The Descent into Hell Second Edition, Revised and Re-arranged, with an Analysis and Notes: To which are added, Uriel, a Fragment and Three Odes. By John A. Heraud |
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![]() | The Descent into Hell | ![]() |
ODE.
Even a Parent's Heart!
My Boy! thou wert—thou art
My Boast, even in thy shroud!
Death hath come up amongst my little Flock,
And taken One from out my darling Seven,
The loveliest—worthiest—as a special mock,
Or rather marked him as preferred for Heaven.
My Boy! my own broad-browed, precocious Boy!
Thy Body was a Casket, fair but frail—
No helm hadst thou—no warrior's coat of mail—
The golden Chain, that linked it to thy Soul,
Was weak, that it might snap, ere came annoy;
Early the garment dropt, soon won the goal.
Hence as I watched thee, resting midst the strife,
Beauty on thy calm features set her seal,
The Beauty of the Dying;—nay, the Life
Of Hope, to Victory making sure appeal,
Bringing the Distant near,
And of the Future saying—‘It is here.’
Deluded, irked with pain,
Would importune in vain
The gates of Power, the shrines of Truth.
Answered not they to his austere demand:
They knew not Freedom's Angel. Hence he sought
To Winds and Waves,..if they could understand,
And might for him interpret his great Thought.
They told him, they were homeless and unchartered;
The Forests and the Clouds had conscious voice,
And Liberty, she was their playmate ever;
And the proud Sun did vaunt of Light unbartered.
So, from an Ocean-cliff, with wild endeavour,
(Glad to find reason wherefore to rejoice,)
He deemed, by virtue of strong Love, to send
The Spirit of his Being into all
The permeant Elements,—and therewith blend,
As if Creation were redeemed from thrall;
And, Nature! thus, through thee,
Sport with the phantast alien, Liberty.
Maternal Nature knows not thee!
Clouds, Woods and Waves and Winds,
Necessity still binds;
Only the Soul is free!
Only the Soul, self-knowing,
That, by pure Intuition,
Contemplates, rapt and glowing,
The Image and the Vision
Of beatifick Truth,
And feels the wings regrowing
Of her eternal Youth!
The human soul divine!
She clasps, as in a scrine,
All modes, and all degrees.
How infinite is her capacity,
That can embrace their Beings in her own;
And with herself affirmeth them to be,
Herself uncomprehended, and alone!
Marvellous Powers in her close-folded rest;
Conscience and Will, far deeper and more high,
Than Consciousness, still as Eternity,
Till violated Law to wrath awakes—
And Faculties, acknowledging behest,
Two worlds which limits, due distinction makes;—
Functions—of Reason, generating Forms
Grasping all Time,—of wise Intelligence,
Which maugre Sin and Evil, War and Storms,
Plants Order amid Chaos,—and the Sense;
With all the pregnant changes,
O'er which the excursive mind for ever ranges.
Art thou not even I?
I whose wide energy
Contains the mystick whole?
The Comprehending but Uncomprehended!
Yet whence the Law that even thus am I?
And ever by that Law am thus attended?
O'erruling, circling, as the Earth, thou, Sky!
Our God is in the Heavens! his types are they—
And His includes our Spirits, as his hand,
In its deep hollow, holds the seas and hills—
All Liberty—all Love—all Life, fulfils.
Our Being is the Word of his Command:
His Being is the Law to what he doth,
Pure Power and Being, Will most absolute!
Whose gracious Word is Law and Being both,
Coeval Image! Oracle ne'er mute!
By Angels seen Thou art,
Heard in the beatings of the human heart!
For who by Grief would be beguiled,
Who knows the Eternal One,
THE FATHER OF THE SON?
On him He aye hath smiled!
—Thine was a touching saying,
That, if thy other Dear Ones
Should far outlive Life's Maying,
Yet, even when we are sere Ones,
Our Boy will alway be,
As when thou sawst him playing,
A very Child to thee.
The seal of Childhood yet
For ever now hath set—
Impression nought shall dim!
Of such is Heaven's kingdom—there our Child
Is with the Father, and in God self known,
No changing Object, from itself exiled,
No mortal Body, poisoned by its zone—
But, in his Self Identity secure,
Whereto he is remanded, at the shrine
Of his Creator, ministering praise,
With the Incarnate, glorified and pure,
Clothed with his brightness, living in his rays.
For there the Spirit maketh of one kind,
And equally illustrious all that is;
Object perceived and the perceiving Mind,
One in the very plenitude of bliss—
Where God in his own Son
Beholds himself—reflected in that One!
Which—in expanding—bounds,
Condenses and immounds—
Unseen, and yet all-seeing!
Oft times have I the Revelation wrought,
In act contemplative, absorbing time,
Too deep for Consciousness, too high for Thought,
Profound as Hades, and as Heaven sublime.
It hath o'erwhelmed me as a mighty flood,
And so baptized me with pure element—
It hath upborne me like a fiery car,
Or heavenly ichor fused into my blood,
That gave me mighty power to soar afar,
Not needing wings, by spiritual ascent.
Then felt I, Man was godlike, and his Heart
An Ark of Covenant, a holy Place,
Whence if awhile the Veil were drawn apart,
He might behold his Maker face to face.
O! then the Soul, I knew,
Immortal, Truth's great witness, herself true!
My Soul in worship, thankfully,
Acknowledgeth that Thou
Herself hast made her know,
And know herself in Thee!
—I thank Thee for the Assurance,
That Thou hast in thy keeping,
Where Grief hath no inurance,
The Child for whom we are weeping!
I thank Thee, who canst save,
For Faith and strong Endurance,
Triumphant o'er the grave!
SONNET.
[Who die, repose in Hope. We live on Earth]
Who die, repose in Hope. We live on EarthBy Faith, in Heaven by Love. Yet bide they not
Apart, Faith, Hope and Charity, I wot—
Consistent faculties of human birth.
But in all times and places find they dearth,
Now less..now more. High hour, and sacred spot,
Hath each..have all—and a peculiar lot
By holy altar, or domestick hearth.
And Hope as well as Faith, (this know I well,)
Supports our conflicts with the world, and Love
Cheers many a toil—Yet distant and above
Their objects be,..felt, yet invisible.
Here, promises:—the things whereof they tell
Death shall disclose, and Paradise approve.
THE DESCENT INTO HELL
I. PROLOGUE.
Alone within a Bower, while the fresh airs
Played o'er my unconscious temples, I reclined.
Of sterner age perplexed; on Faith sublime
That still inspires the soul which nobly dares;
On Hope, like Love, that acts an alien part,
As if Above, or Under, she would climb,
In spirit though present alway. Therefore I,
In spirit, sought her in the great Earth's Heart.
Æonian, whose clear light no shadow flings
On gnomoned dial, from apparent sky:
Their work by motion relative they raise,
Order of sequence, and the sum of things.
Each other, till the morning shall accede;
And, like the moon, our life has many a phase.
Our yesterdays are in Eternity,
And to-day is Eternity indeed.
Inheres; and thou mayst feel, but listen well,
In thine own soul, spiritual harmony,
Of Ocean's diapason, tender made,
Like memory, in his imitative shell—
Even more divinely in the calm recess
Of simple hearts, hid in the quiet shade,
Live in that Other, and sweet visions see,
Pensive as Thought and grave as earnest Bliss—
Of real Light and undeparting Love..
To such will all be present as to me;
As ere deep sleep on Adam fell of old,
Walking as angels walk in heaven above;
All goodness, ranging over boundless tracts
Of Duty, and fulfilling all untold.
Ideas are realities. For why?
Will here is mind, and its desires are facts.
And Reason and Religion are the same,
And Faith and Sense are one,..all ear, all eye.
Of Consciousness breathe odorous ministries!
How fine the taste and touch! how nice their aim!
All objects they pervade. Sensation ranges,
Like Light, and turns transparent what it sees;
Remaining in itself, it takes its pleasure,
An unchanged spirit through unnumbered changes;
Of fragrant and delicious essences,—
Of melodies in every varied measure,—
Than the bee sips from dewy bud at morn,—
And beauty lavish of its loveliness,
Even as a garment on each form, but free
From accident, as what it doth adorn;
As perfect, with capacity for more,
And still enlarging its felicity.
The Light that shews those symbols to the day,
Radiant with Life, else darkling as before.
Hither return, by every door of Death,
His private channel and his public way.
Of Life departs, yet is it still the same—
Or Force, or Nature, or Translation—Death.
Our Death and Life—they change like day and night—
Alike their origin—alike their aim.
Who longest lives 'scapes most contingencies—
Each Hour—each Minute—ready stands to smite.
Death has occasions many as our Life,
And a deep interest in longevities.
Only continues—nor can sages tell,
Who lives or dies, nor what is Death or Life.
And here to me was given an angel's wing,
While by a Voice commanded thus—of Hell—
Who left his Glory, and was desolate
On Earth, but triumphed in the Grave—to sing.
But not eternal? finite,—it began.
On the huge hinge harsh thunders hoarsely grate;
Thy wearied shriek, “a change!”—of lot no change,
If change of suffering, for fiend or man:
May please sad pain monotonous, and make
Variety to charm in this dull grange:
Is none of better state,—(and less Desire,)—
Or aught the penal thirst that can aslake,
In the strong throes of whelp birth?—“Who art thou,
Demandest entrance? Who hath heard thy lyre?”
To its rude hest. Not I the Florentine
Who trod thy burning marle,..as I would now,..
His name who first saw thy portcullis raised
To let the Arch-Rebel out. Yet shall thy Scrine
To blindness with its Tables' graphick flame;
Yea, be in visual death suddenly glazed;—
And like thy molten sea that mirror seem,
Thy molten sea, wherein the monstrous Dame,
Worships her visage hideous. I defy
Thy power, O Hell! however thou blaspheme,
Ere long, with other verse and earlier theme,
To visit thee again, or soar on high,
Unsepulchring from that obscurest deep
The spectres of a superhuman dream,
Upon oblivion's shores; where the fat weeds
Acquire wild overgrowth, and man may steep
Truth, old as earth's foundations. There it lay
With giants, and the records of their deeds,
Is all thy life, degenerated Man!
And thee a narrow grave admeasure may,)—
—But not alone for Pain thee God decrees:
Thou wert with Chaos, ere young Earth began—
Things as they are, whereof the things are made
That but appear, unreal images;—
Albeit unseen save in this pure abode,
With substance permanent each transient shade.
The Life of Earth is but its diastole,
Then by her veins returns, and back through the same road.
Informs and actuates in each living thing,
The Sap that animates root, branch and bole:
Leviathan in ocean—Man on earth—
In air the Eagle quick of eye and wing;
In elemental visibility,
Of elements unseen,..the growth,..the girth.
A fairy workshop and its implements..
But where the Worker? what, and who is he?
The Form of forms, and whatsoever is;
Earth, Air, Fire, Water;—they, and their contents.
Hence sleepless Ocean hath his ebb and flow,
And Air and Fire elastick pliancies;
In all her changes, and with all her nations,
(Circling the sun, rejoicing or in woe,
Clasped with her arms the heavens, in mystick dance,
For days and years and times and generations.
Itself at rest immoveable remains,
Exempt from change, necessity, and chance.
Original—eternal—final proof,
Prime archetype of all our orb contains—
The World of Sense is but a Parable;
A Fable wrought in intricatest woof;
But misinterpreted—neglected—scorned—
“Shadowy of truth,” and symbolizing well;
A Stage, of scenes illusive, and of men
Drest in disguises phantast and suborned—
The sovran and the slave are equal both,
Yet nothing changed but the appearance then.
From this mid point, and perfect more or less,
As near or farther from its fount it floweth;
By distance from the centre whence it rays,
And Motion varies even to nothingness.
Though none of death, led by the Spirit of Light,
Have followed to the land where light displays
Authentical and holy, yet wherein
Our Spirits look with unconsumed sight,
For His dear sake who died upon the Cross;..
Though venturous the voyage we begin,
Not void but fulness; that your kind may learn,
Whate'er is not ideal is but dross.
Descend from heaven apocalyptical,
Whereof “his thoughts do breathe, his words do burn.”
Vision of Peace! white Bride of the Most High,
Whose Glory clothes thine apostolick wall!
Equal in all dimensions as beseems,
And like an Angel's thy capacity.
No Temple hast thou, neither Sun nor Moon—
God is thy Temple—and thy Light he beams.
Thy gates shall not be shut at all by day,
Nor night be thine, Land of perpetual Noon..
But no defiled thing shall enter thee,
Loving a lie, or tempting to betray.
Freely his thirst is at thy Fount allayed,
Water of Life, a River pure as he.
The Tree of Life, whose very leaves are healing,
Shall yield its monthly fruit and never fade..
In these echo rhimes is attempted a sentimental imitation of Milton—
Hell trembled at the hideous Name, and sighed
From all her caves, and back resounded Death.”
In these echo rhimes is attempted a sentimental imitation of Milton—
Hell trembled at the hideous Name, and sighed
From all her caves, and back resounded Death.”
I. PART THE FIRST.
THE CAPTIVITY.
II. THE MOUNTAIN OF SETH.
The Prophet of the Lord!—For Zion mourn,
A childless Widow in captivity!
For all Creation with her suffering God
Suffered. So Hades from his secret bourn,
With Visions of the Crucified, ere long
Transpierced and buried, on the Air forth rode,
Unto the World of Spirits. There dwelt Fear,
Dwelt in the Land of Hope, the Elect among,
And Hell and Satan, speeding their account,
Over the Holy City, hovered near.
Of Seth, the Patriarchs, as before the Flood,
Hold solemn Converse by the living Fount,
Mingles its liquid murmurs. Lo, with them
Stands Moses, Shepherd meek, and Warrior good.
And his voice swells upon the buoyant air
That mantles purple round Jerusalem.
And after; thee, paternal dwelling-place,
Of universal Being. We repair
And are renewed. Thou art our God for ever,
Pure keystone of Creation—bourn and base!
With whom thou conquerest. O tarry not,
Hasten to save thy Saints, oh, hasten to deliver!”
Myriads of voices, as one voice, aloud
Anthem the Song, a choral monoglot.
Hovering above the Mountain of the Even,
Gorgeously painting what their shadows shroud,
Midway on Hermon stands the Midianite;
Above, enthroned in orbs of twelve and seven,
Crown the hill's crest, a lively diadem,
Majestically tall, magnificently bright.
Earthly Jerusalem, repose serene;
And of her glory many a lesser gem—
Who loved and taught the truth, of every land,
Fill up in order, and complete the scene;
—Then Israel's Singer made his Song excel,
He raised his voice, and took his harp in hand.
In unity together. Sweet it is
As the rich Unguent that o'er Aaron fell
His garment-skirts. 'Tis precious as the Dew
Distilled on Hermon in fine essences.
For there the Blessing of Eternal Life
The Lord our God shall evermore renew.”
The living waters well from out the Throne;
The Song of Peace their only arm of strife,
The Northern Powers their City gates have girt,
And Death hath stricken the Anointed One.—
Where virtue is.” Thus he, who sang erewhile
Of Fortitude even Jove could not subvert,
Can awe the Soul well-centred. Lo, He comes
Who shall release Prometheus, and I smile—
That none will hear—the Sage who pleads in vain
To human conscience of eternal dooms,
From Abel's blood to that more precious still;—
Their's is the Rock, the Vulture and the Chain.
Though the tumultuous world assail them sore—
Yet their high destinies shall they fulfil.
By its own living power it is renewed—
And the World's Tyrant can exact no more.
The Secret that perplexed the Power of Air;
Wisdom, Art, Patience, Faith and Fortitude.
Of Darkness, to deliver whom no storm
Might overcome, nor torment make despair!”
With Truth, breathed in the murmur of the Bees,
Heaven-visited, and made to gods' conform,
“Not into Darkness went the Friends of Man,
Not into Darkness comes our Hercules!
Of Life impended, Clouds involved the rear,
If bright the space between, how brief its span!—
Possession never—and if good not great,
If great not good—a parted hemisphere,
After their lost integrity, but hate
To find in others what themselves want yet.
Hence when the Perfect and the Just appeared,
Him they pursued to death, inveterate.”
By him, the unskilful Shepherds who reproved
In ancient Greece, and perished though revered:
Are they, and loving Heaven, and what they love
Make to their souls, and are by Heaven commoved,
The clouds of Fate, in the serene pure air
Of Innocence, and hover like the Dove
To turn to shape; beholding in all things
Order reflected from the happy seer.
To bear them on their visionary flight,
And faith in bodiless imaginings.
And interpenetrate the loving orbs
Of living and transparent chrysolite.
All modes into its mood; all joy it makes,
And sorrow and pain high Conscience blunts or barbs.”
His rich old musick, now refined and pure
Even as the muses' own,..for he partakes
He sings the law of liberty, whereby
The universal heavens for aye endure;
The dusky Earth remurmurs musical—
Mysterious echoes, sweet yet shadowy.
Of old. How lovely in the stilly night
Their Voice he heard, and grew prophetical—
And to his hand the laurel-branch conveyed,
And robed his Soul in radiance of their light.
The Shadow that we saw, of light unable—
But now by no delusion are betrayed.
The Generations of the Heavens and Earth
Are born in Light, with Love unfathomable.
Even of thy Will a glorious emanation,
And with thy Word thy Spirit goeth forth.
Thou art our Refuge, Being of our being;
Father of Spirits!—hasten thy Salvation!”
Named, by his prophet, Zion to rebuild,
Soared to the heaven of song, with heaven agreeing,
Strange, as the eagle's secret way in air,
To ears of earth, and yet on earth fulfilled.
When in the Solitude of Being, Thou
Remainedst in thyself. Who saw thee there?
There no brave Ship rides buoyant to debel,
Or breasts the billows with a peaceful prow;
Plies its lithe oars, in that profound abyss,
Lonely—pacifick—vast—unvoyageable!
Thy works obscure thee, as a shadow doth,
And the Sun's glory is a Veil on this.
Nor idle. Both Eternity and Time
Come forth from thee, of thee irradiate both;
One fixed—one flowing—both coincident,
Making one harmony, one perfect chime.
Unmoved; uncomprehended, in the Floods:
So dwells the Eternal in Time's element.
O'er all the Interspace, and in the End
The Last endures, Supreme of men and gods!
Thee who? Thou workst, and who shall let? All things,
Made for thy glory, to thy glory tend.
As Light and Darkness, Peace and Evil be;
Thy works they are though strange; all Sufferings,
They are thy doing—Author thou of all,
And Hell and Death accomplish thy decree.”
The eagle Song yet soars its hidden way,
And wantons in the Sun, nor fears a fall;
Enlarge the strain, through all the Congregations
Of universal Man, and thus conclude the lay—
From the Beginning, and declared the same
Before the Ancient Time, that their creations
And the Word answered—Father! yea, thou art,
And I in thee. All Creatures of all Name
And move but in its pulses. Nature yearns
To rid her imperfections,..now apart
And feels her wants, and evermore desires
Through all the scales of Being; and returns
By an eternal strife, and agony
Eternal,—ever baffled; and ne'er tires
From travail groaning, with the appetence
For Being which alone is found in thee!
And from the Captive take corruption off,
And let the year of Liberty commence.
Of controversy, make the Truth appear,
And bring the Adversary to the proof;
And reconcile the contraries of strife;
Come, Mediator! come, Deliverer!
—The Son of Sirach thus sums up the Song:
“The Memory of famous men is rife,
The Lord by them hath wrought great glory, through
His power from the beginning, men among.
Are wise in council, sure in prophecy;
The eloquent, the active, and the true.
Of numerous verse: rich men and graced with mind,
Abiding in their dwellings peaceably.
A honourable name; their righteousness
Shall never be forgotten by their kind.
A heritage for aye, and dwell in peace;
Dying, they live: so Wisdom flourishes.
Seen 'midst a cloud in morn's prophetick hour;
And as the Moon at full is his increase;
Upon the Temple of his God and King;
And as the Bow between the sun and shower;
The Lilies by the Streams; the Branches free
Of Frankincense in summer foliaging;
Budding forth fruit; and as a Cypress rare
That groweth to the clouds..Even such is He.
And lovely is her brow, albeit too bright
For earthly eye, she veil her aspect fair,
Beneath a diverse visage, now austere
Now lovely, suited to the gazer's sight.
To look, would know her heavenly and divine,
And Deity itself in her revere—
There find her, thou unto thyself shalt wake,
And to thy God; for Heaven is her's and thine:
III. ETERNAL GENERATION.
A three-fold Chorus their loud harmonies,
And the three Worlds in all their echoes quake.
I.1.
At mercy of his nurse in infancy,
And in his youth of all propensities,
Or worse discretion, weakness in his age;
Then to Death's prison straight returneth he—
Then teems with births whose spawn enriches earth,
Whence food for life in each successive stage.
The possibility of life proceeds,
Corruption—Generation—but no Dearth.
Philosophy and Science, written fair,
As in a book, to regulate his deeds.
'Tis born again—and Night dies in her turn—
And the Stars perish, glorious as they were.
The stars are stedfast, and the sun endures;
He shineth still—but ye do not discern.
Death is Life's shadow, and the Hours its span,
Ye are their measure, and its Maker yours!
I.2.
Who shall declare? Thou Word Omnipotent!
In whom the expression of the Eternal Plan,
Thyself ineffable, thy written Name
Not known on Earth, for Heaven too excellent!
Of the mysterious universe was cast,
Ere Space and Time had measure and an aim,
And art, and aye shall be—when Time and Space,
And Earth and Heaven, shall perish and have past.
II.1.
Thou saidst—“Let Angels be!”—And Angels were,
And hadst provided them a dwelling-place.
First on the glories of the ethereal sky,
Then on his radiant brethren of the sphere,
Had not the Spirit divine infused the sense
Into their apprehensions audibly,
And Power and Being could proceed alone
From absolute Being and Omnipotence.
Spread quick, as o'er the steely battle-field
The lightning goeth propagating on,
They tried their wings, and felt them made to soar,
Then, borne aloft, beheld their God revealed.
Beatitude receiving from his sight,
And so in song their happy hearts outpour;
They break forth into singing as they shine,
In radiant ranks, the progeny of light.
II.2.
Crowned with pure gold and amaranthine sheen;
His locks a wreath of beams did well entwine.
And Gabriel towered in majesty revered,
And Uriel as the Eye of God was seen.
Whose name, since blotted from the Books of Life,
In holy heaven is now no longer heard;
In Holiness and Beauty,..types of those
Whose spring is in the Eternal Essence rife.
III.1.
There the First Good and the First Fair abide,
Unseen by angels, in profound repose.
And from Eternity together dwelt,
Triune, blest Sisters, lovingly allied;
And known in Sun, Moon, Stars, and shadowy Bow,
Mountain and Vale, and Ocean's golden belt.
At all times present, and in every place;
First—Last; One, yet all number, and aye now:
Above all heights; lower than all depths, in Hell;—
Glorious in Heaven, on Earth how full of grace!
Thou spreadst the curtain of the firmament,
To make thy majesty endurable.
The beams of thy high chambers in the Deep
Are laid—and under Earth the Floods are bent.
And cover her as with a monstrous weed:
They stood above the hills, a massy heap!
III.2.
And hasted, from the thunder of thy voice,
Away. Up by the mountains, lo, they speed;
To their appointed region and wide home.
Therein the huge Leviathans rejoice:
Yields to their queenly beauty, as they tread
The labouring surge, dividing as they come,
Or homage to Diviner Majesty;
Of Presence puissant admonished.
IV.1.
The Snow, the Hail, the Rain, do call him Sire;
And the Dew saith—Thou hast begotten me.
Are kindled in his wrath. The heavens were bowed,
And he came down, pavilioned in his ire;
Most royally, and on the” expanded “wings
Of mighty winds came flying all abroad.”
Of smouldering conflagration. Ere man's eye
Regained its vision, or his shudderings
Over them like a furnace;—citadels,
And their indwellers. Roared the liquid sky,
In stormy undulation, wild and deep;
And o'er th' appalling chasm the void calm dwells;
An undigested wreck, an ashy waste;
Field of the rank bitumen none may reap,
And that salt monument of Unbelief,
Stanced on the blasted site, and not misplaced.
IV.2.
Jehovah! the Omnifick! the clouds are
Thy chariot—winds thy steeds. The bounteous Sheaf
Spirits thine Angels, and thy Ministers
Thou makest flames of fire. 'Twas thou didst bar
Of creatures and of things exists in thee;
And all good gifts are thine—to Man who errs,
Unto the rising of the Sun is bowed:
Pervading yet remote Divinity,
II. PART THE SECOND.
HADES.
“I beheld the earth, and lo, it was without form and void; and the heavens, and they had no light.
I beheld the mountains, and lo, they trembled, and all the hills moved lightly.
I beheld, and lo, there was no man, and all the birds of the heavens were fled.
I beheld, and lo, the fruitful place was a wilderness, and all the cities thereof were broken down, at the presence of the Lord, and by his fierce anger.
For thus hath the Lord said, The whole land shall be desolate; yet will I not make a full end.
For this shall the earth mourn, and the heavens above be black: because I have spoken it, I have purposed it, and will not repent, neither will I turn back from it.”
Jeremiah iv. 23—28.IV. ISAIAH.
Of Hades throughout all the worlds, and o'er
The Hill descends, and as in wrath consumes.
In silence—save that on that horrour soars
Isaiah's voice, majestick as of yore.
Whose lips were touched divinely, to respond,
Lo, here am I, send me! and yet adores
Of Darkness. God! thy voice is raised. Thy hand
Is shaken. Lo, the Mighty, from beyond
By thee on-guided o'er their desolate path,
To make destruction in thy chosen land.
The spirits of the Saints—they are in pain,
As when a woman travaileth, for thy wrath.
The sun is darkened as he climbs on high—
The moon is desolate in her domain—
Wilt punish, and wilt make the Man, whom thou
Hast chosen, precious unto every eye;
The great One and the Saviour! Lo, the Day
Over the Vale of Vision darkles slow—
Of chariots and of horsemen! Earth doth mourn,
Yea, the world languishes and fades away!
Thy fury on all armies rages on,
Who to destroy them utterly hast sworn.
The heavens are rolled together as a scroll,
Their hosts drop down as vine leaves. It is done!
The spirit doth divide—it shall descend
Upon the people of thy curse—controul
With strong desire, I pant, I thirst to see,
Whom for thy Glory—Glory without end—
Redeemer from the Grave—That earth might cleave
To the centre, God! and set thy prophets free;..
—Thus fervent prayed Isaiah. Deeper still
The horrour of great darkness doth upheave,
Even such as followed Death, when fearful Power
O'er fourth of earth was given to him to kill
With furious beasts. Then following, comes before
Him now Hell populous, in this dread hour—
Hell hath her gates unfolded. Lo! as it were
A Mausoleum wide as Chaos, or
Yet walled about; the Ward of Death and Sin;
Not silent;—Sleep, with Hope, is alien here.
Inaugurate, crowned strangely; Spectres vast
As of blue ice compact, and making din
Heard o'er the polar wild's vacuity,
That goes unquestioned on, lost and aghast,
One barren stump, a solitary stone,
Half shriek—half whistle,—and finds no reply.
Each in his cell; his eyes' impatient glow,
Now glancing on the desert, and now gone,
Glazing his aspect with a ghostly gleam;
Here twinkling now. now there...evanished now
The void cold forehead, and the fitful light
Of massy and monarchal diadem,
The regal pall hangs the broad shoulder o'er,
Frozen in gorgeous folds, and moveless quite.
Heard ye not hoofs on that ice-pavement clang,
In rampant fury or triumph? Hark! once more,
Near and more near,..the voice of many storms,..
Whom heralding? Gaunt Death! the Heralds sang.
He comes,...pale Rider of the pallid Steed,...
Trampling alike o'er warriors, worlds and worms;
Vaunt and defiance, while his blasting breath
Parcheth with cold the flakier air. “The Deed!”
V. DEATH.
Ye Demigods, whose place on earth is blank,
Whose fame and name no poet uttereth;
Own your Outdoer,...shamed and silent be!
—Who ruleth the down-rushing Avalanch?
Descending in its brightness terribly,
With the noise of torrents...it obeyeth me.
Yea I come flying on the winged wind;
And my pavilion of the snow pile I,
To come abroad; then I wend on my way
Precipitous in lightning, though not tined
About my secret place, where royally
Dwelleth the hiding of my power, whose sway,
And is in that it is, like to a god
Which lives but in his proper energy.
And bear me onward, gathering as I go,
And armies come unto me from the cloud.
Forth utter I my voice,...the thunder peals:
Forth from my sanctuary I rush, and, lo,
My presence,...and the village vanisheth;
Ruin to my pleased ear man's shriek reveals,
—A home in Air have I. Winds hear my voice,
The four winds answer it with all their breath.—
In his ubiquity, and cometh out
With sudden and exaggerated noise;
Amid the sky, the while his iron shoon
Cottage and Palace trample;..with a shout,
As with the ruin he would blot out heaven,
And quench the glorious sun,—as I shall soon.
As in a witch-dance, round, and aye around,
And perish in the flashes of the leven;
For sport;—and thus I gambol merrily.
—My way is on the Waters. Of the Drowned
Take innocent delight, and think when this
Strong hand shall, with the same facility,
A bubble and a world. I dance—I dance—
Around the circles of the Vortices,
And hear the shriek,—one, yet how manifold!
There, where the steeds o'the Tempest foam and prance,
Like fire-flakes, wreathe the billows, and their neigh
Doth chide the clarion-clang of Ocean old.
Doth plunge my Charger with me; he doth swim,
Wild in his fierceness, through the flashing spray;
And darted phrenzy to his brain, and he
Were maddened with the torture in each limb,
And made huge havock in his maniack might,
Till his heart burst. Then on the exhausted sea
Lay sluggishly about the riven hulk,
O'er which the day rose sunless as the night,
With a red eye and fiery. Lo! I
Chafe Ocean, that he waken from his sulk
And brief;—yet unto me the billows spring,
Wild playmates, and a low-breathed harmony
A doleful and predestinating dirge.
Then droops again old Ocean, murmuring,
May waken more, basking in watchet weeds
Under the calm blue heaven; while on the verge
On flesh of men; with Thirst that drinks their blood;
And Pestilence, glad of their savage deeds,
Couchant o'er carcases. And I am there!
—The Crater is my cradle. In still mood,
Of sulphur I repose, which bubbleth up
So gently, that the traveller well may dare
As if, thus amiable, I might therein
Dissolve, like to a pearl, for lips to sup,
The waters to ferment, and central fire
To howl, and with huge uproar and wild din,
And there, in that capacious cavern, boil
The floods as in a cauldron, and perspire
From the bare shore affrightedly. Anon,
The rocky pillars of the human soil
Vast, subterrane, obscure, with hideous crash,
Hurled by the winds into the abyss unknown;
From chaos, seething like a yeasty wine
Over its bursting vessel; as they clash,
And rage for vent. Earth gapes convulsively,
And vomits the Volcano. It is mine!
And undulate like ocean billowy;
And the columnar smoke,—it chariots me,—
A dun funereal shade, a broad black stain,
Like the pine's branches. In the flame am I
Of ashes, and the lava flood. I burn
In the withering air, and on the molten plain.
With the swoln Neptune—lo, a vacant coast,
Proud City late, but now an open Urn,
—Strange pangs seize Earth. The sound of rushing wheels,
Whose axles burn with thunder, like a host!
Inebriate with the terrour of his coming.
He heard the clang of my pale courser's heels,
Ay, Demigods are ye? (Then what am I,
Haught Deicide?) Ye who, with wrath consuming
Yourselves, like Hercules, and climb in flame
Audacious to the stars, and shine on high,
And saw, and conquered—what? Worms—ashes—dust.
I war with Heaven, and Him who rules the same,
The Good, the Wise, the Holy, and the One!
His hand doth drop the golden chain, or must,
By which the pendent and terrestrial Orb
Is ordered and sustained. The deed is done!
Into his void immeasurable womb
The breathing Universe. Ready, my barb!
Being and Form, Intelligence and Power;
All things create to unsubstantial gloom!
Born of th' unnumbered Age by thought untrod—
On the Creator his own heavens do lour.
The empyreal canopy doth bow,
Dissolved in darkness o'er the dying God!
Her caves cry to each other, peal for peal,
Yea, all her echoes are rejoicing now;
And, like the voices of the waters, crowd
Together in their rivalry and zeal.
In the paternal chariot did pursue,
And hurled Rebellion from that high abode—
And I beheld him bow his holy head,
Whose locks were humid with ambrosial dew.
I conquer conquerors—all revenges wreak—
Thou, my last Foe, transfixed, suspended, dead!”
Like eastern gust in crannies of old tower,
There multiplies itself,...of what to speak?
Spectral, and yet in pain majestical,
How ghastly in her beauty's fatal dower,
She weeps,..anon, into a fading wreath,
Dissolved; like mountain-mist that borrows all
Cold lightning gleams, an ice-bolt rives;—they sweep
That region like a storm—And where is Death?
Of dreams whence the flesh quakes, that Centaur-Wraith,
With those huge Shapes, and that Sepulchral Deep,
VI. THE DARKNESS.
I.1.
Things have intelligible entity,
And are arrayed in glory to man's eye,
O thou, unto sad Earth as soul to sense,
Life-giving Light! her graves even yearn for thee...
Ancestral ages are unsepulchred,
Old oracles awaken from suspense.
Dark is the lustre of the Seraphim—
The Word is silent,—lo, the heavens are dead.
This wreck of elements anon subsides;
Man hath slain God,—Creation dies with Him;
Inquire of Night and Chaos. Can ye be,
If God be not? Adore him,—Deicides!
If thou wert quenched, earth would be formless, void,
And darkness o'er the deep brood silently.
I.2.
Created Light of uncreated Light!
But even thou wert not, were Mind destroyed;
Unto its origin, in the obscure
Of the Eternal Being hidden quite.
Motion and Time revolve. Their sweet concents
Both Heaven and Earth suspend; all tasks are o'er:
Nature's heart pauseth, in whose pulse we live;
And Man doth slumber with the Elements.
In arid clefts, and yawning gulphs disclose
Tartarean mysteries for the sky to shrive,
Like some fair scroll's illumined characters,
Wrinkled with eld, were darkling ere they rose.
Ocean no more, far spooming, huge and wild;
But his dull weeds stagnate our Sepulchres.
Of Earth, and perish from his Universe?
Nay, it from him would perish first; exiled.—
I.3.
Swifter than a god's thought, precipitate,
Loosed from his Providence, it would disperse
And Chaos'-self be not. Not on the wreck
Of the demolished Earths, the expiring state
Elanced, sheer o'er destruction's brink, shall He,
With his sublime despair, haste on, and deck
Shall pass away, Darkness and Death be gone;
They perish from his presence utterly,
'Till unimaginable doom obscure,
Delete, annihilate, the Essential One.
Great God! for ever and for aye, dost Thou,
Sole Dweller of Eternity, endure.
From thee her seasons hath the appointed Moon,
And the bright Stars thy handy work avow!
II.1.
And, at Thy bidding, hasteneth to his gaol,—
And, like a martyr, hails his fiery boon,
And sets in flame; soon to renew his race,
And, like a hero who hath run the whole,
And glory, as he lived. Darkness God makes;
Yea, this unnatural Night that shades Noon's face,
In dread of dissolution—as light's car
It is to him—'tis He the earth who shakes,
The hills; and into the deep vale that sinks
'Twixt them, irriguous and irregular,
His thirst the wild ass quenches, and whereby,
Among the branches foliaging their brinks,
Who makes to soar the vapours, and in might
Brings forth the winds out of his armoury.
II.2.
Yea, the young lions roar not for their prey;
They seek not food from God, this worse than night,
In whirlwind, and in earthquake, and in fire,
And in the darkness and the silence, they
Nor wait the Sun's bright resurrection, ere
They gather in their caves;..if thy fierce ire
As wont ere this amiss,—O Thou to whom
Vengeance belongs! Yet to thy love repair
Life daily—yet is thy spirit in man express,
—Free Bounty gives not, only to resume—
Which none can understand, astonish him,
And Judgement, from thy throne in heaven's recess,
And the earth's echoes answered unto thee:
Hell before thee is bare in every limb:
Who dwelleth in thy secret place, abides,
Under thy shadow, in security.
II.3.
The Death which wastes at noon day, pass him by;
He treads upon the adder, and derides
Though he be poured like water, though his heart
Melt forth like wax,—in this extremity.
Imperfect substance in its energies,
Fearfully wrought in the Earth's lowest part.
While yet unfashioned, written in thy book,
In its continuance and dependencies.
And made him hope upon his mother's breast;
Even from the womb, as to a Sire Sons look,
—To Him, who dying conquereth...all hail!
Son of the Virgin; Hero of the Blest!
Warrior! who hast alone the wine press trod.
Reign, Victor-Victim! reign, when Time shall fail,
III. PART THE THIRD.
EARTH.
“And it shall come to pass in that day, that the Prophets shall be ashamed every one of his vision, when he hath prophesied: neither shall they wear a rough garment to deceive:
But he shall say, I am no prophet, I am an husbandman: for man taught me to keep cattle from my youth.
And one shall say unto him, What are these wounds in thine hands? then he shall answer, Those with which I was wounded in the House of my Friends.
Awake, O Sword, against my Shepherd, and against the man that is my fellow, saith the Lord of Hosts: smite the Shepherd and the Sheep shall be scattered: and I will turn mine hand upon the little ones.”
Zechariah xiii. 4—7.VII. CALVARY.
Their hymn. Lo, gradually, to pass not soon,
Of Calvary the Vision now is blended.—
Brake west of the equator. Tardily
It brake; and like the blank and quenched Moon,
Rose fearful-pale. Son of the golden Morn,
Thee once a mortal voice controled on high—
—Or did some planetary orb, elanced
By the great shock wherewith the worlds were torn
Them all in one astonishment intense,
From its due sphere, a wreck, down rush—advanced
And blot thee from between the Heaven and Earth?
Or wept thy Seraph so for Man's offence,
The copious flood did quell thy glowing light?
The Heavens are girt as with a swaddling girth,
And, out upon thy melancholy weed!
Sackcloth of hair, more black than blackest night.
That sombre swathe moves from thy radiant brow:
Heaven dares again to look upon that deed:
The Stars assert their courses and their orders;
And reinvested with thy beams art thou.
More holy than God's sanctuary mount,
Of whose high praise be Angels the recorders;
There Jesus is adored, but here He died!
O Calvary! that Rood is as a fount
Yet healing as Bethesda. Calvary!
The Earthquake that did rock thee doth subside;
Dim and less dim in the returning light,
Appear, and on thy summit paint the sky.
Of grief subdued, yet not despairing. Her
His words supported in her piteous plight,
The settling sorrow at her heart, and keep
Her spirit buoyant; while the Comforter
Of her bereaved soul. In after-time,
Shall erring man, in superstition's sleep,
Above the circle of the eternal sky,
Mother of God, and Empress of heaven's clime,
The Moon beneath her feet, and on her head
A starry crown:—oh, fond Idolatry!
Because of him, the Crucified, her Son,
The Son of God, the First-fruit of the Dead,
Now on that sacrificial Altar there,
He dies! And she, sustained on faithful John,
Mary her Sister, and the Magdalene,
In anguish, on the hill recumbent here,
And rolls her pale eyes toward pale heaven, as they,
In their fine phrensy rapt above, have seen
And watched it in an attitude sublime
Of concentrate impatience at delay,
That should seem good to God, resigned and still,
To punish signally that signal crime.
Hover in silence; so the ghostly gloom
And earthquake them had quailed, they had no will,
Had else too much depressed the present mind.
The very Steeds whereon they rest assume
Moves not their flowing manes; neither toss they
Their arched necks, nor, in their haughty kind,
Nor paw nor overturn the troubled earth;
Subdued by sacred horrour or dismay.
Had lifted his adoring brow, which there
He bent, when Jesus, in the depth and dearth
Of his great Father in the heaven above
Pealed out his mighty voice, beyond the sphere,
His spirit did commend. Thereat the breast
The people smite, and one by one slow move,
With fear and grief, mystery and miracle.
But that Centurion felt his soul possest,
Stiffening his sinews, boiling in his blood,
And spake inspired as from an oracle—
—From that amazement scarce recovered, lo,
A Man,—in vesture white as snow untrod,
Inquired of whom he spake, and why such style
Divine attributed to mortal?—“Know,
From a far land where Joy and Peace abide,
And Love and Beauty and Perfection smile,
O'erpast, entered at length your fertile clime.
—Proceeding through your City deified,
Till, wearied with its grandeur, and the way,
I stretched me in the porch, and slept a time;
And shaking of the ground. When lo, thick night,
At noon day, had o'erspread the earth, and lay
Seize all; and, terribly, noise as of floods
Appals them; and the imaginative might
Sad visions of majestick mien pass by,
With heavy countenance, and chill men's bloods;
Shut up in prison without iron bars,
Bound in one chain of gloom and jeopardy.
Might hear, assails the darkness dumb; and forth
The priesthood rush in horrour from their prayers,
Cry out aloud in phrenzy—It is rent,
The Veil that veiled the Holiest! Hear, O Earth!
Through all the multitude. I felt my way
In gloom, and found, as cleared the element,
Toward this defended hill. Now tell me, ye,
The meaning of these things, if that ye may,
And at this time? And who is He ye call
The Son of God? and what his History?”
That thou wouldst know thou'lt better learn of her
Who worships by yon centre Cross. A thrall
A question I in truth am little skilled
To satisfy, who in conjecture err.”
Her beating heart, pleased with his lofty port,
Her frame with venerative awe that thrilled.
With amiable readiness, thus she
Meekly addressed the stranger, in such sort
—“Behold him there—of whom ye speak—my Son,
But of no earthly Sire. Look, Sir, where he,
E'er knew, whose mouth had never uttered guile,
Whose thoughts were only fixed on God alone,
Illumed that stranger's visage, broad and bright;
It broadened and it brightened all the while
Dilate, and of his robe the bosom folding
Heaved with strange ecstasy, and a wild light
That transport in, he courteously desired,
(His attitude to humbler manner moulding,)
She answered, “a task difficult to me
Whom grief scarce suffers speech, whereof inspired
Capable only. But it doth behove,
That, at all times and in all places, we
Even to the death, he bare for us—for all—
For whom he left the adoring heavens above,
And die a victim, an accursed death.
'Twere sweet, methinks, that I should now recall
Whereon his blessed body doth depend.
Stranger, believe my Witness. Let my breath
And, wheresoever thou mayst travel hence,
Report my words, to save and to defend
The bread of life I give among all lands.”
—She paused to gather heart; then did commence
Clasped on her bosom, and her aspect bent;
In meekness and in modesty she stands:
VIII. THE VIRGIN'S NARRATIVE.
Whom God appointed to be Israel's King,
Psalmist and prophet, of whose seed divine
The blessed Branch of Jesse's hallowed Stem—
Who should redemption to all nations bring—
That of my womb the Saviour of mankind,
Of bard and seer the Promise and the Theme,
Espoused a righteous, just and aged man
By pure affection piously inclined—
Direct from David's royal house. As yet
Our festal rite of marriage unbegan;
Even in Jehovah's presence, sent by God,
Me Gabriel with salutation met.
To me, and cried, “Hail, highly-favoured, hail!
The Lord upon thee hath his grace bestowed,—
Fear not, O Mary. Favour hast thou won
With the Most High; nor shall his promise fail.
Jesus his name, and mighty shall he be,
The sole-begotten of the Highest One.
It came—Messiah! of thy blessed birth
The timeous marvel and old mystery—
And all that it inherits, Maker great;
An Infant at a mortal breast, with dearth
—In swaddling clothes I swathed the heavenly Child;
A Stable was his chamber incomplete,
The Shepherds in the field kept watch by night,
Their flocks beneath the moon slept reconciled,
And shining in the silver sheen. Anon,
The Angel of the Lord, in stronger light,
And, as they trembled, thus their timid fear
Admonished, while abroad his glory shone:
Great joy that shall to every people be,
For on this day, the whitest in the year,
A Saviour who is Christ the Lord.” Then nigh
The heavenly host 'gan singing suddenly
Peace upon Earth, and Goodwill toward Men.”
—So vanished that celestial company.
They found the Babe rejoiced and praised the Lord,
And spread abroad the fame thereof. And then,
Homage and tribute to the Child divine,
For they had studied in the written Word,
Miraculous that travelled in mid-air,
And still continued on their path to shine,
The incarnate God was lodged, the holy Child.
Him worshipped they, and gifts presented there—
Yet lofty were my inmost thoughts of him
Who slept, divine with human reconciled,
Above him unseen ministry did keep,
And he was guarded by the Cherubim;
Shed overshadowing circling energy—
For very joy it was my wont to weep!
Of Simeon, aged priest. Devout, sincere,
For Israel's consolation waited he.
See death, 'till he had seen the very Christ.
Led by the Spirit to the Temple, where
And were the Child presenting to the Lord,
He took the holy Babe, so dearly prized;
Praise unto God, and blessings upon us;
Yet said, that through my soul should pierce a sword.
But in my Son rejoiced I—yet rejoice—
Fragrant his life, his death was odorous,
And, like a pleasant spice, though crushed and bruised,
Stern Sorrow, that not seldom but destroys,
—The grace of Heaven was on the Child, like dew;
In stature, and in wisdom self-educed,
With God and Man in favour and esteem.
—And when twelve springs have graced his youth anew,
And solemnize the Passover's great days
Of Festival, and there accomplish them;
Him did his own high purposes detain!
Thrice, eve and morn, we sought in all the ways,
Then in the Temple found him, sitting there
Amidst the Doctors, in debate of pain
He searched their hearts with questions far above
His years, and charmed them with his answers clear,
Thus wore his wonderous youth. His words and deeds
I treasured in my heart with more than love.
Aloud the Herald of Messiah cried,
“Repent. Prepare the way.” All Judah heeds,
To be baptized, their sins acknowledging.
With water he baptized by Jordan's side;
Of One far mightier, after him arriving,
Who with the Spirit and with fire should bring
—Behold, the Mightier came;—From human hand
Requires the lymphid rite the Ever-Living.
The clouds are rolled apart, and from on high,
In vision like a dove serene and bland,
And lighteth on the Christ;—the while a Voice
Doth call from midst the region of the sky,
—And now, the Tempter, who in Paradise
Beguiled the Woman to a fatal choice,
To crush the Seed foredoomed his head to bruise;
Defeated soon in all his subtleties.—
And what reject, upon his ministry,
Preaching Repentance, and the glorious news
Of Faith, Light, Life and Love, and Hope and Truth,
Enduring Joy and Immortality.
The wounded soul, and cure the sick of heart;
And heal the bite of sorrow's rabid tooth.
Ears to the deaf and Eyes unto the blind.
Pale Malady obeyed his potent art,
Its sway, and Palsy and the Aches and Pains,
The heritage of flesh. From the unclean Mind
And fled the captive. Elements! All ye
Confess your Maker, you his might constrains—
With all thy multitude of waves; thee, Wind,
With all thy brotherhood of tempests;—He
His tumult, and the storm his roaring stilled,
And all was tranquil as a pious mind.
He walked the foaming billows with calm tread;
He to the Father gave the dying Child,
Restored her only Son. The insatiate Grave
Her victim did surrender at his dread
—My soul is joyous,..a mysterious joy
Broods on my sorrowing soul, as on the wave
Who vanquished Death? Corruption shall He see
Who from the Sepulchre, whose gorge to cloy
And ravished its due prey? His Triumph blends
With mine, and rushes on my memory,
—Shout, Daughter of Jerusalem..behold
Thy King. Salvation on his way attends,
He cometh to thee riding on an Ass,
Whose natural back man never yet controled,
In meekness, O ye people; ye who throng
About him, little do ye deem, alas,
In an innumerable multitude,
As in procession, ye attend with song,
Your garments in his way, and branches green,
As in a princely Conqueror's ye would.
He on whose ears the mysteries of sound,
The lame who now can walk, he who hath seen
Rejoice aloud—a choral Company.
And had they not, the stones, from out the ground,
Had borne; such was the inspiration then,
The rapture and possession. And lo, He
Cowered as before a god, and from the Fane,
The Temple of his Father, made a den
The barterers in gold, and overthrew
The seats of them who made a mart for gain
Of his celestial tears,—Jerusalem!
Jerusalem! whose sanguinary hue
Sent to thee from thy loving God, to save
Or to restore thy sacred diadem,—
Thy desolation he bewept. Yea, thine,
Whose children, under his broad wing's wide wave,
Affection, as a hen her tender brood;
But thou wouldst not! O thou incarnadine!
Wo to thy children! But thrice wo to ye,
Ye Husbandmen—for with an iron rod,
Who of his vineyard have the fruit denied
Unto the Planter, and thus utterly
His Son beloved, and slain the proper Heir,
That the inheritance ye might divide!
Who shut the gates of heaven against mankind,
And yet yourselves will never enter there—
The houses of the widows ye devour,
And make long prayers, devotion ill-designed.
Omit ye;—Judgement—Mercy—Faith: and dole
The petty tithe of your external dower:
As righteous men ye do without appear,
Within iniquity usurps the soul:
Beautiful outward, hiding dead men's bones,
Uncleanness and corruption, every where.
Of Sires who slew the prophets and the seers,
And deem disclaimer of the deed atones
Of the unhallowed, fill their measure up!
Ye garnishers of Martyrs' Sepulchres!
And Vengeance is on you for all the blood
By Earth absorbed, and He in heaven shall stoop,
On you, and on your land, and generation!
—I speak his words who suffereth on the Rood.
They have filled the measure of their Fathers' guilt!
They bought his blood..'twas shed for man's salvation!
They crowned him with the diadem of thorn,
Who is the Monarch of the World he built.
They smote him, they blindfolded him; and straight
They burthened him, forsaken and forlorn.
Raised like the Serpent in the desart wide,
His human limbs divine by their own weight
IX. THE DESCENT FROM THE CROSS.
The Narrative of Mary, there, as stilled
By some informing god, the stranger stood.
But he was not; none saw which way he went,
Evanished utterly: then all were thrilled.
And silence; but not long endured that pause,
Else ancient song had lacked accomplishment.
To preparation for the holier morrow.
High Day of Sabbath, thy thrice-sacred laws
If crucifixion had with death profaned
The dawn, that wont from life its life to borrow.
When him they found already dead: yet one
Pierced with a spear his side, as preordained,
As it is written.—Now in her shadowy stole,
The solemn Eve scarfed the declining Sun;
And from the Cross died his departing ray,
Whereon his Maker yielded up his soul.
No tardy visit his. His heart was here,
His ardent heart, that panted for the day
A good man and a just, but rich and high,
Arimathean Joseph, a sincere
From terrour of the Jews. With leave procured
From Pilate, he approaches to apply
And for the wicked with the wicked died,
And with the rich his sepulchre assured.
Meekly attendant; he who came by night
Of Jesus to enquire, and was supplied
Of spirit of diviner excellence
Eke only apprehensible aright.
Life and existence, and be born anew;
Born both of water and of spirit, whence
And where it lists the wind shall blow, whose sound
Thou hearest, but knowst not—none ever knew—
And no man hath ascended into heaven,
But he who thence came down, and bore the wound,
The Son of Man in heaven who dwells for aye!
—These, in the awe of that most sacred Even,
Came carrying each his tribute to the Dead,
Linen and spice, devout and lovingly.
The sacred temple of his body they
Remove, from which the God had vanished.
With trembling veneration, from that height
They bore it down, all lifeless as it lay.
Her heart was broken as with a fresh blow,
The floods o'erflowed, and overwhelmed her quite.
As men in shipwreck unto heaven uplook,
And spread abroad her hands, and watched him so;
Knelt and received the Saviour's wounded feet,
And veiled them with the vest;—the while John took
Affection, bore the burthen of his corse
As it descended in its winding-sheet.
In sorrow like her's if there may be excess,
And more than madness might beget remorse.
What mother ever had a son like thine?
Than common mothers, oh, canst thou mourn less?
Wrapt in the linen mingled with the balm,
And gazed their last upon the most divine.
That cold chaste countenance, that seems to smile
Even yet! that frame that flourished like the palm,
Of exquisite proportion, symmetry,
And grace, how lovely! Those bland lips, whence guile
As eloquence still lingered mutely there;
And still that forehead is of dignity!
Lies on his field of fame the Victor-Chief—
And here shall also be his sepulchre.
Thy glorious life, thou Warrior of our Faith,
Hero of Peace, and Champion of Belief!
Where, in a rock, was newly hewn a tomb,
Whose concave never man had slept beneath.
Shall rest the long Desire of every land,
The Hope of nations, and the Lord of doom.
(Their pupil arms the Rabbi's faithful bier,)
Thither they bore him, and with gentle hand,
In most magnificent simplicity—
—All silent—save the toning of a tear,
X. ŒLINA.
Of Man; hallowed and halcyon be the haunt
Of thy repose serene, heroick One!
Oh Peace! thy pleasant song—a plaintive lay,
Of tone so fine it silence may not daunt.
In Wisdom's pensive paths he took delight,
And his Benevolence was like the day.
Of highest hope, and at the iniquity
Of Fortune, murmurest to the silent night?
More skilful to instruct or to acquire?
More beautiful and brave? more fair and free?
Ampler in fancy, reason more complete,
To touch the human chords of the heart's lyre?
Was he who lieth here within the rock,
A perfect man;—and art thou perfect yet?
The modesty of death. He, without stain,
Was hated, hunted; made a mark and mock;
Born to privation, and in suffering bred,
In ignominy lived, and died in pain.
Nests have the birds of air, and foxes holes,
He had not where to lay his weary head.
In him they saw no beauty to desire,
No grace that wins, no virtue that controls.
Proved meritorious, greatest, bravest, best;
A man of sorrows, manifold and dire.
From prison and from judgement, like a lamb
Led to the slaughter guiltless, yet distrest.
Thy merit spurned? thy passion or thy pain?
That thou shouldst wring thy hands, lament, exclaim.
Dumb as a sheep before her shearers he!
Why murmurest thou? be patient, thou profane!
Wiser and better? Older far are some
In mind than most in years:—Go, wed to thee
And give the green leaf on the tree to God,
The yellow and the withered to the tomb.
Of life he was surprised, and rapt away:
Few were the days the Son of Man abode.
His life is measured by his glory now,
And that shall never perish nor decay.
Canst only raise to manlier energy,
And make humanity a grander show.
Change and corruption; thou art of the flesh
Fleshly, and born of an humanity
Nor from its fatal lapse recovered yet,
Hath to its proper stature grown afresh.
As an ensample unto human kind,
Of the Idea, thus impersonate,
In archetypal vision, lordly Man
Was preconceived by his all-plastick mind.
His being; and glad Wisdom from on high,
Down-wafted with celestial airs, swift ran,
Of Beauty, her twin-sister, cast the zone,
Full of attractions, love and harmony;
A palace of the Soul, a glorious shrine;
But for the Sons of Nature built alone,
Charmed by the symbol and the semblance, here,
Of that consummate Beauty, who is thine;
Who in high Heaven delights thee, Mind Supreme?
They bask in her bright presence every-where.
Of living waters, and within the bower
Of love in Paradise, Man saw the gleam
The azure Heaven, and Woman's heavenly eye,
And fused the day into a happy hour.
Sad was thy parting, slow and wandering,
Alien and out-cast Man, new-doomed to die!
Saddest on earth! pomp for dead monarch hoary,
Sad pomp funereal for a father-king.
Messiah's going-forth in nakedness,
From the bright palace of paternal glory.
Angelick burning in their sighs, and spirits
Of fire dissolved in liquid tears; by stress
Their mould seraphick melted into dew;
At the Atonement meant for Man's demerits.
Emptied of deity, become a child;
But, from the humiliation of that view,
Transcending what they then beheld, and bent
On the far end which all things reconciled.
They clothed their joy with song and harmony,
Good-will to Man, by great Messiah sent.
Hover in grave delight and melancholy,
Oh Son of Man! in pious sympathy—
We linger here; but Faith, serene and pure,
Looks unto Thee, Eternal and most Holy!
Thou wilt not suffer, nor his Soul in Hell
To perish, but wilt lead him thence,..secure.
Oh, Son of Man! and hallowed be thy slumbers,
And calm..for wisely thou hast done, and well!
The Hierarchs of Heaven, far in the sky,
And they whom, though on Earth, no Earth incumbers,
Of Hell and Chaos; with according chime,
Each in his scale of solemn harmony;
“The invention of Epitaphs proceeded from the presage or forefeeling of Immortality, implanted in all men naturally, and is referred to the scholars of Linus, the Theban poet, who flourished about the year of the world two thousand seven hundred; who first bewailed this Linus, their master, when he was slain, in doleful verses, then called of him Œlina, afterwards Epitaphia, for that they were first sung at burials, afterwards engraved upon the sepulchres.” Weever's Discourse of Funeral Monuments.
IV. PART THE FOURTH.
CHAOS.
XI. THE WAY TO HELL.
Reposed; but, like a strong and armed man,
With that loud voice in Empyreum heard,
Throughout Earth's womb, and rent her sepulchres,
Travailling with Death,—and Life again began.
And rends the veil that wont its rites debar
From eyes profane, unconsecrated ears:
And conscious Chaos, with a huge recoil,
Hushes her waves and stills her stormy war.
About Night's throne, direct my downward way—
How perilous the path! untried the toil!
The Virgin's story heard; then vanished—
—As now he vanishes!—
Of precipice, and waste outrageous deep
Of waters, in an agonizing bed,
With sounds of human voice! Still vacancy,
Void o'er whose formless face doth darkness sleep,
Of temporal space, which leads to that far bourne,
In the calm regions of Eternity,
With tread corporeal, a pure element,
Of aught material as of sound forlorn.
There; yet Duration is, and Substance dwells,
And Being absolute and permanent.
Utters to empty forms and shapeless shades,
Who deafly list unutterable spells.
With tales of tumult or detours of pain,
With Fancy peoples and with Sense pervades.
Report adventure strange and voyage hard;
The Mind sees in the wreck itself again.
Or sage that mystic region generates
In his own likeness, for his own reward,
Sinner and Saint their spirits in different guise
Reflect, as each his doom anticipates.
Of that far region, which no region is,
All mystery, yet hath no mysteries—
Within us and about us every-where—
It clothes the bed of death with ecstasies,
The worst wild pass, in sorest, saddest dream,
Of the lost soul, bewildering less, less drear;—
On blessed sleep, less dulcet and divine:—
Than that strange transit, ever in extreme!
Wandering reluctant far from Paradise,
Millions of years no measure can define,
And was—all alp, all desart, all ravine;
Horrour of Darkness girdling Hell's abyss.
The darkness is its own, yet not of it;
For we are it: what veils it, is the screen
They are within us, and we dwell in them;
Yet are they not on Earth, in Heaven, nor yet
For these are truths, and every truth's a spell,
Wisdom must value, Wit may not contemn;
Of prophecy, have cleansed my vision so,
That I can look on things invisible.
My mind dwells in its own eternity,
Beholds life's source and aim, its ebb and flow;
To speak. Now listen. Know, that Mind it is,
Creates the light whereby the Eye doth see,
Or absent; nor is then its orb the Eye,
More than its ruins are Persepolis.
Day; Moon nor Stars, to rule the night, or tell
Of seasons: here is no variety
Of my own being, a pure sphere of light
I can project, and shape and syllable
Even as the eye of Childhood doth, create
Pictures and friezes indistinct or clear.
In her own time and space, eath as the sense
Of Euclid could construct and demonstrate
Perfect and pure, by power of his own mind,
Shaped by its prescript, and proceeding thence.
Nor skill of cunning painter could pourtray—
Path the Soul travels to her place assigned.
Him I perceived of whom I spake erewhile,
Present and vanished ere that I could say,
So, the same instant, leaves this world beneath,
And reaches th' other, passing no defile,
Smoothly transported to a blessed goal:
Of Past or Future no account with Death.
Eternity broods o'er the Infinite,
Time has no lapse and Space is one and whole.
Glanced and was gone, returning through the void
To his far home, a disembodied sprite.
Or sent; revisiting the quaking earth,
Then trembling as about to be destroyed?
Who knows not Amoz' son? The Prophet wept
Of Israel's doom the darkness and the dearth,
The Lord upon his Throne, and with his train
The temple filled, where his high state he kept.
With twain they clad their face, with twain their feet,
And flew, a volant canopy, with twain.
Were touched, and he foretold the Virgin's seed,
What keystone should Creation's arch complete.
Rumour of that event was heard; for there
John, as on earth, Messiah did precede,
For his great coming, to lead captive thence
Captivity in triumph through the air.
Of what was done on Earth; and all the Saints
And Seërs old thrilled with desire intense,
By grace divine, with eagerness upborne,
Love that fears not, and Faith that never faints,
Bare confirmation of the glorious news,
To comfort all who dwell in that sojourn
Profane or sacred, in her voyages;
Nor wonder, though adventurous, she refuse,
To plunge down hither; or discern it not,
So well-concealed in such remote recess;
There where the spirits of men repose apart,
In expectation of their final lot;
XII. THE VALLEY OF THE SHADOW OF DEATH.
1.
The portals of his Shadow hast thou seen
Within the Valley of his Mystery?
The bottomless chasm, the abyss ineffable,
And those far gardens of perpetual green;
And that dark bourn of terrour where the bad
Pine in their prison, expectant of worse hell.
The mighty desart with its golden face;
Thereat a shadow, pensive but not sad,
Of undecaying beauty, shedding day
And light immortal in that obscure place.
Her perfects limbs enfolds, yet hides them not,
But in more chaste proportion doth display:—
An amaranthine crown is on her head,
And in her hand a sceptre she hath got.
Of countenance, and lovely though severe—
Who may she be?..the Living in the Dead.
Beheldst him, vaunting on his paly steed;
For spirits can in either sex appear:
Or slackness, and in terrours or in smiles,
As men with fear or faith his coming heed.
But they do name her Immortality
Who placid dwell within those pleasant isles.
And sheds the halo o'er his dying brow,
Type of the Crown that he shall wear on high;
Soars like a dove away, and is at peace,
Far in the mountains where she dwelleth.—Lo!
Beyond the Abyss of Space, and free from Time,
Heir of the realm of pure realities.
2.
Happy the Dwellers of its palaces,
Where thoughts are things, how beauteous, how sublime,
In truth and spirit to pure Intelligence,
As words and objects, in material dress,
Forms of the mind, yet dwelling far apart,
Substantial beings, their own evidence,
The evidence of things invisible,
Yet real as the pantings of the heart.
We pass the gulph that parts that world from ours,
Heaven dwells in us, and we in heaven do dwell.
Of asphodel beneath Elysian skies,
And hold high converse with celestial Powers!
But Being and eternal Truth and Good,
Pure Freedom and developed Energies;
The pure, the perfect, and the permanent,
Only are there, with peace and plentitude.
When the religious soul finds entrance there,
For whom yon gate is opened, with consent
Unearthly spirits, in no temporal clime,
Await the growth of Heaven's consummate year.
Of mortal coil, and earthly circumstance
Of pain and peril, evil care and crime,
Of coinherent impulse, to prefer
That Other Gate, which glows as they advance,
Insatiate, to embrace and then immure,
In darkness, and the fire shut up in her.
Even for its gloom, the flame even for its ire;
Dark spirits of wrath such sympathies allure;
For all their ends are madness. And, lo, She
Them to her adamantine gate of fire
Hell's Porteress, sits, all in her sable stole,
As she of the realm were queen, who keeps the key.
3.
And limits to its wanderings are none;
Nought sees she as it is, as part or whole.
Though both dishonest and irrational,
And amiable to herself alone;
These she misnames the graceful—noble—free—
Pious, ascetick, and heroical.
Turned from the bright and beatifick Vision
Their willing Love, and sought Felicity
Or in the Foreign Infinite beyond,
Illimitable as desires elysian—
And cried aloud in phrenzy—“I have being!”
Alien of heaven, incapable as fond.
Sent forth celestial Wisdom ever-blest,
From midst his Glory, where, with Love agreeing,
She went forth from his bosom, and displayed
His Judgements, and his Power made manifest.
And all his Creatures only in its sphere
Are what they are, and in his gifts arrayed.
Of God is her beginning; and to know
The Holy One is understanding clear.
Subsists the Universe; and from his Will
Life, Light and Motion, as their fountain, flow.
By Understanding he established heaven,
Brake up the depths by Knowledge and by Skill.
The hidden Counsel of the Eternal Three—
This legend lettered in perpetual leven;
Eternal Possibility, and Will
For ever active, Bounty ever free,
V. PART THE FIFTH.
THE RESTORATION.
“And the multitude of all the nations that fight against Ariel, even all that fight against her and her munition, and that distress her, shall be as the dream of a night-vision.
It shall be as when a hungry man dreameth, and behold, he eateth; but he awaketh, and his soul is empty: or as when a thirsty man dreameth, and behold, he drinketh; but he awaketh, and behold, he is faint, and his soul hath appetite: so shall the multitude of all the nations be that fight against Mount Zion.”
Isaiah xxix. 7—8.XIII. ADAM.
—Of Hades, and Earth's phantasm, and the train
On Calvary, together with that last
That he redemption might on man bestow—
And Ardis shone in glory forth again.
Sublime, the Father of Mankind addrest
His Children, to his voice attentive now.
And, that they might have being, did decree
Undying Health, and unrevolving Rest.
God made immortal as his righteousness.
An image of his own eternity,
But are for ever; hence, in every place
And time, apparent, thorough all degrees.
When dwelt thy Word with Man, and was the Law
Of Wisdom to the Soul. In thine embrace
Of Excellence whereunto I uplooked,
And Beauty that attracted with its awe.
I communed with thy glory, and my heart
Rejoiced in thee;..and thou its homage brooked.
Before thee the huge World is as a grain
Of sand beside the ocean—yea, its chart
Is as a globule of the morning dew
That drops upon the earth its tiny rain.
For thou art God alone, and on thy Power
All righteousness and Justice must ensue,
All thy Creation Mercy uncreate,
For thou createdst all, and shalt restore.
Thou willst, they are; thou speakst, and they endure—
Lover of Souls! so they reciprocate.
In Thee my being had its Home and Heaven,
A habitation suitable and sure,
And I with thine eternal Wisdom dwelt
In thy capacious bosom..I was graven
Thy Spirit incorruptible pervade
My Spirit, and into mine essence melt,
The human and divine; one Love, one Will,
Uniting both, and without Law obeyed.
And circumscribe with thine Infinitude,
Eternally incomprehensible.
To full felicity, and there enjoying
Love, without fear, and without evil, Good.
Human perfection with its mere excess,
Though inexhaustible yet never cloying,
Of that absorbing fire, lost in the God,
And to itself be very nothingness.
Kept in its centre, neighboured yet alone;
My Spirit, by thy holy Will withstood,
Maintained its outbirth, though embraced in thee,
The Generator,..dwelt apart, self-known.
Of her existence, fondly measuring
Its depths and heights and its capacity;
Stirred into action by its plastick Will,
And warmed to life by Love's awakening.
Than Life to quicken, wont with Life to teem;
And my heart ached with its mysterious thrill.
Yet feeling in my spirit such desire,
As kept me waking, but as in a dream,
Wrought in me, I was as a God, and felt
Heroick scorn of earth and her attire.
Unsatisfied. The Glory of the Sun;
The Pride of th' Height, whereto men since have knelt;
Ethereal Arch; the Majesty of the Noon;
Clouds with their changes, and the Sky with none;
The marvellous works of the Omnipotent,
Spake to my soul in a despised tune:
A personal Marvel and a Mystery,
Conscious of power divinely excellent,
Over all Elements. Had I not seen
Thee, their Creator, and conversed with thee?
More terrible in majesty and might,—
Than these—than all. When hath thine Equal been?
Stronger than Fire—above thy Works thou art,
And who can magnify thy name aright?
And there are hid yet greater things than these—
Thou givest Wisdom to the godly heart!
My longing was not in them. Not in them
My Image, though of God the images.
I questioned of the Beasts of Earth,..in vain;
They were not to my mind, nor of my stem.
I knew their natures, and prescribed their names,
But shared not in their joys and did disdain.
Of fire stirred in my Soul. Eternal Father!
Who of thyself didst generate the frames
One Life, one Form of thy coeval Love,
And in thy Word that all Creation gather—
To be delivered of its lovely freight.
Then formless, void and darkling;..from above
And unrevealed to sense; nor knew I how
Their objects our affections do create.—
Welled from thee in the Garden, ere thou slept,
And from thy side a broader stream might flow!
Sanguine of Hope! 'till, sick with Love denied,
The dews of Slumber o'er my Spirit crept.
The Birth I travailled with, by Power Divine,
Emerged all-beauteous,..Daughter, Sister, Bride!
Redeemer! who with thine own flesh and blood
Repairst the breach which then I made in mine.
By Man, with this disruption of the heart,
This bloody Passion in his Solitude,
Thy Maker and thy Husband bears the whole,
Death's Sacrament;..and yet his Life thou art!
Deep was the sleep I slept that thou mightst live,
And its baptizing floods had strong control,
The Form of mine Idea. Anon, awaken,
I saw the Woman, and I called her Eve.
A Paradise within a Paradise,
A Fountain sealed, a City unforsaken—
She having her perfection but in me,
And I in turn lived only in her eyes;
Naked, though unashamed; and, under Law,
Guiltless of Sin, yet not from Nature free;
Speaking like Woman, of a Life by-gone,
And one commenced—and one that Faith foresaw,
Whom the Revealer, in the days that are,
Hath manifested in the Eternal One.
Thy Church hath wandered from thee: dwelt apart,
And of her habitation passing fair
Idolatrous adored and deified
The vanities of Lust,—the lies of Art,
The Good and Evil that with Knowledge came,
Labour and pain, and peril—taught and tried,
From Heaven, accepted the devoted Life,
Whose Shedding clothed Humanity from Shame,
Debarred from touching, by Cherubick fire,
The Tree whose fruitage now is ripe and rife,
Thy potent Word, out of thy royal Throne,
Leapt down from heaven amidst a land of Ire,
And standing up, Avenger unadored,
Filled all the region of that populous zone
It swooped to hell, and smote her land with fear.
—By Suffering perfect made, by death restored,
Her wrecks are levelled, and her ruin healed.
Each Son of mine is the first Labourer's heir—
He prays—and Angels minister his need,—
His Blessing fattens the renewed field;
—Oh Eve! Strong was my Love as Death, to share
With thee the Curse of that ambitious deed,
Stronger his Love who hath atonement made,
And died, that he a body may prepare
And for the senselessness of shame she lost,
Be in the marriage garment well displayed.
The First and Last of Beings. Hence began
The Ages; and his Words, the countless Host
Hence Woman; and with woman man partook
Her doom; and great Messiah's grace outran
And shall redeem, with energy divine,
All to himself, wherefore he all forsook,
XIV. THE PATRIARCHS.
Beloved Abel, who, in the World's prime,
Watched the devoted Flock—thus set apart
Descending, in the cool of day, appointed,
For Sin, Atonement from the birth of Time.
Both Curse and Cure, a refuge for the Soul,
And to redeem the flesh it kills anointed.
Man's body, for whose food all perisheth,
Attired through the mutation of the whole.
As, by the organons of touch, the Mind
Discourses with the World whose life is death—
Life still regenerated bodily,
Still mortal, every moment recombined.
Even in the heart of his peculiar sphere,
Hast drunk Death's Vintage thus outpoured for thee!
Unto the Mystery of Blood he bowed,
Shed for the World ere her foundations were,
For Labour, the great Curse, made Cain as stern
As Earth, fat with his sweat; hence he bestowed
Of one who had well-done, expecting straight
The guerdon of his toil. No man may earn
Was thine, O Seth! who now on that same hill
Reposest, where of old, in placid state,
Call on Jehovah's Name, and evermore
Worship the Highest and Invisible—
The Forms of Life, so lovely, ever new,
And of their passions make them idols store.
Enamoured of its coil, divorced from Reason;
Or Reason, pitying, grow imbruted too,
To his supremacy, right-absolute,
Without respect to sanctuary or season,
Before or after; naked, yet unshamed,
Until he tasteth that sciential fruit,
So by the Law Sin reigned, that Grace might be,
And God's high Will o'er all be known and named.
And manifold inventions vainly sought,
To entrench his weakness, and to make him free;
Thanks to the shame which made him feel his need,
The sorrow that could hide and heal it not,
To endure the Sorrow, to despise the Shame,
The Virgin's Son, the Woman's only Seed.
In all things, and his Nature multiplied
Among heaven's hosts, and idolized the same,
But carnal. Hence Rapacity and Lust;
And civil Violence was deified—
And cruel, seeking its own good alone,
Unsocial, and unfaithful to its trust;
Soon sorrowing, if repenting not, in sorrow
That hath repentance none,—and none atone.
Their patriarchal name—Man's Yesterday
Of rest was your's—and wherefore came the Morrow?
And Man conversed with heaven in vision pure,
And silence, till the flesh dissolved away,
Faith aimed at heaven, and Reason walked the skies,
Hope pierced the clouds, and Love abode secure!
And Thought o'er Thought piled up, from heaven to heaven
Soared unto God, and solved all mysteries—
Held not the plough, nor gloried in the goad,
Nor in the furrows quenched the spirit's leven!
Of labour, upon whom the Sabbath-Rest,
Redeemed by God descending, is bestowed!
Like the wild Ass unclean, untaught, untamed,
Rude Nature's vigour working in their breast,
Living to labour,—labouring to live,
Hopeless in Death—of Hell and Darkness named.
Thyself, and skilful to no end but this,
Still to be doing, never to achieve—
Man cannot utter it, be full of thee—
The Eye unsatisfied, the Ear no less—
Ordained to exercise the Sons of Men—
Who getteth Wisdom, where thy trials be?
Pondering his work, the vapours of the fire
Waste his swart flesh—he sighs in his hot den,
Watchful to fashion, polish and complete,
The thing he makes for others to admire.
Nor such as he—who know not to declare
Justice or Judgement, rude and indiscreet.
To work out knowledge, yet doth Wisdom miss,
Who comes unforced, or is already there,
Whom she makes sacred. Subtle she and pure,
Yet permeating all complicities—
Self-resident, or in the Eternal Mind
Her dwelling doth invisibly endure.
It crieth, not in me! 'Tis not in me,
Old Ocean saith; as empty is the Wind—
Hid from the Eyes of Heaven. Yet seek again—
Inquire of Hell and Death—they answer—We
—God set her region, when He weighed the winds,
The lightning winged, and meted land and main.
Fear God, be wise; shun evil, would ye know:
This Rede who loves, he Understanding finds!
Oh Sons of God!—permitted, were ye brought,
To look on other Beauty than what now
To contemplate its Source—whence mixture strange,
Daughters of Labour with the Sons of Thought?
And chance of place and season, may attain
Its perfect time, and universal range;
All elements its ministers, and make
Life's food, Life's self,..the sunshine and the rain—
In many rivers from its hidden cell,
And bear back tribute to its parent Lake—
Who eateth of that Tree shall hunger not,
He thirsts no more who drinketh of that Well!
Jared and Enoch and Methuselah,
Lamech and Noah, crown the Crest about
Who ministered at fountains, firm in faith,
Bitter as Marah, shut as Meribah!
Of fear, and fear of Death, with wrath were rife,
And heeded all the heart imagineth—
And opened up Eternity, and showed
Superior Wisdom reconciling strife,
With majesty of manhood most divine,
Fulness of Godhead bodily bestowed—
Boil o'er, the fountains of the abyss upleap,
Broken, and in mid-air with heaven combine
Of the huge World, save the Ark divine that bore
Her Remnant o'er the universal Deep!
The Bow of Promise arched appeased heaven,
And earth baptized rose lovelier than before,
Who worshipped on her bosom; while supreme
God smiled on him whom he had lately riven,
And so the Universe itself careers,
Invisibly directed, o'er the stream
Of various Being, Orbits and Degrees,
In storm and calm, hopes manifold and fears
Eternity—surrounding like a sky
Its unintelligible voyages!
The hovering spirit o'er thy Deep proclaim,
Will, Action, Law, Order, and Deity!
From the tumultuous Waters, canst thou not,
In all thy progresses, attest the same?
Fate's Mystery, unravel and unseal,
Of Man and Men the Destiny and Lot.
Of Indigence on Industry for aid,
Evoke heroick Power, prophetick Zeal,
Until the Sum of Generation be
Complete, and the great recompence appaid.
And Will judicious, still Success awaits;
Nothing too high, nothing too low for thee,
Win royal greatness, or endiadem
Thy brow with laurel-wreath that antedates
Of Independence for thy household hearth,
And 'mong the Citizens be chief of them.
Is as thyself for others, theirs for thee,
For future time, not this; for heaven, not earth—
Love 'midst Contention reconciling all,
Not surer Fate, not Providence more free.
The great and wise into remembrance; they
Wrought for their race—for thee; the unnamed and small
Of their wished harvest, on the level field
Treadst in the steps where first they ploughed the way.
Wisdom and Bliss, and for thy seed complete
The noble dome where they surceased to build!
Perfect the task thou burnedst to fulfil,
In a happier state—thou art eternal yet—
O'er Nature's wreck and Death's subdued ire,
Hovers at ease th' emancipated Will!
And Spirits made perfect, mingling, as it may,
In three-fold union, the thrice-heavenly fire
Of earth's more shadowy speech,..the interwoof
Sudden disparts?—how welcome?—Let them say
XV. THE PROPHETS.
The feet of him, who with good tidings comes,
To publish Peace, Salvation to declare;
His throne, and in the holy City reigns
Almighty! Lo, his Coming far illumes
Tinges the heights, when, out of deepest night,
The Morning Star the coldest Air constrains
Lone harbinger of Day, that spreads anon,
In universal majesty of light,
He comes, second Elias sanctified,
With holy hand, to consecrate the One
Of that redeeming Ordinance, decreed
Ere the Worlds were. By Patience to decide
His Cup who else might drink? His Baptism none
Could be baptized withal; of human seed
Us for His Advent comest thou to prepare,
Whom in this Orb of Hope thou hast fore-run?”
By whirlwind was translated into heaven,
And dropt his mantle on his pupil heir,—
And gazed aloft in faith, the while he soared,
Borne with the steeds of fire and car of leven,
—Whom thus the Baptist answered: “Seers, I stood
Beneath the Towers of Salem, which the horde
Until I heard the Watcher on the Wall,
Asked of the Night, return an answer good;—
Aloud, and sing a song of Victory
O'er Babylon, and Salem freed from thrall.’
Replied—‘The Morning cometh—and the Night
Will tarry not.’ Then I arose, and me
The Guardian of the City, Michaël,
With words of comfort equable and right—
Here hastes. Soon eye to eye the Lord again
Shall Zion bring—this to the captive tell—
He hath made bare his righteous arm, in sight
Of all the worlds, and hath redeemed the main!’”
And in the Patriarchs' souls unveiled the morn;
But chief the Prophets glowed with full delight,
To scotch the serpent's coil. Oh, happy lands,
Where Hope ne'er hopes in vain, and Love is ne'er lovelorn!
Majestically eminent o'er all,
And blesses them with his thanksgiving hands.
Though humblest of that holiest company,
Sweet as sublime—So once looked royal Saul;
Amidst the Children of his Father's land,
The goodliest, loftier than the rest was he.
King midst his Brethren hallowed and proclaimed.
So Samuel stood above the prophet band,
But, smit at Naioth by the Spirit there,
Quelled at his feet lay naked and ashamed.
Vaileth his reverential forehead low,
Unto the Prophet, the time-hallowed Seer—
A true prophetick University;
The Jewels are made up, or nearly so;
Shall be disclosed the Vision, that will fill
The Casket up, and seal it sacredly.
Pearling a sunbeam, smiles his welcome soft?
A man of woes, and victim of all ill,
Most blessed of the Blest, wont on the tide
Of tenderness, to exalt the Soul aloft,
On such a stream, pathetick Spirits, swollen
With sympathy, and lovingly allied
The flood, which swelled its volume that now blends
With the descending deluge, where-mid rollen,
The ocean-chariot that convoyed it high,
And passes,—how none wholly apprehends,—
So Jeremiah on a Sea of Grief
Floated his Ark of pensive melody.
Ezekiel, with a brother's strict embrace,
Greeted the grasp of that returned Chief;
Because the furbished Sword contemned the Rod,
And, for a trial, glowed with its disgrace,
Will smite his hands together, and refrain
From fury—but the Vintage must be trod.
Of one who sweetly sang, and deftly played,
But in a foreign land discoursed in vain.
In no strange tongue the things that were to be,
Simple of manners, and of mind unswayed.
How dear is thine, to whom for this was given
The Hope of Nations over all to see!—
Surround the Prophet silently controled,
And hear how well his embassy has thriven—
Jonas, type of our theme, and Obadiah,
And Nahum who of Nineveh foretold—
Joel, Haggai, and Malachi, who saves
But with a curse; and lofty Zechariah—
The stormy World, and guides the Ark devout
In safety o'er the battle-banded waves,
Their ministrant service. God; thou biddest now
The stormy wind to clip their whereabout—
Thy wonders in the vasty Deep. 'Tis thine,—
The watery Universe; There standest Thou,
Mirrored in tempest. Foam is lift on high,
And Men ascend to heaven upon the brine,
Profound; because of fear their troubled souls
Melt and reel drunken in their agony—
The storm into a calm, and glad are they,
And to their bay desired pleased Ocean rolls.
Who swathed in cloud? who made the darkness be
His swaddling band? who taught him where to stay?
His haughty billows bound—his line allowed—
His limits—even his wrath—defined by Thee!
The Charge they loved?—this, swift as their desire,
Isaiah hath affectionately showed;
And three-fold Darkness deep and terrible,
The Universe pervadeth, loosed in ire
Still, strong in faith, I persevere and pass
The guarded gates, the captive citadel,—
Alas! for Speech is not, and Thought is vain,
And yet the Unimaginable was!
And there amidst, amidst the Darkness there,
A bloody Cross of fire, a fiery rain
Night only, Night at Noon-day; Night foretold
Of every oracle; the Day of Fear,
Whose glory dims the Sun, and with excess
Of Light shall blind the Nations. But, behold,
From East to West, from North to South, and show
The Throne of Heaven, and pierce the Grave's recess.
Downward I look, but can not trace its root,
Upward, it soars beyond my ken: and, lo!
Into the darkness, and, in the dim light,
Shadows of Slain outglimmer, moveless, mute;
And his Companions' graves are multiplied
About him, fallen, fallen, fallen to nether night;
Chariot and Steed in huge confusion rolled,
Armies of Hell;.. they perished in their pride..
By mightier Power, stands with uplifted hand,
Ghastily dead!—On the other, I behold
With Michael, Leader of the Hosts of Heaven,
And the great Chiefs of that heroick band,
Like Victors, o'er a falling Universe,
Waiting the wreck where lately they had striven.
The prayer of faith, upholds my spirit now,
Dispels my doubts, and dissipates my fears;
I soar to Earth, there hangs the Crucified,
And from his wounds the healing fountains flow;
Behold, his infinite Arms embrace the Skies,
And with his Blood the Stars are purified:
Led by the Spirit to the Eternal Throne,
Entranced there and slain with mysteries,
Adoring, and absorbed in Deity,
Humbled, consumed, transformed, and not self-known.
At length, awaked..on Earth, beneath the Cross,
And praying 'midst the Darkness veiling thee,
Anon, I saw thy human face divine—
O miracle of Grace! O mighty Loss,
How great the Gain for Sacrifice so choice,
The Holiest on the most accursed Shrine!
Of Man and Woman;..her's whose virgin womb
Conceived the Son!”—Hereat one cried, “Rejoice!”—
By all that Multitude was sung—“Behold!”
And Numbers without number, who the gloom
Of every land—all in one voice combine:
—“Behold the holy City doth unfold
As if her Light were come! Behold the Cloud
Of Glory over her, from line to line,
From the sublime o'ercanopying sky
To her foundations, gloriously endowed
The Bride. How beautiful in her array
The City of our God, who from on high
Her golden Streets we shall revisit still,
And in her Temple Sacrifices pay.
Even he whose hands are clean, whose heart is pure,
Faithful of Word, and dutiful of Will.
The King of Glory comes victoriously!
Who is the King of Glory? He, besure,
Lift up your heads, ye Gates! He stands before ye.
Oh, ye æonian Gates! uplifted be,
Who is the King ye herald? Who but he
The Lord of Hosts? Who else is King of Glory?”
Doth from the mountains to the plain descend;
Multitudes, multitudes, successively,
All people, and all tongues, along the plain,
Huge continent, yet thronged. As friend with friend,
Throughout incalculable multitudes,
Still onward—onward—a majestick train—
Whose pleasant rivers through the mighty meads,
Flow on, and fertilize far fields and woods,
Along a musical and winding shore,
And follows pensively where'er it leads;
The City, where they enter, in one sea,
The Paradise of God, unite once more.
They hail the sacred ramparts, and behold
The Hosts of Heaven again watch over thee,
For ever, yet nought enters to defile,
And Michael hovers o'er thee, as of old.
XVI. THE SOMETIME DISOBEDIENT.
I.1.
For Wisdom is the grey hair unto men,
A spotless Life old age: how great their gain!
Translated from amidst a sinful race,
Soon perfect, why should they be proved agen?
For God esteems his Chosen, and his Saints
Shall seek and find his mercy and his grace.
They understood not, how he will reward
Love that fears not, and Faith that never faints.
I.2.
Who from yon Hill of Speculation came,
Patriarch and Sage, with Prophet, Priest and Bard,
From the voluptuous Daughters of the Plain,
Each heart devote on its selected Dame,
Musick and Song delight the Ear..the Eye
Is ravished with the Dance though graceful, vain—
And Motion exquisite, lures for the sense,
Nor fraught with ill if tempered holily.
And from her Mount of Vision drag the Soul,
To waste her strength in wanton feculence.
I.3.
Usurps the Seat of Justice. Evil thrives
From length of years, and reaches its far goal.
Ill only, all the Good is purged away—
Knowledge but from the Visible derives
Inflate, but cannot fatten, whom they feed;
And demon-pride pervades the night and day,
Strange divination of strange gods begot,
The accursed Art, the unutterable Deed!
II.1.
The hoary head is as a silver crown,
That he is cold of heart who worships not—
To Thee with honour, whom for ten long ages
Wisdom had hallowed, knowledge and renown.
Time, the Truth-utterer, to your patient view,
Of his huge tome expanded all the pages;
And Heaven had eke revealed its mysteries,
But that Man's heart made evil what it knew.
II.2.
With lusts abominable; and the Earth
Groans with his guilt, and teems with agonies.
Teem with heroick purpose, and rejoice
In its completion with no transient mirth.
Of millions, at the end of many times,
Doth hail the Tyrant of their fatal choice
And rages like the dog-star in the days
Of madness. Love itself, itself sublimes
And Hate becomes immortal, and fell Ire
With ages grows, and Grief;—yet Death delays.
II.3.
Made feebler with the weight of Centuries,
Shrinks from unfilial vigour. Thou wilt require,
Now from the ground. Yet mercy reigns supreme;
Lo, in yon Ark a ready refuge lies,
They reck not of his warning that foretells
The penal Deluge, weary of the theme.
His eloquent arms upraised unto his God,
Who hears in heaven and answers, and impels.
III.1
Thou Earth, break up thy fountains,..and spurn hence
The proud Oppressor, son of force and fraud!
Though small, intensely small, erects his ears,
His mane erects, and smarts in every sense.
His veins with courage tremble while they madden,
His eye returns the lightning while it sears,
And reeling in the rain and wind and thunder,
He yields the life the hills no longer gladden.
III.2.
A Band of revellers, in open air,
Invoking Hymen, when the rock asunder
'Mid the cleft Cliff upboiling—on one ridge,
Rage perishing, and curses breathe for prayer!
Despair, amid his sullen family,
Sits fixed, remediless, though the peak's edge
Plunging into the flood that fulmines near,
To brave his dread and prove his destiny.
Fear worse than Death, them howl the Wolves about
Unfeared, for worse than Famine clings them there.
III.3
Amidst the Ocean, they have sate and watched
Destruction's goings-on, since first the shout
Looked through the gloom up to the sky, wherein
Orb met with orb. How fearfully they clashed,
And strangled her amidst the waves,..but kills
Her not. Behold no refuge! Earth hath been!
Who, from the bursting waters rushing thence,
Meet myriads scaping from the falling Hills!
IV.1
Of Cities was! Of all that they contained,
(After it in the distance aches the sense,)
God's Angel guides the Ark, and guards it well,
Blessed, albeit on every side constrained—
In safety, creatures of the Earth and Air,
And Man their lord, and Woman, first who fell,
Them guides God's Angel to their Ararat,
And renovated Earth awaits them there.
IV.2.
Faith quickens in the souls of faithful men,
That moral Courage which the World spurns at,
The Heroes of Earth's vulgar Victories,
Worse Flood shall whelm than rolled o'er giants then.
Leap o'er their Carcasses, and nothing lives
Between, save that saved Ark, and he who flies,
No footing to the Dove who straight returns:
And whom the Ark which sent her forth receives.
The Olive-branch she brings! Go forth again!
She comes not back. Lo! Earth! and Man discerns.
IV.3.
Come ye to Judgement! lo, the Judge appears!
Where'er ye bide, on mountain or in plain,
Concurrent Prophecy of Paradise,
Dated co-eval with the Eternal Years,
Come Myriads! the Messiah to behold,
The Preacher like to Noah—Rise—arise!
The Deeds of the Ungodly to confound,
And everlasting Judgement to unfold!
VI. PART THE SIXTH.
THE PREACHING.
“In a little wrath I hid my face from thee for a moment; but with everlasting kindness will I have mercy on thee, saith the Lord thy Redeemer.
For this is as the waters of Noah unto me: for as I have sworn that the waters of Noah should no more go over the earth, so have I sworn that I would not be wroth with thee, nor rebuke thee.
For the mountains shall depart, and the hills be removed; but my kindness shall not depart from thee, neither shall the covenant of my peace be removed, saith the Lord that hath mercy on thee.”
Isaiah liv. 8—10.XVII. THE HOLY OF HOLIES.
The pure of heart, the clean of hand—before
Thy “Beautiful Gate,” a sainted Company.
The Angel of God's presence. Thus he cries,
Thus hails the Myriads, friends of God of yore;
Now get thee up into the mountain high;
Jerusalem! lift up thy voice, thine eyes;
‘Behold your God!’—say to the Isles around.”
—Thus from above those Hosts are welcomed by
For distant bourn, four Cherub heralds wait,
And question of them, what? and whence? propound.
Of the blest City stood. Four Chariots they,
Vision whereof doth Iddo's Son relate,
The Angel of God's presence spake again;
—“These are the Spirits four who stand alway
Of brazen mountains, firm as his decrees,
(Swift Powers of Heaven,) like rushing Winds, amain,
Behold! yon two wend toward the South, and call
Her people forth; that seeks the North to appease
But to the Earth these Bay have sought to go;
Get hence, pervade the Earth.” So vanish all.
Into a hymn as they ascend the Hill,
In numbers without number, singing so.
Go up into the Temple of the Lord;
Lo, we shall dwell in Salem.”—Thus, until
Their raptures in no mortal verse; then strain
Of higher mood they raised and bolder word—
And girt with strength. The World immoveably
Is stablished, and His Throne shall aye remain!
O Lord! the Floods have lifted high their voice,
The Floods lift up their billows mightily—
Of many waters, stronger than the seas—
Thy Word is sure—let all the Earth rejoice!”
Of the Diluvian and the After-time,
According to their orders and degrees,
Of every creed, the righteous and the good,
Have entered now the nine-fold Gates sublime.
Inner as outer, for the Wall was not,
That made distinction of belief and blood,
Advancing thence, they pass the Portico,
A priestly band, and by one spirit taught,
Nor pause 'till they the Halidom have hailed—
And lo! the Glory of the Holiest! Lo!
The Veil, the Veil, by earthquake rent and riven,
To publick view the Holiest is detailed!
Where God is seen in beatifick Vision;
And that on earth of this, whereof was given
Entrancing there the meekest of mankind,
In colloquy divine and dream elysian.
Of all the Earth in vain thereon would gaze,
Wherein Messiah is in Mercy shrined,
Of godlike Majesty, from whose far stream
Recoil the Nations, with immense amaze,
There sate the God-like on his sapphire Throne,
Exalted o'er the sky-crowned Cherubim,
And gloriously the Bow of Promise wove,
About the Son of Man, its blended zone,
Upon the obedient firmanent he trod,
Stretched forth crystalline o'er the heads above
The People with his Power, whenas they viewed
The perfect Man, the Coeternal God.
Borne on the wings of Angels, folded now;
The Chariot of their Maker. So they stood.
Great fourfold orbs irradiate all with eyes,
And elevated high, terrifick show,
The Almighty, populous and hovered o'er,
With Seraphim, on flaming ministries.
With humble heart a contrite Sinner lay,
Adoring him whose blood he witnessed pour,
His fellow Sufferer for his Saviour owned,
And in that blood washed all his sins away,
Swathed in the penal robes of sunken shame,
Silent he prayed to Him who sate enthroned—
Had he for pardon; and the Arch-Enemy
Summed his transgressions and denounced the same.
The Adversary stood, and urged his plea,
Disputing yet for Death 'gainst Victory.
Thus glozcd the Tempter and Accuser, lies
Founding on Truth, pronounced maliciously.
And keen of edge for guile's infernal deed,
Satanick craft of vain logomachies.
Admonished of his Law, in thunder spoken,
And the loud trumpet bade His people heed;
Both Curse and Death should swift pursue and smite
The Man by whom their prescript should be broken.
The power of Death? What hindereth then that I
Resume my own? if Reason rule, not Might.
If one—then all. Adoring what he stole,
He sacrificed, in fond idolatry,
Dishonouring his Father in the act,
Slaying the Tree that bore him, branch and bole,
Charging her cold remains—false witness, worse
Than he who from his Neighbour would detract,
What need of more? all these his crime includes—
His Maker's name who doubts he oft would curse,
Bring me the Thief who can these faults forego—
'Tis clear he coveted another's goods—
I stand for Moses, and his written law,
And plead it to the letter. Judge thou so!”
The Thief breathed fervently his silent prayer,
Heard by his ear whose eye his spirit saw.
What Sinai claimed did Golgotha fulfil,
And Death even died with the Incarnate there.
God's word hath double edge, destroys to save,
And makes alive even while it seems to kill.”
But by the Form can we the Spirit know,
But by the Letter they expression have—
The truth it represents;..for who can see,
The Spirit formless, wordless?..who can show?”
Known by the Spirit only, although read
By the dishonest most dishonestly—
Is that which doth interpret, they accord—
If that be faithful, error none need dread—
Rebukes thee!”—At these words, the Accuser fell,
As lightning flashed from heaven; the Heaven abhorred,
XVIII. NOAH.
The Lord spake—“Stand upon thy feet!”—and lo,
The entering Spirit did with life inspire,
The penal swathings of his shame fell down
From off his limbs, which now with glory glow,
A mitre fair, on his anointed head;
Angelick garb, and he an angel grown.
Who vailed o'erpowered, before that glorious Throne,
Their prostrate brows with reverential dread;
He rose, but the same spirit pervaded wide,
The adoring Nations; thus they arose, as one,
The triumph of redemption. There might be
Patriarch and Prophet, King and Priest descried—
Oh Noah, I beheld—encouraged so,
With thine innumerable Company,
Aiming at heaven by means forbid to men,
Odious to Order, whence did deluge flow.
He spake and said: “Oh, Lord my God! I kneel
Beneath the Seat of Judgement, now, as when
That thou wouldst spare the World, and pretermit
The penal Deluge. Behold, I appeal
Upon the Sinners whose imaginings
Were evil, and their hearts on evil set.
Lured by Temptation into errour's maze,
By length of years, by angel-ministrings.
Of old forgotten by thee? Shall the Past
Call thee its Saviour, worship thee and praise?”
Spoken for others. For thyself,..I bear
Thee witness, that thy Faith withstood the blast
Then came thy cry, when the Floods compast thee,
Within his Temple into the Almighty's ear.
Waiting for the consummate Day when Time
Shall be no more—Why on the past dwell ye?
Of the expanded Future, and behold
The Flesh redeemed to its immortal prime.
Creation, of the Father's will, by me
Expressed, in its begotten Order rolled—
My glory veils and shadows, for behoof
Of all his Creatures, his great Deity:
It dwell from you, ye in its light do dwell,
Sun of the Soul—a pattern and a proof.
To eye or ear. In me his plentitude
Abides—his only Son from whom ye well,
His Glory only. I his Brightness am,
His Word in whom he sole is understood.
The Second Adam, ere the First am I,
Saviour of every Age and Clime the same.
Dying to live, and rising to redeem,
Suffering..rejoicing, with Humanity,
Nourished, replenished with the Blood devote
For aye upon the Shrine of the Supreme—
Expense of Godhead may Creation be,
Much less Redemption of the Creature wrought.
Which I delight to do; Obedience pure,
Free to submit, when most submiss most free.
But die not in my Death, who, once for all,
Died, and your Sufferings are mine, besure!
I feel the pains of your Mortality,
Temptation, and infirmity, and fall;
With all—all human Suffering, of mine
A partial echo, meant to purify
Earth's Griefs touch me in Heaven. My Spirit pleads
With groans unutterable, Man, for thine.
Thy heart with the affliction of the strife,
That good and evil in thine embryo breeds,
Between the Flesh and Spirit, whose great war
In childhood and in age alike is rife,
Of their nativity directs to rule,
In arts or arms, the nations from afar?
The wrath of the Unskilful—the Proud's scorn,
The wisdom of the World, the Porch, the School,
And with thy Blood compel thee to baptize
The teeming age in its prophetick morn?
Partaker; for it so behoved that I
Should feel the sense of thine infirmities;
Creation's God, and yet Creation's heir,
The Ways of God to Men to justify.
Not for His pleasure, but to exercise
The Chastened for his profit, in severe
And bringing peace to the obedient Soul,
Whom out of suffering He glorifies.
Obedience taught unto His perfect will,
And my reward awaits me at the goal.
A little lower than the Angels made,
Yet crowned with honour and with glory still—
The bases of the Universe, wherein
I, as in me the Father, am pourtrayed.
But not so stedfast; and the great Abyss
As my decree, whose depth may not be seen,
Ere my Voice thunders, lo, the Lightning flies,
My Fiat swifter executes than this.
The present God, and felt him in all things;
But most in thine inherent energies,
The plastick power of Thought and of Desire,
Delight and Sorrow, Sin and Sufferings,
Kindled and killed, that ye might be redeemed,
And after a far better life aspire.
And Imperfection become manifest,
And Nature checked, however good it seemed,
Man's Freedom might be chartered, tried and proved,
And Life revealed, and Charity possest.
The Freedom of the Soul, the Will, supreme
O'er Law, and Love fulfilling what behoved—
On Earth, but ye are taught by Death and Time
The Truth and Meaning of the immortal Theme.
And in the Past and Future, as he lists,
Expatiates and confers with every clime—
Of the expanded Universe, by whom
Created, and whereto it yet exists,
Open the way to the celestial land
Where God prepares a City, as a womb—
Wherein their Brethren in the dust repose,
Grasped in the Father's Omnipresent hand—
Save he who passes inward. There with earth
Earth mingles, changes and more perfect grows,
More glorious, meet for spirit to indwell,
Perfect in Love, and consummate in worth—
Of large performance, destined to aspire,
All will and purpose to accomplish well.
Prepared for me, who came to do his Will,
Left in the tomb. But thence shall I require
Redemption, captive lead Captivity,
And gifts receive for you..for all—until
—Lo, I am with you ever; and to you
The Gospel now is preached, that ye may be
Men in the flesh, but in the spirit live
According unto God. This hear, and do.
XIX. THE FATHER OF THE FAITHFUL.
To that innumerable Company,
I'th' presence of the Angels, who thereon
Within the circle of the Rainbow, they
Rejoiced, and clapped their wings triumphantly.
Was glorious; to and fro, with gladsome speed,
They did their messages of love convey.
What next I saw. Behold, Melchizedek!
And he who for himself and for his seed
His pious Father: “But where is the Lamb
For sacrifice?”—his dignity partake.
The eternal Priest bowed down in silent prayer.
Messiah thus—“Ere Abraham was, I am!
Greeted the Faithful from his Victory
With sacramental blessing;..thou wert heir
Whence Bread from heaven,..angelick food for man,..
And Life divine outpoured in Blood. With thee
Accomplished now. Be thou a Priest for ever;
I swear, nor shall repent. I will—I can—
In righteousness and peace, surcease to hold
Sway and dominion when and wheresoever.
Sware by myself, that from his barren eld
Should issue generations manifold;
The City truly based, divinely built,
Whereof unto his seed was oracled—
And not remember Sin,—but multiply
Thy Seed, O Abraham! For whom thou wilt,
My Laws, and write them in their minds, and they
Shall be my people everlastingly,
—Then Abraham rose, and by the Spirit moved,
Thus reverently answered.—“Lord, alway,
To my dead body thou didst raise an heir,
And from the dead restore my Son beloved—
Children to me, and of my bosom name
The Paradise whereto thou dost appear.
The glory of thy power unto all lands,
Behold, the peoples that of me became,
Present their acceptable offerings.
Whoe'er loves mercy, whoe'er understands
His heart a holocaust, or unto thee
Doth sacrifice a tear;..oh, for these things,
Adopted, and from Sin and Death redeemed!
But chief for him pray I—who barbarously
Of mightier power than Nature, when he sought
To read her volume, that with marvels teemed,
Astonished and o'erwhelmed the excited Soul
With Fear, and unintelligible Thought!
The Chaos of his mind, and on his heart
Of thy great Love and Bounty pour the whole—
Was not all Earth baptized on which Man trod?
Oh! is not thine its universal Chart?
Or poisonous Nurture misdirect the Mind—
Be thou not wroth, nor, with an iron rod,
Thou laugh'st in heaven—thou laughest in thy love,
And thou for Man hast righteously designed,
—He spake and there was silence. Every eye
Was on Messiah fixed—if he approve,
Made radiant his celestial Countenance,
So shone abroad that Frequence gloriously.
Upon the wings of Tempest, and in Cloud
Descend, with Terrours compast, and entrance
Walks in the Thunder, but its dreadful tone
Hath Blessing to the Universe avowed.
Go forth to Earth; and Peace to Man—I bruise
To heal again—and break to reatone.
Justice unto the needy; I preside
Over the Gods, the nations who abuse;
Behold, they do my work—prepare my way—
But they shall perish—Man be justified.
My Spirit hath been present every where,
Brooding o'er Chaos with Omnifick Sway—
From the imperfect growth of human Mind,
Whose manhood shall like deity appear,
Then shall my head its golden Crown assume,
Then shall I reap the Harvest of Mankind—
Maturely beautiful. But He shall thrust
His Sickle in her Vine, and gather from
Be trodden in the Winepress, and with blood
Appease the Wrath of the divinely Just.
Prisoners, go forth!—and ye shall reign with me,
(Earth rebaptized, but with a fiery flood,)
The Grave shall throughly heave like to a womb,
And, from her Chambers, hasten to set free
—Thus spake Messiah, seated royally
Between the Cherubim, who now assume
Saying, “Holy—holy—holy—Omnipotent,
Worthy, who wast, and art, and art to be!”—
Is lifted up, and, with the mighty motion,
Is heard a noise of musical concent,
As of the winds that strive upon the wave—
The voice of speech, in praise and in devotion,
Hymned to the Lord of Hosts upon his throne,
From universal Being, solemn, grave.
The King..whose throne is Heaven, whose footstool Earth,
The Priest..who shed the blood that shall atone,
The happy bridal of the earth and sky!
—And, ever as they sang their holy mirth,
They bear the enthroned One, and, as they go,
Behold, the fourfold wheels which stood thereby,
By the same Mind inspired, remove forth right
Rapt on a whirlwind's wing. The Temple,—lo!
Conceives its majesty, increasing still,
Interminably opened. Sheeted Light
The space, with Voices multitudinous,
Proceeding from that Throne ineffable,
Borne on the wings of hymning Cherubim,
Afar, into the Void diaphanous,
Charioting their Creator, who forth goes
With thousands and ten thousands tending him,
Still inward—inward still—that following Tide
Of peoples, where Messiah leads,..and glows
Hosannas:—Inward, in the distance, they
Host after and around the Deified,
Beyond my ken; for to the Precipice
Do they arrive, in orderly array,
Sustained by power supernal, they descend,
The Co-Assessors, and the Witnesses,
XX. THE GODS.
I.1.
The Gods, supreme; in orbs concentrick roll
The Worlds beneath his feet, not without song.
Guides, rules, and animates, in each and all,
And the same God is present to the whole,
And Time shall answer, and the unflying hours
Rest, like the stars in their ethereal hall,
All Energies, of Nature and of Man,
To him yield their dominion..heavenly dowers.
I.2.
Thy universal Church shines like the Moon,
Irradiate with thy Glory. Whence began
She who in the beginning of thy way
Thou didst possess, with everlasting noon—
Of thy Earth's founding, and took after-joy
Within its habitable parts to play
Whose Tree of Life the Cherubim ensphered
From touch profane, commissioned to destroy.
Before the depths, or ere the fountains flowed;
Thou wert his Sister, and his pleasures shared,
And set a compass on the darkling face
Of the Profound, and its due limits showed;
On Earth; Thou art his mother, seated high
Above the Moon, star-crowned, in virgin grace;
And one with him, whose glory covers thee,
As with a garment, sun-clad, in the sky.
II.1.
Is radiant with thy glory, in all ages,
Among all people. Mutability
Hast thou appeared in vision and in dream,
Whereof bear record their prophetick pages,
To those whose hearts within them, like their own,
Glowed and expanded, with the truth supreme.
One..manifold..entire: but Souls embrute
Bow to the Image meant to make her known.
II.2.
The contemplative Spirit, suffering
From occultation of the Absolute,
That, passing, veils the Truth. Let it pass on!
Shine forth, O Sun! the universal King,
For ever is, immovable, and Earth
Light from thine aspect borrows, and, anon,
To darkness, not forsaken; for the Moon
And Stars reflect thy glory faintly forth,
Majestick Heaven itself alone reveals
To Faith,..a starry spell,..a visible tune,..
Of the mysterious Tome, and supersedes
Their borrowed Lights,..their spirit-motived wheels.
Their office rightly;—Oracles Earth hears
In visionary slumber, hears and heeds;
Enthroned; Angels of Night, whose choral gleams
Echo the Word unto the Worlds He cheers.
III.1.
Idolatrous Earth, reposing on the lap
Of Nature, lost in maze of errant dreams,
The Archetypal Image to discern,
And finding none to stand within the gap.
The floods of Being flow. Unformed, unseen,
Unchanged, art thou; Creator sempitern,
Around a greater than Apollo throng
The Lights of Life, immortal and serene!
III.2.
Is silent, Art is shamed, and Nature hushed,
Before thy coming, Lord of Lords! Along
The Demiurgick Mind through the obscure
Of his dark aspect, Emeph. He hath crushed
And vailed the princely plume upon his head;
Nor vaunts his word a world. No more,..besure—
And everlasting Sire reposes, 'till
The times of strife are all accomplished.
Stands, and adores a greater Guide than he;
And Neptune, Son of Sorrow, wise of will,
Yields his dominion to a greater power:
And Pluto hails aloud the Deity
The Souls detained by Love and by Desire,
Prepared for perfect Bliss. Let Mars adore,
Who fell like Lucifer from heaven, behold
The Gatherer of the Just; Son of the Sire!
IV.1.
To the Messiah! Let all Gods bow down
Before him. Lo! he cometh, all-extolled;
Him King,..him God! The King of kings,..the God
Of Gods—the knowing-all, the all-unknown—
Is in the Heaven, whose sway is on the Sea,
Whose judgements are in Hell for ever showed—
Deeper into the Abyss of Darkness driven,
The Adversary flees from dread of Thee!
IV.2.
Death, and the Power of Death! Hail, Darkness, hail!
Hail, central Darkness! utter and unriven,
Of Life. The Lord of Life—the Lord of Light,
Even in thy deepest pit of saddest bale,
In non-existence all impalpable,
Shining in darkness, breathing in despite.
His coming whom we herald. Hast thou hied
Into thy Centre inaccessible?—
Thy firm foundations cast, and, based on thee,
His Universe of Mercy edified.
Calls Light into existence, from the womb
Of hidden being. Earth appears—and she,
Emerged irradiate, rolls amidst the Day,
A solitary Orb, till Night resume
Darkness retires, above, beneath, around,
(Its immaterial Centre,) far away—
VII. PART THE SEVENTH.
THE JUDGEMENT.
XXI. SATAN.
Of Darkness! Borne on wings cherubick, see,
Leading the Hosts of Heaven, Messiah enter!
Built like a wall, profound, sublime, immense—
Chaotick verge, Creation's boundary—
And here they dwell together. Life in Death,
And Light in Darkness, but without the sense
No Eye, no Ear, no Mind. But Silence sits
Gibbering to Night what Desolation saith.
No tongue of Angel or of Man to tell,
Too high for great, too mean for little wits.
Abortive all its acts returning still
Upon itself;..oh! anguish terrible!
Malice would scowl upon the foe he fears,
And he with lip of scorn would seek to kill;
For Darkness each in his own Dungeon bars,
Lust pines for dearth, and Grief drinks its own tears—
Against himself, and feeds upon his chain,
Whose iron penetrates the Soul it scars.
Each its own place, its prison all alone,
And finds no sympathy to soften pain.
High in his living Chariot, with his Hosts
Of Earth and Heaven, royally rides on—
Amidst the Land of Ghosts rides royally,
And with his Armies overflows Hell's coasts.
Of Death, and Darkness from before his face
Recedes, and Hell reveals her mystery.
The Throne of Hell, the vacant Throne of Hell;
And, at its footstool, prostrate in disgrace,
Vaunting of Victory o'er his Vanquisher,
Death and his Horse lie conquered. There, as well,
The Mother by her Son, while listening,
With gratulation, to the Triumpher—
Where he whose seat is vacant, who from hence
Sublime, ruled Earth by demon ministring?
In his own being a far deeper hell;
Whereof this Hell's but the Circumference,
But, lo, the Omnipresent Word, that spake
Him into being, from his being's well
The charm in which he trusted: and, behold,
He rose majestick from the fiery lake,
Unfathomable depth; and, upward borne,
Within a cloudy chariot inter-rolled,
Fallen from its place in heaven, yet still the Star
Of Morning, beauteous, though of glory shorn;
'Twas not the Scar of Thunder on his brow,
That made him loveless, but the Pride of War.
Could quell, no might subdue, no right convince,
Revenge and Hate's insatiable glow.
Not loveable nor lovely. But, from Heaven
Derived, his beauty springs, unalien since,
Greatness of soul, and energy of will,
Resolve majestick, column yet unriven,
Royal investments, worthy of Man's foe,
And God's Arch-angel though depraved to ill.
Before the Judge upreared his crest erect,
Undaunted, and addressed Messiah so—
Of the Eternal Universal Sire—
Then wherefore thine alone? or of thy sect?
Consumes and purifies..(and why not me?)..
And my reward for services require,
Where is Sin's strength, but in the Law? Death's sting
But in Sin's being? And am I not he
For whose sake wreak I vengeance? for mine own?
They wrong not me..I want no worshipping!
For why? because I deign not to confess
An Equal my superior. God alone
Him I adore the Invisible,..not thee,
The visible Intelligence express,
When hath he spoken? Him would I believe;
But Laws by thee repeated, I am free
Even as it likes me. Faith is for the slave!
Free souls will know, endeavour and achieve.
He made me amorous of liberty,
Ambitious, independent, wise and grave;
Having dominion and a throne ungiven..
Then why to aught begotten bow the knee?
What fault is mine? He made me what I am,
And can unmake—if yet He reign in heaven!
Glorious: His fiat made it such, His hand
Wrought all its springs, and predisposed its frame.
Impressed upon my being I obey,
Edicts I feel, decrees I understand.
Whereto our nature is repugnant. Force
May conquer, but subdue it never may.
What crime to be like God, if he be good?
And that sought I by reason, and discourse,
If God be Love, would not his Love attract
All creatures to himself, well understood?
Supernal, still ascending to attain
The highest point of glory: to transact
Of Seraph and Archangel, ministries
Sublime and great; vain aspiration, vain!
Pined to behold thee, and mine ears to hear,
Impatient of eternal mysteries—
No God of Love, but a consuming fire,
Wrath terrible, and Vengeance most severe!
I look in vain the evidence to find
Of the far-bruited mercy of thy Sire.
Doubts of the Justice, that gave being to
Creatures, for Death and Misery designed,
And suffer wrong, the populace of hell,
Who sought but to become as one of you—
XXII. MESSIAH.
High in his winged Chariot, paved with love,
Life its foundation, and its pillars light,
Messiah patient heard the insensate plea,
Wherewith the Arch-apostate wrathful strove.
On the thick bosses of my buckler thou
Hurlst thy defence of ire, impetuously.
Thou hast not been his Counsellor. To thee,
Say, when to thee did he his secrets show?
His Word, and breathed his Spirit infinite
Through the far echoes of Eternity?
Unfathomable Love, exceeding Grace,
Eternal, equitable, just and right.
We sware we would in covenant combine,
That Heaven and Earth should be, and Time and Space?—
Heardst thou the voice that called thee, ere thou wert,
And thou becamest..a God! with power divine?
Ere thou hadst being merit could be none;
Only the Father's Bounty, ne'er inert,
Thou stoodst before us, image of our mind,
How beautiful, an uneclipsed Sun;
Of glorious energies, to love, to will;
Action and Thought, for blessedness designed.
Made out of hate, wrath's subject, and God's foe?
Nay, but his law exultedst to fulfil—
Within the bosom of the Father, I
Remained invisible, and thou wert so
Prime of Heaven's commonwealth, yet unrevealed
Her monarchy, and His supremacy—
Pervaded yet, a moving presence, felt
Throughout all being,..homage wont to yield,—
Within Eternity, and each might rear
The individual Being, freely dealt.
Might one have seen his Glory, and remained
With Life within himself, but mingled there,
Such was his Will, that Will might grow in you
To perfect growth, and Difference be maintained.
Waxed strong in excellence, and stood alone,
And your desires in independence grew,
And loving what they made and well-beloved—
Till to the height of Self-perfection grown.
Divinest, swayed by no intelligence
Superior, wisest, mightiest, self-emoved.
Incapable of brighter, till the Sire
Made manifest a higher excellence—
That had extinguished arch-angelick Thrones,
And Love Almighty more consumed than Ire,
In visible dominion, suddenly
Revealed, in presence of the heavenly Ones.
‘To me hath said Jehovah; Lo—thou art
My Son—this day have I begotten thee’—
Burst forth in hallellujahs; and, with song
Vocal, each harp in jubilee bore part.
Adored, and, in devout humility,
The Eternal Father blest, who, them among,
Before his Creatures; that they might improve
Their natures to the standard, endlessly,
And such their aim, within whose spirit Law
Discovered no repugnance. Such his Love.
Checked, but Ambition prompted to aspire
Beyond all glory that all Creatures saw;
Of that perfection which deserved esteem;
(Of glory without goodness vain desire:
Law proved thy Love defective—Faith, unsound—
Will, rebel to the voice of the Supreme.
And Wrath, not in the Father but in thee,
Consumed of thine own Fury. Look around!
Impatient of reproof, thus Satan said—
“It is as I—but who created me?
The Vessel for them. So he loves not me—
Nor these who dwell with me in this thick shade—
—To whom replied Messiah.—”Even in this
The Father's Love is proved, though terribly—
Even to the righteous, to the Sinner more!
Thy wrath is imperfection. Not so His.
He pities improgression, and descent,
And would by pain admonish and restore.
Thou tremblest if persuaded to believe—
And vain remorse is thy void element.
And contemplates with Love, as, in the height
Of Heaven, the Archangels, whom no lapse makes grieve,
—Then Satan—“Why not I unfallen? but He
Made me defectible—a Son of Spite!”
Else thou wert not a Spirit, nor He were
Of such the Father. He created thee
The Truth I speak, but wholesome to the soul.
Both thou and Man were free, each in his sphere
Through your obedience. Other bond have I
None with the Father, but Obedience whole.
Entire obedience to the Father's will
Inscrutable, devout and filially—
All gracious purposes—and so became
The Mediator to all creatures, till
Warned of the peril, and through death and doubt,
Labour, and strife, and sin, pursued the same,
That God may willingly be served, when he
Becomes as God in knowledge wise, devout.
Knowledge of evil for his greater good,
To manifest God's love supernally—
A bitter lesson for his after gain—
Experience hard, and Sin redeemed with blood.
The Sons of Labour murmured as they toiled,
Like Captives galled with an ignoble chain.
For Law was given but to this end, that they
Should conquer in my right, and be assoiled
Advance from dawn to noon, from Law to Love;
Itself a Law unto itself alway;
And hell beneath, and over the wide seas,
Behold that Love reflected, and approve
Thy power shall be broken, and without
Creation be cast forth its Carcases,
Triumphant, o'er the mighty Slain rejoice.
—Who God reproves must answer! Who shall doubt?
XXIII. THE MIRACLE.
The Fiat of Omnipotence, and shrank
Into himself with fear. Fain would he melt
He fell; and with him fell, with hideous crash,
His throne tyrannick, which Oblivion drank.
Horrible lightning thunderously outrolled,
And took them in, closed with a sudden clash.
The Chariot of his Love past o'er them there,
The living Chariot of Cherubick mould—
Hell's waste dominions, and an Eden blooms—
The Flowers of Paradise their blossoms bear
Of myriads. Still the Omnifick Word careers,
The Light of Life through those ancestral glooms
Darkness dispels. Sin, and the Centaur Death
Went down with Satan; lo, his Hosts and Peers
Slain by the Sword proceeding from his mouth—
Deep-buried in the Abyss, Hell perisheth.
How are ye fallen! From th' unapproached Throne,
Down-swooped; from East to West, from North to South,
Her rebel land, with desolating arm,
The Omnipotent Destroyer did enzone!
Night in the midst of her swift course. Amain,
Girt with Jehovah's fiat, by Alarm
The First-born. Princes in your Palaces,
Captives in dungeons, cattle on the plain,
The Avenger smote ye, and delivered us,
God's Israel, from their hands who would oppress!”
“So let his head be bruised; for God is Love,
And wills not strife eternal, ruinous.
The Powers of Darkness. Heirs of the Most High,
Beloved of God—his Love ye shall approve.
Had my delights among the Sons of Men,
Ere Pain was known, or Man was doomed to die.
Stark Evil made Sin grievous, and aslaked
Its wrath with Sorrow, Earth baptizing then.
To Joy or Grief, beneath whatever sky,
Where'er Man was, where'er endeavour ached,
Wrought out Redemption, rearing up the Soul
By Faith, from Childhood to Antiquity.
Of Knowledge is forthradiate; and, in me,
The Universe submits to high control.
Sustained, suspended, for the weal of man,
And Providence and Miracle agree.
O'errule and change all elements by power
Of harmony, wherein they all began—
When ye shall hear the Trump, and from the grave
Redeem the body which it would devour,
A glorious Kingdom and a beauteous Crown—
My hand shall cover them, my arm shall save.
And make my sword the Creature for revenge—
And Righteousness and Judgement I'll put on
The rightly-aiming thunderbolts abroad,
Winged from the bow of heaven, in that great Change.
For Death is swallowed up in victory—
Quenched and exhausted in my quickening blood,
God's Throne is based on Justice,—so I died,
That Mercy might have life eternally.
If possible, the bitter cup away
Might pass from me—to thee the Crucified
For him, create Intelligence, whom now
The stormy-footed wrath hath swept from day.
And to its unrevealed decree resign
Thy Creature—All thy Love thou wilt avow,
What Thou beneath my feet wilt subject, when
I shall deliver—for the kingdom's Thine,
XXIV. THE CELEBRATION.
Benignity and beauty from his eyes,
How dovelike, with celestial softness shine.
Whose Spirit circumscribes Infinitude,
There present where, above the starry skies,
Of Darkness o'er the outer Deep, there where
They couch in Hell;..lore little understood.
Where on his hidden throne his awful Sire
Sits inaccessible in Love severe.
From the great Altar of Atonement, blends
The acceptable incense; while the Quire
Its wonted hymnings. They in Silence muse
The Mystery that all mysteries transcends.
O'er heaven, o'er earth, o'er hell; and Voices rise,
With thunderings and with lightnings, tremulous;
—“Ascribe, ye Mighty, to Jehovah might
And glory, victor o'er his enemies—
The glory due unto his Name! Adore
Him in the Beauty of Holiness aright!
Careers; the God of Glory thundereth;
Jehovah speaks where many waters roar—
Thy powerful Voice is full of majesty;
Thy Voice o'erthrows the Cedar with its breath.
Skip like a Calf, and like a Unicorn,
In youth transilient, and by nature free—
Jehovah shakes the Wilderness; his Voice
Maketh the Hinds to calve, the forest-born.
And all declare his Glory. On the Sea
He sitteth—hushed is its tempestuous noise—
Upon the calmed flood, eternal Lord;
And strength unto his people giveth He,
XXV. THE RETURN.
Accompanied, Messiah from the plain
Of Victory returned; with him along
Attendant on his Chariot. Greater he
Than that God-guide, renowned in antique strain
Himself his Chariot animating, who
Traversed the heavens with the heavenly,
The gorgeous banquet of the Gods, on high,
Whereof no bard hath told in numbers true.
Messiah, on the wings of Cherubim,
Was charioted aloft, triumphantly—
As with the sound of waters, variable
In harmony; above, the Seraphim
And hymns were harped by that redeemed throng.
—One Sabbath dawned in heaven, on earth, in hell;
URIEL.
(THE FRAGMENT OF) A MYSTERY.
Methought of Uriel I had writ or read
A mystery—the Doom of Quick and Dead.
'Twas the Last Day, and Satan came, it seemed,
To tempt the Sun's bright Angel, misesteemed,
For that his World for Wreck was destined—
And Uriel's Faith was proved. Then Judgement sped:...
Wo! to the Tempter!—Hail! to the Redeemed!
And the soul everthinking thought in sleep;
And forged a drama in a poet's brain—
Anon, conceived Ambition made me weep:
The Tempted is inferior in their strain,
In mine, even as the Tempter, high and deep.
I. THE ARK OF HADES.
Uriel.Earth, the great Mother, Children bears no more;
And Man knows all that he can ever know.
Of the Pacifick Deep, where Hades sails,
The Ship of Souls, awaits him, as of yore;
Of this more blessed Araby, salute
The populous Bark, and their delight inhales,
—Billowless Gulf, upon thy bosom moves
Nor ship, nor galley, Ocean absolute!
May hover o'er that Ocean of Repose,
With those bright Spirits, those descending Doves,
O glorious JAH! wilt thou to her not be
Broad world of streams and rivers, where none goes
HYMN OF THE FLOOD From the Ark.
The voices of the storm are high,
All is wrath and wreck without us—
All within, security.
Some desperate wretch clings to it!—vain!
None but us her keel preserveth—
Silence—on she speeds again;
A thing of life, she stems the flood—
Nought the peril bides, save only
The Ark of Almighty God.
We rise, and reel, and rock—and, lo!
All above the window flashing,
Lightnings ever come and go!
It rushes in a tide of doom—
Heaven is ravished from before us,
Earth is universal gloom!
And the dread Curse of God depart,
And the field and forest lighten,
And the aspect and the heart
With renovation, love and joy;
Jubilant in God forgiving,
Who would prosper not destroy?
Being! mysterious Word! Eternal Son!
Oh, Life of Light!—The Sea of the Abyss
Covers the sands, and Time can gather none!
The Shadow breaks that pageant Glass of his,
Still gazing on the Vessel while she soars,
And, as on Voyage to the Isle of Bliss,
Like a sea-bird, her noiseless way explores.
Satan,
(Having risen unperceived by Uriel, now exclaims behind him)
His Bow was bent! Thou Great and Most Glorious!
Was thine ire 'gainst the Rivers wild?
Was thine anger against the Sea?
The Mountains confest Thee victorious—
The waters o'erflowing and tempest-piled
Passed by, and the Deep raised his voice unto Thee,
And lifted his hands to thy Deity!
At the flash of thine arrows and glittering spear,
They shrunk from the sky they were chartered to fill
With the flood of their light,—for the Ocean's was there!
HYMN OF THE FLOOD
And is His anger without end,
Ever from His presence banished
All that Earth could comprehend?
Shut out from all that lived before,
As within the grave dark shrouded,
Must we visit her no more?
The fields of heaven, the golden sun,
Never seek a glimpse to gather
Of that purest, brightest One!
Note the broad waves sublimely swell,
And the billowy West enlarging
With the setting day's farewell,
As, mid the light of other sphere,
Spirits, though unheard, had spoken
Into life the glory there,
The nurse of Faith, and Peace, and Love,
Which without her may not blossom—
They exist not—but above!
Thou spakest like a Seraph, and thou art
Such in thy form and spirit. Whence camest thou?
Satan.
From going to and fro through Earth and Hades
And Heaven.
Uriel.
Thy mission?—
Satan.
It is written on the Tables
Of Prophecy, which shine above the Altar
Of Vengeance and Redemption, that “there shall be
Nor sun, nor moon, since He becomes henceforth
The Light himself, for in His holy eyes
Even Angels are not pure, but charged with folly.”
Uriel.
The Father's Will be done!
HYMN OF THE FLOOD
With God's fierce might, and vengeance too,
Every doubt with being ended,
Death hath no more dread for you!
Submerged is every mountain's height!
Lo, the flood arrests the raven,
And the loftier eagle's flight!
His Will be done!
And Uriel be no more of Light the Angel,
Than Lucifer is now the Son of Morn!
Uriel.
Ha! Tempter? thou art he!
HYMN OF THE FLOOD
Flung on the waters waste and wide,
In the wind and tempest cradled,
On the neck of fear we ride,
Avaunt, begone! ye warp the heart,
Smiting man with gloomy errours—
Faith admits ye not—depart!
And when in trouble triumphs most;
Not alone when fields are flowerful,
But in winter and in frost.
And though the tree no fruit should bear,
She shall flourish in the bosom,
If the heart be faithful there.
What! if I be—
The die is thrown 'twixt Satan now and God—
Beneath his feet must all things be subdued
Ere the Son yields the Kingdom to the Father—
Must Satan then not bow?
Uriel.
Seraph, once bright,
And now not shorn of glory utterly,
Still beautiful, though fearful in thy beauty,
Of form majestick, if erect of soul;
Comest thou to make submission?
Satan.
Wherefore not?
Shall Uriel's brightness, perfect, yet expire?
Then what of mine remains may well be merged!
Uriel.
We are but for his glory.
Satan.
So are all.
His boundless glory is from everlasting
To everlasting—circling all, uncircled—
Incomprehensible—omnipotent—
What can exist without it? Man or Angel?
It crushes all—engulphs—devours—absorbs—
Into its infinite capacity.
Earth cannot hold it, Heaven is even too little,
And Hell is compassed with it round about.
Thy words are of the truth.
Satan.
They are the truth.
And Truth is very Being, and he is,
Who utters, Truth.
Uriel.
That is, the Son of God.
HYMN OF THE FLOOD
Turned from thy truth its rebel eye,
Every bosom, evil hearted,
Teemed with all iniquity.
Thy holy Spirit was aggrieved
With unutterable anguish,
Deep, mysterious, unconceived!
“I have repented of my work,
Man, whose heart hath still dissembled,
Still my spirit sought to irk.”
Wert mindful then—and shall I now
Doubt thine help, oh, thou All Seeing,
Thou, my God—my Saviour, thou!
We all are Sons of God—nay, we are gods,
For Scripture is inviolate—then, why
Should not his glory shine in us, as in
The Son himself, but sole-begotten named
For excellence of merit, not of essence?
Uriel.
True, they are gods to whom God's Word hath come—
He is the Word.
Satan.
More words than one proceed
From God's prolifick mouth. His Words are Things;
And all things that exist, they are his words.
Words and Works differ in a letter only,
In meaning nought.
Uriel.
Creation is the Book
Of the Almighty—
Satan.
An Incarnation of
The Deity in mythick wise expressed.
Heaven, and the Glory of the Stars, declare,
As in Apocalypse, that all his works
Are in his words, and every word incarnate.
Uriel.
Oh! all things speak of Him, all his works praise Him!
How glorious is the Sun! that doth embody
The Light thou art; magnifick Work, wherein
Is tabernacled Word magnificent
Of Him, who said, Be Light! and Uriel was.
What wonder men the Sun should have adored,
In Thrace, as god Apollo, or in the isle
Of Erytheia, where the bright red herds,...
Betwixt your territory, Atintanes,
And the Ceraunian mountains, northward of
Epirus, on the borders of famed Greece,
Nigh to the Dorian land, there, on the banks
Of Aous, running from the Lacmon mount,...
Grazed, sacred to the sun, guarded through day
At large, and in a mountain cave through night,
By holy shepherds? In learned Corinth too
The sun was worshipped. Nor need wonder be,
Symbol so glorious was identified
With him, who reigned of Art and Eloquence
Divine Inventor. But, O Uriel, thou
Wert not as element a deity,
But far removed from Nature, Essence pure!
Uriel.
Get thee behind me, Satan! Thus, of old,
Changed from thy proper shape, a stripling Cherub,
With habit fit for speed succinct, and held
Before thy decent steps a silver wand,
Didst thou with flatteries accost me once,
Answer to win which might direct thy way
To that one of these shining Orbs, where Man
Held fixed seat, while yet in Paradise,
Whence, duped by thy temptation, he was driven.
HYMN OF THE FLOOD
The Mighty and the Glorious One!
Storms and shadows round him gather,
Brightness that subdues the Sun—
Cast o'er the world his eye of wrath,
Did the vast circumference measure,
Doomed to universal scathe!
Were hidden by the swelling surge,
Every vestige of the creature
Trembled on Destruction's verge.
Oped, and Earth's springs were broken up;
Thunder went abroad, and leven—
Poured the flood from wrath's full cup!
He scattered the everlasting mountains—
He bowed the perpetual hills to his thunder,
He clave the earth with her rivers and fountains!
List to the lay! 'tis of that broken Orb,
Now once more to be broken; nay, Creation
Thoroughly purged, that He may make anew,
Or rather, making that he may destroy.
Blasphemer! Well should I that time remember—
Then didst thou, 'midst the Sons of God, denounce
Me, as once Job, for one who would resign
Integrity, if trial came severe;
And hadst permission so to attempt my faith,
As if that Baptism were of Fire not Flood,
As now it is indeed:—ay, haply, now,
In this extreme, thou, at thy like request,
Permission hast again. But I defy
Thine arts, even now as then, and from my Orb
Thee hurl, with weapon of ethereal temper, down
Into the dark abyss.
[Elances his Spear at Satan—it recoils.
Satan.
Behold, O Seraph!
Thou art forsaken of thy vaunted God;
Or, wiselier, know thy god in me. Fall down,
And worship. In my name, shall yet the Father
Receive his creatures, as the victor in
Strife long and sore, by perseverance gained—
Acknowledge thy Messiah; of his names
Once Lucifer was one.
Uriel.
Thou hast no power
But what the Highest lends. With this keen trial
I must comply, but He will make a way,
For my escape. His holy Will be done!
He doth abandon thee, he hath abandoned—
Nor thee alone, but all. Thy rule and realm
He takes from thee, thine Orb he will abolish,
Thy glory will dissolve, for sake of One.
But all things first must lie beneath his feet;
Submit not to prostration. Up! delay
The time's accomplishment, and still preserve
Thy proper glory, thine unforfeit state.
Uriel.
Light was before Light-bearers, may be after—
Though the foundations of the Universe
Subvert and be supplanted, yet will I
In faith adore the Mercy of the Lord.
HYMN OF THE FLOOD
Prime Architect, and Lord of All,
Built by Man,—securely stranded,
Waiting the prophetick call,
Hail! Mother of the future World!
Travailling in wild commotion,
On the billowy desert hurled!
The first World into light and life,
Lo! the next unseen, untended,
Embryo of the womb of strife—
The shriek, the groan, the dash, the cry—
Ruin that aloud rejoices—
And its guard the louring sky!
They boasted of their steeds of strife;
Ships above the water guided,
Things of motion and of life—
O'er the earth's circle, and to whom,
As the grasshopper that twitteth
Vainly in its own green home,
Heaven as a curtain and a tent—
Whom the might of demons dreadeth—
Holy and Omnipotent;
And poised the Orb of Earth—alone!
Lord of Life, Death, Rest, and Motion—
Earth his footstool, heaven his throne—
And launched thee o'er the stormy waste!
Fear not...By his presence tended,
Haven shalt thou have at last!
To thee shall look in peril, pain—
And the riddle thou unravellest
Hope shall bless, and joy attain.
In Him shall trust who thee preserves,
And the Faith that doth inherit
What it seeks, but sees not, nerves.
Shall it create an unseen Ark,
Wrought of Love, and Mind and Merit,
To oppose the deep and dark;
Till joyful they arrive at length
To their haven's rest, confiding
In their Saviour and their Strength!
Tempt me no more, Deceiver—hence—begone.
Satan.
Weak Slave! Had I not power on Him ye worship,
To hold him in the Wilderness? to take him
Up into mountain high, and show him thence
The kingdoms of the world? Him set I not
On loftiest pinnacle of that proud pile,
The glorious Temple, soon by Titus razed?
My power is more on thee. Here stay I, seraph,
Here by thy side; and hence behold with thee
The Universe, to swift destruction doomed!
Hence make thee see such Visions, not unreal,
As shall convince thee of misconfidence.
Behold!
II. THE HOST OF HEAVEN.
Uriel.Vision of Salem, Mother of us all—
How lovelily thou sailest, Ship of Souls!
Yet from the Sun thou life-light e'er receivest,
And still thy way pursuest, free from thrall.
An Orb and now a Crescent—waxest—wanest—
But art not as thou seemest—never leavest,
—The Planets come, in filial confidence,
Whose dance harmonious in thy wake thou trainest,
In their auriferous urns, o'er all degrees
And constellations, shedding influence.
Ye thousand thousands, borne on radiant cars!
Light from the Fount of Light, replenishes;
Watchers of Night! the Angels of the Stars!
Our ordered course combine,
The Cherubim of Light are we,
Recipient of divine.
Or ere was Heat or Cold—
God's Voice we heard, and, overjoyed,
Cried, “Light is born—behold!”
Yet by no sign exprest,
Division land and main between,
And heaven manifest;
For seasons and for years,
Whose mystick progress echoes yet
The musick of the spheres.
Satan.
Hosting, ye come, ye Armies of Heaven!
What are now the Planets Seven?
What are the fables that were forged in thy brain,
Thou Son of old Adam? or art thou a Cain,
Or art thou an Abel, the vain of the vain?
Seven days had a week, seven steps had the throne
Of the wisest of kings, seven Spirits made One:
Seven was the chance, Seven the main,
When shall man look on such Seven again?
Who sits in Scorner's Chair, ne'er he
Shall utter Truth, or know, or be—
But let this even be gravely said,
The unarmed eye is limited.
If all it seeth All it deemeth,
'Tis Sign of That whereof it dreameth;
But when as Reason bares the sky
To the far-reaching scient eye,
Bursts...spreads, on intellectual sight,
What Image of the Infinite!
Satan.
Much owe the Students of the Stars
To him, once doomed to dungeon bars,
The Tuscan Artist, who would see
The Moon from top of Fesolé.
Nor less owes Man to him whose glass
Shows myriad worlds in tiniest mass:
Dwarfed, with his Earth, by other Orbs,
Specks which the vast of space absorbs;
He gains again gigantick height,
And she partakes of Infinite;
Above—beyond—the atom races,
Worlds couched in worms, life's dwelling-places.
Uriel.
Of worlds innumerable in the presence,
Man it behoves an humble mind to bear;
In contemplation of the Eternal Essence,
Let him feel pride he can, in his dim sphere.
Little is he compared with Power divine,
There, in his moral being, lies the source
Of intellectual life and mental force;
All Speculation on his Will depends,
And “Know Thyself” all Wisdom comprehends—
But, though man's Will be as the central sun,
Round which the Universe, since it begun,
Hath rolled in choral orbed sisterhood,
Wheel within wheel, if spiritually understood,
Let him acknowledge that the all-homaged Sun
Owns the same Centre as each starry one,
And yield (then freest) his Will submiss to thine,
Thou centreless all-central Will Divine;
And while he learns to know himself, like me,
Know then himself best known, when known in Thee!
CHORUS OF STARS.
Our living chariots glow,
And the same Spirit that begun
Still guides them as they go.
Will voyage the Profound,
And of surpassing Glory be,
Like him, with Glory crowned.
Uriel.
Wisdom presides above yon Crescent still—
Death sits within her shadow—
Uriel.
And her head
Is star-crowned, she sun-clad—
Satan.
Yet has she been
Chased from her state into the Wilderness—
Uriel.
But then the Angel of the Heaven stooped down,
And from the Angel of the Earth received
The Man-Child she had borne from Dragon-power.
Satan.
Hosting they come! Not only now they be
Earth, Venus, Vesta, Juno, Jupiter,
Mars, Ceres, Saturn, Pallas, Mercury,
And Ouranus, but all the Names that e'er
Bore God or Demigod, Hero or Sage;
So numerous the populous worlds appear
To common vision in a scient age—
Look—hath a Comet filled them with affright
Dashing amongst them in his fiery rage?
'Tis the Death-Demon on his Steed of White!
CHORUS OF STARS.
Wo! wo! wo!
What art thou, Centaur-Wraith?
Ask Him who saith,
And it is so!
Uriel.
Death is among the Planets on his steed
Of paly hue, a Warrior in his pride,
Trampling the children, while the parents bleed
With unseen ichor, the unnoticed tide
Which the soul sweats, the spirit's living rain.
Before him, and behind, and on each side,
Father and Mother agonize—in vain!
Satan.
Why, Death's a Hero, and each Hero must
Have his Aceldama, though Grief and Pain
Lie writhing on the field, and feed on dust!
—But let me quit this measure,...theme sublime
Is best discussed in right-heroick rhime.
Nature and Spirit have a double sense:
Death, in the days of old intelligence,
Was as Apollo named, because both might
Destroy or heal, and Pæan each was hight.
They chanted pæans, when from plague relieved.
Battle began, or victory was achieved;
And when Apollo with the Python strove,
The Delphick Virgins' Io Pæans clove
Through the wild noise of conflict, and, undrowned,
Loud and harmonious rose above the sound.
Hence—gaunt King! dread Death—begone!
Death.
Song and Dance with you alone
Bide not. I am the Merry One!
Chorus.
Terrible! the Terrible!
Hence from Heaven! hie back to Hell!
Death.
Nay, my way has been as well
On the bosom of the Earth,
And the Sea that is her girth—
And my song has murmured near
Bower and hall, and field and meer,
Bed and billow, passing sweet,
And to Dance attuned the feet.
Shall my work not be complete?
Chorus.
What then hast thou now to do?
Death.
To tread all the Planets through,
Clean way making for worlds new—
New heavens, new earths—Ye must vanish,
I remain, whom ye would banish.
Do not curse us as we go—
Death.
Io Pæan!
Chorus.
Wo! wo! wo!
Satan.
Yon dark half of the Crescent lingers—
Uriel.
Life
Not Death, is there—the Church invisible.
Satan.
Her side which looks on earth is oft times dark
Uriel.
What hither looks the Orb I rule enlightens,
As she moves eastward, earth with light she gladdens.
Satan.
Anon, earth rolls between thine Orb and hers,
And lo, her phase converted toward the earth,
Cheered by thy lineal rays, shines out in radiance,
And then what upward looks seems veiled in gloom.
Uriel.
O! what is dark to earth is brightest then
In heaven's eye, and what to earth is brightest,
Is black as night to the pure eye of God!
But when right obvious to thy Glory, hers
Is perfect and complete—for what is it
But thine reflected? And these stars, that wait
On her majestick goings-forth, like her
Express thy Glory, and, haply though obscurely,
Memorial bear of thee. Hence Night is holy,
For it preserves remembrances of Holier.
Uriel.
And of the Holiest—Fountain of mine!
The Heavens declare the Glory of the Lord,
The Firmament doth show his handy work.
Satan.
Thou art their god; 'tis of thy light they mind,
In their relations each revealing it.
And shall yon Death their altars thus destroy,
Their temples raze? The Power of Death have I—
Look, he my eye acknowledges, obeys
The mandate of my frown.
Uriel.
God has to thee
Given power, whereto I yield, in patient faith.
Satan.
Lo! with his planetary train he comes,
In homage to my feet. Fall down and worship.
Uriel.
Thee?
Thee! thou art the god of all these worlds;
Thou rulest, and Death lives—if not, Death dies.
Death.
Father! all hail!
Satan.
All hail! my Son beloved—
Loved for thy Mother's sake and for thy own.
Why art thou rampant?
Death.
For the worlds are doomed.
Satan.
And Uriel's too?
Death.
Yea.
Satan.
Hearst thou not?
Uriel.
But grudge not.
Satan.
Thy world shall yet be saved—
Death.
It may not be—
It must be. Know, your destinies are twined.
The Consummation of the Filial Age
Must be delayed, or hideous wreck cling both—
“All things,” 'tis written, “need submit to Him;”
Light first to be shall be the last to cease,
Save Death.
Death.
And what of me?
Satan.
Then comes thy end.
For on the Tables it is prophesied,
“The last Foe that shall be destroyed is Death.”
Therefore to thee be Uriel as a god;
Lift not thine hand against him, but adore;
Live thou his votary, or die his victor.
Uriel.
Why rage ye? and imagine a vain thing?
And wherefore envy him who seeketh not
His own but the Paternal glory? Is not
Excepted HE who put all things beneath him?
And when all things to him shall be subdued,
Shall not the Son himself be subject to
Him who put all things under him, that God
Be all in all?
Satan.
Ay—so he saith. But who
Hath seen the Father?
I reject your worship!
Death.
Turn, oh, turn not in thy wrath,
Sun-god! from thy worshippers;
Prostrate in thy sacred path,
Heed my supplicating verse.
I to whom the race of man,
And all things since Time began,
Have been subject;—I to thee
Bow, benignant Deity.
By the Light which is thy Being;
By thine Eye which is all-seeing;
By thy far and fervid Throne;
By thy State aloft—alone—
By thy Sway from East to West;
By thy blessing Beams and blest;
By thine everlasting Rest;
And the Rising and the Setting
Of the earths of thy begetting;
By thy Rays whose echoes are
Such of planet and of star;
By the Life which thou dost give
Unto each and all that live;
By thy Strength and thy Rejoicing,
And the Plenty thou art voicing
With an ever potent Word,
Not unfelt, albeit unheard;
By the Hymns that are sung to thee,
By the Rites with which worlds woo thee,
Than all worship—I adore!
Save, oh, save—the gods aver,
Thou canst save thy worshipper!
Satan.
Ye myriads of bright Planets, who, unto
The peoples of each other's Orbs, appear
So beautiful, and fitting regions for
Beings far happier than abide in each;
Fair in the depths of Azure as ye sail,
So placidly and patiently, self-moved,
Self-ordered, by inherent power informed,
And with intelligence divine endued;—
Ye know the spirit whence your spirit is,
How generated, and to Uriel pay
High honour duly. So sublime ye are,
Ye seem immortal, yet but seem; for Death
Hath the commission that ye tremble at.
But ye know also where Salvation lies,
Having of our discourse been audient,
Therefore your choral supplication raise,
And with your worship move to pity him,
Whom such high worship well may deify.
ODES.
KLOPSTOCK'S “DER FRÜHLINGSFEYER;”
OR, THE SOLEMNIZATION OF SPRING.
Nor hover where the First-Create adore,
The Sons of Light, a Choir of Jubilee,
And, as they worship, sink in ecstasy—
But round the Drop upon the Bucket's brim,
Only round Earth, I hover worshipping—
Sing, Hallelujah! Hallelujah! sing!
The Drop upon the Bucket, (praise to Him!)
Did also flow, at his command,
Out of the hollow of the Almighty's hand!
The greater Earths outwelled,
When rushed the Streams of Light,
And the Planets Seven compelled —
Then flowedst thou, Drop! at his command,
Out of the hollow of the Almighty's hand!
When dashed, like storm-cloud down a rock,
Of lustrous waves a billowy shock,
And girt Orion, belted One—
Then flowedst thou, Drop! at his command,
Out of the hollow of the Almighty's hand!
The Drop who people or have peopled?—nay,
What even am I? To the Creator's praise
Loud Hallelujahs raise!—
More than all Earths that from his hand outwelled,
More than the Starry Seven that were from rays compelled.
That flutterest nigh with playful glance—
Thou livest—thou—and art, perchance,
Ah! no immortal thing!—
Forth went to worship I—
Weep I instead? Forgive—forgive—
This tear to poor mortality,
Thou who for aye dost live!
Thou wilt all doubts to me unveil, even Thou,
Who through Death's valley dark and dern
Wilt guide my path! I then shall learn,
Whether the golden Worm a Soul endow—
Art thou but shaped Dust alone?
Offspring of May—thus then,
Dispersant dust become again
Or what else wills the Eternal One.
The tears of gladness—
And praise the Lord on High.
Wreathed again, with palms—with palms
Wreathed is my harp, my lips are glad with psalms—
Here stand I, while around my raptured sense
All teems with Wonder, with Omnipotence.
Creation I behold with awe of heart—
For Thou!
O Nameless! Thou!
Its Author art!
And breathe soft coolness on my fervid brow—
Marvellous Airs! his Word of might
Sent you—the Lord, the Infinite!
But now they hush—they scarcely breathe—
The morning-sun glows sultrily—
Above, clouds stream and wreathe—
He comes—the Eternal!—visibly.
They swoop—they rush—the Winds whirl now!
How bows the Wood—the Stream swells how!
Visible, as to mortals thou mayst be,
Thou comest, Infinite! ay, visibly!
The Forest bends—the Stream recedes apace—
And fall I not upon my face?
Lord! Lord! God! merciful! and full of grace!
Have mercy, thou who art so nigh, on me!
That Night is thus thy garment now?
This Night to Earth is Blessing rather—
Thou art not wroth, O Father!
All round about is in deep stillness lying!
The gold-clad Worm looks upward in this hour—
Not soul-less then, perhaps? perhaps, undying?
O were my power to praise Thee as my will!
Ever more glorious thou thyself revealest—
Darker the night becomes where thou concealest,
But heavier grows with Blessing—fuller still!
Jehovah's thunder hear ye?
Hear ye it, how near ye?
The shattering thunder of the Lord Supreme!
Lord! Lord! God!
The merciful! the full of grace!
Be worship and high laud
Unto thy glorious Name!—
—And the storm-winds? They bear the Thunder!
How they rush!
O how, in their impetuous mood,
They stream with loud waves through the wood!
And now they hush—
And slowly, in its place,
The swart cloud wanders whence they came.
Hear ye on high his thunder, Lord Supreme?
He calls: Jehovah!—Jehovah!—Alas!
Smokes the smit forest—but—
Oh! not our Hut!
Our Father gave command,
His dread Destroyer's brand
Our Hut should overpass!
Heaven, and Earth flows with the prolifick Showers!
Now is the Earth refreshed (how thirsted she!)
And Heaven of his full Blessing is set free—
No more Jehovah comes in storm and dread,
But in still murmurs sweet,
He comes; and underneath his feet,
Behold the Bow of Peace, an arch of beauty, spread.
THE AUTUMNAL BENEDICTION;
In Emulation of KLOPSTOCK's “DER FRÜHLINGSFEYER.”
Even Heaven doth pale before her holier gaze,
And thee, dim Earth! with power she can transpierce,
And consecrate thee to thy Maker's praise.
Who died on Calvary, made that Earth-Hill
More sacred than Celestial Mount of Vision—
And Men who, Liberty! thy Law fulfil,
May build on each an Altar to Decision,
That meditates on thy creation hour,
When the Omnifick Word set either pole,
To be the columns of thy house,
And bade thee rise, Heaven's fruitful Spouse,
And gave thee marriage dower:
While yet but Chaos' Daughter. As the spheres
Anthemed thy nuptial welcome, Seraphim,
And Cherubim,
Baptized thee with their fiery tears,
And a holy hymn,
Amidst the Stars,
Rang out in glory from their mystick cars.
When Winter's Snows thy womb with warmth invest,
When Spring awakens first the lyrick bird,
Or Summer peoples with new tribes the faery nest.
Waves at even, noon, and morn;
And the round Moon, broad as old warrior's shield,
With conquest red, walks jovial o'er the field.
The Heavens are drunk with victory—
Earth! thou art drunk with plenty. Harvest teems;
And thy strong Children, Nature! see:—
The sickle and the sheaf—them either well beseems.
Stern Labourers; their Mother thou; their Sire
Thou art, O Mind! The thistle and the thorn
Depart, as from the soil high Thoughts aspire—
High Thoughts! ye soar aloft and pass the sky,
And seek your Father, where he secret dwells,
The Eternal in his own Eternity,
Fount, whence all Seasons flow, and Time outwells:—
Children of Nature born;
From His full horn
The Bounty which ye reap—confess his Love, who feel!
Feel ye not Him in the soft airs, that now
Fan, in the noon tide heat, the sweating brow?
Him in these gentle drops that, big and few,
Fall on the weary, like refreshing dew?
Your eyes are raised, as if to Him, on high—
The clouds a little dim the sky—
Quiets the sense, subdued as if with balm.
—All still—how still! Children of Nature! she
Awaits in silence what shall be—
The All-Present makes his Presence known,
Not only (as felt) by the deep Heart alone—
But to the Ear, and to the Eye,
Audibly and visibly.
How glows the air!—what if with ire?
For God is a consuming Fire!
While the storm blackens in her Lord's swart frown?
While Heaven collects his armies, to come down,
What if in wrath? and dreads she wreck and wo?
—He comes! in darkness comes! God! verily,
Thou hidest thy perfections! Who shall see
The Almighty, and survive?
He comes in mercy then, who wills that Man shall live!
Thy thunder, and saw thee
In the dark teeming clouds. Then poured the rain,
To feed the budding grape, to swell the springing grain—
—Therefore we will not fear,
Because thou comest now in majesty,
Though the Sun hide himself, ere thou appear:
Not deathless he—but the Soul cannot die!
—The Corn has ripened with the Sun and Dew,
The Showers have swelled the ears—we watched it while it grew—
Now the ripe Shocks stand in the field uppiled,
And Man rejoices—God is reconciled.
Elanced, flash through the excited atmosphere—
Look! Saw ye not the Shaft pass now?
Hark! heard ye not? do ye not hear?
Holy! Holy! Holy!
On Earth have Mercy, Lord!
Holy! Holy! Holy!
To Man his Prayer accord!—
The Thunder of His Power—
The Lord our God is strong—
His Voice makes Flesh to cower.
His bolt hath smitten yonder Oak,
Hills trembled at the flash,
Rivers leaped up beneath the stroke,
And echoed with the crash—
Holy! Holy! Holy!
On Earth have Mercy, Lord!
Holy! Holy! Holy!
To Man his Prayer accord!
Descends. It is a fearful hour!
While as the Deluge swoops, the Lightnings fly,
And the proud Thunder neighs about the Sky.
Holy! Holy! Holy!
The Lord our God is strong—
Holy! Holy! Holy!
His Wrath endures not long.
Ah! the great truth is now revealed—
Wherewith the mighty Mother hath appealed
To him whom, at the time
Of Nature's prime,
She wedded; and, in his embrace, she hears,
Well-pleased, of his delight sublime
In her prolifick years.
He doth rejoice,
And scattereth noxious vapours from the air,
And fertilizeth every-where.
—Anon, the Clouds disperse, and Eve serene
Breathes fragrance, while the softened Sun
Spreads peaceful o'er the smiling scene;
That Benediction done!
![]() | The Descent into Hell | ![]() |