| O throned, O crowned with all renown,Since Thou the earth hast trod,
 Thou reignest, and by Thee come down
 Henceforth the gifts of God.
 By Thee the suns of space, that burn
 Unspent, their watches hold;
 The hosts that turn, and still return
 Are swayed, and poised, and rolled.
 The powers of earth, for all her ills,An endless treasure yield;
 The precious things of ancient hills,
 Forest, and fruitful field;
 Thine is the health, and Thine the wealth
 That in our halls abound;
 And Thine the beauty and the joy
 With which the years are crowned.
 And as, when ebbed the flood, our siresKneeled on the mountain sod,
 While o’er the new world’s altar fires
 Shone out the bow of God;
 And sweetly fell the peaceful spell—
 Word that shall aye avail—
 “Summer and winter shall not cease,
 Seed time nor harvest fail”;
 Thus in their change let frost and heatAnd winds and dew be giv’n;
 All fostering power, all influence sweet,
 Breathe from the bounteous Heav’n.
 Attemper fair with gentle air
 The sunshine and the rain,
 That kindly earth with timely birth
 May yield her fruits again;
 That we may feed Thy poor aright,And, gathering round Thy throne,
 Here in the holy angels’ sight
 Repay Thee of Thine own.
 For so our sires in olden time
 Spared neither gold nor gear,
 Nor precious wood, nor hewen stone,
 Thy sacred shines to rear.
 For there to give the second birthIn mysteries and signs,
 The face of Christ o’er all the earth
 On keeling myriads shines.
 And if so fair beyond compare
 Thine earthly houses be,
 In how great grace shall we Thy face
 In Thine own palace see?
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