[print edition page number: 189]
Lucy Hutchinson
Order and Disorder:
Or, the World Made and Undone (1679)
Canto 1
My ravished soul a pious ardor fires | ||
To sing those mystic wonders it admires, | ||
Contemplating the rise of everything | ||
That with time’s birth flowed from th’eternal spring; | ||
And the no less stupendous providence | 5 | |
By which discording natures ever since | ||
Have kept up universal harmony, | ||
While in one joint obedience all agree, | ||
Performing that to which they were designed | ||
With ready inclination; but mankind | 10 | |
Alone rebels against his maker’s will, [190] | Isaiah 10:5–7, etc.[1] | |
Which, though opposing, he must yet fulfill. | ||
And so that wise power who each crooked stream | ||
Most rightly guides becomes the glorious theme | ||
Of endless admiration, while we see, | 15 | |
Whatever mortals’ vain endeavors be, | ||
They must be broken who with power contend, | Eccl.6:10 | |
And cannot frustrate their Creator’s end, | Isaiah 27:4 | |
Whose wisdom, goodness, might and glory shines | Gen. 45:4–5 | |
In guiding men’s unto his own designs. | Acts 2:23, Gen. 50:20[2] | |
In these outgoings would I sing his praise, | 21 | |
But my weak sense with the too glorious rays | ||
Is struck with such confusion that I find | ||
Only the world’s first Chaos in my mind, | ||
Where light and beauty lie wrapped up in seed | 25 | |
And cannot be from the dark prison freed | ||
Except that power by whom the world was made | ||
My soul in her imperfect strugglings aid, | ||
Her rude conceptions into forms dispose, | ||
And words impart which may those forms disclose.[3] | 30 | |
O thou eternal spring of glory, whence | ||
All other streams derive their excellence, | James 1:17 | |
From whose love issues every good desire, | ||
Quicken my dull earth with celestial fire, | ||
And let the sacred theme that is my choice | 35 | |
Give utterance and music to my voice, | ||
Singing the works by which thou art revealed. | Romans 1:15 | |
What dark eternity hath kept concealed | ||
From mortals’ apprehensions, what hath been | ||
Before the race of time did first begin, | 40 | |
It were presumptuous folly to inquire. [191] | Deut. 29:29 | |
Let not my thoughts beyond their bounds aspire: | ||
Time limits mortals, and time had its birth, | ||
In whose Beginning God made Heaven and Earth. | Gen. 1:1 | |
God, the great Elohim,[4] to say no more, | 45 | |
Whose sacred name we rather must adore | ||
Than venture to explain — for he alone | Job 11:7 | |
Dwells in himself, and to himself is known. | 1 Tim. 6:16, 1:17 | |
And so even that by which we have our sight | ||
His covering is: He clothes himself with light. | Psalm 104:2 | 50 |
Easier we may the winds in prison shut, | ||
The whole vast ocean in a nutshell put, | ||
The mountains in a little balance weigh, | Isaiah 40:12 | |
And with a bulrush[5] plumb the deepest sea, | ||
Than stretch frail human thought unto the height | 55 | |
Of the great God, immense and infinite, | ||
Containing all things in himself alone, | Job 38 | |
Being at once in all, contained in none. | ||
Yet as a hidden spring appears in streams, | ||
The sun is seen in its reflected beams, | 60 | |
Whose high-embodied glory is too bright, | ||
Too strong an object for weak mortal sight; | ||
So in God’s visible productions we | Romans 1:20 | |
What is invisible in some sort see; | Hebrews 11:27[6] | |
While we, considering each created thing, | 65 | |
Are led up to an uncreated spring, | ||
And by gradations of successive time | ||
At last unto eternity do climb; | Isaiah 44:6 | |
As we in tracks of second causes tread, | ||
Unto the first uncausèd cause are led; | 70 | |
And know, while we perpetual motion see, | ||
There must a first self-moving power be | ||
To whom all the inferior motions tend,[192] | Romans 11:36 | |
In whom they are begun, and where they end.[7] | Acts 17:24, 26, 28 | |
This first eternal cause, th’original | 75 | |
Of being, life, and motion, GOD we call, | ||
In whom all wisdom, goodness, glory, might, | ||
Whatever can himself or us delight, | ||
Unite, centering in his perfection, | ||
Whose nature can admit but only one. | Ephes. 4:5 | 80 |
Divided sovereignty makes neither great, | ||
Wanting what’s shared to make the sum complete. | ||
And yet this sovereign sacred unity | The Trinity | |
Is not alone, for in this one are three, | 1 John 5:7 | |
Distinguished, not divided, so that what | Matt. 28:19 | 85 |
One person is, the other is not that. | Matt. 3:16–17 | |
Yet all the three are but one God most high, | ||
One uncompounded, pure divinity, | ||
Wherein subsist so the mysterious three | ||
That they in power and glory equal be.[8] | 90 | |
Each doth himself and all the rest possess | John 14:10 | |
In undisturbèd joy and blessedness. | Proverbs 8:22, 30 | |
There’s no inferior, nor no later there, | John 1:1 | |
All coeternal, all coequal are. | Phil. 2:6 | |
And yet this parity order admits: [193] | John 5:18 | 95 |
The Father first eternally begets | ||
Within himself, his Son, substantial Word | John 1:14 | |
And Wisdom as his second, and their third | 1 Cor. 1:14 | |
The ever-blessèd Spirit is, which doth | John 16:13–14 | |
Alike all eternally proceed from both. | John 15:16 | 100 |
These three distinctly thus in one divine, | ||
Pure, perfect, self-supplying essence shine; | ||
And all cooperate in all works done | John 5:17 | |
Exteriorly, yet so as every one | ||
In a peculiar manner suited to | 105 | |
His person doth the common action do. | ||
Herein the Father is the principal, | Hebrews 12:19 | |
Whose sacred counsels are th’original | Isaiah 42:4 | |
Of every act; producèd by the Son, | John 5:26 | |
By the Spirit wrought up to perfection.[9] | 1 Cor. 8:6 | 110 |
I’the creation thus, by the Father’s wise decree | John 5:19 | |
Such things should in such time and order be, | Ephes. 1:11 | |
The first foundation of the world was laid. | 2 Tim. 1:9 | |
The fabric by th’eternal Word was made | John 1:3 | |
Not as th’instrument, but joint actor, who | Hebrews 1:2 | 115 |
Joyed to fulfill the counsels which he knew. | John 5:19, etc. | |
By the concurrent Spirit all parts were | Genesis 1:2 | |
Fitly disposed, distinguished, rendered fair, | Job 26:13 | |
In such harmonious and wise order set | ||
As universal beauty did complete. | 120 | |
This most mysterious triple unity, | ||
In essence one, and in subsistence three, | ||
Was the great Elohim who first designed, | ||
Then made, the worlds, that angels and mankind | ||
Him in his rich out-goings might adore, | Rev. 4:11 | 125 |
And celebrate his praise for evermore; | Psalms 147 and 148 | |
Who from eternity himself supplied, | Act 17:24 | |
And had no need of anything beside, | ||
Nor any other cause that did him move | ||
To make a world but his extensive love, | 130 | |
Itself delighting to communicate, | ||
Its glory in the creatures to dilate, | ||
While they are led by their own excellence | ||
T’admire the first, pure high intelligence; | Job 33:12 | |
By all the powers and virtues which they have, | Psalm 95:31 | 135 |
To that omnipotence who those powers gave; [194] | Rev. 19:6 | |
By all their glories and their joys to his | ||
Who is the fountain of all joy and bliss; | Psalm 16:11 | |
By all their wants and imbecilities[10] | Gen. 17:10 | |
To the full magazine[11] of rich supplies, | 140 | |
Where power, love, justice, and mercy shine | ||
In their still-fixèd[12] heights, and ne’er decline. | ||
No streams can shrink the self-supplying spring, | ||
No retributions can more fullness bring | Job 35:7 | |
To the eternal fountain which doth run | Psalm 16:2 | 145 |
In sacred circles, ends where it begun, | Rev. 1:8 | |
And thence with inexhausted life and force | Isaiah 41:4 | |
Begins again anew, yet the same course | ||
It instituted in time’s infant birth, | ||
When the Creator first made Heaven and Earth. | Gen. 1:1 | 150 |
Time, though it all things into motion bring, | Time | |
Is not itself any substantial thing, | Be resheth[13] | |
But only motion’s measure, as a twin | In Capite, | |
Born with it; and they both at once begin | Principio | |
With the existence of the rolling sphere, | 155 | |
Before which neither time nor motion were; | ||
Time being a still-continued number, made | ||
By the vicissitude of light and shade, | ||
By the moon’s growth, and by her waxing old, | ||
By the successive reign of heat and cold, | 160 | |
Thus leading back all ages to the womb | ||
Of vast eternity from whence they come,[14] | ||
And bringing new successions forth until | ||
Heaven its last revolutions shall fulfill, [195] | ||
And all things unto their first state restore | 165 | |
When, motion ceasing, time shall be no more, | Rev. 10:6 | |
But with the visible heavens shall expire | ||
While they consume in[15] the world’s funeral fire. | 2 Peter 3:12 | |
Th’invisible heavens, being still the same, | Hebrews 12:27–28 | |
Shall not be touched by the devouring flame. | 170 | |
Treating of which, let’s waive Platonic dreams | ||
Of worlds made in Idea,[16] fitter themes | ||
For poets’ fancies than the reverent view | ||
Of contemplation, fixed on what is true | ||
And only certain, kept upon record | 175 | |
In the Creator’s own revealèd Word, | ||
Which, when it taught us how our world was made, | ||
Wrapped up th’invisible in mystic shade. | ||
Yet through those clouds we see God did create | Heaven | |
A place his presence doth irradiate, | 180 | |
Where he doth in his brightest luster shine; | Hebrews 11:10 | |
Yet doth not his own Heaven him confine, | Isaiah 66:1 | |
Although the paradise of the fair world above, | Matt. 5:34, 6.9 | |
Each-where perfumed with sweet-respiring love, | 1 Kings 8:27–28 | |
Refreshed with pleasure’s never shrinking streams, | Luke 23:43 | 185 |
Illustrated with light’s unclouded beams, | ||
The happy land of peace and endless rest | 1 Cor. 13:13 | |
Which doth both soul and sense with full joys feast, | 1 John 4:16 | |
Feasts that extinguish not the appetite, | Psalm 16:11 | |
Which is renewed to heighten the delight. | Rev. 20:5 | 190 |
Here stands the Tree of Life, decked with fair fruit, | Hebrews 4:9 | |
Whose leaves health to the nations contribute: | Rev. 14:13, 22:2 | |
The spreading, true, celestial vine | ||
Where fruitful grafts and noble clusters shine. | John 15:1 | |
Here majesty and grace together meet; | 195 | |
The grace is glorious, and the glory sweet. [196] | ||
Here is the throne of th’universal king, | Rev. 21:25–26 | |
To which the suppliant world addresses bring. | ||
Here next him doth his Son in triumph sit, | ||
Waiting till all his foes lie at his feet. | Psalm 110:1 | 200 |
Here is the temple of his holiness, | Exod. 15:17–18 | |
The sanctuary for all sad distress. | ||
Here is the saints’ most sure inheritance, | Rev. 7:17 | |
To which they all their thoughts and hopes advance. | 1 Peter 1:4 | |
Here their rich recompense and safe rest lies, | Col. 3:1–2,24 | 205 |
For this they all th’inferior world despise; | Hebrews 12:2 | |
Yet not for this alone, though this excel, | ||
But for that deity who here doth dwell; | ||
For Heaven itself to saints no Heaven were | Psalm 73:25 | |
Did not their God afford his presence there. | 210 | |
But now, as he inhabits it, it is | ||
The treasure-house of everlasting bliss, | ||
The Father’s house, the pilgrim’s home, the port | 2 Tim. 4:8 | |
Of happiness, th’illustrious regal court, | John 14:21 | |
The city that on the world’s summit stands, | Heb. 11:16 | 215 |
United in itself, not made with hands; | Psalms 15:1 and 122:3 | |
Whose citizens, walls, pavements are so bright | Hebrews 12:22 | |
They need no sun in God’s more radiant light. | 2 Cor. 5:1 | |
The pure air being not thickened with dark clouds, | Rev. 21:23 | |
No sable night the constant glory shrouds, | 220 | |
Nor needs there night, when no dull lassitude | ||
Doth into the unwearied soul intrude; | ||
New vigor flowing in with that dear joy | ||
Whose contemplation doth their lives employ. | ||
This Heaven, the third to us within, | 2 Cor.12:2 | 225 |
The first, if from the outside we begin, | ||
Is incorruptible and still the same, | 1 Peter 1:4 | |
Confirmed by him who did its substance frame. | ||
No time its strong foundations can decay, | ||
Its renewed glory fadeth not away. | 230 | |
The other heavens which it doth enfold | Joel 2:30, Isaiah 34:4 | |
In tract of time as garments shall wax old, | Psalm 102:26 | |
And all their outworn glory shall expire | 1 Peter 3:7, 12 | |
In the world’s dreadful last devouring fire;[17] | ||
But this shall still unchangeable remain | 235 | |
While all the rolling spheres which it contains | ||
Shall be again into their Chaos whirled | ||
At the last dissolution of the world. | ||
For God, who made this blessèd place to be | ||
The habitation of his sanctity, | 240 | |
Admitting nothing to it that is vile, | Rev. 21:27 | |
Nothing that can corrupt or can defile, | ||
Never withdraws his gracious presence thence | ||
But is on all the glory a defense.[18] | Isaiah 4:5 | |
Nor are his gates e’er shut by night or day; | 245 | |
His only dread keeps all his foes far away.[19] | ||
He not for need, but for majestic state, | Angels | |
Innumerable hosts of angels did create | ||
To be his out-guards, in respect of whom | ||
He doth his name El-tzeboim[20] assume. | Isaiah 48:2 | 250 |
These perfect, pure intelligences be, | Matt. 26:53 | |
Excel in might and in celerity, | 2 Sam. 14:17 | |
Whose sublime natures and whose agile powers | ||
Are vastly so superior unto ours | 2 Thes. 1:7 | |
Our narrow thoughts cannot to them extend | Daniel 9:21 | 255 |
And things so far above us comprehend | Isaiah 6:6 | |
As in themselves, although in part we know | Col. 2:18 | |
Some scantlings by appearances below | ||
And sacred writ, wherein we find there be | ||
Distinguished orders in their hierarchy: | Rom. 8:38 | 260 |
Archangels, cherubims, and seraphims, | 1 Thes. 4:16 | |
Who celebrate their God with holy hymns; | ||
Ten thousand thousand vulgar angels stand | Psalm 103:20–21 | |
All in their ranks, waiting the Lord’s command, | Gen. 3:24 | |
Which with prompt inclination of their will [198] | Daniel 7:10 | 265 |
And cheerful, swift obedience they fulfill; | Matt. 6:10 | |
Whether he them to save poor men employ | ||
Or send them armed, proud rebels to destroy; | Psalm 91:11–12 | |
Whether he them to mighty monarchs send | 2 Kings 19:35[21] | |
Or bid them on poor pilgrim saints attend; | Gen. 32:1 | 270 |
Whether they must in heavenly luster go, | Luke 2:13–14 | |
Or walk in mortal mean disguise below; | ||
So kind, so humble are they, though so high, | Gen. 32:1–2 | |
They do it with the same alacrity. | Gen. 19:1 | |
Why blush we not at our vain pride, when we | Ps.104:4 | 275 |
Such condescension in Heaven’s courtiers see, | Luke 16:20 | |
That they who sit on heavenly thrones above | ||
Scorn not to serve poor worms with fervent love, | ||
And joyful praises to th’Almighty sing, | ||
When they a mortal to their own home bring? | 280 | |
How gracious is the Lord of all, that he | Matt. 13:29 | |
Should thus consider poor mortality, | ||
Such powers for us into those powers diffuse, | ||
Such glorious servants in our service use, | ||
Who, whether they with light or Heaven had | 285 | |
Creation, were within the six days made? | ||
But leave we looking through the veil, nor pry | ||
Too long on things wrapped up in mystery, | ||
Reserved to be our wonder at that time | Hebrews 12:22 | |
When we shall up to their high mountain climb. | 290 | |
Besides th’empyrean Heaven, we are told | ||
Of diverse other heavens which we behold | ||
Only by reason’s eye; yet were not they, | ||
If made, at least distinguished the first day. | ||
Then from the height we cannot comprehend, | 295 | |
Let us to our inferior world descend. | ||
The earth at first was a vast empty place, | Earth’s Chaos | |
A rude congestion[22] without form or grace, | ||
A confused mass of undistinguished seed. | Gen. 1:2 | |
Darkness the deep, the deep the solid hid,[199] | 300 | |
Where things did in imperfect causes sleep, | ||
Until God’s Spirit moved the quiet deep, | ||
Brooding the creatures under wings of love, | ||
As tender birds hatched by a turtle-dove.[23] | ||
Light first of all its radiant wings displayed; | 305 | |
God called forth light: that Word the creature made. | Gen. 1:3–5 | |
Whether it were the natures more divine, | ||
Or the bright mansions where just souls must shine, | ||
Or the first matter of those tapers which | ||
The since-made firmament do still enrich, | 310 | |
It is not yet agreed among the wise: | ||
But thus the day did out of Chaos rise, | ||
And cast its bright beams on the floating world, | ||
O’er which soon envious night her black mists hurled, | ||
Damping the new-born splendor for a space | 315 | |
Till the next morning did her shadows chase, | ||
With restored beauty and triumphant force | ||
Returning to begin another course: | ||
An emblem of that everlasting feud | John 3:19–21 | |
’Twixt sons of light and darkness still pursued; | 320 | |
And of that frail, imperfect state wherein | Col. 1:12–13 | |
The wasting lights of mortal men begin; | ||
Whose comforts, honors, lives, soon as they shine | 1 Peter 1:24 | |
Must all to sorrows, changes, death resign; | ||
Even their wisdom’s and their virtue’s light | 325 | |
Are hid by envy’s interposing night. | ||
But though these splendors all in graves are thrown, | ||
Wherever the true seed of light is sown | ||
The powers of darkness may contend in vain, | Psalm 97:11 | |
It shall a conqueror rise and ever reign. | 330 | |
For when God the victorious morning viewed, | ||
Approving his own work he said ’twas good, | ||
And of inanimate creatures sure the best, | ||
As that which shows and beautifies the rest; | ||
Those melancholy thoughts which night creates [200] | 335 | |
And feeds in mortal bosoms, dissipates; | ||
In its own nature subtle, swift, and pure, | ||
Which no polluted mirror can endure. | ||
By it th’Almighty Maker doth dispense | ||
To earthy creatures heavenly influence; | 340 | |
By it with angels’ swiftness are our eyes | ||
Exalted to the glory of the skies, | ||
In whose bright character the light divine, | ||
Which flesh cannot behold, doth dimly shine. | ||
Thus was the first day made; God so called light, | 345 | |
Severed from darkness; darkness was the night. |
Canto 2
Again spoke God; the trembling waters move. | Gen. 1:6 | |
Part fly up in thick mists, made clouds above, | ||
Part closer shrink about the earth below, | The Firmament | |
But did not yet the mountains’ dry heads show. | ||
Th’all-forming Word[24] stretched out the firmament | 5 | |
Like azure curtains round his glorious tent, | Psalm 104:2–3 | |
And in its hidden chambers did dispose | ||
The magazines of hail, and rain, and snows, | ||
Amongst those thicker clouds from whose dark womb | Job 38:22–23 | |
Th’imprisoned winds in flame and thunder come; | 10 | |
Those clouds which over all the wondrous arch | ||
Like hosts of various-formèd creatures march | ||
And change the scenes in our admiring eyes, | ||
Who sometimes see them like vast mountains rise, | ||
Sometimes like pleasant seas with clear waves glide, | 15 | |
Sometimes like ships on foaming billows ride; | ||
Sometimes like mounted warriors they advance, | ||
And seem to fire the smoking ordinance; | ||
Sometimes like shady forests they appear, | ||
Here monsters walking, castles rising there. | 20 | |
Scorn, princes, your embroidered canopies | ||
And painted roofs: the poor whom you despise | ||
With far more ravishing delight are fed [201] | ||
While various clouds sail o’er th’unhousèd head, | ||
And their heaved eyes with nobler scenes present | 25 | |
Than your poetic courtiers can invent. | ||
Thus the exalted waters were disposed | 2 Peter 3:5 | |
And liquid skies the solid world enclosed | ||
To magnify the most almighty hand | Job 37:18 | |
That makes thin floods like rocks of crystal stand, | 30 | |
Not quenching, nor drunk up by that bright wall | ||
Of fire which, neighboring them, encircles all. | ||
The new-built firmament God “Heaven” named, | ||
And over all the arch his windows framed; | ||
From whence his liberal hand at due time pours | 35 | |
Upon the thirsty earth refreshing showers; | Psalm 147:16–18 | |
And clothes her bosom with descending snow[25] | Job 26 to the end | |
To cherish the young seeds when cold winds blow. | ||
Hence every night his fattening dews he sheds, | Psalm 18:8–14 | |
And scatters pearls amidst th’enamelled beds. | 40 | |
But when presumptuous sins the bright arch scale, | ||
He beats them back with terrifying hail, | Job 38:27 etc. | |
Which like small shot amidst his foes he sends, | ||
Till flaming thunder, his great ordnance, rends | ||
The clouds which, big with horror, ready stand | 45 | |
To pour their burdens forth at his command. | Exodus 9:2 | |
But th’unpolluted air as yet had not | ||
From mortals’ impious breath infection got; | ||
Enlightened then by a superior ray, | ||
A serene luster decked the second day. | 50 | |
Th’inferior globe was fashioned on the third, | Gen. 1:10 etc. | |
When waters at the all-commanding Word | ||
Did hastily into their channels glide, | Psalm 104:6–10 | |
And the uncovered hills as soon were dried. | ||
In the same body thus, distinct and joined, | 55 | |
Water and earth, as flesh and blood, we find. | ||
The late-collected waters God called seas. | ||
Springs, lakes, streams, and broad rivers are from these | ||
Branched, like life-feeding veins, in every land, | ||
Yet wheresoe’er they seem to flow or stand, | 60 | |
As all in the vast ocean’s bosom bred, | Ecclesiastes 1:7 | |
They daily reassemble in their head,[202] | ||
Which thorough[26] secret conduits back conveys | ||
To every spring the tribute that it pays. | ||
So ages from th’eternal bosom creep, | Eccles. 1:4 | 65 |
So lose themselves again in that vast deep. | ||
So empires, so all other human things, | ||
With winding streams run to their native springs. | ||
So all the goodness mortals exercise | Romans 4:22 | |
Flows back to God out of his own supplies. | 70 | |
Now, the great fabric[27] in all parts complete, | ||
Beauty was called forth to adorn the seat; | ||
Where earth, fixed in the center, was the ground,[28] | Psalm 102:25 | |
A mantle of light air compassed it round; | Job 26:7 | |
Then first the watery, then the fiery wall, | 75 | |
And glittery Heaven last involving all. | ||
Earth’s fair green robe vied with the azure skies, | ||
Her proud woods near the flaming towers did rise. | ||
The valleys’ trees, though less in breadth and height, | ||
Yet, hung with various fruit, as much delight. | Gen 2:9 | 80 |
Beneath these little shrubs and bushes sprung, | ||
With fair flowers clothed, and with rich berries hung, | ||
Whose more delightful fruits seemed to upbraid | ||
The tall trees yielding only barren shade. | ||
Then sprouted grass and herbs and flowers and plants,[29]Ps. 104:14 | 85 | |
Prepared to feed the earth’s inhabitants, | ||
To glad their nostrils and delight their eyes, | ||
Revive their spirits, cure their maladies. | ||
Nor by these are the senses only fed, | ||
But th’understanding too, while we may read | 90 | |
In every leaf, lectures of providence, | ||
Eternal wisdom, love, omnipotence; | ||
Which th’eye that sees not with hell’s mists is blind, | ||
That which regards not is of brutish kind. | ||
The various colors, figures, powers of these | 95 | |
Are their Creator’s growing witnesses; [203] | ||
Their glories emblems are wherein we see | Psalm 90:5–6 | |
How frail our human lives and beauties be: | ||
Even like those flowers which at the sunrise spread | Job 14:2 | |
Their gaudy leaves, and are at evening dead, | Isaiah 40:6–8 | 100 |
Yet while they in their native luster shine, | ||
The eastern monarchs are not half so fine.[30] | Matt. 6:28–30 | |
In richer robes God clothes the dirty soil | ||
Than men can purchase by their sin and toil. | James 1:10–11 | |
Then rather fields than painted courts admire, | 105 | |
Yet seeing both, think both must feed the fire; | ||
Only God’s works have roots and seeds, from whence | Job 14:7–8 | |
They spring again in grace and excellence, | ||
But men’s have none: like hasty lightning they | ||
Flash out, and so forever pass away. | 1 Cor. 3:15 | 110 |
This fair creation finished the third day, | ||
In whose end God did the whole work survey, | ||
The seas, the skies, the trees, and less plants viewed, | ||
And by his approbation made them good; | ||
In all the plants did living seeds enclose, | Gen. 1:12 | 115 |
Whence their successive generations rose; | ||
Gave them those powers which in them still remain, | ||
Whereby they man and beast with food sustain. | ||
Thrice had the day to gloomy night resigned, | The fourth day | |
And thrice victorious o’er darkness shined, | 120 | |
Before the mediate cause of it, the sun | ||
Or any star had their creation,[31] | ||
For with th’omnipotent it all is one | ||
To cause the day without, or by the sun. | ||
God in the world by second causes reigns, | 125 | |
But is not tied to those means he ordains.[32] | ||
Let no heart faint, then, that on him depends, | ||
When the means fail that lead to their wished ends; [204] | ||
For God the thing, if good, will bring about | ||
With instruments we see not, or without. | 130 | |
The fourth light having now expelled the shade, | ||
God on that day the luminaries[33] made, | Gen. 1:14 etc. | |
And placed them all in their peculiar spheres | ||
To measure out our days, and months, and years, | ||
Which by their various motions are renewed, | 135 | |
And heat and cold have their vicissitude. | ||
So springs and autumns still successive be, | ||
Till ages lose them in eternity. | ||
The sun, whom th’Hebrews God’s great servant call, | Sun | |
Placed in the middle orb, as lord of all, | 140 | |
Is in a radiant, flaming chariot whirled, | ||
And daily carried round about the world | Psalm 19:4–6 | |
By the First Mover’s force, who in that race | ||
Scatters his light and heat in every place, | ||
Yet not at once. Now in the east he shines, | 145 | |
And then again to the western deep declines, | ||
Seeming to quench his blazing taper there | ||
While it enlightens the other hemisphere. | ||
Thus he their share of day and night divides | ||
Unto each world in their altérnate tides. | 150 | |
But then its orb, by its own motion rolled, | ||
Varies the seasons, brings in heat and cold, | ||
As it projects its rays in a straight line | ||
Or more obliquely on the earth doth shine. | ||
And thus doth he to the low world dispense | 155 | |
Life-feeding and engendering influence. | ||
This lord of day with his reflected light | Moon | |
Gilds the pale moon, the empress of the night, | ||
Whose dim orb monthly wastes and grows, | ||
Doth at the first sharp-pointed horns disclose, | 160 | |
Then half, then her full shining globe reveals, | ||
Which, waning, she by like degrees conceals. | ||
The other glittering planets now appear | Stars | |
Each as a king enthroned in his own sphere; | ||
Then the eighth heaven[34] in fuller luster shines | 165 | |
Thick-set with stars. All these were made for signs, [205] | ||
That mortals by observing them might know | ||
Due times to cultivate the earth below, | ||
To gather fruits, plant trees, and sow their seed, | ||
To cure their herds and let their fair flocks breed, | 170 | |
Into safe harbors to retire their ships, | Acts 27:10 | |
Again to launch out into the calm deeps, | ||
Their wandering vessels in broad seas to guide | ||
When the lost shores no longer are descried; | ||
Physicians to direct in their great art, | 175 | |
And other useful knowledge to impart. | ||
Nor were they only made for signs to show | ||
Fit opportunities for things we do, | ||
But in their various aspects too we read | ||
Various events which shall in time succeed: | 180 | |
Droughts, inundations, famines, plagues, and wars, | ||
By several[35] conjunctions of the stars | ||
At least shown, if not caused, through the strong powers | ||
And workings astral bodies have on ours, | ||
Which, as above they variously are joined, | 185 | |
So are their subjects here below inclined | ||
To sadness, mirth, dread, quiet, love, or hate — | ||
All that may calm or trouble any state.[36] | ||
Yet they are but a second cause, which God | ||
Shakes over sinners as a flaming rod, | 190 | |
And further manages in his own hands | ||
To scourge the pride of all rebellious lands. | ||
Falsely and vainly do blind mortals then | ||
To them impute the fates and ills of men, | ||
When their sinister operations be | 195 | |
Only th’effects of men’s iniquity, | ||
Which makes the Lord his glittering hosts thus send | ||
To execute the just threats they portend. | ||
Nor are they characters of wrath alone, | Judges 5[37] | |
They sometimes have God’s grace to mankind shown. [206] | 200 | |
Such was that new star which did heaven adorn | Matt. 2 | |
When the great king of the whole world was born.[38] | ||
Such were those stars that fought for Israel | ||
When Jabin’s vanquished host by God’s host fell. | ||
Even those stars which threaten misery and woe | 205 | |
To wicked men, to saints deliverance show: | ||
For when God cuts the bloody tyrant down, | Luke 2:28 | |
He will their lives with peace and blessings crown. | ||
Thus the fourth evening did the fourth day close, | ||
And where the sun went down, the stars arose. | 210 | |
New triumph now the fifth day celebrates. | ||
The perfumed morning opes her purple gates, | ||
Through which the sun’s pavilion doth appear | Psalm 19 | |
And he, arrayed in all his luster there, | ||
Like a fresh bridegroom, with majestic grace | 215 | |
And joy diffusing vigor in his face, | ||
Comes gladly forth to greet his virgin bride | ||
Tricked up in all her ornaments and pride. | ||
Her lovely maids at his approach unfold | ||
Their gaudy vests,[39] on which he scatters gold, | 220 | |
Both cheering and enriching every place | ||
Through which he passes in his glorious race. | ||
But though he found a noble theater, | ||
And yet in it no living creatures were; | ||
Though flowery carpets spread the whole earth’s face | 225 | |
And rich embroideries the upper arch did grace, | ||
And standards on the mountains stood between, | ||
Bearing festoons like pillars wreathed with green, | ||
The velvet couches and the mossy seats, | ||
The open walks and the more close retreats | 230 | |
Were all prepared; yet no foot trod the woods, | ||
Nor no mouth yet had touched the pleasant floods; | ||
No weary creature had reposed its head | ||
Among the sweet perfumes of the low bed; | ||
The air was not respired in living breath, | 235 | |
Throughout a general stillness reigned, like death; | ||
The king of day came forth but, unadmired, | ||
Like unpraised gallants blushingly retired; [207] | ||
As an uncourted beauty, night’s pale queen | ||
Grew sick to shine where she could not be seen; | 240 | |
When the Creator first for mute herds calls, | ||
And bade the waters bring forth animals. | ||
Then was all shell-fish and each scaly race | Gen. 1:20 etc. | |
At once produced in their assigned place; | ||
The crooked dolphins, great Leviathan, | 245 | |
And all the monsters of the ocean[40] | ||
Like wanton kids among the billows played; | Job 41 | |
Nor was there after on the dry land made | ||
Any one beast of less or greater kind | ||
Whose like we do not in the waters find; | 250 | |
Where every greater fish devours the less, | ||
As mighty lords poor commoners oppress. | ||
Next the Almighty by his forming Word | ||
Made the whole plumy race, and every bird | ||
Its proper place assigned, while with light wings | 255 | |
All mounted heaven. Some o’er the lakes and springs, | ||
Some over the vast fens and seas did fly, | ||
Some near the ground, some in the cloudy sky, | ||
Some in high trees their proud nests built, some chose | ||
The humble shrubs for their more safe repose, | 260 | |
Some did the marshes, some the rivers love, | ||
Some the cornfields, and some the shady grove. | ||
That silence which reigned everywhere before | ||
Its universal empire held no more. | ||
Even night and darkness, its own dear retreat, | 265 | |
Could not preserve it in their reign complete. | ||
The nightingales with their complaining notes, | ||
Ravens and owls with their ill-boding throats, | ||
And all the birds of night, shrill-crowing cocks | ||
Whose due-kept times made them the world’s first clocks, | 270 | |
All interrupted it, even in the night; | ||
But at the first appearance of the light | ||
A thousand voices, the greenwood’s whole choir, | ||
With their loud music do the day admire. | ||
The lark doth with her single carol rise | 275 | |
To welcome the fair morning in the skies; | ||
The amorous and still-complaining dove | ||
Courts not the day, but woos her own fair love; | ||
The jays and crows against each other rail, | ||
And chattering pies[41] begin their gossips’ tale. [208] | 280 | |
Thus life was carried on, which first begun | ||
In growth of plants, in fishes’ motion,[42] | ||
And next declared itself in living sound, | ||
Whilst various noise the yielding air did wound. | ||
Various instincts the birds by nature have, | 285 | |
Which God to them in their creation gave, | ||
That unto their observers do declare | ||
The storms and calms approaching in the air; | ||
That teach them how to build their nests at spring | ||
And hatch their young under their nursing wing, | 290 | |
To lead abroad and guard their tender brood, | ||
To know their hurtful and their healing food, | ||
To feed them till their strength be perfect grown, | ||
And after teach them how to feed alone. | ||
Could we the lessons they hold forth improve, | 295 | |
We might from some learn chaste and constant love, | ||
Conjugal kindness of the pairèd swans, | ||
Paternal bounty of the pelicans, | ||
While they are prodigal of their own blood | ||
To feed their chickens with that precious food.[43] | 300 | |
Wisdom of those who, when storms threat the sky, | ||
In thick assemblies to their shelter fly, | ||
And those who, seeing devourers in the air, | ||
To the safe covert of the wing repair. | ||
The gall-less doves would teach us innocence, | Matt. 10:16 | 305 |
And the whole race to hang on providence; | Matt. 8:26 and 10:19 | |
Since not the least bird that divides the air | ||
Exempted is from the Almighty’s care, | ||
Whose bounty in due seasons feeds them all, | ||
Prepares them berries when the thick snows fall, | 310 | |
Clothes them in many-colored plumes, which vain | ||
Men borrow; yet the peacock’s gaudy train | ||
More beautifully is by nature dressed | ||
Than art can make it on the gallant’s crest. | ||
This privilege these creatures had, to raise | 315 | |
Their voices first in their great Maker’s praise, | ||
Which when the morning opes her rosy gate, | ||
They with consenting music celebrate; | ||
Again, with hunger pinched, to God they cry, | ||
And from his liberal hand receive supply; [209] | 320 | |
Who them and all his watery creatures viewed, | ||
And saw that they in all their kinds were good, | ||
Then blessed them that for due successions they | ||
Might multiply. So closed he the fifth day. | ||
And now the sun the third time raised his head | 325 | |
And rose the sixth day from his watery bed, | Gen. 1:24 | |
When God commands the teeming earth to bring | ||
Forth great and lesser beasts, each reptile thing | ||
That on her bosom creeps; the Word obeyed; | ||
Immediately were all the creatures made. | 330 | |
Like hermits some made hollow rocks their cell, | ||
And did in their preparèd mansions dwell. | ||
The vermin, weasels, fulmots,[44] and blind moles | ||
Lay hid in clefts of trees, in crannies and in holes. | ||
The serpents lodged in marishes[45] and fens, | 335 | |
The savage beasts sought thickets, caves, and dens. | ||
Tame herds and flocks in open pastures stayed, | ||
And wanton kids upon the mountains played. | ||
Here life almost to its perfection grew | ||
While God these various creatures did endue[46] | 340 | |
With various properties and various sense, | ||
But little short of human excellence, | ||
Save[47] what we in the brutes dispersèd find | ||
Is all collected in man’s nobler mind, | ||
Who to the high perfection of his sense | 345 | |
Hath added a more high intelligence. | ||
Yet several brutes have noble faculties: | ||
Some apprehensive are, some subtle, wise, | ||
Some have invention and docility, | ||
Some wonderful in imitation be, | 350 | |
Some with high generous courage are endued, | ||
With kindness some, and some with gratitude, | ||
With memory some, and some with providence, | ||
With natural love, and with meek innocence; | ||
Some watchful are, and some laborious be, | 355 | |
Some have obedience, some true loyalty. | ||
Among them too, we all the passions find, | ||
Some more to love, some more to hate inclined. | ||
The musing hare and the light-footed deer | ||
Are under the predominance of fear; [210] | 360 | |
Goats and hot monkeys are with lust possessed, | ||
Rage governs in the savage tiger’s breast; | ||
Jealousy doth the hearts of fierce bulls move, | ||
Impatient of all rivals in their love. | ||
Some sportive and some melancholy be, | 365 | |
Some proner to revenge and cruelty. | ||
The kingly lion in his bosom hath | ||
The fiery seed of self-provoking wrath. | ||
Joy is no stranger to the savage breast, | ||
As oft with love, hate, and desire possessed, | 370 | |
Through the aversion and the appetite | ||
Which all these passions in their hearts excite. | ||
God clothed them all in several wools and hair, | ||
Whereof some meaner, some more precious are, | ||
Which men now into garments weave and spin, | 375 | |
Nor only wear their fleeces, but their skin; | ||
Besides employ their teeth, bones, claws, and horn; | ||
Some medicines be, and some the house adorn. | ||
A thousand other various ways we find, | ||
Wherein alive and dead they serve mankind, | 380 | |
Who from th’obedience they to him afford | ||
Might learn his duty to his sovereign lord. | Isaiah 1:3 |
Canto 3
Now was the glorious universe complete | ||
And everything in beauteous order set, | ||
When God, about to make the king of all,[48] | ||
Did in himself a sacred council call; | ||
Not that he needed to deliberate, | 5 | |
But pleased t’allow solemnity and state | ||
To wait upon that noble creature’s birth | ||
For whom he had designed both heaven and earth: | Psalm 8:6 | |
“Let us,” said God, “with sovereign power endued, | Genesis 1:26 | |
Make man after our own similitude; | 10 | |
Let him our sacred impressed image bear, | Ephes. 4:24 | |
Ruling o’er all in earth and sea and air.” | Psalm 8 | |
Then made the Lord a curious mould of clay | ||
Which lifeless on the earth’s cold bosom lay | ||
When God did it with living breath inspire, [211] | 15 | |
A soul in all, and every part entire, | ||
Where life rose above motion, sound, and sense | ||
To higher reason and intelligence; | ||
And this is truly termèd life alone | ||
Which makes life’s fountain to the living known. | 20 | |
This life into itself doth gather all | ||
The rest maintained by its original, | ||
Which gives it being, motion, sense, warmth, breath, | ||
And those chief powers that are not lost in death. | ||
Thus was the noblest creature the last made, | 25 | |
As he in whom the rest perfection had, | ||
In whom both parts of the great world were joined, | ||
Earth in his members, Heaven in his mind; | ||
Whose vast reach the whole universe comprised, | ||
And saw it in himself epitomized.[49] | Eccles. 3:11 | 30 |
Yet not the center nor circumference can | ||
Fill the more comprehensive soul of man, | ||
Whose life is but a progress of desire, | ||
Which still, enjoyed, doth something else require, | ||
Unsatisfied with all it hath pursued | 35 | |
Until it rest in God, the sovereign good. | Matt. 11:25 | |
The earthly mansions of this heavenly guest | ||
Peculiar privileges too possessed. | ||
Whereas all other creatures clothèd were | ||
In shells, scales, gaudy plumes, or wools, or hair, | 40 | |
Only a fair smooth skin o’er man was drawn, | ||
Like damask roses blushing through pure lawn.[50] | ||
The azure veins, where blood and spirits flow,[51] | ||
Like violets in a field of lilies show. | ||
As others have a down-bent countenance, | 45 | |
He only doth his head to heaven advance, | ||
Resembling thus a tree whose noble root | Psalm 144:12 | |
In heaven grows, whence all his graces shoot. | ||
He only on two upright columns stands, | ||
He only hath, and knows, the use of hands, | 50 | |
Which God’s rich bounties for the rest receive, [212] | ||
And aid to all the other members give. | ||
He only hath a voice articulate, | ||
Varied by joy, grief, anger, love, and hate, | ||
And every other motion of the mind | 55 | |
Which hereby doth an apt expression find. | ||
Hereby glad mirth in laughter is alone | ||
By man expressed; in a peculiar groan | ||
His grief comes forth, accompanied with tears; | ||
Peculiar shrieks utter his sudden fears. | 60 | |
Herein is music too, which sweetly charms | ||
The sense, and the most savage heart disarms. | Proverbs 15:1 | |
The gate of this God in the head did place, | ||
The head which is the body’s chiefest grace, | ||
The noble palace of the royal guest | 65 | |
Within by fancy and invention dressed, | ||
With many pleasant, useful ornaments | ||
Which new imagination still presents, | ||
Adorned without by majesty and grace: | ||
O who can tell the wonders of a face! | 70 | |
In none of all his fabrics more than here | ||
Doth the Creator’s glorious power appear, | ||
That of so many thousands which we see | ||
All human creatures like, all different be. | ||
If the front be the glory of man’s frame, | 75 | |
Those lamps which in its upper windows flame | ||
Illustrate it, and as day’s radiant star | ||
In the clear heaven of a bright face are.[52] | ||
Here love takes stand, and here ardent desire | ||
Enters the soul, as fire drawn in by fire. | 80 | |
At two ports on each side, the hearing sense | ||
Still waits to take in fresh intelligence, | ||
But the false spies both at the ears and eyes | ||
Conspire with strangers for the soul’s surprise | ||
And let all life-perturbing passions in, | James 5:11 | 85 |
Which with tears, sighs, and groans issue again. | ||
Nor do those labyrinths which like breast-works are | ||
About those secret ports serve for a bar | ||
To the false sorcerers conducted by | ||
Man’s own imprudent curiosity. | Proverbs 1:10–12 | |
There is an arch i’the middle of the face | 91 | |
Of equal-necessary use and grace, [213] | ||
For there men suck up the life-feeding air, | ||
And panting bosoms are dischargèd there. | ||
Beneath it is the chief and beauteous gate | 95 | |
About which various pleasant graces wait, | ||
When smiles the ruby doors a little way | ||
Unfold, or laughter doth them quite display, | ||
And, opening the vermilion curtains, shows | ||
The ivory piles set in two even rows | 100 | |
Before the portal, as a double guard | ||
By which the busy tongue is helped and barred; | Proverbs 25:11 | |
Whose sweet sounds charm, when love doth it inspire, | Ecclesiastes 12:11 | |
And when hate moves it, set the world on fire. | James 3:6 | |
Within this portal’s inner vault is placed | 105 | |
The palate, where sense meets its joys in taste. | ||
On rising cheeks, beauty in white and red | ||
Strives with itself, white on the forehead spread | ||
Its undisputed glory there maintains, | ||
And is illustrated with azure veins. | 110 | |
The brows love’s bow and beauty’s shadow are. | ||
A thick-set grove of soft and shining hair | ||
Adorns the head, and shows like crowning rays, | ||
While th’air’s soft breath among the loose curls plays. | ||
Besides the colors and the features, we | 115 | |
Admire their just and perfect symmetry, | ||
Whose ravishing resultance[53] is that air | ||
That graces all, and is not anywhere; | ||
Whereof we cannot well say what it is, | ||
Yet beauty’s chiefest excellence lies in this; | 120 | |
Which mocks the painters in their best designs, | ||
And is not held by their exactest lines. | ||
But while we gaze upon our own fair frame, | ||
Let us remember too from whence it came, | ||
And that, by sin corrupted now, it must | 125 | |
Return to its originary dust. | Job 4:19 | |
How undecently doth pride then lift that head | ||
On which the meanest feet must shortly tread? | ||
Yet at the first it was with glory crowned, | Ecclesiastes 7:29 | |
Till Satan’s fraud gave it the mortal wound. | 130 | |
This excellent creature God did “Adam” call | ||
To mind him of his low original,[54] | ||
Whom he had formed out of the common ground | ||
Which then with various pleasures did abound. | ||
The whole earth was one large delightful field | 135 | |
That, till man sinned, no hurtful briars did yield, | ||
But God, enclosing one part from the rest, | Gen. 2:8 | |
A paradise in the rich spicy East | ||
Had stored with nature’s wealthy magazine, | ||
Where every plant did in its luster shine, | 140 | |
But did not grow promiscuously there: | ||
They all disposed in such rich order were | ||
As did augment their single native grace | ||
And pérfected the pleasure of the place | ||
To such a height that th’apelike art[55] of man, | 145 | |
Licentious pens or pencils, never can, | ||
With all th’essays[56] of all-presuming wit, | ||
Or form or feign aught that approaches it. | ||
Whether it were a fruitful hill or vale, | ||
Whether high rocks or trees did it impale, | 150 | |
Or rivers with their clear and kind embrace | ||
Into a pleasant island formed the place, | ||
Whether its noble situation were | ||
On earth, in the bright moon, or in the air, | ||
In what forms stood the various trees and flowers, | 155 | |
The disposition of the walks and bowers, | ||
Whereof no certain word nor sign remains, | ||
We dare not take from men’s inventive brains.[57] | ||
We know there was a pleasant and noble shade | ||
Which the tall-growing pines and cedars made, | 160 | |
And thicker coverts,[58] which the light and heat | Gen. 3:8 | |
Even at noonday could scarcely penetrate. | Gen. 2:10 | |
A crystal river, on whose verdant banks | ||
The crownèd fruit-trees stood in lovely ranks, | ||
His gentle wave thorough the garden led, | 165 | |
And all the spreading roots with moisture fed; [215] | ||
But past th’enclosure, thence the single stream, | ||
Parted in four, four noble floods became: | ||
Pison, whose large arms Havilah enfold, | Gen. 2:11 | |
A wealthy land enriched with finest gold, | 170 | |
Where also many precious stones are found; | ||
The second river, Gihon, doth surround | Gen. 2:13 | |
All that fair land where Chus[59] inhabited, | ||
Where tyranny first raised up her proud head | ||
And led her bloodhounds all along the shore, | 175 | |
Polluting the pure stream with crimson gore. | ||
Eden’s third river Hiddekel they call, | ||
Whose waters eastward in Assyria fall. | ||
The fourth, Euphrates, whose swift stream did run | Gen. 2:14 | |
About the stately walls of Babylon | 180 | |
And in the revolution of some years[60] | ||
Swelled high, fed with the captived Hebrews’ tears. | ||
God in the midst of Paradise did place | ||
Two trees that stood up dressed in all the grace, | Gen. 2:9 | |
The verdure, beauty, sweetness, excellence, | 185 | |
With which all else could tempt or feast the sense. | ||
On one, apples of knowledge did abound, | ||
And life-confirming fruit the other crowned. | ||
And now did God the new-created king[61] | ||
Into the pleasures of his earthly palace bring. | 190 | |
The air spice, balm, and amber did respire, | ||
His ears were feasted by the sylvan choir; | ||
Like country girls, grass, flowers did dispute | ||
Their humble beauties with the highborn fruit;[62] | ||
Both high and low their gaudy colors vied, | 195 | |
As courtiers do in their contentious pride, | ||
Striving which of them should yield most delight [216] | ||
And stand the finest in their sovereign’s sight. | ||
The shrubs, with berries crowned like precious gems, | ||
Offered their supreme lord their diadems, | 200 | |
Which did no single sense alone invite, | ||
Courting alike the eyes and appetite. | ||
Among all these the eye-refreshing green, | ||
Sometimes alone, sometimes in mixture seen, | ||
O’er all the banks and all the flat ground spread, | 205 | |
Seemed an embroidered or plain velvet bed. | ||
And, that each sense might its refreshment have, | ||
The gentle air soft pleasant touches gave | ||
Unto his panting limbs, whenever they | ||
Upon the sweet and mossy couches lay. | 210 | |
A shady eminence there was whereon | ||
The noble creature sat, as on his throne, | Gen. 2:19 etc. | |
When God brought every fowl and every brute | ||
That he might name unto their natures suit, | ||
Whose comprehensive understanding knew | 215 | |
How to distinguish them at their first view; | ||
And they, retaining those names ever since, | ||
Are monuments of his first excellence | ||
And the Creator’s providential grace, | ||
Who in those names left us some prints to trace; | 220 | |
Nature, mysterious grown since we grew blind, | ||
Whose labyrinths we should less easily find | ||
If those first appellations as a clue | ||
Did not in some sort serve to lead us through | ||
And rectify that frequent gross mistake | 225 | |
Which our weak judgments and sick senses make | ||
Since, man ambitious to know more, that sin | ||
Brought dullness, ignorance, and error in. | ||
Though God himself to man did condescend, | Society | |
Though his knowledge to all natures did extend, | 230 | |
Though heaven and earth thus centered in his mind, | ||
Yet, being the only one of his whole kind, | ||
He found himself without an equal mate | ||
To whom he might his joys communicate, | ||
And by communication multiply. | 235 | |
Too far out of his reach was God on high, | ||
Too much below him brutish creatures were. | ||
God could at first have made a human pair, | ||
But that it was his will to let man see | ||
The need and sweetness of society; | 240 | |
Who, though he were his Maker’s favorite, | ||
Feasted in paradise with all delight, [217] | ||
Though all the creatures paid him homage, yet | ||
Was not his unimparted joy complete, | ||
While there was not a second of his kind | 245 | |
Endued with such a form and such a mind | ||
As might alike his soul and senses feast: | ||
He saw that every bird and every beast | ||
Its own resemblance in its female viewed, | ||
And only union with its like pursued. | 250 | |
Hence birds with birds, and fish with fish abide, | ||
Nor those with beasts, nor beasts with these reside; | ||
According to their several species too, | ||
As several households in one city do, | ||
So they with their own kinds associate: | 255 | |
The kingly eagle hath no buzzard mate; | ||
The ravens more their own black feather love | ||
Than painted pheasants, or the fair-necked dove. | ||
So bears to rough bears rather do incline | ||
Than to majestic lions, or fair kine.[63] | 260 | |
If it be thus with brutes, much less then can | ||
The brutish conversation suit with man. | ||
’Tis only like desires like things unite: | ||
In union likeness only feeds delight. | ||
Where unlike natures in conjunction are, | 265 | |
There is no product but perpetual war, | ||
Such as there was in nature’s troubled womb | ||
Until the severed births from thence did come. | ||
For the whole world nor order had, nor grace, | ||
Till severed elements each their own place | 270 | |
Assignèd were, and while in them they keep, | ||
Heaven still smiles above, th’untroubled deep | ||
With kind salutes embraces the dry land, | ||
Firm doth the earth on its foundation stand, | ||
A cheerful light streams from th’ethereal fire | 275 | |
And all in universal joy conspire. | ||
But if with their unlike they attempt to mix, | ||
Their rude congressions everything unfix; [218][64] | ||
Darkness again invades the troubled skies, | ||
Earth trembling under angry heaven lies; | 280 | |
The sea, swollen high with rage, comes to the shore | ||
And swallows that which it but kissed before; | ||
Th’unbounded fire breaks forth with dreadful light | ||
And horrid cracks which dying nature fright, | ||
Till that high power which all power regulates | 285 | |
The disagreeing natures separates, | ||
The like to like rejoining as before, | ||
So the world’s peace, joy, safety doth restore. | ||
Yet if man could not find in bird or brute | ||
That conversation which might aptly suit | 290 | |
His higher nature, was it not sublime | ||
Enough, above the lower world to climb | ||
And in angelic converse to delight, | ||
Although it could not reach the supreme height? | ||
No; for though man partake intelligence, | 295 | |
Yet that, being joined to an inferior sense, | ||
Dulled by corporeal vapors, cannot be | ||
Refined enough for angels’ company. | ||
As strings screwed up too high, as bows still bent | ||
Or break themselves, or[65] crack the instrument, | 300 | |
So drops neglected flesh into the grave, | ||
If it no share in the soul’s pleasure have. | ||
Man like himself needs an associate, | ||
Who doth both soul and sense participate: | ||
Not the swift horse, the eager hawk or hound, | 305 | |
Dogs, parrots, monkeys, ’mongst whom Adam found | ||
No meet companion, thinking them too base | ||
For the society of human race, | ||
Though his degenerate offspring choose that now | ||
Which his sound reason could not then allow, | 310 | |
But found himself amongst them all alone. | ||
Whether he begged a mate it is not known.[66] | ||
Likely his want might send him to the spring; | ||
For God, who freely gives us everything, | ||
Mercy endears by instilling the desire, [219] | ||
And granting that which humbly we require.[67] | Ezekiel 36:37 | 315 |
Howe’er it was, God saw his solitude | ||
And gave his sentence that it was not good. | ||
Yet not a natural, nor a moral ill, | Gen. 2:18 | |
Because his solitude was not his will, | 320 | |
Opposing his creator’s end, as they | ||
Who into caves and deserts run away, | ||
Seeking perfection in that state wherein | ||
A good was wanting when man had no sin. | ||
For without help to propagate mankind | 325 | |
God’s glory had been to one breast confined, | ||
Which multiplièd saints do now conspire | ||
Throughout their generations to admire. | Hebrews 12:23 | |
Man’s nature had not been the sacred shrine, | ||
Partner and bride of that which is divine; | 330 | |
The Church, fruit of this union, had not come | ||
To light, but perished, stifled in the womb. | ||
Again, ’tis not particularly good | ||
For man to waste his life in solitude,[68] | ||
Whose nature, for society designed, | 335 | |
Can no full joy without a second find | ||
To whom he may communicate his heart | Ecclesiastes 4:8 etc. | |
And pay back all the pleasures they impart; | ||
For all the joys that we enjoy alone, | ||
And all our unseen luster, is as none. | 340 | |
If thus want of a partner did abate | ||
Man’s happiness in man’s most perfect state, | ||
Much more hath human nature, now decayed, | ||
Need of a suitable and a kind aid. | ||
It is not good virtue should lie obscure, | 345 | |
That barren rocks rich treasures should immure, | ||
Which our kind Lord to some, for all men gave, | 1 Cor. 12:5–12 | |
That all might share of all his bounties have; | ||
Not good, dark lanterns should shut up the light | Matt. 5:15–16 | |
Of fair example, made for the dark night; [220] | 350 | |
Not good, experience should her candle hide, | ||
When weak ones perish, wanting her bright guide; | ||
Not good to let unactive graces chill, | ||
No lively warmth receive, no good instill | ||
By quickening converse. Thus nor are the great, | 355 | |
The wise, the firm, permitted to retreat, | ||
Betraying so deserted innocence, | ||
To which God made them conduct and defense; | ||
Nor may the simple and the weak expose | ||
Themselves alone to strong and subtle foes; | 360 | |
Men for each other’s mutual help were made, | ||
The meanest may afford the highest aid, | ||
The highest to necessity must yield: | ||
Even princes are beholden to the field. | Ecclesiastes 5:9 | |
He that from mortal converse steals away | 365 | |
Injures himself, and others doth betray | ||
Whom providence committed to his trust, | ||
And in that act nor prudent is nor just. | ||
For sweet friends, both in pleasure and distress, | ||
Augment the joy and make the torment less. | 370 | |
Equal delight it is to learn and teach, | ||
To be held up to that we cannot reach, | ||
And others from the abject earth to raise | ||
To merit, and to give deservèd praise. | ||
Wisdom imparted, like th’increasing bread | 375 | |
Wherewith the Lord so many thousands fed, | Matt. 15:36 | |
By distribution adds to its own store, | ||
And still the more it gives it hath the more. | ||
Extended power reaches itself a crown, | ||
Gathering up those whom misery casts down. | 380 | |
Love raiseth us, itself to heaven doth rise | ||
By virtue’s varied mutual exercise, | ||
Sweet love, the life of life, which cannot shine | Romans 13:9–10 | |
But lies like gold concealèd in the mine, | ||
Till it through much exchange a brightness take | 385 | |
And conversation doth it current make. | ||
God, having showed his creature thus the need | ||
Of human helps, a help for man decreed. | ||
“I will,” said he, “the man’s meet aid provide.” | ||
But that he from his waking view might hide | 390 | |
Such a mysterious work, the Lord did keep | ||
All Adam’s senses fast locked up in sleep. | Gen. 2:21–22 | |
Then from his opened side took without pain | ||
A clothèd rib, and closed the flesh again, | ||
And of the bone did a fair virgin frame [221] | 395 | |
Who, by her maker brought, to Adam came | ||
And was in matrimonial union joined, | ||
By love and nature happily combined. | ||
Adam’s clear understanding at first view | ||
His wife’s original[69] and nature knew; | 400 | |
His will, as pure, did thankfully embrace | ||
His father’s bounty, and admired his grace. | ||
And as her sweet charms did his heart surprise, | ||
He spoke his joy in these glad ecstasies: | ||
“Thou art my better self, my flesh, my bone, | 405 | |
We, late of one made two, again in one | Gen. 2:23–24 | |
Shall reunite, and with the frequent birth | ||
Of our joint issue, people the vast earth. | ||
To show that thou wert taken out of me, | ||
Isha shall be thy name;[70] as unto thee, | 410 | |
Ravished with love and joy, my soul doth cleave, | ||
So men hereafter shall their fathers leave, | ||
And all relations else which are most dear, | Ephesians 5:31 | |
That they may only to their wives adhere; | Matt. 19:5 | |
When marriage male and female doth combine, | 415 | |
Children in one flesh shall two parents join.” | ||
Lastly, God, who the sacred knot had tied, | ||
With blessing his own ordinance sanctified: | ||
“Increase,” said he, “and multiply your race, | ||
Fill th’earth allotted for your dwelling-place. | Gen. 1:28 etc. | 420 |
I give you right to all her fruits and plants, | ||
Dominion over her inhabitants; | ||
The fish that in the flood’s deep bosom lie, | ||
All fowls that in the airy region fly, | ||
Whatever lives and feeds on the dry land, | 425 | |
Are all made subject under your command. | ||
The grass and green herbs let your cattle eat, | ||
And let the richer fruits be your own meat, | ||
Except the tree of knowing good and ill: | ||
That, by the precept of my sovereign will, | 430 | |
You must not eat, for in the day you do,[222] | ||
Inevitable death shall seize on you.” | ||
Thus God did the first marriage celebrate | ||
While man was in his unpolluted state, | Gen. 2:22 | |
And th’undefilèd bed with honor decked, | Heb. 13:4 | 435 |
Though perverse men the ordinance reject, | ||
And, pulling all its sacred ensigns[71] down, | ||
To the white virgin only give the crown. | Proverbs 18:22 | |
Nor yet is marriage grown less sacred since | ||
Man fell from his created excellence. | 440 | |
Necessity now raises its esteem, | ||
Which doth mankind from death’s vast jaws redeem, | ||
Who even in their graves are yet alive | ||
While they in their posterity survive.[72] | ||
In it they find a comfort and an aid | 445 | |
In all the ills which human life invade. | ||
This curbs and cures wild passions that arise, | Psalm 127:3–5 | |
Repairs time’s daily wastes with new supplies; | ||
When the declining mother’s youthful grace | ||
Lies dead and buried in her wrinkled face, | 450 | |
In her fair daughter it revives and grows | ||
And her dead cinder in their new flames glows. | ||
And though this state may sometimes prove accursed, | ||
For of best things, still the corruption’s worst, | ||
Sin so destroys an institution good, | 455 | |
Provided against death and solitude. | ||
Eve, out of sleeping Adam formèd thus, | ||
A sweet instructive emblem is to us | ||
How waking providence is active still | Psalm 121:3–5 | |
To do us good and to avert our ill | 460 | |
When we locked up in stupefaction lie, | Job 32:15–17 etc. | |
Not dreaming that our blessings are so nigh, | ||
Blessings wrought out by providence alone | Deut. 32:36 | |
Without the least assistance of our own. | ||
Man’s help produced in death-like sleep doth show | Romans 4:19 | 465 |
Our choicest mercies out of dead wombs flow. | ||
So from the second Adam’s bleeding side | John 19:34 | |
God formed the Gospel Church, his mystic bride, [223] [73] | 1 John 5:6, 1 Tim. 5:5 | |
Whose strength was only of his firmness made: | Phil. 4:13, 2 Cor. 12:9 | |
His blood quick spirits into ours conveyed, | John 5:2 | 470 |
His wasted flesh our wasted flesh supplied, | Ephes. 2:1, 5–6 etc. | |
And we were then revivèd when he died; | 2 Tim. 1:10, Isaiah 53:5 | |
Who, waked from that short sleep, with joy did view | Acts 20:28 | |
The virgin fair that out of his wounds grew, | Ephes. 5:25–27 | |
Presented by th’eternal Father’s grace | Rev. 5:19 | 475 |
Unto his everlasting kind embrace. | John 17:9–10 | |
“My spouse, my sister,” said he,[74] “thou art mine; | ||
I and my death, I and my life are thine; | Psalm 2:8 | |
For thee I did my heavenly Father quit | Song of Songs 2:16, 4:10 | |
That thou with me on my high throne mayst sit, | 1 Cor. 3:22–23 | 480 |
My mother’s human flesh in death did leave | John 6:38–39 | |
For thee, that I to thee might only cleave, | Rev. 5:9–10 | |
Redeem thee from the confines of dark hell, | Phil. 2:9, John 19:27 | |
And evermore in thy dear bosom dwell. | Col. 2:13–15 | 484 |
From Heaven I did descend to fetch up thee, | 1 Cor. 15:54–55, 21–22 | |
Rose from the grave that thou mightst reign with me. | John 17:23–24, 14:3 | |
Henceforth no longer two but one we are. | Eph. 4:9–10 etc., | |
Thou dost my merit, life, grace, glory share. | Rom. 8:17–18, 2 Tim. 2:12 | |
As my victorious triumphs are all thine, | Col.1 | |
So are thy injuries and sufferings mine, | Eph.1 | 490 |
Which I for thee will vanquish as my own, | John 1:16 | |
And give thee rest in the celestial throne.” | Acts 9:25, Matt. 25:34ff. | |
The bride, with these caresses entertained, | Heb. 4:13 | |
In naked beauty doth before him stand, | Heb. 10:19–20 etc. | |
And knows no shame, purged from all foul desire | 1 Pet. 1:2 | 495 |
Whose secret guilt kindles the blushing fire. | Heb. 13:12, 1 Pet. 1:10–12 | |
Her glorious Lord is naked too, no more | Ephes. 3:9–10 | |
Concealed in types and shadows as before. | Hebrews 8:5 | |
So our first parents innocently did [224] | ||
Behold that nakedness which since is hid | 500 | |
That lust may not catch fire from beauty’s flame, | 2 Pet. 2:14 | |
Engendering thoughts which dye the cheeks with shame. | Matt. 5:28 | |
Thus Heaven and earth their full perfection had, | Gen. 2:1 | |
Thus all their hosts and ornaments were made. | ||
Armies of angels had the highest place, | 505 | |
Bright starry hosts the lower heaven did grace, | ||
The mutes encampèd in the waters were, | ||
The wingèd troops were quartered in the air, | ||
The walking animals, as th’infantry | ||
Of th’universal host, at large did lie | 510 | |
Spread over all the earth’s most ample face, | ||
Each regiment in its assignèd place. | ||
Paradise the headquarter was, and there | ||
The emperor to his viceroy did appear, | Gen. 2:16 | |
Him in his regal office did install, | 515 | |
A general muster of his hosts did call, | ||
Resigning up into his sole command | Gen. 2:19 | |
The numerous tribes that fill both sea and land. | ||
As each kind severally had before | ||
Blessing and approbation, so once more, | 520 | |
When all together God his works reviewed, | ||
The blessing was confirmèd and renewed, | Gen. 1:31 | |
And with the sixth day the creation ceased. | ||
The seventh day the Lord himself did rest, | ||
And made it a perpetual ordinance then | Gen. 2:2–3 | 525 |
To be observed by every age of men | Exod. 20:8 | |
That after six days’ honest labor they | ||
His precept and example should obey, | ||
As he did his, their works surcease, and spend | ||
That day in sacred rest till that day end,[75] | 530 | |
And in its number back again return, | ||
Still consecrated, till it have outworn | ||
All other time, and that alone remain | ||
When neither toil nor burden shall again | ||
The weary lives of mortal men infest, | 535 | |
Nor intermit their holy, happy rest. | ||
Nor is this rest sacred to idleness: | ||
God, a perpetual act, sloth cannot bless. | ||
He ceased not from his own celestial joy, | ||
Which doth himself perpetually employ [225] | 540 | |
In contemplation of himself and those | Proverbs 8:22, 30–31 | |
Most excellent works wherein himself he shows; | Matt. 3:17 | |
He only ceased from making lower things, | John 5:17, 20–21 | |
By which, as steps, the mounting soul he brings | ||
To th’upmost height, and, having finished these, | 545 | |
Himself did in his own productions please, | Jer. 9:24 | |
Full satisfied in their perfection,[76] | Psalms 104, 147, 145 | |
Rested from what he had completely done; | ||
And made his pattern our instruction,[77] | ||
That we, as far as finite creatures may | 550 | |
Trace him that’s infinite, should in our way | ||
Rest as our Father did, work as he wrought, | ||
Nor cease till we have to perfection brought | Ecclesiastes 9:10 | |
Whatever to his glory we intend, | Hebrews 6:1 | |
Still making ours the same which was his end. | Phil. 3:19 | 555 |
As his works in commands begin, and have | 1 Cor. 10:30 | |
Conclusions in the blessings which he gave, | ||
So must his Word give being to all ours; | 1 John 5:3 | |
And since th’events are not in our powers, | Psalm 119:9 | |
We must his blessing beg, his great name bless, | 560 | |
And make our thanks the crown of our success. | ||
As God first Heaven did for man prepare, | ||
Men last for Heaven created were: | ||
So should we all our actions regulate, | Matt. 6:33 | |
Which Heaven, both first and last, should terminate, | Col. 3:1 | 565 |
And in whatever circle else they run, | ||
There should they end, there should they be begun, | ||
There seek their pattern, and derive from thence | ||
Their whole direction and their influence. | ||
As, when th’Almighty this low world did frame, | 570 | |
Life by degrees to its perfection came, | ||
In vegetation first sprung up, to sense | ||
Ascended next, and climbed to reason thence, | Hebrews 5:12–14 | |
So we, pursuing our attainments, should | ||
Press forward from what’s positively good, | 575 | |
Still climbing higher, until we reach the best, | ||
And, that acquired, forever fix our rest, | ||
Our souls so ravished with the joys divine | ||
That they no more to creatures can decline. | ||
As God’s rest was but a more high retreat | 580 | |
From the delights of this inferior seat, [226] | ||
So must our souls upon our Sabbaths climb | ||
Above the world, sequestered for that time | Isaiah 58:13 | |
From those legitimate delights which may | ||
Rejoice us here upon a common day. | 585 | |
As God, his works completed, did retire | ||
To be adored by the angelic choir, | ||
So, when on us the seventh day’s light doth shine, | ||
Should we ourselves to God’s assemblies join, | ||
Thither all hearts as one pure offering bring, | Job 1:6 | 590 |
And all with one accord adore our King. | Hebrews 10:25 | |
This seventh day the Lord to mankind gave, | ||
Nor is it the least privilege we have — | Matt. 2:27 | |
And ours peculiarly. The orbs above | Ezekiel 20:12 | |
As well the seventh as the sixth day move, | 595 | |
The rain descends and the fierce tempest blows, | ||
On it the restless ocean ebbs and flows; | ||
Bees that day fill the hive, and on that day | ||
Ants their provisions in their store-house lay; | ||
All creatures ply their works, no beast | 600 | |
But those which mankind use share in that rest, | ||
Which God indulged only to human race | ||
That they in it might come before his face | ||
To celebrate his worship and his praise | ||
And gain a blessing upon all their days. | 605 | |
O wretched souls of perverse men, who slight | ||
So great a grace, refuse such rich delight, | ||
Which the inferior creatures cannot share, | ||
To which alone their natures fitted are, | 609 | |
And whereby favored men admitted be | Hebrews 4:9, 12:22 | |
Into the angels’ blessed society. | ||
Yet is this rest but a far distant view | ||
Of that celestial life which we pursue, | ||
By Satan oft so interrupted here | ||
That little of its glory doth appear, | 615 | |
Nor can our souls’ sick, languid appetite | ||
Feast upon such substantial, strong delight. | ||
As music pains the grievèd, aching head, | ||
With which the healthful sense is sweetly fed, | Amos 8:5 | |
So duties wherein sound hearts full joys find | 620 | |
Fetters and sad loads are to a sick mind | ||
Till it thereto by force itself inure, | ||
And from a loathing fall to love its cure. | ||
God for his worship kept one day of seven; | ||
The other six to man for man’s use given, | 625 | |
Adam, although so highly dignified, [227] | ||
Was not to spend in idle ease and pride, | ||
Nor supine sleep, drunk with his sensual pleasures, | ||
Profusely wasting th’empire’s sacred treasures, | ||
As now his fall’n sons do, that arrogate | 630 | |
His forfeited dominion and high state; | ||
But God his daily business did ordain | ||
That kings, hence taught, might in their realms maintain | ||
Fair order, serving those whom they command | ||
As guardians, not as owners of the land, | Rom. 13:3–4 | 635 |
Not being set there to pluck up and destroy | ||
Those plants whose culture should their cares employ. | ||
Nor doth this precept only kings comprise, | 1 Thes. 4:11 | |
The meanest must his little paradise | 1 Tim. 5:8 | |
With no less vigilance and care attend | 640 | |
Than princes on their vast enclosures spend. | ||
All hence must learn their duty, to suppress | ||
Th’intrusions of a sordid idleness. | ||
Who formed, could have preserved the garden fair | ||
Without th’employment of man’s busy care, | 645 | |
But that he willed that our delight should be | ||
The wages of our constant industry, | ||
That we his ever-bounteous hand might bless | ||
Crowning our honest labors with success, | ||
And taste the joy men reap in their own fruit, | 650 | |
Loving that more to which they contribute | ||
Either the labor of their hands or brains | ||
Than better things produced by others’ pains. | ||
Led by desire, fed with fair hope, the fruit | ||
Oft-times delights not more than the pursuit. | 655 | |
For man a nature hath to action prone, | ||
That languishes and sickens finding none. | ||
As standing pools corrupt, water that flows | ||
More pure by its continual current grows, | ||
So humankind by active exercise | 660 | |
Do to the heights of their perfection rise, | ||
While their stocked glory comes to no ripe growth | ||
Whose lives corrupt in idleness and sloth, | ||
Which is not natural, but a disease | ||
That doth upon the flesh-cloyed spirit seize. | 665 | |
Where health untainted is, then the sound mind | ||
In its employment doth its pleasure find. | ||
But when death or its representer sleep | ||
Upon the mortals’ tired members creep, | ||
This during its dull reign doth life suspend | 670 | |
That, ceasing action, puts it to an end. [228] | ||
Lastly, since God himself did man employ | ||
To dress up Paradise, that moderate joy | ||
Which from this fair creation we derive | ||
Is not our sin, but our prerogative, | 675 | |
If bounded so as we fix not our rest | 1 Tim. 4:4–5 | |
In creatures, which but transient are at best; | 1 John 2:17 | |
Yet ’tis sin to neglect, not use or prize, | 1 Cor. 7:31, 20 | |
As well as ’tis to waste and idolize. |
Canto 4
Good were all natures as God made them all, | Gen. 1:31 | |
Good was his will, permitting some to fall: | Romans 9:21–23 | |
That th’rest, renouncing their frail strength, might stand | Romans 11 | |
Humble and firm in his supporting hand; | Romans 3:6 | |
His wisdom and omnipotence might own | Gen. 18:25 | 5 |
When his foes’ power and craft is overthrown; | Romans 11:33 | |
Seeing his hate of sin, might thence confess | 1 Cor. 10:12 | |
His pure, innate, and perfect holiness, | ||
And that the glory of his justice might | Romans 16:20 | |
In the rebels’ torturing flames seem bright; | Psalm 2 | 10 |
That th’ever-blessed Redeemer might take place | Jos. 24:19 | |
To illustrate his rich mercy and free grace | ||
Whereby he fallen sinners doth restore | Ps. 5:4–6, 7:11 etc., 11:5–6 | |
To fuller bliss than they enjoyed before; | ||
That virtue might in its clear brightness shine, | 1 Pet. 1–10 | 15 |
Which, like rich ore concealèd in the mine, | Ephesians 1:4, 11 | |
Had not been known but that opposing vice | John 3:16, Ephesians 2:5 | |
Illustrates it by frequent exercise. | Rom. 8:35–39, 5:5 | |
If all were good, whence then arose the ill?[78] | 1 Pet. 4:12–14 | |
’Twas not in God’s, but in the creatures’ will, | 20 | |
Averting from that good which is supreme, | ||
Corrupted so, as a declining stream | Ecclesiastes 7:29 | |
That breaks off its communion with its head, | Jude 6 | |
By whom its life and sweetness late were fed, | John 8:44 | |
Turns to a noisome, dead, and poisonous lake, | 25 | |
Infecting all who the foul waters take; [229] | ||
Or as a branch cut from the living tree | ||
Passes into contempt immediately, | ||
And dies divided from its glorious stock, | ||
So strength disjoinèd from the living rock | 30 | |
Turns to contemnèd imbecility,[79] | ||
And doth to all its grace and glory die. | Jer. 2:13 | |
Some new-made angels thus, not more sublime | Devils | |
In nature than transcending in their crime, | ||
Quitting th’eternal fountain of their light, | 35 | |
Became the first-born sons of woe and night, | Ephesians 2:2 | |
Princes of darkness and the sad abyss, | Acts 26:18 | |
Which now their cursèd place and portion is, | Matt. 25:41 | |
Where they no more must see God’s glorious face | Rev. 20:10 | |
Nor ever taste of his refreshing grace, | 40 | |
But in the fire of his fierce anger dwell, | ||
Which though it burns, enlightens not their hell. | ||
But circumstances that we cannot know | ||
Of their rebellion and their overthrow | ||
We will not dare t’invent, nor will we take | 45 | |
Guesses from the reports themselves did make | ||
To their old priests, to whim they did devise | ||
To inspire some truths, wrapped up in many lies;[80] | ||
Such as their gross poetic fables are, | ||
Saturn’s extrusion, the bold giants’ war, | 50 | |
Division of the universal realm | ||
To gods that in high heaven steer the helm, | ||
Others who all things in the ocean guide, | ||
And those who in th’infernal court preside, | ||
Who there a vast and gloomy empire sway, | 55 | |
Whom all the furies and the ghosts obey.[81] | ||
But not to name these foolish impious tales, | ||
Which stifle truth in her pretended veils, | ||
Let us in its own blazing conduct go | ||
And look no further than that light doth show; | 60 | |
Wherein we see the present powers of hell, | ||
Before they under God’s displeasure fell, | ||
Were once endued with grace and excellence | ||
Beyond the comprehension of our sense. [230] | Luke 10:18 | |
Pure holy lights in the bright Heaven were | 65 | |
Blazing about the throne, but not fixed there; | Jude 6 | |
Where, by the apostasy of their own will | ||
Precipitating them into all ill, | ||
And God’s just wrath, whose eyes are far too pure | 2 Pet. 2:4 | |
Stained and polluted objects to endure, | Hab. 1:13 | 70 |
They fell like lightning, hurled in his fierce ire, | Luke 10:18 | |
And, falling, set the lower world on fire; | James 3:6 | |
Which their loose prison is where they remain, | John 8:44 | |
And walk as criminals under God’s chain | Jude 6 | |
Until the last and great assizes[82] come, | 75 | |
When execution shall seal up their doom. | 1 Cor. 6:3, Matt. 8:29 | |
Thus are they now to their created light, | Gen. 3:15 | |
Unto all truth and goodness opposite, | 1 Pet. 5:8 | |
Hating the peace and joy that reigns above, | Job 1:7 etc. | |
Vainly contending to extinguish love, | Rev. 20:10 | 80 |
Ruin God’s sacred empire, and destroy | ||
That blessedness they never can enjoy. | ||
A chief they have, whose sovereign power and place | Mark 3:22–26 | |
But adds to’s sin, his torture, and disgrace. | Rev. 20:10 | |
An order too there is in their dire state, | 85 | |
Though they all orders else disturb and hate. | ||
Ten thousand thousand wicked spirits stand | Luke 8:30 | |
Attending their black prince at his command, | ||
To all imaginable evils pressed | ||
That may promote their common interest. | 90 | |
Nor are they linkèd thus by faith and love | ||
But hate of God and goodness, which doth move | ||
The same endeavors and desires in all | ||
Lest civil wars should make their empire fall. | Matt. 12:25–26 | |
An empire which the Almighty doth permit, | 95 | |
Yet so as he controls and limits it, | Rev. 20:2, 7–8 | |
Suffering their rage sometimes to take effect | Job 2:6 | |
Only to be the more severely checked | ||
When he produces a contrary end | Col. 2:14–15, Heb. 2:9, 14 | |
From what they did maliciously intend, | 100 | |
Befools their wisdom, crosses their designs, | Luke 22:3 | |
And blows them up in their own crafty mines, | 2 Tim. 2:25–26 | |
Allows them play in the entangling net | ||
So to be faster in damnation set, | Ephes. 6:11–12 etc. | |
Submits them to each other’s tyrannies | 1 Pet. 5:8 | 105 |
Who did God’s softer, sacred bonds despise, [231] | ||
Lets them still fight who never can prevail, | Rev. 12:12 | |
More cursed if they succeed than if they fail, | ||
Since every soul the rebels gain from God | ||
Adds but another scorpion to that rod,[83] | 110 | |
Bound up, that they may mutual torturers be, | Luke 16:24 | |
Tormented and tormenting equally. | Rev. 14:10–11 | |
As a wise general that doth design | Matt. 25:41 | |
To keep his army still in discipline | ||
Suffers the embodying[84] of some slighter foes | 115 | |
Which he at his own pleasure can enclose | ||
And vanquish, that he justly may chastise | ||
Their folly, and his own troops exercise, | ||
Their vigilance, their faith and valor prove; | ||
Endearing them thereby to his own love, | 120 | |
As he alike endears himself to theirs | Luke 22:31–32 | |
By his continual succors and kind cares; | ||
So the Almighty gives the devils scope, | John 17:20 | |
Who, though they are excluded from all hope | Matt 4 | |
Of e’er escaping, no reluctance have, | Heb. 2:18, 4:15, 7:25 | |
But, like the desperate villain they make brave, | 126 | |
To death pursue their bold attempts, that all | Romans 16:20 | |
O’er whom they cannot reign with them may fall. | ||
And though God’s watchful guards besiege them round | ||
That none can pass their strict prescribèd bound, | 130 | |
Yet make they daily sallies in their pride, | Rev. 12:7–8, Matt. 4:11 | |
Which, still repulsed, the holy host deride, | Jude 9 | |
Their malice in itself and its event | ||
Being equally a crime and punishment. | ||
Thus though sin in itself be ill, ’tis good | 135 | |
That sin should be, for thereby rectitude | ||
Thorough opposed iniquity, as light | ||
By shades, is more conspicuous and more bright. | ||
The wonderful creation of mankind, | ||
For lasting glory and rich grace designed, | 140 | |
The blessèd angels looked on with delight, | ||
Gladded to see us climb so near their height, | Luke 15:10, 16:22 | |
Above all other works, next in degree, | Hebrews 12:22 | |
And capable of their society. | ||
But ’twas far otherwise with those that fell: [232] | 145 | |
Man’s destined Heaven increasèd their hell, | ||
While they burned with a proud malicious spite | ||
To see a new-made, earth-born favorite | John 8:44 | |
For their high seats and empty thrones designed. | ||
Therefore both against God and man combined | 150 | |
To hinder God’s decree from taking place | ||
And to divest man of his Maker’s grace, | ||
Which while he in a pure obedience stood | 1 Pet. 3:13 | |
They knew, not all their force nor cunning could, | ||
But if they could with any false pretense | 155 | |
Inveigle him to quit his innocence, | ||
They hoped death would prevent[85] the dreaded womb | ||
From when their happier successors must come. | ||
Wherefore th’accursèd sovereign of hell, | ||
Thinking no other devil could so well | 160 | |
Act this ill part, whose consequence was high | Gen. 3:1 etc. | |
Enough to engage his hateful majesty, | ||
Himself exposes for the common cause, | ||
And with his hellish kingdom’s full applause | ||
Goes forth, putting himself into disguise, | 165 | |
And so within a bright-scaled serpent lies, | ||
Folded about the fair forbidden tree, | ||
Watching a wished-for opportunity; | ||
Which Eve soon gave him, coming there alone[86] | ||
So to be first and easier overthrown; | 170 | |
On whose weak side th’assault had not been made | ||
Had she not from her firm protection strayed; | ||
But so the Devil then, so lewd men now | ||
Prevail, when women privacies allow,[87] | 2 Tim. 3:6 | |
And to those flattering whispers lend an ear | 175 | |
Which even impudence itself would fear | ||
To utter in the presence of a friend, | ||
Whose virtuous awe our frailty might defend. | ||
Though unexperience might excuse Eve’s fault, [233] | ||
Yet those who now give way to an assault, | 180 | |
By suffering it alone, none can exempt | ||
From the just blame that they their tempters tempt, | ||
And by vain confidence themselves betray, | ||
Fondly secure in a known desperate way. | ||
As Eve stood near the tree, the subtle beast, | 185 | |
By Satan moved, his speech to her addressed: | ||
“Hath God,” said he, “forbid that you should taste | ||
These pleasant fruits which in your eyes are placed? | ||
Why are the tempting boughs exposed if you | ||
May not delight your palates with your view?” | 190 | |
“God,” said the woman, “gives us liberty | ||
To eat without restraint of every tree | ||
Which in the garden grows, but only one; | ||
Restrained by such a prohibition,[88] | ||
We dare not touch it,[89] for whene’er we do | 195 | |
A certain death will our offense ensue.” | ||
Then did the wicked subtle beast reply: | ||
“Ah, simple wretch, you shall not surely die, | ||
God enviously to you this fruit denies. | ||
He knows that eating it will make you wise, | 200 | |
Of good and ill give you discerning sense, | ||
And raise you to a God-like excellence.” | ||
Eve, quickly caught in the foul hunter’s net, | ||
Believed that death was only a vain threat. | ||
Her unbelief, quenching religious dread, | 205 | |
Infectious counsel in her bosom bred, | ||
Dissatisfaction with her present state | ||
And fond ambition of a God-like height; | ||
Who now applies herself to its pursuit, | ||
With longing eyes looks on the lovely fruit, | 210 | |
First nicely plucks, then eats with full delight, | ||
And gratifies her murderous appetite. | ||
Poisoned with the sweet relish of her sin [234] | ||
Before her inward torturing pangs begin, | ||
The pleasure to her husband she commends, | 215 | |
And he by her persuasion too offends | ||
As by the serpent’s she before had done. | ||
Hence learn pernicious counselors to shun. | Proverbs 1:10 etc. | |
Within the snake the crafty tempter smiled | ||
To see mankind so easily beguiled; | 220 | |
But laugh not, Satan: God shall thee deride. | ||
The Son of God and Man shall scourge thy pride, | ||
And in the time of vengeance shall exact | 1 John 3:8 | |
A punishment on thee for this accurséd fact.[90] | John 16:11 | |
Now wrought the poison on the guilty pair, | 225 | |
Who with confusion on each other stare | ||
While death possession takes, and enters in | ||
At the wide breach laid open by their sin. | Romans 5:12 | |
Sound health and joy before th’intruder fled, | ||
Sickness and sorrow coming in their stead. | 230 | |
Their late sweet calm did now forever cease, | ||
Storms in all quarters drove away their peace; | ||
Dread, guilt, remorse in the benighted soul | Isaiah 48:22 | |
Like raging billows on each other roll; | ||
Death’s harbingers waste in each province make, | 235 | |
While thundering terrors man’s whole island shake. | ||
Within, without, disordered in the storm, | ||
The color fades and tremblings change the form, | ||
Heat melts their substance, cold their joints benumbs, | ||
Dull languishment their vigor overcomes. | 240 | |
Grief-conquered beauty lays down all her arms, | ||
And mightier woe dissolves her late-strong charms. | Psalm 39:11 | |
Shame doth their looks deject, no cheerful grace, | ||
No pleasant smiles, appear in their sad face, | ||
They see themselves fooled, cheated, and betrayed, | 245 | |
And naked in the view of Heaven made. | ||
No glory compasses the drooping head, | ||
The sight of their own ugliness they dread, | ||
And curtains of broad, thin fig-leaves devise | ||
To hide themselves from their own weeping eyes. | 250 | |
But ah! These coverings were too slight and thin | ||
To ward their shame off, or to keep out sin, | ||
Or the keen air’s quick-piercing shafts, which through | ||
Both leaves and pores into the bowels flew. | ||
While they remained in their pure innocence [235] | 255 | |
It was their robe of glory and defense; | ||
But when sin tore that mantle off, they found | ||
Their members were all naked, all uncrowned, | ||
Their purity in every place defiled, | ||
Their vest of righteousness all torn and spoiled. | 260 | |
Wherefore through guilt the late-loved light they shun, | ||
And into the obscurest shadow run; | Psalm 139:11 | |
But in no darkness can their quiet find, | ||
Carrying within them a disturbèd mind | ||
Which doth their cureless folly represent | 265 | |
And makes them curse their late experiment, | ||
Wishing they had been pure and ignorant still, | ||
Nor coveted the knowledge of their ill. | ||
Ah, thus it is that yet we learn our good, | ||
Till it be lost but seldom understood; | 270 | |
Rich blessings, while we have them, little prize | ||
Until their want[91] their value magnifies, | ||
And equally doth our remorse increase | ||
For having cast away such happiness. | ||
O wretched man! who at so dear a rate | 275 | |
Purchased the knowledge of his own frail state, | ||
Knowledge of small advantage to the wise | Ecclesiastes 1:18 | |
Which only their affliction multiplies, | ||
While they in painful study vex their brain, | ||
Pursuing what they never can attain | 280 | |
And what would not avail them if acquired, | ||
Till at the length, with fruitless labor tired, | ||
All that the learnèd and the wise can find | ||
Is but a vain disturbance of the mind, | ||
A sense of man’s inevitable woes | 285 | |
Which he but little feels who little knows. | ||
While mortals, holding on their error, still | ||
Pursue the knowledge both of good and ill, | Proverbs 1:7 | |
They neither of them perfectly attain | Psalm 111:10 | |
But in a dark tumultuous state remain; | 1 Cor. 1:20–21, 2:14 | |
Till sense of ill, increasing like night’s shade, | James 3:15–17 | 291 |
Or[92] hath a blot of good impressions made, | ||
Or good, victorious as the morning light, | ||
Triumph over the vanquished opposite: | ||
For both at once abide not in one place, | 295 | |
Good knowledge flies from them who ill embrace. | ||
So were our parents filled with guilt and fear [236] | ||
When in the groves they God’s approaches hear, | ||
And from the terror of his presence fled; | ||
Whether their own convictions caused their dread, | 300 | |
For inward guilt of conscience might suffice | ||
To chase vile sinners from his purer eyes;[93] | ||
Or nature felt an angry God’s descent | ||
Which shook the earth, and tore the firmament; | ||
We are not told, nor will too far inquire.[94] | 305 | |
Lightnings and tempests might speak forth his ire; | ||
For at the day of universal doom | ||
The great Judge shall in flaming vengeance come, | ||
An all-consuming fire shall go before, | ||
Whirlwinds and thunder shall about him roar, | Psalm 97:3–4 | 310 |
Horror shall darken the whole troubled skies | Isaiah 9:5, 66:15–16 | |
And bloody veils shall hide the world’s bright eyes, | 2 Thes. 1:8 | |
While stars from the dissolving heaven drop down | 2 Pet. 3:12 | |
And funeral blazes every turret crown. | ||
The clouds shall be confounded with the waves, | Rev. 1:7 | 315 |
The yawning earth shall open all her graves, | Joel 3:15–16 | |
Loud fragors[95] shall firm rocks in sunder rend, | ||
Cleft mountains shall hell’s fiery jaws distend, | Matt. 24:29 | |
Vomiting cinders, sulphur, pitch, and flame, | ||
Which shall consume the world’s unjointed[96] frame | 320 | |
And turn the paradises we admire | ||
Into an ever-boiling lake of fire. | Rev. 19:20 | |
But God then in his rich grace did delay | ||
These dismal terrors till the last great day. | ||
Yet even his first approach created dread | 325 | |
And the poor mortals from his anger fled | ||
Until a calmer voice their sense did greet. | ||
Love even when it chides is kind and sweet. | Hebrews 12:11 | |
The sense of wrath far from the feared power drives, | ||
The sense of love brings home the fugitives. | Ps. 89:31–33 | 330 |
Souls flying God into despair next fall, | ||
Thence into hate, till black hell close up all. [237] | Gen. 4:14[97] | |
But if sweet mercy meet them on the way,[98] | Acts 9 | |
That milder voice first doth their mad flight stay | ||
And their ill-quitted hope again restore, | Ps. 130:7, 4 | 335 |
Then love that was forsaking them before | ||
Returns with a more flaming strong desire | ||
Of those sweet joys from which it did retire, | ||
And in their absence woe and terror found, | Lamentations 3:1 etc. | |
And all those plagues that can a poor soul wound. | 340 | |
While thus this love with holy ardor burns, | ||
The bleeding sinner to his God returns | ||
And prostrate at his throne of grace doth lie, | Matt. 27:46 | |
If death he cannot shun, yet there to die | Job 13:15 | |
Where mercy still doth fainting souls revive | Hos. 6:1–3 | 345 |
And in its kind embraces keep alive | ||
A gentler fire than what it lately felt | ||
Under the sense of wrath. The soul doth melt | ||
Like precious ore, which when men would refine | ||
Doth in its liquefaction brightly shine; | 350 | |
In cleansing penitential meltings so | ||
Foul sinners once again illustrious[99] grow, | ||
When Christ’s all-heating, softening spirit hath | Mal. 3:2–3 | |
Their furnace been, and his pure blood their bath. | Rev. 1:5 | |
Now though God’s wrath bring not the sinner home, | 355 | |
Who only by sweet love attracted come, | ||
Yet is it necessary that the sense | Romans 12:1 | |
Of it should make us know the excellence | John 16:9–10 | |
And taste the pleasantness of pardoning grace, | Matt. 11:28 | |
That we may it with fuller joy embrace; | 360 | |
Which, when it brings a frightened wretch from hell, | ||
Makes it love more than those who never fell; | Luke 7:47 | |
But mankind’s love to God grows by degrees | 1 John 4:10 | |
As he more clearly God’s sweet mercy sees, | ||
And God at first reveals not all his grace | 365 | |
That men more ardently may seek his face, | ||
Averted by their folly and their pride, | ||
Which makes them their confounded faces hide. | ||
As still the sun’s the same behind the clouds, | ||
Such is God’s love, which his kind anger shrouds, | Lam. 3:22–23 | 370 |
Which doth not all at once itself reveal [238] | ||
But first in the thick shadows that conceal | ||
Its glory doth attenuation cause; | ||
Then the black, dismal curtain softly draws | Lam. 3:26, 29 etc. | |
And lets some glimmering light of hope appear, | 375 | |
Which rather is a lessening of our fear | Hosea 2:15 | |
Than an assurance of our joy and peace, | ||
A truce with misery, rather than release. | ||
Thus had not God come in, mankind had died | ||
Without repair; yet came he first to chide, | 380 | |
To urge[100] their sin, with its sad consequence, | ||
And make them feel the weight of their offense, | ||
To examine and arraign them at his bar[101] | ||
And show them what vile criminals they were. | ||
But ah! Our utterance here is choked with woe; | 385 | |
With tardy steps from Paradise we go. | ||
Then let us pause on our lost joys a while | ||
Before we enter on our sad exile. |
Canto 5
Sad nature’s sighs gave the alarms,[102] | ||
And all her frightened hosts stood to their arms, | ||
Waiting whom the great Sovereign would employ | ||
His all-deserted rebels to destroy, | ||
When God descended out of Heaven above | Gen. 3:8 | 5 |
His disobedient viceroy to remove. | ||
Yet, though himself had seen the forfeiture | ||
Which distance could not from his eyes obscure, | ||
To teach his future substitutes how they | ||
Should judgments execute in a right way, | 10 | |
He would not unexamined facts[103] condemn, [239] | 2 Sam. 23:3 | |
Nor punish sinners without hearing them; | ||
Therefore cites to his bar the criminals, | ||
And Adam first out of his covert[104] calls. | ||
“Where art thou, Adam?” the Almighty said. | 15 | |
“Here, Lord,” the trembling sinner answer made, | ||
“Amongst the trees I in the garden heard | ||
Thy voice and, being naked, was afeared, | ||
Nor durst I so thy purer sight abide; | ||
Therefore myself did in this shelter hide.” | 20 | |
“Hast thou,” said God, “eat[105] the forbidden tree, | ||
Or who declared thy nakedness to thee?” | ||
“She,” answered Adam, “whom thou didst create | ||
To be my helper and associate | ||
Gave me the fatal fruit, and I did eat.” | 25 | |
Then Eve was also called from her retreat. | ||
“Woman, what hast thou done?” th’Almighty said. | Gen. 3:13 | |
“Lord,” answered she, “the serpent me betrayed | ||
And I did eat.” Thus did they both confess | ||
Their guilt, and vainly sought to make it less | 30 | |
By such extenuations as, well weighed, | ||
The sin, so circumstanced, more sinful made — | ||
A course which still half-softened sinners use: | ||
Transferring blame their own faults to excuse, | ||
They care not how, nor where; and oftentimes | 35 | |
On God himself obliquely charge their crimes, | ||
Expostulating in their discontent | Romans 9:19 | |
As if he caused what he did not prevent; | Ezekiel 18:2 | |
Which Adam wickedly implies, when he | James 1:13–15 | |
Cries, “’Twas the woman that thou gavest me;” | 40 | |
Oft-times make that the Devil’s guilt alone | ||
Which was as well and equally their own. | ||
His lies could never have prevailed on Eve | ||
But that she wished them truth and did believe | ||
A forgery that suited her desire, | 45 | |
Whose haughty heart was prone enough to aspire. | ||
The tempting and the urging was his ill, | ||
But the compliance was in her own will. | ||
And herein truly lies the difference | ||
Of natural and gracious penitence: | 50 | |
The first transferreth and extenuates | ||
The guilt, which the other owns and aggravates. | Psalms 51:3–5, 32:5 | |
While sin is but regarded slight and small [240] | ||
It makes the value of rich mercy fall; | ||
But as our crimes seem greater in our eyes, | 55 | |
So doth our grateful sense of pardon rise. | 1 John 1:8–10 | |
Poor mankind at God’s righteous bar was cast | ||
And set for judgment by, when at the last | ||
Satan within the serpent had his doom, | ||
Whose execrable malice left no room | 60 | |
For plea or pardon, but was sentenced first: | ||
“Thou,” said the Lord, “above all beasts accursed, | ||
Shalt on thy belly creep, on dust shalt feed; | ||
Between thee and the woman, and her seed | ||
And thine, I will put lasting enmity; | 1 Pet. 5:8 | 65 |
Thou in this war his heel shalt bruise, but he | ||
Thy head shall break.” More various mystery | ||
Ne’er did within so short a sentence lie.[106] | Matt. 13:25 | |
Here is irrevocable vengeance, here | Jude 6 | |
Love as immutable. Here doth appear | Mal. 13:25 | 70 |
Infinite wisdom plotting with free grace, | Zac. 6:13 | |
Even by man’s fall, th’advance of human race. | 1 Cor. 2:9 | |
Severity here utterly confounds, | Romans 11:22 | |
Here mercy cures by kind and gentle wounds; | ||
The Father here the Gospel first reveals, | 75 | |
Here fleshly veils th’eternal Son conceals. | Isaiah 7:14 | |
The law of life and spirit here takes place, | Romans 8:2–4 | |
Given with the promise of assisting grace. | Acts 13:10 | |
Here is an oracle foretelling all | Matt. 3:7 | |
Which shall the two opposèd seeds befall. | Psalm 22:30 | 80 |
The great war hath its first beginning here, | Jer. 31:22 | |
Carried along more than five thousand year | Eph. 6:12 | |
With various success on either side, | John 8:44 | |
And each age with new combatants supplied. | Jude 9, Gen. 6:2, 4–5 | |
Two sovereign champions here we find, | Heb. 2:10 | 85 |
Satan and Christ contending for mankind. | Acts 5:31, Eph. 2:2 | |
Two empires here, two opposite cities rise, [241] | John 15:18–19 | |
Dividing all in two societies: | ||
The little Church and the world’s larger State, | Luke 12:32 | |
Pursuing it with ceaseless spite and hate. | Ps. 105:12–15 | 90 |
Each party here erecting their own walls, | ||
As one advances, so the other falls. | ||
Hope in the promise the weak Church confirms, | Isaiah 9:6–7 | |
Hell and the world fight upon desperate terms. | ||
By this most certain oracle they know | Rev. 12:12 | 95 |
Their war must end in final overthrow. | ||
Some little present mischief they may do, | John 16:30, 20 | |
And this with eager malice they pursue. | ||
The angels whom God’s justice did divide | Matt. 10:34 | |
Engage their mighty powers on either side: | Ps. 2:1 | 100 |
Hell’s gloomy princes the world’s rulers made, | Rev. 12:7–9 | |
Heaven’s unseen host the Church’s guard and aid; | Daniel 10:13, 21 | |
Till the frail woman’s conquering Son shall tread | Psalm 104:4 | |
Beneath his feet the serpent’s broken head. | Rom. 16:20 | |
Though God the speech to man’s false foe address, | 105 | |
The words rich grace to fallen man express, | ||
Which God will not to him himself declare | ||
Till he implore it by submissive prayer; | Ps. 50:15 | |
Sufficient ’tis to know a latitude | Isaiah 41:9 | |
For hope, which doth no penitent exclude. | Ps. 130:4 | 110 |
Had death’s sad sentence passed on man before | Luke 1:74 | |
The promise of that seed which should restore | Gal. 3:8, 16 | |
His fallen state, destroying death and sin, | 1 Cor. 15:54, 57 | |
Cureless as Satan’s had his misery been. | ||
But though free grace did future help provide, | 115 | |
Yet must he present loss and woe abide | 1 Cor. 3:15 | |
And feel the bitter curse, that he may so | ||
The sweet release of saving mercy know. | Gen. 3:13 | |
Prepared with late-indulgèd hope, on Eve | Gen. 3:16 etc. | |
Th’Almighty next did gentler sentence give. | 120 | |
“I will,” said he, “greatly augment thy woes | ||
And thy conceptions, which with painful throes | ||
Thou shalt bring forth, yet shall they be to thee | ||
But a successive crop of misery. | ||
Thy husband shall thy ruler be, whose sway | 125 | |
Thou shalt with passionate desires obey.” [242] [107] | ||
Alas! How sadly to this day we find | ||
Th’effect of this dire curse on womankind; | ||
Eve sinned in fruit forbid, and God requires | ||
Her penance in the fruit of her desires. | 130 | |
When first to men their inclinations move, | ||
How are they tortured with distracting love![108] | Gen. 39:7 | |
What disappointments find they in the end, | ||
Constant uneasinesses which attend | 134 | |
The best condition of the wedded state, | 1 Cor. 7:34, 39–40 | |
Giving all wives sense of the curse’s weight, | 1 Pet. 3:5 | |
Which makes them ease and liberty refuse, | ||
And with strong passion their own shackles choose. | ||
Now though they easier under wise rule prove, | ||
And every burden is made light by love, | Gen. 29:20 | 140 |
Yet golden fetters, soft-lined yokes,[109] still be | ||
Though gentler curbs, but curbs of liberty, | ||
As well as the harsh tyrant’s iron yoke; | ||
More sorely galling them whom they provoke | ||
To loathe their bondage and despise the rule | 145 | |
Of an unmanly, fickle, froward[110] fool. | 1 Sam. 25:25 | |
Whate’er the husbands be, they covet fruit, | Gen. 30:1, 35:18 | |
And their own wishes to their sorrows contribute. | ||
How painfully the fruit within them grows, | Matt. 24:19 | |
What tortures do their ripened births disclose, | 150 | |
How great, how various, how uneasy are | ||
The breeding-sicknesses, pangs that prepare | ||
The violent openings of life’s narrow door, | John 16:21 | |
Whose fatal issues we as oft deplore! | ||
What weaknesses, what languishments ensue, | 155 | |
Scattering dead lilies where fresh roses grew. | ||
What broken rest afflicts the careful nurse, | ||
Extending to the breasts the mother’s curse, | ||
Which ceases not when there her milk she dries, | ||
The froward child draws new streams from her eyes. | 160 | |
How much more bitter anguish do we find | ||
Laboring to raise up virtue in the mind | ||
Than when the members in our bowels grew; [243] | ||
What sad abortions, what cross births ensue; | Prov. 10:1 | |
What monsters, what unnatural vipers come | 165 | |
Eating their passage through their parent’s womb; | Prov. 15:20 | |
How are the tortures of their births renewed, | ||
Unrecompensed with love and gratitude. | ||
Even the good, who would our cares requite, | ||
Would be our crowns, joys, pillars, and delight, | 170 | |
Affect us yet with other griefs and fears, | ||
Opening the sluices of our ne’er dried tears. | ||
Death, danger, sickness, losses, and the ill | Luke 2:48, 35 | |
That on the children falls, the mothers feel, | Matt. 2:18 | |
Repeating with worse pangs the pangs that bore | 175 | |
Them into life; and though some may have more | ||
Of sweet and gentle mixture, some of worse, | ||
Yet every mother’s cup tastes of the curse, | ||
And when the heavy load her faint heart tires, | ||
Makes her too oft repent her fond desires. | Gen. 27:46 | 180 |
Now last of all, as Adam last had been | ||
Drawn into the prevaricating[111] sin, | ||
His sentence came: “Because that thou didst yield,” | Gen. 3:17 | |
Said God, “to thy enticing wife, the field, | ||
Producing briars and fruitless thorns to thee, | 185 | |
Accursèd for thy sake and sins shall be. | ||
Thy careful brows in constant toils shall sweat, | ||
Thus thou thy bread shalt all thy whole life eat | ||
Till thou return into the earth’s vast womb, | ||
Whence, taken first, thou didst a man become; | 190 | |
For dust thou art, and dust again shalt be | ||
When life’s declining spark goes out in thee.” | Prov. 103:14, 104:29 | |
In all these sentences we strangely find | ||
God’s admirable love to lost mankind; | ||
Who, though he never will his word recall | 195 | |
Or let his threats like shafts at random fall, | ||
Yet can his wisdom order curses so | ||
That blessings may out of their bowels flow. | ||
Thus death the door of lasting life became, | 2 Cor. 4:6 | |
Dissolving nature to rebuild her frame | 200 | |
On such a sure foundation as shall break | 2 Tim. 1:10 | |
All the attempts hell’s cursèd empire make. | ||
Thus God revenged man’s quarrel on his foe, | ||
To whom th’Almighty would no mercy show, | ||
Making his reign, his respite, and success, | Luke 18:7–8 | 205 |
All augmentations of his cursedness. [244] | ||
Thus gave he us a powerful chief and head, | Zac. 9:10–12 | |
By whom we shall be out of bondage led, | ||
And made the penalties of our offense | ||
Precepts and rules of new obedience, | 210 | |
Fitted in all things to our fallen state | Matt. 11:29–30 | |
Under sweet promises that ease their weight. | ||
Our first injunction is to hate and fly | ||
The flatteries of our first grand enemy; | Prov. 1:10 etc. | |
To have no friendship with his cursèd race, | 215 | |
The interest of the opposite seed t’embrace, | Eph. 5:11 | |
Where though we toil in fights, though bruised we be, | 1 Tim. 6:12 | |
Yet shall our combat end in victory, | Jude 3 | |
Eternal glory healing our slight wound | Rev. 2:10 | |
When all our labors are with triumph crowned. | Micah 7:6–17 | 220 |
The next command is, mothers should maintain | ||
Posterity, not frightened with the pain, | ||
Which, though it make us mourn under the sense | ||
Of the first mother’s disobedience, | ||
Yet hath a promise that thereby she shall | 1 Tim. 2:16 | 225 |
Recover all the hurt of her first fall | ||
When, in mysterious manner, from her womb | Isaiah 9:6[112] | |
Her father, brother, husband, son shall come. | Heb. 2:12–13 | |
Subjection to the husband’s rule enjoined | ||
In the next place — that yoke with love is lined, | Eph. 5:25 etc. | 230 |
Love too a precept made, where God requires | Luke 1:35 | |
We should perform our duties with desires; | 1 Peter 3:1–2 | |
And promises t’incline our averse will, | ||
Whose satisfaction takes away the ill | ||
Of every toil and every suffering | 235 | |
That can from unenforced submission spring. | ||
The last command God with man’s curse did give | ||
Was that men should in honest callings live, | ||
Eating their own bread, fruit of their own sweat, | ||
Nor feed like drones on that which others get. | 1 Thes. 4:11–12 | 240 |
And this command a promise doth imply | ||
That bread should recompense our industry. | 2 Thes. 3:12 | |
One mercy more his sentence did include, | ||
That mortal toils, faintings and lassitude | Rev. 14:13 | |
Should not beyond death’s fixèd bound extend, | 245 | |
But there in everlasting quiet end. [245] | Matt. 10:28 | |
When men out of the troubled air depart, | ||
And to their first material dust revert, | Job 3:17–19 | |
The utmost power that death or woe can have | Eccl. 3:20 | |
Is but to shut us prisoners in the grave, | 250 | |
Bruising the flesh, that heel whereon we tread; | ||
But we shall trample on the serpent’s head. | 1 Thes. 4:14 | |
Our scattered atoms shall again condense, | ||
And be again inspired with living sense; | Isa. 26:19 | |
Captivity shall then a captive be, | 255 | |
Death shall be swallowed up in victory, | Job 19:26–27 | |
And God shall man to Paradise restore, | 1 Cor. 15:20–22, 26, 54–57 | |
Where the foul tempter shall seduce no more. | Acts 2:24 | |
How far our parents, whose sad eyes were fixed | ||
On woe and terror, saw the mercy mixed | Ps. 68:18 | 260 |
We can but make a wild, uncertain guess,[113] | ||
As we are now affected in distress, | ||
Who less regard the mitigation still | Isaiah 43:2 etc. | |
Than the slight smart of our afflicting ill; | 1 Pet. 4:12–13 | |
And while we groan under the hated yoke, | 265 | |
Our gratitude for its soft lining choke. | Jer. 30:11 etc. | |
But God, having th’amazèd sinners doomed, | Mic. 7:18–19 | |
Put off the judge’s frown and reassumed | ||
A tender father’s kind and melting face, | Isaiah 49:15 | |
Opening his gracious arms for new embrace, | Jer. 31:20 | 270 |
Taught them to expiate their heinous guilt | Psalm 50:5 | |
By spotless sacrifice and pure blood spilt, | 1 Pet. 1:19 | |
Which, done in faith, did their faint hearts sustain | Heb. 11:4 | |
Till the intended Lamb of God was slain, | Daniel 9:26–27 | |
Whose death, whose merit, and whose innocence | John 1:29 | 275 |
The forfeit paid and blotted out th’offense. | Ps. 40:6–7 | |
The skins of the slain beasts God vestures made[114] | 1 John 2:2 | |
Wherein the naked sinners were arrayed, | Rev. 1:5 etc., 9–10 | |
Not without mystery, which typified | Rev. 5:10, 19 | |
That righteousness that doth our foul shame hide. | Col. 2:14 | 280 |
As when a rotting patient must endure | Ps. 32:1–2 | |
Painful excisions to effect his cure, | Rev. 19:8 | |
His spirits we with cordials fortify, | Rom. 3:22, 13–14 | |
Lest, unsupported, he should faint and die, [246] | Gal. 3:27 | |
So with our parents the Almighty dealt; | Zac. 3:4–5 | 285 |
Before their necessary woes they felt, | ||
Their feeble souls rich promises upheld | Deut. 33:27 | |
And their deliverance was in types revealed. | ||
Even their bodies God himself did arm | ||
With clothes that kept them from the weather’s harm. | Matt. 6:30 | 290 |
But after all, they must be driven away, | Ps. 89:32–34 | |
Nor in their forfeit Paradise must stay. | ||
Then said the Lord with holy irony, | Gen. 3:22 | |
Whence man the folly of his pride might see, | ||
“The earthy man like one of us is grown, | 295 | |
To whom, as God, both good and ill is known. | ||
Now lest he also eat of th’other tree, | ||
Whose fruit gives life, and an immortal be, | ||
Let us by just and timely banishment | ||
His further sinful arrogance prevent.” | 300 | |
Then did he them out of the garden chase | ||
And set a cherubim to guard the place, | ||
Who waved a flaming sword before the door | ||
Through which the wretches must return no more. | ||
May we not liken to this sword of flame | 305 | |
The threatening law which from Mount Sinai came | Heb. 12:7, 12:18–21 | |
With such thick flashes of prodigious fire | ||
As made the mountains shake and men retire, | ||
Forbidding them all forward hope that they | ||
Could enter into life that dreadful way? | 310 | |
What’er it was, whate’er it signifies, | ||
It kept our parents out of Paradise, | ||
Who now, returning to their place of birth, | ||
Found themselves strangers in their native earth. | ||
Their fatal breach of God’s most strict command | 1 Pet. 2:11 | 315 |
Had there dissolved all concord, the sweet band | Heb. 11:13 | |
Of universal loveliness and peace, | Ps. 39:12 | |
And now the calm in every part did cease. | ||
Love, though immutable, its smiles did shroud | ||
Under the dark veil of an angry cloud, | Rev. 3:19 | 320 |
And while he seemed withdrawn whose grace upheld | ||
The order of all things, confusion filled | Psalm 75:3 | |
The universe. The air became impure | ||
And frequent dreadful conflicts did endure | ||
With every other angry element; | 325 | |
The whirling fires its tender body rent. | ||
From earth and seas gross vapors did arise, | ||
Turned to prodigious meteors in the skies; | ||
The blustering winds let loose their furious rage [247] | ||
And in their battles did the floods engage. | Ps. 107:25–27 | 330 |
The sun confounded was with nature’s shame | ||
And the pale moon shrunk in her sickly flame; | Jude 5:20 | |
The rude congressions[115] of the angry stars | ||
In heaven begun the universal wars, | ||
While their malicious influence from above | 335 | |
On earth did various perturbations move. | ||
Droughts, inundations, blastings killed the plants; | ||
Worse influence wrought on th’inhabitants, | ||
Inspiring lust, rage, ravenous appetite, | Ps. 78:45–48 | |
Which made the creatures in all regions fight. | 340 | |
The little insects in great clouds did rise | ||
And, in battalions spread, obscured the skies; | ||
Armies of birds encountered in the air, | ||
With hideous cries deciding battles there; | ||
The birds of prey, to gorge their appetite, | 345 | |
Seized harmless fowl in their unwary flight. | ||
When the dim evening had shut in the day, | ||
Troops of wild beasts, all marching out for prey, | ||
To the resistless[116] flocks would go, and there | Ps. 104:20–22 | |
Oft-times by other troops assailèd were, | 350 | |
Who snatched out of their jaws the new-slain food | ||
And made them purchase it again with blood. | ||
Thus sin the whole Creation did divide | ||
Into th’oppressing and the suffering side. | ||
Those, still employing craft and violence | 355 | |
T’ensnare and murder simple innocence, | ||
True emblems were of Satan’s craft and power | ||
In daily ambuscado[117] to devour; | 1 Pet. 5:8 | |
Nor only emblems were, but organs too, | Rev. 12:8, 12 | |
In and by whom he did his mischiefs do, | 360 | |
While persecuting cruelty and rage | ||
Them in his cursèd party did engage. | ||
Love, meekness, patience, gentleness, combined | ||
The tamer brood with those of their own kind; | ||
Wherefore God chose them for his sacrifice | 365 | |
When he the proud and mighty did despise, | ||
And his most certain oracles declare | Romans 8:20–21 | |
They man’s restorèd peace at last shall share. | ||
But to our parents then, sad was the change [248] | Isaiah 11:7, 65:25 | |
Which them from peace and safety did estrange, | 370 | |
Brought universal woe and discord in, | ||
The never-failing consequents of sin; | Isaiah 57:20–21 | |
Nor only made all things without them jar, | Eph. 2:12–14 | |
But in their breasts raised up a civil war. | ||
Reason and sense maintained continual fight, | 375 | |
Urging th’aversion and the appetite, | ||
Which led two different troops of passions out, | ||
Confounding all in their tumultuous rout. | ||
The less world with the great proportion held. | ||
As winds the caverns, sighs the bosoms filled, | 380 | |
So flowing tears did beauty’s fair fields drown, | ||
As inundations kept within no bound. | ||
Fear earthquakes made, lust in the fancy whirled, | ||
Turned into flame and, bursting, fired the world; | ||
Spite, hate, revenge, ambition, avarice | 385 | |
Made innocence a prey to monstrous vice. | ||
The cold and hot diseases represent | ||
The perturbations of the element. | ||
Thus woe and danger had beset them round, | ||
Distressed without, within no comfort found. | 390 | |
Even as a monarch’s favorite in disgrace | ||
Suffers contempt both from the high and base,[118] | ||
And the most abject most insult o’er them | ||
Whom the offended sovereigns condemn; | ||
So after man th’Almighty disobeyed, | 395 | |
Each little fly durst his late king invade | ||
As well as the wood’s monsters, wolves and bears, | ||
And all things else that exercise his fears. | ||
Methinks I hear sad Eve in some dark vale | ||
Her woeful state with such sad plaints bewail: | 400 | |
“Ah! Why doth death its latest stroke delay? | ||
If we must leave the light, why do we stay | ||
By slow degrees more painfully to die | ||
And languish in a long calamity?[119] | ||
Have we not lost by one false cheating sin | 405 | |
All peace without, all sweet repose within? | ||
Is there a pleasure yet that life can show? | ||
Doth not each moment multiply our woe, [249] | ||
And while we live thus in perpetual dread, | ||
Our hope and comfort long before us dead, | 410 | |
Why should we not our angry Maker pray | Job 3 | |
At once to take our wretched lives away? | Jonah 4:3 | |
Hath not our sin all nature’s pure leagues rent | ||
And armed against us every element? | ||
Have not our subjects their allegiance broke? | 415 | |
Doth not each worm scorn our unworthy yoke? | ||
Are we not half with griping hunger pined | ||
Before we bread amongst the brambles find? | ||
All pale diseases in our members reign, | ||
Anguish and grief no less our sick souls pain. | 420 | |
Wherever I my eyes or thoughts convert,[120] | ||
Each object adds new tortures to my heart. | ||
If I look up, I dread Heaven’s threatening frown; | ||
Thorns prick my eyes when shame hath cast them down; | ||
Dangers I see, looking on either hand; | 425 | |
Before me all in fighting posture stand. | ||
If I cast back my sorrow-drownèd eyes, | ||
I see our ne’er to be recovered Paradise, | ||
The flaming sword which doth us thence exclude, | ||
By sad remorse and ugly guilt pursued. | 430 | |
If I on thee a private glance reflect, | ||
Confusion doth my shameful eyes deject, | ||
Seeing the man I love by me betrayed, | ||
By me, who for his mutual help was made, | ||
Who to preserve thy life ought to have died, | 435 | |
And I have killed thee by my foolish pride, | ||
Defiled thy glory and pulled down thy throne. | ||
O that I had but sinned and died alone! | ||
Then had my torture and my woe been less, | ||
I yet had flourished in thy happiness.” | 440 | |
If these words Adam’s melting soul did move, | ||
He might reply with kind rebuking love: | ||
“Cease, cease, O foolish woman, to dispute, | ||
God’s sovereign will and power are absolute. | Ps. 115:3 | |
If he will have us soon or slow to die, | 445 | |
Frail worms must yield, but must not question why. | Rom. 9:20–23 | |
When his great hand appears, we must conclude | ||
All that he doth is wise and just and good. | Ps. 119:68 | |
Though our poor, sin-benighted souls are blind, | Rom. 3:4 | |
Nor can the mysteries of his wisdom find, [250] | Ps. 51:4 | 450 |
Yet in our present case we must confess | Gen. 18:25 | |
His justice and our own unrighteousness. | ||
He warned us of this fatal consequence, | ||
That death must wait on disobedience; | Rom. 6:23 | |
Yet we despised his threat and broke his law, | 455 | |
So did destruction on our own heads draw. | ||
Now under his afflicting hand we lie, | ||
Reaping the fruit of our iniquity; | ||
Which, had not he prevented when we fell, | ||
At once had plunged us in the lowest hell. | Gen. 6:3 | 460 |
But by his mercy yet we have reprieve, | 1 Pet. 3:20 | |
And yet are showed how we in death may live, | ||
If we improve our short-indulgèd space | ||
To understand, prize, and accept his grace. | John 11:25 | |
Did all of us[121] at once like brutes expire | 465 | |
And cease to be, we might quick death desire. | ||
But since our chief and immaterial part, | ||
Not framed of dust, doth not to dust revert, | ||
Its death not an annihilation is, | ||
But to be cut off from its supreme bliss; | Matt. 25:41, 46 | 470 |
Whatever here to mortals can befall | ||
Compared to future miseries is small. | Luke 16:21–22 | |
The saddest, sharpest, and the longest have | ||
Their final consummations in the grave; | Matt. 10:28 | |
These have their intermissions and allays, | 475 | |
Though black and gloomy ones, these nights have days. | ||
The worst calamities we here endure | Psalm 130:1 | |
Admit a possibility of cure. | ||
Our miseries here are varied in their kind, | Ps. 107 | |
And in that change the wretched some ease find. | 480 | |
Sleep here our painèd senses stupefies | Isaiah 29:8 | |
And cheating streams in our sick fancies rise. | ||
But in our future sufferings ’tis not so, | ||
There is no end, no intermitted woe, | ||
No more return from the accursèd place, | Luke 16:26 | 485 |
No hope, no possibility of grace, | ||
No sleepy intervals, no pleasant dreams, | ||
No mitigations of those sad extremes, | ||
No gentle mixtures, no soft changes there, | Rom. 2:8–9 | |
Perpetual tortures heightened with despair, | Jude 13 | 490 |
Eternal horror and eternal night, | Matt. 13:50 | |
Eternal burnings with no glance of light, | Luke 16:24 | |
Eternal pain. O, ’tis a thought too great, [251] | Matt. 8:12, 22, 14 | |
Too terrible, for any to repeat | ||
Who have not ’scaped the dread. Let’s not to shun | Rev. 19:20 | 495 |
Heaven’s scorching rays, into hell’s furnace run; | Hos. 13:9, Rom. 3:16 | |
But having slain ourselves, let’s fly to him | Ps. 103–104 | |
Who only can our souls from death redeem. | ||
To undo what’s done is not within our power, | ||
No more than to call back the last fled hour. | 500 | |
To think we can our fallen state restore, | ||
Or without hope our ruin to deplore, | ||
Are equal aggravating crimes; the first | ||
Repeats that sin for which we were accursed, | Eph. 2:4, 6–10 | |
While we with foolish arrogating pride | 505 | |
More in ourselves than in our God confide; | Rom. 3:27 | |
The last is both ungrateful and unjust | ||
That doth his goodness or his power distrust, | ||
Which whereso’er we look, without, within, | ||
Above, beneath, in every place is seen. | 510 | |
Doth Heaven frown? Above the sullen shrouds | Ps. 36:5–6 | |
God sits, and sees through all the blackest clouds | ||
Sin casts about us, like the misty night, | ||
Which hides his pleasing glances from our sight; | Isaiah 44:22, Lam. | |
Nor only sees, but darts on us his beams, | 3:44, 31–32, 25 | 515 |
Ministering comfort in our worst extremes. | ||
When lightnings fly, dire storm and thunder roars, | Job 37:11–13 | |
He guides the shafts, the serene calm restores. | ||
When shadows occupy day’s vacant room, | Isaiah 40:1–2, 57:18–19 | |
He makes new glory spring from night’s dark womb. | 520 | |
When the black prince of air lets loose the winds, | ||
The furious warriors he in prison binds. | John 14:18 | |
If burning stars do conflagrations threat, | ||
He gives the cool breezes to allay the heat. | Isaiah 25:4 | |
When cold doth in its rigid season reign, | Ps. 78:16–17 | 525 |
He melts the snows and thaws the air again; | Ps. 30:5 | |
Restoring the vicissitude of things, | Luke 8:24–25, Isaiah 27:8, | |
He still new good from every evil brings. | 4:6, Cant. 2:11–12, Gen. 8:22 | |
He holds together the world’s shaken frame, | Ps. 147:17–18, Isaiah 45:6–8 | |
Ordaining every change, is still the same. | Ps. 75:3 | 530 |
If he permit the elements to fight, | James 1:17 | |
The rage of storms, the blackness of the night, | Ps. 102:26–27 | |
’Tis that his power, love, and wisdom may | Mal. 3:6 | |
More glory have, restoring calm and day; | Isaiah 54:6–10 | |
That we may more the pleasant blessings prize, | Jer. 31:35–36 | 535 |
Laid in the balance with their contraries. | ||
Though dangers, then, like gaping monsters stand | 2 Cor. 4:17 | |
Ready to swallow us on either hand, [252] | Isaiah 54:6–10 | |
Let us despise them, firm in this faith still, | ||
If God will save, they can nor hurt nor kill; | Ps. 46:1–2 | 540 |
If by his just permission we are slain, | ||
His power can heal and quicken us again. | Isaiah 8:9–14 | |
If briars and thorns which from our sins arise, | ||
Looking on earth, pierce through our guilty eyes, | Isaiah 51:11 etc. | |
Let’s yet give thanks they have not choked the seed | 545 | |
Which should with better fruit our sad lives feed. | Gen. 50:20 | |
If discord set the inward world on fire, | 2 Sam. 17:14 | |
With haste let’s to the living spring retire, | Esther 5:14, 6:13, 7:10 | |
There quench and quiet the disturbèd soul, | ||
There on love’s sweet refreshing green banks roll, | 550 | |
Where, ecstasied with joy, we shall not feel | Ezekiel 37:1 etc. | |
The serpent’s little nibblings at our heel. | ||
If we look back on Paradise, late lost, | Isaiah 19:22 | |
Joys vanished like swift dreams, thawed like a frost, | Jer. 30:17 | |
Converting pleasant walks to dirt and mire, | Acts 14:17 | 555 |
Would we such frail delights again desire, | John 7:37–38 | |
Which at their best, however excellent, | Ps. 23:1–2, 6–7 | |
Had this defect, they were not permanent? | Col. 3:1–2 | |
If sin, remorse, and guilt give us the chase, | Ps. 107:33–36 | |
Let us lie close in mercy’s sweet embrace, | 1 Cor. 7:31, Eccl. 1:2 | |
Which when it us ashamed and naked found, | 2 Cor. 4:18 | 561 |
In the soft arms of melting pity bound, | Rev. 3:18, 20 | |
Eternal glorious triumphs did prepare, | Ps. 32:1–2 | |
Armed us with clothes against the wounding air, | ||
By expiating sacrifices taught | 1 John 2:25 | 565 |
How new life shall by death to light be brought. | ||
If we before us look, although we see | ||
All things in present fighting posture be; | ||
Yet in the promise we a prospect have | ||
Of victory swallowing up the empty grave; | 1 Cor. 15:54–55, 26 | |
Our foes all vanquished, death itself lies dead, | 571 | |
And we shall trample on the monster’s head, | Hos. 13:14 | |
Entering into a new and perfect joy | Rom. 16:20 | |
Which neither sin nor sorrow can destroy — | Matt. 25:21 | |
A lasting and refined felicity, | Rev. 20:4 | 575 |
For which even we ourselves refined must be. | Mal. 3:2–3 | |
Then shall we laugh at our now childish woes | Col. 1:12 | |
And hug the birth that issues from these throes. | John 16:21–22 | |
Let not my share of grief afflict thy mind, | ||
But let me comfort in thy courage find; | 580 | |
’Twas not thy malice, but thy ignorance | ||
That lately my destruction did advance; | ||
Nor can I my own self excuse; ’twas I [253] | ||
Undid myself by my facility. | ||
Let’s not in vain each other now upbraid, | 585 | |
But rather strive to afford each other aid, | ||
And our most gracious Lord with due thanks bless, | ||
Who hath not left us single in distress. | ||
When fear chills thee, my hope shall make thee warm, | ||
When I grow faint, thou shalt my courage arm; | 590 | |
When both our spirits at a low ebb are, | ||
We both will join in mutual fervent prayer | ||
To him whose gracious succor never fails | ||
When sin and death poor feeble man assails, | ||
He that our final triumph hath decreed | 595 | |
And promised thee salvation in thy seed.” | ||
Ah! Can I this in Adam’s person say | ||
While fruitless tears melt my poor life away? | ||
Of all the ills to mortals incident, | ||
None more pernicious is than discontent, | 600 | |
That brat[122] of unbelief and stubborn pride | ||
And sensual lust, with no joy satisfied, | ||
That doth ingratitude and murmur nurse, | ||
And is a sin which carries its own curse; | ||
This is the only smart of every ill. | 605 | |
But can we without it sad tortures feel? | ||
Yes: if our souls above our sense remain, | ||
And take not in th’afflicted body’s pain; | ||
When they descend and mix with the disease, | ||
Then doth the anguish live, reign, and increase, | 610 | |
Which when the soul is not in it, grows faint | ||
And wastes its strength, not nourished with complaint. | ||
Submissive, humble, happy, sweet content | ||
A thousand deaths by one death doth prevent, | ||
When our rebellious wills, subdued thereby | 615 | |
Into th’eternal will and wisdom, die; | Gal. 2:20 | |
Nor is that will harsh or irrational, | ||
But sweet in that which we most bitter call, | Matt. 11 | |
Who err in judging what is ill or good, | ||
Only by studying that will understood. | 620 | |
What we admire in a low paradise, | ||
If they our souls from heavenly thoughts entice, | ||
Here terminating our most strong desire | ||
Which should to perfect permanence aspire, | ||
From being good to us they are so far | 625 | |
That they our fetters, yokes, and poisons are, [254] | ||
The obstacles of our felicity, | ||
The ruin of our soul’s most firm healths be, | ||
Quenching that life-maintaining appetite | ||
Which makes substantial fruit our sound delight. | 630 | |
The evils, so miscalled, that we endure | ||
Are wholesome medicines tending to our cure; | ||
Only disease to these aversion breeds, | ||
The healthy soul on them with due thanks feeds. | ||
If for a prince, a mistress, or a friend, | 635 | |
Many do joy their bloods and lives to spend, | ||
Wealth, honor, ease, dangers, and wounds despise, | Luke 9:23–24 | |
Should we not more to God’s will sacrifice | ||
And by free gift prevent that else-sure loss? | ||
Whate’er our will is, we must bear the cross, | 640 | |
Which freely taken up, the weight is less | ||
And hurts not, carried on with cheerfulness. | ||
Besides, what we can lose are gliding streams, | ||
Light airy shadows, unsubstantial dreams, | Ps. 90:5–6, 9, Ps. 49:10–13 | |
Wherein we no propriety could have | 645 | |
But that which our own cheating fancy gave. | ||
The right of them was due to God alone, | Luke 12:20 | |
And when with thanks we render him his own | ||
Either he gives us back our offerings | ||
Or our submission pays with better things. | 650 | |
Were ills as real as our fancies make, | Job 1:21, 42:10–12 | |
They soon must us, or we must them forsake; | ||
We cannot miss ease and vicissitude | ||
Till our last rest our labors shall conclude. | ||
Natural tears there are which in due bound | 655 | |
Do not the soul with sinful sorrow drown; | ||
Repentant tears, too, are no fretting brine, | 2 Cor. 7:10 | |
But love’s soft meltings, which the soul refine; | ||
Like gentle showers that usher in the spring, | ||
These make the soul more fair and flourishing. | 660 | |
No murmuring winds of passions here prevail, | ||
But the life-breathing spirit’s sweet fresh gale, | ||
Which by those fruitful drops all graces feeds | ||
And draws rich extracts form the soakèd seeds; | ||
But worldly sorrow, like rough winter’s storms, | 665 | |
All graces kills, all loveliness deforms, | ||
Augments the evils of our present state | ||
And doth eternal woes anticipate. | ||
Vain is that grief which can no ill redress | ||
But adds affliction to uneasiness, | 670 | |
Unnerving the soul’s powers then when they should [255] | ||
Most exercise their constant fortitude. | ||
With these most certain truths let’s wind up all: | ||
Whatever doth to mortal men befall | ||
Not casual is, like shafts at random shot, | 675 | |
But providence distributes every lot, | ||
In which th’obedient and the meek rejoice, | ||
Above their own preferring[123] God’s wise choice. | ||
Nor is his providence less good than wise, | ||
Though our gross sense pierce not its mysteries. | 680 | |
As there’s but one most true substantial good, | ||
And God himself is that beatitude, | ||
So we can suffer but one real ill: | ||
Divorce from him by our repugnant will; | ||
Which when to just submission it returns | 685 | |
The reunited soul no longer mourns, | ||
His serene rays dry up its former tears, | ||
Dispel the tempest of its carnal fears, | ||
Which dread what either never may arrive, | ||
Or not as seen in their false perspective;[124] | 690 | |
For in the crystal mirror of God’s grace | ||
All things appear with a new lovely face. | ||
When that doth Heaven’s more glorious palace show, | ||
We cease t’admire a Paradise below, | ||
Rejoice in that which lately was our loss, | 695 | |
And see a crown made up of every cross. | ||
Return, return, my soul, to thy true rest, | Psalm 116:7 | |
As young, benighted birds unto their nest; | ||
There hide thyself under the wings of love | ||
Till the bright morning all thy clouds remove. [256] | 700 |
- Like many of the other scriptural references that, following the practice of the first edition of 1679, are included in the margin of our edition, this text operates as a comment and gloss upon the poem in its early historical contexts. Because this prophetic passage rails against “an hypocritical nation” (KJV) or “a dissembling nation” (Geneva Bible), the connection between the post-Restoration epic and the overturning of the revolutionary governments of the English Republic and Cromwellian Protectorate becomes more concrete through the biblical allusion. Just as the prophet Isaiah attacks the apostasy of the Israelites, so the poet here activates political allegory through her embroidery of poetic image and scriptural reference. The evocation of discord leading providentially to harmony connects the will of the English people to restore the monarchy and conform to the established church of England with the Assyrian tyranny over the nation of Israel. As the gloss on the passage in the 1599 Geneva Bible explains, “God’s intention is to chastise them for their amendment, and the Assyrians’ purpose is to destroy them to enrich themselves: thus in respect of God’s justice, it is God’s work, but in respect of their own malice, it is the work of the Devil.” Although commentary on all of Hutchinson’s scriptural references would be prohibitively lengthy for our notes, we include comments and quotations where necessary and encourage readers more generally to pursue the marginal references where the poem becomes most relevant to their interpretive concerns. ↵
- This run of biblical citations illustrates one of Hutchinson’s modes of employing chains of scripture thematically to reinforce her theme. The central, shared concern of these passages is embodied in the two references to the story of Joseph, sold into Egyptian bondage by his brothers, who ultimately becomes their savior. Together with the citation from Peter’s Pentecost Sermon from Acts, the other texts suggest a typological link between the divine will and the suffering of God’s true servants, which prefigures the crucifixion of Jesus. Like the passage from Isaiah with which these marginal references began, these citations seem to bring together the sufferings of the dissenting English with God’s providential plan. ↵
- Except . . . disclose: i.e., unless God’s creative power aids my soul in her imperfect struggling to put her lowly ideas into forms and imparts words that will reveal those forms. In this invocation, Hutchinson seeks to align her poetic creation with God’s creation of the universe, a theme with which Milton also contends in the opening to the first book of Paradise Lost. ↵
- Elohim: One of the names of God in Genesis. Two separate texts depicting the creation, usually called the Priestly and the Yahwist, or “P” and “J” narratives, were according to biblical scholars woven together to form the received text of the book of Genesis. In the “P” text, the name of the deity is “Elohim,” usually translated into English as “the Lord God.” ↵
- Bulrush: a tall, naked stalk or reed from a plant that grows near water; in the Bible applied to the papyrus of Egypt. ↵
- Apparently continuing the political layer of allegory, the verse from the Epistle to the Hebrews unites salvation through faith in Christ with the faith of Moses in his resistance to Pharaoh’s power: “By faith he forsook Egypt, not fearing the wrath of the king: for he endured, as seeing him who is invisible” (KJV). ↵
- In the preceding and following sentences, Hutchinson employs a conventional combination of the “ontological argument” and the “argument from design” to establish the existence of God. As her qualification to line 64 (“we / What is invisible in some sort see”) suggests, the poet holds a theological reservation about the potential for idolatry in claiming to “see” God in signs visible through the created world, a reservation common among Protestants throughout the early modern period. In the 11th century, St. Anselm of Canterbury developed the “ontological argument,” the notion of a being greater than any other that could be conceived, and in his Proslogion argued that if such a being failed to exist, a greater being could be imagined; therefore the ability to imagine a being greater than any other that could be imagined means such a being must exist. The concept of a first uncausèd cause (line 70) or a prime mover (primum movens immobile) derives from Aristotle’s Metaphysics 12, and was developed most influentially in the 13th century by St. Thomas Aquinas (Summa Theologica 1) in conjunction with the arguments from contingency and necessity to establish a logical basis for the existence of the Christian God. Also known as the teleological argument, the “argument from design” is the last of Aquinas’s five proofs of God’s existence, and it seeks to prove that a divine hand guides all natural things whether they know it or not toward their proper ends “as an arrow is directed by an archer.” ↵
- In the early modern period, the Trinity was commonly held to subsist (line 89), i.e. “to have its being or existence in a certain manner, form, or state, or by a certain condition,” according to the OED, which cites Richard Hooker: “In which essential unity of God a trinity personal nevertheless subsisteth” (Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity 1.2.2). ↵
- perfection: the word must have four syllables — per-fect-i-on — for the meter to work and for the rhyme to receive proper accent; this practice of extending words that end with the suffix -tion was conventional among early modern poets. ↵
- Imbecilities: weaknesses, impotencies. ↵
- Magazine: a warehouse or depot. ↵
- Still-fixèd: ever-stable, securely placed. ↵
- Be resheth: This and the following two marginal notes (“In Capite” and “In Principio”) are the first words/phrases of Genesis in Hebrew, a Latin rendering of Aquila’s Greek translation, and the Latin Vulgate, respectively. ↵
- A Lucretian commonplace given memorable and compact expression in reference to the primordial Chaos in Paradise Lost 2.911: “The womb of nature and perhaps her grave.” The original line is from Lucretius’s De rerum natura 5.259, which Hutchinson herself translated as: “Earth for her part made by her fruitful womb / The general mother is, is common tomb” (5.272–73; ed. Hugh de Quehen [Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1996]). Hutchinson’s detailed study of the epicurean poem marks her depictions of cosmological topics throughout Order and Disorder and provides an important counterpoint to the more orthodox theology of the poem. See Reid Barbour, “Between Atoms and the Spirit: Lucy Hutchinson’s Translation of Lucretius,” Renaissance Papers (1994): 1–16; see also the introduction to de Quehen’s edition. ↵
- Consume in: the modern idiom would call for the passive construction “are consumed in.” ↵
- Platonic . . . Idea: The concept of a structural pattern or essence that preceded material existence — like a blueprint from which the world was made — was a commonplace of Platonic philosophy. Plato’s Timaeus depicts the creation of the cosmos along these lines. This cosmology, as well as most of the main concepts from the dialogues, later appeared in the philosophy of Plotinus and, largely through his influence, entered western Christian philosophy by way of the writings of Boethius and St. Augustine. Nonetheless, when placed in sharp contrast with the more fundamentalist Christianity of the Protestant sects, Platonic concepts, even when operative, were frequently dismissed as the “ridiculous lies” and “rubbish” of heathen thinkers, from which Hutchinson seeks to “vindicate” herself in the Preface to Order and Disorder. ↵
- [197]For the phrase tract of time, in which tract means a stretch or length, compare Paradise Lost 5.498. The biblical texts that illustrate this passage bring together prophetic doom and domestic, marital politics through the exhortation to husbands to “give honor to the woman, as unto the weaker vessel, even as they which are heirs together of the grace of life” (1 Peter 3:7). Psalm 102:26 alludes to the heavens and earth waxing old like a garment and being changed; Isaiah 34:4 tells how “the heavens shall be folden like a book, and all their hosts shall fall as the leaf falleth from the vine, and as it falleth from the fig tree” (Geneva Bible). ↵
- The marginal scriptural text (Isaiah 4:5) is quoted nearly verbatim, though Hutchinson brings the tense closer to the present by constructing her sentence with a more suspended syntax. The Geneva Bible reads: “And the Lord shall create upon every place of Mount Zion, and upon the assemblies thereof, a cloud and smoke by day, and the shining of a flaming fire by night: for upon all the glory shall be a defense.” The accompanying gloss on the passage extends its sense thus: “The faithful are called the glory of God, because his image and tokens of his grace shine in them.” ↵
- His only dread . . . away: i.e., the fear alone of God is enough to keep all his enemies far away. ↵
- El-tzeboim: Hebrew from the verse cited in the margin, which means “the Lord of Hosts.” ↵
- The mighty monarchs of line 269 suggests the restored Stuart monarchy; the text cited in the margin reinforces the political allegory suggested by several of the other prophetic texts cited throughout, particularly Isaiah, in which the Assyrian tyranny over the Israelites may represent punishment for the chosen nation’s idolatry and apostasy. 2 Kings 19:35 follows the prophecy of Isaiah against Sennnacherib: “And it came to pass that night, that the angel of the Lord went out, and smote in the camp of the Assyrians an hundred fourscore and five thousand: and when they arose early in the morning, behold, they were all dead corpses. So Sennacherib king of Assyria departed . . .” (KJV). ↵
- Rude congestion: an unformed accumulation or heap ↵
- The image of God’s nurturance of creation has analogues in other early modern texts; see Paradise Lost 1.21f., referring to the Spirit of creation, which “Dovelike satst brooding on the vast abyss / And madst it pregnant.” In the sixteenth-century Protestant Latin Bible, specifically the Junius-Tremellius version of the Old Testament (reprinted in London, 1579–1580), the opening of Genesis includes the image: “Spiritus Dei incubat superficiei aquarum.” Whereas the KJV has the Spirit of God “moved upon the face of the waters,” Junius-Tremellius says “the Spirit of God brooded over the surface of the water” (incubare: to brood over or lie on). The dove was a common symbol of the Holy Spirit in Christian iconography across the arts throughout the Renaissance. ↵
- According to an ancient Christian tradition with its roots in the Proem to the Gospel of John (1:1–14), the Creation takes place through the agency of the divine Word: “without him was not any thing made that was made” (1:3, KJV). John rewrites the Creation from Genesis as an act of the Trinity, but places emphasis on the agency of Jesus Christ: “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God” (1:1, KJV). ↵
- Clothes . . . snow: Compare a related image from Milton’s ode, “On the Morning of Christ’s Nativity” (1629): Nature hides “her guilty front with innocent snow, / And on her naked shame, / Pollute with sinful blame, / The saintly veil of maiden white to throw. . .” (ll. 39–42). ↵
- thorough: an archaic form of “through.” ↵
- fabric: a frame, structure, or body formed by the conjunction of dissimilar parts. ↵
- The biblical verse cited in the margin alludes to the foundation of the earth, here called the ground; but this scriptural passage does not refer to the position of the earth as fixed in the center — a commonplace of the older, Ptolemaic cosmology that had begun to be replaced by the Copernican and Galilean concept of heliocentric astronomy. ↵
- The first edition of 1679 does not print “and flowers,” but the addition of these words in the manuscript of the poem held in the Osborne Collection of Yale University’s Beinecke Library corrects the printed edition’s incomplete and faulty meter by adding an iamb. ↵
- The fabled wealth of the eastern monarchs goes back at least as far as the idea of there being a distinct West, as for example in the ancient Greek historian Herodotus’ depiction of the lavish excesses of the courts of the Persian emperors. The passage from the Gospel of Matthew cited in the margin does not refer to eastern wealth, but follows the same line of politicized emphasis on humility as the lines that follow, while at the same time glancing back at the notion from lines 90–91 that “we may read / In every leaf, lectures of providence.” Jesus asks, “Why take ye thought for raiment? Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin . . .” (Matthew 6:28, KJV). ↵
- creation: another conventional metric extension to four syllables, pronounced: cre-a-ti-on. ↵
- second causes: i.e., causes secondary to God’s primary ones; see n.7 to line 1.74 above. ↵
- luminaries: stars ↵
- eighth heaven: the eighth Ptolemaic sphere or stellatum. The ancient theory of the celestial spheres, still influential in early modern astronomy, held that stars, planets, and other heavenly bodies are embedded within a series of concentric spheres that revolve around the earth (in the Ptolemaic, geocentric model) or, later, around the sun (in the Copernican, heliocentric model). See also Southwell, “An Elegy,” n. 2. ↵
- several: for metrical consistency, pronounced with three syllables: sev-er-al. ↵
- Although the political astrology of the period was still taken seriously in some quarters, so that eclipses and astronomical irregularities could be read as signs of discord reflected in the cosmos, Hutchinson seems skeptical of the prophetic and especially causal power granted astrology, and in the following lines argues that this is a false attribution. ↵
- This chapter of the Book of Judges is the song and thanksgiving of Deborah and Barak after the victory over the idolatrous king Jabin of Canaan. Jael, an Israelite woman and Heber’s wife, had killed Sisera, Jabin’s commander, by driving a nail into his temples while he was sleeping (Judges 4:21). In Judges 5:20, Deborah and Barak say that “they fought from heaven, even the stars in their courses fought against Sisera” (Geneva Bible). ↵
- Here we follow Norbrook’s conflating emendation of the 1679 edition, which reads “the whole word,” by correcting to “world” with the guidance of the Yale manuscript, which reads “all the world.” ↵
- gaudy vests: brilliantly fine robes or gowns ↵
- ocean: a three-syllable extension to fill out the meter, pronounced: o-ce-an. ↵
- pies: magpies. ↵
- motion: extended to three syllables, pronounced: mo-ti-on. ↵
- It was commonly held that mother pelicans fed their young by pecking at their chests until blood ran down to feed their chickens, or babies. The pelican was often seen as a type of Christ, giving his own blood to save humanity. ↵
- fulmots: polecats ↵
- marish: an archaic form of the word “marsh.” ↵
- endue: invest or endow with qualities. ↵
- save: except. ↵
- the king of all: in this case, Adam, who is granted dominion over all the earth and its creatures in Genesis 1:26. See 3.421–26. ↵
- epitomized: in the Renaissance, the human form was often considered to be a microcosm or epitome of the universe. Compare, e.g., John Donne’s Holy Sonnet that begins, “I am a little world made cunningly / Of elements and an angelic sprite . . .” ↵
- damask rose: a species of rose supposed to have originated in Damascus. lawn: a fine linen. ↵
- blood and spirits flow: Before William Harvey’s discovery of the circulation of blood (published in 1628), it was thought that blood vessels carried both blood and air or “spirits.” ↵
- If the front . . . face are: if the forehead (front) is the glory of man’s body (frame), those eyes (lamps) which flame in its upper windows illuminate (illustrate) it, and are as the sun (day’s radiant star) in the clear sky (heaven) of a bright face. ↵
- resultance: effect or outcome. ↵
- [214] low original: lowly origin; the pun derives from the Hebrew: ’adam means “the man,” and ’adamah means “the soil, the ground.” Hence the wordplay in Genesis 2:7, where “the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul” (KJV). Although there is some debate about where in the text of the Hebrew Bible “Adam” first appears as a proper noun, the word is used more descriptively here; Genesis 4:25 certainly uses the word as a name. ↵
- apelike art: the art of counterfeiting or mimicking reality in an inferior manner, as apes were held to mimic human gestures, appearances, and behavior. ↵
- essays: trials or attempts, from the French verb essayer. ↵
- Compare with Calthorpe’s “A Description of the Garden of Eden” in this volume. ↵
- covert: a shelter, covering. ↵
- Chus: Chus, the eldest son of Noah’s son Ham, is the father of Nimrod, the builder of the Tower of Babel in Genesis 11:1–9 and the type of all tyrants. Following the Vulgate Bible, the Bishops’ Bible (1568) uses this form of the name; the Geneva and KJV Bibles refer to him as Cush. See Genesis 10:6–8 and 1 Chronicles 1:8–10. ↵
- in the revolution of some years: over the course of some years; alluding to (e.g.) Psalm 137 on the Babylonian captivity. ↵
- new-created king: again referring to Adam’s dominion over the earth’s other creatures. ↵
- In following the text of the 1679 edition, we depart from Norbrook’s standard modern edition and the Yale manuscript. Norbrook (p. 38) prints “Like country girls, gross flowers did dispute / Their humble beauties with the high-born fruit,” which favors the Yale manuscript’s reading of “gross flowers,” whereas we retain “grass” and re-punctuate so that the grass and flowers, both “low-born,” dispute with “high-born” fruit. ↵
- kine: an archaic plural of “cow.” ↵
- Hutchinson deploys the image of a cosmic civil war, in which rude congressions or “collisions” create chaos by unfixing everything. Compare 5.333 below and, as Norbrook notes in his edition (p. 41), Hutchinson’s translation of Lucretius, where this infrequent usage occurs three times within ten lines (5.434–43). It is also worth noticing how comparatively sparse the marginal biblical citations become in Canto 3 as Hutchinson moves away from the letter of the scriptural account in order to embroider her poetic representation of the creation of Eve and thus human society. ↵
- Or . . . or: this syntactic form, common in early modern English, is the equivalent of the modern “either . . . or” formulation. ↵
- Presumably this is because Genesis does not directly supply an answer. Compare 4.48, 4.305, and 5.261, where Hutchinson cautiously avoids the appearance of blasphemy that might arise from curious inquiry into or conjecture about the foundations of belief. ↵
- The theme is supported by the text from the prophet Ezekiel cited in the margin, which says: “Thus saith the Lord God, I will yet for this be sought of the house of Israel, to perform it unto them: I will increase them with men like a flock” (36:37, Geneva Bible). The marginal note to the verse before this interprets the context in a way that is consonant with Hutchinson’s moralization: “He declareth that it ought not to be referred to the soil or plentifulness of the earth that any country is rich and abundant, but only to God’s mercies, as his plagues and curses declare, when he maketh it barren.” ↵
- Again . . . in solitude: This sentiment is in keeping with the Protestant abolition of enclosed monastic life, especially in its contemplative forms. ↵
- original: origin. The reference might be seen as ambiguous: does he see God or himself in her (or both)? ↵
- The poetic line echoes Genesis 2:23: “Then the man said, This now is bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh. She shall be called woman, because she was taken out of the man” (Geneva Bible). The Geneva gloss explains the significance of the word Hutchinson uses: “[Woman:] Or, maness, because she commeth out of man: for in Hebrew Ish is man, and Ishah the woman.” Hutchinson also imitates the Hebraic play on words in the next line, where ravished contains an internal rhyme with Ish. ↵
- ensign: a sign, emblem, or token. ↵
- A poetic commonplace of the Renaissance, most memorably expressed in different forms throughout the first 17 of Shakespeare’s Sonnets, e.g., when the young man is urged “to breed another thee”: “Then what could death do if thou shouldst depart, / Leaving thee living in posterity?” (Sonnet 6, 11–12). ↵
- According to typological convention, Christ is the second Adam, as in Romans 5:19: “For as by one man’s disobedience many were made sinners, so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous” (KJV). After his death, Christ was wounded in the side by a Roman centurion in the Gospel of John 19:34; the flow of blood and water from the wound was interpreted as a miracle by Origen, St. Thomas Aquinas, Cornelius a Lapide, and others. The Church was commonly represented as the spouse or bride of Christ following the tradition that interpreted the Song of Solomon as an allegory of the love of Christ for the Church. Compare Lady Anne Southwell’s poem, “All Married Men Desire to Have Good Wives,” also in this volume. ↵
- A potential ambiguity of antecedent for the pronoun in this line nicely conveys the sense of typological figuration. In other words, the fact that it is momentarily unclear whether “he” is Adam or Christ, and whether his “spouse” and “sister” is Eve or the Church, reveals the significance of the episode for Christian readers. Hutchinson purposefully speaks on both levels at once to illustrate the principle at work in her reading of Scripture, which was common. ↵
- The idea that the Sabbath should be observed as a day of sacred rest was typical of Puritans in the early modern period, as are the Canto’s emphases upon the sacredness of marriage and labor. ↵
- perfection: extended to four syllables for the meter, pronounced: per-fec-ti-on. ↵
- instruction: likewise extended: in-struc-ti-on. Note that this word completes a rare triplet of rhymed lines. ↵
- The ancient question of the problem of evil, unde malum? or “whence evil?” as asked by Latin Church Fathers Tertullian and St. Augustine. The response to this question has come to be known since Leibniz in the early 18th century as theodicy, or, in Milton’s famous phrase, the effort to “justify the ways of God to men” (Paradise Lost 1.26). The simplest solution is suggested by the marginal text, which urges believers to “rejoice, inasmuch as ye are partakers of Christ’s sufferings,” etc. (1 Peter 4:13, KJV). ↵
- contemnèd imbecility: hated weakness ↵
- Compare 3.312, 4.305, and 5.261, where Hutchinson cautiously avoids the appearance of blasphemy that might arise from curious inquiry into or conjecture about the foundations of belief. ↵
- Compare Milton’s encompassing critique of mythological “fables” in book 1 of Paradise Lost, esp. 1.196–200, 1.507–21, and 1.739–48. ↵
- great assizes: assizes are trials; hence the great assizes are the trials of all souls by Christ at the Last Judgment. ↵
- scorpion to that rod: following the scriptural references to scorpions as a means of chastisement, the term stands as a symbol of oppression and denotes a whip or lash with knotted cords or steel spikes to inflict greater suffering; see 1 Kings 12:11, 2 Chronicles 10:11, and Paradise Lost 2.701. ↵
- embodying: organizing into a military body or company ↵
- prevent: anticipate or act in advance ↵
- Like Milton in book 9 of Paradise Lost, Hutchinson exploits a potential ambiguity in the episode from Genesis in order to emphasize that Eve is alone when tempted by Satan in the serpent. ↵
- In the verse referred to in the margin, St. Paul describes the enemies of truth as lovers of pleasure more than lovers of God: “For of this sort are they which creep into houses, and lead captive silly women laden with sins, led away with diverse lusts, ever learning, and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth” (2 Timothy 3:6–7, KJV). As Norbrook notes (p. 58), Hutchinson elsewhere warns her own daughter against heresy by quoting the same passage. ↵
- prohibition: extended to five syllables to fill out the meter, pronounced: pro-hi-bi-ti-on. ↵
- Genesis 3:3 reads: “But of the fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the garden, God hath said, Ye shall not eat of it, neither shall ye touch it, lest ye die” (KJV). A great debate surrounds Eve’s addition of the phrase “neither shall ye touch it,” which Hutchinson emphasizes by leaving the injunction against tasting implicit. At Genesis 2:17, when God admonishes Adam, he does not mention the sense of touch at all, but merely says “of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it: for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die” (KJV). Is this Eve’s embellishment, or is Adam responsible for adding the phrase when he tells Eve of the admonition? ↵
- This line is in iambic hexameter, a rare variation on the pentameter norm of the poem. ↵
- want: lack ↵
- Or . . . Or: Either . . . or. ↵
- This first suggestion follows Martin Luther’s early allegorization of Genesis quite closely. ↵
- Compare 3.312, 4.43, and 5.261, where Hutchinson cautiously avoids the appearance of blasphemy that might arise from curious inquiry into or conjecture about the foundations of belief. ↵
- fragors: harsh noises, crashes. ↵
- unjointed: unconnected, incoherent ↵
- The passage cited here contains Cain’s words to the Lord after he has been cursed for killing his brother Abel. The parallel to the passage in the poem is not direct, but rather typological and anticipatory. ↵
- on the way: the phrase wittily plays off of the archetypal conversion narrative of St. Paul alluded to in the marginal citation of Acts 9, in which then Saul of Tarsus is blinded by heavenly light and hears the voice of Jesus on the road to Damascus (9:3–9). ↵
- illustrious: shining, bright ↵
- urge: Although the primary meaning of the word in early modern English is allege, affirm, or state, particularly in justification or defense, the secondary and more common modern meaning (advocate or advise earnestly; press, claim, or demand) might be relevant were the phrase to appear before rather than after the Fall. Nonetheless, for modern readers, the phrase does seem unavoidably to activate both opposing meanings in this idiom. ↵
- bar: intended of course in the legal sense, an in contemporary usage for the “bar exam.” The bar was the barrier marking off the judge’s seat, and prisoners stood at the bar for arraignment, trial, and sentencing. ↵
- This line is in iambic tetrameter, a rare variation on the pentameter norm of the poem. ↵
- facts: things done, deeds; here evil deeds or crimes ↵
- covert: hiding place ↵
- eat: eaten of or from ↵
- The mystery to which Hutchinson alludes is the presence of the Gospel within the text of the Old Testament. This form of typological interpretation, common among Christians of all sects but especially emphasized within Protestantism, was used to see in the actions and occurrences of the Hebrew Bible the promise of future salvation under Jesus Christ. Thus the protevangelium as it was called consisted of the text of the curse upon the serpent, understood as Satan, who would bruise the heel of man, or the merely mortal part, while Christ on the cross would break the head of Satan and destroy sin forever. In this way Christ becomes the second Adam who answers the sin of the first, and Mary become the second Eve who gives birth to the savior necessitated by the transgression and fall of the first. The marginal citations variously reinforce this figural interpretation. ↵
- Although the claim that patriarchal rule serves as part of the curse of Eve is scriptural, the passionate desires in Hutchinson’s line receive distinctive emphasis, as the following passage shows. The biblical text reads: “Unto the woman he said, I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy conception; in sorrow thou shalt bring forth children; and thy desire shall be to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee” (Genesis 3:16, KJV). ↵
- Distracting love is in this case adulterous, as the marginal text suggests: “And it came to pass after these things, that his master’s wife cast her eyes upon Joseph; and she said, Lie with me” (Genesis 39:7, KJV). ↵
- yokes: contrivances designed to hold the necks of two beasts such as oxen together so that they can pull a plough or cart together; hence a common symbol since antiquity of oppression and servitude. ↵
- froward: perverse, naughty ↵
- prevaricating: swerving from the proper course ↵
- Cited here, following the apparent equation of grace with anti-monarchical sentiment, this passage from Isaiah was conventionally read as foretelling Christ’s birth and kingdom; compare 5.93, where the text is also cited in the margin to gloss the promise of the “weak Church.” ↵
- Compare 3.312, 4.48, and 4.305, where Hutchinson cautiously avoids the appearance of blasphemy that might arise from curious inquiry into or conjecture about the foundations of belief. ↵
- The skins . . . made: Compare patristic exegesis of Genesis 3:21: according to Origen, the animal-skin clothing worn by Adam and Eve signified postlapsarian human bodies. ↵
- congressions: collisions. See the note to 3.278 (n. 64). ↵
- resistless: unresisting. The 1679 edition reads “restless” instead, but we follow the Yale MS and Norbrook in emending to more contextually relevant resistless. ↵
- ambuscado: ambush ↵
- The vehicle of this simile seems to glance at the duke of Buckingham, who a generation earlier had been the favorite of King James I and his son, Charles I, but was vastly unpopular among both nobility and commoners before his assassination in 1628. ↵
- Milton’s Adam has similar questions after the Fall in Paradise Lost 10.771–75, 852–59. ↵
- convert: turn, perhaps also suggesting that the reaction is a result of the speaker’s spiritual condition ↵
- all of us: i.e., each in our entirety; the whole of each one of us ↵
- brat: offspring, product ↵
- preferring: The 1679 edition prints “preserving,” though the idiom seems to suggest that the Yale MS reading of preferring is more correct. ↵
- false perspective: according to early modern usage, a perspective was an optical instrument such as a magnifying glass or telescope through which one looked to alter one’s vision; the sense extends to the pictures produced by mirrors and similar effects, which represent images anamorphically — in other words, in a distorted way until one views from the right position. ↵