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- Book VI
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- All night the dreadless Angel, unpursued,
- Through Heaven's wide champain held his way; till Morn,
- Waked by the circling Hours, with rosy hand
- Unbarred the gates of light. There is a cave
- Within the mount of God, fast by his throne,
- Where light and darkness in perpetual round
- Lodge and dislodge by turns, which makes through Heaven
- Grateful vicissitude, like day and night;
- Light issues forth, and at the other door
- Obsequious darkness enters, till her hour
- To veil the Heaven, though darkness there might well
- Seem twilight here: And now went forth the Morn
- Such as in highest Heaven arrayed in gold
- Empyreal; from before her vanished Night,
- Shot through with orient beams; when all the plain
- Covered with thick embattled squadrons bright,
- Chariots, and flaming arms, and fiery steeds,
- Reflecting blaze on blaze, first met his view:
- War he perceived, war in procinct; and found
- Already known what he for news had thought
- To have reported: Gladly then he mixed
- Among those friendly Powers, who him received
- With joy and acclamations loud, that one,
- That of so many myriads fallen, yet one
- Returned not lost. On to the sacred hill
- They led him high applauded, and present
- Before the seat supreme; from whence a voice,
- From midst a golden cloud, thus mild was heard.
- Servant of God. Well done; well hast thou fought
- The better fight, who single hast maintained
- Against revolted multitudes the cause
- Of truth, in word mightier than they in arms;
- And for the testimony of truth hast borne
- Universal reproach, far worse to bear
- Than violence; for this was all thy care
- To stand approved in sight of God, though worlds
- Judged thee perverse: The easier conquest now
- Remains thee, aided by this host of friends,
- Back on thy foes more glorious to return,
- Than scorned thou didst depart; and to subdue
- By force, who reason for their law refuse,
- Right reason for their law, and for their King
- Messiah, who by right of merit reigns.
- Go, Michael, of celestial armies prince,
- And thou, in military prowess next,
- Gabriel, lead forth to battle these my sons
- Invincible; lead forth my armed Saints,
- By thousands and by millions, ranged for fight,
- Equal in number to that Godless crew
- Rebellious: Them with fire and hostile arms
- Fearless assault; and, to the brow of Heaven
- Pursuing, drive them out from God and bliss,
- Into their place of punishment, the gulf
- Of Tartarus, which ready opens wide
- His fiery Chaos to receive their fall.
- So spake the Sovran Voice, and clouds began
- To darken all the hill, and smoke to roll
- In dusky wreaths, reluctant flames, the sign
- Of wrath awaked; nor with less dread the loud
- Ethereal trumpet from on high 'gan blow:
- At which command the Powers militant,
- That stood for Heaven, in mighty quadrate joined
- Of union irresistible, moved on
- In silence their bright legions, to the sound
- Of instrumental harmony, that breathed
- Heroick ardour to adventurous deeds
- Under their God-like leaders, in the cause
- Of God and his Messiah. On they move
- Indissolubly firm; nor obvious hill,
- Nor straitening vale, nor wood, nor stream, divides
- Their perfect ranks; for high above the ground
- Their march was, and the passive air upbore
- Their nimble tread; as when the total kind
- Of birds, in orderly array on wing,
- Came summoned over Eden to receive
- Their names of thee; so over many a tract
- Of Heaven they marched, and many a province wide,
- Tenfold the length of this terrene: At last,
- Far in the horizon to the north appeared
- From skirt to skirt a fiery region, stretched
- In battailous aspect, and nearer view
- Bristled with upright beams innumerable
- Of rigid spears, and helmets thronged, and shields
- Various, with boastful argument portrayed,
- The banded Powers of Satan hasting on
- With furious expedition; for they weened
- That self-same day, by fight or by surprise,
- To win the mount of God, and on his throne
- To set the Envier of his state, the proud
- Aspirer; but their thoughts proved fond and vain
- In the mid way: Though strange to us it seemed
- At first, that Angel should with Angel war,
- And in fierce hosting meet, who wont to meet
- So oft in festivals of joy and love
- Unanimous, as sons of one great Sire,
- Hymning the Eternal Father: But the shout
- Of battle now began, and rushing sound
- Of onset ended soon each milder thought.
- High in the midst, exalted as a God,
- The Apostate in his sun-bright chariot sat,
- Idol of majesty divine, enclosed
- With flaming Cherubim, and golden shields;
- Then lighted from his gorgeous throne, for now
- "twixt host and host but narrow space was left,
- A dreadful interval, and front to front
- Presented stood in terrible array
- Of hideous length: Before the cloudy van,
- On the rough edge of battle ere it joined,
- Satan, with vast and haughty strides advanced,
- Came towering, armed in adamant and gold;
- Abdiel that sight endured not, where he stood
- Among the mightiest, bent on highest deeds,
- And thus his own undaunted heart explores.
- O Heaven! that such resemblance of the Highest
- Should yet remain, where faith and realty
- Remain not: Wherefore should not strength and might
- There fail where virtue fails, or weakest prove
- Where boldest, though to fight unconquerable?
- His puissance, trusting in the Almighty's aid,
- I mean to try, whose reason I have tried
- Unsound and false; nor is it aught but just,
- That he, who in debate of truth hath won,
- Should win in arms, in both disputes alike
- Victor; though brutish that contest and foul,
- When reason hath to deal with force, yet so
- Most reason is that reason overcome.
- So pondering, and from his armed peers
- Forth stepping opposite, half-way he met
- His daring foe, at this prevention more
- Incensed, and thus securely him defied.
- Proud, art thou met? thy hope was to have reached
- The highth of thy aspiring unopposed,
- The throne of God unguarded, and his side
- Abandoned, at the terrour of thy power
- Or potent tongue: Fool!not to think how vain
- Against the Omnipotent to rise in arms;
- Who out of smallest things could, without end,
- Have raised incessant armies to defeat
- Thy folly; or with solitary hand
- Reaching beyond all limit, at one blow,
- Unaided, could have finished thee, and whelmed
- Thy legions under darkness: But thou seest
- All are not of thy train; there be, who faith
- Prefer, and piety to God, though then
- To thee not visible, when I alone
- Seemed in thy world erroneous to dissent
- From all: My sect thou seest;now learn too late
- How few sometimes may know, when thousands err.
- Whom the grand foe, with scornful eye askance,
- Thus answered. Ill for thee, but in wished hour
- Of my revenge, first sought for, thou returnest
- From flight, seditious Angel! to receive
- Thy merited reward, the first assay
- Of this right hand provoked, since first that tongue,
- Inspired with contradiction, durst oppose
- A third part of the Gods, in synod met
- Their deities to assert; who, while they feel
- Vigour divine within them, can allow
- Omnipotence to none. But well thou comest
- Before thy fellows, ambitious to win
- From me some plume, that thy success may show
- Destruction to the rest: This pause between,
- (Unanswered lest thou boast) to let thee know,
- At first I thought that Liberty and Heaven
- To heavenly souls had been all one; but now
- I see that most through sloth had rather serve,
- Ministring Spirits, trained up in feast and song!
- Such hast thou armed, the minstrelsy of Heaven,
- Servility with freedom to contend,
- As both their deeds compared this day shall prove.
- To whom in brief thus Abdiel stern replied.
- Apostate! still thou errest, nor end wilt find
- Of erring, from the path of truth remote:
- Unjustly thou depravest it with the name
- Of servitude, to serve whom God ordains,
- Or Nature: God and Nature bid the same,
- When he who rules is worthiest, and excels
- Them whom he governs. This is servitude,
- To serve the unwise, or him who hath rebelled
- Against his worthier, as thine now serve thee,
- Thyself not free, but to thyself enthralled;
- Yet lewdly darest our ministring upbraid.
- Reign thou in Hell, thy kingdom; let me serve
- In Heaven God ever blest, and his divine
- Behests obey, worthiest to be obeyed;
- Yet chains in Hell, not realms, expect: Mean while
- From me returned, as erst thou saidst, from flight,
- This greeting on thy impious crest receive.
- So saying, a noble stroke he lifted high,
- Which hung not, but so swift with tempest fell
- On the proud crest of Satan, that no sight,
- Nor motion of swift thought, less could his shield,
- Such ruin intercept: Ten paces huge
- He back recoiled; the tenth on bended knee
- His massy spear upstaid; as if on earth
- Winds under ground, or waters forcing way,
- Sidelong had pushed a mountain from his seat,
- Half sunk with all his pines. Amazement seised
- The rebel Thrones, but greater rage, to see
- Thus foiled their mightiest; ours joy filled, and shout,
- Presage of victory, and fierce desire
- Of battle: Whereat Michael bid sound
- The Arch-Angel trumpet; through the vast of Heaven
- It sounded, and the faithful armies rung
- Hosanna to the Highest: Nor stood at gaze
- The adverse legions, nor less hideous joined
- The horrid shock. Now storming fury rose,
- And clamour such as heard in Heaven till now
- Was never; arms on armour clashing brayed
- Horrible discord, and the madding wheels
- Of brazen chariots raged; dire was the noise
- Of conflict; over head the dismal hiss
- Of fiery darts in flaming vollies flew,
- And flying vaulted either host with fire.
- So under fiery cope together rushed
- Both battles main, with ruinous assault
- And inextinguishable rage. All Heaven
- Resounded; and had Earth been then, all Earth
- Had to her center shook. What wonder? when
- Millions of fierce encountering Angels fought
- On either side, the least of whom could wield
- These elements, and arm him with the force
- Of all their regions: How much more of power
- Army against army numberless to raise
- Dreadful combustion warring, and disturb,
- Though not destroy, their happy native seat;
- Had not the Eternal King Omnipotent,
- From his strong hold of Heaven, high over-ruled
- And limited their might; though numbered such
- As each divided legion might have seemed
- A numerous host; in strength each armed hand
- A legion; led in fight, yet leader seemed
- Each warriour single as in chief, expert
- When to advance, or stand, or turn the sway
- Of battle, open when, and when to close
- The ridges of grim war: No thought of flight,
- None of retreat, no unbecoming deed
- That argued fear; each on himself relied,
- As only in his arm the moment lay
- Of victory: Deeds of eternal fame
- Were done, but infinite; for wide was spread
- That war and various; sometimes on firm ground
- A standing fight, then, soaring on main wing,
- Tormented all the air; all air seemed then
- Conflicting fire. Long time in even scale
- The battle hung; till Satan, who that day
- Prodigious power had shown, and met in arms
- No equal, ranging through the dire attack
- Of fighting Seraphim confused, at length
- Saw where the sword of Michael smote, and felled
- Squadrons at once; with huge two-handed sway
- Brandished aloft, the horrid edge came down
- Wide-wasting; such destruction to withstand
- He hasted, and opposed the rocky orb
- Of tenfold adamant, his ample shield,
- A vast circumference. At his approach
- The great Arch-Angel from his warlike toil
- Surceased, and glad, as hoping here to end
- Intestine war in Heaven, the arch-foe subdued
- Or captive dragged in chains, with hostile frown
- And visage all inflamed first thus began.
- Author of evil, unknown till thy revolt,
- Unnamed in Heaven, now plenteous as thou seest
- These acts of hateful strife, hateful to all,
- Though heaviest by just measure on thyself,
- And thy adherents: How hast thou disturbed
- Heaven's blessed peace, and into nature brought
- Misery, uncreated till the crime
- Of thy rebellion! how hast thou instilled
- Thy malice into thousands, once upright
- And faithful, now proved false! But think not here
- To trouble holy rest; Heaven casts thee out
- From all her confines. Heaven, the seat of bliss,
- Brooks not the works of violence and war.
- Hence then, and evil go with thee along,
- Thy offspring, to the place of evil, Hell;
- Thou and thy wicked crew! there mingle broils,
- Ere this avenging sword begin thy doom,
- Or some more sudden vengeance, winged from God,
- Precipitate thee with augmented pain.
- So spake the Prince of Angels; to whom thus
- The Adversary. Nor think thou with wind
- Of aery threats to awe whom yet with deeds
- Thou canst not. Hast thou turned the least of these
- To flight, or if to fall, but that they rise
- Unvanquished, easier to transact with me
- That thou shouldst hope, imperious, and with threats
- To chase me hence? err not, that so shall end
- The strife which thou callest evil, but we style
- The strife of glory; which we mean to win,
- Or turn this Heaven itself into the Hell
- Thou fablest; here however to dwell free,
- If not to reign: Mean while thy utmost force,
- And join him named Almighty to thy aid,
- I fly not, but have sought thee far and nigh.
- They ended parle, and both addressed for fight
- Unspeakable; for who, though with the tongue
- Of Angels, can relate, or to what things
- Liken on earth conspicuous, that may lift
- Human imagination to such highth
- Of Godlike power? for likest Gods they seemed,
- Stood they or moved, in stature, motion, arms,
- Fit to decide the empire of great Heaven.
- Now waved their fiery swords, and in the air
- Made horrid circles; two broad suns their shields
- Blazed opposite, while Expectation stood
- In horrour: From each hand with speed retired,
- Where erst was thickest fight, the angelick throng,
- And left large field, unsafe within the wind
- Of such commotion; such as, to set forth
- Great things by small, if, nature's concord broke,
- Among the constellations war were sprung,
- Two planets, rushing from aspect malign
- Of fiercest opposition, in mid sky
- Should combat, and their jarring spheres confound.
- Together both with next to almighty arm
- Up-lifted imminent, one stroke they aimed
- That might determine, and not need repeat,
- As not of power at once; nor odds appeared
- In might or swift prevention: But the sword
- Of Michael from the armoury of God
- Was given him tempered so, that neither keen
- Nor solid might resist that edge: it met
- The sword of Satan, with steep force to smite
- Descending, and in half cut sheer; nor staid,
- But with swift wheel reverse, deep entering, shared
- All his right side: Then Satan first knew pain,
- And writhed him to and fro convolved; so sore
- The griding sword with discontinuous wound
- Passed through him: But the ethereal substance closed,
- Not long divisible; and from the gash
- A stream of necturous humour issuing flowed
- Sanguine, such as celestial Spirits may bleed,
- And all his armour stained, ere while so bright.
- Forthwith on all sides to his aid was run
- By Angels many and strong, who interposed
- Defence, while others bore him on their shields
- Back to his chariot, where it stood retired
- From off the files of war: There they him laid
- Gnashing for anguish, and despite, and shame,
- To find himself not matchless, and his pride
- Humbled by such rebuke, so far beneath
- His confidence to equal God in power.
- Yet soon he healed; for Spirits that live throughout
- Vital in every part, not as frail man
- In entrails, heart of head, liver or reins,
- Cannot but by annihilating die;
- Nor in their liquid texture mortal wound
- Receive, no more than can the fluid air:
- All heart they live, all head, all eye, all ear,
- All intellect, all sense; and, as they please,
- They limb themselves, and colour, shape, or size
- Assume, as?kikes them best, condense or rare.
- Mean while in other parts like deeds deserved
- Memorial, where the might of Gabriel fought,
- And with fierce ensigns pierced the deep array
- Of Moloch, furious king; who him defied,
- And at his chariot-wheels to drag him bound
- Threatened, nor from the Holy One of Heaven
- Refrained his tongue blasphemous; but anon
- Down cloven to the waist, with shattered arms
- And uncouth pain fled bellowing. On each wing
- Uriel, and Raphael, his vaunting foe,
- Though huge, and in a rock of diamond armed,
- Vanquished Adramelech, and Asmadai,
- Two potent Thrones, that to be less than Gods
- Disdained, but meaner thoughts learned in their flight,
- Mangled with ghastly wounds through plate and mail.
- Nor stood unmindful Abdiel to annoy
- The atheist crew, but with redoubled blow
- Ariel, and Arioch, and the violence
- Of Ramiel scorched and blasted, overthrew.
- I might relate of thousands, and their names
- Eternize here on earth; but those elect
- Angels, contented with their fame in Heaven,
- Seek not the praise of men: The other sort,
- In might though wonderous and in acts of war,
- Nor of renown less eager, yet by doom
- Cancelled from Heaven and sacred memory,
- Nameless in dark oblivion let them dwell.
- For strength from truth divided, and from just,
- Illaudable, nought merits but dispraise
- And ignominy; yet to glory aspires
- Vain-glorious, and through infamy seeks fame:
- Therefore eternal silence be their doom.
- And now, their mightiest quelled, the battle swerved,
- With many an inroad gored; deformed rout
- Entered, and foul disorder; all the ground
- With shivered armour strown, and on a heap
- Chariot and charioteer lay overturned,
- And fiery-foaming steeds; what stood, recoiled
- O'er-wearied, through the faint Satanick host
- Defensive scarce, or with pale fear surprised,
- Then first with fear surprised, and sense of pain,
- Fled ignominious, to such evil brought
- By sin of disobedience; till that hour
- Not liable to fear, or flight, or pain.
- Far otherwise the inviolable Saints,
- In cubick phalanx firm, advanced entire,
- Invulnerable, impenetrably armed;
- Such high advantages their innocence
- Gave them above their foes; not to have sinned,
- Not to have disobeyed; in fight they stood
- Unwearied, unobnoxious to be pained
- By wound, though from their place by violence moved,
- Now Night her course began, and, over Heaven
- Inducing darkness, grateful truce imposed,
- And silence on the odious din of war:
- Under her cloudy covert both retired,
- Victor and vanquished: On the foughten field
- Michael and his Angels prevalent
- Encamping, placed in guard their watches round,
- Cherubick waving fires: On the other part,
- Satan with his rebellious disappeared,
- Far in the dark dislodged; and, void of rest,
- His potentates to council called by night;
- And in the midst thus undismayed began.
- O now in danger tried, now known in arms
- Not to be overpowered, Companions dear,
- Found worthy not of liberty alone,
- Too mean pretence! but what we more affect,
- Honour, dominion, glory, and renown;
- Who have sustained one day in doubtful fight,
- (And if one day, why not eternal days?)
- What Heaven's Lord had powerfullest to send
- Against us from about his throne, and judged
- Sufficient to subdue us to his will,
- But proves not so: Then fallible, it seems,
- Of future we may deem him, though till now
- Omniscient thought. True is, less firmly armed,
- Some disadvantage we endured and pain,
- Till now not known, but, known, as soon contemned;
- Since now we find this our empyreal form
- Incapable of mortal injury,
- Imperishable, and, though pierced with wound,
- Soon closing, and by native vigour healed.
- Of evil then so small as easy think
- The remedy; perhaps more valid arms,
- Weapons more violent, when next we meet,
- May serve to better us, and worse our foes,
- Or equal what between us made the odds,
- In nature none: If other hidden cause
- Left them superiour, while we can preserve
- Unhurt our minds, and understanding sound,
- Due search and consultation will disclose.
- He sat; and in the assembly next upstood
- Nisroch, of Principalities the prime;
- As one he stood escaped from cruel fight,
- Sore toiled, his riven arms to havock hewn,
- And cloudy in aspect thus answering spake.
- Deliverer from new Lords, leader to free
- Enjoyment of our right as Gods; yet hard
- For Gods, and too unequal work we find,
- Against unequal arms to fight in pain,
- Against unpained, impassive; from which evil
- Ruin must needs ensue; for what avails
- Valour or strength, though matchless, quelled with pain
- Which all subdues, and makes remiss the hands
- Of mightiest? Sense of pleasure we may well
- Spare out of life perhaps, and not repine,
- But live content, which is the calmest life:
- But pain is perfect misery, the worst
- Of evils, and, excessive, overturns
- All patience. He, who therefore can invent
- With what more forcible we may offend
- Our yet unwounded enemies, or arm
- Ourselves with like defence, to me deserves
- No less than for deliverance what we owe.
- Whereto with look composed Satan replied.
- Not uninvented that, which thou aright
- Believest so main to our success, I bring.
- Which of us who beholds the bright surface
- Of this ethereous mould whereon we stand,
- This continent of spacious Heaven, adorned
- With plant, fruit, flower ambrosial, gems, and gold;
- Whose eye so superficially surveys
- These things, as not to mind from whence they grow
- Deep under ground, materials dark and crude,
- Of spiritous and fiery spume, till touched
- With Heaven's ray, and tempered, they shoot forth
- So beauteous, opening to the ambient light?
- These in their dark nativity the deep
- Shall yield us, pregnant with infernal flame;
- Which, into hollow engines, long and round,
- Thick rammed, at the other bore with touch of fire
- Dilated and infuriate, shall send forth
- From far, with thundering noise, among our foes
- Such implements of mischief, as shall dash
- To pieces, and o'erwhelm whatever stands
- Adverse, that they shall fear we have disarmed
- The Thunderer of his only dreaded bolt.
- Nor long shall be our labour; yet ere dawn,
- Effect shall end our wish. Mean while revive;
- Abandon fear; to strength and counsel joined
- Think nothing hard, much less to be despaired.
- He ended, and his words their drooping cheer
- Enlightened, and their languished hope revived.
- The invention all admired, and each, how he
- To be the inventer missed; so easy it seemed
- Once found, which yet unfound most would have thought
- Impossible: Yet, haply, of thy race
- In future days, if malice should abound,
- Some one intent on mischief, or inspired
- With devilish machination, might devise
- Like instrument to plague the sons of men
- For sin, on war and mutual slaughter bent.
- Forthwith from council to the work they flew;
- None arguing stood; innumerable hands
- Were ready; in a moment up they turned
- Wide the celestial soil, and saw beneath
- The originals of nature in their crude
- Conception; sulphurous and nitrous foam
- They found, they mingled, and, with subtle art,
- Concocted and adusted they reduced
- To blackest grain, and into store conveyed:
- Part hidden veins digged up (nor hath this earth
- Entrails unlike) of mineral and stone,
- Whereof to found their engines and their balls
- Of missive ruin; part incentive reed
- Provide, pernicious with one touch to fire.
- So all ere day-spring, under conscious night,
- Secret they finished, and in order set,
- With silent circumspection, unespied.
- Now when fair morn orient in Heaven appeared,
- Up rose the victor-Angels, and to arms
- The matin trumpet sung: In arms they stood
- Of golden panoply, refulgent host,
- Soon banded; others from the dawning hills
- Look round, and scouts each coast light-armed scour,
- Each quarter to descry the distant foe,
- Where lodged, or whither fled, or if for fight,
- In motion or in halt: Him soon they met
- Under spread ensigns moving nigh, in slow
- But firm battalion; back with speediest sail
- Zophiel, of Cherubim the swiftest wing,
- Came flying, and in mid air aloud thus cried.
- Arm, Warriours, arm for fight; the foe at hand,
- Whom fled we thought, will save us long pursuit
- This day; fear not his flight;so thick a cloud
- He comes, and settled in his face I see
- Sad resolution, and secure: Let each
- His adamantine coat gird well, and each
- Fit well his helm, gripe fast his orbed shield,
- Borne even or high; for this day will pour down,
- If I conjecture aught, no drizzling shower,
- But rattling storm of arrows barbed with fire.
- So warned he them, aware themselves, and soon
- In order, quit of all impediment;
- Instant without disturb they took alarm,
- And onward moved embattled: When behold!
- Not distant far with heavy pace the foe
- Approaching gross and huge, in hollow cube
- Training his devilish enginery, impaled
- On every side with shadowing squadrons deep,
- To hide the fraud. At interview both stood
- A while; but suddenly at head appeared
- Satan, and thus was heard commanding loud.
- Vanguard, to right and left the front unfold;
- That all may see who hate us, how we seek
- Peace and composure, and with open breast
- Stand ready to receive them, if they like
- Our overture; and turn not back perverse:
- But that I doubt; however witness, Heaven!
- Heaven, witness thou anon! while we discharge
- Freely our part: ye, who appointed stand
- Do as you have in charge, and briefly touch
- What we propound, and loud that all may hear!
- So scoffing in ambiguous words, he scarce
- Had ended; when to right and left the front
- Divided, and to either flank retired:
- Which to our eyes discovered, new and strange,
- A triple mounted row of pillars laid
- On wheels (for like to pillars most they seemed,
- Or hollowed bodies made of oak or fir,
- With branches lopt, in wood or mountain felled,)
- Brass, iron, stony mould, had not their mouths
- With hideous orifice gaped on us wide,
- Portending hollow truce: At each behind
- A Seraph stood, and in his hand a reed
- Stood waving tipt with fire; while we, suspense,
- Collected stood within our thoughts amused,
- Not long; for sudden all at once their reeds
- Put forth, and to a narrow vent applied
- With nicest touch. Immediate in a flame,
- But soon obscured with smoke, all Heaven appeared,
- From those deep-throated engines belched, whose roar
- Embowelled with outrageous noise the air,
- And all her entrails tore, disgorging foul
- Their devilish glut, chained thunderbolts and hail
- Of iron globes; which, on the victor host
- Levelled, with such impetuous fury smote,
- That, whom they hit, none on their feet might stand,
- Though standing else as rocks, but down they fell
- By thousands, Angel on Arch-Angel rolled;
- The sooner for their arms; unarmed, they might
- Have easily, as Spirits, evaded swift
- By quick contraction or remove; but now
- Foul dissipation followed, and forced rout;
- Nor served it to relax their serried files.
- What should they do? if on they rushed, repulse
- Repeated, and indecent overthrow
- Doubled, would render them yet more despised,
- And to their foes a laughter; for in view
- Stood ranked of Seraphim another row,
- In posture to displode their second tire
- Of thunder: Back defeated to return
- They worse abhorred. Satan beheld their plight,
- And to his mates thus in derision called.
- O Friends! why come not on these victors proud
- Ere while they fierce were coming; and when we,
- To entertain them fair with open front
- And breast, (what could we more?) propounded terms
- Of composition, straight they changed their minds,
- Flew off, and into strange vagaries fell,
- As they would dance; yet for a dance they seemed
- Somewhat extravagant and wild; perhaps
- For joy of offered peace: But I suppose,
- If our proposals once again were heard,
- We should compel them to a quick result.
- To whom thus Belial, in like gamesome mood.
- Leader! the terms we sent were terms of weight,
- Of hard contents, and full of force urged home;
- Such as we might perceive amused them all,
- And stumbled many: Who receives them right,
- Had need from head to foot well understand;
- Not understood, this gift they have besides,
- They show us when our foes walk not upright.
- So they among themselves in pleasant vein
- Stood scoffing, hightened in their thoughts beyond
- All doubt of victory: Eternal Might
- To match with their inventions they presumed
- So easy, and of his thunder made a scorn,
- And all his host derided, while they stood
- A while in trouble: But they stood not long;
- Rage prompted them at length, and found them arms
- Against such hellish mischief fit to oppose.
- Forthwith (behold the excellence, the power,
- Which God hath in his mighty Angels placed!)
- Their arms away they threw, and to the hills
- (For Earth hath this variety from Heaven
- Of pleasure situate in hill and dale,)
- Light as the lightning glimpse they ran, they flew;
- From their foundations loosening to and fro,
- They plucked the seated hills, with all their load,
- Rocks, waters, woods, and by the shaggy tops
- Up-lifting bore them in their hands: Amaze,
- Be sure, and terrour, seized the rebel host,
- When coming towards them so dread they saw
- The bottom of the mountains upward turned;
- Till on those cursed engines' triple-row
- They saw them whelmed, and all their confidence
- Under the weight of mountains buried deep;
- Themselves invaded next, and on their heads
- Main promontories flung, which in the air
- Came shadowing, and oppressed whole legions armed;
- Their armour helped their harm, crushed in and bruised
- Into their substance pent, which wrought them pain
- Implacable, and many a dolorous groan;
- Long struggling underneath, ere they could wind
- Out of such prison, though Spirits of purest light,
- Purest at first, now gross by sinning grown.
- The rest, in imitation, to like arms
- Betook them, and the neighbouring hills uptore:
- So hills amid the air encountered hills,
- Hurled to and fro with jaculation dire;
- That under ground they fought in dismal shade;
- Infernal noise! war seemed a civil game
- To this uproar; horrid confusion heaped
- Upon confusion rose: And now all Heaven
- Had gone to wrack, with ruin overspread;
- Had not the Almighty Father, where he sits
- Shrined in his sanctuary of Heaven secure,
- Consulting on the sum of things, foreseen
- This tumult, and permitted all, advised:
- That his great purpose he might so fulfil,
- To honour his anointed Son avenged
- Upon his enemies, and to declare
- All power on him transferred: Whence to his Son,
- The Assessour of his throne, he thus began.
- Effulgence of my glory, Son beloved,
- Son, in whose face invisible is beheld
- Visibly, what by Deity I am;
- And in whose hand what by decree I do,
- Second Omnipotence! two days are past,
- Two days, as we compute the days of Heaven,
- Since Michael and his Powers went forth to tame
- These disobedient: Sore hath been their fight,
- As likeliest was, when two such foes met armed;
- For to themselves I left them; and thou knowest,
- Equal in their creation they were formed,
- Save what sin hath impaired; which yet hath wrought
- Insensibly, for I suspend their doom;
- Whence in perpetual fight they needs must last
- Endless, and no solution will be found:
- War wearied hath performed what war can do,
- And to disordered rage let loose the reins
- With mountains, as with weapons, armed; which makes
- Wild work in Heaven, and dangerous to the main.
- Two days are therefore past, the third is thine;
- For thee I have ordained it; and thus far
- Have suffered, that the glory may be thine
- Of ending this great war, since none but Thou
- Can end it. Into thee such virtue and grace
- Immense I have transfused, that all may know
- In Heaven and Hell thy power above compare;
- And, this perverse commotion governed thus,
- To manifest thee worthiest to be Heir
- Of all things; to be Heir, and to be King
- By sacred unction, thy deserved right.
- Go then, Thou Mightiest, in thy Father's might;
- Ascend my chariot, guide the rapid wheels
- That shake Heaven's basis, bring forth all my war,
- My bow and thunder, my almighty arms
- Gird on, and sword upon thy puissant thigh;
- Pursue these sons of darkness, drive them out
- From all Heaven's bounds into the utter deep:
- There let them learn, as likes them, to despise
- God, and Messiah his anointed King.
- He said, and on his Son with rays direct
- Shone full; he all his Father full expressed
- Ineffably into his face received;
- And thus the Filial Godhead answering spake.
- O Father, O Supreme of heavenly Thrones,
- First, Highest, Holiest, Best; thou always seek'st
- To glorify thy Son, I always thee,
- As is most just: This I my glory account,
- My exaltation, and my whole delight,
- That thou, in me well pleased, declarest thy will
- Fulfilled, which to fulfil is all my bliss.
- Scepter and power, thy giving, I assume,
- And gladlier shall resign, when in the end
- Thou shalt be all in all, and I in thee
- For ever; and in me all whom thou lovest:
- But whom thou hatest, I hate, and can put on
- Thy terrours, as I put thy mildness on,
- Image of thee in all things; and shall soon,
- Armed with thy might, rid Heaven of these rebelled;
- To their prepared ill mansion driven down,
- To chains of darkness, and the undying worm;
- That from thy just obedience could revolt,
- Whom to obey is happiness entire.
- Then shall thy Saints unmixed, and from the impure
- Far separate, circling thy holy mount,
- Unfeigned Halleluiahs to thee sing,
- Hymns of high praise, and I among them Chief.
- So said, he, o'er his scepter bowing, rose
- From the right hand of Glory where he sat;
- And the third sacred morn began to shine,
- Dawning through Heaven. Forth rushed with whirlwind sound
- The chariot of Paternal Deity,
- Flashing thick flames, wheel within wheel undrawn,
- Itself instinct with Spirit, but convoyed
- By four Cherubick shapes; four faces each
- Had wonderous; as with stars, their bodies all
- And wings were set with eyes; with eyes the wheels
- Of beryl, and careering fires between;
- Over their heads a crystal firmament,
- Whereon a sapphire throne, inlaid with pure
- Amber, and colours of the showery arch.
- He, in celestial panoply all armed
- Of radiant Urim, work divinely wrought,
- Ascended; at his right hand Victory
- Sat eagle-winged; beside him hung his bow
- And quiver with three-bolted thunder stored;
- And from about him fierce effusion rolled
- Of smoke, and bickering flame, and sparkles dire:
- Attended with ten thousand thousand Saints,
- He onward came; far off his coming shone;
- And twenty thousand (I their number heard)
- Chariots of God, half on each hand, were seen;
- He on the wings of Cherub rode sublime
- On the crystalline sky, in sapphire throned,
- Illustrious far and wide; but by his own
- First seen: Them unexpected joy surprised,
- When the great ensign of Messiah blazed
- Aloft by Angels borne, his sign in Heaven;
- Under whose conduct Michael soon reduced
- His army, circumfused on either wing,
- Under their Head imbodied all in one.
- Before him Power Divine his way prepared;
- At his command the uprooted hills retired
- Each to his place; they heard his voice, and went
- Obsequious; Heaven his wonted face renewed,
- And with fresh flowerets hill and valley smiled.
- This saw his hapless foes, but stood obdured,
- And to rebellious fight rallied their Powers,
- Insensate, hope conceiving from despair.
- In heavenly Spirits could such perverseness dwell?
- But to convince the proud what signs avail,
- Or wonders move the obdurate to relent?
- They, hardened more by what might most reclaim,
- Grieving to see his glory, at the sight
- Took envy; and, aspiring to his highth,
- Stood re-embattled fierce, by force or fraud
- Weening to prosper, and at length prevail
- Against God and Messiah, or to fall
- In universal ruin last; and now
- To final battle drew, disdaining flight,
- Or faint retreat; when the great Son of God
- To all his host on either hand thus spake.
- Stand still in bright array, ye Saints; here stand,
- Ye Angels armed; this day from battle rest:
- Faithful hath been your warfare, and of God
- Accepted, fearless in his righteous cause;
- And as ye have received, so have ye done,
- Invincibly: But of this cursed crew
- The punishment to other hand belongs;
- Vengeance is his, or whose he sole appoints:
- Number to this day's work is not ordained,
- Nor multitude; stand only, and behold
- God's indignation on these godless poured
- By me; not you, but me, they have despised,
- Yet envied; against me is all their rage,
- Because the Father, to whom in Heaven s'preme
- Kingdom, and power, and glory appertains,
- Hath honoured me, according to his will.
- Therefore to me their doom he hath assigned;
- That they may have their wish, to try with me
- In battle which the stronger proves; they all,
- Or I alone against them; since by strength
- They measure all, of other excellence
- Not emulous, nor care who them excels;
- Nor other strife with them do I vouchsafe.
- So spake the Son, and into terrour changed
- His countenance too severe to be beheld,
- And full of wrath bent on his enemies.
- At once the Four spread out their starry wings
- With dreadful shade contiguous, and the orbs
- Of his fierce chariot rolled, as with the sound
- Of torrent floods, or of a numerous host.
- He on his impious foes right onward drove,
- Gloomy as night; under his burning wheels
- The stedfast empyrean shook throughout,
- All but the throne itself of God. Full soon
- Among them he arrived; in his right hand
- Grasping ten thousand thunders, which he sent
- Before him, such as in their souls infixed
- Plagues: They, astonished, all resistance lost,
- All courage; down their idle weapons dropt:
- O'er shields, and helms, and helmed heads he rode
- Of Thrones and mighty Seraphim prostrate,
- That wished the mountains now might be again
- Thrown on them, as a shelter from his ire.
- Nor less on either side tempestuous fell
- His arrows, from the fourfold-visaged Four
- Distinct with eyes, and from the living wheels
- Distinct alike with multitude of eyes;
- One Spirit in them ruled; and every eye
- Glared lightning, and shot forth pernicious fire
- Among the accursed, that withered all their strength,
- And of their wonted vigour left them drained,
- Exhausted, spiritless, afflicted, fallen.
- Yet half his strength he put not forth, but checked
- His thunder in mid volley; for he meant
- Not to destroy, but root them out of Heaven:
- The overthrown he raised, and as a herd
- Of goats or timorous flock together thronged
- Drove them before him thunder-struck, pursued
- With terrours, and with furies, to the bounds
- And crystal wall of Heaven; which, opening wide,
- Rolled inward, and a spacious gap disclosed
- Into the wasteful deep: The monstrous sight
- Struck them with horrour backward, but far worse
- Urged them behind: Headlong themselves they threw
- Down from the verge of Heaven; eternal wrath
- Burnt after them to the bottomless pit.
- Hell heard the unsufferable noise, Hell saw
- Heaven ruining from Heaven, and would have fled
- Affrighted; but strict Fate had cast too deep
- Her dark foundations, and too fast had bound.
- Nine days they fell: Confounded Chaos roared,
- And felt tenfold confusion in their fall
- Through his wild anarchy, so huge a rout
- Incumbered him with ruin: Hell at last
- Yawning received them whole, and on them closed;
- Hell, their fit habitation, fraught with fire
- Unquenchable, the house of woe and pain.
- Disburdened Heaven rejoiced, and soon repaired
- Her mural breach, returning whence it rolled.
- Sole victor, from the expulsion of his foes,
- Messiah his triumphal chariot turned:
- To meet him all his Saints, who silent stood
- Eye-witnesses of his almighty acts,
- With jubilee advanced; and, as they went,
- Shaded with branching palm, each Order bright,
- Sung triumph, and him sung victorious King,
- Son, Heir, and Lord, to him dominion given,
- Worthiest to reign: He, celebrated, rode
- Triumphant through mid Heaven, into the courts
- And temple of his Mighty Father throned
- On high; who into glory him received,
- Where now he sits at the right hand of bliss.
- Thus, measuring things in Heaven by things on Earth,
- At thy request, and that thou mayest beware
- By what is past, to thee I have revealed
- What might have else to human race been hid;
- The discord which befel, and war in Heaven
- Among the angelick Powers, and the deep fall
- Of those too high aspiring, who rebelled
- With Satan; he who envies now thy state,
- Who now is plotting how he may seduce
- Thee also from obedience, that, with him
- Bereaved of happiness, thou mayest partake
- His punishment, eternal misery;
- Which would be all his solace and revenge,
- As a despite done against the Most High,
- Thee once to gain companion of his woe.
- But listen not to his temptations, warn
- Thy weaker; let it profit thee to have heard,
- By terrible example, the reward
- Of disobedience; firm they might have stood,
- Yet fell; remember, and fear to transgress.
-
-
-
- Book VII
-
-
- Descend from Heaven, Urania, by that name
- If rightly thou art called, whose voice divine
- Following, above the Olympian hill I soar,
- Above the flight of Pegasean wing!
- The meaning, not the name, I call: for thou
- Nor of the Muses nine, nor on the top
- Of old Olympus dwellest; but, heavenly-born,
- Before the hills appeared, or fountain flowed,
- Thou with eternal Wisdom didst converse,
- Wisdom thy sister, and with her didst play
- In presence of the Almighty Father, pleased
- With thy celestial song. Up led by thee
- Into the Heaven of Heavens I have presumed,
- An earthly guest, and drawn empyreal air,
- Thy tempering: with like safety guided down
- Return me to my native element:
- Lest from this flying steed unreined, (as once
- Bellerophon, though from a lower clime,)
- Dismounted, on the Aleian field I fall,
- Erroneous there to wander, and forlorn.
- Half yet remains unsung, but narrower bound
- Within the visible diurnal sphere;
- Standing on earth, not rapt above the pole,
- More safe I sing with mortal voice, unchanged
- To hoarse or mute, though fallen on evil days,
- On evil days though fallen, and evil tongues;
- In darkness, and with dangers compassed round,
- And solitude; yet not alone, while thou
- Visitest my slumbers nightly, or when morn
- Purples the east: still govern thou my song,
- Urania, and fit audience find, though few.
- But drive far off the barbarous dissonance
- Of Bacchus and his revellers, the race
- Of that wild rout that tore the Thracian bard
- In Rhodope, where woods and rocks had ears
- To rapture, till the savage clamour drowned
- Both harp and voice; nor could the Muse defend
- Her son. So fail not thou, who thee implores:
- For thou art heavenly, she an empty dream.
- Say, Goddess, what ensued when Raphael,
- The affable Arch-Angel, had forewarned
- Adam, by dire example, to beware
- Apostasy, by what befel in Heaven
- To those apostates; lest the like befall
- In Paradise to Adam or his race,
- Charged not to touch the interdicted tree,
- If they transgress, and slight that sole command,
- So easily obeyed amid the choice
- Of all tastes else to please their appetite,
- Though wandering. He, with his consorted Eve,
- The story heard attentive, and was filled
- With admiration and deep muse, to hear
- Of things so high and strange; things, to their thought
- So unimaginable, as hate in Heaven,
- And war so near the peace of God in bliss,
- With such confusion: but the evil, soon
- Driven back, redounded as a flood on those
- From whom it sprung; impossible to mix
- With blessedness. Whence Adam soon repealed
- The doubts that in his heart arose: and now
- Led on, yet sinless, with desire to know
- What nearer might concern him, how this world
- Of Heaven and Earth conspicuous first began;
- When, and whereof created; for what cause;
- What within Eden, or without, was done
- Before his memory; as one whose drouth
- Yet scarce allayed still eyes the current stream,
- Whose liquid murmur heard new thirst excites,
- Proceeded thus to ask his heavenly guest.
- Great things, and full of wonder in our ears,
- Far differing from this world, thou hast revealed,
- Divine interpreter! by favour sent
- Down from the empyrean, to forewarn
- Us timely of what might else have been our loss,
- Unknown, which human knowledge could not reach;
- For which to the infinitely Good we owe
- Immortal thanks, and his admonishment
- Receive, with solemn purpose to observe
- Immutably his sovran will, the end
- Of what we are. But since thou hast vouchsafed
- Gently, for our instruction, to impart
- Things above earthly thought, which yet concerned
- Our knowing, as to highest wisdom seemed,
- Deign to descend now lower, and relate
- What may no less perhaps avail us known,
- How first began this Heaven which we behold
- Distant so high, with moving fires adorned
- Innumerable; and this which yields or fills
- All space, the ambient air wide interfused
- Embracing round this floried Earth; what cause
- Moved the Creator, in his holy rest
- Through all eternity, so late to build
- In Chaos; and the work begun, how soon
- Absolved; if unforbid thou mayest unfold
- What we, not to explore the secrets ask
- Of his eternal empire, but the more
- To magnify his works, the more we know.
- And the great light of day yet wants to run
- Much of his race though steep; suspense in Heaven,
- Held by thy voice, thy potent voice, he hears,
- And longer will delay to hear thee tell
- His generation, and the rising birth
- Of Nature from the unapparent Deep:
- Or if the star of evening and the moon
- Haste to thy audience, Night with her will bring,
- Silence; and Sleep, listening to thee, will watch;
- Or we can bid his absence, till thy song
- End, and dismiss thee ere the morning shine.
- Thus Adam his illustrious guest besought:
- And thus the Godlike Angel answered mild.
- This also thy request, with caution asked,
- Obtain; though to recount almighty works
- What words or tongue of Seraph can suffice,
- Or heart of man suffice to comprehend?
- Yet what thou canst attain, which best may serve
- To glorify the Maker, and infer
- Thee also happier, shall not be withheld
- Thy hearing; such commission from above
- I have received, to answer thy desire
- Of knowledge within bounds; beyond, abstain
- To ask; nor let thine own inventions hope
- Things not revealed, which the invisible King,
- Only Omniscient, hath suppressed in night;
- To none communicable in Earth or Heaven:
- Enough is left besides to search and know.
- But knowledge is as food, and needs no less
- Her temperance over appetite, to know
- In measure what the mind may well contain;
- Oppresses else with surfeit, and soon turns
- Wisdom to folly, as nourishment to wind.
- Know then, that, after Lucifer from Heaven
- (So call him, brighter once amidst the host
- Of Angels, than that star the stars among,)
- Fell with his flaming legions through the deep
- Into his place, and the great Son returned
- Victorious with his Saints, the Omnipotent
- Eternal Father from his throne beheld
- Their multitude, and to his Son thus spake.
- At least our envious Foe hath failed, who thought
- All like himself rebellious, by whose aid
- This inaccessible high strength, the seat
- Of Deity supreme, us dispossessed,
- He trusted to have seised, and into fraud
- Drew many, whom their place knows here no more:
- Yet far the greater part have kept, I see,
- Their station; Heaven, yet populous, retains
- Number sufficient to possess her realms
- Though wide, and this high temple to frequent
- With ministeries due, and solemn rites:
- But, lest his heart exalt him in the harm
- Already done, to have dispeopled Heaven,
- My damage fondly deemed, I can repair
- That detriment, if such it be to lose
- Self-lost; and in a moment will create
- Another world, out of one man a race
- Of men innumerable, there to dwell,
- Not here; till, by degrees of merit raised,
- They open to themselves at length the way
- Up hither, under long obedience tried;
- And Earth be changed to Heaven, and Heaven to Earth,
- One kingdom, joy and union without end.
- Mean while inhabit lax, ye Powers of Heaven;
- And thou my Word, begotten Son, by thee
- This I perform; speak thou, and be it done!
- My overshadowing Spirit and Might with thee
- I send along; ride forth, and bid the Deep
- Within appointed bounds be Heaven and Earth;
- Boundless the Deep, because I Am who fill
- Infinitude, nor vacuous the space.
- Though I, uncircumscribed myself, retire,
- And put not forth my goodness, which is free
- To act or not, Necessity and Chance
- Approach not me, and what I will is Fate.
- So spake the Almighty, and to what he spake
- His Word, the Filial Godhead, gave effect.
- Immediate are the acts of God, more swift
- Than time or motion, but to human ears
- Cannot without process of speech be told,
- So told as earthly notion can receive.
- Great triumph and rejoicing was in Heaven,
- When such was heard declared the Almighty's will;
- Glory they sung to the Most High, good will
- To future men, and in their dwellings peace;
- Glory to Him, whose just avenging ire
- Had driven out the ungodly from his sight
- And the habitations of the just; to Him
- Glory and praise, whose wisdom had ordained
- Good out of evil to create; instead
- Of Spirits malign, a better race to bring
- Into their vacant room, and thence diffuse
- His good to worlds and ages infinite.
- So sang the Hierarchies: Mean while the Son
- On his great expedition now appeared,
- Girt with Omnipotence, with radiance crowned
- Of Majesty Divine; sapience and love
- Immense, and all his Father in him shone.
- About his chariot numberless were poured
- Cherub, and Seraph, Potentates, and Thrones,
- And Virtues, winged Spirits, and chariots winged
- From the armoury of God; where stand of old
- Myriads, between two brazen mountains lodged
- Against a solemn day, harnessed at hand,
- Celestial equipage; and now came forth
- Spontaneous, for within them Spirit lived,
- Attendant on their Lord: Heaven opened wide
- Her ever-during gates, harmonious sound
- On golden hinges moving, to let forth
- The King of Glory, in his powerful Word
- And Spirit, coming to create new worlds.
- On heavenly ground they stood; and from the shore
- They viewed the vast immeasurable abyss
- Outrageous as a sea, dark, wasteful, wild,
- Up from the bottom turned by furious winds
- And surging waves, as mountains, to assault
- Heaven's highth, and with the center mix the pole.
- Silence, ye troubled Waves, and thou Deep, peace,
- Said then the Omnifick Word; your discord end!
- Nor staid; but, on the wings of Cherubim
- Uplifted, in paternal glory rode
- Far into Chaos, and the world unborn;
- For Chaos heard his voice: Him all his train
- Followed in bright procession, to behold
- Creation, and the wonders of his might.
- Then staid the fervid wheels, and in his hand
- He took the golden compasses, prepared
- In God's eternal store, to circumscribe
- This universe, and all created things:
- One foot he centered, and the other turned
- Round through the vast profundity obscure;
- And said, Thus far extend, thus far thy bounds,
- This be thy just circumference, O World!
- Thus God the Heaven created, thus the Earth,
- Matter unformed and void: Darkness profound
- Covered the abyss: but on the watery calm
- His brooding wings the Spirit of God outspread,
- And vital virtue infused, and vital warmth
- Throughout the fluid mass; but downward purged
- The black tartareous cold infernal dregs,
- Adverse to life: then founded, then conglobed
- Like things to like; the rest to several place
- Disparted, and between spun out the air;
- And Earth self-balanced on her center hung.
- Let there be light, said God; and forthwith Light
- Ethereal, first of things, quintessence pure,
- Sprung from the deep; and from her native east
- To journey through the aery gloom began,
- Sphered in a radiant cloud, for yet the sun
- Was not; she in a cloudy tabernacle
- Sojourned the while. God saw the light was good;
- And light from darkness by the hemisphere
- Divided: light the Day, and darkness Night,
- He named. Thus was the first day even and morn:
- Nor past uncelebrated, nor unsung
- By the celestial quires, when orient light
- Exhaling first from darkness they beheld;
- Birth-day of Heaven and Earth; with joy and shout
- The hollow universal orb they filled,
- And touched their golden harps, and hymning praised
- God and his works; Creator him they sung,
- Both when first evening was, and when first morn.
- Again, God said, Let there be firmament
- Amid the waters, and let it divide
- The waters from the waters; and God made
- The firmament, expanse of liquid, pure,
- Transparent, elemental air, diffused
- In circuit to the uttermost convex
- Of this great round; partition firm and sure,
- The waters underneath from those above
- Dividing: for as earth, so he the world
- Built on circumfluous waters calm, in wide
- Crystalline ocean, and the loud misrule
- Of Chaos far removed; lest fierce extremes
- Contiguous might distemper the whole frame:
- And Heaven he named the Firmament: So even
- And morning chorus sung the second day.
- The Earth was formed, but in the womb as yet
- Of waters, embryon immature involved,
- Appeared not: over all the face of Earth
- Main ocean flowed, not idle; but, with warm
- Prolifick humour softening all her globe,
- Fermented the great mother to conceive,
- Satiate with genial moisture; when God said,
- Be gathered now ye waters under Heaven
- Into one place, and let dry land appear.
- Immediately the mountains huge appear
- Emergent, and their broad bare backs upheave
- Into the clouds; their tops ascend the sky:
- So high as heaved the tumid hills, so low
- Down sunk a hollow bottom broad and deep,
- Capacious bed of waters: Thither they
- Hasted with glad precipitance, uprolled,
- As drops on dust conglobing from the dry:
- Part rise in crystal wall, or ridge direct,
- For haste; such flight the great command impressed
- On the swift floods: As armies at the call
- Of trumpet (for of armies thou hast heard)
- Troop to their standard; so the watery throng,
- Wave rolling after wave, where way they found,
- If steep, with torrent rapture, if through plain,
- Soft-ebbing; nor withstood them rock or hill;
- But they, or under ground, or circuit wide
- With serpent errour wandering, found their way,
- And on the washy oose deep channels wore;
- Easy, ere God had bid the ground be dry,
- All but within those banks, where rivers now
- Stream, and perpetual draw their humid train.
- The dry land, Earth; and the great receptacle
- Of congregated waters, he called Seas:
- And saw that it was good; and said, Let the Earth
- Put forth the verdant grass, herb yielding seed,
- And fruit-tree yielding fruit after her kind,
- Whose seed is in herself upon the Earth.
- He scarce had said, when the bare Earth, till then
- Desart and bare, unsightly, unadorned,
- Brought forth the tender grass, whose verdure clad
- Her universal face with pleasant green;
- Then herbs of every leaf, that sudden flowered
- Opening their various colours, and made gay
- Her bosom, smelling sweet: and, these scarce blown,
- Forth flourished thick the clustering vine, forth crept
- The swelling gourd, up stood the corny reed
- Embattled in her field, and the humble shrub,
- And bush with frizzled hair implicit: Last
- Rose, as in dance, the stately trees, and spread
- Their branches hung with copious fruit, or gemmed
- Their blossoms: With high woods the hills were crowned;
- With tufts the valleys, and each fountain side;
- With borders long the rivers: that Earth now
- Seemed like to Heaven, a seat where Gods might dwell,
- Or wander with delight, and love to haunt
- Her sacred shades: though God had yet not rained
- Upon the Earth, and man to till the ground
- None was; but from the Earth a dewy mist
- Went up, and watered all the ground, and each
- Plant of the field; which, ere it was in the Earth,
- God made, and every herb, before it grew
- On the green stem: God saw that it was good:
- So even and morn recorded the third day.
- Again the Almighty spake, Let there be lights
- High in the expanse of Heaven, to divide
- The day from night; and let them be for signs,
- For seasons, and for days, and circling years;
- And let them be for lights, as I ordain
- Their office in the firmament of Heaven,
- To give light on the Earth; and it was so.
- And God made two great lights, great for their use
- To Man, the greater to have rule by day,
- The less by night, altern; and made the stars,
- And set them in the firmament of Heaven
- To illuminate the Earth, and rule the day
- In their vicissitude, and rule the night,
- And light from darkness to divide. God saw,
- Surveying his great work, that it was good:
- For of celestial bodies first the sun
- A mighty sphere he framed, unlightsome first,
- Though of ethereal mould: then formed the moon
- Globose, and every magnitude of stars,
- And sowed with stars the Heaven, thick as a field:
- Of light by far the greater part he took,
- Transplanted from her cloudy shrine, and placed
- In the sun's orb, made porous to receive
- And drink the liquid light; firm to retain
- Her gathered beams, great palace now of light.
- Hither, as to their fountain, other stars
- Repairing, in their golden urns draw light,
- And hence the morning-planet gilds her horns;
- By tincture or reflection they augment
- Their small peculiar, though from human sight
- So far remote, with diminution seen,
- First in his east the glorious lamp was seen,
- Regent of day, and all the horizon round
- Invested with bright rays, jocund to run
- His longitude through Heaven's high road; the gray
- Dawn, and the Pleiades, before him danced,
- Shedding sweet influence: Less bright the moon,
- But opposite in levelled west was set,
- His mirrour, with full face borrowing her light
- From him; for other light she needed none
- In that aspect, and still that distance keeps
- Till night; then in the east her turn she shines,
- Revolved on Heaven's great axle, and her reign
- With thousand lesser lights dividual holds,
- With thousand thousand stars, that then appeared
- Spangling the hemisphere: Then first adorned
- With their bright luminaries that set and rose,
- Glad evening and glad morn crowned the fourth day.
- And God said, Let the waters generate
- Reptile with spawn abundant, living soul:
- And let fowl fly above the Earth, with wings
- Displayed on the open firmament of Heaven.
- And God created the great whales, and each
- Soul living, each that crept, which plenteously
- The waters generated by their kinds;
- And every bird of wing after his kind;
- And saw that it was good, and blessed them, saying.
- Be fruitful, multiply, and in the seas,
- And lakes, and running streams, the waters fill;
- And let the fowl be multiplied, on the Earth.
- Forthwith the sounds and seas, each creek and bay,
- With fry innumerable swarm, and shoals
- Of fish that with their fins, and shining scales,
- Glide under the green wave, in sculls that oft
- Bank the mid sea: part single, or with mate,
- Graze the sea-weed their pasture, and through groves
- Of coral stray; or, sporting with quick glance,
- Show to the sun their waved coats dropt with gold;
- Or, in their pearly shells at ease, attend
- Moist nutriment; or under rocks their food
- In jointed armour watch: on smooth the seal
- And bended dolphins play: part huge of bulk
- Wallowing unwieldy, enormous in their gait,
- Tempest the ocean: there leviathan,
- Hugest of living creatures, on the deep
- Stretched like a promontory sleeps or swims,
- And seems a moving land; and at his gills
- Draws in, and at his trunk spouts out, a sea.
- Mean while the tepid caves, and fens, and shores,
- Their brood as numerous hatch, from the egg that soon
- Bursting with kindly rupture forth disclosed
- Their callow young; but feathered soon and fledge
- They summed their pens; and, soaring the air sublime,
- With clang despised the ground, under a cloud
- In prospect; there the eagle and the stork
- On cliffs and cedar tops their eyries build:
- Part loosely wing the region, part more wise
- In common, ranged in figure, wedge their way,
- Intelligent of seasons, and set forth
- Their aery caravan, high over seas
- Flying, and over lands, with mutual wing
- Easing their flight; so steers the prudent crane
- Her annual voyage, borne on winds; the air
- Floats as they pass, fanned with unnumbered plumes:
- From branch to branch the smaller birds with song
- Solaced the woods, and spread their painted wings
- Till even; nor then the solemn nightingale
- Ceased warbling, but all night tun'd her soft lays:
- Others, on silver lakes and rivers, bathed
- Their downy breast; the swan with arched neck,
- Between her white wings mantling proudly, rows
- Her state with oary feet; yet oft they quit
- The dank, and, rising on stiff pennons, tower
- The mid aereal sky: Others on ground
- Walked firm; the crested cock whose clarion sounds
- The silent hours, and the other whose gay train
- Adorns him, coloured with the florid hue
- Of rainbows and starry eyes. The waters thus
- With fish replenished, and the air with fowl,
- Evening and morn solemnized the fifth day.
- The sixth, and of creation last, arose
- With evening harps and matin; when God said,
- Let the Earth bring forth soul living in her kind,
- Cattle, and creeping things, and beast of the Earth,
- Each in their kind. The Earth obeyed, and straight
- Opening her fertile womb teemed at a birth
- Innumerous living creatures, perfect forms,
- Limbed and full grown: Out of the ground up rose,
- As from his lair, the wild beast where he wons
- In forest wild, in thicket, brake, or den;
- Among the trees in pairs they rose, they walked:
- The cattle in the fields and meadows green:
- Those rare and solitary, these in flocks
- Pasturing at once, and in broad herds upsprung.
- The grassy clods now calved; now half appeared
- The tawny lion, pawing to get free
- His hinder parts, then springs as broke from bonds,
- And rampant shakes his brinded mane; the ounce,
- The libbard, and the tiger, as the mole
- Rising, the crumbled earth above them threw
- In hillocks: The swift stag from under ground
- Bore up his branching head: Scarce from his mould
- Behemoth biggest born of earth upheaved
- His vastness: Fleeced the flocks and bleating rose,
- As plants: Ambiguous between sea and land
- The river-horse, and scaly crocodile.
- At once came forth whatever creeps the ground,
- Insect or worm: those waved their limber fans
- For wings, and smallest lineaments exact
- In all the liveries decked of summer's pride
- With spots of gold and purple, azure and green:
- These, as a line, their long dimension drew,
- Streaking the ground with sinuous trace; not all
- Minims of nature; some of serpent-kind,
- Wonderous in length and corpulence, involved
- Their snaky folds, and added wings. First crept
- The parsimonious emmet, provident
- Of future; in small room large heart enclosed;
- Pattern of just equality perhaps
- Hereafter, joined in her popular tribes
- Of commonalty: Swarming next appeared
- The female bee, that feeds her husband drone
- Deliciously, and builds her waxen cells
- With honey stored: The rest are numberless,
- And thou their natures knowest, and gavest them names,
- Needless to thee repeated; nor unknown
- The serpent, subtlest beast of all the field,
- Of huge extent sometimes, with brazen eyes
- And hairy mane terrifick, though to thee
- Not noxious, but obedient at thy call.
- Now Heaven in all her glory shone, and rolled
- Her motions, as the great first Mover's hand
- First wheeled their course: Earth in her rich attire
- Consummate lovely smiled; air, water, earth,
- By fowl, fish, beast, was flown, was swum, was walked,
- Frequent; and of the sixth day yet remained:
- There wanted yet the master-work, the end
- Of all yet done; a creature, who, not prone
- And brute as other creatures, but endued
- With sanctity of reason, might erect
- His stature, and upright with front serene
- Govern the rest, self-knowing; and from thence
- Magnanimous to correspond with Heaven,
- But grateful to acknowledge whence his good
- Descends, thither with heart, and voice, and eyes
- Directed in devotion, to adore
- And worship God Supreme, who made him chief
- Of all his works: therefore the Omnipotent
- Eternal Father (for where is not he
- Present?) thus to his Son audibly spake.
- Let us make now Man in our image, Man
- In our similitude, and let them rule
- Over the fish and fowl of sea and air,
- Beast of the field, and over all the Earth,
- And every creeping thing that creeps the ground.
- This said, he formed thee, Adam, thee, O Man,
- Dust of the ground, and in thy nostrils breathed
- The breath of life; in his own image he
- Created thee, in the image of God
- Express; and thou becamest a living soul.
- Male he created thee; but thy consort
- Female, for race; then blessed mankind, and said,
- Be fruitful, multiply, and fill the Earth;
- Subdue it, and throughout dominion hold
- Over fish of the sea, and fowl of the air,
- And every living thing that moves on the Earth.
- Wherever thus created, for no place
- Is yet distinct by name, thence, as thou knowest,
- He brought thee into this delicious grove,
- This garden, planted with the trees of God,
- Delectable both to behold and taste;
- And freely all their pleasant fruit for food
- Gave thee; all sorts are here that all the Earth yields,
- Variety without end; but of the tree,
- Which, tasted, works knowledge of good and evil,
- Thou mayest not; in the day thou eatest, thou diest;
- Death is the penalty imposed; beware,
- And govern well thy appetite; lest Sin
- Surprise thee, and her black attendant Death.
- Here finished he, and all that he had made
- Viewed, and behold all was entirely good;
- So even and morn accomplished the sixth day:
- Yet not till the Creator from his work
- Desisting, though unwearied, up returned,
- Up to the Heaven of Heavens, his high abode;
- Thence to behold this new created world,
- The addition of his empire, how it showed
- In prospect from his throne, how good, how fair,
- Answering his great idea. Up he rode
- Followed with acclamation, and the sound
- Symphonious of ten thousand harps, that tuned
- Angelick harmonies: The earth, the air
- Resounded, (thou rememberest, for thou heardst,)
- The heavens and all the constellations rung,
- The planets in their station listening stood,
- While the bright pomp ascended jubilant.
- Open, ye everlasting gates! they sung,
- Open, ye Heavens! your living doors;let in
- The great Creator from his work returned
- Magnificent, his six days work, a World;
- Open, and henceforth oft; for God will deign
- To visit oft the dwellings of just men,
- Delighted; and with frequent intercourse
- Thither will send his winged messengers
- On errands of supernal grace. So sung
- The glorious train ascending: He through Heaven,
- That opened wide her blazing portals, led
- To God's eternal house direct the way;
- A broad and ample road, whose dust is gold
- And pavement stars, as stars to thee appear,
- Seen in the galaxy, that milky way,
- Which nightly, as a circling zone, thou seest
- Powdered with stars. And now on Earth the seventh
- Evening arose in Eden, for the sun
- Was set, and twilight from the east came on,
- Forerunning night; when at the holy mount
- Of Heaven's high-seated top, the imperial throne
- Of Godhead, fixed for ever firm and sure,
- The Filial Power arrived, and sat him down
- With his great Father; for he also went
- Invisible, yet staid, (such privilege
- Hath Omnipresence) and the work ordained,
- Author and End of all things; and, from work
- Now resting, blessed and hallowed the seventh day,
- As resting on that day from all his work,
- But not in silence holy kept: the harp
- Had work and rested not; the solemn pipe,
- And dulcimer, all organs of sweet stop,
- All sounds on fret by string or golden wire,
- Tempered soft tunings, intermixed with voice
- Choral or unison: of incense clouds,
- Fuming from golden censers, hid the mount.
- Creation and the six days acts they sung:
- Great are thy works, Jehovah! infinite
- Thy power! what thought can measure thee, or tongue
- Relate thee! Greater now in thy return
- Than from the giant Angels: Thee that day
- Thy thunders magnified; but to create
- Is greater than created to destroy.
- Who can impair thee, Mighty King, or bound
- Thy empire! Easily the proud attempt
- Of Spirits apostate, and their counsels vain,
- Thou hast repelled; while impiously they thought
- Thee to diminish, and from thee withdraw
- The number of thy worshippers. Who seeks
- To lessen thee, against his purpose serves
- To manifest the more thy might: his evil
- Thou usest, and from thence createst more good.
- Witness this new-made world, another Heaven
- From Heaven-gate not far, founded in view
- On the clear hyaline, the glassy sea;
- Of amplitude almost immense, with stars
- Numerous, and every star perhaps a world
- Of destined habitation; but thou knowest
- Their seasons: among these the seat of Men,
- Earth, with her nether ocean circumfused,
- Their pleasant dwelling-place. Thrice happy Men,
- And sons of Men, whom God hath thus advanced!
- Created in his image, there to dwell
- And worship him; and in reward to rule
- Over his works, on earth, in sea, or air,
- And multiply a race of worshippers
- Holy and just: Thrice happy, if they know
- Their happiness, and persevere upright!
- So sung they, and the empyrean rung
- With halleluiahs: Thus was sabbath kept.
- And thy request think now fulfilled, that asked
- How first this world and face of things began,
- And what before thy memory was done
- From the beginning; that posterity,
- Informed by thee, might know: If else thou seekest
- Aught, not surpassing human measure, say.
-
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- Book VIII
-
-
- The Angel ended, and in Adam's ear
- So charming left his voice, that he a while
- Thought him still speaking, still stood fixed to hear;
- Then, as new waked, thus gratefully replied.
- What thanks sufficient, or what recompence
- Equal, have I to render thee, divine
- Historian, who thus largely hast allayed
- The thirst I had of knowledge, and vouchsafed
- This friendly condescension to relate
- Things, else by me unsearchable; now heard
- With wonder, but delight, and, as is due,
- With glory attributed to the high
- Creator! Something yet of doubt remains,
- Which only thy solution can resolve.
- When I behold this goodly frame, this world,
- Of Heaven and Earth consisting; and compute
- Their magnitudes; this Earth, a spot, a grain,
- An atom, with the firmament compared
- And all her numbered stars, that seem to roll
- Spaces incomprehensible, (for such
- Their distance argues, and their swift return
- Diurnal,) merely to officiate light
- Round this opacous Earth, this punctual spot,
- One day and night; in all her vast survey
- Useless besides; reasoning I oft admire,
- How Nature wise and frugal could commit
- Such disproportions, with superfluous hand
- So many nobler bodies to create,
- Greater so manifold, to this one use,
- For aught appears, and on their orbs impose
- Such restless revolution day by day
- Repeated; while the sedentary Earth,
- That better might with far less compass move,
- Served by more noble than herself, attains
- Her end without least motion, and receives,
- As tribute, such a sumless journey brought
- Of incorporeal speed, her warmth and light;
- Speed, to describe whose swiftness number fails.
- So spake our sire, and by his countenance seemed
- Entering on studious thoughts abstruse; which Eve
- Perceiving, where she sat retired in sight,
- With lowliness majestick from her seat,
- And grace that won who saw to wish her stay,
- Rose, and went forth among her fruits and flowers,
- To visit how they prospered, bud and bloom,
- Her nursery; they at her coming sprung,
- And, touched by her fair tendance, gladlier grew.
- Yet went she not, as not with such discourse
- Delighted, or not capable her ear
- Of what was high: such pleasure she reserved,
- Adam relating, she sole auditress;
- Her husband the relater she preferred
- Before the Angel, and of him to ask
- Chose rather; he, she knew, would intermix
- Grateful digressions, and solve high dispute
- With conjugal caresses: from his lip
- Not words alone pleased her. O! when meet now
- Such pairs, in love and mutual honour joined?
- With Goddess-like demeanour forth she went,
- Not unattended; for on her, as Queen,
- A pomp of winning Graces waited still,
- And from about her shot darts of desire
- Into all eyes, to wish her still in sight.
- And Raphael now, to Adam's doubt proposed,
- Benevolent and facile thus replied.
- To ask or search, I blame thee not; for Heaven
- Is as the book of God before thee set,
- Wherein to read his wonderous works, and learn
- His seasons, hours, or days, or months, or years:
- This to attain, whether Heaven move or Earth,
- Imports not, if thou reckon right; the rest
- From Man or Angel the great Architect
- Did wisely to conceal, and not divulge
- His secrets to be scanned by them who ought
- Rather admire; or, if they list to try
- Conjecture, he his fabrick of the Heavens
- Hath left to their disputes, perhaps to move
- His laughter at their quaint opinions wide
- Hereafter; when they come to model Heaven
- And calculate the stars, how they will wield
- The mighty frame; how build, unbuild, contrive
- To save appearances; how gird the sphere
- With centrick and eccentrick scribbled o'er,
- Cycle and epicycle, orb in orb:
- Already by thy reasoning this I guess,
- Who art to lead thy offspring, and supposest
- That bodies bright and greater should not serve
- The less not bright, nor Heaven such journeys run,
- Earth sitting still, when she alone receives
- The benefit: Consider first, that great
- Or bright infers not excellence: the Earth
- Though, in comparison of Heaven, so small,
- Nor glistering, may of solid good contain
- More plenty than the sun that barren shines;
- Whose virtue on itself works no effect,
- But in the fruitful Earth; there first received,
- His beams, unactive else, their vigour find.
- Yet not to Earth are those bright luminaries
- Officious; but to thee, Earth's habitant.
- And for the Heaven's wide circuit, let it speak
- The Maker's high magnificence, who built
- So spacious, and his line stretched out so far;
- That Man may know he dwells not in his own;
- An edifice too large for him to fill,
- Lodged in a small partition; and the rest
- Ordained for uses to his Lord best known.
- The swiftness of those circles attribute,
- Though numberless, to his Omnipotence,
- That to corporeal substances could add
- Speed almost spiritual: Me thou thinkest not slow,
- Who since the morning-hour set out from Heaven
- Where God resides, and ere mid-day arrived
- In Eden; distance inexpressible
- By numbers that have name. But this I urge,
- Admitting motion in the Heavens, to show
- Invalid that which thee to doubt it moved;
- Not that I so affirm, though so it seem
- To thee who hast thy dwelling here on Earth.
- God, to remove his ways from human sense,
- Placed Heaven from Earth so far, that earthly sight,
- If it presume, might err in things too high,
- And no advantage gain. What if the sun
- Be center to the world; and other stars,
- By his attractive virtue and their own
- Incited, dance about him various rounds?
- Their wandering course now high, now low, then hid,
- Progressive, retrograde, or standing still,
- In six thou seest; and what if seventh to these
- The planet earth, so stedfast though she seem,
- Insensibly three different motions move?
- Which else to several spheres thou must ascribe,
- Moved contrary with thwart obliquities;
- Or save the sun his labour, and that swift
- Nocturnal and diurnal rhomb supposed,
- Invisible else above all stars, the wheel
- Of day and night; which needs not thy belief,
- If earth, industrious of herself, fetch day
- Travelling east, and with her part averse
- From the sun's beam meet night, her other part
- Still luminous by his ray. What if that light,
- Sent from her through the wide transpicuous air,
- To the terrestrial moon be as a star,
- Enlightening her by day, as she by night
- This earth? reciprocal, if land be there,
- Fields and inhabitants: Her spots thou seest
- As clouds, and clouds may rain, and rain produce
- Fruits in her softened soil for some to eat
- Allotted there; and other suns perhaps,
- With their attendant moons, thou wilt descry,
- Communicating male and female light;
- Which two great sexes animate the world,
- Stored in each orb perhaps with some that live.
- For such vast room in Nature unpossessed
- By living soul, desart and desolate,
- Only to shine, yet scarce to contribute
- Each orb a glimpse of light, conveyed so far
- Down to this habitable, which returns
- Light back to them, is obvious to dispute.
- But whether thus these things, or whether not;
- But whether the sun, predominant in Heaven,
- Rise on the earth; or earth rise on the sun;
- He from the east his flaming road begin;
- Or she from west her silent course advance,
- With inoffensive pace that spinning sleeps
- On her soft axle, while she paces even,
- And bears thee soft with the smooth hair along;
- Sollicit not thy thoughts with matters hid;
- Leave them to God above; him serve, and fear!
- Of other creatures, as him pleases best,
- Wherever placed, let him dispose; joy thou
- In what he gives to thee, this Paradise
- And thy fair Eve; Heaven is for thee too high
- To know what passes there; be lowly wise:
- Think only what concerns thee, and thy being;
- Dream not of other worlds, what creatures there
- Live, in what state, condition, or degree;
- Contented that thus far hath been revealed
- Not of Earth only, but of highest Heaven.
- To whom thus Adam, cleared of doubt, replied.
- How fully hast thou satisfied me, pure
- Intelligence of Heaven, Angel serene!
- And, freed from intricacies, taught to live
- The easiest way; nor with perplexing thoughts
- To interrupt the sweet of life, from which
- God hath bid dwell far off all anxious cares,
- And not molest us; unless we ourselves
- Seek them with wandering thoughts, and notions vain.
- But apt the mind or fancy is to rove
- Unchecked, and of her roving is no end;
- Till warned, or by experience taught, she learn,
- That, not to know at large of things remote
- From use, obscure and subtle; but, to know
- That which before us lies in daily life,
- Is the prime wisdom: What is more, is fume,
- Or emptiness, or fond impertinence:
- And renders us, in things that most concern,
- Unpractised, unprepared, and still to seek.
- Therefore from this high pitch let us descend
- A lower flight, and speak of things at hand
- Useful; whence, haply, mention may arise
- Of something not unseasonable to ask,
- By sufferance, and thy wonted favour, deigned.
- Thee I have heard relating what was done
- Ere my remembrance: now, hear me relate
- My story, which perhaps thou hast not heard;
- And day is not yet spent; till then thou seest
- How subtly to detain thee I devise;
- Inviting thee to hear while I relate;
- Fond! were it not in hope of thy reply:
- For, while I sit with thee, I seem in Heaven;
- And sweeter thy discourse is to my ear
- Than fruits of palm-tree pleasantest to thirst
- And hunger both, from labour, at the hour
- Of sweet repast; they satiate, and soon fill,
- Though pleasant; but thy words, with grace divine
- Imbued, bring to their sweetness no satiety.
- To whom thus Raphael answered heavenly meek.
- Nor are thy lips ungraceful, Sire of men,
- Nor tongue ineloquent; for God on thee
- Abundantly his gifts hath also poured
- Inward and outward both, his image fair:
- Speaking, or mute, all comeliness and grace
- Attends thee; and each word, each motion, forms;
- Nor less think we in Heaven of thee on Earth
- Than of our fellow-servant, and inquire
- Gladly into the ways of God with Man:
- For God, we see, hath honoured thee, and set
- On Man his equal love: Say therefore on;
- For I that day was absent, as befel,
- Bound on a voyage uncouth and obscure,
- Far on excursion toward the gates of Hell;
- Squared in full legion (such command we had)
- To see that none thence issued forth a spy,
- Or enemy, while God was in his work;
- Lest he, incensed at such eruption bold,
- Destruction with creation might have mixed.
- Not that they durst without his leave attempt;
- But us he sends upon his high behests
- For state, as Sovran King; and to inure
- Our prompt obedience. Fast we found, fast shut,
- The dismal gates, and barricadoed strong;
- But long ere our approaching heard within
- Noise, other than the sound of dance or song,
- Torment, and loud lament, and furious rage.
- Glad we returned up to the coasts of light
- Ere sabbath-evening: so we had in charge.
- But thy relation now; for I attend,
- Pleased with thy words no less than thou with mine.
- So spake the Godlike Power, and thus our Sire.
- For Man to tell how human life began
- Is hard; for who himself beginning knew
- Desire with thee still longer to converse
- Induced me. As new waked from soundest sleep,
- Soft on the flowery herb I found me laid,
- In balmy sweat; which with his beams the sun
- Soon dried, and on the reeking moisture fed.
- Straight toward Heaven my wondering eyes I turned,
- And gazed a while the ample sky; till, raised
- By quick instinctive motion, up I sprung,
- As thitherward endeavouring, and upright
- Stood on my feet: about me round I saw
- Hill, dale, and shady woods, and sunny plains,
- And liquid lapse of murmuring streams; by these,
- Creatures that lived and moved, and walked, or flew;
- Birds on the branches warbling; all things smiled;
- With fragrance and with joy my heart o'erflowed.
- Myself I then perused, and limb by limb
- Surveyed, and sometimes went, and sometimes ran
- With supple joints, as lively vigour led:
- But who I was, or where, or from what cause,
- Knew not; to speak I tried, and forthwith spake;
- My tongue obeyed, and readily could name
- Whate'er I saw. Thou Sun, said I, fair light,
- And thou enlightened Earth, so fresh and gay,
- Ye Hills, and Dales, ye Rivers, Woods, and Plains,
- And ye that live and move, fair Creatures, tell,
- Tell, if ye saw, how I came thus, how here?--
- Not of myself;--by some great Maker then,
- In goodness and in power pre-eminent:
- Tell me, how may I know him, how adore,
- From whom I have that thus I move and live,
- And feel that I am happier than I know.--
- While thus I called, and strayed I knew not whither,
- From where I first drew air, and first beheld
- This happy light; when, answer none returned,
- On a green shady bank, profuse of flowers,
- Pensive I sat me down: There gentle sleep
- First found me, and with soft oppression seised
- My droused sense, untroubled, though I thought
- I then was passing to my former state
- Insensible, and forthwith to dissolve:
- When suddenly stood at my head a dream,
- Whose inward apparition gently moved
- My fancy to believe I yet had being,
- And lived: One came, methought, of shape divine,
- And said, 'Thy mansion wants thee, Adam; rise,
- 'First Man, of men innumerable ordained
- 'First Father! called by thee, I come thy guide
- 'To the garden of bliss, thy seat prepared.'
- So saying, by the hand he took me raised,
- And over fields and waters, as in air
- Smooth-sliding without step, last led me up
- A woody mountain; whose high top was plain,
- A circuit wide, enclosed, with goodliest trees
- Planted, with walks, and bowers; that what I saw
- Of Earth before scarce pleasant seemed. Each tree,
- Loaden with fairest fruit that hung to the eye
- Tempting, stirred in me sudden appetite
- To pluck and eat; whereat I waked, and found
- Before mine eyes all real, as the dream
- Had lively shadowed: Here had new begun
- My wandering, had not he, who was my guide
- Up hither, from among the trees appeared,
- Presence Divine. Rejoicing, but with awe,
- In adoration at his feet I fell
- Submiss: He reared me, and 'Whom thou soughtest I am,'
- Said mildly, 'Author of all this thou seest
- 'Above, or round about thee, or beneath.
- 'This Paradise I give thee, count it thine
- 'To till and keep, and of the fruit to eat:
- 'Of every tree that in the garden grows
- 'Eat freely with glad heart; fear here no dearth:
- 'But of the tree whose operation brings
- 'Knowledge of good and ill, which I have set
- 'The pledge of thy obedience and thy faith,
- 'Amid the garden by the tree of life,
- 'Remember what I warn thee, shun to taste,
- 'And shun the bitter consequence: for know,
- 'The day thou eatest thereof, my sole command
- 'Transgressed, inevitably thou shalt die,
- 'From that day mortal; and this happy state
- 'Shalt lose, expelled from hence into a world
- 'Of woe and sorrow.' Sternly he pronounced
- The rigid interdiction, which resounds
- Yet dreadful in mine ear, though in my choice
- Not to incur; but soon his clear aspect
- Returned, and gracious purpose thus renewed.
- 'Not only these fair bounds, but all the Earth
- 'To thee and to thy race I give; as lords
- 'Possess it, and all things that therein live,
- 'Or live in sea, or air; beast, fish, and fowl.
- 'In sign whereof, each bird and beast behold
- 'After their kinds; I bring them to receive
- 'From thee their names, and pay thee fealty
- 'With low subjection; understand the same
- 'Of fish within their watery residence,
- 'Not hither summoned, since they cannot change
- 'Their element, to draw the thinner air.'
- As thus he spake, each bird and beast behold
- Approaching two and two; these cowering low
- With blandishment; each bird stooped on his wing.
- I named them, as they passed, and understood
- Their nature, with such knowledge God endued
- My sudden apprehension: But in these
- I found not what methought I wanted still;
- And to the heavenly Vision thus presumed.
- O, by what name, for thou above all these,
- Above mankind, or aught than mankind higher,
- Surpassest far my naming; how may I
- Adore thee, Author of this universe,
- And all this good to man? for whose well being
- So amply, and with hands so liberal,
- Thou hast provided all things: But with me
- I see not who partakes. In solitude
- What happiness, who can enjoy alone,
- Or, all enjoying, what contentment find?
- Thus I presumptuous; and the Vision bright,
- As with a smile more brightened, thus replied.
- What callest thou solitude? Is not the Earth
- With various living creatures, and the air
- Replenished, and all these at thy command
- To come and play before thee? Knowest thou not
- Their language and their ways? They also know,
- And reason not contemptibly: With these
- Find pastime, and bear rule; thy realm is large.
- So spake the Universal Lord, and seemed
- So ordering: I, with leave of speech implored,
- And humble deprecation, thus replied.
- Let not my words offend thee, Heavenly Power;
- My Maker, be propitious while I speak.
- Hast thou not made me here thy substitute,
- And these inferiour far beneath me set?
- Among unequals what society
- Can sort, what harmony, or true delight?
- Which must be mutual, in proportion due
- Given and received; but, in disparity
- The one intense, the other still remiss,
- Cannot well suit with either, but soon prove
- Tedious alike: Of fellowship I speak
- Such as I seek, fit to participate
- All rational delight: wherein the brute
- Cannot be human consort: They rejoice
- Each with their kind, lion with lioness;
- So fitly them in pairs thou hast combined:
- Much less can bird with beast, or fish with fowl
- So well converse, nor with the ox the ape;
- Worse then can man with beast, and least of all.
- Whereto the Almighty answered, not displeased.
- A nice and subtle happiness, I see,
- Thou to thyself proposest, in the choice
- Of thy associates, Adam! and wilt taste
- No pleasure, though in pleasure, solitary.
- What thinkest thou then of me, and this my state?
- Seem I to thee sufficiently possessed
- Of happiness, or not? who am alone
- From all eternity; for none I know
- Second to me or like, equal much less.
- How have I then with whom to hold converse,
- Save with the creatures which I made, and those
- To me inferiour, infinite descents
- Beneath what other creatures are to thee?
- He ceased; I lowly answered. To attain
- The highth and depth of thy eternal ways
- All human thoughts come short, Supreme of things!
- Thou in thyself art perfect, and in thee
- Is no deficience found: Not so is Man,
- But in degree; the cause of his desire
- By conversation with his like to help
- Or solace his defects. No need that thou
- Shouldst propagate, already Infinite;
- And through all numbers absolute, though One:
- But Man by number is to manifest
- His single imperfection, and beget
- Like of his like, his image multiplied,
- In unity defective; which requires
- Collateral love, and dearest amity.
- Thou in thy secresy although alone,
- Best with thyself accompanied, seekest not
- Social communication; yet, so pleased,
- Canst raise thy creature to what highth thou wilt
- Of union or communion, deified:
- I, by conversing, cannot these erect
- From prone; nor in their ways complacence find.
- Thus I emboldened spake, and freedom used
- Permissive, and acceptance found; which gained
- This answer from the gracious Voice Divine.
- Thus far to try thee, Adam, I was pleased;
- And find thee knowing, not of beasts alone,
- Which thou hast rightly named, but of thyself;
- Expressing well the spirit within thee free,
- My image, not imparted to the brute;
- Whose fellowship therefore unmeet for thee
- Good reason was thou freely shouldst dislike;
- And be so minded still: I, ere thou spakest,
- Knew it not good for Man to be alone;
- And no such company as then thou sawest
- Intended thee; for trial only brought,
- To see how thou couldest judge of fit and meet:
- What next I bring shall please thee, be assured,
- Thy likeness, thy fit help, thy other self,
- Thy wish exactly to thy heart's desire.
- He ended, or I heard no more; for now
- My earthly by his heavenly overpowered,
- Which it had long stood under, strained to the highth
- In that celestial colloquy sublime,
- As with an object that excels the sense
- Dazzled and spent, sunk down; and sought repair
- Of sleep, which instantly fell on me, called
- By Nature as in aid, and closed mine eyes.
- Mine eyes he closed, but open left the cell
- Of fancy, my internal sight; by which,
- Abstract as in a trance, methought I saw,
- Though sleeping, where I lay, and saw the shape
- Still glorious before whom awake I stood:
- Who stooping opened my left side, and took
- From thence a rib, with cordial spirits warm,
- And life-blood streaming fresh; wide was the wound,
- But suddenly with flesh filled up and healed:
- The rib he formed and fashioned with his hands;
- Under his forming hands a creature grew,
- Man-like, but different sex; so lovely fair,
- That what seemed fair in all the world, seemed now
- Mean, or in her summed up, in her contained
- And in her looks; which from that time infused
- Sweetness into my heart, unfelt before,
- And into all things from her air inspired
- The spirit of love and amorous delight.
- She disappeared, and left me dark; I waked
- To find her, or for ever to deplore
- Her loss, and other pleasures all abjure:
- When out of hope, behold her, not far off,
- Such as I saw her in my dream, adorned
- With what all Earth or Heaven could bestow
- To make her amiable: On she came,
- Led by her heavenly Maker, though unseen,
- And guided by his voice; nor uninformed
- Of nuptial sanctity, and marriage rites:
- Grace was in all her steps, Heaven in her eye,
- In every gesture dignity and love.
- I, overjoyed, could not forbear aloud.
- This turn hath made amends; thou hast fulfilled
- Thy words, Creator bounteous and benign,
- Giver of all things fair! but fairest this
- Of all thy gifts! nor enviest. I now see
- Bone of my bone, flesh of my flesh, myself
- Before me: Woman is her name;of Man
- Extracted: for this cause he shall forego
- Father and mother, and to his wife adhere;
- And they shall be one flesh, one heart, one soul.
- She heard me thus; and though divinely brought,
- Yet innocence, and virgin modesty,
- Her virtue, and the conscience of her worth,
- That would be wooed, and not unsought be won,
- Not obvious, not obtrusive, but, retired,
- The more desirable; or, to say all,
- Nature herself, though pure of sinful thought,
- Wrought in her so, that, seeing me, she turned:
- I followed her; she what was honour knew,
- And with obsequious majesty approved
- My pleaded reason. To the nuptial bower
- I led her blushing like the morn: All Heaven,
- And happy constellations, on that hour
- Shed their selectest influence; the Earth
- Gave sign of gratulation, and each hill;
- Joyous the birds; fresh gales and gentle airs
- Whispered it to the woods, and from their wings
- Flung rose, flung odours from the spicy shrub,
- Disporting, till the amorous bird of night
- Sung spousal, and bid haste the evening-star
- On his hill top, to light the bridal lamp.
- Thus have I told thee all my state, and brought
- My story to the sum of earthly bliss,
- Which I enjoy; and must confess to find
- In all things else delight indeed, but such
- As, used or not, works in the mind no change,
- Nor vehement desire; these delicacies
- I mean of taste, sight, smell, herbs, fruits, and flowers,
- Walks, and the melody of birds: but here
- Far otherwise, transported I behold,
- Transported touch; here passion first I felt,
- Commotion strange! in all enjoyments else
- Superiour and unmoved; here only weak
- Against the charm of Beauty's powerful glance.
- Or Nature failed in me, and left some part
- Not proof enough such object to sustain;
- Or, from my side subducting, took perhaps
- More than enough; at least on her bestowed
- Too much of ornament, in outward show
- Elaborate, of inward less exact.
- For well I understand in the prime end
- Of Nature her the inferiour, in the mind
- And inward faculties, which most excel;
- In outward also her resembling less
- His image who made both, and less expressing
- The character of that dominion given
- O'er other creatures: Yet when I approach
- Her loveliness, so absolute she seems
- And in herself complete, so well to know
- Her own, that what she wills to do or say,
- Seems wisest, virtuousest, discreetest, best:
- All higher knowledge in her presence falls
- Degraded; Wisdom in discourse with her
- Loses discountenanced, and like Folly shows;
- Authority and Reason on her wait,
- As one intended first, not after made
- Occasionally; and, to consummate all,
- Greatness of mind and Nobleness their seat
- Build in her loveliest, and create an awe
- About her, as a guard angelick placed.
- To whom the Angel with contracted brow.
- Accuse not Nature, she hath done her part;
- Do thou but thine; and be not diffident
- Of Wisdom; she deserts thee not, if thou
- Dismiss not her, when most thou needest her nigh,
- By attributing overmuch to things
- Less excellent, as thou thyself perceivest.
- For, what admirest thou, what transports thee so,
- An outside? fair, no doubt, and worthy well
- Thy cherishing, thy honouring, and thy love;
- Not thy subjection: Weigh with her thyself;
- Then value: Oft-times nothing profits more
- Than self-esteem, grounded on just and right
- Well managed; of that skill the more thou knowest,
- The more she will acknowledge thee her head,
- And to realities yield all her shows:
- Made so adorn for thy delight the more,
- So awful, that with honour thou mayest love
- Thy mate, who sees when thou art seen least wise.
- But if the sense of touch, whereby mankind
- Is propagated, seem such dear delight
- Beyond all other; think the same vouchsafed
- To cattle and each beast; which would not be
- To them made common and divulged, if aught
- Therein enjoyed were worthy to subdue
- The soul of man, or passion in him move.
- What higher in her society thou findest
- Attractive, human, rational, love still;
- In loving thou dost well, in passion not,
- Wherein true love consists not: Love refines
- The thoughts, and heart enlarges; hath his seat
- In reason, and is judicious; is the scale
- By which to heavenly love thou mayest ascend,
- Not sunk in carnal pleasure; for which cause,
- Among the beasts no mate for thee was found.
- To whom thus, half abashed, Adam replied.
- Neither her outside formed so fair, nor aught
- In procreation common to all kinds,
- (Though higher of the genial bed by far,
- And with mysterious reverence I deem,)
- So much delights me, as those graceful acts,
- Those thousand decencies, that daily flow
- From all her words and actions mixed with love
- And sweet compliance, which declare unfeigned
- Union of mind, or in us both one soul;
- Harmony to behold in wedded pair
- More grateful than harmonious sound to the ear.
- Yet these subject not; I to thee disclose
- What inward thence I feel, not therefore foiled,
- Who meet with various objects, from the sense
- Variously representing; yet, still free,
- Approve the best, and follow what I approve.
- To love, thou blamest me not; for Love, thou sayest,
- Leads up to Heaven, is both the way and guide;
- Bear with me then, if lawful what I ask:
- Love not the heavenly Spirits, and how their love
- Express they? by looks only? or do they mix
- Irradiance, virtual or immediate touch?
- To whom the Angel, with a smile that glowed
- Celestial rosy red, Love's proper hue,
- Answered. Let it suffice thee that thou knowest
- Us happy, and without love no happiness.
- Whatever pure thou in the body enjoyest,
- (And pure thou wert created) we enjoy
- In eminence; and obstacle find none
- Of membrane, joint, or limb, exclusive bars;
- Easier than air with air, if Spirits embrace,
- Total they mix, union of pure with pure
- Desiring, nor restrained conveyance need,
- As flesh to mix with flesh, or soul with soul.
- But I can now no more; the parting sun
- Beyond the Earth's green Cape and verdant Isles
- Hesperian sets, my signal to depart.
- Be strong, live happy, and love! But, first of all,
- Him, whom to love is to obey, and keep
- His great command; take heed lest passion sway
- Thy judgement to do aught, which else free will
- Would not admit: thine, and of all thy sons,
- The weal or woe in thee is placed; beware!
- I in thy persevering shall rejoice,
- And all the Blest: Stand fast;to stand or fall
- Free in thine own arbitrement it lies.
- Perfect within, no outward aid require;
- And all temptation to transgress repel.
- So saying, he arose; whom Adam thus
- Followed with benediction. Since to part,
- Go, heavenly guest, ethereal Messenger,
- Sent from whose sovran goodness I adore!
- Gentle to me and affable hath been
- Thy condescension, and shall be honoured ever
- With grateful memory: Thou to mankind
- Be good and friendly still, and oft return!
- So parted they; the Angel up to Heaven
- From the thick shade, and Adam to his bower.
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- Book IX
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- No more of talk where God or Angel guest
- With Man, as with his friend, familiar us'd,
- To sit indulgent, and with him partake
- Rural repast; permitting him the while
- Venial discourse unblam'd. I now must change
- Those notes to tragick; foul distrust, and breach
- Disloyal on the part of Man, revolt,
- And disobedience: on the part of Heaven
- Now alienated, distance and distaste,
- Anger and just rebuke, and judgement given,
- That brought into this world a world of woe,
- Sin and her shadow Death, and Misery
- Death's harbinger: Sad talk!yet argument
- Not less but more heroick than the wrath
- Of stern Achilles on his foe pursued
- Thrice fugitive about Troy wall; or rage
- Of Turnus for Lavinia disespous'd;
- Or Neptune's ire, or Juno's, that so long
- Perplexed the Greek, and Cytherea's son:
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- If answerable style I can obtain
- Of my celestial patroness, who deigns
- Her nightly visitation unimplor'd,
- And dictates to me slumbering; or inspires
- Easy my unpremeditated verse:
- Since first this subject for heroick song
- Pleas'd me long choosing, and beginning late;
- Not sedulous by nature to indite
- Wars, hitherto the only argument
- Heroick deem'd chief mastery to dissect
- With long and tedious havock fabled knights
- In battles feign'd; the better fortitude
- Of patience and heroick martyrdom
- Unsung; or to describe races and games,
- Or tilting furniture, imblazon'd shields,
- Impresses quaint, caparisons and steeds,
- Bases and tinsel trappings, gorgeous knights
- At joust and tournament; then marshall'd feast
- Serv'd up in hall with sewers and seneshals;
- The skill of artifice or office mean,
- Not that which justly gives heroick name
- To person, or to poem. Me, of these
- Nor skill'd nor studious, higher argument
- Remains; sufficient of itself to raise
- That name, unless an age too late, or cold
- Climate, or years, damp my intended wing
- Depress'd; and much they may, if all be mine,
- Not hers, who brings it nightly to my ear.
- The sun was sunk, and after him the star
- Of Hesperus, whose office is to bring
- Twilight upon the earth, short arbiter
- "twixt day and night, and now from end to end
- Night's hemisphere had veil'd the horizon round:
- When satan, who late fled before the threats
- Of Gabriel out of Eden, now improv'd
- In meditated fraud and malice, bent
- On Man's destruction, maugre what might hap
- Of heavier on himself, fearless returned
- From compassing the earth; cautious of day,
- Since Uriel, regent of the sun, descried
- His entrance, and foreworned the Cherubim
- That kept their watch; thence full of anguish driven,
- The space of seven continued nights he rode
- With darkness; thrice the equinoctial line
- He circled; four times crossed the car of night
- From pole to pole, traversing each colure;
- On the eighth returned; and, on the coast averse
- From entrance or Cherubick watch, by stealth
- Found unsuspected way. There was a place,
- Now not, though sin, not time, first wrought the change,
- Where Tigris, at the foot of Paradise,
- Into a gulf shot under ground, till part
- Rose up a fountain by the tree of life:
- In with the river sunk, and with it rose
- Satan, involved in rising mist; then sought
- Where to lie hid; sea he had searched, and land,
- From Eden over Pontus and the pool
- Maeotis, up beyond the river Ob;
- Downward as far antarctick; and in length,
- West from Orontes to the ocean barred
- At Darien ; thence to the land where flows
- Ganges and Indus: Thus the orb he roamed
- With narrow search; and with inspection deep
- Considered every creature, which of all
- Most opportune might serve his wiles; and found
- The Serpent subtlest beast of all the field.
- Him after long debate, irresolute
- Of thoughts revolved, his final sentence chose
- Fit vessel, fittest imp of fraud, in whom
- To enter, and his dark suggestions hide
- From sharpest sight: for, in the wily snake
- Whatever sleights, none would suspicious mark,
- As from his wit and native subtlety
- Proceeding; which, in other beasts observed,
- Doubt might beget of diabolick power
- Active within, beyond the sense of brute.
- Thus he resolved, but first from inward grief
- His bursting passion into plaints thus poured.
- More justly, seat worthier of Gods, as built
- With second thoughts, reforming what was old!
- O Earth, how like to Heaven, if not preferred
- For what God, after better, worse would build?
- Terrestrial Heaven, danced round by other Heavens
- That shine, yet bear their bright officious lamps,
- Light above light, for thee alone, as seems,
- In thee concentring all their precious beams
- Of sacred influence! As God in Heaven
- Is center, yet extends to all; so thou,
- Centring, receivest from all those orbs: in thee,
- Not in themselves, all their known virtue appears
- Productive in herb, plant, and nobler birth
- Of creatures animate with gradual life
- Of growth, sense, reason, all summed up in Man.
- With what delight could I have walked thee round,
- If I could joy in aught, sweet interchange
- Of hill, and valley, rivers, woods, and plains,
- Now land, now sea and shores with forest crowned,
- Rocks, dens, and caves! But I in none of these
- Find place or refuge; and the more I see
- Pleasures about me, so much more I feel
- Torment within me, as from the hateful siege
- Of contraries: all good to me becomes
- Bane, and in Heaven much worse would be my state.
- But neither here seek I, no nor in Heaven
- To dwell, unless by mastering Heaven's Supreme;
- Nor hope to be myself less miserable
- By what I seek, but others to make such
- As I, though thereby worse to me redound:
- For only in destroying I find ease
- To my relentless thoughts; and, him destroyed,
- Or won to what may work his utter loss,
- For whom all this was made, all this will soon
- Follow, as to him linked in weal or woe;
- In woe then; that destruction wide may range:
- To me shall be the glory sole among
- The infernal Powers, in one day to have marred
- What he, Almighty styled, six nights and days
- Continued making; and who knows how long
- Before had been contriving? though perhaps
- Not longer than since I, in one night, freed
- From servitude inglorious well nigh half
- The angelick name, and thinner left the throng
- Of his adorers: He, to be avenged,
- And to repair his numbers thus impaired,
- Whether such virtue spent of old now failed
- More Angels to create, if they at least
- Are his created, or, to spite us more,
- Determined to advance into our room
- A creature formed of earth, and him endow,
- Exalted from so base original,
- With heavenly spoils, our spoils: What he decreed,
- He effected; Man he made, and for him built
- Magnificent this world, and earth his seat,
- Him lord pronounced; and, O indignity!
- Subjected to his service angel-wings,
- And flaming ministers to watch and tend
- Their earthly charge: Of these the vigilance
- I dread; and, to elude, thus wrapt in mist
- Of midnight vapour glide obscure, and pry
- In every bush and brake, where hap may find
- The serpent sleeping; in whose mazy folds
- To hide me, and the dark intent I bring.
- O foul descent! that I, who erst contended
- With Gods to sit the highest, am now constrained
- Into a beast; and, mixed with bestial slime,
- This essence to incarnate and imbrute,
- That to the highth of Deity aspired!
- But what will not ambition and revenge
- Descend to? Who aspires, must down as low
- As high he soared; obnoxious, first or last,
- To basest things. Revenge, at first though sweet,
- Bitter ere long, back on itself recoils:
- Let it; I reck not, so it light well aimed,
- Since higher I fall short, on him who next
- Provokes my envy, this new favourite
- Of Heaven, this man of clay, son of despite,
- Whom, us the more to spite, his Maker raised
- From dust: Spite then with spite is best repaid.
- So saying, through each thicket dank or dry,
- Like a black mist low-creeping, he held on
- His midnight-search, where soonest he might find
- The serpent; him fast-sleeping soon he found
- In labyrinth of many a round self-rolled,
- His head the midst, well stored with subtile wiles:
- Not yet in horrid shade or dismal den,
- Nor nocent yet; but, on the grassy herb,
- Fearless unfeared he slept: in at his mouth
- The Devil entered; and his brutal sense,
- In heart or head, possessing, soon inspired
- With act intelligential; but his sleep
- Disturbed not, waiting close the approach of morn.
- Now, when as sacred light began to dawn
- In Eden on the humid flowers, that breathed
- Their morning incense, when all things, that breathe,
- From the Earth's great altar send up silent praise
- To the Creator, and his nostrils fill
- With grateful smell, forth came the human pair,
- And joined their vocal worship to the quire
- Of creatures wanting voice; that done, partake
- The season prime for sweetest scents and airs:
- Then commune, how that day they best may ply
- Their growing work: for much their work out-grew
- The hands' dispatch of two gardening so wide,
- And Eve first to her husband thus began.
- Adam, well may we labour still to dress
- This garden, still to tend plant, herb, and flower,
- Our pleasant task enjoined; but, till more hands
- Aid us, the work under our labour grows,
- Luxurious by restraint; what we by day
- Lop overgrown, or prune, or prop, or bind,
- One night or two with wanton growth derides
- Tending to wild. Thou therefore now advise,
- Or bear what to my mind first thoughts present:
- Let us divide our labours; thou, where choice
- Leads thee, or where most needs, whether to wind
- The woodbine round this arbour, or direct
- The clasping ivy where to climb; while I,
- In yonder spring of roses intermixed
- With myrtle, find what to redress till noon:
- For, while so near each other thus all day
- Our task we choose, what wonder if so near
- Looks intervene and smiles, or object new
- Casual discourse draw on; which intermits
- Our day's work, brought to little, though begun
- Early, and the hour of supper comes unearned?
- To whom mild answer Adam thus returned.
- Sole Eve, associate sole, to me beyond
- Compare above all living creatures dear!
- Well hast thou motioned, well thy thoughts employed,
- How we might best fulfil the work which here
- God hath assigned us; nor of me shalt pass
- Unpraised: for nothing lovelier can be found
- In woman, than to study houshold good,
- And good works in her husband to promote.
- Yet not so strictly hath our Lord imposed
- Labour, as to debar us when we need
- Refreshment, whether food, or talk between,
- Food of the mind, or this sweet intercourse
- Of looks and smiles; for smiles from reason flow,
- To brute denied, and are of love the food;
- Love, not the lowest end of human life.
- For not to irksome toil, but to delight,
- He made us, and delight to reason joined.
- These paths and bowers doubt not but our joint hands
- Will keep from wilderness with ease, as wide
- As we need walk, till younger hands ere long
- Assist us; But, if much converse perhaps
- Thee satiate, to short absence I could yield:
- For solitude sometimes is best society,
- And short retirement urges sweet return.
- But other doubt possesses me, lest harm
- Befall thee severed from me; for thou knowest
- What hath been warned us, what malicious foe
- Envying our happiness, and of his own
- Despairing, seeks to work us woe and shame
- By sly assault; and somewhere nigh at hand
- Watches, no doubt, with greedy hope to find
- His wish and best advantage, us asunder;
- Hopeless to circumvent us joined, where each
- To other speedy aid might lend at need:
- Whether his first design be to withdraw
- Our fealty from God, or to disturb
- Conjugal love, than which perhaps no bliss
- Enjoyed by us excites his envy more;
- Or this, or worse, leave not the faithful side
- That gave thee being, still shades thee, and protects.
- The wife, where danger or dishonour lurks,
- Safest and seemliest by her husband stays,
- Who guards her, or with her the worst endures.
- To whom the virgin majesty of Eve,
- As one who loves, and some unkindness meets,
- With sweet austere composure thus replied.
- Offspring of Heaven and Earth, and all Earth's Lord!
- That such an enemy we have, who seeks
- Our ruin, both by thee informed I learn,
- And from the parting Angel over-heard,
- As in a shady nook I stood behind,
- Just then returned at shut of evening flowers.
- But, that thou shouldst my firmness therefore doubt
- To God or thee, because we have a foe
- May tempt it, I expected not to hear.
- His violence thou fearest not, being such
- As we, not capable of death or pain,
- Can either not receive, or can repel.
- His fraud is then thy fear; which plain infers
- Thy equal fear, that my firm faith and love
- Can by his fraud be shaken or seduced;
- Thoughts, which how found they harbour in thy breast,
- Adam, mis-thought of her to thee so dear?
- To whom with healing words Adam replied.
- Daughter of God and Man, immortal Eve!
- For such thou art; from sin and blame entire:
- Not diffident of thee do I dissuade
- Thy absence from my sight, but to avoid
- The attempt itself, intended by our foe.
- For he who tempts, though in vain, at least asperses
- The tempted with dishonour foul; supposed
- Not incorruptible of faith, not proof
- Against temptation: Thou thyself with scorn
- And anger wouldst resent the offered wrong,
- Though ineffectual found: misdeem not then,
- If such affront I labour to avert
- From thee alone, which on us both at once
- The enemy, though bold, will hardly dare;
- Or daring, first on me the assault shall light.
- Nor thou his malice and false guile contemn;
- Subtle he needs must be, who could seduce
- Angels; nor think superfluous other's aid.
- I, from the influence of thy looks, receive
- Access in every virtue; in thy sight
- More wise, more watchful, stronger, if need were
- Of outward strength; while shame, thou looking on,
- Shame to be overcome or over-reached,
- Would utmost vigour raise, and raised unite.
- Why shouldst not thou like sense within thee feel
- When I am present, and thy trial choose
- With me, best witness of thy virtue tried?
- So spake domestick Adam in his care
- And matrimonial love; but Eve, who thought
- Less attributed to her faith sincere,
- Thus her reply with accent sweet renewed.
- If this be our condition, thus to dwell
- In narrow circuit straitened by a foe,
- Subtle or violent, we not endued
- Single with like defence, wherever met;
- How are we happy, still in fear of harm?
- But harm precedes not sin: only our foe,
- Tempting, affronts us with his foul esteem
- Of our integrity: his foul esteem
- Sticks no dishonour on our front, but turns
- Foul on himself; then wherefore shunned or feared
- By us? who rather double honour gain
- From his surmise proved false; find peace within,
- Favour from Heaven, our witness, from the event.
- And what is faith, love, virtue, unassayed
- Alone, without exteriour help sustained?
- Let us not then suspect our happy state
- Left so imperfect by the Maker wise,
- As not secure to single or combined.
- Frail is our happiness, if this be so,
- And Eden were no Eden, thus exposed.
- To whom thus Adam fervently replied.
- O Woman, best are all things as the will
- Of God ordained them: His creating hand
- Nothing imperfect or deficient left
- Of all that he created, much less Man,
- Or aught that might his happy state secure,
- Secure from outward force; within himself
- The danger lies, yet lies within his power:
- Against his will he can receive no harm.
- But God left free the will; for what obeys
- Reason, is free; and Reason he made right,
- But bid her well be ware, and still erect;
- Lest, by some fair-appearing good surprised,
- She dictate false; and mis-inform the will
- To do what God expressly hath forbid.
- Not then mistrust, but tender love, enjoins,
- That I should mind thee oft; and mind thou me.
- Firm we subsist, yet possible to swerve;
- Since Reason not impossibly may meet
- Some specious object by the foe suborned,
- And fall into deception unaware,
- Not keeping strictest watch, as she was warned.
- Seek not temptation then, which to avoid
- Were better, and most likely if from me
- Thou sever not: Trial will come unsought.
- Wouldst thou approve thy constancy, approve
- First thy obedience; the other who can know,
- Not seeing thee attempted, who attest?
- But, if thou think, trial unsought may find
- Us both securer than thus warned thou seemest,
- Go; for thy stay, not free, absents thee more;
- Go in thy native innocence, rely
- On what thou hast of virtue; summon all!
- For God towards thee hath done his part, do thine.
- So spake the patriarch of mankind; but Eve
- Persisted; yet submiss, though last, replied.
- With thy permission then, and thus forewarned
- Chiefly by what thy own last reasoning words
- Touched only; that our trial, when least sought,
- May find us both perhaps far less prepared,
- The willinger I go, nor much expect
- A foe so proud will first the weaker seek;
- So bent, the more shall shame him his repulse.
- Thus saying, from her husband's hand her hand
- Soft she withdrew; and, like a Wood-Nymph light,
- Oread or Dryad, or of Delia's train,
- Betook her to the groves; but Delia's self
- In gait surpassed, and Goddess-like deport,
- Though not as she with bow and quiver armed,
- But with such gardening tools as Art yet rude,
- Guiltless of fire, had formed, or Angels brought.
- To Pales, or Pomona, thus adorned,
- Likest she seemed, Pomona when she fled
- Vertumnus, or to Ceres in her prime,
- Yet virgin of Proserpina from Jove.
- Her long with ardent look his eye pursued
- Delighted, but desiring more her stay.
- Oft he to her his charge of quick return
- Repeated; she to him as oft engaged
- To be returned by noon amid the bower,
- And all things in best order to invite
- Noontide repast, or afternoon's repose.
- O much deceived, much failing, hapless Eve,
- Of thy presumed return! event perverse!
- Thou never from that hour in Paradise
- Foundst either sweet repast, or sound repose;
- Such ambush, hid among sweet flowers and shades,
- Waited with hellish rancour imminent
- To intercept thy way, or send thee back
- Despoiled of innocence, of faith, of bliss!
- For now, and since first break of dawn, the Fiend,
- Mere serpent in appearance, forth was come;
- And on his quest, where likeliest he might find
- The only two of mankind, but in them
- The whole included race, his purposed prey.
- In bower and field he sought, where any tuft
- Of grove or garden-plot more pleasant lay,
- Their tendance, or plantation for delight;
- By fountain or by shady rivulet
- He sought them both, but wished his hap might find
- Eve separate; he wished, but not with hope
- Of what so seldom chanced; when to his wish,
- Beyond his hope, Eve separate he spies,
- Veiled in a cloud of fragrance, where she stood,
- Half spied, so thick the roses blushing round
- About her glowed, oft stooping to support
- Each flower of slender stalk, whose head, though gay
- Carnation, purple, azure, or specked with gold,
- Hung drooping unsustained; them she upstays
- Gently with myrtle band, mindless the while
- Herself, though fairest unsupported flower,
- From her best prop so far, and storm so nigh.
- Nearer he drew, and many a walk traversed
- Of stateliest covert, cedar, pine, or palm;
- Then voluble and bold, now hid, now seen,
- Among thick-woven arborets, and flowers
- Imbordered on each bank, the hand of Eve:
- Spot more delicious than those gardens feigned
- Or of revived Adonis, or renowned
- Alcinous, host of old Laertes' son;
- Or that, not mystick, where the sapient king
- Held dalliance with his fair Egyptian spouse.
- Much he the place admired, the person more.
- As one who long in populous city pent,
- Where houses thick and sewers annoy the air,
- Forth issuing on a summer's morn, to breathe
- Among the pleasant villages and farms
- Adjoined, from each thing met conceives delight;
- The smell of grain, or tedded grass, or kine,
- Or dairy, each rural sight, each rural sound;
- If chance, with nymph-like step, fair virgin pass,
- What pleasing seemed, for her now pleases more;
- She most, and in her look sums all delight:
- Such pleasure took the Serpent to behold
- This flowery plat, the sweet recess of Eve
- Thus early, thus alone: Her heavenly form
- Angelick, but more soft, and feminine,
- Her graceful innocence, her every air
- Of gesture, or least action, overawed
- His malice, and with rapine sweet bereaved
- His fierceness of the fierce intent it brought:
- That space the Evil-one abstracted stood
- From his own evil, and for the time remained
- Stupidly good; of enmity disarmed,
- Of guile, of hate, of envy, of revenge:
- But the hot Hell that always in him burns,
- Though in mid Heaven, soon ended his delight,
- And tortures him now more, the more he sees
- Of pleasure, not for him ordained: then soon
- Fierce hate he recollects, and all his thoughts
- Of mischief, gratulating, thus excites.
- Thoughts, whither have ye led me! with what sweet
- Compulsion thus transported, to forget
- What hither brought us! hate, not love;nor hope
- Of Paradise for Hell, hope here to taste
- Of pleasure; but all pleasure to destroy,
- Save what is in destroying; other joy
- To me is lost. Then, let me not let pass
- Occasion which now smiles; behold alone
- The woman, opportune to all attempts,
- Her husband, for I view far round, not nigh,
- Whose higher intellectual more I shun,
- And strength, of courage haughty, and of limb
- Heroick built, though of terrestrial mould;
- Foe not informidable! exempt from wound,
- I not; so much hath Hell debased, and pain
- Enfeebled me, to what I was in Heaven.
- She fair, divinely fair, fit love for Gods!
- Not terrible, though terrour be in love
- And beauty, not approached by stronger hate,
- Hate stronger, under show of love well feigned;
- The way which to her ruin now I tend.
- So spake the enemy of mankind, enclosed
- In serpent, inmate bad! and toward Eve
- Addressed his way: not with indented wave,
- Prone on the ground, as since; but on his rear,
- Circular base of rising folds, that towered
- Fold above fold, a surging maze! his head
- Crested aloft, and carbuncle his eyes;
- With burnished neck of verdant gold, erect
- Amidst his circling spires, that on the grass
- Floated redundant: pleasing was his shape
- And lovely; never since of serpent-kind
- Lovelier, not those that in Illyria changed,
- Hermione and Cadmus, or the god
- In Epidaurus; nor to which transformed
- Ammonian Jove, or Capitoline, was seen;
- He with Olympias; this with her who bore
- Scipio, the highth of Rome. With tract oblique
- At first, as one who sought access, but feared
- To interrupt, side-long he works his way.
- As when a ship, by skilful steersmen wrought
- Nigh river's mouth or foreland, where the wind
- Veers oft, as oft so steers, and shifts her sail:
- So varied he, and of his tortuous train
- Curled many a wanton wreath in sight of Eve,
- To lure her eye; she, busied, heard the sound
- Of rusling leaves, but minded not, as used
- To such disport before her through the field,
- From every beast; more duteous at her call,
- Than at Circean call the herd disguised.
- He, bolder now, uncalled before her stood,
- But as in gaze admiring: oft he bowed
- His turret crest, and sleek enamelled neck,
- Fawning; and licked the ground whereon she trod.
- His gentle dumb expression turned at length
- The eye of Eve to mark his play; he, glad
- Of her attention gained, with serpent-tongue
- Organick, or impulse of vocal air,
- His fraudulent temptation thus began.
- Wonder not, sovran Mistress, if perhaps
- Thou canst, who art sole wonder! much less arm
- Thy looks, the Heaven of mildness, with disdain,
- Displeased that I approach thee thus, and gaze
- Insatiate; I thus single;nor have feared
- Thy awful brow, more awful thus retired.
- Fairest resemblance of thy Maker fair,
- Thee all things living gaze on, all things thine
- By gift, and thy celestial beauty adore
- With ravishment beheld! there best beheld,
- Where universally admired; but here
- In this enclosure wild, these beasts among,
- Beholders rude, and shallow to discern
- Half what in thee is fair, one man except,
- Who sees thee? and what is one? who should be seen
- A Goddess among Gods, adored and served
- By Angels numberless, thy daily train.
- So glozed the Tempter, and his proem tuned:
- Into the heart of Eve his words made way,
- Though at the voice much marvelling; at length,
- Not unamazed, she thus in answer spake.
- What may this mean? language of man pronounced
- By tongue of brute, and human sense expressed?
- The first, at least, of these I thought denied
- To beasts; whom God, on their creation-day,
- Created mute to all articulate sound:
- The latter I demur; for in their looks
- Much reason, and in their actions, oft appears.
- Thee, Serpent, subtlest beast of all the field
- I knew, but not with human voice endued;
- Redouble then this miracle, and say,
- How camest thou speakable of mute, and how
- To me so friendly grown above the rest
- Of brutal kind, that daily are in sight?
- Say, for such wonder claims attention due.
- To whom the guileful Tempter thus replied.
- Empress of this fair world, resplendent Eve!
- Easy to me it is to tell thee all
- What thou commandest; and right thou shouldst be obeyed:
- I was at first as other beasts that graze
- The trodden herb, of abject thoughts and low,
- As was my food; nor aught but food discerned
- Or sex, and apprehended nothing high:
- Till, on a day roving the field, I chanced
- A goodly tree far distant to behold
- Loaden with fruit of fairest colours mixed,
- Ruddy and gold: I nearer drew to gaze;
- When from the boughs a savoury odour blown,
- Grateful to appetite, more pleased my sense
- Than smell of sweetest fennel, or the teats
- Of ewe or goat dropping with milk at even,
- Unsucked of lamb or kid, that tend their play.
- To satisfy the sharp desire I had
- Of tasting those fair apples, I resolved
- Not to defer; hunger and thirst at once,
- Powerful persuaders, quickened at the scent
- Of that alluring fruit, urged me so keen.
- About the mossy trunk I wound me soon;
- For, high from ground, the branches would require
- Thy utmost reach or Adam's: Round the tree
- All other beasts that saw, with like desire
- Longing and envying stood, but could not reach.
- Amid the tree now got, where plenty hung
- Tempting so nigh, to pluck and eat my fill
- I spared not; for, such pleasure till that hour,
- At feed or fountain, never had I found.
- Sated at length, ere long I might perceive
- Strange alteration in me, to degree
- Of reason in my inward powers; and speech
- Wanted not long; though to this shape retained.
- Thenceforth to speculations high or deep
- I turned my thoughts, and with capacious mind
- Considered all things visible in Heaven,
- Or Earth, or Middle; all things fair and good:
- But all that fair and good in thy divine
- Semblance, and in thy beauty's heavenly ray,
- United I beheld; no fair to thine
- Equivalent or second! which compelled
- Me thus, though importune perhaps, to come
- And gaze, and worship thee of right declared
- Sovran of creatures, universal Dame!
- So talked the spirited sly Snake; and Eve,
- Yet more amazed, unwary thus replied.
- Serpent, thy overpraising leaves in doubt
- The virtue of that fruit, in thee first proved:
- But say, where grows the tree? from hence how far?
- For many are the trees of God that grow
- In Paradise, and various, yet unknown
- To us; in such abundance lies our choice,
- As leaves a greater store of fruit untouched,
- Still hanging incorruptible, till men
- Grow up to their provision, and more hands
- Help to disburden Nature of her birth.
- To whom the wily Adder, blithe and glad.
- Empress, the way is ready, and not long;
- Beyond a row of myrtles, on a flat,
- Fast by a fountain, one small thicket past
- Of blowing myrrh and balm: if thou accept
- My conduct, I can bring thee thither soon
- Lead then, said Eve. He, leading, swiftly rolled
- In tangles, and made intricate seem straight,
- To mischief swift. Hope elevates, and joy
- Brightens his crest; as when a wandering fire,
- Compact of unctuous vapour, which the night
- Condenses, and the cold environs round,
- Kindled through agitation to a flame,
- Which oft, they say, some evil Spirit attends,
- Hovering and blazing with delusive light,
- Misleads the amazed night-wanderer from his way
- To bogs and mires, and oft through pond or pool;
- There swallowed up and lost, from succour far.
- So glistered the dire Snake, and into fraud
- Led Eve, our credulous mother, to the tree
- Of prohibition, root of all our woe;
- Which when she saw, thus to her guide she spake.
- Serpent, we might have spared our coming hither,
- Fruitless to me, though fruit be here to excess,
- The credit of whose virtue rest with thee;
- Wonderous indeed, if cause of such effects.
- But of this tree we may not taste nor touch;
- God so commanded, and left that command
- Sole daughter of his voice; the rest, we live
- Law to ourselves; our reason is our law.
- To whom the Tempter guilefully replied.
- Indeed! hath God then said that of the fruit
- Of all these garden-trees ye shall not eat,
- Yet Lords declared of all in earth or air$?
- To whom thus Eve, yet sinless. Of the fruit
- Of each tree in the garden we may eat;
- But of the fruit of this fair tree amidst
- The garden, God hath said, Ye shall not eat
- Thereof, nor shall ye touch it, lest ye die.
- She scarce had said, though brief, when now more bold
- The Tempter, but with show of zeal and love
- To Man, and indignation at his wrong,
- New part puts on; and, as to passion moved,
- Fluctuates disturbed, yet comely and in act
- Raised, as of some great matter to begin.
- As when of old some orator renowned,
- In Athens or free Rome, where eloquence
- Flourished, since mute! to some great cause addressed,
- Stood in himself collected; while each part,
- Motion, each act, won audience ere the tongue;
- Sometimes in highth began, as no delay
- Of preface brooking, through his zeal of right:
- So standing, moving, or to highth up grown,
- The Tempter, all impassioned, thus began.
- O sacred, wise, and wisdom-giving Plant,
- Mother of science! now I feel thy power
- Within me clear; not only to discern
- Things in their causes, but to trace the ways
- Of highest agents, deemed however wise.
- Queen of this universe! do not believe
- Those rigid threats of death: ye shall not die:
- How should you? by the fruit? it gives you life
- To knowledge; by the threatener? look on me,
- Me, who have touched and tasted; yet both live,
- And life more perfect have attained than Fate
- Meant me, by venturing higher than my lot.
- Shall that be shut to Man, which to the Beast
- Is open? or will God incense his ire
- For such a petty trespass? and not praise
- Rather your dauntless virtue, whom the pain
- Of death denounced, whatever thing death be,
- Deterred not from achieving what might lead
- To happier life, knowledge of good and evil;
- Of good, how just? of evil, if what is evil
- Be real, why not known, since easier shunned?
- God therefore cannot hurt ye, and be just;
- Not just, not God; not feared then, nor obeyed:
- Your fear itself of death removes the fear.
- Why then was this forbid? Why, but to awe;
- Why, but to keep ye low and ignorant,
- His worshippers? He knows that in the day
- Ye eat thereof, your eyes that seem so clear,
- Yet are but dim, shall perfectly be then
- Opened and cleared, and ye shall be as Gods,
- Knowing both good and evil, as they know.
- That ye shall be as Gods, since I as Man,
- Internal Man, is but proportion meet;
- I, of brute, human; ye, of human, Gods.
- So ye shall die perhaps, by putting off
- Human, to put on Gods; death to be wished,
- Though threatened, which no worse than this can bring.
- And what are Gods, that Man may not become
- As they, participating God-like food?
- The Gods are first, and that advantage use
- On our belief, that all from them proceeds:
- I question it; for this fair earth I see,
- Warmed by the sun, producing every kind;
- Them, nothing: if they all things, who enclosed
- Knowledge of good and evil in this tree,
- That whoso eats thereof, forthwith attains
- Wisdom without their leave? and wherein lies
- The offence, that Man should thus attain to know?
- What can your knowledge hurt him, or this tree
- Impart against his will, if all be his?
- Or is it envy? and can envy dwell
- In heavenly breasts? These, these, and many more
- Causes import your need of this fair fruit.
- Goddess humane, reach then, and freely taste!
- He ended; and his words, replete with guile,
- Into her heart too easy entrance won:
- Fixed on the fruit she gazed, which to behold
- Might tempt alone; and in her ears the sound
- Yet rung of his persuasive words, impregned
- With reason, to her seeming, and with truth:
- Mean while the hour of noon drew on, and waked
- An eager appetite, raised by the smell
- So savoury of that fruit, which with desire,
- Inclinable now grown to touch or taste,
- Solicited her longing eye; yet first
- Pausing a while, thus to herself she mused.
- Great are thy virtues, doubtless, best of fruits,
- Though kept from man, and worthy to be admired;
- Whose taste, too long forborn, at first assay
- Gave elocution to the mute, and taught
- The tongue not made for speech to speak thy praise:
- Thy praise he also, who forbids thy use,
- Conceals not from us, naming thee the tree
- Of knowledge, knowledge both of good and evil;
- Forbids us then to taste! but his forbidding
- Commends thee more, while it infers the good
- By thee communicated, and our want:
- For good unknown sure is not had; or, had
- And yet unknown, is as not had at all.
- In plain then, what forbids he but to know,
- Forbids us good, forbids us to be wise?
- Such prohibitions bind not. But, if death
- Bind us with after-bands, what profits then
- Our inward freedom? In the day we eat
- Of this fair fruit, our doom is, we shall die!
- How dies the Serpent? he hath eaten and lives,
- And knows, and speaks, and reasons, and discerns,
- Irrational till then. For us alone
- Was death invented? or to us denied
- This intellectual food, for beasts reserved?
- For beasts it seems: yet that one beast which first
- Hath tasted envies not, but brings with joy
- The good befallen him, author unsuspect,
- Friendly to man, far from deceit or guile.
- What fear I then? rather, what know to fear
- Under this ignorance of good and evil,
- Of God or death, of law or penalty?
- Here grows the cure of all, this fruit divine,
- Fair to the eye, inviting to the taste,
- Of virtue to make wise: What hinders then
- To reach, and feed at once both body and mind?
- So saying, her rash hand in evil hour
- Forth reaching to the fruit, she plucked, she eat!
- Earth felt the wound; and Nature from her seat,
- Sighing through all her works, gave signs of woe,
- That all was lost. Back to the thicket slunk
- The guilty Serpent; and well might;for Eve,
- Intent now wholly on her taste, nought else
- Regarded; such delight till then, as seemed,
- In fruit she never tasted, whether true
- Or fancied so, through expectation high
- Of knowledge; not was Godhead from her thought.
- Greedily she ingorged without restraint,
- And knew not eating death: Satiate at length,
- And hightened as with wine, jocund and boon,
- Thus to herself she pleasingly began.
- O sovran, virtuous, precious of all trees
- In Paradise! of operation blest
- To sapience, hitherto obscured, infamed.
- And thy fair fruit let hang, as to no end
- Created; but henceforth my early care,
- Not without song, each morning, and due praise,
- Shall tend thee, and the fertile burden ease
- Of thy full branches offered free to all;
- Till, dieted by thee, I grow mature
- In knowledge, as the Gods, who all things know;
- Though others envy what they cannot give:
- For, had the gift been theirs, it had not here
- Thus grown. Experience, next, to thee I owe,
- Best guide; not following thee, I had remained
- In ignorance; thou openest wisdom's way,
- And givest access, though secret she retire.
- And I perhaps am secret: Heaven is high,
- High, and remote to see from thence distinct
- Each thing on Earth; and other care perhaps
- May have diverted from continual watch
- Our great Forbidder, safe with all his spies
- About him. But to Adam in what sort
- Shall I appear? shall I to him make known
- As yet my change, and give him to partake
- Full happiness with me, or rather not,
- But keeps the odds of knowledge in my power
- Without copartner? so to add what wants
- In female sex, the more to draw his love,
- And render me more equal; and perhaps,
- A thing not undesirable, sometime
- Superiour; for, inferiour, who is free
- This may be well: But what if God have seen,
- And death ensue? then I shall be no more!
- And Adam, wedded to another Eve,
- Shall live with her enjoying, I extinct;
- A death to think! Confirmed then I resolve,
- Adam shall share with me in bliss or woe:
- So dear I love him, that with him all deaths
- I could endure, without him live no life.
- So saying, from the tree her step she turned;
- But first low reverence done, as to the Power
- That dwelt within, whose presence had infused
- Into the plant sciential sap, derived
- From nectar, drink of Gods. Adam the while,
- Waiting desirous her return, had wove
- Of choicest flowers a garland, to adorn
- Her tresses, and her rural labours crown;
- As reapers oft are wont their harvest-queen.
- Great joy he promised to his thoughts, and new
- Solace in her return, so long delayed:
- Yet oft his heart, divine of something ill,
- Misgave him; he the faltering measure felt;
- And forth to meet her went, the way she took
- That morn when first they parted: by the tree
- Of knowledge he must pass; there he her met,
- Scarce from the tree returning; in her hand
- A bough of fairest fruit, that downy smiled,
- New gathered, and ambrosial smell diffused.
- To him she hasted; in her face excuse
- Came prologue, and apology too prompt;
- Which, with bland words at will, she thus addressed.
- Hast thou not wondered, Adam, at my stay?
- Thee I have missed, and thought it long, deprived
- Thy presence; agony of love till now
- Not felt, nor shall be twice; for never more
- Mean I to try, what rash untried I sought,
- The pain of absence from thy sight. But strange
- Hath been the cause, and wonderful to hear:
- This tree is not, as we are told, a tree
- Of danger tasted, nor to evil unknown
- Opening the way, but of divine effect
- To open eyes, and make them Gods who taste;
- And hath been tasted such: The serpent wise,
- Or not restrained as we, or not obeying,
- Hath eaten of the fruit; and is become,
- Not dead, as we are threatened, but thenceforth
- Endued with human voice and human sense,
- Reasoning to admiration; and with me
- Persuasively hath so prevailed, that I
- Have also tasted, and have also found
- The effects to correspond; opener mine eyes,
- Dim erst, dilated spirits, ampler heart,
- And growing up to Godhead; which for thee
- Chiefly I sought, without thee can despise.
- For bliss, as thou hast part, to me is bliss;
- Tedious, unshared with thee, and odious soon.
- Thou therefore also taste, that equal lot
- May join us, equal joy, as equal love;
- Lest, thou not tasting, different degree
- Disjoin us, and I then too late renounce
- Deity for thee, when Fate will not permit.
- Thus Eve with countenance blithe her story told;
- But in her cheek distemper flushing glowed.
- On the other side Adam, soon as he heard
- The fatal trespass done by Eve, amazed,
- Astonied stood and blank, while horrour chill
- Ran through his veins, and all his joints relaxed;
- From his slack hand the garland wreathed for Eve
- Down dropt, and all the faded roses shed:
- Speechless he stood and pale, till thus at length
- First to himself he inward silence broke.
- O fairest of Creation, last and best
- Of all God's works, Creature in whom excelled
- Whatever can to sight or thought be formed,
- Holy, divine, good, amiable, or sweet!
- How art thou lost! how on a sudden lost,
- Defaced, deflowered, and now to death devote!
- Rather, how hast thou yielded to transgress
- The strict forbiddance, how to violate
- The sacred fruit forbidden! Some cursed fraud
- Of enemy hath beguiled thee, yet unknown,
- And me with thee hath ruined; for with thee
- Certain my resolution is to die:
- How can I live without thee! how forego
- Thy sweet converse, and love so dearly joined,
- To live again in these wild woods forlorn!
- Should God create another Eve, and I
- Another rib afford, yet loss of thee
- Would never from my heart: no, no!I feel
- The link of Nature draw me: flesh of flesh,
- Bone of my bone thou art, and from thy state
- Mine never shall be parted, bliss or woe.
- So having said, as one from sad dismay
- Recomforted, and after thoughts disturbed
- Submitting to what seemed remediless,
- Thus in calm mood his words to Eve he turned.
- Bold deed thou hast presumed, adventurous Eve,
- And peril great provoked, who thus hast dared,
- Had it been only coveting to eye
- That sacred fruit, sacred to abstinence,
- Much more to taste it under ban to touch.
- But past who can recall, or done undo?
- Not God Omnipotent, nor Fate; yet so
- Perhaps thou shalt not die, perhaps the fact
- Is not so heinous now, foretasted fruit,
- Profaned first by the serpent, by him first
- Made common, and unhallowed, ere our taste;
- Nor yet on him found deadly; yet he lives;
- Lives, as thou saidst, and gains to live, as Man,
- Higher degree of life; inducement strong
- To us, as likely tasting to attain
- Proportional ascent; which cannot be
- But to be Gods, or Angels, demi-Gods.
- Nor can I think that God, Creator wise,
- Though threatening, will in earnest so destroy
- Us his prime creatures, dignified so high,
- Set over all his works; which in our fall,
- For us created, needs with us must fail,
- Dependant made; so God shall uncreate,
- Be frustrate, do, undo, and labour lose;
- Not well conceived of God, who, though his power
- Creation could repeat, yet would be loth
- Us to abolish, lest the Adversary
- Triumph, and say; "Fickle their state whom God
- "Most favours; who can please him long? Me first
- "He ruined, now Mankind; whom will he next?"
- Matter of scorn, not to be given the Foe.
- However I with thee have fixed my lot,
- Certain to undergo like doom: If death
- Consort with thee, death is to me as life;
- So forcible within my heart I feel
- The bond of Nature draw me to my own;
- My own in thee, for what thou art is mine;
- Our state cannot be severed; we are one,
- One flesh; to lose thee were to lose myself.
- So Adam; and thus Eve to him replied.
- O glorious trial of exceeding love,
- Illustrious evidence, example high!
- Engaging me to emulate; but, short
- Of thy perfection, how shall I attain,
- Adam, from whose dear side I boast me sprung,
- And gladly of our union hear thee speak,
- One heart, one soul in both; whereof good proof
- This day affords, declaring thee resolved,
- Rather than death, or aught than death more dread,
- Shall separate us, linked in love so dear,
- To undergo with me one guilt, one crime,
- If any be, of tasting this fair fruit;
- Whose virtue for of good still good proceeds,
- Direct, or by occasion, hath presented
- This happy trial of thy love, which else
- So eminently never had been known?
- Were it I thought death menaced would ensue
- This my attempt, I would sustain alone
- The worst, and not persuade thee, rather die
- Deserted, than oblige thee with a fact
- Pernicious to thy peace; chiefly assured
- Remarkably so late of thy so true,
- So faithful, love unequalled: but I feel
- Far otherwise the event; not death, but life
- Augmented, opened eyes, new hopes, new joys,
- Taste so divine, that what of sweet before
- Hath touched my sense, flat seems to this, and harsh.
- On my experience, Adam, freely taste,
- And fear of death deliver to the winds.
- So saying, she embraced him, and for joy
- Tenderly wept; much won, that he his love
- Had so ennobled, as of choice to incur
- Divine displeasure for her sake, or death.
- In recompence for such compliance bad
- Such recompence best merits from the bough
- She gave him of that fair enticing fruit
- With liberal hand: he scrupled not to eat,
- Against his better knowledge; not deceived,
- But fondly overcome with female charm.
- Earth trembled from her entrails, as again
- In pangs; and Nature gave a second groan;
- Sky loured; and, muttering thunder, some sad drops
- Wept at completing of the mortal sin
- Original: while Adam took no thought,
- Eating his fill; nor Eve to iterate
- Her former trespass feared, the more to sooth
- Him with her loved society; that now,
- As with new wine intoxicated both,
- They swim in mirth, and fancy that they feel
- Divinity within them breeding wings,
- Wherewith to scorn the earth: But that false fruit
- Far other operation first displayed,
- Carnal desire inflaming; he on Eve
- Began to cast lascivious eyes; she him
- As wantonly repaid; in lust they burn:
- Till Adam thus 'gan Eve to dalliance move.
- Eve, now I see thou art exact of taste,
- And elegant, of sapience no small part;
- Since to each meaning savour we apply,
- And palate call judicious; I the praise
- Yield thee, so well this day thou hast purveyed.
- Much pleasure we have lost, while we abstained
- From this delightful fruit, nor known till now
- True relish, tasting; if such pleasure be
- In things to us forbidden, it might be wished,
- For this one tree had been forbidden ten.
- But come, so well refreshed, now let us play,
- As meet is, after such delicious fare;
- For never did thy beauty, since the day
- I saw thee first and wedded thee, adorned
- With all perfections, so inflame my sense
- With ardour to enjoy thee, fairer now
- Than ever; bounty of this virtuous tree!
- So said he, and forbore not glance or toy
- Of amorous intent; well understood
- Of Eve, whose eye darted contagious fire.
- Her hand he seised; and to a shady bank,
- Thick over-head with verdant roof imbowered,
- He led her nothing loth; flowers were the couch,
- Pansies, and violets, and asphodel,
- And hyacinth; Earth's freshest softest lap.
- There they their fill of love and love's disport
- Took largely, of their mutual guilt the seal,
- The solace of their sin; till dewy sleep
- Oppressed them, wearied with their amorous play,
- Soon as the force of that fallacious fruit,
- That with exhilarating vapour bland
- About their spirits had played, and inmost powers
- Made err, was now exhaled; and grosser sleep,
- Bred of unkindly fumes, with conscious dreams
- Incumbered, now had left them; up they rose
- As from unrest; and, each the other viewing,
- Soon found their eyes how opened, and their minds
- How darkened; innocence, that as a veil
- Had shadowed them from knowing ill, was gone;
- Just confidence, and native righteousness,
- And honour, from about them, naked left
- To guilty Shame; he covered, but his robe
- Uncovered more. So rose the Danite strong,
- Herculean Samson, from the harlot-lap
- Of Philistean Dalilah, and waked
- Shorn of his strength. They destitute and bare
- Of all their virtue: Silent, and in face
- Confounded, long they sat, as strucken mute:
- Till Adam, though not less than Eve abashed,
- At length gave utterance to these words constrained.
- O Eve, in evil hour thou didst give ear
- To that false worm, of whomsoever taught
- To counterfeit Man's voice; true in our fall,
- False in our promised rising; since our eyes
- Opened we find indeed, and find we know
- Both good and evil; good lost, and evil got;
- Bad fruit of knowledge, if this be to know;
- Which leaves us naked thus, of honour void,
- Of innocence, of faith, of purity,
- Our wonted ornaments now soiled and stained,
- And in our faces evident the signs
- Of foul concupiscence; whence evil store;
- Even shame, the last of evils; of the first
- Be sure then.--How shall I behold the face
- Henceforth of God or Angel, erst with joy
- And rapture so oft beheld? Those heavenly shapes
- Will dazzle now this earthly with their blaze
- Insufferably bright. O! might I here
- In solitude live savage; in some glade
- Obscured, where highest woods, impenetrable
- To star or sun-light, spread their umbrage broad
- And brown as evening: Cover me, ye Pines!
- Ye Cedars, with innumerable boughs
- Hide me, where I may never see them more!--
- But let us now, as in bad plight, devise
- What best may for the present serve to hide
- The parts of each from other, that seem most
- To shame obnoxious, and unseemliest seen;
- Some tree, whose broad smooth leaves together sewed,
- And girded on our loins, may cover round
- Those middle parts; that this new comer, Shame,
- There sit not, and reproach us as unclean.
- So counselled he, and both together went
- Into the thickest wood; there soon they chose
- The fig-tree; not that kind for fruit renowned,
- But such as at this day, to Indians known,
- In Malabar or Decan spreads her arms
- Branching so broad and long, that in the ground
- The bended twigs take root, and daughters grow
- About the mother tree, a pillared shade
- High over-arched, and echoing walks between:
- There oft the Indian herdsman, shunning heat,
- Shelters in cool, and tends his pasturing herds
- At loop-holes cut through thickest shade: Those leaves
- They gathered, broad as Amazonian targe;
- And, with what skill they had, together sewed,
- To gird their waist; vain covering, if to hide
- Their guilt and dreaded shame! O, how unlike
- To that first naked glory! Such of late
- Columbus found the American, so girt
- With feathered cincture; naked else, and wild
- Among the trees on isles and woody shores.
- Thus fenced, and, as they thought, their shame in part
- Covered, but not at rest or ease of mind,
- They sat them down to weep; nor only tears
- Rained at their eyes, but high winds worse within
- Began to rise, high passions, anger, hate,
- Mistrust, suspicion, discord; and shook sore
- Their inward state of mind, calm region once
- And full of peace, now tost and turbulent:
- For Understanding ruled not, and the Will
- Heard not her lore; both in subjection now
- To sensual Appetite, who from beneath
- Usurping over sovran Reason claimed
- Superiour sway: From thus distempered breast,
- Adam, estranged in look and altered style,
- Speech intermitted thus to Eve renewed.
- Would thou hadst hearkened to my words, and staid
- With me, as I besought thee, when that strange
- Desire of wandering, this unhappy morn,
- I know not whence possessed thee; we had then
- Remained still happy; not, as now, despoiled
- Of all our good; shamed, naked, miserable!
- Let none henceforth seek needless cause to approve
- The faith they owe; when earnestly they seek
- Such proof, conclude, they then begin to fail.
- To whom, soon moved with touch of blame, thus Eve.
- What words have passed thy lips, Adam severe!
- Imputest thou that to my default, or will
- Of wandering, as thou callest it, which who knows
- But might as ill have happened thou being by,
- Or to thyself perhaps? Hadst thou been there,
- Or here the attempt, thou couldst not have discerned
- Fraud in the Serpent, speaking as he spake;
- No ground of enmity between us known,
- Why he should mean me ill, or seek to harm.
- Was I to have never parted from thy side?
- As good have grown there still a lifeless rib.
- Being as I am, why didst not thou, the head,
- Command me absolutely not to go,
- Going into such danger, as thou saidst?
- Too facile then, thou didst not much gainsay;
- Nay, didst permit, approve, and fair dismiss.
- Hadst thou been firm and fixed in thy dissent,
- Neither had I transgressed, nor thou with me.
- To whom, then first incensed, Adam replied.
- Is this the love, is this the recompence
- Of mine to thee, ingrateful Eve! expressed
- Immutable, when thou wert lost, not I;
- Who might have lived, and joyed immortal bliss,
- Yet willingly chose rather death with thee?
- And am I now upbraided as the cause
- Of thy transgressing? Not enough severe,
- It seems, in thy restraint: What could I more
- I warned thee, I admonished thee, foretold
- The danger, and the lurking enemy
- That lay in wait; beyond this, had been force;
- And force upon free will hath here no place.
- But confidence then bore thee on; secure
- Either to meet no danger, or to find
- Matter of glorious trial; and perhaps
- I also erred, in overmuch admiring
- What seemed in thee so perfect, that I thought
- No evil durst attempt thee; but I rue
- The errour now, which is become my crime,
- And thou the accuser. Thus it shall befall
- Him, who, to worth in women overtrusting,
- Lets her will rule: restraint she will not brook;
- And, left to herself, if evil thence ensue,
- She first his weak indulgence will accuse.
- Thus they in mutual accusation spent
- The fruitless hours, but neither self-condemning;
- And of their vain contest appeared no end.
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- Book X
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-
- Mean while the heinous and despiteful act
- Of Satan, done in Paradise; and how
- He, in the serpent, had perverted Eve,
- Her husband she, to taste the fatal fruit,
- Was known in Heaven; for what can 'scape the eye
- Of God all-seeing, or deceive his heart
- Omniscient? who, in all things wise and just,
- Hindered not Satan to attempt the mind
- Of Man, with strength entire and free will armed,
- Complete to have discovered and repulsed
- Whatever wiles of foe or seeming friend.
- For still they knew, and ought to have still remembered,
- The high injunction, not to taste that fruit,
- Whoever tempted; which they not obeying,
- (Incurred what could they less?) the penalty;
- And, manifold in sin, deserved to fall.
- Up into Heaven from Paradise in haste
- The angelick guards ascended, mute, and sad,
- For Man; for of his state by this they knew,
- Much wondering how the subtle Fiend had stolen
- Entrance unseen. Soon as the unwelcome news
- From Earth arrived at Heaven-gate, displeased
- All were who heard; dim sadness did not spare
- That time celestial visages, yet, mixed
- With pity, violated not their bliss.
- About the new-arrived, in multitudes
- The ethereal people ran, to hear and know
- How all befel: They towards the throne supreme,
- Accountable, made haste, to make appear,
- With righteous plea, their utmost vigilance
- And easily approved; when the Most High
- Eternal Father, from his secret cloud,
- Amidst in thunder uttered thus his voice.
- Assembled Angels, and ye Powers returned
- From unsuccessful charge; be not dismayed,
- Nor troubled at these tidings from the earth,
- Which your sincerest care could not prevent;
- Foretold so lately what would come to pass,
- When first this tempter crossed the gulf from Hell.
- I told ye then he should prevail, and speed
- On his bad errand; Man should be seduced,
- And flattered out of all, believing lies
- Against his Maker; no decree of mine
- Concurring to necessitate his fall,
- Or touch with lightest moment of impulse
- His free will, to her own inclining left
- In even scale. But fallen he is; and now
- What rests, but that the mortal sentence pass
- On his transgression,--death denounced that day?
- Which he presumes already vain and void,
- Because not yet inflicted, as he feared,
- By some immediate stroke; but soon shall find
- Forbearance no acquittance, ere day end.
- Justice shall not return as bounty scorned.
- But whom send I to judge them? whom but thee,
- Vicegerent Son? To thee I have transferred
- All judgement, whether in Heaven, or Earth, or Hell.
- Easy it may be seen that I intend
- Mercy colleague with justice, sending thee
- Man's friend, his Mediator, his designed
- Both ransom and Redeemer voluntary,
- And destined Man himself to judge Man fallen.
- So spake the Father; and, unfolding bright
- Toward the right hand his glory, on the Son
- Blazed forth unclouded Deity: He full
- Resplendent all his Father manifest
- Expressed, and thus divinely answered mild.
- Father Eternal, thine is to decree;
- Mine, both in Heaven and Earth, to do thy will
- Supreme; that thou in me, thy Son beloved,
- Mayest ever rest well pleased. I go to judge
- On earth these thy transgressours; but thou knowest,
- Whoever judged, the worst on me must light,
- When time shall be; for so I undertook
- Before thee; and, not repenting, this obtain
- Of right, that I may mitigate their doom
- On me derived; yet I shall temper so
- Justice with mercy, as may illustrate most
- Them fully satisfied, and thee appease.
- Attendance none shall need, nor train, where none
- Are to behold the judgement, but the judged,
- Those two; the third best absent is condemned,
- Convict by flight, and rebel to all law:
- Conviction to the serpent none belongs.
- Thus saying, from his radiant seat he rose
- Of high collateral glory: Him Thrones, and Powers,
- Princedoms, and Dominations ministrant,
- Accompanied to Heaven-gate; from whence
- Eden, and all the coast, in prospect lay.
- Down he descended straight; the speed of Gods
- Time counts not, though with swiftest minutes winged.
- Now was the sun in western cadence low
- From noon, and gentle airs, due at their hour,
- To fan the earth now waked, and usher in
- The evening cool; when he, from wrath more cool,
- Came the mild Judge, and Intercessour both,
- To sentence Man: The voice of God they heard
- Now walking in the garden, by soft winds
- Brought to their ears, while day declined; they heard,
- And from his presence hid themselves among
- The thickest trees, both man and wife; till God,
- Approaching, thus to Adam called aloud.
- Where art thou, Adam, wont with joy to meet
- My coming seen far off? I miss thee here,
- Not pleased, thus entertained with solitude,
- Where obvious duty ere while appeared unsought:
- Or come I less conspicuous, or what change
- Absents thee, or what chance detains?--Come forth!
- He came; and with him Eve, more loth, though first
- To offend; discountenanced both, and discomposed;
- Love was not in their looks, either to God,
- Or to each other; but apparent guilt,
- And shame, and perturbation, and despair,
- Anger, and obstinacy, and hate, and guile.
- Whence Adam, faltering long, thus answered brief.
- I heard thee in the garden, and of thy voice
- Afraid, being naked, hid myself. To whom
- The gracious Judge without revile replied.
- My voice thou oft hast heard, and hast not feared,
- But still rejoiced; how is it now become
- So dreadful to thee? That thou art naked, who
- Hath told thee? Hast thou eaten of the tree,
- Whereof I gave thee charge thou shouldst not eat?
- To whom thus Adam sore beset replied.
- O Heaven! in evil strait this day I stand
- Before my Judge; either to undergo
- Myself the total crime, or to accuse
- My other self, the partner of my life;
- Whose failing, while her faith to me remains,
- I should conceal, and not expose to blame
- By my complaint: but strict necessity
- Subdues me, and calamitous constraint;
- Lest on my head both sin and punishment,
- However insupportable, be all
- Devolved; though should I hold my peace, yet thou
- Wouldst easily detect what I conceal.--
- This Woman, whom thou madest to be my help,
- And gavest me as thy perfect gift, so good,
- So fit, so acceptable, so divine,
- That from her hand I could suspect no ill,
- And what she did, whatever in itself,
- Her doing seemed to justify the deed;
- She gave me of the tree, and I did eat.
- To whom the Sovran Presence thus replied.
- Was she thy God, that her thou didst obey
- Before his voice? or was she made thy guide,
- Superiour, or but equal, that to her
- Thou didst resign thy manhood, and the place
- Wherein God set thee above her made of thee,
- And for thee, whose perfection far excelled
- Hers in all real dignity? Adorned
- She was indeed, and lovely, to attract
- Thy love, not thy subjection; and her gifts
- Were such, as under government well seemed;
- Unseemly to bear rule; which was thy part
- And person, hadst thou known thyself aright.
- So having said, he thus to Eve in few.
- Say, Woman, what is this which thou hast done?
- To whom sad Eve, with shame nigh overwhelmed,
- Confessing soon, yet not before her Judge
- Bold or loquacious, thus abashed replied.
- The Serpent me beguiled, and I did eat.
- Which when the Lord God heard, without delay
- To judgement he proceeded on the accused
- Serpent, though brute; unable to transfer
- The guilt on him, who made him instrument
- Of mischief, and polluted from the end
- Of his creation; justly then accursed,
- As vitiated in nature: More to know
- Concerned not Man, (since he no further knew)
- Nor altered his offence; yet God at last
- To Satan first in sin his doom applied,
- Though in mysterious terms, judged as then best:
- And on the Serpent thus his curse let fall.
- Because thou hast done this, thou art accursed
- Above all cattle, each beast of the field;
- Upon thy belly groveling thou shalt go,
- And dust shalt eat all the days of thy life.
- Between thee and the woman I will put
- Enmity, and between thine and her seed;
- Her seed shall bruise thy head, thou bruise his heel.
- So spake this oracle, then verified
- When Jesus, Son of Mary, second Eve,
- Saw Satan fall, like lightning, down from Heaven,
- Prince of the air; then, rising from his grave
- Spoiled Principalities and Powers, triumphed
- In open show; and, with ascension bright,
- Captivity led captive through the air,
- The realm itself of Satan, long usurped;
- Whom he shall tread at last under our feet;
- Even he, who now foretold his fatal bruise;
- And to the Woman thus his sentence turned.
- Thy sorrow I will greatly multiply
- By thy conception; children thou shalt bring
- In sorrow forth; and to thy husband's will
- Thine shall submit; he over thee shall rule.
- On Adam last thus judgement he pronounced.
- Because thou hast hearkened to the voice of thy wife,
- And eaten of the tree, concerning which
- I charged thee, saying, Thou shalt not eat thereof:
- Cursed is the ground for thy sake; thou in sorrow
- Shalt eat thereof, all the days of thy life;
- Thorns also and thistles it shall bring thee forth
- Unbid; and thou shalt eat the herb of the field;
- In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread,
- Till thou return unto the ground; for thou
- Out of the ground wast taken, know thy birth,
- For dust thou art, and shalt to dust return.
- So judged he Man, both Judge and Saviour sent;
- And the instant stroke of death, denounced that day,
- Removed far off; then, pitying how they stood
- Before him naked to the air, that now
- Must suffer change, disdained not to begin
- Thenceforth the form of servant to assume;
- As when he washed his servants feet; so now,
- As father of his family, he clad
- Their nakedness with skins of beasts, or slain,
- Or as the snake with youthful coat repaid;
- And thought not much to clothe his enemies;
- Nor he their outward only with the skins
- Of beasts, but inward nakedness, much more.
- Opprobrious, with his robe of righteousness,
- Arraying, covered from his Father's sight.
- To him with swift ascent he up returned,
- Into his blissful bosom reassumed
- In glory, as of old; to him appeased
- All, though all-knowing, what had passed with Man
- Recounted, mixing intercession sweet.
- Mean while, ere thus was sinned and judged on Earth,
- Within the gates of Hell sat Sin and Death,
- In counterview within the gates, that now
- Stood open wide, belching outrageous flame
- Far into Chaos, since the Fiend passed through,
- Sin opening; who thus now to Death began.
- O Son, why sit we here each other viewing
- Idly, while Satan, our great author, thrives
- In other worlds, and happier seat provides
- For us, his offspring dear? It cannot be
- But that success attends him; if mishap,
- Ere this he had returned, with fury driven
- By his avengers; since no place like this
- Can fit his punishment, or their revenge.
- Methinks I feel new strength within me rise,
- Wings growing, and dominion given me large
- Beyond this deep; whatever draws me on,
- Or sympathy, or some connatural force,
- Powerful at greatest distance to unite,
- With secret amity, things of like kind,
- By secretest conveyance. Thou, my shade
- Inseparable, must with me along;
- For Death from Sin no power can separate.
- But, lest the difficulty of passing back
- Stay his return perhaps over this gulf
- Impassable, impervious; let us try
- Adventurous work, yet to thy power and mine
- Not unagreeable, to found a path
- Over this main from Hell to that new world,
- Where Satan now prevails; a monument
- Of merit high to all the infernal host,
- Easing their passage hence, for intercourse,
- Or transmigration, as their lot shall lead.
- Nor can I miss the way, so strongly drawn
- By this new-felt attraction and instinct.
- Whom thus the meager Shadow answered soon.
- Go, whither Fate, and inclination strong,
- Leads thee; I shall not lag behind, nor err
- The way, thou leading; such a scent I draw
- Of carnage, prey innumerable, and taste
- The savour of death from all things there that live:
- Nor shall I to the work thou enterprisest
- Be wanting, but afford thee equal aid.
- So saying, with delight he snuffed the smell
- Of mortal change on earth. As when a flock
- Of ravenous fowl, though many a league remote,
- Against the day of battle, to a field,
- Where armies lie encamped, come flying, lured
- With scent of living carcasses designed
- For death, the following day, in bloody fight:
- So scented the grim Feature, and upturned
- His nostril wide into the murky air;
- Sagacious of his quarry from so far.
- Then both from out Hell-gates, into the waste
- Wide anarchy of Chaos, damp and dark,
- Flew diverse; and with power (their power was great)
- Hovering upon the waters, what they met
- Solid or slimy, as in raging sea
- Tost up and down, together crouded drove,
- From each side shoaling towards the mouth of Hell;
- As when two polar winds, blowing adverse
- Upon the Cronian sea, together drive
- Mountains of ice, that stop the imagined way
- Beyond Petsora eastward, to the rich
- Cathaian coast. The aggregated soil
- Death with his mace petrifick, cold and dry,
- As with a trident, smote; and fixed as firm
- As Delos, floating once; the rest his look
- Bound with Gorgonian rigour not to move;
- And with Asphaltick slime, broad as the gate,
- Deep to the roots of Hell the gathered beach
- They fastened, and the mole immense wrought on
- Over the foaming deep high-arched, a bridge
- Of length prodigious, joining to the wall
- Immoveable of this now fenceless world,
- Forfeit to Death; from hence a passage broad,
- Smooth, easy, inoffensive, down to Hell.
- So, if great things to small may be compared,
- Xerxes, the liberty of Greece to yoke,
- From Susa, his Memnonian palace high,
- Came to the sea: and, over Hellespont
- Bridging his way, Europe with Asia joined,
- And scourged with many a stroke the indignant waves.
- Now had they brought the work by wonderous art
- Pontifical, a ridge of pendant rock,
- Over the vexed abyss, following the track
- Of Satan to the self-same place where he
- First lighted from his wing, and landed safe
- From out of Chaos, to the outside bare
- Of this round world: With pins of adamant
- And chains they made all fast, too fast they made
- And durable! And now in little space
- The confines met of empyrean Heaven,
- And of this World; and, on the left hand, Hell
- With long reach interposed; three several ways
- In sight, to each of these three places led.
- And now their way to Earth they had descried,
- To Paradise first tending; when, behold!
- Satan, in likeness of an Angel bright,
- Betwixt the Centaur and the Scorpion steering
- His zenith, while the sun in Aries rose:
- Disguised he came; but those his children dear
- Their parent soon discerned, though in disguise.
- He, after Eve seduced, unminded slunk
- Into the wood fast by; and, changing shape,
- To observe the sequel, saw his guileful act
- By Eve, though all unweeting, seconded
- Upon her husband; saw their shame that sought
- Vain covertures; but when he saw descend
- The Son of God to judge them, terrified
- He fled; not hoping to escape, but shun
- The present; fearing, guilty, what his wrath
- Might suddenly inflict; that past, returned
- By night, and listening where the hapless pair
- Sat in their sad discourse, and various plaint,
- Thence gathered his own doom; which understood
- Not instant, but of future time, with joy
- And tidings fraught, to Hell he now returned;
- And at the brink of Chaos, near the foot
- Of this new wonderous pontifice, unhoped
- Met, who to meet him came, his offspring dear.
- Great joy was at their meeting, and at sight
- Of that stupendious bridge his joy encreased.
- Long he admiring stood, till Sin, his fair
- Enchanting daughter, thus the silence broke.
- O Parent, these are thy magnifick deeds,
- Thy trophies! which thou viewest as not thine own;
- Thou art their author, and prime architect:
- For I no sooner in my heart divined,
- My heart, which by a secret harmony
- Still moves with thine, joined in connexion sweet,
- That thou on earth hadst prospered, which thy looks
- Now also evidence, but straight I felt,
- Though distant from thee worlds between, yet felt,
- That I must after thee, with this thy son;
- Such fatal consequence unites us three!
- Hell could no longer hold us in our bounds,
- Nor this unvoyageable gulf obscure
- Detain from following thy illustrious track.
- Thou hast achieved our liberty, confined
- Within Hell-gates till now; thou us impowered
- To fortify thus far, and overlay,
- With this portentous bridge, the dark abyss.
- Thine now is all this world; thy virtue hath won
- What thy hands builded not; thy wisdom gained
- With odds what war hath lost, and fully avenged
- Our foil in Heaven; here thou shalt monarch reign,
- There didst not; there let him still victor sway,
- As battle hath adjudged; from this new world
- Retiring, by his own doom alienated;
- And henceforth monarchy with thee divide
- Of all things, parted by the empyreal bounds,
- His quadrature, from thy orbicular world;
- Or try thee now more dangerous to his throne.
- Whom thus the Prince of darkness answered glad.
- Fair Daughter, and thou Son and Grandchild both;
- High proof ye now have given to be the race
- Of Satan (for I glory in the name,
- Antagonist of Heaven's Almighty King,)
- Amply have merited of me, of all
- The infernal empire, that so near Heaven's door
- Triumphal with triumphal act have met,
- Mine, with this glorious work; and made one realm,
- Hell and this world, one realm, one continent
- Of easy thorough-fare. Therefore, while I
- Descend through darkness, on your road with ease,
- To my associate Powers, them to acquaint
- With these successes, and with them rejoice;
- You two this way, among these numerous orbs,
- All yours, right down to Paradise descend;
- There dwell, and reign in bliss; thence on the earth
- Dominion exercise and in the air,
- Chiefly on Man, sole lord of all declared;
- Him first make sure your thrall, and lastly kill.
- My substitutes I send ye, and create
- Plenipotent on earth, of matchless might
- Issuing from me: on your joint vigour now
- My hold of this new kingdom all depends,
- Through Sin to Death exposed by my exploit.
- If your joint power prevail, the affairs of Hell
- No detriment need fear; go, and be strong!
- So saying he dismissed them; they with speed
- Their course through thickest constellations held,
- Spreading their bane; the blasted stars looked wan,
- And planets, planet-struck, real eclipse
- Then suffered. The other way Satan went down
- The causey to Hell-gate: On either side
- Disparted Chaos overbuilt exclaimed,
- And with rebounding surge the bars assailed,
- That scorned his indignation: Through the gate,
- Wide open and unguarded, Satan passed,
- And all about found desolate; for those,
- Appointed to sit there, had left their charge,
- Flown to the upper world; the rest were all
- Far to the inland retired, about the walls
- Of Pandemonium; city and proud seat
- Of Lucifer, so by allusion called
- Of that bright star to Satan paragoned;
- There kept their watch the legions, while the Grand
- In council sat, solicitous what chance
- Might intercept their emperour sent; so he
- Departing gave command, and they observed.
- As when the Tartar from his Russian foe,
- By Astracan, over the snowy plains,
- Retires; or Bactrin Sophi, from the horns
- Of Turkish crescent, leaves all waste beyond
- The realm of Aladule, in his retreat
- To Tauris or Casbeen: So these, the late
- Heaven-banished host, left desart utmost Hell
- Many a dark league, reduced in careful watch
- Round their metropolis; and now expecting
- Each hour their great adventurer, from the search
- Of foreign worlds: He through the midst unmarked,
- In show plebeian Angel militant
- Of lowest order, passed; and from the door
- Of that Plutonian hall, invisible
- Ascended his high throne; which, under state
- Of richest texture spread, at the upper end
- Was placed in regal lustre. Down a while
- He sat, and round about him saw unseen:
- At last, as from a cloud, his fulgent head
- And shape star-bright appeared, or brighter; clad
- With what permissive glory since his fall
- Was left him, or false glitter: All amazed
- At that so sudden blaze the Stygian throng
- Bent their aspect, and whom they wished beheld,
- Their mighty Chief returned: loud was the acclaim:
- Forth rushed in haste the great consulting peers,
- Raised from their dark Divan, and with like joy
- Congratulant approached him; who with hand
- Silence, and with these words attention, won.
- Thrones, Dominations, Princedoms, Virtues, Powers;
- For in possession such, not only of right,
- I call ye, and declare ye now; returned
- Successful beyond hope, to lead ye forth
- Triumphant out of this infernal pit
- Abominable, accursed, the house of woe,
- And dungeon of our tyrant: Now possess,
- As Lords, a spacious world, to our native Heaven
- Little inferiour, by my adventure hard
- With peril great achieved. Long were to tell
- What I have done; what suffered;with what pain
- Voyaged th' unreal, vast, unbounded deep
- Of horrible confusion; over which
- By Sin and Death a broad way now is paved,
- To expedite your glorious march; but I
- Toiled out my uncouth passage, forced to ride
- The untractable abyss, plunged in the womb
- Of unoriginal Night and Chaos wild;
- That, jealous of their secrets, fiercely opposed
- My journey strange, with clamorous uproar
- Protesting Fate supreme; thence how I found
- The new created world, which fame in Heaven
- Long had foretold, a fabrick wonderful
- Of absolute perfection! therein Man
- Placed in a Paradise, by our exile
- Made happy: Him by fraud I have seduced
- From his Creator; and, the more to encrease
- Your wonder, with an apple; he, thereat
- Offended, worth your laughter! hath given up
- Both his beloved Man, and all his world,
- To Sin and Death a prey, and so to us,
- Without our hazard, labour, or alarm;
- To range in, and to dwell, and over Man
- To rule, as over all he should have ruled.
- True is, me also he hath judged, or rather
- Me not, but the brute serpent in whose shape
- Man I deceived: that which to me belongs,
- Is enmity which he will put between
- Me and mankind; I am to bruise his heel;
- His seed, when is not set, shall bruise my head:
- A world who would not purchase with a bruise,
- Or much more grievous pain?--Ye have the account
- Of my performance: What remains, ye Gods,
- But up, and enter now into full bliss?
- So having said, a while he stood, expecting
- Their universal shout, and high applause,
- To fill his ear; when, contrary, he hears
- On all sides, from innumerable tongues,
- A dismal universal hiss, the sound
- Of publick scorn; he wondered, but not long
- Had leisure, wondering at himself now more,
- His visage drawn he felt to sharp and spare;
- His arms clung to his ribs; his legs entwining
- Each other, till supplanted down he fell
- A monstrous serpent on his belly prone,
- Reluctant, but in vain; a greater power
- Now ruled him, punished in the shape he sinned,
- According to his doom: he would have spoke,
- But hiss for hiss returned with forked tongue
- To forked tongue; for now were all transformed
- Alike, to serpents all, as accessories
- To his bold riot: Dreadful was the din
- Of hissing through the hall, thick swarming now
- With complicated monsters head and tail,
- Scorpion, and Asp, and Amphisbaena dire,
- Cerastes horned, Hydrus, and Elops drear,
- And Dipsas; (not so thick swarmed once the soil
- Bedropt with blood of Gorgon, or the isle
- Ophiusa,) but still greatest he the midst,
- Now Dragon grown, larger than whom the sun
- Ingendered in the Pythian vale or slime,
- Huge Python, and his power no less he seemed
- Above the rest still to retain; they all
- Him followed, issuing forth to the open field,
- Where all yet left of that revolted rout,
- Heaven-fallen, in station stood or just array;
- Sublime with expectation when to see
- In triumph issuing forth their glorious Chief;
- They saw, but other sight instead! a croud
- Of ugly serpents; horrour on them fell,
- And horrid sympathy; for, what they saw,
- They felt themselves, now changing; down their arms,
- Down fell both spear and shield; down they as fast;
- And the dire hiss renewed, and the dire form
- Catched, by contagion; like in punishment,
- As in their crime. Thus was the applause they meant,
- Turned to exploding hiss, triumph to shame
- Cast on themselves from their own mouths. There stood
- A grove hard by, sprung up with this their change,
- His will who reigns above, to aggravate
- Their penance, laden with fair fruit, like that
- Which grew in Paradise, the bait of Eve
- Used by the Tempter: on that prospect strange
- Their earnest eyes they fixed, imagining
- For one forbidden tree a multitude
- Now risen, to work them further woe or shame;
- Yet, parched with scalding thirst and hunger fierce,
- Though to delude them sent, could not abstain;
- But on they rolled in heaps, and, up the trees
- Climbing, sat thicker than the snaky locks
- That curled Megaera: greedily they plucked
- The fruitage fair to sight, like that which grew
- Near that bituminous lake where Sodom flamed;
- This more delusive, not the touch, but taste
- Deceived; they, fondly thinking to allay
- Their appetite with gust, instead of fruit
- Chewed bitter ashes, which the offended taste
- With spattering noise rejected: oft they assayed,
- Hunger and thirst constraining; drugged as oft,
- With hatefullest disrelish writhed their jaws,
- With soot and cinders filled; so oft they fell
- Into the same illusion, not as Man
- Whom they triumphed once lapsed. Thus were they plagued
- And worn with famine, long and ceaseless hiss,
- Till their lost shape, permitted, they resumed;
- Yearly enjoined, some say, to undergo,
- This annual humbling certain numbered days,
- To dash their pride, and joy, for Man seduced.
- However, some tradition they dispersed
- Among the Heathen, of their purchase got,
- And fabled how the Serpent, whom they called
- Ophion, with Eurynome, the wide--
- Encroaching Eve perhaps, had first the rule
- Of high Olympus; thence by Saturn driven
- And Ops, ere yet Dictaean Jove was born.
- Mean while in Paradise the hellish pair
- Too soon arrived; Sin, there in power before,
- Once actual; now in body, and to dwell
- Habitual habitant; behind her Death,
- Close following pace for pace, not mounted yet
- On his pale horse: to whom Sin thus began.
- Second of Satan sprung, all-conquering Death!
- What thinkest thou of our empire now, though earned
- With travel difficult, not better far
- Than still at Hell's dark threshold to have sat watch,
- Unnamed, undreaded, and thyself half starved?
- Whom thus the Sin-born monster answered soon.
- To me, who with eternal famine pine,
- Alike is Hell, or Paradise, or Heaven;
- There best, where most with ravine I may meet;
- Which here, though plenteous, all too little seems
- To stuff this maw, this vast unhide-bound corps.
- To whom the incestuous mother thus replied.
- Thou therefore on these herbs, and fruits, and flowers,
- Feed first; on each beast next, and fish, and fowl;
- No homely morsels! and, whatever thing
- The sithe of Time mows down, devour unspared;
- Till I, in Man residing, through the race,
- His thoughts, his looks, words, actions, all infect;
- And season him thy last and sweetest prey.
- This said, they both betook them several ways,
- Both to destroy, or unimmortal make
- All kinds, and for destruction to mature
- Sooner or later; which the Almighty seeing,
- From his transcendent seat the Saints among,
- To those bright Orders uttered thus his voice.
- See, with what heat these dogs of Hell advance
- To waste and havock yonder world, which I
- So fair and good created; and had still
- Kept in that state, had not the folly of Man
- Let in these wasteful furies, who impute
- Folly to me; so doth the Prince of Hell
- And his adherents, that with so much ease
- I suffer them to enter and possess
- A place so heavenly; and, conniving, seem
- To gratify my scornful enemies,
- That laugh, as if, transported with some fit
- Of passion, I to them had quitted all,
- At random yielded up to their misrule;
- And know not that I called, and drew them thither,
- My Hell-hounds, to lick up the draff and filth
- Which Man's polluting sin with taint hath shed
- On what was pure; til, crammed and gorged, nigh burst
- With sucked and glutted offal, at one sling
- Of thy victorious arm, well-pleasing Son,
- Both Sin, and Death, and yawning Grave, at last,
- Through Chaos hurled, obstruct the mouth of Hell
- For ever, and seal up his ravenous jaws.
- Then Heaven and Earth renewed shall be made pure
- To sanctity, that shall receive no stain:
- Till then, the curse pronounced on both precedes.
- He ended, and the heavenly audience loud
- Sung Halleluiah, as the sound of seas,
- Through multitude that sung: Just are thy ways,
- Righteous are thy decrees on all thy works;
- Who can extenuate thee? Next, to the Son,
- Destined Restorer of mankind, by whom
- New Heaven and Earth shall to the ages rise,
- Or down from Heaven descend.--Such was their song;
- While the Creator, calling forth by name
- His mighty Angels, gave them several charge,
- As sorted best with present things. The sun
- Had first his precept so to move, so shine,
- As might affect the earth with cold and heat
- Scarce tolerable; and from the north to call
- Decrepit winter; from the south to bring
- Solstitial summer's heat. To the blanc moon
- Her office they prescribed; to the other five
- Their planetary motions, and aspects,
- In sextile, square, and trine, and opposite,
- Of noxious efficacy, and when to join
- In synod unbenign; and taught the fixed
- Their influence malignant when to shower,
- Which of them rising with the sun, or falling,
- Should prove tempestuous: To the winds they set
- Their corners, when with bluster to confound
- Sea, air, and shore; the thunder when to roll
- With terrour through the dark aereal hall.
- Some say, he bid his Angels turn ascanse
- The poles of earth, twice ten degrees and more,
- From the sun's axle; they with labour pushed
- Oblique the centrick globe: Some say, the sun
- Was bid turn reins from the equinoctial road
- Like distant breadth to Taurus with the seven
- Atlantick Sisters, and the Spartan Twins,
- Up to the Tropick Crab: thence down amain
- By Leo, and the Virgin, and the Scales,
- As deep as Capricorn; to bring in change
- Of seasons to each clime; else had the spring
- Perpetual smiled on earth with vernant flowers,
- Equal in days and nights, except to those
- Beyond the polar circles; to them day
- Had unbenighted shone, while the low sun,
- To recompense his distance, in their sight
- Had rounded still the horizon, and not known
- Or east or west; which had forbid the snow
- From cold Estotiland, and south as far
- Beneath Magellan. At that tasted fruit
- The sun, as from Thyestean banquet, turned
- His course intended; else, how had the world
- Inhabited, though sinless, more than now,
- Avoided pinching cold and scorching heat?
- These changes in the Heavens, though slow, produced
- Like change on sea and land; sideral blast,
- Vapour, and mist, and exhalation hot,
- Corrupt and pestilent: Now from the north
- Of Norumbega, and the Samoed shore,
- Bursting their brazen dungeon, armed with ice,
- And snow, and hail, and stormy gust and flaw,
- Boreas, and Caecias, and Argestes loud,
- And Thrascias, rend the woods, and seas upturn;
- With adverse blast upturns them from the south
- Notus, and Afer black with thunderous clouds
- From Serraliona; thwart of these, as fierce,
- Forth rush the Levant and the Ponent winds,
- Eurus and Zephyr, with their lateral noise,
- Sirocco and Libecchio. Thus began
- Outrage from lifeless things; but Discord first,
- Daughter of Sin, among the irrational
- Death introduced, through fierce antipathy:
- Beast now with beast 'gan war, and fowl with fowl,
- And fish with fish; to graze the herb all leaving,
- Devoured each other; nor stood much in awe
- Of Man, but fled him; or, with countenance grim,
- Glared on him passing. These were from without
- The growing miseries, which Adam saw
- Already in part, though hid in gloomiest shade,
- To sorrow abandoned, but worse felt within;
- And, in a troubled sea of passion tost,
- Thus to disburden sought with sad complaint.
- O miserable of happy! Is this the end
- Of this new glorious world, and me so late
- The glory of that glory, who now become
- Accursed, of blessed? hide me from the face
- Of God, whom to behold was then my highth
- Of happiness!--Yet well, if here would end
- The misery; I deserved it, and would bear
- My own deservings; but this will not serve:
- All that I eat or drink, or shall beget,
- Is propagated curse. O voice, once heard
- Delightfully, Encrease and multiply;
- Now death to hear! for what can I encrease,
- Or multiply, but curses on my head?
- Who of all ages to succeed, but, feeling
- The evil on him brought by me, will curse
- My head? Ill fare our ancestor impure,
- For this we may thank Adam! but his thanks
- Shall be the execration: so, besides
- Mine own that bide upon me, all from me
- Shall with a fierce reflux on me rebound;
- On me, as on their natural center, light
- Heavy, though in their place. O fleeting joys
- Of Paradise, dear bought with lasting woes!
- Did I request thee, Maker, from my clay
- To mould me Man? did I solicit thee
- From darkness to promote me, or here place
- In this delicious garden? As my will
- Concurred not to my being, it were but right
- And equal to reduce me to my dust;
- Desirous to resign and render back
- All I received; unable to perform
- Thy terms too hard, by which I was to hold
- The good I sought not. To the loss of that,
- Sufficient penalty, why hast thou added
- The sense of endless woes? Inexplicable
- Why am I mocked with death, and lengthened out
- To deathless pain? How gladly would I meet
- Mortality my sentence, and be earth
- Insensible! How glad would lay me down
- As in my mother's lap! There I should rest,
- And sleep secure; his dreadful voice no more
- Would thunder in my ears; no fear of worse
- To me, and to my offspring, would torment me
- With cruel expectation. Yet one doubt
- Pursues me still, lest all I cannot die;
- Lest that pure breath of life, the spirit of Man
- Which God inspired, cannot together perish
- With this corporeal clod; then, in the grave,
- Or in some other dismal place, who knows
- But I shall die a living death? O thought
- Horrid, if true! Yet why? It was but breath
- Of life that sinned; what dies but what had life
- And sin? The body properly had neither,
- All of me then shall die: let this appease
- The doubt, since human reach no further knows.
- For though the Lord of all be infinite,
- Is his wrath also? Be it, Man is not so,
- But mortal doomed. How can he exercise
- Wrath without end on Man, whom death must end?
- Can he make deathless death? That were to make
- Strange contradiction, which to God himself
- Impossible is held; as argument
- Of weakness, not of power. Will he draw out,
- For anger's sake, finite to infinite,
- In punished Man, to satisfy his rigour,
- Satisfied never? That were to extend
- His sentence beyond dust and Nature's law;
- By which all causes else, according still
- To the reception of their matter, act;
- Not to the extent of their own sphere. But say
- That death be not one stroke, as I supposed,
- Bereaving sense, but endless misery
- From this day onward; which I feel begun
- Both in me, and without me; and so last
- To perpetuity;--Ay me!that fear
- Comes thundering back with dreadful revolution
- On my defenceless head; both Death and I
- Am found eternal, and incorporate both;
- Nor I on my part single; in me all
- Posterity stands cursed: Fair patrimony
- That I must leave ye, Sons! O, were I able
- To waste it all myself, and leave ye none!
- So disinherited, how would you bless
- Me, now your curse! Ah, why should all mankind,
- For one man's fault, thus guiltless be condemned,
- It guiltless? But from me what can proceed,
- But all corrupt; both mind and will depraved
- Not to do only, but to will the same
- With me? How can they then acquitted stand
- In sight of God? Him, after all disputes,
- Forced I absolve: all my evasions vain,
- And reasonings, though through mazes, lead me still
- But to my own conviction: first and last
- On me, me only, as the source and spring
- Of all corruption, all the blame lights due;
- So might the wrath! Fond wish!couldst thou support
- That burden, heavier than the earth to bear;
- Than all the world much heavier, though divided
- With that bad Woman? Thus, what thou desirest,
- And what thou fearest, alike destroys all hope
- Of refuge, and concludes thee miserable
- Beyond all past example and future;
- To Satan only like both crime and doom.
- O Conscience! into what abyss of fears
- And horrours hast thou driven me; out of which
- I find no way, from deep to deeper plunged!
- Thus Adam to himself lamented loud,
- Through the still night; not now, as ere Man fell,
- Wholesome, and cool, and mild, but with black air
- Accompanied; with damps, and dreadful gloom;
- Which to his evil conscience represented
- All things with double terrour: On the ground
- Outstretched he lay, on the cold ground; and oft
- Cursed his creation; Death as oft accused
- Of tardy execution, since denounced
- The day of his offence. Why comes not Death,
- Said he, with one thrice-acceptable stroke
- To end me? Shall Truth fail to keep her word,
- Justice Divine not hasten to be just?
- But Death comes not at call; Justice Divine
- Mends not her slowest pace for prayers or cries,
- O woods, O fountains, hillocks, dales, and bowers!
- With other echo late I taught your shades
- To answer, and resound far other song.--
- Whom thus afflicted when sad Eve beheld,
- Desolate where she sat, approaching nigh,
- Soft words to his fierce passion she assayed:
- But her with stern regard he thus repelled.
- Out of my sight, thou Serpent! That name best
- Befits thee with him leagued, thyself as false
- And hateful; nothing wants, but that thy shape,
- Like his, and colour serpentine, may show
- Thy inward fraud; to warn all creatures from thee
- Henceforth; lest that too heavenly form, pretended
- To hellish falshood, snare them! But for thee
- I had persisted happy; had not thy pride
- And wandering vanity, when least was safe,
- Rejected my forewarning, and disdained
- Not to be trusted; longing to be seen,
- Though by the Devil himself; him overweening
- To over-reach; but, with the serpent meeting,
- Fooled and beguiled; by him thou, I by thee
- To trust thee from my side; imagined wise,
- Constant, mature, proof against all assaults;
- And understood not all was but a show,
- Rather than solid virtue; all but a rib
- Crooked by nature, bent, as now appears,
- More to the part sinister, from me drawn;
- Well if thrown out, as supernumerary
- To my just number found. O! why did God,
- Creator wise, that peopled highest Heaven
- With Spirits masculine, create at last
- This novelty on earth, this fair defect
- Of nature, and not fill the world at once
- With Men, as Angels, without feminine;
- Or find some other way to generate
- Mankind? This mischief had not been befallen,
- And more that shall befall; innumerable
- Disturbances on earth through female snares,
- And strait conjunction with this sex: for either
- He never shall find out fit mate, but such
- As some misfortune brings him, or mistake;
- Or whom he wishes most shall seldom gain
- Through her perverseness, but shall see her gained
- By a far worse; or, if she love, withheld
- By parents; or his happiest choice too late
- Shall meet, already linked and wedlock-bound
- To a fell adversary, his hate or shame:
- Which infinite calamity shall cause
- To human life, and houshold peace confound.
- He added not, and from her turned; but Eve,
- Not so repulsed, with tears that ceased not flowing
- And tresses all disordered, at his feet
- Fell humble; and, embracing them, besought
- His peace, and thus proceeded in her plaint.
- Forsake me not thus, Adam! witness Heaven
- What love sincere, and reverence in my heart
- I bear thee, and unweeting have offended,
- Unhappily deceived! Thy suppliant
- I beg, and clasp thy knees; bereave me not,
- Whereon I live, thy gentle looks, thy aid,
- Thy counsel, in this uttermost distress,
- My only strength and stay: Forlorn of thee,
- Whither shall I betake me, where subsist?
- While yet we live, scarce one short hour perhaps,
- Between us two let there be peace; both joining,
- As joined in injuries, one enmity
- Against a foe by doom express assigned us,
- That cruel Serpent: On me exercise not
- Thy hatred for this misery befallen;
- On me already lost, me than thyself
- More miserable! Both have sinned;but thou
- Against God only; I against God and thee;
- And to the place of judgement will return,
- There with my cries importune Heaven; that all
- The sentence, from thy head removed, may light
- On me, sole cause to thee of all this woe;
- Me, me only, just object of his ire!
- She ended weeping; and her lowly plight,
- Immoveable, till peace obtained from fault
- Acknowledged and deplored, in Adam wrought
- Commiseration: Soon his heart relented
- Towards her, his life so late, and sole delight,
- Now at his feet submissive in distress;
- Creature so fair his reconcilement seeking,
- His counsel, whom she had displeased, his aid:
- As one disarmed, his anger all he lost,
- And thus with peaceful words upraised her soon.
- Unwary, and too desirous, as before,
- So now of what thou knowest not, who desirest
- The punishment all on thyself; alas!
- Bear thine own first, ill able to sustain
- His full wrath, whose thou feelest as yet least part,
- And my displeasure bearest so ill. If prayers
- Could alter high decrees, I to that place
- Would speed before thee, and be louder heard,
- That on my head all might be visited;
- Thy frailty and infirmer sex forgiven,
- To me committed, and by me exposed.
- But rise;--let us no more contend, nor blame
- Each other, blamed enough elsewhere; but strive
- In offices of love, how we may lighten
- Each other's burden, in our share of woe;
- Since this day's death denounced, if aught I see,
- Will prove no sudden, but a slow-paced evil;
- A long day's dying, to augment our pain;
- And to our seed (O hapless seed!) derived.
- To whom thus Eve, recovering heart, replied.
- Adam, by sad experiment I know
- How little weight my words with thee can find,
- Found so erroneous; thence by just event
- Found so unfortunate: Nevertheless,
- Restored by thee, vile as I am, to place
- Of new acceptance, hopeful to regain
- Thy love, the sole contentment of my heart
- Living or dying, from thee I will not hide
- What thoughts in my unquiet breast are risen,
- Tending to some relief of our extremes,
- Or end; though sharp and sad, yet tolerable,
- As in our evils, and of easier choice.
- If care of our descent perplex us most,
- Which must be born to certain woe, devoured
- By Death at last; and miserable it is
- To be to others cause of misery,
- Our own begotten, and of our loins to bring
- Into this cursed world a woeful race,
- That after wretched life must be at last
- Food for so foul a monster; in thy power
- It lies, yet ere conception to prevent
- The race unblest, to being yet unbegot.
- Childless thou art, childless remain: so Death
- Shall be deceived his glut, and with us two
- Be forced to satisfy his ravenous maw.
- But if thou judge it hard and difficult,
- Conversing, looking, loving, to abstain
- From love's due rights, nuptial embraces sweet;
- And with desire to languish without hope,
- Before the present object languishing
- With like desire; which would be misery
- And torment less than none of what we dread;
- Then, both ourselves and seed at once to free
- From what we fear for both, let us make short, --
- Let us seek Death; -- or, he not found, supply
- With our own hands his office on ourselves:
- Why stand we longer shivering under fears,
- That show no end but death, and have the power,
- Of many ways to die the shortest choosing,
- Destruction with destruction to destroy? --
- She ended here, or vehement despair
- Broke off the rest: so much of death her thoughts
- Had entertained, as dyed her cheeks with pale.
- But Adam, with such counsel nothing swayed,
- To better hopes his more attentive mind
- Labouring had raised; and thus to Eve replied.
- Eve, thy contempt of life and pleasure seems
- To argue in thee something more sublime
- And excellent, than what thy mind contemns;
- But self-destruction therefore sought, refutes
- That excellence thought in thee; and implies,
- Not thy contempt, but anguish and regret
- For loss of life and pleasure overloved.
- Or if thou covet death, as utmost end
- Of misery, so thinking to evade
- The penalty pronounced; doubt not but God
- Hath wiselier armed his vengeful ire, than so
- To be forestalled; much more I fear lest death,
- So snatched, will not exempt us from the pain
- We are by doom to pay; rather, such acts
- Of contumacy will provoke the Highest
- To make death in us live: Then let us seek
- Some safer resolution, which methinks
- I have in view, calling to mind with heed
- Part of our sentence, that thy seed shall bruise
- The Serpent's head; piteous amends! unless
- Be meant, whom I conjecture, our grand foe,
- Satan; who, in the serpent, hath contrived
- Against us this deceit: To crush his head
- Would be revenge indeed! which will be lost
- By death brought on ourselves, or childless days
- Resolved, as thou proposest; so our foe
- Shal 'scape his punishment ordained, and we
- Instead shall double ours upon our heads.
- No more be mentioned then of violence
- Against ourselves; and wilful barrenness,
- That cuts us off from hope; and savours only
- Rancour and pride, impatience and despite,
- Reluctance against God and his just yoke
- Laid on our necks. Remember with what mild
- And gracious temper he both heard, and judged,
- Without wrath or reviling; we expected
- Immediate dissolution, which we thought
- Was meant by death that day; when lo!to thee
- Pains only in child-bearing were foretold,
- And bringing forth; soon recompensed with joy,
- Fruit of thy womb: On me the curse aslope
- Glanced on the ground; with labour I must earn
- My bread; what harm? Idleness had been worse;
- My labour will sustain me; and, lest cold
- Or heat should injure us, his timely care
- Hath, unbesought, provided; and his hands
- Clothed us unworthy, pitying while he judged;
- How much more, if we pray him, will his ear
- Be open, and his heart to pity incline,
- And teach us further by what means to shun
- The inclement seasons, rain, ice, hail, and snow!
- Which now the sky, with various face, begins
- To show us in this mountain; while the winds
- Blow moist and keen, shattering the graceful locks
- Of these fair spreading trees; which bids us seek
- Some better shroud, some better warmth to cherish
- Our limbs benummed, ere this diurnal star
- Leave cold the night, how we his gathered beams
- Reflected may with matter sere foment;
- Or, by collision of two bodies, grind
- The air attrite to fire; as late the clouds
- Justling, or pushed with winds, rude in their shock,
- Tine the slant lightning; whose thwart flame, driven down
- Kindles the gummy bark of fir or pine;
- And sends a comfortable heat from far,
- Which might supply the sun: Such fire to use,
- And what may else be remedy or cure
- To evils which our own misdeeds have wrought,
- He will instruct us praying, and of grace
- Beseeching him; so as we need not fear
- To pass commodiously this life, sustained
- By him with many comforts, till we end
- In dust, our final rest and native home.
- What better can we do, than, to the place
- Repairing where he judged us, prostrate fall
- Before him reverent; and there confess
- Humbly our faults, and pardon beg; with tears
- Watering the ground, and with our sighs the air
- Frequenting, sent from hearts contrite, in sign
- Of sorrow unfeigned, and humiliation meek
-
-
-
- Book XI
-
-
- Undoubtedly he will relent, and turn
- From his displeasure; in whose look serene,
- When angry most he seemed and most severe,
- What else but favour, grace, and mercy, shone?
- So spake our father penitent; nor Eve
- Felt less remorse: they, forthwith to the place
- Repairing where he judged them, prostrate fell
- Before him reverent; and both confessed
- Humbly their faults, and pardon begged; with tears
- Watering the ground, and with their sighs the air
- Frequenting, sent from hearts contrite, in sign
- Of sorrow unfeigned, and humiliation meek.
- Thus they, in lowliest plight, repentant stood
- Praying; for from the mercy-seat above
- Prevenient grace descending had removed
- The stony from their hearts, and made new flesh
- Regenerate grow instead; that sighs now breathed
- Unutterable; which the Spirit of prayer
- Inspired, and winged for Heaven with speedier flight
- Than loudest oratory: Yet their port
- Not of mean suitors; nor important less
- Seemed their petition, than when the ancient pair
- In fables old, less ancient yet than these,
- Deucalion and chaste Pyrrha, to restore
- The race of mankind drowned, before the shrine
- Of Themis stood devout. To Heaven their prayers
- Flew up, nor missed the way, by envious winds
- Blown vagabond or frustrate: in they passed
- Dimensionless through heavenly doors; then clad
- With incense, where the golden altar fumed,
- By their great intercessour, came in sight
- Before the Father's throne: them the glad Son
- Presenting, thus to intercede began.
- See$ Father, what first-fruits on earth are sprung
- From thy implanted grace in Man; these sighs
- And prayers, which in this golden censer mixed
- With incense, I thy priest before thee bring;
- Fruits of more pleasing savour, from thy seed
- Sown with contrition in his heart, than those
- Which, his own hand manuring, all the trees
- Of Paradise could have produced, ere fallen
- From innocence. Now therefore, bend thine ear
- To supplication; hear his sighs, though mute;
- Unskilful with what words to pray, let me
- Interpret for him; me, his advocate
- And propitiation; all his works on me,
- Good, or not good, ingraft; my merit those
- Shall perfect, and for these my death shall pay.
- Accept me; and, in me, from these receive
- The smell of peace toward mankind: let him live
- Before thee reconciled, at least his days
- Numbered, though sad; till death, his doom, (which I
- To mitigate thus plead, not to reverse,)
- To better life shall yield him: where with me
- All my redeemed may dwell in joy and bliss;
- Made one with me, as I with thee am one.
- To whom the Father, without cloud, serene.
- All thy request for Man, accepted Son,
- Obtain; all thy request was my decree:
- But, longer in that Paradise to dwell,
- The law I gave to Nature him forbids:
- Those pure immortal elements, that know,
- No gross, no unharmonious mixture foul,
- Eject him, tainted now; and purge him off,
- As a distemper, gross, to air as gross,
- And mortal food; as may dispose him best
- For dissolution wrought by sin, that first
- Distempered all things, and of incorrupt
- Corrupted. I, at first, with two fair gifts
- Created him endowed; with happiness,
- And immortality: that fondly lost,
- This other served but to eternize woe;
- Till I provided death: so death becomes
- His final remedy; and, after life,
- Tried in sharp tribulation, and refined
- By faith and faithful works, to second life,
- Waked in the renovation of the just,
- Resigns him up with Heaven and Earth renewed.
- But let us call to synod all the Blest,
- Through Heaven's wide bounds: from them I will not hide
- My judgements; how with mankind I proceed,
- As how with peccant Angels late they saw,
- And in their state, though firm, stood more confirmed.
- He ended, and the Son gave signal high
- To the bright minister that watched; he blew
- His trumpet, heard in Oreb since perhaps
- When God descended, and perhaps once more
- To sound at general doom. The angelick blast
- Filled all the regions: from their blisful bowers
- Of amarantine shade, fountain or spring,
- By the waters of life, where'er they sat
- In fellowships of joy, the sons of light
- Hasted, resorting to the summons high;
- And took their seats; till from his throne supreme
- The Almighty thus pronounced his sovran will.
- O Sons, like one of us Man is become
- To know both good and evil, since his taste
- Of that defended fruit; but let him boast
- His knowledge of good lost, and evil got;
- Happier! had it sufficed him to have known
- Good by itself, and evil not at all.
- He sorrows now, repents, and prays contrite,
- My motions in him; longer than they move,
- His heart I know, how variable and vain,
- Self-left. Lest therefore his now bolder hand
- Reach also of the tree of life, and eat,
- And live for ever, dream at least to live
- For ever, to remove him I decree,
- And send him from the garden forth to till
- The ground whence he was taken, fitter soil.
- Michael, this my behest have thou in charge;
- Take to thee from among the Cherubim
- Thy choice of flaming warriours, lest the Fiend,
- Or in behalf of Man, or to invade
- Vacant possession, some new trouble raise:
- Haste thee, and from the Paradise of God
- Without remorse drive out the sinful pair;
- From hallowed ground the unholy; and denounce
- To them, and to their progeny, from thence
- Perpetual banishment. Yet, lest they faint
- At the sad sentence rigorously urged,
- (For I behold them softened, and with tears
- Bewailing their excess,) all terrour hide.
- If patiently thy bidding they obey,
- Dismiss them not disconsolate; reveal
- To Adam what shall come in future days,
- As I shall thee enlighten; intermix
- My covenant in the Woman's seed renewed;
- So send them forth, though sorrowing, yet in peace:
- And on the east side of the garden place,
- Where entrance up from Eden easiest climbs,
- Cherubick watch; and of a sword the flame
- Wide-waving; all approach far off to fright,
- And guard all passage to the tree of life:
- Lest Paradise a receptacle prove
- To Spirits foul, and all my trees their prey;
- With whose stolen fruit Man once more to delude.
- He ceased; and the arch-angelick Power prepared
- For swift descent; with him the cohort bright
- Of watchful Cherubim: four faces each
- Had, like a double Janus; all their shape
- Spangled with eyes more numerous than those
- Of Argus, and more wakeful than to drouse,
- Charmed with Arcadian pipe, the pastoral reed
- Of Hermes, or his opiate rod. Mean while,
- To re-salute the world with sacred light,
- Leucothea waked; and with fresh dews imbalmed
- The earth; when Adam and first matron Eve
- Had ended now their orisons, and found
- Strength added from above; new hope to spring
- Out of despair; joy, but with fear yet linked;
- Which thus to Eve his welcome words renewed.
- Eve, easily my faith admit, that all
- The good which we enjoy from Heaven descends;
- But, that from us aught should ascend to Heaven
- So prevalent as to concern the mind
- Of God high-blest, or to incline his will,
- Hard to belief may seem; yet this will prayer
- Or one short sigh of human breath, upborne
- Even to the seat of God. For since I sought
- By prayer the offended Deity to appease;
- Kneeled, and before him humbled all my heart;
- Methought I saw him placable and mild,
- Bending his ear; persuasion in me grew
- That I was heard with favour; peace returned
- Home to my breast, and to my memory
- His promise, that thy seed shall bruise our foe;
- Which, then not minded in dismay, yet now
- Assures me that the bitterness of death
- Is past, and we shall live. Whence hail to thee,
- Eve rightly called, mother of all mankind,
- Mother of all things living, since by thee
- Man is to live; and all things live for Man.
- To whom thus Eve with sad demeanour meek.
- Ill-worthy I such title should belong
- To me transgressour; who, for thee ordained
- A help, became thy snare; to me reproach
- Rather belongs, distrust, and all dispraise:
- But infinite in pardon was my Judge,
- That I, who first brought death on all, am graced
- The source of life; next favourable thou,
- Who highly thus to entitle me vouchsaf'st,
- Far other name deserving. But the field
- To labour calls us, now with sweat imposed,
- Though after sleepless night; for see!the morn,
- All unconcerned with our unrest, begins
- Her rosy progress smiling: let us forth;
- I never from thy side henceforth to stray,
- Where'er our day's work lies, though now enjoined
- Laborious, till day droop; while here we dwell,
- What can be toilsome in these pleasant walks?
- Here let us live, though in fallen state, content.
- So spake, so wished much humbled Eve; but Fate
- Subscribed not: Nature first gave signs, impressed
- On bird, beast, air; air suddenly eclipsed,
- After short blush of morn; nigh in her sight
- The bird of Jove, stooped from his aery tour,
- Two birds of gayest plume before him drove;
- Down from a hill the beast that reigns in woods,
- First hunter then, pursued a gentle brace,
- Goodliest of all the forest, hart and hind;
- Direct to the eastern gate was bent their flight.
- Adam observed, and with his eye the chase
- Pursuing, not unmoved, to Eve thus spake.
- O Eve, some further change awaits us nigh,
- Which Heaven, by these mute signs in Nature, shows
- Forerunners of his purpose; or to warn
- Us, haply too secure, of our discharge
- From penalty, because from death released
- Some days: how long, and what till then our life,
- Who knows? or more than this, that we are dust,
- And thither must return, and be no more?
- Why else this double object in our sight
- Of flight pursued in the air, and o'er the ground,
- One way the self-same hour? why in the east
- Darkness ere day's mid-course, and morning-light
- More orient in yon western cloud, that draws
- O'er the blue firmament a radiant white,
- And slow descends with something heavenly fraught?
- He erred not; for by this the heavenly bands
- Down from a sky of jasper lighted now
- In Paradise, and on a hill made halt;
- A glorious apparition, had not doubt
- And carnal fear that day dimmed Adam's eye.
- Not that more glorious, when the Angels met
- Jacob in Mahanaim, where he saw
- The field pavilioned with his guardians bright;
- Nor that, which on the flaming mount appeared
- In Dothan, covered with a camp of fire,
- Against the Syrian king, who to surprise
- One man, assassin-like, had levied war,
- War unproclaimed. The princely Hierarch
- In their bright stand there left his Powers, to seise
- Possession of the garden; he alone,
- To find where Adam sheltered, took his way,
- Not unperceived of Adam; who to Eve,
- While the great visitant approached, thus spake.
- Eve$ now expect great tidings, which perhaps
- Of us will soon determine, or impose
- New laws to be observed; for I descry,
- From yonder blazing cloud that veils the hill,
- One of the heavenly host; and, by his gait,
- None of the meanest; some great Potentate
- Or of the Thrones above; such majesty
- Invests him coming! yet not terrible,
- That I should fear; nor sociably mild,
- As Raphael, that I should much confide;
- But solemn and sublime; whom not to offend,
- With reverence I must meet, and thou retire.
- He ended: and the Arch-Angel soon drew nigh,
- Not in his shape celestial, but as man
- Clad to meet man; over his lucid arms
- A military vest of purple flowed,
- Livelier than Meliboean, or the grain
- Of Sarra, worn by kings and heroes old
- In time of truce; Iris had dipt the woof;
- His starry helm unbuckled showed him prime
- In manhood where youth ended; by his side,
- As in a glistering zodiack, hung the sword,
- Satan's dire dread; and in his hand the spear.
- Adam bowed low; he, kingly, from his state
- Inclined not, but his coming thus declared.
- Adam, Heaven's high behest no preface needs:
- Sufficient that thy prayers are heard; and Death,
- Then due by sentence when thou didst transgress,
- Defeated of his seisure many days
- Given thee of grace; wherein thou mayest repent,
- And one bad act with many deeds well done
- Mayest cover: Well may then thy Lord, appeased,
- Redeem thee quite from Death's rapacious claim;
- But longer in this Paradise to dwell
- Permits not: to remove thee I am come,
- And send thee from the garden forth to till
- The ground whence thou wast taken, fitter soil.
- He added not; for Adam at the news
- Heart-struck with chilling gripe of sorrow stood,
- That all his senses bound; Eve, who unseen
- Yet all had heard, with audible lament
- Discovered soon the place of her retire.
- O unexpected stroke, worse than of Death!
- Must I thus leave thee$ Paradise? thus leave
- Thee, native soil! these happy walks and shades,
- Fit haunt of Gods? where I had hope to spend,
- Quiet though sad, the respite of that day
- That must be mortal to us both. O flowers,
- That never will in other climate grow,
- My early visitation, and my last
- ;t even, which I bred up with tender hand
- From the first opening bud, and gave ye names!
- Who now shall rear ye to the sun, or rank
- Your tribes, and water from the ambrosial fount?
- Thee lastly, nuptial bower! by me adorned
- With what to sight or smell was sweet! from thee
- How shall I part, and whither wander down
- Into a lower world; to this obscure
- And wild? how shall we breathe in other air
- Less pure, accustomed to immortal fruits?
- Whom thus the Angel interrupted mild.
- Lament not, Eve, but patiently resign
- What justly thou hast lost, nor set thy heart,
- Thus over-fond, on that which is not thine:
- Thy going is not lonely; with thee goes
- Thy husband; whom to follow thou art bound;
- Where he abides, think there thy native soil.
- Adam, by this from the cold sudden damp
- Recovering, and his scattered spirits returned,
- To Michael thus his humble words addressed.
- Celestial, whether among the Thrones, or named
- Of them the highest; for such of shape may seem
- Prince above princes! gently hast thou told
- Thy message, which might else in telling wound,
- And in performing end us; what besides
- Of sorrow, and dejection, and despair,
- Our frailty can sustain, thy tidings bring,
- Departure from this happy place, our sweet
- Recess, and only consolation left
- Familiar to our eyes! all places else
- Inhospitable appear, and desolate;
- Nor knowing us, nor known: And, if by prayer
- Incessant I could hope to change the will
- Of Him who all things can, I would not cease
- To weary him with my assiduous cries:
- But prayer against his absolute decree
- No more avails than breath against the wind,
- Blown stifling back on him that breathes it forth:
- Therefore to his great bidding I submit.
- This most afflicts me, that, departing hence,
- As from his face I shall be hid, deprived
- His blessed countenance: Here I could frequent
- With worship place by place where he vouchsafed
- Presence Divine; and to my sons relate,
- 'On this mount he appeared; under this tree
- 'Stood visible; among these pines his voice
- 'I heard; here with him at this fountain talked:
- So many grateful altars I would rear
- Of grassy turf, and pile up every stone
- Of lustre from the brook, in memory,
- Or monument to ages; and theron
- Offer sweet-smelling gums, and fruits, and flowers:
- In yonder nether world where shall I seek
- His bright appearances, or foot-step trace?
- For though I fled him angry, yet recalled
- To life prolonged and promised race, I now
- Gladly behold though but his utmost skirts
- Of glory; and far off his steps adore.
- To whom thus Michael with regard benign.
- Adam, thou knowest Heaven his, and all the Earth;
- Not this rock only; his Omnipresence fills
- Land, sea, and air, and every kind that lives,
- Fomented by his virtual power and warmed:
- All the earth he gave thee to possess and rule,
- No despicable gift; surmise not then
- His presence to these narrow bounds confined
- Of Paradise, or Eden: this had been
- Perhaps thy capital seat, from whence had spread
- All generations; and had hither come
- From all the ends of the earth, to celebrate
- And reverence thee, their great progenitor.
- But this pre-eminence thou hast lost, brought down
- To dwell on even ground now with thy sons:
- Yet doubt not but in valley, and in plain,
- God is, as here; and will be found alike
- Present; and of his presence many a sign
- Still following thee, still compassing thee round
- With goodness and paternal love, his face
- Express, and of his steps the track divine.
- Which that thou mayest believe, and be confirmed
- Ere thou from hence depart; know, I am sent
- To show thee what shall come in future days
- To thee, and to thy offspring: good with bad
- Expect to hear; supernal grace contending
- With sinfulness of men; thereby to learn
- True patience, and to temper joy with fear
- And pious sorrow; equally inured
- By moderation either state to bear,
- Prosperous or adverse: so shalt thou lead
- Safest thy life, and best prepared endure
- Thy mortal passage when it comes.--Ascend
- This hill; let Eve (for I have drenched her eyes)
- Here sleep below; while thou to foresight wakest;
- As once thou sleptst, while she to life was formed.
- To whom thus Adam gratefully replied.
- Ascend, I follow thee, safe Guide, the path
- Thou leadest me; and to the hand of Heaven submit,
- However chastening; to the evil turn
- My obvious breast; arming to overcome
- By suffering, and earn rest from labour won,
- If so I may attain. -- So both ascend
- In the visions of God. It was a hill,
- Of Paradise the highest; from whose top
- The hemisphere of earth, in clearest ken,
- Stretched out to the amplest reach of prospect lay.
- Not higher that hill, nor wider looking round,
- Whereon, for different cause, the Tempter set
- Our second Adam, in the wilderness;
- To show him all Earth's kingdoms, and their glory.
- His eye might there command wherever stood
- City of old or modern fame, the seat
- Of mightiest empire, from the destined walls
- Of Cambalu, seat of Cathaian Can,
- And Samarchand by Oxus, Temir's throne,
- To Paquin of Sinaean kings; and thence
- To Agra and Lahor of great Mogul,
- Down to the golden Chersonese; or where
- The Persian in Ecbatan sat, or since
- In Hispahan; or where the Russian Ksar
- In Mosco; or the Sultan in Bizance,
- Turchestan-born; nor could his eye not ken
- The empire of Negus to his utmost port
- Ercoco, and the less maritim kings
- Mombaza, and Quiloa, and Melind,
- And Sofala, thought Ophir, to the realm
- Of Congo, and Angola farthest south;
- Or thence from Niger flood to Atlas mount
- The kingdoms of Almansor, Fez and Sus,
- Morocco, and Algiers, and Tremisen;
- On Europe thence, and where Rome was to sway
- The world: in spirit perhaps he also saw
- Rich Mexico, the seat of Montezume,
- And Cusco in Peru, the richer seat
- Of Atabalipa; and yet unspoiled
- Guiana, whose great city Geryon's sons
- Call El Dorado. But to nobler sights
- Michael from Adam's eyes the film removed,
- Which that false fruit that promised clearer sight
- Had bred; then purged with euphrasy and rue
- The visual nerve, for he had much to see;
- And from the well of life three drops instilled.
- So deep the power of these ingredients pierced,
- Even to the inmost seat of mental sight,
- That Adam, now enforced to close his eyes,
- Sunk down, and all his spirits became entranced;
- But him the gentle Angel by the hand
- Soon raised, and his attention thus recalled.
- Adam, now ope thine eyes; and first behold
- The effects, which thy original crime hath wrought
- In some to spring from thee; who never touched
- The excepted tree; nor with the snake conspired;
- Nor sinned thy sin; yet from that sin derive
- Corruption, to bring forth more violent deeds.
- His eyes he opened, and beheld a field,
- Part arable and tilth, whereon were sheaves
- New reaped; the other part sheep-walks and folds;
- I' the midst an altar as the land-mark stood,
- Rustick, of grassy sord; thither anon
- A sweaty reaper from his tillage brought
- First fruits, the green ear, and the yellow sheaf,
- Unculled, as came to hand; a shepherd next,
- More meek, came with the firstlings of his flock,
- Choicest and best; then, sacrificing, laid
- The inwards and their fat, with incense strowed,
- On the cleft wood, and all due rights performed:
- His offering soon propitious fire from Heaven
- Consumed with nimble glance, and grateful steam;
- The other's not, for his was not sincere;
- Whereat he inly raged, and, as they talked,
- Smote him into the midriff with a stone
- That beat out life; he fell;and, deadly pale,
- Groaned out his soul with gushing blood effused.
- Much at that sight was Adam in his heart
- Dismayed, and thus in haste to the Angel cried.
- O Teacher, some great mischief hath befallen
- To that meek man, who well had sacrificed;
- Is piety thus and pure devotion paid?
- To whom Michael thus, he also moved, replied.
- These two are brethren, Adam, and to come
- Out of thy loins; the unjust the just hath slain,
- For envy that his brother's offering found
- From Heaven acceptance; but the bloody fact
- Will be avenged; and the other's faith, approved,
- Lose no reward; though here thou see him die,
- Rolling in dust and gore. To which our sire.
- Alas! both for the deed, and for the cause!
- But have I now seen Death? Is this the way
- I must return to native dust? O sight
- Of terrour, foul and ugly to behold,
- Horrid to think, how horrible to feel!
- To whom thus Michael. Death thou hast seen
- In his first shape on Man; but many shapes
- Of Death, and many are the ways that lead
- To his grim cave, all dismal; yet to sense
- More terrible at the entrance, than within.
- Some, as thou sawest, by violent stroke shall die;
- By fire, flood, famine, by intemperance more
- In meats and drinks, which on the earth shall bring
- Diseases dire, of which a monstrous crew
- Before thee shall appear; that thou mayest know
- What misery the inabstinence of Eve
- Shall bring on Men. Immediately a place
- Before his eyes appeared, sad, noisome, dark;
- A lazar-house it seemed; wherein were laid
- Numbers of all diseased; all maladies
- Of ghastly spasm, or racking torture, qualms
- Of heart-sick agony, all feverous kinds,
- Convulsions, epilepsies, fierce catarrhs,
- Intestine stone and ulcer, colick-pangs,
- Demoniack phrenzy, moaping melancholy,
- And moon-struck madness, pining atrophy,
- Marasmus, and wide-wasting pestilence,
- Dropsies, and asthmas, and joint-racking rheums.
- Dire was the tossing, deep the groans; Despair
- Tended the sick busiest from couch to couch;
- And over them triumphant Death his dart
- Shook, but delayed to strike, though oft invoked
- With vows, as their chief good, and final hope.
- Sight so deform what heart of rock could long
- Dry-eyed behold? Adam could not, but wept,
- Though not of woman born; compassion quelled
- His best of man, and gave him up to tears
- A space, till firmer thoughts restrained excess;
- And, scarce recovering words, his plaint renewed.
- O miserable mankind, to what fall
- Degraded, to what wretched state reserved!
- Better end here unborn. Why is life given
- To be thus wrested from us? rather, why
- Obtruded on us thus? who, if we knew
- What we receive, would either no accept
- Life offered, or soon beg to lay it down;
- Glad to be so dismissed in peace. Can thus
- The image of God in Man, created once
- So goodly and erect, though faulty since,
- To such unsightly sufferings be debased
- Under inhuman pains? Why should not Man,
- Retaining still divine similitude
- In part, from such deformities be free,
- And, for his Maker's image sake, exempt?
- Their Maker's image, answered Michael, then
- Forsook them, when themselves they vilified
- To serve ungoverned Appetite; and took
- His image whom they served, a brutish vice,
- Inductive mainly to the sin of Eve.
- Therefore so abject is their punishment,
- Disfiguring not God's likeness, but their own;
- Or if his likeness, by themselves defaced;
- While they pervert pure Nature's healthful rules
- To loathsome sickness; worthily, since they
- God's image did not reverence in themselves.
- I yield it just, said Adam, and submit.
- But is there yet no other way, besides
- These painful passages, how we may come
- To death, and mix with our connatural dust?
- There is, said Michael, if thou well observe
- The rule of Not too much; by temperance taught,
- In what thou eatest and drinkest; seeking from thence
- Due nourishment, not gluttonous delight,
- Till many years over thy head return:
- So mayest thou live; till, like ripe fruit, thou drop
- Into thy mother's lap; or be with ease
- Gathered, nor harshly plucked; for death mature:
- This is Old Age; but then, thou must outlive
- Thy youth, thy strength, thy beauty; which will change
- To withered, weak, and gray; thy senses then,
- Obtuse, all taste of pleasure must forego,
- To what thou hast; and, for the air of youth,
- Hopeful and cheerful, in thy blood will reign
- A melancholy damp of cold and dry
- To weigh thy spirits down, and last consume
- The balm of life. To whom our ancestor.
- Henceforth I fly not death, nor would prolong
- Life much; bent rather, how I may be quit,
- Fairest and easiest, of this cumbrous charge;
- Which I must keep till my appointed day
- Of rendering up, and patiently attend
- My dissolution. Michael replied.
- Nor love thy life, nor hate; but what thou livest
- Live well; how long, or short, permit to Heaven:
- And now prepare thee for another sight.
- He looked, and saw a spacious plain, whereon
- Were tents of various hue; by some, were herds
- Of cattle grazing; others, whence the sound
- Of instruments, that made melodious chime,
- Was heard, of harp and organ; and, who moved
- Their stops and chords, was seen; his volant touch,
- Instinct through all proportions, low and high,
- Fled and pursued transverse the resonant fugue.
- In other part stood one who, at the forge
- Labouring, two massy clods of iron and brass
- Had melted, (whether found where casual fire
- Had wasted woods on mountain or in vale,
- Down to the veins of earth; thence gliding hot
- To some cave's mouth; or whether washed by stream
- From underground;) the liquid ore he drained
- Into fit moulds prepared; from which he formed
- First his own tools; then, what might else be wrought
- Fusil or graven in metal. After these,
- But on the hither side, a different sort
- From the high neighbouring hills, which was their seat,
- Down to the plain descended; by their guise
- Just men they seemed, and all their study bent
- To worship God aright, and know his works
- Not hid; nor those things last, which might preserve
- Freedom and peace to Men; they on the plain
- Long had not walked, when from the tents, behold!
- A bevy of fair women, richly gay
- In gems and wanton dress; to the harp they sung
- Soft amorous ditties, and in dance came on:
- The men, though grave, eyed them; and let their eyes
- Rove without rein; till, in the amorous net
- Fast caught, they liked; and each his liking chose;
- And now of love they treat, till the evening-star,
- Love's harbinger, appeared; then, all in heat
- They light the nuptial torch, and bid invoke
- Hymen, then first to marriage rites invoked:
- With feast and musick all the tents resound.
- Such happy interview, and fair event
- Of love and youth not lost, songs, garlands, flowers,
- And charming symphonies, attached the heart
- Of Adam, soon inclined to admit delight,
- The bent of nature; which he thus expressed.
- True opener of mine eyes, prime Angel blest;
- Much better seems this vision, and more hope
- Of peaceful days portends, than those two past;
- Those were of hate and death, or pain much worse;
- Here Nature seems fulfilled in all her ends.
- To whom thus Michael. Judge not what is best
- By pleasure, though to nature seeming meet;
- Created, as thou art, to nobler end
- Holy and pure, conformity divine.
- Those tents thou sawest so pleasant, were the tents
- Of wickedness, wherein shall dwell his race
- Who slew his brother; studious they appear
- Of arts that polish life, inventers rare;
- Unmindful of their Maker, though his Spirit
- Taught them; but they his gifts acknowledged none.
- Yet they a beauteous offspring shall beget;
- For that fair female troop thou sawest, that seemed
- Of Goddesses, so blithe, so smooth, so gay,
- Yet empty of all good wherein consists
- Woman's domestick honour and chief praise;
- Bred only and completed to the taste
- Of lustful appetence, to sing, to dance,
- To dress, and troll the tongue, and roll the eye:
- To these that sober race of men, whose lives
- Religious titled them the sons of God,
- Shall yield up all their virtue, all their fame
- Ignobly, to the trains and to the smiles
- Of these fair atheists; and now swim in joy,
- Erelong to swim at large; and laugh, for which
- The world erelong a world of tears must weep.
- To whom thus Adam, of short joy bereft.
- O pity and shame, that they, who to live well
- Entered so fair, should turn aside to tread
- Paths indirect, or in the mid way faint!
- But still I see the tenour of Man's woe
- Holds on the same, from Woman to begin.
- From Man's effeminate slackness it begins,
- Said the Angel, who should better hold his place
- By wisdom, and superiour gifts received.
- But now prepare thee for another scene.
- He looked, and saw wide territory spread
- Before him, towns, and rural works between;
- Cities of men with lofty gates and towers,
- Concourse in arms, fierce faces threatening war,
- Giants of mighty bone and bold emprise;
- Part wield their arms, part curb the foaming steed,
- Single or in array of battle ranged
- Both horse and foot, nor idly mustering stood;
- One way a band select from forage drives
- A herd of beeves, fair oxen and fair kine,
- From a fat meadow ground; or fleecy flock,
- Ewes and their bleating lambs over the plain,
- Their booty; scarce with life the shepherds fly,
- But call in aid, which makes a bloody fray;
- With cruel tournament the squadrons join;
- Where cattle pastured late, now scattered lies
- With carcasses and arms the ensanguined field,
- Deserted: Others to a city strong
- Lay siege, encamped; by battery, scale, and mine,
- Assaulting; others from the wall defend
- With dart and javelin, stones, and sulphurous fire;
- On each hand slaughter, and gigantick deeds.
- In other part the sceptered heralds call
- To council, in the city-gates; anon
- Gray-headed men and grave, with warriours mixed,
- Assemble, and harangues are heard; but soon,
- In factious opposition; till at last,
- Of middle age one rising, eminent
- In wise deport, spake much of right and wrong,
- Of justice, or religion, truth, and peace,
- And judgement from above: him old and young
- Exploded, and had seized with violent hands,
- Had not a cloud descending snatched him thence
- Unseen amid the throng: so violence
- Proceeded, and oppression, and sword-law,
- Through all the plain, and refuge none was found.
- Adam was all in tears, and to his guide
- Lamenting turned full sad; O!what are these,
- Death's ministers, not men? who thus deal death
- Inhumanly to men, and multiply
- Ten thousandfold the sin of him who slew
- His brother: for of whom such massacre
- Make they, but of their brethren; men of men
- But who was that just man, whom had not Heaven
- Rescued, had in his righteousness been lost?
- To whom thus Michael. These are the product
- Of those ill-mated marriages thou sawest;
- Where good with bad were matched, who of themselves
- Abhor to join; and, by imprudence mixed,
- Produce prodigious births of body or mind.
- Such were these giants, men of high renown;
- For in those days might only shall be admired,
- And valour and heroick virtue called;
- To overcome in battle, and subdue
- Nations, and bring home spoils with infinite
- Man-slaughter, shall be held the highest pitch
- Of human glory; and for glory done
- Of triumph, to be styled great conquerours
- Patrons of mankind, Gods, and sons of Gods;
- Destroyers rightlier called, and plagues of men.
- Thus fame shall be achieved, renown on earth;
- And what most merits fame, in silence hid.
- But he, the seventh from thee, whom thou beheldst
- The only righteous in a world preverse,
- And therefore hated, therefore so beset
- With foes, for daring single to be just,
- And utter odious truth, that God would come
- To judge them with his Saints; him the Most High
- Rapt in a balmy cloud with winged steeds
- Did, as thou sawest, receive, to walk with God
- High in salvation and the climes of bliss,
- Exempt from death; to show thee what reward
- Awaits the good; the rest what punishment;
- Which now direct thine eyes and soon behold.
- He looked, and saw the face of things quite changed;
- The brazen throat of war had ceased to roar;
- All now was turned to jollity and game,
- To luxury and riot, feast and dance;
- Marrying or prostituting, as befel,
- Rape or adultery, where passing fair
- Allured them; thence from cups to civil broils.
- At length a reverend sire among them came,
- And of their doings great dislike declared,
- And testified against their ways; he oft
- Frequented their assemblies, whereso met,
- Triumphs or festivals; and to them preached
- Conversion and repentance, as to souls
- In prison, under judgements imminent:
- But all in vain: which when he saw, he ceased
- Contending, and removed his tents far off;
- Then, from the mountain hewing timber tall,
- Began to build a vessel of huge bulk;
- Measured by cubit, length, and breadth, and highth;
- Smeared round with pitch; and in the side a door
- Contrived; and of provisions laid in large,
- For man and beast: when lo, a wonder strange!
- Of every beast, and bird, and insect small,
- Came sevens, and pairs; and entered in as taught
- Their order: last the sire and his three sons,
- With their four wives; and God made fast the door.
- Mean while the south-wind rose, and, with black wings
- Wide-hovering, all the clouds together drove
- From under Heaven; the hills to their supply
- Vapour, and exhalation dusk and moist,
- Sent up amain; and now the thickened sky
- Like a dark cieling stood; down rushed the rain
- Impetuous; and continued, till the earth
- No more was seen: the floating vessel swum
- Uplifted, and secure with beaked prow
- Rode tilting o'er the waves; all dwellings else
- Flood overwhelmed, and them with all their pomp
- Deep under water rolled; sea covered sea,
- Sea without shore; and in their palaces,
- Where luxury late reigned, sea-monsters whelped
- And stabled; of mankind, so numerous late,
- All left, in one small bottom swum imbarked.
- How didst thou grieve then, Adam, to behold
- The end of all thy offspring, end so sad,
- Depopulation! Thee another flood,
- Of tears and sorrow a flood, thee also drowned,
- And sunk thee as thy sons; till, gently reared
- By the Angel, on thy feet thou stoodest at last,
- Though comfortless; as when a father mourns
- His children, all in view destroyed at once;
- And scarce to the Angel utter'dst thus thy plaint.
- O visions ill foreseen! Better had I
- Lived ignorant of future! so had borne
- My part of evil only, each day's lot
- Enough to bear; those now, that were dispensed
- The burden of many ages, on me light
- At once, by my foreknowledge gaining birth
- Abortive, to torment me ere their being,
- With thought that they must be. Let no man seek
- Henceforth to be foretold, what shall befall
- Him or his children; evil he may be sure,
- Which neither his foreknowing can prevent;
- And he the future evil shall no less
- In apprehension than in substance feel,
- Grievous to bear: but that care now is past,
- Man is not whom to warn: those few escaped
- Famine and anguish will at last consume,
- Wandering that watery desart: I had hope,
- When violence was ceased, and war on earth,
- All would have then gone well; peace would have crowned
- With length of happy days the race of Man;
- But I was far deceived; for now I see
- Peace to corrupt no less than war to waste.
- How comes it thus? unfold, celestial Guide,
- And whether here the race of Man will end.
- To whom thus Michael. Those, whom last thou sawest
- In triumph and luxurious wealth, are they
- First seen in acts of prowess eminent
- And great exploits, but of true virtue void;
- Who, having spilt much blood, and done much wast
- Subduing nations, and achieved thereby
- Fame in the world, high titles, and rich prey;
- Shall change their course to pleasure, ease, and sloth,
- Surfeit, and lust; till wantonness and pride
- Raise out of friendship hostile deeds in peace.
- The conquered also, and enslaved by war,
- Shall, with their freedom lost, all virtue lose
- And fear of God; from whom their piety feigned
- In sharp contest of battle found no aid
- Against invaders; therefore, cooled in zeal,
- Thenceforth shall practice how to live secure,
- Worldly or dissolute, on what their lords
- Shall leave them to enjoy; for the earth shall bear
- More than enough, that temperance may be tried:
- So all shall turn degenerate, all depraved;
- Justice and temperance, truth and faith, forgot;
- One man except, the only son of light
- In a dark age, against example good,
- Against allurement, custom, and a world
- Offended: fearless of reproach and scorn,
- The grand-child, with twelve sons encreased, departs
- From Canaan, to a land hereafter called
- Egypt, divided by the river Nile;
- See where it flows, disgorging at seven mouths
- Into the sea: To sojourn in that land
- He comes, invited by a younger son
- In time of dearth; a son, whose worthy deeds
- Raise him to be the second in that realm
- Of Pharaoh: There he dies, and leaves his race
- Growing into a nation, and now grown
- Suspected to a sequent king, who seeks
- To stop their overgrowth, as inmate guests
- Or violence, he of their wicked ways
- Shall them admonish; and before them set
- The paths of righteousness, how much more safe
- And full of peace; denouncing wrath to come
- On their impenitence; and shall return
- Of them derided, but of God observed
- The one just man alive; by his command
- Shall build a wonderous ark, as thou beheldst,
- To save himself, and houshold, from amidst
- A world devote to universal wrack.
- No sooner he, with them of man and beast
- Select for life, shall in the ark be lodged,
- And sheltered round; but all the cataracts
- Of Heaven set open on the Earth shall pour
- Rain, day and night; all fountains of the deep,
- Broke up, shall heave the ocean to usurp
- Beyond all bounds; till inundation rise
- Above the highest hills: Then shall this mount
- Of Paradise by might of waves be moved
- Out of his place, pushed by the horned flood,
- With all his verdure spoiled, and trees adrift,
- Down the great river to the opening gulf,
- And there take root an island salt and bare,
- The haunt of seals, and orcs, and sea-mews' clang:
- To teach thee that God attributes to place
- No sanctity, if none be thither brought
- By men who there frequent, or therein dwell.
- And now, what further shall ensue, behold.
- He looked, and saw the ark hull on the flood,
- Which now abated; for the clouds were fled,
- Driven by a keen north-wind, that, blowing dry,
- Wrinkled the face of deluge, as decayed;
- And the clear sun on his wide watery glass
- Gazed hot, and of the fresh wave largely drew,
- As after thirst; which made their flowing shrink
- From standing lake to tripping ebb, that stole
- With soft foot towards the deep; who now had stopt
- His sluces, as the Heaven his windows shut.
- The ark no more now floats, but seems on ground,
- Fast on the top of some high mountain fixed.
- And now the tops of hills, as rocks, appear;
- With clamour thence the rapid currents drive,
- Towards the retreating sea, their furious tide.
- Forthwith from out the ark a raven flies,
- And after him, the surer messenger,
- A dove sent forth once and again to spy
- Green tree or ground, whereon his foot may light:
- The second time returning, in his bill
- An olive-leaf he brings, pacifick sign:
- Anon dry ground appears, and from his ark
- The ancient sire descends, with all his train;
- Then with uplifted hands, and eyes devout,
- Grateful to Heaven, over his head beholds
- A dewy cloud, and in the cloud a bow
- Conspicuous with three lifted colours gay,
- Betokening peace from God, and covenant new.
- Whereat the heart of Adam, erst so sad,
- Greatly rejoiced; and thus his joy broke forth.
- O thou, who future things canst represent
- As present, heavenly Instructer! I revive
- At this last sight; assured that Man shall live,
- With all the creatures, and their seed preserve.
- Far less I now lament for one whole world
- Of wicked sons destroyed, than I rejoice
- For one man found so perfect, and so just,
- That God vouchsafes to raise another world
- From him, and all his anger to forget.
- But say, what mean those coloured streaks in Heaven
- Distended, as the brow of God appeased?
- Or serve they, as a flowery verge, to bind
- The fluid skirts of that same watery cloud,
- Lest it again dissolve, and shower the earth?
- To whom the Arch-Angel. Dextrously thou aimest;
- So willingly doth God remit his ire,
- Though late repenting him of Man depraved;
- Grieved at his heart, when looking down he saw
- The whole earth filled with violence, and all flesh
- Corrupting each their way; yet, those removed,
- Such grace shall one just man find in his sight,
- That he relents, not to blot out mankind;
- And makes a covenant never to destroy
- The earth again by flood; nor let the sea
- Surpass his bounds; nor rain to drown the world,
- With man therein or beast; but, when he brings
- Over the earth a cloud, will therein set
- His triple-coloured bow, whereon to look,
- And call to mind his covenant: Day and night,
- Seed-time and harvest, heat and hoary frost,
- Shall hold their course; till fire purge all things new,
- Both Heaven and Earth, wherein the just shall dwell.
-
-
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- Book XII
-
-
- As one who in his journey bates at noon,
- Though bent on speed; so here the Arch-Angel paused
- Betwixt the world destroyed and world restored,
- If Adam aught perhaps might interpose;
- Then, with transition sweet, new speech resumes.
- Thus thou hast seen one world begin, and end;
- And Man, as from a second stock, proceed.
- Much thou hast yet to see; but I perceive
- Thy mortal sight to fail; objects divine
- Must needs impair and weary human sense:
- Henceforth what is to come I will relate;
- Thou therefore give due audience, and attend.
- This second source of Men, while yet but few,
- And while the dread of judgement past remains
- Fresh in their minds, fearing the Deity,
- With some regard to what is just and right
- Shall lead their lives, and multiply apace;
- Labouring the soil, and reaping plenteous crop,
- Corn, wine, and oil; and, from the herd or flock,
- Oft sacrificing bullock, lamb, or kid,
- With large wine-offerings poured, and sacred feast,
- Shall spend their days in joy unblamed; and dwell
- Long time in peace, by families and tribes,
- Under paternal rule: till one shall rise
- Of proud ambitious heart; who, not content
- With fair equality, fraternal state,
- Will arrogate dominion undeserved
- Over his brethren, and quite dispossess
- Concord and law of nature from the earth;
- Hunting (and men not beasts shall be his game)
- With war, and hostile snare, such as refuse
- Subjection to his empire tyrannous:
- A mighty hunter thence he shall be styled
- Before the Lord; as in despite of Heaven,
- Or from Heaven, claiming second sovranty;
- And from rebellion shall derive his name,
- Though of rebellion others he accuse.
- He with a crew, whom like ambition joins
- With him or under him to tyrannize,
- Marching from Eden towards the west, shall find
- The plain, wherein a black bituminous gurge
- Boils out from under ground, the mouth of Hell:
- Of brick, and of that stuff, they cast to build
- A city and tower, whose top may reach to Heaven;
- And get themselves a name; lest, far dispersed
- In foreign lands, their memory be lost;
- Regardless whether good or evil fame.
- But God, who oft descends to visit men
- Unseen, and through their habitations walks
- To mark their doings, them beholding soon,
- Comes down to see their city, ere the tower
- Obstruct Heaven-towers, and in derision sets
- Upon their tongues a various spirit, to rase
- Quite out their native language; and, instead,
- To sow a jangling noise of words unknown:
- Forthwith a hideous gabble rises loud,
- Among the builders; each to other calls
- Not understood; till hoarse, and all in rage,
- As mocked they storm: great laughter was in Heaven,
- And looking down, to see the hubbub strange,
- And hear the din: Thus was the building left
- Ridiculous, and the work Confusion named.
- Whereto thus Adam, fatherly displeased.
- O execrable son! so to aspire
- Above his brethren; to himself assuming
- Authority usurped, from God not given:
- He gave us only over beast, fish, fowl,
- Dominion absolute; that right we hold
- By his donation; but man over men
- He made not lord; such title to himself
- Reserving, human left from human free.
- But this usurper his encroachment proud
- Stays not on Man; to God his tower intends
- Siege and defiance: Wretched man!what food
- Will he convey up thither, to sustain
- Himself and his rash army; where thin air
- Above the clouds will pine his entrails gross,
- And famish him of breath, if not of bread?
- To whom thus Michael. Justly thou abhorrest
- That son, who on the quiet state of men
- Such trouble brought, affecting to subdue
- Rational liberty; yet know withal,
- Since thy original lapse, true liberty
- Is lost, which always with right reason dwells
- Twinned, and from her hath no dividual being:
- Reason in man obscured, or not obeyed,
- Immediately inordinate desires,
- And upstart passions, catch the government
- From reason; and to servitude reduce
- Man, till then free. Therefore, since he permits
- Within himself unworthy powers to reign
- Over free reason, God, in judgement just,
- Subjects him from without to violent lords;
- Who oft as undeservedly enthrall
- His outward freedom: Tyranny must be;
- Though to the tyrant thereby no excuse.
- Yet sometimes nations will decline so low
- From virtue, which is reason, that no wrong,
- But justice, and some fatal curse annexed,
- Deprives them of their outward liberty;
- Their inward lost: Witness the irreverent son
- Of him who built the ark; who, for the shame
- Done to his father, heard this heavy curse,
- Servant of servants, on his vicious race.
- Thus will this latter, as the former world,
- Still tend from bad to worse; till God at last,
- Wearied with their iniquities, withdraw
- His presence from among them, and avert
- His holy eyes; resolving from thenceforth
- To leave them to their own polluted ways;
- And one peculiar nation to select
- From all the rest, of whom to be invoked,
- A nation from one faithful man to spring:
- Him on this side Euphrates yet residing,
- Bred up in idol-worship: O, that men
- (Canst thou believe?) should be so stupid grown,
- While yet the patriarch lived, who 'scaped the flood,
- As to forsake the living God, and fall
- To worship their own work in wood and stone
- For Gods! Yet him God the Most High vouchsafes
- To call by vision, from his father's house,
- His kindred, and false Gods, into a land
- Which he will show him; and from him will raise
- A mighty nation; and upon him shower
- His benediction so, that in his seed
- All nations shall be blest: he straight obeys;
- Not knowing to what land, yet firm believes:
- I see him, but thou canst not, with what faith
- He leaves his Gods, his friends, and native soil,
- Ur of Chaldaea, passing now the ford
- To Haran; after him a cumbrous train
- Of herds and flocks, and numerous servitude;
- Not wandering poor, but trusting all his wealth
- With God, who called him, in a land unknown.
- Canaan he now attains; I see his tents
- Pitched about Sechem, and the neighbouring plain
- Of Moreh; there by promise he receives
- Gift to his progeny of all that land,
- From Hameth northward to the Desart south;
- (Things by their names I call, though yet unnamed;)
- From Hermon east to the great western Sea;
- Mount Hermon, yonder sea; each place behold
- In prospect, as I point them; on the shore
- Mount Carmel; here, the double-founted stream,
- Jordan, true limit eastward; but his sons
- Shall dwell to Senir, that long ridge of hills.
- This ponder, that all nations of the earth
- Shall in his seed be blessed: By that seed
- Is meant thy great Deliverer, who shall bruise
- The Serpent's head; whereof to thee anon
- Plainlier shall be revealed. This patriarch blest,
- Whom faithful Abraham due time shall call,
- A son, and of his son a grand-child, leaves;
- Like him in faith, in wisdom, and renown:
- The grandchild, with twelve sons increased, departs
- From Canaan to a land hereafter called
- Egypt, divided by the river Nile
- See where it flows, disgorging at seven mouths
- Into the sea. To sojourn in that land
- He comes, invited by a younger son
- In time of dearth, a son whose worthy deeds
- Raise him to be the second in that realm
- Of Pharaoh. There he dies, and leaves his race
- Growing into a nation, and now grown
- Suspected to a sequent king, who seeks
- To stop their overgrowth, as inmate guests
- Too numerous; whence of guests he makes them slaves
- Inhospitably, and kills their infant males:
- Till by two brethren (these two brethren call
- Moses and Aaron) sent from God to claim
- His people from enthralment, they return,
- With glory and spoil, back to their promised land.
- But first, the lawless tyrant, who denies
- To know their God, or message to regard,
- Must be compelled by signs and judgements dire;
- To blood unshed the rivers must be turned;
- Frogs, lice, and flies, must all his palace fill
- With loathed intrusion, and fill all the land;
- His cattle must of rot and murren die;
- Botches and blains must all his flesh emboss,
- And all his people; thunder mixed with hail,
- Hail mixed with fire, must rend the Egyptians sky,
- And wheel on the earth, devouring where it rolls;
- What it devours not, herb, or fruit, or grain,
- A darksome cloud of locusts swarming down
- Must eat, and on the ground leave nothing green;
- Darkness must overshadow all his bounds,
- Palpable darkness, and blot out three days;
- Last, with one midnight stroke, all the first-born
- Of Egypt must lie dead. Thus with ten wounds
- The river-dragon tamed at length submits
- To let his sojourners depart, and oft
- Humbles his stubborn heart; but still, as ice
- More hardened after thaw; till, in his rage
- Pursuing whom he late dismissed, the sea
- Swallows him with his host; but them lets pass,
- As on dry land, between two crystal walls;
- Awed by the rod of Moses so to stand
- Divided, till his rescued gain their shore:
- Such wondrous power God to his saint will lend,
- Though present in his Angel; who shall go
- Before them in a cloud, and pillar of fire;
- By day a cloud, by night a pillar of fire;
- To guide them in their journey, and remove
- Behind them, while the obdurate king pursues:
- All night he will pursue; but his approach
- Darkness defends between till morning watch;
- Then through the fiery pillar, and the cloud,
- God looking forth will trouble all his host,
- And craze their chariot-wheels: when by command
- Moses once more his potent rod extends
- Over the sea; the sea his rod obeys;
- On their embattled ranks the waves return,
- And overwhelm their war: The race elect
- Safe toward Canaan from the shore advance
- Through the wild Desart, not the readiest way;
- Lest, entering on the Canaanite alarmed,
- War terrify them inexpert, and fear
- Return them back to Egypt, choosing rather
- Inglorious life with servitude; for life
- To noble and ignoble is more sweet
- Untrained in arms, where rashness leads not on.
- This also shall they gain by their delay
- In the wide wilderness; there they shall found
- Their government, and their great senate choose
- Through the twelve tribes, to rule by laws ordained:
- God from the mount of Sinai, whose gray top
- Shall tremble, he descending, will himself
- In thunder, lightning, and loud trumpets' sound,
- Ordain them laws; part, such as appertain
- To civil justice; part, religious rites
- Of sacrifice; informing them, by types
- And shadows, of that destined Seed to bruise
- The Serpent, by what means he shall achieve
- Mankind's deliverance. But the voice of God
- To mortal ear is dreadful: They beseech
- That Moses might report to them his will,
- And terrour cease; he grants what they besought,
- Instructed that to God is no access
- Without Mediator, whose high office now
- Moses in figure bears; to introduce
- One greater, of whose day he shall foretel,
- And all the Prophets in their age the times
- Of great Messiah shall sing. Thus, laws and rites
- Established, such delight hath God in Men
- Obedient to his will, that he vouchsafes
- Among them to set up his tabernacle;
- The Holy One with mortal Men to dwell:
- By his prescript a sanctuary is framed
- Of cedar, overlaid with gold; therein
- An ark, and in the ark his testimony,
- The records of his covenant; over these
- A mercy-seat of gold, between the wings
- Of two bright Cherubim; before him burn
- Seven lamps as in a zodiack representing
- The heavenly fires; over the tent a cloud
- Shall rest by day, a fiery gleam by night;
- Save when they journey, and at length they come,
- Conducted by his Angel, to the land
- Promised to Abraham and his seed:--The rest
- Were long to tell; how many battles fought
- How many kings destroyed; and kingdoms won;
- Or how the sun shall in mid Heaven stand still
- A day entire, and night's due course adjourn,
- Man's voice commanding, 'Sun, in Gibeon stand,
- 'And thou moon in the vale of Aialon,
- 'Till Israel overcome! so call the third
- From Abraham, son of Isaac; and from him
- His whole descent, who thus shall Canaan win.
- Here Adam interposed. O sent from Heaven,
- Enlightener of my darkness, gracious things
- Thou hast revealed; those chiefly, which concern
- Just Abraham and his seed: now first I find
- Mine eyes true-opening, and my heart much eased;
- Erewhile perplexed with thoughts, what would become
- Of me and all mankind: But now I see
- His day, in whom all nations shall be blest;
- Favour unmerited by me, who sought
- Forbidden knowledge by forbidden means.
- This yet I apprehend not, why to those
- Among whom God will deign to dwell on earth
- So many and so various laws are given;
- So many laws argue so many sins
- Among them; how can God with such reside?
- To whom thus Michael. Doubt not but that sin
- Will reign among them, as of thee begot;
- And therefore was law given them, to evince
- Their natural pravity, by stirring up
- Sin against law to fight: that when they see
- Law can discover sin, but not remove,
- Save by those shadowy expiations weak,
- The blood of bulls and goats, they may conclude
- Some blood more precious must be paid for Man;
- Just for unjust; that, in such righteousness
- To them by faith imputed, they may find
- Justification towards God, and peace
- Of conscience; which the law by ceremonies
- Cannot appease; nor Man the mortal part
- Perform; and, not performing, cannot live.
- So law appears imperfect; and but given
- With purpose to resign them, in full time,
- Up to a better covenant; disciplined
- From shadowy types to truth; from flesh to spirit;
- From imposition of strict laws to free
- Acceptance of large grace; from servile fear
- To filial; works of law to works of faith.
- And therefore shall not Moses, though of God
- Highly beloved, being but the minister
- Of law, his people into Canaan lead;
- But Joshua, whom the Gentiles Jesus call,
- His name and office bearing, who shall quell
- The adversary-Serpent, and bring back
- Through the world's wilderness long-wandered Man
- Safe to eternal Paradise of rest.
- Mean while they, in their earthly Canaan placed,
- Long time shall dwell and prosper, but when sins
- National interrupt their publick peace,
- Provoking God to raise them enemies;
- From whom as oft he saves them penitent
- By Judges first, then under Kings; of whom
- The second, both for piety renowned
- And puissant deeds, a promise shall receive
- Irrevocable, that his regal throne
- For ever shall endure; the like shall sing
- All Prophecy, that of the royal stock
- Of David (so I name this king) shall rise
- A Son, the Woman's seed to thee foretold,
- Foretold to Abraham, as in whom shall trust
- All nations; and to kings foretold, of kings
- The last; for of his reign shall be no end.
- But first, a long succession must ensue;
- And his next son, for wealth and wisdom famed,
- The clouded ark of God, till then in tents
- Wandering, shall in a glorious temple enshrine.
- Such follow him, as shall be registered
- Part good, part bad; of bad the longer scroll;
- Whose foul idolatries, and other faults
- Heaped to the popular sum, will so incense
- God, as to leave them, and expose their land,
- Their city, his temple, and his holy ark,
- With all his sacred things, a scorn and prey
- To that proud city, whose high walls thou sawest
- Left in confusion; Babylon thence called.
- There in captivity he lets them dwell
- The space of seventy years; then brings them back,
- Remembering mercy, and his covenant sworn
- To David, stablished as the days of Heaven.
- Returned from Babylon by leave of kings
- Their lords, whom God disposed, the house of God
- They first re-edify; and for a while
- In mean estate live moderate; till, grown
- In wealth and multitude, factious they grow;
- But first among the priests dissention springs,
- Men who attend the altar, and should most
- Endeavour peace: their strife pollution brings
- Upon the temple itself: at last they seise
- The scepter, and regard not David's sons;
- Then lose it to a stranger, that the true
- Anointed King Messiah might be born
- Barred of his right; yet at his birth a star,
- Unseen before in Heaven, proclaims him come;
- And guides the eastern sages, who inquire
- His place, to offer incense, myrrh, and gold:
- His place of birth a solemn Angel tells
- To simple shepherds, keeping watch by night;
- They gladly thither haste, and by a quire
- Of squadroned Angels hear his carol sung.
- A virgin is his mother, but his sire
- The power of the Most High: He shall ascend
- The throne hereditary, and bound his reign
- With Earth's wide bounds, his glory with the Heavens.
- He ceased, discerning Adam with such joy
- Surcharged, as had like grief been dewed in tears,
- Without the vent of words; which these he breathed.
- O prophet of glad tidings, finisher
- Of utmost hope! now clear I understand
- What oft my steadiest thoughts have searched in vain;
- Why our great Expectation should be called
- The seed of Woman: Virgin Mother, hail,
- High in the love of Heaven; yet from my loins
- Thou shalt proceed, and from thy womb the Son
- Of God Most High: so God with Man unites!
- Needs must the Serpent now his capital bruise
- Expect with mortal pain: Say where and when
- Their fight, what stroke shall bruise the victor's heel.
- To whom thus Michael. Dream not of their fight,
- As of a duel, or the local wounds
- Of head or heel: Not therefore joins the Son
- Manhood to Godhead, with more strength to foil
- Thy enemy; nor so is overcome
- Satan, whose fall from Heaven, a deadlier bruise,
- Disabled, not to give thee thy death's wound:
- Which he, who comes thy Saviour, shall recure,
- Not by destroying Satan, but his works
- In thee, and in thy seed: Nor can this be,
- But by fulfilling that which thou didst want,
- Obedience to the law of God, imposed
- On penalty of death, and suffering death;
- The penalty to thy transgression due,
- And due to theirs which out of thine will grow:
- So only can high Justice rest appaid.
- The law of God exact he shall fulfil
- Both by obedience and by love, though love
- Alone fulfil the law; thy punishment
- He shall endure, by coming in the flesh
- To a reproachful life, and cursed death;
- Proclaiming life to all who shall believe
- In his redemption; and that his obedience,
- Imputed, becomes theirs by faith; his merits
- To save them, not their own, though legal, works.
- For this he shall live hated, be blasphemed,
- Seised on by force, judged, and to death condemned
- A shameful and accursed, nailed to the cross
- By his own nation; slain for bringing life:
- But to the cross he nails thy enemies,
- The law that is against thee, and the sins
- Of all mankind, with him there crucified,
- Never to hurt them more who rightly trust
- In this his satisfaction; so he dies,
- But soon revives; Death over him no power
- Shall long usurp; ere the third dawning light
- Return, the stars of morn shall see him rise
- Out of his grave, fresh as the dawning light,
- Thy ransom paid, which Man from death redeems,
- His death for Man, as many as offered life
- Neglect not, and the benefit embrace
- By faith not void of works: This God-like act
- Annuls thy doom, the death thou shouldest have died,
- In sin for ever lost from life; this act
- Shall bruise the head of Satan, crush his strength,
- Defeating Sin and Death, his two main arms;
- And fix far deeper in his head their stings
- Than temporal death shall bruise the victor's heel,
- Or theirs whom he redeems; a death, like sleep,
- A gentle wafting to immortal life.
- Nor after resurrection shall he stay
- Longer on earth, than certain times to appear
- To his disciples, men who in his life
- Still followed him; to them shall leave in charge
- To teach all nations what of him they learned
- And his salvation; them who shall believe
- Baptizing in the profluent stream, the sign
- Of washing them from guilt of sin to life
- Pure, and in mind prepared, if so befall,
- For death, like that which the Redeemer died.
- All nations they shall teach; for, from that day,
- Not only to the sons of Abraham's loins
- Salvation shall be preached, but to the sons
- Of Abraham's faith wherever through the world;
- So in his seed all nations shall be blest.
- Then to the Heaven of Heavens he shall ascend
- With victory, triumphing through the air
- Over his foes and thine; there shall surprise
- The Serpent, prince of air, and drag in chains
- Through all his realm, and there confounded leave;
- Then enter into glory, and resume
- His seat at God's right hand, exalted high
- Above all names in Heaven; and thence shall come,
- When this world's dissolution shall be ripe,
- With glory and power to judge both quick and dead;
- To judge the unfaithful dead, but to reward
- His faithful, and receive them into bliss,
- Whether in Heaven or Earth; for then the Earth
- Shall all be Paradise, far happier place
- Than this of Eden, and far happier days.
- So spake the Arch-Angel Michael; then paused,
- As at the world's great period; and our sire,
- Replete with joy and wonder, thus replied.
- O Goodness infinite, Goodness immense!
- That all this good of evil shall produce,
- And evil turn to good; more wonderful
- Than that which by creation first brought forth
- Light out of darkness! Full of doubt I stand,
- Whether I should repent me now of sin
- By me done, and occasioned; or rejoice
- Much more, that much more good thereof shall spring;
- To God more glory, more good-will to Men
- From God, and over wrath grace shall abound.
- But say, if our Deliverer up to Heaven
- Must re-ascend, what will betide the few
- His faithful, left among the unfaithful herd,
- The enemies of truth? Who then shall guide
- His people, who defend? Will they not deal
- Worse with his followers than with him they dealt?
- Be sure they will, said the Angel; but from Heaven
- He to his own a Comforter will send,
- The promise of the Father, who shall dwell
- His Spirit within them; and the law of faith,
- Working through love, upon their hearts shall write,
- To guide them in all truth; and also arm
- With spiritual armour, able to resist
- Satan's assaults, and quench his fiery darts;
- What man can do against them, not afraid,
- Though to the death; against such cruelties
- With inward consolations recompensed,
- And oft supported so as shall amaze
- Their proudest persecutors: For the Spirit,
- Poured first on his Apostles, whom he sends
- To evangelize the nations, then on all
- Baptized, shall them with wonderous gifts endue
- To speak all tongues, and do all miracles,
- As did their Lord before them. Thus they win
- Great numbers of each nation to receive
- With joy the tidings brought from Heaven: At length
- Their ministry performed, and race well run,
- Their doctrine and their story written left,
- They die; but in their room, as they forewarn,
- Wolves shall succeed for teachers, grievous wolves,
- Who all the sacred mysteries of Heaven
- To their own vile advantages shall turn
- Of lucre and ambition; and the truth
- With superstitions and traditions taint,
- Left only in those written records pure,
- Though not but by the Spirit understood.
- Then shall they seek to avail themselves of names,
- Places, and titles, and with these to join
- Secular power; though feigning still to act
- By spiritual, to themselves appropriating
- The Spirit of God, promised alike and given
- To all believers; and, from that pretence,
- Spiritual laws by carnal power shall force
- On every conscience; laws which none shall find
- Left them inrolled, or what the Spirit within
- Shall on the heart engrave. What will they then
- But force the Spirit of Grace itself, and bind
- His consort Liberty? what, but unbuild
- His living temples, built by faith to stand,
- Their own faith, not another's? for, on earth,
- Who against faith and conscience can be heard
- Infallible? yet many will presume:
- Whence heavy persecution shall arise
- On all, who in the worship persevere
- Of spirit and truth; the rest, far greater part,
- Will deem in outward rites and specious forms
- Religion satisfied; Truth shall retire
- Bestuck with slanderous darts, and works of faith
- Rarely be found: So shall the world go on,
- To good malignant, to bad men benign;
- Under her own weight groaning; till the day
- Appear of respiration to the just,
- And vengeance to the wicked, at return
- Of him so lately promised to thy aid,
- The Woman's Seed; obscurely then foretold,
- Now ampler known thy Saviour and thy Lord;
- Last, in the clouds, from Heaven to be revealed
- In glory of the Father, to dissolve
- Satan with his perverted world; then raise
- From the conflagrant mass, purged and refined,
- New Heavens, new Earth, ages of endless date,
- Founded in righteousness, and peace, and love;
- To bring forth fruits, joy and eternal bliss.
- He ended; and thus Adam last replied.
- How soon hath thy prediction, Seer blest,
- Measured this transient world, the race of time,
- Till time stand fixed! Beyond is all abyss,
- Eternity, whose end no eye can reach.
- Greatly-instructed I shall hence depart;
- Greatly in peace of thought; and have my fill
- Of knowledge, what this vessel can contain;
- Beyond which was my folly to aspire.
- Henceforth I learn, that to obey is best,
- And love with fear the only God; to walk
- As in his presence; ever to observe
- His providence; and on him sole depend,
- Merciful over all his works, with good
- Still overcoming evil, and by small
- Accomplishing great things, by things deemed weak
- Subverting worldly strong, and worldly wise
- By simply meek: that suffering for truth's sake
- Is fortitude to highest victory,
- And, to the faithful, death the gate of life;
- Taught this by his example, whom I now
- Acknowledge my Redeemer ever blest.
- To whom thus also the Angel last replied.
- This having learned, thou hast attained the sum
- Of wisdom; hope no higher, though all the stars
- Thou knewest by name, and all the ethereal powers,
- All secrets of the deep, all Nature's works,
- Or works of God in Heaven, air, earth, or sea,
- And all the riches of this world enjoyedst,
- And all the rule, one empire; only add
- Deeds to thy knowledge answerable; add faith,
- Add virtue, patience, temperance; add love,
- By name to come called charity, the soul
- Of all the rest: then wilt thou not be loth
- To leave this Paradise, but shalt possess
- A Paradise within thee, happier far.--
- Let us descend now therefore from this top
- Of speculation; for the hour precise
- Exacts our parting hence; and see!the guards,
- By me encamped on yonder hill, expect
- Their motion; at whose front a flaming sword,
- In signal of remove, waves fiercely round:
- We may no longer stay: go, waken Eve;
- Her also I with gentle dreams have calmed
- Portending good, and all her spirits composed
- To meek submission: thou, at season fit,
- Let her with thee partake what thou hast heard;
- Chiefly what may concern her faith to know,
- The great deliverance by her seed to come
- (For by the Woman's seed) on all mankind:
- That ye may live, which will be many days,
- Both in one faith unanimous, though sad,
- With cause, for evils past; yet much more cheered
- With meditation on the happy end.
- He ended, and they both descend the hill;
- Descended, Adam to the bower, where Eve
- Lay sleeping, ran before; but found her waked;
- And thus with words not sad she him received.
- Whence thou returnest, and whither wentest, I know;
- For God is also in sleep; and dreams advise,
- Which he hath sent propitious, some great good
- Presaging, since with sorrow and heart's distress
- Wearied I fell asleep: But now lead on;
- In me is no delay; with thee to go,
- Is to stay here; without thee here to stay,
- Is to go hence unwilling; thou to me
- Art all things under $Heaven, all places thou,
- Who for my wilful crime art banished hence.
- This further consolation yet secure
- I carry hence; though all by me is lost,
- Such favour I unworthy am vouchsafed,
- By me the Promised Seed shall all restore.
- So spake our mother Eve; and Adam heard
- Well pleased, but answered not: For now, too nigh
- The Arch-Angel stood; and, from the other hill
- To their fixed station, all in bright array
- The Cherubim descended; on the ground
- Gliding meteorous, as evening-mist
- Risen from a river o'er the marish glides,
- And gathers ground fast at the labourer's heel
- Homeward returning. High in front advanced,
- The brandished sword of God before them blazed,
- Fierce as a comet; which with torrid heat,
- And vapour as the Libyan air adust,
- Began to parch that temperate clime; whereat
- In either hand the hastening Angel caught
- Our lingering parents, and to the eastern gate
- Led them direct, and down the cliff as fast
- To the subjected plain; then disappeared.
- They, looking back, all the eastern side beheld
- Of Paradise, so late their happy seat,
- Waved over by that flaming brand; the gate
- With dreadful faces thronged, and fiery arms:
- Some natural tears they dropt, but wiped them soon;
- The world was all before them, where to choose
- Their place of rest, and Providence their guide:
- They, hand in hand, with wandering steps and slow,
- Through Eden took their solitary way.
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