Paradise Lost : Book VII.
Descend
from
Heaven,
Urania,
by
that
name
If
rightly
thou
art
called,
whose
voice
divine
Following,
above
the
Olympian
hill
I
soar,
Above
the
flight
of
Pegasean
wing!
The
meaning,
not
the
name,
I
call:
for
thou
Nor
of
the
Muses
nine,
nor
on
the
top
Of
old
Olympus
dwellest;
but,
heavenly-born,
Before
the
hills
appeared,
or
fountain
flowed,
Thou
with
eternal
Wisdom
didst
converse,
Wisdom
thy
sister,
and
with
her
didst
play
In
presence
of
the
Almighty
Father,
pleased
With
thy
celestial
song.
Up
led
by
thee
Into
the
Heaven
of
Heavens
I
have
presumed,
An
earthly
guest,
and
drawn
empyreal
air,
Thy
tempering:
with
like
safety
guided
down
Return
me
to
my
native
element:
Lest
from
this
flying
steed
unreined,
(as
once
Bellerophon,
though
from
a
lower
clime,)
Dismounted,
on
the
Aleian
field
I
fall,
Erroneous
there
to
wander,
and
forlorn.
Half
yet
remains
unsung,
but
narrower
bound
Within
the
visible
diurnal
sphere;
Standing
on
earth,
not
rapt
above
the
pole,
More
safe
I
sing
with
mortal
voice,
unchanged
To
hoarse
or
mute,
though
fallen
on
evil
days,
On
evil
days
though
fallen,
and
evil
tongues;
In
darkness,
and
with
dangers
compassed
round,
And
solitude;
yet
not
alone,
while
thou
Visitest
my
slumbers
nightly,
or
when
morn
Purples
the
east:
still
govern
thou
my
song,
Urania,
and
fit
audience
find,
though
few.
But
drive
far
off
the
barbarous
dissonance
Of
Bacchus
and
his
revellers,
the
race
Of
that
wild
rout
that
tore
the
Thracian
bard
In
Rhodope,
where
woods
and
rocks
had
ears
To
rapture,
till
the
savage
clamour
drowned
Both
harp
and
voice;
nor
could
the
Muse
defend
Her
son.
So
fail
not
thou,
who
thee
implores:
For
thou
art
heavenly,
she
an
empty
dream.
Say,
Goddess,
what
ensued
when
Raphael,
The
affable
Arch-Angel,
had
forewarned
Adam,
by
dire
example,
to
beware
Apostasy,
by
what
befel
in
Heaven
To
those
apostates;
lest
the
like
befall
In
Paradise
to
Adam
or
his
race,
Charged
not
to
touch
the
interdicted
tree,
If
they
transgress,
and
slight
that
sole
command,
So
easily
obeyed
amid
the
choice
Of
all
tastes
else
to
please
their
appetite,
Though
wandering.
He,
with
his
consorted
Eve,
The
story
heard
attentive,
and
was
filled
With
admiration
and
deep
muse,
to
hear
Of
things
so
high
and
strange;
things,
to
their
thought
So
unimaginable,
as
hate
in
Heaven,
And
war
so
near
the
peace
of
God
in
bliss,
With
such
confusion:
but
the
evil,
soon
Driven
back,
redounded
as
a
flood
on
those
From
whom
it
sprung;
impossible
to
mix
With
blessedness.
Whence
Adam
soon
repealed
The
doubts
that
in
his
heart
arose:
and
now
Led
on,
yet
sinless,
with
desire
to
know
What
nearer
might
concern
him,
how
this
world
Of
Heaven
and
Earth
conspicuous
first
began;
When,
and
whereof
created;
for
what
cause;
What
within
Eden,
or
without,
was
done
Before
his
memory;
as
one
whose
drouth
Yet
scarce
allayed
still
eyes
the
current
stream,
Whose
liquid
murmur
heard
new
thirst
excites,
Proceeded
thus
to
ask
his
heavenly
guest.
Great
things,
and
full
of
wonder
in
our
ears,
Far
differing
from
this
world,
thou
hast
revealed,
Divine
interpreter!
by
favour
sent
Down
from
the
empyrean,
to
forewarn
Us
timely
of
what
might
else
have
been
our
loss,
Unknown,
which
human
knowledge
could
not
reach;
For
which
to
the
infinitely
Good
we
owe
Immortal
thanks,
and
his
admonishment
Receive,
with
solemn
purpose
to
observe
Immutably
his
sovran
will,
the
end
Of
what
we
are.
But
since
thou
hast
vouchsafed
Gently,
for
our
instruction,
to
impart
Things
above
earthly
thought,
which
yet
concerned
Our
knowing,
as
to
highest
wisdom
seemed,
Deign
to
descend
now
lower,
and
relate
What
may
no
less
perhaps
avail
us
known,
How
first
began
this
Heaven
which
we
behold
Distant
so
high,
with
moving
fires
adorned
Innumerable;
and
this
which
yields
or
fills
All
space,
the
ambient
air
wide
interfused
Embracing
round
this
floried
Earth;
what
cause
Moved
the
Creator,
in
his
holy
rest
Through
all
eternity,
so
late
to
build
In
Chaos;
and
the
work
begun,
how
soon
Absolved;
if
unforbid
thou
mayest
unfold
What
we,
not
to
explore
the
secrets
ask
Of
his
eternal
empire,
but
the
more
To
magnify
his
works,
the
more
we
know.
And
the
great
light
of
day
yet
wants
to
run
Much
of
his
race
though
steep;
suspense
in
Heaven,
Held
by
thy
voice,
thy
potent
voice,
he
hears,
And
longer
will
delay
to
hear
thee
tell
His
generation,
and
the
rising
birth
Of
Nature
from
the
unapparent
Deep:
Or
if
the
star
of
evening
and
the
moon
Haste
to
thy
audience,
Night
with
her
will
bring,
Silence;
and
Sleep,
listening
to
thee,
will
watch;
Or
we
can
bid
his
absence,
till
thy
song
End,
and
dismiss
thee
ere
the
morning
shine.
Thus
Adam
his
illustrious
guest
besought:
And
thus
the
Godlike
Angel
answered
mild.
This
also
thy
request,
with
caution
asked,
Obtain;
though
to
recount
almighty
works
What
words
or
tongue
of
Seraph
can
suffice,
Or
heart
of
man
suffice
to
comprehend?
Yet
what
thou
canst
attain,
which
best
may
serve
To
glorify
the
Maker,
and
infer
Thee
also
happier,
shall
not
be
withheld
Thy
hearing;
such
commission
from
above
I
have
received,
to
answer
thy
desire
Of
knowledge
within
bounds;
beyond,
abstain
To
ask;
nor
let
thine
own
inventions
hope
Things
not
revealed,
which
the
invisible
King,
Only
Omniscient,
hath
suppressed
in
night;
To
none
communicable
in
Earth
or
Heaven:
Enough
is
left
besides
to
search
and
know.
But
knowledge
is
as
food,
and
needs
no
less
Her
temperance
over
appetite,
to
know
In
measure
what
the
mind
may
well
contain;
Oppresses
else
with
surfeit,
and
soon
turns
Wisdom
to
folly,
as
nourishment
to
wind.
Know
then,
that,
after
Lucifer
from
Heaven
(So
call
him,
brighter
once
amidst
the
host
Of
Angels,
than
that
star
the
stars
among,)
Fell
with
his
flaming
legions
through
the
deep
Into
his
place,
and
the
great
Son
returned
Victorious
with
his
Saints,
the
Omnipotent
Eternal
Father
from
his
throne
beheld
Their
multitude,
and
to
his
Son
thus
spake.
At
least
our
envious
Foe
hath
failed,
who
thought
All
like
himself
rebellious,
by
whose
aid
This
inaccessible
high
strength,
the
seat
Of
Deity
supreme,
us
dispossessed,
He
trusted
to
have
seised,
and
into
fraud
Drew
many,
whom
their
place
knows
here
no
more:
Yet
far
the
greater
part
have
kept,
I
see,
Their
station;
Heaven,
yet
populous,
retains
Number
sufficient
to
possess
her
realms
Though
wide,
and
this
high
temple
to
frequent
With
ministeries
due,
and
solemn
rites:
But,
lest
his
heart
exalt
him
in
the
harm
Already
done,
to
have
dispeopled
Heaven,
My
damage
fondly
deemed,
I
can
repair
That
detriment,
if
such
it
be
to
lose
Self-lost;
and
in
a
moment
will
create
Another
world,
out
of
one
man
a
race
Of
men
innumerable,
there
to
dwell,
Not
here;
till,
by
degrees
of
merit
raised,
They
open
to
themselves
at
length
the
way
Up
hither,
under
long
obedience
tried;
And
Earth
be
changed
to
Heaven,
and
Heaven
to
Earth,
One
kingdom,
joy
and
union
without
end.
Mean
while
inhabit
lax,
ye
Powers
of
Heaven;
And
thou
my
Word,
begotten
Son,
by
thee
This
I
perform;
speak
thou,
and
be
it
done!
My
overshadowing
Spirit
and
Might
with
thee
I
send
along;
ride
forth,
and
bid
the
Deep
Within
appointed
bounds
be
Heaven
and
Earth;
Boundless
the
Deep,
because
I
Am
who
fill
Infinitude,
nor
vacuous
the
space.
Though
I,
uncircumscribed
myself,
retire,
And
put
not
forth
my
goodness,
which
is
free
To
act
or
not,
Necessity
and
Chance
Approach
not
me,
and
what
I
will
is
Fate.
So
spake
the
Almighty,
and
to
what
he
spake
His
Word,
the
Filial
Godhead,
gave
effect.
Immediate
are
the
acts
of
God,
more
swift
Than
time
or
motion,
but
to
human
ears
Cannot
without
process
of
speech
be
told,
So
told
as
earthly
notion
can
receive.
Great
triumph
and
rejoicing
was
in
Heaven,
When
such
was
heard
declared
the
Almighty's
will;
Glory
they
sung
to
the
Most
High,
good
will
To
future
men,
and
in
their
dwellings
peace;
Glory
to
Him,
whose
just
avenging
ire
Had
driven
out
the
ungodly
from
his
sight
And
the
habitations
of
the
just;
to
Him
Glory
and
praise,
whose
wisdom
had
ordained
Good
out
of
evil
to
create;
instead
Of
Spirits
malign,
a
better
race
to
bring
Into
their
vacant
room,
and
thence
diffuse
His
good
to
worlds
and
ages
infinite.
So
sang
the
Hierarchies:
Mean
while
the
Son
On
his
great
expedition
now
appeared,
Girt
with
Omnipotence,
with
radiance
crowned
Of
Majesty
Divine;
sapience
and
love
Immense,
and
all
his
Father
in
him
shone.
About
his
chariot
numberless
were
poured
Cherub,
and
Seraph,
Potentates,
and
Thrones,
And
Virtues,
winged
Spirits,
and
chariots
winged
From
the
armoury
of
God;
where
stand
of
old
Myriads,
between
two
brazen
mountains
lodged
Against
a
solemn
day,
harnessed
at
hand,
Celestial
equipage;
and
now
came
forth
Spontaneous,
for
within
them
Spirit
lived,
Attendant
on
their
Lord:
Heaven
opened
wide
Her
ever-during
gates,
harmonious
sound
On
golden
hinges
moving,
to
let
forth
The
King
of
Glory,
in
his
powerful
Word
And
Spirit,
coming
to
create
new
worlds.
On
heavenly
ground
they
stood;
and
from
the
shore
They
viewed
the
vast
immeasurable
abyss
Outrageous
as
a
sea,
dark,
wasteful,
wild,
Up
from
the
bottom
turned
by
furious
winds
And
surging
waves,
as
mountains,
to
assault
Heaven's
highth,
and
with
the
center
mix
the
pole.
Silence,
ye
troubled
Waves,
and
thou
Deep,
peace,
Said
then
the
Omnifick
Word;
your
discord
end!
Nor
staid;
but,
on
the
wings
of
Cherubim
Uplifted,
in
paternal
glory
rode
Far
into
Chaos,
and
the
world
unborn;
For
Chaos
heard
his
voice:
Him
all
his
train
Followed
in
bright
procession,
to
behold
Creation,
and
the
wonders
of
his
might.
Then
staid
the
fervid
wheels,
and
in
his
hand
He
took
the
golden
compasses,
prepared
In
God's
eternal
store,
to
circumscribe
This
universe,
and
all
created
things:
One
foot
he
centered,
and
the
other
turned
Round
through
the
vast
profundity
obscure;
And
said,
Thus
far
extend,
thus
far
thy
bounds,
This
be
thy
just
circumference,
O
World!
Thus
God
the
Heaven
created,
thus
the
Earth,
Matter
unformed
and
void:
Darkness
profound
Covered
the
abyss:
but
on
the
watery
calm
His
brooding
wings
the
Spirit
of
God
outspread,
And
vital
virtue
infused,
and
vital
warmth
Throughout
the
fluid
mass;
but
downward
purged
The
black
tartareous
cold
infernal
dregs,
Adverse
to
life:
then
founded,
then
conglobed
Like
things
to
like;
the
rest
to
several
place
Disparted,
and
between
spun
out
the
air;
And
Earth
self-balanced
on
her
center
hung.
Let
there
be
light,
said
God;
and
forthwith
Light
Ethereal,
first
of
things,
quintessence
pure,
Sprung
from
the
deep;
and
from
her
native
east
To
journey
through
the
aery
gloom
began,
Sphered
in
a
radiant
cloud,
for
yet
the
sun
Was
not;
she
in
a
cloudy
tabernacle
Sojourned
the
while.
God
saw
the
light
was
good;
And
light
from
darkness
by
the
hemisphere
Divided:
light
the
Day,
and
darkness
Night,
He
named.
Thus
was
the
first
day
even
and
morn:
Nor
past
uncelebrated,
nor
unsung
By
the
celestial
quires,
when
orient
light
Exhaling
first
from
darkness
they
beheld;
Birth-day
of
Heaven
and
Earth;
with
joy
and
shout
The
hollow
universal
orb
they
filled,
And
touched
their
golden
harps,
and
hymning
praised
God
and
his
works;
Creator
him
they
sung,
Both
when
first
evening
was,
and
when
first
morn.
Again,
God
said,
Let
there
be
firmament
Amid
the
waters,
and
let
it
divide
The
waters
from
the
waters;
and
God
made
The
firmament,
expanse
of
liquid,
pure,
Transparent,
elemental
air,
diffused
In
circuit
to
the
uttermost
convex
Of
this
great
round;
partition
firm
and
sure,
The
waters
underneath
from
those
above
Dividing:
for
as
earth,
so
he
the
world
Built
on
circumfluous
waters
calm,
in
wide
Crystalline
ocean,
and
the
loud
misrule
Of
Chaos
far
removed;
lest
fierce
extremes
Contiguous
might
distemper
the
whole
frame:
And
Heaven
he
named
the
Firmament:
So
even
And
morning
chorus
sung
the
second
day.
The
Earth
was
formed,
but
in
the
womb
as
yet
Of
waters,
embryon
immature
involved,
Appeared
not:
over
all
the
face
of
Earth
Main
ocean
flowed,
not
idle;
but,
with
warm
Prolifick
humour
softening
all
her
globe,
Fermented
the
great
mother
to
conceive,
Satiate
with
genial
moisture;
when
God
said,
Be
gathered
now
ye
waters
under
Heaven
Into
one
place,
and
let
dry
land
appear.
Immediately
the
mountains
huge
appear
Emergent,
and
their
broad
bare
backs
upheave
Into
the
clouds;
their
tops
ascend
the
sky:
So
high
as
heaved
the
tumid
hills,
so
low
Down
sunk
a
hollow
bottom
broad
and
deep,
Capacious
bed
of
waters:
Thither
they
Hasted
with
glad
precipitance,
uprolled,
As
drops
on
dust
conglobing
from
the
dry:
Part
rise
in
crystal
wall,
or
ridge
direct,
For
haste;
such
flight
the
great
command
impressed
On
the
swift
floods:
As
armies
at
the
call
Of
trumpet
(for
of
armies
thou
hast
heard)
Troop
to
their
standard;
so
the
watery
throng,
Wave
rolling
after
wave,
where
way
they
found,
If
steep,
with
torrent
rapture,
if
through
plain,
Soft-ebbing;
nor
withstood
them
rock
or
hill;
But
they,
or
under
ground,
or
circuit
wide
With
serpent
errour
wandering,
found
their
way,
And
on
the
washy
oose
deep
channels
wore;
Easy,
ere
God
had
bid
the
ground
be
dry,
All
but
within
those
banks,
where
rivers
now
Stream,
and
perpetual
draw
their
humid
train.
The
dry
land,
Earth;
and
the
great
receptacle
Of
congregated
waters,
he
called
Seas:
And
saw
that
it
was
good;
and
said,
Let
the
Earth
Put
forth
the
verdant
grass,
herb
yielding
seed,
And
fruit-tree
yielding
fruit
after
her
kind,
Whose
seed
is
in
herself
upon
the
Earth.
He
scarce
had
said,
when
the
bare
Earth,
till
then
Desart
and
bare,
unsightly,
unadorned,
Brought
forth
the
tender
grass,
whose
verdure
clad
Her
universal
face
with
pleasant
green;
Then
herbs
of
every
leaf,
that
sudden
flowered
Opening
their
various
colours,
and
made
gay
Her
bosom,
smelling
sweet:
and,
these
scarce
blown,
Forth
flourished
thick
the
clustering
vine,
forth
crept
The
swelling
gourd,
up
stood
the
corny
reed
Embattled
in
her
field,
and
the
humble
shrub,
And
bush
with
frizzled
hair
implicit:
Last
Rose,
as
in
dance,
the
stately
trees,
and
spread
Their
branches
hung
with
copious
fruit,
or
gemmed
Their
blossoms:
With
high
woods
the
hills
were
crowned;
With
tufts
the
valleys,
and
each
fountain
side;
With
borders
long
the
rivers:
that
Earth
now
Seemed
like
to
Heaven,
a
seat
where
Gods
might
dwell,
Or
wander
with
delight,
and
love
to
haunt
Her
sacred
shades:
though
God
had
yet
not
rained
Upon
the
Earth,
and
man
to
till
the
ground
None
was;
but
from
the
Earth
a
dewy
mist
Went
up,
and
watered
all
the
ground,
and
each
Plant
of
the
field;
which,
ere
it
was
in
the
Earth,
God
made,
and
every
herb,
before
it
grew
On
the
green
stem:
God
saw
that
it
was
good:
So
even
and
morn
recorded
the
third
day.
Again
the
Almighty
spake,
Let
there
be
lights
High
in
the
expanse
of
Heaven,
to
divide
The
day
from
night;
and
let
them
be
for
signs,
For
seasons,
and
for
days,
and
circling
years;
And
let
them
be
for
lights,
as
I
ordain
Their
office
in
the
firmament
of
Heaven,
To
give
light
on
the
Earth;
and
it
was
so.
And
God
made
two
great
lights,
great
for
their
use
To
Man,
the
greater
to
have
rule
by
day,
The
less
by
night,
altern;
and
made
the
stars,
And
set
them
in
the
firmament
of
Heaven
To
illuminate
the
Earth,
and
rule
the
day
In
their
vicissitude,
and
rule
the
night,
And
light
from
darkness
to
divide.
God
saw,
Surveying
his
great
work,
that
it
was
good:
For
of
celestial
bodies
first
the
sun
A
mighty
sphere
he
framed,
unlightsome
first,
Though
of
ethereal
mould:
then
formed
the
moon
Globose,
and
every
magnitude
of
stars,
And
sowed
with
stars
the
Heaven,
thick
as
a
field:
Of
light
by
far
the
greater
part
he
took,
Transplanted
from
her
cloudy
shrine,
and
placed
In
the
sun's
orb,
made
porous
to
receive
And
drink
the
liquid
light;
firm
to
retain
Her
gathered
beams,
great
palace
now
of
light.
Hither,
as
to
their
fountain,
other
stars
Repairing,
in
their
golden
urns
draw
light,
And
hence
the
morning-planet
gilds
her
horns;
By
tincture
or
reflection
they
augment
Their
small
peculiar,
though
from
human
sight
So
far
remote,
with
diminution
seen,
First
in
his
east
the
glorious
lamp
was
seen,
Regent
of
day,
and
all
the
horizon
round
Invested
with
bright
rays,
jocund
to
run
His
longitude
through
Heaven's
high
road;
the
gray
Dawn,
and
the
Pleiades,
before
him
danced,
Shedding
sweet
influence:
Less
bright
the
moon,
But
opposite
in
levelled
west
was
set,
His
mirrour,
with
full
face
borrowing
her
light
From
him;
for
other
light
she
needed
none
In
that
aspect,
and
still
that
distance
keeps
Till
night;
then
in
the
east
her
turn
she
shines,
Revolved
on
Heaven's
great
axle,
and
her
reign
With
thousand
lesser
lights
dividual
holds,
With
thousand
thousand
stars,
that
then
appeared
Spangling
the
hemisphere:
Then
first
adorned
With
their
bright
luminaries
that
set
and
rose,
Glad
evening
and
glad
morn
crowned
the
fourth
day.
And
God
said,
Let
the
waters
generate
Reptile
with
spawn
abundant,
living
soul:
And
let
fowl
fly
above
the
Earth,
with
wings
Displayed
on
the
open
firmament
of
Heaven.
And
God
created
the
great
whales,
and
each
Soul
living,
each
that
crept,
which
plenteously
The
waters
generated
by
their
kinds;
And
every
bird
of
wing
after
his
kind;
And
saw
that
it
was
good,
and
blessed
them,
saying.
Be
fruitful,
multiply,
and
in
the
seas,
And
lakes,
and
running
streams,
the
waters
fill;
And
let
the
fowl
be
multiplied,
on
the
Earth.
Forthwith
the
sounds
and
seas,
each
creek
and
bay,
With
fry
innumerable
swarm,
and
shoals
Of
fish
that
with
their
fins,
and
shining
scales,
Glide
under
the
green
wave,
in
sculls
that
oft
Bank
the
mid
sea:
part
single,
or
with
mate,
Graze
the
sea-weed
their
pasture,
and
through
groves
Of
coral
stray;
or,
sporting
with
quick
glance,
Show
to
the
sun
their
waved
coats
dropt
with
gold;
Or,
in
their
pearly
shells
at
ease,
attend
Moist
nutriment;
or
under
rocks
their
food
In
jointed
armour
watch:
on
smooth
the
seal
And
bended
dolphins
play:
part
huge
of
bulk
Wallowing
unwieldy,
enormous
in
their
gait,
Tempest
the
ocean:
there
leviathan,
Hugest
of
living
creatures,
on
the
deep
Stretched
like
a
promontory
sleeps
or
swims,
And
seems
a
moving
land;
and
at
his
gills
Draws
in,
and
at
his
trunk
spouts
out,
a
sea.
Mean
while
the
tepid
caves,
and
fens,
and
shores,
Their
brood
as
numerous
hatch,
from
the
egg
that
soon
Bursting
with
kindly
rupture
forth
disclosed
Their
callow
young;
but
feathered
soon
and
fledge
They
summed
their
pens;
and,
soaring
the
air
sublime,
With
clang
despised
the
ground,
under
a
cloud
In
prospect;
there
the
eagle
and
the
stork
On
cliffs
and
cedar
tops
their
eyries
build:
Part
loosely
wing
the
region,
part
more
wise
In
common,
ranged
in
figure,
wedge
their
way,
Intelligent
of
seasons,
and
set
forth
Their
aery
caravan,
high
over
seas
Flying,
and
over
lands,
with
mutual
wing
Easing
their
flight;
so
steers
the
prudent
crane
Her
annual
voyage,
borne
on
winds;
the
air
Floats
as
they
pass,
fanned
with
unnumbered
plumes:
From
branch
to
branch
the
smaller
birds
with
song
Solaced
the
woods,
and
spread
their
painted
wings
Till
even;
nor
then
the
solemn
nightingale
Ceased
warbling,
but
all
night
tun'd
her
soft
lays:
Others,
on
silver
lakes
and
rivers,
bathed
Their
downy
breast;
the
swan
with
arched
neck,
Between
her
white
wings
mantling
proudly,
rows
Her
state
with
oary
feet;
yet
oft
they
quit
The
dank,
and,
rising
on
stiff
pennons,
tower
The
mid
aereal
sky:
Others
on
ground
Walked
firm;
the
crested
cock
whose
clarion
sounds
The
silent
hours,
and
the
other
whose
gay
train
Adorns
him,
coloured
with
the
florid
hue
Of
rainbows
and
starry
eyes.
The
waters
thus
With
fish
replenished,
and
the
air
with
fowl,
Evening
and
morn
solemnized
the
fifth
day.
The
sixth,
and
of
creation
last,
arose
With
evening
harps
and
matin;
when
God
said,
Let
the
Earth
bring
forth
soul
living
in
her
kind,
Cattle,
and
creeping
things,
and
beast
of
the
Earth,
Each
in
their
kind.
The
Earth
obeyed,
and
straight
Opening
her
fertile
womb
teemed
at
a
birth
Innumerous
living
creatures,
perfect
forms,
Limbed
and
full
grown:
Out
of
the
ground
up
rose,
As
from
his
lair,
the
wild
beast
where
he
wons
In
forest
wild,
in
thicket,
brake,
or
den;
Among
the
trees
in
pairs
they
rose,
they
walked:
The
cattle
in
the
fields
and
meadows
green:
Those
rare
and
solitary,
these
in
flocks
Pasturing
at
once,
and
in
broad
herds
upsprung.
The
grassy
clods
now
calved;
now
half
appeared
The
tawny
lion,
pawing
to
get
free
His
hinder
parts,
then
springs
as
broke
from
bonds,
And
rampant
shakes
his
brinded
mane;
the
ounce,
The
libbard,
and
the
tiger,
as
the
mole
Rising,
the
crumbled
earth
above
them
threw
In
hillocks:
The
swift
stag
from
under
ground
Bore
up
his
branching
head:
Scarce
from
his
mould
Behemoth
biggest
born
of
earth
upheaved
His
vastness:
Fleeced
the
flocks
and
bleating
rose,
As
plants:
Ambiguous
between
sea
and
land
The
river-horse,
and
scaly
crocodile.
At
once
came
forth
whatever
creeps
the
ground,
Insect
or
worm:
those
waved
their
limber
fans
For
wings,
and
smallest
lineaments
exact
In
all
the
liveries
decked
of
summer's
pride
With
spots
of
gold
and
purple,
azure
and
green:
These,
as
a
line,
their
long
dimension
drew,
Streaking
the
ground
with
sinuous
trace;
not
all
Minims
of
nature;
some
of
serpent-kind,
Wonderous
in
length
and
corpulence,
involved
Their
snaky
folds,
and
added
wings.
First
crept
The
parsimonious
emmet,
provident
Of
future;
in
small
room
large
heart
enclosed;
Pattern
of
just
equality
perhaps
Hereafter,
joined
in
her
popular
tribes
Of
commonalty:
Swarming
next
appeared
The
female
bee,
that
feeds
her
husband
drone
Deliciously,
and
builds
her
waxen
cells
With
honey
stored:
The
rest
are
numberless,
And
thou
their
natures
knowest,
and
gavest
them
names,
Needless
to
thee
repeated;
nor
unknown
The
serpent,
subtlest
beast
of
all
the
field,
Of
huge
extent
sometimes,
with
brazen
eyes
And
hairy
mane
terrifick,
though
to
thee
Not
noxious,
but
obedient
at
thy
call.
Now
Heaven
in
all
her
glory
shone,
and
rolled
Her
motions,
as
the
great
first
Mover's
hand
First
wheeled
their
course:
Earth
in
her
rich
attire
Consummate
lovely
smiled;
air,
water,
earth,
By
fowl,
fish,
beast,
was
flown,
was
swum,
was
walked,
Frequent;
and
of
the
sixth
day
yet
remained:
There
wanted
yet
the
master-work,
the
end
Of
all
yet
done;
a
creature,
who,
not
prone
And
brute
as
other
creatures,
but
endued
With
sanctity
of
reason,
might
erect
His
stature,
and
upright
with
front
serene
Govern
the
rest,
self-knowing;
and
from
thence
Magnanimous
to
correspond
with
Heaven,
But
grateful
to
acknowledge
whence
his
good
Descends,
thither
with
heart,
and
voice,
and
eyes
Directed
in
devotion,
to
adore
And
worship
God
Supreme,
who
made
him
chief
Of
all
his
works:
therefore
the
Omnipotent
Eternal
Father
(for
where
is
not
he
Present?)
thus
to
his
Son
audibly
spake.
Let
us
make
now
Man
in
our
image,
Man
In
our
similitude,
and
let
them
rule
Over
the
fish
and
fowl
of
sea
and
air,
Beast
of
the
field,
and
over
all
the
Earth,
And
every
creeping
thing
that
creeps
the
ground.
This
said,
he
formed
thee,
Adam,
thee,
O
Man,
Dust
of
the
ground,
and
in
thy
nostrils
breathed
The
breath
of
life;
in
his
own
image
he
Created
thee,
in
the
image
of
God
Express;
and
thou
becamest
a
living
soul.
Male
he
created
thee;
but
thy
consort
Female,
for
race;
then
blessed
mankind,
and
said,
Be
fruitful,
multiply,
and
fill
the
Earth;
Subdue
it,
and
throughout
dominion
hold
Over
fish
of
the
sea,
and
fowl
of
the
air,
And
every
living
thing
that
moves
on
the
Earth.
Wherever
thus
created,
for
no
place
Is
yet
distinct
by
name,
thence,
as
thou
knowest,
He
brought
thee
into
this
delicious
grove,
This
garden,
planted
with
the
trees
of
God,
Delectable
both
to
behold
and
taste;
And
freely
all
their
pleasant
fruit
for
food
Gave
thee;
all
sorts
are
here
that
all
the
Earth
yields,
Variety
without
end;
but
of
the
tree,
Which,
tasted,
works
knowledge
of
good
and
evil,
Thou
mayest
not;
in
the
day
thou
eatest,
thou
diest;
Death
is
the
penalty
imposed;
beware,
And
govern
well
thy
appetite;
lest
Sin
Surprise
thee,
and
her
black
attendant
Death.
Here
finished
he,
and
all
that
he
had
made
Viewed,
and
behold
all
was
entirely
good;
So
even
and
morn
accomplished
the
sixth
day:
Yet
not
till
the
Creator
from
his
work
Desisting,
though
unwearied,
up
returned,
Up
to
the
Heaven
of
Heavens,
his
high
abode;
Thence
to
behold
this
new
created
world,
The
addition
of
his
empire,
how
it
showed
In
prospect
from
his
throne,
how
good,
how
fair,
Answering
his
great
idea.
Up
he
rode
Followed
with
acclamation,
and
the
sound
Symphonious
of
ten
thousand
harps,
that
tuned
Angelick
harmonies:
The
earth,
the
air
Resounded,
(thou
rememberest,
for
thou
heardst,)
The
heavens
and
all
the
constellations
rung,
The
planets
in
their
station
listening
stood,
While
the
bright
pomp
ascended
jubilant.
Open,
ye
everlasting
gates!
they
sung,
Open,
ye
Heavens!
your
living
doors;let
in
The
great
Creator
from
his
work
returned
Magnificent,
his
six
days
work,
a
World;
Open,
and
henceforth
oft;
for
God
will
deign
To
visit
oft
the
dwellings
of
just
men,
Delighted;
and
with
frequent
intercourse
Thither
will
send
his
winged
messengers
On
errands
of
supernal
grace.
So
sung
The
glorious
train
ascending:
He
through
Heaven,
That
opened
wide
her
blazing
portals,
led
To
God's
eternal
house
direct
the
way;
A
broad
and
ample
road,
whose
dust
is
gold
And
pavement
stars,
as
stars
to
thee
appear,
Seen
in
the
galaxy,
that
milky
way,
Which
nightly,
as
a
circling
zone,
thou
seest
Powdered
with
stars.
And
now
on
Earth
the
seventh
Evening
arose
in
Eden,
for
the
sun
Was
set,
and
twilight
from
the
east
came
on,
Forerunning
night;
when
at
the
holy
mount
Of
Heaven's
high-seated
top,
the
imperial
throne
Of
Godhead,
fixed
for
ever
firm
and
sure,
The
Filial
Power
arrived,
and
sat
him
down
With
his
great
Father;
for
he
also
went
Invisible,
yet
staid,
(such
privilege
Hath
Omnipresence)
and
the
work
ordained,
Author
and
End
of
all
things;
and,
from
work
Now
resting,
blessed
and
hallowed
the
seventh
day,
As
resting
on
that
day
from
all
his
work,
But
not
in
silence
holy
kept:
the
harp
Had
work
and
rested
not;
the
solemn
pipe,
And
dulcimer,
all
organs
of
sweet
stop,
All
sounds
on
fret
by
string
or
golden
wire,
Tempered
soft
tunings,
intermixed
with
voice
Choral
or
unison:
of
incense
clouds,
Fuming
from
golden
censers,
hid
the
mount.
Creation
and
the
six
days
acts
they
sung:
Great
are
thy
works,
Jehovah!
infinite
Thy
power!
what
thought
can
measure
thee,
or
tongue
Relate
thee!
Greater
now
in
thy
return
Than
from
the
giant
Angels:
Thee
that
day
Thy
thunders
magnified;
but
to
create
Is
greater
than
created
to
destroy.
Who
can
impair
thee,
Mighty
King,
or
bound
Thy
empire!
Easily
the
proud
attempt
Of
Spirits
apostate,
and
their
counsels
vain,
Thou
hast
repelled;
while
impiously
they
thought
Thee
to
diminish,
and
from
thee
withdraw
The
number
of
thy
worshippers.
Who
seeks
To
lessen
thee,
against
his
purpose
serves
To
manifest
the
more
thy
might:
his
evil
Thou
usest,
and
from
thence
createst
more
good.
Witness
this
new-made
world,
another
Heaven
From
Heaven-gate
not
far,
founded
in
view
On
the
clear
hyaline,
the
glassy
sea;
Of
amplitude
almost
immense,
with
stars
Numerous,
and
every
star
perhaps
a
world
Of
destined
habitation;
but
thou
knowest
Their
seasons:
among
these
the
seat
of
Men,
Earth,
with
her
nether
ocean
circumfused,
Their
pleasant
dwelling-place.
Thrice
happy
Men,
And
sons
of
Men,
whom
God
hath
thus
advanced!
Created
in
his
image,
there
to
dwell
And
worship
him;
and
in
reward
to
rule
Over
his
works,
on
earth,
in
sea,
or
air,
And
multiply
a
race
of
worshippers
Holy
and
just:
Thrice
happy,
if
they
know
Their
happiness,
and
persevere
upright!
So
sung
they,
and
the
empyrean
rung
With
halleluiahs:
Thus
was
sabbath
kept.
And
thy
request
think
now
fulfilled,
that
asked
How
first
this
world
and
face
of
things
began,
And
what
before
thy
memory
was
done
From
the
beginning;
that
posterity,
Informed
by
thee,
might
know:
If
else
thou
seekest
Aught,
not
surpassing
human
measure,
say.