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Deity

A Poem [by Samuel Boyse]
  

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 I. 
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 VI. 
 VII. 
VII. WISDOM.
 VIII. 
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 XI. 

VII. WISDOM.

O thou, who when th'Almighty form'd this All,
Upheld the scale, and weigh'd each ballanc'd ball;
And as his hand completed each design,
Number'd the work, and fix'd the seal divine;
O Wisdom infinite! creation's soul,
Whose rays diffuse new lustre o'er the whole,
What tongue shall make Thy charms celestial known?
What hand, fair Goddess! paint thee but thy own?

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What tho' in nature's universal store,
Appear the wonders of almighty pow'r?
Pow'r unattended, terror would inspire,
Aw'd must we gaze, and comfortless admire.
But when fair Wisdom joins in the design,
The beauty of the whole results divine!
Hence life acknowledges its glorious cause,
And matter owns its great disposer's laws;
Hence in a thousand different models wrought,
Now fix'd to quiet, now ally'd to thought;
Hence flow the forms and properties of things,
Hence rises harmony and order springs,
Else had the mass a shapeless chaos lay,
Nor ever felt the dawn of wisdom's day!
See, how associate round their central sun,
Their faithful rings the circling planets run;
Still equi-distant, never yet too near,
Exactly tracing their appointed sphere.

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Mark how the moon our flying orb pursues,
While from the sun her monthly light renews;
Breathes her wide influence on the world below,
And bids the tides alternate ebb and flow.
View how in course the constant seasons rise,
Deform the earth, or beautify the skies:
First Spring advancing, with her flow'ry train,
Next Summer's hand that spreads the sylvan scene,
Then Autumn with her yellow harvests crown'd,
And trembling Winter close the annual round.
The vegetable tribes observant trace,
From the tall cedar to the creeping grass:
The chain of animated beings scale,
From the small reptile to th'enormous whale,
From the strong eagle stooping thro' the skies,
To the low insect that escapes thy eyes!
And see, if see thou can'st, in ev'ry frame,
Eternal Wisdom shine confess'd the same:
As proper organs to the least assign'd,
As proper means to propagate the kind,
As just the structure, and as wise the plan,
As in this lord of all—debating man!

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Hence, reas'ning creature, thy dictinction find,
Nor longer to the ways of heav'n be blind.
Wisdom in outward beauty strikes the mind,
But outward beauty points a charm behind.
What gives the earth, the ambient air or seas,
The plain, the river, or the wood to please?
Oh say, in whom does beauty's self reside,
The Beautifier, or the beautify'd?
There dwells the Godhead in the bright disguise,
Beyond the ken of all created eyes!
His works our love, and our attention steal,
His works (surprizing thought!) the Maker veil;
Too weak our sight to pierce the radiant cloud,
Where Wisdom shines, in all her charms avow'd!
O gracious God! omnipotent and wise,
Unerring Lord, and ruler of the skies;
All-condescending to my feeble heart,
One beam of thy celestial light impart;
I seek not sordid wealth, or glitt'ring pow'r,
O grant me Wisdom—and I ask no more!