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| | The Song of a City, and the Pearl of Peace |
 | | This song of a city may, however, belong to us as much as to the men of Judah, and we may throw into it a deeper sense of which they were not aware. |
 | | Now, when we get as far as this,a strong city, and a city into which we have entered, we are still further glad to learn who the keeper and garrison of that city may be, for a city needs to be kept while there are so many foes abroad. |
 | | Whisper it at the gates, and in the hostelries, that the city might be taken by surprise, and that spies had been seen in the meadows, down by the East gate; and straightway the city would be in a ferment. |
| www.spurgeon.org /sermons/1818.htm (6411 words) |
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