I've found a longer version of a Landlord's Prayer which Henry George published in The Standard (late 1880s, or early 1890s). This one was reprinted in December, 1920 in an IBEW publication, and is sourced there to the Dundee People's Journal.
LANDLORD'S PRAYER.
(By William Allan.)
Lord, keep us rich and free from toil
For we
Are honored holders of thy soil,
Which democrats would fain despoil
With glee.
O Lord, our fathers got the land
For serving men whom Thy right hand
Had chosen to be great and grand,
As kings.
Tho' taken by stealth, we're not to blame;
Thou knowest, O Lord! it is a shame
To say to us of titled name
Such things.
Lord, let us live in wealth's content
And peace;
Lord, we are by Thy mercy meant
To rule mankind and make our rent
Increase.
The birds that hunt the moors and hills,
The fish that swim in streams and rills,
The beasts that roam as nature wills,
We own.
E'en Lord, the minerals that lie
Beneath the earth's periphery
Belong to us -- Thou knowest why
Alone.
Lord, on the rugged rabble frown,
For they
Are foes to us, Thy church and crown;
Lord, bare Thine arm and grind them
down
To clay.
O Lord, our God! we make their laws,
Which they reject with wild applause;
Be Thou a buckler to our cause
And caste.
They scorn our love, Thy name and word,
They reverence neither squire nor lord;
Lord, them consume with fire and sword
At last.
Lord, they are poor and ignorant,
And worse.
Compared with us, how different
In manner, garb, and lineament,
And purse!
Lord, never let them get or see
The power which lies in unity.
Keep us apart from them -- for we
Are men.
Protect us from their greedy hands,
Protect us from their vile demands,
Protect us in our wealth and lands,
Amen, amen!
--Dundee People's Journal.
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