This section is from the book "Manual Of Useful Information", by J. C Thomas. Also available from Amazon: Manual of useful Information.
Your Bible, if it is of the regulation sort, closes the Book of Psalms with the 150th. In the Greek Bible, however, there is another entitled "A Psalm of David After He Had Slain Goliath." Athanasius praises it very highly in his "Synopsis of the Holy Scriptures." It was versified by Apollinarius Alexandrius, A. D. 360, and a Latin translation of it may be found in the works of Fabricus, Vol. II., pp. 995-997. The translation below is by Baring-Gould, the well-known antiquarian.
1. I was small among my brethren; and growing up in my father's house, I kept his sheep.
2. My hands made the organ and my fingers shaped the psaltery.
8. And who declared unto my Lord. He, the Lord, he heard all things.
4. He sent his angels and they took, me from my father's sheep; he anointed me in mercy from his unction.
5. Great and goodly are my brethren, but with them God was not well pleased.
6. I went to meet the [giant] stranger; and he cursed me by all his idols.
7. But I smote off his head with his own drawn sword; and I blotted out the reproach of Israel.
 
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