 

toe and T! 
Be piaisei and thanks, and g] 
By men on earth, l>y Saints in heaven. 



9 A.M., fttxml which time it v nid in 

* An Dilation l>y tat ' 

5 It WA^ hfd hour t! 

It 15. 






TERCE, OR THE THIRD HOUR. 



53 



In Paschal time it is said thus, al- 
tered in honour of the Resurrection : 

JESU, our Risen Lord, to Thee, 
To Father, Spirit, One and Three, 
Be praise, and thanks, and glory given, 
By men on earth, by Saints in heaven. 

Amen. 

// is also occasionally otherwise al- 
tered, which occasions are marked in 
their places. 

Then follow six sections of Psalm 
CX VIII. They are all said under one 
Antiphon, and when Five A?itiphons 
have bee?i said at Lauds, the Second of 
these Five is the Antiphon at Terce. 
Otherwise those given here are used. 

Ordinary Antiphon for Sundays ; 
and for every day in Paschal time. 
Alleluia. 

Ordinary Antiphon for Week-days. 
Lead me. 

In Advent the Antiphon is the Second 
Antiphon which has been said at Lauds 
on Sunday, unless the day have a set of 
its own. 

Antiphon in Lent. Behold now 
is the day. 

Antiphon in Passiontide. O Lord, 
Thou hast judged. 



Continuation of Psalm C XVIII. 

rr 1 

'"PEACH me, O Lord, the way of 
-*■ Thy statutes : * and I shall 
keep it unto the end. 

Give me understanding, and I 
shall keep Thy law : * yea, I shall 
observe it with my whole heart. 

Lead me ' in the path of Thy 



commandments : * for therein do I 
delight. 

Incline mine heart unto Thy testi- 
monies, * and not to covetousness. 

Turn away mine eyes from be- 
holding vanity : * quicken Thou me 
in Thy way. 

Stablish Thy word unto Thy ser- 
vant, * that he may fear Thee. 

Turn away my reproach, which I 
dread : * for Thy judgments are 
good. 

Behold, I have longed after 
Thy precepts : * quicken me in 
Thy righteousness. 

Here the Doxology, " Glory be to the 
Father, &c," is not said. 



LET Thy mercy come also unto 
me, O Lord : * even Thy sal- 
vation, according to Thy word. 

So shall I have wherewith to 
answer him that reproacheth me : 
* for I trust in Thy word. 

And take not the word of truth 
utterly out of my mouth : * for I 
have hoped in Thy judgments. 

So shall I keep Thy law contin- 
ually, * for ever and ever. 

And I will walk at liberty : * for 
I seek Thy precepts. 

I will speak of Thy testimonies 
also before kings : * and will not be 
ashamed. 

And I will delight myself in Thy 
commandments, * which I have loved. 

Mine hands also will I lift up 
unto Thy commandments, which I 
have loved : * and I will meditate 
in Thy statutes. 



1 Here begins the letter He, an aspirate, nearly represented by our H. 

2 Here begins the letter Vau, variously attempted to be represented by V, W, U. 
O, Oo. 



54 



PSALTER. 



M Psalm. 

r 

R [EMBER Thy word unto 
rvant, * upon which 
Thou hast caused me I 

This is my comfort in mine afflic- 
* that Thy word hath quickened 

The proud have behaved them- 

:ly : * yet h.r. 
not turned aside from Thy law. 

I remembered Thy judgments of 
old, C) Lord : * and have comforted 
If. 
Horror hath taken hold upon me, 

* be< :ie wicked that forsake 
Thy law. 

Thy statutes have been my songs 

* in the house of my pilgrim 

I have remembered Thy Name, O 
Lord, in the night, * and have kept 
aw. 

This I had, * because I kept Thy 
precepts. 

Hen tin- Doxology^ M < dory be to the 
Father, &c," is not said. 

*T*I I my portion, Lord, 

■ * I have said that I would 
Thy law. 

»ur with my 
whole heart : * be merciful unto me 
according to Thy word. 

I thought on my ways, * and 
turned my feet unto Thy | 

I not 

* to ; 
The b. 



compassed mi 

I no" I by law. 

midnight I will rise to \ 
thanks unto Thee, * because 
Thy righteous judgments. 

m the companion of all them 
that fear Thee, * and of them that 
keep Thy prec < 

The earth, O Lord, is full of 
Thy mercy : * teach me Thy 
statu: 



Continuation of t tie same Psalm, 
i 



ta 



T^HOU hast dealt well with Thy 
* servant, O Lord, * according 
to Thy word. 

Teach me goodness, and judg- 
ment, and knowledge : * for I have 
believed Thy commandments. 

Before I was afflicted, I went 
astray : * therefore now I have 
kept Thy word. 

Thou art good, * and in Thy 
goodness teach me Thy statutes. 

The proud have dealt 
wickedly with me : * but I will 
keep Thy precepts with my whole 
heart. 

Their heart is curdled as milk : 4 
* but I delight in Thy 1. 

It is good for me that Thou hast 
afflicted me : * that I might I 
Thy statu- 

The law of Thy mouth is be! 
unto me, * than thousands of gold 
and silver. 



Hert ti. I rlory be ti 

Father, &C," tS 



: i : ; tO / . 

tented by Kb and llh 

i M Idet conveyed is th.it .»f stupidity. 



TERCE, OR THE THIRD HOUR. 



55 



THINE hands have made me and 
fashioned me : * give me 
understanding, that I may learn 
Thy commandments. 

They that fear Thee will be glad 
when they see me : * because I have 
hoped in Thy word. 

I know, O Lord, that Thy judg- 
ments are right, * and that Thou 
in faithfulness hast afflicted me. 

Let Thy merciful kindness be for 
my comfort, * according to Thy 
word unto Thy servant. 

Let Thy tender mercies come unto 
me, that I may live : * for Thy law 
is my delight. 

Let the proud be ashamed, for 
they dealt wrongfully with me with- 
out a cause : * but I will meditate 
in Thy precepts. 

Let those that fear Thee turn 
unto me, * and those that know 
Thy testimonies. 

Let mine heart be undented in 
Thy statutes, * that I be not 
ashamed. 

Ordinary Antiphon for Sundays. 
Alleluia, Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Antiphon for every day in Paschal 
time. Alleluia, Alleluia, Alleluia, 
Alleluia. 

Ordinary Antiphon for Week- 
days. 2 Lead me in the path of 
Thy commandments, O Lord. 

In Adve?it the Antiphon is the Second 
Antiphon which has bee7i said at Lauds 
on Sunday, unless the day have a set of 
its own. 

Antiphon in Lent. Behold now 
is the day of repentance, to redeem 
sin, and save the soul. 



Antiphon in Passion tide. 3 O 
Lord, Thou hast judged the cause 
of my soul. Thou hast redeemed 
my life, O Lord my God. 

Then follows the Chapter and the 
Short Responsory. When they are not 
given specially, one of the following is 
used. After the Chapter is always an- 
swered, " Thanks be to God." 



On Sundays, from the Third Sun- 
day after the Epiphany inclusive until 
Septtmgesima Sunday exclusive, and 
from the Third Sunday after Pentecost 
inclusive until Advent Sunday exclusive 
are said the following, and the Respon- 
sory is used moreover till the First 
Sunday in Lent exclusive. 

Chapter, (i John iv. 16.) 

f~^ OD is love : and he that dwell- 
^-J eth in love dwelleth in God, 
and God in him. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

Short Responsory. 

4 Incline mine heart unto Thy 
testimonies, O God. 

Answer. Incline mine heart unto 
Thy testimonies, O God. 

Verse. Turn away mine eyes from 
beholding vanity : quicken Thou me 
in Thy way. 

Ansiver. Unto Thy testimonies, 
O God. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. Incline mine heart unto 
Thy testimonies, O God. 

Verse. 5 I said, Lord, be merci- 
ful unto me. 

Answer. Heal my soul, for I 
have sinned against Thee. 



1 Here begins the letter Jod, variously represented by J, Y, I, Ee. 

2 Ps. cxviii. 35. 3 Lam. iii. 58. 4 Ps. cxviii. 36, 37. 



Ps. xl. 5. 



56 



THE 



On ord hout 

Ud the foL 

■.:. JCT. \ui. 

T T EAL me, O Lord, and I shall 
* * be healed : od I 

shall be saved : for Thou art my 
praise. 

Answ r. Thanks be to God. 

Short Responsory. 

Heal my soul, for I have sinned 
against Thee. 

Answer. Heal my soul, for I 
have sinned against Thee. 

Verse. I said, Lord, be merciful 
unto me. 

Answer. For I have sinned against 
Thee. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Gh< 

Answer. Heal my soul, for I 
have sinned against Thee. 

Verse. l Be Thou mine Helper, 
neither leave me, 

Answer. Nor forsake me, O God 
of my salvation. 

/;/ Advent art said the following (but 

the Chapter on Week- days otily) : 

Chapter, (Jer. xxiii. 5.) 

BEHOLD, the days come, saith 
th« that I will 1 

unto David a righteous branch: and 
a King shall reign in wisdom, and 

shall execute judgment and justice 

in the earth. 

I hi ol 

Short Reeponsorf. 
Come and Lord I 



At I ome and save us, O 

Lord God of bod 

Ve> use Thy face to shine, 

and we shall be sa\ 

rd God of ho 

Verse. Glory be to tin 
and tO tl and to the Holy 

Gho 

Answer. Come and save us, O 
Lord God of ho- 

Verse. 3 The heathen shall fear 
Thy Name, O Lori>. 

Answer. And all the kings of 
the earth Thy glory. 

In Lent are said the following {but the 
Chapter on Week-days only) : 

Chapter. (Joel ii. 12, 13.) 

HTURN ye to Me with all your 
*- heart, with fasting, and with 
weeping, and with mourning. And 
rend your heart and not your gar- 
ments, saith the Lord Almighty. 
Answer. Thanks be to God. 

Short Responsory. 

4 He hath delivered me from the 
snare of the fowler. 

Answer, He hath delivered me 
from the snare of the fowler. 

Verse. And from the noisome 
pestilence. 

nver. From the snare of the 

fowl 

Verse. Glory be to the Fat 
and tO the Son, and tO the i 
It 

Answer, He hath deliv< 
from the snare- of the fowler. 

He shall cov< with 

And under Hi 
shah thou trust. 









I's. 



I 



TERCE, OR THE THIRD HOUR. 



57 



In Passiontide are said the following 
{but the Chapter on Week-days only) : 

Chapter. (Jer. xvii. 13.) 

r\ LORD, all that forsake Thee 
^-^ shall be ashamed : they that 

(depart from Thee shall be written 
in the earth : because they have 
forsaken the Lord, the fountain of 
living waters. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

Short Respo?isory. 

I 1 O God, deliver my soul from 
the sword. 

Answer. O God, deliver my soul 
from the sword. 

Verse. And my darling from 
the power of the dog. 

Answer. My soul from the sword. 
O God, deliver my soul from the 
sword. 

Verse. O Lord, save me from 
the lion's mouth. 

Answer. And mine affliction 
from the horns of the unicorns. 

In Paschal time are said the following 
{but the Chapter on Week-days only) : 

Chapter. (Rom. vi. 9.) 

/^HRIST, being raised from the 
^ dead, dieth no more, death 
hath no more dominion over Him. 
For in that He died, He died unto 
sin once ; but in that He liveth, He 
liveth unto God. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

Short Responsory. 

The Lord is risen from the grave, 
Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Answer. The Lord is risen from 
the grave, Alleluia, Alleluia. 



Verse. Who hung for us upon 
the tree. 

Answer. Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. The Lord is risen from 
the grave, Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Verse. 2 The Lord is risen in- 
deed, Alleluia. 

Answer. And hath appeared to 
Simon, Alleluia. 

After the Short Responsory, if the 
Preces have bee?i said at Lauds, all kneel 
down a?id the following are said; but 
if the Preces have been omitted at Lauds, 
then these are also omitted dow7i to the 
mark *. 

Kyrie eleison. 

Answer. Christe eleison. 

Kyrie eleison. 

/^\UR Father {inaudibly), Who 
^-^ art in heaven, Hallowed be 
Thy Name. Thy kingdom come. 
Thy will be done on earth, as it is 
in heaven. Give us this day our 
daily bread. And forgive us our 
trespasses, as we forgive them that 
trespass against us. {Aloud?) 

Verse. And lead us not into 
temptation. 

Answer. But deliver us from evil. 

Verse. 3 Turn us again, O Lord 
God of hosts. 

Answer. And cause Thy face to 
shine, and we shall be saved. 

Verse. Arise, O Christ, and help 
us. 

Answer. And deliver us for Thy 
Name's sake. 

Here the Office is continued when the 
above has been omitted. 



Ps. xxi. 21. 



Luke xxiv. 34. 



3 Ps. lxxix. 8. 



58 



Till 



Lord. 
unto 



r my prayer, O 

And let i; 



onic 



after 

x my prayer, O Lord. 
And let my cry come 
unto Thee. 

Verse. Bless we the Lord. 
m r. I hanks be to God. 

the Little Office of the BL 
Virgin Mary is to follow immediately, 
it is I I not 

said. Otherwise the Office ends thus : 

Verse {said in a somewhat lower 
May the souls of the Faith- 
ful, through the mercy of God, rest 
in peace. 

Amen. 



r is said inaudilly. 

Ol'R Father, Who art in h< 
Hallowed 1> 
kingdom come. Thy will be done 
on earth, as it is in heaven. I 
us this day our daily bread. 

3 our trespasses, . 
give them that trespass agains* 
And lead us not into temptation ; 
but deliver us from evil. Amen. 

Note. 1 1 'hen Office is said in ( 
the Sen 'ice is ended with the Ant 
of the Bit in Mary every 

the Choir is left. Otherwise it is 
said as given in this book, at tii 
of Lauds (or the aggregation of n 
Lauds forms a part) and Complii 

Feasts. The above Office, appointed 
for all Sundays and 1 1 r eek-days thr> 
out the year, is likewise said on all 
<ts. 



59 



SEXT, OR THE SIXTH HOUR. 1 



©fiftce for efarg trag in tfje 

At the beginning of Sext, the Lord's 
Prayer and the A?igelic Salutation are 
said inaudibly. 

OUR Father, Who art in heaven, 
Hallowed be Thy Name. Thy 
kingdom come. Thy will be done 
on earth, as it is in heaven. Give 
us this day our daily bread. And 
forgive us our trespasses, as we for- 
give them that trespass against us. 
And lead us not into temptation; 
but deliver us from evil. Amen. 

TJAIL, Mary, full of grace; The 
-*- *- Lord is with thee : blessed 
art thou among women, and blessed 
is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus. 

Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray 
for us sinners, now, and at the hour 
of our death. Amen. 

Then is said aloud : 

Verse, ►£< Make haste, O God, to 
deliver me. 

Answer. Make haste to help me, 
O Lord. 

Glory be to the Father, and to 
the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

As it was in the beginning, is 



now, and ever shall be, world with- 
out end. Amen. Alleluia. 



From Septuagesima Sunday to 
Maundy Thursday, instead of "Alle- 
luia" is said: 

Ceaseless praise to Thee be given, 
O Eternal King of Heaven. 

The?i is said the following : 
Hymn. 2 

OGOD, Who canst not change nor 
fail, 

Guiding the hours, as they roll by, 
Brightening with beams the morning 

pale, 
And burning in the mid-day sky ; 

Quench Thou the fires of hate and 

strife, 
The wasting fever of the heart ; 
From perils guard our feeble life, 
And to our souls Thy peace impart. 

Grant this, O Father, Only Son, 
And Holy Spirit, God of grace, 
To Whom all glory, Three in One, 
Be given in every time and place. 

Amen. 

The last verse is sometimes said thus, 
altered in honour of the Incarnation : 

Hear, Jestj, Virgin-born, our cry, 
W T ith Father and with Holy Ghost, 
To Whom be praise, here as on high, 
On earth as 'mid the Angelic Host. 

Amen. 



1 The proper hour for Sext is 12 noon. In Choirs it is generally said after the Com- 
; munity Mass. 

8 Another hymn of the Ambrosian school, with one word altered. Translation by the 
late Card. Newman. 



6o 



nil-: PSALTER. 



/// Paschal time it is said thus, alt 
in honour of the Hon: 

To Thee, our Risen Lord, we 
With Father and with Holy Ghost, 
To Whom be praise, here as on b 
On earth as mid the Angelic 1 1 

Amen. 

// is also occasionally (ti- 

ed in 
their pla. 

Tii six sections of Psalm 

CX VIII. They are all said under one 
Antiphon, and when Five Antiphons 
have been said at Lauds the third of 
the Antiphon at Sext. 
Other-wise those given here are used. 

Ordinary Antiphon for Sundays 
and for every day in Paschal time. 
Alleluia. 

Ordinary Antiphon for Week-days. 
Hold Thou me up. 

/// Advent the Antiphon is the Third 
Antiphon which has been said at Lauds 
on Sunday, unless the day have a set of 
its own. 

Antiphon in Lent. Let us ap- 
prove ourselves. 

Antiphon in Passion tide. O My 
people. 



Continuation of Psalm CATIII. 

AyTY soul fainteth for Thy salva- 
^V*- tion : * but I hope in Thy 
word. 

Mi I'hy word, * 

sayin. d wilt Thou comfort 

I am like a v 

skin in time of frost : * yd do I 

my statu N 



How many are the days of Thy 
:it ? * when wilt Thou execute 
judgment on them that pers 
me ? 

The wicked have spoken 
unto me, * which are not after Thy 
law. 

All Thy commandments are faith- 
ful : * they persecute me wrongfully, 
help Thou me. 

They had almost consumed me 
upon earth : * but I forsook not 
Thy precepts. 

Quicken me after Thy loving- 
kindness : * so shall I keep the 
testimony of Thy mouth. 

Here the Doxology, " Glory be to the 
Father, &c," is not said. 



T^OR ever, O Lord, * Thy word 
-*• is settled in heaven. 

Thy faithfulness is unto all genera- 
tions : * Thou hast established the 
earth, and it abideth. 

The day continueth by Thine 
ordinance : * for all things 
Thee. 

In less Thy law had been my 
delight, * then perchance I should 
have perished in mine affliction. 

I will never forget Thy j 
* for with them Thou hast quick- 
ened me, 

I am Thine, save me : * I 

have Bought Thy precepts. 

The wicked have waited for me, 
to di : * but 1 1 

I have- Been an end of all pi ■: 
tion : * but Thy commandment is 
broad. 



H« ph, 1 guu ittd by C, <. l 

Hen 



SEXT, OR THE SIXTH HOUR. 



61 



the 



Continuation of the same Psalm. 

a 1 

r\ HOW I love Thy law, O Lord 
^-J * it is my meditation all th 
day. 

Thou, through Thy command- 
ments, hast made me wiser than 
1 mine enemies : * for they are ever 
with me. 

I have more understanding than 
all my teachers : * for Thy testi- 
monies are my meditation. 

I understand more than the an- 
cients, * because I keep Thy pre- 
cepts. 

I have refrained my feet from 
every evil way ; * that I might keep 
Thy word. 

I have not departed from Thy 
judgments : * for Thou hast taught 
me. 

How sweet are Thy words unto 
my taste ! * yea, sweeter than honey 
to my mouth. 

Through Thy precepts I get un- 
derstanding : * therefore I hate every 
false way. 

Here the Doxology, " Glory be to the 
Father, &c," is not said. 



"PHY word is a lamp unto my feet, 
* * and a light unto my path. 
I have sworn, and am stedfastly 
purposed, * to keep Thy righteous 
judgments. 

I am afflicted very much, O 
Lord : * quicken me according to 
Thy word. 

Accept, I beseech Thee, the free- 



will offerings of my mouth, O Lord : 
* and teach me Thy judgments. 

My soul is continually in mine 
hand : * yet do I not forget Thy law. 

The wicked have laid a snare for 
me : * yet I erred not from Thy 
precepts. 

Thy testimonies have I taken as 
an heritage for ever : * for they are 
the rejoicing of mine heart. 

I have inclined mine heart to 
perform Thy statutes always, * be- 
cause of the reward. 

Continuation of the same Psalm. 



f" HATE the unrighteous : * but 
*- Thy law do I love. 

Thou art mine Helper and my 
Protector : * and in Thy word do 
I hope. 

Depart from me, ye evil-doers : 
* for I will keep the commandments 
of my God. 

Uphold me according to Thy 
word, and I shall live : * and let me 
not be ashamed of mine hope. 

Hold Thou me up and I shall be 
safe : * and I will have respect unto 
Thy statutes continually. 

Thou hast trodden down all them 
that err from Thy statutes : * for 
their thought is falsehood. 

I hold all the wicked of the earth 
as liars : * therefore I love Thy 
testimonies. 

Make Thou my flesh to tremble 
for fear of Thee : * for I am afraid 
of Thy judgments. 

Here the Doxology, " Glory be to the 
Father, &c," is not said. 



1 Here begins the letter Mem, answering to M. 

2 Here begins the letter Nun, answering to N. 

3 Here begins the letter Samech, somewhat represented by S. 






THE PSALTER. 



r 



HAVE done judgment and jus- 

A tiCC : * mine 

lor Thy servant lor 
good: * let not the proud op; 
mc. 

Mine eves fail for Thy salva- 
tion, * and for the word of Thy 
ousness. 

a\ with Thy servant AOCOrd 
unto Thy mercy : * and teach me 
Thy 

I am Thy servant : * give me un- 
derstanding, that I may know Thy 

It is time for Thee, Lord, to work : 
* they have made void Thy law. 

Therefore I love Thy command- 
ments * above gold and the topaz 
stone. 

Therefore did I turn to all Thy 
commandments : * I hate every 
false way. 

Ordinary Antiphon for Sunday. 
Alleluia, Alleluia, Alleluia. 

tiphon for every day in Paschal 
time. Alleluia, Alleluia, Alleluia, 
Alleluia. 

Ordinary Antiphon for Week-days. 
on me up, () Lord, and I 
shall 

/// Adi end thi Antiphon u the Third 

Antiphon which hax .' tuds 

>/td<iy, unless the diy hii 
its o:. 

fiphon in Lent Let lis 

much patience, in 
rmour of 

1 17. 



AnUph > ion tide. s O My 

people, what have I done unto 
and wherein have I wearied I 
'ify against Me. 

Then follows the Chapter ana 
ponsory. When ih 
• specially, one of the follows 
After the Chapter 
swered," Thanks be to God." 

On Sundays, from the Third Sunday 
after the Epiphany inclusive until 
tuagesima Sunday exclusive, and 
the Fourth Sunday after I'entcc 
elusive until Advent Sunday exclu 

lid the following^ and tit 
sponsory is used until the 

First Sunday in Lent, txclu. 

Chapter. (Gal. vi. 2.) 

T3EAR ye one another's burdens, 
*-* and so shall ye fulfil the law 
of Christ. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

Short Responsory. 

* For ever, O Lord, Thy word is 
settled [in heaven]. 

Answer, lor ever, () Lord, Thy 
word is settled [in heaven]. 

Verse. Thy faithfulness is unto 
all generations. 

Answer. Thy word i [in 

en} 
Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the 1 I 
Ghost. 

Answer. I Thy 

word is settled [in heaven]. 

iRD is my Shep- 
I shall not want. 

lie maketh mi 

down m green pi 



SEXT, OR THE SIXTH HOUR. 



63 



On ordinary Week-days throughout 
the year are said the following : 

Chapter. (Gal. vi. 2.) 

BEAR ye one another's burdens, 
and so shall ye fulfil the law 
of Christ. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

Short Responsory. 

1 I will bless the Lord at all 
times. 

Answer. I will bless the Lord 
at all times. 

Verse. His praise shall continu- 
ally be in my mouth. 

Answer. At all times. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. I will bless the Lord 
at all times. 

Verse. The Lord is my Shep- 
herd, I shall not want. 

Answer. He maketh me to lie 
down in green pastures. 

/// Advent are said the following {but 
the Chapter on Week-days only) : 

Chapter. (Jerem. xxxiii. 16.) 

IN those days shall Judah be 
saved, and Israel shall dwell 
safely : and this is the name where- 
by she shall be called, The Lord 
our Righteousness. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

Short Responsory. 

2 Show us Thy mercy, O Lord. 

Anszver. Show us Thy mercy, O 
Lord. 

Verse. And grant us Thy sal- 
vation. 

Answer. Thy mercy, O Lord. 

1 Ps. xxxiii. 2. 2 Ps. lxxxiv. 8. 



Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. Show us Thy mercy, O 
Lord. 

Verse. 3 Remember us, O Lord, 
with the favour that Thou bearest 
unto Thy people. 

Answer. O visit us with Thy 
salvation. 

In Lent are said the followi?ig {but 
the Chapter on Week-days only) : 

Chapter. (Isa. lv. 7.) 

LET the wicked forsake his way, 
and the unrighteous man his 
thoughts, and let him return unto 
the Lord, and He will have mercy 
upon him 3 and to our God, for He 
will abundantly pardon. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

Short Responsory. 

4 He shall cover thee with His 
wings. 

Answer. He shall cover thee 
with His wings. 

Verse. And under His feathers 
shalt thou trust. 

Answer. With His wings. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. He shall cover thee 
with His wings. 

Verse. His truth shall be thy 
shield. 

Answer. Thou shalt not be 
afraid for the terror by night. 

In Passiontide are said the following 
{but the Chapter on Week-days only) : 

Chapter. (Jerem. xvii. 18.) 

LET them be confounded that per- 
secute me, but let not me be 
confounded ; let them be dismayed, 



Ps. cv. 4. 



4 Ps. xc. 4. 



6 4 



THE PSA1 



but let not me b bring 

upon them the day of evil, and de- 
them with double destruction, 
O Lord our ( . 

Thanh < iod. 

Shot 

,\e me from the lion's 
mouth. 

>\ O Lord, save me from 
the lion's mouth. 

ru. And mine affliction from 
the horns of the unicorns. 

From the lion's mouth, 
ord, save me from the lion's 
mouth. 

take not my soul to 
sh with sinners, C) (iod. 
An river. Nor my life with bloody 
men. 



/// Paschal time arc said the follow- 
but the Chapter on Week -days 

& (i Cor. xv. 20.) 

N( )\Y is Christ risen from the 
ad, the first-fruits of them 
that by man came 

death, by man came also the 

tion of the dead. For as in 
Adam all di in Christ 

shall all be made alive. 

Thanks be to God. 

Short Rdiponsory. 

.. Alleluia, 

: in 
hiia. 
And bath appeared to 



Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
It 

The Lord is risen in- 
ula, Alleluia. 

he disciples were glad, 
Alleluia. 

Answer. When they saw the 
Lord, Alleluia. 

After the Short Kesponsory, if the 
r have been said at Lauds all kneel 
down and the folio:, iid, but if 

the Preces have been omitted at I 
then these are also omitted, down to the 
mark *. 

Kyrie eleison. 

Answer, Christe eleison. 

Kyrie eleison. 

OUR Father (inaudi/dy), Who art 
in heaven, Hallowed be Thy 
Name. Thy kingdom come. Thy 
will be done on earth, as it is in 
heaven. Give us this day our daily 
bread. And forgive us our tres- 
passes, as we forgive them that 
pass against us. (Aloud.) 

Verse. And lead us not 
temptation. 

Answer. But deliver us from 
evil. 

Verse. Turn us again, ( > ! 
God of hosts ! 

And cause Thj 
shine, and we shall be 

Vet 
us. 

v /. And deliver us for Thy 

Name's sake. 

Here the Of 

omitted* 



* r 



1 m\ pnv 












SEXT, OR THE SIXTH HOUR. 



65 



Answer. And let my cry come 
unto Thee. 

Let us pray. 

Here is said the Prayer for the day, 
after which : 

Verse. Hear my prayer, O Lord. 
Afiswer. And let my cry come 
unto Thee. 

Verse. Bless we the Lord. 
Ansiver. Thanks be to God. 

If the Little Office of the Blessed Vir- 
gin Mary is to follow immediately, it 
is begun here, and what follows is not 
said. Otherwise the Office ends thus : 

Verse {said in a somewhat lower 
to?ie). May the souls of the Faithful, 
through the mercy of God, rest in 
peace. 

Answer. Amen. 



Lastly, unless None follow, the Lord's 
Prayer is said inaudibly. 

OUR Father, Who art in heaven, 
Hallowed be Thy Name. 
Thy kingdom come. Thy will be 
done on earth, as it is in heaven. 
Give us this day our daily bread. 
And forgive us our trespasses, as we 
forgive them that trespass against us. 
And lead us not into temptation ; 
but deliver us from evil. Amen. 

Note. When Office is said in Choir 
the Service is ended with the Antiphon 
of the Blessed Virgin Mary every time 
the Choir is left. Otherwise it is only 
said as given in this book, at the end of 
Lauds {or the aggregation of which 
Lauds forms a pari) a?id Compline. 

Feasts. The above Office, appointed 
for all Sundays and Week-days through- 
out the year, is likewise said on all 
Feasts. 



VOL. II. 



66 



NONE, OR THE NINTH HOUR. 1 



©iftcc for rbcrg tiau in ttir 
Kirch. 

^4/ Mr beginning of None the Lord's 
tr ana the Angelic Salutation art 
'.audibly. 

OU R Father. Who art in heaven, 
Hallowed be Thy Name. 
Thy kingdom come. Thy will be 
done on earth, as it is in heaven, 
us this day our daily bread. 
And forgive us our trespasses, as we 
forgive them that trespass against us. 
And lead us not into temptation ; 
but deliver us from evil. Amen. 



As it was in the beginning, is i 
and ever shall be, world without end. 
Amen. Alleluia. 

From Septuagesima Sit 
Maundy Thursday instead of " Alle- 
luia" is said: 

Ceaseless praise to Thee be given, 
O Eternal King of heaven. 



Hymn. 1 

O'GOD, Unchangeable and True, 
Of all the Light and Power, 
Dispensing light in silence through 
Every successive hour ; 



HAIL, Mary, full of grace; The 
Lord is with thee : blessed 
art thou among women, and blessed 
is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus. 

Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray 
for D id at the hour 

of our death. Amen. 

Then is said aloud : 

Verse. ►J* Mak. 
to deliver 

Answet te to help 

O L/» 

Gl 



Lord, brighten our declining day, 

That it may never wane, 
Till death, when all things round decay, 

Brings back the morn again. 

This grace on Thy redeemed confer, 

Father, Co-equal Son, 
And Holy ('.host, the Comforter, 
Eternal Three in One. 

Amen. 



77 tkuS) 

altered in honour of the I 

inborn, to Thee, 

iven, 

With lather, Spirit. < >ne and Tin* 
Hen- as it i^ in heaven. 






m., hut in I 
i of ih( 



Trunk 



NONE, OR THE NINTH HOUR. 



6 7 



In Paschal time it is said thus, al- 
tered in honour of the Resurrection : 

To Father, Son, and Paraclete, 

The slain and risen Son, 
Be praise and glory, as is meet, 

While endless ages run. 

Amen. 

// is also occasionally otherwise al- 
tered, which occasions are marked i?i 
their places. 

Then follow six sections of Psalm 
C XVI IP They are all said under 07te 
Antiphon, and when Five Antiphons 
have been said at Lauds, the Fifth of 
these Five is the Antiphon at No?ie. 
Otherwise those given here are used. 

Ordinary Antiphon for Sundays 
and for every day in Paschal time. 
Alleluia. 

Ordinary Antiphon for Week-days. 
Look Thou upon me. 

In Advent the Antiphon is the Fifth 
Antiphon which has been said at Lauds 
on Sunday, unless the day have a set of 
its own. 

Antiphon for Week-days in Lent. 
Let us approve ourselves. 

Antiphon for Week-days in Pas- 
siontide. Did not they reward me 
evil for good? 

Co?itinuation of Psalm CXVIII. 

a 1 

PHY testimonies are wonderful : 
*■ * therefore doth my soul keep 
them. 

The unfolding of Thy words 
giveth light : * yea, it giveth under- 
standing unto the simple. 

I opened my mouth and panted : 
* for I longed for Thy command- 
ments. 



Look Thou upon me, and be 
merciful unto me, * as Thou usest 
to do unto those that love Thy 
Name. 

Order my steps in Thy word : * 
and let not any iniquity have do- 
minion over me. 

Deliver me from the oppression 
of man : * and I will keep Thy 
precepts. 

Make Thy face to shine upon 
Thy servant : * and teach me Thy 
statutes. 

Rivers of water run down mine 
eyes : * because they keep not Thy 
law. 

The Doxology, " Glory be to the 
Father, &c," is not said. 



OIGHTEOUS art Thou, O 
-■^ Lord : * and upright are 
Thy judgments. 

Thy testimonies that Thou hast 
commanded are righteous, * and 
very faithful. 

My zeal hath consumed me, * 
because mine enemies have for- 
gotten Thy words. 

Thy word is tried to the utter- 
most : * and Thy servant loveth it. 

I am small and despised : * yet 
do I not forget Thy precepts. 

Thy righteousness is an ever- 
lasting righteousness : * and Thy 
law is the truth. 

Trouble and anguish have taken 
hold upon me : * Thy command- 
ments are my delight. 

The righteousness of Thy testi- 
monies is everlasting : * give me 
understanding, and I shall live. 



1 Here begins the letter Pe, represented by P, Ph. F. 

2 Here begins the letter Tzade, represented by Tz or Ts. 



58 



TIIK PSALTER. 



Continuation of 



P' 



CRIED with my whole heart, 
1 hear me, O Lori> : * I will 
keep Thy statutes. 

1 I ried onto I ': me : * 

and I will keep Thy command- 
ma 

fore the dawning of the morn- 
ing, I cried : * for I hoped in Thy 
word. 

Mine eyes look up to 'I 
early : * that I may meditate in 
Thy word. 

ar my voice according unto 
Thy loving-kindness, O Lord : * 
and quicken me according to Thy 
judgment. 

They that persecute me draw nigh 
to sin : * but are far from Thy 

Thou art near, O Lord: * and 
all Thy ways are truth. 

Concerning Thy testimonies I 
have known of old : * that Thou 
hast founded them for ever. 

77/ ;\ " (ilory he to the 

Father, 8 >t said. 



t [DER mine affliction, and 

^-^ deliver me : * for I do not 

iy law. 

judgment concerning me, 

and deli\ n me for 

by word. 
far from th< 
not Thj 



r> : • quicken me according to 
judgment 

.Man} arc niv persecutors, and 
mine enemies : * yet do I not turn 
aside from Thy testimonies. 

I beheld the transgressors, and 
was grieved : * because they kept 
by word. 

Consider how I love Thy pre- 
cepts, O Lord : * quicken me 
according to Thy loving-kindness. 

Thy word is true from the be- 
ginning : * and every one of Thy 
righteous judgments endureth for 
ever. 



Continuation of the same Psalm. 

TDRINCES have persecuted me 
-1 without a cause : * but mine 
heart standeth in awe of Thy word. 

I will rejoice at Thy word, * as 
one that findeth great spoil. 

I hate and abhor wickedness : * 
but Thy law do I love. 

Seven times a day do I praise 
Thee, * because of Thy righteous 
judgments. 

Great peace have they that love 

Thy law : * and for them then 
no stumbling-blocks. 

Lord, I hope for Thy salvation : 

* and I love Thy commands 

My soul hath kept Th\ tcstimo 

* and loved them exceedin 

1 have kept Thy precepts and 
Thy testimonies ; * for all my l 

arc before Th 

The Di t to the 

I' a! •/</. 



1 1 - ind Sh, 



NONE, OR THE NINTH HOUR. 



6 9 



L 



n 1 

ET my cry come near before 
Thee, O Lord: * give me 
understanding according to Thy 
word. 

Let my supplication come before 
Thee: * deliver me according to 
Thy word. 

My lips shall utter praise, * 
when Thou hast taught me Thy 
statutes. 

My tongue shall speak of Thy 
word : * for all Thy commandments 
are righteousness. 

Let Thine hand help me : * for I 
have chosen Thy precepts. 

I have longed for Thy salvation, 

Lord : * and Thy law is my de- 
light. 

My soul shall live, and it shall 
praise Thee : * and Thy judgments 
shall help me. 

I have gone astray like a lost 
sheep : * seek Thy servant : for 

1 do not forget Thy command- 
ments. 

Ordinary Antiphon for Sundays. 
Alleluia, Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Antiphon for every day in Paschal 
time. Alleluia, Alleluia, Alleluia, Al- 
leluia. 

Ordinary Antiphon for Week-days. 

2 Look Thou upon me, O Lord, and 
be merciful unto me. 

In Advent the Antiphon is the Fifth 
Antiphon which has been said at Lands 
on Sunday, unless the day have a set of 
its own. 

Antiphon for Week-days in Lent. 

3 Let us approve ourselves in much 



patience, by the armour of righteous- 
ness, by the power of God. 

Antiphon for Week-days in Pas- 
siontide. 4 Did not they reward me 
evil for good ? for they digged a pit 
for my soul. 

Then follows the Chapter and the 
Short Responsory. When they are 7iot 
given specially, o?ie of the following is 
used. After the Chapter is always an- 
swered : " Thanks be to God." 

On Sundays, from the Third Sunday 
after the Epiphany inclusive until Sep- 
tuagesima Sunday exclusive, and from 
the Third Sunday after Pentecost in- 
clusive till Advent Sunday exclusive, 
are said the following, and the Respon- 
sory is used moreover till the First 
Sunday in Lent exclusive. 

Chapter, (i Cor. vi. 20.) 

"POR ye are bought with a great 
■*• price. Glorify God, and bear 
Him in your body. 

Anszver. Thanks be to God. 

Short Responsory. 

5 1 cried with my whole heart, 
hear me, O Lord. 

Answer. I cried with my whole 
heart, hear me, O Lord. 

Verse. I will keep Thy statutes. 

Answer. Hear me, O Lord. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. I cried with my whole 
heart, hear me, O Lord. 

Verse. 6 Cleanse Thou me from 
secret faults, O Lord. 

Answer. Preserve Thy servant 
also from the sins of others. 



1 Here begins the letter Tau, corresponding somewhat to T or Th. 
1 Ps. cxviii. 132. 3 2 Cor. vi. 4, 7. 



5 Ps. cxviii. 145. 



4 Jer. xviii. 20. 



Ps. xviii. 13, 14. 



70 






On 

i Cor. vi. 20.) 

"POR ft are bought wit!. 

* price, (ilo: bear 

Him in your body. 

Thank < »od. 



A> I he Lord shall a 

upon thee, O Jerusalem. 

rse. And His glory shall 
seen upon th- 

Answer. Upon thee, O Jerusalem. 

rse. Glory be to the Father, 

and to the Son, and to the Holy 

St. 

Answer. The Lord shall 
Upon thee, O Jerusalem. 

/ eras. Come, O Lord, and make 
no tarrying. 

Ans7ver. Pardon the sins of Thy 
people. 



1 Redeem me, O Lord, and be 
merciful unto me. 

Redeem me, O Lord, 
and be merciful unto me. 

Verse. For my foot standeth in 
uprightness. 

And be merciful unto 
me. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy ~\EAL thy bread to the hungry, 
^ u *^* and bring the poor that are 

cast out to thine house : when thou 



In Lent arc said the folio: 
the Chapter on Week-days on; 

Chapter. (Isa. lviii. 7.) 



Ghost. 

Answer. Redeem me, O Lord, 
and be merciful unto me. 

rse. Cleanse Thou me from 
secret faults, < » Lord. 

Ansmet Thy servant 

also from the sins of oth< 

/;/ Ad~-ent arc said the following (but 
the Chapter on Week days only) : 

\\\. 1.) 

T_I I to come, and 

* * shall not be pro- 

long* id will 

shall be 

'I bank 1 -od. 

I 
1 TI 



seest the naked, cover him, and 
hide not thyself from thine own 
flesh. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

Short Responsory. 

His truth shall be thy shield. 
Answer. His truth shall be thy 
shield. 

Verse. Thou shalt not be afraid 

for the terror by night 
Thy shield. 

her, 
and to the Son, and to the 1 

Ansux r. I lis truth shall be thy 
shield. 

rod hath gn 
r thee. 
Answ > . I\> V in all thy 

1 












NONE, OR THE NINTH HOUR. 



71 



In Passiontide are said the following 
{but the Chapter on Week-days only) : 

Chapter. (Jer. xviii. 20.) 

T3 EMEMBER that I stood before 
^^ Thee, to speak good for them, 

and to turn away Thy wrath from 

them. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

Short Responsory. 

1 Make not my soul to perish with 
sinners, O God. 

Answer. Make not my soul to 
perish with sinners, O God. 

Verse. Nor my life with bloody 
men. 

Answer. With sinners, O God. 
Make not my soul to perish with 
sinners, O God. 

Verse. 2 Deliver me, O Lord, 
from the evil man. 

Answer. Preserve me from the 
wicked man. 



In Paschal time are said the follow- 
ing {but the Chapter on Week-days only): 

Chapter, (i Pet. iii. 18.) 

CHRIST hath once suffered for 
our sins, the Just for the un- 
just, that He might bring us to God, 
being put to death in the flesh, but 
quickened by the Spirit. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 



Short Responsory. 
3 The disciples were glad. 



Al- 



leluia, Alleluia. 

Answer. The disciples were glad. 
Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Verse. When they saw the Lord. 

Answer. Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 



and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. The disciples were glad. 
Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Verse. 4 Abide with us, Lord. 
Alleluia. 

Answer. For it is toward even- 
ing. Alleluia. 

After the Short Responsory, if the 
Preces have been said at Lauds, all 
kneel down, and the following are said. 
But if the Preces have been omitted at 
Lauds, then these are also omitted down 
to the mark *. 

Kyrie eleison. 

Answer. Christe eleison. 

Kyrie eleison. 

OUR Father (inaudibly), Who art 
in heaven, Hallowed be Thy 
Name. Thy kingdom come. Thy 
will be done on earth, as it is in 
heaven. Give us this day our daily 
bread. And forgive us our tres- 
passes, as we forgive them that tres- 
pass against us. {Aloud.) 

Verse. And lead us not into 
temptation. 

Answer. But deliver us from evil. 

Verse. Turn us again, O Lord 
God of hosts. 

Answer. And cause Thy face to 
shine, and we shall be saved. 

Verse. Arise, O Christ, and help 
us. 

Answer. And deliver us for Thy 
Name's sake. 

Here the Office is continued when the 
above has been omitted. 

* Verse. Hear my prayer, O 
Lord. 

Answer. And let my cry come 
unto Thee. 



1 Ps. xxv. 9. 



Ps. cxxxix. 2. 



John xv. 20. 



4 Luke xxiv. 29. 



72 



THE PSALTER. 



Let us j>! 

Hi > 

after which : 

Eleti n Lord. 

.// \nd let my cry come 

unto Thee. 

Bless we the Lord. 
Thanks be to God. 

it tie Office of the Blessed Vir- 
Um immediately, it 
is tf t<< t not 

said. Otherwise //. 

ru (saiJ in a somewhat lower 

.!>• the souls of the Faithful, 

through the mercy of God, rest in 

Amen. 

//)', unless Vespers follow, the 
is said inaudibly. 



OUR Father, Who art in h< 
Hallowed be Th\ N 
kingdom conic. Thy will be 
done on earth, as it is in he 
us this day our daily 1»: 
And forgive us our tn 
forgive them that trespass against 
us. And lead us not into temp- 
tation ; but deliver us from evil. 
Amen. 

Note. When Office is said in t 
the sendee is ended with the Antiphon 
of the Blessed Virgin Mary every time 
the Choir is left. Otherwise it is only 
said as given in this book, after J 
{or the aggregation of which I 
forms a part) and Compline. 

Feasts. The above Office ', appointed 
for all Sundays and 1 1 Wk-days thr 
out the year, is likewise said on all 
Feasts. 



73 



Jftoubag at Jttattin*. 



THE SECOND DAY OF THE WEEK. 



All as on Sundays, except as other- 
wise given here. 

Invitatory. O come, * let us sing 
unto the Lord. 

When this Invitatory is used the 
Psalm begins with the words, " Let us 
make a joyful noise.' : 

Invitatory in Paschal time. Al- 
leluia, Alleluia, * Alleluia. 

On Simple Feasts the Invitatory is 
special. 

On Simple Feasts the Hym?i is special, 
but on Week-days kept as such the fol- 
lowing is said from the Octave of the 
Epiphany till the first Monday in Lent, 
and from the Octave of Pentecost to Ad- 
vent. The Hymns for the other seasons 
are given in the proper office of the 
Seasons. 

Hymn. 1 

CLEEP has refreshed our limbs, we 
•^ spring 

From off our bed, and rise ; 
Lord, on Thy suppliants while they 
sing, 

Look with a Father's eyes. 

Be Thou the first on every tongue, 

The first in every heart ; 
That all our doings all day long, 

Holiest ! from Thee may start. 

1 Another hymn of the Ambrosian school, with two words altered. Translation by the 
late Card. Newman. 

VOL. II. C 2 



Cleanse Thou the gloom, and bid the 
light 
Its healing beams renew ; 
The sins, which have crept in with 
night, 
With night shall vanish too. 

Our bosoms, Lord, unburthen Thou, 

Let nothing there offend ; 
That those who hymn Thy praises now 

May hymn them to the end. 

Grant this, O Father, Only Son, 

And Spirit, God of grace, 
To whom all worship shall be done 

In every time and place. 

Amen. 

Only one Nocturn is said. 

Antiphon. The Lord is the de- 
fence. 

In Paschal ti?ne there is only one 
Antiphon to the whole Nocturn, Al- 
leluia. 

Psalm XXVI. 

[Intituled "Of David." The Vulgate and 
the LXX. add ''before his anointing." See 
2 Kings (Sam.) ii. 4. Monday, fifth week 
after Pentecost.] 



T 



HE Lord is my light and my 
salvation ; * whom shall I 
fear? 

The Lord is the defence of my 
life : * of whom shall I be afraid ? 



74 



THE PSA] 



When the come U] 

* to cat up my fie 

Mine enemies thai trouble me, * 

-tumble and fall. 
Though an host should encamp 
St me, * mine heart shall not 

Though war should ftinst 

* in this will I be confident. 
One thin- have I desired of the 

Lord, that will I seek after, * that 

I may dwell in the house of the 

i all the days of my life, 

behold the beauty of the 

>, * and to visit His temple. 

: He hath hidden me in His 

pavilion: * in the secret of His 

tabernacle hath He hidden me in 

the day of trouble. 

He hath set me up upon a rock : 

* and now hath He lifted up mine 

..• mine eneii 

I will offer in His tabernacle 

the sacrifice of joy : * I will sing, 

I will sing praises unto the 

I 

Hear, ( ) LORD, when I cry with 
my voice : * have mercy on me and 

■lie. 
My heart said unto Thee, My 
hath sought Thee : * Thy face, 
I . will I ft 

DOt Thy face far from 

* turn ii< from 
Thy servant. 

Th0U mine Helper, * neither 
>d of 
Ivation. 

\\ I : and m\ mother 

" then th< Iteth 

lp. 

: * 
and l( i a plain path 

I ». unto th<- will 



»t me, and 
iniquity hath belied itself. 

I believe that I shall yet see 
goodness of the Lord * in the land 
of the li\ 

Wait on the Lord, be of good 
courage : * and thine heart shall be 
strengthened, wait, I say, on the 
Lord. 

aim XWII. 
[Also intituled M 1 >f David."] 

UNTO Thee will I cry, O L 
my God, be not silent to me : 

* lest, if Thou be silent to me, I 
come like them that go down into 
the pit. 

Hear the voice of my suppl 
tion, O Lord, when I cry unto T 

* when I lift up mine hands toward 
Thine holy temple. 

Draw me not away with the wick- 
ed : * and destroy me not with the 
workers of iniquity. 

Who speak peace with their 
neighbour : * but mischief is in 
their hearts. 

(iive them according to their 
deeds, * and according to the wick- 
edness o( their inventions. 

Give them after the works of their 
hands : * render to them their d«. 

because they regard not the works 

of the Lord, or the operation of His 
hands, * Thou shalt i them, 

and not build them up. 

Blessed be the Lord : * 

He bath heard tin- I my 

supplication. 



The L« IRD is i 



emiin ami in 



Shield : * mine heart trusted in I 
and 1 am holpen. 

And in i : * 

and with m\ \\l. I will 

1 Inn. 



MONDAY AT MATTINS. 



75 



The Lord is the strength of His 
people : * and He is the saving 
strength of His Anointed. 

O Lord, save Thy people, and 
bless Thine inheritance : * and gov- 
ern them, and lift them up for ever. 

Antiphon. 1 The Lord is the de- 
fence of my life. 

Second Antiphon. Worship. 

Psalm XXVIII. 

[Intituled "A Psalm of David." The 
Vulgate and the LXX. add "for the going 
forth from the tabernacle, or ending of the 
tabernacle," apparently meaning the con- 
clusion of the Feast of Tabernacles.] 

GIVE unto the Lord, O ye sons 
of God : * give unto the 
Lord young rams. 

Give unto the Lord glory and 
honour, give unto the Lord the 
glory due unto His Name : * wor- 
ship the Lord in His holy courts. 

The voice of the Lord is upon 
the waters, the God of glory thun- 
dereth : * the Lord is upon many 
waters. 

The voice of the Lord is power- 
ful : * the voice of the Lord is full 
of majesty. 

The voice of the Lord breaketh 
the cedars : * yea, the Lord break- 
eth the cedars of Lebanon. 

He smiteth them down as though 
it were a calf in Lebanon, * and the 
beloved [forest is felled] like a young 
wild bull. 2 

The voice of the Lord forketh 
the flames of fire : * the voice of 
the Lord shaketh the wilderness, 



yea, the Lord also shaketh the 
3 wilderness of Kadesh. 

The voice of the Lord maketh 
the hinds to calve, and discovereth 
the thickets : * and in His temple, 
every one uttereth His glory. 

The Lord fixeth the flood : * yea, 
the Lord sitteth King for ever. 

The Lord will give strength unto 
His people : * the Lord will bless 
His people with peace. 

Psalm XXIX. 

[Intituled "A song of rejoicing at the 
opening of the house of David." The pal- 
ace, for the inauguration of which this song 
was written, is thus mentioned in 2 Kings 
(Sam.) v. 9-11. "So David dwelt in the 
fort" (on Sion) "and called it the city of 
David. And David built round about from 
Millo and inward. And David went on, 
and grew great ; and the Lord God of 
Hosts was with him. And Hiram, King of 
Tyre, sent messengers to David, and cedar- 
trees, and carpenters, and masons ; and they 
built David an house."] 

T WILL extol Thee, O Lord, for 
^ Thou hast lifted me up, * and 
hast not made my foes to rejoice 
over me. 

O Lord my God, I cried unto 
Thee, * and Thou hast healed me. 

O Lord, Thou hast brought up 
my soul from the grave : * Thou 
hast saved me from being one of 
them that go down into the pit. 

Sing unto the Lord, O ye Saints 
of His ! * and give thanks to the 
memorial of His holiness. 

For there is terror in His anger : 

* and in His favour is life. 
Weeping may endure for a night : 

* but joy cometh in the morning. 



1 Ps. xxvi. 1. 

2 The Hebrew is, "He also maketh them to skip like a calf, Lebanon and Shiryon" 
(oftener called Hermon) "like young wild cattle." 

J That is, the deserts to the south of Palestine, amid which is found the town of 
Kadcsh-Barnea. 



THE PSALTER. 



And I, in my prosperity I said : 
I shall never be moved. 

Lord, in Thy favour, * Thou hast 
made my glory to stand so 1 

Thou didst hide Thy foe from 
me, * and I was troubled. 

I cried unto Thee, O Lord : * 
and unto my (iod I made supplica- 

What profit is there in my blood, 
* when I go down to corruption ? 

Shall the dust praise Thee, * or 
shall it declare Thy truth ? 

The Lord heard me, and had 



mercy upon me 



the Lord be- 



came mine Helper. 

Thou hast turned for me my 
mourning into rejoicing : * Thou 
hast put ofT my sackcloth, and 
girded me with gladness. 

To the end that my glory may 
sing praise unto Thee, and may not 
be silent : * O Lord my God, I will 
give thanks unto Thee for ever. 

Antiphon. ] Worship the Lord 
in His holy courts. 

Third Antiphon. 1 )eliver me. 

Psalm XXX. 

[Intituled "A l\alm «.f David" with the 
same farther superscription as Ph. \ii. \iii. 
The Vulgate tod the LXX. add "«.f l, 

ining apparently that 

; wrote it, on recovering from the 

mental condition in which he had exclaimed 

; am cut off from before Thine 

TN do I put my 

* trust, let 

in Thy righteousm 

urn Thine ear unto me i * 

delr. !y. 

■ iii to djk Pre 



server, and an house of defence, * 

:ie\ 

For Thou and 

my refuge : * and for Thy Nat 
sak. Thou wilt lead me and nourish 
me. 

Thou wilt pull me out of the 
that they have laid privily for me : * 

:iou art my Preserver. 

- Into Thine hands I commend my 
spirit : * Thou hast redeemed me, 

Lord (lod of truth ! 

I have hated them that regard * 
lying vanities. 

But I trust in the Lord : * I will 
be glad and rejoice in Thy mercy. 

lor Thou hast considered my 
trouble : * Thou hast saved my soul 
in adversity : 

And hast not shut me up into the 
hand of the enemy : * Thou hast 
set my feet in a wide place. 

Have mercy upon me, O Lord, 
for I am in trouble : * mine e 
consumed with grief, my soul, and 
my belly. 

For my life is spent with grief, * 
and my years with sighing. 

My strength faileth because of 
mine affliction, * and my bones are 
consumed. 

I was a reproach among all mine 
enemies, and among my neighbours 
specially, * and a fear to mint 
quaintance. 

They that did see me without fled 
from me : * I am forgotten B 
I man out of mind. 
1 am like a broken vessel : * 

1 have heard the slander of many 

on every side : 

When they took counsel together 
nst me, * the) devised to take 

my life. 



ni. 46. 



MONDAY AT MATTINS. 



77 



But I trusted in Thee, O Lord : 
* I said : Thou art my God, my 
lot is in Thine hand. 

Deliver me from the hand of 
mine enemies, * and from them that 
persecute me. 

Make Thy face to shine upon Thy 
servant, save me in Thy mercy : * 
let me not be ashamed, O Lord, for 
I have called upon Thee. 

Let the wicked be ashamed and 
let them go down into the grave : * 
let the lying lips be put to silence ; 

Which speak grievous things 
proudly and contemptuously * 
against the righteous. 

O how great is Thy goodness, 

Lord, * which Thou hast laid up 
for them that fear Thee ! 

Which Thou hast wrought for 
them that trust in Thee, * before 
the sons of men ! 

Thou shalt hide them in the 
covert of Thy presence * from the 
troubling of men. 

Thou shalt keep them secretly in 
Thy pavilion * from the strife of 
tongues. 

Blessed be the Lord : * for He 
hath showed me His marvellous 
kindness in a strong city. 

For I said in mine haste : * I 
am cut off from before Thine 
eyes. 

Nevertheless Thou heardest the 
voice of my supplication, * when 

1 cried unto Thee. 

O love the Lord, all ye His 
Saints : * for the Lord loveth truth- 
fulness, and will plentifully reward 
the proud doers. 

Be of good courage and let your 
heart be strengthened, * all ye that 
hope in the Lord. 



Psalm XXXI. 
[Intituled "A didactic (?) poem of David."] 

T3LESSED are they whose trans- 
-"-* gressions are forgiven, * and 
whose sins are covered. 

Blessed is the man unto whom 
the Lord imputeth not iniquity, * 
and in whose spirit there is no guile. 

Because I kept silence, my bones 
waxed old, * while I groaned all the 
day long. 

For day and night Thine hand was 
heavy upon me : * I turned in mine 
anguish while the thorn was fastened 
in me. 1 

I acknowledged my sin unto 
Thee : * and mine iniquity I hid 
not. 

I said : I will confess against 
myself my transgression, unto the 
Lord : * and Thou forgavest the 
iniquity of my sin. 1 

For this shall every one that is 
godly pray unto Thee, * in a season- 
able time. 

Surely in the floods of great 
waters, * they shall not come nigh 
unto him. 

Thou art mine hiding-place from 
the trouble that compasseth me : * 
O Thou That art my joy ! deliver 
me from them that compass me 
round about. 1 

I will give thee understanding, 
and teach thee in the way which 
thou shalt go : * I will keep Mine 
eyes upon thee. 

Be ye not as the horse and as 
the mule, * which have no under- 
standing. 

Whose mouths thou holdest fast 
with bit and bridle, * else they will 
not come unto thee. 



1 SLH. 



7& 



THE PSA] 



l£anj thai] be to the 

wicked : * but he that trusteth in 
the I him 

about. 

ye r 

upright in heart 

in Thy 

(rthAntipfwii. I 'raise is comely. 



Psalm XXXII 



[The Vulgate and th 
psalm " to David."] 



,\X. ascribe this 



T ) EJOICE in the Lord, O ye 
*^ righte > ' praise is comely 
for the upright. 

the LORD with harp: * 
onto Him with the psaltery 
of ten strings. 

, r unto Him a new song: * 
play skilfully unto Him with a loud 
noise. 

For the word of the Lord is 
right : * and all His works are done 
in truth. 

He loveth mercy and judgment : * 
the earth is full of the goodness of 

the word of the Lord \ 

made, * and all the 
host of them by the breath of n 
mouth. 

H. of the 

p : * 1 [e 

eth Up 

>RD : 

habitants of the world 

i ;ui. 

and n in 

* \\< • OR I, and it v. 



of the i bo nought : * H 

maketh t ; - of the | 

the 
counsel of pri' 

But the counsel of th< 

leth for ever, * the thoughts of 
His heart to all generations. 

Blessed is the nation wl. 
is the Lord, * the people He hath 
chosen for His own inherit;: 

The Lord looketh from hca\ 

* He beholdeth all the men. 

From the set place of His habi- 
tation * He looketh upon all the 
inhabitants of the earth. 

He fashioneth the h< very 

one of them: * He consideteth all 
their works. 

There is no king saved by the mul- 
titude of an host: * a mighty man is 
not delivered by much strength. 

An horse is a vain thing for safety: 

* by his great strength he shall not 

;>e. 

Behold, the eyes of the I 
upon them that fear Him, * and 
upon them that hope in His n 

To deliver their soul from death, 

* and to k-L-d them in time of famine. 

( Nil soul waiteth for the Lord : * 
for He is our help and our shield. 

r our heart shall rejoice in Him: 

* because we have trusted in 
holy Name. 

I Thy m< upon 

us, * according as we hope in I 

;n. 

[Intituled "Of I >.i\ id, when I 
lii- behaviour before Abinx 
him away and he departed. " I 'i. 

is tin: 

I lath. And 



MONDAY AT MATTINS. 



79 



the servants of Achish said unto him : Is 
not this David the King of the land ? Did 
they not sing one to another of him in 
dances saying, ' Saul hath slain his thou- 
sands, and David his ten thousands ' ? And 
David laid up these words in his heart, and 
was sore afraid of Achish the King of Gath. 
And he changed his behaviour before them, 
and feigned himself mad in their hands, 
and scrabbled on the doors of the gate, and 
let his spittle fall down upon his beard. 
Then said Achish to his servants : Lo, ye 
see the man is mad ; wherefore have you 
brought him to me ? Have I need of mad- 
men, that ye have brought this fellow to 
play the madman in my presence? Shall 
this fellow come into mine house ? xxii. 
David therefore departed thence, and es- 
caped to the cave of Adullam." This Psalm 
is A B C Darian.] 

j WILL bless the Lord at all 
** times : * His praise shall con- 
tinually be in my mouth. 

My soul shall make her boast in 
the Lord : * the humble shall hear 
thereof, and be glad. 

magnify the Lord with me : * 
and let us exalt His Name together. 

1 sought the Lord, and He heard 
me, * and delivered me from all my 
distress. 

Draw near unto Him, and be light- 
ened, * and your faces shall not be 
ashamed. 

This poor man cried, and the 
Lord heard him, * and saved him 
out of all his troubles. 

The angel of the Lord encampeth 
round about them that fear Him, * 
and delivereth them. 

O taste and see that the Lord is 
good : * blessed is the man that 
trusteth in Him. 

O fear the Lord, all ye His Saints : 

* for there is no want to them that 
fear Him. 

The mighty lack and suffer hunger : 

* but they that seek the Lord shall 
not want any good thing. 



Come, ye children, hearken unto 
me : * I will teach you the fear of 
the Lord. 

What man is he that desireth life, 
* that loveth to see good days ? 

Keep thy tongue from evil, * and 
thy lips from speaking guile. 

Depart from evil and do good : * 
seek peace and pursue it. 

The eyes of the Lord are upon 
the righteous : * and His ears are 
open unto their cry. 

But the face of the Lord is against 
them that do evil, * to cut off the 
remembrance of them from the earth. 

The righteous cry and the Lord 
heareth, * and delivereth them out 
of all their troubles. 

The Lord is nigh unto them that 
are of a broken heart, * and saveth 
such as be of a contrite spirit. 

Many are the afflictions of the 
righteous : * but the Lord will de- 
liver them out of all. 

The Lord keepeth all their bones : 

* not one of them shall be broken. 
The death of sinners is grievous : 

* and they that hate the righteous 
shall be guilty. 

The Lord redeemeth the souls of 
His servants : * and none of them 
that trust in Him shall be guilty. 

Antiphon. 2 Praise is comely for 
the upright. 

Fifth Antiphon. Fight against 
them. 

Psalm XXXIV. 
[Intituled " Of David."] 

P)0 me right, O Lord, against 
*^ them that strive with me : * 
fight against them that fight against 
me. 



Ps. xxx ii. i. 



8o 



THE PSALTER. 



ke hold of arms and buckler : * 
and stand up for mine help. 

1 )raw out also the spear, and stop 
the way against them that per» 

* say unto my soul : I am thy 
salvation. 

Let them be confounded and put 
to shame, * that seek after my soul. 
them be turned backward and 
brought to confusion, * that d 
mine hurt. 

I them be as dust before the 
wind : * and let the Angel of the 
Lord drive them. 

Let their way be dark and slip- 
pery : * and let the Angel of the 
Lord chase them. 

For without cause have they hid- 
den for me the deadly trap of their 
net : * without cause have they 
digged a pit for my soul. 

I the snare come upon him at 
unawares, and let his net, that he 
hath hid, catch himself: * and into 
that very snare let him fall. 

And my soul shall be joyful in 
the Lord : * it shall rejoice in His 
salvation. 

All my bones shall say : * Lord, 
who is like unto Ti 

Who deliverest tin- poor from 
them that are too strong for him, * 
the poor and the needy from them 
that spoil him ? 

did rise up, * they 
laid to my charge things that I knew 
not. 

Tl evil for good, 

* to put all men far off from nie. 

. when t! 

* my clothing Wl ioth. 

1 humbled my ^oul with 

* and my prayer shall return into 

I ; ell as though be 

1 (Utarally,) M 



had been my friend or brother : * I 
bowed down as one that mourneth 
and is b< 

lnst me they rejoiced and 
gathered themselves together : * 
llir* d against me, 

and I knew it not. 

They disappeared, yet they ce;. 
not ; they assailed me, they laughed 
me bitterly to scorn : * they gnashed 
upon me with their teeth. 

Lord, how long wilt Thou look 
on? * Rescue my soul from their 
destruction, my darling l from the 
lions. 

I will give Thee thanks in the 
great congregation : * I will praise 
Thee among much people. 

Let not them that are mine ene- 
mies wrongfully rejoice over me, * 
they that hate me without a cause 
and wink with the eye. 

For they spoke to me peaceably : 
* but by their leasing they stirred 
up the land to anger against me. 
they plotted against me. 

Yea, they opened their mouth 
wide against me : * they said. 
Aha, our eyes have seen it. 

This Thou hast seen, O Lord, 
keep not silence : * O Lord, be not 
far from me. 

Stir up Thyself, and awake to my 
judgment, * unto my cause, my God 
and my Lord. 

Judge me, o Lord my I 
i Thy righteousr* 

and let them not rejoice over me. 

I .< t them not say in their hearts : 

Aha, Aha. BO would we have it : * 

neither let them Wt have 

allowed him up. 
I 1 1 them be ashamed and broi 
to confusion together, • thai 

at mine hurt. 



MONDAY AT MATTINS. 



8l 



Let them be clothed with shame 
and dishonour, * that magnify them- 
selves against me. 

Let them shout for joy and be 
glad, that favour my righteous cause : 
* and let them that have pleasure 
in the prosperity of His servant 
say continually, Let the Lord be 
magnified. 

And my tongue shall speak of 
Thy righteousness ; * of Thy praise, 
all the day long. 

Psalm XXXV. 

[Intituled " Of David, the servant of the 
Lord," — and a farther superscription not 
now understood.] 

"THE wicked saith plainly in his 
-*■ own heart, that he will go on 
still in sin : * there is no fear of 
God before his eyes. 

For he flattereth himself in his 
own eyes, * until his iniquity be 
found hateful. 

The words of his mouth are ini- 
quity and deceit : * he willeth not 
to understand, that he may do 
good. 

He deviseth mischief upon his 
bed : * he setteth himself in every 
way that is not good, but he ab- 
horreth not evil. 

Thy mercy, O Lord, is in the 
heavens : * and Thy faithfulness 
reacheth unto the clouds. 

Thy righteousness is like the 
mountains of God : * Thy judg- 
ments are a great deep. 

O Lord, Thou preservest man 
and beast : * How excellent is Thy 
loving-kindness, O God ! 

And the children of men * shall 
put their trust under the shadow of 
Thy wings. 



They shall be abundantly satisfied 
with the fatness of Thine house, * and 
Thou shalt make them drink of the 
river of Thy pleasures. 

For with Thee is the fountain of 
life : * and in Thy light shall we see 
light. 

O continue Thy loving-kindness 
unto them that know Thee, * and 
Thy righteousness to the upright in 
heart. 

Let not the foot of pride come 
against me : * and let not the hand 
of the wicked remove me. 

There are the workers of iniquity 
fallen : * they are cast out, neither 
are they able to stand. 

Antiphon. 1 Fight against them 
that fight against me. 
Sixth Antiphon. Show. 

Psalm XXXVI. 

[Intituled "Of David." It is A B C 
Darian ; the first, third, and fifth verses, and 
so on, begin with the corresponding letters 
of the alphabet.] 

TICKET not thyself because of the 
-*- evil-doers : * neither be thou 
envious against the workers of 
iniquity. 

For they shall soon dry up like 
the grass, * and wither quickly as 
the green herb. 

Trust in the Lord, and do good : 
* and dwell in the land, and thou 
shalt be fed with the riches thereof. 

Delight thyself in the Lord : * 
and He shall give thee the desires 
of thine heart. 

Show thy way unto the Lord, 
trust also in Him : * and He shall 
bring it to pass. 

And He shall bring forth thy 



1 'Ps. xxxiv. I. 



82 



THE 



.im\ thy 

judgment as the noon-day : * rest in 

. and make thy prayer unto 

Fret not th\ off him 

that prospered) in his way, * 

of the man that bringeth 
wick 

and for sake- 
wrath : * fret not thyself to do evil. 

For evil-doers shall be cut off: * 
but those that wait upon the LottD, 
shall inherit the earth. 

' a little while, and the 
rj shall not be : * yea, thou 
shalt search for his place, and thou 
shalt not find it. 

1 I Jut the meek shall inherit the 
earth : * and shall delight themselves 
in the abundance oi 

The wicked plotteth against the 
just. * and gnasheth upon him with 
his teeth. 

But the Lord shall laugh at him : 

* for He seeth that his day is 
com:: 

The wicked have drawn out the 
I. * they have bent their bow, 

cast down the poor and the 
.. * to slay such as be upright 
of heart. 

Their sword shall enter into their 
own hearts : * and their bow shall be 
brok* 

A little that is man hath 

* i> better than great riches of the 
wick* 

tin- wicked shall 

; * but the Lord up- 
on*, 
knoweth the i 

the ti their in: 

fj m the 

evil t 



they shall be 1 : * for 

iiall perish. 

• 
r than they be honour 
and exalted, * shall pa 
away like smoke. 
The wicked borroweth and 
eth not again : * but the right 
showeth mercy and giveth. 

For such as bless him shall in- 
herit the earth : * but they that 
curse him shall be cut off. 

The sups of a [good] man 
ordered by the Lord : * and H< 
lighteth in his way. 

Though he fall, he shall not 
utterly cast down : * for the I 
upholdeth him with His hand. 

I have been young, and now am 
old : * yet have I not seen the 
righteous forsaken, nor his seed 
begging bread. 

He is ever merciful and lendeth : 
* and his seed shall be blessed. 

Depart from evil and do good : * 
and dwell for evermore. 

For the Lord loveth judgment, 
and forsaketh not His saints : * 
shall be preserved lor ever. 

The unrighteous shall be pun- 
ished : * and the seed of the wicked 
shall be cut off. 

Hut the righteous shall inherit the 
land : * and dwell therein t 

The mouth of the righteou 
eth wisdom. * and his tongue talketh 
judgment. 

The law of his Cod is in 

:. * none of hie -hall 

The wicked watchctli the i 

. * and seeketh to slay him. 
But tin .11 not leave him 

in his hands, * nor condemn him 

when he is judged. 



MONDAY AT MATTINS. 



83 



Wait on the Lord and keep His 
way, and He shall exalt thee, to in- 
herit the land : * when the wicked 
are cut off thou shalt see it. 

I have seen the wicked in great 
power, * and exalted like a cedar in 
Lebanon. 

And I passed by, and, lo, he was 
not : * and I sought him, and his 
place was not found. 

Keep innocency, and look to the 
thing that is right : * for the peace- 
maker shall have a reward here- 
after. 

But the transgressors shall be cut 
off together : * the end of the wicked 
is destruction. 

But the salvation of the righteous 
is of the Lord : * and He is their 
strength in the time of trouble. 

And the Lord shall help them, 
and deliver them: * He shall de- 
liver them from the wicked, and 
save them, because they trust in 
Him. 

Psalm XXXVII. 

[Intituled "A Psalm of David." It has 
a further superscription of (now) unknown 
meaning. The Vulgate and the LXX. con- 
nect it with the Sabbath.] 

r\ LORD, rebuke me not in Thy 
^^ wrath, * neither chasten me 
in Thine hot displeasure. 

For Thine arrows stick fast in 
me : * and Thou hast laid Thine 
hand heavily upon me. 

There is no soundness in my 
flesh, because of Thine anger : * 
neither is there any rest in my bones 
because of my sins. 

For mine iniquities are gone over 
mine head : * and as an heavy bur- 
then they are too heavy for me. 

My wounds stink and are cor- 
rupt, * because of my foolishness. 



I am troubled and bowed down 
exceedingly : * I go mourning all 
the day long. 

For my loins are filled with a 
loathsome disease : * and there is 
no soundness in my flesh. 

I am feeble and. sore broken : * 
I groan aloud by reason of the dis- 
quietness of mine heart. 

Lord, all my desire is before 
Thee : * and my groaning is not hid 
from Thee. 

Mine heart panteth, my strength 
faileth me : * as for the light of 
mine eyes, it also is gone from 
me. 

My friends and my neighbours * 
draw near, and stand over against 
me. 

And they that are nearest to me 
stand afar off: * they also that 
sought after my life have used 
violence against me. 

And they that seek mine hurt have 
spoken mischievous things, * and 
imagined falsehoods all the day 
long. 

But I, as a deaf man, hear not, * 
and as a dumb man that openeth 
not his mouth. 

Thus I was as a man that heareth 
not, * and in whose mouth are no 
reproofs. 

For in Thee, O Lord, do I 
hope : * Thou wilt hear me, O Lord 
my God ! 

For I said : Let not mine ene- 
mies rejoice over me : * when my 
feet slip they magnify themselves 
against me. 

For I am ready for the scourges : 

* and my sorrow is continually be- 
fore me. 

For I will declare mine iniquity, 

* and think upon my sin. 

But mine enemies are lively, and 



84 



THL PSALTER. 



they are strengthened against nv 
and they that hate me wrongfully 
are many. 

They that render evil for good 
speak against me, * b have 

followed goodness. 

Forsake nie not, ( » my 

God : * be not far from me. 

Make haste to help me, * O 
Lord God of my salvation I 

Antiphon. l Show thy way unto 
the Lord. 

Antiphon J al time. Al- 

leluia, Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Then is said a Verse and Answer. 

In Advent. 

1 it of Zion, the Perfec- 
tion of beauty. 

Answer. Our God shall come 
manifestly. 



Dur 



est of the year. 



Verse. 3 Thy mercy, O Lord, is 
in the heavens. 

Answer. And thy faithfulness 
reacheth unto the clouds. 

/// Lent. 

Ith delivered me 
from the : the fowler. 



And ti 



mi rum 



:h, 



lenc< 



/// Passion time. 



I I ' my soul 

'd. 

And my darting from 

. vliv 
* P 



/// J 'as. / 

Verse. The Lord is risen fi 

. Alleluia. 
Answer. Who hung for us u] 
the tree, Alleluia. 

ne as the J 
turn of the preceding Sunday, only the 
>:d sometin 

an- th<>u of the day. 

Simple Feasts. It is to be renum- 
bered that when a Simple Feast is kept 
on Monday, the Invitatory and Hymn 
are of the Feast, being taken from the 
Common of Saints of the class^ unless 
specially given. Then the Psalms and 
An tip/tons of the : as given 

above. Then is said a Verse 
Answer as follow : 

In the Simple Office for one or m 
Martyrs in Paschal time. 

Verse. O ye saints and right- 
eous, rejoice in the Lord, Alleluia. 

Answer. u God hath chosen you 
for His own inheritance. Alleluia. 

In the Simple Office for one Martyr 
{out of Paschal time). 

Verse. ~ Thou hast crowned him 
with glory and honour, O Lord. 

Answer. And madest him to 
have dominion over the work 
Thine hands. 

/// the Simple Office for many .!/«," 
{out of Paschal ti>> 

Verse. 8 Be glad in tin 
and rejoice, ye righteous. 

\iul shout for joy, all 
ye that are upright in heart. 

//; the Simple ( >/■'. 

hops or i: 

'■' The Lord loved him and 
ratified him. 

[In Paschal t. 



21. 

I 1. 



cxiL II 



MONDAY AT MATTINS. 



85 



Answer. And clothed him with 
a robe of glory. 

[In Paschal ti?ne, add Alleluia.] 

In the Simple Office for one Holy 
Woman, of any class. 

Verse. x In thy comeliness and 
thy beauty. 

[In Paschal time, add Alleluia.] 

Answer. Go forward, fare pros- 
perously and reign. 

[In Paschal time, add Alleluia.] 

The others, as well as what follows, 
to the end of the service, are taken from 
the First Nocturn of the Office Commo?i 
to Saints of the class, unless something 
special be appointed. The Lessons are 
arranged according to the rules in 
Chapter xxvi. 4, of the general Rubrics. 
The Hymn, " We praise Thee, O God," 
is said at the end, instead of a third 
Responsory. The Responsories are 
arranged according to the rules in 
Chapter xxvii. 4, of the ge?ieral Rubrics. 
Thus : — 

The Lord's Prayer is said : 

/^VUR Father {inaudibly), Who art 
^-^ in heaven, Hallowed be Thy 
Name. Thy kingdom come. Thy 
will be done on earth, as it is in 
heaven. Give us this day our daily 
bread. And forgive us our tres- 
passes, as we forgive them that tres- 
pass against us. (Aloud.) 

Verse. And lead us not into 
temptation. 

Answer. But deliver us from 
evil. 

The?i this Absolution : 

/GRACIOUSLY hear, O Lord 
^-* Jesus Christ, the prayers of 
Thy servants, and have mercy 
upon us : Who livest and reignest 



with the Father, and the Holy 
Ghost, world without end. 
Answer. Amen. 

Then the Reader says : 

Sir, be pleased to give the bless- 
ing. 

First Blessing, if the Lesson be from 
Scripture. 

May the Eternal Father bless us 
With an everlasting blessing. 
Answer. Amen. 

First Blessing, if the Lesson be of an 
Homily. 

May the Gospel's saving Lord 
Bless the reading of His Word. 
Answer. Amen. 

First Blessing on a Simple Feast. 

May His blessing be upon us 
Who doth live and reign for ever. 
Answer. Amen. 

Then is read the First Lesson from 
Scripture or from the Homily, or on a 
Simple Feast either the First from 
Scripture, or, if the Sai?it or Saints 
have two Lessons, the whole three from 
Scripture read together as o?ie. 

Then the First Responsory, unless 
otherwise directed. On a week-day kept 
as such, this is the First Responsory of 
the preceding Sunday. On a Simple 
Feast, the first Responsory in the Com- 
mon Office for the class to which the 
Saint belongs. 

Then the Reader says : 
Sir, be pleased to give the bless- 



ing. 



Second Blessing, if the Lesson be of 
Scripture. 

May the Son the Sole-begotten 
In His mercy bless and help us. 
Answer. Amen. 



Ps. xliv. 5. 



86 



THE PSA1 



Seco 

i 

mighty strength alway 

Be His people's staff ami 
Anicn. 

Simple F 

He (or si. . > whose 

Plead fa re the Lord. 

Amen. 

the Second ither 

from Scripture or from an Homily, or 
t cither the Second 

and Third Lessons from Scripture 

r if the Saint 

o Lessons, the first 

of ti: 

Then the Second Responsory, unless 

otherwise directed. On a week-day kept 

ah, this is the Second Responsory 

of the preceding Sunday t but in Paschal 

time there is added to it : 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 

-St. 

d the Answer of the Responsory is 



: 
Itich the Saint belt 

Father," J-v., and the repetith 

the . 

Then the 

Sir, be pleased to give the b 
ing. 

Third Blessings if the Lesson be of 

May the grace of God the Spirit 
All our heart and mind enlighten. 
wer. Amen. 

Third />'/ r a Simph 

if the Lesson be from an Homily. 

May He That is the Angel* - K 
To that high realm His people bring. 
Answer. Amen. 

Then is read the Thira ther 

from Scripture, or of the Homily. 
Simple Feasts the Second or only I. 
of the Saint. 

Then, on Simple Feasts and on 
day in Paschal time is said the Hymn, 
" \Ve praise Thee, O ( ut on 

week-days kept as such out of Pa 
time the Third Re sponsor}- of tiu 
ceding Sunday. 



S7 



THE SECOND DAY OF THE WEEK. 



All as on Sunday, except as other- 
wise given here. 

The Psalms are as follows : 

Antiphon. Have mercy. 

If this Antipho?i be used, the Psalm 
begins with the words, " Upon me, O 
God." 

Psalm L. 

[This Psalm has a musical (?) superscrip- 
tion, and the title then proceeds, "A Psalm 
of David, when Nathan the Prophet came 
unto him, after he had gone in to Bath- 
sheba." The whole history is in 2 Kings 
(Sam.) xi. xii. (Saturday, 5th week after 
Pentecost, and 6th Sunday.)] 

HAVE mercy upon me, God, 
* after Thy great mercy : 

And according to the multitude 
of Thy tender mercies * blot out my 
transgressions. 

Wash me thoroughly from mine 
iniquity : * and cleanse me from my 
sin. 

For I acknowledge my trans- 
gression : * and my sin is ever 
before me. 

Against Thee, Thee only, have I 
sinned, and done evil in Thy sight : 
* that Thou mightest be justified 
when Thou speakest, ami be clear 
when Thou art judged. 



For behold, I was shapen in in- 
iquity : * and in sin did my mother 
conceive me. 

For behold Thou desirest truth : 

* the hidden secrets of Thy wisdom 
Thou hast made manifest unto me. 

Sprinkle me with hyssop, and I 
shall be clean : * wash me, and I 
shall be whiter than snow. 

Make me to hear joy and glad- 
ness : * that the bones which Thou 
hast broken may rejoice. 

Hide Thy face from my sins : * 
and blot out all mine iniquities. 

Create in me a clean heart, 
God : * and renew a right spirit 
within me. 

Cast me not away from Thy 
presence : * and take not Thine 
holy Spirit from me. 

Restore unto me the joy of Thy 
salvation : * and uphold me with 
Thy free Spirit. 

Then will I teach transgressors 
Thy ways : * and sinners shall be 
converted unto Thee. 

Deliver me from blood-guiltiness, 
O God, Thou God of my salvation : 

* and my tongue shall sing aloud l 
of Thy righteousness. 

O Lord, open Thou my lips, * 



1 So the Hebrew, the LXX., and all the versions, including Doway, but the Latin 
text has the curious mistake of extdtalrit for exaltabit. 



88 



Mil. 



and my mouth shall show forth Thy 

1 Thou desirest not sacrifice, 
ild ] i u : * Thou 
lightest not in burnt-offering. 

ie sacrifice of God u ■ broken 

spirit : * and a contrite 

Thou wilt not despise. 

1 >o good in Thy good pleasure 

unto Zion : * to build the walls of 

!em. 

Then Bhalt Thou be pleased with 

the sacrifices of righteousness, with 

burnt-offering and whole bumt-ofler- 
* then shall they offer bullocks 
upon Thine alt 

Antiphon. Have mercy upon me, 

M)d. 

Second Antiphon. Consider. 
Psalm V. 

[Intituled "A PhIbo <>f David," with a 
musical (?) superscription.] 

GIVE ear unto my words, O 
rd, * consider my suppli- 
cation. 

1 [earken unto the voice of my cry, 

* my King and my God! 

I lice will I pray. * O 
Lord, in the morning Thou shalt 
hear my vuice : 

In the morning will I stand before 

i look up. * For Thou art 

not a God that hath pleasure in 

ither shall the evil dwell with 

, * nor the unrighteous stand 
in 'I 1. 

iniquity. 

* Thou shall -ill them that 

: thr blO 

tful man 

in the multitude of Thy in< 



I will come into Thine house 
I will worship toward Thine holy 
temple in Thy fear. 

Lead me, O Lord, in I 

. * because of mine 
enemies ; make my way str, 
before Thy face. 

r there is no faithfulness in 
their mouth : * their inward 
\ wickedness. 

Their throat is an open sepule: 
they Hatter with their tongue. * 
Judge Thou them, O God ! 

Let them fall by their own coun- 
sels ; cast them out in the multi- 
tude of their transgressions, * for 
they have rebelled against Th< 
Lord! 

And let all those that put their 
trust in Thee, rejoice : * let them 
ever shout for joy, because Thou 
dwellest in them : 

Let them also that love Thy Name 
be joyful in Thee. * For Thou wilt 
bless the righteous. 

O Lord, Thou hast compa 
us * with Thy favour as with a 
shield. 

Antiphon. Consider my suppli- 
cation, O Lord. 

Third Antiphon. O God, Thou 
art my God. 

If this Antiphon is u 

irly will I 

ilmi l.xii.. l.wi. 

O God, Thou art my I 

1 i 
( rod, early will 1 seek I 

,'iphon. Thine anger 
is turned a\va\. 



MONDAY AT LAUDS. 



8 9 



The Song of Isaiah the Prophet. 

[Isa. xii. 1. The description of the res- 
toration of Israel in Isa. xi. (Second Sun- 
day in Advent) is continued to the end 
of that Chapter, and this Song is then 
introduced by the words, "And in that 
day thou shalt say : — "] 

r\ LORD, I will praise Thee, 
^-^ though Thou wast angry with 
me, * Thine anger is turned away, 
and Thou comfortest me. 

Behold, God is my salvation : * 
I will trust and not be afraid : 

For the Lord is my strength 
and my song : * He also is become 
my salvation. 

Therefore with joy shall ye draw 
water out of the wells of the Saviour : 
* and in that day shall ye say : 
Praise the Lord and call upon His 
Name ! 

Declare His doings among the 
people, * tell them that His Name 
is exalted. 

Sing unto the Lord, for He hath 
done glorious things : * make ye 
this known in all the earth. 

Cry aloud and shout, thou inhabi- 
tant of Zion : * for great is the 
Holy One of Israel in the midst of 
thee! 

Antiphon. Thine anger is turned 
away, and Thou comfortest me. 
Fifth Antiphon. Praise ye. 

If this Antiphon be used, the Psalm 
begins with the words "the LORD 
from the heavens." 

Psalms CXLVIII., CXLIX., CL. 

Praise ye the Lord from the 
heavens, &c. {pp. 25, 26). 

Antiphon. Praise ye the Lord 
from the heavens. 



From Advetit Sunday till the Octave 
of the Epiphany and from the First 
Sunday in Lent till the Octave of Petite- 
cost special Chapters are given. At 
other times the following is said on all 
week-days observed as such. 

Chapter. (Rom. xiii. 12.) 

HP HE night is far spent, the day 
* is at hand : let us therefore 
cast off the works of darkness, and 
let us put on the armour of light : 
let us walk honestly as in the day. 

Hymn. 1 

OF the Father Effluence bright, 
Out of Light evolving light, 
Light from Light, unfailing Ray, 
Day creative of the day. 

Truest Sun, upon us stream 
With Thy calm perpetual beam, 
In the Spirit's still sunshine 
Making sense and thought divine. 

Seek we too the Father's face, 

Father of almighty grace, 

And of majesty excelling, 

Who can purge our tainted dwelling ; 

Who can aid us, who can break 
Teeth of envious foes, and make 
Hours of loss and pain succeed, 
Guiding safe each duteous deed. 

And, infusing self-control, 
Fragrant chastity of soul, 
Faith's keen flame to soar on high, 
Incorrupt simplicity. 

Christ Himself for food be given, 
Faith become the cup of heaven, 
Out of which the joy is quaff d 
Of the Spirit's sobering draught. 

With that joy replenished 
Morn shall glow with modest red, 
Noon with beaming face be bright, 
Eve be soft without twilight. 

It has dawned : — upon our way, 
Father, in Thy Word, this day, 
In Thy Father, Word Divine, 
From Thy cloudy pillar shine. 



1 Another hymn of the Ambrosian school, slightly altered. Translation by the late 
Card. Newman. 



90 



THE I.SALTER. 



the Father and the S 

And the Spirit. Three and I 
t\en. 
d here be en. 

Amen. 

isfied us 

early with Thy m< 

rejoice and 
glad. 

tiphonfor the Zacharias. 

sed * be the Lord God of Israel. 

After the repetition of the Antiphon 

, r of Zacharias, on the 

nt and Lent, the 

Ember Days, and all Vigils which are 

pt Christmas Eve and the 

md Ember Pays of Pentecost, all 

//, and the following prayers 

called the /'reces are said: 

Kyrie eleison. 

Christe eleison. 
K\ rie eleison. 

Then the Lord's Prayer is said aloud. 

OL'R Father, Who art in heaven, 
Hallowed be Thy Name. 'Thy 
kingdom come. Thy will be done 
on earth, as it is in heaven. Give 
us this day our daily bread. And 
forgive us our tre for- 

them that trespass against us. 
And lead us not into temptation ; 
wer. Hut deliver us from evil. 
Verse. 1 he mer- 

ciful unto me. 

rwer. Heal my soul, for I 
sinned again 
Verse. s Ret up how 

At tad let it 

con< ts. 



rse. 4 Let Thy m< 
be upon us. 

tswer. According as we hope 
in Thee. 

Thy pru si 
clothed with righteousness. 
tswer. And let Th . 
shout for 
Vet 

r. And hear us in the day 
when we call upon Thee. 

rse. "O Loi 
pie, and bless Thine inheritance. 

tswer. And govern them, and 
lift them up for e\ 

Verse. s Remember Thy con. 
gation. 

Answer. Which Thou hast pur- 
chased of old. 

rse. 9 Peace be within thy 
walls. 

Ansiver. And prosperity within 
thy palaces. 

rse. Let us pray for the faith- 
ful departed. 

Answer. O Lord, grant them 
eternal rest, and let the everlasting 
light shine upon them ! 

Verse. May they rest in pe 
Answer. Amen. 
Verse. Let us pray for our ab- 
sent brethren. 

Answer. 10 O Thou my i 

Thy servants that trust in 

Verse. Let us pray for the 
rowful and the captives. 

Answer. u Redeem then 
of Israel, out of all their troul>!< 

nd them help 
from the sanctuary. 



• Pi. I 

22. 
• Pi. xix. to. This verse | 

9- 

11 Pv 



MONDAY AT LAUDS. 



91 



Answer. And strengthen them 
out of Zion. 

Verse. Hear my prayer, O Lord. 

Answer. And let my cry come 
unto Thee. 

Psalm CXXIX. 

[Intituled "A Song of Degrees. " The 
meaning of this title is not certain. The 
Psalms so called may perhaps, like the 
" Graduals " of the Roman Liturgy, be 
"step-songs," intended to be sung during 
processions, Liturgical or of pilgrims.] 

OUT of the depths have I cried 
unto Thee, O Lord ! * Lord, 
hear my voice. 

Let Thine ears be attentive * to 
the voice of my supplication. 

If Thou, Lord, shouldest mark 
iniquities, * O Lord, who shall 
stand ? 

But there is forgiveness with 
Thee : * because of Thy law, I wait 
for Thee, O Lord ! 

My soul waiteth on His word : * 
my soul hopeth in the Lord. 

From the morning watch even 
until night * let Israel hope in the 
Lord : 

For with the Lord there is mercy, 
* and with Him is plenteous re- 
demption. 

And He shall redeem Israel, * 
from all his iniquities. 

Glory be to the Father, and to 
the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

As it was in the beginning, is 



now, and ever shall be, world with- 
out end. Amen. 

Verse. Y Turn us again, O Lord 
God of hosts ! 

Answer. And cause Thy face to 
shine, and we shall be saved. 

Verse. 2 Arise, O Christ, and 
help us. 

Answer. And deliver us for Thy 
Name's sake. 

Verse. Hear my prayer, O Lord. 

Answer. And let my cry come 
unto Thee. 

Let us pray. 

Then follows the Prayer of the Day. 

All proceeds to the end of the service 
as on Sunday, except that when Suf- 
frages are said, the followi?ig is said 
before the Commemoration of the Blessed 
Virgin Mary. 

Commemoration of the Cross. 

Antiphon. Through Thy Cross's 
holy sign, Jesus, guard this soul of 
mine, from my ghostly enemy. 

Verse. 3 Let all the earth worship 
Thee, and sing unto Thee. 

Answer. Let them sing praises 
unto Thy Name, O Lord ! 

Let us pray. 

OLORD, we beseech Thee, keep 
us in continual peace, whom 
it hath pleased Thee to redeem by 
the tree of the Holy Cross. 



1 Ps. b 



2 Ps. xliii. 26. 



3 Ps. lxv. 4. 



92 



(Eucsbag at iHattins. 

THE THIRD DAY OF THE WE 



A I. cpt as other- 

wise given hit 

Invitatory. Let us make a joyful 
noise to * the God of our salvation. 



itatory in Paschal time. 
luia, Alleluia, * Alleluia. 



Alle- 



On Simple Feasts the Invitatory is 
speeial. 

On Simple Feasts the Hymn is 
-/, but on Week-days kept as sueh 
■l from the Octave 
of the Epiphany till the first Tu 

nt, and from the Octave of Pente- 
cost till Advent. The Hymns for the 
other Seasons are given in the proper 
Office of the Seasons. 

Hymn. 1 

OGOI) from Cod, and Light from 
In. 
Who 
Our chant! thai! break the clouds of 

ni^ht ; 
ith Of while IT! 

urn that haunts the 
mind, 
The thronging shades of hell, 

it hind 
with a spell. 

I 
Who, in this hour I 

tith in what they do not see, 



Grant this, O Father, Only Son, 
And Spirit, God of grace, 
To Whom all worship shall be done 
In every time and place. 

Amen. 

Only one Nocturn is said. 

Antiphon. That I sin not. 

/// Paschal time there is only one An- 
tiphon to the whole Nocturn, Alleluia. 

Psalm XXXVIII. 

[Intituled "A Psalm of David," with a 
farther notice of meaning now uncertain. 
It is addressed to Jeduthun, cona 
whom it is said, in I Par. (Chron.) w 
that David appointed, along with the 1 
who officiated before the Ark, " Heman 
and Jeduthun, and the rest that w 
who arc expressed by name, to give thanks 
to the Lord, because His ureth 

ver. And with them Heman and 
Jeduthun. with trumpets and cymhals, for 
those that should make a sound, and with 
musical instruments of< 
-ays that it was to he- QSed hy Jedulh 
tC& in the Saner. 



will take heed unto 
* that I sin not with 



T SAID: I 
* my Wl 

my tongue. 

I kept a watch upon my mouth, 
while the \vn | 1 up agair 

one 

:u»l>, and humbled mvsc 

I held in it goo< 



l.ition by the late Cai 



TUESDAY AT MATTINS. 



93 



* and my sorrow was stirred up 
afresh. 

Mine heart was hot within me : 

* and while I was musing the fire 
kindled. 

I spake with my tongue : * Lord, 
make me to know mine end ; 

And the measure of my days 
what it is ; * that I may know how 
frail I am. 

Behold, Thou hast made my days 
as a span : * and mine age is as 
nothing before Thee. 

Verily every man living * is 
altogether vanity. 1 

Surely every man flitteth by like 
a shade : * he is disquieted also in 
vain. 

He heapeth up riches, * and 
knoweth not who shall gather them. 

And now for what wait I ? Is it 
not for the Lord ? * and mine hope 
is with Thee. 

Deliver me from all my transgres- 
sions : * Thou hast given me for a 
reproach unto the foolish. 

I was dumb and opened not my 
mouth, because Thou didst it : * 
remove Thy strokes away from me. 

I am consumed by the blow of 
Thine hand : * Thou, with rebukes 
dost correct man for iniquity. 

And Thou makest his beauty to 
consume away like a spider's web : 

* surely every man is disquieted in 
vain. 1 

Hear my prayer, O Lord, and my 
cry : * give ear unto my tears. 

Hold not Thy peace : for I am a 
stranger with Thee, and a sojourner, 

* as all my fathers were. 

O spare me, that I may recover 
strength, before I go hence, * and 
be no more. 



Psalm XXXIX. 

[Intituled "A Psalm of David " and with 
the same (now) uncertain superscription as 
Ps. xii.l 



WAITED patiently for the 
Lord, * and He inclined unto 



me, 



And heard my cry : * He brought 
me up also out of an horrible pit, 
and out of the miry clay. 

And set my feet upon a rock j * 
and ordered my goings. 

And He hath put a new song in 
my mouth, * even praise unto our 
God. 

Many shall see it, and fear, * and 
shall trust in the Lord. 

Blessed is that man whose trust 
is the Name of the Lord : * and 
who respecteth not pride and lying 
vanities. 

Many, O Lord my God, are Thy 
wonderful works which Thou hast 
done : * and in Thy thoughts there 
is none like unto Thee. 

If I would declare and speak of 
them, * they are more than can be 
numbered. 

Sacrifice and offering Thou hast 
not desired ; * but mine ears hast 
Thou opened. 

Burnt-offering and sin-offering hast 
Thou not required : * then said I : 
Lo, I come. 

In the beginning of the book it is 
written of me that I should fulfil 
Thy will: * O my God, I delight 
to do it, yea, Thy law is within mine 
heart. 

I have preached Thy righteous- 
ness in the great congregation : * lo, 
I have not refrained my lips : O 
Lord, Thou knowest. 



SLH 



94 



THE PSAL 



I have not hidden Thy righteous- 
within mine heart : * I have 
Thy faithfuh 
sal vat 

I have not I 
kindness, and Thy truth * from the 
great congregation. 

Withhold not Thou Thy tender 
from me, O Lord : * let 
Thy loving-kindness and Thy truth 
continually me. 

r countless evils have com- 
passed me about : * mine iniquities 
taken hold upon me, and I am 
not able to look up. 

They are more in number than 
the hairs of mine head : * and mine- 
heart faileth me. 

Be pleased, O Lord, to deliver 
me : * O Lord, look upon me to 
help me. 

Let them be ashamed and con- 
founded together that seek after my 
soul, * to destroy it. 

Let them be driven backward, 
and put to shame, * that wish me 
evil. 

Let them quickly bear their 
shame, * that say unto me : Aha, 
Aha. 

• all those that seek Thee re- 
joice and be glad in Thee : * and 
let such as love Thy salvation say 
continually: The- Lord be mag- 
nified. 

Bill I am poor and needy: * the 
Lord thinketh upon inc. 

Thou art mine Helper and my 
Deliverer : * ma!. ig, O 

< 



.'////"//. ' Tha 
my t 

'lion. 



not with 






tin xl. 

[Intituled 

• me other Psalms.] 

BLESSED is he that consid 
the poor and needy : * the 
LORD will deliver him in time of 
trouble. 

The Lord preserve him, and 
quicken him, and make him to be 
blessed upon the earth : * and de- 
liver him not unto the will of his 
enemi 

The Lord strengthen him U] 
his bed of suffering ! * Thou 
made all his bed in his sickness. 

As for me, I said : Lord, be 
merciful unto me : * heal my soul, 
for I have sinned against Thee. 

Mine enemies speak evil of me : 
* When shall he die, and his name 
perish ? 

If he came to see me he spake 
vanity : * his heart gathereth iniquity 
to itself. 

He went out, * and told it. 

All they that hate me whispered 
together against me : * against me 
did they devise mine hurt. 

They plotted together to do me 
evil : * Now that he lieth, surely he 
shall rise up no more. 

\ ea, mine own familiar friend in 
whom I trusted, * who did eat of 
my bread, hath lifted up his heel 
st me.* J 

But Thou, O LORD, be merciful 
unto me, and raise me up : * and I 

will requite them. 

By tins 1 know that Thou 
lightest in me: * b nine 

enemy cannot triumph on 

1 hit as I* it me, I h< m UDnol) 









TUESDAY AT MATTINS. 



95 



me, because of mine innocence : * 
and settest me before Thy face for 
ever. 

Blessed be the Lord God of 
Israel from everlasting, and to 
everlasting. * Amen, Amen. 1 

Psalm XLI. 

[This Psalm has a superscription, the 
meaning of which is not now certain, but 
which seems in part to imply that it was a 
didactic poem written to be sung by the 
choir of the Korahites, a family of Levites 
and singers in the time of David.] 

AS the hart panteth after the 
water-brooks : * so panteth 
my soul after Thee, O God ! 

My soul is athirst for God, for 
the mighty God, for the living God : 

* when shall I come and appear 
before God? 

My tears have been my meat day 
and night, * while they daily say 
unto me : Where is thy God ? 

When I remember these things, 
I pour out my soul in me : * for 
I will go unto the place of the 
wondrous Tabernacle, even unto 
the house of God. 

With the voice of joy and praise, 

* the noise of a multitude that keep 
holiday. 

Why art thou cast down, O my 
soul, * and why art thou disquieted 
in me? 

Hope thou in God, for I shall yet 
praise Him, * the Health of my 
countenance and my God. 

My soul is cast down within me : 

* therefore will I remember Thee 
from the land of Jordan, and from 

1 With this Psalm ends the first of the five books into which the Psalter is divided. 

2 A chain of mountains in the north-east of Palestine, stretching down on the eastern 
side of Jordan. 

3 Or rather, the hill Mizar (viz. the Little), proper name of a mountain on the eastern 
ridge of Lebanon. May it not be that the Korahites were among the Levitical families 
which had cities in the north and north-east districts ? 4 Ps. xl. 5. 



the mountains of Hermon, 2 from the 
Little Hill. 3 

Deep calleth unto deep, * at the 
noise of Thy waterspouts. 

All Thy waves and Thy billows * 
are gone over me. 

The Lord hath commanded [the 
praise of] His loving- kindness in 
the day-time, * and in the night 
His song. 

Mine shall it be to pray unto the 
God of my life. * I will say unto 
God : Thou art my refuge. 

Why hast Thou forgotten me ? * 
and why go I mourning, while the 
enemy oppresseth me ? 

While my bones are broken, * 
they that trouble me, even mine 
enemies, reproach me ; 

While they say daily unto me : 
Where is thy God ? * Why art thou 
cast down, O my soul, and why art 
thou disquieted within me? 

Hope thou in God, for I shall yet 
praise Him : * the Health of my 
countenance and my God. 

Antiphon. 4 Heal my soul, O 
Lord, for I have sinned against Thee. 
Third Antiphon. Mine heart. 

Psalm XLIII. 

[This Psalm has the same uncertain 
[? musical] superscription as some others, 
and the Targum farther ascribes its author- 
ship to David.] 

T \ TE have heard with our ears, 
* » O God : * our fathers have 
told us, 

What work Thou didst in their 
days, * and in the times of old. 



96 



THE PSA1 



Thine hand scattered the heathen, 
and planted them : * Thou didst 
afflict the people and cast them out. 

j got not the land in ;■■ 
session by thei: id : * neither 

did their own arm save them. 

Hut Thy right hand, and Thine 
arm, and the light of Thy counten- 
: * because Thou hadst a favour 
unto them. 

Thou art my King and my (iod: 
* Who command tiei for 

Jacob ! 

Through Thee shall our horn toss 

our enemies : * through Thy Name 

will we tread them under that rise 

gainst us. 

For I will not trust in my bow : * 

neither shall my sword save me. 

For Thou hast saved us from them 
that afflicted us, * and hast put to 
shame them that hated us. 

In God will we glory all the day 

long, * and will praise Thy Name 

I er. 1 

Hut now Thou hast cast off and 

put us to shame : * and Thou, O 

wilt not go forth with our 

armies. 

Thou hast turned us back behind 
our enemies : * and they that hate 
us take spoil for themselves. 

m hast given us like sheep ap- 
pointed for meat, * and hast scat- 
then, 
old Thy people for 
nought, * and hast not i 
•h by their ] 

h to our 
rn and a derision 
Hid about us. 

hi makes* ui ■ by-word 

the li of the i 



me, * and the shame of my face 
hath covered me, 

For the voice of him that repro. 
eth and blasphemeth, * by reason of 
the enemy and a\e: 

All this is come upon us. 
we not forgotten Thee : * n« 
have we dealt falsely in Thy cove: 

Our heart also is not turned ba 

* neither have our steps 
from Thy - 

Though Thou hast sore broken us 
in the place of affliction, * and the 
shadow of death hath covered us. 

If we have forgotten the Nan; 
our God, * or stretched out our 
hands to a strange god ; 

Shall not God search this out ? * 
for He knoweth the secrets of the 
heart. 

a, for Thy sake are we killed all 
the day long : * we are counted as 
sheep for the slaughter. 

Awake, why sleepest Thou, O 
Lord? * arise, and cast us not off 
for ever. 

Wherefore hidest Thou Thy face, 

* and forgettest our affliction and 
our oppression ? 

For our soul is bowed down to 
the dust : * our belly cleaveth unto 
arth. 

Arise, O Lord, help us : * and 
redeem us for 'Thy Name's sake. 

Psalm XLIV. 

[This Psalm bus a longsu] n, the 

meaning <>f which is not ni 
oa to have been a mai 
ing l>y the Korah 
gum a • the lime 

rather to belong to that of the I 
Monarchy. | 

MINT', heart i with 

a good matter : * I speak of 
my WOrkfl unto the ki: 
II 



TUESDAY AT MATTINS. 



97 



My tongue is the pen * of a ready 
writer. 

Thou art fairer than the children 
of men, grace is poured into thy lips : 

* therefore God hath blessed thee 
for ever. 

Gird thy sword upon thy thigh, * 
O most mighty ! 

In thy comeliness, and thy beauty, 

* go forward, fare prosperously, and 
reign, 

Because of truth, and meekness, 
and righteousness : * and thy right 
hand shall lead thee wonderfully. 

Thine arrows are sharp — (the 
people shall fall under thee) — * into 
the heart of the King's enemies. 

J Thy throne, O God, is for ever 
and ever : * the sceptre of Thy 
kingdom is a right sceptre. 

Thou hast loved righteousness, 
and hated iniquity : * therefore, 
God, thy God, hath anointed thee 
with the oil of gladness above thy 
fellows. 

Thy garments smell of myrrh, and 
aloes, and cassia, out of the ivory 
palaces, * whereby kings' daughters 
among thine honourable women have 
made thee glad. 

Upon thy right hand did stand 
the queen in a vesture of gold, * 
bedecked with divers colours. 

Hearken, O daughter, and con- 
sider, and incline thine ear : * for- 
get also thine own people, and thy 
father's house : 

And the King shall greatly de- 
sire thy beauty : * for He is the 
Lord thy God, 2 and Him shall they 
worship. 

And the daughters of Tyre shall 



entreat thy favour * with gifts, even 
all the rich among the people. 

The King's daughter is all glo- 
rious within, * in a vesture of gold, 
clad in divers colours. 

After her shall virgins be brought 
unto the king : * her fellows shall 
be brought unto thee. 

With gladness and rejoicing shall 
they be brought : * they shall enter 
into the King's palace. 

Instead of thy fathers shall be 
thy children : * thou shalt make 
them princes over all the earth. 

They shall be mindful of thy 
name, * unto all generations. 

Therefore shall the people praise 
thee for ever, * yea, for ever and 
ever. 

Antiphon. 3 Mine heart is over- 
flowing with a good matter. 
Fourth Antiphon. Our help. 



Psalm XLV. 

[This Psalm has a superscription of un- 
certain meaning, but of which part seems 
to imply that it was to be sung by treble 
voices, from the choir of the Korahite 
family. And the Targum ascribes it, but 
apparently by a mere guess, to the time when 
Korah and his fellow-rebels were destroyed 
by an earthquake in the wilderness, but 
"the children of Korah died not" (Num. 
xxvi. 10, II).] 

GOD is our refuge and strength, 
* our help in trouble, which 
is come upon us exceedingly. 

Therefore will we not fear, though 
the earth be removed, * and though 
the mountains be carried into the 
midst of the sea ; 

Though the waters thereof roar 



1 So are these words translated in Heb. i. 8, 9. 

2 The word "God" is not in the Hebrew, and the original meaning, addressed to the 
bride, is, " He is thy lord, and bow thou to him.' 

3 Ps. xliv. 2. 

VOL. II. 



So also St Jerome. 



9 8 



THE 



and be troubled ; * though the 
mountain with the swelling 

of. 1 
[There is] a river, the .streams 

whereof make glad the city of ( I 
* th< [igh hath hallowed Hi- 

Taberna 

1 is in the midst of her, she 
shall not DC moved: * God shall 
help her right early. 

The heathe: md the king- 

doms were moved: * He Uttered 
Uth melted. 
The LOUD Of hosts is with us : * 
-od of Jacob is our refuge. 1 
me and behold the works of 
the LORD, what wonders He hath 
wrought in the earth : * He maketh 
unto the end of the 
earth. 

He breaketh the bow and cut- 
teth the weapons in sunder : * and 
burnetii the shields in the fire. 

Be still, and know that I am 
* I will be exalted among 
the heathen, and I will be exalted 
in the earth. 

Tl. of hosts is with us : * 

the God of Jacob is our refuge. 1 

m XLVI. 

[Intituled " A l'-.ihn of tin 
K<>rah," with another (now uncertain) direc- 
tion.] 

0\1' your hands, all 
people : * shout unto God 
with the voice of triumph. 

i is ter- 
rible : * He is a great King over all 

arth. 
il. hath iubd ople 

. * and the nations under 

1 It i.aii, | | 

1 si it 



for us, * the excellency of 
Jacob, whom He loved. 1 

d is gone up with a shout, * 
and I D with the sound of a 

trumpet. 

ig praises to our God, 

* sing praises unto our 
sing prai 

' iod is the King of all the 
earth : * sing ye praxes with under- 
standing. 

God reigneth over the heathen : 
* (iod sitteth upon the throne of 
His holin- 

The princes of the people are 
gathered together with the (iod of 
Abraham : * for the mighty ones 
of the earth are greatly exalted. 

Antiphon. ' 2 Our help in trouble. 
Fifth Antiphon. Great is the 
Lord. 

If this Antiphon be used the /' 
begins with ttu lyto 

he praised." 



Psalm XLVI I. 

[Intituled "A Song. A l'-.ilm of the 
of Kurah." The Vulgate and the 

LXX. assign it to the tecond day of the 

week.] 

GREAT is the Lord, and greatly 
to be praised * in the city of 
our God, in the mountain of 
holiness. 

beautiful for situation, the joy of 
the whole earth, is mount /.ion, * 
On the sides of the north, the 
Of the great King. 

d is known in her p 

I or, lo, the king-, were assernb 
* they passed by togetl 
Tl. id so the) ma 

- I's. \! 



TUESDAY AT MATTINS. 



99 



they were troubled, they hasted 
away : * fear took hold upon them 

There, pain, as of a woman in 
travail. * Thou shalt break the 
ships of Tarshish 1 with a mighty 
wind. 

As we have heard, so have we 
seen in the city of the Lord of 
hosts, in the city of our God : * 
God hath established her for ever. 2 

We have received Thy loving- 
kindness, O God, * in the midst 
of Thy temple. 

According to Thy Name, O God, 
so is Thy praise unto the ends of 
the earth : * Thy right hand is full 
of righteousness. 

Let mount Zion rejoice, and let 
the daughters of Judah be glad, * 
because of Thy judgments, O Lord. 

Walk about Zion, and go round 
about her : * tell the towers thereof. 

Mark ye well her bulwarks : * 
and consider her palaces ; that 
ye may tell it to the generation 
following. 

For this God is our God for ever 
and ever : * He shall be our guide 
for ever. 

PsalmXLVlII. 

[This Psalm has the same title as Ps. 
xlvi.] 

IT EAR this, all ye people : * 
-*- •*■ give ear, all ye inhabitants 
of the world ; 

Both low and high : * rich and 
poor together. 

My mouth shall speak of wisdom : 
* and the meditation of my heart 
shall be of understanding. 

I will incline mine ear to a par- 
able : * I will open my saying 
upon the harp. 

1 A very flourishing colony and emporium 



Wherefore should I fear in the 
day of evil ? * The iniquity of them 
that dog mine heels shall compass 
me about, — 

They that trust in their own 
strength, * and boast themselves 
in the multitude of their riches. 

Can a man redeem, redeem his 
brother ? * He cannot give to God 
a ransom for himself — 

Nor yet a redemption for his own 
soul, * if he should work for ever, 
and live even unto the end. 

Nay, though he should not see 
destruction, when he beholdeth 
wise men die — * likewise the 
fool and the brutish person perish, 

And leave their wealth to others : 

* and their grave shall be their 
house for ever — 

Even their dwelling-place to all 
generations : * they called their 
lands after their own names. 

For man, having been created 
in honour, hath had no understand- 
ing : * he hath made himself like 
unto the beasts that understand 
not, and is become like unto 
them. 

This their way is a stumbling- 
block for themselves : * yet their 
posterity will approve their sayings. 2 

Like sheep they are laid in the 
grave : * death will pasture them. 

And the upright shall have do- 
minion over them in the morning : 

* and the beauty of their strength 
shall waste away in the grave. 

But God will redeem my soul 
from the power of the grave, * 
when He shall receive me. 2 

Be not thou afraid when one is 
made rich, * and when the glory 
of his house is increased. 

For when he dieth he shall carry 
of the Phoenicians in Spain. 2 SLH. 



IOO 



Till PSA1 






nothing away, * his glory shall not 
nd with him. 
Though while he lived he Messed 
-oul ; * and praised thee when 
thou didst well to him. 

He shall go to the generation of 
his fathers : * and shall never see 

Man, having been created in 
honour, hath had no understand- 
ing : * he hath made himself like 
unto the beasts that understand 
not, and is become like unto them. 

Antiphon. L Great is the Lord, 
and greatly to be praised. 

\th Antip/ion. The God of 
gods. 

If this Antiphon be used, the Psalm 
ith the words, "Even the 
Lord." 

m XL1X. 

[Intituled "A I'suhn of Asaph." This 
. was ■ Levitt, chief of the singers 
appointed by David, i 1'ar. (Chron.) xvi. 
4. "And he (David) appointed certain of 
the Levites to minister before the Ark of 
the LORD, and to record, and to thank 
and praise the LORD (l<>d of Israel. Asaph 
the chief, and next to him Zachariah, Jeiel, 
Shemiranioth, and Jehiel, and Mattithiah, 
and Lliab, and Uenaiah, and Obed-ed«>m ; 
and Jeiel with t nd with harps ; 

but Asaph made a toand with cymbals."] 

Till. God of gods, even the 
i:d, hath spoken, * and 
called the earth, 

.in the rising of the sun unto 
the l of. * < hit of 

Zton, the Perfection ol beauty, 

<1 shall ■ii;uii!t -tly, * 

i, and shall not I 

A fire shall devour before Him: 

* and it shall be very tempestuous 

. • I i 



Hi shall call to the heavens from 
" and to the earth, that 
IK may judge Hi- people. 

its together unto 
Him, * those that have made a 
ant with Him by 

And the heavens shall declare 
righteousness : * for God is 
Judge Himself. 1 

Hear, () My people, and I will 
speak ; () Israel, and I will testify 
against thee ; * I am ( iod, 
thy God. 

I will not reprove thee for thy 
sacrifices : * for thy burnt -offer 
are continually before Me. 

I will take no bullock out of thine 
house, * nor he -goats out of thy 
folds. 

For every beast of the forest is 
Mine, * the cattle and the bulls 
upon the mountains. 

I know all the birds of the d 

* and the beauty of the field is 
Mine. 

If I were hungry, I would not 
tell thee : * for the earth is Mine, 
and the fulness thereof. 

Will I eat the flesh of bull 
or drink the blood of goa: 

Offer unto God the sacrino 
praise : * and pay thy vows unto the 
Most High : 

And call upon Me in the d. 
trouble : * I will deliver thee, and 
thou shalt glorify Me. 

But unto the wieki .:. I nth : 

* What hast thou to do t< 

tatutes, that thou ihouldesl 
, mouth? 

ing thou hatest instruction. * 

and castetl My words behind d 

When thOU B thief then 

thou took ire in him : * 

hast been partaker with adulten 



TUESDAY AT MATTINS. 



01 



Thy mouth aboundeth with evil : 
* and thy tongue frameth deceit. 

Thou satest and spakest against 
thy brother, and slanderedst thine 
own mother's son : * these things 
hast thou done, and I kept silence. 

Thou thoughtest wickedly that I 
was such an one as thyself: * I will 
reprove thee, and set them in order 
before thine eyes. 

Consider ye this, ye that forget 
God : * lest He tear you in pieces, 
and there be none to deliver. 

The sacrifice of praise shall honour 
Me : * and there is the path where- 
in I will show unto him the salvation 
of God. 



Psalm LI. 

[After another uncertain superscription, 
the title of this Psalm proceeds: — "[A 
Psalm] of David, when Doeg the Edomite 
came and told Saul, and said unto him : 
David is come to the house of Ahimelech. " 
The circumstances may be read in I Kings 
(Sam.) xxii. (Saturday, fourth week after 
Pentecost). After Doeg told Saul, the 
latter sent for Ahimelech and the other 
Priests, and ordered them to execution. 
" But the servants of the king would not 
put forth their hand to fall upon the Priests 
of the Lord. And the king said to Doeg : 
Turn thou, and fall upon the Priests. And 
Doeg the Edomite turned and fell upon the 
Priests, and slew on that day four-score and 
five persons that did wear a linen ephod. " 
The inhabitants of the Priestly city of Nob 
were also brutally massacred. One of the 
sons of Ahimelech escaped and told David.] 

WHY boastest thou thyself in 
mischief, * O thou that art 
mighty in iniquity ? 

Thy tongue deviseth unrighteous- 
ness all the day long : * like a sharp 
razor hast thou wrought treachery. 

Thou lovest evil more than good ; 
* iniquity rather than to speak of 
uprightness. 1 

1 SLH. 



Thou lovest all deadly words, * 
O thou deceitful tongue ! 

Therefore God shall destroy thee 
for ever : * He shall take thee away, 
and pluck thee out of thy dwelling- 
place, and root thee out of the land 
of the living. 1 

The righteous shall see it, and 
fear, and shall laugh at him, and 



say 



Lo, this is the man that 



made not God his strength • 

But trusted in the abundance of 
his riches : * and hardened himself 
in his wickedness. 

But I am like a fruitful olive- 
tree in the house of God, * I trust 
in the mercy of God for ever and 
ever. 

I will praise Thee for ever, be- 
cause Thou hast done it : * and I 
will wait on Thy name, for it is 
good before Thy saints. 

Antiphon. 2 The God of gods, 
even the Lord, hath spoken. 

Antiphon for Paschal time. Al- 
leluia, Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Then is said a Verse and Answer, 
hi Advent. 

Verse. Send forth the Lamb, O 
Lord, the ruler of the land. 

Answer. From the "Rock" of 
the wilderness unto the mount of 
the daughter of Zion. 

During the rest of the year. 

Verse. 3 Offer unto God the sac- 
rifice of praise. 

Answer. And pay thy vows un- 
to the Most High. 

In Lent. 
Verse. He shall cover thee with 
His wings. 

2 Ps. xlix. i. 3 Ps. xlix. 14. 



102 






r. And under His feath- 
halt thou tn 

/// Passion ti 

re me from 

the lion's mouth. 

And mine affliction 
from the horns of the unicorns. 

/// Paschal t: 

rst. The Lord is risen in- 
Alleluia. 
At \nd hath appeared un- 

ion. Alleluia. 

The rest is the same as the Second 
Nocturti on tho preceding Sunday, only 
the L d sometimes the Respon- 

SOries, are those of the day. 

Simple i he remembered 

that when a Simple Feast is kept on 
day, the Imntatory and Hymn are 
of the Feast, being taken from the Com- 
mon of Saints of the class, unless speci- 
ally gr 

Then the Psalms and Antiphons of 
the Week-day, as given above. Then is 
said 

In the Simple Office for one or many 
in Paschal time. 

Verse. The everlasting light 
shall shine upon Thy Saints, O 
L Alleluia. 

Answer. Even unto everlasting. 
Alleluia. 

/// HU Simple Offi Martyr 

Paschal time). 

rU. ■ Thou i crown, 

ioui Btoni 
Answer. bifl head. 



/// the Sim pi, 

ill! re- 
joice 



p. 



Answer, Yea, let then! 
ingly rejoice. 

/// the Simple Office for a Bishop and 
Conf 

)rd chose him for 
a priest unto Him 

[In Paschal time, add Alleluia.] 

Answer. To offer up unto Him 
the sacrifice of praise. 

[/// Paschal time, add Alleluia.] 

In the Simple Office for a C* 
not a Bishop. 

Verse. 4 The mouth of the right- 
eous shall speak wisdom. 

[/// Paschal time, add Alleluia.] 

Answer. And his tongue talk of 
judgment. 

[In Paschal time, add Alleluia.] 

For one Holy J I Oman, of\ kind. 

Verse. 5 God shall give her the 
help of His countenance. 

[/// Paschal time, add Alleluia.] 

Answer. God is in the midst of 
her, she shall not be moved. 

[/// Paschal time, add Alleluia.] 

The ot/t, .'.' as what foil 

to the end of the Set 
the Second Noctum of th 

to Saints of the da 
special be appointed. 'The J 
arranged according to the rules in Chap- 
ter wvi. 4 of the general A':. 
The Hymn, " We \ 
is said at the end, ins/ 
Responsory. The . 
ranged according to the rules 
xx\ ii. 4 of the general Ru 

■ 

OUR I .I!' 
in heaven, Hallowed he 
Name. Thy kingdom come Thy 

Alexandrian 



TUESDAY AT MATTINS. 



I03 



will be done on earth, as it is in 
heaven. Give us this day our daily 
bread. And forgive us our tres- 
passes, as we forgive them that tres- 
pass against us. {Aloud.) 
* Verse. And lead us not into 
temptation. 
Answer. 
evil. 

The?i this Absolution : 



But deliver us from 



AY His loving kindness and 



mercy help us, Who liveth 
and reigneth with the Father, and 
the Holy Ghost, world without end. 
Ansiver. Amen. 

Then the Reader says : 

Sir, be pleased to give the bless- 
ing. 

First Blessing, if the Lesson be from 
Scripture. 

God the Father the Almighty 
Show on us His grace and mercy. 
Answer. Amen. 

First Blessing, if the Lesson be of an 
Homily. 

May the Gospel's saving Lord 
Bless the reading of His Word. 
Answer. Amen. 

First Blessing on a Simple Feast. 

May His blessing be upon us, 
Who doth live and reign for ever. 
Answer. Amen. 

Then is read the First Lesson from 
Scripture or from the Homily, or, on a 
Simple Feast, either the First from 
Scripture, or, if the Saint or Saints 
have two Lessons, the whole three Scrip- 
ture Lessons read together as one. 

Then the First Responsory, unless 
otherwise directed. On a week-day kept 
as such, this is the First Responsory of 
the Second Nocturn of the preceding 



Sunday. On a Simple Feast, it is the 
first Responsory in the Common Office 
for the class to which the Saint belongs. 

Then the Reader says : 

Sir, be pleased to give the bless- 
ing. 

Second Blessing, if the Lesson be of 
Scripture. 

May Christ to all His people give 
For ever in His sight to live. 
Ansiver. Amen. 

Second Blessing, if the Lesson be froni 
an Homily. 

God's most mighty strength alway 
Be His people's staff and stay. 
Ansiver. Amen. 

Second Blessing, for a Simple Feast. 

He {or She or They) whose feast-day 

we are keeping 
Plead for us before the Lord. 
Answer. Amen. 

Then is read the Second Lesson, either 
from the Scripture or from an Homily, 
or, on a Simple Feast, either the Second 
and Third Lessons from Scripture read 
together as one, or, if the Saint or Saints 
have two Lessons, the first of these. 

Then the Second Responsory, unless 
otherwise directed. On a week-day kept 
as such, this is the Second Responsory 
of the preceding Sunday, but in Paschal 
time there is added to it : 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

And the A?iswer of the Responsory is 
repeated again. 

On a Simple Feast the Second Re- 
sponsory in the Common Office for the 
class to which the Saint belongs, with the 
addition of " Glory be to the Father," 
d^c, and the repetition of the Answer. 



104 



THE PSA1 



Then the Reader sa 

Sir, be pleased to give the bless- 
ing. 

Third Blessing, if the Lesson be of 

Spirit's fire divine 
In our inmost being shine. 
wer, Amen. 

Third Blessing, for a Simple Feast, or 
if the Lesson be from an Homily. 



He that is the A 
To that high realm 
Amen. 

Then is read the Third Lesson ex 
from Scripture, or of the Homily 
on Simple Feasts, the Second or only 
Lesson of the Saint. 

Then, on Simple Feasts a/: 
in Paschal time save Rog 
Monday is said the Hyi) raise 

Thee, O God." But on 
as such out of Paschal time the Third 
Responsory of the preceding Sutu I 



105 



^uesbaj) at ICaub*. 



THE THIRD DAY OF THE WEEK. 



All as on Sunday, except as otherwise 
given here. 

The Psalms are as follows : 
Antiphon. O Lord. 

Psalm L. 
Have mercy upon me, &c. (/. 

8 7 ). 

Antiphon. O Lord, blot out my 
transgressions. 

Second Antiphon. The health. 

PsalmXLII. 

[The Vulgate and the LXX. ascribe this 
Psalm "to David."] 

JUDGE me, God, and plead 
my cause against an ungodly 
nation : * O deliver me from the 
unjust and deceitful man. 

For Thou, O God, art my strength : 
* why dost Thou cast me off? and 
why go I mourning, because of the 
oppression of the enemy ? 

O send out Thy light and Thy 
truth : * let them lead me and bring 
me unto Thine holy hill, and unto 
Thy tabernacles ! 

Then will I go unto the Altar 
\ of God, * unto God, the Gladdener 
of my youth ! 

vol. 11. 



Upon the harp will I praise 
Thee, O God, my God ! * why art 
thou cast down, O my soul? and 
why dost thou disquiet me? 

Hope thou in God : for I will still 
praise Him, * Who is the health of 
my countenance, and my God. 

Antiphon. The health of my 
countenance, and my God. 
Third Antiphon. Early. 

Psalms LXIL, LXVI. 

O God, Thou art my God, &c. 

(A 23). 

Antiphon. Early will I seek Thee, 
O God. 

Fourth Antiphon. Save us. 



The Song of Hezekiah, King of 
Judah. (Isa. xxxviii. 10.) 

[Intituled "The writing of Hezekiah, 
King of Judah, when he had been sick, and 
was recovered of his sickness." The his- 
tory will be found in 4 (2) Kings xx. (nth 
Sunday after Pentecost).] 

I SAID, In the midst of my days, 
* I shall go to the gates of the 
grave : 

I looked for the rest of my 
years. * I said, I shall not see the 
d 2 



io6 



THE I>.\LTER. 



Lord my God l in the land of the 

living : 

I shall behold man no more, * 
with the dwellers in the land of 
rest. 

Mine age is departed, and 
rolled up from me, * as a shepherd's 
tent : 

My life is rut off as by a weaver : 
my v, -carce begun when He 

cut me off: * from day even to 
night wilt Thou make an end of 
me. 

I thought I might live till morn- 
ing : * as a lion, so doth He break 
all my boi 

From day even to night wilt Thou 
make an end of me. * Like a 
swallow's fledgling so did I twitter, 
I did coo as a do\ 

Mine eyes fail, * with looking 
upward. 

LORD, I am seized, undertake 
for me. * What shall I say, or what 
will He answer me, seeing that He 
Himself hath done it? 

1 will call to remembrance before 
Thee all my years * in the bitter- 

of my soul. 
O Lord, if by these things men 
live, and in such things is the life 
of my spirit, so mayest Thou chasten 
and make me to live. * Be- 
hold, mine anguish is [turned] into 
ce : 

I Thou hast delivered my soul 
from destruction : * Thou has; 

all my sins behind Thy back, 
nnot pra 

: * they 
thai go down into the pit cannot 

: Thy truth. 



I do this day : * 
the father to the children shall make 
known Thy truth. 

O Loki ne : * and we will 

sing our songs all the days of our 
life in the house of the 

Save us all the da\ 
our life, O Lord. 

<th Antiphon. Praise ye the 

Lord. 



Psalms CXLVIII., CXI 

Praise ye the Lord from the 
heavens, &c. {pp. 25, 26). 

Antiphon. Praise ye the I 
from the heavens, all His Ar._ 

Chapter. (Rom. xiii. 

The night is far spent, 
.lay, p. 89). 

Hyi 

DAY'S In- raid bird 
At length is lu 

Telling its morni; ! lit. 

And small and still 

Christ's accents thrill 
Within the heart, rekindling 

With' languid 1 

And sickly slumbers profith 
I am at hand. 

•and. 
In awe, and truth, and holim 

l [e \\ ill appear, 
The heai I 

uppliants pale ami abstinent . 
Who 

With ho! 1 violent 



Prudcntiu 



TUESDAY AT LAUDS. 



07 



Keep us awake, 

The fetters break, 
JESU ! which night has forged for us ; 

Yea, melt the night 

To sinless light, 
Till all is bright and glorious. 

To Father, Son, 
And Spirit, one, 
To the Most Holy Trinity, 
All praise be given 
In earth and heaven, 

Amen. 



Verse. x Thou hast satisfied us 
early with Thy mercy. 

Answer. We rejoice and are glad. 

Antiphonfor the Song of Zacharias. 
The Lord hath raised up * an horn 
of salvation for us, in the house of 
His servant David. 

Commemoration of the Cross before 
the other general Commemorations, and 
Long Preces in Adve?it and Lent, and 
on Fast-days, as on Monday. 



1 Ps. lxxxix. 14. 



ioS 



SEUimcsbaj) at iftattins. 

THE FOURTH DAY OF THE WEEK. 



All as on Sunday except as otherwise 

Invitatory, In Thy hand, O 
Lord, * are the inmost depths of 
the earth. 

Hymn. 1 

WHO madest all and dost control, 
Lord, with Thy touch divine, 
Cast out the slumbers of the soul, 
The rest that is not Thine. 

Look down, Eternal Holiness, 

And wash the sins away 
Of those, who, rising to confess, 

Outstrip the lingering day. 

Our hearts and hands by night, O Lord, 

We lift them in our need ; 
As holy Psalmists give the word, 

And holy Paul the deed. 

Each sin to Thee of years gone by, 
h hidden stain lies bare ; 
brink not from Thine awful • 
I Jut pray that Thou wouldst spare. 

:.t this, O Father, Only Son, 
And Spirit, < 
To Whom all worship shall be done 
In every time and p A nun. 

Only one Nation is said* 

tiphon. God bringeth back. 
/// Paschal i iphon 

Hun. Alleluia. 



Psalm LI I. 

[Intituled "of David," with a further 
superscription, perhaps musical, but of a 
(now) uncertain meaning. The Targum 
gives it the additional superscription, 
render praise, for the reward of the impious 
who blasphemed the Name of the I 
It is a repetition of Pi, xiii.] 

'T^HE fool hath said in his heart : 
-*■ * There is no God. 

Corrupt are they and have done 
abominable iniquity : * there is 
none that doeth good. 

God looketh down from heaven 
upon the children of men, * to see 
if there be any that will understand, 
or that will seek God. 

Every one of them is gone back, 
they are altogether become unprofit- 
able : * there is none that doeth 
good, no, not one 

Have the workers of iniquity no 
knowledge, * who eat up my people 
as they eat bread ? 

They have not called upon 
* there were they in g] 
where no fear ffl 

d hath scattered the 1" 

of them that work that which is 

ting in the sight oi 

they are put tO shame, 1 >e< . 
hath despised them. 

O that the salvation i 



■ 



WEDNESDAY AT MATTINS. 



109 



were come out of Zion ! * when 
God bringeth back the captivity of 
His people, Jacob shall rejoice, and 
Israel shall be glad. 

Psalm LIV. 

[This Psalm has a superscription of which 
nothing can now be certainly interpreted, 
except the ascription of authorship " To 
David."] 

GIVE ear to my prayer, O God, 
and despise not my suppli- 
cation : * attend unto me and hear 
me. 

I mourn in my exercise ; * and 
am troubled, because of the voice 
of the enemy, and because of the 
oppression of the wicked. 

For they cast iniquity upon me : 

* and in wrath they hate me. 
My heart is sore pained within 

me : * and the terrors of death are 
fallen upon me. 

Fearfulness and trembling are 
come upon me : * and darkness 
hath overwhelmed me. 

And I said : O that I had wings 
like a dove, * for then would I fly 
away and be at rest ! 

Lo, then would I wander far off, 

* and remain in the wilderness. 1 

I waited for Him Who hath de- 
livered me * from distress of spirit 
and from tempest. 

Destroy, O Lord ! divide their 
tongues : * for I have seen iniquity 
and strife in the city. 

Day and night iniquity goeth 
round about upon her walls : * 
trouble also and unrighteousness are 
in the midst of her. 

Usury and guile * depart not 
from her streets. 

For if mine enemy had reproached 
me, * then I could have borne it. 



If he also that hated me had 
magnified himself against me, * 
then haply I would have hidden 
myself from him. 

But it was thou, a man like- 
minded, * my guide and mine ac- 
quaintance : 

We took pleasant meats together : 

* we walked unto the house of God 
in company. 

Let death come upon them : * 
and let them go down quick into 
hell; 

For wickedness is in their dwell- 
ings, * among them. 

But as for me I have called upon 
God : * and the Lord shall save 
me. 

Evening, and morning, and at 
noon will I complain and cry aloud, 

* and He shall hear my voice. 

He shall deliver my soul in 
peace from them that draw nigh 
against me : * for there were many 
against me. 

God shall hear and afflict them, 

* even He That abideth of old. 1 
Because they have no changes, 

therefore they fear not God. * He 
hath stretched forth His hand to 
requite them. 

They have broken His covenant : 
the anger of His countenance hath 
put them to flight, * and His wrath 
pursueth them. 

His words were softer than oil, 

* yet were they drawn swords. 
Cast thy burden upon the Lord, 

and He shall sustain thee : * He 
shall never suffer the righteous to 
be moved. 

But Thou, O God, shalt bring 
them down * into the pit of destruc- 
tion. 

Bloody and deceitful men shall 



SLH. 



no 



THE . 



not live out half their days : * but 
I will trust iu Thee, O Lord. 

: God bringeth I 
oi His people. 
Second Antip fc m. For in j bouL 



dm LV. 

[This Psalm 1. scure 

i part of this it - 
that it was written to he sung to a tune 
called "The dumb dove among forei^: 
The authorship I tovid, 

when the Philistines took him in Gath." 

This may either be the occasion described 

in the note on Ps. xx.viii. (p. 78), or that 

ted thus in I 111.) xxvii. 

"And David said in his heart : I shall now 
perish one day by the hand of Saul ; there 

ling better for me than that I should 
speedily escape into the land of the Philis- 
tines ; and Saul shall despair of me, to 

me any more in any coast of Israel ; 

• out 01 his hand. And 

David I he passed over, with the 

six hundred men that were with him, unto 

Achish, the son of Maoch, king of Gath. 

And it was told Saul that David was 
fled to Gath, and he sought no more again 
for him. 'J 

13 E merciful unto me, O God, for 
^ man treadeth me down : * he 
fighteth all the day long, and op- 
eth me 
Mine enemies tread me down all 
the day long : * for they be many 
that fight against me. 

■ if the morning m 
me afraid, * but I will trust in 

In God I will praise His word, 

it my trust : * I 

will not f( Beth can do unto 

• my 
* all their tfaou 
.il. 

ther 



and hide themselves : * they mark 

When they wait for my soul, 
for nothing shalt Thou 
them : * in Thine I hou 

shalt cast down the people. 

God. 1 have declared my life 
unto Thee, * Thou hast put my 

in Thy E 

hou hast promised. * 
Then shall mine enemies turn 

In whatsoever day I cry unto 
Thee : * behold, I know that Thou 
art my God. 

In God will I praise His word, 
in the Lord will I praise 
word : * in God have I put my 
trust, I will not be afraid what 
man can do unto me. 

Thy vows are upon me, O 1 

* I will pay them, even pi. 
unto Thee. 

For Thou hast delivered 
soul from death, and my feet from 
falling ; * that I may walk before 
God in the light of the h\ 

dm LYI. 

[Another long title of uncertain 
The Psalm seems to have been writt< 
a tune calli 

when he tied from Saul in tin 
Kings (Sam.) xxii. 1 — "David the: 
departed t hence >m Gath) " and 

Adullam. 
. \xxiii., p. 7S.] 

F)E merciful unto 1 
■ ' be merciful unto m 

my soul trusteth in Thee, 
a, in the shadow of Thj 

will I make my refuge, * until 

Iniquity be 01 

1 a ill cry unto I 

* unto God| That performed. 

me. 



. hi. 7. 



WEDNESDAY AT MATTINS. 



Ill 



He hath sent from heaven, and 
saved me : * He hath given for a 
reproach them that trod me down. 1 

God hath sent forth His mercy 
and His truth ; * and delivered my 
soul from among the lions' whelps ; 
I was troubled in my sleep. 

As for the sons of men, their 
teeth are spears and arrows, * and 
their tongue a sharp sword. 

Be Thou exalted, O God, above 
the heavens : * and let Thy glory 
be over all the earth. 

They prepared a net for my 
steps ; * and bowed down my soul. 

They digged a pit before me : * 
into the midst whereof they are 
fallen themselves. 1 

Mine heart is ready, O God, 
mine heart is ready : * I will sing, 
and give praise. 

Awake up, my glory ; awake, 
psaltery and harp : * I will awake 
early. 

I will praise Thee, O Lord, among 
the people ; * and sing unto Thee 
among the nations. 

For Thy mercy is great unto the 
heavens, * and Thy truth unto the 
clouds. 

Be Thou exalted, O God, above 
the heavens : * and let Thy glory 
be above all the earth. 

Antiphon. 2 For my soul trusteth 
in Thee. 

Third Antiphon. Judge uprightly. 



Psalm LVII. 

[This Psalm has the same title as the last, 
except the historical reference.] 

T F ye indeed speak righteousness, 
-■■ * judge uprightly, O ye sons of 
men. 



1 SLH. 



Yea, in heart ye work wickedness : 
* your hands weigh out violence in 
the earth. 

The wicked are estranged from 
the womb, they go astray from the 
belly, * speaking lies. 

Their poison is like the poison of 
a serpent : * they are like the deaf 
adder, that stoppeth her ears ; 

That will not hearken to the 
voice of charmers, * nor of the 
sorcerer charming never so wisely. 

God shall break their teeth in 
their mouth : * the Lord shall 
break off the great teeth of the 
lions. 

They shall melt away as waters 
which run down : * He bendeth 
His bow until they be shattered. 

They shall melt away like melting 
wax : * fire taketh hold upon them 
and they see not the sun. 

As thorns that are plucked up 
before ever they be grown into a 
bush : * so even in their greenness, 
shall He root them up in His 
anger. 

The righteous shall rejoice when 
he seeth the vengeance : * he shall 
wash his hands in the blood of the 
wicked. 

And man shall say : Verily, there 
is a reward for the righteous, * 
verily there is a God That judgeth 
the earth. 



Psalm LVIII. 

[This Psalm has the same title as the two 
last, with the addition : — " when Saul sent, 
and they watched the house, to kill him." 
The occasion is thus described in I Kings 
(Sam.) xix. II. " Saul also sent messengers 
unto David's house, to watch him, to slay 
him in the morning ; and Michal, David's 
wife, told him, saying : If thou save not thy 

2 Ps. lvi. 2. 



I I 2 



Till. PSALTER. 



life to-night, to-morrow th -lain. 

let David down through a 
window, and he went, and fled, and 
escape 

T AKI.IYKR me from mine ene- 
*^ mi my God: * and 

defend me from them that rise up 
against me. 

Deliver me from the workers of 
iniquity : * and save me from bloody 
men. 

For, lo, they lie in wait for my 
life : * the mighty have fallen upon 
me. 

Not for my transgression, not for 
my sin, O Lord ; * I ran and 
ordered myself without fault. 

Awake to meet me, and behold : 

* O Thou, the Lord God of hosts, 
the God of Israel ! 

Awake to visit all the heathen : 

* be not merciful to any wicked 
transgressors. 1 

They come at evening and hunger 
like dogs ; * and go round about 
the city. 

Behold, they yelp with their 
mouth, and a sword is in their lips : 

* for who, say they, doth hear ? 

But Thou, C) Lord, shalt laugh 
at them : * Thou shalt bring all 
the heathen to nought. 

O my strength, I will wait upon 
Thee, for Thou, O God, art my 
ice: * the mercy of my God 
shall receive me. 

God shall let me see all my 
re upon mine enemies: slay 

them not ; * lest my people foi 

them by Tin power : * 

and firing them down, () Lord our 
shield ! 

I of their mouth, and 

of their lips : * let them 
i. u. 



And at the end they shall be 
spoken of for cursing and h 

* and in the wrath at the end 
shall perish. 

Ami they shall know that I 
ruleth in Jacob, * and unto the 
ends of the earth. 1 

They shall return at evening, 
and hunger like dogs: * and 
round about the i 

They shall wander up and d< 
for meat ; * and grudge if the 
not satisfied. 

Hut I will sing of Thy pov. 

* yea, I will sing aloud of 
mercy in the morning. 

For Thou hast been my def< 

* and refuge in the day oi 
trouble. 

L'nto Thee, O my strength, will 
I sing, for God is my defen 
the God of my mercy. 

tipJion. 2 Judge uprightly, O 
ye sons of men. 

Fourth A)itiphon. Give us. 



Psalm LIX. 

[This Psalm has a superscript i 
ably musical, hut the meaning of which 
now uncertain. It then proceeds :— " ( 
David, when he strove with Me- 
ant! with Western Syria, when Joab r 
turned and smote 
of Salt'' (viz. the Jordan valley 
Dead Sea) "twelve thousand." The Q 

cation was some i 

David carried on against several Deighbov 
ins kings, and winch 

... I viii. and I 
wiii. Tlu ve l>e< 

written und 

during the campaign.] 

Ot ;< >i >. Thou hast 
and d us: ' 

hast been disp 
upon us. 

- Pi h 






WEDNESDAY AT MATTINS. 



113 



Thou hast made the earth to 
tremble, and hast broken it : * 
heal the breaches thereof, for it 
shaketh. 

Thou hast showed Thy people 
hard things : * Thou hast made 
us to drink the wine of astonish- 
ment. 

Thou hast given a warning to 
them that fear Thee, * that they 
may fly from before the bow. 1 

That Thy beloved may be deliv- 
ered : * save with Thy right hand, 
and hear me. 

God hath spoken in His holi- 
ness : * I will rejoice and divide 
Shechem, and mete out the valley 
of booths. 2 

Gilead is mine, and Manasseh 
is mine : * Ephraim also is the 
strength of mine head. 3 

Judah is my King : * Moab is 
the vessel [of the triumph] of mine 
hope. 4 

Over Edom will I cast out my 
shoe : * over the " Strangers " 5 
have I triumphed. 

Who will bring me into the 
strong city? * who will lead me 
into Edom? 

Wilt not Thou, O God, Who 
hast cast us off? * and wilt not 
Thou go out with our armies, O 
God? 

Give us help from trouble : * 
for vain is the help of man. 

Through God we shall do vali- 
antly : * for He it is That shall 
tread down our enemies. 



Psalm LX. 

[Intituled "of David." It has also a 
musical (?) superscription now of uncertain 
meaning.] 

TTEAR my cry, O God : * attend 
^ *- unto my prayer. 

From the ends of the earth I 
cried unto Thee : * when mine 
heart was overwhelmed, Thou didst 
lift me up upon a rock. 

Thou didst lead me, for Thou 
hast been a shelter for me, * a 
strong tower from the enemy. 

I will abide in Thy tabernacle 
for ever : * I will make my 
refuge in the covert of Thy 
wings. 1 

For Thou, O God, hast heard 
my vows : * Thou hast given the 
heritage to those that fear Thy 
name. 

Thou wilt prolong the King's 
life : * and his years to many 
generations. 

He shall abide before God for 
ever : * who will seek for His 
mercy and truth? 

So will I sing praise unto Thy 
name for ever : * that I may daily 
perform my vows. 

Antiphon. 6 Give us help from 
trouble, O Lord. 

Fifth Antiphon. Doth not my 
soul. 

If this Antiphon be used the Psalm 
commences with the words " Wait upon 
God." 



1 SLH. 

2 Shechem, now Nablus, in the valley between Mounts Ebal and Gerizim, called the 
I valley of booths" from those which Jacob erected there for his cattle. Gen. xxxiii. 17. 

3 These three form the central district of the Land of Promise. 

4 The Hebrew is — " Moab is my wash-pot," that is, a receptacle for off-scourings. The 
comparison is with the Divinely appointed sovereignty of Judah, respecting whom see 
Gen. xlix. 10. 

5 That is, the Philistines. 6 Ps. lix. 13. 



H4 



.LTER. 



Jra LXI. 

[Thi> Psalm 1 i}H.-r- 

n.] 

[ \<>1'H not my soul wait upon 
*^ God? * fur from Him com- 
eth my salvation. 

He only is my Cod and my 
tion : * He is my deleft 
shall not be greatly moved. 

How long will ye run together 
,st a man? * Do ye slay, all 
of you [one that is] as a bowing 
wall and as a tottering fence? 

Truly they imagined to cast me 
down from mine honour, when I 
ran in my thirst : * they blessed 
with their mouth and cursed in 
their heart. 1 

But wait thou on God, O my 
soul : * for mine expectation is 
from Him. 

For He only is my God and my 
salvation : * He is mine helper, I 
shall not be moved. 

In God is my salvation and my 
glory : * He is the God of my 
strength, and my refuge is in God. 

Trust in Him, ye congregation 
of the people, pour out your heart 
before him : * God is our help for 
ever. 1 

Surely the BOns of men are vanity, 
the sons of men are a lie in the 
balance : * they are a deceit, alto- 
r lighter than vanity. 

Tru^t not in iniquity, and desire 
not robbery : * if riches incp 
set not your heart upon them. 

'1 hath spoken on ! two 

thing rd; thai power be- 

also unto I | 

I hou 

rding 
to his works. 



lm I. XIII. 

[Intituled u A Psalm i 

ription of meaning 

i in.] 

T_J EAR my voi 

-*• ^ prayer : * my life 

from fear of the enemy. 

Thou hast hidden me from the 
secret counsel of the wicked, * from 
the insurrection of the worker 
iniquity. 

For they whet their tongue like 
a sword : * they bend their 

. even bitter words, that 
may shoot in secret at the 
feet. 

Suddenly do they shoot at him 
and fear not : * they encou 
themselves in evil purpose. 

They commune of lay in _ 
privily : * they say : Who shall see 
them ? 

They search out iniquities : 
they accomplish a diligent search. 

Man shall attain to thou_ 
are very deep : * but God shall 
[still] be exalted. 

The arrows of babes have pie; 
them : * and their tongues are 
weakened against them. 

All that saw them were moi 

* and all men feared. 

And declared the work 
* and und< 
doings. 

The righteous shall be glad in 
the LORD, ami shall trust in 1 

* and all the upright in heart shall 
glory. 

tiphon. - Doth not my soul 
wait upon God? 

,th Antiphon. 1'. 



SLH. 



WEDNESDAY AT MATTINS. 



115 



Psalm LXV. 

[Except the words " Psalm or Song" the 
title of this Psalm is not now certainly 
understood. The Vulgate and the LXX. 
add "for the uprising."] 

IV /T AKE a joyful noise unto God, 
*•**- all ye lands, sing forth the 
honour of His name : * make His 
praise glorious. 

Say unto God : How terrible art 
Thou in Thy works, O Lord ! * 
through the greatness of Thy power 
shall Thine enemies feign to submit 
themselves unto Thee. 

Let all the earth worship Thee, 
and sing unto Thee : * let them 
sing praises to Thy Name. 1 

Come and see the works of God ; 

* He is terrible in His counsels 
toward the children of men. 

He turned the sea into dry land, 
they went through the flood on foot : 

* there did we rejoice in Him. 

He ruleth by His power for ever, 
His eyes behold the nations : * let 
not the rebellious exalt themselves. 1 

bless our God, ye people : * 
and make the voice of His praise to 
be heard. 

Who holdeth my soul in life : 

* and suffereth not my feet to be 
moved. 

For Thou, O God, hast proved 
us : * Thou hast tried us with fire, 
as silver is tried. 

Thou broughtest us into the net, 
Thou laidst affliction upon our 
back : * Thou hast caused men to 
ride over our heads. 

We went through fire and through 
water : * and Thou broughtest us 
out into a place of refreshment. 

1 will go into Thine house with 



burnt-offerings : * I will pay Thee 
my vows, which my lips have uttered, 

And my mouth hath spoken, * 
when I was in trouble. 

I will offer unto Thee burnt- 
sacrifices of fatlings, with the in- 
cense of rams : * I will offer unto 
Thee bullocks with goats. 1 

Come, hear, all ye that fear God, 
and I will declare * what He hath 
done for my soul. 

I cried unto Him with my mouth, 

* and extolled Him with my tongue. 
If I regard iniquity in mine heart, 

* the Lord will not hear me. 
Therefore God hath heard me, 

* and attended to the voice of my 
prayer. 

Blessed be God, * Who hath not 
turned away my prayer, nor His 
mercy from me. 

Psalm LXVII. 

[The meaning of the title of this Psalm, 
except the ascription of authorship " To 
David," is now uncertain.] 

ET God arise, and let His 
-1— ' enemies be scattered : * let 
them also that hate Him flee before 
Him. 

As smoke is driven away, so let 
them be driven away : * as wax 
melteth before the fire, so let the 
wicked perish at the presence of 
God. 

But let the righteous be glad, and 
rejoice before God : * yea, let them 
exceedingly rejoice. 

Sing unto God, sing praises to 
His name : * spread a path before 
Him That rideth upon the heavens : 
The Lord 2 is His name. 



1 SLH. 

2 "The Lord" is here, as elsewhere, substituted out of profound reverence for the real 
name of God, the Unspeakable Word, called the " Tetragrammaton," from its four letters. 



u6 



THE PSA1 



re Him : * tear shall 
go before the face of Him Thi 
the Father of the fatherless, and the 
Judge of the widu. 

en God ill His holy habitation : 

* (iod, That maketh men to be of 
one mind in an house. 

He bringeth out those which are 
bound with chains, * but they that 
provoke Him dwell among the 

O (iod, when Thou wentest 
forth before Thy people, * when 
Thou didst march through the 
wilderness — l 

The earth shook ; the heavens 
also dropped at the presence of the 
of Sinai, * at the presence of 
the (iod of Israel. 

Thou, () (iod, didst send a plen- 
tiful rain - upon Thine inheritance : 

* Thou didst refresh Thine inheri- 
tance when it was weary. 

Thy flock dwelt therein : * Thou, 
rod, didst provide in Thy good- 
ness for the poor. 

The Lord gave the word * to 
the great company that published 
it. 

3 The king of the hosts is [fallen 
into the hands] of the Well-belowd : 

* and the fair ones that tarried at 
home have divided the spoils. 

Though ye have lien among the 

yet shall ye be as the 

a dove, covered with silver. 



* and her tail-feathers with yellow 
gold. 

When the [Cod] of heaven had 

scattered kings in it, then white as 

with snow was Salmon, 5 * that 

i, that fruitful hill. 

An hill of many peaks, a fruitful 
hill : * why look ye enviously 
the high hills? 

This is the hill which (iod de- 
sireth to dwell in : * yea, the Lord 
will dwell in it unto the* end. 

The chariots of (iod are man] 
times ten thousand, even thousands 
of the blessed : * the Lord is among 
them ; [as] in Sinai, [so] in the 
Holy place. 

Thou hast ascended on 
Thou hast led captivity captiv. 
Thou hast received gifts among 
men, 

Even them that believe not 
that the Lord (iod dwelleth among 
them. 

Blessed be the Lord daily : * the 
Cod of our salvation maketh our 
way prosperous. 7 

He That is our Cod is the I 
of salvation : * and unto the Lord, 
even the Lord, belong the is 
from death. 

But Cod shall wound the ! 
of His enemies : * the hairy - 
of such an one as goeth 
in his trespasses. 

The Lord said : 1 will bring 



.11. i haps the manna is n. 

I do : be remarked that the sense <>f this ■. In the yi< 

tranalatOl to be a play upon the name of David, whicl 

baps mi allusion to an army camping out in the fi 
6 A mountain in S 

Louring kil niui thinks thai 

a hitc with the i 

Ian, and th( ht of tin- I tarviihes, su; 

Id white with jibbaJ 

hem. 7 si. II. 



WEDNESDAY AT MATTINS. 



117 



them again from Bashan 1 : * I will 
bring them back from the depths 
of the sea. 

That thy foot may be dipped in 
the blood of thine enemies, * the 
tongue of thy dogs in the same. 

They have seen Thy goings, O 
God, * even the goings of my God, 
my King, Which dwelleth in the 
sanctuary. 

The singers went before, the 
players on instruments followed 
after, * among the damsels playing 
with timbrels. 

Bless ye God in the congrega- 
tions, even the Lord, * ye that are 
of the fountains of Israel ! 

There is little Benjamin, * in the 
joy of his heart, 

The princes of Judah, their 
leaders, * the princes of Zabulon, 
the princes of Nephthali. 

Command it, O God, in Thy 
strength : * strengthen, O God, that 
which Thou hast wrought for us. 

Because of thy temple at Jeru- 
salem, * shall kings bring presents 
unto Thee. 

Rebuke the beasts of the reeds, 2 
the multitude of the bulls with the 
cows of the people, * [who watch] 
that they may cut off them that are 
tried like silver. 3 

Scatter Thou the people that de- 
light in war : ambassadors shall come 
out of Egypt : * Ethiopia shall soon 
stretch out her hands unto God. 

Sing unto God, ye kingdoms of 
the earth : * O sing praises unto 
the Lord. 4 



O sing praises unto God, even 
unto Him that rideth upon the 
heaven of heavens * from the day- 
spring. 

Lo, He shall send out His voice, 
and that a mighty voice. Ascribe 
ye strength unto God j * over Israel 
is His excellency, and His strength 
is in the clouds. 

God is wonderful in His holy 
places : the God of Israel is He 
That shall give strength and power 
unto his people : * blessed be God. 

Antiphon. 5 O bless our God, ye 
people. 

Antiphon for Paschal time. Al- 
leluia, Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Then is said a Verse and Answer. 
In Advent. 

Verse. The Lord cometh out of 
His holy place. 

Answer. He will come and save 
His people. 

During the rest of the year. 

Verse. e O God, I have declared 
my life unto Thee. 

Answer. Thou hast put my tears 
in Thy sight. 

In Lent. 

Verse. His truth shall be thy 
shield. 

Answer. Thou shalt not be 
afraid for the terror by night. 

I?i Passion time. 

Verse. Take not away my soul 
with sinners, O God. 



1 The campaign of David related in 2 Kings (Sam.) viii. and 1 Par. (Chron.) xviii. 
extended to this neighbourhood. 

2 Perhaps meaning wild buffaloes. As to the comparison of the enemy to wild cattle, 
compare Ps. xxi. 13, " Many bulls have compassed me, strong bulls have beset me round." 

3 If the words are to be taken thus, the reference is perhaps to David's veterans, but the 
meaning seems more likely to be " those that submissively offer in tribute pieces of silver." 

4 SLH, 5 Ps. lxv. 8. 6 Ps. lv. 9. 



IS 



I I IK 



Nor my life with bloody 
men. 

//; Pas Jui I t: 

re glad, 

Alleluia. 

When! ie Lord, 

aia. 

The Mrd 

'/day, ex- 

UWS 

. 

to the rut, 
Chapter xxvii. 4, 5. of the General 
ics. 

to be rem em- 

that when a Simple Feast Is kept 

on W the Invitatoty and Hymn 

■ t, being taken from the 

:nts of the class, unless 

Then the Psalms and 

An tip/tons of the week-day, as given 

Then i I 'erse and An- 

r as foil ou 

For one or many Martyrs in Paschal 
time. 

Verse. l Everlasting joy upon 
their heads, Alleluia. 

<wer. They shall obtain joy 
and gladness, Alleluia. 

For one Martyr, (out of Paschal time.) 

Verse. - His glory is great in 
Thy salvation. 

Answer. Honour and great ma- 
shalt Thou lay upon him. 

For many Martyr*, (out of Paschal 
tin; 

Verse. 3 The righteous shall live 
1 ore. 
wer t 'l'ii' u reward also is 

with the Lord. 

hop and I 

/ - 1 for 

[/« Paschal t. Alleluia.] 

1 Im 



[/// /'aschal time, add Alleluia.] 
For a Confessor n 

• law of his 
in his heart. 

[In Paschal time, add Alleluia.] 
Answer. And his steps shall not 

slide. 

[/// Paschal time, add Alleluia,] 
>■ one Holy Woman of any kind. 

I erse. God hath chosen her, and 
fore-chosen her. 

[/// Paschal time, add Alleluia.] 
Answer. He hath made her to 
dwell in His tabernacle. 

[/// Paschal time, add Alleluia.] 

The oth, 't follows} 

to the end of th 
the Third Nocturn of the Offc, 

lints of the class, unless something 
special be appoints 
differences. The Lessons are art; • 
according to the rules in CJiaptcr 
4, of the general Rubrics. The Hymn 
" We praise Thee, O God," is sa; 
the end, instead of a Third Re spoil 
The Responsorics are ai 
ing to the Rules in Chapter xxvii. 4. 
the General Rubrics. Thus: — 

The Lord's P> 

OUR Father (inaudibiy), Who art 
in heaven, 1 [allowed be Thy 
Name. Thy Kingdom conic. Thy 
will be done on earth, as it i 
heaven. ( live US this day our 1 

bread. And forgive us our 
ive them that 
d.) 

d lead 

station. 

But delh 



\. l6. 



* r 






WEDNESDAY AT MATTINS. 



119 



Then this Absolution : 

MAY the Almighty and merciful 
Lord loose us from the bonds 
of our sins. 

Ansiver. Amen. 

Then the Reader says : 

Sir, be pleased to give the bless- 
ing. 

First Blessing; if the Lesson be from 
Scripture. 

May His blessing be upon us, 
Who doth live and reign for ever. 
Answer. Amen. 

First Blessing, if the Lesson be of an 
Homily. 

May the Gospel's saving Lord 
Bless the reading of His Word. 
Afiswer. Amen. 

First Blessing on a Si7nple Feast. 

May His blessing be upon us 
Who doth live and reign for ever. 
Answer. Amen. 

Then is read the First Lesson from 
Scripture or from the Homily, or on a 
Simple Feast either the First from 
Scripture, or, if the Saint or Saints 
have two Lessons, the whole three from 
Scripture read together as one. 



Then the First Respojisory, unless ing. 



otherwise directed. O71 a week-day kept 
as such, this is the First Responsory of 
the precedi?ig Sunday. On a Simple 
Feast, the First Responsory in the Com- 
mon Office for the class to which the 
Saint belongs. 

Then the Reader says : 

Sir, be pleased to give the bless- 



ing. 



of 



Second Blessing, if the Lesson be 
Scripture or from an Homily. 

God's most mighty strength alway 
Be His people's staff and stay. 
Answer. Amen. 



Second Blessing; for a Simple Feast. 

He (or She or They) whose feast-day 

we are keeping 
Plead for us before the Lord. 
Ansiver. Amen. 

Then is read the Second Lesson, either 
from Scripture or from a?i Homily, or 
on a Simple Feast either the Second 
and Third Lessons from Scripture 
read together as one, or if the Saint 
or Saints have two Lessons, the first 
of these. 

Then the Second Responsory, unless 
otherwise directed. On a week-day kept 
as such, this is the Second Responsory 
of the preceding Sunday, but in Paschal 
time there is added to it : 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

And the A?tswer of the Responsory is 
repeated again. 

O11 a Simple Feast the Second Re- 
sponsory in the Common Office for the 
class to which the Saint belongs, with 
the additioji of "Glory be to the 
Father," Qr'c, and the repetition of 
the Ansiver. 

Then the Reader says : 
Sir, be pleased to give the bless- 



Third Blessing. 

May He That is the Angels' King 
To that high realm His people bring. 
Answer. Amen. 

The?i is read the Third Lesson either 
from Scripture, or of the Homily, or on 
Simple Feasts the Second or only Lesson 
of the Saint. 

Then, on Simple Feasts and on any 
day in Paschal time is said the Hymn, 
"We praise Thee, O God." But on 
week-days kept as such out of Paschal 
time the Third Responsory of the pre- 
ceding Sunday. 



20 



(JBcbncsbag at i\uibs. 

THE FOURTH DAY OF THE WEEK. 



All as on Sundays, except as other- 
given here. 

The Psalms arc as follows : 
Antiphon, Wash me. 

Psalm L. 
Have mercy upon me, &c, (/. 

tiphon. Wash me throughly 
from mine iniquity, O Lord. 

Second Antiphon. Praise be- 
cometh Thee. 

If this Antiphon be used the Psalm 
begins with the words, "O God, in 
Zion." 

Psalm LXIV. 

[Intituled "A Psalm. A Song of 

ih a musical (?) superscription. 

The Vulgate adds that iu iw was pre- 

! iniah and K/ekiel to the 

when they began to return from 

the Captivity.] 

PRAISE becometn Thee, 
in Zion : * and unto Thee 
shall the vow be pi in Jeru- 

Hear my prayer: * unl 
shall all flesh con 

Ini'juitp i tis : * 

but i i bou 

shalt j 



Blessed is the man whom Thou 
choosest, and causest to come near 
unto Thee : * he shall dwell in 
Thy courts : 

We shall be satisfied with the 
goodness of Thine house : * Thy 
temple is holy, terrible in right- 
eousness. 

Answer us, O God of our salva- 
tion : * Thou that art the confidence 
of all the ends of the earth, and 
of the uttermost parts of the sea ! 

Thou that by Thy strength settest 
fast the mountains, being girded 
with power : * Thou that stirrest 
up the depth of the sea, and the 
noise of his waves ! 

The heathen shall be troubled. 
They that dwell in the uttermost 
parts shall be afraid at Thy tokens : 
* Thou makest the outgoings of the 
morning and evening to rej< 

Thou visitest the earth and u 
est it : * Thou greatly enriches! it : 

The river of Cod is full ol 

Thou makest ready their com, * for 
Thou hast so prepared it. 

1 trench her furrows, increase the 

fruits thereof: * the springil 

of shall i' her show 

Thou crown ar with Thy 

less : * and Thy fields I 
with huitfuliii 

Thi places of the 



WEDNESDAY AT LAUDS. 



121 



ness wax fruitful : * and the little 
hills are girded with joy. 

The pastures are clothed with 
flocks ; the valleys also overflow 
with corn : * they shout for joy, 
yea, they sing. 

Antiphon. Praise becometh Thee, 
God, in Zion. 

Third Antiphon. O my God. 

Psalms LXIL, LXVI. 
O God, Thou art my God, &c, 
(A 23). 

Antiphon. O my God, my lips 
shall praise Thee while I live. 

Fourth Antiphon. The Lord 
shall judge. 

The Song of Hannah, (i Kings 
(Sam.) ii.) 

[Composed by her when she brought her 
son Samuel and presented him to the Lord. 
See 1 Kings (Sam.) i. ii., (Monday and 
Tuesday after Trinity Sunday.)] 

A /TINE heart rejoiceth in the 
*^** Lord, * and mine horn is 
exalted in my God : * 

My mouth is enlarged over mine 
enemies : * because I rejoice in Thy 
salvation. 

There is none holy as the Lord ; 
for there is none beside Thee : * 
neither is there any mighty like our 
God. 

Talk no more * so exceeding 
proudly. 

Let your old arrogancy depart out 
of your mouth : for the Lord is a 
God of knowledge, * and by Him 
thoughts are judged. 

The bows of the mighty men are 
broken, * and they that stumbled 
are girded with strength. 



They that were full have hired 
out themselves for bread : * and 
they that were hungry are filled. 

So that the barren hath borne 
fruitfully : * and she that had many 
children is waxed feeble. 

The Lord killeth, and maketh 
alive : * He bringeth down to the 
grave, and bringeth up. 

The Lord maketh poor, and 
maketh rich : * He bringeth low, 
and lifteth up. 

He raiseth up the poor out of the 
dust, * and lifteth up the beggar 
from the dunghill, 

To set them among princes, * and 
to make them inherit the throne of 
glory : 

For the pillars of the earth are 
the Lord's, * and He hath set the 
world upon them. 

He will keep the feet of His 
saints, and the wicked shall be silent 
in darkness : * for by his strength 
shall no man prevail. 

The adversaries of the Lord shall 
be made to fear Him : * out of 
heaven also shall He thunder upon 
them. 

The Lord shall judge the ends 
of the earth : and He shall give 
strength unto His King, * and exalt 
the horn of His Anointed. 

Antiphon. The Lord shall judge 
the ends of the earth. 

Fifth Antiphon. Praise God. 

Psalms CXLVIIL, CXLIX., CL. 

Praise ye the Lord from the 
heavens, &c, {pp. 25, 26). 

Antiphon. Praise God, ye heavens 
of heavens. 



1 The Divine Name. 



122 



THE PSA1 



Chapter. (Rom. nil 12.) 

The night is far spent, &C., {as on 
A 89). 



Unmn. 1 

I [AUNTING gloom and flitting 
■ ' ides, 

Ghastly shftpe 
Christ is rising, and ; 

iven with d 

He with His bright spear the night 

Dazzles and pursu. 
Earth wakes up, and glows with light 

Of a thousand hues. 

Thee, O Christ, and Thee alone, 

With a single mind, 
We with chant and plaint would own ; 

To thy flock be kind. 



h it needs Thy liKht divine, 

:i to clean ; 
it of Ange hine 

With Thy face serene. 

To the Father, and the Son, 

And die Holy ( diost, 
Here be glory, as is done 

lie host. Amen. 

Verse. Thou hast sati>fied m 
early with Thy m< 

Answer. We rejoice and are glad.) 

Antiphon for the Song of Zacharias. 
O Lord, save us * from the hand of 
all that hate us. 

Commemoration of the Cross bcfo> 
other Commemorations, and I. 
in Advent and Lent, on the E 
Wednesdays {except that of Pent 
and on Fast-days, as on Mv> 



:nn founded on hymn in the Cathemerinon of Prudentius; translation by the late 
Card. Newman. 



123 



^fmrsbag at Jftattm*. 



THE FIFTH DAY OF THE WEEK. 



All as on Sunday, except as other- 
wise given here. 

Invitatory. It is the Lord That 
hath made us : * O come, let us 
worship Him. 



Hymn. 1 

A LL tender lights, all hues divine, 
■**- The night has swept away; 
Shine on us, Lord, and we shall shine 
Bright in an inward day. 

The spots of guilt, sin's wages base, 
Searcher of hearts, we own ; 

Wash us and robe us in Thy grace, 
Who didst for sins atone. 

The sluggard soul, that bears their 
mark, 

Shrinks in its silent lair, 
Or gropes amid its chambers dark 

For Thee, Who art not there. 

Redeemer ! send Thy piercing rays, 

That we may bear to be 
Set in the light of Thy pure gaze, 

And yet rejoice in Thee. 

Grant this, O Father, Only Son, 

And Spirit, God of grace, 
To whom all worship shall be done 

In every time and place. 

Amen. 

Only one No c turn is said. 

Antiphon. Make haste. 

In Paschal fane only one Antiphon 
is said to the whole Nocturn. Alleluia. 



Psalm LXVIII. 

[Intituled "Of David," with a (now un- 
certain) musical (?) direction.] 

for the 
waters are come in unto my 

* where 



CAVE i 

soul. 

I sink in deep mire, 
there is no standing. 

I am come into the depth of the 
sea, * and the flood overfloweth me. 

I am weary of my crying, my 
throat is dried : * mine eyes fail, 
while I wait for my God. 

They that hate me without a 
cause, * are more than the hairs of 
mine head. 

They that would destroy me, 
being mine enemies wrongfully, are 
mighty : * then I restored that 
which I took not away. 

O God, Thou knowest my fool- 
ishness : * and my faults are not 
hid from Thee. 

Let not them that wait on Thee, 
O Lord, be ashamed for my sake, * 
Thou Lord of hosts. 

Let not those that seek Thee * 
be confounded for my sake, O God 
of Israel. 

Because for Thy sake I have 
borne reproach : * shame hath 
covered my face. 

Ambrosian hymn ; translation by the late Card. Newman. 



124 



THE PSALTER. 



I am become a stranger unto my 
brethren, * and an alien unto my 
mother's children. 

For the zeal of Thine house hath 
eaten me up : * and the reproaches 
of them that reproached Thee are 
fallen upon me. 

And I chastened my soul with 
ng : * and that was to in) 
proach. 

I made sackcloth also my gar- 
ment, * and I became a proverb to 
them. 

They that sat in the gate spake 
against me, * and I was the song of 
the drunkards. 

But as for me, my prayer is unto 
Thee, O Lord : * in an acceptable 
time, O God ! 

In the multitude of Thy mercy 
hear me, * in the truth of Thy 
salvation ! 

Deliver me out of the mire, that 
I sink not : * deliver me from them 
that hate me, and out of the deep 
wate: 

Let not the waterflood overflow 
neither let the deep swallow me 
up, * and let not the pit shut her 
mouth upon me. 

Hear me, O Lord, for Thy 
loving - kindness is good : * turn 
unto me according to the multitude 
of Thy tender mercies. 

And hide- not Thy face from Thy 
nt, * for I am in trouble ; bear 
me speedily. 

Draw nigh unto my soul, and re- 
i it : * deliver me he< ause of 

ich, and 

my shame, * and my dishonour. 

Ui hath looked tor 
md bitten 

And I look 



pity on me, and there was non< 
and for comforters, and I found 
none. 

They gave me also gall for m< 

* and in my thirst they gave 

_ar to drink. 

I et their table be made a snare 
* and a recompt 
and a stumbling-block. 

Let their eyes be darkened, that 
they see not : * and ever bow Thou 
down their back. 

Pour out Thine indignation upon 
them, * and let Thy wrathful a 
take hold of them. 

Let their habitation be desolate : 

* and let none dwell in their tents. 

For they persecute him whom 
Thou hast smitten : * and they 
embitter the pain of my wounds. 

Add iniquity unto their iniquity : 

* and let them not come into Thy 
righteousness. 

Let them be blotted out of the 
book of the living : * and no: 
written with the righteous. 

But I am poor and sorrowful : * 
Thy salvation, O Cod, hath set me 
up on high. 

I will praise the name of God: 
with a psalm, * and will mas. 
Him with thanksgiving. 

And it shall pi :- better 

than a young bullock, * that hath 
horns and hoofs. 

Let the humble see this and be 
glad, * seek (iod, and your 
shall live. 

i the Lord heareth the poor: 

* and despiseth not His prison. 

I the heaven anil earth praise 
Him, * the sea, and everything 
that moveth therein. 

I id will s.t\( /ion. * and 
the I hall be built 

up. 



THURSDAY AT MATTINS. 



125 



And they shall dwell there, * 
and have it in possession. 

The seed also of His servants 
shall inherit it, * and they that 
love His name shall dwell therein. 

Psalm LXIX. 

[Intituled "Of David, to bring to re- 
membrance " with another (now uncertain) 
musical (?) superscription. The Vulgate 
and the LXX. add to remembrance ' ' how 
the Lord had saved him " ; the Targum 
associates the Psalm with the offering of 
'the incense. This Psalm is a repetition 
of the last four verses of Ps. xxxix.] 

MAKE haste, O God, to de- 
liver me : * make haste to 
help me, O Lord. 

Let them be ashamed and con- 
founded, * that seek after my 
soul. 

Let them be turned backward 
and put to confusion, * that de- 
sire mine hurt. 

Let them be turned back with 
shame, * that say unto me, Aha, 
['Aha. 

Let all those that seek Thee be 
joyful and glad in Thee, * and let 
such as love Thy salvation say con- 
tinually : Let the Lord be magnified. 

But I am poor and needy : * 
[help me, O God. 

Thou art mine help and my 
deliverer : * O Lord, make no 
tarrying. 

Antipkon. 1 Make haste, O Lord 
God, to deliver me. 

Second Antiphon. Be Thou my 
God. 

Psalm LXX. 

[The Vulgate and the LXX. give the 
heading, "A Psalm of David ; of the Sons 
jf Jonadab, and the first Captives." The 



sons of Jonadab are the descendants of 
Jonadab, the son of Rechab, of whose 
faithfulness to observe a nomadic life, 
and to abstain from wine, it is written 
in Jer. xxxv. 19: "Therefore thus saith 
the Lord of Hosts, the God of Israel : 
Jonadab, the son of Rechab, shall not 
want a man to stand before me for 
ever." They had taken refuge at Jeru- 
salem to escape the incursions of Nebu- 
chadnezzar, and the meaning seems to 
be that when they and others were carried 
away as captives, they made special use 
of this Psalm.] 

TN Thee, O Lord, have I put 
-*■ my trust, let me never be put 
to confusion : * deliver me in Thy 
righteousness, and cause me to es- 
cape. 

Incline Thine ear unto me, * 
and save me. 

Be Thou my God, my Pro- 
tector, and my strong habitation, 

* to save me. 

For Thou art my rock, * and 
my fortress. 

Deliver me, O my God, out of 
the hand of the wicked, * and out 
of the hand of the unrighteous and 
cruel man. 

For Thou art mine hope, O Lord : 

* O Lord, Thou art my trust from 
my youth. 

By Thee have I been holden up 
from the womb : * Thou art my 
defence from my mother's bowels. 

My praise shall be continually 
of Thee : * I am a wonder unto 
many : but Thou art my strong 
refuge. 

Let my mouth be filled with 
Thy praise, that I may sing of 
Thy glory, * all the day long of 
Thy greatness. 

Cast me not off in the time of 
old age : * forsake me not when 
my strength faileth. 



Ps. lxix. 1. 



THE PSALTER. 



r mine enemies speak against 
me, * and they that lay wait for 
»ul take counsel together, 

id hath forsaken him : 
persecute and take him, * for there 
is none to deliver him. 

O God, be not far from me: * 
O my God, make haste for mine 
help. 

them be confounded and 

consumed that are adversaries to 

-oul : * let them be covered 

with reproach and dishonour, that 

seek mine hurt. 

But I will hope continually, * 
and will yet praise Thee more and 
more. 

My mouth shall show forth Thy 
righteousness, * Thy salvation all 
the day. 

And because I know not the tale 
thereof, I will go in the strength of 
the Lord : * O Lord, I will make 
mention of Thy righteousness, even 
of Thine only. 

God, Thou hast taught me 
from my youth : * and hitherto 
have I declared Thy wondrous 
works. 

Now also when I am old and 
headed, * O God, forsake me 
not, 

Until I have showed Thy strength 
* unto all generations, that are to 
come. 

Thy power and Thy righteous- 
:. are in the highest, 
Who hast done great things : * O 
like unto Tl: 

Thou who hast showed me gi 

and » ibles, ihalt quicken me 

n : * and bring me up a 

from tli<- depths of the earth. 

Thou hast increased Tl 
ness : * and . aforted m 

1 will also pra on the 



psaltery, even Thy truth : 
God, unto Thee will I sing wit 
the harp, O Thou Holy Oi 
ell 

My lips shall be fain when 
unto Thee, * and my soul whic| 
Thou hast redeemed. 

My tongue also shall talk of Th 
righteousness all the day long : 
they are confounded and brougj 
unto shame that seek mine hurt. 

PSALM LXXI. 

[Intituled " Of Solomon,'" that is, writte 
concerning him. J 

r^ IVE the king Thy judgment, < 
^~* God, * and Thy righteoi: 
unto the king's son. 

To judge Thy people with righ 
eousness, * and Thy poor wit 
judgment. 

The mountains shall receive peac 
with the people, * and the little 
righteousness. 

He shall judge the poor of th 
people, and save the children of th 
needy, * and shall break in piece 
the false accuser. 

And he shall endure with tl 
and before the moon, * throughoi 
all generations. 

He shall come down like rai 
upon a fleece, * and as showers tha 
water the earth. 

In his days shall righteousnes 
flourish, and abundance of peace 

* so long as the moon endureth. 

He shall have dominion also frot 
ea : * and from the rive 

unto tin- endi ^( the earth. 

The Ethiopians shall fall I 
him : * and his enemies shall lid 
the dust. 

rush, and 



shall bring pre 






THURSDAY AT MATTINS. 



127 



kings of Arabia and Saba 1 shall 
offer gifts. 

Yea, all the kings of the earth 
shall fall down before him : all 
nations shall serve him. 

For he shall deliver the needy 
from the strong, * the poor also that 
hath no helper. 

He shall spare the poor and 
needy, * and shall save the souls of 
the needy. 

He shall redeem their soul from 
1 fraud and violence : * and precious 
shall their name be in his sight. 

And he shall live, and to him 
shall be given of the gold of Arabia ; 
prayer also shall be made for him 
continually ; * all the day long shall 
he be blessed. 

And there shall be a staff of 
bread in the land, upon the top of 
Wt mountains ; the fruit thereof 
shall be higher than Lebanon : * 
land they of the city shall flourish 
like grass of the earth. 

Blessed be his name for ever : * 
his name endureth as long as the sun. 

And in him shall all the kindreds 
of the earth be blessed : * all nations 
shall call him blessed. 

Blessed be the Lord God of Is- 
rael, * Who only doth wondrous 
things. 

And blessed be His glorious 
Name for ever : * and let the whole 
earth be filled with his glory : Amen, 
Amen. 2 

Antiphon. 3 Be Thou my God, 
my protector. 

Third Antiphon. Thou hast re- 
deemed the rod. 



Psalm LXXII. 
[Intituled " A Psalm of Asaph."] 

^TRULY God is good to Israel, * 
*- to such as are upright in 
heart. 

But as for me, my feet were al- 
most gone : * my steps had well 
nigh slipped. 

For I was envious at the un- 
righteous, * when I saw the pros- 
perity of the wicked. 

For they have no thought of 
death : * and they are uncon- 
cerned in trial. 

They are not in trouble as other 
men, * neither are they plagued like 
other men. 

Therefore pride compasseth them 
about, * violence and ungodliness 
cover them as a garment. 

Their iniquity ariseth as it were 
from fatness : * they have more 
than heart could wish. 

They think and speak wickedness : 
* they speak loftily concerning op- 
pression. 

They set their mouth against the 
heavens, * and their tongue walketh 
through the earth. 

Therefore my people turn aside 
after them : * and the men of their 
day run after them. 

And they say : How doth God 
know, * and is there knowledge in 
the Most High ? 

Behold, these are the ungodly, 
who prosper in the world, * they 
increase in riches. 

And I said : Then I have cleansed 
mine heart in vain, * and washed 
mine hands in innocency. 



1 This seems to be Meroe, a province of Ethiopia. 

2 After this, there is the following notification, "The prayers of David, the son of 
Jesse, are ended," and this is the end of the second of the five books into which the 
Psalter is divided. 3 Ps. lxx. 3. 



128 



THE PSAJ 



For all the- day long have I been 
Bed, * and chastened i 
morning. 

If I say : I will apeak thus : * 
behold, I should disown the gener- 
ation of Thy children. 

d I thought to know this, * 
it was too hard for me : 

Until I went into the Sanctuary 
of God, * and understood their 
. Iter. 

Surely Thou dost set them in 
slippery places : * Thou castest 
them down even in their pros- 
perity. 

How are they brought into deso- 
lation ? In a moment are they 
perished, * they are utterly con- 
sumed because of their wickedness. 

As a dream when one awaketh, 

Lord, * Thou shalt bring their 
image to nought in Thy city. 

For mine heart was on fire, and 

1 was pricked in my reins ; * and I 

brought to nothing and knew 
not : 

I became as a beast before Thee : 

* nevertheless I am continually with 
Thee : 

Thou hast holden me by my 
right hand, and guided me accord- 
ing to Thy will, * and received me 
to glory. 

For what have I in heaven, * and 
what is there upon earth that I 
desire beside T1m 

My Beth and mine heart faileth : 

* Thou ai rod of mine heart, 
and God is my portion for ev 

For, lo, they that go far from 

i turn hast 

; all them that go a uhur- 

tor me to draw 
* to put my trust in 



That I may declare all Th) 
praises, * in the gates of tru 
daughter of Zion. 

Am LXXIII. 

[Intituled "A didactic (?) 
Asaph."] 

0( .< >1>. why hast Thou ca 
off for ever : * why dotrJ 
Thine anger smoke against the 
sheep of Thy pasture? 

Remember Thy congregation, * 
which Thou hast purchased 01 
old. 

Thou hast redeemed the rod o)| 
Thine inheritance: * Mount Ziou 
wherein Thou hast dwelt. 

Lift up Thine hands against theii 
perpetual pride : * even all that 
the enemy hath done wicked 
the sanctuary ! 

They also that hate Thee 
in the midst of Thy solemn con 
negation. 

They set up their ensigns foi 
trophies * on the pinnacles [of Thy 
temple] as though it had been the 
gate [of their own city] ; and caf| 
sidered not ! 

As the fellers in a wood of thick 
trees, so did they hew down the 
gates thereof: * they have i >rokf 
it down with axes and hami 

They have set on lire Th) 
tuary : * they have defiled tfl 

dwelling-place of Thy name by 

casting it down to the ground. 
The sort of them said in their 
with one consent : * 
put away the I 
of the land. 

\\ ( ice not our signs, thei 

more- any piophet : * and 

knoweth ui any more. 

long shall the ad- 



THURSDAY AT MATTINS. 



I29 



versary reproach ? * Shall the enemy 
blaspheme Thy name for ever ? 

Why withdrawest Thou Thine 
hand, even Thy right hand, * from 
Thy bosom for ever ? 

But God is our King of old, * 
working salvation in the midst of 
the earth. 

Thou by Thy strength didst 
make the sea to stand on an heap : 
* Thou brakest the heads of the 
dragons in the waters. 

Thou brakest the heads of le- 
I viathan in pieces : * Thou gavest 
him to be meat to the people 1 of 
I Ethiopia. 

Thou didst cleave the fountains 
and the floods : * Thou driedst up 
the rivers of Ethan. 2 

The day is Thine, the night also 
is Thine : * Thou hast created the 
light and the sun. 

Thou hast set all the borders of 
the earth : * Thou hast made 
summer and spring. 

Remember this, that the enemy 
hath reproached the Lord : * and 
that a foolish people have blas- 
phemed Thy name. 

O deliver not unto beasts the 
souls of them that praise Thee : * 
and forget not the souls of Thy poor 
> for ever. 

Have respect unto Thy cove- 
nant : * for the dark places of the 
; earth are full of the habitations of 
cruelty. 

O let not the oppressed return 
ashamed : * let the poor and needy 
praise Thy name. 

Arise, O God, judge Thine own 



cause : * remember how the foolish 
man reproacheth Thee daily. 

Forget not the voice of Thine 
enemies : * the pride of them that 
hate Thee ascendeth continually. 

Antiphon. 3 Thou hast redeemed 
the rod of Thine inheritance. 

Fourth Antiphon. And we will 
call. 

Psalm LXXIV. 

[Intituled " A Psalm — A Song of Asaph," 
with a superscription of meaning now un- 
certain, but, in part, indicating the tune 
" Destroy not." The Targum says that it 
was composed as a thanksgiving at the time 
when David said " Destroy not thy people," 
and the occasion meant is probably that of 
the plague provoked by David's number- 
ing of the people, as related in the last 
chapter of 2 Kings (Sam.)] 

UNTO Thee, O God, will we 
give thanks : * we will give 
thanks and call upon Thy name. 

We will declare Thy wondrous 
works : * when I shall take a set 
time, I will judge uprightly. 

The earth and all the inhabitants 
thereof are dissolved : * I bear up 
the pillars of it. 4 

I said unto the wicked : Deal 
not wickedly : * and to the evil- 
doers : Lift not up your horn on 
high. 

Lift not up your horn on high : 
* speak not wickedness against 
God. 

For neither from the east, nor 
from the west, nor from the desert 
mountains : * for God is the judge : 

He putteth down one, and setteth 
up another : * for in the hand of the 

1 People — probably referring to the wild beasts, (as in Proverbs xxx. 25, 26, "The ants 
are a people not strong — the conies are but a feeble folk ") who ate the dead bodies of the 
Egyptians (whose power seems meant by the leviathan) washed upon the shores of the 
Red Sea. 

2 Ethan = continuity — "The continuously flowing streams." 



3 Ps. lxxi 



SLH. 



VOL. II. 



130 



THE I 



Lord the: up of strong wine 

full of mixtu: 

And he tumeth it this way and 
that : >ui s thereof are 

not wrung out : * all the wicked of 
the earth shall drink them. 

But I will declare t * I 

will sing praises to the (iod of Jacob. 

All the horns of the wicked also 
will I break : * and the horns of the 
righteous shall be exalted. 

Psalm LXXV. 

[Intituled "A Psalm— A Song of Asaph," 
with a farther superscription similar to the 
preceding. The Vulgate and the LXX. add 

-vrians " ; the meaning pro- 
bably is that it was found appropriate as a 
Psalm of thanksgiving after the destruction 
of the Assyrians (3 (2) Kings xix. 35).] 

IN Judah is God known : * His 
name is great in Israel. 
And His tabernacle is in " Peace," 2 

* and His dwelling-place in Zion. 
There brake He the arrows of the 

bow, * the shield, the sword, and 
the battle. 3 

When Thou didst make Thy light 
to shine forth right wondrously from 
the everlasting hills : * all they that 
were foolish of heart were troubled : 

They have slept their sleep : * 
and all the men of riches have found 
nothing in their hands. 

At Thy rebuke, God of Jacob, 

* they that rode upon horses are 
Catt into a dead ill 

Thou art to be tod who 

shall withstand Thee, * wi. 
Thou art angry? 

Thou d judgment to 

from heaven i * the earth 

>led and was still, 



When God arose to judgment, * 
ve all the meek of the 
r the thoughts of man shall 
hee : * the remainder of 
his thoughts shall keep holy his 
before Thee. 

\<>w, and pay unto the Lord 
your God : * all ye that are round 
about Him bring presents, 

Even unto Him That ought to be 
feared, and that cutteth off the spirit 
of princes, * to Him That is terrible 
among the kings of the earth. 

Antiphon. 4 And we will call 
upon Thy name, O Lord. 

Fifth Antiphon. Thou art the 
God. 

dm LXXVI. 

[Intituled "A Psalm of Asaph," u 
musical (?) direction, addressed to Jeduthun.] 

[ CRIED unto the Lord with my 

* voice ; * even unto God with 
my voice, and He gave ear unto 
me. 

In the day of my trouble 1 
sought the Lord ; in the night with 
my hands I sought Him * and failed 
not. 

My soul refused to be com for: 

* I remembered God, and rejo 
and pondered, and my spirit 
overwhelm 

Mine eyes anticipated the n 
watches j * 1 was troubled, and 
spake not. 

1 have considered th< 

* and hail in mind t: 

In the night also I commune with 
mine own heart : * and 1 in 
i bed out mine own spirit 



th wine to 

..!!. 4 1 



THURSDAY AT MATTINS. 



131 



Will God cast off for ever? * or 
will He be favourable no more ? 

Or will He put away His mercy 
for ever, * to generation and genera- 
tion ? 

Or hath God forgotten to be 
gracious ? * or will He in His anger 
shut up His tender mercies ? 1 

And I said : Now have I begun : 

* the change cometh of the right 
hand of the Most High. 

I remembered the works of the 
Lord : * surely I will remember 
Thy wonders of old. 

I will meditate also of all Thy 
work : * and talk of Thy doings. 

Thy way, O God, is in the sanc- 
tuary. Who is so great a God as our 
God? * Thou art the God That 
doest wonders. 

Thou hast declared Thy strength 
among the people : * Thou hast with 
Thine arm redeemed Thy people, 
the sons of Jacob and Joseph. 1 

The waters saw Thee, O God, 
the waters saw Thee : * and they 
were afraid, the depths also were 
troubled. 

There was a noise as of many 
waters, * the clouds sent out a 
sound. 

Thine arrows also went abroad : 

* the voice of Thy thunder rolled. 
Thy lightnings lightened the 

world : * the earth trembled and 
shook. 

Thy way is in the sea, and Thy 
paths in the great waters : * and 
Thy footsteps are not known. 

Thou leddest Thy people like a 
flock, * by the hand of Moses and 
Aaron. 



Psalm LXXVII. 

[Intituled " A didactic (?) poem of 
Asaph."] 

GIVE ear, O my people, to my 
law : * incline your ears to 
the words of my mouth. 

1 will open my mouth in para- 
bles : * I will utter dark sayings 
of old. 

Which we have heard and known, 

* and our fathers have told us. 
They are not hidden from their 

children, * in the generation to 
come : 

Showing the praises of the Lord, 
and His mighty acts, * and His 
wonderful works that He hath done. 

He established also a testimony 
in Jacob, * and appointed a law 
in Israel. 

Which He commanded our fathers 
that they should make known to 
their children : * that the generation 
to come may know them, 

Even the children which shall be 
born and arise, * and declare them 
to their children ; 

That they may set their hope in 
God, and not forget the works of 
God, * but keep His command- 
ments. 

And may not be as their fathers, 

* a stubborn and rebellious gen- 
eration, 

A generation that set not their 
heart aright, * and whose spirit 
was not steadfast with God. 

2 The children of Ephraim bend- 
ing and shooting with bows, * turned 
back in the day of battle. 

They kept not the covenant of 



1 SLH. 

2 The next few verses perhaps relate to the refusal of the children of Israel to in- 
vade the Land of Promise when they first reached it, owing to fear of the inhabitants. 
Numb. xiv. 






THE 



. * and to walk in 

law. 

And forgot His works, * and 
His wonders that He had showed 
them. 

Marvellous things did He in the 
sight of their fathers, in the land of 
»t, * in the plain of Tanis. 1 

He divided the sea, and caused 
them to pass through, * and He 
made the waters to stand as an 
heap. 

In the day - time also He led 
them with a cloud, * and all the 
night with a light of fire. 

He clave the rock in the wil- 
derness, * and gave them drink 
as out of the great depth. 

He brought water also out of 
the rock, * and caused waters to 
run down like rivers. 

And they sinned yet more against 
Him, * and provoked the Most 
High in the wilderness. 

And they tempted God in their 
hearts, * to ask meat for their 
lust. 

a, they spake against God : * 
they said : Can God furnish a table 
in the wilderness? 

liehold, He smote the rock, and 
the waters gushed out, * and the 
streams overflowed. 

i He give bread also, * or 
furnish a table for His people? 

'lb the Lord heard this, 

and th : * so a 

kindN . and I 

• ! aeL 
cv believed not in 
God, * and trusted not in 
salvation. 

And lie commanded the clouds 



from above, * and opened 
doors of heaven. 

And rained down manna upon 
them to eat, * and gave them of 
the bread of heaven. 

Man did eat Angels' bread: * 
He sent them meat to the full. 

He caused an east wind 
blow in the heaven : * and by 
power He brought in the south 
wind. 

He rained flesh also upon them 
as dust, * and feathered fowls like 
as the sand of the sea. 

And it fell in the midst of their 
camp, * round about their habita- 
tions. 

So they did eat, and were 
filled, and He gave them their 
desire : * they were not disap- 
pointed of their lust. 

But while their meat was yet in 
their mouths : * the wrath of ( iod 
came upon them. 

And slew the fattest of them, * 
and smote down the chosen men 
of Israel. 

For all this they sinned still, * 
and believed not in His wondrous 
works. 

Therefore their days were con- 
sumed in vanity, * And their \ 
in trouble. 

When He slew them, they sought 
Him: * and they returned, and 

enquired early aft< 

And tiny remembered that I 
ngth, * and the I 
( rod their redeen. 

I they Hat in with their 

mouth, * and lied unto Him with 
their 

For theii 



■ 

■ 



THURSDAY AT MATTINS. 



133 



with Him, * neither were they 
steadfast in His covenant. 

But He being full of compassion, 
forgave their iniquity, * and de- 
stroyed them not. 

Yea, many a time did He turn 
His anger away, * and did not stir 
up all His wrath. 

He remembered also that they 
were but flesh ; * a wind that 
passeth away and cometh not 
again. 

How often did they provoke 
Him in the wilderness? * grieve 
Him to anger in the desert? 

Yea, they turned again, and 
tempted God, * and provoked the 
Holy One of Israel. 

They remembered not His hand, 

* in the day when He delivered 
them from the hand of the op- 
pressor. 

How He set His signs in Egypt, 

* and His wonders in the plain of 
Tanis. 

And turned their rivers into 
blood : * and their floods, that 
they could not drink. 

He sent divers sorts of flies 
among them, which devoured them : 

* and frogs, which destroyed them. 
He gave also their increase unto 

the caterpillar, * and their labour 
unto the locust. 

And He destroyed their vines 
with hail, * and their sycamore 
trees with frost. 

He gave up their cattle also to 
the hail, * and their flocks to hot 
thunderbolts. 

He cast upon them the fierceness 
of His anger, * indignation, and 
wrath, and trouble, by sending evil 
Angels among them. 

He made a way to His anger; 
He spared not their soul from 



death, * and cut off their cattle in 
death with them. 

He smote also every first-born in 
the land of Egypt : * the first-fruits 
of all their labour in the tabernacles 
of Ham. 

And made His own people to go 
forth like sheep : * and guided them 
in the wilderness like a flock. 

And He led them on in hope, 
and they feared not : * and He 
overwhelmed their enemies in the 
sea. 

And He brought them to the 
mountain of His Sanctuary, * even 
the mountain, which His right hand 
hath purchased. 

He cast out the heathen also 
before them, * and allotted the land 
among them by line, 

And made the tribes of Israel to 
dwell * in their tents. 

Yet they tempted and provoked 
the Most High God, * and kept not 
His testimonies. 

And turned back, and observed 
not His covenant, * like their 
fathers j they were turned aside like 
a deceitful bow. 

They provoked Him to anger 
with their high places, * and moved 
Him to jealousy with their graven 
images. 

God heard it and cast them out : 
* and brought Israel utterly to 
nought. 

He forsook also the tabernacle of 
Shiloh, * even His tabernacle, where 
He dwelt among men. 

And He delivered their strength 
into captivity, * and their beauty 
into the enemy's hand. 

He gave His people over also 
unto the sword : * and cast off His 
inheritance. 

The fire consumed their young 






T! 






• mod their maidens made no 

fvir.cr.il sOOg, 

ests fell by the sword: 
• and their widows made no la: 

rd awaked as one 
out of sleep, * like • mighty man 
heated with wi 

il enemit- 
.inder part : * He put them to 
a perpetual shame. 

•reover, He refused the taber- 
e of Joseph, • and chose not the 
tribe 

But cho- be of Ju 

Mo. red 

• . like 
the horn >rn upon the 

earth, • which He hath established 

He chose 
and took him from the sheepfolds : 
-ves great with 
young He brought him, 

ed Jacol * and 

Israc nee. 

So he fed them according to the 

of his heart : • and guided 

lands. 

AntipHon. l Thou art the God 
That doest wonders. 

tk A n tip ho n. He merciful. 

III. 
! "Al'ulmof Aw|>! 
( \ 

holy temple hav< • 

they have made Jerusalem lik 
heap of stones in an • 

The dead 
hnrc ven to be meat i 



of Thy saints unto the beasts of the 
earth. 

Their blood ha\ hed like 

water round about Jerusalem : * and 
was none to bury them. 

We are become a reproach to our 
neighbours, * a scorn and derision 
tn that are round about us. 

How long, Lord? wilt Thou be 
angry for ever ? * shall Thy jealousy 
burn like : 

Pour out Thy wrath upon the 
heathen, that have not known T 

* and upon the kingdoms that have 
not called upon Thy name I 

For they have devoured Jacob, 

* and laid waste His dwelling-place. 
O remember not against us our 

former iniquities, let Thy tender 
mercies speedily overtake us : * for 
we are brought very low. 

Help us, O God of our salvation, 
and for the glory of Thy name de- 
liver us, () Lord: * and forgive our 
sins, for Thy name's sake. 

st haply they should say among 
the heathen: Where is their G 

* And make known among the 
nations in our sight 

Tl. mce of the bloc: 

Thy . which is shed : * let 

the sighing of the prisoners come 
iee. 
According to the is of 

Thine arm, * preserve Thou the 
children of the slain. 

id render unto our neighl 
nfold into their In their 

ach wherewith they hav< 
,01 ord I 

* will gi' 
than] 

w e will show forth Thy 
i >ns. 



THURSDAY AT MATTINS. 



135 



Psalm LXXIX. 

[Intituled "A Psalm of Asaph," with a 
direction, perhaps musical, the meaning 
of which is not now certain. The LXX. 
adds "concerning the Assyrian," probably 
meaning that it was used as a prayer 
after the destruction of Jerusalem by 
Nebuchadnezzar. ] 

GIVE ear, O Shepherd of Israel, 
* Thou That leadest Joseph 
like a flock. 

Thou That sittest upon the Cheru- 
bim, * shine forth before Ephraim, 
Benjamin, and Manasseh. 

Stir up Thy strength, and come 

* and save us. 

Turn us again, O God, * and 
cause Thy face to shine, and we 
shall be saved. 

O Lord God of hosts, * how 
long wilt Thou be angry against the 
prayer of Thy servant ? 

Wilt Thou feed us with the bread 
of tears, * and give us tears to drink 
in great measure ? 

Thou makest us a strife unto our 
neighbours : * and our enemies jest 
upon us. 

Turn us again, O God of hosts : 

* and cause Thy face to shine, and 
we shall be saved. 

Thou hast brought a vine out of 
Egypt : * Thou hast cast out the 
heathen and planted it. 

Thou preparedst room before it : 

* Thou didst cause it to take deep 
root, and it filled the land. 

The hills \lere covered with the 
shadow of it, * and the cedars of 
God with the boughs thereof. 

She sent out her boughs unto the 
sea, * and her branches unto the 
river. 1 

Why hast Thou broken down her 



hedge ? * so that all they which 
pass by the way do pluck her? 

The boar out of the wood doth 
root it up, * and the wild beast of 
the field doth devour it. 

Return, O God of hosts : * look 
down from heaven, and behold, and 
visit this vine ; 

And protect that Thy right hand 
hath planted, * and the son of man 
whom Thou madest strong for Thy- 
self. 

It is burnt with fire, and cut 
down : * they shall perish at the 
rebuke of Thy countenance. 

Let Thine hand be upon the man 
of Thy right hand, * and upon the 
son of man whom Thou madest 
strong for Thyself. 

So will we not go back from 
Thee ; * quicken us, and we will 
call upon Thy name. 

Turn us again, O Lord God of 
hosts : * and cause Thy face to 
shine, and we shall be saved. 

Antiphon. 2 Be merciful unto our 
sins, O Lord. 

Antiphon in Paschal time. Al- 
leluia, Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Then is said a Verse and Answer. 
In Advent. 

Verse. Out of Zion, the Per- 
fection of beauty, 

Answer. Our God shall come 
manifestly. 

During the rest of the year. 

Verse. 3 My lips shall be fain 
when I sing unto Thee. 

Answer. And my soul, which 
Thou hast redeemed. 



1 That is, the dominion of the Israelites stretched from the Mediterranean to the 
Euphrates. 2 Ps. Ixxviii. 9. 3 Ps. lxx. 23. 









ulh 



me 



from the snare of the fowi 

\nd from the noisome 
pestik 

I > God, deliver my soul 
from the sword. 

\nd my darling from 
the power of the dog. 



7 time 



is 



Lord 
the grave, Alleluia. 

Who hung for us upon 
the tree, Alleluia. 



The rest is the same as the i 
irn on the precediti. 
the Lessor metimes the Rt sport- 

sories, are those of the day. 



137 



^hxtrsiag nt % aubs. 



THE FIFTH DAY OF THE WEEK. 



All as on Sunday ', except as otherwise 



riven here. 



gi 



The Psalms are as follows : 



Antiphon. Against Thee, Thee 
only. 

Psalm L. 

Have mercy upon me, &c., {p. 

8 7 ). 

Antiphon, Against Thee, Thee 
only, have I sinned, have mercy 
upon me, O Lord ! 

Second Antiphon. Lord. 

If this Antiphon be used, the Psalm 
begins with the words, " Thou hast 
been." 

Psalm LXXXIX. 

[Intituled "A Prayer of Moses the man 
of God."] 

LORD, Thou hast been our re- 
fuge * in all generations. 
Before the mountains were brought 
forth, or ever the earth and the 
world were formed, * even from 
everlasting to everlasting, Thou art 
God. 

Turn not man to destruction ; * 
for Thou sayest, Return, ye children 
of men. 

For a thousand years in Thy sight 
* are but as yesterday when it is past, 
And their years shall be reckoned 
VOL. 11. 



as nothing, * even as a watch in 
the night. 

In the morning they are like 
grass which soon fadeth away : in 
the morning it flourisheth, and 
then it fadeth away : * in the 
evening it is cut down, drieth up, 
and withereth. 

For we are consumed by Thine 



anger 



and by Thy wrath are 



we troubled. 

Thou hast set our iniquities be- 
fore Thee, * our life in the light 
of Thy countenance. 

For all our days are passed away, 
* and we are consumed by Thine 
anger. 

The works whereon we toil all 
our years are but frail structures 
like a spider's web : * the days of 
our years are threescore years and 
ten : 

And if by reason of strength they 
be fourscore years, * yet is their 
increase but labour and sorrow : 

For weakness cometh, * and we 
are cut off. 

Who knoweth the power of Thine 
anger, * or can measure Thy wrath, 
that he may fear Thee as Thou 
oughtest to be feared? 

Show Thou the might of Thy 
right hand ; * and apply our hearts 
to wisdom. 

e 2 



138 



THE PSALTER. 



Return, O Lord, how long? * 
and let it intreat Thee concerning 
Thy servants. 

Thou hast satisfied us early with 
Thy mercy, * and we rejoice and 
are glad all our days. 

We are gladdened for the days 
wherein Thou hast afflicted us j * 
for the years wherein we have seen 
evil. 

Look upon Thy servants, and 
upon Thy works, * and establish 
their children. 

And let the beauty of the Lord 
our God be upon us ; and establish 
Thou the work of our hands upon 
us : * yea, the work of our hands 
establish Thou it. 

Antiphon. Lord, Thou hast 
been our refuge. 

Third Antiphon. I meditate. 

Psalms LXIL, LXVI. 

O God, Thou art my God, &c, 
(A 2 3)- 

Antiphon. I meditate upon Thee 
in the night watches. 

Fourth Antiphon. Let us sing. 

If this Antiphon be used the Canticle 
begins with the words, "Unto the 
Lord." 

The Song of Moses (Exod. xv.) 

[On the occasion of the successful escape 
of the Israelites through the Red Sea.] 

ET us sing unto the Lord, for 
^ ' He hath triumphed gloriously : 
* the horse and his rider hath He 
thrown into the sea. 

The Lord is my strength and 
my song, * and He is become 
my salvation : 

1 But in the present Hebrew text 



He is my God, and I will glorify 
Him : * my father's God, and I 
will exalt Him. 

The Lord is like a man of war : 
"The Almighty" 1 is His name. 

* Pharaoh's chariots and his host 
hath He cast into the sea. 

His chosen captains are drowned 
in the Red Sea. * The depths have 
covered them : they sank into the 
bottom as a stone. 

Thy right hand, O Lord, is be- 
come glorious in power : Thy right 
hand, O Lord, hath shattered the 
enemy. * And in the greatness 
of Thy majesty Thou hast over- 
thrown them that rose up against 
Thee. 

Thou sentest forth Thy wrath, 
which consumed them as stubble. 

* And with the blast of Thy fury 
the waters were gathered together, 

The floods stood upright, * and 
the depths were congealed in the 
heart of the sea. 

The enemy said : I will pursue 
and overtake, * I will divide the 
spoil ; my soul shall be sated upon 
them : 

I will draw my sword, * mine 
hand shall destroy them. 

Thy wind blew, and the sea 
covered them ; * they sank as lead 
in the mighty waters. 

Who is like unto Thee, O Lord, 
among the mighty? * who is like 
unto Thee, glorious in holiness, 
terrible, and worthy to be praised, 
doing wonders? 

Thou stretchedst out Thy right 
hand, and the earth swallowed them. 

* Thou in Thy mercy hast led 
forth the people which Thou hast 
redeemed : 

And hast borne them in Thy 
here stands again the Divine name. 



THURSDAY AT LAUDS. 



139 



strength, * unto Thine holy habi- 
tation. 

The people came up and were 
angry : * sorrow took hold on the 
inhabitants of Philistia. 

Then the princes of Edom were 
amazed, the mighty men of Moab, 
trembling took hold upon them : * 
all the inhabitants of Chanaan 
melted away. 

Let fear and dread fall upon 
them, * by the greatness of Thine 
arm : 

Let them be as still as a stone : 
till Thy people pass over, O Lord, 

* till Thy people pass over, which 
Thou hast purchased. 

Thou shalt bring them in and 
plant them in the mountain of 
Thine inheritance, * in Thy most 
sure dwelling, which Thou hast 
made, O Lord : 

In the Sanctuary, O Lord, which 
Thine hands have established. 

* The Lord shall reign for ever 
and ever. 

For the horse of Pharaoh went 
in with his chariots and with his 
horsemen into the sea, * and the 
Lord brought again the waters of 
the sea upon them : 

But the children of Israel went on 
dry land * in the midst of the sea. 

Antiphon. Let us sing gloriously 
unto the Lord. 

Fifth Antiphon. Praise God. 

Psalms CXLVIII., CXLIX., CL. 

Praise ye the Lord, &c, (pp. 25, 
26). 



Antiphon. Praise God in His 
Sanctuary. 

Chapter. (Rom. xiii. 12.) 

The night is far spent, &c, (as 
on Monday, p. 89). 

Hymn. 1 

CEE, the golden dawn is glowing, 
^ While the paly shades are going, 
Which have led us far and long, 
In a labyrinth of wrong. 

May it bring us peace serene ; 

May it cleanse, as it is clean ; 

Plain and clear our words be spoke, 

And our thoughts without a cloak ; 

1 

So the day's account shall stand, 
Guileless tongue and holy hand, 
Steadfast eyes and unbeguiled, 
" Flesh as of a little child." 

There is One Who from above 
Watches how the still hours move 
Of our day of service done, 
From the dawn to setting sun. 

To the Father, and the Son, 
And the Spirit, Three and One, 
As of old, and as in Heaven, 
Now and here be glory given. 

Amen. 

Verse. Thou hast satisfied us 
early with Thy mercy. 

Answer. We rejoice and are 
glad. 

Antiphon for the Song of Zacharias. 
Let us serve the Lord * in holiness, 
and He will deliver us from our 
enemies. 

Commemoration of the Cross before 
the other Commemorations, and Long 
Preces in Advent and Lent, and on 
Fast-days, as on Monday. 



1 Extracted from hymn by Prudentius ; translation by the late Card. Newman. 



: 4 o 



Jfribas at Jttattin*. 

THE SIXTH DAY OF THE WEEK. 



All as on Sunday, except as otherwise 
given here. 

Invitatory. Let us worship the 
Lord, for * He is our Maker. 



Hymn. 1 

MAY the dread Three in One, Who 
sways 
All with His sovereign might, 
Accept from us this hymn of praise, 
His watchers in the night. 

For in the night, when all is still, 
We spurn our bed and rise, 

To find the balm for ghostly ill, 
His bounteous hand supplies. 

If e'er by night our envious foe 
With guilt our souls would stain, 

May the deep streams of mercy flow, 
And make us white again ; 

That so with bodies braced and bright, 

And hearts awake within, 
All fresh and keen may burn our light, 

Undimmed, unsoiled by sin. 

Shine on Thine own, Redeemer sweet ! 

Thy radiance increate 
Through the long day shall keep our 
feet, 

In their pure morning state. 



Grant this, O Father, Only Son, 

And Spirit, God of grace, 
To whom all worship shall be done 

In every time and place. 

Amen. 

Only one Nocturn is said. 

Antiphon. Sing aloud. 

If this Antiphon be used the Psalm 
begins with the words, " Unto God our 
strength." 

In Paschal time only one Antiphon is 
said for the whole Nocturn. Alleluia. 

Psalm LXXX. 

[Intituled "Of Asaph." It has a super- 
scription of meaning now uncertain, but 
part of which perhaps means that it was 
a Hymn for the vintage.] 

SING aloud unto God our strength : 
* make a joyful noise unto the 
God of Jacob. 

Take a psalm, and bring hither 
the timbrel: * the pleasant harp 
with the psaltery. 

Blow the trumpet in the new 
moon, 2 * in the time appointed, 
on our solemn feast-day. 



1 From a hymn of the Ambrosian school, very slightly altered ; translation by the late 
Card. Newman. 

9 The ordinance referred to in this and the next verses is found in Numb. x. "And the 
Lord spake unto Moses, saying : Make thee two trumpets of silver, of a whole piece shalt 
thou make them. . . . And in the day of your gladness, and in your solemn days, and 
in the beginnings of your months, ye shall blow with the trumpets over your burnt-offerings, 
and over the sacrifices of your peace-offerings ; that they may be to you for a memorial 
before God. I am the Loud your God." 



FRIDAY AT MATTINS. 



141 



For this is a statute for Israel : 

* and a law of the God of Jacob. 
This He ordained in Joseph for 

a testimony, when he went out of 
the land of Egypt : * he heard a 
language that he understood not. 

He removed his shoulder from 
the burden, * his hands were done 
with slaving over the baskets. 

Thou calledst upon Me in trouble, 
and I delivered thee : * I answered 
thee in the secret place of thunder : I 
proved thee at the waters of strife. 1 

Hear, O My people, and I will 
testify unto thee : * O Israel, if 
thou wilt hearken unto Me, there 
shall no strange god be in thee, 
neither shalt thou worship any 
strange god. 

For I am the Lord thy God, 
Who brought thee out of the land 
of Egypt : * open thy mouth wide 
and I will fill it. 

But My people would not hearken 
unto My voice : * and Israel would 
not obey Me : 

So I gave them up unto their 
own hearts' lust : * they walked 
in their own counsels. 

that My people had heark- 
ened unto Me, * that Israel had 
walked in My ways ! 

1 should quickly have brought 
their enemies under them, * and 
turned Mine hand against their 
adversaries. 

The haters of the Lord would 
have feigned submission unto Him : 

* but their time should have en- 
dured for ever. 

He would have fed them also 
with the finest of the wheat : * 
and with honey out of the rock 
would He have satisfied them. 

1 SLrL For "the waters of Meribah" or 

2 SLH. 3 This verse was quoted by 



Psalm LXXXI. 
[Intituled "A Psalm of Asaph.' ; ] 

GOD standeth in the congrega- 
tion of the mighty : * He 
judgeth among the judges. 

How long do ye judge unjustly, 

* and accept the person of the 
wicked ? 2 

Defend the poor and fatherless : 

* do justice to the afflicted and 
needy. 

Deliver the poor, * and rid the 
needy out of the hand of the wicked. 

They know not, neither do they 
understand, they walk on in dark- 
ness : * all the foundations of the 
earth are out of course. 

3 1 have said : Ye are gods, * 
and all of you are children of the 
Most High; 

But ye shall die like men : * 
and fall like one of the princes. 

Arise, O God, judge the earth : 

* for Thou shalt inherit all na- 
tions. 

Antiphon. 4 Sing aloud unto 
God our strength. 

Second Antiphon. Thou alone. 



Psalm LXXXII. 

[Intituled " A Song. A Psalm of 
Asaph."] 

OGOD, who shall be likened 
unto Thee ? * hold not Thy 
peace, and be not still, O God. 

For, lo, Thine enemies make a 
tumult : * and they that hate Thee 
have lifted up the head. 

They have taken crafty counsel 
against Thy people, * and con- 
sulted against Thine holy ones. 

"strife," see note on Ps. xciv., p. 2. 

our Lord. John x. 34. 4 Ps. lxxx. 2. 



142 



THE PSALTER. 



Let them be confounded and 
troubled for ever : * yea, let them 
be put to shame and perish. 

And let men know that Thy 
name is the Lord : * Thou alone 
art the Most High over all the 
earth. 

PsalmLXXXIII. 

[Intituled "A Psalm of the sons of 
Korah. " It has the same superscription as 
Ps. lxx., referring possibly to the vintage. 
It reads as if it were a pilgrim-song refer- 
ring to the going up of all the males of 
Israel to Jerusalem to observe the Feast of 
Tabernacles, when harvest and vintage were 
over. ] 

TTOW lovely are Thy taberna- 
* * cles, O Lord of hosts ! * 
my soul longeth and fainteth for 
the courts of the Lord : 

Mine heart and my flesh * rejoice 
for the living God. 

Yea, the sparrow hath found an 
house, * and the dove a nest for 
herself, where she may lay her 
young, 

Even Thine altars, O Lord of 
hosts, * my King and my God ! 

Blessed are they that dwell in 
Thine house, O Lord; * they will 
be ever praising Thee. 2 

Blessed is the man whose strength 
is from Thee ; * who hath settled in 
his heart to go up [to thy Sanctu- 
ary,] through the vale of tears, 4 to 
the place which he hath appointed. 

He That hath given the Law will 

1 Of the list of tribes in the next few verses, the Ishmaelites are the inhabitants of Edom; 
Moab, and the Hagarenes, Gebal, Ammon, Amalek, tribes to the south and south-east of 
Canaan ; the " Strangers " are the Philistines ; Assur is Assyria ; the children of Lot are 
the Moabites and Ammonites. 2 gLH. 

3 The Midianites invaded Israel during the Judgeship of Gideon, who defeated them. 
Barak had previously, by a great victory between the Kishon and Endor, delivered his 
people from the tyranny of Jabin king of the Canaanites, whose general, Sisera, lost his life 
on the occasion. Oreb and Zeeb were two princes, and Zebah and Zalmunna two kings of 
the Midianites, whom the Israelites took prisoners and put to death on the second occasion. 
See Judges lv.-viii. 

4 Hebrew, "of Baca," probably the proper name of a place, but, literally, "weeping." 



They have said : Come and let 
us cut them off from being a na- 
tion : * that the name of Israel 
may be no more in remembrance. 

For they have consulted together 
with one consent : * they are con- 
federate against Thee : the taberna- 
cles of Edom, 1 and the Ishmaelites. 

Of Moab, and the Hagarenes; 
Gebal, and Ammon, Amalek, * the 
"Strangers" with the inhabitants 
of Tyre. 

Assur also is joined with them : 

* they have holpen the children 
of Lot. 2 

Do unto them as unto Midian, 3 
and Sisera : * as unto Jabin, at 
the brook of Kishon. 

They perished at Endor : * they 
became as dung for the earth. 

Make their nobles like Oreb 
and like Zeeb; * as Zebah and 
Zalmunna, 

All their princes : * who said : 
Let us take to ourselves the Sanc- 
tuary of God in possession. 

O my God, make them like a 
wheel [of whirling dust] ; * and as 
the stubble before the wind ! 

As the fire that burneth a wood, 

* and as the flame that setteth the 
mountains on fire. 

So pursue them with Thy tem- 
pest, * and trouble them in Thine 
anger. 

Fill their faces with shame : * and 
they will seek Thy Name, O Lord ! 



FRIDAY AT MATTINS. 



43 



give His blessing ; they shall go 
from strength to strength : * they 
appear before the God of gods in 
Zion. 

Lord God of hosts, hear my 
prayer : * give ear, O God of Ja- 
cob ! 1 

Behold, O God, our shield : * 
and look upon the face of Thine 
Anointed. 

For a day in Thy courts is better 

* than a thousand. 

1 had rather be a menial in the 
house of my God, * than to dwell 
in the tents of wickedness. 

For God loveth mercy and truth : 

* the Lord will give grace and 
glory. 

No good thing will He withhold 
from them that walk uprightly. * 
O Lord of hosts, blessed is the man 
that trusteth in Thee ! 

Antiphon. 2 Thou alone art the 
Most High over all the earth. 
Third Antiphon. Lord. 

If this Antiphon be used the Psalm 
begins with the words " Thou hast been 
favourable." 

Psalm LXXXIV. 

[Intituled " A Psalm of the sons of 
Korah," with the usual (now uncertain) 
superscription.] 

LORD, Thou hast been favour- 
able unto Thy land : * Thou 
hast brought back the captivity of 
Jacob. 

Thou hast forgiven the iniquity of 
Thy people : * Thou hast covered 
all their sins. 1 

Thou hast taken away all Thy 
wrath : * Thou hast turned Thyself 
from the fierceness of Thine anger. 



Turn us, O God of our salvation, 

* and cause Thine anger towards us 
to cease. 

Wilt Thou be angry with us for 
ever? * wilt Thou draw out Thine 
anger to all generations ? 

God, Thou shalt again quicken 
us : * and Thy people shall rejoice 
in Thee. 

Show us Thy mercy, O Lord ! * 
and grant us Thy salvation. 

1 will hear what the Lord God 
will speak in me : * for He will 
speak peace unto His people, 

And to His saints, * and unto 
them that are changed in heart. 

Surely His salvation is nigh them 
that fear Him, * that glory may 
dwell in our land. 

Mercy and truth have met to- 
gether : * righteousness and peace 
have kissed each other. 

Truth hath sprung out of the 
earth : * and righteousness hath 
looked down from heaven. 

Yea, the Lord shall give that 
which is good : * and our land shall 
yield her increase. 

Righteousness shall go before 
Him : * and shall set His footsteps 
in the way. 

Psalm LXXXV. 
[Intituled "A Prayer of David."] 

BOW down Thine ear, O Lord, 
and hear me : * for I am poor 
and needy. 

Preserve my soul, for I am holy : 

* O Thou my God, save Thy servant 
that trusteth in Thee. 

Be merciful unto me, O Lord, for 
I cry unto Thee all the day long : * 
rejoice the soul of Thy servant, for 



SLH. 



2 Ps. lxxxii. 19. 



144 



THE PSALTER. 



unto Thee, Lord, do I lift up my 
soul. 

For Thou, Lord, art good and 
ready to forgive, * and plenteous 
in mercy to all them that call upon 
Thee. 

Give ear, O Lord, unto my 
prayer : * and attend to the voice 
of my supplication. 

In the day of my trouble I called 
upon Thee, * for Thou hast heard 
me. 

Among the gods there is none like 
unto Thee, O Lord : * neither are 
there any works like unto Thy works. 

All nations whom Thou hast 
made shall come and worship be- 
fore Thee, O Lord : * and shall 
glorify Thy name. 

For Thou art great and doest won- 
drous things : * Thou art God alone. 

Teach me Thy way, O Lord, 
and I will walk in Thy truth : * 
let mine heart be glad, that it may 
fear Thy name. 

I will praise Thee, O Lord my 
God, with all mine heart, * and I 
will glorify Thy name for evermore. 

For great is Thy mercy toward 
me : * and Thou hast delivered my 
soul from the lowest hell. 

O God, the wicked are risen 
against me, and the assemblies of 
violent men have sought after my 
soul, * and have not set Thee before 
them. 

But Thou, O Lord, art a God full 
of compassion and gracious, * long- 
suffering, and plenteous in mercy 
and truth. 

O look upon me, and have mercy 

1 Ps. lxxxiv. 2. 



upon me : * give Thy strength unto 
Thy servant, and save the son of 
Thine handmaid ! 

Show me a token for good, that 
they which hate me may see it and be 
ashamed : * because Thou, O Lord, 
hast holpen me, and comforted me. 

Antiphon. 1 Lord, Thou hast 
been favourable unto Thy land. 
Fourth Antiphon. Her foundation. 

If this Antiphon be used the Psalm 
begins with the words, "Is in the holy 
mountains." 

Psalm LXXXVI. 

[Intituled " A Psalm. A Song of the 
sons of Korah." The Targum adds that it 
was based upon words of the ancients, 
perhaps meaning that the two first verses 
before the SLH were an ancient saying to 
which the rest was a later addition.] 

ER foundation is in the holy 
mountains : * the Lord lov- 
eth the gates of Zion more than all 
the dwellings of Jacob ! 

Glorious things are spoken of 
thee, * O city of God ! 2 

I will make mention of Rahab 3 
and Babylon * that know me. 

Behold the "Strangers," 4 and 
Tyre, and the people of Ethiopia, * 
these were there — 

And of Zion shall it not be said : 
This and that man was born in her, 
* and the Highest Himself hath 
established her? 5 

The Lord shall make count, 
when He writeth up the people [and 
the princes,] 6 * of all that are in her. 2 

All they that dwell in thee * are 
in gladness. 

2 SLH. 



H 



namely, Egypt. 



I.e.. the Philistines. 



3 That is "the Insolent One, 

5 Is the meaning that Jerusalem shall be" illustrious as the birth-place of all kinds of 
distinguished persons? The Targum, curiously enough, says that the persons meant are 
David and Solomon, whereas David is a native of Bethlehem. 

11 Displaced from the beginning of the next verse. 



FRIDAY AT MATTINS. 



145 



Psalm LXXXVII. 

[This Psalm has a long superscription, in 
which its authorship is attributed to Heman 
the Ezrahite, one of five brothers, descen- 
dants of Zarah, the son of Judah. Four of 
them were celebrated for wisdom. 3 (i) 
Kings iv. 31. This Psalm was written for 
the sons of Korah, and intended to be sung 
with an accompaniment of pipes and flutes.] 

OLORD God of my salvation, * 
I have cried day and night 
before Thee. 

Let my prayer come before Thee ; 

* incline Thine ear unto my cry. 
For my soul is full of troubles : * 

and my life draweth nigh unto the 
grave. 

I am counted with them that go 
down into the pit : * I am as a 
man that hath no strength, lying 
nerveless among the dead, 

Like the pierced that lie in the 
grave, whom Thou rememberest no 
more : * and they are cast off from 
Thine hand. 

They have laid me in the lowest 
pit, * in darkness and in the shadow 
of death. 

Thy wrath lieth hard upon me, 

* and Thou hast afflicted me with 
all Thy waves. 1 

Thou hast put away mine ac- 
quaintance far from me : * they 
have made me an abomination unto 
them. 

I am shut up, and cannot come 
forth : * mine eyes fail by reason 
Df affliction. 

Lord, I have called daily upon 
Thee : * I have stretched out my 
lands unto Thee ! 

Wilt Thou show wonders to the 
lead? * or can physicians quicken 
hem, so that they may praise 
Thee ? l 

Shall Thy loving - kindness be 
1 SLH. 



declared in the grave, * and Thy 
faithfulness in destruction? 

Shall Thy wonders be known in 
the dark, * and Thy righteousness 
in the land of forgetfulness ? 

But unto Thee have I cried, O 
Lord : * and in the morning shall 
my prayer come before Thee. 

Lord, why castest Thou off my 
prayer, * why hidest Thou Thy face 
from me ? 

I am afflicted, and in toil from 
my youth up : * and when I was 
lifted up, then was I brought down 
and troubled : 

Thy fierce wrath goeth over me, 

* and Thy terrors have troubled me. 
They came round about me all 

the day like a flood : * they com- 
passed me about together. 

Friend and neighbour hast Thou 
put far from me, * mine acquaint- 
ance also, because of my misery. 

Antiphon. 2 Her foundation is 
in the holy mountains. 
Fifth Antiphon. Blessed. 

Psalm LXXXVII I. 

[Intituled " A didactic (?) Poem of Ethan 
the Ezrahite." This Ethan was a brother 
of the author of the last Psalm. ] 

f WILL sing of the mercies * of 
-*■ the Lord for ever. 

With my mouth will I make 
known Thy faithfulness * to all 
generations. 

For Thou hast said : Mercy shall 
be built up for ever in the heavens : 

* Thy faithfulness shall be estab- 
lished in them. 

I have made a covenant with My 
chosen, I have sworn unto David 
My servant : * thy seed will I 
establish for ever. 

2 Ps. lxxxvi. I. 



146 



THE PSALTER. 



And build up thy throne * to 
all generations. 1 

And the heavens shall praise Thy 
wonders, O Lord; * Thy faithful- 
ness also in the congregation of the 
Saints — 

For who in heaven can be com- 
pared unto the Lord? * Who 
among the sons of God can be 
likened unto God ? 

God, Which is glorious in the 
assembly of the saints, * great 
and terrible to all them that are 
about Him. 

Lord God of hosts, who is 
like unto Thee ? * Thou art strong, 
O Lord, and Thy faithfulness is 
round about Thee ! 

Thou rulest the raging of the 
sea : * when the waves thereof 
arise Thou stillest them. 

Thou hast broken the " Inso- 
lent " one, 2 as one that is slain : 
* Thou hast scattered Thine ene- 
mies with Thy strong arm. 

The heavens are Thine, the 
earth also is Thine, as for the 
world and the fulness thereof 
Thou hast founded them : * the 
North and the South Thou hast 
created them : . 

3 Tabor and Hermon shall re- 
joice in Thy name. * Thou hast 
a mighty arm. 

Strong is Thine hand, and high 
Thy right hand : * justice and 
judgment are the foundations of 
Thy throne. 

Mercy and truth shall go before 
Thy face. * Blessed is the people 
that know the joyful sound ! 

1 SLH. s 

3 Two prominent mountains in the North of Syria. 

4 That is ;— " I will make his power to be bounded on the West by the Mediterranear 
and on the East by the Tigris and Euphrates." 

5 The next verses are a sort of quotation of the Divine message given by Nathan t 
David. 2 Kings (Sam.) vii. 14-16. 



They shall walk, O Lord, in 
the light of Thy countenance, and 
in Thy name shall they rejoice all 
the day : * in Thy righteousness 
also shall they be exalted. 

For thou art the glory of their 
strength : * and in Thy favour 
our horn shall be exalted. 

For of the Lord is our de- 
fence, * and of the Holy One of 
Israel is our King. 

Then Thou spakest in vision to 
Thine holy ones, and saidst : * I 
have laid help upon one that is 
mighty, and have exalted one 
chosen out of My people. 

I have found David My ser- 
vant : * with Mine holy oil have I 
anointed him. 

For Mine hand shall help him 
* Mine arm also shall strengthen 
him. 

The enemy shall prevail nothing 
against him : * nor the son of 
wickedness afflict him. 

And I will beat down his foes 
before his face, * and put them 
that hate him to flight. 

And My truth and My mere] 
shall be with him : * and in Mi 
Name shall his horn be exalted. 

I will set his hand also in the 
sea, * and his right hand in th( 
rivers. 4 

He shall cry unto me : Thoi 
art my Father, * my God, anc 
the rock of my salvation. 

5 Also I will make him My first 
born, * higher than the kings c 
the earth. 

My mercy will I keep for hin 

Rahab — i.e., Egypt. 



FRIDAY AT MATTINS. 



147 



for evermore, * and My covenant 
shall stand fast with him. 

His seed also will I make to 
endure for ever, * and his throne 
as the days of heaven. 

But if his children forsake My 
law, * and walk not in My judg- 
ments, — 

If they break My statutes, * and 
keep not My commandments, 

Then I will visit their trans- 
gressions with the rod, * and 
their iniquity with stripes. 

Nevertheless My loving-kindness 
will I not utterly take from him, 

* nor fail in My truth. 

My covenant also will I not break, 

* nor make void the thing that is 
gone out of My lips. 

Once have I sworn by Mine 
holiness, that I will not lie unto 
David : * his seed shall endure for 
ever, 

And his throne, as the sun before 
Me : * and as the full moon for 
ever, and as the faithful witness in 
heaven. 1 

But Thou hast cast off and de- 
spised, * Thou hast put away Thine 
Anointed. 

Thou hast made void the cove- 
nant of Thy servant : * Thou hast 
profaned his crown [by casting] it 
to the ground. 

Thou hast broken down all his 
hedges : * Thou hast brought his 
strongholds to ruin. 

All that pass by the way spoil 
him : * he is a reproach to his 
neighbours. 

Thou hast set up the right hand 
of his adversaries : * Thou hast 
made all his enemies to rejoice. 



Thou hast turned the edge of his 
sword, * and hast not upholden him 
in battle. 

Thou hast made his brightness to 
cease, * and cast his throne down 
to the ground. 

The days of his youth hast Thou 
shortened : * Thou hast covered 
him with shame. 2 

How long, Lord, wilt Thou hide 
Thyself, for ever? * Shall Thy 
wrath burn like fire? 

Remember how short my time is 1 
* wherefore hast Thou made all the 
sons of men in vain ? 

What man is he that liveth, and 
shall not see death? * Shall he 
deliver his soul from the hand of 
the grave? 2 

Lord, where are Thy former lov- 
ing-kindnesses, * which Thou swarest 
unto David in Thy truth ? 

Remember, Lord, the reproach of 
Thy servants, * (that I bear in my 
bosom) even the reproach of many 
people — 

Wherewith Thine enemies have 
reproached, O Lord — * wherewith 
they have reproached the woes of 
Thine Anointed. 

Blessed be the Lord for ever- 
more ! * Amen, Amen. 3 



Psalm XCIII. 

[The Vulgate and the LXX. ascribe this 
Psalm to David, and assign it to the fourth 
day of the week. ] 

THE Lord God to Whom ven- 
geance belongeth, * the God 
to Whom vengeance belongeth hath 
shown Himself. 

Lift up Thyself, Thou judge of 



1 SLH. Is the "faithful witness" the rainbow? See Gen. ix. (Thursday after Sexa- 
gesirna Sunday.) 2 SLH. 

5 Here ends the third of the five books into which the Psalter is divided. 



4 8 



THE PSALTER. 



the earth : * render a reward to the 
proud. 

Lord, how long shall the wicked, 

* how long shall the wicked 
triumph ? 

How long shall they utter and 
speak iniquity ? * all the workers of 
wickedness boast themselves ? 

They crush Thy people, O Lord ! 

* and afflict Thine heritage. 

They slay the widow and the 
stranger, * and murder the father- 
less. 

Yet they say : The Lord shall 
not see, * neither shall the God of 
Jacob understand. 

Understand, ye brutish among the 
people ! * and ye fools, some time 
be wise ! 

He That planted the ear, shall He 
not hear ? * or He That formed the 
eye, can He not see ? 

He That chastiseth the heathen, 
shall not He correct? * He That 
teacheth man knowledge? 

The Lord knoweth the thoughts 
of men, * that they are vanity. 

Blessed is the man whom Thou 
chastenest, O Lord, * and teachest 
out of Thy law.. 

That Thou may est give him rest 
from the days of adversity, * until 
the pit be digged for the wicked. 

For the Lord will not cast off 
His people, * neither will He for- 
sake His inheritance. 

Until righteousness return unto 
judgment, * and all the upright in 
heart follow it. 

Who will rise up for me against 
the evil-doers ? * or who will stand 
up with me against the workers of 
iniquity ? 



Unless the Lord had been mine 
help, * my soul had almost dwelt 
in the grave. 

When I said : My foot slippeth 
— * Thy mercy, O Lord, held me 
up. 

In the multitude of the sorrows 
within mine heart, * Thy comforts 
delight my soul. 

1 Hath the throne of iniquity 
fellowship with Thee? — * which 
frameth mischief by a law? 

They that gather themselves 
together against the soul of the 
righteous, * and condemn the in- 
nocent blood — ? 

But the Lord is my refuge, * 
and my God is the stay of my 
trust. 

And He shall bring upon them 
their own iniquity, and shall cut 
them off in their own wickedness : 
* the Lord our God shall cut 
them off. 

A?itiphon. 2 Blessed be the Lord 
for evermore. 

Sixth Antiphon. Sing. 



Psalm XCV. 

[In I Par. (Chron.) xvi. it is stated that 
David gave this Psalm to Asaph and his 
brethren upon the day that the ark was 
brought to Jerusalem. The text is there 
given somewhat differently, and the whole 
forms the second part of one Psalm, 01 
which the first part consists of the firs:! 
fifteen verses of Ps. civ. The Vulgate anci 
the LXX. note that it was sung at thtj 
rebuilding of the Temple after the Cap, 
tivity.] 

f~~\ SING unto the Lord a nev 
^-^ song : * sing unto the Lord 
all the earth. 

Sing unto the Lord, and bles 



1 This verse is translated according to the sense of the Hebrew, the LXX., Aquila 
Symmachus, Theodotion, and St Jerome, but the Latin has the second, instead of th 
third, person singular in the last clause. 2 Ps. Ixxxviii. 53. 



FRIDAY AT MATTINS. 



149 



His Name : * show forth His sal- 
vation from day to day. 

Declare His glory among the 
heathen, * His wonders among all 
people. 

For the Lord is great, and greatly 
to be praised : * He is to be feared 
above all gods. 

For all the gods of the heathen 
are devils : * but the Lord made 
the heavens. 

Praise and beauty are before 
Him : * holiness and majesty are 
in His sanctuary. 

Give unto the Lord, O ye kin- 
dreds of the people, give unto the 
Lord glory and honour : * give 
unto the Lord the glory due unto 
His name. 

Bring sacrifices, and come into 
His courts : * O worship the Lord 
in His holy temple ! 

Let all the earth fear before 
Him. * Say among the heathen, 
The Lord reigneth ! 

He hath established the world 
also, that it shall not be moved : 
* He shall judge the people right- 
eously. 

Let the heavens rejoice, and let 
the earth be glad, let the sea roar, 
and the fulness thereof: * let the 
fields be joyful and all that is 
therein. 

Then shall all the trees of the 
wood rejoice before the Lord, for 
He cometh, * for He cometh to 
judge the earth. 

He shall judge the world with 
righteousness : * and the people 
with His truth. 1 






Psalm XCVI. 

[The Vulgate and the LXX. have the 
superscription "[A Psalm] of David when 
his country was re - established " — per- 
haps meaning after the usurpation of Ab- 
solom.] 

XHE Lord reigneth ; let the 
* earth rejoice : * let the mul- 
titude of isles be glad thereof. 

Clouds and darkness are round 
about Him : * righteousness and 
judgment are the foundation of 
His throne. 

A fire shall go before Him, * and 
burn up His enemies round about. 

His lightnings enlightened the 
world : * the earth saw and trem- 
bled. 

The hills melted like wax at 
the presence of the Lord, * at 
the presence of the Lord of the 
whole earth. 

The heavens declared His right- 
eousness, * and all the people 
saw His glory. 

Confounded be all they that 
worship graven images, * and that 
boast themselves of idols. 

Worship Him, all ye His An- 
gels ! * Zion heard, and was glad. 

And the daughters of Judah 
rejoiced, * because of Thy judg- 
ments, O Lord ! 

For thou, Lord, art high above 
all the earth : * Thou art exalted 
far above all gods. 

Ye that love the Lord, hate evil : 
* the Lord preserveth the souls of 
His saints ; He delivereth them out 
of the hand of the wicked. 

Light is sprung up for the 

1 In I Par. (Chron.) xvi. the Psalm continues: — "O give thanks unto the Lord, for 
He is good : for His mercy endureth for ever. And say ye : Save us, O God of our 
salvation, and gather us together, and deliver us from the heathen, that we may give 
thanks to Thy holy Name, and glory in Thy praise. Blessed be the Lord God of 
Israel for ever and ever. And all the people said : 'Amen' and praised the Lord" 
—possibly in Ps. cxxxv. 



150 



THE PSALTER. 



righteous, * and gladness for the 
upright in heart. 

Rejoice in the Lord, ye right- 
eous, * and give thanks to the 
memorial of His holiness ! 

Antiphon. 1 Sing unto the Lord, 
and bless His name. 

Antiphon for Paschal ti?ne. Al- 
leluia, Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Then is said a Verse and Answer. 
In Advent. 

Verse. Send forth the Lamb, O 
Lord, the ruler of the land. 

Answer. From the "Rock" of 
the wilderness unto the mount of 
the daughter of Zion. 

Daring the rest of the year. 
Verse. 2 Let my prayer come 
before Thee, O Lord. 

Answer. Incline Thine ear unto 
my cry. 

In Lent. 

Verse. He shall cover thee with 
His wings. 

Answer. And under His feath- 
ers shalt thou trust. 

In Passion time. 

Verse. O Lord, save me from 
the lion's mouth. 

Answer. And mine affliction 
from the horns of the unicorns. 

In Paschal time. 

Verse. The Lord is risen in- 
deed, Alleluia. 

Answer. And hath appeared un- 
to Simon, Alleluia. 

The rest is the same as the Second 
Nocturn on the preceding Sunday, only 



Simple Feasts. It is to be retnembered 
that whe?i a Simple Feast is kept on 
Friday, the Invitatory a?id Hymn are 
of the Feast, being taken fro??i the Com- 
mon of Saints of the class, unless speci- 
ally given. 

Then the Psalms and Antiphons of 
the Week-day, as given above. The?i is 
said a Verse a?id Answer as follows : 

In the Simple Office for one or many 
Martyrs in Paschal time. 

Verse. The everlasting light 
shall shine upon Thy Saints, 
Lord. Alleluia. 

Anszuer. Even unto everlasting. 
Alleluia. 



the Lessons, and sometimes the Respon 
sories, are those of the day. 

1 Ps. xcv. 2. 

* Ps. lxvii. 3. s Ecclus. xlv. 



In the Simple Office for one Martyr, 
{put of Paschal time). 

Verse. 3 Thou hast set a crown, 
O Lord, of precious stones. 
Answer. Upon his head. 

hi the Simple Office for many Martyrs. 
{out of Paschal time). 

Verse. 4 Let the righteous re- 
joice before God. 

Answer. Yea, let them exceed- 
ingly rejoice. 

In the Simple Office for a Bishop and 
Confessor. 

Verse. 6 The Lord chose him fo 
a priest unto Himself. 

[In Paschal time, add Alleluia.] 
Answer. To offer up unto Hin 
the sacrifice of praise. 

[In Paschal time, add Alleluia.] 

hi the Simple Office for a Confessor 
not a Bishop. 

Verse. 6 The mouth of the righ 1 
eous shall speak wisdom. 

[In Paschal time, add Alleluia.] 
Answer. And his tongue talk c 
judgment. 

[In Paschal time, add Alleluia.] 
! Ps. lxxxvii. 3. 3 Ps xx 3 

16. 6 Ps. xxxvi. 30. 



FRIDAY AT MATTINS. 



151 



For one Holy Woman, of whatever 
kind. 

Verse. x God shall give her the 
help of His countenance. 

[In Paschal time, add Alleluia.] 

Answer. God is in the midst of 
her, she shall not be moved. 
\In Paschal time, add Alleluia.] 

The others, as well as what follows, 
to the end of the Service, are taken from 
the Second Nocturn of the Office common 
to Saints of the class, unless something 
special be appointed. The Lessons are 
arranged according to the rules in Chap- 
ter xxvi. 4 of the general Rubrics. 
The Hymn, " We praise Thee, O God," 
is said at the end, instead of a Third 
Responsory. The Responsories are ar- 
ra?iged according to the rules in Chapter 
xxvii. 4 of the Ge?ieral Rubrics. Thus: — 

The Lords Prayer is said: 

OUR Father (inaudibly), Who art 
in heaven, Hallowed be Thy 
Name. Thy Kingdom come. Thy 
will be done on earth, as it is in 
heaven. Give us this day our daily 
bread. And forgive us our tres- 
passes, as we forgive them that tres- 
pass against us. {Aloud.) 

Verse. And lead us not into 
temptation. 

Answer. But deliver us from 
evil. 

Then this Absolution : 

TWTAY His loving kindness and 
*-* *■ mercy help us, Who liveth 
and reigneth with the Father, and 
the Holy Ghost, world without end. 
Answer. Amen. 

Then the Reader says : 
Sir, be pleased to give the bless- 



ing. 



First Blessing, if the Lesso?i be from 
Scripture. 

God the Father, the Almighty, 
Show on us His grace and mercy. 
Answer. Amen. 

First Blessing, if the Lesson be of an 
Homily. 

May the Gospel's saving Lord 
Bless the reading of His Word. 
Answer. Amen. 

First Blessing on a Simple Feast. 

May His blessing be upon us, 
Who doth live and reign for ever. 
Answer. Amen. 

Then is read the First Lesson from 
Scripture or from the Homily, or, on a 
Simple Feast, either the First from 
Scripture, or, if the Saint or Saints 
have two Lessons, the whole three Scrip- 
ture Lessons read together as one. 

Then the First Responsory, unless 
otherwise directed. On a week-day kept 
as such, this is the First Responsory of 
the preceding Sunday. On a Simple 
Feast, it is the First Responsory in the 
Com?non Office for the class to which 
the Saint belongs. 

Then the Reader says : 

Sir, be pleased to give the bless- 
ing. 

Second Blessing, if the Lesson be of 
Scripture. 

May Christ to all His people give 
For ever in His sight to live. 
Answer. Amen. 

Second Blessing, if the Lesson be from 
an Homily. 

God's most mighty strength alway 
Be His people's staff and stay. 
Answer. Amen. 



1 Ps. xlv. 5, (Alexandrian version). 



152 



THE PSALTER. 



Second Blessing, for a Simple Feast. 

He (or She or They) whose feast- 
day we are keeping 
Plead for us before the Lord. 
Answer. Amen. 

Then is read the Second Lesson, either 
from the Scripture or from an Homily, 
or, on a Simple Feast, either the Second 
and Third Lessons frotn Scripture read 
together as one, or, if the Saint or Saints 
have two Lessons, the first of these. 

Then the Second Responsory, unless 
otherwise directed. On a week-day kept 
as such, this is the Second Responsory 
of the preceding Sunday, but in Paschal 
time there is added to it : 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

And the Answer of the Responsory is 
repeated again. 

On a Simple Feast the Second Re- 
sponsory in the Common Office for the 
class to which the Saint belongs, with the 
addition of " Glory be to the Father," 
&°c, and the repetition of the Answer. 



Then the Reader says : 

Sir, be pleased to give the bless- 
ing. 

Third Blessing, if the Lesson be of 
Scripture. 

May the Spirit's fire divine 
In our inmost being shine. • 
Ansiver. Amen. 

Third Blessing, for a Simple Feast, or 
if the Lesson be from a?i Homily. 

May He that is the Angels' King 
To that high realm His people bring. 
Answer. Amen. 

The?i is read the Third Lesson either 
from Scripture, or of the Homily, or, 
on Simple Feasts, the Second or o?ily 
Lesson of the Saint. 

Then, on Simple Feasts and on any 
day in Paschal time is said the Hymn, 
"We praise Thee, O God." But on 
week-days kept as such out of Paschal 
time the Third Responsory of the pre- 
ceding Sunday. 



153 



Jfribap at §Jattb0, 



THE SIXTH DAY OF THE WEEK. 



All as on Sunday, except as other- 
wise given here. 

The Psalms are as follows : 

Antiphon. Uphold mine heart. 

Psalm L. 
Have mercy upon me, &c, (/. 

Antiphon. Uphold mine heart 
with Thy free spirit, O God. 

Second Antiphon. In Thy faith- 
fulness. 

Psalm CXLII. 

[Intituled "A Psalm of David," and 
the Vulgate and the LXX. add, "when 
he was being persecuted by Absolom his 
son."] 

TJEAR my prayer, O Lord, 
■*- -"■ give ear to my supplication 
in Thy faithfulness : * answer me, 
in Thy righteousness. 

And enter not into judgment 
with Thy servant : * for in Thy 
sight shall no man living be jus- 
tified. 

For the enemy hath persecuted 
my soul : * he hath smitten my 
life down to the ground : 

He hath made me to dwell in 
darkness, as those that have been 



long dead. * Therefore is my 
spirit overwhelmed within me : mine 
heart within me is troubled. 

I remember the days of old : 
I meditate on all thy works : * 
I muse on the works of Thine 
hands. 

I stretch forth mine hands unto 
Thee : * my soul [thirsteth] after 
Thee, as a thirsty land. 1 

Hear me speedily, O Lord : * 
my spirit faileth : 

Hide not Thy face from me, * 
lest I be like unto them that go 
down into the pit. 

Cause me to hear Thy loving- 
kindness in the morning : * for 
in Thee do I trust : 

Cause me to know the way 
wherein I should walk : * for I 
lift up my soul unto Thee. 

Deliver me, O Lord, from 
mine enemies : I flee unto Thee 
to hide me. * Teach me to do 
Thy will : for Thou art my God. 

Let Thy good Spirit lead me 
into the land of uprightness. * 
For Thy name's sake, O Lord, 
Thou shalt quicken me in Thy 
righteousness. 

Thou shalt bring my soul out 
of trouble : * and of Thy mercy 
cut off mine enemies, 



SLH. 



1 



154 



THE PSALTER. 



And destroy all them that af- 
flict my soul: * for I am Thy 
servant. 

Antiphon. In Thy faithfulness, 
answer me, Lord. 

Third Antiphon. O Lord. 

Psalms LXIL, LXVI. 
God, Thou art my God, &c, 
(A 23)- 

Antiphon. O Lord, cause Thy 
face to shine upon us. 

Fourth Antiphon. O Lord, I 
have heard. 

If this Antiphon be used the Can- 
ticle begi?is with the words, "Thy 
speech." 

The Song of Habakkuk the 
Prophet. (Hab. iii.) 

[Intituled "A prayer of Habakkuk the 
Prophet " with a direction, perhaps musi- 
cal.] 

OLORD, I have heard tell of 
Thee : * and was afraid : 

O Lord, revive Thy work * in 
the midst of the years ; 

In the midst of the years shalt 
Thou make it known : * in wrath, 
Thou wilt remember mercy. 

God shall come from " the 
South," * and the Holy One 
from Mount Paran. 1 



His glory covered the heavens, 

* and the earth was full of His 
praise. 

His brightness was as the light: 

* He had horns 2 coming out of 
His hand : 

There was the hiding of His i 
power. * Before Him went death. 

And the destroyer went forth 
at His feet. * He stood and mea- 
sured the earth : 

He beheld, and drove asunder 
the nations : * and the e.verlast- 1 
ing mountains were crushed : 

The everlasting hills did bow : * 
because the Eternal passed by. 3 

I saw the tents of Ethiopia in ; 
affliction : * the curtains of the 
land of Midian did tremble. 4 

Wast Thou displeased against 
the rivers, O Lord? * was Thine 
anger against the rivers ? Thy 
wrath against the sea? 

That Thou didst ride upon 
Thine horses, * and Thy chariots 
were salvation ? 

Thou didst seize and draw Thy 
bow, * according to the oaths that) 
Thou utteredst unto the tribes. 5 

Thou didst cleave the rivers of i 
the earth : the mountains saw Thee 
and they trembled: * the overflow- 
ing of the water passed by : 

The deep uttered his voice : * 
he lifted up his hands on high. 
The sun and moon stood still 



1 SLH. "The South" is, in the original, " Teman," the name of a country and natior 
eastward of Idumea, but used for the south generally. Paran, or Pharan, is an uncultured 
and mountainous region, lying between Arabia Petrsea, Palestine, and Idumea. The pas-, 
sage is an imitation of the words of Moses when blessing the tribes. Deut. xxxiii. 2. "Thd 
Lord came from Sinai, and rose up from Seir unto them ; He stirred forth from Mount 
Paran, and He came with ten thousands of Saints : from His right hand went a fiery lavi 
for them." 

2 Gesenius says " ' Horns' is here used of flashes of lightning, just as the Arabian poeti< 
compare the first beams of the rising sun to horns, and call the sun itself a gazelle." 

3 The present Hebrew simply is "77*.? ways are everlasting to Him." 

1 Proper name of an Arabian nation whose territory lay from the eastern shore of th<! 
. Elanitic Gulf as far as the land of Moab. 5 SLH. 



FRIDAY AT LAUDS. 



155 



in their habitation : * at the light 
of Thine arrows they went forth, at 
the shining of Thy glittering spear. 

Thou didst tread down the 
land in indignation : * Thou didst 
thresh the heathen in anger. 

Thou wentest forth for the sal- 
vation of Thy people, * even for 
salvation with Thine Anointed. 1 

Thou didst smite the head of 
the house of the wicked : 2 * Thou 
didst lay bare the foundation unto 
the neck. 3 

Thou didst curse his sceptre, 
even the head of his fighting men, 

* when they came out as a whirl- 
wind to scatter me : 

Their rejoicing was as the re- 
joicing of him * that devoureth 
the poor secretly. 

Thou didst make a way in the 
sea for Thine horses, * through 
the mire of great waters. 

I heard, and my belly trembled : 

* my lips quivered at the voice : 
Let rottenness enter into my 

bones, * and corruption swarm 
under me : 

That I may rest in the day of 
trouble : * that I may go up unto 
our people that are girded. 4 

Although the fig-tree shall not 
blossom, * neither shall fruit be 
in the vines : 

The labour of the olive shall 
fail, * and the fields shall yield 
no meat : 

The flock shall be cut off from 
the fold, * and there shall be no 
herd in the stalls : 



Yet will I rejoice in the Lord : 

* I will joy in the God of my 
salvation. 5 

The Lord God is my strength : 

* and He will make my feet like 
hinds' feet : 

And He will lead me forth, to 
make me to walk upon mine high 
places, * as a conqueror, to sing 



praises unto Him. 6 

Antiphon. O Lord, I have heard 
Thy speech, and was afraid. 
Fifth Antiphon. Praise God. 

Psalms CXLVIIL, CXLIX., CL. 

Praise ye the Lord, from the 
heavens, &c, (pp. 25, 26). 

Antiphon. Praise God with the 
timbrel and dance. 

Chapter. (Rom. xiii. 12.) 

The night is far spent, &c, (as on 
Monday, p. 89). 

Hymn. 7 

GLORY of the eternal Heaven, 
Blessed Hope to mortals given, 
Of the Almighty Only Son, 
And the Virgin's Holy One ; 
Raise us, Lord, and we shall rise 

In a sober mood, 
And a zeal which glorifies 
Thee from gratitude. 

Now the day-star keenly glancing, 
Tells us of the sun's advancing; 
While the unhealthy shades decline, 
Rise within us, Light Divine ! 

1 Moses ? 2 Pharaoh ? 

3 SLH. Some critics read " of the rock " instead of " unto the neck." 

4 Accinctum. The Latin translator probably meant "girt," as the dead were girt, cf. 
John xi. 44. 5 Jesu Meo. So the Hebrew. 

6 This last clause seems to be only a musical direction, which has got confounded with 
the text. Some translate it : " Given to the leader of the string band." 

7 Hymn of the Ambrosian school, slightly altered ; translation by the late Card. Newman. 



156 



THE PSALTER. 



Rise, and, risen, go not hence, 

Stay and make us bright, 
Streaming through each cleansed 
sense, 

On the outward night. 

Then the root of faith shall spread 
In the heart new fashioned ; 
Gladsome hope shall spring above, 
And shall bear the fruit of love. 
To the Father, and the Son, 

And the Holy Ghost, 
Here be glory, as is done, 

By the Angelic host. 

Amen. 



Verse. Thou hast satisfied us 
early with Thy mercy. 

Answer. We rejoice and are 
glad. 

Antipkon for the Sojig of Zach- 
arias. Through the tender mercy 
of our God * the day-spring from on 
high hath visited us. 

Commemoration of the Cross before 
the other Commemorations, and Long 
Preces i?i Advent a?id Lent, and on 
"Fast-days, as on Monday. 



157 



<Satitrbai) nt Jftattin*, 



THE SABBATH. 



All as on Simday, except as other- 
wise given here. 

Invitatory. O come, let us wor- 
ship * the Lord our God. 

Hymn. 1 

FATHER of mercies infinite, 
Ruling all things that be, 
Who, shrouded in the depth and height, 
Art One, and yet art Three ; 

Accept our chants, accept our tears, 

A mingled stream we pour ; 
Such stream the laden bosom cheers, 

To taste Thy sweetness more. 

Purge Thou with fire the o'ercharged 
mind, 

Its sores and wounds profound; 
And with the watcher's girdle bind 

The limbs which sloth has bound. 

That they who with their chants by 
night 

Before Thy presence come, 
All may be fill'd with strength and light 

From their eternal home. 

Grant this, O Father, Only Son, 

And Spirit, God of grace, 
To whom all worship shall be done 

In every time and place. 

Amen. 

Only one Nocturn is said. 
Antiphon. For the Lord. 

hi Paschal time o?ily one Antiphon is 
said for the whole Nocturn. Alleluia. 

1 Another hymn of the Ambrosian school, 
Card. Newman. 



Psalm XCVII. 

[Intituled " A Psalm." The Vulgate and 
the LXX. ascribe it to David.] 

f~\ SING unto the Lord a new 
^-^ song : * for He hath done 
marvellous things. 

His right hand, and His holy arm, 

* have gotten Him the victory. 
The Lord hath made known His 

salvation : * His righteousness hath 
He openly showed in the sight of 
the heathen. 

He hath remembered His mercy, 

* and His truth towards the house 
of Israel. 

All the ends of the earth have 
seen * the salvation of our God. 

Make a joyful noise unto the 
Lord, all the earth, * make a 
loud noise and rejoice, and sing 
praise. 

Sing unto the Lord with the 
harp, with the harp and the voice 
of a psalm. * With trumpets and 
sound of cornet, 

Make a joyful noise before the 
Lord, the King. * Let the sea 
roar, and the fulness thereof, the 
world and they that dwell therein. 

Let the floods clap their hands, 
let the hills be joyful together be- 
considerably altered ; translation by the late 



158 



THE PSALTER. 



fore the Lord. * For He cometh 
to judge the earth : 

With righteousness shall He judge 
the world, * and the people with 
equity. 

Psalm XCVIII. 

[The Vulgate and the LXX. ascribe this 
Psalm to David.] 

THE Lord reigneth, be the 
people never so impatient : * 
He sitteth upon the Cherubim, be 
the earth never so unquiet. 

The Lord is great in Zion : * 
and He is high above all people. 

Let them praise Thy great and 
terrible Name, for it is holy: * 
and the King's majesty loveth judg- 
ment. 

Thou dost establish equity : * 
Thou executest judgment and right- 
eousness in Jacob. 

Exalt ye the Lord our God, and 
worship at His footstool : * for it 
is holy. 

Moses and Aaron among His 
priests, * and Samuel among them 
that call upon His name. 

They called upon the Lord, and 
He answered them. * He spake 
unto them in the cloudy pillar : 

They kept His testimonies, * 
and the ordinance that He gave 
them. 

Thou answeredst them, O Lord 
our God ! * O God, Thou forgav- 
est them, though Thou tookest 
vengeance of their inventions. 

Exalt the Lord our God and 
worship at His holy hill : * for the 
Lord our God is Holy. 

Antiphon. 1 For the Lord hath 
done marvellous things. 

1 Ps. 



When the following Psalm, "Make 
a joyful noise unto God, all ye lands," 
is to be said at Lauds (as would be the 
case, for instance, if Christmas Eve fell 
on a Saturday) it is not said here, nor 
its Antiphon. But instead is said Psalm 
xci., " It is a good thing to give thanks 
unto the LORD," from the Saturday 
Lauds which are to be displaced, with 
the Antiphon, "It is a good thing * to 
give thanks unto the Lord," in which 
case the Psalm begins with the words 
" To give thanks unto the Lord." 

Second Antiphon. Make a joyful 
noise. 

If this Antiphon be used, the Psalm 
begins with the words, ". Unto God, all 
ye lands." 

Psalm XCIX. 

[Intituled "A Psalm of thanksgiving." 
The Targum has " A Psalm for the Sacrifice 
of" thanksgiving."] 

A T AKE a joyful noise unto God, 
- * -*■ all ye lands : * serve the 
Lord with gladness. 

Come before His presence, * with 
singing. 

Know ye that the Lord, He is 
God : * it is He That hath made 
us, and not we ourselves : 

We are His people, and the 
sheep of his pasture. * Enter into 
His gates with thanksgiving, and 
into His courts with praise : give 
thanks unto Him, 

Praise His Name. For the Lord 
is good, His mercy is everlasting : * 
and His truth endureth to all gen- 
erations. 

Psalm C 

[Intituled "A Psalm of David."] 

WILL sing of mercy and judg- 
-■- ment, * unto Thee, O Lord ! 
I will sing and behave myself 
xcvii. i. 



SATURDAY AT MATTINS. 



159 



wisely in a perfect way. * O when 
! wilt Thou come unto me ? 

I walked within mine house, * in 
the innocence of mine heart. 

I set no wicked thing before mine 
eyes : * I hate the work of them 
that turn aside. 

A froward heart cleaveth not 
unto me : * the wicked person that 
turned aside from me, I would not 
know. 

Whoso privily slandered his neigh- 
bour, * him did I expose. 

Him that had an high look and 
a proud heart : * with him I will 
not eat. 

Mine eyes are upon the faithful 
of the land, that they may dwell 
with me : * he that walked in a 
perfect way, he ministered unto 
me. 

He that doeth proud things shall 
not dwell within mine house : * he 
that speaketh wickedness was not 
upright in my sight. 

I will early destroy all the wicked 
of the land : * that I may cut off 
all wicked doers from the city of the 
Lord. 

Antiphon. 1 Make a joyful noise 
unto God, all ye lands. 
Third Antiphon. O God. 



Psalm CI. 

[Intituled "A Prayer of the afflicted, 
when he is overwhelmed, and poureth 
out his complaint before the Lord."] 

TJEAR my prayer, O Lord, * 
* -*■ and let my cry come unto 
Thee. 

Hide not Thy face from me : * 
in the day when I am in trouble 
incline Thine ear unto me. 

J Ps. 



In the day when I call upon 
Thee, * answer me speedily. 

For my days are wasted away like 
smoke : * and my bones are con- 
sumed as a firebrand. 

I am smitten like grass, and mine 
heart is withered : * for I have 
forgotten to eat my bread. 

By reason of the voice of my 
groaning * my bones cleave to my 
flesh. 

I am like a pelican of the wil- 
derness : * I am like an owl in his 
hole. 

I watch, * and am as a sparrow 
alone upon the house-top. 

Mine enemies reproached me 
all the day : * and they that 
praised me are sworn together 
against me. 

For I have eaten ashes like bread, 
* and mingled my drink with weep- 
ing : 

Because of thine indignation and 
wrath : * for Thou hast lifted me up 
and cast me down. 

My days are like a shadow that 
declineth : * and I am withered like 
grass. 

But Thou, O Lord, endurest for 
ever, * and Thy remembrance unto 
all generations. 

Thou shalt arise and have mercy 
upon Zion : * for the time to 
favour her, yea, the set time, is 
come. 

For Thy servants take pleasure 
in her stones : * and have pity on 
her dust. 

So the heathen shall fear Thy 
name, O Lord, * and all the kings 
of the earth Thy glory. 

When the Lord shall build up 
Zion, * He shall appear in His 
glory. 



i6o 



THE PSALTER. 



He hath had regard unto the 
prayer of the destitute, * and hath 
not despised their supplication. 

Let this be written for the gen- 
eration to come : * and the people 
which shall be created shall praise 
the Lord. 

For He hath looked down from 
the height of His sanctuary : * 
from heaven did the Lord behold 
the earth : 

To hear the groaning of the 
prisoners, * to loose the children 
of the slain. 

To declare the name of the 
Lord in Zion, * and His praise in 
Jerusalem. 

When the people are gathered 
together, * and the kings, to serve 
the Lord. 

1 He answered him in the way 
of his strength : * Show me the 
shortness of my days. 

Call me not away in the midst of 
my days : * Thy years are unto all 
generations. 

Thou, Lord, in the beginning, 
hast laid the foundation of the 
earth : * and the heavens are the 
works of Thine hands. 

They shall perish, but Thou re- 
mainest : * and they all shall wax 
old as doth a garment : 

And as a vesture shalt Thou 
change them, and they shall be 
changed : * but Thou art the 
Same, and Thy years shall not 
fail. 

The children of Thy servants shall 
continue : * and their seed shall be 



Psalm CI I. 
[Intituled "of David."] 

BLESS the Lord, O my soul : * 
and all that is within me, bless 
His holy name. 

Bless the Lord, O my soul, * and 
forget not all His benefits. 

Who forgiveth all thine iniquities: 
* Who healeth all thy diseases. 

Who redeemeth thy life from 
destruction : * Who crowneth thee 
with loving - kindness and tender 
mercies. 

Who satisfieth thy desire with 
good things : * thy youth is re- 
newed like the eagle's. 

The Lord executeth mercy, * and 
judgment for all that are oppressed. 

He made known His ways unto 
Moses, * His will unto the chil- 
dren of Israel. 

The Lord is merciful and gra- 



cious : * slow to anger, and plen- 
teous in mercy. 

He will not always chide : * 
neither will He keep His anger for 
ever. 

He hath not dealt with us after 
our sins : * nor rewarded us accord- 
ing to our iniquities. 

For as the heaven is high above 
the earth, * so great is His mercy 
toward them that fear Him. 

As far as the east is from the 
west, * so far hath He removed our 
transgressions from us. 

Like as a father pitieth his chil- 
dren, so the Lord pitieth them that 
fear Him. * For He knoweth our 
frame ; 

1 "He" may be taken for the "afflicted man" who has just given utterance to his 
hopes of a brighter future. The Hebrew, (as now pointed,) reads : " He afflicted in the 
way his (my) strength, he cut short my days." The Alexandrian translators, using an 
unpointed text, took the opening word of the clause to mean " he answered " instead 
of "he afflicted" as they might easily do, the letters being the same for either word. 
The Hebrew text itself is not quite settled. 



established for ever. 



SATURDAY AT MATTINS. 



161 



He remembereth that we are 
dust : * as for man, his days are as 
grass, as a flower of the field so 
shall he flourish. 

For the wind passeth over it, and 
it is gone, * and the place thereof 
shall know it no more. 

But the mercy of the Lord is 
from everlasting * to everlasting 
upon them that fear Him, 

And His righteousness unto chil- 
dren's children ; * to such as keep 
His covenant, 

And to those that remember His 
commandments, * to do them. 

The Lord hath prepared His 
throne in heaven, * and His king- 
dom shall rule over all. 

Bless the Lord, all ye His 
Angels, * that excel in strength, 
that do His commandments, to 
hearken unto the voice of His 
word. 

Bless ye the Lord, all ye His 
hosts : * ye ministers of His that 
do His pleasure. 

Bless the Lord, all His works : 
* in all places of His dominion ; 
bless the Lord, O my soul ! 

Antiphon. 1 God, let my cry 
come unto Thee. 

Fourth Antiphon. Bless the 
Lord. 

If this Antiphon be used the Psalm 
begins with the words, " O my soul." 

Psalm CIII. 

[The Vulgate and the LXX. ascribe this 
Psalm to David.] 

OLESS the Lord, O my soul : * 
D O Lord my God, Thou art 
very great ! 

Thou art clothed with honour and 
1 Ps. ci. i. 2 So 

VOL. II. 



majesty, * covering Thyself with 
light as with a garment ! 

Who stretchest out the heavens 
like a curtain, * Who coverest their 
upper chambers with the waters ! 

Who makest the clouds Thy 
chariot, * Who walkest upon the 
wings of the wind ! 

Who makest Thine Angels spi- 
rits : * and Thy ministers a flame 
of fire ! 2 

Who layest the foundations of the 
earth ; * it shall not be removed for 
ever ! 

Thou coveredst it with the deep 
as with a garment, * the waters 
stood above the mountains. 

At Thy rebuke they fled : * at 
the voice of Thy thunder they hasted 
fearfully away. 

The mountains go up, and the 
valleys go down, * into the place 
which Thou hast founded for them. 

Thou hast set a bound, that 
they may not pass over : * that 
they turn not again to cover the 
earth. 

Who sendeth springs into the 
valleys : * the waters run among 
the hills. 

All the beasts of the field drink 
thereof : * the wild asses seek them 
in their thirst. 

By them build the fowls of the 
heaven their habitation ; * they sing 
among the rocks. 

He watereth the hills from His 
upper chambers : * the earth is 
satisfied with the fruit of Thy 
works. 

He causeth the grass to grow for 
the cattle, * and herb for the service 
of men : 

That Thou mayest bring forth 
food out of the earth, * and wine 
is this passage translated, Heb. i. 7. 

F 



1 62 



THE PSALTER. 



that maketh glad the heart of 
man; 

Oil to make his face to shine, * 
and bread to strengthen man's 
heart. 

The trees of the field are filled 
[with sap], the cedars of Lebanon 
also, which He hath planted : * 
there the birds make their nests. 

The stork's nest is the highest 
among them : * the high hills are a 
refuge for the wild goats, and the 
rocks for the conies. 

He hath appointed the moon for 
seasons : * the sun knoweth his 
going down. 

Thou makest darkness, and it is 
night : * wherein all the beasts of 
the forest do come forth. 

The young lions roar after their 
prey, * and seek their meat from 
God. 

The sun ariseth, and they gather 
themselves together : * and lay 
them down in their dens. 

Man goeth forth unto his work, 

* and to his labour, until the even- 
ing. 

O Lord, how manifold are Thy 
works ! * in wisdom hast Thou 
made them all : the earth is full of 
Thy riches. 

So is this great and wide sea : 

* wherein are things creeping in- 
numerable. 

Both small and great beasts : * 
there go the ships; 

There is that Leviathan whom 
Thou hast made to play with him : 

* these all wait upon Thee, that 
Thou mayest give them their meat 
in due season. 

That thou givest them, they 
gather : * when Thou openest Thine 
hand, they are all filled with good. 



Thou hidest Thy face, they are 
troubled : * Thou takest away their 
breath, they die, and return to their 
dust. 

Thou sendest forth Thy spirit, 
and they are created : * and Thou 
renewest the face of the earth. 

Let the glory of the Lord endure 
for ever ! * the Lord shall rejoice in 
His works. 

He looketh on the earth and 
maketh it to tremble : * He touch- 
eth the mountains and they smoke. 

I will sing unto the Lord as long 
as I live : * I will sing praise to my 
God while I have my. being. 

My meditation of Him shall be 
sweet : * I will be glad in the 
Lord. 

Let the sinners be consumed out 
of the earth, and let the wicked be 
no more : * bless thou the Lord, O 
my soul ! x 

Psalm CIV. 

[The first fifteen verses of this Psalm 
are found in a slightly different edition in 
i Par. (Chron.) xvi. as the first part of a 
Psalm given by David to Asaph and his 
brethren, on the day that the ark was 
brought to Jerusalem. The rest is our 
present Psalm xcv., which see with the 
notes, p. 148. The Vulgate and the LXX. 
prefix "Alleluia."] 

(^i GIVE thanks unto the Lord, 
^^ and call upon His name : * 
make known His deeds among the 
heathen. 

Sing unto Him, and sing psalms 
unto Him : * talk ye of all His 
wondrous works. 

Glory ye in His holy name : * 
let the heart of them rejoice that 
seek the Lord. 

Seek the Lord, and be strong : 
* seek His face evermore. 



1 "Alleluia" is here appended in the Hebrew. 



SATURDAY AT MATTINS. 



163 



Remember His marvellous works 
that He hath done: * His won- 
ders and the judgments of his 
mouth. 

O ye seed of Abraham, His ser- 
vant, * ye children of Jacob His 
chosen ! 

He is the Lord our God : * His 
judgments are in all the earth. 

He hath remembered His cove- 
nant for ever, * the word which 
He commanded to a thousand gen- 
erations — 

[The covenant] that He made 
with Abraham : * and His oath 
unto Isaac. 

And He confirmed the same 
unto Jacob for a law, * and to 
Israel for an everlasting covenant. 

Saying : Unto thee will I give 
the land of Canaan, * the lot of 
your inheritance. 

When they were but a few men 
in number, * very few, and strangers 
in it. 

And they went from one nation 
to another, * and from one king- 
dom to another people. 

He suffered no man to do them 
wrong : * yea, He reproved kings 
for their sakes. 

Touch not Mine anointed, * and 
do My prophets no harm. 1 

Moreover He called for a famine 
upon the land : * and brake the 
whole staff of bread. 

He sent a man before them : * 
Joseph was sold for a servant : 

Whose feet they hurt with fetters, 
the iron entered into his soul. * 
Until his word came, 

The word of the Lord tried 
him : * the king sent and loosed 
him ; even the ruler of the people, 
and let him go free. 



He made him lord of his house, 
* and ruler of all his substance. 

To instruct his princes at his 
pleasure, * and teach his elders 
wisdom. 

Israel also came into Egypt, * 
and Jacob sojourned in the land 
of Ham. 

And He increased His people 
greatly : * and made them stronger 
than their enemies. 

He turned their heart to hate 
His people, * and to deal subtilly 
with his servants. 

He sent Moses His servant, * 
and Aaron whom He had chosen. 

He showed signs among them, 
*. and wonders in the land of 
Ham. 

He sent darkness and made it 
dark : * He made not His words 
of none effect. 

He turned their waters into 
blood, * and slew their fish. 

Their land brought forth frogs, * 
in the chambers of their kings. 

He spake, and there came divers 
sorts of flies, * and lice in all their 
coasts. 

He gave them hail for rain, * 
flaming fire in their land. 

He smote their vines also and 
their fig-trees, * and brake the trees 
of their coasts. 

He spake, and the locust came, 
and the caterpillar, * without 
number, 

And ate up all the herb in their 
land, * and devoured all the fruit 
of their ground. 

He smote also all the first-born 
in their land, * the chief of all 
their travail. 

He brought them forth also with 
silver and gold : * and there was 



1 Here ends the portion found in I Par. (Chron.) xvi. 22. 



164 



THE PSALTER. 



not one feeble person among their 
tribes. 

Egypt was glad when they de- 
parted : * for the fear of them fell 
upon them. 

He spread a cloud for a cover- 
ing, * and fire to give light in the 
night. 

They asked, and the quail came, 
* and He satisfied them with the 
bread of heaven.- 

He opened the rock and the 
waters gushed out, * the rivers 
ran through the dry places. 

For He remembered His holy 
promise, * that He made unto 
Abraham His servant. 

And He brought forth His people 
with joy, * and His chosen with 
gladness. 

And gave them the lands of the 
heathen, * and they inherited the 
labour of the peoples. 

That they might observe His 
statutes, * and keep His laws. 

[Here the Hebrew adds "Alleluia."] 

A?itiphon. 1 Bless the Lord, O 
my soul ! 

Fifth Antiphon. Visit us. 

Psalm CV. 
[Superscribed "Alleluia."] 

C~\ GIVE thanks unto the Lord, 
^-^ for He is good : * for His 
mercy endureth for ever. 

Who can utter the mighty acts 
of the Lord? * who can show 
forth all His praise? 

Blessed are they that keep judg- 
ment, * and they that do righteous- 
ness at all times. 

Remember us, O Lord, with 

1 Ps. 



the favour that Thou showest unto 
Thy people : * O visit us with 
Thy salvation : 

That I may see the good of Thy 
chosen, that I may rejoice in the 
gladness of Thy people, * that 
Thou mayest be praised in Thine 
inheritance. 

We have sinned with our fathers : 

* we have done wickedly, we have 
committed iniquity. 

Our fathers considered not Thy 
wonders in Egypt : * they remem- 
bered not the multitude of Thy 
mercies, 

But provoked Him when they 
went up unto the sea, * even the 
Red Sea. 

Nevertheless He saved them for 
His name's sake, * that He might 
make His mighty power to be 
known. 

He rebuked the Red Sea also, 
and it was dried up : * and He 
led them through the depths as 
through the wilderness. 

And He saved them from the 
hand of them that hated them, * 
and redeemed them from the hand 
of the enemy. 

And the waters covered their 
enemies : * there was not one of 
them left. 

And they believed His words : 

* and sang His praise. 

They soon forgot His works : * 
and waited not for His counsel. 

And lusted exceedingly in the 
wilderness : * and tempted God 
in the desert. 

And He gave them their request, 

* and sent fulness into their soul. 
They provoked Moses also in the 

camp, * and Aaron, the saint of the 
Lord. 



SATURDAY AT MATTINS. 



I6 5 



The earth opened and swallowed 
up Dathan, * and covered the com- 
pany of Abiram. 1 

And a fire was kindled in their 
assembly, * the flame burned up 
the wicked. 

2 They made a calf also in 
Horeb, * and worshipped the 
graven image. 

Thus they changed their Glory * 
into the similitude of a calf that 
eateth grass. 

They forgat God their Saviour, 
* Who had done great things in 
Egypt, wondrous works in the land 
of Ham, terrible things by the Red 
Sea. 

Therefore He said that He would 
cut them off, * had not Moses His 
chosen stood before Him in the 
breach, 

To turn away His wrath, lest 
He should destroy them : * yea, 
they despised the pleasant land ; 

They believed not His words : 
but murmured in their tents : * 
they hearkened not unto the voice 
of the Lord. 

He also lifted up His hand 
against them, * to overthrow them 
in the wilderness. 



To overthrow their seed also 
among the nations, * and to scat- 
ter them in the lands. 

They joined themselves also unto 
Baal-peor, 3 * and ate the sacrifices 
of the dead. 

And they provoked Him to 
anger with their inventions: * and 
the carcasses lay thick among 
them. 

Then stood up Phinehas and 
made a propitiation : * and the 
plague was stayed. 

And that was counted unto him 
for righteousness, * unto all genera- 
tions for evermore. 

They angered Him also at the 
waters of "Provocation," 4 * so 
that it went ill with Moses for 
their sakes ; because they provoked 
his spirit ; 

So that he spake unadvisedly with 
his lips. 5 * They did not destroy 
the nations concerning whom the 
Lord commanded them : 6 

And they were mingled among 
the heathen, and learned their 
works, and served their idols : * 
and it became a snare to them. 

Yea, they sacrificed their sons 
* and their daughters unto devils. 



1 Numbers xvi. They tried to stir up a rebellion against Moses and Aaron, upon 
levelling principles, "and the earth opened her mouth and swallowed them up," while 
some of their partizans were consumed by a fire which issued from the sanctuary. 

2 For the well-known history of the golden calf, see Exod. xxxii. 

3 I.e., "the Lord of Mount Peor," an idol of the Moabites. The whole history of this 
lapse of the Israelites, and how Phinehas stopped the plague by killing one pair of 
the transgressors, is in Numbers xxv. "And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying: 
Phinehas, the son of Eleazar, the son of Aaron the Priest, hath turned My wrath 
away from the children of Israel. . . . Behold, I give unto him My covenant of 
peace ; and he shall have it, and his seed after him, even the covenant of an everlasting 
Priesthood. " 

4 Meribah. See note on Ps. xciv., p. 3. 

5 Numbers xx. 10. "And Moses . . . said unto them: Hear now, ye rebels, must 
we fetch you water out of this rock?" v. 12. "And the Lord spake unto Moses 
and Aaron : Because ye believed Me not, to sanctify Me in the eyes of the children 
of Israel, therefore ye shall not bring this congregation into the land which I have 
yiven them." 

6 In Judges i. 21 to the end, is a long list of the districts of idolaters whom they left in 
Canaan and among whom they lived. 



1 66 



THE PSALTER. 



And shed innocent blood, * even 
the blood of their sons and of their 
daughters, whom they sacrificed unto 
the idols of Chanaan : 

And the land was polluted with 
blood. They were defiled also 
with their own works, * and went 
a whoring with their own inven- 
tions. 

Therefore was the wrath of the 
Lord kindled against His people, 

* and He abhorred His own in- 
heritance. 

And He gave them into the hand 
of the heathen : * and they that 
hated them ruled over them. 

Their enemies also oppressed 
them, and they were brought into 
subjection under their hand. * 
Many times did He deliver them, 

But they provoked Him with 
their counsel, * and they were 
brought low for their iniquity. 

But He regarded their affliction, 

* and heard their cry. 

And He remembered His cove- 
nant, * and repented according to 
the multitude of His mercies. 

He made them also to be pitied 

* of all those that carried them 
captives. 

Save us, O Lord our God, * 
and gather us from among the 
nations ! 

To give thanks unto Thy holy 
Name, * and to triumph in Thy 
praise. 

Blessed be the Lord God of 
Israel from everlasting to everlast- 
ing : * and let all the people say : 
Amen, Amen. 

[The Hebrew adds "Alleluia," which 
the Vulgate and the LXX. prefix to 
the next Psalm. Here ends the fourth 
of the five books into which the Psalter 
is divided.] 



Psalm CVI. 

OGIVE thanks unto the Lord, 
for He is good : * for His 
mercy endureth for ever. 

Let the redeemed of the Lord 
say so, whom He hath redeemed 
from the hand of the enemy : * 
and gathered them out of the 
lands, 

From the rising of the sun and 
from the setting thereof, * from 
the north and from the south. 

They wandered in the wilderness 
in a dry land : * they found no 
pathway to a city to dwell in : 

Hungry and thirsty, * their soul 
fainted in them. 

Then they cried unto the Lord 
in their trouble ; * and He de- 
livered them out of their distresses. 

And He led them forth by the 
right way, * that they might go 
to a city to dwell in. 

O that men would praise the I 
Lord for His goodness : * and for 
His wonderful works to the children 
of men ! 

For He satisfieth the longing | 
soul : * and filleth the hungry soul| 
with goodness. 

Such as sit in darkness and in; 
the shadow of death, * being bound! 
in affliction and iron. 

Because they rebelled against the! 
words of God, * and contemned the! 
counsel of the Most High. 

Therefore their heart was brought' 
down with labour : * they fell down,' 
and there was none to help. 

Then they cried unto the Lordi 
in their trouble : * and He de- 
livered them out of their distresses. 

And He brought them out of' 
darkness and the shadow of death : 
* and brake their bands in sunder. 



SATURDAY AT MATTINS. 



I6 7 



O that men would praise the 
Lord for His goodness : * and 
for His wonderful works to the 
children of men ! 

For He hath broken the gates 
of brass, * and cut the bars of iron 
in sunder. 

He saved them from the way 
of their transgression : * for they 
were afflicted because of their in- 
iquities. 

Their soul abhorred all manner 
of meat : * and they drew near even 
unto the gates of death. 

Then they cried unto the Lord 
in their trouble : * and He de- 
livered them out of their dis- 
tresses. 

He sent His word and healed 
them, * and delivered them from 
their straits. 

O that men would praise the 
Lord for His goodness : * and for 
His wonderful works to the children 
of men ! 

Yea, let them sacrifice the sacri- 
fice of thanksgiving, * and declare 
His works with rejoicing. 

They that go down to the sea 
in ships, * and do business in great 
waters ; 

These see the works of the Lord, 

* and His wonders in the deep. 

He commandeth, and the stormy 
wind riseth, * and the waves thereof 
are lifted up. 

They mount up to the heaven, 
and go down again to the depths : 

* their soul is melted because of 
trouble. 

They reel to and fro, and stagger 
like a drunken man, * and are at 
their wits' end. 

Then they cry unto the Lord 
in their trouble, * and He delivereth 
them out of their distresses. 



And He maketh the storm a 
calm, * and the waves thereof are 
still. 

And they are glad because [the 
breakers] be quiet : * so He 
bringeth them unto their desired 
haven. 

O that men would praise the 
Lord for His goodness : * and for 
His wonderful works to the children 
of men ! 

Let them exalt Him also in the 
congregation of the people, * and 
praise Him in the assembly of the 
elders. 

He turneth the rivers into a 
wilderness, * and the water-springs 
into dry ground ; 

A fruitful land into a salt desert, 
* for the wickedness of them that 
dwell therein. 

He turneth the wilderness into a 
standing-water, * and dry ground 
into water-springs. 

And there He maketh the hungry 
to abide, * and they prepare a city 
to dwell in : 

And sow the fields, and plant 
vineyards, * and bring forth fruits 
of increase. 

He blesseth them also, and they 
are multiplied greatly : * and He 
surTereth not their cattle to decrease. 

Again they are minished, * and 
brought low, through oppression, 
affliction, and sorrow. 

He poureth contempt upon prin- 
ces, * and He causeth them to 
wander in the wilderness, and in 
the land where there is no way. 

Yet helpeth He the poor from 
affliction, * and maketh him fami- 
lies like a flock. 

The righteous shall see it and 
rejoice : * and all iniquity shall stop 
her mouth. 



i68 



THE PSALTER. 



Who is wise, and will observe 
these things? * even he shall un- 
derstand the loving-kindness of the 
Lord. 

Antiphon. l Visit us with Thy 
salvation, O Lord. 

Sixth Antiphon. I will greatly 
praise. 

Psalm C VI I. 

[ Intituled \ ' A Song. A Psalm of David." 
It is a compilation of Ps. lvi. 8-12, and 
Ps. lix. 6-14.] 

MINE heart is ready, O God, 
mine heart is ready : * I 
will sing and give praise, even with 
my glory. 

Awake up, my glory, awake, 
psaltery and harp ! * I will awake 
right early. 

I will praise Thee, O Lord, 
among the people : * and sing unto 
Thee among the nations. 

For Thy mercy is great above the 
heavens : * and Thy truth unto the 
clouds. 

Be Thou exalted, O God, 
above the heavens, and let Thy 
glory be above all the earth : * 
2 that Thy beloved may be de- 
livered : 

Save with Thy right hand and 
hear me. * God hath spoken in 
His holiness : 

I will rejoice, and divide She- 
chem, * and mete out the valley of 
booths. 

Gilead is mine; and Manasseh 
is mine : * Ephraim also is the 
strength of mine head : 

Judah is my King : * Moab is 
the vessel [of the triumph] of mine 
hope. 

1 Ps. cv. 4. 

2 Here begins the extract from Ps. lix. 



Over Edom will I cast out my 
shoe : * over the " Strangers " have 
I triumphed. 

Who will bring me into the strong 
city? * who will lead me into 
Edom? 

Wilt not Thou, O God, Who 
hast cast us off? * and wilt not 
Thou go forth with our armies, 
O God? 

Give us help from trouble : * for 
vain is the help of man. 

Through God we shall do val- 
iantly : * and He it is That shall 
tread down our enemies. 



Psalm CVIII. 

[Intituled "A Psalm of David," with a 
superscription, probably musical, but now 
uncertain.] 

HOLD not Thy peace, O God 
of my praise : * for the 
mouth of the wicked, and the 
mouth of the deceitful are opened 
against me : 

They have spoken against me 
with a lying tongue : they com- 
passed me about also with words of 
hatred : * and fought against me 
without a cause. 

In return for my love they were 
mine adversaries : * but I gave 
myself unto prayer. 

And they have rewarded me evil 
for good, * and hatred for my love. 

Set Thou a wicked man over 
him : * and let the devil stand at 
his right hand. 

When he is judged, let him go 
forth condemned : * and let his 
prayer become sin. 

Let his days be few ; * and let 
another take his office. 

See that Psalm and notes on it, p. 112. 



SATURDAY AT MATTINS. 



169 



Let his children be fatherless, * 
and his wife a widow. 

Let his children be continually 
vagabonds, and beg : * and let 
them be driven out of their dwell- 

Iings. 
Let the extortioner catch all that 
he hath : * and let the stranger spoil 
his labour. 

Let there be none to extend 
mercy unto him : * and let there 
be none to have pity on his little 
ones. 

Let his posterity be cut off : * in 
one generation let their name be 
blotted out. 

Let the iniquity of his fathers be 
remembered before the Lord : * 
and let not the sin of his mother be 
blotted out. 

Let them be before the Lord 
continually, and let their memory 
be cut off from the earth. * Be- 
cause that he remembered not to 
show mercy, 

But persecuted the poor and 
needy man, * and the broken in 
heart, that he might slay him. 

As he loved cursing, so let it 
come unto him : * as he delighted 
not in blessing, so let it be far 
from him : 

As he clothed himself with curs- 
ing, like as with a garment, * so 
let it come into his bowels like 
water, and like oil into his bones. 

Let it be unto him as the gar- 
ment which covereth him, * and 
for a girdle wherewith he may be 
girded continually. 

Let this be the reward of mine 
<:rsaries from the Lord: * and 
of them that speak evil against my 
soul. 

And do Thou for me, O Lord, 

1 Ps 

VOL. II. 



for Thy name's sake, O Lord, * 
because Thy mercy is good. 

Deliver Thou me, for I am 
poor and needy : * and mine heart 
is wounded within me. 

I am gone like the shadow when 
it declineth : * and tossed up and 
down as the locust. 

My knees are weak through 
fasting : * and my flesh faileth 
of fatness. 

I became also a reproach unto 
them : * they looked upon me, 
and shaked their heads. 

Help me, O Lord my God ! * 
O save me according to Thy 
mercy. 

That they also may know that 
this is Thine hand : * and Thou, 
Lord, hast done it ! 

Let them curse, but bless Thou : 
* when they arise against me let 
thern be ashamed : but let Thy 
servant rejoice. 

Let mine adversaries be clothed 
with shame : * and let them be 
covered with their own confusion 
as with a mantle. 

I will greatly praise the Lord 
with my mouth : * yea, I will 
praise Him among the multitude. 

For He standeth at the right 
hand of the poor, * to save my 
soul from them that persecute me. 

A ntiphon. 1 1 will greatly praise 
the Lord with my mouth. 

Antiphon in Paschal ti?ne. Al- 
leluia, Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Then is said a Verse and Answer. 
In Advent. 

Verse. The Lord cometh out of 
His holy place. 

cviii. 30. 

F 2 



170 



THE PSALTER. 



Answer. He will come and save 
His people. 

During the rest of the year. 

Verse. x Hear my prayer, O 
Lord. 

Answer. And let my cry come 
unto Thee. 

In Lent. 

Verse. His truth shall be thy 
shield. 

Answer. Thou shalt not be 
afraid for the terror by night. 

In Passion time. 

Verse. Take not away my soul 
with sinners, O God. 



Answer. Nor my life with bloody 
men. 

In Paschal ti?ne. 

Verse. The disciples were glad, 
Alleluia. 

Answer. When they saw the Lord, 
Alleluia. 

The rest is the same as the Third 
Noctum of the preceding Sunday, ex- 
cept necessary differences. The Lessons 
are those of the day. The Responsories 
are arranged accordifig to the rules in 
Chapter xxvii. 4, 5, of the General 
Rubrics. 

No Festal Office can occur, except 
that of the Immaculate Conception of 
the Blessed Virgin Mary. 



Ps. ci. 2. 



i7i 



aturbag at fjauti*, 



THE SABBATH. 



All as on Sunday, except as otherwise 
given here. 

The Psalms are as follows: 

Antiphon. Do good. 

Psalm L. 
Have mercy upon me, &c, (/. 
87)- 

Antiphon. Do good, O Lord, in 
Thy good pleasure. 

Second Antiphon. It is a good 
thing. 

If this Antiphon be used the Psalm 
begins with the words, " To give 
, thanks." 

Psalm XC I. 

[Intituled "A Psalm. A Song for the 
Sabbath Day."] 

T T is a good thing to give thanks 
-*- unto the Lord, * and to sing 
praises unto Thy name, O Most 
High! 

To show forth Thy loving-kind- 
ness in the morning, * and Thy 
faithfulness in the night ; 

Upon an instrument of ten 
strings : * upon the harp with a 
solemn sound. 

For Thou, Lord, hast made me 



glad through Thy work : * and I 
will triumph in the works of Thine 
hands. 

O Lord, how great are Thy 
works ! * Thy thoughts are very 
deep. 

A brutish man knoweth not : * 
neither doth a fool understand this. 

When the wicked spring up like 
grass : * and when all the workers 
of iniquity are seen, 

It is that they may be destroyed 
for ever : * but Thou, Lord, art 
Most High for evermore. 

For, lo, Thine enemies, O Lord, 
for, lo, Thine enemies shall perish : 
* and all the workers of iniquity 
shall be scattered. 

But mine horn shall be exalted 
like the horn of an unicorn : * and 
mine old age shall be crowned with 
Thy mercy. 1 

Mine eye also shall look upon 
mine enemies : * and mine ear shall 
hear of the wicked that rise up 
against me. 

The righteous shall flourish like 
the palm tree : * he shall grow like 
a cedar in Lebanon. 

Those that are planted in the 
house of the Lord, * in the courts 
of the house of our God shall 
flourish. 



Hebrew : " I am anointed with fresh oil." 



72 



THE PSALTER. 



They shall still bring forth fruit 
in old age: * they shall flourish, 
to declare : — 

That the Lord our God is up- 
right : * and that there is no un- 
righteousness in Him. 

Antiphon. It is a good thing to 
give thanks unto the Lord. 

Third Antiphon. Let all the 
ends. 



Psalms LXIL, LXVI. 
O God, Thou art my God, 
(A 2 3). 



&c, 



Antiphon. Let all the ends of 
the earth fear the Lord. 

Fourth Antiphon. Ascribe ye 
greatness. 

The Song of Moses. (Deut. xxxii.) 

[Deut. xxxi. 28: "Gather unto me," 
(said Moses) "all the elders of your tribes, 
and your officers, that I may speak these 
words in their ears, and call heaven and 
earth to record against them. For I know 
that after my death ye will utterly corrupt 
yourselves and turn aside from the way 
which I have commanded you ; and evil 
will befall you in the latter days ; because 
ye will do evil in the sight of the Lord, to 
provoke Him to anger through the work of 
your hands. And Moses spake in the ears 
of all the congregation of Israel the words 
of this song, until they were ended : — "] 

f~^ IVE ear, O ye heavens, and I 
^-* will speak ; * and hear, O 
earth, the words of my mouth. 

My teaching shall drop as the 
rain, * my speech shall distil as the 
dew; 

As the small rain upon the 
tender herb, and as the showers 
upon the grass : * because I will 
proclaim the name of the Lord. 

Ascribe ye greatness unto our 
God. * The works of God are 



Father? * That 
and made thee, 



perfect : and all His ways are judg- 
ment : 

A God of truth, and without 
iniquity, just and right is He. * 
They have sinned against Him, 
and by their defilement they are 
not His children : 

They are a perverse and crooked 
generation. * Do ye thus requite 
the Lord, O foolish people and 
unwise ? 

Is not He thy 
hath bought thee, 
and created thee ? 

Remember the days of old, * 
consider generation after genera- 
tion : 

Ask thy father, and he will show 
thee — * thine elders, and they will 
tell thee. 

When the Most High divided 
the nations, * when He separated 
the sons of Adam, 

He set the bounds of the people 

* according to the number of the 
children of Israel. 

For the Lord's portion is His 
people : * Jacob is the lot of his 
inheritance. 

He found him in a desert land, 

* in the waste and howling wilder- 
ness : 

He led him about and instructed 
him, * and kept him as the apple 
of His eye. 

As the eagle that stirreth up her 
young to fly, * and fluttereth over 
them, 

So spread He abroad His wings, 
and took him, * and bore him on 
His pinions ; 

The Lord alone did lead him, 

* and there was no strange god 
with him. 

He made him ride upon the 
high places of the earth, * that! 



SATURDAY AT LAUDS. 



173 



he might eat the increase of the 
fields : 

And He made him to suck 
honey out of the rock, * and oil 
out of the flinty rock : 

Butter of kine, and milk of 
sheep, * with fat of lambs and 
rams of the breed of Bashan : 

And goats, with the fat of wheat, 

* and to drink the pure blood of 
the grape. 

The " Beloved " ? waxed fat, and 
kicked : * he was waxen fat, he 
was grown plump, he was covered 
with fatness : 

He forsook God That made him, 

* and departed from the God of 
his salvation. 

They provoked Him to jealousy 
with strange gods, * and with 
abominations provoked they Him 
to anger. 

They sacrificed unto devils, and 
to things that were no gods, * to 
gods whom they knew not, 

New gods that came newly up, 

* whom their fathers feared not. 
The God That begat thee hast 

thou forsaken, * and hast forgotten 
God That formed thee. 

When the Lord saw it, He was 
roused to anger, * because of the 
provoking of His sons and of His 
daughters. 

And He said : I will hide My 
face from them, * and see what 
their end shall be : 

For they are a very froward 
generation, * children in whom is 
no faith. 

They have moved Me to jealousy 
with that which is not God, * and 
provoked Me to anger with their 
vanities : 



1 Jeshurun — but that this pet-name of the Israelite people means 
now reckoned certain. 



And I will move them to jealousy 
with those who are not a people, 

* and provoke them to anger with 
a foolish nation. 

A fire is kindled in Mine anger, 

* and shall burn unto the lowest 
hell, 

And shall consume the earth with 
her increase, * and set on fire the 
foundations of the mountains. 

I will heap mischiefs upon them, 

* and will spend Mine arrows upon 
them. 

They shall be wasted with hun- 
ger, * and the birds of the air 
shall prey on them with a very 
grievous devouring : 

I will send the teeth of beasts 
upon them, * with the poison of 
serpents creeping in the dust. 

The sword without and terror 
within shall destroy * both the 
young man and the virgin, the 
suckling with the man of grey 
hairs. 

I said : Where are they ? * I 
will make the remembrance of 
them to cease among men : 

But I forbore because of the 
wrath of the enemy, * lest their 
adversaries should triumph, 

And lest they should say : Our 
high hand, and not the Lord, * 
hath done all this. 

They are a nation void of coun- 
sel, neither is there any under- 
standing in them. * O that they 
were wise, and that they understood 
this, and would consider their latter 
end ! 

How should one chase a thou- 
sand, * and two put ten thousand 
to flight ! 

Except their God had sold them, 

Beloved " is not 



174 



THE PSALTER. 



* and the Lord had delivered them 



up 



For their gods are not as our 
God, * even our enemies them- 
selves being judges. 

Their vine is of the vine of 
Sodom, * and of the fields of Go- 
morrah : 

Their grapes are grapes of gall, 

* and their clusters are bitter : 
Their wine is the poison of 

dragons, * and the cruel venom of 
asps. 

Is not this laid up in store with 
Me, * and sealed up among My 
treasures ? 

To Me belongeth vengeance, 
and I will repay in due time, * to 
make their foot to slide. 

The day of their calamity is at 
hand, * and the things that shall 
come upon them make haste. 

The Lord shall judge His people, 

* and take pity on His servants, 
When He seeth that their hand 

is weakened, * and there is none 
shut up and left, and that they 
that remained are consumed. 

And He shall say : Where are 
their gods, * in whom they trusted ? 

Of whose sacrifices they did eat 
the fat, * and drank the wine of 
their drink-offerings? 

Let them rise up, and help you, 

* and be your protection in the 
time of need. 

See now that I, even I, am 
He, * and there is no god with 
Me: 

I kill, and I make alive : I wound 
and I heal : * neither is there any 
that can deliver out of Mine hand. 

I will lift up Mine hand to 
heaven, and say : * I live for ever. 

1 Hymn of the Ambrosian school, considerably altered; translation by the late Card. 
Newman. 



If I whet My glittering sword, 
* and Mine hand take hold on 
judgment ; 

I will render vengeance to Mine 
enemies, * and will requite them 
that hate Me. 

I will make Mine arrows drunk 
with blood, * and My sword shall 
devour flesh ; 

With the blood of the slain * and 
of the captives, and of the despoiled 
chief of the enemy. 

Rejoice with His people, ye 
nations : * for He will avenge the 
blood of His servants, 

And will render vengeance to 
their adversaries, * and will be 
merciful unto the land of His 
people. 

Antiphon. Ascribe ye greatness 
unto our God. 

Fifth Antipho7i. Praise God. 

Psalms CXLVIIL, CXLIX., CL. 

Praise ye the Lord from the 
heavens, &c, (pp. 25, 26). 

Antiphon. Praise God upon the 
loud cymbals. 

Chapter. (Rom. xiii. 12.) 

The night is far spent, &c, (as 
on Monday ', p. 89). 



Hymn. 1 

'THE dawn is sprinkled o'er the sky, 
■*• The day steals softly on ; 
Its darts are scattered far and nigh, 
And all that fraudful is, shall fly 

Before the brightening sun ; 
Spectres of ill, that stalk at will, 

And forms of guilt that fright, 
And hideous sin, that ventures in 

Under the cloak of night. 



SATURDAY AT LAUDS. 



75 



And of our crimes the tale complete, 

Which bows us in Thy sight, 
Up to the latest, they shall fleet, 
Out-told by our full numbers sweet, 

And melted by the light. 
To Father, Son, and Spirit, One, 

Whom we adore and love, 
Be given all praise, now and always, 

Here as in Heaven above. 

Amen. 

Verse. Thou hast satisfied us 
early with Thy mercy. 



Answer. We rejoice and are glad. 

Antiphon for the Song of Zacha- 
rias. Give light, O Lord, * unto 
them that sit in darkness, and guide 
our feet into the way of peace, O 
Thou God of Israel ! 

Commemoration of the Cross before 
the others, and Long Preces in Ad- 
vent and Lent, and on Fast-days, 
except the Eves of Christmas and 
Pentecost. 



176 



VESPERS, OR EVENSONG. 1 



The Lord's Day. 

At the beginning of Vespers the 
Lord's Prayer and the Angelic Salu- 
tation are said inaudibly. 

OUR Father, Who art in heaven, 
Hallowed be Thy Name. 
Thy kingdom come. Thy will be 
done on earth, as it is in heaven. 
Give us this day our daily bread. 
And forgive us our trespasses, as 
we forgive them that trespass against 
us. And lead us not into tempta- 
tion ; but deliver us from evil. 
Amen. 

TTAIL, Mary, full of grace; The 
■^ -^ Lord is with thee : blessed 
art thou among women, and blessed 
is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus. 

Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray 
for us sinners, now, and at the hour 
of our death. Amen. 

Then is said aloud: 

Verse. *%t Make haste, O God, 
to deliver me. 

Answer. Make haste to help 
me, O Lord. 

Glory be to the Father, and to 
the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 



As it was in the beginning, is now, 
and ever shall be, world without end. 
Amen. Alleluia. 



From Septuagesima Sunday to 
Maundy Thursday instead of "Alle- 
luia" is said: 

Ceaseless praise to Thee be given, 
O Eternal King of heaven. 

Then follow the Psalms. They are 
said under Five Antiphons, except in 
Paschal ti?ne when there is only one, 
and when these are not specially given, 
those give?i here are used. 

Antiphon. The Lord said. 

If this Afitiphon be used the Psalm 
begins with the words " Unto my 
Lord." 



Antiphon for Paschal time. 
leluia. 

Psalm CIX. 



Al- 



[Intituled " A Psalm of David." The 
first verse was quoted by our Lord. — Matth. 
xxii. 44 ; Mark xii. 36 ; Luke xx. 42.] 

THE Lord said unto my Lord : 
* Sit Thou at My right hand, 
Until I make Thine enemies * 
Thy footstool. 

The Lord shall send the rod of 
Thy strength out of Zion : * rule 
Thou in the midst of Thine ene- 
mies. 



1 The proper hour for Vespers is sunset, reckoned to be about 6 p.m. 
recitation, they ought not usually to be begun before noon. 



In private 



VESPERS, OR EVENSONG. 



177 



Thine shall be the dominion in 
the day of Thy power, amid the 
brightness of the saints : * from the 
womb, before the day-star have I 
begotten Thee. 

The Lord hath sworn, and will 
not repent : * Thou art a Priest for 
ever after the order of Melchisedek. 

The Lord at Thy right hand * 
shall strike through kings in the 
day of His wrath. 

He shall judge among the hea- 
then, He shall fill the places with 
dead bodies : * He shall wound the 
heads over many countries. 

He shall drink of the brook in 
the way : * therefore shall he lift 
up his head. 



covenant. * He will show His 
people the power of His works, 

That He may give them the 
heritage of the heathen. * The 
works of His hands are verity and 
judgment : 

All His commandments are sure ; 
they stand fast for ever and ever, * 
being done in truth and uprightness. 

He sent redemption unto His 
people : He hath commanded His 
covenant for ever : 

Holy and terrible is His Name. 

* The fear of the Lord is the be- 
ginning of wisdom : 

A good understanding have all 
they that do His commandments : 

* His praise endureth for ever. 



Antiphon. The Lord said unto 
my Lord : * Sit Thou at My right 
hand. 

Second Antiphon. All His com- 
mandments. 



Antiphon. 1 A11 His command- 
ments are sure ; they stand fast for 
ever and ever. 

Third Antiphon. In His com- 
mandments. 



Psalm CX. 

[The Hebrew prefixes "Alleluia," and 
begins, " I will praise the Lord." The 
Psalm is A B C Darian.] 

] WILL praise Thee, O Lord, 

* with my whole heart : * in the 
assembly of the upright, and in the 
congregation. 

The works of the Lord are great, 

* meet to serve for the doing of 
His will. 

His work is honourable and glo- 
rious, * and His righteousness en- 
dureth for ever. 

He hath made a memorial of 
His wonderful works : the Lord 
is gracious and full of compassion. 

* He hath given meat unto them 
that fear Him : 

He will ever be mindful of His 

IP* 



Psalm CXI. 

[The Hebrew prefixes "Alleluia." The 
Vulgate adds to the superscription "on the 
return of Haggai and Zechariah [from the 
Captivity]." See Thursday, fifth week in 
November. The Psalm is A B C Darian.] 

T3LESSED is the man that fear- 
*-* eth the Lord : * that de- 
lighteth greatly in His command- 
ments. 

His seed shall be mighty upon 
earth • * the generation of the up- 
right shall be blessed. 

Glory and riches shall be in his 
house : * and his righteousness en- 
dureth for ever. 

Unto the upright there ariseth 
light in the darkness : * he is 
gracious, and full of compassion, 
and righteous. 



i 7 8 



THE PSALTER. 



Happy is the man that showeth 
favour and lendeth ; he will guide 
his words with discretion : * surely 
he shall not be moved for ever : 

The righteous shall be in ever- 
lasting remembrance. * He shall 
not be afraid of evil tidings : 

His heart is ready, trusting in the 
Lord. His heart is established, * 
he shall not be afraid until he see 
his desire upon his enemies. 

He hath dispersed, he hath given 
to the poor: his righteousness en- 
dureth for ever : * his horn shall 
be exalted with honour. 

The wicked shall see it, and be 
grieved ; he shall gnash his teeth, 
and melt away : * the desire of 
the wicked shall perish. 

Antiphon. In His command- 
ments he delighteth greatly. 

Fourth Antiphon. Blessed be the 

Name. 

Psalm CXII. 
[The Hebrew prefixes "Alleluia."] 

DRAISE the Lord, O ye His 
*• servants, * praise the Name 
of the Lord. 

Blessed be the Name of the 
Lord, * from this time forth, and 
for evermore ! 

From the rising of the sun unto 
the going down of the same, * the 
Lord's Name is to be praised. 

The Lord is high above all 
nations, * and His glory above the 
heavens. 

Who is like unto the Lord our 
God, Who dwelleth on high, * 
and beholdeth what is lowly in 
heaven, and in the earth? 

He raiseth up the poor out of 



the dust, * and lifteth the needy 
out of the dung-hill; 

That He may set him with 
princes, * even with the princes 
of His people. 

He rnaketh the barren woman 
to keep house, * and to be a joy- 
ful mother of children. 

[The Hebrew adds " Alleluia," which 
the Vulgate and the LXX. prefix to the 
next Psalm.] 

Antiphon. Blessed be the Name 
of the Lord for evermore. 

Fifth Afitiphon. We that live. 

Psalm CXI 1 1. 

WHEN Israel went out of Egypt, 
* the house of Jacob from 
a people of strange language, 

Judah was His sanctuary, * and 
Israel His dominion. 

The sea saw it and fled : * Jor- 
dan was driven back. 

The mountains skipped like rams, 

* and the little hills like lambs. 
What ailed thee, O thou sea, 

that thou fleddest? * and thou 
Jordan, that thou wast driven back ? 

Ye mountains, that ye skipped 
like rams? * and ye little hills, 
like lambs? 

The earth trembled at the pres- 
ence of the Lord, * at the presence 
of the God of Jacob : 

Who turned the rock into a 
standing water, * and the flint into 
a fountain of waters. 1 

Not unto us, O Lord, not unto us : 

* but unto Thy Name give glory, 
For Thy mercy, and for Thy 

truth's sake. * Wherefore should 
the heathen say : Where is now 
their God? 



1 In the Hebrew here ends Ps. cxiv. and the next words begin 



VESPERS, OR EVENSONG. 



179 



But our God is in the heavens : 
* He hath done whatsoever He 
hath pleased. 

The idols of the heathen are 
silver and gold, * the work of 
men's hands. 

They have mouths, but they 
speak not : * eyes have they, but 
they see not. 

They have ears, but they hear 
not : * noses have they, but they 
smell not : 

They have hands, but they handle 
not : feet have they, but they walk 
not : * neither speak they through 
their throat. 

May they that make them be 
like unto them : * even every one 
that trusteth in them. 

The house of Israel trusteth 
in the Lord : * He is their help 
and their shield. 

The house of Aaron trusteth in 
the Lord : * He is their help and 
their shield. 

They that fear the Lord trust 
in the Lord : * He is their help 
and their shield. 

The Lord hath been mindful of 
us, * and blessed us : 

He hath blessed the house of Is- 
rael : * He hath blessed the house 
of Aaron. 

He hath blessed them that fear 
the Lord, * both small and 
great. 

The Lord increase you more 
and more, * you and your chil- 
dren. 

Ye are blessed of the Lord, * 
Who made heaven and earth. 

The heaven of heavens is the 
Lord's : * but the earth hath He 
given to the children of men. 



The dead shall not praise Thee, 
O Lord, * neither all they that go 
down into the grave. 

But we that live bless the Lord, 
* from this time forth for evermore. 

[The Hebrew adds "Alleluia."] 

Antiphon. We that live bless the 
Lord. 

Antiphon for Paschal time. Alle- 
luia, Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Here follows the Chapter. When a 
special o?ie is not given, the following is 
used: 

Chapter. (2 Cor. i. 3.) 

T3LESSED be God, even the 
-"-* Father of our Lord Jesus 
Christ, the Father of mercies, and 
the God of all comfort, Who com- 
forteth us in all our tribulation. 
Answer. Thanks be to God. 

This Answer is always ?nade after 
the Chapter. 

Then follows the Hy?nn. When a 
special o?ie is ?iot given, the follotving 
is used: 

Hymn. 1 

P ATHER of Lights, by Whom each 
•*• day 

Is kindled out of night, 
Who, when the heavens were made, 
didst lay 
Their rudiments in light ; 
Thou, W 7 ho didst bind and blend in one 
The glistening morn and evening pale, 
Hear Thou our plaint, when light is 

gone, 
And lawlessness and strife prevail. 

Hear, lest the whelming weight of crime 

Wreck us with life in view ; 
Lest thoughts and schemes of sense 
and time 

Earn us a sinner's due. 



1 Hymn of the Ambrosian school, very slightly altered ; translation by the late Card. 
Newman. 



i8o 



THE PSALTER. 



So may we knock at Heaven's door, 
And strive the immortal prize to win, 
Continually and evermore 
Guarded without and pure within. 

Grant this, O Father, Only Son, 

And Spirit, God of grace, 
To Whom all worship shall be done 

In every time and place. 

Amen. 

Then is said a Verse and Answer. 
If a special one is not give ft, the follow- 
ing is used : 

Verse. 1 Let my prayer, O Lord, 
be set forth. 

Ansiver. As incense before 
Thee. 

Then is said the following Canticle 
from the Gospel. It has an Antiphon 
which is always special, and which is 
either begun or said through the first 
time before it, according as the Office is 
Double or not. 

The Song of the Blessed Virgin 
Mary. (Luke i. 46.) 

MY soul * doth magnify the 
Lord: 

And my spirit hath rejoiced * in 
God my Saviour. 

For He hath regarded the low- 
liness of His handmaiden : * for, be- 
hold, from henceforth all generations 
shall call me blessed. 

For He That is Mighty hath done 
to me great things : * and holy is His 
name. 

And His mercy is on them that 
fear Him, * from generation to gen- 
eration. 

He hath showed strength with 
His arm : * He hath scattered the 
proud in the imagination of their 
heart. 

He hath put down the mighty 



from their seat, * and exalted them 
of low degree. 

He hath- filled the hungry with 
good things, * and the rich He hath 
sent empty away. 

He hath holpen His servant Is- 
rael, * in remembrance of His 
mercy : 

As He spake to our fathers, * 
to Abraham, and to his seed for 
ever. 

The Hymn, " Glory be to the Father, 
&c," is said, and then the Antiphon re- 
peated. 

Then is said: 

Verse. Hear my prayer, O Lord. 
Answer. And let my cry come 
unto Thee. 



Let us pray. 

Then follows the Prayer for the day, 
at the e?id of which is answered; 

Answer. Amen. 

Afterwards are made any Commemo- 
rations necessary, by the Antiphon for 
the Song of the Blessed Virgin, the Verse 
and Answer after the Hymn, and the 
Prayer, (preceded by " Let us pray,") 
from the superseded Office which is to 
be commemorated. After which the fol- 
lowing Common Commemorations are 
made, if required, according to Chapter 
xxxv. of the General Rubrics. 

When more than two Pi-ay ers are to 
be said, the last clause of each (beginning 
"Through our Lord, &c," or "Who 
livest, &c") is omitted in all except the 
first and the last, nor is " Amen " an- 
swered except after these two. 

(Note that if these Cornmemorations, 
with the exception of those of St Joseph, 
and SS. Peter and Paul, be said upon 
a week-day, kept as such, out of Paschal 
time, they are preceded by the Commem- 
oration of the Cross, given hereafter at 
the end of the Lauds of Monday.) 



Ps. cxl. 2. 



VESPERS, OR EVENSONG. 



181 



I. Co?nmemoration of the Blessed 
Virgin Mary. 

{This Commemoration is omitted if 
the Office of the day be of the Blessed 
Virgin, or if her Little Office is to be 
said!) 

Antiphon. O Holy Mary, be thou 
an help to the helpless, a strength to 
the fearful, a comfort to the sorrow- 
ful ; pray for the people, plead for 
the clergy, make intercession for all 
women vowed to God ; may all that 
keep thine holy remembrance, feel 
the might of thine assistance. 

Verse. Pray for us, O holy Mother 
of God. 

Anszver. That we may be made 
worthy of the promises of Christ. 

Let us pray. 

GRANT, we beseech Thee, O 
Lord God, unto all Thy ser- 
vants, that they may continually 
enjoy soundness both of mind and 
body, and by the glorious inter- 
cession of the Blessed Mary, always 
a Virgin, may be delivered from 
present sadness, and enter into the 
joy of Thine eternal gladness. 

From the Octave of the Epipha?iy to 
Candlemas, the Antiphon is the same, 
but the rest is as follows : 

Verse. After thy delivery thou 
still remainest a Virgin undefiled. 

Answer. Mother of God, pray 
for us. 

Let us pray. 

r\ GOD, Who, by the fruitful vir- 
^-^ ginity of the Blessed Mary, 
hast given unto mankind the rewards 
of everlasting life ; grant, we beseech 
Thee, that we may continually feel 



the might of her intercession, through 
whom we have worthily received the 
Author of our life, our Lord Jesus 
Christ Thy Son. 

II. Commetnoration of St Joseph, 
Pat?-on of the Universal Church. 

{Omitted in the Votive Office of St 
Joseph.) 

Antiphon. x Behold a faithful and 
wise servant whom his Lord hath 
made ruler over His household. 

Verse. 2 Glory and riches shall 
be in his house. 

Answer. And his righteousness 
endureth for ever. 

Let us pray. 

f~\ GOD, Who, in Thine unspeak- 
^-^ able foreknowledge, didst 
choose Thy blessed servant Joseph 
to be the husband of Thine Own 
most holy Mother; mercifully 
grant that now that he is in heaven 
with Thee, we who on earth do 
reverence him for our defender, 
may worthily be holpen by the 
succour of his prayers to Thee 
on our behalf. 



III. Commemoration of the Holy 
Apostles, Peter and Paul. 

{Omitted in the Votive Office of the 
Apostles.) 

Antiphon. Peter the Apostle, 
and Paul the Teacher of the Gen- 
tiles, have taught us Thy law, O 
Lord. 

Verse. 3 Thou shalt make them 
princes over all the earth. 

A?iswer. They shall be mindful 
of Thy Name, O Lord. 



1 Matth. xxiv. 45. 



Ps. cxi. 3. 



3 Ps. xliv. 17, 18. 



82 THE PSALTER. 



Let us pray. the deep of the sea, when he suf- 

GOD, Whose Right Hand fered shipwreck ; graciously hear 

caught the Blessed Peter us and grant, for the sake of them 

when he walked upon the water, both > * at w f a,s0 ma V attaln unto 



o 



and began to sink, and thrice de- everlasting glory 
livered his fellow-Apostle Paul from Note \ 



1 In England, by a special rule in this case, is made 

Commemoration of St George, Patron of England. 

Antiphon. The Saints through faith subdued kingdoms, wrought 
righteousness, obtained promises. 

Verse. O Lord, Thou hast compassed him. 
Answer. With Thy favour as with a shield. 

Let us pray. 

OGOD, Who dost gladden us through the worthy deeds and prayers 
of Thy blessed Martyr George ; mercifully grant that all they 
which seek Thy favour through him, may effectually obtain the gift of 
Thy grace. 

{And thus it is said within the Octave.) 

In the Diocese of Hexham St George is not commemorated, but instead the following 
commemoration is made of St Cuthbert : 

Antiphon. Holy Cuthbert, our Protector, grace and glory of our father- 
land, look down upon us from Heaven, and pray God for us, that He grant 
us everlasting joy. 

Verse. At the prayers of Blessed Cuthbert and for his sake, 

Answer. Be merciful unto Thy people, O Lord. 

Let us pray. 

r~\ GOD, Who, through the priceless gift of Thy grace, dost make 
^-^ Thine holy ones glorious, mercifully grant, that the prayers of Thy 
Blessed Confessor and Bishop Cuthbert may help us worthily there to 
attain, where are the spirits of just men made perfect. 

In the Diocese of Northampton the following commemoration of St Thomas of 
Canterbury is made before that of St George : 

Antiphon. I am the Good Shepherd, and know My sheep, and am 
known of Mine, and I lay down My life for the sheep. 
Verse. In your patience 
Answer. Possess ye your souls. 

Let us pray. 
r\ GOD, in defence of Whose Church the glorious Bishop Thomas 
^-S fell by the swords of wicked men, grant, we beseech Thee, that all 
that ask his help may obtain wholesome fruit of their petition. 



VESPERS, OR EVENSONG. 1 83 

For Peace. Let us pray. 

Antiphon. Give peace in our f~\ GOD, from Whom all holy 

time, O Lord, because there is ^-^ desires, all good counsels, 

none other that fighteth for us, and all just works do proceed ; 

but only Thou, O our God. give unto Thy servants that peace 

Verse. Peace be within thy which the world cannot give, that 

walls. both our hearts may be set to 

Answer. And prosperity within obey Thy commandments, and also 

thy palaces. that by Thee we being defended 



In the Diocese of Plymouth the following commemoration of St Boniface of Maintz is 
made before that of St George : 

Antiphon. Many nations, many thousands of men, did Blessed Boniface 
gain for Christ, and forasmuch as he made himself like unto an Apostle 
he hath purchased unto himself a great reward in Heaven along with 
the Apostles. 

Verse. Be strong in the Lord, be strong. 

Answer. That ye may live for ever with God. 

Let us pray. 

f~\ GOD, Who wast pleased to make the zeal of Thy Blessed Martyr 
^-^ and Bishop Boniface the mean whereby Thou didst cause many 
peoples to know Thy Name, mercifully grant unto us who honour his 
memory to be feelingly holpen by the succour of his protection. 

(And so it is said within the Octave) 

In the Diocese of Portsmouth the following commemoration of St Edmund of Canter- 
bury is made after that of St George : 

Antiphon. He loved righteousness and hated iniquity, and therefore 
he died in exile. 

Verse. Cast out upon a world of woes, 

In exile here we roam. 
Answer. O Blessed Edmund, by thy prayers, 
Gain us the love of home. 

Let us pray. 

C^\ GOD, Who in the abundance of Thy goodness toward Thy Church 
Bp-^ hast made her bright by the illustrious life of Thy blessed Confessor 
and Bishop Edmund, and gladdened her by his glorious and wondrous 
works, mercifully grant unto Thy servants that they may be bettered in 
following after his ensample, and shielded by his protection from all 
things that may rise up against them. 



8 4 



THE PSALTER. 



from the fear of our enemies, may 
pass our time in rest and quiet- 
ness. Through our Lord Jesus 
Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity 
of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. 
Answer. Amen. 

From the Monday after Low Sunday 
till Rogation Tuesday, instead of the 
preceding Commemorations, is said the 
following: 

Paschal Commemoration of the 
Cross. 

(Omitted in the Votive Offices of 
the Blessed Sacrament, and of the 
Passion.) 

Antiphon. Jesus, our trium- 
phant Head, 

On the Cross's transom dread 

The Hands of power and mercy 
spread 

That brake the prison of the 
dead. Alleluia. 

Verse. Say among the heathen 
— Alleluia. 

Answer. That the Lord reign- 
eth from the tree, 1 Alleluia. 

Let us pray. 

OGOD, Who didst send Thy 
Son to suffer death for us 
upon the Cross, that Thou might- 
est deliver us from the power of 
the enemy ; grant unto us Thy 
servants to be made partakers of 
His Resurrection. Through 'the 
Same our Lord Jesus Christ Thy 
Son, Who liveth and reigneth with 
Thee in the unity of the Holy 
Ghost, one God, world without end. 
Answer. Amen. 



After the last Prayer is said: 

Verse. Hear my prayer, O Lord. 
Answer. And let my cry come 
unto Thee. 

Verse. Bless we the Lord. 
Answer. Thanks be to God. 

Then is said in rather a low voice : 

May the souls of the Faithful, 
through the mercy of God, rest in 
peace. 

Answer. Amen. 

Then, unless Compline follow, the 
Lords Prayer inaudibly : 

OUR Father, Who art in heaven, 
Hallowed be Thy Name. 
Thy kingdom come. Thy will be 
done on earth, as it is in heaven. 
Give us this day our daily bread. 
And forgive us our trespasses, as we 
forgive them that trespass against us. 
And lead us not into temptation ; 
but deliver us from evil. Amen. 

Note. Wheji Office is said in Choir, 
the service is ended with the Antiphon 
of the Blessed Virgin Mary every time 
the Choir is left. Otherwise it is only 
said as given in this book, after Lauds, 
(or the aggregation of which Lauds 
forms a part) and Compline. When- 
ever it is said, except after Co?npline, it 
is preceded by : 

Verse. >%* The Lord give us His 
peace. 

Answer. And life everlasting. 
Amen. 

I j the Office of the Dead follow im- 
mediately, the above prayer for the 
Faithful departed, and the "Our Fa- 
ther," are omitted. 



Feasts. The above Office, appoifited 
for Sunday, is also, speaking in a gen- 
eral sense, used on all Feasts above the 
rank of Simples. 

Vs. xcv. 10, old version. 



VESPERS, OR EVENSONG. 



I8 5 



JHontiag, 



The Second Day of the Week. 

All as on Sunday, except as otherwise 
given here. 

The Psalms are as follows : 

Antiphon. The Lord hath in- 
clined. 

hi Paschal time only one Antiphon 
is said, Alleluia. 

Psalm CXIV. 

[The Vulgate and the LXX. prefix " Al- 
leluia."] 

I AM well pleased, because the 

* Lord hath heard * the voice 
of my supplication : 

Because He hath inclined His ear 
unto me, * therefore will I call upon 
Him all my days. 

The sorrows of death compassed 
me : * and the straits of hell found 
me : 

Sorrow and trouble did I find. 

* Then called I upon the name of 
the Lord : 

Lord, deliver my soul. * Gra- 
cious is the Lord, and righteous : 
yea, our God is merciful. 

The Lord preserveth the simple : 

* I was brought low and He helped 
me. 

Return unto thy rest, O my soul : 

* for the Lord hath dealt bountifully 
with thee. 

For He hath delivered my soul 
from death, * mine eyes from tears, 
and my feet from falling. 

1 will walk before the Lord * in 
the land of the living. 

Antiphon. * The Lord hath in- 
clined His ear unto me. 



Second Antiphon. I believed. 

If this Antipho?i be used the Psalm 
begins with the words, " Therefore have 
I spoken." 

Psalm CXV. 

[In the Hebrew this Psalm is a continua- 
tion of the last. The Vulgate and the LXX. 
prefix "Alleluia."] 

T BELIEVED, therefore have I 
■■- spoken : * but I was greatly 
afflicted. 

I said in my haste : * All men 
are liars. 

What shall I render unto the 
Lord * for all His benefits toward 
me? 

I will take the cup of salvation, 

* and call upon the name of the 
Lord. 

I will pay my vows unto the Lord 
in the presence of all His people. 

* Precious in the sight of the Lord 
is the death of His Saints. 

Lord, truly I am Thy servant : 

* I am Thy servant, and the son of 
Thine handmaid : 

Thou hast loosed my bonds. * I 
will offer to Thee the sacrifice of 
thanksgiving, and will call upon the 
name of the Lord. 

1 will pay my vows unto the Lord, 
in the presence of all His people : * 
in the courts of the Lord's house, in 
the midst of thee, O Jerusalem ! 

[Here the Hebrew appends "Alle- 
luia," which the Vulgate and the LXX. 
prefix to the next Psalm.] 

Antiphon. I believed, therefore 
have I spoken. 

Third Antiphon. O praise. 

If this Antiphon be used the Psalm 
begins with the words, " The Lord." 



Ps. cxiv. 2. 



1 86 



THE PSALTER. 



O 



ye 

all 



Psalm CXX. 
[Also a Song of Degrees.] 

I WILL lift up mine eyes unto the 
hills, * from whence cometh 
mine help. 

Mine help cometh from the Lord, 
* Who made heaven and earth. 

He will not suffer thy feet to be 
moved : * He That keepeth thee 
will not slumber. 

Behold, He That keepeth Israel 
shall neither slumber nor sleep. 

The Lord is thy keeper : the 
Lord is thy shade * upon thy right 
hand. 

The sun shall not smite thee by 
day, * nor the moon by night. 

The Lord shall keep thee from 
all evil : * the Lord shall keep thy 
soul. 

The Lord shall keep thy coming 
in and thy going out, * from this 
time forth and for evermore. 

Antiphon. 3 From whence cometh 
mine help. 

A?itiphon in Paschal time. Alle- 
luia, Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Hymn. 4 

LORD of unbounded space, 
Who, lest the sky and main 
Should mix, and heaven should lose its 
place, 
Didst the rude waters chain ; 

Parting the moist and rare, 
That rills on earth might flow 

To soothe the angry flame, whene'er 
It ravens from below ; 

Pour on us of Thy grace 
The everlasting spring, 

Lest our frail steps renew the trace 
Of the ancient wandering. 

1 Properly "Black-skin." This was the name of a son of Ishmae'l, and of an Arabian 
tribe sprung from him. 2 p s< cxix j 3 Ps cxx< x> 

* Hymn of the Ambrosian school, almost unchanged; translation by the late Card. 
Newman. 



Psalm CXVI. 

PRAISE the Lord, all 
nations: * praise Him, 
ye people. 

For His merciful kindness is great 
toward us : * and the truth of the 
Lord endureth for ever. 

[Here the Hebrew appends "Alle- 
luia," which the Vulgate and the LXX. 
prefix to the next Psalm.] 

Antiphon. O praise the Lord, 
all ye nations. 

Fourth Antiphon. I cried. 

Psalm CXIX. 

[This is the first of the "Songs of De- 
grees," or "Gradual Psalms." See note 
to Ps. cxxix., p. 91.] 

IN my distress I cried unto the 
Lord, * and He heard me. 

Deliver my soul, O Lord, from 
lying lips, * and from a deceitful 
tongue. 

What shall be given unto thee, or 
what shall be done unto thee, * thou 
false tongue? 

Sharp arrows of the mighty, * with 
hot burning coals. 

Woe is me ! that my sojourn is 
long : I dwell with the dwellers of 
Kedar. 1 * My soul hath long dwelt 
as an exile 

With them that hate peace. I 
was peaceable : * when I spoke 
unto them, they fought against me 
without a cause. 

Antiphon. 2 1 cried, and He heard 
me. 

Fifth Antiphon. From whence 
cometh. 



VESPERS, OR EVENSONG. 



I8 7 



May faith in lustre grow, 
And rear her star in heaven, 

Paling all sparks of earth below 
Unquenched by damps of even. 

Grant it, O Father, Son, 

And Holy Spirit of grace. 
To Whom be glory, Three in One, 

In every time and place. 

Amen. 

Antiphonfor the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. My soul doth magnify the 
Lord, * for God hath regarded my 
lowliness. 

After the repetition of the Antiphon 
after the Song of the Blessed Virgin, on 
the Week-days of Advent and Lent, the 
Ember Days, a?id all Vigils which are 
Fasts, except Christmas Eve and the 
Eve and Ember Days of Pentecost, all 
kneel down, and the following prayers, 
called the Preces, are said: 

Kyrie eleison. 

Answer, Christe eleison. 

Kyrie eleison. 

Then the Lord's Prayer is said aloud. 

OUR Father, Who art in heaven, 
Hallowed be Thy Name. Thy 
kingdom come. Thy will be done 
on earth, as it is in heaven. Give 
us this day our daily bread. And 
forgive us our trespasses, as we 
forgive them that trespass against 
us. And lead us not into tempta- 
tion. 

Answer. But deliver us from 
evil. 

Verse. I said : Lord, be merci- 
ful unto me. 

Answer. Heal my soul, for I 
have sinned against Thee. 

Verse. Return, O Lord, how 
long? 

Answer. And let it repent Thee 
concerning Thy servants. 



Verse. Let Thy mercy, O Lord, 
be upon us. 

Answer. According as we hope 
in Thee. 

Verse. Let Thy priests be clothed 
with righteousness. 

Answer. And let Thy Saints 
shout for joy. 

Verse. O Lord, save the King. 

Answer. And hear us in the day 
when we call upon Thee. 

Verse. O Lord, save Thy people, 
and bless Thine inheritance. 

Answer. And govern them, and 
lift them up for ever. 

Verse. Remember Thy congre- 
gation. 

Answer. Which Thou hast pur- 
chased of old. 

Verse. Peace be within thy 
walls. 

Answer. And prosperity within 
thy palaces. 

Verse. Let us pray for the Faith- 
ful departed. 

Answer. O Lord, grant them 
eternal rest, and let the everlasting 
light shine upon them. 

Verse. May they rest in peace. 

Answer. Amen. 

Verse. Let us pray for our absent 
brethren. 

A?iswer. O Thou, my God, save 
Thy servants that trust in Thee. 

Verse. Let us pray for the sorrow- 
ful and the captive. 

Answer. Redeem them, O God 
of Israel, out of all their troubles. 

Verse. O Lord, send them help 
from the sanctuary. 

Answer. And strengthen them 
out of Zion. 

Verse. Hear my prayer, O 
Lord. 

Answer. And let my cry come 
unto Thee. 



i88 



THE PSALTER. 



Psalm L. 

Have mercy upon me, O God, 
&c, (/. 87). 

Glory be to the Father, and to the 
Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

As it was in the beginning, is now, 
and ever shall be, world without end. 
Amen. 

Verse. Turn us again, O Lord 
God of Hosts. 

Answer. And cause Thy face to 
shine, and we shall be saved. 

Verse. Arise, O Christ, and help 
us. 

Answer. And deliver us for Thy 
Name's sake. 

Verse. Hear my prayer, O Lord. 

Answer. And let my cry come 
unto Thee. 

Let us pray. 

Here follows the Prayer of the Day. 

All proceeds to the end of the service as 
on Sunday, except that when Suffrages 
are said, the following is said before the 
Commemoration of the Blessed Virgin 
Mary. 

Commemoration of the Cross. 

{Omitted in the Offices of the Blessed 
Sacrament, and of the Passion.) 

Antiphon. Through Thy Cross's 
holy sign, Jesus, guard this soul of 
mine, from my ghostly enemy. 

Verse. Let all the earth worship 
Thee, and sing unto Thee. 

Answer. Let them sing praises to 
Thy name, O Lord. 



Thou hast vouchsafed to redeem by 
the tree of the Holy Cross. 

Simple Feasts. If the Vespers of a 
Simple Feast be kept on a Monday, the 
Office is of the Feast, from the Chapter 
inclusive. 



o 



Let us pray. 

LORD, we beseech Thee, keep 
us in continual peace, whom 



The Third Day of the Week. 

All as on Sunday, except as otherwise 
given here. 

The Psalms are as follows : 

Antiphon. Let us go. 

In Paschal time only one Antipho7i is 
said, Alleluia. 

Psalm CXXI. 
[Intituled " A Song of Degrees, of David."] 

I" WAS glad when they said unto 
-■* me : * Let us go into the house 
of the Lord. 

Our feet have been wont to stand 

* within thy gates, O Jerusalem ! 
Jerusalem is builded as a city * 

that is compact together : 

Whither the tribes go up, the 
tribes of the Lord, * the testimony 
of Israel, to give thanks unto the 
name of the Lord. 

For there are set thrones for judg- 
ment, * the thrones for the house of 
David. 

Pray for the peace of Jerusalem : 

* they shall prosper that love thee. 
Peace be within thy walls, * and 

prosperity within thy palaces. 

For my brethren and companions' 
sakes, * I will now say — Peace be 
within thee ! 

Because of the house of the Lord 
our God, * I will seek thy good. 



VESPERS, OR EVENSONG. 



8 9 



Antiphon. Let us go with glad- 
ness into the house of the Lord. 

Second Antiphon. O Thou That 
dwellest. 

Psalm CXXII. 
[Intituled "A Song of Degrees."] 

UNTO Thee lift I up mine eyes, 
* O Thou That dwellest in 
the heavens ! 

Behold, as the eyes of servants * 
look unto the hand of their masters, 

As the eyes of a maiden unto 
the hand of her mistress : * so 
our eyes look unto the Lord our 
God, until that He have mercy 
on us. 

Have mercy upon us, O Lord, 
have mercy upon us : * for we are 
exceedingly filled with contempt. 

Our soul is exceedingly filled 

* with the scorning of those that 
are at ease, and with the con- 
tempt of the proud. 

Antiphon. O Thou That dwell- 
est in the heavens, have mercy 
upon us. 

Third Antiphon. Our help. 

Psalm CXXIII. 

[Intituled "A Song of Degrees," to which 
the Hebrew and the Targum add " of 
David," but this ascription of authorship 
•does not occur in the Vulgate or the LXX.] 

TF it had not been the Lord 
-*■ Who was on our side — now 
may Israel say — * if it had not 
been the Lord Who was on our 
side, 

When men rose up against us : 

* then they had swallowed us up 
•quick, 

When their wrath was kindled 

1 Ps. 



against us : * then the waters had 
overwhelmed us, 

The stream had gone over our 
soul : * then the overwhelming 
waters had .gone over our soul. 

Blessed be the Lord, * Who hath 
not given us as a prey to their teeth. 

Our soul is escaped as a bird * 
out of the snare of the fowlers : 

The snare is broken, * and we 
are escaped. 

Our help is in the name of the 
Lord, * Who made heaven and 
earth. 

Antiphon. 1 Our help is in the 
name of the Lord. 

Fourth Antiphon. Do good, O 
Lord. 

Psalm CXXIV. 
[Intituled "A Song of Degrees."] 

T^HEY that trust in the Lord 
* shall be as Mount Zion : * 
he that dwelleth in Jerusalem 
shall never be moved. 

The mountains are round about 
Jerusalem : * and the Lord is 
round about His people, from 
henceforth, and for ever. 

For the Lord will not suffer 
the rod of the wicked to rest upon 
the lot of the righteous : * lest 
the righteous put forth their hands 
unto iniquity. 

Do good, O Lord, to the good, 
* and to them that are upright in 
their hearts. 

As for such as turn aside unto 
their crooked ways, the Lord 
shall lead them forth with the 
workers of iniquity : * peace be 
upon Israel ! 



Antiphon. Do good, O Lord, 



cxxiii. 8. 



190 



THE PSALTER. 



to the good, and to them that are 
upright in their hearts. 

Fifth Antiphon, We were like. 

Psalm CXXV. 
[Intituled "A Song of Degrees."] 

WHEN the Lord turned again 
the captivity of Zion, * we 
were like them that come again 
from sickness. 

Then was our mouth filled with 
laughter, * and our tongue with 
singing. 

Then said they among the hea- 
then : * The Lord hath done great 
things for them. 

The Lord hath done great things 
for us : * whereof we are glad. 

Turn again our captivity, O 
Lord, * as the streams in the 
south. 

They that sow in tears * shall 
reap in joy. 

They go forth weeping, * sow- 
ing their seed ; 

They shall doubtless come again 
with rejoicing, * bringing their 
sheaves with them. 

Antiphon. We were like them 
that come again from sickness. 

Antiphon in Paschal time. Al- 
leluia, Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Hymn. 1 

A LL-BOUNTIFUL Creator, Who, 
■**- When Thou didst mould the 

world, didst drain 
The waters from the mass, that so 
Earth might immovable remain ; 

That its dull clods it might transmute 
To golden flowers in vale or wood, 
To juice of thirst-allaying fruit, 
And grateful herbage spread for food ; 



Wash Thou our smarting wounds and 

hot, 
In the cool freshness of Thy grace ; 
Till tears start forth the past to blot, 
And cleanse and calm Thy holy place, 

Till we obey Thy full behest, 

Shun the world's tainted touch and 

breath, 
Joy in what highest is and best, 
And gain a spell to baffle death. 

Grant it, O Father, Only Son, 
And Holy Spirit, God of grace, 
To Whom all glory, Three in One, 
Be given in every time and place. 

Amen. 

Antiphon for the Song of the 
Blessed Virgin. Let my spirit re- 
joice * in God my Saviour. 

Commemoration of the Cross before 
the other general Commemorations, and 
Long Preces at certain times as on 
Monday. 

Simple Feasts. If the Vespers of a 
Simple Feast be kept on a Tuesday, the 
Office is of the Feast from the Chapter 
inclusive. 



HHetmeisfoaij, 



The Fourth Day of the Week. 

All as on Sunday, except as otherwise 
given here. 

The Psalms are as follows : 
Antiphon. He shall not be 
ashamed. 

In Paschal time o?ily one Antiphon 
is said, Alleluia. 

Psalm CXXVI. 

[Intituled "A Song of Degrees, of Solo 
mon." The LXX. omits the ascription tc 
Solomon. ] 

the Lord build the 
* they labour in vair 



T7XCEPT 
*-* house, 
that build it : 



1 Hymn of the Ambrosian school, hardly altered ; translation by the late Card. Newman. 



VESPERS, OR EVENSONG. 



I 9 I 



for you to 
up when 



rise up 

ye are 

bread of 



Except the Lord keep the city, 
the watchman waketh but in 
vain. 

It is vain 
early, * rise 
rested, ye that eat the 
sorrow : 

For He giveth His beloved sleep. 
Lo, children are an heritage of the 
Lord, * the fruit of the womb is His 
reward. 

As arrows are in the hand of a 
mighty man, * so are the children 
of the out-cast. 

Happy is the man that hath his 
desire satisfied with them : * he shall 
not be ashamed when he speaketh 
with his enemies in the gate. 



Zion : * and mayest thou see the 
good of Jerusalem all the days of 
thy life. 

Yea, mayest thou see thy chil- 
dren's children, * and peace upon 
Israel. 



Antiphon. Blessed is every one 
that feareth the Lord. 

Third Antiphon. Many a time. 

If this Antiphon be used, the Psalm 
begins with the words, " Have they 
afflicted me." 



Psalm CXXVIII. 

[Intituled "A Song of Degrees."] 

1\ /TANY a time have they warred 
against me from my youth 
— * may Israel now say : — 

Many a time have they warred 
against me from my youth : * yet 
they have not prevailed against 
me. 

1 The ploughers ploughed upon 
my back : * they made long their 
furrows. 

The Lord is righteous, He hath 
broken the necks of the wicked. * 
Let them all be confounded and 
turned back that hate Zion. 

Let them be as the grass upon 
the house-tops, * which withereth 
before it is plucked up : 

Wherewith the mower fllleth not 
his hand, * nor he that bindeth 
sheaves his bosom. 

Neither do they that go by say : 
The blessing of the Lord be upon 
you ! * we bless you in the name of 
the Lord ! 

Antiphon. Many a time have they 
afflicted me from my youth up. 

1 They furrowed my back with stripes as the ground is furrowed with the 
-Gesenius. 



Antiphon. He shall not be a- 
shamed when he speaketh with his 
enemies in the gate. 

Second Antiphon. Blessed. 

If this Antiphon be used the Psalm 
comme7ices with the words t "Is every 
one." 

Psalm CXXVII. 
[Intituled "A Song of Degrees."] 

T3LESSED is every one that feareth 
*-* the Lord, * that walketh in 
His ways. 

For thou shalt eat the labour of 
thine hands : * happy shalt thou be 
and it shall be well with thee. 

Thy wife shall be as a fruitful vine 
* on the sides of thine house : 

Thy children like olive plants * 
round about thy table. 

Behold, that thus shall the man 
be blessed * that feareth the 
Lord. 

The Lord bless thee out of 



1 I.e., 

plough. "- 



192 



THE PSALTER. 



If I have not thought lowly of 
myself — * (but lifted up my soul) — 

Even as a child that is weaned 
from his mother : * so be my soul 
rewarded. 

Let Israel hope in the Lord, * 
from henceforth and for ever. 

A?itiphon. Let Israel hope in the 
Lord. 

Antiphon in Paschal time. Alle- 
luia, Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Hymn. 1 

OLORD, Who throned in the holy 
height, 
Through plains of ether didst diffuse 
The dazzling beams of light, 
In soft transparent hues ; 

Who didst, on the fourth day, in 
heaven, 

Light the fierce cresset of the sun, 
And the meek moon at even, 
And stars that wildly run ; 

That they might mark and arbitrate 
'Twixt alternating night and day, 
And tend the train sedate 
Of months upon their way ; 

Clear, Lord, the brooding night within, 
And clean these hearts for Thy abode, 
Unlock the spell of sin, 
Crumble its giant load. 

Grant it, O Father, Only Son, 
And Holy Spirit, God of grace, 
To Whom all praise be done 
In every time and place. 

Amen. 

Antiphon at the Song of the\ 
Blessed Virgin. The Lord hath 
regarded * my lowliness, and He 
That is mighty hath done in mei 
great things. 

Commemoration of the Cross before\ 
the other general Commemorations, and\ 

1 Hymn of the Ambrosian school, somewhat nltered ; translation by the late Card.! 
Newman. 



Fourth Antiphon. Out of the 
depths. 

If this Antiphon be used, the Psalm 
begins with the words, " Have I cried 
unto Thee." 



Psalm CXXIX. 

OUT of the depths have I cried 
unto Thee, O Lord ! * Lord, 
hear my voice. 

Let Thine ears be attentive * to 
the voice of my supplication. 

If Thou, Lord, shouldest mark 
iniquities, * O Lord, who shall 
stand ? 

But there is forgiveness with Thee : 

* because of Thy law, I wait for 
Thee, O Lord! 

My soul doth wait on His word : 

* my soul hopeth in the Lord. 
From the morning watch even 

until night * let Israel hope in the 
Lord : 

For with the Lord there is mercy, 

* and with Him is plenteous redemp- 
tion. 

And He shall redeem Israel, * 
from all his iniquities. 

Antiphon, Out of the depths have 
I cried unto Thee, O Lord. 

Fifth Antiphon. Let Israel hope. 

Psalm CXXX. 

[Intituled "A Song of Degrees," to which 
the Hebrew and the Vulgate, but not the 
Targum or the LXX., add "of David."] 

LORD, mine heart is not haughty, 
* nor mine eyes lofty : 
Neither do I exercise myself in 
great matters, * or in wonderful 
things that are above me. 



VESPERS, OR EVENSONG. 



193 



Long Preces in Advent and Lent, and 
o?i Fast-days, as on Monday. 

Simple Feasts. Lf the Vespers of a 
Simple Feast be kept on a Wednesday, 
the Office is of the Feast from the Chap- 
ter inclusive. 



Stfjitrstfag- 



The Fifth Day of the Week. 

All as on Sunday, except as otherwise 
given here. 

The Psalms are as follows : 

Antiphon. And all. 

I11 Paschal time only one Antipho?i 
is said, Alleluia. 

Psalm CXXXI. 

[Intituled "A Song of Degrees." It 
reads like a Processional for some transla- 
tion of the Sacred Ark, perhaps that de- 
scribed in 3 (1) Kings vii. (Saturday before 
8th Sunday after Pentecost.)] 

\ ORD, remember David, * and 
-*— ' all his meekness : 

How he sware unto the Lord : * 
he vowed a vow unto the God of 
Jacob ; — 

Surely I will not come into the 
tabernacle of mine house, * nor go 
up into my bed ; 

I will not give sleep to mine eyes, 

* or slumber to mine eyelids ; 

I will not give the temples of 
mine head any rest, until I find out 
a place for the Lord, * an habita- 
tion for the God of Jacob. 

1 Lo, we heard of it at Ephratah : 

* we found it in the fields of " the 
Wood." 



We will go into His tabernacle : 

* we will worship in His footprints. 
Arise, O Lord, into Thy rest, 

* Thou and the ark of Thine 
holiness. 

Let Thy priests be clothed with 
righteousness, * and let Thy Saints 
shout for joy. 

For Thy servant David's sake, 

* turn not away the face of Thine 
Anointed. 

The Lord hath sworn in truth 
unto David, and He will not turn 
from it : * Of the fruit of thy body 
will I set upon thy throne. 

If thy children will keep My 
covenant, * and My testimony 
that I shall teach them, 

Then their children for ever * 
shall sit upon thy throne. 

For the Lord hath chosen Zion : 

* He hath chosen it for His habita- 
tion. 

This is My rest for ever : * here 
will I dwell, for I have chosen it. 

I will abundantly bless her 
widows : * I will satisfy her poor 
with bread. 

I will clothe her Priests with 
salvation : * and her Saints shall 
shout aloud for joy. 

There will I make the horn of 
David to bud : * I have ordained 
a lamp for Mine Anointed. 

His enemies will I clothe with 
shame : * but upon him shall My 
sanctification flourish. 

Antiphon. And all his meekness. 
Second Antiphon. Behold. 

If this Antiphon be used, the Psalm 
begins with the words, "How good and 
how pleasant." 



1 This verse relates to the fetching of the ark from Kirjath-jearim, (literally "The 
town-of-the- woods,") which stood at the borders of the territory of Ephraim, here called 
Ephratah. See 2 Kings (Sam.) vi. (Thursday, 5th week after Pentecost.) 

VOL. II. G 



194 



THE PSALTER. 



Psalm CXXXII. 

[Intituled " A Song of Degrees," to which 
the Hebrew and the Vulgate, but not the 
Targum or the LXX., add "of David."] 

BEHOLD, how good and how 
pleasant it is * for brethren 
to dwell together in unity. 

1 It is like the precious oint- 
ment upon the head. ■' that ran 



Whatsoever the Lord pleased, 
that did He in heaven and in 
earth, * in the seas, and all deep 
places : 

Causing the vapours to ascend 
from the ends of the earth : * 
He maketh lightnings for the rain ; 

He bringeth the wind out of 
His treasures. * He smote the 



down upon the beard, even Aaron's first-born of Egypt, from man even 



beard, 

That went down to the skirts 
of his garments. * As the dew of 
Hermon, that descendeth upon 
the mountains of Zion ; 2 

For there the Lord commanded 
the blessing, * even life for evermore. 

Antiphon. Behold, how good 
and how pleasant it is for brethren 
to dwell together in unity. 

Third Antiphon. Whatsoever. 

Psalm CXXXIV. 
[To this Psalm is prefixed "Alleluia,"] 

T3RAISE ye the Name of the 
^ Lord, * praise Him, O ye 
servants of the Lord ! 

Ye that stand in the house of 
the Lord, * in the courts of the 
house of our God : 

Praise the Lord, for the Lord 
is good : * sing praises unto His 
Name, for it is pleasant. 

For the Lord hath chosen Jacob 
unto Himself, * and Israel for 
His peculiar treasure. 

For I know that the Lord is 
great, * and that our Lord is above 
all gods. 

1 The reference is to the unction of Aaron with holy chrism at his consecration, 
described in Lev. viii. 12. 

2 Probably not the mountain at Jerusalem, but one of the chain of Hermon, which is 
once mentioned elsewhere. Deut. iv. 48. 

3 Sihon, a king of the Amorites, reigning in Heshbon ; Og, a giant, king of Bashan. 
They were both defeated and slain by the Israelites. Num. xxi. 



unto beast. 

He sent tokens and wonders 
into the midst of thee, O Egypt, 
* upon Pharaoh and upon all his 
servants. 

He smote great nations, * and 
slew mighty kings. 

3 Sihon, king of the Amorites, 
and Og, king of Bashan, * and 
all the kingdoms of Canaan. 

And gave their land for an 
heritage, * an heritage unto Israel 
His people. 

Thy Name, O Lord, endureth for 
ever ! * Thy memorial, O Lord, 
throughout all generations ! 

For the Lord will judge His 
people, * and will repent Himself 
concerning His servants. 

The idols of the heathen are 
silver and gold, ' the work of 
men's hands. 

A mouth have they, but they 
speak not : * eyes have they, but 
they see not. 

Ears have they, but they hear 
not : * neither is there any breath 
in their mouths. 

Let them that make them be 
made like unto them, * and every 
one that trusteth in them. 



VESPERS, OR EVENSONG. 



195 



Bless the Lord, O house of 
Israel ! * bless the Lord, O house 
of Aaron ! 

Bless the Lord, O house of 
Levi ! * ye that fear the Lord, 
bless the Lord ! 

Blessed be the Lord out of 
Zion, * Which dwelleth at Jeru- 
salem ! 

[The Hebrew adds "Alleluia," which 
the Vulgate places at the beginning of 
the next Psalm.] 

Antiphon. Whatsoever the Lord 
pleased, that did He. 

Fourth Antiphon. For His 

mercy. 

Psalm CXXXV. 

[It is not improbable that this Psalm was 
sung at the Dedication of the Temple, for, 
in 2 Par. (Chron.) vii. 3, it is said that when 
the congregation on that occasion saw the 
fire miraculously descending upon the sac- 
rifice, " they bowed themselves with their 

. faces to the ground upon the pavement, and 
worshipped, and praised ' the Lord, for He 
is good, for His mercy endureth for ever.' " 
It looks very like a continuation of the song 
given by David to certain singers, I Par. 
(Chron.) xvi. 7, especially as it is afterwards 

t said that some of them were chosen " to give 
thanks to the Lord, because His mercy 
endureth for ever." Some consider that 
the latter verses refer to the return from the 
captivity, but these may be an addition.] 

f~\ GIVE thanks unto the Lord, 
^J for He is good ! * for His 
mercy endureth for ever. 

O give thanks unto the God of 
gods ! * for His mercy endureth 
for ever. 

O give thanks to the Lord of 
lords ! * for His mercy endureth 
for ever. 

To Him Who Alone doeth great 
. wonders — * for His mercy endureth 
for ever. 

To Him That by wisdom made the 
VOL. 11. 



heavens — * for His mercy endureth 
for ever. 

To Him That spread out the 
earth above the waters — * for His 
mercy endureth for ever. 

To Him That made great lights 

— * for His mercy endureth for 
ever. 

The sun to rule by day — * for 
His mercy endureth for ever. 

The moon and stars to rule by 
night — * for His mercy endureth for 
ever. 

To Him That smote Egypt in their 
first-born — * for His mercy endureth 
for ever. 

To Him That brought out Israel 
from among them — * for His mercy 
endureth for ever. 

With a strong hand and with a 
stretched out arm — * for His mercy 
endureth for ever. 

To Him That divided the Red 
Sea into parts — * for His mercy 
endureth for ever. 

And made Israel to pass through 
the midst of it — * for His mercy 
endureth for ever. 

But overthrew Pharaoh and his 
host in the Red Sea — * for His 
mercy endureth for ever. 

To Him That led His people 
through the wilderness — * for His 
mercy endureth for ever. 

To Him That smote great kings 

— * for His mercy endureth for 
ever. 

And slew mighty kings — * for His 
mercy endureth for ever. 

Sihon, king of the Amorites 

— * for His mercy endureth for 
ever. 

And Og, the king of Bashan 

— * for His mercy endureth for 
ever. 

And gave their land for an heri- 
g 2 



196 



THE PSALTER. 



tage — * for His mercy endureth for 
ever. 

Even an heritage unto Israel His 
servant — * for His mercy endureth 
for ever. 

Who remembered us in our low 
estate — * for His mercy endureth 
for ever. 

And hath redeemed us from our 
enemies — * for His mercy endureth 
for ever. 

Who giveth food to all flesh — 
* for His mercy endureth for ever. 

O give thanks unto the God of 
heaven ! * for His mercy endureth 
for ever. 

O give thanks unto the Lord of 
lords ! * for His mercy endureth for 
ever. 



If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, * let 
my right hand forget her cunning — ■ J 

Let my tongue cleave to the roof 
of my mouth, * if I do not remember 
thee, — 

If I prefer not Jerusalem * above 
my chief joy. 

Remember, O Lord, the chil- 
dren of Edom, * in the day of 
Jerusalem : 

Who said : Rase it, rase it * even 
to the foundation thereof. 

O daughter of Babylon, doomed j 
to destruction, * happy shall he be| 
that rewardeth thee, as thou hast 
served us ! 

Happy shall he be that taketh, * 
and dasheth thy little ones against 
the rock. 



Antiphon. For 
dureth for ever. 

Fifth Antiphon. 
the songs. 



His mercy en- Antiphon. Sing us one of the 

songs of Zion. 

Sing us one of Antiphon in Paschal time. Alle- 

luia, Alleluia, Alleluia. 



Psalm CXXXVI. 

[The Vulgate and the LXX. connect this 
Psalm with the name of Jeremiah. They 
also style it a Psalm of David, the apparent 
meaning of which would seem to be that it 
was composed in imitation of his poems.] 

13 Y the rivers of Babylon, there we 
*-* sat down, yea, we wept, * when 
we remembered Zion. 

We hung our harps upon the 
willows * in the midst thereof. 

For there they that carried us 
away captive required of us * a 
song; 

And they that had taken us 
said : * Sing us one of the songs 
of Zion. 

How shall we sing the Lord's 
song * in a strange land ? 

1 Hymn of the Ambrosian school, slightly 
Newman. 



Hymn. 1 

r\ GOD, Who hast given 
^-^ The sea and the sky, 
To fish and to bird 
For a dwelling to keep, 
Both sons of the waters 
One low and one high, 
Ambitious of heaven, 
Or sunk in the deep ; 

Save, Lord, Thy servants, 
Whom Thou hast new made 
In a laver of blood 
Lest they trespass and die ; 
Lest pride should elate, 
Or sin should degrade, 
And they stumble on earth 
Or be dizzied on high. 

To the Father, and Son, 
And the Spirit be done, 
Now and always, 
Glory and Praise. Amen. 

altered ; translation by the late Card:! 



VESPERS, OR EVENSONG. 



97 



Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. O God, * show strength with 
Thine arm : put down the mighty, 
and exalt them of low degree. 

Commemoration of the Cross before 
the other general Cotmnemorations and 
Long Preces in Advent and Lent, and 
on Fast- days, as on Monday. 



JFrttrag. 

The Sixth Day of the Week. 

All as on Sunday, except as otherwise 
giveti here. 

The Psalms are as follows : 

Antiphon. Behold the Angels. 

In Paschal time only one Antiphon is 
said, Alleluia. 

Psalm CXXXVTI. 

[Intituled "Of David," to which the 

LXX. adds "of Haggai and Zechariah," 

the meaning apparently being that it was 

his composition, but that they made some 

i special regulation as to its use.] 

T WILL praise Thee, O Lord, with 
* my whole heart : * because 
Thou hast heard the words of my 
mouth. 

Before the Angels will I sing 
praise unto Thee. * I will worship 
toward Thine holy temple, and 
praise Thy Name. 

For Thy loving-kindness, and for 
Thy truth : * for Thou hast mag- 
nified Thine holy Name above 
every name. 

In whatsoever day I call upon 
Thee, answer me : * Thou wilt 
strengthen my soul exceedingly. 

Let all the kings of the earth 



praise Thee, O Lord, * for they 
have heard all the words of Thy 
mouth. 

Yea, let them sing of the ways of 
the Lord : * that great is the glory 
of the Lord. 

For the Lord is high, yet hath 
He respect unto the lowly : * but 
the proud He knoweth from afar. 

Though I walk in the midst of 
trouble Thou wilt revive me : * 
Thou shalt stretch forth Thine hand 
against the wrath of mine enemies, 
and Thy right hand shall save me. 

The Lord will give recompense 
on my behalf: * Thy mercy, O 
Lord, endureth for ever : forsake 
not the works of Thine own hands. 

Antiphon. Before the Angels 
will I sing praise unto Thee, O 
my God. 

Second Antiphon. O Lord. 

If this Antiphon be used the Psalm 
eminences wit 
searched me." 



Psalm CXXXVIII. 

[Intituled "A Psalm of David," with a 
musical (?) direction, the meaning of which 
is not now certain.] 

r\ LORD, Thou hast searched 
^^ me, and known me : * Thou 
knowest my down-sitting and mine 
up-rising : 

Thou understandest my thoughts 
afar off. * Thou searchest my path, 
and my line, 

And art acquainted with all my 
ways : * before there is a word on 
my tongue. 

Lo, O Lord, Thou knowest all 
things both new and old : * Thou 
hast made me, and laid Thine hand 
upon me. 



198 



THE PSALTER. 



Such knowledge is too wonderful 
for me : * it is high, and I cannot 
attain unto it. 

Whither shall I go from Thy 
Spirit? * or whither shall I flee 
from Thy presence? 

If I ascend up into heaven, Thou 
are there : * if I go down into hell, 
Thou art there. 

If I take the wings of the morn- 
ing, * and dwell in the uttermost 
parts of the sea; — 

Even there shall Thine hand lead 
me, * and Thy right hand shall hold 
me. 

If I say : Surely the darkness 
shall cover me : * even the night 
shall be light about me in my 
pleasures. 

For the darkness is not darkness 
to Thee : and the night shineth as 
the day : * the darkness and the 
light to Thee are both alike. 

For Thou didst form my reins : 
* Thou hast upholden me from 
my mother's womb. 

I will praise Thee, for Thy great- 
ness is terrible : * marvellous are 
Thy works : and that my soul 
knoweth right well. 

My bones were not hid from 
Thee, when Thou madest me in 
secret : * nor my substance in the 
lower parts of the earth. 

Thine eyes beheld my substance 
yet being imperfect : and in Thy 
book all were written : * day by day 
were they to be fashioned, when as 
yet there was none of them. 

But to me, O God, Thy friends 
are exceeding honourable : * their 
power is waxen right strong. 

If I should count them, they are 
more in number than the sand : * I 
arose, and am still with Thee. 



Surely Thou wilt slay the wicked, 
O God : * depart from me, ye bloody 
men. 

For ye say in thought : * In 
vain shall Thy people take Thy 
cities. 

Do not I hate them, O Lord, 
that hate Thee? * and am not I 
grieved at those that rise up against 
Thee ? 

I hate them with perfect hatred : 
* they are to me as enemies. 

Search me, O God, and know 
mine heart : * try me and know my 
thoughts. 

And see if there be any wicked 
way in me : * and lead me in the 
way everlasting. 

Antiphon. O Lord, Thou hast 
searched me and known me. 
Third Antiphon. Preserve me. 



Psalm CXXXIX. 

[Intituled " A Psalm of David," with the 
same musical (?) direction as before.] 

pvELIVER me, O Lord, from 
*-^ the evil man : * preserve me 
from the wicked man : 

Which imagine mischiefs in their 
heart : * continually are they gath- 
ered together for war. 

They have sharpened their tongues 
like a serpent : * adders' poison is 
under their lips. 1 

Keep me, O Lord, from the hands 
of the wicked : * and preserve me 
from the evil man : 

Who purpose to overthrow my 
goings. * The proud have hid a 
snare for me : 

And spread a net with cords : * 
by the way-side have they set a trap 
for me. 1 



SLH. 



VESPERS, OR EVENSONG. 



199 



I said unto the Lord : Thou art 
my God : * hear the voice of my 
supplication, O Lord ! 

Lord, my Lord, Thou Strength 
of my salvation, * Thou hast covered 
mine head in the day of battle ! 

Give me not up, O Lord, to the 
desires of the wicked : * they take 
counsel together against me : forsake 
me not, lest they exalt themselves. 1 

As for the head of those that 
compass me about, * let the mis- 
chief of their own lips cover them. 

Let burning coals fall upon them ; 
let them be cast into the fire : * when 
they are in trouble they will not be 
able to stand. 

An evil-speaker shall not prosper 
in the earth : * evil shall hunt the 
wicked man, to overthrow him. 

1 know that the Lord will main- 
tain the cause of the afflicted, * and 
will revenge the poor. 

Surely the righteous shall give 
thanks unto Thy Name ; * and the 
upright shall dwell in Thy presence. 

Antiphon. Preserve me, O Lord, 
from the wicked man. 

Fourth A?itiphon. Lord. 

If this Antiphon be used, the Psalm 
begins with the words, " I cry unto 
Thee." 

Psalm CXL. 
[Intituled "A Psalm of David."] 

jj ORD, I cry unto Thee : hear 
*—* me ! * give ear unto my voice 
when I cry unto Thee. 

1 SLH - 

2 The Targum is, "They are torn away from the house of instruction by the strong 

hands of their judges." The Syriac, "And their judges are crushed by the strong hand." 
Messrs Jennings and Lowe render, "When their judges have been thrown down the sides 
of the rock, then they shall hear my words as welcome;" and continue, "When the 
usurping rulers have been deposed, and the disappointed rabble has executed its ven- 
geance on them, it shall bethink it again of David's divinely constituted authority, and 
gladly recall him to the throne. This is the only rational interpretation of the verse. 
For the mode of punishment mentioned, cf. 2 Chron. xxv. 12, Luke iv. 29." 



Let my prayer be set forth as in- 
cense before Thee : * the lifting-up 
of mine hands as the evening sacri- 
fice. 

Set a watch, O Lord, before my 
mouth : * keep the door of my lips. 

Incline not mine heart to any evil 
word, * to excuse myself in my sins, 

With men that work wickedness ; 

* and let me not eat of their dainties. 

Let the righteous smite me in 
kindness : and let him reprove me : 

* but the oil of the wicked shall not 
anoint mine head : 

For yet my prayer shall be against 
their lusts. * 2 Their judges shall 
be left [to their fate beside] in the 
hands of the rock : 

[And] they [that have wreaked 
their vengeance on them] shall hear 
my words, that they are mighty. * 
Like clods of earth broken by the 
ploughman, 

So are our bones scattered at the 
grave's mouth. * But mine eyes are 
unto Thee, O Lord, my Lord : in 
Thee is my trust, leave not my life 
to destruction. 

Keep me from the snare which 
they have laid for me, * and the gins 
of the workers of iniquity. 

The wicked shall fall into their 
own net ; * as for me, I dwell alone, 
until I depart hence. 

Antiphon. Lord, I cry unto Thee, 
hear me. 

Fifth Antiphon. O Lord, let my 
portion. 



200 



THE PSALTER. 



Psalm CXLI. 

[Intituled " A didactic (?) Psalm of David. 
A Prayer when he was in the cave," namely, 
on the same occasion as that on which he 
wrote Psalm lvi. See note on that Psalm, 
p. no.] 

I CRIED unto the Lord with my 
voice : * with my voice unto 
the Lord did I make supplication. 

I pour out my complaint before 
Him : * before Him also I show my 
trouble. 

When my spirit faileth from me, 

* then Thou knewest my path. 
In the way wherein I walked * 

have they privily laid a snare for me. 

I looked on the right hand, and 
beheld : * but there was no man 
that would know me : 

Refuge failed me : * and no man 
cared for my soul. 

I cried unto Thee, O Lord ! * I 
said : Thou art my refuge, and my 
portion in the land of the living. 

Attend unto my cry, * for I am 
brought very low : 

Deliver me from my persecutors : 

* for they are stronger than I. 
Bring my soul out of prison, that 

I may praise Thy Name : * the 
righteous wait for me, till Thou deal 
bountifully with me. 

Antiphon. O Lord, let my por- 
tion be in the land of the living. 

Antiphon in Paschal time. Alle- 
luia, Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Hymn. 1 

W?t°i M all r obe y>— „ 7L e All as on Sunday, except as otherwise 

Maker of man ! Who from Thy given here . 
height * 

Badest the dull earth bring to light 
All creeping things, and the fierce might 

Of beasts of prey ;— Antiphon. Blessed. 

' Hymn of the Ambrosian school, considerably altered ; translation by the late Card. 
Newman. 



And the huge make 
Of wild or gentler animal. 
Springing from nothing at Thy call, 
To serve in their due time, and all 

For sinners' sake ; 

Shield us from ill ! 
Come it by passion's sudden stress, 
Lurk in our mind's habitual dress, 
Or through our actions seek to press 

Upon our will. 

Vouchsafe the prize 
Of sacred joy's perpetual mood, 
And service-seeking gratitude, 
And love to quell each strife or feud, 

If it arise. 

Grant it, O Lord ! 
To Whom, the Father, Only Son, 
And Holy Spirit, Three in One, 
In heaven and earth all praise be done 

W T ith one accord. 

Amen. 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. He hath put down the 
mighty, * that persecute His Saints : 
and hath exalted them of low degree, 
that confess His Christ. 

Commemoration of the Cross before 
the other general Commemorations, and 
Long Preces in Advent a?id Le?it, and 
on Past-days, as on Monday. 

Simple Feasts. If the Vespers of a 
Simple Feast be kept on a Friday, the 
service is of the Feast from the Chapter 
inclusive. 



SaturtmjL 

The Sabbath. 



The Psalms are as follows : 






VESPERS, OR EVENSONG. 



20] 



If this Antiphon be used, the Psalm 
begins with the words, "Be the Lord 
my God." 

In Paschal time only one Antiphon is 
said, Alleluia. 



Psalm CXLIII. 

[Intituled " Of David. " The Vulgate and 
the LXX. add "against Goliath."] 

BLESSED be the Lord my God, 
Which teacheth mine hands 
to war, * and my fingers to fight. 

My goodness, and my fortress : * 
my strength, and my Deliverer : 

My shield, and He in Whom I 
trust : * Who subdueth my people 
under me. 

Lord, what is man, that Thou 
takest knowledge of him? * or the 
son of man, that Thou makest ac- 
count of him ? 

Man is like to vanity : * his days 
are as a shadow that passeth away. 

Bow Thy heavens, O Lord, and 
come down : * touch the mountains, 
and they shall smoke. 

Cast forth the bright lightning, 
and scatter them : * send out 
Thine arrows, and make them to 
quake. 

Send Thine hand from above : 
rid me, and deliver me out of great 
waters, * from the hand of strange 
children : 

Whose mouth speaketh vanity : * 
and their right hand is a right hand 
of falsehood. 

I will sing a new song unto Thee, 
God ; * upon a psaltery of ten 
strings will I sing praises unto 
Thee : 

Who hast given salvation unto 
kings : * Who deliveredst David 
Thy servant from the hurtful sword. 
Rid me, 

And deliver me from the hand 



of strange children, whose mouth 
speaketh vanity : * and their right 
hand is a right hand of falsehood : 

Whose sons may be as saplings 
grown up * in their youth j 

Their daughters decked out, * 
adorned after the similitude of the 
temple : 

Their garners full, * affording 
stores upon store : 

Their sheep fruitful in young, 
countless in their pastures : * their 
oxen fat : 

There is no breach in their walls, 
nor inroad : * nor wailing in their 
streets. 

Happy is that people, that is in 
such a case : * happy is that people 
whose God is the Lord. 

Antiphon. Blessed be the Lord 
my God. 

Second Antiphon. Every day. 

Psalm CXLIV. 

[Intituled " David's song of praise." It is 
ABC Darian.] 

T WILL extol Thee, my God, O 
1 King! * and I will bless Thy 
name for ever and ever. 

Every day will I bless Thee ; * 
and I will praise Thy name for ever 
and ever. 

Great is the Lord, and greatly to 
be praised : * and His greatness is 
unsearchable. 

One generation shall praise Thy 
works to another, * and shall declare 
Thy mighty acts. 

They shall speak of the glorious 
honour of Thy Majesty, * and tell of 
Thy wondrous works. 

And men shall speak of the might 
of Thy terrible acts, * and declare 
Thy greatness. 



202 



THE PSALTER. 



They shall abundantly utter the 
record of Thy great goodness, * 
and shall sing of Thy righteous- 
ness. 

The Lord is gracious and full of 
compassion : * slow to anger and of 
great mercy. 

The Lord is good to all, * and 
His tender mercies are over all His 
works. 

May all Thy works praise Thee, 
O Lord ! * and let Thy saints bless 
Thee! 

They shall speak of the glory of 
Thy kingdom, * and talk of Thy 
power ; 

To make known to the sons of 
men Thy mighty acts, * and the 
glorious majesty of Thy king- 
dom. 

Thy kingdom is an everlasting 
kingdom, * and Thy dominion 
endureth throughout all genera- 
tions ! 

The Lord is faithful in all His 
words, * and holy in all His 
works. 

The Lord upholdeth all that fall, 
* and raiseth up all those that be 
bowed down. 

The eyes of all wait upon Thee, 
O Lord ! * and Thou givest them 
their meat in due season. 

Thou openest Thine hand, * and 
fillest all things living with plenteous- 
ness. 

The Lord is righteous in all 
His ways, * and holy in all His 
works. 

The Lord is nigh unto all them 
that call upon Him, * to all that call 
upon Him in truth. 

He will fulfil the desire of them 
that fear Him : * He also will hear 
their cry and will save them. 

The Lord preserveth all them 



that love Him, * but all the wicked 
will He destroy. 

My mouth shall speak the praise 
of the Lord; * and let all flesh 
bless His holy Name for ever and 
ever. 

Antiphon. Every day will I bless 
Thee, O Lord. 

Third Antiphon. While I live. 

Psalm CXLV. 

[To this Psalm is prefixed "Alleluia." 
The Vulgate and the LXX. connect it with 
the names of Haggai and Zechariah.] 

P RAISE the Lord, O my soul; 
-■- while I live will I praise the 
Lord : * I will sing praises unto my 
God while I have being. 

Put not your trust in princes, * 
in the son of man, in whom is no 
help. 

His breath goeth forth, and he 
returneth to his earth : * in that 
very day their thoughts perish. 

Happy is he that hath the God 
of Jacob for his help, his hope is 
in the Lord his God : * Who made 
heaven and earth, the sea, and all 
that therein is : 

Who keepeth truth for ever. 
Who executeth judgment for the 
oppressed : * Who giveth food to 
the hungry. 

The Lord looseth the prisoners : 
* the Lord openeth the eyes of the 
blind : 

The Lord raiseth them that are 
bowed down : * the Lord loveth 
the righteous : 

The Lord preserveth the stran- 
gers ; He defendeth the fatherless 
and widow : * but the way of the 
wicked He will turn aside. 

The Lord shall reign for ever ! 



VESPERS, OR EVENSONG. 



203 



even thy God, O Zion, * unto all 
generations ! 

[The Hebrew adds "Alleluia," which 
1 the Vulgate and the LXX. prefix to the 
next Psalm.] 

Antiphon. While I live will I 
praise the Lord. 

Fourth Antiphon. Let the praise 
of our God. 

Psalm CXLVI. 

[The Vulgate and the LXX., as stated, 
prefix "Alleluia," and the LXX. adds " of 
Haggai and Zechariah."] 

ORAISE ye the Lord, for it is 
*- good to sing praises : * the 
praise of our God is pleasant and 
comely. 

The Lord doth build up Jeru- 
salem : * He gathereth together 
the outcasts of Israel. 

He healeth the broken in heart, * 
and bindeth up their wounds. 

He telleth the number of the 
stars; * and calleth them all by 
their names. 

Great is our Lord, and of great 
power : * and His understanding is 
infinite. 

The Lord lifteth up the meek ; * 
but He casteth the wicked down to 
the ground. 

Sing unto the Lord with thanks- 
giving : * sing praise upon the harp 
unto our God. 

Who covereth the heaven with 
clouds : * and prepareth rain for the 
earth, 

Who maketh grass to grow upon 
the mountains, * and herbs for the 
service of men : 

He giveth to the beast his food, 
* and to the young ravens which cry 
unto Him. 



He delighteth not in the strength 
of an horse ; * neither taketh He 
pleasure in the legs of a man. 

The Lord taketh pleasure in them 
that fear Him, * and in those that 
hope in His mercy. 

Antiphon. Let the praise of our 
God be pleasant. 

Fifth Antiphon. Praise the Lord. 

If this Antipho?i be used the Psalm 
begins with the words, " O Jerusalem." 

Psalm CXLVII. 

[In the Hebrew this is the continuation 
of the preceding Psalm. The Vulgate and 
the LXX. prefix "Alleluia," and the LXX. 
adds " of Haggai and Zechariah."] 

PRAISE the Lord, O Jerusalem ! 
-■- * praise thy God, O Zion ! 

For He hath strengthened the 
bars of thy gates : * He hath blessed 
thy children within thee : 

He maketh peace in thy borders : 
* and filleth thee with the finest of 
the wheat. • 

He sendeth forth His command- 
ment upon earth : * His word run- 
neth very swiftly. 

He giveth snow like wool : * He 
scattereth the hoar-frost like ashes. 

He casteth forth His ice like 
morsels : * who can stand before 
His cold? 

He sendeth out His word, and 
melteth them : * He causeth His 
wind to blow, and the waters flow. 

He declareth His word unto 
Jacob, * His statutes and His 
judgments unto Israel. 

He hath not dealt so with any 
nation : * neither hath He made 
known to them His judgments. 

[The Hebrew adds "Alleluia," which 
the Vulgate and the LXX. prefix to the 
next Psalm.] 



204 



THE PSALTER. 



Praise the Lord, O 



Antiphon. 
Jerusalem. 

Antiphon in Paschal time. 
luia, Alleluia, Alleluia. 



Alle- 



From Advent Sunday till the Octave 
oj the Epiphany, a?id from Septuagesima 
Sunday till the Octave of Pentecost spe- 
cial Chapters are given. 

At other times the following is said: 
Chapter. (Rom. xi. 33.) 

OTHE depth of the riches and 
wisdom and knowledge of 
God : how unsearchable are His 
judgments and His ways past find- 
ing out ! 

The following Hymn and Verse and 
Answer is used 'during the same seasons 
as the above Chapter, a?id likewise from 
Septuagesima to Lent. 



Hymn. 1 

THE red sun is gone, 
Thou Light of the heart, 
Blessed Three, Holy One, 
To Thy servants a £un 
Everlasting impart. 

1 Hymn of the Ambrosian school, 
the late Card. Newman. 



There were Lauds in the morn, 
Here are Vespers at even : 
Oh, may we adorn 
Thy temple new born 
With our voices in Heaven. 

To the Father be praise, 
And praise to the Son, 
And the Spirit always, 
While the infinite days 
Of eternity run. 

Amen. 

Verse. Let the evening prayer 
ascend unto Thee, O Lord. 

Answer. And let there descend 
upon us Thy mercy. 

The following Antipho?i is said only 
from the Octave of the Epipha?iy till 
Septuagesima. 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. God hath hoi pen His ser- 
vant Israel : * as He spake to 
Abraham and to his seed, to exalt 
them of low degree for ever and 
ever. 

Prayer of the succeeding Sunday. 
altered almost beyond recognition ; translation by 



205 



COMPLINE. 1 



©ffice for ttrerg Dap in tlfje 



^4/ //z<? beginning of Compline the 
Reader says : 

Sir, be pleased to give the bless- 
ing. 

The B/essing. 

May the Almighty Lord grant us 
a quiet night and a perfect end. 
Answer. Amen. 

Then is read this Short Lesson. 

Short Lesson, (i Pet. v. 8.) 

"DRETHREN, be sober, be vigil- 
*-* ant : because your adversary 
the devil as a roaring lion walketh 
about, seeking whom he may devour : 
whom resist ye, stedfast in the faith. 

But Thou, O Lord, have mercy 
upon us. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

Verse. *^t 2 Our help is in the 
Name of the Lord. 

Answer. Who made heaven and 
earth. 

Then the Lord's Prayer is said in- 
audibly. 



kingdom come. Thy will be done 
on earth, as it is in heaven. Give 
us this day our daily bread. And 
forgive us our trespasses, as we for- 
give them that trespass against us. 
And lead us not into temptation j 
but deliver us from evil. Amen. 



After this is said the General Confes- 
sion and Absolution. 

T CONFESS to God Almighty, to 
1 the Blessed Mary, always a 
Virgin, to the Blessed Michael the 
Archangel, to the Blessed John the 
Baptist, to the Lloly Apostles Peter 
and Paul, and to all the Saints, that 
I have sinned exceedingly in thought, 
word, and deed, by my fault, by my 
fault, by my most grievous fault. 
Therefore I beseech the Blessed 
Mary, always a Virgin, the Blessed 
Michael the Archangel, the Blessed 
John the Baptist, the Holy Apostles 
Peter and Paul, and all the Saints, to 
pray to the Lord our God for me. 

The Absolution. 

ALMIGHTY God have mercy 
**■ on us, forgive us our sins, 
and bring us to life everlasting. 
Answer. Amen. 

1 Compline (Completorium) is the last office of the Church, and is proper to the end of 
the evening before going to bed, reckoned to be about 9 p.m., but it may be said any time 
before midnight. It is very frequently recited along with Vespers, thus forming the com- 

flete Evening Service of the Church, and it is from this aggregation that the "Evening 
rayer " of the Anglican Prayer Book is derived. 2 Ps. cxxiii. 8. 



o 



UR Father, Who art in heaven, 
Hallowed be Thy Name. Thy 



206 



THE PSALTER. 



►fi IV jl AY the Almighty and mer- 

1V1 c if u i Lord grant us pardon, 
absolution, and remission of all our 
sins. 

Answer. Amen. 

Verse. 1 Turn us, O God of our 
salvation. 

Answer. And cause Thine anger 
toward us to cease. 

Verse. ^ Make haste, O God, to 
deliver me. 

Answer. Make haste to help me, 
O Lord. 

Glory be to the Father, and to the 
Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

As it was in the beginning, is now, 
and ever shall be, world without end. 
Amen. Alleluia. 

From the Saturday before Septua- 
gesima Sunday to Maundy Thursday 
instead of " Alleluia" is said: 

Ceaseless praise to Thee be given, 
O Eternal King of heaven. 

Then follow the Psalms. They are 
all said tender one Antiphon. 

Antiphon. Have mercy. 
Antiphon in Paschal time. Alle- 
luia. 

Psalm IV. 

[Intituled "A Psalm of David," with a 
musical (?) direction of (now) uncertain 
meaning.] 

VVTHEN I called, the God of my 
* » righteousness heard me : * 
Thou hast enlarged me when I was 
in distress : 

Have mercy upon me, * and hear 
my prayer. 

O ye sons of men, how long 
will ye be dull of heart? * Why 
will ye love vanity, and seek after 
leasing ? 2 

1 Ps. lxxxiv. 5. 



But know that the Lord hath set 
apart for Himself him that is holy : 

* the Lord will hear me when I 
call unto Him. 

Be ye angry and sin not : * what 
ye speak in your heart, repent upon 
your bed. 2 

Offer the sacrifices of righteous- 
ness, and put your trust in the Lord. 

* There be many that say : Who will 
show us any good ? 

Lord, Thou hast set upon us the 
light of Thy countenance. * Thou 
hast put gladness in my heart, 

More than in the time that 
their corn, and wine, and oil * 
increased. 

I will both lay me down in peace, 

* and sleep, 

For Thou, Lord, only * makest 
me to dwell in safety. 

Psalm XXX. 

[The first eight verses of Psalm xxx., p. 
76.] 

IN Thee, O Lord, do I put my 
trust, let me never be asham- 
ed ; * deliver me in Thy righteous- 
ness. 

Bow down Thine ear to me, * 
deliver me speedily. 

Be Thou to me a God, a Pre- 
server, and an house of defence, * 
to save me. 

For Thou art my strength and 
my refuge, * and for Thy Name's 
sake Thou wilt lead me and nourish 
me. 

Thou wilt pull me out of the net, 
that they have laid privily for me, 

* for Thou art my Preserver. 
Into Thine hands I commend my 

spirit : * Thou hast redeemed me, 
O Lord God of truth ! 
2 SLH. 



COMPLINE. 



207 



Psalm XC. 

[The Vulgate and the LXX. give the 
heading, "A Psalm of praise of David."] 

HE that dwelleth in the help of 
the Most High, * shall abide 
under the shadow of the God of 
heaven. 

He will say to the Lord : Thou 
art my refuge, and my fortress, * 
my God, in Him will I trust. 

For He shall deliver me from the 
snare of the fowler, * and from the 
noisome pestilence. 

He shall cover thee with His 
wings, * and under His feathers 
shalt thou trust : 

His truth shall be thy shield. * 
Thou shalt not be afraid for the 
terror by night ; 

For the arrow that flieth by day, 
for the pestilence that walketh in 
darkness, * for the evil spirit that 
wasteth at noon-day. 

A thousand shall fall at thy side, 
and ten thousand at thy right 
hand : * but it shall not come 
nigh thee. 

Yea, with thine eyes shalt thou 
behold : * and see the reward of 
the wicked. 

Because Thou, O Lord, art my 
trust : * thou hast made the Most 
High thy refuge. 

There shall no evil befall thee, * 
neither shall any plague come nigh 
thy dwelling. 

For He hath given His Angels 
charge over thee, * to keep thee in 
all thy ways : 

They shall bear thee up in their 
hands, * lest haply thou dash thy 
foot against a stone. 



Thou shalt tread upon the adder 
and the cockatrice : * the lion also 
and the dragon shalt thou trample 
under feet. 

Because he hath set his trust 
upon Me, therefore will I deliver 
him : * I will defend him because 
he hath known My Name. 

He shall call upon Me, and I will 
answer him : * I am with him in 
trouble : I will deliver him and 
glorify him. 

With long life will I "satisfy him : 
* and show him My salvation. 

Psalm CXXXIII. 

[Intituled "A Song of Degrees."] 

T3EH0LD now, bless ye the 
*~* Lord, * all ye servants of the 
Lord. 

Which stand in the house of the 
Lord, * even in the courts of the 
house of our God, 

By night. Lift up your hands 
toward the sanctuary, * and bless 
the Lord. 

The Lord That made heaven 
and earth, * bless thee out of 
Zion ! 

Antiphon. 1 Have mercy upon 
me, O Lord, and hear my prayer. 

Antiphon in Paschal time. Al- 
leluia, Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Then is said the following : 

Hymn. 2 

1VTOW that the day-light dies away, 
"*-^ By all Thy grace and love, 
Thee, Maker of the world, we pray 
To watch our bed above. 



1 Ps. iv. 2. 

2 Hymn of the Ambrosian school, very slightly altered ; translation by the late Card. 
Newman. 



208 



THE PSALTER. 



Let dreams depart and phantoms fly, 

The offspring of the night, 
Keep us, like shrines, beneath Thine 
eye, 

Pure in our foes' despite. 

This grace on Thy redeemed confer, 

Father, Co-equal Son, 
And Holy Ghost, the Comforter, 

Eternal Three in One. 

Amen. 

The last verse is sometimes said thus, 
altered in honour of the Incarnation : 

Jesu, the Virgin-born, to Thee 

Eternal praise be given, 
With Father, Spirit, One and Three, 

Here as it is in heaven. 

Amen. 

In Paschal time it is said thus, al- 
tered in honour of the Resurrection : 

To Father, Son, and Paraclete, 

The slain and risen Son, 
Be praise and glory, as is meet, 

While endless ages run. 

Amen. 

// is also occasionally otherwise al- 
tered, which occasions are marked in 
their places. 

Then follows the 
Chapter. (Jer. xiv. 9.) 

YET Thou, O Lord, art in the 
midst of us, and Thine holy 
Name is called upon us : x leave us 
not, O Lord our God. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

Then the Short Responsory. 

2 Into Thine hands, O Lord, I 
commend my spirit. 



Answer. Into Thine hands, O 
Lord, I commend my spirit. 

Verse. Thou hast redeemed us, 
O Lord God of truth. 

Answer. I commend my spirit. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. Into Thine hands, O 
Lord, I commend my spirit. 

Verse. 3 Keep us, O Lord, as 
the apple of the eye. 

Answer. Hide us under the 
shadow of Thy wings. 

From the Saturday after Easter in- 
clusive to the Saturday after Pentecost 
exclusive, the above is said thus : 

Into Thine hands, O Lord, I com- 
mend my spirit. Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Answer. Into Thine hands, O 
Lord, I commend my spirit. Al- 
leluia, Alleluia. 

Verse. Thou hast redeemed us, 
O Lord God of truth. 

Answer. Alleluia, Alleluia. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. Into Thine hands, O 
Lord, I commend my spirit. Alle- 
luia, Alleluia. 

Verse. Keep us, O Lord, as the 
apple of the eye. Alleluia. 

Ansiver. Hide us under the 
shadow of Thy wings. Alleluia. 

Then is said the following Canticle 
fro7ii the Gospel, with its Antiphon. 

Antiphon. O Lord, keep us. 



1 The allusion seems to be to the invocation of the Name upon Israel by the Priests, 
Numb. vi. 22. "And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying : Speak unto Aaron, and unto 
his sons, saying, On this wise shall ye bless the children of Israel, saying unto them — The 
LORD bless thee and keep thee ; the Lord make His face shine upon thee, and be gracious 
unto thee; the Lord lift up His countenance upon thee, and give thee peace — and they 
sluill pat My Name upon the children of Israel ; and I will bless them." 

2 Ps. xxx. 6. 3 Ps. xvi. 8. 



COMPLINE. 



209 



The Song of Simeon. (Luke ii. 29.) 

[Uttered by Simeon at the presentation 
of our Lord in the Temple. "Then took 
he Him up in his arms, and blessed God, 
and said : — "] 

LORD, now lettest Thou Thy 
servant depart in peace, * 
according to Thy word : 

For mine eyes have seen * Thy 
Salvation, 

Which Thou hast prepared * 
before the face of all people ; 

A Light to lighten the Gentiles, 
* and the glory of Thy people 
Israel. 

The Doxology, "Glory be to the 
Father, &c," is said. 

Antiphon. O Lord, keep us 
waking, guard us sleeping: that 
we may wake with Christ and rest 
in peace. 

In Paschal time, " Alleluia." 

Then follow these short prayers, called 
the Preces. Th ey are omitted o?i Doubles 
and within Octaves, hi Advent, Lent, 
and the Ember Days they are said 
kneeling. 

Kyrie eleison. 

Answer. Christe eleison. 

Kyrie eleison. 

OUR Father, (inaudibly,) Who 
art in heaven, Hallowed be 
Thy Name. Thy kingdom come. 
Thy will be done on earth, as it is 
in heaven. Give us this day our 
daily bread. And forgive us our 
trespasses, as we forgive them that 
trespass against us. (Aloud.) 

Verse. And lead us not into 
temptation. 

Answer. But deliver us from 
evil. 

1 Dan. ii i 



I BELIEVE (inaudibly) in God 
the Father Almighty, Maker of 
heaven and earth. And in Jesus 
Christ, His only Son, our Lord ; 
Who was conceived by the Holy 
Ghost, born of the Virgin Mary, 
suffered under Pontius Pilate, was 
crucified, dead, and buried : He 
descended into hell : the third day 
He rose again from the dead : He 
ascended into heaven, and sitteth 
on the right hand of God the 
Father Almighty. From thence He 
shall come to judge the quick and 
the dead. I believe in the Holy 
Ghost, the Holy Catholic Church, 
the Communion of Saints, the For- 
giveness of sins, {aloud) 

Verse. The Resurrection of the 
body. 

Anstver. And the Life ever- 
lasting. Amen. 

Verse. x Blessed art Thou, O 
Lord God of our fathers, 

Answer. And to be praised and 
glorified above all for ever. 

Verse. Bless we the Father, and 
the Son, and the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. Let us praise and exalt 
Him above all for ever. 

Verse. x Blessed art Thou, O 
Lord, in the firmament of heaven, 

Answer. And to be praised, and 
glorified, and exalted above all for 
ever. 

Verse. May the Lord, the Al- 
mighty and merciful, bless and 
keep us. 

Answer. Amen. 

Verse. Vouchsafe, O Lord, this 
night, 

Answer. To keep us without sin. 
Verse. Have mercy upon us, O 
Lord. 

Answer. Have mercy upon us. 
52, 56. 



210 



THE PSALTER. 



Verse. Lord, let Thy mercy 
lighten upon us. 

Answer. As our trust is in Thee. 

Here the service is resumed, when 
the above has been omitted. 

Verse. Hear my prayer, O Lord. 
Answer. And let my cry come 
unto Thee. 

Let us pray. 

VISIT, we beseech Thee, O 
Lord, this habitation, 1 and 
drive far from it all snares of the 
enemy : let Thine holy Angels dwell 
herein, to keep us in peace, and 
may Thy blessing be always upon 
us. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, 
Thy Son, Who liveth and reigneth 
with Thee, in the unity of the Holy 
Ghost, one God, world without end. 

Answer. Amen. 

Verse. Hear my prayer, O Lord. 

Answer. And let my cry come 
unto Thee. 

Verse. Bless we the Lord. 

Answer. Thanks be to God. 

The Blessing. 

May the Almighty and Merciful 
Lord, *i* the Father, the Son, and 
the Holy Ghost, bless and keep us. 

Answer. Amen. 

Then follows immediately o?ie of 
these Four Antiphons of the Blessed 
Virgin Mary, according to the season 
of the year. 

I. From the Vespers of the Saturday 
before Advent Sunday till those of 
Candlemas, both inclusive. 

Antiphon. Maiden ! Mother of 
Him Who redeemed us, thou that 
abidest 



Heaven's open gate, and the Star 
of the Sea, come, succour the fallen ! 

Fallen indeed we are, but fain 
would rise by thy succour. 

Thou that beyond nature's course 
hast borne in time the Eternal ; 

Thou that a Virgin before, 
after that childbirth remainest, 

From the Archangel's lips 
quickening message receiving, 

Mother of Jesus and us, 
thine eyes of mercy on sinners. 



and 



the 



turn 



Verse. The Angel of the Lord 
announced unto Mary, 

Answer. And she conceived of 
the Holy Ghost. 

Let us pray. 

WE beseech Thee, O Lord, pour 
Thy grace into our hearts ; 
that, as we have known the Incar- 
nation of Thy Son Jesus Christ by 
the message of an Angel, so by His 
Passion and Cross we may be 
brought unto the glory of His 
Resurrection. Through the same 
Christ our Lord. 
Answer. Amen. 

From the First Vespers of Christinas 
inclusive, the Verse and Answer and 
Prayer are as follows : 

Verse. After thy delivery thou 
still remainest a Virgin undefiled. 

Answer. Mother of God, pray 
for us. 

Let us pray. 

GOD, Who, by the fruitful 
virginity of the Blessed Mary, 
hast given unto mankind the re- 
wards of everlasting life; grant, we 
beseech Thee, that we may con- 
tinually feel the might of her in- 



o 



1 This Office was originally the last Prayer before going 
Order of St Benedict. 



rest for the monks of the 



COMPLINE. 



211 



tercession ; through whom we have 
worthily received the Author of 
our life, our Lord Jesus Christ 
Thy Son. 

Answer. Amen. 

II. From the Compline of the 2nd 
day of February inclusive to 
Maundy Thursday exclusive. 

Antiphon. Hail, O Mary, Queen 
of heaven, 

Queen of Angel worlds on high, 
Hail, O Rod to Jesse given, 
Blessed Portal of the sky, 

Hail, O Lady, bright and glorious, 
Clad in beauty, pure and true, 
Virgin ! o'er sin's stain victorious, 
Sinners for thy succour sue. 

Verse. Holy Virgin, my praise 
by thee accepted be. 

Answer. Give me strength against 
thine enemies. 

Let us pray. 

TV /TOST merciful God, grant, we 
*■**- beseech Thee, a succour 
unto the frailty of our nature, that 
as we keep ever alive the memory 
of the holy Mother of God, so by 
the help of her intercession we may 
be raised up from the bondage of 
our sins. Through the same Christ 
our Lord. 

Answer. Amen. 

III. From the First Compline of 
Easter inclusive till the First 
Vespers of Trinity Sunday ex- 
clusive. 

Aiitiphon. Rejoice! rejoice! thou 
Queen of Heaven, Alleluia, 



For He That thee for Son was 
given, Alleluia, 

As He promised is arisen. Alle- 
luia. 

Mother, pray to Him for us, 
Alleluia. 

Verse. Be glad and rejoice, O 
Virgin Mary, Alleluia, 

Answer. For the Lord is risen 
indeed. Alleluia. 

Let us pray. 

f~\ GOD, Who dost vouchsafe to 
^-^ gladden the whole world by 
the resurrection of Thy Son our 
Lord Jesus Christ ; grant, we be- 
seech Thee, that by the help of 
His Mother the Virgin Mary, we 
may finally attain unto the glad- 
ness of life everlasting. Through 
the same Christ our Lord. 
Answer. Amen. 

IV. From the First Vespers of 
Trinity Sunday inclusive till the 
Vespers of Saturday before Ad- 
vent Sunday exclusive. 

Antiphon. Hail, O Queen, Mo- 
ther of mercy ! hail, our life, our 
sweetness, and our hope. To thee 
we cry, the banished sons of Eve. 
Toward thee we sigh, weeping and 
groaning in this vale of tears. Ah, 
then, thou our Advocate, turn on us 
those merciful eyes of thine ! And, 
after this our exile, show to us Jesus, 
the blessed Fruit of thy womb. O 
most merciful, O most gracious, O 
most sweet Virgin Mary ! x 

Verse. Pray for us, holy Mo- 
ther of God. 

Answer. That we may be made 
worthy of the promises of Christ. 



1 Of these four Antiphons, "Maiden Mother" is ascribed to Hermann the Cripple, a 
monk of Reichenau, who died a.d. 1052. The authorship of the second is unknown : it 



212 



THE PSALTER. 



Let us pray. 

O ALMIGHTY and everlasting 
God, Who, by the co-opera- 
tion of the Holy Ghost, didst make 
ready both the body and soul of 
the glorious Virgin and Mother 
Mary worthily to become a meet 
dwelling for Thy Son; grant that 
as we rejoice in her memory, so 
by her pitiful intercession we may 
be delivered from the evils that 
continually hang over us, and finally 
from everlasting death. Through 
the same Christ our Lord. 
Answer. Amen. 

After each of these Antiphofis is said 
this Blessing: 

God's most mighty strength alway 
Be His people's staff and stay. 
Answer. Amen. 

Lastly, whether Mattins be to follow 
immediately, or not, the Lord's Prayer, 
the Angelic Salutation, and the Apos- 
tles' Creed are said i?iaudibly. 

OUR Father, Who art in heaven, 
Hallowed be Thy Name. 
Thy kingdom come. Thy will 
be done on earth, as it is in 
heaven. Give us this day our 
daily bread. And forgive us our 
trespasses, as we forgive them that 
trespass against us. And lead us 
not into temptation ; but deliver 
us from evil. Amen. 



HAIL, Mary, full of grace ; the 
Lord is with thee : blessed 
art thou among women, and blessed 
is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus. 

Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray 
for us sinners, now, and at the 
hour of our death. Amen. 

T BELIEVE in God, the Father 
A Almighty, Maker of heaven 
and earth. And in Jesus Christ, 
His Only Son, our Lord, Who 
was conceived by the Holy Ghost, 
born of the Virgin Mary, suffered 
under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, 
dead, and buried : He descended 
into hell : the third day He rose 
again from the dead : He ascended 
into heaven, and sitteth at the right 
hand of God the Father Almighty : 
from thence He shall come to 
judge both the quick and the dead. 
I believe in the Holy Ghost, the 
Holy Catholic Church, the Com- 
munion of Saints, the Forgiveness 
of sins, the Resurrection of the 
body, and the life everlasting. 

Amen. 



Thus ends the Office of Compline 
throughout the year, in which Office 
the words, " May the souls, &c," are 
oniitted, a?id the Verse and Answer, 
" The Lord give us, &c," are not said 
before the Antiphon of the Blessed 
Virgin. 



seems to date from about the eleventh century. The date and authorship of the third are 
likewise unknown ; but a legend has become attached to it, to the effect that St Gregory 
the ( neat heard the three first lines uttered by an angel, and himself added the fourth, on 
the same occasion on which was instituted the procession upon St Mark's Day. The 
authorship of " Hail, O Queen" is disputed. The last clause is usually admitted to be an 
exclamation uttered by St Bernard of Clairvaux in the cathedral of Spires. But the 
authorship of the rest is disputed, some ascribing it to Hermann the Cripple, others to 
>ne l't-ter of Monsoro, bishop of Compostella, others to one Adhemar, bishop of Podium 
(I'uy-en-Vclay). It seems to have been well known, at least in Spain, early in the 
twelfth century. 



&|je proper £)flue of t|je Reason, 



lent. 



During Lent the followi?ig rules are 
to be observed. 

i . On the first Saturday and every 
Week-day after, Vespers l are said be- 
fore Supper, being the one meal allowed. 

2. When the service is of the Week- 
day, at every service except Mattins, 
Preces are said kneeling. 

3. If the service is of the Week-day, 
the following additions are made i?i 
Choir, but persons bound to the Divine 
Office are not bomid to the?n under sin. 2 

a. On Monday the Office of the Dead, 
viz. the Vespers after the Vespers on 
Sunday evening, and the Dirge after 
Lauds the next morning. Out of Choir 
it may be said any time betw.ee?i Sun- 
day afternoon and Monday midnight. 
Monday in Holy Week is excepted. 

b. 0?i Wednesday the Gradual 
Psalms. In Choir they are said be- 
fore Mattins ; out of Choir whenever 

convenient, and Wednesday in Holy 
Week is excepted. 

c. On Friday B the Penitential 

1 The letter of this rule is, of course, fulfilled by those who eat before sunset, if they say 
Vespers before supper, which a tolerated custom now allows to be taken at any time after noon. 
In this country at least, the rich, when fasting, usually adhere to the primitive practice of the 
Church during the warmth of her first love, and take their meal after dark ; but among working- 
people and religipus, who rise very early, the other practice is most usual. The Church now 
tolerates it, only insisting that at any rate her day of Prayer should have closed. For private 
recitation some do not hold the rule to apply. 

2 There are, however, indulgences for reciting them under any circumstances. 

3 But in most if not all dioceses there are Greater Double Offices in honour of the Passion on 
these Fridays. 

VOL. II. H 



Psalms and the Litany. The whole 
is said kneeling after Lauds, but out 
of Choir how and when convenient. 
Good Friday is excepted. (See the 
Additional Services at the end of the 
Breviary. ) 

4. Simple Feasts are only commemo- 
rated. Doubles and Semidoubles are 
observed, if they fall on Week-days be- 
fore Palm Sunday. In this case the 
Ninth Lesson of the Festival is omitted 
or read as one with the Eighth, and 
for the Ninth Lesson is read the first 
part or the whole of the Homily for 
the Week-day, which is also co?nme?no- 
rated at Lauds and Vespers. 

Stetj TOeimestias, 

Fourth Day. Of Ashes. 

This Day cannot be displaced by a 
Festival. 

Before Mattins are said the Gradual 
Psalms. 



214 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



MATTINS. 



First Lesson. 



The Lesson is taken from the Holy Gos- 
pel according to Matthew (vi. 16.) 

A T that time : JESUS said unto His 
^"^ disciples ; When ye fast, be not, 
as the hypocrites, of a sad countenance. 
And so on. 

Homily by St Austin, Bishop [of 
Hippo.] {Bk. ii. on the Lord's Sermon 
on the Mounts ch. xii., torn. 4.) 

It is evident that by these precepts 
we are bidden to seek for inner glad- 
ness, lest, by running after that reward 
which is without, we should become 
conformed to the fashion of this world, 
and should so lose the promise of that 
blessing which is all the truer and 
more stable that it is inward, that 
blessing wherein God hath chosen us 
to be conformed to the likeness of His 
Son. In this chapter we will princi- 
pally consider the fact that vain-glory 
findeth a ground for its exercise in 
struggling poverty as much as in 
worldly distinction and display ; and 
this development is the most dangerous, 
because it entices under pretence of 
being the serving of God. 

First Responsory. 

1 1 came this day unto the well, and 
I besought the Lord, and said : O 
Lord God of Abraham, Thou hast 
prospered my way. 

Verse. Therefore the virgin to 
whom I shall say : Give me water of 
thy pitcher to drink ; and she shall say 
to me : Drink, my lord, and I will give 
thy camels drink also ; let the same be 
the woman whom the Lord hath ap- 
pointed for my master's son. 

Answer. O LORD God of Abraham, 
Thou hast prospered my way. 



Second Lesson. 

LIE that is characterised by un- 
bridled indulgence in luxury or 
in dress, or any other display, is by 
these very things easily shown to be a 
follower of worldly vanities, and de- 
ceiveth no one by putting on an hypo- 
critical mask of godliness. But those 
professors of Christianity, who turn all 
eyes on themselves by an eccentric 
show of grovelling and dirtiness, not 
suffered by necessity, but by their own 
choice, of them we must judge by their 
other works whether their conduct 
really proceedeth from the desire of 
mortification by giving up unnecessary 
comfort, or is only the mean of some 
ambition : the Lord biddeth us beware 
of wolves in sheep's clothing, but " by 
their fruits," saith He, "ye shall know 
them." 

Second Responsory. 

2 The word of the Lord came unto 
Abram, saying : Fear not, Abram : I 
am thy shield, and thy exceeding great 
reward. 

Verse. For I am the Lord thy God 
That brought thee out of Ur of the 
Chaldees. 

Answer. Fear not, Abram : I am 
thy shield, and thy exceeding great 
reward. 

Third Lesson. 

HP HE test is when, by divers trials, 
such persons lose those things 
which under the cover of seeming un- 
worldliness they have either gained or 
sought to gain. Then must it needs 
appear whether they be wolves in 
sheep's clothing, or indeed sheep in 
their own. But that hypocrites do 
the contrary maketh it no duty of a 
Christian to shine before the eyes of 
men with a display of needless luxury 
— the sheep need not to lay aside their 



1 Gen. xxiv. 42-44. 



xv. 1, 7. 



LENT. 



215 



own clothing because wolves sometimes 
falsely assume it. 

Third Respo7isory. 

Abram removed his tent, and came, 
and dwelt by the vale l of Mamre ; and 
built there an altar unto the LORD. 

Verse. And the Lord said unto 
him : Lift up thine eyes, and look ; all 
the land which thou seest, to thee wall 
I give it, and to thy seed for ever. 

Answer. And built there an Altar 
unto the LORD. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. And built there an altar 
unto the Lord. 



vespers. 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. Lay up for yourselves treasures 
in heaven, * where neither moth nor 
rust doth corrupt. 

Prayer. 2 

TOOK mercifully, O Lord, upon all 
that bow themselves down before 
Thy Divine Majesty, and, as Thou 
hast given them to taste of Thine 
Unspeakable Gift, so strengthen them 
ever by Thy heavenly succour. Through 
our Lord JESUS Christ Thy Son, Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the 
unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. Amen. 



LAUDS. 



Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
When ye fast, * be not, as the hypo- 
crites, of a sad countenance. 



Fifth Day. 

MATTINS. 



Prayer. 

(On this and all other Week-day Offices 
in Lent, Preces are said k?ieeling.) 

Q LORD, grant unto Thy faithful 
people to enter with all meet 
godliness upon the observance of this 
worshipful and solemn Fast, and in 
like mind faithfully to fulfil the same. 
Through our Lord JESUS Christ, Thy 
Son, Who liveth and reigneth with 
Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, 
one God, world without end. Amen. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, and 
None. 

After Alone, ashes are blessed and 
put upon the heads of clergy and people, 
after which is celebrated the Liturgy. 



1 So 



First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy Gos- 
pel according to Matthew (viii. 5.) 



A T that time : 
"^^ entered into 



When Jesus was 

Capernaum, there 

Him a centurion, beseech- 

and saying : Lord, my 

lieth at 



came unto 

ing Him, 

servant 

palsy, and grievously tormented. 

so on. 



home sick of the 
And 



Homily by St Austin, Bishop [of 
Hippo.] (Book ii. on the Agreement 
of the Evangelists, ch. xx., torn. 4.) 

Let us consider whether Matthew 
and Luke are at one as touching this 
centurion's servant. Matthew saith : 
"There came unto Him a centurion, 



me, instead of "vale" or "plain," read "oak 



terebinth -tree.' 



■ These Prayers appointed for the Week-day evenings during Lent, are the same as the 
"Prayers over the people" read after the Post-Communions of the corresponding masses said 
after None. The first clause of the Prayer above relates to the Bidding, " Bow down your 
heads to God," always said before the "Prayer over the people," and the second clause, of 
course, to the Holy Communion just received. 



2l6 



THE PROPER OFFICE -"OF THE SEASON. 



beseeching Him, and saying : Lord, 
my servant lieth at home sick, of the 
palsy." This seemeth to differ from 
what Luke saith : namely : " And when 
he heard of Jesus, he sent unto Him 
the elders of the Jews, beseeching Him 
that He would come and heal his 
servant. And when they came to 
Jesus, they besought him instantly, 
saying : That he was worthy for whom 
He should do this ; for he loveth our 
nation, and he hath built us a syna- 
gogue. Then Jesus went with them ; 
and when He was now not far from 
the house, the centurion sent friends 
to Him, saying unto Him: Lord, 
trouble not Thyself; for I am not 
worthy that Thou shouldest enter under 
my roof." (vii. 6, et seq.) 

First Responsory. 

Lord, my servant lieth at home sick 
ol the palsy, and grievously tormented. 
Amen, I say unto Thee, I will come 
and heal him: 

Verse. Lord, I am not worthy that 
Thou shouldest enter under my roof, 
but "speak the word only, and my ser- 
vant shall be healed.: 

A7iswer. Amen, I say unto thee, I 
will come and heal him. 

Second Lesson. 

T F it were done thus, how is Matthew 
truthful, when he saith that the 
"centurion came unto Him,"— seeing 
that, in fact, he sent his friends ? We 
must then look well into this, and we 
shall see that Matthew only made use 
of a common form of speech. Now, 
we use to say of a man that he cometh 
to a place even though he be not 
already come: whence also we say, 
" He arrived close;" or " He arrived i 
long way off," that is, to that place to 
which he would come ; yea, we speak 

1 xviii. i, 2 



of that coming, toward which he 
tendeth, as though it had already 
taken place, when he that should be 
come at, seeth not yet him that cometh, 
but is come at for him by friends, to 
obtain his favour, which is needful for 
him that would come to him. And so 
much doth this manner of speaking 
hold, that they are commonly said to 
" come at " a great man, (who is 
beyond their personal reach,) who, by 
means of suitable persons, succeed in 
laying before him such things as they 
desire. 

Second Responsory. 

1 Abraham stood by the oak of 
Mamre, and he saw three men coming 
up by the path. He saw three, and 
worshipped One. 

Verse. Behold, Sarah thy wife shall 
bear thee a son, and thou shalt call 
his name Isaac. 

Answer. He saw three, and wor- 
shipped One. 

Third Lesson. 

"THEREFORE it is not strange that 

Matthew should make use of the \ 
common short phrase, and say of the I 
centurion, who reached the Lord's sym- I 
pathies, by mean of friends, that he 
"came unto Him." Also we must 
needs not pass by lightly the mystic j 
depth which underlieth the words of 
this holy Evangelist. It is written in | 
the Psalms (xxxiii. 6) : " Draw near ! 
unto Him and be lightened." Thus 
did the centurion in faith draw near I 
unto Jesus, and the Lord so praised 
him that He said : "I have not found .' 
so great faith, no, not in Israel." Of 
him of whom these words were spoken , 
the Evangelist deemeth it wiser to say 
that he had found his way to Jesus, ; 
that he had got to Christ, than that ! 
they came, through whom he sent his 
message unto Him. 
; xvii. 19, 



ULENT.v 



217 



Third Responsory. 

1 The Lord did tempt Abraham, and 
said unto him: Take thy son .Isaac 
whom thou lovest, and offer him there 
for a burnt-offering upon one of the 
mountains which I will tell thee of. 

Verse. And when the Lord called 
him, he answered : Behold, here I am. 
And the Lord said unto him : 

Answer. Take thy son Isaac whom 
thou lovest, and offer him there for a 
burnt-offering upon one of the moun- 
tains which I will tell thee of. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. Take thy son Isaac whom 
thou lovest, and offer him there for a 
burnt-offering upon one of the moun- 
tains which I will tell thee of. 



LAUDS. 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
Lord, my servant lieth at home sick of 
the palsy * and grievously tormented. 
Amen, I say unto thee: I will come 
and heal him. 

Prayer. 

C\ GOD, Whom sin doth justly move 
to anger, and repentance turn 
again, mercifully to forgive the same, 
look down now graciously upon the 
supplications of Thy people praying 
before Thee, and turn away the scourges 
of Thy wrath, which for our sins, we 
do most rightfully deserve. Through 
our Lord Jesus Christ, Thy Son, Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the 
unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. Amen. 

At the beginning of the Marty rology, 
say, On the morrow we commemorate 
the Coronation of our Lord JESUS 
Christ with Thorns. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, 
and None. 



Office in Memory of the Coronation 
of our Lord fESUS Christ with 
Thorns. 

Greater Double. 

All as on Sundays except the follow- 
ing. 

FIRST VESPERS. 

. A ntiphons, Chapter, and Prayer from 
Lauds. 

Last Psalm. 

, Ps. cxvi. O praise the Lord, &c, 
(A 1 86.) 

f/ymn. 2 

J^AUGHTERS of Zion ! Royal Maids ! 

Come forth to see the. Crown 
Which Zion's self, with cruel hands. 
Hath woven for her Son. 

See ! how amid His gory Locks 
The jagged thorns appear; ' 

See ! how His pallid Countenance 
Foretells that death is near. 

Oh, savage was the' earth that bore 
Those thorns so sharp and long ! 

Savage the hand that gathered them 
To work this deadly wrong ! 

But now that Christ's redeeming Blood 

Hath tinged them with its dye, 
Fairer than roses they appear, 

Or palms of victory. 

Jesu ! the thorns which pierced Thy Brow 

Sprang from the seed of sin ; 
Pluck ours, we pray Thee, from our hearts, 

And plant Thine own therein. 

Praise, honour, to the Father be, 

And sole begotten Son ; 
Praise to the Spirit Paraclete 

While endless ages run. Amen. 

Verse. When they had platted a 
crown of thorns, 

Afiswer. They put it upon His 
Head. 



Hymn found in the Breviary only ; translation by the late Rev. E. Caswall. 



218 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Antiphon at the So?ig of the Blessed 
Virgin. 1 Go forth, O ye daughters 
of Zion, and behold King Solomon 
with the Crown wherewith his mother 
crowned him whilst she was making 
ready a Cross for her Saviour. 

A Commemoration of the Week-Day. 

Antiphon. Lord, I am not worthy 
Thou shouldst enter under my roof; 
but speak this word only, and my 
servant shall be healed. 

Verse. Let my prayer, O Lord, be 
set forth, 

A?iswer. As incense before Thee. 



Prayer. 

CPARE, O Lord, spare Thy people, 
wJ that they, being justly chastened 
because of their iniquities, may, 
through Thy mercy, find time of 
relief. Through our Lord Jesus 
Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of 
the Holy Ghost, one God, world 
without end. Amen. 



MATTINS. 

Invitatory. Christ our King, Who 
was crowned with thorns, * Him, O 
come, let us worship ! 

Hymn from Vespers. 

FIRST NOCTURN. 

Only three Psalms are said, as fol- 
lows. 

First Antiphon. He shall be like 
a tree planted by the rivers of water, 
that bringeth forth its fruit in its 
season. 



4.) 



Ps. i. Blessed is the man, &c, {p. 
Second Antiphon. They take coun- 



sel together against the Lord, and 
against His Anointed. 

Ps. ii. Why do the heathen, &c, 

(?■ 40 

Third Antipho7i. Thou hast en- 
larged me when I was in distress. 

Ps. iv. When I called, &c, {p. 
206.) 

Verse. 2 Thou hast crowned Him 
with glory and honour, O Lord — 

Answer. And madest Him to have 
dominion over the works of Thy hands. 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Book of 
the Prophet Isaiah (liii.) 

AUHO hath believed our report? 
And to whom is the arm of the 
Lord revealed ? For he shall grow 
up before Him as a tender plant, and 
as a root out of a dry ground : he 
hath no form nor comeliness ; and when 
we shall see him, there is no beauty 
that we should desire him. He is 
despised and rejected of men ; a man 
of sorrows and acquainted with grief ; 
and he hid as it were his face from 
us ; he was despised, and we esteemed 
him not. Surely he hath borne our 
griefs and carried our sorrows : yet 
we did esteem him stricken, smitten 
of God, and afflicted. But he was 
wounded for our transgressions, he 
was bruised for our iniquities : the 
chastisement of our peace was upon 
him, and with his stripes we are 
healed. 

First Pesponsory. 

3 Cursed is the ground by man's 
work. Thorns and thistles shall it 
bring forth for the Anointed. 

Verse. Because Adam hath eaten 
of the tree of which God commanded 



1 Cant. iii. u. 



2 Ps. viii. 6. 



3 Gen. iii. ij, 18, &c. 



LENT. 



219 



him, saying : Thou shalt not eat 
of it. 

Afiswer. Thorns and thistles shall 
it bring forth for the Anointed. 

Second Lesson. 

A LL we, like sheep, have gone 
astray ; we have turned every 
one to his own way : and the Lord 
hath laid on him the iniquity of us all. 
He was offered up because he willed 
it, 1 and he opened not his mouth. 
He is brought as a sheep to the 
slaughter, and as a lamb before his 
shearers is dumb, so he openeth not 
his mouth. He was taken from prison 
and from judgment : and who shall 
declare his generation ? For he was 
cut off out of the land of the living ; 
for the transgression of my people have 
I stricken him. 



Second Responsory . 

The Lord 2 appeared unto Moses in 
a flame of fire, out of the midst of a 
bush ; and he looked, and, behold, the 
bush burned with fire, and the bush 
was not consumed. 

Verse. And Moses said : I will now 
turn aside, and see this great sight. 

Answer. And he looked, and, 
behold, the bush burned with fire, and 
the bush was not consumed. 



Third Lesson. 

AND he made his grave with the 
wicked, and with the rich in his 
death ; because he had done no vio- 
lence, neither was any deceit in his 
mouth. Yet it pleased the LORD to 
bruise him ; He hath put him to 

1 Oblatus est quia ipse voluit. The present Hebrew is literally, "He was oppressed and 
he was afflicted." Jonathan ben Uzziel, " He was required, and he was brought back, and 
without opening his mouth, he submitted to the mighty of the people." 

2 Exod. iii. 2, 3, but the words are "the Angel of the Eternal appeared, &c." 

3 Gen. xxii. 7, 8, 13. 



grief; when he hath made his soul 
an offering for sin, he shall see his 
seed, he shall prolong his days, and 
the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper 
in his hand. He shall see of the 
travail of his soul, and shall be satis- 
fied : by his knowledge shall My 
righteous servant justify many, for he 
shall bear their iniquities. 

Third Responsory. 

3 Behold the fire and the wood. 
God will provide Himself a lamb for a 
burnt-offering. 

Verse. And Abraham lifted up his 
eyes, and looked, and, behold, behind 
him a ram caught in a thicket by his 
horns. 

Answer. A lamb for a burnt-offer- 
ing. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. A lamb for a burnt-offer- 
ing. 

SECOND NOCTURN. 

First Antiphon. O Lord, Thou 
hast compassed me with Thy favour 
as with a shield. 

Ps. v. Give ear to my words, &c, 
(p. 88.) 

Second Antiphon. Thou hast made 
him a little lower than the angels, 
Thou hast crowned him with glory and 
honour. 

Ps. viii. O Lord, our Ruler, &c, 

(A 70 

Third A?itiphon. The wicked bend 
their bow, they make ready their arrows 



220 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



in the quiver, that they may shoot at 
the upright. 

• Ps. x. In the Lord, &c, (p. 9.) 

Verse. l Thou hast set a crown, O 
Lord, of precious stones, 
Answer. Upon his head. 

FQurth Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Sermons 
of St Bernard, Abbat [of Clairvaux.] 
{i?idfor Twelfth Day.) 

"TO forth, O ye daughters of Zion." 
^ Jr You we address as daughters 
of Zion, O worldly souls, frail, sickly 
children, daughters and not sons, 
beings in whom there is no muscle, 
and no manliness. Go forth from 
your dream of carnal sensuality to 
understand something with your mind. 
Go forth from your bondage to the 
lusts of the flesh, unto the freedom of 
spiritual intelligence. Go forth out of 
your country, and from your kindred, 
and from your father's house, and be- 
hold King Solomon with the crown 
wherewith his mother crowned him, 
that crown of want and woe. But 
albeit his stepmother crowned him with 
a crown of woeful thorns, he is yet to 
be crowned by his household with a 
crown of righteousness, when "the 
Son of Man shall send forth His 
Angels, and they shall gather out of 
His Kingdom all things that offend," 
(Matth. xiii. 41,) when "the Lord 
will enter into judgment with the 
antients of His people," (Isa. iii. 14,) 
and " the world shall fight with Him 
against the unwise." (Wisd. v. 21.) 
The Father also crowneth Him with a 
crown of glory, as saith the Psalmist : 
"Thou hast crowned him with glory 
and honour, O Lord," (Ps. viii. 6.) 
Daughters of Zion ! behold Him with 
the crown wherewith His mother 
crowned Him ! 



Fourth Responsory. 

2 When the chief Shepherd shall 
appear, (even the Shepherd That was 
smitten, and the sheep of the flock 
were scattered abroad,) when He shall 
appear, ye shall receive a crown of 
glory that fadeth not away 

Verse. When He maketh a great 
feast to show the riches of His glorious 
kingdom. 

Answer. Ye shall receive a crown 
of glory that fadeth not away. 



Fifth Lesson. (42nd Sermon on the 
Song of Songs. ) 

DRETHREN, from the first moment 
of my conversion, I took care to 
gather a bundle of my Lord's troubles 
and griefs, and put the same to lie be- 
tween my breasts, to make up for the 
sheaf of merits which I knew I had not. 
I will tell how abundantly sweet was 
the smell of this [bundle of myrrh.] 
As long as I live, even for ever and 
ever, I will never forget those mercies 
whereby I was called to life. I have 
kept this healthy bundle by me, and 
no one will ever take it away from me, 
but it shall lie between my breasts. I 
have decreed that to think of these 
troubles and griefs is real wisdom ; 
in them I have determined to find 
perfect righteousness, full knowledge, 
plentiful salvation, and abundant merit. 
From these His troubles and griefs I 
drink sometimes a draught of healthy 
bitters, and from the same again I 
draw the sweet oil of comfort. It is 
the thought of these troubles and woes 
of His that cheereth me when I 
afflicted, and maketh me grave when 
it is well with me. As the pilgrim 
walketh along the King's High- way of 
this present life, in joy and in sorrow, 
it is the memory of the woes of JESUS 
that keeps him moving straight and 



1 Ps. 



xx. 4. 



8 1 Pet. v. 4 ; Matth. xxvi. 31 ; Esther i. 3, 4. 



LENT. 



221 



saveth him from the dangers that 
threaten him upon the one hand or 
upon the other. These griefs are what 
will gain my pardon from the Judge of 
all the earth ; He Who is dreadful to 
the mighty is shown by these griefs to 
be meek and lowly, manifesting as the 
Forgiving One, yea, One That a man 
may take ensample by, Him Who is 
exalted above all Princes and dreadful 
among the kings of the earth. 



Fifth Respo?isory. 

1 He hath received a glorious king- 
dom and a beautiful crown. 

Verse. 2 God hath highly exalted 
Him, and given Him a Name which is 
above every name. 

Answer. And a beautiful crown. 



Sixth Lesson. 

^THEREFORE are these His griefs 
oftentimes in my mouth, and 
God knoweth that they be alway in 
my heart. My pen useth to write of 
them, as is manifest. The highest 
flight of my philosophy is this, to 
know JESUS, and Him Crucified. I 
do not ask, like the Bride, where He 
lieth to rest at noon, (Cant. i. 6,) since 
I have the joy to embrace Him as He 
lieth between my breasts. I ask not 
where He feedeth at noon, since I see 
Him on the Cross a Saviour. On the 
Cross He is glorious, at my breast He 
is sweet ; on the Cross, my Bread ; at 
my breast, my milk, milk which filleth 
the bellies of sucklings, and the paps 
of mothers, and therefore He shall lie 
betwixt my breasts. Do ye also, dearly 
beloved brethren, do ye also gather you 
a bundle of this beloved myrrh, [even 
the woe of Jesus,] put it in the core 
of your heart, put it to guard the door 
of your breast, that it may lie betwixt 



your breasts also. If ye have before 
your eyes Him Whom ye bear about, 
the sight of the Lord's afflictions 
will make your own lighter to carry, 
through the help of Him Who is 
the Bridegroom of the Church, and 
Who is above all God, blessed for 
ever. Amen. 



Sixth Responsory. 

3 They shall make an ark of shittirh- 
wood ; and thou shalt overlay it with 
pure gold ; within and without shalt 
thou overlay it, and shalt make upon 
it a crown of gold round about. 

Verse. And thou shalt put into the 
ark the testimony which I shall give 
thee. 

A?iswer. And shalt make upon it 
a crown of gold round about. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. And shalt make upon it 
a crown of gold round about. 



THIRD NOCTURN. 

First Antiphon. He that walked 
uprightly and worked righteousness 
was crowned upon Thy holy hill. 

Ps. xiv. LORD, who shall abide, &c, 

(A io.) 

Second Antiphon. Thou hast set a 
crown of precious stones upon his head, 
O Lord. 

Ps. xx. The king shall joy, &c, {p. 

Third Antiphon. In the presence 
of mine enemies Thou anointest mine 
head with oil. 

Ps. xxii. The Lord is my Shepherd, 
&c, (p. 470 



1 Wisd. v. 17. 
VOL. II. 



2 Phil. ii. 9. 



3 Exod. xxv. 10, 11, 
H 2 



i6. 



222 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Verse. l A crown of gold upon his 
head. 

Answer. Wherein was engraved 
" Holiness." 

Seventh Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (xix. i.) 

AT that time: Pilate took Jesus 
^^ and scourged Him. And the 
soldiers platted a crown of thorns, and 
put it on His Head. And so on. 

Homily by St Bernard, Abbat [of 
Clairvaux.] {^oth o?i divers matters.) 

Daughters of Zion, behold King Solo- 
mon — not here called "the Preacher," 
or Y'dydyah. 2 By these three names 
was that King called, and therein is he 
a figure of our true Solomon, Jesus 
Christ, Who was Sh'lomoh, that is, 
" the Peaceful One " in His exile here, 
Who will be [Koheleth, that is,] " the 
Preacher " when He delivereth the last 
doom, and Who is Y'dydyah, that is, 
"the delight of the Lord" as the 
Universal King — gentle in His exile, 
righteous in His judgment, glorious in 
His kingdom ; lovely in His exile, 
dreadful in His judgment, worshipful 
in His kingdom. Behold Him now 
" with the crown wherewith His Mother 
crowned Him." This was a crown of 
mercy, and therein He may be followed. 
But His step-mother also crowned Him 
with a crown of sorrow, and therein 
He was made a reproach. By His 
step-mother I mean the Synagogue 
which showed herself not as His mother, 
but as His step-mother. 

Seventh Responsory. 

3 Thou shalt make an Altar to burn 
incense upon ; of shittim-wood shalt 

1 Ecclus. xlv. 14. 

2 "The-delight-of-the-LoRD," a name given 
Vulgate it is translated " Amabilis-Domino." 

3 Exod. xxx. 1, 3, 6. 



thou make it. And thou shalt make 
unto it a crown of gold round 
about. 

Verse. And thou shalt put the 
Altar before the veil that is before 
the mercy-seat. 

Answer. And thou shalt make 
unto it a crown of gold round 
about. 

Eighth Lesson. 

TTIS household will crown Him with 
a crown of righteousness, and 
therein He will be dreadful. His 
Father crowneth Him with a crown of 
glory, and therein He is lovely. Let 
sinners gaze upon Him in His crown 
of sorrow, the crown of thorns, and let 
the pricks thereof enter into themselves. 
Let the daughters of Zion, the souls 
that love Him, gaze upon Him in His 
crown of mercy, and follow in His 
steps. The wicked shall gaze upon 
Him in His crown of righteousness, 
and they shall perish. The Saints 
shall gaze upon Him in His crown of 
glory, and they shall be blessed for 
ever„ Others also that have followed 
Him shall be crowned after Him, but 
that by earnest working by the help of 
His grace. He alone was crowned by 
His mother, Who alone, with every 
emotion duly ordered, came forth out 
of His mother's womb, like a Bride- 
groom out of his chamber. 

Eighth Respo7isory. 

4 A man of sorrows and acquainted 
with grief, Christ was crowned withj 
thorns. The Same is He Who 
crowneth us with mercy and loving- 1 
kindness. 

Verse. He was wounded for our 
transgressions ; He was bruised for: 

to Solomon, 2 Kings (Sam.) xii. 25. In the, 
4 Isa. liii. 3 ; Ps. cii. 4. 



LENT. 



223 



our iniquities ; and with His stripes we 
are healed. 

Answer. The Same is He Who 
crowneth us with mercy and loving- 
kindness. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. The Same is He Who 
crowneth us with mercy and loving- 
kindness. 

Ninth Blessing. 

May the Gospel's glorious word 
Cleansing to our souls afford. 



Ninth Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to Matthew (v. 

430 

A T that time : Jesus said unto His 

disciples : Ye have heard that it 

hath been said : Thou shalt love thy 

neighbour and hate thine enemy. And 

so on. 

Homily by St Jerome, Priest [at 
Bethlehem.] {Bk. i., Comm. on Matth. 
v. and vi. ) 

" But I say unto you : Love your 
enemies, do good to them that hate 
you." There are many who judge 
of the commandments of the Lord by 
their own weakness, and not by the 
strength of His Saints ; and so deem 
Him to have commanded things im- 
possible. These are they who think 
that not to hate their enemies is all 
that they are able to do ; and that to 
command us to love them, is to com- 
mand more than man's nature can 
bear. It behoveth them to know, that 
this which Christ commandeth is not 
impossible, albeit perfect. This is what 
David did in respect of Saul and 
Absalom ; the martyr Stephen also 
prayed for his enemies, even while they 



were stoning him ; and Paul " could 
wish that himself were accursed from 
Christ for his " persecutors. (Rom. ix. 
3.) And this, Jesus Himself did, as 
well as taught, when He said : " Father, 
forgive them : for they know not what 
they do." (Luke xxiii. 34.) "That 
ye may be the children of your Father 
Which is in heaven." If he that doeth 
the commandments of God becometh a 
son of God, then is he not a son by 
nature, but by his own choice. 

"Therefore when thou doest thine 
alms, do not sound a trumpet before 
thee, as the hypocrites do in the syna- 
gogues, and in the streets, that they 
may have glory of men." He that 
soundeth a trumpet before him, when 
he doeth alms, is an hypocrite. He 
that disfigureth his face, when he 
fasteth, to the end that he may show 
the emptiness of his belly in his looks, 
he also is an hypocrite. He that 
prayeth in the synagogues and in the 
corners of the streets, that he may be 
seen of men, is an hypocrite. From 
all which, we gather that an hypocrite 
is one which doeth anything that he 
may have glory of men. To me also 
it seemeth that he which saith unto 
his brother : " Let me pull out the 
mote out of thine eye," (vii. 4,) that he 
also is an hypocrite ; for he proposeth 
to take upon him that office for vain- 
glory's sake, that he himself may ap- 
pear righteous. WTierefore the Lord 
saith unto him : " Thou hypocrite, first 
cast out the beam out of thine own 
eye." Thus we see that it is, not the 
doing good, but the motive which 
moveth us to do good, which will meet 
with reward from God ; and, if thou 
stray but a little from the right way, it 
is of small moment whether thou 
wander to the right hand or to the 
left, when once thou hast lost the 
straight path. 

The Hymn, "We praise Thee, O 
God, &c," is said. 



224 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



LAUDS. 

First Antiphon. l My beloved is 
white and ruddy; * the hair of his 
head is like kingly purple bound in 
tresses. 

Second Antiphon. 2 The spirit of 
the fear of the Lord rested upon him ; 
* a crown of wisdom and gladness 
adorned him. 

Third A ntiphon. 3 The Lord clothed 
him with the garments of salvation, * 
and with the robe of righteousness, 
as a bridegroom decked with his 
crown. 

Fourth Antiphon. 4 A bundle of 
myrrh is my well-beloved unto me ; * 
he shall lie betwixt my breasts. 

Fifth Antiphon. 5 The King of Eter- 
nal Glory, * Who was crowned for our 
sakes, will bless the crown of the year 
with His goodness. 



Chapter. (Cant. iii. n.) 

(~*0 forth, O ye daughters of Zion, 
^ and behold King Solomon with 
the crown wherewith his mother 
crowned him. 



Hymn. & 

•"THE noble crown of Christ our Lord 

Shines in the antient pact ; 
By thorn-entangled Victim shown, 
And burning Bush intact. 



The ark was circled by a crown ; 
The Table's mystic round, 
And Altars breathing sweet perfume 
Fair golden crowns surround. 

Hail ! Crown of glory ! hail to thee ! 
Encircling Jesus' scars ! 
No gems, no gold can rival thee, 
Nor crowns of shining stars. 



Strength, honour, praise and glory be 
To Father and to Son, 
And to the Spirit Paraclete, 
While endless ages run. Amen. 

Verse. 7 Thou shalt be a crown of 
glory in the hand of the LORD. 

Answer. And a royal diadem in 
the hand of thy God. 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
Then came JESUS forth, wearing the 
crown of thorns and the purple robe. 



Prayer throughout the Office. 

/^RANT, we beseech Thee, O Al- 
^-* mighty God, that we who among 
the memories of the sufferings of our 
Lord Jesus Christ do make worshipful 
mention of His Coronation with thorns, 
may by Him be worthily crowned with 
glory and honour in heaven. Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the 
unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. Amen. 



Commemoration of the Week-day. 

Antiphon. When thou doest alms 
let not thy left hand know what thy 
right hand doeth. 

Verse. Thou hast satisfied us early 
with Thy mercy. 

Answer. We rejoice and are glad. 



Prayer. 

r\ LORD, the Fast is now begun ; 
^-^ we beseech Thee graciously to 
bless the same, and so to strengthen 
us Thy people, that we may ever 
follow this our bodily exercise, with 
our hearts truly turned to seek after 
Thee. Through our Lord JESUS 

ii. 3 Isa. lxi. 10. 



1 Cant. v. 10; vii. 5. 2 Isa. xi. 2 ; Ecclus. i. 22, 11. 

4 Cant. i. 12. 5 Ps. lxiv. 12. 

6 Hymn of sixteenth to eighteenth century, found in the Breviary only, author unknown, 
translation by the Rev. Dr Wallace. 7 Isa. lxii. 3. 



LENT. 



225 



Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of 
the Holy Ghost, one God, world 
without end. A7nen. 



PRIME. 

Antiphon. My beloved, &c, {First 
Antiphon at Lauds.) 

Ps. liii. and the two sections of 
cxviii. " Whosoever, &c," is not 
said. 

Chapter at the end. (Isa. xxviii. 5.) 

T N that day shall the LORD of hosts 
be for a crown of glory, and for a 
diadem of beauty unto the residue of 
His people. 

TERCE. 

Antiphon. The spirit of the fear, 
&c, {Second Antiphon at Lauds.) 

Chapter from Lauds. 

Short Responsory. 

Thou shalt be a crown of glory in 
the hand of the Lord. 

Answer. Thou shalt be a crown of 
glory in the hand of the Lord. 

Verse. And a royal diadem in the 
hand of thy God. 

Answer. In the hand of the Lord. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. Thou shalt be a crown of 
glory in the hand of the LORD. 

Verse. Thou hast crowned him 
with glory and honour, O Lord. 

Answer. And madest him to have 
dominion over the works of Thy 
hands. 

SEXT. 

Antiphon. The Lord clothed him, 
&c, ( Third Antiphon at Lauds.) 



Chapter. (Apoc. vi. 2.) 

f SAW, and behold, a white horse ; 

and he that sat on him had a 

bow ; and a crown was given unto 

him ; and he went forth conquering, 

and to conquer. 



Short Responsory. 

Thou hast crowned him with glory 
and honour, O Lord. 

Answer. Thou hast crowned him 
with glory and honour, O Lord. 

Verse. And madest him to have 
dominion over the works of Thy 
hands. 

Answer. With glory and honour, 
O Lord. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. Thou hast crowned him 
with glory and honour, O Lord. 

Verse. We worship Thy Crown, 
O Lord, — 

Answer. We tell of Thy glorious 
sufferings. 

NONE. 

Antiphon. The King, &c. {Fifth 
Antiphon at Lauds.) 

Chapter as at the e?id of Prime. 



Short Responsory. 

We worship Thy Crown, O Lord. 

Answer. We worship Thy Crown, 
O Lord. 

Verse. We tell of Thy glorious 
sufferings. 

Answer. Thy Crown, O Lord ! 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. We worship Thy Crown, 
O Lord. 



226 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Verse. When they had platted a 
crown of thorns, 

Answer. They put it upon His 
Head. 

SECOND VESPERS. 

Antipho?is, Chapter, and Prayer 
from Lauds. 

Last Psalm. 

Ps. cxvi. O praise the Lord, &c, 
{p. 1 86.) 

Hymn, and Verse and A7iswer from 
First Vespers. 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. x And they bowed the knee 
before Him, and mocked Him, saying : 
Hail, King of the Jews ! And they 
spit upon Him, and took the reed, and 
smote Him on the Head. 

Commemoration of the Week-day. 

Antiphon. But thou, when thou 
prayest, enter into thy closet ; and 
when thou hast shut the door, pray 
to thy Father thus : 

Verse. Let my prayer, O Lord, be 
set forth. 

Answer. As incense before Thee. 

Prayer. 

r^ RACIOUSLY look down upon Thy 
^■^ people, O Lord, and purge the 
same from all sin, for then shall no 
evil be able to hurt them, when no 
iniquity hath hold upon them. Through 
our Lord Jesus Christ, Thy Son, Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the 
unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. Amen. 



The Sabbath. 

MATTINS. 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to Mark (vi. 
49-) 

A T that time : When the even was 
come, the ship was in the midst 
of the sea, and Jesus alone on the land. 
And so on. 

Homily by the Venerable Bede, 
Priest [at Jarrow] and Doctor of the 
Church. 2 (Bk. ii., cap. 6, on Mark 
vi. 45-) 

The toil of the disciples in rowing, 
and the wind contrary to them, is a 
figure of the divers toils of the Holy 
Church, as, amid the waves of a world 
that fighteth against her, and the 
stormy blasts of unclean spirits, she 
laboureth to reach the rest of her 
Fatherland above, as a shore safe 
for her anchor. Here also it is 
well said that the ship was in the 
midst of the sea, and He alone on 
the land ; for sometimes it cometh 
to pass that the Church is, by the 
great pressure of the Gentiles, not 
only so afflicted, but also befouled, 
that it seemeth as though, if it were 
possible, her Redeemer had for the 
time forsaken her. 



First Responsory. 

I came this day, &c, {p. 214.) 

1 Matth. xxvii. 29. 

2 The celebrated English historian; born, A.D. 673, near Jarrow on the Tyne ; sent to the 
new Benedictine house at that place, at seven years of age ; ordained Deacon in 691 ; Priest, 
702 ; died, May 26, 735, after the First Vespers of the Ascension, which fell on May 27, on 
which day, therefore, the Martyrology names him, with the remark that he is very famous for 
holiness and learning. In England he [had] a Festival on Oct. 29. [On November 13, 1899, 
he was proclaimed a Doctor of the Church. His Festival is now kept everywhere on May 27.] 



LENT. 



227 



Second Lesson. 

YVTHENCE it is that there cometh 
that cry of hers, when she is 
taken amid the waves, and the winds 
of temptations that break upon her, 
and with piteous entreaty she calleth 
on Him to protect her — " Why stand- 
est Thou afar off, O LORD, why 
hidest Thou Thyself in times of 
trouble?" (Ps. ix. 22.) And then, 
in the verses that follow, she telleth 
Him what saith the enemy that per- 
secuted her, saying : " For he hath 
said in his heart : God hath for- 
gotten ; He hideth His face : He 
will never see it." (32.) 



Second Responsory. 

The word of the Lord, &c, (p. 

214.) 

Third Lesson. 

WERILY, He forgetteth not the 
prayer of the poor, neither turn- 
eth He His face away from any that 
putteth his trust in Him ; yea, rather, 
to him whosoever is striving with the 
enemy, He giveth help to conquer, and, 
whosoever conquereth, to him He giveth 
an everlasting crown. For the which 
reason also it is here said plainly : 
" He saw them toiling in rowing." 
The Lord seeth them that are toiling 
in the sea, albeit He be Himself on 
the land. Although He seem for a 
moment to tarry in succouring the 
distressed, nevertheless the look of His 
love is strengthening them, all the 
while, lest they should faint : and 
sometimes He setteth them free, even 
by an open deliverance, conquering all 
their adversaries for them, as when He 
walked upon the swelling of the waves, 
and stilled them. 



Third Responsory. 

Abram removed his tent, &c, (p. 

215.) 

LAUDS. 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
1 Yet they seek Me * daily, and delight 
to know My ways. 



Prayer. 

TT EAR our prayers, O Lord, and 
grant unto us, that we may keep 
with all earnestness and godliness, 
this solemn Fast, ordained for the 
health both of our bodies and of our 
souls. Through our Lord JESUS Christ, 
Thy Son, who liveth and reigneth with 
Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, 
one God, world without end. Amen. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sexl, 
and None. 

VESPERS. 

This is the first day on which Vespers 
must be said before Supper. 

Chapter and Prayer from the follow- 
ing Lauds. 

Hymn. 2 

r\ MAKER of the world, give ear, 

Accept the prayer and own the tear, 
Towards Thy Seat of Mercy sent 
In this most holy Fast of Lent. 

Each heart is manifest to Thee : 
Thou knowest our infirmity : 
Forgive Thou then each soul that fain 
Would seek to Thee, and turn again. 

Our sins are manifold and sore, 

But pardon them that sin deplore ; 

And, for Thy Name's sake, make each soul, 

That feels and owns its languor, whole. 



1 Isa. lviii. 2. 

2 Hymn by St Gregory the Great 
from the " Hymnal Noted." 



the fourth verse slightly altered ; translation extracted 



228 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



So mortify ,we every sense 
By grace of outward abstinence, 
That from each stain and spot of sin 
The soul may keep her fast within. 



Henceforth more sparing let us be 
Of food, of words, of sleep ; 

Henceforth beneath a stricter guard 
The roving senses keep: 



Grant, O Thou Blessed Trinity ! 
Grant, O Essential Unity ! 
That this our Fast of forty days 
May work our profit and Thy praise. 

Amen. 

Verse. God hath given His Angels 
charge over thee. 

Answer. To keep thee in all thy 
ways. 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. 1 Then shalt thou call, * and 
the Lord shall answer : thou shalt cry, 
and He shall say : Here I am. 



And let us shun whatever things 

Distract the careless heart ; 
And let us shut our souls against 

The tyrant tempter's art ; 

And weep before the Judge, and strive 

His vengeance to appease ; 
Saying to Him with contrite voice 

Upon our bended knees : 

Much have we sinned, O Lord ! and still 

We sin each day we live ; 
Yet look in pity from on high, 

And of Thy grace forgive. 

Remember that we still are Thine, 

Though of a fallen frame ; 
And take not from us in Thy wrath 

The glory of Thy name. 



jftrst Sutttiag in %tnt 

The First Lord's Day in the Forty 
Days before Easter. 



MATTINS. 

Invitatory. Let it not be vain for 
you to rise up early, before the light 2 : 
for * the Lord hath promised a crown 
to them that watch. 



Hymn.* 

J\TOW, with the slow revolving year, 

Again the Fast we greet; 
Which in its mystic circle moves 
Of forty days complete. 

That Fast, by Law and Prophet taught, 

By Jesus Christ restored ; 
Jesus, of seasons and of times 

The Maker and the Lord. 



Undo past evil; grant us, Lord, 
More grace to do aright ; 

So may we now and ever find 
Acceptance in Thy sight. 

Blest Trinity in Unity ! 

Vouchsafe us, in Thy love, 
To gather from these fasts below 

Immortal fruit above. 



FIRST NOCTURN. 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Second 
Epistle of the Blessed Apostle Paul 
to the Corinthians (vi. i.) 

V\Z"E then, as workers together with 
Him, beseech you also that ye 
receive not the grace of God in vain. 
(For He saith : " I have heard thee in 
a time accepted, and in the day of sal- 
vation have I succoured thee." 4 Be- 



1 Isa. Iviii. 9. 2 p s . cxxv i # 2 

Hymn of the Ambrosian school, very slightly altered ; translation by the late Rev. E. 

4 Isa. xlix. 8. 



Caswall. 



FIRST WEEK IN LENT. 



229 



hold, now is the acceptable time ; 
behold, now is the day of salvation.) 
Giving no offence to any, that our 
ministry be not blamed ; but in all 
things let us approve ourselves as the 
ministers of God, in much patience, in 
afflictions, in necessities, in distresses, 
in stripes, in imprisonments, in tumults, 
in labours, in watchings, in fastings, in 
purity, in knowledge, in long-suffering, 
in kindness, in the Holy Ghost, in love 
unfeigned, in the word of truth, in the 
power of God : by the armour of right- 
eousness on the right hand and on the 
left, by honour and dishonour, by evil 
report and good report ; as deceivers, 
and yet true ; as unknown, and yet 
well known ; as dying, and behold, we 
live ; as chastened, and not killed ; as 
sorrowful, yet alway rejoicing ; as poor, 
yet making many rich ; as having no- 
thing, and yet possessing all things. 



First Responsory. 

Behold, now is the acceptable time ; 
behold, now is the day of salvation : 
let us approve ourselves in much 
patience, in much fasting ; in the 
power of God, by the armour of right- 
eousness. 

Verse. In all things let us approve 
ourselves as the ministers of God, in 
much patience, in much fasting. 

Answer. In the power of God, by 
the armour of righteousness. 



Second Lesson. 

f~\ YE Corinthians, our mouth is open 
unto you, our heart is enlarged. 
Ye are not straitened in us, but ye 
are straitened in your own bowels ; 
but having the same recompense, (I 
speak as unto sons,) be ye also en- 
larged. Be ye not unequally yoked 
together with unbelievers. For what 

1 "The destroyer," i.e., Satan. 



fellowship hath righteousness with un- 
righteousness ? And what communion 
hath light with darkness ? And what 
concord hath Christ with Belial ? l or 
what part hath he that believeth with 
an infidel ? And what agreement hath 
the temple of God with idols ? For ye 
are the temple of the living God, as 
God hath said : "I will dwell in them, 
and walk among them, and I will be 
their God, and they shall be My 
people." 2 

Second Responsory. 

In all things let us approve our- 
selves as the ministers of God, in much 
patience ; that our ministry be not 
blamed. 

Verse. Behold, now is the accept- 
able time ; behold, now is' the day of 
salvation : let us approve ourselves in 
much patience. 

Answer. That our ministry be not 
blamed. 

Third Lesson. 

T AM filled with comfort, I am ex- 
A ceeding joyful in all our tribula- 
tion. For when we were come into 
Macedonia, our flesh had no rest, but 
we were troubled on every side : with- 
out were fightings, within were fears. 
Nevertheless God, That comforteth 
those that are cast down, comforted us 
by the coming of Titus. And not by 
his coming only, but also by the con- 
solation wherewith he was comforted 
in you, when he told us your earnest 
desire, your mourning, your zeal for 
me : so that I rejoiced the more. For 
though I have made you sorry with a 
letter, I repent not ; and, if I had re- 
pented, perceiving that the same 
epistle made you sorry, (though it 
were but for a season,) now I rejoice : 
not that ye were made sorry, but that 
ye sorrowed to repentance. 

2 Exod. xxix. 45 ; Lev. xxvi. 12. 



230 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Third Responsory. 

1 The Priests shall pray, with fast- 
ing and with weeping, and shall say : 
Spare, O Lord, spare Thy people ; 
and give not Thine heritage to de- 
struction. 

Verse. The Priests shall weep be- 
tween the porch and the altar, and 
shall say : 

Answer. Spare, O Lord, spare 
Thy people ; and give not Thine heri- 
tage to destruction. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. Spare, O Lord, spare 
Thy people : and give not Thine heri- 
tage to destruction. 



SECOND NOCTURN. 

Fourth Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Sermons 
of Pope St Leo [the Great.] (4th 
on Lent.) 

"P) EARLY beloved brethren, I am to 
preach to you the holiest and 
the greatest of Fasts ; and with what 
words can I more fitly begin than with 
those words of the Apostle, in whom 
Christ spake, which have just been 
read ? " Behold, now is the accept- 
able time ! Behold, now is the day of 
salvation ! " It is true that there are 
no times which are not rich with God's 
gifts ; His grace doth ever give us an 
entry unto His mercy ; nevertheless, 
more especially at this time doth it 
behove that the minds of all men be 
earnestly stirred up to make progress 
in things spiritual, and to be nerved 
by a trust in God stronger than ever ; 
for now the anniversary of that day on 
which we were redeemed is drawing 
near, and thereby moving us to work 
all godliness, to the end that we may 
be able to celebrate, with clean minds 



and bodies, that mystery which ex- 
ceedeth all others, the mystery of the 
Lord's sufferings. 

Fourth Responsory. 

Let us amend for the better in that 
wherein we have sinned unknowingly, 
or ever the day of death suddenly pre- 
vent us, and we seek a place of repent- 
ance, and find none. Give heed, O 
Lord, and have mercy upon us, for we 
have sinned against Thee. 

Verse. 2 Help us, O God of our 
salvation, and for the glory of Thy 
Name deliver us, O Lord. 

Answer. Give heed, O Lord, and 
have mercy upon us, for we have 
sinned against Thee. 

Fifth Lesson. 

TV/TYSTERIES so great demand sus- 
^ tained earnestness, and continu- 

ous worship, if we would ever abide in 
the sight of God, such as it is meet 
that He should find us on the Feast of 
the Passover. But since few have the 
strength to do thus, and the frailty of 
the body rebelleth against such hard- 
ness, while the divers actions of this 
life distract us with their cares, it 
necessarily befalleth that the dust of 
earth befouleth the hearts even of the 
godly. To meet this befoulment there- 
fore, and to restore the cleanness of 
our souls, it is provided by the health- 
ful institution of God, that we should 
be purged by an exercise of forty days, 
wherein godly works may redeem the 
mis-spending of our other time, and 
purifying fasts rid us of the same. 

Fifth Responsory. 

3 Let the wicked forsake his way, 
and the unrighteous man his thoughts, 
and let him return unto the LORD, and 
He will have mercy upon him ; 4 for the 



Joel ii. 17. 



2 Ps. lxxviii. 9. 



3 Isa. lv. 7. 



4 Joel ii. 13. 



FIRST WEEK IN LENT. 



231 



Lord our God is gracious, and merci- 
ful, and repenteth Him of the evil. 

Verse. 1 The Lord hath no pleasure 
in the death of the wicked ; but that 
he turn from his way and live. 

Answer. For the Lord our God is 
gracious, and merciful, and repenteth 
Him of the evil. 

Sixth Lesson. 

'"THEREFORE, dearly beloved 
brethren, as we are now about 
to enter upon these mystic days, the 
end of whose most holy ordinance is 
the cleansing both of our souls and 
bodies, let us take heed that we be 
obedient unto the command of the 
Apostle, putting far away from us 
every defilement of flesh and spirit, 
ordering the strife which there is be- 
tween the two substances whereof we 
are compounded ; that the soul, which 
is ordained under the rule of God, and 
which it beseemeth under His rule to 
rule the body, may enjoy the fulness 
of her lordship ; giving no offence to 
any so that we may give no cause to 
such as revile us. For if our ways 
during the Fast agree not with the 
purity of perfect temperance, the re- 
proaches of the unbelievers will be 
just, and our sins will arm the tongues 
of the ungodly to the harming of our 
religion. The sum of our Fast standeth 
not only in abstaining from meats ; 
neither is it profitable to deny food to 
the body, if the mind be not bridled 
from iniquity. 

Sixth Responsory. 

The season of the Fast openeth unto 
us the gates of heaven ; let us enter 
thereon in prayer and supplication, that 
on the day when the Lord riseth again 
we may rejoice with Him 

Verse. In all things let us approve 



ourselves the ministers of God, in 
much patience. 

Answer. That on the day when 
the Lord riseth again we may rejoice 
with Him. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. That on the day when 
the Lord riseth again we may rejoice 
with Him. 

THIRD NOCTURN. 

Seventh Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to Matthew (iv. 1.) 

A T that time : Jesus was led up of 
J ^ the Spirit into the wilderness, to 
be tempted of the devil : and when He 
had fasted forty days and forty nights, 
He was afterward an-hungred. And 
so on. 

Homily by Pope St Gregory [the 
Great.] (16 th on the Gospels.) 

Some persons are accustomed to 
question what Spirit it was of which 
JESUS was led up into the wilderness, 
on account of the words a little farther 
on : " Then the devil taketh Him up 
into the holy city " — and again : " The 
devil taketh Him up into an exceeding 
high mountain." But in truth, and 
without any searching, we may very 
fitly take it that we are to believe it 
was the Holy Ghost Who led Him up 
into the wilderness ; His own Spirit led 
Him where the evil spirit found Him 
to tempt Him. When however it is 
said that He, God and man, was taken 
up by the devil either into an exceed- 
ing high mountain or into the holy city, 
the mind shrinketh from believing, and 
the ears of man tingle to hear it. Yet 
these things we know not to be incred- 
ible, when we consider certain other 
things concerning Him. 



1 Ezek. xxxiii. 



232 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Seventh Responsory. 

1 Rend your hearts and not your 
garments, and turn unto the Lord 
your God ; for He is gracious and 
merciful. 

Verse. Let the wicked forsake his 
way, and the unrighteous man his 
thoughts, and let him return' unto the 
Lord, and He will have mercy upon 
him. 

Answer. For He is gracious and 
merciful. 

Eighth Lesson. 

T N truth, the devil is the head of all 
the wicked, and every wicked man 
is a member of this body, of which the 
devil is the head. Was not Pilate a 
limb of Satan ? Were not the Jews 
that persecuted, and the soldiers that 
crucified Christ, likewise limbs of 
Satan ? Is it then strange that He 
should allow Himself to be led up into 
a mountain by the head, Who allowed 
Himself to be crucified by the mem- 
bers ? Therefore it is not unworthy 
of our Redeemer, Who came to be 
slain, that He was willing to be 
tempted. It was meet that He should 
thus overcome our temptations by His 
own, even as He came to conquer our 
death by His own. 

Eighth Responsory. 

2 Deal thy bread to the hungry, 
and bring the poor and the wanderer 
to thine house. Then shall thy 
light break forth as the morning, 
and thy righteousness shall go before 
thee. 

Verse. When thou seest the naked, 
cover him ; and hide not thyself from 
thine own flesh. 

Answer. Then shall thy light break 
forth as the morning, and thy right- 
eousness shall go before thee. 



Ninth Lesson. 

V\7"E ought to know that temptation 
worketh through three forms. 
There is, first, the suggestion ; then 
the delectation ; 3 lastly, the consent. 
When we are tempted, it often hap- 
peneth that we fall into delectation, 
and even into consent, because in the 
sinful flesh of which we are begotten, 
we carry in ourselves matter to favour 
the attack. But God, when He took 
Flesh in the womb of the Virgin, and 
came into the world without sin, did 
so without having in Himself anything 
of this lusting of the flesh against the 
spirit. It was possible therefore for 
Him to be tempted in the first stage, 
namely suggestion ; but there was no- 
thing in His Mind in which delectation 
could fix its teeth. And thus all the 
temptation which He endured from the 
devil was without, and none within 
Him. 

Ninth Responsory. 

4 God hath given His Angels charge 
over thee, to keep thee in all thy ways. 
They shall bear thee up in their hands, 
lest haply thou dash thy foot against a 
stone. 

Verse. Thou shalt tread upon the 
adder and the cockatrice, the lion also, 
and the dragon shalt thou trample 
under feet. 

Answer. They shall bear thee up 
in their hands, lest haply thou dash 
thy foot against a stone. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. They shall bear thee up 
in their- hands, lest haply thou dash 
thy foot against a stone. 

LAUDS. 

First Antiphon. Create in me a 
clean heart, * O God, and renew a 
right spirit within me. 



1 Joel ii. 13. 

3 I.e., the feeling of " How pleasant to do it." 



2 Isa. lviii. 7, 8. 
4 Ps. xc. 11-13. 



FIRST WEEK IN LENT. 



233 



Psalm L. 

Have mercy upon me, &c, (p. 87.) 

Second Antiphon. Save me now, O 
Lord ; * O Lord, send Thou pros- 
perity. 

Psalm CXVII. 

O give thanks, &c, (p. 37.) 

Third Antiphon. Thus will I bless 
Thee, * O Lord, while I live ; and will 
lift up my hands in Thy Name. 

Psalms LXIL and LXVI. 

O God, Thou art my God, &c, (p. 
23-) 

Fourth Antiphon. 1 In an humble 
spirit * and a contrite heart may we 
be accepted by Thee, O Lord ; and so 
let our sacrifice be this day, that it 
may be acceptable and pleasant in Thy 
sight, O Lord our God ! 

The Song of the Three Holy Children. 

Fifth Antiphon. Praise God, * ye 
heavens of heavens, and all ye waters. 2 

Psalms CXLVIIL, CXLIX, CL. 

Praise ye the Lord, &c, {pp. 25, 
26.) 

Chapter. (2 Cor. vi. 1.) 

T) RET H REN, we beseech you that 
ye receive not the grace of God 
in vain. For He saith : I have heard 
thee in a time accepted, and in the day 
of salvation have I succoured thee. 



Hymn. 3 

'"THE darkness fleets, and joyful earth 

Welcomes the new-born day ; 
Jesus ! true Sun of human souls ! 
Shed in our souls Thy ray ! 



Thou, Who dost give the accepted time, 

Give tears to purify, 
Give flames of love to burn our hearts 

As victims unto Thee. 

The fountain, whence our sins have flowed, 

Shall soon in tears distil, 
If but Thy penitential grace 

Subdue the stubborn will. 

The 4 day is near when all re-blooms, — 

Thine own blest day, O Lord ! 
We too would joy, by Thy right hand 

To life's true path restored. 

All-glorious Trinity ! to Thee 

Let earth's vast fabric bend ; 
And evermore from souls renewed 

The Saints' new song ascend. 

Verse. God hath given His Angels 
charge over thee. 

A?iswer. To keep thee in all thy 
ways. 

Afitiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
Jesus was led up of the Spirit into the 
wilderness, * to be tempted of the 
devil : and when He had fasted forty 
days and forty nights, He was after- 
ward an-hungred. 

Prayer throughout the day. 

f~\ GOD, Who dost every year purge 
^^^ Thy Church by the Fast of Forty 
Days, grant unto this Thy family, that 
what things soever they strive to obtain 
at Thy hand by abstaining from meats, 
they may ever turn to profit by good 
works. Through our Lord JESUS 
Christ Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of 
the Holy Ghost, one God, world with- 
out end. Amen. 

PRIME. 

Antiphon. When Jesus had fasted 
forty days * and forty nights, He was 
afterward an-hungred. 



1 Dan. iii. 40. 

2 Possibly, an allusion to the approaching Easter baptisms. 

3 Hymn of perhaps twelfth century ; author unknown ; altered almost beyond recognition ; 
translation by the late Rev. E. Caswall. 4 I.e., Easter. 



234 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



TERCE. 

Antiphon. Then the devil taketh 
Him up into the holy city, * and set- 
teth Him on a pinnacle of the temple, 
and saith unto Him : If Thou be the 
Son of God, cast Thyself down. 

Chapter from Lauds. 

SEXT. 

Antiphon. Man shall not live by 
bread alone, * but by every word that 
proceedeth out of the mouth of God. 

Chapter. (2 Cor. vi. 2.) 

DEHOLD, now is the acceptable 
time ; now is the day of salvation : 
giving no offence to any, that our min- 
istry be not blamed. 

NONE. 

Antiphon. Thou shalt worship the 
Lord thy God, * and Him only shalt 
thou serve. 

Chapter. (2 Cor. vi. 9.) 

A S chastened, and not killed ; as 

sorrowful, yet alway rejoicing ; 

as poor, yet making many rich ; as 

having nothing, yet possessing all 

things. 

VESPERS. 

Chapter and Verse a?id Answer from 
Lauds. 

Hymn as on Saturday evening. 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. Behold, now is the accepted 
time ; * behold, now is the day of sal- 
vation ; in these days therefore let us 
approve ourselves as the ministers of 
God, in much patience, in fastings, in 
watchings, and in love unfeigned. 

Afterwards are said the Vespers for 
the Dead. 



Second Day. 

MATTINS. 

Hymn as on Sunday. 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy Gos- 
pel according to Matthew (xxv. 31.) 

A T that time : Jesus said unto His 
■^^ disciples : When the Son of Man 
shall come in His glory, and all the 
Angels with Him, then shall He sit 
upon the throne of His glory, and be- 
fore Him shall be gathered all nations. 
And so on. 

Homily by St Austin, Bishop [of 
Hippo.] (On Faith and Works, xv. 4.) 

If, without keeping the command- 
ments, it be possible to attain unto life 
by faith only, (and "faith, if it hath 
not works, is dead," — James ii. 17,) 
how can it be true that the Lord will 
say to such as He shall have set on 
His left hand : " Depart from Me, ye 
cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared 
for the devil and his angels ? " He 
rebuketh them, not because they have 
not believed in Him, but because they 
have not wrought good works. Yea, 
lest any man should promise himself 
life eternal by faith only, (and "faith, 
if it hath not works, is dead,") the 
Lord saith that He will gather together 
all nations, nations who have lived 
mingled together in the same countries, 
that we may seem to hear them which 
have believed indeed in Him, but have 
not wrought good works, (as though 
that their dead faith could, "being 
alone," lead them into life eternal,) 
that we may seem to hear such crying 
unto Him, — " Lord, when saw we Thee 
suffering such and such things, and did 
not minister unto Thee ? " 



FIRST WEEK IN LENT. 



235 



First Responsory. 

Behold, now is the acceptable time, 
&c, (A 228.) 

Second Lesson. 

T F they shall go into everlasting fire 
A who have not done works of 
mercy, shall not they go who have 
taken their neighbour's goods ? Or 
shall not they go who have outraged 
the temple of God in their own selves, 
and so been merciless to themselves ? 
As if works of mercy could avail any- 
thing without love, contrary to the 
words of the Apostle : " Though I 
bestow all my goods to feed the poor, 
and have not charity, it profiteth me 
nothing." (1 Cor. xiii. 3.) And what 
manner of love to his neighbour hath 
he who loveth him as himself and 
loveth not himself ? — remembering that 
" he that loveth iniquity hateth his own 
soul." (Ps. x. 6.) 



into life eternal." As the fire, so shall 
the burning be ; and the Truth biddeth 
us know that they shall burn therein, 
who have lacked, not faith, but good 
works. 

Third Responsory. 
The Priests, &c, {p. 229.) 

LAUDS. 

Chapter. (Isa. lviii. I.) 

C* RY aloud, spare not ; lift up thy 
^ voice like a trumpet, and show 
My people their transgressions, and 
the house of Jacob their sins. 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
Sunday, {p. 233.) 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
Come, ye blessed of My Father, * in- 
herit the kingdom prepared for you 
from the foundation of the world. 



Second Responsory. 
In all things, &c, (p. 228.) 

Third Lesson. 

TV? EITHER dare we say here that by 
which some delude themselves, 
namely, that the fire indeed is everlast- 
ing, but that they will not burn therein 
everlastingly. Such men say that they 
whose faith is dead, will pass through 
that everlasting fire, and that they are 
they to whom it is promised that they 
themselves " shall be saved, yet so as 
by fire." (1 Cor. iii. 15.) So that, 
though the fire itself be everlasting, the 
burning of the damned therein, that is, 
the work of the fire upon them, will 
not be everlasting. As though the 
Lord were answering this beforehand, 
the last words of His Sermon are : 
" And these shall go away into ever- 
lasting punishment, but the righteous 



Prayer. 

TURN us, O God of our salvation, 
and that the Fast of these Forty 
Days may profit us, do Thou order 
all our thoughts according to Thy 
heavenly teaching. Through our 
Lord Jesus Christ, Thy Son, Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the 
unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. Amen. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, 
and None. 

After Lauds is said the Dirge. 

VESPERS. 

Chapter. (Joel ii. 17.) 

THE Priests, the ministers of the 
Lord, shall weep between the 
porch and the altar, and shall say : 
Spare, O LORD, spare Thy people, 
and give not thine heritage to reproach, 



236 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



that the heathen should rule over 
them. 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
Saturday, {p. 227.) 



L< 



Prayer. 

OOSE us, O Lord, we beseech 
Thee, from all bonds of our 
sins, and in Thy mercy turn away 
from us all pains which for the same 
we do justly deserve. Through our 
Lord Jesus Christ Thy Son, Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the 
unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. Amen. 

Third Day. 
MATTINS. 
Hymn as 011 Sunday. 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to Matthew (xxi. 
10.) 

A T that time : When Jesus was 
■^^ come into Jerusalem, all the 
city was moved, saying : Who is 
this ? And so on. 

Homily by the Venerable Bede, 
Priest [at Jarrow.] {yth for Lent, 
Tom. vii.) 

The same thing which the Lord 
showed in a figure by cursing the 
barren fig-tree, He afterwards more 
plainly put before us by casting the 
desecrators out of the temple. The 
tree herself had not sinned by bearing 
no fruit when the Lord was hungry, 
for the time of figs was not yet come, 
but those Priests had sinned who were 
carrying on worldly business in the 



Lord's house, and who neglected to 
bring forth that fruit of godliness 
which they owed, and which the Lord 
was hungry to find in them. The 
Lord made the fig-tree to wither away 
under His curse, that all men who 
saw it, and all men who hear of it, 
might know that they will be con- 
demned by the judgment of God, if 
they content themselves with the talk 
of godliness, without the solid fruit of 
good works, even as that barren fig- 
tree was clothed only with a rustling 
garb of green leaves. 

First Responsory. 
Let us amend, &c, {p. 229.) 



Second Lesson, 

T)UT because the buyers and sellers 
understood not the parable of 
the barren fig-tree, the Lord brought 
upon them the stroke of the punish- 
ment that they had deserved, and cast 
out the traffickers in earthly things, 
from that house, wherein it had been 
commanded that nothing should be 
done save the work of God, sacrifices 
and prayers offered up to Him, and 
His word read, taught, and sung. 
And yet it may be believed that noth- 
ing was being sold or bought in the 
temple save such things as were need- 
ful for the service thereof, as we read 
in another place, (John ii. 14,) that 
when JESUS went into the temple 
"He found those that sold oxen and 
sheep and doves," — and all these 
things were doubtless there for no 
other end but to be offered to God in 
that His holy house, and were sold 
by the natives to those worshippers 
who came from a distance, to be so 
used. 

Second Responsory. 
Let the wicked, &c, {p. 229.) 



FIRST WEEK IN LENT. 



237 



Third Lesson. 

T F, therefore, the Lord would not 
have to be sold in the temple, 
even such things as He willed should 
be offered therein, (On account, that 
is, of the greed or dishonesty which 
is often the stain of such transactions,) 
with what anger, suppose ye, would 
He visit such as He might find laugh- 
ing or gossiping there, or yielding to 
any other sin ? If the Lord suffer not 
to be carried on in His house such 
worldly business as may be freely 
done elsewhere, how much more shall 
such things as ought never to be done 
anywhere, draw down the anger of 
God if they be done in His own holy 
house ? Lastly ; the Holy Ghost 
came down upon the Lord in the 
shape of a dove, and by doves there- 
fore may be signified the gifts of that 
Holy Spirit. They, then, to this day 
sell doves in the temple of God, who 
take money in the Church for the lay- 
ing on of their hands, whereby the 
Holy Ghost is given from heaven. 

Third Respo?isory. 

The season of the Fast, &c, {p. 
230.) 

LAUDS. 

Chapter from Isa. Iviii. 1, as on 
Monday {p. 234.) 

Hymn and Verse and A?iswer as on 
Sunday (p. 232.) 

An tip/ion at the Song of Zacharias. 
Jesus went into the temple of God, * 
and cast out all them that sold and 
bought ; and overthrew the tables of 
the money-changers, and the seats of 
them that sold doves. 

Prayer. 

TOOK down, O Lord, on this Thy 

family, and grant that our minds, 

which, by the chastening of the body, 

we seek to purify, may ever more and 



more shine in Thy sight by strong 
hungering after Thee. Through our 
Lord JESUS Christ Thy Son, Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the 
Unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. Amen. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, 
and None. 

VESPERS. 

Chapter from Joel ii. 1 7, as on Mon- 
day, {p. 234.) 

Hym?i and Verse and Answer as on 
Saturday, (p. 227.) 

Antipho?i at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. For it is written that My 
house is the house of prayer * for all 
nations ; but ye have made it a den 
of thieves ; and He was daily teach- 
ing in the temple. 

Prayer. 

C\ LORD, may our prayers come 
^^^ up before Thy presence, and 
do Thou mercifully rid Thy Church 
of all wickedness. Through our Lord 
Jesus Christ Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of 
the Holy Ghost, one God, world with- 
out end. Amen. 

6m6er (BDetoteefcap. 

Fourth Day of Quarter- Tense. 

Before Mattins are said the Gradual 
Psalms. 

MATTINS. 

Hymn as on Sunday. 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to Matthew (xii. 
38.) 

A T that time : Certain Scribes and 
^^ Pharisees answered Jesus, say- 
ing : Master, we would see a sign 
from Thee. And so on. 



238 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Homily by St Ambrose, Bishop [of 
Milan.] (yth Bk. on Luke, ch. xii.) 

After the condemnation of the Jew- 
ish people, the mystery of the Church 
is plainly declared in the figures of 
the repentant Ninevites, and of the 
Queen of the South. Like that Queen, 
the Church cometh from the uttermost 
parts of the earth, to hear the wisdom 
of the true Solomon, the Prince of 
Peace. 1 A Queen she is, and a 
Queen of one indivisible realm, 
wrought into one body out of all na- 
tions, however divers and distant. 

First Responsory. 
Rend your hearts, &c, {p. 231.) 

Second Lesson. 

AND thus cometh that great mys- 
tery of Christ and the Church, a 
mystery more excellent now in the 
fulness of truth, than in the ancient 
type. For there they had in Solomon 
only a type of that which Christ is 
now in His own Person. And the 
Church is of two classes, whereof the 
one knoweth not how to sin, and the 
other sinneth no more. To wash 
away sin is the work of repentance, 
to eschew it that of wisdom. 

Second Responsory . 
Deal thy bread, &c, [p. 231.) 



of His love ; for, by turning our eyes 
on the Ninevites, He showeth us a way 
of escape, while He setteth before us 
the horror of what will otherwise be 
our punishment. Even the Jews- 
need not cease to hope for pardon, 
if only they would repent. 

Third Responsory. 

2 Shut up alms in the breast of the 
poor, and it shall plead for you with 
the Lord. For, 3 as water will quench 
fire, so alms maketh an atonement 
for sins. 

Verse. 4 Give alms, and, behold, all 
things are clean unto you. 

Answer. For, as water will quench 
fire, so alms maketh an atonement for 
sins. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. For, as water will quench 
fire, so alms maketh an atonement for 
sins. 

LAUDS. 

Chapter from Isa. lviii. 1, as on 
Monday, {p. 234.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
Sunday, {p. 232.) 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
This evil and adulterous generation 
seeketh after a sign ; * and there shall 
no sign be given to it, but the sign of 
the Prophet Jonas. 



Third Lesson. 



Prayer. 



[ ASTLY, the sign of the Prophet r\ LORD, we beseech Thee, merci- 
Jonas, as it was a figure of the " fully to he 



Lord's sufferings, was also a witness to 
the gravity of those sins which the 
Jews committed. At the same time, 
we see in these words of the Lord a 
declaration at once of His power, and 



fully to hear our prayers, and to 
stretch forth the right hand of Thy 
power against all things that fight 
against us. Through our Lord Jesus 
Christ Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of the 



1 A play on the meaning in the Hebrew of the name Solomon, 

2 Ecclus. xxix. 15. 3 Ecclus. iii. 33. 



" Peaceful." 
4 Luke xi. 41. 



FIRST WEEK IN LENT. 



239 






Holy Ghost, one God, world without 
end. Amen. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, and 
None. 

VESPERS. 

Chapter from Joel ii. 17, as 071 
Monday, {p. 234.) 

Hy?nn and Verse and Answer as on 
Saturday, {p. 227.) 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. As Jonas was three days and 
three nights in the whale's belly, * so 
shall the Son of man be three days and 
three nights in the heart of the earth. 



Prayer. 

f~\ LORD, we beseech Thee to cast 
Thy bright beams of light upon 
our mind that we may clearly see 
whatsoever things Thou wouldst have 
us to do, and have strength to do 
always that is pleasing in Thy sight. 
Through our Lord JESUS Christ Thy 
Son, Who liveth and reigneth with 
Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, 
one God, world without end. Amen. 



£#u*efca£. 



Fifth Day. 

MATTINS. 

Hymn as on Sunday, {p. 227.) 



Homily by St Jerome, Priest [at 
Bethlehem.] (Bk. ii. Comm. on 
Matth. xv.) 

Christ leaveth the Scribes and 
Pharisees who had spoken falsely 
against Him, and goeth into the 
coasts of Tyre and Sidon, that He 
may heal the Tyrians and Sidonians. 
But a woman of Canaan cometh to 
Him out of the land He had left, and 
crieth to Him to give health to her 
daughter. Remark that the case of 
the daughter of this woman of Canaan 
is the fifteenth case of healing. 

" Have mercy on me, O Lord, Thou 
Son of David ! " She knew that He 
was to be called " Son of David " be- 
cause she was come out of His own 
country, and had left the errors of the 
Tyrians and Sidonians when she 
changed her home and her faith. 1 

First Responsory. 

I had been troubled, but that I 
knew Thy mercy, O Lord : Thou hast 
said : 2 I have no pleasure in the death 
of the wicked, but that he turn from 
his way and live. O Thou, Who 
didst call the Canaanitish woman and 
the Publican unto repentance ! 

Verse. 3 In the multitude of the 
sorrows within my heart, Thy com- 
forts delight my soul. 

Answer. O Thou Who didst call 
the Canaanitish woman and the 
Publican unto repentance ! 



First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to Matthew (xv. 
21.) 

A T that time : Jesus went thence, 
and departed into the coasts of 
Tyre and Sidon. And so on. 



Second Lesson. 

" IVT^ daughter is grievously vexed 
11 with a devil." I think that 
the daughter of this woman of Canaan, 
[whom the Lord at length delivered,] 
was a figure of the souls of such as 
now believe, but were once grievously 
vexed by the devil, knowing not Him 



1 "The woman was a Gentile, a Syrophenician by nation." (Mark vii. 26.) 

2 Ezek. xxxiii. 11. ' Ps. xciii. 19. 



240 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Who made them, and bowing down 
to stocks and stones. 

" But He answered not a word " — 
not because He was puffed up with 
the pride of the Pharisees, or shared 
the high looks of the Scribes, but that 
He might fulfil His own word that He 
had spoken, saying : " Go not into the 
way of the Gentiles, and into any city 
of the Samaritans enter ye not." 
(Matth. x. 5.) He would not give 
an occasion to such as spoke falsely 
against Him, and He kept back perfect 
salvation from the Gentiles until such 
time as He should have suffered and 
risen again. 

Second Responsory, 
In all things, &c, (p. 228.) 



Third Lesson. 

" A ND His disciples came and be- 
sought Him, saying : Send her 
away ; for she crieth after us." The 
disciples, knowing not as yet the 
mysterious things of the Lord, said 
this, either because they were moved 
with compassion and so interceded for 
this Canaanitish woman, whom another 
Evangelist calleth a Syrophcenician, 
(Mark vii. 26,) or because she was 
crying out that the Lord was an hard, 
instead of a merciful physician, and 
they desired to be rid of her clamour. 
" But He answered and said : I am 
not sent but unto the lost sheep of the 
house of Israel," — not that He was not 
sent unto the Gentiles, but because it 
was to Israel in the first instance that 
He was sent, whom refusing the Gos- 
pel, He might justly pass away from, 
and go to the Gentiles. 



LAUDS. 

Chapter from Isa. lviii. 1, as on 
Monday, {p. 234.) 

Hymn and Verse and Aiiswer as on 
Sunday, {p. 232.) 

Antipho?i at the Song of Zacharias. 
Jesus went thence, * and departed 
unto the coasts of Tyre and Sidon : 
and, behold a woman of Canaan came 
out of those coasts, 1 and cried unto 
Him, saying : Have mercy on me, 
Thou Son of David ! 

Prayer. . 

f~\ LORD, look down favourably 
^^ upon the. earnestness of Thy 
people, and grant that they being an- 
hungred in their bodies, may be spirit- 
ually fed by the fruit of good works. 
Through our Lord Jesus Christ Thy 
Son, Who liveth and reigneth with 
Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, 
one God, world without end. Amen. 

At the begi7ini?ig of the Martyrology 
is said, 

On the morrow we commemorate 
the piercing of the Lord Jesus Christ 
with the spear and the nails. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, ajid 
None. 

Sixth Day of Quarter- Tense. 

Office in Mejnory of the Piercing of 
our Lord JESUS Christ with the 
Spear and Nails. 

Greater Double. 



Third Responsory. 
The Priests, &c, {p. 229.) 

1 Viz., those of her adopted country, Canaan 



All as on Sunday, except the fol- 
lowing. 



FIRST WEEK IN LENT. 



241 



FIRST VESPERS. 



Antiphoiis, 
from Lauds. 



Chapter, a?id Prayer 



Last Psalm. 

Ps. cxvi. O praise the LORD, &c, 
{p. 186.) 

Hymn. 

C\& Calvary with what a mystery gleams 
^ The spear that at the ninth hour of 

the day 
Made for the Precious Blood toward the 
earth 
Out of the pulseless Heart its last strange 
way. 

As the first Adam by the tree of life 
Lay still and silent in sleep's deep repose, 

Mother of all that live, from his cleft side 
Eve guileful bride to life and beauty rose. 

So when upon the Cross's quickening tree 
In death's deep sleep the Second Adam 
hung, 
Mother of all that live by faith, the Church 
From His cleft Side in Blood and Water 
sprung. 

There too the nails that pierced Him— they 
they were 
Wherewith the Saviour to the bitter wood 
Whereto His Hands and Feet were nailed, 
nailed too 
The dark handwriting that against us 
stood. 



Antiphon at the So?ig of the Blessed 
Virgin. 2 Blotting out the hand- 
writing of the ordinance that was 
against us, He took it out of the way, 
nailing it to His Cross. 

Commei7ioration of the Week-day. 

Antiphon. O woman, great is thy 
faith : be it unto thee even as thou 
wilt. 

Verse. God hath given His Angels 
charge over Thee. 

Answer. To keep Thee in all Thy 
ways. 

Prayer. 

/^RANT, O Lord,. we beseech Thee, 
^^ unto all Christian people, that 
what they now believe they may one 
day know and may see in love un- 
checked, that heavenly gift whereof 
now they are the worshippers and the 
partakers. Through our Lord Jesus 
Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of 
the Holy Ghost, one God, world with- 
out end. Amen. 

At Compli?ie, last verse of the Hymn, 

Lord Jesu, slain for us, to Thee 

Eternal praise be given, 
With Father, Spirit, One and Three, 

Here as it is in heaven. 



Praise to the Father, and the Holy Ghost, 
And Him Who, where earth's feeble vision 
fails 
Amid the glory of the Eternal Throne 
Still bears the marking of the spear and 
nails. 



MATTINS. 



Inviiatory. Christ, Who was pierced 
with the Spear and Nails, * Him, O 
come, let us worship ! 



Verse. 1 They pierced My Hands 
and My Feet. 

Answer. They have told all My 
Bones. 



Hymn? 

If the Hymn at Vespers should not 
have been said, it is said instead of this 



1 Ps. xxi. 17, 18. 2 Col. ii, 14. 

' Hymn of sixteenth to eighteenth century, author unknown, translation by the late Rev. 
E. Caswall. 



242 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Book of 
the Prophet Zechariah (xii. 10.) 

HTHUS saith the Lord: I will pour 
A upon the house of David and 
upon the inhabitants of Jerusalem the 
spirit of grace and of supplications ; 
and they shall look upon Me Whom 
they have pierced ; and they shall 
mourn for him, as one mourneth for 
his only son, and shall be in bitter- 
ness for him, as one useth to be that 
is in bitterness for the death of his 
first-born. In that day there shall 
be a great mourning in Jerusalem, as 
the mourning of Hadadrimmon in the 
field of Megiddon. 3 And the land 
shall mourn, every family apart ; the 
family of the house of David apart, 
and their wives apart ; the family of 
the house of Nathan apart, and their 
wives apart ; the family of the house 
of Levi apart, and their wives apart ; 
the family of Shimei apart, and their 
wives apart ; all the families that re- 
main apart, and their women apart. 

First Responsory. 

But when they came to Jesus, and 
saw that He was dead already, they 
brake not His Legs ; but one of the 
soldiers with a spear pierced His 
Side. 

Verse. And he that saw it bare 
record, and his record is true. 

Answer. One of the soldiers with 
a spear pierced His Side. 

Second Lesson, (xiii.) 

Verse. 2 They persecute him whom T N that day there shall be a fountain 

Thou hast smitten. A opened to the house of David, 

Answer. And they embitter the and to the inhabitants of Jerusalem, 

pain of my wounds. for sin and for uncleanness. 4 And 

1 Antiphons from John xix. 33-37. 2 p s , ] X viii. 27. 

3 This was the national lamentation for the death of Josiah. 2 Par. (Chron.) xxxv. 24, 25. 

4 In ablutionem peccatoris et menstruatae. 



one, and verses 1, 2, and 3 of this are 
prefixed to the Hymn at Lauds. 

TTAIL, Spear and Nails, erewhile despised 
-^ As things of little worth ; 
Now crimson with the Blood of Christ 
And famed through heaven and earth. 

Chosen by Jewish perfidy 

As instruments of sin, 
God turned you into ministers 

Of love and grace Divine : 

For from each several wound ye made 

In the Redeemer's Frame, 
As from a fount, celestial gifts 

And life eternal came. 

Thee, Jesu, pierced with Nails and Spear, 

Let every knee adore ; 
With Thee, O Father, and with Thee, 

O Spirit, evermore. Amen. 

FIRST NOCTURN. 1 

Only three Psalms are said. 

First Antiphon. But when they 
came to Jesus, they brake not His 
Legs, but one of the soldiers with a 
spear pierced His Side. 

Ps. i. Blessed is the man, &c, {p. 
40 

Second A?itiphon. And forthwith 
came thereout Blood and Water ; and 
he that saw it bare record, and his 
record is true. 

Ps. ii. Why do the heathen, &c, 

(A 40 

Third Antiphon. Another Scripture 
saith : They shall look on Him Whom 
they pierced. 

Ps. iii. Lord, how are they in- 
creased, &c, {p. 5.) 



FIRST WEEK IN LENT. 



243 



it shall come to pass in that day, saith 
the Lord of hosts, that I will cut off 
the names of the idols out of the land, 
and they shall no more be remem- 
bered ; the false prophets and the 
unclean spirit will I cause to pass out 
of the land. And it shall come to 
pass that, when any shall yet prophesy, 
then his father and his mother, that 
begat him, shall say unto him : Thou 
shalt not live, for thou speakest lies 
in the name of the Lord. And his 
father and his mother, that begat him, 
shall thrust him through, when he pro- 
phesieth. And it shall come to pass 
in that day, that the prophets shall be 
ashamed every one of his vision, when 
he had prophesied ; neither shall they 
wear a rough garment to deceive ; but 
he shall say : I am no prophet ; I am 
an husbandman ; for Adam hath been 
mine ensample from my youth. 

Second Responsory. 

One of the soldiers with a spear 
pierced His Side, and forthwith came 
thereout Blood and Water. 

Verse. In that day there shall be 
a fountain opened to the house of 
David and to the inhabitants of Jer- 
usalem. 

Answer. And forthwith came there- 
out Blood and Water. 



sheep shall be scattered ; and I will 
turn Mine hand upon the little ones. 
And it shall come to pass that in all 
the land, saith the LORD, two parts 
therein shall be cut off and die ; but 
the third shall be left therein. And I 
will bring the third part through the 
fire, and will refine them as silver is 
refined, and will try them as gold is 
tried. He shall call on My Name, and 
I will hear him. I will say : Thou 
art My people ; and he shall say : 
The Lord is my God. 

Third Responsory. 

In that day there shall be a fountain 
opened to the house of David, and to 
the inhabitants of Jerusalem, for sin 
and for uncleanness. 

Verse. This is He That came by 
Water and Blood, even Jesus Christ. 

Answer. For sin and for unclean- 
ness. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. For sin and for unclean- 



SECOND NOCTURN. 

First Antiphon. They shall look 
upon Me Whom they have pierced ; 
and they shall mourn for him as one 
mourneth for his only son. 



Ps. iv. 

206.) 



When I called, &c, (p. 



Third Lesson. 

AND one shall say unto him : What 
"^^ are these wounds in thine hands ? 
Then he shall answer : Those with 
which I was wounded in the house of 
my friends. 1 Awake, O sword, against 
My shepherd, and against the man 
that is My fellow, saith the LORD of 
hosts ; smite the shepherd, and the 

1 Abp. Kenrick says: "The occasion of his wounds is not stated, although he received 
them in the house of his friends. They were probably inflicted by his parents, to punish 
him for uttering false prophecies "—as he also says before: "The general horror of idolatry 
is expressed by the readiness of parents to punish their own son for countenancing it by 
false predictions." 



Second Antiphon. What are these 
wounds in thine hands ? 

Ps. v. Give ear, &c, {p. 88.) 

Third Antiphon. Those with which 
I was wounded in the house of my 
friends. 



244 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Ps. viii. O Lord, our Lord, &c, 

(A 7-) 

Verse. He was wounded for our 
transgressions. 

Answer. He was bruised for our 
iniquities. 

Fourth Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from a Sermon 
by Pope Innocent VI. {Decree con- 
cerning the Feast of the Spear and 
the Nails.) 

\ 7LTE are behoven so to glory in the 
most holy sufferings of our 
Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, as to 
count out one by one all the mysteries 
and merits of His Suffering, and even 
to glory in every one of their soul- 
saving instruments. Among such 
mysteries is notable the fact that the 
Saviour on the Cross, after that He 
had given up the Ghost, .bore that 
His Side should be pierced with a 
spear, to the end that in the,, stream 
of Blood and Water which forthwith 
came thereout, there might spring 
forth, one, and stainless, and virgin, 
His Bride and our holy mother, the 
Church. O how blessed is that gap 
in the Sacred Side, whence have 
rushed for us so many and so great 
streams of mercy ! Happy for us 
was the lance whose work was to do 
us such good, and to add such an- 
other glory to such a victory ! 

Fourth Responsory. 

1 This is He That came by Water 
and Blood, even Jesus Christ ; not by 
Water only, but by Water and Blood. 

Verse. 2 There are Three that bear 
witness in earth, the Spirit, and the 
Water, and the Blood : and these 
three are One. 

Answer. Not by Water only, but 
by Water and Blood. 



Fifth Lesson. 

T N opening that Side, the lance 
opened for us the gates of the 
kingdom of heaven. In wounding 
Him Who was dead already, (John 
xix. 33, 34,) the lance closed our 
wounds, and gave us life and health. 
In piercing Him Who was harmless, 
(Heb. vii. 26,) the lance, by His 
Blood, purged our sins of their harm- 
fulness ; in trickling down with that 
most holy Water, it flooded away from 
our eye the beam which had made us 
blind, and washed us clean in the 
waves of God's mercy. For us are 
also sweet the nails wherewith the 
Saviour was fastened upon the Cross. 
We must clearly remember that theirs 
it was not only to be smeared with 
the sinless Blood, not only to bear 
up the weight of the Great [Victim of 
Atonement], but to open for us, in the 
salvation-bringing Wounds, sweet wells 
of the goodness of God ; [by going 
through His Hands,] to free our hands 
from the manacles of sin, and, [by 
boring His Feet,] to draw our feet 
out of the snares of death. 



Fifth Responsory. 

3 Many dogs have compassed me : 
the assembly of the wicked have in- 
closed me. They pierced my hands 
and my feet : they have told all my 
bones. 

Verse. One shall say unto him, 
What are these wounds in thine 
hands ? 

Answer. They pierced my hands 
and my feet : they have told all my 
bones. 

Sixth Lesson. 

'"THAN the Cleft in that Side, and 

the Wounds in those Hands and 

Feet what is there holier ? What is 



1 1 John v. 6. 



1 John v. 8. 



Ps. xxi. 17. 



FIRST WEEK IN LENT. 



245 



there more life-giving ? — out of Them 
floweth salvation, and in Them the 
souls of believers may for ever find 
health. The Lance and Nails hereto- 
fore mentioned, and other instruments 
employed in the life-giving Sufferings 
of Christ, are everywhere to be held 
in reverence of all His faithful people, 
and solemn Offices concerning His 
Sufferings themselves are held and 
kept in the Church ; but We, never- 
theless, hold it meet and convenient 
that a special Festal Office should be 
held and kept concerning these things 
in particular, especially in those places 
where the instruments themselves are 
asserted to be still preserved ; and 
We desire by these Offices and In- 
dulgences more particularly to provoke 
the earnestness in godliness of such 
of the faithful as please themselves 
with the belief that they have any such 
Relique in their possession. 

Sixth Responsory. 

One shall say unto him : What are 
these wounds in thine hands ? Then 
he shall answer : Those with which I 
was wounded in the house of my 
friends. 

Verse. * Except I shall see in His 
Hands the print of the nails, I will not 
believe. 

Answer. Those with which I was 
wounded in the house of my friends. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. Those with which I was 
wounded in the house of my friends. 

THIRD NOCTURN. 

First Antiphon. They pierced my 
hands and my feet : they have told all 
my bones. 

Ps. xcv. O sing unto the Lord, 
&c, {p. 148.) 



Second Antiphon. Except I shall 
see in His Hands the print of the 
nails, and put my finger into the print 
of the nails, and thrust my hand into 
His Side, I will not believe. 

Ps. xcvi. The Lord reigneth, &c, 
{p. 149.) 

Third Antiphon. Reach hither thy 
finger, and behold My Hands ; and 
reach hither thy hand, and thrust 
it into My Side. 

Ps. xcvii. O sing unto the Lord, 

&c, (p. 1 57-) 

Verse. The chastisement of our 
peace was upon Him. 

Answer. And with His stripes we 
are healed. 

Seventh Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (xix. 28.) 

A T that time : Jesus, knowing that 
all things were now accom- 
plished, that the Scripture might be 
fulfilled, saith : I thirst. And so on. 

Homily by St Austin, Bishop [of 
Hippo.] (120th Tract upon John.) 

" One of the soldiers with a spear 
pierced His Side, and forthwith came 
thereout Blood and Water." The 
Evangelist speaketh carefully. He 
saith not that he smote the Side, nor 
yet that he wounded It, nor yet any- 
thing else, but " pierced " — " pierced " 
It, to fling wide the entrance unto life, 
whence flow the Sacraments of the 
Church, those Sacraments without 
which there is no entrance into the life 
which is life indeed. That Blood, 
Which was shed there, was shed for 
the remission of sins, that Water is the 
Water that mantleth in the cup of 
salvation. Therein are we washed. 



John xx. 25. 



VOL. II. 



246 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



and thereof do we drink. Of this was 
it a type when it was said unto Noah : 
" The door of the ark shalt thou set in 
the side thereof . . . and of every 
living thing of all flesh shalt thou 
bring into the ark ... to keep them 
alive." (Gen. vi. 16, 19.) A figure 
this of the Church. 

Seventh Respo7isory. 

These things were done that the 
Scripture should be fulfilled : A bone 
of Him shall not be broken. And 
again another Scripture saith : They 
shall look on Him Whom they pierced. 

Verse. I will pour upon the house 
of David and upon the inhabitants of 
Jerusalem the spirit of grace and of 
supplications. 

Answer. They shall look on Him 
Whom they pierced. 

Eighth Lesson. 

HTHUS it was that the first woman 
was made from the side of her 
husband while he slept, and she was 
called [Eve, which is, being inter- 
preted,] "Life," "because she was the 
mother of all living." (Gen. iii. 20.) 
This name set forth a great good, 
before it became associated with the 
bitter fruit of a great evil. And here 
we have the second Adam bowing His 
Head, and the deep sleep of death 
falling upon Him upon the Cross, 
and He sleepeth that the Lord God 
may take a thing out of His Side, and 
make thereof a wife for Him. O what 
a death was His, which quickeneth the 
dead ! What is cleaner than His 
Blood ? What more health - giving 
than His wounding ? " For these 
things were done, that the Scripture 
might be fulfilled : ' Not a Bone of Him 
shall be broken,' — and again, another 
Scripture saith : ' They shall look on 
Him Whom they pierced.'" 



Eighth Responsory. 

I will pour upon the house of David 
and upon the inhabitants of Jerusalem 
the spirit of grace and of supplications ; 
and they shall look upon Me Whom 
they have pierced. 

Verse. And they shall mourn for 
him as one mourneth for his only son. 

Answer. And they shall look upon 
Me Whom they have pierced. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

A?iswer. And they shall look upon 
Me Whom they have pierced. 



Ninth Blessing. 

May the Gospel's glorious word, 
Cleansing to our souls afford. 



Ninth Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (v. I.) 

A T that time : There was a feast of 
^^ the Jews : and JESUS went up to 
Jerusalem. And so on. 

Homily by St Austin, Bishop [of 
H i ppo. ] (17 th Tract on Joh?i. ) 

Let us see what is mystically signi- 
fied by that one infirm man whom 
alone the Lord, keeping to a mys- 
terious unity, chose out of so many 
sufferers, to be the subject of His 
healing power. He found in him a 
certain number of years of sickness. 
He had had an infirmity thirty and 
eight years. How this number is 
proper rather to weakness than to 
health, will now be the subject of a 
few careful remarks. I bespeak your 
attention ; the Lord will be present, 
that I may speak fitly, and you may 
understand. The number forty is put 
before us as hallowed, and, in a way, 
perfect. I think that your love know- 



FIRST WEEK IN LENT. 



247 



eth this : God's Scriptures often and 
; often witness it. Ye well know that 
a Fast of this number of days is hal- 
lowed. Moses fasted forty days. Elias 
did the same. And our Lord and 
Saviour JESUS Christ Himself fasted 
this number of days complete. Moses 
representeth the Law, Elias the Pro- 
phets, and the Lord the Gospel. And 
therefore these three appeared on the 
Mount of the Transfiguration. There 
the Lord showed Himself to His dis- 
i ciples with His Face shining as the 
sun, and His raiment glistering ; and 
He stood between Moses and Elias ; 
as it were, the Gospel receiving testi- 
mony, on the one hand from the Law, 
and, on the other, from the Prophets. 
Whether, therefore, it be in the Law, 
or in the Prophets, or in the Gospel, 
the number of forty is recommended 
to us for Fast-days. The great and 
general Fast is this : to abstain from 
the iniquity of the world, and her for- 
bidden pleasures. This is the perfect 
Fast, " that, denying ungodliness, and 
worldly lusts, we should live soberly, 
righteously, and godly in this present 
world." After such a Fast, what is 
the Feast that followeth ? Hear what 
the Apostle saith in continuation : 
" Looking for that blessed hope, and 
the glorious appearing of our great 
God and Saviour JESUS Christ." 
(Titus ii. 12, 13.) We, then, make 
our pilgrimage in this world a Lent, 
by living good lives, and abstaining 
from her iniquities and her forbidden 
pleasures. But at the end of this 
life-long Lent there will be an Easter 
indeed. We " look for that blessed 
hope, and the glorious appearing of 
our great God and Saviour JESUS 
Christ" When that hope is realised, 
when that faith is swallowed up in 
knowledge, then indeed shall we re- 
ceive every man a penny. In good 
sooth, it is true that every labourer 
in the vineyard will get his wages — 



witness that Gospel which I believe 
ye have not forgotten, (Matth. xx. 1- 
16) and which it is not my business 
to quote again as if ye were ignorant 
children. Now, the word used in the 
original for this penny which the la- 
bourers received is " denarion." And 
the derivation of the word " denarion " 
is the numeral "decern," ten. There 
are forty days in Lent, and if we add 
ten, we get fifty. So do we toil in 
fasting for the forty days of Lent be- 
fore Easter, and, then, when we have, 
as it were, received our reward, we 
keep holiday for the fifty days of 
Easter- tide. Remember how I re- 
marked, that the man healed by our 
Lord at the pool of Bethesda had had 
an infirmity thirty and eight years. I 
wish to explain why this number of 
thirty-eight is proper rather to weak- 
ness than to health. " Love is the 
fulfilling of the law" (Rom. xiii. 10;) 
to the fulfilling of the law belongeth 
in every work the number forty. But 
in love we have given us two precepts : 
" Thou shalt love the Lord thy God 
with all thy heart, and with all thy 
soul, and with all thy mind. This is 
the first and great commandment. 
And the second is like unto it : Thou 
shalt love thy neighbour as thyself. 
On these two commandments hang all 
the law and the prophets." (Matth. 
xxii. 37-40.) When the widow gave 
all she had for an offering to God she 
gave two mites (Mark xii. 42 ;) the 
inn-keeper received two pence where- 
with to cure him that had fallen among 
thieves (Luke x. 35 ;) Jesus abode for 
two days among the Samaritans (John 
iv. 40,) that He might establish them 
in love. When, then, anything good 
is spoken of as two, the two great 
divisions of love are the chief mystic 
interpretation. If, then, the law is 
fulfilled in the number forty, and it 
is not fulfilled if there be lacking the 
two precepts of love, what wonder is it 



248 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



that he was infirm who lacked two of 
forty ? 

The Hy??m, "We praise Thee, O 
God, &c," is said. 



LAUDS. 

First Antiphon. One of the soldiers 
with a spear pierced His Side, * and 
forthwith came thereout Blood and 
Water. 

Second Antiphon. They pierced 
my hands and my feet, * they have 
told all my bones. 

Third Antiphon. There are three 
that bear witness in earth, * the Spirit, 
and the Water, and the Blood. 

Fourth Antiphon. 1 Why are ye 
troubled? * and why do thoughts 
arise in your hearts ? Behold My 
Hands and My Feet, that it is I 
Myself. 

Fifth Antiphon. Reach hither thy 
finger, and behold My Hands ; * and 
reach hither thy hand, and thrust it 
into My Side. 

Chapter. (1 John v. 5.) 

y\ EARLY beloved brethren, Who is 
he that overcometh the world, 
but he that believeth that Jesus is the 
Son of God ? This is He that came 
by Water and Blood, — even Jesus 
Christ — not by Water only, but by 
Water and Blood. 



Hymn? 

(~)H, turn those blessed points, all bathed 

In Jesu's Blood, on me ; 
Mine were the sins that wrought His death — 
Mine be the penalty. 

Pierce through my feet, my hands, my heart- 
So may some Drop distil 

Of Blood Divine, into my soul, 
And all its evils heal. 

1 Luke xxiv. 38, 39. 

2 Hymn of sixteenth to eighteenth century, 
E. Caswall. 



So may my feet be slow to sin, 

Harmless my hands shall be ; 
So, from my wounded heart, shall each 

Forbidden passion flee. 

Thee, Jesus ! pierced with nails and spear ! 

Let every knee adore ! 
With Thee, O Father, and with Thee, 

O Spirit, evermore. Amen. 

Verse. They pierced my hands and 
my feet. 

Answer. They have told all my 
bones. 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
3 His visage was so marred more than 
any man, and His Form more than 
the sons of men. So shall He sprinkle 
many nations. 

Prayer throughout the Office. 

r\ GOD, Who didst take our weak 
^^^ nature upon Thee, and, inas- 
much as Thou didst will it, didst 
work salvation for the world by being 
crucified with nails and pierced with 
a spear, mercifully grant unto all of 
us who now on earth are making sol- 
emn memorial of the same nails and 
spear, that hereafter in heaven we 
may be made glad for ever by the fruits 
of that glorious victory whereof Thy 
piercing was the mean. Who livest 
and reignest with God the Father, 
in the unity of the Holy Ghost, one 
God, world without end. Amen. 

Commemoration of the Week-day. 

Antiphon. The Angel of the Lord 
came down from heaven : and the 
water was troubled, and one was 
made whole. 

Verse. God hath given His angels 
charge over Thee. 

Answer. To keep Thee in all Thy 
ways. 

author unknown, translation by the late Rev. 
3 Isa. lii. 14, 15. 



FIRST WEEK IN LENT. 



249 



Prayer. 

T>E gracious unto Thy people, O 
.■*-' Lord, and in Thy mercy help 
all such as Thou hast called to be 
Thine. Through our Lord JESUS 
Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of 
the Holy Ghost, one God, world with- 
out end. Amen. 



PRIME. 

Antiphon. One of the soldiers, 
&c, {First A?itipho7i at Lauds.) 

Ps. liii. and the two sections of Ps. 
cxviii. "Whosoever, &c," is ?iot said. 

In the Short Responsory, instead of 
"Thou That sittest, &c," is said, 

Verse. Thou That wast wounded 
for us. 

Chapter at the end. (1 Pet. ii. 24.) 

VyHO His Own Self bare our sins 
in His Own Body on the tree, 
that we, being dead to sins, should 
live unto righteousness : by Whose 
stripes ye were healed. 

TERCE. 

Antiphon. They pierced, &c, 
{Second Antiphon at Lauds.) 

Chapter from Lauds. 

Short Responsory. 

They pierced my hands and my 
feet. 

Answer. They pierced my hands 
and my feet. 

Verse. They have told all my 
bones. 

Answer. And my feet. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 



Answer. They pierced my hands 
and my feet. 

Verse. They persecute him whom 
Thou hast smitten. 

A?iswer. And they embitter the 
pain of my wounds. 

SEXT. 

Antiphon. There are three, &c, 
( Third Antiphon at Lauds. ) 

Chapter. (1 Pet. ii. 21.) 

T3RETHREN, Christ suffered for 
us, leaving you an example, that 
ye should follow His steps : Who did 
no sin, neither was guile found in His 
Mouth. 

Short Responsory. 

They persecute him whom Thou 
hast smitten. 

Answer. They persecute him 
whom Thou hast smitten. 

Verse. And they embitter the pain 
of my wounds. 

Answer. Whom Thou hast smitten. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. They persecute him 
whom Thou hast smitten. 

Verse. He was wounded for our 
transgressions. 

Answer. He was bruised for our 
iniquities. 



NONE. 



Antiphon. Reach hither, &c, 
{Fifth Antiphon at Lauds.) 

Chapter as at the end of Prime. 



Short Responsory. 

He was wounded for our trangres- 
sions. 

Answer. He was wounded for our 
transgressions. 



250 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Verse. He was bruised for our ini- 
quities. 

Answer. For our transgressions. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. He was wounded for our 
transgressions. 

Verse. The chastisement of our 
peace was upon Him. 

Answer. And with His stripes we 
are healed. 

SECOND VESPERS. 

All as the First, except the following. 

Last Psalm. 

Ps. cxv., I believed, &c, {p. 185.) 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. Surely He hath borne our 
griefs, and carried our sorrows : yet 
we did esteem Him stricken, smitten 
of God and afflicted. 

Com??iemoration of the Week-day. 

Antiphon. He that made me 
whole, the same said unto me : Take 
up thy bed, and walk in peace. 

Verse. God hath given His angels 
charge over Thee. KZZI3 

Answer. To keep Thee in all 
Thy ways. 

Prayer. 

TTEAR us, O merciful God, and 
cause the bright beams of Thy 
grace to shine upon our souls. 
Through our Lord JESUS Christ, Thy 
Son, Who liveth and reigneth with 
Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, 
one God, world without end. Amen. 

6m6etr Itahitrfcap. 

The Sabbath of Quarter-Tense. 

MATTINS. 

Hymn as on Sunday. 



First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to Matthew (xvii. 
I.) 

A T that time : JESUS taketh Peter, 
■^^ and James, and John his brother, 
and bringeth them up into an high 
mountain apart, and was transfigured 
before them. And so on. 

Homily by Pope St Leo [the 
Great.] {On the Trajisfiguration of 
the Lord.) 

Dearly beloved brethren, the Lesson 
from the Holy Gospel which, entering 
in by our bodily ears, hath knocked at 
the door of our inner mind, calleth us 
to understand a great mystery. This, 
by the grace of God, we shall the more 
readily do, if we return to consider 
what hath been told us just before. 
The Saviour of mankind, even Jesus 
Christ, laying the foundations of that 
faith whereby the ungodly are called 
to righteousness and the dead to life, 
instilled into the minds of His dis- 
ciples, both by the voice of His teach- 
ing and the wonder of His works, that 
they should believe Him, the one 
Christ, to be both the Only-begotten 
Son of God and the Son of man. 
Had they believed Him one of these 
and not the other, it had availed them 
nothing to salvation ; and the danger 
was equally great, of holding the Lord 
Jesus Christ to be God without the 
Manhood, or Man only without the 
Godhead, since we are constrained 
to acknowledge that He is perfect 
God and perfect Man, and that as 
there is in the Godhead perfect Man- 
hood, so there is in the Manhood 
perfect Godhead. 

First Responsory. 
Rend your hearts, &c, {p. 231.) 



FIRST WEEK IN LENT. 



251 



Second Lesson. 

T^O strengthen, therefore, the sav- 
ing knowledge of this faith, the 
Lord had asked His disciples what, 
among the differing opinions of men, 
I was their own belief and judgment 
as to Who He was. Then did the 
Apostle Peter, by the revelation of 
That Father Who is above all, 
rising above fleshly things, yea, out- 
stripping the thoughts of men, then 
did he fix the eyes of his mind upon 
the Son of the living God, and con- 
fess the glory of the Godhead, for he 
looked not on the substance of the 
flesh and blood only. And in all the 
exaltation of this faith so well did he 
please God, that he was gifted with 
that joyous blessing, the hallowed 
establishment of that impregnable 
rock, whereon the Church being- 
founded, should prevail against the 
gates of hell and the laws of death ; 
neither, when anything is to be bound 
or loosed, is any bound or loosed in 
heaven, otherwise than as the judg- 
ment of Peter hath bound or loosed 
it upon earth. 

Secoiid Responsory. 
Deal thy bread, &c, (p. 231.) 

Third Lesson. 

DUT, dearly beloved brethren, it 
behoved that the height of this 
understanding, which the Lord praised, 
should rest upon a foundation, and 
that foundation, the mystery of the 
lower nature, lest the faith of the 
Apostle, carried away by the glorious 
acknowledgment of the Godhead in 
Christ, should deem it unworthy and 
unnatural for the impassible God to 
take into Himself the frailty of our 
nature ; and should thus believe that 
n Christ the Manhood had been so 
glorified as to be no longer able to 
suffer pain, or be dissolved in death. 



And therefore it was that, when the 
Lord said how that He must go up 
unto Jerusalem, and suffer many things 
of the elders and chief priests, and 
scribes, and be killed, and rise again 
the third day, and the blessed Peter, 
bright with heavenly illumination, and 
still glowing from the passionate ac- 
knowledgment of the Divine Sonship, 
by a natural, and, as seemed to him, 
a godly shrinking, could not bear the 
mention of mockery and insult and a 
cruel death, he was corrected by the 
merciful rebuke of JESUS, and moved 
rather to desire to be a partaker in the 
sufferings of his Master. 

Third Responsory. 
Shut up alms, &c, {p. 237.) 

LAUDS. 

Chapter fro?n Isa. Iviii. 1, as on 
Monday, (p. 234.) 

Hymn a7id Verse and Answer as on 
Sunday, {p. 232.) 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
JESUS took His disciples, * and went 
up into a mountain, and was trans- 
figured before them. 

Prayer. 

TOOK down mercifully, O Lord, we 
beseech Thee, upon Thy people, 
and graciously turn away from them 
the scourges of Thy wrath. Through 
our Lord JESUS Christ Thy Son, Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee in the 
unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. Amen. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, and 
None. 

VESPERS. 

Chapter and Prayer from the follow- 
ing Lauds. 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the last Saturday, {p. 227.) 



252 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. Tell the vision that ye have 
seen to no man, * until the Son of man 
be risen again from the dead. 



Secontr «Suntia2 in ILent 

Second Lord's Day in the Forty Days 
before Easter. 



MATTINS. 

Invitatory and Hymn as on last 
Sunday, {p. 227.) 

FIRST NOCTURN. 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Book of 
Genesis (xxvii. 1.) 

AND it came to pass that when 
^^ Isaac was old, and his eyes were 
dim, so that he could not see, he called 
Esau his eldest son, and said unto 
him : My son ? And he said unto 
him : Here am I. And his father 
said : Behold, now I am old, and I 
know not the day of my death. Take 
thy weapons, thy quiver and thy bow, 
and go out to the field ; and take me 
some venison, and make me savoury 
meat, such as thou knowest that I 
love, and bring it to me, that I may 
eat, and my soul may bless thee be- 
fore I die. And Rebecca heard. And 
Esau went to the field to do as his 
father had commanded him. And 
Rebecca said unto Jacob her son : I 
heard thy father speak unto Esau thy 
brother, saying : Bring me venison, 
and make me savoury meat, that I 
may eat, and bless thee before the 
LORD, before my death. Now there- 
fore, my son, obey my voice, and go 
now to the flock, and fetch me from 
thence two good kids of the goats, and 



I will make them savoury meat for 
thy father, such as he loveth ; and 
thou shalt bring it to thy father, that 
he may eat, and that he may bless 
thee before his death. 



First Responsory. 

Take thy weapons, thy quiver and 
thy bow, and bring me some of thy 
venison, that I may eat, and my soul 
may bless thee. 

Verse. And when thou hast taken 
somewhat, make me thereof savoury 
meat, that I may eat. 

And my soul may bless 



Answer, 
thee. 



Second Lesson. 



AND he answered : Thou knowest 
*^^ that Esau my brother is an hairy 
man, and I am a smooth man ; if my 
father feel me, and perceive it, I fear 
lest he think that I go about to deceive 
him, and I shall bring a curse upon 
me, and not a blessing. And his 
mother said unto him : Upon me be 
the curse, my son ; only obey my 
voice, and go, fetch me them as I 
have said. And he went, and fetched, 
and brought them to his mother. And 
she made savoury meat, such as she 
knew that his father loved. And she 
took goodly raiment of Esau, which 
were with her in the house, and put 
them upon Jacob : and she put the 
skins of the kids of the goats upon his 
hands, and upon the smooth of his 
neck. And she gave the savoury 
meat, and the bread which she had 
prepared, into his hand. And he 
brought it unto his father, and said : 
My father ? And he said : I hear ; 
who art thou, my son ? And Jacob 
said : I am Esau thy first - born ; I 
have done according as thou badest 
me. Arise, sit, and eat of my veni- 
son, that thy soul may bless me. And 
Isaac said unto his son again : How 



SECOND WEEK IN LENT. 



253 



is it that thou couldest find it so 
quickly, my son ? And he said : God 
willed that that which I sought should 
come to me quickly. 

Second Responsory. 

See ! the smell of my son is as the 
smell of a field which the Lord hath 
blessed : may my God multiply thee 
as the sand of the sea, and give thee 
a blessing of the dew of heaven ! 

Verse. And God Almighty bless 
thee, and multiply thee — 

Answer. And give thee a blessing 
of the dew of heaven. 



Third Lesson. 

AND Isaac said : Come near, that I 
"^ may feel thee, my son, whether 
thou be my very son Esau or not. 
And he went near unto his father, and 
Isaac felt him, and said : The voice is 
Jacob's voice, but the hands are the 
hands of Esau. And he discerned 
him not, because his hands were 
hairy, as his elder brother's hands. 
Therefore, or ever he blessed him, he 
said : Art thou my very son Esau ? 
And he answered : I am. And he 
said : Bring it near to me, my son, 
and I will eat of thy venison, that my 
soul may bless thee. And he brought 
it near to him, and he did eat ; and 
he brought him wine also. And when 
he had drunk, he said unto him : 
Come near now, and kiss me, my son. 
And he came near and kissed him. 
And as soon as he smelled the smell 
of his raiment, he blessed him, and 
said : See ! the smell of my son is as 
the smell of a field which the Lord 
hath blessed. God give thee of the 
dew of heaven, and the fatness of the 
earth, and plenty of corn and wine. 
Let people serve thee, and nations 
bow down to thee : be lord over thy 
brethren and let thy mother's sons 
VOL. 11. 



bow down to thee. Cursed be he that 
curseth thee, and blessed be he that 
blesseth thee ! 



Third Responsory. 

God give thee of the dew of heaven 
and the fatness of the earth. Let 
people and nations serve thee. Be 
lord over thy brethren. 

Verse. And let thy mother's sons 
bow down to thee. 

Answer. Be lord over thy brethren. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. Be lord over thy brethren. 



SECOND NOCTURN. 

Fourth Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Book 
against Lying written by St Austin, 
Bishop [of Hippo.] (Ch. ix. torn. 4.) 

T F we consider faithfully and care- 
fully what it was that Jacob did 
by the advice of his mother, and where- 
in he seemeth to have deceived his 
father, it will appear that [it hath an 
aspect in which] it is not a lie, but an 
allegory. If we denounce this [its 
mystic sense] as a lie, then must we 
also give the name of lies to even all 
parable, and to every figure devised to 
set forth the nature of anything, which 
is not to be taken in its literal sense, 
but in which one thing is to be under- 
stood under the name of another. 
And this be far from us. Whoso 
should do this, would bring the charge 
of falsehood against very many figures 
of speech, including that one called 
metaphor (in which a word is trans- 
ferred from that meaning which be- 
longeth to it, to some other) to which 
would, by such reasoning, be given 
the name of a lie. 

1 2 



254 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Fourth Responsory. 

1 As Jacob went out from his own 
land, he saw the glory of God, and 
said : How dreadful is this place ! 
This is none other but the house 
of God ; and this is the gate of 
heaven. 

Verse. Surely God is in this place, 
and I knew it not. 

Answer. This is none other but 
the house of God ; and this is the 
gate of heaven. 



Fifth Lesson. 

'"PHE deep meaning is given; but 
what is considered is the lie ; 
because men do not understand the 
way in which that signification, which 
is a truth, is set forth ; but the false- 
hood is plainly expressed, and be- 
lieved. That we may understand this 
more plainly by taking some points in 
illustration, consider with me what 
Jacob did. It is certain that he cov- 
ered his limbs with the skins of goats. 
If we consider his object in point of 
fact, we shall find that it was to lie, 
because he did this that he might be 
thought to be he who he was not. 
But if we consider this his deed in 
that deep typical sense which it un- 
doubtedly possesseth, we find that by 
the goat-skins are represented sins, 
and by him who covered himself 
therewith Him Who bore not His own 
sins, but the sins of others. 



Fifth Responsory. 

2 If the Lord my God will be with 
me, in this way that I go, and will 
keep me, and will give me bread to 
eat, and raiment to put on, and will 
bring me again safely, the Lord shall 
be my refuge, and this stone shall be 
a sign. 



Verse. So Jacob rose up early in 
the morning, and took the stone that 
he had put for his pillow, and set it 
up for a pillar, and poured oil upon 
the top of it, and said : — 

Answer. The Lord shall be my 
refuge, and this shall be a sign. 

Sixth Lesson. 

TT is impossible to apply the term 
A " lie " to that mystic aspect of this 
transaction in which it was true ; and 
such an aspect there is, not only in 
the acts, but in the words. When 
Isaac said to Jacob: "Who art thou, 
my son ? " and Jacob answered : " I 
am Esau, thy first-born," — if we take 
this in its sense relative to the two 
brothers, it will be apparent that it 
was a lie. If, however, we look at it 
relatively to that for the sake of which 
these words and deeds were written 
down, we shall see that Christ is here 
signified in His mystic body, the 
Church. Concerning her, [the young- 
er covenant,] He saith [to them of the 
older covenant] : " Ye shall see Abra- 
ham, and Isaac, and Jacob, and all the 
Prophets in the kingdom of God, and 
you yourselves thrust out. And they 
shall come from the east, and from 
the west, and from the north, and 
from the south, and shall sit down in 
the kingdom of God. And, behold, 
there are last which shall be first, and 
there are first which shall be last." 
(Luke xiii. 28-30.) Thus did the 
younger take away the title and in- 
heritance from the elder, and acquire 
it to himself. 



Sixth Responsory. 

The Lord shall be my God, and 
this stone, which I have set for a 
pillar, shall be called God's house, 
and of all that Thou shalt give me, I 



xxviii. 17. 



2 xxviii. 20, 21, 18. 



SECOND WEEK IN LENT. 



255 



will offer tithes and peace-offerings to 
Thee. 

Verse. If I come again to my 
father's house in peace. 

Answer. I will offer tithes and 
peace-offerings unto Thee. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. I will offer tithes and 
peace-offerings unto Thee. 

THIRD NOCTURN. 

Seventh Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to Matthew (xvii. 

I.) 

A T that time : Jesus taketh Peter, 
"^ and James, and John his brother, 
and bringeth them up into an high 
mountain apart, and was transfigured 
before them. And so on. 

Continuation of the Homily by Pope 
St Leo" [the Great.] 

Jesus took Peter, and James, and 
John his brother, and brought them 
up into an exceeding high mountain 
apart, and manifested forth the bright- 
ness of His glory. Hitherto, though 
they understood that there was in Him 
the Majesty of God, they knew not 
the power of that Body which veiled 
the Godhead. And therefore He had 
individually and markedly promised 
to some of the disciples that had stood 
by Him (Matth. xvi. 28) that they 
should "not taste of death till they 
had seen the Son of Man coming in 
His kingdom," — that is, in the kingly 
splendour, which is the right of the 
Manhood taken into God, and which 
He willed to make visible to those 
three men. This it was that they saw, 
for the unspeakable and unapproach- 
able vision of the Godhead Himself 
which will be the everlasting life of 



the pure in heart, (Matth. v. .8,) can 
no man, who is still burdened with a 
dying body, see and live. 

Seventh Respo?isory. 

1 The Angel said unto Jacob : Let 
me go, for the day breaketh. And he 
said : I will not let thee go, except 
thou bless me. And he blessed him 
there. 

Verse. And when Jacob arose, 
behold there wrestled a man with him, 
until the breaking of the day ; and, 
when he saw that he prevailed not, he 
said unto him : — 

Answer. Let me go, for the day 
breaketh. And he said : I will not 
let thee go, except thou bless me. 
And he blessed him there. 

Eighth Lesson. 

VyHEN the Father saith : "This 
is My beloved Son, in Whom I 
am well pleased : hear ye Him " — did 
they not plainly hear Him say — " This 
is My Son, Whose it is to be of Me 
and with Me without all time " ? For 
neither is He That begetteth, before 
Him That is begotten, neither He 
That is begotten, after Him That be- 
getteth Him. " This is My Son " — 
between Whom and Me, to be God is 
not a point of difference ; to be Al- 
mighty, a point of separation ; nor to 
be Eternal, a point of distinction. 
" This is My Son " — not by adoption, 
but My very Own ; not created from, 
or of another substance, or out of 
nothing, but begotten of Me ; not of 
another nature, and made like unto 
Me, but of Mine own Being, born of 
Me, equal unto Me. 

Eighth Responsory. 

I have seen God face to face- — and 
my life is preserved. 

24-32. 



256 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Verse. And he said unto me : Thy 
name shall be called no more Jacob, 
but Israel shall be thy name. 

Answer. And my life is preserved. 

Ninth Lesson. 

" '"THIS is My Son "—by Whom all 
things were made, and without 
Whom was not anything made that was 
made, (John i. 3 ;) Who maketh like- 
wise all things whatsoever I make : 
and what things soever I do He doeth 
likewise, (v. 19), inseparably and in- 
differently. " This is My Son " — Who 
thought it not robbery, nor hath taken 
it by violence, to be equal with Me, 
but, abiding still in the form of My 
glory, that He may fulfil Our common 
decree for the restoration of mankind, 
hath bowed the unchangeable Godhead 
even to the form of a servant. (Phil, 
ii. 6, 7.) Him therefore in Whom I 
am in all things well pleased, by Whose 
preaching I am manifested, and by 
Whose lowliness I am glorified, Him 
instantly hear ye. For He is the Truth 
and the Life, (John xiv. 6,) My Power, 
and My Wisdom. (1 Cor. i. 24.) 

Ninth Responsory. 

1 When Jacob heard that Esau came 
to meet him, he divided his sons and 
his wives, saying : If Esau smite the 
one company, then the other shall es- 
cape. Deliver me, O Lord, Which 
saidst unto me : I will multiply thy 
seed as the stars of heaven, and as the 
sand of the sea, which cannot be num- 
bered for multitude. 

Verse. O Lord, Which saidst unto 
me : Return unto thy country — 2 O 
Lord, Which feedest me still from my 
youth up — 

Answer. Deliver me, O Lord. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

1 xxxii. 7, 11, 12. 



Answer. Which saidst unto me : I 
will multiply thy seed as the stars of 
heaven, and as the sand of the sea, 
which cannot be numbered for multi- 
tude. 

LAUDS. 

First Antifthon. O Lord, open 
Thou my lips, * and my mouth shall 
show forth Thy praise. 

Psalm L. 

Have mercy upon me, &c, {p. 87.) 

Second Antiphon. The right hand 
of the Lord * hath done valiantly, the 
right hand of the LORD hath exalted 
me. 

Psalm CXVII. 

O give thanks, &c, {p. 37.) 

Third Antiphon. My God * hath 
been my help. 

Psalms LXII. and LXVI. 
O God, Thou art my God, &c, 

(A 23.) 

Fourth Antiphon. Let us sing the 
Song of the Three Children, * even the 
Song that they sang when they blessed 
the Lord in the burning fiery furnace. 

The Song of the Three Holy Children^ 
(A 24.) 

Fifth Antiphon. He hath estab- 
lished them * for ever and ever : He 
hath made a decree which shall not 
pass. 

Psalms CXLVIIL, CXLIX., CL. 
Praise ye the Lord, &c, {pp. 25, 26.) 

Chapter. (1 Thess. iv. 1.) 

WfE. beseech you, brethren, and ex- 
hort you by the Lord Jesus, that 
as ye have received of us how ye ought 

2 xlviii. 15. 



SECOND WEEK IN LENT. 



257 



to walk and to please God, ye would so 
walk, and abound more and more. 

Hymn and Verse and A?iswer as on 
the First Sunday, {p. 232.) 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
Jesus took His disciples, * and went 
up into a mountain, and was trans- 
figured before them. 

Prayer. 

r\ GOD, Who seest that we have no 
^^^ power of ourselves to help our- 
selves, keep us both outwardly in our 
bodies, and inwardly in our souls, that 
we may be defended from all adversities 
which may happen to the body, and 
from all evil thoughts which may as- 
sault and hurt the soul. Through our 
Lord Jesus Christ Thy Son, Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the 
unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. Amen. 

The same Prayer throughout the day. 

PRIME. 

Antiphon. Lord, it is good for us 
to be here : * if Thou wilt, let us make 
here three tabernacles, one for Thee, 
and one for Moses, and one for Elias. 

TERCE. 

A ntiphon from Prime. 
Chapter from Lauds. 

SEXT. 

Antiphon. Let us make here three 
tabernacles, * one for Thee, and one 
for Moses, and one for Elias. 

Chapter. (1 Thess. iv. 3.) 

T70R this is the will of God, even 
your sanctification, that ye should 
abstain from fornication ; that every one 
of you should know how to possess his 
vessel in sanctification and honour. 



NONE. 

Antiphon. Tell the vision that ye 
have seen to no man, * until the Son 
of Man be risen again from the dead. 

Chapter. (1 Thess. iv. 7.) 

T7OR God hath not called us unto 
uncleanness, but unto holiness, 
in Christ JESUS our Lord. 

VESPERS. 

Chapter from Lauds, 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Saturday, {p. 227.) 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin same as that at None. 

After Vespers are said the Vespers 
of the dead. 

Second Day. 

MATTINS. 

Hymn as o?i the First Sunday, (p. 
227.) 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (viii. 21.) 

A T that time : Jesus said unto the 
^"^ multitudes of the Jews : I go My 
way, and ye shall seek Me, and shall 
die in your sins. And so on. 

Homily on this passage by St 
Austin, Bishop [of Hippo.] {Tract 
38 on John.) 

The Lord spake unto the Jews, say- 
ing : " I go My way " — for, to the Lord 
Christ, death was a departure to that 
place whence He had come, and 
whence He had never departed. " I 
go My way," saith He, "and ye shall 
seek Me " — not from love, but from 
hatred. Yea after He had withdrawn 



•258 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Himself from the sight of men, two 
classes sought Him, even they that 
loved, and they that hated Him ; the 
one because they longed for His pres- 
ence, the other because they were fain 
to hunt Him down. In the Psalms the 
Lord Himself saith by His Prophet: 1 
" Refuge failed me, and no man cared 
for my soul." (Ps. cxli. 5.) And 
again He said in another Psalm : " Let 
them be confounded and put to shame 
that seek after my soul." (Ps. xxxiv. 

First Responsory. 

2 While as Jacob went from Beer- 
sheba, and hasted unto Haran, the 
Lord spake unto him, saying : The 
land whereon thou sleepest, to thee 
will I give it, and to thy seed. 

Verse. 3 He built an altar of stones 
unto the Name of the Lord, and poured 
oil upon the top of it ; and God blessed 
him and said,: 

Answer. The land whereon thou 
sleepest, to thee will I give it, and to 
thy seed. 

Second Lesson. 

'T'HUS doth He blame them that 
seek not, and condemn such as 
seek. Yea, it is a good thing to seek 
the soul of Christ, as the disciples 
sought it ; and an evil thing to seek 
it, as the Jews sought it ; the first 
sought it to possess, the second to 
destroy it. What then doth He bid 
us know will be the reward of such as 
seek it evilly in a perverse heart ? 
"Ye shall seek Me, and" — lest ye 
think that ye shall do well so to seek 
Me, I tell you that ye — " shall die in 
your sins." To seek Christ with bad 
intent, is as much as to die in sin, for 
it is to hate Him through Whom alone 
we can be saved. 



Second Responsory. 

4 God appeared unto Jacob, and 
blessed him, and said : I am the God 
of Bethel, where thou anointedst the 
pillar, and where thou vowedst a vow 
unto Me. 5 I will make thee fruitful, 
and multiply thee. 

Verse. 6 Surely the Lord is in this 
place, and I knew it not. 

Answer. I will make thee fruitful, 
and multiply thee. 

Third Lesson. 

AiyHEREAS men whose hope is in 
God ought to return good even 
for evil, those men returned evil for 
good. The Lord therefore told them 
beforehand, and, because He knew it, 
He let them know their coming end, 
how that they should die in their sins. 
Then He said farther : " Whither I 
go, ye cannot come." This He said 
in another place (xiii. 33) to His dis- 
ciples, but He never said to them : 
"Ye shall die in your sins." What 
said He ? The same words as to the 
Jews : " Whither I go, ye cannot 
come." Yet, to the disciples, these 
words only deferred, they cut not 
away hope — for they, though for a 
little while they could not come whither 
He was to go, were yet in the end to 
go there. Not so they to whom He 
foretold and said : " Ye shall die in 
your sins." 

Third Responsory. 
God give thee, &c, {p. 252.) 

LAUDS. 

Chapter from Isa. lviii. 1, as o?i the 
First Monday, {p. 234.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Sunday {p. 232.) 



1 Viz., by inspiring the language of the complaint. The words in both cases were uttered by 
David. 



xxvin. 13. 



3 xxxv. 7, 14, 9. 



4 xxxi. 13. 



xlviii. 4. 



6 xxviii. 16. 



SECOND WEEK IN LENT. 



259 



Antipha7i at the So?ig of Zacharias. 
Even the Same * That I said unto you 
from the beginning. 

Prayer. 

r\ ALMIGHTY God, grant, we be- 
^ seech Thee, unto this Thy family, 
that as they do abstain from meals to 
afflict the flesh, so by following after 
righteousness they may fast from sin. 
Through our Lord JESUS Christ Thy 
Son, Who liveth and reigneth with 
Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, 
one God, world without end. Amen. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, and 
None. 

After Lauds is said the Dirge. 

VESPERS. 

Chapter from Joel ii. 1 7, as on the 
First Mo?iday, (p. 234.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as atn 
the First Saturday, {p. 227.) 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. He That sent Me is with Me, 
* and hath not left Me alone, for I do 
always those things that please Him. 

Prayer. 

/GRACIOUSLY hear our prayers, O 
^ Almighty God, and as Thou dost 
give us to look with confidence for Thy 
favour for which we hope, so grant us, 
in Thy goodness, the manifestation of 
Thine accustomed mercy. Through 
our Lord Jesus Christ Thy Son, Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the 
unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. Amen. 



Third Day. 
MATTINS. 

Hymn as o?i the First Sunday, {p. 

227.) 



First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to Matthew (xxiii. 
1.) 

A T that time : Spake Jesus to the 
;*^* multitude, and to His disciples, 
saying : The Scribes and Pharisees sit 
in Moses' seat. All therefore whatso- 
ever they bid you observe, that ob- 
serve and do ; but do not ye after 
their works. And so on. 

Homily by St Jerome, Priest [at 
Bethlehem.] {Bk. iv. Comm. on 
Matth. xxiii.) 

Was there ever man g-entler and 
kinder than the Lord ? The Phari- 
sees tempted Him ; their craft was 
confounded, and, in the words of the 
Psalmist, " The arrows of babes have 
pierced them," (Ps. lxiii. 8,) and 
nevertheless, because of the dignity 
of their priesthood and name, He 
exhorteth the people to be subject to 
them, by doing according to their 
words, though not according to their 
works. By the words " Moses' seat " 
we are to understand the teaching of 
the law. Thus also must we mysti- 
cally take, " Sitteth in the seat of the 
scornful," (Ps. i. 1,) and likewise, 
"overthrew the seats of them that 
sold doves," (Matth. xxi. 12,) to de- 
scribe doctrine. 

First Responsory. 
As Jacob went, &c, {p. 253.) 

Second Lesson. 

" "pOPv they bind heavy burdens, 
and grievous to be borne, and 
lay them on men's shoulders, but they 
themselves will not move them with 
one of their fingers." This is gen- 
erally directed against all teachers 
who command things hard, and them- 



260 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



selves do not even things easy. But 
it is to be remarked that the " shoul- 
ders," the "fingers," and the "bind- 
ing" of the burdens, have a spiritual 
interpretation. 

" But all their works they do for to 
be seen of men." Whosoever there- 
fore doth anything for to be seen of 
men, the same is, so far, a Scribe and 
a Pharisee. 

Second Responsory. 

If the Lord my God, &c, {Fifth 
Responsory on Sunday, p. 253.) 

Third Lesson. 

'"T^HEY make broad their phylac- 
teries, and enlarge the borders 
of their garments. And love the 
uppermost rooms at feasts, and the 
chief seats in the synagogues, and 
greetings in the markets, and to be 
called of men, Rabbi." Woe to us 
miserable sinners who have inherited 
the vices of the Pharisees ! When the 
Lord had given the commandments of 
the law to Moses He added after- 
wards : " Thou shalt bind them for a 
sign upon thine hand, and they shall 
be as frontlets between thine eyes," 
(Deut. vi. 8.) The sense of these 
words is : " My Law shall be in thine 
hand to order whatsoever thou doest, 
and ever before thine eyes that thou 
mayest meditate therein day and 
night." But the Pharisees, by a 
bad interpretation, were accustomed 
to write on pieces of parchment the 
Decalogue of Moses, that is, the Ten 
Words of the Law, 1 and to tie these 
pieces of parchment, plaited in a 
peculiar manner, on their foreheads, 
so as to make a sort of crown round 
their heads, which projected in front 
of their eyes, and always moved be- 
fore them. 



Third Responsory. 

The Lord shall be my God, &c, 

(P. 2530 

LAUDS. 

Chapter from Isa. lviii. 1, as o?i the 
First Monday, {p. 234.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Sunday, {p. 232.) 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
For One is your Master, * Which is 
in heaven, even Christ the Lord. 

Prayer. 

TENABLE us, O Lord, we beseech 
Thee, to carry to a perfect end 
this holy and helpful observance, that 
what we know we have to do by Thine 
ordinance we may be holpen to do 
by Thy strength. Through our Lord 
J^SUS Christ Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of the 
Holy Ghost, one God, world without 
end. Amen. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, and 
None. 

VESPERS. 

Chapter from Joel ii. 17, as on the 
First Monday, {p. 234.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Saturday, {p. 227.) 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. And all ye are brethren, * and 
call no man your father upon earth : 
for One is your Father, Which is in 
heaven : neither be ye called masters, 
for One is your Master, even Christ. 

Prayer. 

TEND Thy merciful ears, O Lord, 

we beseech Thee, unto our 

supplications, and heal the sickness 



1 St Jerome seems to have been misinformed. The passages inscribed in the phylacteries 
are four, and are (1) Exod. xiii. 1-10, (2) 11-16; (3) Deut. vi. 4-9; (4) xi. 13-21. 



SECOND WEEK IN LENT. 



26l 



of our souls, that we, receiving Thy 
pardon, may rejoice for ever in Thy 
blessing. Through our Lord JESUS 
Christ Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of 
the Holy Ghost, one God, world 
without end. Amen. 

Fourth Day. 

Before Mattins are said the Gradual 
Psalms. 

MATTINS. 

Hymn as on the First Sunday, [p. 
227.) 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to Matthew (xx. 
17.) 

A T that time : Jesus, going up to 
*^^ Jerusalem, took the twelve dis- 
ciples apart, and said unto them : Be- 
hold, we go up to Jerusalem ; and the 
Son of man shall be betrayed unto the 
chief priests and unto the Scribes, and 
they shall condemn Him to death. 
And so on. 

Homily by St Ambrose, Bishop [of 
Milan.] (Bk. v. to Gratian, on Faith, 
c. ii.) 

Consider what it was that the mother 
of Zebedee's children came to Christ 
desiring, with, and for her sons. She 
was a mother, who, longing for the 
honour of her sons, preferred a request 
immoderate, and yet pardonable. She 
was a mother who, albeit stricken in 
years and comfortless, at an age 
when she had sore need of the 
strength of her offspring to help and 
keep her, was yet so earnest in godli- 
ness and motherly love, that she had 
liefer suffer the loss of her sons, that 
they might gain the reward of follow- 



ing Christ still, as we read they had 
already done, when, at the first call of 
the Lord, they left their nets and their 
father, (iv. 21, 22.) 

First Responsory. 
The Angel said, &c, {p. 254.) 

Second Lesson. 

CHE, then, yielding to the intensity 
of her motherly love, besought 
the Saviour, saying, " Grant that 
these my two sons may sit, the one 
at Thy right hand and the other 
at Thy left hand, in Thy kingdom." 
Although it was a mistake, it was 
a mistake of love. For a mother's 
love knoweth no moderation. Yet, 
although it was a greedy prayer, 
that was a pardonable greed, which 
hungered, not for riches, but for 
grace. Neither was that request 
shameless which sought, not her own 
good, but her children's. Remember 
that she was a mother. Think how 
that she was a mother. 

Second Responsory. 
I have seen God, &c, {p. 254.) 

Third Lesson. 

f HRIST took into His considera- 
V* tion that mother's love of hers, 
which made her sons' reward the 
comfort of her own old age, and 
which could bear the loss of her 
loved ones, broken as she was by a 
mother's yearnings. Consider also 
that she was a woman, that is, of 
the weaker sex, to which the Lord 
had not yet given strength by His 
Passion. Consider, I say, that she 
was an heiress of Eve, and weakened 
by that transmission of the unbridled 
covetousness of the first woman, which 



262 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



the Lord had not yet disarmed by His 
Blood, even that craving for undue 
dignity, wherewith all our natures are 
imbued, and which Christ's Blood- 
shedding had not yet washed away. 
She erred indeed, but the mistake was 
an inherited weakness. 

Third Responsory. 
When Jacob heard, &c, {p. 255.) 



O 



Prayer. 

GOD, the Renewer and Lover of 
innocency, turn the hearts of all 
Thy servants to Thyself, that so they, 
being enkindled with the fire of Thy 
Spirit, may be found ever rooted in 
faith, and fruitful in works. Through 
our Lord Jesus Christ Thy Son, Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the 
unity of the Same Holy Ghost, one 
God, world without end. Amen. 



LAUDS. 

Chapter from Isa. lviii. 1, as on the 
First Monday, {p. 234.) 

Hymn a?id Verse and Answer as on 
the First Sunday, {p. 232.) 

Afttiphon at the So?ig of Zacharias. 
Behold, we go up to Jerusalem, * and 
the Son of man shall be betrayed to be 
crucified. 

Prayer. 

TOOK down in mercy upon Thy 
people, O Lord, we beseech 
Thee, and grant unto them, whom 
Thou commandest to abstain from 
fleshly meats, power to abstain also 
from the corruption of sin. Through 
our Lord JESUS Christ Thy Son, Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the 
unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. Amen. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, and 
No?ie. 

VESPERS. 

Chapter from Joel ii. 17, as on the 
First Monday, {p. 234.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Saturday, {p. 227.) 

Ajitiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. For He shall be delivered to 
the Gentiles, * to mock, and to scourge, 
and to crucify. 



Fifth Day. 

MATTINS. 

Hymn as on the First Sunday, {p. 
227.) 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to Luke (xvi. 19.) 

A T that time : JESUS said unto the 
^" Pharisees : There was a certain 
rich man, which was clothed in purple 
and fine linen, and fared sumptuously 
every day. And so on. 

Homily by Pope St Gregory [the 
Great.] (40th on the Gospels.) 

Whom, dearly beloved brethren, 
whom are we to understand as signi- 
fied by that rich man which was 
clothed in purple and fine linen, and 
fared sumptuously every day, whom, I 
ask, are we to understand, but the 
Jewish people, who had all the outward 
life of religious ordinances, and who 
turned the treasure of the law they had 
received to show and not to use ? 
What but the herd of the Gentiles is 
figured in Lazarus, full of sores ? 
Whosoever turneth himself to God and 
is not ashamed to confess his sin, hath 
his sores on the skin, for in a sore on 
the skin breaketh out the corruption, 
which is drawn from within. 



SECOND WEEK IN LENT. 



263 



First Responsory . 
Take thy weapons, &c, {p. 251.) 

Second Lesson. 

"117" HAT is, then, the confession of 
our sins but the breaking out 
of our sores ? The corrupt matter of 
sin is healthily opened in confession, 
instead of remaining in the mind to rot 
it. Open sores on the skin bring the 
poisonous matter to the surface, and 
when we confess our sins, what do we 
but open up the evil that there is lurk- 
ing in us ? But Lazarus desired to be 
fed with the crumbs which fell from the 
rich man's table, and no man gave 
unto him ; even so did that proud 
people scorn to admit a Gentile to the 
knowledge of their law. 1 

Second Responsory. 
See ! the smell of my son, &c, (p. 



5 2. 



Third Lesson. 



PHE teaching of the law moved 
them to pride, and not to love, 
as though they swelled with self- 
importance at the thought of their 
riches, and the words which some 
Gentiles caught of their knowledge 
were as crumbs falling from their 
sumptuous table. On the other hand, 
the dogs came and licked the sores of 
the beggar that was laid at their gate. 
Sometimes in Holy Writ, under the 
figure of dogs, preachers are under- 
stood. A dog's tongue healeth the 
sore which it licketh, and so do holy 
teachers, when we confess our sins, 
and they speak to us, mollify by their 
tongues the sores of our souls. 

Third Responsory. 
God give thee, &c, {p. 252.) 



LAUDS. 

Chapter from Isa. lviii. 1, as on the 
First Monday, {p. 234.) 

Hymn and Verse and Afiswer as on 
the First Sunday, (p. 232.) 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
Son, remember * that thou in thy life- 
time receivedst thy good things, and 
likewise Lazarus evil things. 

Prayer. 

/^RANT unto us, O Lord, we be- 
^^ seech Thee, the help of Thy 
grace, that we, who are now bent on 
fasting and prayer, may be freed from 
enemies both of our bodies and of our 
souls. Through our Lord JESUS 
Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and reign- 
eth with Thee, in the unity of the 
Holy Ghost, one God, world without 
end. Amen. 



The same Prayer at Terce, 
and None. 



Sext, 



At the beginni?ig of the Mar tyro logy, 
is said, 

On the morrow we commemorate 
the Enshroudment of our Lord Jesus 
Christ in His Most Holy Winding- 
sheet. 



Sixth Day. 

Office in Me?nory of the Enshroudment 
of our Lord JES US in His Most 
Holy Winding-sheet. 

Greater Double. 

All as on Sundays, except the follow- 
ing. 

FIRST VESPERS. 



Antiphons, 
from Lauds. 



Chapter, and Prayer 



1 Gentilium quemque ad cognitionem legis admittere superbus ille populus despiciebat. It 
is, however, evident, from John xii. 20, Acts ii. 5, and other places, that Gentile converts to 
Judaism were by no means rare. 



264 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Last Psalm. 

Ps. cxvi. O praise the Lord, &c., 
(J>. 186.) 

Hymn?- 

JESUS ! when on Thy fatal day 
J Thy people turn their awe-struck eyes, 
Thy latest vesture's history dread 
Distinct before their memory lies. 

Thy Suffering o'er, from Hands and Feet 
They drew the nails who loved Thee well — 

Into the linen's spotless folds 
Thy Soul-less Body gently fell. 

O Word of God ! the conquest won, 
Thy trophies still around Thee lay ; 

Clothed in a vesture dipped in Blood, 
Thou restedst Victor from the fray. 

With our salvation's awful Price 
Still wet upon Thy gaping Side 

And mangled Feet, and Hands, and Brow, 
The virgin web was redly dyed. 

If Blood from Thee, let tears from us 
In spirit on Thy grave-clothes fall : 

The price was Thine, the debt was ours ; 
For us, for us, was suffered all. 

Thou Who Thine own blest life didst give 

A sacrifice for ours to be, 
Teach us, O God, in least return 

Our Blood-bought lives to give to Thee ! 

Word of the Self-Existent One, 
Word uttered with the Breath Divine, 

Word clad in vesture dipped in Blood, 
All praise eternally be Thine ! Amen. 

Verse. We honour Thy Winding- 
sheet, O Lord. 

Answer. We call to mind Thy 
glorious Sufferings. 



B 



to be delivered.] And when [Joseph] 
had taken [the Body] he wrapped It 
in a clean linen cloth. 

Comi7ie?noration of the Week-day. 

Antiphon. That rich man, who 
had refused Lazarus bread-crumbs, 
cried for a drop of water. 

Verse. God hath given His Angels 
charge over Thee. 

Answer. To keep Thee in all Thy 
ways. 

Prayer. 

E Thou, O Lord, the help of Thy 
servants, and grant unto their 
prayers this abiding effect of Thy 
mercy : that as they do make their 
boast in Thee, that it is Thou which 
hast created and dost govern them, so 
Thou wilt renew in them the gifts 
wherewith Thou didst bountifully en- 
dow them, and wilt preserve what 
Thou hast renewed. Through our 
Lord Jesus Christ, Thy Son, Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the 
unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. Amen. 



MATTINS. 

Itwitatory. Christ our Lord, Who 
recalleth the memory of His Suffer- 
ings by the thought of the Holy 
Shroud, * — Him, O come, let us 
worship ! 

Hymn? 

A WONDROUS mystery this day 
Reveals itself before our eyes : 
The true Son of the living God 
Upon the Cross in torment dies. 

To advocate a servant's cause, 

He takes that servant's guilty guise ; 

The Master suffers for the slave, 
The just Man for the sinner dies. 



Antiphon to the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. A man named Joseph, a 
good man and a just, went to Pilate, 
and begged the Body of Jesus. 
[Then Pilate commanded the Body 

1 The original Latin, of sixteenth to eighteenth century, is from the Proprium of the arch- 
dioccese of Freiburg. 

2 Hymn of sixteenth to eighteenth century, taken from the Proprium of the arch-diocoese 
of Freiburg, translation by the Rev. Dr Wallace. 



SECOND WEEK IN LENT. 



265 



The emblems of His cruel death 
And triumph redly were impressed 

Upon the robe, which with its folds 
His mangled Body did invest. 

These were the signs of victory won 
O'er Death, o'er Hell, and o'er the World 

These were the trophies which our Chief 
Displays triumphantly unfurled. 

This gratitude at least we owe 
To Him Who brought eternal life, 

That 'neath this banner we should stand, 
And fight and conquer in the strife. 

Then let us die to all our sin, 
And let us rise to life of grace ; 

That by the Cross we may deserve 
To see the glory of His Face. 

Grant this, O Father merciful ! 

And Thou, His own coequal Son ! 
Grant this, O Spirit ! Who dost bear 

The sceptre, while the ages run. Amen. 



FIRST NOCTURN. 

Only three Psalms are said. 

First Antiphon. x Thou art red in 
thine apparel, and thy garment like 
their's that tread in the wine-press. 

Ps. iv. When I called, &c, {p. 
206.) 

Second Antiphon. 1 Blood hath 
been sprinkled upon my garments, 
and I have stained all my raiment. 

Ps. xiv. Lord, who shall abide, 
&c, (p. 10.) 

Third Antiphon. 2 They part my 
garments among them, and cast lots 
upon my vesture. 

Ps. xv. Preserve me, &c, {p. 12.) 

Verse. We honour Thy Winding- 
sheet, O Lord. 

Answer. We call to mind Thy 
sufferings. 



First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Book of 
the Prophet Isaiah (liii.) 

A \T HO hath believed our report ? 
And to whom is the arm of the 
Lord revealed ? For he shall grow 
up before Him as a tender plant, and 
as a root out of a dry ground : he 
hath no form nor comeliness ; and when 
we shall see him, there is no beauty 
that we should desire him. He is 
despised and rejected of men ; a man 
of sorrows and acquainted with grief ; 
and he hid as it were his face from 
us ; he was despised, and we esteemed 
him not. Surely he hath borne our 
griefs and carried our sorrows : yet 
we did esteem him stricken, smitten 
of God, and afflicted. But he was 
wounded for our transgressions, he 
was bruised for our iniquities : the 
chastisement of our peace was upon 
him, and with his stripes we are 
healed. 

First Responsory. 

Behold, we saw Him as having no 
form nor comeliness. There is no 
beauty in Him. He hath borne our 
sins, and sorroweth for us. He was 
wounded for our transgressions, and 
with His stripes we are healed. 

Verse. Surely He hath borne our 
sins, and carried our sorrows. 

Answer. And with His stripes we 
are healed. 

Second Lesson. 

A LL we, like sheep, have gone 
■^^ astray ; we have turned every 
one to his own way : and the Lord 
hath laid on him the iniquity of us 
all. He was offered up because he 
willed it, 3 and he opened not his 



2 Ps. xxi. 19. 
The present Hebrew is literally, ** He was oppressed and 



1 Isa. lxiii. 2, 3. 

3 Oblatus est quia ipse voluit 
he was afflicted." Jonathan ben Uzziel, " He was required, and he was brought back 
and without opening his mouth, he submitted to the mighty of the people." 



266 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



mouth. He is brought as a sheep to 
the slaughter, and as a lamb before 
his shearers is dumb, so he openeth 
not his mouth. He was taken from 
prison and from judgment : and who 
shall declare his generation ? For 
he was cut off out of the land of the 
living ; for the transgression of my 
people have I stricken him. And 
he made his grave with the wicked, 
and with the rich in his death ; 
because he had done no violence, 
neither was any deceit in his mouth. 

Second Responsory. 

1 What are these wounds in thine 
hands ? Then he shall answer : Those 
with which I was wounded in the house 
of my friends. 

Verse. Awake, O sword, against 
My shepherd, and against the man 
that is My fellow. 

Answer. Then he shall answer : 
Those with which I was wounded in 
the house of my friends. 

Third Lesson. 

A/ET it pleased the LORD to bruise 
him ; He hath put him to 
grief; when he hath made his soul 
an offering for sin, he shall see his 
seed, he shall prolong his days, and 
the pleasure of the LORD shall prosper 
in his hand. He shall see of the 
travail of his soul, and shall be satis- 
fied : by his knowledge shall my 
righteous servant justify many, for he 
shall bear their iniquities. Therefore 
will I divide him a portion with the 
great, and he shall divide the spoil 
with the strong ; because he hath 
poured out his soul unto death ; and 
he was numbered with the trans- 
gressors ; and he bare the sin of 
many, and made intercession for the 
transgressors. 



Third Responsory. 

We honour Thy Winding-sheet, O 
Lord ; we call to mind Thy glorious 
sufferings. Thou that didst suffer for 
us, have mercy upon us ! 

Verse. O that every one who is 
here gathered this day to praise Thee 
may find that Thou art indeed salva- 
tion for him ! 

Answer. Thou that didst suffer for 
us, have mercy upon us ! 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. Thou that didst suffer for 
us, have mercy upon us .! 



SECOND NOCTURN. 

First Antiphon. He hid as it 
were His Face from us ; He was 
despised, — -and we esteemed Him 
not. 

Ps. xxiii. The earth is the Lord's, 
&c, {p. 46.) 

Second Antiphon. All they that 

see Me, laugh Me to scorn ; they 

shoot out the lip, and shake the 
head. 

Ps. xxvi. The Lord is my light, 
&c, (p. 73.) 

Third Antiphon. He hath poured 
out His soul unto death ; [and He was 
numbered with the transgressors ;] and 
He bare the sin of many. 

Ps. cxliv. I will extol Thee, &c, 
(A 201.) 

Verse. We adore Thee, O Christ, 
and we bless Thee. 

Answer. Because that through 
Thy Cross Thou hast redeemed the 
world. 



1 Zech. xiii. 6, 7. 



SECOND WEEK IN LENT. 



267 



Fourth Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Sermons 
of St Ambrose, Bishop [of Milan.] 
(On Luke xxiii.) 

A \T HAT is the meaning of this, that, 
not His Apostles but Joseph, 
and as saith John, Nicodemus, per- 
formed the burial of Christ ? The one 
was a just and bold man, the other a 
master in Israel. Such it beseemed 
Christ to have to lay Him in the grave 
even He from whom all justice and all 
rule proceed. Hereby no ground is 
left for dispute, and the Jews are con- 
futed by witnesses from their own 
midst. For had the Apostles buried 
Him, they might have said that He 
had been taken away, rather than 
buried. The just man covereth the 
Body of Christ with linen, the guile- 
less anointeth it with ointment. These 
distinctions we find not idle, for the 
clothing of the Church is the righteous- 
ness of her Saints (Apoc. xix. 8), and 
guilelessness bringeth her grace. 

Fourth Resfionsory. 

O wondrous Shroud, wherein was 
wrapped up our Treasure, the ransom- 
money of the captives. 

Verse. The whole world rejoiceth, 
redeemed by the Blood of her Lord. 

Answer. Our Treasure, the ransom- 
money of the captives. 

Fifth Lesson. 

"P\0 thou, if thou also wilt be just, 
clothe [in thy mind's eye] the 
Body of the Lord, with that glory 
which is Its Own. Though thou be- 
lievest It to have been dead, [in thy 
faith] cover It with the fulness of the 
Godhead Which belongeth unto It. 
Anoint It with myrrh and aloes, that 
thou mayest be a good savour of 



Christ. The linen which the just 
Joseph gave was fine, and perchance 
the same as the great sheet knit at 
the four corners, and let down to the 
earth, wherein were all manner of four- 
footed beasts of the earth, and wild 
beasts, and creeping things, and fowls 
of the air, figures of the Gentiles, 
which appeared unto Peter. (Acts x. 
11, 12.) With Christ was mystically 
buried in that ointment of spikenard 
the Church, who bindeth together in 
her Communion all peoples, how 
divers soever they be. 

Fifth Responsory. 

1 And his brethren took Joseph's 
coat, and dipped it in the blood of a 
kid of the goats, which they had 
slaughtered, and they sent one that 
brought the coat unto their father, 
and said : This have we found — see 
now whether it be thy son's coat 
or no. 

Verse. And he knew it, and said : 
It is my son's coat ; an evil beast hath 
devoured him. 

Answer. This have we found — 
see now whether it be thy son's coat, 
or no. 

Sixth Lesson. 

HTHIS Joseph is called by Luke just, 
and by Matthew rich. And well 
is he called rich which receiveth the 
Body of Christ. By receiving [the 
source of all] riches, he bade farewell 
to lack of faith. He that is just is 
rich. A just man therefore wrapped 
the Body in the linen, while an Is- 
raelite "brought a mixture of myrrh 
and aloes, about an hundred pound 
weight," — that is to say, the measure 
of perfect faith. "Then took they 
the Body of Jesus, and wound It in 
linen clothes with the spices, as the 
manner of the Jews is to bury" — 



Gen. xxxvii. 31-33. 



268 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



(John xix. 38-42,) wound it, not in 
the nooses of treachery, but in the 
bands of loyalty. And they laid It 
in that garden, whereunto the Church 
is so oftentimes compared, because of 
the manifold and divers fruits of good 
works and flowers of grace which do 
grow in her. 

Sixth Responsory. 

1 Christ suffered for us, leaving you 
an example, that ye should follow His 
steps, Who did no sin, neither was 
guile found in His Mouth. 

Verse. Who, when He was reviled, 
reviled not again ; when He suffered, 
He threatened not. 

Answer. Who did no sin, neither 
was guile found in His Mouth. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. Who did no sin, neither 
was guile found in His Mouth. 

THIRD NOCTURN. 

First Antiphon. My flesh shall rest 
in hope, for Thou wilt not suffer Thine 
Holy One to see corruption. 

Ps. liii. Save me, O God, &c, 

(A 36.) 

Second Antiphon. Thou hast turned 
for me my mourning into rejoicing : 
Thou hast put off my sackcloth, and 
girded me with gladness. 

Ps. lxxv. In Judah is God known, 

&c, (A 130.) 

Third Antiphon. I am as a man 
that hath no strength, lying nerveless 
among the dead. 

Ps. lxxxvii. O Lord God of my 
salvation, &c, {p. 145.) 

Verse. Let all the earth worship 
Thee and sing unto Thee. 



Answer. Let them sing praises to 
Thy Name, O Lord. 

Seventh Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to Mark (xv. 42.) 

A T that time : When the even was 
^"^ come, because it was the Pre- 
paration, that is, the day before the 
Sabbath, Joseph of Arimathaea, an 
honourable Counsellor, which also 
waited for the kingdom of God, came, 
— And so on. 

Homily by the Venerable Bede, 
Priest [at Jarrow.] {For Tuesday in 
Holy Week.) 

The Greek word " Paraskeue," 
used by the Evangelist, signifieth 
" the Preparation," and was the name 
by which the Greek-speaking Jews 
were used to call Friday, as being the 
day whereon those things were got 
ready which would be needed during 
the rest of the Sabbath, even as it 
was antiently commanded concerning 
the manna : " On the sixth day they 
shall prepare that which they bring in, 
and it shall be twice as much as they 
gather daily." (Exod. xvi. 5.) Even 
thus is it written that on Friday " God 
created man." (Gen. i. 27.) And 
"thus the heavens and the earth were 
finished, and all the host of them. 
And on the seventh day God ended 
His work which He had made ; and 
He rested on the seventh day from 
all His work which He had made. 
And God blessed the seventh day and 
sanctified it, because that in it He 
had rested from all His work which 
God created and made." (ii. 1-3.) 
And He was pleased to call the sev- 
enth day the Sabbath, that is to say, 
the Day of " Rest." (Exod. xx. 10.) 
In like manner also did the crucified 



1 Pet. ii. 21-23. 



SECOND WEEK IN LENT. 



269 



Saviour complete upon Friday the 
work of the new creation, and "when 
. . . He had received the vinegar, 
He said : It is finished " — even as it 
were "The evening and the morning 
are about to be numbered as the sixth 
day, and My work whereby I have 
re-made the world, I have ended." 
And on the seventh day, the Sabbath 
Day, He rested from all His work 
which He had made, awaiting in the 
grave till the eighth day should come, 
for him to rise again. 

Seventh Responsory. 

Joseph bought a clean linen cloth, 
to wrap therein the Body of the Lord. 
He came therefore, and took the 
Body. 

Verse. Joseph of Arimathaea be- 
sought Pilate that he might take away 
the Body of Jesus. 

Answer. He came therefore, and 
took the Body. 

Eighth Lesson. 

" T OSEPH of Arimathaea, an honour- 
J able Counsellor, which also 
waited for the kingdom of God, came, 
and went in boldly unto Pilate, and 
craved the Body of Jesus." Very 
honourable was this Joseph in the 
eyes of the world, but his honour now 
is because of his good work toward 
God. It was meet that he who laid 
the Lord in the grave should by his 
good life have earned such a ministry, 
and by the power of his honourable 
position in the world should have been 
able to obtain it. A person unknown 
or obscure would not have been able 
to go unto the President and to obtain 
from him the Body of the Crucified. 

Eighth Responsory. 

This is that most honourable Wind- 
ing-sheet, wherein, when the Author 



of salvation was taken down from the 
Cross, He was pleased to be wrapped. 

Verse. That we being stripped of 
the slough of the old Adam and buried 
together with [the new Adam] might 
be clothed on with the white linen of 
His sinlessness. 

Answer. Wherein when the Author 
of salvation was taken down from 
the Cross, He was pleased to be 
wrapped. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. Wherein, when the Au- 
thor of salvation was taken down from 
the Cross, He was pleased to be 
wrapped. 

Ninth Blessing. 

May the Gospel's glorious word 
Cleansing to our souls afford. 

JVinth Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy Gos- 
pel according to Matthew (xxi. 33.) 

A T that time : Jesus spake unto 
"^^ the multitudes of the Jews and 
unto the chief priests this parable : 
There was a certain householder, 
which planted a vineyard, and hedged 
it round about. And so on. 

Homily by St Ambrose, Bishop [of 
Milan.] {Bk. ix. on Luke xx.) 

Many derive divers spiritual mean- 
ings from the term vineyard, but 
Isaias giveth us to know that " the 
vineyard of the Lord of Sabaoth is 
the house of Israel," (v. 7.) Who 
but God planted that vineyard ? He 
it was that let it out to husbandmen, 
and went into a far country ; not that 
the Lord, Who is everywhere present, 
moveth from place to place ; but be- 
cause He is nigh unto them that seek 
Him, and from such as regard Him 
not He standeth afar off. For a long 
time He tarried away, lest He might 



270 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



seem to ask too early for the fruits 
of His vineyard. For where kindness 
is greatest, there ingratitude is worst. 

Therefore it is well written in Mat- 
thew, for our instruction, that He 
" hedged it round about," that is, He 
girded it with the fortifications of His 
own Divine protection, that it might 
not easily lie open to the ravages of 
spiritual wild beasts. 

"And digged a wine-press in it." 
What sense are we to put upon the 
wine-press, unless it be that the Psalms 
are here described under that title, 
because in them the mysteries of the 
Lord's Passion flow over like new 
wine, working under the power of the 
Holy Ghost? Whence also, they 
upon whom the Holy Ghost was out- 
poured were deemed to be drunken 
(Acts ii. 13.) God therefore digged 
a wine-press, whereinto the reasonable 
grapes of inward fruitfulness poured 
their spiritual richness. 

"And built a tower" — that is, He 
raised up the goodly structure of the 
Law. And so this His vineyard, 
thus fortified, furnished, and garnished, 
He gave over to the Jews. 

"And when the time of the fruit 
drew near, He sent His servants to the 
husbandmen." Well doth He call it 
the time of the fruit, not the time of 
the in-gathering. For the Jews yielded 
Him no fruit ; the Lord had no in- 
gathering from that vineyard of which 
He said: "When I looked that it 
should bring forth grapes, it brought 
forth wild grapes." 1 (Isa. v. 4.) Not 
that wine that maketh glad the heart 
of man, not with the new wine of the 
spirit, reeked that wine-press, but with 
the blood of the Prophets, brutally 
shed. 

The Hymn, "We praise Thee, O 
God, &c," is said. 



LAUDS. 

First Antiphon. There was a man 
named Joseph, an honourable Coun- 
sellor, a good man, and a just ; * (the 
same also was rich ;) who also himself 
waited for the kingdom of God. 

Second Antiphon. This man went 
in boldly unto Pilate, * and craved 
the Body of Jesus. 

Third Antiphon. When Pilate 
knew of the Centurion that Jesus was 
already dead, * he gave the Body to 
Joseph. 

Fourth Antiphon. And Joseph 
bought fine linen, * and took Him 
down, and wrapped Him in the linen. 

Fifth Antiphon. And laid Him in 
a sepulchre, * wherein never man be- 
fore was laid. 

Chapter. (Isa. lxiii. 1.) 

WHO is This That cometh from 
Edom, with dyed garments 
from Bozrah ? This That is glorious 
in his apparel, travelling in the great- 
ness of His strength ? I, That speak 
in righteousness, mighty to save. 

Hymn? 

JESUS, as though Thyself wert here, 
I draw* in trembling sorrow near ; 
And gazing on Thy Form divine, 
Kneel down to kiss those Wounds of Thine. 

Ah me, how naked art Thou laid, 
Blood-stained, distended, cold, and dead, — 
Joy of my soul, my Saviour sweet ! — 
Upon the sacred Winding-sheet ! 

Hail, awful Brow ! Hail, thorny wreath ! 
Hail, Countenance, now pale in death, 
Whose glance but late so brightly blazed, 
That angels trembled as they gazed. 

And hail to Thee, my Saviour's Side— 
And hail to Thee, Thou Wound so wide, 
Thou Wound more ruddy than the rose, 
True Antidote of all our woes. 



1 Thus the present text, but that quoted by St Ambrose follows the LXX., " 
Hymn, of sixteenth to eighteenth century, from the Proprium of the arch- 
burg, translation by the late Rev. E. Caswall. 



thorns, 
diocoese of Frei- 



SECOND WEEK IN LENT. 



271 



O by those sacred Hands and Feet 

For me so mangled, I entreat, 

My Jesus, turn me not away, 

But let me here for ever stay. Amen. 

Verse. The Lord reigneth, He is 
clothed with majesty. 

Answer. The Lord is clothed 
with strength, and hath girded Himself 
with power. 

Antipho7i at the Song of Zacharias. 
Joseph, an honourable Counsellor, 
l which also waited for the kingdom of 
God, bought fine linen, and took down 
the Body of JESUS, and wrapped It 
in the linen. 



Prayer throughout the Office. 

C\ GOD, Who hast left unto us [in 
^ the] records of Thy Sufferings 
[how Thou wast enshrouded] in the 
holy linen wherein Joseph wrapped 
Thy most sacred Body what time he 
had taken It down from the Cross, 
mercifully grant that through Thy 
Death and Burial we may be brought 
unto the glory of Thy Resurrection. 
Who livest and reignest with God the 
Father, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, 
one God, world without end. Amen. 

Commemoration of the Week-day. 

Antiphon. He will miserably de- 
stroy those wicked men, and will let out 
His vineyard unto other husbandmen, 
which shall render Him the fruits in 
their seasons. 

Verse. God hath given His angels 
charge over Thee. 

Answer. To keep Thee in all Thy 
ways. 

Prayer. 

C\ ALMIGHTY God, grant, we be- 

seech Thee, that the Sacred 

Fast may so cleanse us that thereby 



Thou mayest make us to come with 
clean hearts unto those holy ordin- 
ances l which are now before us. 
Through our Lord Jesus Christ, Thy 
Son, Who liveth and reigneth with 
Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, 
one God, world without end. Amen. 



PRIME. 

Antiphon. There was a man, &c, 
[First Antiphon at Lauds.) 



I 



Chapter at the end. (Isa. lxiii. 5.) 

LOOKED, and there was none to 
help ; I searched, and there was 
none to uphold ; therefore Mine Own 
arm brought salvation unto Me, and 
My fury, it upheld Me. 

TERCE. 

Antiphon. This man went in, &c, 
{Second Antiphon at Lauds.) 

Chapter from Lauds. 

Short Responsory. 

We honour Thy Winding-sheet, O 
Lord. 

Answer. We honour Thy Wind- 
ing-sheet, O Lord. 

Verse. We call to mind Thy 
Sufferings. 

Answer. O Lord. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. W T e honour Thy Wind- 
ing-sheet, O Lord. 

Verse. We worship and bless 
Thee, O Christ ! 

Answer. For that by Thy death 
Thou hast redeemed the world. 



1 Viz., the Sacraments administered at Easter. 



2J2 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



SEXT. 



Antiphon. When Pilate knew, 
&c, {Third Antiphon at Lauds.) 



Chapter. (Isa. lxiii. 2.) 

Vy-HEREFORE art Thou red in 
** Thine apparel, and Thy gar- 
ments like their's that tread in the 
wine -fat ? I have trodden the wine- 
press alone, and of the people there 
was none with Me. 



Short Responsory. 

We worship and bless Thee, O 
Christ ! 

Answer. We worship and bless 
Thee, O Christ! 

Verse. For that by Thy death Thou 
hast redeemed the world. 

Answer. O Christ ! 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. We worship and bless 
Thee, O Christ! 

Verse. Let all the earth worship 
Thee, and sing unto Thee. 

Answer. Let them sing praises to 
Thy Name, O Lord. 



NONE. 

Antiphon. And laid Him, &c, 
{Fifth Antiphon at Lauds.) 

Chapter as at the end of Prime. 

Short Responsory. 

Let all the earth worship Thee and 
sing unto Thee. 

Answer. Let all the earth worship 
Thee and sing unto Thee. 

Verse. Let them sing praises to 
Thy Name, O Lord. 

Answer. And sing unto Thee. 



Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. Let all the earth worship 
Thee and sing unto Thee. 

Versi. The Lord reigneth, He is 
clothed with majesty. 

Answer. The Lord is clothed with 
strength, and hath girded Himself 
with power. 



SECOND VESPERS. 

As the Firsts except the following. 



Last Psalm. 

Ps. cxli. I cried unto the LORD, 
&c, {p. 200.) 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. A certain rich man of Ari- 
mathaea, named Joseph, took the Body 
of Jesus, and wrapped It in clean 
linen. 



Commemoration of Week-day. 

Antiphon. When they sought to 
lay hands on Him, they feared the 
multitude, because they took Him for 
a Prophet. 

Verse. God hath given His angels 
charge over Thee. 

Answer. To keep Thee in all Thy 
ways. 

Prayer. 

C* RANT unto Thy people, O Lord, 
^- J we beseech Thee, soundness both 
of mind and body, that they, cleaving 
ever unto good works, may evermore 
worthily be defended by the shield of 
Thine Almighty arm. Through our 
Lord Jesus Christ, Thy Son, Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the 
unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. Amen. 



SECOND WEEK IN LENT. 



273 



The Sabbath. 
MATTINS. 

Hymn as on the First Sunday. 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to Luke (xv. 11.) 

A T that time : Jesus spake this 
"^^ parable unto the Pharisees and 
Scribes : A certain man had two sons ; 
and the younger of them said to his 
father : Father, give me the portion of 
goods that falleth to me. And so on. 

Homily by St Ambrose, Bishop [of 
Milan.] {Bk. vii. Comment, on Luke 

xv.) 

Thou seest how that the heavenly 
goods are given to such as seek them. 
Neither oughtest thou to think the 
father to blame, because he gave to 
his younger son. In the kingdom of 
God there is no age of weakness, 
neither doth faith wax infirm with 
years. He, surely, who asked, deemed 
himself of sufficient age. And would 
that he had not left his father ! then 
had he been ignorant of the obstacle 
of his age ! But after that he had 
left his father's house, and had gone 
into a far country, he began to be in 
want. Well is he said to have wasted 
his substance, who hath cut himself 
off from the Church ! 



First Responsory. 

Father, I have sinned against heaven 
and before thee, and am no more 
worthy to be called thy son. Make 
me as one of thine hired servants. 

Verse. How many hired servants 
of my father's have bread enough and 
to spare, and I perish with hunger ! 



I will arise and go to my father and 
will say unto him : 

Answer. Make me as one of thine 
hired servants. 

Second Lesson. 

TTE took his journey into a far 
country. No man can go farther 
than to abandon his own better self, to 
leave, not his country, but his morals, 
and, as it were, in an hideous fever of 
lust after the world, to divorce himself 
from the ties that bind him to holy 
things. Yea, he that turneth his back 
on Christ, banisheth himself from his 
Fatherland, and becometh a citizen of 
the world. But we "are no more 
strangers and foreigners, but fellow- 
citizens with the saints, and of the 
household of God," since we " who 
sometimes were afar off, are made nigh 
by the Blood of Christ." (Eph. ii. 19, 
13.) Let us not envy the pleasures of 
them who remain in the far country. 
We too have once been there, but, as 
saith Isaiah, "they that dwelt in the 
land of the shadow of death, upon 
them hath the light shined." (ix. 2.) 
And that far country is the land of the 
shadow of death. 

Second Responsory. 
I have seen God, &c, (J>. 254.) 

Third Lesson. 

TDUT we to whom the Lord Christ is 
the breath of life, are alive under 
the shadow of Christ. And therefore 
it is that the Church saith : "I sat 
down under His shadow with great 
delight." (Cant. ii. 3.) The prodigal 
son by riotous living wasted all the 
gifts of nature. Take warning, O thou 
who art made in the image and likeness 
of God, lest thou waste the same by 
brutish wallowing. Thou art the work 
of God ; say not " to a stock : Thou 



274 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



art my father," (Jer. ii. 27,) lest thou 
grow into the likeness of a stock, as it 
is written : "They that make them are 
like unto them." (Ps. cxiii. 16.) 



Efyxti Stmtiag in lent* 

Third Lord's Day in the Forty Days 
before Easter. 



Third Responsory. 
When Jacob heard, &c, {p. 255.) 



LAUDS. 

Chapter from Isa. lviii. 1, as on the 
First Monday, {p. 234.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Sunday, {p. 232.) 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
I will arise and go to my father, * and 
will say unto him : Make me as one of 
thine hired servants. 



Prayer. 

f~* RANT, O Lord, we beseech Thee, 
^ that our Fasts may bring forth 
their fruit unto salvation, that so the 
affliction which we lay upon our bodies 
may quicken our souls unto spiritual 
increase. Through our Lord JESUS 
Christ Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of 
the Holy Ghost, one God, world 
without end. Amen. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, and 
None. 

VESPERS. 

Chapter and Prayer from the follow- 
ing Lauds. 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Saturday, {p. 227.) 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. But the father said to his 
servants : * Bring forth the best robe, 
and put it on him, and put a ring on 
his hand, and shoes on his feet. 



MATTINS. 



Invitatory and Hymn as on the 
First Sunday, {p. 227.) 



FIRST NOCTURN. 



First Lesson. 



The Lesson is taken from the Book of 
Genesis (xxxvii. 2.) 

JOSEPH, being sixteen years old, 
was feeding the flock with his 
brethren, for he was yet but a lad ; 
and he was with the sons of Bilhah 
and Zilpah, his father's wives ; and he 
brought unto his father their evil 
report. Now Israel loved Joseph more 
than all his children, because he was 
the son of his old age, and he made 
him a coat of many colours. And 
when his brethren saw that their father 
loved him more than all his brethren, 
they hated him, and could not speak 
peaceably unto him. And it came to 
pass that he dreamed a dream, and he 
told it his brethren ; and they hated 
him yet the more. And he said unto 
them : Hear, I pray you, this dream 
which I have dreamed : I thought that 
we were binding sheaves in the field, 
and my sheaf arose, and stood upright ; 
and your sheaves stood round about, 
and made obeisance to my sheaf. And 
his brethren said unto him : Shalt thou 
indeed rule over us ? or shalt thou 
indeed have dominion over us ? And 
they hated him yet the more for his 
dreams and for his words. And he 
dreamed yet another dream, and told 
it to his brethren, and said : I beheld 
in my dream as though the sun, and 
the moon, and the eleven stars made 
obeisance to me. And he told it to 



THIRD WEEK IN LENT. 



275 



his father and to his brethren ; and his 
father rebuked him, and said unto 
him : What is this dream that thou 
hast dreamed ? Shall I, and thy 
mother, and thy brethren indeed come 
to bow down ourselves to thee to the 
earth ? 

First Respo?isory. 

And when his brethren saw Joseph 
afar off, they said one to another : Be- 
hold, this dreamer cometh. Come, let 
us slay him ; and we shall see what 
will become of his dreams. 

Verse. And when his brethren saw 
that their father loved Joseph more 
than all his brethren, they hated him, 
and could not speak peaceably unto 
him ; therefore they said : 

Answer. Come, let us slay him ; 
and we shall see what will become of 
his dreams. 

Second Lesson. 

CO his brethren envied him, but his 
father observed the saying, and 
spake nothing. And when his brethren 
were gone to feed their father's flock in 
Shechem, Israel said unto him : Thy 
brethren feed the flock in Shechem : 
come, and I will send thee unto them. 
And he said to him : Here am I. And 
he said to him : Go, I pray thee, and 
see whether it be well with thy 
brethren, and with the flocks ; and 
bring me word again what passeth. 
So he sent him out of the vale of 
Hebron, and he came to Shechem. 
And a certain man found him wander- 
ing in the field, and asked him what 
he sought. And he answered : I seek 
my brethren ; tell me, I pray thee, 
where they feed their flocks. And the 
man said unto him : They are departed 
hence ; for I heard them say : Let us 
go to Dothan. And Joseph went after 



his brethren, and found them in 
Dothan. And when they saw him 
afar off, before he came near unto 
them, they conspired against him, to 
slay him, and said one to another : 
Behold, this dreamer cometh ; come, 
let us slay him, and cast him into some 
old cistern, and we will say : Some evil 
beast hath devoured him ; and we shall 
see what will become of his dreams. 

Second Responsory. 

Judah 1 said unto his brethren : Be- 
hold, the Ishmaelites pass by ; come, 
let us sell him, and let not our hands 
be defiled. For he is our flesh, and 
our brother. 

Verse. What profit is it if we slay 
our brother, and conceal his blood ? 
It is better to sell him. 

Answer. For he is our flesh, and 
our brother. 



Third Lesson. 

AND Reuben heard it, and he strove 
to deliver him out of their hands ; 
and said : Kill him not, nor shed blood, 
but cast him into this cistern that is 
in the wilderness, and keep your hands 
undefiled. This he said, being willing 
to rid him out of their hands, and de- 
liver him to his father again. And it 
came to pass straightway, when Joseph 
was come unto his brethren, that they 
stripped him out of his coat of many 
colours that was on him ; and they 
cast him into an old cistern, wherein 
was no water. And they sat down to 
eat bread ; and, behold, a company of 
Ishmaelites came from Gilead, with 
their camels bearing spicery, and balm, 
and myrrh, going to carry it down to 
Egypt. Judah therefore said unto his 
brethren : What profit is it if we slay 
our brother, and conceal his blood ? 



1 Judas. Perhaps the passage is chosen for this Responsory with allusion to the selling of 
Christ by the Iscariote. 



276 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



It is better to sell him to the Ishmael- 
ites, and let not our hands be de- 
filed ; for he is our brother and our 
flesh. And his brethren were con- 
tent. Then there passed by Midian- 
ites, merchantmen, and they drew 
up Joseph out of the cistern, and 
sold him to the Ishmaelites for 
twenty pieces of silver : and they 
brought him into Egypt. 

Third Responsory. 

They drew up Joseph out of the pit, 
and sold him to the Ishmaelites for 
twenty pieces of silver. 1 And Reuben 
returned unto the pit, and when he 
found not Joseph, he rent his clothes, 
and wept, and said : The child is not, 
and I, whither shall I go ? 

Verse. And they took Joseph's coat, 
and dipped it in the blood of a kid of 
the goats, and they sent one that 
brought the coat unto their father, and 
said : See now whether this be thy 
son's coat or no. 

Answer. And Reuben returned 
unto the pit, and when he found 
not Joseph, he rent his clothes, and 
wept. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. And Reuben said : The 
child is not, and I, whither shall I go ? 

SECOND NOCTURN. 

Fourth Lesso?i. 

The Lesson is taken from the Book 
upon holy Joseph written by St Am- 
brose, Bishop [of Milan.] (Ch. 1.) 

T*HE lives of the saints are the 
models for the lives of others. 
This is one of the reasons why we 
have been given the wise tale of the 
Scriptures, that while, by reading 



therein, we come to know Abraham, 
and Isaac, and Jacob, and others of 
the righteous, we may follow them in 
that path of innocency which is opened 
to us for our imitation by the record 
of their godly conversation. Of them 
I have often treated, and to-day the 
story of the holy Joseph cometh be- 
fore me. In that story there are 
patterns of many virtues, but chiefly 
is he glorious on account of his clean 
living. Right is it then that ye who 
have learnt in Abraham the devoted- 
ness of a faith that nothing could 
daunt, in Isaac the transparency of an 
upright soul, in Jacob a wonderful 
patience of spirit in great travails, 
should now turn from their worthy 
deeds, to see the bright example of 
Joseph's self-control. 

Fourth Responsory. 

When Jacob saw Joseph's coat he 
rent his clothes, and mourned ; and he 
said : An evil beast hath devoured my 
son Joseph. 

Verse. And his brethren took his 
coat, and sent it to his father : and he 
knew it, and said : 

Answer. An evil beast hath de- 
voured my son Joseph. 



Fifth Lesson. 

'"FHE holy Joseph is put before us as 
"■• a pattern of chastity. Modesty 
shineth in his manners and in his 
deeds, and a certain loveliness, which 
is found with chastity, shineth there 
also. Hence his parents loved him 
more than their other children. But 
this love caused him to be the object 
of an envy, which we must needs not 
pass by, and upon this the whole 
story turneth. Yet, at the same time, 
we learn how that just man was not 
swayed by any desire to avenge his 



1 xxxvii. 29-33. 



THIRD WEEK TN LENT. 



277 



own sufferings, neither repaid evil for 

! evil. Whence also David saith : " If 

I have rewarded evil — " (Ps. vii. 5.) 1 

Fifth Responsory. 

2 When Joseph came into the land 
of Egypt, he heard a language that he 
understood not ; his hands were bur- 
dened with labour ; 3 and his tongue 
spake wisdom among princes. 

Verse. 4 Whose feet they hurt with 
fetters ; the iron entered into his soul, 
until the time that his word came — 

Answer. And his tongue spake 
wisdom among princes. 

Sixth Lesson. 

T N what would Joseph have been 
worthy to be chosen before others, 
if he had harmed them which harmed 
him, and loved them which loved him ? 
For this do many do. But it is a won- 
der if one do that which the Saviour 
teacheth, and love his enemy. Well, 
then, may we wonder at him who did 
this before the Gospel came ; who, 
being injured, spared ; being assailed, 
forgave ; being sold, returned no evil ; 
but repaid insult with favour. We, 
from the Gospel, have been taught to 
do all this, and we cannot. Let us 
also, then, learn how that there was 
envy even among some of the holy 
[Patriarchs], that we may follow the 
example of the patience [wherewith 
others of them bore it ;] and let us 
feel that they were not men of another 
and higher nature than ours, but only 
more heedful ; that they were not sin- 
less, but that they repented. But if the 
passion of envy scorched even some 
of the holy race, how much more need 
is there for the sinful to take heed lest 
it set fire to them ? 



Sixth Resfto?isory. 

5 Think on me when it shall be well 
with thee, and make mention of me 
unto Pharaoh, that he may bring me 
out of this prison. For I was stolen 
away ; and here have I done noth- 
ing, that they should put me into the 
dungeon. 

Verse. For yet three days, and 
then Pharaoh shall remember thy ser- 
vice, and restore thee unto thy place ; 
then think of me — 

Answer. And make mention of 
me unto Pharaoh, that he may bring 
me out of this prison. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. For I was stolen away ; 
and here have I done nothing, that 
they should put me into the dungeon. 

THIRD NOCTURN. 

Seventh Lesso?t. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to Luke (xi. 14.) 

A T that time : JESUS was casting 
'^^ out a devil, and it was dumb. 
And it came to pass, when the devil 
was gone out, the dumb spake ; and 
the people wondered. And so on. 

Homily by the Venerable Bede, 
Priest [at J arrow.] (Bk. iv. ^.48 on 
Luke xi.) 

We read in Matthew (xii. 22) that 
the devil, by which this poor creature 
was possessed, was not only dumb, but 
also blind ; and that, when he was 
healed by the Lord, he saw as well as 
spake. Three miracles, therefore, 
were performed on this one man ; the 
blind saw, the dumb spake, and the 



1 Viz., "I have not rewarded evil," &c. St Ambrose seems to have understood the sense 

of the words of David to be — " If I have rewarded evil unto them that rewarded [evil unto] 
me." a Ps. lxxx. 6, 7. 

3 Ps. xlviii. 4 ; civ. 22 ; cxviii. 46. . 4 Ps. civ. 18. 5 xl. 14, 15, 13. 

VOL. II. K 



278 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



possessed was delivered. This mighty 
work was then indeed wrought car- 
nally, but it is still wrought spiritually 
in the conversion of believers, when 
the devil is cast out of them, so that 
their eyes see the light of faith, and 
the lips, that before were dumb, are 
opened that their mouth may show 
forth the praise of God. 

" But some of them said : He casteth 
out devils through Beelzebub, the chief 
of the devils." These some were not 
of the multitude, but liars among the 
Pharisees and Scribes, as we are told 
by the other Evangelist (24.) 

Seventh Respo?isory. 

1 We are verily guilty concerning our 
brother, in that we saw the anguish 
of his soul, when he besought us, and 
we would not hear. Therefore is this 
distress come upon us. 

Verse. And Reuben answered his 
brethren, saying : Spake I not unto 
you, saying: Do not sin against the 
child ; and ye would not hear ? 

A?iswer. Therefore is this distress 
come upon us. 

Eighth Lesson. 

VX^HILE the multitude, who were 
less instructed, wondered ever 
at the works of the Lord, the Pharisees 
and Scribes, on the other hand, denied 
the facts when they could, and when 
they were not able, twisted them by an 
evil interpretation, and asserted that 
the works of God were the works of an 
unclean spirit. 

" And others, tempting Him, sought 
of Him a sign from heaven." They 
would have had Christ either to call 
down fire from heaven like Elias, (4 
Kings i. 10,) or, like Samuel, (1 Kings 
vii. 10,) to have made thunder roll, 
and lightning flash, and rain fall at 



midsummer. And yet and if he had 
so done, they had been still able to 
explain away these signs also, as being 
the natural result of some unusual, 
though, till that moment, unremarked 
state of the atmosphere. O thou, who 
stubbornly deniest that which thine 
eye seeth, thine hand holdeth, and 
thy sense perceiveth, what wilt thou 
say to a sign from heaven ? In 
good sooth, thou wilt say that the 
magicians in Egypt also wrought 
divers signs from heaven. (Ex. vii., 
viii.) 

Eighth Responsory. 

And Reuben answered his brethren, 
saying : Spake I not unto you, saying : 
Do not sin against the child ; and ye 
would not hear ? Behold, his blood is 
required. 

Verse. We are verily guilty con- 
cerning our brother, in that we saw the 
anguish of his soul, when he besought 
us, and we would not hear. 

Answer. Behold, his blood is re- 
quired. 

Ninth Lesson. 

" T)UT He, knowing their thoughts, 
said unto them: Every king- 
dom divided against itself is brought 
to desolation, and an house divided 
against an house falleth." He an- 
swered not their words, but their 
thoughts ; as though He would com- 
pel them to believe in the power 
of Him Who seeth the secrets of 
the heart. But if every kingdom 
divided against itself is brought to 
desolation, then have not the Father, 
the Son, and the Holy Ghost a 
divided kingdom, since His is a 
kingdom that, without all contra- 
diction, shall never be brought to 
desolation by any shock, but abideth 
unchanged and unchangeable for ever. 
"If Satan also be divided against 



1 xlii. 21, 22. 



THIRD WEEK IN LENT. 



279 



himself, how shall his kingdom stand ? 
Because ye say that I cast out devils by 
Beelzebub." In saying this, He sought 
to draw from their own mouth a con- 
fession that they had chosen for 
themselves to be part of that devil's 
kingdom, which, if it be divided against 
itself, cannot stand. 

Ninth Responsory. 

Jacob lamented for his two sons, say- 
ing : Woe is me ; I am bereaved of 
Joseph, for he is not ; and afflicted 
because of Benjamin, because he is 
taken away for bread. I pray the 
King of heaven in my distress, that He 
may make me to see them yet again. 

Verse. And Jacob cast him down 
upon his face upon the ground, and 
wept sore ; and he prayed, saying — 

Answer. I pray the King of heaven 
in my distress, that He may make me 
to see them yet again. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. I pray the King of heaven 
in my distress, that He may make me 
to see them yet again. 

LAUDS. 

First Antipho7i. O Lord, do good 
in Thy good pleasure * unto Zion ; to 
build the walls of Jerusalem. 

Psalm L. 

Have mercy upon me, &c, {p. 87.) 

Second Antiphon. The Lord is on 
my side ; * I will not fear : what can 
man do unto me ? 

Psalm CXVII. 
O give thanks, &c, {p. 37.) 

Third Antiphon. God be merciful * 
unto us, and bless us. 



Psalms LXIL and LXVI. 

O God, Thou art my God, &c, 

(A 23.) 

Fourth A?itiphon. l The fire forgat 
his strength * that Thy children might 
be delivered therefrom. 

The Song of the Three Holy Children, 

(A 24.) 

Fifth Antiphon. Praise God, O ye 
sun and moon, * for His Name alone 
is exalted ! 

Psalms CXLVIIL, CXLIX., CL. 

Praise ye the LORD, &c, {pp. 25, 

26.) 

Chapter. (Eph. v. 1.) 

T3RETHREN, be ye followers of 
God, as dear children ; and walk 
in love, as Christ also hath loved us, 
and hath given Himself for us, an 
offering and a sacrifice to God for a 
sweet-smelling savour. 

Hymn and Verse a?id Answer as on 
the First Sunday {p. 233.) 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
When a strong man armed keepeth his 
palace, * his goods are in peace. 

Prayer throughout the Office. 

"\17'E beseech Thee, Almighty God, 
look upon the hearty desires of 
Thy humble servants, and stretch forth 
the right hand of Thy Majesty, to be 
our defence against all our enemies. 
Through our Lord JESUS Christ Thy 
Son, Who liveth and reigneth with 
Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, 
one God, world without end. Amen. 

PRIME. 

Antiphon. When Jesus had cast 
out the devil, * the dumb spake, and 
the people wondered. 



1 Cf. Wisdom xvi. 23. 



280 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



TERCE. 



Aiitiphon. If I with the finger of 
God * cast out devils, no doubt the 
kingdom of God is come upon you. 

Chapter from Lauds. 



SEXT. 



Antiphoii. He that gathereth not 
with Me scattereth, * and he that is 
not with Me is against Me. 



Chapter. (Eph. v. 5.) 

T7OR this know ye, that no whore- 
monger, nor unclean person, nor 
covetous man, who is an idolater, hath 
any inheritance in the kingdom of 
Christ and of God. 



NONE. 

Antiphon. When the unclean spirit 
* is gone out of a man, he walketh 
through dry places, seeking rest, and 
finding none. 



Chapter. (Eph. v. 8.) 

T7OR ye were sometimes darkness, 
but now are ye light in the Lord. 
Walk as children of light : for the fruit 
of the Spirit is in all goodness, and 
righteousness, and truth. 



VESPERS. 

Chapter from Lauds. 
Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Saturday (pp. 227, 228.) 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgi?i. A certain woman of the com- 
pany lifted up her voice and said : * 
Blessed is the womb that bare Thee, 
and the paps which Thou hast sucked. 
But Jesus said unto her : Yea, rather, 



blessed are they that hear the word of 
God, and keep it. 

After Vespers are said the Vespers of 
the Dead. 

QUonfcap. 

Second Day. 

MATTINS. 

Hymn as on the First Sunday (p. 
228.) 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to Luke (iv. 23.) 

A T that time : Jesus said unto the 
"^^ Pharisees : Ye will surely say 
unto Me this proverb : Physician, heal 
Thyself. Whatsoever we have heard 
done in Capernaum, do also here in 
Thy country. And so on. 

Homily by St Ambrose, Bishop [of 
Milan.] (Bk. iv. on Luke iv.) 

Here we have a display of a spite 
not very common. Their hatred of 
Christ, and their desire to find grounds 
for that hatred in what in Him ap- 
pealed for their love, had made them 
forget their local friendliness to a 
fellow-citizen. By this example as well 
as by God's declaration, thou mayest 
learn that thou wilt wait in vain to be 
holpen of His mercy, whilst thou art 
envious of the spiritual good of thy 
neighbour. Yea, the Lord turneth Him 
away from the envious, and will not 
show the mighty works of His power 
to such as are bitter against His gifts 
to others. The example of Himself 
which God hath been pleased to set 
before us is that of His doings in the 
Flesh, and it is by these His doings 
which He suffered to be seen, that we 
are taught touching those which are 
unseen. 



THIRD WEEK IN LENT. 



28l 



First Responsory. 

1 Take hence presents with you, and 
go unto the lord of the land, and when 
ye be come into his presence, bow 
yourselves to him to the earth. And 
my God give you mercy before the 
man, that he may send away again 
this your brother, and him which he 
keepeth in ward. 

Verse. Take of the best fruits of 
the land in your vessels, and carry 
down the man a present. 

Answer. And my God give you 
mercy before the man, that he may 
send away again this your brother, 
and him which he keepeth in ward. 



Second Lesson. 

HP HE Saviour then doth not lightly 
excuse Himself that He had 
wrought none of His mighty works 
in His own country, lest perchance 
any should thence learn to think 
lightly of our duty to love our Father- 
land. Neither was it possible that 
He Who loved all, should not love 
His own countrymen ; they it was 
who failed in that love because of 
their very envy. 

" I tell you of a truth, many widows 
were in Israel in the days of Elias." 
The days of Elias — not that the said 
days belonged to Elias, but either be- 
cause those were the days when Elias 
lived and worked ; or, else, this is a 
mystic phrase, meaning that Elias by 
his works made many souls to awake 
spiritually from the night of sin to the 
day of grace, and turn to the Lord. 
In this latter sense that holy Prophet 
was a mean whereby heaven was 
opened to such as looked to the eter- 
nal and mysterious things of God, 
and again was shut, (and there was 
a famine,) when there were no means 



of knowing God through outward or- 
dinances. This subject, however, I 
have treated before at full length, 
when I was writing on the subject of 
widows. 



Second Responsory. 

2 Is this your younger brother, of 
whom ye spake unto me ? God be 
gracious unto thee, my son. And he 
made haste, and entered into the 
house, and wept there, for his tears 
brake forth, and he could not refrain 
himself. 

Verse. And Joseph lifted up his 
eyes, and saw his brother Benjamin, 
and his bowels yearned upon his 
brother. 

Answer. And he made haste, and 
entered into the house, and wept there, 
for his tears brake forth, and he could 
not refrain himself. 



Third Lesson. 

"AND many lepers were in Israel 
"^^ in the days of Eliseus the Pro- 
phet, and none of them was cleansed, 
saving Naaman the Syrian." By these 
words of the Lord our great Physician, 
we are plainly taught and urged to 
put our trust in the Adorable God, 
since we see that none was healed, or 
cleansed from bodily plague - spots, 
save him who took a religious means 
to regain health. For the blessings 
of God are not given to them who 
close their eyes in sleep, but to them 
that look to Him. We have remarked 
in our other book, (alluded to above,) 
that the widow to whom Elias was 
sent was a type of the Church. And 
next after [the mention of the type of] 
the Church cometh meetly the [men- 
tion of him who was a type of the 



1 Cf. xliii. 11-14. 



2 xliii. 29, 30. 



282 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Gentile] people, [her converts.] 1 Yea, 
the Gentiles were a people foreigners 
by birth, leprous, and covered with 
plague-spots, till they were baptized 
in the stream [of the] mystic [Jordan ;] 
but from the sacramental waters they 
rise, lepers no more, but cleansed in 
body and soul, a glorious virgin 
Church, not having spot, or wrinkle, 
or any such thing. (Eph. v. 27.) 



Third Responsory. 

2 Joseph said unto his eleven breth- 
ren : I am Joseph whom ye sold into 
Egypt ; is our father yet alive, the old 
man of whom ye spake unto me ? Go, 
bring him down unto me, that he may 
live. 

Verse. For these two years hath 
the famine been in the land ; and 
yet there are five years, in the which 
there shall neither be earing nor 
harvest. 

Answer. Go, bring him down unto 
me, that he may live. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. Go, bring him down unto 
me, that he may live. 



LAUDS. 

Chapter from Isa. lviii. 1, as 071 the 
First Monday, {p. 235.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Sunday, (p. 233.) 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
Amen I say unto you, * No Prophet 
is accepted in his own country. 



Prayer. 

f~\ LORD, we beseech Thee merci- 
^^^ fully to shed abroad Thy grace 
into our hearts, that we who are now 
denying carnal meats to our bodily 
cravings, may have power likewise to 
withhold from the same all yielding to 
the deathful lusts of sin. Through 
our Lord Jesus Christ Thy Son, Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the 
unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. Amen. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, 
and None. 

After Lauds is said the Dirge. 



VESPERS. 

Chapter from Joel ii. 17, as on the 
F^irst Monday, {p. 235.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Saturday, {pp. 227, 228.) 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. But Jesus, * passing through 
the midst of them, went His way. 



Prayer. 

T ET our help, O Lord, be in Thy 
mercy, that we over whom Thy 
wrath doth most justly hang because 
of our sins, may in all dangers worth- 
ily be shielded by Thy protection and 
delivered by Thy salvation. Through 
our Lord Jesus Christ Thy Son, Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee in the 
unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. Amen. 



1 Translated directly from the works of the Saint, which give the following : — " Diximus, in 
vidua ilia, ad quam Elias directus est, typum ecclesiae praemissum. Populus ecclesiam eongruit 
ut sequatur, (i.e., eongruit ut populus ecclesiam sequatur.) Populus ille ex alienigenis congre- 
gatus, populus ille ante leprosus," &c. In the printed text of the Breviary the passage has got 
corrupted thus : — " Diximus, in vidua ilia, ad quam Elias directus est, typum ecclesiae prae- 
missum. Populus ecclesiam congregavit, ut sequatur populus ille ex alienigenis congregatus. 
Populus ille ante leprosus," &c. 2 x i v# ^ 6 ; xliii. 27. 



THIRD WEEK IN LENT. 



283 



Third Day. 

MATTINS. 

Hymn as on the First Sunday, {p. 

228.') 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to Matthew (xviii. 
15.) 

A T that time : JESUS said unto His 
"^ disciples : If thy brother shall 
trespass against thee, go and tell him 
his fault between thee and him alone. 
And so on. 

Homily by St Austin, Bishop [of 
Hippo.] (16th Sermon on the Words 
of the Lord, vol. x.) 

Why tell him his fault ? Because 
he hath made thee smart by trespass- 
, ing against thee ? God forbid. If 
1 thou tell him his fault because thou 
lovest thyself, thou dost nothing. 
But if thou tell it him because thou 
lovest him, then dost thou do exceed- 
ing well. Hear now, in the words of 
the Gospel itself, for love of whom 
, thou oughtest to do it, of thyself, or 
of him. The Lord saith : " If he 
shall hear thee, thou hast gained thy 
brother." Therefore it behoveth thee 
to do it for his sake, that thou mayest 
gain him ; since, if thou so do, haply 
thou mayest gain him ; whereas, if 
thou do it not, he may haply perish. 
Why then are there so many who 
reckon lightly of a trespass against 
their brother, and say : I have done 
no great offence, for I have tres- 
passed only against my fellow man ? 
Deem it not light ; thou hast tres- 
passed, though it be against thy 
fellow man. 



First Responsory. 

1 They told Jacob, saying : Thy son 
Joseph is yet alive, and he is gover- 
nor over all the land of Egypt ; and, 
when he heard it, his spirit revived, 
and he said : It is enough ; I will go, 
and see him before I die. 

Verse. And when Jacob heard 
that his son yet lived, he was as one 
that awakeneth from a deep sleep, 
and said — 

Answer. It is enough ; I will go, 
and see him before I die. 

Second Lesson. 

VyOULDEST thou know that thy 
trespass against thy brother 
hath destroyed thee ? If he against 
whom thou hast trespassed tell thee 
thy fault between himself and thee 
alone, and thou hear him, he hath 
gained thee. Gained thee ! And 
what signify those words, if it be not 
that thou, if thou be not gained, shalt 
perish ? For if thou shouldest not 
otherwise perish, in what sense can 
he be said to gain thee ? Therefore 
let no man deem it a light thing when 
he trespasseth against his brother. 
For the Apostle Paul saith in a cer- 
tain place : " When ye sin so against 
the brethren, and wound their weak 
conscience, ye sin against Christ." 
(1 Cor. viii. 12.) We are all mem- 
bers of Christ. How dost thou not 
trespass against Christ, which tres- 
passest against one of His members ? 

Second Responsory. 
When Joseph came, &c, {p. 277.) 

Third Lesson. 

f ET no man therefore say : I have 

not trespassed against God, but 

only against my brother ; that is, I 



1 xlv. 26-28. 



284 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



have trespassed against my fellow- 
man ; and so the sin is light, if any 
at all. And perchance thou wilt ar- 
gue that it is light, because it is 
quickly mended ; thou hast trespassed 
against thy brother, but thou canst 
make satisfaction, and be right again ; 
thou hast done the deadly thing 
quickly, and quickly canst thou find 
a remedy. O my brethren, which of 
us can hope for the kingdom of heaven, 
when we remember that the Gospel 
saith : " Whosoever shall say to his 
brother : Thou fool : shall be in dan- 
ger of hell fire ? " (Matth. v. 22.) It 
is a thought full of dread ; but, lo ! 
the remedy — " If thou bring thy gift 
to the altar, and there rememberest 
that thy brother hath aught against 
thee, leave there thy gift before the 
altar, and go thy way ; first be recon- 
ciled to thy brother, and then come 
and offer thy gift." God is not wroth 
that thou tarry or ever thou offer thy 
gift ; for God seeketh thyself more 
than thy gift. 

Third Responsory. 
Think on me, &c, {p. 2.77.) 

LAUDS. 

Chapter from Isa. lviii. 1, as on the 
first Monday, {p. 235.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Sunday, {p. 233.) 

A?itiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
If two of you shall agree on earth * 
as touching anything that they shall 
ask, it shall be done for them of My 
Father, saith the Lord. 



Prayer. 

/GRACIOUSLY hear us, O Al- 
^ mighty and merciful God, and 
in Thy goodness enable us to reap the 



fruit of this our healthful Fasting. 
Through our Lord Jesus Christ Thy 
Son, Who liveth and reigneth with 
Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, 
one God, world without end. Amen. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, 
and None. 

VESPERS. 

Chapter from Joel ii. 17, as 011 the 
First Monday, {p. 235.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Saturday, {pp. 227, 228.) 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. Where two . or three are 
gathered together in My Name, * 
there am I in the midst of them, saith 
the Lord. 

Prayer. 

r\ LORD, shield us by Thy pro- 
^-^^ tection, and keep us ever from 
all iniquity. Through our Lord Jesus 
Christ Thy Son, Who liveth and reign- 
eth with Thee, in the unity of the 
Holy Ghost, one God, world without 
end. Amen. 



Fourth Day. 

Before Mattins are said the Grad- 
ual Psalms. 

MATTINS. 

Hymn as on the First Sunday, {p. 
228.) 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to Matthew (xv. 

1.) 

A T that time : There came to Jesus 
*^^ Scribes and Pharisees which 
were of Jerusalem, saying : Why do 



THIRD WEEK IN LENT. 



285 



Thy disciples transgress the tradition 
of the elders ? And so on. 

Homily by St Jerome, Priest [at 
Bethlehem.] {Bk. ii. Comm. on Matth. 

xv.) 

The stupidity of the Pharisees and 
Scribes is something extraordinary. 
They rebuke the Son of God because 
He doth not observe the traditions 
and commandments of men : " for 
they wash not their hands when they 
eat bread." It behoveth us to cleanse, 
not the hands of the body, but the 
hands of the soul, namely, our works, 
that we may do the commandments 
of God. 

" But He answered and said unto 
them : Why do ye also transgress the 
commandment of God by your tradi- 
tion ? " He meeteth here their false 
accusation by a true. ' How,' saith 
He, 'do ye, who pass over the com- 
mandments of God, in order to keep to 
the traditions of men, hold that My 
disciples are to be rebuked, because 
they deem the tradition of the elders 
of little moment in comparison with 
the doing of what they know to be 
the Laws of God ? ' 



First Respo?isory. 
We are verily guilty, &c, {p. 278.) 

Second Lesso?i. 

" T^OR God commanded, saying, 
Honour thy father and mother ; 
and, He that curseth father or mother, 
let him die the death." But ye say : 
"Whosoever shall say to his father 
or his mother : It is a gift, by what- 
soever thou mightest be profited by 
me ; and honour not his father or his 
mother, he shall be free." The word 
" honour " is used in Scripture, not so 
much in the sense of paying saluta- 
tions and services, as in that of giving 
VOL. II. 



alms and gifts. " Honour widows," 
saith the Apostle, " which are widows 
indeed." (1 Tim. v. 3.) And here 
honour signifieth support. So again, 
(17, 18): "Let the Priests that rule 
well be counted worthy of double 
honour, especially they who labour in 
the word and doctrine. For the 
Scripture saith : ' Thou shalt not 
muzzle the ox that treadeth out the 
corn : ' and : ' The labourer is worthy 
of his reward.' " 



Second Responsory. 

And Reuben answered, &c, (p. 

278.) 

Third Lesson. 

'THE Lord being mindful of the 
helplessness, or age, or poverty 
of parents, had commanded their 
children to honour them even by giv- 
ing them the necessaries of life. The 
Scribes and Pharisees, scrupling not 
to make of none effect this most be- 
nign law, and bringing in ungodliness 
under the very form of godliness, 
taught, for the benefit of unnatural 
children, that if any one vowed to 
God, Who is our very Father in 
heaven, whatsoever he was bound to 
give to his parents, the duty of dis- 
charging his debt to his heavenly 
Father ought to come before that 
which he owed to his earthly father ; 
or, at least, that parents in such case 
incurred the guilt of sacrilege by tak- 
ing for themselves what they knew 
had been made a gift to God. And 
so parents were left unsuccoured, and 
the offerings of such children, under 
pretence of being given to God and 
His temple, became the gain of the 
Priests. 

Third Responsory. 

Jacob lamented, &c, {p. 279.) 
K 2 



286 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



LAUDS. 

Chapter fr ODi Isa. lviii. I, as on the 
First Mo?iday, {p. 235.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Sunday, {p. 233.) 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
Hear and understand * the traditions 
which the Lord hath given unto us. 



Prayer. 

/^RANT unto us, O Lord, we be- 
^- J seech Thee, that we, being 
purged by healthful Fasting, and 
mortified to all sinful lusts, may the 
more speedily obtain of Thee forgive- 
ness. Through our Lord JESUS 
Christ Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of 
the Holy Ghost, one God, world with- 
out end. Amen. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, 
and None. 

VESPERS. 

Chapter from Joel ii. 17, as o?i the 
First Monday, {p. 235.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Saturday, {pp. 227, 228.) 

A?itiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. To eat * with unwashen 
hands, defileth not a man. 



Prayer. 

/^RANT unto us, we beseech Thee, 
^- J O Almighty God, that we who 
seek the shelter of Thy protection, 
being defended from all evils, may 
serve Thee in peace and quietness of 
spirit. Through our Lord Jesus 
Christ Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of 
the Holy Ghost, one God, world with- 
out end. Amen. 



Fifth Day. 

MATTINS. 

Hymn as on the First Sunday, {p. 
228.) 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to Luke (iv. 38.) 

A T that time : Jesus arose out of 
^^ the synagogue, and entered into 
Simon's house. And Simon's wife's 
mother was taken with a great fever. 
And so on. 

Homily by St Ambrose, Bishop [of 
Milan.] {Bk. iv. on Luke iv.) 

Behold here how long-suffering is 
the Lord our Redeemer ! Neither 
moved to anger against them, nor 
sickened at their guilt, nor outraged 
by their attacks, did He leave the 
Jews' country. Nay, forgetting their 
iniquity, and mindful only of His 
mercy, He strove to soften their hard 
and unbelieving hearts, sometimes by 
His teaching, and sometimes by free- 
ing some of them, and sometimes by 
healing them. St Luke doth well 
to tell us first of the man who 
was delivered from an unclean 
spirit, and then of the healing of 
a woman. The Lord indeed came 
to heal both sexes, but that must 
be healed first which was created 
first, and then must not she be 
passed by whose first sin arose 
rather from fickleness of heart than 
from depraved will. 



First Responsory. 

And when his brethren, &c, (/. 

2750 



THIRD WEEK IN LENT. 



287 



Second Lesson. 

n^HAT the Lord began to heal on 
the Sabbath-day showeth in a 
figure how that the new creation be- 
ginneth where the old creation ended. 
It showeth, moreover, that the Son of 
God, Who is come not to destroy the 
law but to fulfil the law, (Matth. v. 
17,) is not under the law, but above 
the law. Neither was it by the law, 
but by the Word, that the world was 
created, as it is written : " By the 
Word of the LORD were the heavens 
made." (Ps. xxxii. 6.) The law, 
then, is not destroyed, but fulfilled, 
in the Redemption of fallen man. 
Whence also the Apostle saith : 
" Put off, concerning the former con- 
versation, the old man, which is cor- 
rupt according to the deceitful lusts ; 
and be renewed in the spirit of your 
mind ; and put on the new man, 
which after God is created in righteous- 
ness and true holiness." (Eph. iv. 22.) 



with things lesser, that He may go on 
to things greater. Even men are 
able to deliver other men from evil 
spirits, albeit with the word of God : 
to command the dead to rise again is 
for God's power alone. 1 Perchance, 
also, this woman, the mother-in-law of 
Simon and Andrew, was a type of our 
nature, stricken down with the great 
fever of sin, and burning with unlawful 
lusts after divers objects. Nor would 
I say that the passion which rageth in 
the mind is a lesser fire than that 
fever which burneth the body. Cov- 
etousness, and lust, and uncleanness, 
and vain desires, and strivings, and 
anger — these be our fevers. 



They 

276.) 



Third Respojisory. 
drew up Joseph, &c, (p. 

LAUDS. 



Chapter from Isa. lviii. 1, as on the 
First Monday, {p. 235.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Sunday, {p. 233.) 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
And devils also came out of many, * 
crying out and saying : Thou art 
Christ the Son of God. And He, 
rebuking them, suffered them not to 
speak, for they knew that He was 
Christ. 



Second Responsory, 
Judah said, &c, {p. 275.) 

Third Lesson. 

T T was well that He began to heal on 
the Sabbath, that He might show 
Himself to be the Creator, weaving in 
one with another of His works, and 
continuing that which He had already 
begun, even as a workman, being to 
repair an house, beginneth not to take 
down that which is old from the 
foundations, but from the roof. Thus 
doth the Lord begin to lay to His 
hand again, in that place whence last 
He hath lifted it ; then He beginneth 

1 Divinas solius est potestatis — and yet Scripture attributes this miracle to divers saints under 
both covenants. 

2 On this day the "station" at Rome is in the Church of SS. Cosmas and Damian. It is 
mot, however, the day of their martyrdom, which the Martyrology distinctly declares to be 
Sept. 27, when their Feast occurs. The " beata solemnitas " here spoken of must therefore be 
understood of their victory itself. Cf. Cant. iii. 11, "the day of his espousals, the day of the 
gladness of his heart." 



Prayer. 

2 pRAISE be to Thee, O Lord, for 
the blessed and solemn victory 
of Thine holy servants Cosmas and 
Damian, whereby Thou, in Thine un- 
speakable Providence, wast pleased to 
give unto them everlasting glory, and 



288 



THE PROPER, OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



unto us a shield and succour. Through 
our Lord Jesus Christ Thy Son, Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the 
unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. Amen. 

At the beginning of the Martyrology, 
is said, 

On the morrow we commemorate 
the Five Most Holy Wounds of our 
Lord Jesus Christ. 

Prayer as above at Terce, Sext, and 
No?ie. 



Office in honour of the Five Most 
Holy Wounds of our Lord JESUS 
Christ. 

Greater Double. 

All as on Sundays, except the follow- 
ing. 

FIRST VESPERS. 

Antiphons, Chapter, and Prayer 
from Lauds. 

Ps. cxv. I believed, &c, {p. 185.) 

Ps. cxix. In my distress, &c, {p. 
186.) 

Ps. cxxxix. Deliver me, O LORD, 
&c, {p. 198.) 

Ps. cxl. Lord, I cry unto Thee, 
&c, {p. 1 99-) 

Ps. cxli. I cried unto the Lord, 
&c, {p. 200.) 



Hymn} 

CING, my tongue, the glorious battle, 

With completed victory rife : 
And above the Cross's trophy 

Tell the triumph of the strife : 
How the world's Redeemer conquered 

By surrendering of His life. 

God his Maker, sorely grieving 

That the first-made Adam fell, 
When he ate the fruit of sorrow 

Whose reward was death and hell, 
Noted then this Tree, the ruin 

Of the ancient tree to quell. 2 

For the work of our salvation 
Needs would have his order so, 

And the multiform deceiver's 
Art by art would overthrow, 

And from thence 3 would bring the med'cine 
Whence the insult of the foe. 

Wherefore, when the sacred fulness 
Of th' appointed time was come, 

This world's Maker left His Father, 
Sent the Heavenly Mansion from, 

And proceeded, God Incarnate, 
Of the Virgin's Holy Womb. 

Weeps the Infant in the manger 
That in Bethlehem's stable stands ; 

And His Limbs the Virgin Mother 
Doth compose in swaddling bands, 

Meetly thus in linen folding 
Of her God the Feet and Hands. 4 

To the Trinity be glory 

Everlasting, as is meet : 
Equal to the Father, equal 

To the Son, and Paraclete : 
Trinal Unity, Whose praises 

All created things repeat. Amen. 

Verse. 5 They shall look upon Him 
Whom they have pierced. 

Answer. And they shall mourn for 



1 Hymn by Venantius Fortunatus, translated by the late Dr Neale. 

2 The Cross, as the mystic "tree of life," (Gen. ii. 9,) is here set by the poet in antithesis 
to the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, "whose mortal taste Brought death into the 
world and all our woe." The present translator has taken the liberty to substitute "tree" for 
"wood," as a translation of "lignum," — as more conformable to our common phraseology,. 
and used by Dr Neale himself in the "Royal Banners." 

3 I.e., from trees. 

4 The poem is here abruptly broken off, the rest being sung at Lauds, 
6 Zech. xii. 10. 



THIRD WEEK IN LENT. 



289 



Him, as one mourneth for the death of 
the first-born. 

Antiphon at the So?ig of the Blessed 
Virgin. While as the Only-begotten 
Son of God hung upon the Cross, and 
was mocked of all, His Virgin Mother 
Mary worshipped him in her sorrow as 
very God and Man. 

Commemoration of the Week-day. 

Antiphon. All they that had any 
sick brought them unto Jesus, and He 
healed them. 

Verse. God hath given His Angels 
charge over Thee. 

Answer. To keep Thee in all Thy 
ways. 

Prayer. 

[ ORD, we beseech Thee that Thine 

. heavenly Peace- Offering may so 

1 effectually work for all Thy people, 

which are now bowing themselves 
! down before Thee, that they may ever 

continue in meek obedience to Thy 
1 commandments. Through the Same 
1 our Lord Jesus Christ Thy Son, Who 
, liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the 

unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 

world without end. Amen. 

MATTINS. 

Invitatory. Christ Who was nailed 
to the Cross, pierced with five Wounds, 
* Him, O come, let us worship ! 

Hymn as at Vespers, {p. 288.) 

FIRST NOCTURN. 1 

First Antiphon. Who is This That 
cometh from Edom, with dyed gar- 
ments from Bozrah ? 

Ps. x. In the Lord put I, &c, {p. 

9-) 

Second Antiphon. Wherefore art 
Thou red in Thine apparel, and Thy 



garments like their's that tread in the 
wine-fat ? 

Ps. xiv. Lord, who shall abide, &c, 
(P. 10.) 

Third Antiphon. I have trodden the 
wine-press alone, and of the people 
there was none with Me. 

Ps. xxiii. The earth is the Lord's, 
&c, {p. 46.) 

Verse. 2 They pierced My Hands 
and My Feet. 

Answer. They have told all My 
Bones. 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Book of 
the Prophet Isaiah (liii.) 

"tX^HO hath believed our report? 
And to whom is the arm of the 
Lord revealed ? For he shall grow 
up before him as a tender plant, and 
as a root out of a dry ground : he 
hath no form nor comeliness ; and 
when we shall see him, there is no 
beauty that we should desire him. 
He is despised and rejected of men ; 
a man of sorrows and acquainted with 
grief; and he hid as it were his face 
from us ; he was despised, and we 
esteemed him not. Surely he hath 
borne our griefs and carried our 
sorrows : yet we did esteem him 
stricken, smitten of God, and afflicted. 
But he was wounded for our trans- 
gressions, he was bruised for our 
iniquities : the chastisement of our 
peace was upon him, and with his 
stripes we are healed. 

First Responsory* 

3 God hath made us acceptable in 
His beloved Son, in Whom we have 
redemption through His Blood, for the 
remission of sins. 

Verse. 4 Behold, the fulness of the 



Antiphons from Isa. lxiii; 1-3. 



2 Ps. xxi. 



Eph. i. 6, 7. 



* GaU iv. 4. 



290. 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



time was come wherein God sent forth 
His Son into the world. 

A?iswer. In Whom we have re- 
demption through His Blood, for the 
remission of sins. 

Second Lesson. 

A LL we, like sheep, have gone 
^^ astray ; we have turned every 
one to his own way : and the LORD 
hath laid on him the iniquity of us 
all. He was offered up because he 
willed it, 1 and he opened not his 
mouth. He is brought as a sheep 
to the slaughter, and as a lamb before 
his shearers is dumb, so he openeth 
not his mouth. He was taken from 
prison and from judgment : and who 
shall declare his generation ? For 
he was cut off out of the land of the 
living ; for the trangression of My 
people have I stricken him. And 
he made his grave with the wicked, 
and with the rich in his death ; be- 
cause he had done no violence, 
neither was any deceit in his mouth. 
Yet it pleased the LORD to bruise 
him ; He hath put him to grief. 



Second Responsory. 

2 We who sometimes were far off, 
are made nigh by the Blood of Jesus 
Christ ; for He is our peace, Who hath 
made both one. 

Verse. This is the Lord's doing, 
and it is marvellous in our eyes. 

Answer. He is our peace, Who 
hath made both one. 



W 



Third Lesson, (lxiii. 1.) 

HO is this that cometh from 
Edom, with dyed garments 
This, that is glorious 



from Bozrah ? 



in his apparel, travelling in the great- 
ness of his strength ? I that speak 
in righteousness, mighty to save. 
Wherefore art thou red in thine 
apparel, and thy garments like their's 
that tread in the wine-fat ? I have 
trodden the wine-press alone, and of 
the people there was none with me. 
I trod them in mine anger, and tram- 
pled them in my fury ; and their blood 
is sprinkled upon my garments, and I 
have stained all my raiment. For the 
day of vengeance is in mine heart, and 
the year of my redemption is come. 
I looked, and there was none to help ; 
I sought, and there was none to 
uphold. 

Third Responsory. 

3 It pleased [the Father] that in the 
first-born from the dead should all the 
fulness of the Godhead dwell, and by 
Him to reconcile all things unto Him- 
self, making peace through the Blood 
of His Cross, whether they be things 
in heaven or things in earth. 

Verse. He is the Head of the Body 
of the Church, in all things having the 
preeminence. 

Answer. Making peace through 
the Blood of His Cross, whether they 
be things in heaven or things in earth. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. Making peace through 
the Blood of His Cross, whether they 
be things in heaven or things in earth. 

SECOND NOCTURN. 

First Antiphon. They pierced My 
Hands and My Feet ; they have told 
all My Bones. 

Ps. xxi. My God, my God, &c, {p. 

48.) 



1 Oblatus est quia ipse voluit. The present Hebrew is literally, "He was oppressed and 
he was afflicted." Jonathan ben Uzziel, "He was required, and he was brought back, and 
without opening his mouth, he submitted to the mighty of the people." St Jerome thought it 
meant " He was brought before" [Pilate], &c. 

2 Eph. ii. 14 ; Ps. cxvii. 23. 3 Col. ii. 9; i. 18, 20. 



THIRD WEEK IN LENT. 



291 



His brethren, that he might be 
merciful. 

A?iswer. That He might deliver 
them who through fear of death were 
all their life-time subject to bondage. 

Fifth Lesson. 

T O with what red flowers doth 
blossom that noble Vine, our 
ruddy Jesus ! Look if anywhere on 
His Body thou wilt not find those 
bloody roses. Look into one Hand 
and then into the Other, and thou wilt 
find a rose in Either. Look at one 
Foot and then at the Other — are They 
not rosy ? Look at the Gash in His 
Side, and That hath Its rose too — 
but a rose pink rather than red this 
time, by reason of the Water ; as saith 
the Evangelist : " One of the soldiers 
with a spear pierced His Side, and 
forthwith came thereout Blood and 
Water." 

Fifth Responsory. 

3 By man came death ; by Man 
came also the resurrection of the dead. 
For as in Adam all have sinned, even 
so in Christ shall all be made alive. 

Verse. At last shall be destroyed 
the enemy death. 

Answer. For as in Adam all have 
sinned, even so in Christ shall all be 
made alive. 

Sixth Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the same. 
{On the Passion of the Lord.) 

T OOK down, O Lord, Holy Father, 
•^ from Thy Sanctuary, even from 
heaven Thy dwelling-place, and behold 
this Most Holy Oblation Which our 
Great High Priest, Thine Holy Child, 
the Lord Jesus doth offer unto Thee 

1 Isa. i. 6. 2 Heb. ii. 15, 17. 

3 1 Cor. xv. ai, 22, 26. Notice the curious divergence from the inspired text, which reads, 

In Adam all die, &c." 



Second Antiphon. 1 From the Sole 
of the Foot even unto the Head there 
is no soundness in Him. 

Ps. lxv. Make a joyful noise, &c, 

(A 1 1 5-) 

Third Antiphon. 1 Wounds, and 
Bruises, and putrefying Sores — they 
have not been closed, neither bound 
up, neither mollified with ointment. 

Ps. lxxv. In Judah is God known, 
&o, (p. 130.) 

Verse. Surely He hath borne our 
griefs. 

Answer. And carried our sorrows. 

Fourth Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Sermons 
of St Bernard, Abbat [of Clairvaux.] 
(Bk. on the Passion, ch. 41.) 

A FTER much mocking by Jews and 
"^ Gentiles, after much Blood-shed- 
ing, JESUS is taken, and His Hands 

1 and Feet pierced with hard nails, and 
so our Saviour, the gentle JESUS, is 
nailed to the tree of the Cross. Look 
there, and gaze upon the roses of 

1 bloody suffering — how they shine — 
the marks of that love greater than 

jj which hath no man. Suffering and 

S love strive together whether the one 
shall be more excellent for bloodiness 
or the other for fieriness. 



Fourth Responsory. 

2 Jesus through death destroyed 
him that had the power of death, that 
He might deliver them who through 
fear of death were all their life-time 
subject to bondage. 

Verse. Wherefore in all things it 
behoved Him to be made like unto 



292 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



for the sins of His brethren ; and take 
not vengeance upon us for the multi- 
tude of our iniquities. Know now, O 
Father, whether this be Thy Son 
Joseph's coat or no. Alas ! an evil 
beast hath devoured Him, and trampled 
[Him] in his fury [and stained all] His 
raiment. Behold, in five places It is 
rent grievously. 1 

Sixth Respo7isory. 

2 We see Jesus, [Who was made a 
little lower than the angels,] for the 
suffering of death, crowned with glory 
and honour, that He [by the grace of 
God] should taste death for every man. 

Verse. For it became Him [for 
Whom are all things, and by Whom 
are all things,] in bringing many sons 
unto glory, to make the captain of their 
salvation perfect through sufferings. 

Answer. That He [by the grace 
of God] should taste death for every 
man. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. That He [by the grace 
of God] should taste death for every 



THIRD NOCTURN. 

First A7itiphon. 3 What are these 
wounds in Thine Hands ? 

Ps. xcv. O sing unto the Lord, 
&c, (A 148.) 

Second Antiphon. 3 Those with 
which I was wounded in the house of 
My friends. 

Ps. xcvi. The Lord reigneth, &c, 
{p. 149O 

Third Antiphon. 4 My complaint is 
bitter, and my stroke is heavier than 
my groaning. 

1 Cf. Gen. xxxvii. 32, 33 ; Isa. lxiii. 3. 
4 Job xxiii. 2. 



Ps. xcvii. O sing unto the Lord, 
&c. (p. 157.) 

Verse. He was wounded for our 
transgressions. 

A?iswer. He was bruised for our 
iniquities. 

Seventh Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (xix. 28.) 

A T that time : Jesus, knowing that 
^^ all things were now accom- 
plished, that the Scripture might be 
fulfilled, saith : I thirst. And so on. 

Homily by St Cyril, Pope of Alex- 
andria. (Bk. xii. Comment, on Jo Jin.) 

The brutality of the Jews had 
already outraged Christ to the full ; 
cruelty had nothing left to desire ; and 
now at the last moment the Most Holy 
Flesh of Christ suffereth a pain spring- 
ing naturally from Itself. That Flesh, 
fevered by many and divers tortures, 
felt thirst. Great pain hath the 
property of producing strong thirst, 
since by some natural law which I 
cannot explain, it drieth up as by heat 
the liquids of the body and as it were 
setteth on fire the inward parts. 

Seventh Responsory. 

5 The grace of God is now made 
manifest by the appearing of our 
Saviour Jesus Christ, Who hath 
abolished death, and hath brought life 
and immortality to light. 

Verse. Who hath saved us and 
called us with His holy calling, ac- 
cording to grace which was given us 
in Christ JESUS. 

Answer. Who hath abolished 
death, and hath brought life and im- 
mortality to light. 



- Heb. ii. 9, 10. 
5 2 Tim. i. 10, 9. 



3 Zech. xiii. 6. 



THIRD WEEK IN LENT. 



293 



Eighth Lesson. 

" TT is finished." Jewish outrage 
against God was finished ; the 
power to inflict torture was finished. 
What had the Jews left unattempted, 
or cruelty left undone ? Did any pain 
or insult remain uninflicted ? Rightly 
did He say : " It is finished." But 
He was come to be the Lord of the 
dead as well as of the quick, and the 
hour was now calling Him to go and 
preach to the imprisoned spirits in the 
netherworld. He accepted even death 
for our sakes and bore in His Own 
Flesh that suffering common to all our 
nature. 1 When they saw that the 
Head of JESUS had fallen, and deemed 
Him to have already given up the 
Ghost, they held it pains wasted to 
break His Legs. Howbeit, forasmuch 
as they were not quite sure that He 
was dead, they pierced His Side with 
a spear, and there burst forth Blood 
mingled with Water, the image and the 
first-fruits of the mystic Thankoffering 
and of holy Baptism, for holy Baptism 
is indeed a thing of Christ and from 
Christ, and the virtue of the mystic 
Thankoffering proceedeth unto us from 
His holy Flesh. 

Eighth Responsory. 

2 Thou art worthy, O Lord, to take 
the book, and to open the seals thereof, 
for Thou wast slain, and hast redeemed 
us to God by Thy Blood — 

Verse. And hast made us unto our 
God a kingdom and Priests. 

Answer. By Thy Blood. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. By Thy Blood. 



Ninth Blessing. 

May the Gospel's glorious word 
Cleansing to our souls afford. 

1 The lesson now stops here. 



Ninth Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (iv. 5.) 

A T that time : Cometh Jesus to a 

city of Samaria which is called 

Sychar : near to the parcel of ground 

that Jacob gave to his son Joseph. 

And so on. 

Homily by St Austin, Bishop [of 
Hippo.] (15th Tract on John.) 

"JESUS, wearied with His journey," 
— "JESUS, wearied with His journey," 
— the mysteries are beginning now. 
It is not for nothing that JESUS is 
wearied. It is not for nothing that 
the Mighty One of God is wearied. It 
is not for nothing that He is wearied 
Who Himself giveth Rest to all them 
that are weary and heavy-laden. It is 
not for nothing that He is wearied 
Whose absence prostrateth us, and 
Whose presence maketh us to be 
strong. 

"Jesus, therefore, being wearied 
with His journey, sat thus on the well : 
and it was about the sixth hour." 
There is a depth in all these details — 
they all have something to say for us 
to learn. Upon them we gaze. 
"Knock," saith the Lord, "and it 
shall be opened unto you." Let us 
knock then — and, O, may He open to 
me and to you, even He Who hath 
spoken to us those words : " Knock, 
and it shall be opened unto you." 
(Matth. vii. 7.) It is for thy sake 
that JESUS was wearied with His 
journey. We find the strength of 
Jesus, and we find Jesus weak ; yea, 
strong and weak. Strong, for " In the 
beginning was the Word, and the 
Word was with God, and the Word 
was God : the Same was in the be- 
ginning with God." Wouldest thou 
know again how that the Son of God 
is strong ? " All things were made 

2 Apoc. v. 9, 10. 



294 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



by Him, and without Him was not 
anything made that was made " — 
made without effort. (John i. 1-3.) 
What then is stronger than He by 
Whom all things were made without 
effort ? Wouldest thou know His 
weakness ? " The Word was made 
Flesh and dwelt among us." (14O 
Christ, strong, made thee ; Christ, 
weak, redeemed thee. Christ, strong, 
made all things out of nothing ; Christ, 
weak, so wrought that that that was 
made perished not. His strength hath 
made us, and His weakness saved us. 
He then, being Himself made weak, 
is strength to all such as are weak, 
gathering them together, to use His 
own figure, even as an hen gathereth 
her chickens under her wings. " O 
Jerusalem, Jerusalem ! how often would 
I have gathered thy children together, 
even as an hen gathereth her chickens 
under her wings, and ye would not ! " 
(Matth. xxiii. 37.) Consider now, my 
brethren, in what bondage is an hen to 
her chickens. There is no other bird 
in whom motherhood is unmistakeable. 
We watch the sparrows building their 
nests under our eyes ; we see swallows, 
and storks, and pigeons building theirs 
every day. But, unless we actually 
see them in their nests, we know not 
if they have little ones, or no. But 
the hen's motherhood is so much a 
part of herself, that even if at the 
minute we see not her children the 
chickens following after her, neverthe- 
less we see by her ways if she be a 
mother. 

The Hymn, "We praise Thee, O 
God, &c," is said. 

LAUDS. 

First Antiphon. Surely He hath 
borne our griefs * and carried our 
sorrows. 

1 Isa. xxx. 26. 
3 Lam. i. 12. 



Second Antiphon. But He was 
wounded for our transgressions, * He 
was bruised for our iniquities. 

Third Antiphon. l The LORD bind- 
eth up the hurt of His people, * and 
healeth the stroke of their wound. 

Fourth Antiphon. 2 Every one that 
goeth by it shall be astonished * at all 
the plagues thereof. 

Fifth Antiphon. 3 O all ye that 
pass by ! * Behold and see, if there be 
any sorrow like unto My sorrow ! 

Chapter. (Isa. liii. 5.) 

[/^HRIST] was wounded for our 
transgressions, He was bruised 
for our iniquities, and with His stripes 
we were healed. 



Hymn.* 

'"THIRTY years among us dwelling, 

His appointed time fulfilled, 
Born for this, He meets His Passion, 

For that this He freely willed : 
On the Cross the Lamb is lifted, 

Where His Life-Blood shall be spilled. 

He endured the nails, the spitting, 
Vinegar, and spear, and reed ; 

From that Holy Body broken 
Blood and water forth proceed : 

Earth, and stars, and sky, and ocean, 
By that flood from stain are freed. 

Faithful Cross ! above all other, 

One and only noble Tree ! 
None in foliage, none in blossom, 

None in fruit thy peers may be : 
Sweetest wood and sweetest iron ! 

Sweetest weight is hung on thee. 

Bend thy boughs, O tree of glory ! 

Thy relaxing sinews bend ; 
For a while the ancient rigour, 

That thy birth bestowed, suspend ; 
And the King of heavenly beauty 

On thy bosom gently tend. 

2 Jer. xlix. 17. 

4 Continuation of the Vespers Hymn. 



THIRD WEEK IN LENT. 



295 



Thou alone wast counted worthy 
This world's ransom to uphold ; 

For a shipwrecked race preparing 
Harbour, like the ark of old : 

With the Sacred Blood anointed 
From the smitten Lamb that rolled. 

To the Trinity be glory 

Everlasting, as is meet : 
Equal to the Father, equal 

To the Son, and Paraclete: 
Trinal Unity, Whose praises 

All created things repeat. Amen. 



Prayer. 

f ORD, we beseech Thee graciously 
to bless this our Fast, that we 
who are now outwardly denying meats 
to our bodies, may have power in- 
wardly to keep our souls fasting from 
all sin. Through our Lord JESUS 
Christ Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of the 
Holy Ghost, one God, world without 
end. Amen. 



Verse. They shall look upon Him 
Whom they have pierced. 

Answer. And they shall mourn for 
Him as one mourneth for the death of 
his first-born. 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
One of the soldiers with a spear pierced 
His Side, and forthwith came thereout 
Blood and W^ater. 



Prayer throughout the Office. 

r\ GOD, Who by the suffering of 

^^ Thine Only-begotten Son, and 

I the outpouring of His Blood through 

S] the Five Wounds, hast made anew the 

1 manhood which sin had lost, grant, we 

* beseech Thee, that we who on earth do 

! worship the Wounds Which He re- 

i ceived may worthily obtain in heaven 

the purchase of His Most Precious 

Blood. Through the Same our Lord 

I JESUS Christ Thy Son, Who liveth and 

reigneth with Thee, in the unity of the 

Holy Ghost, one God, world without 

end. Amen. 

Commemoration of the Week-day. 

Antiphon. Whosoever drinketh of 
; the water that I shall give him, shall 
never thirst. 

Verse. God hath given His angels 
; charge over Thee. 

Answer. To keep Thee in all Thy 
ways. 



PRIME. 

Antiphon. Surely, &c, (First An- 
tiphon at Lands.) 

Chapter at the e?id. (Isa. liii. 12.) 

[/^HRIST] poured out His Soul unto 
death; and He was numbered 
with the transgressors ; and He bare 
the sin of many, and made intercession 
for the transgressors. 



TERCE. 

Antiphon. But He was wounded, 
&c, (Seco?id Antiphon at Lands.) 



Chapter from Lauds. 



Short Responsory. 

They pierced My Hands and My 
Feet. 

Answer. They pierced My Hands 
and My Feet. 

Verse. They have told all My 
Bones. 

Answer. My Hands and My Feet. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. They pierced My Hands 
and My Feet. 

Verse. O all ye that pass by ! 

Answer. Behold, and see My 



296 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



SEXT. 

Antiphon. The LORD bindeth up, 
&c, {Third A?itiphon at Lauds.) 

Chapter. (Isa. 1. 6.) 

T HID not my face from shame and 
spitting ; for the Lord GOD will 
help me ; therefore shall I not be 
confounded. 

Short Responsory. 

Surely He hath borne our griefs. 

Answer. Surely He hath borne our 
griefs — 

Verse. And carried our sorrows. 

Answer. Our griefs. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. Surely He hath borne our 
griefs. 

Verse. The chastisement of our 
peace was upon Him. 

Answer. And with His stripes we 
are healed. 

NONE. 

Antiphon. O all ye, &c, {Fifth 
Antiphon at Lauds.) 

Chapter as at the end of Prime. 

Short Responsory. 

He was wounded for our transgres- 
sions. 

A?iswer. He was wounded for our 
transgressions. 

Verse. He was bruised for our ini- 
quities. 

A?iswer. For our transgressions. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. He was wounded for our 
transgressions. 

Verse. He was offered up because 
He willed it. 

Answer. And He opened not His 
Mouth. 



SECOND VESPERS. 

All as the First, except the 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. I am your Redemption. * 
My Hands, which made you, those 
Hands were pierced with the nails. It 
was for your sakes that I was scourged, 
for your sakes that I was crowned with 
thorns, for your sakes that as I hung, 
I said : " I thirst " — and, for water, 
they gave Me vinegar to drink. They 
gave Me also gall for My meat, and 
pierced My Side with a spear. I died 
and was buried, and arose again. I 
am with you always and am alive for 
evermore. 

Commemoration of the Week-day. 

Antiphon. Sir, I perceive that Thou 
art a prophet : our fathers worshipped 
in this mountain. 

Verse. God hath given His angels 
charge over Thee. 

A?iswer. To keep Thee in all Thy 
ways. 

Prayer. 

/^RANT, we beseech Thee, O Al- 
mighty God, that we whose 
trust is under the shadow of Thy 
wings, may, through the help of Thy 
power, overcome all evils that rise up 
against us. Through our Lord JESUS 
Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of 
the Holy Ghost, one God, world 
without end. Amen. 

The Sabbath. 

MATTINS. 

Hymn as o?i the First Sunday, {p. 
228.) 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (viii. 1.) 



THIRD WEEK IN LENT. 



297 



A T that time : Jesus went unto the 
•^* Mount of Olives. And early in 
the morning He came again into the 
temple. And so on. 

Homily by St Austin, Bishop [of 
Hippo.] (33rd Tract on John.) 

"Jesus went unto the Mount of 
Olives " — even unto that fruitful 
Mount, that anointing Mount, that 
Mount of Chrism. Where else be- 
came it Christ to teach if not on the 
Mount of Olives ? For the word 
" Christ " is derived from " Chrisma," 
and "Chrisma" is the Greek for 
"ointment." He hath anointed us 
that we may be able to wrestle with 
the devil. 1 

" And, early in the morning, He 
came again into the temple ; and all 
the people came unto Him ; and He 
sat down, and taught them " — and no 
man laid hands on Him, because He 
was not yet pleased to suffer. And 
now listen how His enemies tried the 
Lord's meekness. 



First Responsory. 
We are verily guilty, &c, {p. 278.) 



Second Respo?isory. 

And Reuben answered, &c, {p. 

278.) 

Third Lesson. 

VA / E must understand, my brethren, 
that there was a wonderful gen- 
tleness in the Lord. They knew that 
He was most mild and most gentle. 
Of Him indeed it had been said of 
old time : " Gird Thy sword upon Thy 
thigh, O most Mighty ! In Thy come- 
liness and Thy beauty go forward, fare 
prosperously, and reign, because of 
truth, and meekness, and righteous- 
ness." (Ps. xliv. 4, 5.) And He 
came bringing truth as one that 
teacheth, meekness as one that de- 
livereth, and righteousness as one that 
knoweth. Because of these it was 
that the Prophet declared, in the Holy 
Ghost, that He was to reign. When- 
ever He spake, truth shone forth : 
whenever He spared His enemies, 
meekness was made glorious. And 
His enemies, racked with envy and 
hatred by His truth and His meek- 
ness, laid a stumbling-block for His 
righteousness. 



Second Lesson. 

" AND the Scribes and Pharisees 
"^^ brought unto Him a woman 
taken in adultery ; and when they had 
set her in the midst, they say unto 
Him : Master, this woman was taken 
in adultery, in the very act. Now, 
Moses in the law commanded that 
such should be stoned ; but what 
sayest Thou ? This they said, tempt- 
ing Him, that they might have to 
accuse Him." Whereof to accuse 
Him ? Had they taken Him in any 
sin ? Or was the woman said to have 
anything to do with Him ? 



Third Responsory. 
Jacob lamented, &c, {p. 279. 



lauds. 

Chapter froin Isa. lviii. 1, as on the 
First Monday, {p. 235.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Sunday, {p. 233.) 

A?itiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
Jesus stooped down, * and wrote on 
the ground : He that is without sin, 
let him cast a stone at her. 



1 The ancient wrestlers had their bodies rubbed with oil. 



298 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Prayer. 

r\ ALMIGHTY God, grant, we 
^-^ beseech Thee, that as many as, 
to afflict the body, do abstain from 
meats, may, by following after right- 
eousness, fast from sin. Through our 
Lord Jesus Christ Thy Son, Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the 
unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. Amen. 

The same Prayer at Perce, Sext, 
and None. 

VESPERS. 

Chapter and Prayer from the follow- 
ing Lauds. 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Saturday, {pp. 227, 228.) 

A?itipho?z at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgifi. Woman, hath no man con- 
demned thee ? * No man, Lord. 
Neither do I condemn thee : go, and 
sin no more. 



iyr OW Moses kept the flock of Jethro 
his father-in-law, the priest of 
Midian : and he led the flock to the 
back-side of the desert, and came to 
the mountain of God, even to Horeb. 
And the LORD 2 appeared to him in a 
flame of fire, out of the midst of a 
bush : and he looked, and, behold, 
the bush burned with fire, and was 
not consumed. And Moses said : I 
will now turn aside, and see this great 
sight, why the bush is not burned. 
And when the Lord saw that he 
turned aside to see, He called unto 
him out of the midst of the bush, and 
said : Moses ! Moses ! And he said : 
Here am I. And He said: Draw not 
nigh hither ; put off thy shoes from off 
thy feet ; for the place whereon thou 
standest is holy ground. Moreover 
He said : I am the God of thy father : 
the God of Abraham, the God of 
Isaac, and the God of Jacob. And 
Moses hid his face ; for he was afraid 
to look upon God. 



jHfolLmt Sutrtrag, called also 
fHotfjertng Stmtiag, attti 
Jftose Suntiag. 1 

The Fourth Lord's Day in the Forty 
Days before Easter. 

MATTINS. 

Invitatory and Hymn as o?i the First 
Sunday, {p. 228.) 

FIRST NOCTURN. 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Book of 
Exodus (iii. 1.) 



First Responsory. 

The Lord spake unto Moses, saying: 
Go down now into Egypt, and say unto 
Pharaoh : Let My people go. And 
the heart of Pharaoh shall be hardened, 
that he will not let My people go but 
by a mighty hand. 

Verse. The cry of the children of 
Israel is come unto Me, and I have 
seen their affliction : come now, there- 
fore, and I will send thee unto 
Pharaoh, and thou shalt say unto 
him — 

Answer. Let My people go. And 
the heart of Pharaoh shall be hard- 
ened, that he will not let My people 
go but by a mighty hand. 



1 So called because on this day the gladness of the Church at the thought of the consequences 
to her of the atonement causes her to use, if possible, rose-coloured (viz. reddish brown) vest- 
ments, &c, instead of purple, as well as the altar to be decorated with flowers, the dalmatic and 
tunicle to be worn, and the organ played. The observance is a sort of rest in the middle of Lent, 
and in some places the Fast undergoes a slight modification for a few days. On this day, at 
Rome, the Pope blesses the Golden Rose, which afterwards remains on the altar during Mass. 

2 Hebrew, "the angel of the Lord." So also the LXX. and Onkelos. 



FOURTH WEEK IN LENT. 



299 



Second Lesson. 

AND the LORD said : I have surely 
•^ seen the affliction of My people 
which are in Egypt, and have heard 
their cry by reason of their task- 
masters ; for I know their sorrows ; 
and I am come down to deliver them 
out of the hand of the Egyptians, and 
to bring them up out of that land, unto 
a good land and a large, unto a land 
flowing with milk and honey, unto the 
place of the Canaanites, and the Hit- 
tites, and the Amorites, and the 
Perizzites, and the Hivites, and the 
Jebusites. Now, therefore, the. cry of 
the children of Israel is come unto 
Me, and I have also seen the oppres- 
sion wherewith the Egyptians oppress 
them. Come now therefore, and I 
will send thee unto Pharaoh, that thou 
mayest bring forth My people, the 
children of Israel, out of Egypt. 



Second Respo?isory. 

1 Moses stood before Pharaoh, and 
said : Thus saith the LORD : Let My 
people go, that they may hold a feast 
unto Me in the wilderness. 

Verse. The Lord God of the 
Hebrews hath sent me unto thee, 
saying : 

Answer. Let My people go, that 
they may hold a feast unto Me in the 
wilderness. 



Third Lesson. 

AND Moses said unto God : Who 
x *^ am I that I should go unto 
Pharaoh, and that I should bring forth 
the children of Israel out of Egypt ? 



And He said unto him : Certainly I 
will be with thee ; and this shall be a 
token unto thee that I have sent thee : 
when thou hast brought forth My 
people out of Egypt, thou shalt serve 
God upon this mountain. And Moses 
said unto God : Behold, when I come 
unto the children of Israel, and shall 
say unto them : The God of your 
fathers hath sent me unto you : and 
they shall say unto me : What is His 
Name ? what shall I say unto them ? 
And God said unto Moses : I AM 
THAT I AM. 2 And He said : Thus 
shalt thou say unto the children of Is- 
rael : I AM 3 hath sent me unto you. 
And God said moreover unto Moses : 
Thus shalt thou say unto the children 
of Israel : The Lord God of your 
fathers, the God of Abraham, the God 
of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, hath 
sent me unto you. This is My Name 
for ever, and this is My memorial 
unto all generations. 

Third Responsory . 

4 Let us sing unto the Lord, for He 
hath triumphed gloriously ; the horse 
and his rider hath He thrown into 
the sea. The Lord is my strength 
and song, and He is become my 
salvation. 

Verse. The Lord is a man of war ; 
Almighty 5 is His Name. 

Answer. The Lord is my strength 
and song, and He is become my sal- 
vation. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

A?iswer. The Lord is my strength, 
and my song, and He is become my 
salvation. 



1 Exod. v. 1. 

2 EGO SUM QUI SUM. Hebrew, EH'YEH ASHER EH'YEH. LXX., I AM HE 
THAT IS. Onkelos does not dare to attempt a translation, and it is indeed unfathomable ; 
though it is generally understood to express the nature of Him Who alone is Self-existent, 
Eternal, and Unchangeable. 

* QUI EST. Hebrew, EH'YEH. LXX., HE THAT IS. Onkelos, untranslated, as 
before. 4 xv. 1-3. 5 The Name. 



300 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



SECOND NOCTURN. 

Fourth Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Sermons 
of 1 St Basil the Great, Archbishop 
[of Caesarea-in-Pontus.] (ist on 
Fasting. ) 

\17'E know that it was with and by 
^ * fasting that Moses went up into 
the Mount, 2 for he had not dared to 
go up to that smoking summit, nor to 
have entered that darkness, except he 
had been made strong by a Fast. It 
was with fasting that he received the 
commandments, written by the finger 
of God upon tables of stone. Upon 
the mountain, that Fast made interest 
with Him Whose law was given unto 
it ; but, below, gluttony was leading 
the people to the worship of idols and 
polluting them. It is written : "The 
people sat down to eat and to drink, 
and rose up to play." (Ex. xxxii. 6.) 
That one fit of drunken phrenzy, on 
the part of the people, made void and 
of none effect all the toil and patience 
of the forty days, during the which 
the servant of God had fasted and 
prayed unceasingly. To the Fast 
had been given those tables of stone 
written on with the finger of God ; the 
Feast's work was to break them, by 
the hand of the most holy prophet, 
who deemed a nation of drunkards a 
nation unmeet to receive law from 
God. 

Fourth Resftonsory. 

3 Thy way is in the sea, and Thy 
paths in the great waters. Thou 
leddest Thy people like a flock, by the 
hand of Moses and Aaron. 

Verse. 4 Thou broughtest them 
through the Pxed Sea, and leddest 
them through much water. 



Answer. Thou leddest Thy people 
like a flock by the hand of Moses and 
Aaron. 

Fifth Lesson. 

T N a moment of time, that people, 
who had by great wonders been 
taught to worship God, were, by 
gluttony, dropped back into the cess- 
pool of Egyptian idolatry. The which 
things if thou wilt consider, thou shalt 
see that the tendency of fasting is to 
God-ward, and that that of feasting is 
to hell-ward. What was it that de- 
graded Esau, and made him a slave to 
his brother ? Was it not that one dish 
of pottage for which he sold his birth- 
right ? (Gen. xxv. 29-34.) Was it 
not prayer when joined to fasting that 
gave Samuel to his mother ? ( 1 Kings 
[Sam.] i. 7, 19.) What made the 
mighty Samson invincible ? Was it 
not the fast during the which he was 
conceived in his mother's womb ? 
The fast it was which made him to be 
conceived ; the fast, which fed him ; 
the fast, which made a man of him, 
even as the Angel of the Lord com- 
manded his mother, saying : " She 
may not eat of anything that cometh 
of the vine, neither let her drink wine 
or strong drink." (Judges xiii. 14.) 
Fasting is the mother of prophets, the 
strength and stay of mighty men. 

Fifth Responsory. 

O Lord, Thou hast overwhelmed in 
the deep of the sea them which perse- 
cuted Thy people, even Thy people 
which Thou leddest in the pillar of 
the cloud. 

Verse. Thou leddest Thy people 
like a flock, by the hand of Moses and 
Aaron. 

Answer. Even Thy people, which 
Thou leddest in the pillar of the cloud. 



1 June 14. 

2 See the facts referred to throughout, in Ex. xxiv. 12-18 ; xxxL 18 ; xxxii. 1-19. 



3 Ps. lxxvi. 20. 



4 Wisd. x. 



FOURTH WEEK IN LENT. 



301 



Sixth Lesson. 

T T is fasting which giveth wisdom to 
lawgivers ; fasting which is the 
l trustiest keeper of the soul, and the 
i safest companion for the body. It is 
I fasting which is strength and armour 
to mighty men ; fasting which maketh 
\ . supple them which run and which 
X wrestle. It is fasting which maketh 
a man strong to strive against tempta- 
tion, and which is to godliness as a 
\ fenced city ; even fasting, whose fellow 
I is soberness, and her work temperance. 
It is fasting which maketh men to 
I wax valiant in fight ; fasting which 
\ teacheth to rest in time of peace. 
Fasting maketh a Nazarite to be holy, 
I and a priest perfect. Without a fast 
it is unlawful to touch the Sacrifice, 
not only in that mystic and true wor- 
ship of God which now is, but also 
kj according to the law, in those sacrifices 
\ which were offered of old time as 
figures of the true. It was fasting 
1 which opened the eyes of Elias to look 
' upon the visions of God, even as it is 
1 written, that when he had fasted forty 
■ days and forty nights he was in the 
' mount of God, even Horeb, and he 
; was made able, so far as man may be 
; made able, to see God. (3 [1] Kings 
xix. 8 et seq.) Even so also was 
1 Moses in that Mount forty days and 
; forty nights, fasting, at what time he 
again received the Law. (Ex. xxxiv. 
28.) Unless the Ninevites had fasted, 
both man and beast, herd and flock, 
they had not escaped from the ruin 
that hung over them. (Jonah iii. 7- 
10.) In the wilderness fell some — 
and who were they ? Yea, they 
were such as lusted after flesh meat. 
Xum. xi. 33.) 

Sixth Responsory. 

1 Moses, the servant of God, fasted 
forty days and forty nights, to make 



him meet to receive the Law of 
God. 

Verse. 2 Moses gat him up unto 
the Lord into Mount Sinai, and he 
was in the Mount forty days and 
forty nights. 

Answer. To make him meet to 
receive the Law of God. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. To make him meet to 
receive the Law of God. 

THIRD NOCTURN. 

Seventh Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (vi. 1.) 

A T that time : Jesus went over the 
"^^ Sea of Galilee, which is the sea 
of Tiberias. And a great multitude 
followed Him, because they saw His 
miracles which He did on them that 
were diseased. And so on. 

Homily by St Austin, Bishop [of 
Hippo.] (24th Tract on Joh?i.) 

The miracles which our Lord Jesus 
Christ did were the very works of God, 
and they enlighten the mind of man by 
mean of things which are seen, that he 
may know more of God. God is Him- 
self of such a Substance as eye cannot 
see, and the miracles, by the which He 
ruleth the whole world continually, and 
satisfieth the need of everything that 
He hath made, are by use become so 
common, that scarce any will vouch- 
safe to see that there are wonderful 
and amazing works of God in every 
grain of seed of grass. According to 
His mercy He kept some works to be 
done in their due season, but out of 
the common course and order of 
nature, that men might see them and 
be astonished, not because they are 
greater, but because they are rarer 



1 Exod. xxxiv. 28. 



2 Exod. xxiv. 18. 



302 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



than those which they lightly esteem, 
since they see them day by day. 

Seventh Responsory. 

1 After that the Lord had looked 
upon him, the face of Moses shone. 
And when the elders saw that his face 
shone, they marvelled and were sore 
afraid. 

Verse. And when he came down 
from Mount Sinai with the two tables 
of testimony in his hand, he wist not 
that his face shone, because that God 
had spoken with him. 

Answer. And when the elders saw 
that his face shone, they marvelled and 
were sore afraid. 

Eighth Lesson. 

"jCpOR it is a greater miracle to govern 
the whole universe, than to satisfy 
five thousand men with five loaves of 
bread ; and yet no man marvelleth at 
it. At the feeding of the five thou- 
sand, men marvel, not because it is a 
greater miracle than the other, but 
because it is rarer. For Who is He 
Who now feedeth the whole world, 
but He Who, from a little grain that 
is sown, maketh the fulness of the 
harvest ? God worketh in both cases 
in one and the same manner. He 
Who of the sowing maketh to come 
the harvest, is He Who of the five 
barley loaves in His Hands made 
bread to feed five thousand men ; for 
Christ's are the Hands which are able 
to do both the one and the other. 
He Who multiplieth the grains of 
corn multiplied the loaves, only not by 
committing them to the earth whereof 
He is the Maker. 

Eighth Responsory. 

2 Behold, I send My Angel before 
thee, to keep thee. Beware, and obey 

i Exod. xxxiv. 29, 30. 2 Exod. xxiii. 20. 



My voice ; then I will be an enemy 
unto thine enemies, and an adversary 
unto thine adversaries ; for Mine Angel 
shall go before thee. 

Verse. 3 O Israel, if thou wilt 
hearken unto Me, there shall no 
strange god be in thee, neither shalt 
thou worship any strange god : for 1 
am the LORD. 

Answer. Beware, and obey My 
voice ; then I will be an enemy unto 
thine enemies, and an adversary unto 
thine adversaries ; for Mine Angel 
shall go before thee. 

Ninth Lesson. 

''"PHIS miracle, then, is brought to 
bear upon our bodies, that our 
souls may thereby be quickened ; 
shown to our eyes, to give food to 
our understanding ; that, through His 
works which we see, we may marvel 
at that God Whom we cannot see, 
and, being roused up to believe, and 
purified by believing, we may long to 
see Him, yea, may know by things 
which are seen Him Who is Unseen. 
Nor yet sufficeth it for us to see only 
this meaning in Christ's miracles. 
Let us ask of the miracles themselves 
what they have to tell us concerning 
Christ — for, soothly, they have a 
tongue of their own, if only we will 
understand it. For, because Christ is 
the Word of God, therefore the work 
of the Word is a Word for us. 

Ninth Respo?isory. 

4 Give ear, O My people, to My 
law : incline your ears to the words 
of My mouth. 

Verse. I will open My mouth in 
parables : I will utter dark sayings of 
old. 

Answer. Incline your ears to the 
words of My mouth. 

3 Ps. lxxx. 10. 4 Ps. lxxvii. 1. 



FOURTH WEEK IN LENT. 



303 



Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 
Answer. Incline your ears to the 
words of My mouth. 

LAUDS. 

First Antiphon. Then shalt Thou 
be pleased * with the sacrifices of 
righteousness, when Thou hast hidden 
Thy face from my sins. 

P sah) 1 L. 
Have mercy, &c, (p. 87.) 



Second Antiphon. It is better to 

JSt * 

princes. 



trust * in the Lord, than to trust in 



Psalm CXVIL 

O give thanks, &c, (p. 37.) 

Third Antiphon. Let God, even 
Wax own God, bless us ; * let God 
bless us. 

Psalms LXII. and LXVI. 

O God, Thou art my God, &c, {p. 

230 

Fourth Antiphon. 1 O Lord, Thou 
art mighty to save * us with a strong 
hand : deliver us, O our God. 



The Song of the Three Holy Children. 

Fifth Antiphon. Kings of the earth, 
* and all people, praise God. 



Psalms CXLVIIL, CXL/X., CL. 

Praise ye the Lord, &c, (pp. 25, 

26. 

Chapter. (Gal. iv, 22.) 

T3RETHREN, It is written that 

Abraham had two sons ; the one 

by a bond-maid, the other by a free 



woman. But he who was of the bond- 
woman was born after the flesh : but 
he of the free woman was by promise ; 
which things are an allegory. 

Hymn and Verse and A?iswer as o?i 
the First Sunday (p. 233.) 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
When JESUS lifted up His Eyes, * and 
saw a great company come unto Him, 
He saith unto Philip : Whence shall 
we buy bread that these may eat ? 
And this He said to prove him ; for 
He Himself knew what He would do. 



Prayer. 

/^RANT, we beseech Thee, Al- 
^- J mighty God, that we who for 
our evil deeds are worthily punished, 
may, by the comfort of Thy grace, 
mercifully be relieved. Through our 
Lord JESUS Christ Thy Son, Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the 
unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. Amen. 

The same Prayer throughout the day. 



PRIME. 

Antiphon. And Jesus took the 
loaves, * and when He had given 
thanks, He distributed to them that 
were set down. 



terce. 

Antiphon. With five loaves and 
two fishes * did the Lord satisfy five 
thousand men. 



Chapter fro7n Lauds. 



SEXT. 
Same Antiphon as at Terce. 



1 Dan. iii. 17. 



304 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Chapter. (Gal. iv. 27.) 

"D EJOICE, thou barren, that bearest 
not, break forth and cry, thou 
that travailest not ; for the desolate 
hath many more children than she 
which hath an husband. 

NONE. 

Antiphon. Then those men, * when 
they had seen the miracle that Jesus 
did, said within themselves : This is of 
a truth that Prophet that should come 
into the world. 

Chapter. (Gal. iv. 31.) 

CO then, brethren, we are not child- 
^ ren of the bond-woman, but of 
the free : in the liberty wherewith 
Christ hath made us free. 

VESPERS. 

Chapter fro?n Lands. 
Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Saturday, (J>p. 227, 228.) 

A?itiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. And Jesus went up into a 
mountain, * and there He sat with His 
disciples. 

After Vespers are said the Vespers 
of the Dead. 

QUonfcap. 

Second Day. 

MATTINS. 

Hymn as on the First Sunday, {p. 

228.) 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (ii. 13.) 

A T that time : The Jews' Passover 

was at hand : and Jesus went 

up to Jerusalem, and found in the 



temple those that sold oxen, and 
sheep, and doves. And so on. 

Homily by St Austin, Bishop [of 
H ippo. ] ( 1 oth Tract on John. ) 

What hear we now, my brethren ? 
Behold, that temple was still but a 
figure, and the Lord drove out there- 
from all them that sought their own, 
even them that were come to deal in 
merchandise. And what was it that 
they sold there ? Only such things as 
were needful to men for the sacrifices 
that then were. For your love know- 
eth that, because of that people's 
carnal-mindedness and the stoniness 
of their heart, there were commanded 
unto them such sacrifices as these, 
thereby to hold them back from idol- 
atry : and there, according, they 
offered up oxen, and sheep, and doves. 
This ye have read, and know. 

First Responsory. 

1 When ye be gone over Jordan, 
there shall ye build an altar unto the 
Lord, of whole stones ; ye shall not 
lift up any iron tool upon them ; and 
ye shall offer burnt-offerings thereon, 
and peace-offerings, unto your God. 

Verse. When ye shall pass over 
[Jordan] unto the land which the 
LORD giveth you, there shall ye build 
an altar unto the Lord. 

Answer. Of whole stones ; ye shall 
not lift up any iron tool upon them ; 
and ye shall offer burnt-offerings there- 
on, and peace-offerings, unto your God. 

Second Lesson. 

T T was no great sin, therefore, if they 
sold in the temple that which was 
bought to be offered in the temple — 
and yet He drove them out. If, then, 
the Lord drove out of His temple them 
which sold such things as are lawful 



Deut. xxvii. 4-6. 



FOURTH WEEK IN LENT. 



305 



and right (for to buy and sell is lawful, 
if only it be done honestly,) and suf- 
fered not the house of prayer to be 
made an house of merchandise, what 
would He have done if He had found 
there men drunken ? 



Second Resp07isory. 

Hear, O Israel, the law of the Lord, 
and write it in thine heart as in a 
book ; and I will give unto thee a land 
flowing with milk and honey. 

Verse. Take heed therefore, and 
hearken unto My voice : and I will be 
an enemy unto thine enemies. 

Answer. And I will give unto thee 
a land flowing with milk and honey. 



Third Lesson. 

T F the house of God must not be an 
A house of merchandise, must it be 
an house to drink in ? And yet, when 
we say this, men gnash upon us with 
their teeth. But we find consolation 
in remembering that so far we are 
even as the Psalmist, who saith : 
" They gnashed upon me with their 
teeth." 1 (Ps. xxxiv. 16.) Yea, we 
have also learnt to listen to words 
that heal us, though, of a verity, the 
lashes that are made at His word are 
really made at Christ. " Lashes," 
saith He, " were heaped upon Me ; 
and they knew not what they did." 
(1 5.) 1 He was lashed by the scourges 
of the Jews, and He is lashed still by 
the blasphemies of false Christians ; 
they heap lashes upon the Lord their 
God ; and know not what they do. 
As for us, we will do that which He 
hath holpen us to do ; " But as for 
me, when they troubled me, my cloth- 
ing was sackcloth, and I humbled my 
soul with fasting" (13). 1 



Third Responsory. 

2 As I was with Moses, so I will be 
with thee, saith the Lord. Be strong 
and of a good courage, and thou shalt 
bring My people into a land flowing 
with milk and honey. 

Verse. Fear not, for I am with 
thee : whithersoever thou goest I will 
not fail thee, nor forsake thee. 

Answer. Be strong and of a good 
courage, and thou shalt bring My 
people into a land flowing with milk 
and honey. 



LAUDS. 



as o?i the 



Chapter from Isa. lvin. 
First Monday, (p. 235.) 

Hymn a?id Verse and Answer as on 
the First Sunday, (p. 233.) 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
Thus saith the Lord : * Take these 
things hence ; make not My Father's 
house an house of merchandise. 



Prayer. 

/^RANT, we beseech Thee, O Al- 
^ J mighty God, that we who year 
by year do prayerfully renew the holy 
observance of this Thy great Fast, 
may be acceptable in Thy sight, as 
touching both our bodies and our 
souls. Through our Lord JESUS 
Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of the 
Holy Ghost, one God, world without 
end. Amen. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, a?id 
None. 

After Lauds is said the Dirge. 



VESPERS. 

Chapter from Joel ii. 17, as on the 
First Monday, (p. 235.) 



1 The quotation is not from the present Latin Version. 

2 Addressed to Joshua. (Josh; i. 5, 6.) • 



306 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Hy ni7i a,7id Verse a.7id Answer as on 
the First Saturday, {pp. 227, 228.) 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. Thus saith the Lord : * 
Destroy this temple, and in three days 
I will raise it up. But He spake of 
the temple of His Body. 

Prayer. 

r\ LORD, we beseech Thee graci- 
^^^ ously to hear our supplications, 
and evermore help and defend all them 
to whom Thou hast given the mind to 
pray. Through our Lord JESUS 
Christ Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of 
the Holy Ghost, one God, world 
without end. A77ie7i. 



Third Day. 

MATTINS. 

Hymn as on the First Sunday, (p. 
228.) 

First Lessoii. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (vii. 14.) 

A T that time : About the midst of 
the Feast, Jesus went up into 
the temple, and taught. And the 
Jews marvelled. And so on. 

Homily by St Austin, Bishop [of 
Hippo.] (29th Tract on John.) 

He Who had gone up unto the 
Feast, " not openly, but as it were in 
secret," the Same taught, and spake 
openly, and no man laid hands upon 
Him. That He had hid Himself, 
was for example's sake ; that He 
manifested Himself, was to show His 
power. And when He taught, the 



Jews marvelled. As seemeth to my I 
mind, they all marvelled, but were not 
all converted. And wherefore mar- 
velled they ? Because many of them 
knew where He was born, and how 
He had been brought up. They had 
never seen Him learn letters ; but 
they heard Him dispute concerning 
the law, and alledge the testimony of 
the same, as no man could do who 
had not read it ; and no man can read 
unless he learn ; and therefore they 
marvelled. But their marvelling was 
unto the Teacher an occasion for the 
revealing of higher truth. 

First Responsory. 

Why go ye about to kill Me, a Man 
That hath l told you the truth ? If I 
have spoken evil, bear witness of the 
evil ; but if well, why smitest thou 
Me? 

Verse. 2 Many good works have I 
wrought among you ; for which of 
those works go ye about to kill Me ? 

Answer. If I have spoken evil, 
bear witness of the evil ; but if well, 
why smitest thou Me ? 

Second Lesson. 

"POR when they marvelled and whis- 
pered, the Lord said a certain 
deep thing, yea, a thing worthy of 
very careful thought and discussion. 
And what was this thing which the 
Lord gave for an answer to such as 
" marvelled that He knew letters, hav- 
ing never learned ? " " Jesus answered 
them and said : My doctrine is not 
Mine, but His That sent Me." Here 
is the first depth, for He seemeth in 
these few words to enunciate a contra- 
diction. He saith not : This doctrine 
is not Mine — but : " My doctrine is 
not Mine." If it be not Thine, O 



John vii. 20 ; viii. 40 ; xviii. 23. 



2 Cf. John x. 32. 



FOURTH WEEK IN LENT. 



307 



Thine ? If it be Thine, wherefore say- 
est Thou that it is not Thine ? For 
Thou sayest : " My doctrine is not 
Mine." 

Second Responsory. 

1 I, even I, the Lord, have led you 
forty years in the wilderness, and your 
clothes are not waxen old upon you. 
I rained down manna upon you from 
heaven, and ye have forgotten Me, 
saith the Lord. 

Verse. I led you forth out of the 
land of Egypt, and delivered you from 
the house of bondage. 

Answer. I rained down manna 
upon you from heaven, and ye have 
forgotten Me, saith the Lord. 

Third Lesson. 

j" ET us then carefully regard what 
this same holy Evangelist saith 
in the beginning of his Gospel, and we 
shall find there wherewith to loose the 
knot of this difficulty. There it is 
written : " In the beginning was the 
Word, and the Word was with God, 
and the Word was God." (i. 1.) 
What is the doctrine of the Father but 
the Word of the Father? If Christ 
therefore be the Word of the Father, 
He is the doctrine of the Father. 
But a Word cannot be of no one, but 
must needs, if it be a Word, have 
some one whose word it is. Christ 
therefore saith that His doctrine is 
Himself, and therefore not His, foras- 
much as He is the Word of the 
Father. And what hast thou that is 
so much thine own as thy self? Or 
what is there that is so little thine 
own as thyself, if that which thou art 
is another's ? 

Third Responsory. 

Moses, the servant of God, &c, if>. 
3d.) 



LAUDS. • 

Chapter from Isa. lviii. 1, as on the 
First Mo?iday, (p. 235.) 

Hymn and Verse and Aiiswer as on 
the First Sunday, (p. 233.) 

Antipho?i at the Song of Zacharias . 
Why go ye about to kill Me, * a Man 
that hath told you the truth ? 



Prayer. 

C\ LORD, we beseech Thee that the 
^^^ observance of this holy fast 
may avail us both to the increase of 
godliness in our conversation, and the 
stablishing upon us of the help of Thy 
mercy. Through our Lord JESUS 
Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of the 
Holy Ghost, one God, world without 
end. Ame7i. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, and 
None. 

VESPERS. 

Chapter from Joel ii. 17, as on the 
First Monday, (p. 235.) 

Hymn and Verse and A?iswer as on 
the First Saturday, {pp. 227, 228.) 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. No man laid hands on Him ; 
* because His hour was not yet come. 



Prayer. 

f~\ LORD, have mercy upon Thy 
^ > ^ people, and be graciously pleased 
to grant relief unto the same, who 
are ever toiling amid the storms of 
divers tribulations. Through our Lord 
JESUS Christ Thy Son, Who liveth 
and reigneth with Thee, in the unity 
of the Holy Ghost, world without end. 
Amen. 



1 Deut. xxix. 5. 



303 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Fourth Day. 

Before Mattins are said the Gradual 
Psalms. 

MATTINS. 



fore so " by nature," unless it were 
that the sin of the first man had made 
all his descendants to be born in sin, 
in that they partook of his nature ? 
If, then, our nature bring sin with it, 
all men, according to the spirit, are 
born blind. 



Hym?i as on the First Sunday, (p. 

8 ■: First Responsory. 

First Lesson. After that the Lord, &c, (p. 302.) 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (ix. 1.) 



A T that time : As Jesus passed by, 
*^^ He saw a man which was blind 
from his birth. And His disciples 
asked Him, saying : Rabbi, who did 
sin, this man, or his parents, that he 
was born blind ? And so on. 

Homily by St Austin, Bishop [of 
Hippo.] (44th Tract on John.) 

Dread and wondrous are all the 
things which our Lord Jesus Christ 
did, both His works and His words ; 
the works, because He wrought them ; 
the words, because they are deep. If, 
therefore, we consider the meaning of 
this work of His, we see that that 
man which was blind from his birth 
was a figure of mankind. This spirit- 
ual blindness was the consequence of 
the sin of the first man, from whom we 
all inherit by birth, not death only, 
but depravity also. For if blindness 
be unbelief, and faith, light, whom, 
when Christ came, did He find faith- 
ful ? Nay, the Apostle who had him- 
self been born of the race of which 
the Prophets came, saith : " We also 
were by nature children of wrath, even 
as others." (Eph. ii. 3.) And if 
children of wrath, then children also 
of vengeance, children of dam- 
nation, children of hell. And where- 

1 Oil (specially blest for that purpose by Bishops on Maundy Thursday, and called from its 
object the oil of Catechumens) is, of course, still used in so making them, both infants and 
adults. 



Second Lesson. 

'THE Lord came ; and what did 
He ? He set before us a great 
mystery. " Jesus spat on the ground, 
and made clay of the Spittle " — for 
" the Word was made flesh." 

" And He anointed the eyes of the 
blind man with the clay" — but yet 
that man saw not. He was anointed, 
indeed, but yet still he saw not. 

"And He said unto him : Go, wash 
in the Pool of Siloam." Now, it was 
the duty of the Evangelist to impress 
upon us the name of this Pool, and 
therefore he saith : " Siloam, which 
is, by interpretation, Sent." Ye, my 
brethren, know Who is signified where 
it is written: "[The sceptre shall not 
depart from Judah, nor a law-giver 
from his loins, until] He that shall be 
Sent [cometh.]" (Gen. xlix. 10.) 
Yea, He it is, Who, if He had not 
been sent, we had never been sent 
loose out of the prison-house of sin. 
The blind man went his way there- 
fore, and washed his eyes in that 
Pool, which is, by interpretation, 
" Sent " — in other words, he was bap- 
tized in Christ. When, therefore, he 
had figuratively been baptized in Him 
Whom the Father hath Sent into the 
world "he came seeing." When he 
was anointed, he was perchance made 
a figure of a Catechumen. 1 



FOURTH WEEK IN LENT. 



309 



Second Responsory. 
Behold I send, &c, {p. 302.) 



Y 



JESUS answered, and said : Neither 
hath this man sinned, nor his parents ; 
but that the works of God shall be 
made manifest in him. 

Prayer. 

f~\ GOD, Who by mean of fasting- 
^- > ^ dost give unto the righteous the 
reward of their good works, and unto 
sinners pardon ; have mercy upon us, 
we beseech Thee, and grant that we, 
humbly confessing our guiltiness, may 
so be enabled to obtain Thy forgive- 
ness. Through our Lord Jesus Christ 
Thy Son, Who liveth and reigneth 
with Thee, in the unity of the Holy 
Ghost, one God, world without end. 
Amen. 

The sa?ne Prayer at Terce, Sext, and 
None. 

vespers. 

Chapter from Joel ii. 17, as on the 
First Monday, (p. 235.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Saturday, {p. 227.) 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed' 
Virgin. The Man that is called Jesus 
* made clay of His Spittle, and an- 
ointed mine eyes, and now I do see. 

Prayer. 

ET Thy merciful ears, O Lord, be 
open unto the prayers of all them 
that entreat Thee, and that Thou 
mayest grant us ever such things as 
we ask, teach us ever to ask such 
things as are pleasing in Thy sight. 
Through our Lord JESUS Christ Thy 
Son, Who liveth and reigneth with 
Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, 
one God, world without end. Amen. 

1 The ancient Church, at least in Africa, did not so commonly use infant Baptism as we 
do. St Augustine himself was made a Catechumen when an infant, and not baptized till 
his conversion to Catholicism from the heresy which he had embraced as a young man and 
retained for nine years. 

2 A great deal of doctrine and several formularies as well as privileges were concealed from 
the Catechumens. 

VOL. II. L 



Third Lesson. 

E have heard this great mystery. 
Ask of a man: 1 "Art thou a 
Christian ? " He answereth thee : " I 
am not." Then, if thou ask him: 
" Art thou a pagan then, or a Jew ? " 
And he still saith unto thee : " Nay " 
— and thou say : " Art thou then a 
Catechumen, though not yet one of 
the faithful ? " and he saith : " Yea, a 
Catechumen " — then there thou seest 
a man anointed, but not yet washed. 
With what hath he been anointed ? 
Ask of him, and he will tell thee. 
Ask of him in Whom he believeth, 
and, being a Catechumen, he will 
say: "In Christ." But, behold, I 
speak before both Faithful and Cate- 
chumens. What said I touching the 
. Spittle and the clay ? I said : " for 
'the Word was made flesh.'" This 
the Catechumens hear, but it is not 
enough for them to be anointed ; they 
must make haste to the washing, if 
they would have their eyes opened. 2 



Third Responsory. 

Give ear, O My people, &c, 

302.) 

LAUDS. 



(A 



Chapter from Isa. lviii. 1, as on the 
First Monday, (J). 235.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Sunday, {p. 233.) 

A?itiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
Rabbi, who did sin, this man, or his 
parents, * that he was born blind ? 



3io 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Fifth Day. 
MATTINS. 

Hymn as on the First Sunday, (p. 
228.) 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to Luke (vii. 11.) 

A T that time : Jesus went into a 
^"^ city called Nairn ; and His dis- 
ciples went with Him, and much 
people. And so on. 

Homily by St Ambrose, Bishop [of 
Milan.] {Bk. v. Conwi. on Luke vii.) 

The history which we here read in 
the Holy Gospel hath for us specially 
two gracious lessons, the one from the 
literal, the other from the mystic in- 
terpretation thereof. According to the 
letter then, we see how quickly the 
compassion of God was aroused by 
the sorrow of this mother, who was a 
widow, a widow broken down by nurs- 
ing her only son, or by the bitterness 
of her grief for his death. She was a 
widow also whose worshipful conver- 
sation is borne witness to by this, 
that, " much people of the city was 
with her." Mystically however, this 
widow encompassed by the multitude 
was something more than a poor 
woman whose tears won from the 
Lord the resurrection of her young 
and only son ; for she is a type of our 
holy Mother the Church, who calleth 
back her young children to life from 
the pursuit of deathly vanities, and 
soul-slaying honours, by bidding them 
look on those tears which she sheddeth 
for such as they, and which it is un- 
lawful for her to shed for them of 
whom she knoweth that they will rise 
again. 1 



First Responsory. 

The Lord spake unto Moses, &c, 
(A 298.) 

Second Lesson. 

'T^HIS man, then, being dead, was 
carried out on a bier to the 
grave by four bearers, 2 even as the 
sinner is borne to destruction by the 
four elements of which he is composed. 
But there was hope in his latter end, 
from this, that that whereon he was 
carried was of wood, and wood, albeit 
it had profited us little before, is 
become everything to us now since 
"Jesus touched it," being a figure of 
that gibbet, the Cross, which was 
made thereof, and wherefrom salva- 
tion floweth unto all people. When, 
therefore, the horrid bearers of the 
corpse heard the commandment of 
God, they stood still, and carried no 
farther him who was dead through the 
fatal course of a material nature. And 
is not our case even as that of the 
widow's son, when we lie, as it were, 
lifeless, in our spiritual coffin, that is, 
in the last bed of our soul's death, 
consumed by the fever of unbridled 
lust, or frozen by cold-heartedness, or 
with our whole manliness sapped by 
some degrading habit of this earthly 
body, or starved by a spiritual lock- 
jaw that shutteth our mouth to the 
bright food of our soul ? These, and 
such as these, are they which carry us 
out to burial. 

Second Responsory. 
Moses stood, &c, {p. 299.) 

Third Lesson. 

"DUT even at the last hour, when the 
hope of life hath been utterly ex- 
tinguished, and the bodies of the dead 
are lying by the side of the grave, by 



1 Viz. those "who are fallen asleep in Jesus. 
- The Greek uses the Plural, not the Dual. 



FOURTH WEEK IN LENT. 



3" 



the word of God those carcases live 
again, yea, arise and speak. Then 
doth Jesus deliver the son to his 
mother, for Jesus calleth him out of 
the grave, and delivereth him from 
death. O, what is the grave of the 
soul but a bad life ? Sinner ! thy 
grave is unbelief, and thy throat is a 
sepulchre ! Even so is it written : 
"Their throat is an open sepulchre," 
(Ps. v. ii,) whereout breathe their 
pestilential words. Lo ! Christ mak- 
eth thee free from that grave ! If 
only thou wilt hear the word of God, 
thou shalt yet arise from that sepul- 
chre ! Yea, though thy sin be ex- 
ceeding weighty, so that the tears of 
thine own sorrow cannot wash it away, 
let thy Mother the Church weep for 
thee, that longing Mother who weepeth 
for every one of her children as though 
he were " the only son of his mother, 
and she was a widow." Believe me, 
her spiritual anguish is keen like the 
anguish of nature, when she seeth her 
children dead in sin, and carried out 
to be buried for ever. 

Third Pesponsory. 
Let us sing, &c, (p. 299.) 



lauds. 

Chapter from Isa. lviii. 1, as on the 
First Monday, {p. 235.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Sunday, {p. 233.) 

A?itiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
Jesus went into a city called Nairn ; * 
and, behold, there was a dead man 
carried out, the only son of his 
mother. 

Prayer. 

Q ALMIGHTY God, grant, we be- 
seech Thee, that we who are 
chastened by this hallowed fast, may 



be gladdened by holy earnestness, and 
that as earthly attractions grow dim- 
mer, things heavenly may grow clearer. 
Through our Lord Jesus Christ, Thy 
Son, Who liveth and reigneth with 
Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, 
one God, world without end. Amen. 

At the beginning of the Martyrology 
is said, 

On the morrow we commemorate 
the Most Precious Blood of our Lord 
Jesus Christ. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, and 
None. 

Sixth Day. 

Office i?i honour of the Most Precious 
Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ. 

Greater Double. 

All as on Sundays, except the fol- 
lowing. 

FIRST VESPERS. 1 

First A?itiphon. Who is this that 
cometh from Edom, with dyed gar- 
ments from Bozrah ? this, that is 
glorious in His apparel ? 

Second Antiphon. I that speak in 
righteousness, mighty to save. 

Third Antiphon. He was clothed 
with a vesture dipped in blood, and 
His name is called " The Word of 
God." 

Fourth Antiphon. Wherefore art 
Thou red in Thine apparel, and Thy 
garments like him that treadeth in the 
wine-fat ? 

Fifth Antiphon. I have trodden 
the wine - press alone, and of the 
people there was none with Me. 

Chapter and Prayer from Lauds. 



1 Antiphons from Isa. lxiii. 1-3 except the 3rd, which is Apoc. xix. 13. 



3*? 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Hymn. 1 

"CORTH let the long procession stream 

And through the streets in order wend ; 
Let the bright waving line of torches gleam, 
The solemn chant ascend. 

While we, with tears and sighs profound, 

That memorable Blood record, 
Which, stretched on His hard Cross, from 
many a Wound, 

The dying Jesus poured. 

By the first Adam's fatal sin 
Came death upon the human race ; 

In this new Adam doth new life begin, 
And everlasting grace. 

For scarce the Father heard from heaven 

The cry of His expiring Son, 
When in that cry our sins were all forgiven, 

And boundless pardon won. 

Henceforth, whoso in that dear Blood 
Washeth, shall lose his every stain, 

And, in immortal roseate beauty robed, 
An Angel's likeness gain. 



nant, and to the Blood of sprinkling 
That speaketh better things than that 
of Abel. 

Commemoration of the Week-day. 

Antiphon. A great Prophet is risen 
up among us, and God hath visited 
His people. 

Verse. God hath given His Angels 
charge over Thee. 

Answer. To keep Thee in all Thy 
ways. 

Prayer. 

r\ GOD, the Teacher and Shepherd 
^-^ of all Thy people, free the same 
from all sins which do assail them, 
that so they may ever be pleasing in 
Thy sight and safe under Thy shelter. 
Through our Lord JESUS Christ Thy 
Son, Who liveth and reigneth with 
Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, 
one God, world without end. Amen. 



Only, run thou with courage on 
Straight to the goal set in the skies ; 

He Who assists thy course will give thee 
soon 
The everlasting prize. 

Father Supreme ! vouchsafe that we, 
For whom Thine only Son was slain, 

And whom Thine Holy Ghost doth sanc- 
tify, 
May heavenly joys attain. Amen. 

Verse. 2 Lord, Thou hast redeemed 
us by Thy Blood. 

Answer. And hast made us unto 
our God a kingdom. 

Antiphon at the So fig of the Blessed 
Virgin. 3 Ye are come unto Mount 
Sion and unto the city of the living 
God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to 
Jesus the Mediator of the New Cove- 



MATTINS. 

Invitatory. Christ the Son of God 
hath redeemed us by His Own Blood. 
* O come, let us worship Him. 



Hymn.' 1 

TJE Who once, in righteous vengeance, 

Whelmed the world beneath the flood, 
Once again in mercy cleansed it 
With the stream of His Own Blood, 
Coming from His Throne on high 
On the painful Cross to die. 

5 Blest with this all-saving shower 
Earth her beauty straight resumed ; 
In the place of thorns and briars, 
Myrtles sprang and roses bloomed : 
Flowers surprised the desert waste, 
Wormwood lost her bitter taste. 



1 Sixteenth to eighteenth century, author unknown, translation by the late Rev. Father 
Caswall. 2 Apoc. v. 9, 10. 3 Heb. xii. 22, 24. 

4 Anonymous hymn of eighteenth century translation by the late Rev. E. Caswall. 

5 These two verses are apparently founded on such passages as Isa. xxxv. ; xi. 8 ; Mark 
xvi. 18, &c. 



FOURTH WEEK IN LENT. 



3*3 



Scorpions ceased ; the slimy serpent 
Laid his deadly poison by ; 
Savage beasts of cruel instinct 
Lost their wild ferocity ; 
Welcoming the gentle reign 
Of the Lamb for sinners slain. 

O the wisdom of the Eternal ! 
O its depth and height Divine ! 
O the sweetness of that mercy 
Which in Jesus Christ doth shine ! 
Slaves we were condemned to die, 
Our King pays the penalty. 

When before the Judge we tremble, 
Conscious of His broken laws, 
May this Blood in that dread hour, 
Cry aloud and plead our cause — 
Bid our guilty terrors cease — 
Be our pardon and our peace. 

Prince and Author of Salvation ! 
Lord of Majesty Supreme ! 
Jesu, praise to Thee be given 
By the world Thou didst redeem i 
Who with the Father and the Spirit 
Reignest in eternal merit. Amen. 

FIRST NOCTURN. 

Only three Psalms are said. 

First Antiphon. 1 And when eight 
days were accomplished, for the cir- 
cumcising of the child, His Name was 
called Jesus. 

Ps. ii. Why do the heathen, &c, 

(A 4.) 

Second Antiphon. 2 And being in 

an agony, He prayed more earnestly, 

and His Sweat was as it were great 

drops of Blood falling down to the 

ind, 

Ps. iii. Lord, how are they in- 
creased, &c, {p. 5.) 

Third Antiphon. 3 Judas, which 
had betrayed Him, repented himself, 
and brought again the thirty pieces of 
silver, saying : I have sinned, in that I 
have betrayed the innocent Blood. 



Ps. xv. Preserve me, O Lord, &c, 
(*, 12.) 

Verse. Lord, Thou hast redeemed 
us — 

Answer. By Thy Blood. 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Epistle 
of the Blessed Apostle Paul to the 
Hebrews (ix. 11.) 

/^HRIST being come an High 
^ Priest of good things to come, 
by a greater and more perfect taber- 
nacle, not made with hands, that is to 
say, not of this building, neither by 
the blood of goats and calves, but by 
His own Blood, He entered in once 
into the Holy Place, having obtained 
eternal redemption for us. For if the 
blood of goats or of bulls, and the 
ashes of an heifer sprinkling the un- 
clean, sanctifieth to the purifying of 
the flesh, how much more shall the 
Blood of Christ, Who, through the 
Holy Spirit, offered Himself without 
spot to God, purge our conscience 
from dead works to serve the living 
God ? And for this cause, He is the 
Mediator of the New Testament, that, 
by means of death, for the redemption 
of the transgressions that were under 
the first Testament, they, which are 
called, might receive the promise of 
eternal inheritance. 

First Responsory. 

4 Jesus also, that He might sanctify 
the people with His own Blood, suf- 
fered without the gate. Let us go 
forth therefore unto Him without the 
camp, bearing His reproach. 

Verse. Ye have not yet resisted 
unto blood, striving against sin. 

Answer. Let us go forth therefore 
unto Him without the gate, bearing 
His reproach. 



Luke 



2 Luke xxii. 44. 3 Matth. xxvii. 3, 4. 



4 Heb. xiii. 12, 13; xii. 4. 



3*4 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Second Lesson. 

TpOR where a testament is, there 
must also of necessity be the 
death of the testator. For a testa- 
ment is of force after men are dead : 
otherwise it is of no strength at all 
while the testator liveth. Wherefore 
neither the first Testament was dedi- 
cated without blood. For when Moses 
had read every precept of the law to 
all the people, he took the blood of 
calves and of goats, with water, and 
scarlet wool, and hyssop, and sprinkled 
both the book and all the people, 
saying : This is the blood of the 
Testament which God hath enjoined 
unto you. Moreover, he sprinkled 
likewise with blood both the Taber- 
nacle and all the vessels of the minis- 
try. And almost all things are by the 
law purged with blood ; and without 
shedding of blood is no remission. 

Second Responsory. 

1 Moses took the blood, and sprin- 
kled all the people, saying : This is the 
blood of the Testament which God 
hath enjoined unto you. 

Verse. Through faith he kept the 
Passover, and the sprinkling of blood, 
lest he that destroyed the first-born 
should touch them. 

Answer. Saying : This is the blood 
of the Testament which God hath 
enjoined unto you. 

Third Lesson, (x. 19.) 

TTAVING therefore, brethren, bold- 
ness to enter into the holiest by 
the Blood of Christ, by a new and liv- 
ing way which He hath consecrated 
for us, through the veil (that is to say, 
His Flesh,) and having an High 
Priest over the house of God, let us 
draw near with a true heart and full 



assurance of faith, having our hearts 
sprinkled from an evil conscience, and 
our bodies washed with pure water ; 
let us hold fast the profession of our 
faith without wavering ; (for He is 
faithful That promised,) and let us 
consider one another to provoke unto 
love and to good works. 

Third Responsory. 

2 Ye, who sometimes were far off, 
are made nigh by the Blood of Christ. 
For He is our Peace, Who hath made 
both one. 

Verse. 3 It pleased [the Father that 
in Him should all fulness dwell, and,] 
having made peace through the Blood 
of His Cross, by Him to reconcile all 
things unto Himself, [by Him, I say,] 
whether they be things in earth or 
things in heaven. 

Answer. For He is our Peace, 
Who hath made both one. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. For He is our Peace, 
Who hath made both one. 



SECOND NOCTURN. 

First Antipho?i. 4 Pilate, willing to 
content the people, delivered Jesus, 
when He had scourged Him, to be 
crucified. 

Ps. xxii. The Lord is my Shep- 
herd, &c, {p. 470 

Second Antiphon. 5 When Pilate 
saw that he could prevail nothing, he 
took water, and washed his hands j 
before the multitude, saying : I am j 
innocent of the Blood of this just l 
Person. 

Ps. xxix. I will extol Thee, &c, 

(A 750 



1 Heb. ix. 19, 20 ; xi. 28. 
4 Mark xv. 15. 



2 Eph. ii. 13, 14. 

5 Matth. xxvii. 24, 25. 



3 Col. i. 19, 20. 



FOURTH WEEK IN LENT. 



315 



Third A7itipho?i. Then answered 
all the people and said : His Blood be 
on us, and on our children. 

Ps. lxiii. Hear my voice, &c., {p. 

114.) 

Verse. 1 The Blood of JESUS Christ, 
the Son of God, — 

Answer. Cleanseth us from all sin. 

Fourth Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Sermons 
of St John Chrysostom, Archbishop 
[of Constantinople.] 

\1T0ULDEST thou hear the power 
VV of the Blood of Christ ? Then 
let us look at the figure thereof, let us 
call to mind the old type, and tell the 
story written in the antient Scriptures. 
The Egyptians would not let God 
take away Israel His firstborn, 2 "And 
Moses said : Thus saith the Lord — 
About midnight will I go out into the 
midst of Egypt, and all the first-born 
in the land of Egypt shall die, from 
the first-born of Pharaoh that sitteth 
upon his throne unto the first-born of 
the maid-servant that is behind the 
mill, and all the first-born of beasts. 
And there shall be a great cry 
throughout all the land of Egypt, such 
as there was none like it, nor shall be 
like it any more. But against any of 
the children of Israel shall not a dog 
move his tongue, against man or 
beast ; that ye may know how that 
the LORD hath put a difference be- 
tween the Egyptians and Israel." 
(Ex. xi. 4-7.) "Then Moses called 
for all the elders of Israel, and said 
unto them : Draw out and take you a 
lamb according to your families and 
kill the Passover. And ye shall take 
a bunch of hyssop and dip it in the 



blood that is in the basin, and strike 
the lintel and the two side-posts with 
the blood .... and when He seeth 
the blood upon the lintel and on the 
two side-posts, the LORD will pass 
over the door, and will not suffer the 
destroyer to come in unto your houses 
to smite you." (xii. 21-23.) An d 
could the blood of a sheep save a 
man ? Yea, in good sooth ; not be- 
cause it was blood, but because it 
represented in a figure the Blood of 
the Lord. 

Fourth Responsory . 

3 Pass the time of your sojourning 
here in fear ; forasmuch as ye know 
that ye were not redeemed with cor- 
ruptible things, as silver and gold — 

Verse. But with the Precious Blood 
of Christ, as of a lamb without spot. 

Answer. Ye know that ye were not 
redeemed with corruptible things, as 
silver and gold. 

Fifth Lesson. 

THE statues of monarchs, mindless 
and speechless images though 
they be, have sometimes been an 
helpful refuge to men endowed with 
soul and reason, not because they are 
works of the brazier's skill, but because 
the likeness they bear is a King's. 
And just so did this unconscious blood 
deliver the lives of men, not because 
it was blood, but because it fore- 
shadowed the shedding of the Blood 
of JESUS. On that night in Egypt, 
when the destroying Angel saw the 
blood upon the lintel and on the two 
side-posts, he passed over the door, 
and came not in unto the house. 
Even so now much more will the 
destroyer of souls flee away when he 



1 1 John i. 7. 

- The description in the Latin is a sort of oratorical paraphrase of the account in the 
Pentateuch, which I have thought it best to represent by two simple quotations. 
3 1 Peter i. 17-19. 



3i6 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



seeth, not the lintel and the two side- 
posts sprinkled with the blood of a 
lamb, but the 1 mouth of the faithful 
Christian, the living dwelling of the 
Holy Ghost, shining with the blood of 
the True Messiah. If the Angel let 
the type be, how shall not the enemy 
quail before the Reality ? Wouldest 
thou hear more of the power of that 
Blood ? I am willing. Consider from 
what source it welleth, from what foun- 
tain it springeth. Its fountain is the 
Heart of the Lord, pierced for us 
upon the Cross. "Then came the 
soldiers, and brake the legs of the 
first, and of the other which was cruci- 
fied with Him ; but when they came to 
Jesus, and saw that He was dead 
already, they brake not His Legs, but 
one of the soldiers with a spear 
pierced His Side, and forthwith came 
thereout Blood and Water," (John xix. 
32-34,) whereof the One is a figure of 
Baptism, and the Other of the Sacra- 
ment [of the Altar.] 2 

Fifth Responsory. 

3 Ye are bought with a great price, 
therefore glorify God and bear Him in 
your body. 

Verse. Ye are bought with a price 
^be not ye the servants of men. 

A?iswer. Glorify God and bear 
Him in your body. 

Sixth Lesson. 

/^NE of the soldiers with a spear 
^^^ pierced His Side — the veil of 
the Temple of His Body was rent in 
twain. (John ii. 19-21, Matth. xxvii. 
51.) O how glorious is the treasure 
that is laid open to me therein ! How 
noble the riches that it is my joy there 
to have found ! Thus was it with the 



Paschal lamb. The Jews slew the 
typical sheep, but to me also is it 
given to know the worth of the thing 
typified. " One of the soldiers with a 
spear pierced His Side, and forthwith 
came thereout Blood and Water." I 
would not, O my hearer, that thou 
shouldest pass by the depths of such 
a mystery as this without pausing. I 
have some mystic and hidden words to 
say. I have said that that Blood and 
Water were a figure of Baptism and 
of the Mysteries [of the Altar.] These 
are the foundations of the Church, 
" the washing of regeneration, and re- 
newing of the Holy Ghost." (Tit. iii. 
5.) I say [that the Church is founded 
in these things, whereof the substance 
came out of the Redeemer's Side, 
namely,] in Baptism and the Mysteries 
[of the Altar.] It was therefore out of 
the Side of Christ that the Church was 
created, just as it was out of the side 
of Adam that Eve was raised up to be 
his bride. (Gen. ii. 21, 22.) This is 
the reason why Paul saith, no doubt 
in allusion to the [bride of the Second 
Adam, even the Holy Church to which 
we belong, coming, like the bride of 
the first Adam, out of the] Side [of 
her Husband] : " We are members of 
His Body, [of His Flesh,] and of His 
bones." (Eph. v. 30.) For even as 
God made the woman Eve out of the 
rib which He had taken out of the side 
of Adam, so hath Christ made the 
Church out of the Blood and Water 
Which He made to flow for us out 
of His Own Side. 

Sixth Respo?isory. 

4 God commendeth His love toward 
us, in that, while we were yet sinners, 
in due time Christ died for us. 

Verse. Much more then being now 



1 I.e., probably, as wet from the Eucharistic chalice. 

2 After this comes a passage which I omit, as it relates to a reading in the Gospel of St John, 
used by St Chrysostom, but rejected by the present Greek and Latin texts. 

3 1 Cor. vi. 20 ; vii. 23. 4 Rom> v> 8} 9> 6> 



FOURTH WEEK IN LENT. 



317 



justified by His Blood, we shall be 
saved from wrath through Him. 

Answer. In that, while we were yet 
sinners, in due time Christ died for us. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. In that, while we were yet 
sinners, in due time Christ died for us. 



THIRD NOCTURN. 

First Antiphon. 1 Then came JESUS 
forth, wearing the crown of thorns, and 
the purple robe. And Pilate saith 
unto them : Behold the Man ! 

Ps. lxxiii. O God, why hast Thou, 

&c, (A 128.) 

Second Antiphon. And He, bearing 
His Cross, went forth into a place 
called "the place of a Skull," where 
they crucified Him. 

Ps. lxxxvii. O Lord God, &c, (J>. 
I45-) 

Third Antiphon. [But] when they 
[came to Jesus, and] saw that He was 
dead already, they brake not His 
Legs ; but one of the soldiers with a 
spear pierced His Side, and forthwith 
came thereout Blood and Water. 

Ps. xciii. The LORD God to Whom 
vengeance, &c, {p. 147.) 

Verse. 2 Christ loved us — 
Answer. And washed us from our 
sins in His Own Blood. 



Seventh Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (xix. 29.) 

A T that time : When JESUS had re- 
ceived the vinegar, He said : It 
is finished. And He bowed His 



Head, and gave up the ghost. And 
so on. 

Homily by St Austin, Bishop [of 
Hippo.] (120th Tract on John.) 

" One of the soldiers with a spear 
pierced His Side, and forthwith came 
thereout Blood and Water." The 
Evangelist speaketh carefully. He 
saith not that he smote the Side, nor 
yet that he wounded It, nor yet any- 
thing else, but "pierced" — "pierced" 
It, to fling wide the entrance unto life, 
whence flow the Sacraments of the 
Church, those Sacraments without 
which there is no entrance unto the 
life which is life indeed. That Blood 
which was shed there was shed for the 
remission of sins, that Water is the 
water that mantleth in the cup of 
salvation. Therein are we washed, 
and thereof do we drink. Of this was 
it a type when it was said unto Noah : 
" The door of the ark shalt thou set 
in the side thereof . . . and of 
every living thing of all flesh shalt 
thou bring into the ark ... to keep 
them alive." (Gen. vi. 16, 19.) A 
figure this of the Church. Thus was 
it that the first woman was made from 
the side of her husband while he slept, 
and she was called [Eve, which is, 
being interpreted,] "Life," "because 
she was the mother of all living." 
(Gen. iii. 20.) This name set forth a 
great good, before it became associ- 
ated with the bitter fruit of a great 
evil. And here we have the Second 
Adam bowing His Head, and the 
deep sleep of death falling upon Him 
upon the Cross, and He sleepeth, that 
the Lord God may take a thing out of 
His side, and may make thereof a wife 
for Him. O what a death was His, 
which quickeneth the dead ! What is 
cleaner than His Blood ? What more 
health-giving than His wounding ? 



VOL. 11. 



John xix. 5, 17, 33, 4. 



2 Apoc. i. 5. 



L 2 



3*8 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Seventh Resfionsory. 

1 This is He That came by Water 
and Blood, even JESUS Christ ; not by 
Water only, but by Water and Blood. 

Verse. 2 In that day there shall be 
a fountain opened to the house of 
David and to the inhabitants of Jeru- 
salem, for sin and for uncleanness. 

Answer. Not by Water only, but 
by Water and Blood. 

Eighth Lesson. 

1\ /T EN were being held bondsmen to 
the devil, slaves to evil spirits. 
But they have been redeemed from 
that bondage. They had been able to 
sell themselves, but they were not able 
to redeem themselves. A Redeemer 
came and paid the price for them. 
He shed His Blood, and at that cost 
bought the world. Ye ask what He 
bought ? Look what He paid, and ye 
shall see what He bought. Christ's 
Blood was the price. What is His 
Blood worth ? What, but the whole 
world ? What but all men ? They 
are very unthankful for His redemp- 
tion, or very proud, who say that It is 
only precious enough to buy the 
Africans, or that they themselves are 
so precious that It was shed only for 
them. Let there be an end to such 
conceit, an end to such vain-glory. 
What He paid, He paid for all. 

Eighth Resfionsory . 

3 God hath predestinated us unto 
the adoption of children by Jesus 
Christ, in Whom we have redemption 
through His Blood. 

Verse. The forgiveness of sins, ac- 
cording to the riches of His grace, 
wherein He hath abounded toward us. 

Afiswer. In Whom we have re- 
demption through His Blood. 



Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

A?iswer. In Whom we have re- 
demption through His Blood. 

Ninth Blessing. 

May the Gospel's glorious word 
Cleansing to our souls afford. 

Ninth Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (xi. i.) 

A T that time : A certain man was 
^^ sick, named Lazarus, of Beth- 
any, the town of Mary, and her sister 
Martha. And so on. 

Homily by St Austin, Bishop [of 
Hippo.] (49/// Tract on John.) 

Ye remember that in our last read- 
ing we learnt how that the Lord 
" escaped out of the hands " of them 
which " took up stones to stone Him," 
" and went away again beyond Jordan, 
into the place where John at first 
baptized." (John x. 31, 39, 40- ) 
While, then, the Lord still tarried 
there, Lazarus was sick at Bethany, 
which was a town near to Jerusalem. 

"It was that Mary which anointed 
the Lord with ointment, and wiped 
His Feet with her hair, whose brother 
Lazarus was sick. Therefore his 
sisters sent unto Him." We know 
already whither it was that they sent, 
for we know where Jesus was : " He 
was gone away again beyond Jordan." 

" His sisters sent unto Him, saying : 
Lord, behold, he whom Thou lovest is 
sick " — in order that, if He so pleased, 
He might come and free him from his 
sickness. But Jesus healed not, that 
He might afterward quicken. What 
therefore sent his sisters to say? 



1 1 John v. 6. 



- Zech. xiii. 



3 Eph. i. 5-7. 



FOURTH WEEK IN LENT. 



319 



" Lord, behold, he whom Thou lovest 
is sick" — and no more. They said 
not : " Come : " — for JESUS loved 
him ; and to tell Him that he was 
sick was enough. They dared not to 
say : " Come, and heal him : " — they 
dared not to say : " Speak the word 
where Thou art, and it shall be done 
here." And wherefore should they not 
have said this if they had the faith 
which won the Centurion so much 
praise ? He had said : " Lord, I am 
not worthy that Thou shouldest come 
under my roof; but speak the word 
only, and my servant shall be healed." 
(Matth. viii. 8.) But they said none 
of these things, only : " Lord, behold, 
he whom Thou lovest is sick " — " It is 
enough that Thou shouldest know it : 
Thou art not one that lovest and 
leavest." But some man will say : 
" How shall Lazarus be a type of the 
sinner, and yet the Lord so love him ? " 
Let such an one hear the words of the 
same Lord, which He said : " I am 
not come to call the righteous, but 
sinners." (Matth. ix. 13.) For if 
God had not loved sinners, He had 
not come down from heaven to earth. 

"When Jesus heard that, He said : 
This sickness is not unto death, but 
for the glory of God, that the Son of 
God might be glorified thereby." Such 
a glorification is no increase of majesty 
for Him, but of profit for us. He 
therefore meaneth to say : " This 
sickness is not unto death, but for the 
working of a miracle, the which being 
wrought, if men will thereby believe in 
Christ, they shall escape the real 
death." Note especially how the Lord 
doth in this place declare Himself to 
be God, as it were by implication, for 
the sake of some which say that He is 
not the Son of God. 

The hymn "We praise Thee, O 
God, &c. ," is said. 



LAUDS. 1 

First Antiphon. Who are these * 
that are arrayed in white robes ? 
And whence came they ? 

Second Antiphon. These are they 
which came out of great tribulation, 

* and have washed their robes [and 
made them white] in the Blood of the 
Lamb. 

Third Antiphon. Therefore are 
they before the throne of God, * and 
serve Him day and night. 

Fourth Antiphon. And they over- 
came the dragon * by the Blood of the 
Lamb, and by the word of their testi- 
mony. 

Fifth Antiphon. Blessed are they 

* that wash their robes in the Blood 
of the Lamb. 



Chapter. ( Heb. ix. II.) 

TDRETHREN, Christ being come an 
High Priest of good things to 
come, by a greater and more perfect 
tabernacle, not made with hands, that 
is to say, not of this building ; neither 
by the blood of goats and calves, but 
by His Own Blood, He entered in once 
into the Holy Place, having obtained 
eternal redemption. 



Hymn.' 2, 

U AIL, Holy Wounds of Jesus, hail ! 

Sweet pledges of the saving Rood ! 
Whence flow the streams that never fail — 
The purple streams of His dear Blood. 

Brighter than brightest stars ye show, 
Than sweetest rose your scent more rare, 
No Indian gem may match your glow, 
No honey's taste with yours compare. 

Portals are ye to that dear Home, 
Wherein our wearied souls may hide. 
Whereto no angry foe can come, 
The Heart of Jesus Crucified. 



1 Antiphons from Apoc. vii. 13-15 ; xii. 11 ; xxii. 14. 

2 Translation extracted from the Hymnal Noted. 



320 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



What countless stripes our Jesus bore, 
All naked left in Pilate's hall, 
What copious floods of purple gore 
Through rents in His torn garments fall. 

His comely brow, O shame and grief, 
By the sharp thorny crown is riven, 
Through Hands and Feet, without relief 
The cruel nails are deeply driven. 

But when for our poor sakes He died, 
A willing Priest, by love subdued, 
The soldier's spear transfixed His Side — 
Forth flowed the Water and the Blood. 

Beneath the winepress of God's wrath, 
To save our souls from endless pains, 
Still hour by hour His Blood flows forth 
Till not a single drop remains. 

Come, bathe you in that healing flood, 
All ye who mourn with sin opprest, 
Your only hope in Jesus' Blood, 
His Sacred Heart your only rest. 

All praise to Him, the Eternal Son, 
At God's right hand enthroned above, 
Whose Blood the world's redemption won, 
Whose Spirit seals the gifts of love. 

Amen. 

Verse. Being justified by the Blood 
of Christ — 

Answer. We shall be saved from 
wrath through Him. 

Antiphon at the So?ig of Zacharias. 
The blood shall be to you for a token, 
saith the Lord, and when I see the 
Blood I will pass over you, and the 
plague shall not be upon you to 
destroy you. 1 

Prayer throughout the Office. 

Q ALMIGHTY and Everlasting 
^^ God, Who hast appointed Thine 
Only-begotten Son to be the Redeemer 
of the world, and hast been pleased to 
be reconciled unto us by His Blood, 



grant us, we beseech Thee, so to use 
this solemn worship of the price of our 
salvation, that the Power thereof may 
here on earth keep us from all things 
that may hurt us, and the purchase of 
the same may gladden us for ever 
hereafter in Heaven. Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of the 
Holy Ghost, one God, world without 
end. Amen. 

Commemoration of the Week-day. 

Antiphon. Our friend Lazarus 
sleepeth : let us go and awake him 
out of sleep. 2 

Verse. God hath given His Angels 
charge over Thee. 

Answer. To keep Thee in all 
Thy ways. 

Prayer. 

r\ GOD, who dost quicken the 
^~^ whole world anew by Thine 
unspeakable Sacraments, grant, we 
beseech Thee, that Thy Church may 
both profit by whatsoever Thou hast 
ordained touching the things which 
are eternal, nor be comfortless of such 
help as is needful unto her touching 
the things which are temporal. 
Through our Lord Jesus Christ Thy 
Son, Who liveth and reigneth with 
Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, 
one God, world without end. Amen. 



PRIME. 



Antiphoji. Who are these, 
{First Antiphon at Lauds.) 



&c, 



Ps. liii. a?id the two first sections 
of cxviii. In the Short Responsory, 
instead of "Thou That sittest, &c," 
is said, 

Verse. Thou That hast redeemed 
us by Thy Blood. 



1 Ex. xii. 13. 

2 A curious divergence from the words of the inspired text, which are : "I go, that I may 
awake him, &c." 



FOURTH WEEK IN LENT. 



321 



Chapter. (Heb. ix. 19.) 

IV/rOSES took the blood of calves 
and of goats, with water, and 
scarlet wool, and hyssop, and sprinkled 
both the book, and all the people, 
saying : This is the blood of the 
Testament which God hath enjoined 
unto you. 

TERCE. 

Antiphon. These are they, &c, 
{Second Antiphon at Lauds.) 

Chapter from Lauds. 

Short Responsory. 

Lord, Thou hast redeemed us by 
Thy Blood. 

Answer. Lord, Thou hast redeemed 
us by Thy Blood. 

Verse. Out of every kindred, and 
tongue, and people. 

A?iswer. By Thy Blood. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. Lord, Thou hast redeemed 
us by Thy Blood. 

Verse. The Blood of Jesus Christ, 
the Son of God — 

Answer. Cleanseth us from all sin. 



SEXT. 

Antiphon. Therefore are they, &c, 
{Third Antiphon at Lauds.) 

Chapter. (Heb. ix. 13.) 

T F the blood of bulls and of goats, and 
the ashes of an heifer, sprinkling 
the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying 
of the flesh, how much more shall the 
Blood of Christ, Who through the 
Holy Spirit offered Himself without 
spot to God, purge our conscience 
from dead works, to serve the living 
God? 



Short Responsory. 

The Blood of Jesus Christ, the Son 
of God, cleanseth us. 

Answer. The Blood of JESUS 
Christ, the Son of God, cleanseth us. 

Verse. From all sin. 

Answer. Cleanseth us. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. The Blood of JESUS 
Christ, the Son of God, cleanseth us. 

Verse. Christ loved us — 

Answer. And washed us from our 
sins in His Own Blood. 

NONE. 

Antiphon. Blessed are they, &c, 
{Fifth Antiphon at Lauds.) 

Chapter as at the end of Prime. 

Short Responsory. 

Christ loved us, and washed us from 
our sins in His Own Blood. 

Answer. Christ loved us, and 
washed us from our sins in His Own 
Blood. 

Verse. And hath made us unto our 
God and Father a kingdom and 
priests. 

A?iswer. In His Own Blood. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. Christ loved us, and 
washed us from our sins in His Own 
Blood. 

Verse. Being justified by the Blood 
of Christ, — 

Answer. We shall be saved from 
wrath through Him. 

SECOND VESPERS. 



Same as the First except the follow- 



ing. 



322 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



• Last Psalm. 

Ps. cxlvii. Praise the Lord, O 
Jerusalem, &c, {p. 203.) 

Verse. We pray Thee therefore, 
help Thy servants. 

Answer. Whom Thou hast re- 
deemed by Thy Precious Blood. 

Antipho?i at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. This day shall be unto you 
for a memorial, and ye shall keep it a 
Feast to the Lord throughout your 
generations ; ye shall keep it a Feast 
by an ordinance for ever. 

Commemoration of the Week-day. 

Antiphon. Lord, if Thou hadst 
been here, Lazarus had not died ; be- 
hold, by this time he stinketh, for he 
hath lain in the grave four days al- 
ready. 

Verse. God hath given His Angels 
charge over Thee. 

Answer. To keep Thee in all Thy 
ways. 

Prayer. 

(^RANT, we beseech Thee, O Al- 
mighty God, unto all us who 
know that we are weak, and who trust 
in Thee, because we know that Thou 
art strong, the gladsome help of Thy 
loving-kindness, both here in time and 
hereafter in eternity. Through our 
Lord JESUS Christ Thy Son, Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the 
unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. Amen. 



The Sabbath. 

MATTINS. 

• Hymn as on the First Sunday, {p. 
228.) 



First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (viii. 12.) 

A T that time : Jesus spake unto the 
multitudes of the Jews, saying ; 
I am the Light of the world : He that 
followeth Me, walketh not in dark- 
ness ; but shall have the Light of life. 
And so on. 

Homily on this passage by St 
Austin, Bishop [of Hippo.] (34/^ 
Tract on John.) 

I take it that these words of the 
Lord — " I am the Light of the world " 
— are sufficiently clear to all men who 
have eyes which see that Light. At 
the same time, such men as have no 
eyes except those which are in their 
bodies, are surprised to find our Lord 
Jesus Christ saying, " I am the Light 
of the world." And that we might 
not want somebody to say, "Is our 
Lord Jesus Christ, then, the same 
sun that riseth and setteth every 
day ? " there have actually been 
heretics who did say it. The Mani- 
chasans believed that that sun which 
we see with our bodily eyes, and to 
see which is plain and common to 
beasts as well as men, was the Lord 
Christ. 

First Responsory . 
After that the Lord, &c, {p. 302.) 



Second Lesson. 

TDIJT the right faith of the Catholic 
Church damneth such comment, 
and recogniseth in it a doctrine of 
devils. And as it is her practice not 
only to brand errors by the difference 
of her own Creed, but also to remove 
them, if possible, by dint of argument, 
let us take up arms against this false- 
hood, which hath from the very begin- 
ning been the object of the curse of 



FOURTH WEEK IN LENT. 



323 



the Holy Church. God forbid that 
we should believe that our Lord Jesus 
Christ is this sun whose apparent 
movement is to rise every day in the 
East, and set every day in the West ; 
which when we see no more, night 
cometh over us ; and whose rays are 
sometimes intercepted by clouds : and 
which hath some law of motion of its 
own whereby it describeth an orbit. 1 
The planet is not the same thing as 
our Lord JESUS Christ. Our Lord 
Jesus Christ is not that created sun, 
but He by Whom that sun was 
created ; for " all things were made 
by Him, and without Him was not 
anything made that was made." (John 
i. 30 

Second Responsory. 

Behold I send, &c, {p. 302.) 



Third Responsory. 
Give ear, &c, {p. 302.) 

LAUDS. 

Chapter from Isa. lviii. 1, as on the 
First Monday, {p. 235.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
the First Sunday, {p. 233.) 

A?itiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
Thus saith the Lord : * He that fol- 
loweth Me walketh not in darkness, 
but shall have the Light of life. 



Prayer. 

r\ LORD, we pray Thee, that Thy 
^^^ grace may make fruitful the toil 
of this our godly exercise, since it shall 
nothing avail us to have fasted, if our 
Fast be not pleasing in Thy most gra- 
cious sight. Through our Lord Jesus 
Christ Thy Son, Who liveth and reign- 
eth with Thee, in the unity of the Holy 
Ghost, one God, world without end. 
Amen. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, and 
None. 

Before Vespers all Crosses, images, 
and pictures are covered with purple 
veils? 

VESPERS. 

From these Vespers till the Vespers 
of Low Sunday, both inclusive, the 
Week-day Commemoration of the Cross 
is ?iot made, and at a?id after the Lauds 
of the Monday i?i Low Week it is made 
i?i the ma?iner peculiar to Easter-tide 
till the Lauds of the Eve of the Ascen- 

1 Modern astronomers believe the centre of its orbit to be a star (Alcyone) in the constellation 
Pleiades. 

2 The extremely sorrowful tone of the Church throughout the early part of the month Nisan, 
(and that Passiontide is to be so translated is evident from the First Responsory on Passion 
Sunday,) is not explained by any custom of the Synagogue, and is perhaps intended in honour 
of our Lord's last sojourn in Judaea, during which the plots for His death were in development. 
He seems, from the Gospel and tradition, to have arrived at Bethany, from the neighbourhood 
of Jordan, on the Friday, and the Church, in deference to the " Day of Delight," postpones her 
commemoration of these woeful days till the close of the Sabbath which began on Friday evening, 
and during which He rested with those He loved, the last Sabbath but one before His death. 



Third Lesson. 

IT E is therefore the Light by Whom 
the material light was made. 
Him may we love, Him may we long 
to know, Him may we thirst after ; to 
Him may His own beams one day 
lead us, and in Him may we so live 
that we shall never die ! For He, 
even He, and none other, He is that 
Light, of Whom the Prophet that was 
given of old time sang in the Psalms, 
when he said : " For with Thee is the 
fountain of life, and in Thy Light shall 
we see light." (Ps. xxxv. 10.) Re- 
member ye likewise what the word of 
God's ancient saints saith of such 
Light : " O Lord, Thou preservest 
man and beast — How excellent is Thy 
loving-kindness, O God!" (7, 8.) 



324 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



sion, inclusive, save on Doubles and 
days within an Octave. Likewise, 
from these Vespers inchcsive, till Lauds 
of the Monday after Trinity Su?iday 
exclusive, the Common Commemora- 
tions of the Blessed Virgin Mary, of 
St Joseph, of the Holy Apostles Peter 
and Paul, of the local Patron, and for 
Peace are omitted. 

Chapter and Prayer from the follow- 
ing Lauds. 

Hymn. 1 

THE Royal Banners forward go ; 

The Cross shines forth in mystic glow, 
Where Life for sinners death endured, 
And life by death for man procured. 

Where deep for us the spear was dy'd, 
Life's torrent rushing from His Side, 
To wash us in that precious flood 
Where, mingled, Water flowed, and Blood. 

Fulfilled is all that David told 
In true Prophetic song of old ; 
"Amidst the nations, God," saith he, 
"Hath reigned and triumphed from the 
Tree." 2 

O Tree of Beauty ! Tree of Light ! 
O Tree with Royal Purple dight ! 
Elect on whose triumphal breast 
Those holy Limbs should find their rest ! 

On whose dear arms, so widely flung, 
' The weight of this world's ransom hung : 
The price of human kind to pay, 
And spoil the spoiler of his prey. 

3 O Cross, our one reliance, hail ! 
This holy Passiontide, avail 
To give fresh merit to the Saint, 
And pardon to the penitent. 

To Thee, Eternal Three in One, 
Let homage meet by all be done; 
Whom by the Cross Thou dost restore, 
Preserve and govern evermore. Amen. 



Verse. Deliver me, O Lord, from 
the evil man. 

Answer. Preserve me from the 
wicked man. 



Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. I am One * That bear wit- 
ness of Myself, and the Father That 
sent Me beareth witness of Me. 



COMPLINE. 

Note that the Verse, "Glory be to 
the Father, and to the Son, and to the 
Holy Ghost," is omitted in the Short 
Responsory, and is not said again ex- 
cept on Festivals, till the Saturday 
evening before Low Sunday. Also 
that the same change is made in all the 
other Short Responsories, viz., those at 
Prime, Terce, Sext, and None, till 
Low Sunday. The Responsory there- 
fore runs as follows : 

Into Thy hands, O Lord, I com- 
mend my spirit. 

Answer. Into Thy hands, O Lord, 
I commend my spirit. 

Verse. Thou hast redeemed us, O 
Lord God of truth. 

Answer. I commend my spirit. 
Into Thy hands, O Lord, I commend 
my spirit. 

Verse. Keep us, O Lord, as the 
apple of the eye. 

Answer. Hide us under the shadow 
of Thy wings. 

And it is thus said daily until 
Maundy - Thursday, exclusive, except 
on Festivals, when it is said as 
usual. 



i Translation by the late Rev. Dr Neale. It was composed by Venantius Fortunatus, Bishop 
of Foictiers, (whose life extended from a.d. 530 to 609,) on occasion of the reception of certain 
Kehques by bt Gregory of Tours and St Radegund, previously to the consecration of a Church 
at I oictiers. It is therefore strictly and primarily a processional hymn. (Neale's Mediaeval 

2 . So-called Italic for Ps. xcv. 10. 

3 " These two verses were added when the Hymn was appropriated to Passiontide." 



PASSION WEEK. 



325 



passion Sun&ag* 

The Lord's Day in time of the 
Passion. 

MATTINS. 

Invitatory. To-day if ye will hear 
the voice of the Lord, * harden not 
your hearts. 

In Ps. xciv. the words, "To-day, if 
ye will hear His voice, harden not your 
hearts," are omitted, and in place of 
them, the Invitatory is repeated again 
by the Choir, {or others who may be 
answering,) after which the Cantors or 
Officiant begin, "As in the Provoca- 
tion, &c." 

At the end of the Psalm the clause 
beginning " Glory be to the Father, 
&c." is also omitted, nor are the words 
" Harden not your hearts " said, but 
the entire Invitatory is simply repeated 
again. 

Hymn! 

CING, my tongue, the glorious battle, 

With completed victory rife : 
And above the Cross's trophy 

Tell the triumph of the strife : 
How the world's Redeemer conquered 

By surrendering of His life. 

. God his Maker, sorely grieving 

That the first-made Adam fell, 
When he ate the fruit of sorrow 

Whose reward was death and hell, 
Noted then this Tree, the ruin 

Of the ancient tree to quell. 2 



For the work of our salvation 
Needs would have his order so, 

And the multiform deceiver's 
Art by art would overthrow, 

And from thence 3 would bring the med'cine 
Whence the insult of the foe. 

Wherefore, when the sacred fulness 
Of th' appointed time was come, 

This world's Maker left His Father, 
Sent the Heavenly Mansion from, 

And proceeded, God Incarnate, 
Of the Virgin's Holy Womb. 

Weeps the Infant in the manger 
That in Bethlehem's stable stands ; 

And His Limbs the Virgin Mother 
Doth compose in swaddling bands, 

Meetly thus in linen folding 
Of her God the Feet and Hands. 4 

To the Trinity be glory 
Everlasting, as is meet : 

Equal to the Father, equal 
To the Son, and Paraclete : 

Trinal Unity, Whose praises 

All created things repeat. Amen. 

FIRST NOCTURN. 

First Lesson. 

Here beginneth the Book of the 
Prophet 5 Jeremiah (i. I.) 

HTHE words of Jeremiah the son of 
Hilkiah, of the Priests that were 
in Anathoth, in the Land of Benjamin : 
to whom the word of the Lord came 
in the days of Josiah the son of Amon 
king of Judah, in the thirteenth year 

1 Also by Venantius Fortunatus, and translated by the late Dr Neale. 

2 The Cross, as the mystic "tree of life," (Gen. ii. 9,) is here set by the poet in antithesis to 
the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, " whose mortal taste Brought death into the world 
and all our woe." The present translator has taken the liberty to substitute "tree" for 
"wood," as a translation of "lignum," — as more conformable to our common phraseology, 
and used by Dr Neale himself in the " Royal Banners." 

3 I.e., from trees. 4 The poem is here abruptly broken off, the rest being sung at Lauds. 
6 Abp. Kenrick says : "This Prophet was a son of Hilkiah, a Priest of Anathoth, a village in 

the tribe of Benjamin, about three miles from Jerusalem. He prophesied in Judea, from the 
thirteenth year of the reign of Josiah, about 629 years before Christ, until the eleventh year of 
Zedekiah, during a period of forty years. Subsequently, also, he prophesied both in Judea and 
in Egypt, where he is believed to have died, although the circumstances of his death are not 
ascertained. St Epiphanius states that he was stoned by the people of Taphne." (So the 
Roman Martyrology, on May 1 ; and it is generally believed that he was martyred for protest- 
ing against idolatry.) "The Prophet was, in several respects, a type of our Redeemer, of 
Whose wonderful Conception, Life, and Sufferings, striking predictions and figures are found in 
this Divine book. The Church borrows his lamentations to express her anguish and desolation 
in contemplating the Passion and Death of her Divine Spouse." For some account of the 
'•vents of his time, see the Eleventh Week after Pentecost. 



326 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



of his reign. 1 It came also in the 
days of Jehoiakim the son of Josiah 
king of Judah, unto the end of the 
eleventh year of Zedekiah, the son of 
Josiah, king of Judah, unto the carry- 
ing away of Jerusalem captive in the 
fifth month. Then the word of the 
Lord came unto me, saying : Before 
I formed thee in the belly I knew 
thee ; and before thou earnest forth 
out of the womb I sanctified thee ; 
and I ordained thee a prophet unto 
the nations. Then said I : Ah ! Lord 
God ! 2 behold, I cannot speak, for I 
am a child ! 3 



mouth ; and the Lord said unto me : 
Behold, I have put My words in thy 
mouth. See, I have this day set thee 
over the nations and over the king- 
doms, to root out and to pull down, 
and to destroy and to throw down, and 
to build and to plant. Moreover the 
word of the Lord came unto me, 
saying : Jeremiah, what seest thou ? 
And I said : I see a rod of the watch- 
early [tree. 6 ] Then said the Lord 
unto me : Thou hast well seen : for I 
will watch over My word to perform it 
early. And the word of the Lord 
came unto me the second time, say- 
ing : What seest thou ? And I said : 
I see a seething pot, and the face 
thereof is from the face of the North." 

Second Responsory. 

s They be increased that trouble me, 
and that say : There is no help for 
him in his God. Arise, O Lord ! 
Save me, O my God ! 

Verse. 9 Lest mine enemy say : I 
have prevailed against him. 

Answer. Arise, O Lord ! Save 
me, O my God ! 



First Responsory. 

4 These are the days to be observed 
of you in their seasons. In the four- 
teenth day at even is the Lord's 
Passover, and on the fifteenth day ye 
shall keep a Feast unto the Lord, the 
Most High. 5 

Verse. The Lord spake unto 
Moses, saying : Speak unto the chil- 
dren of Israel, and say unto them : 

Answer. In the fourteenth day at 
even is the Lord's Passover, and on 
the fifteenth day ye shall keep a Feast 
unto the Lord, the Most High. 

Second Lesso?i. 

DUT the Lord said unto me: Say 
not, I am a child : for thou shalt 
go to all that I shall send thee ; and 
whatsoever I command thee, thou shalt 
speak. Be not afraid of their faces, 
for I am with thee to deliver thee, 
saith the Lord. Then the Lord put 
forth His hand, and touched my 

1 About the year B.C. 629. 2 The Name. 

3 He is thought to have been about fifteen years of age. 4 Lev. xxiii. 1-6. 

5 The 14th day is Holy Saturday, and at Even (the hour of Even Song) is the joyful ceremony 
peculiar to that day. The 15th day is Easter Day. 

6 This is the Hebrew name of the almond-tree, " so called because it is the first to arouse and 
awake from the sleep of winter." (Gesenius.) 

7 "This boiling caldron is used to represent the elements of excitement on the part of the 
Babylonians and Chaldeans who were about to invade Judah." 

8 Ps. iii. 2, 3, 7. 9 Ps# xii> , 



Third Lesson. 

'THEN the Lord said unto me: 
Out of the North an evil shall 
break forth upon all the inhabitants of 
the land. For, lo, I will call all the 
families of the kingdoms of the North, 
saith the Lord : and they shall come, 
and they shall set every one his throne 
at the entering of the gates of Jerusa- 
lem, and against all the walls thereof 
round about, and against all the cities 



PASSION WEEK. 



327 



of Judah. And I will utter My judg- 
ments with them, touching all their 
wickedness who have forsaken Me, and 
have made offerings unto other gods, 
and worshipped the works of their own 
hands. Thou, therefore, gird up thy 
loins, and arise, and speak unto them 
all that I command thee. Be not dis- 
mayed at their faces ; for I will not 
make their countenance fearful unto 
thee. For, behold, I have made thee 
this day a fenced city, and an iron 
< pillar, and brazen walls against the 
whole land, against the kings of 
Judah, against the princes thereof, 
and against the priests thereof, and 
against the people of the land. And 
they shall fight against thee, and they 
shall not prevail against thee ; for I 
am with thee, saith the Lord, to 
deliver thee. 



to come to this one in worthy and 
meet manner. But these days, which 
now are, are they which ought most 
especially to stir up a godly mind in 
us, seeing that they are they which 
are nearest to that most glorious 
mystery of God's mercy. In these 
days the holy Apostles, taught by the 
Holy Ghost, ordered the chiefest store 
of Fasting, that we, sharing His Cross 
with Christ, might, albeit we are what 
we are, in Him, do some of the same 
things which He did for our sakes, 
and so realise the saying of the 
Apostle : " If we suffer with Him, we 
shall be also glorified together.'' 
(Rom. viii. 17.) He that is "par- 
taker of the sufferings" (2 Cor. i. 7) 
of the Lord hath a sure and certain 
hope of that blessedness which He 
hath promised unto us. 



Third Responsory. 

1 How long shall mine enemy be ex- 
alted over me ? Consider, and hear 
1 me, O Lord my God ! 

Verse. Those that trouble me will 
rejoice when I am moved : but I have 
trusted in Thy mercy. 

Answer. Consider and hear me, O 
Lord my God ! How long shall mine 
enemy be exalted over me ? Consider 
and hear me, O LORD my God ! 

SECOND NOCTURN. 

Fourth Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Sermons 
of Pope St Leo [the Great.] (gth 
for Lent. ) 

"P) EARLY beloved brethren, we 
know that of all the solemn 
Feasts which are kept by Christians 
the Passover is the chief. The ordi- 
nances of the whole rest of the year 
are ordered to the end of preparing us 

1 Ps. xii. 3-6. 



Fourth Responsory. 

2 Thou art my God — be not far from 
me : for trouble is near ; for there is 
none to help. 

Verse. But be not Thy strength 
far from me ; O Lord, haste Thee to 
help me. 

Answer. For trouble is near ; for 
there is none to help. 



Fifth Lesso7i. 

T\ EARLY beloved brethren, there is 
"*-^ no man to whom the state of the 
age in which he liveth denieth a share 
in this glory of partaking, first the suf- 
ferings, and then the triumph and joy, 
of Christ. It is not as though this 
time of peace were barren in occasions 
of valour. The Apostle giveth us this 
warning : " All that will live godly in 
Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution." 
(2 Tim. iii. 12.) And therefore, as 
long as godliness is watchful, persecu- 
tion will never be asleep. The Lord 

2 Ps. xxi. 11, 12, 20. 



328 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Himself saith in one of His own ex- 
hortations : " He that taketh not his 
cross, and followeth after Me, is not 
worthy of Me." (Matth. x. 38.) And 
we must not doubt that these words of 
Christ apply not only to His immedi- 
ate disciples, to whom He spoke them, 
but belong to all the faithful and to 
the whole Church, who, whosoever be 
the believers of whom she is for the 
time composed on earth, heareth in 
these words the way to be saved which 
her Lord hath appointed for them. 

Fifth Respojisory. 

1 1 was cast upon Thee from the 
womb ; Thou art my God from my 
mother's belly ; be not far from me. 
For trouble is near, and there is none 
to help. 

Verse. Save me from the lion's 
mouth, and mine affliction from the 
horns of the unicorns. 

Answer. For trouble is near, and 
there is none to help. 

Sixth Lesson. 

A S, then, it is the duty of the whole 
body of the Church to live godly, 
so is it her right at all times to be 
a-bearing of her Master's Cross, and 
that not only in her general body, but 
individually in the person of each one 
of her members, who differ every one 
from another in the way in which they 
have to carry it, and the shape in 
which it is laid upon them. The one 
common name for all their carrying of 
the Cross is persecution, but the man- 
ner of his wrestling is special to each ; 
and there is often more danger in the 
ambush than in the pitched field of 
battle. Blessed Job, who had tried 
both the goods and the ills of this 
world, said : "Is not the life of man 
upon earth a warfare?" (vii. 1.) 

1 Ps. xxi. 11, 12, 22. 



The attack upon the faithful soul 
arrayeth itself not alone in bodily 
torture and punishment ; yea, when 
the limbs are sound enough, fearful is 
the ravage that threateneth us when 
the lusts of the flesh unman us. But 
when " the flesh lusteth against the 
spirit, and the spirit against the 
flesh " (Gal. iv. 7) the reasonable mind 
findeth her reinforcement in the help- 
ful Cross of Christ, and though she be 
lured by foul cravings, yet refuseth to 
give her consent, for God maketh her 
pure thoughts to tremble for fear of 
Him. (Ps. cxviii. 120.) 

Sixth Responsory. 

2 O Lord, my trouble is near, and 
there is none to help me ; or ever 
they pierce my hands and my feet, 
save me from the lion's mouth ! — that 
I may declare Thy Name unto my 
brethren. 

Verse. O God, deliver my soul 
from the sword, and my darling from 
the power of the dog. 

Answer. That I may declare Thy 
Name unto my brethren. O Lord, my 
trouble is near, and there is none to 
help me ; or ever they pierce my hands 
and my feet, save me from the lion's 
mouth ! that I may declare Thy Name 
unto my brethren. 

THIRD NOCTURN. 

Seventh Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (viii. 46.) 

A T that time : Jesus said unto the 
^*- multitudes of the Jews : Which 
of you convinceth Me of sin ? And, if 
I say the truth, why do ye not believe 
Me ? And so on. 

Homily by Pope St Gregory [the 
Great] (iSth on the Gospels.) 

2 Ps. xxi. 12, 17, 22, 23, 21. 



PASSION WEEK. 



329 



Dearly beloved brethren, consider 
the gentleness of God. He came to 
take away sins, and He saith : "Which 
of you convinceth Me of sin ? " He 
Who, through the might of His God- 
head, was able to justify sinners, was 
contented to show by argument that 
He was not Himself a sinner. But 
exceeding dread is that which follow- 
eth. " He that is of God heareth 
God's words ; ye, therefore, hear them 
not, because ye are not of God." If, 
1 then, whosoever is of God heareth 
God's words, and whosoever is not of 
Him cannot hear His words, let each 
one ask himself if he, in the ear of his 
heart, heareth God's words, and under- 
standeth Whose words they are ? The 
Truth commandeth us to long for a 
Fatherland in heaven, to bridle the 
lusts of the flesh, to turn away from 
the glory of the world, to seek no 
man's goods, and to give away our 
own. 

Seventh Responsory. 

1 O Lord, I go mourning all the day 
long, for my soul is filled with a loath- 
some disease : they also that sought 
after my life have used violence 
against me. 

Verse. My friends and my neigh- 
bours draw near, and stand over 
against me ; and they that are nearest 
to me stand afar off. 

Answer. They also that sought 
after my life have used violence 
against me. 



Eighth Lesson. 

f ET each of you, therefore, think 

within himself if this voice of 

God is heard in the ear of his heart, 

and if he knoweth already if he is of 

God. For some there be, whom it 



pleaseth not to hear the command- 
ments of God even with their bodily 
ears. And some there be, who receive 
the same with their bodily ears, but 
whose heart is far from them. And 
some also there be, who hear the 
words of God with joy, so that they 
are moved thereby even to tears ; but 
when their fit of weeping is past they 
turn again to iniquity. They hear not 
the words of God, who despise to do 
them. Therefore, dearly beloved bre- 
thren, call up your own life before 
your mind's eye, and then ponder 
with trembling those awful words 
which the mouth of the Truth spake : 
" Ye therefore hear them not, because 
ye are not of God." 

Eighth Responsory. 

2 O Lord, hide not Thy face from 
Thy servant, for I am in trouble ; hear 
me speedily. 

Verse. Draw nigh unto my soul, 
and redeem it ; deliver me, because of 
mine enemies. 

Answer. For I am in trouble ; 
hear me speedily. 



Ninth Lesso7i. 

T'HE Truth speaketh these words 
concerning the reprobate ; but 
the reprobate make manifest the same 
thing concerning themselves, by their 
evil works. Thus immediately fol- 
loweth : — " Then answered the Jews, 
and said unto Him : Say we not well 
that Thou art a Samaritan, and hast a 
devil ? " But let us hear what the 
Lord said to this insult. " I have not 
a devil, but I honour My Father, and 
ye do dishonour Me." The Lord 
said : " I have not a devil," but He 
did not say : " I am not a Samaritan," 
for in a sense a Samaritan He was 



1 Ps. xxxvii. 7, 8, 13, 12. 



2 Ps. lxix. 17. 



330 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



indeed, 1 since the word Samaritan, in 
the Hebrew tongue, signifieth, being 
interpreted, "a Watcher," and the 
Lord is that Watcher, of Whom the 
Psalmist saith (cxxviii. 2) that unless 
He keep the city, other watchman 
waketh but in vain. He also is that 
Watchman unto Whom crieth Isaiah 
(xxi. 11): — "Watchman, what of the 
night ? Watchman, what of the 
night ? " Therefore the Lord said : — 
" I have not a devil," but not : " I 
am not a Samaritan." Of the two 
things brought against Him He denied 
one ; but by His silence, admitted the 
other. 

Ninth Responsory. 

O 2 that my head were waters, and 
mine eyes a fountain of tears, that I 
might weep day and night ! for my 
nearest brother hath supplanted me, 
and my neighbour hath walked with 
slanders against me. 

Verse. 3 Let their way be dark and 
slippery, and let the Angel of the Lord 
persecute them. 

Answer. And my neighbour hath 
walked with slanders against me. O 
that my head were waters, and mine 
eyes a fountain of tears, that I might 
weep day and night ! for my nearest 
brother hath supplanted me, and my 
neighbour hath walked with slanders 
against me. 

LAUDS. 

First Antiphon. 4 O Lord, behold 
my affliction ; * for the enemy hath 
magnified himself. 



Psalm L. 
Have mercy upon me, &c, (p. 87.) 



Second Antiphon. I called upon the 
Lord * in my distress ; and He an- 
swered me, and set me at large. 

Psalm CXVII. 

O give thanks, &c, (p. 37.) 

Third A?itiphon. 5 O Lord, Thou 
hast pleaded the cause of my soul ; * 
Thou hast redeemed my life, O Lord 
my God. 

Psalms LX1I. and LXVI. 

O God, Thou art my God, &c, (p. 

23-) 

Fourth Antipho?j. 6 O My people, 
what have I done unto thee ? * or 
wherein have I wearied thee ? testify 
against Me. 

The Song of the Three Holy Children, 

(A 24.) 

Fifth A?itiphon. 7 Shall evil be re- 
compensed for good ? * for they have 
digged a pit for My soul. 



Psalms CXLVIIL, CXL/X., CL. 
Praise ye the Lord, &c, {p. 25.) 

Chapter. (Heb. ix. 11.) 

DRETHREN, Christ being come an 
High Priest of good things to 
come, by a greater and more perfect 
tabernacle, not made with hands, that 
is to say, not of this building, neither 
by the blood of goats and calves, but 
by His Own Blood, He entered in once 
into the holy place, having obtained 
eternal redemption for us. 



1 The Jews, however, of course meant that He was one of those heretics whose headquarters 
were at Samaria, and who still exist there, of whom He had Himself said, " Ye worship ye 
know not what." (John iv. 22.) 

2 Jer. ix. 1, 4. — Lit., " Who will give my head," &c. :5 Ps. xxxiv. 6. 
4 Lam. i. 9. 5 Lam. iii. 58. 6 Micah vi. 3. 7 Jer. xviii. 20. 



PASSION WEEK. 



331 



Hymn. 1 

''THIRTY years among us dwelling, 

His appointed time fulfilled, 
Born for this, He meets His Passion, 

For that this He freely willed : 
On the Cross the Lamb is lifted, 

Where His Life-Blood shall be spilled. 

He endured the nails, the spitting, 

Vinegar, and spear, and reed ; 
From that Holy Body broken 

Blood and water forth proceed : 
Earth, and stars, and sky, and ocean, 

By that flood from stain are freed. 

Faithful Cross ! above all other, 

One and only noble Tree ! 
None in foliage, none in blossom, 

None in fruit thy peers may be: 
Sweetest wood and sweetest iron ! 

Sweetest weight is hung on thee. 

Bend thy boughs, O tree of glory ! 

Thy relaxing sinews bend ; 
For a while the ancient rigour, 

That thy birth bestowed, suspend ; 
And the King of heavenly beauty 

On thy bosom gently tend. 

Thou alone wast counted worthy 
This world's ransom to uphold ; 

For a shipwrecked race preparing 
Harbour, like the ark of old ; 

With the Sacred Blood anointed 
From the smitten Lamb that rolled. 

To the Trinity be glory 

Everlasting, as is meet: 
Equal to the Father, equal 

To the Son, and Paraclete : 
Trinal Unity, Whose praises 

All created things repeat. Amen. 

Verse. 2 Deliver me from mine 
enemies, O my God, — 

Answer. And defend me from them 
that rise up against me. 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
Jesus said * unto the multitudes of 
the Jews and unto the Chief Priests : 
He that is of God heareth God's 

1 Continuation of the Mattins Hymn. 



words ; ye, therefore, hear them not, 
because ye are not of God. 



Prayer throughout the day. 

YM"E> beseech Thee, Almighty God, 
mercifully to look upon this 
Thy family, that by Thy great good- 
ness they may be governed and pre- 
served evermore, both in body and 
soul. Through our Lord JESUS 
Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of the 
Holy Ghost, one God, world without 
end. Amen. 



PRIME. 

Antiphon. I have not a devil ; * 
but I honour My Father, and ye do 
dishonour Me, saith the Lord. 

The Short Responsory is said as fol- 
lows : — 

Christ, Thou Son of the Living God, 
have mercy on us. 

Answer. Christ, Thou Son of the 
Living God, have mercy on us. 

Verse. Thou, that sittest at the 
right hand of the Father. 

Answer. Have mercy on us. 
Christ, Thou Son of the Living God, 
have mercy on us. 

Verse. Arise, O Christ, and help us. 

Answer. And deliver us for Thy 
Name's sake. 

And it is thus said daily until 
Maundy-Thursday, exclusive, except o?i 
Festivals, when it is said as usual. 

TERCE. 

Antiphon. I seek not Mine Own 
glory ; * there is One That seeketh 
and judgeth. 



Chapter from Lauds. 



Ps. lviii. 2. 



332 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON, 



SEXT. 



Antiphon. Amen, Amen, * I say 
unto you : If a man keep My saying, 
he shall never see death. 



Chapter. (Heb. ix. 13.) 

T7OR if the blood of goats and of 
^ bulls, and the ashes of an heifer 
sprinkling the unclean, sanctifieth to 
the purifying of the flesh, how much 
more shall the Blood of Christ, Who 
through the Holy Spirit offered Him- 
self without spot to God, purge our 
conscience from dead works, to serve 
the living God ? 



NONE. 

A?itiphon. Then took the Jews up 
stones * to cast at Him : but Jesus hid 
Himself, and went out of the temple. 



Chapter. (Heb. ix. 15.) 

AND for this cause He is the Medi- 
■^^ ator of the New Testament, that, 
by means of death, for the redemption 
of the transgressions that were under 
the first Testament, they which are 
called might receive the promise of 
eternal inheritance, in Christ JESUS 
our Lord. 

VESPERS. 

Chapter from Lauds. 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
Saturday evening, {p. 324.) 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. Your father Abraham rejoiced 
to see My day : * and he saw it, and 
was glad. 

After Vespers are said the Vespers of 
the Dead. 



QUotrtap in (paeeton Q#eeR. 

Second Day. 

MATTINS. 

Invitatory and alterations in Ps. 
xciv., a7id Hymn, as yesterday. 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (vii. 32.) 

A T that time : The chief priests and 
■^^ the Pharisees sent officers to take 
Jesus. And so on. 

Homily by St Austin, Bishop [of 
H ippo. ] (31^ Tract on John. ) 

How could they take Him until such 
time as He willed to be taken ? If, 
then, they could not take Him until 
He willed to be taken, were they sent 
to watch His teaching ? " Then said 
Jesus unto them : Yet a little while 
am I with you " — what ye now seek 
to do, ye shall do ; but not yet, for I 
will not so yet. And why will I not 
so yet ? Because " yet a little while 
am I with you, and then I go unto 
Him that sent Me " — I must fulfil that 
which I am sent to do, and so go to 
suffer. 

First Responsory. 

1 Deliver me, O my God, out of the 
hand of the wicked, and out of the 
hand of the unrighteous and cruel man. 
For Thou art my hope. 

Verse. O my God, be not far from 
me : O my God, make haste for my 
help. 

Answer. For Thou art my hope. 

Seco?id Lesson. 

" VE shall seek Me, and shall not 

find Me, and where I am 

thither ye cannot come." In» these 



1 PS. 1XX. 4, 5, 12. 



PASSION WEEK. 



333 



words He foretold already His rising 
again from the dead. While He was 
with them they would not know Him ; 
and afterwards they sought Him, when 
they saw that a multitude already be- 
lieved in Him. For great signs were 
wrought also when the Lord rose 
again, and ascended up into heaven. 
Then were great signs again wrought 
through the Disciples, (that is, through 
them by Him Who worketh the same 
directly also by Himself,) according 
as He had said unto them : " Without 
Me ye can do nothing." (John xv. 5.) 
When that lame man that was laid 
daily at the Beautiful Gate of the 
Temple stood up at the voice of Peter 
(Acts iii.) and walked, and all the 
people were filled with wonder, Peter 
bade them know that it was not by 
his own power that he had made him 
to walk, but by the power of Him 
Whom they had killed. And when 
they heard this, many were pricked 
in their heart, and said : What shall 
we do ? (Acts ii. 37.) 

Second Responsory. 

1 They that lay wait for my soul 
take counsel together, saying : God 
hath forsaken him ; persecute and 
take him, for there is none to de- 
liver him. O my God, be not far 
from me : O my God, make haste 
for my help. 

Verse. 2 All that hate me whispered 
together against me ; against me did 
they devise my hurt, saying : 

Answer. Persecute and take him, 
for there is none to deliver him. O 
my God, be not far from me : O my 
God, make haste for my help. 



Third Lesson. 

T^ OR they saw that they were bur- 
dened with the guilt of an ex- 
ceeding great sin, in that they had 
killed Him, Whom it was their duty 
to worship and adore : and for that 
guilt they knew of no propitiation. 
Yea, their sin was indeed exceeding 
great ; and the consideration of it 
made them to despair for whom the 
Lord, when He hung upon the Cross, 
had been willing to pray, as it is 
written : " Then said JESUS : Father, 
forgive them, for they know not what 
they do." (Luke xxiii. 34.) At that 
hour He had seen among many aliens 
some that were His Own ; for them 
He asked forgiveness, while yet He 
suffered at their hand, nor considered 
that they were putting Him to death, 
but only that He was dying for them. 

Third Responsory. 

3 Mine enemies spoke to me peace- 
ably, but in wrath they troubled me. 
This Thou hast seen, O Lord ; keep 
not silence : be not far from me. 

Verse. But as for me, when they 
troubled me my clothing was sackcloth, 
and I humbled my soul with fasting. 

Answer. This Thou hast seen, O 
Lord ; keep not silence : be not far 
from me. Mine enemies spoke to me 
peaceably, but in wrath they troubled 
me. This Thou hast seen, O Lord ; 
keep not silence : be not far from me. 

LAUDS. 

Chapter. (Jer. xi. 19.) 

POME, let us put [poison of a 
^ deadly] tree 4 into his bread, and 
let us cut him off from the land of the 

2 Ps. xl. 8. 



1 Ps. lxx. 10, 11. 

3 Ps. xxxiv. 20, 22, 13. (Other version than the present.) 

4 The present Hebrew is, literally, "Let us destroy . . . tree in his bread," i.e., "Let us 
destroy him by putting the juice of some poisonous tree into his food." LXX., " Let us put 
tree into his bread." Jonathan ben Uzziel, " Let us cast poison of death into his food." For 
the context regarding this plot to assassinate Jeremiah, see the First Lesson on Tuesday in 
Holy Week. This passage seems to have been selected with an eye to a mystic allusion to the 
" fatal tree " of the Cross, as the instrument of death. 



334 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



living, that his name may be no more 
remembered. 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
Sunday, {p. 331.) 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
In the last day, that great day of the 
Feast, * Jesus stood and cried, saying: 
If any man thirst, let Him come unto 
Me, and drink. 



Prayer. 

IT ALLOW, O Lord, we beseech 
Thee, this our Fast, and merci- 
fully grant us forgiveness of all our 
trespasses. Through our Lord Jesus 
Christ Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of 
the Holy Ghost, one God, world 
without end. Amen. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, and 
None. 

After Lauds is said the Dirge. 

vespers. 

Chapter. (Jer. xi. 20.) 

T3UT, O Lord of Sabaoth, That 
judgest righteously, and triest 
the reins and the heart, let me see 
Thy vengeance on them : for unto 
Thee, have I revealed my cause, [O 
Lord my God.] 

Hymn and Verse a?zd Answer as on 
Saturday, [p. 324.) 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. If any man thirst, let him 
come unto Me, * and drink : and out 
of his belly shall flow living water, 
saith the Lord. 

Prayer. 

/~*RANT unto Thy people, we be- 
^ seech Thee, O Lord, health both 
of mind and body, that they, ever 



cleaving unto good works, may under 
Thy shadow be ever worthily defended. 
Through our Lord JESUS Christ Thy 
Son, Who liveth and reigneth with 
Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, 
one God, world without end. Amen. 



^ueebap in (paeeton QBeeft. 

Third Day. 

MATTINS. 

Invitatory, alteration in Ps. xciv., 
and Hymn as on Sunday, {p. 325.) 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (vii. 1.) 

A T that time : JESUS walked in Gali- 
"^^ lee ; for He would not walk in 
Jewry, because the Jews sought to kill 
Him. And so on. 

Homily by St Austin, Bishop [of 
H ippo. ] ( 2 8th Tract on John. ) 

In this chapter of the Gospel, my 
brethren, our Lord Jesus Christ hath 
much commended Himself unto our 
faith, as touching His Manhood. At 
the same time, His words and works 
were alway such as to give us to be- 
lieve that He is both God and Man, 
yea, that God Who made us, and that 
Man Who hath sought us, yea, God 
the Son, Who, as touching His God- 
head, is alway with the Father, (John 
i. 18; iii. 13,) and, as touching His 
Manhood, hath been with us in time. 
(Matth. i. 23.) For He had not 
sought the work of His hands unless 
He had been made His own work. 
(John i. 14.) Keep this well in mind, 
and let your hearts never forget it, 
namely, that Christ was not made 
Man so as to cease to be God. He, 
Who made the Manhood, took It into 



PASSION WEEK. 



335 



that Godhead Which is His from ever- 
lasting to everlasting. 1 

First Responsory. 

2 Thou art my Helper and my Pro- 
tector, O Lord, and in Thy word do I 
hope. Depart from me, ye evil doers, 
for I will keep the commandments of 
my God. 

Verse. I hate the unrighteous, but 
Thy law do I love. 

Answer. Depart from me, ye evil 
doers, for I will keep the command- 
ments of my God. 

Second Lesson. 

\XTHILE therefore He lay hid in the 
Manhood, we must not think 
that He had suffered any lessening of 
power, but that He was giving en- 
sample to our weakness. When He 
willed it, He was taken ; when He 
willed it, He was put to death. (John 
x. 1 8.) But, since He was to have 
members, that is, His faithful people, 
who would not have that power over 
their lives which He, our God, had 
over His, He hid Himself, He con- 
cealed Himself, as if it were to escape 
being put to death, to show what 
should be done by those His members 
in whom He should dwell. 



Answer. Deliver me from blood- 
guiltiness, O God, Thou God of my 
salvation. 

Third Lesson. 

17 OR Christ is not the Head of His 
Church in such sense that He is 
not in her Body ; but the whole Christ 
is in the Head, and the whole Christ 
is in the Body. That, then, which 
His members are is Himself, (though 
That Which He is, That are not there- 
fore His members.) For if His mem- 
bers had not been indeed His Own, 
how had He said unto Saul, (Acts ix. 
4): "Why persecutest thou Me?" — 
since Saul was not persecuting Him 
in Himself, but in His members, that 
is, in His faithful ones which were 
upon earth. He said not, " Why per- 
secutest thou My holy ones," nor, 
" My servants," no, nor yet called He 
them by that more honourable name, 
— " My brethren," but, " Why perse- 
cutest thou Me?" — that is, "the mem- 
bers of My Body, whose Head I am." 



Third Responsory. 

4 Make not my soul to perish with 
sinners, O God, nor my life with 
bloody men. Redeem me, O Lord ! 

Verse. 5 Deliver me, O Lord, from 
the evil man, preserve me from the 
wicked man. 

Answer. Redeem me, O Lord ! 
make not my soul to perish with sin- 
ners, O God, nor my life with bloody 
men. Redeem me, O Lord ! 

LAUDS. 

Chapter from Jer. xi. 19, as yester- 
day, (A 333-) 

Hymn and Verse a?id A?iswer as on 
Sunday , {p. 331.) 

1 The Creed of St Athanasius is as felicitous as usual in the expression oPthis dogma — " One ; 
lot by conversion of the Godhead into Flesh ; but by taking of the Manhood into God." See 
he whole passage beginning, " For the right Faith is, that we believe and confess that our Lord 
' hrist, the Son of God, is God and Man, &c, &c.' 



Second Responsory. 

8 1 will teach transgressors Thy 
ways, and sinners shall be converted 
unto Thee. Deliver me from blood- 
guiltiness, O God, Thou God of my 
salvation. 

Verse. O Lord, open Thou my lips, 
and my mouth shall show forth Thy 
praise. 



Ps. cxviii. 114, 115, 113. 



3 Ps. 1. I5-I7. 



4 Ps. XXV. 



6 Ps. cxxxix. 2. 



336 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



A?itipho?i at the Song of Zacharias. 
My time is not yet come : * but your 
time is alway ready. 



O 



Prayer. 

LORD, we beseech Thee, that 
this our Fast may be acceptable 
in Thy sight, and may, through Thy 
blessing, effectually work in us, making 
us meet here to receive Thy grace and 
hereafter the everlasting glory which 
Thou hast promised. Through our 
JESUS Christ Thy Son, Who 
and reigneth with Thee, in the 
of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
without end. Amen. 



Lord 
liveth 
unity 
world 



(JOebnee^a^ in (paeeion QSeeft. 

Fourth Day. 

Before Mattins are said the Gradual 
Psalms. 

MATTINS. 

Invitatory, alteration in Ps. xciv., 
a?id Hymn as on Sunday. 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (x. 22.) 

A T that time : It was at Jerusalem 
^^ the Feast of the Dedication, and 
it was winter. And Jesus walked 
in the Temple in Solomon's Porch.' 
And so on. 

Homily by St Austin, Bishop [of 
H ippo. ] ( 4 2>th Tract on John. ) 

The Greek word " Enkainia," used 
by the Evangelist, 2 signifieth the Feast 
of the Dedication of the Temple. The 
derivation thereof is " kainon," which 
is, being interpreted, "new;" and the 
Dedication of anything new is thence 
called Enkainia. The use of this word 
is still preserved among ourselves ; 3 if 
any man put on his new coat for the 
first time we say that he enkainiateth. 4 
It was the use of the Jews to keep 
solemn holiday upon the Anniversary 
of the Dedication of the Temple, and 
this was the Feast-day which was be- 
ing observed when the Lord spake the 
words which have been read. 5 

First Responsory. 
O Lord, I go mourning, &c, [p. 329.) 

1 An allusion to those who are to be baptised on the approaching Holy Saturday. 

2 And preserved in the Latin, probably because it was the regular name for the Feast among 
the Greek-speaking Jews. It was the Feast now commonly called " Chanucah," which is kept 
on Casleu 25, (about the beginning of December,) with an Octave. See Monday in the 
Second week of October. 

3 Viz., in Africa in the fifth century. * Encaeniare dicitur. 
5 The discourse was perhaps delivered after the Gospel at High Mass. 



The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, and 
None. 

VESPERS. 

Chapter from Jer. xi. 20, as yester- 
day, {p. 334-) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
Saturday, {p. 324.) 

Antipho?i at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgi7i. Go ye up unto this Feast : * 
I go not up [yet] unto this Feast, for 
My time is not yet full come. 

Prayer. 

f~\ LORD, we beseech Thee to give 
^^ us grace to endure to the end in 
doing of Thy will, that in our days 
Thy people which serve Thee may 
have increase, both as touching better- 
ing of their works, and multiplying of 
their numbers. 1 Through our Lord 
Jesus Christ Thy Son, Who liveth 
and reigneth with Thee, in the unity 
of the Holy Ghost, one God, world 
without end. Amen. 



PASSION WEEK. 



33/ 



Secofid Lesson. 

«JT was winter. And Jesus walked 
* in the Temple in Solomon's 
Porch. Then came the Jews round 
about Him, and said unto Him : How 
long dost Thou make us to doubt ? 
If Thou be the Christ, tell us plainly." 
They sought not to know the truth, 
but to have whereof to accuse Him. 
It was winter, and they were cold ; 
for they were slow to draw near to 
God's fire. If to believe is to draw 
near thereto, then he which believeth 
draweth near thereto : and he which 
denieth, goeth away therefrom. The 
feet of the soul, by which it moveth, 
are the affections thereof. 



Second Responsory. 
O Lord, hide not, &c, {p. 329.) 

Third Lesson. 

H^HEY were frozen with want of love, 
and at the same time on fire with 
thirst to do injury. They stood afar 
off, and yet came near ; for though 
they drew not near by faith, they 
were eager to persecute. They sought 
to hear the Lord say : "I am the 
Christ ; " and perchance they knew 
somewhat concerning Christ, as touch- 
ing His Manhood, for the Prophets 
had prophesied of Christ. But the 
Godhead of Christ even some heretics 
do not see witnessed either in the 
Prophets or in the Gospel ; how much 
less the Jews, as long as " the veil is 
upon their heart." (2 Cor. iii. 15.) 

Third Responsory. 
O that my head, &c, {p. 330.) 

LAUDS. 

Chapter from Jer. xi. 1 9, as on Mon- 

<h>, (A 333-) 



Hymn and Verse and Answer as 011 
Sunday, {p. 331.) 

A7itiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
My sheep hear My voice, * and I, the 
Lord, know them. 



O 



Prayer. 

GOD, be mercifully pleased, 
through the hallowing of this 
Fast, to shed light upon the hearts 
of Thy faithful people, and since Thou 
hast given them the mind to pray, let 
Thy pitiful ears be opened graciously 
to hear their supplications. Through 
our Lord Jesus Christ Thy Son, Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the 
unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. Amen. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, and 
No?ie. 

VESPERS. 

Chapter from Jer. xi. 20, as on M071- 
day, (j>. 334.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
Saturday, (J>. 324.) 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. Many good works have I 
wrought * among you, and for them 
ye go about to kill Me. 



Prayer. 

/GRACIOUSLY hear our prayers, O 
^ Jr Almighty God, and as Thou dost 
give us to look with confidence for Thy 
favour for which we hope, so grant us, 
in Thy goodness, the manifestation of 
Thine accustomed mercy. Through 
our Lord JESUS Christ Thy Son, Who 
liveth and reigneth with Thee, in the 
unity of the Holy Ghost, one God, 
world without end. Amen. 



338 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



t£j}urebag in (paeeton Q#eel 

Fifth Day. 
MATTINS. 

hivitatory, alteration in Ps. xciv., 
and Hymn as 011 Sunday. 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy Gos- 
pel according to Luke (vii. 36.) 

A T that time : One of the Pharisees 
^^ desired Jesus that He would 
eat with him. And He went into the 
Pharisee's house, and sat down to 
meat. And so on. 

Homily by Pope St Gregory [the 
Great.] (33rd on the Gospels.) 

When I think of the repentance of 
Mary Magdalene I feel nigher to weep 
than to say ought. Is there indeed 
any man, however stony his heart, who 
is not somewhat moved to follow the 
ensample of her repentance by the tears 
of that poor sinful woman ? She 
weighed what she did, and would not 
that what she did should be niggardly. 
She came unbidden among the guests, 
and obtruded her tears upon the ban- 
quet. Ye may hence gather her 
sorrow, that she was content to weep 
at a feast. 

First Responsory . 
Deliver me, &c, (p. 332.) 

Second Lesson. 

V\7'E believe that this woman, of 
whom Luke saith that she was 
" a woman in the city, which was a 
sinner," and whom John nameth Mary, 
(xi. 2,) was the same as she of whom 
it is written in Mark (xvi. 9) that the 
Lord had cast out of her seven devils. 
And what signify seven devils but all 



manner of sin ? For even as seven 
days do represent all time, so doth 
the number seven stand for all. There- 
fore is it said that Mary had seven 
devils, because she was full of all sin. 

Second Responsory. 
They be increased, &c, {p. 326.) 

Third Lesson. 

TDUT see how she realized the depth 
of her own filthiness, and came to 
be washed to the Well of Mercy, before 
all them which were bidden to the 
feast. The bitterness of her inward 
shame made her esteem it a light thing 
to be despised outwardly. At what 
then do we marvel, my brethren? 
That she came, or that the Lord wel- 
comed her ? Or would it be truer for 
me to say that He drew her to Him 
and welcomed her when she came ? 
for His mercy inwardly drew her, and, 
when she came, His gentleness openly 
welcomed her. 

Third Respo?isory. 
How long, &c, {p. 327.) 

LAUDS. 

Chapter from Jer. xi. 19, as on M 071- 
day, (p. 333.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
Sunday \ {p. 331.) 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
The Master saith, My time is at hand ; 
* I will keep the Passover at thy house 
with My disciples. 



Prayer. 

/^RANT, we beseech Thee, O Al- 
^ mighty God, that the honour of 
man's nature, which gluttony hath de- 
graded, may be seasonably renewed by 



PASSION WEEK. 



339 



strictness in keeping of this healthful 
Fast. Through our Lord Jesus Christ 
Thy Son, Who liveth and reigneth with 
Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, 
Dne God, world without end. Amen. 

At the beginning of the Marty rology, 
is said, 

The morrow is the Feast of the 
Seven Sorrows of the Most Blessed 
Virgin Mary. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, and 
None. 

Vespers are of the Feast. 

5nfca£ in (paeeton QBeefi, 
£ompa00ion of our Bafcp. 

Sixth Day. 

Greater Double. 

Office of the Seven Sorrows of the 
Blessed Virgin Mary. 

All fro?n the Common Office for 
Feasts of the Blessed Virgin Mary, 
except what is given here. 

Note, (ist) That should this Feast 
be prevented by one of higher dignity, 
it is transferred to the Saturday, and 
should it be agai?i prevented, it is 
omitted, (indly) If, for a?iy reason, 
the First Vespers are not said, the 
Hymn proper to them is prefixed to the 
Hymn at Mattins. «** 



FIRST VESPERS. 



Antipho?is, 
from Lauds. 



Chapter, and Prayer 



Psalms. 

I. Psalm CXV. 

I believed, therefore have I spoken, 
&c, (p. 185.) 

2. Psalm CXIX. 
In my distress, &c, (p. 186.) 

3. Psalm CXXXIX. 
Deliver me, O LORD, &c, {p. 198.) 

4. Psalm CXL. 

Lord, I cry unto Thee, &c, (p. 
1990 

5. Psalm CXLI. 

I cried unto the Lord, &c, (p. 
200.) 

Hymn. 1 

A T the Cross her station keeping, 

Stood the mournful Mother weeping, 
Close to Jesus to the last : 
Through her heart His sorrow sharing, 
All His bitter anguish bearing, 
Lo ! the piercing sword had passed ! 

O, how sad, and sore distressed, 
Now was she, that Mother Blessed 
Of the Sole-begotten One ; 
Woe-begone, with heart's prostration, 
Mother meek, the bitter Passion 
Saw she of her glorious Son. 

Who could mark, from tears refraining, 
Christ's dear Mother uncomplaining, 
In so great a sorrow bowed? 
Who, unmoved, behold her languish 
Underneath His Cross of anguish, 
'Mid the fierce unpitying crowd? 



1 This, with the Hymns at Mattins and Lauds, constitutes the master-piece of Jacopone 
da Todi, the "Stabat Mater," called by Dr Neale the most pathetic, as the "Dies Irae " is 
the most sublime, of Mediaeval poems. The translation is extracted from " Hymns for the 
Year," except verses 8 and 9, which are omitted in that compilation, and which are taken 
from the "Hymnal Noted." The "People's Hymnal" contains an extract from the same 
translation, and attributes it to Bp. R. Mant. The readings of these Hymnals differ con- 
siderably from one another. 



340 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



For His people's sins rejected, 
She her Jesus unprotected, 
Saw with thorns, with scourges rent ; 
Saw her Son from judgment taken, 
Her beloved in death forsaken, 
Till His Spirit forth He sent. 

Fount of love and holy sorrow, 
Mother! may my spirit borrow 
Somewhat of thy woe profound ; 
Unto Christ, with pure emotion, 
Raise my contrite heart's devotion, — 
Love to read in every Wound. Amen. 

Verse. Pray for us, O Virgin most 
sorrowful. 

Answer. That we may be made 
worthy of the promises of Christ. 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. l Simeon said unto Mary : 
Yea, a sword shall pierce through thine 
own soul also. 

Prayer as at Lauds. 

The following Commemoration is 
made of the Week-day. 

Antiphon. 2 With desire I have 
desired to eat this Passover with you 
before I suffer. 

Verse. Deliver me, O Lord, from 
the evil man. 

Answer. Preserve me from the 
wicked man. 

Let us pray. 

r\ LORD, we beseech Thee deal 
^^ mercifully with Thy people, and 
fill plentifully with the rich things of 
Thy commandments all them who at 
this time do, to fulfil Thy will, turn 
away from that which displeaseth 
Thee. Through our Lord Jesus 
Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of 
the Holy Ghost, one God, world with- 
out end. Amen. 

1 Luke ii. 34, 35. 



At Compli7te the last verse of the 
Hymn is altered i7i ho?iour of the 
Incarnation, a?id so at Prime, Terce, 
Sext, None, and the Seco?id Compline. 

As the Office is of a Festal form, 
the Verse, " Glory," &c, is said as 
usual in the Responsory, and so 
throughout. 

MATTINS. 

Invitatory. When we remember 
the sorrows of the most glorious Vir- 
gin, * O come, let us worship the 
Lord, Who suffered for us ! 



Hymn. 

'"THOSE five Wounds on Jesus smitten, 

Mother ! in my heart be written, 
Deep as in thine own they be : 
Thou, my Saviour's Cross who bearest, 
Thou, thy Son's rebuke who sharest, 
Let me share them both with thee ! 

In the Passion of my Maker 

Be my sinful soul partaker, 

Weep till death, and weep with thee ; 

Mine with thee be that sad station, 

There to watch the great Salvation 

Wrought upon the atoning Tree. Amen. 

FIRST NOCTURN. 

First Antiphon. The kings of the 
earth set themselves, and the rulers 
take counsel together against the 
Lord, and against His Anointed. 

Psalm II. 
Why do the heathen rage ? &c, 

(A 4.) 

Second Antiphon. I cried unto the 
Lord with my voice, and He heard 
me out of His holy hill. 

Psalm III. 
Lord, how are they increased, &c, 

(A 50 ■ 

2 Luke xxii. 15. 



PASSION WEEK. 



341 



Third Antiphon. My heart is like 
melting wax in the midst of my bowels. 

Psalm XII. 

How long wilt Thou forget me, &c, 
(A 9-) 

Verse. 1 He hath made me deso- 
late. 

Answer. And faint with sorrow all 
the day. 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Book 
of the Prophet Isaiah (liii.) 

■\17"HO hath believed our report? 
And to whom is the arm of the 
Lord revealed ? For he shall grow 
up before Him as a tender plant, and 
as a root out of a dry ground : he 
hath no form nor comeliness ; and 
when we shall see him, there is no 
beauty that we should desire him. 
He is despised and rejected of men ; 
a man of sorrows and acquainted with 
grief; and he hid as it were his face 
from us ; he was despised, and we 
esteemed him not. Surely he hath 
borne our griefs and carried our 
sorrows : yet we did esteem him 
stricken, smitten of God, and afflicted. 
But he was wounded for our trans- 
gressions, he was bruised for our ini- 
quities : the chastisement of our peace 
was upon him, and with his stripes 
we are healed. . 



sight of Him doth altogether breathe 
of love, and stirreth up to love in 
return ; His Head is bowed down, 
His Hands are stretched out, and His 
Side is opened. 

Verse. Maiden and Mother, thou 
didst look upon Him with eyes full of 
tenderness, and there thou sawest not 
only that thy Son was smitten, but 
that the world was saved. 

Answer. For the sight of Him 
doth altogether breathe of love, and 
stirreth up to love in return ; His 
Head is bowed down, His Hands are 
stretched out, and His Side is opened. 

Second Lesson. 

A LL we, like sheep, have gone 
astray ; we have turned every 
one to his own way : and the Lord 
hath laid on him the iniquity of us all. 
He was offered up because he willed 
it, 3 and he opened not his mouth. 
He is brought as a sheep to the 
slaughter, and as a lamb before his 
shearers is dumb, so he openeth 
not his mouth. He was taken from 
prison and from judgment : and who 
shall declare his generation ? For 
he was cut off out of the land of the 
living ; for the transgression of my 
people have I stricken him. And he 
made his grave with the wicked, and 
with the rich in his death ; because 
he had done no violence, neither was 
any deceit in his mouth. 



First Responsory. 

2 My Beloved is white and ruddy, 
yea, He is altogether lovely ; for the 



Second Responsory. 

His hands are like rings, 4 pierced 
with the points of the nails ; set with 



1 Lam. i. 13. 2 Cant. v. 10. 

3 Oblatus est quia ipse voluit. The present Hebrew is literally, ' ' He was oppressed and he 
was afflicted." Jonathan ben Uzziel, " He was required, and he was brought back, and without 
opening his mouth, he submitted to the mighty of the people." St Jerome, whose version this 
is, takes the words in the sense of " brought before" the several tribunals. 

4 Viz., with the centres removed so as to make the outside of the hand surround a void space, 
as a ring does, instead of the palms. The words of the original, (Cant. v. 14,) however, are— 
" His hands are like gold rings, set with gems of Tarshish " — viz., according to Gesenius, " The 
fingers when bent are like gold rings, the dyed nails are compared to gems," — the Easterns, as 

VOL. II. M 



342 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



price of man's salvation, as it were 
with jacinths. 

Verse. 1 He had horns coming out 
of His hands : there was the hiding 
of His power : for His Hands are — 

Answer. Set with the price of 
man's salvation, as it were with 
jacinths. 

Third Lesso?i. 

~\J¥T£ it pleased the Lord to bruise 
* him ; He hath put him to 
grief; when he hath made his soul 
an offering for sin, he shall see his 
seed, he shall prolong his days, and 
the pleasure of the LORD shall prosper 
in his hand. He shall see of the 
travail of his soul, and shall be 
satisfied : by his knowledge shall 
My righteous Servant justify many, 
for he shall bear their iniquities. 
Therefore will I divide him a portion 
with the great, and he shall divide 
the spoil with the strong ; because he 
hath poured out his soul unto death ; 
and he was numbered with the trans- 
gressors ; and he bare the sin of 
many, and made intercession for the 
transgressors. 

Third Responsory. 

Jesus loved John because his singu- 
lar gift of purity made him more worthy 
of love. He chose him for a virgin 
unto Himself, and he remaineth a 
virgin for ever. 

Verse. At the end, when He was 
dying upon the Cross, to him did 
He commit His mother, maiden to 
maiden. 

Answer. He chose him for a 
virgin unto Himself, and he remaineth 
a virgin for ever. 



Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. He chose him for a 
virgin unto Himself, and he remain- 
eth a virgin for ever. 

SECOND NOCTURN. 

First Antiphon. Mine enemies 
speak evil of me : When shall he 
die, and his name perish ? 

Psalm XL. 
Blessed is he that considereth, &c, 
(A 94-) 

Second Antiphon. O God, I have 
declared my life unto Thee, Thou 
hast put my tears in Thy sight. 

Psalm LV. 
Be merciful unto me, &c, {p. no.) 

Third Antiphon. As for the sons 
of men, their teeth are spears and 
arrows, and their tongue a sharp 
sword. 

Psalm L VI. 

Be merciful unto me, &c, {p. 1 10.) 

Verse. 2 My face is swollen with 
weeping, 

Answer. And on mine eyelids is 
the shadow [of death.] 

Fourth Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Sermons 
of St Bernard, Abbat [of Clairvaux.] 
( On the twelve stars. ) 



THE Martyrdom of the Virgin is 

set before us, not only in the 

prophecy of Simeon, but also in the 

is well known, being accustomed to dye their nails red, or rather orange, with henna. What 
particular stone is to be understood by " gems of Tarshish " is not certain. Jacinth is the Latin, 
and it is of a purple colour with reddish flashes, so that it might, by a violent figure, be com- 
pared to the appearance of an inflamed wound. The LXX. and others understand the topaz, 
which is found of a. pinkish and yellowish tinge, and thus would answer to the effect (viz., like 
Homer's "rosy-fingered Dawn") of finger nails died with henna. 
* Hab. iii. 4, p. 87. 2 j b xvi. 17. 



PASSION WEEK. 



343 



story itself of the Lord's Passion. 
The holy old man said of the Child 
Jesus (Luke ii. 34,) "Behold, this 
Child is set for the fall and the 
rising again of many in Israel ; and 
for a sign which shall be spoken 
against ; yea," (said he unto Mary,) 
"a sword shall pierce through thine 
own soul also " — Even so, O Blessed 
Mother ! The sword did indeed 
pierce through thy soul ! for nought 
could pierce the Body of thy Son, 
nor pierce thy soul likewise. Yea, 
and when this Jesus of thine had 
given up the ghost, and the bloody 
spear could torture Him no more, 
thy soul winced as it pierced His 
dead Side — His Own Soul might 
leave Him, but thine could not. 

Fourth Respo?isory. 

1 The Jews crucified Jesus ; and 
there was darkness ; and about the 
ninth hour JESUS cried with a loud 
voice : My God, why hast Thou for- 
saken Me ? And He bowed His 
Head, and gave up the Ghost. 

Verse. 2 O what a sickening at 
heart was thine at that moment, O 
Mother ! 

Answer. And He bowed His 
Head, and gave up the Ghost. 

Fifth Lesson. 

PHE sword of sorrow pierced 
through thy soul, so that we 
may truly call thee more than martyr, 
in whom the love, that made thee 
suffer along with thy Son, wrung thy 
heart more bitterly than any pang of 
bodily pain could do. Did not that 
word of His indeed pierce through 
thy soul, sharper than any two-edged 
sword, even to the dividing asunder 
of soul and spirit, (Heb. iv. 12,) — 
" Woman, behold thy son ! " (John 

1 Matth. xxvii. 35, 45, 46 ; John xix. 30. 



xix. 26.) O what a change to thee! 
Thou art given John for Jesus, the 
servant for his Lord, the disciple for 
his master, the son of Zebedee for 
the Son of God, a mere man for 
Very God. O how keenly must the 
hearing of those words have pierced 
through thy most loving soul, when 
even our hearts, stony, iron, as they 
are, are wrung at the memory thereof 
only ! 

Fifth Responsory. 

The suffering of the Lord was a 
sorrow exceeding sorrowful to her, 
His Mother, crushed by a natural 
bereavement. 

Verse. The iron of the soldier's 
lance pierced through the Side of the 
Redeemer, and through the soul of the 
Virgin Mother. 

Answer. A sorrow exceeding sor- 
rowful to her, His Mother, crushed 
by a natural bereavement. 

Sixth Lesson. 

TV/TAR VEL not, my brethren, that 
•*- Mary should be called a Martyr 

in spirit. He indeed may marvel who 
remembereth not what Paul saith, 
naming the greater sins of the Gen- 
tiles, that they were " without natural 
affection," (Rom. i. 31.) Far other 
were the bowels of Mary, and far 
other may those of her servants be ! 
But some man perchance will say : 
Did she not know that He was to 
die ? Yea, without doubt, she knew 
it. Did she not hope that He was 
soon to rise again ? Yea, she most 
faithfully hoped it. And did she still 
mourn because He was crucified ? 
Yea, bitterly. But who art thou, my 
brother, or whence hast thou such 
wisdom, to marvel less that the Son 
of Mary suffered than that Mary suf- 
fered with Him ? He could die in 

2 An Hexameter line. 



344 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



the Body, and could not she die with 
Him in her heart ? His was the deed 
of that Love, greater than which hath 
no man (John xv. 1 3 ;) hers, of a love, 
like to which hath no man, save He. 



Sixth Responsory. 

1 O that Thou wert my brother, that 
sucked the breasts of my mother, that 
I might cleave unto Thy Side, till 
Thy Blood touched my blood, and 
cleansed it ! O that the Fountain of 
Water 2 Which floweth from the 
Well-head of Thy Righteous Heart, 
(through Thy Veins, Who hast done 
all things well, 3 ) may at the last 
spring up for us into everlasting 
blessedness ! 

Verse. 4 Thy sons shall come from 
far, and Thy daughters shall be nursed 
at Thy Side. 

Answer. O that the Fountain of 
Water Which floweth from the Well- 
head of Thy Righteous Heart, (through 
Thy Veins, Who hast done all things 
well,) may at the last spring up for us 
into everlasting blessedness ! 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. O that the Fountain of 
Water Which floweth from the Well- 
head of Thy Righteous Heart, (through 
Thy Veins, Who hast done all things 
well,) may at the last spring up for 
us into everlasting blessedness ! 

THIRD NOCTURN, 

First A?itiphon. They bend their 
bow, even bitter words, that they may 
shoot in secret at the perfect. 

Psalm LXIII. 
Hear my voice, &c, {p. 114.) 



Second Antiphon. I am as a man 
that hath no strength, lying nerveless 
among the dead. 

Psalm LXXXVIL 

O Lord God of my salvation, &c, 
(A 145.) 

Third Antiphon. 5 He hath filled 
me with bitterness, he hath made me 
drunken with wormwood. 

Psalm CVIII. 
Hold not Thy peace, &c, {p. 168.) 

Verse. O God, I have declared my 
life unto Thee — 

Answer. Thou hast put my tears 
in Thy sight. 

Seventh Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (xix. 25.) 

A T that time : There stood by the 
^"*- Cross of Jesus His Mother, and 
His Mother's sister Mary the wife of 
Cleophas, and Mary Magdalene. And 
so on. 

Homily by St Austin, Bishop [of 
Hippo.] ( 1 1 gth Tract on John. ) 

This is that hour whereof Jesus, 
when He was about to turn water into 
wine, had said unto His Mother : 
" Woman, what have I to do with 
thee ? Mine hour is not yet come. 55 
(John ii. 4.) He had spoken of this 
hour, which then was not yet come, 
wherein, being about to die, it should 
be His duty to acknowledge her of 
whom He had been born in a dying 
Body. Then, since He was about to 
work the works of God, He thrust 



1 Cant. viii. 1. 

3 Lit., through the veins of good work. 

4 Isa. lx. 4. 



2 Cf. John iv. 14. 
Cf. Mark vii. 37. 
5 Lam. iii. 15. 



PASSION WEEK. 



345 



from Him, 1 as though He knew her 
not, her who was His Mother, not 
in that nature as touching which He is 
equal to the Father, but in that as 
touching which He is inferior to the 
Father. But now, since He is suffer- 
ing the pains of Man, He careth, with 
a Man's love, for her of whom He 
hath been made Man. And herein 
He giveth us a lesson. He doth that 
which He would have us to do. The 
Good Master, by His Own example, 
commandeth that among His disciples, 
dutiful children should succour their 
parents, as though even that Tree 
whereupon His dying Limbs were 
nailed, even that Tree were to be a 
pulpit for His teaching. 

Seventh Responsory. 

2 I am distressed for Thee, my Son 
Jesus, very pleasant hast Thou been 
unto me ; Thy love to me was wonder- 
ful, passing the love of women ; for 
even as a mother loveth her only Son, 
so loved I thee. 

Verse. 3 My life is spent with grief, 
and my years with sighing. 

Answer. For even as a mother 
loveth her only Son, so loved I Thee. 

Eighth Blessing. 

She whose Feast-day we are keeping — 
Mary, Blessed Maid of Maidens, 
Be our advocate with God. 

Eighth Lesson. 

AND of this teaching by Jesus 

Crucified cometh that which the 

Apostle Paul commandeth, where he 

1 Tunc, ergo, divina facturus, non divinitatis sed infirmitatis matrem velut incognitam re- 
pellebat, lit. " the Mother, not of His Divinity but of His weakness." To translate this passage, 
I have made use of the exact words of the Athanasian Creed. (Tr.) 

2 2 Kings (Sam.) i. 26. It is from the lament of David over Saul and Jonathan, and is, in 
the original place, "lam distressed for thee, my brother Jonathan, &c." 

3 Ps. xxx. 11. 4 Creatus. 

5 These words are not in the original from the Hymn, as is the beginning of the Responsory, 
but they rhyme with it, and express the same idea. 

6 Commortui, i.e., in baptism. Rom. vi. 4; Col. ii. 12; 2Tim. ii. 11. 



saith, (1 Tim. v. 8 :) " If any provide 
not for his own, and specially for 
those of his own house, he hath 
denied the faith, and is worse than 
an infidel." But what is so much of 
a man's own house, as children are 
of their parents' ? and parents of their 
children's ? Of this most healthy law 
the Master of the Saints was pleased 
Himself to give an example, when, 
being God, He treated not as His 
handmaid her of whom He was the 
Maker and the Lord, but, being 
also Man, gave another to be as 
a son in His stead, to her of whom 
as Man He had been made, 4 and 
whom He was leaving. 

Eighth Responsory. 

Fount of love and holy sorrow, 
Mother ! may my spirit borrow 
Somewhat of thy woe profound ; 
6 Unto Christ, with pure emotion, 
Raise my contrite heart's devotion, — 
Love to read in every Wound. 

Verse. That as thy Son Jesus for 
our sakes died and rose again, so we 
also who have died with Him 6 may 
rise again with Him. 

Answer. Unto Christ, with pure 
emotion, 

Raise my contrite heart's devotion, — 

Love to read in every Wound. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. Unto Christ, with pure 
emotion, 

Raise my contrite heart's devotion, — 

Love to read in every Wound. 



346 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Ninth Blessing: 

May the Gospel's glorious word 
Cleansing to our souls afford. 

Ninth Lesson. (Of the Week-day}) 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (xi. 47.) 

A T that time : Gathered the chief 
^"^ Priests and the Pharisees a 
council against Jesus, and said : 
What do we ? For this Man doeth 
many miracles. And so on. 

Homily by St Austin, Bishop [of 
Hippo.] (4 9M Tract on John.) 

The chief Priests and the Pharisees 
took counsel together, but " Let us 
believe in Him " was not one of the 
suggestions offered. Those lost crea- 
tures thought much more how they 
might hurt and undo Him, than how 
they might save themselves from 
perishing. And yet they were afraid, 
and took counsel together, " and said : 
What do we ? For this Man doeth 
many miracles. If we let Him thus 
alone, all men will believe on Him ; 
and the Romans shall come and take 
away both our place and our nation." 
They were afraid of losing temporal 
things, but they gave no thought to 
eternal life, and so they lost both. 2 
(Second Lesson of the Week-day.) 
For, after that the Lord had suffered 
and been glorified, first came the 
Romans, and took away both their place 
and nation, prevailing against them 
and leading them away captive, and 
secondly there followeth them that 



which is written : " But the children 
of the kingdom shall be cast out into 
outer darkness." (Matth. viii. 12.) 
But their fear was that, if all men 
should believe on Christ, none would 
remain to defend the city of God and 
His Temple against the Romans, 
since they deemed that Christ's teach- 
ing was against the Temple itself, 
and against the laws of their fathers. 
(Third Lesson of the Week-day.) 
"And one of them, named Ca'iphas, 
being the High Priest that same year, 
said unto them : " Ye know nothing 
at all, nor consider that it is ex- 
pedient for us that one man should 
die for the people, and that the whole 
nation perish not. And this spake he 
not of himself : but being High Priest 
that year, he prophesied — " Here 
we will learn that bad men are en- 
abled by the spirit of prophecy to 
foretell the future ; which, at the same 
time, the Evangelist attributeth to an 
ordinance of God, namely, that he was 
the High Priest. 

The Hymn, " We praise Thee, O 
God, &c," is said. 

LAUDS. 

First Antiphon. 3 I will get me to 
the mountain of myrrh, * and to the 
hill of frankincense. 

Second A?itiphon. My beloved * is 
white and ruddy : the hair of his head 
is like kingly purple, bound in tresses. 4 

Third Antiphon. 5 Whither is thy 
beloved gone, * O thou fairest among 
women ? Whither is thy beloved 
turned aside ? 



1 If it be transferred to Saturday, of course it is the Homily for that day. 

2 A person bound to the Office may satisfy by ending the Ninth Lesson here. 

3 Cant. iv. 6. 

4 Canalibus, lit., streamlets. Cant. vii. 5. The allusion of the Office is evidently to the 
Hair of our Lord when on the Cross, darkened with the Precious Blood, and hanging in long 
masses from under the cincture of His thorny crown. The Latin translator seems to have used 
a different vocalisation of the Hebrew text to that which we now have, and which makes the 
sense somewhat thus: "The hair of thine head is like purple" — (alluding perhaps to the 
appearance of very black hair, especially in sunlight ; and the Bride of the Canticles was 
swarthy, i. 4)— "the King is captivated by thy tresses." 5 Cant. v. 17. 



PASSION WEEK. 



347 



Fourth A?itiphon. 1 A bundle of 
myrrh is my well-beloved unto me ; he 
shall He betwixt my breasts. 

Fifth Antiphon. 2 Revive me with 
flowers, * stay me up with apples, for 
I am swooning with love. 

Chapter. (Isa. liii. i.) 

"1X7" HO hath believed our report? 
And unto whom is the arm of 
the Lord revealed ? For he shall 
grow up before Him as a tender plant, 
and as a root out of a dry ground. 



Hymn. 

"WIRGIN, thou, of virgins fairest, 
May the bitter woe thou bearest 

Make on me impression deep ; 
Thus Christ's dying may I carry, 
With Him in His Passion tarry, 

And His Wounds in memory keep. 

May His Wounds transfix me wholly, 
May His Cross and Life-Blood holy 

Ebriate my heart and mind : 
Thus inflamed with pure affection, 
In the Virgin's Son protection 

May I at the Judgment find. 

When in death my limbs are failing 
Let Thy Mother's prayer prevailing 

Lift me, Jesus ! to Thy throne : 
To my parting soul be given 
Entrance through the gate of heaven ; 

There confess me for Thine own ! 

Amen. 

Verse. Pray for us, O Virgin most 
sorrowful ! 

A?iswer. That we may be made 
worthy of the promises of Christ. 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
When Jesus saw His Mother, * and 
the disciple whom He loved, standing 
by the Cross, He saith unto His 
Mother : Woman, behold thy Son ! 
Then saith He to the disciple : Behold 
thy Mother ! 

1 Cant. i. 12. 



Prayer throughout the Office. 

f~\ GOD, at Whose Passion, accord- 
^^^ ing to the prophecy of Simeon, 
a sword of sorrow pierced through the 
gentle soul of the glorious Maiden and 
Mother Mary, mercifully grant to as 
many as do ever remember with awe 
how that her soul was pierced and 
Thou didst suffer, — even for all such 
be Thou entreated, for the sake and 
by the prayers of all Thy glorious and 
holy servants who stood so leally by 
Thy Cross, and grant unto the same, 
that for them Thy life-giving Death 
may not have been in vain. WTio 
livest and reignest with God the 
Father, in the unity of the Holy 
Ghost, one God, world without end. 
Amen. 

The following Commemoration is 
made of the Week-day. 

A?itiphon. Now the Jews' Feast- 
day was at hand, and the chief Priests 
sought how they might kill JESUS ; 
but they feared the people. 

Verse. Deliver me from mine ene- 
mies, O my God. 

Answer. And defend me from 
them that rise up against me. 

Let us pray. 

"VITE beseech Thee, O Lord, pour 
Thy grace into our hearts, that 
all we who of our own will do check 
our sins with the curb of mortification, 
may suffer here, and escape condem- 
nation to eternal punishment hereafter. 
Through our Lord JESUS Christ Thy 
Son, Who liveth and reigneth with 
Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, 
one God, world without end. Amen. 

{The Penite?itial Psalms and the 
Litany are not said, because of the 
Feast. ) 

2 Cant. ii. 5. 



348 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



PRIME. 

Antiphon. I will get me, &c. 
{First Antiphon at Lauds.) 

In the Short Responsory, instead 
of the words, " Thou that sittest at 
the Right Hand of the Father," is 
said : 

Verse. Thou That didst suffer for 
man's sake. 

And the Verse, " Glory be, &c," is 
said as usual out of Passiontide. 

Chapter at the end. (Isa. liii. 8.) 

V\7"HO shall declare his generation ? 
For he was cut off out of the 
land of the living ; for the transgres- 
sion of My people have I stricken 
him. 

TERCE. 

Antiphon. My beloved, * &c. 
{Second Antiphon at Lauds.) 

Chapter from Lauds. 



Short Respo?isory. 

He hath made me desolate. 

Answer. He hath made me des- 
olate. 

Verse. And faint with sorrow all 
the day. 

Answer. Desolate. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, 
and to the Son, and to the Holy 
Ghost. 

Answer. He hath made me des- 
olate. 

Verse. My face is swollen with 
weeping. 

Answer. And on mine eyelids is 
the shadow [of death.] 

After Terce, in community Churches, 
is said or sung the Mass of the Feast. 



SEXT. 

Antiphon. Whither, &c. {Third 
Antipho?i at Lauds.) 

Chapter. (Isa. liii. 5.) 

T_I E was wounded for our transgres- 
sions ; he was bruised for our 
iniquities : the chastisement of our 
peace was upon him, and with his 
stripes we are healed. 



Short Responsory. 

My face is swollen with weeping. 

Answer. My face is swollen with 
weeping. 

Verse. And on my eyelids is the 
shadow [of death.] 

Answer. Swollen with weeping. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. My face is swollen with 
weeping. 

Verse. O God, I have declared my 
life unto Thee, — 

Answer. Thou hast put my tears 
in Thy sight. 

NONE. 

Antiphon. Revive me, &c. {Fifth 
Antiphon at Lauds.) 

Chapter as at the e?id of Prime. 

Short Responsory. 

O God, I have declared my life unto 
Thee — 

Answer. O God, I have declared 
my life unto Thee — 

Verse. Thou hast put my tears in 
Thy sight. 

Answer. I have declared my life 
unto Thee. 

Verse. Glory be to the Father, and 
to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost. 

Answer. O God, I have declared 
my life unto Thee. 



PASSION WEEK. 



349 



Verse. Pray for us, O Virgin most 
sorrowful ! 

Answer. That we may be made 
worthy of the promises of Christ. 

After None, i?i C07Jimu?iity Churches, 
is said or sung the Mass of the Week- 
day. 

SECOND VESPERS. 

All as at the First, except the 
Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin, which is the same as that at 
the Song of Zacharias at Lauds, and 
the following 

Commemoration of the Week-day} 

Antiphon. The chief Priests con- 
sulted that they might kill Jesus, but 
they said : Not on the Feast-day, lest 
there be an uproar among the people. 

Verse. Deliver me, O Lord, from 
the evil man. 

Answer. Preserve me from the 
wicked man. 

Let us pray. 

/^RANT, we beseech Thee, O Al- 
^ mighty God, that we who seek 
the grace of Thy protection, being 
delivered from all evils, may serve 
Thee ever in peace and quietness of 
spirit. Through our Lord Jesus 
Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of 
the Holy Ghost, one God, world with- 
out end. Amen. 



First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (xii. 10.) 

A T that time : The chief Priests 
consulted that they might put 
Lazarus also to death ; because that 
by reason of him many of the Jews 
went away and believed on Jesus. 
And so on. 

Homily by St Austin, Bishop [of 
Hippo. ] ( 5 oth Tract on John. ) 

When they saw Lazarus who had 
been raised from the dead, and knew 
that the miracle which the Lord had 
worked was so great, spread about by 
so many witnesses, and so plain and 
manifest that it could neither be con- 
cealed nor denied, they invented an 
expedient ; and see here what it was 
— " But the chief Priests consulted 
that they might put Lazarus also to 
death." What stupidity of thought, 
what blindness of cruelty is here ! If 
the Lord Christ had raised up again 
a man who had died a natural death, 
could He not also raise up one that 
had died by violence ? Would killing 
Lazarus paralyse the Lord ? But if ye 
consider that there is a difference be- 
tween a man dead of disease, and a 
man killed, behold, the Lord hath 
raised up both : for He first raised 
up Lazarus, who had died a natural 
death, and then Himself, after a vio- 
lent one. 

First Responsory. 

O Lord, I go mourning, &c, {p. 
3290 

Second Lesson. (51J/ Tract.) 

Invitatory and alter atio?i in Ps. " /^\N the next day much people 
xciv. and Hymn as on last Sunday, ^^^ that were come to the feast, 

{p. 325.) when they heard that Jesus was com- 



§atot*ag in (paeeton QBeeft. 

The Sabbath. 
MATTINS. 



1 Supposing the Feast not to be transferred to Saturday. 



VOL. II. 



M 2 



350 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



ing to Jerusalem, took branches of 
palm-trees, and went forth to meet 
Him, and cried : Hosanna ! Blessed 
is the King of Israel That cometh 
in the Name of the Lord ! " Palm- 
branches are glorious boughs which 
tell of victory ; yea, the Lord was now 
ready by His Own Death to trample 
down death, and to carry the victori- 
ous banner of His Cross in triumph 
over the devil, the prince of death. 
The cry with which He was greeted, 
namely " Hosanna," hath not, as we 
are assured by some who are ac- 
quainted with the Hebrew language, 
any meaning in particular, but is a 
shout after the manner of interjections, 
as they are called, just as in Latin 
when we lament we say " Heu," or 
when we are pleased, " Vah." * 



is, as He Who is Lord of our intellect, 
a Ruler Whose power shall never wane, 
and Who openeth a Kingdom in heaven 
to all such as centre in Him their faith, 
their hope, and their love. 

Third Responsory. 
O that my head, &c, {p. 330.) 

LAUDS. 

Chapter from Jer. xi. 19, as on 
Monday, {p. 333.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
Sunday, (p. 331.) 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 

Father, glorify Thou Me * with 
Thine Own Self, with the glory which 

1 had with Thee before the world was. 



Second Responsory. 

Lord, hide not, &c, {p. 329.) 

Third Lesson. 

'T^HESE were the shouts of applause 
with which the crowd greeted 
Him, " Hosanna ! Blessed is the King 
of Israel That cometh in the Name of 
the Lord ! " What inward torture 
must the jealousy of the Jewish leaders 
have caused them, when they heard 
that great multitude hailing Christ as 
their King ! But, for the Lord, what 
was it to be King of Israel ? To the 
Eternal 2 King what mattered it to be- 
come a King of men ? And Christ is 
not King of Israel in the sense of 
monarchs who exact tribute, or arm 
hosts with steel to conquer enemies 
that are seen. But King of Israel He 

1 So in English " Hurrah," " Ha, ha, ha," and so on. Heu is generally translated "Alas," 
and Vah, "Aha." "Hosanna," however, means "Save, I pray," or "O save !" i.e., " I pray 
[God] save [you]." It is said to have been a common Hebrew cry, answering to " Long live — " 
or more nearly "God save— e.g., the King." The actual phrase occurs in Ps. cxvii. 25, 26, 
where it possibly hails the King's entrance into the temple. "Save now, O Lord ! O Lord, 
send Thou prosperity! Blessed be he that cometh in the Name of the Lord ! "—"Anna, 
Adonai, hoshiah na ; anna, Adonai, hatzlichah na." 

8 Rex saeculorum, " King of the ages," or, " King of the worlds." 



Prayer. 

r\ LORD, we beseech Thee that 
^^^ Thy people, since they are hal- 
lowed as Thine Own, may grow ever 
in godly love toward Thee their Father 
Who art in heaven, and may so be 
schooled by holy works, that being 
more and more pleasing in the sight 
of Thy Divine Majesty, they may ever 
receive more and more of Thy gifts. 
Through our Lord JESUS Christ, Thy 
Son, Who liveth and reigneth with 
Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, 
one God, world without end. Amen. 

At the beginning of the Martyr- 
ology, is said, 

The morrow is the Lord's Day of 
the Palms, on the which day our 
Lord Jesus Christ entered Jerusalem 



HOLY WEEK. 



351 



sitting upon the foal of an ass, as had 
been foretold in the prophecy of Zach- 
arias, and the multitude came forth to 
meet Him carrying branches of palm- 
trees. 



The same Prayer at Terce, 
and None. 

VESPERS. 



Sext, 



Chapter and Prayer fro?n the Lauds 
of the following morning. 

Hym?i and Verse and Aiiswer as on 
last Saturday, (p. 324.) 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgi?i. O righteous Father, the world 
hath not known Thee ; * but I have 
known Thee, because Thou hast sent 
Me. 



$alm Suntrag. 1 

The Lords Day among the Palms. 



MATTINS. 



Invitatory, alteration in Ps. xciv., 
and Hymn, as on the last Sunday, (J>. 
3250 

FIRST NOCTURN. 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Book of 
the Prophet Jeremiah (ii. 12.) 

DE astonished, O ye heavens, at this, 
and ye gates thereof, be ye very 
desolate, saith the Lord. For My 
people have committed two evils. 
They have forsaken Me, the Fountain 
of living waters, and hewed them out 
cisterns, broken cisterns, that can hold 
no water. Is Israel a servant ? Is he 



an home-born slave? Why is he 
spoiled ? The young lions roared upon 
him and yelled, 2 and they made his 
land waste : his cities are burned, with- 
out inhabitant. Also, the children of 
Memphis 3 and Tahapanes have pol- 
luted 4 thee up to the crown of thy 
head. Hast thou not procured this 
unto thyself, in that thou hast forsaken 
the Lord thy God, when He led thee 
by the way ? 

First Responsory. 

5 O Lord, in the day that I called 
upon Thee, Thou saidst : Fear not. 
Thou hast pleaded my cause, and hast 
redeemed me, O Lord my God. 

Verse. 6 In the day of my trouble 
I called upon Thee, for Thou hast 
heard me. 

Answer. Thou hast pleaded my 
cause, and hast redeemed me, O Lord 
my God. 

Second Lesson. 

AND now what hast thou to do in 
^^ the way of Egypt, to drink the 
waters of the "Miry"? 7 Or what 
hast thou to do in the way of Assyria, 
to drink the waters of the river ? 8 
Thine own wickedness shall correct 
thee, and thy back-slidings shall re- 
prove thee. Know, therefore, and see, 
that it is an evil thing and bitter, that 
thou hast forsaken the Lord thy God, 
and that My fear is not in thee, saith 
the Lord God of hosts. Of old time 
thou hast broken My yoke, and burst 
My bands ; and thou saidst : I will 
not serve. Yea, upon every high hill, 
and under every green tree, thou wan- 
derest playing the harlot. Yet I had 
planted thee a noble vine, wholly a 
right seed : how then art thou turned 



1 Called also Flowering Sunday, and Fig Sunday. 

■ Lit., gave out their voice. 3 Hebrew name, Noph. 

4 Constupraverunt : but the Hebrew is, "devour the crown, &c." 

5 Lam. iii. 57, 58. 6 Ps. lxxxv. 7. 

7 Shichor, "miry," an abusive nick-name for the Nile. 8 Euphrates. 



352 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



into the degenerate plant of a strange 
vine unto Me ? For though thou wash 
thee with nitre, and take thee much 
soap, yet thine iniquity is marked be- 
fore Me, saith the Lord God. 1 

Second Respofisory. 

My brethren stand afar off from me, 
and they which have known me — 
make themselves strange unto me, and 
leave me. 

Verse. My neighbours forsake me, 
and mine acquaintance — 

Afiswer. Make themselves strange 
unto me, and leave me. 

Third Less on. (29.) 

^THEREFORE will ye plead with 
Me ? Ye all have forsaken 
Me, saith the LORD. In vain have I 
smitten your children ; they received 
no correction ; your own sword hath 
devoured your Prophets, the genera- 
tion of you hath been as a lion unto 
them to destroy them. See ye the 
word of the Lord : Have I been a 
wilderness unto Israel ? a land of 
darkness ? Wherefore say My people : 
We have forsaken Thee ; we will come 
no more unto Thee ? Can a maid 
forget her ornaments or a bride her 
attire ? 2 Yet My people have for- 
gotten Me, days without number. 

Third Responsory. 

3 Give heed to me, O Lord, and 
hearken to the v'oice of them that con- 
tend with me. Shall evil be recom- 
pensed for good ? for they have digged 
a pit for my soul. 

Verse. Remember that I stood 
before Thee to speak good for them, 
and to turn away Thy wrath from 
them. 



A?is%ver. Shall evil be recompensed 
for good ? for they have digged a pit 
for my soul. Give heed to me, O 
Lord, and hearken to the voice of 
them that contend with me. Shall 
evil be recompensed for good ? for 
they have digged a pit for my soul. 



SECOND NOCTURN. 

Fourth Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Ser- 
mons of Pope St Leo [the Great.] 
{Second on the Passion of the 
Lord.) 

"P) EARLY beloved brethren, the 
"^ jubilant and triumphal day 
which ushereth in the commemoration 
of the Lord's Passion is come ; even 
that day for which we have longed so 
much, and for whose yearly coming 
the whole world may well look. 
Shouts of spiritual exultation are 
ringing, and suffer not that we should 
be silent. It is indeed hard to preach 
often on the same Festival, and that 
always meetly" and rightly, but a 
Priest is not free, when we celebrate 
so great and mysterious an out-pouring 
of God's mercy, to leave his faithful 
people without the service of a dis- 
course. Nay, that his subject-matter 
is unspeakable should in itself make 
him eloquent, since where enough can 
never be said, there must needs ever 
be somewhat to say. Let man's weak- 
ness, then, fall down before the glory 
of God, and acknowledge herself ever 
too feeble to unfold all the works of 
His mercy. We may jade our emo- 
tions, break down in our understand- 
ing, and fail in our speech : it is good 
for us, that even what we truly feel in 
presence of the Divine Majesty is 
but little, [compared to the vastness of 
the subject.] 



1 The Name. 



Fascia pectoralis — breast-knot. 



Jer. xviii. 19. 



HOLY WEEK. 



353 



Fourth Respoiisory. 

1 The enemy hath enclosed my 
ways : he lay in wait for me as a lion 
in secret places : he hath filled me and 
made me drunken with bitterness : 
they have cut off my life in the dun- 
geon, and cast a stone upon me. O 
Lord, behold all their iniquity, and 
plead the cause of my soul, Thou That 
art the Redeemer of my life ! 

Verse. I was a derision to all my 
people, and their song all the day. 

Answer. O Lord, behold all their 
iniquity, and plead the cause of my 
soul, Thou That art the Redeemer of 
my life ! 

Fifth Lesson. 

T70R when the Prophet saith : 
" Seek the Lord and be strong ; 
seek His face evermore," (Ps. civ. 4,) 
let no man thence conclude that he 
will ever have found all that he seeketh, 
lest he which hath ceased to come 
near should cease to be near. But 
among all the works of God which foil 
and weary the steadfast gaze of man's 
wonder, what is there that doth at 
once so ravish and so exceed the 
power of our mind's eye as do the 
sufferings of the Saviour ? He it was 
Who, to loose man from the bands 
wherewith he had bound himself by 
the first death-dealing transgression, 
spared to bring against the rage of the 
devil the power of the Divine Majesty, 
and met him with the weakness of our 
lowly nature. For if our proud and 
cruel enemy had been able to know 
the counsel of God's mercy, it had 
been his task rather to have softened 
the minds of the Jews into gentleness, 
than to have inflamed them with un- 
righteous hatred ; and so lost the 
service of all his slaves, by pursuing 
for his Debtor One That owed him 
nothing. 

\ Lam. iii. 9, io, 15, 53, 58, 14. 
3 Jer. xvii. i 7 , 18, (LXX.) 



Fifth Responsory. 

2 Save me, O God, for the waters 
are come in unto my soul : hide not 
Thy face from me ; for I am in 
trouble. Hear me speedily, O Lord 
my God. 

Verse. Draw nigh unto my soul, 
and redeem it : deliver me because of 
mine enemies. 

Answer. For I am in trouble. 
Hear me speedily, O Lord my God. 

Sixth Lesson. 

"DUT his own hate dug a pit-fall for 
him : he brought upon the Son 
of God that death which is become 
life to all the sons of men. He shed 
that innocent Blood, Which hath re- 
conciled the world unto God, and 
become at once the price of our re- 
demption and the cup of our salvation. 
The Lord hath received that which 
according to the purpose of His Own 
good pleasure He hath chosen. He 
hath let fall on Hrm the hands of 
bloody men : but while they were bent 
only on their own sin, they were ser- 
vants ministering to the Redeemer's 
work. And such was His tenderness 
even for His murderers that His prayer 
to His Father from the Cross, as 
touching them, was, not that He 
might be avenged upon them, but 
that they might be forgiven. 



Sixth Responsory. 

3 O Lord, be not Thou far from me : 
spare me in the day of evil : let them 
be confounded that persecute me ; but 
let not me be confounded. 

Verse. 4 Let all mine .enemies which 
seek after my soul be confounded. 

A?iswer. But let not me be con- 
founded. O Lord, be not Thou far 

2 Ps. lxviii. 2, 18, 19. 
4 Cf. Ps. xxxiv. 4. 



354 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



from me : spare me in the evil day : let 
them be confounded that persecute me, 
but let not me be confounded. 

THIRD NOCTURN. 

Seventh Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 

Gospel according to Matthew (xxi. 

I.) 

A T that time : When JESUS drew 

^^ nigh unto Jerusalem, and was 

come to Bethphage, unto the Mount of 

Olives, then He sent two disciples. 1 

And so on. 

Homily by St Ambrose, Bishop [of 
Milan.] (gth Book on Luke.) 

Beautiful is the type, when the 
Lord, about to leave the Jews, and to 
take up His abode in the hearts of the 
Gentiles, goeth up into the Temple ; a 
figure of His going to the true Temple 
wherein He is worshipped, not in the 
deadness of the letter, but in spirit and 
in truth, even that Temple of God 
whereof the foundations are laid, not 
in buildings of stone, but in faith. He 
leaveth behind Him such as hate Him, 
and getteth Him to such as will love 
Him. And therefore cometh He unto 
the Mount of Olives that He may 
plant upon the heights of grace those 
young olive-branches, whose Mother 
is the Jerusalem which is above. 
Upon this mountain standeth He, the 
Heavenly Husbandman, that all they 
which be planted in the House of the 
Lord may be able each one to say : 
" But I am like a fruitful olive-tree in 
the House of God." (Ps. li. 10.) 

Seventh Responsory. 

2 The Lord is with me as a Mighty 
Terrible One ; therefore have they 



persecuted me, and have not been able 
to understand. O Lord, Thou triest 
the reins and the heart — unto Thee 
have I opened my cause. 

Verse. :i O Lord, Thou hast seen 
my wrong that they do me ; judge 
Thou my cause. 

Answer. Unto Thee have I opened 
my cause. 

Eighth Lesson. 

A ND perchance that mountain doth 
■^^ signify Christ Himself. For 
what other is there that beareth such 
fruit of olives as He doth, not rich with 
store of loaded branches, but spiritu- 
ally fruitful with the fulness of the 
Gentiles ? He also it is on Whom we 
go up, and unto Whom we go up ; He 
is the Door ; He is the Way ; He is 
He Which is opened and Which 
openeth ; He is He upon Whom 
knocketh whosoever entereth in, and 
to Whom they that have entered in, 
do worship. 

A figure also was it that the dis- 
ciples went into a village, and that 
there they found an ass tied and a colt 
with her : neither could they be loosed, 
save at the command of the Lord. It 
was the hand of His Apostles which 
loosed them. He whose work and 
life are like theirs will have such 
grace as was theirs. Be thou also 
such as they, if thou wouldest loose 
them that are bound. 

Eighth Responsory. 

4 The ungodly said, reasoning with 
themselves, but not aright ; Let us lie 
in wait for the righteous, because he is 
clean contrary to our doings : he pro- 
fesseth to have the knowledge of God, 
he calleth himself the Son of God, and 
boasteth that he hath God to his 



1 Here follow the two words "dicens eis" which I omit, as they would produce an odd 
sense in English. 

2 Jer. xx. ii, i2. 3 Lam. iii. 59. 4 Wisd. ii. 1, 12, 13, 17, 16, 20. 



HOLY WEEK. 



355 



Father. Let us see if his words be 
true ; and, if he be indeed the Son of 
God, let Him deliver him from our 
hand ; let us condemn him with a 
shameful death. 

Verse. We are esteemed of him as 
counterfeits, and he abstaineth from 
our ways as from filthiness, and com- 
mendeth the end of the just. 

Answer. Let us see if his words be 
true ; and, if he be indeed the Son of 
God, let Him deliver him from our 
hand ; let us condemn him with a 
shameful death. 



Verse. For trouble is near, and 
there is none to help. 

Answer. But do Thou, O Lord 
my Redeemer, avenge me ! Liars are 
come round about me, they have 
fallen upon me with scourges without 
a cause. But do Thou, O Lord my 
Redeemer, avenge me ! 

LAUDS. 

First Antiphon. l The Lord God 
will help me : * and therefore I am 
not confounded. 



Ninth Lesson. 

"M" OW, let us consider who they 
were, who, being convicted of 
transgression, were banished from their 
home in the Garden of Eden into a 
village, and in this thou wilt see how 
Life called back again them whom 
death had cast out. For this reason, 
we read in Matthew that there were 
tied both an ass and her colt ; thus, as 
man was banished from Eden in a 
member of either sex, so is it in 
animals of both sexes that his re-call 
is figured. The she-ass is a type of 
our sinful Mother Eve, and the colt 
of the multitude of the Gentiles ; and 
it was upon the colt that Christ took 
His seat. And thus it is well written 
of the colt, (Luke xix. 30,) that thereon 
never yet had man sat, for no man 
before Christ ever called the Gentiles 
into the Church — which statement 
thou hast in Mark also (xi. 2): 
"Whereon never man sat." 

Ninth Respo?isory. 

Liars are come round about, they 
have fallen upon me with scourges 
without a cause. But do Thou, O 
Lord my Redeemer, avenge me ! 



Psalm L. 

Have mercy upon me, &c, (p. 87.) 

Second A?itiphon. They compassed 
me about, * yea, they compassed me 
about : but in the Name of the Lord ! 
I will destroy them. 

Psalm CXVII. 

O give thanks, &c, {p. 37.) 

Third Antiphon. Judge Thou my 
cause, * and redeem me, O Lord, for 
Thou art mighty to save. 

Psalms LXII. and LXVI. 

O God, Thou art my God, &c, {p. 

23-) 

Fourth Antiphon. 2 Fare we with 
Angels and men in faith to meet the 
Redeemer, * hailing the Slayer of 
death with joyful shouts of ' Hosanna 
in the highest ! ' 

The Song of the Three Holy Chil- 
dren. 

Fifth Antiphon. 3 Let them be 
confounded that persecute me ; * but 
let not me be confounded, O Lord my 
God. 



1 Isa. 1. 7. 

2 This is the fifth Antiphon sung during the Procession. It has a sort of cadence like two 
Hexameter lines, ending with ' Hosanna.' 3 j er . xvii. 18. 



356 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Psalms CXLVIIL, CXLIX., CL. 

Praise ye the Lord, &c, {pp. 25, 

26.) 

Chapter. (Phil. ii. 5.) 

"DRETHREN, Let this mind be in 
■^ you, which was also in Christ 
Jesus, Who, being in the form of God, 
thought it not robbery to be equal with 
God : but emptied Himself, and took 
upon Him the form of a servant, and 
was made in the likeness of men, and 
found in fashion as a man. 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
last Sunday, (p. 331.) 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
Much people that were come to the 
Feast, cried * unto the Lord : Blessed 
is He That cometh in the Name of the 
Lord ! Hosanna in the highest ! Y 

Prayer throughout the Office. 

A LMIGHTY and everlasting God, 
"^^ Who, of Thy tender love to- 
wards mankind, hast sent Thy Son 
our Saviour Jesus Christ to take upon 
Him our flesh and to suffer death 
upon the Cross, that all mankind 
should follow the example of His 
great humility ; mercifully grant, that 
we may both follow the example of 
His patience, and also be made par- 
takers of His resurrection. Through 
the Same our Lord JESUS Christ Thy 
Son, Who liveth and reigneth with 
Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, 
one God, world without end. A?nen. 

PRIME. 

Antiphon. The Hebrew children 
took branches of olive-trees, * and 
went forth to meet the Lord, crying 
and saying : Hosanna in the highest ! 

1 That is, either "Save [Him,] we pray [Thee, O Thou That dwellest] in the highest," or 
"O send [Him] health from heaven." 

2 Jer. xx. 12 ; Lam. iii. 58. 3 Lam. iii. 55, 56. 



TERCE. 

Antiphon. The Hebrew children 
spread their garments in the way, * 
and cried, saying : Hosanna to the 
Son of David ! Blessed is He that 
cometh in the Name of the Lord ! 

Chapter from Lauds. 

After Terce, and, in Parish 
Churches, the blessing and sprinkling 
of the Holy Water, there follows the 
ceremony of blessing the palms, or other 
boughs of trees, during which is read 
the Lesson ft vm Exod. xv. xvi. and the 
Gospel from Matth. xxi., which is the 
subject of the Homily at Mattins. 
When the branches have been distrib- 
uted to the people, follows the pro- 
cession, which represents the Trium- 
phal Entry of our Lord into the Holy 
City. After the procession the Liturgy 
is immediately celebrated, with the rites 
peculiar to the day, and including the 
Epistle from Phil. ii. and the Passion 
according to Matthew (xxvi. xxvii. ) 



SEXT. 

Antiphon. 2 Unto Thee have I 
opened my cause, * O Lord my God, 
Which art the Redeemer of my life. 

Chapter. (Phil. ii. 8.) 

TIE humbled Himself and became 
obedient unto death, even the 
death of the Cross, wherefore God also 
hath highly exalted Him, and given 
Him a Name which is above every 
name. 

NONE. 

Antiphon. 3 I will call upon Thy 
Name, * O LORD ; hide not Thy face 
at my cry. 



HOLY WEEK. 



357 



Chapter. (Phil. ii. 10.) 

A T the Name of JESUS let every 
"^^ knee bow, of things in heaven, 
and things in earth, and things under 
the earth : and let every tongue con- 
fess that our Lord Jesus Christ is in 
,the glory of God the Father. 

VESPERS. 

Chapter from Lauds. 
Hyimi and Verse and Answer as on 
Saturday before Passion Sunday, {p. 

3240 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. Y It is written : I will smite 
the Shepherd, * and the sheep of the 
flock shall be scattered abroad : but 
after I am risen again, I will go before 
you into Galilee: there shall ye see Me, 
saith the Lord. 



sat at the table" — lest men should 
deem that it was but by an ocular 
delusion that they had seen him arise 
from the dead. He lived therefore, 
spake, and ate ; to the manifestation 
of the truth, and the confusion of the 
unbelieving Jews. JESUS, then, sat 
down to meat with Lazarus and others, 
and Martha, being one of Lazarus' 
sisters, served. But Mary, Lazarus' 
other sister, " took a pound of oint- 
ment of spikenard, very costly, and 
anointed the Feet of Jesus, and wiped 
His Feet with her hair ; and the house 
was filled with the odour of the oint- 
ment." We have now heard that 
which was done ; let us search out 
the mystic meaning thereof. 

First Responsory. 

3 The ungodly said : Let us oppress 
the righteous man without cause, and 
swallow him up alive, as the grave : let 
us make his memorial to perish from 
the earth, and cast lots among us for 
his spoils : and those murderers laid 
by store for themselves, but of evil. 
Fools and haters loathe wisdom, and 
are guilty in their thoughts. 

Verse. Such things they did im- 
agine, and were deceived, for their 
own wickedness blinded them. 

Answer. Fools and haters loathe 
wisdom, and are guilty in their 
thoughts. 

Seco7id Lesson. 

^^THOSOEVER thou art that wilt 
be a faithful soul, seek with 
Mary to anoint the Feet of the Lord 
with costly ointment. This ointment 
was a figure of justice, and therefore 
is there said to have been a pound 
thereof, [a pound being a weight used 
in scales.] The word " pistikes " used 

1 Matth. xxvi. 31, 32 ; Zech. xiii. 7. 

2 Called also Fig Monday, in certain parts of England, because on this day our Lord desired 
to eat figs. 3 Wisd. ii. 1, 10; Prov. i. 12. 



QUonfcap in J)o% Q#eefc. 2 

Second Day in the Great Week. 

MATTINS. 

Invitatory, alteration in Ps. xciv., 
a?id Hymn as on Passion Sunday, {p. 
' 3250 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Holy 
Gospel according to John (xii. 1.) 

THEN Jesus, six days before the 

Passover, came to Bethany, 

where Lazarus was, which had been 

dead, whom Jesus raised from the 

dead. And so on. 

Homily by St Austin, Bishop [of 
Hippo.] (5 oth Tract on fohn. ) 

" There they made Him a supper " 
— and " Lazarus was one of them that 



358 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



by the Evangelist as the name of this 
ointment, we must believe to be that 
of some place, from which this costly 
perfume was imported. 1 Neither is 
this name meaningless for us, but 
agreeth well with our mystic interpre- 
tation, since " Pistis " is the Greek 
word which signifieth " Faith," and 
whosoever will do justice must know 
that: "The just shall live by faith." 
(Rom. i. 17; Hab. ii. 4.) Anoint 
therefore the Feet of Jesus by thy 
good life, following in the marks which 
those Feet of the Lord have traced. 
Wipe His Feet likewise with thy hair ; 
that is, if thou have aught which is 
not needful to thee, give it to the poor ; 
and then thou hast wiped the Feet of 
Jesus with thy hair, that is, with that 
which thou needest not, and which 
is therefore to thee as is hair, being 
a needless out -growth to the body. 
Here thou hast what to do with that 
which thou needest not. To thee it is 
needless, but the Lord's Feet have 
need of it ; yea, the Feet which the 
Lord hath on earth are sorely needy. 

Second Responsory. 

2 1 became a reproach unto mine 
enemies : they looked upon me and 
shaked their heads. Help me, O 
Lord my God ! 

Verse. They have spoken against 
me with a lying tongue : they com- 
passed me about also with words of 
hatred. 

Answer. 
God! 



Help me, O Lord my 



Third Lesson. 

T7OR of whom save of His members, 

will He say at the latter day: 

" Inasmuch as ye have done it unto 

1 But ,. U I s , n °^ generally believed that this word is either (1) From "pino," to drink, a 

ct ' e "i " faith and * *' 

spike "-nard. 



one of the least of these My brethren, 
ye have done it unto Me " — ? (Matth. 
xxv. 40.) That is — "ye have spent 
nothing save that which ye needed 
not, but ye have ministered unto My 
Feet." 

" And the house was filled with the 
odour of the ointment." That is, the 
fragrance of your good example filleth 
the world ; for this odour is a figure of 
reputation. They which are called 
Christians, and yet live bad lives, cast 
a slur on Christ : and it is even such 
as they unto whom it is said : " The 
Name of God is blasphemed among 
the Gentiles through you." (Rom. ii. 
24 ; Ezek. xxxvi. 20, 23.) But if, 
through such, the Name of God be 
blasphemed, through the godly is 
praise ascribed to the Same His Holy 
Name, as the Apostle doth likewise 
say : "In every place we are unto 
God a sweet savour of Christ, [in them 
that are saved, and in them that 
perish."] (2 Cor. ii. 14, 15.) 

Third Responsory. 

3 False witnesses are risen up against 
me, and such as breathe out cruelty : 
they have gone about to kill me, 
neither spared they to spit in my face ; 
their spears have wounded me, and 
all my bones are out of joint. But as 
for me, I counted myself as one that 
is dead upon the earth. 

Verse. They poured forth their fury 
upon me, they gnashed upon me with 
their teeth. 

Answer. But as for me, I counted 
myself as one that is dead upon the 
earth. False witnesses are risen up 
against me, and such as breathe out 
cruelty ; they have gone about to kill 
me, neither spared they to spit in my 
face ; their spears have wounded me, 



means liquid; (2) From " pistis," faith, and means genuine, unadulterated; or (3) From the 



Latin "spicata," and means 
2 Ps. cviii. 25, 3. 



Cf. Ps. xxvi. 12. 



HOLY WEEK. 



359 



ind all my bones are out of joint. But 
is for me, I counted myself as one 
that is dead upon the earth. 

LAUDS. 

First Antiphon. 1 I hid not my . 
face * from shame and spitting. 

Second Antipho7i. 2 Awake, O 
sword, * against them that scatter 
my flock. 

Third Antiphon. 3 They took the 
(thirty pieces of silver, * my price, that 
I was prized at of them. 

Fourth Antiphon. 4 Waters flowed 
over mine head ; * I said : I am cut 
off; I will call upon Thy Name, O 
Lord God. 

Fifth Antiphon. O Lord, behold 5 
the lips * of those that rose up against 
me, and their device. 

Chapter from Jer. xi. 1 9, as 071 Mon- 
day after Passion Sunday, {p. 333.) 

Hyimi and Verse and Answer as on 
Passion Sunday, {p. 331.) 

Antiphoti at the So?ig of Zacharias. 
And now, O Father, glorify Thou Me * 
with Thine Own Self, with the glory 
which I had with Thee before the 
world was. 

Prayer. 

Q ALMIGHTY God, Which know- 
est that we be set in such straits 
that we have no power of ourselves to 
help ourselves, we pray Thee merci- 
fully to relieve us for whom continually 
pleadeth the Suffering of Thine Only- 
Begotten Son, Who liveth and reigneth 
with Thee, in the unity of the Holy 
Ghost, one God, world without end. 
Amen. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, and 
None. 

The Antiphons at Prime, Terce, 



Sext, and None are the First, Second, 
Third, and Fifth, at Lauds, respec- 
tively. 

VESPERS. 

Chapter from Jer. xi. 20, as on the 
Monday after Passio?i Sunday, {p. 
3340 

Hymn a?id Verse a?id Answer as on 
Saturday before Passion Sunday, {p. 
3240 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. Thou couldest have no power 
* at all against Me, except it were 
given thee from above. 

Prayer. 

T_J ELP us, O God of our salvation, 
and grant us grace to draw 
near with joy to the memorial of Thy 
great mercies whereby Thou wast 
pleased to make us new creatures. 
Through our Lord JESUS Christ Thy 
Son, Who liveth and reigneth with 
Thee, in the unity of the Holy Ghost, 
one God, world without end. Amen. 



Third Day in the Great Week. 

MATTINS. 

Invitatory, alteration in Ps. xciv., 
and Hymn, as on Passion Sunday, {p. 
3250 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Book of 
the Prophet Jeremiah (xi. 15.) 

AITHY hath My beloved wrought 
many iniquities in Mine house? 
Will holy meats 6 make atonement for 
thy perverseness, whereof thou boast- 
est ? The Lord called thy name, A 



1 Isa. 1. 6. 

4 Lam. iii. 54, 55. 



2 Cf. Zech. xiii. 7. 
5 Lam. iii. 62. 



3 Zech. xi. 12, 13. 

6 Apparently the sacrifices. 



360 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



green olive tree, fair, fruitful, goodly : 
as soon as He had spoken, a great 
fire was kindled in her, and the 
boughs thereof are burnt up. And 
the Lord of hosts, That planted thee, 
hath pronounced evil against thee, for 
the evil of the house of Israel, and of 
the house of Judah, which they have 
done against themselves, to provoke 
Me to anger, in making offerings unto 
Baalim. But Thou, O LORD, hast 
given me knowledge of it, and I 
know it : then Thou showedst me 
their doings. But I was like a 
gentle lamb, that is brought to the 
slaughter : and I knew not that they 
had devised devices against me, say- 
ing : Come, let us put [poison of a 
deadly] tree into his bread, and let 
us cut him off from the land of the 
living, that his name may be no more 
remembered. But, O Lord of Saba- 
oth, That judgest righteously, and 
triest the reins and the heart, let me 
see Thy vengeance on them ; for unto 
Thee have I revealed my cause. 



First Responsory. 

1 1 have suffered defaming and fear 
from them that were my familiars : 
they watched for my halting, 2 saying : 
Let us entice him, and prevail against 
him. But Thou, O Lord, art with 
me, as a Mighty Terrible One. Let 
them stumble into everlasting con- 
fusion, that I may see Thy vengeance 
upon them, for unto Thee have I 
opened my cause. 

Verse. 3 O Lord, plead Thou the 
cause of my soul, Thou That art the 
Redeemer of my life. 

Answer. Let them stumble into 
everlasting confusion, that I may see 
Thy vengeance upon them, for unto 
Thee have I opened my cause. 



Second Lesson, (xii. i.) 



R 



IGHTEOUS art Thou, O Lord, 
and I plead with Thee ; yet let 
me talk with Thee of Thy judgments : 
wherefore doth the way of the wicked 
prosper ? Wherefore are all they 
happy that lie and work iniquity? 
Thou hast planted them ; yea, they 
have taken root : they grow ; yea, 
they bring forth fruit. Thou art near 
in their mouth, and far from their 
reins. But Thou, O Lord, knowest 
me ; Thou hast seen me, and tried 
mine heart toward Thee. Pull them 
out like sheep for the shambles, and 
prepare 4 them for the day of slaughter. 
How long shall the land mourn, and 
the herbs of every field wither, for the 
wickedness of them that dwell therein? 
The beasts are consumed and the 
birds, because they said : He shall 
not see our last end. 



Second Responsory. 

5 For Thy sake, O God of Israel, I 
have borne reproach ; shame hath cov- 
ered my face ; I am become a stranger 
unto my brethren, and an alien unto 
my mother's children. For the zeal of 
Thine house hath eaten me up. 

Verse. Draw nigh unto my soul, 
and redeem it ; deliver me, because of 
mine enemies. 

Answer. For the zeal of Thine 
house hath eaten me up. 

Third Lesson. ( 7 . ) 

T HAVE forsaken Mine house ; I 
have left Mine heritage, I have 
given the dearly beloved of My soul 6 
into the hand of her enemies. Mine 
heritage is become unto Me as a lion 
in the forest ; it crieth out against Me, 
therefore have I hated it. Is not 



1 Cf. Jer. xx. 10, 11. 

3 Lam. iii. 58. 

5 Ps. lxviii. 8-10, 19. 



2 Custodientes latus meum, lit., watching my side. 

4 Sanctifica, lit., devote them. 

6 Dilectam animam meara, lit., my dearly beloved soul. 



HOLY WEEK. 



361 



Third A?itiphon. 5 1 cried by reason 
of mine affliction unto the Lord, * and 
He heard me out of the belly of hell. 

Fourth Antiphon. 6 O Lord, I am 
oppressed — * undertake Thou for me ; 
for I know not what to say unto mine 
enemies. 

Fifth Antiphon. "The ungodly 
said : Let us oppress the righteous 
man, * because he is clean contrary 
to our doings. 

Chapter from Jer. xi. 19, as on Mon- 
day in Passion Week, {p. 333.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
Passion Sunday, (p. 331.) 

A?itiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
Now, before the Feast of the Passover, 
as Jesus knew that His hour was 
come, * having loved His Own which 
were in the world, He loved them 
unto the end. 

Prayer. 

r\ ALMIGHTY and everlasting 
^^^ God, give us grace so to use 
the solemn and mysterious memorial 
of the Lord's Suffering, that the same 
may be unto us a mean whereby 
worthily to win Thy forgiveness. 
Through the Same our Lord Jesus 
Christ Thy Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of 
the Holy Ghost, one God, world 
without end. Ame7i. 

The sa?ne Prayer at Terce, Sext, and 
None. 

The Antiphons at Prime, Terce, 
Sext, and None, are the First, Second, 
Third, a?id Fifth, at Lauds, respec- 
tively. 

1 " Numquid avis discolor haereditas Mea Mihi ? Numquid avis tincta per totum ? " Hebrew, 
lit., "Is Mine heritage unto Me an hideous [flock of] vultures? Is the flock of vultures all 
round it?" LXX., "Is not Mine heritage an hyaena's den unto Me? or a den [of them] all 
round it?" Jonathan ben Uzziel: " Like a flock of birds scattered about, thus is Mine heritage 
scattered about before Me. And like a bird that has been shot at, thus collect themselves upon 
it those who murder with the sword ; all around, the kings of the nations ; and their camps 
come upon it for plunder." 

2 Cf. Ps. vii. 8, 5, 10, 9. 3 Lam. i. 20 ; Ps. lxviii. 18. 4 Ps. xlii. 1. 

5 Jonah ii. 3. 8 Isa. xxxviii. 14. Cf. 15. 7 Wisd. ii. 12. 



Mine heritage unto Me as an hideous 
)ird [of prey] ? Is not the unseemly 
oird everywhere throughout it? 1 Come 
ye, assemble yourselves together, all 
ye beasts of the field, hasten to de- 
vour. Many pastors have destroyed 
My vineyard, they have trodden My 
portion under foot, they have made My 
pleasant portion a desolate wilderness. 
They have made it desolate, and 
[being desolate] it mourneth unto 
Me. With desolation is the whole 
dand made desolate, because there is no 
man that considereth in the heart. 

Third Pesponsory. 

2 The congregation of the people 
hath compassed me about, but I re- 
warded no evil unto him that rewarded 
evil unto me. O Lord, let the wicked- 
ness of the wicked come to an end, 
but establish the just. 

Verse. Judge me, O Lord, accord- 
ing to my righteousness, and accord- 
ing to mine integrity that is in me. 

Answer. O Lord, let the wicked- 
ness of the wicked come to an end, 
but establish the just. The congrega- 
tion of the people hath compassed me 
about, but I rewarded no evil unto 
* him that rewarded evil unto me. O 
Lord, let the wickedness of the wicked 
come to an end, but establish the just. 

lauds. 

First Antiphon. 3 Behold, O Lord, 
and see : * for I am in trouble : hear 
me speedily. 

Second Antiphon. 4 Plead my cause, 
* O Lord : deliver me from the unjust 
and deceitful man. 



362 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Aftei None is celebrated the Liturgy, 
including the Passion according to 
Mark (xiv. i-xv. 46.) 

VESPERS. 

Chapter from Jer. xi. 20, as on 
Monday in Passion Week, {p. 334.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
Saturday before Passion Sunday, {p. 

324.) 

A?itiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. I have power to lay down 
My life, * and I have power to take it 
again. 

Prayer. 

T3 ID us, O God, by Thy mercy, of 
A all deceitfulness of the old man, 
and make us meet to become a new 
creature in our Lord JESUS Christ 
Thy Son, Who liveth and reigneth 
with Thee, in the unity of the Holy 
Ghost, one God, world without end. 
Amen. 

QBefcneafcap in 5)o% QBeeft. 

Fourth Day i?i the Great Week. 

MATTINS. 

Invitatory, alteration in Ps. xciv., 
a?id Hymn as 071 Passion Sunday, {p. 
325-) 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Book of 
the Prophet Jeremiah (xvii. 13.) 

(} LORD, the Hope of Israel, all 
W that forsake Thee, shall be 
ashamed : they that depart from Thee, 
shall be written in the earth ; because 
they have forsaken the Lord, the 
fountain of living waters. Heal me, 
O Lord, and I shall be healed ; save 



me, and I shall be saved ; for Thou 
art my praise. Behold, they say unto 
me : ' Where is the word of the 
Lord ? let it come now.' As for me, 
I was not turned aside from following 
after Thee, Which art my Shepherd 
neither have I desired the day of 
man ; Thou knowest. That which 
came out of my lips was right before 
Thee. Be not a terror unto me 
Thou art my hope in the day of evil. 
Let them be confounded that perse- 
cute me, but let not me be con- 
founded : let them be dismayed, but 
let not me be dismayed : bring upon 
them the day of evil, and destroy them 
with double destruction. 

First Responsory. 

2 They have spoken against me with 
a lying tongue ; they compassed me 
about also with words of hatred : in 
return for my love they were my 
adversaries : but I gave myself unto 
prayer ; and Thou hast heard me, 
Lord my God ! 

Verse. And they have rewarded 
me evil for good, and hatred for my 
love. 

Answer. But I gave myself unto 
prayer ; and Thou hast heard me, 
Lord my God ! 

Second Lesson, (xviii. 13.) 

Al/'HO hath heard such things as the 
virgin of Israel hath done most 
horribly ? Will the snow of Lebanon 
fail from the rock of the field ? 3 or 
can a man root up the source of a 
fountain of cold flowing waters ? Be- 
cause My people hath forgotten Me, 
they have offered sacrifices to lies, and 
stumbled in their ways, their ancient 
ways, to turn aside therefrom into 
paths untried ; to make their land 



1 I.e., that in which the veracity of the Prophet would be proved by the destruction of 
hlS » P** 1 * ,. 2 Ps- cviii. 3, 4, 5. 

9 I.e., will snow ever cease to he among the wild crags of Lebanon ? 



HOLY WEEK. 



363 



lesolate, and a perpetual hissing. 
£very one that passeth thereby shall 
>e astonished, and wag his head. I 
irill scatter them as with an east wind 
>efore the enemy ; I will show them 
he back, and not the face, in the day 
>f their calamity. Then 1 said they : 
Come, and let us devise devices 
igainst Jeremiah ; for the law shall 
lot perish from the Priest, nor counsel 
rom the wise, nor the word from the 
3 rophet. Come, and let us smite him 
vith the tongue, and let us not give 
leed to any of his words. 

Second Responsory. 
The ungodly said, &c, {p. 354.) 

Third Lesson. 

/^IVE heed to me, O Lord, and 
^ hearken to the voice of them 
:hat contend with me. Shall evil be 
recompensed for good ? For they 
lave digged a pit for my soul. Re- 
member that I stood before Thee to 
>peak good for them, and to turn away 
Thy wrath from them. Therefore de- 
iver up their children to the famine, 
md give them over to the edge of the 
sword : let their wives be bereaved of 
:heir children and be widows, and let 
:heir men be put to death ; let their 
young men be slain by the sword in 
Dattle. Let a cry be heard from their 
houses ; for Thou wilt bring the 
robbers suddenly upon them ; because 
they have digged a pit to take me, 
and hid snares for my feet. Yet, 
Lord, Thou knowesf all their counsel 
against me to slay me ; forgive not 
their iniquity, neither blot out their sin 
from Thy sight ; let them be over- 
thrown before Thee : deal with them in 
the time of Thine anger. 

1 That is, when the Saint had delivered the preceding prophecy, his fellow-townsmen deter- 
mined to put him down as a young upstart. 

1. 16. '■'- Jer. xx. 10, 11. 4 Ps. lxii. 10. 6 Ps. cxlix. 8. 



Third Responsory. 
Liars are come, &c, {p. 355. 



LAUDS. 

First Antiphon. 2 Deliver me from 
blood-guiltiness, O God, * Thou that 
art my God, and my tongue shall sing 
aloud of Thy righteousness. 

Second Antiphon. 3 I have suffered 
defaming * and fear from them : but 
the Lord is with me as a Mighty 
Terrible One. 

Third Antiphon. 4 But in vain 
have they sought my soul ; * they 
shall go into the lower parts of the 
earth. 

Fourth Antiphon. All mine ene- 
mies heard of my affliction : * O 
Lord, they rejoiced that thou hadst 
done it. 

Fifth Antiphon. s O Lord, bind 
the Gentiles * with chains, and their 
kings with fetters. 

Chapter from Jer. xi. 19, as on 
Mo?iday in Passion Week, {p. 333.) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
Passion Sunday, (p. 331.) 

A?itiphon at the So?ig of Zacharias. 
Simon, sleepest thou ? * Couldst not 
thou watch one hour with Me ? 



Prayer. 

r\ ALMIGHTY God, we beseech 
^^ Thee that we whose transgres- 
sions do unceasingly harm us, may 
find freedom in the Suffering of Thine 
Only-begotten Son, Who liveth and 
reigneth with Thee, in the unity of the 
Holy Ghost, one God, world without 
end. Amen. 



364 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



At the beginning of the Martyrology, 
is said, 

On the morrow is commemorated 
the Lord's Supper, whereat Christ 
Jesus, upon the day before He was 
crucified for our salvation, committed 
to His disciples the celebration of the 
mysteries of His Body and Blood. 

After the Martyrology on this day, 
the Martyrology is not read again till 
Easter Sunday. 

The same Prayer at Terce, Sext, and 
None. 

The Antiphons at Prime, Terce, 
Sext, and None are the First, Second, 
Third, and Fifth at Lands, respec- 
tively. 

After None is celebrated the Liturgy, 
including the Passion according to 
Luke (xxii. 1— xxiii. 55.) 



VESPERS. 

Chapter from Jer. xi. 20, as on 
Mo?iday in Passion Week, (p. 334. ) 

Hymn and Verse and Answer as on 
Saturday before Passion Sunday, {p. 

3240 

Antiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. The damsel said unto Peter : 
* Surely thou art one of them, for thy 
speech bewrayeth thee. 



Prayer. 

T ORD, we beseech Thee, behold 
this Thy family, for which our 
Lord JESUS Christ was contented to 
be betrayed, and given up into the 
hands of wicked men, and to suffer 
death upon the Cross : Who liveth 
and reigneth with Thee, in the unity 
of the Holy Ghost, one God, world 
without end. Amen. 



Fifth Day of the Great Week, whereon 
was institicted the Lords Supper. 

MATTINS. 

On this and the two following, 
nights Mattins and Lauds are always 
said together, and these Three Services 1 
are commonly called the Three Nights 
of Darkness. 1 In Choir six lights art\ 
lighted upon the Altar, and fifteen 
(seve?i on each side and one at the top"} 
in a triangle-shaped candlestick before] 
the Epistle corner. As each A n tip hoi, ■ 
is repeated the second time, one of t/u 
fifteen candles is put out. 

The A?itiphons are all doubled, anc\ 
the Hymn, " Glory be to the Father, 1 1 
&c, is everywhere omitted. 

After the Lord's Prayer, the Angelil 
Salutation, and the Apostles' 1 CreeA 
have been said inaudibly, all else i\ 
omitted, and the First Antiphon bt\ 
gifts at once. 



FIRST NOCTURN. 

First Antiphon. The zeal of Thin 
house hath eaten me up, and the re 
proaches of them that reproached The j 
are fallen upon me. 

Psalm LXVIII. 

Save me, O God, &c, (fi. 123.) 

Second Antiphon. Let them b 
turned backward and put to confusior 
that desire my hurt. 

Psalm LXIX. 

Make haste, O God, &c, (p. 125.) 

Third Antiphon. Deliver me, m| 
God, out of the hand of the wicked. 



1 Tenebrae. 



HOLY WEEK. 



365 



Psalm LXX. 

In Thee, O Lord, &c, {p. 125.) 

Verse. Let them be turned back- 
yard and put to confusion. 
Answer. That desire my hurt. 

■ The whole of the Lord's Prayer is 
\hen said inaudibly, and the Reader at 
fnce begi?is the First Lesson. Thus is 
t done o?t each of the three nights ; no 
Absolution or Blessing is asked or 
n in any Noctumi or before any 
Lesson. 

First Lesson. 

3ere beginneth the Lamentation 1 of 
Jeremiah the Prophet (i. 1.) 

A LEPH. 2 How doth the city sit 
solitary that was full of people ! 
ttow is she become as a widow, she 
hat was great among the nations ! 

I She that was Princess among the pro- 
vinces, how is she become tributary ! 
Beth. She weepeth sore in the 
light, and her tears are upon her 
':heeks : among all her lovers, she hath 
lone to comfort her ; all her friends 
lave dwelt treacherously with her, and 
ire become her enemies. 
1 Ghimel. Judah is gone into cap- 
ivity, because of affliction, and because 
)f great servitude : she dwelleth among 
he heathen, and findeth no rest : all 
ler persecutors overtook her between 
:he straits. 

DALETH. The ways of Zion do 
nourn, because none come to the 
solemn Feasts ; all her gates are 
lesolate, her Priests sigh, her virgins 
ire afflicted, and she weighed down 
•vith bitterness. 

He. Her adversaries are the chief, 
ier enemies prosper : for the Lord 



hath afflicted her for the multitude of 
her transgressions ; her children are 
gone into captivity before the enemy. 
Jerusalem ! Jerusalem ! Return unto 
the Lord thy God ! 

The Reader does not say, " But 
Thou," &c, ?ior is " Thanks be to 
God " answered after this or any other 
Lesso?i on these three nights, bitt the 
Responsory begins at once. 



First Responsory. 

3 At the Mount of Olives He prayed 
unto the Father : O My Father, if it 
be possible, let this cup pass from Me ! 
The spirit indeed is willing, but the 
flesh is weak. 

Verse. Watch and pray, that ye 
enter not into temptation. 

Answer. The spirit indeed is will- 
ing, but the flesh is weak. 



Second Lesson. 

"\7"AV. And from the daughter of 
Zion all her beauty is departed : 
her princes are become like harts that 
find no pasture, and they are gone 
without strength before the pursuer. 4 

Zain. Jerusalem remembereth, in 
the days of her affliction and of her 
miseries, all her pleasant things that 
she had in the days of old, when 
her people fell into the hand of the 
enemy, and none did help her : the 
adversaries saw her, and did mock 
at her Sabbaths. 

Heth. 5 Jerusalem hath grievously 
sinned ; therefore she is removed. All 
that honoured her, despise her, because 
they have seen her nakedness. Yea, 
she sigheth and turneth backward. 



1 Over the ruins of Jerusalem, after it had been sacked and burnt by the Assyrians. 

2 This composition is A B C Darian. The letters are those of the Hebrew alphabet. 
; ■ Matth. xxvi. 42, 41. 

4 The simile is a sporting one, taken from wretched animals subjected to the chase, but which 
! ire too feeble to run well. 

8 Rather, Cheth, or Kheth,— a strong guttural, like Scotch "ch" in "loch." 



366 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Teth. Her filthiness is in her 
skirts ; she remembereth not her last 
end : therefore she came down wonder- 
fully, she had no comforter. O LORD, 
behold my affliction, for the enemy 
hath magnified himself. 

Jerusalem ! Jerusalem ! Return unto 
the Lord thy God. 

Second Responsory. 

1 My Soul is exceeding sorrowful, 
even unto death : tarry ye here and 
watch with Me ; yet a little while, and 
ye shall see the multitude close Me in. 
Ye shall flee ; and I will go to be 
offered a sacrifice for you. 

Verse. Behold, the hour is at hand, 
and the Son of man is betrayed into 
the hands of sinners. 

Answer. Ye shall flee ; and I will 
go to be offered a sacrifice for you. 

Third Lesson. 

TOD. 2 The enemy hath spread out 
his hand upon all her pleasant 
things ; for she hath seen the heathen 
enter into her Sanctuary, concerning 
whom Thou didst command that they 
should not enter into Thy congregation. 

Caph. All her people sigh, they seek 
bread : they have given their pleasant 
things for meat to relieve the soul. 
See, O Lord, and consider, for I am 
become vile. 

Lamed. Is it nothing to you, all ye 
that pass by ? Behold, and see if there 
be any sorrow like unto my sorrow, 
which is done unto me ; wherewith the 
LORD hath afflicted me in the day of 
His fierce anger. 

Mem. From above hath He sent 
fire into my bones, and it prevaileth 
against them : He hath spread a net 
for my feet. He hath turned me back : 
He hath made me desolate and faint 
all the day. 

1 Matth. xxvi. 38, 45. 2 Or, Yod. 



Nun. The yoke of my trans- 
gressions is bound by His hand ; they 
are wreathed and come up upon my 
neck. He hath made my strength to 
fall : the Lord hath delivered me into 
their hands, from whom I am not able 
to rise up. 

Jerusalem ! Jerusalem ! Return unto 
the Lord thy God ! 

Third Responsory. 

3 Behold, when we shall see Him, He 
hath no form nor comeliness : there is 
no beauty in Him : this is He Which 
hath borne our griefs and carried our 
sorrows ; but He was. wounded for our 
transgressions, and with His stripes we 
are healed. 

Verse. Surely He hath borne our 
griefs and carried our sorrows. 

Answer. And with His stripes we 
are healed. Behold, when we shall see 
Him, He hath no form nor comeliness: 
there is no beauty in Him ; this is He 
Which hath borne our sins and carried 
our sorrows : but He was wounded for 
our transgressions, and with His stripes 
we are healed. 

SECOND NOCTURN. 

First Antipho7i. The Lord shall de- 
liver the needy from the strong : the 
poor also, that hath no helper. 

Psalm LXXI. 

Give the king, &c, {p. 126.) 

Second Antiphon. The ungodly thinl 
and speak wickedness : they spea 
loftily concerning oppression. 

Psalm LXXII. 
Truly God is good, &c, {p. 127.) 

Third Antiphon. Arise, O Lord, anc 
judge my cause. 



3 Isa. liii. 2, 4. 



HOLY WEEK. 



3^7 



Psalm LXXIII. 

God, why hast Thou cast us off ? 
&c, (p. 128.) 

Verse. Deliver me, O my God, out 
liof the hand of the wicked. 

Answer. Out of the hand of the un- 
righteous and cruel man. 

Fourth Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Treatise 
of St Austin, Bishop [of Hippo,] 
upon the Psalms (liv. 1.) 

" r^ IVE ear to my prayer, O God, 
and despise not my supplica- 
tion : attend unto me and hear me." 
These are the words of a man tra- 
vailing, anxious, and troubled. He 
prayeth in the midst of much suffer- 
ing, longing to be rid of his affliction. 
J Our part is to see what that his 
affliction was, and when he hath told 
us, to acknowledge that we also suffer 
therefrom ; that so, partaking in his 
trouble, we may take part also in his 
! prayer. He saith : "I mourn in my 
exercise, and am troubled." Where- 
in mourned he ? Wherein was he 
troubled ? He saith : "In my exer- 
icise." In the next words he giveth 
us to know that his affliction was the 
oppression of the wicked, — (" Because 
of the voice of the enemy, and because 
of the oppression of the wicked,") — 
and this suffering which came upon 
him at the hands of wicked men, he 
hath called his exercise. Think not 
that wicked men are in this world 
for nothing, or that God doth no good 
with them. Every wicked man liveth, 
either to repent, or to exercise the 
righteous. 

Fourth Responsory. 

1 Mine own friend hath betrayed Me 
by the sign of a kiss : " Whomsoever I 



shall kiss, That Same is He — hold 
Him fast." This was the traitorous 
sign which he gave, even he who 
murdered with a kiss. Woe unto that 
man ! He cast down the price of 
blood, and went, and hanged him- 
self. 

Verse. It had been good for that 
man if he had not been born. 

Answer. Woe unto that man ! He 
cast down the price of blood, and 
went, and hanged himself. 

Fifth Lesson. 

VyOULD to God that they which 
now exercise us were converted 
and exercised with us ! Yet, while 
they are as they are, and exercise us, 
we will not hate them : for we know 
not of any one of them whether he 
will endure to the end in his sin. 
Yea, oftentimes, when thou deemest 
that thou hatest thine enemy, he 
whom thou hatest is thy brother, 
and thou knowest it not. The Holy 
Scriptures show us that the devil and 
his angels are already damned unto 
everlasting fire, and therefore of their 
repentance it behoveth us to despair ; 
but of theirs only. These are they 
against whom we wrestle within ; to 
the which wrestling the Apostle stir- 
reth us up where he saith : " We 
wrestle not against flesh and blood," 
— (that is, not against men whom we 
see,) — "but against principalities, 
against powers, against the rulers of 
the darkness of this world." (Eph. 
vi. 12.) He saith not "the rulers of 
this world," lest perchance thou 
shouldest deem that devils are the 
lords of heaven and earth ; what he 
doth say is, " rulers of the darkness 
of this world," of that world which 
they love who love the world, of that 
world wherein the ungodly and un- 
righteous do prosper, of that world, 



1 Matth. xxvi. 48, 24 ; xxvii. 5. 



368 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



in fine, of which the Gospel saith : 
"And the world knew Him not." 
(John i. 10.) 

Fifth Responsory. 

1 The vile trader Judas came to the 
Lord to kiss Him, and He, as a guile- 
less Lamb, refused not a kiss to Judas, 
who, for a certain number of pence, 
betrayed Christ to the Jews. 

Verse. It had been good for that 
man if he had not been born. 

Answer. Who, for a certain number 
of pence, betrayed Christ to the Jews. 

Sixth Lesson. 

" T HAVE seen iniquity and strife in 
A the city." (v. 10.) Behold, the 
glory of the Cross. That Cross which 
was the object of the insults of God's 
enemies, is established now above the 
brows of kings. The end hath shown 
the measure of its power : it hath 
conquered the world, not by the 
sword, but by its wood. The enemies 
of God thought the Cross a meet 
object of insult and ridicule, yea, they 
stood before it, " wagging their heads 
and saying : If He be the Son of God, 
let Him come down from the Cross ! " 
(Matth. xxvii. 39, 40.) And He 
stretched forth His Hands unto a 
disobedient and gainsaying people. 
(Rom. x. 21.) If he is just which 
liveth by faith, (Rom. i. 17; Hab. ii. 
4,) he is unjust that hath not faith. 
Therefore where is written " iniquity " 
we may understand "unbelief." The 
Lord therefore saith that He "saw 
iniquity and strife in the city," and 
that He "stretched forth His Hands 
unto that disobedient and gainsaying 
people," — and, disobedient and gain- 
saying as they were, He was hungry 
for their salvation, and said : "Father, 



forgive them, for they know not what 
they do." (Luke xxiii. 34.) 

Sixth Responsory. 

2 One of My disciples shall betray 
Me this night. Woe unto that man 
by whom I am betrayed ! It had 
been good for that man if he had not 
been born. 

Verse. He that dippeth his hand 
with Me in the dish, the same shall 
betray Me into the hands of sinners. 

Answer. It had been good for that 
man if he had not been born. One of 
My disciples shall betray Me this 
night. Woe unto that man by whom 
I am betrayed. It had been good for 
that man if he had not been born. 



THIRD NOCTURN. 

First Antiphon. I said unto the 
wicked : Speak not wickedness against 
God. 

Psalm LXXIV. 
Unto Thee, O God, &c, {p. 129.) 

Second Antiphon. The earth trem- 
bled and was still, when God arose to 
judgment. 

Psalm LXXV. 

In Judah is God known, &c, {p. 
130-) 

Third A?itiphon. In the day of my 
trouble I sought God with my hands. 3 



Psalm LXXV/. 
I cried unto the Lord, &c, 



130-) 



Verse. Arise, O Lord. 
Answer. Judge Thou my cause. 



1 Cf. Matth. xxvi. 48-50, 15, 24 ; Jer. xi. 19. 2 Matth. xxvi. 21, 24, 23, 45. 

3 In its original place the meaning would be, "hands lifted up in prayer;" here it is 
probably meant to refer to our Lord's, lifted up and stretched out upon the Cross. 



HOLY WEEK. 



369 



Seventh Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the First 
Epistle of the Blessed Apostle Paul 
to the Corinthians (ii. 17.) 

TVTOW, in this that I command, I 
^ praise you not, that ye come to- 
gether, not for the better, but for the 
worse. For, first of all, when ye come 
together in the Church, I hear that 
there be divisions among you, and I 
partly believe it. For there must be 
'also heresies, that they which are ap- 
proved may be made manifest among 
you. When ye come together, there- 
fore, into one place, this is not to eat 
the Lord's Supper. For every one 
taketh before his own supper to eat, 
and one is hungry, and another is 
drunken. What ! have ye not houses 
to eat and to drink in ? or despise ye 
the Church of God, and shame them 
that have not ? What shall I say 
to you ? Do I praise you ? In this 
I praise you not. 

Seventh Rcsponsory. 

1 I was like a gentle lamb that is 
brought to the slaughter, and I knew 
'not that mine enemies had devised de- 
vices against me, saying : Come, let 
us put [poison of a deadly] tree into 
his bread, and let us cut him off from 
the land of the living. 

Verse. 2 All they that hate me de- 
vised my hurt against me : they plotted 
together to do me evil, saying : 

A?iswer. Come, let us put [poison 
of a deadly] tree into his bread, and 
let us cut him off from the land of the 
living. 

Eighth Lesson. 

T7 OR I have received of the Lord 

that which also I delivered unto 

you, That the Lord JESUS, the same 



Jer. xi. 19. 



2 Ps. xl, 8, 9 



night in which He was betrayed, took 
bread ; and, when He had given 
thanks, He brake it, and said : Take, 
eat : This is My Body, Which shall 
be given for you ; this do in remem- 
brance of Me. After the same manner 
also He took the cup, when He had 
supped, saying : This Cup is the New 
Testament in My Blood. This do ye, 
as oft as ye drink it, in remembrance 
of Me. For as often as ye eat this 
Bread and drink this Cup, ye do show 
the Lord's death till He come. 

Eighth Respo?isory. 

3 Could ye not watch with Me one 
hour, ye that called one on the other 
to die for Me ? Or see ye not Judas, 
how that he sleepeth not, but maketh 
haste to betray Me to the Jews ? 

Verse. 4 Why sleep ye ? Rise, and 
pray, lest ye enter into temptation. 

Answer. Or see ye not Judas, how 
that he sleepeth not, but maketh haste 
to betray Me to the Jews ? 

Ninth Lesson. 

A1THEREFORE, whosoever shall 
eat this Bread, or drink the 
Cup of the Lord, unworthily, shall be 
guilty of the Body and Blood of the 
Lord. But let a man examine him- 
self, and so let him eat of that Bread, 
and drink of that Cup. For he that 
eateth and drinketh unworthily eateth 
and drinketh damnation to himself, not 
discerning the Lord's Body. For this 
cause many are weak and sickly 
among you, and many sleep. For if 
we would judge ourselves, we should 
not be judged. But when we are 
judged we are chastened of the Lord, 
that we should not be condemned with 
the world. Wherefore, my brethren, 
when ye come together to eat, tarry 
one for another. If any man hunger, 

3 Matth. xxvi. 40. 4 Luke xxii. 46. 



37o 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



let him eat at home, that ye come not 
together unto condemnation. And the 
rest will I set in order when I come. 

Ninth Responsory. 

1 The elders of the people consulted 
that they might take JESUS by subtilty, 
and kill Him : they came out, as 
against a thief, with swords and 
staves. 

Verse. 2 The chief Priests and the 
Pharisees gathered a council. 

Answer. That they might take 
Jesus by subtilty, and kill Him : they 
came out, as against a thief, with 
swords and staves. The elders of the 
people consulted that they might take 
JESUS by subtilty, and kill Him : they 
came out, as against a thief, with 
swords and staves. 

LAUDS. 

This part of the Service begins at 
once with the First Antiphon. 

First Antiphon. O Lord, Thou 
shalt be justified when Thou speakest, 
and be clear when Thou art judged. 

Second Antipho?i. 3 The Lord was 
brought as a lamb to the slaughter, 
and He opened not His mouth. 

Third Antiphon. Mine heart is 
broken within me ; all my bones 
tremble. 

Fourth Antiphon. O Lord, Thou 
hast spoken unto us in Thy strength, 
and in Thy Holy Banquet. 

Fifth Antiphon. 8 He was offered 
up because He willed it, and He bore 
our sins. 

No Chapter or Hymn are said either 
on this or the two following nights. 

Verse. 4 Mine Own familiar friend, 
in whom I trusted, — 



Answer. Which did eat of My 
bread, hath lifted up his heel against 
Me. 

By this time all the candles on the 
triangular candlestick have been put 
out, except the one at the top, and, 
while the Song of Zacharias is being 
sung, every light throughout the 
Church is put out, as are also the six 
o?i the Altar, one by one, so that the 
last is put out at the words, " To give 
light to them that sit in darkness, &c.' 
As the Antiphon, " Now he that be- 
trayed Him, &c," is repeated the second 
time, the candle at the top of the tri- 
angular candlestick is. take?i and hidden 
under the Altar, at the Epistle corner. 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
Now he that betrayed Him gave them 
a sign, saying : Whomsoever I shall 
kiss, That Same is He : hold Him fast. 

Then is said the following sentence^ 
and as it begins, all kneel down : 

Christ, for our sakes, became obedi- 
ent unto death. 

Then is said : 

i . The Lords Prayer, inaudibly. 

2. Ps. L., " Have mercy upon me 
&c," {p. 87,) in a tone which can jus. 
be heard. 

3. The Prayer, " Lord, we beseecl 
Thee, behold this Thy family, &c.,' 
(f>. 364.) Neither " Let us pray " not 
anything else is said before it. It 
said in the same tone as Ps. L., excep. 
the last clause, " Who liveth and reign 
eth, &c," which is said inaudibly 
When it is over some noise is made, 
the hidden light is put back on th, 
triangular candlestick, and all presen 
immediately rise and depart i?i silence. 



1 Matth. xxvi. 3, 4, 55. 2 John xi. 47. 3 Isa. liii. 7. 4 Ps. xl. 10. 

5 That is, the Officiant, to announce that the Prayer is over, gives one or two taps. 



HOLY WEEK. 



371 



PRIME. 

After the Lord's Prayer, the Angelic 
Salutation, a?id the Apostles' 1 Creed 
xave been said inaudibly, all else is 
emitted, and the Psahns begin at once. 
I No Antiphon is said, and the Hymn, 
j' Glory be to the Father, &c," is 
everywhere omitted. 

The Psalms themselves are as on 
7 easts, viz. Ps. LIII. " Save me, O 
'}od, &c," ajid the two first parts of 
J s. CXVIIL, " Blessed are the unde- 
iled, &c," and "Deal bountifully, 

As soon as the Psalms are over, the 
Office co?itinues, " Christ, for our sakes, 
:c," to the end, as at Lauds. And so 
i zrminates the Service. 

The Martyrology is not read in 
Iwir, and whether in or out of Choir, 
j/iat follows it, beginning " Precious 
1 the sight of the LORD," is omitted. 

TERCE, SEXT, AND NONE. 

After the Lords Prayer and the 
[ \ngelic Salutation have bee?i said in- 
udibly, all else is omitted, and the 
sual portions of Ps. CXVIIL begin at 
nee. 

No Antiphon is said, and the Hymn, 
Glory be to the Father, &c," is 
very where omitted. 

As soon as the appointed portions oj 
>s. CXVIIL are over, the Office cont- 
inues, " Christ, for our sakes, &c," to 
he end, as at Lauds. Aiid so termin- 
tes the Service. This ending must 
e said complete after each Office, 
whether they be said at one time or 
ot. 

After None the Altar is vested in 

te, and adortied as for a solemn 

■"east, but without reliques, pictures, or 

r es. The Cross is covered with a 

•kite veil over the purple one ; six 
'ghts are lighted, and the organ plays 

Idle the Priest and his ministers pro- 
to the Sanctuary, dressed in white 



vestments. The Liturgy is then cele- 
brated, in memory of the First Euchar- 
ist, celebrated by our Lord Himself on 
this evening. After the Liturgy, the 
Consecrated Host Which is to be con- 
sumed on the next day, goes in Proces- 
sion to the place prepared for Lt. The 
Procession over, all return to their 
places, except the Priest a7id his mi?iis- 
ters, who go to the Sacristy. Ln their 
absence Vespers are begun, and they 
meanwhile take off their white vest- 
ments, the celebrant and deaco?i putting 
on purple stoles and returning to the 
Choir towards the end of the Miserere, 
in time to assist at the latter part of 
the Service. 

VESPERS. 

After the Lord's Prayer and the 
Angelic Salutatio?i have been said in- 
audibly, all else is omitted, and the 
First Antiphon begins at o?ice. 

The Antiphons are all doubled, and 
the Hymn, " Glory be to the Father, 
&c," is everywhere omitted. 

First Antiphon. I will take the 
cup of salvation, and call upon the 
Name of the Lord. 

Psalm CXV. 

I believed, therefore have I spoken, 
&c, (p. 185.) 

Second Antiphon. With them that 
hate peace, I was peaceable ; when I 
spoke unto them they fought against 
me without a cause. 

Psalm CXIX. 

In my distress, &c, {p. 186.) 

Third Antiphon. O Lord, pre- 
serve me from the wicked man. 

Psalm CXXXIX. 
Deliver me, O Lord, &c, {p. 198.) 



37* 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Fourth Antiphon. Keep me from 
the snare which they have laid for me, 
and the gins of the workers of iniquity. 

Psalm CXL. 

LORD, I cry unto Thee, &c, {p. 
I99-) 

Fifth Antiphon. I looked on my 
right hand, and beheld : but there was 
no man that would know me. 

Psalm CXL/. 

I cried unto the Lord with my voice, 
&c, (p. 200.) 

No Chapter, Hynni, nor Verse and 
Answer are said. 

A?itiphon at the Song of the Blessed 
Virgin. And, as they were eating, 
Jesus took bread, and blessed, and 
brake, and gave to His disciples. 1 

Then, " Christ, for our sakes, &c," 
to the e?id, as at Lauds. 

After Vespers, the Priest in his 
purple stole, and with the help of his 
ministers, strips the Altar quite bare, 
in reinembrance of the Nakedness of our 
Lord fesus Christ during great part 
of His Passion. During the ceremony 
is recited Ps. XXL, « My God, My 
God, &c," without the Hymn, " Glory 
be to the Father, &c," but with this 
Antiphon, both before a?id after : "They 
part My garments among them, and 
cast lots upon My vesture." There 
remain only 011 the Altar the Cross 
tender its purple veil, and the u?i- 
lighted candles in the candlesticks. 
This is the end of the Service. 

At a later hour in the day is per- 
formed the Maundy, that is, the " Man- 
datum," or " Commandment of the 



Lord," that is to say, Superiors was 
the feet of their inferiors, in obedient 
to the command and exa?nple of ou 
Lord, Who, on this evening, Himse, 
first performed this ceremony for //, 
disciples. 

COMPLINE. 

The early part of the Service is e; 
tirely omitted, except the Confessio?i a?, 
Absolution, after which begin the usu< 
Psalms, without any Antiphon, or t, 
Hymn, " Glory be to the Father, &c. 
which is everywhere omitted. 

Immediately after Ps. CXXXIL 
" Behold, bless ye the Lord, &c," 
said the Song of Simeon, without at 
Antiphon, a?id immediately after 
glory of Thy people Israel " is sail 
" Christ, for our sakes, &c," to the en 
as at Lauds. 

Thus end Lauds, Prime, Terce, Se: 
None, Vespers, a?id Compline, from 1 
Lauds of Maundy Thursday to the No 
of Holy Saturday, both inclusive. 



CKootr JFritrag. 

Sixth Day of the Great Week. 
The Preparation of the Passover.' 

MATTINS. 

This is the Second Night of Da 
ness. The ceremonial is the same 
before, as are also the omissions i?i 
Service. 

The Antiphons are all doubled, 
the Hymn, " Glory be to the Fat 
&c," is everywhere omitted. 

After the Lords Prayer, the Anj. 
Salutation, and the Apostles' Creed '\ 
been said i?iaudibly, the First Antipt 
begms at once. 



1 Matth. xxvi. 26. 

2 In Parasceve, i.e., Paraskeu6. This is the Greek word used by all the Evangelists 
designate this day ; by St John three times. The work is retained in the Latin, pro! 
because it was the common name of the day among Greek-speaking Jews. 



HOLY WEEK. 



373 



FIRST NOCTURN. 



her bars ; her king and her princes 
are among the Gentiles. The law is 
no more ; her Prophets also find no 
vision from the LORD. 

IOD. The elders of the daughter of 
Zion sit upon the ground, and keep 
silence : they have cast up dust upon 
their heads ; they have girded them- 
selves with sack-cloth : the virgins of 
Jerusalem hang down their heads to 
the ground. 

Caph. Mine eyes do fail with tears, 
my bowels are troubled, my liver is 
poured upon the earth, for the destruc- 
tion of the daughter of my people, be- 
cause the children and the sucklings 
swoon in the streets of the city. 

Jerusalem ! Jerusalem ! Return unto 
the Lord thy God. 

The First Responsory begins at once. 



First Antiphon. The kings of the 
earth set themselves, and the rulers 
take counsel together, against the 
Lord, and against His Anointed. 

Psalm II. 
Why do the heathen rage, &c, {p. 4.) 

Second Antiphon. They part my gar- 
ments among them, and cast lots upon 
my vesture. 

Psalm XXI. 

My God, My God, &c, {p. 48.) 

Third Antiphon. False witnesses 
are risen up against me, and iniquity 
hath belied itself. 

Psalm XXVI. 

The Lord is my light, &c, {p. 73.) 
Verse. They part my garments 
among them. 

Answer. And cast lots upon my 
I vesture. 

Then, the Lord's Prayer having been 
said inaudibly, the First Lesson begins 
at once. 

First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Lamen- 
tations of Jeremiah the Prophet 

(ii. 8.) 

T_J ETH. 1 The Lord hath purposed 
to destroy the wall of the 
daughter of Zion : He hath stretched 
out His line, He hath not withdrawn 
His hand from destroying : the ram- 
part dofh lament, and the wall lan- 
guished with it. 

Teth. Her gates are sunk into the 
ground, He hath destroyed and broken 

1 This commences in the middle of another ABC Darian composition. 

2 Et terribilibus oculis plaga crudeli percutientes, aceto potabant me. This appears to be a 
I of compound of Job xvi. 10, 15, and Ps. lxviii. 22, and the passage in the text is accordingly 

constructed from those passages, but the quotation is either very inexact or from a very different 
version to the present. 

VOL. II. N 



First Pesponsory. 

All my friends have forsaken me, and 
mine enemies have prevailed against 
me ; he whom I loved hath betrayed 
me. Mine enemy sharpeneth his eyes 
upon me ; he breaketh me with breach 
upon breach : and [in my thirst] they 
gave me vinegar to drink. 2 

Verse. I am numbered with the 
transgressors ; and my life is not 
spared. 

Answer. Mine enemy sharpeneth 
his eyes upon me ; he breaketh me 
with breach upon breach ; and [in 
my thirst] they gave me vinegar to 
drink. 

Second Lesson. 

r AMED. They say to their mothers : 

Where is corn and wine ? When 

they swooned as the wounded in the 

streets of the city, when their soul was 

poured out into their mother's bosom. 



374 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



Mem. What thing shall I take to 
witness for thee ? What thing shall I 
liken to thee, O daughter of Jerusalem ? 
What shall I equal to thee, that I may 
comfort thee, O virgin daughter of 
Zion ? For thy breach is great like 
the sea : who can heal thee ? 

Nun. Thy Prophets have seen vain 
and foolish things for thee, and they 
have not discovered thine iniquity, to 
stir thee up to repent, but have seen 
for thee false burdens and causes of 
banishment. 

Samech. All that pass by clap their 
hands at thee : they hiss and wag 
their head at the daughter of Jerusalem, 
saying : Is this the city that men call 
" The Perfection of beauty," " The joy 
of the whole earth ! " 

Jerusalem ! Jerusalem ! Return un- 
to the Lord thy God ! 



Aleph. Surely against me is He 
turned : He turneth His hand agains 
me all the day. 

Beth. My skin and my flesh hatr 
He made old ; He hath broken mj 
bones. 

Beth. He hath builded rounc 
about me, and compassed me witl 
gall and travail. 

Beth. He hath set me in darl 
places, as they that be dead of old. 

Ghimel. He hath hedged m< 
about, that I cannot get out : He hatl 
made my chain heavy. 

Ghimel. Also when I cry an< 
shout, He shutteth out my prayer. 

Ghimel. He hath inclosed m; 
ways with hewn stone : He hath mad< 
my paths crooked. 

Jerusalem ! Jerusalem ! Return un 
to the Lord thy God. 



Second Responsory. 

1 The veil of the Temple was rent in 
twain, [from the top to the bottom,] 
and all the earth did quake : 2 the thief 
on the cross cried, saying : Lord, re- 
member me when Thou comest into 
Thy kingdom ! 

Verse. l The rocks rent, and the 
graves were opened, and many bodies 
of the Saints, which slept, arose. 

Answer. And all the earth did 
quake : the thief on the cross cried, 
saying : Lord, remember me when 
Thou comest into Thy kingdom. 

Third Lesson, (iii. i.) 3 

ALEPH. I am the man that hath 
seen affliction by the rod of His 
wrath. 

Aleph. He hath led me, and 
brought me into darkness, but not 
into light. 



Third Responsory. 

4 I had planted thee a noble vim 
How then art thou turned into a dc 
generate plant, which wiliest tha 
Barabbas should be released unt 
thee, and that I should be crucified 

Verse. 5 I fenced thee, and gatr 
ered out the stones from thee, an 
built a tower in [the midst of] the* 

Answer. How then art thou turne 
into a degenerate plant, which willes 
that Barabbas should be released unt 
thee, and that I should be crucified 
I had planted thee a noble vii 
How then art thou turned into a ( 
generate plant, which wiliest ths 
Barabbas should be released unt 
thee, and that I should be crucifiec 

SECOND NOCTURN. 

First Afitiphon. They that soug 
after my life have used violence again 
me. 



I Matth. xxvu. 5 i, 52. 2 Luke xxiii. 42. 

! Here begins a third ABC Darian poem, but each letter has three, instead of one verse. 

4 J er ' «• «• 5 l sa . v# 2 . 



HOLY WEEK. 



375 



Psalm XXXVII. 

Lord, rebuke me not, &c, {p. 

1*30 

Second Antiphon. Let them be 
ashamed and confounded together 
that seek after my soul, to destroy it. 

Psalm XXXIX. 

1 waited patiently, &c, {p. 93.) 

Third Antiphon. Strangers are 
risen up against me, and oppressors 
seek after my soul. 

Psalm LIII. 
Save me, O God, &c, {p. 36.) 

Verse. Y False witnesses are risen 
up against me. 

Answer. And iniquity hath belied 
' itself. 

Fourth Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Treatise 
of St Austin, Bishop [of Hippo,] 
upon the Psalms (lxiii. 2.) 

'""THOU hast hidden me from the 
secret counsel of the wicked, 

j from the insurrection of the workers 

I of iniquity." Now let us fix our eyes 
upon our Head. Many martyrs have 

. suffered such things as He suffered, 
but God's hiding of His suffering ser- 

; vants is not so well seen in the 
Martyrs, as it is in the Captain of 
the Martyrs. And it is in Him that 
we best see how it fared with them. 
He was hidden from the secret coun- 
sel of the wicked ; hidden by God, 
being Himself God ; hidden, as touch- 
ing the Manhood, by God the Son, 
and the very Manhood, Which is taken 
into God the Son ; because He is the 
Son of man, and He is the Son of 

; God — Son of God, as being in the 



form of God ; Son of man, as having 
taken upon Him the form of a ser- 
vant, (Phil. ii. 6, 7,) Whose life no 
man taketh from Him, but Who 
layeth it down of Himself. He hath 
power to lay it down, and He hath 
power to take it again, (John x. 18.) 
What then was all that they which 
hated Him could do ? They could 
kill the Body, but they were not able 
to kill the Soul. 2 Consider this very 
earnestly. It had been a small thing 
for the Lord to preach to the Martyrs 
by His word, if He had not also 
nerved them by His example. 

Fourth Responsory. 

3 Are ye come out, as against a 
thief, with swords and staves, for to 
take Me ? I sat daily with you, 
teaching in the Temple, and ye laid 
no hold on Me ; and, now when ye 
have scourged Me, ye lead Me away 
to crucify Me! 4 

Verse. 5 And when they had laid 
hands on Jesus, and taken Him, He 
said unto them : 

Answer. I sat daily with you, 
teaching in the Temple, and ye laid 
no hold on Me ; and now, when ye 
have scourged Me, ye lead Me away 
to crucify Me ! 

Fifth Lesson. 

VE know what secret counsel was 
that of the wicked Jews, and 
what insurrection was that of the 
workers of iniquity. Of what iniquity 
were they the workers ? The murder 
of our Lord JESUS Christ. " Many 
good works," saith He, 6 "have I 
showed you — for which of those works 
go ye about to kill Me ? " He had 
borne with all their weaknesses : He 
had healed all their diseases : He 



1 Ps. xxvi. 12. 

4 Matth. xxvii. 26, 31. 



2 Cf. Matth. x. 28. 
5 Mark xiv. 46, 48, 49. 



3 Matth. xxvi. 55. 
6 John x. 32 ; vii. 



376 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



had preached unto them the king- 
dom of heaven : He had discovered to 
them their iniquities, that they might 
rather hate them, than the Physician 
That came to cure them. And now 
at last, without gratitude for all the 
tenderness of His healing love, like 
men raging in an high delirium, 
throwing themselves madly on the 
Physician, Who had come to cure 
them, they took counsel together how 
they might kill Him, as if to see if 
He were a Man and could die, or 
Something more than a man, and 
That would not let Himself die. In 
the Wisdom of Solomon we recognise 
their words, (ii. 18, 19, 20,) "Let us 
condemn Him with a shameful death 
— Let us examine Him ; for, by His 
own saying, He shall be respected. 
If He be the Son of God, let Him 
help Him." 

Fifth Responsory. 

1 The Jews crucified Jesus : and 
there was darkness [over all the land, 
unto the ninth hour] : and about the 
ninth hour Jesus cried with a loud 
voice, [saying] : My God, [My God,] 
why hast Thou forsaken Me ? 2 And 
He bowed His Head, and gave up 
the Ghost. 

Verse. 3 When Jesus had cried 
with a loud voice, He said : Father, 
into Thy hands I commend My 
Spirit. 

Answer. And He bowed His Head, 
and gave up the Ghost. 

Sixth Lesson. 

ur "PHEY whet their tongue like a 
sword." The Jews cannot 
say : " We did not murder Christ " 
— albeit they gave Him over to Pilate 
His judge, that they themselves might 

1 Matth. xxvii. 35, 45, 46. 2 John xix. 30. 3 Luke xxiii. 46. 

4 This is not in the Gospels. There are words like it in John xix. 6, but the whole passage 
seems a loose quotation from xviii. 31. 5 Jer. xii. 7, 8 ; cf. 9-11. 



seem free of His death. For when! 
Pilate said unto them, "Take ye Him: 
and kill Him," 4 they answered, "It; 
is not lawful for us to put any man 
to death." They could throw the' 
blame of their sin upon a human 
judge : but did they deceive God, the '■ 
Great Judge? In that which Pilate; 
did, he was their accomplice, but inf 
comparison with them, he had far the 
lesser sin. (John xix. 11.) Pilate' 
strove as far as he could, to deliver 
Him out of their hands ; for the which 
reason also he scourged Him, (John 
xix. 1,) and brought Him forth to, 
them (4). He scourged not the Lord 
for cruelty's sake, but in the hope that; 
he might so slake their wild thirst for 
blood: that, perchance, even they 
might be touched with compassion, 
and cease to lust for His death, when 
they saw What He was after the flag-; 
ellation. Even this effort he made.! 
" But when Pilate saw that he could! 
not prevail, but that rather a tumult 
was made," (Matth. xxvii. 24,) ye 
know how that "he took water, and 
washed his hands before the multi- 
tude, saying: I am innocent of the i 
Blood of this Just Person." And yetJ 
" he delivered Him to be crucified ! ' | 
(26). But if he were guilty who did 
it against his will, were they innocent ; 
who goaded him on to it? No. 
Pilate gave sentence against Him. 
and commanded Him to be crucified.: 
but ye, O ye Jews, ye also are His 
murderers ! Wherewith ? With youi j 
tongue, whetted like a sword. And 
when ? But when ye cried, " Crucif) 
Him ! Crucify Him ! " (Mark xv. 13. 
14 ; Luke xxiii. 21 ; John xix. 6.) 

Sixth Respo7isory. 

5 I have given the dearly-beloved o 
My soul into the hand of her enemies 



HOLY WEEK. 



377 



and Mine heritage is become unto Me 
as a lion in the forest ; the enemy 
crieth out against Me, saying : As- 
semble yourselves together, hasten to 
devour Him : they have made My 
portion a desolate wilderness, and 
the whole land mourneth unto Me : 
because there is none found that will 
know Me, nor do well. 

Verse. There be risen up against 
me such as breathe out cruelty, and 
they have not spared my soul. 

Answer. Because there is none 
found that will know Me, nor do well. 
I have given the dearly-beloved of 
My soul into the hand of her enemies, 
and Mine heritage is become unto Me 
as a lion in the forest : the enemy 
crieth out against Me, saying : Assemble 
yourselves together, hasten to devour 
Him : they have made My portion 
a desolate wilderness, and the whole 
land mourneth unto me : because there 
is none found that will know Me, nor 
do well. 

THIRD NOCTURN. 

First Antiphon. O Lord, defend 
me from them that rise up against me, 
for they lie in wait for my life. 

Psalm L VIII. 
Deliver me, &c, {p. m.) 

Second Antiphon. Thou hast put 
away mine acquaintance far from me ; 
I am shut up, and cannot come forth. 

Psalm LXXXVII. 

Lord God of my salvation, &c, 

P- M5.) 

Third Antiphon. They gather 
themselves together against the soul 
of the righteous, and condemn the 
innocent blood. 

1 Ps. cviii. 3. 



Psalm XCIII. 

The Lord God, to Whom vengeance, 

(A 147.) 

Verse. * They have spoken against 
me with a lying tongue. 

Answer. They compassed me about 
also with words of hatred, and fought 
against me without a cause. 



Seventh Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Epistle 
of the Blessed Apostle Paul to the 
Hebrews (iv. 11.) 

f ET us labour to enter into that 
rest, lest any man fall after the 
same example of unbelief. For the 
Word of God is quick and powerful, 
and sharper than any two-edged sword, 
piercing even to the dividing asunder 
of soul and spirit, and of the joints and 
marrow ; and is a discerner of the 
thoughts and intents of the heart. 
Neither is there any creature that is 
not manifest in His sight : but all 
things are naked and opened unto the 
eyes of Him with Whom we have to 
do. Seeing then that we have a great 
High Priest That is passed into the 
heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let 
us hold fast our profession. For we 
have not an High Priest, Which can- 
not be touched with the feeling of our 
infirmities : but was in all points 
tempted like as we are, yet without sin. 

Seventh Responsory. 

2 They have turned me over into the 
hands of the wicked : they also have 
numbered me with the trangressors, 
neither have they spared my life : the 
mighty are gathered together against 
me, and stand up against me like 
giants. 

Verse. 3 Strangers are risen up 



Cf. Job xvi. 12, 14, 15 ; Isa. liii. 12. 



» Ps. liii. 5. 



378 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



against me, and oppressors seek after 
my soul. 

Answer. And stand up against 
me like giants. 

Eighth Lesson. 

[" ET us therefore come boldly unto 
the throne of grace, that we may 
obtain mercy, and find grace to help 
in time of need, (v.) For every High 
Priest taken from among men is or- 
dained for men in things pertaining 
to God, that he may offer both gifts 
and sacrifices for sins : who can have 
compassion on the ignorant, and on 
them that are out of the way ; for 
that he himself also is compassed 
with infirmity. And by reason here- 
of he ought, as for the people, so 
also for himself, to offer for sins. 



Eighth Responsory. 

1 That wicked one betrayed JESUS 
to the chief-priests and elders of the 
people : but Peter followed Him afar 
off, to see the end. 

Verse. And they led Him away to 
Caiphas the High Priest, where the 
Scribes and Pharisees were assembled. 

Answer. But Peter followed Him 
afar off, to see the end. 

Ninth Lesson. 

A ND no man taketh this honour un- 
to himself, but he that is called 
of God, as was Aaron. So, also, Christ 
glorified not Himself to be made an 
High Priest, but He That said unto 
Him : " Thou art My Son, to-day have 
I begotten Thee." (Ps. ii. 7.) As He 
saith also in another place : " Thou art 
a Priest for ever, after the order of 
Melchisedeck." (Ps. cix. 4.) Who, in 



the days of His flesh, when He had 
offered up prayers and supplications, 
with strong crying and tears, unto 
Him That was able to save Him from 
death, was heard, in that He feared. 2 
And though He was the Son of God, 
yet learnt He obedience by the things 
which He suffered : and being made 
perfect, He is become the Author of 
Eternal Salvation unto all them that 
obey Him — called of God an High 
Priest after the order of Melchisedeck. 

Ninth Responsory. 

3 Mine eyes do fail with tears, be- 
cause the Comforter that should relieve 
me is far from me. Behold, O all 
ye nations, if there be any sorrow like 
unto my sorrow. 

Verse. O all ye that pass by, be- 
hold, and see — 

Answer. If there be any sorrow 
like unto my sorrow. Mine eyes do 
fail with tears, because the Comforter 
that should relieve me is far from me. 
Behold, O all ye nations, if there be 
any sorrow like unto my sorrow. 

LAUDS. 

This part of the Service begins at 
once with the First Antiphon. 

First Antiphon. 4 God spared not 
His Own Son, but delivered Him up 
for us all. 

Second Antiphon. My spirit is over- 
whelmed within me : my heart within 
me is troubled. 

Third Antiphon. 5 One thief said 
unto the other : We indeed receive the 
due reward of our deeds, but what 
hath this Man done ? Lord, remember 
me, when Thou comest into Thy 
kingdom. 

Fourth Antiphon. Lord, when my 



1 Cf. Matth. xxvi. 47, 48, 57, 58. 
3 Lam. ii. 11 ; i. 16, 12. 



2 Or, " on account of His reverent submission." 
4 Rom. viii. 32. 5 Luke xxiii. 40-42. 



HOLY WEEK. 



379 



soul is troubled, Thou wilt remember 
mercy. 

Fifth Antiphon. Lord, remember 
me, when Thou comest into Thy 
kingdom. 

No Chapter or Hym?i is said. 

Verse. * He hath set me in dark 
places. 

Answer. As they that be dead of 
old. 

Antiphon at the Song of Zacharias. 
2 They set up over His Head His 
accusation written : JESUS OF 
NAZARETH THE KING OF THE 
JEWS. 

The Service finishes as yesterday, ex- 
cept that the sentence, " Christ, for our 
sakes, &c," is read thus : 



Christ, for our sakes, became obedi- 
it un 
Cross. 



ent unto death, even the death of the 



The whole of the other Offices are 
Precisely the same as yesterday, with 
the exception of the above addition to 
the sentence, " Christ, for our sakes, 
&c," which addition is made through- 
out the day, and the Antiphon at the 
Song of the Blessed Virgin at Vespers, 
which is : 

When He had received the vinegar, 
He said : It is finished ! and He 
bowed His Head, and gave up the 
Ghost. 3 

The Liturgy is celebrated after No?ie. 
At its coticlusion the Priest and his 
ministers go to the Sacristy to unvest, 
and Vespers are begun in their absence, 
just as yesterday. The Priest and min- 
isters in the same way return to Choir 
before Vespers are over. 



%$fy Itafurtap, caWe* afeo Better 

The Holy Sabbath. 

MATTINS. 

This is the Third Night of Darkness. 
The Ceremonial is the same as before, as 
are also the omissions in the service. 

The A?itiphons are all doubled, and 
the Hyjnn, " Glory be to the Father, 
&c," is everywhere oniitted. 

After the Lords Prayer, the Angelic 
Salutation, and the Apostles' Creed have 
been said inaudibly , the First Antiphon 
begins at once. 

FIRST NOCTURN. 

First Antiphon. I will both lay 
me down in peace, and sleep. 

Psalm LV. 

When I called, &c, {p. 206.) 

Second Antiphon. He shall abide 
in Thy tabernacle : He shall dwell in 
Thy holy hill. 

Psalm XLV. 

Lord, who shall abide, &c, {p. 10.) 

Third Antiphon. My flesh shall 
rest in hope. 

Psalm XV. 

Preserve me, O Lord, &c, (p. 12.) 

Verse. I will both lay me down in 
peace. 

Answer. And sleep. 

Then, the Lord's Prayer having been 
said inaudibly, the First Lesson begins 
at once. 



1 Lam. iii. 6. 



2 Matth. xxvii. 37. 



3 John xix. 30. 



3 8o 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



First Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Lamen- 
tation of Jeremiah the Prophet (iii. 

22.) 

IT ETH. 1 It is of the Lord's mer- 
cies that we are not consumed : 
because His compassions fail not. 

Heth. They are new every morn- 
ing ; great is Thy faithfulness. 

Heth. The Lord is my portion, 
saith my soul : therefore will I hope 
in Him. 

Teth. The Lord is good unto 
them that wait for Him, to the soul 
that seeketh Him. 

Teth. It is good that a man 
should quietly wait for the salvation 
of the Lord. 

Teth. It is good for a man that 
he bear the yoke in his youth. 

Iod. He sitteth alone and keepeth 
silence, because he hath borne it upon 
him. 

Iod. He putteth his mouth in the 
dust, if so be there may be hope. 

Iod. He giveth his cheek to him 
that smiteth him : he is filled full with 
reproach. 

Jerusalem ! Jerusalem ! Return un- 
to the Lord thy God ! 



Second Lesson, (iv. i.) 

A LEPH. 4 How is the gold become 

dim ! How is the most fine 

gold changed ! The stones of the 

Sanctuary are poured out in the top 

of every street ! 

Beth. The precious sons of Zion, 
clad in fine gold, how are they es- 
teemed as earthen pitchers, the work 
of the hands of the potter ! 

Ghimel. Even the most savage 
beasts 5 draw out the breast, they give 
suck to their young ones : the daugh- 
ter of my people is cruel, like the 
ostrich in the wilderness ! 

Daleth. The tongue of the suck- 
ing child cleaveth to the roof of his 
mouth for thirst : the young children 
ask bread, and no man breaketh it 
unto them ! 

He. They that did feed delicately,, 
are dead of famine in the streets : they 
that were brought up in scarlet em- 
brace dung-hills ! 

Vav. For the iniquity of the 
daughter of my people is greater than 
the sin of Sodom, that was overthrown 
in a moment, and no hands stayed 
on her. 

Jerusalem ! Jerusalem ! Return un- 
to the Lord thy God ! 



The First Responsory begins at once. 

2 He hath been brought as a lamb 
to the slaughter, and while he was 
evil -entreated he opened not his 
mouth : he was delivered up to death, 
that he might quicken his people. 

Verse. 3 He hath poured out his 
soul unto death, and he was numbered 
with the transgressors. 

Answer. That he might quicken 
his people. 



Second Responsory. 

6 Arise, O Jerusalem, and put off 
thy garments of rejoicing : cover thee 
with sack -cloth and ashes : for the 
Saviour of Israel hath been slain in 
the midst of thee. 

Verse. 7 Let thy tears run down 
like a river day and night, and let not 
the apple of thine eye cease. 

Answer. For the Saviour of Israel 
hath been slain in the midst of thee. 



1 This is the continuation of the ABC Darian poem begun last night, omitting the letters- 
Daleth, He, Vav, and Zain. 2 Cf. Isa. liii. 7 ; 1 Mace. vi. 44. 

3 Isa. liii. 12. 4 This is the beginning of another ABC Darian poem. 

5 Lamiae, pr. a kind of vampire, or night-wandering spectre. Hebrew, Tanin — a word of 
indeterminate meaning, expressing generally savage wild beasts. Gesenius supposes jackals. 

6 Cf. Jonah iii. 6. 7 Lam. ii. 18. 



HOLY WEEK. 



381 



shepherds, in sack-cloth and ashes, for 
the day of the Lord is at hand, and 
it is great and very terrible. 



Third Lesson. (Lam. v. 1.) 

Here beginneth the Prayer of Jeremiah 
the Prophet. 

DEMEMBER, O Lord, what is 
come upon us : consider and 
behold our reproach. Our inheritance 
is turned to strangers, our houses to 
aliens. We are orphans and father- 
less ; our mothers are as widows. We 
have drunken our water for money ; 
our wood is sold unto us. Our necks 
are in jeopardy ;' we are weary, and 
have no rest. We have given the 
hand to the Egyptians, and to the 
Assyrians, to be satisfied with bread. 
Our fathers have sinned, and are not ; 
and we have borne their iniquities. 
Servants have ruled over us : there is 
none that doth deliver us out of their 
hand. We gat our bread with the 
peril of our lives, because of the sword 
of the wilderness. Our skin was black 
like an oven, because of the terrible 
famine. They ravished the women in 
Zion, and the maids in the cities of 
Judah. 

Jerusalem ! Jerusalem ! Return un- 
to the Lord thy God ! 

Third Respo?isory. 

1 O my people ! lament, like a virgin 
[girded with sack-cloth for the husband 
of her youth,] 2 howl, ye shepherds, in 
sack-cloth and ashes, 1 for the day of 
the Lord is at hand, and it is great 
and very terrible. 

Verse. Gird yourselves, ye Priests, 
and howl, ye ministers of the altar : 
cast up ashes upon you. 

Answer. For the day of the Lord 
is at hand, and it is great and very 
terrible. O my people ! lament, like 
a virgin, [girded with sack-cloth for 
the husband of her youth,] howl, ye 

1 Joel i. 8, 15 ; ii. 11 ; i. 13. 2 Jer. xxv. 34. 

3 Probably here referring to the "gates of death" entered by Christ when He "descended 
into hell." The other Antiphons seem put in the mouth of "the spirits in prison." (1 Pet. 
in. 19-) * Ps. xl. 11. 

VOL. II. N 2 



SECOND NOCTURN. 

First Antiphon. Be ye lift up, ye 
everlasting doors, 3 and the King of 
glory shall come in. 

Psalm XXIII. 

The earth is the Lord's, &c, {p. 
46.) 

Second Antiphon. I believe that I 
shall yet see the goodness of the Lord 
in the land of the living. 

Psalm XXVI. 

The LORD is my light, &c, {p. 73.) 

Third Antiphon. O Lord, Thou 
hast brought up my soul from the 
grave. 

Psalm XXIX. 

I will extol Thee, &c, {p. 75.) 

Verse. 4 But Thou, O Lord, be 
merciful unto me. 

Answer. And raise me up ; and I 
will requite them. 

Fourth Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Treatise 
of St Austin, Bishop [of Hippo,] 
upon the Psalms (lxiii. 7.) 

" A/TAN shall attain to thoughts that 
are very deep : but God shall 
still be exalted." The enemies of our 
Lord had communed of laying snares 
privily; they had said, "Who shall see 
them ? " They had searched out in- 
iquities ; they had accomplished a dil- 



382 



THE PROPER OFFICE OF THE SEASON. 



igent search. And Man attained even 
unto [the realisation of] their counsels, 
for the Lord, as Man, suffered Himself 
to be taken. For He had not been 
taken at all, unless He had been a 
Man, or seen, unless He had been a 
Man, or smitten, unless He had been 
a Man, or crucified, unless He had 
been a Man, or have died, unless He 
had been a Man. Man therefore, He 
attained unto all those sufferings, 
which had had nothing in Him, 
unless He had been a Man. But if 
He had not been Man, man had not 
been redeemed. And the Lord as Man 
attained to thoughts that were very 
deep, yea, secret ; showing the Man- 
hood to the eyes of men, and keeping 
the Godhead within Him ; veiling the 
form of God, as touching Which, He 
is Equal to the Father, and manifest- 
ing the form of a servant, as touching 
which, He is inferior to the Father. 



Fourth Responsory. 

Our Shepherd, even the Fountain of 
living waters, is gone from us ; He 
passed away, and the sun was dark- 
ened. For now hath our Saviour 
bound him captive, which bound the 
first man captive ; this day hath He 
burst the gates and bars of death. 

Verse. The bands of hell He hath 
utterly abolished, and hath done away 
the power of the devil. 

Answer. For now hath our Saviour 
bound him captive, which bound the 
first man captive ; this day hath He 
burst the gates and bars of death. 

Fifth Lesson. 

IT OW far did the accomplishment 
of their diligent search reach ? 
Even to the setting a watch of soldiers 
at the sepulchre, to guard the Lord, 
even after He was dead and buried. 
For " they said unto Pilate : Sir, we 



remember that that deceiver — " 
(Matth. xxvii. 63.) This was the 
term by which they designated the 
Lord Jesus Christ, and the remem- 
brance that He was so named is a 
sweet consolation to us His servants, 
when we are called impostors. So 
they said unto Pilate, " that deceiver 
said, while He was yet alive : After 
three days I will rise again. Com- 
mand therefore that the sepulchre be 
made sure until the third day, lest His 
disciples come and steal Him away, 
and say unto the people : He is risen 
again from the dead : so the last error 
shall be worse than the first. Pilate 
said unto them : Ye have a watch ; go 
your way ; make it as sure as ye can. 
So they went and made the sepulchre 
sure, sealing the stone, and setting a 
watch." 

Fifth Responsory. 

O all ye that pass by, behold and 
see if there be any sorrow like unto 
my sorrow. 

Verse. O all ye nations, behold, 
and see my sorrow, — 

Answer. If there be any sorrow 
like unto my sorrow. 



Sixth Lesson. 

"CO they went, and made the sepul- 
*^ chre sure, sealing the stone, 
and setting a watch " — and anon, 
"behold, there was a great earth- 
quake," and the Lord arose. So 
great wonders were wrought about 
the sepulchre that the very soldiers, 
which were put to guard it, were 
witnesses thereto, if only they would 
have told the truth. But the same 
love of money which had made a slave 
of that disciple who was a companion 
of Christ, made slaves also of the 
soldiers that were put to watch His 
sepulchre. " Some of the watch came 
into the city, and showed unto the 



HOLY WEEK. 



383 



chief- priests all the things that were 
done : and when they were assembled 
with the elders, and had taken coun- 
sel, they gave large money unto the 
soldiers, saying : Say ye, His disciples 
came by night and stole Him away 
while we slept." In good sooth, their 
diligent search had been accomplished 
and ended before this. What didst 
thou say, O stupid cunning ? Wast 
thou indeed so utterly void of the light 
of godly wisdom, and confounded in 
the bottomless pit of thine own false- 
hood as to tell them to say : "His 
disciples came by night, and stole Him 
away while we slept ? " Part of the 
testimony of thine eye-witnesses was 
that they were asleep at the time : 
thou thyself wast asleep not to be able 
to see that on their own testimony, 
their testimony must have been worth- 
less. 

Sixth Responsory. 

1 Behold how the righteous dieth, 
and no man taketh it to heart ; and 
the just are taken away, and none 
considereth. From the midst of sin- 
ners is the righteous translated ; and 
his memory is in peace. 

Verse. As a lamb before his 
shearers is dumb, so He opened not 
His mouth ; He was taken from prison 
and from judgment. 

Answer. And his memory is in 
peace. Behold how the righteous 
dieth, and no man taketh it to heart ; 
and the just are taken away, and none 
considereth. From the midst of sin- 
ners is the righteous translated ; and 
his memory is in peace. 

THIRD NOCTURN. 

First Antiphon. God is my helper, 
and the Lord upholdeth my soul. 

1 Cf. Wisd. iv. 10, 14 ; Isa. lvii. 1. 

2 Lit., Salem, a play upon the meaning of that name, viz., Peace, 
it was true in both senses. 



Psalm LI II. 

Save me, O God, &c, {p. 36.) 

Second Antiphon. His place is in 
"Peace," 2 and His dwelling-place in 
Zion. 

Psalm LXXV. 

In Judah is God known, &c, {p. 
130.) 

Third Antiphon. I am as a man 
that hath no strength, lying nerveless 
among the dead. 

Psalm LXXXVII. 

O Lord God of my salvation, &c, 

(A 145.) 

Verse. His place is in "Peace." 2 
Answer. And His dwelling-place 
in Zion. 

Seventh Lesson. 

The Lesson is taken from the Epistle 
of the Blessed Apostle Paul to the 
Hebre